THE AMERICAN 5 The lata demo-pop convention held in Omaha, Neb., was remarkable for two things. One, wm a congressman standing on the floor and telling the men whom he had halter on that they were there under Instruction, that they did not dare disoiey them, and that If they wanted to see him nomi nated and wanted him to run on a 16 to 1 platform they mutt elect hi man Smith 'an chairman. The other was the number of 'niickUs'' who had seats as delegates. The delegations from Douglas and Lancaster counties were alive with them, while every coun'y posseting a town of any Importance contributed Its quota of Romanist And they were all for Bryan. This was shown to be true, with nnecxeep tion, In the vote for governor. Cuming county, which has a argo Roman Catholic vote, held fast to Democratic principles and voted against nominat ing Hotcomb. On the second page of tins issue will be found the full text of the declaration of principles, the platform and the resolutions adopted by the Independent American citizens' party, September 12. A careful perusal of the same will re pay any American citizen, and convince him that Chicago Americans have re turned to first principles. May the new party live and prosper. PICS IX. in 1804 said: "The Roman pontiff cannot, and ought not, to recon cile himself to or agree with progress, liberalism and modern civilization." We have a few McKinley souvenir badges left, which his admirers can have at 10c and 25c each. Moving for Majors. The business men of Omaha have de cided to take an active part in politics, and to move for the election of Hon. Thomas J. Majors as governor. To that end a meeting was held in the Paxton block last night, at which the following well-known business men were present. H. Kountze, banker; W. A. Paxton, capitalist; II. W. Yates, banker; C. N. Dletz, wholesale lumber; Thos. Kil patrlck, wholesale dry goods; Lorenzo Fowler, banker; J. A. McShane, capi talist; W. V. Morse, wholesale boots and shoes; F. Murphy, banker; John Brady, wholesale groceries; Charles A, Coe, wholesale boots and shoes; F. Col' Detzer. wholesale and retail dealer in lumber; L. Drake, banker; Z. T. Lind' eey, wholesale rubber goods; Dan Far- rell, wholesale syrup; P. Garneau President American Biscuit Co.; M Barlow, banker; C. S. Montgomery, at torney; H. E. Palmer, Insurance; W, A. L. Gibbon, wholesale hats; J. D. Sheean, attorney; R. S. Wilcox, Mgr. B. K. & Co.; C. J. Karbach, manufao turer of carriages; Wm. McHugh, at torney; A. L. Nleld, and many others. The following resolution was unanl mously adopted: That an organization of business men be perfected for the purpose of moving public opinion In opposition to tne rop- ulist state ticket. The name of the organization is to be The Business Men's Association of Nebraska, and will be manned by the following officers: President, L. Drake; Secretary, V. B. Caldwell; Treasurer, L. D. Fowler. The executive committee is composed of the following gentlemen: W. A, Paxton, J. A. McShane, R. S. Wilcox, H. E. Palmer, F. Colpetzer, W. D. Mo Hugh, Dan Farrell, Jr. The object of the association is to or ganize the business men of Nebraska for political action for the purpose of averting the election of a Populist gov' ernor this fall, as they believe the eleo tion would be a calamity to the business interests of the state. Thank You! This office has been receiving for several weeks a paper published at Omaha called The American, and it seems to be the official organ of the A P. A. It wades into the Catholics like a nigger into a ripe watermelon; and it occasionally hits the populists a swipe, while it is a particular friend of T. J Majors and the entire Republican ticket. We rather like its spicy, clear' cut American ideas, but it seems to be rather dictatorial and inclined to the sensational. However, we shall con tinue to read it with a view to gain ing "full information." Western (Neb. Ware. The time is not far away when the Roman Catholic church of the republic of the United States, at the order of the pope, will refuse to pay their school tax, and will send bullets to the breasts of government agents rather than pay it. It will come quickly as the click of a trigger, and will be obeyed, of course, as coining from God Almighty Himself, Mgr. Cupel. At the Baltimore Lay convention in 1889, the "late lamented" Bishop O'Con' nor, whom John Rush welcomed to Omaha a few years ago, said: "Relig' ious liberty is merely endured until the opposite can be carried into effect with' out peril to the Roman Catholic Church." "Foxe.s Book of Martyrs" should be in everybody's library. You can get a cloth-bound volume oi nearly 1,100 quarto pages for 82.50 It is worth double this price to any student of his tory. Send your orders to American Publishing Company. rooiruisrs of the jem its. Their Mlghtiug lnfluenc Concern the Welfare tf tlie Mliule Country. Washington, I) C, Oct. 2, A good deal is said of late about the