January 24, 180). THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. GOt-A DOLLAR? ( It to ocr eboece rnurT Twtt. shrubs or vihes. 1 - - ------ w til ore wta Thy i . I It TTlTl tTTIV-1, fTr Vl 'jr ! i r5,rr. r ;3TaW . M"ii' I I " " m 9 1 trvet r4rr .?. , i 1 t fv I fee aw i.l4HT 0rji Ag-' i .. tf " .. S M Mrry. t -. Sua, '' an a-r.t at was, HMk aV, i JtltlJ ltaI.X, Sta jrestrfcaurf, DR. REYNOLDS See. Barr l-sck. roots- 17 1. Te!e jc.e CSi. OSice iiocru, 10 a. ta. to 12 is-; 3 Uttt p. is. H jr,dj 3 to Watchmaker Jew eler & Engraver 1211 O STREET. Is eu. Out a a. Jewt-lry, I.a riierwnre, tit-4fcki tan'!. 1-lc U.aeaea .tjiavi, currct , aeet siiJLeuit ey--i.i. jLia .a at jus Free. SWAl Iif etteni4 to. Dr. Lvj. ei,ie,ceui, Lie fcxKith 11th tr-et J'.f.wR:; hi.-it. fir I pflua's zrzzzrzzmzm WML6WU8 u trr. mix . m.i.wil.ei a4HHMtai Cnl'lk t i aa mm Saad iiw II I Mil IrtM t!MW " KFlll I ATilM . 'a fc eag. tta.U I LA Ivi w uB, u kiH aitrtaS MlHtCT,UWM.,tt uitta efrakwsMe- Itoti care all pthoiotricil troubles. Salesmen ean ui profitable, permanent - - . - i i..liou. storiette uonxfmrT; pay wmiij. Vet4ra Numtt Co.. iiak iJid- Lawrene ured and death from cancer? DIL T. O'CONNOR curea ctccer, tucuors, and wens; no knife, blood or plaster. Address 1300 O street, Uccolfs, NVhmska. PiralB HcspitalDr. Shoemaker's If you are going to a Hospital for treatment, it will pay you to consult Dr. Shoemaker. He makes a specialty of diseases of women, the nerrous sys tem and all surgical diseases. 1117 L St., Lincoln. Neb. P. O. box 951. 1 JV T. J. THORP & CO., Central Mmchioi$ts. Brpairioff of all kiada iSudel-tnalcers, etc. hLirt.ea Cresa toeraior- CATJCER CURED wiin,sguininu,oLiai.uiis ' 5..:.. Kutbr 5lamM. StaKil.. Chfcki. Etc. jo8 5o. itth St., Lincoln, Neb. klrg-fors of Gre2.t Britain and lr !..rl t He taken west with his parents to Aur&rt C 1144. t lin-iy fol house with no trees or Priftre HenaAU4rnfta-Victoria May 2S45. 1'rlE.r-? s Loi'.fe-C ro U ne- A H rt . Mercb IS. HIS. liicce Arthur-Wii'am-fslri' k-AI-Wrt. dt:ke cf Cocsaurt. rirce of th united kingdoo of Gnat iiritain Irlaiil. dake of S&s.asy end print A Coturg a.sd Gotha, May 1. 10. lYlsce Lopcl1-Ceorge-I)a&can-AI-fcrt. pricc cf tt united kiexdom cf Great Britain and Ireland, duke tf Faxony and princ of Coburg ?nd 3o tha. April 7, 112; died In UH. Iiiac IJatrice-Mary-Victoria-core. Apnl 1, 17. Tfce pri&' conort. eminent as a scholar and a zausician. reputed a xsott lender t uUa&d and father uiul universally beloved by tie ?'bjctb cf lit jEn. died at Wsnlsor ruM'. - cet aee alliance. fr.v.fis. !l missed his grandmother and couM not le comforted. One day 1,H ir.otner found him Jn the garden v UU a gpake, planting a photograph of hr mother. "My son. what are yoti doing? "I t'ot." said he. with quiver ing lips and convulsive sobs, "if 1 pla.-.ted it. it would grow and then I could have my gramma again." Poor little fellow, pictures can t grow! Alas for the man with the experi ment station. The station is left with som cc'Feg hanging over it. Agai i hundreds of dollars have been paid out by intelligent and responsible pa-th ta find out what they could not do. There is not a nurseryman Jn tli i-tzi who has not a list of fail ures. "IliiF is hardly fair. It Is too grf-U u rurden on the individual. Thi3 is a moving age. We stand in the door- ir 11. 1H1, tht iZd rear of his ; way of a new century and we are in and tit Zlt of hi matrimonial ; (he 4awn cf horticulture. That science which was inaugurated In Eden by Adam and wife, who were put there to Tfce news from South Africa is to dris it and keen it. la now ready to the e!fer ttta the lVvrs are still ad- i. .ri.t forth from Its former bounds ta vancing into Unglith territory. It U j aa txpansoin unknown before. There t-ald thit one of the coniman lo act- j 8re members of this society who will t&liy fcotd tsecsc-Ive on tne e wonders accomplished before they their medicine like men, instead of squealing like the participants In an International baby contest? What would Kitchener have done to Boer agents caught sowing sedition among his troops? Washington hanged an Englishman by the name of Major John Andre for an act very much like the one for which it Is said that Do Wet shot au Englishman and whipped two native residents. - - : In the past there has been a great deal said about