The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, January 18, 1900, Page 7, Image 7
January 18, 1900. TEE ITEBriABKA IITDEPEITDEIIT. . "1 i J it's: N- -m .SJf (Continued Froiri Last Week. ...... i ; ; . . Xn truth, nothing matte. Tbia dirty little- world full of con fd Ion. aod the ; blue' rag stretched overhiad for a sky la so low we could toudi it with pur hand. . -. ( v. . J - Existence4 is a ffreat ' pL and the nit! fate who stirs it rounIoares nothing what rises to the top lud what proes down and laughs whi the bubble burst. And we do no!1 care. Let h boil about. Why shojd we trouble Vuurselves? Nevertbt-te the phyKitu sensations are real. Iljger hurts, am' thirst: therefore we eafcnd drink. lu action pains us: therefp we work Ilk galley slaves. No onepmand it. but we set ourselves to bfd a great dam In red sand beyond tbraves. In the gray dawn ffore the sheep are let out we work it it All day . while the young osi-bes . we ten ! - feed about us. we worpn through tbt fiercest beaL The jeople wonder what new spirit haseized . us now They do not know wee working for life. We bear the grjest stones and .feel a satisfaction tn we stagger under them and arejirt by a pang that shoots through i chest. While we eat our dinner wepry on baskets full of earth, as thouaf.be devil drove m. The Kaffir serva have. a story that at night a wltcind two white oxen come to belp ufNo wlL they "r. say, could grow so ckly under one ; man's hands. i '" At night, alone in cabin, we si . no more brooding ovete fire. Wha! should we think of nf All is empti ness. So we take tidd arithmetic, and the multiplican table, which with so much pains? learned long ago and forgot direcjwe learn now In a few hours and ar forget again. We take a strangntisfactlon in working arithmetlcarobleois. We pause in our buiidj to cover the nones with figures ! calculations. :We save money lor and an algebra and Atm grammar Jy them about In our pockets, por over them as over our Bible of old; have thought we were utterly st Incapable of remembering anyth of learning anything. Now w4d that all is ;.'aay. Has a new shrept into this Told body, that evetir Intellectual faculties are chan We marvel, not perceiving tbatat a man ex pends In prayer andasy he cannot have over for actj.g knowledge. You never shed a,r or create a beautiful jmage orrer with emo tion but you pay fr. the practical, calculating end j nature. You have Just so niuv.i'e. When the : ne channel runs the other runs dry. ( - And now we tu Nature. All these years we hayed beside her, and we have never her. Now we open cur eyes and it her. , The rocks have to us a blur of brown. We bendjthem, and the disorganized roaaiiissolYe into a many colored, maniped, carefully - arranged form of aice. here mass es' of rainbow t crystals half fused together, th nds of smooth gray and red me ally overlying each other. This nere is covered with a delicate slljacery, in some mineral resemblin?sand branch es. There on the lone, on which we so often have streep and pray, we look down andt covered with the fossil fpotprjnjreat birds a&d Haw Mi wm Cured f : after 5f tufftring. : ?t Mctitcheter, ilstuchen 2V. J, ' The fol( statement is made by U of Mr. J. E. Jewett, tb known reli gious pu of 77 Bible House, Nrk City. Mr. Jewett'sjr suburban home is a;chen N. J., nd Mrs. J is a member HZ AfiMalf aGeotiirv: of Metncd is highly es- 1 teemed irnmumty. She says: ( ; Xr$. j. Kjewtt. ' ! wa.Yith Rheumatism xrhon I was tweaty years o'd, and enOurcd JTorlng from the disease lor nearly fifty years. During that tl?iireated by regular physicians, and consulted the best .. . specially York and Philadelphia, but found no permanent re . lie! Tb9 all In my tnee Joints, and was at Umca almost nn- : boarabliinabla to go out of doors, and could only bobble about ' . the fcoui cane. I finally bought some of Dr. Williams' Pint Fins fbtple, and before I b.