The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, April 04, 1901, Page 6, Image 6

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    GAREEEIE a failure
A KUUUf Jkpp.ll ta rrfsrJpUw f the
C pmt mm tix BmIi of a. Life fc
My xkiB(
Her. Taoisaa B. Gregory discus
ti life cf A&drew Cararsle In tlse Chi
cago Acserlc&a la a diZerest war tram
TrSt fc?a lb cuton in tfc truly
good rtligtosa Jo-anu.1. Tfce c!4-fah-iob4
Ciritla feaa felt all the time
t&at Crfici &as tn fcatieriac the
nliUocs ttat t vronc oat of labor
ifcat tter vu eosKhi&g wrong some
where tint It m not accortllmE to
the teaefclagv Christ, alttouRa most
of tLe plutocratic ministers beM forth
In many jncexyric vpon the lessons
to be ltrefd Irora the life that Car
&ec1 Ilred. Mr. Gregory, after siring
a resume cf the salient points la Car-f-tle's
career, says:
A faarreloti!y tufcewfal life! You
vouM say a life cf nabrokea and erer
iareajlC triumphs.
-Bat It arrears tVst the taultlmll
lionalre himself 4oes not so view It. At
the en4 cf his wonderfal career, with
his well laa coffer piled op about
him, Mr. Carrecle declares that he
do not o rlew it. At the end of his
wonderful rareer. wltli his well ladea
ccSers piled tip about him. Mr. Carne
f deUres that he does not want
thfa. And to show that he Is sincere
te is sJlrs tha away as rapidly to
die. poor; and the Intention seems to
fce la a fair way of teniae Itself car
ried oat to the letter, for at the rate
his wealth is now passing from him
Mr. Caraegie promises to die la Just
about the sam sort of financial con
dition he was n whea he took eharre
cf the Uttle stationary engine down ia
Flttsirarc
ArA wrat is this bat the confessioa
that he has been laboring all these
years for nothing? What !s It bat the
frank and manly adcisaloa that his
life Is a failure?
-By dint of hard thinXlng and hard
working he tut made lis mighty for
tune. aa4 now that he has it. he de
clares lis all fro4 faith, that he mast
get rid cf it. ia order that he may die
as ce begaa poor.
"Furthermore. Mr. Carnegie seems
to admit, ty fcts action, thst wealth
4o cot make happiness. If Mr. Car
tel really believed that wealth was
essential to happiness he would not
pirt with it a he Is sow doing, for
with Mr. Carregie as is the ease with
all the rt of as happiness is our
being's end a ad aim.' The desire of
happinees is hemaaity's ruling pas
sica. and whea a man carelessly
throws a thing away, we may be detd
acre that ia his opinion that thing is
cot essential to the realization of his
being's end and aim.
"Late ia his life, then, Mr. Carnegie
Is coming to the light! He is begia
sing to understand that happiness is
ssbjertive. not objective an affair of
the Inside, not of the outside and
that it depends not cpoa what one has
so tsttfs as cpoa what cm is.
-la a book known as the New Tes
tament we read that oae day a rich
ma a. with 'great possessiona. cattle,
houses, barns and wide acres, came to
Jess. and Inquired cf him how he
raisht inherit the 'klcedora Jesus
said In repiy; 'Get rid of all that you
have and come and follow me, Jesus
laid no particular stress oa the gettlag
rid cf the great poaaessicna that was
a side is&ue; what He wanted was to
hare the man s-e that the thing he waa
inquiring about lay wlthfn raiser thaa
without; that It was to te found la
what he was as a tsaa. and cot la
what he had around a '.out aim as a
properly holder.
J"be "kingdom that Is. the highest
good Is mental and spiritual, not
fiscal or ecoriornle. The thc:;tts' cf
the poor. old. la-ne, slaia Epictelus,
were richer thaa all the gold a ingots
of King Crotts; and the Kay of
Kmersoa are lsfialtely more Taluable
than ail t belongings cf the 'blliloa
o!ar trust.
