July,10,:l902 COLLARS D "if fQU8 Dealer jo SH(rt BEFORE. YOU BUY.1 i MANUFACTURED Bf I t Lincolm.Meb; .;5 mHnHMHMMinnMM . ON'T Set Hens the Same Old Way, ana i?t uce Jtiu uiu on me nest. Tiffany's Sure Death, to Lice JPowder. will kill alt vermin.and your hen will brtnjf her brood off free from lice. Tiffany's para gon Lica KMer "Liquid," guaranteed to kill all lice and mites. Instantly kills lice oh colts, calves, and bogs. By using oar Sprayer a very lltt )e goes a great way. Penetrates all cracka. Sprey bottom of house for spider l ice. It la a rowfrfrxl disin fectant. 1 per gal. can; 63c gal. One gallon and 8prayer,$!.50. Can get it free where no agentaby a iittl work far rxa. Tw c TxAJY Co.. Lincoln. Neb. B-3 280 ACRES OF LAND .... 130 acres under plow, rest good pasture; all under fetice," . Good buildings, three-fourths mile from good school, two miles from good town. Will give vosessiou at once. , Price S10 Per Acre Cash. For further iu formation ad- dress ' J. E. EVANS, Sargent, Nab. (Mention this paper.) THE NEW MODEL SUSPENDER Is a new invention that promises to revolutionize the Suspender trade. The web is of the best quality; the notched tipsareof firm, oak-tanned belt ; leather; the fastenings ot first-class calf, very jolt and flexible. Adjustable front and hack, they will not slip off the shoulders or tear off but tons. There is no metal to rust, break, or cut the clothing the only abjust able suspender made with out metal. It will outwear any suspender made. While for men of . heavy work it has no equal on account of material and wearing qual ities, yet it is dressy enough for anyone, making ita de sirable suspender for all classes. Less value is re ceived in the purchase of trie ordinary suspender . than in any other item of dress. The best is the cheapest. Ask your Dealer for "THE NEW nODEL" and take no other, or send 50 Cents and we will mail you a pair postpaid. Regular lengths 31, 33 and 35 inches, special length made to order. Give length when ordering, - All of these gcods are made out of the very best material. We believe the people will ap preciate the value they get at these low prices. MesarvB-Edgerton Mfg.! Co,, " LINCOLN, - - - - NEBRASKA. We fire for Women BEST ON EARTH LINCOLN STEEL RANGE Made of Rocky Mountain Steel and lined-with As bestos. Most Economical of Fuel. Best baker and cooker, largest oven of any range. Top polished like a looking glass. Grease will not stick to it. No blacking required. Always polished. Can be delivered anywhere in United btates. Write for price and what the peo ple say about them. AMERICAN RANGE AND HARDWARE - CO. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. urn M j . , II CATTLE I I SHEEP J Live Stock Com- mission Nye Buchanan Go, SOUTH OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Best possibjeetyic in all depart ments. Write or wire us for markets or other information. & v, v FARM AND RANCH BARGAINS Improved Quarter-Section 8-room house, granary, shop, well and wind : mill, plenty of good water, suitable for dairy or stock farm, near Lincoln, one mile from R. R. switch and street car iine. A bargain; easy terms. Improved Stock Ranch 5,000 acres in Republican river valley, fenced, house, orchard, plenty of water, improve ments worth $3,000 price $5,000, 400 Head Cattle at market price -(about 10,000) wilt sell separately or exchange for eastern Nebraska farm. For these and other bargains, write " WOODS INVESTMENT CO., BOX L, LINCOLN, NEB tMMi(-iM lt E2 ma inwriiTiwfiiitii FAT TOO FAT People Reduce your lO.-J. .X. weight with K6C1U C HO Reduce your fat and be refined. Kefine your fat and be reduced. "Reducto" Is a perfectly harmless vegetable compound endorsed by thousands of physicians and people who have : tried it. We send you the Formula, you make "Reducto" at home if you desire, you know full well the ingredients and tnerefcir need have no fear of evil effects. Send $1.00 for re ceipt and Instructions everything mailed In plain envelope. Address , - 5 Ginseng Chemical Co., , 3701 S. Jefferson Av St. Louis, Mo. News of the Week Pierpont Morgan called on Emperor William last week and was invited to lunch. Morgan, and the;monarchs of Europe are air "great friends. There i3,a common tie that binds them to gether. They are all despots and in their various fields pursue the sams methods. - . ,,-. . To make cows pay, nse bharples Cream Separators,! ouwouaiucss uanjuig - & vav.iiu tree v unesier.Jfa. Anarchy still continues . to grow in the United States. Not the silly