The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, October 23, 1902, Page 7, Image 7

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    0
Oct. 23,1902
THE ITEBRAOZA IITDEFEI7DEI7T.
Sinco Lincoln's Timo,
more than 7,000,000 Jas. Bo$a Stiffened Gold Watch Cases
b&ve.beea sold. Many of the flrit one ere still giving
satisfactory Berrice. proving that the Jas. Boss Case wilt
cmtwear tbo guarantee of 25 years. These cases are recog
nized as tbo standard by all Jewelers, because tbey know
from personal observation that tbey will perform as guar
anteed and are tbo most serviceable of all watcb cases.
MS. IBttDSS
are made o f two layers of solid sold with a laysr
of stiffening metal between, all welded together
Into one solid sheet. The gold permits of beau
tiful ornamentation. The stiffening metal gives
strength. United they form tbe best watch case
It is possible to make, insist on Having a Jas.
Boss Case. You will know It by this trademark
' Send for Booklet
THE KEYSTONE WATCH CASE CO.. Philadelphia
V V
DRUG
ROY'S
STORE
104 North lOlh St.
We say "Iloy's" drug store as a
matter of fact It is EVERYBODY'S
drug store almost. Roy only con
ducts it, buys and keeps to sell Jtie
goods, and meet and force competition.
Our patrons do the rest. We want to
remind you of seasonable goods, viz:
Garden Seeds, Conditi - Powders, Lice
Killers, B. B. Poison, Kalsomine,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes, etc.
Wo make a specialty of all kinds of
Stock and Poultry Foods, etc. Don't
miss us.
Roys' 104 No I Oth
64c
"SPECIALS."
"Time is drawing near. We soon
must hike."
$1.00 Danderine (K. D. C). 64c
$1.00 Herpicide (Newbro's)......;64c
?1.00 Cook's Dandruff Tonic. ... ...64c
$1.00 Kinney Hair Tonic 64c
$1.00 Peruna (Genuine) 64c
$1.00 Dr. Mott's Nervine Pills 64c
$1.00 Dr. Milrs Remedies 64c
$1.00 Dr. Mott's Pennyroyal Pills.. 64c
$1.00 Dr. Pierce's Remedies 64c
$1.00 Cupidine (Vitalizer) 64c
$1.00 Hood's Sarsaparilla ..64c
$1.00 Lyon's Periodical Drops. ... ."64c
$1.00 Paine's Celery Compound. . .64c
, $1.00 Cramer's Kidney. Cure 64c
$1.00 Wine of Cardui 64c
$1.00 "Temptation Tonic" 64c
$1.00 Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets.. 64c
$.00 Hem-Roids (Pile Cure) 64c
$1.00 Pinkham Compound 64c
$1.00 Beef, Wine and Iron 64c
$1.00 Kilmer's Swamp Root 64c
$1.00 Oregon Kidney Tea 64c
$1.00 Scott's Emulsion 64c
$1.00 Swift's specific (S. S. S.) 64c
RIGGS'
Cut Rate Pharmacy
PILES
Fistula, Fissure, all Rectal
Diseases radically andper
manently cured in a few
w.ks wunout the knife, cutting, liga
ture or caustics, and without pain or
detention from business. Particulars
of our treatment and sample mailed
, free.
Mr. W. G. McDaniel, railway engi
neer, writes: Hermit Remedy Co.
Dear Sirs: I have doctored for bleed
ing and protruding piles for fifteen
: years, the trouble becoming worse as
time went on, until I was laid up sick
in bed not able to attend to my du
ties. My wife came to your office to
; get treatment, one Saturday, the f ol-
lowing Monday I was able to go to
work, and in thirty days I was com
pletely cured without the loss of an
hour's time. Several doctors told ms
that nothing but an operation would
relieve, and I think the cure in my
case, in so short a time. Is wonderful
indeed, and is most gratefully ac
knowledged. Very truly yours, W. G.
