Nebraska herald. (Plattsmouth, N.T. [Neb.]) 1865-1882, February 10, 1876, Image 2

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    T IT E II KK A 1. 1).
J. A. MACMpRPJIY. Editor.
rLATTSMOUTTT, FEB. 10, 1S76.
OUR CLUB LIST FOK 1870.
YTorw? sent oat rearle.s this wreck with a club
Jv-ticf p-nn whlcli .can be taken twin the
XlsaA.i.i- In this way ;you can get two papers
w Ji;i2;ulnet for.llttle .more .'than the price ft
OI.S.
VV: umM Hk to havrSnll thenb-irr!lers we
tnnjjst caiety.ne3ejrat ty the nil J die of Ie
rvtuber. W lo wonll like new sr.twrltHrs to the
UisaD. and all who propose taking It for an
other yea.r4lo coincjforwiinl now, tor on the
amber of vonr auhscriptlons depends some
changes we would like to make In the paicr.
Ti Rekai-D and Harpers lazaax. Week
ly, or Magazine, 4 .90
" and Inter-Ocean, weekly.... 2.80
t.etnl-wckly. 4.25
" " Chicago Tribune
post & Mall, weekly
- r - - dally
" - " Prairie Farmer
" Daily Graphic
" Hearth & Home
" IyuisvTe Courier Journal
Serlbuer's Monthly
- St.JNielioIas
" American Agriculturist..
rU'J JMTIMJ.
2.80
Z.ZQ
t.n
3.30
12.4.5
3.50
3.05
4.8.
4.0
2.70
Where's our Junior Senator on this
South Platte matter.
Give hltn another hash house, Perk
Ins; That'll fix him.
Lycnrgus Crouuse" That's a mis
take. It's Lie-cur &) cuss Miller,
just now.
Whistle hiio off with the promise of
a hash house, Crounse. Any dog will
cutue at the smell of that.
Piuilrnatl meeting to-night at Fitz
gerald Hall, Turn out everybody and
bring your neighbor with you.
Grant talked of bottling IJutler up;
but with a bridge at Plattsmouth and
or.e.at lSIuir, we might Paddock Omaha
cut.
Dlnna y hear the Slogan ? It's the
h;ie k of a Locomotive coming across
ths bridge of discrimination with Per
kins on the safety valve.
"There's music in the air." It's the
cut throats and robbers getting tip
if team to cross the bridge without
discrimination.
Lo-raln-so Crounse That's the name.
Itiiutjonly rains so, but Lo! it pours
to, that u few more hail from a Crounse
Thunder Cloud will fetch 'em.
Lewis S. Heed, of Omaha, the effi
cient county Clerk of Douglas county,
sends the Hehald greeting. -and we
most cordially return the same.
Perkins Don't you want the loan of
- , A. . O .... t
a live newspaper a uay or i u .- i.ul
throat and Itobber?" Traitor and
Coward; how would that offset it?
If Omaha can be discriminated
tigninst to easily, she had better come
south t the Platte. We'll give her a
larger Paddock to run in, where she
won't get short of gnus? so often.
How does that "sharp eyed and clear
headed gentleman," Manager Perkins,
like being called a "cut-throat and rob
ber," by the leading papeu?) of the
town where ho established his fiead
quarttrs not long since?
We have received from the Sec'y of
the State Grange, the journal of proceed
ing of the Nebraska State Grange, 5th
cession, held at Fremont; also journ
al of proceedings of National State
-titange, 9th session. Thanks.
Will Macilurphy, of the Plattsmouth
1Ikhal1, tell us how it happened that
Cunningham didn't have the National
Republican Convention held at Platts
luouth instead of Cincinnati Blair
J 'Hot.
Couldu't vote loud enough-that's all.
Forsooth, a bridge at PI ittsmcuth,
"discriminates against Omaha." Don't
build it, Mr. Perkins, don't; Omaha
might move away, commit suicide, or
ijnething. Don't ask it citizens of
Cuss and the South Platte; don't stand
:p for your interests. Dr. Miller
tnijht call you cut-throats and roofers.
Th Bee flatters itself that the Oma
.ia Herald only circfllates 200 copies
south of the Platte, so that but few of
ihe people will see the mean things
Miller says of us, and that help to
. widen the breach between Omaha and
' '.Le rest of the State.
You can't dra w our stinger that way,
lie. Bee, we shall send out about a
-Thousand copies to the people south of
the Platte, that will tell the stings that.
help to widen the breach."
We have no hesitancy in delaring
liiit any man in Congress." either in
- the House or the Senate, who was or is
' j be elected by the votes ttf the rrhole
people of this State, cither directly it
through a Legislature, who does not
-support" by his vote the true interests
of the whole of the honest hard-working
toilers and tax-payers of this State,
is not only an enemy to Omaha (and
its little county), but to the best inter
ests of Jiimvelf. and his State, and
Cass County, has 2000 votes that says
30; irrespective of party.
"It is of course, understood, as was
fairly stated in our first article on the
Incorporated commercial cut-throats of
the Iowa "ioor railways, that our des
ignation of them is in no sense pv-rson-l.
The managers, general and local,
vf these lines, are all gentlemen, and
are altogether to popular personally
. for the good of the people of Omaha,
or. for that matter, for the good of
each other. We speak of them as im
personal cut-throats, and only in a busi
aess sense " Omaha Iltral d.
' For God's sake, somebody lend him
a little more mud to wallow in, and
help coyer up his brazen face if possi
ble. If we ever had occason to call a set
ot gentlemen "cut-throats" and rob
bers we would see them further In pur
gatory than a crow could ny in a thous
and years, before we would crawfish in
that style.
Woman proposes ami wan gits up and
We have been as much surprised as
pained by the "reading of an article in
last Saturday's Omaha Republican, on
the attempt now making by the Bur
liugton & Missouri River It. R. Co. to
force the Union Pacific Co. to pro rate
with it, and we are led to ask that pa
ler if it considers the necessities and
prosperity of Omaha so paramount to
those of the rest of the State, and es
pecially the South Platte portion,
that it will descend from its claimed
position as the leading newspaper of
the State, to become the local journal
of Omaha, even if that burg does have
20,000 souls?
We have had too much of thi3 sort
of assumption in the past, and, it only
needs a few more such articles to kin
dle a blaze of indignation that will
hurt the Rejntbllcan and Omaha more
grievously than the success of the li &
M. projects possibly can.
As lo the Omaha Herald taking up
the light for the Union Pacific, we be
lieve no one feels surprised at its course,
for it wears the V. V. collar, anil its ed
itor is a standing evidence of the as
tronomical illusion which beholds the
sun rise and set midway between Jay
Gould's head and heels, always under
standing the view to be a distant one
and beheld posteriorly.
