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About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1901)
-.-! ' , , ', ' f 1 ft I ! 'V, 1 8 THE NEBRASKA. INDEPENDENT. Inclement Weather Brinas Cough s? Colds and Catarrh. Inclement weather begins when autumn ends. The great objection to our climate is that it alternates be tween the beat of the tropics and the rigors of the Arctic. - - - - " -, The system becomes relaxed by the effects of the beat, and the ' first cold 4 snap of winter sows the seed of thousands of cases of chronic catarrh which in a large per cent, of cases will end fatally. ; President Wm. Ubelaker Uses Pe- runa as. a safeguard Against I Inclement Weather. I Congressman Horace G. Snover, of Port Austin,' Mich., writes from. House of Representatives, Washington, D. C ' ZraVe found Peruna a very efficient and speedy remedy for A persistent and annoying cough ' resulting from catarrhal trouble. ""Horace O.Snover. ; Mrs. Lavina E. Walker, who holds the highest state office of the Ladies of the Illinois G. A. R., which is Department Chaplain, writes the following letter : Western Springs, III. The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: Gentlemen: "You hare 1 my sincere gratitude for placing before suffering women ; a medicine which 'has proven such a blessing as Peruna has" ' . - " I have used it myself when much worn outi and found most gratifying results, and a number of the women of Wm. Ubelaker, President of the Lake View Lodge of Foresters, writes from 8327 North Clark St., Chicago, 111., the following letter: The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O. : Gentlemen For years past when I have been exposed to wet or inclement weather, my chest would hurt me and I would have serious indigestion, and I would be laid up for a day or two, caus ing inconvenience and pain. . One of my lodge friends advised me to try Peruna, as it had helped him, and I found that a bottle cured me. If I feel badly now I at once take two or three doses, and I find it keeps me in fine health.' Peruna is worthy of every one's confidence. WM, UBELAKER. It is only Just ordinary good, common 'sense to provide against inclement weather. If you have the slightest cold, cough, sneezing, or any other indication that you are "under the weather," a few doses of Peruna will put you right. MRS. LAYIXA WALKEB. our Order suffering with weakness pe culiar to women, have been wonderfully helped and cured by Peruna." Lavina E. Walker. -r , Address The Peruna Medicine Co., of Columbus, Q., for a free , copy of Dr. Hartman's latest book on catarrh. A republican editor delights in noth ing so much as going to a funeral, and when there is no corpse to hold a wake over, he proceeds to fake up one and have his gruesome jubilee; Just at present republican editors have pro- J nounced the populist party dead and they are holding a continual wake. While the populist party is more vigor- j ously alive than it ever was since it was born, that fact don't trouble them in. the least. They are never happy unless they are jubilating because something is dead. They celebrated Bryan's funeral until they wore them- selves out and now that they find that i he is still -one of the great forces in American politics, they "renew their ghoulish glee over a fake corpse which they call populism. Meantime pop- ; ulism marches on to glorious victories in every state, in the union. Hardly a day passes that the papers do not bring news that some city, after long suffer ing under the application of republi can principles, has adopted some car dinal principle of the populist pariy as a means of relief. TO OUR NEW READERS Several hundred persons will re ceive The independent for the first time this week. The issue is not differ ent from the average through the whole year.. The amount of editorial writing and all the Other features, in cluding its Washington and other cor respondence, will be found from week to week. The 'principles that it advo cates never vary. All news of inter est to thinking -men - and women is summarized- and commented upoa, while murder trials, divorce cases and the antics of "high society" are give:: scant space. One man ; writing from Boston says that he wants to "take a course in populism?' Another, the head of a great , educational1 institu tion in Pennsylvania, says: "God bless the people's . party. l has been the leader ?, in intelligent - economic thought since its organization." A Texas man says: "I like the name and the location from, which The Indepen dent