;April 19, 19oo THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT bi TME MBM - C? A3 5:; i(FSIl its uu , t (OocTiaatd traa kat wk.) "Tmat tlae xawatala far eway-lt a viap vka we jet to ft. Mi WW. Sim ckwl &r area a gala. XI draw tfet t2a in Ufwa aad teiiad. aad t,e w-aj-gsj r34 awajr stewiy. Tfce landlady aad l& sd&grrt stood ta watci; . it frvm tie "sta?." Vary aikatly tie frest wag? rolled aJ&es te rnas cTarJ plain. The strlver cfi Cm fraat box did sot dap Lis wLip ar rat to tit axes, aad Gragwr sat beside Lisa with f al Jed are.. lie kiad tfeam, La tbe csoeed wa.goa, she lay. wlu te dec t Ler . vary rt&et. wit foldad Lands. XI Grt" ery) darad tt be la tra. Ule Hagar armasa s& laid btr trmeit dowa La t wCdtcaeaa. 1m nt tfu od "Tor Uacar Let me sot aae tie death mi tbe dBt" ' Erl came, and yet tfca tin arestsia waa act reached, aad all the Bcxt day tlKj rwie oc aioaiy. but still It was far aC. OtJy at areaing they reached It. tkot tJaa aow, fcst low mod trsvi, wn4 with V-eg waring; grtw i aod roaga TVey draw the waga wp dome to tta foot for tbe tUgtt.' It vu a shattered, vara spot. Tba tiLl waa growing v-y M vbq free a loax pf ol si? Ljo da3 avctei cm&Hm bcrmvd at br ad, TL d&x taj o Sr fK. bet b abfrend. It tcad tboo1 a cia strock to Lto froa Li nCr pUra. St lxj vita fold ed taay lart1rg cpvard. aad beard tl axes cWvlac axd abe aaw tfc tv ssoaqtoea Lexxlax dnstrUj recsd and suacl aad bcr tltcsta fecr ticctt raa tar Lac lata tbe past. TtrociA tfc saonTti aac&iaa a tsUt tad rcatod aa kr salad. It ni reStd tsrir saw. aad t& old dear ialcf awac trom Urn kmg torpuc It loccd Lues Sato tfca past, It aav ta rrat. Tbr -was ika fatar do v. Ft aid atrocx tod xalbered ttsrlf to rriMr far tfca last Oat, It kaw artn tt stood, Saly rsisicx VermstZ cat tr Low. tst tott froca ti aa3 a xlsas Ibat fccrrg yt,tJid tbera Her fLaxvrs wt r2T aad catd. E&a pet tb pillow oa htr tiwiut axkd stood tba xiaas axtlast It. TVra tae wait facs oa tl. pillow lootsd ttt tbe wllta face la tke t-la. TijT hmd loekea at era c&r flea eo laars. It a lMa a raiJds fare case. Ifrofrtat; oat alwve trs ties puaafora. It tad tmtm a waxaaa'a foe. wita a dJta aLsdew la te eyes aad a fcometLin; wfcca aed said: ""We re aoi afraid. y aad L We rjw XJbtilr. We will Ja aad L" w loixtl It tad eoc-e ta tLta, TSic djrx ejea oa the pHIov tooted tcta tb djlrc 7 t t xaa Tbry bwv tLat tfieir boar Lad eoaa fibe raided ooe baad aad ptvmmi Ue tlT fiaxers araioxt tb Tbvj were c"tX eT7 atUL ELe trtod s reak to it. b-t she would Tttmz nyesX. axsia. Oc!y the wooder fxl jrxrar CxLt waa la the eyes atUL STLa body aa dead est the aosi, atoar and cncflanded. looked torth. - Ttea mt!. wttboct a sosnd. tb beaur ckiwl. TLa dead face t&SX the xias reSercad was a tbinx of h7 aad trajoastHity- The da wa rrpt ta orer It aad aaw It tytax tbere. Had sie fovsd wbat abe aocxht for aossatLlax to wcrahJaf Had abe ceas ed trsrs bax? Wbe saall Ull us? TLer' !s a e3 of terrlhl zlst orer XL Sase at Ct Lereafirr. ei Ca most ttmiriLt& nature, from the bat kaewa fwefk. attests fas power ol De. ViHiims Piak Pub WraisPoopla. ' Tim effoer caa rod it widioat fecli&g LopcfuL m MktptMC caa read at wrZhoat bcin; coawvocea. &rry dmnm cat Cut bitiod. and acrves is rrpre aeasca troaa a cocosaoa rasktoscrofttlai from prandgis to evenroas pmotrstiont irombooc adbcto rbramaom I from ordtjaary "wtxk ncm to partial fsanlrsus. Urea arc tared by Dr. VZiiia I mfTrwl for Ctct3 j-r wlthtb-e trocbl tbomto votbca&tbcjbacof life. I waa al vcjLcsd. cut't msca of ti Ume to oo tsf wm we k. a&4 aSr4 beyoa I n y power If V-A ft "I 1 WtK soary ClScrwtt Bbl2ac, tmt ZKUilag to ao boo acr IXrr 5. aad aotjM of scy frleod rcoxacica44 them aisr. Iradcjs3jtclaj to try them. Xboscht to rt bos ta Xrca, 17, aad was beoeCtod Xrom taaaturt. - a box a&d a tmZS eared t& eoasplrtely, aad X am rarreaaaanrosa. trocsia too9 X beraa takisc; tb pma. tArtKe&add tocm to maay womea woo are oaStr! m I mrnZtrmtL aoo tM the mal