-KeowJeir the knowledge which
means raeaul and spiritual growth
tnf gladness is worth more thaa any
other thing, or thaa all other
thing. The man who succeeds
ia dercloping his mind, la ex
panding his aSectione. and la putting
h!ciM-lf ia 11 ring touch with the beau
tiful and the good ia the world of na
ture and of nun. accomplishes a big
ger and a grander thing thaa is
wrought by the maa who simply suc
ceeds la becoming a multimillionaire.
-Is not this clearly admitted la Mr.
Carnegie's actioa? How ahail we ex
plain his noble mania for founding li
braries and erecting organs? Is it not
as though he were saying to himself:
"I hate sacrisced my self upon the
altar cf commercialism? But the best
things la Ufe are mind and heart, and
these I have, kaowa. but indifferently.
Thta I wlU u tcy large wealth in
steerisg cthfrs tWr of the rock oa
which I was wrecked- I will do what
i caa to 11 the world with thought
FREE
la mmm Wmmm
A Wonderful Shrub-Cures
KIDNEYmBLADDER
Disuses, Eisraiiisa, Be
a C IHrUft. SflsUter of Ue GxpL
mmr Ami f Mjr writ from tt.m )os. at
4v& Ga&Met:. tvo ciMiutt j. Nrv lurk.
1 hmmmb utnUM milk. kidy bd kia
4r4 4Mt Smt am .. ac.4 trid mil 1
ei 1 cS w.itoti riit. T mtid m Lm.lt yar
tHgM9 mil mm. U&i m wLmt to mm ma
i.r luc. Mr ML&4r im mmm mmd
wix-itm Lm-4 tf; bc tJ wmsihd,
1 -i ttm mm n droary U'.m m.l
emnmim ! it- it Immt I Lmri of Aiat. a1
rw"i I cermmymttcmi tmki& it. at
t&ml ttmum I mm minus m .ftt
mill Uam im fctt. tUjot iktp vt
r, Imm sUwm U mr mUmLmtit. I
osli mil miciA mm mmmd.f m m bmbf
mmmltmA m Sum U rr bf(Wr.
Lt I k U hmm A m f trJy twiivv
ilfi'Jfe 1j mA mhjm .iit i lttU f.t
trtcL I sw; a4ly rnoKJ AUsvia to aiL
bttrcf. four,
t.i a. . iMBLixa.
TW mmmmhlm KnJce$ W. itva, f
St'crbeek a. H ml i rr of to imu
e faa ti pKfmm of Sikttvui Mt cuntji mwvmrm
StMatltB- ii swJfl f br tgUr
teist. Si? l4.i Je cbB ia lmmtitjum
t tim wmdmrii rru pori of SIaavm is
kiay mtaA til 4iimmmm. mmA otbar trombd
o Stm prIi to 09'.atocKl. wluch
tul ii ywfrf fa 4arate4 tr.
1 1 mmm ' tt f tins Grt
"eioTr for f o..f, LJ m4 yo oc
Lr fey s:l fro, esif auiijMr tlut
tiMtfl ferf fm ui e0MMN4 it to
xr- !iU riS rnrm mi4 rtuwt
fu. a aa.L t car aiir car
ttuty, N, t-A f evrtk 4(M, ew Tork Cit.
and with music, that men may find in
them the happiness which I have
missed. w -
The Independent has its doubts
about the ultimate good from librar
ies, unless something else besides the
mere ability to get books and read
them free of cost goes along with
them. Unmeasured potencies for good
does not He In wasting time reading
the norels that are furnished by the
hundred thousand by the libraries al
ready established. In the aggregate,
cycles of time are wasted by the mil
lions who spend years In reading nor
els that teach no lessons and Incite no
derating thoughts. Nine-tenths of the
bocks that are drawn from the public
libraries already established are the
merest trash. They do no: strengthen
character, they do not impart useful
information, they simply are a means
of wasting time, in a somewhat pleas
urable manner. If the Carnegie li
braries only increase this evil he will
hare accomplished nothing toward the
deration and uplifting of the human
race. In that case the many millions
wrung from the toil in buruing far
cares and the dark mines will be whol
ly wasted. Libraries of the right sort
and used for the right purposes are
one of the great uplifting agencies,
but as they are now conducted that can
hardly be said of them.
