The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, February 12, 1909, Page 14, Image 14

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The Commoner.
VOLUME 9, NUMBER 5
14
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profit
on
9 acres of cabbage
Mr George "Fcdcrolf, who lives five miles north of Brownsville,
Toxuh, in the Gulf Coast; Country, planted nine acres in cabbages,
from which lie marketed 227,000 pounds. lie sold the entire crop to
McDavitt Bros., Commission Merchants of Brownsville, for $4,000.
According to Mr. Federolf 's statement, it only cost him ,$400 to grow
tho entire crop and load it on the cars. His net profit, above all
cost, was $3,000.
This crop was planted In December and sold in March, a pretty good
allowing for four months work.
The same land will produce, two or three crops a year.
Do you wonder that so many men are leaving their-jobs in the North
and going down to tho Gulf Coast Country to ilnd fortune and independence,
Why don't you do the same? Anyone can raise fruits and vegetables in the
Gulf Coast Country oven tho city man. It is 'simply "making garden"
oh a larger scalo. You will only need a few acres and can buy the land on
easy IQllilB. il piopuny uuiuu lui, iuu uiau uiui uuuum mmu iiiuu yajr lui iv.
The Gulf Coast Country has passed tho experimental stage irrigation,
and quick transportation to tho large markets of the Mississippi Valley
and tho East, have made largo yields and big profits a' practical certainty.
Growors can reach tho northern markets .weeks ahead of the products
of othor soctlons, thus insuring enormous profits.
Tho Gulf Coast Country is a delightful place in which to live. Mild
Bunny winters, summors pleasantly tempered by Gulf breezes.
A great change has been wrought in tho Gulf Coast Country within the
past two or threo years. Prosperous towns and cities have sprung up
irrigation has boon systematized and extended methods of marketing have
boon Improved.
Iuvostlgnto this proposition whllo tho land Is within your reach. Next year
it will cost more
A trip of Investigation will bo Inexpensive. Twice each month you can buy
round trip tickets via tho Rock Islnnd-Frlsco-C. & E. I. Lines to any point
Alt mu WU1JL UUUOl UUUIII.1 u.1. kliu luiiuivillb VUI7 1UW IUI.IJ3.
Chicago $30.00 St. Loul3 $25.00
Peoria 30.00 Kansas City.. 25.00
St. Paul 32.50 Minneapolis.. 32.50
TheWlnterVegetaMe
uaruen ui rtmenuo.
'Those tickets will bo good for twenty-flvo days
and allow llboral stop-ovor privllogos.
On oxcurslon days tourist sleepers run through
from Chicago, St. Louis, St. Paul, Minneapolis and
Kansas City to Brownsville, Toxas, via Rock Island
Frisco Lines.
, If you would llico to know more of tho big profits
growers aro making in tho Gulf Coast Country, wrlto
mo today for some very Interesting literature wo
havo proparod for froo distribution.
JOHN SEKASTrAN, Pass. Trafflc iHgT., Roclc-Tslnnd-Frisco-O. & E. I. Lines,
j.u 4 .uuoimu owuon, umcugo, or 1U77 JU'rJsco Building, St. Louis.
I. M
M" EXAS J A
Banking By Mail Made
-' Safe in Oklahoma.
- ' Hundreds of Hanks fnllml in inns thmihnnri
of DRPaSI'rOUS lmd thotr saving Joopar-
ulaodifnotlost; .
''-. , ' Avoid bolnp; among tho lwiors In 19M, by
.! 'kcplnflr-your account In nnOklnhoma state'
?. lianic, s. -;t .
JDoposttgrs from 31 states testify to our abil
ity to hnmllo your business sat'sfactorlly.
Booklet coutnlnliig law froo on application.
Guaranty State Bank,
Muskogee, - Oklahoma.
J. D. BENEDICT, Prosldcnt. M. Q. HASKELL, Cashlor.
30c
pete tbo hottest Democratic paper In U. S.
ono year. Tho Hornet, IJlxby, N. O.
