(J November 29, 1800. nmcm tttty a qtt a TTTxiTaTTTTxTrT XII l? X XUJUHVUKJfl. e JLJLJkJXJ. Ail XV. aLSJLJi.1 X. Foe tx year I was "irtlm of 4 ye jMawsaa la it wer&t I ora. 1 cu4 eat aUaef fei mux towrt. au-i at usM Cf ts.el o'j1 tt rata a & etrt tit. Lett March 1 tt.a tJMksc rAi);AKtrr! and theai fcave ati.y hr proved, w,til 1 am aa veil a I ter vm Lb c-j .fe. ySh CANDY 1 Jf CATHARTIC Caotf. M mwi. ov lr.t. 10c. j&c Sue CURE CONSTIPATION. ... , S tarfc. til KO-TG-LUC 52SE!!D HO BONEY (W ad act Ui art.-u U tta. I tvl (tt, tia.taf ta fcvcjr M i abS t iacrtfe i.rt u frt f raan I -a t- ! a4t a alii xt K . -i t Km fixes. i t - - - i A H- 'J f I MUI lL.l?lttUH . jT, r'i i J ' --. to xwulw. 4' . -i i- 1 Mt.at !! atry It. -3 If CV , 7 - . J-u iMt a.t-r laa a l'"-1 " " a-r a . ? . .a -aj f wiiii,(.iii1.5 qt;: certain other things which have hap- .. Tfif iitj pened since the election do not harmo I t hi rr.f .MtrMr. nire with each other, to say the least ! u of It. More Is the pity! For Instance, : y jJ nj ; jj5 '.rt l.i It r- frr- mwm !. f n.ror-'t fc.i ti .M ; ui a tu w rfrm . ea ..!. te k:r EARS, RCESUCK C0n CHICAGO, ILL. ; LIKE A $50.1 VATGH. 3 tT CiOLI) FILLED A31KHir AN 310VOENT IdaXUHtW al I. I 25 Ttl CtiRtTEE- i trwmm pmvrU Hit l4aiTm. W mn9m4 -r mzptm v A t 'l &W tf nnr.r f H C t ! r-. t ! k l 0 n mm m -x. vrlbmt i.ig p.i 1 W w m OT yb4 -.J W m- r i tm hm '.4 Pari a ievaio Ca, CejCI it tat ig. CKCAC3. SEHD HO MONEY 4 .i. vsar.. IS SI .III. IfMUl t Hr r I a WAfEAMTCsTzo TEARS f.e aaaua f eail a. c. .r i a - tart, ff t '. 0mvm .! m ftV a ie. m "' Xanuar V altvk C, 3 S t ' Ca:-ai ua XUf , Cjueas in 5. h - .-V- 1 .-! L oJAII! iiX W!liil i' I t a4a-. M lJ& tJ0iLJ m m ATT W mf OCarESS r HAPD.HEAQINQ a?af wr ianratA t:. lSai.kHi.fILI. !. - ca. f.a.si'fta'tcai tm.A ftjnt fraa. 1 r w ja-a't t t-atis. at f7-' vt J c-jaC AT CUT p t Tr mm MEDICINES 11 1 Nra;.a.ri..a l iar C:.trr 1 on. vU f Z?3 - 7re . 7ro 1 A rrV Sr.n .a 1 ifj A.!c' SariMij-aniSa 1 W A. !:. vV..m Vj'Mijind . . I ' Soutt'a llru u w-.-n i ii h IT .Vr lx;jrry I '.J IVruc .... " 1 t) Samp i .. S . 1 vA Picktaaa 'ecetah Conp"d .75. 1 Jj r " ili;---srt .... 75- 1 ! iff- at.d H'ir,. TT.i- .. 7S; ! -it! M. !-:fraiTe T.';.i-: . . . Wit.- c-f iriiui 1 JJ krt;aj"a t uoiuUu.'o 1 U lia:nekl' I -i;.a. l jlaWr. 1 tJ SLjp! 1 Lea tors ue. 1 lJ !r.d.c 1 l0 McLas LTer mui Kidty lU'Tt. I i Moti'rf- Fr.ajcJ 1 t V.'a-V Hea tL I,torcr. . . 1 U La ce ;:: a 1 U. Ha:-:tra L;tr-ra 1 m Iruu . r.:: ii.:r" . . Jc ; . . 75c ; . .75o i . . Cc . . 75o . .75e . . 7 jo 1 isO r-iecUc liilVra Tit- Johnson Drug Store LOT Prices ' 141 So. iuli St. Lincoln, Neb. Ik 3. J. DOBS OK & Co., lr"r u Elt'ES. RPS. IAU0W AND 1C0L tO K t-It tt.. M It. 4. u j j tii U-t"i-af rit riee. Woompener's Drug STORE. DHUGS,PAIHTS,01LS,GLASSi A fs'i iiceef lVrfwtoe ad Tit lioo-!. Srfh I nth 5t Ppfwiei fl 9, U I Lincoln, Neb. Wt W M tlliMI M lu M lulan K'Jmi p . t- ; ' r - u iwfu (iar ' soon as A-"' - t ' t r 4 - : - I thele&s. V "VI " 1 a.. u-e . jm people who VL-if 'C ' tZA'LZICZXt ' trrestest Republican Ante-election Promises. BENEFITS NOT APPAEENT. Golden Era of Prosperity Falls - to Dawn. CAPITAL REMAI5S Kf HIDIUQ. Dl Fflr and W Bdcttn Marie h Trlmaaplk f McKinley. Tram pa Mr Himtroai Thaw CTr. Pablle Money Wsated For Armor Plato Iraator Collora'i To( la Daaarr Chip fabaldr BUI a Pat ! riam-Xo Relief From the Traits. : (cial WttUiBCton LeUer. fsomo tlilnea th&t were nrcmlsed br tLe Ilr nuLllcans before the election and Uiy assenea wjin ereat rocuerauon and freoofitt reiterations that Bryan s candidacy was the only tbln? that in- Guced the rilJDinos to cenc on and that those ooor benighted heathens who are idiotic enouch to desire to srov- ! trn themselres would immediately lay i down their arms, disband and surren- der the moment they heard McKlnley was elected. It seems to be tolerably j well ascertained that McKlnley was i elected or will be as soon as the electo- ral college meets. It Is presumed that j the ignorant savages In the Philippines ' Lave heard of the event which happen- j t-0 Nov. C as there ts cable communi cation with Manila. But, mlrablle die- j tu. they still fight on. and it looks as ; If they have no definite idea of stop ping. General Mac Arthur declares that the Philippine war lacks a great deal j of being over and that It will take more soldiers and a greater navy to end It. The war department makes j like assertions. . We were also assured with a great deal of emphasis that there would be universal prosperity as soon as Mc Klnley was re-elected and that capital. which appears to be the most timid of -H things, would come out of hiding as Isryan was defeated, rsever- and to the utter astounding of are no kin to King Solomon matter -of j wisdom, eno of the failures of years haj just even- ew York. Tramps Hnmerooa. We were also frequently reminded of the fact that Democrats were solely re sponsible for the tramps, and yet the tMw0papers state that there are more tramps going south and pestering the ; railroads and the farmers than ever be- j fore In the history of the country. The ; railroad men report that as many as 3o or 40 have to be driven from every , trsrit 1m in cnln?r south and that for r reason the force of employees on t r - o , No, the hobo is a migratory bird, go- j tutr. so that those who are going south cow to depredate on the southern peo- i pie will be performing the same feat on northern farmers In June and July. ; -A Good Eaoagh Morsjnn. I am not writing this ln a railing splr- j st or disposition to find fault with the j Itepublicans. I wiuh from the bottom were at an end; that every man, worn-1 an and child within the confines of the t republic were prosperous and that j there wasn't a tramp oa the whole face j of the earth. I am simply stating the facts as they appear to be. When & great many years ago It was charged that the Masons had murdered a man named Morgan In New York because it was charged that he revealed the se crets cf the order, Thurlow Weed, Wil liam II. Seward and other shrewd po litical manipulators organized an anti Maaoaic party and made great political capital out of the deep damnation of Morgan's taking off. The Masons and their friends strenuously denied that il&min was dpad at all and claimed that he bad been spirited away and kept ln biding simply to make political capital out of it, whereupon Weed cyn ically and satirically remarked, 'Wheth er he's dead or not. It's a good enough Morgan till after this election." It looks very much In the retrospect as if the roseate promises of the Re publican spellbinders of the late cam ra!m were merely "rood enough Mor- o&tll after the election. Wane ( Public Money. Tbe sertary of the navy has recent ly made a contract with Andrew Car negie for f 16.000.000 worth of armor ! I late at between $100 and &00 per ton. 1 This Is wicked and wanton waste of j the people's money. Armor plate can be made for about $150 per ton. and the government should build a plant and make Its own armor plate. But ' Andrew supported McKlnley and has bis reward. On one mournful occasion Uccle Shel ; tj M. Cuilom of Illinois reluctantly ad mitted that a senator of the United f States was only human, and there are others for Instance. Governor John uuey manner or Illinois, tie is very human, if not humane, and Is hot foot after Uncle Shelby's seat In the senate. John Riley Is so Irreverent , as to jio '- I am a. a : "V . t r- t a "V I .eager uou nis cap to uncie ssueioy ce- cause the latter resembles Abraham XJncoln physically; merely that and nothlog more. Democrats will' have about the same Interest ln their struir git for a senatorial toga as the old w man had In the fight betwixt her hus band and the bear when she shouted with great Impartiality, "Go It, hus band; go It, bear!" ; i . ; At young Dick Yates seems to have been born under a l ucky star and suc ceeds to the first great office which his brilliant father held to wit, the gov ernorship of Illinois his run of luck may continue, and, In the bitter fight to the death between. Uncle Shelby and John Riley, Richard may duplicate his father's second great performance and go to the senate. " Sbtp Svbstdr BUI. It is given out from Washington that one piece of work which the Republic an congress Intends to perform . this winter is to pass Mark Hanna's ship subsidy