8 NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT January 24, 1901. m l: .5 Edited and Published by that Matchless Leader HON. W. J. BRYAN 6& I jf The Leading Peoples Party Seml in voiir order without delay ami we will begin your subscription with the FIRST ISSUE. Sereral thousand EXTRA COPIES have been printed FOR OUR ESPECIAL USE in filling back orders. Back numbers are mailed the same day your order is received. The above offer is open alike to old and new subscribers. Present Readers TheIndde 1 wliL iCaUCl O Commoner," should send det Pcb. Co., Lincoln, Nebraska, and we will have "The Commoner" sent to your ad dress for one year and will also give your subscription account credit for three months. Tn Maw QtlHcrrihAt-O For l we wiU send "The Commoner" for 1 i U 1 C WUlii lUCi b year and The Independent three months. Djregttlar subscription price of uThe Commoner" is $1 a year. By taking ad vant age of our clubbing offer yot will get Three Months Subscription to The Independent Absolutely Free This is the most liberal offer made by auy publisher. Call your neighbors atten tion to this opportunity and invite him to subscribe. Why not GET UP A CLUB of 5 or 10 and in that way show your interest in" the cause of the people? The next day after we commenced this offer last week Mr. Johnathan Higgins, of Cambridge, Nebr., H?nt in a list of 22 subscribers that he had secured in his immediate neighborhood. Hun dreds of others have sent in clubs since that. Education is the first essential to the suc cess of the cause of the people. The weekly paper delivered regularly at the home is the most effective means of education ihat can be found. Why not take advantage of our liberal offer and help to increase the circulation and educational influence of the greatest reform papers in th country I Why not do it today ? You will find an or der blank in this page. Address all orders to I Little- by little, but steadily as man's march to the grave, we have been eiviii ' the old for the new faith. are creaieu euai; put, now, irom mat oegmning we nave run down to the other declar ation that for some men to ensUye others is a "sacred right of self-government." These principles cannot stand togetheivj They are as opposite as God and Mammon; and who ever holds to the one must despise the other. From Abraham Lincoln's Speech, Peoria, HI., October 16, 1854. : J it In those days our Declaration: of Independence was held sacred by all, .and thought to include all; but now to aid in making the bondage of the negro universal and eternal it is assailed and sneered at andVxmstrued and hawked at "and torn, till, if its framers could rise from their graves, thej could not at all recognize it Abraham Lincoln's Speech at Springfield, 111., June 2(J, 1857. ARE YOU DOING YOUR ' PART TO PRESERVE THE REPUBLIC? MOTHER GOOD THING T aoeretary mt tfc Interior ftaads m CmibmC to Ceag,Tea Favortac Irrlgmtlaaw The Independent Is not of the ixar-tow-isi&ded cJhiap sort of newspapers. .Whenever it a Rood thins it is tsot afraid to commend it. even though it is done by the opposite party. It lu given the highest commendation to Prwldeat McKlnly for the coinage ef immense amounts of tllrer, hereby he wjta enabled to rererse the roup boce era inaugurated by - Cleveland and sopported by the leading men of th rrp-nblicaa party in the house and eetate when they stopped the coinage cf Urer in 1&33. Because The Iiuit pandect is a vlscrou opponent of the presJjent party, it did cot therefore Imitate to accord him and his ad mi c. t-tratlon a dae meed of praise for tl and Jast policy. TLe IniVpeud-.it biw finds aether tfci&jc which it most heartily com mend as aa art of this administra tion, for cf corure the secretary of the Interior would Bot introduce a note of discord or advocating the irrigation of arid lands unless he had the appr raj of the president and cabinet in so doinf. At the request of the house commit tee on public lands Secretary Hitch cock has prepared a statement of his mws on this question, and his paper was submitted to the committee on Friday. It is a broad and comprehen rre document.- On-thlrd of the whole area of the United States, he say, ex clusive of Alaska and the new insular pocsessions. consists of public lands open to settlement tinder the home ste4 act- - This one-third, he con tinues, "includes some of the richest arricuitural lands in the world, cap able of produciiic enormous crops." and the only obstacle which prevents ft utilization is a scarcity of water t certaia times and seasons. Not ins the necessity cf the conserving of the water and the Coeds in this region, and cf their artificial distribution, ws aaserta that. -when this is done there win fee opportunities for thousands, or evta millions, of homes within tb portion cf the ITnited State now al most uaiahahiutle. The creation of thee homes would add enormously to Commoner 11 I i 59 lndepesiQerii Paper in the United States NLY Imemmkm r UK Lincoln, Nebraska. Near eighty years ago we began by declaring that all men T the nutrrial wealth of the nation, and the utijizatlon of this vast area of farmil land will In no way reduce the ralue of the lands now cultivated." He de Jips that these, crops will come In con petition with those of the east, but atttrts that they will find and reach! Other markets. 