Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1880~SIXTEEN PAGES. “MAGIC REMEDY” For the Cure of Syphilis. We will contract to cure Syphilis or refund all money and pay entire expense of coming here, railroad fare, hotel bills, etc. We have never failed to cure the most obstinate cases. Ten days in recent cases does the work. It is theold chronic, deep-seated cases that we solicit. We have cured hundreds who have been abandoned by physicians and pronounced incurable, and we challenge the world to bring us a case that we cannot cure. ; Since the history of medicine a true specific for Syphilis has been sought for but never found until our MAGIC REMEDY was discovered, and we are justified in saying it is the only remedy in the world that will postively cure, because the latest medical works, published by the best known authorities, say there never was a true specific before. Our reputation as business .men, the company’s financial standing, to- ether with the character, reputation and skill of our physicians will bear the most rigid investigation, and the result will justify anyone af- icted with Syphilis in placing themselves in our hands. All classes of people may consult or correspond with us with the utmost safety as regards exposure in any way We Guaraniee to Cure Syphilis in any Stage, Whether Contracted or Hareditary, Why waste your time and money with patent medicines that never had virtue, or doctor with physicians that cannot cure you? You that have tried everything else should come to us and get permanent relief. Younever can get it elsewhere. Mark what we say, in the end you must take QUR “MAGIC REMEDY” OR NEVER RECOVER, and you that have been afflicted but a short time should by all means come to us now. Those who have been afflicted a long time do not generally believe what we say, but we make written contracts to do just what we say, and our financial standing exceeds $200,000---enough to satisfy the most skeptical. READ THIS. A few days sinee, we wrote to one of our Chicago patients, inquir- ing as to his health, and received the following answer: Chicago, Il1., Sept. 13th, 1889. COOK REMEDY COMPANY, Omaha. Neb. Gentlemen—If there is in all this city of a million people, one who is feeling any better, physically or mentally, than the writer, he should take unto himself wings and enter Heaven, o la the fellow who eon=- sorted with theravens. Thelast vestige of the disease has disappeared, and I am feeling finer than [ did at 21. The specific is a miraculous compound, which puts to shame the wonderous performances of Alladin’s fabled lamp. To one having need of them, every pellet is worth a year of life, Sincerely Yours, JE=up Immediately on receipt ofthe above, we wrote him again, asking permission to use his letters in such a wayas not to lead to exposure, and received the following reply; Physicians, has my condition at its best, perraitted me for a moment to harbor this faith. Ten days after the treatment, for the first time in six years, not a trace of the disease was visible or tobe felt. 1n feeling, in the briefin- terval of fifteen days, 1 seened to have grown twenty years younger. 1 recall the, to me, most important transaction of my life—beginning with the writing of my first letter of inquiry, prompted by the sheer desperation of six years of suffering and unsuccessful treatment to the happy results so quickly following the five days use of the speci- fic. It seems all to wonderful for realization. You may rely upon my doing all 1 ean for the Remedy, and poor wretches, who now, more than ever have my sympathy. I feel an obligation which no amountof money could reqiiite, and ever anx- ious that all having need of the marvelous specific should have the blessings it can bring. Command me in anyth‘ng wherein I can benelit the patient or yourselves. Yours Truly. H To parties desiring it, we will furnish the opportunity for ve \ ing the genuineness of the forgoing correspondence. A full discript- ion of this patient’s case and treatment, with all the correspondence which has passed between him and this office, will soon be pub- lished in phamplet form, and can be had on application personally orby letter. It will make interesting reading. With the above facts before ti ili ili imi i is vi B hor e e ore them, we do not see how anyone can longer doubt the curability of Syphilis or that we have the means of eliminating this virulent P. S.