Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, March 24, 1892, Image 2

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    aMMIMNlBmaaMM
republican: state conven
tion. The repuhliiui electors of the
Atateof Nebraska are requested to
tii(l .1fl-;t'H from their several
umiiilii'M to ux't't in convention in
the city of Kearney Wednesday
April 27.1 Sim, at 11 o'clock it. in., for
the ptiipoM-of Heeling four dele
gate ill l.ire to the republican na
tional convention to be held in
Minneapolis June 7, IV.C
T11I5 Al'I'OKTIO.NMKNT.
Tlx Hwei .ii co o ii i it m ale entitled
! representation follows, bein
based upon I lie vole cast for Hoii
George II. H:isiiui.i for attorne
feni T.il in HM, one deleali
at larj;" I" each county a. id one for
each l.'ii) voles iiiii the major frac
tion thereof:
Omiilii-i
AiIjiiii
AnU'ij''
IfHII'K'i
fllHIIU'
Buy. I
BlHlIK
Box Unite.
Hruwn
BiiDiiIii
Hiitior .
Burt .
CH . .
Cedar ...
Chuse
Clievenne .
Cherry
CUv.
Ciiltax
C limine
Cutter ....
Dnkxtri.
DWCH
lcl.,l'lMlllil'H
. llllollllMl'i
... iiKeariii'V
. .'t: Ki'vi I'lllill
.. i Kcit li
... Z kttulmll ...
Del
fi :..
I I,.
Tn.
in :. , '.in . ..
7 1,'iiri
h Mnilimin
, II Mi l'licnrmm
, I Merrlrk .
, :i iiik r
r mnhn . . .
S'.Niukoll
Ill I line ....
4 1'iiwtiee
7 I'rrUinn . . .
I'.' fierce
4 rii)-ln
7 I'lutle.
71'i.lk
H KV.I Willow .
K'ii luirilrnitl .
II K'cK'k
itl Suline
H Sarpy
II SiiuuitcrH
AjSeottH Muff..
fiiSi'wiinl . .
oiiel . ..
)lxmi
JollnhlH
Jiinilv
fllmure. ..
tik I i it . ..
Frontier ...
furnu
....
rlli-M
eV.,rr
tfrmit ... ..
Oret'lv
Snll "
aiiiiltiin . ....
nnrliiu
Haven
Uitrlit'iK'k....
n,.lt
rtnwnrit
Hooker
.1 Slieriilun
Y Shermiin
2. Sioux
HStiiiitim .. ..
Vl'lm ver
! riioniiiM
I Thurston .
1 Valley
Washington.
I Wayne
WVfiHter
' Wheeler
Y'ork
2I
Total
It is reconnTnfeo ffr.Uno proxies
e admitted to the convenf ion, and
that the delegate preHent be t"th.
rized to cant full votes of the dele
gation. It recommended that the republi
cans of every county in thin Btate
We requested to select their county
central committee at the first coun
ty convention held in their respec
tive counties. Said committee to
nerve until the county convention
of MM be held.
Pk. S. I). Mekcek,
Chairman.
Walt. M. Shelby.
Secretary,
FIRST DIS fRICT CONVENTION.
The reimblican electors of the
tSe'l4. First congressional district of the
0.:M' .tate of Nebraska nre reouested to
"f-pl delegates from the several
coittji.g comprising said district to
neet in convention in the city of
Falls Ciy. "Wednesday, April ,
1W1, at 7::) o'clock p. in., for the
purpose of electing two delegates
and two alternate delegates to the
republican national convention to
be held at Minneapolis June 7, 1 S'.KI,
THE AKI'OKTIONMEN'T.
The several counties are entitled
to representation as follows, be
ing based upon the vote cast for
Hon. W. J. Council for congress in
MX). One delegate for each 1(H)
votes and major fraction thereof
and one delegate at large from each
county:
Counties. IM.ICouuties Del
iniw I!H( Moe 1,1
JohiiHon I I'awnee m
Ijuic-aMter 4:;KiiliarclHm HI
.rniHuu 1.'
