July 1 6, 1896. THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. u -r M . . PLUTQCRAGTMS UNITED. Every Gold Bug Regardless of Party Ties Will Vote for McKinley. He I the Leader of Ue Cohort of Oppres sion. Wmxfrkd, Neb., July 3, 1896. Editor Independent: Financial re tnrm U imoossible without the electing a nraaiilpnt lit ftCCOfd With ideas. We cannot hope to obtain inritioa eaual to two-thirds in houses of congress in reform ma-both favor of financial reform. It is absolutely certain rnai any measure enacted by congress em bracing free coinage of silver or any other measure proposed by the popu lists on the subject of finance would be met with a presidential veto by V ill.am McKinley if elected. Mckinley stands for plutocracy and he is backed by all the power of the republican party. There is absolutely no hope under Mc Kinley administration. His party promises nothing, but on the contrary resolves to stand by the existing gold standard system. . Plutocracy is the guiding force of the republican party and it will unqiiestion ably rail v to it all the factions in the dom ocraticaiid other parties that are forgold standard. It will be united in the com ing effort to electa president. Cleveland, Carlisle, McKinley and Sherman will all vote the same ticket for president and will form the most powerful political combination ever yet formed in this country. It cannot be successfully coin batted by any one of the opposing par ties. It is folly to entertain any such hope. With the divided forces of finan cial reform strugglingiu detached bodies, they would fall an easy vietory to the enemy. The only hope for success is the uniting all the forces who oppose pluto cratic domination. I would emphasize the necessity of unity. It wilt take all the opposing forces to down plutocracy. "In union there is strength." United to ran nonnner divided we fall. Now is the time to make the great effort it is the supreme opportunity. After a plu tocratic victory in the election of an other president it may be everlastingly tnnlate. Plutocracy though its ingen inn a nnri devlish methods will so rivet tha chains of its nefarious, grasping sys tem for absorbing the substance of in dustry, that it will be impossible to cast them off or breaK tnem wiinout revuiu tion, and that remedy, desperate as it is, micrhr, fail. 1 verily bolieve there is a large major ity nf the neonle of this country that are nf one mind UDon the question of the free eoinaure of silver at 16 to 1. It has assumed an importance in the minds of the people whether justly so or not, that is paramount to other politi cal nuestions. The people are prepared to vote upon it. It would be an unpardonable blun HArnot to orovideto make this vote count as one voice. The opposition to tha isBuinir and selling bonds has also become very prominent and with the silver element this opposition is univer- HH.1. Why not unite the anti-plutocratic forces on these questions in the selection of a candidate for president? And by such union make our forces effective, We must so unite or we cannot accom nlish anvthine. Divided we are neither fmred or felt. Any candidate elocted on these issues is almost sure to be right and on the side of the people in many other needed reforms. If we cannot get all we want, let us take what is in sight and take the chances on what may be exnected to nome into view afterwards. f I am a nopulist. I helped form th ideas that brought the party into being. I hail the party as being the only party that has errasned the situation in it views of the political affairs of this country, or that offers any reasonable solution to the financial and other po litical problems now agitating the minds of the people. But 1 was never quite so fastidious when I was real hungry and wanted a good breakfast of wheat and corn bread together with coffee and ham and eggs, as to refuse to eat because the hostess was unable or refused to supply me with corn bread and eggs. Politi cally I am awfully hungry. I want the whole populistic bill of fare, but when I know I can't get all the good things I would be glad to take free coinage of silver, no more interest-bearing bonds, payment of government obligations in silver coin and such other etceteras as I can induce my political host to provide. Entertainiug these views I could for the purpose of uniting the forces opposed to plutocratic dominion, heartily concur with the silver democrats in the nomina tion of anv irood, competent man of sound views on these questions who has had the moral courage to step out of his party because of his political con victions. J. M. King. V congratulate the honest republi cans who left the 8t. Louis national con vention for the sane 01 principle nuu