16 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. JANUARY 15, 1903. 1KTIH RICHARD LE GALUENNE SEAKLEi & -. SEARLES, SPECIALISTS IN Kervous, Chronic & Private Diseties of MEN & WOMEN. WE CURE ALLMEN'S DISEASES AND NO PAY UNLESS CURED. t W guarantee to euro all curable cases of the Nose.Tbroat, Chert, Stomacli, Liver, Blood. Skin and Kidney Diseases, Lost Manhood, Night Kmii-rions, Hydrocele, Varicocele, Gon, orrbea, Gleot, Pilos, Fistula and Rectal Ulcers Diabetes and Hrifrht'a Disease. $100.00 for a cat of t'AIAKKH, IUIMJMAT1M, JYS l'KPSIA or SYPHILIS we cannot cure, If curable. HOME TREATMENT BY MAIL. " Examination and consultation free. Call, or address with stamp, P. O.Box Drs. Searles & Searlesl firVJa. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. You Will riot Fail in the chicken busi ness if you start right with a Successful Incubator and Brooder, Not experiments but nkchlnes with years ef successful record. Perfect regulation perfect hatches. Do not swell nor shrink . A variety ot styles ana rlu- Hmi 6 ma U iwpi to wtwl wit of nalUnc far lowUUi u4 Pomltrr Bookt. Bttadart Pwltry sad Praliry 6applls. fiMks la r lanuM Das Koines Incb. Co Defl , DosBoIbm, Iowa., . Br Dipt. IS, Bahte, R. I. HL Trial. Don't Pay Double. We'll sell you a better hatcher for the money than any other Incubator concern on earth. New im proved regulator, that can't get out ofordar. lllf, book-Sou llluitrstloni frt. SURE UATtll INCl'BiTOlt CO., Clay Crater, Neb. or Colnmbns, Ohio "zrz f r sw srv hi Trees That Grew The best and hardiest varieties. See our prices. uniM appio, 40. Uaddad Pmk.iUa. BiMk uxnirt Swdlinrjfl Illus trated Cat- or Kncrli;h fVpu. Gflrman Nurvori. Carl Sonderepeer. Proo.. Box 21, " Beatrict, Nth. HEALTHY Sto4ft.,t6; chei TREES NOME GROWN, free irom disease. Wo pay ireicrtt. Apple. : cherry. 2 to.lft., Ilo; peach, tl; Concord grape, 2 per 100. 1000 Ash, $1 ; Catalpa, LocuKt, It. Mul berry, B. Elder and Osago Hedge jlow price. Catalog t ree. "ealbraith!turteries1(FonaijjiuenNurerj)Bi 35, Fairbury.Heb. Lincoln Hide Market The Lincoln Hide & Fur Company, 920 R street, Lincoln, Nebraska, suc cessors to S. J. Dobson & Co., quote tie following prices, f." o. b. Lincoln, .until further notice: No. 1 green salted hides, per lb., 7c, No. 2, j 6c; bulls and side branded, r.c, - horse and mule , hides, large, each, $2.35; small, 75c-$1.50; green sheep pelts, each 40-75c; dry pelts. 5-8c per ; lb.; dry flint butchered hides, per lb., t 12-13c; dry fallen,, weather beaten and murrain hides ,per lb., 5-10c Our clas sified fur list, together with little booklet telling how to trap, skin . stretch and handle furs and bides to . obtain the best lults, will be mailed : free to all upon request, also write for . tags and general information any time. : All correspondence promptly attend ed to. ' Dr. Mitchell's Lumpy Jaw Cure Dr. Mitchell's Lumpy Jaw Cure is guaranteed to cure or money refunded. , One application is enough. One bottle is sufficient for 4 head or more. You can buy it at your druggists or he can get it from his jobber. If he won't, . write us direct and we will send you a bottle for $1.25 delivered. Marshall Oil. Company, sole sale agents for the United States Marshalltown, la. Life Sketch of tb Popular Poet and Novelist Mr. Richard Le Gallienne is now quite as well known in this country as in England. Indeed he is to all in tents and purposes an American au thor. For the greater part of the year he make3 his home In New York. His three latest books have been brought out by New York publishers R. H. Russell and the Harpers. His Ameri can audience is larger in numbers and warmer in sympathy than his English clientele, as has been the case with some other notable British authors, including Thackera and George Eliot. Finally the freer political atmosphere of this country is better suited to the poet who voiced "The Cry of the Little Peoples" than the close, prescriptive air of England. Mr. Le Gallienne has published twenty books of prose and verse, and he is only 36 years old. His literary reputation has been well established for a good dozen years in England, a: i is not now seriously questioned even by the London Saturday Review, long his redoubtable foe. Yet remark able as has been Mr. Le Gallienne's progress, until very lately he has felt that he had to fight every inch of the way. A brief sketch is here offered of his brilliant and interesting career. Richard La Gallienne" was born at Liverpool, January 20, 1866. His grandfather was a Guernsey man and a Frenchman to boot, which accounts for the poet's patronymic. With this exception the family was of excellent English stock into which, however, a drop of Irish blood found its way and. it may be taken for granted, helped In the making of the poet Perhaps also it may be held responsible for Rich ard's democratic proclivities. The poet's father was a sound busi ness man and determined to make an other of his son. Richard was edu cated at Liverpool College and, in ac cordance with the paternal program, was at the age of 16 articled to a firm of chartered accountants. So one of the finest and most delicately artistic of living English writers owes noth ing to either of the great English uni versities; Nor did Charles Lamb, it will be recalled, who has also glorified the