4 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. Zht Uibraska Independent Zlat$!ar CtbrJskM rgrS5.fi tlDC COKE OTW AND N STS rrLXintx Etui Thcmdt XI. OO P? Y? J7 ADVANCE t t fcrasU4 bjf ifcm- Tkf fratjily tWt rit 4Jri left wit Om, u4 sfeaCTiW fails to Alr all (ttUtiMi. u4 a" drafta, miy ar. , paysW t C nthrssha Imdeptndent, Lincoln, feb. Amctm Mlrctiae will ate to ao rs4. Tb Asphalt trut. tne Sugar trust, Oly tnexa Loth McKlnley xnnit. A Ksser maa tata be Coszsaads tne nary, sails tne sea. 3ak our tariff, demands our awe. Ties for the trtista let all hurrah! The constitution xsakera la Cuba fcsva lea cWseiy following the exam ple of tb United State and that Is the rea oa that they did not wish to ub mit ittir eonatltutioa for approval to tort I fix nation-. The corrugated sriae sheds and mad bats cf the asphalt company were al! tasdics uaharxrd at lan accounts a4 a aquadroa of the United States maTy was tallies around the coasts of Venezuela under the command of a trust attorney. Hurrah for the trusts! The State Hypocrite and Thunder maker Harison would do well to read th report cf the committee on sol diers" homes appointed by this repub lican legislator which reports that the Mllford home -has been well man aged. gereral Chicago ministers have dis covered that partisan Insanity Is very prevalent la that city, so there were many sermons preached by them last Sunday drawln attention to the fact. if they had been readers cf The Inde-' pendent they wou?d har known all about that d!tae lone go and might have done eotnethlne to prevent It be contzjs epidemic. The blue Jackets of the United States r.avy, whose glory is written upon er ery p cf American hlitory. hav now vLt fLe. administration of 31c Klnley become the Janlssari of the Asphalt trust. To be i, trust ir.g1.t Is greater than feeing: a, kiss;. His hired man can sail around in an American war vessel vhkn is an honor denied to any other man Hurrah for the trust! , Cold standard England has had to rati oa bimetallic France to pull her mt of the danger of bankruptcy again. Tfc Brttin whs nee! lor relies ujim Frnc to Coat mnth of tie new war loan. It will be placed at 7 per cent vt Its face value; la other words, gole standard .XTn;IIh paper is 3 per cent Hcoust in bimetallic France. VVfctrs 2s "ts beat money now? President McKlnley said that it was cur plain duty to give Porto Rico free trfcde with th United States. He said that we must see to it that free Cuba Is a reality.- What did be do? He s!gne4 a b:ll imposing a tariff on Porto It J co and be is now sending or ders to the Cuban constitutional con vertioo to the effect that it roust ac kbowd:e the sovereignty of the United State. These statements no man denies, but McKlnley is a great, holy, truthful, moral, upright and godly man. Any man who says dif ferent la a traitor. Tterev was f3l3.2S2.04 Internal rev enue collected la Kansas in the year easing June SO. IKMJ. Se annual re port commissioner of Internal revenue, paxe li.I And the most of this from plates that Carrie Nstlon seeks to de molish with her little hatchet. If the great, upright McKlnley treats the rxmstitatloa and laws of Kansas with titter contempt. Is It any wonder that Mrs. Nation finds a few thousand of his follower doing the same thing In that state? They sell liquor, after Mc Klnley has gives them a government license to do ia direct violation of the law and eornitution of the state. Is nar!y every civilized govern ment rational Irrigation Is aa acroiu piisbed fact, Just as government tele rrapha and railroads are. For oce. The Independent If very tired pf thi Urging along at the tail end of civili sation. It would have the United Stat es fctep to the front and take the lead. bnt the millionaires and plutocrat went let os a lonx as they control the government-' When they want to copy everything evil n the govern ments of the old world, they call them -the most enlightened nations. When pop propose to adopt rome of the rseszare that these governments have proved to be cf great value to the peo p! by Ions; experience, then they are tb ete xsossrchles of the east." TAXES AND CIIABITY. The article in last week's Indepen dent entitled a "Taxpayers Conven tion. has attracted a great deal of no tice. Several letters have been re ceived inquiring about it and it has been made the subject of comment in some dallies. The facts