English fair play. Lt them show a little of it In South Afri ca. There recent performances should be called the "English Baby Act." Christian Invasion What the "Christian" invasion of China has meant to the inhabitants of that country who lived along the line of march is strikingly brought out In a letter from a distinguished Ameri can officer to the Countess Cesaresco, which is pidnted in the London Times. Arriving late, after giving up an im portant post at home, this soldier found the cities and villages between Tientsin and Pekin "all looted, silent, and empty as the ruins of Nineyah and Babylon;' "not a native in a region lately teeming with human life.' Ixxting, murder and outrage this was the story on every side, and the whole campaign was to this witness discred itable to the superior race, and very demoralizing to all those who took part. "It Js amazing how quickly the instincts of tyranny, the worst char acteristics of the slave-driver, are de veloped in the average man who finds his fellow-men under his unchecked control." In this sentence this officer has put his finger upon the main rea son why no man is good enough to rule another against his will, as Lincoln put it. When he is. transferred to the Philippines, if he has not already been, he will recognize the same attitude on the part of the invaders toward the invaded, and in it will doubtless find the real reason why our "higher civ ilization" offers no attractions to the Filipinos. After such treatment of the Chinese by the disciples of the Prince of Peace, as is reported from all sides, 'we do not see how any mission ary could have the heart to attempt to make further conversions to Chris tianity. The Chinese need but point to the campaign of 1900 to seal his lips and prove that in China, at least, Christians do not practice what they preach. New York Post. coiJt to it" wtl cf Cap? Town and &bout sixty i-il a ditat then fron.. The ttnoaci cf the invasion i fchown by ti.tr ru;d effort to thor oughly oru5y Car Tca and to t-.st end a larg? nursb r of naval gur.s frora the h;i la the harbor have h it landed and placed in tle fortiSealion. It is t&li the KiiiilosaJre coward to brought on the war axe tlrinx Ly artery nean of .cape. woe c-f theni payicg high price for a chance to jctt away on returning trarispoita Bd Oittle LU'- They iur the !dkw that were &o keen for war and uphold ing "the honor cf the nation." They never did any fighting fend no one could fore them to fight. die. We are gathering treasures from all the world and getting the best we can find, and by cultivation and bv hybridizing are improving all the time. We want to "prove all things and hold fast that which is good." What a gain the century has witnessed in the apple. Perhaps the quality of even the Johnathan and Grimes Gold en may yet be improved. What a field the great west and northwest present! The further north we can raise the ap ple tbe better It is. What room for improvement in plains! As the Japanese have an affin ity ith our natives, a great field opt'tr. All honor to the men who have i.'k d iOTK and faith.'ully alont; tuis I'.re. H. A. Terry, of Crescent, la., has introduced forty-five new kinds, n j-tly i jiprovemenLi on the Ameri ca una. Iowr is doing much cram News from the Philippines has !m-h completely hut off. ertn the lists of killed, wounded end died of disease, are not est any core. One tint came from Hong Kong. It rays that there- m ..u'.vaii -r stit experiment station eriou trotiti In tne Phillpr-ia- i than e are. xsosg the American troops They are j When we have a fruit like the plum, not only tkk and tired of thHr job. vthlch bears from June to November, tut thoroughly disgusted with -It I and 1 in great demand, every offoit whole br si nets. The Seers aad nirii : hu ( be us:u. to develop it. fh'j ia the ranks eee a cumber of favwd individual rttlng rich; they are na down la health and depressed in spir it and it having beta Intimated th.;t they coull not corse home until a nw army ia enlUted. organUed ani transported to the island they are ia-cline-i la be mutinous, that this fil ing h beccrae prevalent. lecaue th-y do sol t"l!i"ie that a new army ran recruited la the United States by ol tistary enlistsert to fight ia the trop ical Isle, for the accommodation 3f peculator and to satisfy the cormo rant of eccsmerce. It