The independent. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1902-1907, March 12, 1903, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    the ftiMiu Mi?Mtm
. - f(... i Si ' :
MARCH 12, 1903.
FAR;! LANDS
in the Mooe
Mountain Dist.,
CANADA.
200.000 ACRK8 of the
choicest virgin lnia for
sale at from s?.r . , ,
$8 to $12 per Acre;
Fei tile Valleys. Open .
Plain, Luxuriant Grasses,
Pure Spring Water. ,
It should interest every fannerin Nebraska
to know that be can sell out hia high-priced
lands and move to the fertile valle a of East
ern Assinibo a and bay land at from $8 oo to
fit oo per acre, with an expenditure of very
ttle cash. It must certainly be of interest
also to know that the taxes on improved farma
in this famous district are fum 12.50 to $5 00
on the quarter secti n. Hundreds have come
into this d strict from Minnesota, Iowa and
Nebraska at my instigation and have found
a district just as fertile, and the winters jurt
aa pleasant, as in the Western States, and
prosperity more generally prevailing. Poor
men who came to thia district two years ago
and purchased land at f 8.00 per acrt are now
prosperous and contented. In 1901- Areola
shipped 500,000 bnshela of wheat, being an
average or 29 bushcia per acre, aud iu the
season just pawed 900 coo bushels of wheat
being an aveiageof rj bushels per acre, be
sides 200,000 bushels of flax. Write to your
friends in this district, or send to me for ra
map and pamphlet showing the lai ds I stifi
have for sale at the above prices. Vou cannot
help but be impressed by the prospects. It
is worth figuring out.
A.B. COOK, Areola, Asalnlboia, Canada.
FARMERS, GOME TO MONTANA.
RICH lands, good markets, fine climate. Buy
a farm before they advance in price. They
will double in value in the next 2 years. I can
sell you the bet improved farms here now for
$10 per acre. Write me for particulars. Address,
J. M. GAUKT, Kaal Estate,
Great Falls, Cascade Co., Moat.
Cancers Cured;,
why suffer
1 pain and death
from cancer? - Dr. T. .O'Connor
cures cancers, tumors and wens;
no knife, blood or plaster. Address
1306 O St., Lincoln, Nebraska.
Insure Your Crops
AGAINST HAIL
A HOME ST A TE COMPANY
AND GOOD AS GOLD. '
The United Hail Insurance Associa
tion of Lincoln, Nebr., has paid the
-enormous sum of $147,300x0 to 1949
farmers who have suffered losses by
hail during the past four years. This
is the oldest and most reliable company
in the state. .", It started this year with
over 3,000 of ,our best class of farmers
as members who have their cultivated
ground covered with $1,360,000 of In
surance. . The average cost the past
three years in the Eastern part of the
state has been 2i per cent, on the
amount insured, while other compan
ies have not carried it for less than 4
per cent.
GOOD AGENTS WANTED.
'SEE'''
United Mutual Bail las. Association,
116 So. 10th' 5t, Lincoln, Nebr.
cattle"""
Stock SrV mission
I SHEEP
Hye & Buchanan Co,, 1
SOUTH OMAHA, NEBRASKA.
Best possible service in all depart
ments. Write or wire us for markets
or other information. ;
Long distance Telephone 2305
CERTIFICATE OF PUBLICATION
STATE OF N EBB ASK A7- - '
AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Lincoln. February 1st, 1903
It is hereby aertilied, That tba National
Ufa and Trust Company, of Dea Molaas, in
the State of Iowa, has complied with the
Insaranee Law of this State, applicable to such
companies and Is therefore authorized to Con
tinue the business of Life Insurance in this
State for the current year ending January 31st,
1904. , ' '
Summary of report filed for the year ending
December 31st, 1SW2.
