Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1896)
THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT February C, 1896 THE PIGTAILS AND JAPS Having More Brains Than tbo Gold Baga They are About to Down Us Tbe American Economist says: "Japan ia the only country in the world that has bought more raw cotton from u, since the uw crop year began, than in 18i)4. A year aro, in three months to November 30, Japan took only 810 bales, or 464,411 pounds of our cotton. This season Japau has taken 5,800 bales or 3,006,891 pounds, an in crease of 5,000 bales. While the larger quantity is not alarming as yet, it is mighty significant to our cotton manu facturers, who may feel the effects of thia cheap labor competition u little sooner than they anticipated." Hon. Geo. A. Maltz, of Detroit, says: "Few people are aware to what extent the Japanese are becoming our competi tors in the manufacture ol certain lines of roods, and if somethingis not done to counteract it, there will ere long go up a big wail from our people. "Not long ago a friend of mine in New York was waited on by the representa tives of a Japanese firm and shown sam ples of buttons made over there. The price asked was so low that my friend supposed there was some mistake, but he was convinced to the contrary, and gave an order of $ 9,000. This is but one in stance. In the matter of making matches they can send every concern that pro duces them in the United States into bankruptcy. Of course the reason lies in the difference of wages. Fifty cents a week will pay for labor in Japan, and we cannot compete against that." In the Home Market Bulletin, which is spending its days and nights talking about the beauty of the home market and high tariff we have almost exactly the same uews item. The article reads: "In 1893 Japan took American raw cotton to the value of 1,273,521 yen and in 1894 to the value of 2,680,671 yen. The yen is worth 99 cents and 7 mills in gold. A business which more than doubless in one year may be saidto be good. "But of course this means that we shall sell Japan little or no cotton yarn or cloth hereafter, and if Japanese cot tons do not deluge our home market within five years it will be because our tariff is raised to keep them out." A tariff that will stop theimportation of Japanese goods must at least equal t, A. tt. v, .ii a.. iuq uiuni uu;; 111 UUUII Ul Hi j bun wui utt the difference in the priceof silver bullion and gold bullion at the ratio of 16 to 1. Do these writers suppose that they can pass or enforce a tariff of 100 percent? Ed. Independent. 1 The London Times says: 'The results already achieved are un doubtedly calculated to strike the im agination at first sight with astonish ment and alarm. The most conspicuous of theso resnlts are those connected with the cotton industry. "In 1885 Japan imported only S800.- 000 worth of raw cotton; in 1894 she imported $19,500,000 worth, or more than four and twenty times as much. At t.hft hpoMiinino nf 1 NNft thora nra nine O 1-) v. - - ...... w ' ....... teen spinning mills, with about 50,000 2 11 a.. 1 J a pinuies, m iiapan, ana at me ena oi t9d there were forty-six, with about 500,000 spindles. The result was of fourse inevitable. This is not populist talk. All the Above are eold bug writers. However they are only now recording just what the populists said three years ago would mppen. This influx of Japan goods can 10 more bestopped with tariffs than you :an dam the Mississippi with straws, md there is not an economist living who loesnot say so. Editor Independent. That Great Wave of Prosperity Under the above heading the Inde pendent will contain a short article each week and will give such items of news as vill show how the great world of pros lerity is progressing. The gold bug pa ters have been telling the people for the ost two years that there is such a wave broad in thelaud. One of the best testa is to prosperity or adversity in a coun ty is the number of failures in business. f hat being the case we publish the busi- ess failures in the United States and anada for the week preceding the one i which each paper is issued. We will !so eive the total number of failures for hat portion of the year that has passed uu mtitifvuujijai ibuuo niiu iuiiiici jcais. . G. Dunn s report for last week was as Allows: Failures in three weeks of January now liabilities si f.BdD.oii, against 10,875,060 last year; in manufacturing S.661,129 this year against $2,479,193 Vstyear; in trading $10,317,360 against 3,165,267 last year, h allures this weeK ive been 404 in the United States gainst 354 last year, and 70 in Canada rainst 54 last year." This report shows fifty more failures r last