I Total '
It is recommended that no proxies
be admitted to the convention, and
that the delegates present from
each county cast the full voteof the
delegation.
W. If. WoowAkp,
Chairman.
Frank McCartney,
Secretary.
.no ior Mepublloan Primaries and
City Convention.
The republican electors of IMatts
mouth City arc hereby called to
meet in primary convention Satur
day evening, March 12. 182. from
7 o'clock till 8, for the purpose of
selecting one candidate for council
man for each ward: and for tlw fur
ther purpose of selecting delegates
to the city convention, which is
Hereby called to meet in the Rock
wood Hall Saturday evening,
March 10th, for the purpose of nom
inating a city ticket as follows:
mayor, two members of the school
hoard, police judge, city clerk and
treasurer.
The representation for city con
vention is based on the vote cast for
the Hon. G. H. Hastings for attor
tiey general Xov. 1S!H), allowing one
delegate for each ten votes and
major fraction thereof, which en
titles the several wards to repre
sentation as follows-
First ward, 10 delegates, to be
held at Council chamber.
Second ward. 10 delegates, to be
iwcontl ward 8cflool lloU9(,
held at Kichey's lumber office
Fourth want, 12 delegates, to be
held at county clerk's otlice.
Fifth ward. 5 delegates, to be held
at fifth ward school house.
No proxies admitted but'deleirates
present will cast the fufl vote of
their respective wards.
Hy order of the city central coin
mittec. -.SLt.A.ch,nn
MENDING THE WAIL POOCHES.
Uw Unci lin'i Mall HM Ara Repair
ad-150,000 Lark Itruowrd.
Ones in eight years all the lock on
United States mail hags must be
changed, if not oftener. Thin is be
cauH after it while a good many Inst
keya get around, ami they are not very
!) to have so diHtributed. Just now
the Knuipnient livihinn of the I'ost
olVu'C department is milking over 25'),
() h old loekn, merely for thn purpose
of .rendering them dilTernnt.
At linit it was anirgested tint all
tliese vii ,'M,i locks Hhnuld b thrown
away. The junk men were asked how
much they woiibl give, fur them ami
llirt H.ii'l '.MTcnt.i a hiiinlreil kuiiiIk.
Thii did not seem very l:irg, iims
inucli as the postnllieo hd (iriginnlly
ijaiil 57 cents apiece for the locks.
Therefore it was concluded to make
them over 2'n. and this is bcinij
tlonii now at the repair shop on C
street, at a cost of 6 3-4 eenU per look.
It is a very pretty sight to see the
workmen cut the. old contriv:wicra
apart, polish them up on rapidly-re-volving
griuilHtones, which give out
tiliowers of sparks, reorganizing the
tumblers, and putting together the
pieces into as good shape as the new
lamps which the magfe ian in the story
of Aladdin exchanged for old ont'8.
These locks, as has been said, are to
secure mail bags, but ven more inter
est ing are mail bags themselves and
their histories. Naturally, in the
course of human events, these recepta
cles wear out now ami then. This bo
ing regarded as inevitable, in former
times they wero turnnd over prompt.lv
to the junk men. Now, however, it id
all very different. According to the
regulations, as fut as the bags show
symptoms of wearing out they are for
warned to Washington from all over
tho United States Thus one tinds in
tho equipment shop on C street great
rooms heaped with enormous slacks of
mail sacks in all utr.ges of use, decay,
and, one might almost say of decomposition.
Upon arrival they ant conveyed by a
big elevator to the third lloor, where
11 women sit sewing with course
thread. Tin) bags are made of jute.