'More than thlsf hi adds, "the possible popular tion wnt of the Mississippi , will vast ly enh uce the volume of trade a ad manufacture throughout the. rest of the cot-nry, and will make more val uable t.id productive area to the great manufacturing centers in the east." The scretary estimates that at least 74,000,KOi acres of - - land 1 can be re- claimed oy a wise policy on the part homes i-a be made for- 50.000.000 of people.t "The remarkable results ac compli3liel In the valley of the Nile, he continues. "In practically redeem ing Egyiitffrom a state of bankruptcy should encourage a most liberal con sideration! of the question of Irriga tion. It is! desirable that such reason able exp Dentures be made by the fed eral gof irpment. as well as by the states, a will gradually, but as rapid ly as pcsiible, insure the blessings consequent! upon a well-defined and executed system of irrigation." THE LEGISLATURE - 1 . - StatUrt MMlud to Try Their Hands at fnMailiS Member Vfho Had a God Round Majority. The exigencies of the senatorial con test bad a very restraining effect upon the republican majority in regard to heaving fwion members over' the transom.' Whenever the man" to be seated was looked over the first ques tion that .se "Who will he rote for senator if he is seated?" and then therevts trouble on hand. . If he was for Rosewater, the supporters of other candidates would not help pitch him over. I(J he was for Thompson, then the Ro.ewater men would not as sist. So, It 1as all the way round. That saved ;i least half a dozen seats to the fusifJiiUts. t - Last wekf however, the senate sup- portervoi different candidates came to &me sort of agreement among LA $1 direct to the Ind "The DEPEX- cr nr themselves and the committee on con tested elections agreed, that Is the republican part of it, to heave over Senator Henry Reuting of Clay county. It was not denied that he had a good round majority, but they said that he had violated the corrupt practices act the one with which Dietrich made such havoc during the campaign. The Independent says now what it said in the beginning that any man who violated the law should be prosecuted in the courts and if found guilty suffer the penalties prescribed. It op posed the taking up that law in the case of Dietrich, the most notorious violator of it, and making It a ground to contest his election. It said: swear out a warant, bring him before a court, try him and if convicted impose the penalties. It says the same in every other case. If the republicans propose to make simple charges unsupported by evidence of the violation of this act an excuse for pitching fusionists over the transom, then The Indepen dent is in favor of letting the conspir ators find out that there are two ways of playing that game. As was announced to the populist state committee by The Independent when it was in session here, the re publicans are making arrangements to introduce a ballot law to prevent fu sion in this state. That is one thing that they will do whether they do anything else or not. It might as well be taken as an accomplished, fact and preparations made to meet it. The thing should, be.4aken. up by all the reform weeklies and discussed. "A bal lot law will be passed to prevent fu sion and it will bo so arranged, as to give the republican party every advan tage possible- .. The legislature" so "far "has done nothing except to cast useless votes for United States senator, pass bills to pay their own salaries and expenses and make arrangements to get up a ballot law that will give the republican party all the advantages, that is possible to confer upon it and make it stand the test of the , courts. Some scores of bills have been introduced and re ferred to committees and a tremen dous long list of employes have been provided with" snug' jobs during the winter. That is. the sum total of$the work of the republican legislature for the state of Nebraska so far. . CO,; Current Comment j The hazing business at West Point was settled by the captains of each class appearing before congressional committees and agreeing upon honor to abolish it in the institution. vThe most contemptible; man in the whole membership of the; academy was ' the fellpw , who was introduced ; as the president - of the Young : Men's Chris tiaa association. One of the members of the committee denounced his tes timony as "blasphemous." That tes timony as reported by the Associated press is another evidence of the utter unreliability of the reports which are given constantly to the public. This "Christian" when pressed with ques tions as how he could' defend the bru tality and cowardice practiced upon lower classmen replied that the lower classmen could be better trained by keeping a