-vd used tho first box I noticed an lmprov fter I bad taken two boxes I could walk 'without a ! - cane, ariot of doors freely. Well, I continued nslng the plUs " and by tU had taken thirtynilx boxes I was entirely well, and eufferedjit alL (Signed) libs. JE, Jbwbtt." Dr. Uink Pills for Pale People expel impurities from the blood, an4 the material for rapidly rebuilding tvastednerve tissues. Informed hundreds of almost miraculous cures in se ,v8xe cases Inatism, niany times after doctors had given up hope. DH WILLIAMS trade n 5 on ezh - 1 oc 1 1L EOFLE DR. Wit MEDICINE BY OUTS SCtilfNUTEH. A TALE OF LIFE IN THE BOER REPUBLIC the beautiful "skeleton of a fish. We hare often tried to picture In our mind what the foBnIled remains of creatures mua be like- and a the while we sat on them. We have been so blinded by thinking and feeling that we have nev er seen the world. Tbt fiat plain has been to us a reach of monotonous red. We look at "It. and every handful of sand. starts into life. That wonderful people, the ants, we learn to know: see them make war and peace, play and work, and build their buge palaces. And that smaller people we make acquaintance with who live in the flowers. The bitto flower has been for us a mere blur of yellow. Yelflnd its heart composed of a hun dred perfect flowers? the homes of the tiny black people with red stripes, who move ki and out in" that little yellow city. Every bluebell has Its Inhabitant. Every day the "karroo" shows us a new wonder -sleeping in Its teeming bosom. On our way to work we pause and stand to see the ground spider make its trap, bury itself in the sand and then wait for the falling In of its enemy. Farther on , walks a horned beetle, and near , him starts open the door of a spider, who peeps out care fully and quickly pulls it down again. On a "karroo" bush a green fly Is lay ing her silver eggs. We carry them borne and see the shells pierced, the spotted grub come out. turn to a green fly and flit away. 1 We are not satisfied with what Na ture shows us and will see something for ourselves. Under the white ben we put a dozen eggs and break one dally to see the white spot wax into the chicken. We are not excited or enthusiastic about it But a man is not to lay his throat open. He. must think of something. So we plant seeds in rows on our dam wall and pull one up daily to see how It goes with them. Alladeen buried her wonderful stone, and a golden palace sprang up at her feet. We do far more. We put a brown seed la the earth, and a living Uiing starts out starts upward why, no more than : Alladeen can we say starts upward, and does not desist till it is higher than our heads, sparkling with dew in the early morning, glitter ing with yellow blossoms, shaking brown seeds with little embryo souls on to the ground. We look at it sol emnly from the time it consists of two leaves peeping above the ground and a soft white root till we have to raise our faces to look at it, but we find no reason for that upward starting. We look Into the dead ducks and lambs. In the evening we carry them borne, spread newspapers on the floor and lie working with them till mid night. With a startled feeling near akin to ecstasy we open the lump of flesh called a heart and find little doors and strings Inside..' We feel them and put the heart away, but every now and then return to look and to feel them again. Why we like them so we can hardly telL , , ' A gander drowns itself In our dam. We take It out and open it on the bank and kneel, looking at it. Above are the organs divided by delicate tissues; below are the Intestines artistically curved In spiral 'form and each tier covered by a delicate network of blood vessels standing out red against tha faint bue background. Each branch of the blood vessels is comprised of "a trunk, bifurcating and reblfurcating into the most delicate balrlike threads. INK a ILLS g FOR - K Sold 6y alt. druggists, 50 i 'cents per bex ; ; six boxes t Sr. jo. Of ALE 5 COMPANY, Ooheneotady. N. Y. symmetrically arranged.