8 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. . February 6,-1902, 51 wfil pa k DR.F.L.SEARLES SPECIALIST. A CURED IH 5 DAYS TO STAY CURED. NO CUTTING OR PAIN "We want Terr man afflicted with VARICOCELE?. BLOOD POISONING, NERVOUS - DEBILITY or allied troubles to come to our offlce.where we will explain to hira our method of curing these diseases. We invite in partic ular all men who have become dissatisfied with treatment elsewhere. We will explain to you why you have not been cured, and will demonstrate to your entire satisfaction why we can cure you safely, quickly and permanently. Our counsel will cost you nothing, and our charges for a perfect cure will be reasonable and not more than you will ho willing to pay for benefits conferred. CERTAINTY OF CUR Is what you want. We give a written LEGAL GUARANTEE to cure you. W earn and will cite you by permission when satisfied that informuticn is desired by sincere) people, to cases that we have oured to stay eured which have been abandoned by family physicians and so-called experts. What we have done for others we can do for you. If too cannot call, write us a full and truthful statement of your symptoms. One personal visit is preferred, but if it Is impossible for you to call at our office write us a descrip- your general n enveioce scientific and honest opinion or your case iree oi cnarge. Call on or address with stamp, Box 834. Rfjain Office; Rooms 217-220 Richards Block LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. V1S11 IS prCIt;i IT"U, Vllb 11 lb IB liuunsjuio iwi uu w a u isu& nine Ul tlon of your case as you understand it, plainly statine your symptoms, y physical condition, your occupation, etc., and you will receive in plain Treatment by mail a specialty. Ca DBS. SEARLES & SEARLES, LIBERTY BUILDING GUARDS Doing Valiant Work Notwithstanding the Cold and Stormy Weather. Last week we announced to the read ers of The Independent the desire on our part and the necessity for the construction of a permanent home for the publication of this paper. The plan which we have adopted to accomplish the undertaking is to sell "Liberty Building Postals" in blocks of five for $3.00. Each postal is good for a year's subscription to The Independent to oe sent to any address in the United States or Canada. What we ask of our friends and patrons is their co-operation in disposing of 2,000 of these building postals. We have made th price low to make it easy for them to dispose of the cards. When you ask 3'our neighbor to buy one of these cards you are not asking him to con tribute or donate anything. You are in reality offering to sell him a year's subscription to The Independent at 40 cents less than he could buy the sub scription direct. We can afford to make this low rate for these cards in blocks of five for three reasons: First, we do not have to pay an agent his wages and traveling expenses to secure the subscriptions. All that expense, which is usually heavy, we avoid by this method. Second, we will use the mon ey to build a home for The Indepen dent and quit paying rent which now costs us $65 per month. Third, we wished to make it easy for our friends to sell the cards. Those are the plain reasons why we are selling "Liberty Building Subscriptions" in blocks of five at the low figure we are. We have been as liberal in our offer as possi ble. It costs more money to publish a paper devoted to the defense of tne plain people than to publish one ad vocating the cause of plutocracy. The money power would gladly furnish material to fill all our columns free of charge if we would accept it. They would be liberal with their advertis ing patronage and generous to a fault if we would indorse their legalized robberies. That's why plutocratic sheets cost so little. Shall we give you that kind of a paper? Never! We will print the truth and sell the paper as cheaply as we can. Invite your neighbor to try it for a year. Ask him to compare it with the hand-me-downs and ready made stuff furnished him by the organs of plutocracy. Here is the roll of Liberty Guards and what they have done to date. Let us ad your name to the list: No. cards ordered. Wilfred Lebert, Archer Neb 5 W. E. Freeman, Cushing, Neb 5 L. E. Hallstead, Petersburg, Neb.. T S. Hunziker. Guide Rock. Neb 5 J. W. Bray, Table Rock, Neb f D. E. Burkey, Giltner, Neb 5 Lewis Reynolds, Union, Neb 5 J. F. Abbott, Unadilla, Neb 3 Mrs. Eliza Sowards, Ashland, Neb.. 5 J. M. Babb, Clayton, 111 5 Jas. O'Fallon, Mead, Neb...' 5 Wm. Scott, St. Paul, Neb. 