—We desire to state emphatically that The Cook Remedy Co., has no agents, and our Remedy can be nrocured from no one but ourselves. sons have our formula, or any other formula that will produce the same results. The Gook Remedy Go., Room 413 Paxton Bld"g Omaha Neb. yours of the 16th. First allow me to reassert former assurances, [ am the healthiest and happiest fellow in town, not excepting terri= tory recently annexed. Asto my willingness and desire to attest, in every way I consistently may, the immediate and miraculous re- sults of your treatment, | assure you I should esteem it not only a pleasure but a duty. But I fear you overestimate my simple ac- nowledgements of the inestimable benefits I have received. The letters, ns you are aware, were written mainly during treatment, when the heroic effects of the specific searealy econduced to a frame of mind suitable for composition, but they recite the facts, which are all important, and [ would cheerfully forego all my leisure from daily occupation, if I might have anopportunity of personally conveying the blessed truth to every sufferer. I have no objection to printing the correspondence, eliminating any personal me: tion of names, but pre nting the glorious trutns. 1 will gladly undertake to ans- wer personally any letters asking confirmation ofthe'correspondence, and do what Iean to inspire confidence in your commendable busi- ness methods, and the absolute and wonderful specific action of the Remeady as evidenced and established in my experience. As intima- ted in one of your letters, [ have an intuitive fezling that 1 am cured permanently. Never before, while under the treaiment of eminent i Chieago, September 17, 1889. COOK REMEDY COMPANY, Gentlemen—Returning to the city after a few days ahsence, 1 find No other ver- LEGISLATION T0 SAVE LIFE. | How it Ought to Compel the Use of Automatic Couplers. PRESIDENT ADAMS' NEPOTISM, The Question of Through KRates and State and National Jurisdiction —8ome of the Trials of Pioneer Engineers. Automatic Couplers, Just at present, the longitudinal lines hold the key to the situation in the railway world. Had any prediction been made of this char- acter two months ago, it would have been scoffed at by the matter-of-fact men of the lines running in the opposite dircction. The change iu the channels of traffic has been the means of a change in the stock markets. Four mouths ago the stock of the Chicago, Burlington & Northern opened and closed each day with adull and inuctive market. Even the proferred stock failed to prove very attractive to the capitalist and specula- tor. When, not long ago, the late President Touzalin endeavored to negotiate the sale of the Chicaga, Burlington & Northern to the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, the latter de- clined, giving as a reason, that no ruilroad property on the vergo of bankruptcy was de- siruble. As a consequence, the deal fell through, and now the Q. has an opportuuity to repent. The change in the direction of tne chanpel through which the seaboard and export traffic has been moving, has been the weans of making the Chicago, Burlington & Northern not only the prime factor as regards the estab- lishment and maintenance of through rates from upper Mississippi river points to the seaboard on the east, but has also created a strong demand for its hitherto demoralized stoc] Alwmost similar bas been the result as regards the Chicago, St. Paul & Kansas City. i ] “Congress should uot ignore the appeal of the trainmen for legislation on car couplers and couplivg,” saia a well kuowa rallway ofticial. *“The fact is that subject can be disposed of only by congress. It is a ques- tion too extensive for state legislation, ‘This is self-explanatory. for instance,n law might be pussed in Nebraska affording the neces- sary relief, while the state of lowa might fail to legislate oo the subject. The cous: quence would be that no foreign cars, inas- much as they were not equipped with auto- matic couplings could bo hauled or used ‘within the limits of Nebraska, while iu lowa no distiustion would be made, This would not only be undue discrimina- tion, but it would necessitate the changiog of through consignments from one car 10 another at an intermediate point. But if a law waus passed for all roads in the states and territories relatng to tne auto- matic coupler, all the disadvaugtuges of ~‘Which I have spoken would be done away with, Yes, I thwk the link and vin have about run their career, They should be dis- carded at the eariiest possible moment. “Phey have been the means of making thous- ands of cripples; of sonding mauy & man 1o @ premature grave, and of consuming wmillions of dollars in more ways than one.' General Munager Culing, of the consoli- dated syatem, hus Just made an appointment that fails to be in keeping with the **policy” of Churles Francis Adams. It will bo remembered that Mr. Adams, when in Omaba recently, stated that, hence" forth, fuvoritism would be shown old em- Ployes as regards promotion. His words bad Bcarcely died away when & minature piece of buient reached Omaha anuouncing that SW. B, Green is hereby appointed superin- tendeut of the 1dabo_aivision of the Union Paciflo viee John Rapolle, roaigued, with headquurters at Pocatello.”’ Tt was “signed ' by G. M. Cuming. he wppowtee 18 @ hew man 1 the service of the Union Pa- oifle, haviug been with the road but a few ths, He left the Chicago, Burlington & mhnm o short time ago 1o take the posi- tion of truinmaster of the Wyomivg d n to fhe Union Vaciie. It is said in s avpointment s superintendent he has been promoted over av least ono hundeed me who on the ground of seniority should haye been recognized, and whose ability to fill the position would compare very favorably with that of Mr. Green. wte The move toward malng the through vate from Chicago to points west of the Mis- souri'the sum of the two locals, with the Missouri river as a basing, 18 gradually gath- ering strength, not only among the’ trans- Missouri mercantile circles, but among the western lines, Should this bebrought ubout the wholesale houses of Omaha, St. Joe, Kansas City and Sioux City would be put on an equal footi with _ the wholesale merchants of Chic: far as the tariff on shipments is concerned. The Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley road is the only line at prosent that muke through rate the sum of the loc Union Pacific and the Burlington have thus far declined to cotertain any provosition in that direction. Consequentiy the wholesale merchants of this city have been and are compelled to submit to undue discrimination. By making a through rate in_this way, the roads would, it 15 sard, be brought undor the jurisdiction of the state commission as well as under the inter-state con ission, as ro- gards through business for Nebraska points, as the basing point would be the state line, also. It is stated on good authority that the Union Pacific would cousent to the change, but the Burlington, its_principal competitor, opposes the move, and_consequently it i3 compeled to maintain the rate established by the *‘combination’ in order to proteet; its through business. - “That is a lie,” and the cheeks ot two rail- way magnates paled with. anger. From that time, up to the hour that the life spark of Thomas J. Potter went out, a cooluess ex- isted between him and P. . Shelby. The assertion was made by tho latter al o meet- ing held in Chicago. He was then assistant general trafic manager of the Union Pacific, und Mr. Potter was general manager of the Hurlington system. A controversy arose in waich both men widely differed. One word brought on another, and finally Mr. Stelby gave vent to his opinion in tho foregoini strong terms. Calmly yet determined M Pouter replied: *You will see tho day, sir, that you wili regret haying made that remark.” The meoting adjourned without further uupleasautoess, and the officials roturned to | their respective posts of dulty, The days rolled by, and Mr, Shelby ittle know wihiat the future had in store for him, and,no doubt, little anticipated the radical change it brought about. The ability of Mr. Potier made him a very desirable man. The terws which induced Mr, Potter to relinquish his position with the Burlington aud accept tho vice-presidenoy of the Union Pacitic are well known in the railway world. He was given direct control of the Union Pacific, and the retirement of Mr. Shelby followed. It was done quietly, and but few individuals are aware of the cause that prompted the change, Mr. Shelby, however, like Mr. Potter, was made of good material, and was not_long in finding & place in which to exercise his abil ity. He hns since his retirement from the Union Pacific became the assistant geueral manager of the St. Paul. Mumneapolis & Manitoba, having been recently appointed to that position. » ' “During days that "hove passed and gone, when I was on the Union: Pacific, I have kissed my wife and little cues never expect— ing to seo them again,” said » well-knc engineer now runuing @ passenger on the Northwestern, “Danger was ever) 3 Indians, train _robbers, poor roadbed, thing thut could go to make a teip perilous, of the present know of but little of the and tribulations that were exper- ienced by trainmen in early days. 1 ha! been compelled 10 run the gauntiet on in- dians, when I little expected to escape with my life. They used to place obstructions on the track, and, had not & lookout been con tinually kept up, wrecks and loss of life would necessarily have followed. Some- times the Iudiaus would lay iu awbush, and when & train whirled by they