The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, April 03, 1902, Page 5, Image 5
v April 3,; 1902 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT 1 f w 1 1 11 'S S E S Prove That Old Cases of Chronic Ca tarrh can be Cured A Medicine That Will Cure Cases of Catarrh of Long Standing De serves a Very High Place in the Annals of Medical Discovery. Such a Peruna. Medicine THOUSANDS of testimonials are pouring in- every day of old case3 of chronic catarrh that have re sisted all treatment for 3'ears, being promptly and permanently cored by 1'ercna. Thee reports do not all come from obscure places, sigrned by obscure peo ple. A large proportion of these letters are written by men and women promi nent in business and professional cir cles and many of them well known from ocean to ocean. Colonel John Franklin Water?? occu pies a prominent position among the leading trial lawyer- of Chicago. He has probably obtained more verdicts a trainst corporations in suits for personal injuries ftan any man of his r.pe in the 1'nited States, and during his practice of over fifteen yars h-3 has not lost a frinrrle ense in the Supreme Courts of Illinois and Missouri. He is a hard worker and ha3 the energy of four men. For a number of years he hiid been B filleted with chronic catarrh and hav ing recently been thoroughly cured of his old affection, an interview was ob tained with him by one of our reporters in which he gave tho following state ment to the public : Chicago, III., Aug. 6, 1P0O. The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O. : Gentlemen--'" It gives me great pleasure to testify to the merits of such a worthy remedy for cstsrrh as your Peruna. I bad suffered for a number of years from this very dis ftgreeahle disease and had tried many so-called remedies, but until I used Peruna none had the desired effect. I feel that I am perfectly cured and can cheerfully recommend Peruna to any one suffering from catarrh. ' JONS' F. WATERS, 120 E. Randolph SL, Chicago, HI. Another case equally well-known in Chicago, is reported through a letter from a veteran Railroad man. t if I V-s R t t colot:l johk fuaxklin waters, of Chicago. Captain John II. Lyons, of Chicago, -f passenger agent for various rail road com- paniesforthe past twenty four years, connected i with the Postof f ice Departm e n t for six years, the Police Department 1 for six years, and -at pres ent connected with the Grand Trunk railroad, had a similar case. He is a 1 r I J. H. Lyons. . o.J veteran soldier and. a prominent mem ber of G. A. R. Camp No. 102. Captain John H. Lyons, 1612 Prairie Ave., Chicago, 111., writes: "For twenty years I suffered with chronic catarrh but thanks to Peruna I am now entirely cured. " It affords me much pleasure to make a statement in behalf of your meritorious remedy, Peruna. - I have nsed same for catarrh and have found it to be all yon claim for it. I had suffered for twenty years. I cheerfully recommend Peruna to anyone suffering from catarrh, as I believe that, as in my case, it will prove a sure cure." Captain John II. Lyons. Address The Peruna Medicine Co., of Columbus, Ohio, for instructive free literature on catarrh. The wool growers of the west are attempting to organize a trust and may succeed in doing something along the line of raising prices; but so long as the price of silver stands at Z to 54 cents they will be at a disadvantage of about 5S per cent in competing with the wool growers of silver using coun tries, less, of course, whatever special privileges may be accorded them in the way of tariff duties. When Senator Spooner got into a ticse corner he said that "a subsidy is a eift." That is just what it is, and the United States as well as the states themselves have been making gifts" to the rich for the last forty years and then making the poor pay them in taxation. The ship subsidy is an enormous "gift" of millions to the American Navigation company with a few crumbs to others. Reginald Vanderbilt went into fi famous gambling house in New York the otter day and came out, so the pa pers say, a loser to the amount of. $71,000. He is the youngest son or Cornelius Vanderbilt and has some of the millions that were given to the elder Vanderbilt by the state of New York in franchises and other wa;s. The farmers of the west will make up that $71,000 in excessive freight rates over the Vanderbilt