distance between them and the upper classes just as the officers did with the cadets and men in the ranks. When asked if it would not have been more in accordance with the teaching of Christ who associated with publicans and sinners and by his personal influence tried to aid them to have lent the lower classmen a helping hand, he replied: "Yes, but Jesus Christ was not running a mili tary academy." The Associated press in reporting that answer stopped at the word "yes,", which completely changed the answer. The Independent does not blame the young man for such an outrageous reply, but the teaching in the plutocratic churches from which he drewhis inspiration as president of the Young Men's Chris tian association. It is in character with much of the preaching in these days since the general apostacy from the teaching of Christ has become so popular. - Queen Victoria passed away at 6:S0 Tuesday evening. The particulars of the closing hours were not , given to the public. Shortly afterward, the Prince of Wales was proclaimed under the title of Edward VII. After the queen was stricken and before she lost consciousness, she received a tele gram from President Kruger, which for state reasons was not given to the public. A correspondent in Holland from whence the message was sept, says that it was an expression cf Krugex's deep .religious nature, ex pressing the highest and noblest Christian sentiments. It was also his full and complete , absolution to the dying queen. The world will perhaps never know Its exact words. , A good deal continues to be printed in the English papers concerning the sudden collapse of the queen after ner interview with Lord Roberts. She had been led to believe by her ministers that the bloodshed in Africa was prac tically ended, a When Lord Roberts came into her presence her eyes shone expectantly and she asked if it were really true that the devastating Boer struggle promised shortly to claim its final victims The London Guard ian declares' that the commander-in-chief was so grieved at not being able to give her majesty the assurance she so eagerly sought that he, quit the royal presence,sunable to restrain his emotion. He put the queen off with evasive replies, 4 hoping to escape the necessity of telling her frankly what appeared to be in , store for the British array. The result was that later her majesty, in her intense anxiety to learn more from the man who knows most, commanded Lord Roberts to wait upon her again. It is said that the interview was of a most painful character. The Arkansas; house of representa tives passed a resolution of sympathy with the Filipinos by a vote of 53 to 32. It is caid that an official copy, with the great seal of state attached, will be forwarded to Aguinaldo in the care of General MacArthur at Ma nila. Whether a General MacArthur will forward -it under a flag of truce with his compliments to its designa tion is. considered to be rather doubt ful. The general made a speech to some of the troops the other day which contained some rather startling ethi cal and phisolophical principles. He said: "The chief advantage is the engendering of a warlike spirit, with out which no nation can continue to live, and by which alone a nation is created and made perpetual." If that is true all the teaching in our public schools and churches up to the last three years, when the great apostacy set in, has been false and pernicious. If "engendering the war spirit," is "alone" the foundation and perpet uity of nations, then Christ was the greatest false prophet who ever lived. Let us all stop shouting, "Peace, on earth, good .will to men," get a frun and go to shooting. . ' No news of any importance at all has come from China and in the ab sence of it some sensible writing by scholars and thinkers has taken , its place. One writer points out that China has a civilization, while it 's not like ours, is admirable in many respects. He says it has done some things that the Christian civilization has failed to do. It has contrived to eliminate from civilization the soldier, priest and capitalist and of 400,000.000 have made the most politically com pact body on earth. He asks: "What are the interests of the European states in China? They certainly do not consist in having lands for colon-, ization,. because there is not an inch of ground there which is not already rrUILL PAY YOU to Mud for our big cata log glrlng wholesaleprices en ebicies.implements.eto Thla frnaranteod buggy PRICE only oar othr ads la thte papa. "Tltt bow that oMrai jinnoMT, WESTERN MERCANTILE Do. 5 tonka,. BIDES. S. J. DOBSON & Co., Successor to Dobaon St LandgTen, IV Dealers in HIDES, FUFS, TAU0W AND W001 R Stn LINCOLN. NEB. We wmntnythiin oar line law or small .