r THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. Oct. i, 189b. HOCS ETUIE S 7 Csfy the Law and Repudiate tie Ccnstitstioa. .ZHIHO CHILDREN'S MONEY zlj 7CO.0O0 on which the Thieves draw Interest Deride It tmDK tbemselvf. Nebraska haa a magnificient endow- cmt for her public school system which tss been carefully guarded against loss er dinwnition by wise provisions in her constitution. To more than 3,000,000,000 acres of Lind, one-eighteenth of her entire teri " torial domain, ceded by the general gov eminent, boundaries, further addition ta this matniifieieut perpetual school fand Is provided for uuder state laws in tie form of escheats, forfeitures, ect., tie whole fund now amounting in the r;regate to more than 120,000,000, ta Talue. Of this sum, May, 21, 1890, 3,690, 769,55 were invested in bonds , end other securities and f 675, 036, 59 vers idle in the bands 01 the state treas- crar. Under theconstitution these funds ere held in trust by tb state for the ben eStot the public schools and all losses oocurmg in any way must be made good remain a perpetually increasing fund forever, the interest only being1 appor tioned semi-annually to the several school districts, under the law. The management of these trust funds I9 in the hands of a Board called the Board of Educational Lands and Funds, consisting of the Governor, Secretary of : Ctate, State Treasurer, Attorney Gener al Atirl rVtmtYitaairtnafl r mihlin T nnila ,' and Buildings, whose duty it is tosoe , that these trust funds are invested as . directed by the' legislature for the bene fit of the school children and the tax payers of the state. This duty, a maj ority of the present Board have neglect ed and refused to perform. xoem trust ranus may oe invested in united States and State securities and registered county bonds only. The Supreme Court of Nebraska has : hwigb ueciueu inns mare warrants prop erly issued are state securities under the constitution. These decisions have never teen reversed. The Legislature has di ' reoted, chap, 48, laws of 1891, that the i board of educational lands and funds ' hall ... 1..V th- I . 1 1 that the state treasurer shall invest the idle trust fund in such state war i rants. A, majority of this board has re : fused to obey the law, ignoring the de- r'atnna nff tho htn')aar. tpihlinal in fka state and disregarding the,pluiu provis, ions of statute Taw. With half A million of those trust lands lying idle in the hands of the state treasorer, state securities in the shape of I ttate warrants drawing 5 per cent inter est are hawked about the streets of Lin- : coin at from 95 to 97 cents on the dol ; hr. This despite the persistent efforts ' tt governor Holcomb, a member of this taard, to nave these idle funds invested i n th&se state securities. Some warrants lave been issued for large suras without minority of law but these issues are : Lnown to the board the trust funds need tot be invested in them. 29,930 votes. William's congressional district must have a wonderful spite at itself in supporting such a man to repre sent it in congress. A man who would turn traitor at this critical period, and try to perpetuate the horrors of a gold standard upon the American people by turning the electoral vote of this state over to McKinley for a few hundred dollars; such a man would, if elected to congress, in less than half a year permit England by the most violent means to tear that " stupendous organ, his tongue, from bis mouth to be taken to England as an emblem of American patriotism and national honor, so great is bis greed lor money and notoriety. The idea of sending to congress a man who has disregarded family ties and dis graced his posterity by having bis name adorn tbe police docket of the city of Lincoln for disorderly conduct In the most noted bawdy house in the city! Tbe idea of posing as a political re former when his corruption makes him unworthy to commend tbe respect of even an audience 01 McKinley republi cans. l torn sucn men as he and Ee raer Stephenson emanate criticisms on our grand Christian statesman and true AmericanBryan. lie is true and noble in every sense of tbe word; true to bis family and true to