about the Very large amount of taxation for charitable, purpose are new to most. taxpayers. They were very much understated in the article referred to. although a great many think that they must have been, overestimated. ; Our courts are sup ported by taxation and the fact was not mentioned that", a ; considerable amount of the expenses of courts are caused by the dependent classes. It Is a fact "beyond contradiction that very much more than one half of the money raised by taxation goes to tne support of the dependent classes when every thing is taken into consideration, and that these classes increase In a far greater ratio than the'population. If something is not done to remedy this evil the producing class will be over whelmed It will be Impossible for its members to support themselves and so large a class of dependents. Thl3 fact has been recognized by the scholars and original Investigators connected with our universities, and from the study of the subject In a scientific way. has grown up the new science called "sociology. Many of the great uni versities have departments for the study of this subject. Jn some there are three or four professors, in others only one or two. The scientists engaged in this work are very greatly hampered. The truths that they discover they are not free to teach or make public Plutocracy is afraid of them. They are denounced as cranks, fanatics and disturbers. In their study to discover the cause of the increase of pauperism they have established some facts that are very distasteful to the "dependents'" of the upper classes. They do not want these scientific truths to become common knowledge. They do everything in their power to suppress the truth. A most disgraceful scene of that kind oc curred in the board of regents of the Nebraska university where the two re publican regents put up' a fight against the teaching of sociology by the world wide master of the science. They'cailed hrra a rdisturber."' The object of the professors of ' eo- ciology Is to gain anf accurate knowl edge of the laws and facts producing the conditions which exist in, society, When one of these professors ' after long years ot Investigation has dis covered what he believes to te the cause of the increase of pauperism, and sv remedy, he should be as free to-make public his discoveries as the man who by ion years of study has. discovered something new in chemistry.1, it Lis conclusions are not correct, their fals ity should be shown. To ostrasize him, to drive him from the university, to ridicule him, to "denounce him as a' "disturber, to drive him into silence and obscurity is adopting the same plan used In the dark ages to silence Galileo when he announced the doc trine that the earth revolved and the sun stood still. Galileo was a "dis turber. The men who silenced him, Imprisoned him and made him recant a scientific truth, were of the very same class as these two republican re gents. The sociologist looks upon true charity as being a system that would make' these dependent classes self-sup porting that would remove the bur den of nearly half the' taxation now placed upon those who produce. They would find the causes of poverty, in sanity and crime and as far as possible remove them. A department of sociol ogy In a university. In the present state of society, is of more importance to the tax paying citizen than any other department, and the effort to strength en it in the Nebraska university meets with the most hearty approval of The Independent. t KrPlBLICAN ANARCHISTS. The Independent has said nothing about the performances'of Mrs. Carrie Nation, deeming her a perfectly honest- woman of good Impulses, but suffer ing from delusions that her friends. In stead of encouraging, should have en deavored to suppress. All persons who believe that God speaks directly to them In dreams or In an audible voice rrc tn lhat PXtnt Inne- Ir- Kansas the republican party, through the po lice form of the state, has agreed to the violation of the law for a certain I pr cent of the profits. It is the same sort of business that the police force in f every large city is engaged In." The police permit crime and protect crim- inrls for the money they get out of it. upneht citizen can agree to any 'such thing. The police are greater I T-Tn4tal thin th mpn tt V; n artnallv commit the crimes. But Carrie Na tion's way