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About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1900)
. February 15, 1900 . : : 7 :w:.. 1 r i-. ....... I,. nf i i nr Mr fur trrinrii h ii t f t i t r h t rr""Ti-r'Ti ! v h i i - . t - -f . .. it fs not means of making bread, fo A 17 . . , , - - if : I whea each . woman's' life, is .filled .with Ioy.U -iiinicvuyiniu;. m .a 12 if . k- ' . - 1 II . ... ' Ki - I I VK Ul uttri : V IV. (Continued From Last Week. . ""When she epoke again, it was very tneasuredly. They bring ? weighty arguments against ns when we -ask tor the per fect freedom of women," she said, 'but when yon. come to the .objections they are like pumpkin devils with can dles Inside, hollow,"" and can't bite. They say that women do not wish for the sphere and freedom wo ask for them and would not use It. T "If the bird does like Its cage and docs like Its sugar and will not leave , It, why keep the door so very carefully -ehut? Why not open it, only a little? ' Do they know there is many a bird will not break Its wlns against the bars, but would fly- If the doors were "open?" She knit her forehead and lean ed farther over the bars. Then they say, 'If the women have the liberty you ask for, they will be found In positions for which they are not fittedT If two men climb one lad- dbr, did you ever see the weakest any where but at the 'foot? The surest Blgn of fitness is success. The weakest never wins but-where there Is handi capping. Nature left to herself will as beautifully apportion a man's work tc his capacities as -long ages ago she graduated the colors on the bird'i breast. If we are" hot fit, you give us to no purpose the right to labor. The ' work will Tall out of our hands into tiio9 that are wiser. She talked more rapidly as she went en, as one talks of that over which one has brooded long and which lies near one's heart. Waldo watched berrintentl y, . . . . . . . "They say women have one great and noble work left them, and they do it ill. That is true. They do it execra bly. It is the work that demands the broadest culture, and they have not even the narrowest. . The lawyer may see no deeper than his lawbooks and the chemist see no farther than the windows of his laboratory, and they may do their work well. But the wo man who does woman's work needs a many sided, multiform culture. The heights and depths of human life must not be beyond the reach of ber vision. 1 She must have knowledge of men and things in many states, a wide catholic- ty of- sympathy, the strength that isprlngs from knowledge and the mag- ' 0 nauimity that springs from strength. We bear, the world, and we make it. The souls of little children are mar velously delicate and tender things and keep forever the shadow that first falls on them, and that Is the mother's, or, at best, a woman's. There was never a great man who had not a great moth er. It Is hardly an exaggeration. The first six j-ears of our life make us. All . that is added later is veneer. And yet some say 'if a womnncan cook a din ner or dress herself well she has cul ture enough. "The mightiest and noblest of human work Is "given to us, and we do it ilL Send a navvy to work into an artist's etudlo and see what you will find there! .And yet, thank God, we have this work," she added quickly. "It is the one window through which we see Into the great world of earnest labor. The meanest girl who dances and dresses becomes something higher when her children look up into her face and ask ber questions. It Is the only education we have and which they cannot take from us. She smiled slightly. "They say that We complain of woman's being com r 1 From one who baa words of Air. Nellie broad meaning to every "la tha fall of 189H I eh trouble in the very my etomacb, and I bad me constantly. The lack rapidly: 1 drouMd from time. There was not the shadow of my former self. Able physicians treated me, but failed absolutely. I was a complete wreck; when a friend told me to try vr. Williams' .Tin K mis for Pale Feople. One box gTeatly Im proved my condition; It was astonishing how quickly they built me up. i believe Pink Mb P saved my X was enabled to sleep, and la the moraine I felt refreshed and rented. My stotnacit was strengthened, what 1 ate , benefited m&mTWM?bt fnrrrfuuwl m.it T .ruin rirtr.w4 it x nau tMk i ttm now wen ana tarour. i cannot speak rrW too hitflUy