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About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1901)
NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT January 10, 1901. b. Feed Cooker EVERYTHING rifS.l I! IT MTILLenok a barrel of t4 is tMir iitmt - wtoi a-raia la I ut.l If M ILL wetar far titcLritkg, I La- lroit of tank I aii warn Lb alr. IIS I'sK w ill UdU brood aewafa a cod ooedi- tia. afaJaoata t far s fly and aake a Laatf iti Id 1J motita as ibvr aaliy ia fci to wood. ITS t'SK i U Jr for Htmit ta a fa-a- '$23.00 m m tor fciJ fxtticvlar. FARMERS SUPPLY ASSOCIATION tS.l-Ul . IStfc at, Utopia. br. Metka Tt Ia4paiiot. FARSETS f HM SWEET FEES MILL firi&4 nt eora, W!li eora. oala. and all imd ui fraia. fctaei bail Lwarir.. Ha e jq4 aaaia cvb or war rraabar. aad las $w4 ftt6i rtsa seekis.. it orior to at-r -4ir aaia. Adnata bia frea feed ari&d af . v airy taa of aaa- a fatt aad rapid art!. X.it-t wttm. vabwtaatial. dorabia. mmd iarc c Lret a ad ti awep nuiaftda N cKrtaf. iiarra jy iacae ta i . Burr aeJ-laraa. Weight of sail gma4i. fa Uo a.U wa ?r to tLa farasw a ad dock j faadars t&e oouBtry thmif mill that j aar eora aa-1 aii kmd of mall j a-rata mqml'f , j writ urn laU fnciiar. PRICE ONLY $23.75. FARMERS SUPPLY ASSOCIATION I1-I3e-I3t X. 12th l Uala. rbr. Maevk TLa ladapaadeat. HARDY'S COLUMN Crira- of Crit6 Nw Words Two Goteror Ion't Agr Hann Fays Military Schooiu Citizen Sol -cirft Thrre War War Churches UN i . . , . I Harl&n, Young. Hodges. Tfce mort hemou. crime a nation nducatioral-Allen. chairman; Har aa every guilty of committing Is that ,an Van Cdrrle. Zieeler. of tuylcg or selling people, either as , ,ihr,r. Yonir. chairman: Van Bos oss or individuals. Where the) failed Stat- of America Is drifting to j la fcjrd to tell, but it mt itty are a full carter to the hell rushi&c oa Of 3Ei.tlOS.S- , . . T , . We don t like the new f angled worn, ; jnT vroutzi ibio u. .mesier. nui . kuow hat It m-act if they should tset It la the mood. Then "func tion" for party or dance. A few more cut a words will bast any big head , , . Newell, Steele. Hodges, Liddell. !a the tn-o magt. of the two out- Miscellaneous subj-cts-Oleson. Cur golsg and Incoming governors, we find j rie Crounse. Harlan. Steele. Young, yet oss recommendation that woul 1 j Weber !ea the state expense, that was to j Miscellaneous corporations Berlet, replace the nvnber of district judgj. rhairinan: A1Jen Baidrige, Martin, V.e wold ur. do away with the labor , 0'Xei!I. Arends. Campbell, bureau, the pare food bureau, the oil : University and normal schools inpertion and gije u a board of sU.e O'Neill, chairman; Baldrige, Allen, c octroi who thall spetd their entire oens. Meredith. time la the state service, watching ! Constitutional ?.mf ndments and fed mVt .f'lT"5 mtter8- ral relations Young. chairman; v!ti prodigality has met a rebuff in j Crounse baldrige. Martin, Owens, Ole the new governor of New ork. j fon Ransom. w e can i agr-e wun our new gov-r-rt.nr. that his hot:, his home or hi-; fa rilly should be run as a state Insti tution. About half of the governor wa have had mould demand that a bai rel of Liquor should be on tap In the froet room. FurnHhtng a house for him tc live in and a salary ten timej what fee could earn on a farm is mooiis. aays we mu?'. pas the hiu aubaicy ball for lh republicans will e4 at least five millions more next j time to carry the presidential election I an fc will o arrange It that the sub- j aldised fefcip-ownr will furnish it. Stand up 'or Hacna or you are not a ! reptibllcsn. Bryan is not dead yet, ; zru U roo for at leat to more k:t tl. 1 The only a ay tc mk hfe and limb , aafe at V, t Point is to keep the clacr. entirely separate. Establish three or four schools not less than ten or a hundred mhes .part then as j ble.m!ndf d and horne for the friend- !Lnt. tUh tye" Xu?r n' ! less-Harlan. chairman; Edgar. O' ddil. let them p' to the next school ; - r,pllt, ' vniPr ail tofether. Let the builys. with big brad, exercise their murder inclir.a- ' tioaa span their lasmate. Our mill- : tary cd naval Kchoois shot: Id be r-1 d?ic4 9t last half. Our young m?n j ar learcicg war too much. They ar? eHota e;ood for anything, tlse after' grtdaating at war wheels. The di1rence between a standing ! array and in army of volurteer clti- i yena Is ;te fact that regular soldier will never work after biag discharged feik tr v'itiwn toidler will take up h! work where he laid It down when he C listed- Neither of the three wars are yet eced. The election of McKInley has cot stopped the war In the Philippine Islands a it was prophesied. The Eng lih Urt not annlhilsted the nativ rey of Africa. The . billion of Chinamen are not all killed yet. The atatement is confirmed that Mc Kialcy has purchased the Danish West Indie, which Include St. Croix. St Thomas and St. John. Nothing remains ocly for coneress to appropriate five millions to pay. Three more armies will be needed to keep those Islands nnder control. hat rext? We must have an Island In the Meditteranean. We must have a chunk of Africa. We mm buy a chunk of India. England win need the money. We must have Certra! America; then Mexico to con cert. Mexican pi o? pet it y with silver money is a menace to our millionaire. It I quite certain that a majority of the church member, including bish "p. priests and preachers, arc In favor IT mil PAY YOU a m mm 1 mkt t-e r -w PRICE TM -Mini , t accr m a, m tkm '- WCSTtaa1 MlACaitTlC CO. of prosecuting the three wars until the ttrong nations subdue the weaker ones and make serfs or slaves of them. They teem to think that God has thrown them Into our pat h, for the sole pur pose of having the' gospel shot into them and that the church, neglects their highest duty If they fail to shoot. Just so seventy-five years ago, the church thought that God had put us on to the track of the negro and pushed us on to make Blares of them, that they might te Christianized and fitted for heaven. . Those who fought slavery were branded as Infidels. Senate Committees The senate committee on standing committees of which Lieutenant Gov ernor Savage is chairman, has agreed npon the following report and the ma jority side has approved it: Judiciary commltteeBaldridge, chairman; Martin, Young, -Grounse, Owens. Oieson, Harlan, Van Boskirk, Ransom. - - - 1 - Finance, ways and means Arends. chairman; Owens, Berlet, Edgar, Al len. O'Neill, Oieson, Van Boskirk, Reuting. Public lands and buildings Allen, chairman; Young. Trompen, Arends, Berlec, Owens. Steele, Lyman, Krum bach. Agriculture McCargar. chairman; Young, Trompen, Berlet, Currie, Crounse. Zieeler. Highways, bridges and ferries Tromnen. chairman; Newell, McCar gar. Liddell. Krumbach. Accounts ?.nd expenditures Currie, chairman; Oieson, Harlan, Mart n, Pitney. Counties and county boundaries Pitney, chairman: Ransom, Weber, 1 Pafchal. Van Boskirk. Military affairs Steele, chairman; j Crounse. Ntwell. v-Oargar, Meredith, j Muclcfpal affairs Harlan, chair 1 man; O'Neill. Baldridge. Edgar, Wool- etnh-jln. Internal improvements Berlet, chairman; Allen, Crounse, McCargar, Lyman. School lands and funds Crounso, chairman; Trompen. Arends, Weber, Paschal. Pubiic printing Kdgar. chairman: McCargsr, Neweli O'Neill. Campbell Labor Steele, chairman; Currie. kirk. Harlan. Trompen. Lyman. Claims Oieson. chairman; Arends. Martin. " McCargar. Steele! Cummlns. j Backs and currency Crounse, chair- man; Berlet. O'Neill. Martin. Meredith Uv stock and gngan Bos kJrk chaIriaaii: Currie. Trompen, Mi!- ier. Reuting. Manufactures and commerce Mc Cargar. chairman; O'Neill, Edgar, Pit- ney. Krumbach. I Public charities Martin, chairman; State prison Trompen, ch airman: ! Okson. Arends, Van Boskirk, Krum- bach. Medical societies Newell, chairman; ; Crounse. O'Neill, Meredith, Miller, j Privileges and elections Young, j chairman; Harlan. Mai tin, Campbell. I Woolstenholm. j Revenue Martin, chairman: Edgar. Currie. Young, Owens. Wbolslsmbolm, ! Ziesler. ! Railroads Owens, chairman: Edgar, Arends. Steele. Baldriee, Van Boskirk, ; Allen. Currie. Meredith. Enrolling and engrossing bills : Newell, chairman: McCargar. Oieson, j Harlan. Edear, Hodces. Ziegler. Immieration