But for the Omaha Rexmblican to
lose its broad views on any matter of
State importance, and suppress its
boasted interest in the general welfare
to gratify its Omaha readers, and be
cause it is published there, and possibly
because its proprietors have pecuniary
interests at stake in Omaha, is a mat
ter of painful surprise to us.
Without being grangers, we feel and
know as do loth the editors of the
Herald and Republi'-an, th.it the LTnion
Pacific II. R. Co. is an immense monop
oly, and that it holds the 15. & M. at a
fearful disadvantage by refusing rates
to it, thus compelling a passenger who
goes to Cheyenne, or any point beyond
Kearney, to pay as much if lie gets off
the train of the U. &. M. at Kearney,
and goes aboard the U. P., as though
he had got on the U. P. at Omaha.
If either of the editors above men
tioned can call that right to the people
of this State, they will prove them
selves special pleaders of so high an or
der that we would consider them enti
tled to life passes on the U. P., to say
nothing of silent partnerships In prof
itable hash houses along its line.
Wo would like to call the attention
of our young friend Sup't Irving to a
fact. When the management of the B.
& M. saw fit to remove some of their
offices to Omaha, although it was con
sidered detrimental to tin's town, and
unjust by many of our people, no
harsh words followed them, no coarse
epithets were applied to the officers of
the road, and no idiotic threats of re
taliation; but the chief paper(?J of the
town they have chosen as their so call
ed "headquarters," on Use slightest pro
vocation, on the mere assumption that
they are looking after their bet inter
ests, designates its principal officers as
"cut-throats" and robbers. How does
it set, brother Irving?
COUNTY AFFAIIiS.
SPEND Y0FU MONEY AT HOME.
- i
First, It is your home; you cannot
improve it much by taking money away
to invest.
Second There is no way to improve
a place so much as to encourage good
mechanics, good schools, and good peo
ple to settle among ou, and this cannot
be done unless you spend your money
at home.
Third Spend your money at home
because there is where you get it. It
is your duty.
Fourth Spend your money at home,
because when it is necessary for you to
get credit, it is of your own town mer
chants you have generally to get it,
and they must wait for it. Therefore
when you have the cash in hand spend
it at home.
Fifth Spend your money at home
It will make better merchants of your
merchants; they can and will keep bet
ter assortment, and sell at lower rates
than if only the business they can do is
what is credited out, while the money
goes to other places,
Sixth Spend your money at home
You may have sons growing up who
may be some day the best merchants in
town. Help lay down the foundaton
now. It is a duty. It may be your
pride in after years to say: "By my
trading at the store I got my son a
position as clerk and now lie is propri
etor." Then you will think it hard if
jour neighbor spends his money out of
town. Set the example now.
Seven Spend your money at home.
set the example now. luv your drv
goods, jrroceries. meats, and evervthin
at luiiii', and yon will see a wonderful
change in a short time in the buisness
outlook of the place, therefore deal
with your home merchants.
Eighth Spend your money at home;
what do you gain by going off? Count
the cost and see what you would have
done by letting jpoor merchants have
the cash. Strike a balance and see if
you would not have been as well oil,
besides helping your merchants.
Ninth Spend your money at home.
Your merchants are your neighbors;
your friends ; they stand by you in your
sickness are your associates; without
your tr;ule they cannot keep in bus
iness. No stores, then no banks, no
one wantng to buy property to settle
on to build up your place.
Tenth. Meichauts should do their
advertising at home. They should get
their bill heads, circulars, cards, letter
heads, envelopes, and ail their printing
at home, of their own newspaper,
which aids them in many ways, and
advertises them hundreds of times
without any pay whatever. Merchants
should set the example to their cu.tom
eis. by patronizing liberally their home
newspapers. Men and women are
imitative animals and prone to follow
the example set thein. How can mer
chants expect their neighbors to trade
with them if they set the example of
going away from horns for their print
ing and advertising? Let merchants
and people patronize home enterprise,
home industry and home trade. So
shall they all be prosperous and happy.
There is some talk of removing the
headquarters of the Platte from
Omaha, to some point in the vicinity
of Salt Lake. Utah.
Til E NEVT C'JilSLSSIONEIL
Something ahont Newspapers in Gener
al, and Editors ia Particular.
C. II. KATES AND LAND GRANTS.
Among the notable events, in Cass
County during the past few weeks,
such as the- discovery of immense coal
beds, the collapse of the Weeping Wa
ter Jiejlster and the holding of a regu
lar term yf Court, we have have also
struck a rara acis in these parts a
new Democratic red hot reform Com
missioner. His name is Ramsey ; you
may have heard of him. He beat our
friend Hoover last fall and we think
our doughty captain must have thrown
some old world. Black forest, magic
German spell over the hitherto un
clouded intellectof the renowned Ram
sey, in order that time in its celebrated
"whirligig" may bring around to the
Captain its oft-asserted and inevitable
"revenges."
Mr. Ramsey has objected to every
bill but one, we believe, that has been
brought before their highnesses, the
Commissioners, since his advent in
the board. That one was for verv
"dirty work," he said, and he allow
ed it.
He beats all the lawyers we ever saw
at objecting. When a lawyer objects,
however, he must sustain his objection
before an impartial judge. In this
case of course the judge will be the
people, and we understand Mr. Ram
sey proposes to leave his case there
next fall for them to decide in a race
for Legislative honors, where he will
have a still larger field to object in, and
may become famous, should he happen
to get elected, as the great american
ohjei-tor ; even as Jim. Doom, another
celebrated Cass County politician, be
came famous as the great sii'jtjtsler.
The IIkrat.d at present, is of the
opinion that Ramsey is wasting more
time than he is saving money to the
county, but we propose to help him
along all we known how and when he
gets done with all his objections, and
lias proved everyone else a rogue or a
rascal but himself, and that next fall
gets around here then that IIkuald
will calmly, dispassionately sum up
the Dr. and Cr. side of ledger and if
Mr. Ramsey has really accomplished
any permanent and truly economical
reform, then will the Hkkald hold up
both hands for him and shout: Ram
sey! tiii the granite boulders in the
great Weeping Water valley shall re
sound with our cries.