of Dr. Williams' rink rills for Pale PeopleV7, I I Buoecrioed and .worn to before tills Sd day of July. 1889. STACY D. BKH E Xotary AH womankind should know and me virtues oi ut w imams riiuriiu fox Pale People. , . Bold by aU druggists. Prep red IKE DR. WILLIAMS MEDICINE Schenectady, N. Y. i 8C2BEXZfSB. n A TALE OF LIFE IN THE BOER REPUBLIC. n pelled to look upon marriage as a pro fession, but that she Is free to enter upon It or leave It, as she pleases. "Yes, and a cat set afloat In a pond is free to sit in the tub till it dies there. It is under no obligation to wet its feet. And a drowning man may catch at a straw or not, just as he likes. It is a glorious liberty! Let any man think for five minutes of what old maiden hood means to a woman, and then let him be silent. Is it easy to bear throughout life a name that In Itself signifies defeat to dwell, as nine out of ten unmarried women must, under thefinger of another woman? Is it easy to look forward to an old age with out honor, without the reward of use ful labor, without love? I wonder how many men there are-who would give up everything that is dear in life for the sake of maintaining a high ideal purity." ' - She laughed a little laugh that was clear .without being pleasant. "And then, when they have no other argu ment against us, they say: 'Go on. but when you have made woman what you wish and her children 'inherit her culture you will defeat yourself. Man will gradually, become extinct from ex cess of Intellect. The passions which replenish the race will die. Fools!" she said, curling her pretty Up. "A Hottentot sits at the roadside and feeds on a rotten bone he has found there and takes out his bottle of Cape smoke and swills at it and grunts with satisfaction, and the cultured child of the nineteenth century sits in his arm chafr and sips choice wines with the lip of a connoisseur and tastes deli cate dishes with a delicate palate and with a satisfaction of which the Hot tentot knows nothing. Heavy Jaw and sloping forehead, all have gone with Increasing intellect, but the animal ap petites are there still, refined, discrimi native, but Immeasurably intensified. Fools I Before men forgave or wor shiped, while they, were still weak on their hind legs,, did they not eat and drink and fight for wives? When all the latter additions to humanity have vanished, will not the foundation on which they are built remain? She was silent then for awhile and said somewhat dreamily, more as though speaking to herself than to him: 'Tbey ask; What will you gain, even If man does not become extinct? You will have brought justice and equality on the earth and sent love from it. When men and women are equals, they will love no more. Your highly cul tured women will not be lovable, will not love. Do they see nothing understand nothing? It is Taut' Sannie who buries husbands one after another and folds her hands resignedly 'The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away, and blessed be the name of the Lord' and she looks for another. It is the hard headed, deep thinker who, when the wife who has thought and worked with him goes, can find no rest and lingers near her till he finds sleep beside her. "A great soul draws and Is drawn with a more fierce Intensity than any small one. By every Inch we grow In intellectual height our love strikes down its roots deeper and spreads out Its arms wider. It is for love's sake yet more than for any other that we look for that new time." She had leaned her head against the stones and watched with her sad, soft eyes the retreating bird. "Then when that time comes." she said slowly, "when love Is no more bought or sold,, when mi litem to all who are goffering. The Cameron, of Lock port, N.Y., convey m thoughtful woman. Mrs. Cameron says: was In a deplorable condition. 