America, and the young men of this country regardless of politics will take him in tbe palms of ineir nanos, as it were, and place him where be belonrrs in the presidential cnair. ueoiioe a,. Hobebts. Beware of Ointments for Oatanb that Contain Heronry. m mercury will surely destroy the sens of bid ell and completely derang the whole entering It through the mucous surfaces. Such article should never be need ueent .1.... ..1.1. t .r r: -""" iiuwuiw uiiyeicittne, as ens aamags they will do U ten fold to the irood you can pos sibly derivs from them. H all ' Catarrh Care, manufactured by F. J. Chenev Co.. Tniuin. n vUUv.u Uv uncirj, sou in hud internally, acting directly npon the blood and mnconi sur faces ot tbs system, In buying; Hall's Catarrh vMrviw ion yon get tne Rename. It Is taken uiruuy, aua maae in Toieao. Ohio, by F. 3. Ilh.nav JL rn T ... , m i I . .1 w vu i rauuvuiB B un. Sold by druggists. Dries 7fia tr bottle . i . ... oi wnicn is to aia in lorcing upon us a foreign financial policy that will enslave us and our posterity. We are not worshipers of men. We do our owq tniniting, we snail do our own voting and we affiin that we are as will ing as we' are able to defend our views, our principles and our rights as Ameri can citizens. These privileges we con cede to all men, and, comrades, you have ialsely charged us through tbe public press with intent to disturb your meet ings and offer indignities to' your dis tinguished political guests. In order to cast reproach on some of our members you have pretended to ex pel one who never belonged to your club and you have refused to accept the withdrawal of others whom you have afterward expelled and whose good name you have sought to injure witnout just cause or provocation. Because we refuse to serve, as we be lieve, the interests of those who know no country, who serve under no flag and who are loyal to no party, you apply to us such epithets as we do not care to re peat. "Tears for the dead and cheers for th living" old soldier who performed any honorable service for his country in her time of peril, but contempt for the camp follower and the coward or the comrade who in any way at any time attempts to injure the reputation or tarnish the good nameof a comrade because of dif ferences in religious faith or political be lief or affiliations. Comrades, your invi. tation is declined with thanks. ' By order of veteran Solpiers' Bryan Club of over 187 old soldiers. WATSON'S SPEECH FOR SALE. Copies of the supplement to this paper containing Tom Watson's entire speech for sale at 2 cents per copy or f 1,50 per 100. Cash must accompany all orders. Address Nebraska Independent, Lin- coin, Nebraska. ' Skia fiotte Atkinsons. 1 thin Bone Atkinsons and a certain bishop have, as a Bet off to that most able j exposition ot populism by Tom WatBon J which recently appeared in the N. Y. lowing financial conundrum: "If Con gress can by law force me to accept fifty three cents' worth of silver for one dol lars worth, may it not with equal justice and legality or constitutionality force tne to accept tifty-three cents' worth of wbeator any other commodity for one -dollar's worth of gold" We would like to ask the celebrated Shin Bone and hie holiness, tbe bishop, this question: "Jf I have transferred a good farm to a man and given him a deed for it, by what right can congress force me to take in payment a few peices of gold for which I have no use in the world, which I cannot eat or wear, or make any use whatever? f lease answer that quest ion Mr. Shin Bone. t- But no one ever proposed to make 2hin pone, the Bishop or any one else to take 53 cents worth of silver for one lollar s worth. We propose to pay every debt calling for dollars with dollars, and a, dollar is always a dollar and will ilwuye buy n dollar's worth. When the time comes that a dollar will not buy a Jtninr's Wtrth, then circies wiii be square and Shin Bone Atkinsons will be a phy ' oepher and the Bishop will understand political economy. ' The Ideal Hotel on South 14st Lin coln, Neb-, is a quiet well constructed md well managed Hotel, A favorite re port lor country people. Stop there when you come in Liucoln. Hates very