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About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1901)
Jurib 20, 190L 8 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. VKtN OTHERS fan. CONSULT o) ill SEARLES & SEARLES Main Office Lincoln, Utb. SPECIALISTS IN Jfa. ChraaU suhd frtrat . ! WEAK MEN Sr A!! dlMiNi aad dls- - t rti.ra f &a. Treatment f " tphtUe r4l for Ufa. -af U . l&roaL ctt lir, kkwd. aia-l Um; cct. Ltt Xaafetod, MU JJv&rerela. Vartre, ODorrtrfm, w-xt. ht. ieta.a ei4 I'.'. tit Ur, Diabetea an Crf r-t Jh.O0 for a ce of C1TAKKH, KtlElMATHM. rrtfxiL Stridors & GIebi' J2foJ tr,x: t. UM-iom I lifcfc. Triisatlj sa4 CaO. ? wt ita I Mats Office Drs. SsirlES & Ssariss I Asstex. LINCOLN lNCOFClSlCl The Time to Paint I riht now The kin.i of paint to use i Harrison's Th i lac to bar it i 1211 O street as4 the man to bay it of is Kostka Guaranty! absolutely pure boiled iifcM-! oil 65 rent. Hie Wt anl puret lead in the worM t5.50. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Kostka Lincoln, Neb. 121 1 0 St. Mention Tie Independent. GOLD BUSS AND C1KEX A t mrTvpuiirmt rt 11a Had Ultu lrMiEiHriM WUU IJolk Kind f Cretre 4ltor tedf-pendent: The Independ ent idea ttat is located la a country her there Is no house clean lag I fully ir. lor-i by me and some ttLer h.ap la ths parts. If there is fprins Louse cleaning there, here's toe ti.at don't want to go there he would ratbrr go to the other place. Kite y-ar ago 1 Earned as nice a lit tle woman as Nebraska can furnish. V.'e rented a house and I bought new furniture. We ere truly happy for nearly a year. Then ray wife became DKTi 0 W7 SYSTEMIC And Grip Prostration Afflicts the People All Summer. 'CA. ill? C5ITED STATES 2f AILSIIAL SIMMONS. Ilea. F. Bimmons, United States Marshal, Mobile, Alabama, speaks In high rrai of tb raeriu of Peruna. In & letter written from Washington, D.C., he says x "After havloz used Peruna for a short time I find that it is the most excellent remedy for the grip and catarrh ever prepared, I can heartily recommend It to any one," Yours sincerely. Err a a flight mttmck oA- grippe crw the sard's of discord mndJf genera tJoa mil through tks tysUanu Jfccovery teems Impossible. The strcegtb doe xtot return. The whole system seem cranky. She was "tot as crazy as a bug, but she got bug crazy. She de clared that there, were bugs in the house. She had everything carried out of. doors, all the carpets taken up and I paid a man Ave dollars who pounded them with a big club for four days. She nearly ruined the bedsteads by pouring hot water on them. For five days that house looked as if it had been in the path of one of Kitchener's raiding parties or that a Kansas cy clone had wandered up this way. It was two weeks before she had things arranged again and I had a decent bed to sleep in and regular meals. After that she was just as sweet and loving as a woman could be until the next spring, when about the same time in the year the same craze struck her again. She declared the house was in fected with bugs and although I never saw one, nor could find one, she de clared that they were there. She gave me desertations on bugs at mealtime and all hours of the aay, and jai day when I went home for dinner I found two great Russian women tearing everything about the house to pieces. Only ten days of mi3ery followed iiiis time and my wif 3 again returned to her senses. The third year this was repeated. This time she sent the baby to her mother's and I did not see it for a When the fourth spring came around the attack ciime on about two months earlier than usual and seemed more virulent than ever before. I came to the conclusion that If I was ever to have any settled peace in this world something desperate must be done. Finally I concluded that I would build a new house on my own laud a year sooner than I had contemplated, and see if I could net get rid of those bugs, i sold every Mt of furniture in the house to the second hand man, burned up all the mattresses and old clothes, and before we moved into the new house, I hired a chemist to come and disinfect it from cellar to garret. He did a whole lot of things to it. Among other things he had a sprayer and sprayed and sprayed the walls and floors with a solution of corrosive sublimate. I bought new furniture and bedding and had all our wearing ap parel disinfected and every insect and germ in them killed deader than a door nail. All this cost me about $500 ex tra, that is, the loss on the sale of the furniture and the disinfecting cost that much cold cash, but I was deter mined to provide for future happiness and peace. This year my wife got the bug craze again and tore that house up from top to bottom. She didn't seem right certain that there were any bugs, but she declared that her sister was com ing from California to see her and stay all summer and if her sister should see the sign of a bug. everlasting dis grace would follow. So I say that if There is any house cleaning in heaven, I would rather