1 had stom worst form. Nothing at all would stay on to almost starve myself. Aly side pained of nourishment can sed me to lose flesh 13S to VJ rounds, crovriur weaker all tha slightest color In my face. 1 was slznnlv a BY ouvs r. Williams' life. me. Public understand only fey CO.. n it is not -it means of making bread, when each woman's life Is filled with earnest, independent labor, then love wilt come, to iter,: a strange sudden sweetness breaking in upon her earnest work, not sought for, but found. Then, but not now r ' "- Waldo waited for her to finish the sentence, but she seemed to have for gotten him. ; V . J- : i.yudall," he said,, putting bis nana upon her she started), "if you think that that new time will be so great, so good, you who speak, so easily" She interrupted him ' - ' "Speak speak r she said. "The dif ficulty is hot to speak. The difficulty is to keep silence." ' V " 0 'But why do you not try to bring that time?" he said, : with pitiful sim plicity. "When you speak, I believe all you say. Other people would listen to yon also." - 4 ll am not so sure of that," she said, with a smile. " Then over the small face came the Weary took it had worn last night as it watched the shadow In the corner ah, so weary I - T. Wnldn. I?" shf. sn!d. "I will do nothing good for myself, nothing for the world, till some one wakes me. I am asleep, swathed, shut up in self. Till I have been delivered I will deliver no one." He looked at her, wondering, but she was not looking at him. "To see the good and the beautiful," she said, "and to have no strength to live it is only to be Moses on the moun tain of Nebo, with the land at your feet and no power to enter. It would be better not to see It. Come." she said, looking up into his face and see ing Its uncomprehending expression, "let us go. It is getting late. Doss is anxious for his breakfast also." She added, wheeling round and calling to the dog, who was endeavoring to un earth a mole, an occupation to which he bad been zealously addicted from the third month, but in which he had never on any single occasion proved successful. Waldo shouldered his bag, and Lyn- dall walked on before In silence, with the dog close at her side. Perhaps she thought of the narrowness of the lim its within which a human soul may speak and be understood by its nearest of mental kin. of how soon it reaches that solitary land of the individual ex perience In which no fellow footfall is ever heard. Whatever her thoughts may have been, she was soon inter rupted. Waldo came close to her and. standing still, produced with awk wardness from bis breast pocket a small carved box. "I made It for you," he said, holding It out. "I like it," she said, examining It carefully. The workmanship was better than that of the grave post, The flowers that covered it were delicate, and here and there small conical protuberances were let In among them. She turned It round critically. Waldo bent over it lovingly. ' "There Is one strange thing about it," he said earnestly, putting a finger on one little pyramid. "I made It without these, and I felt something was wrong. I tried many changes. and at last I let these in, and then It was right. But why was It? They are not beautiful in themselves." "They relieve the monotony of the smooth leaves, I suppose."" He shook his head as over a weighty matter. "The sky Is monotonous," he said. "when it Is blue, and yet it is beauti ful. I have thought of that often. But it is not monotony and it is not variety makes beauty. What Is it? The sky and your face and this box the same thing is In them all, only more in the sky and in your face. But what is it? She smiled. "So you are at your old work still Why, why, why? What is the reason It Is enough for me." she said, "if I find out what is beautiful and what is ugly, what Is real and what is not, Why It Is there and over the final cause of things In general I don't trouble my self. There must be one, but what is it to me? If 1 howl to all eternity, I shall never get bold of it, and if I did I might be no better off. But you Germans are born with an appetite for burrowing. You can't help yourselves. You must sniff after reasons, just as that dog must after a mole. He knows perfectly well he will never catch it, but he's under the imperative necessity of digging for it." "But he might find It" "Might! But he never has and never will. Life Is too short to run after mights. We must have certainties." She 7 tucked the box under her arm and was about to walk on when Greg ory Rose, with shining spurs, an os' trlch feather in his hat and a silver headed whip, careered past. He bow ed gallantly as he went by. They waited till the dust of the horse's hoofs had bald. , "There," said Lyndall, "goes a true woman, one born for the sphere that some women have to fill without be ing born for it. How happy he would be sewing frills into his little girl's frocks, and how pretty he would look sitting