is a vry nat ural conclnsloc for the troop who have wided the jwaaps and suffered from the dla- and debilitating cll isuit of the Pr-Uippln ta cora io, but they must retnembc-r that :h mul let he&d of the relied Stats have very Httl Inforrratloa concerning the Philippine, or anything l for that matter. l!ot of them l-3s-v that the Philippines are the tropical isb-s nUite should help and help generoui1 C v of the tnout patnetic things in tbo ;, ntury is tl- Ustory of the maf tyis of horicuiture. Ephraim Bu'l, to revoluli"! .ized the grape culttr cf th United States. Gideon, who rioted the apple beit 000 miles north. ! c'ying in the old men's home and the other In xverty. And we sve honorable ruent'on to H. A. Terry, who besides improving plums and cherries, has introduced over nirity new and choice paeonies, and John C. Teas, both venerable men. who have given their lives to the age and have reaped small returns. Cherries must not be forgotten. The wonder is that more is not done along this line. Nebraska is the finest cher ry country in the world. We want a larger, better cherry than the Rich mond, and one as early. We want to know whether the Sweet and Duka cherries can be crossed with Morellos. We want to see if we cannot do some of the bkst where the balny breeze 1 thing by way of improving those late blow and crr-t of gold are pScke 1 vp oa the Ltak of every r--k. All that they hae ever real is Senator Beveridfe's fpech. tx?mmi STATIONS lftttlsgly Ctlx Tkittff fr Tmrmm-f-11 Tj C14 rr tt I rota fSrtLr 3f Mww it ytlfhl fmy. At the rectnt meeting cf the liorti-cul:u.-al society ia Lincoln many val uable papers were read. The follow ing ly C- S. Harrica of York. Neb.. wil.Vemind cany a farmer of the cost ly experiment he ha tried: We Lave had too many experiment ft tiers cj they rave n very ii couragfee and otproStable. They are gtjwrally started in thl way: A man will coiae akng with ome beautiful plctari f something new and won tterfah Pet heps tt ia a new and ery hardy pttch which could be grated on the North Pole and made to bear esor elous crcps. I'Vt as that cannot be reached, they are grafted oa the Can ada whit not. or on the elm. or soft maple, by a procet known only to evr firtx" Bo h ell a large amount cf trcs x'.ll a large amount of cheek ; and lip, azl the can seta up aa pr ..inent station and tad, to hi utter d'.ixnxt, he ha tonght a f!L If could ca!y plant the picture and make the-a grow he would he all fight, but -Ihat woat work. I once heard of a poor Uttl horaealck boy who tried It. large Russians. I saw some growing in Colorado the last of September. If one could get plenty of land it would be a good idea to plant thousands of seedlings to test them; save those of real value and top graft those that are worthless. English Baby Act The odds against the Boers in South Africa are so enormous that it does reem as if It would be merely sports manlike In the British to allow their feeble enemies the benefit of all the rules of the game, yet whenever tne Boers undertake to enforce any of the rigors of the military code universally accepted among belligerents they are denounced as savages and threatened with merciless reprisals. When it was suggested, for Instance, that the retreating burghers might de stroy the mines at Johannesburg, a perfectly legitimate act of war, they were told that If they did anything of the sort President Kruger would be held personally responsible. But the British had no scruple in de stroying farm houses Inhabited only by women and children, and would have been shocked If it had been sug gested that Lerd Roberts. Lord Kitch ener, not tc speak of Lord Salisbury, houlc be hanged in consequence. . Now the world is Invited to be hor rified because General De Wet has flogged three emissaries sent among hi men to induce them to desert and has shot one of them. Wfey should not Englishmen take State of Ohio, City of Toledo ss. Lucas County. Frank J. Cheney makes cath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F, J. Cheney & Co., doing business In the city of Toledo, county and state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case of ca tarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my-presence this 6th day of Decem ber, A. D., 1886. A. W. GLEASON, (Seal) Notary Public. Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. HARDY'S COLUMN Senatorial Insure Public Funds- Reciprocity Killed Bears Sleep One Decision Canteen Must Go Colored Fire Wood Missouri Sym pathizes Income and Outgo Short Gas More Iron Works Roosevelt's Miracle Amendment Ballots South American Trouble Victoria Dying Royal Blood. There are at least three of the re publican candidates for senator now before our legislature who will vote against letting the people elect, fo they know they could never make it with the people. They still hope to make it with the legislature. We hope a bill will pass .giving the city council, county commissioners and state board power to pay the bond companies for treasurers' bonds. It is virtually an insurance upon public funds. The bond companies watch their insured and compel them to be honest. With such watching we would not have to put treasurers under the ice or into the pen. The reciprocity treaties negotiated by McKinley are all sure to be kicked out. More tariff instead of less is demanded especially, on American- made goods bought in Europe and brought back home. Roosevelt they say has gone on a bear hunt in the Rocky Mountains. He probably does not know that all the bears this time of year are in their dens asleep. The supreme court has decided that Cuba is a foreign country and that thieves must be sent back there for trial. Who will pull down' the flag? Fitzhugh Lee says it never will come down. It now looks as though the canteen will be driven out of the army. We remember when daily rum rations were cut out of army supplies. We also remember when liquor was ex cluded from the navy. If the navy can get along without liquor, as they have for years, we are sure the land forces can. No wonder the colored man who had the smallpox on O street slipped out of the back door and ran when the police quarantined his house. He supposed there was another nigger burning on hand. The Missouri legislature extended a vote of sympathy to the Filipinos who are struggling for Independence and freedom. The income of the Philippine islands has been only about eight millions the last year, while the cost to this gov ernment has been a hundred and twenty millions. Profitable business, sure. The natural gas seems to be giving ont, Whether there is- a chemical aboratory under ground constantly generating gas or wheiSer there is s Imlted supply is the qUootlon. It looks as though the supply was being ex- austed. , It appears that Andrew Carnegie has decided to build a twelve-million iron plant at Conneaut, on Lake Erie. The ron ore he digs in Minnesota is trans ported here and taken to Pittsburg. They are telling in the east of how ioosevelt saved the life of his chum :iunter. A mountain Hon was up a tree, crouched on a big limb; the two hunters were advancing toward him to get a shot, Roosevelt in the rear. The lion jumped for the foremost man, but as he was sailing through the air Roosevelt took a snap shot at him and he turned back to his limb and laid down and died. , The mountain lion i3 a very stupid animal. Amendment to our constitution could be carried if the ballpts were only printed rightly. Every person who votes at the election for any can didate . votes against the amendment unless lie votes for it. His vote is counted against it If he does not vote either way. Print all the ballots for the amendment and then let those who wish to be counted against it cross out the "for." If he wants to vote still stronger, he can write against lu dace of for. The Stanford university trouble has two sides to it. In the first place it is not a public, but a private institution. t was built by Stanford and is now run by Mrs. Stanford. It certainly seems she has a right to dictate what shall be taught, how it is taught and by whom taught. Talk about free speech. A man can have, free speech who works for himself and pays him self, but if another does the paying, the payer has a right to dictate and if the dictation is not heeded the pay can be stopped. Our university is a public institution, and yet it would not be very healthy for one of our professors to stand up for polygamy or for slavery. Free speech In telling truth, for good, is admissable, but in telling truth, even for injury to an other, becomes slander, unless it is about a public officer or a candidate for office, then it is our duty