4 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. January 31, 1901 Cpt Jlebraska Independent Btirssk TZZSSl EUXL. CO-tM OTlf AND N STJ Prsi-UJsrD Er Thursday .f.OO PER yTXf? IN ADVANCE KMf wit gses, Matr,te.a to fee frwr44 ky tfcaa. Tr fr vlf Ut -ri?k tW a.s4 La MtWibf fails- to m I rxnmr re4it A44rra all f uTtSnLoai, -aka all C6r Etbrtsks lmdtptmdent, Lincoln. Neb. Hi sot t r The republicans of the Nebraska Ug UUture caw and cuss totwlihstandinc tbt ne-pper rtport to tbe contrary. Twenty of thtra hsre also screed to eaKt r. The m pre me court deld4 that Nesfy bad to follow the Indictment wbetber th fiag follows the eotistitu tloa or tot. The latter question they till tare tusdt-r -rotst. deration. UeKlnley b f'a buying seme snore it IstJs trtrm ijain. . Thi time fc j4 f 1M0 easa down for t-o peeks ia the tr :' inhabited by polygaraitts an-i ! a ie-bolder-. FpaJfl ot the mosey ca the tame terms that be got the 119 Vc? never a eta it called a traitor ta the t. S. cnate It 1 only positive proof that be opposes the money pow tr and is hose. To that point has tbt nxilllojiaire club arrived. Doubt Is" Senator Teller cherishes the ac aslts made cpoa bits as the bighett ort of coaspiirnect. . EocizlUt ' pub- Jerted ta Just sarh rule as all others and son beside . Correpoad?nre snt fcr publication East contain the name cf the author loot necessarily for pub lication I bet as a mark of good faith. The papers re full of advertise ments cf -Complete life of Queen Vic toria.' The book-fet -will: swarm mr tie land In countless number. Anyone who has cornea sense will )cs,w, without being told, bow tncii rafcie ther will be in a history com piled, printed and published la le ftaa tea days. There bare been more arreaU. late!y cf Cuban peat si thieves."' One John Fheridan who bad charge cf the money ciders is short ma ay thousand dollars. It was a toash lot of carpet -baggers that MrKii-W sent down there. Those wfe west from Nebraska we know about. If the rest of tbero were cf th? same kind, no wonder the cash con tirres to disappear. - CbanceUcr Andrews tittered a grest tratb la fets Omaha adorers when be tail: The fart Is that, to a great rxtect. taoraiJty can be taught. Hither to we bare hardly made any effort to .Imrelcate It Wide and systematic ef forts la tba beazvlf will trrprtse the world witb their eoecess. Tbe teach ing; cf morals baa been practically a hardened !a both the higher and low er schools for a great maey years. Tbe result is ererywbere apparent. ' ' Celone! Harrisoij is making a rigor ous Itkk aoct being discbarged from tb army because bis father made a speech agalnat Imperialism. He wants a er-rt cf inquiry instituted to find cct tbe reason why. If tbe sons of two supreme jodges caa get cfSces be dost se why the sea of an es-preri-ret should mot bare one. Harrisoa says that Ccrbia seised cable dls patcbe addressed to btra (Harrison) and refused to let them be examined. Two or tbr weeks ago The Inde jcdett Informed its readers about tbe tboutands of houseless and homeles poor wto were nandering In the trttf of Losdoa. I-ast Sunday som of tbe slow-going dailies beard of ' and actually bad a few feeble com taests a tbe subject. Tb "submerge tenth" that existed when Genera! Booth cf tbe Salratloa army wrote Mi book about -Darkest England" has row become the "submerged fifth," and their condition more desperate tbsa erer. ...... Seta cf tbe Wall treet financiers got caught la a British trap ia such a costpletft way that eiery one of both side of tbe oceaa U laughing at them. When that last British loaa was of fered the smart American millionaires west after it and underbid tbe British Investors. Now tbey Sad. thxt they wfll bare to pay a British income tax ' ,nf 5 per rest ca tbe Interest of those Brltiih bonds and It makes them feel wor than if they tad eatea a peck of 'aaareVraut. Tbey are not bragging to 'much about bow tbey beat the Brit ish fa getting that loan as tbey were ahi"e a so. rBOTECTINO CItXME. A young farmer writes a letter to Tbe Independent in which be says that be reads this paper and that be read an article in it a short time ago about the way farm hands from the country were swindled by the confi dence men in the cities. He says'that be thought that be was prepared fcr that kind of business, but that The Independent failed 'to gire an account of all the tricks that are played and because it did not do it he got into trouble In South Omaha, For the benefit of others be wants The Inde pendent to print his experience. He says be went to South Omaha with a friend in charge cf two carloads of bogs. They were walking along the street when they met two respect able looking men in front of a place that was called