A afaaaaaaaaaaal : p. " . 7 V i ft . V It A 1 if II J v THE BEST IN BlacKwell'? Bull Durban?. SrnoKing Tobacco Situated in the immediate section of country that produces a grade of tobacco, that in texture, flavor and quality is not grown elsewhere ''in the world, and being in position to command the choice of all offer ings upon this market, we spare no pains nor expense to give the trade THE VERY BE5T. When in want of the best; ask for Bull Durban?. Sold everywhere. None genuine without the Trade Ma.k of the Bull on each package. BLACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO., DURHAM, N. C. Circulation Large. Rates Reasonable. Returns Remunerative PLATTSWIOUTH HERALD Is c Weekly "t . ... . . seel' to l'eqcly fqrnilies t'OS1!" 3T-u.ll Infcirciatlon jn.cL a m i77 ATrhnnnn jbusisess 801 Cor Fifth PLATTSMOUTH y ' Everything to Furnish Sour House. AT I. PEARLMAN'S GREAT MODERN - m -a aa !" a m V M W w W HI a" am NT W If BaT U V HOUbt rUKW15HIl1U LMrUltlUl.J. Javinj Diirchaed the J. V. AVeckbach store room on nouth Main street where I am now located can sell goods cheap tr than the cheapest having just put in the largest stock Aof new goods ever brought to ind furniture of all kindsold ';f . k I iV1 I 1 V 1 A MTHE POSITIVE CURE. THE WORL.D77 ; ! JDURHAM j Pqblicqtioii f . 3i a nag ei. and Vine St. 1 . NEBRASKA the city. Gasoline stoves oh the installment plan. I. PEAROIAN. : II 11 lr1 d La Grippe. No healthy pernon need fear any i da;ierou8 conHcNjuenccH from an ! attack of la izrim if properly treated. It in much the Ha. ne a a j severe cold and require precisely the fame treatment. Remain quiet J ly at home and take Chamberlain' Cough Remedy as directed for a se- i vere cold and ;i prompt and com- lete recovery is wure to follow. This remedy also counteracts any j leiiucnc- 01 la grijpe to result in pneumonia. Among the many 1 liou.- ;i nls who have used it during the epidemics of the past two years we have yet to learn of a single case that has not recovered or that has resulted in pneumonia. '-!." and .r0 cent bottles for sale by R (i. Fricke it Co. La rippo SuccessluHy Treatad "I have just recovered from a sec ond attack of the. grip this year," says .Mr. Jas. O. Jones, publisher of the leader, Mexica Texas. -'In the latter case I used Chamberlain's Cough remedy, and I thiim with considerable success, only being in bed a little over two days, against ten days for the first attnek... The second attack, I am ratslied. would have been equally as bad as the (irst but for the use of this ri'inwlv. 1 as I had to go to bed in about six hours after being struck with it, wjiile in the first case I was able to attend to business about two days before getting down. 5y cent bot tles for sale b F. G. Fricke & Co. The population of Platumouth Is about 1(),(XJ0, add vre would say at least neo-half are troubled with some effection oti the throat and lungs, as those complaints are, ac cording to staaistics, more numer ous than others. We would advise all our readers not to neglect the opportunity to call on their drug gist and get a bottle of Kemp's Hal sam for the throat and lungs. Trial size free. LargeBottle 50c- and $1. Sold by all druggist. Every Month many women suffer from Kzceeaive or Scant Menstruation; they don't know who to confide ia to get proper adrice. Don't confide in anybody but try Bradfield's Female Regulator a Specific for PAINFDL, PROFUSE. SCANTY. SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION. Book to "WOMAN" mailed free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta. Ga. Hold by all Drag-cUta. SrunCtenness h, tin Lluoor Habit, Positively Cure v.i r.oEJircisjrEntJG dr. haires' goidem specific It czn be given in a cud ol codee or tea, or in ar ''ic'.ss ol 'ood. without the knowledge of the per i.a taking it; it is absolutely harmless ainl wiL eS'oct a permanent ami opeedy cure, xvheh.-r tiiepatientisa moderate rtrlnkeror an nlpoiioli" wreck. jt NEVER FAILS. We GUARANTEE a complete cure in evaiy instance. 