July 31, 1902 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT C KIDNEY TROUBLE CURED. General Health Greatly lm proved by Pe-ru-na. III T-',' , . ' ) ; . If MRS. FRANCES MATOOJT. Mrs. Frances Matoon, Treasurer of the Minneapolis Independent Order of Good Templars writes from 12 Sixth Street, Minneapolis, Minn., as follows : "Last winter I had considerable trouble with my kidneys brought on after a hard cold which I had neglected. One of my lodge friends who called when I was ill told me of a wonderful medicine called Peruna. I had no faith in it, but my husband purchased me a bottle, and asked me to try it. It brought mo most (satisfactory results. I used three bottles before I was completely cured, but I have had good cause to be grateful, for not only did my kidney trouble dis appear, but my general health improved and I have been in good health ever since. I would not be without it for ten times its cost." FRANCES MATOON. This experience has been repeated many times. We hear of such cases nearly every day. Mrs. Matoon had catarrh of the kid neys. As soon as she took the right remedy she made a quick recovery. Peruna cures catarrh wherever located. Peruna is a specific for the catarrhal derangements of women. Address Tho Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio, for free book on catarrh written by Dr. 8. B. Hartman. aroused in European capitals." Final ly, one reads that Cardinal Rampolla, the papal secretary of state, has writ ten a letter to Secretary Hay, and thus the precedent for official negotia tions between the Vatican and the American government nas necome suf ficiently well established. As to the negotiations, it appears that the Taft ambassy (appointed without the consent of anybody ex cept Roosevelt and Root, these two ex ercising the imperial power to send ambassadors to foreign courts on their own motion) have amounted to noth ing. The pope has made no promise : withdraw the friars and the furtherest point that he has gone is to introduce "little by little, eclesiastics of other nations, especially Americans." The Washington correspondents are caying that the administration is very much perturbed and somewhat excited because a trade war is helng organ ized by all Europe against the United States. The great decrease in exports is said to be the first fruits of it. The Independent has been saying for some years that such a war would be inaug urated if the prohibitive protection duties remained on the statute books. It was inevitable. Foreign nations cannot forever buy American products and sell nothing in return. That is au impossibility. It is now said that the czar's proposal for an European anti-trust conference Is only a cover for an agreement among tnose na tions to put discriminating duties on all American protected articles ex cept bread stuffs. If that is done the "sound money" manufacturers of the east will get It in the neck while tbo farmer' will be on top. ' A late census bulletin shows that the Consumption of wool per capita is de creasing notwithstanding prosperity. The enormous tariff on wool so in creases the, cost to the consumer that cotton is substituted wherever possi ble. There was never a greater mis conception of the force of economic laws Indulged in than the plan to make farmers rich by taxing wool. The eastern papers are discussing the senatorial situation In Kansas very extensively. Many of them visit their wrath upon the mediocre Burton who is ostracised by the administra tion and most of the republican sena tors for his savage attacks on Roose velt and the worse crime of telling tales out of school. In all the time that the republicans have held the state they have only elected two men as senators of ability Plumb and Ingalls. Many of the others were the moral offiscourings of the plains, such as Pomeroy and Caldwell. The lat ter was so disreputable that the leg islature asked him to resign, which he did. Some of them were so in significant that even their names are forgotten. Such were Karvey and Martin. The populists have done a little better. They elected the harm less old Peffer and the strong and able Harris. Ross, who saved Andrew Johnson, Is setting type on a country weekly. Martin walks the streets of Topeka with no one so poor as even to notice him. The whole . list from Pomeroy and Lane to Burton has been a disgrace and a shame to the state with the exception of Plumb, Ingalls and Harris. If senators had been elected by a direct vote of the people Instead1 of by the legislature the rec ord would have been different The large additions to the White house will make it a palace. If