THE SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS-HERALD, PLATTSMOUTH, NEB., MARCH 17, 1897. raid J JLI3HEO WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS ... BY THfc ... NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY M. D. POLK, EDlTuKf DAILY EDITION. One Year, in advance, .... Six Months ne Week, Single Copies, SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION. One Year, in advance, . . -Six Months, S5 2 CO 50 10 5 81 00 50 T.?F LARGEST CIRCULATION Of any Cass County Paper. BRYAN is evidently feeling better. He said,in"an interview'yesterday that "the United States would not go out of business under anyadministration, our progress can not be blocked." We are gladjto note 6uch confidence in our country. Carter Harkison, eon of the ex mayor, bearing the same name, was nominated;bj the democrats of Chi cago.for mayor yesterday. Carter is a silverite and he will ccine as near being mayorjas Jhe will in going to heaven by the balloon route. It is 6aid Billy Bryan is going to trample on Mark Hanna's ground again. He has promised to canvass Onio next year in the interest of John R. McLeantfor United States senator. It would seem that Mr. Bryan should have gotten enough of Mark Ilanna in his bout last fall. Secretary Morton was tendered a splendid farewell reception In Wash ington,; yesterday, and it would be merited trecognitiontof his fidelity to Nebraska and his; ability as a public officer if he were; given a cordial wel come home by the entire state. Ne- braskariCity ought to arrange some) such affair. President McKinley has ap pointed We Sinclair steward of the White, house, he being the one who enjoyed that position under the last administration. We assume from this he is a democrat, but when McKinley reflected on how fat he kept Cleveland he considered it well to extend the civil service rules to him and keep.him in office. Fremont Tribune. The whole northwest will have a surplus of water when spring opena Floods are looked for on all the big rivers, and the lakes will be filled to overflowing. It was less than eighteen months ago, ydu will remember, that the croakers were discoursing upon tne gradual change of the interior of the continent into a desert. They are now mourning because It is in uanger of becoming a swamp. Slate Journal. President McKinley has already- shown a degree of statesmonship and political lairness that the Major por tion' of his party will applaud. Men who held office under Harrison are given to understand that "there are others" and they must take a back seat. It requires quite a fine exhibit of gall anyway for a man to hold office four years under Harrison and ther. try to crowd good men out in otder tt get another whack at the public crib. But theie.are plenty of that kind anc McKinley has done himself proud in telling them to stand back. THE Pawnee Republican has been delving in the cocoanut and has dis covered the milk therein. It says "The reason Bartley is60lowin turn ing over the cash, and the lack ol rapid motion on the part of legisla ture to hasten tho 'pass-over,' is said to be owing to the fact that Gov. Holcomb is very much interested in at least one bank that owes the state considerable money, and that if the cash were demanded instanter the governor's bank, along with the 'black boar pig' and the cow called 'Speck' would go to thewalL" General Thayer is out gunning for anotheri'.office, as has been hi? diurnal custom for half a century. It the pubiic owes the general anything more, we are in favor of his reducing his bill to writing then we can raise the desired amount, pay him off in cash and get him to subside. There seems to benoJ,easier method of get ting him down off the perch, which he usurps with all the airs and self-conceit of a man whose coat would be sev eral sizes too large for George Wash ington or Abraham Lincoln. General, in the name of suffering humanity, won't you subside ? The plan of a crowd of so-called re publicans at Lincoln to interfere with the count of the amendment ballots is a piece of small business that the party itself should not be charged with. II the amendments carried, the public is entitled to know it, and if the two pop ulist judges are elected by only a ma jority of one vote we hope to see them seated on the supreme bench. We are glad Governor Hoi comb has inter posed and that the courts can not block the way