Mr. Ramsey, like many another
neophyte, has suddenly found himself
removed from tiie quiet and secluded
hauhts of a country schoolmaster, ac
customed to contact with subordin
ate and inferior intellects, completely
under his command, and where pleas
ant theories of abstract right are relig
iously taught and believed by both ped
agogue and pupil, to actual contact
with the great public world as it is; he
finds himself confronted with the
facts of public duties instead of the
theories of how it ought to be done.
If he passes through this ordeal and
comes out successful, he will have to
become something more than a chron
ic objector.
jxirts, as works of grr-at literary art,
and caused thij pvoph? to rush madiy
after the Hi:i:alis containing lhe:n. ' The t:;!i.i.Tin is the text of Mr. Cro-.n:' Bills
b-.iying thousands of ci-pies.t.'i' ii would ; jvg -nliti; K it. r.tfes and hand Ciaiils :
Wc gladlv print them free, and donate' Ai;il.!.
a handsome subsidy to it. besides, as a l.imiiii:;: rates for lite ti'.uii;)t.r;a:lon o, fnii:i:t ' Wheat
public benefactor. u.i.t p v.-.r-oi-s oer th oridse ronsirnrted , coin". .I".".'.'."."
, - . ti. i , , by the I niKii encitic 11 wlioad t oinp.oiY across Oais
If we should try to make a purely the. Mis..n-i i:ivr at Omaha, .nh,. ' ' Kyr
literary paper here, we should igno- ! Iif u f""i' i j i-ic chju ;i; -ux or '- i parley
i ttnwc ii.cnihLcn: I liar ;tiur ;is;i; ox H(rs
THS MARKETS.
1IOMF. MAUKiri'S.
KKCOini D BV WI1ITK & IAI!1I Alt.
miniwusly fail; every one knows that.
If we should turn into a mirelv leiral ! tiii-t a-t u sinii not i- i.vuf.ii f r the Vnson
or ad verti-uni' sheet it would siwm ! ''"lC Kat.ioaU C o:np:i- j , us 1. see or avsi-tis to
oi a.ivei using s.itti, it voum .soon 4.n.,r;r(. 1lie t!l ,,, IKe ,ii:irs fr ;inv ,.a. of
have no readers, except of that C'ass irei;ht, nor more than twenty-live tent's for any
or worse yet. none at all, and in either I ransenuer. pa-sins overtne i iMi-i aiidapi.ioa.'ii
.. .. . . i es eonsinu-trd ov sjid eonin.iiiv. lieteeii ( onn-
Case it WOllld Cease to be a liaCSUnpT i r i H'ii.-N. in lowa.and 0:i.a ia'in tlie S!:-. .,f
and useful as a disseminator of countv
affairs to those who really want and
ought to have the facts.
Only on rare occasions do the busi
ness details of a count' or State be
come so notorious as to warrant their
being published as items of news, and
we hope the affairs of Cass county
have not arrived tit that pass. Even
then it is generally the condensed and
boiled down opinions of the editor,
the gist of the matter extracted by his
wit and brain labor, that is really read
and becomes a marketable article of
absolute value to the paper.
"WE I at rou tiii: PAPICK''
And that entitles us to this matter
Do you? how and when do many of the
readers, aspiring politicians among the
number pay for it? Months and years
after the news( ?) has been published,
after public officers and parties and
men have been overthrown or m ule by
the same and mouths after the editor
has paid out if same other cuniiu'jK, oT
some one else's pocket, for the paper
and the printing and the press work
and the ink, our tardy growler comes
in perchance and deposits Si, and thinks
he has done w onders towards paying
for the newsf ?)
What dues that S3 pay for? For the
sake of real information let us exam
ine and see.
Years ago, in England and in fact in
all old countries, they printed newspa
pers for the rich. J'hev charged what
Cattle,
lsin-kw heat
4O-I70
2X"2l
VVfAS
40
a.vt
1 2of;.i :
C oo"t i"
3 t'';'.4 o
;0
Nebraska
A BILL
Derlnritiz lands heretofore granted to certain
milro.tJ companies .subject to state taxation.
Seetioti 1. He it enacted by the Senate and
House of lie present atives of ihe Cnited States
of America in Congress assembled, Tli.it no pro
vision contained in either the act entitled "An
art to aid in toe construction of a railroad and
telegraph trom tin; Missouri river to the" I'acilie
ocean, and to secure to the (loveruinent the use
of the same fur postal and military purposes."
approved July t. i.m2. or the act amendatory
thereto, approved July 2. 1S4. shall be so con
.s:rii9d as to exempt from taxation by State au
thority laitds which either of the companies in
said acts mentioned, or irs successors, shall have
earned by the construction of its road, or parts t
thereof; Provided. That such roads or parts;'
thereof shall have been first accepted by tiie I
t'niled Slates in the maimer in said acts pre- I
scribed; and taxes ;issessed either before, or i
sueii as may np assessed, .-utcr the passage of
this act. upon lauds ear-. ed by "aid companies,
or their successors, or cither of them, shall be
valid as against any claim or dtle of the L'nitod
States in or lo such lands.
s-ce. 2 That if any ''onipany entitled to said
lands or parts thereof shall fail to pay the costs
of surve in ai.d selecting the same, or the land
officers fees, the pu:vh.i.-r of any ol said lands
at tax sale may pay such costs and fees due i:;-
the lands by iii:n pun-iiased i t iie properof
fi .-!. aLd theietinon letters natcnt shall issue lo
such company, couvi yiug such lauds to it. but i
subject to the leiral rihti and title of such tax
s.de purchaser.
VALUABLE TO EVERY HOME.
Money,
Gold,..
LATEST SEW YOKIC MAKKKTS
New Yokk. Feb. 9.
4V
1 H
Klour
Wheat
Com,
oats
Kve
Barley,
Hoirs
Cattle
VTI-'ST I'lIICAtiO MAKKTTS.
Chicauo. Feb. 9.
ft on
10.'
-lo't
... - - 31 '
i
75
7 fi"tw.7 "
4 13 t so
national Medication.