JVlcDaniel, 367 Milwaukee ave., Chi
ta;.o. We have hundreds of similar testl-
monials of cures in desperate cases
from grateful patients who had tried
many cure-alls, doctors treatment,
, end' different1 methods of operation
without relief.
Ninety 'per cent of the people we
treat come to us from one telling the
, other. You can have a trial sample
: mailed yfreo by writing us full partic
; vlars of your case. Address Hermit
, Remedy Co., Suite 738, Adams Ex
; press Building. Chicago, 111.
ITS
..iVJ
1
Educated and fastidious
drinkers always demand a
malt whiskey and. only tbe
best is good enough.
ILER'5 PURE rtALT
Is sold by leading dealers
and prescribed by physicians
as being the finest, purest
and most healthful of all malt
-whiskies. If you try it once
yrw writ use il niwavs.
Willow Springs.
DlstllUrj.
PARTISAN CUSSEONESS
Democrat Fought for the Union Whig
legislatures Carrlad Tirglnia and
Tannasss Iato tha Confederacy
In criticising Mr. Bryan's explana
tion of the last two panics this country
has witnessed, Bro. Wolfe in his Home
Record says:
"In applying the facts of history
Bryan will discover that the panic of
1873 was the result of the contrac
tion period as the result of the war to
wipe out the democratic slave-holding-rebellion.
"The democratic panic during Cleve
land's administration was really due
to the insufficient revenue to keep up
the gold reserve under free trade."
In his one column article Bro. Wolfe
butchered more history than Mr. Bry
an ever did in all his life, and as Mr.
Wolfe is an old editor and a thorough
student such glaring misstatements
can only be attributed to downright
partisan cussedness. The panic of 1873
was caused by the contraction of cur
rency, as he says, and the demonetiza
tion of silver, which he didn't say. The
point Mr. Bryan 'made was that we
have not always had the good times,
as claimed, under republican adminis
tration. As an inducement to Bro. Wolfe to
brush up on American history we wish
to state that 635,000 Breckenridge
bolting democrats, and half a million
Bell and Everett whigs formed the
nucleus of the rebel army that Vir
ginia and Tennessee were carried out
of the union by whig legislatures
that a million and a quarter of Doug
las democrats bore arms in defense of
the union that the 375,000 Brecken
ridge democrats in the north remained
at home and organized the copper
head brigade that they and their de
scendents are now dead, good-republicans,
or democratic reorganizers they
have been and are now shaping the
policy of the republican party that
the financial traitors of New York
during the war are the men who havo
dictated the financial policy of the
government ever since who endeavor,
and in part succeed, in doing the think
ing for every national banker in the
United States, including Bro. Wolfe.
Again, we wish to state that it was
the republican policy of reconstruction
and carpet-bag rule, which Hayes af
terwards repudiated and . abandoned,
that made the south line up solidly
democratic. In spite of the fact that
copperheads had made the democratic
party so detestably odious, the rascal
ity of republican leaders so disgusted
the country that in 1872 the democrats
won the lower house. In order to com
plete their subserviency to the Bank
of England and the financial traitors
of Wall street, the republicans re
venged their defeat in the short ses
sion of 1873 by demonetizing silver.
The money power has owned the re
publican party soul and body ever
since.
On the last panic our brother writes
with the flippant assurance of a young
amateur, instead of the care and cau
tion which we remember in early
years. Brother Wolfe is certainly not
ignorant of the fact that the Cleveland
panic occurred a year before any "free
trade" measure was passed. Mr. Cleve
land took up the republican policy
the destruction of silver money and re
tirement of greenbacks. The McKin
ley bill was in force when the panic
occurred, and remained in force for a
year thereafter.
During his first encumbency Mr.
Cleveland bought bonds to prevent the
treasury from being glutted in ex
cess of needs, and keeping money
hoarded in the . treasury, that was
needed in circulation. To obviate the
necessity of piling up money not need
ed, he recommended tariff reduction.