.-; , "' . - INCOMS '
Premiums.. $ 990,37412
All other sources ' 71,019.54
Total 11,061,393.66
DISBURSEMENTS
Paid nolicv boldera M,O01.2
Allotherpaymeots...... 527,199.50
Total $
Admittedasii4;-. $
582,200.81
992,094.68
LIABILITIES
Net reserve... v. , 792,171.06
Net Policy Claims...... 2,404.00
All other liabilities .... 66,779.17
Capital stock paid up.. 100,000.00
Surplus beyond capital
stock ana outer us
Ml it ion : t.
Total t 992,094.68
Witness my band and the seal of the Auditor
of Public Account the day and rearflrat above
written. ' tusnss weiwn,
J. L. Pierce, Auditor of Publie Accounts.
Deputy.
841,354.23
50,740.45 150.740.45
HARDY'S COLUMN
f We can't see why the United States
senate should object to Senator-elect
Smoot from taking his seat A large
minority of the present senate are just
as much polygamists in practice as
Senator Smoot. Nebraska can boast of
having one senator of that grade.
'The beef trust has been prosecuted
because the easf buys beef of, the
west,' but the oil trust goes free be
cause the east sells, oil to the west
So It is through and through, the east
wants free trade for what they buy
and a high tariff for what they sell.
Dear senators, ' kill the anti-trust
bill if you want another million of
my money to carry the next election.
Remember I am a rocky fellow.
Typhoid fever came near breaking
up the state university at Ithaca, N.
Y., a few days ago. The cause of the
disease seemed to be in the water
used. Lincoln can boast of as pure
water as any city in America. ' Dead
hogs and dogs cannot be thrown into
the supply a hundred feet under the
groundneither can the sewer filth of
the city get down so deep. '
Is It not a little queer that the
whisky republicans should call out
seven or eight hundred republican
voters, at their late primaries, who
dW not register or vote last fall. Will
all of them be allowed to vote at the
coming election? If their number
should double we would heed an extra
city clek to help issue voting certifi
cates. It looks as though the time
had come to put up ; a non-partisan
ticket National party questions have
nothing to do with city interest
Home questions alone should rule.
The two riotous street trolley
strikes in South Bend, Ind., and Wa
terbury, Conn., are still burning. Has
it got to come to this that a few hun
dred men can organize themselves in
to an army of marauders and override
all laws and ordinances?. Will clubs,
stones, .brick bats and. explosives be
their extreme, after a little, or will
they resort to fire arms and guerilla
warfare? The cause of one of these
strikes was the dismissal of two or
three saloon frequenters. So It goes,
more and more trouble. Hundreds of
men stand ready to fill all these ..well
paying places. Citizens, of all classes,
seem to stand up for the strikers and
justify their law-breaking.
There seems to be no remedy in
sight, only for cities, states and na
tions to own and control all public
utilities. Certainly, socialists are
making some tracks in the right direc
tion. The mine owners are making
ten times more out of the coal strike
than the coal diggers. Compare fif
teen dollars a ton in the city of Lin
coln with eight, and tell us who pock
ets the difference. Cities better pay
rental for street cars and let them
stand still, than to pay the expense
and damage on both sides of a strike
war. When government owns all these
utilities, let the employes be appointed
for life, then strikers will stop striking.
Patronize our advertisers. ;
There were two men and two women
who started in life a few years before
we did, who had more influence in the
formation of our character, sentiment
and plan of life than all other men
and women not connected with our
early home. These four were Horace
Greeley, Wendell Philips, Susan B.
Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
All have gone over the snowy range
except Susan. Each of the four pulled
separate strings and not a string has
broken. Susan's string has stretched,
but it still holds. - .
It don't look as 'though our legis
lature or congress was likely to do
any legislating only in the interest of
corporations and trusts. Equat rights
and justice are suspended. The tune
played is to tax the common people
and relieve the wealthy.
II. W. HARDY.
' The Bellwood Gazette says that the
Farmers' Co-operative association at
Bellwood shipped a car of wheat to
the P. P. Williams Grain company at
St Louis and realized 6 cents a
bushel more than the trust elevators
were paying. But Williams discovered
that the shippers are not "regular"
and warns them that "we cannot take
any more shipments except through
the regular dealer in your city." The
Gazette thinks it time for the farm
ers to try standing up for 'Betsy and
the baby.'
