f V ( December 26, 1901. THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. Ti.- Weak - Hen i fsour health worth a 2Hjent stamp? If so. then write us at once for our ABSOLUTELY FREE OFFER JVe will send absolutely free to all "who write US' before Feb. 1. 1902, our PERFECTION ELECTRIC BELT, the most unique and perfect Electric Appliance In the market for the cure tneryous and sexuaL .diseases. X' This offer" is made In feood faith for the purpose of introducing and adver tising, our methods of treating -"-all eh ron ic d iseases.- : ' - Tv ' - , :; ...DON'-T-' ; V s allow, this, opportunity tQ. escapeyau, of, regaining the ., health and vigor,- which- your earlyfdlltesf'ah! dislpa-, tior have sapped, away. ; v.,-, . . PROVIDENCE MEDICAL "- INSTITUTE, 39 Dearborn SCSl.r ; Chicago, III. -!- -;- ' ' .V;V Plutocratic AdYice (Continued from .Page One.) wings of Or species of bird grow strong er, larger and ' better adapted for flight. " ' During the process it is plain that (higher leaves, of 'trees succeeding' generations must, in .-suc cession, become superior to those whieh preceded them. The whole pro blem of evolution hinges on the ques tion. In what way is this improvement, effected? By what method? - ' - Only; two theories , of .evolution are possible, or even thinkable. Lamarck, because he first formally enunciated It, gave, bis name to the one theory; Darwin for the same reason, gavehis to the other. " x : The two theories can be explained best by illustrations drawn from the animal world, but first it is necessary to define two important terms. All . the characters of a living being, ev ery physical structure and every men tal trait, may be placed in one of two .categories. Either, they are inborn xr they , are acquired. An inborn or innate char acter is one which, in common par lance, arises in the individual by nature." Thus arms, legs, eyes, ears, head, etc., are all inborn characters. The child inherits them from his par ent. .But, if during its development, or after the completion of the develop ment any one of, the inborn charac ters, of, an individual is modified .by some occurrence,, the change thus pro duced is known as an. acquired char acter, or, shortly, as an acquirement. Thus all the effects of exercise are acquirements, for example, the en largement whicl. exercise' causes in muscle.1 The effects : of lack of exar clse are also acquirements;- for ex ample, the wasting of a disused musce. .The, .effects' of injury, are acquire ments: for example, the changes to a diseased lung or injured arm. Every modification of the mind is also an vc-s quirement; .for example, everything stored within the memory. . If . a man T? blinded by accident or disease," his blindness fs' acquired. But if he come' into "the :world blind, if he be blind by nature, his blindness is inborn: If a son be naturally smalHr than his father, then his inferiority of size is Inborn; but if his growth be stunted by ill health or. lack of nour ishment or exercise, bis inferiority is acquired. . - Lamarck held, as people in all ages have held, that characters acquired by parents are also transmissible to some extent, 'and that evolution re sults from their accentuation during succesding generations'. Lamarck's theory is rejected totally by the mod ern followers of Darwin. If, as -Lamarck alleged, a child in herits his father's acquirement, it must follow that he differs from his father in that he has Inborn, the peculiarif.y which the parent acquired., .He differs at birth from what his. father was at birth. He therefore makes a different start in life. , ' , But. even If Lamarck were right, even if the transmission of acquire ments be admitted, it is still certain that all inborn differences betwe3n parent and child cannot be attributed to this cause.. For instance, a child may, be born with peculiarities of which the parent had, never a trace: for example, a mole on the face. The child of a natural athlete who lias trained himself to the point of per fection may be a natural weakling. The child of a sedentary parent may have in him the makings of an ath lete. , It (is clear, therefore, that offspring may be superior or inferior to their parents, as regards any particular, from causes other than the transmis sion of acquirements. On that' In dubitable fact Darwin founded his theory of evolution. Darwin, accepted Lamarck's theory so far as it went. He' thought that nature, like the breeder, selected to continue the race individuals who were "accidentally" superior, while : she eliminated the "accidentally" inferior.. The world has progressed since Dar win's day. A new school- has arisen which out-Herods Herod. His modern followers, the Neo-Darwinians, declare .that Darwin, with characteristic mod esty, underrated his own great discov ery. ' They Insist that Lamarck was whol ly wrong, that acquired characters are never transmitted, and that