Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1901)
November 79 1901. THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. r We are Lincoln Agents for the Garland Stoves and Ranges. A beautiful" bteel range like cut, high clos et, re.evoir for Ml fcizes $27.00 upwards Overstocked on Silverware HI VTt A. K4ti tea spoons, shell or plain pattern, set E9c Xil - tbU - - - L78 RUDGE, GUENZEL CO. Hardware, Furniture, Carpets & Quecnsware 1 1 iS to ii J4 N St-, Lincoln, Neb. ala. Kaa worked the ! to u of our !orira rarrytJif vessels, and the Joss , cf til" T,!a is tit a mall part of the cot to th: country uf the clap trap g.c!d atari rd- TL- whole cost cf IhU r'sx-trap toll staudard. 0 far as r-Ut- la oar frJgn deallcr.. f-a all cur ava.ILa.ble proof are tsaie up Ut Mer about a follows: A ;criga t-' -t of cSae billion dollar. rwj'iJrlEC as interest tribute cf us of tiw yarly; the loss of our f?reUn carrying veeis. requiring jtariy tribute of us for arn it 2 freight; it losa cf ownership to ml til lie a dollar rf railroad arid ctfc.-r property, requlrtas a Z.0. iXj yearly tribute for proSU there . to foreigrvera: and for eaperi-- of African nabol traveling Sa other o5Rtri-s. f i .t! ..(.' yearly. This raxkes a ?eta! yearly tribute to for ;rner now of J .(. and it i all the tin.e lacreai&c- TbU :!maie is true a. ad trry conservative as I will hereafter prove. It Is far below the -eai'ti a I tllee. tt it ta BUS t-toWb to tsake a fatal cae for tie r 'Hiliheaa party. "t V lritcr is only a xnili l-ir.cin: for Easy otise-m to follow probably for a year or more, a!! to b freighteil us proofs ttat rr ut'i'an fiaasclal tau.L!cKs are tat:tually fictitious, filse arid ciUla-Iinr. and bare proved tfcsreles n to te, and that the ftall rs of tl e has torn for the great j roi sctive labofics people to tahe the covert meat into their own haads and tUih truth. ri;hteouafc and Jas .ire Is their cwa laterest- I am sure it can t oae. II A It VI X WARREX. TOBACXOSPTT UvJlM f Bd SMOKB " m VourUfeawayl mm W fw-l ci .a form of Wtuicro attic kf m. tig -j iaIusx JVO TO ' BA Cm U-m furtrJ ta t- Ufi. je BOO tOOO rwrtsd. a:iirBif ;. Cvr riirjttirl more than they would fuse with the Mark Hanna republicans. Ed. Ind.) 4JP WHAT DEMOCRATS DID lftSrislrfllUM fmrtf C14 It j a Thf Wld Ik Editur Icdepeadent: 1'pon four dif ferent orraioc.s the detaorratlc party, with fooi wo-kici5 Eiajority ia the lower house. ed jLgaitrt the free and calSraitM eoiaa$e of silver at the rati- cf IS to i. The fcrty-cittii coc?r . hat las a izuxralie suajciity of 42. on April e. Ulled a Mil protif if.? for the free and tjcl'rsil! roiaje of silver at the ratio cf I to 1. The tfty-setuiid cor.res. haviar a Ctrz-rrxUc majority of 14. oa the T4th !ay f March. Ii's2. killed a free coittfe bill at the ratio of 16 to L Oa the i;:h day of Jaly foHowiaj? tey overwh'iEaiagly def rated another fre colaace bill at the ratio cf 16 to 1, after It had passed a republican senate. On Acrsst Z3. IhiZ, the democrats, with a majority cf K3 over republicans sad populist, aaia declared asralcst he free and unlimited coinage of sil ver at the ratio of 1 to I. When the above rote was taken tsere ere 217 democrats present and voting cf whom 191 were for and 116 SLgaian the Liii. This shows that if the repu. li'-ars and poptilists had been reesoTed frora ronrress. leasing the matter wholly with the decuocrats. free a.d nn'irait-d rotnajce of silver would hart been defeated by a major ity c? The broken promises cf the demo cratic party reaaiad me of two men that were ta a boat out on a swolen river abovit to be rat away. One had r'4 sense: the other was foolish. The o&e with set. aiked the other to pray, a si he cotaajeticed. "0. God. Just it us grrt to the tank this time and I will give yoa a great tia; lump of tal low as ti as my Sst." "Where are yon Ksitf to set that tallow from asked his cocpanioa. He replied. "HuiJi. yo d f'JoL I was Just telling him sc. How many mere time will it be ee4try for the people ta he de ceived ly ih promises of democratic leaders before they find out that they. too. are lust tfUirr them so? It has caw bn over Zi years since the fietsosstitatloa swindle, one of the moat sicaxtkr Isi-iltles that ever had S3 existence, v as perpetrated. I? the p?pT.lit party were repre sented la conrrs t-y a tme middle- of-the-road itlegatloa. scSclentiy larje, the woaf-d da cor- Inside of week to tear cst ard forever remove said Sni'S-sity than both the old parties have cone ta nearly z'i years. I BRYAN