FEBRUARY 11, 1904. 10 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT i 1 Fr.EE $3.75 TREATI.1EIIT Describe Your i Symptoms to Dr. FrsnkiSn ni!ss, the Celebrated Heart Specialist and He Will Send Vou a Complete Special " treatment For Your Case, Absolutely Free. - ' To people who suffer from weak heart, short breath, pale fw bands and feet, poor arcuEatioTi 6jr zlness, fainting . spells, palpitation, weak, sinking or smothering spells, pain in side, shoulders or left arm .ir regular Pulse, sitting up to breathe, swollen ankles or dropsy, etc.: A word with you. I am a practic ing, graduated physician, with over a quarter of a century's experience in treating human ills. I have discovered a scientific method ot treating the human heart, when sick by means of tonic tabloids, a cur ative elixir, eliminating pilla and a compound strengthening hyoscyamlc plaster, in which the Ingredients art so varied in strength and composition as to give to every one of my patients the benefit of a treatment so carefully adapted to their case as to make a cure practically certain. - To prove to you the positive value of my new system of treatment for a -xiass of diseases hitherto deemed In curable, I will gladly send you free, a complete set of these special reme dies adapted to your own particular case, together with valuable advice as to diet, exercise, etc., upon request. ' All I ask of you is to write me a complete history of your case, w'th symptoms, giving your age, height, sex and weight, mentioning this pa per, when I will at once prepare and send you this Complete Special $3.75 Treatment, together with my new Book on Heart Diseases, absolutely . free. ' ' Address: Franklin .L. Mile3, M. D Liu B.,.205 to 231 State Street.. Chi eago, 111. ' -Please mention The Inaependent in your reply. To the Farmers of Nebraska: KB . ' Do : you know ; PPi. ' ft 1 (tcrftnt ! rnVia nr roata made from the 5 r n - horse or cattle hides you sell to S: local dealer? Write for particu- 2 jars or send your hides to g THE LINCOLN TAMfiY, Henry Holm, Prop, -03-313 O Stret. Lincoln, Nab. i COLUMBIA NATIONAL BANK CF LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. i ! Capital, $100,000.00 Surplus, 14,000.00 Deposits, 1,350,000.00 J OFFICERS I Johm B. Wright, President T A J. H. Westcott, 1st Vice Tre. $ Job. Samuels, 2d Vice Tres. P. L. Hall, W. U Kvos, Asst. Cashier Cancers Cured 1 Why siifTer rain and death from cancer? Dr. T. O'Connor cures cancers, tumors and wens; no knife, blood or planter. Addrew laOG O Bk Lincoln, Nebraska. GREEN GABLES ,j.Th Or. Ben, f, Galley 1 n AN ATORIU M. for trratmrM ft rtrrto 4 , !' hi 14 muuwn, Mutuittt ari in ih mi ihh tPMU dtMnr. All ltttti' !( trie t rfniiiil lu irratuu-iil let. ! mnA 1,1,1.1. al I'lillmr. tlit t thr lr hi il t") I n li!t!lnily Lriithl tftimtortuiit lu Iht !. ti h i l4rvkulrk Ad4fr Or. Den F. Dalley Sanatorium, Uneolft, Nebrka. . IMPORTANT IF TUVU Startling news comes from Chicago to the effect that the populists con trolled the Employers' association, or ganized in part to break up the trades unions. This is the organization of which D. M. Parry of Indianapolis Is president. C. W. Uhdy, representing the Builders' association of New York, is quoted as declaring, "'The popuiists from the west are running thi3 meet ing. It is an outrage." If the populists have actually gone Into such business as this we should agree with Mr. Uhdy that "it is an outrage." We trust the information is not correct Divide and conquer has been the policy of despots from Julius Caesar down. If capitalism can pit farmers against wage-earners it can continue indefinitely to rule and rob them both. In 1894 western pop ulists sent aid to A. R. U. strikers in Chicago. This is the spirit that must prevail. "Workingmen of all coun tries, unite!" Thomas Elmer Will, in Social Ethics, Wichita, Kaa. Our friend. Will, has not been bo many years "out of populism," as to believe that rot. He knows that the words "populism," "socialism," and "anarchy" are used interchangeably by mullet-headed easterners, to desig nate something they hate. No one ever truly accused D, M. Parry of be ing a populist. . However, none of us are free from ambiguous use of terms. Prof. Will, even if he does run the American so cialist College, is none too clear in his use of the term "capitalism." "If capitalism," he says, "can pit farmers against wage-earners," etc. As a mat ter of fact, aren't a, majority of farm ers themselves "capitalists" to the ex tent of owning some of the mean3 of production?. By "capitalism," then, Prof. Will must mean about what we populists do when we say "plutoc racy" or "Wall street!' or the "money power" or "the trusts." It is true that the western populists in 1894 