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About The Wealth makers of the world. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1894-1896 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1895)
THE WEALTH MAKERS. August 29, 1895 CUBA IS BEING RUINED i HER GREAT SUGAR INDUS I TRY IN DANGER. jTMBVMrv i db"i vo usinvr in vrop ok This Tear or Prepare For Heit Mhoi'i -iwiuiMi Aimoat Deaa anil in uus- look Serious Vie w of a Planter. Niw York, Aug. Any. S7. The Ward lino steamer Santiago, which bu Jut arrived here, brought Dr. 1L Ton Bern of this city and John La Donrdette, administrator of the Santa Marc plantation at Ouantanamo, which was recently raided Dr. Von Herft said: "I found business of all kinds in Santiago de Cuba at a stand' atilL Most of the merchants were waiting for better times. Some of them had closed their doors. Recently the government issued an order forbid ding the merchants to sell any goods or materials to women and children from the country. This was done to eat off the insurrectionists from ob taining any supplies from the towns. .The revolutionists are simply carry ing on a guerrilla wafare. Every few days I beard of some raid, which usually consisted of destroying a plantation. There is little fighting going on. No one ventures to predict when the war will coma to an end. If the Insurrection goes on for another year, the sugar industry will be pros trated. The administrator of one of the largest plantations in the Santiago sugar district told me that it will take the planters four or five years to re cover from the damages already done. Many plantations not laid waste by, the Insurrectionists have been practically abandoned. In fact, the sugar plant ers really bear the brunt of the war. They will have to pay enormous taxes, even if the insurrection be put down. At present almost every planter is threatened with ruin if he does not contribute money to the insurgent cause. The sugar planters are be tween the devil and the deep sea. If they do not contribute large sums of money for protection their fields are laid waste. If they ask for protection they are marked as enemies of the re public and their property would be set on fire or ruined at the first opportu nity. " TREATIES ABOVE STATES. Bannock and Shonhono Indian Hunters Will Be Protected In Wyoming. A Washington, Aug. 27. No attention Will be paid by the Indian bureau to the game laws of Wyoming where they come into conflict with the treat- ... leg of the United States with tha Balnock and Shoshone Indians, the attorney general, after considering the matter, having informed the sec retary of the interior and the com missioner of Indian affairs that the right of Indians to hunt on unoccupied lands, in his opinion, are unquestion- ., able, and that he considers that the state of Wyoming has no power to limit or abridge this right termination have been decided upon than that the instructions to the United States district attorneys to se cure the release of the Indians now in custody on writs of habeas corpus probably will be supplemented by an order to do the same thing in case any arrest shall be made in tne future. The bureau will discourage hunting by the Indians as far as possible, and at present no passes will be issued per - in ii ting the braves to leave the reserv at ion. w . 'Germany May Join France, England and America In Protecting Missionaries. u i ui . u i ru v i a4 rvi i ' London, Aug. 37. The llerlin corre spondent of the Standard telegraphs to that paper that the news that France will join England and America in whatever steps may be necessary to stop the massacrs of foreigners in China has induced some German news papers to express the hope that Ger many will do likewise. Germany has a large squadron in Chinese waters. Washington, Aug. 2d. The Concord sailed to-day from Chemulpo, Corea, and will proceed direct to Chee Foo, China. The Yorktown is also bound for that port, having left Shanghai Saturday, Then the United States will be well prepared for any action deemed necessary in Chinese waters. MR. PECK RESIGNS. Leaves the Santa Fe and Goes to th Milwaukee as General Solicitor. Ohicago, Aug. 27. George R. Peck has tendered his resignation of the of fice of general solicitor of the Atchi son, Topeka and Santa Fe railway to Keceivers McCook and Walker and the same has been accepted. E. D. Kenna of St Louis, who has held the position of general attorney