Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1902)
A July 17- 1902 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT ... - A A "NURSE SAYS Pe-ru-na is a Tonic of Efficiency. READ WHAT WOMEN SAY OF IT. MRS. KATE TAYLOR. Afrs. Aae Taylor, a" graduated I nurse of prominence, gives her ex l perience with Peruna in an open letter. Her position In society and professional standing combine to give special prominence to her utl terances. CHICAGO, ILL., 427 W. Monroe St. "As far as I have observed Peruna ia the finest tonic any man or woman can use who is weak from the after effects of any serious illness. "I have seen it used in a number of convalescent cases, and have seen sev eral other tonics used, but I found that those who used Peruna had the quickest relief. "Peruna seems to restore vitality, in crease bodily vigor and renew health and strength in a wonderfully short time." MRS. KATE TAYLOR In view of the great multitude of women suffering from some form of female disease and yet unable to find any cure, Dr. Hartman, the renowned specialist on female catarrhal diseases, has announced his willingness to direct the treatment of as many cases as make application to him during the summer months without charge. Address The Peruna Medicine Co.. Columbus, Ohio. News of the Week It Is announced that large numbers of the Boers Tefuse to take the oath ot allegiance although they are willing to sign 'a declaration that they ac knowledge King Edward as their law ful sovereign. What will Joe Cham berlain do now? The fellows of figures are still work ing away on the "percentage" of in crease in the trade with the Philip pines. That 13 air 'stuff -for the mullet heads. They say that our trade with the Philippines has Increased to the enormous amount of fifty times what it was before Dewey sailed into the harbor of Manila. That may all be true and yet not amount to the trade of one of the sand hill counties of Ne braska. The actual amount of trads with the Philippines has been given many times in The Independent and it does not amount to a hill of beans la comparison with the expenditure that we have made to get it. It amount!) to a few hundred thousand and we have spent hundreds of millions in war in those islands.. It is not at all strange that the monarchs of Europe have very friend ly feelings for J. Pierpont Morgan. He has made a big ship combine for which American capital was the base and now he offers the ship3 to England for war purposes for the next fifty years whenever England wants them.. It is only another demonstration of what The Independent often said dur ing the last two presidential cam paigns. These great financiers, who claimed all the patriotism, 'have none at all. They will furnish aid just as quickly to any foreign government as they will to this, provided there is money In it. Gold is the only god they worship and allegiance to ia the only allegiance they know. It Is said that the American navy officers are very much Incensed over Mor gan's action. n- . Just as every sensible man expected there Is a hitch in the Panama canal program. The draft of a Panama canal treaty submitted by the Colom bin government provides for the im mediate payment to that government of $7,000,000 by the United States. At the end of fourteen years there is to be an agreement as to further compen sation. The next thing will be a treaty that will bind the United States to become a yearly contributor to the little South American republic of somn millions a. year for all time to come. Then that treaty will be rejected by the senate and no canal. While the trans-continental railroads own the re publican party there is not much show for any Isthmian canal.' : reading of the Bible in the ' schools. He says that it 13 not an Inspired book and has no more authority than any other book. Granted. But then no man ot sound mind, will deny, that the Bible contains some of the best litera ture, and Gimply as literature, he should want his children to become acquainted with its contents. Much of the literature of all nations would be unintelligible without a knowledge of the Bible, r Many of Its phrases are household words, not because they ar? inspired words at all, but because of their -force and piquancy. The. illu sions of the Bible, are so" frequent that a person unacquainted with them would be sadly at sea even In an ordi nary conversation If he were ' wholly ignorant of the book. ,Whyfany man should desire his children to grow up under such difficulties as an absolute ignorance of the Bible would place them in. is incomprehensible. As far as teaching any system of religion as of diyine. authority in the common schools is concerned that is another matter altogether. ' "" ' "''! France is slowly and surely riddlns herself of any connection, between church and state It is a system that hasabeen rooted for a. thousand years in the soil of France, but its day has run. In , the last campaign that wa3 the paramount question and the new government has over a hundred majority.