bill, which will cost the tax payers of the land 19,000,000 per year for 20 years. This will hardly be tak en as an item of news by any well in formed person, for there has never been any doubt that this bill would he passed at the short session. If there ever had been any doubt on the sub ject, it would have been removed by McKinleys election, for It Is absolutely safe to assert that any Republican wb) runs counter to any of Mark Hanna'l plans will be divorced from the pi counter instanter and sans ceremonie. The only reason they didn't pass It at the long session was because they were afraid to. This is an outrageous waste of public money and is a superfluous largess to a lot of Republican bangers on whose patriotism is measured ex actly by the number of dollars they can squeeze out of the government. The Hon. John Dalzell of Pennsylva nia, one of the Republican chieftains of the ways and means committee, in forms a startled world that there will be no tariff tinkering at this session. The Hon. John might just as well have saved his breath, for there is not a soul in the United States outside of a luna tic asylum who ever dreamed that there would be any tariff tinkering un less to tinker the rates still higher to further fleece the people for the bene fit of the tariff barons. Brother Dal zell might just as well have announced that congress would not undertake to suspend the law of gravitation, for there is just as much prospect of that law being suspended as that the tariff law will be cut down by It. They will not even cut down the tariff on wood pulp or anything that goes into white paper, although a large majority of edi tors In the United States, without re spect to party ' affiliations, would like remarkably well to see the paper trust knocked on the head. But sapient Re publican editors who are seeking relief from that monopoly should remember that the continued existence of the trusts depends upon their all standing together, and they can rest assured that the only way ln which they can hope for relief from this particular trust which is crushing them is to join hands witlTthose vho are fighting all the trusts. In this way, and in this . way alone, can they emancipate them selves from the monster that is crush ing out their lives. Concerning Wood Pol p. Last spring I went personally to Mr. Chairman Payne and to Governor Steele of Indiana and to Mr. Dalzell, . leading : members of the ways and means committee, and asked them If the committee would give me a hearing, on my bill to put wood pulp on the free ' list a mMicnrp Intpnrlprl tn kill th n. i per trust. They said they would give me the hearing, but that it was only fair to inform me in advance that no action would be taken upon that bill br ' any other bill of a kindred nature. As ' it Is utter nonsense to do futile and su- j perfluous things, I declined to do any- thing so preposterous, and so the mat ter rests that way. These Republican editors who are against the wood pulp and paper trust might just as well make up their minds that that trust is going to ride them I like the Old Man of the Sea until they come to their senses and help elect a Democratic president. The truth is : that the paper trust is not a whit worse j than other trusts, but the reason why the Republican papers howl about the paper trust Is because their particular ox is being gored. For instance. It is no worse than the salt trust, which has just put salt up to $2.50 per barrel. It must make a Republican farmer who voted for McKlnley and Roosevelt real ize "what fools these mortals be" when he comes to pay this additional tribute to the salt trust, for which there is less excuse than for any other trust. Tariff on Salt. When God created the world, he made salt nearly as plentiful as the water we drink and the air we breathe. Neither man nor beast can live without It. It 1s a prime necessity of animal life. It is a crime to place an undue price on salt. Thomas H. Benton, the great Missourian. fought for 20 years to place salt on the free list, and when he succeeded be said In his pompous way that he Imagined he could hear the flocks and herds on a thousand hills bellowing