therefore Darwin's theory, instead of only par tially explaining the facts of evolu tion, wholly explains them. The reader will note that Darwin merely accepted the indubitable , fact that offspring - differ from . their par ents in that they are superior or in ferior, and founded his theory on the supposition; that as a general rule, the superior individuals are selected by nature to continue .the race. He did not attempt by his theory to explain how. the differences arose, f " . Lamarck did more. He attempted to go deeper than Darwin. He assigned a particular cause for the differences. j Let us now 'return to- our : illustra tions. The followers of Lamarck at tribute the long neck of the modern giraffe to the transmitted effects of stretching. : They think that ancestral giraffes. lengthened their necks by stretching upward, and that this ac quirement,' being transmitted and jin-; creased In subsequent generations, Re sulted in evolution. , . .' Neo-Darwinians, on the other hand, contend that, the change was due solely to the survival of those individuals which had naturally the longer necks. They suppose that in times of drouth when food was scarce, the shorter giraffes perished, because .they were less aoie "than the tauer to reacn iue . "Ho been uoluC AStAllKTS for nsomniu. with which I have been aftiicicd for Aer twenty years, and t can say that Cascarets nave tri ven me more relief than av other remo- ujr i uavc ever tried. I shall eertaiulv recom- mend them to my friends us lcin all tlicy Are represented - Tuws. Gh.i.auo. Klin, J1L , CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable. "Potent. TantA ctnnA rv Oooa. Never Sick,,. WeakenTor Grfpe l(S.c'.Jw! mZZ -CURE CONSTIPATION. ssw iv UHV gists to-;rU,lfK Tobacco ilahuL Lamarckians believe that hares via swiftly because -their efforts at swift running developed the transmitted and f increased gei,eratlon after generation. resulted at last in that. very swift ani mal; the modern hare:, Neo-Darwinians contend that the great speed of hares is duetto the fact that these ani mals who. were naturally the swiftest escaped" their enemies,' and that by this means, during the process of ages, was the swift modern hare evolved. Neo-Darwinians say that a naturally tall man tends to .have tall children., but that, no matter how a man stretched or how he stretches himself, his children will not be taller in t'M smallest degree for the stretching; Lamarckians affirm that they will. Lamarckians maintain that if a blacksmith increases the. size of his muscles by labor, his children will thereby profit and .have stronger mu? cles than they, otherwise would have had. Neo-Darwinians deny this. marckians affirm that if a man devel ops his brains by study his childrea will have better brains for this process. This again Neo-Darwinians deny. Lamarckians maintain that .if a man has children, ana tnen, aiier falling into ill-health, has more chil dren, the latter will be more feebie than the former. This yet again is de nied by Neo-Darwinians. Examined closely it will be. seen that the two theories are violently opposed. No breeder of "plan ts and animals is able to improve " his stock unless he breeds with care; unless he exercise? stringent selection. Race horses, fcr example, could not have; been evolved by the occasional, elimination of a a inferior animal. .All or most inferior animals had to be eliminated. It follows that .a breeder cannot at one and the same time improve a spe cies in every or even in 'many direc tions; he must be content with im provement in a very few particulars only. "' ' ' If he sought improvement In may directions, in size,- instrength, in speed Jn endurance and' .hardiness, in beauty of color and form,' in sight, in scent, in hearing, and so, forth, so few .anl-' mals would be excellent at once in all these particulars that if he attempted selection in all, he would exterminate rather than Improve his stock. He, therefore, deals with a few char acters only) and as regards all other characters eliminates only such ani mals as- are plainly inferior to the av erage. If the Neo-parwinian doctrine be true, the , same thing must , occur in nature. In that case wild plants and animals could not undergo evolu tion in many directions at the same time. The Lamarckian school is rapUly becoming" extinct in' the scientific world. It flourishes, however, among the general public, who, though thsy may never have heard of Lamarck, give to his theory unquestioning ad herence. Probably many of my non-biological readers are now thinking of instances within their knowledge which they believe prove the transmission of .ic quired characters. All these cases of alleged transmis sion, of which readers are perhaps thinking, are, I venture to believe, mere coincidences. Thus, for instance, if they are thinking of, some man they have heard of who broke, a finger and afterward had a. son with