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About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1902)
Aug. 7, 1902 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT CONGRESSMAN FITZPATRICK , Says Pe-ruTna is a Splendid Ca : tarrhai Tonic. ' ' Congressman T. Y. Fitzpatrlci. . Hon. T. Y Fitzpatrick, Congressman .from Kentucky, writes from the Na tional Hotel, Washington, D. C, as fol lows: "At the solicitation of a friend I used your Peruna ard can cheerfully recom mend your remedy to anyone suffering with catarrh or who needs a good tonic" T. Y. FITZPATRICK. r A Good Tonic. Ie-ru-na is a natural and efficient nerve tonic. 'It strengthens and re stores the activity of every nerve in the body.- - - Through" the use of Pe-rn-na the weakened or overworked nerves resume their natural strength and the blood vessels . begin at once to regulate the flow of blood according to nature's laws. Congestions immediately disappear. Catarrh Cured. All phases of catarrh, acute or chronic, are promptly and permanently cured. It is through its operation upon the nervous system' that Pe-ru-na has at tained such a world-wide reputation as a cure and reliable remedy for all phases of catarrh wherever located. , 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 free. Address Dr. Hartman, President of .The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. state government longer than July oJ the next biennium. 'There are many republicans who want to - make in vestments In state warrants (not paid 'for want of funds) and the state house gang are going to see to it that they get them. Vote 'er straight. The magazines and the dailies have . always had a great .deal to; say about tramps. But there is one kind of tramp, the most persistent beggar t: them .all, that , they never . mentiou. That Is the tramp corporation. Thoir , migrations exceed, ten to one, that of the ordinary tramp who goes north n the summer and south in the winter. A corporation organized by citizens of Minnesota under the laws of Delaware to operate a railroad in North Dakota, the stock of which shall be owned and its business controlled by another cor poration organized for the purpose by citizens of New York under the laws of New Jersey, is a tramp that can trayel to beat any box-car passenger that ever lived. These corporation tramps live off the public Just like the other kind. The McKinley bill with its extraor dinary high duties brought on a panic In less than three years after its en-, actraent. When the bill wa3 passed the country was in a state of prosper ity. The protection was increased un der the Wilson bill although the aver age duties were cut down about seven per cent; At tax: of 600 to 700 per cent was taken, off some things where a hundred pWcent was prohibitive, and, . more taxes were put on where It would increase protection. Then followed the Dingley bill with still higher duties. There would have been another pantc before now had there not been a tre- 'mendous increase in the currency. Ever since we have had tariffs a panic has come "about every ten or twelve 'years. Another one is looming up on the horizon. As a panic breeder, over stimulation of manufacturing by high protective duties beats any other plan, ever invented. - ' The republic of Venice had many " things in its history in common with the- history of the United States. It was founded by hard working pioneers. It elected its doge or chief magistrate by a vote of the people. It rapidly : rose to commercial power. It fostered the arts and education. The intelli gence' of Its people and their skill in manufacturing made the republic a world power. Then they went In for wars of conquest and expansion. Final ly the doge, Enrico Dandelo, cap tured Constantinople and proclaimed ther Byzantine empire. From that da? the republic began to decline until it became the prey of surrounding peo- pies -and disappeared at last as a na tion.' The United States has gone ' through with all the' glorious part of ' ' the history of Venice. Will it, with its wars of " conquest and abandon ment' of the principles that made it great, follow Venice to 'destruction? Child labor is an economic waste vent by civil and criminal laws Just as it has a right to punish a' man for burning a house' or destroying prop erty for any kind.'even "though he! be the owner of it. ' Child'labor destroys vitality, shortens life,5 and ' increases the dependent classes. The putting "of young children to labor for the little present profit there is in it, is' killing the goose that lays the golden egg. If there were any real statesmen in the south who desired "those states to be come permanently prosperous they would soon put' a stop to it. There is only one' compensation to the' eVll thing.. The poor white trash who, en slave their children by ' driving them to the cotton factories and then spend the wages they earn at the corner grd cery will soon be'eonie extinct r In that event the negroes "will take1 their places. " v 'T"--; . '. While the evils of. which complaint was made against .Tammany- still exist and . in some Instances -'have grevn worse under the Low-Platt administra tion there has been an improvement made in some quarters about which nothing was said during the campaign. Under Tammany the- policy.' shops numbered 1,200. Now they number a little less than 400. It is said that th 3 poor people of New York spent $7,560, 000 every year under Tammany guess ing what the drawings were going 'o be. This reform has been, secured lijt so much by the present city adminis tration, however, as by the active work of a private society. It would be in teresting to know how much th peo ple of Lincoln and Omaha spend on policy each year,. If . the truth were published it would show that it was very much larger in proportion to' the number of Inhabitants than it ever was in New York. Omaha under the Rose-water-Dennison administration is the widest open town for gambling in the whole country. The "pink tea" policy of the gov ernment in regard to naval' affairs presages the ruin of the navy. Sec retary Moody repeats the wail of; hie immediate predecessors that he can not get men to man the navy. He is short of both junior officers and eh listed men. As long as the present policy the Crowhinshield naval clique ide prevails there will be a short age of men. It is impossible to get self-respecting men to , enlist in . the navy under present conditions. Even a Jarge increase in pay would not In duce such men to submit.to the brutal discipline and the utter, hopelessness of promotion. It is an ) impossibility for an enlisted man in the navy to rise, from the ranks to the position i a commissioned officer, 'it was said of Napoleon's army that every private carried a marshal's baton in his knap sack. Napoleon never lacked for -recruits as long as recruits existed. That would be the case, in the navy under the same system. What is the use of going on building more "war ships when men cannot be found to man' those we Jiave? A miner writes a letter saying that the anthracite coal trust will not make as much out of the strike as " it ex pected to. Its position of "nothing io arbitrate" will not work as the barons thought it would. The object was t? create a great scarcity of anthracite coal and then run up the price because of scarcity. The refusal Of the bi tuminous miners to strike will knock out those calculations. Soft coal will be permanently substituted in many places for anthracite. The smoke consuming devices will enable the manufacturers to use soft coal with out objection and it will be much cheaper. One : day the barons will wake up to find that half of their cus tomers are gone and gone forever. Just at present, however, they are very happy. The average New York jJiily price for anthracite is $4.30, but it Is selling now at $7 and' $8. So far the working miners have had to pay their own expenses, but the public pays for the coal trust's side' of the strike and has put lots of money in the baroh' pockets' besides. ; ' fr . Wonder how those Otoe- county dem-r ocrats and populists feel now that the Corn Products company, has begun the work of dismantling the. Argo starch works ? Many of themc believed - At torney General Smyth was" little better than a traitor because he began an action to annul the sale of the Argo plant to the trust. He was simply at tacking a home industry, they asserted. He was a marplot a foe, to progress and to home institutions, they urged. But all things come to him that waits. Two short years have vindicated ; Mr. Smyth. The Argo plant, is going the way the Lincoln paper mill went. The