we are a world power, have colonies . and wage wars , of conquest, the supreme ruler should reside in a palace and congress has seen to it that one is provided. ' Our Massachusetts friends can find a few more "facts" 'concerning federal Judges by reading the newspapers Judge Jackson, a federal .judge, has abolished free speech in his jurisdlc tion. He has sent a man and woman to Jail for "talking." These federal Judges are tyrants, such as flourished in the dark ages. They, are a scourge to humanity. De Witte, the Russian finance m In lster, says that the trusts are violat ing all commercial treaties and that their transactions furnish a precedent for a whole series of retaliatory acts. The Imposition of extra duties on Rus sian sugar which was ordered by the treasury department some time ago at the dictation of the sugar trust, is go ing to make a lot of trouble for Amer ican manufacturers before the thing is done with. If the republican leaders think that they can fix up history with pious ejaculations, they are very badly, mis taken. Their appeals to providence and reference to destiny, which are more numerous lately than ever be fore, will not influence the final Judg ment of mankind. The . Imperialists intend to annex Cuba. That is very evident from the propaganda that they have started in that island. They have the same solicitude for Cuban In dependence that Frederick and Cather ine had when they secured the right to Intervene to protect the Polish con stitution. . One of the greatest financial author ities in England was the late governor of the Bank of England, William Lid derdale. For many years he was an authority in finance wiiose Judgment had the greatest weight with all think ing men: ' The other day he died. When his will -was probated It was found that his estate was only worth $5,000. According to the standards set up in this age of commercialism fn this country, that; man could not pos sibly have known anvthing about cur rency, banking, or finance in any de partment. But Lldderdale preferred to be true to the trust confided in him and preserve the funds intrusted to his care in safety for the owners. The Springfield Republican, though still disgruntled at Bryan for his cut ting reply to Cleveland, grew some what mollified after it heard Bryan at the Nantasket meeting. In writing of that occasion it says: "There were no inharmonies to mar the auspicious outward look of the occasion. Once again Mr. Bryan appeared as an at tractive popular orator, and his differ entiation of the two great parties that must always exist in such a republic as ours was clear and philosophic, true to history and pertinent to the situa tion a3 it exists. As a setting forth of modern democracy as It must be in es sence and alignment, little fault can be found with Mr. Bryan's address. The clarity and simplicity of his manner of appeal are striking here as always. The art of appealing to the great mass of citizenship was his beyond other speakers." r A gentleman writing to the editor of The Independent from Boston winds up his epistle with these words: "In this region the ; republicans find the devil to pay and no pitch hot." A sea captain discovered an unin habited Island in the Pacific ocean and named it Marcus after the great re publican leader. Then he reported it to the government and was authorized to raise the flag and annex it to the United States. The island was rich in guano and when the sea captain went back there to claim it he found the Japanese there mining his guano. They ordered him off and sent for a warship. Again he reported to the Washington government. The state department instead of warning off the warship and telling them that "the flag must stay put," sent word to the sea captain not to resist the Japanese Now is the time for expansionists who believe in naval ;. bases, coaling sta tions and "shoot the man who hauls down the flag" to raise a howl. Will they? Hardly. All New England is excited over the tariff. Most of the big guns of the re publican party are down there trying to pacify the voters. Wage workers are numbered by the hundred thou sand down there and the cost of liv ing has more, than doubled while wages stay at about the same old level. They put the blame on the tariff and the trusts. Your Uncle Mark is very much troubled over the outlook. One member of the cabinet made a speech in which he. mentioned a revision of the tariff. The next day he got a let ter from Boston which said: "What we want is not a revision of the en tire list. All we want is a reduction in the duties on hides, and stop there." Boston wanted the duty