THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT APRIL 18, 1907. Mood's Sarsaparilla Purifies and enriches the blood and builds op the whole system. It radically cures all blood diseases, from pimples to scrofula. It is the best remedy for catarrh, iheumatiem and dyspepsia. At all times of the year it is the most widely useful medicine. These statements are confirmed daily by cured men and women. Over 40,000 testimonials received in two years an unequaled record ! In tablets, as well as in usual liquid form. 100 Dose3 One Dollar. av;i always said about the injustice of railroad rebates. When people got to expressing: in figures the near and remote cost of railroad rebates the re bates were quickly banned. Argue against war that it has plunged th nations of the world $34, 000,000,000 in debt, iind that its annual cost in inter est and armaments is at least $3,000, C00,000 equal to half the gold supply of the world, and the peace movement fairly spins along. It is not so long since people argued seriously that war caused prosperity. In those days the demand for universal peace deafened no ears. Tlu-.ro la no doubt that the revulsion against the liquor business which is now apparently sweeping the country is due less to the long heard tales of starving wives and children and ruined men than to the spread of the discovery that the business is a dead waste in volving the whole of society, not ex eluding those portions that run their schools on the license money. Mor alists need not be discouraged by these facts. In the last analysis the moral thing and the economical - thing are likely to coincide. ... IiOO ROLLING A MEKACK. x Tho criticism of Governor Sheldon offered by the Kearney Hub is of par ticular value in showing the quality of the courage required to veto an appro priation upon which an entire commu--mty naju set us nean., uniy an. execu-. Uve with knowledge of the situation and a determination to make the expenses of " the state match the reve nue would apply the knife to such an Item. A man who puts in such a veto 4, SS4 NEW CHILD LABOR LAW, The child labor law, house roll No. 9, was passed with the emergency clause, has been signed by the governor and is now in force. The bill provides that no child under fourteen years of age shall be employed in any theatre," concert hall, , place of amusement, place where intoxicating liquors are sold, mercantile institution, store, office,- ho-;; tel. laundry, manufacturing establishment, bowling alley, passenger or freight elevator, factory or workshop or as a messenger or driver 4 therefor, ttn nereon or eoraoratlon shall employ a child under four- 4 teen years of age during the hours when the public schools are in session. . - ... . -: - ' . ' " :.' ' Children between fourteen and sixteen years of age may be em nloved in the above mentioned places except where intoxicating liquors are sold but the employer must keep on file and open to in- spectlon a certificate from the superintendent of schools showing that the child has finished the eighth grade or its equivalent or is a reg- 4 ular attendant at night school. A list-df all children employed must & be kept posted In a conspicuous place in the establishment. Who- - ever employs a child in violation of the above provisions shall be fined not more than $50 for each offense and a parent or guardian who per- mlts a child under his control to be "employed in violation thereof shall be fined not more than $20. - '""". ; 1 ; No child under sixteen years of age shall be - employed for more , than forty-eight jiours each week, nor more than eight hours in any one : day nor before 6 o'clock in the morning or after 8 o'clock in the even- ing. All employers shall post in every room where ctildren are em ployed, a printed notice stating the hours required of them each day of thi week, the hours for beginning and quitting work and the time allowed for dinner. Whoever, continues to employ a child in violation f this act after having been notified by the proper officer, shall be fined for every day thereafter not less than $5 or more than $20, The enforcement of the law is placed in the hands of the truant 4 officers, the deputy labor commissioner and a board of inspectors of five to be appointed by the governor, two of them to le women. The memberj of the board serve without pay and the chairman must be a resident of the county employing the most child labor, which is Douglas.. These officers are empowered to enter any establishment 4 where' there is reason, to believe children are employed and to make a'thorough physically in- capable" perfotmlng the work "re quired of such "child, the -officers' 4 may demand a certificate from a licensed physician to be designated 4 by the officer, as to the fitness of the child. 