- - The Mark Hanna and Dave Hill out fit having made arrangements to put up Durand, a gold democrat, for gov ernor In Michigan, they are " some what astounded " to ne- informed by men who know that there are at least 100,006. Bryan democrats In the state who will not vote for him and who cpenly declare that they prefer a re publican to an old traitorous gold democrat. The, same sort of a story comes also from Indiana. A report from Consul Bray of Mel bourne, Australia, of Hay 30, says that the drouth continues in that countrv. This is the longest and most persis tent drouth that has ever occurred in Australia and the purchasing power of the people is so reduced that our trade with that country will be great ly reduced. While, It may have somo effect In. this country in keeping up the price of foodstuffs, the loss of trade will balance that. It Is another illus tration of that principle In political economy that loss and distress in one country not only does not help other countries, but is a loss to them also. While no one denies that pig Iron can be produced here cheaper than In any other country in the world, con siderable quantities are now being im ported after paying freight charges and a duty of $4 a ton. The coal strike has so curtailed the output that the furnaces cannot get the coal to make the iron. In normal times we export large quantities of pig - iron and sell it to foreigners at from $4 to $5 a ton less than the American citizen can buy It for. : - But the thick-headed American seems to like that way rt doing business. He not only pays that much more fof his iron, but he has to pay taxes to support the government besides, for the prohibitive duty pre vents Importation and, of course, the " government eets no -revnn T-hn consequence is the government must maKe u up irom internal taxation. The Bible In the schools Is up asraln for discussion, - as well as religious teaching in the Philippine schools. As far as this writer Is concerned ho could never see the logic of the free The president. is at his place at Oys ter Bay. He is surrounded by a horde of police and secret service men. There are eight or ten of the latter. They stand guard at the entrance to Saga more Hill from 7 o'clock in the morn ing to 11 at night in four watches of six hours each, driving out three miles from town in a buggy. The man who is relieved from duty takes back th3 team. At least two men are always in reserve at the little hotel, which is connected by telephone. The rest of the detectives, two of them from the New York city force, wander around town, loaf on. the hotel piazza, and meet all the trains that arrive at the Oyster Bay station. Taft's mission to the pope seems to be a complete failure. It is now ac knowledged in Washington that the demand made upon the head of the catholic church was preposterous. It was no doubt thought at Washington that the none could be boueht with a few millions to denounce and remove from the Philippines certain of the regular orders of , the church. But U seems that money cannot influence the pope to issue a decree contrary to all the canons of the ehurch. get 'the Friars out of the Philippines ia something that none of that cult can f.nd out The Friars are protected by treaty with Spain which that famous commission agreed to when . they bought an insurrection and paid $20, 000,000 cash down for it. That treaty provides: "Spanish subjects, natives of the peninsula, residing in the ter ritory over which Spain by the present treaty , relinquishes or cedes her sov ereignty, may remain in such territory or may remove therefrom, retaining in either event all their rights of. prop erty, including the right to sell or dis pose of Fuch property, or of its pro ceeds, tin d they shall also have the right to carry on their industry, com merce and professions, being subject in respect thereof to such laws as are applicable to other foreigners." An other paragraph states that the In habitants of the territories ceded by Spam shall be secured in the free ex ercise of their religion. The Friars have the law and the treaty on their side. It will take a little more Imper ialism to get rid of them than the im perialists themselves would like to in dulge in. The Taft commission can pass a b li banishing them and that seems the only way out. A little moro or less of that thing should not count for much. If we are to have imperial ism, why not take it pure and unde-filed? How the imperialists are going to The Anglo-Saxon brag got a setback last week - in ? Chicago. Much to