Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, May 16, 1901, Image 2

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    Harrison Press-Joarnal
GEO. D. CANON, Publisher. .
HARRISON,
. . KEBRASKA
The New Jersey Judje who propose!
to squeeze the water out of the trust
stock will not be looked upon as a
prosperity promoter in certain quar
ters. Municipal ownsrship has seized the
people of Fulton, Mo., and they have
voted to purchase a cemetery. This
comes very near running municipal
ownership into the ground.
The population of the Indian empire,
according to the census Just taken, is
294 millions. The returns show an In
crease In British territory of ten mil
lions, and a decrease In native states
of three millions.
Members of congress returning from
Cuba are relating all sorts of stories
concerning the situation down there.
All of which but goes to show that a
man can find out almost anything he
prefers to believe if he will but be
persistant.
The toy-making Industry of Ger
many las enjoyed great prosperity
(luring the past few years. Cape Col
ony, British East India, Eastern Asia,
North and South America and Austra
lia buy German toys, and the demand
seems to be increasing from year to
year.
The legislature of AUbama has
passed the much discussed "White
House" bill, carrying an appropriation
for the purchase and maintenance or
the old Jefferson Davis house In Mont
gomery. This relic of the days of the
Confederacy will now be given its
proper place and made an Interesting
feature of the capital city of Alabama.
The death of Baron Satge de Tho
rent at the age of 97 deprives the Le
gion of Honor ot its oldest member.
The baron served for many years in
the French army and afterward mads
his home in Ireland, where he mar
ried. One of his sons served in the
British army. The baron spent the lat
ter part of hi3 life upon an estate in
the Eastern Pyrenees.
A remarkable contrast to the map
In precious stones which lately aston
ished Paris, Is the railway map on
tiles, put up at York Station, in Eng
land, by the Northeastern company. It
is made of white tiles, the lines being
marked in black and burnt sienna.
It Is about six feet square, and each
tile is eight Inches square. The com
pany intends to have similar maps at
all Important stations on its own sys
tem.
Prince Henry, consort of the Queen
of Holland, is extremely busy at the
present moment getting together a
perfect armory of spotting guns, most
ly of English manufacture, in view
ot his approaching trip to the-island of
Java, and to the remainder of the
Dutch East Indies. He sails early In
the month of June; that is to say, Just
about the time the honeymoon may
reasonably be expected to have begun
to wane, and will remain absent until
the end of the year.
Scores of old barns In Ohio have
floors and mangers of black walnut,
put In fifty or seventy-five years 'tgo
when the chief endeavor of the pianeer
iras to clear the dense forests for crops,
So popular is black walnut furniture
abroad that English and French agents
buy even old barn timbers and fence
rails. One of the few walnut groves
left In Ohio was sold last month for
export as lumber. The larges tree
eight feet In diameter at the stump
brought twelve hundred dollars.
Many of the coast towns of Califor
nia Instituted last year on Memorial
day a unique form of tribute v the
memory of our sailor dead whose un
known graces lie in the ocean. Bands
of children marched to the wi'er's
edge and while singing patriotic songs
strewed the sea with flowers. It is
now urged that this pretty cerei-ony
be made a national custom, and with
this Idea in view a circular, signed by
Mrs. Armitage 8. C. Forbes of Loi An
geles, Cal., is being sent about, urging
all Interested and influential people to
concur and assist In perpetuation the
ceremony.
Max L. Poldrose, of Bromberger,
Germany, was some time ago
compelled to leave the Fatherland oa
account of certain articles which ap
peared In his paper, the Bromberger
Tageblatt, giving deep offence to the
crown. Recently his father died and
h succeeded to the title of baron and
M estate of $127,000. His brother se
cured amnesty for him, and he will
return to Germany after wedding Miss
Aba Franklin at Chattanooga, Tenn.
He Is about 30 years old and a gradu
ate of Heidelberg. While In this
country he worked as a baker, and re
cently bad been employed at Lebanon,
iBd.
