The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, January 10, 1901, Page 6, Image 6

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    8
THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT
January lO, 1901 A
Cirik 13 33 .
FRANK ! A MS ratorftad from t tine. Oct. 2 W. with utouT importation of stal-!-ot
to .Nfru ij Ubli a&ea ia Lai 14 biavrs that imported ALL black talliokb.
Ha laspertel. ..
28 Black Percherons 28
Tbtj tiw T0r ti-- Th. popl tbrotur his barns aod babbi orer with these com
UaMs.Uk. "Te see es4 Urrt t.;ck stations I erar saw." "Erery oa a winner, "The best
itwal" -it Lass eiwas has ue larr, and finest horse," "Won't hare culls,
"Uu Uunmm a-.; via el state fstre. lie Las oa Land
100 Black Pcrchsrons, Siiires, Glydas and Goachers -100
TLt er to to y ears oil. weight
J, W J01 late La star tiack stal
twaa. sacra tea ajtd fci ataUkasa. nor
rrar Jaeie. acre tpe. errnraaBt
?5jrsre4, no? ai tr4 ataliktta, t!ea all
j ar-var-. er CAAAA. ! -t
franca e&i iiffMii ecd au ix.ir-jrt-r;
kw iL tardr la FKSCV
-ocn. Tkia, with twassty trm yea re'
triie, aae bin (Mju a each stai
t ..! t aaWtt iy the aery Lt
i&4it4ala. Has h1mim-h
rw ta4Jvaas got- tiuaratt to
tU )wa score tor YkI ParcLroo aiai
luuc t&es all iatSMTtan of Xeteke, tr
ff far a&4 SJU.
u a v-VrTT Ira.
I
FRANK
SHIP YOUR
TW ia tm way to H fall a!oa for roar prodara irpt ly thippiac airaci to nuriw.
f-r t.a&d tt iti wt of tt farm va tLrouU before reaciiuj tbe cooiumer tbe more
tr LUrrei fr It jrtJscr.
We Distribute Direct to the Consumer.
Wa rcie add sell
lit Tnrt n. roc. rr.AU ltkv. ;amk. n it. nnrs. pklts. woou pota-
TOt-i .t-l. HUOlH ttltN, I-OI- fOUS. HtANN UAV OKAIN, OHEEN AND
Of alllkid.r aerlLiii f o mar Laa todlipoaof. Wr ruarantre prompt aalea and quick
t-tra for aU aL.(cbt.atM f u.l Markt priraand full weigUt weraarantee to get , vnmor
Mua-rt for ur tut you cao ct at Uo.-aa Otws biiaetit ill conriuce you of tUU fact
M ara rUUi'vltrf(t1U: josj rua uo ru ia abippia to o; feara ben cstablubea Lare
tm 3 yaara. W riva wa f.r trie. :iM-.n ta or any information you may waat.
SUM HERS, BROWN & CO.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND RECEIVERS f OR THE PEOPLE,
feet. t-rd I sckuaas ltak. C aira(. and
PEKSH3H AFFR0PH1AT10NS
LrrL Cm ! Eaper U-d (or tfca
nfly Iatli ta Id Ia
tia WMTiU
Tir l'la
Sorre r-ct ftat-ir.-nts made by
tfce eoaisiiiocer of pension are at
trAtlt.s a oo-i deal of atlntioa. If
tke tram we are engigM tn continue
for any leaictn of time, jwesion will
tare to t rKurM or the country will
be cots lrspTeriL-d. The commis
c loner say a:
Tne trtt pension n rrant-d ia
1TS. i-sii la tte annual expendi
ture asso rted to S4.120.7&. most of
U oa account of tte war of the revolution-
From that date, as the veterans
c;f the revolution became more feeble,
or aa they d.ed aad left widows and
orphan, the toll grew alowly. until
It waa gHen a aarp Incrf-ase as the
r-u!t of the war of lsl2. when the
faytrects ros In l.a to th" then un-jrece4ent-4
ac;otint of 1 3 .20 ,37 6.3 L
Freta that time the general tendency
waa downward cntil 12, when the to
tal pymcta amoustM to but
ITd.47. Then the peoon of the civil
war began to conae tn. an 1 under the
I-oiicy adcjjted by congresa of liberal
izing tte pension laws la some partic
ular at almost every .eim the in
crease continued titttil lv3. when the
total was f lS7,rt,.. The payments
for the C.va.1 year of l'j"t amounted to
liM.c:.j.tt.