on hides low ered, so it could get free raw material from Argentina for the manufacture of shoes, but any suggestion that the duty on shoes be reduced would result in a protest from every person ' employed in the boot and shoe industry In the New England states. That is the way it is all over the country. The Attle bury statesmen defeated the French reciprocity treaty because it reduced the duty on pinchbeck jewelry in re turn for lower duties in France on many of our exports. The meeting of the New England; Democratic League at Nantasket was a great . affair. The Springfield Re publican's account of it contained the following: "At the close of the day it seems as if the occasion had been a great success. In the first place, it was aggressive and determined. It had the ring of a great cause, nothing less than the liberties of the people of the United States and the permanence of the principles on which the gov ernment of the people rests. ., It was inspiring. It was harmonious. It was enthusiastic. It will put the other side on the defensive, and it showed capacity for leading to a successful conclusion. It was dignified and In every way worthy of the confidence of the public. It was patriotic, and as true to the principles of Abraham Lin-i coin and of the republican party in its early days as any republican conven-j tion which ever met in Massachusetts J It has made a manly, forceful and pa-j triotic appeal to the country, and 11; opens the campaign' auspiciously. Mri Bryan was the center of interest, lrj spite of his supposed eclipse and the alleged weakness of his hold; in New England. He was cheered liberally a$ For Sals , Good farm, 1 miles to station, Fill more county, good 8-room house, barn, granaries, hog house, ISO acres under cultivation; price till -August 1, 1902. $35 per acre. Another nearby, in York county, at $31.25 per acre.- Sev eral very good farms In Harlan, Fur nas and Gosper counties at $12.50 to $15 per acre. Lancaster county, $30 to $67.50., Gage county, $42.50 to $45, near Firth. Four hundred acres near Endicott, Jefferson county, $16.50. Two very fair farms in Hall at $22.50. Sev eral in Buffalo, $10 to $25. Ranche3, all sizes, some for trade, in Holt, Rock Brown, Cherry, Sheridan, Keith, Blaine, Custer and other Nebraska, counties. Also some very cheap prop erty in Colorado. When writing say what you want and how you want to pay for it LAWS & DOLAN, Lincoln, Neb. he boarded the boat at Boston, as he entered the dining room and as he ap peared in the tent." Winthrop's work on military law, the army authority, says: "Admoni tion is but the milder form of repri mand; a sentence to be 'admonished' is an Indication that ' the court deems the offense to be one or comparatively trivial character." Thus it appears that the court which tried General Smith deemed his orders to burn and devastate and kill everything over 10 a "trivial offense. Both sentences that in the case of Smith and that in the case of Genn are mockeries. That was in the very nature of things the ciily result of Philippine court-martials and The Indepencent said it would be when the very first ones were ordered. A war or conquest on an inferior race was never carried on and never will be in any other way than the war in the Philippines was conducted. Every man of common sense knew that when the war began. The blame ehould rest on the men who ordered the war. King Edward is to be crowned on the 9th of August. Most of the cere monies which were planned for the coronation before his illness will be omitted. This early crate is set be cause another operation will have to be performed before tne king finally recovers, if he ever does. It is charged by many of the lead ing papers in the east that the sta tistical bureau of the government has become an appendage of the literary bureau of Mark Hanna's national com mittee and that not only the facts and figures are given out, but articles are irepared trd sent out by the officials with the "fficial signatures attached, ready for publication. Monograms and articles about the country's com merce, glorifying the administration and the commercial policy of the re publican party are sent forth and paid for by the whole people. The New York Journal of Commerce makes this charge openly and cites the proof of it. The statistical bureau has done some pretty ratty things, but it was never before guilty of preparing and circul ating political articles at tne expense of the taxpayers. All faith In the gov ernmental statistics will soon be gone,1 and the immense expense or this new permanent census bureau will all go for nothing. It