V' The Wealth Makers and Lincoln Independent Consolidated. VOL. IX. LINCOLN, NEBR., THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1897. NO, I4, mmp 4 V i . IpdtffUHS TAX. Sonw Season Jy it Should bo Adopted In Tbia Country. n ACOUii ITION VS. CREATION Impossible for, a Man to Earn a Million j. Dollars. Th'w In Ollur Countries. T' following la an extract from a (paper prepared by Dr. C. F. Taylor and read before tfc American aaaoclatlon for the advancement ofscionc at Buffalo, N. Y; The aufcject o! Inheritance taxa tion hue never received much attention - in thl country, but i at this time rapidly coining to the front aa a politi al laaue In many atatee. Dr. Taylor says the disposition of property by will Is not a natural right WLen an owner of property die the property that formerly belonged to birn ia distributed to hie childrnn or bia near et kin, or according to hi will, if be baa left a will. We are no accustomed to tbia that we think helra of the blood .bav a "natural" right to claim the property that belonged to their klne nan now dead, or that u possessor of property ha a "natural" right to direct fcy will what auuii oe aone witu nia pro perty after he ia dead. Instead of being natural righta theae rlghta are entirely artificial. Using created by law they an be unmade by tb same power that tnade the law. As a brief inquiry into what li ""natural" in these reapecta lot na take a fx 0 into the animal world. Who ever Jieard of a bird building ueata to leare to ita grown-up deceudante? Tb fol lowing would be a very ludicrous pio turn: An old and prosperous bird dies, lie loaves a row of nest to be rented out to other birda for the beuefit of bia .fortunate family, i be rental price ia a nice fat worm of certain dimensions very morning and evening foreocb nest, Let ua imagine one of the beir-birda suf fering from indignation and hoadache. The doctor ia sent for, and being of .sensible and independent aort, aaya plainly, "You need exerciae." The Indo lent heir-bird dot not like the idea of "bUNtling" out upon the wing, eo sends lor a very fashionable quack doctor, who praises, flattera and indulge, and r her birdMhip spends a life of indolent, miserable eoae, and the unfortunate "rectera" spend lives of anxious, over worked hardship. Au equally ludicrous picture could be drawn irom any sphere of the animal kingdom. And it doea not take ua long to aee that, the natural method ia aa fol- jows; l'arenta give protection and suaten suce to their offspring until adolescence; then come a briof period of traiuing and partial auatenance. which aoon ter minate in the young adult animal be ing left to depend upon bia own exer tiona. ow let na look into the community life of the aavage. Possession other than distinctly peraonal objecta are usually in common. Ifoth Individual and tribal exUteuce ia dependent upon tbe protection lor which the tribe waa orlgiually formed; and tbia fact ia worth taking into accouut;poscsionsat death rovert to tbe tribe or to tbe bead of the tribe, to be used for the general good. To thia day the sheik of a bedouin tribe possesses all the property of the tribe, not for hiitiHelf, but for the tribe, ror example, tbe guide at the pyramid turn their earning over to tbe aheik. At the death of tbe aheik, th protierty decenda to the succeeding head of the tribe, aa guardian rather than posessor, and alwaya for th general us of the tribe. Aa we approach civilized life, we not tbe Individual ownerahlp of property. Out of thia grew the law of Individual inheritance, There arc those who claun that all th glorie of civilisation, the discoveries ol science, t It wrfection of art, th exalted hope and aspirations ol th roc graw out of th dcllniug of Individual proiierty right and th pro taction thereof. And there ar those who believe that the crime, th corrup tion, th mi wry and woe, th want and destitution, selflahnea and grand, and all th iiiibaiNn ebildred uf thea black and htdeou inou;ire, all th unnatural and loathaont in ol body and oul, all of which ar confined ehielly to ao-ealM clvilUad aiM-n-ty, ar due primarily lo th Individual ownership of property. IVrhap a bred consideration of bow property tome iutoailateac will throw milt light upon th right ol Individual ownarahip and traaautlaaion and th limit hef.. Kotuuaoa trueo uki am layout wealthy, Jtjr hi unaldjcd efforU harould aotrrte wealth. The power to rraat wealth t vaat.'y InrreAMHl by tool, divt ma of laUr, itiarhiaery, layantuiaa, lit., aad tMantlxally tame ar du In atl, 1 h agaii aa wMWr(ully Im rvuMHl wiaa Itwwarjr la vrralie WtxtUli, and by ateait ot ha a(vai'W IiIim4 ?Mity kw litu itrioeiy wvaltay la i-tf matvrtal wituluft, row tttH and laiury. 