out their love and gratitude to him. It was a splendid conception, though somewhat whimsical and fan tastically expressed. A farmer who will vote for a party that will enable the salt trust to thus rob the people ought to be taken out and tapped for the simples. No remedy less heroic will do him any good., - - ' The wire and steel trust put up barb ed wire to almost triple Its former price, an article that has been a great boon to farmers, especially those living In a prairie country. A farmer who rotes for the party that enables that party to fleece him ought to be com pelled to sit on a coll of barbed wire the rest of his life. .1. An Pnaotred Mystery. , 7 In this country .we are confronted with and , confounded by-this enfgmat-' leal anomaly Everybody. l.worthy of citizenship takes an interest in politics, more or less intense,1 owing to tempera ment and environment, : which Is alto- gather laudable. A majority of voters would not object to office, large mi nority desire office, a small minority seek offlce, an Infinitesimal minority se cure .office, and yet nearly everybody abuses the politicians and ascribes to them divers and sundry tins of omis sion and commission of which they are as Innocent as , newborn babes. It would . have puzzled even , King Solo mon with his wondrous headpiece to have solved, this mystery. I can under stand all of it except the abuse. When I "was attending the Cincinnati Law school, 1 bean) George uH, Pendleton, "Gentleman George," as he was popu larly named, then in' the prime of his splendid powers and In the full bloom of his manly beauty, declare in the Grand Opera House that "the sweetest Incense that ever greeted the nostrils of a public man ts the applause of the people, and' "Gentleman George" was correct. Deny It If he will, disguise it If he can, It still remains true that the average American craves the good pin ion 'of" his fellows, and he believes with all his heart that the most feasi ble plan for his fellows to manifest that good opinion Is by voting for him. Love of fame Is the master passion of the human mind. It ennobles and glori fies our race. It is a desire for fame more than greed for money which in duces most men to become candidates for public station. The worst and most appalling feature of running for office Is that from the moment a man an nounces his candidacy until he finally retires every scoundrel in the country appears to have carte blanche to lie about him, and the scoundrel lives up fully. to his privilege. A Statesman- Defined. The most incomprehensible part of the whole story is that those who are the victims of obloquy and detraction while living are regarded as sages and patriots after' they have departed hence. This idea has been crystallized and Immortalized by Thomas Brack ett Reed In one of the best of his count less epigrams. When asked to define a statesman, that masterful, great man growled, "A statesman is a politician after, death." ' We of the present generation are prone to believe that George Washing ton was loved and revered by all his contemporaries even as he is loved and revered by us. He surely deserved to be, but he was not. Americans of that day were willing to make him commander in chief of the army which achieved our independence; they were willing, to elect him president so often as he would accept the office, but they always reserved the right to criticise and revile him. When he quit the pres idency, a large number of newspapers fervently thankedzAlmlghty God that the old tyrant had stepped down and out at last j ) f Thomas Jefferson la nqw universally regarded. a4 the! profouudest philoso pher tbat ever devoted his life to states manship as the chief priest apostle and prophet of civil liberty. In his day and generation he was bitterly and brutally assailed as an ienemyof or ganized society... New England preach ers took him for their text on Sundays and anathematized him; as the anti christ described ,ln the ' Bible, yet In the recent campaign both' imperialists and anti-Imperialists claimed to be jus tified In their, theories and their con duct by the doings and sayings of Jef ferson. Verily, 1 the stone