n.TH i.lnyyf$?3 and home bred draft and coach stallions are larger than all import-rs i lf i Hi BLAC stallions and prices are "HOT PKOPOSITIONS" to his competitors. tbfm o Vo-away-back-and-it-down" and sin? "Ain't-it-a-sbame." That IAMH J5?". Bnd breeds only the best first-class bi draft stallions.flash coachers.and he sells tbem at le,s than we can afford to. He surely hypnotizes his many buyers with his top- m 5 rt' , r VT''v B, dos ?u,iae"' But he is the only man in C. S. that imports ALL cLACh. &f ALLIONS. Hehasonhand . 100 BIaCk Perchers Clydes, Shires and g Q .berare.th,(?-"3E9ATION"!,of tbetown. Visitors thron the barns and say": "Most select 2rileststalhoILever.sw , Se0 that 2,000-pound-two-year-old-a Tipper; and that 2,200 EPJ and tbre--year-old "herd header' 'a topper'." "O, my I See that 5,000-pound pair of four-year-olds; they are on i of sight; largest pair in 17. S. ; wide as a red wagon and have 12 and 14-inch bone and they more hke flash soachera." lams has a larger "HORSE SHOW" every day than tan b seen at the Iowa or Nebraska State Fairs. Hehasonhand 50 Black Ton Stallions- 50 ir.Mt8il2ea"511: I!'iihtl,to 2'509 Pou. fast movers. MORE Black Percberons, ton stallions, Paris Exhibition and State prize winners, government APPROVED and STAMPED PTivwR8 vo yAnomlter' . Iam8 Peks French and German, pays NO INTERPRETER, NO m Sx VBklr1i,NUn5tr?Tt-n mTen Prtn?r to share profits. His buyers get MID DLEMEN & PROFITS and SALARIES. lams buys direct from breeders. This, with his twenty p.. Mjre wuH 3rcura tuo oea. ah me Hoove racts save uis buyers 8500. (JO to $1,000.00 on a first-class stallion, and you get a rirstlass horse, a only second-rate stallions are peddled by slick sa esmento be sold. GOOD ONES SELL THEMSELVES. It costs $000.00 and $800.00 to have salesman form CO. and soil a second-rate stalJion. Form your own companies. Go direct 1? i?fff tb?TnoEZ?2ll?n you a ?etter stallion for $1,000.00 and $1,200.00 than others are selling ? a4i-aa8,,C5,0- I,Aras Pa;.borse freight and his buyer's fare. Good guarantees. BARNS l 1XV N. Don t be a clam. Write for an eye-opener and finest horse catalog on earth. 9 ST. PAUL, HOWARD CO., NEB., ON U. P. AND B. & M. RYS. References-5t. Paul State Bank, First State Bank, Citizens' National Bank. WE ARE NOT THE LARGEST IMPORTERS in the U. S. Neither have we all ton horss. But we do make ft importations each year. Our stables at Lincoln, Neb., and at South Omaha Union Stock Yards are full of first-class stallions. If you want a rsood one for what he is worth, it will pay you to see us. Our horses won sweepstakes in all draft and hacknoy classes at Nebraska State .' Wnyx- Aaaress an oorresponaenca to MMiWATSOH, WOODS' BROS. & KELLY CO., Lincoln, Neb. Gold still goes to Europe. Five mil lion went last week. The result was a fall in stocks and the banks called many loans. The constant shipment of large amounts of goods and go'.d to Europe above what is returned to this country, continues to excite com ment. What becomes of it? Certain ly it is not given away. The drain upon the wealth of this country is tre mendous. The constant shipping of more wealth out of the country than comes into it is for the enrichment of Europe and the impoverishment of ourselves. It certainly cannot go oa forever, unless we shall voluntarily make ourselves the working slaves of monarchies of the old world. .T. tAUKENCE LAUGPL1N J. Laurence Laughlin, professor of political economy in Rockefeller's Chi cago university, has an article in the Yale Quarterly on legal tender. The.e are so many twistings and turnings, tergiversations, subterfuges and eva sions in his logic that it would make a mountain climber dizzy to follow his devious trails. If one carefully looks through the article, he will see that he admits enough truth not to destroy entirely his reputation as an econo mist. He knows the truth well enough, but what would become of J. Laurence Laughlin if he should write it out and print it? He would no longer be at the head of the department of political economy in a great plutocratic uni versity. As the pop farmer would say, he would have "to git up and git." There is just one fact that knocks J, Laurence Laughlin and all of his care fully prepared sentences clear out of the box. The silver dollar is worth just as much as the gold dollar and the material in it is worth less than half as much and it is "not redeema ble in any other kind of money." What makes the silver dollar of the same value of the gold dollar? Why is its power in exchange exactly equal to the gold dollar? There is but one answer that can