The independent. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1902-1907, July 16, 1903, Page 16, Image 16

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THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT
JUNE 16, 1903.
Qfni'Ti'.ira'Io)
SEARLES &
SEARLES
SPECIALISTS IN
-Nervous, Chronic,
AND
Other Dls.ares of
" yen end Women we
35 CURE
1ALL MEN'S
DISEASES
-
PS
' Dr. F. L. Searles.
CURES GUARANTEED.
Yes, we guarantee to cure all curable cases
of the Nose, Throat, Chc-t, Stomach, Liver,
Heart, Paralysis,. Bowel, Bladder, Pimples on
face. Blood, Skin and Kidney Diseases. Piles,
Fistula and Rectal Ulcers. Diabetes and Bright1!
Disease. ' , -
$100.00 ir a cane of CATARRH, RHCUMA
TlSM, DYSPEPSIA OB BLOOD POISON WI
CAW WOT CUIII, If CUMABLC.
HOME TREATMENT BY MAIL.
Examination and comultation free. Call or
t ddrcss with stamp, P. O. Box 224. -
Drs. Searles & Ssarles SxztfXS
LINCOLN. NEBRASKA.
LIY8
Stock
CATTLE
SHEEP
Com
mission
1
. Iiye& Buchanan GoM
SOUTH OMAHA, NEBRASKA.
Best possible service in all depart
ments, Write or wire ua for markets
or other information.
Long distance Telephone 2305
ft
TIPPANY'5 Sure Death ta
Lice (Powder) sprinkled
In the nest keeps your
fowls free from lice. Sprinkle
hen and the little chicks will
haTe no lice. Tiffany 'sParagon
"Liquid" kills mites instantly.
Sprinkle bed for hogs, rooets
for fowls. Bor powder for lit
tle turkeys and chicks post
paid 10c. We want agents.
THE TIFFAN V CO.,
Lincoln, Neb.
Buy Paint at Wholesale Prices
Black Roof Paint....... 40c. per gal
Red Barn Paint 58c. per gal
Slate Color Barn Paint, ,78c. per gal
Shingle Stain. 3cc to... 60c. per gal
Sheep Dip 65c. per gal
Excelsior Disinfectant. . . 60c. per gal
Superior Disinfectant. . .75c. per gal
EXCELMOR DISINFECTANT will kill iieeon
bogs and cattle; prevent and cure hog cholera.
Bam plea, circulars and color cards free. We
guarantee everything we sell. Terms cash on
receipt of goods. As to our responsibility, we
refer you to any commercial report or any bank
in Findlay, Ohio.
THE OHIO PAINT & VARNISH COMPANY
FINDLAY. OHIO, U. S. A.
Plumbing and Heating
Estimates Furnished
j. c.cox
X33 North !lth Street. Mnco'n, Neb.
Splendid Farm babgain.
'FOR SALE. Farm 400 acres, near Frank
fort, Marshall county, Kansas. Improve
ments cost $7,000; seven-room house, stone
cellar, cemented floor. Water piped into
house. Wind mill, supply tanks all steel
175 bbls. in fact, complete water works.
Barn holding 16 horses; 2 hog houses, planked
flooring; rook house; boilers and scales;
granary and self feeder holding 10,000 bush
els grain; two hay barns, cow barn, 3 corrals,
complete with racks, hog pasture, 380cres
in cultivation, 20 acres wood land. A most
complete stock and grain farm, strictly first
class. Price 45. Cash $7,000; balance, time
-4 per cent, interest. , .
- Woods Investment Company,
Lincoln Hotel, Lincoln, Neb.
rir U Chillicothe Normal College
OLfkll Chillicothe Commercial College
Chillicothe Shorthand College
R R F AT Chillicothe Telegraphy College
UllL.ni chillicothe Pen Art College
fflDI I CPC0 Chillicothe Musical College
uULLEOlO Chillicothe College of Oratory
For free catalog address ALLEN MOORE
Pres't, Chillicothe, Mo. Car fare paid. .
INVESTMENTS IN
SOUTHERN LANDS
Such Investments are not speculative. The
south is not a new country. Market and ship-
ping facilities are adequate and first-class. The
climate is mild and favorable. Notwithstand
' ing these and other advantages, southern lauds
are selling for prices far below their real value,
end at present prices net large returns on the
investment. For a free set of circulars, Nos. 1
to 10, inclusive, concerning the possibilities of
lands in Kentucky, West Tennessee, Mississippi
and Louisiana, on and near the Illinois Central
Railroad, for homeseekera and investors, ad
tress the undersigned. - W. H. BBILL,
District Passenger Agent, Omaha, Neb. ,
Money and the Taxi rig- Power
BY vv. JX ASHBT.
AU Rights Reserved.
BOOK' 2. Chapter X.