race of accountants and whose drudgery at the desk's dead wood bo-, gan earlier and lasted far longer than did Le Gallienne's. Richard felt he had the literary vo cation from the moment of leaving col lege, but the paternal will prevailed, and so he serve ' seven long, dreary years for Rachel in the office of the Liverpool accountants. But during this time he was zealous in acquiring a literary equipment. Bookkeeping is not incompatible with a mild practice of literature, as Charles Lamb had proven. Young Le Gallienne soon be gan to test his vocation in the usual way, and even before leaving the chartered accountant he had made for himself quite a literary reputation in 'tb Tqricssbir As an example of his early leanings toward singularity it is pointed out that, he "raved over Wqir Whitman's poetry to hard-headed Lancashire people who could see neither rhyme nor leason in the rug ged lines of the Trill man of the west, but who admired Mr. Le Gallienne's genius in perceiving the genius they could not discern underlying the 'Leaves of Grass'." It is not amiss to rpoall that Robert Louis Steveneon also professed a great admiration foi Whitman frd wrole a splendid essay in justification thereof. The aestheticisn of the '80's was not without its influence on the young poet, and indeed he was ere long to be recognized as a leading exponent of that peculiar cult of beauty and hedonism. But while indulging the humors of youth, Le Gallienne with a sagacity for which the critics have not always given him credit, never lost sight of his objective. Having abandoned his ledgers, he went up to London where for some months he acted as secretary to Wil son Barrett. Then he joined the staff of the Star as literary critic, in which capacity he obtained his firsh blush of fame. This prepared the way for hi3 genuine literary debut with "Th'? Book-Bills of Narcissus." which, in the estimation of many critics, still re mains one of his most charming works. The book at once established Le Gallienne's reputation, which was presently confirmed by his "George Meredith: Some Characteristics," a just and subtle appreciation. But the things which compelled the world in general to take note of young Mr. Le Gallienne was his happily timed "The Religion of a Literary Man." Denunciatory advertisement on the part of the English clergy helped to make both book and author famous. The most unfriendly critics and the pack were after Richard in those days were obliged to confess that he had "arrived." This was in 1893 and since that time the" world has occupied itself a good deal with Mr. Richard Le Gallienno. Also it is to be said, the world thinks better of him than ever. Though -be has published twenty books, he has written no conspicuously bad one, and he has added immensely to the de light of English readers. Few con temporary English writers have beau so prolific as Mr. Le Gallienne Kip ling is, ot course, a remarkable excep tion. ; In spite of this great sum of literary work (to which should be added much journalizing both in this country and in England, lecturing etc.), it cannot be denied that Le Gal lienne has shown a corresponding ar tistic growth. Today his work i3 firm and mature, proving the full knowl edge of life into which he has come, while the delicate fancy, the style ex quisite alike in prose and verse, are as alluring as ever. Mr. Le Gallienne has just entered into an' engagement, through R. II. Russell of New York, to supply a weekly literary letter to the principal papers of the country. Mr, Bryan's Prosperity The fact that Hon. W. J. Bryan has just completed a home at Lincoln, Neb., is being received with a great deal of pain by. a number of papers throughout the north and east. These papers lay particular stress upon the fact that this house has twenty rooms, and that Mr. Bryan is not only a free silver man, but an energetic opponent of the trusts. They hold to the axiom that any man who sympathizes with the poorer classes chould remain poor himself and leave to others the ac cumulation of riches. It is said that Mr. Bryan has already accumulated between $150,000 and $500,000 worth property; and asserted that his annual income from his paper and other sources is not less than $50,000 an nually. This condition of affairs is sad, no doubt, but what is the use of pro testing? An especially generous Provi dence endowed Mr. Bryan with more than his share of gray matter, and it is not apparent how these people, aro to keep him poor. It is true that Mr. Bryan is becoming wealthy without oppressing any one, and that there has never been the least suspicion that one penny of filthy money ev. r soiled his hands. And it is this that hurts. The plutocratic organs whic are pained at his prosperity wouli have no ill-feeling against him if hs money were wrung from the sweat and the suffering of th3 mass of the peo ple. If Mr. Bryan had, for example, secured his wealth by cornering the stock of coal in some city during th? existing blizzard, or had devised some plan whereby small dealers in certain commodities could have been ruined that a syndicate might capture the tra-ie which had been theirs, he wou'd have been hailed ab a captain of in dustry. But that he should coin this wealth out of the gray matter within his skull, and without injury to any