The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, September 18, 1902, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    IF....
You were going to ship stock to Omaha and you
didn't know one commission firm from the other,
its a ten to one shot that you would inquire of some
neighbor that you knew, and if he told you of a
firm that had always dealt square you'd hunt them
up. When you want to buy anything, and you
don't know one store from another, its a good deal
the same way you ask somebody And if they tell
you of a store that has always dealt square you
will be apt to go there with confidence. Ask your
neighbor about us. Ak them if they ever hekrd
a kick on uThe Nebraska." Come and eee us on
the strength of what your neighbors say about us
and you'll soon be telling how well you got used.
If you can't come, send for our catalogue. We
issue two, one for men and one for women. Write
for either or both.
GT7 '0 . i&PUl
A A
W9i
dependent does not positively assert
that Wellman was that man, but af
firms that to its best recollection and
belief that he was. A man who would
write the falsehoods in the letter
which was printed in the Record-Herald,
September 9, would be very like
ly to do just such a thing.
Wellman is just the sort of a man to
charge Bryan with dishonesty and sub
terfuge, but the important thing about
this matter is that every plutocratic
daily will take up this statement and
make it a basis for editorial writing.
New assaults will be made upon Bry
an and that wing of the democracy
that he represents.
The republican daily papers are
filled from the beginning to the
end of every year with just such ma
licious falsehoods as are contained in
this letter of Wellman's.
THE ANSWER IS: "NO"
A gentleman who for thirty years
has been engaged exclusively in lite
rary work and has been successful, be
ing among the ten or fifteen who stand
at the top of the profession in New
York city, writes to the editor of The
Independent and invites him to come
to New York, where he says a money
making career surely awaits him. Sev
eral such invitations haVe been re
ceived during the last year and the
same assurances of success given. One
man said he would insure a circulation
to a paper of the character of The In
dependent of 100,000 within a year and
if at the end of that time it could be
sold for a check of five figures at any
time. This last writer says: "I have
carefully examined three or four edi
tions of The Independent which have
been sent to me by a friend and I say
that in style, force and pungent writ
ing, as well as the character of the
themes discussed, it is wholly unique
among newspapers. It is the only writ
ing that I ever saw that could make
the dull subject of political economy
interesting. Usually I would rather
attack an abstruse problem in algebra
than read a chapter on political econ
omy, but The Independent makes that
subject as Interesting as a problem
play or the latest and best novel. Come
east. Here is the place from which
to disseminate all kinds of literature.
No matter what its elegance or value
may be, it will not circulate from west
to east. Again I say, come east."
To invite the editor of The Inde
pendent to go east is useless. The
west is "his own, his native land." Its
fertile farms, its groves and streams
are all a part of his very nature, and
to them he clings. There is no telling
what he might do down there among
the Morgans, Baers and Rockefellers.
He probably would not be the same
man at all and the style of his writ
ing might so change that it would not
be any more interesting, with the writ
er surrounded by that environment,
than that of those who are there now.
Many thanks for the kind compli
ments, but the answer must be: "No."
BEET SUGAR TRUST
The Independent has never been de
ceived by the Elkins-Dietrich-Millard
1 rogram. That those men were deep
ly interested in the welfare of the
farmers and from purely patriotic mo
lives were fighting reciprocity with
Oil-a no man who had even a superfi
cial knowledge of them ever believed.
It is now announced that H. O. Have
in eyer and his friends have acquired
a controlling interest in no less than
fourteen plants engaged in the manu
facture of beet sugar. These plants
have a capacity of 9,000 tons of beets
a nay, as compared with a total con
sumption of 25,000 tons of beets a day
In the entire country. This presents
evidence of the strong foothold, so far
as the manufacture of beet sugar is
concerned, that has been obtained by
the American Sugar Refining com
pany. Eventually it is the intention
to combine all these plants Into a sin
gle company.
Beet sugar manufacturing is a part
ot the sugar trust and The Independent
has said so all the time, which is an
other demonstration of the fact that
the readers of this paper can rely on
its statements most implicitly.