Medication is only successful when it is ra
tional, and it is rational only when it begins at
the oefjmnin;!. tn other words, to cure a mala
i!v, its cause must be removed. Weakness,
either jrencral or local, is the origin of the great
majoi ity ot diseases. Keinforee the vital ener
gies, reljillate digestion and secretion, by
sirenm heuiti' the organs w hich perform those
all-important functions, and dysitrpsia const i
p.ilion. kidney and Madder complaints, uterine
iliitieuliics. impure circu'.al ion, and the thous
and and one ailments which are the conse
quences of ilchiiit). are completely, and in
most cases permanently, removed, 'l'he best,
sifest and most nerecaole tonic ;md al tent live
that can be emplov eil for this purpose is Hos
teller's Stomach Bitters. The experience of
twenty-five years, during which time it has out
lived perhaps ten times that number of ephem
eral preparations whieh have entered intoeom
petil ion it h it , has moved i; to lie uueiuule!
as a remedy for all disorders accompanied by
or proceeding from weakness fj
We shall do our readers a favor bv
calling their special attention to the j '
value, the usefulness, and we may say I ms fi fi V P
the direct profit, of supplying them- j f . ,C j IMXt
selves the present year, with one of the j Wk-iMiaI
clieajnst, as well as tli.) most valuable
Journals i.-uel in the country. It
OUT ! !
the printing and the literary workc-.v, costs hardly half a cent a day, a sum
and they sold their papers for a price easily saved, while iU practical hints
Among the bills particularly object
ed to by the new commissioner, are
the printing bills. First, for printing
the bridge report, for which the Huu
ald kindly cha'ged half rates, viz:
So'o.OO. Whether Mr. Ramsey thinks
we ought not to have published it at
all, or that the Commissioners ought
not to have ordered it published, or
tht the IIkuald should have publish
ed it free of expense, his .vritten pro
test does not say. Verbally, he makes
just this three-liold ohection, if we un
derstand him correctly.
We join issue with our friend, tiie
new Commissioner, and in giving our
view of his objections we shall try and
help him along the thorny road toward
the calm and peaceful haven of true
reform, by a few lessons in political
economy.
First, the HniiALD is a newspaper
employing several persons, and with
considerable capital invested. The
persons so employed depend on our
judgment and business tact to enable
them to receive their wages. It is
both our duty and our right to receive
afaircompenstionforo-.tr own labor,
and for the use of the money so invest
ed. Therefore we certainly should
not feel warranted in refusing any
kind of a public report or any other le
gitimate business offered us, simply
because one political party or the oth
er, or a private party, does net like the
substance of the report.
The people had petitioned the Com
missioners for a published report on
those bridges and we suppose they con
sidered themselves bound, as servants
of the people, to have th report pub
lished. At all events it is a matter the
Hkbalij has nothing to do with, and
can in no wise affect the justice of our
bill.
Lastly, If any logical icason can be
given why the surveyors and the in
spectors should be paid for making
that report, or even the carpenters for
building the bridges, and the Commis
sioners themselves, while sitting in
iudcrnient on these matters, should re.-
1 ceive pay for their work, ami a news
I paper should not charge for its work
in printing the same, we will with
draw the bill. Any reason that will
lie in equity, in law or in moral obli
gations if Mr. Ramsey, can educe tiny
the editor of this papaer will refund
the money cheerfully, but when we do
we want all other employees of the
county, the commissioners included, to
donate their work for the public good
also. We will stand that game as long
as they can.
It should be given as an item of
news Mr. 15. urges, "we pay for the pa
per" says R. "and we are entitled to the
news" so! Let us see; that brings us
around to a few words about
to cover this charge, from lUo to 2c
our money, or from -So.-d to 13 a year.
Very small beside our papers some of
thein were toj. The early pipers of
this country were printed an I sold on
the same plan. At these rates only
those who had great natural tastes for
reading, or who were pecuniarily "well
oil" could afford the luxury of newspa
pers and per consequence become pos
sessed of the knowledge and education
in public matters that they impart.
As another sequence of this tli!? rich
and the aristocratic generally ruled the
country, and the papers too, and all un
gainly secrets that militated against
these two classes were carefully exclu
ded from public print and eye.
It remained then, for Yankee ingen
uity to invent a universal newspaper,
a poor man's paper at' a poor man's
price, one that was so cheap every one
could buy, that was so readable every
one must buy. He did it by adding to
the reading or literary part of the pa
per the room and space for advertising
and by charging for the space occupied
ty legal notices and all not ices, ordered
bv the proper authority, that are for
the regulation of order or the promo
tion of civil law and the general well
fare. Thus levying a tax, to a certain ex
tent upon the willing and unwilling to
promote the general good and the fur
therance of general intellig nee (not
news.)
- In no other way could papers be sup
ported in the present day. giving tiie
news and information on public a trail's
that they do. The subscription price
does not cover the composition of the
reading matter. If Mr. Ramsey will
observe, papers devoted to purely liter
ary matter ehargc much more, or the
few weeklies that are published at any
tiling near the price of county weeklies
have by sensation articles or otherwise
obtained an. immense general circula
tion, anil in that case, they neither al
low local advertisements or articles of
special interest to a class of society on
ly; nor would they sell any part of their
reading space for county matter or
public news at any reasonable rate.
Let us try a little arithmetic, the
tryo in mathematics can work this or.t.
If a weekly literary 'paper at i?2 p -r
year had 4!i,0J circulation and could
make j per cent, or one cent on each
copy that would be S52ii,t. ), a very
handsome income. On the other hand
a county paper with 1,0;) ) circulation
making the same amount per copy,
would get 6"00: a sum so ridiculously
small that every one can see the result
of running a county paper o:i subscrip
tion alone even if it were po sii le lo
mak ,'4 per cent 011 an issue of 1,000.
which of course is preposterous.
Or another way, 1,000 copies of a
county paper and very f ?w Counties
take to excee-I 1,000 S,0' , one fourth
of that is inevitably lost in bad sub
scriptions, say it netts j?lo'.)0. It takes
about $s."0 per year for white paper
alone. Such a paper as the IIkkaLd
could not be run with less than three
persons whose wag s at Hie lowest av
erage would be ;l week or sMS'O
per year. This is purely for mechani
cal work, add to that ink, wastage, the
Si 1st investment, or the wear and tear
of types and machinery, to say nothing
of editorial work, and it must be plain
to even Mr. Ramsay's capacity that a
county paper of any dimensions and
edited with anv sort of ability cannot
be run on the money from its subscrip
tion alone, and that the paying of t4
per year does not entitle t'.ie general
reader or the county to have any
amount and all kinds of reading mat
ter insetted lice of charge.
For these and other reasons, wir:e
men, and men tiiat have been called
statesmen, have thought it better to
to foster ami encourage the press, not
cripple and hamper it.
BY POSTAL CARD.
AT COST I
FOR CASH !
Store for m or Real ! !
FURNITURE,
and "suggestions will be most Iikelv to
bring back that amount many times
over. The oO'J to 000 beautiful, in
structive engravings, are alone worth
many times the cost of the paper. We
refer to the Amcrimii Ayrieulturist,so
called because started . years ago as
a Rural Journal, but now enlarged and
improved to suit the wants of every
family in Country, Village, an 1 City.