lines. Cecil Rhodes is to be buried at a place selected by himself on the top of a kopje in the wilderness near the spot where a band of English soldiers were all killed in a war against the Matabeles in 1883. There is no road to the place and it is said that it will require the work of a large number of Seed Gcrn 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 sheileJ, 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 ?. pure white corn. Price, ?1.25 per bu. MIKE FLOOD, Seward, Neb. Msmmoth White Artichoke Seed for sale. Address GEO. A. ARNOLD, Kayden, Neb. i mi t n men for a month to make one. All things considered, this is very appro priate. Put him away from the sight of men and let his memory die. Again hoping that the sage of Arbor Lodge may be so wrapped up in in vestigating the "crime of '73" that he will not catch us at it, The Indepen dent acknowledges receipt of a mail sack of government garden seeds, sev eral hundred packages, bearing the frank of Hon. Wm. Sulzer, representa tive from New York. These have been mailed out or handed out to sub scribers of The Independent. Each package contains a packet each of pea, cucumber, watermelon, parsley and radish. Stead's Americanization of the world is being accomplished piecemeal, one of the latest steps being the boodling of the English wholesale tobacco deal ers by the American Tobacco com pany. The American tobacco trust has offered the w s 5 per cent profit of all deals them, and it is now up to the Impu. ! Tobacco com pany (the English truc) to raise the ante. If it isn't done, the president of the English wholesale tobacco deal ers' association says the English trust had better shut up shop. The national millers' federation is another step in the direction of a uni versal trust. Probably It is another of those "inevitabilities'! which H. Gaylord Wilshire talks about. About $400,000,000 of capital is represented by the concerns united and their total output is about 100,000,000 barrels of flour annually. Like most other con cerns of the kind, it denies that any attempt will be made to control prices but that will be taken with a grain of salt. Its permanency and success will depend upon how much special privileges it can secure. . An editor down In New York wans to know just what is the policy that The Independent advocates in regard to the Philippines. Its policy is "git up and git" out of there just as soon as the troops can be brought home. In answer to the statement that some other nation will step in and take the islands. The Independent says it hopes that one of them may try It. After it gets through with the Philippines that nation will never be a threat to the peace of the world. If any nation wanta to take this job off our hands. Filipinos will go to killing each other as soon as the United States troops leave, The Independent, says, let them kill, it is no affair of ours. It does not believe that they will engage in any more killing than the South American republics are engaged in most of the time and it has never been suggested that we go down there and do the killing, instead of letting them do it themselves. The Washington correspondents of the plutocratic dailies have undertaken to secure the nomination of Mark Hanna for president by the republi can party. They held a meeting and gave him a dinner and then shouted for Hanna for president. The Inde pendent hopes that the correspondents will succeed in their undertaking and that Hanna will be nominated for president. He certainly is "the logical candidate" of which we have heard during the last four presidential cam paigns. Let him be nominated by all means. ' . A lot of bankers are scheming to find a way to beat the postoffices out of the money order business. They want to issue bills of credit that by writing in the name of the payee will transform them into drafts payable at any national bank in the United States. They claim that it is pure pa triotism that actuates them and that their only object is to facilitate ex change. The Independent can tell them of a much .better and more ef ficient plan. Let the government take the telegraphs and then money can be transferred by wire much quicker than by bank drafts. Now the cost is pro hibitive except in cases of great emerg ency. , , , "No one, however," says Public Opinion, "can seriously blame a banker for selling, his bonds at the