- lott. We pay the bichett market price, cultivated even to excess. Neither can an immediate increase, in the ex portation of goods be hoped for. The wants of the -Chinese- sre of the most restricted description, and in -the sec ond place the women are : almost slaves, and as that slavery forms the corner stone of Chinese society it can not be altered. The Chinese ; have clothing, - housesv and amusements which are not subject to fashion. Dur ing the-whole of the year 1898 mer chandise" to the amount of 411.000.W0 francs ($S2,200,000) only could be im ported into the country,, the greater part consisting of cotton, opium, rice and petroleum (and opium is not. a European product), with barely 11, 000,000 francs worth of machinery. And what need is there for augment ing the fports : in order to sell these goods? Germany increased her im ports from 2,000,000 francs to 28, 000,000 francs in ten years without augmenting her ports, and England, with an augmentation of ports, is at a discount and worse still for export." This writer also points out that the statistics showing an increase of im portations into China are all a de lusion. Those imports, instead of in creasing, have actually decreased. They are . all estimated , in the silver tael, and while the figures, show that the imports when paid for in taels has nearly doubled, it is on account of the depreciation of silver that the statis tics show an increase .while the amount. of goods has really decreased. He says that while the population of China is dense, the people are so poor that they cannot buy foreign goods. He says that the building of railroads and factories, if the venture Is suc cessful, will be the greatest danger that Christian civilization has ever faced. These Chinamen are strong and quick to learn. Under the law of evolution they have developed a race that can live and work on half the sustenance that would barely keep the people of Christian nations alive. That with factories and railroads the Chinese would flood the world with cheap goods, and he believes that the result would be that the Chinese. would become the. , dominant race of the world. He thinks the sooner the "Christian nations" get out of China and let the Chinese alone the better it will be for them. Alaska with 40,000 people produced more than twice as much surplus wealth as the whole of the Philippines ,xrih i innnnnnn nniiintinr. ThPre were more exports to Alaska than the the Philippines and ten times the im ports, most of which were pure gold. What was not gold, was food, prod ucts. Perhaps you think that we do not import food from Alaska. Look up the official statistics and count the millions of cans of salmon that ara packed there. The mullet head who shivers over on the corner of O and Eleventh streets while he shouts for the repub lican party, has now another thing to spur him on in his good work. The meat trust has raised the price of liver to seven cents a pound. He may not.be able to stand it quite as many hours a day, now that he can't get even liver, but then he can shout the louder while he is there. - In every part of the world the ten dency to place -publicutilities in the ownership of the people instead of that of private corporations is on the In crease. Before this century is closed the people will look back into the years that are passed with astonish ment at the stupidity of the repub licanism of those times when the mul let heads fought to have private cap italists own and exploit the water, street car lines, gas and the electric lighting of the cities and towns. Many of the cities and towns in Canada are taking over these plants. In Toronto the people have just voted to take charge of all of them. The conse quence will be that the people will get all' the gas they want for 50 cents u thousand. The republicans of Lincoln prefer to pay $1.25. They think that if they got it for less that that would be anarchy, or socialism, or something of that sort. The financiers of England and the continent still continue to take a dole ful view of the economic prospects and predict the coming of a series of years of hard times and- distress. Those are all gold standard countries and according to the doctrine that was preached to us by republicans they ought to all be enjoying unlimited prosperity. While they weep over the situation, the people of this coun try having ;. been blessed with the greatest amount of coinage of silver during the last four years that ever was coined in the same length. of time, continue to take their trade away. They have the gold standard over there, but very few of the inhabitants ever see a gold coin. The mass of the business - is done with copper money. The next higher grade see a little subsidiary silver and only the rich ever handle any gold. Here, where we have $600,000,000 of silver, standard money,' in circulation, gold is. seen everywhere. It is very evi dent that the gold standard that was to ' shower blessings on. all mankind ha3 not had that effect in Europe. Th-j rich over there are getting rich, but the poor are getting most almighty poor. LOOKING BACKWARD Why Jfot Edncata Man to Join tha Forces of Progress Instaad of Always Look ing Backward to Frecadant. v In reality Bellamy was looking for ward, but, knowing the pernicious habit mankind has fallen into of al ways looking to the rear, he purpose ly "shoved up the date line" and pre tended to be writing history. "The evils of looking backward, or the ccrse of precedents" would make an excellent text from which to preach a sermon calculated to check the rapid decadence of reason. . Slowly, but surely; the people are contracting. the lawyers' disease servility to prece dent. 