February 28, 1901 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT 3 GOARRH R COLDS GRIPPE COUGHS CROUP SORE- HQARSQ THROAT NESS CfF JUSTICE CHAMBERS. OP SAMOA. Srz "I ca recommend Peraes mm em of the very test remedJet furcstsrrb. I tvammad Peruam to mil Muttertn.' BOOKER T. WASmSGTON. Of Tuskcgee, Ala., writes: "I have never taken any medicine that has im proved me as much as Pcruna. For catarrh it is certainly a blessing. 99 THE CARRIE NATION CRUSADE If ! tk Vaa 4)14 t.ry M itd a Tba a4 Tla la Tti Wwrl.l's lat 11 iatry . Tfci Crrs Nation crusade is a strutg and itrikisg iirple of the varying cwii cf ci The fact tb&t to tnuiui. ago at- vai jut a plain lGC15r uaknown outside fct-r own to-itty asd tLat uov te&U the world Is lik: aboul Lt-r a&d the Brag papers all over tic country are toting her ev ery word d aetioa, i remarkable rou;a; hst tat Is tuor remarkable tl!l it ttat all at one in- v. C. T. U. tfce ministerial associations, the law f jorr-z&x:t !-iru-s and every other kic-lrd organization Laa awakened from its long tlutsUr and gone to work iritis real akia to that of Mrs. Nation feerwlf; that apparently not sly they, tat many other people as well LaTe jolcd In a crusade against fcosaethiEg which at election time vai a;parently least la the thought of men, this is more remarkable ti!L At the preett day it 1 pro ta lie that there are very few wide open town in Kaa-- But in tlx month all this furor. m&h and clatter will be forgotten. It 1 the way we traveL In religion, in politic., in bakne it i the same. Ove extreci follows another. Along ftr-n the evatifelit and in a fw wk two-ttirda of the meanest old inter in the town are down on their hamJjotiea at the mourner' bench tell-it-x tow wicked they are. But when the I'jsner months come the wicked- M FOB HEX READ EVERY WORD. s offer CH. HOME'S wEectwc Belts 7 4i Atn ML-f. MU wto . m m ; kwT, i im WW ecim. D3. llOHKE I r-TrTf r. j ri r a a. if jmm m 1 f I f S rarrai Mmrt Trmmtlmr rJr rmti Jmaaaa Hfd TrwwMao J2. XZHmi Cmwmplmimt MmmmtuCmmplmtmlt rM u a J Xi-W 7, jm n-MfaMajM "'I JBwawa at u m iajia--lantiMtn waatnaaiUfrataMtaaMn) ! . yoa tatxata. t" o w f-rmlMiulai. " I km ne&c is resumed on the former basis. In politics the people will after they have been robbed Iocs and lustily enough to awake to the wickedness of a corrupt, boodling gang In control and cast them hence, ant in a short time they bare forgotten to support those who, have championed their cause and cleaned matters up, and the boodler is again doing business at the old stand and flourishing. In business it Is boom, collapse and panic in regular order. But to recur to Mrs. Nation we will say that she is a fanatic, at least. She believes that God is fighting her battles for her. But the great revivals and reforms at different periods of the world's history have frequently been started by just such fanatics. It is that Intensity of conviction that gives her power. She Is no doubt a woman of the best intentions, but withal not a woman that many men even of the best sort would want for a wife. But after all her success is due to the dis covery whether accidental or not, or whether by herself or some one lc. that the property of a joint in Kans-as is legally in a delicate condition. Had not this been the case, her efforts would have terminated much different ly. Hutchinson (Kas.) Gazette. TYRANNY AND OPPRESSION Hepburn Declares That Military Offlears ; ara Brought up In Thi Practice and Saldlers Isrt. - Once in a great while a hereditary tendency shows its influence amog tin' crazed followers of McKinley. Many of them cava had aactore who fecght and died for liberty aud the old love of freedom for all men suddenly breaks out in a fierce protest against thi adoption of the theories of Gejrge HI. Such an exhibition waa seen in ti-e bouse t he other t!ay when Hepburn of Iowa astonished -his fellow members by a reversion to the ideas formerly entertained by the republican party. It was like a thunder clap from a clear sky. "Why,- Mr. Hepburn asked, "was the navy department 8,000 men short of its complement? Why ha i there been 4,000 desertions from the army? Because the men were Amer'can citi zens compelled to serve under men 'schooled in tyranny and oppression ' These oncers," Mr. Hepburn said, "stood by each other, f have In my pocket a list of twenty-five vessels of the United States cast away upon the rocks or shoals by incompetent oflicers