in a parlor, with a rough man making lore to him! Don't you think so?" "1 shall not sta$ here when he Is master," Waldo answered,' not able to connect any kind of beauty with Greg ory Rose. "I should Imagine not. The rule of a woman is tyranny,' but the rule of a man woman grinds fine. Where are you going?" "Anywbere," y "What to dor " . - i . . s "See see everything." "You will be disappointed. ' . "And were you?" ' ' "Yes, and you will be more so. want some things that men and the world give. You do not. If you have a few yards of earth to stand on and I kSM fcea SMtas? CAICABm And e a mild and effective laxative they are simply won derful. My daughter and t- were bothered with eiek stemacB and our breath was very bad. After taking a few doses of Cascarets we have improved wonderfully. Thejr are a (treat heln In the family." W ILHSLMIltA OAOIL. U3T Bitteabouse St., Cincinnati, Ohio. HllMMit. Pn.ln.ts.hiA. PnMnt . rb flnM Ita Good, Never Biefcen. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 60c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Bterliac Hey Cwfu;, Cliles, aatral, Twk. SIS a bit oF blue over you and something that you cannot see to dream about, ou have1 all that you need, all that you know how to use. But I like to see real men. Let them be as disagree able as they please, they are more in teresting to me than flowers or trees or stars or any other thing .under the sun. Sometimes," she added walking on and shaking the dust daintily from ber skirts, "when I am not too busy trying to find a new way of doing my hair that will show my little neck to better advantage or over other work of that kind sometimes It amuses roe Intensely to trace out the resemblance between one man and another, to see how Tant Sannie and I, you and Bonaparte, St. Simon on his pillar and the emperor dining off larks' tongues are one and the same compound, mere ly mixed in different proportions. What is microscopic in one is largely devel oped In another, what is a rudimentary in one man is an active organ in an other, but all things are in all men, and one soul Is the model of all. We shall find nothing new In human nay ture after we have once carefully dis sected and analysed the one being we ever shall truly know ourself. "The' Kaffir girl threw some coffee on my arm In bed this morning. I felt dis pleased, but said nothing. Tant'- San nie would have thrown the saucer at her and sworn for an hour, but the feeling would be the same irritated displeasure. If a huge animated stom ach like Bonaparte were put under a glass by a skillful mental microscopist, even he would be found to have an em bryonic doubling . somewhere Indica tive of a heart and rudimentary bud dings that might have become con science and sincerity. Let me take your arm, Waldo. How full you are of mealle dust! No? never mind., It will brush off. And sometimes what is more amusing still than tracing the likeness between man and man is to trace the analogy there always is be tween the progress and development of one Individual and 'of a whole nation or, again, between a single nation and the entire human race. It is pleasant when it dawns on you that the one is just the other written out in large let ters and very odd to find-all the little follies and virtues and developments and retrogressions written out in the big world's book that you find in your little Internal self. It is the most amusing thing I know of but of course, being a woman, I have not often time for such amusements. Professional duties always first, you know. It takes a great deal of time and thought al ways to look perfectly exquisite, even for a pretty woman. Is the old buggy still In existence, Waldo?" "Yes. but the harness Is broken." "Well, I wish you would mend It You most teach me to drive, 1 must learn something while 1 am here. I got the Hottentot girl to show me how to make 'sarsarties' this morning and Tant' Sannie is going to teach me to make 'kapjes.' 1 will come and sit with you this afternoon while .you mend the harness." "Thank" you." "No; don't thank me. I come for my own pleasure. I never find any one I can talk to. Women bore me, and men I talk so to 'Going to the ball this evening? Nice little dog that of yours. Pretty little ears. So fond of pointer upsf And they think me fascinating, charming! Men are like the earth, and we are the moon. We turn always one side to them, and they think there Is no other because they, don't see It, but there is." They had reached the house now. 