In connection with trls matter, Ja
cob A. Rees prints In ute same paper
a beautiful little epic iu prose on this
subject In which he says:
"The exciuslveness that excludes the
best of human feelings is too dearly
bought, We shall never understand
each other till we know each other.
Hence we must In some way be
brought together again. But you can
not make a bridge over that gap with
a bank check. You must yourself be
the bridge. That Is the sense of the
settlement plan, which some one has
called a passenger bridge upon which
men and women go over, not down,
from the mansion to the tenement in
contrast with the old fashion of dump
ing coal and groceries down upoa the
poor la contemptuous discharge of
brotherhood arrears.
, -But since there must be second
hand charity, let it take the form of
something to educate something. That
helps to self-help, and so stops the
leak. Society has a twofold duty to
ward a starving child: First, to feed
It. and next to find out why it starved,
and to deal with the cause. The nur
sery and the kindergarten are such
stop-gaps.
Then there are the aged poor, who
have done what they could as long as
they could, and have a good claim up
on society. Whether through personal
effort, through organized charity
which Is Just orderly charity or by
any other agency, Is of less account.
-My own feeling Is that the church
should lead In such work, to be like Its
founder, who 'went about doing good,
and pointed to that when asked If He
were the Christ. But if there is any
light outside the church, let us have
it all of It for use Inside.
-I was In Muskegon, Mich., this win
ter, and there saw a beautiful park,
with statues of our country's great
men. and a splendid public library
hard by, all given by one public-spirited
man. who loved his city. In the
midst of It all stood a fine stone build
ing, a public school, the gift, I was
told, of the same maa.
-That was his monument, and no
bler and more enduring it was than
marble or bronze. If I were a rich
man and wanted to set myself a me
morial In New York that would last I
would build in Its most crowded dis
trict an Ideal public school, in a park
big enough to let in all the children
of tho neighborhood, with never a sign
cf 'keep off the grass;' la It bath
rooms for the children and library
books and club rooms of evenings. And
the door of the big assembly room
should swing wiue for trades union de
bates and neighborhood meetings of
every kind, so that it should no longer
be true that: the saloon is the poor
man's only club.
-At oae end of such a school I would
hare a kindergarten, as the right be
ginning of all educatioa, aad at the
other end a cooking class as the sensi
ble climax of it and the proper antidote
to the unwomanly antics of the Mrs.
Nations with their hatchets. Then I
think I should sleep sweetly at night,
no matter how maay millioas I were
afflicted with, feeling that I had done
the best for my city and my day."
With this kind of work work that
has received the sanction of all the
philanthropists from Christ until the
present Carnegie will have nothing
to do. The result of the sociological
investigations of the last two decades
have no iaflueace upon Carnegie. He
knows nothing about them. He has
been too busy la gathering In the fruits
of other men's toil to have had time to
learn, so he goes hU own way. The
starving little children, whose condi
tion his financial methods have in a
large measure produced, have no
place in his heart. Of the improve
ment of the race by beginning with the
little children, of whom Christ said,
of such are the kingdom of heaven,"
he knows nothing, and cares nothing.
Tby have no place in his plans of
philanthropy.
Host Encouraging Thing
Editor Independeat: The most en
couraging thing at the present time is
the fact that so many people like your
paper. You hit the nail square on the
head every time. It takes me back to
the old anti-slavery times. The Inde
pendent Is like the Emancipator edited
by Joshua Leavlt, I never did like the
Liberator. It took anarchistic grounds
against all civil government. It was
too acreachy. It said: "The constitu
tion ia a covenant with death and an
agreement with hell." Leavlt, Stewart,
Garret Smith and W. L. Chaplain took
the ground that a consistent interpre
tation of the constitution would have
abolished slavery as such a decision
did.
Oh! but didn't Bryan curry that old
hack, Grover, nicely? Hurrah for
Bryan! Oae of the old humorists said:
-Doa't prophesy unless you know,"
but I am going to do it, hit or miss. I
think that the old democratic party is
soon to break up as the old whig party
did. If it does, the wisdom of keep
ing the populist party ia line will be
demonstrated.
ELI AS S. GILBERT,
t Weeping Water, Neb.
Till Heavenly Twins
It is a beautiful pair of twins that
the republicans have sent to represent
the state in the United States senate.
