L ij -if. EMI- EEXY TIIK NKtVH. r.stiil.lRlicd Nov. 5. IWH . I . ,,,, , , luir nil; lU.ltAU. '.m.H.I.Hh,.,! April Kl, IMil. t t""!,(,U,JKU" J'n .' PLATTSMOUTII, NEB.. SK1TEM1JKU 22. 1899. VOL. VIII. NO. IK). News TTT - i WEI : - f S I ; i TT UNPAID CUBAN DEBTS. .pain Repudiates Tijerr. and Re fuses to Pay thjc iQterest On the Bonds . United States Never Agreed to (3s c.ume Liability p'or Their Payment. Ni:v Voijk, S pi. 21. A hpcciil to tho .lournul mid Ad vrtir--r from "ni-hiii(tori ;ivs the deci-Ion by the Spitni.sh cabinet that tin: iiitoriftt on tho Cuban bonds must bo paid by the Cub.m tfoet ninent is a virtual an nouncement that Sp.iin will not pay thn inlcrct and tliHt tho bonds uro v.il iiolcHH. I n v lved in this announce ment is tho condition that thero may bo an attempt to c-nt'iiiyli eetiress in :i d isciiHsion cf tho responsibility of lln! Uniled Slater ovi-rnni'Mit for tho inliiri-st i! urine tho. American occupa t ion of t hn inland . Tin' ad ion of thf Spanish cabinet was referred to tho state department, from which tho fol lo w i nz author! ti vo htalctiK nt was oblaino.l: '-'lbo United Status (miinis.sionurs at Purls novor at any time or in .ny dc-groo agreed that tho United Sti.tos should become re.spoiisi bio for Spain's Cuban dobt. Thoro never was any understanding that any other paiMy hhould bo respon sible for I but debt than Spain. The reason the United Staled did not as- Mime tho debt, or any pirt or it, was that the. dobt w;is incurred almost wholly by Spain to crush tho several in.-oirroct ions. The United State? inihl h.ivo a-siimcd to guarantee this dobt if the funds named had been ex pended in internal improvements in ( 'uba. kThU govei nmont.'is is woll known, erjnsented to pay Spain $2(,(KK,)00 in tho case of tho Philippine islands, solely on the ground that approx imately that, amount had been ex pended by Spain in improvements in tho islands. Tho United Stales, therefore, has assumed no blijjatiotis for, and has no interest whatever in, tho declarations of the Spanish cabinet oij tho debts of Sp.iin or how they shall be paid. The present declaration looks like a repu diation of the debt principal and in terest Tho state department argues that when Spain relinquished its sover eignty in Cuba it relieved that island of debts contracted to keep it in hon d h go This construction, it is held, is af liimed in the notes which passed bo tween the two disputing commissions when th! treaty was under discussion in P u i. NrwH In ftliltntry CircW-H. DKTI'OIT, Mich., Sept. -1. Captain K. 15. Fenten of this city, commissary department, U. S. A. .tonight received orders from Washington to proceed t S n lYancbeo at tho expi'-ation of his leave, September 00, for temporary d u ty . lie Will III il !- I H M I i I I I IC fil I'VVIU U I'Ul -i - e 1. LI lilt 11 W . t J I iiJ iv.ll tllUiai v w i o-. - there to Manila and report for duty to i , f ,u cs Uiuenca lieceullv, nowever, owing to tho commanding irenof I of the Kiiihth p' , . . the constant changing that is going army corps. j . . . ' Washington", S -pt. 21. -Tho total -on 111 ; h nvor Us mnVl became im- enlistment- for tho twelve volunteer j aUvo i . ii, .. .i.,.,,;.,1 The Mand in. the companion ste imor regiments last called out to date is i ' ',-, , , , a of tho Mcl'herson, which operated S,:.-2 men. of whom -HO were secured ' ' ' 1 Iho enrollment for the coloreit n gimLiits is 2 -'2 niMi for the : l ty -eighth nl 10U men T.'. i -I r.n i Ml h i n f :i n t r V . for t)C I -i,-'..,v-..v- .,'... "i Thn n .i.m.Mi n., 'hjil. - iiv ..... . , .,i , aep.irimeni issueu a uum ici ' 11 .... . , . r uardiiig examination of omcors of tho ; . . a, volunteer array, an important pro, is- r . . .i . .... ion of which is ti nt vacancies of sec- ond lieutenants are to be filled by promotions from the ranks of he I regiments in which they occur. j Sax Ft: a no seo, Sept. 21 The j Thirty-second infantry from frVrtj Leavenworth, Kan., arrived he e to-1 , i ... :.-.., n.. m . ., t t l-v , I . 1 liaV Hi 1 Weill Ulll inui ' n mo - " ' ' , . eidio. Colonel Craig and Lieutenant ; p . , , Colonel Strother are in command of I j theiegiment. - SAN KKAxnsco Sept. U.