The preparation of a simple and
cheap .artificial stone I bncomtn an
Important German Industry and likely
eventually to supplant brick making.
The Ingredient! are only lime end uai
la the proportion of from four to six
parte of the latter. The materials are
thoruogbly ml tea and shaped Into
Moeta at U see tree Use. The latter
an ikes fat Is taCar. which la
tzStt, e4 aataiCtai to a mtmm ares
f st frt3 into 11) f 'Ji fee
, n triVirJ rtr vr?!i a
n t i.
INTELLIGENT FRANCE
NO TROUBLE THERE OVER
LABOR AND WAGES.
Tba Yarlon Revolution Hit Taught
the Plutocrat a Wboleeomn Leaeon
Injnetlce) to Labor Would B Bw
uli with tbe Sword.
The employes on the Paris under
ground railroad had a strike and have
settled their strike.
The terms of the settlement amaze
the outside world. Those terms are
especially amazing to the American
and well they may be.
The employes of the underground
railroad in Paris are government em
ployes. Their strike Inconvenienced the pub
lic and even the radical French people
were annoyed with the strikers.
In other European countries and In
this country, as the news reports very
truly Bay, the strike of those govern
ment employes would have been dealt
with very summarily. Three engines
of civilization would have been
brought into play effectively.
First, the police; second, the caval
ry; third. Galling guns."
But the police, the cavalry and Gat-
ling guns were tried on the French
people long ago and that little matter
was fought ont and settled. The men
who govern France know that at a
certain stage In the proceedings a
courageous people will not stand Gat
ing guns, cavalry or police. They
have found out In France that the way
to deal with striking workmen is Just
the way the government official would
like to be dealt with himself if he were
a striking workman instead ot a well
paid public officer.
pw- - . i , i . , , that
1 UK Bifmiiig Citrli Cuiiijiiaiucu t"-
their day's work was too long and
their pay too small. The pay was in
creased and the day was shortened
which was perfectly right.
Each employe Is now allowed one
day off in seven, and ten days vaca
tion every year with full pay which is
perfectly right
The young men employed on the
road are compelled to do twenty days"
work in the army each . year. Their
wages are paid while they are doing
this compulsory military work which
is perfectly right.
If a man is ill he gets his pay as long
as he is ill up to three hundred and
sixty-five days, and the company In
whose service he has become ill pays
his doctor's bill, hU drug store bill and
any extra expenses involved which
is perfectly Just and fair.
No Btriker is to be dismissed Because
nf ha vine taken Dart In the strike. A
benefit fund Is provided for the em
ployes of this government enterprise
and the company pays the membership
subscription to the benefit fund with
no deduction from the workman's pay.
The above seems a horrible narra
tive to the energetic American exploit
er of labor.
It would have seemed very stupid.
In fact quite incomprehensible, to the
French government at any time before
the revolution.
But the revolution taught France
and some other people that a nation
like any other structure, is Insecure
when its foundation is agitated. The
foundation of a nation is the enormous
mass of working people, and that
foundation the French have learned
to respect and to treat well.
We shall learn as much here some
day. Let us hope we shall learn
more peaceably than the French did,
DEMORALIZING THE ARMY.
The revelations of corruption at Ma
nila are Decullarly painful, because
they Involve so many army officers
We are accustomed to dishonest poli
ticians, but our army and navy, as
rule, have been morally clean.
They have been so, of course, be
cause the atmosphere of the service
has tended to keep them so. Army
and navy officers are not made of any
special clay they are simply the pro
ducts of their training and associa
tions. The environment that braces a
naturally weak character Is hard to
build up and easy to break down, it
took only a year or two after the Res
toration to destroy the moral tone that
Cromwell had created In the English
army. Prussian omcers weie u iu
be models of austere honesty at tne
time of the Franco-German war; now
the German army Is honeycombed with
corruption.
The American army hitherto nas
been email. Its officers could all have
been accommodated la a single club of
moderate size. They have grown up
together, like one great family-, and
the opinion of their order has been a
regulating force of tremendous power.