MORE PLUTOCRATIC LIES
While the American plutocratic dail
ies are declaring that arbitration in
New Zealand is a failure, the London
Times, which is as mucn opposed to it
as the anthracite coal barons, prints
a letter from a New Zealand corre
spondent in which the writer says:
"It is fair to the authors of the
conciliation and arbitration act to
own that all the evil consequences
which its adversaries predicted
have not come to pass, and that
employers have not withdrawn
their capital In order to escape
, what it was said.woujd, scon be
come intolerable tyranny. We are
ready to admit thta this has been
in some degree owing to the good
sense of leaders of the trade unions
who moderated demands and
stopped wholly unreasonable ap
plications." Only let the plutocratic dailies unite
in saying anything and it seems that
the whole population will believe it,
populists and democrats as well as re
publicans, and the editorial statements
that New Zealand is on the verge of
revolt against arbitration Is a case ex
actly in point.
GROWN ARROGANT
Twenty-five years ago the railroad
officials had a wholesome fear of what
the people might do in the state in re
lation to railroads. This writer has
a distinct remembrance of one order
that was issued to train men on one of
the roads. They were directed to try
to get acquainted with the farmers
along the line, to show them the great
est respect, answer all questions po
litely, point out things that might be
of interest to them about the engines
and trains and in every way cultivate
their good will. Now no such orders
are given. Instead, the most arbitrary
rules are issued without any consid
eration for the convenience of the
farmers. Many of these rules have in
times past been adjudged illegal by
the courts, but the railroads don't care
a fig for that.
What has caused this great change
in the attitude of the railroads toward
the people? It is simply this: They
have learned that by getting control
of the machinery of the republican par
ty, the expenditure of a few thousand
dollars each year in cash for republi
can campaign funds and subsidizing a
few conscienceless scamps in each lit
tle town with passes, they can run
the state government to suit them
selves. Besides this, they have to fee a
host of lawyers, all of whom have
passes all over the United States. By
controlling the elections they control
the courts. It would be a pretty, tough
proposition in any part of the state
where the republicans rule for any
lawyer who was disposed to do jus
tice between the people and the rail
roads to attempt to be elected judge.
That accounts for the arrogance of the
railroads, their arbitrary rules, their
exorbitant rates. Their reliance is on
the partisan insanity of the people.
They know that there are thousands
of farmers in Nebraska who will vot
the republican ticket even if the pres
ent rates were doubled and the con
ductor should give each of them a kick
every time they got on or off a train.
They think that they have to "pro
te6t the infant industries" even if the
roads take half of what they produce,
and to do that they must 7ote the re
publican ticket.
A FAIR TO URAW TO
Governor Savage and Coal Baroa
Baer would make a pair upon which
any republican could raise the bet and
draw to with the perfect assurance of
winning. Baer says he Is the vice
gerent of God to whom the Almighty
has confided the property Interests of
the country and Savage says in reply
to the miners' demand for arbitra
tion: "Arbitration is simply a crutch
on which organized anarchy is
willing to lean for support after it
has found lawlessness of no avail,
and while it may contain some
merit, it is its subtle progeny and
is of kindred parentage."
Notwithstanding that the bosses de
clare that you are an anarchist and
have found lawlessness of no avail,
dear brother wage-worker, continue to
vote 'er straight or the country will
be ruined. There is not a particle of
doubt that Savage and Baer represent
the real feeling that republicans en
tertain towards wage-workers and
producers. The only difference be
tween them and some others is that
the others have sense enough to hold
their tongues.
A FAIR SAMPLE
In no state in the union where the
republicans hold power is there any
effort being made to check the trusts
or interfere with oppressions of the
corporations. Nebraska is a fair sam
ple of the rest. When a demand was
made to force the railroad corpora
tions to pay their just share of taxes,
the attorney general, as a representa
tive of the party and its policies, as
sembled around him all the leading
railroad corporation lawyers in the
state and he and they together fought
against the demand of the taxpay
ers, which was an equitable demand,
that all property should be taxed ac
cording to its salable value. Prout
and his associates in office in the state
house owe their positions to the solid
support of every railroad corporation
in the state. Every man in Nebraska
who has common sense knows that the
republican party always has the ac
tive support of every railroad official
in the state. He knows that they go
to the extent of sending an agent to
the state university every year and
offering bribes in the shape of a pass
to every student to go home who will
vote the republican ticket. He knows
that they will do that again this year
and that hundreds of passes will be
given to voters who are absent from
the state to come home and Vote. He
knows that the railroads selected the
two present United States senators. He
knows that every delegate to a repub
lican state convention is given a pass
to go and return. Most of them know
that the railroads have permanent
agents at every little town in the state
who work all the year round in the
interests of the republican party and
are paid for their work with rebates
and passes. All this is common knowl
edge possessed by every intelligent
man. There can be nothing else ex
pected from republican officials than
that they will work for the interest
of the railroads and that in every dis
pute between the roads and the people,
whether it is taxation or freight and
passenger rates, the officials will take
the side of the roads. He knows that
ten days before the last republican
state convention that a railroad attor
ney announced that the roads had
agreed on Mickey for governor and
that that Mickey was nominated. All
this is common knowledge, and then
comes Tim Sedgwick and announces
that the republican party has thrown
off corporation domination and re
fused to nominate the candidates that
the railroads wanted. The mullet heads
all answer to Tim's assertion: "Yep.
