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About The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1910)
i ff ' , j-'srY? J " 7 ' fB. t . .. JtHv '? IY ft u I'V 1 m b V A IM ;. yr - 'Wb' ' x?rr JANUARY 7, 1810 ..n. . .- BRAVE WOJVIEN ; Women's delicate nervo organism subjects them to so much sufCoririfr ..that it is almost inconceivable how they manage to fulfill the various 'household and social duties, and yet they do and suffer. . As a rula they understand tho naturo ."of their delicate organism, but overlook tho wonderful lnfluenco their nervous ; system has upon their general health. ' They are not sufficiently impressed ; with tho fact that all their ills are di- rectly traceable to the nervjous system. ; That their periodical sufferings and headaches are due to weakened nerves. 'has been -wonderfully successful in re vitalizing the" nerves and curing all cases of nervous disorders and loss of Vitality. Thousands of delicate woman havo regained their health and vigor by its use, and the thbughtful fortify them selves by Keeping their nervous system strong and vigorous by its use. "From a thin nervous wreck, miser able and wretched, I am now enjoying splendid health, and it Is all traceable ,to your splendid medicine, Dr. Milos' ' Restorativo Nervine." Mrs. Maud B Oplingcr, Philadelphia, Pa. r The first bottle will benefit, If not, the 'druggist will return your money. The Commoner. THE BEST ASSET OP A BANK is honest officials; the best se curity of depositors is tho Oklahoma-bank -law. Bank officials are not always honest. Tho state banks of Oklahoma are all operated under tho Guar anty Law If you want to know about it ask for our booklet. GUARANTY STATE BANK Muskogee, Oklahoma M., G. HASKELL, Cashier W fl M T P II aUwaO a1' Clerhs. Lotus ." C lli A k, .Prgpnroyou for Spring examlim tlon! too XVce Scholar tihipti. Prrs't of our school conducted Gov't Exnmlnntlon. Write for p Catalog atul Jrec TrJahJCesnon. Ozmont's Collpgb, Bept.,03, St. Louis, Mo. JPATJEJUTOtS SiggftSig" Frco report to Patontnbllltv. Illustrated Ouklo 13ook, and List of Invention Vanted. sent frco. ViCTon J. Evans fc Co., Washington, D. 0. TOBACCO SALESMEN FACTORY WANTS Good pay, steady w oik and promotion. Kxperionca UnneCCESarVlia IVfl .will iMvn rnmnloln InilniMlnni DanvilU Tobacco Co., Box X 56. Danville; Va.' i .., " ACItES of choice farm land for salo in tho best portion of Eastern Okla homa, Writo Comtnomcmtlth JbaiiU Coin Vany, Vinita, Oklahoma. PATENTS Watson E. Coleman, Patent Lawyer.Woslnnglon, Bates reasonable. Highest references. Beatacrvlcca AGKNTS Big-profits selling Vulcan Fountain andStylo Pens; jvell advertised: easy to sell: write for catalogue- phowing liberal discounts. Ullrich & Co., 27 TliameB St., New York. i i , HAIR LIKE THIS BTDEjKT Let me send you a remark able treatment or Ilalclness, Dandruff, Gray Hair, etc.. at my own expense. I twill sur prise and delight you. Write today to YK.C1IA8.KKENE, I're.ldtnt JLorrlmer IniU, I)ept 2GM Baltimore, Hd. FREE MaryT. Goldman's Gray Hair Restorer roctorca orlninnl color in mild, healthful manner In from 7 to 14 days. En tirely uifforont irom any thine olso. Its effect la permanent. Does n o t , w waan on nor jook uuhuic nraL Has no sediment, so it'a neither sticky nor sroMy--lt'8 as puro and dear as water. Don't experiment nee what thousands of others have 'found safe and satisfactory. Sample and comb absolutely free. Bo snro to mention ori nlnal color of yoar hair. XARY X, GOLDMAN, 241 Goldman j"ag St. Paul, Minn. iaBaa V Baal xA KS -ii TiaauARHltor RIDER A6EHTS JTNTE9 In each town to ride ana exaipunajw xotoDIcycle. Write for tcf0?'t rW ShlB Approval xg Aw.iiowio Bays trek trial. nerosY FmCKonbIcycleJ,tlres HIStOUY MAiaNG EVENTS of lTo9 ftfrnU? ?i8t0ry makine ventB NBW rtrl-n m d a WrltGr II1 thO Now Orleans Times-Democrat in this svsSm fT1 rot," proposing a based , , no, anditaXatlon in Enelanti; tnrnu rUpon Valuea rather "mil rd pnrS,(fs at Present), with tho "un earned increment" feature added, has been referred to the voters by the