The rerolutloa r.dt-d ia 171. but
there are still four widows of revolu
tionary eldlers n the rolls and seven
daughters of such soldi r. who have
leea pen toted by p--eial acta of con
gress. There is or. a irvlvor of the
war of 112. and 1.70 widows of sol
diers f this war are on the rolls at
this tirze.
It will be n from these figures
that, la all probability, there will still
1 quite a lift of widows of soldiers
cf the yjo.r.ih a&d Philippine wars on
th roil at the end of the century.
- Any material redact on In the pay
ment for pen Ions during the first
READ
EVERY
WORD.
KCMEH,
tm ijfif!ri
a make thia Kn
latroUac ana
4 1 W dv cr if.
aax-t m ywt iMtUty,
v. ta IWft
rri
ff lanwri Bcailar
I? a r
' ta tttia
Cmtmrr
JTawrwyLa
OawavlaMrt
JVawawaa
ftMa
a .!trs4 aa aa.
aw-farm , af Caefc
Tmrptf X4aw
Urrl
JE4avy Caawjufalaa
Caeyl -a
jrriaa AtaaUfy
fc.it w-a ao-1 at am
l "tan
Cm
yaBU
Da. Hohse
fmtmm at
r.t
f .
it
ayaaaaawaMier aa Bartr.a P)t a&
1 roakB-w.wfca-Pota
AU iraataaam m
d
r aM ta t.
waawd aa Ciaasn.
N
, i i a in i ipwi i a u i . m ' " i 11 11 ip w hi "t!1 ""'
r j .- . 1 1 i
v ,14; ' J
St Paul. Howard Co.,
Nebraska, on B. & M.
and Union Pacific Ry.
tale paper
198 S. Water St., Chicago.
tec years of the new century cannot
be expected. The veterans of the civil
war are now nearly all old men, and
their ranks will rapidly grow thin
ner. Their places will be largely tak
en, however, bjr their widows and by
the soldiers of the Spanish and Phil
ippine wars.
The amount disbursed on account
of pensions from July 1. 1790, to June
30. 1900, was i2.624.818.549.62. At he
present rate it will not take many
years in the next century to equal the
amount paid during the last 100 years.
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
It 1 1 a fln Two Terme of Fierce Fight
ing ia theCourta Proeecutlng lte
pabllcaa Tbtevea.
There has been no department of
the state government that has given
better satisfaction to the fusionists,
and for that matter every honest man
In the state than that of the attorney
general's office. The thieves don't like
him at all, especially the public
thieves of the republican persuasion.
The business of the office has been
twice or three times as much as ever
before, on account of the necessity of
prosecuting so many republican
thieves. The attorney general landed
the former republican state treasurer
In the penitentiary for a twenty-year
term and would have had the former
republican auditor there also, who ac
knowledged that he had stolen $25,000,
if it had not been for a. strange deci
sion of a republican supreme court.
He secured his convistion in the cir
cuit court.
He has recovered about $50,000 of
stolen money and turned it into the
treasury and he would have had over
?2O0,0OO more except for the action of
Judee Baker. That matter is not set
tled yet.
Besides that Attorney General
Smyth has undertaken to enforce the
law against trusts and ha brought
many suits which are still pending.
With a republican attorney general
coming into office, tte trusts are not
1HI
4
"fa
1AW3S3
PRODUCE DIRECT.
Your First an tl
THI9
GQOPOkj
ia food for
LAST
SmM
4
t pret the
V or id-Knowned
BR. HCRliE'S
S20 Uootrio
Belt ion only
$6.66
KM
if sent with an crderik
1nr n t tn rut Tft oI : A
later tita n th irty days
front date of this
r j-
S0FFER!SGO0DF0R3ODflYSflHLV
- lal t'nprecedentcd Offer to Qaickly
Obtain Agenta ia New Localities.
It E..T't Kw Imprcvrd KifuUr $20.00 Eleetri
-"""'I aUi 01a it !M!t.f-rrvtrrPronresdincthi
tmtwaM4 t rka Bi t e ernicl tm.-. ir la tb HU
fcuf .1.n fer4a all tkUI til ! turL trie, but want
an4 ele Uuttt )ca tmy m Enit fvu vill bo U
awaiaru:f to (at on,
a sr. effrln vm mI a: u m.. x. j rv- rH.