Currie. chairman; : Berlet. Newell. Paschal. Liddell. Soldiers" home Edgar, chairman; ' Crounse. Steele, Newell. Lyman, i I insurance O'Neill, chairman; Har- lan. Owens. Baldrige, McCargar. Irrl?atIonoWens. chairman; Van neV.,,t r-i- Aiia Trmr,0n urn. ler. Campbell. Reform school, institute for the fee- Neill, Reuting. Miller. Insane hospitals Arends. chairman: Baldrige. Oieson. O'Neill, Cummins. Deaf and dumb and blind asylums Baldrige. chairman; Arends, Owens, Young, Cummins. Mines and mining Ransom, chair- man; Meredith. Liddell. Weber, Camp- ! bell, Reuting. Pitney, Hodges. Lyman, ' r t M 1(111. T r. AU 1 nfnnl.tan. LTi Kn,.wh hi- l.S Nf ,TOm "fFV :-portionment Van ?!lf!m ?7 ! rnrria niocjin Martin n'Moill A110T1 Harlan. Standing committee Savage, chair man: Arends, Allen. Young, Owens, Baldrige, Van Boski.-k. Committee on rules Harlan, chair man; Martin. Owens. Current Comment (Continued from Page Five.) who brought on the war had to put up several millions of dollars, buying their own stocks to prevent a. panic It is not. at all certain yet that they will be able to do it. . It would be poetic justice if this war that they brought on by their greed should re sult In sending the whole gang into bankruptcy. That Is what they de serve. Gloom, thicker than their his toric fogs, hangs over London. If the government had listened to the voice of the real English patriots and lov ers of liberty instead of giving itself over to Hoolinganism and Joe Cham berlain, peace and prosperity would now be their portion. But it would not listen end it must bear the retri bution for Its. sins. Joe Chamberlata was the chief actor In downing Glad stone. If he Is kept In power, he will be the chief actor in the overthrow of the empire. The Independent would be glad to see the English govern ment get tack to the principles of Gladstone and remain forever the bea con light of liberty In Europe. Under Its present leadership that cannot be An apportionment bill was passed by the house Tuesday and will doubt less ; go through the senate without amendment. It increases the mem bership of the house and no state loses any representatives. , There is i an increase in the number of repre sentatives from several states as fol lows: Illinois, New York and Texas, 3 each; Minnesota, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, 2 each, and Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, North Dakota, Washington, West Vir ginia and Wisconsin, 1 each. The bill makes an effort to curtail the gerry mandering powers of legislatures by providing that the districts shall not only be made up of "contiguous" ter ritory, but they shall also be "com pact." Whenever a new state is ad mitted the number of representatives will be increased by the number to which the new state is entitled. There has been a pandemonium of betting in Wall street for a whole week. Shares were bought and sold by the billion dollars worth and they call that "business." It is the same kind of "business" that is transacted at Monte Carlo. There was a rise in the stocks of the roads and kindred business that went into the' great Rockefeller-Hill-Morgan combine. Meantime what the farmer has to sell declined. A. thing that has' made a good deal of talk around Washington was the re fusal of McKinley to furnish the sen ate with certain official reports relat ing to the stealings of republican ap pointees in Cuba. The excuse given was that it would be against public policy because McKinley was going to prosecute some of those fellows, but the general opinion is that the reports were refused because their publication would be against the interests of the republican party. McKinley has adopted another Span ish plan of dealing with the Filipinos. He will hereafter go into the banish ment business. He has established a penal colony on the irland of Guam and recalcitrant Filipinos will be ban ished from the island of Luzon and imprisoned there. The military au thorities say thai they are going to break up the secret Filipino govern ment that rules affairs in Manila alongside of McKinley's