highest price he can get for them." Oh, no; certainly not. That isn't where the blame comes in. What one really marvels at is that sensible peo ple will allow themselves to be hood winked into believing that our cur rency system should be tolerated for a moment. Backed, by government bonds, which the bankers can and will sell when they please, the currency cir culation is expanded and ' contracted without regard for the .needs of trade. Abolish the system. Let the govern ment issue all money. Then the bankers can traffic in bonds all they IMPERIALISM AT HOME 1; . It appears that this administration is about to undo all the work accom plished by Generals Crook, Miles and hundreds of civilians, scholars and writers for all the years that have passed in regard to the Indians. The old imperialistic idea that was thought to have been buried out of sight, to wit: that the Indians had no vested rights that the authorities at Washing ton were bound to respect, is brought to life again. George Kennan has an article in the last Outlook, that shows the determination of the authorities at Washington to revive the theories of the old Indian ring, that covered these plains with dead soldiers ; and burning homes, that a few Indian agents and pet contractors might fill their pockets. There was never an Indian war in Canada and only one insignificant rebellion, while for a hundred " years there was scarcely a year that there was not one here and Canada has morer'lndians than the United States. The reason was that the Canadian government always rec ognized the Indians as British subjects with all the rights and immunities of any others. The long and costly fight made by the editor of The " Independent as sisted by many of the best citizens of this state and the culture and scholar ship of New England, it was hoped had buried thi3 imperialistic theory so deep that there would be no resur rection for it. Commissioner Jones and the present administration is set ting aside all the principles supposed to have been established by the pass age of the "severalty act" and laying the foundation for unending trouble and injustice. The senate. Indian com mittee, upon which there seems to be no one posted in regard to Indian af fairs and with no one present to in form them or intelligently insist upon the continuance of the reform that has worked such wark!ers,in the last twenty years, allows the bureaucrats to issue mandatory orders involving millions of dollars' worth of property and ignore the rights of thousands of human beings. That is imperialism pure and simple. Any one who reads Mr. Kennan's ar ticle in the Outlook of March 29 and notes the fraud, force and deceit, the violation of solemn contracts, the sub stitution of one contract for another, the desolation "of hundreds of homes poor homes they may be but more dearly prized than the millionaires prize their mansions! may imagine what goes on in colonies located 10, 000 miles from the searof government, governed in the sam.e" way, where there is no Kennan or other correspon dent to tell of the wrongs committed, or if one Is found willing to tell, he is immediately imprisoned or ban ished. . PREPARING THE WAT It seems that Roosevelt is making every preparation for the man on horseback. He will allow no one in the government service to express an opinion adverse to the administration; and recently he has made the aston ishing claim that the army is super ior to congress and that congress can not pass a bill setting aside the ver dict of a court-martial and further that every verdict o a court-martial is subject to the approval or disap proval of the president only, who is the commander-in-chief of . the army and navy. The prerogative that the president assumes is a long step to ward autocratic power and the making of the military superior to the civil power. The question as the president puts it in his special message is en tirely aside from the question of whether any of the persons engaged in the civil war against .whom the charge of desertion stands should be restored to the rolls. He .denies the power of congress to overrule the verdict of any military court whatever. The adop tion of that principle would make a greater change in the government than the recent supreme court decisions. The .president says: It appears tof imply the posses- r, sion by congress, of the power of