desire to join hands with the silver men of all parties, who are ready to vote for the common goon 01 numaunj. We heartily congratulate the country in general and Lancaster county in par ticular on the nomination by tho demo- cratic party of our illustrious Ifllow cit- izn, William 15ryan lor ue exmwu po sition of president of the United States. Hi nomination is but a just recognition of his ability and integrity and his faith ful and earnest labor in the cause of the common people. ,.,., . T. II. TlBBMCS, J. A. Edoerton, O. E. Goodkix, J. i. NEKF, E. C. IlEWICK Committee. How's Ttis7, We oB.ir On Hundred Dollar Reward for any ran or Untarrn tuat can o t uu n Catarrh Cur-. F. J. CUENKI HI., I'rops., -loieuu, w, We. tue andornlnned, taav. known F. J. Cheney lor tb last 16 jsnrs and believe him perrecciy honorable In all business trauawtione and finan cially able to carry oat any obligations made by their firm. Went Triiax. Wbolewe Druirtrist.s, toioqo, u.; WaldliiK, Klnnaa Marvin, Wholesale uruK (rlKte, Toledo, O. H all's Oatnrrh Cure is taken Internally, artlnir directly on the blood hd mucous urlacs uf the system. Price. 7Bc per bottle. Bold by all drug gists. Testimonials free. DONNELY'S POTATOES. He Has Another Great with them. Big Row Wall Street' Heserve Tower. What is this "reserved power on which Wall street is now reposing" unless it is the power to wreck and ruin, the power to drivo to despair, to destroy and make desolate, to rob industry of its labor, to dry up wells of hope, to starve, to drive to self-destruction, to turn prosperity nto barren waste, and to blast the rip ening fruits of our later civilization? All this is included in the collected threat of Wall street as it is spoken to the free citizens of America through Henry Clews. Wall street intends to try intimida tion to its extreme limit this time. Hav ing become master of the art of coercion in 1893, it is fully resolved to try it ngain in 189G ou a larger scale. Woe be it, if that is the final determination. The lessons of history might rise like warning ghosts to arrest a purpose so desperately wicked, so thickly strewn with the wrecKs of a luria destruc tionHuman nature still remains hu man and refuses to be driven beyond its limitations. There is an end to endur ance, especially after a grinding exper ience of over twenty years. U ar better for a free people, informed with awaken ed intelligence, to go on with unre strained discussion, to proclaim their preference by peaceful action, than any stirring of tnougbts 01 violent resistance that border dangerously close upon revolution. The way of safety obviously is tho im mediate and thorough exposure of all threats against the freedom of the intel ligent ballot, latent in the'ill-suppressed language of designing conspirators. Tins latest danger signal is not to De overlooked or lightly considered. What wonder that free blood grows hot when threats of this order are shot like bolts of destruction through the thickening air. The very evidence of the free soirit that exists, inspires and sus tains is seen in these sure risings of pop ular resistance. They are the unmistake able colors of hope stretching across a cloud-gathering sky. They do not sig nify a thought of ultimate revolution; they mean rather a righteous and invin cible sovereignty that is greater than all mere agents and agencies combined, that comorehends the situation and con trols and shapes the result. If money is to be accounted more than men, now is the time to substitute for our declara tion of independence a proclamation of human servitude. George Canning Hill. Populist Champion. That bright, brainy, bristling cham pion of populism, the Kebkaska Inde pendent. Industrial Leader (Mo.) They Object to Being Thrown in the River. In the last issue of the Representative Donnelly tells this story: "We gave the other day the sad his tory of "them potatoes," 700 bushels, raised ou our laud last fall, which we tried to sell for 25 cents a bushel, for 15 cents, for 10 cents, for a cents, for one cent! But nary a bid could we get. We offered them as a present to our neigh bors and some were carted away. The remainder, about 500 bushels, wre dumped into the Mississippi river; for they had begun to smell stronger than r.bo tr n. n., and threatened to breed a pestilence worse than the calamities which that great organization has en gendered in the land. "We thought that was the end of the potatoes; but the other day the news reached us that they were kicking up a great bobbery in the bed of the Father of Waters, and that a rebellion of some kind, a la Clews whs threatened. We went down to investigate the matter. We found the potatoes rolling and tum bling in the river in a high state of