issues. We need millions of in-i dependents who think more of prin ciples and 'the perpetuation pf the re public 'than of parties." Many score say that they want to- know more about the populist party, one of whbin seems to have a pretty correct idea of it al ready, for he "remarks that; he. under stands it to be 5 "the very hntipode of the republican party." During the next six weeks the readers of The lndepen dent will be made perfectly familiar with populist principles which,' rest ing on the eternal verities, have nevr.r changed in the least from the time n Its organization Since the people's party first took the s field, it , has been impossible for any one to know -its principles unless -ho was a reader ; of Its literature. The great dailies have, constantly asserted that it was advocating views which populists abhorred, such as the unlim ited issue of paper money and things of that sort, while the great maga zines have maligned and misrepresent ed it and all its leaders in. like fash ion, the Century-once, first printing in its columns, and, afterwards sending out iri pamphlet form a statement of populist principles that was false from beginning to. end. But the worst 'foes that the populist party, has had to con tend with have been traitors who have come-into its fold for the purpose of betraying it to "its enemies, prominent among whom were men like Powderly, Senator Kyle, Wharton Barker, Loucks and Clem Deaver, all of whom are now, if still alive, holding offices under the republican party or active workers therein. The :Dartv-has learned murhJ by such experiences and will not oe likely to" have traitors to deal with n the future, for they will be eliminated before they rise to positions whera they can. do harm. During . the week letters have 'been received from every state, and territory, and from Canada, asking for sample, copies. y The idea "that judges should be be yond criticism, so attacks , the very foundations of free government that the wonder is that any writer can bo found so lost to all reason and sense of justice as to defend it. There are judges and judges. Some are emmi nent men of much learning; ; upright in character and sensitively conscien tious. ; Others are men of the lowest moral character, knowing but a smat tering of law and are tools of the cor porations that have secured their elec tion or appointment. The other day a New Jersey judge refused to set asida a verdict of one dollar for the killing by a great corporation of a boy, there by giving it as his Judgment that one dollar was the value of the' life of a boy. In another case Justice, O'Gor man of the supreme court of New York created a precedent , by f setting aside a judgment of $300 as damages for the killing, of. a .boy, by. the Metropolitan railroad without ey en a'haotion to th at effect by. the plaintiff.- He declared: This is not an ordinary; case of inadequate damages. The verdict s is perverse and the damages arbi trarily and ; capriciously - fixed . af. such a low figure as to shock the moral sense. J -' , , - .r We" suppose that if some .writer had given that New Jersey judge such a roasting criticism as he really de served, he wQuld have been arrested for contempt, and. there would have been plenty of $5,000 a year editors on the great dailies who would hive backed up the judge in -an order for. his im prisonment. ' , $5.00 per day made by active agents. A great, seller and big profits.; For full particulars and confidential prices toN agents; address Box. 351, Lincoln, Neb Hardy's Column The . Labor Vote & Sympathy Home Goods 5 Love Russia and Her Railroad. The laboring men in San Francisco ought to realize their strength, so had the laboring men all over the country. If they would all vote for what they want they would get it, but as long a3 half, of them vote the other way there is no chance for them to win. If they only had backbone enough to strike In politics as they do in factories they would come out ahead as they did in San 'Francisco Much sympathy is being manifest for the Boer prisoners just as there was for the Cuban prisoners under Spain. Our government does not daro to express sympathy, for the Filipinos Heed it just as bad as the Boers. There is something quite strange about the battles lately fought with ; the Fili pinos. They always have a large army, several times larger than ours, and a great number are killed, but at other times the Filipino army counts only a few dozen. Manufacturers should be" compelled to sell their goods as cheaply at home as