of the 'Frisco road, pan oi we fcanta e system, has been ppuiniiea successor. It is stated on reliable authority hat Mr. Peck has been nffpwd tha nn. iition of general counsel of the Chi sago, .aiuwauKee and St. Paul road. VbiCh has bonn VRPBtorl cinno V.o Death Of .TnHcrft .TnVin Af Pow rmonths airo. although t.h&t. Pmir. ficials would neither confirm nor deny the report Officials Accused of Malfeasance. Laksed, Kan., Aug. 27. Ex-County Attorney Polk Cline is preparing to bring suit against County Attorney A. T CncAtr anA Tlrmtir Pmi?ittt Attnhndif H. G. Flaherty for malfeasance in office, in collecting fees in violation of the statutes. Casey and Flaherty are Populists. YbekA, CaL, Aug. 27. Four murder ers confined in the county jail here Johnson, Semler, Null and Moreno "cid vancu irum jau dj a mOD at S o'clock this morning and hanged in the lailyard. The mob was composed of 250 men. who broke into the jail, battered down the cell doors where the four murderers were confined and dragged the men into the yard and hanged t.Vl nm all tVnm n roil Mr li n K Via 1i..m placed between two trees. -vu. h t. U.VU UUU UVI. LI The lynching is the climax of a reign 01 lawlessness wnlcn has prevailed in this part of the country for several monins past HOLMES LATEST STORY Tells In a Signed Statement How Nairn 1 Williams Died. - New York, Aug. 27. A signed state ment written by II. IL Holmes in Moy amensing prison at Philadelphia and certified to by his lawyer, going into all the details of his acquaintance with Minnie E. Williams, is printed by a local paper. Holmes writes that hi first met Minnie at an intelligence office, kept by one Campbell, on Dear born street, Chicago, in January, 1403, and employed her as a stenrgrapher. She was installed in bis office in tin building which has become known ai "Holmes' Castle,'' and from March U May of that year occupied rooms in the building adjoining the office. Oc casionally meals were served in the building, and if any bones have been found in the stove there, he writes, it will be found by microscopic examin ations that they are the remains oJ such meals. Holmes says that in April Minnie Williams, knowing him to be in need of money, gave a draft for $3,5oO, the proceeds of the sale of real estate she Lad held in Texas, and asked him to use it until she should need it. About this time, Holmes narrates, Miss Williams was taken ill, suffered from acute mania and was removed to the Presbyterian hospital, being en rolled as Mrs. Williams, as her ail ment was such that it was prudent for her to pass as a married woman. Minnie Williams' condition was brought about, so Holmes says she told him, by a prominent lioston busi ness man, head of a firm dealing in surgical instruments, with whose wife she visited at their borne in Somer ville. This man had acquired an influ ence over her which she was unable to resist; betrayed her, and she met him frequently at a hotel near his place of business, breaking her engagement to marry an honest clerk. When she grew better and returned to his house, her sister, Nannie Williams, came from Texas to visit her. Returning one evening early in July from a day in the city, he was greeted with a cry from Minnie Williams in the parlor: "Is that you? My God, I thought you would never come. Nannie is dead. " She was seated upon the floori hold ing her sister's head in her arms, rocking back and forth and moaning, much as a mother would over a child. He found that; Nannie had been dead for hours, and laid her body upon the bed in his own room, finding no mark or violence, but a slight discoloration on one of her temples. According to the story written by Holmes Minnie Williams had been away the preced ing night, and Holmes had also been unexpectedly detained by business all night When Minnie Williams re turned home she noticed that his bed had not been occupied during the night. This is what Holmes writes: "And with only one thought in her disordered mind, she had rushed into the adjoin ing room where her sister sat, and in a voice which only the very few who h ave been intimately acquainted with M is8 Williams can appreciate, had said: ' You devil, you have stolen my hus band from me.' At the same time she struck her sister with a small foot stool, causing her to fall to the floor where with hardly a struggle, she ceased to breathe." At first Minnie thought her sister had only fainted and tried to revive