-The First tl .lifornia volunteer regiment j was mustered out of the service of the ! j United States today. j uuriincton :-c. i Kt '. Kansas City, Sept. 21. The tiht between the Memphis and Burlington j roads over Kinsis City-Omaha dif-j forentials has nut both railroads in a j position where they are carrying pack ing house products to the southeast at a heavy loss. As a result the Burlington gave notice today of tho cancellation on Oc tober 1 of all packing house rates from Kansas City to tho southeast; also r ite- from Our-iha to Memphis for points bejond. A fter October 1 a combination of local rates will apply. Itrywu'ri Uwun.1 Heaknein. CllHAf.f-), Sept. 20. The Times Ilerald tomorrow will say: Mayor Harrison will run for governor of Illi nois next year. His reason was sup posed to remain a secret unlil later in the season. The mayor himself gave the news to . J. Bryan last Saturday. Bryan was so eager to express satisfaction to three or four Illinois democrats that he opened the leak. Ice cream pucked for picnic parties at HollowavV MG COAL FAMINE IN SIGHT. KllroH.l Are Cutablo to Furulth I -urn to foul Mm, HlCAGO, Sjpt. 21. Tho Record to morrow will day: According to pre 8 en I indications tho central west this win tor will ex perlenco a conl famine tho like of which never before ban been known in this nclion of the country. Prosperity, it is baid, wil. bo the primary cause uf tho famine. Ord in;i t ily a t this boasfjti of tho year the railro.nl companies, especially those who.-o lilies connect tho east nnd the central west, derive their greatobt bei 111 from the transporta tion of coal from the eastern fields of this section, but under tho present conditions they lire unable to provide cars for the hauling of the fuel owing lo the unprecedented handling of fit.ri'W and more profitable commodi ties. U rider crd i nary conditions tho lake carriers are engaged in carrying coal ftom tin; east to the we-tand stocking tho great bunkers for the winter sup ply, but in tho summer, which ends ti 'lay, they have had more than they could do lo haul othor things, which contributed more generally to the ex chequers of tho various companies. Coal mine owners in the east havo spent a noticeable portion of tho hist mix month in trying to secure accom modations for their shipment-3, but tho railroad companies, even in evi dence of tho fact that they havo oper ated with greatly increased equip ment, have been unable to obligo coal men. Il'ilroad tariffs on tho fuel have b'en ;;dvaiiccd and there are strong reasons to believe that before very long iliey will bo sent up still higher. At present, when ur utr ordinary cir cumstances, tho winter supply of coal would bo in tho market bins there is comparatively little to bo had on hort notice. The inability of tho coal minors to get their wares on the market und tho general advance in freiht rates will servo lo make tho fuel much dearer this winter than over before, recording to tho coal yard operator. SNAG WORK ON THE MISSOURI iiveriiiiifiit Hoiit.. Takn Out N.nrlyj Three llumlreil In few Monttiit. Cil AMiiKKL.WX, S. D.,Sopt. 21 The steamer McPhei son, government snag boat, has just reached this port on its way down tho river to its vvinlerq jar ters in Sioux C ity. Since August 8 the boat has taken up and removed from the river 12l snags, and removed ninoty-th reo trees from caving in banks, which would have fallen into tho river and become formidable snags. A rock was a so re moved from the channel opposite tho Crow Creek agency that measured sixty-one cubic foot, or more than five tons, j ist covered by water, and of course very dangerous to navigation. The importance of an annual exam ination of the river is illustralod in tiiis very i oek. It, has been known since 1SS7 to liver men, but as it was ! covered by sand a good portion of the 1"' ' I"--' 1 y,v ,-" S.oux City ana me Jru.e atiei i-y, alo remoV'u hi snags ar.u cut down 1,22 ) in cf from ca in g banks from May 1) t ) July 20 OtlicKil statistics ihuw that since . . ,., nf... , . lStiO some-.hing like 200 boats have - . . been wricked on tho Missouri river between Omaha and P.iimarck, and of "U'- "re than JM ',or COnl ere owing to snags; Knom vclt Taken a llmnl Nkw Yokk, Sept. 21. General Roe, ch drmau of the committee on land parade of the Dewey celebration, finds ir i. himself between two fires as a rosu.t . , of the Grand Array s refusal to take . .. .,i . part in the pageant unless they caii have the right of the lie. Commander -ilivelv the Graud Armv lt, n t i3 accede i to. GeneralK ,e ann0unces with equal oosi ti ven ess th it if he is not sustained by the committee he will resign from all connection with the parage, Today Governor R Oievcit,speaking at the Oisego county fair at Coopors- town, X. V., said: "I transacted one piece of business today that may be of interest to you of the Grand Army. I s?e by the prers today that there had been some hitch in the airangements of tho parade to meet Dewey and I telegraphed to the major general commanding the Na tional guard of this state that tho Grand Army is to have the right of position or anything it wanta in the parade. If I c:in bring it about I am going to have thr- heroes of the great civil war rccupy the prominent posi tion." Governor Roosevelt is General Roe's superior officer and tha Grand Army will probably march. "Thay are simply perfect," writes Robert Moore, of La Factte, Ind., of DoWitt's Little Early Risers, the "famous little pills" for constipation and all liver ailments, novor gripo. F. G. Fricke & Co. PRISON J300KS OPEN. Captain Alfred Dreyfus at Last Steps Forli) Into the World a Free Man. Goes With hjis Brother to Nantes and (Addresses a Statement o the Public. ItKXXKS, France, Sept. 20. Captain Alfred Dreyfus at 3 o'clock this morn ing left the prison here in which he had been confined since his return from Devil's island and proceeded to Vern, where he took a train bound for 'Nnntes. Ilia departure was com pletely unnoticed. M. Viguire, the chief of the secret service, and the prefect, M. Doreault, arrived at tho prison after miduight, bringing the minister of war's order for tho transfer of Dreyfus. Tho lut tor walked from tho prison to tho Boulevard Lacnno, where he entered a wailing carriage and was driven to the Vern stition, outsido tho town Mutliiou Dreyfus met him at tho train and accompanied him to rs antes. While thir. dramatic turn in the Dreyfus drama wa9 taking plucn all Uonnes sle.pt and tho departure of tho famous prisoner of Devil's island was no more noticed than that of an ordi nary traveler. The carriage which was in waiting was tho same vehicle which took Drey fus to his prison when he re turned from Devil's island. Dreyfus got in opposite the house where Maitro Libori had stayed previous to tho at tempt on his life and alighted about 50 yards from the station and walked in. regardless of the drizzling rain. The Nantes train camo in just as he anivai. Alfred and Matthieu Drey fus quickly took their seats, and tho train went out of llenncs bearing Dreyfus away a free man. A small crowd of people had waited around the prison until midnight, but it then dispersed, thinking it was too late for Dreyfus to leave. Vme. Dreyfus left Rennes at noon, accompanied by her father and friends Dreyfus Arrives At Xanten. ANTES, Sept. 20. Dreyfus arrived here this morning from Rennes, accom panied by his brother, the chief of the secret police, M. Viguire, and one po liceman. The party traveled as ordinary- passengers. The train reached the station at 8:15. Tho Dreyfus brothers alighted on the platform first, followed by M. Vig uire, who inquired if they could have a private room. A waiter replying in tho affirmative the brothers entered a room and ordered two glasses of milk, wbilo M. Viguire and the policeman remained outsido in the public bar. lrquiry was then made concerning the Bordeaux train, which they wore informed left at 8:f3 a. m. All four then entered a first-ciass compartment in which there were already other passengers. It was intended by thus refraining from any attempt to secure privacy to avoid exciting curiosity. M. Viguiro and the policeman only went as far as the first stop, Vertou, whence they returned to Niotes to catch the 12:30 p. m. expross for Paris, leaving the brothers to continue their journev alono. It. is