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About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1900)
HARDY'S COLUHH Wcc't tlb it. Two Seta tor Bar terser- Diffre Train Robbery Slock icjtrket Leffa tf liepub ." t-an C2ubWe ar Not Aciious -Tb Firs Stat Iotrt Aawwican ' Gr TiCMf Stretchier I&acicti3 ilocey Iu;j--Tfce Pro- fcibitkut-Ii4 Breath Not Rec- Wi'J t avthctitie allow the declara tion to be re.4 is Manila the Fourth? Lrtaoy Filipino be eaegbt reading it ac4 be" iU bot for treason. Me.Viio tod Tbosipsoii will make a grand repuhlisan ja for tie nate, x i stucK so and th ttLr tuck ia the must, i I The Journal report that 1-"j0 extra bar j tcder are ruw oa hand io Kan City t waiticsj for tba democrat eocrrction-1 TiSr!1?,0.! ine exirau wu. 10 au-eipaa, , to run the Mchirtley eacWna, ? . ! Tb difVreu- in the two ticts 14 j jnaidy thi. the republican bare put their roue a rider at the tail of the Ucet feik the fanner Lae put their rough ricrr ai a m3. Another Nebraaka train he'd up in Yk eoenty this tira. A robber went I throogh the isleeper and took wtn F-dQ. j then jutnpd oil the car. IJetter tatf a ; revolt r in ery Nrth a they do "ufe I preerrer on ttcaxu to&la. I I of New York was ' McKinler cuoreir ! The tock market rot disturbed by the ttotx tor the c;er tears k&rw they ovred . 3 eiery ut cf a g-ua ia the confection aod zsm they kuw they own the candi date. The CiiJItotJure factory of course rill be di-tarifd when Bryan in elected, for there m ill not be half as cacy made the text four year. But the farmer ar tot diaturbVd for they k&ow Bryan lands for thsu The leayje of republican club is on it lat ley. We will ee how their rati f,cZM.m cos pa re sith the ratirkration of firyao- To eta the fact, there it ooth ir.Z to gwie-rat ecthuiata in McKinJey and Mark iiaa&a. If there i &ot three tinse the number at the Br an tioo we will ki Bud Liodey'a ratitvea toe. caa 1 j . we are smioci tor for a-r mM a w 4 ' --a m.-- . was a v wui do u more frd is the cabinet, then e waist to Biake him pre-kiect after Bryan. v a Vs r yds t.tAki'fart IIa will ; We have oc -ite icterest that above j all otfcr hould receive careful atten-1 tioa aad that m cmr pubuc school. The j Superintendent of Publc Ia4ru-tion is ' ai candidate bate been laettioEied but for expene&ce a a teacher and auperin-! tesdect rjooe eta to take the lead of ' Irof. C. Y. Irk, of Bart county. If we j do xaske &Ltake ad xixptte motey a? prfpriatkwi for other -tate interest, ii ! auuter litt, Inst we can not afford to scar the educatkm at mr chiidren. We hoy Prof. Beck will b cocacated and elected. Hcrg Kocg atd a jatch of couctry aroacd will net tatisfy American creed a bow cr.ift under McKiciey. Huth Asnrt B5ut b traded for a patch of Kat Icdia, thee e aut ro into the M ei i racte an. whip fjt4un.. tAi hr tecrttnry. butia tie Nicaragua rr. i trade half of it for half of the Suez ca- nai. then we will be fixed ar.d will be ready to Jet McKiay retire. m 1 Tie chief 3 is tre cocjitg rresi- dectia! electtos i prosperity for the fsJiocaire rerti troierity for the I frmerr Ha!tipIicatio of the one and proa tra tioo cf the other. - If McKc!ey U re elected the EdUkscaire will double in '. cucber. if Bryao i elected borrie with-; cmt a iDortca? will double. The repub-1 licasa cd cot care to acock lTer and , preexcacjea ot.i un oui u mc- Kltley la rr elected toota will tare to go. They did riot prosei in their platform ; to let the money standard akne where ; they baie low left it. ; It i the ioe4et tretch of the politi cal iu.ak.aU'ua ith the least degree cf ccaiteocy to art that Cleveland's ai car titration cued all the hard time all over the world and the McKicley ad csisistratica ha brought prosperity to all the world. It would be jually juat to ooodade that the lchabitacU cf the tirtirr lake axe oore properoa under MeKic-rf-y than ender Cerelacd. i tral Nebraska, and every man of them is Clark's ciioo dii tot con.e out of s an aggressive friend who will work to in the cosiCioa pxp at did the oil truit crea our business and protect our rev ised sugar trut n-osiey, but out of the enues against enemies who blander and gmici ia the form of