It caused his defeat When the re
publicans got back a billion-dollar con
gress destroyed the Cleveland argu
ment for tariff reduction. The McKin-
ley bill, raising the tariff from 42.70
per cent, which had glutted the treas
ury under an honest, economical dem
ocratic administration, to 48.67 per
cent, was ineffective. When Cleveland
returned in 1893 he found an empty
treasury, and the bonds already pre
pared to buy gold '.to replenish the
treasury. The only honest act that
Cleveland ever did after his second
inauguration was to boldly support
the republican ticket In 1896.
Bro. Wolfe says Bryan's 16 to 1 ar
gument was fallacious. The only 16
to 1 argument he used was in calling
attention, to the fact that republicans
had kept up the fallacy of coining the
seignorage and all the other silver
they could get their hands on. That
is certainly true. Making arguments
for Mr. Bryan which he didn't make,
is a much safer proposition behind
your bank counter, than making them
through the columns of the Home Rec
ord, Bro. Tom. Butler County Press.
Some very drastic measures are be
ing taken with the small trusts and
combinations who are attempting to
fleece the people in immitation of the
great trusts. At Richmond, Ind., the
dealers in soft coal ran -the-price up to
an exorbitant figure. .The city coun
cil, to . protect the poor, from extor
tion. anDointed a' committee to buy
coal and sell it for $2 a ton less than
the dealers wanted. When the trusts
get as big as e steel and sugar com
bination nothing short of the general
government can do anything with
them, and as the republican govern
ment &t Washington won't even try
to do a-nything, they are permitted to
extort whatever contributions they see
fit to take from the people. The
present attitude of the trusts and
tariff grafters, if persisted in, will re
sult in a complete reorganization of
this government, and some of them be
gin to realize that fact. The destruc
tion of competition will be followed
by public ownership.
The editor of The Independent re
quests several correspondents in the
eastern states to read the article en
titled . "Dollars and Debts," and take
it for an answer to the questions that
they have asked. It is true that the
value of all things, as expressed in
terms of money, cannot rise or fall,
for as the value of commodities go up,
the value of money ' must go down.
That is to say that the value of money
cannot rise and fall both at the same
time. When all values, both money
and commodities, are Included in the
one statement, there can be no rise or
fall. One correspondent says: "But
wealth does increase." In what terms
does he express that Increase? If
half the quantity of the money in the
world were destroyed, there would be
a very great decrease of wealth. All
the wealth that there was in the world
would remain, but its "value" as ex
pressed in terms of money, would
greatly decrease.
TEDDY'S SPEECHES
Republican Insults .Compared With the
Courtesy with "Which the Opposition
Treat the President
Just suppose, for the sake of con
trast, that President Roosevelt were
a democrat. In that event, can any
one imagine the ridicule which would
be heaped upon him by the republi
can press, which praises so highly his
speechifying travels? Notoriety-seek
er, sensationalist, mountebank such
are the terms, judging from past ex
amples, which tne republican newspa
pers would apply to our chief execu
tive if, as a democrat, he were mak
ing the same sort of a personal cam
paign as he is now doing.
But as he is a republican, and the
nominal head of the nation, the demo
cratic papers are refraining from com
menting too sarcastically on a tour
that reminds one almost irresistibly
of the travels of Don Quixote, setting
forth and tilting at windmills ; with
ludicrous results. Not but what there
are real robber barons enough to
challenge the bravery of the knight,
and he would seek them; but he evi
dently prefers to shun the real con
flict, refusing the lance offered by the
Sherman law, and availing himself of
the doubtful armor of future constitu
tional amendment. No wonder Rosin
ante kicks her heels and playfully dis
ports every time a windmill comes into
sight, thereby reminding the public of
nothing so much as a bucking broncho.