(j Ckmai f r mm cfwonim. It ia adjtiit-
y awaalwr ( tea faBulr. ia.pr.rar7 fra ailta aiarj
aaf jrtcra; ia (ui, lh Ea aa Eartk, acd wa
at aia axat. Wa kata a.iL4 hfTtuina. v.A..n.
Lr, l (. TWra lx.A ft ttxHj but ..t thouil hiva cna cf thM Belts,
"aa4 atwcMtdecter. at4 m do (Mt ha U ffa oot cf thaboesata
- " tr k I-pTra. and aril ara Ksalf is doctor billi
Kitanm. TW Liaan.ia tW.ta Lata ran i Ussuaaada aca will eora ron If yo
1 na it tnaL aa tt au, - hrh DUUi.k in
TC9 C6I S3 K1SX II CE&UE3 WITH OS.
. aa-aaayataaa-aa ay aaaawy fa a4afc Ujoavut sat of Hum
h"7 iili!itotaL4aUwrtatt ata effica, C. O. D., ao
, ; "r ma aiwia at ir joa earn tnto
iS-saa. . ixva a--.y atara. tat it ya aa t2.tir aauificd with It, pi thaez
aaa itut M miJm a4 aipraaa cklt and Uaa It ; aUinwU it will
vaai a&a X .ru cf., Mui. ti..M ,1... w. . .v.
aa fca aa m4UluC O r. . ..L.n. li
- 4mli ar.ta raits ar wiil crraar a!l aipreaa Sharraa
aWa t rjca. kt rt ta dwiart to intrudora thara ia naw Ia.
100
ta aasd LraTaim awa U as H f or aa. It ya want coa ai
OUT COTJXON
t aaaaaara la inrtia. baas't dala. Orda and I
aarjata. '
Electric Belt & Truss Go.
J J KIT. Lt f CHICA83, ILL.. O.8.A.
Band or mail Uiia adaa.
ieriof fa4 baalth. By dew.
wi bati fsw crrtr w tco am cppostckitt cf ycsb life
aaaaJ aT U aorry f i ft, wa shall nrrvr araia offer
laaraaviwwiamaaln. aawaca at-aodazastia rrr loealitr ta a,u.m
wa Mif aaaaiar tboaa wka am caad as Balta
atnamaaalainaut.
ta mmt rW-afcOrty w rrf r ta acy bpraa Ceaipany,
ao4 taa aaaey taaaaaada ail eacr tea l ooad gtataawai
tMu a4 arolaawaa dcr-st tfco eaat J .ra
losing any sleep over their future
prospects. In all his cases, the attor
ney general has had to contest with
the best legal ability of the state and
flghtin for every Inch of ground. He
has often-found himself lined up in
court with five or six of the best cor
poration lawyers in the state against
him, any one of whom received a larg
er fee for a single case than he re
ceived for a whole term of service.
Attorney General Smyth has been
tte fighting member of the fusion firm
and he has fought with such ability
and success that he has won the ad
miration of every populist and demo
crat In the state.
If the legal services which Mr.
Smyth has rendered the state were
paid for at the rate that such ser
vices are charged by the attorneys of
the state, it would amovmt to ten
times as much as the state has paid
him.
The next attorney general will have
an easy time of it. There are no em
bezzlers to prosecute among the out
going officials, and the trust cases on
the dockets will not trouble him. They
can all be disposed of with celerity.
Then the attorney general's office will
assume its old-time air of ease and
leisure.
Mr. Smyth has had able assistants
in his office. For his first term Ed
Smith and for his second W. D. Old
ham were his deputies. Mr. Paul
Pizey, a graduate of the state univer
sity, has been doing much valuable
technical work of late in preparing
briefs and much of the hard druggery
that the public knows nothing of, but
which requires exactness and clear le
gal insight. The attorney general's
office has been a credit to the state
and every honest man in the state is
proud of the record that it has made.
THE LABOR BUREAU
The Splendid Service It Haa Rendered
to Wage Worker, and in AdrertL
lug the State Beaoorcea.
The bureau was designed primarily
to give facts pertaining to capital and
labor, wages, etc., but necessity has
broadened its work and made it a de
partment of general information, and
it is expected to answer questions con
nected with every phase of industrial
activity. At the present time in ad
dition to the gathering of wage sta
tistics, the inspection of factories, the
enforcement of labor laws and laws
relating to fire escapes, etc., the
bureau compiles crop statistics, mort
gage indebtedness, social, manufac
turing and miscellaneous statistics,
and operates a free employment office.