a . crooked finger. , . .' Ten thousand men might break their finger, yet among their offspring not one might have a crooked finger. Cdn sider on the other hand for how many generations women have bored their ears and noses in"-India. Yet-when Is a gill born with ears and nose, already pierced? For how many generations have we amputated the tails of ter riers, and yet their tails are no shorter. It will then be perceived how over whelming is the case against the doc trine of the transmission of acquire ments. The general question of the trans mission of acquirements is too big and too abstruse to be treated adequately here. Two arguments more I may use, however, partly because they have not been developed, to niy knowledge, by other writers, and partly because they seem to me well-nigh decisive. The more than normal development of the blacksmith's arm is rightfully callelj an acquired trait, since it arises from exercise, from use, not from germinal conditions. But no Infant's arm de velops into an ordinary adult arm without exercise similar in kind' to that which develops4 the blacksmith '3 arm, though ! 3ss in degree. Every single thing contained within the memory of man, every single word of a language, .for instance, is, an ac quirement. But when are the contents of a parent's mind transmitted to the child? . .V Again, a manls capable of becoming a parent at any time between extreme youth and extreme old age; a; woman from the age of thirteen to fourteen till nearly fifty. Between the birth of the first child and the last such an in dividual changes vastly. ; Under, stress and fear of circum stances, under the slings andn arrows of outrageous fortune, all sort ofac ouirements are' made. The body be comes vigorous, and then feeble; the mind grows maV.re,1 and theti senile. He or She grows ' wrinkled . and bowed, and perhaps very wise, .or per- ' . ' haps much the reverse. Yet - no ; one viewing a baby show, , a children's party, or an assembly of adults, of whom he has no previous knowledge, can say; which is the child of the youthful and which Of aged parents. Apparently, therefore, the whole of the parent's acquirements have no ef fect on the child. Surely no evidence could be stronger. How, do you like the advertisement of Sure -Hatch Incubator on page 2? Where Schley Left Them , r 'Twas thought a wile ago That the case of'Schiey was done; The solemn fact is, though, N That the trouble's just" begun;' They are pouring resolutions into Congress by the score; There has been a lot of talking, there will be1 a great deal more; They will fight the good fight over, ' they will argue pro andcon. We hall hear again how bravely "all the heroes' sword3 wem drawn Ah. let 'them scold away, , For no matter , what tbey say1, And no matter what the verdict in the .case, , at last, may be, Still j those buttered wrecks will lie Th ere , beneath the southern sky Where Schley left them to be sung ' to by the sea. Fodder For Sale Ihave'50 ton of shredded corn fod der o sell Parties wishing to buy-can write to me. Address J. E. Fish, Camp bell, Franklin Co., Nebraska. RUBBING IT IN ON MADDEN The Irrepressible WlUMre Pleya a II age Joke on the Czar of the United States Pontal Department ,. The irrepressible and egotistical H. Gaylord Wilshire he of the flamboy ant talk and dauntless spirit has played a cruel and unusual joke upon the truly good Mr. Madden. We de plore the joke because it makes a simian out of Mr. Madden, and if there is upon the face of the broad, earth a man who thinks that he is the acme of-political wisdom and the ne plus ultra of governmental authority it is Mr. Edward Madden, third assistant postmaster general of these United States. We might saj', although it will be a digression from the subject in hand, that if we had as much money as. Mr. - Madden don't know beans, we would be able to finance a northern se curities company and pay the plumb er's, bill without flinching. , Wilshire used to run a paper called the Challenge out in Los Angeles. It was a good paper because it possessed an individuality, and because the edi tor had a unique way of putting, his ideas before the people. It is ,tn.e that he r.3ed the personal pronoun extensively, but so far as we know he never tried to attract public at tention by busting a broncho, shoot ing a Spaniard in the back or going on a .mountain lion chase equipped with kodaks and a carps of special corre spondents. He merely let people kAow that what he had to say. was said af-J ter thinking it all over, and if he: posed a little hero here and strutted a little there he is to be forgiven, because we all love to pose a little and stmt a little. Eut the Challenge did not meet with the approbation of Mr. Madden. This is sad, but true. We are pained to tUnk that Mr. Madden -should meet up with anything calculated to jar his finer feelings. B'ut the Challenga jarred him and he proceeced