for eign kind that murders' rulers, but the . real American kind that bids defi ance to law. It is often foundamong, the very rich and shows itself , fre quently , among the , poor. White-capping, as it- is practiced in Indiana, is simply anarchy. -So Is the republican persecution of innocent .colored por sons In Illinois. In Arkansas last week some of these anarchists came to a sudden end. A crowd of then started out to white-cap - a man they didn't like and one of them carried a stick of dynamite to . blow up the house. .The intended victim fired upo:i the white-cappers. The bullet struck the stick of dynamite and the man who had it in his pocket was blown all over the township while nine, others were more or less injured. Such ought to be the end of every anarchistic crowd that starts out on a lynching bee or forms combinations to over ride the law. ' - - ' . When there was a populist governor in this1 state he was constantly as saulted for abusing the pardoning power by a vile republican press, al though the said populist 'gdv'ernoi4 iever pardoned a single; convict dur? ing his ' whole term of service. Re publican governors, ; since ihey have been restored to powershave prosti tuted t he pardoning power as It has never before been prostituted In any state in the union. The pardon of Bartley was only the beginning of the work. From that time it has been kept up and on the Fourth three "mora convicts were pardoned, while one es caped. . -.r:'", President Roosevelt Issued a pardon to a large number of "prisoners in the Philippines on .the Fourth.- In tlis document he says he does it "by vir tue Of the power, aqd authority vestod in me by the constitution." It seems to The Independent that it : would bother even . ; Justice Brown to toil where the power and authority is re corded in the constitution to enable the president to ' pardon men of an other race who are not citizens of tlu United States and over whom it has been expressly declared that the con stitution does not extend. There was never such an anamoly seen on : this broad earth before as this attempt to make the president of this republic a constitutional despot over the isl ands of the Asiatic seas. The manner in which this Justlc1 Brown overthrow of constitution works makes a despotism that is more unlimited than anywhere else in ' thf world. Just at present Governor Taft is in Rome carrying on diplomatic Iu: tercourse. with the . pOpe.. Taf t , pro poses to buy three, or . four, hundred million' dollars"' worth1 r of 'land froltf the Friars in" the Philippines." ' This transaction, stupendous in proportion as it is and necessitating heavy taxa tion, i3 to be completed without refer ence to any legislative body. A sim ple order is issued . at Washington, Taft receives his instructions from the secretary of war, a lot of Friais are paid millions for lands to which they have at best a disputed i title. Roosevelt, Taft and Root are the three individuals concerned in it. They make such bargains as they please and tax the people to pay the bill. It is outside of all law and all Constitu tions. It is absolutism. That very sort of thing will begin to be applied here in the United' : States . before, many years, just as certain as ' the people keep these imperialists in office. From Roosevelt's Harvard . speech one is lead to the conclusion that he thinks the historic friendships cf David and Jonathan and Damon and Pythias were too contracted.: Instead of a dual fellowship he, the "strenu ous," intends to set up a quadruple combination which is composed Of Roosevelt, Root, Taff and Wood. These four are to go down to history locked in a . loving embrace. ; . According to Roosevelt their goodness and great ness, their wisdom and unselfishness was never equalled in all the world before. Seriously, the "oration was Of the school boy character, and as far in matter and form from the speeches of Webster and Clay as the fainte3t star seen through the telesebpe is from the earth. The British have concluded that they will take a hand at the steamship combination game in competitibn with Morgan and have organized a steam ship trust, including the Cunard line with a capital 'of $100,000,000. -The British trust is in close connection with the Canada trans-continental railroad line. On the other v end they have made arrangements - for many steamships that will run from -London east,so they have a line extending clear around the world under one con trol. That seems to be going Mdrgan one better. . . - The monthly circulation statement issued by the comptroller of , the -currency shows that at the close of busi ness June 30, 1902, the total circulation of national bank notes was $356,672, 091, an increase for the year of $2. 