- We ere struck with its singular beauty. And, moreover (and here we drop from our kneeling Into a sitting posture), this also we remark of that ; same exact shape and outline Is our thorn tree seed against the sky 'In midwinter; of that saape also is delicate metallic tracery between onr rocks; la that exact path does our water flow when without a furrow we lead It from tba dam; so shaped are the antlers of the horned beetle. How are these things related that such deep union should exist between them all? Is It chance, or are they not all the fine branches of one trunk, whose sap flows through us all? That would explain ft We nod over the gander's inside. This thins- we call existence. Is ft not a something which has Its roots far d wo below in the dark and ita branches stretching out into the Im mensity above which we among the branches, cannot see? Not a chance Jumble, a living thing, a One. The thought gives us Intense satisfaction. .We cannot tell why. ; We nod over the gander, then start tip suddenly, , look Into the blue ' sky, throw the dead gander and the refuse Into the dam and go to .work again. And so it comes to pass In time that the earth ceases for us to be a welter ing chaos. We walk In the great ball of life, looking up and round reveren tially. Nothing is despicable; all Is mtaning full. Nothing Is small; all Is part of a whole whose beginning and end we know not. The life that throbs In us is a pulsation rom It. too mighty for our comprehension, not too smalL - And so It comes to pass at last that, whereas the sky was at first a small blue rag stretched out over us and so low that our hands might touch it, pressing down on us. it raises itself into an Immeasurable blue arch over our heads, and we begin to live again. CHAPTER XV. WALDO'S STRANGER. Waldo lay on his stomach on the red Rand. The small ostriches be herded wandered about him, pecking at the food he had cut or at pebbles and dry sticks. On his right lay the graves, on his left the dam. In his hand was a large wooden post covered with carv ings., at whloh he worked. Doss lay before him basking in the winter sun shine and now and again casting an ex pectant glance at the . corner of the nearest ostrich camp. The scrubby thorn trees under which they lay yield ed no shade, but none was needed in that glorious June weather, when in the hottest part of , the afternoon the sun was but pleasantly warm. And the boy carved on, not looking up. yet conscious of the brown serene earth about him and the Intensely blue sky above. , '--' ' '' , Presently, at the corner of the camp, Em appeared, bearing a covered saucer in one hand and in the other a jug with a cup on the top. She was grown into a premature little old woman of 16, ridiculously fat. The Jug and saucer she put down on the ground before the dog and his master and dropped down beside them herself, panting and out of breath. "Waldo, as I came up the camps I met some one on horseback, and I do believe it must be the new man that la coming." , - ' : The new man was an Englishman1 to whom the Boer woman had hired half the farm. ' "Hum!" said Waldo. " "He Is quite young." said Em. bolfllng her side, "and he has brown hair and beard curling close to his face and such dark blue eyes. And. Waldo. 1 was so ashamed! I was Just looking back to see, you know, and be hap pened just to be looking back. too. and we looked right Into each other's face, and he got red," and I got so red. I be lieve he Is the new man." "Yes," said Waldo. "I must go now. Perhaps he has brought us letters from the post from Lyndall. You know, she can't stay at school much longer. She must come "back soon. And the new man will have to stay with us till his house Is built. I must get his room ready, Goodbyl" - She tripped off again, and Waldo carved on at his post. Doss lay with his nose close to the covered saucer and sroelled that some one had made nice little fat cakes that afternoon. Both were so intent on their occupa tion that not till a horse's hoofs beat beside them in the sand did they look up to see a rider drawing in his steed. He was certainly not the stranger whom Em had described, a dark some what French looking little man of eight and twenty, rather stout, with heavy, cloudy eyes and pointed mus taches, nis horse was a fiery crea ture, well caparisoned. A highly fin ished saddlebag hung from the saddle. The' man's hands were gloved, and be presented the appearance an appear ance rare on that . farm of . a well dressed gentleman. In an uncommonly melodious voice he inquired whether be might be al lowed to remain there for an hour. Waldo directed him to the farmhouse, but the stranger declined. He would merely rest under the trees and give his horse water. He removed the bad die, and