to shut it from the mails. Of course he had no moral or legal right to do thisbut he happened to have the authority, and that is all that some poopie need when they set about to do something that will satisfy personal spite or cinch their popularity with the powers that have political pie to cut and dis tribute. Wilshire made earnest pro test, but Madden declared that the Challenge was only an "advertising sheet" nd therefore not eligible to entry as second class matter. Of course Wilshire thought it was strict:y first-class, but that is not figured ac cording to the postal laws. When Wil shire pointed out that the Challenge ! carried very little advertising Madden retorted; '"Yes, but you use most o! your space advertising your ideas." Here is where we opine that Madden made his greatest mistake. When he saw ideas advertised he should hav4 Immediately seized the opportunity and acquired a few. Much as we love and esteem Madden, we are compelled to remark that no man of our acquaint' ance stands more in need of a few bright, original, useful ideas. The ones he happens -to have are shop worn, second-hand and somewhat in clined to be the possessor of the an cient and fish-like smell betokening decay. . But to return to our mutton, as the tariff protected trust magnate said when he threw the poor beggar over the transom and returned to his well laden table. Wilshire tried to secure justice, but failed. The word was i new one in Madden's vocabulary. Wil shire changed the Challenge from a weekly to a monthly and applied for re-entry at the New York postoffice. mmm ah? Convict From Heed Too la latest Stvle. WRITE FOB FREE SAJTCPLES aad Mestnremant Blanks, . A Cen0 eaerfat wc& made to year neaimre. In tha latent English Baoif stylo, well made ana durably trimmed, auch a ault as orr.o tailors chr?ro....!iO.OO. A lf lanlap or Btctaoa block, Darfejr or Veilnillat .77... ........ ..0 K.SO APalrottjUhLoenBIoc,tUenewquecn laot i.60 X kandaoiserapcy FercaleKesUae ailrt with collar ana cufta attached .....7.7r..... l.iB IKeatSUk Necktie .60 pair ol hncTWol. Eioatlo Suppeadcra. .60 JapaneeeBllk llanl!:crcilcf .60 4 pafr of faocy Lisle lb read fiocka ,8ft order raoaiTea for thete eutta to order (or only i0 00 and fflva tha balanco of ti e complete outat rilEC altneachorfer. Actually tC8.OOTaiuororonlySio.UO so introduce aad not liini to pay till after you receive w i bum tun ic just mm reDreseniea. nana u .1 m: Will lank ooljar, ate. DO NOT DELAV-after Haytne fill erdera oar price to? UMn ault will ba dSO.00 and The Qents' Comolete Outfitting Co.e IT 11 Amm Street, CUeace, VS. . ... . oaeeas postal card wltb yonr name and nont otllca aaareaa. and wa will aend you free aamplea of cloth and aaasoremen blank for aire of suit, shirt, bat. ahoea. LUd But Madden the chesty and dignifiel autocrat of the P. O. D. refused. And tnen it was that Wilshire, with a flendishness that would 'do credit to a Fi jii island Cannibal, hit upon a means of revenge calculated to make Mr. Madden feel like three lead dimes. Wilshire moved the Challenge to To ronto, Canada, where he is enabled, to enjoy the freedom vouchsafed by i monarchy and rid. himself from, the despotism of a free and enlightened re public The Canadian postal rates are, just half what the United States rates are. - Under the postal agreement all mail from the United States for Ca nadian points is carried free in Canada and mail from Canada for points with in the United States is carried free in the United - ftates. Does the dear reader begin to grasp the. point? Mr. Wilshire prints his paper in Canada, saves ohe-half on the postal charges, and forces the man who : refused to accept the regular fee for mail priv ileges to caVry' it for nothing, abso lutely nothing. Imagine if you can the huge de light of Wilshire as he sees his per sonal pronouns hiking through the United States mails in open defiance of Madden E Pluribus Unum Mad den. Imagine if you can the impotent wrath of this same Madden as he pon ders on the chuckling of the aforesaid Wilshire. , We hasten to extend our congratula tions of Wilshire not because of his political views,; but because of his shrewdness in circumventing the. plain scheme that some fellows have coi cocted to prevent the promulgation-of ideas calculated to assure Mr. Madden In Hoe Signo Vinces Madden that we have thus far been unable to frame up any sympathy for him. He invited the trouble by" being entirely too fresh. He reminds us of the man who .had the temerity to tackle a locomo tive: The man in questibn filled up on conversation juice and started home along the railroad track. When half way across a bridge that lay between himself and home he" collided . withJ a locomotive:. "Git out o' my 1 way!" shouted the inebriated individual. "Toot! toot!!" shrieked the locomo tive. . A moment later the inebriated gen tleman pulled himself out of the mud a dozen yards away, , and; after