Some of the women wear dunce-caps
ot Drown paper on tlieir heads, and all
are nusy as so many hees. I hey are
all sewing upon mail sin ks, and when
ever one has finished her task sho holds
up her hand. At once the foreman
In charge goes to her, takes the bag
ne nas umsiied, ami lays it on a pile,
In exchange, he gives her another,
which he takes from a stuck near by.
l he sacks in the latter pile nre in all
4tages of (dilapidation, nnd the rule is
that each worker must take the no
that is on top. A wooden parti tinnJ
sinus on lite women irom siirht of t he
pile, because some complained a whilo
ago that it was possible for others to
ee when there were good sacks on ton,
and so escape bad ones. It is like tho
system of "takes" in a newspaper ollice.
1 hus fat1 only the jute bags have
heen spoken of. lint there is another
room in which the leather mail punches
are mended, twenty-two workmen
ing employe I for the purjose. This
fysteni has grown up within the last
four years. So short a time ago only
eight women and three leather work
ers were employed to do the work.
Dut it. is lielieved that a irreat econoniv
vftnild result from devoting nttentii.n to
the mending of old sack, and this has
proved so far true that many thniisain
i i
jeneruags are inanu aiiiiiiallv now
than were required in 1SS7, altlinueh
the poslollice business increased
one-qunrter since t hen. J' ho b:iirS
manufactured in cw York Slate.
W lien the mending of each, hair
IS
mushed it, is inspected bv a ni:,a who
is the only person in the United Slates
with whom the decision lies us to when
a mail sack is wui n out and shall be
longer. onueinneil ones are
ail used in one fashion or another. The
nest parts ol tlu in are used for the
tin loins i if sacks that haxe to hu re
paired, while oilier portions serve for
patches. Hie ragged bits being slashed
itt willi slurp kii.ves.- Wanliiinjtun
LOCUSTS IN ALCIERS,
An
jrm.r Willi a Front of Tlirra Mtlu
and a Iti pih or Twrnty.
lhe flight of which thev originally
formed members had a front of about
three miles (rugulated bv the width of
tho valley), hays the Curiiltill Mu.n
zirw.. They traveled fairlv fast : uprint
ing myself along the level path fur Id)
yards in the direction of their passage,
I must confess to having beer out
paced by them. The main hoe was
nearly live hours in passing a given
imint. Almost the greater number of
them flew at a considerable height in
the air but did not perceptibly darken
the sky. That night, in tlie little
country auberge where I stayed, two
t!ni drivers.oiie a Spaniard, the other
a Sicilian, were comparing notes. One
said that in tho midst of the swarm he
could not sec tho sun: the other, that
he could not driv his team against
them, as tho horses refused to face
them (which was probably true), and
that they were three inches deep ou
the road (which probably wasn't).
At alwut 4 o'clock tho'locusts perch
ed down for the night, lindiug a lodg
ing on the hot. hot ground, in vine
yards, cornfields, and a wood or two.
The frantic proprietors did all in tlieir
power to prevent such a calamity; but
one can not fight a snowstorm, nor a
flight of locusts, either. In the vine
yards tho acridians were everywhere;
in the cornfields they perched, head
upward, one above the other, four or
five on each stalk; in the woods they
massed themselves upon the tree
trunks, facing the declining sun. Thus
do they like to take an afternoon nap
after the fatigues of their day's jour
ney, sunning themselves to 'the last
moment n evening draws on. Kspe
eially do they love to tiud sandy banks,
or a good dry road, facing the sunset
-and so they rest, motionless, for the
night.
Next morning they ought to have
cot up. and. after a hasty toilet and
breakfast, they ought to havo winged
their way onward again northward;
they generally start so soon as tho sun
has dried the air and their wimra. u,,t
to the exasperation of the proprietor
of the land, they stayed two days,
mating and egg-laying, before mov
log. Jn this interim many of them.
men or were put to neatn, ana nere
we re arrived at a few of the graves.
before this present year most people
believed that after mating and egg
laying tho locusts would die a natural
death. It isn't true. No doubl vast
quantities do die, but theso are hardly
an appreciable fraction of the whole
number.