has been announced that the army in the Philippines will be reduced to 18,000 men. To support an American army on a peace footing costs some thing over a thousand dollars per man. Warlike operations, of course, cost more. Every regiment of a thousand men, therefore, is equivalent In ex pense to a university like Columbia. Nine thousand men on garrison duty in the Philippines, making no allow ance for campaigns, use up as much money as all the colleges and universi ties in New England and the middle states combined, including Harvard, Yale. Columbia, Cornell, Princeton, the university of Pennsylvania and Johns Hopkins. A cablegram from Manila says that four of the school teachers sent out by the government have been captured and killed by Ladrones. Since the exposure of the padded ex port statistics and the proof that the made a part of the repuollcan national committee were made public, very grave doubts have been expressed about" the figures given out of the killed in the war in the Philippines. It seems to have dawned on some of the reorganizes down east tnai any man nominated for president or any other Important office by the dem ocrats is certain of one thing, and that is defeat. Dave Hill and Cleveland seem to be oblivious of that apparent fact. The enormous crowds that turned out to hear Bryan down in Maine was an astonishment alike to the reor ganizes and the republicans. The Illinois republicans got Secre tary Root to open tne campaign for them. He has proved to be so great a suppressor of facts that the republi can suckers thought he was - just the man for them. According to Senator Mason upon the. suppression of facts the machine republicans put their only hope of success. Russia. .Tanan and FnsTand havp alT made treaties guaranteeing the inde pendence of Corea. The lesson of his tory would lead us to look, for its separation and annexation pretty soon. That is what Frederick and Catherine did in regard to Poland; It is what the United States did in regard to Cu ba, and what several other powers have done when they got ready to "assimilate" another nation. The Independent has several times informed its readers that one of Rocke feller's big government grafts was free tin. All the rest of the people of the United States have to pay an enormous import duty. Not so Mr. Rockefeller. The government gives'him a rebate of 99 per cent of all duties on the tin which he uses in exporting oil. He buys his tin in Wales and when he exports it he gets back 99 per cent of the duties he has paid. When that preposterous thing was tacked on the tariff bill this writer protested and told what it was for. The thine has been brought to public attention during the week on account of the tin trust mak ing a proposition to their workmen to accept 25 per cent reduction in their wages so the trust can sell its tin to Rockefeller. ; It is said that the indicted mayor of Minneapolis was a renegade democrat who played the McLaurin game In mu nicipal politics. He went over to the republicans for "an office. He belongs to the same stripe of scoundrels as Clem Deaver. , ;The republicans have been doing a good deal of that sort of business. It reaches from the senate of the United States around by Min neapolis to O'Neill. Some of the eastern dailies are jump ing onto McLaurin wltn a vengeance since he has announced that he would not accept a place on the court of claims. They take it for granted that the administration has given up the idea of building up a republican party In the south composed of northern scalawags and .southern democratic re organizers. Having come to the con clusion that Roosevelt has turned Mc Laurin out to grass, they begin to tell the truth about him. one of them says: "McLaurin was opposed to the treaty of peace until the very last mo ment; he made a speech against it, and only on the morning on which the vote was taken he announced before the meeting of the senate that he was still opposed to it. His mind was changed within a very few minutes, and when his vote was Anally taken It was cast with the republicans. Then there began to be rumors that Mr. Mc Laurin was to be made a judge by Mr. McKinley before the end of the sena torial term. The charge was made again and again in the newspapers; it was uttered on the floor of the sen ate in conversation, and no denial was ever heard. It was not denied, either, and never has been, that Immediately after the treaty was ratified, McLaurin was given control of the patronage of South Carolina, and, while he secured places for a number of his democratic friends, he did his best to uphold and sustain the