footprint of the J i suits. The object of this letter is to show th ir footprints In America a eel forth in the records of hisdirtriet, relating to charters. For one of the most curious facts in the his tory of the United States is, that fie Society il Jef us, so called, has obtained more chart rs fur colleges under the laws of the district of Columbia than all ottn r societies combined; there be ll g twenty-one Jesuit colleges so char tered. These are situated in variois states, as well as in the district, a fact which indicates that from the begin ning, the astute Jesuit understood very well that there was less danger of the confiscation of projK-r'y held under a charter trom the federal government han there might he if such property were held under state d arters only. The following table shows the name, location and date of organization, to gether with the number of instructors, and number of students of each, las; year: H.wton CollPiie. Boston Canislus College, liulTalo Catholic I nlverslty. Washiugtou. IK-troit College, Uetrolt. Georgetown University, Washington. oon.aga College, wasiiingiou. I. a Salle College. Philadelphia.... Loyola College. Italllinore Manhattan College, New fork Mount Angel College, Mount Angel, Oregon Mount Saint Mary's College, Enmiltstiiinrh, Md. Notre Hatne University, South Bend, Ind Setou Mall College, South Orange, N. J Saint Benedict's College, Atchison, Kan Saint Charles College, Overhrook. I'a Saint Frauds College, St. Frauds, Wis Saint Francis Xavler. New York Saint John's College, Washington Saint John's College, Brighton, Mass Saint Joseph Theological Seminary, Troy, N. Y. alnt l.ouis iimversuy, r-t. i.ouis. mo Hint Mary's Seminary, Baltimore aint Xaviers College, Cincinnati, O This table shows pretty well the ideas of the Jesuits in reference to the strategic points of the republic. It shows that there are three universities and twenty colleges of this order char tered under the laws of the district of Columbia, of which two universities and two colleges are located here, while the other nineteen Institutions are scattered throughout the north and west not a single one being placed in the south. It shows that the first Jes uit establishment chartered under the laws of this district was Georgetown University in 178S, and that the last was the Catholic University of America in 1889 both located in Washington. Of course this does not include every Jesuit college in the country, but it affords a very fair idea of the distribu tion of their missionary forces, and is therefore extremely important to the student of current history. It em phasizes the fact that our national capi tal is their most important stronghold, and that here they overshadow and dwarf all other educational and mis sionary powers. The moral and politi cal atmosphere of this city must there fore be modified permanently by their influence. Now, the decree expelling members of this order from France, ar raigns them in the following words: "Their dogmas break all bounds of civil society, authorize theft, perjury, falsehood, the most inordinate and criminal impiety, and generally all passions and wickedness; teaching the nefarious principle of secret compensa tion, equivocation and mental reserva tion; extirpating every sentiment of humanity in their sanction of homicide and parricide; subverting the authority of government, and, in fine, overthrow ing the practice and foundation of re ligion, and substituting in their stead all sorts of superstition, with magic, blasphemy, and adultery." This sounds like a very severe criti cism. But the provincial letters of Blaize Pascal supply ample proofs of the truthfulness of every count in this terrible indictment, and the facts that crop out here in the courts, now and then, show that the influence of Jesuiti cal principles on our public men and women is of the most baneful character. That their effect in shaping the views of statesmen is extremely unwhole some, was shown conspicuously by the remarkable statement of John J. In galls, In which he openly avowed that, in his opinion, the decalogue and the golden rule had no place in politics. This blighting influence concerns the welfare of the whole country, for there is not a town, a hamlet, or a household in the United States to which it does not reach in one form of legislation or another. No citizens, of whatever section, creed or party, can escape it. And, in the language of Martin Luther, I tell you it is the last, worst curse of the earth, the very worst that all the devils with their might can generate. Next to the district of Columbia in importance, as judged by this criterion, is new York state, where four of these Jesuit colleges are located. In that state, and especially in New York City, the people are beginning to realize that Satolli was right when he declared in the international Journal of Ethics last April, that the "Roman question is as full of vitality