gold, aUier and frauds who would impose upon the corn copper or. Clark had &o special law to pany. help bias as the other feliows had. The ; The strongest insurance writers in taoeey he ssbtecntiesi to the Brya" elec-1 the west are flocking to our company. toa fend will fccivtisk. Insurance solicitors know a good thing. ) They want to ally themselves with a vig- , .. - - . orou4, modern, well-managed company The FfoiibmoB crzuon. this year, oCtrring iCliUrance contract which meet wert hz'z-z bear acd rothirgeh. The the increasing demands of the times for eesber are ready to ail watching for W insurance. bear aod let th4 oIte grjw their ri'ht 1 "l wish it were possible to assemble leg cff. Ther guts are loaded for bear ! our Advisory boards for this celebra acd it wiU be ajmse to ehool any other tion," continued President Ilobkon. "It asisah Their steak era wul be" biased t would be an invaluable object lesson to if they ay a ord about any thr civil- ; some of the alien agents who spend their Lsed cur- caily the kofs. The kind of ; time trying to injure our home compan- poiiticai gen that suiU us is one loaded They would see men of intelligence, for ary and every injustice and wrocg. ol icfiuence in their communities, men The f.rohibttko gun eor.ee carried was whose names acd character are a guar- ao loaded. aoty that the association to which they I give a most loyal support has the con- - .. . . . ; tidence cf bankers, merchants, profes- Utcxat-rg Nttor seems to run tooionU m farmers, 6tock e; and rree.y through the taouths of oar ofSoe ! the people of all occupation'?!, bolder. The cbac.&el i eaiy detected s We lapsed one policy in May. Do by the polluted breath. There are men know ? ,an" other company doing b bedieg oces of trust and repon-1 buJfe"? m ebr&a Wlth a record? sibility iatnis state who would cot be .- JtT n? raet the representa- retained as brakeeaeo cm a freight train Urm ? Bankers Reserve and get for a itge day. Republicans ued to I fajoted with a group of hustlers, the eiake iv with barrel of hoaor in rvtir ! Iik cf which you will not see again un- ft'at ifMtittJik, . !! ir- ir.'- t; ,.t oar, and the snakes are biticg just aboct as hard as ever tior. Every poLitieai element making up the fusion party is Nebraska has been in vited to the appointive lunch counter, excepting o&e. The silver republicans who supported Harrison, the suiver dem ocrats vno exported Cleveland and the stiver pops wfco supported Wearer have ba reasesbiered by ctat appointment Our Store is the Mecca for Wen's and Bops1 Hew, Stylish Spring Clothing, Heady to Wear and Tit m ml Orders . i i i i i i We know of no better ready-to-wear clothing than tie Ilackett, Carhart, Michael Stera i Co, Hart, Schaffner & Marx Co., and ready-made clothing on merchant tailor plan. The tailoring throughout our garments is as important to you as the fabrics. WEN'S $1O.00 SUITS FOR, $4.75.-1" fine all wool clay worsteds htnpd and checked, tancy worsted, also dark, plain, very fine cassimeres, and blue surges, all sires from 34 to 44. MEN'S VERY FINEST SPRING SUITS AT $7.50, $10 and $15. There uiu are excellently tailored, being sewed throughout with 6000 standard pure dye silk, they have the style and character of swell merchant tailoring and tit perfectly. They are made by the best manufacturers in the world. The insides &f our garments are taken care of you would be convinced that there is no way lo tnake clothing better. MAIL ORDERS FILLED. r iriniht MYDEN BROS,, The Big Store ... but not a man who supported St John ha had a Pinell. Thousands, of them wt'J rote for Bryan all the fame and against rasping the money standard to htrlP raillionaire. . Trusts Easily Destroyed In July's Success, Hon. Champ Clark, Congressman from Missouri, writes these etirriag sentences about the trusts: -Trust might be regulated now, later they will be extirpated. How? In two ways: 1. By placing ererything owned manufactured or sold on the free lih 2. By malting it a tienitentiary offense to own stock in a: trust, to hare any financial interest in j one. or to be engaged in any manner whatsoever; in running er conducting : one. j "If the-e two laws were enacted and j enforced honestly and resolutely, in a ', twelremocth there would not be a trust : j betwixt the two oceans a consumma- i ;, - ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION. Syltniii Success of a Strong Home Institu tion Fitly Signalixed. 