since the close of the civil war. In many cases the ship were totally de stroyed, but with a solitary exception their brother officers let i:e comman ders off with slight punishment. The severest punishment inflicted 'as sus pension of rank. Even in China pub lic upinion compels a commander who loses his ship to commit su'.cids. Here, when a ship is cast away and becomes a total loss, nothing is done. I want to see a fixed and certain punishment for hazing. Men Inured to the custom of hazing are unfit to command troops or sailors of the United States and our boys will not serve un1r rrzn reared in the unwholesome, pe-nicious ana damnable atmosphere of tyranny." If it had been a member of the mi nority who had alluded to "unwhole some, pernicious snd damnable atmos phere of tyranny" which now ruled in McKinley's armies of conquest. Cannon would have been on his feet instantly demanding that he be tried by a drum head court-martial and shot. The biologist will readily understand the cause of this outburst on the part of Hepburn, Such things frequently hap pen. It will have no permanency. Within a few days he will be found voting, when the army bill comes be fore the bouse, for the rider tacked on in the senate, to permanently estab lish "the unwholesome, pernicious and damnable atmosphere cf tyranny" In the Philippines. Poor Hepburn! If he had not been caught In the vortex of this George III. craze, his heredit ary tendency to stand by liberty might have proved strong enough to have kept his feet in the paths of the fathers. wmwm Your Firs t and THIS QOUPOU Is good tor 813.34 if sent with an order for a $2QjOo Belt not later lhanth irty days from date of this LAST 0PP0RTUH1TY t ret th VtuldKowTiad DH. liORIIE'S S20 ElooUlo Colt tor only 06.66 Paper Dec. 6. 1900 is enon Fiui im niiYX hni y 91 Vim k thi fiMd&l r 11 priced en t O d OlTer to QuicklT 1 ff.5 Ittlfft4aa - - -- . i-- . la 1 IW 'f w- a a ft, I a a-. trW ktK t b-. n! rrx. frr In thm Hi Ml bt ttata n Ixj htit von wiU bM ' mnmm wmw E.a 9 get CS. , , A " rrf jwwwlT UMlinrtiftlDr. Eoraa't !H T?-r -",t 'r -!. ("Hmmt fr with .Wry fTT!? k kM kn44, rn, Uoutsjilof v aisyr! r o o.. .o. MwTJ ' ad wUl lit i.If in doctor bait . T!2 831 13 l CCAUI3 WITH 8S. rjr.nir;7.riit5 iii u r mbc,c.o.d.. traaaf urM, lad Uwwhh it maBt lata 7Zm7ZllZZ"JZ?l" fiiy IT..7 tb.1l. 1 srrtf eo you ai mpmtsiitt cf ybbi ufe t. ., . -. . , m. W MM krr to intraaMm tfcaa laaawo wktMaaata-uUlaraa. If voa want aa OTJT OOtTPOIC vaa i aaiay. a to4y If EUCTRIC CELT & T&USS CO. j t.i-L . Li , 6HI8Ata, 11L, B.S.A. - a aaTM) t-od fcaJth. d3S Vtatlrn-uorUM rka k aaad V Jlalts -,1 W aaaaa aanar Ok -pa to ymmn. SUGAR TRUST ORDERS McKlatley Meat Obay Them If It Make mn Emtmr of a Nation That Ha Bb Oar Friend tor a Hundred , Yoars. Suppose we consider for a moment just what is this friendship with Rus sia that Secretary Gage, at the com mand of the sugar trust; has, so sum marily ended and what it has meant for the United States. '' Russia was one of the first countries to acknowledge with a friendly salu tion the birth of the republic . When the war . of 1812 was coming on the test of Europe (except France) cheerfuly hoped to see us obliterated from the map- Russia, appalled by the disproportionate strength of the combatants, tried to avert the struggle. After the war was begun, fearing we should be 5 crushed, Russia (made re peated efforts to bring about peace. Not a. slinking, cowardly, hypocritical suggestion like John Hay's . in the South African horror, but genuine, whole-hearted intervention for peace. 1 When the civil war came on and the blockade of the southern ports strained our naval resources to the utmost lim its it was Russia that gave the most extraordinary evidence of friendship, that one nation ever gave another in the offer of assistance from her navy. When England and Napoleon the Little, as the war went on, busily plotted and plotted, day after day, the destruction of the republic in its hour of distress, it was always Russia that upset all their conspirings. "But there' is the bear!" was always the in surmountable obstacle. Nothing but the steadfast friendship of Russia saved us from the frightful calamity of a foreign war on the top of the civil war we were then waging. From the Declaration of Indepen dence to the present time there has not been a single instance of an at titude not perfectly friendly assumed toward us by Russia. So late