Waldo led the animal away to the dam. J. When he returned, the stranger had settled himself under the trees, with his back against the sad dle. .The boy offered him of the cakes. He declined, but took a draft from the Jug, and . Waldo lay down not far off and fell to work again. It mat bred nothing if cold eyes saw lu It was not his sheep shearing machine. With' material loves, as with human, we go mad once, love out and have done. . . We never get up the true en thusiasm a second time. This was but a thing be bad made. labored over, lov ed and liked, nothing more not bis machine. - vv" ' The stranger forced ; himself lower down ip the fdd and yawned, it V yj lAi UVU . A tape worm eighteen fMt lone; at least una o to soene after my taklogtwo OASCARBTS. Tkls 2 am sure bas caused my bad health tor the past three years. I am still lak: g Oascareu. the only eathartio worthy or aotioe by eansfbla people.' - uao. w. UOWL.M, uaira, uig CAMOV -CATHARTIC .Pleasaat. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Biosea. Weaken, or Grl. 10c. 2bc.S0c ... CURB CONSTIPATION. ... SfHb B j C May, Chtemp, M toi. Mm TtIu KJ If A.Tn.nf! 80,(1 n4 JErSItl by nil drog Htf" I IrUAV gists to CtUlsKTobaooo llabitT was a drowsy afternoon, and he object ed to travel in these out of the world parta. He liked better civilized life, where at every hour of the day a man may look for bis glass of wine and bis easy chair and paper; where at night he may lock himself into his room with his books and a bottle of brandy and taste joys mental and physical. The world said to him the all knowing, omnipotent world, whom no locks can bar. who has the catlike propensity! of seeing best In the' dark the worli said that .better than the books he loved the brandy and better than books or brandy that which It had been better 1 had he loved less.' But for the world he cared nothing He smiled blandly in Its teeth." All life is a dream. If wine and philosophy and women keep the dream from becoming a nightmare, so much the , better. It is all they' are fit for, all they can be used for: There was another side to bis. life and thought, but of that' the world knew nothing and said nothing, as the way of the wise world is. - ' The stranger looked from beneath his sleepy eyelids at the brown earth that stretched away, beautiful in spite of Itself, in that June sunshine; looked at the graves, the gubips of the farm house showing over the stone walls of the camps, at the clownish fello-.v at his feet, and yawned. But he bad drunk of the hind's tea and must say something.; t t "Your father's place, I presume?" he Inquired sleepily. "No; I am only a servant." "Dutch people?" v . ' "Yes." ' ?And you like the lifer? The boy hesitated. "On days like these." , ; : "And why on these Tt The boy waited. ' "They are very beautiful.'' . The strahger looked at him." It seem ed that as the1 fellow's dark eyes look ed across the, brown earth , they kin dled with an intense satisfaction. Then they looked back at the carving. What had that creature, so coarse clad and clownish, to do with the sub tle joys of the weather? 'Himself,' white handed and delicate, he might hear the music which shimmering sun shine and solitude play on the finely strung ehords of nature, but that fel low! Was . not the ear In that great body too gross for such delicate m ut ter! ngs? .:-':'-.;.' ' Presently he said: , "May I see what you work at?" The fellow banded his woodenpost. It was by no means lovely. The men and birds were -almost grotesque in their labored resemblance to nature and bore signs of patient thought The stranger turned the tliiug over on his knee. - i . ';.-.' f "Where did you learn this work?" "I taught myself." "And these zigzag lines represent"--"A mountain." ; ; r , Thesstranger looked. 'Tt has some meaning, has It not?" The boy muttered confusedly: "Only things." ; v The questioner looked down at him the huge, unwieldy figure, in slxe a man's. In right of Its childlike fea tures and curling hair a child's and It hurt him. It attracted him. and ' It hurt him. It was something between pity and sympathy. . v : "How long have you worked at this?" A: J-::- "Nine months." From his pocket the'; stranger drew his pocket book and took something from it. He could fasten the post to his horse in some way and throw it away In the sand when at a safe dis tance. "'V -'T' . : V Will you take this for your carving??