44 page book FRFE, Adiiresain confi'iencp, Vittij SPEOFiC CO., 1 83 fine SL. CincinnatLO a 0,t'T,0 J'"" want to maVe 33 U ' tl I J money? SoikI ten jjS cents ami receive u sam- tf3 p!e. with full particulars of tlie busi s ness, which will jive you large protits and ouick sales. Steailv eiuplov- ment guaranteed. Adlress ?V;arsh & Co., aa.SS7 Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment. A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, OL Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Soro Hippies had Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by U. after all other treatment had failed. It is put up in 25 and CO cent boxes. SO Llf.C WATER 03 MIHC G K AT K VL COM FO R T I X G Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only N ESS ABSAOIIOISH CURED bj Fk'l Inrnbl TabaUr Mmr CW Ian. Wfclwars heard. Camfortable. Sarrmfalwbmailrrnudmfail. Sold by F. HImox.oov, CDTC 8&3 bnimtmj. Sew Vara. Writ fur book of proof inCC COCOA r??s I PARKER'S WBA HAIR BALSAM ' SSH!3 CTwnan aad beautirtaa th hair, f-ijftag- - I rromotet a luxuriant growth. (.ffsSJ Ner Fails to Beatore Gray ff-ij Hair to it Tontliful.' Color. ;.'s T -V. Cum aeaJp diaaaara & hair lalikur. 'j- '? ,mitl.Wl DrugUa - t.r,-r'3 G-inger Tonic, it cure tne rurl Cough, v'cak Lonn. IX-bihrr. Indigtation, Faia,Takeio time. jUcta. Hi.'iDLRCORNS. The on'y turt enre tor Cum a. Stops aU puiu. Lie at ijruggiata, or lllSCOX at CO., N. Y. How Lost! How Regained kl"c:; thyself. Or SELF.PRE8ERVATION. A new and only Gold Medal PKIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS and PHYSICAL 'DEBILITY, ERRORS of YOUTH, EXHAUSTED VITALITY, PRE MATURE DECLiat, ana au uiASS and WEAKNESSES of MAN. 300 pages, cloth. ilt; 186 invaluable prescription. Only $1.00 y mail, doable sealed. Descriptive Prospect us with endorsements mpp cewn of the Presa and voluntary HKh H I unvu testimonials of the cured. NUW. Consultation in person or by mail. Expert treat si iy Ann; 1. xJtLrcri i ucai SECKECY and CEK- 1 lr. W. H. Parker, or ' ment- INVIOLABLE he Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Buhinch St.. Boaton, Maaa. the feabody Medical Institute nas many inu la tora, trat Do equal. uraiii. i ne tttoence or late, or "mmi mwmnm KITCHEN TRAINING. WORK WHICH HAS POOR AND RICH HELPED MANY FAMILIES. AVhat "Kltrhru (iitrdrn TrinlnT," Mcni, How It U'an StitrKil and by Wliftiu. MU HuntiuKtun'a (irt-at Work for Hrr Leaa Fortunate Siatra In a Itl City. "There is bo much to Gnd fault with and ho much to wish for in such a threat bi, dirty city as ours that sometimes the good, sweet, modest facts connected with onrcharitahle institutions are over looked," said a visitor to the Wilson In dustrial school and mission as she came away from there the other day. The building at 12 St. Mark's place was turned, nearly forty years ago, from factory into the pleasant school house which it now is. This school, which was the first institution of the kind in Amer ica, is not endowed and is maintained entirely by voluntary contribution. Mrs. Jonathan Stnrges is the first director, and many familiar names are on the list of managers. The matron of the school is Miss Emily Huntington, the originator of the system or kitchen garden training, a branch of work now carried ' ou not only at the Wilson school and elsewhere in this city, but in other American cities and in Canada, England, Ireland, Scot land and France. - Miss Huntington has made the mission house her home, and here she watches day by day the results of the methods which she has estab lished. It is with a fascinating interest that one listens to the tale of how by the merest chance Miss Huntington, at eighteen, just out of school and ready to be ushered into fashion's pleasures, chanced to be taken by a friend to visit a "ragged school," and how the only daughter of fond parents put society and the usual amusements of youth aside, and not in the same manner, but with the same motive as her cousin, Fa ther Huntington, set herself about mis sion school work. Nobody could work with Miss Hunt ington's energy and her capacit' for or ganizing without developing new ideas which should bring fortli more com plete work, so as time passed on and she gained experience, not only among