will only make matters worse. If she smashes saloons, those who differ with her will retaliate in j kind. In one instance a church has ben demolished with hatchets. In another a man who stol'e a small sum from a saloon was sentenced tc forty years Imprisonment at hard labor Ech and all of these acts are a viola- lion of constitutional law. Especially so is this extreme Imprisonment In dl-' rect-violation of the eighth, amend, racnt to the constitution which pro vides that no excessive fines shall be imposed nor cruel and unusual punish ments Inflicted. ,The republican leaders in Kansas who so loudly accused the, populists of oe ing anarchists have introduced an archy into the state. There is but one way to preserve order and that is to enforce the laws. If one class is al lowed to violate them upon the pay ment of . a sum of money, respect and obWience to all law will soon disap pear. Follow Grant's advice. The best way to jget rid of a bad law is to en force it. : If a majority of the people of Kansas are in-favor of prohibition, then prohibition should be enforced until they change their , minds. There is no other way to maintain a govern ment of law or to maintain order. The republican leaders of Kansas are ar- archists. If a majority of the people of that state want" that sort of: thing, then it must be endured.- If they do not, let them be voted out of office. ' THE CITY "YOKEL. 3 The city dailies take great pleasure in recording any little acts of "the country yokel" who happens to show a want of knowledge of city ways. But for genuine "greenness commend us the dweller In the city. The other day this writer saw a woman deposit a letter in a waste paper receptical which she thought was a letter box. If some of these city people go to the country, they show the most aston ishing ignorance of the commonest things. Country people, being better bread, do not report it to the i papers and avoid remarks that would hurt the feelings of the city visitor. In the city, the wajit of good breeding sends the person who sees any little lack of knowledge of city ways displayed by one from the country, hastening to a reporter to tell the story. The re porter and the city editor, both being without the knowledge of what gen teel deportment really is, forthwith send It forth in the columns of the paper. It would be only a poetic sort of justice if the editors of some of the country weeklies should keep a watch on, city folk visiting the country and report some of- their doings. This writer once asked some 600 pupils of the grammar m grade in the Boston schools, from the flesh of what animal mutton was obtained and only about a dozen could tell. More than one-half of the residents of Lincoln" could not tell whether, a field of growing grain was wheat or oats or rye until after it was headed out and a good many of them could not tell then. There are more points of distinction between them than between, a letter bpx and a waste paner box. Hundreds of erown up children in the cities do not know where milk comes from. One girl twelve years old was sent to the coun try for her health and especially that she might get plenty of good fresh milk. After the first day she absolutely refused to touch milk. Her father be ing cent for. she explained to him that the reason that she did not was be cause she saw the hired man squeez ing the milk that they put on vhe table out of an old cow. They did not get it out of a nice glass bottle like they did in the city. The city child breathes in egotism from the day of its birth. All the as sociations of schools has a tendency to make them feel that' they are su perior to. the ignorant people of the country. It would be a good thing if city teachers would once In a while ask a question of their classes like this one: "What would become of the city its lawyers, its doctors, its teach ers, its merchants and its laborers if the farmers failed to raise a crop for two years in succession?" A SCANDALOUS FALSEHOOD. In another column there is printed a statement in the Chicago Record of the most ' disgraceful sort concerning Senator Allen. The readers cf The Independent know what it thinks of the veracity of the writer of that ex tract, but statements of the same sort, though not so extended, have been no ticed in other papers. It is about time that some sort of denial was made of these statements