5 C. J. West, St. Paul, Neb 5 Joseph Wittwer. Salem, Neb 5 C. W. Duncan, Pilger, Neb 5 D. W. Haskins, Geneva, Neb 5 Lewis Frey, Fairmont, Neb 5 L. O. Leffingwell, Frankfort, Kas.. 5 A. W. Cox, Bladen, Neb 10 B. A. Dean, Juniata, Neb Michael Hoferer, Wamego, Kas..., 5 J. Miner, Friend, Neb ,. G L. Brickard, Wood River, Neb C, Total 118 THE LIBERTY BUILDING How the Headers of the Independent Re spond to the Call to Make This Paper Safe As soon as the subscribers began to receive the last edition of The Inde pendent they began to write for "Lib erty Postal Cards." Nebraska sub scribers begin to receive their Inde pendents Saturday. The first mail Monday morning brought numerous answers to the call. Among them were the following: C. J. West, St. Paul, Neb En closed you will find $3 for a block of Liberty Building Postals for which you may give credit to Mr. Wm. Scott. We will try and get up a few more. Mr. , Scott says that is the best pack of cards in the United States. L. M. Babb, Clayton, 111. Send me a block of your Liberty Postals. Eliza Sowards, Ashland, Neb. Send me five subscription cards. W. E. Freeman, Cushing, Neb. I wish to help in the Liberty Building plan. We need The Independent to champion populist principles. I remit four dollars. $1 for arrears and $3 for a block of Liberty Building subscrip tions. Wilfred Lebert, Archer, Neb. Please send me block of 'Liberty Building postals. . L. E. Hallstead, Petersburg, Neb. Send me one of your blocks of five cards. S. Hunziker, Guide Rock, Neb. Send me a block of your Liberty Building subscription cards. I have worked for The Independent from its first issue and I have seen its brave advocacy of honest and true principles. It is sec ond to none. - J. W. Bray, Table Rock, Neb. Please send me five of your cards. D. E. Burkey, Giltner, Neb. I am pleased to see The Independent trying to get a home of its own, and I will for one accept its offer, but I have not sold my wheat yet which is all that I have to sell this year (that was the region of the drouth. Ed.) so if you will send me the five postals I will sell them and send you the money. Linus Reynolds. Union, Neb. Sen'! ' me five subscription postals. I would like them within two or three days. My" father is a reader of your paper. J. F. Abbott, Unadilla, Neb. Send me three of your subscription cards and I will send you $3.00. Louis' Frey, Fairmont, Neb. Send me five Liberty Building postal cards. - D. W. Haskins, Geneva, Neb. Send me five of your liberty cards. I do not care -to make anything on them, but I should like to see your paper read by more people. ' C. W. Duncan, Pilger, Neb. Find enclosed $3 for Liberty Building sub scription cards. Joseph Wittwer, Salem, Neb. My ' father is a reader of your paper. I noticed the offer in your paper. Please send me fiye cards; I think I can sell them right in this community. L. O. Leffingwell, Frankfort, Kas. how you can get up so good a paper for the price. I know of no paper that I would exchange The Independent for. I would be very glad to know that it was in a home of its own and will make every effort to get a few of my neighbors to subscribe. A. W. Cox, Bladen, Neb. You will find enclosed $3.00 for five Liberty Building subscriptions and please send The Independent to the following per sons. You may send me some more of your cards and I will sell them at least I will make the attempt. There is money in poultry. See ad vertisement of Sure Hatch Incubator on page 5. Whose Land Is It? Editor Independent: On the out skirts of Philadelphia is a piece of land owned by the queen of Spain. The tract is large enough to be used as a truck farm and the queen's agent lets it for this purpose. The tenant is a free born American citizen, en joying all the rights that go with such citizenship. He works for a living and works just as hard and just as long as the average American farmer, and he gets the same wages, too, name ly, a bare living. What he produces by his labor he exchanges In the mar ket for money. Every month he takes some of this money to the queen's agent and pays the rent of the ground. The agent, in turn, buys a draft on London or Madrid, and in this way the money finally gets into the queen's pocket. - Of course the result would be the same if, instead of first converting the produce into money he , sent her the produce itself. Our exports would then be Increased still more, and the "balance of trade" would be heralded by every republican as being "favora ble" to the tenant, even though as a