they do in Europe or else the tariff should be taken off entirely. But no, they will not let us even buy American goods abroad and bring them home without paying a high protective tariff upon them. Many think that is a great benefit to Nebraska farmers. But few seem to know the meaning of the. word ' "love" when applied t J human action' and feeling. It is the antipode of selfishness, hatred, re venge and enmity. We are command ed to love our enemies as we do our selves.. Our love for them should 'be strong enough to do them good and not harm.' Our love for such neigh bors as the Samaritan was should be strong enough to prompt us to do a little better for them than for our selves. , ! if It is hard to estimate the -full value of the Russian railroad through Si beria to the Pacific coast. The road i3 more than twice as long as the Un ion Pacific from the Missouri river to San Francisco. It passes through for ests o all kinds of valuable northern timber instead of through barren, ua timbered, drouth-stricken country like the Rocky and Nevada mountains. It passes through valleys almost equal to the Ohio valley. Precious and useful metals abound as plentifully as on the U.. P. The chief agricultural product will be wheat and rye. " The country is too far north for corn or cotton. Flax, though, fills the place of cotton so the people will not be dependent upon the United States for that product. Fur abounds more plentiful than in any other part of the world, and wool as well as fur will soon become an article of export. Beef and mutton will abound which is much more healthy than pork. Wild meat is now plenty and will last until tame meat be comes plenty. Factories are becoming numerous. The long road was built in so short a time, only ten years, that many 'of the steel rails and much of the rolling stock was bought in Amer ica. Millions of the Russians are leav ing the western cities and surrounding country and settling up the new coun try along the road. So, too, there are millions of Chinamen and East Indian people going into the country. It is quite certain there will be no more famines in Russia. The country is io varied and the extent so great that a failure of crops cannot devastate the whole land. The railroad can distri bute the food which could not be done before. The territory south of the road has just about such a climate as New England, Minnesota and Canada. The road has all it can do already and is bound to be a world's highway. Russia does not need to control the Dardanelles as much as before. The Sure Hatch Incubator; hatcho3 sure. See advertisement on page 2. Musings. on the News The Schley court of inquiry is still cogitating over what sort of a report they will make concerning Admiral Alibi. It would require no time at all to report on the conduct of Admiral Schley. The silliness of the editorial writing in the great dailies has been more ap parent than usual during the week. They have been devoting a great amount of space to talk about the downfall of the English trade becatise Americans have lately been investing a lot of money in London. To The In dependent it looks as though trada must be pretty good over there if Am ericans find so many openings. The British have been investing millions of money in the United States for the last fifty years and it does not seem to have presaged our downfall., A plutocratic editor of a great daily caa write more nonsense than any other sort of a creature on earth. ' They say that this is a time of great prosperity. So it is for the millior aires, railroad ; pirates and tariff ba rons, but when we come down among the common people, especially of great cities, it is not so apparent. The club women of Chicago have been investi gating child labor in that city and the sights that they have seen where tho poor, thin-faced little creatures were confined and toiled, were so distressing that some of the women could not en dure the sight. There are over 15,000 children in Chicago under 14 years old who are confined, in miserable sweat shops and factories where they only earn a pittance, and lay the founda tions of a weak and diseased body. Prosperity does not s'eenr to have reached that class.' . It was announced that Governor Sav age would join with the governors along the Canadian line and fight the consolidation of the great competing lines of railroads. Holdrege came to Lincoln, stayed a day, and the next day it was announced that Governor Savage would not have anything to do with the movement as Nebraska was not interested. The general attorney of the. Burlington gave a statement to the press in which he said that Hold rege had not seen Governor Savage at all.