as last autumn it was Russia, with France, that consistently and persistently stood by the demand of the United States that the looting and slaughter in China should cease. This is the nation that now at the behest of an illegal and- pirate corpora tion we have attacked and insulted in a way- beyond precedent. We do not need the paltry revenues Involved in Mr. Gage's duties. We have not one single advantage in trade or in any other way to reap anywhere in the world from his action and we have no reasbn with which to defend what we have done except this: A huge, lawless combination, hav ing contributed heavily to Mr. McKin ley's election, demands In return en larged means to wring dollars out of the public. ' . That is the beginning and the end of a ruling that has cancelled $30,000,000 of American trade, probably $7,000, 000 of which belongs to the state of Illinois. " : ; This is the way the case stands. How do you like it! Chicago American. WHACKING THE MULLET HEADS A Country Editor Onco In a Whlla Takes a Shot at the Critters in His Own Neighborhood. Some of the chaps who whooped it up for Mark Hanna and McKinley last fall find out that they don't like trusts and imperialism as well as they thought they would. As they can't think and as they never will attend 9 reform meeting in a state of mind to understand the truth, the only way to bring them to their senses is to whack their heads up against a few disagree able experiences. The Nuckols County Sun publishes the following: "A farmers' club was organized at the Center school house Tuesday of last week. The object is to purchase the necessary family supplies from the large department stores of Chicago and New York." From our Blaine precinct correspondent. Of course the above information will be exasperating to the local retail merchant. The man, or set of men, who send money abroad for the pur chase of merchandise, even though it may be procured at a less cost, has al ways been characterized in bitter terras by the retail merchant. We started out to suggest to the lo cal merchant that he keep his nether garments in tact. There are several reasons why he should do so aside from making a holy show of himself. The department store is an exemplifi cation of wealth centered in the hands of one person or of but a few. For that reason they buy goods much cheaper and for the same reason are albe to secure special low transporta tion rates for their goods. They then distribute them at a less cost than the local merchant, and in the course of time these department stores will suc ceed in making the retail business so unprofitable that local dealers will be a thing of the past. This accumulation of all business and commerce into the hands of a few is, according to authority no less emi nent than Mark Hanna, a sequence of modern times a scientific evolu tion, and when a majority of the local merchants heard this high-sounding verbiage they seemed to regard it as something intended for their especial advantage and immediately threw up their hats and shouted for Mark and Mack in the late campaign. But a few lessons, such as the farm ers in Blaine precinct are preparing to give, may serve to eventually cut the eye teeth of some retail merchants who are now egotistically wise concerning matters political. Digging a Ditch Editor Independent: In The Inde pendent of January 27, 1898, you pub lished the following problem: Two men, A and B, agree to dig a ditch 200 rods in length for which C agrees to pay them $400 or $2 per rod. A part of the ditch was stony; A says to B, I will dig the stony part for $2.25 per rod and you dig the dirt part for $1.75 per rod. Each received $200. How far did each dig? If it was solved I don't remember having seen It, and would wish to see it if you would kindly publish it again. JOHN M'lLDUFF. The problem was referred to- the Chess Editor a.nd reported as follows; It is evident that B did not earn his $200 by digging wholly in the "dirt" part of the ditch, because that would require 114 2-7 rods at fl.75 to give him his $200, leaving &5 5-7 rods for A, which, at the $2.25 rate, would give him only $192.66 for his share. Hence, A must have had "stony" ditch for all of his task, Which would require 88 8-9 rods. Now, this leaves 111 1-9 rods, part "dirt," part "stony" for B to dig. B gets $200 for digging this 111 1-9 rods, or an average of $1.80 per rod, an ad vance of 5 cents over the "dirt" price. This , would mean $5.55 5-9 for the whole ill 1-9 rods. Now. the "stony" price is 50 cents higher than the "dirt" price. Divide $5.55 5-9 by .50 and you have 11 1-9 rods which must have been stony and for digging which B received $2.25 per rod, or $25; and his 100 rods at $1.75 makes up B's $200, It follows that there were 100 rods each of stony and dirt ditch. y- THAT AGUINALDO BRIBE At Example of the Contemptible and Con tinuous Lying of th Imperialist ,' f Press. .The editor of the Lincoln German Free Press has a few words to say in the Chicago Record to the imperialistic vHartr that are very much to the point. His article was as follows: To the Editor:- Is it necessary to repeat to a man like Mr, Curtis the tes timony of our own officials tnat Aguin aldo was not bribed? Mr. Wildman, consul general of the United States at Hong Kong, writes to J. B. Moore, acting secretary of state, on July 18, 18o: "There has been a systematic attempt to blacken the name of Aguin aldo and his cabinet on account of the questionable terms of their surrender to Spanish forces a year ago tViS month. It has been said that they sold their country for gold, but this has been conclusively disproved, not only by their own statements, but by the speech of the late Governor General Rivera in the Spanish senate, June 11, 1898. He said that Agulnaldo under took to submit if the Spanish goyern ment would give a certain sum to the widows and orphans of the insurgents. He then admits that only a tenth part of this sum was ever given to Aguln aldo, and that the other promises made he did not find expedient to keep. I was in Hong Kong September, 1897, when Aguinaldo and his leaders ar rived under contract with the Spanish government. They waited until the 1st of November for the payment of the promised money and the fulfill ment of the promised reforms. Only $400,000 Mexican was ever placed to their credit in the banks. (Senate document 62, pages 337 and 338.) United States Consul -Williams at Manila writes to William R. Day, sec retary of state, on May 24, 1898: "To day Ihav executed, a power of at torney whereby General Aguinaldo re leases to his attorneys in fact $400,000 now in bank in Hong Kong, so that money therefrom . can pay for 3,000 stand; of arms bought there and ex pected here tomorrow." (Senate docu ment 62, page 328,) F.V. Greene major general United States volunteers, says: "No steps have, -been taken to introduce the re forms, more than 2,000 insurgents, who had been deported to Fernando Po and other places are still in confine ment, and Aguinaldo is now using the money to carry on the operations of the present insurrection." (Senate document 62, page 421.) All these quotations from our own officials show that Aguinaldo invested the "bribe" in arms to fight for the liberation of his people. I think that we could afford to be generous and truthful even to our enemies. But this is the kind of "information" which is given by our administration writers on all questions pertaining to the Philippine war. B. HERMANN. Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 18. What They Meant The authors of the Declaration of Independence meant it to be--as, thank God, it is now proving itself a stumbling-block to those who in af ter times might seek to turn a free people back into the hateful paths of despotism. They knew the proneness of prosperity to breed tyrants, and they meant when such should reap pear in this fair land and commence their vocation they should find left, at least one hard nut to crack,-Abra-ham Lincoln. There were perhaps never two sen tences so weighted with prophesy and profound wisdom as is contained in the above quotation from Lincoln. To day there is a fierce battle being waged in the United States senate, fought with the keenest logic and all the wea pons of statesmanship, but the sum and substance of all the speeches can be found in the above short paragraph. The "effort to turn a free people back into the hateful paths of despotism" is again being made and even with more persistence than at the time when Lincoln made this time-enduring protest. They "have commenced their vocation' but they have in these words of the great lover of mankind another "stumbling block" and an other "nut to crack," a nut that is very hard to crack, because this "breed of tyrants" claims to enslave mankind in the name of Lincoln. That Sugar Trust Order ; The New York Evening