Corn Products company do not want a starch factory so near the raw ma terial. The Argo plant is too near the cornfields of Nebraska. ,The railroads would get but little freight out of hauling- the corn to", the factory" and as Nebraska people ... use considerable , starch, the railroads would get but lit tle freight in distributing; the finished product. Haul ..the -corn clear across the continent," make., stanch of Jt; then haul the starch- backrthat is one, of tf Hardy's Column i; The higher courts of Illinois have decided that cities have a right to fix the price of gas. After this. the peo ple of Chicago will only pay 75 cents while the people of Lincoln pay $1.25. ' Chicago is putting in a new sewer system. They are making the open ings much larger, sinking it deeper and then are going to pump the flow over into the harbor and let the drain age canal carry it off. So the lake will be kept pure and healthy, The Rock Island Railroad company is building a fine depot. The old one has been torn down and the new one takes its place on Vanburen street. , Sugar In Cuba has dropped from 2 to 1 cent a pound since congress adjourned. The government and peo ple are reported to be merging into bankruptcy. , , , ' Another inch and 7 a half of rain Monday night. It is time Rainmaker Wright was notified to shut up shop; . The. big lions that guarded the steps of the art building .on the old '93 ex position ground have been moved down town and are made to guard the steps of the Chicago art building. . Lions are out of place in North America. A buffalo would represent the United States much better. The eagle is a fair . bird representation. England chose the lion, Russia the bear, jani mals that feed upon other animals), now let the United States choose tha buffalo, an animal that does not feed upon other animals, excepting the Philippines. , The Chicago oat corner was snubbed by an injunction. It is hard to tell la whose, interest the injunction was is sued. A certain grade of oats was sold for future delivery and the purchasers kept on buying at higher prices. The injunction said you must stop raising the price. There should be a severe law against corners. Actual supply and actual demand should rule the market. Under the present system of trade boards one milionaire can tear a market all to pieces. The honest dealer can see no signs of change. In ancient times, a few year3 ago, men almost always brought a morning paper to the breakfast table and would mix reading with eating. The women at the table would have to mix talk with each other with their eat ing. Now we are pleased to.. report that the women bring about as many papers to the breakfast table as, the men do. The present age demands that women must be as intelligent as men. - The present, state government has decided to override Governor' Diet rich's veto on the constitutional amendment that the last , legislature submitted to a vote of the people. IV seems to us it would be legal to print the ballots. For "the amendment- Yes. , Againstithe, amendment then let the voter who wants to vote against it scratch the word yes and write it opposite the other side against the amendment. The . high-colored republican papers criticise the action of the Iowa re publican state convention for men tioning the tariff question and thus standing up with McKinley in his last speech at Buffalo. McKinley is dead they say and Roosevelt will not dare to chime in with anything of the kind. It is a fact that there are many men who voted for McKinley who now think the tariff should be changed on many articles of import. Any change is branded as free trade. H. W. HARDY. Bryan Down East Bryan's recent speeches in the New England states are attracting more at tention from the aristocrats than any he has ever before delivered; Many are "forced" to speak in complimen tary terms of these addresses. New York and Washington papers have been commenting upon them. The Washington Star, aristocratic and re publican to the core, makes among others "the following remarks: "It is six years this month since the Chicago convention surrendered . to that fluent and fiery young man who faced it with a conqueror s air. Ho had prepared himself with care, and he delivered his speech as prepared. From that day he has practically done nothing but talk