929,904. A little while ago when busi ness was prostrated and the populists said that "more money" was needed, the bankers declared the said pop ulists were idiots and anarchists: Now the bankers themselves are creating "more money" at an astonishing rate. The building of the Panama canal is a long way off. Under the bill just passed the government must- first de termine the sufficiency of the title. At a meeting of the cabinet this was re ferred to the attorney, general.' It will be necessary for the attorney generat to send to France some thoroughly competent person who can; if need ber retain local, French legal talent to aid in his work.' After that it will rW necessary to negotiate a treaty with Columbia. After that the appoint ment of a technical commission to make new surveys, if all of the former, arrangements turn out right, and finally . the actual construction will be begun. Senator Morgan will be in his grave a long time before the first spadeful of dirt Is turned If the re publicans continue, to hold the gov ernment by the grace of the continen tal railroads. Now that congress has adjourned after making appropriations amount ing to a billion dollars (1,000 mil lions) the republican dailies are full of congratulations for the "old watch dog of the treasury," Joe Cannon. He has played a roaring farce during the whole session and the republican tax grabbers are immensely ' pleased with him;; He is just such "a watch dog" as; every thief likes., A thousand mil lions at one session! On with thfc dance. : It is said that the president's pardon proclamation includes Aguinaldo. A cablegram says that the Filipino leader will visit the United States, but part of the cablegram is such an ab surd fa'ke, probably the whole thing is. ; Recent events In connection with the diplomatic intercourse with China Is not what Europe and America aro going to do to China, but what China Is going to do to us. When a race of 400,000,000 people, hardened into phy sical endurance Jjy thousands of years of natural selection, comes in contact with the - political rottenness of the West, .after haying acquired western science : and applied its discoveries, something Is going to happen. What will it be? ..The announcement made in Cleve land, that three inventors have in vented simultaneously a process " of turning air into gas that will produce light and heat at an exceedingly small cost must be taken with a good deal of allowance, although it is said that three stores are lighted with it and have been for some time. The thing Is not an impossibility "at all. Every high school boy has seen the experi ment performed, but the cost is too great. Whether the Cleveland inven tors have succeeded in "commercializ ing" the process and producing from the air an illuminant cheap enough to displace the "water gas" that is now manufactured in every city and town is a ' question to ! be determined when the actual details of the so-called pro cesses are made known. If the process is what Is claimed and gas for heating and lighting can be produced from the air at the exceedingly small , cost, it will be the end of the billionaireship Of John D. : Rockefeller and the mo- nopoly of Standard oil. . ' The substance of Dewey's testimony Is that he killed a few people at Md hiia for the sole purpose1 of preserv ing the "honor" of the Spanish com mahder. The play was a farce in Which murder was the comic feature. The diplomats are at it again iii China. These distinguished gentle men want to raise the Chinese indem nity just in the ratio that silver goes down. They .take no account of the fact-that the claims are silver claims, instituted ;within af silver: using coun try fend to-be satisfid within that coun try where the r ordinary, purchasing power .of silver would not . vary with the fluctuations in exchange. l -The house of representatives estab lished a new precedent which it is to be hoped will be followed hereafter It held a Sunday session for the pur pose of pronouncing eulogies upon dead members. The ceremonies on such occasions when taken up in the regular legislative day . have become so perfunctory as to be a disgrace to the nation. Such functions can prop erly be conducted On Sunday and It is to be hoped that hereafter that will be the, practice. . r. The