ara" aboerlbc4 aad mra ir, X.i-.iC- , 1 I t ar fr oow xnr OLTVB P fx A TALE OF LIFE IN THE BOER REPUBLIC 7 8. . CILLpfEaXXVL CUnZL XXVI. tegXaKs. "Taa caa wtat a aoal deairea. and I will t3 joa wtat tt is." So raaa tLa pLfasa. "Tail aa wtat a s&aa dreaias, aad 1 via ta& 7 wkat aa larsa," Tuat it baa lta truta. Oa ta sJx&t waea Grexory told bis scary Waldo sat alo&e before tfce &re Lis xatasted stzpper before Liza. Q via trearx after bis daj vrorfc, too wrarj to ear. He put tb plate down a tt iaor for Doss, wbo licked It caeaa aad t&ea went back to bis corner. After a fins tba scaster tbrew biiaself ecroas tL foot of the bed trittont au dreaslsx md fall asleep tLere. He slept ao loeig thax tb caadle barned Itself est and tb room waa In daxsxiess. But La drraxsd a lorelj- dresxa aa be laj tbara. Is t!a drsaza. to Lis rtxbt rose hlsb taottataloa. tLelr tops crow&ed wltb asow, tLafr aides clotbed wltb basb and LctLed in tL sacsblna. At their feet waa tL aea bis aad breesj. bluer tLaa acy eartLly sea, like the sea be Lad dreamed of in bis boyhood. In tL Barrow forest that ran between the XsaRStsis as! tLa aea the air was rich with tLa sceat of tL Looey creeper tLat Lues froo dark xren bcalies, and tlroBxL tL Tslrety xraas little streams ran ptsiicx dowa tzito the aea, He sat ca a LiX aqaar rock amonx tbe bLf, and Lycdaa eat by him and -g to Lisa. EL was only a small cLd wltb a Llo pinafore and a gTare, grave, iistl face. Ha waa lookinx up ti & BOCSTslaa. Then suddenly when hm iaaaad rocad aLe waa gone. He a??ed down from Lis rock and went W look tor Ler, Lot Le found only her LiKW teetcxrka. He found them on tb tfrlxht grean crass and In tbe moist tt, 4 and tLere wLr tbe Cttle streams feaa psrilax dowa Into tL sea. In and fin?, la asd cist, and amonx the bushes vw tLa Lcasy creeper huxj, be went taxiing tcT Ler. As last, far oS. In the sunshine, be t&V ha gStLtrisx aLells cpon the sand. w&a Uui a cLUd now. but a woman, svnd the e&a aLose on Ler soft brown Lair, and la Ler wbite dress she put the eWUs L gasLered. She was stooplnx. hot arLeti tL ttard bis step she stood tt?b Leldlsg bar skirt close about ber. &4 waited for Lis coznx- One hand Se pml iu Lis. a&d togetLer they walk ed oa erar tt gl'ttericx sand and pink aibeilf, acd they beard the leaves tailing and they beard the "rater bab lALis ca their way to the sea, tnd they Lard the eea tinging to itself, slaving, aloxiax. At last tLey came to place where was a loax reach of pure white sand. There abe stood still and dropped on to the sand one by one the shells that she bad leathered. Then she looked up Into Lit face with ber beautiful eyes. She ) said nothlny but she lifted one hand aud laid It eoftly a his forehead. The other she laid on Lis heart. With a cry of suppressed agony Wal do spraax from the bed, flung open the upper half of the door and leaned out. breathing bearily. Great Gol! It znixht be only a dream, but the pain was rery real, tJi though a knife ran throaxh his heart, as though some treacherous murderer crept on him in the dark! Tbe strong man drew Lis breath like a frightened woman. Only a dream, but the pain was very real," be muttered as bs pressed hla right band cpon bis breast. Then he folded bis arms on the door and stood Piak Pili for PccjJc cool. X lf cot tn toLberei wita Tfary are to o&ly thin tbt that oia to ao maay women at Mas. J.1L. Vkatu. . ta before m tbl S3d ly- of O. & USCSa, JTOory jpW4tc. a e v -j r V! looking out Into the starlight. The dream was with Mm still. Tbe woman who waa Lis friend waa not separated from him by years. Only that very night Le Lad seen Ler. He looked up Into the night sky that all bis life long had mingled Itself with bis existence. There were a thousand faces that he loved looking down at him. a thousand stars In their glory, in crowns and circles and solitary gran deur. To the man they were not less dear than to the boy they bad been not less mysterious, yet Le looked up at them and