- ;; :,?r'-..--; : The boy glanced at the 5 note and shook bis head. "No; I cannot." - . ' : "You think It is worth more?" asked the stranger, with a little sneer, v He pointed with ,. his thumb to a grave. ' : :' ' "Sai it Is for him.'' ' "And who la there?" asked the stran ger., ..: .; "My father." y...v;':-" The man silently returned the ' note to his pocketbook and gave the carv ing to the boy and, drawing his hat over his eyes, composed himself - to sleep. Not being able to do so, after awhile h glanced over the fellow's shoulder to watch him work. The boy carved letters Into, the back. ; . , , "If,"-said the stranger, with his melodious voice, rich with a sweetness that never showed itself in the clouded eyes, for sweetness will linger on In the voice after it has died out In the eyes "if for such a purpose, . . why write that opcTVltf ? w y v The boy.glruced at him. but made no answer. He had r! ' "cottea his presence, "You surely believe stran ger, "that some day. . - later, these graves win open auu caose Boer nnclea with their wives walk about here, la tbe rrJ KS with the very. JJ mm MAUN IKMsmMOt' fleshly legs with . which they went to sleep? Then why say, He sleeps for ever? You believe be will stand up again?" "Do your asked, the boy. lifting for an instant hJa heavy eyes to the stran ger's face. -vj . :- Half taken aback, the stranger laugh ed. It was as though a curious little tadpole which be held under his glass should suddenly lift its tail and begin to question him, "I? No." He laughed bis short, thick laugh. "1 am a man who be lieves nothing, hopes nothing, fears nothing, feels nothing. I am beyond the pale of. humanity, no criterion of what you :. should be - who Uve here among yoar ostriches and bushes." The next moment: the. stranger was surprised by a sudden movement on the part of the fellow, which brought him close to the stranger's feet. Boon after be raised bis carving and laid it across the man's knee. "Yea. I will tell you." he muttered; T will tell yoa all about it." , He put his finger on the grotesque little manikin at the bottom (ah, that man who believed nothing, hoped noth ing, felt nothing bow he loved hlm!, and. with eager finger the fellow moved upward, explaining over fantastic fig ures and mountains, to the crowning bird from whose' wing dropped a feath er. At the end he spoke with broken breath short words, like one who ut-. tera things of mighty Import The stranger watched'more the face than the carving, and there was now and then, a ; show of white 'teeth be-, neath the mustaches as he listened. "I thinks be said blandly when the boy had. done, Vthat ; 1 partly under stand you. : It Is something after thjs fashion. Is It not?" He smiled. "In certain valleys there was a hunter." He touched the grotesque little figure at the bottom. "Day by day he went to hunt for wild fowl In the'woods, and It chanced that once he stood on the shores of a lare lake. While he stood' waiting in the rushes for the coming of the birds a great shadow fell on him, and in the water he saw a re flection. He looked up to the sky, but the thing was gone. Then a burning desire came over him to see once agsin that reflection in the water, and all 'day be' watched and waited, but night came, and it had: not returned. Then lie went home with bis empty bag, moody and silent, nis comrades came questioning about him to kuow the rea son, but he answered them nothing, lie sat alone and brooded. Then; h!$ friend catue to him, and to him he spoke., : ' ".- " 'I have seen today, he said. that which I never saw before a vast white bird, with ,silver wings outstretched, sailing in the everlasting blue, And now It Is as though bl great fire burned within my breast It was but a sheen, a shimmer, a reflection in the water, but now I desire nothing more on earth than to hold her.' v "His friend laughed. ' "'It was but a beam playing on the water or the shadow of your own head. Tomorrow you will forget her,' he said. "But tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow the hunter walked alone. He sought in the forest and In the woods, by the lakes and among the rushes, but he could not find her. He shot no more wild fowl. What were , they to him?