In a recent editorial the World
Herald asked the legislators to "Stand
by Brady" and his bill for side-tracks
to farmers' elevators. This inspired
Prof. C. Vincent, editor of the Central
Farmer and state ; organizer of the
Nebraska Farmers Co-operative
Grain and Live Stock association (re
cently organized), to write the World-
r
I
m
OS
i
as
OUR SPECIAL
:WM COMBINATION
We Pay the Freight.
We will deliver the following 110.00 combination to any town in
the state of Nebraska, freight prepaid by us, any time during the
month of March, 1903. Reference; First National Bank or The In
dependent. 60 lbs Best Granulated Sugar for ............. . 11.00
20 jbs Choice Prunes....... ....1.00
25 bars Good Laundry Soap...... .......1.00
- 2 lbs High Grade Japan Tsa.,...,...., 1-00
10 lbs High Grade Peaberry Coffee 2.00
6 lbs Fancy Bright Apricots .75
4 lbs Fancy Muer Peaches.. .50 .
r 4 lbs Fancy 4 Crown Large Raisins. 50
7 6 lbs Fancy Japan Head Rice .50
2 cans 16-oz Cream of Tartar Baking Powder. .50 ,
3 pkgs. 10 cent soda..... .".v..;. ..................... .25
3 pkgs 10 cent Corn Starch....................... 25
. 3 pkgs 10 cent Gloss Starch... ,25,
lib Pure Black Pepper....; .25
1 bottle Lemon Extract .10
1 bottle Vanilla Extract.......... .10
2doz. clothes Pins......................... .05
All the above for..,
...f 10.00
Orders for customers outside of the state of Nebraska and on line
of railroad entering Lincoln add 75c to pay part of freight ",
Branch & Miller W
C r. 10th and P Sts.
What we Advertise we Do.
Lincoln, Neb.
I
VI'
I
vt
w
t
I
!
itTr iwft"- mi in ii
Machinery
Being
Installed
by
National
Sold and Silver
.lining Company
To complete that machinery,
treasury stock will be sold
During Uarch at 25 Cents
You will reao a profit of 30a per
cent, when par is reached and have
an Income for life from this certain
dividend payer.
RI1V Hfll'J d get the benefit of all
nwa advances m value and
draw the same dividends as those who wait
and pay. $1.00 or more for shares.
UA AM lit InefefllMAtoS QIIMI
22$ percent, with order, 35 per cent, in 30 days,
50 per cent. In 60 days.
MANY ARE HAVING SHARES RESERVED while getting
money ready. Why not you ? Write today for prospectus.
The National Gold and Silver Mining Company,
Suite 126, 70 La Salle Street, CHICAGO.
$15.00 To Billings.
$20.00 Butte, Helena, Salt Lake and Ogden.
$22.50 To Spokane.
Portland, Seattle, Tacoma, San Francisco and
Los Angeles, via the Burlington daily February
15th to April 30th, 1903.
mm
City Ticket Office
Cor Tenth and O Streets
Telephone No. 235
Burlington Depot
7th St.. between P. and Q
Tel, Burlington 1290.
Herald a commendatory letter. In
this he incidentally very neatly re
moves the cuticle from one R. B.
Schneider, a grain trust man and
high muck-a-muck in the republican
party. Schneider appeared before the
committee having Brady's bill in
charge and asked that it be killed be
cause the grain elevator trust has
large investments in elevators and if
the farmers enter the grain shipping
arena it will mean a depreciation of
the value of the trust property. Vin
cent showed that the farmers have
about 360 times as much invested as
has the elevator trust magnate who
serves them; that a sacrifice of 5 to 9
cents a bushel, because of no competi
tion, means a loss of over ten thou
sand dollars a year to each quarter
section, and he says: "The bandits
who have ' thus despoiled Nebraska
have the effrontery and gall to send a
lobby to the legislature, a majority of
which are farmers, and 'demand pro-tectlonV
:2?