The men who made the fight and se
cured a republican legislature were
both turned down and men never men
tioned for the office before the election
were selected. They fought Thomp
son to the bitter end although he had
more good, hard sense in his little
finger than the man they gave the
place had In his whole cope. They
said that Thompson had never been
prominent in political life, had never
been seen at state conventions and it
was preposterous that such a man
should aspire to the office of United
States senator. Then they went to
Omaha and picked up a national bank
er who had never been seen outside
of his bank parlor, who knew so little
about politics that he could not . tell
how many members there were in the
president's cabinet or name offhand
the state officers of his own state. Be
sides that, this latter heavenly twin
has a peculiar record closely connected
with that of one Bartley, Mosher. Out
calt and other first-class rascals of
the republican persuasion, some of
whom are in the penitentiary, some
have been there and served their time
and some who escaped the mlnione of
the law.
The transaction began by the de
posit in Mosher's bank of $180,101.75
of the school fund. The bank, its
president, cashier and the set of men
who held it up were all first class re
publican thieves, branded with the
trado mark of all their class, which
read3: "Vote 'em straight." The bank
went up the flume as every one knows
and the $180,101.75 disappeared from
view. Who got It? Deponent sayeth
not.
The next thing In this transaction is
a document that reads as follows:
Treasurer of the State cf Nebraska:
Pay to J. S. Bartley .or order one
hundred and eighty thousand one hun
dred and one 75-100 dollars for to reim
burse the state sinking-fund in ac
cordance with legislative appropriation
approved April 10, 1895, and charge
general fund. EUGENE MOORE,
Auditor Public Accounts.
P. O. HEDLUND, Deputy.
Countersigned:
J. S. BARTLEY, State Treasurer.
On the back of this document is
written:
"Presented and not paid for want
of funds and registered for payment,
April 10, 1895."
Further indorsed:
J. S. BARTLEY.
J. H. MILLARD.
This Is the first appearance of this
heavenly twin and it appears from that
little seed grew a seat in the United
States senate for six years. The his
tory goes on in the following way:
Omaha National bank, J. H. Millard,
president. State Depository. Warrant
deposited for $180,101.75, April 10, 1895,
(same day the warrant was drawn).
Warrant sold to the Chemical National
bank of New York. October, 1896, the
Chemical National bank sent to the
Omaha National bank, J. H. Millard,
president, for collection.
January 2, 1897, Bartley drew a
check as treasurer of the state of Ne
braska upon the Omaha National
bank, J. H. Millard, president, which
was a state depository. The check
was made payable to J. H. Millard.
The check was delivered to the said
J. H. Millard, who presented the war
ant to Bartley. The state's money to
the amount named was turned over to
the Chemical National bank of New
York and the Exchange Bank of At
kinson. The Chemical National bank asked
only the collection of $180,101.75 and 6
per cent interest from April 10, 1895..
Bartley's check covered the amount of
the warrant and interest- at 7 per cent.
The Omaha National bank, J. H. Mil
lard, president, handed over to the
New York bank the 6 per cent and
something over $3,000, being interest
at the rate of 10 per cent, to the At
kinson bank. For some time Millard
held possession of the warrant and
Indorsed it as in possession of the
bank.
Attorney General Smyth brought
suit to recover and Judge Baker, a re
publican judge, ordered the jury to
bring In a verdict for the heavenly
twin. The case is still pending in the
courts.
Who got that money, which, with in
terest, now amounts to much over
$200,000? The heavenly twin will not
tell, but the republicans have sent him
to the United States senate.
A Heathen Idea
A Japanese journal gives the Chris
tian nations the following timely re
primand: "There are no Christian nations.
Here and there, you meet a Christian,
but Christian nations there are none,
never were any, and today less than
ever. Loot at the events In China.
There the Christian powers perpetrate
crimes which make us heathens blush.
These horrors are committed in the
name of religion and a higher civiliza
tion, -aid In the face of these cruel
ties, which you commit in the name of
your Savior, you dare to peal your
church bells, Inviting us for prayer?
Go, pdeach to the Christians, who are
so much in need of being converted to
a religion of reason and goodness.
And when you have made of them
humane beings, thet and only then
come back to us."