of a fair count. There are two honest republicans on the can vassing board, and we have no fears of any'stufTing the hat." There publican party has always stood for ftir play, and the rank and file con demn severely any subterfuge that miy be resorted to looking to the pre vention of a fair count of the ballots. Old fashioned oak tanned leather (that lasts twice as long as the chemi cal quick tanned - leather) is what August Gorder uses, and the result is if a man buys hia harness once he will fcave no other. SFION ief the OXtra SJ:S' Dur ing operation of tho McKinley larilt 75 p.i cent ef all lha woo! -gro.vi in the United Slates was spun and woven in American mills and, converted i-i'.o clothing for American people. Dur ing the operation of the Wiifon taiitT less than S3 per cent has been uied this. During the four years preced ing t he passage of the WiIsvjQ Tariff less than -i per cent lias bet'U u-ed thus. Du; ing tbe four years preced ing the pasugo of the Wits-on ili the imports of woolen goods averaged 12,0(.K,000 pounds a year; during the lirst year of the fuil operation of ibis disastrous measure the imports t-csj to 40,(00.000 pounds. This is bad enough as it stands, but it means more th;.n it at first seems; a very largo par i of the so-called woolen imoris were shoddy; 2,000,0UU pounds of this vile stuff were imported in one year. The revenue from tariff duties during the first twenty-seven months of the McKinley law was $430,100,100; during the lirst twenty-seven mt-nth- of the Wilson ta iff w;.s 34S,0J,(;00, a de crease of S 82,000,000. Duri:i.' the same periods tt.e internal revenue fell from $3 43,000, COO to $o01,0!0,000, a dec ease of $42,000,000, total shrinkage of revenue under democratic administra tion, $124,000,(00. During tho liscal year 1S95 the deilcit, which is the amount by which the income of the government fell short of its expendi ture, was $43,000,000; for lSOU it was $23,000,000; for the 'year ending June 30, 1S07, it was likely to be $Gi),000,000; for the seven months between June, 1S06, and February, 1897. a deficit of $43,000,000 is shown. INFORMATION A SO Ol'INIONS. General Thayer, who is down at Washington looking for an office, was taken quite ill with grip yesterday. A man at his ago, drawing $10'3 per month pension, ought to bs itisfied to stay at hf me. The agent for Harnum & Bailey's show has closed a contract with Mi? Ella Ewmg, the Missouri giantess whereby she is to exhibit with said show for tho term of twenty -six weeks commencing April 1, at $120 par week with her own and her mother's ex penses paid; also her father's ex penses for six visits to her at what ever point they may be at the time he may desire to visit her. E.la is twenty live years of age, weighs 200 pound .nd stands eight ft.et tour and one half inches in height. She was born oa farm near Gorin and is never as happy as when at her country home. It said that she is a modest country girl wit h a lovely disposition and a good conversationalist. This sum of 62,34 for six month's wck is proof that i pays to be the tallest lady on earth to wtucn nor.or 3iiss i-lla is u: qucs tionnbly entitled. Ex. It is said that up in Gas county inoe a certain young man was lined il for hugging a girl the young men fear even to embrace an opportunity ind the other girls have boye- ttcd tht grirl who brought tho suit for damage isainst the fellow who huired ner. Nebraska City News. iiovernor leeuy or Kansas has p ir ily zed the "reform" forces everywhere oy vetoing a Mil regulating the rail roads of that st;Ue. And this is tht same Governor Leedy who was elec .ed on a platform which promised tc "blow blood into the ears of corpora uons. It must be the corporations- nave been whispering in his ear Governor Leedy mude a mistake when ho tried to explain the matter in 4, ( 00-word mcssape. He could have shortened it to I just tell you that th?y saw me." Ex. A man in Bedford, Iowa, hue sued oaD er for $10,000 damages because an irticle was printed announcing that the plaintiff's wife had eloped, where is she had not done so. Well, it is criminal to raise false hopes li!.o tl;a' without sufficient foundation. Ex. ATCHISON liLOliE SIUIITS. 