TYSOX. I Carihajre. X. C. ITh doitc of th things that ars aior ennmeratd was the caas of tie organization of the popt 1 1st party. If the Hni-CSrrelaii4 crowd got co atrol It sro-uld do the same thing jsxaia ... In that ease the northern poyjlirts would Siare tt ssore t asloa with thm, any Two School Teachers A court decision fought for by two young women school teachers of Chi cago and handed down by a country judge has had an effect bo momentous that it has set the whole United States to talking. It has saved the city of Chicago from financial distress, and the public school of Chicago from reducing their terms of Instruction owing to lack of funds. It has relieved the small taxpayer from a long-borne and onerous burden. It has brought the arrogant and powerful corporations into respect and obedience to the law. It has changed the whole aspect of the taxing question In Illinois and has set the people of all the other states to thinking along lines of reform of tax abuses. Interest naturally centers around the young women who had the cour age and the endurance to bring a case of such vast importance into court for adjudication. As for the judge who decided this case, there was at first surprise and astonishment, then ad miration, which has rapidly crystal ired into an affection on the part of the people that it has rarely before been the portion of a people's tribune to enjoy. Chicago American. The Dude Monkey Since Dr. Haeckel has reversed The scientific plan, Which figured an orang outang The foredad of a man, We msy expect the simians To get In-quite a spunk, - -For while bis plan may flatter man. It's tough upon the monk. He says the baboon and the ape Are but degenerates. Who for some bestial sin slipped back Through retrograding states, Who, failing In the human rele. Descended down the scale And got their proper hold on life Iiy sprouting out a tail. There seems some reason in this view To anyone who delves Into the divers ways that men Make monkeys of themselves: And then the theory half-formed Becomes a certitude. When he observes the monkey-shines Indulged In by the dude. - J. A. Edgerton. THE DOCTORS EXTEND THEIR TIME REINDEER CARRY MAIL Owing to the Large Number Who Have Been Unable to See the British Doc tors, These Eminent Gentlemen Have Extended the Time for Giving Their Services Free to All Who Call Before December Cth. Owing ; the large number of In valids who have called upon the Brit ish Doctors at their office. COR. 11TH AND N STS., SHELDON BLOCK, and who have been unable to see them, these eminent gentlemen have, by request, consented to conUnue giv ing their services entirely tree ior three months (medicines excepted) to ail Invalids who call upon them for treatment between now and Decem ber 6. These services consist not only of consultation, examination and advice. but also of all minor surgical operations. The obiect in pursuing this course is to become rapidly and personally ac quainted with the sick and afflicted, and under no condiuons win any charge whatever be made for any ser vices rendered for three months to an who call before December 6. The doctors treat all forms of disease and deformitia and guaranU-e a cure ia every care they undertake. At the 1st Interview a thorough examlnaton Is mad, and. if Incurable, you are frank ly and kindly told so; also advised against spending your money for use less treatment. JA'ale and female weakness, catarrh and catarrhal deafness, also rupture, goitre, cancer, all skin diseas and all diseases of the rectum, are positively cured by their new treatment, The Chief Associate Surgeon cf the Institute is In personal chariie. OSce hours, from Sa.a til 8 p. m. No Sunday hours. Special Notice If you cannot call, send stamp for question blank for home treatment. Their Value Proved by Tests .Made In Alaska. AK INTERESTING EZPEEHIEKT. HEADACHE 1 1. -. .. . . ' ? t I I'll ravi ! Pit II. I ,1 V ' '. f 'If. J"1- ? At 3 Sru 2S Data 25c A Fire Hundred Mile Race Through the Snow Between Reindeer and t Dos Tenma Friendahip Between Theae Animals and Siberians. American Efforts to Introduce the Reindeer Into Alaska. When reindeer were first proposed for use in the mall service In Alaska, the Idea was ridiculed, says the New York Sun. Since then experiments have demonstrated the animal's value for this purpose. The first test showed Its superiority over dog teams for trav eling through the snow. A reindeer team with a Lapp driver was selected to carry one of the mall bags over the Nome route