be given. IT IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE, EXCEPT WHERE OTHERWISE PROVIDED IN THE CONTRACT. J. Laurence Laughlin may write un til his hair all turns gray and his teeth fall out from old age and he will never convince any reasonable, honest man that the legal tender power does not add to the value of the material to which it is attached. A scientist who abandons the search for the truth and attempts to establish falsehood is the most contemptible of men. MUNICIPAL REFORM The editor of The Independent has received a letter from a prominent business man of the city in which h'i says that he is thoroughly disgusted with the kind of government that re publicans are giving the city and wants to know why the populists and democrats do not organize a vigorous opposition. As the writer of this let ter is a republican it seems a matter worth while to discuss the proposi tion. His party has an overwhelming majority in the city and if there is ever any reform accomplished it must come among the republicans. There are not enough fusionists to get con trol of the government. As long ns he and the remainder of his party will persist in voting the republican ticket. Seed Corn For Sale The Improved Gold Mine is a pure, yellow and early corn, and will ma ture in ninety to one hundred days, and is a large corn; yields as much as the later variety that takes 120 days to mature. It will shell sixty pounds of shelled grain to the bushel of ears It is tipped and thoroughly tested be fore it leaves my place, and shelled, sacked, put on cars, at Seward, free! Price, $1.25 per bu.; half bu., 75 cents! Iowa Silver Mine seed corn Is a good large white corn and is early, maturing in one hundred days; is a T-,..;.. (Mor , , Lincoln will have to suffer under cor poration rule. If the fusionists should put up a ticket of the very best men in the city upon a platform of reform, the republicans would still continue to vote for 'the corporation tools who are on the republican ticket and The Independent very much doubts wheth er the writer of the letter would vote for such men unless they were labeled republican. The gas company, the street car company, the electric light company and other corporations rule this city and will continue to rule it as long as a majority of the citizens will vote the republican ticket. If enough republicans will leave the party to make it probable that an op position ticket could be elected, there would very soon be one in the field. Reform must begin among those who have voted the republican ticket. When they have so far progressed as to be able to vote for their own In terests instead of at the dictation of corporation managers, we will hava reform and not before. What is true of Lincoln is true of hundreds of other cities. JUST WHAT SUITS US The more a man has the more he wants. When he gets a million, then he wants two millions. When he gets two millions, that don't satisfy him any more than one million did. That is the way of the privileged class. The more they get the more they want. It is especially true of the tar iff grabbers. The whole republican party is lined up and this is their pro gram. No reciprocity treaties of any sort. All that were negotiated under the McKinley administration to be laid on the shelf and kept there. That In cludes the reciprocity with Cuba as favored by McKinley and now advo cated by Roosevelt. The defeat of every effort to lower the tariff on anything and the tariffs on trust goods sold cheaper to for eigners than to Americans to stand untouched. A tariff on Porto Rico and the Phil ippines and every other place tbat a tariff can be made to reach. Then they want a ship subsidy bill which is only another form of the protective tariff. On that basis the party pro poses to go before the country. All the thieves will line up together. Penn sylvania tariff pirates will fight just as hard for a tariff on beet sugar al though the state does not produce a pound, as they will for a tariff on iron and coal. The Oregon protectionists will fight just as hard for a tariff on Connecticut fake jewelry as they will for one on canned salmon. Every thief proposes to stand for the graft of every other thief from Maine to California, and the aggregation ex pects to rule the country. That is the plan. The Independent likes it fir&t rate. That is just as it ought to be.. Wild cat banking and tariffs mountain high. Nothing could suit us better. HIP, HIP, HURRAH! Some of the best writing that ever appeared in the United States were the Bee head-lines over the summary of the currency bill