OA R Mlontl,i 8 Kxpcnso Allowanco atsbirt,
PtV to pu out Merchandise & Qrocory Cntnlopj,
Mall order houso. American Homo Supply
Co., Desk W 2. Chlcnuo, lib
tfrBjffCTBHWri
AGKN'lb ISAltN $76 to $250 a month solllnir
Novety Knives. Ulados. razor steel. Six xnonUis'
Buarantoe. Jlandlcs decorated with namo, address.
pictures of liiivAN and othor colobrttlck Oront
PLUTOORA.OY nMADE UNIVERSI
TIES Guegielmo Ferroro. tho famous
Italian historian, after ten weeks in
America has sailed for home. Dur
ing his stay in this cpuntry he was
honored by , scholars, educators,
statesmen, men., of affairs, by tho
president of the; United States him
self, as ono at whose-feet even our
wisest men might well sit in learn
ing, aeroro no left America he sub
mitted an interview in which he gave
ttu JJtV OIU l0 tne PeoPle of the
United States. His message is that
of one learned in the history of em
pires and peoples, of a philosopher
whose wisdom has been gained by a
life-long study of 'the tendencies, in-
ai-iiuuuus ana events that have
marked tho -progress of the world
and the rise and fall of nations.
The most slcniftannt'nnrf m
sage had to do with the tremendous
part recently taken by the American
PlU?l:acy in e .educational system
of this republic, It bears so direct
ly on the Rockefeller and Carnegie
efforts to gain a . foothold in the
University of Nebraska, and on the
Rockefeller project now to. establish
a University of Omaha," that the
vvuwu-iuenua Herewith renrodnopc
seller. Vie commission: Write quick Tfor territory it out nf tho -mT, reproduces
A .; , OI uus clty and state:
.-S??B?.ur millionaires are
XrZL VI ,BO many ways, you
YOU CAN STOP
DRINKING
Your Husband, Son
or rriand from
Wrltn mo. nnil T will tnii ,.., i.
oitljor with or without hla consent, nnil without
SoWub to fcvPr Vr f hL? tlmo- "t wmoo tyou
iioiiuu to try. I have jiivon my advleo tr inin.i
reds upon hundreds, and never hoard or nin
where it falloib Address 15. 1'orti Tpi oh
ko, iu.. 00 Doarboro su Ataoluto secrSr pJoSSJS:
allow them to do some things 'which
wo would nevor nil, m. .
Europe You, allow them to found
universities! -You allow them to de
vote their millions to founding and
supporting vast establishments in
which tho youth of the nation is to
acquire its Ideals. If the million
aires themselves can not teach the
rising generation the ideals they
would like them to acquire, they
can at least select the men who are
to teach them. May there not be
some method in this kind of giving?
" 'Why do you say that a million
aire could not found a university in
Europe?' asked tho writer.
"Tho state would not allow it. If
the millionaire started to do any
thing of that sort the state would
instantly step in and say to him:
'No, my dear sir, do what you like
with your money, but leave the train
ing of the youth to me. I, tho state,
havo charge of that. It is for me
alone to say how the young men and
women are to be brought up; I will
place before them the ideals that I
think they should have. I will Ill
low of no interference on your part.'
Such an institution as Chicago Uni
versity is unimaginable in any coun
try of Europe. It would not be tol
erated for one moment. It is a
beautiful place. I was glad to lec
ture there, but I could not help
thinking what a peril to America
it might become, what sinister pos
sibilities are latent within, it. Mr.
Rockefeller, I understand, does not
interfere. at all in the management
of that university; he does not dic
tate the professors who shall lecture
there nor the curriculum that shall
be followed; and from what I have
been able to learn of him I don't
think he ever will. But some suc
cessor to his millions might choose
to wield the power which Mr. Rocke
feller has thus far let alone. Think
of the power such a man would
have if he wanted to exercise it!
Think of the ideals that might be
set before the youth of America by
an unscrupulous millionaire con
trolling a university through his do
nations! It is too great a power to
be permitted to any man, and I am
amazed that iti America, where the
millionaires are checked by public
opinion, no question seems ever to
be raised as to the possible danger
of the university that is millionaire
made." .
This is the thoucht-nrovoldncr
message left with us by one of the
most illustrious scholars of the Old
World. It sustains exactly the posi
tion this newspaper has taken from
the beginning. It is in line with
the recent powerful letter on the
subject for the World-Herald by
William J. Bryan.
No thoughtful man can look about
him and not see the danger Ferrero
saw so readily that he was "amazed"
at the seeming blindness of the
American people.