1irviM tittliM wkivk U lorciMg HmU to the Intnl. au I will eooa daataal a rttlUtt). T kuM do llmw MIM' htru aad UiaruM, tkvaw wtaiif form walik rll by wKwlf, iigktlully h Ua wkiWfttitigludiiMaal laitlwtivw and aterprM fjr rightful mdt, yt theae alone would be futile. However industrious and enterpriaiug Hobinaon Cruaoe might have been, he could never have had the comfort that the humblest laboring man in civilized aociety enjoy. Give Cruaoe the choicest tool and ho would be poor, I 'luce on bia ialuud the moat advanced machinery of modern times, and teach him all the arts of the skilled machinist and leave bim alone again, and ho would still be poor. lie must nave the cooperation of bia fcllowe befoie hia position - would be substan tially improved. Given all these condition, aud we find that, while the maaaea labor from morn till night year after year, and get only a small portion of th product of labor, a few get much more than their juat share, have aervauta, go abroad to live, leave vaftt estates, etc. If the workingmeo are Indebted to the advantagea of ao ciety for tbe improvement ol their con dition over that of Cruaoe, how much mora la the man who accumulated (not created) wealth Indebted to society I For example, In the midst of our great for tune today, th following calculation will be in torus time: It will be readily granted that a workiiiicmm who saves on dollar per day above living expenses every working day, and who baa the opportunity of doing thia rontinuoualy month after month and year after year, ia very fortunate. Hut let u suppose thuta worklngmau began working and saving at thia rat at the beginning of theChriatiao era, and that hia life had been miraculously prolonged through all theae centuriea, bow many milliona (baring interest) would be be worth to day!' 1 ou will be surprised to near that hia first million would be only a little mora than half earned. Thou what shall we aay to those wbo vet not only on million, but many milliona, during the brief tlm of the efficient portion of a human life? Certainly millionaire get more than the ad van t aire of tool, ma chinery, and cooratiou in tbe ordinary euse. Jt la only by special privilege 01 eome aort that the accumulation of so much aa a million dollar ia possible. And the "accumulation" ia not the pro cess 01 earning, but ol In aome way in eluding the forcee of civilized aociety to contribute to Individual coffer Instead of to th general good. Our law give protection in the pos session of thea unearned and unnatural large fortunea; not only protection In their poaaeaaion, but the right to trans mit tbe aurne at tbe death of tbe o wner according to bia will, or, in tb absence of a will, the property goee to the des cendant of tbe owner. It ua notice that society, the force of which much more than tbe industry of tbe Individual created the fortune, make no claim aa an heir to the fortune; or, to put it in another way, the state, by roeana of whose institutions and fostering protec tion th accumulation aud retention of a (urge fortuue become posaible, makes no claima aa an heir at tbe death of tbe owner. There are two reasons why ao ciety or the state should be on heir in these caaea. The first ia, if tbe force of aociety, rather than tb force of tbe In dividual, created the fortune, aociety abould have aright to the poaaeaaion of at leaar a part of the fortune, if not at the time of the accumulation, certainly after the accumulator ia dead. Hecond, the elate haa many ward growing up in vie and ignorance, aud it needa Ua rightful resources to give healthful and moral surroundings and needful educational advantage to those who, without auch aid, will become crim inals and paupera luatead of useful citi zens. We have seen that in the animal world the "natural" inheritance of tbe off spring I sustenance during the period of incapacity, and