Buffalo Express (rep.) after re lating the action of several republican state conventions, says: "The platform-makers of an overwhelmingly republican New England state and of a . very doubtful western state both agree that public opinion Is not at ail eager for, the retention of the Philip pines as an American ; colony, and that it demands reciprocity with Cu ba." A referendum on this question of Imperialism would show a majority of , ten k to one against it, but the incip ient despotism that has established It self at Washington uses the old Van derbilt phrase when any one says any thing about the people's wishes. Admiral Dewey's testimony before the Philippine committee is so ex traordinary that comment upon it 1 very extensive. To the committee he Said :. v "Aguinaldo and his people were forced upon me. by Consul Pratt and others." In the memorandum which Dewey furnished the first : Philippine commission and which is in "his own handwriting occurs the folowing: "On April 24, 1898, the following ; Cipher dispatch was received at Hong Kong from Mr. E. Spencer Pratt, United States consul general at Singapore : 'Aguinaldo, insurgent, leader, nere. Will come Hony Kong arrange with commodore for generai co-operation insurgents, Manila, if desired. , Tele graph.' I telegraphed to Mr. - Pratt: 'Tell -Aguinaldo to come as . soon as possible.' " In the same memorandum occurs the following: "The day; be fore we left Hong Kong I received a telegram from Consul General Pratt, located at Singapore, : saying that Aguinaldo was at Singapore and would join me at Hong Kong. I replied, 'All right; tell him to come aboard.' " Dewey sailed without Aguinaldo be cause he . was ordered by the British government to get out of British wa ters; within 24 hours. ' In the same document occUrs the following: "The. McCulloch came back with Aguinaldo and about a dozen young men. Aguin aldo came to see me. I said to him, 4 Go ashore there and start your army.' He came 'back to me " after a few hours, and said, he wanted to leave, that he wanted to go to Japan. I said, 'Do not give it up.' 'I wanted his help. Next morning he went ashore and be gan -recruiting men. . . . We had -a common i enemy, and, l: Of course, I w anted Aguinaldo's help." ;: Such dis crepancies with his former written statements of. course cannot fail to discredit Dewey with all fair-minded men. " . HardjY Colauin ' Two sister republics have been mur dered of late by Imperial troops. A pair of twin republics have been bora to the mother republic of America. One is being kissed by the mother and the other is being kicked. It is more humane for a king to murder than for m. mother to kick her children.' It is just as noble and patriotic to vote for a government as it is to fight for It. Bullets and ballots should go together. - , One king has lately died; another Is sfck If Mark Hanna and Pierpont Morgan should be sick or die the American people would feel just as bad. . - . . - We can think of nothing in history that in any way equals the action of the United States- toward the people of Cuba. Never before was a people set at liberty by a third national , power. They have always done as the United States are now doing with the Fili pinos. Honor and dishonor walk hand in hand in our dooryard today. ' The high protective republicans in-, si st that the present high tariff is the cause of the present prosperous times Why don't they explain what;:mad3 hard times in the seventies. We ha I a higher tariff then than we had ever had before. . Forty-five thousand dollars doctors fees for professional services in car ing for McKinley after being shot. Why did they not allow a single million? Nearly a billion of dollars .' have been appropriated by, the present con gress. Much of it wholly unnecessary, but the high ,tariff money must be used up or the tariff reduced. They miglit have to admit sugar free again and pay a bounty to those who make it here. ' Both houses and the president have agreed to go on with the Panama ca nal as soon as the title is cleared and made over to the United States. That is one sensible expensive measure. There is no man living who -represents Abraham Lincoln in statesman ship, political doctrine, patriotism and religious life better Or more accurate ly than William Jennings Bryan. The Wall street uppercrust hate him just as bad as. they hated Lincoln.