ex citement. At last one of the tubers, a big fellow, rose up to the top, on the shoulders of the rest, and cocking one of his indignant eyes at us, cried out fierce ly: "See here! We submitted patiently to the degredation of being pitched into this wet place, like a deceasea cat, be cause we thought it was inevitable; but we have since been informed, by a pontic cat-fish, that there is a tarin ou us 01 ten cents a bushel!! we are protectee. potatoes! Do you hear that? Protect ed potatoes! The aegis of a mighty na- r . :cev tion is spread over us. inetarin nas added ten cents a bushel to our price! We can't therefore be worth less than ten cents a bushel. McKinley has been nominated to uphold the doctrine of pro tection; and protection protects by put ting up prices; and our price is up; and it was a populist who dumped us into the Mississippi, in order to show that the west's share in the benefits of protection is a fraud and a sham. Hurrah for Mc Kinley and protection!" "Here the whole mass of turbulent po tatoes rolled and tumbled and shouted like an old-party gold-standard meeting. All they needed was a brass band and a few torches to enable them to vote. "Take us out of here," cried the big potato again; "our normal price is 25 cents a bushel; and the tariff also adds 10 cents, that makes us worth 35 cents a bushel; and it is sacrilege to throw 35 cents potatoes into the Mississippi. Go get the horses and wagon and haul ns out. Give us a chance for our wnite alley.' " And then it was our sad duty to ex plain to the potatoes that the tariff was 1 1 ...:? .'Kn. 00 Dr. Koblnson. The populists of Hancock county, Ind. have instructed their delegation to vote for Dr. C. A. Robinson for candidate for congress. Dr. Robinson was for a long time president of the Farmers Mutual Benefit association. Silver Men la New York. As an indication of the silver strength in New York state the announcement fn one of the trade journals that the Bland club had ordered 2.000 uniforms to wear of the Chicago convention is as good as we have seen. A clubof2,000 uniformed members is no small organization. Word From the Workers. Besides the single subscriptions, the following parties sent in clubs for the wet.k ending Thursday, the 16th: J. A. Moline Ogalalla, 3. Frank B. Ilibbard, Irvington, 17. L. Griffin, 5. H. A, Lambert Auburn, 14. Oliver Clocker Bega, 2. Campaign Badges. Capt. C. A. Powers of Indiana, desires to give notice that he will be at the Lin dell hotel a few days in advance of the national convention with a supply of Ht erture and campaign badges, and asks our people to patronize him rather than the street fakirs, as he proposes to do nate a liberal percentage of his profits to the national Committee. Insurance Department. Conducted by J. T. M, solicited. Swinart- Correspondence Can't Stand It Longer. The silver republicans of Minnesota have issued a manifesto stating that they can no longer stand by the party on account of its single gold standard platform. Among the signers are Con gressman C. A. Towne of Duluth, ex Congressma John Lind of New TJlm, County Attorney Frank M. Nye and. John Dainsmith of Minneapolis, and John B. Sanborn of St. Faul. All these have been very prominent in politics. Favor Bryan. Topeka, Kan., July 12. A number of people's party conventions were held yesterday in different parts of the state and they, too, adopted resolutions favoring the nomination of Bryan for president. All leading populists, includ ing Senator Peffer, Jerry Simpson, Ex Governor Lewelling., John W. Breiden thal and W. A. Harris, ex-congressnan-at-large, are favorable to the nomina tion or endorsement of the democratic candidates for president and vice-presi dent by the people's party. a humbug; that the tariff on wheat is 20 cents a bushel and wheat had fallen from $ 1 a bushel to 35 cents in the Dakot as and 46 to 55 cents in Minnesota. There is a tariff of 20 cents on corn and corn is worth 18 cents a bushel. There is a tariff of 20 centson barley and barley is worth 18 cents. And the "protected" inhabi tants of this country are going around with empty pockets and holes in their nether raiment, and contemplating high wav robbery or suicide." "And when they heard these words the whole rule of potatoes sent up a wild shriek "We have been fooled! We have been fooled!" and sank down weeping in to the mud of the river bed and gave up the ehost. There wasn't one of them fool enough to vote for McKinley if he had had a chance. But. men are wiser They hug their robbers." Khenmatism. Sufferers need sulffer no longer. I will send to any one the formula for a com. plete cure of this painful disease, the in gredients of which can be procured at any drug store for a trifle. Send $1.00 in stamps or V. 0. money order. Address. C. M. Mackintosh. Room 4 McVickcr's Theatre Bldg. 49-13. Chicago, 111. Feed the Nerves upon pure, rich blood and vou will not be nervous. Pure blood comes by taking Hood's Sarsapa- . rilla. which is thus the greatest and best I nerve tonic. Hood's Pills cure nausea, sick head ache, indigestion, biliousness. All drug gists. 