A Soldier's Life
The Independent advises all those
good people who voted for imperial
ism, standing armies and the rule of
the devil to read the following words
from Chaplain Nave, U. S. A., and then
take their sons to some recruiting sta
tion and have them enlist in the reg
ular army.
"The soldier must still live In en
forced celibacy, in enforced separa
tion from family -Influences and the'
elevating society of good women, de
prived of the wholesome diversions
that were a part cf his life before en
tering the army. Time will drag the
same as before; idleness still enters
Into his life; morbid spells will con
tinue to affect him; the time will still
look a great way off when he can get
back home and into civil life, which
a large majority long for after the
newness of army life has worn off; sa
loons and dens of vies still surround
his camp; the restlessnese of the
youthful spirit still lurks within him
."We must hold to a conclusion al-
No. 831 Single Buggy Harness.
No. 33610 Concord Team Harness.
No. 33610 Concord Team Harness, Campbell Lock Stitch. Bridles
-inch, flat reins, combination fronts, sensible blinds, face piece with
Concord spots. ; Hames No. 250 oiled bolt. Breeching, folded, H
inch layer; -inch double back straps running to rings in hames;
-inch double hip straps; -inch side straps; traces l-inch, 6 feet,
doubled and stitched; lines 1-inch, 18 feet, with snaps; breast straps
li-inch, with snaps and slides; pole straps 1 inch; collar straps
inch; collars, black russet face, metal sewed; Jap; one hitch strap.
Price, $23 75 with Collars 27 50
ready reached by army men, that the
army shall not be th j dumping ground
of the out-of-works and bums of civil
society. The soldier has too Important
functions to be. committed to irre
sponsible people,, especially now in this
world-wide reach of his field.
"The bum has been ruled out of the
great' industrial operations, and he
shall not feel that the government has
opened an asylum for him in its army.
This is one thing we must hold, which
has been measurably well settled."
You see that the army demands the
best blood of the nation, it doesn't
want and will not accept the bums
and dead-beats. You have voted for
a great army. Now take your son and
put him under the influence and into
the life that - the chaplain describes.
Don't try to sacrifice some other man's
son. Send your own.
ANIDROSIS, SKOWHEGAN, Me.,
Will mail the true guide to Health and
Wealth for two stamps. Nebraska peo
ple are just as liable to have their sys
tems clogged and diseased as those
of other states. After investigating the
efficacy of this fuming and bathing,-in
dissolving and disinfecting the con
sulate, corrupt secretions for prompt
expulsion, all will realize the cause of
our country being flooded with cheap
imitations, without the supplies of this
humane method! Every, community
should be provided with an agency for
sale of family outfits and administra
tion of this fuming and bathing.
Hail Insurance
From the reports filed in the Insur
ance Department of the state the past
two years It would seem as though this
class of insurance is one of the most
important classes carried in the state
of Nebraska. One of these hail com
panies alone has paid the enormous
sum of 1105,053.42 in losses during the
past two seasons. No other insurance
company in the state has paid such a
large sum for losses as this one hall
insurance company. The manage
ment of this company has been more
economical than is usually the case
with insurance companies. Otherwise
it would not have been possible to pay
such a large sum for losses. While
several hail insurance companies have
ceased to do business the past two
vears on account of not paying losses,
the United Mutual Hail Insurance as
sociation of Lincoln, the one above re
ferred to, stands out alone with the
proud record of which the officers of
any insurance company could - feel
proud, having paid $42,000 more for
losses than was paid by all the other
hail insurance companies combined in
the state. We f can therefore recom
mend the United Mutual of Lincoln to
anyone wishing good protection to his
growing crops or to any agent wishing
to write hail Insurance.
Dr. Ross' New Book
The work on "Social Control" by
Edward Alsworth Ross, which the
Macmlllan company will publish im
mediately Is, as its subtitle Indicates,
A Survey of the Foundations of Or
der." It aims to account for social
order among men of the masterful,
Chronic Constipation Cured.
The most important discovery of
recent years is the positive remedy
for constipation. Cascarets Candy
Cathartic. Cure guaranteed. Genu
ine tablets stamped C. C C .Never
sold in bulk. Druggists, loci
SUPPLY ASSOCIATION
128-130-132 North 12th Street, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
No, 831 Single Strap Buggy
Harness.