believed the Dreyfuses alighted at an intermediate station to take a fresh start in an un known direction. May Come to America. London, Sept. 20. The Times pub lishes the following dispatch from Liver pool: "A quantity of luggage has arrived here from Havre and Folkestone ad dressed to Mme. Dreyfus, and rooms have elso been taken at a local hotel. The luggage is marked for New York, und it is supposed that Dreyfus is go ing to America. The Paris correspondent of the Daily Telegraph says: "Dreyfus is so ill that be can live ODly a few months. Tho government has promised to watch over and protect him, and has recommended that he live on the Riviera. It is not unlikely that he will iiecept the villa offered him dur ing tho trial by the princ of Monte Carlo." " All On Account of Love, Denver, Colo., Sept. 20. After eighteen years of separation, Bessie Wiuslow Robinson has met her brother, William Wins'.ow, and her sister, Fanny Winslow. The reunion was effected by Bessie's sweetheart, Sergeant George M. Lashell, who re turned Thursday with the First Colo rado regiment. The Winlows,Robin sons and Lasheils were neighbors in Grafton, Neb., until 1SS2, when Mrs. Winslow died, leaving eight ch.ldren. Mrs. J.J. R)binson adopted Bessie, then eight months old. For years William Winslow has been looking without success for the family into which his sister had been adopted. Ia the meantime the two girls had met and necome far.t friends, but not until the return of Sergeant Lashell and his discovery of their relation, did tbev find out that they were sisters. De Witt's Little Early Risers perma nently cure chronic constipation, bil iousness, nervousness and worn out feeling; cleanse and regulate the en tire system. -Small, pleasant, never grips or sicken "famous little pills." F. G. Fricke & Co. BANK TRAGEDY IN ILLINOIS. Affd Charier of FulUtlne Hank At tacked and Nearly Killed. CHICAOO, Sept. 20. Frederick J. Filbert, the aged cashier of the Palla tine bank in Failatino, 111., tweuty-sJx miles north of Cnicago, is lying close to oea.th as the result of an attack made on him today by a young man who gives the numo of Waltor Law ton. The latter, who is unknown to any body in I'allatine, is in the county hospital suiToring from a bullet wound. Henry Plagge, seventy years of age, a firmer, whose intervention at a critical moment prevented tho out right murder of the cashier, is at his home west of the village bruised and disabled as a result of his struggle with Lawion. Tho assault was mudo with a tack hammer and the aged cashier was struck at lenst a dozen times before Flagg interfered. Tho attack oc curred at 3 p. m. L vwtou denies that ho had entered tho bank for tho purpose of robbery and claimed that the alienation of his wife's affections by Filbert loolc place five years ago at the Fifth Avcnuo hotel in New York City. Filbert do- , clares he has not been in New York for twenty years. Late tonight it was announced that both Filbert and Lawton will die. The former's skuil ia fractured in two places and tho latter cannot survive the wound in his abdomen. Lawton's confessed motive for tho assault was revenge on Filbert, who, he alleges, alienated the affections of his wife. His story is not believed by the police, however. They have no doubt the looting of tho bank was his ultimate design. Colony of J.ip tor Hawaii. ViCTOKix, B. C.,Sept. i0. Not con tent with tho importation through Minister Ramon of a small army of field workers, tho planters of Hawaii are now arranging for a wholesale im portation of contract liibor from Japan. When tho empress of India sailed from Yokohoma on the 7th inst. their agents had secured 0,310 laborers, and these, with the women who are to ac company them to the islands, means a total emigration from Japan of up wards of 10,500. The large demand for cheap labor results from the recent heavy invest ments of American capital in Hawaii, but the present immigration is viewed with alarm in .I ipau, the government promising stringent restrictions for the next session of the Diet. FOR "SIR WALTER. The Value of Scott's Novel as Heading for tlie Young1. Above all, writes B. M., in the St. Nicholas, Sir