the chagrin eZ the sixteen members of the first year. law class of the Illinois Wes leyan university, a young Japanese named Takahashi Misaya, from Tokio, won first honors, being all but perfect in the dry subjects of Blackstone, Par son on Contracts and Reynolds on Evi dence. His respective markings were 99, 98 and 98. In his few years' resi dence Takahashi has secured a fine command of the language and speaks it with the grace of a native-born. The native Filipinos are practically the same kind of men as the Japanese and are intellectually just as bright. Scores of them have obtained high standing in European universities and . have been granted the highest degrees cum laude. But the imperialist insists that they are savages, and what the im perialists say goes. President Roosevelt and Secretary Root are guilty of making a vicious at tack on the army. The dispatches Wednesday relate that upon the rec ommendation of Secretary Root, the president has affirmed the sentence of the court-martial and placed .Gen eral Smith on the retired list as pun ishment for issuing the "kill all over ten" order. The court-martial had found General-Smith guilty and sen tenced him to be "admonished" by the reviewing authority, saying: ."The court is thus lenient In view of , the undisputed evidence that the accused did not mean everything that his un explained language implied, that' hi? subordinates did not gather such a meaning and that the orders were never executed in such sense, not withstanding that a desperate strug gle was being conducted with a cruel and savage foe." - Secretary Root, commenting on this said: "Although the sentence imposed is exceedingly light, it carries with it a condemna tion which for an officer of his rank and age ' is really a severe punish ment." The president said: "Gen eral Smith has behind, him a long ca reer distinguished, for gallantry, and, on the whole, for good conduct. Tak en in the full, his work has been such as to reflect credit upon the American army and, therefore, upon the nation, and it is deeply to be regretted that he should have so acted in this instance as to interfere with his further useful ness in the army. I hereby direct that he be relieved from the active list." Ml Went It Yes, we desire harmony. Let those who have disturbed harmony restore it by harmonious conduct. Let them come in and claim the great name of Demo crat and cease to repudiate the party's platform and candidate with words of insult. All we ash of them is silence along this line. They shall not tell our six and a half millions thai we were wrong for by all that is true, WE WERE RIGHT. If circumstances ... have removed from the arena those issues, that is all right. We can accept new situations. If other issues now loom large and urgent, tee can set aside the minor and fight the greater fight. They want harmony. :.' So does the rank and file, of the party. r We all want it. We . wanted it in 1996 ' and 1900. ;'. We appealed for it. But Cleveland and hu Jcind gave comfort to the vast, " : organized brood that has 'since chained us hand and foot in the power of- the V, trusts, and the myrmydons of inipefial- ism. Even now we want harmony. Let yiis'hqve '.it,Pfattsbujrg (Mo.) Leader. ONE GALLON WINE FREE With ; every gallon finest 10-yearold Both sh. a j , ( Art IP " OLD TIMES WHISKEY " 5 p" '.- &d.l5 We make this unparalleled offer to introduce quickly. Old Times Whiskey won first prize and gold medal at World's Fair and is guaranteed Ten Tears Old and absolutely pure. Send orders direct to. ., . - - - Farms For Sals Eleven hundred acres, near town, on main line B. & M.; all fenced; 950 acres good bottom alfalfa land; 40 acres now in alfalfa, for $13 per acre. An Improved 240 acre Webster county farm, near Guide Rock, for $21 per acre. If interested, in your first let ter state as clearly as you can what you want, farm, ranch, or pasture lands, where you :want it and how much vou want to pay, cash and time. . LAWS & DOLAN, Room 419, Richards bik., Lincoln, Neb. With Tact and Discretion President Wm. R. Harper of Chicago university has been addressing cue National " Educational association in Minneapolis on the' security of the professor's tenure of - office. He de livered a long address, but when he got through his hearers all knew very well what they also knew before he began to speak; namely, that the secur ity of a prof essor's tenure of office depends, very much . upon his paying extreme deference! and wrapt homage to men. of great wealth' upon' whom the great universities are dependent for their life blood. . This deference and homage must not be too ostenta tious. It must be rendered with tact and discretion. When it is, the pro fessor's tenure of office is usually quite secure. When professors do not en