Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, June 30, 1887, Page 7, Image 7

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    PL ATTSMO OTII WEEKLY HERALD, Tilt ?DAV, JUNE 80, 1SS7.
COUNTY LOCALS.
KI.MWOOU.
From tho Kcho.
tSiiimicl linker is moving into liis new
quartern.
Mr. untl MrH. W. S. Waters were visit
ing ut (Jlcnwood the forepart of the
Week.
Mih. Itowen, of Colunilus, mother of
Mrs. Chus. Ilollenheck, was visiting here
tliis week.
Miss MuMr Swciirinjjcn, of Weeping
Water, was visiting her brother at this
pluco last Siiturthiy.
Mrs. Hutch nnl tliihlren have returned
from their long visit over in I own, und
(leorgc is supremely h ippy.
LOUISVII.I.K.
From the Observer.
Mr. and Mrs. J. 15. Yates who have
been visiting his parents in the western
part of the state for some two months,
returned homo Sunday.
Prof. Sutton, who has been acting as
principal over the schools at Greenwood
for the past year has moved his family
and household fixtures to our city and
will Uke charge of our schools this year,
which will begin on the first Monday in
September.
Pred Hall had his right wrist thrown
out of place one day last week while
breaking at Stout's quarry. He was stand
ing on the steps of the engine and it was
running from IS to 20 miles an hour
when they passed by some braces to a
trussel work which stood near the track,
his arm struck against one of the braces
with such force as to throw his wrist out
of place.
WKKIMNO WATER.
From the Eagle.
cracker on any part of mans antaomy, by
a very simple turn of the wrist.
Miss Doe Klepser one of the popular
teachers in our schools last season, is now
Visiting friends at l'lattsmouth.
The small boy and his fire cracker
Lave commenced to practice for the 4th
by that time they will be able to land a
A. H. Fleming arrived home yesterday.
Ilis claim in Colorado has received many
valuable improvements of late; he has a
new house built ready for his family.
From the KepuMican.
Transfers in real estate are plenty.
Mrs. Spink is not so well this week.
Surveyor Madole was at work in town
Monday.
Mrs. T. F. Jameson visited friends in
riattsmouth this week,
v W. A. Keithley, of riattsmouth, visited
with us the fore part of the week.
A young lady friend f rom riattsmouth
is visiting"Mrs. J. M. Koberts this week.
A team belonging to Will Dunn ran
away with E. II. Wooley last Saturday,
on Sunday the same team ran away with
Fred Dudley.
The entire Weeping Water lire depart
ment will be out on the afternoon of the
fou,-th of July. The hose and hook and
ladder companies will give some line ex
hibitions 'm 1 street-
"WABASH.
From thti Item. , ., , , .
Albert Zabel has a who is quite
sick.
The church bell has bC Put in its
place.
The proceeds of the basket festival
will be applied toward the pure. OI
an organ for the church.
Mr. Horton proposes to flood the .old
creek bed on his place north of the rail
road, for a lish pond and boating part.
It will furnish several acres of water.
Our base ball club went up to Grand
Trairie Saturday to play the Manly club
and were doing them up in ime style
vheu, after three innings, the Manly club
threw up the sponge and gave up the
game in disgust.
Will Woodruffs ponies ran away the
other dav, and breaking loose from the
,"i,.orr,,1 hi ni some distance atter
Dulling him out of the wagon by tlu.
reins. unc siac oi ms
badly scratched and brused.
LVSN.
The most of Factoryville expect to
unove to our town in a short time.
.The town was full of people Saturday
afternoon, watching the track layers.
t A l?nn .t Co.. have built an ad-
ditiou to their store, and are doing a very
good business.
N. G. Dougc of Saline Co., a formar
resident .of this place, is here visiting ms
children a:ul inciuis.
Harvest has commenced in earnest, the
lL i;L-f it would be very jrood;
corn never looke;! better at this time of
the vear than it doc3 now.
The bridge builders are at work on the
loc l.ri.lf. nvcr the Weenincr Water; they
will lay the track to the Weeping Water
today, and then go down on uie ouu-i
end of the line and lay wuac is reauy
tfhere.
Well, Lynn is connected with the out
side world by rail at last, they are laying
! thrmirrh our town. Now. any one
w ting to come to our city, that is to
the track any place north
town, and if the cars are not there
just et a ue tICKet aJlu viWlk
Jake.
avoca.