0,000 or SEW Bl SIJiESS IN A WEEK Til re Year, of Achievement to Be Re viewed at Lake Manaiti tin the f'oarth of July. T"he 3d of July marks the third anni versary of the life of our company," said Mr. B. II. Robison, president of Omaha's fcuceeiteful life insurance company, the Banker Reserve Life Association. . "We propose to make a day of it at Lake Macawa on the Fourth, when the president will meet and greet the officers and field force and the day will be de- otea to a general joumcauon. Ace xaa wnica 1 nave gathered f m? 18 m?lt awent. e nave ben busy U year writing new Ijri w tae had no leisure for pleasure. 1 want the field agents to meet each otner and the officers of the company, and have, therefore, arranged to celebrate the glorious Fourth. "With our business more than doubled in six months and our income three times what it was fcix months ago, we very caturaliy feel elated. We claim the right to a special celebration. "Our modern plans and forms of poli- rie have tiroved extremelv tor.ular. The comicg year promises more tnan the mrAt-ndid achievement alreadv attained. Our phenomenal record will be more than duplicated. -Jut wait for our December, 1900, statement to the Insurance Department j if you want to know how prompt Nebrafckans are to recognize merit in a home institution," added Mr. Robison as he picked out a dozen new policies and attached his signature to them. "There," said he, -is fCO.000 of new busir.es written in a single week in pite of hot weather and the malevolent attacks of alien competitors. The twelve ; names cn those dozen policies are a ' dozen of the best business men in Cen- " " them together on some other occasion, concluded the head of the famous local company as he turned with justifiable pride to his desk and his duties. f . Franklin on Imperialism The well-founded esteem and, permit me to say, affection which I shall always have for your lordship make it painful for me to see you engaged in conducting Tilled.. OMAHA. NEB. a war, the great ground of which (as de scribed in your letter) is "the necessity of preventing the American trade from passing icto foreign channels." Tome it seems that neither the obtaining nor retaining any trade, how valuable soever, is an object for which men may justly spill each other's blood; that the true and sure means of extending and secur ing commerce : are the goodness and cheapness of commodities, and that the profits of no trade can ever be equal to the expense of compelling it ana hold ing it by fleets and armies. I consider this war against us,' therefore, as both unjust and unwise, anc I am persuaded that cool and dispassionate posterity will condemn to infamy those who ad vise it, andf that even success will not save from some degree of dishonor those who voluntarily engaged to conduct it. This letter of Frankin's can be found in the third volume of a work entitled "Modern British Essayists," published by Carey & Hart of Philadelphia in 1857. BRYAN'S ELECTION CONCEDED Chicago" Greatest Daily Predict That the Democrats Will Carry New York. The most earnest and most fearless MeKinley organ in the west, the Chi cago Times-Herald, practically concedes the election of Mr. Bryan and the defeat of its idol, basing its conclusions on the fact of the nomination of Roosevelt. The day after the Roosevelt nomination the Times-Herald started its leading edi torial with the -declaration that-"the re publican party must now face the seri ous problem of electing its ticket with out the electoral vote of New York," and for reasons stated: In Albany Governor Roosevelt was the derth's head at every corporate feast. the fly in every pot of oily jobbery for which Tomas C. Piatt lives and schemes. Tom Piatt would rather have a demo crat in the governor's mansion at Al bany than a second term of Governor Roosevelt. The only way Piatt could checkmate the popular demand for this was through