a theatre. One of the men said: "If you want to sec a pood show go Inside. It woa't cost you a cent and it is really the best free show that I erer saw." Ire and bis friend went la. An attendant said: "Take a seat, a performance will be&in in a minute or two." The room was filled with small tables and a few people were sitting around. They sat down at one of tbe tables and in a minute or two, two women came and at down at the same table. They began a con versation and presently they ordered beer. A waiter brought four bottles of beer and demanded of the men two dollars. The y cutis man who writes says be saw that be wps in for it and taking a silver dollar out of his pocket be paid for two bottles. Without drinking the beer he t up and went out. He waited outside for some time for his companion and then fearing that be might be in trouble he went back. When be got Inside there was a row on. His friend had refused to pay for the other two bottles. He says that they were set upon by four ruf fians, assaulted and thrown out on the stteet- Immediately a policeman appeared and arrested them both aud ir were taken to jail, locked up over nifUt and accused the next morning of ?elng drunk and disorderly. The pcliremen who arrested them did not appear and they were discharged. T i youns farmer asks that his ex peri tic be published in The Inde pevle?it for tbe benefit of other hon est "young men that may go to Omaha or Eoath Omaha on business. Tl e Independent publishes it be CS.US the experience related is tHe re sult cf the introduction Into Nebras ka oftbe police protection of crimo andr'U for a consideration In money whlci jhas lorg been the practice in Philadelphia, New York and Chicago. That place, wherever it was, that -was calle.l a theatre, was put un under a contract with the police to divide the profits! The polfceman who arrested the two young farmr was the great est r Jlain In the outfit. He knew per fectly "Well that the two young men had oea robbed or that an attempt had i n made to rob them, and he knowingly arrested the innocent and let the-: guilty escape. No such plac could exist In Omaha or South Omaha withe ut the assistance of the police, and the Independent is informed that there are quite a number of them. This police protection of crime and vice bis gone on for a great many years atid the people in the cities have all known it. The ministers know it tbe lawyers know it, all of the citi sens; of the cities know it and they have made no protest. The grand Juries know it. the judges know it, tbe state si I attorneys know it and they bate not protested. At last it has in vaded kebraska. Will there be any efflcie tj protest made In this state? Innoc fat men, men known to be inno cent ) "yf the officers are arrested every day fx Nebraska and confined in loath some" prisons, foul with filta and ver min. , 'hile they are not imprisoned for lottgf terms, as was done in the dark ages.';itll the Innocent are imprisoned and t4 guilty are protected and c:i- eouraB by the officers of the law. The practice has grown so universal irtbe eastern cities that public atten- being called to it. Meetings cf n held lately in Chicago, Phil- adelpJ if and New York protesting against it. There is no very great hope )fj reform. Such protests have been .cide in years past, men tne mattex f as dropped. It Is the result of the dfgfneracy that has set in since tbe chttfch apostatized and began the worship of Mammon instead of the God ofixuth and justice. The heads of pol departments who derive an ineonv twice their salary from such work! Judges who never present such mattes s I to grand juries, politicians who b; fneans of the existence of such nl&eesL ; Secure nominations and elpc tionsi ale one and all received into the ck arches, or If they are not, thty hear nadenuncIation of their wicked cess fiotn the pulpits except in times of sudden outbursts, and after that, things g on as usual. : We have the same tiing right here in Lincoln. Last week I rwo of the Lincoln policemen were cbirged with addressing two re spectatl married women and endeav oring to entice them away to houses of prostitution. Will; they be dismissed from tUil service of the republican par 1 ' ' " - 1 tioa Ji have I ty ? Hardly. When the next city elec tion comes the degenerate churcbe3 will line up and cast an almost solid vote for the same practices. There are one or two honorable ministers in the city who will protest and quite a number of laymen. But the majority will vote as they always have voted. The degeneracy will go on until so ciety is disintegrated or a sudden up heaval "occurs. Men with money, much of which comes from the spoils of robbery, will control the primaries, and then because they run on a ticket lalelled "republican," the apostates will all vote for them. The hope of this republic lies in the purer life lead by the families living on farms. WHAT'S IN A NAME. To show the unimportance of names t is related by Plutarch that when the ambassadors of Antlochus tne Great represented , to the Achaeans how numerous the king's forces were, and, to make them appear still more so, reckoned them up by all their dif ferent names. . "I supped once," said Flaminius, "with a friend; and upon my complaining of the great number of dishes, and expressing my wonder how he could furnish his table with such a variety. 