So, after two days, on went the sur
vivors. 1 hey had eaten nothing! I his
is on the principle of tho cabbage biib
terlly, who leaves her eggs exactly
where the young caterpillar can find
plenty of food so soon as be is born.
1 so locusts had left tho vineyards and
tho cornfields for their sons and daugh
ters, the crickets, to make a meal of so
soon as thev should be hatched. For
here we are arrived at the cradles.
The female locusts had laid their eiiirs
an inch or so underground, and in
from ten to twenty-live days' time, ac
cording to tho heat and character of
the soil, the eclnsion -tho hatching-
would occur. And what were the ex
asperated proprietors to do mean
while?
DETERMINED fO WIN.
Tha Woman Pawned Ilir ioat
a Oat
Monrjr for llrr t.awmilt.
My first case," said a well-known
Harlem lawyer to a Cornnitrcial Adver
tiser man, "was an unique one. An
Irish family of the name of Murphy.
living up on the rocks in one of the
fast-disappearing remnants of Shanty-
town, were fraudulently evicted from
their tumbledown cabin bv a rascally
landlord. Tho practical head of the
household was the wife, and she de
termined to light the matter out.
"ror three weeks the Munihvs, chil
dren, furniture and all, lived in the
back yard of their former home with
nothing between them nnd heaven but
lhtusy tent made of old sheet, while
Mrs. Murphy tramped around town
looking for a lawyer who would take
their case for nothing.
Ono day sho charged into my office
and told mo her story with tho stereo
typed exactness that comes from fre
quent repetition. The case seemed to
tie a worthy one, and as I wasti t over
burdened with work I agreed to take
it, free of charge nnd reinstate the
Muriihys in their dilapidated homo
steail.
Sho wanted to get out a free sum
mon against the landlord and waive
sereidl other small but necessary ex
penses, but I told her it would be
more politic to pay these, as the total
would not amount to $..
"Foive dollars,' she cried, Mivil a
pint have tho Murphvs seen since nit
nushand losht Ins mu wan month airo.
and tho lasht blissed thing thim pawn-
nroKcrs 11 take they ve got already.'
"When I offered to loan her th
money she went into such a rage that
I apologizod abjectly.
"'He the powers,' she exclaimed after
pacing the lloor for about ten minutes,
'I forgot wan thing! Wait, mister,
an' I'll bo back in an hour.'
"She kept her word, and just as 1
was closing up shop for tho day she
reappeared with her hands full of sil
ver, which she poured upon my desk.
"Mrs. Murphy,' I queried, 'where
did you get this? I thought your
last valuable had been pawned?'
"'Yis,' sho replied with a gleam of
triumph in her gray eyes, 'iverything
excipt the goat. I tuk auld Nanny,
whose milk me childer has lived upon,
over to tho Kenneys, and they lint me
four dollars and nincty-sivin cints on
her. There's tho money, young man,
and now, be the lur of hivin, go in
and bate McCarty!' '
"I take pleasure in stating that Mo
Cart y was 'baten."
VIODERrf ENGINEERING.
Maay of In FwiM Kran Like tha Worl
a Wlnnril,
The civil engineer of the present age
is a wir.ard who annihilates spaces and
matter. The highest mountains, the
deepest va-'ley? are his playthings; he
bridges one ami tunnels through the
bowels of the other. The railroad
from Calao through the heart of Peru
is the highest and most wonderfully
constructed line in the world. The
grades are often of 3iM feet to tho
mile, and when the Andes were reached
so difficult was the work that laborers
were lowered from cliffs above by
ropes in order that they might carve a
foothold to begin the cutting for thb
roadway.
Tunnels are more numerous than
open cuts and as far as the road has
nuii i.iy-ouc iiinneis nave been con
structed, aggregating 2',(KX) feet in
length. The road attains a height of
15,000 feet above the level of the sea
and at thu highest ixint is shout equal
to the topmost peak of Mount Hlane.