ahuddered. at last turned away from them with horror. Such countless multitudes, stretching out far into -space, and yet not in one of them all waa ah el Though Le search ed through them all, to the farthest, faintest point of light, nowhere should Le ever say, "She Is hers! Tomor row's sun would rise and gild the world's mountains a&d shine into Its thousand valleys. It would set and the stars creep out again. Year after year, century after century, the old changes of nature would go on, day and night, summer and winter, seed time and harvest, but In none of them all would she have parti He shut the door to keep out their hideous shining and because the dark was Intolerable lighted a candle and paced the little room faster and faster yet. He saw before him the long ages of eternity that would roll cn, on, on. and never bring ber. She would exist no more. A dark mist filled the little room. -Oh, little hand I Oh, little voice! Oh, little form!" he cried. "Oh, little soul that walked with mine! Oh, little soul that looked so fearlessly down into the depths, do you exist no more forever, for all timer" He cried more bitterly: lt is for this hour this that men blind reason and crush out thought! For this hour this, this they barter truth and knowledge, take any lie. any creed, so it does not whis per t them of the dead that they are dead! O God, God, for a hereafter!" Muttering to himself, Waldo walked with bent head, the mist in his eyes. To the soul's wild cry for its own there are many answers. He began to think of them. Waa not there one of them all from which he might suck one drop of comfort? "You shall see her again," says the Christian, the true Bible Christian. "Yes; you shall see her again. 'And I saw the dead, great and small, stand before God. And the books were open ed, and the dead were judged - from those things which were written In the books. And whosoever was not foand written In the book of life was cast into the lake of fire, which is the sec ond death.' Yes; you shall see Ler again. She died so, with her knee un bent, with her hand unraised. with a prayer nn uttered. In the pride of her Intellect and the strength of her youth She loved, and she was loved- But she said no prayer to God; she cried for no mercy; she repented of no sin! Yes; you shall see ber again." In his bitterness Waldo laughed low. Ah. he had long ceased to hearken to the hellish voice! But yet another speaks. "You shall see her again, says the nineteenth century Christian, deep lntc whose soul modern unbelief and thought have crept, though he knows it not. He It Is who uses his Bible as the pearl fishers use their shells, sorting out gems from refuse. He sets his pearls after bis own fashion, and he sets them welL "Do not fear," he says. "Hell and judgment are not. God Is love. I know that beyond this blue sky above us is a love as wide spreading over alL The All Father will show her to you again not spirit only. The little hands, the little feet, you loved you shall lie down and kiss them if you will. Christ arose and did eat and drink. So shall she arise. The dead, all the dead, raised incorrupti ble! God is love. You shall see her again." It is a heavenly song this of the nine teenth century Christian. A man might dry his tears to listen to it but for this one thing Waldo muttered to him self confusedly: "The thing I loved was n woman proud and young. It had a mother once, who, dying, kissed her little baby and prayed God that she might see It again. If It had lived, the loved thing would itself have had a son, who, when he closed the weary eyes and smoothed the wrinkled forehead of his mother, would have prayed God to see that old face smile again in the hereafter. To the son heaven will be no heaven if the sweet worn face la not in one of the choirs. He will look for it through the phalanx of God's glorified angels, and the youth will look for the maid, and the mother for the baby. 