as It is of actuality, There, this question is equivalent to the question of Tammany's supremacy In politics, and on that polut, Mr. Charha Stewart Smith, at tne forma tion of the new anti-Tammany organ ization on September tth, p.ke as fol lows: "This Is not only a question of the welfare of our homes and families, or of the commercial supremacy of this city and state; It has become a national Issue, and Is more Important and fa reaching than any question of tariff or silver. Twenty six to twenty-eight millions of the inhabitants of this coun try now live In the towns and cities. Early in the next century the urban population will comprise fully one-half of the whole, and it is certain that in the near future the character of the government of our cities will fix the character of the general government, and determine the destiny of the re public." The Humanists, who are now under the absolut s domination of the Jesuit party, hate concentrated their mem bership In the cities, and they practi cally control all the givat centers of trade except Philadelphia, which the spirit of Stephen Girard, operuting in the college which bears his name, has preserved against their power, and the I E 1U III 80 K.ll 24 343 ls-9 13 3D 17" 14 214 17!S 1IM 0.1(1 lfC'l 11 141 lstil lit 241) lh.V 11 2IH 1S1H 3d tills 1SS7 l." 11S lMIM 'M VM lh44 63 820 ltvd 21 ISO 1W 22 170 1832 12 145 lrn 12 240 1M7 33 BTS Mil 12 im IHS4 12 121 1m4 1 12 lM 18 3IK 17X1 11 24 ' Imii zu 377 537 ll.tiiM) words of Mr. Smith on this point should never bo forgotten. The truth they convey is of overwhelming importance. The fight against Tammany is a fight against Jesuitical doctrines manifest ing themselves in muni uipal policy. It is the same battle which the Protes tants of the country are waging all through the land. Their quarrel with Tammany Is our quarrel with Rome, and vice versa. May their success be commensurate with the merits of their cause. The force we have to contend with Is one of great power. According to the Catholic Directory for 181)0, there were In the United States 13 archbishops, 73 bishops, 8,332 priests, 2,132 ecclesiasti cal students, 7,523 churches. 3.302 chapels and stations, 35 theological seminaries, 102 colleges, 635 academies, 3,194 parochial schools, 633,238 pupils In the parochial schools, 553 charitable institutions, and about 8,000,000 Catho lics. This force dictates the nomina tion of candidates for office in national and congressional, conventions, and in many state conventions. It virtually controls both the great political par ties. And the time has come for its overthrow. IT IS TIME. The Whole Country Awake to the Fact That Religious and Civil Liberty is Only a Name. The Western Watchman, that infamous Roman Catholic sheet which was de nounced by Archbishop Kain as unfit to enter even Roman Catholic families, is making a great parade over publishing the names of those It declares to be members of the American Protective Association. Doubtless the object of this political paper is to intimidate as many as possible from voting against Roman Catholic candidates for office. Even the Roman Catholic Church Pro gress warns the Western Watchman of its foolish course, to which Editor Phe- lan replies: "Our nondescript neighbor, the "Church Progress," ventures to remind us that our course In publishing the nameB oi me a. tf. A. rogues must ulti' maieiy iana us in jail., well, II we ever get there we will have one com fort, namely; that there are better peo ple inside the jail than out of it." western wntenman, Sept. 2, 1894. In this, the members of the American Protective Association are called "rogues!" Yet in order to secure the names that are published, robbery has been resorted to upon the part of Ro man Catholics or their agents, which is the same thingl They even knocked one man down upon the street to cap ture the secretary's book to get the names. Where Is the proof that the members of the American Protective Association have committed such acts as these? Also, the newsboys, in order to sell the Watchman, are crying, "The Names of 250 A. P. A.'s" as if the members of the A. P. A. were highway robbers, murderers or thieves ! ! I Again we ask what is the crime laid to the charge of the American Protective Association? According to the testimony of their en.mies themselves, their crime lies in the fact that they bind themselves not to vote for Roman Catholics for office, and to prefer Protestants over Romanists, in employing laborers. As free men, certainly they have a right to vote, or not to vote, for whom they ple.iM', and to employ such workmen as they deem bust. Everyone who under stands Romanism knows that a loyal Roman Catholic owes allegiance In temK)ral, a well as spiritual matters to the hic, a foreign deiit. It U Im possible for a loyal Romanit to be. a loyal citizen of the United States. It seems that the object In publishing the names of the moral tors of