forcing his nomination for vice-president. This is what he accomplished before he left Philadelphia Wednesday night with a glad hearttbeating exultantly un der his fractured rib. Having fixed upon Piatt the responsi bility for the shelving of Roosevelt, the Times-Herald continued in this strain: And now western republicans must be prepared to face the difficult task of elect ing MeKinley and Roosevelt without re lying on New York state. The truth." cannot be concealed that as a candidate for governor, an office in which his fear less impetuosity and honest instincts were needed, Theodore Roosevelt would have attracted thousands of independ ent republicans, anti-Tammany demo crats and civil service reformers to the support of the republican ticket. As candidate for vice-president his person- 1 j a m v. amy win not count lor a rush to win support from these classes. 11 a man iie mra . uoier is nomi nated for governor by the democrats against any stool-pigeon Tom Piatt may name, does anyone doubt that the disgust over the political assassination of the Rough Rider will endanger both the state and national republican tick- etsY The Times-Herald then begun figur ing on the states. It conceded Ken tucky and Maryland to the democrats without question, and the votes of the three states added to the votes Bryan got in itj wouia give mm nine more than enough to elect. It waa argued therefore, that in order to be elected, Mckinley would have to get at least nine votes out of the states of the west carried for Bryan. This is virtual acknowledgement of the defeat of Mckinley. He cannot carry a single state he did not carry be fore. And what is more to the point, New York, Maryland and Kentucky are not the only ones he will lose. BOER WAR NOT OVER Preparations by Lord Roberta Indicate Protracted Struggle. It is clear that Lord Roberts does not consider the war in South Africa ended. as he has put a stop to the return of civilians and has ordered the mining men DacK to tsioemiontein. lie is cred ited . with thinking that three months must elapse before affairs will be settled enough to permit of the resumption of business. A large body of British are again re ported to be in Swaziland. Genera ruinate nas issued a proclamation an nouncing to the farmers supposed to be harboring armed ex-burghers and not informing against them, that these farms will be confiscated and the re ceipts they hold for goods requisitioned cancelled, or will be compelled to pay a f ' A , A 1 1 1 . nne 01 not less man nan a crown per morgen on the area ot the larms. Patronize our advertisers. CHESS ( Addrem all communications intended for this department to the Chess Editor Independent. 2646 Gai field street, Ldn ooln, Nebraska. i July 5, 1900. NOTES. " The Chess Editor is glad to be back at his post again, and hopes that no further interruptions will occur in the work out lined in this column. Owing to press of other matter, Game Studies will be omitted this week; but next week Ruy Lopez games from the Paris tournament will be selected for our class. Mr. Hammond of Wymore, because of a change in his work, found it inconveni-' ent to begin his game against the Inde pendent's class in consultation. The secretary of the Nebraska Chess Association is at work on a neat little book in which to record scores of games played by correspondence or otherwise. All members of the association will be furnished a copyv ... NEBRASKA CHESS ASSOCIATION. Only 24 members of the association voted at the election of officers. . Messrs. Hald, Seeley and De France were re elected to their respective offices of pres ident, vice-president, and secretary-treasurer.. The following members failed to qualify and vote during the month of June: Owen, Powell, Nelson, Roche, Ed wards, Tyson, Carroll, Barron, Hinman, Kinniburgh, Boucher, Whited, Grant, W. S. Swim, and Damon. Twenty-one members voted in favor of holding a summer, tournament. For dace of holding the same, Lincoln re ceived 13 votes, Omaha, 3; Dannebrog, 1; Grand Island, 1; no choice, 4. As to time, there was considerable diversity of oninion. Two members-favored June, 4 were for July; August had 2 votes; September, 