-. ' , . a , ,;; . "'What alls him T said hla comrades. f Ue i mad,' said one. ; "No; but be Is worse said another. 'He would -see that which none of us have seen and make himself a wonder.' .'"'Come, let us forswear his com pa ny.' said all. '. ' "So the hunter walked alone, "One night as be -wandered in the shade, very heartsore and weeping, an old man stood before him, grander and taller than the sons of men. "'Who are you? asked the hunter. " I am Wisdom, answered the old man, 'but some men called me Knowl edge. All my life I have, grown in these valleys, but no man sees me till he has sorrowed much. The eyes must be washed with tears' that are to be hold me, and, according as a man has suffered. I speak V "And the hunter cried: v r Oh, you who have lived here so long, teH roe, what is that great wild bird I have seen sailing in the blue? They would have me believe she is a dream, the shadow of my own head.' , ; "The old man smiled, y ?'' ' . " Her name is Truth. He who has once seen her never rests again. Till death he desires her. - "And the hunter cried: 'Oh, tell me where I may find herf "But the man said;" " 'You have not suffered enough and went: :: si.'.. '.',".-'. ': i '.;.:'-';,:'-:::',,' "Then the' hunter took from his breast the shuttle of Imagination and wound on it the thread, of his Wishes, and all night he sat and wove a net' "In the morning he spread the golden net open on the ground, and into it be threw a few grains of credulity, which his father had left him and which he kept in his breast pocket r They were like white puff ba 11b, and when you trod on them a brown dust flew out .Then $10O Reward $100. v The readers of this paper will be pleased to loam that there ia at least one dreaded disease that science , has been able to cure in all its stages, and that U Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only . positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh .being a constitutional disease, requires a consti tutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, actio? directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the founda tion of the disease, and giving the pa tient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure, . Send for list of testimonials.' v '; Address.F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. ESTBoId by Dru gists, 75c -. . ( Bail's Fandly 'tills are the best. ' fie sat By to see wFat wouf3f happen. The first that came Into the net was a snow white bird, with dove's eyes. And he sang a beantlful song. 'A human God, a human God, a human God!" It sang. The second that came was black and mystical. . with dark, lovely eyes, that looked Into the depths of, your soul, and he sang only this 'Immor talityP .. . ': Continued next week. .Dr. f Bull's Cough Syrup prevents pneumonia or inflama tion of the lungs. This celebrated remedy will cure a cough or cold promptly. It is the best medicine for all Jtinda bflung trouble and costs but 25cts a bottle. Tii3 teSiafor Prcta' ,v Among those machines which made a nwjst enviable ; reputation at "'home in their own immediate territory before they nought a wider fieldnone stsnd out with more prominence tfib,a the Sure Hatch Incubator and Breeders, which are manufactured " by th SLre "Hati;h Incubator Co. of Clay Center, Neb. We do not refer to those machine asNbeing new and untried but wish to pointf out that they were manufactured in a sh;all way and tried, tested and used under a?l varying conditions at home in Nebraska1, before they were offered ' to the pubuo at large. The gratifying1 results have borae out the wisdom of the manufac turers in this plan of working. Another wpecially strong point of the Sure Hatch people seems to us to lie in the fact that they eonfine their efforts to but one kind of incuhatora and brooders and devote all their time, energy and capital, and business and mechanical skill to attain, ing the highest degree of ' perfection alone thi-s s-ineie line. 