Post quotes W. L. Saunders, vice president of the Ingersoll-Sergeant Drill company, as saying of Secretary Gage's action in imposing countervailing duties on Russian sugar, which has resulted in Russia retaliating by increased duty on many of American exports to that country: "It will mean a direct loss to American exporters of $10,000,000 a year, and all because of the paltry su gar importation from Russia, which in 1900 amounted to only $22,790. Sec retary Gage has made the mistake of his life in this decision, and if he has been influenced in reaching it by the claims of the sugar trust I predict that it will be but the beginning of a con certed attack, not only on the trusts, but on the whole principle of the Am erican protective tariff. His action is all the more unpardonable in that he has-acted with the full knowledge of the injurious results that would fol low, and yet with no actual knowledge that Russia was paying a bounty of 4 cents a pound on sugar which brought it Into competition with the product of the trust in this country." - SOD HOUSE ECONOMIST How the Republican Party After Advo eating Repudiation for f any Tears Tried to Escape by a Tenich- ' oallty. x The Independent has pointed out a thousand times that every national bond and obligation was . payable in silver by the terms of the written con tract and that the effort to make them navable in cold was a violation of the contract, to do which congress must pass an ex post facto law in direct vio lation of the constitution. The repub lican party press always" denied this and undertook to make an argument which was always so hazy that it was imnossihlft to make anv direct answer to their gibberish. In the testimony before the committee ' on coinage, weights and measures. Secretary Gage made a most astonishing admission. He gives direct evidence in support of the charge that The Independent has so often made. He says that a law passed to make the national bonds payabie in gold would be a violation of the written contract and an ex post facto law. Then he tells how the re publican party endeavored to accom plish the same end without making a record that might be appealed to under circumstances that would be very era harassing to the. plutocrats. Mr. Gage's statement upon that subject is without equivocation and is as follows: "Obiec.ttnn la made to the new law that it does not make the bonds of the United States redeemable in gold. That is true in a narrow sense. The new law as finally enacted does not change the contract between the government and the holder of the bond, which was an agreement to nav coin. What 13 apparently desired by Prof. Laughlin, and what was embodied in the nouse bill, was the proposition that the gov ernment bv act of congress should change the terms of the contract, al though not its substance, from a coin to a eold contract. I think that upon many grounds the conference commit tee acted wisely in refusing to make this chance. It establishes a danger ous precedent to enact a retractive law. If the fifty-sixth congress can change a coin contract into a gold contract, not even leaving the option to the bondholder to take silver if he pre fers it. what would prevent the fifty- seventh congress, if it containea a Bryan majority, from changing the gold contract embodied in the new 2 per cent bonds to a silver contract? In other words, I think it is good public nolicv not to chanee the terms of a contract by mandate of law. Even if the avowed purpose is to benefit both of parties, the same purpose might be avowed for verv objectionable legisla-. tion at some future time. For those who nrefer a eold bond congress pro-. vlded the means of obtaining it by of fering the new 2 per cent bonds upon terms of conversion approaching the market value of the old Donas. It will be seen that in that state ment Secretary Gage acknowledges that the proposition advocated by Prof. Laughlin and the whole repuoncan rtartv was to pass a retroactive or ex post facto law and to change by act of congress a written contract, Dotn dc int a clear violation of the constitu tion and verging closely upon an archy. Then be tells how the party undertook to avoid the shame and dan ger of such action. The bonds that were payable by contract in silver and which had tnat contract printed on the face of every one of them, were refund- ed into bonds specincaiiy payame in gold. The deed has been done, but