feeling, himself to ascertain the measure of damage, exclaimed: "I guess I: overestimated my abil ity." .. - ' Mr. Madden Vox Populi Vox a Bas Madden has . overestimated his abil ity. IZ3, is hot. yet as powerful as ?.h Almighty. But this may be because Mr. Madden is a young man yet. LABOR'S GREAT FORUM Golden Era's Note Sounded by " t, Says Straus. CLAIMS GBA5D EESULTS ABE ?LAIN Get Together Editor Independent: Remembering that a few weeks ago you expressed a fear lest the j-UniteJ States postoffice department might exclude the Nebras ka Independent from the mails as second-class matter; I mail you s under a separate wrapper; a copy of Appeal to Reason" (No;:i 313); not . knowing v. hether you get - it or not, which the Third Assistant Postmaster, General Madden seems Vent on .suppressing "be cause of its socialistic tendencies. FOr the life of me I cannot see anything wrong in the Appeal, or true socialism, can you ? I know you have read volumes upon the subject, as you r editorially in formed the readers of The Independent last year, and yet seemingly uncon vinced of the inherits of socialism, but what can be wrong in. "government ownership of all public utilities," espe cially If under it- (true socialism) ev ery man- woman and child inv the United States could draw $3,000 an nually? Wish you and J. A. Way land, editor of the Appeal, could get together' and compare ideas. I'd like to hear the confab, I suggest that populists, .Bryan democrats, socialists, and all. republicans, get "together and vote-republican plutocracy out of ex istence, . substituting .therefore the "brotherhood ' of man." .' 3 . J- E. SPENCER. .. Bemer, Neb. " There is nothing wrong in "the public ownership of public utilities'," but when jt comes to the common own ership bt everything and the attempt t6.:rcarry6n;;'aHj the vaci industries of the Un lted States upon direct orders from "therovernmentithat is a matter at which The Independent halts. If such an effort as that were made the profits, instead. of being $3,000 per cap ita, would be nothing at all. Ed. Ind.) Unfbrfiinat8 Affusion v The "president in his message says the anarchists, crime should be made anr offense against the law of nations, like piracy, and that form of man stealing .known as the slave trade. . The comparison is an unrortunate one. Does Mr. Roosevelt not know that te slave trade is now being car ried on under , the stars and stripes in our new eastern possessions, the Sulu islands? And does he not know that we have been assured by no less " an authbrity than President Schurman, ex-resident of the Philippine com miss on, that slavery as it now exists in the United States in Asia, "is not the ci',uel and inhuman kind of slav ery that we have been accustomed to think bf, but on the contrary the rela tionship between the slaves and their owners (is often quite friendly?" - It is unfortunate to have Mr. Roose velt pntlavery In the same category with piricy and anarchy. This por tion of tce message will not make a favorable Impression in Jolo, Utica (N. Y.) democrat, WW be Suppressed Editor Independent: Your offer of sample coptes will cause Madden to close the mails against you just as he has squelchcfl the Challenge, the Ap peal to Reaspn and the Topeka. Advoi cate. I J. H. "WILLIAMSON. Belle Fouikh. S. D. Populism Needed Editqr Independent: I am much Interested irf the , people'.; party and am sorry that there is no organization here In New lYork where it Is so much LARENCE STRIGHT. ace, Brooklyn, N. Y. needed." ' . Clarence " Labor Conference In Kevr York, De- la Worlclnir Directly Toward tne World'a Peace Bellerea It la Pre eminently a Practical Hortutat. A new plane of discussion of the la bor problem has, developed from the New York conference. The new com mittee of thirty-six Is recognized in the general discussion of its aims, objects and proposed methods as a body hav lng an authority at the bar of. ptiblic opinion never before conceived of. ; Par ticipants in and critics of the move ment are now agreed that a new era has begun in the work of bringing cap italist and breadwinner to a common meeting place. The point most dwelt upon is the fact that theory, futile hitherto, has been abandoned for prac tical und efficient means. As planned by J. P. Morgan, the de viser cf the conference, the discussion has sounded a meaning note with which both interests are in accord. It has stated the basic principles of fu ture relations to which money and work alike subscribe and has embod ied those ideas in men .whose repre sentative character commands univer sal respect. . Oscar S. Straus, " prominent in the movement as a man who has thought much and worked much for mankind, emphasizes these points In the Inter view which follows, says Julius Cham bers in the- New York Journal. As a largeA and generous employer of labor in various branches of mercan tile trade Oscar S. Straus, ex-minister