-' , - " 4 The Chicago dailies announce that the railroads will issue no passes at all after the first of January. The In dependent will take some stock in that , story if i the first .time he goes down to Omaha he sees less than six republican workers and officeholders riding on annual passes. He has nev er seen such a sight yet, when he went to Omaha or in any other direction from Lincoln. : The Washington correspondents all agreed in saying a short time ago that President Roosevelt's message would be . very .short. - Now they ' all agree .that it will be. the longest ever sent' to congress, containing not less than 28,000 wordsV You pay your money and take your choice, the same as with the rest of the writing which the pluto cratic Scribes of the capital regale us with from day to day. r '' X It .:is announced in the cable dis patches; that a Germany iron' manufac turer has invpnteda process of .manu facturing steel that results in produc ing steel twice as hard as any hereto fore known andj at half the cost. It is said that instruments made of this new steel - will 'cut the hardest variety of steel v which-, has ever been produced as if it were lead.' There may be trou ble ahead for the; jpteel trust. The . republican - state officers are making some precedents that may cose the taxpayers of this state many thou-; sands of dollars before the thing is ended. - -They are making contracts for enormous buildings without any au thority. 6f law and without any appro-" priation - bing made - to pay the cost, pf course no. contractor will take n job of that kind arid wait for the 'leg islature to sanction it and make ap propriations to pay the; bills without adding tlarge sums to his bid. . The , trusts organize and water stocks two or three hundred per cent and exports continue to increase, while gold and silver also flows out of the country, - All this news has been gath ered from the great plutocratic: dailies during the week.V They also say thai the economists are nonplussed over the situation and can't find out why it is that wealth is shipped-out of .this, coun try in amounts of millions more than is, shipped in. It Is all very easy to iac count for. Ou excess of exports goes to foreign . investors in watered ; stock who rake . in the interest from month to month. If watering stock were prohibited in this country, we would get something in . return when we shipped our immense crops to Europe. Now we get nothing, while the fool editors of the great dailies stand with open mouths and wonder at it all. The Independent always feels sorry for the people who have nothing to read but the plutocratic dailies, t'.ie financial magazines and things of that sort. If they.'ever try to think they must. find the 1 intellectual fogs thicker than those that covered London1 and Paris last week. The magazine writers tell them that we have suddenly in vaded all the markets of the world and have tpruhg.all at once into a great manufacturing nation. Suppose one cf thefe readers should happen to cor.ie across xa . document giving our exports lor the last 25 years and think f oiv a , moment' . over, the vast " foreign trade we have been carrying on for. many years past. How would they reconcile the 'truth with the statement that we only became a great manufac turing and exporting nation since the war with Spain,, and all at once, like a mushroom, we sprang into a "world pover?" The magazines and dailies feed their patrons on intellectual dish water. ; Many men have been engaged in dis cussing why it was possible to over throw ..Croker ,in New Yorl' and Mart Quay could not be imhor k-d in Phila delphia. : Matt certainly r ad the be.-;t political machine, for he d'd not heat a journal or slip a cog. K'e thieving is far more notorious than any thit h-is been charged to Tammany, for ne took his rake-off in five million dollar lots, and no one disputes the fact. Matt had behind him all the great railroads, the trusts and the tariff ba rons. That is t.o reason of his vic tory. Croker had no such aid. Some of the "literary fellows" have been discussing the different charac teristics of people living in various parts of the country. The Independent looks at it in this way: It is said that in Boston they ask, "What do you know?" In1 New York, "How much are you worih?" In Philadelphia, "Who" was your . grandfather?" Out here in Nebraska we ask, "What can you