overruling and reversing by stat ute a valid judgment. If it did not do that it was simply an exer cise of the pardoning power. It is , questionable t whether congress possesses either of these powers, and when the bill directed the secretary of war to revoke an or der, congress in fact did the thing ' which it ordered him to do. About the only persons In congress who give unqualified approval of th position taken by the president are the gold democrats men who long since abandoned every attribute of honorable manhood by deserting their principles and accepting place and power from the enemy, a more dis honorable thing than simply desert ing from the army and. the greatest imperialist of all, Secretary Root. In sustaining , the president's position in regard to court-martiais, Secretary Root says: To reverse the judiciary by statute is a dangerous doctrine. That is precisely what congress seeks to do. If it does not do that it seeks to exercise the pardon ing power, as the president points out in his message, and the par doning power doe3 not belong to congress at all. but to the execc- martial which he calls the "judiciary" on exactly the same level of the su preme court of the United States, making th military superior to con gress and 1 the civil -power. The Root army bill, concentrating the military power in the hands cf the president, the Dick bill , making the militia subject to the orders of the president, the anarchy bill intended to muzzle the press in regard to any expression of opinion concerning the president or any head of a department, and finally this claim that drumhead court-martials may sentence and exe cute any one who offends the powers I that be, without the power of congress to intervene, makes the framework of despotism and no mistake. ' They j change a republic into a military! oligarchy. That is the preparation! that Roosevelt .and the imperialists! are making for the coming of the man ! on horseback. They prepare the way before him and the man will appear. MAT WE HEAR FROM TOU? The Independent cannot find words in which to express Its gratitude to the quiet workers in the ranks of reform who have made such efforts to get their party paper housed in a place where it will be forever free from any sort of plutocratic influence or dicta tion. These men who have done this work are privates in the ranks, men who never sought a commission and whose only desire was to help to spread those principles, which, if en acted into law, would leave a" govern ment to their children where special privileges would not exist, in which trusts and monopolies would be un known and that would forever remain the land of the free and the home of the brave. Such men have been found in almost every state in the union. They all want one paper that is ab solutely free, upon which no man has any sort of string, that will fight their battles for them in the fierce conflicts of the future and stand always and all the time for the rights, of the common epople. The Independent has an option on a lot for a building, a cut of which ap pears on the first page. These un selfish workers have sold about 4,000 cards. Dare we undertake so heavy a risk ,a3 to go on and put up a Liberty Building? Do the readers of the paper think that we ought to? More of the cards are sold each week is true, but will there be enough sold to put up the building? Is it a possibility that The Independent can find a home there? One of the greatest campaigns, both state and national," is about to begin. Can votes be made in any other way as cheaply as by putting a fearless, in dependent, well written weekly paper in the homes of those whom we hope to win back to the old ideals of lib erty, who will raise their voices along with us against cruel wars of con quest, special privileges to the rich, gifts of millions of money forced from the taxpayers to be handed over to millionaires who build ships and sail them on the seas, while you must fol low the plow and toil from early morn to the going down of the sun? Can any work that you can do for reform be more effective than selling a block of Liberty postals? Shall a fortress be erected on that vacant lot from which the defenders of the Declaration of In dependence and the constitution can fire into the ranks of greed and spe cial privileges, without fear of ever being driven from it? A few score have responded