benevolent as similation authorities. It has long been asserted by the newspaper cor respondents that there was an actual Filipino government in the city of Ma nila and all over Luzon and taxes were regularly assessed anct paid. Now that fact is formally acknowledged by the United States authorities. The P street idiot who furnishes daily pabulum for the mullet heads made a great discovery last Wednes day. He found out that the invasion of Cape Colony by the Boers was done with the consent of Lord Kitchener and was for the purpose of finding out who the disloyal subjects of Her Ma pesty really were. After Dewet has done that service he will be promptly "surrounded" and captured. This is his" own brilliant idea. He says that Lord Kitchener has made a great tac tical discovery and the cheerful idiot explains it in this way: "When De wet wants to come home again he will find many obstructions to his march. It will be easier perhaps to catch him going than it was coming." . , Congressman Neville . has been dan gerously ill for the last ten days. At one time his life was despaired of, but later dispatches say that he had ral lied to some extent and that there were hopes of his recovery. In his afflic tion Judge Neville has the sincere sympathy of the thousands of people who know him in this state. .. Editor Independent: You will' find enclosed $1.40 for renewal and .Wood'.? Natural History. I suggest that you name the republicans "Puty-Headed International Agreementists." JOHN F. MOYER. Clarks, Neb. At the hour of going to press nona of the contest cases in the legislature have been settled. A rather strange state of affairs has developed which seems likely to result in curtailing the "pitching over the transom" business. Every contestant is known to be for one of the senatorial candidates. " If he is for Rosewater then the Meikle- john-Crounse-Thompson combine don't want him seated. If he is for Thomp son, then the Rosewater-Hinshaw-Meiklejohn-Crounse outfit are opposed to seating him. It therefore appears that there will not be many, thrown over. It is practically settled that, the Rosewater contestants from Douglas will not get in. A Dutch republican introduced into- the senate "a resolution of sympathy for the Boers. The committee to which it was referred added to it a lot of ful some praise for McKinley, congratulat ing him upon the efforts that he had made in behalf of the Dutch republics and in that form it was voted on in the senate. Every republican voted for it and every fusionist voted against it. That sort of a resolution may. tickle McKinley, but it will have an opposite effect upon McKinley's English friends. As far as the friends of the Boers are concerned it will have no effect at all. . The lower house of the Missouri leg islature passed the following resolu tion of sympathy for the Filipinos by a vote of 75 to 47: "Whereas, The sympathies of the American people go out to all nations and all people struggling for liberty; therefore, bo it "Resolved, That the house of repre sentatives of the XLIst general assem bly of Missouri extend sympathies to the people cf the Philippine archipel ago in their heroic struggle for free dom." The imperialists are trying to create a great row over this resolution and call it treason. But if the republican senate of Nebraska can sympathize with the Boers struggling for inde pendence, why should it be treascft for the Missourians to be called traitors for sympathizing with Filipinos strug gling for the same thing. In the financial" columns of the New York papers there is a rather startling statement and as it Is asserted in all of them without contradiction from any, it is without doubt true. , One of them puts it this way: ,"The financial powers controlling the destinies of the great railway sys tems of the nation are reported, to be sharpening their axes preparatory to bringing about one of the biggest economical reforms in the history of American railroad operations. The keen edges of the implements are in tended for the necks of the vast army of travelling passenger and freight