Prof. Laughlin and the whole repub lican rtartv stands convicted of sun- porting a proposition to violate con tracts and pass ex post facto laws. ' - a. T. 11. That record nas Deen maae. coming can wipe it out. - - Ponulism stands forth in brighter colors every day. There Is no record of that sort that can be brought up against it. It never advocated the vio lation of contracts. When Prof. Laughlin was denouncing us as fan atics and lunatics we stood for what was lawful, honest and right, while bv was advocating the most pernicious and dangerous doctrines ooctrines that were a threat against the stability of eovernment and the transaction of all business. The sod house pop econ omist stands out in a glorious con trAst to this nlutocratic nrofessor of the Rockefeller university. When his tory is written the sod house econo mist will sret his lust aDDreciation. As far as The Independent is concerned it says: Give us a sod house and an honest man in preference to a hun dred million dollar university and a plutocratic professor every time. CONGRESSIONAL LIARS There are Many Who are Not Only No torious and Efficient, but Loud Heads the List. The habit of passing bills upon hon or as it has been called in congress will have to be dispensed with. It 13 the custom to ask the chairman of a committee who is pushing a bill quea tiona concerning its provisions atid its effect when passed. It has alwaj s been the custom to rely implicitly upon the statements made on the floor of the house and member3 vote accordingly, for it is absolutely impossible for con gressmen to know, the contents of ev ery bill that is offered. Hereafter members will likely ask for come cor roborative evidence before they will believe what republican congressmen say on such occasions. Congressman Loud .of California has been working like a beaver in the interest of the ex press companies for several years. Time and again his bills making a change in the postal laws have been defeated by decisive majorities. - A few days ago he came near effecting his purpose by clean, straight cut lying on the floor of the house. He introduced a bill under the claim that it was only a "codification of the postal laws, as they at present existed." The "codi fication" bill was of course a long one, containing, in fact, 221 pages, and it passed the house without being sub jected to careful scrutiny, because Mr. Loud stated that it made the fewest possible changes in the existing law, and no change whatever in the "law relating to second-class mail matter." The bill went to the senate, and might quickly have passed that body upou the same understanding had not Mr. James L, 'Cowles and Mr. Edmund F. Merriam called the attention of a few newspaper publishers to sections iq ereasing the rates upon weekly news-1 papers published in cities having let-! ter-carrier delivery.. If the bill had passed upon this IW told by Loud on the floor of the house. The Independent would have had to put a one-cent stamp on every one of its numbers delivered in the city Monthly periodicals would have had to put on from two to four cents in stamps. In the large cities this would have amounted to hundreds of thou sands of dollars. Then in would have" come the express companies and mad4 an offer to deliver them at a fraction less than the ; government would Charge. To cover this extra charge, the. weeklies and monthlies would have' had to raise the price of subscription to city subscribers whether they put on stamps or paid the express compa nies for delivering them. The Inde pendent would have been a dollar a year to all-subscribers except those living in the city and to them an ad ditional charge would have to be made of fifty-two cents a year. That is what results from electing corporation tools to represent the peo ple In congress. The fees that the cor porations pay them i are very often many times the amount of the salaries that they receive from the govern ment.. There are scores of such men in congress. They appear before the people as patriots and talk about the flag and this great and glorious na tion. Then the mullet heads are per fectly satisfied. They leave their work, march in processions, carry greasy torches and shout themselve3 hoarse trying to elect them. That is the way the mullet heads have of do ing things and asi they are in a major ity the rest of un must submit. This discovery ;o( the bare-faced ly ing Of Congressman Loud