matter of fact he gets back nothing in exchange But that is another story. So far this transaction differs in no essential particular from the thousands of others where tenants pay rent to landlords, and, like other cases, it becomes significant only when we ask ourselves what , the queen of Spain has done -to earn this money which our fellow citizen, sends her for . the great privilege of working and making a living In his native land. What does she give him in exchange for the money, things or - services which he gives her? Did the queen make this land which she claims as her property and which the laws allow as such? If she did, then we must admit that her title is perfect: But the question is absurd as applied to land. We know that she did not; we know that the Creator saved her this trouble. But if her serene highness the queen did not make the land, does she protect her tenant in the full andfree en joyment of it? Or does she protect and stand guard over his life and prop erty? No, the local, state and federal government do this and will even col lect the rent for, her on the tenant's return for the services rendered her? Study this. question as we may we can come to but one conclusion. There is but one answer and that is noth ing! Literally and absolutely, noth ing! Her so-called right to this rent is simply a legal one; a lying device by which the cunning may continu ously rob the credulous; a power to reap where she has not sown; a scheme for getting service without giving service; a tisne-honored wrong which enables the do-nothing to ride on the back of the worker. In so far as the queen of Spain is supported by this man's labor she is a pauper dependent upon his, bounty.. But this . is not all. Let us suppose that this same queen owns other tracts of land in the United States. I do not know whether she does or not, but other foreigners own land here and -there's nothing in our laws or in stitutions to prevent her doing so. For all we know to the contrary she may now be the owner of such valuable land here in the United States that from the income derived from her ten ants she can, if she chooses, rebuild the whole Spanish navy. Just think of the Spanish vessels destroyed by our navy having been built and paid for out of rent received from Amer ican workers! Think of these same Americans speaking of this land as their country and singing national anthems while they toil for the real owner! In the expressive language of the street, doesn't this jar you? But to whom does this land right fully belong? Who are justly entitled to its use and all the benefits that come from its use? The first question asked anyone suspected of having stolen property in his possession is, "Where did you get it?" Applying this , question in the present instance, we find that the queen's title rests finally on a grant made by an English king to William Penn. Records don't go back any farther, nor is it neces sary that they should, for 'we know where the king got the land. He took it. The title then rests on force. How valid is a title which rests on force? You are stronger than your neighbor; suppose you take his watch. Does the power you have to keep it give you a good title to it? Suppose you sell the watch to someone else. Is his title then any better than yours was? Or does such a title grow perfect by the lapse of time, and if so at what rate per annum? Now, judged by the standard we ap ply to all other forms of property, or tried by the maxims of common law. it is plain that the queen of Spain has no right whatever in this land or to any of the benefits which come from its use. She should therefore be dis possessed and the land be put in pos session of its rightful owners. Who are its rightful owners? The whole people always have been and always are. They are the ones who are robbed whenever land is made private prop erty, and since all other titles to land rest on the same basis as the one we have just traced back, the verdict we have declared against the queen of Spain stands with equal force and jus tice against all landlords. "Violence, fraud, the prerogative of force, the claims of superior cunning these are the sources to which their titles may be traced. The original deeds were written with the sword rather than with the pen; not lawyers, but soldiers, were the conveyancers; blows were the current coin given in payment, and for seals blood was used in preference to wax." That the earth was created for all men and that all men are equally en titled to its