would storm iv with arrows. Near North Platte about dusk 0ne eveniug &0 arrow came crashing through the window of my cab und lodged in the op- Dosite side, Just missing me. Anotver time I was shot in the left thigh, the arrow piercing the flesh nearly to the bone. Now along with this came the dangerpf encountering train robbers, 1t is bad enough when thoso fellows board a train sud compel its passcogers, and especi- | ally its express messengor hands, but the train robbers to be feare and we had to deal with that class largel, are those ck a train, and rob eve thing and_everybody, dead or alive, during the n old-timer could 4 between un obstruction placed on the track by Indians and one by train-robbers. The Indians would pile up b of several feet, while the ald arrauge it so that unless a close watch was kept up it would bo un- noticed until it was too late. On one occa- sion, abiout one nundred and fifty miles west of Omaha, I discovered what appear: me to be a pol knew better t any chances, and I brought the train to stop. In insututed an investization and found that it was an .iron rod about two inches thick, and just loi nough to reach across the jrack. was a curve in the road at that point, and had I not discovered 1t I think we would have been ditched. I never heard anything further concerning it, but I have always thought it was pluced there by train-rob- vers, 10 hold up their —— CONNUBIALITI It was Lord Ulln's daughter who told the ferryman: *No cross, no crown.” “Ilove you, Emeline, with all the fervor command, siid, as they strolled out Kast avenu When o married man buttons his suspned- erson eightpenny nails it is sure evidence thav he has been disappointed in lo The man who shoots his girl to make her love him and the girl wio throws vitriol n her lover's face for the same purposo should marry and have itsout with one another. My, H. Williams and Miss Martha Critshen wore marriad the other day at Clayton, Ala. fter a courtship of one month. The youn, man 18 only cighteen and the brideforty- five, Returned Traveler—*1 have often thought of that young Mr. Tease, and how he used to trment Auburn about her red hair, Did sk or et even with him (" Old friend - She married him,” , (George,” she replied, “I know it, et 1 would that you had told me of your love in some other terms, I bave been loved witn fervor, oh! so many times, and I d natch to amount to something." your pretty cousin coming et to say that her chauces E 3. ireat heavens! Is she 80 dangerously ill?? “She is not ill at all, Her chances in lifo are slim because she is engaged 1o ba married to a dude.”” Dolley—"That scems to be a good rule which Mr. Gladstone and his wife observe.” Cumso—*"What is it?’ “When he insists his » submits; when she insists he subwits.” “*Yes, that's & good rule. My wife aud I fol- low it, too—at least the last purt of it,” “What is your opinion of marriage, Frau- n Adelat’ “Oh! I hate and defest men 1" *Ach! and poor fool as Lam, I was about to solicit your band and heart! Adleu, mein Fraulein!” “What! can it be possibled For goodness suke do stop—1 feel asif I could pathize with you! The young women of Calloun, Ky., die- tate rules of courtship to the young ‘men of that neighborhood in the following resolu- tion: “We think the young men of this town display unbounded sudacity and temerity when they accompany us to places where no cush is nec buv are conspicuously ab- lace which woula s0ing into their pocketbooks.” time ago the neads of two families lLiving in a flourishing settlement not many miles from Charlottetown, says the Halifax Herald, held a consultation at which it was decided that the daughter of one of the par- ties should wed the son of the other, It was also aecided that the marriage ceremony be verformed at un early date, ~ The respit of the conference was communicated to the young pair. The man took kindly 1o the business; the girl did not. But her parents iusisted Upon her currying out the bargain they bad made. Now, the girl had a young men in Boston to whom she was very much at ached, and to whom she wrote, telling of ber trouble, He immediately repaired to Charlottetown, met the girl, and took her to the states, where they have probably become husband and wif ki A White Tarantula. A pure white tarantula was caught in Los Vegas, A. T., last week, Itsvenom is said 1o be equal to that of a rattle- suuke., e A o AN B . BT 45 s DL | A NAGNIFICENT CARAVANSARY Washington Will Build One if She Gets the World's Fair. PAVEM:NTS IN VERY BAD SHAPE. Danger That the Streets Will be Rough When the Knights Come —Boarding Hates—Pension Perquisives, A RBig Hotel in Prospect. Should Washizgton secure the location of