'Be not uneasy aoout that, said my friend, 'for it is all hog's flesh; and the difference is only in the dressing and the sauce.' In like man ner, I say to you, my Achaean friend, be not astonished at the number of Antiochus forces, at these pikemen, these halberdiers and cuirassiers; for they are all Syrians, only distin guished by the trifling arms they bear." "What's in a name?" the poet askd, believing the name to be unimportant. But is it so? The people of the United States have for years been robbed by protection to our infant industries;" they have voted for a financial system, known by the high-sounding title of honest money," which has for its ob ject an unjust distribution of wealth. the creation of a few millionaires and hundreds of thousands of semi-paupers. By calling it "benevolent assim ilation" they have justified, to their own satisfaction, the murder of peo ple guilty of a desire to be free and tc govern themselves, in an osiensiuiu effort to "maintain the parity" of sil ver, the .national administration is slowly but surely doing the very things which must result in destroy ing the parity. "What's in a name?" Everything, mv friend. The haDDV selection of a cleverly constructed catch pharse will often prove more effective than the most learned arguments. Republican leaders are adepts in the art of coin ing successful catch phrases. Protec tion, reciprocity, honest money, sound monev. "a dollar worth a hundred cents the world over," criminal ag gression and benevolent assimilation, maintaining the parity all these must eo down in history as illustrations that names have something in them; that with the multitude, sound is for a time more successful than sense. "What's in a name?" Much for weal or woe. If there be one thin absolutely necessary to a free ex pression of the will of the people, that thing is direct legislation. And why? Because it is the only feasible plan so far presented approximating a pure democracy a government of the peo ple, by the people, and for the people. But it has been handicapped t)y names. The initiative and referendum and im perative, mandate Words with a for eign sound, breathing cf nihilism, an archy, communism, socialism, and all the other isms which, rightly or wrongly, strike terror to the heart of the averaee conservative man aud your average man is generally conser vativc. ' The people of Nebraska make use of the referendum every time they vots on a constitutional amendment. They are. not afraid to vote on amendments, but thousands of them are alarmed if you but suggest that the referendum ought to be invoked in the case of all important legislation. They are afraid of the name. "Direct legislation" is a little bet ter. But why not call it "popular leg islation" or "law making by the people?" The Illinois legislature soon brought a recalcitrant railroad to terms. It hud issued passes to all the membera, but wrote on them "not good on the limited express. mat made a row and the number of sand-bagging bills that, were prepared frightened the su I-erintendent so badly that he went down to Springfield and told them that v bile it was impossible to carry al ti'.e members and their hangers-on to Chicago on Fridays, as the train wa3 as heavy and long as could be hauled without them, nevertheless he would fix things to suit them. So he ordered a special train to be made up for the accommodation of the legislature and the lobby and the bills for lower fares will never see the light of day. Those who do pay fares will pay the cost of Ihauling these deadheads. That's right. That is what the people of Illinois voted for and they ought to have it. XOT TIXI, THEN As long as money controls elections n the west it win never receive tne benefits of national legislation such as s bestowed on the east. Millions upon millions are appropriated by congress every year for the benefit of eastern states, and but the smallest doles are ever allowed to the west. So extrava gant have the eastern appropriations been for the last fifty years that the result of them has been