which the builders rejected has become the head of the corner! Abase of Great Men, The opposition papers from 1S2S to 1SS6, both inclusive, represented An drew Jackson as a ruffian, a gambler, a tyrant, a murderer, the stealer of an other man's wife, yet there is not a cit izen of the republic worthy of his birth right of freedom who would be willing to blot from the history of the repub lic the pages glorified . by the deeds of the leonine hero of New Orleans. While he lived Abraham Lincoln, by long shot the greatest Republican that ever lived and caBlly one of the four great presidents, was denounced not only by his Democratic opponents, but also by his Republican enemies, as an ape, a baboon, a boot, a vulgarian, an imbecile and a despot though- he Is now universally recognized as a states man of. vast capacity and as possess ing one of the most generous hearts that ever beat ln human bosom. It is difficult to feel any great pity for Senator Marcus A. Hanna. He is so truculent and to domineering that he arouses all cambativeness and all the evil passions of his opponents, and yet there was something almost pathet ic in his appeal for a milder verdict on himself whan, before an Indiana audi ence, he said, "I appear here tonight to demonstrate that X have not horns and hoofs." Abuse Is the fool's argument It is a bad cause1 which has to be supported by slander and vilification. In the language of citizens of Boyvllle, a pub lic man should be given a chance for his white alley. Personal merit where It exists should be freely: accorded to a candidate. It should be a matter of pride with the people it closely con cerns the perpetuity of the republic that our "public men T should -possess "spotless reputations, the richest treas ure mortal time affords." Good name tn man er woman, dear my lord, "" la tle immediate Jewel of .their aoulat We steal to puree steals trash; 'tis sotnethisgV 'aotWng; ; .i : Twaa mine,' 'tis hia, and baa been slave to thou ; - ssade: -"' s- v. - But he that filches from me an good name . Koba me of that which not enriches him And makes me poor indeed. ; " " My plea is for justice to public men. The old saying, "De. mortals nil nisi bonum," Is small consolation to a liv ing man. It should read. "Say nothing except , that which is good concerning either the living or the dead. 'T7' ' Tbo Fatur mt Oar Ire. Professor Yung of the University of Quef, Switzerland, entertains great fears concerning the future of our lower limbs. This sage Is of the opin ion that within the next thousand years human beings will have forgot ten how to use their legs, and that these limbs, if evolution win not do away with them, will serve -a mere brnaments to the rest of the body. : Professor Yung1 states that at the present age human beings show a de cided aversion to personal or physical locomotion, and. this Is more manifest every time a new automatic, traveling Instrument Is Invented and rendered practical. Steam) electricity, cable power and the different velocipede ma chines all .bear an Influence over us and create a dislike for walking,- and the future generations will likely have the convenience of ateerable airships at their windows and : electric auto mobiles at their doors,' and these con veyances will be bo cheap that almost every one can own them, and this means the doom of our legs. The latter will be regarded as super fluous appendages, no use will be made of them, and who knows but that they may disappear altogether? But so much more will our arms develop ln length and strength. - These are the cruel laws of evolution, and It will be due to their pranks that future gen erations will again resemble the apes. There will come another epoch of short legs and long arms. Compiled Wltb tbe Law. "A certain well known Mobile law yer, who was lame and had something of a reputation as a fighter, said a southern gentleman, "was at one time attorney in a suit that caused much ill feeling. He won the suit for his client and the loser vowed vengeance. . 