The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, August 28, 1902, Page 2, Image 2

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THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT
Aug. 28, 1002
1 mm
.. . v , -
Twenty-five yean ago In acquainting Jewelers wltn th
Strength of tho Jas. Boss stiffened Gold Watch Cases,
an enterprising salesman used tbe method berosbown.
Jan. Boss Cases are still tha strongest cases made. As
good as solid gold in appearance. Better than gold In
jirarip j quality. Less than solid gold in coat. Ia a
BM. BdDSS
' there Is a layer of very hard composition between aa
Inside and outside layer of solid cold reducing tbe cost ,
- tf tbs case, and adding greatly to its strength.
BOSS Cases are guaranteed to wear for 2 years; are '
recognized as the standard, and sold such by all
Jewelers. Write us for a booklet. .' ;
The Keystone Wstch Case Compjnjr, Philadelphia.
.mm '
-
Wjfl Yoa Know Them M
By This Mark
The News' of ithe Week,
To acqufre any accurate knowledge
of Philippine affairs requires? search
lhg through' numerous daily papers,
both those published in the east and
v est. The recent speech of President
Roosevelt plying" such glowing ac
counts of 'the success attained in the
effort' of benevolent assimilation is
not at all borne out by what has been
published in various cablegrams. The
fact?' seem, to be that another and
costly campaign is about to begin in
the island of Mindanao against the
Moros. There has also been more fight
ing in Caviteprovnee In which sev
eral soldiers were killed. Jt does not
deceive the unprejudiced reader to call
these forces that are till in the field,
lad rones. C.avi.te.has always been the
hotted of "revolution against the Span
ish, and as jt is close to Manila, if
order cannot be maintained there and
civjl government instituted, what may
we expect of . the more distant pro
vinces. War, goes on as it has gone
o'n for. til Q. last century and there is
lio mcrp prospect, now of quiet civil
government than there has been in the
past., The last, medical report shows
the death of 72 soldiers in fifteen days,
the. diseases, being cholera, dysentery
and malaria. .
One of the most pathetic things of
all this cruel business is a statement
.? . T t 1 f m .
ituiu jiaoina,-wnois suunem a pris
oner on the island of Guam. In re
fusing to take the oath of allegiance
to the United States he said: "I can
not get over the idea-that others shall
legislate for-me and my people; and
In so doing govern us. It is better to
die In exile than to prostitute my con
science for at best I have but a few
years to live." Aguinaldo will not come
to this country and lecture as the im
perialist, papers have been declaring,
but will (go- back to his farm and cul
tivate that.- The shallowness and
ranl'ce of imperialist papers are ex
emplified by the Chicago Tribune
which calls these two men "counterfeit
WashingtonsJ' .-The position that both
of them have taken in regard to the
conquest of their country by a foreign
array is honorable, and would prob-
atly have been adopted by Washing
ton or- any- other patriot under the
tame circumstances. - "-
It is announced that General Bates
Trill be ordered back to the Philippines
as commander-in-chief of the islands.
This will be the sacrifice Of another
gallant officer. No officer of the United
States army ever has, or ever will ac
quire any honor In wars of conquest.
They go to the Philippines, come
back, if their lives are spared, with
impaired health: and do the duty that
they are ordered to do. but there are
no plaudits frOm the people and the
future historian; if he mentions their
bervices at all, will give them but a
line, while to De Wet, Delarey and
Botha,' who fought for liberty, pages
will be devoted.
Roosevelt has been making "stren
uous" efforts to reorganize the repub
lican party in the south. It has long
been known that what was called re
publicanism down, there was a close
corporation Into which no more were
allowed to enter than would fill the
federal offices. These men have
worked, so Roosevelt thinks, to pre
vent the election of any republicans
from the south to congress, for fear
that when elected the said represen
tatives would control the appoint
ments to 'office. Roosevelt has been
blowing the whole crowd up and tell
ing them that they must change their
tactics.. He; announces that he wants
"the t republican party in the south,
even thought.lt be in a minority, to be
actuated by unselfish; motives." When
Teddy gets a . republican politician,
either south .or north, to act'f rom "un
selfish motives" it will be'in another
country from this.
.--." ,. ..
The attempt of John W. Gates to
capture the Colorado Fuel and Iron
company and attach it to the .steel
trust seems to -have been frustrated.