the poor, but with her own class, 6he made various discoveries. One was that the leisure of some of the young girls of her acquaintance might readily be put to good account, and another that kitchen gardening might with profit be adapted to the rich as well as the poor. She obtained the co-operation of some of the mothers and the interest of the girls, so that a meeting was called for the purpose of developing a plan of movement. Fifty girls met at the house of one of the elder women. This was in 18G7. It was proved that most of them, no matter how well verted they were in Latin and geometry, knew absolutely nothing about domestic science, so ar rangements were made for forming a normal class which should be divided into companies, these companies to go I' to the mission for regular days of teach ing. These young women, as their paths divided, removed to Boston, dneayn and elsewhere and set up kitchen gar dens of their own, with the result that the system has spread everywhere. It might even be said with truth that the I other thought, that of the Working Girls' clubs, emanated from this mis sion, for Miss Grace H. Dodge was one of the fifty young women who joined in the work there, and it was no doubt be cause of the experience she gained at this time her idea was conceived and devel oped. The girls became kitchen gardeners ( themselves, and afterward, when mar riage had placed some of them in homes of their own, they wrote to the founder of the system, "You have no idea how kitchen garden helps me with my serv ants and my housekeeping," and to others it gave the means of livelihood" when unforeseen reverses of fortune made them dependent upon their own resources. It must be confessed that "kitchen garden" is a rather misleading name, for it suggests to many a place where vegetables are grown for kitchen use. When Miss Huntington was asked about the name, she said: "It means a system by which all the intricacies of domestic science are taught sweeping, dusting, I washing, ironing, waiting at table, etc. I thought a little of changing the name at one time because it was confounded with the term vegetable garden, but I found nothing that quite took its place, and I soon discovered that the fact that the name had to be explained gave it additional importance." The school hours are the same here as elsewhere from 9 to 3. There are about 200 girls, ranging in age from five to ten, and there are the usual lessons in read ing, writing and arithmetic, which come under the head of study. The training in the kitchen garden branches is little else than a systematized form of play, and this takes up a proportionate part of the school day. Xew York Tribune. Nickel Armored Ships Can't Go Nortli. The remarkable discovery of the ef fect of temperature on the density of nickel steel is likely to have an im portant bearing on its use in the con struction of war vessels. After this va riety of steel has been frozen it is read ily magnetized, and, moreover, its den sity is permanently reduced fully 2 per cent, by the exposure to the cold. It is stated that a ship of war built in the temperate climate of ordinary steel and clad with say o.OOO tons of nickel steei armor would be destroyed by a visit to the arctic regions, owing to the con traction of the steel by the extreme lov tempeiature. New York Journal. A Leading Outiun. Mr. Smallbrain (fondling his fuzzv - - m.rer lip) Ah, Miss Belle, I've been. , 1 , .. 1... t. an, letting m iuumaiih; uuu t von know, for a week. Miss Belle (significantly) For a weak A Chilly A Hair. "Mr. Simpkins-llarold'shesaid, with faltering coynens. while he gave a sud den htart of terror at) the thought that this is the year IW2 Hashed ujh.ji him, I am the bean r of a message from my fath'T. He siys that you must come here no lonei' without stating your in tentions. And. Harold, you know this is leap year, and and, oh, need 1 hay more?" "Miss Iioggs," replied the young man. recovering his self osses8ion and his hat, "am I to understand that your fa ther charged you to deliver to mo an ul timatum?" "Why, yes, Harold, if you will use those uewspaier terms at such a mo ment." "Say to him, then," said the young man, "that his representative is iersoiia non grata to me, and that I firmly but resjtectfully decline to continue diplo matic relations." In a moment he was gone. But the young girl did not falter. "Persona non grata, am I?" she mused. "That might have done a week or two ago, but it has leen shown that when really serious complications have arisen that plea doesn't go. And 1 just reckon, Harold Simpkins," she continued aloud, as a I tvwv Hnh T?mntlel lier Tiliumi elieeL- 1 . r. . 