Fred Ruhga has a -fine new girl.
J. II. Marquardt wa3 Jn Omaha yester
day.
J. C. LaOrango of Lincoln, was in tow n
last week.
Mrs. John Ncwham was visiting her
children in Avoca last week.
C. Lindemann feels very happy since
he became a father. It's a 101b girl.
Mrs. Wm. Mart.all is very ill with ma
larial fever. Dr. Walluccis in attendance.
A. H. Smith and family were in l'latts
mouth lastweek on a visit to his brother
Marshall.
fjJus. Uuss has a new bicycle which he
has already learned to locomote in pretty
good style.
. M. Malcolm had a severe bilious at
tack, but will go to work tomorrow at
Xeth a wka.
Mrw. Louisa Kichardson died last Satur
day evening of spinal meningitis, aged
about P.) years. She leaves a little baby
girl and husband to mourn her loss.
(ll.KANKIt.
TOOK MAN S IIOM.OW.
Crops look well.
I have been a reader of the IIkkai.d
for years, but have never read much from
this pait of Cass county so perhaps a line
from here would lincl a placo in your
columns.
Notwithstanding the name we think
that we occupy one of the finest portions
of old Cass, situated us we are near South
Hend on our north, Wabash and Elm
wood on our south, Greenwood and Ash
land west.
As this is the time of year for picnics,
will mention one we had here June iMth,
it being the last day of our district
school. At noon the scholars headed by
their teacher, Miss Sallie Nicholson,
marched from the school house to Mr.
August Ilingon's fine grove where a large
crowd h:id gathered and had eveything
in readiness. A long table was loaded
from one end to the other, with most
everything good to cat, and we all did
eat and were tilled, and there was plenty
left. After dinner the literary exercises
commenced. First, a song by the schol
ars, after which there were declamations,
singing, aud music; Then the distribution
of presents to each scholar. Those that
had head-marks were paid in cash, by
the teacher, according to the amount of
lead marks ranging from one to rhirty-
ivc cents. The farewell address of Miss
Nickolson was very touching. To say
that all did well is hardly doing justice,
t showed the great care and trainingand
hard study of both teacher and scholars,
and I wish to say here that it would be
well for district boards to retain such
teachers at almost any price, if they can.
Instrumental music was furnished by the
Crawford and Klerser families and the
music was listened to by those present
with delight. Thanks boys and girls,
we hope to hear you again on many other
such occasions. The singing, music and
other amusements were kept up until
nearly sun-down, when all went home
feeling happy and that the day had been
well spent.
One That Was There.
ROCK BLUFFS.
We hear that Mr. Sullivan whose house
burned down last Monday intends to
build a new one soon.
"Fides" has imiirrated atrain. this time
from Plattsraouth to Rock Bluffs. lie
staid two full weeks in Plattsniouth.
The place for holding the celebration
has been changed. The last decision
ibices it in the grove near the post oilice.
George Churchill is in luck again. A
new girl called at his home a couple of
weeks ago, with a claim forboard,clothcs
and an education. lie can count him
self in for a sixteen hundred dollar job
when that claim is all paid.
Just at present, picking peas for the
canning factory, is giving employment to
a good many boys and girls. David
Young took out a whole wagon load
this morning to his pea patch. Last Fri
day he had about twenty-live hands.
J. G. Chandler and Sherad Grayes, who
s'old their store sometime ago to Charles
and Los Graves, started two weeks ago
in a prairie schooner for Ogalalla, Keith
county, Neb., and the last heard from
them they had stopped at Kearney to
look around for a while.
This is the sort of fun the farmers have:
Will Koyal lost an extra good cow a
snort time ago, with milk fever, and
about the same time S. L. i urlong lost a
good calf by its eating some posionous
weed. David Churchill had a tine horse
very badly cut on a barbed wire, so that
he will not be able to use him for some
time, and Sam Schwap had a 100 colt
badly cut in the same way.
Glenn Roval and Ella Churchill ended
their long courtship last Sunday, by go-
inf to the liock Creek Christian church
and getting married. This is the second
marriage the result of a leapyear fourth
of Julv celebration in 18S4, and we are
just holding our breath expecting every
week when we snail nave to report an
other one, the result of the same celebra
tion. We hear there are a few that have
escaped our observation.
