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The Yale Expositor. J. A. Mekzieb, Publisher. YALE, MICH Farmers, beware! Counterfeit $1,000 bills have been discovered In Kentucky. And so a man has died from thirst a few miles from Yuma, Arizona. He couldn't do It in town. There Is talk of a compressed air trust. At last the combines have dis covered how to squeeze money out of the atmosphere. In France the people find great amusement in a new game died barrel-rolling. In this country log-rolling is a pastime with many. Any Weary Waggles who Is thlnk iug of going to Alaska can assure him self a measure of respect by getting incorporated as the North Pole Cornu copia Company, limited, capital $1,0J0, 000,000. Think of Timothy Reynolds of Os wego Falls, N. Y., who left home . t week for the Klondyke country with only ?15 In bis inside pocket. There'3 nerve for you. Tim insists that he will get there, and get there right. It was said recently that If women appeared in church without hats or bonnets the congregation would hare "a more devotional and homelike as pect." Were women to bring their knitting the aspect would be even more "homelike." Nevertheless, the apostle's word about women being cn-erM in church remains in force. The distil c ion between a pew and the porch of a summer hotel is a vital one, both for Dehavior and for dress. relievers In the wooden nutmeg leg end can say once more that time makej all things even. A stranger has ap peared in Connecticut with a prepara tion warranted by him to keep flies and mosquitoes cway from domestic ani mals. One package dissolved In ten quarts of water was said to be suffi cient to protect twelve oxen, or twenty-four horses. After the seller had disappcaied the stuff was examined and found to be oak sawdust scented with camphor. Since the cities of this country have begun to give attention to the matter of street cleanliness the resulting ben efits have been so striking that the movement has revived an impetus that nothing can check. Clean streets mean a low mortality rate, and no other rec ommendation Is of so great advantage to a city. One of the first requirements to enable a city to be clean In respect to its streets is smooth pavements. Paris has probably the cleanest streets of any city in the world, and the rea son why Its streets can be kept eo clean Is that most of them are smooth paved. At a recent annual dinner of the London association of correctors of the press a prominent publisher said that the great mass of English literature that will remain Is the product of men who had other occupations than that of writing. Shakespeare, Bacon, Bun yan. Swift, Burke, Lamb, Scott, Mat thew Arnold, were some of the men who held business or official positions or were engaged in other than literary work. The speaker referred to "the melancholy spectacle of young men and women, ambitious of literary fame, who are only too ready to throw up their positions In office or shop to buy an inkpot and ream of paper and set out on a literary career." The mis take of making a vocation of work which may be only profitable as an avo cation is to be reckoned among the life blunders which involve grave losses and profound regret. Japanese immigration is attracting attention not only in the South Pacific, where its effects havo produced im portant consequences-in the relations between Hawa" nd Japan, but also on the Pacific coast, says Bradstreet's. The entrance o' .Tmnese immigrants into California has attracted consider able attention there also, though the number of Japanese who have thus far arrived to obtain employment in the beet-fields is small. The men who ar rived were engaged with great prompt ness, a circumstance which gave rise to the suT)'cion that they came to the United States under contract to labor. Up to the present, at any rate, the movement has not been of sufficient volume to Justify the alarm expressed over It in some quarters. According to the best evidence obtainable regard ing the situation it appears that while nr.me Japanese are woiiclng in the fields, about 95 per cent of the labor of raising beets at Watsonvllle, one of the centers of the industry. Is done by American laborers, so that unless there should be a great increase in the volume of immigration the fears that have been expressed from time to time regarding the threatening nature of Japanese competition on the Pacific coast would seem to be exaggerated. The European powers, l'ke the fisher man in the Arabian Nights who re leased the genie from hla Imprison ment, are finding It no easy task to crowd Turkey back Into its former compass. The sultan, who has prof ited by the exhibition cf vacillation and indecision which was given by the pow rrq last spring, demands a slice of Greek territoryt