the Amer- cau Protective Association is to insti tute a boycott against them, that they may ! brought to financial ruin. If (htsoiis are to bo hunted down and boy cotted because they refuse to vote for Roman Catholics for olllee, then civil liberty has well nigh come to an end. Romanist may commit theft and bur glary to obtain the names of those upon whom they desire to wreak vengeance, and the officers of the law muko no effort whatever to punish tho criminals, neither are the names of these "rogues" published in the papers and hold up to infamy. Howling Roman Catholic mobs may pursue American c.tizens for the exercise of the liberty of sinx ch, and the officers of the government, make no effort to bring these slaves tif Rome to justice, neither are their names published in the palters as worthy of boyott for their Infamous conduct. The Roman Catholic hie rarchy, even in St. Louis, may unlaw fully kldnipand Imprison helpless girls and reduce them to the most infamous disgrace and torture in those prison dens called convents, while the officers of the law seem wholly indifferent. Neither are the names of the porpetra tors of such shameful cruelties pub lished in the papers and held up to the contemi t of an outraged public. If all those who refuse to voto for Roman Catholics are to bo treated as infamous outlaws, then It Is time that tho whole country .8 awake to the fact that religious and civil liberty Is only a name. If this conduct upon the part of Roman Catholics and their supjorters continues, it will arouse the jiwpie all over the country to support those who are being persecuted and boycotted by Romanists. Surely, Roman Catholics, who are not even as much as ono-tcnth of tho population of the country, will not be able to intimidate the whole country and continue Roman Catholics in iM.sesslon of the government. Pap tist Flag. MILLIONS OF MONEY Appropriated Annually For Sectarian rurMs'K. The Roman Catholic institutions of this city received for the year 1893, $1,213,000 from excise and general funds. All the Protestant institutions received the niggardly sum of $75,000. The New York legislature for the year 1890 ap- prlated to 16 institutions under Roman Catholic control $1,079,986.07; to all other denominational institutions, num bering 28, $846,640.67. The amount of public money granted from tho United States treasury In nine years for the Roman Catholic mission was $2,758,517; all other denominations, $1,534,775. These appropriations are in violation of both the letter and the first amendment of the constitution. It is to be earnestly hoped that all Protestants will decline further appropriations from the public funds, so that they can consistently pro test against the excessive grants to Roman Catholic institutions. The foundling asylum, under the charge of the sisters of charity, and the New York Catholic Protectory received from the city funds In the years 1884 to 1893 inclusive, $5,103,498.02. Many of these 8ealled "orphans" have both parents living, and the church is main taining them at the expense of the tax payer and making an enormous profit, the appropriations being five times In exce.-s of the expense of providing for such "orphans." The coming consti tutlonal convention will be asked to adopt an amendment to the constitu tion and submit it to the people for their approval, prohibiting appropria tions from the public funds for any sectarian purposes whatsoever. New York Tribune. Ingersoll on the l'ope. In a recent Interview with a New York Herald reporter Robert G. Inger soll had this to say of the pope and his claim of infallibility: "It may be that the pope thinks he l& infallible, but I doubt It. He may think that he is the agent of God, but I guess not. He may know more than other people, but if he does he has kept it to himself. He does not seem satis fied with standing in the place and stead of God in spiritual matters, but desires temporal power. He wishes to be pope and king. He imagines that he has the right to control the belief of all the world; that he is the shepherd of all 'sheep' and that the fleeces belong to him. He thinks that in his keeping is the conscience of mankind. So he imagines that his blessing is a great benefit to the faithful and that his prayers can change the course of natural events. He is a strange mixture of the serious and comical. He claims to represent God, and admits that he is almost a prisoner. There is something pathetic in the condition of this pontiff. When I think of him I think of Lear on the heath old, broken, touched with Insanity, and j et, in his own opin ion, 'every inch a king.' "The pope is a fragment, a remnant, a shred, a patch of the ancient power and glory. Ho is a survival of the un til text, a souvenir of theocraey. a relic of the ucrnntural. Of course he will have a few successors, and they will be come more and more comical, more and more helpless and lmolent as the world grows wImj