tertain a cautious regard for the wishes, the views and the prejudices of men of great wealth and : women of great wealth, too, for I must not forget Mrs. Hearst they are extreme ly liable to the pains and misfortunes which overtook President Andrews, and Professors Ross, Howard, Hud son, Bemis, Emerson and many oth ers. Chester C. Piatt in Ithaca (N. Y.) Democrat. . ,,r. Hardy's Column Bad stories are better . if they are mistakes, errors, falsehoods or even lies. Gold has gone down to one-third its usual value as compared with corn and beef. The man who betrays a public trust in office is more Of a criminal than the thief or robber; i It ought not to hurt the feelings of, any honest .man to. hear them upbraided for their meanness even though the kink of law shields them. - The apparent reason for fighting the piece-work system in railroad' shops is that the lazy men will only get pay for what they do. The labor organi zations are at fault to demand the same pay for a slow, lazy workman that the employer is. .willing . to pay to a fast, faithful "workman. , Clear, blue sky is- worth more per yard in Nebraska,:-is this year, than calico. Dry,, hot winds mixed in with a foot of rain will taste,' smell and look better. - The board of trade , gambling ought' to be punished the same as any other gambling. Every man who sells any thing he does not possess ought to be sent to the penitentiary and anybody who buys anything, he has - not the money to payfrfor- ought : to follow. Ten millionaires formed, a corn corner and have bought twenty million bush els of No. 2 corn to be delivered this month, in Chicago,-. -As soon as they had done buying they commenced to push the price up; now the sellers of the twenty ; million'' bushels have to pay 75 cents or a dollar. Nothing but delivery sales should 'be allowed. Our preachers do. .not discuss, show up and condemn the ; sins and crimes of today as much as they should. What was done back in Moses' time does not concern ujs-as much as what is being done todayi There have been new sins and crimes invented as well as new machinery. Idolatry has put on a new phase. Bowing down to blocks of wood and stone is not . half as bad. as bowing to'appetite, lust and greed. One of the worst things of today is the use of tobacco, opium and other stimulating preparations. No one knows the amount of such stuffy taken. Yes, we stand up for Nebraska, but we do hot stand up for her grasshop pers, her hot winds or her big floods. One of our ancient wonders is where the grasshoppers came from and where they went to. In' the latter sixties and early, seventies, the grasshoppers did immense damage. The air was . full for miles up and Vegetation covered during the ay and' during the night the ground was " covered a foot deep in nooks and corners. No one knows where they came from or where they went to. ' The republican journals east of the Mississippi curse Bryan for showing up Cleveland's democracy, It-was too bad to give him such a big dose all at once; he should have given a part at a time, and yet there is no doubt that Bryan could give -more of-the same color, and he may;yet do it. Bryan occupies , about the same re lation to Cleveland In party politics that Uriah did to David in family re lation. Uriah did not know how mean David had been. -j Bryan does know how mean Cleveland has been, and has not yet " exposed half his meannes3. We may hear yet how much1 of that seventeen millions t Pierpont Morgan made on the bonds Cleveland put into his own pocket - Probably five mil lions; for it is reported that he relin quished the office of president with eight millions in- hfe pocket: Tha eastern i millionaires all , stand up for Cleveland and .are ready to kick Bryan every "chance they have. Bryan has made a fine little fortune single-handed, with no special raw or office to help him. Thousands made in that way are better than millions made as Cleveland has, or as John Sherman did, or as the high protected trusts are making. If Bryan made any mis statements, why do they not specify and correct. . , H. W. HARDY. The Trusts - The money trust seems the prolific trusts arise. E pluribus unum, one out of many, seems the law and order of nature. While each seems Individ ual, each must give to the many, that each may. receive from the many the materials of life. Nature's law of benevolence determines receiving by giving. Should the tree refuse to give ox3rgen, it would have no room for car bon. Accumulated oxygen would con sume Its carbon to ashes. The evils of the trusts spring from the attempt of, the. one by theft to monopolize the benefits of the many. Nature. Inexor ably allows to the one but the .use of one share. Nature usually ' deprives the monopolist in his assiduity of theft the use of his one share. Pride's