Of course, we all know that our cow
boy president has no fear of a bucking
broncho, also that he Is lightning on
(the draw, and a dead sure shot with
al. But we should think that his ex
perience as a historian would have
taught him of the futility of rapid-fire
speeches from the tail-end of an ex
press train.
However, it is to be presumed that
he feels that he cannot trust his sen
ators, his cabinet members, or the pro
visional orators of his party to ex
pound his views in public. This Is,
doubtless, because his views are so
peculiar to himself that no one save
Roosevelt, Ipse, can expound them. In
the meantime, the public is greatly edi
fied by the spectacle of Teddy the Ter
rible.
ANIDROSIS,
SKOWHEGAN, MAINE.
Wili mail true guide to Health by
luxurious Fuming and Bathing, and
V'ealth from pleasant Practice and
Outfit Sales, by men and women ev
erywhere. Postage 10 cents.
Piles Cured
With one box of Lenox Pile Cure for
Two Dollars or money refunded.
S prague Drug Co., Agents, Lincoln,
Neb.
MB
Ml
During Attacks Of
Heart Failure.
Would Appear To Be
Dead.
Dr. Miles' Heart Cure
Relieved and Cured.
T have no hesitation in saying that Dr.
Miles' Heart Cure is all that one can wish it
to be. I was troubled with heart.disease lor
fifteen years. I have tried many different
remedies but until I tried Dr. Miles' Heart
Cure I could fir.d no relief. I was subject to "
headaches and had tried your Pain Pills and
they were so effective I thought your Heart
Cure might help me. I would have attacks
at times so severe that I would be stone
blind for the time being. During these
spells I would be to all appearances dead.
I took the medicine strictly as directed and I
can truthfully say that I am completely cured.
I advise all that are troubled with heart dis
ease to take Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure
at once. I write this and rive my name to
my fellow sufferers." S. E. Purdy, Atkinson,
Nebraska.
- T first felt the effects of a weak heart in
the fall of 1896. I saw an advertisement in
the Sioux City paper in which a man stated
his symptoms which seemed to me to indicate
a trouble similar to mine. I had a soreness
in the chest at times, and in my shoulder, an
oppressive choking sensation in my throat
and suffered from weak and hungry spells.
I was truljr frightened at my condition and
Erocured six bottles of Dr. Miles' Heart Cure,
ince taking my first bottle I have never
been bothered by any of the old disagree
- able symptoms and now am well and con
sider my cure permanent." Lewis Anderson.
Kuhn, S. D.
All druggists sell and guarantee first bot
tie Dr. Miles Remedies. Send for free book,
on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address
Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart, Ind.
IRM9ATED LAUDS
Government Report Shows Successful Sys
tem of Irrigation From Storage Reser
oire In Colorado. Home-Seek-ersShonld
Investigate
In another cqlumn readers of The In
dependent win nnd an advertisement
of irrigated lands In the Cache la Pou
dre Valley near Ft. Collins, Colorado,
offered for sale by the Woods Invest
ment Co. These . lands are Irrigated
by a system of reservoirs as com
plete and excellent in their construc
tion as can be found anywhere In the
irrigated countries. The results ob
tained by settlers In that locality were
so excellent that the department of
agriculture sent a special engineer to
investigate the system and make re
port. His reports can be found in
the United States official report, the
Year Book of the department of agri
culture for 9101, beginning at page
415. This engineer in his report says:
'ReservoJrs are being built because
those now in operation are successful
and vrofitable. These have paid their
builders and are benefiting the com
munities they serve In a surprising
degree." In his official report he de
scribes the construction of the reser
voirs, their operation, when they are
filled, wiion the water is used, and the
benefits derived from . them. In de
scribing why the Cache la Poudre Val
ley reserve irs were constructed the
government engineer says:
""At cho outset the farmers of these
valleys irrigate directly from the riv
ers. "When their natural flow filled the
canals farmers had abundant harvest
When the rivers ran dry the farmers
saw their crops wither and perish.