It is apparent that from the first
the bureau was created to appease the
demands of labor and not because It
was considered of any particular value.
At first labor was recognized in the
appointment of the deputy. Mr. John
Jenkins, the first deputy, being a mem
ber of the knights of labor, but later
on the order became less powerful and
influential, caused to a great extent
by the breaking of the boom of 1890
and the panic following. At this time
the policy of appointing men as de
puties who were in touch or sym
pathy with the labor movement
seemed to have been changed, and for
some time the department sems to
have been out of touch with the in
dustrial classes.
It must be borne In mind that Ne
braska is pre-eminently an agricul
tural state, and the wage-workers have
had but a very limited representation
in the state legislature so that little
could be expected in the way of means
to carry out the ideas of those who
were instrumental in founding the
bureau.
Since the foundation of the bureau
several very valuable laws, advocated
by the department, have been passed,
and while their passage cannot be
credited entirely to Its work, still the
bureau was a prominent factor in
their consummation. Among them
were the anti-Pinkerton law designed
to prevent the importation of armed
men by corporations in case of strikes,
the Australian ballot law, now pretty
generally adopted throughout the
United States, and the free-text book
law, a boon indeed to the poor man
having children going to school.
Recently It has secured the passage
of the child labor law, providing that
no child under 14 years of age shall
work, who has not had five months
schooling in the year, the law limit
ing the employment of females to ten
hours per day, as well as the law pro
viding that railway engineers shall
not work more than eighteen consec
utive hours, and the law for fire es
capes, all of which follow out the rec
ommendations made by the various
commissioners in their several re
ports. The advocacy by the bureau of
manual training or technical training
in schools has probably done much In
the aid of Its growth and subsequent
adoption by several of the institutions
in the state, and its present rapid
growth in the minds of the teachers
and the public.
A free employment department wa?
added to the bureau in 1897, which
has furnished positions for many
worthy people, although It Is not the
success it might have been had branch
offices been established in the larger
cities, instead of making the bureau it
self an office for the whole state.
One of the most valuable features of
the bureau is its general statistical
work, designed to give information,
showing the resources of the state.
These reports going as they do ta all
the state bureaus and libraries of this
and foreign countries are Invaluable
in advertising the state. The map Is
sued showing the surplus commodities
marketed by the people of the state is
worth more as an advertisement for
the state than the whole cost of the
bureau.
It is to be hoped that in the future
the bureau will receive more liberal
treatment, and that it will be in a po
sition to meet the growing demands
being made upon it for information,
touching the resources of Nebraska.
Under the management of S. J. Kent
the bureau has been most successful.
The Farmers Supply Association of
this city has just issued a valuable
catalogue of furniture, stoves, ranges,
groceries, wagons, buggies, etc., etc.
in fact everything needed in the house
or on the farm which they are mail
ing free to all who ask for it. Se3
their ad. on another page and write a
postal card today asking for complete
catalogue.
IMEIGHAH'S MOKUHEIIT
Th Common People Erect a Sol table
Memorial to the Memory of Their
Defender.
The common people may sometimes
seem not to appreciate the work of
those who spend their lives In their
defense, but this is not the case in
regard to William Arthur McKeighan.
They remember the long and brave
fight he made for them and have
erected a beautiful monument at Red
Cloud, Neb., to help hand down his
memory to coming generations. The
words upon the monument were taken
from the address delivered by W. J.
Bryan at the funeral and as far as the
work of McKeighan . are concerned,
coming generations will bear testi
mony to the truth.
William Arthur McKeighan was
born of Irish parents in Cumberland
county, New Jersey, January 19, 1842.
Died December 15, 1895, at Hastings,
Neb.
He removed with his parents to Ful
ton county, Illinois, in 1849 where he
lived on a farm and attended the com
mon school; enlisted in the. Eleventh
regiment, Illinois cavalry, in Septem-
r -.
r' 1
il S3 CaaaKt
Jam U Ml -
bit. Krttts
ajW I, tiaVatanman
aaiaa
Mtiakt
r
IfTSSfBrrclW by the
ber, 186X; at; the close of the war set
tled on a farm near Pontiac, 111.; was
married October 24, 1865, to Miss Lois
E. Brown, , of Fulton county, Illinois.
He took an active part in organiz
ing the farmers association; removed
to Nebraska in 1880 and settled on a
farm near Red Cloud; took an active
interest in organizing the alliance;
was elected county judge of Webster
county in 1885; in 1886 was democratic
candidate for congress against Hon.