week than for the same week last mn f ho fniliirpu fnr t.hn Iab three Ceks in this country are 1182 and Can- la 210. If this rate should keep up for e year the total for 1896 would be 1,280 as against 13,179 for 1895. iese figures would show an increase of ore than 6,000 for the year. There iblicans will tell you that the Wilson riff bill is to blame. If the Wilson bill d anything to do with it why should nada have more than thirty per cent an increase of failures; 1 hey do not I von that in Japan and all silver using untries the number of failures have 'ofttlv decreased, while lu all single hndard countries thefailureshavemore an doubled in the last ten years. The !y explanation that can be made is ,t this country has not near enough Siey to transact the business with. I Come to Time Jobnny. L very large silver league meeting was d at Custer City, Jan. 25. They ro ved: hiat it is the sense of this meeting and Is our desire and our wish that our Ilators and representatives in congress kit be petitioned to so vote on the Wndment to the "bond bill," now bo 's congress, thatsilver may be restored .tS place as standard money at its time ratio of sixteen to one. v , Ve wish to emolov one or two W solictors in each county ln a state to secure suDscnoers 1 advertisements for this paper, lite for terms. WHAT IS VALUE AND PKICE Soma "Sound" Sense Applied to These Economic Terms. It is with great pleasure we print the following article from the pen of John Jeffcoat, of Omaha. This is the doctrine as taught by all the great economists of this country and of the whole world. Tbe only criticism that can be made is that Mr. Jeffcout uses the old term "use value" or "value in use." AH the later economists drop those terms and employ in their stead the word "utility," which is more definite. "Value" is one thing and "utility" is an entirely different thing. Sometimes the things of the greatest utility have no value, like the air, and sometimes things of no, or very little utility have very great value, like the celebrated I'euch Blow vase. Mr. Jeffcoat says : Everthing of service or use to man has two forms or kinds of value. First its value in use or consumption; second, its value in exchange. The hrst is an in herent quality in the thiug itself a qual ity not dependent upon either number, quantity, relation, or amount of labor in its production, ilio second only and always expresses a relative relation as to number and quantity of other things desired and withheld by other persons. It expresses the degree of the desire or necessity for a thing and the power of others to withhold it the degree of monopoly. A thing that cunnot be lim ited or withheld by others has no ex change or commercial value. To illustrate, a loaf of bread, a bat, a coat, will feed or clothe a pttrson serve in its consumption or utility value just as completely, whether there is but a single loaf of bread, or hat, or coat in all the world, or whether there is a mil lion of each for every inhabitant of the earth; tbe inherent value in consump tion and use will be the sume. Nor can this value be added to or diminished by the labor cost of - production. Whether the lubor cost of a loaf of bread be one minute, one hour, a day, or a year, its value or power to sustain life will be just the same no more, no less. Neither will the money price paid for it, whether one cent, one dime, one dollar, or a thousand dollars, increuseordiminish this inherent or consumptive value one iota. lo illustrate the difference between the use-value of a thing aud its value in ex change and what exchange value grows out of. What is the most intrinsically useful or valuable thing in the world to muu? Air. Why ? Because no person can live but a few minutes if deprived ol it. Air has no exchunge or commercial value. Why? Because it cannot be lim ited or withheld by others. But let there be a number of persons placed in a cave or air.tight room, as the Black Hole ol Calcutta, with only a small hole for the admission ol air, and very soon, ns some begin to smother, will the commercial value of a breath of this precious air a position at this opening arise. And, as the dnnger and certainty of smother ing increases, there would be no limit to the commercial value of a position at this opening. All earthly goods, all earthly prospects, would be offered; everything would be sacrificed, all virtue, all honor, all rights, as the strongest and most brutal savagely struggle for a last breath to be had only at this opening. This is the principle out of which all commercial value grows. The term price expresses the relative relation of the volume of money or money units to all other things in ex