That's so."
The old plan of the money power
was to double debts by doubling the
purchasing power of money. The new
plan is to double capital by watering
stocks. The result will be the same in
both cases.
Mr. Hardy regards it "a little queer
how frost conquers the wind" and
comments on "how still and calm it
was during those frosty nights." Isn't
it barely possible that the wind con
qjerp the frost and that the stillness
an calmness of those nights gave the
frcct a chance?
The republican thieves in Thurston
county have been so active this year
that it has been necessary to send four
different inspectors from Washington
Uj investigate, watch and prosecute
them. Special Agent Ruby arrived
lart week to take the evidence in the
Clem Deaver land steal. It costs more
to watch these republicans than their
Fal&ries amount to and the watching
don't seem to do much good. How
would it do to try a few honest men
for a -while?
G.A. R. FOR WASHINGTON
The Nebraska official train will leave
Chicago via Wabash R. R. at 12 o'clock
noon October 5, passing Niagara Falls
next morning and arriving, Washing
ton 4 o'clock afternoon. Cheap rates,
long limit and stop-over allowed on
Wabash line. Be sure your ticket reads
from Chicago over the Wabash Route.
Your local agent can sell that way.
Other information address Harry E.
Moores. General Agent Passenger De
partment, Omaha, Neb.
Editorial Notes.
For the first time in forty years the
republicans failed to get a majority
in Vermont, and in Maine the demo
crats increased their representation in
the legislature by more than a dozen
and elected sheriffs and other officers
in localities where they never did be
fore. The president was right in or
dering his cabinet to stump the New
Er.sriand states for. there was danger
there.
The secretary of the anti-imperialist
league denounces the statements, in the
daily papers to the effect that "anti
imperialists will suspend agitation for
the present." He says the league is
just at present sending out 121,000
copies of Senator Hoar's speech, 25,
000 copies of a pamphlet written by
Sixto Lopez besides thousands of oth
er documents. He adds: "Our work is
limited only by our financial ability,
not by lack of zeal or interest in the
cause."
One of the most hopeful things that
The Independent has noticed in con
nection with the churches for a long
time is that a good many of them
have been taking up collections for
the striking miners. Such a collec
tion as that will have more religious
effect than the taking of half a dozen
to send missionaries to China to be
murdered by the boxers. A few more
such kindly acts towards wage-workers
would go far toward changing the
feeling that laboring people have been
manifesting toward the church.
The amount of water on which the
people of the United States are paying
interest cannot be accurately stated,
but it mounts up to thousands of mil
lions. The United States census re
ports that the value of all the plants
and the money used in the manufac
ture of steel in the whole country was
$590,530,484 and the steel trust is pay
ing interest and dividends on $1,400V
000,000, while outside of the trust there
are. many independent plants. That
seems even better than "making mon
ey dear and all other things cheap."
The declaration of the motorman on
the car that smashed into the presi
dent's carriage and killed the secret
service man Craig that he "had the
right of way," will bring that question
before the people. The truth is that
a street car company gets the right to
lay tracks on the streets, but as to the
ight of way it has no superiority over
a four-horse wagon, baby wagon or
footman. All these have rights of
way in the streets, but must not use
them to obstruct traffic. That is the
truth about the matter.