local republican organization." The bolting republican candidate for governor in Vermont tried to get the democratic party to indorse him. The Vermont democrats, however, replied that as between two republican can didates they had no choice and that they would promulgate their own plat form and nominate their own candi date. The independent republican is making his canvass on the ground of universal corruption in the regular re publican party." " The eastern papers say that Bryan's spoken speech at the Nantasket dinner was very different from the advanced copies given to the press. In the spoken speech he drew a sharp line be tween the people at large and the aris tocrats, which he called an aristpc lacy of wealth. ' ; The Handy Pocket Account Book Containing four parts each convenient for pocket use. Part I consists of simple, yet comprehensive Instruc tions with plain examples and llluetratsons for keep ing private accounts In bookkeeping: form. Part II consists of business forms, as notes, receipts, etc.. Interest rules and many others, and useful tables, Part III shows how tV write (rood letters, with forms, (Printed matter above 3a pages.) Part IV, 64 blank pages ruled for Dr. and Or, heavy paper on which to keep accounts. blze 6x3i Inches firmly bound with pocket and flap. Price 50c post paid. 1 and 2c stamps accepted. Agents can return books unsold. Money refunded. Address F. 0. JOHNSON, Publisher, Marion, Iowa. Hardy's Column We spent a week on the road be tween Lincoln and Chicago, stopping at several places for a day or more. The wheat is much later than in Ne braska; it is nearly all spring wheat. The oats are just ready for harvest. We never saw so 'mucn drowned corn. It was one steady string from Lincoln to Chicago. Thousands of acres, atl counted. Small grain has suffered much on low corners, but as a rule corn takes the low ground. Railroads have suffered much loss from floods. At several places bags of sand were strung along outside of the track to hold the ties down and prevent the water from running over and washing tracks away. All kinds of grain and grass looked of splendid growth. Har vesting and threshing of small grain has been much delayed. The rainy afeason does not seem to be over any where along the route. Two or three heavy rains have fallen all along with in the last week New railroads are being built. The extension of the Great Western frcra the east to Council Bluffs is well un der way. An electric road is being built from Des Moines to Colfax. The government canal from the Mis sissippi near Rock Island to the Illi nois canal near Hennepin stands halt finished and in all probability will never be finished. It is a foolish in vestment. Canals in other parts of tae United States nearly all of them have been thrown up or given over for rail roads on the toe-path. The Chesapeake & Ohio canal was a government canal and was thrown up years ago when railroads came into use and the oxd acqueduct across the Potomac is used as a bridge. r Is there any way of finding out how the republican candidates for con gress are going to vote, if elected this tall, in Nebraska, on the ship subsidy bill, the retirement of the greenbacks, redemption of the silver dollars in gold or the Issue of bank bills with out putting up government bonds as security? We hereby offer a red sweet apple , to anybody who will find out bow any one of the six 13 going to vote on any one of these questions. The Philippine water cure will have to be resorted to. For one, I will not vote for a man who dares not to tell pub licly where he stands on such public questions. : A big fight is being waged between a local company, near Joliet, and the city of Chicago for the use of the wa ter power generated By the drainage canal from Chicago harbor. We have wondered why the city did not utilize the .power as soon' as the canal was completed by sending It over wires back to the city for lighting the streets and running street cars and other city machinery. The talk is now that tha canal has so lowered the level of the water in the harbor that the etreet tunnels, under the river, will have to be lowered to keep large v steamers from grounding in the harbor. The coal strikers have caned out all the soft coal diggers in Illinois that they had power over and the result is that hundreds of mines, owned by in dividuals, have opened up In full force und are doing a big business. Many of the big mines have closed down. W. H. HARDY. It will pay you to read the advertise ments and take advantage of the bar gains offered. SOCIALISM Sid Force Makes Some Enquiries Regard ing the Common