i Kt the ' 1 WsM Pains at the waist, back, front, or side, are nearly sureproof of female trouble. Some other signs are headache, pressing down pains, irregular functions, restless ness, cold limbs, nervousness, etc. These pains may be allayed, the system braced and the womanly functions regulated by the use of The County Exchanges f t Rii it benefit Interest Selected troi tfaa Colamos if Contcmporenes f 4 Elmwood From tbe liwW-Kcho Willis Bartlett and John Eidenmiller last week completed a fine new barn for Waldo Willitt. The structure is 24x32, lfi foot posts. W. H. Hay leaves today for his old home in New York. He will visit the state fair at Syracuse and other points of interest before his return. J. E. Worley and family came down from Lincoln to spend Sunday and Mon day at the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Worley. Miss Pearl Woodard was operated on at Omaha Wednesday by Dr. Gifford for catarrh of the throat, from which the has been a sufferer for some time. Mrs. C. S. Hart returned Sunday from Ft. Collins, Colo., where she has been the past three months for the benefit f her health. We are pleased to learn that her health is much im proved. Mrs. Ueardslee, of Troy, I'enn., Mrs. Thomas, of Canton, I'enn., Mrs. Chas. Williams, of Corning, N. Y.. and Joe Williams, of Wellsbougheri I'enn., are visiting at the homes of Philander Williams, L. F. I,anghorst and Harry Williams. Joe Williams is an uncle and the rest of the party are cousins to Harry Williams and Mrs. Langhorst. Union Lost and Fonnd. Ixxst, between p. m., yesterday and noon today, a bilious attack, with nausea and sick headache. This loss was occasioned by the finding at F. C. Fricke & Co. drugstore a box of Dr. King's New Life Pills, the guaranteed cure for biliousness malaria and jaundice. rom i ti t.-ii!t-r Mrs. Henry Born and children, of Plattsmouth came last Saturday to make a few days visit with L. G. Todd jr., and family. Mrs. Moss McCaroll departed Monday night for Lawrence, Kan., to spend several weeks visiting her parents and other relatives. Mrs. W. B. Banning and son, Hollis arrived home Wednesday afternoon from Dubuque, Iowa, where they had been visiting the past few weeks. Andrew Lynn arrived last Sunday night from Ohiowa, Neb., in response to a message notifying him of the ser ious condition of his mother, Mrs. Sarah Lynn. Mrs. Barbara A. Taylor recently pur chased the Carraher residence, one of the finest and best in town, and yes terday she and the family began the task of moving. They will have a very fine home and we are pleased to wel come such additions to the village. J. W. Pittman and daughter, Miss Josie, arrived home last Tuesday after noon from Burlington Junction, Mo., where they have been the past few weeks for their health. We are glad to note that they are both much im proved in health. Misses Blanche Mougey, Hattie Tay lor and Jennie Mark' went to Platts mouth on Monday to commence their studies in the high school of that city. They are delighted because they will have for superintendent their former teacher. Prof. J. W. Gamble. Wto of C&irdtai Mrs. Annie Hamilton, of Stetsonville, Wis., writes: "Cardui saved me from the grave after three (3) doctors had failed to help me. It is a good medicine and I recommend it to all suffering women." For sale at all druggists, in $1 bottles. llnTC IIC A 1 PTTPD Writ today for a fre copy of valuable 6-pa llluitr.ted Book for Women. If you need Mrdlral Ad- It I I L. II J f LLl I I LlV vice- 4cribe your symptoms, stating ace. and reply will be sent in plain sealed envelope. A4dres : " " Ladies Advisory Dept.. The Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chattanooga. Tenn. J .17 ENGINEERS VOTE ON A STRIKE Nehawka (rutin lli- KftrisMT. ) A Humane Appeal. A humane citizen of Richmond, Ind., Mr. U. D. Williams. 