Bee lies, they have been among a huge
civilian population, alwaya jealous of a
standing army, and they have felt con
tinually under obligations to be on
their good behavior.
But now all these old safeguards
have been relaxed. The army has been
tripled In site. It has been scattered
over half the circumference of the
earth. It has been diluted with civil
ian officer, brlnaing Into It the tradi
tions of the stock pit, the real estate
market and the law courts. Above all.
It baa been set down among subject
peoples wboee public opinion could be
Ignored, and It baa been allowed to
svpprssa the publicity that might have
eUecked transgressions.
waea an aSeer In this country say
Ctvptala Carter-He accused of Irrem
IviOm, ke has to disprove the charges.
Wfcaa Editor Rice brought such ac
ta Manila Be was brought
Ooeaoel Crowder, and according
la Hi aoeonat tnls ftrmiririTT immtir
Crawdef Boat yea tfclak yoa are
Crowder Then you still think ymm
are right?
Rice Yes, sir; I know I am.
Crowder I am sorry for you, young
man; if you still persist in saying you
are right, my orders are from General
Macthur to deport you.
Rice If you will give me a fair trial
In court I can prove that I am right
Crowder I'nder martial law such
characters as you receive no trial. We
have not the time.
Rice Can I see the evidence in the
Investigation which you claim proves
my charges false?
Crowder No; the investigation was
placed in competent hands and does
not need your approval. Your state
ments have been proved to our satis
faction to be without foundation, and
you will be deported as an Incendiary
character and a menace to the military
situation. You are too young to let
go on slandering men of honesty and
capability, and I consider your charac
ter as having fallen to Its lowest level.
In writing and publishing such articles
you endanger the foundation of our
military system. Such conduct as this
I consider equal to traitorism.
Rice So far as being a traitor, I
have served my country In the field for
over a year ana never naa my iun
of country so much as questioned.
while you have never been under Are
and never expect to be, and you dare
question my patriotism! I have more
patriotism to the square inch than you
have in your whole carcass.
Crowder Be careful; a few more
words and I will put you In BUlibid
(the Jail.)!
The order of deportation was then
Issued, but before the ship soiled
Colonel Crowder gave the culprit an
other chance, In this fashion:
Crowder The military governor
(MacArthur) directs me to ask you
that if your conduct is satisfactory up
to the time of your deportation and he
sees nt to remit your sentence, wm
you promise that in the future you
will never write articles of a similar
character against any officer of tne
military?
Rice No, sir. I hold the right to
publish anything, anywhere, whenever
I have proof of my statements.
Crowder Your case is hopeless.
Thereupon Rice was put Into soli
tary confinement, where he stayed un
til tie shin was ready to take him
away.
The subsequent proceedings seem to
show that Immunity from criticism Is
not Just what is needed to promote a
healthy administration. Publicity is
even more imDortant among "sub
jects" than among citizens.
MORGAN AND GAMBLERS.
Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, leading cit
izen of the world, crossed the ocean.
Two professional gamblers on the
boat gave a modest Imitation of big
financial deals.
They played with the other passen
gersbut not with Mr. Morgan, Mr.
Morgan sat down, took one look at the
small professional gamblers, and was
horrified to discover that these gentle
men had arranged what Is known as a
"sure thing."
The gamblers could NOT lose, the
passengers were BOUND to lose.
The two professionals, of course, did
not get eleven hundred million dol
lars. or even one million. But they
did get twenty-five hundred dollars
Mr. Morgan denounced them to the
other passengers and they were com
pelled to give back the money.
Honor to J. Pierpont Morgan for his
quickness of sight and promptness of
action. We thank him, on behalf of a
great public, for having thwarted
wicked attempt
We hope the two professional gam
blers will never be so impertinent as
to walk down to the corner of Wall
and Broad streets, In New York, where
Mr. Morgan has HIS office, and give
their opinion of the game that
played there.