were In hearty sympathy with the A. R. U. strikers. But railroad employes as a rule haven't much use for a populist, especially if he be a farmer. The farmers' organizations and the wage-earner organizations tried the "Workingmen of all coun tries, unite" program in 1892, but the wage-earners did not stand up to the rack. - For this th?y cannot be blamed, however, as they were looking lor cheap food, while the farmer wanted dear food products. Everything the farmer demanded was, on the surface, at .least, opposed to the "egoism" of the! wage-earner who worked for what Prof. ,Will terms the 'capitalists" and it isn't much jvonder that they didn't pull together. If the twain could not unite on the farmers' platform in 1892, it is hardly likely they will unite on the wage earners' platform in 1904. But if neither supports the old party tick ets this year, there will surely be a rattling of the dry bones." Prof. L. C. Bateman. town of Au burn, county of Androscoggin, state of Maine, writes the Vineland Inde pendent that he, "an enrolled mem ber of the peoples party," favors the nomination of Wharton Barker for president and "any good man" for vice president. He threatens to turn socialist if any man who was "mixed up in the Bryan sell-out" is "placed on euard." "No Nebraska uoliticians for ns." he cenciudes-. and to this Bro. Streeter gives a hearty "amen." If by that he means to exclude every noniilist who voted for Bryan iu 1836 and 1900, ha had just as ell get to nayinc dues :n the socialist party rlsh'. now. The little contingent who voted for Wharton Barker in 1900 cer tainly do nut 'ope to accomplish the "tail wagging the dog ' real; Sonic iinregtMieratp son of Belial, acting as rcprtsentathc of eastern newspaper, has Knt out the report that ' the, Nebraska populihta have started a campuign for ine removal of Chancellor H. Benjamin Andrews." There ia absolutely no truth in tho (latement. Ilnc the frothlngs of the ChleaRo Inter-Ocran, reproduced on the editorial puR" of the Omaha Ihe. need scant notice. Ily tho way, Uu't it rathr curious how the little "waLtuniui" on the hitl hlfti h!: aitlia? Not o very Ions ago he wan (figuratively) teannR hi hair b raii the populist reitenta had elected Chancellor Andrew. Now, he li a very trcnuoi Andre upiaiter and alt in dUxnitnatlng the maul fed II mentioned above. diamiHe I.owther, editor of i Ut r.thien," a MxUlUt mauailno pub llUd at WUUta. Kaa., arrie upon thi toier pnff of hU iu! lor Pvi-cm ber. in black-faced Plymouth type, this statement: "The Right of Free Speech Was Denied the Editor of This Paper : on the Streets of Great Bend, Kansas." " ' Pshaw! -That's easy. Two labor ing men In Omaha were haled into jail for distributing little "unfair" cards and our supreme-court held the ordinance good, tinder which they were convicted, notwithstanding our constitution declares that "Every person may freely speak, write, and publish on all subjects, being responsible for the abuee of that liberty Hardly a slcele day fails to make good the prediction of the French astrologers that "the year 1904 will be one of horrors, accidents and -fatalities. About eleven o'clock Sunday morning a fire broke out in the whole sale dry goods house of John E. Hurst & Co., Baltimore, Md., and for twen-tyt-eight hours it raged continuously with a fury that swept everything be fore it, destroying about two miles, square of the business portion of the city. ' Fortunately the Baltimore fire was confined to th business portion of the city and did not reach the residences. By the strange irony of things it was the "fire-proof" buildings that burned. The loss is variously esti mated from $100,000,000 toJ300,000,000, but is probably somewhere between the two figures. In point of financial loss, the Baltimore fire is probabW a little less than the great Chicago fire in the 70's. A rough summary of the Baltimore fire follows: Estimated loss (above) $100,000,000: acres burned over. 140: citv blocks fire swept. 73: buildings burned, 2,500; injured (prob ably), 50. After weeks and months of diploT matic jockeying the Russo-Japanese war has begun In real earnest. As usual the disnatches are indefinite, but it seems that Japanese torpedo boats attacked the Russian fleet at Port Ar thur Mondav n'eht. disabled two war ships and a cruiser, and then escaped undamaged. Martial law has 'been proclaimed at Port Arthur. The ruler's .or Japan evidently learned the whole lesson wnen tney took on modern civilization. After making - marvelous nroeress in nlod ern industry, the powers behind' the throne began clamoring for "fconest " monev: and -Janan adoDted the ''en lightened gold standard." From that time on the usury-takers have pros tvered. but the manufacturers