and free. 1 am not blaming the Hie. Ho was ftolsoned at the bit ant of his mother Suiertition was mingled with her milk. Ho wa poisoned at school taught to distrust his reason and to live by faith. And so it may be that his mind was so twisted and tortured out of sliajH' that ho now reallv believe that lie is the infallible agent of an Infinite God." SOMi: KKSOM TIONS Adopted by Council No. is of the A. V. A. of St. Joseph, Mo. WllEKKAS, In view of tho fact that a majority of tho representatives in the halls of eongron sacrifice the country's welfare In catering to a rellgio-political power, bo It Utsoh-tJ, That we view with satisfac tion the manly and patriotic stand made by William S Linton in opHsition to the Indian appropriation bill; and though unsuccessful in his effort to compass the defeat of tho bill, bis la bors have had an answering echo in the hearts of tho American ioople; tho In roads and Intrigues of an ecclesiastical power against the spirit of the Ameri can constitution, the appropriation of public money for sectarian purposes, and the sacrifice of the advancement of the Indians to the Insatiate greed of the Roman Catholic hierarchy as demon strated by William S. Linton in his ar gument in opposition to the passage of the bill, have, In a largo measure, aroused thorn to a sen so of their in security; therefore bo It further Jicsolml, That wo put forth our most earnest efforts to secure tho election of a representative from this district who will pledge himself In opposition to the "appropriation of public money for any sectarian purioso wbatsievcr." WHAT THEY SAY. There has not been a "strike" in this country, not engineered by foreigners, and yet In tho face of It there seems to be no limit to the Influence of that ele ment, an clement that landson Monday, washes its face Tuesday, votes on Wednesday, and Issues a full-fledged office-holder on Thursday. Spirit of Times. . It is not pauper-labor that we have so much to fear as the paupor patriot ism that we ini)ort. So between the lines, of red, white and blue streaming to tho wind lot there be inscribed in letters that can be read across tho seas: "This is tho flag of the American Union. lie who enters hero leaves all other flags behind." Washington Pout. A Threatening Missive. The following letter was received by Friend L. C. Goodrich, special organ izer for the A. P. A.: AURORA, 111., Sept. 18, 1894. L. C. Goodrich Sir: We have at last located your design and the reason you have been demanded to come to Aurora. I have learned through reliable per sons at Elgin, Big Rock, Sugar Grove and Montgomery, that you and some of the local members of the A. P. A. have slandered Mr. Burke, the Republican nominee of the Republican party for sheriff. Now, Sir, you must leave this place or you will bo waited upon and that in a manner that will give you rest in some county hospital. We give you 48 horn s to leave Aurora and to stay away during tho campaign. We are fixed for you and this is no bluff by G . I am a Republican and mean business. Now take the hint and do nj be found here after this time ex pires. We are on to the A. P. A gang who travel with you, and H will be to pay soon If you don t let up. H. C. & S. W. Separate Schools iu Canada. The long and bitter fight regarding religious exercises in the public schools, and the proposed abolition of all Ro man Catholic separate schools in the Canadian northwest, was brought to a close, for a time at least, by the north west legislature recently, the leglsla ture determining by a majority vote that the papists shall not be deprived of their right to establish separate schools, and in districts where they maintained such separate schools shall not also be taxed for the public schools. It has been determined further that the only religious exercise in the public schools shall be the simple reading of the Lord's Prayer at the opening. Priest Found Guilty. Sioux Falls, S. D., Oct. 1. The jury in the case of the state against V. J. C. Ahem, a Roman Catholic priest at Flandrau, who was arrested for an assault with a deadly weapon with in tent to do great bodily injury, after be ing out three hours, returned a verdict of guilty. Ahern has not yet been sen tenced. The maximum penalty is five years in the penitentiary or a year in the county jail. The case has attracted much attention all over the state in Roman Catholic circles. Ahern has for some months, been engaged in fight with the bishop. The A. P. A. in Politics In Illinois. The platform and resolutions adopted by the Independent American Citizen'i party of Illinois will bo found on an other page No man who is not thor oughly imbued with the bigotry of one or the other of the old political jw uni an do aught but endorse every senti ment contained in the document. Tne roxtllion for the elimination of tho tariff muddle from olitic is a most imoly and valuable suggestion, and it adoption by the leading parties at an early day could not fail to bo of lasting benefit to tho country. The Independent American party la the party of the future, and The Putrivt shtartllylii sympathy with the gal lant fight being made in Chicago. The result in November may tie. defeat for the patriotic contingent who aio en gaged in the battle, but they have the nalienable right of every American citizen to advocato their political prin- Iples and to p!axs candidates support ing those principles in the field. Wi.