'And whose then shall she be at tbe resurrection of the dead? "Ah, God! Ah, God! A -beautiful dream!" he cried. "But can any one dream it not sleeping?" Waldo paced on, moaning in agony and longing. lie heard the transcendentalisms high answer: "What have you to do with flesh, the gross and miserable garment in which spirit hides Itself? You shall see. her again. But the hand, the foot the forehead, you loved you shall see no more. The loves, the fears, the frailties, that are born with the flesh. with the flesh shall die. Let them die! There Is that in man that cannot die a seed, a germ, an embryo, a spiritual essence. Higher than she was on earth, as the tree is higher than the seed, the man than the embryo, so shall you behold her, changed, glori fied!" High words, ringing welL They are the offering of jewels to the hungry, of gold to the man who dies for bread. Bread is corruption; gold is incorrupti ble. Bread is light; gold is heavy. Bread is common; gold is rare. But the hungry man will barter all your mines for one morsel of bread. Around God's throne there may be choirs 2nd com panies of angels, cherubim and sera phim, rising tier above tier, but not for one of them all does the soul cry aloud, only perhaps for a little human, wom an, full of sin, that It once loved! "Change Is death, change L death! he cried. "I want no angel, only she no holler and no better, with all ber sins upon ber. So give Ler me or give me nothing r ! For the soul's fierce cry for immor tality ia this, only this: Return to me after death the thing as It waa before.. Leave me In the hereafter the being that I am today. Bob me of the thoughts, the feelings, the desires, that axe my life, and yon Lave left nothing to take. Tour immortality ia annihila tion; your hereafter la a lie. Waldo flung open the door and walk ed oat into the starlight. Lis pain stricken thoughts ever driving Lira on as Le paced there, "There mast be a hereafter because man longs for it," he whispered. "Ia not all life from the cradle to the grave one long yearning for that which we never touch? There must be a here after because we cannot think of any end to life. Can we think of a begin ning? Is it easier to say 1 was not than to say 1 shall not be? And yet where were we 90 years ago? Dreams, dreams! Ah. all dreams and lies! No' ground anywhere !" All dies, all dies! The roses are red with the matter that once reddened the cheek of the child. The flowers bloom the fairest on the last year's bat tleground. The work of Death's finger cunningly wreath ed oyer is at the heart of all things, even of the living. Death's finger is everywhere. The rocks are built up of a life that was. Bodies, thoughts and loves diet. From where springs that whisper to the tiny soul of man. "You shall not die? Ah, is there no truth of which this dream is the shadow? " He fell into perfect silence. And at last, as he walked there with Lis bent head. Lis soul passed down the steps of contemplation Into that vast land where there is always peace; that land where the souL gazing long, loses all consciousness of its little self and al most feels its Land on the old mystery of Universal Unity that surrounds it. "No death, no -death f Le muttered. "There is that which never dies, which abides. It is but the individual that perishes; the whole remains. It is the organism that vanishes; the atoms are there. It is but the man that dies; the Universal Whole of which he is part reworka him into its Inmost self. Ah, what matter that man's day be short; that the sunrise sees him. and the sun set sees his grave. That of which he Is but the breath has breathed him forth and drawn him back again. That abides; we abide," For the little soul that eries aloud for continued personal existence for Itself and Its beloved, there Is no help. For the soul which knows itself no more as a unit, bat asUTpart of the Universal Unity of whlch4 tbe Beloved also is a part, which v feels within Itself the throb of the Universal