the world’s fair, which is to bo opened in 1892, and probably continue permanently. unother effort will be made by capitalists nere and in New York to secure the incor- poration of a hotel company which will es- tablish a hostelry with becoming proportions and dignity to the national capital. A bill to incorporate a hotel company with two or three million dollars capital was defeated in the last two congresses, and it was killed through the efforts of rival landlords. Al- most any of the western cities of half the population of Washington huve sunerior hotels to those here. There are a sufficient number of hotels at the capital but they are not up to the demunds of the highest class of patrons. Ivis more than probabie that the location of the building for the world’s fair and the hotel company will be along together. It is stated in real estate and financial circles that a combination of capitalists is looking around for a large tract of land suitable for the loca- tion of the fair building, and that although the proposed new botel 1s not to be located in close proximity, it is to be owned by the same people. There is no city in the United States having as large a perzentage of vis- itors who are willing to patronize a really first-cluss hotel us Washington. WASHINGTON'S BAD STREETS, Considerable uneasiness is being shown by some of the leading merchants 1n Washing- ton about the condition of the principal thoroughfares. ‘Lhe district commissioners some time ago let contracts for reasphalting Penusylvania avenue, which is the great parade thoroughfare of the city, and Fiftcenth stroet, which joms tho avenue at the treasury department and runs north- ward. ‘I'liese two tboroughfares we the joy of all organizations and meetings where parades are given, Penusylvania avenue is over one hundred foet wide, and offers the most magnificent parade grounds to be found in the United States within the corporation of any city, The contractors have skinued off the old asphalt over a small portion of the avenue, and It begins to look as if they would only get fairly at work when the tri- enniel conclave of Knjghts Templar meets here three weeks hence. If Pennsylvania avenue and Fiftoenth street should not ve in condition for the Knights Templar parade it would be & great wisfortune to the thousands who will come here from a distance, and 1t would be deeply regretted by ull residents of the national capital. " A demand is being made of the commis- sioners that they compel the contractors to prton a night force of workmen with in- structions to push the work of resurfacing theso thoroughfares, and finish the work by the 1st of October. This, of course, would necessitute an extra expeuse to the contract- ors, und they are kicking up behind, BOARDING RATES. While a great many icquiries have been made for boarding house aud hotel accommo- dations auring the triennial conclave of Knights Tewplar carly next month, those who have places to reat report that the de- munds are in o way to be compared with those made for the last presidential i ation, One of the principal reusons is that a great many halis have beon hired, and will be vtilized as camping places by the visitors. Nothing of this kind occurred during the in- auguration. The crowd which will attend the Kuights Templar meeting will not be so large either as was here during the inaugur- ation. The landlords will get all the money they can out of their rooms for rent, sud the to receive s large f March. Hoarding houses are cha ing from $: to # per day for rooms and meals. There are places where accommodnzions are secured if two persons will occupy the same room, as low as &1.50 per day for rooms and _meals, but those who expect to receive comfortable quarters shonld not calculate to pay less than $2.50 per day for the room und menls at boarding houses, while the hotels will charge from §.50 to $6 aday. ‘The weather in Washington during the early days iu October 1s generaily mag- nificont, ‘Lhe trees will have just begun to shed.thewr folage. The season withal will be probably two or three weeks later than in the central states of Ohio, Indiana, Iilinoi and on that parallel of latitude. Prepar tions are bemg made for a splendid time and people who come need not expect to be robbed, ces ‘as they did 85 MONEY IN PENSION CLAINS, The retirement from the pension oftice of Corporal Tanner has renewed interest in tho business of the pension agents in Washing- ton. There was a time wheu very few bu nesses at the national capital were as lucra tive as that of representing the claims of soldiers before the pension department. During the past six or eight years there b been a steady decline of