to Turkey, was pre-eminently fitted to take part in the memorable conference of capitalists, labor representatives and neutrals that closed its session In New York city the other day. The choice of United States Senator Marcus A., Hanna as chairman of the Industrial d?partment of the National Civic association was made in a spirit of the utmost harmony. Every man present at the conference bears testi mony to that fact. Mr. Straus declares him tobe the ideal chairman, of so Im portant and so original a social and j economic project, I "I regard this as the greatest and most conspicuous movement for Indus trial peace - that ha9 ever occurred in the history of labor," said the Hon. Oscar S. Straus. "I am devoted to Its prosecution heart and soul. We ,are not theorists, for you will see that we have eliminated that phasie of the sub ject lri. our 'plan and scopje.' This Is pre-eminently a practical movement managed by practical men to achieve practical results. We do not hope for the millennium, but we do expect to be able to lessen industrial disturbances, to be instrumental in bringing employ ers and workingmen nearer together for the purpose of avoiding and remov ing those misunderstandings that in the past have been the most fruitful sources of strikes. . "The whole tones and spirit of the conference, as expressed by the repro sentatlve men who stood for two mil lions of organized labor, by those men who represented the public Interest and by the men who "are the chief repre sentatives of the largest employers of labor throughout the United States, were such as to cause every member present at each session to feel assured that the Inauguration of this momen tous movement and the formation of this permanent body would have the most beneflciaj results." , The speaker then paid the highest compliments to the Intelligence of the men who acted as spokesmen for labor. He concluded by saying: "The representatives of labor met us upon a high plane and In a broad spir it. They Were 4 Gorapers.- president of the American Federation: Mitchell, president of the United Mine Workers: Sargent, grand master cf the Brother hood of Locomotive Firemen: Shaffer, president of the American Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers: Keefe, president of the International Associa tion of Longshoremen: Fox, president of the Iron Molders of America: Lynch, president of the international Typo graphical union; White, secretary of the Garment Workers of America, and MacArthur and McDonald. "I can sincerely say that the repre sentative employers came with the same feelings. It was a grand and magnificent reunion. I shall always be proud to have had a place In its mem bership. "I am not a prophet or a chaser of rainbows, but to me the grand results to bo expected are plain. s "Employed and employers must feel grateful for the enthusiastic support of the newspaper press throughout the country. It has shown the highest pub lic spirit ani interest. "Early conferences when differences arise are the surest safeguards," con tinued Mr. Straus as he handed me tho text of what 4 is known as the "scope and province of the department. These are the resolutions minted at the meeting of the executive comix It tee the other day. ' , "Those are the frank and joint ex pressions of nil the elements represent ed in the conference." added V Mr. Straus in conclusion. "They are epocl making. Tne golden era's note of pedce has been sounded." A Rubber Subatltnte. A promising substitute for rubber has recently been made from the youna shoots of the Rocky mountain grease -wood plant. , . - ; MARCONI ON H3 HOPE8.; Maaaaa - War '15os Seat at a fcaW ' a ,-W"ord bjr Wlrelcaa r t j, " . Sir Cavendish Boyle, governcr of NewfounUland, recently gavo a large luncheon at St. John's In "honor of Sig nor Marconi. Auionjr those present were Premier Bond, the cabinst minis ters and the heads of departments. The affair was practically a state func tion. .. " ' : ;. K; : Governor Boyle in proposing Sfgnor Marconi's health spoke at length, on the Inventor's work since his arrival lu the colony and referred In a glowing manner to what his latest exploit means to the scientific world and what it may soon mean to the world of com merce. " The speaker thanked Signor j Marconi for having selected Newfound land as the scene of his most important experiments. He said this Illustrated the Important strategic value of the island. He closed by: congratulating the 'inventor ''upon his approaching marriage. . V , ; " In replying. Signor Marconi thanked Sir Cavendish for the many kindnesses shown to him (Marconi) and for his flattering remarks. After referring to the important factor In the progress of civilization which lies In facility of communication between different coun tries Stgnor Marconi said: ."If my system of wireless telegraphy can be commercially established be tween different parts