Life for that soul there is no death. "Let us die, beloved, you and I, that we may pass on forever through the Universal Life!" In that deep world of contemplation all fierce desires die out, and peace comes down. He (Wal do) as he walked there saw no more the world that was about him; cried out no more for the thing that he had lost. His soul rested. Waa It only John, think you, who saw the heavens open? The dreamers see It every day. So age succeeds age, and dream suc ceeds dream, and of the joy of the dreamer no man knoweth but Le who dreametb. Our fathers had their dream; we have ours; the generation that follows will have its own. Without dreams and phantoms man cannot exist. Continued next week. tlOO Reward SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleas- ed to learn that there is at least one i dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hail's Catarrh Cure, the only positive cure known to the medi cal fraternity. Catarrh being a consti tutional disease, requires a constitution al treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the founda tion of the disease, ana giving the pati ent strength by building up the consti tution 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. Address F. J. Ghkxkt Co. Toledo, O. fSSold by druggis 75c Hall's Family Pills are the best. BEST LINE TO Kansas Gity, By all odds. Two daily through express trains. One leaves at night and the other at 2 p. m. City ticket office 1039 O street. Lincoln. F. D. CORNELL, C. P. and T. A. Do you need a sewing machine? If you do it will pay you to read ths adver tisement of the Independent machine on page "three Durable machine, elegant finish, warranted ten years. KITTIE. It was away out ia the country where dissipation was a word almost without meaning.- - s . Into this qalet tide4 a trodden, exciting element had fallen in the shape of a gay. young girl from a neighboring city. Her name was dennie Mordant," and she claimed cousinship with Farmer Mor dant's brown faced and rather bashful aona in a daring, coaxing way that was new and delightful to them, and Jared, the eldest, grew more demonstrative to ward others. : There was a little girl living up at Low Hill pass whose name Lad often been spoken ,ia connection with Jared s, and it waa guessed that they mutually felt a shy f oadaesa for each other. Jared only called her by Ler. formal Christian name, Katherine, at rare intervals, and then with a sense of familiarity that made him half ashamed. Bat after Jennie Mordant had tied his necktie and brushed the threads oS his coat he escaped from her bright eyas and merry ways and walked to Low Hill with a light stepi As he neared the house he saw Katherine returning home- "cross lots from Widow Sangster's, where she had been to take the old lady some buttermilk. With." one leap he scaled the wall," and, harrying to the narrow footpath, he said softly: "Don't walk so fast, Kittie." The girl stood - still, trembling and blushing, and then she asked in a voice scarcely audible: "What made you call me that 7 "May I call you so again?" "Yes," she answered simply, and he did not know how quick her heart was beat ing. And so they went in silence through the gathering dew and darkness up to the door. When it was time for Jared to leave, he sidled up to the kitchen window, and, reaching in, with one arm on the sill, he dropped a spray of lilac as if by accident and said. "Good night, Kittie. So the summer passed with a new glo ry, and when the evenings grew long and cool in the autumn a dancing school was talked of in the village. So "the season opened far more gayly than usual. Then there was to be a husking at Farmer Mordant's in the long, new barn. Long before dark the great piles of corn filled the bam floor, and the fiddlers walked about, with their pet violins tucked away in green bags, while the kitchen waa overflowing with food, and a row of cider barrels lay tapped in the yard. Katherine