'JZZZ Hard work is the easiest way of kil :ing time. .any man aoie to eat pie need not worry about his health. Lent is a sort of Keelov treatment for the dissipation of women. More national problems are settled in shoe shops than in congress. A good many rac-n think it is no 6in to drink whisky in a drug store. lou have prooably observed that when you want to talk, the other fel low hag the same ambition. In speaking of the iila that flesh is heir to, old flesh and vcuog -flesh do not belong to the same category. Clothes are like horses; if you want something good you must pay a fancv pneo, even if timps are hard. FKEE! 1KEK! FKtE! Unprecedented Offer To the Sick. To all who desire med:cal services will furnish medicines for two months treatment for only $1.50; for threo to four months treatment, 52 50. To tb ose who are not able to pav any thing for medicines and will bring me a line from their pastor stating the same, l will furnish them medi cines free of charge. Never can the afiiicted expect such an offer aain. W nat 1 have done for those I have treated here formerly and now is suf ficient guarantee of perfect satisfac tion in all cases. This offer holds good for a few days oniy. DR. W. M. FOLLETT. Torturing, itching, scaiy skin erup tions, burns and scalds are soothed at once and promptly healed by De Witt's Witch Hjzel Salve, the best known cure for piles. F. G. Fricke & Co. THE MEED OF AN EXTRA S Th.- I iter "ii a ' 'i r,iilnirin i r. .iSOfl.i wllV ill! TirBferTlngf Pictures. Prints or lithographs may be trans ferred to glass by a very simple process. The glass U cleaned with alcohol and a polisher, then coated with fine dammai varnish, laid on very evenly. It is then put away in a place where theie is no dnst, where it is to remain until it is so sticky that whe-n touched with tho finger i the glass, if a small plate, may be lilted , bv the adhesion. The picture to be trans ferred must be soaked in rainwater until it is completely saturated, then placed between sheets of blotting paper and gently pressed. This removes all su perfluous water. Now put the pictures, face down, upon the sticky side of the glass. The utmost care is necessary in placing it, as one-e it touches it cannot be moved without danger of tearing ont pieces of the print. When it is adjusted, begin at one corner and press the picture closely upon the adhesive surface, watch ing it continually to see that no air bub bles appear between the picture and the varnished surface. When this is finished, put the picture away again, let it re main until quite dry, then lay a wet towel over the back cf the picture until tho paper is thoroughly soaked. Now begin at one corner, and, with the fingers, frequently dipped in water so that they will remain wet, rub off the white paper. Continue this until all the white portion is removed. This will leave only the color of the picture upon the glass. At the finish give the back a rather heavy coat of transparent var nish. Let it dry thoroughly and add a very thin second coat. When this is per fectly dry, frame the picture with a very thin glass over the varnished side. Hang in the window as a transparency. A few attempts may be, necessary before expert handling is acquired, but perse verance will bring success, and with care and a little ingenuity very many beautiful pictures may be prepared at the most trifling expense. New York Ledger. Early English Bindings. During the reign of Elizabeth the fashion in binding underwent a consid erable change, the graceful simplicity of the early work, with its rather severe and restrained ornament, giving place to a heavy, overdecorated style, in which a superabundance of gilding hid pover ty of design. This style reached its height in the bindings produced for James I, which were commonly dotted all over with flowers-de-luce or thistles, while the corners were filled with a heavy bloek of coarse design. During the reign of Charles the bindings were as a rule copied from French work and the designs carried out with very small tools; but, though foreign influence was strongly felt at first, the English bind ers 6oon struck out a line of their own, and Samuel Mearne, the binder to Charles II, produced some admirable work and seems to have introduced the quaintly shaieil panel which gave the name of cottage binding to a certain class of work. At a little later date an Edinburgh binder whose name is un known, but whose work is easily distin guishable, executed some marvelous pieces of work on very dark greeu mo roe'O. Athenajuin. A Parliament Ciintoiu. Before the rpecch from