Moreover, it is of usury we now
speak; and to the long list of loans
must be added the longer list of un
satisfied judgments and delinquent tax
levies the world 6ver, all of which are
tearing usury. And since it is with
the quantity of usury, and not of
mounts loaned, that we are here con
cerned, if we add to the mountain al
ready enumerated, the vast difference
of rate of usury on the loans based
upon the needs of the poor, as com
pared with those of the borrowings for
business . or - speculative purposes, it
H least doubles that mountain. -
Nor is this all. In the final result,
it is the poor and helpless whose toil
.nd sweat pays the usury prom
ised by all those great mercantile,
manufacturing - and transportation
companies; for they fix the prices of
their products and their charges for
service so as to include the usury they
have promised, and it must finally be
paid by the dumb, defenseless consum
ers of the products and users of the
means of transportation.
It is a tribute paid by the poor to
the rich, and which is upheld and en
forced by statutes enacted for that
purpose.
But a more important and unanswer
able objection to permitting the tak
ing of usury than any of these, is
disclosed when we consider what it is
the lender lends, and the position in
v'hich secure "lending places the lender
is his relations to society and human
ity at large.
The usurer who lends incurs no
risks. He makes repayment certain.
What he lends is "coin." The life of
an American gold eagle is said to be
twenty years. But though the gold
eagle be worn and wasted, the lender
receives back a new one fresh from
the mint; for so it is nominated in
the bond. What he lends in the
"coin" or "tax receipt," and his con
tract calls not for the return of the
identical piece of metal, but of a "dol
lar" coined under such conditions as
give it power at the time of payment
to cancel, by- its tender, any tax levy
or judgment of an amount equal to
that expressed by it. The borrower
n ust stand the abrasion and wear of
use and pay usury besides.
Every element of risk or uncertain
ty to the lender is or may be elimi
natied.
While all men engaged in any useful
ocation must meet and grapple with
the unknown and uncertain, the us
urer alone, under the ages of unjust
laws and subservient courts, deals
with certainties. He sells nothing but
the resistless flight of time, for which
the borrower mint pay coin procure!
by the toil of his body or brain.
The usurer shifts the uncertainties
of life upon the shoulders of others,
and takes no chances in the battle.
Whatever changes may be wrought by
the movements of time, pass over
without effect upon the claim Of the
usurer.
The combined efforts of all the hu
man race are directed toward the bet
terment of human conditions. This
they accomplish by extending man's
dominion over nature and her forces.
Improved appliances and improved
methods in all departments of pro
ouction and distribution,te.nd to abund
ance and a lessening of the service or
power to serve required to obtain pos
session, in exchange, of needful things
endowed with power to perform ben
eficial service for. man. This means
that the effect of improved appliances
and methods in all departments of in
dustry is to reduee human "valuation"
of the force of demand for those
needful things.
It means a decrease in the intensity
of the force of demand for all those
things. It means a reduction of the
Quantity of human energy required
to be expended to obtain possession of
them.
This decrease of intensity of the
force of demand can only be expressed
in the "money" symbol. .
But the usurer's coin, " which he
lends, has the statutory "valuation"
of the degree of intensity of the force
of demand fixed by law and stamped
upon it in that money symbol, and the
process of cheapening, which acts
upon all other things, through cheap
er and more perfect methods of pro
duction and distribution, produces no
effect upon that coin.
The "valuation" of all commodities
must be expressed in the '"money"
symbol, and when so expressed it is
"price," and discloses a constant re
duction of that "valuation" in all
commodities, except '"cola."
But the usurer's commodity is un
affected by this cheapening process,
toward the attainment of which all
useful human effort is directed. Every
reduction in the quantity of human
energy required to be expended in or
der to obtain possession of needful
things, should be a distinct gain for
humanity. But the benefits which
should thus accrue, to mankind at
large, are all gathered in by the gojd
owning usurer, the "valuation," of
whose commodity is fixed and un
changeable, and submits to no cheap
ening. This would not be true, were it not
for the fact that tax levies and judg
ments can only be met by the tender
or coin, and thus the force of demand
lor coin is perpetually renewed at iU
fixed "price."
The more men struggle to make hu
man life easy, by cheaper and more
abundant products, the greater be
comes the relative power of the gold
owning usurer's coin as a means of
procuring possession of human prod
ucts. The more men succeed in reducing
the quantity of toil requisite to ob
tain possession of all needful things
except "coin" the greater the quantity
cf those things man must sacrifice to
the usurer to get possession of his
coin the only means of deliverance
from tax levies and judgments.
Thus the greater the strides man
kind makes toward abundance and
security in the production and distri
bution of all commodities needful for
human comfort, the further he recedes
from the enjoyment of that comfort.
The "valuation" of all commodities
endowed with utility, excepting coin,
is fixed by human appraisal and then
expressed in the "money" symbol;
which expression' is their "price." The
"valuation" of coin alone is fixed by
that statute the ' usurer procured to
be enacted and is expressed in the
same "money" symbol, which is the
:'price" of the coin; and at that price
alone can it be used to cancel tax
levies and judgments, which are uni
versal. Human efforts 'tending toward the
decreased valuation of all commodities
cannot affect the price of coin; so that
every step which seems to lead to
ward the betterment of human condi
tions, leads only to the betterment of
the condition of the gold-owning us
urers, while it makes ever more mis
erable the lot of the rest of mankind.