use becomes more than a mere inference when we consider the conseauences of permitting land to be treated as private property. For if it be maintained that the earth rightfully belongs to landowners, then they alone are justly entitled to its use; all who are not landowners are trespassers, exist only by sufferance, and may enuitably be expelled from the earth altogether. This conclusion is so mon strous that reason and conscience re ject it. But mankind having gotten into the dilemma it is in now by recog nizing land as private property, (he question arises, What is the remedy? There is but one. Men's equal rights to the Creator's bounty can be secured in but one way. Let landowners re tain possession if they choose; U.t them continue to speak of it as their land if they want to. but let us compel the .n to pay for the privilege thus ac corded them. What is the privilege worth? Always the rental value of the land. This the people can take in the form of a tax, and with the amount so raised pay the common expenses of government. This value belongs to the people because the land belongs to them. It arises as the need of gov ernment arises; it is due to the pres ence of an industrious population and not to anything which owners, as such, have done; it increases with popula tion and decreases as population de clines; it is the natural tax and the only one which the government can be justified in taking. It is known as the single tax, and when applied will, in the language of its eloquent ex pounder, Henry George, "raise wages, extirpate pauperism, abolish poverty, give remunerative employment to who ever wishes it, afford free scope to human powers, lessen crime, elevate morals and taste and intelligence, purify government and carry civiliza tion to yet nobler heights." If any reader of The Independent desires to know more about the single tax I will send him literature free on request. C. F. SH ANDREW. Germantown, Pa. (The editor of The Independent would send for some of that literature himself if he thought he could find an answer to a few practical questions in it. He has read thousands of pages of it and never yet found an answer to them. First, if all the land in the United States is taxed to its full rental value, what will be done with the innumerable millions of dollars that such a tax would produce? It is true that population gives most of the value to land. Land in an uninhabited coun try has no value. The coming of popu lation gives it value. But it i3 popu lation that gives value to everything else. A man may have a herd of horse3 i and SMO KB m mm Youriiieawayi You can be cured of any form of tobacco usinsr easily, be made well, strong, magnetic, full of new life and vigor by taking HQ-TQ-BA0. tnat makes weak, men strong. Mntiy train Lincoln, Nebraska Sv f i '"nce Wiact that ten pounds in ten days. Over BOO.OOO In Cloaks, Suits, Skirts, and Waiats We are receiving new pods every day. New spring styles in Raglans in me dium weight cloth, Moire, Peau de Soie and Taffeta Silk. , New Peau de Soie and Taffeta Silk Skirts. Beautiful designs and ex clusive with us. $ew. Walking Skirts new in style, color, and cloth. New silk Waists in white and; in even ing colors. New Brilliantine Waists in white, button back, nice assortment, f . upwards from New black Taffeta Silk Waists Q upwards from . $0 JjTew black suits in spring weights and .Styles. Embroideries, Muslin Underwear, Etc. Opening Sale of Embroideries Feb. 8 to 15 We would call your attention to the opening of our magnificent line of 1902 embroideries, consisting of the latest novelties in white, cream and black edges; insertions, ribbon-beading, bands, appliques, galloons, motives, re vers, Swiss. Flounces in full sets, and 45-inch all-over embroidery. , Our Great Annual Sale of Ladies1 and Children's Under Muslin will take place during the month and will be an nounced shortly. Wait for it. Yunka Black Silks Al? absolutely ana are guaranteed by us. Sold only at this store. 