do? If any of the effete eastern ers ask a'Nebraskan that he replies: "In thirty years we have taken a wil derness, inhabited only by savages,' filled it; with railroads, cities,' towns, churches andsschools and put it at the hea of all the states in intelligence.' Al scientific' Investigator was nosing around in Baltimore trying to find out why the wage-workers had deserted the churches, and one of the workers, when questioned, replied: "The church trust is the most superbly organized and is capitalized the highest Of any, trust in the United States. Its capital ization run3 so high up in the millions that, it is beyond the power of the Imagination of a working man to con ceive. Labor organizations fight all the trusts alike, .The capital was all furnished by. the rich and of course it will, like any other trust,; be run in the interest of the. stockholders." . If the great republican x dailies q? Chicago are telling the truth, theh party in tha state is. about as rotter, as a party can geti The Tribune roasts Governor Yates every day and the Rec:. ord-Herald . says; that Congressman Lorimer is the worst scoundrel that ever tried to organize a republican; machine. The roast that the Record-4 Herald gave Lorimer was so hot, that gentleman has sued the- paper .and. Kohlsaat for $100,000 damages. ft may turn out in this instance that the old proverb will come true that "when! thieves fall outhonest men will get their dues." The European press and -the snobs, in this - country who always sneeze when the foreigners take snuff, have for , along time indulged in criticising American consuls. They have said that the diplomatic service should be organized on the European, plan and consuls be appointed for life and trained for the positions. Recent Am erican consul reports have been of such high character, that these same foreign critics now say that they are the most valuable ever printed. The other day a new gun sent a shell through the best armor, eleven and a half inches thick, which burst on the other side and tore up things for a quarter of an acre around where it burst. Last week the Holland sub marine boat, Pluton, sank itself in New York harbor and remained under wa ter 15 hours. During ' the time that the boat was sunk a great-storm came up the worst that New York has seen for years. When the boat came to the surface the crew was astonished be yond measure for the men had sup posed that everything was calm, on the waters, as their boat had rested so peacefully during those hours beneath, the surface. The moral to' this tale is that great warships are practically good for nothing but old junk and all the money put into them is wasted. A sub-marine boat can sail up to them unseen and blow them to pieces. :i J. . November 28, 1901, f WHEN OTHERS FAIL, CONSULT i: I it? m i 4g SEAEES & SEARLES LINCOLN, NEBI THE OLD RELIABLE SPECIALISTS 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN Nervous. Chronic & Private Diseases Women, Catarrh of all Kinds WE CURE 1 Curable Dl of the Nou, Throat, Ear, Head, ltronrhlal Tubes, Lung, $toUach, Bowe!i,LlTr, Kidneys, Hladaer, Kbeumalltm, t . aljrala. Piles, iiikln UIwhmk, Sick Headache, Dyapepftia, Epilepsy, and all Diseases Peculiar to Woman. ALU.M.EIJCINE H;KN1SHKI. Compound Oxygen Treatment IN CONSUMPTION, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, ETC. private Diseases of any Nature, Varicocele, Hydrocele, lllood Poison. Stric ture and Glfeet Cared at Home by Mew Method, wttboutPaln or Cuttlnr CURES GUARANTEED. ) HOM E TREATMENT C H A It ti E S L O W. ; ' My Mall In all Diseases a Specialty. 'REFERENCES Best Hanks and Lending: Rnslness Men ef tho City. Examination and Consultation Free. - Call or address -with stamp for circu lar, free book,4tnd advice. P. O. Box 224-Oftice Hours 10-12 A.M., 2-4 and ' 7-8 P. M. .-if ...... - ....... , Rooms 217 to 220 Richards Dlk. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. DRS. SEARLES & SEARLES. - ML IT The dudes of New York have had a great time hunting the semi-domesticated deer in the Adirondack. Now that the season is over a newspaper man has made an accounting of the season. The summing up of killed is 500 deer and 23 dudes. It seems that the dudes could not see well enough to tell one of their brothers from a deer. For several weeks the dailies have contained accounts of men shot by mistake in the Adirondacks. The howl that has been reverberat ing over the plains of Nebraska for the last few weeks to the effect that the fu sion party was dead and the numerous 'wakes that republican editors have been attending is a new diversion in vented for the occasion. The f usion- ists have carried the state several times by bigger majorities than the republicans carried it this time, but no notices of death were published and no wakes held. ' The anti-English uproar in Germany is beginning to be looked upon, as -a very serious matter. The whole of Germany sympathizes with' the Boers and the, press and people have only been waiting for a chance to break loose In a storm of indignation. Cham berlain made a reference to , the Ger man army in time of the war with France. At any other time the remark would jhave attracted' no notice, but the Germans were , waiting for a chance and they jumped at that. It is reported from London that the matter begins to attract serious attention ?.n diplomatic circles. The act of some man may produce a' general upheaval, just as the blowing up of the Maine did. American to understand , fes we all have looked upoij: Greece as a civilized nation.' That .'a? university , and uni versity students T should be ; the prime movers in such'a thing is still more incomprehensible. The translation of the" Bible from' ancient ' i.6 modern Greek, " against which students have been rioting ahd coming ;into fatal conflicts with troops, -was ordered by Queen Olga, because - she found 30 many Greeks quid not read the lan guage of their; classic ancestors. The students oppose the translation on the ground that ltwould be desecration to put the Bible into Greek as it is now spoken. In the chamber on Saturday Premier Theotoki defended the course of the queen,1 and referred o her as a Woman whose piety, Christian sentl- mentst; and nobility of character were the 'admiration of the world. During the Graeco-Turklsh war, he said, she' was everywhere told by wounded sol diers that they could not read the gos pels because they did not understand the text. . s . It is continually-asserted ' that an effort W"l be made at the coming ses slon .of congress! to make, the silver dollars redeemable in gold. There is no demand from the people for such legislation. No one has asked for it except the bankers, but it should be re membered . that what the bankers ask for they generally get. The silver dol lar as long as it Is even a partial legal tender will remain at par with the gold dollar and that every tanker very well knows. It is not because that he is afraid ,that; the silver dollar will go to a discount; but because he wants to start up another endless chain, raid the treasury and' force the issue of some hundreds of millions of bonds with which to buy gold. Then he will take the5 bonds, start a few more na tional banks and get interest onhis bonds- and on the money that he is sues against them. ' The Omaha Bee and ali i the rest of the great dailies see nothing wrong In this measure and much to commend. , ' The Bee says: "At the opening of the session next Monday Nebraska will be represented in the United States senate by two republicans for the first time in eight years." Yes, that is true, but when you take a look at Bartley's partner and the beer-guzzling, saloon haunting, ignorant galoot that accom panies him, is there anything to ;e proud off? - '.- Iowa-Nebraska-Beaumont oil stock at ten cents a share is the; surest and biggest' money maker before the pub-. lie today.; - ... . - , , x 'THE OFFICIAL COUNT The riots in Greece over the trans lation of the gospels into modern Greek and the resignation of the cab inet is something very hard for an Two CharB argairis As a Very Special Inducement We will offer these two chairs M a bar gain price. The chairs will be delivered at freight depot in Lincoln in first-class shape. These chairs are heavy, well made, solid oak, golden finish, cane seat, size of seat 16x17 in ches. Height of back 39 inches. (No. 2 10, Price 85c Each.) I r: You will never re gret sending life a mail order for a set of these (No. 307 Prlc 75 Cents each.) chairs. Hardy Furnitiire Co. 1124 O Street, Lincoln, Nebraska. The Nuftiber of Ballots Cast in the State V andor "Whom They Were Counted ' The state canvassing board, compris ing Governor Savage, Secretary of State , larsh', Treasurer Stuef er and Auditor Charles Weston, met in tha office of the secretary of state yester day in-accbrdance with law, and pro ceeded; with the canvass. : There not being ft complete set of duplicate re turns, no tabulation, was made in ad vance of the board meeting. The work was quickly done and when even ingr came the result was announced. Thq