It is packed full of good things, useful; Of every description
.,.,,1 i 1. 1.
ber contains 44 large (double octavo), I (JlOill)Cr TIllUl LVCr.
pages, beautifully printed. It has i. Some things even
much for instructing find pleasing
Housekeepers and Children, and Far- RF!T .D"W" COST I !
liters. Mechanic's, Merchants indeed
all classes. Its Hons Plans and im- Chamber SetS, $25 till fl tip.
nrtrveu.euts with Engravings, and par- j Dressing BlireaUS, $12.50, UI3.
licularsas to cost, Mul the common- , 0 , , 'rJr ' ' 1
sense directions, are worth more than
uureau stanus, ijJY.DU, up.
many costly architectural works. Its ! Bedsteads, $3, lip.
constant, persistant, fearless exposure j "Ey t PTisinn Tflh1p3 70 nri
of Humbugs and swindling schemes, j ,XlrIIalI(i Aaoies .M Up.
is of great value to the whole conn- j CliairS, 50C, lip.
try and to every individual. In short. Ttnst.rm P rwlrovo 9 Kf nn
Centre Tables, $6, up.
Wool and Wire 3Ist tress-
it is full of good things for everybody,
and we advise everybody to take it this
year. It will be specially valuable in
this Centennial year. Its circulation,
which is a hundred fold greater than
the majority of other journals, enables
the publishers to supply the Avici iutn
Agriculturist at the very low rate of
Sl.Ct) ;i year, post-paid, or four copies
for;3o.40. Take our advice and send
for it to the publishe s, vi'.: Messrs.
! Okange Jrir & Co.vrAsvJ '44 Bioad-
wav, .New l ork t.itv.
es, very Cheap.
Everything in the Furniture
Line, Cheap.
If you don't believe it call
and see for your
elvcs, at
I L A TTS.MO t'TII, NCR.
STATE ITL3IS.
Richi.rdson County is going to have
a distillery. Some three or four thous
and dollars have already been pledged.
On Mond.iv last an agt d irentlemam.
whose name is supposed to have been
done, boarded the 3!. &. M train for J
Real rice. Conductor Frost, in answer !
to his inquiries, told hint that he !
should get off at Crete to take the train j
for Reatriee. dust after leaving Crete,
however, Mr. Frost saw
man still on the tram, and stopped it
i and let him get off. The old gentle
man started to walk back over the
railroad bridge to tli;; deput.' Ju.it af
ter crossing the bridge he was observed
to fall to the ground, and parties on
reaching him found him in a dying
conditio:!. He was conveyed to a hotel
where he breathed his last in about
two hOUI'S. Upon his bodv Was found Seminal Weakness. Spermatorrhwa. Niu-lif l.os
i letter i n t rod n.-i n -r Mr Junes nf Wis- ' cs. .sexual J eiii:iT ami imjioiency. i.o.-s of Sex
a It UCI inilOdtH lllg .U. JO.l s, Ol VV is- , j..,,.,., :ls ,.. ,esnli l Mdf-ahn.se in youth, sex
coiisitl, to Mr. I.lkr, at Stctl;; Clt V. ! ual cxci sses in maturer yeaiw. ami ;"i!l iiimcdi-
siftipd bv ev-CurcTpssinan S twver of ! nn nts to man ia'e, permanently cured wh limit
s. at a o ha i oi, jessiii ia 3.n,ui, oi ,11,.Ivlirv ,. ;1I1V ()! i. , ,,. 1:j l.-,. l-uieim
Oshkosh, is. Ills pockets niSO eon- ! :u a di-tanee treated by letter. Medicines sent
tallied a draft for tfl.OO'J and about ' ecr where. Voting men who have become
the victims oi solitary ice -mat, urea tit in and
Medical institute
i:.iTA-5Lirj.IJKI AS A RKFl'OK
n;ou ia(keuy.
i Y'i' i ' i TIH' ""'y I'laee where a sure cure can be i-e-t!i:j
old gentle- - 1-ed upon. I.iitlc U rcoiuri d in the way of
I advertising. a tne rcnutalion of the Institution
j is e;i known ihrouhuul ilie west. Call and
te convinced that this is the biiest and most
'complete institution of the kind in America
! for l lie successful treatment of all Chronic Sev
j it-it. Private and V'encral It'se:tsesof both sex
I sin it its Syphilis, t loaorrlnea. llleet. Stricture,
i Kuptuie. Varicose Veins, t trehu is, P.ubo. s.c.
All nriimry and syphil.'iic or mercurial affec
! tin-is of ihc throat, skin or bones are treated
j with unparalleled success. Cieiorrho-a cured
I in rrom three to live il.iys. Syphilis cured ir.
from live to ten las. t Her I7.:7a cases cured.
oss-
$150 iti money. The coroner's jury re
turned a verdict of death from heart
disease. The decased was about seven
ty vears of aga. Jurn if.
tCoiiii.naiicatcd.)
Ir.:i OF miTiiEKIA.
It is a
treated
readers'
we shall try
to the argu-
I). J. T. Reed, formerly of Crete, and
now in West Las Animas, Colorado,
Remembers the Heuald and helps up
out iu these hard times.
NEWSPAPEKS,
and what constitutes news,
subject that has often been
from both newspaper and the
view of it, nevertheless
and add a few iwdnts
ments.
County commissioners proceedings j
and business reports published in ex- i
tenso are hot news. News is a salea-
hie commodity : it must be a reada-
ble commodity. It must be something
that is in universal demand.
It is a settled newspaper fa:-t that
readers do not crave these reports,
they do not hanker after them, alwavs
excepting a very few, directly interest
ed ia the matter in hand.
Thev tlo not rush around the street
to buy them; they do not squander i
wealth to get th"in. These repoitsi
are not even readable matter to the ;
subscribers of the Hkkald outside of i
Cass county, and it is sale to say that
one half of its readers in the county .
invariably skip ti-iii and wii.li we j
would give them something else be- ;
sides those tiresome reports. j
We do not say it is right i hey should i
We lament that our young '
Aftox Fkontiek Co., Xi:n., i
Jan'y Mist lsTG. f
En. IIekald: Will jjive notes of
weather from Dec. 26th to Jan. -list;
notes taken early each mocning. Av
erage temperature for ill morning
12,;j', above zero; avei age temperature
for month of Jan. 12"; coldest day, sj j now associated ia d
far. 12 below zero, the only time below ; u s wio;
zero this winter. Warmest dav this i over dep.
winter. Jan 4th, 32 above zero. Have j Jos ;5S s "
had a few snow storms, but nothing widtiov.
severe. W e are not feeding stock vet
Louisville, C... . Co.. Nkh..