By constant hammering, open let
ters to secretary of the interior and
commissioner of Indian affairs and
much personal work, Congressman
Robinson seems to have awakened the
authorities to the real situation in re
gard to the syndicate stealing from
the Indians in his' district. His ef
fort has been to get such rules promul
gated as will give the farmer a chance
to purchase the lands that have come
on the market without paying a big
rake-off to the distinguished crowd of
republicans who planned a big rake-off.
When Major Gardener arrived at
San Francisco he was asked: "Had
you any idea that your report might
be used for political purposes," he re
plied with evident astonishment:
"Politics! Why I have never mixed
in politics of any' sort. My politics
consists of the Declaration of Indepen
dence and the golden rule." That an
swer settles the doom of Major Garde
ner. An army officer who will public
ly declare that he still believes in the
Declaration of Independence, the im
perialists will find means to squelch
pretty quick. He will go the Way of
Schley and Miles.
Recent reports from India are to the
effect that rains have been general
and there is a prospect of some relief
for the starving millions. Some mil
lions have died of starvation during
the last four years and the work oxen
and milk cows have almost become ex
tinct. That being the condition of
England's subject nation, it is casually
announced in a recent letter from
Delhi that $2,000,000 were spent in that
city to celebrate the coronation of
their alien king. Such is the results
of the rule of plutocracy. That is
what imperialism has done in all ages
past and what it does today.
When automobiles first appeared in
England years ago, parliament passed
a law that a man should always walk
in front of them waving a red flag and
they had to pay 900 per cent more on
the toll roads than "a coach and four."
That law was not repealed until 1896.
Parliament at that time was complete
ly dominated by the railroads and they
feared the competition of the steam
road wagons. Such laws killed the
business. It is probable that auto
mobiles would long since have been in
general use had it not been for the
effective opposition of the railroads.
The telegraph and district messen
ger companies should be prohibited by
law from employing girls as messen
gers. The messengers of these com
panies are sent to gambling hells,
bawdy houses and saloons or wherever
a message is directed or a messenger
ordered. It is bad enough for boys
PE-RU-NA
IS THE
FRSEN
3
So Says Mrs. Rose, of New York City,
And Tens of Thousands of Other Women.
i 1 i
1 mm
Mrs. Jennie Rose, 362 W. Twenty-Second Street, New York City, writes :
The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.:
Gentlemen: "Peruna is a blessing to suffering women, i suffered with
female trouble since I began menstruation, and every month I suffered two and
three days of untold agony, and had to arrange my work and duties so as to
be in bed every month for two days at least.
"My brother was cured of Bright' s Disease from the use of Peruna and so
determined to try it for my trouble.
'Imaglne my great Joy when I found that it relieved me quite a bit the first
month and I was entirely without pain during that period after having used
Peruna only four months.
"This is about two years ago and all during that time I have suffered no pain.
I can now come and go as 1 like and consider Peruna woman's best friend
and with that every suffering woman might know that she can find relief
through the use of this medicine. "
r, - - Truly yours, s:
AIRS. JENNIE ROSE.
Mrs. Ellen Thompson, Battle Towu,
Ky writes :
"When I wrote you for advice I vu3
very bad off. "When I received your
letter I commenced using Peruna and it
did just what you said it would. I hava
had a cough for about fifteen years and
your medicine has done me moro goxl
than anything I have ever used. I am
so thankful to you for your advice to
me." Mrs. Ellen Thompson.
Mrs. James Fighmey, Grape, Mich.,
writes :
"I have been troubled with pain be
fore and during my monthlies ever since
I was seventeen. I was also troubled
with other female weakness. I took
your treatment, and am now well, and
thank you for your kind advice." Mrs.
James Eighmey.
Mrs. John Meyers, Erhart, O., writft:
"I have been c sufferer from ohrouio
catarrh for years aud havo thereby lost
the sense of smell entirely. 1 had four
of the best physicians in this vicinity
without receiving any benefit whatever.
"Now I am once more a well woman.
I find Peruna to be the best medicine
in the world as it has done me more
good than my physician could hayo
done for me. My friends say I look
ten years younger. I tell them t?zt
Peruna did It. I can't thank you
enough for your free advice." -Mrs.
John Meyers.
Mrs. Ida Baker, Portsmouth, O.,
writes:
"I am glad to say that I am well. I
have taken Peruna and feci better than
I have for ten years ; have gained twelve
pounds and am still gaining. When I
wrote to you for advico I had given up
all hope of being -well again, and I feel
that it has saved my life." Mrs. Ida
Baker.