If he had-succeeded it would in all
probability have gone the way of tho
Argo Starch company at Nebraska
City . 'Attorney General Smyth trie 1
to save that manufacturing concern to
Nebraska, but the mullet heads down
that way wouldn't have. It.
"Republican ' moral rottenness goes
from the very top to the bottom of
the whole organization. The Chicago
Inter-Ocean recently published the
statement that Shelby M. Culloro, the
present senator, abstracted from the
state - treasury $17,500 when he was
governor and - when presented ; with
the proof replied: "I never consid
ered I was a borrower of state treas
ury funds, but considered it a matter
in the hands of my personal friends.
When I ran for governor-1 speat a lot
of money and the first thing I knew I
was in over my, head. . Then it was
that" all this occurred." Cullom nver
refunded the money, '
a
The Joe .Parkerltes of Kansas arfc
determined to have j the road wde
enough so that they can walk in the
middleand be solitary and alone. It
Is said that seven of them held a state
convention down in Kansas the other
day and nominated . a state ticket.
The great dailies printed full reports
of the convention, but the reporters
all forgojtn rakenm JJj,mJr
delegates,' "or if 'they "did, the Associated-press
cut itout.
The first act; of. the . British after
securing, supremacy in South Africa
was to reduce wages In the mines from
$7.50 to "$8.75 per month, The con
sequence is -that not more than one
third of the mines are -being worked.
Instead of the "boom that was pre
dicted when; the British should get
control business Is paralyzed.
One of the Boer ministers in Pre
toria preached a sermon on the can
tinued nationality -of the ; Boers. To
define his position,'' he read the follow
ing, from Tennyson
;(; Sir, If a state submit
At qnce'she may be blotted out at
' .. once. '" '
And swallowed- in ' the conqueror's
; chronicle.
Whereas In wars of freedom -and de
fence ; ; : "--',
The glory and grief of battle won and
. lost . J ::; f
Solders a race together yea, though
. they, fail.
The names 'of those who fought and
7 fell are like 1 - '
A banke.dup.fire that flashes out again
From century to century, and at last
May Jead them on to victory I hope
' " so " ' '
Like phantoms of the gods. "" "
Those , lines seem also to describe
the feeling of the Filipinos.
One thousand Boers, including Gen
eral Cronje, his wife and his staff,'
sailed -from, the island of St. Helena
for South Africa last week.
Ey charging the citizens of this
country 40 per cent more for the same
goods than it sold them to Canadians
and the rest of the world, the steel
trust is able to announce that its net
earnings for the last three months
was $37,691,856,. .This is $11,327,856
more than for the same period last
year, or an increase of practically 43
per cent. At this rate the profits of
the combination for the entire year
would., be only, a trifle below $150,
000,000. The reason' why; the public is
forced ' to pay prices which give the
trust a surplus of over $3,000,000 a
week is easily discovered. The one
word "tariff" explains it all.
The people In Porto Rico and the
Philippines have about as much of the
freedom Of the press as they have in
Russia. Santiago Iglesias, sent to
Porto Rico by President Gompers of
the federation of labor, has been ar
rested for issuing, a pamphlet criticis
ing the insular authorities for their
attitude on the recent strike. Imper
ialism brooks no such thing as the
freedom of the press for it well com
prehends that it could not long en
dure where free speech and a free press
were allowed.
The inhumanity and cruelty in at
tempting to govern islands from
Washington which are scattered all
over the world, is manifest in the case
of Commander Schroder of the navy,
who is trying to govern the island of
Guam, which is outside of the consti
tution and only an "appurtenance" at
tached to this government by Justice
Brown. When Captain Leary was there
he paid attention to no law; he
adopted the old kingly statement: "I
am the state," and went ahead just
as it-suited him. .The navy depart
ment at last concluded that some of
his doings were "absurd," removed
him and sent Schroeder. A native was
found guilty of murder in a police
court and many thought that he was
not guilty at all, so an appeal was
made to Schroeder. Schroeder could
find nothing in the navy regulations
that constituted him a. superior court,
so he suspended sentence and sent the
case to the secretary of the navy. The
secretary of the navy turned it-over
to the attorney general; That office
is so behind in its business and Knox
has to spend so much of his time
fighting the trusts that it is said that
it may be years before he will reach
it. Meantime the native languishes
in prison and may die behind the bars
before the case is decided, just as he
would under the old Spanish regime.
What would Lincoln have said of gov
ernment of that sort?