James Laird and was defeated. He
was again nominated by the alliance
or independent party, was indorsed by
the democratic convention and was
elected to the Fifty-second and re
elected to the Fifty-third "congress as
a people's party candidate.
Members of the committee who had
charge of the fund and erection of thi
monument to the memory of the Hon.
William A. McKeighan were Hon. J.
R. Thompson of Grand Island, chair
man; Dr. Robert Ramerell of Red
Cloud, treasurer; P. C. Larsen of Hol
stein, secretary, and J. L. Miner of Red
Cloud, member of the committee.
The erection of the manument was
completed at Red Cloud, December 10,
1900; is of dark barry granite, weighs
about 15,000 pounds, thirteen and a
half feet In height and is three and a
half by three and a half feet square
at the base. Cost $568, and is a hand
some mark for the last resting place
of Hon. William A. McKeighan.
IMiniey a Democrat
Grover Cleveland says he is the only
democrat that has been elected and
seated since the war and therefore he
is authority and the only authority to
which reference must be made to find
out what democracy is.
On December 22, duly copyrighted
and protected by a special notice that
"all persons are expressly forbidden
to reprint it, either wholly or in part,
an eastern weekly gives to the world
an eye-opener, yclept, "The Plight of
the Democracy and the Remedy, by
Grover Cleveland."
Inasmuch as the article is forbidden
fruit to all except to the readers of
the paper mentioned, and inasmuch as
the paper is one not generally read by
the people we6t of the Alleghenies, Jt
will economize time, space and money,
as well as be a blunt statement of a
plain fact, to say that Mr. Cleveland's
contribution is not worth two, of the
five, cents for which the favored paper
sells.
Stripped of Its puerile platitudes and
statuesque cullings from ancient state
papers, it is a poorly-concealed In
dorsement of imperialism, monometal
lism and government by injunction;
with an added assumption that these
three are distinctive democratic grac
es and that without them democracy
can never again hope to come Into
full possession of its ancient heritages.
Western democrats will laugh; but
beyond all doubt Mr. Cleveland in
tends and expects to be taken serious
ly. That he is sincere not many will
believe. If Mr. Cleveland Is right in
his estimate of "true democracy," and
true democracy contemplates a loyal
devotion to imperialism, monometal
lism and government by injunction,
then the aforesaid "true democracy"
is mostly to be found in Mr. Hanna's
political aggregation; and it has! re
cently elected according to Mr. Cleve
land's schedule, a "true democrat"
for president.
McKinley and Grover have long been
members of the, same adulation socie
gS1 J ; ;
ty. McKinley thinks that Cleveland is
an excellent republican and Cleveland
thinks McKinley Is a true democrat.
They would doubtless join the same
political party if it were not necessary
in the estimation of Wall street to
keep two parties in the field, both of
which could be relied upon to stand
by plutocracy. If they can only man
age things In that way, it would make
no difference whether the democratic
donkey or the republican mullet head
was on top, plutocracy would be all
right in either event.
THE PHILIPPINE MUDDLE
A Beviaion of Policy Will Stand Them
up Ag-alnat a Wall In the Old Span
lah Faahion and Blaze Away.
General MacArthur continues to be
the "enfant terrible" of the Philippine
question. With appalling frankness,
he blurts out truths which the admin
istration at Washington and the com
mission in Manila compass sea and
land to conceal. To Judge Taft, in par
ticular, that prophet of smooth things,
it must be like a blow in the face to
have the military . governor general
bluntly admit in an official proclama
tion that Manila itself Is the "rendez
vous of the emissaries of insurrec
tion." Where does this leave the cock
sure pre-election predictions of Roose
velt, Root, Schurmann and the rest?
Looking very like exploded humbugs.
Instead of that general crawling of
the Filipinos to the feet of the invinc
ible McKinley which we were to see
Immediately following republican suc
cess at the polls, we now discover that
the Islands are more disaffected than
ever, that they are honeycombed with
insurrection, and that the revolt has
become so pervasive as to compel Gen
eral MacArthur to begin operations
against even non-combatants.