Mr. Rockefeller has p.ut $35,000,
000 into the University of Ghinnern.
so that it completely overshadows the
public supported University of Illi
nois. He has put $43,000,0.00 into
an educational fund. Mr. Carnegie
nas put i$ib,uuu,quo Into a profes
sors' pension fund. And these are
only beginnings., Universities not
particinatinjr in all thasa rfoVioc m.
pitifully handicapped. They can not
offer the facilities, the costly instruc
tors, the buildings, equipments, li
braries, that do' these millionalro
made institutions with unlimited
wealth to back them. The small
universities, the sectarian schools,
feel the crushing weight of this
plutocratic competition more and
more keenly. If present tendencies
continue unchecked it requires no
especial faT-sightedness to see the
time when tho stato universities and
smaller private universities will be
left lagging hopelessly in the rear
and when the flowpr nf w ,i.... '
tional system will be in the hands",
u uuuui mo control, or the heirs
and administrators of the present
American plutocracy.
Did Ferrero overstato the case
when he said, of the plutocratic edu
cational system, that "I eould not
Free to the
Ruptured
A New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use
Without Operation Pain Danger
Or Loss of Time
Ruptured persons can forever end tho chafing
and annoyanco of truss-wcarlng and tho dancers
of strangulation by writing-- Dr. W. B. Itlco,
Adams, N. Y. for his famous freo method.
COL. L. W. BI8GELL
Thousands havo dono this and aicnoiv cured
and thoro is no reason for anyone to suffor longer.
Col. L. W.Bissell, Chester Depot, Vt. wrote for
Dr. lUnfs Vrnn Mnthnri. nnr! nnw cnwa it
told Nor Hampshiro soldier, 65 years old, and
wuuvbv w;u. mo puuuu inan UT.XUCQB WCtllOa
completely and permanently cured mo of asovero
rupture ftomwhlchl had suffered for 28 years.
Don' t pay outhundreds of dollars when you can bo
cured so easily without pain or danger of any
kind." '
Dr. Rico has devoted a lifetime to tho euro of
Rupture. His latest discoveries place him In tho
foremost rank of tho world's specialists. A limited
number of free treatments has been assigned to
ourrcaders. Don't send any money. Just fill out
tho coupon below and mall it today to Dr. W. S.
Rico, 485 Main Street, Adams, N. Y.
Age Cause of Rupture.
Whore ruptured
Name
Address .........
-..
'........M....
SKtecribm' JMvertisittg Dept.
This department Is for tho exclusive
use of Commoner subscribers, and
special rate of qlx cents a word per in
sertion the lowest rate has been
made for them. Address alf communi
cations to The Commoner, Lincoln. Neb.
TWO-THIRDS
snftnt In ahnna
vj'wa J ItwVWt
OF YOUR L.IPIQ TS
Whv nnflinrfn Tn
- - Z . . " "J vw JIUTO JLbU,-
cine ioei l-Totectors inside - them to
produce comfort prevent "sllpnlnK"
and save hosiery? 25 cents per pair,
prepaid. In- ordering, stato kind' of
shoes worn. Raqino Heel .Protector
Co., Racine, Wisconsin.
QENTNEITS- VEGETABLE LIVER
lull8', Whe" you are about all in.
SinJSSarIQa'iiCpnayiP.atlon' Headache
Dizziness, Sallow Skin, you havo a
sluggish Liver. Try them; only 50
S5?iB , w or en 5 l H. Elder, Box
2382, Station G." Washington, D. C.
QPECIAL OFFER TO COMMONTCRcj
175 Strawberry PUants, three va
rietlos ; or 15 strong. Grape Vines?thr2e
In3s;, or 15 .Currant Bushes Pre
paid by mail. Order now John w
Dayton, Waukonr Iowa. F'
QKLAHOMA FARMS'. SEND FOR
olcffiSma.181' T' Wt?utS
FnSrlg? w?CT
Pionshlp-for largest and beat? ear t
glafc, Ge' : StaInbrook' "VSSliS
QRANb- cpRAfRIE, ARKANSAS THtt
Stuttgart, Ark. Th Arlmnsawyr.
TEXAS FARM tANDS: SEND 1MB
M. Truehcart, Galvcetoi, Texa"
glance; throe per conty?Efnr2??
xz.uu cash for 160 acros nf n An "lJ
Df Instructions Now HUiii TJioo5
descriptions of lands t tWT . and
School Land LocatJr, 140 Dth'SLfJ
rsia
L 11