Imitation hand sewed Camp
bell stitch.
Bridle, -inch over-check, box
loops, round winker stay; breast
collar lf-inch; traces lj-inch,
stitched to breast collar.
Breeching lf-inch, side straps
1-inch, hip straps -inch, turn
back -inch, round crupper.
Saddle 2i-inch No. 1 strap iron
jocKey, narness
leather
Griffith
to loop
bottom. Belly band,
buckle. Lines -inch
in, with hitch strap,
Jao. ' Priea Q ttfl
AU or
nickle or imitation
extra.
WHERE YOUR DOLLARS BUY THE MOST
I
self-assertive West-European stock.
After showing that natural sentiments
such as sympathy, the sense of justice
and resentment, cannot achieve order
save in a simple embryo society, the
author undertakes to set forth the en
tire social-regulative system. While
Mr. Spencer has treated order as if it
were a matter of institutions politi
cal, ecclesiastical, etc., the author
shows that much regulation is outside
of institutions. In his studies in pub
lic opinion, suggestion, custom, per
sonal ideals, social valuations and the
like, Doctor Ross emphasizes the con
trol that is unembodied, and for the
most part unnoticed. The author
treats at legnth more than a dozen dis
tinct agencies that contribute to social
order and appraises their relative im
portance in social evolution. Discard
ing the old units school; church,
state he penetrates to ultimate fac
tors such as law, beliefs, social relig
ion, education, ceremony, art and per
sonality. He locates the chief, guiding
centres in society and shows under
what conditions the crowd will domi
nate, and under what conditions the
elders, the warriors, the priests, the
moneyed men, the learned, or the elite.
He distinguishes beneficent class lea
dership from class control, and shows
the methods and fate of the latter.
The practical bearings of the author's
investigation are many. He explains
why control relaxes or tightens, and
shows that the present tendency to re
lax is not ultimate, but is due to the
diffusion of opportunity. The fate of
religious dogmas and political theories
is connected with economic changes
rather than speculation. He points out
the causes of class conflict and states
what societies are most likely in the
coming century to be exempt from this
evil. Religion is assigned a distinct
role, and its great transformation to
day is interpreted as the decay of non
social religion, and the growth of so
cial religion. The author' shows the
problem of government is only a part
of the larger problem of order and that
political science needs to be fertilized
from sociology. He sets up canons by
which to pass a scientific judgment
opun the moral socialism of Tolstoi
and the moral anarchism of Nietzsche.
He shows why in democratic society
the school is being given the wealth
and prominence that the church en
joyed in feudal society.
THE OLD ESTABLISHED LINE
Between Omaha and St. Paul Is the
"North-Western J-ine.
Rates to the biennial meeting Head
Camp Modern Woodmen of America
leather skirts,
rubber S L50
This harness in heavy lt-inch back straps, 1-Inch double hip straps,
U-inch side straps, l-inch traces, lf-inch 20-foot lines. t Long,
round check reins, check strap with snap, crooper snapped on. A
very heavy Concord Harness. All hand finished. : Sold everywhere
for from $38 to 140. Our price $28 5Q with collars $32 25
No. 206 1 Team
In all lines of goods we have
many styles but you are safe in
getting any of them you like
W. C SKNN,
MANUFACTURER OF .
COPPER
CABLE
LIGHTNING
RODS
and dealer in X-Ray Machines and
Electrical Appliances. '
2110 O St., Lincoln, Neb.
HONEST MEN wanted in each county
to sell goods.
Eaeh Agent furnished with "Thundr Storm" Ma
chin. Send for one of our free books on Lightning
and Protection. When answering advertisement men
tion the Nebraska Independent. .V
have been announced at one fare, plus
$2, for the round trip.
The railroads of Nebraska connect
ing with the Northwestern Line, at
Omaha, are
The Union Pacific,
B. & M.. .
Missouri Pacific,
C, R. I. & P., '
and the road connecting at Missouri
Valley is the Fremont, Elkhorn &
Mo. Valley.
Delegates and their friends from all
points in the state can therefore secure
the best accommodations by buying
through tickets from their home towns
via the most convenient road to the
Missouri River and the "Northwestern
Line" beyond. -
TWO THROUGH TRAINS DAILY.