chunge; its value and power being gov erned by the same law of supply and de- m and as illustrated in the case of commodities. The relation of money to commodities is precisely the same as the rotation of the denominator of a fraction to the numerator; as to multiply the nu merator is in effect the same as to divide the denominator, and vice versa. So, to increase the volume of money, commodi ties remaining the same, prices will rise, or to contract the volume of money, prices will fall. The same or opposite ef fect is produced if the volume of com modities is disturbed relatively. It is entirely erroueous,misleading,and unscientific to speak of different stan dards of value, as a gold standard, a silver standard, or a paper standard. The supreme court long ago in the legal tender cases declared that the law knew no such standards, but only legal money. There is never but one standard or de nominator of prices the relative rela tion of the money volume as a whole to all other things in exchange. It will just as certainly disturb the standard of prices to contract or inflate one sort of money as another. John Jeffcoat. He Did Say So Often. Chairman Taubeneck of the people's party national committee, said in an in terview at St. Louis : "So far as the report is concerned to the effect that I have advocated a union of all the reform forces in the nation ou a free silver platform, I want to de nounce here and now as absolutely and ridiculously false. I have done no such thing, nor had I even contemplated it. Of course we will make the currency question the main issue in our platform, but that by no means indicates that we are going to merge our party into any other. We are still in the middle of the road and are going to stay there." Now, Mr. Taubeneck, you are talking at the top of your voice with your hat off. Why didn't you say it out plain like that long ago? Shake. Arkansaw Kicker. He has, a thousand times, and has never said anything else, notwithstand ing the lies that have been printed about him. Ed. Independent. Our aim from now until February, 1st shall be not to make but to get money. We will therefore sell Suits & Coats at uu nrecedented low prices. Agriculturalists visiting Lincoln the coming week will, we believe, save money Dy trading wan us. Paine, Warfel & Bumstead. Now is the time so subscribe, lo say that the opportunity will never return again would be to predict the impro bable, but there is no time like the pre sent and no better use to which a dollar oan be put. This paper and the Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union, the official organ of tbe Farmers' Alliance, both for one year for $1.10. BMdachatwdf OetDr.lUlM'Psia PlOai NOW THE TIME TO UNITE One Who Helped to Organize the Ile pnblican Party Now Wants to Bring all Forces Together. ' Lincoln, Feb. 4, 1894. Editor Independent: We have been told over and over again by the gold bugs and high tariff Mountebanks, that the silver craze was dying out, confidence was being restored and trade beginning to revive, while all the time the silver sentiment has been gaining ground and other things have been growing worse and worse. Whenever a senator or con gressman denounces tbe follies and crimes of the old party leaders be is denounced as a demagogue, offscouring renegade, but when one cukoos to the White House or Wall street he is a patriot with wings just ready to fly. When Cleve land's policy is attacked the republicans feel just as much hurt as when McKinley ism, Quay ism or Plattism is shown up. All this goes to show that the gold bugs are all ready to go together and make a common fight if necessary just as the sil ver gray whigs and hunker democrats did in 1856 to elect Buchanan. If the reform forces at St. Louis, next July unite on the right man, as there publicans did on Fremont, we will hear the old party dry bones rattle, not into life, but into the bone yard as fertilizers. The pops must not demand their man harnessed to their organization; tliesil verites and prohibs must not claim their right to rule, but all must unite in cool, common sense to do the best thing for our oppressed country. Our next presidential campaign is bound to be the east against the south and west, just as it was in 1856, south against the north. We will give tbem Ohio. The solid south must unite with the solid silver states, leaving Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, and perhaps Iowa the battle ground. Ir 1840 I was a boy whig, in '48 an ab olitionist, in '52 a free soiler and in '56 helped to organize the republican party. Today there is need of another just such a job and I am ready to help do it. We have just as good timber