'Tell me when you set to work," she said and walked toward the door. Waldo 6tood to look after her, and Doss stood at his side, a look of pain ful uncertainty depicted on his small countenance and one little foot poised In the air. Should he stay with his master or go? He looked at the figure With the wide straw hat moving to ward the house, and he looked up at his master. Then he put down the lit tle paw and went. Waldo watched them both in at the door and then walked away alone. He was satisfied that at least his dog was with her. CHAPTER XVIII. TAirr SAXN7E HOLDS XX trPfclTTIjTO, ASD OREGOBT WRTTES A USTTXT&. , It was just after sunset and Lyndall had not yet returned from her first driving lesson when the lean colored woman, standing at the corner of the house to enjoy the evening bree2e, saw coming along the road a strange horse man. Very narrowly she surveyed him as he slowly approached. He was attired In the deepest , mourning, the black crape round his tall hat. totally concealing the black felt and nothing but a dasxllng shirt front relieving the funereal tone of his attire. v He rode much forward In his saddle, with, his chin resting on the uppermost of his shirt studs, and there was an air of meek subjection to the will of heaven and to what might be in store for him that bespoke itself even in the way. in Vyy CATHARTIC which , he gently urged his steed. : He was evidently In no huVry to reach his destination, for the nearer he ap proached to ft the slacker did his bri dle hang. The colored woman, having duly Inspected him, dashed Into the dwelling..-- "Here is another one," she cried, "a widower. I see It by his hat." "Good Lord!" said Tant Sannie "It's the seventh I've bad this month. But the men know where sheep and good looks and money In the bank are to be found," she ' added,' winking knowing ly. "How does he look?" s "Nineteen, weak eyes, white hair, lit tle round nose," said the maid. "Then It's he, then It's he," said Tant Sannie, triumphantly, "Little Piet Vander Walt, whose wife died ast month two farms, 12,600 sheep. 've not seen him. but my sister-in-law told me about him, and I dreamed about him last night." Here Piet's black hat appeared in the doorway, and the Boer woman drew herself up in dignified silence, extend ed the tips of her fingers and motioned solemnly to a chair. The young man seated himself, sticking his feet as far nnder it as they would go, and said mildly: "I am Little Piet Vander Walt, and my father is Big Piet Vander Walt." Tant' Sannie said solemnly, "Yes." "Aunt," said the young man, start- , ,, r Ing up spasmodically, "can I off sad dle?" , "Yes." .. : : . : . He seized his hat and disappeared with a rush through the door. "I told you sol I knew it!" said Tant' Sannie. "The dear Lord doesn't send dreams for nothing. Didn't I tell you this morning that I dreamed of a great beast like a sheep, with red eyes, and I killed it? Wasn't the white wool his hair, and the red eyes his weak eyes, and my killing him meant mar riage? Get supper ready quickly. The sheep's Inside and roaster cakes. We shall sit up tonight." To young Piet Vander Walt that sup per was a period of Intense torture. Tbere was something overawing in that assembly of English people, with their incomprehensible speech and, moreover, it was his first courtship. His first wife had courted him, and ten months of severe domestic rule had not raised his spirit or courage. He ate little and when he raised a morsel to his lips glanced guiltily round to see if he were not observed. He had put three rings on his little finger, with the intention of sticking It out stiffly when he raised a coffee cup. - Now the little finger was curled miserably among Its fellows. It was small relief when the meal was over and Tant' Sannie and he repaired to the front room. Once seated there, be set his knees close to gether, stood his black hat upon them and wretchedly turned the brim up and down. But supper had cheered Tant' Sannie, who found it impossible longer to maintain that decorous silence and whose heart yearned over the youth. "I was related to your Aunt Selena who died," said Tant' Sannie. "My mother's stepbrother's child was mar ried . to her father's brother's step- nephew's niece." "Yes, aunt," said