t tmywF - v v-w 'F"7awrp32JwWRp T(Rt9F3 - ' - rw .-tea 12 The Commoner, TELLS WHY CHICKS DIE J, 0. Hoofer, tho poultry oxport of 1801 Mnln St.. Kaiimui City, Ma, In Rlvlrijc wny froo a vnlunblo book entitled "Whlto Diarrhoea nm! How To Guro It'. Tlila rcrnarknMo look contalni omo new pclcntlllo lacU on wliltodlnrrliwannd tcllxliow to projmro a uluiplo Bolutloii tliat cunt tliln tcrriblo dtocuno ovor nlclit. Kvcryotio Intonwtcd In poultry ........... .wk.hu, 1Tvu mil ni-uiur luruuuui I HUM) froo ItOOkN. f!AI VEC RA,SE THEM WITHOUT MILK. UJ4fc.fCd BOOKLET FREE. WEBRASKA SEED COMPANY, OMAHA, NEB. - In Virginia-- "l our ll r and property arc (info from tlratruo tlon ly wind and flood, mid fnrm Iambi yield bit rcttiniH on tlio liivusttnciiL Write, JIAKItV T. hTKATTON, UOi flloflinnlci llltljr., rtornburrf Ta. grinding process has come an inde pendence that was not then known was hardly then possible. When a man does not know where his next meal Is coming from It Is hard to be Independent, but give him assurance for the future and he insists upon uie recognition or. nis riguis. "Ad T li n tta trnvnlnrl fVirritcrli fVi land I have met an increasing num ber of men who are looking at this question from a1 larger than a per sonal interest. The first one of this group was a Chicago business man. He told me that until within two years he had not studied public ques tions, but that re'eent investigation had convinced him that there were WHY INCUBATOR CHICKS DIE ,l,lU-,...,.",V,',"ryonVhlu, Ilnrrliora,orWhylnniialor Chicks Die." will bo sent ab?o i? J. vn ?.... tin.1.0! '1"l,0,,p M'Mdln.K " t a"M of 7 to 10 of tliolr friends that nso Incubators. d",wiy..,,'.,.,(w,.'?'or.. ltdasrrlboawlilto diarrhoea or bowel trouble, tho canso. nnrt muuiiu-un'. fxiuK (iitnoiuieiy jukjc lor lliu Names. RfliSflLL REMEDY COMPANY, Blaekwell, Oklahoma MONEY-MAKING PROPOSITION FOR LAND AND COLONIZATION AGENTS Desk C, Commoner Office, Lincoln, Neb. WBMBCSHBjBMBBlBBMBf 3Mjjj AL'-'OTpygy ! .,. I 1""' "' '" ' WK3 An FOR SALE Improved Texas Farm I OFFER for Sale 240 acres of land, three miles from Mission, Texas, on the Rio Grande, 200 acres are cleared and under irriga tion. The improvements, consist ing of a $2500.00 house with barns, fences, etc., have cost over $5,000.00. Easy terms will be given on deferred payments. I would not care to sell to anyone unless purchaser makes a personal examination of the property. Ap ply to owner for price and terms. W. J. Bryan, Lincoln, Neb. some men in this country that had more money than it was safe for the country for them to have. He said ho had been looking for a' remedy; that he had considered several, but they did not seem sufficient, and be asked me if I could suggest any other. I told him that he interested me; that I had been talking to men who had been fighting for their lives, urn, tuat ne seemea to iook at the question from a different standpoint. He said yes, that for many years he had had an income of fifteen or twenty thousand dollars a year and that he was not worried about him self, but that he was worried about the future of the country. I told him I was not afraid that any man by his own unaided effort giving to l touuujLy u rewara commensurate with that that he collected could ever collect enough money from society to make his fortune a menace to those around him. That the only thing that need alarm anyone was the fact that in some cases we had allowed men to gather where they did not sow; that we had allowed men to take from society a recom pense out of proportion to the ser vice that they rendered, and that this necessarily left to other people a re ward that was less fhnn fiior i,o earned. This was nno nf v. I asked him if he knew anybody else like him in Chicago. He said he knew a- hundred men among his per sonal acquaintances who were look ing at the question from the same standpoint and reaching the same conclusion And my observation since that time has convinced me that It was a conservative statement that he made. I have found all over this country a political independence such as we have not known before, and I believe the reason of it is that men have commenced to feel that they haye to take their consciences into politics and that they have to cifc,ii ijuuiiu questions by moral Buuuuarus m tnis country. (Ap plause.) v L "Some two years ago a man came to the city of Lincoln and made a sPG(lC,11 t the business men as sembled, at the invitation of our Commercial club, and he told the 5?7j?f J how nnrl nffn. Z , 10rtUIie ln BUSineSS, and after having made his fortune invested some of it as a matter of