and adds with con siderable force that if they could not dislodge Vesso and his two thousand Areeka from Crete he Is not afraid of their driving three hundred thousand victorious Turks out of ThesseJy. PALMAGE'S SERMON. LABOR STRIKES THE SUBJECT LAST SUNDAY. From the Following Tnt, Matt. Til 12: "Whatsoever Ye Would that Men Mioulil Do to You, lo Yoa Kven 80 to Them." HE greatest war the world has ever seen Is between capital and li-bor. The strife Is not like that which in history Is called the Thirty Years' War, for It is a ar of centuries. It Is a war of the five con tinents, it is a war hemispheric. The middle classes In unon whom the nation this country. has depended for holding the balance of power and for acting as mediators between the two extremes, are dimin ishing; and If things go on at the same ratio as they are now going. It will not be very long before there will be no middle class in this country, but all will be very rich or very poor, princes or paupers, and the country will be given up to pnlacep and hovels. The antagonistic forces are closing in upon each other. The Pennsyl vania miners' strikes, the telegraph operators' strikes, the railroad em ployes' strikes, the movements of the boycotters and the dynamiters are only skirmishes before a general engage ment, or, if you prefer it, escapes through the safety-valves of an Im prisoned force which promises the ex plosion of society. You may pooh pooh it; you may say that this trouble, like an angry child, will cry itself to sleep; you may belittle it by calling it Fourlerism, or Socialism, or St. Sira onism, or Nihilism, or Communism; but that will not hinder the fact that it is the mightiest, the darkest, the most terrific threat of this century. All attempts at pacification have been dead failures, and monopoly is more arrogant, and the trades unions more bitter. "Give us more wages," cry the employes. "You shall have less." say the capitalists. "Compel us to do few er hours of toll In a day." "You shall toll more hours." say the others. "Then, under certain condition, we will not work at all." say these. "Then you shall starve," say those, and the work men gradually, using up that which they accumulate In better times, un less there be some radical change, we shall have soon In this country four million hungry men and women. Now, four millions hungry people cannot be kept quiet. All the enactments of leg islatures and all the constabulari js of the cities, and all the army and navy of the United States cannot keep four million hungry people quiet. What then? Will this war between capital and labor be settled by human wis dom? Never. I shall first show you how this quar rel between monopoly and hard work cannot be stopped, and then I will show you how this controversy will be settled. Futile remedies. In the first place there will come no pacification to this trouble through an outcry against rich men merely because they are rich. There is no member of a trades union on earth that would not be rich if he could be. Sometimes through a for tunate invention, or through some ac cident of prosperity, a man who had nothing comes to a large estate, and we see him arrogant and supercilious, and taking people by the throat Just as other people took him by the throat. There is something very mean about human nature when it comes to the top. But it is no more a sin to be rich than it is a sin to be poor. There are those who have gathered a great es tate through fraud, and then there are millionaires who have gathered their fortunes through foresight In regard to changes in the markets, and through brilliant business faculty, and every dollar of their estate Is as honest as the dollar which the plumber gets for mending a pipe, or the mason gets for building a wall. There are those who keep In poverty because of their own fault. They might have been well-off, but they gave themselves to strong drink, or they smoked or chewed up their earnings, or they lived beyond their means, while others on the same wages and on the same salaries went on to competency. I know a man who is all the time complaining of his pov erty and crying out against rich men, while he hlself keeps two dogs, and chews and smokes, and is filled to the chin with whisky pud beer! Micawber said to David Copperfleld: "Copperfield, my boy, one pound in- come, twenty shillings and sixpence expenses: result misery. But, Copper- j field, my boy, one pound income, ex- ' penses nineteen shillings and six pence; result, happiness." And there are vast multitudes of people who are kept poor because they are the vlc- , tlms of their own improvidence. It is no sin to be rich, and it is no sin to be poor. I protest against this out cry which I hear against those who, through economy and self-denial