50c 85 c NEW DRESS SILKS We are showing an exceedingly choice line of corded wash Silks in fancy stripes, suit able for waists, quality un equaled, for Colored satin striped grass Lin : en, 44 inches wide, at. A full line of best quality, velvet Corduroy, very popular O I, I rt now for waists, at . . . . . J j U GRAN ITEWARE SALE This week we will begin a Special Sale of gray and white-lined Granite ware high grade ware at almost man ufacturers1 cost. Many articles can be bought during this sale for about ONE HALF OFF. Cooking, pudding and milk small cooking kettles, cups, pie plates, worth up to 25c, choice Coffee and tea pots, Berlin ket tles, regular kettles, sauce pots, covered buckets, etc., worth up to 60c, choice . . Tea kettles, slightly damaged, only 50c and. Dish pans, perfect grade, triple coated, all sizes, on account of being overstocked, at ONE-HALF OFF. STATIONERY DEPT Valentines. NEW NOVELTIES IN VALENTINES, NEW LACE VALENTINES, NEW COMIC VALENTINES. Our selection of these charming little rememb rances is the best in the city. In larger and better display than ever before we are showing the most exquisite rnd appropriate of this season's refined souvenirs. Our line of comic Valentines is the most complete in the city. The additions this year are numerous and fully up to the- standard in raciness asd Aigor. Everything we show ,in these goods are entirely new and of this season's purchase. pans, 10c 25C 25C V In Domestic Department An After-Inventory . . Blanket and Comfort Sale We have divided our blankets an comforts into different ilots each, am: will close them out regardless of then value. " Blankets, Lot 1 All $3.50 tp $5.00 blankets choice at,Q M "7 per pair. .... ... . . . . . . . ijZiT' i Blankets, Lot 2 All $6.00 to $8.00 blankets choice, per QJJ Q Q pair..... OtiUO Blankets, lot 3 All $8.50 to $12.00 blankets choice, Q J per pair, at UUiU U Comforts, Lot 1 All $1.65, $1.75 and $2.00 comforts, Q I l)Q choice, each U I iZ U Comforts, Lot 2 All $2.25, $2.35 and $2.65 comforts, Q I choice, each U I "0 u Comforts, Lot 3 All $2.75, $3.00 and $3.50 comforts, ft I) Q choice, each Lim U Comforts, Lot 4 All $5.00, $0.00 and $6.50 Com- Q Q7 forts, choice, each Old 36-inch bleached muslin, extra heavy, would be cheap at 7 I n 9c, at - 2U 36-inch percale, short lengths, I J best quality, worth 15c, at J y 32-inch peicale, short lengths, Q I & best quality, worth 10c at. U2b Ginghams, short lengths, heavy r cloth, apron checks, at Jj (J Butterick Patterns and Publications WE ARE SOLE LINCOLN AGT.- TrvaMail Order ktbofakmrni Nebi or a Duilling full of plows, and if there, ar no -"inhabitants the horses and the plows will have no value. If it i3 morally right to tax out all the value that population gives to land, why not take by taxation the value that population gives to the horses and the plows? This question the editor has pressed time and again upon single taxers, who are most estimable and patriotic men, but never one yet at tempted to make an answer. The Queen of Spain must have bought that land of somebody, and paid money or its equivalent for it. She personally did not take it by force. Nor did William Penn, if we can put any reliance in history. He bought it of the Indians. He recognized their first occunancy as givinc them a title, just as all men recognize the title to an article found that has no owner, even if the possessor did not create it. Now. suDDOse the Queen of Spain should have taken the money that she paid for. land and bought instead a portion of a railroad. That railroad would have sent her greater dividends than she probably gets from the land. Those dividends come out of tne tun of the farmer, they take part of his cron lust as much as if he sent them in kind, and- the Queen of Spain gets them from the toil of American citi zens nnrl ar.r.ordiner to this reasoning, returns nothing absolutely nothing. She might build a navy with them and that would be making American citi zens build Spanish fleets for which they got nothing in return. Does Mr. Shandrew hold that that investment in railroads should be taxed to its full value in dividends? Such a tax rests nrppisplv nnon the same logic, as far as the editor of The Independent has ever been able to make it out, as tne single land tax. Tf therefore follows that any income from . investment should be taken by the government. There can be no escape from the conclusion if the logic emnloved to defend the taking of all- rental value from land is sound.. But that would be socialism, and If one class of citizens hate socialism worse than another it is the single taxers. The Independent remains an open forum for the full and free discussion of any plan that any man honestly thinks is for the benefit of mankind. Ed. Ind.) Crowning Miss Roosevelt A Washington dispatch says that so ciety is deeply interested in the report that Miss Alice Roosevelt will attend the coronation of King Edward. It is said that Miss Roosevelt will sail with Special Ambassador Reid and Mrs. Reid on June 5. Here is