ow. l'jt Reprobate Bill Dech. I Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 24, 1896. To the "Editor: The Call, in taking notice of ay article in your paper regarding Bene dict Decb, ventures the assertion that when William gets his guns rightly ad ! usted that I, with the rest of the popu list faction, will "take to the woods." Now, for fear there might be more truth an poetrr in the assertion, I would ine to make a few remarks before I take -y departure. That William Dech hasn't created th6 lonnt of sensation he was paid for 'ong the 70,000 populists, is liable to lit in a suit against him by thsrepub n committee for obtaining money r false pretenses. I think William ! ' honest in his ijitentions,but the 'Ib is he figured Bry an and Hoi i -I majority at 69. He expected to ' me thie amount by changing one ' a thousand, which would besev tea. But the majority has been i v by the republicans to reach ) Wh will leave William shy A Terse Reply, Below will be found a reply to the in vitation , which was extended by the Union Veterans McKinley club to the Union Veterans Bryan club to be present and hear what the "great generals" had to say on tbe political situation at the rally held last night. LiNOOLN, Neb., Sept. 29, 1896.-To the Members of the Union Veteran Re publican Club of Lincoln, of Over 300 Old Soldiers: Comrades, we have read with no surprise your fraternal invita tion fo be present and hear what our distinguished generals, Howard, Alger, Sickles and Siegal had to say as repub licans. You show a discriminating taste when you say that you "prefer the civilization of Europe to that of China." So do we. And we prefer our American civilization to that of Europe or any other nation on earth. Do you? We prefer the finan cial platform of the Chicago convention to tbe republican platform, because we like American civilization better than that of the Turks. All desire a government of the people which because such is best for all the people, and, the insinuation that any considerable number of American citi zens desire any other government is a gratuitous insult to American manhood, not unworthy of rebuke even though founded on ignorance and falsehood. Underlying all the turmoil and abuse, the falsehood and vituperation indulged in during political campaigns, is a de termined patriotic purpose that this "government of the people, for tbe people by the people shall not perish from the earth." Good government is what a" ucocF?, but like tii use in other days who assumed to be the only de fenders of sacred truths and who hung, beheaded and burned those who differed from them, so you, our comrades er ronously assume to be tbe only defenders of the flag, of national integrity and national honor. k We suggest to you an examination of your own heurts and your own ranks before you denounce bthers as rogues and anarchists. You say Generals Grant and Sherman would turn in their graves if they knew that any of their old comrades would deny a hearing to these surviving gen erals. Perhaps they would, we do not know; we have no such celestial insight into the feelings and motives of the dead as you propose. We lovsd those generals, living, we revere their memories now that they are dead and we are now, as ever ready to defend the country.they honored and the flag they bore and no amount of vituperation or epithets, by whomsoever applied, shall deter us from the discbarge of our duty. We respect all our old comrades, and Commanders Alger, Howe, Sickles and Seigel, for their courage and valor on the battle field, but we insist that their conduct was no more heroic than that of the soldier boys in the ranks who charged across death swept fields, scaled t enemy's works and placed the flag of their country at tbe muzzle of ' the ene my's guns. You say those generals come as pri vate citizens in the interest of their coun try's honor. We say they come as part of a great political machine, the purpose You Can't Buy Happiness, but if you are suffering from dyspepsia, scrofu la, suit rheum, impure blood, you may be cured and made happy by taking Hood's Sursaparilla. Hood's Pills are the best family ca thartic and liver