to the call. Among the other thousands of readers of The Independent are there not some hun dreds more who will give a few hours time to maintaining the principles that our forefathers fought seven long years to establish and from which has come all the blessings that we enjoy? The sins of his life must have laid heavy upon the soul of Cecil Rhodes. Even in a friendly biography written by an English friend these words oc cur: "Hi3 closing days devolved into an unceasing, purposeless quest of change of scene. . During his recent trip to Egypt this was particularly noticeable. He rushed from place to place, as if with the only object of upsetting his own" plans. Then he suddenly returned to England." Did he think in those days how he secured the diamond mines? Did he remem ber the organization of the Jameson raid? Had he any recollection of the blood-stained battle fields of South Africa? With the very highest respect for our Boston friends who seem to have been infused with new life since they began to read The Independent, we must still hold that the discussion of political economy and current events expressed in vigorous, colloquial, con-1 crete and idiomatic English, suits this age and the people who read this pa per better than the scholastic phrases employed In most of the "high class" magazines. Again the editor says that he cannot write Bostonese. He does not believe that it would be good pol icy to do so If he could. He believes that some of the critics, as a resident of Boston writes, like the papsr be- .&3 T 122.35 TO 554.80 m o"w iruoi our a icmarkn and unto bmmmm factor!, Um ;Mi bacviM Mid by ' ufcKfcB BT CUR BIDDING GUARANTEE. Carriage and W agona at prwporiiioamteiy low price. EONI BUY ELSEWHERE FJSaV.Vo0 aaiiwi t. mmj addreM tr .. .UcuSa. will b ..rprb riu u! aiax-r w tmm u jmm ad the Mnfanlt em. offer, i.ddroa. SEfmS, ROEBUCK fi CO., CH!LG0- fir1 1l fapaa- ! w mi lui t m m niuwy it' mm mm MmMi aitiaf .i aanna ' iLLET Our first car of Red German or Siberian Millet went off with a rush. This we have now costs us 10 cents more per bushel, and we have raised the price 10 cents. Xhia millet is earlier, stands drouth. better, has more blades on the stem, and makes from one-third to one-half more hay than the regular German millet. The hay is softer when cured, greener in. color and is preferred by stock to other hay or millet. Every , farmer who has tried this millet has very high praises for it. It yields from 30 to 50 bushel sued per acre. Price Pr bushel (3-bushel grain bags extra at 16c each) SI. 20 GRiSWOLD SEED CO,, Box K, Lincoln, Nebraska. SEED mm 1,000 bushels select Med from 1901 crop pure Golden Cap field corn grown continuously on my Platte Valley lands for 12 years. A dot 50 bns. per acre last season. A 100-day corn, bright yellow, small rob, deep grain, yielding- abundantly always. Tipped, sacked, f. o. b. cars (1.25 per bu. Write for samples, descriptive cir-j colar and price list. J. M.. MA HER. Fremont, Neb. axiMiUWji TRIUMPH INCUBATOR i&JV . Low in price, superior in construction, j Certain in results. Awarded First Premium at Nebraska State Fair, 1901, in competition incu bators at work. A marvel of simplicity Built on new scientific principles. En tirely new features. It satisfies pnr chaser becaue it hatches all fertile efgs, under any conditions. .Built on Honor and Sold on Merit A reliable, buBiness, every-day Incuba tor, that will do all the work required of it, do it well, and leare no disappointed hopes. DON'T BUY an Incubator un -til you investigate the merit of thi one. Catalogue and testimonials from "home folks" who use the machine sont free on request. Ask for them. Address TRIUMPH INCUBATOR GO 103 South I Ith St., ? LINCOLN, NEB. M ft--..-hi W.imY ViYmVuVi! CRETE NURSERIES ESTABLISHED 1- i72 ESTABLISHED rS 1872 .- We off er full line of Nursery Stock, Trees and Plants, Ornamental Trees, Shrub 5? : and Roses. Our trees and plants are nots tied up in cellars like commereil nurseries, 5 but wis tkked with booth lit eakth. That our fruit treea are productive is shown by the crops of fruit we have grown. , 5j 5 . - .- . 1 3 HAH Prt,lp or Apm-ES in out season. 17 to 24 bushels of apples on single OtUUU AJUSiieiS trees. 