.J.iim try Ti h, isiti. )
Dear Hi:rai.i : This monnnsr finds us .'.rap
ed iu mourning. T.ie urim monster, death, low
ered dark pinion., over our humble dwelling
on the l.S!h lust., and laid claims on our dear
little I'diaetta ; vrho pcacefu.iy passed into the
a. iu-i of .Je.-us Hi iii'nutes of 11 o'clock p. in.
Aited " years. 4 ninut hs. and 15 days.
And jijjr.iu lie returned and lowered las dark
pinions oi the moiidiig of the 'S-'i. and laid
claims mi oar dear li.tle Elijah VW-bster, who
p:isscd over the 'iver, safe into the arms of .le
s:;s. 20 minutes ol 7 o'clock, a. in., a--ted Z years.
and 1 d.iy. I
Oiii- here:' venie'.it. is ' leal : i? .seems :i!mot I
greater t. a i we can bear, lint not our will, bid
the Lo: ('".- nc done. Death h i.- paled the lire t f
ilicii lit. i minds, an i a convoy uf Angels have
Mtiifi their spirits welcome limne lo those bright
mansions preprie.l forliiem, ia ihe 2'aiathse of ;
tiod. and his aiiuoaited. Our near hale ones
have bid cari.li aiii.'u and have gene to liieir
home. And we niouni toeir loss : "iU cau.-.e
the siivcrcord is hitiscd, and the ;;oldt u bo.l is
broken, and the pitcher has h.-cn broken at the
iouiaaiu, and the w heel broken at the t i-tt ru,
and dust has been tnrued to dust.aad lite spirits
to Hod w tin t;ve litem." fdeep, loved ones un
til Jod snull call joti forth, in itie i,csiirtevtlou
morn.
Alnn st the sam.; hour that aauoiuu e I the de
mise of one ivo notice of the di'par; of the
o.ucr. il'.ey were assuciai-'d iu life, and are
It It. i Kliovv U is saiil tnat
i loueep, niiu liiouru, ami si.i a tcais
r'.c-l loved ones, hut we tiiinl; not.
; ami !esrruetive namr vvuicii anima'iy sweeps
I to an untimely urave thotLsands of younn men
! of t he most cxintcd tab nts and briliiai't intel
lect, who nairat otherwise entrance Senates
with the thunders of e)oiucncc. or waked to te
stacy t lie bvinn lyre may call with full confi
dence. What a' pity that a yoiiiie man. the
hope of his country, t he tiariinn of his parents,
should be snatched from all piospccis. and en
joyments ot lile hy the conseUeiices of deviat
ing from the path of nature and imluliiiii'; in a
certain seciel habit. Sued x-rsoi,s must, he
foiv contempt.-!! iiiir marriage, reflect that a sound
l:li:nl :lln I lli.e V M
tlie mo-l neces;t!-y requis
ites f promote connuhial hapniness. imleed
without these the joamey throuch lite be
com s a weary )iilt ima.i;e. the prospect hourly
darkens to I he view'. I 'ie aiilid becomes shadow
ed with despair and tilled with melancholy re
tlecl ions t hat t lie happiness ol a not her is h! j jilt
ed wit h our tiv.n. To all erring ynunjj men we
wou'itt say, do nol keep this secret to yourself
and your tied un' ii it lias sapped the vitals and
left yoaawieekofliumaiiity.il cmsr to your
self "aid a Imrden lo society. If you are eiitan
irlt d hi the snare of self-pollution, or any pri
vate disease. Ih-e trom its destruction, ami ap
ply at sr. Joseph Medical Institute for treat
ment and become one more a human beinjj.
I "Cures mi tranieed or mony leliilied.
- ll female diflienlties and imMilimeiits
to Maiii...:;e treated with safety and success.
2. urear medical Itonir and secrets lor la-
I dies and irents. Sent fn-e lor two stamp-,
j Addless S:. .Josee Me,li-a I list 11 lite. Francis
i S'reet, between Second and Third, St. .l-eph,
; Ma. ;wly
W. L. Tucker,
has removed fo the buildirnr opposite Math
ews Hardware Store, (t m till Street. Bet. Main
and Vine.) Where in addition to other work,
he will ive cei;U attention to
UEFAIRING FURNITURE,
MAKlXd l'It;TVliK FUAMtS.&C.
Also A sent for the COMMON' SENSE IKON
IMi TAlll.ES. of whieh I have a
number on had ; call
am see I hem.
See ! Head ! Look ! !
The Compliments of the season to all
our customers, from
Salomon INatlmxi
For the increase in our trade and
the large business we have done the
last year, we desire to thank our num
erous friends and hope they may con
tinue the same as we expect to offer
better and better inducements for
them to do so.
Wo hope to see you at the old stand,
the ensuing year, where we tire prepar
ed to do a large wholesale and retail
business.
on. ;rti; i:vs
FAMILY JlEIIICIXESi
AUK the result of an eTer1emv of thirty yi ur
In the practice of a nicccvlul phvsn ian.
Hitler 'fi'oiiie - An e( i;n t of oo;'s ami h 1
so judiciously and meiliclo: '1 comhincil (hat
eeiy part of the diseased lu.dy receive Him
help reunited. It Is not claimed as n panacea
for all Ihe ills of life, but for 1 vspejisla, billion
and liver complaints, fuver and Him, cholera,
debility, and all diseases of II. t stomach, liver,
and digestive organs. It U an efleeiual reiucdy'
A a preventative against fever and ano ii
malarious diseases it Is imsnipasved j
strcnet hens and builds up the ilehiliiaieii t.ts
tcm, and j;ives renewed vljjor lo all n.-irls of ih
ImmIv.
K'lnie'M i'lirc Acts an a rllnretfr evaenaf
In cases of dropsy, emit, travel, nd discuses ot
the blatbler and kidnevs. imriljct the blood,
cures scrofula and erupllve diseanes. rheumatic
and neuralgic pains, and all til -ease of llm uri
nary organs.
Iltprrlornnt- A prompt remedy rorrinirb
asthma, rioup. and all disease of the throat,
lunjfs ami chest, and the first n.'igc of otn
sumption and typhoid fever.