gift of many thefts to the one cannot com pensate either the many robbed or the robber. , The thief -cannot equalize by giving part of his spoils to church or college. . . , : . All material things are moved, con trolled and governed by invisible forc es. We do not see the force, the labor by which, the revolving earth makes Eight and day, neither the life force which clothes all things with material lorm for the . uses of life. All tnw units of measure for exchange are in visible, immaterial, exact, determined parts of the quality they measure. The unit of number is an invisible one ex pressed by any and all things.. The bushel ; unit is 32 quarts of empty space. It is absurd to call the chips of the basket theunlt; to call the ma terial enclosing, the space enclosed. All true units can be expressed by any and all things since all things contain the qualities they measure. Gold dollars and their representatives are material bodies without a soul. Our dollar unit is fiat nothing the imaginary flat price of a few grains of gold. Nature has not written the quality of price on anything she ha3 created. The materialists called green backs fiat - money because all their material money is flat money. Unlike our true units by which we exactly measure products for exchange by their qualities, our fiction flat dollar unit never remains in one stay. Our pound unit always and everywhere exactly measures either the first or last pound of a ton of sugar. Our fiat price unit, is here, there and never anywhere. How can we measure with out the measure? Our law-makers have coined no gold dollars. They have not given us one of the dollars they declare Is and shall remain the standard unit of measure. Men are not governed by reason. They are commanded by habit and custom. A few centuries since all cultured . and barbarous nations (except a handful of Jews educated by forty years of solitary training) worshiped gods who never were. The Japs today are Shin toos or Buddists. Our money system is equally as ab surd as these myths. If there were such a quality as price Its unit could npt measure the different quality of honest time or labor. All product is the result of continuous time or labor stored. Product is life clothing itself by continuous time or labor with ma terial form. Without intelligent mind there is no matter or material form. Each unit can only measure its own quality. A foot rule cannot weigh a pound of sugars - It seems useless -. to combat the evils of trusts and leave the parent alive. If we do not restore to use the exact, historic, scientific unit in accord with our other true units, this Frankenstein of human creation, this material gold god en throned in our hearts and lives, in place of the immaterial God will con tinue as in 'the past to destroy. For ever these monopolists will Invisibly exchange their fiat nothing for labor's something. With the supreme intelli gence a thousands years are as one day's crucifixion garners the harvest of thousands of years. , 5 - r. , F. W. ANTHONY. Matta wan, Mich. Take Your Medietas At the recent meeting of the bank ers of Kansas and Missouri they pass ed resolutions against that portion of the Fowler bill that favored branch banks as "unpatriotic, un-American, unbusinesslike, and as tending to establish a monopoly of the great and honored business of banking in the hands of a few millionaires to the exclusic of the men of the west, old and young; who have labored so faith fully and well to make our banking system what it is today the best in the known wojrld.". Too late, gentle men. You are only kicking against the pricks. You are doomed, and you deserve it, because you had no pity for the people of the west in the past, but helped fix firmly in the saddle tho eastern money bags who , were then forging their thunder-bolts to strike down other western Interests. They did 4t with, your help. Stand up now, don't whine, be men, dang you, take your medicine. Perhaps it may turn your "in'ards" wrong side out, but you will learn better next time. So mote it be. Dow Busenberk in Esk ridge (Kas.) Star. J. C. Brennan Nothing which the fusion conven tions t at; Grand Island did was more gratifying to the people of Fillmore county, than the nomination of J. C. Brennan, of Omaha, for land commis sioner.' For nearly four years he was a resident of this county and has a host of friends in all parties. Hi3 ability to fill , the office, his loyalty to the new kind' of democracy and his contempt for Grover Cleveland and all his works is proverbial. His , name adds strength "to a , splendid ticket. Geneva Gazette." f" " " " '' Kansas Campaign Some of the papers announce that the democratic state committee Is ar ranging to bring some of their biggest and best men into.Kansas for-speeches