Tim'Shaver.
MURRAY.
Mr. Editor: I am glad to see yu
came out so bold and spoke for your
country as tou did about the rebel Hags.
You spoke my sentiments exactly and
thousands of others when you spoke your
own. If Cleveland wants to show his
great respect for the south and teach the
northern people to honor the rebel flags,
he will hnd, in 1SS3, that he, by his acts.
has caused the good thinking people of
the democratic party to dishonor him.
C. W. Miller lias a new road opened up
south of Murray. It starts from John
Edwards and runs northwest.
Mrs. Dr. Brcndel went to Indiana some
two or three weeks ago to yisit her parents
aud while there her father, who had been
quite poorly for some tiuie.died, making
her visit a sad one.
Murray is still booming and intends to
have an old-time 4th of July. Who the
speakers will be I do not know but I ex
pect L. G. Todd w ill lay olf his coat and
wade in, for one, and if he-speaks it will
be a better day for greenbackers than it
will for those who wish to celebrate the
4th in its true light.
Why does the democratic party stand
such a good show for heaven when it
dies ? It is because the good book tells
us, "he that dieth full of the truth shall
be saved." If that is true the democratic
party cannot be lost for they must be full
of the truth as they have never let any
escape them in the history of the party.
Corn crops are looking fine in this sec
tion of the county. The prospects are
that corn will not bring 10c. per bushel
this fall, look out you poor, hark-work-ing
democratic voters, things are coming
down to the old democratic prices and
you must expect to come down to the old
democratic times 20 to 2oc. per day, or
$5 to $S per month, and 130 days per
month at that.
Some time ago Dr. Hrendel went over
to Des Moines, Iowa, to attend a medical
institute. The doctor is a good hearted
soul, and on3 who wishes to save both
soul and body of mankind. He came in
contact with the Salvation Army and
says it was the greatest sight he ever saw.
It is said that the doctor is thinking ol
starting an army in Murrny. If he starts
one here I will be sure to go for I do
think it would be a show indeed to see
the doctor on the stand preaching.
Roving Boy.
One of the most interesting machines
used in the laundries at Troy is called a
whiz.cr." It dries clothes by making
1,000 revolutions a minute. One of these
days the whizzer will be introduced into
the editorial room, and the bore who
persists in talking while the editor is
usy up to his ears will be invited to get
into the whizzer and dry up. Yuma
Man.
Not Hid by Republicans.
A correspondent of the Des Moines
Register, having read Cleveland's letter
in which he stated that the rebel Hags
had been rolled up in a dusty attic "for
years," thereby purposing to give out the
impression that they had been placed
there by a Republican administration,
states the fact that the flags, with captur
ed cannon, cavalry Huddles, pikes taken
from John Brown's men at Harper's Fer
ry, a tree stump, all shot into holes by
rebels at Spottsylvania, and hundreds of
other war mementoes, were on exhibition
at Winder's building, at the corner of
Seventeenth and F. streets, Washington,
until Mr. Cleveland came into power,
soon after which they disappeared.
It was the democrats who hid the flags,
and then when the people asked to see
them, said they had been stored away
"years ago," where they could not be got
at.
Babyland.
He will surely enjoy the favor of both
mothers and babies who invents another
baby-play as available as "This little pig
went to market, etc.," which is said a
million times a year, while the happy
mother counts the five little rosy toes to
the music of baby's alternate suspense
and ringing laughter.
A well-known kindcrgartner has made,
and Babyland prints, a series of nursery
jingletales with running accompaniments
of pictures and finger-2lay which mothers
and babies go over together with equal
delight.
There are two set of pictures, one for
the eyes aud one for the hands. The lat
ter show how fingers can represent rab
bits, pigs, mice, birds, flowers and clouds
ui the sky.
This series of baby-delight alone is
enough to make the fortune of Babyland.
But it isn't alone. There are puzzles so
easy that baby can almost road them, and
rhyni"s that sing themselves in her ear as
she goes to sleep, and pleasant talcs to
come again in her dreams.
There is only one rich and beautiful
Babyland. Send to D. Lothrop Com
pany, Boston, five cents for a sample
copy.
The Kindergarten Association at its
May meeting at Hartford recently set it
self in a body at learning Finger-play,
which by the way is just as good for
babies at home as in a kindergarten.