Is
We learn with considerable Indigna
tion that when the gamblers were ex
posed they alleged that there waa an
element of humor In their being ex
posed by Mr. Morgnn.
There was nothing humorous about
It There is an enormous difference
between selling for eleven hundred
millions something that you never
owned and working the insidious ace
from the bottom of the pack Into your
own hand.
HURRAH FOR LIBERTY.
The captain of the port in a town
occupied by American troops seems to
be an exceedingly formidable person
age. It was for lese majeste against
the captain of the port of Manila that
Editor Rice was banished from the
Philippines by Gen. MacArthur with
out trial. Even more summary meth
ods sesem to be In vogue at Havana.
There the captain of the port, when
bis dignity was offended by two Cu
ban edltori,auromond them before him
and forthwith sentenced one of them
to thirty days and the other to sixty
days' imprisonment at hard labor. He
based these sentences on the ground
that a certain article In the paper with
which the culprits were connected was
an Insult to himself. Neither of the
men Imprisoned had written the ar
ticle. And yet the ungrateful Cubelis
pretend not to enjoy American liberty!
Chicago American.
The heirs of Cornelius Vanderbllt
are lighting tbe payment of an Inherit
ance tax of 9M,208, Imposed on tba
trust fund left by W. M. Vanderbllt for
tbe Children of Cornelius. They say
that this Imposition was not legal. But
their regard for legality does not seem
to load them to take any steps toward
paying up tie 118,000,000 or so of par
soaal taxes that were daa and nat paid
as tba Cornelius VaaaerWlt estate
while its late owner waa allta.
JIKTliODS OF TltUSTS.
PAVING THE WAY FOR
OWNERSHIP.
PUBLIC
The rromUInc Toafe Heail It U the
Hrad or tbe Truat Toad Knd of tba
AE ' Competition formation of
Labor 1'bIods.
The head of a toad, like the head of
a trust, is superficially a hideous thing
to look at.
Sometimes it is alleged that valuable
Jewels are found In a toad's head, and
on this account the hideousness even
of the fur-famed horned toad of the
west becomes less repulsive. The trust
toad, as you will find by examining it
losely and studying events, has a
head equipped with Jewels of a very
fine quality. Many years from now
men will be very glad that the trust
toad was born, because of the good
that will come from It
Already we see that the trusts are
inevitably strengthening labor unions.
They are bringing the men into closer
relationship and forming them into
greater and more closely united bodies
of workmen. They are preparlug for
the inevitable and early forcible in
crease In wages. The trusts organize
admirably the great industries and
prepare the day when all of these In
dustries will be owned by the govern
mentthat Is to say, by the people
themselves.
The trusts eliminate competition.
which Is a stupid, out-of-date form of
barbarism, leadtng to cheating, thiev
ery and adulteration. The trusts do
away with the vast armies of middle
men, and, by diminishing every day
the number of those who live on the
work of others, they compel an ever
growing number to enter the fields of
useful production.
Just at present the Jewel that stands
out most prominently in the ugly trust
toad's head is "Free Trade." Men have
argued and fought and voted, and
made speeches, and paraded for Free
Trade and all In vain. The more
they talked and paraded the heavier
were the duties. But when the trusts
want free trade they will have it, for
the trusts control legislation. And we
shall have free trade, for the trusts
will want it very soon. A trust engag
ed in manufacturing wants to buy as
cheaply as it can the raw materia
used. The trusts will soon own all the
industries, all the manufactories, and
fhev will want freedom from tne
duties which are now paid on the ma
terlal. Already there is in process or
formation a great clothing trust. The
small man who makes clothing now
must pay a duty on wool to protect the
American farmer who rais sheep.
How long do you think the clothing
trust will tolerate this duty on wool?
How long do you think the trust en
gaged in making clothes in America
will tolerate a duty on wool that
makes the industry so expensive?
Some of the duties will be retained, of
course at least until the trusts shall
be powerful enough even to despise
foreign competition. But one thing
after another the trusts will want free
from duty, and these things will be
freed as fast as the trusts' order
given.