go to the other place, where the fire would be hot enough to kill the bugs without tearing every thing to pieces once a year. My farm adjoins the city and I lived through the drouth and the Cleveland soup-house reign after the stoppage of the coinage of silver. Those were weary times trying to pay off a mort gage and save money enough to get married, but they were not equal to the times when ray wife gets bug crazy. The one consolation is that I had to suffer from gold bugism until they began to coin silver again while these rpells that my wife takes never last more than two weeks and sometimes not quite so long. As between gold bugs and these kind that my wife hunts, one is about as bad as the other. ANTI-C1MEX LECTULARIUS. They Can't Help It The republican papers often tell the people of the state If they are only F. Simmons, deranged. Every function Is disturbed. Appetite and digestion demoralized. Creeping rigors, hot flashes, cold sweats mad fitful sleep linger to make life almost unbearable. catarrh given an opportunity, they will posi tively redeem themselves, but every now and then we hear of one of the old state gang falling by the way in the mire. The latest member of 'the old republican gang to fall was Lieu tenant Richard Townley, a graduate of the ring, who secured his appointment. He was bank examiner . under Tom Benton, and secretary during the ad ministrations of Moore, Bartley and Hastings, and dropped out of sight when fusion won in this state. But the gang of Nebraska still bad power with the adminstration, and Townley, with others from Nebraska were given places of trust. Townley was given a good place in the United States navy, but it seems he could not keep a good thing, for recently, after trial by court martial, he was dismissed for irregu larities. Who's next? Fremont Leader. The Giant Labor The following poem by J. A. Edger ton ranks well up alongside of the great English poets who have writ ten on the same subject. Mr. Edgerton is doing some very excellent work of late and if he keeps up the style and power of his recent efforts, he will soon be recognized as one of the standard American poets: A giant? Yes, with all a giant's force, And all a giant's patience in its use. With toil-bent form he takes his plod ding course, - An object of coercion and abuse. He never thinks his Titan strength to lose On those who drive him; but reserves it all To bear the world's great burdens; to produce At the behest of his oppressors small. He might be master yet continues as a thrall. He is a social outcast, being poor; Too humbled to proclaim his real worth. A sense of servitude he must endure From those of wealth and so-called gentle birth; And yet he makes the wealth of all the earth; The palace builds, to beg before its gates; He lives In want and suffers from the dearth Of luxuries that he himself creates. He meekly bears it all and blames it to the fates. He makes the mountain yield her store of gold, And yet its blessings are to him un known; -He fills the land with bounties mani fold, Yet others reap the harvests he has sown. ' He, through his toil and industry alone, The wilderness into a garden turns, ' Yet others take the fruitage for their own. Greed beats him down and filches what he earns. He feels it all, but still the lesson never learns. The parasites feed always on his veins. The vampire, Interest, must fill its maw, While Rent and Profit, looking for their gains, By night and day his life-blood ever draw. He creeps unto his pallet made of straw, Thus weakened and reduced to poverty. He's bound and duped by fictions of the law, But when his real friends would make him free, He turns from them to kiss the hand of tyranny. He is the Atlas bearing up the world. It Is this condition that Dr. Hartmaa calls systemic catarrh. The whole sys tem is saturated with catarrh. Thisdis covery marked an important advance in the history of medical science. The medical profession had long been grop ing to discover the meaning of the stub born and distressing after-effects of la grippe. All remedies seemed alike In adequate. As soon as Dr. Hartman announced that it was his belief that the after effects of la grippe was simply sys temic catarrh, a great advance was made in the treatment of these cases. It now only remained to find a reliable remedy for systemic catarrh. Here a new difficulty arose. Catarrh had been regarded by many physicians as a local disease and treated solely by local remedies. Such physicians knew of no systemic remedy for catarrh. Other physicians regarded catarrh as a blood disease and had been in the habit of treating it with blood medicines,' which could be of no possible use In systemic catarrh. For a time Peruna enjoyed the dis tinction of being the only systemic oa tarrh remedy known. It was not even claimed by anyone that there was an other remedy for this exasperating con dition. Since then, however, a great many remedies have been proposed for sys temic catarrh, and a great deal of val uable time wasted in experimenting with other remedies. But it still re mains true that Peruna is the only spe cific remedy for the after-effects of la grippe. The demand for this remedy, in consequence of the present epidemic of la grippe, is enormous. Mr. J . P. Lowery, proprietor City Hotel Albany, Texas, says : "Being advised to try Peruna for la grippe and asthma, I did so with good results. I had been feeling very unwell for a long time, and had asthma quite bad till I came West, when I got better of the asthma, but was not well. I tried a great many remedies for it, but nothing was able to cure me. 