4; October, 4; "during state fair," 3; "any time," 4. Hence it is prob able that the meeting will be held in Lincoln in September. Nineteen mem bers nromised to attend Notwithstanding the fact that the 1899 correspondence tournament is not fin ished yet, 19 members favored holding another tournament at long range and 4 were against it. As to time of beginning this tournament, 13 voted to begin "now," "soon," or "any time." , September had 3 votes; and July, August, October and December had 1 each. Eighteen mem bers pledged themselves to enter. The secretary now . proposes this plan to those who desire a correspondence tour nament: That each section contain but five players and that each playerake up at once his four games, so thai the sec tions will all finish about, the same time. That two prizes be offered in each sec tion; a copy of Freeborough's Chess Openings (or some similar book) to the winner,, and. a copy, of Cunnington's "How to Play Chess" to the player hav ing the poorest score of games actually played a player withdrawing and re signing unfinished games, of course, be ing not entitled to a prize. THE 1900 CORRESPONDENCES TOURNAMENT, A sufficient number-having expressed a desire to begin pJas at once in a new tournament, the secretary announces the following sections: T x SECTIOS ia. . R. E. Brega, Callaway; John I. Clark, Platte Center; i George E. Lund berg, Bloomfield; Judge S. 11. Sedgwick, York, and C. B. Swim, St. Edward. SECTION B. J. M. Crosby, Fremont; W. R. Ellis, Bloomfield: C. O. Rettenmayer, Arcadia; M. F. Winchester, Dannebrog, and W. W. Wyckoff , York. Other sections will be added just as ast as members express a desire to be gin piay, eacn section containing out live players. SOIXTIO'3 AND SOLVERS. Problem 19: The key-move is Kt-QKt We advise solvers to put the problem on the board and work out the beautiful mates for themselves. Solved correctly by D. F. Logan, Norton, Kansas, and B. B. Rice, Grand Island. Problem 20: 1. P-Kt7 K-R2 2. P-KtS (Q) ch KxQ 3. K-Kt6 gaining the opposition and winning as follows: 3. K-rt 4. K-B7 K-R2 5. P-Kt6 cb, etc Solved correctly by C. R. Oldham, Moundsville, WTest Virginia; R. E. Brega, Callaway; ri. G. Griffin, St. Edward, and D. F. Logan. Mr. Rice suggests K-B5, K-Kt4, etc for White; but his solution is faulty, as Black can stalemate or win the second pawn. End-Game 21; Key-move is RxP, and White either stalemates or wins all the Black Dawns. Solved correctly bv Messrs. Logan, Rice, Griffin, Oldham, and Rev. J. A. Younkins, JSatrona,Penn sylvania. Problem 21: Hey-move is R-B7. Solv ers should work out the mates for them selves. There are many variations and some beautiful mates. Solved correctly by Messrs. Logan, Oldham, and Nelson, Hald. Dannebrog. The unnumbered problem in issue of June 21 was incorrectly printed in the diagram and cannot be solved. It will not be republished at present. EUD-GAMES 12, 20, AND 22. Messrs. Griffin, Lund berg, Ellis, Rice, Younkins, and Brega, are still hammer ing away at the Chess Editor on End Game 12. Most of them have reached nine moves with no immediate win in If to liaven't a regular, bealtar morement ot tba bowels Try yon'n sick.or will be. Keep your bowel open, ana be well. Force, in tbeabapeof violent pnysle or pill poison, is dangerous. The SBootbest. easiest, most perfect way of keeping Ine Bu.cis uear ana um w hi iu Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. lOo. J5c, 40c Write mow ira sanpie, ana Boosiet oa Health. .Address tafitac rmm, cum imtwi, bw rrfc KEEP YOUR DLOOD CLEAIl BEOTHRTHE IIUELS VV CANDY If VX CATHARTIC ye. S TAOt MANN WMUko sight. Messrs. C. B. Swim, Griffin, Younkins, h.llis, ana ssi. uouia, juannat- tan, Kansas, started on End-Game 20, but part of them have resigned. Black s 40th move should be -JtJo en, ana w nite cannot break through without danger. 40.. PxP will undoubteaiy lose for Black. Rev. J. A. Younkins. Natrona, Pa- and II. B. Hammond, Wymore, have accepted the challenge in End-Game 22 (the Brega game) and are playing against the Chess Editor. THK COMPOSITE GAME, This game is moving slowly on its sec ond round. The moves reported to date are as follows: . 