and to re turn with the outgoing mall, the round trip le!ngabout 500 miles. Two days before the reindeer started three well equipped dog teams set out. The route lay through a country without road or trail, and the conditions were as bad as heavy snowfalls could make them. Early on the fifth day out the rein deer team caught up with the slowest of the dog outfits la a stretch of soft drifted snow. In this the dogs had been stalled, and their desperate floun derlngs had so wearied them that they were making little progress. The rein deer plowed through the drifts with little difficulty. That afternoon they passed the second dog team. The Lapp brought his mail to Its des tination, rested his deer thirty hours, started on the return trip and fifty miles out met the foremost of his com petitors. Even more remarkable was a mall trip ' of 1,240 miles through a trackless wilderness made by reindeer, the teams making as much as 110 miles a day under favorable conditions. Now that the value of these animals has been fully established the United States have become an importer and breeder of stock and will bring in the next few years thousands of reindeer Into their northernward possession. There are now In Alaska eight herds comprising about 3,500 head. By Jan uary, this number will be increased through Importation to more than 5,000. . At first the whites In Alaska were not successful In handling the animals. They are scarcely comprehensible by the Caucasian. The reindeer is easily frightened and easily offended, and it Is Impossible to tell how he will behave in either case. Sometimes he will rush at the offending person and strike him down with his sharp, powerful fore hoofs or endeavor to rip him open with a quick descent of his formidable ant lers. Again he wlU balk, sulk and even pine away. Between the Siberian and the rein deer there exists a sort of affinity. The animal will obey his accustomed mas ter when a white skinned man can do nothing with him. So a number of herders were brought over from Sibe ria and young Alaskan Eskimos put under them to learn the business. The Alaskan natives have taken the great est interest In the Introduction of the reindeer, and on manjr occasions dele gations have traveled 'from 300 to 400 miles to inspect a herd, which is looked upon as opening a new avenue of wealth for them. For a time It was feared that the Alaskan dogs unless checked would manifest a disposition to scatter and destroy the reindeer herds, but the herders were armed and had strict orders to fire upon any dog interfering with a herd, and after a number of meddlesome dogs had been shot this source of annoyance disappeared al most altogether. A few reindeer are killed each year by wolves. Even more expert than the Siberians In the CRre and training of reindeer are the natives of Lapland. Accordingly a score of fullblooded Lapps have been Induced by liberal offers to emigrate to Alaska, where they form a little col ony. With them have came a number of their dogs, remarkably intelligent animals that not only herd and guard the reindeer, but also assist in training and breaking them to harness. The dogs are very courageous and will fight wolves, mountain lions or any other beast of prey that may attack the herd. Any of the Lapps may upon applica tion to the government have the loan of 100 head of reindeer for a period of from three to five years, at the end of which time the borrower returns the 100 head of deer to the government re taining the Increase as his private property. The reindeer has also been introduc ed as a pack animal. One of the pio neers in this movement was Hank Summers, who for nearly a score of years has been a miner and prospector In Alaska. This veteran some months ago procured a reindeer from one of the mission stations, and upon this deer he packed his tent, blankets, pro visions and tools for the summer's prospecting. After a brief experience with his new assistant he declared that he would never again bother with do? teams. . . The breaking of a reindeer is only 6lighUy less exciting than the same op eration In the case of a broncho on the western plains. When the deer Is las soed, the Ibop being thrown over the antlers, he often becomes infuriated and, rising upon his hind legs, strikes out viciously with his fore feet. It Is then In order for the man -to beat a hasty retreat. Watching his opportu-. nlty. he runs In, seizes the horns, one In either hand, and dextrously throws the deer upon his back. When once down, the