,fr1'vtf,ffPm:fi'rxr'r' s vfr I t)U 14 The Commoner. VOLUME 10, NUMBER 30 1"V .,,, If )N mtmA. About 3,000,000 persons aro con Btantly ill in tlio Unitod States, ono sovonth ol! whom havo tuberculosis. Tallklrigf Farrots Wo offer for n limited time, yoiinir, tamo parrots nt 16 oncli that wo Btinrnntoo to taiu within BO dy or monoy ! lundod. Shipped safoly any whoro In tho U. 8 Canada or Moxico on rocolpt of prlco. Tlila Include slilpplnjrbox and food for lournoy. Ovor 2000 satisfied purchaBora last season. A 12.50 stool wlro cago for 12.00 when ordorcd with parrot. CUBIEY fi MUUEH.12B3 Market 8r.,PNiUDiLPRM. Pa. Tht hart at Vtt Shtf In tht World) 5g jMfl Theodore Roosevelt in Egypt To tlio Editor of tho Manchester Guardian. Sir: When tho news roached us at Cairo that Mr. Roose volt, ex-president of tho great Amer ican republic, had agreed to give a locturo before tho Egyptian Univer sity, our young university students wero delighted at tho idea. They looked forward to an opportunity of listening to tho sago advice of a' man who had been one of tho successors of Washington, who freed the Unitod States from tho English yoke! They thought that whether or no ho en- DON'T JIJEAT UJP THE MOUSE USUI A JVJUI'VK SI3TJV-MUSATXXO 1?IjA.T'I110V You would linvn ono In your homo boforo this week ends if you real Izwliiow irood, liow muoli nncl how comfortable youxanlron with It, How nay, Hicody and Inoxvonulvo to onorato. Not u The" home To lron-UHO a JUlJlIiKK tills summer. Writo for frco booklot. Jublleo Manufacturing Co,, 216 S. 14th St., Omaha, Neb. ORDER A COPY OP The Platform Text-Book Containing THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES AND All the National Platforms of all the Parties A handy compendium of political Information that should be in tho Lhands of every American voter of whatever party affiliation. It clearly shows the trend of political principles from the earliest foundation or our government to tho present time. This book is printed in clear type, bound in substantial paper covers, and contains 207 pages. The supply is limited, but orders will bo filled as long as they last at 25 cents per conv. nostnnid to any address. Send your order today. Address all Orders to The Commoner, Lincoln, Nebr. I Ideal Home or Investment My fruit farm, which I am offering for sale at a very low figure, contains 160 acres of the finest fruit land In Southwestern Arkansas. The price is so low and tho location so good that whoever buys this farm is bound to make a profitable investment. The location is ideal for fruit growing near to a first-class mar ket without which the finest fruit producing land would be ren dered unprofitable. It Is situated three miles from Dequeen, Ark., one of the principal railroad points in that state, and at the fool hills of tho Ozark Mountains. FRUIT PICKED ON THIS FARM IS SHIPPED DIRECT TO KANSAS CITY AND PLACED ON SALE THE FOLLOWING MORNING. Kansas City is the greatest market city of the south west, and tho prices received there are tho very best. This section of Arkansas produces the finest flavored Elberta peaches grown anywhere, always in demand and commanding tho highest prices. My farm has. 2 8 acres In ono year old Elberta peaches In fine growing condition. As soon as these trees come Into bearing threo crops of peaches will easil pay for the land at tho prico I am ask ing. Besides this I have 6 acres In bearing orchard peaches, apples and plums. Of my farm, 130 acres are cleared and in cultivation. The land is of good quality and is this year planted in corn, cotton, sugar cano, sweet and Irish potatoes, cow peas, peanuts, and garden vegetables. About forty acres of good alfalfa land. Some good timber. Good improvements. Good water. Healthy locality. R. F. D. This farm" is a money-maker, but I am past 70 years of age and getting too old to develop It. Besides I have other interests de manding my attention. This is a fine opportunity for a younger man to stop in and make some money In a few years' time. Tho prlco is so reasonable that you will be surprised when I quote you my terms In a direct letter. I will sell this farm if bought within a short time, at less than one-half the prico of the commonest farm lands up north. This farm will bear the strictest investigation you can mako. I invite correspondence from any ono seeking to better their condition, or wishing to mako a splendid investment. jr. JK. BAMM, 041 So. 13th St., Xj in coin, JXTeb couraged them to go on with their struggle for liberty, ho would at least say an appreciative word of their effort towards light and their desire for education and for scientific knowledge. His speech at Khartoum was a first disappointment, and cooled their interest in him. He exhorted the Soudanese to accept the. English regime, which he represented to them as the most liberal and humanitarian any nation had imagined. Ho for got that the Soudan was an Egyptian province and that the English had no more right there than in Egypt. Nevertheless it was hoped that at Cairo he would mend his manners. The result was a' second, still great er, . disappointment for his friends. He said everything at Cairo that he ought most carefully to have left unsaid. He rushed into tho question of the assassination of Boutros Pasha. His speech gave us the im pression that he had been primed by tho English to advise us to abandon our claims and to accept English rule, resignedly, if not joyfully, all hope of a constitution being de ferred for several generations! The Bpeech when it was