and write politics. His readiness is extraordinary. Wak ened out of a sound sleep, called from the festive board, interrupted In a spirited personal conversation, he takes position before a crowd and without a moment's hesitation begins a speech which elicits the heartiest applause. He repeats himself frequent ly, but never in a dull way. His vo cabulary is not only large, but he em ploys it to capital advantage and al ways so as to reach the common understanding." Gold Shipments The gold shipments provided. for at New York yesterday aggregate the large amount of about $3,700,000, and had a decidedly sobering influence on the soaring stock market. It is too early to say much about the probable extent of the movement, but one thlug is being made clearly evident. Inter; national trade and international cred it have passed the culminating point in our favor for the present, and if tile rising tide of merchandise import and other foreign obligations . against us can .be met without extensive gold shipments during this fiscal year we shall be lucky. Springfield Republi can. .-'.;,,; ' . , -.V ".... - .. Child Labor .A representative of the New York Dry Goods Economist, after an inves tigation of the child labor situation in the southern cotton mills, concludes that Elbert Hubbard overdrew his picture, to which public attention was recently directed. But it is is ad mitted that the employment of mere children is scandalously extensive and doubt about where the responsibility for it all lies. The manufacturer and mill owner some of them Massachti setts people- makeup the party of the first part" to this crime against a de cent and humane, civilization. Spring- PRESIDEHT R00SEVE1T COMING ARRANGEMENTS ARE BEING PER FECTED FOR A VISIT FROM , . , THE NATIONAL. EXECU- . . - TIVE .THIS FALL.. . c ALL CITIZENS OF THE WEST Anxiously Await His. Coming, and During . HlsJ.Visit Will Tender Him a Genuine Western , - , : : Ovation. President Roosevelt assured Sena tor Millard and" Congressman Mercer that he would visit Omaha on his fall excursion. " He is expected here early In October.' The Knights i of Ak-Sar-Ben are waiting for him to fix the ex act date of his visit before determining upon the fall festivities. He is com ing sure. . Wheir he comes the parade committee will " arrange his journey through the city to pass by the offlces of - ; " '" '. : ' THE BANKERS" RESERVE LIFE in the McCague Block, because the Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben recognize this institution as one of the great busi ness enterprises ! of the west. Presi dent Roosevelt will have the . oppor tunity of applying for a 20-payment life Gold Bond policy in this strenuous young insurance corporation. If he should take the necessary time to con sider its policies and its career, there is, no doubt but he will cheerfully embrace the opportunity offered. ROOSEVELT LOVES THE WEST, and believes In the potency of its in stitutions. He agrees that this magni ficent trans-Missouri region is no long er dependent upon -the money con gested east, for the safe investment of western surplus funds. Our people are rapidly accumulating fortunes. West ern fiduciary institutions can aid in husbanding them. These in turn will steady the movements of our commer cial 'fleets and effectually palliate .if not prevent panics.- ''" ; ; B. H. ROBISON; PRESIDENT, is an admirer' of ' the national chief executive. Heenjoys the president's virile style. He applies to the life in surance work entrusted to. him all the energy and experience of a quarter of a century in thisr field. He is aided by the best corps'Oflife underwriters as-; sociated under-:netife insurance lead-? er in Nebraska and this 'explains; why his company is enjoying a phenomenal growth. ( c-'- -- Five additional) --general and special agents wanted ijnmediately by - the : BANKERS' PRESERVE LIFE, ::.