animal at once gives up the struggle. TEACHERSTROUBLES A TRYING OCCUPATION FOR WOMEN WITH DELICATE NERVES" Tli. Bard Work Entallsd by th. Chars;, of a School Room Often Caas.a th. ' Health to Break Dowa From The Tribune, Iff mncapolis, 21 inn. From The .Tribune, Minneapolis, Minn. Teaching school is an occupation which has many attractions for cul tured women, but it also has many drawbacks and often affects their health seriously. Esp-ecially is this so in the case of "woman with delicate nervous systems and those with ,a tendency to pulmonary troubles. Miss Mary K. Powers, of Ellsworth, Wis., is a teacher whose health was broken down by the hard work which the charge of a large school entails. She says: "During the winter of 1898," while teaching school,-1 became subject to nervousness; which grew worse until my whole system wtis run down. My back ached and at times. I was so dizzy that I could hardly stand. My limbs were swollen and always tired, so that I felt no more rested in the morning than when I went to bed. I was also troubled with a cough and the food I ate did not strengthen me. This condition, accompanied by palpitation of the heart, kept- up for several months until in March; when I read about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People in a Juneau, Wisconsin, newspaper. "I began taking the pills and in about a week I noticed a change for the better. I felt jso encouraged by this improvement that I kept on tak ing them until I had used three boxes, and was entirely cured. I always keep Pink Pills by'me and I take them oc casionally when I feel the need of a tonic. "I believe firmly in the good done by Pink Pills for Palo People and have advised many of my friends , to use them." . : All . the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered iierves are con tained, in a condensed form, in Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous head ache, the after-effects of the grip, pal pitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexion, and all forms of weakness. At all druggists, or direct from Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., fifty cents, per, box; six boxes two dollars and a half. A Losing Game It is greed greed greed; And it's slay slay r-slay. We rob the poor and we crush the weak . fi We fancy are In our way; But we never stop to count the cost Our children will have to pay. ' . ? h Our sabres gleam in air; : Our brothers before us fall; We pay no heed, though our victim plead ; -We are deaf to freedom's call; We give to the few the heritage That God intended for all. Our palace wails re&ourid To revelry and to mirth. While cries of want and wretchedness Ascend from all the earth; We give the priceless gems of life For things that are nothing worth. By dreams of empire lured, By glitter of gold enticed, Peace, mercy, love and charity Are ever sacrificed. WThile calling upon His holy : name, , We crucify the Christ. " . We sell our souls for wealth. Our principles for fame; k We stake all that, is best in life For a fortune or a name; And howsoever the dice may fall, We play a losing game. J. A. Edgerton. Trial Package FREE Have too arot dyspepsia or indlRasticml YOU CAN HE CURED. I will send Von FREE a trial package of my Stomach Tablets. This FKEE TKlALis t be very best evidence I can famish you of the very great merit of my Tablets. My Stomach Tablets anred ma of dyspepsia when every thing else had failed, and I want you to try them. I am a drussrist of over twenty yeara experi ence, and my Stomach Tablets are the very oest I have ever known for the positive cure of Dyapepaia, Indigoatlon, Soar Stomach, Heartburn. Oa on Stomach, and all ail ments caused by bad diaestion. such as poor appetite, loss of flesh, palpitation of the heart, sleeplessness) and loss of energy. MY STOMACH TABLETS Assist the stomach to direst food. That is their mission. They DO THIS by setting things right in the stomach. Creta new life and en ergy by strengthening the stomach. ANY FORM OF STOMACH TROUBLES Can be cured if the right remedy is used. My Stomach Tabl.ta la the Remedy. I have seen hundreds of very ba oases cured by them. My offer to let you try thm FREE is based on my faith in and experience with my Tablets in earing dyspepsia. Write me at one. and the FREE TRIAL. PACKAGE will he ftent by return mail and soon you will be cured. JOHN MORROW, Chemist, Spring-field, O. LADIES ! I mak big wages at home, nd want ail to have th. same opportunity. The work is very pleasant and wili