to build up enormously rich and flourishing com munities in the most sterile and n- hospital portion of the union. Whila this has been going on, the west has not been able to obtain even the nec essary appropriations for public builds ngs. Western senators and congress men who are elected by money sent in from the east make no such fights for the interest of their constituents as are made by the eastern senators ; who dominate the senate, or the men in the house who manipulate the legislation there. If a western congressman .gets so much as the repair of a worn-out sidewalk around a public building, he comes home and brags about it during the whole campaign. This condition of affairs will continue just as long as western senators and congressmen are elected by the use of eastern money, and eastern money will be sent here in campaigns by the hundreds of thousands just as long as the mullet heads continue to vote the republi can ticket regardless of all conse quences. When these men become in telligent enough to refuse to vote away their birth rights for a mess of pottage, even if it is offered in a tin dinner pail, then, and not until then, will the west receive the same con sideration as the east. BORN THAT WAY The information that the P Street Idiot gives to his readers is sometimes somewhat astonishing. The other day he solemnly informed them that "The sixteen-to-wunner claims that an ounce of gold is worth no more and no less than sixteen ounces of silver, but he always flies the track when the government proposes to say that It shall be when it is coined into silver dollars. "The sixteen-to-wunners have al ways declared that. the ratio was es tablished by divine fiat, but they al ways object to the interposition of hu man law to make it good in fact rath er than in theory." There Is no doubt that the Idiot firmly believes all those statements to be true. He states them so unreserv edly and positlvelyho one can doubt that he firmly believes them. He is not to blame for being an idiot. He was born that way,? and: it would te cruel to charge the thing with deliber ate lying. ' ; WHATWILIYOCDO; There are some things that every voter in the three, r reform parties should take into consideration right now, so that he can have plenty of time to make up his mind concerning what course he will pursue in the fu ture. In the first place the Cleveland wing of the democratic party is mak ing great inroads on the democratic organization. Several things show that. One is the vote cast in the Mas sachusetts legislature where it was supposed that the organization, was solid for Bryan. Instead of voting for George Fred Williams or some man of that character, all the democrats voted for Olney, who is a Cleveland democrat and. was a member of Cleve land's cabinet. The Texas legislature invited Dave Hill to address it. The new democratic state committee of Il linois is said to be of the Cleveland re publican kind. Word comes from oth er places to the same effect. There is not much doubt that if the Cleveland democrats can get hold .of the democratic organization that their promise of -electing the next president has a good show of success. They will have , to aid them with all the vast power of money that Mark Hanna handled with so much success in this last campaign. The whole money powr er under such circumstances would be Dn the side of democracy. , The money power is very anxious to do that thing. They find that the sup port of the republican party costs im mense amounts of money. The sup port of the democratic party, with-a man to suit them on the ticket, would not cost them one-tenth as much. They count upon the fact that the southern states will all vote the democratic ticket, no matter who is the candi date or what principles are set forth in the party ; platform. They would have with a gold bug-imperialist can didate and platform the solid south without the cost of a cent. All they would have to do would be to buy two or three northern states. Support ing the republican party, they have to buy a great many northern states and it costs them very many millions, Therefore it is very much cheaper for them to buy up the control of the democratic organization. That is what they are now. doing, and from the success that they have had, it be gins to loojt as if they would succeed. If they do succeed there, will be a division in the democratic ranks. There arc hundreds of thousands of democrats in the north and some in the south who will never affiliate with a Cleveland democratic party. What will such democrats do? ! The silver republicans have dropped their organization (they are all in the north) and joined the democratic par ty. They cannot take their