25c. All Ecououilsts Agree. Francis Walker, the eminent American economist, whose book on political econ omy is the text-book at Oxford, England, speaking of the appreciation of gold, says: "An appreciation of gold consti tutes a truly fearful addition to debts, mortflraces.'and fixed charges of every description. Buteven thisis not the worst feature of the situation. Nothing is so discouraging to the merchant and man ufacturer as to bring forward goods for a falling market. Declining prices cut into the normal profits of business, check enterprise, and retard the produc tive investment of capital. One micht Quote from all economists similar opinions, which, 01 course, no in telligent student of money would for a moment disDute. These principles are as old as Aristotle. Wife Wanted- Maid or widow age about 40. A country lady is my choice one who has home and plenty and room for the hus band she loves. I am two years a widow er, not satisfied to live alone, can testify that married lile is not a tailure. 1 am temperate, use no tobacco, weigh 135 American born, good stanaiug in cnurcn and society. Am not advertising for fun but think it proper and right and the lady that thinks it wrong will not answer. 1 patronize only the state and country papers, and for fear the right one will not notice this ad, 1 will make tho following offer: Any editor of country or state paper who will publish this personal and by so doing help me to find my companion, they shall be in vited to my wedding and will pay $ 100. 00 before I wed. Flense direct plain that it may be re in ailed to reach me. W. T. I. Boss, Elba, Neb. THE COUNTY CONVENTION. of It was Enthusiastic and Unanimous. ' The populist county convention Lancaster county assembled in the hall of the Y. M. C. A, Saturday, July 11, at 1 p. m. and elected delegates to the state convention at Grand Island and Hast ings and the congressional convention of this district to be held at Tecumseh July 30. ' The following resolutions were passed unanimously: We, the delegates of Lancaster aty in convention assembled reathrm principles 01 the Umaha I declare our continued ad- sour distinguished rep- 1 United States senate, pvhis manly fight in pnwfjr. 01 tne common fcfiiWlujBi successful ef- . -r-,.T.. r vu 1 .icui ao- It Fizzled. The McKinley blow-out, which was to have taken place in DeWitt, has gone glimmering and the powder is still in the mngazine, waiting for some one to grow bold enouzh to touch it off. Saline County Independent. IRON AND WOCD 1 ktiift Vt. the wa&wvrftint fo .vv!untfjAl! l 7"i T. 1 J! i. . T" V-'. 1 am 1 1 'Thurston on Silver" All for Bryan. The Bimetallic Union has issued an ap peal to all silver leagues which closes with these words: We appeal to all members of the bi metallic union and of the affiliated silver leagues and all others opposed to the continuance of the single gold standard, regardless of party affiliations, to come to the support of the platform and the splendid ticket given us at the peoples great convention just held at Chicago. We further urge upon all who agree with us upon this vital issue to join us at St. Louis on the 22d of July, there to en dorse aud ratify the work so nobly be gun. MUTUAL INSURANCE VS. STOCK. We do not fall in entirely with the idea that the way to build np mutual insur ance is to keep cudgeling stock insur ance and its advocates. The underlying principles of insurance have by the pa triarchs of the "old liners" been fetched to almost if not quite a science, as ca pable of reasonable demonstration as any of theeconomicproblems of the times, but there are times when the contrast becomes so vivid that to refrain from casting a stone would be no virtue. Lin coln's obiect lesson of the manufacture of the railroad rail is quite to the point. If we as a country send to England and buy the railroad rail, we get the rail and England gets the money. We are just as well off financially after buying the rail as before providing we don't pay too m'fh for tha rail. But if we make the rail ourselves we have both the rail and the money and we are consequently better off for doing it, by the value of the rail, having kept our money at home. Now if we insure in the Continental of N. Y., we get tho insurance and N. Y. gets the money. If we insure in our county mutual we get the insurance cer tain. The supreme court of Iowa say