traiuing during the period of adolescence. It is seldom, and only through accident, that the young animal fails to receive tbia natural in heritance. When adult life ia reached further inheritance invariably ceoaea. Kbotild not society, or oa aome would prefer to express it, the state, insure to its needy younir tbia "natural" inherit ance, particularly when it baa so good a claim aa an heir to these large unearned fortunes? Those wbo inherit by descent or will these immense fortune (only by grace of the law) get a superabundant aud undeserved inheritance, while the waifs of society do not even get their natural right of auatenance and train ing. My proposition la to take a portion Irom tbe excoasirely larue inheritance, and with thia portion restore tb natu ral aud liulili'u! iulieiitituiw to the toai'a. Th almtraotinar of a part of au In her I - taut I usually culled an Inheritance tax; but I pioteat against thia theory. An estate, whose former owuer ia dead, belong to uo one, except by the grace aud oouseut of th state. Kx-I'remler Itonebury aay that th dead band ha no right. Tb will that the hand now dead ha executed la also dead, except aa tbe elate bring it to life. The d eendanta of the lormer owner did not earn th wealth, heuc it i not their, except aa the tat may permit. Titer I abundant legal authority lor ttiia ptwilitin. 1 contend mat Iha state should o a Drat aud prafvrred hair to a portion of very xcwaaivdy larga estate; alter huh th remainder may b divided a at present, ih state inherltanc should aot b nut into th enral ImJ fur ordinary ipna, tut b devoted to lhetblialiUMMit ol lustitutiou lor the uateuane aud traiuing ol i bildrvu Iroiu In slum id th ilti wboaa natural pruteviur have ait bar died or antln- eom patent. I ls pnui-ipla ol iulieritane taxation I all tatabiialied all UVT tb flllle, witrld. I naUad gat twalv -f cut of bar tulal rUli (about "l.,IMHI,(HH trout lat Miina, aad some oaalria get aa aitfb a tweaiy twrraut, ) ranee iai aa Dills during Ida, a Wall a property trauaatitiati at th daatl ol tha uwuar, Th Mpattvaa of th world that Ihwkiwdof tat t .IU'tel ilr aad t'oatiaaatj oa KlgMk I'ag ) KA1LK0AD PROBLEMS The Authority of the Ooyarnment to Buy Railroads and Operate Them. OPINION B7 T. E. WATSON. Title to Eailroad Property Not More Sacred Than to Prirate Property, Tb frlneltl of "Kinlnant Doraslu." Tb problem of govornmentownerahip of railroada ia not well understood bj th masses of th people. Moat peoplo do not uuderatand tb meaning of th "right of eminent domain" and th method by which government owner abip could be brought about. A prominent railroad official, 13. W, Carter, recently wrote letter to lion. Thomaa E. Wateon, aaking him bow tbe government could obtain possession of tbe railroad. Tbia railroad official aaid that be regarded railroad "charter" aa "contract" between tbe companlea and tb atate and Inquired of Mr. Wateon, "Can tb atate ignor ita contract, and retake th soil on which railroada have been constructed'" Mr, Wataon called Mr. Carter' atten tion to th fact that if he will look in Webster dictionary he will find tbat thaVKight of eminent domain la tbat superior dominion of the eovereign pow er over all tb property within the atate, including that previously granted by itself, which authorize it to appropriate any part thereof to a necessary public use, reasonable compensation being made " In abort, tb principle of eminent do main ia tbat the eovereign power in a atate ia auprerae; tbat individual good must give way to general good; that private property must yield to public necessity reaaonabl damage being paid. , Thia ia th law under which the rail roada got their real estate. It muat oc cur to Mr. Carter npon reflection tbat it would be a atrange atate of tbinga that th legislature could take hi land aud give it, at an assessed value, to th rail roada, and that after tbe railroada got it tb title was mor sacred than when be bad it. A railroad cannot own land by any higher title than Mr, Carter doea. When public necessity take a slice of hia land for a corporation, wby cannot tbe eame law get tb land beck and bold it for tb public for whose benefit It waa first taken? Mr. Carter ask a me if I think a charter ia a contrast. Under the decisions I am bound to aay yea. Hnt when the atate grant bim a neadright grant to a piece of land, ia not tbat alao a contract? Ia not every man'e title to land a contract which tbe atate by it conatitution and law engage to protect? ily what courae of reasoning do we get the notion that Hmith' land deed ia leva sacred that a railroad charter? Let ua illustrate: In the city of Atlanta th railroad coropaniea hav certain lota of land. Upon these Iota they Dulld varioua houses. 