her, then she found her efforts useless. and remained in the position in which he lound her. ihen came the ques tion of what to do. Holmes' story of what was done follows: "We clothed Nannie in a light dress she had liked to wear, and taking a large trunk she had brought with her from Texas, I placed her in it I went to a stable and obtained a covered con veyance, and upon my return H en gaged a man to accompany me to the house and help me place the trunk in the carriage. I then drove to the lake side and waited until night, thus ap pearing to parties noticing me, if any, that 1 was awaiting the return of some belated boating party. "Then I procured a boat at some distance and took it near my waiting place, and later, with considerable trouble, I placed the trunk in the craft and proceeded about one mile from the shore. There in the dark ness passed beyond the sight of this world into the ever-grasping depths or Lake Michigan all that was mortal of this beautiful Christian girl. "The housekeeping was broken up, and very shortly thereafter Mr. Hatch took Minnie Williams to Milwaukee, where she remained in a private insti tution until later in the summer. The cause that produced her unsound men tal condition had been removed. We kept Nannie's things several weeks, until I could obtain time to dispose of them, when I assorted some of them and gave them to Fietzel, telling him that they were some that Miss Will iams had sent to his children. All the others were burned in the large stove in the third story office. The last I ever saw of Miss Williams was in De troit last fall, and my belief is that she is still alive and well.", BACTERIA IN THE MILK. Three or Four Million Germs Regarded as Moderate in Europe. Washington, Aug. 27. A review of the process of changes in milk is made in a buletin of the agricultural de partment It points out that the amount of bacteria in the milk supply of cities and towns vary greatly. Tests so iar made show that city milk that contains not more that 3.000.000 or 4,000,000 bacteria per cubic centimeter may be regarded as exceptionally gooa ior European cities, and the probability is that the milk supply delivered in America's largest cities is in general superior to that of European cities. The milk of large cities, it is stated, contains more germs than that of small communities, but is probably no more harmful Charges Against a Consul. New York, Aug. 27. Charles T. Ly ons of Brooklyn has presented charges to the state department at Washing ton against United states Consul Wet ter of Madagascar. He claims that Mr. Wetter was not energetic in guard ing the interests of ex-Consul Waller, sentenced to twenty years' imprison ment. He also claims that Mr. Wet ter, from interests purely personal. caused his (Lyons) arrest on the charge 01 violating the United States statutes. John Smallev. killed at Mi.Rain. Mich., was identified as the murderer 01 Letecuve ueorge w. Power. POINTS FOR THE PEOPLE. Government banks can alone secure to us an unfluctuating unit of value, a dollar whose purchasing power will neither appreciate nor depreciate. Wealth Makers. Arguments in favor of the gold standard and our present financial sys tem are pretty sure to come from bank ers. They know on which side their bread is buttered. Star and Kansan. Debt is the greatest curse to hu manity. Abolish debt and there would be no interest Without interest lots of fellows who are taking it easy now would have to go to work. Star and Kansan. To get money for interest is to get it without labor. To get money with out labor is to get what will buy labor without labor. No man ever yet "earned" a cent of interest money. Star and Kansan. Would the cause of Christianity be more rapidly advanced by dropping nine of the ten commandments from their platform and making the fight on the "dominant issue" plank, which ever that might be? Clay Center Dis patch. There is just the same reason for intrinsic value, as a medium of ex change, that there is for a baggage check or a railroad ticket to be made of gold, and the fact that over 94 per cent, of the business transacted is without any cash foundation, except in name, is an evidence of this fact Chicago Express. The proposition that the initiative and referendum be given a prominent place in the platform next year is gain ing in favor, and there are many who believe it should be made a leading feature. It would be difficult for any