'I took three bottles of Peruna and 1 am happy to say that it is the best med icine I ever used. I am satisfied that Peruna is a good medicine, and as such have commended it to several of my friends with good results. It is seldom I cive a testimonial, but T fMnV tiU n you. I hope others may be benefited T "1 . . wirougn you ana your meaicmes. " Every one should read Dr. Hartman V latest lecture on la grippe. This lecture will be sent free by The Peruna Medicina Coxapasy, Columbus, Ohio. ' . , When he at last grows conscious of his power, The pigmies from his pathway shall be hurled And his oppressors from his might shall cower. v Above the startled nations he shall tower ' V Like some Leviathan aroused from sleep. - ".- There shall be no justice then; and from that hour The wages that , he merits he shall v keep, The fields in which he sows, there shall he also reap. Sleep if you can, secure in dreams of ease And follow up your greed and low desire, ;. ' - O, creatures with your stolen luxuries. Unmindful of a People's growing ire; But know the God of Nineveh and Tyre, Of Babylon and Rome reigns yet to day; And know your unjust system shall expire, In some red night of ruin and dismay. Across whose wake the dawn of ages shall grow gray. Goad not too far the giant. Think of him, His service to mankind through all the years, His slavery in ages past and dim, His toil whose wages were but blood and tears. Has he no claim that to your heart endears ' His patient worth? Why crush him for your gain? . For know the hour of his redemp tion nears, When all your tyranny shall be in " vain. The kingdom he creates, there shall he also reign. ' FREE KIDNEY CURE A Trial Case of a Remarkable Remedy Mailed Free to Every Sufferer . Sending Name and Address Dear Sirs: I am a passenger engineer on the H. & T. C. R. R. ajidhare been for twenty years. 1 have suffered with Kidney and Liver trouble for fifteen years. Before I commenced to take your remedy I had to lay off, and was not able to turn in bed or get up in the morning, but since taking Aikavis have not suffered with my Kidneys or Rheumatism, nor have I lost a day. Before taking your medicine I made applica tion to join insurance orders, but was rejected on account of Kidney trouble, but six months after taking I, was examined again and passed O. K. Chas. B. Brady. Disorders of the Kidneys and Bladder cause Blight's Disease, Rheumatism, Gravel, Pain in the Back, Bladder Disorders, difficult or too frequent passing water, Dropsy, etc Forthese diseases a Positive fcpecific Cure is found in a new botanical discovery, the wonderful Kava Kava Shrub, called by botanists, the piper methysticum, from the Ganges River, East India. It has the extraordinary record of 1,200 hospital cures in 30 day s. It acts directly on the Kidneys, and cures by draining out of the Blood the poisonous Uric Acid, Urates, Lithates, etc., which causa the disease. . Hon, R. C.. Wood, of Lowell, Ind., writes that in four weeks he was cured of Rheumatism, Kidney and Bladder disease, after ten years' suffering, 7 His bladder trouble was also . great and he had to get up five to twelve times dur ing the nifat.- Hundreds of others, and many ladies, iuc lading Mrs. Sarah. Castle, of Poes tenkill, N. Y., and Mrs. L. D. Fegelev, Lancas ter, 111., also -testify to its wonderful curative powers in Kidney and other. disorders peculiar to womanhood ; , That you may judge of the value of this Great Discovery for yourself, we will send you one Large Case by mail Free, only asking that when cured yourself you will recommend it to others. It is a sure Specific and cannot fail. Address the Church Kidney Cure Company, No. 607 Fourth Avenue, New York City. AMERICAN SNOBS For the Real Unadulterated Article, the Searcher Has to Come to America to Find It At the communion service in one of the Presbyterian churches in Wash ington last Sunday the bread and wine were passed by two admirals, a gen eral, two supreme court justices and a former secretary of state. Exchange. Dear me! How flattered the Lord must be! k I cannot get over wondering how on earth the admirals and general et al. ever condescended to so celebrate the feast of a lowly carpenter. ' Mr. Thackeray, Mr. Thackeray, why did you die so soon, and why didn't you write a book on American snobs while you were about it? There are plenty of them here. Oh, a great