Walter Scott was the champion of youth, and it is the fra grance of the springtime that breathes through his stories. In his day writing for young people had not become a pro fession, otherwise there is no knowing what he might have done for us; still, he has done enough; and oddly, too, his heroes and heroines are almost without exception very young no older, indeed, than many school-girls and boys, and certainly not so well educated, though, poor things, the stress of the times made them sadly wiser in the ways of the world. It is only necessary to cite a few examples. Naturally, "Ivanhoe" is the first suggestion. Rowena was 15 when the story opens, Rebecca was lit tle older, and Ivanhoe himself was not of age. Quentin Durward was 19, and Isabelle of Croye, his sweetheart, waa scarcely 15, while her Aunt Hameline was thought quite elderly at 30. Cath erine, "The Fair Maid of Perth," wa3 not more than 17. Edith Plantagenet. the heroine of "The Talisman'" was about the same age: Mary Avenel, in "The Monastery." was somewhere be tween 13 and 15, while the two broth ers, Halbert and Edward, were about 17 and 15 respectively. Catherine Sey ton, in "The Abbott," was not above 16, and Roland, the page, was scarcely older. Di Vernon romped with the dogs and the horses. Annie of Geier-s-tein was a child, and Arthur Stanley merely a precocious boy; and so all through his stories, except in a few rare instances, when the tales treated of a later epoch, when maturity was not forced upon children. The same may be said of the characters in his poems, and here It is more especially apparent among his heroines; his men are more thoughtful, and certainly older In most Instances. The spirit of youth runs through everything Scott touched, and is the secret alike of the unwavering interest in his works, and of the love and veneration for the man. Kite and Tlinnderstormv Mr, William A. Eddy, of Bayonne, New Jersey, finds that he can predict the approach of thunderstorms when they are yet so distant that their at tendant clouds have not come into view by means of high-flying kites. TLo kites inform him of tht electrical condition of the atmosphere, which assume a recognizable character in ad vance of such storms. Thunderstorms have the peculiarity of advancing in lines hundreds oX miles in length, the Btorms composing such an array, keep ing, in a general way, abreast of one another, like skirmishers leading a line of battle. A Loctor'a Prescription. Abernethy, the celebrated surgeon, was no respecter of persons, and for plain speaking was a terror to many a purse-proud man. A lazy, wealthy Individual asked him in fear and trem bling what was the cure for gout, a disease caused by his luxurious mod of living. "Live on sixpence a day," was the doctor's reply, "and earn it!" Glorious News. Comes from Dr. D.. B. Cargllo, of Washita, I. T. He Writes: "Four bottles of Electric Bitters has cured Mrs. Brewer of ecrofulu, which had caused her great suffering for yoars. Terrible sores would break out on her head and face, and tho host doctors could give no hei p; but her ctre is com plete and her health is excellent." This shows what thousands havo proved, that Electric Bitters is the best blood purifier known. It's the supremo remedy for eczema, tetter, 6alt rheum, ulcers, bails, and running sores. It stimulates liver, kidnev-and bowels, expels poisons, holos digo-tiou builds .in thoutrnn.rth On! f.o. n.-n i- . i- . t i . Sold by F. G. Fricko & (o. druggists, guaranteed. 4 Th I'ope'a l.lfV. Viewed from the hum m standpoint nothing can be more jcy'r-ss than th daily life of the Roman p int iff at th present day. The era ef ? rjnifU'ence, 1 of pageantry, for the It ). inn court, ha forever passed away :: vm. auster ity, at least outwardly, di-iinguishea the dwellers of the Va:i:vn. The at mosphere there is gloomy mid chill. The pope lives alone; no one shares with him even a meal. A walk in th. garden attached to the pMb-r-e has for years been the only vine of relaxa tion for him who, v e -tyling him self, "the Vicegerent of fluist" is nevertheless, by his own volition, "the Prisoner of the Vu : ii an. ' Self- Culture. How's This. We offer Ohe Hundred Dollar Howard for any case of Catarrh that cannot lie cured ty Hull's Catarrh Cure. 1 S. CIIKNKV & CO.. Props., Toledo. I). We the undersigned, have known F. .1. Cheney tor the last l." years, mid believe him perfectly honorable in all biisinens transactions ttnd iiimnclnlly able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. Wkst ft Tki'AX, Wholesale Drtii;lst4, To ledo. O. Wai.kino. Kinnix & M auxin-. Wholesale Druse is ts. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Trine T.'jo. per bot tle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family I'iUs arc the best. Lottery Scheme for Spuin. Under the auspices of the Spanish government a great lottery scheme will be launched in Madrid August 1, the receipts of which, minus the prizes, will be turned over to the government for its most pref-slnn needs. It Is thought that by September the sala ries of civil and m'.'ltary servants re cently suspended c?n then be made good. Circulars are being sent out all over Europe, and it is expected that 500,000,000 peseta, or about $100. 000,000, will be netted by the govern ment. There are five capital prizes of 500,000 pesetas each. The lottery is now new In Spain, but Spanish lot tery has never been popular in other states of Europe, investors preferring to take their chances with the Dutch or Prussian lotteries. The Spanish lottery Id 3897 brought the treasury 3,000,000 pesetas, in the same year the Portuguese lottery gained 1,750,000 milreLs (nearly $2,000,000). The lot tery is authorized in other countries of Europe. In Italy last year the government gained 62,000,000 lire ($12, 400,000), showing that the poor lazza rone was not without his savings. In Holland the official lotteries gained $300,000; in Denmark the winnings amounted to about half a million more. But the Prussian lottery, which is annually operated under the direct authority of the state, Is the most pop ular. There are a number of prizes of 500,000 marks every year, and in 1897 tho receipts of the treasurer amounted to over 100,000,000 marks. New York Times. Wear Tliem Always. There are three rings wh'ch the queen of England never by any chance removes from her hand. One is the little enamel ring, set with a single, diamond, given to her when quite a child by Prince Albert; another is her betrothal ring, a beautiful snake of emeralds, and the third is a plain nar row band her wedding ring. Taroma'f Bicycle Paths. Tacoma has fully twenty-two and a half miles of bicycle paths within its city limits, and these connect with fourteen miles more which the coun try has provided. This gives the cyclist almost forty miles of good paths. A l'iulInrH of the lluiel -Orgran. "It seems like a very easy thing to do lo play a hand -organ. ' said one who has tiled it, "but it is not so eisy as It seems. You expect the music to Keep time with the turning of the c:.mk. but as a matter of faf-t it does noth ing of the sort. It doesn't slns? i-i with it at all. Other instruments ke-p time with the touch; the hand-organ does not. You are almost sure tostop short, the first time you try, because the music doesn't come in as you ex pect it to. After awhile you begin t j realize that crank and music have no relation in the matter of time, except as the crank makes the organ go, and you get so that vjii cm !f.: crank turning without . t ";: ''..'a " Puerto IIlco Once a Forest. Puertc Rico, say the scientists, was originally an immense forest from the 6eashore to the mountain summits. It Is doubtful If there is a single foot of Its land area which was not at one time covered by tree growth, from the di minutrr mangrove bushes on the coast to the giant trees of the mountain side and top. Although still wooded In the sense that It is dotted by many beau tiful treea, tha Island is now largely de forested from a commercial point of View. When you want to smoke a 10-cent cigar try Otto WurlVSilver Wreath" union made you can find n ter on the market. ll'-iilli of a S.llnl J. '1 he iJ.