The trusts are going to do a great
deal of good to the masses of the peo
ple In time. They will end by forcing
universal government ownership of
monopolies upon the people. Of course
this last step Is a long way ahead, and
there will be considerable stiff fighting
before It is taken.
WOULD MAKE CUBA A STATE
Senator Morgan of Alabama believes
in dealing honestly and frankly with
the Cubans. He propones to admit
what Is obviously true, though the ad
ministration Republicans foolishly try
to make Cubans and Americana bellev
it is not true, that the Piatt rider to
the army bill practically establishes a
protectorate over the island and leaves
tbe Cubans no Independence, but onl
a limited control over their Internal
affairs, subject to the right of the
Washington government to take away
even that at any time-
There is no use In denying that th
Piatt rider Is a complete repudiation
of the Joint resolution of congress d"
daring that tbe people of Cuba were
and of right ought to be Independent
and that the United States Intended to
recognize their Independence and no
to exercise any control over them afte
the pacifying of tbe Island.
Senator Morgan does not believe In
denying that the rider repudiates tha
resolution, which the president has re
peatedly declared we are bound to re
spect and carry out In good faith. Th
Alabama senator Is opposed to false
pretenses and hypocrisy to the dark
and treacherous policy which Involved
us In war with the civilized and Chris
tlan people of the Philippines and won
the friendship of none but the polygi
mous slave-holding and eml-Bava?
Mohammedans of the southern group
of the archipelago. Mr. Morgan pro
poses to be honest and straightforward
and so avoid trouble.
And he proposes to go further. He
will advise the committee from tbe Cu
ban convention which Is about to visit
Washington to advise the body they
represent to apply directly to congress
for admission to the union as a date
He will tell them that congress has
repented of tho pledge It gave to them
and tbe world In 188. and Is not go
Ing to grant them Independence. He
will show them that they will come
far nearer to Independence as a stale
of the union than tbey cau ever come
in anr other way.
Ha will show tbem that as a state
they will have two seats In tba tin I ted
States senate, seven or mora seat in
tba bona of represenUUres and eon
trol of their own affairs except In their
relations with foreign countries and
in some less important matters, while
they will be protected by the constitu
tion against all unauthorized meddling
of the general government In their af
fairs. And when it dawns on them
that as a state of the union they can
go in debt to any extent and be pro
tected by the Vnlted States In repudia
tion, if they choose to repudiate, they
may take Mr. Morgan's advice.
But nothing of this sort will suit the
administration Republicans. If Cuba
hould become a state of the union all
Cuban products would have to be ad
mitted free Into all the other states of
the union. The claim that the consti
tutional provision respecting unifor
mity of duties, etc.. applies only to
states and not to territories would no
onger be of avail with respect to
Cuba.
Free trade with Cuba is not what
the administration Republicans want.
It is not what is wanted by the Inter
ests which have already demonstrated
their power to control the administra
tion. When the Porto Rico bill was
pending in the senate Senator Foraker
said in effect: "If we cannot lay pro
tection duties on the products of these
islands we have taken from Spain,
we cannot get out of them too quick
ly."
That defines the position of the ad
ministration Republicans. That Is why
they contrived the Piatt protectorate
scheme for Cuba instead of treating it
as a territory of the United States
without keeping up the false pretense
of independence to come. The supreme
court might hold that the constitution
al provision as to duties applied to ter
ritories as well as states. In that
case It would never do to have Cuba a
territory of the United States. That
would break the backs of the sugar
and tobacco protectees.
Auu it WOUid be rVrli W0n6 With
Cuba as a state, for there would be no
possible way out. Congress can get
rid of a territory; it can never get rid
of a Btate. Tbe Morgan plan will
never be approved by the McKlnley
party.
GOD
MADE THE COAL FOR
WHOM?
nKIIOI D the hire of tha I.AIHKr-KS
who liaTa reaped down your field, whl-h
It of you kepi berk by fraud, rrlethj and
the crlee of Ihem which hare reaped
are entered Into the ear ot the Lord or
Babaoth Jaiuee 4.