agents and other officials directly en gaged in the solicitation of business for; the lines. - Should the : axes .ba brought into service as the reports say, the official, decapitation of more than 50,000 men and the annual saving of millions of dollars to the carrying companies will be the. result." . The result of that will be another concentration of wealth In the hands of a few. . Freight and passenger tar iffs will not be lowered and: the say ing that will be made will go to the m,ulti-millionaires who own. the roads. The throwing of fifty thousand men out of employment will be the begin ning of another soup house era. There is no doubt that these 50,000 men all whooped it up for the corporations and trusts during the last campaign and they will receive the just, reward fQr their insane partisanship. -But that will not make . it any easier to be borne.. Fifty-thousand . families will become non-consumers, . consumption to that extent will be . reduced, other workmen will be thrown out of em ployment, and all that a few millions more may be added to the accumulated millions of Rockefeller, Hill and J. Pierpont Morgan. That is what the whole republican policy of trusts, cor porations, subsidies and protection re sults in. . Perhaps some of . these fifty thousand men who have been drawing good salaries will do some thinking as they wend . their weary way along, counting ties. The Independent has been trying in vain to get them-to do some thinking for many years. : . The death of P. D. Armour last week was followed with hundreds, of col umns of comment and eulogies in the daily papers. Armour was of the same class of men as Huntington and Gould who are dead, and Hill, Rockefeller and Morgan, still living. They were all endowed with transcendant-ability in the art of accumulating money. The question whether such men are a blessing or a curse to a country re mains for the future to decide. They are distinctly, a product, of the latter part . of . the- nineteenth century. Ar mour was worth something over fifty millions. His -start was obtained in a big corner in pork which he man aged at the close of the war; He sold mess pork at from $40 to $56 a barrel and bought it back when the deal was closed at less than $18. From that on. he managed a great legitimate busi ness and engaged in many other trans actions similar to his pork corner, in wheat and other grains. Armour was a more generous man than most of the men of his? character, and gave away a great deal. of money most judicious ly.; If men r of his ability In money making coujd live for a hundred years, there wouldi be little left to divide among thejqremainder of the. inhabi tants of the United States. The only redeeming ".feature about it is . that they are seldom or: never followed by sons of the . same, ability. If , Rocke feller lives and Is able to manage his millions for :vhe next quarter of a century, the . property of the United States will ibe--largely under his con trol.' What; then? , The people of Lincoln are- deter mined that there shall not be a build ing erected within its borders wher3 patients can be sent for treatment for contagious diseases. Two buildings erected for? that purpose have been burned down by the citizens. It is also the place where the State Journal i3 printed. It is a needless piece of in formation tc remark that it is a town where there is. a republican majority of from l.OQfr to 1,200. The first two facts being known, anyone would ex pect the other without being told. The press dispatches say that the army, bill is sure to pass in a hurry. Call up your son and tell him that benevolent assimilation demands that he immediately prepare to go to the tropics where he will come in contact with leprosy, smallpox, bubonic plagues and. will be expected to devote the few years that he may live to shooting Filipinos in the name, of th? Lord and Bill McKinley. Tell him that that is the modern definition of patriots and that he must be patriotic. There is just one thing for the pop ulist party to. do go forward. The Armstrong Clothing Co.. has. a