When his dollar, coined as va gift
to him, comes back to him after the
lapse of years with another dollar,
also coined as a gift, sticking to it as
usury, each of these dollars is a tax
paying and judgment-paying dollar of
the new time, to the , bringing of
vvhich, with its reduced cost of pro
cuction and cheaper products, its
greedy owner contributes nothing; and
yet through its ownership he com
mands as a master, at ever decreas
ing cost, all that the race without
him, and in spite of him has by toil
and self-sacrifice brought into being.
He' is a superfluity in the. world, yet
revertheless he reaps almost the en
tire reward of the laborious efforts of
mankind in dragging the race toward
a better future.
Every cheapening ' of the . cost and
every lessening of "prices", of . things
endowed with power to perform ben
eficial service, thus accrues, to his ex-r
elusive profit, though he had no part
in bringing it about. He constitutes
no part of the human family, and can
have no sympathy with its labors or
ts sufferings.
Lending at usury is. thus made" a
tempting occupation, and . everyone
who engages in it becomes separated
from his fellow, men and deprived of
till sympathy with humanity, and its
toil and sufferings.
(Continued Next Week.) ,
R sbssssi M. aw m r n r I Go to the True CATTLE COUNTRY In the
O 1 ULrrVlVl talJ, Panhandle of Texas.
The vastest tracts. The lowest prices. The most perfect climate. TJnfailingnative grasses.
Rich and arable soil. Exhaustless supplies of pure water. The best and surest forage crops.
The finest railroad facilities. These are the certain advantages offered to purchasers of land
contained within the 1,500 miles of fence of the X. I. T. ranch. For particulars write to or
call upon A. G. Boyee, Chnnninsr, riartley Co., Texas; W'm. Boyce, Amarillo, Totter Co.,
Texas; or George Findlay, 14 Market St., Chicago, 111.
A n
a":o5Yirowi
To Die of Paralysis'
Like Father.
1HT 1 it I ago T- -r H 4 TTsi
j 1
Three Years.
Dr Miles' Nervine Made
My Nerves Strong.
"For many years I suffered from terrible
headaches and pains at the base of the brain,
and finally pot so bad that I was overcome
with nervous prostration. I had frequent
dizzy spells ana was so weak and exhausted'
that I could take but little food. The beat
physicians told me I could not lire; that I
grandfather had. I remained a helpless in-
valid for three years, when I heard of Dr.. !
Miles Restorative fiemne and, began using -it
That winter J felt better than! had be
fore in many years, and I have not been
troubled with those dreadful headaches since
I 6rst used Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine.
My appetite is good and my nerves are .
strong. Mrs. N. M. Buck ncll, 2929 Oak
land Ave., Minneapolis, Minn.
"For many years I suffered from nervous
Erostration, and could not direct my house
old affairs, nor have any cares. My stom
ach was very weak, headaches very se
vere, and I was so nervous that there was
not a night in years that I slept over one .
hour at a time. We spent hundreds of dol
lars for doctors and medicine, I was taken
to Chicago and treated by specialists, but
received no benefit at alL Finally I heard -of
Dr. Miles' Nervine and began its use. X
was surprised that it helped me so quickly,
and great was my joy to find, after using -seven
bottles, that 1 had fully recovered ray
health." Mrs. W. A. Thompson, Duluth.
"Minn.
. All druggists sell and guaiantee first bot
tle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book
on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address
Dr. MUes Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.
, ACAMiiXfi FACTORY
at home. Farmers don't delay.
Investigate. Save your surplus
fruit by canning. Easy to learn.
Catalog free. RL F0ERG.
Meridian, Mississippi.
BUY THE-
DOUBLE DEWEY HOB WATERER
-rom your
dealer or
write "us
WE GUAR.
A NTEE
EVERY
Fountain
It not satis
factory re
turn and get another, or your money back.
We make this guarantee to every dealer.
VERY CHEAP THIS YEAR.
THE B-B MFG. CO., Dave rf port, Iowa
No. 76 Masonic Temple,
KEEP SWEET.
TO INDEPENDENT READERS: '
HONEY in 11-Ib. cans 4 or more cans,
?t each. A. No. 1 article. F. O. B. here.
Address
y F. A. SNELL, Milledgeville, III.
3E
A New and. Sure SeHef for the Dumb Beasts, udV
' . " Mosey Saver fef Their Owners.
Quaker Fly Away will Increase the amount ef miur
110 00 per cow during the season at a cost of SOo. per
animal One (ration wUl protect GOO eows. They wiU
Kive 1-4 more milk. This Is a big saving. Endorsed by
dairymen, blacksmiths and stock-raisers. Apply with a,
Quaker Spray Pump. One gaL $185; two gal ons. 12.00;
1-2 gallon, 75c; qaarts,80o. put up in case? of one oosen;
5-gallon can, with spittyen S5.00; 10-galloa caai with
sprayer $10.00, delivered. Ask your dealer. If he can- '
not or will not supply yon, send direct to manuf'turers.
Monarch Mtg, Co., Council Bluffs, la. '
If you want spiff tight and bull strong
feDce inquire for the
BOSS FENCE
manufactured .at Fremont, Nebr., by P.
(.M. Ilealy.