But this latter was rarely the case at
first Wheat and hay were the lead- j
ing crors and as these were irrigated
while the mountain snows were melt
ing and the rivers were high, there
were few complaints of drouth. All
this was changed when wheat farming
gave way to diversified crops and al
falfa and potatoes became important
products. Then water for late irriga
tion became a paramount necessity
and the ratural flow, of these streams
failed o supply the demand. When
the snows on the mountains disap
peared the water in these streams
shrank; not slowly, but suddenly. The
Irrigator who quit work on Saturday
nl?ht with all the water he needed
often found when he attempted to
resume his labors Monday that his
ditch was empty. After July 15 the
early approprlators controlled both
rivers. There was not enough left for
later approprlators to keep alike the
shade trees and orchards and much
less to mature their crops or even
the more valuable products. Farm
ers, as they looked upon their parched
fields, thought regretfully of the wa
ter which had run to waste a few days
before and realized that their losses
we:e not due to a scanty supply, but
to its faulty distribution. To remedy
this the floods had to be held back un
til tbey were needed and farmers be
gan to provide for this.
In order to do this it was not nec
essary to explore the motfntains for
reservoir sites and build costly dams
across canyons. Nature had made
ready for this need ?vhen It should ap
pear by providing storage sites amidst
the fields where the w.ater was to be
used. These valley s like all the
country along the eastern base of the
Rocky Mountains, slppe away from the
mountains with a fall varying from
10 to 25 feet per mile. Scattered over
this incline are depressions which can
be filled from the canals which cross
the slope above them and be emptied
by means of cuts or tunnels on the
lower side. Some of these basins have
natural outlets which have to be
dammed. Where a reservoir outlet is
too low to Irrigate the lands of Its
owners, an exchange is made with the
holder of early appropriations, giving
the stored water for an equal volume
from the stream. The upper canals
fill the reservoirs and the lower ca
nals take the water from these reser
voirs in times of shortage, leaving the
water of the stream to the upper ca
nals. Such is a brief outline of the sys
tem. The large number of separate
reservoirs it Includes prevents describ
ing each one separately. Those se
lected are the most important"
Describing one of the many reser
voirs in the Cache la Poudre Valley
where the Woods Investment Com
pany lands are offered for sale, the
United States engineer says:
"This Cache la Poudre reservoir cov
ers 60 acres. Is 32 feet deep, and holds
8,034 acre-feet of water. It was filled
last winter between November and
June. The reservoir is owned by the
people who use the water, and who
have been incorporated as a company,
with 375 water rights. Thirty-five
rights belong to the Lake Canal com
pany stockholders. The rest are usea
in Cache la Poudre Canal No. 2. This
canal suDDlies water to 30,000 acres of
land. The reservoir water is used be
tween July 15 and September 30. with
out It this year there would have been
no potato crop and the third crop of
alfalfa would have been short From
the river alone only the gram crops
and two crops of alfalfa could have
been brought to maturity. The man
ager of the canal estimates that the
reservoir was worth this year to the
farmers under It $500,000.
The original cost of the reservoir
was 1105,000. It is valued at $200,000.
To operate and maintain it costs $1,
000 a year. It has been in operation
since 1892. In running the water out
of the reservoir a weir at the outlet
measures the total flow, and each
farmer has ' a measuring weir in his
own lateral. v
There are two embankmentsne 2,-
000 feet long and 16. feet high, the
other one-half mile long and 36 feet
high. Both are 16 feet wide at the
top, with slopes of 2 to 1 on the out
side and 3 to 1 on the Inside. The in
side slopes are covered with 2 feet of
gravel and then riprapped with stone
to at least 1 foot in thickness. The
outlet Is located at the deepest por
tion of the highest embankment In
building this bank a trench 1,000 feet
long and 6 feet deep was excavated
as a precautionary measure. , It was
made wide enough for a team to work
in, and filled with better material be
fore the bank was built above it
The outlet Is on marshy ground and
required considerable care in construc
tion. A trench was dug the entire
Doss This Dog Express
Delight or Pain?