friend of popular government to main tain an argument against this plan of giving the people actual controL Chi cago Express. If the "bankers of the country are to be supplied with ready printed bank notes at a tax of one per cent, as they have been in the past, and the government is to go out of the business of issuing paper money, how long will it be before they will want to issue the postal money orders and the postage stamps, at a handsome profit, of course, to themselves? And why shouldn't they? Index. Had the voters in 1893 voted for financial reform, as set forth in the Omaha platform, instead of giving their power to the two old parties, "trade, the commonwealth of na tions," would not be stagnant Ex perience is a dear school, but it is said fools learn in no other. It would seem as if the lessons of the past ten years ought to teach the voting masses some thing. Naugatauk Citizen. The gold standard is doing more to correct the land monopoly than all other influences combined. Through its operation all the land will soon be in a few hands. Then the masses will demand land reform, but not sooner. The average intelligent American can't see past the five-cent, equity which he owns. All the equities will soon be gone to the few and will not longer obscure the mental vision of the many. Our Nation's Crisis. On the money question, the peo ple's party will enter the next cam paign as the party whose teaching and contention for monetary reform has gradually led to the awakening of the American people. Its growth has been phenomenal, and it ought, because of its principles, to easily draw into its ranks the disaffected free silver ele ments of the two old parties. Certain ly the division of the monetary reform forces means disaster to them, while their united action would mean their success. Lyndon (Kan.) Herald. The bonds which investors are tum bling over one another to buy at 119 are silver bonds. Don't forget that The Rothschilds offered to charge $18, 000,000 less interest for bonds payable specifically in gold coin. Now the sil ver "coin" bonds are selling at a price which makes them over $15,000,000 bet ter than the price offered for the gold bonds. As soon as the first interest payment on these bonds matures, it should be met in big bright silver dol lars. There was no mistake about the terms of the contract and the Roths childs should beheld to them. Denver News. The Boston nerald speaks of the United States as "a country that had the wisdom and courage to raise its paper money that was at one time worth only 35 cents on the dollar up to the level of gold, and to keep it at that level since 1879." It does take courage, but we question the wisdom of a policy that binds the country to pay 100 cents for every 85 cents worth, of debt which it contracted. That's what the Herald's figures mean, and that's just the size of the situation. Little wonder that the producers who paid the bill are now impoverished. llrockton (Mass.) Diamond. I Errors of Youth.! . env-rroros rprvf sk SUFFERERS FROM Bsnons Mility, YontMnl Indiscretions, Lost Mooi, BE YOUR OWN PHYSICIAN. Mtny men, from tne ffect of youthful imprn- 5 dence, have brought about a tute of weaknew Q that hu reduced the general Titem to much a to 9 Induce almoat every other diteae and the real fj cauae of the troubie ecarcely ever being fiipected, they are doctored for everything but the right one. W During oureitemtva college and hotpital practice A we have dicovend new and concentrated renie- w die. The accon penying prescription il ottered Am aa a CURTAIN and 8VKF.DY ct , hundred! ot cae having been restored to perfect health by it A uw after all other reniedief failed. Perfectly rmre w m ingredient! mutt be used in the preparation of Out 0 prescription . 