Alice Scott, of Franklin, Ky., in a let
ter to Dr. Hartman, says:
."For seven long years I had been a
constant sufferer from catarrh of the
pelvic organs which resulted iu dis
placement of -the uterus. I wroto you
telling you all my complaints from the
beginning to the present, made happy
and much encouraged every time by
your kind and fatherly letters of advice
and instruction. I am now a strong
woman weighing 148 pounds." Alice
Scott.
If you do not derive prompt and satis
factory results from the u?e of Peruna,
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case and he will
be pleased to give you his valuable ad
vice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio.
For over sixty years Mrs. Winslow's
Soothing Syrup has been used by
mothers for their children while teeth
ing. Are you disturbed at night and
broken of your rest by a sick child
suffering and crying with pain of Cut
ting Teeth? If so send at once and
get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow's Sooth
ing Syrup" for Children Teething. Its
value is incalculable. It will relieve
the poor little sufferer immediately.
Depend upon it, mothers, there is no
mistake about it. It cures diarrho.
regulates the stomach and bowels,
cures wind colic, softens the gums, re
duces inflammation, and gives tone
and energy to the whole system. "Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for chil
dren teething is pleasant to the taste
and is the prescription of one of the
oldest and best female physicians and
nurses in the United States, and is for
sale by all druggists throughout tbe
world. Price. 25 cents a bottle. Be
sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's
Soothing Syrup."
and ought to be made impossible for
girls to engage in such business. It is
an open door for entering on a street
life. The telegraph companies are
rich enough to pay boys a salary suf
ficient to keep the ranks full. But
capital has no soul and no morals.
The democratic party of Colorado in
spite of all that Senators Teller and
Patterson could do, refused to fuse
with the populist party and resolved
to take to the middle of the road.
That gives Wolcott a good chance to
get back into the United States senate
as well as the probable retirement of
Senator Teller. The thing was engi
neered by ex-Governor Thomas. Tho
mas was bent on getting into the
United States senate. When Patter
son was chosen two years ago and Tel
ler became the unanimous choice of
the populists anu democrats this year,
he preferred to wreck the party. Such
is politics.
It seems difficult for Mr. Hardy to
distinguish between child labor in fac
tories and having the children help do
work about the home. Undoubtedly
children should be taught to work, to
do something useful, to be a help to
their parents. But there is a world
of difierence between having a little
girl o- ten "do up the dishes" and help
mother sweep and dust, and having
her labor continuously for ten hours
watching and tending a piece of dan
gerou? machinery, with only a short
irn ei mission for lunch. The labor un
ions are right.
The business of manufacturing oleo
margarine for export amounts to sev
eral million dollars a year, the most
of it going to the South American
countries where it is impossible to ship
butter. The law demands that all
oleo for export must be marked "adul
terated" which absolutely prohibits ex
portation. So this great industry,
along with several other manufactur
ing businesses, are moving over into
Canada. This last republican con
cress, beinar erreat Anglophiles and not
j knowing how they could go directly
to the aid of the English; did the next
thing to it and passed a lot of laws
that greatly benefit Canada.
The plutocratic dalies are filled with
editorials declaring that the working
people of New Zealand have become
dissatisfied with their arbitration laws
and are demanding a repeal of them.
Let no one believe a word of it. There
is no evidence to sustain the declara
tion of these editors. It is likely that
an order has gone fortn from the trust
magnates of this country and partic-
. ularly from the anthracite coal barons
that such editorials shall be written
because of the general demand in the
east that the coal strike shall be arbi
trated. They have issued the order
so as to stop that demand and the
flunkey editors have instantly obeyed.
Tom Johnson may make a valiant
fight on state issues only, but if he
really desires to become a presidential
candidate he will some time have to
make an explicit statement concern
ing his views upon finance. Does he
believe the government should control
the volume of money and so regulate
it as to secure stable prices? Does he
think that it is necessary, for the gov
ernment to issue a bond, sell that bond
to a banker, then take -back the bond
and give to the banker the full amount
paid for it, allow the banker to col
lect interest on the bond and the mon
ey that the government has given him,
all for the purpose of getting into cir
culation the audltional amount of
money that we must have after all the
gold and silver . that is mined Is
coined?