One can get some notion of what it is
from this bit without pictures or music.
TWO GREEDY PIGS.
Tlgy Wi and Piggy Wee,
Iluugry pigs as pifis could be.
For their dinner had to wait
Down behind the barn-yard gate.
I'igjy Wig and Piggle Wee
Climed the barn-yard Kate to see.
Peeping through the gate so high.
But no dinner could they spy.
Tiggle Wis and Piggie Wee
viot down sad as pigs could bs ;
But the gate soon opened wide
And they scampered forth, outside.
Piggie Wig and Piggle Wee,
What was their delight to see
Dinner ready not lar off--Such
a lull and tempting trough I
Piggie Wig and Piggie Wee.
Greedy pigs as pis could he,
For their dinner ran pell-mell ;
In the trough both piggies fell.
Both mother and bady accompany the
verses with finger-play. The thumbs are
the pigs and the fingers the gate; and easy
little movements of both keep np with
the pigs in the story.
The whole is pictured and fingered
out in Babyland every month. A dozen
such nursery jingles run through the
year.
BEECHE1 SENTENTIOUS WISDOM.
A rartU
olleetion of Proverb from
P lymouth I'ulplt.
Every fa; i should own a good farmer.
A man never has good luck who has a bad
wife.
The masses against the classes, the world
over.
A man who does not love praise Is not a
full man.
A man must ask leave of Lis stoinoch to bo
a happy man.
It takes longerfor man to find out man
than any other creuturo that is made.
Flowers aro tho sweetest things that f Itvl
ever made und forgot V) put a soul into.
A mun without self restraint U likea barrel
without hoops ami tumbles to pieces.
Whoever makes homo seem to the young
dearer und more happy is a public lene
factor. The greatest event in a hen's Hfo Is inadu
up of an egg ami a cackle. But bugles never
cackle.
A proud man is seldom a grateful man, for
ho never thinks that he gets ua much us ho
desorves.
That cannot lo a healthy condition ir:
which few prosper and tho great muss are
drudges.
Communities are blest in tho proportion in
which money is diffused through tho whole
rouge of population.
(ambling with cards or dice or stocks is nil
one thing it is getting money without giv
ing an equivalent for it.
Newspapers nro the srhoolmostors of tho
common TKJople. That endless book, tho
newspaper, is our national glory.
One of tho original tendencies of tho hu
man mind, fundamental and universal, is the
lovo of other jieoplo's private affairs.
This is a good world to sin in; but, so far
as men aro concerned, it is a very hard world
to repent in. It is a bitter world; it hi a cruel
world.
Toverty Is very good in poems, but It is
very bad in a house. It is very good in
maxims and in sermons, but it Is very bud in
practical life.
A cow is tho saint of tho barnyard. She
could bo fat if she only would be selfish. But
sho economizes beauty that she may bo pro
fuse in milk.
No city bred man has any business to ex
pect satisfaction in a puro country life for
two months uidcss ho has a geniiu for leisure
and even laziness.
Debt rolls a man over and over, binding
him hand and foot and lotting him hang upon
tho fatal mesh until the long legged interest
devours him.
Our government is built upon the vote.
But votes that are purchasable are quick
sands, and a government built on them stands
upon corruption and revolution.
A man is a great bundle of tooJi lie is
bora into this life without tho kn6w?edge of
how to use them. Education is the process
of learning their use, and dangers and troubles
aro God's whetstones with which to keep
them sharp. Appleton's "Proverbs from
Plymouth Pulpit."
Biggest Ilalloon of All.
Capt. Morton, the well known Birmingham
aeronaut, is building a balloon which is to whip
creation. It is to bo made in thirty sections,
each sixty feet in length, and there is upward
of 3,000 yards of sewing to be done by hand
and machine. This fabric, which is being
manufactured in France, is an intermixture
of silk and cambric, and will be woven very
strongly, but to woigk- as light as possible,
Capt. Morton intends having it coated with
a special preparation, consisting of the best
India rubber, as he considers, after many
years' experience, that it will bo better
adapted in every way for ballooning purposes
than tho old fashioned method of oiling. He
also finds that it forms a perfect gas holder,
and offers a better resistance to the element!.
Tho valves will be improved upon, and will
bo fitted with four powerful springs, thus
keeping the shutters as close as possiblo to the
plunge, and preventing a leakage of tho light
gas. Tho netting, although light, will bo of
great strength, and Messrs. Gorton & Sons,
of Dudloy, will supply the materials, which
will consist of tho finest Italian hemp. Capt.