-: . Vlj OMAHA.' ;x:-i . lv. . .::.. . A Republican Jeffreys The following Us what the ' republic can federaljudgeV Jackson, said about organized labor :; i "' c f f "While I recognize the right of all laborers to combine for the purpose .of protecting all. their lawful rights, I do not recognize the right'of laborers to conspire together to compel employes who are not dissatisfied with -their work in , the mines to lay, down their picks and quit their work without a just or proper reason therefor, mere ly to gratify a professional set of graft ers, organizers and walking' delegates who roam all .over the country as agents for some combination, who are vampires that live and fatten on the honest labor of the-coal miners of the country and who are busybodies, cre ating dissatisfaction among a. class of people who are quiet, well disposed and who do not want to be disturbed by the unceasing agitation of this clas3 of people." Judge Jackson's assumptions are ut terly absurd, . for the labor agitator must be a product Of labor unrest and organization, and not a cause of it all. However, the labor agitator or. leader, merely . as such, is a person , acting within the law, and when the court enjoins him as such it usurps extra ordinary power.5 ; Why any .member of a labor union should ever vote the republican ticket is one of those, things which no pop can find out, ; ' ; : : $100 REWARD $100 The readers of this paper, will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that Is Catarrh.- Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only, positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. CatarrtTbe ing a constitutional disease; requires a constitutional treatment. " Hall's Catarrh Cure, is taken Internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de stroying the foundation of the dis-' ease, and giving the patient strength by building up the "Constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred1 Dollars for any case that it falls ta cure.1 Send for list of testimonials. . -. Address, : F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's 'Family Pills are the best. . Farm Bargains 160 acres Greeley ; county, Neb.; 80 acres cultivated, 40 more can be cul tivated, 40 acres rough pasture land fenced, well, windmill, barn for 6 head horses ; good 'soil. Price, $2,500. Will take a few young cattle at market price as part payment. 10 acres within corporate limits of good thriving town, a county seat. This Is a good one. . There is a good frame. house, barn, and other outbuild ings. All of the tract is in' orchard consisting of cherries, apples, peaches, apricots; pears, etc." This" orchard is a good bearer, and the place is a very desirable one. Write for particulars, then you will , come to see " It, then you will buy; it. Price $5,000. Large list ''of farm bargains free for the asking. '; -P f VAN DE CAR & BRADLEY, , Modern Actual s Traitors -.-ere .were toriea in 1776; . . . There are tories yet today; The same old breed with the same old - 2 ' tricks, -- . . Who talk in the same old way. r They said of the men with .Washings ton, "They are traitors to good Kin George."- They' sneered; and jeered ; with gibes and' fun . . v At the heroes of Valley Forge. They simply failed to understand This lesson of history, That the real traitors in every land' Are the traitors to Liberty.. , They were "men of wealth who saw , no- light . -; ; " a But that which comes from the Past; They. believed the doctrine thatjnight makes right; f - They knelt at the' shrine of s caste; They bowed to custom and church and The king was their, sovereign lord; And they only felt contempt and hat4 : For "the traitorous rebel -horde." They had failed to note on history's - , page . ...... That the men whom the world in dicts : A3 the real traitors in every age. Are the traitors to equal rights. The modern, tory is still the same As his prototype of old; Except that his god has another name, He kneels at the shrine of gold. The doctrine of human, liberty Has found no place in his plan; And measured by his geometry The dollar's above the man. Wealth unto him is the end sublime; And. he never has understood That the real traitors in every clime Are the traitors to brotherhood. There , are tories in every state and time; . . And today they seek to hide The glorious light of the truths sublime : , For which our fathers died; But the minds of men are filled with the dream Of a new democracy v And the future's hill tops are all . , agleam . . .. , ; . . With the light of a day( to be. To the higher freedom we'll march ' ; ahead ;" " ' And blazon; on every mind; ' That the real traitors we have to dread Are the traitors to humankind. J. A. Edgerton. " COURSES. Bnsinetf, Shorthand, Typewriting, ana, ummoD innsn. TEACHERS. Men 'of (tuccessfal business ex perience and recoimixed teaching ability. EQUIPMENTS. Excellont. ETery fscility for the rapid adTancement of studcints. EXPENSES. Very reasonable. Catalogue and beautiful sourenir cf Lincoln FE. Address. - All Over Again Editor Independent: Enclosed finrl draft for $3 to pay for block, of five sent some time ago.. It is very pleas ant to know that myfregard for The Independent Is understood, appreciated! and . reciprocated. -.