Under the earth's surface at varioua
depths, In veins of varying thickness,
lies the world's supply of coal. Mil
lions of years before men came here
this coal was stored away to supply
them with heat, when In the fullness
of time they should arrive on earth to
fulfill their mysterious and still unex
plained errand. During thousands of
centuries tbe coal was stored slowly,
and during other thousands of cen
turies it was packed into a stony con
dition by the pressure of the weight
piled up above it. Today men dig, it
out and sell It
In the production of this coal you
would naturally say that there were
only two great agencies. First, God,
who made tho coal and stored it away
to be used. Second, the men and wom
en and children who work In the
mines, living In darkness and grime,
and bringing coal to the surface. Bui
there must be some other great agency
responsible for this coal - and for this
reason: The coal product of Great
Britain last year sold for THREE
HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS. The
total amount paid to all men and
women and children who dug
the coal out of the ground
was FIFTY millions of dollars.
Two hundred and fifty millions of dol
lars, flve-slxths of tbe entire product,
went to some one else. Of course that
"some one else" Is the mine owner, the
coal speculator.
We do not believe that the power
which made the coal and gave It to
men la quite satisfied with the condi
tions under which the coal is dug
We have an Idea that a situation which
involves extravagant prices for the
poor who use the coal, very small pay
for the poor who dig It, and two hun
dred and fifty millions of dollars fo.-
men who neither made the coal nor
dig It, is not satisfactory to the Maker
of coal mines and the Ruler of th
world.
We sincerely believe that In II
own time He will change a system
which needs changing so badly.
We believe that a change will com?
and that It will be radical. For Dl
vine disapproval of the grab-alls li
written too clearly to admit of any
varied Interpretation:
"tio to dow, ye rtrh men, M V.V.V am:
HOWL fof roar enl.erlee that (ball come
upon yon.
"Tear rlrhee ere r or mp ted and your
"l our gold aad ellrer I cankered and
the met of then ahall ha n wltneaa
aealaet yon aad ehall eat roar Heeli
It were fire. Te bare heaped trwauor
together far tba laal dart." Jaiaee
I, S. 3.
The existence of a half-starved miner
is not pleasant The life of a woman
working In the mines Is horrible and
tho stealing of flve-slxths of tbe coal
from those who dig It out Is abomin
able. But we have an Idea that when
the time comes to straighten out ac
counts the miner will not bare the
hardest part of the bargain.
fteale far Iowa Seeaaa,
Sioux City Tribune: Tbe next leg
tslsturs will bare a good time at Des
Moines. Tbere Is now a surplus In
tbe treasury of about 11.250,000, and
It la hardly to be expected that tbe
rule of scraping tbe bottom clema will
be brokea.
r
COME AND GO
la many form
Rheumatism
Neuralgia
Lumbago
Sciatica
make op larpe part of human
uflering. Tbry come milrtenly,
but they go promptly by the
nee of
St Jacobs Oil
which la a certain sure core,
wal?..r-..iTlioipMa,i Ey Witir
a. rutin atoxi. t ameew. avowae, a, I.
SEND US YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS
and upon receipt ef wune I will tend too a
mpoeltlon blrtv jron will be llbrrellr
paid for e few tuiouul ot your time; do ran
vuehx. 1 hue mxhloir to Mil. It eotta
full abeolulelr oolblDK. Write W-dJT.