'In pursuance of that same,' in the lan guage of Truthful James,, he one day went into the lawyer's office and sub jected him to a tirade of abuse that would have caused a salt water cap tain to die from pure envy, such was his talent ln vituperation. "The lawyer answered him nothing, to the surprise of two or three men who were present, but getting out of his chair, began to hobble backward. His enemy, thinking he was retreating, followed him up, with more abuse and threatening gestures. "The lawyer's foot finally struck against the wall, when he suddenly straightened up and saying, 'Gentle men, I call on you to witness that on account of this wall, I have retreated as far as possible (the general law of homicide), drew -out a derringer and shot his opponent "At the trial he was acquitted, his witnesses being the men present at the time of the killing,' who testified to the lawyer's having retreated as far as possible." New York Tribune. A Cold Xtarbt In Canada. r The sky at night is a deep dark blue, and the stars are like dropping balls of fire, so close they seem to. be almost within reach. The northern lights look as If a titanic paint brush had been dipped In phosphorescent flame and drawn In great bold strokes across the heavens. , As yon pass the electric lamps you see very fine particles of snow caught up by the wind and glittering high In the air like diamonds. But it is a cold night and you are not sorry to get into your room. First of all, you take a blanket or so from the bed, for there are people In Canada who sleep all the year round . with only a sheet over them, to such a pitch of perfection have they brought the heating of their rooms. - After you have tucked yourself In the stillness of the night Is broken oc casionally by a report like a cannon. Have you ever been Inside a bathing machine when a mischievous boy threw a stone at it? And, If so. do you remember how you jumped? When the walls of a wooden house crack In the bitter cold, the effect is similar, only magnified. But, you know what it means here, so you only draw the clothes closer round you, thankful that' you are snug and warm. And so good night Blackwood's. Always Faee tbe Eagtae. In his prime the late Mr. John Cook, the great tourist agent was a man of Iron frame. But when years of rail way traveling, which averaged annual ly some 40,000 miles, produced certain alarming symptoms, he made a dis covery that may be worth giving to the public. He found that the threat ened trouble, something spinal, dis appeared when he no longer sat with his back to the engine. He always thereafter faced It and that the prin ciple is sound will be borne out by otberr whom he advised to do the same. All who are called upon to do much railtvay traveling will be wise to sit "facing the horses." It Is astonishing to notice how, those women who have the.. smallest hand wish to live on the largest footing. $5 A- KlUNTl. Tele GREW, SPECIALIST, TWt all Form, of DISEASES AND DISORDERS Of MEN ONLY. 22 Years Ekperlencs. . . 12 Vari n Omaha Medicine and treat ment sent erervwhere by Mail or Kxpreae. at the arnail rharrra nf ONLY $5 A MOUTH. howetrkatmkNT that cures and saves yon time and money. ELECTRICITY AND MEDICAL trttt- m '- combined in all eases where H Is advis able. Varicocele, Stricture. Syphilis, ln all Its stages. Loss of Vigor and Vitality, caused from abases or Excesses, Weakness and Dis orders of Kidney and Bladder.' CURES GUARANTEED to allCorable cases. Charges low. iiook r'ree. Consultation and Examination Free Office bonra.S a. m. to 5, Ttolpm. Sundays to is.-DR. KICCRKW P. O. Box 786. Office N. E. Corner a7 lltb iMdfarnam 1U., OMAHA. NEB.- STAL FRANK I A MS returned from France, Oct. 20, 1900. with L.A SO est importation of atal Hons to Nebraska in 19UU OiiJL man in United States tbat imported ALh slack stallion.. 28 Black Perche ron s '28 , . Tbey are the "tow talk." Tbe people throng his barn and babble oter with these com Plimenta, Tbe moat and largest black stall ion I ever saw," "Krerr one a winner.. -Tbe bast Isms ever imported," "Bat lams always bas tbe largest and finest horses," "Won't hare culls," "His horses aiwajra wia at state fairs.'1 ' He has on band . , . .. 