Coming to the details of this latest
Philippine proclamation, we find it
threatening to treat the insurgents as
"fugitive criminals" that is, bandits
to be shot on sight or hung without
trial if captured to try as "traitors"
even "well-disposed persons" in plac
es "where secret committees are per
mitted to exist on behalf of the in
surgents," to accept no "pleas of in
timidation" from non-combatants who
have been forced to contribute to the
insurgent cause, and finally, to deny
the "privileges of prisoners of war"
to all rebels in arms who are not "part
of an organized force." It will be left,
of course, to the American officers to
decide what is an "organized force,"
and it is clear that what is contem
plated is a revision to the fine old
Spanish practice of standing prison
ers up against a wall and shooting
them as soon as taken. So we see
that the good McKinley's breathing
of grace, mercy and peace to the Fili
pinos work out into this policy of
"tho rough," which may lead to our
outdoing of Cromwell in Ireland or
Alva in the Low Countries. If the
shrieks of slaughtered victims still
have power to trouble a tyrant's
dreams, the inevitable results of the
new plans for official murder in the
Philippines should cause many a
sleepless night in the White house.
New York Post.
What Spellbinders Said
Perry Crippen, writing from Stock
ton, Kas., asking for the address of
his paper to be changed to another
postofflce says: "Allow me to ask
some questions. Can a party be justly
charged with demonetizing silver,
when it is coining it in perhaps great
er quantities than it was ever coined
before?
"Can we truly be said to have tho
gold standard and have other money
just as good?
"Can you describe the gold standard
so that any one may know it at sight.
Some of the republican spellbinders in
'96 said that we had had the gold
standard for many years."
(The Independent has not charged
the republican party with demonetiz
ing silver, but with the vilest hypoc
risy in denouncing the coining of sil
ver while it, as soon as it got Into
power, went to coining it by the ton,
and at the same time they kept the
mullet heads in a tremble with fear,
by charging that if Bryan was elected
he would coin silver and blue ruin
would be the result.
There is no country in the world
that has an absolute gold standard
England comes the nearest to it. A
gold standard, if there are any mean
ing in the words, would be a country
where nothing but gold coin would be
a legal tender. There is no such
country and never will be. Ed. Ind.l
Dewet's Joke
The latest Dewet story is making all
London laugh. The Boer general took
three imperial .yeomanry scouts pris
oners near Lindley and told them if
they would undertake to deliver an
important dispatch into General Run
die's own hards they wnuld be lib
erated. The yeomen gladly took the
dispatch to Rundle, who opened it ea
gerly. It read:
"Dear Sir: Please chain up these
three devils, as I catch them every
day. Yours, "DEWET."
The Trusts are Safe
The supreme court of Ohio has dis
missed under the motion of Attorney
General Sheets the cases against the
following companies, brought by At
torney General Monnstt under the
anti-trust laws of Ohio: Solar Buck
eye Pipe company, Ohio Oil company,
Buckeye Pipe Line company, Stand
ard Oil company of Ohio, and the
Continental Tobacco company. The
TURKISH LOST MANHOOD
PADdll CC the weak man's friend.
uArOULCO A POSITIVE guaran
tee always given with every $5 order,
that they will do jast what we claim in
curing sexnal weakness, nervousness,
and any and all weakness arising from
early abuses. Onr medicine will make
yon nappy. 6 boxes for K will cure any
case, no matter how long standing.
Single boxes $1. Sent free of charge in
plain wrappers. If not thoroughly con
vinced as to your condition send for
symptom blank before ordering. Cor
respondence strictly confidential. Ad
dress ,
HAHJP8 PHARMACY.
1805 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. '
Sold by B. O. Kostka, Lincoln, Neb.
YOU CAN COUIIT &&Sfii'z BURR INCUBATOR
ITS MADE RIGHT, WORKS RIGHT, IS SIMPLE, SURE and SUC
CESSFUL. Write to us today for Catalogue.
BURR INCUBATOR
aaa.
cases are all dismissed without record
and at the cost of the state.
Watch Prout follow suit. He has
the opportunity of a life time to make
himself solid with the bosses who run
the republican party. . .
New Labor Union
That dilletante class, the artists, are
joining the ranks of organized labor.
Headed by Alma Tadema and a group
of well known London artists, includ
ing Prinzep, Dicksee, Stone and Flldes,
are sending out circulars to their
brethren urging the formation of a
professional union. They hope to get
700 members to pay a guinea each.
The especial object of the organization
will be watching the business inter
ests of struggling painters.
Politics of Nw Governors.