during the campaign this fall. It is stated that Tom Johnson of Ohio will deliver six speeches in the state this fall. Bryan is also among the list of speakers. Congressman Wheeler of Kentucky, a young man who has been very highly eulogized by Bryan, Champ Clark of Missouri, known for his literary work as much as for his record in congress, and Senator Bailey of Texas, comprising altogether a lot of . the strongest and best men in the party, are all slated for work in this state. Hutchison should get some of SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES (Established 1881) Offers Practical Work in the Business, Shorthand, . & & anil Typewriting and English Courses Our graduates are holding good paying positions. Write for our New Catalogue and Souvenir and for any information, you desire concerning our school. ' Fall term opens September 1, 1902. LINCOLN BUSINESS COLLEGE, LINCOLN, NEB. CEVEN A CbUtlcotho Normal School ' - f .mTTITrTTZ '. . ... ...i., . m. OLlUl I ChUllcotb Commercial Otlleiiro $ llV SCHOOLSjiSS ' fcpEW . J Ctoimcotlio Musical Conservatory. ,rr 'r Jin f " Last year's enrollment 729. $130 pays for 4S ' it n mini T ... m weeksr board, taitioa, room runt, and use of text 1C22-S4 Yaraaua trt books. For Fit EE lUustixUed VataUia addrtas Business. Shorthand, TrpewrtUnff and En-!lsa. ALLEN MOORE. Pres., Box 21, ChHHcothc. Mo Student! who desire It are assisted to positions to earn amtmm mJmmmmmami m boar1 whH attending, bend for catalogue. x-JlIflnTMAfil Wanted For U. S. Army. C-rt l S!!!? ! wf U Able-bodied unmarried men between ftf 7 7tr$iBi:o" agea of .21 and 35, citizens of United A iec bonding, chem bowl and States, of good character and tem- Si 2!52 nmoMbif GrmdutM perate habits who can speak, read and mm ili edSrVVd write English. For information apply i- MsMsia, rre..- " to Recruiting Officers, Postofflce Build- kM -jSf f OEiCrniusiJESSCOilKE. ing, Lincoln, Neb., or 16th and Dodge 1 ' Qiy. . . imu. sts., Omaha. Neb. HUMBOLDT COLLEGE HCMBOIDT, IOWA. CATAI OO FKER 9-14 DKPA 8TM KNTS Preparatory, Normal, Collefriate. Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Telegraphy, etc. Strictly first-clasa. tj $8o nd upwards pays for board, room, and tuition 4S weeks jj FREE TUITION to one from each county Fall term opens August 13. 0000000000OS00 o o o o Mm, GRANITE, SLAT! Several hundred finished mon.' uments always on hand, from which selections can be made. A personal call desired; where 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. o o o o o 0 ii .il n ..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 50 per cent and get the Purest Freshest and most Dependable Goods. . 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 pric list. " M. J. GINTER GROCERY CO. 25-27 Sixth Street South. Minneapolis, Minn. HtjiaAaM IkajMU Favorite Schiller; The Schiller Piano has always been the favorite with people wishing a really good Piano at a moderate price. In short, it has not a single, equal at the price. Their success along this line has in spired the company to attempt something higher. The new lligh Grade Schiller is the result. , This, like the medium grade, is the best yet produced for the money. , The price is necessarily some higher, but just as low in proportion to quality. Write for description and prices to the Ware room 1120 O Street LINCOLN, NEDR. ft 1 . .... A. . , atthews Piano Co. Summer Excursions to Colorado, - - i Utah and the 1 Black Hills, . . .. . -. - . - o Q "0 c a a o o $c 2 W2. aj b wasp teoS. o rs & s - - gS go ?3 g'.og ?i?;r fu B 2T ., dates . ii ff 1 si ik flf of sale- r r;?., fa!?;?? 3S -Jane 22 to 24- - .- - " ' ' ' i ' July 1 tol3. ' ' v An. 23 to 24. ' "-' ' ' . Aag. aU to Bapt. 10. . iflMX) $1500 $15.00 S25.00 $30.00 $13.50 I14.W gVtt Any. 1 to 14. - 111.00 1&.Q I5.00 $25.00 ft!5.00 jl3.5Q tU.bl si&.tiS Juris 1 to2L ' ' - Jnn25to30. : , . , . - July 14 to 31. -Aug. 15 to 22. - .; tAxg. 25 to 29. - Sapt. 11 to 15. $18,25 8.85 Itf.OC :30.25 $32.00 $17.00 118.15 $19.35 Beturn limit on all abov tickets, October 31, 1902. ' Tor further information and printed matter, eau at- s. CITY TICKET OFFICE J .e Cor.. 10th and O Sts. Jt Telephone 235. J JtJtJtjjJtJlt .. ,-jC Jt J8 jt jit Jt J Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt , Jt BURLINGTON TIE! POT . JtJt Jtjt nh St. Bet. P & Q. j Jt Telephone 25. jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt Jt YE quaint r.lAGAZinz An Odd Qur mnd Ourloua MAGAZIitfev I Uuiutl btoriM. Huin Hmppaninin, SUanga EspwiraAs. Odd Advar tluutntaJa. Each yaarly aabaeribar laentiilad Id tod aAair, but ona inada raa) by an axpart Astrologer. Six liontha So eta. Trial Trier. back nnmbara) 10 da. PoatWreW no free aopiaa. E QUAINT MAUKirnSt Bst Low Prled Hotel n the City. . . RATES, - $1.00 per day and up. btel AAalton