plenty, thank you. The English snob is a wierd crea ture, strangely and wonderfully made, and a French tuft hunter is a thing to be marveled at, but for real, down right, unassumed snobbery give - me, or, give me, a fine, large, well-grown American. An Englishman has a certain right to- be snobbish. He doesn't know any better, and he doesn't pretend anything else. But we Americans oh, brothers and sisters, do let's do our best to live up to the good old Declaration of Inde pendence and have a little, just a wee bit of a trifle of common sense. The Knickerbocker craze of all ab surdities under the sky who ever heard of anything so absurd as the Knickerbocker fad? Who were the Knickerbockers, pray tell me, ye winged winds? Princes, dukes, admirals, nay, even humble honorable of high begetting? Not . once of them, not a single one of them. They were good, honest, dull-witted Dutchmen, who sold cheese or made butter or ferried boats or salted her ring for a living. Decent, God-fearing, beer-drinking, coarse, Ignorant, well enough meaning men who came over here to live in peace and eat onions without the faintest thought of found ing a country or anything else. If any rash spirit had prophesied that he was the founder of an aris tocracy he would have had a fit of apoplexy at the very thought. The Virginians we hear so much of who were the Virginians for the most part? Runaway sons, or sons who were sent away from England for Eng land's good-1 adventurers; brave, light hearted, decently bred, to be sure, but adventurers for all that, , and their wives sh weren't there some ship loads of serving-maids' sent out to Vir ginia some time in the gay beginning of things and weren't these serving maids bought for so many pounds of tobacco to be good and loyal wives? Puritans. . "Good old Puritan blood! " Where does it come from ? " From a set of cold-blooded, hard headed, high-handed old skinflints who were for the most part of extremely humble birth. What is there so mar- velously fine about a crop-haired. car penter who burned people at the stake for disagreeing with him that we should all he so anxious to trace our selves back to some one who "came over" with him? What on earth does it all signify, anyway? If your father, was a good man, a kind neighbor, an honest gen tleman, a brave soldier or a faithful friend to those who . loved him, be proud of him in Pride's name and do your best to be worthy of him, wheth er he sat in chambers and judged peo ple or whether he carried a club and arrested them. What he wore or what he owned or where he lived aren't of the slightest consequence. . What was he? - That's "the important thing. I helped to take a party of American boys and girls to the world's fair at Chicago: There were twenty-one of them. . They were public school children and they came from California, bless the dear old state! Some were the children of rich men ,and some were born of poor parents. But they were all American -boys and girls, and they were sent to the world's fair because they had proven them selves unusually bright in school. Coming home from the fair, there came one day Into our special car two Russian noblemen. They were sent to America by the Russian government to study the American system of public education. They wanted to see our boys and girls. They saw them. They talked-with them. By and by one of the Russian noble men spoke to me in private. ' - "These are very interesting," he said. "But I would like to see some of the peasant children. I heard there were some in your party. "We have no peasants, in America," I began. The Russian nobleman smiled tolerantly. "Oh, I know you say so," he said. A . "Well," said I, "you have just been talking to the daughter of a Swedish peasant, and that boy across the aisle his father doesn't read very well. The girl you think is so pretty, she's the daughter of a laboring, man. The girl with her is a banker's daughter. Can you tell much difference between them?" The Russian nobleman didn't believe one word I said. It was all true, every word of It but that was in California, where things are really American, yet. . In the east in the crowded districts it would not have been true. The poor man's daughter is not the same as the rich, man's there because, and only because, she and the- rich man's daughter think she's different, and that makes her different. Let's stop that kind of thinking. Let's be American really, straight forwardly, honestly American, or. else let's move across the ocean and be done with it. Let's stop all this folly of the "I'm as good as you" business and begin to work on the "You're as good as I am" principle. All . men are not. equal. The consti tution of the United States never meant to say they were, except before the law. . . . Some men are brave and some are cowards. Some women are good, while some are wicked. Some children lie and some tell the truth. Some people are gentle and well mannered and kindly these are the aristocracy of the earth and some are