1 Now, In the eame city there Is the Na tional liuilding and Loan association owning lota and owning house. There are also your Individual citizens owning Iota and bouse. A great Are breaka out and becomes unmanageable to tb Are companiea. The city authorities decide tbat to save th great capital city of the atate it la necessary to blow np an entire block of building and tbua make a gap In tbe progress of th fir and so stop it. Mr. Carter must admit that under tb law tb house ol the private citizen can be destroyed to save Atlanta. He must admit tbat the house of th Iiuilding and Loan association can like wise be blown to piece. ill b for a moment contend tbat th tUae UtiwUttillk to tiid lu'i'luAui (.&& not be made to yMd likewise to public necessity? Certainly not. II will admit that the law which take from th on will take from th other. Well, if tb city of Atlanta can take railroad iirojierty under tbe law of pub lie necessity, why cannot tb national government do likewise? Mr, t arter will remember th great Chicago Or of 1H70. Ioe b know bow it waa chcke? ()ii. 1'bil. Kherldan, aeelng that th usual mean wer entirely unable to inaater th (lame, l.law up block after block of th nuaat building la th great city, and thus stopped th fire. Corpora tion iirorty waadtro?d just a that of individual la ordr that public good might reault Judg Thomas M, Cooley ia one of th greatest lawyer now living, II la an authority u,xin th eultl of conslitU' lioual law. aud he i-ertainly ranuot be accused ol hostility to tbe railroads, II say it Is th rlahtful authority, which al ia u la every sotareigatr, to control and rt-gu'ate tltoa right of a publi natur winch rtaiu to It tlllfus In eotnmoa, aad to appropriate and eoutrol Individ, ual prorty lor Ik publte bant a th piltilu) safety. ivatilaiiew, aacaaalty or wllar may demand," To aliow Mr. Carter Ih absolute want ot raaatia lor hia Mr that th law 1 agalsst a upon thia point, I quote Iroia nm ot tb dactsioa ol th eourte la ik Msiaahpi, pNg 11 J 7, th ourtayi "lk right (ot mtaaat du main) ia iuberent in all government, and require no conatitutlonal proviaiou to give it force." In a New York decision this language ia held by Judge liogeboom; "Title to property la alwaya held upon tbe implied condition tbat it muat be surrendered to tbe government, either In whole or In part, when the public necessities, evi denced according to the established forms of law. demand." Judge Cooley expressly eaya on page 651 and 6.1a that "Every specie of property which the public need may re quire" is subject to th law of eminent domain. In enumerating th different kinds of property h mention corporate froperty and franchises, and cites a ong list of decision to sustain bia po sition. There are no authorise and no de cision to the contrary. Hence we think Mr, Carter, having had bia reaaonabl objection respectfully met. may dismiss that particular point In the discussion as not being well taken, and may tollov ua aa w examine the mora eerloue argument usually ad vanced In opposition to tb railroad piank of our platform. It being quit clear tbat tb law au thorite tb government to pay a fair price and take the rallronu for public us, the next thing to consider I tbia; Doe tbe public good requir it? To answer tbia Question w must study tb present system of corporation owner ship aud get a correct Idea of it dan gers, ita evils and ita abuses. At tb very start, w ought to bear In mind that tbe railroad wer never in tended to be private property in th usual sense 01 tb word. (jur law maker did not consent that any corporation should own tb great power and privilege of transportation in th eatne way that you own your borae or your cow. ion bold your land and your atock without awing any do tie to tb public except to tbat your property does no damage to your neigh