and assiduity, hsve come to large fortune. This bombardment of commercial suc cess will never stop this quarrel be tween capital and labor. I Neither will the contest be settled by cynical and unsympathetic treat ment of the laboring classes. There are those who speak of them as though they were only cattle or draught horses. Their nerves are nothing, their domestic comfort is nothing, their happiness Is nothing. They have no more sympathy for them than a hound, has for a hare, or a hawk for a hen, or a tiger for a calf. When Jean Valjean, the greatest hero of Vic tor Hugo's writings, aft t t .Ife of suf fering and brave endurance, goes Into incarceration and death, they clap the I book shut and say, "Good for him!" They stamp their feet with Indigna tion and say just the opposite, of "Save the working-classes." They have all their sympathies with Sbylock, and not with Antonio and Portia. They aro plutocrats, and their feelings are in fernal. They are filled with Irritation and irascibility on this subject. To stop this awful imbroglio between capital and labor they will lift not so much as the tip end of the little finger. Neither will there be any pacification of this angry controversy through vio lence. God never blessed murder. Well, If this controversy between capital and labor cannot be settled by human wisdom. If today capital and labor stand with their thumbs on each other's throat as they do it Is time for us to look somewhere else for re lief and it points from my text rose ato and Jubilant and puts one hand on the broadcloth shoulder of capital, and puts the other on the bome-spuu-covered shoulder of toil, and says, with a voice that will grand!y and glorious ly settle this, and settle everything, "Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you. do you even so to them." That is, the lady of the house hold will say: "I must treat the maid In the kitchen Just as I would like to be treated If I were downstairs, and It were my work to wash, and cook, and sweep, and It were the duty of tho maid in the kitchen to preside In this par!or." The maid in the kitchen must say: "If my employer seems to be more prosperous lhau I, that Is no fault of hers; I shall not treat her as an enemy. I will have the same In dustry and fidelity down-stairs as I would expect from my subordinates, if I happened to be the wife of a silk Importer." The owner of an Iron mill, having taken a dose of my text before leav ing home In the morning, will go into his foundry, and. passing Into what is called the puddling-room. he will see a man there stripped to the waht, and besweated and exhausted with the labor and the toll and he will say to him: "Why It seems to be very hot in here. You look very much ex hausted. I hear your child is sick with scarlet fever. If you want your wages a little earlier this week so as to pay the nurse and get the medicines. Just come into my office any time." After awhile, crasli gees the money market, and there is no more demand for the articles manufactured In that Iron mill, and the owner does not know what to do. He says, "Shall I Etop the mill, or shalll run It on half time, or shall I cut down the men's wages?" He walks the floor of hl3 counting-room all day, hardly knowing what to do. Towards evening he calls all the laborers together. They stand all around, some with arms akimbo, some with folded arms,' wondering what the boss is going to do now. The manufacturer says: "Men, times are very hard; I don't make twenty dol- lars where I used to make one hun dred. Somehow, there is no demand now for what we manufacture, or hut very little demand. You see I am at vast expense, and I have called you to gether this afternoon to see what you would advise. I don't want to shut up the mill, because that would force you out of work, and you have always been very faithful, and I like you, and you seem to like me, and tho bairns must be looked after, and your wife will after awhile want t new dress. I don't know what to do." There Is a dead halt for a minute or two, and then one of the workmen steps out from the ranks of hU fel lows, and says: "Boss, you have been very good to us, and when you pros pered we prospered, and now you are In a tight place and I am sorry, and we have got to sympathize with you. I don't know how the others feel, but I propose that we take off twenty per cent from our wages, and that when the times get good you will remember us and raise them again." The work man looks around to his comrades, and says: "Boys, what do you say to th'.H? All in favor of my proposition will say ay." "Ay! ay! ay!" shout two, hundred voices. But the mill-owner, getting in some new machinery, exposes himself very much, and takes cold, and it nettles into pneumonia, and he dies. In the procession