- citnsin Patriot. THE COMIC SIDE. DennU Malone "Say, Pat, would It not have been a fearful disaster for New York had there Iwen no Ireland?" Pat MaGulro "Yes, Denny, for then New York would have been without a lolico force. Cab driver to new nrrlval from Ire land at Castle Garden "Where do you wish to go, sir?" McFadden (comfortable in cab) 'Well, sor, you may as well droive me to the polls." WHEN DOCTORS DISAGREE W hat Heroines of the I'ufiont! Doctors have their hobbles as well another people and In the treatment of disease often carry them too far for the patient s gxd. l or instance in the treatment of indigestion of dyspepsia many doctors give bismuth and nothing olso, others rely on pepsin to bring their patient through, still another doc tor treats stomach troubles with the various vegetable esiencos and fruit salts, Now, one or tho other of these ex cellent remedies becomes a hobby with tne doctor who has tiau most success with the particular onu in question, be cause all of them are first class reme dies for indigestion and dysopsla, but not one of them alono Is so good as a combination of nil of them, such as is found in Stuarts I)yscpsla 1 ablets which contain not only vegetable es sences and fruit salts, but also tho fresh est purest pepsin and bismuth, making altogether a remedy unsurpassed for every form of Indigestion, sour stomach, nervous dysH!psia, oeicning oi gas, dis tress after eating, sleeplessness, head aches, etc. Stuart's Dysticpsla Tablets is not a secret patent nostrum, but you can see for yoursolr what it is aud Knowing this, its success as a dysspsla cure Is not surprising. All druggists recom mend and sell thorn at 50 cents, or if your druggist does not happen to have them, seiiu ny man to tne atuanvjo., Marshall, Mich. Education, outside of the control of tho Catholic church, 1 a damnable heresy. Pope Pius, IX. H OpUKO in IIIC IIIICCI) Tho physical machiuory of most peo ple olton has a "spoke in the wheel." That Is they have some disorder which either im pedes their progress or creates nerve friction in some portion of their delicate muciianlsm. Piles is a tedious and persistent dis ease whlcn wears out the patience of its victims, it has several forms of torture. Sometimes its a maddening Itching sensation. At other times Its a knot of aching tumors highly in flamed. The only way to cure the dis ease permanently is to use a remedy tnat has tne power to permeate tnrouga the delicate membranes and tissues and remove alt traces of inflamation. The iJyrarnld Pile Cure possesses thla power to perfection. It is formulated on scientific principles by specialists who understand tne nature oi tne dis ease thoroughly, f nousanus have been permanently cured by it and the manu facturers have come to look upon it as 'remedy that never fails." ouneed not go through an inconvenient Course of dieting aud supplementary treatment while usiug it. it is a co oi pie to cure requiring nothing on your part out a strict observance of lue printed direc tions which go witu each pacaage. It is manufactured by toe Pyramid Drug Co. at Aloion, Micu., aud may be nad. of all first ciass druggists. Don't ex periment if you are ullucued witn. tais troublesome disease. It may lead to serious complications if allowed to con tinue. Cot this remedy and cneca: tne disease Oeloro it buconies chronic; don't allow it to drain your oest en ergies and weaken your constitution. A LIST OF fciOOD BOOKS. Foxe's Book of Martyrs. A large quarto vulume of 1,100 double column pages, and It a standard work In every particular. Cloth, 12.50, sent by express. LeCarou the Spy Gives a history of the Fenian raids on Canada, and a complete expose of their pi. ts again the British government, f aper, SO cents. The Assassination of Lincoln is an Intensely Interesting volume, written by T. M. Harris, one of the mil itary commission which, tried the as sassins. Cloth, 12.50. Plain Talk About Romanism of Today By Rev. Hugh Montgomery. This Iitti work Is by no means uninteresting. It draws a comparison between popery and Protestantism, and contains much historical Information. Price In paper cover, 50 cents. Romanism Not Christianity By Rev. Robt. Love. This is an excel lent work, and Is well worth reading by every Patriotic student. Frlce, paper, 50 cents. All the above books will be furnished by the Aubricak FcBLisuiNOConPANT at prices named, but cash must accompany the order else no notice will be taken of It. J