the throne is read, when the houses are resumed in the afternoon, by the lord chancellor in the house rjf lords and the speaker in the house of commons, it is the practice in both houses to read one bill a first time pro forma in order to assert their right of deliberation without reference to the immediate cause of summons. This practice is enjoined in the house of lorels by a standing order. In the house of commons the same form is observed pursuant to ancie-nt custom and of the following resolution, passed March 22, 1603: "That the first day of every sit ting in every parliament some one bill and no more, receiveth a first reading for form sake. " In the house of com mons the clerk of parliaments produces an ancient document which lias served this purpose for at least a century, en titled "A bill for effectually prevent ing clandestine outlawries," which is duly read a first time and ordered to be read a second time and will never be heard of again till the opening of the next session. Loudon News. Marvelous Mechanism of the Human Body. The human body is an epitome in na ture of all mechanics, all hydraulics, all architecture, all machinery of every kind. There are more than 310 mechan ical movements known to mechanics to day, and all of these are but modifica tions of those found in the human body. Here are found all the bars, levers, joints, pulleys, pumps, pipes, wheels and axles, ball and socket movements, beams, girders, trusses, buffers, arches, columns, cables and supports known to science. At e very point man's best me chanical work can Le shown to be but adaptations cf processes of the human body, a revelation cf first principles used in nature. William George Jordan in Ladies' Home Journal. The Pandects of Justinian. The pandects of Jnstiniau, the most complete body of Roman laws ever col lected, were supposed to be lost, but in 113 , when Amalfiwas taken and plun elered by the Pisans, a private soldier found a copy which he sold to an officer for a few pence. The value of the discov ery was soon apparent and the precious volume was taken to Pisa and stored in the city library. Whe n Pisa was stormed by the Florentines, in 1415, the precious volume was captured and taken to Flor ence, where it was placed in the library oi me iueaici. Skilled Narslns. Skilled nursing is now regarded as of quite as much significance as expert medical attendance. Those whose means will permit of it generally e mploy train ed nurses, and between the professional assistant of the physician in the home and hcispital treatment for various ail ments the old conditions of the sickroom have almost passed awav. Baltimore Herald. "Our Hoys" and the Library. lbe people of I'lattsmoulh now have an excellent opportunity of aid ing the public libjary, which is in great need tif new books Everyone who has at heait the welfare of their town and young people, should en courage in every possible way the coming performance of "Our Boys" Friday and Saturday nights of this week. Seats ara ne w on sale at Lehr- hoff's. Carriages, buggies, sieighs und har ness at A. Gorder'e. L-irgest line in Cass county to select from. A Hindoo Made of Bobber. - ! A Hindoo named Bava Luchman Dass is attracting the interested attention of j the London medical profession. Mr. Dass is a Yogi, and if all Yogis are like Mr. Dass the ordinary treatises on an atomy must be subjected to revision. He was exhibited to the Students' Anatom- ical society of bt. Ueorge s Hospital and introduced by the lecturer as "an nnu-1 sually complicated specimen of the In dian Yogi a Brahman, namely, of a very high caste who goes through cer tain religious exercises with a view of qualifying himself better for paradise." These religious exercises seem to take a physical form, and Mr. Dass, a little, dark gentleman, sat upon the table and proceeeled to exhibit a selection from the 84 abnormal positions which he has put in 40 solid years in learning. He seemeel to have ligaments of the gutta percha persuasion, while his joints evidently work on all bearings. He formeel his legs into a cravat and tied them about his neck. He hopped about on one hand and strolled about jauntily on his knees, a position which is said to greatly assist thought, though the thoughts of a white man in such a position would hardly be fit for publica tion. He foldeel his legs tightly around his boely and stood