18. De France, B-K3 Hald, P-Q4 19. Owen, B-B4 Hartzell, B-Q3 2a Powell, BxB PROBLEM SO. 22. A little lesson in queening pawns. White to play and win. . BLAUK. If ! mum rrr Li3 psff T"irSi f'tn iimis auM0 frnt fV wmw-t W'WAS . t 5 - k ' i t i 1 i tfV.fH m& lI Lli vr &ypy y-riP? kiJi SmaJt WHITE. One of Morton's Lies. Editor Independent I see that the "Conservative" asserts that Mr. Bryan in 1896 "received the smallest per cent, of the popular vote of any democratic nom inee during the entire period; meaning the period from 1824 until 1896. The "Conservative" further says that while Greeley, whose defeat has always been regarded as the most "humiliating dis aster to the democratic party," received 44 per cent, of the popular vote Mr, Bryan received but 40 per cent. The truth is that Greeley--whose nom ination was the worse mistake the old democratic party ever committed re ceived 2,834,079 votes out of 6,466,165, which is about 43! per cent. Mr. Bryan received 6,502,925 votes out of 13,923,102 votes, which is 46 per cent As 1 do not believe that a man so closely allied with banks, trusts and all kinds of "agencies of prosperity" as Mr. J. Sterling Morton should not be able to figure out the right percentage I look for the reason of his arithmetical ignor ance in his perpetual endeavor to belittle Bryan's success by any means with truth, if possible, with lie and abuse, if necessary. Mostly with aid of the last named means. ! A Democrat. When writing advertisers please men tion this'paper. Politics in Pennsylvania Philadelphia. June 25, 1900. Editor Independent: A friend sent me a copy of your democratic paper. I see you ad vertise to send your paper for the cam- naiirn of 1900 for 25 cents. Please send copy to my address and oblige. In this large city of 1,300,000 inhabit ants we have not a single democratic paper to educate this vast population in true democratic principles, ine papers are all save one owned or controllad by bankers, corporations, spoilsmen or re cipients of the public printing of the dominent party. One is orthodox on the tariff question, but has soft words for the banker and capitalist. Ihe demo- ocratic organization here has drifted to the control of a certain class of men who will dominate the civil and religious lib erty ot a country, or cnaos may come. Such now is the condition here of the democratic party. These elements get all the offices they can, and bargain with the dominent party for public plunder. Under such conditions as exist here, the educated American democrat is ap athetic and will not assimilate with the party. Yet William Jennings Bryan at the next election will have an increased vote of 10 per cent. J. DOWLER. SPRING MEDICINES AT CUT RATE... 00 Hood's Sarsaparilla 75c 00 Paine's Celery Compound.... 75c 00 Avers' Sarsaparilla .75c 00 Allen's Sarsaparilla .......... ,75c 00 Allen's Celery Compound ..... 75c UO ocotts rjmuision oc 00 King's New Discovery.. 75c 00 Peruna 75c 00 Swamp Root. ...75c 00 S S S oo 00 Pinkham's Vegetable Comp'd.75c 00 Jayne's Expectrant ,75c 00 Beef Iron and Wine Tonic 75c j 00 Pierce's Favorite Prescription. 75c 00 Miles Restorative Tonic 75c 00 Wine of Cardui..... 75c 00 Slocum's Ozomulsion. 75c 00 Radfield's Female Regulator.. 75c 00 Shoop's Restorative 75c 00 Indian Sagwa . 75c 00 McLean s Liver and Kidney xiaim ...toe 00 Mother's Friend. ... 75c 00 Woman's Health Restorer 75c 00 La-cu-pi-a. 75c 00 Hostetter's Bitters ... 75c 00 Iren Tonic Bitters 75c 00 Electric Bitters ....75c! Johnson Drug Store Low Prices 141 So. 9th St. Lincoln, Neb. P. J AS. COSGKATE, Attomey-at-Law ltilliujfley Sloek. s Georee W. Polloct, non-resident, defendant : Yon are notified that June 23, 1900, Jennie Pol lock filed her petition against you in the dis trict court of Lancaster county, Nebraska, ask-1 ing for a diTorre on tne grounds of desertion and non-support. - - " You are required to answer said petition on or beiore August e, iima. JENNIE POLLOCK, By her attorney F. J as. Coso bays. A TTOaiAKS TRUE WORK. It is Not Her Mission in the World to Make Monej, but to Make a Home. "The work of a woman in the world is not to make money, but to make a home; her true