Lv. Omaha, Union Passenger
Station 7: 55p.m.
Lv. Omaha, Union Passenger
Station 6:55a.m.
The night train has modern broad
vestibuled coaches and Pullman sleep
ers. The day train has modern broad
vestibuled coaches and observation
buffet parlor car.
We note the fact that "M. W. of A."
always wants the best when they can
get it -for the same money. The motto
of the Northwestern Line is, "The
Best of Everything."
J. R. BUCHANAN,
General Passenger Agent, Omaha. ;
Hew Are Year Kidaera t .
Dr. Hobbs' Sparafros Pills cure aU kidney tils. Paso
pie free. Add. Sterling Remedy Co., Cbicago or N. t.
CERTIFICATE OF PUBLICATION
STATE OF NEBRASKA
OFFICE OP " -
AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Lincoln, February 1st, iooi.
It is hereby certified that the
Ocean Accident and , Guaran
tee Corporation,Ltd.,of Lon
don, in England,
has complied with the insurance lair of this state
applicable to such companies and is therefore
authorized to continue the business of
Accident and Employers ;
Liability and Ouaranty
insurance in this state for the current year end
ins; January 31st. ioo. -
Witness my hand and the seal of the Auditor
of Public Accounts the day and year first above
written. - .
CHARLES WESTON, 1
' Auditor of Public Accounts.' .
4 By H. A. BABCOCK, Deputy. .
Harness
- N0.2OGI Team Harness
Campbell lockstitch. Imi
tation hand sewed. Bridles
-inch sensible blinds; com
bination fronts and winker
braces; fiat reins. Haues,
No. 150, iron over top. Pads,
Keystone, with dees. ''Back
straps, -inch, hip straps
1-inch. Traces li
inch, 6 feet, double and
stitched. Lines 1-inch, 13
feet, with snaps. Breast
straps lf-inch, with snaps
and slides. Pole straps ir
inch. Collars, black leather
back and rim, russet face,
metal sewed. XC. One
hitch strap. Price $2 0-50-With
collars $24-25.
CERTIFICATE OF PUBLICATION
STATE DF NEBRASKA
OFFICE OF
AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
, . . .Lincoln, February 1, 1901.
It Is hereby certified that the
Phoenix Mutual Life Insur
ance Co., of Hartford, in the
State of Connecticut,
has complied with the insurance law of this state
applicable to such companies and is therefore
authorized to continue the business of
LIFE INSURANCE
in this state for the current year ending Tanuarr
31st. 190a. . '
Witness my hand and the seal of the Auditor
of Public Accounts the day and year first a dot
written.,
CHARLES WESTON.
Auditor Public Accts.
By H. A. BABCOCK, Deputy.
CERTIFICATE OF PUBLICATION
STATE OF NEBRASKA
OFFICE OF I
AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
T. ".' . Lincoln, February 1st., 1901.
It is hereby certified that the y
Union Mutual Life Insurance
Company of Portland, in
the State of Maine",
has complied with the insurance law of this state
applicable to such companies and is therefore
authorized to continue the business of
LIFE INSURANCE
i?J?5joft',T thC currcnt ending: January
Witness ray hand and the seal of the Auditor
SigJJf Accounts the day and year first abovJ
CHARI.ES WESTON,
" Auditor of Public Accounts.
oy a., a. -BABCOCK, Deputy.
Feed Cooker
,N EVERYTHING
IT WlLLcook a barrel of feed
!5 twent minutes-whole rain in
40 minutes. IT WILL heat water
tor butchering, thaw ica out of tank
and warm the water. ITS USK will
keep the brood sows ia food condi
tion, keep shoats thrifty and makes
Kvav sasi h At 1 t i
.1 1
WX.5 HI N N GOTTHERE HRST
I
they usually et In 10 to v months. ITS USE is
profitable it pays for Itself in a few 00 fi fl
soothe. Special price to introduee..Z0iUU
t Write for full particulars.
FARMERS SUPPLY ASSOCI ATI ON
laa-MO-lSa n. istk St., Lincoln, ebr.
Mention The IndepeaieaW