thoughtfully on his finger tips for several minutes, in which posture he eleclared he was able to re main for seven days. However, as the meelical students elid not wish to carry out this particular experiment to its bit ter end, Mr. Dass proceedeel to tie him self up in a knot and to go to sleep on one leg like a flamingo. Then sitting down suddenly he brought the soles of his feet together, his knees being at such an acute angle that nothing short of complete dislocation could have made the performance possible. The lecturer endeavored to follow his movements on an extremely suggestive looking skeleton which he had by his side and finally came to the e-ou elusion that Mr. Dass had no ligaments at all. London Graphic. Treacherous Cape Cod. Nobody knows how many vessels have been wrecked on Cape Cod since the bleak December day when the Mayflower rounded Race point and sought shelter in what is now the harbor of Province town. The number is very great, how ever, and the loss of life on this most dangerous part of the whole New Eng land coast has been something appalling. A list, admitted to be incomplete, of the wrecks since 1S73 shows that 151 vessels, including three steamers, have gone to pieces on the pitiless sands of the cape, and, had not the waves always hastened to remove the evidences of their work, the shore all the way from Chatham, at the elbow of Massachu setts' elbow, to the crock of her bent hand woultl be piled high with the ribs and planking of shattered vessels. A large proportion of the cape s victims are coasting schooners, with only an oc casional bark or brig. These disasters, therefore, rarely attract much attention, but they arc tragical none the less, and almost every storm aelds to the number of dreadful stories which the lighthouse keepers and members of the life saving service have to tell. New "iork Times. Kuglinh as a- Cursing Medium. A ple asing testimonial to the resources of the English language was given at Mauche-stcr. An inquiry was being held as to a house reputed to be used for gam bling. It was frequented by poor Jews, and they were stated in a general way to have spoken their own Yiddish ex cept when they wished to swear. Then they used English. Our oaths appear to be simpler and stronger than those of any other tongue. The Spaniards', though it must bo admitted they are coarser, are too elaborate. They 6wear, not in words, but in sentences. The same may be said of Italian execrations. French oaths are a failure. They beat us in slang, but in simple objurgation they are nowhere. German imprecations mean a gooel eleal, but that is just where they fail. The essence of a goexl round oath is mystery. And that is why Amer ican swearing, though sonorous, misses its mark. There is too much thought in it St. James Gazette. Hairpin Motor. A fuse burned out in one of the Weth ersfield cars, and the car at once came to a standstill. After a moment the mo torinan opened the front door, and, put ting in his head, inquired, "Can any lady lend me a hairpin?" His singular request was at once complied with, and in a ehort time the car was again under way. "What did you want that hairpin for?" askeel the woman who had sup plied it of the conductor when that of ficial came to collect her fare. "Tj make a fuse out of," was the reply, "and I guess you are entitled to ride free this trip. ' And she did, while the other passengers applauded heartily. Hartford Post. Sympathy. Captain (to stowaway) So, you young rascal, you ran away from home, did you? You ought to be thrashed for leaving home anel thrasheel again for get ting aboard a ship without permission. Stowaway Please, sir, my sister commenced takin music lessons an prae ticiu scales on the piancr, an I thought there wouldn't be uopianers on ships 'Come to my arms, my son. I had a musical sister once myself." New York Weekly. Poor Consolation. The Friend Didn't the parson's visit console you? The Widower He's a poor hand at consolation. The Friend Why, what did he say? The Widower Said she wasn't dead, but gone before. Illustrated Bits. Replaced. Mistress Why, Bridget, what on earth are you doiusr with all tho broken dishes on the shelf? Brielget Sure, mum, yez towld me Oi wor to replace every one Oi broke. London Answers. I'ooghs Are Warnings oi femetniDfr amiss m the throat or lunjjs. Don't mind the eough, mind the cause. Use the remedy that cures the