Of course we do not expect you to
have a dog judge for you the good
and bad qualities 01 our talking m
chines.
We want you to hear the excellent
reproductions of the VICTOR m
. chine and records. We will send an
outfit to you, subject to return if
not satisfactory, if you wish.
Wholesale
and
Retail.
311-213
S15
S. llth St.
length of the outlet conduit; it was
190 feet long, 14 feet wide and 9 feet
deep, except at the apron and ap
proach, where it was made 20 feet
wide. Clean cobblestones were put
into the trench to a depth of 2 feet;
these were hammered down well with
mauls, then thoroughly slushed with
mortar, one part cement to four parts
sand. ' On this foundation rubble ma
sonry was built fVz feet thick, careful
ly laid in mortar, and slushed every
foot of height, so as to be sure every
joint was completely filled. After the
top had been slushed it formed the
floor of the outlet The opening is five
feet wide and five feet extreme height,
arched on top. The side walls are 24
feet thick, the arch 16 inches thick,
made of a lot of condemned sandstone
curbstones, which, being more or less
wedge-shaped, worked satisfactorily
Into an arch. The stones were used in
their original lengths of 10, 12 and 14
feet. This outlet has never shown
any signs of settlement nor given any
trouble."
We have published at length the re
port and description made by the offi
cial surveyors for the government in
order that readers of The Indepen
dent may know something definite as
to the proposition that is being made
to them by the Woods Investment Co.
If any are looking for a home we
would advise that they investigate this
opportunity before looking elsewhere.
The following letters from two farm
ers who have recently purchased lands
in this locality from the Woods In-
estment Co. show how well they are
pleased with" the location:
Emerald, Neb., Sept 23, 1902 Woods
Investment Co., Lincoln, Neb. Gen
tlemen: I am well satisfied with the
farm that I purchased through your
agency near Fort Collins, Colo. I per
sonally investigated the reservoir sys
tem and am satisfied that there is no
possible doubt about there being plen
ty of water to irrigate the lands you
are selling. I interviewed quite a num
ber of farmers In that section who
hold their land at from $100 to $150
per acre and do not want to sell at
that as they are perfectly satisfied and
don't know where they could invest
the same amount of money where
they would get as good results. I paid
$40 per acre for my eighty-acre farm
without any building improvements.
Other lands were offered me up to $K5
per acre according to the statement
that you made me before I went to see
the country. Yours very truly,
JOHN ELDGREDCiiS.
Palmyra. Neb., Oct. 3, 1902. Woods
Investment Co., Lincoln. Dear Sirs:
Yours of recent date asking how I
liked Fort Collins and the North Pou
dre country received. In reply will say
what I saw was a revelation to me.
The abundance of all kinds of farm
produce, hay, grain, . vegetables, fruit.
etc.. were prima facie evidence 01 a
rich, fertile country. "A land flowing
with milk and honey," one in which
one might delight to dwell.
It is not only a good home for man,
but for beast All kinds of stock
thrive there. It seems to be especially
adapted to sheep and cattle feeding
and abundant provision is made ior
feeding large numbers of them every
winter.
The extensive reservoirs of the
North Poudre Irrigation company with
their millions of feet of water capacity
are sufficient guarantee of abundant
water supply to those who are so for
tunate as to possess stock in that com
part. The Boxelder Valley in which
a large part of the land of this com
pany lies gives promise of being one
of the richest of the many rich spots
in Colorado. None can foretell the
limit of its possibilities. From pres
ent appearances the coloring of the
rlcture can hardly be too bright to
portray the brilliant future of this
premising new country.
I liked It well enough to secure a
piece of land and expect to move
thereon as soon as I can get away
freni here.
I believe that with fertile soil, sun
ny climate and plenty of water to ap
ply when needed abundant rewards
await the man who is willing to work.