Morton expects to complete tho machine for
Whit week, and hopes to arrange tor its
ascent in Birmingham. He will uso it for hia
voyago in August from Dover to France in
the Channel balloon race. Boston Transcript.
Spain's National Odor.
I remember a charming French friend cf
mine, who used now and again to give him
self a treat of gigot stuffed with garlic; after
which meal he would drink a few glasses cf
tafia, smoko a ciyirette or two of corporal,
and then call upon me and invariably kits
me. His breath was attar of roses or es
sence of bouquet compared to tho person cf
an average Spaniard. By an extravagant
and continuous consumption of garlic these
people, men and women, get it into their
skins. From their skins it passes into their
clothes, so that they walk about in a small
pei-sonal atmosphere of garlic indescribably
Bickly and sickening.
A Spanish gentleman remarked to me one
day in a Madrid salon, while praising Eng
lish women, their beauties, virtues, etc.:
"There is only one fault I detected in them
their skin has no perfume. When I kiss a
Spanish lady's hand I smell that delicku3
national odor that we all adore; but an Eng
lish lady's hand, though delicately white and
soft, does not absolutely smell of anything."
He missed, poor fellow, that taint of garlic.
Madrid Letter.
Poll Tax on Foreigners.
There is some reason to believe, judging
from the tone of Novoe Vremya and other
leading Russian journals, that the tax on
foreign residents in Russia, which these
journals so strongly advocate, may shortly bo
introduced by the govenillient. A report is
current that this tax will be fixed at 160 gold
rubles per annum, which makes about 235
rubles in the ordinary currency, or about
25. The effect of such an Impost would of
course be to drive out of the country the more
skilled and industrious artisans of foreign
nationalities. Like tho foreign passport tax,
it will act as another check to Russia's foreign
commerce. If such a tax were limited to Vjo
heads of foreign houses and agencies in Rus
sia, there could be little or no objection to it.
The English principals of such houses would,
I am suro, agree in the justice of a limited
measure of this description; but it is ex
tremely short sighted to make it so sweeping
in its application. Odessa Cor. London News.
Pboto Matrimonial Souvenirs.
A new charm or novelty will henceforth be
associated with fashionable weddings. Mr.
Rockwood, of Union square, has arranged to
photograph wedding parties, bride, gsoem.
clergyman and "best friends" at the house of
the parties or at the church, before or after
the ceremony, by a new adaptation of tho
magnesium light. This is as good or better
than a marriage certificate, and certainly an
interesting souvenir of the event. Home
Journal. . . ... ,
Mii.itaky 15iiotiikiuio(4 opens the
July Outiuij and leads one naturally to
the first article entitled "On tho March,"
a neat and vivid picture of a soldier' m ex
periences. The paper is well illustrated
by half a dozen clever pen and ink
sketches by Itcmington.
J. I. Caklkiov, of Jackson township,
is in possession of a wonder in the form
of a living two headed calf, now about
two weeks old. One of the heads is fully
provided with eyes nose, mouth, etc. and
is in its proper position as regards the
body, while the second head, which is
minus the eyes, but has all other needed
faculties, projects to one side. It eats
with the principal head and breaths with
the double aparatus. The strange animal
seemes to be in possession of good life
and vigor and bids fair to live to a good
old age. It is a genuine wonder and Mr.
(!arletoii has in it a good start toward a
menagerie.- Warn n f'junty News, Iowa
Dracc Up.
You arc feeling depressed, your appe
tite is pool, you are bothered with Head
ache, you ar.i fidgety, nervous and gen
erally out of sorts, and want to brace up.
brace up, but not w ith stimulants, spring
medicines, or bitters, which have for
their lwsis yery cheap, bad whisky, and
which stimulate for an hour, and then
leave you in worse condition than before.
What you want is an alterative that will
purify your blood, start healthy action of
Liver and Kidneys, restore your vitality,
and give renewed health find strength
S.ucha medicine you will find in Electric
Bitters, and only o0 cents a bottle at F.
G. Fricke fc Co.'s drug store. (3)
Tho Rightful Owner Found
North Platte Telegraph.