107 West Main St., j says: I appeal to all persons with ' weak lungs to take Dr. King's New j Discovery, the only remedy that has i helned me and fullv comes ur to the Charley Snyder, the human skeleton proprjetor's recommendation." It saves from the east side, is rejoicing over the more ,ives than a, other throat and arrival of twins. They belong to the remedies put together. Used as a most famous jersey cow in the precinct, j a coujrh and co,d cure the worl(, oyer J. M. Stone accompanied by Mrs. D. j Cures asma, bronchitis, croup, whooping C. West and Gladys left for Cherokee, j cough, quincy, hoarseness, and phthisic, Okla., on the midnight train Tuesday. ' stops hemorrhages of the lungs and They will be absent about two weeks. builds them up. Guaranteed at F. C. L. C. Tdd too: a shipment of cattle ; Fricke & Co. druggstore, 50c and" $1.00 antl hogs to Omaha Tuesday his own I Trial bottle free. raising and feeding that sold for a , fine figure, the cattle bringing 6.40. Tfje Lumber Trust The who'.e shipment amounted to ; sjj .?yi , ' The cost of lumber is high and hurts nearly every one curecuy. x ne excess i Daid on building a small cottage would more than balance the excess paid on coal oil for the average family ''Vis. Lindville, a daughter of Z. W. Shrader. who has been here on a visit for sjme time, left on Saturday for a visit with relatives in Nodaway county Missouri. From there she will return , to her home in Furnas county. Charles S. S o.ie, of Mtray, who from his looks never had an unhappy moment in his life since he outgrew the for twenty-five years. Last winter con gress authorized an investigation which has been had, and the report says the cause is excessive freight rater. With this report made public, Messrs Hill and Harriman have announced an "sorrowings" of the paternal slipper, increase in rates of ten cents per hun came ciown irom me - city on tne mu that cannot be hid" Tuesday evening. dred pounds, effective October 1st, whirh will add to the cost of lumber He was wearing the same old smile just 3f) per 10(M) feet in all territory that has made him famous with well, . east of the Rocky mountains. except you know. j Nebraska and Kansas, where the ad- Miss Ruth Murdoch left on Tuesday i vance will be five cents per hundred morning for Ogderi. Utah, where she pounds, or $1.65 per 1,000 feet. You will teach school for the coming year. an remember what a great splurge Miss Ruth grow to womanhood here, congress and the administration made graduated froji th'.s -school and for the ; -ASt year regarding the railway corn last four years has been a successful mission. This commission gets big teacher in the intermediate department. ( salaries, long tenure of oifice and all Her work has been t;f a high character the assistance they need. What have and we r cs-peak for her abundant success they done, or what do they intend to in her now field. She was 'joined at do? Comparatively nothing. Thev may The Missouri Pacific May Have Troube in One Branch of ihe Service The diirerences between the Brother hood of Locomotive Engineers and the Missouri Pacific railroad, which may re sult in a strike of 3,000 enineers em ployed on the system, were explained from the standpoint of the employes by a Missouri Pacific Engineer who lives o:i the west side, says the Kanrs City Times cf Monday. "The engineers are asking for noth ing they have not had for the last twenty years," he said. "In that time a con tract has been signed by the engineers and the company every two years and we have always worked under it. Several months ago our board . of adjustment met in St. Louis to renew this contract. M. W. Cadle, of Cleveland, Ohio., as sistant chief engineer, was told by the company that no such contract was in existence. The company then asked the engineers to sign a new contract which is different in several respects from the old one.- For twenty years the company has allowed the engineers coming in from their runs to turn their engines over to hostlers to be taken to the roundhouse. The new contract re quires the engineers to take their en gines to the roundhouse themselves and allow them an additional mile on the run at four cents a mile. To get the engine into the roundhouse requires all the way from a half hour to five hours. Some of the runs are sixteen hours long and an engineer is pretty tired when he gets in. In Omaha, for in stance, the roundhouse is three miles from the terminus. Yet under the new contract the engineers would only be allowed one mile for making the trip. All the engineers want is to have the old contract renewed." A vote on the question of calling a strike is now being taken. ROBBERS FIGHT CONDUCTOR DUVAL Lincoln by teach there. who will also Com .(it..; recently, " it to pun h:. : farmer. I.. I Duff Grain ' at that j r'ci; i of oats :s: son why .; '' prosper'!";1'. tO I! ly Prospering tM becoming kingly i'kf' :i rour.d half dollar of it from the SU-.il just ::o'd to the r. i-r; thf.u.-r.nd bushels ! Jour thou.