introduced into congress last week. They ran like this: "Puts care on banks. Fiscal bill transfers responsibility of pro tecting gold reserve. Removes the burden from the government, etc." Oh! those patriotic bankers. They long to take the responsibilities "of the gov ernment and 76,000,000 of people upon their own shoulders. Bankers only want to increase their responsibilities. They never think of decreasing them. Thev want to redeem somebody else's notes, to pay other people's debts. They have always been known as the burden-bearers of the people. Hurrah for the banks! Watch them redeem Uncle Sam's promises to pay. Poor are going to step in and take up his "burden." How we should love, honor and reverence these bankers. ;jo such unselfish creatures were ever known in all the world before. Let the welkin ring with your shouts for the bankers. Form a procession a mile long. Get some grease dropping torches, march up and down the streets and 'whoop it up" for the bankers and the republi can party. They are going to "re deem" Uncle Sam's notes and all of the silver dollars. They are going to pro tect the treasury. Uncle Sam can build navies, raise armies and whip the world without costing him a cent. Hip, Hip, Hurrah! NEVER GIVE UP THE SHIP A few populists and Bryan demo crats have written letters to The In dependent in which they give up hope and declare that imperialism, trusts and special privileges cannot be over thrown, and that they will grow more and more powerful and rapacious un til some sort of a cataclysm occurs, when we iU begin at the bottom and build the temple of liberty all over again. They should remember that there have been times in this republic when the money power seemed more firmly installed in power than it is now, and yet each time in the end it. was defeated. The first great fight in this country was against landlordism. The landlords ruled things to suit themselves, but they were downed in the end. Then came the banks when they felt themselves so strong that Biddle told General Jackson to his face that no man could be elected whom he opposed. But Biddle and his bank power was overthrown. Then for a long time slavery ruled the coun try, not in the south alone, but many of the northern states. Slavery went down. It has only been one generation since liberty arose triumphantly from the field of battle and the nation strted out on a new career. There have slowly arisen three powers, which to day seem to many to be permanently enthroned banks, trusts and rail roads. The object of them all is tha same as the forces that have been overthrown. It is to enslave labor an I accumulate in a few hands the wealth of the country. The fight against thes-3 new forms of oppression is not half as hopeless as the fate of liberty has sometimes seemed in the past. But you must fight if you would win. "Truth forever on the scaffold, Wrong forever on the throne, But the scaffold sways the future And behind the dim unknown Standeth God within the shadow, . Keeping watch, upon his own." "As the exchangeable values o? commodities are only social functions of these things, and have nothing at all to do with the natural qualities, we must first ask, What is the com mon social substance of all commodi ties? It is labor. To produce a com modity a certain amount of labor must be bestowed upon it, or worked up in it. And I say not only labor, but social labor. A man who pro duces for his own immediate use, to consume it himself, creates a product, but not a commodity. As a self-sustaining producer he has nothing to do with society. But to produce a' com modity, a man must not only produce an article satisfying some social want, RFDDY Dl ANKrr Sale-40 varieties, LL.III r 1IJ moderate price. Send for 1902 Catalogue. B. 1 Smith, P. O. drawer C, Lawrence. Kans. FREE TOBACCO CURE. Mrs. A. R. Raymond, 967 Charles street, Des Moines, la., has discovered a wonderful cure for tobacco habit. She is curing all her friends. Mie will send receipt free to anybody sending two cent stamp for postage. Write for it. TREES and PLANTS THAT CROW snd baar fine fruit. We trow that kind. Lareaitock. Honest deal tag. Lew prlets. We pay fr!r&t. Budded Peaches Ce ; Grafted Ap plea 5c ; Concord Grape 3c. Engliah or German ratalofroea free. GAEL S0NBESEOGER, Prop. Box 35, Beatrice, Iffeb. GREAT BARGAINS Importers and Exporters of 3; var ieties land and water lowls 'Stock and eggs for sale at all times. Write before you buy. Bank and personal references given. Send for Full Il lustrated Circular Iowa Poultry Co. Box 633, Des Moines, Iowa. IDAHO LANDS Do you want a