if they are malicious falsehoods. If Senator Allen has not the time to attend to such matters, there are five private secretaries in Washington to fusion members of con gress, each drawing $100 a month, and certainly some one of them could find time to write a short letter to some fusion paper in the state giving the facts about the matter. Senator Allen Is being voted for to succeed himself every day the legislature is in session and the republican members go around repeating these undenied stories. The populists have no way of refuting them. That story of W. E. Curtis is simply to the effect that Allen was sleepy drunk upon a very Important occasion, that the republicans saw to It that he was placed in a very important and conspicuous place so that his con I'dition could be observed by all. That a sergeant-at-arms and a page were employed ' to draw attention to the fact. It Is a most . disgraceful thing from beginning to end.. If there is not enough energy in any populist at 'Washington to pay attention to such a scandalous charge, we might as well quit business. : ; THE TRUST GOES TO WAS The sugar trust is not the only trust that can knock the president and con gress about, make them get up and hustle, change their policies and eat their own words. The Asphalt trust is a little trust in comparison with some of the others, but it seems to be able to command the navy, use it to trans fer its attorneys from one port to an other and threaten a friendly nation in a very4serious manner; The Asphalt trust was able to make a bigger dis play of naval force off the chief port of a nation that it had difficulty with than the United States ever made be fore. ' It ordered three warships to go to the port Caracas, "Venezuela, and they went. One of them carried the at torney of the company, which is con trary io the specific laws governing the navy. But when a trust issues au order, Jaw never stands . in , the way. The people of Venezuela were , aston ished beyond measure when they saw this hostile fleet. They have been al most worshippers of the United, States. Pictures and statues of "Washington are to be everywhere seen In Vene zuela. When this country stepped in and demanded arbitration at the time that England was trying to slice off a portion of their territory, they grew to be more enthusiastic admirers of the United States than ever. When the warships appeared they were as tounded. They had not heard that the trusts had taken control of this gov ernment and could scarcely believe their eyes. The Asphalt trust claimed that the Venezuelan government was about to violate a contract made about twenty-five years ago. The trust did not want to go to law and have the matter settled in the courts and so it just ordered three American warships to make a display off the coast and set tle the matter by force,, . it proceeded to do it without any-delay; It is no use to talk to a trust about interna tional law, ethics or rights. Whenever it wants a thing, it, just takes it, for it has the American army, navy, presi dent and congress all subject to its orders. If it wants, to make war it proceeds to do so. r MAlCBTWAIN A LUNATIC The Brooklyn Eagle carries the re publican plan of not, indulging in de fense of its new found policies or at tempting to support them by argu ment to- the most,; extreme point. In a criticism upon Mark Twain's article in the North American review, it says: "If he or any one in sympathy with him asks why he is not replied to, the answer is that ro nation can, .with respect for itself, insist it has not lost its virtue, merely because a man. de li berately declares.. that degradation is its condition and fts choice." Mark, Hanna" said, so . it was. re ported in the newspapers, at the be ginning of the last campaign: "We carried the election of 1896 without making an argument and we will car ry this election in the same way." The Brooklyn Eagle boldly 1 adopts that plan, and the other, which has proved so efficatious, namely, if you can't re ply to a man's arguments,- absolutely ignore him, never let his name appear in the news or the discussions of the day, call him a lunatic if he must be mentioned. That plan is indorsed in reference to Mark Twain in the some what Involved and cumbersome sen tences closing a column of insulting criticism. Read it and then ponder on the ways of plutocratic