To whom could the captured rebel flags
have gone in case there had been no pro
test to prevent their removal ? The late
"volunteer organizations," as Cleveland
terms the rebel armies, are not in existance,
the rebel States are loyal States now, and
conld not receive them, and any local or
ganization that should receive one oi
them would be tresonable just so far as it
cared for and honored and taught th
people to revere the treasonable rag.
There is but one man in all America who
could consistently and safely receive and
care for them, the only unreconstructed
rebel alive today, the one who can enact
trenson and advocate it and yet live
Jeff Davis. Give him his flags? Well,
not this year.
Dr. C. A. Marshall.
(Suocessor to Clutter fc Marshall.)
EH 32! M T Z S T!
Preservation of natural teeth a specialty.
Tcdh airacted wtiJumt pain by ue of LaufjMna
(Jan.
Ml work warranted. Prices reasonable.
Fitzgerald IIlock, Plattsmou th.Nkb.
ieiean
ustang
Liniment
Sciatica,
Lumbago,
&heumatism.
Bums,
SctJds,
Stings,
Bites,
Bruises,
Bunions,
C0IT13,
Scratches.
SprainJ.
Strains,
Rtitchei,
Stiff Joints,
Backache,
Galls,
Sores,
Spavin
Cracks.
Contracted
Muscles,
Eruptions,
Hoof Ail,
Screw
"Worms,
Swumsy,
Saddle Galls,
Files.
THIS GOOD OLD STAND-BY
accompliahes for everybody exactly what Isclalmed
for It. CmcQf the reason for the great popularity of
tho Mustang Liniment Is found In its universal
applicability. Everybody needs such s medicine.
The Lumberman needs It in case of accident.
The Housewife needs It for seneral family umu
Th c Canaler needs it for his teams and his men.
The 5Iechanlc needs It always on his work
bench.
The 9Ilner needs U In case of emergency.
The Pioneer needs It cant get along withoot It
The Farmer needs It la his house, his stable,
and his stock yard.
The Steamboat man or the Boatman needs
it In liberal supply afloat and ashore.
The norse-fancier needs It U Is bis tea
friend and safest reliance.
The Stock-grower needs It It will save Mm
thousands of dollars and a world of trouble.
The Railroad man needs It and wm need it so
long as his life is a round of accidents and dangers.
The Backwoodsman needs it. There Is notlv
ing like it as an antidote for the dangers to life,
limb and comfort which surround the pioneer.
The Merchant heeds It about his store among
his employees. Accidents will happen, and when
these cbme the Mustang liniment Is wanted at once.
Keep a Bottle in the IIon.se, TU to best oi
economy.
Keep a Boule In Use Factory. IU Immediate
use Incase of accident sores pain and loss of wagsa.
Keep a Bottle Always la th ts)l for
so wbea wanted - ?
gggMMI'll iwig
M$h
SOUTH PA UK is bitu
utt'd immediately iid
joinirifr; tliu eily of
i'latthmoutli on the
south between the tuo main
thoroughfares into the eity,
Lincoln and Chicago Avenue,
and on the line ot the U. & M.
railroad extending south Irom
the company' machine i-hops.
The proprietors of thin val
uable addition propose to
spare neither pain nor rrns
onable expense to make it not
only pleasant but profitable
to all persons purchasing lotn.
In the center ol this hand
some addition a
T5)
ot magnificent forest trees has
been reserved for the use and
pleasure of the city. Chicago
and Lincoln avenues furnish
the only circuitous drive out
and into the city which avoid
hills, and the level grade sug
gests the early construction
of our street railway to this
locality, and to this end lib
eral inducements will be offer
ed. South Park is less than
nine blocks from the business
center of the city, and but a
few rods from the great man
ufacturing interests of the li.
& M. railroad, thus making it
a desirable residence locality.
The proprietors of this ad
dition propose to re-invest the
proceeds of the sale of the first
100 lots, in choice residences,
which will be offered lor sale
on monthly payments. This
will enhance the value of the
lots purchased.
Now is the time to invest,
for permanent use or specula
tion. Without exaggeration
or fictitious booming, Platts
mouth realty is growing more
firm in value each day, advanc
ing on the basis of a perma
nent business foundation.
For particulars as to
property in South Park.
Apply to
R. B. WINDHAM
Or,
Jolri &. IDqies,
Ovci 33qql of Gqss Go.
ff$ TP I