4. 4. 4. 41 4. 4 $ 4. v ,; 4444i4li,4i4l4,'i4i44a4 unio..i hiduty to the whole slate rHof ehTghr3rxnaa ni-rm.iicca-nr a re-election. -If-the -feeling-shown'by the' Kearney Hub toward the governor were shared by the people of every co?'-" where 22. w ''p v J J" I3ais.'i8.:. tnim-?- .1111 A V t.'" -, 11 .. I; 0f AVc2c(abtePrfpara(!onforAs slmilatingfteRotfanimBgula: ting tlic Stomachs anilBwels (tf Promotes DiestionJCfefdlil ncss and fest.Contains RcitlKr OpiuniIorphiac norJIiacral. Nor Narcotic. Pinplm SkJ" JlxJam JtkMt&dk- Jixrmhf - Wtm Sen' Ou.itif4 X.f hmtKytrm llrrW. UIIIIMt ApenVei Reiwdy forConsRfi Hon . Scur Stonudi.Dtarrtefi YonnsjroiwulsioittJ!,eTTrislt ncss and Loss or Slier FicSuhmc Sifjratare ef NEW YORK. 1 iiiMniinnTriiif TTTP WW For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the F Use U' For Over Thirty Years GuaranSrttl Eact Copy mt Wrtpir. saagegargtasarrggag PS 1! L'JU a Tt mpni, mtm irt. a state institution is located if every ,nuim;.,.. t ,Mit,g cpenai irp. ixt a community were- followed by instant and unsparing condemnaton '." Of . ..the man respoiosible for it then the state would eventually find it necessary to abandon its present policy of scatter ing its institutions. In sheer self de fense it would be forced to cluster them in one county. At the present time state institutions are maintained in Lancaster, Gage, Nemaha Otoe, Douglas, Madison, Ad ams, Buffalo, - Hall; - Lincoln;: imimora and Seward ' counties. In the senate these counties are represented by fif teen votes, and in the house by thirty five. That means thai at any time a combination is formed to log roil ap propriations through the state institu tions now h: existence can command fifteen-out of the seventeen senators re quired to give a constitutional ma jority. In the house they will have more than one-third of the total mem bership and within sixteen votes of a majority. The figures, taken in connection with the vigorous language used by the Kearney Hub conducted by one of the cleanest and most patriotic editors in Nebraska are conclusive In show ing that concentration rather than diffusion must be the policy of the .state in dealing with its public institu tions In the future if it is to kep them on a sound business basis. Tne ranker a Wife Is very careful about her churn. She scalds it thoroughly after using, and gives it a sun bath to sweeten It. She knows Ihat if her churn is sour it will taint th butter that is made in it. The stomach is q iihnni Tn ill o c frm a It n rA f f rrQt i V and nutritive tracts are performed pro cesses which are almost exactly like the churning of butter. Is it not apparent then that if this stomach-churn is foul it makes foni all which is put into it? The evil.of a foi'' stomach is not alone the bad taste in the mouth and the foul' breath caused by it, but the corruption of . the pure current of blood and the dissem ination of disease throughout the body. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery makes the sour and foul stomach sweet. ' It does for the stomach what the washing and sun bath do for the churn absolutely , removes every taiung or corrupting ele ment. In this way it cures blotches, pimples, eruptions, scrofulous swellings, sores, or open eating ulcers and all humors or diseases arising from bad blood. If you have bitter, nasty, foul taste in your mouth, coated tongue, foul breath, are weak and easily tired, feel depressed and despondent, have frequent headaches, dizzy attacks, gnawing or distre&s in stom ach, constipated or irregular bowels, sour or bitter risings after eating and poor; appetite, these symptoms, or any consider able number of them, indicate that you are . siiifenng from biliousness, torpid