this” business until at present it” is said that there is not more than one quarter as much money made out of pousion claims as there Was SIX years ugo. This fact is iargely due, men at the pension oftice say, to the work of men in congress, Appl 1008 have come to uude: stand that their senator or member of con- I 0 and will push pension claims with much more vigor and success than a pension agent, und it will cost them nothing to Lave it done. Much of the money made by agents in securing pensions during the past three or four years has been the result of the labor of senators and representatives. Pension agents secure the clientage of applicants and take the vreliminary steps, but the work of pushing the claims, filing additional testi- mony, and all that sort of thing, is, in more thau two-thirds of the instances, done by men in congress, When the pensions are allowed the agents represent that the success was due to tieir efforts and proceed to cc lect their fees, Nine-tenths of the claims before the pension bureau are represented by attorneys, and four-fifths of the pensions al- lowed come through the efforts of men in congress, of friends who have no financial interests involved. GOT EVEN WITH THE GENERA In connection with the talk about General Roscerans retiring from the registership of the treasury, his commission having expired and he havine secured the permanent pay of a brigadior-goneral on the retived list, amountiug in all 0 about $5,000 a year, oF $1,000 a8 pensioner and an equal sum as @ federal ofticer, it is remarked by almost every one who has run against the gallant old soldier of late that he is becoming remarkably “gingery.” A well-known newspaper reportor of this city went into General Kosecrans’ office during the recent discussion of the Dproposition to remove the remains of General Grant from Riverside park in New York to the Arlington cometery in this city, and asked him what he thought of tho proposi- tion, General Rosccrans has despised the very name of Grant for a score of years, and he generally loscs his temper when he Lears it mentioned. General Rosecrans was stretehed outon an easy-chair,and taking his afternoon siesta when the reporter entored the office of register of the treasury **What do you think of the proposition to remove General Girant’s remains,” was the way the question was propounded. General Rosecraus opened his eyes, rubbed them gently, and replied: “Ob, I haven't got time to say what I think about’ it.” ““The reporter, who is somewhat of & wag, looked the general in the eyes & moment,und gave vent to his feelings by roplying: “Maybe you will have more time, general, wheu President Harrison gets back.”’ The door closed behind the reporter just in time to enable bim to escape an invitation to retire. - For Any Form of Kidney or Bladder Trouble Go to Excelsior Springs, Mo, Its waters are a speedy and infallible cure. Fine accommodations at the FElms. Twenty-five miles from Kansas City on the St. Paul read. |MERELY BANDS OF ROBBERS. A New York Man's Vigorous De- nunciation of Trusts. THROTTLE THEM AT BIRTH, These Conspirators Aganst the Rignts of the roeple Should be Classed With Bomb Throwers and Burglars, Tenney on Trusts. The Hon. A. W. Tenny, of Brooklyn, a public man of considerable promi- nence who has become very popular among the people of New York for his attitude with regard to the trusts, re- cently delivered an address at the ninth annual encampment of the Wayne County Veteran Soldiers’ and Sailors association and the first annual en- campment of the Women’s Relief Corps and Sons of Veterans at Sodus Point, N. Y.,in the course of which he said: “*We want no unjust monopolies nor oppressive trusts arbitrarily to fix and control the conditions of trade in this land. We want no unjust or burden- some rates of transportation from the grain fields of the west to the markets of the e Fair play, fair trade and cheup transportation are the demands of the hour. Inthe great contest now going on of the many against the few, of the poor against the rich, of the people agmnsy the trusts, I am for the people and the rights of the people. Open markets and honest competition in all the marts of trade, and in every product of hand and brain, will alone give hcalthy prosperity to every citizen of this republic, Every combination, 1 care not its name, created to enhance the price of a com- modity in the hands of the consumer is wrong and against our civilization and should be driven from our land by the fiery indignation of an injured people. ‘Wheat pools in the west, created to en rich the tew at the hands of the man should be strangled at their birth by the swift hand of the law. A man with a large bank account who would make a corner in wheat, in rice or in corn, and thereby increase the price to the con- sumer is no better than the burglar with his jimmy, or the Nililist with his bomb, Each and all are alike enemies to society, to good citizenship and to the glory and renown of the public itsel’ There are times. 