W. C KLEINE,
100 Pine Street, St. Loull.Mo.
REWARD ,? .'.1
berkeche. orrrouinifei, lerplrm
dh, w!koee. Ie "f vltallt i . la
clplrnl kWDer.b'ldir ana urlMry
fl!rlra lhl ren not be rurrfl by
tbe ereel kldner. Ilrer awl blood medicine. BOn
At aU Itrusift". Write Vt free nifle. Addri-w
KID-na-viwot -i i
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS
IN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED
If you lake up your
home In Wi'HU-ru Can
a4a.thft land of plenty.
liluMruwd pamphlet,
iflvin? ?xjKri'iic'"!t of
fnrmeni who have be
couif! wealthy la trrow
IriR vheut, report of
diflPKUU'n, eur-.. and full
Irjformation at to reduced raiitruy ralf-n ctta b
hail on application to the hupfrinu-ndnnt of
Immigration. Deportment of lufrior. Ottawa,
atiadtt. or to W V. lteunelt, SOI New YorSi
Lllc 1110k . Omuba, Neb,
i j TIRE TIPS'
The Fife of 1 tire, cut of irfair ini
it luting oujlitia determine III worth.
O lc J Tun tit rr.ade from the best
quality of rubber. They arc light enough
to be retilierrt, ifrong eaough to be dur
able, and cut riding, which Imurta com
fort and ulety.
Catalogue it our Agflcr by rnail.
O & J TIRE COMPANY,
Indlenepolli, lad.
One Sack Washburn Gold Medal
Flour for 57 cents,
whii taken 1tb. and ea part nt te '
following bat. Onter a Uanpta
tio. 777.
H-nd nn RKiney, SIKPLT onM.a
TIIWL imxiIm, aixl will y.k
and akin to you at onre,. V h-u
twey arrWa. If yiwi da nut find the m
.til tofxjdathat or rffnrbant
HIrr at knot 15 S rf-uin U
MKi l ua. If, hoaever, j" do
find the eocdft tK.- t w ,iff Jtm.
arortb 7.rT arid witial tng-i lllti
ytmr mttIibhi ., j-imi IU-1& fur,
fr four freuhl ejrrnt or War
banker rf. 77 abd th trrlgUt l. me and the a'"! ra
your, ho atM-b bawl" haa "o oirrrfd hf any
cm hut !-... t.. iti.Wwrw f.,i , irr"OArle In
-TT play la tbe lnl anuliM till" (.rlc. cenno
bale but do It. W M'r-liatite' I Kir
Trie. I'rta.
1 Perk nf Weabbarn'a Keat Hold Mi-dtl
rKr nt s .87
I lie- Tre, any kind, Kllh llreabfael, I
Haakrt t'md Gun )',)' or Y"U'.tt
llyar-n (I 1.89
T? Ua. i.,.1 lc,t.-d Corfa 14 1.79
lb. B"i l ra.k-ra, ffl, liuuer or Ojrtar 11 ,Qf
i'i.i-.ir-pu. ; , im ,ia
tOlbe. fen'-y I'mnea . 1.M .49
IIU I'urelirou-id l' upar .20
tut. H'ltll ot triple etntb Kalreot
ot Vanilla IS ,ia
ttof. bottle of TrlppteltieenirUi fcauact
ef Uau M .19
I tb. fiafi Hll. a Candy ,., j ,bf
I lb Aaa.,rtd lk.n kvxia J ,T
t lb. A.-t.-d a.it. n
Ikoaafaww. uan. , u .70
iw H.77
lata tot mt ever .. wort of wood tor 17.77, bat bear
la .lad taea w au eat aieaa aay baase I tba a
fit pace f'K-'ry Hit matl4frei poatal card will
brine It. Meatliia Ibla paper, or, will bead a fre
lib tba abut aaeurtmeat If aekee for,
T. U. Roberts' Supply Hoots,
ri7.7IS.771 NttwUet Art. (. Wee.
Vkts aasasrlsg MvertlsesMSta ttest
fkstloa Tils rsssr.
W, N. U. OMAHA No. ip-teat
II! vm
I lA" Pafteke 91 Trlet ef Or. O.
I Ptwliw erown't Crw k.m-ly for
Senate v,t ..! All KMMfl DUec. ArldreM W
Erfffl
mm
Warranted Watetproof.e-V
Mals to atand hard f 1 J
kno ks end roucU - L IC
wort. Ixjolifor S V Iv1
aFieefre Kami f aa(eif, Utm.