Ownership of Property-Thinks Oor Present System Best. Editor Independent: I want to de vote a few lines to the discussion of socialism. I want it distinctly under stood, first, that I do not know any thing at all about it; but am not going to stand back on that account. The mere . fact that one does not know what he is talking about is no dis qualification. Certainly in this country every one has the right to enter into the public or private discussion of any question; and often times the less he knows about it, the better qualified ho is to hold up his side of the argument. If one was going to attack the right, or to make a defence of the wrong, Ignorance is the prime requisite. Be cause, if there is a particle of hon esty in one's make-up, he could neither attack the right nor defend the wrong, unless he did it through ignorance. But to return to socialism. I have only a hazy, indistinct idea of what it means. I understand it to mean equal ity everybody equal to everybody else, socially, financially and every other way. Now as to equal religious, civil and political rights, I believe that is all right; but as to how all men could be made equal financially, without working a hardship on some and giving others more than their dus. is more than I can understand. To hold all property in common, who would attend to the distribution of it? Or would it be all put in one heap and let every fellow help himself when he got ready; in that case who would replenish the pile when the supply began to run short? How would you make the lazy fellow work? His wants would all be provided for as long as the supply lasted; he would have an equal share with everybody else. - I don't know what couldbe done with him unless you would inflict s6me sort of punishment on him; and then the question would arise, Would not that be an interference with his rights? Now if the millenium were al ready here, and men were well de veloped saints, instead of undeveloped devils, such a thing as common own ership might work all right. Now as to government ownership of and con trol of everything. I don't know about that either. I suppose it would be all right if the government was all right. But the people, the real government, make a mistake sometimes in the se lection, or election of their administra tors of government;' and a such a time as that, with all this increase of power the fellows in . charge might make wreck and ruin of things. Better not give the administration too mucn power, as things are now the people remain behind the administration, as the great source of power, the engine and flywheel of the machinery of gov ernment, holdine things even and steady. True it is that in the upper stories of the governmental structure there is a continuous circus perform -ancfi erninet on. a ereat deal of wire work, political acrobatics, and stren- uosity. But we can't neip tnat ior u while we will make the nest we can nf it. Tt is not as bad as it might be and it is entertaining, and amusing. Of course the imperialists are going to make all the wreck they can of "people's government" machinery. But let them get their play-time out. We. can send somebody un there to re pair things when they get through. It is going to cost us something going to cost us a great deal but that is all right; it ought to cost us; our fault in the first place; we had no business to Dut such a set of fellows In charge Let the plan of government as drawn by the forefathers alone. We can't improve upon it, smart as we think we are. The fault is not with the plan it is with us who haven't sense enough to build in accordance with the plan. SID FUKKE. Our Snobs The long suit of our snobs is wealth the hull blamed push is rich, Ther short suit is in intellect, moral ity an' sich. The Lord He kind o' evens up on most things here below; An' when He's somewhat scant o' brains He makes it up with dough. This suits the snobs, for what they lack in brains they never miss; An livin on what others makes is ther idee o' blisa. It gives them opportunity fer raisin' of the deuce, Which same they do a plenty, when our ' Snobs Break Loose. Sometimes they git divorces an' are married the same day. Sometimes they, marry dukes an' theu with fiddlers run away. Sometimes they, dodge ther taxes an' then turn an smite the hand That fed 'em: they won't live in sich 'orrid, vulgar land. Sometimes they have swell dinners at which little Egypts dance. Sometimes they lead a mob of titled , imbeciles in France. But whatsoe'er they do, with tawdry show' they're most profuse. The hull blamed country blushes when our Snobs Break v . Loose. J. A. EDGERTON. One of the Best. The ticket nominated at Grand Isl and by the populists and democrats is one of the best ever brought before the people of Nebraska and deserves the hearty support of every true reformer and anti-monopolist Wert L. Kirk, In People's News, Creighton. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES COURSES. Business, Shorthand, Typewriting, wuu vuuiwua XriUgiisa. .... TEACHERS. Men of successful business ei ,.ntri?J1an3 'ec-S"nid teachitlt ability. EQUIPMENTS, fiicellent. Every facility for r-ti1.J!ti4.'flTancemen,; of students., EXPENSES. Very ressonable. Catalogue and beautiful souvenir 'of Lincoln FREE Address. (Xitablished 184) ADVANTAGES. 1-Indirldual instruction wbea needed. : 2 Students permitted tn advance at rap idly as ability will allow. ' 8 Classes for those of limited at well at advanced education. t-rAssistance rendered in securlnc em- 5 All advantages of a Capital City. LINCOLN BUSINESS COLLEGE. LINCOLN. NEB. 30 Course Preparatory, Normal. Collejriate, Buinc, Shorthand, Telegraphy, etc. Strletly flret-elesa. JSc and upwards for board, room, and tuition 48 weeks. FREE tuition to one from each county. We pay vour car fsre up to 1 ico miles. Pall teres opens Ku. lo. Catalog Free. SEVEN GREAT H SCHOOLS j ChllUcothe Normal School I Chtlllootne Commercial Colltze Ccllllcotbe Shorthand College Chlllicotne Totegrapby College 1 nuncome ttm-Art college CbMlcothe School of orator' C&UUcothe Musical Conservatory. Last year's enrollment 729. $130 pays for 48 weeks' board, tuition, room rent, and use of text books. Fur FREE llluettxited Cotoloj addreas ALLEN MOORE, Pres., Box 21, Chillicothe, Mo 1 SHORTHAND Typewriting, Book-keeping. IS pro fessors, 1 ,400 students, J100.0C0 col lege building, cheap bond and revsonablo tuition. Graduates se cure good situations. Si-pace Illus trated Catalogue F.ee. Address D. l Muaaelman, Pres. OEM CITT BUSINESS COLLEGE. Qulncy, IUlnoL 1! 'IZI.izC 1622-94 Farnatn Street ' Business. Shorthand, TvpewrHlnir and English. Students who desire it are aaatsted to positions to ears board while attending, hend for catalogue. Wanted For U. S. Army. Able-bodied unmarried men between ages of 21 and 35, citizens ot United States, of good character and tem perate habits who can speak, read and write English.' ' For' information apply to Recruiting Officers, Postoffice Build ing, Lincoln, Neb., or 16th and Dodge sts,, Omaha, Neb. o MARBLE, GRANITE, SLATE 4 o o 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 Favorite MSafe: ; Schiller Jf Jp 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 High Grade Schiller is the result. This, like the medium5; 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 v are room 1120 O Street LINCOLN, NEBR. Matthews Piano Co. 2t Summer Excursions to Colorado, Utah and the Black Hills '.DATES' Si SSirHil rfrS Sit OF SALE- : ? .323 35-3 g-3 3-f , . : o . a- . June 22 to 24. , " " " July 1 to 13. ' ., Aug. 23 to 24. i Aug. M to 8ept. Id. $15.00 115.00 $15.00 $25.00 130.00 $13.50 11455 llVg Aug. 1 to 14.' $15.00 I15.H0 jiS.OU $25. UJ f&.UO $13.50 jsi4..5 i5.t5 June 1 to 21. June 25 to 30. " ' ' July 14 to 31. ' e Aug. ,15 to 22. . . . ... Aug. 25 to 29. . 3 Sept. 11 to 15. . $18.25 $18.85 $1.00 $30. 2S $32.00 $17.0C $13.15 $19.35 Bet urn limit on all above tickets, October 31, 1902. matter, eall at sjC CITY TICKET OFFICE J Cor. 10th and O Sts. Telephone 235. i. s t? For farther information and printed BURLINGTON DEPOT & 7th St., Bet. P & Q. $ Telephone 25. , n$ , ONE GALLON WINE FREE With .rerjr gIlon finest lO-jrearoldW jj,, ftft IP OLD TIMES WHISKEY " $ 1 00. 1 D 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 Years Old and absolutely pure. Send orders direct to Eagle Liquor & Bottling Co,, Western Distributers, tfoTx Kansas City, Mo' Best Lew Priced Hotel n the City. , RATES, $1-00 per day and up. Hotel Walton 1516 O St. I.IKCOI.X. KKB. if r fVT HARVESTERS. It cuts and 11 lr rj throws it in pile. One man V. and one horse euts equal to a corn binder. Price $12. Circulars free. NEW PROCESS MFQ. CO., Lincoln. Kansas. Earn a Home, i . If you want to earn a home, address Colorado Co-operatiye Co., Pinon, Montrose Co. Colo. Real Estate Agents. A Word to You. Do you want to know where the next frrea land boom will be, and where you can make plenty of money t If so, write the undersiraei for circular telling "Ail about it." J. F. MERRY, Ass't Gen'l Pass'r Aent, Illinois Central Railroad, Dubuqne, la. TEN YEARS TIME Six per cent on deferred payments. G ratine land from $1.51) . to $5.00 per acre, ranch. Dairy Farms liberal terms. Write E. N. McPHERRIN, Holyoke, Colo