It pierces the range above by a tunnel
8,M7 feet long. The tunnels of the
Andes, however, do not compare with
those of the Union Pacific, nor do the
latter approach the tunuels of tho
Alps.
the improvements In locomotives
rendered them capable of climbing
grades, which in early days of rail
road engineering wero deemed out of
the question. J'he first railroads were
laid almost level, but it was soon dis
covered that a grade of a few feet to
the mile was no impediment to prog
ress, and gradually the grade was
steepened. To the energy and perse
verance of inventors the success of
mountain railroading is due. The
road up Mount Washington, finished
in 186K. was the first, ami thn road up
Pike's Peak is the latest of steep lines.
Of the F.uropean roads, the one up t'lf
sides of Mount Kigi in the Alps is V
most famous. It is 19.0011 feet lotg
and in that distance rises 4,000 feet at
an averaging grade of ono foot to
every four. At places the grade is
about one foot in two and a half, which
is believed to be the steepest in the
world.
She Prefers Hunshine to Fog.
Mile, do la Hamee ("Ouida") is on
tho point of leaving tho beautiful old
palace, in Florence in which sho has
now oassed several years. Her boxes
are all packed, but at present she can
not make up her mind whether to
leave the City of Flowers or not. Her
last book. "Santa Harbara and Other
Stories," is just out. These stories are
chiefly Italian tales.
PLACES OF WORSHIP.
Cathouc.-M. I'aul's ( liurcli. nk. between
Kltlli mid Sluh. Kallier Ch-ik v. exMnr
Srrvioei : Vmhs nt s i mi in :;io A. a. oundhT
school at 2 :M, ii brnedicti
(iikivi on n I..,, usl ami Iml-MIiKu.
s, tvlct- nmridni! Sim rvn tar A.
(.al'oway I a.sioi Suiulay liclionl in a. M.
Krls"ni-AU-Hi Luke's I liurcli. corner 'Inlrd
nun t ine. nr n li hurPBii i-ter. Ser
vices: It a m t ill sir . SunihiN S.-hnnl
Hi .:i p.m.
.riiMA.s Mi-tiiopiht. . irni-r simIi m hu
(ii uilte. Kev. lint. Iv-toi. si rv.iT : 11 A. M
anil 7 ::w I-. M, Snunny Sclimil 111 :3M A M
l'KrKYi miAS. emeu lu 1 1 clinch. r
uer hixlh ainl (irMi iip sip ltev .1 'l.lnir -.
.ator MiiidiO-sc i nl a' 9 :Si ; J ii hcI iii
al II a lit.KMl x ii in.
Uie II . (' K of ih" clinii h in e'i-i.e;y
Silhluitll fVHili )' hi 7 IS ih'l i h;innir ..
the I'lincih. A Hre'iiviieil to iiit.ia Un,,
Heelini:
IKM1 MhTHopiST. Sixth M., I.etweii Miiiu
and Pearl. Hev I, K. Kritt. H. I. naMor.
ervlce:ll . m. :0n I M sunil'. Jehool
9:3dA M I'ray. r inicli p ednesilny even
ItiK. .KiiMA.N I'lCHiivTKKtA.s (' rnei Mailt mm
Nililli. Ilev V tie, piisior MTViec usn:i
hours. Sntid iy eliool i :: A. M
SWK.nnisii ( i Ni.lirOATInNAl.-lilaiiiie. he
tweeii Kifth ami slxm
I'lll.OKK.Il HAI-1 IM'.- ,Ml. (Iliv, . :ik. IiiIWm i,
Ji'lilh end Kli ventli II. v A l (well. u s
lor. Sri vices II a. in : ml ; -..A) p in Cri'jei
mc tlnif Weitin silay ev. ni, u.