IVvrritnd Airue IMIln Are prepnreilej.
pressly to aid the tonle In curing acute nnd
chionic cases, they act without depletion.
4'i-ii!M'Hii IdiiDiieii t ..im the miic tt
the ilesh. and peiiel rales to the lione or neat 1
pain, uivin relief to manor bc;ut as dpocdllj
as any oul w ard application ran.
Sold by all Drin;nisls and Dealers.
E. T. P.AtU'hl FK . CO..
ryl . I'm Puff on. l"t
We have just received a large new
stock of goods,
PURCHASED
CASH !
Right from
Head-Ouarters
and the
at the very lowest prices; which we
intend to sell at such rates as will as
tonish everybody.
Wei do not pretend to say vre sell the
cheajest in the world, neither do we
profess to say that we keep everything
from an axe-handle to telegraph
matches, and from pies to bologna sau
sage as so many do
BUT WE 1)0 SAY:
we are the only
Exclusive Dealers,
in our city in
Staple & FANcy
DRY GOODS.
In these lines, and in NOTIONS, wc
lead the trade.
We have the lest assortment of the
latest novelties from the last patent
needle to the most fashionable style o,f
silk I less.
We sell at the lowest prices that can
be found between here and San-Francisco,
Cal. We think that few mer
chants CAN COMPUTE WITH 7$.
and to convince you, we especially ask
your candid attention to the following
list of prices: !
Jl'ST IX.'!
:i cases of American standard prints,
1 J yards for
1 case cotton flannel, at 10 vards
for....
12 cases tloniestic ginghams, at
yards for
" cases of muslin, best brand
vards for
We have employed the
OLD RELIABLE
mmmi
Jas. B. Folden.
Now, Friends, if ten want
Fair Dealings, and to go home
satisfied, bring in your
Wheat,
C
We also respsctf ally announce
to you that we haye 01
on a full lino of
nothing.
Dry Good,
Groceries,
Quccriswaro.
Boots 6c 8 lions,
ftotiann,.
Saw
. 1 00
OUR
Mill Yard
is well stocked with
Cottonwood
AXD
Building Materia!
Axle Trees,
AND
Wagon Tongue,
A very largt; assortment of blxrk and j Com irhon you need anything in r
colored alpacas double warp, the finest ! jn and gt ruuc for j;tir mon.
in the city, trom 2.c a yd. up.
A prime lot of ladies shawls from )?1
up.
Carp:.t chain, standard brand, pound
package 1 2."
A new and handsome lot ,f carpets,
hemp, from 27; cts. un.
j Ingrain, from r, u
! three-plv, from
New sttick of handsome embroideries.
10
12
1 00
1 00
1 00
J.& H.Shera,
31 tf
f rom
. 12l2 cts. per jtl. nj
Rtidies fashionable collarets,
from 5 cts. up.
New stock, all colors, of worsted
fringes, 20 cts. per yd.
In addition to all these new goods at
very low rates, we offer our large stock
of
LAM EX AND (IE NTH"
Furnishing Goods !
now on hand, at
ipiii
PRICES !
desire to disjose of our HATS,
CAPS, (J LOVES. HOOTS and
SHOES, TRUNKS and VA
LISES, FURS, BLANKETS, AND
I COMFORTERS.
p vvtli tan-.
Me ced.'.r "!
that we
ve. and
p." We j
water ii j
Careful Work and Prompt Attend-
HHci; to Cull.
4,i-ly VM. I.. Tl'CKKK.
JEW SLRY,
and Ladies Milliner' goods will be clos
es out at DEAD DOWN, BED ROCK,
as for instance,
Ladies' Hats,
81 50
Cash Prices,
(fine trimmed
j except milch cows.
1 in the last week
i health gfmd. Yours,
Same new settlers ,
or two. General i
i
I
E. s. Child.
A (ii)01 RESOLUTION.
v. oo .lave tl' Hope ;
fuiU'j. a.i '.ic I t all. A!
uuilci all tbat w.ii i. ior;
VVebsier. "vet t i.rW.'.,
Tliis til" tcloi'io-n ife
acoii-ola! i.ni i' i.s, aiiii sitou.-.
..e voice of i,e t rave
hoii h i! -atii lias i ihi
il o. le .I.i 'iact !;. an I
tle.t.t s.tall Jive aa u."
CAS'SI3II:KKS,JKAS,
waterproofs, and ladies'
Vff Am our adveruner Lk not nia.la lit lT.if
ment uluitrmlier atstinct, . wlU li)Un
rata it a. fullnwa :
K. it. rooTi;. r.i..
Anthor of Plain Il'mi Xlk, Mk Ileal Com m'.n
I S-i"nc! in SMiry. ef... 1J0 Ia xinvrtot) Avenue (mr.
; Ka-t tt-.th Strt), New Yorlt, nn lsiv.yrnnwtr
I -HYSietA. trrat all f.irni. of l.tugtrlng r-r Cl-rnntrt
I Inwt, vn 1 r.roi letter, from .11 irt. tti
j Citilizku Would.
I V.J la nri'll'Utl env of cmfliK-Ung a Mortiral Tr
! H'. he mx!eifMli trcnt:nif niviwot:. itirM in
' Kiiropc, thr U'ritt In !!, linlnlon C
j Canada, and in .very art of tt,c t'nia-il SiatM.
no iKitcrritiA-ij
j Or drtrlon drtin nwl. He ha. rlnrin th" r1
I twenty thn-e year, trrau-d. kuftn-sirnlly nenr.y or tiH
' 4U.IHJ0 Alt fact ei.finrvAMt with eiwh ca-.ir.
'. carefully rcoriel, whetln-r lh'-y b crtiiiniiriir.ti frf
IUt In rtn, or olTvel Ly tlie Ihu-t nr ht
ajwrtiate phyHicians. The latter are alt mimito
mciTcul men.
HOW INVALIDS AT A DISTANCE
! Are treated. All Invalid, at a distance are rmjuirel
to answer a lit of .iain inption. whieh e,W it vr
' .rmnwiin umlr wnich the invalid a'ffr. All mm
t.iUuUiltiOiix irefltml mlrlullu rnn-tHfll. A ix-lr 1( V
yu-m of reiri.trriiiK vent nux'akw or cofif.ion.
Lit of qniwtian ent free, oti ai-l iioiti-'n. t nny (irr
of the world. Sixty patre parnnlilut of EtiiiMcw o
Frcesa, alw cnt free. All the4e teMjruoniai. are
frum thiwe who hnve been treate.1 lv mail and etpr-a.