voters into the democratic party if the Cleveland wing gets control of it. What will they do? In Colorado it seems that the pop ulists have resolved to go into the democratic party. If the national or ganization gets into the hands of tho plutocrats they will not stay there. What will they do? From some things that have appeared . in the Colorado papers some of the populist leaders are beginning to think that they made a mistake. . - Last, there is the populist party in the state of Nebraska with a complete organization in every county in the state. But this legislature is sure to pass a law to prevent fusion. At the next election the reform forces will all feave to vote under one party name. What are you going to do about that? What name will we vote under? Will we put two tickets in the field with two sets of candidates, one called dem ocratic and one people's party? Will we all unite under one name? What shall that name be? These are some of the things that will press for solution in the near fu ture. They- should be taken under consideration now. . . REDEEMING SILVER. The committee on coinage, weights and measures undertook to report their bill to finally destroy silver and green backs without any hearing except on one side of the case. To that Con gressman Sutherland made such strenuous objection that at last he got a hearing. In the discussion over th matter, he denied the statement of Mr. Hill that the minority of the commit tee had had an opportunity to present its views on the gold standard bill and charged that the hearing on the meas ure had been formal and the evidence was given by prominent gold standard advocates. He questioned Mr. Hill on the full meaning of the bill, to which Mr. Hill replied that under its provisions the bullion and silver dollars in the treas ury could be coined into the subsid iary coinage and that the bill would force the treasury to exchange gold coins for silver dollars, when pre sented by holders thereof. He be lieved we should have only gold and bank currency and ' silver subsidiary coin, being opposed to greenbacks, sil ver certificates, or any form of govern ment paper -money. , , Any one who has read the bill can plainlysee that the object of the meas ure is to destroy silver as money and retire the greenbacks. Then the sil ver now in circulation will be sold a bullion and all . the paper money will be issued by the national banks, creat ing a financial despotism such as the world never before suffered under. State banks would be a hundred times better, for state bankers would get only one rate of interest, while these national bankers will get Interest on the money invested in bonds and again on the same money when issued from the" banks. This bill of course makes a new issue of. bonds necessary and an immense increase in the national debt. If silver dollars are sold as bullion, bonds will have to be issued , to cover the difference between the : value of silver dollars as standard money and the price of silver bullion." At th present, time that difference would amount to - about $300,000,000, and would make at least the issue of that amount of bonds necessary. Before 3uch a policy could be carried out it would be. very much more. The throw ing of 600,000,000 silver dollars on thi market as bullion would depress the price of bullion to no man knows where. On last Friday, nine days after The Independent had fully informed it3 readers all about the Hill and other bills introduced to redeem silver dol lars and sell the silver for bullion, tho three great dallies of the state printed the very first news about it. That is doing better than usual. They are us ually from five months to five years behind this paper in the news they furnish that is of importance to the reople. Their mission seems to be to keep track of the divorce trials, kidnapping games, and scandals in high life. When it comes to real news that the people are interested in and which affects, their well-being, tbe dailies are days, months and some times years behind this live weekly. The moral to this little tale is that if you wantthe news that affects your present well-being and future welfare you must subscribe for 3Che Indepen dent. ; Free speech has not been entirely suppressed in the Chicago university The proof of the fact is that a thesis discussing "The Assymptotic Evalua tlon of certain Toticut sums wa3 not suppressed. ' " DEMOCRATIC EDITORS. "Democratic editors," said a demo crat whose name is familiar to every citizen in this state and many other states, "there are no democratic edi tors. Not one. They are simply re porters." A That is. getting to be the general opinion of all the thinking men in the democratic party