six-column advertisement in this pa per that is of more than ordinary in terest to anyone in need, of clothing. Look it over and either call at the store or send In a mail order. . Criticising Ministers Editor Independent: Now. that Mr. Bryan is defeated I am most thorough ly disgusted;, especially with .Nebras ka. He was stabbed by his. enemies in the democratic ranks. I see little hope for the political future and personally I think that I shall return to the ranks oftho prohibitionists. . Whiles in the main I like The Independent and its leading editorials, I don't admire its abuse of the churches. You seem to forget or don't know that more min isters of the gospel in the United Stat es voted for Mr. Bryan than for Mc-, Kinley. REV. JAMES A. GRIFFIS. Braidentown Fla. . ' (If Rev. Mr. Griffis goes back into the prohibition party, he would do well to keep away from the meetings addressed by Ir. Woolley, if he does not like to hear ministers and the churches criticised. Mr. Woolley came to Lincoln and gave them a more dras tic dressing down in a public address in the Auditorium than ever appeared in . The Independent. His rebuke to eclesiastical hypocrisy was so stinging that some of the ministers repudiated him and denounced him in the daily papers. The ministers in Florida may have supported Bryan, but they were against him in. Nebraska almost to a man. One or two canvassed the state against him - and out of the score or more in Lincoln who are in charge of congregations, only ono was known to be his supporter. When the republi cans nominated a mac. for governor who made a .canvass of the saloons, treating every man who would take a drink, the ; ministers most generally supported him, though a few revolted. The Independent has never condemned the men who preach the gospel of the Prince of Peace, but those who under the cloak of religion advocate war and the shooting , of Christianity into the heathen. Ed. Ind.) - Do it for Their Good "I bring you . the ; stately matron named Christendom, returning be draggled, .besmirched and. dishonored from pirate raids Jn Kiao Chou, Man churia, South Africa and the Philip pines, with her soul full, of meanness, her - pocket- full of .'boodle and her mouth. full of. pious hypocrisies.. Give her soap and towel, but hide the look ing glass." Mark Twain's greeting to the Red Cross society. . PREFACE. Oh, a little Christian song I'm going to sing. And both dollars and religion it will bring. It's about the white man's burden, And its martyr's crown and guerdon, With a kind of catchy Barrack Ballad swing, " (P. S.) It's an easy trick to write that sort of thing. . BALLAD. If you see an island shore Which has not been grabbed before, Lying in- the track of trade as islands should, With the simple native quite Unprepared to make a fight, Oh, you just drop in and take it for his good. Chorus " -Oh, you kindly, stop and take it for his "good, Not for love of money, be it under stood, But you row yourself to land. With a le in your hand, And you pray for him, and rob him, for his good; If he hollers, then you shoot him for his good. There've been sad and bloody scenes In the distant Philippines, Where we've slaughtered thirty thou sand for their good. And, with bullet and with brand. Desolated all the land; But you know we only did it for their good. Chorus (fortissimo, beginning with a howl) : Ow! just club your gun and kill him for his good; Don't you waste a cartridge, give him steel - or wood. When he's wounded and he's down Brain him, 'cause his skin is brown, Only, mind you, do it for his good. Take no prisoners, but kill them for their good. Yes, and still more far away, Down in China, let us say, Where the 'Christian" robs the "hea then," for his good, You may burn and you may shoot, You may fill your sack with loot. But be sure you do it only for his good. Chorus When you're looting Chinese Buddhas for their-good, Picking opals from their eyeballs made of wood, r As jrou prize them out with care, .Tnst reneat a little nraver. To the purport that you do It for their - . good; . Make your