easily pay $13 weekly. This is no deception. I want no money and will gladly send foil reticulars to all sending stamp. MRS. H. A. WIGGINS, Benton Harbor, Mich. Best Low Priced Hotel in th City. RATES, $100 per day and up. Hotel Walton 1516 O St. IJNCOL.N, NEB. Cancars Cured YOUTHFUL ROUGH RIDERS. They Wanted to See Kerralt Rooao velt, but Were Dtaappointed. Few callers at the White House at tracted more attention than did a party of tinder grammar school lads who a few days ago, according to a Washing ton special to the New York Tribune, Informed the doorkeeper that they wished to see Master Kermit Roosevelt They appeared just before 5 o'clock in the afternoon immediately after Mr. and Mrs. James Gray of Baltimore had arrived. Trunks .and grips had been sent ahead and were piled on the porti co. Ushers admitted the president's guests to the reception room, and the carriage sent to meet them bad just gone back to the stable. As if closing up on a fugitive after a ten mile chase, five Junior rough riders, mounted on long tailed ponies, all about ten hands high, bolted In the covered driveway in front of the main entrance. Their ride from the east gate to the portico at full speed was almost unobserved by the small crowd which had gathered when Mr. and Mrs. Gray arrived. So the boys had dismounted, left their steeds standing unhitched and walked to the doorway, when the guards real ized that a formidable cavalry troop was obstructing the driveway. They were hurried away by the po lice, but returned in a few minutes, when their identity and the purpose of their visit were disclosed. They formed a baud of delegates from various sec tions of the district. The leader was young Cartwright, son of the well known Connecticut Pie company man ager in Georgetown; two were Robin sons, sons of a Capitol hill veterinarian, and two more were sons of Guhorst, an undertaker and livery stable keep er. They had come to extend to Ker mit. an invitation to take a ride with them. Understanding that the presi dent had been a rough rider, they as sumed that his oldest son had a pony. But Kermit had no pony at that time, and the boys were told that he was taking his afternoon bicycle ride. They were surprised at this and for some moments gazed at the officers in aston ishment. To make way for a vehicle the five boys were ordered away. They dashed down the semicircular drive way through the west gate, then into Pennsylvania avenue to the east gate, thence, again to the front of the man sion. This time they did not dismount, but were, told to come again and per haps they could see Kermit. The pres ident's youngest boy was attracted to the portico by the appearance of the ponies, and there he watched them gallop away through the west gate and turn the avenue In the road past the east front of the war, state and navy building which leads to the White Lot five-eighths of a mile track. WAS UNDERSTOOD. Admiral Melville Explain a Point With Pat Simile. Admiral George W. Melville, chief en gineer. United States navy, generally makes himself understood when he says anything, says the New York Times. In & company composed chiefly of young engineers he was recently re counting some of his arctic experiences when he commanded the boat's crew of the ill fated Jeannette expedition which escaped from the wastes of the Lena delta. After he had described the ter rors and hardships of that experience and told 'how it was often impossible to make a progress of more than a mile or two in a day of exhausting labor a gentleman present ventured to remark that he should think the crew would have moved faster than that if for no other reason than to keep warm. Admiral Melville shock out his leo nine loeksr snorted and said: "Gentle men, you no doubt think It great fun to go sledding on arctic seas and per haps fancy that it bears some relation to sleighing in Central park. Well, let me tell you that much of the sledding I have described was fairly comparable to a trip from the Battery to Harlem over the tops of the buildings. If you will look out of the windows of one of the upper stories of a . skyscraper" and take the general topography of the city from that point of view and then plan an excursion in a straight line in any direction you will understand what It means to drag a boat over the Irreg ular ice masses of the polar sea." That Illustration gave a better idea of arctic exploration than could have been gained from hours of description. Save Funny Stories For Market. Mark Twain, who