-The Independent, is flghting.the abolition, battle of 1330-60' right over, again. Then we contended for the rights of the negrd to save the rights- of the white ' man. " Today to save the rights Df both. .The blows, of The Independlent are right?,frcm th.ca nfir bluster," rfo -bragging.' "l i3.A ; - r When - I "read ' it; memory Stakes vin back, to the Emancipator, edited ry Joshua Leavitt in 1840-48. My. com rades in the anti-slavery fight are all gone. s Not one left. When in 1876' I came to this state I felt that my -work was dohe; that what leisure L.had I could employ in such, studies as were pleasant to me. I little dreamed that tcday we should be engaged in a life and death struggle to preserve our own liberties and property. .Under such circumstances it is not strange that I take an interest in The Independent. To repeat: You are fighting the old battle over again. We shall, win. Not, .perhaps, until my body mingles with Mother Earth. Nev ertheless, I shall share In the victory. ELI AS S. GILBERT. Weeping Water, Neb. ' "R. J. Miller of Persia, , la., had a very nice car of medium weight ho?s on the South Omaha market August 1. which sold for $7.65, 15c above the next highest price paid. This is three times in succession that Mr. Miller has topped the market and he ex presses himself as especially weil pleased with his treatment at the hands of the. well-known firm of Nye & Buchanan Co., who . have always handled his shipments. . For Sale Good farm, 1 miles to station, Fill more county, good 8-room house, barn, granaries hog house, 130 acres under cultivation; .price till Augusts, 19ft2, $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. Ranches, 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. An Improved Sweet Potato House. The above house, in connection with' important details, will render it prac tical and easy to keep sweet potatoes in good condition until the new crop comes in, or if desirable, for- twelve months. The plan has been thorough ly tested. The house complete will cost but little more than the ordinary sweet potato house. - Inclose 50 cents to Bryan Tyson, Carthage, N. C, and receive, postpaid, a pamphlet containing necessary cuts and full instruction that will' enable any. person of ordinary skill to con struct the above house. You will please give name of paper. CANNING MACHINES Specially suited for homo, canners. Mil lions of cans are put up every season by - farmers with, these machines... YOU CAN DO IT and make money out of the sur r. plus crop. CIRCXXAK .FREE. y irjtr. FOJEBO, MBRIMAJf, MISS. . SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES Fall Term Opens September i. Catalog Frea 1 7f h & Docglas Sts ROHRBOUGHBROSM Proprietors. V'!f New classes In all DejJarttnehts." f- FALL TEHM-BeiHna Sept. istl COUKSK OF UTUiJ RffiTllar Business. Prettafalorv Combined. NormiL Civil Seri- Telepraphv, Shorthand, TybewrUing, Elocution, Oratory, Law, Physical Culture and Penmanship - WORK FOB iBOARI.--Any student will be civep a place to work for board while altendl ing the College. Write us about it. GENERAL INFORMATION The College was moved into- new quarters March tt. Many additional .facilities and equipments have been added. Over one thousand student en rolled last year. The Omaha School of Law is now connected with the College. Vc have a Col lege Band." a College Orchestra, a Literary Society,- a Lecture, Course, a Senes of Public Entertain ments, a Board of Trade and many other features not common to the ordinary Commercial schsol. We have accommodations for over six hundred pupils at onetime. Positions for graduate are always provided. It will pay you to attend the Omaha Commercial College this year. A CiU logue will be sent free to any address, " '' ROHRBOUGH BROS.; Proprietors. (Established 1S81) ADVANTAGES. 1-Indiridoal instruction wbea ..v needed. 