pocket-picking clearly un derstood. Or this lesson I can shape Tn the nnmnaienine at the Cane.. Where the Boer is being hunted for his good. He would welcome British rule if he weren't a blooming fool; Thus you see that it is only for his good. Chnrns fnianissimo) So they're burning burghers houses for their good. As they pour the kerosene upon the wood, 1 can prove them, if I list, Every man an altruist, Making helpless women homeless for their good; Leaving little cnildrec roofless for their good. MORAL. There's a moral to my song. But it won't detain you long, For I couldn't make it plainer if I would. If you dare commit a wrong On the weak because you're sVong, You may do it if you do it for his good. You may rob, him, if you do it for his good; You may kill him, if you do it for his good; : - You may forge and you may cheat; You have only to repeat This formula, "I do it for your good." Crime is "Christian" when it's really understood. Bertrand Shadwell. The Farmers Mutual The Farmers' Mutual Insurance Co. of Nebraska will hold its annual meet ing In Lincoln on Wednesday, January 16. Every member that can attend should be present as business of great importance to policy holders will come before this meeting. Members should bring their policies with t1 em as their credentials, so that they will have no trouble in gaining admission to the meeting. Reduced rates have been se cured over all roads. Take agent's receipt when you purchase your ticket. The attention of our readers is di rected to the advertisement of the Burr Incubator, which appears in this is sue. This Incubator has been in suc cessful operation In a limited field for a number of years. The owner of the patents covering its construction not having the capital to manipulate it ex tensively. All this time, however, the owner has been Improving and per fecting his incubator until now he has the most perfect egg hatching machine on the market. This fact, careful ex periment and comparison has estab lished.. The, patents and the" factory of the Burr incubator are now the property of a strong company of Om aha. Business men with capital who propose to manufacture and guarantee WHEN OTHERS FAIL CONSULT cT SEARLES & SEARLES Main Office Lincoln. Neb. ' SPECIALISTS IN XerToua, Cbronle and PrtTata Diaaaaaa. WEAK MEN All prlrata diaaaaa'i anddis-' orders of man. Treatment by mail ; consultation f raa. fSTphllie eared for life. Alffonnio? female weak nets and Diseases of Wo men. Electricity Mada. Enables na to guarantee to care all eases curable of the nose, throat, chest, stomach, liver, blood, skin and kidney disease p. Lost Manhood, Night . Kmieeions, Hydrocele, Varicocele, Gonorrhea, Qieet, Piles. Fistula and Rectal Ulcers, Diabetes and Bright' Disease, ' SIOO.OO for a case of CATAKRtI lfHKU&IATISM, DYSPEPSIA r SYPHILIS we cannot care, If curable. StrlCtUrS & GlfiSt method witoou'paTnor Catting. Consultation FBKE. Treatment by mail Call, or address with stamp I Mala Office Drs. Searles & Searies I RSdVU LCOLN NEBRASKA these machines and place before poul try fanciers and raisers as good a ma chine as can be produced of its kind, This company , is reliable in every re spect and the Burr incubator is worthy of the attention of our readers. The Tlarkets CHICAGO GRAIN AND PRODUCE. Cash quotations: Wheat No. 3 spring, 6774c; No. 2 red. 7678c. Corn No. 2, 37c; No. 2 yellow, 37c. . OatsNo. 2, 244c; No. 2 white, 27 27c; No. 3 white, 26 27V2c. Rye No. 2, 5Zc. Barley Malting, 58c. Flaxseed No. 1, $1 59. Prime Timothy Seed $4 75. Mess Pork $14 7514 85. Lard $7 257 37. Dry Salted Shoulders eQMc. Whisky $1 27. Clover $10 75. Butter-Creameries, 1523c; dairif s, 1220c. Cheese 1014llc. Eggs Fresh, 19c. SOUTH OMAHA LIVE STOCK. Representative sales Wednesday: Beef Steers. No. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr. 3.... 1026 $3 25 17.... 975 $4 10 15 1036 4 25 19 1142 4 50 31.... 1238 4 55 21.... 1233 4 75 Cows. 11.... 986 $2 60 6."... 1016 $2 85 16 1097 3 20 21 1100 3 25 18....114S 3 25 1.... 730 3 50 Bulls. 1....1550 $3 00 4.... 1520 $3 75 Cstlvcs. 5 410 $4 25 2 105 $5 50 Stags. 