the young man. "I knew we were related." "It was her cousin," said Tant San nie, now fairly on the flow, "who had the cancer cut out of her breast by the other doctor, who was not the right doctor they sent for, but who did it quite as well." . "Yes, aunt," said the young man. "I've heard about It often," said Tant' Sannie. "And he was the son of the old doctor that they , say died on Christmas day, but I don't know if that's true. People do tell such awful lies. Why should he die on Christmas day more than any other day?" "Yea. aunt, why?" said the young man meekly. "Did you ever have the toothache?" asked Tant' Sannie. "No, aunt." "Well, they say that doctor not the son of the old doctor that died on Christmas day, the other that didn't come when he was sent, for he gave such good stuff for the toothache that If you opened the bottle in the room where any one was bad they got bet ter directly. You could see it was good stuff," said Tant' Sannie. "It tasted horrjd. That was a real doctor! He used to give a bottle so high," said the Boer woman, raising her hand a foot from the table. "You .could drink at it for a month and It wouldn't get done, and the same medicine was good for all sorts of sicknesses croup, mea sles, jaundice, dropsy. Now you have to buy a new kind for each sickness. The doctors aren't so good as they used to be." , "No, aunt," said the young man, who was trying to gain courage to stick out his legs and clink his spurs together. He did so at last Tant Sannie had noticed the spurs before, but she thought It showed a nice, manly spirit and her heart warm d. let more to th ySqth. , ' Continued next week. ? Statk of Ohio, City of Toledo, ) .. - - Lucas County. JFrawk J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J Cheney &. Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, county 'and state afore said, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE t HUNDRED . DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh tha cannot be cured by the use of Hall's L7ATABBH (JUBB. Fbank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D.188G. SEAL V A. WGleason, Notarv Pnhlit Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. P. J. CHENEY" & CO., Toledo, O. tSTSold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Science of Money Editor Independent: Money Is 'a science and should be studied as a science. Like arithmetic, in order to get any correct knowledge of It, the study must be commenced in the right place. There is but one right place to begin it Like arithmetic it has its rudiments and these rudiments should be taken up and matured in their reg ular logical order. : ' - The school boy would not get along very well to begin the study of arith metic at the rule of three, or at com mon fractions. If he did so he would be in confusion and make no true pro gress until he should begin at the right place and have patience, to clear every thing - up as he goes. The science of money like arithmetic. ' has its rules also, in which much is comprehended in a few words, and these rules should be committed to memory, aud every word in them should be gotten in mind just exactly right. Every young man should study the science of money in this manner before he comes to voting age.; If this carefulness was used in the study of the subject, we would soon think nearly all alike, and not be Involved in such complications and contradictions amongst us. . ; M. W ARREN. Fairbury, Neb. Doyle & Stone Attorneys, Brown ell Blk. NOTICE OP INCORPOKATION Notice is herebv riven that the undersigned have formed a corporation under the laws of tne state of Nebraska, tne name oi wmcn saia corporation is The Harland . Account Book Company. . . z. ' The orinciDle olace of transacting the busi ness of said corporation is Lincoln, Nebraska. ' 3. The sreneral nature of the business to be transacted bj said corporation is the manufac ture and sale of a book, known as Harland'a A. B. C. System of Auditing and Classifying Ac counts, and to do any and all things incident to carrying on said business. , 4th The amount of the eauital stock - authorized is the sum of $10,000 to be subscribed and paid stock is non-assessible. The time of the commencement of said cor poration is January 29th. 1900. to terminate in ninety nine years from that time. The hitrhest amount of indebtedness or liabil ity to which the corporation is at any time to subject itself is the sum of $2,500. , , , .