couh by curing the cause. Bal lard's Horehound Syrup cure Throat and Lune Troubles, Whooping Coug-h, etc., the right way. Quick, Su-e, S.ifo. Mrs. W. B. Evans. Clearwater. Kan., writes: "Fix year aeo my husbind lay sick f&r three months;the Doctors said ho had Quick Consump tion. One bottle of Ballard's Hore hound Svrup cured him." Price 25 and 5 ) Cents. Soli by F. G. Fricke &Ca - Whose Was It? " " A scholar traveling in the east Bars that he was once in camp with his j xxxuu uiuuna, a niixu oj. iwuuixii tun cub, j in a wretched Phrygian village far from ; the track of travelers. As they were j striking tents in the morning a heavy faced boy brought Mr. Ramsay a hand-! ful of bronze for sa:c. He sorted it rap idly on the palm - ' his hand and fonnd among the rubbish j.-- very rare coin of Hierapolis. Then he put it all back again in the boy's ou'. stretched palm and offered half a dollar for the lot. The boy accepted the bid, gave back the handful, took his money and disappeared while the exultant purchaser went chuckling off among the horses. Ten minutes later the boy appeared again, and, going up to the other Eng- , lishman, offered another handful of rub bish among which was the same rare Hierapolitan coin. The gentleman kept the bronze in his hand and offered a half dollar for it, which the boy refused, though the bargain was eventually con cluded for a dollar. Then the gentleman, in high glee, hailed his companieai and, showing his purchase, informed him that he was not the only man who possessed a coin of Hierapolis. "Let us compare," said other, emptying the pocket where . ronze was jingling. He sorted the lot and felt in every pocket. No coin of Hierapolis was there. To this day three questions remain un answered: How did the bey retain the cein in the first instance in ortler to sell it over again? How, in that remote rrgicn, far fror.i the haunts ef travelers, did he know the value of his find? And to which purchaser elid the coil: really belong? Youth's Companion. His Sweet Voice. The best of men are at times liable to inake very serious mistakes. A man in a Leicestershire village woke in the night and heard what he supposed to be the harsh grating of a saw on a hard board and at once jumped to the con clusion that some bold, bud burglar was sawing a hole in the front eloor. He slipped ont of bed, glided like a specter into the hall and again listened and this time became fully satsfied that hs first suspicions were correct. Seizing his fusty guu, he ponied a handful of powder and ditto cf shct i:?to each barrel, capped it and, softly rais;iig an up stairs window, blazed away in the darkness, the shot being followed by a howl of pain from below. He then hurriedly drew on a few of his most necessary garments and went to investigate the matter, and upon the first step found the wounded form of a neighboring youth, who, in feeble tones, explained that he had come over to sere nade his sweetheart, the old man's only daughter, with a song and that when be was shot he was diiving ahead as best he could on "Swee t Spirit, Hear My Prayer." He expressed ro Fnrpri.je at the old man's mistake, but tliini-s that ho might have at lea.-t yelled "Who's there?" be fore he pulled the' tiigger, but the shoot er said ho was somewhat excited and just a little scared, so didn't step to think. Pearson's Weekly. The Gillie's Excuse. It is well known that the quern has a dislike to the smell of tobacco, and even such a constant smoker as the Prince of Wales is careful to deexlorize himself a1? much as possible before being received by his royal mother. Perhaps the late John Brown took her majesty's aversion more cewlly than any one else, fer his 6porran was always crammed with a mixture peculiarly black and strong. On one occasion the late Duke of Sutherland sent semie liveeleer to Wind sor uuder the charge of his head keeper, who, having seen his charges safely housed, foregathered with Brown, and smoke and whisky speedily combined in no small quantities. While the carouse was progressing John was hastily sum moned to the queen's presence1, anel away he went without changing his clot he's. His sovereign lady seKjn detect ed the peccant odor and repreiached Brown with it. "Hech! Your majesty," said Brown, "it's nae my fault. It's jexist 'contact' with the duke's keeper." He was for given on the spot. London Telegraph. Oneer Language. The