bor. Such property la private and personal; you buy it for your private use, pay for It wub your private funds and uae It for your private good, Tb public did not help you get it, and tbe public ia not concerned with tbe way you manage it. Rut with tb railroad property it I different. They got their land and tbeir char tera and tbeir varioua powera and privi leges upon tbe diatinct idea that they were to undertake the diacarg of public dutie in a manner beneficial to the pub lic. Tbey bold their property pledged to tbe public duties tney promised to per form. Hence when tb chartered right granted them ar exercised witbout re gard for the good of th public, common ease, M the instinct of self preservation, suggest tbat the people abould change the system, Uuder our law neither a private per son, nor a corporation, nor even a tate can get th ownership of a navigable river, Why; nimply because a water high s ay concerns the public generally, aud the public should keep it open for tbe free uae of all. Thus the Havannah, or tb Ohio, or tb Mississippi river ia a much tb prop erty of plain John Jone a of tb Van derbilt millionaire. Tb humblest row boat baa aa much right to na those water highway aa the costliest steam- ship.- Tbua our forefatbera aaid in tb strongest sort of way tbat those tbinga which were of a public nature ought not to go into private control, Tb com merce of tb whole world I interested in having open road. Tbe man wbo travel and th man wbo ships freight have a natural right to do so witbout paying a tax to worn one els for tbe privilege. If you want to raft your log or your lumber down the Ohio, you bav tb right to do so. if you want to get into a boat and travel down th Havannah, you hav th right to do so. lty th wisdom of your forefather th water road bav been kept open, tbe government own them, and th beggar ha a much right to na them aa a king baa. Tbe same principle applies to your dirt roads. W used to have toll-gate in soma parte of tbia country, and tb citizen who carried bia produce to town bad to pay a tax to som private corporation which owned th road. Hut th turnpike road, with ite vexa tion charge lor traveler and vehicles, haa almost disapeard and w now hav th free dirt-road from ocean to ocean. Th public work them, and tb public owns them, aud the public use them, I'pon our river and Un our dirt road will be found about th last mm uaut of that principle of equality Upon wbicb our republui waa fouudwd. A an instuuosof th Insolent appro priation ol proerty by th corpora' tion, notice tb telegraph line which baa bera strung along th dirt-road ol Georgia! 'I hi "right-of-way" for th corporation waa worth thousand ol dollar. What did they pay? Nothing. Tha puhlto road belonged to a drowsy bublut. To grab it and ua It wa th Ida of the idawak corporation. Tbey grabbed and they ued. And th drowsy publi looked on, grumbled aud submitted a usual, Ihoaa dirt -road belong to th laud owner ua ew h aula, 'lb publi ha no title to th road-Is"! leapt to uaa it lor travel, hhtiuld lb publw quit Usiug tt for Uaval, tbe laud owner iul. agata lenc It In t4 grow hi rro upon it. What right did a Nw York telegraph eorporaltou bav to mov in and lake hmhmhmihT .Nona, or did tlt egula tura hav Ih right to grant thatu tt. power. (Catiud ua I HtU I'im,) mat mmm Decreasing Wheat Area a SerloM Problem for the Eng lish People, DEPEND ON OTEES NATIONS, Thirteen-seventeenth li Supplied Iby the United States , and Euasla, , Kffart la Com of fTsr, The Cable. Loudon, publishes an arti ale written by Thomaa it, Head ou tb wheat supply for Great liritalo, Ia view of th present conditions of tb wheat market and tb position occupied by tbia country at tbia tlm lo supplying the wneat to the world, tb artu-i 1 in. teresting. Mr, llead aar: "How to plac this country (tb English govern ment) In a trior secure position a to tb wheat supply I tb most important problem tbat at present require sola tion. It is tb most vital Imperial que, tion, W now bav a band to-moutb supply of wheat, and for over two-thirds of oar daily bread w ar dependent 00 tb will of foreign power. "Hlowiy tt total average amount of wheat held by u at on time baa de creased, until w now, ou a avera, hav only about two weeks' upply ia London, and on uiootb'a rquirmiite