Several states and cities are com
plaining about wildcat insurance com
panies. 1 In Chicago much insurance
has been taken and ; premiums paid
in concerns' under some corporate
name where the company has never
been -incorporated att all. It is just
plain stealing. ; -- - ?
'Republicans are getting a little more
candid. They' have heretofore made
platforms and disregarded them after
election, but before election they have
always called upon their candidates to
stand upon the platform. Now the
Chicago Tribune says: "Re-elect Sen
ator Spooner, even If 'he remain silent
as to the platform, for the single and
sufficient reason that he has done the
nation and the state great service." -
' It. Is announced that Palizzolo, the
No.' 1, or head chief of the Italian
Mafia, has been convicted of" murder
&nd sentenced to 30 years solitary con
finement. The Italians in ihis country
hafe watched the trial, Wnich lasted
tcnmonth3, with the mostf intense in
terest, as thousands of them have been
bounded clear across tbe ocean by
that murderous 'society.! Thev now
V
They will watch nervously the news
from Italy to see If the Mafia will be
able to rescue him from prison or in
any way alleviate his condition.
:3. J. Hill made a speech before the
farmers' congress the other day which
is rather amusing from an economic
view. He says he would not put a
straw in the way of the isthmian ca-nair-but
"instead -of spending $500,000,
000 there he thinks that $50,000,000
had better be spent on irrigation that
would , result in an Immense increase
of freight On his roads. He would
like to seQ $40,000,000 spent on the
Mississippi from New Orleans to St.
Louis, but not a cent above that noint.
because that,, would introduce water,
competition within the field of his
roads and he wants all that traffic
without- any competition from water
communications to the sea; Great is
Jim Hill, .
Frank Pi Wfllsh nf Vaneaa ntr nriin
"has just paid a visit to Cleveland says
tnat tne west will have none of Hill,
Cleveland or Whitney and that Tom
T 1 a 14 1 . - -. . . ...
jonnsuu win De tne next presidential
candidate or the democratic party.
He says that the whol wpst is . for
Johnson, Bryan Is for him, and that
tne east is at least not against him.
; The story, that was so widely pub
lished that Teddy in a competition
with the crack sharn shooters of the
Boer army put five shots from a re
volver In succession into one and the
same bullet hole at fifty yards, is be
lieved by every mullet head in the
land, yet every ordnance officer knows
that in the scientific tests where a re
volver is screwed into an absolutely
stationary vice, no ammunition ever
yet made would put five successive bul
lets front, a revolver into the same
hole at fifty yards. If the great plu
tocratic dallies should announce that
Teddy had roped the moon, hauled
it down and cut a slice off from it, ev
ery mullet head in the land would
religiously believe every word of the
story.
When the president visits Milwaukee
any ' one ' can dine with him at the
Pfister hotel by paying $12. Not many
wage-workers yill be there, as it would
take a whole week's wagtfs for tho
most of them to pay for that one meal.
But we suppose that most of them
will vote 'er straight any way. ! -.
" While the Spaniards have been im
porting coal from England to run
their locomotives over immense un
worked coal fields they have spent
their revenues trying to maintain au
thority over distant subject peoples.
The Spanish minister to this country
announces that the loss of colonies
has resulted in a great revival of busi
ness in his country and more pros
perity than it has known for centur
ies. Spain will now develop her own
resources and soon begin to export
coal instead of importing it.
A "gentleman writing to the eastern
papers from Louisiana says that every
democratic candidate for congress in
the south is advocating a tariff on lum
ber, wool, rice, sugar and cotton man
ufactures and that in the next demo
cratic platform there will be a
straight out plank for high tariffs.. A
tariff on lumber will' be especially in
sisted upon. Under the high tariffs on
that article the northern forests have
been denuded, the lumber region for
the future now lies in the southern
states, and the southerners will insist
on the same kind of stealing from the
consumers of lumber that the north
ern syndicates have so long enjoyed.
It therefore appears . that if there is
any effective resistance to exorbitant
tariffs, it must come from the states
of the northwest. '
The territory 'of. the United States
would make sixty nations as large as
England and Wales combined, or thirty-one
as large as Italy, or eighteen
as large as Spain. Take five of the
first class powers of Europe, namely.