has doffed his soft felt hat for a shining silk hat, from be neath which his white, luxuriant curls fall in graceful confusion over his neck, never utters a joke except in his "literary stuff or his lectures, reserv ing all his ideas for this profitable util ization. Requested the other night at a dinner at Sherry's, in New York, to tell a funny story, he referred the party to several of his works, observing drawl lngly: "I must keep my stories for the mar ket. If I told you one it has taken me the whole afternoon to think up, you would repeat It, and when I Introduce It to the public In a book or lecture it will have become fiat, stale and un profitable. I'll tell you some other fel low's funny story, but never my own." Why suffer pain and death from can cer? DR. T. O'CONNOR cures can cers, tumors, and wens; no knife, blood or plaster. Addreaa'ISOS O street, Lin-j coin, Nebraska. . Well Shooter's Perilous Ride. Charles Brown, a shooter for the Rock Glycerin company, escaped death recently, says the Bradford Record, by & miracle. While driving on Quintuple hill with eighty quarts of nitroglycerin in his wagon the team became fright ened and started to rurl away down the steep mountain road. They arrived at the foot-of the hill In safety, but as they were making a turn near Stoffer's barn at Toad Hollow, on the main road, the nitroglycerin was piled np In the ditch and scattered along for nearly a hundred feet. Fortunately It did not explode, and the horses and wagon were uninjured. THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY TROUBLE AND DON'T NOV IT To Prove What Swamp-Rob t,, the Great Kidney Remedy Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of "The Nebraska Independent" May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. WEAK AND UNHEALTHY KIDNEYS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR MORE SICKNESS AND SUFFRING THAN ANY OTHER DISEASE, THEREFORE, WHEN THROUGH NEGLECT OR OTHER CAUSES, KIDNEY TROUBLE IS PERMITTED TO CONTINUE, FATAL RESULTS ARE SURE TO FOL LOW. .- YOUR OTHER ORGANS MAY NEED ATTENTION BUT YOUR KIDr NEYS MOST, BECAUSE THEY DO MOST AND NEED ATTENTION FIRSTe IF YOU ARE -SICK OR "FEEL BADLY," BEGIN TAKING DR. KIL', MER'S SWAMP-ROOT, THE GREAT KIDNEY," LIVER AND BLADDER REMEDY, BECAUSE AS SOON AS YOUR KIDNEYS "ARE WELL THEY WILL HELP ALL OTHER ORGANS TO HEALTH. A TRIAL WILL CON VINCE ANYONE. The mild and immediate effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp-Root will set your whole system right, and the best proof of this is a trial. 14 WaaT 117th St., New York Citv. DaxaSia: Oct. 15, 1900. " I had been Buffering severely from kidney trouble. Ail symptoms were on hand; my for mer strength and poorer had left me; I could hardly drag myself along. Even my mental ca pacity was givirx out, and often I wished to die. It was t.en I saw an advertisement of yours in a New York paper, but would not have paid any attention to it, had it not promised a sworn guarantee with every bottle of your med icine, asserting that your Swamp-Boot is purely vegetable, and does not contain any .harmful drugs. I am seventy yeara and four months old, and with a good conscience I can recom mend Swamp-Rout to ail sufferers from kidner troubles. Four members of my family have been using Swamp-Root for four different kid ney diseases, with the same good results." With many thanks to you. I remain, , Vary truly yours, ROBERT BERNER. You may have a sample bottle of this famous kidney, remedy,., Swamp-Root, sent free by mail, postpaid, by which you may test, its virtues for such dis orders as kidney, bladder and uric acid diseases, poor digestion, when obliged to pass your water frequently night and ' E?r,iT-rri a i levrir-rj v v,.. Vi eliahtesi FvmDtoms of kidnev or blad' der trouble, or if there is a : trace of it in yout family history, send at once to Dri .... -r w r i 1 1 1 .ju ens- A rviv hw rvt nif i mmon iQtAl V. Kilmer & Co., limgnampton, i. i., wno win k""1 bc,,v "J, "r J ' . . 