100 Black Percherons, Shires, Glydes and ; Goachers 100 ' 'They are two to fire year! old, weight 1.600 to 2,400. lams has mere hlaak stal lions, more ton and. big stallions, more cracker-jacks, more' tops,' gOTeromeat approved, royal bred stallion, than ALL iatroaTxaa orxKsaASKA. "lams speaks ' French and German i needs no inter preter; knows tbe . breedera in tekch cocktv. Tbia, with twenty-fire years' experience, saves him 9300 pa each stal- -lion, and he selects only , the rery best individuals. Has no salesman sares you middlemen's profit. Guarantees to show you more ton black ercheroa stal lions than all importers of Nebraska, or pay fare and $20. ' DOK'T B A CLAM WAITS TAX. - - FRANK SHIP YOUR PRODUCE DIRECT. There is no way to get fall value for your produce except by shipping direet to market. The fewer hands the products of the farm passes through before reaching the consumer the more profit there is for the producer; f , . We Distribute Direct to' the Consumer. ,v ".Ovv We receive and sell BUTTER, EGGS, VEAW POULTRY, GAME, FUR. HIDES, PELTS. WOOL. POTA TOE.S SEKD, BROOM. CORN, POP CORN, BEANS, HAY GRAIN, ORKEX ANl DRIED FRUIT , , - " v - -- Of all kinds, or anything you may hare to dispose of. We guarantee prompt aalea and quiek returns for all shipments.also full market price and full weight; we guarantea toget;v"i mora money for your product than yon can get at home. One shipment will convince yon of this fact. e are reliable and responsible ; you run no risk in shipping to us t hare bean established here for 27 years. Write us for prices, shipping tags or any information you may watt. SUMHERS, BROWN & CO., C0MM1SSI0N"MERCHANTS AND RECEIVEr for the people, ' , Ref. Produce Exchange Bank, Chicago, and this paper.' v 108 S. Water St., Chicago. ftrst ananWannnnnMa'aannnnnnnnnnn 0 tfttbamcally Correct jt Operation 6aay. -? QOork elegant. Hr: drlts for Ttw Hrt Catalogue fne. XZbt Smith premier TJypc writer Co, Syracuse, fi. "I- 0. 8. H. STOVES? X JLtnJ' H ALL, at 1308 O Street , ?; Lincoln f NebV., Will sell you abetter stove at a lower price than any man in the' United States. l Al guaranteed first-class steel plate French Range, dven;;i.0x20xl31i with high closet and Bickel;tlated reservoir, .only - '; :-.r--f .::. Majestic Range Headquarters Estate and Radiant Home Heaters, Also some crood second-hand Stoves to close out CHEAP. SEE US ABOUT A FURNACE. When you need Hardware call on ' a. -TO 14 AT T - eTl Mia! av at 4 a,'R KF California and Oregon. " SPECIAI ATTENTION GIVEN TO LA DIES AND CHILDREN TRAVEL- They are well cared for by ING ALONE., the Conductors who accom pany each of these excursions to California and Oregon, and pass ensers can depend upon receiving the most' courteous' treatment. THE CONDUCTORS are. all men of experience in excursion trarel, and will see that the comfort of all patrons is carefully attend- ONE OF THE MOST' ATTRACTIVE ,' FEATURES OF THESE EXCURSIONS There is a difference be . 13 THE ECONOMY. ' tween the first and second class passage, in railroad and sleeping car fares of nearly $25 per passenger. This sum can be saved by patronizing the Un ion Pncihc Personally Conducted Excursion THE NEW . PULLMAN ORDINARY , SLEEPING CARS assigned to the service were built expressly to accommodate the excursionists, to California and Oregon. ALL ARE LIGHTED with the famous PINTSCH LIGHT, are well ventilated, have seperata lavatories for ladies and gentlemen, and all cars are carpeted and upholstered, with movable parti tions separating the sections, thus assuring all the utmost pri vacy. NO SMOKING IS ALLOWED in the excursion cars, there being , A SMOKING CAR provided for the purpose on the train. . THE ABOVE EXCURSIONS LEAVE OMAHA EVERY FRIDAY, T , AJTD CAN BE JOINED AT ANY POINT ALONG THE LINE. ; 1 1 ' ...... , .. ; ' .-A- 3 i t For full information; call on your nearest agent, or address " I::5.' .J I & SLOSSON, Agent, Lincoln, Nebr. ' u- MS St Paul, Howard Co., : Nebraska, on B. & M. and Union Pacific Ry, tn XmvetTienta. Xbs Best Valuf Cttrtrtng Machine. t ai,WJj!.l.,l,..l a . n if I I I. r- IwaaaaaaaHnaaaaanaaaMaEaHHMaaaHa fttmplfctt a ' Cardinal Potat: I ... i . We have them 'in all sizes. He will SAVU f you worry . . . . . The Popular Personally Conducted Excursions --; -.' .