to tell the whole truth and let it hit where It may. The employment of Chinamen to build the roads that now support the school seems to have been the hot po tato of contraversy. The roads would not have been built at that time only for the Chinese help. The Chi nese people have the same right to send home the Americans that we have to send back the Chinamen. A just law will work both ways. gangs Of COOlies earrvtmr tir1rta f slop for manure, hv Aw a -ova m hags loaded with baskets of farm pro- uue, ana Dy nttie girls borne down by baskets fastened to poles on their shoulders. It seemed as though the poor houses of the empire had been emptied out on this road to the home oi tne ncn, and the contrast of the poverty present and the wealth to come was most striking. ' This poverty continued in the VDTV gates of the millionaire's palatial city. it euuea as we passed through them, severely scrutinized by the guards at the entrance. The City iS made im of manv rna story houses, all roofed with heavy uiac. uies. some of the buildings cover acres, for a man here may have a home of a hundred Twvma nnrt oil on the ground floor. The rooms were built around courts which run this way and that. They are connected by long aisles under covered nassawwava some of which wind about like the mazes or Rosamond's bower. The buildinsrs are of Chin pra arch). tecture. I despair of giving you con ceivable pictures of them. The roofs are curved at the corners, like a ram's norn. l ne outer walls are of blue brick, the inner of WOOd wondprfiillv carved, being in many cases a net- worK oi Diack ebony set with glass of all the colors of the rainbow In orien tal splendor. Goinsr throueh a wide court we were admitted to the private ouueungs or the millionaire's home. We crossed a court and entered a gal lery, upon one side of which was a garden. The gallery was ooen at the sides. It was roofed with heavy tiling. We chatted awhile and then Lau Wing Hong strolled with us through his gardens. These are full of con ceits which would be striking features in any millionaire estate along the Hudson or in George Vanderbilt's bic farm In North Carolina, The gardens are or large extent. They are filled with tropical flowers and trees, the lat ter cut into all sorts of fantastic shap es. We strolled through walks shad ed with feathery bamboos, wound our way in and out among the roots of enormous banyan trees and stopped long before some pines, each several nunared years old and not more than a foot high. We sat n grottoes of rockwork interset with mirrors, loafed about in Chinese summer houses and admired the great stone tables which had been built up under the trees. ThP lineerine death of Queen Vic toria has attracted the attention of the entire world. She bears about the same relation to the other rulers of Eneland that Lincoln bears to the other nresidents of the United States. She never has pleased the upper crust of Europe. The coromon'peopie nave been her favorites, at least enough so that she has granted them equal jus tice before the law. Gladstone s title of great commoner is equally befitting Victoria Great Commoner yueen. We know it is hard .for a person in high position to stand up ror justice, but there are a few . who have the strength of character to do it. It is much easier to play the Hanna than it is to nlav the Bryan. The common English people will mourn more than the wealthy class. As . long as tne queen lives and has her powers of heart and mind we know wnat to ex pect, but after her, there is no telling what will be the policy or tne nmgusn ernx emment. Her oldest boy may be a McKinley or Cleveland and play into the hands of the rich, witn no regard for justice. We never could see why the royal fnmlHes of Eurone were so earnest to intermarry. It would seem much more fittine if Victoria's daughters had mar ried Englishmen. But it seems Vic toria did not want to mix royal Diooa with common blood.