ns then. The pops correspond to the freesoilers then, the prohibs to the abolitionists, the sil ver democrats to the barn burner demo crats and the silver republicans to the wooley head whigs. The new party is bound to go together. II. W. Haudy. THE OLD PARTIES DIFFER Bat Only as to the Details of the way Robbing Shall be Done Both old partie favor the great wrong of issuing interest-boaring bonds in time of peace; they differ simply as to the de tails of committing the wroug. Both sides unite in refusing to do the right; they differ simply as to the most plaus ible method of doing wrong. One party would stab you in the back; the other criticises that method of stabbing you and insists that you should be stabbed under the fifth rib. Both would stab. you, both would murder you. They quibble, however, about the method of committing the murder; that is all. The senator from Ohio believes in hanging, the senator from New York believes in electrocution. The difference between tweedledee and tweedledum if one side has its way, bonds will be issued in twee dledee fashion; if the other side has its way, bouds will be issued in tweedledum fashion. They are both in favor of bonds, more bonds! More bonds! They are both for piling up the debt of the nation to be paid by future generations; they are both for contracting the cur rency to curse the present generation. The policy of either party means tailing priceB, stagnation of business and the paralysis of every productive industry. Senator Marion Butler. Associated Press Liars. The golditieg are very much disturbed because the silver party has resolved to act independently of the two old parties. They are employing their usual tactics to deceive the people. For example: The Associated Press, which belongs to Wall street says that the silver party is only provisional and is waiting to see if one of the old parties will not declare for silver. This is absolutely false. The conference that met in Washington, D. C, on the 22d of January, knew as the people of the United States are beginning to learn, that both of the old parties are owned by the Rothschild combination. They will undoubtedly increase the vol ume of their lies to make the people be lieve they are friendly to the money of the Constitution, but twenty years of lying on that subject has increased the difficulty of making the people believe their lies this year. Silver Knight. Is Be the Same Man. A large number of republicans seem to be highly indignant because Willie An drews is voting for gold bonds, down at Washington, in order to help a demo cratic administration to build up a treas ury surplus instead of trying to do something to give the people of Nebraska a surplus. They should not complain; he is doing the will of his masters. Willie will soon evolve into a first-class dude- worshiper of the golden calf. Clay Co. Patriot. Is this the same Willie Andrews that was so hot for free silver before the elec tion? Editor Independdnt. Some Pop Law. The newly elected populist judge from the Kearney district made a little law of his own the other day that ought to be placed upon every statute book in the land. A divorce suit was being tried, the plaintiff of which was the woman. Among other items of evidencesubmitted by her was the proof that the husband had struck her with his flst. The judge in rendering a decision said that that fact alone was sufficient ground for a decree and he so ordered. This seems to, us to be right. Judge Green is a popu list. The Monitor. This paper and the Iowa Searchlight, published at Council Bluffs, la., both for one year for $1.40. The Annex restaurant is as good as any in the city. Give tbem a trial. 75 cents will buy $1.00 worth of Shoes at The Foot Form Store, 1213 0 Street, Dr. Miles' Nerve Plartmlto Bdrafftati. A MAN CAN'T W0JIK WHEN HE 18 SUTFEBING WITH PILES. Ha Can't Eat, Can't Sleep, Can't Get Com fort Any Way But One Pyramid Pile Cars Will Cnre Him. Give Belief at Once Sever Known to Pall. Just a little pain may so distract a man's mind that it will cost him hun dreds of dollars. Life is a battle. To succeed ode needs all bis energies aud all his brain force to apply to the question at hand. Even a corn will make him ir ritable, cross, angry and an angry man seldom succeeds. The trilling pain of a corn is a pleasant feeling beside tbe agon izing ache of piles. 