home on easy terms or an investment that wiil pay you 15 per cent. We have it in Idaho land, and have sent an experienced man to investigate and can and will furnish reliable information. Write P. J. Carey, Lincoln, Neb. Also. ranch lands in Colorado, Wyo : Axis and western Kansas. tSO&SE COLLARS sHoWTnim fOUfi Dealerto BEFORE. YOU BUY. MANUFACTURED BY HAS?PHARi BR0S.C0. NOTICE. A BLUE PENCIL MARK AROUND THE ADDRESS ON THE WRAPPER OF YOUR PAPER INDICATES THAT YOUR SUBSCRIP TION IS DELINQUENT AND THAT YOU SHOULD PAY NOW. '? J hut his labor itself must form part and parcel of the total sum of labor ex pended by society. . . If we consider commodities as values, we consider them exclusively under the single as pect of realized, fixed, or, if you like, crystallized social labor." Karl Marx. It seems strange that such a logical reasoner as Karl Marx should fall into the error of defining value as "crystal lized social labor." The energy ex pended in producing a given thing is quite different from the struggle, be tween individuals to gam possession of that thing after it has been pro duced. It is quite true that the value of labor and raw materials entering into the production of most goods usually approximates the value of the finished product, but not necessarily. The good is desirable. Perhaps many individuals want it, probably may need it badly. Each of these is bidder for it; each enters the contest and struggles for its possession; each must offer or make some sacrifice in order to get it; but each has in. mind the cost in labor and raw materials of producing that good, and ordinarily will not bid greatly above the cost of production," but in many cases, will. It isn't the "crystallized social labor" in the good which gives it value it i& the tug of war on the rope of demand. "What the American socialist de mands is that the government or state shall employ first the unemployed ar-d all thrt want to work for the govern ment, making goods, food, houses, and divide among them in wages all they produced (about $4 a day in goods, etc.). The government has rich sub arid prairies enough to feed 100 or 200 million people, so it does not want or need the farmers' misused, worn out weed farms, and they and the trusts can continue business on the old stand for the next hundred years to their hearts' content. Now, a few of the skilled, highest paid laborers get $2.50 a day. Under socialism the man who dug ditches and the skilled labor? r would get the same?; otherwise, all would -fit themselves 'for the highest paid labor and nbbody would want to dig ditches at all, and I dare say they would all have to take turns about for a week or two to dig ditches any way. Under socialism no one would have any rent to pay, and fuel would be free. There is wind-falls in timber and slabs around sawmills now wasted that would provide fuel in abundance," S. P. Gibson, Page, Neb. Why does Mr. Gibson use money terms in speaking of the good time coming? There would be no such thing as money. The dollar would cease to be the unit of account, as Th i Independent understands the question, and the day's lal; or would, be the unit regardless of the fact that the labor of one, man may be greatly superior to that of some other man, or that the labor of one man might be much more valuable one day than another. But conceding that it would be fair to pay all men exactly the same for a day's labor, it does not follow that it would be right or wise to make them all take turns at ditch digging. Perhaps many of them would be vastly morr: useful to society if they never threw a spadeful of earth. Under socialism of any kind every man would have to pay for everything rent, fuel, food, all; but he would pay to the government instead of private persons. It would be a change of landlords and shop keepers. The Kansas Brown Oats Is rust proof and will not lodge on rich soil. In eleven years of my ex perience they have yielded more than any oats I have ever tried. It will pay every farmer to try them. This year they yield Allz bu. by machine measure, in wagon; boxful weighs i pounds to a bushel measure. Good seasons they yield from sixty to eighty bushels per acre. Price, 75 cents with sack. I have Lincoln Oats, they are a good white oats, and a good yielder, at 65 cents per bushel with sack. The Early Champion, they are rust proof and won't lodge on rich soil; ripens ten days earlier than the common early oats; price, 80 cents per bu. with sack. Send for sample. 