Great Britain, Germany, Austria,
France and Italy and to those add
Spain, Portugal, Switzerland, Denmark
and Greece, weld them Into one empire
and you could lay It down In the
United States a first time, a second
time and a THIRD time and have room
to spare. Yet Whitelaw Reid and
other - snobs and sycophants go over
the sea to fawn and , worship at the
feet of the petty monarchg of the old
world, all of which fills the populist
with disgustT He knows that this Is
the greatest nation on earth and be
lieves that It should lead; and not
fawn. ...... : .. '.
The Pacific Cable.
(Continued from Page One.)
Manila to the Asiatic coast 630 miles.
While the depth of the Pacific is some
what greater than that at which any
cable has been laid, the difference be
tween its depth and the greatest depth
reached by cables ; in the Atlantic
would be very slight, the cable recently
laid from Haiti to the Windward isl
ands being In 18,000 feet of water."
The recent survey for a cable between
the Pacific coast and. Manila justifies
the belief that a route can be selected
in which ;the depth will not exceed
20,000 feet and may. not exceed 18,000
feet The recent survey made by the
bureau of equipment, navy depart
ment, under the direction of Rear Ad
miral R. B. Bradford; disclosed the
greatest ocean 'depths heretofore
known lying between Midway Island
and Guam and. being: 31,614 feet, or
but 66 feet short of six miles depth of
water. . . This depression, however,
which has beenrf named the "Nero
deep, -:. in honor of the vessel ; from
which the sounding was made, can be
avoided by a detour, and it is believed
that the necessary depth will not ex
ceed 20,000 feet and may not be more
than 18,000 feet.
FARM BARGAINS - Samples.
In the most beautiful part of tbe Republican River
Valley. Wheat 25 to 50 bushels per acre. Alfalfa 4
tons per acre. Cora will be 50 to 75 bushels per acre.
531-ncro highly improved alfalfa ranch, tl'l.'b per
acre. 160-acre highly Improved upland farm, $15.00
per acre. 440-acre upland ranch, $6.75 per acre. 320
acre partly Improved alfalfa ranch, $23.00 per acre.
Now is the time to buy, before prices are advanced.
Tell ine what you want.
JAMES HUNTER, Republican City, Neb.
Hardy's Column
It really looks as though the an
thracite mine owners were actually
stimulating the strike. Theyare wait
ing for the old last5 year's surplus to
be used, and the price permanently
advanced four or five dollars a ton,
then they will make peace and set the
men to work.
We have ttwo cities that are work
ing a reform for the common people.
They are Cleveland and San Fran
cisco. If we had a few more such
city governments the whole country
would be better.
When no railroad steel rails or pig
iron is imported ' and millions of
pounds are exported what is the need
and what does the government gain
from a high protective tariff on those
commodities? There can be no other
reason only to make the people of the
United States pay more than the peo
ple of Europe for the same goods.
If they would let us go to Europe
and buy American goods and bring
them back to America free it would be
much better. . .
Russia, Germany' Canada and nearly
all the governments on the face of the
earth are moving, to increase their
tariff on American goods, making it as
high as our tariff on their goods. Sure
that will be just and right. "Tit for
tat and spit for spat."
Was it Mickey who loaned money
and took a mortgage on a spotted cow
By The Farmer's Grocery Company, of Lincoln, the follow
ing combination orders, securely packed, delivered to any
railroad station in the United States upon receipt of amount
specified in each order. All goods warranted.
COMBINATION NO. 64E.
40 lbs. best granulated sugar.... $1 00
25 'bars laundry soap. 1 00
1 lb. best tea 50
2 lbs. best baking powder 50
4 lbs. choice evaporated peaches. 50
6 pkgs. best yeast cake. 25
1 large box best matches. ....... 25
1 lb. pure pepper 25
3 pkgs. best soda 25
1-2 lb. pure ginger. , ; . . . . 25
1-2 lb. pure mustard 25
$5 00
SPECIAL COMBINATION NO. 65E.
40 lbs. best fine granulated sugar. $1 00
2 lbs. Moca and Java coffee.... 50
3, pkgs. best soda , 25
4 lbs. fancy evap. peaches J50
4 lbs. choice raisins..... 60
4 lbs. choice Cal. prunes 50
2 lbs. best baking powder 50'
1 lb. pure pepper,,. 25
2 lbs. best tea , 1 00
All the above for......
.$5 00
SPECIAL COMBINATION NO 66.E.