the-interesting program of the visit of Miss Roosevelt, according to Borne of her Washington friends: When Mr. and Mrs. Whitelaw Reid come to Washington next week the matter will be arranged in every de-' tail. Her presentation at the first drawing room immediately following the coronation will be made by Am bassador and Mrs. Choate. The latter has been written to with regard not only to the presentation gown, but what is of even greater importance, for minute directions as to the corona tion robe." This, in accordance with Jthe court regulations, must be of a shade of an American beauty rose. Miss Roosevelt, as the daughter of the head of this nation, would, in ac cordance with court etiquette, wear coronation robes the same as any of the princesses of the blood royal. In the latter case, as also with every peeress to be present, there must be a crown worn. This in tlje case of Miss Roosevelt might be the same as those worn by the princesses. If the president allows his daughter to engage in any such royal foolish ness as that he is not the sort of a man that The Independent thinks he Is. He will cut a pretty figure run ning for president of a republic after such a performance as that. But so many men in the republican party have proved traitors to the principles upon which this government was founded that it no longer seems safe to rely on any of them. A FINE CATTLE RANCH OOO Tons of Hy, 3,000 Acres of Pasture 6 Flewlnjc Wells This is known as the Tyrrell Ranch, and is located fifteen miles south of Atkinson, Holt county, Neb. This ranch consists of 1,600 acres; 960 acres deeded land and mostly fine hay mea dow, the balance, 640 acres, is a school section, the lease running for twenty two years at less than half what the taxes would be on the same tract. There is some hay land on the school section, but it is mostly adapted to range, and this, with enough of the free range land adjoining to make 3, 000 acres, is fenced with a substantial three-wire fence. A good six-room frame house, barn 35x80 with stanch ions for twenty-eight cows, granary, shed room and good yards, pens and corralls. Three small pastures of 20. 40 and 120 acres, fenced with good four-wire fence a:ad each containing a fjlne flowing well, which flaws a 1 inch stream of the purest water on earth the year around. Ten acres cood timber. Daily mail delivered at door. Postoffice, store and blacksmith shop on adjoining farm. There is no better ranch in Nebraska. Price, $16,000, $6,000 down, the balance in ten annual payments at 6 per cent in terest. Call upon or address, EDWIN S. EVES, O'Neill, Neb. newspaper reports of how Schwab was hiring special trains on . the slightest provocation, merely to transport his single self from place to place. Mr. L. G. Todd, Union, Neb., writes that he will ship seed corn that has been ordered from him during March. Corn shelled and shipped earlier than that does not grow as well as when allowed to remain on the cob longer. Brer Madden The American Emperor The president of the United States Steel corporation has been going through Europe like a king at the head of an irresistible army of invasion. When he reached Vienna the Austrian papers published alarmist reports that all the principal steel works of the country were to be bought up and tied to the tentacles of the American octopus. Emperor Francis Joseph begged for an interview with Mr. Schwab who is a young man. and not long ago was driving a country stage in Pennsylvania and it was gracious ly accorded, but when later on he re quested a second interview with the great man, it was: denied, Mr. Schwab sending word down to the emperor that he had to hurry away on business. Evidently the natives were surprised that he should have condescended to Editor Independent: The tail-end appendage of the postoffice department at Washington reminds me of a yel low, curly-tailed, half flc, half cur, I had when I was a boy. I had. named him General Forrest, after the man my pap had "fit under in the war." How General did hate a rat was a caution to the crows! He was "death on 'em,", too. Put him into a corn crib and say "rats" to him and he would dive in amongst the shucks and fairly play a tune with 'em. Then L.'j-me the rat you could find in that crib, till the next time. After an episode of this kind, Gen eral would prance around, his - ears, cocked and his tail curled so tight that it looked as though there would surely come a split 'twixt it and his sacrum. And he would look into my face and bark as If to