to the tomb arc all tho workmen, tears rolling down their cheeks, and off upon the ground: but an hour before the procession gets to the cemetery the wives and the chil dren of those workmen are at the grave waiting for the arrival of the funeral pageant. Tho minister or re ligion may have dMvred an eloquent euloglum before they started from the house, but the most impressive things are said th?t day by the working classes standing around the tomb. That night In all the cabins of the working-people where they have fam ily prayers the widowhood and the orphanage In the mansion are remem bered. No glaring populations loofr over the iron fencs of the cemetery, but, hovering over the scene, the bene diction of God and man is coming for the fulfillment of the Christ-like ln Jurctlon, "Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do you even so to them." "Oh," says some man here, "that is all Utopian, that is apocryphal, that Is impossible." No. I cut out of a pa per this: "One of the pleasantest in cidents recorded In a long time is re ported from Sheffield, England. The wages of the men in the Iron works at Sheffield are regulated by n board of arbitration, by whose decision both masters and men are bound. For some Ime past the iron and steel trade has been etxremely unprofitable, and the employero cmnot, without much lops, pay the wages fixed by the board, which neither employers nor employed have the power to change. To avoid this difficulty, the workmen in one of the largest steel works In Sheffield hit .iron a device as rare as It was gener ous. They offered to work for their employers or.o week without any pay whatever." But you go with me and I will show you not so far off as Sheaield, Eng landfactories, banking houses, store houses, and cjstly enterprises whero this Christ-like lnJUi.cou of mj text is fully kept, and you could no more get the employer to practice an injus tice upon his men, or the men to con--spire against the employer, than you could get your right hand and your left hand, your right eye and your left eye, your right ear and your left ear, into physiological antagonism. Now, where is this to begin? In our homes, in our stores, on our farms uot wait ing for other people to do their duty. Ij there a divergence now between the parlor and the kitchen? Then there is something wrong, either in the par lor or the kl.c .en, pet haps in both. Are the clerks in your store irate against the firm? Then theie is some thing wrong, either behind the counter, or In the private office, or perhaps in btth. Hie great want of the world today is the. fulfillment of thl3 Christ-Iikr injunction, that which he promulgated in his sermon Olivet. c. All the politic al concmists under the archivault of the heavens in convention for a thou snnd years cannot settle this contro versy between mocopo.y and hard work, between capital and labor. Dur ing the Revolutionary war theie was a heavy pKc? f timber to be lifted, per haps for some fortress, and a corpora wbs overseeing tu work, and he was giving commands to some soldiers as they lifted: "Heave away, there! yt heave!" Well, the timber was toi heavy; they could not gei It up. There was a gentleman riding by on a horse and he stopped and said to this cor poral. "Wny don't you help them lift". That timber is too heavy for them U lift." "No," he said, "I won't; 1 am a corporal." The gentleman got off hh horse and citne up to the place "Now," he sa.d to the soldleis, "all to gether yo heave!" and the timber went to its pif.co. "Now," said the gentleman to the corporal, "when you have a piece of timber too heavy foi the men to lift, and you want hep, yon send to your commauder-in-chief." 1. was Washington. Now, that is about all the Gospel I know the Gospel ol giving somebody a lift, a lift out 01 darkness, a lift out of earth Into heaven. That is all the Gospel 1 know the Gospel of helping somebcd else to lift. The greatest friend of capitalist and toiler, and the one who will yet bring them togeiher in complete. accord, was bcrn one Christmas night while the curtains of heaven swung, stirred by the wings angelic. Owner of all thing? a'.l the continents, all worlds, and al the islands of light. Capitalist of im mensity, crossing over to our condition. Coming into our world, not by gate of palace, but by door of barn. Spend ing his first night amid the shepherds. Gathering afterward around him the fishermen to be his chief attendants. With adze, and saw, and chisel, and are, and in a c rpenter shop showing himself brother with the tradesmen. Owner of all things, and yet on a hil lock back of Jerusalem one day re signing everything for others, keeping not so much as a shekel to pay for hi3 obsequies: by charity buried in the suburbs cf a city that had cast him