rough and ill mannered and brutal they are the low born and the low living. All the rest of the distinctions are simply so much chaff to be blown away by the first breeze of common sense that catches them. Let's start a little breeze to blowing in our own particular neighborhood, right now. Winifred Black. Hardy's Column Power of Congress j8 African Wart County Officers ,5 City Dads Infer ior Race Republican Papers Sure J Vacation Season Mutual Insurance. According to the late decision of our highest court, congress, has a right to put a tariff upon the cattle and wool coming out of New Mexico, Arizona and other territories the same as when brought from Old Mexico or South Am-, erica. That is the way to make a house of lords out of congress. Put them in for life and "their oldest son after them and things will then be all right. Women and children are penned up and being starved in South Africa by, the English just as they were in Cuba by the Spanish. Is it not time for the United States government to at least do as much as to protest. Then let the English protest against the , way we are treating the Filipinos. A county treasurer is to be elected this fall in each of the counties, to-J gether with other county officers. If taxpayers in Lancaster, county exer cise any degree of common sense they will re-elect William McLaughlin. We have not had a county treasurer for thirty years who has paid out the money collected on county debts as closely as he has. - Instead of deposit ing the money in banks and pocketing the interest, McLaughlin has paid debts. Had other treasurers done the same the taxpayers would have been saved thousands of dollars. tr ATM I have kecs aslar CASCARETS amd aa a mild and effective laxative tbey are simply won derful. My daughter and I were bothered with aick stomach and our breath waa very bad. After taking a few doses of Cascareta we have improved wonderfully. Tbey are a areat help In the family.'.' WILHELMINA NAOBL. 1137 BlttenbouM St., Cincinnati. Ohio. . Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c 2o, iOo. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... BterllKf- Hrmrij Cmu., Chins, XMlral, Saw Tark. 31 fin.Tft-li If Sold and irnaranteed by all drug UU" I U-UAW guts to CDXI Tobaooo UsbltT Ojv CANDY I I V' CATHARTIC yt Special Sale of Shirt Recently we purchased from two manufacturers who .were anxious to close out all stock on hand about Vrie hundred and twenty dozen of white and colored shirt waists. We secured them at very low prices and we are now selling them rapidly on the same low basis. "We mention a few of the special lots. Thirty-two dozen white lawn waists, trimmed with two, rows of Swiss embroidered inserting, worth 75c each Sale price 39c Seventeen dozen white lawn waists, trimmed with eight lace edged tucks, 'worth $1.00 each Sale price 69c Fourteen dozen white lawn waists, trimmed with ' twenty-seven tucks and six rows of lace, worth $1.20 each Sale price 85c Twenty dozen fancy printed lawn, fancy printed dimity and fancy percale waists, worth 85c to $1,00 each Sale price 69c li cr'.& Lincoln, : r The city dads of the city of Lincoln seem to turn ,their backs upon the idea of "the city .owning an electric light plant and lighting the streets them selves. Bonds were voted, but no move has vet been made to accomplish the object. '.How much will the old, light ing' company have to pay in order to hold the dads down? - There is no sense, decency or justice in making the taxpayers pay double for lighting the streets of Lincoln what other cities of the same size pay. , It is generally thought that the Afri can race is, an . inferior race and yet many of the states dd not care to give them the same rights and privileges before the law because they fear the smartest of them will come out ahead of the jowier white class. It is a fact they learn a little more readily. There Is not a more successful educator in the United States than Booker T. Washington. From slavery he has stepped into the highest ranks of education..- His pupils have all descended from the slave class. Considering the timber he; uses where is his equal? Republican papers are gloating over the late' court decision. They claim it sanctions and permanently estab lishes all the actions and doctrines of Emperor McKinley. That it insures his re-election for a third term or a man just like him.. So they claimed that Clay s omnibus compromise, the fugi tive slave law and the Dred Scott de cision were going to perpetuate the old parties and choke out the reform sen timent. But It did not do it. The re form sentiment soon triumphed at the ballot box and on the battle field. So it will be again. The American people are. being divided, further and further apart. One side wants to take the gov ernment out of the hands of the com mon people. so that the laws enacted and the court . decisions handed down may be more ' permanent and not changeable by the vote of the people. The common Vpeople -are, sure-to tri umph with