9 E Ervthmiylc n coca, drachm. V Jerubebin, I drachm. llelonias D'oica, i drachm. Oelsemin, grains. .... A Kit ignatia- smera (alcoholic), I gTelns. w m Kit leptandra, S scruple. A m Glycerine,!), l. Mix. 9 Make 60 pills. Talte 1 pill at 8 p.m.. and another 9 on going to bed. This remedy is adapted to every weAness in eitler sei, and especially In those W cases resulting (h m Imprudence. The recuperative sm powers of this rettorative are astonishing, and its w use continued ir a shurttimechanges the languid, m debilitated, nerveless condition (o one of renewed w a life and vigor. , . A To those who onld prefer to obtain of ni, by A remitting 1, a alrd package containg t rilUs Q carefully eompou. ded, will be sent by mail from our private lah-ntory, or we will furnish 6 pack. 0 ages, which will (tire most cases, for i. UiKtsrt O MfTttaHy tionjMtnt si VP EW ENGLAND MEDICAL INSTITUTE, J J No.7, Tre-i-ont Row.Boston.Maaa 14th Judicial District Call The People's iDdepcadaat lectors of tha 14th JoilM-iavl District of the mate of Nebraska rs brlr requested to elect and sand deletrat from their respective coontlee to meet la the city of McCook, on Saturday Kept ember T. 1SV6, at 2 o' clock p. m.. for the prjrpoee of placing; la nomi nation one candidate for Jada-e of the district court of the 14th Judicial district, and to trans, art soi-b other business as may properly come before the convention. The basis of representa tion will be one delegate at large from each comity and one additional delegate for each one hundred voters or major fraction thereof east at the general election of 1S84 for Hon. H. W. Mo Kadden lor Secretary of State, which gives the following vote by coontlee: Furnae Dandy . Cbaae. Hayes.. Oosper . lied Wlllow.............. Frontier ................. ...9 H itchcock Total S3 Wonld recommend that the delegates present east full vote of their respective eoantles. 1. A. Sheridan. Chairman 14th Judicial District. Three Cent Column. "For Sale," "Wanted,",'ForExchanga."a4 small advertisement for abort time, will bw charged three cents per word for each inser tion. Initials or a Dumber counted as on word. Cash with the order If you want anything, or haveanytht that anybody else "wants," make It known through this column. It will pay, F RANK D. EAGER. Attorney-at-Law, 1084 O Street. SEED CORN " k,,d"- Catalogue 1 DMUEiU VUnii smpls Ires. Bexo eaoTria, Voorbles, 111. o. wilson, tssrBSi Burr's block, Lincoln, Neb" 1 WANTED-.Flre and cyclone agents. Ooo4 pay. J. Y. M. Swlgart, Bec?y, Lincoln, Neb. oT.e WANTKD Gentleman or lady te sell Dome's Aluminum Coffee Economise!-; fit any coffee pott saves one-third the coffee. Arthur L. Doble Co., SU Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. UllDIJUDC THE ACME SUB80ILER at. taches to any plow. Send for circular. A. L. FUNK. Htata Agent, Llnooln, Neb. Doble's Coffee Xeonomlter maxes your coffe' last twice as long. Fits any pot, Free circular Artanr L. Doble ft Co., 311 Wabash Ave., Chicago, ru $750.00 A Year and All Expenses. We want a few more Ueneral Agents, ladles or gentlemen, to travel and appoint agents on onr new publications. Full particnlars given on ap plication. If you apply pleane send references, and state business experience, age and send pho tograph. If you cannot travel, write us for terms to local canvassers. Dept. Rare, 8. 1. BELL k CO., Philadelphia, Pa, Buy "Direct From Factory" Best MIXED Paints. At WHOLESALE PRICKS, Delivered Free. For Honnee. Barns, Roofs, all colors, and SAVE Middlemen's profits. In use 51 years. Endorsed by Orange and Farmers' Alliance. Low prices will surprise you. Write for samples. O. W. INGERSOLL, 253 Plymouth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. A WONDERFUL OFFER. Our grand catalogue, over 860 Illustrations, agent's latest goods and novelties, 1 writing pen, fountain attachment, 1 elegant gentleman's watch chain and charm, guaranteed 20 years. Your name In agent's directory 1 year, all sent forlOcts. Postage 2 cents. EMPIRE NOVELTY CO.. 157 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER! if We want luuo more active agents before July 1st. WewtllKuiirantee$20to$!0perday can be easily made in any locality ; our goods m sell themselves i we furnish a large roll of 1 samples entirely FREE and allow 60 per ceut. commission on all sales. Send to-day for full particulars, or we will send with A same a Valuable sample of our goods in W Solid Silver upon receipt of 10 cents in i sllver or stamps. Established 1 In lfii. Ad- dress, STANDARD SILVERWARE rfui . Rnstnn. Mslrm. V SULPHO-SALINE Bath House and Sanitarium Corner 14th & M Sts., LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. Open at All Hours Day and Night All Forms of Baths. Turkish, Russian, Roman, Electric. With Special attention to the application ot NATURAL SALT WATER BATHS. Several times stronger than eea water. Rheumatism, Kkln, Blood and Nervons Dlg- easas. Liver and Kidney Troubles and Chronla Ailments are treated successfully. ,Sea Bathingg) mv be enjoyed at all seasons In our large SALT SWIMMING POOL, 50x142 feet, 