out. Before the cross of such a cap italist, and sicli a carpenter, all men can afford to shake hands and wor ship. Here is the every man's Christ. None so high, but he was higher. None so poor, but he was poorer. At his feet the hostile extremes will yet renounce their animosities, and coun tenances which have glowered with the prejudices and revenge of centuries shall brighten with the smile of heaven as he commands: "Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do you even so to them." An Ital'an Solomon. The Duke of Ossone, while Viceroy of Naples, delivered many quaint and clever Judgments. The case Is related where a young Spanish exquisite named Bertrand .solus, while lounging about in the busy part of the city, wa3 run against by a porter carrying a bun dle of wood on his shoulder. The porter had called out, "Make way, p'ease!" several times, but with out iect. He had then tried to get by without collision, but his bundle c night the young man's velvet dress and tore it. Solus was highly Indig nant, and had the porter arrested. The Viceroy, who had privately in vestigated the matter, told the porter to pretend he was dumb, and at the trial to rep'.y by signs to any question that might be rut to him. When the case came on, and Solus had made his complaint, the Vc?roy turned to the porter and asked him what he had to say in reply. The por ter only shook his head and made signs with his hands. "What Judgment do you want me to give against a dumb man?" asked the Viceroy. "Oh, your excellency," replied Solus, falling Into the trap, "the man is an imposter. I assure you he is not dumb. Before he ran Into me I distinctly heard him cry out, 'Make way.' " "Then." said the Viceroy sternly, "If you heard him ask you make way for him, why did you not? The fault of the resident was entirely with your gelf, and you must give this poor man compensation for the trouble you have given him in bringing him here." Victoria. Queen Victoria shine3 brightly as a ruler in a galaxy of poets, painters and men and women of genius In her own country find in every land. Rev. Robert S. MacAr thur. Baptist, New York CItv. Adam. It was not a punishment but a blessing that Adam was shut out of EJen, shut out from the tree of life, phut out from Immortality cf sin. Rev. C. M. Coburn, Methodist, Denver, Col. OUR BUDGET OF FUf). SOME GOOD JOKES, ORIGINAL AND SELECTED. A TPIdow's Ironl Property Tough Time and the Parrot -An Unwar r Mil ted ltoaat - l'lotaaiu and Jet sam. Love's Greeting. OLLY meets me at the door When the toll of day Is o'er. When the summer sun at setting. Flashing through the leafy fret ting. Flecks with molten gold the floor, With a smile of Love's beget ting. Molly meets mo at the door. Molly meets me at the door, 'Nts'li the porch's fragrant store, 'T'nth the sweet wls-tar'a. clinplnjj. With Its purpie clusters swmgi.ig. And- the appl-llnoms galore. In hr vt ice a welcome ringing, Molly meets me at the door. Molly meets me at the door, Fair as In the years befoie. When our vows of love were spoken. And I begs'! the ribbon token At bt'r dainty thioat she were. With our love-knot sMll unbroken, Molly meets me at the door. Molly meets me at the door. Ah, pray tlod. for everirore. Till my last fnlnt breath Is fleeting, Till my heart has rented Its beating. May she meet me as of yore: clrant for aye, with cheery greeting, Molly meets me at the door. Ought to Have Told. in: 1 inr - -i'iriP..A. i f. :ilVI' -e- - - ' . lit' mmmm Nephew Hew did you like the par rot I sent you? Uncle Rather tough. Nephew What! did you cat him? Why, he was a great talker. Uncle Well, why didn't th' durn fool say so? In European Style. "This hotel is run on the European plan. Isn't it?" asked the hungry-looking gue3t. with the long hair and buck skin trousers. "Yes, sab," replied the waiter. "Well, I haven't time to look over the bill of fare," rejoined the other re signedly. "Bring me some English breakfast tea, a Hamburg steak, .Swiss cheese, some German fried potatoes and French coffee cake or Vienna bread I don't care a darn which." Chieago Tribune. Her Advantage. Mrs. Stalemate Ouiy 10 think of the way in which Mis. Smarte snapped up that wealthy Mr. Goode! It's positive ly disgusting. Uncle John Naturally some of the other ladles are disappointed; but they had no chance against Mrs. Smarte. She's a widow, you know, and she hasn't haunted the matrimonial bar gain counter the last two or three years for nothing. Boston Transcript. Ills Unwarranted ltoaat, Louise Do you know that Charley Flnnlcks is going around town brag ging that he kissed you the other night? Jessie Why, the horrible story tell er! He did no such thing. It was I that kissed him, and he nearly fainted when I did it, too. But that's the way with cowards. They always