10 cents. Mike Flood, Seward, Neb. Teddy. In this fight The Independent is with Teddy. News of the Week "Wall 'street "has it in for Teddy" so all the Washington and New York correspondents say. His order to prosecute the Northern Pacific merger conspirators brands him in the mind3 of the Wall street gang as a very dan gerous man. Constant accounts are printed about what the great million aire magnates say concerning the au dacity of ordering the prosecution of these violators of law without first consulting them. One of them says that Roosevelt did not even consult his cabinet. He declares that if the cabinet had been consulted every one of them would have opposed . it and certainly would Secretary Root have done so. Wall street has the blue3 The great dailies are just now work ing over the - aftermath of Prince Henry's visit. Columns upon columns of the Sunday papers were given over to describing the heart breaks of so ciety that portion that did not get the opportunity to pour out their ad miration for royalty in the presence of royalty itself. Mrs. Jack Gardner is among the wounded and wailing. , A queer thing happened in New York also. Cornelius Vanderbilt disinher ited his oldest son, Cornelius Vander bilt, jr., and made another son, then a boy at college, the inheritor of hi3 millions, that is, he left his oldest son only $7,000,000 and the other hundreds of millions 10 Gwyn Vanderbilt. All that was done because the oldest son married a woman that the old man didn't like. 'It turns out that Prince Henry had an order from the emperor to dine with Mrs. Cornelius Vander bilt, jr., which was a recognition by royalty itself which the other branch of the family don't like. The corre spondents say "that grave diplomatic complications may result from this ac tion of the emperor." There are a great many other things of this sort that take up most of the space in thi metropolitan dailies. The editor of The Independent has been very unwell for some time and he thinks that it is the result of having to i-ead this sick ening twaddle in the great dailies, it is enough to turn the stomach of a garbage hauler. The social democratic party in Ger many has always been a great ad mirer of the United States. Cable grams during the week assert that the leaders are disgusted with the American sychophancy to royalty and that the members of that party in the reichstag will now join with the agrarians and go in for prohibitive tar iffs on all sorts of American goods. The leaders say that they had looked to this country as an example and ideal which Germany should strive to obtain, but the fawning upon royalty has changed their views. The readers of The Independent will remember how the tax bill was forced through the house under the Reid rules without a word of discussion. The result is just what might have been expected. It is now announced that it is in such a crude and indefinite form that it is absolutely worthless and that the senate will have to for mulate an entirely new bill to take Us place. One of its provisions is so drawn that practically all the intern! duties on tobacco would be abolished. In this instance the fifth wheel to ths government legislative wagon, proved not only useless, but dangerous. As a law-making body the house has be come not only a nullity, but a real ob struction and it might as well adjourn and go home. Some of the ministers of the gospel are beginning to talk in the same way that The Independent has been talk ing for the last five years about the downfall of religion. Dr. Lorimer de clares that there is a crisis in religious affairs, that the church has lost its force and power and that there seems to be no future for it unless a great change comes over the people. The In dependent thinks that there should rather be a change in the church. It has lost its power by its alliance with plutocracy. A magnificent temple with stained glass windows and a preache. drawing a salary equal to that of fifty laboring men, is not in accordance with the teachings of Christ and the common people know that it is not. So they lump the whole matter together and declare that religion is hypocrisy and let it go at that. There was a thing connected with The Independent's mail this week that attracted attention in the postoffice, a no other occurrence of the same kind was ever known there. It was "a reg istered postal card." A subscriber had nnt received his Independent and he sent a registered postal card so that the office should not fan to Know or ms trouble. There was a great reform move ment in New York city engineered by the republican party. Reformers of that brand all over the country re joiced greatly for the city was to be purified