Hubbell camedown early with her brothers. The candles were lighted in the sitting room, and there was Jared her Jared j actually romping with Miss Jennie. She J was standing on her toes to reach his head, pulling his hair and bothering him; when suddenly he turned, and, taking the two little hands in his big brown palms, he held her so firmly that she could not get away, though she struggled and laughed for a minute and then stood still, listening intently. When he let her go, she patted his face, smiled brightly and ran away, and Katherine could see that Jared waa blushing like a girL She did not go into the sitting room as though nothing had happened. She was not actress enough for that. She went slowly round to the "kitchen door and found the girls, and in their merry chatter they did not notice her si lence. But that Jennie how could she ever speak to her again ? She could not flirt and laugh and pre tend not to care, as some girls could. Her eyes flashed with anger as she thought of Jared leading Jennie Mordant out before them all, and, creeping away to Grandma Mordant's room, she huddled herself down by the fire in a forlorn little heap. The old lady was not there, bnt she soon came in, and with her was "that Jennie," talking low and earnestly. "She is always in my way," thought Katherine bitterly, but she held her breath to listen as Jennie said: "Jared says he never has a chance to see her a minute alone, and the house is so full of company that I'm sore there won't be another quiet spot but this room. I'll manage to smuggle him in while she is here, and then do you make an excuse to go out and leave them, there's a dear, good grandma! She is really a sweet little girl, and Jared is so fond of her. Do you know he calls her Kiltie?" The old lady chuckled pleasantly to herself as she went out after a candle, j and when she returned with it lighted the room was empty. But later the harvest moon dropped lower from the deep sky. and all the radiant stars came near to listen to the new meaning that echoed ia Jared's voice as he said, "Good ni&ht, Kittie." Last night an old man lay dying in a handsome home. His gentle, silver hair ed wife 'stood beside him, holding bis hand. "It's growing dark. Come nearer. Good night, Kittie." And his voice had hashed forever. New York News. Christianity- Ia Bnalneaa. "There is not the least question that as the commercial world ia organized and run today it Is run at a fearful loss along the side of money, writes Rev. Charles M. Sheldon in The Ladies Home Jour nal. "Even the rules of success that business men lay down do not insure suc cess. Perhaps no age has equaled this for disturbance and unrest and warring interests in the business world. "If the principles of Christianity were applied to the whole business world, it would cause a shock that for the time being would result in what might indeed prove to be the greatest financial panic of the ages, but out of that result would emerge a new order of buying and sell ing that woedd result ultimately in more financial success on the part of more people than the world has ever witnessed. Ultimately love will pay in dollars and cents better than selfishness. "On selfish principles the business world today does not succeed even in the mat ter of making money that is, not for any length of time nor for the masses of the people. Love in business would lose less moiiey ' and actually distribute the real earnings of toil among a far greater number of human beings than is possible now under the present system." Caatloaa. Dont let Henrietta hear you allude to her as my better half, said Mr. Meekton behind his hand to the friend who had come to dinner. I understand. The expression is a trifle commonplace, not to say plebeian.1 It isn't that- But I wish you'd choose another fraction. It would annoy Hen rietta vastly to have you think she was less than four-fifths at the lowest calcula tion." "Washington Star. , i Wiw Compi