6 to 10 feet deep, heated to uniform temperature of HO degrees. Drs. M. II. & J. O. Everett, Managing Physicians. BEST LINE TO ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO i& r "O books irHEls ill raj iwku kkV ra No. 91. The Fatal Mar rinse. Ky JtlRS M. E. BraUdon. This U a thrilling story. In which a man marries a lovely girl for her wealth, and as it should always he, he came to grief as a reward for his deception. No. 0. Tbe Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow. By Jerome K. Jerome. Mr. Jerome Is known an the "Knclitsh Mark Twain." He Is a writer of the finest sort of fun, which is sure to be highly enjoyed by all who will read this book. It Is considered his best. No. 90. On Her Weddingr Morn. By Bertha M. Clay, author of "Her Only Sin," "A Golden Heart," and other stories. This Is a companion novel to "Her Only Sin," and will be read with the same intensity of feeling, with mingled joy and sadness nVtlm characters in the book have cause for tears or laughter. It is a love story that must appeal to every reader. No. 89. Her Only Sin. By Bertha M.Clay. No. 58. Merry Men. By K. L. Stevenson. A. thrilling account of the perilous adven tures of a party seeking for a sunken .Span ish treasure-ship . No. 61. Br.Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. By R. L. Stevenson. . No. 101. The Chimes. By Charles Dickens. No. 91. A Christmas Carol. By Dickens. No. 98. The Haunted Man. By Dickens. No. 97. Two Ghost Stories. By Dickens. No. 95. The ISattle of I.lfo. By Dickens. No. 98. Three Christmas Stories. By Dickens. No. 100. Cricket on the Hearth. By Dickens. A FREE GIFT. Everyone subscribing or renewing their subscription to this paper within th next THIRTY DAYS will receive five books selected from the above list, also a year's subscription to the Ladies' Home Companion, a paper for women, by women and its departments are edited with rare skill and attractiveness by women whose names are familiar in every household. The quality of illustrations, merit of its fiction, practicability of the articles on housekeeping, care of children, hint on inexpensive and tasteful home adornment and fashion changes, have given this standard home journal the enormous circulation of 140,000 copies each issue. It is published twice a month, each issue containing 20 to 28 large pages, at $1 per year. JUST THINK OF IT. The price of The Wealth Makers is $1.0O per year; the price of the Ladies' Home Companion is $1.00 per year. One Dollar and Twenty-fire) Cents sent to us now will extend your subscription to The Wealth Makers one year, pay for a year's subscription to tbe Ladies' Home Companion, and besides you will receive, postpaid, any five which you may select, of the books men tioned above. If your subscription is already paid up to this paper, get one new subscriber for it at the regular price of $1.00 per year, put in 25 cents extra, and f et the books and the Ladies' Home Companion for yourself. The Vealth Makers must bold everyone of its present subscribers, and wants to get 25,000 new ones this year. We must sweep the state in '96. Will you help us? Don't think of stopping your subscription; if you must sacrifice in some way, sacrU flee in some other way. Help us to increase the circulation of The Wealth Makers to 50,000 and victory for '96 is assured. Renew your subssription I Get new subscribers I Renew your subscription ! Get new subscribers! Address, Wealth Makers Pub. Co., J. S.HYATT, Bus. Mgr. OUR GLcUBBING LIST- The Wealth Makers alth Makers ) AND I s' Tribune ) $1.55 per year. $1.25 per year. $1.50 per year. $1.55 per year. $1.30 per year. $1.55 per year. $1.55 per year. Farmers' The Wealth Makers The Missouri World The Wealth Makers AND y VOX PopUli (monthly) ) The Wealth Makers The Nonconformist The Wealth Makers 4 Nil The Prairie Farmer The Wealth Makers AND Topeka Advocate The Wealth Makers AND Southern Mercury We will send you Thb Wealth Makers and any other weekly paper that you want, the price of which is fl.OO per year for $1.55. Old sub scribers may take advantage of these offers as well as new subscibers. We want every one of our readers to canvas for us. Send us &t least one new subscriber, if it is only for a three month's trial, for 25c We will give 20 per cent commission to agents who will work for us. How many of our readers love The Wealth Makers enough to work for it, to in crease its circulation and consequently