In tb whole country, and import nearly a week' aupply aeb week, Witbout doubt w ar tempting i'rovidewi to our undoing, "Last year our possession sent 0 only sufficient wheat for threw week' bread, and w wer dependent on for eign conntrie for mora than two-tbirds of our daily bread. Of tbia foreign sup ply tb United Mtate and Uusala sent as about thirteen seventeenths. "Hure'y this la a most dangerous po sition for this country to bw in, a war with either tb United Htate or Jtuasia would expos o to most seriou scar' city, whilst hostllitte with both eoun trie would be certain to bring u face to foe with famine. A bofctil fleet of modern Alabama would be mora likely to bring tb Brit ish empire on ber knees, under present conditiona, that a fleet of the most pow- enul batt!e-bip. Doring tb war between China and Japan ric wa oaeiared contraband of war; without doubt wheat will 0 de clared to b contraband of war in tb next naval war ia wbicb wear engaged, 'J'he enemy would be likely to receive la formation of tb departure of aay abip bringing a wheat. If oar agent abroad bad purchased thia wheat for ua, th aa tion who bad sold It would be likely to be pleased to hmr it waa lost, a the re maining wheat tbey had to JI would b Increased in valu. Tb Insurance against war risk would be very high, and necessarily tb pfK of wheat that reached u would b enor mous. Th poor would die lik die, and hunger would b fighting for our enemy mora effectually than any armed lore; and although our navy might be victor ious wherever they wer able to meet tb enemy, witbout doubt a bitter cry of anguish wonld go up from our starving people lor bread and peace, and ourgov- eminent would be belplee to resist that cry. Tbua might our magnificent empire b battered lor want ol a little wheat. Many regard our' possessions a pkely sources to obtain all our wheat Irom; tbey bar sufficient lund, it I true, to grow all our requirement, but tb peo ple ara not ready lor such an undertak ing; and. even wer tbey to grow u(fl- cient wheat to meet our requirements, we should still bav th question of hos tile fast cruisers to fan. A nation should for ber daily bread depend only on ber own resources, on ber own fields, stack yard and granaries. Where tbia ia Hnpissible tb Ideal state should lav reached to auch a degree as can be effected with moderate aocrtfloe and atate help. Whilst promoting an increase in our own wheat area we might encourage our possessions lo send u inev wheat. Th wheat area in th United Kingdom ha decreased, a shown In tb lollow. ing table: Year. ' No. of Acre in Wheat 1N.V1 4.21.1,051 iMOfl ;t.IO,f.n4 1H7 ,IH,f..'.5 HHH , ,J,.'lft.',45l IMi l,73,ll On another page of thia issu Mr. Iiuisa IWII. a farmer' wile, give her i per inc with tb Hhspard Medical In stitute, Flv year ago when I'r, ihf ard adopted a low monthly lew for all patient other doctor mad vigorous objection but I'r. f bepard eonliuud hi praelio pist th same, and tly I treating hundred of patieut each month. Ill prey tic I probably the largest la Nebraaka. Ilia buaina land ing ami raaloaaiblllty I beyond que, tion, Hundred ol Ih beat paopl in luwa, Nebraska, Kansas ai.d other weal em state ara takiug !ratmut and praising It, Kvary week afef al surad pstMiil will tvtily la thea roluuius aa to bis or bar rurw. Our readers should Invtwtigal I'r Hhepard'a treatment aud plan; it wtil roat nothing. Write to him and aak for bla Iraa riraulntioa blanka with parlieular of ft Hunt Traat intdl. Alter you bav invali(tei the matter II you want Ih treatment It will oatytiu an ntor than the nmdnln aloii would eoat at your leal drug atora, II you don't want It thr te no harm don ft lalantettl on another 1sga, la wrttlHg ad-lraa Mhapa'd Mat), ia! litattiate. Ail, Mil and ilia Saw York l.lle Huildisg, Omaha, Nebraska. riCOM THE GENEVA SCHOOL, ontning of tb Msanw In Wbicti it I Conducted, Tb 0uva Industrial ffebool wa built In 191 and is located owetalf mil northwest of tieturva, FilU mors county, Thai ar now seventy young girl at th school, l'rbp ther is not another state institution ia th state that will aneouiplUh aa mueb good for tfi fotar gtwaratioM a tbia ecboof, for tb reason that here many of the mo then of tb 01 1 generation ar taught, not only book and (Iterator but tb vseful avoeatbna