Bryanism for a platform, and they will triumph on the battle field If the east kick over the traces as the south did." . The vacation . season is at hand. River, lake and mountain sides will be thronged with teachers, preachers, bookkeepers and wealthy city Idlers. Great conventions,' campmeetings and expositions dot the land from one end to the other. Railroads and steam boats drop the fare half as bait to in duce travel. As a rule the pay goes on when playing the same as when teach ing, preaching or writing. But how is it with the. farmer? Can he leave his corn and his cows, his harvest and his hogs. Can he be permitted to en joy the cool lake or mountain breezes in the hot summer months or the warm south winds in the zero weather of winter? No, no, no, the presence of the farmer the year round on the farm is needed. His live stock in the winter needs as much" care as his corn crop in the summer. " So it is, the farmer must toil and sweat, early and late, week in and week out, year in and year out, for a small competence in old age. The return for his labor is far below that of any other class. Farmers are too numerous to form a trust. Several farmers to teach the Indians how to farm are wanted by the government. but the pay is small. About one-fourth what is paid to other appointees of government. The farmer must be kept under everywhere and at all times. Thousands and tens of thousands of dollars are paid for.flre and cyclone in surance in Nebraska above what is paid back for losses. The presidents, secretaries, treasurers and agents get big pay and of course the insured must pay high rates. We believe in the mu tual, system, .paying, losses after they occur and roll .up t-big fund before hand to be sqnandered and stolen. We have carried a policy from the Dwell ing House Mutual for over three years and our assessments - have been less than ten cents on a hundred dollars for each year. In the first place, there C V D U 1 1 I Q ?RADBt.9? CURED.-lst. 2nd. or 3rd stages of Syphilis cared OTrillLIO ,or F,QlL 12 rwtment never fails. Pimples, skfn eruptions M '?nlfn-" tf by maiS- Rmber money returned if not satisfactory" "sDcleD Nebraska. is no one getting rich out of the com pany. The writer has acted as treas urer since the organization of the com pany. Last January there was a sur plus of two or three hundred dollars in the treasury, whereupon the com pany, voted unanimously to pay us $23 for three years' services as treasurer. Mutual companies if rightly officered are altogether the cheapest and surest companies. The best life Insurance company we ever belonged to was com posed of five members, each of us put up a five hundred dollar U. S. bond and the family of the one who died first was to have the pile. Any one could withdraw his bond as long as the five were all ' in good health. When we came west we withdrew our bond, interest and all. No one made anything nor , lost anything, excepting we all had an insurance without cost. .BARGAIN COLUMN AN ADVERTISEMENT in this eolumn will bring more and quicker returns for the mony Said than any other newspaper io Nebraska, early everybody reads this column. Bate 10c per line each insertion. 2 BEAUTIES large size (no tights), 10c. Sealed lists for stamps. Star Novelty Co.. Bay Shore, N. Y. QCUn me 25 cents for receipt that will pre. ukilU serve eggs two years. A. H. WAvcaorr Culver, Kansas. nfltl'T Bay ink. Send 25c for sample box. UUil I Harrison's Ink Powder makes 75o worth of excellent writing fluid. No better ink for fountain pens. Once used always used. W. I. Habbibok. Sistersville. W. Va. We Cut Drug Prices READ OUR. ADS and you will know the extent of our cuts. Our prices are the same "to all who pay CASH. $1.00 Riggs' Dyspepsia Tablets. .. .6Dc $1.00 Riggs' Sarsaparilla and Cle- ery Compound. . 1. , 69a $1.00 Riggs' Female Regulator.... 69c $1.00 Cook's Dandruff Hair Tonic. 79c $1.00 Peruna.. 79c $1.00 Miles Nervine...... 79c $1.00 Pierce's Remedies...... 79c $1.00 Hood's Sarsaparilla 79c $1.00 Paine's Celery Compound 79c $1.00 Wine of Cardui......; 79o $1.00 Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets.. 79o $1.00 Malted Milk ;..79c $1.00 Lydia Pinkham's Compound. 79c $1.00 Kilmer's Swamp Root. ..... .79c $1.00 Scott's Emulsion 79c We not only cut on all patents, but we areln a position to give you job- tS ber's rate on .all staples. It pays to trade here. CUT RATE PHARMACY, 12th and O Streets. Lincoln, Neb. APIARY SUPPLIES A foil line of goods needed in the Apiary. All goods and work first class. Descriptive circular and price list froe. New extracted honey for sale after Jnly 1st. Write for prices ou honey. Adaress,- F. A. SNELL, Milledgeville, Carroll 3o., III. LOOK HERE! Do you want a GUITAR or a MAN. DOLIN? If so send us 2.00 for a fine one. We ship the instrument nntLvou pay balance at 50 cents per week uV il paid $3.50 which is three weekly pay. ments. The guitar is regulation size an d worth the money only $3.50. : A. H. WAYCHOFF, Culver, Ka.ns. i