7.. , . . ; . v mat 1 ve goi a mue oaten or diplo matic corresKndence which, when read before any court of breach of promise arbitration in the country, will bring me in a good big indemnity too." Chi cago Times. A Japanese Soclrty. f There are so many English people who have visited Japan or who have fallen in love with it from reading the eulogies penned by Sir Edwin Arnold, Mr. Nor man and others, that the society which is in course of formation for "the en couragement of the study of Japanese art, science and industries, of the com merce and finance, the social life, the literature, the language, history and folklore of the Japanese," ought to be a success. Certainly the programme does not lack comprehensiveness, for almost any one of the subjects enumerated would be sufficient to keep an ordinary society going. The organizing council contains several names closely associated with the coun try, such as Mr. Ernest Satow. Professor W. Anderson and Professor Church, as well as those of leading Japanese resi dents in England. Very suitablj', the headquarters of the society are to be at the Japanese consulates in London, Liverpool and Glasgow, for no eople are more anxious to spread a knowledge of Japan abroad than the Japanese gov ernment. London Chronicle. A Bad Place to lie 111. It is one thing to have the grip in town or anywhere on the mainland within reach of a doctor, and another think to be stricken with the disease on a remote isle of the sea. On a Thursday morning recently the inhabitants of Grand Manan, a large, well injpulated island off the Maine coast, observed a single fire the sick signal burning on Tliree Isles, six miles seaward, but as a gale was blowing and the 6ea running high nobody could land there. On Sun day evening a physician, accompanied byi three sturdy oarsmen in a dory, reached the isles in a blinding snow storm. Fifteen of the sixteen inhabi tants were sick abed, leaving one man barely able to crawl to the headland and keep the signal burning. It was three days before weather moderated suffi ciently to allow the relief party to re turn home, and in that time the sick were relieved. New York Sun. Lightning Spared the Pioua Pair. During a heavy rain lightning struck the parsonage of the Methodist Episco pal church, a nice four room cottage, completely demolishing the building with the exception of the east room, in which were sitting the pastor, the Itev. Jerome Haralson, and his wife. That they were not instantly killed everybody pronounces a miracle, for everything in their room all around them was broken in small pieces. A more complete wreck was never seen. There is not a whole nail or piece of timber in the building except in the little room they occupied. Not only the building was wrecked, but the fence around it was torn down. The shock broke a considerable amount of crockery for those living in the neigh borhood of the parsonage. Haskell Cor. Galveston News. The Dog Didn't Like II is Suore. In hunting for evidence of a dog fight Sunday the officers learned that one Herbert Sprague, a stevedore, had been bitten by a canine. Investigation shows that Sprague went to bed Saturday night with a bull pup. Sprague snored, and this disturbed the dog, so he scratched his owner's face to wake him. Sprague retaliated by cuffing the ca nine, whereupon the bull fastened his teeth in the man's nose and then shook him, sadly lacerating the member. Sprague finally broke the hold, disabled the dog with a chair and then got a neighbor to shoot him. The nose will recover, but looks bad. Bangor Cor. Lewiston