'Do we advocate a1 system of scientific money ah!' it would be a failure; look at the history of Russia's attempt to issue paper money; note what happened to the French as- toNCN OTHERS FAIL CONSULT 1 11 MI SEARLES SEARLES Main Office Lincoln. Net SPECIALISTS IN Nervous, Ch rente Std FrUata Dieeaaea. WEAK MEN r - AH private diseavee anddla ordere of men. Treatment by mall $ oonealtatlon free, hyphtlis eared for Ufa. . all forma of female weak ness and Dieeaseo ot Wo .men.. ; . ..... ElectricilVM .. . 9 Xnsbies as to guarantee to core an eases cnraoia at the nose, !nroat,xbest. stomach, HTer, bloody ski. and kidney dieeases. Lost Manhood, Night Xmtssions, Hydrocele, Varicocele, Gonorrhea, Gieet, Piles. Fistula and Rectal Ulcers, Diabetes andBrighra Ditewe, SIOO-OO for a esse ot er SirHlLia we cannot care. If curable. Stricture & GIe8tSetwa" "tV sattlne. Consultation FRKKv Treatment by mail OaQ, or address with stamp I ' Mala Office Drs. Seirles & Searies I x"rz;ZL LINCOLN NEBRASKA signats; see how our : own "greenbacks",,-depreciated during the civil war; "precedent" is against your prop osition; gold and silver have been used as money almost as far back as we have any authentic history -we must stick to them; no, no, it won't work, this idea of yours, because the pre cedents are adverse. ; V Let any proposition be made sug gesting a change in the existing order of things, and the very first step taken by the average man will be to inquire if it has ever : been tried before and how it worked; but little or no attempt will be made to compare the condi tions "under which the trial was made with those existing at the time the proposed change is suggested: but lit tle effort will be made to see if the cases are "on all fours," as the lawyers say. If the trial In the past was a failure, that settles , the matter fo future generations It can't be done, because in the days of. Pharaoh some thing like it . was attempted and.- re sulted disastrously. This is as far as the average man reasons about ecou omic and political questions that Is, the average . man ' who hasn't been in- "V s?u u oeulated with the virus of populi sm. The late John Clark Ridpath in the Arena of December, 1897, published a leaf from his Samoan note book (dated A. D. 2297) in which , is given, some fragments of . a conversation he had with Sir Thomas . Kho, a chimpanzee knight. Sir Thomas opened the dis cussion by .remarking: "I have not been satisfied with the result of your education in America. It seems to me to work by contraries In thisthat the system puts the face of a man on tlie wrong side of him, so that he always looks backward. I should prefer to have the face of an educated man set to. the fore, as if he were going some where." "I know you call this thing of . yours education, and-you have, as I have learned, many colleges . to promote it. The system seems to have been in vented in Europe at a time when the only light came, from an ignis fatuus In the rear. There was not at that time one fore-torch of knowledge or hope in the world. The man of your "jo called middle ages was not, I confess. much to blame for thinking that the' past is a big thing. How could he' be censured for .not ..knowing that tb. past is only the remaining dust and darkness of a dead .world? It Is only when living men, born in what they call aix enlightened age, persists in educating their youth by twisting their faces around towards the dead world that I protest." . , ' ."If my information be authentic," he continued, . "your education, consists mostly in teaching men how to stop. Nothing in America, I hear, is thought so. inimical to a high standard of schol arship as a belief, in the revolution of the earth on its axis. It , is a great part of. the higher learning to prevent the motion of the earth by denying it. One of , your" poets declares that ."The thoughts, of men are widened with the process" of the-suns," - but-" he -did not learn .this" at coiege; he . learned .Jt when . he was . alone . on the chalky crags at. Dover communing j with the sea." : .' . ;: . , ,' . ; ""Your college men are as a rule in mortal dread of the . "process-of the suns. They insult th'ir charts a.id find that according to Diins Scotiis it is wrong for the sun to proceed; there fore, the sun does not : proceed els-.j the sun would disturb the existing order." . . ". "The average college , man," contin ued his knightship, "huddles down close to the wall and waits, for some ancient dog-cart to come along. As soon as the time-worn vehicle passes on its way back to the last camping ground, he hails it and mounts.