medicine. Harmless, leiiuuie, sure. Maine Election Effects. Chicago Record (goldbug): Secretary S. Steriing Morton gives expression to a warning which Republican shouters would do well to heed when he says that a great fault of the anti-free-silver peo ple in inis campaign is ooastlul overcon fldence. ibat has been a conspicuous fault of the opponent of free silver. Lullinir tnemseives into nopeiul inactivity w th the assertion that the "silver agitation is dying out," tbey were awakened with a shock by the discovery that the demo cratic national convention was in the absolute control of the advocates of free silver coinage. No matter how briirht the outlook may appear now to the more enthusiastic enemies of the free silver .novement, it will not be safe for them to relax their efforts in the least until after the ballots have been counted. The elec tion in Maine will arouse the friends of Mr. Bryan to hard, intelligent work which may go far toward overcoming the difficulties which appear in the doubtful states 'of the middle west. ' The result in Maine does not decide tbe No vember contest unless it has decided it in favor of Mr. Bryan by causing their con fident enemies to relax their efforts to secure nis defeat. Let Us Forget Party. At the recent democratic congressional convention held in Muncie, Ind., Dr. T. J. Bowles, a life-long republican, made the following remarks: "Mr President I do nob iise for the purpose of making a speech, or entering into a discussion of the financial ques tion which is now profoundly agitating all the people of the United States. "I simply desire to define my position, and to say to you that I have been identified all my life with a great politi cal party, whose watchword and battle cry has always been bimetallism until lrjab all the great victories which my party has won in the past have been achieved by devotion of the doctrine of gold and silver bimetallism, without any discrimination against either I stand today with all good and loyal and faith ful republicans upon that platform, and there l expect to stand, until the flair of bimetallism floats proudly in triumph over my country, redeemed from the thralldom of the shylocks of Europe and of Wall street. ' "All the tyrants of Europe and everv autocrat of the world are against us. but the people of the United States are aroused, and when I remember that we once laid low the proud crest of England at Yorktown and again at New Orleans, 1 have no doubt that when autumn comes we will again bury these would-be despoilers of our liberty under an ava lanche of of noiseless and bloodless bal lots. Never before in the history of our republic have party lines been so com pletely obliterated we are no longer democrats and republicans the Cleve- lands and the Shermans have embraced each other and united their fortunes with the monarchs and aristocrats of Europe, and the people are forming a solid and compact union for the defense of liberty. "I speak to you Words of soberness and truth when I say to you that the shylocks, the bondholders and gold mag nates oi England and Wall street have alreadv reduced our 9,000,000 farmers to a state of teuantry and serfdom, only a few degrees above the Russian peas antry, where 100,000,000 of vour broth ers bave no liberty, no solace, no com fort, no consolation except that which springs from the hope of death the czar owns everything animate and animate, the bodies and souls of men the pluto crats of America and their allies in Europe, by controlling our financial system, fondly hope to reduce American freemen to the same abiect state of slavery an dependence, and if they are successful in destroying the monetary power of silver our liberties are gone and can only be regained by revolution. "For thousands of years these two royal and precious metals have marched down the centuries arm in arm and hand in hand like man and wife, and' have faithfully served humauity in its onward and upward struggles to higher forms of civilization and greater happiness, and it is your solemn duty and mine to see to it that these two precious metals shall con etitute the primary money of our coun C-3 E 1 r EflQA Pi A 1 When you want to make your Fall and Winter Purchases. We invite you to our store to investigate our immense stock We want to make the purchaping power of a dollar erater than ever beiore by giving you Low Prices. Q-q.r sFrices ' tills ISTeefe : oooooo'oocooeooocc o o etooeooeeeeceeoeeoeei Dress Flannels ft 18 pieces Press Flannels. 