of course killed the bill. But if there was any sense of hopor -pr, dignity left In the house, th9 '; mattery would not be al lowed to stop there. Loud should bo ignominiously. expelled as a warning to the other, corporation tools who hold. seats In; that: body,. ;.. VACCINATION Smallpox has " become epidemic in every state in the union, It has got beyond any control by 'quarantines. There cannot be said to be centers of infections to which it can be confined for it" Is found in hotels, In business houses, in legislatures, in schools and in every grade of society. . The . only safety now, is to vaccinate. On the subject . pf . vaccination, there was re cently an -article in the Chicago Tri bune that is well'orh reading, writ ten by. Francis ,W.,Mcfta!ara,-t which wa& in part as. follows: . Vaccination is. a. process by which the human organism is so impressed by the introduction of a substance and the blood is so . altered by the changes it produces, that though the individual be exposed to. the contagion of small pox he will not take the disease. This process called vaccination is the re sult of an accidental discovery made in the year 17?5 by an English physician, Dr. . Jenner, who noticed , that dairy maids who had. once, had cowpox en joyed a complete immunity from smallpox. . 1 WThen a person is successfully vac cinated the virus is introduced through ' To Cura Cold in one Day. Take Laxative Bromo' Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to vure. E. W. Grove's sig nature is on each box. 25c. DR. E J. ANGLE. Practice Limited to the treatm ent of Skin nd Ceaho-Urinary diseases. 1313 0 51. Lincoln, Nebr. DR. J. 31, MOLiKUD, - 1300 O Stmt, Lincoln, Nebr. i General Surgery Specialist -"' and diseases (,r f Women First class hospital facilities. Whiten the Teeth and Sweeten the Breath Try a Tooth Wash made by a Lincoln Dentist Ask for a Sample Bottle. Dr. F D.Sherwin, Dentist. Offlca hoars to 1 St 1U5. Second Floor Bsrr Block, Corner room. LINCOLN - - NERBASKA CANCER CURED WITH.SOOTHING, BALMY OILS Csncer.Turaor, Cstsrrh, Files. Fistula, Ulcer and all Skin and Womb Diseases. Writs for illustrated book. Sent free. Address DR. BYE. Hanaat City. .no. ancers why sut ured and . death from cancer? DR. T. O'CONNOR cures cancers, tumors, and wens; no knife, blood or plaster. Address 1306 O street, Lincoln, Nebr!., ' ' Private Hospital Dr. Shoemaker's If you are going to a Hospital for treatment, it will pay you to consult Dr. Shoemaker. He makes a specialty of diseases of women, the nervous sys tem and all surgical diseases. 1117 L St., Lincoln, Neb. P. O. box 951. UK. HtYHULUS Office, Burr Block, rooms 17 -19. Tele phone 655. Office honrs, 10 a. m. to 12 m.; 3 to 5 p. m. Rudv 3 to 5. OPTICAL GOODS. The Western Optical and Electrical Co., located at 131 North 11th street, is composed of old citizens and thorough ly acquainted with the business, hav ing fitted eyes for twenty-five years. Certainly, they ought to be competent to do good work. They are perma nently located with us and that means much to the purchaser of eye glasses and spectacles. , OMI V (!9 fiC FOR THIS REGULAR $6.00 ill. I OalUU WATERPROOF STORM COAL err in n rncv cut this so. out and d CHI) laU MUlttl send to u. IWatlaa Ro. 10SL, stats your height and weight, number of lochs around body st breast, taken over regular cost, clots up under arms, and we ui na you tniicoattiy express C O. D.. subject to examination. SxajBiae it ens trj n mm si year expreaa sflee, and If found exactly as repre sented, the ateat awulerf al lain yua eter aaw er hears ef. essal te Sar watersreor east yea saa bay f -r SS.OO to fS.OU, pJ f . - IN Minn an Mr iHtipiw Special Offer Prlee, 9CVi ehanrea. THIS 8TOHM COAT is the latest 101 slater at y leu It is eay nttinpr. V-1 extra Ions. Base (rest the ery laeat im lu Cmh, Tia Colar Covert Cloth. with a hearYtan color irenutne sheeting I 11 n In if i sewed and strapped seams, ventilat-1 ed arm times, maae witu nign umter eiorm collar wttn aajiimnr straps mr.a outtons, everlapplas aterat tj f feat, elates with ball and eunanau fasteners, drawbuckles on sleeves. The very best seat ever naadsfnr tbe( k exnaaaS la the wralhrr. will wear like Irea. Guaranteed absolutely waterD roof, suit-1 able for both rain or overcoat, and sruar anteed the orreateet Dossible value. S2.Q3J 4 Ho lowMt Twine ttvttr known for euch a eannent. OBDKk ATOM. rnrFrceriodisaaiplraerKtarythlna