Voi;..(i Ml-N's II It J 1 1 a Ai-miciatios--KooiiinIii
v lOeiii nii lilock, Mhln Mu el ( ios
eel iiicellnK. for inei only.evi r Si i dny T.t
ternoon at 4 o'clock, i ooine ojieii week diiy
txim S:;u a in . ii : ;i i. m.
l'TH TAIlK 1 ASKCNACt.S -Iti-V ,1. M.
Wind, ! asior. Mel vie. a; SUMiay School.
'A.m.: l rein-Mi v. u w ni. in.il H p. m ;
jirayei ineetiiis: I i . iiiL'ln ; clioir in a"
' ice H rid inuhi I ai - leoine
bucklen's Arnica Salve.
TllK ItkST Sm.VK ill 'In- ; li.i t.ii ('u!
'ruises, Si ires. Ulcers, S,dt Kin ii" K'-vcl
ores, Tetter. Chspped llimds. ( hilblmns.
Corns, Mini aM hkin Sriiii'ini.f, iio pi.,.!
lively chick P lus, ,,i m, (,,v ouiiiitd.
It i (iUtranti . ii in L ;ve listucili.ii, in
money relumln1. I'i ice'J.'i cent. (., r !m
Cor sub' bv V d Kr ( kc
The First Step,
Perhaps you are run down, can't
cat, can't sleep, can't think, can't do
anything to your rjatisfnctioii, and
you wonder what ails you. You
should heed the warning, you ore
taking the first step into nervous
prostration. You need a nerve tonic
and in Klectric Hitters you will lind
the exact remedy for restoring your
nervous system to it normal, healthy
condition. Surprising results fol
low the use of this great Nerve
Tonic and Alterative, Your appe
tite returns, good digestion is re
stored, and the liver and kidneys re
sume healthy action. Try a bottle.
Price SOc, at F. G. Fric'ke & Co's
drugstore. o
Do not confuse the famous Hltish
of Roses with the many worthless
paints, powders, creams nnd
bleaches which nre Hooding the
market. Get the genuine of your
druggist, O. II. Snyder, 7o cents per
bottle, and I guarantee it will re
move your pimples, freckles, black
heads, moth, tan and sunburn, and
give you a lovely complexion. 1
Specimen Canes.
S. II. Clifford, New Castle, Wit
was troubled with neuralgia and
rheumatism, his stomach was dis
ordered, his liver was affected to at
alarming degree, appetite fell nwni
and he was terribly reduced in flcsl.
and strength. Three bottles of
Klectric Hitters cured him.
Kdward Shepherd, Harrisburg
III., had a running sore on his lep
of eight years' standing. Usee)
three bottles of Electric Hitters and
seven bottles Hucklcn's Arnict
Salve, and his leg is sound and well
John Speaker, Catawba, ()., had five
large fever sores on his leg, doctor
said he whs incurable. One botth
Klectric Hitters and one box Huck
leu's Arnica Salve cured him entire
ly. Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co.
ALittle irla Experlencein a LlgUt
house.
Mr. and Mrs, I.orcn Trescott are
keepers of the Gov. Lighthouse at
Sand Heath Mich, nnd are blessed
with a daughter, four years. Last
April she taken down with Measles,
followed with dreadful Cough and
turned into a fever. Doctors at
home and ;it Detroit trenteil l.nt in
vain, she grew worse rapidly, until
sue was a mere" nanattii ot Doncs .
Then she trieit l)r K'iinr-'u V..,..
Discovery and after the use of two
and a half bottles, was completely
cnreil. Tliev b:iv T")r Kinnu V.....
Discovery is worth its weight in
gold, yet you may get a trial; bottle
urc ui r. yj. rricney drugstore.
Couch Following the CrlD
Many person, who have recovered
rroin la grippe are now troubled
with a persistent cough. Cham
berlain's cough remedy will
promptly loosen this cough and
relieve the lungs, effecting a per
manent cure in a very short time.
'25 nnd 50 cent bottle for sale by F.
G. Fricke A Co.
Mow'sThlt!