- A man would not strengthen his chances for the nrrsldencv bv marrying into any royal family of Europe. Merit and qualifi cation is much better than royal Diooa ALWAYS FOUND TOGETHER Whether In Berlin, Parla, London, Amer ica or China, the Millionaire and Pauper are Inseperable Companions. In one of Carpenter's recent letters he describes a visit made by him to a Chinese millionaire. This million aire whom he says Is of the Jay Gould Vanderbilt type, was surrounded by the same mass of poverty that is found everywhere that millionaires exist. Millionaires and poverty seem to be bound together with a ligature that no surgeon can detach. Mr. Carpenter says: ' My visit to the Asiatic Croesus was in company with Dr. Jayme dos San tos. Dr. Santcs is a well-known citi zen of Macao and a friend of the mil lionaire. Our ride to his home was in jinrikshas, two men to each riksha. one pulling In the shafts and the other pushing behind. Leaving Macao, we passed over the narrow neck of land which joins the Portuguese territory to China, and then rode for miles upon the mainland. The whole way was spotted with pov erty. The crops were everywhere lux uriant, but the people seemed terribly poor. They were dressed in blue cot ton and all were barefooted. There were many beggars and . near the graveyard we met mourners in sack cloth,, who had coolies to hold up their arms as tney moved along, seem ingly prostrated with grief. The fields were full of toilers. Here a man, bare to the waist, trotted from plant to plant, watering them with liquid manure; there another plowed the field with a water huffalo, and fur ther on big-hatted women, with their pantalets rolled up to their thighs, bent double as they waded through the liquid mud and set out the rice crop, plant by plant, Our jinrikshas crowded hollow-eyed burden bearers to the sides of the road. We went by STOLIUO r n FRANK IAMS returned from Fran. fV.t. i lorn atk t.aawk ii..t;...i.t.i Hons to Nebraska in 1900. Omlt man in United States that imported ALL black stallions. He imported. 2 8 - - B lac k Pe rche ro n s 28 They are the "towk talk." The people throajr his barns and babble over with these coa- F amenta, "The moat and larrest blaek ataUiona I ever saw." "Erery one a winner," "The beat ams ever imported," "Bat lams always has the larrest and finest horses," "Woa't hart culls,'" 'His horses always win at state fairs." He has on hand 100 -Black Percherons, Shires, Glydes and Goachers 100 They are two to five years old, weight 1,600 to 2,400, lams has mere black stab lions, more ton and biff stallions, more rracVer-jacks, more tops, government approved, royal bred stallions, than ALL IKPOSTZK OF KEBKABKA. IamS Speaks French and German; needs no inter preter; knows the breeders in rnci county. This, with twenty-five years' experience, saves him $300 on each stal lion, and he selects only the very best individuals. Has no . salesman saves you middlemen's profit. Guarantees to show you more ton black Percheron stal lions than all importers of Nebraska, or pay fare and $20. " Don't be a clam Wbitk Ins. FRANK"! AM 3, St. Paul, Howard Co., Nebraska, on B. & M. and Union Pacific Ry. MAKE SAUSAGE OF THEM The Full Dinner Pail Trap How it Work ed With the Very Large Family of Gates. Editor Independent: I am an in dependent in religion, in politics and natural philosophy and I seek the as sociation of such. This is why I have read the Nebraska Independent for the last two years. I have made com parison with the thoughts expressed in many other publications, including New York papers, with its expressed opinions and with my own. True relig ion is something to satisfy a felt nec essity. - Necessity ; is the mother of faith, for faith is the substance of things hoped for. If there is no nec essity we cannot hope for something to satisfy it, therefore there can be no hope without necessity. An acquaintance shortly after the election said to me: "Who did you vote for?" I replied that I voted the fusionist ticket. He replied: "Voted for Bryan. You ought to have known that he wouldn't win. You were foolish. I voted for McKin- Jey for I was sure he would win." I looked him over carefully and said: "If I mistake not your name is Gute." "Yes, sir. It is, and I am a fellow who likes a full dinner pail." I replied: "I am aware of that fact and further I am aware that there is a very large family of Gutes in the United States. Now, sir, I did not vote for Mr. Bryan because I thought he would win or lose. I voted for the principles set forth In the platform that he repre sented. As for the full dinner pail, it was held out to deceive the people to entice them to sell their birthright to liberty. I am no Esau. I will not sell my birthright for