ilarklateahes, write for RASPLB BOOK tie. 0U sdsreaa, SEARS. ROEBUCK fc CO., Chicago. HIDES. S. J. DOBSON & Co., Successors to Dobson A Landgren, Deslers in - , . HIDES, : FIRS, TALLOW AND WOOL 980 H St., .lCOI.N, NKH. We want anything in our linelarge or small lot. W ry the highest market price. an abraded surface and absorbed into the blood and produces the condition known as vaccinia. So, then,. vaccina tion affords protection from smallpox by producing in t Be body a constitu tional condition which is similar in some respects to the symptoms of smallpox itself hut pf a character so mild as to be utterly and entirely harmless, and produces such changes as to render the development of the disease in a virulent and fatal form &n impossibility, ............. Of all diseases smallpox Is probably the most violently contagious, but un like other terrible diseases it is not content with a fatal termination in many cases, but on those It spares it leaves forever Us ineffaceable marks and warnings Ho others, a warning that speaks louder than words, a cau tion po strong that' It ought to do more in' favor of vaccination than all the words ever written or snokon. The mortality from smallpox In 4,000 cases, collected in nis own practice by Dr, Welch, was 60 per cent of the per sons not vaccinated. The statistics of Mr. Mason dutlng a continuous ser vice o( thirty years in the smallpox hospital of London, show in 15,000 cases a mortality of 40 per cent, while among those who had been vaccinated at some time during life the death rate was only 6 per cent. During the Franco-Prussian war, when the Ger man army was double the strength of the French,, and in which vaccination was obligatoriy, onjy 283 died from this disease, while amongr the French, vac cination not being enforced, the death record reached the enorttQ'is number of 23,000. , The dangers of Vaccination? "when properly and cleanly done by a collir petent-physician, are nil. The un toward results that are reported to fol low vaccinations are due in great measure to unclean habits of the vac cinator or dirty fingers or clothing coming in contact "with the abraded point of inoculation. In the hands ofa competent, surgically clean phy sician there is no danger in vaccina tion, ' - 3 Diseases 3 VARICOCELE.WEAKENING NIGHT EMISSIONS, and OBSTINATE ITCH ING of ANUS and Female Parts Certain ly Cured. New Method and new Results. Treatment by mail, and the most suc cessful ever used. Address with slarap DR. T. M.TRIPLETT, LINCOLN, NEB.' Without good teeth you cannot per fectly masticate your food Without perfect mastication you car. not have good digestion. Therefore give ".ttention to your teeth. Crown and brides work at $5 per tooth. Artificial teeth from t5 to 7.50 ! DR. D. P.SIMS, 1222 0 St. Lincoln, Neb. LIFE SIZE DOLL laDEE? "Baby's cloth es will ruEX row tit Dollie." Girls can get this beautiful lAfe 81 w vou absolutely ree ror eeiii.fronir tour boxes of our Great Cold ft Head svehs Tablets st ZAcctnts a boi. Writo today and we will send the tablets ty mail postpaid, when sold eendi us the montjT ($l.O0 and we will ini you this IJfe Sizo Doll which is 4 1 -it hifh and can wear baby' clothes. rxl lie has an Indestructible Ilear.Goidc-n Hair. Rov ChetV. li.-own I'yeH. Kid Colored Body, a tJoM I'latud poonty Pin. Red Stock! :iflrs.B!a'V S1k?m, will stand alone. Thin doll is an iwt re production of the fineet hand painted, French Doll, and will live in s chilU's memory long after childhood tiafS bsvepaf&ed. Add rem, NATIONAL MEDICINE DO.. Doll Dept. 806 New Haver., Conn. Woempener's STORE DRUGS,PAINTS,OILS,GLASS . A full line of Perfume and Toilet Goods. i 139 South I Oth St., Between CI &N, Lincoln, Neb. WEAK MEN AND BOYS TURKISH LOST MANHOOD CAP- Bales, the only positire cure for j? ' Sexual weaVness, night losses, nervous- v ness an all weaknesses caused by youthful indiscretions. We refund T money in every ease where not perfectly J satisfied. These celebrated Capsules not only make yon feel good, but detolop parts to normal condition. Write today Y for full particulars. Full and positive J guarantee to cure with every $5 order Y six boxes $5. Single boxes $1. Goods g sent in plain wrappers by mail. HA UN'S rilAKMACV, X . .. , 1805 Farnam St., Omaha, ISeb. X Sold by B. O. Kostk a, Lincoln, Nebr, O Dr. Louis N. eme. uentist, 13T South 11th street T?rr'"'" to,i.- i : Patronize our advertisers. sX V r t Hi ! M i i afr Drug A