so and we keep our money at home and are richer by the amount of the cost. More over the mutuals propose to do this in surance at cost, be that more or less, and any scheme whtreby it is to be fur nished at less than cost had a fraud in it somewhere. SPIRIT OF 1876 Ogalla Items. Ogalla, July 13. We are having an other drouth and our crops are being burned up wheat is ruined and corn will not stand it much longer. Dry farming is a failure in this country. The crop will not be as heavy as expec ted. The free silver republicans in this country are in the majority. James Cassell was thrown from a horse and had a leg broken. " Another hail storm destroyed a thous and acres of crop and some of the same farmers have not raised but one crop in five years. The board of irrigation held a session here.Friday. There are a great many contests. Our once popular hotel keeper who lost the Comercial hotel by fire will leave in a few days for California to reside. We are sorry to lose Mr. Baker. Men Willing to Work and Sufi's for ft Just Cause. Moulton, Loup Co.,Neh.,Juiy 9, '96. Editor Independent: Please apply the enclosed on subscription. I would have been glad to have sent something sooner or to send more now but my family really needs every cent of this but I feel it necessary for all to do all we can. As no great object was ever gained with out sacrifice and as I look at it the sol diers of the Revolutionary war accom plished no more than we are trying to do and when we consider what they had to endure we can well afford the extra hardship caused by supporting our pa pers when it is possible to do so in order to save ourselves from a worse exper ience than even they, the soldiers, en dured, and lifelong hardship and slavery for our children. A braver set of men never lived than the editors of our party papers. Let us all unite for vic tory this fall if possible to do so without burying our principles. L. D. Austin. 1 FRGY & FReY, I FIORISTS. I WEDDING t PAItTY DECORATIONS FUNERAL DESIGNS Telephone or Telegraph Orders Filled on bliort Notice. Store 12 O fits., Phone 824. Greenhouses S2d 4 G, " Wl. Lincoln.Neb. WOVEN FENCE OverSOStyles Th tuwt, ni. Earth. Horse hleh Bull strong, Fig and CMcjen titfht. You can make from 40 to 60 rods per day 'or from 14 to 22c. a Rod. illluli-ita Catalogue Free. ! KITSELMAN BROS., (RiUgevdle, - Indiana. nnfinnnnnnnnnnonnnni STEEL P GXET LAWN FEN GE, steel gates, steel posts and rail, also Field and Hog Fence Wire, single and double farm gates. For further information, write to the - UNION FENCE CO., De Kalb, UU Colorado Populists. The Colorado populist state conven tion was held July 4. The resolutions re-affirm "the time-honored principles of the party as heretofore declared," highly laud Senator Teller and declare for a di rect legislation plank; and "favor such action by our national convention as will unify the support of all parties up on a candidate for the presidency who is unqualified in favor of the free coinage of silver." It has also resolved that "the mission of the peoples party has but be- eun. and the organization should De per netuated, strengthened and kept in tact." Among the delegates at large are Editor T. M. Paterson and the Kev. Myron v Reed. Women delegates were granted recognition in the congressional conven tions held after the state convention. IS times out of 101 The New York Journal recently of'erecl ten bicycles to the ten winners in a guessing: contest, leaving the choice of machine to each. All of them chose A ropulist Song:. James G. Clark, the celebrated peoples party poet, is the author of a new song entitled "The Peoples Battle Hymn," published in sheet form by the Oliver Dit son Company, den. Weaver says: "It is the song we have been waiting lor. it is an Iliad of itself." 'Twill l ake a Century. "Invest the school fund," yells the re publicans and then re-nominate the same old oflicials that refused to invest the money. It will take a century to get the school fund invested with such of ficials. llowells Journal. First Distriet Congressional Convention Lincoln, Neb., July 13, 1896.