are the greatest boasters." Cleveland Leader. Very Peraonal. Wilson Has that charming widow any property? Bllson Ye3, considerable. - Wilson Real estate or personal? Bllson Personal; she has six chil dren. - It Wn't M,esary. "Did you permit him to kiss you?" asked the old gentleman. "I didn't have to," replied the sweet young thing. Indeed she had caught an up-to-date young man who knew too much to ask. Chicago Tost. Fun 'or Her. "Does Miss Merry smile upon your ult. Ctaumpley?" "Smilo? She laughi till you can hear her a block every time I propose." Detroit Free Tress. I Rue Mnde From Your Old Cur pet. Latent Improvement, new method of mak ing revt-rsiule run from your old Umbels or Inirraln caretn. vlth border all around Hend for circular and price to S. Kros, C-'li Wentworth Ave., Chicago. III. To learn to play the trombone It Is nerei ary to have good lungs and indulgent neighbor!!. The old soljer is glttln' too many friends that wants to help blm. To Cure Constipation Forever. Tare CascareU Cand y Cathartic, loc or 2.'o If CC.G falls to cure.dr uRKtu refund moue y If you want eggs, you must make your poultry exercise. Norway 1 to have a World's Fair. Learn 10 ue i o -an 10 We wnl s!i.d o vi one lite iz an Artist.. A t st Proof to i d iroia any I' ho o- trr.inh of V0;ir own with Ml ln-t i ct'on to m;Ue it in o a i r ,yon Porua t for fcc postage pre mid d. HARVt Y & LYLI S, "lA.''Af- HALL'S Vegetable Sicilian HAIR REN EWER Beautifies and restoitt Gray Hair to its original color and vitality; prevents baldness; cures itching and dandruff. A fine hair dressing. B. P. Hall & Co., Props., Nashua, N. H. Bold by all Druggists. uct yourPension DOUBLE QUICK Write CAPT. O'PARRELL, Pension Ajrent, 1423 New York Aven. W "OTON, D.C No CGGD, BOILING, FLAUORING, To 51 "lie Elegant uk Kro ting. Sr ii t& . lit In .taiui'n to tli l'l.A V iri.NO eoMl'O. Nl e o., ToWolo. e 1I0. It your CMi'i r ht rift sot It. ana tet mu or t. ii I'om pnni'it inii 01-e .f tlieir flu iiri.niti.iu ;t. AUICNT W tNTKU. T&b Peerless Feces Cs. y tansslan an tvith Hrtrl7.Mnt.al anil kiu vim. . ...4 la tl.a tT Wire Bt&v waAVln dnvlo.A oa the market. MOLLY, MiCtU Witii FOUR HUNDRED yia CHICAGtegiS Great '.Western CHICAGO TO ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS CITY OFFICE I IS ADAMS ST., CHICACO. CURE YOURSELF! Vff Hi CJ fur unnatural dii hurxi'i, liiilauiiiialiuua, irritattiitia or ulceration of iuucou nitiuiLraue. i'aiultma. anil but aitruv- UrtcEUNSCHEMICMLCo. K, n or poikouuna. Mold by IrarflcU, or arnt In plain wrnpprr, ' t nirw. prrnaiil. fur t.m, or 3 hnttlea, 2.;s. Circular scat ua requeet. SI00 lojny to. WILL PAY $lQO FOR ANY CASE Of Weakness In Men They Treat and rail to Cure. Ad Omaha Company places for the firbt time before the public a Maoi'cal Tiieat m ht for the care of Lost Vita.ity, Nervous and rJexual Weakness, and ltestoi ation of Life Force in old ami young men. No worn-oat Frencb remedy; contains no Phosphorus or other bnrmiul drugs. It is a WoMiif itFCL, Thkatmi.nt magical in its ffecispositive in its cure. All render, who are suffering from a weakness that blights their life, causing that uienta and physical "uffer ng peculiar to Lont Man Lood.Hhould write to the &TATE M EDICAL CUMPANV, Umaha, Neb., and they wi.l send you ahso ate y FHKK, a valuable aper on these dl ea es. and positive p' oot's of their truly Mauicai.Ti,atm en r. Thous ands of men,, who have )o-t nil ho, e of a cure, are being restored by them to a per fect condition. Th Maoico. Tbkatmbt may be taken at home under their dire tions. or they wi.l pay railroa I fare and hotel bills to ftl who prefer to go there for trcatme t, if t"ey failtoct.ro. They are terlectlv retal.l; have no Free Pre or ptioas. Free e mo. Free Sample, or C. (). u. fake. Tlioy have Vr,u,0 ca i a', and guaia tee to -nro very cane they trent or t etuiul cvo y dol lar; or their charges wny bedecked in a bank to be piid to them whon a cure i etJe ted. ' ? i CHEAP EXCURSIONS TO S Ssptemoer 21. October 5, 19 On theae dates round- A I gj" trip tickets, froed for 21 II HLl davs. will be oU bv all 3 FARE UurllDi(ton Route agents and by thohe of main eastern railroads at Plus $2.00. Tr-e undersigned w 11 send you froe on J; appllta Ion a hmid-om.- llfS.riteua fiimptilet describing Nebraska, with a 1 srgo sectional map of the hut -. J A Dry, Healthy Climate. A Soil Unsurpassed for Richness, easy to cultliate, and yielding j all Tarletles of crops. ; That Is what Nebraska offers tn the I homesreker. Ask yo r m uret ilekrt nsent nb nit the cheap rati s. or wri e to J I. H. Kustls, (Jenenil IVsper.ger Agent. C CB.sQ.fi, R.. C blcafto. III. C CUIUS WHLht Alt tlist t All S- Best e.oni(h Bjrup. Tanua Uood. Cso m timet pv flrni?irt. .0 n f IiIhI I IZJAf act la HrMun. v voiNomstn.o.ri NEBRASKA S