-;::::d bushels ce.it.;. '1; cio is a rea- change the classification here and there, they may reduce the rate on articles where tariff is light, but on lumber and grain where people are interested, they are very slow to act.' Nine-tenths of the reform propaganda sent out by the administration is buncombe. What benefits is it to the general public to fine a corporation? None whatever. If the courts would modify their meth ods of extortion, then the public wou'd be benefitted. Fifty Years ihe Standard DR; CREAM A Cream of Tartar Powder Made from Grapes NO ALUM A Good Curfew Law "Every lamily," says an unidentified paper, "should have a curfew which should positively 'ring tonight' and every night if needed. These curfews are inexpensive and are home made. Take a piecu of siding two feet long and whittle one end down to a handle: take the child that needs a curfew and bend it over a barrel. Now take the siding in hand and use it as a cla per. Put it on hot, divide the strokes evenly and see that none miss. Good for a boy or girl up to the age of lo and three applications are warranted to cure the most pronounced case of street loafing that exists. The music is said to be finer than singing "Where Is My Wandering Boy Tonight?" Sick Headache. This disease is caused by a derange ment'of the stomach. Take a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab--; lets to correct this disorder and the j sick headache will disappear. For sale i by F. G. Fricke and A. T. Fried. . Celebrates 44th Birthday. On Thursday, September 5, C. A. Gauer, one of the most estimable citi zens of Cass county, was 44 years of age. He thought nothing about the matter, until in the evening, when a number of the neighbors and friends dropped in at his home to help him in celebrating the event. It was a com plete surprise to Mr. Gauer, but he joined the guests in having a good time, which all enjoyed. Dancing was in dulged in until a late hour and at the proper time refreshments were served. After several hours of real pleasure the guests repaired to their various homes with the wish that Mr. Gauer may live many years and each .one of his birth days may as enjoyable as this one. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Inhelder, Mr. and Mrs. Myers, Con Sears and family, Otto- Spreick and family, Geo. P. Stoehr and family, Adam Meisinger and family, Mrs. Sutz ami two sons, Eddie and Willie; Willie, Allie, Emil and Louie Meisinger; Henry and Adam lleil, Henry Fornoff; Louie Keiser; Jeff Ralberg; Philip Theirolf ; John Drides: Jerry Frey; Frank Kroeh ler; Joe, Peter and Otto Sitzman; Chas. Kust, an uncle of Con Sears, Misses Nettie and Mary Meisinger; Ellen Fender: Elsie Inhelder; Lillie Shaeler; Anna, Emma and Laura Gauer. One Who Was There, Crooks on Rock Island Near Alvo Rob Passengers and Try to Stab Conductor. Omaha World-Herald says: "Three armed crooks, who had picked the pock ets of a number of Rock Island passen gers at the station in Lincoln and at tempted to continue their game on the train, engaged in a desperate encounter with Conductor Henry Duval on the Rocky Mountain Limited, near Alvo station about 1 o'clock Friday morning. "After standing off Conductor Henry Duval with a knife, the men leaped from the moving train over a slow piece of track about eight miles west of Alvo and escaped in the darkness. Two Rock Island special agents have been sent to the vicinity of their escape with good descriptions if the men. The last heard from them they had npt struck the trail of the robbers. "Passengers missed their money and reports of the theft were made imme diately, but the crooks, who were evi dently professionals of the smoothest character, threw the police completely off their track. Later they attempted to rob the sleeping passengers in the chair car, and were caught in the act by the conductor. "They had been suspected by the con ductor, who was instructed by the Lin coln police to keep an eye on them. He attempted to keep them on the train and bring them into South Omaha, to deliver them over to the officers, but a poor stretch of track foiled his plans and gave the crooks an opportunity to leap from the train. "Near Alvo station there is a stretch of track where the grade is being changed. The track at this point is soft and all trains slow down while crossing it. While one man ran into the toilet room and dropped from the train through the little window, the other two drew knives on the conductor, backed to the vestibule and dropped off in the darkness. ! "At Murdock the conductor wired ahead to the Albright agent and pre- j parations were at once made to trace the fugitives. ' "The train leaves Lincoln about 12:35 and is due in Omaha at 2:35. The en counter caused no delay in reaching here. "It is said that the men got in the neighborhood of $600." 