1 i Cm.m.Rvtt. and book containing many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received frommen and women cured. In writing be sure to say that you read this generous offer in the Nebraska Independent. ' day, smarting or irritation in passiag brick-dust or sediment in the urioe, headache, backache, Jame back, dizii' ness, sleeplessness nervousness, heat$ disturbance due to bad kidney trouble; skin eruptions from bad blood, neuralgia, rheumatism, diabetes, bloating, irritabil ity, wornout feeling, lack ' of ambition, loss of flesh, sallow complexion, or Bright's disease. If your-water when allowed to remain undisturbed in ' a glass or bottle for twenty-four hours, forms & sediment or settling or has a cloudy appearance, it is evidence that your kidneys and bladder need immediate attention. Swamp Root is. the great discovery of Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and bladder specialist. Hospitals use it with wonderful success in both slight and se vere cases. Doctors recommend it to their patients and use it in their own families, because, they recognize in Swamp-Root the greatest! and most suc cessful remedy. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and :3 for sale the world over at. druggists in bottles of two sizes and two prices fifty cents and one dollar. Remember the name, Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghampton, N. Y. Annie Laurie. Maxwelton braes are bonnie Where early fa's the dew, And it's there that Annie Laurie Gle'd me her promise true Gie'd me her promise true. Which ne'er forgot will be: And for bonnie Annie Laurie I'd lay me doune and dee. Her brow is like the snaw-drift; Her throat is like the swan; Her face it is the fairest That e'er the sun shone on That e'er the sun shone on And dark blue is her ee; And for bonnie Annie Laurie I'd lay me doune and dee. Like dew on the gowan lying Is the fa o' her fairy feet; Like the winds in summer sighing. Her voice is low and sweet Her voice is low and sweet. And she's a' the world to me: And for bonnie Annie Laurie ' Td lay me doune and dee. William Douglas of Kirkcudbright. NEBRASKA GETS MEDALS Awarded at tho Pan-American Exposi tion to This State. ' The horticultural department of the Pan-American exposition has just an nounced its awards. Nebraska re ceives medals as follows: State Horti cultural society, gold medal;, general display of fruits, Younger & Co., gold" medal for displays of fruits; Theo. Wil liams, Benson, gold medal for collec tion of hybrid plums; silver medal, Marshall Bros., Arlington, for 'display of fruits; bronze medal, C. H. Barnard, for display of apples and pears; hon orable mention, Frank Martin, Omaha, for exhibit of plums. In the agricultural department Ne braska received a gold medal for a col lection of agricultural products, & sil ver medal for collection of cereals, gold medal for a display of sugar beets and their products and a silver medal for a display of corn. v The North Platte Valley in northwest -Nebraska offers some wonderfully good opportunities to the man or woman with a little money to Invest in Irrigated lands. j Excellent irrigated land can be had now for $12 to $15 an acre, but it is plain to these watching the develop ment of the North Platte Valley that this low price is just about to fade away. - , V ' ' . The farmers of this valley are now reaping an abundant harvest. Alfal fa, corn, wheat and garden vegetable yield good profits. . There are also good openings in the live stock buslr rtfiCfl If you are interested in the North Platte Valley, write for our booklet describing it. It is free. J. FRANCIS, G. P. A. Burlington Route, Omaha, Neb. Samuel H llama -Attorney NOTICE. C. It. Tallmadge,firat name unknown, will taka notice that on the 29th day of October A. D. JW1 n - T : 9 t.A m.Ba in Anrl f.f III. city of Lincoln, Lancaster county, Nebraska issuea an oruer ui iui.uu . t40.00 in an action pending before him wherein Robert L. Kimbro is plaintiff, and C, L. Tall madge defendant, that property consisting of money, in the hands of the Columbia National Bank of Lincoln Nebraska has been attached under said order. Said cause was continued to the Zlst day of December. ,901 at 1 ojkgk.g. m. rf-WJr. ' Plaintiff. Dated at Lineoln. Neb.. November 1, 1901. . J J at J J J J J Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jl Jt Ji Ji Jt Jt Jt Jt Ji Jt Jt Ji Ji HOME-SEEKERS EXCURSIONS TO OKLAHOMA INDIAN TERRITORY , ' and - TEXAS. One fare plus $2 for the round trip. Nov. 5 and 19 & Dec. 3 and 17. The ROCK ISLAND is the only line, running through from Omaha, Lincoln and other Nebraska points to Ok lahoma and Texas without change. The Omaha & Okla homa Flyer leaves, Omaha at 6:20 p. m. daily and arrives in Oklahoma at 9 o'clock the next morning and at Fort . Worth, Tex., at 7:30 that ev ening without change of cars. For further information call on or address F. H. BARNES. C. P. A. 1045 O St., Lincoln; Neb. Jt Jt Jt J Ji Jt J J Jt Jt Ji Jt Ji Ji Jl Jt Jt Ji Jt Jt jjtjtjtjjtj Jt Jt Ji Jt Ji Jl Jt Jt