business in the stock of a S frin-chise-holding corporation; how he became a director, and how as a affair nfG ?,egan t0 illvessate the affairs of the company; how hP found things that he could nSt in- tSZ f a ?ireCt0r' and yet wh he tried to reform them he found the other dlrfififnrn wi, ' A n tfte hnhneVle Went out and elected a new board by appealing to the stockhohT broughl ?r"VtGIby -teW ,,2 ht,tof a consciousness of the grart system, and he became a re former, and since that time he hnR been one of the zealous reformers of the country. He has given of M means to promote reforms, and hi has seen the results of his work anl has been made happy. d "I micht fivQ -., ii. . men hnf t fVj. . uue "ames of of n f , fear t0 glve you the names that. I 1 bnCa-USe there ar so many are more neonln in fiw ua ttlere day indenS n H1.1.8, to- VOLUME 13, NUMBER l4 inff. this stirrlnp' nt " is the largest factor in this lllj tlon, for after all the con,Hnevolu the most potent fowe ofwhiff U has knowledge. Tell me that S ? the law that makes mJ 1 ll ,3 For one man made honest tT an hundred are mad. hn!! il law science. Tell me that it qK ,on of prison walls thatkeeps man n t path of rectitude! For one m. kept in the narrow way by L? prison walls a multitude are! righteous by those invisible 1 that conscience rears about us, wa that are stronger than walls of atone "In every part of this country in every section of our land, aye ft every civilized nation on this ear h 22. fttftiss-f-? -uTS est -aafitorcU not to be found in the counting money nor yet in the pleasures o society, but is only to be secured Jm af? aPProvjng conscience and from tho consciousness that they have made an unselfish contribution to the welfare of their fellow men (Applause.) " --i'wuuvul ill won fit -.t sasiS rtieqrbr frZ e not from the standpSmt of RE? selfish interest thSn we haV? JWn ownbefore in this coln (T- the'oneenmot1110.10 n any other X the n P,otent than conditions which an ! ing of the I should state to "n h ?ceniZo iuagment this 2 tO fhA ?mV am Feady t0 adVanC thnf XJ d proPosition, namely, that the progress of the world in the essentials of government is as remarknhlo aa !,. u. ia dS in intelligence S in morVrTnl ntnii ue ?iranse ff wifch a larger intelligence there was not a better understanding of the science of gov ernment, and it would be humillat- w ,USif Wlth a better understand ing of the science of government there was not a larger faith in the principles of popular government, i A would be strange, too, if with a better understanding of brother hood there was not a clearer recog- ?i i n the rights of man- Some tmng like a century ago Thomas Jefferson said that there were just wherever speech was free these two Pities would manifest themselves, and these two parties he described as an aristocratic party that would naturally draw to itself those who did not believe in the people and did not trust them, and a democratic party that would as naturally draw to itself those who did believe in the people and did trust them. I need not tell you that when Jefferson used wo wora 'democratic' . he had no reference to the party that we now call democratic. At that time there wa-s no democratic party, so known, m all the world, and in this country the party we now call the democratic was known as the republican party so handicapped were we in a name In the beginning. (Laughter.) He aid not attempt to use the names that aro nnnllorl f nnn4.inn M,nt ,.,myia fjf.tu. 1.1 JLFtll LICa LUUt I.U1UO and go, he rather used names that described the spirit that animates parties, and what he said was true. Jefferson drew the only line that can be drawn always and everywhere through society, the line that sepa rates the man who is at heart demo cratic from the man who is at heart an aristocrat. That is the only fun damental distinction to be found among men, and it is found every where and has existed always, so far as history throws any light upon the wttujoui. Ana tnis distinction is su important when we come to con sider questions of government, that I hope you will pardon me if I dwell for a moment upon it that I may em phasize its importance. If I am go ing to talk to people on the question of government the first thing I want to find out is whether the people to whom I talk are at heart democrats or aristocrats, and you can't find it out by asking men, for in this coun tary they won't admit they are aris tocrats, even if they are, and so I have resorted to a plan of finding out whether a man was a democrat or an aristocrat, and you have been so attentive and so generous in your