2Students permitted to advance as tap idly as ability will allow. :" S Classes for those of limited as well as advanced education. . . ' 4 Assistance rendered in securing em ployment. 5 All advantages of a Capital City. LINCOLN BUSINESS COLLEGE, LINCOLN, NEB. :0 Courses Preparatory, Normal, Collegiate, Bunines. Shorthand, Telegraphy, etc. Strictly tlrat-class. J-iosnd upwards for tnjard, room, and tuition 48 weeks. FREK tuition to one from each county. We pay your car fare uj to 1 100 miles. Fall term opens Aug. lo. Catalog Free. CClCII ChlHicothe Kormal School " " ' ' 1 1 ""i . m,m oLlLn I ChtlUcothe Commercial College .-V M -CWsTl l$f "' I nnriT ChlHicothe Shorthand College .w-iiV 5' lM . v ' -1 UntAI V.Chilllcothe Telegraphy College Vftl Ullm C( tVv ' & 1 1 Rl I ' 1 nniinrtl O ChlHicothe Pen-Art College VwIAlVVr) 'UVV. I NliHlJIll N V Chlllloothe School of oratory --vi IV-A- AWhaK.i 1 uviiwvbv J chllllcothe Musical Conservatory. (' r2 Tcjl"1 'if Last year's enrollment 729. $130 pays for 48 f M iinit,-, , T . 1 weeks'board.tuition, room rent, and use of text Faraaui Htreet books. For FREE lUvstrated Catalog address Eusiness. Shorthand, Typewriting ami Eniuh. At I FN MflftPF " Pre Rni' 7t Chill irothe Mo Students who desire It are assisted to notations to earn ALLKIN AVUUKC, fret., POX Zl. V.nilllCOtrCt mo board while attending. Send for catalogue. ' -jfelQHIinTIIAtlll Wanted For.U. S. Army. T UliVll 1 1U14I.U Able-boaied tinmarried men between tM ) ; 7tnk; ages of, 2Lnd 35. citizens of United . lege building, cheap bord and States, of good character and tem- J reonbie tuition. Crsduate. e- perate habits who can speak, read and mffl SKrTdSeS write English. For Information apply wfomM D HatMimtn, pe. to Recruiting Officers, Postoface Duild Mw'ir 6CM CITY BUSINESS COLLEGE, lng, Lincoln, Neb., or 16th and Dodge I fv-v j Quiacy, . - . xuiaois. Bts., Omaha, Neb. -Schiller v f " iiJ- I The Schiller PiaSioThas always been the favorite with people wishing a really.vgo'(pi"Piahb at i. 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 medium grade, is the best yet produced for the money. The price is necessarily some higher, but just as low. in proportion to quality. 1 Write for description and prices to the Matthews Piano Co. Ljil P Summer Excursions to Colorado, Imud . 1 . . r dSBHBBMBMaaaaBaHBrki Utah and the Black Hills. o o n a i- ta o o -dates -r, r 5 gfi r sfi f r n ii OF SALE- : . B3B ?2fff- -3 g V-v- - j..,?.'.-...-i- ' :;' t IZ i 5.:,. ig,'- : " - :-.. : ; o ; . o . . . . June 22 to 24. ' .' i i 1 .Aug. 23 to 24. I Aug. 30 to Sept. 10. $15.00 $15.00 $15.00 $25.00 $30.00 $13.50'$14.55tli.fi5 - Ang. lto!4. $15.00 $15 .tO $15.00 $25. ()U f-OO $13.50 $U.V 15.i5 Janlto21.- . . v. Jan 25 to .10. ; - Jalr 14 to 31. . i . . Aug. 15 to 22. 1 . , Aug. 25 to 29. , . . . . . Sept. U so 15. $18.25 $18.85 $19.00 $30.25 $32.00 $17.00 118.15 119.35 ' Return limit on all aboTo tiokiits, October lt 1902. For farther information and printed - matter, call nt ; i ; , s5 fC fjS tjC fjt at , ajC fjC at at aS ajt aC a aC (6 aC a5 alC jt CITY TICKET OFFICE $ -jt BURLINGTON DEPOT J Jt Cdr. ' 10th and O Sts. - & & & . jl - .- 7th St.. Bet. P & Q. o Y& - Telephone 235.' 0 - J . ; Telephone 25. ; jt V fjC fC . v tjC Jt aC at st at ONE GALLON WIWE FREE With every gallon finest 10-j ear-old ) h in " OLD TIMES WHISKEY " i p" ' 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. 4 Send orders direct to Eagle Liquor & Bottling Co., Western Distributers SU- Vnmn fi; 17. , tiou a rxaiiiai our, r.'.u Bst Low Prlcd Hot. I n tho City.' RATES,' : $100 pr day and up. Hotel 1016 o St. Walton MKCOLN, NEB. - - Earn a Home. If you want io earn ft home, addross Colorado Go-operative Co., Pinon, Montroso Co. Colo. .. - When writing to advertisers do not fail -j to. fnention -The Independent. If our, advertlserjsjdon't. treat ; you right Real Estate Agents. A Word to You. Do jou want to know where the next rrea land boom will be, and where jon can make plenty of money t If o, write the undersigned for circular telling "All about it." J. F. MERRY, Ass't Oen'l Pas'r Arent, Illinoii Central Railroad, Dubuque, la. TEN YEARS TIME Six per cent on deferred payments. Grazinx land from $1.50 to $5.00 per acre. Raiicl.. Dairy Farma liberal term. Write E. N, McPHERRIN, Holyoke, Col o