of the earth. In regard to the possibility of which I may state I have not the slightest doubt, it would - bring about an enor mous cheapening' In the methods of communication at present existing. The system of submarine cables of today fulfills the demands of communication to a great extent, but the great cost of the cables themselves and their heavy working expenses cause the existing method to be . beyond the reach of a majority of -the people inhabiting the various countries of the. world. But could this new method.be applied I, believe the cost of what we now call cabling to England might be reduced at least twentyfold. The present rate Is 25 cents a word. I do not see why eventually, with the wireless system this cost should not be reduced to 1 cent a word or less." Observing that he was half a Brit isher by birth, .Signor Marconi contin' ued: . . ..- ?- "With regard to the Brl'ish empire. the wireless system has a quite special importance, as facilitating the methods of communication' between the mother country and her great colonies beyond the seas, and it cannot but result in still more firmly .cementing .the bond of, unity and a common, cause In the inter est of civilization,, of which the empire has during;, tle anxious times of , the last two or three years given such a. splendid example to the world. This colony of Newfoundland Is the 'first in which a message was received by cable from across' the ocean, and I am glad to say ; it has equally been, the first to receive a message across this same ' ocean without a cable. It Is my sin cere wish that if there Is anything use-, ful In my method this country should not be the last nor the least In partici pating In its benefits. ' It Is my sincere wish that doverhor Boyle and the members of ' his government may. In the future, always have cause to look back with satisfaction on,' the great as sistance and encouragement they have afforded me in the carrying out of ioy work." . , '. ' ' - .c. ' Signor Marconi's lawyer at St. John's has Informed counsel for" the Anglo American Telegraph company tbat Marconi will" temporarily cease his tests and,' without admitting the rights of the Anglo-American company, will notify that company prior to resuming the tests. 14 ill OIILY IHCUBATOR" .You Can Hatch Chickens by the Thousand The Whicli baa no defects and has advantages orer.aH other machine. You can raise the chicks in THE ONLY BROODER, whtrh Will not rreeae, smother, or overheat the chicks. Write for CatalneiiA.4 Rolrt nn :) rtuv tri-,i THE ONLY INCUBATOR CO., Bok H. Lincoln. Me D "'snapm ilBaMaj1 m' aa" A an m Count the Chicks as they come oat. Tliea eount the ecrffa, and you 'Will see why to many - people are using Incubators; and Brooders, The healthy egir becomes the vigorous, huakr, money making hen. , You will want our beauti fully illustrated catalogue. Five different edi tions In flvo languagon. Englloli edition 4 cent; others free. It Is a poultry Bible. Des Motives Incubator Co., Box 13. Dei Moines, lu., or Box 33, Buffalo, N.Y. 6c An.. eViA 'aIu...!.... ai sw . . . V for 65 cents: " t $1.00 Peruna .. 63c $1.00 Miles Nervine. ;.65c $1.00 Pierce's. Remedies C5c $1.00 Hood's Sar8aparllla.... O.'.c $1.00 Paine's Celery Compound. .. .t."c $1.00 Wine of Cardui f3c $1.00 Stuart's Dyspeptic Tablets. .toc $1.00 Pinkbam's Compound, 5c $1.00 Kilmer's Swamp Root C5c $1.00 Scott's . Emulsion. . . . . . .65c $1.00 S. S. S. ...................... 6oc We are fctlll selling Castorla, old Dr.' Pitcher's formula, 13c. Gut Rate Pharmacy 12th and O STS. Where goods are to be shipped ad l 25c for cost of boxing and drayage. PILES I permanently cured. We can kithiiuly promise you an ab solute cure no matter what your condition for Ritrn i Internal, mind. Bleeding or Itching Piles, uironie or Jiecem, wimoui unaergoing any surgical operation or interruption of but:ues. Thousands cured who, had given up in despair of ever getting relief. WH; iONl'INlE TO) SUFKKRy It eocts nothing to try our tr:atiiit. .Mmpla and particnlars mailed i'rec. How. S. 1. HtADLSY, faris. 111., writes: "I am convinced that you know your buines an 1 can cure where all others fail. . 1 bare doctored for Pils for three years with no beneficial re sults, and your treatment bas cured me in few days. laml'ounry Judge of eJdgar County, Illinois, and wiUbs g.ad toatsUtyou iu spreaa ins your remedy. Yours truly, S. 1. Headlh. Mi. KdwakdSomsrs. Oastleton. 111.. atlere l with bleediug. swelling and protruding PiUs for thirty years doctors bad given up his case as incurable. He was completely cured sty our treatment in three weeks. Mi. M. MrCor. Cogac, Kansas, Captain Co. A, Fiftieth Indiana Infantry, writes: tieriaii Remedy Co. : Dear Sirs 1 have doctored for Piles since the civil ar tuirty -six years andam now glad to report ttiat, after uing your treatment for a few week, lam complta lycnred. 