Advii-s is okfice, o bt mail, rnr.m or chimc,
! Call on or addraa
DR. E. B. FOOTE.
I Ho. 120 Lexine-ton Ave.. 5. T.
KORROW BROS.'
g , w, 5 rf 5 ? I I-' Ji JJ ' ,u llit' saIiH c;italogiu
JL m m. M. m m
39 P
AND
IN SHOUT ;
our S.lVi.:;
t-e to c i i j
The hardest kind of a clutsm
vur faraeai.
do so.
men and voting women do not take
moie Interest in public affairs and Co. !
Commissioner's proceedings, but then ;
we ditl not make the young mn andJ
young women if the county, nor mould !
their minds nor their tastes for read- j
intr: in fact this lat is rather in 1
to get Ramsey's line, and if he could have :
i taught tlwj people fco tulmire brhbe re- ,
A nuniber of Stale ( ranges are adcit
ing the following resolutions for sulcr- j
i'iinnte (Jrar.ej, s: j
Jit-.tofr-ed. Thutth" St at C rang- earti- j
eslly rt commends to tli sut)odiit;te i
(Iranges of the stale to use .their iatSti- j
ence to settle all differences that arise ;
among their members, by the selection J
of three or more disinterested niciii'oevs j
of the Grange, whose decision in the;
mutter shall be dual among the par- :
ties. The adoptitm of this resolution :
would,. we think, be a creat benefit !
and it jaiints out the best means of :
settling differences which necessarily
arise in the Order. i
who lia.e .
ltite" c ,
i;.. !ia e s;- i
c:i in. too oi'.
,r i ;
':
mac j
Machine Shop. ! LINENJ5Q0DS,
:ie.i. i:
tfi'- !!
"Wl.t
Ali.t. I
Aiili.
o-;r e.ui
i'
..... pra:
'If ! O'lC.
. i..:t o-.u
: ; ,.t Iiili;
t'..,l.-.1 1,!
At ! I.. Mono v
ol-t ntalill,
Chicago
r i r: j:i'.-r s;;'.;
.ii'..ler taotms i o
ll'-ll OH? little
utu-e bv i:;c rut
.l:, ci.T s-It Ii; r :.
.s.r.i li-c tic
ia---. liaii'.i : ilea;
tor we i,.
i.it tut i f e
u. we
in-v.; mat
voice tin
s'. -
Subscribe for the Herald and pay
for it in 8dvaTif
v. oi.lo lio v.:;.; i.tf.M oac,
t!lftr s-tirii are v. id. i; :'.;:
eli.il.u : t'.:c .-ol via. in !!;e t'arasli-e
(Jot!. .
Ye.a. ; :!'. if we v.M f " tlie v. '-Iiui
r.;0; I let l'li:!l.:-.it I..1 ip of life, of e
v lia.-c i:ii,tt r cv iail tioo i our t ..: t'l. i:
tae il the of iii-.r c a.ii. ..'.. ;r !
le;.-oi: li'.il.it vvili 1c u- s.Ic t':r
' daH'-'T- tu-.t Ui lV tlcc.'.'eo 11 ou cj',,
' t::: portal '' rtcrii.i! slorv. May tae f.o; i .-lp
us U iiv1 :aill.:'u u -lo.eatfi.
ti.e
''
,'.n
)":.- .. fs
c:-'a tilt
r : 'ie to
c r?e prepaietl to oo a jjtMicral Iasines in
RORSU-SHOEING,
iIc;ati-i--: hJI 'ih;I-4 p I.-iebiis-trry.
.-sc'.i n Si :;. r. Motver,
" ' ifetiiiis- .Kncfi inen.
S'liiwit, Atr 4f.
3DE,ElSSIIsrC3- .
V1ILL PICKS,
AND ALL
on & Steel W ork a Specia)ty.
cw Tr:igons & Eln-rglcs JSade
To 'rtltT.
Z '2f'Ml Worli Warranted to G ire Sut-
Ave j WINTKU GOODS.
and all articles of luxury not staple,
will be sjM way down, to make room
f .ran I JIM ENS E NEW
Spring Stock !
7
I v
Jlanted to sttt DToces PUttn IfomtTulk
and Meiictjl Coniwcri Sense: Alio
J?r 1 cotes Science-in Story.
Firitirtfculars address
f unsv J ii ii I'utiiish i v Corapar.y V K'iStZS
nk vv y n k tc
Dr. Bsr-rsr'i Tonic Bo-el ni I ilo VA.
Th- pil'.are an inf.tlliole remedy f'ir ron-it f"-ttv
an l pil'rs eauxct by wnkut-s. or 'it,reiwi. n of tit
pTiti tic miKion of thn tx,iel.. They very c-" ?
iiK-reaw the actir.ty ol Uia int'-.rltial e.-tnai. tr dur
aoft anl relieve ii!e at one. TtioiiMat:d t.ar
been carel tv ttie:n r"r:ej- JVl r.i.tA. aent by n.i:l nn
retv .t t,f itrioe. Crennre 1 only liy F. ALKKKD
r.P.t'"!f aiT. Phabmcit, 4'ia Fontra ATr-trt-,
Nf.w Yortc CtTT.
Dr.
Xow come ahead, all of you; glad
to show you goods, and gladder yet to
SELL TO
Solom on t$ Ya tJi a n .
Plattsmouth, Xeb., Jan'y 12th76..
Or
Bsrzir's Coanoaal Flail Zstxact ri
Rhub&rb t.ai Diiielio.
Th hMt ovnoiu ttion of purely reelah 4 tn'd'r' A
tn entirely rnv'a Calomel or Blue ful. It icitrei,;
tas 'tv-r. inertrtf the tlow of te.le. and thn. rem v-
, , ( at om. torui lay of the liver, b:louneM aid ha'ttttiHl
C D 1 J i Ttija-.i,n, mil the diea ariin; from noh .a
J trirt:iu. iolc hoailiche. ftatulrnoe. etc. Tae -ffarv
I l v-nv,t .if thin Extract will be proved, r'ulb t. at o ce
j to pitieut, a on. or two tvti are unftictent i
j 3l"r Vtt eorna eTtm tmaatifnllv. I remrve r''npie
all in ri:ind f liver trorhe. V ft per U trie.
1 httl, $V fl't be ent on r . pt ..f the pttce
' v anv d lrei. ree ''f 'hur.'. I-re;r,J ory toy
i ft, ALFEEO UBKyivtty'A rwii.vt-'iyT'. 4tOTVr
I trrvri. Vtf Y'zr.r. Tiit