or-iazy liver with the usual accompanving indi gestion, or dyspepsia and their attendant derangements. , iwn To medical u re above .symptoms ,10ns. as attesjeaTbJt tiiejvri tings x nJM3Jgfl3nlfflB ence lor t fieinroTT, ngULOMiUonRt oUUlSJachfiC an me several scnoo s iiicnersor of medical pr.T?W have been skill fuiig. and: harmonion combjnedjJvDr liic COirmcx That th is is absolutely true will be readily proven to your satisfaction if you will but mail a postal card request to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for a free copy of his looklet of xtrack-j from the 'standard medical authorities, giving the names of all the ingredients-entering into his world-famed medicines and show ing. what tho nwt eminent medical men of. tjie age say of thr m. - - - ,." ' mean speeches demanding more than the bureaucracy wants to grant the charge of inflammatory speechmaklng must be admitted; but judged by the ordinary use of that term, the douma, has been remarkably self contained. as Mr. De Martens says, but even that i doubtful if the French stick to their notion of requiring the douma's O. K. on an Russian loans. , -- THI) IIOIMA. Professor De Martens' letter expres sing entire lack of faith in the Kussian douma disagrees widely with the com mon view. Want of patriotism, a liking" for inflammatory speeches, a disincli nation to attempt constructive reform of hostility to terrorism and want of a proper conception of legislative func tions are the shortcoming of ihci douma that presage Its fail, in, Pruf. Do Mar tens' eyes. Nearly all these charges re quire to be defined before they can bo intelligently discussed. If want of pa triotism means lack of love for the bureaucracy that now rule liUHsla the charge must be admitted. If it mean lack of Interest In the welfare of the Ituwinn people it In at leaM debatable. If reform mcsns tho palliatives pro posed by the bureaucracy, tho 1Uiuc!i nation of he douma to indulge In li will not be denied. If want of a proper con ception of lt functions n Implied In the deir of the douma to nubntitute It own Me;! of reform for those of the bu reaucracy, then that charge inu W admitted. Ther txro two klndn of u r rortum In KumI'i, tho kind i num' ( r il by th ltiMitfin eoveinnient, und ile kind to whleli lh flrt kind yiva rl. The riounm may have offended y fall ing to condemn the necond till th rtrt hit invd, If inflitiHHJtor ieeh-i MIDDLED COISSEI.. Colonel George "5f. Harvey at bi? Jef ferson banquet, William R. Hearst at his, and Mr.-Bryan at his, altogether present a happy confusion of partisan ship. Mr. Harvey is the brilliant edit or of two or three magazines, supposed to be controlled by J, Pierpont Morgan, one of the "doers" whom he lauded in his speech, and his democratic hostil ity to Roosevelt republicanism was matched only by his horror of Bryan democracy. Mr. Hearst, whose voice and newspapers can always be trusted to speak for Hearst as IIe:irst sees him is incapable of dissembling Ins horror of any other man who might by any eventuality become president ahead of Hearst, so his Jeftersonism is agiinst Bryan Jeffersonism even as it is against all that is not pro-Keanst. At another Jeffersonian banquet to come later Mr. Bryan will take the part of Mr. Harvey's "peerless leader hobbling like a enrmie in the wake of his successful rival, gathering as he goes a few scraps that are left or his own fallacies." Tho funny thing about this cleavage at the top is that It goes no deeper than the legs of the banquet table where it shows itself. Among the people below there is n sign of the dissension that rages around the champagne cups. For once and a won der the "divide and conquer" scheme is not working. Party lines are mighty faint except when some party exploiter mannges for a moment to draw his pencil down an alleged line fence. The men about the festal luvml nw contending for an empty opportunity. The dock which they iishl to herd at present shows no disposition to be cor ral led. Try Till Yoi.ro mmm. Satisfied 7.1 i'-rf" IV BP tO "0 ur trui, i wain jrou In kikow , tic I know bffnr you ln. 4 1 iiv OLD TRUSTY Incubators n4 itMt.r Th Old TruHt tUa UH n,kt ". hw,n imrm, I .i, in Ural l.tt n r' ' , . t.,, nma -t M.M. JOflNKOM, r lay Cnit, M.k.