editors. The Eagle says: : 3 - i a t a i it M l i Jtie snouia amoK ;. as ,weu oi uis country as it would think of him. It does not deserve his condemnation. It does not justify his despair. . If it has eve? wronged him, the offense or injury has been the well intended one of over-praise. Of that the effect on him should not be, what some quite gravely fear it may. have been a cere bral tunlef action possibly , calling for an experimental period, of judicious and benign neglect, In lively hope of a salutary restoration : to civic health That statement, stripped of redund ant verbiage, is an accusation that Mark Twain has a tumor, on his brain that has resulted in lunacy, and his name should never hereafter be men tioned in public. That is the treat ment accorded to every man of brains and influence in the whole United Stat es, whoever has had the temerity to object to the rule of money or stood up for the rights of man. Mark Twain cannot escape the fate of all the oth ers. He is a lunatic, not a silver luna tic, but an anti-imperialist lunatic Drive him into obscurity. J ANARCHY AT WASHINGTON. When a set of men less than a dozen In number can make laws for this gov ernment and put them on the statute books without having been passed by either house of congress Unmounts to anarchy. That Is just what has been done- at Washington during the last week. The army bill was enacted and as there were amendments making the bill uifterent when it passed the senate, a conference committee was appointed. The result of the conference was re porteu to the house and senate and each house adopted It, But after the bill was signed by the president it was discovered that It had been changed in such a manner as to force the pres ident to appoint certain sons of con gressmen to very high and lucrative life positions in tha regular army. There was an Investigation jnade. At first the enrolling and engrossing clerks were charged with changing the bill, but they had documentary evi dence to prove that they were Inno cent. It was finally traced to mem bers of . the conference committee. These gentlemen then boldly acknowl edged tfyat they had changed the bin without reporting what they nad done to either" house. They gave as their excuse that certain members of the house threatened to obstruct the pass age of the bill If their sons were not provided .for ln that way, so: the, mem bers of f the committee, deliberately committed forgery and violated their oaths ; of office" and now '"acknbw ledge that they aid. . ' . ':..: Everyj one of these men should be prosecuted and sent to the penitentiary for ten' ; years rat hard labor. This .Is,, corrupting, .government y at 1 its very foundation.. That is what was done in. 1873 when silver was demonetized. Ev ery member of congress "who lets this thing pass without a protest, if he has the opportunity to make one on the floor of the house, is particeps crim- inis in the whole plot. Such a crime ran$s next to murder. It is far more serious than theft or assault.' The In dependent here and . now enters its most emphatic pfbtest against letting these congressmen escape punishment. ' , SUGAR TRUST RULE. Who rules this country? Does con gress or the president? The experience of the .last year, or so would, seem to demonstrate that it is the sugar trust. More than once it has proved itself more powerful than the president or congress. , The president declared it was our plain duty to grant Porto Rico free trade. The ways and means com mittee of the house prepared a bill to carry out the president's recommenda tion. Then the sugar trust appeared at Washington and knocked them both clear out of the ring in the first round. The ways.andr means committee pre pared a new bill taxing Porto Rico. The president ate his own words and used all the power of his office to force the new: bill through. The other day the sugar trust ap peared in Washington again and de manded that the secretary of the treas ury put an additional tax of one cent a pound on Russian sugar. It was done. The fact that Russia would retaliate was wel 1 known,-, but Gage knew that he must tobey the order, of - the: sugar trust and 'Toe 'did not hesitate over ths matter.' ,; ' "" '. '"; h ' ' "' ':, ' .The. result is certain to be most disastrous.