and afnt ! culturlsts have suffered until a crisis was imminent. Thousands were out of work and were clamoring. It meant trouble. But now a war with Russia will give. the unemployed Japs a chance to do something, tneir pa triotism' will be appealed to, ana for the time being the crash is avert ed. Japan never overlooks anything in her imitations! SPECIAL MARKET LETTER FROM NYE k BUCHANAN CO.. LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MER CHANTS. SO. OMAHA. NEB. Cattle: Monday brought a 10c higher market' with liaht receipts at all points, but Tuesday opened with a drag and the same old complaint, tUat packers could not take caie of the dressed rnat on account of the car situation in the east. Wednesday brought heavy receipts at Chicago again and a decided slump. 'I rospects are verv uncertain at present. We quote good choice corn-fed steers $4.25 to $I.7r, fair $3.75 to $1.20, medium short-fed $3.33 to SS.t'O. Choice feeders "3.40 to $3. DO. fair to good yearling steers $3.30 to $3.13. common $2.80 to $3.L'0. uooa rat cows an.l heifers $3.H) to $3. SO, connncn cow $2.00 to $3.i0. cannera $1.40 to $t0. Ktccr stock calves $3.50 to $1.00. heifers $1.00 to $1.'- less, veal $1.75 to 55.73. Bulls $2.25 to 13.50. Sheep: Market very dull. Uccelpts light. Same condition prevails as in the tattlo market. Choice. UnfinWu 1. Lambs ....,....$1,00-5.60 $1.00-4.73 Yearllnzj ...... 1. 40-1. CO 4.00-4 IT, WclUer 4. 00-1. no 3.10-3.SO Kwes 3.23-3.75 2.-3.20 Hog: .Market higher. Range $1.75 to $5.13. A 11 KMrrill V 1i.ul l!tatA ami WetiM Agcocy. 12-2 O St., Llucoln, PAltMS WANTED. If you want to boy a farm, or If you want to tell a farm. m. 1 hava evrral buyer who want to buy, Idtl , your farm itli bk Worcester UANU RE SPREADER Built continuously lnce 1878 by the oldt Manure Spreader manufacturing concern in America. Handles all kinds of manure from rouehest to finest. Simplest and strongest machine made. Best payine in vestment on farm. You ought to know more about this subject. Write for cata- loue- Lininger & Metcalf Co., Vflll CI!) tit" 0.M PER DAT uuaiii pumi. wot S IT ' III. uriKKANTKD. Einlnaim territory. Writs Pl'M JCQCALLZKK CO., IeU , Vumi, Wnnt The World's ; Bread-Dasnot with its 760,000 square miles of ter ritory Western Canada affords homes for 200,000,000 people. THOUSANDS OF U. S. SETTLERS are going. Millions of acres of the finest farming and grazing lands open for settlement. Small taxes, cheap fuel, good climate, enormous crops. Lands sell at$3.50 Per Acre and up, payable in ten annual installments. Whv rent a farm when vou can buy one for less money than you pay as rent, ror full miormawon, appjy 10. A. C. SHAW, Rfin'l Apt. Pass'r. Dent.. CANADIAN PACIFIC RY. CHICAGO. WANTED SEVERAL INDUSTRIOUS PER sons In each state to travel lor house estab lished eleven yeais and with a large capital, to call upon merchants and agents ior successful and protitable lino. Permanent engagement. weefcly casn salary or &i end ail traveling ex penses and hotel bills advanced in cash each week- Kx nerifinea not essential. , Mention ref erence and enclose self-addressed envelope, j THE NATIONAL, 332 Dearborn St., Chicago. I1L CATTLE Cora mission. SHEEP Nye & Buchanan Go.f fOUTH OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Pest possible fervice in all de partments. Write or wire us for markets or other information. Long distance telephone 2305 Reduced Rates to California. March 1st lo April 30th. That lvncr-InnV1-fnr raUfnrniit nnnnr. tunllyls here at Inst. March i to April SU, the Koflc Islaml System will nell "tonrisi ucKets to principal points ia t'ullfurul ul Uit-so low rutcs: $33.00 from Chlc. $4S.OO from M ln.ourl Ki tr Tolntl. $45.00 from Mncolo. Tickets Brc cool In Tourist Sleepers, wbii li the Uock Island ruus dully, t hi-r-BL'o anil K'atJj'RS ( llv to I ox Ant;'lviiil Sun Kranrixc! by whv ot Kl J'bjio; three II nun a w eek Vl t oiorado Sprlntrs and J-'h11 l.hko City. Mnrcli and April arc the liicHsanicM uioiiun vi mo i unuirnu 5 ear douhty In-cause, at home, they are uttially the very oppoMle. TlrkeN Hti.l I.. IUHHI Mil IUh V Isliind ticket ollii or hy addressing F. H. Barms, c. r. a., toil Ofl reel, I.lnt'olo, Selr, $J.oo Saved. Moiicy-alng as imiHirtant a.-t money-iiiakltig. l rcquently t is eas ier to vo than to make. On your next 1111 of crtHCtle you ean a.ive at least $3 by taking advantag of tho iterlal toiuMnatiou utTer rnadd hv 11111 h L Mll!cr Co. in thil iue. I TU good ar the bst and all who have ent orders nave keen intro luan MlUfird. Try it today. Mention the fut that you saw tno ad, in The tnd'iHndcnt and we wilt euarautf aiUf4itlon. Fesir. Windmills run in eligbteet win dhmm Uor;t. rni.Lr ITEM. Tlin Iik)m nrrlB Live 'tafi&X Stock Jr