'l- These points are highly appreciated by their r patrons everywhere, each realizing , that they have ixUKht the perfected machine of a specialist in that parUcularolice of man uiacture. 'Xhe cut here shown Kives a a very good idea of the appearance of the bure Hatch Incubator. Perhaps the most prominent feature of these machines' is the hot water tank which is so constructed that no water rests over the center of the egg . chamber. Tho tank is thickest and the volume of water greatest on the surrounding edges of the egg chamber, just where the greatest amount of heat is required. This matter is fully explained and illustrated in the catalogue wLi ;h every interested person should road before buying an incubator The machines are automatic in every way and. so constructed that by follow- irrrj. ing simple m- "Sississsswm wen niga iin- ' for; catalogue, " prices, etc., and kindly mention that yu saw thte little article in our paper. :. f RIGGS, The Dentist, v 141 So. 12th S., Lincoln, TSi Gold Alloy Filling $1.00 Gold Filling $1.00 and up Gold Crowns . $i.00 and up Set of Teeth . . V . . $5 00 Best Teeth' . ;' . . . . $8 00 RIGGS, The Dentist, 141 So. 12th St., Lincoln. Neb- at ; nio jjj sut5 TO ins ???????? or If so, arrangements should be made ships are engaged early tho number tcatioDs, it not used, can easily be gardicg this trip can be had at my ' C. P. A. Burlington Route, Roy's Drug 140 PAINLESS EXTRACTION General Drug Business and Prescription Work. Paints, Oils, Glass, Ground Oil Cake, Etc. Prices low as the lowest. 'K ISTRov's -C SfiVflng Kaci H:;:!rs. ' Sewing machine shuttles, needles and repairs, all kinds, any machine, satisfac tion guaranteed or money refunded. Address, Geo. B. Oxley, Greenfield, O. $2.00 shoes ,f 1.25 Sanderson's ale 1213 O street. Little Oval Photoa, 25o pe. dozen. I Cabinets 02.00 i . Per dozen. The Rock Istnnd Playing Cards are the slickest you eerv hndled. One pack will be' sent by mail on receipt of 13 cents in tai'.4. A, money order er draft for 50 cents or same. in staaif will secure 1 packs, and they will be neat by ezprM, curge prpaiq. AGareaswooa Seba.sUaa. G. P. 1, O.E.LA P, Chi- raco, . r . . ;- .- - - - - --: 4 i $10-oo TO SSO.oo 1KD El Mn4t IJLY HAY !tt CC AesiKEfiOrrir Yeu Can uaka fcifi Kanef wftk our iiMKimwu. Wa farjitea Ti'kUaBa- Book or iAkirauom teni.iac yon w va aonauct u wu KCHIHES $5, SIS AND $12; EXMSITIOX CuTTITS, $23.76. For fvit ptrtiralan a lbUaU3 HI an4MIIta m. Addre Sears, Roebuck &. Co. (inc.), Chicasa, tU. DR. fl. B. KETHUn, ; SPEOIAIST. $ye, Ear, Noso, Throat, . Catarrh. SpectaVea Fitted Accurately . . . ; . . , . . All Fees Reasonable OFFICE B'om 3li M IF1 iflssid Wool. COBSOH & LtSDGREII r Dealers in Hides, WovU TalloW, and Furs. Send in your gcods and get the HIGHEST markei'pf 920 fl STREET, ; x LINCOLN, NEBR. A. D. Culp : Successors, to John Wlttorff Johx Backs. I CULP & WlTTfJRFF c '; - Dealers in - - O Juz Trade . a Specialty. Fine Hot Lunch 950 to 12.' - . Saturday xxighi 8 to XI . I 915 O STREET S. Ft. IiamM, Attorney. NOTICE. TO TAKE DEPOSITIONS.. State of Nib a ska. Lancaster Couaty a. In district court, Lancaster county, NebrasVa, Albert L. Sinitli. i r., ts. Gladys Smith, Th defendant will taite notica that on Tnendar, January m.ltb, 1900, between th bourti of ten a. m. and six p. m.. at tbe office of W. Scott NoaL room 4, Piooeer buildinR. in the city of BoUe, county of Ada, state of Idalio, the plaint tl above aatawl will take the deposition, Q. R. BinseL, a wttness in tbis actioa. to be used at evidence on the trial of tbe above eatitled cause, with authority to adjourn from day te day until all such depositions shall have been taken. ALBEBT L. SMITILJb.. i Flaintiff. Tbe north wind shakes fcbe leave frem the tmej There's a chill in In air, and If coin fto : 1 Um'tb HliOGifiB THE STOVE your coal now and be ooxvobtabxjl T7t) can serre you promptly. Be wua and scat of the s . ' ' Centervsllo Block Coal Co 119 South 12th GTTTe eell'TxarrHiNO in tne wasd Yard Phono 302 Office Phone 307 . World's Fair and :; ; Eiposition at Pds O ????????P$ at once all the best berths -en the of ships are limited and early reset O disposed of. Descriptive literature re- office. GEO! W. BONNELLr Cor. loth and O Sts.f Lincoln, Nebw Store. 5 NORTH TENTH STREET. rth 10th PRE m ' ) : . V- j . -