and they are crying out against it. When they take a democratic paper they want to find something in.it besides the scan dals and personalities of the whole world. They expect an intelligent dis cussion of fundamental principles and current events. But such things are not to be found in any democratic pa per these days. The editors all seem to have laid down, given up, thrown up the sponge and retired-to" their corners to recuperate. There lies on the edi torial table three democratic dailie3. One published in New .York, one in Chicago and one in this state. What do they discuss in their editorial col umns? ' The leading editorials in one are entitled: "The Superior American Woman,". "A Pretty Wife Not for Locking Up." "The Patterson Verdict," Queen. Victoria's Death," "The Queen's Private Fortune" and one en titled "More Futile Fallacy." which denounces fusion and closes with these words: "Not the futile coalescence of ineffectual fragments, but repentance, regret and a return to true democratic principles will rehabilitate the party." In this democratic paper we find four editorials about women, one a foreign woman, and one written in the interest of republican principles and policies. t . In another great democratic daily there are but two editorials with these headings, 'Traction Profits," and "What of the Castellanes?" This democratic editor seems to think that the fortunes of a French count are cf more importance to the American peo ple than the bonding of the people of this country- In hundreds of millions of dollars to the Rockefeller national bank ring.; In the other democratic paper the editorials are entitled: "Secretary Utt's Report." "A Widespread Ail ment," "The Hour of the Queen's Death," and "Governor Lafe." ' : No wonder that' this old democrat was wrathy and declared that there were no democratic" editors apthing. but reporters." NORMAL SCHOOLS. That there is a necessity for an ex tension of normal school facilities in this state ho one. will question. Thre bills have been introduced in the leg islature bearing on this": question: One is ' to increase the ' facilities for the school at Peru, another for the build ing of a school at Central City and a third for the purchase of the Western Normal situated in the suburbs of Liu coin. This last bill is especially mer itorious. There is there an immense modern building, constructed especial ly for school purposes, a private in stitution completed just as the hard times came on' in 1893. " It has been abandoned and it and the commodious grounds . can be purchased for less than 50 cents on the dollar of the cost. A school located there would hav-3 exceeding great advantages over any place in the state. The students would come under the educational influence of the great university, wnose librar ies, laboratories and museums would be available for their use. They would have an opportunity to come In con tact with the distinguished men con nected with the university and those who come here'to. deliver special lec tures and addresses, ? such as at com mencement time and during the win- ter months. These privileges would be an advantage not to be secured elsewhere.. The, building offered is a noble structure and all ready for oc cupation. It i& connected with the city by street car tracks. --All .things con sidered, ..the purchase of the building, which, is modern and Complete, would result ; in the saving of many thou sands of. dollars: to- the taxpayers, of the state"over any proposition to build a new building at the increased price of structural material now prevailing. Two ladies came personally to The Independent and one hag written a let ter complaining of the vulgarity ex hibited - by - the Nebraska legislature. On one occasion, she wrote,, "it was perfectly shameful. Some ladies who were so seated that they could get away without attracting attention left the hall. Others sat it out, but will not be seen there again." The editor of The Independent paid the house a visit the other day, and while here was no vulgarity, there was about as much dignity about -its proceedings as one would expect in a convention of high school girls assembled to discuss what sort of gowns they, should wear on graduation day. When one man would make a remark, all the . rest would giggle. A fusion legislature always has some . decency and: dignity about it. Many ladles always attended the sessions and there was-never any thing said or done that would offend them. . Now that 'Nebraska is "re deemed" it is- different. ' Patronize our advertisers. . In all the pomp, pageants and gorg eous splendors, in which the British are indulging on account of the death of the queen, there are some things that