4IW$vwiWlfSW U ,r - ' The Commoner. 14 VOLUME 7, NUMBER 4 r t fit H r -I I i H 1 Aches C6f some Icind aro tho horltago o nearly ovory one, from tho Infant and tho colic, tho mlddlo aged and tho dlstrcs- y sine:; inlsorablo headaches, to the aged with nervous, muscular and rheumatic , pains. A remedy to relievo In all cases must 1)0 founded on tho right principle, and that accounts for tho wonderful suc cess of Di Miles' Anti-Pain Pills They never fall to cure all cases of pain, bocauso thoy treat tho Pain Source tho nerves By soothing tho Irritated nerves they lesson the ten sion, build up tho strongth, sot tho blood coursing through tho veins, and thus allay all pain. "Periodic headache, that unfitted mo for business several, days at a time, has boon my llfo experience. I found flrst relief In Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills and since them.J Invariably ward them off by taking a pill when I feel thorn coming on." E. M. MOOBEJRTIY, Windsor, 111. Tho first package will benefit, If not, tho druggist will return your money. 25 doses, 25 conts. NeVer sold In bulk. I FAY YOU bnck your letter postnpo If you will wrlto mo to-day for nn Absolutely Froo trial of my Jncomparnblo KJtlnoy, lilmliler and Urlo Auid trcntmont I do this hecnuso I want to prove, nt my own ex pense, tlint you enn bo cured. Jo strings on this oiror. It menus wlint It says. I'KISJfl Treatment Bent by ninil, prepaid. Address DR. 0. A. WILLBAMS, 528 P. O. Bile, East Hampton, Conn. the depositor or holder, have In creased from $725,000,000 In 18G6 to $0,189,000,000 in 1907, and pub lic confidence in our national banking system has grown with each year. Whenever such currency is put into circulation and becomes -a liability of the bank some good asset, presum ably the note of a solvent customer, enpa Into the assets of the bank, thereby offsetting the liability. There is no fear to be apprehended troui a possible maximum issue under the proposed plan. "It is assumed and asserted in some quarters that such a currency would redound greatly to the advan tage of the speculative market in the city of New York 'Wall street.' This is quite erroneous. The New York stock exchange has a clearing house of its own, based upon the same principled as the clearing house for banks; and brokers instead of paying for all the stock they buy and receiving nay for all the stock they sell, report to this clearing house and settle for the balances. The stock exchange, produce exchange, cotton exchange, all the exchanges dealing in commodities, as well as all the varied interests of any consid erable magnitudo An the city of New York, haVe a currency of their own the certified check. Actual money or currency In any form, is practi cally unknown in the city of New York in any transaction except of a retail character. The bank check performs the function of payment, and if the amount reaches into the thousands the check is certified. It is a perfect currency, it is elastic, re sponding in volume to any demand; , 00 NOT HOARD YOUR MONEY; 00 NOT LET IT LAY IDLE Invest in Farm Land ,FOR SALE A number of one-quarter, oue hil and whole sections of farm laud in Perkins county, Nebraska. Price $8 to $13.50 per acre. This land is all rich prairie land, every acre ot which can be cultivated. The soil is black loam and very productive. Tho country is healthful, the land beautiful, and suited to diversified farming. -' There aro well improved farms, good neigh bors, good schools, good churches, and a good town all in sight of this land. This land is located from one to five miles from a thriving town on the Burlington railroad. There are three other good towns in Perkina county. 45 BUSHELS OP CORN PER ACRE WAS RAISED LAST YEAR ON LAND ADJOINING THIS LAND. 50 BUSHELS OP WHEAT' PER ACRE RAISED ON TnE SAME KIND OP LAND IN THE SAME COUNTY IN 1907. ALPALPA GROWS IN PROFUSION NEAR BY ON,THE SAME KIND OF" LAND. For eaph year during the past three years the crops raised on land in Perkins county sold for more than the COST PRICE of the same land.. Farm this land one year and its present selfintx price would be doubled. It is as productive as the best land in Iowa or. " Illinois; Sell 20 acres in those states and your money win uuy a quarter, section of the land I - uiu uiLuuug iui bine, iuxceuent water at a depth m uu ieuu ix u ueuer country on earth for raising all kinds of stock. Do you want a farm while tills lam1 is within your reach? Cheap farm lands will soon be a thing of tho past. I am offering this land .for less than one-fourth what the same kind of soil is selling for 50 miles distant I can verify every statement made above. If interested call on me or write for prices and detail descriptions. As an Investment or for a home It will pay you to Investigate. Co-operation with other agents solicited. Audrcss T. S. AL-L.E:rsi, LINCOLN, NEB. Room 305, Fraternity J31dg. Certified bank checks. Clenrhn? TTmicn. rwHflmitnc . nnautM,ia J Checks will bo accepted in payment for tho above hinds. , 4 .V it is predicated upon tho credit of the parties to tho transaction. Its redemption is speedy and it is un vexed by arbitrary laws. It is not subject to government interference, it is absolutely responsive to the de mand of trade and without it tho commerce of that great city would be impossible; and, except for sup plying the retail demands incident to every community, it answers every purpose. "The proposed currency would not be usable between banks in the city of New York. Balances at the clear ing house in that city can be settled only in gold or silver or their rep resentative and legal tender money. The present bank notes are not avail able for such purpose. Whenever the present bond secured , bank notes come into the possession of New York banks they send them to the United States treasury' for redemp tion