1 3-gal keg choicest syrup.. ....$ 50
4 lbs Lion or Arbuckles coffee.. 50
10 lbs best fine granulated sugar. 50
1 lb best tea................... 50
2 lbs best baking powder........ 50
12 bars Fairbank's soap 50
4 lbs. choice apricots 50
5 lbs fancy Japan rice......;.... fiO
6 lbs choicest raisins 50
C lbs California prunes....'...... 50
' " win i i
All the above for. $5. 00
Freight prepaid.
SPECIAL COMBINATION NO. 67E.
2 doz. cans choice sweet corn...$l 00
1 doz. large cans tomatoes...... 1 00
1 doz. cans oysters 1 00
6 large cans table peaches 1 00
1 lb. best tea..........k...... 50
1 lb. pure pepper..., 25
1 lb. best baking powder 25
$5 00
Write for Big Harvest Price List now in preparation and out
by Sept. 25th, Many big bargains for you. - - "
The Farmers Grocery Company
99R-79R-9n-97-VM-9qR.9QR north iot strect.
fct-w -ww ..w- .uu m
NCOLN, NEBRASKA
(QNE GALLON WINE FREE
With .Tery g.ll0n ff1t11l0;"" W)'Both shlpMd
m n TIMFX WH XKFY " p"f"
in " '
cases for....
i S3, 1 5
DLD TIMES WnlSKET "
We make this unparalleled offer to introduce quickly. O.d 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 , ' ' j
M'Ur'W81!!!1'1! Western Djstrlbuters, KanjajJitL!
Special P
'jfcJStofcftktfwiwfl FALLMERCHANDISE MebwwiQ
rices Offered During State Fair Week
New Fall Goods are being displayed tn all our numerous depart
ments. We are showing all the new, and approved styles and mater
ials that have been offered in the markets this season. We are pre
pared for an immense business, and a larger and better selected as
sortment of the lines we carry will not be shown in the state. We cor
dially invite you to call and see our new lines.
See the new styles in Ladies' Cloaks, Suits, Silk and Wool waists
and street and walking skirts; the advanced styles in street and walk
ing hats; the new materials in silk and wool dress goods; the newest
novelties in dress trimmings; the correct styles in gents' furnishings.
See and price our ladies' and children's Shoes, Hosiery and Underwear;
our Table Linens, Gloves, Corsets, Notions, Art Goods, Jewelry, Books,
Stationery, School Supplies, China and Glassware, Kitchenware, etc.
... .-.........'
Don't fail to visit our store during Fair Week and take advantage
of the special prices offered and conveniences especially provided for
your ease and comfort including Ladies' Parlor, Lavatory, Writing ma
terials, etc.
k k irn'A9rA. 1 5 tin fit Wak Mention
This Paper
and black pig? There was nothing
wrong about it only the spots and the
black.
(The. labor unions don't like to have
boys and girls work any more than
ihey like to have criminals work in
our penitentiaries. In England a man
who has income enough to live with
out work is a "gentleman." Gentility
does not depend upon deportment in
that country. So if a man wo: ks who
Is able to live without work the labor
ing men brand him as "r.o gentle
man." If a wealthy mar. cackles his
own horse or 'shaves himself he is
branded as "no gentleman." itis far
better to cut off such people from
work than to cut off boys, girls and
prisoners.
3E
roe
avorite
- Colonel Bixby, the noted Nebraska
poet, attacked the writer of this col
umn quite persuasively last week
through the columns of the State
Journal. We thought it necessary to
return the compliment in a poetic
manner, so .
"We called a muse, but she refused
To twist us any rhyme;
We then called old Pegassus bold,
But away he ran, it would not scan,
And left us short all chime.
So we let all fancy go and resorted
to hard wood facts. The Colonel calls
us "back." We much rathe he had
called us forward or up. The ratchet
of our heart and brain fastens us to
the advancing train. We never have
left anything behind worth going back
to; there Is always something better
ahead. Our religious, moral and po
litical opinions have never changed.
We have been an enemy of slavery
from our earliest boyhood. Free soil,
free press and free speech have the
same ruling and in late years we have
added free government, for others as
well as for ourselves. We have seen
nothing very decisive in "daily drift"
fnvnrahif tn a free government in the
Philippines. We have also been an
enemy - of drunkenness, the same
length of time. That enmity has ruled
our own appetite, tongue, pen and bal
lot. We never have knowingly voted
for a saloon man. We voted against
the saloons last April. Did you vote
that way, Colonel?., Are you a mem
ber of the prohibition party? We nev
er heard you speak for the party. We
never saw any declarations in writing
to that effect. When the two big par
ties harmonized for slavery we did not
harmonize with either; so when they
harmonized for the millionaires we re
fused to harmonize. But four presi
dents in fifty-five years were elected
that we voted for. We have always
aimed to stand for justice and right,
regardless of policy or party. We
much rather be defeated on that line
than victorious for greed and wrong.