peers. Parliament hit w y ii0 h Jw Jf?,ld ge?eal electIon w111 b0 K,fio ter th? holIdays, tho enthu siastic campaign being already en tered upon. Tho Payne tariff law was passed by an extra session of the Sixty-first congress, allegedly fulfilling the re publican promises of "revision down ward, in answer to widespread dis satisfaction with it, President Taft calls It the best such measure ever aPProyod by the federal legislators. A Nicaraguan revolution, led by Estrada against the dictatorship of Zelaya, has brought actual war to the isthmus, and, through the executions of two Americans, forced practical in tervention by the United States. Fighting in the Riff reeion of Mo. rocco has followed a Spanish mining adventure there, the engagements having dragged their way through half tho year, with several hundreds killed. Tho Chinese railroad loan has been opened at last so that the United States may share it with England, Franco and Germany; the Celestial government having also, taken the first steps towards constitutional re form, and the building of a great navy. The sugar scandals at the port of New York are being aired in the low er courts, while the supreme court itself is now to pass upon the two rulings that (1) the Standard Oil company is an illegal corporation, acting in restraint bf trade; aha (2) that the Federation of Labor officers Gbmpersr. Mitchell and Morrison, act ed in contempt of court in the matter of a boycott injunction. A United States of South Africa promises to bo born early in 1910, as a result of tho agreement to union reached by Cape Coldny,. Natal, the Orange River arid 'Transvaal Colonies and Bechuanaland. Lord Morley has also brought his British Indian re forms into play. Widespread and costly strikes have marked the year in France and Swe den, Australia, .Argentine and the United States. Barcelona, Spain, and Lima, Peru, have been the centers of serious riotings with bloodshed. Tho Cretan imbroglio failed to eventuate in the union of the Isle with Greece, but paved the way for the appearance of a "military league" at Athens, which has be gun with a strong hand to set the national house in order. Rumors of King George's abdication have not been fulfilled. Somebody found the north pole. Cook's claim to the discovery is yet held "under popular advisement," Peary's visit there being everywhere granted. An English naval officer, Shackleton, has set a new Antarctic record, penetrating to within 111 miles of the southern "stick." MINISTER WU'S CHRISTMAS SER MON The wit and wisdom of Minister Wu will be missed when he returns to China. Many people look on this Oriental diplomat as a sort of Chinese Bernard Shaw because of his sharp comments on Occidental ways and things. It is the natural right of his raco to take unconventional views and say unexpected things when abroad, and that privilege helps the more to give piquancy to their re- m Wuism, for instance, the Chinese ,,"!l . Unload to an Evening ithout the least irony, "Wuism, you might say, is tho Bible mado practl ?? 8 8end moro missionaries loin i na than wo ImPort, consistent selfishness sounds llko unfamiliar doctrine. But it in not on ... ijvhen tho Chineso moralist gives this --vvunumnuu oi mo words: "You see, it Is this way: No hu man soul can bo happy nt tho exponso of unhappiness to another soul. It is a positlvo law of naturo that a good deed performed inevitably brings happiness to tho doer. To bo com pletely happy I must to tho extent of my capacity bo of boneflt to my fellow-creatures. As long as I am of benefit to humanity I will bo hap py. Happiness is tho solo and para mount aim of existence; thereforo my desire to bo happy Ib logically selfish. To bo completely happy I must bo consistently selfish. Do you get what I mean?" An excellent sermon for tho Christraa8tido. Now York World. fflSriES World interviewer last week is "con- Jlree, coaster brake rear wheels, lamp, sundries, halfriett. . qQlflshneBS." Then he added Subscribers' fldwtisiiig Dcpt. Send us a trial ordor. Writ luat An youM talk. Never mind