r ' -' Zo tbe Headers of DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE FREE Upon application, we will mail to your address our CATALOGUE, in which is listed all . . - The Leading Standard Fruits adapted to the Northwest. A ful line of Nursery' Stock on hand for the Spring of 1900. Fruit Trees, Small Fruit Plants, Ornamentals, Forest Shade Trees and Seedlings. EVERGREENS. Address, MA RSHALL BROS., O O O O O Lt. Lincoln 1 :40 Lt. Lincoln "SO O O O It's the Burlington service that gets City Ticket dfflee Cor. Tenth and O Sts Telephone 333. illQulipD OUR ADVANCE AGENT Double Boars Harfoaei Steal The best hare scoar Castor-Caattar SII.QO vita Flew SLlaCXtra. I ft a. Tr. f more state prize winners and Exposition winners. "For 18 years lams has led all horsemen with best horses, lowest prices. Big bargains for next 30 days. All stallions must be sold." No pets. AMS RECEIVED $1,320 IAMS' "BON TON" and " JAQDES CCEUR," aas NO salesman in conn try. Bare money r by a alt acaranteea to show yoa more stallion thai and lams par freight. Good terms to res; uood terms to respoasibie ao HEADOF1AOO TO1900 POUND lams and bis horses are mascots to Oa U. P. and B. & M. Ry. SULPML1 BATH DRS. M. H. AfiDJ. 0 EVERETT, rUIIAGIKG PI1YSIDUHS a Roy's Drug 10 9 8 General Drug Business and Prescription Work. Paints, Oils, Glass, Ground Oil Cake, Etc Prices low as the lowest. . tRoy's, 104 North 10th PIANOS and ORGANS 'Picture Framing, Etc. The Celebrated Estey and Baldwin Pianos as Low as $185; Organs as Low as $40 - AH standard makes and fullr guaranteed. It will only cost yon a postal card to get full in- formation and cuts. Let ns hear from you. - 218 .KifSW t'oUksK; ARTHUR BETZ wents..... tbe Independent : , This is a front View of tlie watch which we send as a premium for a club of 2 campaign subscriptions. ; It is a beautya guaran teed time-keeper. Why not get one? For terms read the , article "Watches For Everybody," on page seven. s ' K Jlebraska Independent, Lincoln, ttebr. Arlington, Nebraska. 3 Chicago Flyerso p.m. ar. Chicago T :20 a JtL ar. N. York 10 am. cm. ar. Chicasro 9 -J&i a.m. ar. . 1 . i -) p.ra. X Lt. Lincoln 10:35 pan. ar. Chicago 2:13 p.xa. ar. N.Y. 8:45 p. m. f Lt. Lincoln 5 0 p.m. ar. Minnea poiis iXt am. St. Paul 8 a.m. Lt. Lincoln 1 -J3Z p.m. ar. SU Louia 7 H9 a.m. - V Lt. 5:50 p.m. ar. Peoria 6 S3 a.m. ar. Indiana poliB 8 Q p.m. Lv. 10 i p.m. ar. Peoria 11 :40 a.m. Indianapolis 9 .-Of p. m. V you there on tlme- O O Burlington Depot 7th 6t Bet. P and Q. 'Phono SS. 811.00 Plea, hart as slat all r. Dlow on eartn at any price. ether N Inch slow for S9.ML OaantDteM to or money refunded. Send for Bt fTM Oateloira I or aaiaya, ""rT TVmm Writ now ana m rwaay n evr ww HAPGOOD PLOW CO., Box 682. autupi, iul. Tfc. i rw- tmrtmrj ir.Ui.U-B. Ulog lint . ikm. IMPORTER and BREEDER PERCHEROIIS, SHIRES-CLYOES and COACHERS. IAMS' Horse Show at the Omaha Expo, had alt the People Judges, Superintendents and all ON THE RUN to see the largest exhibit of horses on the grounds. MORE BLACK STALLIONS than all ex hibitors; more 2,000 pound Horses, MMS For Making Greatest Horse Exhibit AT OJWAHA EXPOSITION. best ia U. S. worth 600 miles trip to to see. IA.M3 going direct to lams haras aad bay a other importers in Nebraska. Good i winner he g-aara&teea. parties, stallions exchanged. CHUNKS and DRAFTERS for SALE people who do fcusinsss with him. ST. PAUL, NEBRASKA HOUSE MID SANITARIUM All forms of baths Turkish, Russian, Ro man. Electric with special attention to the application of natural salt water , baths, several times stronger than sea water,- Rheumatism, Skin. Blood, Catarrh, Stomach. Kervoca, and Heart diseases ; Liver and Kidney troubles : diseases of women and chronic ailments treated successfully. A separate department, fitted with a thoroughly aseptic ward sad operatina rooms, offer special inducements to surgical eases, and all diseases peculiar to women. NORTH TENTH STREET. PIANOS and ORGANS Store. ; II 8