1 hat is a pain which seems to pervade the whole body. It communicates itself to all the parts near the seat of the trouble and brings on a heavy, dragging feeling in the perineum. Those who have never so suffered do not know what it means. It racks the nerves, prevents sleep, prevents concentrated thought aud makes a man lose flesh as fast as he would with a virulent fever. And yet piles are looked upon as a lit tle thiug. They are neglected allowed to ran on from month to month and year to year. By and by comes a danger ous surgical operation. Maybe it cures may be it kills. There is only one sure, safe and quick cure for piles. It is the Pyramid Pile Cure. It is a recent discovery and its properties are such that it cleanses, soothes and heals the inflamed purts, re duces the iuflamatioa at once and with continued treatment, removes all swell ing and all trace of the diseuse. It puts the membranes in a healthy, active con dition and cures completely and perman ently. From C. F. Collins, Garnett: I com menced using the Pyramid Pile Cure and my case was so bad I thought the reme dy was going to fail in my case, but be fore I had used two-thirds of one pack age I began to feel much better and can honestly say I am entirely cured. It is the quickest and surest remedy I have ever tried or heard of. From Josiah Roberts, Port Oram, N. J.: Just one-quarterof a package of the Pyramid Pile Cure did wonders for me and I have lost no opportunity of recom mending such a great remedy. From Wm. Mcllale, Rockport, Mass.: One package of Pyramid Pile Cure has helped more than anything I have yet used. Pyramid Pile Cure is sold by druggists generally. If your's doesn't keep it, he will get it for you if you ask him. Book on cause and cure of piles sent free. Ad dress, Pyramid Drug Co., Albion, Mich. It Win Taken Already. Kodakflend Say. Biggs, I would like to come up and take your house. It would make a charming picture. Biggs You are a little late in ask ing or you might. Kodakflend What has some one else taken it?" Biggs Yes the sheriff. This paper and The Sliver Knightr both for one year for $1,15 in advance. Stenography in Franee. Stenography was first used in the French parliament about the year 1830, and one of the few official sten ographers of that period still surviv ing is M. Lagache, who is now a senator of France. A Krlend in Need. Man in Water, drowning Throw me (puff, puff) a life-preserver, quick! Ik, Tapley, a clerk, on shore Er er what is your waist measurement; pleaseP Puck. While you are not busy, suppose yon get up a club of subscribers for this paper. Send us three yearly subscribers with $3 and we will send you this paper free for one year. BANE & ALTSCHTJLER, Attorneys-at-Law, 1101 0 Street. Earnest Kurth, will take notice that on the 29th day of January, lxw;, Hiram lially, plaintiff here in, filed hie petition in the district court of Lan caster county, agtlnst Kate Hall and George E Hall, her husband, and J. W. Hitchcock, three of the defendants in said action "and said W. H. Kurth, Is Impleaded as one of the defendants In said action," the ol.Ject and prayer of which are to foreclose a certain mortgage (riven by the de fendants, Kate Hall and George E. Hall her hus band to H. M. Lenvltt. and assigned to this plaintiff upon lots number ten (10) and eleven (11), in block number sixteen (16), In Junction Place addition to the city of Lincoln, Lancaster county, Nebraska, as shown by tbe plat now on record In said county, to secure the payment of one certain promissory note dated March 14th, 1KD0, for tbe sum of S800.00, and due and payable in five (5) years from the date thereof; that there is now due upon said note and mortgagctheeum of S1080.00, for which sum with interest from this date plaintiff prays for a degree that defendants be required to pay the same or thatsaid premises may be sold to satisfy the amount found due. You are required to answer said petition on or before the 9th day of March, 1(H. Dated this 29th day of January, 1896. , H1KAM bailey. By Bake 1 Altschuleb, his Attorneys. 84 tu Notice of Incorporation. Notice is hereby Riven that the undersigned have formed themselves Into a corporation nnder tie laws of the state of Nebraska, and on the first day of February, 1X96, filed their articles of incorporation In the office of the county clerk of Lancaster county, Nebraska, under the name and title of "Fltigerald Dry Goods Company," Said articles of Incorporation provide as follows: First The name or said corporation snail be "Fltigerald Dry Ooods Company." Second Tbe principal place ol transacting busi ness shall be Lincoln, Lancaster county, Ne braska. Third The general nature of the business to be transacted shall he to buy and sell dry goods, notions, and such other goods, wares, and mer chandise as are usually kept for sale In dry goods stores, and to take, purchase and hold personal property ol every description, and to bold, con trol. and convey the same. Fourth The amount of capital stock