86 inches wide, rear- OQ. j nlar price 26c, this week saOC VO. li pieces Bedford Twill. 40 Inches wide, reg- O? 3 olar price 30c, this week aDC VQ 10 pieces 1 1 reus f lannel, 60 Inches wide, cheap at 40c, this week '.. 11 pieces Ladles' Cloth, 82 inches wide, worth 50c, this Week...... Bed Comforts. ; 75c Bed Comfort, (all slse. This week... S1.00 Bed Comforts, foil sice. This week. ........ 1.25 Bod Comforts, mil slse. This week 1.50 Bed Comforts, mil size. Thlsweek. ....... $1.75 Bed Comforts, fall site, Thlsweek........ 2.00 Bed Comforts, fullslze. Thlsweek. ....... 2.60 Bed Comforts, tall size. This week 8.00 Bed Comforts, fall slse. Thlsweek........ Underwear ft 40 dozen Men's Natural Grey Shirts and Drawers, : worth 40c. This week 20 dozen Men's medium weight Camel's Half Shirts and Prawers, regular price 60c, This week 25 dozen Men's Natural Wool Shirts and Drawers, worth 76c. This week , , 20 dozn Men's Fancy Wool Shirts and Drawers, regular price 1. This week..- 1 ' ' i bO dozen Chiyjreu's Natural Grey Vests and Pants: Size 18 18 20 - 22 24 28 28 80 37c yd 46c yd 68c 8c $1.13 1.34 1.58 1.79 2.23 2.69 Bach. 3c 44c 68c 89c 32 84 So 80 10c 12'o 15c 17Kc 22c 260 27e 30c ooooooooooooooo o Dress Goodsft 4u,?,l,!0",.u,lcnn? DreM Good8 "Si'" Price II. j 12Hc this week 1 1C V& j. pi, jaeuriviuia, a incnes wide, regular price 15c, this week IS plbces 88 inch Henriettas, black and" col ored, regular price 20c. this week 12 pieces Henriettas, 88 Inches wide, extra line, worth 25c, this week 10 pieces German Silk Finished Henrietta. 40 Inches wide, regnlar price 55c, this week ... Blankets 122c yd 1 7c yd. 2 lc yd 47c yd 65c 10-4 Cotton Blankets. This week 75c 11-4 Cotton Blankets. This wees 1.00 11-4 Cotton Blankets. This week On Ail Wool Blankets 10 per cent discount. Bargains in Shoes ft 36 pairs Hisses' and Children's Shoes, sized 614 to Wi. regular price LIS to 1.60; closing out price.. " 48 pairs Children's School Shoes. Kangaroo Calf. 12 to 2s, regular price 1.75 a pair; clos ing out price 48 pairs Gent's Shoes", sizes 6, 6H, 7. 7, 10, 10& and 11, former price, 92.50; closing out price 38 pairs Gent's Dongola and Calf, lace and con gress, sizes 6. 6 1-2, 7, 7 1-2, 10 and 10 1-2 former priee $3.00 and 3.50,closing out price 23 pairs Gent's Kangaroo Lace and Congress, sizes 6, 6 1-2, 7. 7 1-2, 9 1-2, 10 and 10 1-2, lorm erly 4.00, .SO and 5.00; closing price 47 pairs Ladies' Kid Button, patent tip, pointed and square toes, 2 to 6s, former price 83.00 and $3. 50; closing price Per Pair 54c 67c 89c Per Pair 10 pairs Ladies' Kid Button, patent tip, point ed and square toes, 2H to 6s, former price 2.50; closing price ... $1.00 1.45 1.75 2.15 2.50 2.00 1.75 00000000000 000000000000000000 oooooocooooqp 00000000000000 o OUB MOTTO: . IKellaTole 0-Qod.c at ZLoisrst Prices FRED. SCHM IDT & BRO. 921 O St. Opposite Postoffice, Lincoln, Neb. 99 try as intended and provided for by our miners in tne constitution we owe un dying devotion to the cause of bimetal lism if we should honor and respect tbe miners 01 our republic we owe devotion to this cause if we have any respect for the teachings of republicanism and de mocracy the sainted martyred Lincoln on tne evening beiore his assassination sent a message to the miners of the west in which he said the glory of saving this nation belongs to tbe union soldiers and the glory of paying for its salvation will be awarded to you, for your labor and sweat will soon bring to the mints from those mountain treasuries enough of the precious white metal to relieve all our people from their great mountain of debt. "UoW noble and inspiring these words when compared to the sophistries of Shermans, who favor and truckle to the Kotbscbilds and shylocks of Enirland If these deadly enemies of our country's liberties ana nappiness should be suc cessful in fastening upon this nation the