are so silly that even' brutalized working men of the East End cannot fail to -be disgusted with them. , The queen's funeral is to be the occasion of the largest naval and military display ever seen in the kingdom. - The body of the dead queen is to be. hauled through the streets on kn". artillery caisson. . The other day his. inost-gracious Imperial majesty, , Edward VI I., was pleased to bestow .upon Ms nephew, the Emperor of Germany, the title of field marshal ' In the British army. Then Lord Salisbury, prime minister, and Lord Roberts; commander-in-chief of the British army, wrot? notes to his most gracious and augu -vt imperial majesty, the Emperor oi Ger many, informing him of that fact. Tin flattery and obsequiousness of thes notes are simply disgusting. ., , , The complete surrender of the re publican party to the Standard Oil crowd was publicly announced when Attorney General Sheets of the state. of Ohio; walked. Into the supreme court of that state the other day and asked the court to finally dismiss all. the cases brought by t Former Attorney General Monnett against the Standard Oil company. The request was granted and the last Vfisrie of Mnnnetr's, rros-H ecutions were wiped off the ' docket! Sheets Is how making himself popular -with. the preachers, by appearing' to be very active in the suppression of prize fighting. Soon he will vbe lauded tu the skies by every religious Journal in the state." It "is by little schemes, like that that the trusts and plutocrats arc able to rob the people of millions while the men who aid them in doing it are held up as shining examples of. pur ity and uprightness. . The following is President McKin ley's telegram of condolence upon th? death of the Queen: " "His majesty, the King,' Osborne, Isle of Wight: I have received with profound sorrow the lamentable tid ings of the death of her majesty, the queenj , Allow me, sir, to offer my Bin cere sympathy and that of the Ameri can people in your personal bereae ment, and in the loss Great Britain has suffered In the death of Its ven erable and illustrious sovereign, whose noble life and. beneficent V . influenc ? have promoted1 the peace and won th'? affections of the world. - J - "WILLIAM M'KINLEY." The phrase, "promoted, peace," iXqvh not seem exactly apropos icoming from a man engaged In the creation of a great standing army and waging war upon a helpless people in the far oft Islands of the', sea. ,' ' ' The. Independent wishes to. warn Its readers against the probability of be ing swindled by canvassers for Mr. Bryan's paper. Mr. Bryan employs no ' canvassers or agents of any sort. Any man making such a claim is V fraud. If you want. The Commoner send the money to the Nebraska Inde pendent Publishing Co. You will not only get Mr. Bryan's paper, but you will get three months' subscription to the Nebraska Independent free. The price of The Commoner is one dollar. The Commoner will be sent ; to all subscribers for one year and The In dependent for three months . for one dollar when ordered through this of fice. cust, R. Mulberr: Mulberry B. Eider and Oartga Hedfre; low prl (re Jukii Nursery, Box 8tt Falrtmry; Meb, Cattlpa, Co- CIDMED'C CDicun CWCCD rccn Mill mVllL,n J l tlL,iU M LU1 1 LiltfV Uli UU Grinds' ear corn, shelled corn," oate, "and all kind of small grain. Steel ballbearings. Hat improved double cob or ear- crusher, and im proved grinding- rin making-it superior to any other made. Adjustable force feed friad injj, to any degree of hueness. A. fast and ra pid grinder. Light running, substantial, durable. ana large capacity, largest ana best . swtep mill made. No clogging. - Burrs 30 inches ia diameter. Burrs-self-sharpening. Weight of mm oau pounus. .. In thia mill nr. nff. , V A . 1 'ders of the country the only sweep mill that will handle ear corn and all kinds of small gram equally well. '. Write for full particulars; - - - - PRICE ONLY $23.75. FARMERS SUPPLY ASSOCIATION 128-1 30. 13:; ' 13th. fet.. Lincoln, br., . ' ' Mention The Independent. Feed Cooker uUAKANTEED IN EVERYTHING IT WILLcook a barrel of feed in twenty minutes whole grain in 40 minutes. IT WILL beat water for butchering, thaw ice out of tank and warm the water. ITS US; will keep the brood sows in good condi tion, keep sboats thrifty and makes aiiuK nsea?j,aw to iu month ai they usually get In 10 to ,4 jnonths. ITS USE is profltable--it pays for itself in a fewOQO fifl months Special price to introduce. .vlOtUU -Write for full particulars. FARMERS SUPPLY ASSOCIATION -128-130-1354 N. 13th SU Lincoln, Nebr. Mention The Independent. UEALTtlY TREES. Kffgf 'g: I 3 lo 4 tt., fci; cherry, a to 3 it., MTfreen tone o.r h ! K2i Concord trraoe. wz bet ion. lorn xh i , -jr-s?