published at once caused general indignation, and pro tests wero drawn up and sent to Mr. Roosevelt the same evening by our committee of the national party, by tho students of the high schools, and by all the political associations. Next day a great indignation meeting was held under the chairmanship of our vice president, All Bey Kamel, at which several members of the legis lative council were present, including our great orator Abaza Pasha; and after It those who had taken part In it went on, with flags flying, to make a manifestation against Roose velt under his windows at Shep heard's hotel. He was greeted in th same way in Alexandria at the railway station and on the quays. We were not, therefore, surprised that he should have made another attack on us in London. We all ex pected it. Nevertheless the ferocity of his latest attack on a whole nation has surprised us. The sin of our nation in his eyes has been that it seeks to free its territory and demands the natural right to self-government and this from Mr. Roosevelt, who made war on Spain to oblige the Spaniards to evacuate Cuba and the Philippines! Mr. Roosevelt seems to be one of those who divide the hu man race into two sections, a su perior and an inferior, and would have the one be slave to the other. We do not understand by what right he counts us among those whose function it Is to serve. Is it because our nation was the earliest to civi lize the world? Is it because we are the most ancient race known to his tory? We are quite sure that Mr. Roosevelt's opinion on this head is peculiar to himself and that his fellow-citizens will be less than pleased at a pronouncement so unworthy of a citizen of the greatest republic of tho world. How Is it possible for one brought up in the tradition of liberty and democracy to reproach Englishmen with their "weakness, timidity, and sentimentality, qualities which may be far more disastrous than violence and injustice," and this after Den shawl? What means does he nro- poso should be put In practice against us? Is it to be lynch law for us? Are we to be exterminated like the redskins of America or the blacks of Australia? Mr. Roosevelt allows himself the airs of a man su perior to us all. He would teach each nation in turn what it Is to do. His lecture at tho Sorbonno was a fine example. And now In order to he advises England to uso -violence to us, even injustice! This from a man who has spent a few hours only in Egypt and about a people differ ing from his own in language, man ners, and religion! However, we have one reason to thank Mr. Roosevelt, for in making tho indictment against us ho indicts at the same time the British occu pation. He has shown it up for tho failure it has been, and Englishmen can hardly be pleased at the heavy judgment 'pronounced upon their work, the work they used to boast of so vainglorlously as "the great work of Cromer." That noble lord ought to be even less satisfied with Mr. Roosevelt than ourselves. What, we wonder, does he think about it? As for ourselves, we shall continue to fight on, sure of the sympathy of the liberals of all lands, and most of all of the Americans. Yours, etc., MOHAMMED FARID, Chief of the Egyptian National Party. ' IT MADE A DIFFERENCE William B. Ridgely, former comp troller of the currency, said of a cer tain speculator recently: "The" man is as ingenious as a horse-trader's son who was once un expectedly called .upon by his father to mount a horse and exhibit its paces. "As he mounted he leaned toward his father and said: " 'Are you buying, or selling?' " Success. HANDS UP Eleanor, aged six, had been going to school only a few weeks. She had learned to raise her hand if sho "wanted anything. One day she put this into effect when che was sent to the chicken house to get the. eggs. Just as she reached the chicken house door her mother heard her say, "All you chickens that have laid an egg, raise your hands." The Delineator. GENEROUS "Joseph," said his mother, re provingly, "I should think you'd be ashamed to be in the same class with boys so much smaller than yourself." "Well, mother," replied Joe, "I look upon the matter a different way altogether. It makes me feel fine to seo how proud the small boys are to be in the class with a big boy like me." The Delineator. MARKET RATES Considerate Motorist "I'm awful ly sorry I knocked you down hope you aren't hurt. Now, what can I give you?" Yokel "Well, zur, 'ow much do 'ee generally give?'.' TitBits. SttDscrHurs' Advertising Depn This department Is for tho benefit of Commoner subscribers, and a special rate of six cents a word per Insertion tho lowest rate has been made for them. Address all communications to Tho Commoner, Lincoln. Nebraska. WE CAN TRADE YOUR PROPERTY. Book of 500 exchanges free. Graham Brothers, Eldorado, Kansas. RITE TODAY FOR FREE .PAM- phlet, and prices on finely ground phosphate rock, tho cheapest and best of all phosphate fertilizers. "W. J. Embry & Co., Columbia, Tennessee. BROTHER, ACCIDENTIA Discov ered root will cure both tobacco habit and indigestion. Gladly send particulars. J. W. Stokes, Mohawk, Florida. FORT SMITH, ARKANSAS IS ON THE verge of big developments. For lit erature and Information write O J, 24 Brockman, Real North 7 th St. Estate Dealer, FOR SALE HALF, OR WHOLE IN 1 torest In democratic paper in east ern Kansas: only democratic paper In t, viB .!, -ni,Jrii county; a good proposition. Address I have his revenge on us Egyptians I "Newspaper? care Commoner. V.ifaAa'WA! J mail h.'lmi&Atmit'lUlJki&Uti u VAtfA-'J