and the evils of Tammany rule were to be uprooted. Last Mon day all the New York papers an nounced that every saloon in the city, tenderloin and all. were run wide open on Sunday and not even a Rains law sandwich was handed out with the drinks. Most of the leading preachers of New York, including Bishop Potter and Lyman Abbott, are advocating Sunday saloon opening. It is somewhat difficult to decide how much improvement has been made in New York since the great reformation when Tammany was downed. Honesty in business has become so rare a thing and dishonesty and chi canery so universal that there seems to be a revolt all along the lines. Bus iness men are waking up to the truth of the old maxim that honesty is the best policy. There is therefore a gen eral demand that laws shall be en acted to punish fraud and deception in tie sale of articles to the public. A large delegation is to go to Washing ton to insist that congress shall en act such legislation as will prevent fraud in food stuffs. A pure food" law has been before every congress for many years, but the merchants never gave it active support. Now they de clare that such a law must be passed forthwith. The Porto Ricana have not yet "got onto" the ways of, congress and th American people. They foolishly sent a petition for a bounty on coffee-raising, and gave as a ; reason that th; people engaged in that business are all poor and need assistance. If they had been attached a little longer to the United States and "appertinent there to," as the supreme court says, they would never have presented a peti tion in that form. Subsidies in tne United States are for millionaires and not for the poor who need assistance. They are for men who own great lines of steamships and immense suear fac tories. If these Porto Ricans had as serted in their petition that the men engasred , in - coffeerraising in that isl and were all millionaires and able and 11 4 9m MILLET SEED We have just purchased a lot of very fine Dakota Millet which, . until March 20th, we will offer to our customers at this low price. Dakota ' or Red German t is much like our regular German Millet. It is earlier, stands the, drouth better, ha more blades on the stem, and thus makes from one-third to one-half more hay. , The hay is softer when cured, greener in . . color, and is preferred by stock to other hay or Millet. Unlike .. German Millet.. this hay cm be fed to horses. . It yields from thirty, to fifty bushels seed per acre. . Ul I I O d I.IU Trice per bu. (2 bu. grain bags extra at i6c each) . GRISWOLD SEED CO., Box K, Lincoln, Nebraska ICS ail! 1,000 bushels select seed from 1931 crop pure Golden Cap field coro grown continuously on my Platte Valley lands for 12 years. Above 50 bus. per acre last season. A 100 day corn, bright yellow, small rob, deep crain, yielding abundantly always. Tipped, sacked, f . o. b. cars $1.25 per bu. Write for samples, descriptive cir cular and price list. J. M. MA HER, Frnmont, Nob. fmm (Clarence L;Gerrard; 7" m M' i m iv - -t- Irrigation grown seeds will grow the BEST CROPS. WHY? 5end four cents for samples. ..... . Col u m bus Ne br. - TRIUMPH INCUBATOR m : tam ni ffl T 1iTfi-M nail rl1 1 xS. airiiiM f Low in price, superior in construction. Certain in results. Awarded First Premium at Nebraska State Fair, 1901, in competition iuou bators at work. A marvel of simplicity Built on new scientific principles. En tirely new features. It satisfies pur chaser because it hatches all fertile eggs, under any conditions. Built on Honor and Sold on Merit A reliable, business, very-day Incuba tor, that will do all the work required of it, do it well, and leave no disappointed hopes. DON'T BUY an Incubator un til you investigate the merits of this one. Catalogue and testimonials from "home folks" who use the machine sent free on request. Ask for them. Address , TRIUMPH INCUBATOR CO 103 South I Ifh St., LINCOLN, NEB. iMjflsaaaffe 11 I -S8' CRETE NURSERIES "D j We offer full line of Nursery Stock, Trees and Plants, Ornamental Trees. Shrubs 5; and Roses. Our trees and plants are not tied up in cellars like commercial nurseries, S; :j but wintered with boots in earth. That our fruit trees are productive is shown by - the crops of fruit we have grown, I; I 1 3,000 Bushels season. 17 to l bushels of apples on sinde Is of Cherries in one season: avi bushels nn a single tree; 570 bunches of grapes on a single vine. Extreme care to have all carefully packed and true to name. We help on all losses. 