Journal. The Congressional Funeral. On the recent congressional trip to Chicago from Washington, a young man accustomed to hilarity began to weary of the staid decorum of the excursion ists and to long for something wild and woolly. "Great Scott," he finally exclaimed to a veteran member, "this is like a funeral train." "Is it?" said the congressman, with a significant smile; "well, I guess j-ou don't know much about one of our fn neral trains." Detroit Free Press. How Hanks Treat "Sweatnl" Cuiim. In a recent deposit in the United btates subtreasnry in this city by a New York bank of more than 1(XJ,hmj in gold received from California seven "sweated" coins were found. They were placed on a block and the letter L TO NIIIPI'rfKS. Hutter, Kch, Cliffff, i 11 (lain?. I'oiiltry, Meat, Apple, l'tatoc Green uimI Iricil Finite, Vegetable Cider, lie. 111s, Wool, Jliden, Tilllow Sheep IVIts. burn, Skinx, ToUiccu, Grain, Flour; Hay, Heeowax, l-ealli- cix, Ginning, lir ncorii, mill Ilojit. N. JO. U A I. I. A K I) ;-ii. Coin, Merchant, a d Mi I -r, 217 Market Street - St. Iiulx, Mt. 1 WAN"! Kl-A.'ciit, i,e Hrnu;iliiKil with Kuriu' era Hint Shli i i. i i TTORNKV A. N. SULLIVAN. vtloiiiey Ht-I.aw . iv prompt HltentlOB- all Mirilieix enl rn-t.-t ,. ,ti... otllce Hi Union lilix k. I a I Stl-. I'lHttt-innutli. Net. i9Ki(riijs hoiski. 317, 219, 'ill, AND 22 yAAIN ST PI.ATTSMOUTII, NEH. F. F- GUTHKAN1T. PROP- Rates $4.fio pkk week am vr. JCR. A, SALISBURY : I) K-N-T-I S T :- (;U AND J'OKt'EEAI.V CKOffN Or. Melnnar aua-.Mliclin for I ho piiinlera ex t radio' f teet li Fine Gobi Work a Specialty. Kockwooil Block I'lHtlsiiioiitli. Neb. TIMOTHY ( LAUK. KALEK I.N COAL WOOD TERMS CASIJo artia aid Mue 44 Soath Th id Street Teli'phare !;. J'I.ATTSMOCTn, p j. 1-iasFtN BFALF.lt IN STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES GLASS AND QUEENSWARE. Patronage of the Public Solicited. North Sixth Street, Plattsmoutli 1 emit soil' i :t;ii;tt ion. Lord Tennyson is said to be greatly angered at tli lw;ok in which Mr. ('bur ton Collins seems, at any rate, to briii' against him a charge of plagiari.-m This is a charge which has always had the most irritating efi'ect upon the poet, and most people will prebably agree that a liook like Mr. Collins' is probably best postponed until the aior with whose work it deals is beyond Le feel ing of resenVnent. We are confident that the greater number of the critics who today deal so cavalierly with Vir gil, Homer, Horace and the other great immortals, would attain if their vic tims were still in the land of the living. And in this case the matter is made worse by the fact that Lord Tennyson has been at special pains to show his feelings in regard to any charges of th kind. "These writers," he said to a friend, on the occasion when he was last made the subject of this charge, "these writers are the lice on the locks of liter ature," showing that even in his wrath . a poet does not forget to use "allitera tion's artful aid." Nor is this anger remarkable when it is remembered on what passages tho would be accuser fixed in order to provo the truth of his indictment. PoorTenuj eon was not allowed to say "Ring tho belLs' without being accused of having borrowed from Sir Philip Sidney, or to apply to the ocean the verb "roar" without being told that he had plaiga rized from Homer! And when he de scribed a waterfall in the well known line, "Slow dropping veils of thinnest lawn," he was immediately charged by a critic with having borrowed the meta phor from the lawn used in theaters to imitate a waterfall! Imagine the feel ings of a faithful artist who had t-tudied the effect ljefore a waterfall in the Pyrenees ! Ii tokinau. Two Martrloua Lcapft. In the space of two minutes John Swauson, of Omaha, had two almost .' miraculous escapes from death. He wj standing near a quarry when a keg of 1 -powder exploded and hurled him a con siderable distance from the spot. In a -seneless condition he landed just above a charge of dynamite, the fuse of which had already been lighted. Before he could be rescued the dynamite exploded, and Swauson was blown a second tiutM