of his neighbors, is, of course, inex cusable. It is more inexcusable that he does not change his political views now that he has acquired a consid erable amount of worldly goods. But more damning than all else is that h. Is making regularly the salary of a manager of a great syndicate, without oppressing any one whatsoever. The public, will m pained along with the plutocrats at this extraordinary conduct of Mr. Bryan, but their paiu will by no means be as acute. In faji they may be willing that Mr. Bryan should continue to prosper, though ihe more envkm will not unnaturally complain that Providence was not more even-handed in its distribution of brains. Mr. Bryan has achieved a notable victory in demonstrating that even at this late day brains are a valuable commodity in the world, and that a man ' may prosper even yet without oppressing his neighbors an A without-permitting his conscience to be seared by the acquisition of wealth by furtive methods. It may be as well to inform these plutocratic organs that wealth is not in itself an evil, bu- that evil methods of acquiring the wealth is what con stitutes the sin, and that they will never be able to convince the worid that honestly acquired wealth i a disgrace, while wealth dishonestly and illegally acquired is an honor to the holder. May Mr. Bryan continue to coin wealth out of his brain until b3 has all that is necessary to his happi ness. The pity of it is that most of the great fortunes in this country are not in the keeping of such men as he. New Orleans Times-Democrat. The cheapest t ing in the world is the good will of the little ones, and nothine nava better divi'dona - . -wM 44 IUUU an investment of this kind. The Rifirht Thine. A New Catarrh Core, Which ts Rapidly Com- ing to the Front For several years, Eucalyptot Guaiacol and Hydrastin have been recognized as standard rem edies for catarrhal troubles, but they have al ways been given separately and only very recent ly an ingenious chemist succeeded in combining them, together with other antiseptics into a pleasant' rffective tablet. Druggists sell the remedy under the name of Stuart's Catarrh Tablets and it has met with re markable success in the cure of nasal catarrh, bronchial and throat catarrh and in catarrh of the stomach. . J Mr. F. N. Benton, whoseTiddress is care of Clark House, Troy, N. Y. cays: "When I run up against anything that is good I like to tell people ot it. I have been troubled with catarrh more or less for some time. Last winter more than ever Tried several so-called cures, but did not get any benefit from them. About six weeks ago I bought a 50 cent box of Stuart's Catarrh Tat lets and am glad to say that they have done wonders for me and I do not hesitate to let alt my friends know that Stuart's Catarrh Tablets are the right thing." Mr. Geo. J. Casanova of hotel Griffon. West oth street, New York City, writes: "I have com menced using Stuart's Catarrh Tablets and al. ready they have given me better results than any catarrh cure I have ever tried.'" A leading physician of Pittsburg advises the use of Stuart's Catarrh Tablets in preference to any other treatment for catarrh of the head; throat or stomach. . He claims they are far superior to inhalers, salves, lotions or powder, and are much mort convenient and pleaaDtto takeand are sol-armless that little children take them with benefit as they contain no opiate, cocaine or any poisoncu3 drugs. - ' . All druggists sell Stuart s Catarrh Tablets at 50 cents for full size package and they are prob ably the safest and most reliable cure for any form of catarrh. Rflfi!f KFFPIWfi sufficient for private ac UUUfXftLLr lltU counts and ordinary tisb taught with plain examples and illustrations, and other business information for reference, given inTHK HANDY POCKET ACCOUNT BOOK. Firmly and nicely bound with pocket and rlap; E0c, postpaid. Send M. O. or-JJo stamps. Address F. O. Johnson, Publisher, Marion, Iowa. Plumbing and Heating Estimates Furnished J. c. cox 1332 O Street Lincoln, Nebraska. Live Stock CATTLE SHEEP Com- .a a mission Nye & Buchanan Co,, SOUTH OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Best possible service in all depart ments. Write or wire us for markets or other information. - Long distance Telephone 2305 J o make cows pay, use sharpies v:ream separators EooH"huslnc8s Lalrylnsr" &cat.270 free W. Chester. 22 fl s.uijBrs of L)gHAtaea Wilt rind Pi The Hotel Walton 1510 O STREET, the best and most convenient low priced houe in the c ty. Rates $i per day and up. WANTED FAITHFUL PERSON TO TRAVEL for well established house in a few counties, calling on retail merchants and agents. Local territory. Salary $1024 a year and expenSfs. payable $19. 'iO a week in cash and expenses ad yanced. Position permanent. Business suc cessful and rushing. Standard House,334 Dear born St., Chicago. Fruit Farm For Sale A most desirable fruit farm, con sisting of one hundred and sixty acres, located immediately on the west bank of the Missouri river, in extreme southeastern Nebraska,- where crops of no kind have ever failed. No bet ter fruit soil. Write Robert W. Fur nas, Brownvllle, Neb. Fire Proof Safe Large fire proof and burglar proof safe, 4y2 feet high, 3 feet square for sale at a bargain. Address P. F. Zim mer, 116 South 10th st, Lincoln Neb.