We offer 100 dollars reward for
any case of catarrh that can not be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
K.J. Cheney & Co. Props, Toledo,
Ohio,
We the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years,
and belive him pefectly honorable
in nil buisncss transactions and fin
ancially able to carry out an oblig.
ations made by their firm.
West&Truax, Wholesale Drug
gist, Toledo Ohio., Waldiug Kinnan
& Tarvin, Wholesale druggist Tole
do Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, action directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Price, 7oc. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggist; Testimonials free.
Take Kalrena for your blood, liv
er nnd kidneys. It cures Nervous
and general debility, Rheumatism
suppressed or painful periods, dys
pepsia, indigestion, billions attacks
skin eruptions,, urinary complaints,
and the worst blood disorders
known. It is the best tonicon earth
for the debilitated. Price $1 at O.
It. Snyder and Brown & Harrett.
Would you know wilry vrUh pleasure
Our faces so beam?
0urSerVcDts
Tve'er
1 5 tle cause of
w
rs. ror all sorts
it neer conies annsa.
Made Only by .
N.K.Fairbank8cCo. Chicago.
A Regular Scimita!
That Sweeps
Tl ...III l
. rr., , inBso win aimosi men in your motrtn. me .narmer is
VP Proudu?tlve' high quahtv.and sugar flavor. Has great staying qualities. Vines 3mo
4ft. high. In season follows "Little Cem" and before the'Cliamuion of England." We
.,,,..b,, ...,evj 11, anu .uiiiiuoiui recomm-na n as me Desi ever iniroaucea
Price by mail, per packet, 15 cents pint, 75 cents.
GIVEN FREE, IF DESIRED, WITH ABOVE,
VICK'S FLORAL GUIDE 1802,
which contains several colored plates of Flowers and Vegetables. 1,000 Illustration;?
Over 100 pages 8 x io inches. Instructions how to plant and care for gardl
Descriptions of over 20 New Novelties. Tick's Floral Guide mailed on I
receipt 01 address and 10 cents, which may be deducted from first order.
Tames Vtck's Sons. Rpcrpr xr v
J
wiexican
M
A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast
A long-tested pain reliever.
Its use is almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the
Stock Raiser, and by every one requiring an effective
liniment.
No other application compares with it in efficacy.
This well-known remedy has stood the test of years, almost
generations.
No medicine chest is complete without a bottle of Mustano
Liniment.
Occasions arise for its use almost every day.
All druggists and dealers have it.
re
For Atchinson, St. Joseph, Leaven
worth, Kansas City, St. Louis,
and all points n'th, east
south or west. Tick
eta sold and bag
gage checked
to any
point
iu
the
United
States or
Canada. For
INFORMATION AS TO KATKS
AND ROUTES
Call at Depot or address
H, C. Townsend,
G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo.
J. C. I'HILUFPI,
A. G. P. A. Omaha.
H. D. Apgar. Apt., Plattsmouth.
Telephone, 77.
TIMOTHY CLARK.
DEALER IN
COAL WOOD
-o TERMS CASH
rdt aid Offlce H South Third Street.
Telephone 13.
I II (Ml
Plattsmouth.
Our life Vi
tsJoSS dream.)
our bliss;
m .
ot cleaning v
all before it
m. (.' , . , . . mm. Mai M I
- ' 5 1VV.1IWIVI j i. i MJ
-0
ustang
Liniment. :x
HENRY BOECK
The Leading
FURNITURE DEALER
AND
UNDERTAKE.
Constantly keeps on hund everything
you ne?d to furnish your house. 1
CORNER SIXTH AND MAIN 8THK1CT '
Plattsmouth - Neb
Lumber Yard j
THE OLD OP I Iabi r-
--rtJm.K..
K.1. WATBBBAH ft SON
Ml
ShiiiKleo, Lath, r5nh,
PI UI
1
Doors, Blinds
Cn nupply trerw demand of the city. I
Call and get terms. Fourth street
in rear of opera hc-HM.
iOVEK
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