of lit, asd tbeir moral and spiritual water ar oV vefoped as well, fbey go forth tron this institution realizing that they ar to b useful women In tb world, trW a witbout fit teaching tkwy rwasir br It would Im better Pit tb stat Mid poaterify that tbey never wer bora. It might be well in thia eonawtioa to know something of tit officers wbo bare this school In cbarg, Tb suparinteod' nt, Mr, Wfer, believe In tb teaching of Him wbo did oa Calvary aad by It xarnpf fa Inculcate into tb mind ol theae girl th right Idea of true woman' bord. In politics b i a popnlhit, bar ing team avraf Uum in tb legislature, ltbr as a unfa ir or clerk of som tmporimt ommittew, a delegate to tb Ciaslnnatl convention in IMfl, and to tb fat Mt, lxui eonveation whkb aomlaated Uryaa, and i now secretary of th tte ewntrai committee, Mr, Weber ba made som most xewlient swlaetion in tbosw wbo aaaist bim In tb Institution, Tb matron, Mrs, K, N, 1'billfVk, of fAk eouaty, wa for tbrwyswrs a fwiOa ary to Africa, know well tb lajport aue ol training young girl litt aaefnl live, Mrs, M, V, Wlllard, ot (iraad Isb and. wbo I family manager and tabr of tb "A," or older das of girl, i a mother bsrselr, and take a mud inter' est in tbe young ladle a many of their own mothers bav doa, Mb bae tb lov asd respect of all ber etam. Mia Laura lck, of r airmont, i tb family manager and teacher of tb "tt," or smaller tt a, Mb ba bees a teavchar for nin years, ! never tire ia oVing for and working witb tb litti onaa, I, C, Urannan. of Omaha, I eUtrk a4 steward, W prdet tbat no farwsti gating commit tea will vr find a bort ag in Li anumU, Mrs, M, II, liakr, Crate, baa cbrg of tie sawing etas, wbr tb pupils ar taught to do ail kinds of sawing, Mrs Tucker, of Gtva, teaches tbeaa bow to cook, and Mian Mattel Ionovaa, of Oatewa, ba cbarga of tb laundry department, Mmt, Kftuf, A York, ad liaatstr, iA Lta eola, look after tit mtrnr1g aad rlamblng oVpartmant, 14. Mrti. ol Valparateo, atlaad to tb farm, T, C Caanis. M, ) of Oetevra, J ttr pbyst dan, Wlien any of ta readers of tb IsiKfcsocsy visit (iaatrva fUy sbould ' not fail to go out and as tbi iatitv tioa and msk tb aeriuiata of ita genial officer, O, W, 11, tO THE BUrrALO ENCAMPMENT I, N. Leonard, a TWva from Icjcaa tef County, Will V(t Hi Conrad), Mr. I, X. Laosard, tb well ksowa farmer in tb aort hern part of tb coun ty, ba gon to tb national ca mo ment of tb 0, A, R, at Buffalo, K, I, II ba taken with bim some samples of fruit raised on hi farm, Tbsampte ara as good a can b found in tb state and will convince tb Xdw York people tbat Nebraska la suited to fruit raising aa well aa corn aad stock raUtag. That ia a practical and aaneibUJway to advrr tia Nebraska. Mr, Leonard waa a mwmber of tb Wtb Indiana veteran Infantry, In wbicb b served for four years and four month. II bas an excellent military record, Waa twice wounded at Cbatacboocb and Hton Itiver. Tbr ar lew man wbo wer participant In more battte than Mr. Ixnard, II has praparad a batlg vary handsom In Ite design. It consist of piece of nick I plated metal with th nam of on of th bait law la wbicb Mr. Leonard was engaged stamp ed on ewh jit, and all of them linked together, Thar ara twenty plate car rying tb name of twenty batttea, aa lollows: (irewa UrUr, lltiffolo Mountain, Hlillah, Corinth, I'enyville, Ite nv III, Wild Cat Mountain. Xtona Hivar, thu ka mauga, lookout Mountain, Missionary Itidgs, llingold, Haltos, lUsMica, Adaia ville, Kuaaw Mountain, f'hatUcboo chae, franklin, Naahvtil Ooldsbor. Th grain iroducte of Nabraaka tbia year ar value.) at about I.V,iMXJ,teK, Whan sold It will materially lucre th vol urn of money In circulation la tb late. An Incraaa in th vol uui of money always brings good tlmea. The following la tblit of dlgatea to tb populiat slat convention Iront Itewaaeoustyt X, II, Mtewart, J. W, I'liiniiiier, M, J, loi,T. It. f arlay. W, 1. Haywood, M. M, It. ftfuart, . J. Adam, Waller M, Kara aad 1 rank fsy dar, At the populiat primary la ,aacatar braaim l liwfd Mttaday alght, a raol lion wa poaad lavorisg luaios, About lty volar war praat aad pattest hartiMiwy pravalUI. Th dlegatioN rome in th ran van lion unlHalrueiad, gubarrltei (of III pSH7t np to data Ksst po ted faasaraU Uwatate liver, lldacya aa owtlai av iliaa,waksa ar rfca Xt$ A.