- Russia in retaliation has put prohibitory tariffs on nearly every thing that we have been shipping, to that; country. England! and Germany will rush in and secure a, permanent trade. - Gage knew all that before he put the additional tariff on the Russian sugar, but he dare not disobey "the or der of the sugar trust. Neither will congress. Not a word will be said ty a member of the dominant party about it. They dare not! Too many republi can senators and representatives have been dealing in sugar stock and the trust holds enough testimony to damn them all. They will all keep mum and for the very same reasons, so will the president. Hanna said during the campaign that the republican party would take care of the trusts, but the sugar trust .seems perfectly able to take care of .itself. Nebraska's - new republican deputy bank commissioner Jias made his first report' concerning the condition of the state banks. He declares - that the banks are in a most flourishing condi tion. When we loolc at the figures in his report we find that the banks owe $35,684,219.08 and have only $2,080 125.23 of cash on hand to meet their liabilities. :" That s a very' flourishing condition for. the., banks if their de positors do not take a notion in their heads some day that they want fur or five million dollars of the something oyer $25,000,000 that they have de posited. If such a condition shoul-i arise, these "flourishing banks would all go Into a receiver's hands within twenty-four hours. A short, crop or any one of a dozen other things might bring such a condition about. An Englishman calls attention to the fact that Americans seem to nave a greater admiration for hereditary titles than the British. He said that he hard ly met a man when' visiting this coun try who did not have some sort of decoration on, of which they seemed to be very proud. They were Sons of Veterans, Knights of Pythiasor some thing of. the sort, and the women were just as badly infatuated with the idea, for they were Daughters of the Revolu tion or some other such society whose decoration they wore with a great deal ot pride. While Englishmen only put on their decorations at public furca tions, the Americans were so proud of theirs that they wore them r all the time. That Englishman, like a good many others of his kind, got his im pressions from the flunkies of the east. He should have come out west. There he would have met the virile manhod of the nation men and women 'who did not attempt to thrust themselves forward because their far-off ancestors had done something of note,- while they, themselves were" mere nonenti ties. ' ; . ' ' REPUBLICAN TAXXTION. The 'statement of Congressman Cochran lis so astonishing that a good many different, persons have gone .to. work to see. if. it was a fact that this government was expending; more money than Abraham Lincoln did when he had a . million men on the army list and a thousand warships at sea to provide for. They.haye all been forced to accept the truth of the state ment.' One editorof a. great dally .was forced to say in regard. tQthis matter max ine present expenditures were. even greater than whehwe were fight-. ing tne. greatest war of history. ie I sums it up as follows: . "The. comparison, seems almost, in credible", and yet a reference to the fig ures Involved shows a justification for the assertion. The expenses of the federal, government in the fiscal .year 1863-64 , approximated ... ,$1,245,000,000,. and for the fiscal year 1864-65 $1,100 000.000.1 During'' this period, however the value of gold fluctuated from 130 f o 260, so that the actual value of the amount expended in the two years, re duced to a commdn standard with our present"- currency, " was hardly ' abova half the sums .stated, or, say $1,250;- 000,000-. in gold. : Theappropriations of the two sessions of the present con gress are calculated to be almost $1,- 500,000,000 (It will be more than that Edi Ind.) or considerably above that of the-years which saw the end of the. civil war." V . That is to say, that it takes more of the products of . labor, A more wheat, corn and cotton, , to pay the expenses of t the government under-McKinley than it did under Lincoln when Lin coln had a million of enlisted men to pay and a thousand warships on the sea" to supply, their men to pay and war material to provide. What do the people of the United States propose to do about this? . Nothing at all. They are prohibited from knowing that