highest Vote received by a socialist candidate being 2,007, thfet party is shut out from, making "convention nominations next ' year by reason of having iailed: to muster 1 per cent of the total vote cast in the state. The total vote cast -was 204,192 - Judge Bedgwick received 98,993,while his opponent, Conrad Hollenbeck, re ceived 86,334, a plurality of 12,659 for Sedgwick. . Two years ago Holcomb, fusion candidate" for Judfe, received 109 ,320ihile Judge 'M. F. Reese,-republican! received 94,213. The total vote cast in the 'state that year -was 220,249, or 16,057- more than was cast this yearj-:,':1 : ''-' Last yar C. H. Dietrich, republican candidate f or governor, received 113, 879 votes, while-his opponent, W. A. Poynter, lateceived :113,108. L. O. Jones, prohibition candidate for governor, re ceived 4,315. Mrs: S. M. Walker, pro hibition candidate'for regent this yeat, received 4297. ' ' - The result of the canvass was as follows:- '' ' : ' - '-;' S. 'H. Sedgwick, r. . ...... ... . . . .98,993 Conrad Hollenbeck, f . . ....... . .86,334 W. B; Clark, p. r... ........ ...v 4,072 J.. B. Randolph, . s ...... . . . . .... 1,836 Carl J. Ernst;1!. lT . . ......... .99,084 E. ,C. CalkihU "r ; . 96,845 F. G. Hawa&y,-. fk-i . . . 83,895 J. H. Baystcm, tZ: .'. . .81,819 Mrs. S. M. Walker, ' p. . ....... 4,237 James M." DiVworth, p . . . 4.01S Burla MWilkio:..-i...... 1.924 William Schrjam.ts.. 2,007 Fqur scattering, votes were cast for judi of the siupreme court, and 55 scattering for .regents. -I .kJ, " T vote by5 ; counties for . judge - of the JVipreme court as canvassed by ins toaflis as follows. 1- nties Sedpw. lioiienu. Adf 14 Anl lope 3 Bail Ur ..I Blaine ... Boone . . . Box B"utte Boyd Brown ... Buffalo . .. Burt ..... Butler . . . Cass Cedar ... Chase . . Cherry .. Cheyenne Clay : . . Colfax .. Cuming Custer Dakota Dawes . Dawson Deuel . Dixon Dodge Douglas Dundy . . 91 ..1,277 ...574 67i 393 1,702 ..1,412 1,435 2,269 .1,227 . 297 . 728 . 637 .1,708 . 848 .1,136 .1,895 681 . 534 .1,173 . 363 .1,055 .1,722 .9,354 . 289 Fillmore 1.711 859 683 1,132 3.188 251 388 80 490 1,638 Franklin Frontier Furnas Gage Garfield Gosper . Grant .. Greeley , Hall Hamilton 1,323 Harlan 797 Hayes 297 Hitchcock 3SJt Holt 1,395 Hooker 4S Howard 876 Jefferson 1,595 Johnson 1,312 Kearney 952 Keith 22i' Keya Paha 341 Kimball 120 Khox 1,311 Lancaster 5,055 Lincoln 1,170 Logan 93 Loup 153 McPher3on 56 Madison 1,640 Merrick 990 Nance 912 Nemaha 1,586 Nuckolls 1.273 Otoe 2,133 Pawnee 1,391 Perkins 175 Phelps 1.056 Pierce 753 Platte 1,011 Polk 1 992 Red ' Willow 958 Richardson 2,21a Rock 435 Saline .'. 1,891 Sarpy ' 684 Saunders 1,925 Scotts Bluff 362 Seward 1,657 Sheridan 520 Sherman 419 Sioux '. .154 Stanton 637 Thayer ...1,560 Thomas 86 Thurston 703 Valley 730 Washington 1,34 6 Wayne 974 Webster 1.227 Wheeler 122 York 2,060 1.107 SIM '5St 303 1.17J 751 1.74; l.Si 1.26!) 55G i02 432 1,432 1,1 5S 1.361 1,770 476 1,151 23:; 7D2 2.12 7,6 Mi 259 1.603 93 i 59; 934 1.S91 212 4t; 5 779 1.313 1.235 7SC 20 361 2J l.sr Totals 98,993 Total vote cast 86,33 104,192 Foreign 'Colonies in Washington The official residence of an ambas sador or minister accredited to Wash ington is foreign territory, technical' ly, if rented; but actually, if owned lv ts government. Our laws have no hold upon diplomats or their attaches de tailed here. Their abodes enjoy im munity from our legal processes. Sev en foreign countries own their em bassies or - legations, in Washington. The land upon which they are built is exempt from taxation. The October Ladles Home Journal. Tha Tr 'nailer' sanitarium of Lin- A tAV - a m J nnln a o honuHf llll V lnrfltpfl bHCk and stone building built, and furnished for the treatment of an non-coniagious chronic diseases. They have every leetrie current and bath necessary xor trootmont nf thf Kirk. In fact its LUC " - " furnishings and equipments are ideal. . . 1 . .. A. It isnot a hotel, noi.a nospiun, uui a homC" ' " ' ' 1 " ' Hand-Painted Hats are the Thing One 1 of the newest specialties rt Paris this season is the hand-palntftl hat. The other day I saw an exquisite creation of black velvet with a brini quilled in such a way that, the velvet apparently; formed great rose petals, on each of which was a painted golden feather. Katharine de Forest, in'-ths October Ladies' Home Journal. C ; Clerical s Permits Applications for . clergymen's 'naif-'1 fare permits for 1902 should be filed at the earliest possible date with the ocal agent of the B. & M. R. R. J. FRANCIS. General : Passenger Age at.