business in. life is that of wife and mother," writes "Au American ' - WILLIS D. OLDHAM. ' , Deputy Attorney General of Nebraska, who nominated Bryan at Kansas City." iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin TTti iDicvcies 4 and up Sent to any address in the United States on approval. Write today and get FREE SAMPLE of our 1900 ART CAT ALOGUES. Our 1900 guarantee reads: If defective parts are found in W IT TMANN BI CYCLES wiU replace FREE an Va7 al1 transpor tation charges. THE WITTMANN CO., ESTABLISHED 1870. Genuine Edison Phonographs KENNEDY'S CALL AT For the latest styles in photos. All work up to date. Come in and see our It is the latest. SULPHO-SALINE BATH Jgl DRS. M. H. AND J. 0 EVERETT, MANAGING PHYSICIANS iiiiliiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LINCOLN TRANSFER CO. Buggies and Spring Wagons PLYIVIOUTH TWINE lillllillllllllllllllinillll!llllll!l!ll!llll!lllll!ll!!lllllllllllllllllllllllil 00000VOOOOOOC Cheap SSofllipi) o Uoster, JJ., and return S18.95, Deadwood, S. D., and re- V tarn $21.50; Spearflsh S. D. and return $23; Sheridan, Wyoming, and return $27.fc5; St. Paul, Minn., and return $14.3U; Minneapolis, Minn., and return $H.:; Duluth, Minn.. 64 ana worn in.ou; xvi, Jiiun., ana return ret! perior, Wis., and return, $13.00; West Superior, Wis., and return &18.60. kv CUy Ticket Office Cor. Ten tb and O Sta Telephone 235. m0000000000RO0000 Mother," on "Is a College Education the Best for Our Girls?" in the July Ladies Home Journal. That is true with re gard to nine out of ten of these pretty girls who are tiptoeing about now in caps and gowns, and cherishing the fondest hopes that they may some day be learned Fellows and Deans. 'They will marry perhaps, or. remain single, helpful sisters or aunts. . They will have houses to. manage, marketing to do, stupid cooks to guide, babies to rear, sick children and men to nurse. Not once in a woman's life perhaps will she be called upon to quote from an Assyrian-Baby-Ionic epic, or to dissect a cat. But thee -TiMi r" jHfil ONLY $7.50 1136 0 St, Lincoln. PHONE 182 . : The Bicycle and Phonograph gas headquarters of the entire j west- , REPAIRING Send to us SSS j crar finest and most difficult e- S5 ixiirwork if you want Eatisfac- : SSS tion gruarantecl- at Earn pricfis , fhich bav built up the the larg. 5S5 4st repair business in the west. S I32So. must. "Colodian and Platinum finish.1' HOUSE AND SANITARIUM All forms of batb.3 Turkish, Russian, Ho man, Electric with special attention to the application of natural salt water baths, several tunes stronger than sea water, . Rheumatism, kin. Blood, Catarrh, Stomach, Nervous, and Heart diseases; Lirer and Kidney troubles: diseases of women and chronic ailments treatoa successfully. A separate department, fit tod with a thoroughly aseptic ward and operating rooms, offer special inducements to surgical cases, and all diseases peculiar to woman. Ex- Tiir mini niPTnn r.iiPcmnc hu I II L UUIlLlllU I Ull. V ins HIIHI INi I III! A. Philadelphia and return $31.80, tickets on sale June 14 to 16, 0 the return limit June 26; Chicago and return $14.40, tickets on sale June 25 to 'St. limit July Z. For the Following. Tickets on sale Jane 21st. limited to return to Oet. 31st. PenTer A. and return $18.25; Colorado Springs and return $1S.S5; Pueblo and return $19; Glen wood Springs and return $;3.25; Salt Lake V and Ogden and return $32; Hot Springs S. D. and return $17.M is.i-; t aseca. nainn., ana return. HZ: bu O O 0 Burlington Depot 7th St., Bet. P and y. 'Phone 5. times every day a meal must be cooked under her supervision. At any minute, be she cook or countess, she may be called upon to make a poultice for a sick child, to change the sheets under him, to know why the bread is sodden and the meat uneatable, to give medicine intelli gently to the baby in her arms. The college, be it remembered, takes the g irl for four years out of family life in which this kind of . training would be given to her,. Its controllers, in their anxiety1 to develop her brain as fully as that of. a man, forget the woman's life which in inexorably-placed before her, and do no fit her for its inevitable work." '