liritiBb policy of gold monometallism. no pen nor tongue can describe the sor row and misery that will come' to our people, and especially to the farmers of the United States it will be worse than war, pestilence and famine it will be universal slavery; all the gold-bearing interest bonds of this nation or nearly all of them are now in possession of these shylocks, and nearly all the gold mines of the world are owned by them, and to make them absolute masters of this whole planet and reduce every hu man being to slavery, it only remains for them to destroy one-half the primary money of the world and their nefarious scheme will then be complete and the goal of their ambition reached. "All men will then be Gideonites hewers of wood and carriers of water for them their scheme has already been carried out and completed in nearly all the countries of the earth except in the land of Columbia and m the country of Washington exeept where our starry flag floats proudly in the skies except in the land of the free and the home of the brave except in the United States of America which "holds within its broad domain 65,000,000 of happy meu, happy women and happy children in all the other countries of the earth these infa mous shylocks still hold the people in chains our country is the only spot on earth where liberty can live let us for get that we are republicans letus forget that We are democrats let us forget that we are populists let us forget that we are prohibitionists but let us remember that we are American citizens and let each of us register au oath in heaven that we will crush into fragments and grind unto dust every gold monometal list who aspires to a place in the councils of our nation, and when we shall have succeeded in scourging and driving them out of the temple of liberty our country will enter upon an era of prosperity hitherto unknown, and the river of life in the United States will overflow with happiness." The students of Yale university have hissed down in public address the candi date of the west and south. They have Bealed by force the lips of the man who came to discuss fairly and under tbe open sky the question - that thinking cit izens today must most consider. It is siguificent. Students, more than any other class of men, perhaps, recognize the fata! re flection that rests upon a cause which must resort to coercion and violence. They know the history of such measures. They havo studied the fall of tyrannies. They know by what means tottering despots and shaking feudal systems have made their last frantic attempts to stem the uvalanche of public opinion. They know, yet they have done this. Rlpans Tabulea cure torpid liver. SHIP YOUR PRODUCE DIRECT TO MARKET. AND 0BTAIX ITS TRUE TALUE. Ton can't obtainjt any other way. Because yon liaye been selling y our produce at home for years 'Is no reason y 00 should continue to do so If yon can strike abetter market and make morsmoney. We make a specialty of receiving shipments di rect irom tbe producers and have the largest kst. And oar shlnner are almost nn..n 80.urc "T " In this mar- money. We receire and sell : me returns., because we make them Butter, Eggs, Poultry, Veal, Game, Fur, Wool, Hay, Grain, Seed, Beans, Potatoes, Broom m Corn, Hides, Green and Dried Fruit - - - - 0-1 rro uiiicuuui or any information yon may want RCFERENCES: METROPOLITAN BANK, CHICAGO. Ad this Paper. NATIONAL SUMMERS, MORRISON & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS. 17 South Water St., - Chicago, 111. THE VOICE OF THE EAST. Too long has the strong cry sounded , For the sons of toil to hear, Too often the skies been riven With the,yoice of a nation's cheer. Too often the walls been shaken Where we sit on our shining thrones, Too often our high towers trembled At the sound of his thunder tones. We will put a bar on his lightning And fetter histhunder down, Lest the people bear it and answer And tear from our beads the crown. Kingsley Moohe. Vfl fS fy fs f-ff ft " ------ Grand Bally at Hickman. Hickman, Neb., Sept. 22. (Special Cor respondence.) An enthusiastic meeting was held here Monday evening at the school bouse under the auspices of the Hickman Bryan club. Mr. Owsley