author lied Is 10,000 00, divided Into shares of l,0ou 00 each; all of which shall be fully paid in at the time of commencement ol business ami us non assessable. Fifth This corporation shall commence busi ness February I, 1896, and shall terminate Its ex istence in fifty IDV) years from said date. Sixth Tbe highest amountof Indebtedness to which this corporation can at any time subject Itself Is two-thirds () of tbe paid np capital. Seventh The coutrol of this corporation shall be vested in a board of directors, consisting of three (3) persons, who shall be stockholders, from whom shall be choseu a president, vice-preaiueiir, and secretary -tree surer. And said board of dl rectors shall appoint such other officers and em' ployeee as they may deem proper to properly transact me Dusmessoi uu corporation. Psted February 1. 1896. WM. P. FITZGER ALP, JAMES, F. McCOUUTNEY. ISU ETHELBEKT P. LAMPK1X. Go to 117 So. 10th St. for R. R. and 6 teamship tickets. TAKE NOTICE! Book and Job Printing In all its branches. County Printing Lithographing . . Book Binding Engraving Of all kinds. Blank Books In every style. Legal Blanks Stereotyping From superior Printers' Rollers Made by an material. Country Printers The Independent Pub. Co., Lincoln, Neb. FIVE FACTS. Great Rock Island Route ! Cheap Outing Excursions. First For the National Educational Meeting at Denver, opening July 6th, tbe rats will be one tare plus I2.U0 for round trip Tickets good to return and time up to ana including sept. 1st. Second Tbe regular Tourist Car to California via Kansas City runs once a week, and leaves Chicago every Thursday at 6 p.m., Kansas City at 10.50 a.m. every Friday. Tickets based on second class rate, and car runs on fastest trains, and known as the I'bllllps-Kock Island Tourist Excursions. Car arrives at Colorado i-pnngs Saturday, 7:S5 a.m. Third Home-Seeker s .Excursions to Texas and New Mexico. Next one June 11th. Kate, one lare for round trip. Tickets Rood twenty dnys. i'ourth For Mexico City the Kock island runs a through sleeper from Kansas City daily at 8:40 p.m. via Topeka, McFarlaud, Wichita tind Fort Worth and Austin to San Antonio. Two routes from there are International It. K. to Laredo, and Mexican National to the City of Mexico; southern Pacific and Mexican Interna tional via Spofford and Eagle Pass to City of Mexico. Connections are also made at Fort Worth via the Texas Pacific to El Paso, and over tbe Mexi can Central to City of Mexico. itih Send to address below lor a Souvenir called the "Tourist Teacher," that gives much Information to tourists. Sent free. JOHN SEBASTAIN, G. J. A., Chicago. In the District Court of Lancaster County, Nebraska. Wm. S. Joyce, 1 Plaintiff, Kent K. Hayden. et al, W. C. B. Blddle, bis Srst name un Non-Resident Defendants, known, and Biddle, his wife, her first name unknown. Defendants, Wm. C. B. Blddle, his first name unknown, Biddle, his wife, her Srst name unknown, de fendants, will take notice that on December 27th, lsi)5, wm. b. Joyce, plaintin herein, died bis peti tion in the district court of Lancaster county, Nebraska, against Kent K. Hayden, Minnie K. Hayden, and you the said W. C. B. Biddie, whose first name Is unknown, and Biddle, his wife, whoBe first name is unknown, defendants. The object and prayer of which are to foreclose certain mortgage executed by tbe defendants. Kent K, Hayden and Minnie E. Hayden, his wife. to tbe plaintiff upon lot live (a) In iteming s sub division of the north halt of the northeast quar ter of section number twenty-nine C-'9(, township ten (10 1, range seven (7 east of tbe tun P. M., situated in Lancaster county, Nebraska, to se cure the paymant of one promissory note dated April 17th, lhSS), for tbe sum of f 1,300 due and payable on the 1st day of April, A.D. 1892, with eight per cent interest thereon payable semi-an nually. That there is now due and payable upon said note and mortgage ihe sum of $1,300.00 with eight per cent interest thereon from April 1st, istta. (or wuicn sum witn interest from April 1st, 1805, at tbe rate of eight per cent plaintiff prays decree tnnt defendants be required to pay trie same, or that said premises may be sold to satisfy the amount found due, and fora deficiency Judgment. xiiu are required to answer said petition on or before the 2d day of March, 1896. Dated January 20, 1896. WM. LEESE. Attorney for plaintiff. In tbe District Court of Lancaster County, Nebraska. J. M. Watson, Plaintiff, vs. George W. Boyer, Mary Ann Crowe.Martin Crowe Carlos C. Burr, and A. Baiter, Defendants. Notice of Foreclosure on Non-Residents. A. Halter, defendant, will take notice that on the 27th day of December, A. D. 1895, J. M. Wat