its usefulness? If you will send us onf onenew sub scriber our list will be doubled next week. Individual work is the kind that gives results. Send us two new subscriptions with $2.00 and we will extend your subscription one year freel . Faithfully yours, Wealth Makers Pub. Co., Llnooln, Heb. 411 dranrlflta sell Dr. Miles' Nerve Pinter Below wo give a list of twenty-five good and useful books, suited to every member of the family. Man j are by famous authors, known wherever the English language is spoken. Among them are the following 'DICKENS, DRUMM0ND, JEROME, IIARRADEN, BRADD0N, KIPLING, STEVENSON, And others almost as well known. Each number is t complete book, and each is bound in a separate covel with beautiful design like that shown in the illustra tion above. . No. 5. The Courting of Dinah Shadd. By Hudyaiti Kipling, who is thought by many to be the greatest living story-writer, No. ft). A Iiirsl of Passage. By Beatrice Harraden, author of "(Ships that Pass in the Niijl'.t." The book which has had such a phef nomenal sale (luring the past year. This is I charming story, told in beautiful language, No. 61. The Greatest Thins; in the World. By Henry Drumrnond. This book is on love as taught by Christ and the dis ciples; and if any one doubts that love is the greatest tiling in the world, and if they wan! to be nindn stronger in their love for all t i'ings, they must get this book, by all means, No. G3. Changed Life. By Drumrnond. No. 2. I'eaee be With Von. By Drum, mond. These two books are fully equal to "The Greatest Thing in the World," by the same iiuthor, ench treating of a different phase of Christian life. You will feel purer and better after having read them. No. 5fi. Courtfihip of Widow Bedott and Mr. Crane, by Francis M. Whitcher. No. 57. How Widow liedott Popped the Question. By Francis M. Whitcher. No. 70. Ciood Manners. By Mrs. M. W. Baines. A manual of etiquette. No. 88. Love on a I.ogr. By Hosea Ballou. No. i2. trated. No. 06. No. 7S. Old Mother Hubbard. Illus, O u td oor Sports. Illustrated. Indoor Games. Illustrated. ' Lincoln, Neb. iWcrld's Fair Highest Hwsrds inmiininnniiiiHiiiiuiiHiiii iticutiiaiiu wipiuma on our INCUBATOR and ! . BROODhR Combined. IV Old Reliable" hKSC If you ar intorttttd in Foultrr. ft will) S pt too te aend 4 cents in ft Amps for our S 73 paip catalrxriM, firing vMuabto points 5 on Poultry Culturs. Address r DO YOU WANT IT? Salesmen Wanted In every county, salary or commission. No experience. New Tarttt Bill (rlres n nil ml ted profits, active men ap ply quickly stating; salary and terrltorv wanted. Manufacturers, f. O. Box 8308, juiluu, jnass. ASTHMA BMITHNIGHT'S ftND HAY FEVER REMEDY. Sold under positive guaranty. Samples free. ::::::::::::: L. SMITIIXIGIIT, Cleveland, Ohio. HOMES IN THE SUNNY SOUTH. No hot winds, blizzards, nor Crop failures. Na tural Clover, Timothy and Blue Grass. Fael cheap. Coal $1 per ton at bank. Dry wood f l.M ?er cord dellvured. All kinds of fruit that, grow n this latitude. Ton will find all these advan tages In the country adjacent Calhoun, Henry county, Mo., 12 miles from Clinton, the county seat; population 8,000. Located on the M. K. 4 T. K. It. 70 miles southeast Kansas City. W have a list of good farms for dale at from $10 to t.'IO per acre. Corn yields from 80 to 60 per acre. Flax from 8 to 18 per acre and other crops Is proportion. We will cheerfully give and Informa tion required. Call on or address, UAKTHOLEMEW & ALBION, Beat Estate Agents, Calhoun, Mo. HOMES BY THE SEA- W protected by Beau- tiful Islands. Game. Oysters and Fish In abun dance. Lemons, OranKes. f'ineapples, and all sub-tropical Fruits and Flowers are grown to perfection. Climate delightful, summer and winter. Land fertile, high and dry. A nook In 7 ODiriA comparatively unknown, that will Ur offers tosettlersandtowlnter Tlsltori advantages not lound elsewhere. Seekers after health, pleasure or profit should read our booklet, sent free, by THE LE.HO.N BAY LAND CO., Grove City, Fla. "reform books We have the following books for sale. You ought to have them: Ths Railroad Problem .............. f m Money Found .25 Jason Edwttrds..................,..... 4 ,(q Richard's Crown . (to Hill's Political History............ 26c, 75c, L00 Beneath the Dome 60 Ten Men ol Money Island " .10 Seven Financial Conspiracies io All these are excellent reform books and should be read by everyone. Ad dress all orders to this paper.