5 ...... . Send for illustrated catalogue. Please mention The Independent. : E F. STEPHENS, Mgr, Crete, Neb. SEE CORN We have won four-fifths of the prizes at the Nebraska state fair for the past IS years. At the WOt state fair we won eleven firsts and nine seconds all the prizes offered on field corn. For descriptive price list and samples address, with 2c stamp. . M. H. SMITH & SON, Dc Soto, Neb S. F. BROWN, Ashmore, Illinois Breeder of pure bred Chester White wine, White Holland Turkeys, and (Cochins ( P. Hockn Buff P. Rocks , White Wyandotts ( Leghorns ( Leghorns Stock and lTtfjrs for sale in reason. Mention this paper and send for free price list. Gold in a Nut Shell New book, all about Nut Trees. Price 14 cents. The American Plant & Seed Co., Nashville, Tennessee. CEVErJ Chllltcothe Normal School OLfLii I C'hlUlcothe Commercial Oollejr PDCAT I Chllllcothe Shorthand CUr UnCAl ChiUlcothe 'lelejrraphy Collie Ofilinni O I Chllllcothe l'en-Art loth-sre OUrlUULtS I Chllllcothe School of oratory Chllllcothe Musical Conservatory. Last year's enrollment 729. pays for 4 weeks board, tuition, room rent, and useof text books. Fur FHEti lllustratetl Catalog addre ALLEN MOORE, Pres., Box 21, Chillicothc. Mo. SgiaLFOR THE WIFE Get an incubator that ttu ymn rnn; one that will do good work fron tht .ii iriii '' Ei "l'UI L kuu lust i r ru i , i do nirt I ii ii jSS Hatch is made of California r-l 9 Wrlit U wood,witU12os.cold rolled cnpw tank, Nearest 1 Hy.tro Safety humv. Climax fctir boil.t a4 HOtttS 1 ''or,'"P,e1 " repoitor. Send for oat Uf dred who art making money with vba gar Hutch Incubator. Oer Common Hvasa Broodrr la th beat. -t ltd now. Sure Match Incubator Co.. Clay Center. Neb., or Ca!amkts,0. BLACK DIAMOND SEED OATS Test 40 lbs per bushel, wonderful yielder and endurance, rust proof. 100 lbs., J2.60, 500 lbs 512.00. Sacks free. Cash with order. We carry a full line of choice farm seeds. HENRY BROTHERS, Fairfield. Iowa. TIMOTHY GLOVER MILLET $3.10 $6.20 $1.50 Until our supply is exhausted. Sacks free. Cash with order. Write for prices on corn and oats. . . - - HENRY BROTHERS. Fairfield, Iowa. A MOTH-PROOF BEEHIVE For particulars, address with stamp, BRYAN TYSON,' Carthage, N. C. You will please mention paper. Come to Cass County, Missouri The home of blue grass, timothy, clover, the big red apple and the mule. Where we successfully raise, corn, wheat, and all kinds of grain, fruit and stock. Plenty of pure water, rich soil and good markets. Only 20 to 40 rail ps south of Kansas City. Will soil you good land at from $20.00 to $50.00 per acre, and loan you 05 per cent of purchase price. fnd for our land list. J. C. PATRICK & BKOTHEK, Harrisonvillt), Cass County Missouri. . ; , Wakefield Nursery. Northern grown 'nursery stoes. Nothing but the best sent out. Send for catalogue of nursery stock arw seeds that will grow and that are best suited for the west. Wakefield Nursery, Wakefield, Nell-. Seed Corn For Sale I have a fine lot of yellow seed corn of this year's growth raised on my farm on the little Siota' bottom, miles from Union, Neb., which 1 wiil sell in quantities of 5 to 1,000 bush els at $1 per bushel, f. o. b., s-cks ex tra. Address L. G. Todd, sr., or L. G. Todd, jr.. Union, Neb. Corn Stalk Disease Cure To those who wish a cure for thv? dry stomach in cattle caused by eatir.. stalks or smut I will send them a re ceipt for $1 which I have tried on 9 good many and have not failed on on?. This is no humbug. CHA.NCY COOPER, . Leland, La Salle Co.. lit. FRUIT TREES. Cf Hfi '50 Budded Peach Trees, best varieties JL uu 50 Uood Concord Grape Vine. $1. Will 500 Asparagus Plants, $1. if i a-i. our catalogue mailed for the asking. R I J V It quotes a general line of fruit and or- namental trees: best quality ; low prices Address, GAGE COUNTY NL'KnKKIE. Uox 633, Keatrice, Nebraska. NEBRASKA TREES""""g cherry. 2 to 3 ft., Kli; freestone Di-teh.?l: Coacont Our 1902 catalogue of Nursery Stock and Seeds is a money-saver. Get it. Seed potatoes, $1.00 to ; $1.50 bushel; apple trees, 5 to 6 ft: $12.00 per 100; plum trees, $10.00 per 100; 60 varieties strawberries; seed corn, v We? pay freight. Send for catalogue,, 52 pages, free. Everyone answering this ad. and cut this out and send 10c stiver can select 20 .'.cents', worth of seeds JErnm rmt brink T, A1. T. WRfflHT 1 grape, ri per 100. 1000 Ash, CI; Catalpa, Locust. Ii. Muf- berry.B.Klder and Usage Hedge; lowpnoes.Catal I02 frw. Calbraith Nurttrles, (rmwij Jaam Num?) Bx 35, Fiirbury.ttiL. B I l- fcat i HELP the freight. ot a poor crop bv nsin j Burr INCUBATORS an i BROODERS. They ara money-makers. The best at bottom notch prices. Catalogue free. We pay BURR INCUBATOR CO. Bo D13, Omaha. KeK