tho i?ra nrnar Count numc, poatofllco. and numberV ft0 ono word oaoh. Multiply by 8 cent! per word, and aend your nd. and monay .order direct to The Commoner. Llnaoin, You can makft money and build up a nlco llttlo buiilncRfi of your own bv UHlnir th! department to placo your propojiltlon beforo The Cornmonor'a blic army of rcadera. if you have anything to buy or noil it will pay you to uio thla department at all flmea. A nOUT TOBACCO AND IT8 DKLKTR V riouB KfTectB. By Doctor Charlcn K Slocum. A book for everybody, tobac-co-UHorn and non-uacrn. Ladli- ahould read It. Boyu, kINh and adultn oan do well by ItH milo. Hend ono dollar for' copy, and auk for torma, to Tho Slocum Publishing Company, Toledo Ohio. ' WANTED, BY W. P. ANDBU80N. Or y Canyon City, Oroicon, tho addrens of Jane Sands, whosu last known resi dence wan In Texas. Hr mother was it slstor of w. P. Anderson. NEW BOOK A New, Complete Edition of Mr. Bryan s Speeches Containing All of His Important Public Utterance In two handy volumes. You can follow Mr. Bryan practically through his entiro career, from his valedictory oration at Illinois College In 1881, through his early public life, his presidential campaigns, his world tours, his platform experiences, and his participation in meetings of organizations devoted to national progress, as well as International congresses for tho promotion of the world's peace. Tho subject matter of these speeches covqi;s a wide rango of topics, .from the fundamental jiud vital problems ot national and. world' lltp So the highest ideals of hulrnan endeavor. A handy means of rcferonco to tho studenj of social problems of tho present and future. - - 4 A Brief Outline of Contents In these volumes you will find all his important political speeches on tho Tariff, Banking, Currency, Bimetalism, Incomo Tax, Money, tho Silver Question, Imperialism, Colonialism, Government Ownership, Tho Trust Question, Guaranteed Deposits, Election of Senators by Direct Vote, Initiative and Referendum, Labor, 1908 Tariff Speech, Stato and Nation, etc., etc. Hero you will find all his speeches in foreign lands, beforo tho World's Peaco Congress in London, in Cuba, Japan, England, etc., etc. Theso books contain his educational and religious lectures Tho Price of a Soul, Tho Valuo of an Ideal, Tho Prlnco of Peace, Man, Missions, Faith, etc., etc.; his miscellaneous speeches Character, Gray's Elegy, Memorial Day at Arlington, Receptions in Lincoln, his home city, at the Whito House Conference, on Commerco at tho Taft-Bryan-banquet, to His Neighbors, Tributes to Jefferson, Lincoln, etc., etc. The Only Complete Collection . While Mr. Bryan's speeches, lectures and public addresses havo ap peared from time to time in different editions of his works, or hayo been Issued in separate form, these two volumes contain tho only au thentic, complete and authoritative collection of all of his speeches ever Issued. This is the first publication In book form of a completo collec tion of Mr. Bryan's speeches from his first entry In public life up to tho present time. This complete collection of speeches comes in two handsome volumes, cloth bound, 12m., gilt top, and printed in largo clear type. Frontis pieces showing Mr. Bryan at various stages, with biographical Introduc tion b" his wife, Mary Baird Bryan. Price per set, $2.25, in cloth binding, prepaid. Bound in half leather, $3.25 prepaid. Agents wanted. Sent prepaid on receipt of price. Address all orders and make re mittance payable to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nebraska' Special Offer For a limited time, to any ono sending $2.2tf for 2-volumo set of the new book, "Speeches of William Jennings Bryan," we will include with out extra cost a year's subscription to The Commoner. If already a subscriber, date of expiration will be advanced one year. If half leather edition is wanted send $3.25. Send all orders and make remit tances payable to The Commoner, Lincoln, Neb. Name P. O. 15 f arm . j I i ."f.' t '"Hi t. V .1' v j dttrr ' "BAU UTCbK W.i VQfU ri7 nii a fcififttnttMHH