Saturday Review says that when he was in Egypt Mark Twain hired two Arab guides to take him to the pyra mids. He was familiar enough with Arabic, he thought, to understand and be understood with perfect ease. To his consternation ho found that be could not comprehend a word that either of the guides uttered. At the pyramids he met a friend, to whom hes made known his dilemma. It was very mysterious, Twain thought. "Why, the explanation is simple enough," said the friend. "Please enlighten me, then," said Twain. "Wliy, you should have hired younger men. These olel fellows have lost their teeth, and, of course, they don't speak Arabic. They speak gum Arabic." A Wonderful Scholar. Antonio Magliabecchi, the famous Florentine scholar, was remarkable not only for the amount and variety of his kuowlenlge for he knew ace-urately 60 different languages but also for his in cessant labors as a student anel libra rian. "He usually passed the whole night in study and when exhausted u . ture demanded rest a straw chair Hjr, e(j for a couch and an old threadbar cloak for a coverlet. The people living at Peak's island. Me., are so healthy that the who attempted to ni-.ke a livhn? by re- . mainmg there failed, and the islanders, sick ana wen alike, contribute a certain wuuu j , winning ujiiL paivi xur services, to keep him there. Public exposure of horse flet-h for sale is authorized in Denmark, Sweden and parts of France. From Cripple Creek. After the big fire in Cripple Creek, I took a vet v severe cold and tried many remedies without help, tho cold odv becoming more settled. After i!ain- three small bottles of Chamber- lain't) Cough R medy, both the cough ami cold left me, and in this high alti tude it takes a meritorious cough remedy to do any good. G. B. Hender son, editor Daily Advertiser. For sale by all drugg-Uts. DeWitt's Colic & Cholera Cure. Pica-Mint, quick rasalts, safe to a. for InfantG BP53 HISTY years otwrratlna of j millions of person, permit tin to npea.k cf it without gtislMg. It la nnqneatlonakly h Trost remedy for Infant and Children the world ha ever Iraovrn. It la hannlean. Children like It. It jrfvea them health. It -grill aave their livea. In It Mother, have omethlng -which la aihsoltttelrafo ftnel practically pwfecttta child's medicine. Castorla destroy Worm. Castor! a allayaFoverlshne. Castoria proventa vomiting Sour Cnrd. Castoria cnrca Piarrhcea and "Wind Colle. Caatoria relicvca Teething Tronhlea. Castoria caret Constipation and flatulency. Caatoria wntraliae'-. the effect of enrhonio acid g or polaonona air.' Castoria doe not contain raorTijblnwopinTn, or other narcotic property. Cawtorla agiiTiltie h ftvd, rcgnlatc the wtomachand powela,. giving healthy and aagrtjl g?. Castoria la pnt up in g?lTJ?lYitj?Jpot aold ln tnlIf" Don't allow any cae to nell yon ar rthing else pit the plea or pronil that it la "jnst a good" and "will answer overy purpose. Roe rnn o-et C - A - 5 - T - O The fac-aimilo adgnatnre of Children Cry for tsiSBXM Iff 'til THE OLD RELIABLE DEALER IPJ .-VIVJL Has a larger stock than ever which must be sold and he has made prices that will sell the goods. FOR PRESENTS Nothing is nicer than an Easy Chair, an ele gant Picture; or a conve nient Writing Desk. Pearlman has them to give away or next thing to it. He has the sole agenc y for the best Stove on earth, the GOLD in all sizes and designs, Nr y other house in Cass county "carries h4alf so large a stock and none can compete ou price? i, as hi?Pavs casn for his goods. YOU AftE... Specially to call and see our fiplendid stock and get prices. No trouble to Dgf the Place i. PEARLMAN, Opp. Court House. When Baby wm sick, wt. ave her Castoria. When she vaa Child, she cried for Castoria When she became afiss, she ctuvg to Castoria. BTea aha h&4 Chfldrea, she gave them Castoria. and Children. Cnstorla. the of - R - I - A. 1 on every wrapper. Pitcher's Castoria. 2 COIN" Invited show good. Remem- PlaUsmouth, Neb. sa m ra fa rv n H L 3 V B A l3 STOVES j KhenraatUm Cnrnl 1D a Uj. J "Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and Xe talalgia radically cures in one to (three days. Its action upon the eys 1 tern is remarkable and mysterious. It .removes at onco the cause :ind the disease immediately disappears. The : first doso greatly benefits, 75 cents. ( Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists. t r t ! I v. i , l F It: 1