2 .930 $3 35 1....1270 $4 00 Stock Cows and Heifers. 2 655 $2 50 2...i 575 $3 10 Stock Calves. 3 360 $3 65 Stockers and Feeders. 5.... 613 $3 25 23.... 613 $3 90 HOGS. Representative sales .Wednesday: No. A v. Pr. No. A v. Pr. 73.... 34 $4 25 16.... 95 $4 23 83 183 5 00 1U 157 5 07 89.. .. 172 5 07H 67.... 23? 5 10 44.... 357 5 12 67 255 5 12 Lincoln's Great Annual Event If you have not as yet purchased your winter jacket or Underclothing you are indeed fortunate inasmuch as you will have saved almost 50 per cent if you attend our clearing sale. Every Jacket and Cape in the house has been reduced and of former prices. In Under wear startling reductions have been made, in connection, our annual muslin Underwear" sale will be continued at money saving prices. If you can't be here send for circular. : flail Orders Filled IMhpB 9 C 1 1 y T HOW TO GO TO CALIFORNIA Twice each week e v e ry Tuesday at 10:55 a. m. and '.every Thurs day at 6 p . m . The Burling ton r u n s T o u r i 8 t Sleep in g C a rs to L o s Ange 1 e s via Ogden and S a c'-.: ramento. Call and arra n g e y o u r trip by this route. CATARRH all KINDS WE CURE all forms of Catarrh of the Head. Noae, Bronchial Tube, Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys and Bladder. - All curable cases of CATARRH CURED PERMANENTLY. perfect cure guaranteed in every cae we ac cept. Medicine and treatment only $5.00 pr Month. - blood poison sr4saaffaaas from the system. Nervous and Chronic Dlseasesof MEN and WOMEN. Electrical Treatment with Medicinal NEW YORK HOSPITAL TREATMENT of all forms of Female Weakness and Disease of Women-Inflammation of the Ovaries. Tainful Menstruation, Ulceration, FaJlingof the Womb, Change of Life, Kidney or Bladder Trouble, Leucorrhoea. Nervousness, and Hirk Headache. We cure all Diseases of the Nose, Throat. Chest, Stomach, Bowels, and Liver; P'ood. SWin. and Kidney Diseases; Piles, Fistula,, and Rectal Ulcers if curable. $100 for a cave of CATARRH- RHEUMA TISM or DYSPEPSIA that v cannot cure if curable. t- ,- . - - - tSrExaminfttion and Coufultation FREE. Treatment by Mail a specialty. Call or ad dress vrith stamps. Box 24, DRS. SEARLES & SEARLES, icard?Biocf Room9 V' 21' 219 nd 22ft LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Mention, this paper.. T 70.:.; 207 5.12 59.... 236 5 13 78.... 252 5 17 61.... 237 5 17V, SHEEP. Quotations: Choice fed wether. $4 004 35; fair to good wethers, $3 fi 4 00; choice yearlings, $4 254 50; fair to good yearlings, $4004 2.i choice ewes, $3 353 75; fair to good ewes, $3 003 30; choice spring lamb?. $5 005 35; fair to good spring lamts, $4 755 00; feeder, ewes, $3 254 00; v feeder wethers, $3 503 75; feeder lamb,s, $4 004 40. . , Logic. ... Bystander "Poor fellow! One of his wounds is fatal, I; believe." Policeman "So it is; -but the other wan ain't, so he has an aven chance." Philadelphia Press. Knew His Man. '. Old Closeflst (in restaurant) "IT I were to give you a silver dollar what would you do?" Waiter "Pinch myself to see if I was awake, sir." Natural Question. In Kentucky: Mamma Did you know, dear, your little cousin Isabella, In Frankfort is dead? Isabella Who shot .her? Life. Slanderoua. A woman doesn't talk through her hat unless It happens to be a new one. Philadelphia Record. , IngaUs Son to Wed. The marriage of Miss Lucy Van Hoesen, of Atchison, formerly of Law rence, to Sheffield Ingalls, son of the, late John J. Ingalls, will take placeT Jonuary 9. The wedding- will be a quiet one, owing . to the recent, death of ex-Senator, Ingalls. City Schools of Blair Closed. The Blair, Neb., schools were all closed by ! order of the school board. A case of smallpox had developed in the family of J. Rhoades, in Dexter ville, and for several days the children had been in school. The disease is in a very mild form, and the doctors hope, with the proper preventives, to keep it from spreadinc. January Clearing Sale i c k e t Of f i c e Cor. 10 th and O S t s . Tel . 2 35 . ' - i. M n i i . im i. i - i. i ..i , ,. , ,. D e p o t; 7th St., Be t w e e n P an d Q . T e 1 e p h o n e 2 5 . S. K