such a state of. affairs exists, The great subsidized dailies will - say nothing about it. If an intelligent populist in forms any of them .of the fact, they will simply refuse to believe it. They wiir continue to vote, a ticket called "republican" even if taxation should again be doubled. - . . - : PROGRESS IN EDUCATION. -'The Independent has never been able to see, and. no pop has ever been able .; to find out why an education that bes& fits the pupil to become a normal, self supporting and energetic citizen was not the :.best .education. - Not one?. in ten thousand who attends our common schools - or-; .universities - has any lite-' rary qualifications or ambitions. For such pupils to spend twenty years in the common ' - -schools and -,. colleges studying 'belles letters, j has always seemed to .the; writer, the ut, most, f oily, tt "the cost of. such education is-to be paid by taxation, he could not see' why the cost of an education that would make the pupil a happy, self-supporting citizen, which would not amount to half as much in money or in time, should .not be .paid in , the. same way. Whenever such .an idea has vbeen ex pressed in the presence of a peda gogue, no matter how high or how !"w in the profession he stood, he has met it with the most persistent opposition and very often Viith supreme contempt for the ignorance of the one who pro posed it. v There seems to be a change coming. Superintendent Cooley of the Chicago schools now says: "I am not opposed to classics, but I think that the in struction wtich will fit a boy for a business career comes first. I will do all I can to insure this instruction." In accordance with this new idea, a large commercial school .is planned to htlve accommodations for about, 1,000 boys. Bookkeeping, typewriting, sten ography, commercial arithmetic, com mercial, geography, etc., are to be taught. Classics of all sorts are to be barred. Boys who have graduated, from the grammar schools are to' be eligible for admission,,, and may: attend this school instead, cf attending. the regular high SChOOlS.; :.' r. ':! v .1 This school is to be part of the eem mon school sj stem of Chicago and is to be supported in the same . way. Al ready there have beek oyer ,500. more applicants than" can be accommodated. The establishment of this School seems to The Independent , to be only "good, common serse, but common, sense is the ' most uncommon : thing , in t'.is world. " Between July 1 and December . 31, 1900, American manufactures of Iron and steel amounting In value to 1S, 633,480 were sent abroad-and profit ably sold In foreign markets. To make these sales ourv steel manufactures had to underbid the manufactures of tbe nations to which it as shipped. They bad to pay transportation to the na tions to which it was ehippeti. : They had to pay transportation for thou sands of miles, and to eut or Germany, France and . Russia they had to pay. high tariff duties, They eould pay this transportation and these duties and still undersell the manufacturers there. Why should these seel men have a tariff of . nearly eight dollars a ton to protect them from the pauper made 6teel of Europe? There Is but one an swer. It Is to enable them, to charge American eitlf ens eight dollars a ton more for their goods than a fair, hon est priee. That is the reason end the qnjy reasoB. ' "v ! " "'-: - ' Alfalfa Seed. -. Grown in 1900 in the heart of: the al- - falfa country, clean and free, from Rtfs sian thistle and other tou seed. Sat isfaction "guaranteed and prices reason able. Samples - sent. ; Low "prices on -carload lots.- ; GEO; B. YOUNG. Long Island, Kas,, v. . .-. Potatoes. , Senj out to be sprouted,, on. iiiAitJS. No experience required. ' Directions ; tor . sprouting JFREE with- orderf -J" . . . ... , . -T. J.. SKINNER, Columbus?,. Kas. :" Farlv lava Snrinor Wheat ' "New variety ' matures four to ten days earlier' than other varieties and yields larger Tested at the Iowa agri cultural college, on the Wallace farms. and, by others with. aboye.resuits. un doubtedly the best wheat ontthe mar- net. Heed for sale. PRICE, $1:00 PER' BUSHEL. ' . Cash .with .order. Lincoln s Oats, 50s jer busheL, Write at once, as the sup ply will not last long. ; JD. FVMbRtON, Union, Nbe. MAMMOTH TVHITE ARTIGHpKE SED : Fronj JO years' .experience. In rais ing them In Nebraska I find them due m . - ..... !" .i lL..1iLI,:t oi tne surest crops ana-neaiuueM. hog foods one can raise; as -well as the-, cheapest. -The hogs do the harvesting. For particulars and prices address, GEO. A. ARNOLD, Haydon. .Phelpa County, Neb. 1 v' ' ALFALFA SEED FOR SALE. Re-cleaned eeed, crop of 1900. 