son, plaintiff herein. Bled his petition in the dis trict court of Lancaster county, Nebraska, against said defendants, the object and prayer of which are to foreclose a certain mortgage exe cuted by the defendants George V. Boyer and Mary J. Boyer, bis wife, to the Ballon State Banking Company, upon lots A, B, C, D, E, and '. in O. W. itoyer's subdivision of lots 22, 23, 24, and 26. in block one (1) of Boyer Dawes' sub division of the northeast quarter of section tweuty-seven (27), township ten (10), range six (A), east of the 6thp. m., situated in Lancaster county, Nebraska. To secure the payment of one promissory note dated August 21, 1M3. for the sum of l,2uO, due and payable on the first day of August, 1Mi3. That there is now due and payable upon said note and mortgage 11,200.00 and ten per cent Interest thereon from May 1st, 18it4. Thatsaid mortgage was duly assigned to plaintiff for a valuable consideration on September7,lS88, by the payee. Plaintiff alleges that you have some in terest In said premises by reuson of a judgment In the District Court of Lancaster county you hold against some of the defendants, which plaintiff alleges is subject and inferior to bis mortgage Hen. Plaintiff pray for a decree that he has a prior lein on said premises, that the defendants be required to pay him tbe amount due on said note and mortgage, or that said mortgaged premises may be sold to satisfy the sume. Yon art required to answer said petition on or before Monday, March 2d, 1806. Dated January 20, 186. WM. LEESE, ttorney tor plaintiff. and Supplies . . From the simplest style to the most elaborate. The Red Line Series, the handsomest Blank in th country, printed on Bond Paper at less expense than other houses furnish them on ordinary flat paper. hard metal. expert from the best and most durable Having county or other work, which they cannot themselves handle, would make money by writing ns for terms. IWorlds Fair. .ighesi Awards Medal and Diploma on our INCUBATOR and BR00DLR Combined. "Old Reliable" tLM If you are interested in Poultry, H wil! d tou to lend 4 cents In stmpi for our T2 cstalocu, giTing vlutblt pointa on Poultr Culture. Address Reliable I rtc u l?,a,ti),l',f,Mp''QOCieir .P"!",',!!,,? Ooble's Aluminum CoflfeEeonomuei FITS AMY COFFEE POT Pre) Trial No Egg needed to settle. Keep the pot I svm Clean lusiae. jeywruraor , blackens. We guarantee our 73 Eeonomiser to make better,' The Coffee stronger and richer coffee. Price with 1-3 less. w allow Port R(1a fy.S JPy."1 t actorv can be returned and we will refund the money. ARTHUR L. DOBIE ft CO. 311 Wsbash Av..0kiMa. UL CAVEATS. TRADE MARKS. DESICN PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, etc.! For Information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO.. 861 Broadway, Nhw York. Oldest bureau for securing patents in America. Every patent taken out by us is broucht before the publio by a notice given free of charge In tha jFwttf ifif 'wiCM Largest circulation of anv scientific paper !n ths world. Splendidly illustrated. No iutellijrent man should be without it, Weeklv, .1.00 a year; $1.50 six months. Address, MONV ft CO Publishers, 361 Broadway, New York City. I REFORMJOOKS r Invention and Injustice Ingersoll ioc Storv of the Gold Conspiracy Del Mar ioc J People's Party Shot and Shell Bland ioc I Illustrated First Reader in Social Eco- J nomics... ioc Money Found Hill Banking System.. 25c f The Rights of Labor Joslyn 25c I" The Pullman Strike Carwardine 21c A Story from Pullmantown illustrated 25c J T How to Govern Chicago Tuttle 25c j Jl . Silver Campaign Book Tuttle 25c , A Breed of Barren Metal Bennett.... 25c I 9 Sbylock's Daughter Bates 25c S I Send us 50 cents and we will mail you a j f full sample set of all these books, 1216 y L pages, amounting to S2.40 at regular prices. L S No reduction from this combination rate, 5 I but as many sets as you wish at this figure, 1 l Charles H. Kerr & Co., Publishers 56 Fifth Avenue, Chicago " SULPHO-SALINE Bath House and Sanitarium Corner 14th 4 U 8U., LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. Open at All Hours Day and Night All Forms of Baths. Turkish, Russian, Roman, Electric. With Special attention to the application of NATURAL SALT WATER BATHS. Several times stronger than set. water. Rheumatism, Hkln, Blood and Nervous DIs asas. Liver and Kidney Trouble and Chronlo Ulment are treated successfully. Sea Bathing ay t enjoyed at all seasons In onr large SALT I WIMM1NO POOL. 50x142 feet. 5 to 10 feet deep seated to uniform temperature of 80 degrees. Drs. M. H. & J. O. Everett, Managing Physician. 'AHCV PILLHT GUARD:- Wit.saa Bsvoiria crZjf . I n m IB TRADE MARKS. Wtia I la auU -Us-