and receive in exchange legal tender money, which counts as part of their reserve. One hundred and thirty-six million, two hundred and fifty-two thousand, three hundred and sixty dollars ($136,252,360) na tional bank notes were so presented for redemption by the banks of the city of New York last year. "I call attention to these facts and circumstances in order to show that New York has no greater compara tive interest in the proposed nole is sue than any other locality. When the interior demand for currency is strong, New York banks can issue and ship such notes to their interior correspondents, and by so doing sat isfy the commercial demands with out impairing their reserve money. Such notes, if issued in small de nominations, would undoubtedly come into use for the purpose of the retail trade. Under the proposed plan banks would pay out their own notes and present the notes of other banks for redemption, and the fact can not be too strongly emphasized, that with ample facilities for redemp tion inflation is impossible. The notes would remain in use only to serve a business need, and so long as they served such need they would be promoting the interests of all, and when the demand slackened, thev should and would, logically and nat urally, seek the nearest point of. re demption. . I believe such a currency would materially serve the public in terest, relieving and preventing thfi periodical stringencies which occur under existing laws. "No currency system can relieve such a money stringency as exists at the present time for the reason that it is more a question of mobile capi tal than currency. This is evidenced by the fact that practically the same condition of money stringency exists throughout the world." Packing company, organized under H1108 of New Jersey, with a cap italization of. $115,000,000. The directorate controls the following' The price of meat to all consumers The price of cattle to all breeders' The price of leather to all factor ies, and thus incidentally: The price of shoes. The grain trade is controlled, and it follows: The prioe to bread. Thus without taking such endless details as the fertilizer market, where the trust controls the price that a farmer pays for his fertilizer, it ap pears that the latest fight of the gov ernment in the trust field is directed to the two chief essentials of-life- bread and meat. That the big ten at Chicago has TEN MEN CONTROL PRICE OF NECESSITIES OF LIFE A Chicago dispatch to the Omaha World-Herald follows: Investigation of the packing trust now under way by government officials-is alleged .to have developed that ten men in Chicago compose the dynamic force that control prices from those of meat on the hoof and shoes, and from breadstuff s tb cattle transportation. These ten men are asserted to hold the balance upon the World's SUUnlV Of thft finmmnnoaf n cessities of life: J. Ogden Armour, E. F. Swift, Ira N. Morris, Thomas E. Wilson, S. A. McRoberts, L. F. Swift, Edward Mor ris, T. J. Connors, Arthur Meeker, Lawrence A. Carton. Tho most casual newspaper reader will readily recognize the list as be ing from the inside of the big pack ing plants of Chicago. That fact becomes significant when it is stated that they are all directors of the same corporation the National Catarrh of The Stomach A. Most Dangerous Disease, Which Causes Serious Results, Unless Properly Treated Catarrh of the Stomach is very common and is known as one of tho most obstinate diseases, which, when neglected or Improperly treated with cheap patent medicines, tonics, drugs, pills, and other secret quack reme dies results in a broken down con stitution and often consumption and death. Catarrh of the Stomach, like every other disease of the stomach, except cancer, is the result of poor diges tion. The digestive organs have be come wefik, there is a lack of gastric juice, your food is only half digested, and as a result you becorile affected with loss of appetite, pressure and fullness after eating, heartburn, vomiting, waterbrash, tenderness at pit of stomach, 3limy tongue, bad taste in the mouth, constipation, pain in limbs and face, sleeplessness, nausea, belching of gas, diarrhoea, sick headaches, dizziness, mental de pression, nervous weakness, and many other common symptoms. If your stomach cannot digest the food you eat, then the stomach needs a rest, as that is the only way you can get rid of your catarrh, but in the meantime your body needs plenty of nourishment, because you must live and in order to live you must eat, and if you mu'st eat, your food must be properly digested, and if your stomach is too weak to do tho work, then you must get a substi tute that will do the work. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are the only known substitute that will di gest your food as well as any healthy stomach. They contain vegetable and fruit essences, aseptic pepsin (gov. test), golden seal and diastase, the very elements necessary to digest all foods. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are not a secret remedy and for that very reason thousands of physicians all over tlie United States recommend them to their ,'patients for catarrh ot the stomach, dyspepsia of all kinds. and other stomach troubles. Experi ments and tests have proven that one grain of the active principle con tained in these tablets will digest 3,000 grains of food. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are in the form of pleasant tasting tablets or lozenges and are sold in largo fiftyrcent boxes at alj drug store. Send us your name and address and we will send you a free sample package. The relief you. will get from the trial package alone vm comince you of the' merits of Stu art's Dyspepsia Tablets. Address i. A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich. ., ..", - .l, . SLn. Uwjul.iiMtoA.tMMAa