'Sample sent on request. Prices $5.25 per bu. ; in lots of 5 or 10 bu. or more $5 per bu., f. o. b. cars. Sacks f ree, Chab.Bushukli., Stamford, Harlan Co.. Neb. ONE OF MANY TESTIMONIALS. MrChas. Bushnell. Dear Sir TTtie Alfalfa seed I ordered from you L received all right, and lam pleased with your prompt shipment. The seed is as you represented it. lam yours truly, Nels Salesmen taa ..-i ..iv,-.ie, permanent fositioa, experience unnecessary ; pay weekly. western r ui aerjr (Jo., liank Eiag., Lawrence. Kans. . ; ,, -. TREES and PLANTS west. Large supply SMAIX F11U1T8.. Two Million Strawberry Plants 50 Best Sorts. Also Raspberry and Blackberry Plants at whole sale prices. Catalogue FREE. NORTH BEND NURSERIES, NORTH BEND. DODGE COUNTY, NEBR. . UEfiLTilY TREES. II 3 to 4 It., cherry, a to 8 ft., 3 HOME MOWN, trr from dlsAtive. v pay f relKht.Apple, 30: freestone uarh. $2( Concord (rrupe, (3 per 100. VM0 Ash, CI; Catilpa, l.o curt, R. Mulbarry B. Elder and Osage Hedge; low prices. Catalog free. Jansen Nursery, Box Falrbury, Neb. . GAGE COUNTY NURSERIES OFFER AT VERY REASONABLE PRICES . ; 20,000 Cherry Trees, . -50,000 Apple Tress, 30,000 Peach Trees, ' '' Or a pes and small fruits, evergreen and fores tree seedlings Write for price list. ' Address : Jl A: GAG Beatrice, Neb. Bee-Keeper's Supplies uu vau save ' iiciftui uy uiuciiiia from us. A large supply always ou hand, -and a trial will convince you thai tt'hey are cheapest arid, best. Many improvements. Send !'for . our' free J catalogue. Address, - . . LEAHY MFG. CO., 1730 So. . 13th St., ' Omaha, Neb. , ..... ,. Black Locust, Honey Locust and Cat i ; alpa Fence Posts. - ; I have for sale 20,000 Black ; Locust, Honey Locust and Catalpa fence posts. Catalpa guaranteed to be as durable as Red Cedar. Eight feet long, round posts, ranging in diameter from 3 to 8 inches. . ' ItOBT, W. FURNAS. Brownyille, Neb. IIELOIAK HARES Thoroughbred and pedigreed. Good color and shape." Stock from the best blood lines, including Champion Fash oda (imported), Lord Banbury, Lord Britain, Yucon, Nonpareil and others. Some good breeding does for sale. Also young bucks and does old enough to breed by Royal Fashoda, score 96, son of Ch- Fashoda and dam by Lord Britain. Prices low for the quality. ROYAL RABBITRY, Holdrege, Neb. MONEY IN BEES Send for onr 40 Pace Catalogue, Fre. Tells you how to care for bees Ten styles of hires and all bind a rf Kaa tnnnliki of the 'latest improve ments. Can furnish Ital ian stock of bees and queens. Address. JOHN NEBEL & SO High Ulll, Mo, Estab. LONE STAB APIARIES 1885. Price of queens from imported mothers: Tested...... 1 $1..V) 6 $8.00 12 $15.00 Untested. . 1 .75 .6- 4.25 v 12 8.00 tuoiuen Bams price.) oeieci tested, eiinnr race $2.50. O. F. DAVIDSON, Fartiew, wilsos co. tf.i. INCUBATORS and BROODERS .. From $4.00 up.". Frst-class in every re spect, end fully guaranteed. Large Cata logue freev,. w, . r. ....... . The MonitortCo. Box M, Mood us, Conn. hides: '. "f " S. J. DOBSON & CoM ' Successors to Dobson & Landffren, . , ' Dealers in RIDES, FURS, TALLOW AND WOOL ; yr1; . 020-R St., LINCOLN, NEB. We want anything- in our line large or small lots.. M"e pay the highest market price. POULTRY AN l BELGIAN HAKES. Black Langahan and Barred Rock, males and females, at reasonable prices for good stock. Srders for egga booked now. Fine' pedigreed ;lgian does for sale. Q. M. WHITFORD. .Arlington, Keb. HOLLYHOCK POULTRY FARM 56-pag-e Illustrated Poultry Catalogue. The secrets of successful noultrv ral. J Inn told in plain laognnge; all about in , f Cuba tors, brooders, poultry houses, how to naicn ana raise every Chick, what, wnen ana now to leea, lorctng bens to r lav and hundreds of valuable mihieets contained in no other catalogue. Tells of 851 van eties popular thoroughbred fowls and quoes ex tremely low prices. Send 4c in stamps for postage. Hoi yhock Poultry Fa.-m, Box 1409-. Des Moines, la. SELECT All first-claes, Sweep or Power Mills. Grind all kind of grain, for Btock feeding (or family use. Our new catalogue A- 79 free, -' Aeenta wanted. PEW mm VTOUR V H7J.ADAMJ0LIET,1Ui