say, "Now, haint I a good 'un?" I certainly thought he was, too, till one rainy afternoon in the fall he met his Waterloo and I lost confidence in him and changed his narae. A big trapper negro named Sime came to the store carrying a long fox- trap under his arm. When he came up to tho crowd we could 3ee through the wire end of the trap a large he coon which had been caught the night before. Sime said he had "brung" him there to lick the hair "offen" any dog in the place, and that he would bet 25 cents that the coon could do it. Now if there is . anything in the world that will fight hard and die hard it's an bid he-coon. And if there was anything at that time that I had confluence in, it was the courage - of General Forrest. But I was young then very young and green. And so was my dog. The blacksmith acted as stake-holder and I lit out to the house for the Gen eral . When I got back the crowd was standing 'round In a ring and Sime was in the center ready to turn the coon ut whenever I turned the General in. I could hardly, hold that rascal dog, he was that keen. Zip-coon hadn't more than hit the ground till General had him, and Just about the same time he had the Gen eral. . General vociferously objected to this. But . Zip chewed on at his under lip till the holt broke loose. Then General Forrest for. the first time in his life tucked his crooked tail between his legs and fled from be fore the1 face of his enemy. "Full of wrath and the cabbage" I had eat for dinner I chased and caught him, and brought him back to the scene of action. By that time another dog was. In the embraces and receiving the ca resses of his coonship. The General took in the situation at a; glance and seingthe long tail of the coon lying it lifted his right hind' leg off r ground and with raised bristle? . : grinning teeth he leaped into -arena. He took a death-grip on "ring around the raccoon's tail" ; wrestled and growled, and snouted a : scratched, and turned and twiste-i beat the devil when he and the I)u and the Dun cow fit. But when the other dog's lip gr out, General quietly relinquished tail holt, and retreated in good or ! but at greased lightning speed. It didn't take General long to 1 which was the safe end of ihv.t . mint, nor when was the proper time turn that same safe end loose. The third assistant Is at present the embraces and receiving thr resses of the great newspaper tin and he knows that .that embrace wo : prove fatal to him if he should otherwise than as it bids him. So when the trust said to lm, T or hole those sassy little papers there in Nebrasky and keep 'em u; or in it." , he hit the trail, hot-f and, at the may-be-damned-if-I-do sure-be-damned-if-I-don't gait w baying through the state, v . He holed one and as it went ir, got it by the tail and since then t been yaping and barking and scran i. ing gravel till his tail dips up a: down like a "jay-bird settin' on swingin' limb." "Accordin" tew my tell" which ait worth much Brer Madden Is ia mighty ticklish, place. Tail-holt better than no holt in fact, it's a r good and safe holt as long as t' business' end of the varmint is gaged. But there, will come a tin when the two ends will approach a other and then woe! to him tha been wrestlin' with the tail-piec. Sparta, Tenn. B. O. DL'GG A.V IIw Art Tor JLIdaeya Dr. HobbB'8parafnisPUlcur !1 kidoy tn. file free. At r ' " -"ro or i. Was Millard's Work Although Governor Savage is iL man upon whom the bulk of the odn. for the Bartley pardon falls, yet it certain that other prominent repu! lican politicians are as much to hlac -as he, and we would not be afraid t bet a hat that Senator Millard is ot of them. Callaway Courier. Extensive Improvements Extensive alterations are under w a at Miller & Paine's store. These f: elude the putting in of a new passeni; elevator which with a stairway will ? ford easy access to the, second floor basement. The firm's new two-story building ' the rear of their, present docation be completed in; late spring. T: will be connected with themain buil ing by a broad passage-way betwv the second floors, so that a custom can reach either store from the oth without discomfort or exposure. The new floor space being adcie will more than double the size of XI present store and will give abundant room for the new departments. Thes ? will be carpets and rugs, books, sta tionery and pictures, ladies and chil dren's shoes, and queensware. Th -carpets are already installed, book? and stationery will be on gale in tw-' povc.r. iho gho fnd , miprnszi.