1 believe yon ran cure anyone, for a man could not get in a much worse condition thani was and live, and lam duly grateful to you. Vonr reipectfulli. M. McCot. Thousands of Pile suderers who uad given no in despair of ever being cured hava written us letters full of aratitude. after uainz onrtam. edies for a short time. You can have a trial sample mailed FREE by writing us full particu lars of your case. HKKMIT REMEDY CO. 738 Adams Express hluilding, Chicago. 111. TO FIND THE BEST FOOD. IVtitrltfve Valae to Be Determined 1st All Parts of Nation. Into every section of the United States. Including the Philippines. ; the experiments on the nutritive value of foodstuffs will be carried, says a dis patch from New Haven to the New York Press. The headqxiarters have been at Wesleyan since tbey were be gun three years ago. Professor At water, who has been the prime'mover In Instituting them, says that he hnd obtained the co-operation of fifty insti tutions of learning and public utility, including leading colleges, universities, agricultural experiment stations, hos pitals, college settlements and other organizations. : Congress lias voted an appropriation of $20,000. and the pro moters of the scheme have asked for $30,000. . ' " ; The work how being done has to Co with the food eaten by families of me chanics, millionaires, farmers, mer chants, professional men, .residents of Fifth avenue, people of the slums of New 'York and Chicago, the poor whites of the south, the half breeds of Mexico, the Chinese of California and the natives of. Hawaii and the Philip pines. The object of the Investigation is to get at practical results and de ductions in the nutritive value of foods by a study of the composition and di gestibility of foodstuffs. Floating; ISxhlblttona Pay. The experiment undertaken by Ger man export merchants of fitting out floating commercial exhibitions has been remarkably profitable, says the Springfield Republican. Each of the exporters contributed ' a sum propor tionate to the amount of space he de sired to occupy. This went to defray expenses. In addition each promised a 10 per cnt commission on sales. Ships were fitted ' out. with a staff trained in the technical and commerc'al schools. On entering a harbor a can vass was inadeof the merchants, who were then "Invited on board or visited by -salesmen with samples. At an ex pense of $200,000 goods to the value cf $5,000,000 were sold. Germany has no nntont nn tho nlan. . - ' V: , Meier & Helcr Attorneys, 1341 O St. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT DEFENDANT!- To Catherine Rotors, Tliomas Rogers and Kai fcer jc-mery nerenaant. You and each of you take notice that on t ' 27th day of November, jDOl, Elijah J. Qar filed her petition against you and others, in , District Court of the Third Judicial District Nebraska.' in aud for Lancaster county, to f close the lien of a tax sain and certificate November 24th, 1809 made by the county til urerof said county to the plaintiff on tb lowing property, towit: -JL01 eiRl't ibt east quarter (N. E. ?4 Section thirty a)) f (11) Kanife eicht (81 W'averlv Precinct Lu.i . ter County, Nebraslta, for tue delinquent state and county taxes of the years ltjy5. l$, 1H, 1M. l&M. 1897 and 1898 acid tue lit n of State and County Taxes on said property for the yean I89U,and WU.) paid by the plaintiff under certifl cate'on which there is now due the plaiutitf the sum of thirty-six dollars and seventy-seven cents ($36. 7) with cot of this notice and in terest n twenty dollars and five cents ifi.(5 at ten per cent per annum from November Zith 1901. Plaintiff prays that said property be sold to satisfy aid lieus, and the costs of this action including- an attorney's fee as provided by law and for general relief. You are required to answer said petition 011 or before the third day of February. JiXr. ELIJAH J. liARTEN. ' ' By Meier A Meier her Attorneys. Clerical Permits rZ . Jfl'l. S PICT Applications for clergymen's haif fare pern Its for 1902 should be filed at the earliest possible date with the local agent of the B. & M. It. It. J. FRANCIS. General Passenger Agent. tw tt fc sV1 jC tj ii (,C aC fc 8 v't t J ? - fc? - v1 . tf1 V1' tw at fct few fcC '$ v J sT m.9 a . J a,T fcrT aj" fc k V . v J & a' tj fcW v7 V , QUICKER TIME -to CALIFORNIA. . ,a ; - ; s s8 ve .The Union Pacific has recently & reduced, the already fast time J t time between Lincoln and Jt California, making the run fcst several hours quicker than . St ever before. Jt Leave Lincoln 7 a. m. dally, Jt except Sunday," - connecting t '.Jt ' with fThe Overland Limited" . Jt at P'remont. . Jt Leave Lincoln 1:45 p. m.- daily. Jt : conn, '.ing . with "The Call- Jt fornia Express" at Fremont. Jt For full lnforfatlon call on Jt or address E. B. SL03SON. Jt ; Agent. Jt jt : . ' , jt tJw t w i ' BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCK COCKERALS of best breedibg for iale. A. N. Dafoe. 1 Tecumsen, isf