1 admit, not 50 many now, when we are rich as a people as formerly, when we were poor, when concentrated wealth may be legitimate and beneficial to all, My criticism is upon those attempts now being made from one end of the country to the other to centralize wealth, whereby the rich are made richer and the poor poorer; whereby the weak tradesman and small agriculturist are driven from business into bankruptey and despair, and whereby the necessarics of life ure made dearer 10 every consumer, Such attempts, I say, are against the policy of our government, and are enemies to our American civilization, and should be prohibited by law. A man who will gamble in wheat, or any of the nec ies of life, will gamble with the ed interests of the home, the honor of the individual, and the welfare of the state. There is to-day, . tually, but one purchaser of sugar in this laod, and that is the sugar trust. This trust arbitrarily fixes the 1 price of this commodity upon the tables of the rich and poor alike. 1t has no competitor; it can have none. Combi- nation fixes the price, not compotition. The rule of the ages is ed by the modern rule of avai It not “only fixes the price to the consumer, but to the producer aswell. Its voice is su- preme, and from its decision there is no appeal or escape. And what is true of the sugar trust is true of every other trust that has its grasp upon the indus- tries of this people. 1t is high time the alarm was sounded. It is time the peo- ple struck hands together and demanded of their law-makers legislative enact- ments that will make it impossi- ble for the sugar trust, the lead trust, the salt trustor any other trust to exist in the free air of America. Alveady tinghsh capital, idle and a beggar at home, is coming to our shores and secking the control of many of the leading industrics of this mghty peo- ple. This should not be. American industries should be owned by Ameri- can capital and controlled by Ameri- cans, and not by strang Whoever would share in the matehless oppor- tunit of this growing republie should be willing to como here and be one of us, 1o muko our people his peo- ple and our God his God. He should be willing to help pay our taxes, fight our battles and bear the burdens of citizen- ship, which are costly and many. 1f he is not willing to do 'this, then it him stay at home and keep his muscle and money with him. No Lnglish baron should éver be allowed to fix the price of aloaf of bread or of a day’s work in this country. America for Americans, and her industries for her peoplo,should be the watchword of the hour. Let us remember we are living, not in Europe, nor in China, nor in India, but in America, in whose air there is room for evel wing room for every sail,” provided they fly at sthead the glitterin, stars and stripes. Here, in business an enterprise, every man, rich or poor, high or low,must have an equal chance, Here every branch of industry must stand in equal honor and in’ ejual dignity with every other braneh of in- , as we go forth tolay the founda- tion of new states and develop the un- told resources of this great land. That here we have homes, not castles; school houses,not barricades; equal priviloges, not inherited rights, That here man’s possibilities are measured, not by the vision of the eye, but by the swoep of the stars. Ah, wy countryman, let us take care of such u nation as this and keep it, with all its sacred interests, for that people who believe in its institu- tions, who worship at its shrine and who pay allegiance to its flag. e i AS GOOD AS GOLD, One Th Near Denver, Colorado, Kree. Desiring to attract universal attes tion we have adopted this novel and ex- pensive method of plucing our property before the people. “ The lots we are giving away in Plain- field, a new suburban addition on the Fort' Worth & Denver railroad, only & few minutes ride {rom the Union depot at Denver, Colo, T'hese lots o ifeot, wide streews wnd nice park 4. We keep every other lot for the present and will nob soll. Eyery lot Lhat is given gway will be worth $100 in less than cighteen months, We give only one lob to oach person and require no contract to improve. If you desire one of these lots send us your Tull nume and address, with 4o for postage, and we will mail you deed at once, Ade dress PLAINFIELD ADDITION CO., Casile Rock, Cole