700 bushels of Ckiertb in one season; 3!4 busbeln on a single tree ; 570 bunches of grapes on a single vine. Extreme care to have all carefully J- packed and true to name. We help on all losses. t . ; Send for Illustrated catalogue. Please mention The Independent. I E F. STEPHENS. Mgr., Crete, Neb. 5" SEVEN HBC AT SCHOOLS j ! I Last year's Ctaillicothe Normal School J ChllUcothe ConiuieireUl College f C hUIlcoths Shorthand College V rhMMiu.tliA '1 plHrnmhT Toilette hilllcothe Pen-Art college hUllcothe School of Oratory Chllllcothe Musics! Conservatory. nrollment 729. " 133 pars for 48 weeks'board, tuition, room rent, and use of text books. For FREE ldvtrated Catalog add) ens ALLEN MOORE, Pres., Box 21, Chillicothe, Mo S. F. BROWN, Ashmore, Illinois Breeder of pure bred Chester White Swine, W hite Holland Turkeys, and ( Cochins . ( P. Rocks Buff-i P. Hocks White- Wyandotts ( Leghorns Leghorns Stock and Eggs for sale in season. Mention this paper and send for free prioo list. Gold in a Nut Shell New book, all about Nut Trees.' Price 14" cents.- - - The American Plant & Seed Co., Xashvllle, Tennesi.ee. BLACK DIAMOND SEED OATS Test 40 lbs per bushel, wonderful yielder and endurance, rust proof. 100 lbs.. $2.60,500 lbs $12.00. Sacks free. Cath with order. We cany a full line of choice farm seeds. ' . HENRY BROTHERS, Fairfield. Iowa. PURE HONEY AND APIARY SUPPLIES Honey, lllb cans, 4 or more, $1X0 each net; 601b cans, 4 or more. $4.80 each nt. Apiary sup plies for sale at all timae. Catalogue free. Prompt shipment of honey or supplies. Cnh with order. addres. F. A. BNELL, MilledgeTille, Carroll County, Illinois. -- - mM3 SI9-98 STEEL tiML mCm t0r 912.O8 without rcerror or klfi f 17.08 with rwierrolr, fci aalf aa4 elaact, exactly aa lllaitrateii. sail thta hla- oiubi . . 11.. . ir m.. -x Aft aavaruaa ana mi .w We BBdcraell erraae la tartie aa raagea. Writs for FREE Stov Cateloiru. a. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CHICAGO, ILL. 110 COLLEGE EDUCATION Is needed to rim t he Bore Ilafeii Incubator. They are bo simple tbat they run themselTea. Made or caiuorma renwooa, wsuu.ui- ly nnls&ea; sweive ounce cupper . . ! - ..jI 1.itfvaaf.fvlflmn Kill ly guaranteed. Oarcatalognapontali .hnndredn of photographs of tho S Hitk laeabnlar at work, and t1u ..h. infnrtnation. Rent free. )' Sure Batch lacBbl Co.. C! Ctnter, ieb., or Colnmbui, 0. jm :. efiiea. 1 GREAT BARGAINS j Importers and Exporters oI'S var ieties land and water fowls "Stock and eggs for sale at ail times. Write before yon buy. Bank and personal TIMOTHY CLOVER MILLET E$3.I0 5$6.20 KSI.50 Until our supply is exhausted. Sacks fre. Cash with order. Write for prices on corn an 1 oats. ' HENRY BROTHERS. Fairfield, Iowa. Seed Corn For Sale I have a fine lot of jellow seed corn of this year's growth raised on my farm on the little Siota bottom. 2 miles from Union, Neb., which I win sell in quantities of 5 to 1.000 bush els at $1 per bushel, f. o. b., s. ks ex tra. Address L.;G. Todd, sr., or L. J. Todd, Jr.. Unionj Neb. SEED CORN We have won four-fifths of the prizes at t!; Nebraska state fair for the pat 18 yearn. At tu WU1 state fair we won eleven firsts and nirs-s secouds all tho prizes offered on field corn. For descriptive price list and samples address withile stamp. M. H. SMITH & SOH, Dc Soto, Neb FRUIT TREES. r nn 30 Budded Pacn Trees, best varieties.fi. P' VU 50 Good Concor.l Grape Vines. $1. Vif I I 10C Asparagus Plants, 2e. ' Our catalogue mailed for the aakic?. Bl j V It quotes a general line of fruit and or namental trees; bet quality t low price-t Address, GAGE COUXX V M K-sKliltH. '-. ltox C53, Beatrice, Nebraska. I the freight. SIT DOWN and read about Burr IN CUBATORS. The very best. , Price is right. No guess work. Money re turned if they don't suit. Cataloeue "free. We pay BrRIt INCl'RATOK CO. Box 112, Omaha, Keb. 'mi'ia win..' Best Low Priced Hotel n the City. RATES, $100 per day and up. Hotel Walton 1516 O St. LIXCOLX.XEB. FREE TOBACCO CI RE. Mrs. A. B. Raymond, 967 Charles street. te- Moines, la., has discovered a wonderful core for tobacco habit. She is curing all her friend. She will send receipt free to anybody sending two cent stamp for postage. Write for it. THAT TREES and PLAfiTS aaa kar fta frait. "W paw tbatkiad. Lmrttock. KemtJiiti log. Low prteak Wpay frattmt. BodUd Fachafc; GrmAal x.f flet be 1 Concord Grp 8c rrjlaior Gerrcui ratakfM trm. CARL S0KDBOGER, Prop. Box S3 , SeatriM, F5s., 1 POULTRY PAPER,. lUas'd, 20 paw. zoeia. uex ye . rvttis vrmftrv twwVir f rm tn arlw uihciw Q