'ft Pounds of Best Cranu- fl 00 lafed Sugar for.. ylln Great Introducing Grocery Offer! You can save $3.G0. We gain a customer. This Great troductory Grocery Olfer cannot be broken. Jffl.OO in CASH to accompany order. Satisfaction guaran teed or money refunded: 40 pounds granulated sugar ?1 8 pounds P. & G. coffee 2 10 bars Diamon "C" or White Russian soap 1 Mason pint jar strictly pure honey 1 Mason quart jar sweet piekels 12 cakes snow flakes castle soap 2 cans strictly pure baking powder 1 pound extra blend green tea 1 pound pure foxl black pepper 1 package cow brand backing soda 1 sack Blue Jay Japan rice. 2 bottles 2 oz each extract vanilla 1 quarter gallon can syrup 1 cake Enoch Morgan's sapolio In- (N) (K 25 25 30 30 40 50 2H 05 25 27 10 05 Orders filled same day received. All mail orders f. o. b. cars, Plattsmouth. 1 MDpi ail Store 1 I Wh TVi Rtst of Goofls ARE MADE s A full line of the newest Fall Street Hats are now on sale at Florence Anderson's CASE AFTER CASE at Fair Prices are what are most desired. O For something appropriate in the line of Birthday, Wedding or any ifc Anniversary Presents we have a line that is Unsurpassed. Our Silverwear is unique in pattern and design and surprising in quality and price. Q Q LOCAL WATCH INSPECTOR FOR THE BURLINGTON ROAD V rami0 I The Jeweler. Sells Kis Cattle A. S. Will shipped all of the remain ing of his summer's feed of cattle to South Omaha yesterday, where they went on the market. There remained about one hundred head from the ship ments of the previous times. They found a good market, getting six and a quarter cents for them. They will soon fill their feeding yards up again for the coming season's feed. . Thomas Will, who has charge of the farm at present, was a passenger to Omaha this morn ing, where he goes to be present at the big horse sale which is to open today. At this sale it is claimed there will be offered for sale about five hundred cars of horses. Torturing eczema spreads its burning area every day. Doah's Ointment quickly stops its spreading, instantly relieves the itching, cures it per manently. At any drug store. Mrs. Elizabeth Gregg of San Fran cisco is in the city visiting at the, home of her friends, J. M. Leek and wife. Plenty Kfore Like This in Plaits mouth Scores of Plattsmouth people can tell you about Doan's Kidney Pills. Many a happy citizen makes a public state ment of his experience. Here is a case of it. What better proof of merit can be had than such endorsement? J. B. Patridge, living on Eight street between Oak and Locust streets, Platts mouth, says: "1 never before had any remedy that did me so much good as Doan's Kidney Pills which I procured from Gering & Co. 's drug store. Be fore using them I was pretty nearly broken down with my back. I could hardly straighten and suffered almost constantly from pain across my loins and kidneys. My first experience with this kind of trouble dates back a long time ago and I believe I know what misery and torture 'kidney complaint brings. At times I have been so crip pled up that I could not get around with out the use of a cane. The first box of Doan's Kidney Pills did . me so much good that I got the second box. This brought me out all right. It did the work thoroughly. There is no expres sion I can give that would overestimate the value I place on Doan's Kidney Pills." For sale by all dealers. Price 50c Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. Remember the name -Doan's and take no other. For Sale A six-room house with cistern, half block. Price ?S00. C. L. Martin, Corner 10th and Pearl streets. - We are showing some fine Diamonds in both single settings and combination with Genuine Rabies. The Makes Photography Easy Come in and let us slio-.v von some of the You can have the i enefit of our exper ience in selecting n kodak for ordinary or special work. We have some manu als on developing Velox. Also, seed's. "The art of negative making." which are distributed ckatis. Prescription Druggists u I 3 N I I I III