- , V. The affairs of the corporation are to be con ducted by a president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer, a general manager and two di rectors. J. W. Harland, S. E. Park, , Charles H. Gould, E. A. Doyle, B. E.mmet Giffin, A. H. Buekstaff, Jj. E. Winslow, V. H. Stone, . John Carr, D. W. Mosefey, E. E. Bennett, J. C. Harpham, H. M. Casebeer, J. P. Hendry. Dated January 29th A. D. 1900. About Dining Cars. The verdict given by the general pub lic that the great Rock Island route has the best dining car service in the world will not be disputed by patrons who have used this line. Thousand of let ters testify to this fact. A better meal cannot be secured in any hotel or res taurant in the cities of New York or Chicago than is used in the Rock Island Dining Cars.- A la carte on all cars: a splendid lunch served on Colorado trains for 50 cents. 4 CERTIFICATE OF PUBLICATION OFFICE OF AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS STATE OF NEBRASKA v Lincoln, Febrnary 10, 1900. IT IS HEREBY CERTIFIED THAT THE Moscow Fire Insurance Com pany, of Moscow, in Russia, has complied with the Insurance Law of this State and is therefore authorized to transact the business of Fire Insurance in this State for tbe current year nineteen hundred. Witness my band and official seal tbe day and year first above written. John F. Cornell, Insurance Commissioner. seal W. B. Pkick, . . Deputy. Hides and Wool, - DQBSON & LANDGREN Dealers in Hides, Wool, Tallow, and Furs. Send in yotfr goods and get the HIGHEST market price. 920 R STREET, LINCOLN, NEBR. Look at This! SPECIALS. 60b Syrnyof Ff............ ....,..,...89 25c Talcum Powder .....15 ti Hooda Sareaparillm II WiMOf Cardai ...73. II Pinkhaat Vetabl Corapotma.. ....... .SO foe Cart Little Liver Pills lfte $1 Aren Hair Yiffor lie 75c Boachees German 8ymp ........60o 60c De Witts One Hiaat Couh 8yrap......t3 fl Halted Milk: .............60a SI Kempt Bal9am. ...... ...,75 50c Bhiloh Cooeamptioa Car ....80e :i Perana .....80a 1 a.R.S...... IOa SI Emulsion Cod Liver Oil.. .....?5 Beef. Iron and Wine Tonle ..........He 5c Criera Gl veer in Salve lie Z5c Grays Tea.. rOa fllfilee Nervine.... ........Tie fl Paine Celery Cotnpotmd ..75 $1 Kilmer Swamp Boot..... ....7S S5c Caetoria 2&a 1 Pierces Favorite Preseription... ....75e t5c Beet Tonic tOt All Other $1 Patent Hedlcines SO All Other 50c Patent Medicine..... 40a All Other toe Patent Medici SO Fine Machine Catar Oil, per gal. S6 Fin Machine Lobrica ting Oil, per (al......t5 Fin Machine Blank Oil... ft Aftti'Fly Dope, to keep off Die on hor and cattle, per gal tl.01 Lowst price Drag 8 tor In Lincoln. Neb. 20 years experieno in th Drug Bnainoss. That means something. Riggs' Pharmacy, FUNKS 0PE2A BOU88, UOt and O SIS. BELLAVITA Arsenic Beauty Tablets and Pills. A per- tecuy saie ana guaranieea ireaimtiui r n mui disorders. Restores the bloom of youth to laded laces. 10 days' treatment 50c; 80 days $1.00, by mail. Send for circular. Address, KJ&VITA Mil D1CAL CO. Uatsa ft Jacksoa SU Cfakag - feold by Hariey Drug Co., Cor. u and 11,'Str.; Lincoln, Nebr. StiNLtOCIWTS Mad mir etekrate La BKKTA fil ltR by xprM, C. O. D-, cabjrtt Uviaataatlov, It i Gnrate La Bert lanlru made instrumen t ot preat beauty, perfect roi-ewood fitiUli, very highly pollahed. Handsomely InlaW arouol ound bole and InlaM strip la Sara, ei!Wt bound top ariae. FlnKerboard accurately trea ted with rained frets, htlaM iwarl pwlitea , 4artcaa atadepatrat hraaV, aaS Saest atekal pUlra tallntocs. a KKVlURSS.wtlVllTAK, powairul land sweet totiod. furnished complete with Ian ntra set T best aaallry Ml strives as4 ftalaaala tastrnctloa bok wbtob teacfeea auyw . oae now to tiy. K&aaiSK the ut nan at yr nna) aftlre and tffouca exactly a repreectS and tl) rraatest bargala Jm r saw e ihesrdaf iit t he expres." airent S3. 69 less SOe. is. 15 and eaprsss efcara aud the complete outnt la yours. Satiafao. tion guiuie1 or money refunded In fuii SPECIAL PREMIUM OFFER. .T tS.es easfe U rait we wll. irlvo a Lettered StawerWara Caart. It l art aoptrte (""Tde bswg u tua. wit sharps and flat U tT new, ad ie easily s lusted CO any ol(a wnout eoaavtMr tbt atrw mens. With the mw of the lerte-exJ tLao-artoavrr aay. one can learn to p'-s wUhent the air tm a teactuee. Write for free mualcal ltirument ad pia -M wvmS) catalogue. Krjrthla at lowest wfcslesale p4e AdOKM, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CMM3AQO CMMRS, Knrert'n r - "-.