-A dele gate convention of the people's Indepen dent party of the First congressional district of Nebraska, will be held at Tecumseh on Thursday, July 30, 1896 at 4 o'clock p. m. for the purpose of nom mating a candidate for coneress for the . . i , First congressional aiscncs oi :euran and transactimr such other business as mav properly come before the conven tion. Each county will be entitled to one del egate for each one hundred votes, or miv onty fraction therhof, cast at tne gen eral election of 189( for Samuel Max. well: Cass 14, Johnson 7, Lancaster Z1 Nemaha 13. Otoe 12. Pawnee 5, Rich ardson 7. It is recommended that no proxies allowed. M. JIoave, Acting Chairman. W. One million copies advertised and cir culated from Maine to Alaska. Agents w ntcd everywhere to sell this power ful pamphlet in favor of free coinage as idealited by the chairman of the late Republican National Convention. It contains 16 pages. Copies by mail 70 B. CROMB1E, PUBLISHER, Lincoln, Neb. FREE RIBY CARRIAGE C&talorne. Cot tbta out tod tend wltbrovr om and address, nd wt will mill yoo fcKEK oar otw Mammotb CUlcvoe 01 Doy ftirmwiiirmntuoK 100 different ctylMi from fS.W. Crrl(tiiwnton W Uv Kr trial. Boy dtrwH and dealers' profit. OXFORD BUSK. CO..S0O Wabaea HM AGO. PUMPS OF ALL KINDS. Eclipse and Fairbanks Wind mills, 'lowers, Tanks. Irritia lion Outnis, IIoso, Selling, Grinders. j-ueUttrs, Wood saws, Drive 1'olnis, 1'lpe. Fittings, Krass Goods and Full-banks Ntaadurd Mealea. Prices low. iret the txjiU Send fur Catalogue. ?WfRBANKS, MORSE & CO., Boy Estray- On the morning of the 4th a boy of this city left his home. lie is 14 years old, small, well built, large groy eyes light hair, rather stooped shoulders. .Any information as to his where abouts would be gladly received. Address Independent office. ' tf . Donkey's Heel Theso kickers very seldom kick the enemy, but they always have a donkey's heel ready for their friends. Progressive Farmer. is arnam St. Omaha. Neb. Hon. W. J. Bryan's great speech, de livered in the Chicago convention, neatly printed in pamphlet form, and can be had at 2 per hundred, post-paid on aDolication to L. J. Hurt, care of North Printing Company, Lincoln, Neb. Rlpans Tabules cure biliousness. STANDARD OF THE WORLD. Wine immediately, and" one after he had looked at others. And The Journal bought Ten Columbias. Paid $100 each lor them, too. On even terms a Columbia will be chosen times out of 10 Beautiful Art Catalogue of Columbia and Hartford Bicycles is free if you call upon any Columbia agent ; by mail from us for two 2-cent stamps. POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. Branch Stores and Agencies In almost every city and town. If Columbias are not properly represenicu " jrwu. I III I Mill II I I II I I .... I. . J I I IN I ROIG & DUClAfJ. AgtS. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. F. D. SHERWIN, DENTIST, i Second Floor Burr Block. , Tssth on BnMMr, Plutlanra, Gold. Alnmlnam. and Voroslain Plats. Sold aad Porcslaln Brittf ad Crown Work. Oold. Poroslala, and amalgam Fillings. A GOOD HI HTIIIlin A HANDSOME Bus GLOTHING sa1"' If yon want a good snit of clothes at a very low price, send to ns for our oo plete Chart of figures for measurements, (so simple a child can take a correct meaty nre.) and our handsome illustrations, and description of suits, each accompanied by samples of goods. Our clothes are equal in style and finish to best custom made. We send all of the above by mail free, and if you order a suit and it is not exactly like sample, and you are not satisfied, you will be out nothing, for we will pay expressage both ways. Please mention Nebraska Independent when yofl write, for it is our reference. PEOPLES' SUPPLY CO. e o Tf Suite 11 Adams Express Bldg. Chicago, Ills. be Vopullst Congressional Convention. Lincoln, Neb., July 13. 1800. Editor Independent: I enclose you a call for the people s independent con gressional Convention, to be held at Tecumseh, July 30, 189G. I do this as acting chairman, as our candidate for congress two years ago was empowered to select his chairman, and secretary, and he selected Charles Maybrry as chairman, and A. L. Emer son, of Lincoln, as secretary. The chair man refused by sileuce to act, and 1 took charge. The secretary lives in Col orado, aud I have no list of county com mitteemen; hence 1 send tnis notice to von. and ask for its publication in some reform paper. As many counties have elected delegates, based on Mr. Max well's vote, I make the same apportion ment, lours very trbly, M. Howe, Acting Chairman. Rlpans Tabules: pleasant laxative. Furnas County 1 Poland China and jggu Berkshire Hogs, Holstein Cattle, at Half Price! J-li(Mlirtlr' Two Berkshire Roars and three Bows bred, iail pigs oi Dotn Dreeas, inree ,ii. TiAiardn hnlls and two heifers. One two-year old heifer bred. Order wi,,i tn Snrinc niirs. Produce of 20 too sows and 4 first class boars, stock guaranteed aspresented. H. 8. WILLIAMSON, Mention Xvebiiaska ikdepknuict -ui kj, All ffc Bfc s USE. KANSAS LUMP Ground Rock Sail for Stock ROCK SALT FOR STOCK. USE ROCK SALT For Aides, Pickles, Meats, Ice Cream, Ice Making, Fertilizing, &c, c. Mines snd Works Lyons snd Kanopolls, Kso. FUReST, HeftLTfiieST, BeST. Western Rock Salt Co.. St Louis, Mo. Bol Agents for Lyons Rock Salt Co., arid Royal Salt Co. I apr23-12t S J V ns Rock Salt Co., arfd P - -I