Respectfully, W. R, STEVER,
FOUR PERSONALLY
CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS
FROM OMAHA
TO
CALIFORNIA
WITH CHOICE OF ROUTES.
These excursions leave Omaha ev-
The many requests for our Fall Catalogue has caused u
to order an extra five thousand copies. Readers of The In
dependent should fill out coupon below and mail us at
once.
ery Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and
Saturday at 4:25 p. m., in Pullman
louriht Sleeping Cars. The cars are
accompanied all the way by conductors
skilled in the service of excursion par
tits. The Union Pacific is the only
Jine from Omaha running four excur
sions to California every week.
These excursions can be joined at
any point en route.
For full Information call on or ad
dress, E. B. SLOSSON, Agent,
v Lincoln, Neb.
THOSE DELINQUENTS
Come fa and See u op Stairs Second
rioora Little Torn op, yet we Will
be Glad to See Ton
Editor Independent: I am irlad to
know that "we have moved." The
ideal "Liberty Building," through the
perfection of "modest self-denial" as it
came from The Independent brain, still
lacks a few comforts. Delinquent sub
scribers are the cause. I cannot but
ask myself: "How can we delinquents
have the heart to keep one penny back
from the extended hand of hearty good
fellowship offered by The Independent
when it says: "Come in and see us
upstairs second floor. A little torn
up, but will be glad to see you."
iflinquents! Hearts are surely not
or stone or ice! The cheerful
warmth of The Independent's forbear
ing grace is enough to melt them if
they were. FRANCIS KEYES.
Longmeadow, Mass.
f FRElFSTf
BOOK
PERFECT
MANHOOD
AND
HEALTH
This book 1tm valuable information
upon the
6ENIT0-URINARY and CHRONIC
DISEASES OF MEN.
If yon are interented in any of thete ab
ject ASK FOR IT. Free consultation.
Home Treatment.
D. L.Ramsdell, M, D., Specialist
1134 O Street, Lincoln. Neb.
Catarrh Cured
With one box of Lenox Catarrh Cure
for One Dollar or money refunded.
Sprague Drug Co., Agents, Lincoln,
Neb. r
HEADACHE
At afl erug atom. 2S Oeate 25m.
Patronize
HOME
INDUSTRY
BUY..
(BB)
... HARNESS
...COLLARS
....SADDLES
Ask your dealer for them. Mf 2d. by
BUCKSTAFF BROS. MFG. CO.
' LINCOIN', NEB.
ffall a Writer ffaebfons
... Catalogue "Mo. 12 . . .
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Cut This Out.
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Catalog No. 12 as per your offer in Neb. Independent.
fO It Pays to Trade In'
OMAHA.
The great convention of the Christian Church in Omaha
from October 16th to 23rd enables all to come to Omaha at;
half the usual cost. All the railroads are making one rate
for the round trip to Omaha and return from any point in
the United States.
Make Yourself at Horns at Haydan Bros.' when In Omaha.
Every accommodation free. Baggage checked free. We
will do everything possible to make your stay in Omaha at
any time as pleasant and profitable as possible. - This will be
a good chance to visit Omaha. Sales will be at their height
and the city at its best. Visit Hayden Bros.'
Thi Greatest Mail-order House in the West.
We fill mail orders promptly and properly. We can
save you time, freight and money on everything you eat,
wear or use. Write for price-lists and samples of any goods
you need: Haydens will duplicate or undersell the prices
quoted by any house in America, and being right at your
doors you make a wonderful saving in freight charges- We
are getting up a new Dry Goods catalogue and want you to
to have one. Write for it and it will be sent you as
soon as issued. It contains many special features that will
interest you. SEND IN YOUR MAIL ORDERS FOR.
ANY GOODS YOU NEED. Write for Clothing Catalogue,
,9
WHOLESALE SUPPLY HOUSE, OMAHA
i