Now, if that Bryan party ' goes in
with Cleveland and Dave Hill or with
Pierpont Morgan and Hanna we will
go the other way.
Now, to return good for evil we in
vite Colonel Bixby to advance, not go
back. Stand up for equal Justice to
all and home government for every
people. Please rhyme against sub
sidies and. tariffs that protect a few
and makes the rest foot the bill. Run
through your poetical machine the
doctrine of submitting laws to a vote
of the people as we do constitutions.
Chime against letting the money men
meddle with our , money. There are
more reforms than one and it is the
kickers that lead every reform. Party,
right or wrong, does not sound well.
We should be as free to criticise and
upbraid our own party and its leaders
as any others. Do come- forward and
come up a little: II. W. HARDY.
Schiller
4
tW?4 1.11,
mm
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 medium grade, is the
bes.t yet produced for the money. The price is necessarily sorao
higher, but just as low in proportion to quality.
Write for description and pricey to the " ; -1IST
t IV P Ware room
Matthews Piano Co. sts
2Z
Real Estate Agents.
A Word to You.
Do you want to know where the next great
land boom will be, and where you can make
plenty of money t If so, write the undersigned
for circular telling "All about it."
J. F. MERRY, Ats't Gen'l Pasa'r Agent,
Illinois Central Railroad, lubuque, la.
Best Low Prlcod Hotel n the City.
RATES,
$1-00 per day and up.
Hotel Walton
1816 O St.
tJUCOLN. HUB.
To make eews pay, use hharples t'ream snarslri
Book"JJuiiinesa Dairying" &Cat.20 free W. Ctiisuir.l'
I (The squib from Daily Drift is as
follows:
From reading' Uncle Hardy's enter
taining column in The Independent we
judge he Is becoming weary of the
dry husks of fusionism and is about
ready to return to the fold which
sheltered him so long. Mr. Hardy is
a natural enemy of John Barleycorn.
He has lived so see many of the fair
est flowers of American manhood with
ered by the, blighting touch of the fell
destroyer, and it hurts him" to think
that the people will " longer submit to
the legalized traffic In something which
Is doing us up. It will be a pleasure
to see Mr. Hardy once more in the
ranks, and imtil he return the cause
will not flourish as It should in the
state of Nebraska. J
Come . back, , Uncle Hardy, through
Immm
h fail j
San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego
$25.00
' v - V
Via The Burlington.
Tickets on sale during September and October, 1902.
Call and get full information
aC at jC aS aC aC
CITY TICKET OFFICE v
Jt Cor. 10th and O Sts. J JJ
Jt Telephone 235. & ,
aC 1s sd V tfi 0
BURLINGTON DEPOT Jt
7th St., Bet. P & Q. J
j TeleDhone 2a. J
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MARBLE, GRANITE, SLATE
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
Sand for Illustrated booklet,
free. Mention this paper.
KIMBALL BROS.,
1500 O Street,
Lincoln, Neb.
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I. H. HaCW Attorney
die? :-- c a r :
Notice is hereby by, virtue of an
order of sale ieV3,I Dj" of the Dis.
Uiit Court of the Third Judieis l Di.triet of
Nebraika, within ""1,--fCounty. i
an action wherein ET. Hart,jr ia plaintiff,
2nd Mary FiUgraW I. to . b ri&ht, and a
administratrix 2El dn m Fitli
deceased, et MA?'1'. 2 o'clock..
of Lincoln. Lancaster County, Nebraska, offer
for sale at public auction the folJown de
scribed Lands and Tenements, to-wit:
The north half of LotTiiree (3) in Block Two
(2) In Mni's Addition to J. O. loan-a Last
Lincoln. Lot fire (5) in Block Twenty-nine
in Kinney's 'O Street Addition.
Lot Ten (10) of frresrolar tracts in the
Southwest Quarter (SW!) of tfeetipn Twenty
fiTe (25) Township Ten (W) .North i of Range Six
(6) East of th3 6th P. M.,all in the city of Lin-