a mess of pottage. The most of the republican speeches that I heard or had the honor to read put me in mind of a man going into a pasture with a bucket with a few grains of corn in it to catch a horse. He calls the horse and shakes the bucket and the poor, foolish brute fol lows the dictates of his stomach, not his brains, and goes up and forfeits his liberty for a few grains of corn WTiat did the man catch the horse for? To ride him, and for the same purpose the republican leaders held out the full dinner pail, to you, Gutes. They knew that you had bones and muscles and a large stomach and no- brains. They wished to ride you for another four years and they caught you. Just a moment, Mr. Gute. Don't hurry, You have seen men go to the yard to call the pigs. - They always take a full dinner pail of slop and pour it in the trough. The piggies with more appe tites than brains run up, plunge their snouts into the trough and by and by the axe comes down on poor piggie's head. What for? The master wants more sausage. While the pig is alive the epidermis of the sausage is inside of him. After he Is killed the epider mis is carefully cleaned and piggie is ground up and put inside of It and then it is ready for the master. Well, what of that? Nothing, only the re publican leaders have caught you, Gutes, with the full dinner pail and now they are making laws to grind you up and make sausage of you. That is all. Good-day. Tell Mrs. Gute that old Lee voted for Bryan and she will have good judgment enough to show you that old Lee is not a horse or a pig and that he furnishes and fills his own dinner pail. - A by-stander asked: "What paper do you read, Mr. Lee?" I answered. "Everything that I can get hold of. "Have you read th9 State Journal?" I answered, "Some little." He asked "What do you think of It?" I replied: "I think the editor is a brother to the man who has just left us, and, second. the paper is the true expositor of Gute with the e left oft. I am ho sausage epidermis, therefore I am not afraid of being stuffed by it." S. S. LEE, Sr. Chesterfield, Neb. , INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU BUY. W aat oar eaMomtn to b p.ruuW uuitiad bofora', hay (pond ib r m.ev. InvoattgaU tbt claim of mil iacubmture and then decide. We believe jo wil I find that tbo SURE HATCH li JGUBATOKS AND COMMON FOLIUNG ItKOODEKS u string Uttm- niteftctloa thim UT other made. It 'a becauae thav are ao aitnble. arnaibla and ihm. Th.T are btjilt tor Wl PSY tbt Freight. I l"y poople, ho haven't time to fiea and bothtr. Our eatalogue la Flitfc. We don't ' fta" mV -! in naa l I I am1 I wAM k .vomlniHia t SURE HATCH INCUBATOR COMPANY, CLAY CENTER NEBRASKA. SHIP YOUR PRODUCE DIRECT. Thr ia nn wit in trmt fnll vain (or Tour nroduce exceot by shiDDin direct to market. The fewer hands the Drodncts of the farm Daaaes throush before reaching- the oonaumer the more profit there is for the producer. , ' We Distribute Direct to the Consumer. We receive and sell BETTER.EOOS. VEAL. POULTRY. GAME. FUR, HIDES, PEt.TR, WOOL, POTA TOES, SEED, BROOM COBN, POP CORN, BEANS, HAY GRAIN, GRKEN AND DRIED FRUIT Of all kinds, or anTthinar Von mar have to disDoae of. We sraarantee prompt sales and quick returns lor all smpmentS,also lull market price ana iuii weis;nt;OTe guarantee io so n-'imore uae enipmeni wiu convince von oi tnia mnn,, fcT vnnr vrrritn"t than vmi r a n temt at home. we are reliable and responsible; you run no riar in snipping to us; ntre oeea esvaousueu for 27 years. Write us for prices, shipping tags or any information you may waat. SUMHERS, BROWN & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND RECEIVERS FOR THL PEOPLE, fact here Kef. Produce Exchange Bank, Chicago, and this paper, 198 S. Water St., Chicago. WHiPlillHIl Sfgp - FOR MEI1 $ AND WU 3r! 170MEH. IfcW eJ " I .1 READ EVERY WORD. Your First fuid LAST OPPORTUNITY " to get the World-Renowned Dn. HORllE'S for ofiiv 86.66 e, THI9 Is rood for tf sent with an order 'ordJt i.roo Beltt not later thari Jfjgdays from daU of 'if.is paper, Dec. 6. igoo r 4 in s tr, rt DR. IIORNE'S Iew Improrad Electmc Belts Warranted to eure without medicines, the following diseases. SJaewmotiasje Sciatic lemssoe CaimrrH I Mfywpepaia Conmtipmtii Heart TrouM& ParaljfBi JVefVOMamCM . Bpinal Stocssw FoWeoeeta Trpi XAvmr Throai 9TraatMa fi4 tee Cutplminta