Wil son, candidate for state senator, and W. M. Morning addressed the meeting and were listened to with close attention by a crowded house. Mr, Wilson exposed the 50 cent dollar fallacy as proposed by the insurance companies, and argued that each man owed it to his family and home to vote for a financial policy tha t would enable him to provide for those dependent upon him. Mr. Morning said that he had formerly been a republican, but being a bimetailist before the repub lican convention met at St. Louis, he was still a bimetailist, and as that con vention pledged itself to maintain the present gold standard, he was working for Bryan aud free coinage. He is an en thusiastic and earnest worker in the cause. Ine ladies' Bryan ciuo attended in a body, and entertained the audience by opening and closing the exercises of the evening with the singiugof campaign songs. The Bryan club of Panama at tended with torch lights and helped to enliven the occasion with their cheers. C. ,7. Smythe. For attorney general the combined free silver forces have named Hon. C. J. Smythe, one of the ablest attorneys in the state, and a pioneer in the cause of financial reform, and so his nomination is received gladly by every advocate of honest money, which, properly interpre ted, means gold and silver, with coinage free and unlimited, at a ratio of 16 to 1. Opposed to Mr. Smythe is A. S. Church ill, a man with an unsavory record be yond compare among public men a man who is an every-day disgrace to the fair state he represents as chief legal ad viser. While there can be no doubt of Mr. Srovthe's election, we want to see his majority run away up into the thou sands, and thus the more fittingly re buke the corrupt tool of corporations who is his opponent. PapilliottTimes. Rlpans Tabules care f atu'lence, w!dl. Picket Lawn-Fence Steel Posts, Bteel Ralls and Steel Gates; Steel Tree. Flower and Tomato Guards, Cabled Field and Hog Fence, 24 to 58ln. high. Poultry, Garden and Rabbit t oricoi Steel Wire Fence Board.eto. Catalogue free. &KALB FENCE CO. i High St. OeKalbi , HI TRY IT FREE for a) days in yourown borne and save S10 to 125. No mo..y In ad..M. SriO Kenwood Harbin, for 28.IO $50 Arllnpto. Nttchln. for . $19.AO Sl.ren (Made by us) $H, Sll.SU, 1S and 27 other styles. All atluhM.t FREE. We p.j freight. Buy from factory. Save airents larpre profits. Ottf 100,000 I. m.. Catalogue and testimonials Write at once. f AddPM. (I. rail), CASH BUYERS' UNION ' 168-1 64 West Taa Barea St.li "o2,c"hJ1 lllZ High r-q. Ann 1 wtoociff 1 i. T Winrror'e CfaalwiND HlllgWI 0 U1WQI I MILL Mechanically constructed and simple. Awarded World's Fair Di ploma and Medal. Oalranlsfwl RtaAt Tanks, Regulators and Grind ers. E. B. WlSHHH. enwood Terraoe, Chicago. Consumers Purchasingngency, will buy anything you want at cheapest possible price. D. Clem Deaveb, - Room 9 Granite blk., Omaha, Neb. Wanted An Idea Protect your ideas: ther may brine you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDERBURN ft CO Patent Attor neys, Washington, D. C, for their $1,800 prise offer and list of two hundred Inventions wanted. Who can think of some simple thing to patent? WEAK MEN Manhood Restored, small, weak I organs enlarged. Night emission. 1 exnauetea vitality, nervous and physical disability, and effects of self-abuse quickly and permanen tly curea. 1 win sena seaiea; free the recipe of this simple remedy, which cured me after everything else had failed, and will cure you. Address. C. OLDS, Box 1471 Kalamazoo. Mich. VOVEU W!BI FENCE OverSOStyles' The best on Earth. Horse high, Bull strong, Fig and Chicken tight. Toucan make from 40 to 60 rods per day for from 14 to 22c. a Rod. lliustt-iteti catalogue Free. ! KITSELMAN BROS., Rldgevdle, - Indiana. ;AQ0 For 30 Days Only Buv th OXFORD fm mtW (trovtniStamttSmwittw lAphink with a compiatt jet of sUUra- Thts .l.parrl Hlrh-Gmde Fol-ling Tabid I CadlDrt Oiford Switir Mtt-hr.fMntfi I rrtnrowo faomofi(0 PAYS KlItK i TK1 AIm&oibumiv WfuWd m dvinre. l?eS,otmitoirtn ua. Wori4 lair Hrril liwarrlrl, Freljflit Cbrgei pair. from liutOTV svrtd Mvh Duk..'a Writ toxlav fnr fn itlrwns IO MP.L Cl., Ma .tuk .., IjfutAbO. ILL. Anafi nroSbL 1. f