- The common people who are not tied to party name, love him just as ardently. The only ground of complaint is that he is too candid and outspoken. He tells the whole truth and lets it hit where it may. No one dares Contra dict any statement he makes for they know he is truthful. Looking back from the ; porh . en trance of the 20th century, -there are many , horrid, dark and inconsistent spots upon the national record of the United States. In looking back from the next century spots equally as dark may be seen upon the record now be ing made. Eyes of the past and eyes of .today see the same 'things very dif ferently and there mstf be as much Im provement in the eye's Of the next cen tury. To start with,- the. Declaration of Independence was made, signed and published by slaveholders. Slaves were more or less to be found in every por tion of r the territory" that made the thirteen states. The idea that all men are created equal and entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, while at the same time the same men lashed to servitude tens Of thousands Of slaves: Then when they went into war for liberty and freedom they placed at the head of the army a slave driver. Shortly, after the war was through the same slave-driver was made the first president. A majority of the presidents for. many years were slave-drivers. When the constitution was made the' word slavery did not appear and yet it was a slave-holder's constitution when finished. Every ad dition of territory made during thni first, hundred years was made for the purpose of extending slavery. The re volt in Texas was lead by slave-drivers of the United States. The war with Mexico was waged for the sole pur pose ot extending slavery. When Lin coln was elected the slave-drivers saw that the extension "of slavery was , at an end. Then followed the Jeff Davis war. The, slave trade was legalized for twenty, years latter the adoption of the constitution! For a long time Washington was the largest slave market in the world. ... The work of most, wild . birds is profitable , and with many of them their songs are charming. The gran iverous and songless birds, like the sparrow, are no good and work' great damage sometimes. The sparro ws . are a pest near large cities in the east. They were first brought to this city by authority of the governor for the pur pose of destroying grasshoppers, ; but they never touched them. They never eat bugs or worms. Near Rochester, N. Y., farmers trap them by the thou sands and in many cases eat them. They have wire cages with a porch all around and doors that the little felr lows can lift up and go in, but can't get out. Wheat is scattered , on the flOor as bait. They can go in, eat, and go upstairs and there have to stay. They Ndress them by simply skinning and cutting out the breast. The meat is as delicious as quail meat. ' The home of the sparrow is in the city, but they go out ten or fifteen miles to feed r.; farmers' wheat. After the wheat is gathered into : the barn, , if there is a knot hole they will : go in and feed. The wren is our pet bir'. We have . always furnished them a house under our front porch and de light in their songs. They are, civil ized and prefer, to, be surrounded wit'j civilization. They are never found in extensive forests. , They are birds of reason and philosophy. We made the entrance to their first house too large so the sparrows could go in and turn the house upside down. The little oc cupants soon barricaded their door with sticks, tied with strings, so that a sparrow could not enter. After that we bored the door with an inch au ger and that saved the labor of barri cading. The monotony of hatching and the labor of feeding their; young is shared by the father. A perpetual war should be waged against the spar rows, crows, hawks, owls and eagles, and' high protection extended towards all other birds of Nebraska. The eat--ible birds of course are subject 13 the carving knife. H. W. HARDY. "Still Very (The following verses are from the pen of Hon. J. S. Corbin, Gouverneur, N. Y., nominee of the liberal demo cratic party for lieutenant governor. Ed. Ind.) I still am a democrat; still very still, Those regular Liberals have made m? quite ill; I. roost with the rest who bolted the ticket, ' I joined with Tom Piatt and helped him to lick it; I'm outside the breastworks out , of the saddle. With only the gold-bug machine to straddle, ... . - ... The Loyal Democracy dumped me with skill, . , . But I'm, still . a democrat; still very still. I still am a democrat; still very still, A-trying to muzzle the freeholder's will, . But voters have taken occasion to think, And led up to .Piatt's trough, ! can't make 'em drink. Their - last will and testament reads very plain That I'm disinherited busted again; Political prodigal! Swine-husk aiid swill! Yet I'm still 'a democrat; still very still. I still am a democrat; still very still, But gold-bug re-organs read wretched ly chill, 'Twere better if I with the party all through Had stuck never bolting but Piatt and his crew Insisted that we could twist voters about, . But h 1! It was Thomas who always won out; Yet I have determined, come weal or come ill, To claim I'm a democrat; still very still. I still am a democrat; still very still. But feeling as If I'd been run through a mill; The thrashing I've , had leaves me stiffened and sore, (Tom Johnson is in it ajl right for 0-4; And Bryan has snubbed me and forced me to wait, Because I refused to pull open and straight) ; To Loyal Democracy I'm but a frill, But I'm still a democrat; still very still. I still am a democrat; still very, still, With fifty good henchmen with pock ets to fill, ' My t brave state committee are loyai ... ' and true, .. They'll stand the worst hail-storm that ever yet blew; " -! v I promise them loot at the victory ShOUt, Y-:: -)-, ":- r:. But here I am now with my stuffing - knocked out! , .- .V'. Off coats! I'm - mad! Mad enough quite to kH'trC , ' '.' . ii But I'm still a democrat; still very still. v": .v:.r": :-'r;- I still am a democrat; Still very still, A curse to the party, a castaway pill, And never again can I enter the ranks, Regularity counts mighty little with blanks; I played it too fine with my fifty-fold Pack, . Twice fooled the electors hit Croker a crack, Protected my rear, as I thought with great skill, But I'm a dead democrat; still very still. Mr. W. D. Fitzgerald, the president of the Fitzgerald Dry Goods Co: of this city, has purchased the other interests in the company and now becomes the sole owner. The store has been one o the most successful and enterprising in the west. It has grown rapidly and steadily until It has become the most popular dry. goods house, in Lincoln. From the beginning Mr. Fitzgerald has beeh the active manager and the splen did growth is the result of his care ful attention to every ., detail.-; Every one admires a man who, beginning business in a small way, by honorable methods and fair dealing leads all his competitors. Such has been the suc cess of Mr. Fitzgerald.; His is a rec ord of business success of which an man would be proud. Times Have Changed The descriptions of the magnificence of the United States yacht Mayflower, which has been newly fitted up for the personal use of the president, remind one of the time, not ten yearfe back, when President Cleveland could not go down the Potomac on a lighthouse tender or on a government naphthi launch without Inviting the most ter rific of lambastings in the press. Times have changed. No one now thinks of criticising Mr. Roosevelt on account of the Mayflower, which, according to ona description, rivals in luxury "the royal and imperial yachts of - European princes and potentates." Springfield Republican. The vote on the amendment to the constitution of Oregon providing lor the initiative and referendum In that state (p. 153) is now reported as fol lows: ... For the amendment......-..'.. .62,024 Against the amendment. 5,667 Total vote on amendment . . . 67,691 Total vote on candidates. 92,000 The Public, Chicago. Two Rare Farm Bargains Best and cheapest alfalfa, cattle ranch in the Republican River vallej- 852 acres, highly improved 110 acres in alfalfa. . Price only $17.50 per acre. This is the chance of a life time. - , Highly improved- 240-acre -upland grain and stock i ranch. Timber, and water. Price only $12.50 per acre. Both must be sold this month. , Ad dress at once JAMES HUNTER, Republican City, Neb. . FOR SYSTEMIC CATARRH Peculiar to Summer Pe-ruTna Gives Prompt and Permanent Relief. Clem G. Moore, Editor of the Advocate-Democrat of tCrawfordsville, Ga.f writes the Pernna Medicine Company as follows: ;; v;:" Gentlemen 'After four years ot intense suffering, caused by systemic catarrh, which I contracted while editing, and traveling for my paper, 1 bare been greatly relieved by the use of Peruna. I gave up work during these years of torture, tried various remedies and many doctors, but all the permanent relief came from the use of Peruna. My trouble was called indigestion, but it was catarrh all through 'my system, and a few bottles ot Peruna made me fee! like another person, noting the Improvement