- And' on .that 'safe and sound dog-cart' of reaction and retrogression and cant USE THIS ORDER BLANK Independent Pub. C&Jliiicclni Tltb. ' Gentlemen: Enclosed find . - or one year an( Nebraska Independent for. three months to each' of -the bllowing names ahd-addressesj.;;- 5 v tZy?'7. " . : rC. . , " ; ; - ; NAMES, l-O'Sl-OtfJKlCJB ' STAX" MMHHSMaBiHHNP4aaMaaHaawaaaMaaHanaWNaeMi aHHBMaaaMMawMHaaannHM . " ' '' '. ' ' ' ' :: ; ' '' ,' '1 ' - ' ' . - I . " ' ;"' r ' ' " ' ' ' " - t ' . v v ' . t ' - ' ' ' 4 - -' '...' p ' . . . ; ; . . . . ' .. ". ". . . k m ' ' - - ' ' ' ' : - . . - - ' ' ' . ' Js either Indelible or common lead pencil. XV rite names and" addresses Pt Al2fIY CATARRH a KINDS WE CI RE ell forms of Catrrn of tha Head, Nase, Bronchial , Tab, Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys an Bladder. Ail curable eases of CATARRH CURED PERMANENTLY. A perfect cure anaranteed in eyery oae we ae rpt. Medicine and treatment only $5.00 par Month. BLOOD POISON S"fhS!.!SHr,'tei5 from the system. . ' - Nervouf and Chronic Diseases of MEN and WOMEN. Electrical Treatment with Medicine! NEW YORK HOSPITAL THE AT M E NT of all forms of Female Weakness and IKseases of Women-Inflammation of the Ovaries.Fainfal Menstruation. Ulceration, Falling of the Womb, Chance of Life, Kidney or Bladder Trouble, Leucorrhoea, Nerrousnes. and Sick Headaobe. nr li T: m a. V rri vie cure an jjivoasea or mo iiunc, x uiu t, juw. Stomach. Bowels, and Lirer: P'ood. Skin, and tvvuv"f. WOi- , T W . , ' J if r.li Wner.iseases ; Piles, Fistula, and Kectal amo fJ1!,!!?! nfriTinrtn HWTCTTMA- -liAtVi a r. f Tlt or BTSPEPSIA that wa oannot cure If - m.-.h...i TP Treatment by Mail a sneelaltr. Call or ad drees with stamps. Box 224, : DRS. SEARLES & SEARLES, Slain Offlca: Rooms 217, 21, 219 and 230, ichards Block, : LINCOLN, NEBRASKA . " Mention this paper. : he rides the journey through." "I have learned that nearly all yo ) r university-'productions are leagued with those social and politlpal : forces which drive backwards. Jtis said that your leaders of ; progress, the . greater part of them, spring directly from the people, while your graduates are gath ered into the silken folds of an apa thetic aristocracy. Nine out of ten of them take refuge under; the cloak of organization, and the other one, if he venture into the open, Is generally driven back." No doubt this is pri marily a weakness, but in the language of -your poetj 'to be weak is miser able.'" - :-r:''...';..- v. .:. '; . Continuing, Sir Thomas remarked upon the evanescent character of Am erican literature and asked , what had become of the books produced, during the nineteenth century only Hugo, Buckle and . Darwin had survived "Why," he queried, "do your educated men join themselves to the enemies of progress? Why do they conclude, evn before graduation, that the principal work in. the world is to govern mau kind by means of institutions and op inions, the design of which is to pre vent the governed from growth .and emancipation? Do your scholars real ly . believe that civilization is a sta tionary product of the past? ... Do th?y believe that wealth and slavery are tlie only two things to be worshipped? Do they know so : little of history as. not to be well aware that every single progressive movement of the human race has been the outgrowth and de struction of . existing conditions?", r r"l do not presume," said Sir Thomas in, conclusion, "to advise the people of Europe and An -rica; for that would be presumptuous. But it seems to me perfectly clear . , . . that it Is not a good educational method to twist around the face of man and set it backwards." ' One year's subscription to The Core,- Jmoner, edited and published by Hon. jw. J. Bryan, and three months' -sub scription to The' Independent,,' the lead ing people's party paper in" the U. S both for $1.00. . Send.-your order today to The Independent Pub. Ca,-Lineohi, Pseb. ' Japanese Red Cross j There is continued commendation of .the Japanese soldiers. They seem to have been models for the highly civil ized nations in every respect. .Their Red Cross organization is said to be the best of any nation. , That society cared for' all alike in the recent war in China. From the letters written by patients who received treatment in the Japanese Red Cross hospitals It is easy to , see how thoroughly they appre ciated the care bestowed on them. On officer speaks of "feeling as though he had found a second native province In Japan," and a sergeant-major, after eulogizing the skill of . the surgeons and nurses and the generosity of the Japanese people who loaded him and his comrades with 1 presents, declares that he will never forget, the treatment he received nor ever cease to talk with his family and friends .of 4 the happy hours spent by him in Hiroshima. Whiten the Teeth and SweeteTthe Breath Try a Tooth Wash mads by a Lincoln Dentist, Ask for a Sample Bottle. . . f Dr. F D. Sherwin , Dentist. : Ofllca honrs 9 to 18 A 1 to 5. Second FU.r " Bmrr Blook, Coravr room. LINCOLN - - NERBASKA .for .vhich send ". The Commoner ,f "-:'- .. .f