When the newly elected governors
of the states have been all Inaugurated
there will be twenty-six Republican,
eighteen Democratic, and one silverite,
the last being Relnhold Sadler of Ne
vada. INCUBATORS and BROODERS
From 14.00 up. Frst-classin every re
spect, end fully guaranteed. Large Cata
logue free.
The Monitor Co.
Box M, Mood us, Conn.
(fTi rniUUR PUBLICATIONS
y f ULAR PRICES
iiiiiiiiiii
If you wish
to subscribe for
any of the
Best Magazines,
Best Illustrated Weeklies,
Best Agricultural Papers,
Send for list with attractive prices
Address,
a
the tribune.
I2ew York dtp
BEST LINE TO
Kansas City
Homesekers' Excursions.
to Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas and
Indian Territory on January 1 and 15,
February 5 and 19, March 5 and 19.
Full information at city ticket office,
1039 O street. F. D. CORNELL,
P. & T. A.
You can leave Missouri River after breakfast-fo-day on
"THE OVERLAND LIMITED"
and arriTe in California sooner than if yon left yesterday via any other train.
Rooms, Dining Cars, meals being served a la carte, and every delicacy
is provided. The cars are illuminated with th famous Pintsah Light
and heated with steam.. A notable feature is that safety, perfect com
fort and speed are all included.
Only Two Nights
...between...
Missouri River and San Francisco
For time tables and full Information, call on
E. B. SLOSSON, Asent.
".. " , ., . " f f ,
i. . - ...... 1 ;
Lincoln, Nebraska!.
CO., OMAHA, NEBRASKA
TEEL RANGES
' AT HALF PRICE.
"The Oaeea" only iir.lO.
uuar range, spot., rurmture.
ate, aanalljr
tall y low (rem "Tha Honaa that
BBwaaxoa Mi
oaar." Dont fall to vat
b aUl
Ida. ErarTthtnr for tha bat
farm. a9"8aaoarottoalatbfclanA
WEtTERR MERCANTILE 60., Jl
Dept. a Omaha, Nab,
TREES and PLANTS
ve a fall
N'CaSKRT
west. Large supply of SMALL FI1UITH.
Wa lltlll a A . ata a. M V f a 4T A-
I wo million Strawberry nam ov dck sort.
Also Baspberry and Blackberry Plants at whole
sale prices. Catalogue FREL.
NORTH BEND NURSERIES,
NORTH BEND, DODGE COUNTY, NEBR.
Whiten the Teeth and
I'Ltarr-V vn
w WW
Sweeten the Breath r
"Try a Tooth Wash made by a
Lincoln Dentist. Ask for a
Sample Bottle. ' ,v
Dr. F D. SherwIn,
Dentist.
Office hours 9 to 12 St 1 to 5. Second Floor
Birr Block, Corner room.
LINCOLN - - NERBASKA
Hotel Walton
1516 O Street.
Largest and Best Low Priced
House in the city.
Rates, SI ,00 per Day and up.
Only four blocks from Capitol. Write
for special monthly rates to members of
the Legislature.
There is Something to See Along the
The Line to theLand of Lead and Zinc
The Quick and Most
' Comfortable Route from
ST. LOUIS and KANSAS CITY
To Points In
iocouri, , Arkansas
Texas, Kansas,
Indian Torritory,
Oklahoma,
Tho Souihivesfr
and Far IVosf.
Every Modern Appliance for Comfort
The best railroad Kestaorant and Cafe
Car Service in America.
Cheap Homc-scckcrs Dates
TWICE MONTHLY.
Write to Room No. 726 Century
Building, St. Louis, for one of our
illustrated pamphlets, entitled
"7a Top of the OzarAs."
Feathers and Fins on the Frisco." t
Fruit Farming Along the Frisco, ;
Oklahoma."
The Oxark Uplift."
There is Something to See Along the
Frtsco Line."
The most comprehensive railroad
literature for the home-seeker or In
vestor ever distributed gratuitously.
ATRIP TO CALIFORNIA, in rei?al
splendor, can be made on Tne
Overland Limited," the celebrated Union
Pacific train. This train runs via the
Overland Route," the established roiite
across the continent. It has, perhaps, lihe
most finely equipped cars in the world.
There are Double Drawing-Room Faluce
Sleepers, broad vestibuled Cars through
out. Buffet Smokiog and Library Cars
with Barber Shops and Pleasant Reading