after 1 had used the first bottle, Peruna is undoubtedly the best catarrh remedy ever compounded. -CLEM CL MOORE. Judge Wm, T. Zenor, of Washington, D. C, writes, from 213 N. Capital Street, Washington, D. C. : , . t , "I take pleasure in saying that I can cheerfully recommend the use of Peruna as a remedy for catarrhal trouble and a most excellent tonic for general condi tions." Wm. T. Zenor. - v - Mrs. Amanda Morrill, 138 Reid street, Elizabeth, N. J., writes : "I have been sick over two years with nervous prostration and general debility, and heart trouble Have had four doc tors; all. said that I could not get well. I had not walked a step in nine months", Buffering with partial paralysis ; and palpitation of the heart every other day, and had become so reduced in flesh as to be a mere skeleton weigh ing only 85 pounds.1 'Upto this date I have, taken Peruna fot seven months.ti It has saved my life as t can safely testify. I have cot felt so welt in five years, having walked over one mile without ill result, and have also gained f thirty pounos since commencirg to take Peruna. In fact. I cannot praise it too hiehl v." Mrs. Amanda Morrill. " " Pernna never fails to prevent systemio catarrh or nervons prostration if taken in time. . Peruna is the most prompt and permanent cure for all cases of nervous prostration caused, by systemio atarrh known to the medical profession. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr.' Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad vice gratis. ' . ; Address Dr. Hartman, President of The . Hartman t Sanitarium, Columbus, .Ohio.;,-.;,'.,,;.; ' 1 - nlADDI C PD II MITT 01 ilTC O v O O O O O o o o RftVAral rmnrlrftrl flriicriAfl mnn uments always on hand, from which selections can be - made, A personal call desiredwhere this is not convenient, we will mail designs, prices, etc. - Send for illustrated booklet, free. Mention this paper. KIMBALL BROS., .1500 O Street, Lincoln, Neb. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGE: '. ' (Established 14) . - COURSES: Assistance rendered in securing employ- RlJinesS ' menfc EXPENSES very reasonable. CIV J6. Txr58M. EXCELLENT EQUIPMENT and every Shorthand & Typewriting faciiity for thorough and rapid advance Common English, ment. : Catalogue and beautiful Souyenir of Lincoln free. ". Address: LINCOLN BUSINESS COLLEGE, LINCOLN, NEB. HUMBOLDT COLLEGE HUMBOLDT, IOWA, f 14 DEPAItTMENTS 30 COURSES School all yeat-f Sofs pays for board, room, and tuition 48 weeks-I'KEK TUITION t to one from each county---Fall term opens Aug. 19 Catalog free If Minnesota College of Photography " . . 1 ' -316 Nicollet Ave. Minneapolis, i Minn. ' Pupils can Enter at any time. Rates given on Application. CClCU . Chllllcoth Kormal School t" '""'1" "W V ;-"- - OCVCn I CMllleothe Commercial CollOira ! j(S O SiwrZ '-tffiv V - - - - - S ll H U II L S Hllcotho School of Oratory vAi fAi- VfAr" u w 11 w w m thUUcothe Musical Conservatory. CKS V.t '.-'V ' Last year's enrollment 729. $130 pays for 43 1 . ,aa ?t ,fcU weeks' board,tni tion, room rent, and use of text , " J6-24 Farnant street . books. For FREE Illustrated Catalog address Enslnesa. fborthand,-. Typewrltingr n3 EcfUsb. Alt FN MnnDF Pr Rnv TA r.hilliroths Mo Stndents who desire It are assisted to positions to earn ALLCIM mUUKty n-t., POX t. uniiucotns, wo boardwhlleattendlna:. Send lor catalogue. " IUnflTllAUQ . Wanted For U. S. Army. f 1 -' Ahle-bodled unmarried men betweei OR ) 1 liImM tSeS 21, and 35 citizens or United lege building, cheap boacd nd States, of; good character and tem- f' reasonable tuition. Gradual e se- perate habits who can speak, read and Mm write English. 'For information apply MaQK jT' V'f . 1- MMinta. Pres. ; to Recruiting Offlcers, Postoffice Build- fiEM CITT IUS1NESS COLLEGE, - ing, Lincoln, Neb., or 16th and Dodge I iiifiMf J Qttiacy. ;.,; iuuiou. sts., Omaha, Neb. ..1,000 Satisfied Farmers.. are regular customers of this the only firm in the country that sell gro ceries direct to consumers at wholesale prices. They sent for our price list and learned that they could save from 25 to 5Q per cent and get the Purest Freshest and most Dependable Goods. l Our Complete Price List quotes prices on everything in the grocery line. It tells how we do business. Send for it today. It is free. With it you can live better and save nearly half your grocery bills. Money re funded if goods are not satisfactory. Send today for our complete prtcis list. M. J. GINTER GROCERY CO. 25-27 Sixth Street South. Minneapolis, Minn.