The "four hundred" are a lot of
people who try to keep themselves
aloof from the rest of the people and
then style themselves "the best so
ciety." They adopted the name "smart
set" to sidetrack the other epithets
which were constantly applied, to
them. The "horsey girl," who fre
quents the race tracks, the owner of
the jeweled fingers that handle the
chips at Saratoga, the female admir
ers of the nastiest French plays and
still nastier French novels make up
for the most part the feminine portion
of it. As for the male side, it is com
posed of men who admire women of
that character. That is the sort of
"best society" that plutocracy has giv
en us and it is called "the four hun
dred." It has been remarked by more ob
servant men than one that reorganiza
tion on a revised basis of radicalism,
and reorganization on the old basis of
tariff for revenue only and not much
else, now contest for supremacy in the
democracy. The Ohio state democratic
convention, under the control of John
son, is apparently to lead in the one
movement, and the coming New York
state democratic convention, under the
control of Hill, is apparently to lead
in the ot r. As The Independent has
before said, it is for reorganization of
the democratic party and will watch
with eager interest the battle royal
now on between the old moss backs
and the new democracy which was
brought into existence by the genius
of Bryan.
One W. E. Fairbanks of Blooming-
Patronize
HOME
INDUSTRY
BUY..
(BB)
... HARNESS
....COLLARS
....SADDLES
Ask your dealer for them. Mfgd. by
BUCKSTAFF BROS. MFG. CO.
LINCOLN, NEB.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas
County. ss.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he
is the senior partner of the firm of F.
J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the
city of Toledo, county and state afore
said, and that said firm will pay the
sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS
for each and every case of Catarrh
that cannot be cured by the use of
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this 6th day of De
cember, A. D., 1886.
(Seal) A. W. GLEASON,
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally and acts directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists. 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
ton, Neb., has written the editor of
The Independent what he probably
supposed to Le a "scorching" letter
the usual mid-road harangue. He ac
cuses the editor of thinking more of
"political power" than of underlying
principles and then bitterly accuses
us of being one who "recommended.
Let the democrats swallow us boly
and bones and we will take what the
democrats are a mind to give us."
Strange reasoning, indeed. If we
should permit the democrats to swal
low us, that would not give us much
political power, would it? The Inde
pendent knows nothing about Mr.
Fairbanks, but his talk sounds much
like that of a man who had labored
hard to get an office and failed; or
else a man who has held office at the
hands of democrats and populists and
feels aggrieved because he can't get a
life-lease on the place.
It will pay you to read the advertise
ments and take advantage of the bar
gains offered.
LOW RATES TO CALIFORNIA AND
OREGON via the : : :
ROCK ISLAND SYSTEM.
During September and October the
Rock Island will sell tickets to the
principal points in California and Ore
gon at rate of $25.00. Only two and
one-half days from Lincoln to Los
Angeles via the Rock Island's new El
Paso line. For further Information
call on or address : : :
F. H. BARNES. C. P. A..
1045 O St., Lincoln, Neb.
I. H. Hatfield, Attorney
SHERIFF SALE
Notice is hereby given, that by virtue of an
order of sale issued by the Clerk of the Dis
trict Court of the Third Judicial District ot
Nebraska, within and for Lancaster County, in
an action wherein KllisT. Hartley ia plaintiff,
and Mary Fitzgerald, in her own right, and as
administratrix of the estate of John Fitzfrorald,
deceased, et al Defendants, I will, at 2 o'clock,
P. M., on the 30th day of September, A. D. lr,
at the east door or the Court Houe. in the city
of Lincoln. Lancaster County, Nebrafc a, o.f cr
for sal at public auction the following de
scribed Lands and Tenements, to-wit:
The north half of Lot Three (3) ia Block Two
(2) in Mnir's Addition to J. O. Young's East
Lincoln, Lot five (5) in Block Twentj-nine (29)
in Kinney's "O" Street Addition.
Lot Ten (10) of irregular tracts in the
Fouthwest Quarter (SWi of Section Twenty,
five (25) Township Tn (10) North of Range sf
(6) Ea?tof tin 6th P. M.. all in the city of Lin
coln, Lancaster Countv, Veraska.
Given under my hand this 27th day of Aacuit
A. D. 1932.
Z. 8. Branov,
Shri2,