-uth ii unriouro.ed of u (lo$ bf Jonjjl::": to tiie Women. and Children's hospital, of Cork. Ireland. Leo w.t; h namo. nnd ho was well known, not only in Ireland, but In many parts of Ens land. Of dignified demeanor, he was al ways to bo Been upon the Btreet. with his Alpine barrel slung around his nTk bent on errands of mrroy, as important as those of the Rrat monastery dogs, He gathered over $1,000 for the hospi tal. Leo won the proud distinction of carrying off the cup offersd by the l'rinee of Wales for the do who col lected the largest amount for a hospt tal. and he wai al.-;o known to the Prln- toss "f WaJf-s. vho frequently petted "'' e. H.H, ill ill i.eu e VO 1 en t I ''Xf-rtlona by his eldest son. Leo. The Appetite of a Goat I envied by all poor dyspeptics whoso stomach and liver are out of Order. All such should know that Dr. King's New Life I'ill, the wonderful stoiiv-c!i ami liver remedy, gives a splendid app tite, sound digestion and a regular bodily habit that insures perfect Le;tlth and great energy. Only 2-"o, at F. ;. Fricke & Co's drug store.. 4 Tin. -i-mn rv Mt il.r li-l. To tho mother of a family of youn children a little ineilicine chest is u I'.ei essii ry for the summer outfitg :is clean i- othes. Occasen .i re a I w.i k -iniide rem to .i -i t a st on s are lie of much hazel, for ia for the . .uinner of iiruin when a simple h edy is all that i. r. :-, i i s serious illness and d, i sometimes too far :is..y l i:se. bottle of v.;.li in iii.-es and cut.-,; 1 1 l.ites and .stin ;;f insec capsicum for the cramps, which a com bination of green vegetables, itnripi fruit and hot weather is - bound to bi-inq;. and the well-knani remedies for colds, which can be contracted in the mildest weather. And pr;y do not forget a supply of court plaster. I n there will be frequent calls for it. roriicni j six-room liouse; p!eaE antly located. Inquire of C. C. Mitchell, Sixth i-treet, between (loUI and Itock. Nice Clean Ice. F. S. White i now ready to deliver ice to his customers in any qmnti tios ties: red. The ice is the Hnontevcr har vested. Telephones Plat tsmouth L'or., Nebraska 71. C6 Gream ..IN ALL FLAVORS OUR Chocolate and Vanilla . Beat the World Goring; & Co, S3 ..DRUGGISTS.. WW' ' i Ai Hi 5 Sherwm-Wiluams Paints ia specially suited to some home use either outsifle or inside. It's knowing the right kind of paint, and putting it on the r?gM place that makes painting a success. Tell us what vou want to paint, and we'll tell you the riant kind to ue. For sale in Plattsmouth by F. G. FRICKE & CO., Druggists. THE NEWS Job Las (an Vicar Shoes One oi.-.o "imulirr fter using AUdu'i Foot-L'titfo, a powder lo bo shaken luto tho mIioo.. it miiko-i tight or now b(iH feel eaxy; give Instant relief to corn Mini bunion. the groatent comfort diueovcry of tho ajfo. Cures swollen fowl, blitet h and ealloun npot. Allen's I'ooi-l-. if o is a -eitain euro for Ingrowing muI-, mveatlng.hot, aching feet. At all druggUlM and nhoo ritoroa, 2 .!. Trial packiigo free by mail. Ad dress, Allen S. ( )l instead, LeKoy N. V. K. !. I'VioWo .V- Co., il rugtrlrtU. An I nuirmiif) IC liiinl llo. He was describing a hold-up in which bu had played utnr part. "Yes," he fcald, "iho J,l.-,xest rulllun held mo so lightly iKulnt ti, brick wall that I could feel the mortar scratching my backbone. '(Jlmmn your watch, he growled, i nave i i0 him Immediately." There was a pauna. "Gave it rlht up, eh?" M.ild th breathless listener. "Yen." said tin victim, "I did." 'I In n he dreamily added: "You see. win pressed for time!" Cleveland Plain Ih-alrr. TllK Nkws prints the news. 9o0 0&Ofe0ece9e9 flTailor-Madeflf Suit tor. . .. i) 2 The only way to e(t a Suit of clothe-! that will lit you prop erly is to have it nrnl.) by a com petent Tailor. We- will malco you a suit that wo will guarantee to fit. from ood cloth, nice fin ish and up-to-date throughout, for $ll(l. There i no ii-eol send in g away from homo or wearing ready-inado clothe.-, when you can get a .-.nit, at (-.neb a bargain. Wo solicit a fh.-ti-i I you r pa t rona go. . of Hwlccck ft Mclilroy The New Tailors, flock wood block, 1 '! itl -iinonlli ra m m tit m m m El m a xx l xx xx XX XX XX 5 ? V' fr. Vv yv yf vv sr r Paint for 5e water Everybody And for everything under the sun. Every home has need of paint Each kind of The does Printing i 0 "M o 0