-- .!. - s The Rock Island Playing Cards ars th slickest you ever handled. One pack will be sent by mail on receipt of 13 cents in p tamps. A money order r orate tor ou cents or same in stamps will secure 4 packs, and they will be sent by exnrejS. charona r, rein id Arldreva JVthn Sebastian, O. P. A., C. R. I. & Pn Chi cago, 4U Little Oval Photos, i 25c pe. dozen. (Jabine s $2.00 Per dozen. , 1214 O Street A. D. Culp Successors to $ John Wittorff John Baueb. 2 GULP & VITTORFF Dealers in Liauors and ... CIGARS Jug Trade a Specialty. Fine Hot Lunch 9:30 to 12. Saturday night 8 to 11 915 O STREET ? PAINLESS RIGGS, The Dentist EXTRACTION 141 So. 12th S., Lincoln, TSti r Gold Alloy Filling . $1,00 Gold Filling v ! $1.00 and up Gold Crowns . . $5.00 and up Set of Teeth . . . ... '$5.00 Best Teeth ... . . . $8.00 RIGGS, The Dentist, ' 141 So. 12th Sfc., Lincoln. Neb. ft 9. 75 COX RAIN COAT PKOOF MACKINTOSH fr $if? SEND W0 MONEY. $d tet. rar kif hi aa4 weight, .tat. tuAttW IUM iniua Unf at MT.ML, iun rat wader cat, do, ap aadrr aran, aa4 we will send you ttalacost by expt C.O.D., aubjeet axaarfaatkm. fc mine end try it on at .your near express oroca. a4 H fM4 nmif aa rcpraaealed tha mtmt waa4wat alu. yra .Mr aaw r heard .f. aa4 rqnkl I. aay coat jr .aa bay hr i.OO. ry the epre iurnt Oim StKUAL 6FKK FIUIB, S2.70. expres chrsren. TII IHA KIiTOn la!a,ttt tyle, cany fitting. nd from haary watorprwf, taa eolor, araalaa DaaC Clai k full length, doable tormmi. S&ffer relret collar, f auey plaid lining, waterproof Ml oeama. Suitable lor both Rata ar Ovareaat, and faraat4 6KEATBbT VaU E awr aOarr. by ua or anr other house. I'ar fre. CM Baaa4aa of Mn'a Mackintosh ap to , 21 Mm ana Haae-to-Measure bqihuo Js coats at from ft "0 to 110.00. writa tot FREK DlHPLE BOOK Ra. PI 9 - SEARS, ROEBUCK A Co. (Inc.) CHICAGO. CJSMM, Boeheee A C are theroagbly reliabVa. SEND ONE DOLLARS Cut thia mi. out and send to us and we will wend you tnla H13H UKAUK ACME00-lb. lLATFOUahtaUby freight, C U. subject to exami nation i you oan examine it at your freight depot and if found perfectly satisfactory .exactly aa represented, and equaJ to scale thaG retail at S45.90, pay th railruad afrrot oar ipccial arte., $7.75, k-aa lh Sl.OO, ar 6.7S and freight chalices. The BhipplH(C weUht is 155 lb, and the f raiurhfc will Hmri 75e for each fiOU 4ST3 7 rot las and wa gaaraale. safe delHery. CO i ins at rar i f araa, ator. ar warphnejt la tha 1 druaranteed 10 1 years and will I iut a. If tftt mA will weigh 600 lbs. br tisini? all weipnaa rurnisneo. Bras beam wet aha M lbs., has Htmnn' BrawSIWlaa rH, Platform is 18x23 inches, restlnsr on adjustable chiU bearinsrs, has Denton Bteel pfrotc, niot BeneitiTe, accurate and durable cle made, mounted on rcmr lare wheels; they are nicely painted and ornamented and beautifully finished tbrousrhont. Every fanrev will save twice the cost in one Reason bv weighing tbe grain he sells and buys OBlKR AT OMC before the firlce is advanced. Catalogue of scales free for th ah ag. Addreon, Sears. Roebuck & Co. (Inc.) Crtica;o.ltl. Saars, Itoebaek A Co. ar UsrouKhly rellah'a- Uiut.) UNO S2.7S SEND HO MONEY. Cut t hi au. out, and iiid tc lis, state your weight aad kclrht, airo nam Der of inches arouud h.y at aval and a-h. and we wili aeini thia LOTH CAPE to you Lveiurm. I.U.U.. auloect to Cumination- Vou oan examine and try it on a, your nearest ex pres cr ave and tr found prrfrHiy satlkfaMory, axartl- aa ra mtmlra aa th am waadarfai rata. aa e-rr saw ar har tt, pay tha expreea airent our ape-?la rrer Hee 2 . 7 5 , aa axrM caarcra. Erprest -bar use will averse lift t Sc cent to ear 1,000 mil. THIS CAPE IS LA TEST STYLE FOR FALL arte. WINTER, mad from an extra las aM hraiy all wnal hhwharbia. er clotn, 27 Inch loop, rery full sweep, 1 Mnch uppr cape, extra f ulU lpr can aa I anr. storm aaliar, beauti fully trimmed with bias Baltic seal fort appr cape trimmed with three rows and collar with two row of n. atohalr braid; cloth button ornament. This ap la aa tallar asaaa thrvurhoat and eqaal to cape that aellaf snore thitn donble the price. Writ, for fro. Clash C.t.lwm. GEARS, ROEBUCK 6. CO., CHICAGO CBears, Ka. hue a) C. ar tharMcali rtlnMt ti'iirrj ( ?n mm PREWITT FINE WINES Q a i t.&&Y c w V- Jt i J 1 -7j '-A