Xervttm Debility : Xaxf Tigwr CM XactrmmtiUem Female CimpUUntm JPerifi tt CJfco Asc THIS OFFER IS GOOD FOR 30 DRYSfill! Y We make this Special Unprecedented Offer to Quickly uawuuuw auu vvmuu acu ui O-ej vr ijocamict. To finical fntrodne and ontafn arenta tn ae tninv nan, ln.1(tfaa mkm,IM, for Dr. Borae'i Hew ImDrored BeetricBelti and AnnlianeM. era have decided aell tor SO dT only, our No. 4 Dr. Horse's hew Improved Refular 120.00 Electric Bftiiloronrr ., apnea that will make tt possible for eer pereon reading this adTertiseinent to get one of ear bast Belts at a nominal price. Kever fas the Hie tcry ef ear kaalaeea hare we Cared to aell this Belt at saea a prise, but we want an scent in Jam locality, and we believe that if 70a boy a Belt yon will be aa well pwaaea iron ta you wui c liner act as car scent or Help n to (et one. Beawaiker, the Belt we are offering yon for only 15.64 is onr No. 4 Dr. Home's New Improved Rofnlar S20.CO Combination Belt for men or women. It la adjust able and can be worn by any member of the family. Saepeneery free with every aute Bet, It is the best Belt wa manufacture; in fact, the Best aa garth, and we make no ueeption to this statement. We have sold hundreds, yeav thousands of them, up to 40.00. There it not a family but what should have one ef these Belts, as it ia the best aqd cheapen I doctor, end you do not have to te out of the house to setit. It will last you for yrn with proper ears, and will save iUelfin doctor bills ten times over. These Electric Belts have eured thoussnds end will sure you if yau will only pve it a trial, as the many testimonteJa Which wa publish in onrsstsiosoe will prove. TOO BUN RO RISK IN DEAUXQ WITH 08. . We a et ask yea te cd aay mosey ia advance. Ifyouwsnt ana ef these belts we are perfectly willing te send it to your nearest es ess office, C. 0. D., so thst you can see and examine ft free of any aost, lust the same st it yon came into our office or go into any store, and if you ave perfectly satisfied with it, pay the ea. Kass agent the price of the Belt and express charges and take it; otherwise it will returned te us. Can suv fairer offer be made you than this I We are the only manufacturers of Electric Bells Who send Belts C. O. D., without asking one cent in advance. It you wish te send eash with order we will prepay all repress ahaxgea and guarantee the Belt te be exactly aa represented, or t erf sit 100.00. WI HAVE ROW OFFERED Y00 AH CPPCRTORITY Of YOOR UFE and it you de not accept rt you may be sorry for ft, aa we shall never again offer this Belt et such a price. It seems needless to say that we are sustaining a loss oa every Belt we sell at the ebove prios, but it is cheaper te introduce them In new lo calities is this way than to vend traveling men to do it for us. It yea want ana at fa ' these betta OT7T OXJTP OOUPON and send to us with your waist measure pnosieis, euerwiee you may forget tt. ia inches. Peat delay. Order today if Dn. Horue Electric Belt & Truss Co. , JJEFT. 1j , CHICAGO, ILL, U.S.A. . F. a. ir yea nave ao asa tar aa Beetrie Belt please hand or mail this advar tosement to some one that yon know, wae is net enjoying good health. By dome this you will favor them and us. We want a rood ar.nt in ...r w.m. t i. we can give steady employment. We -only employ those who have used ear and can speak of their merits from personal experience. REFKRIKCES: as to our reliability we refer to any Kxpreee Company, any Bank ia Chicago, and the many thousands all over the United States win have used ant Electric Bolta and appliances dunng the past 80 years, ti It 1 The University of Nebraska SCHOOL OF MUSIC, a . a a Is the leading institution of its kind in the west. It offers complete and thor ough courses in all branches of Music, It has a corps of twenty instructors and a fine building for its exclusive use, and would ask you to send for catalogue? WILLARD KIMBALL, DIRECTOR UNCOLN, 1SIEBRASKA.: O V D II 1 1 IO R BJLD BLOOD CUBED. 1st. 2r X or 3rd stages of Syphilis eared tJ I I M I L I tJ for f20- Fuli I2 box treatment a ..r fails. Pimples, skin eruption assBuaw Tanj,h as if by magic. Bemembr roner returned if not satisfactory. $2 single box. By mail, plain wrappers. Haha's Ph . raster, 1805 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. SOLD BY B. O. KOSTK.A, LINCOLN. NEBR & .V t