Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, October 06, 1887, Page 2, Image 2

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    rLA'lTriMOUTil WEEKLY IIEUALI), T
AY, OOTOlJKll 0, IS -57.
gtte jQluttsmouth gcnthl.
1CMOTTS BROS,
Publishers & Proprietors.
THE PLATTSMOUTII UKKAI.D
Is published cv(ry Thursday morning. Office,
tornerol vine and Fifth streets.
WEEKLY, by mall,
Ono sopy one year 9 J ff
One copy one year (lu advance) 1 5i
One copy bIs. month " '
WeKlstered at tue Tost Office, l'lattsnioutli, a
secoud class matter.
REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET.
Kor Treasurer
D. A. CAMPBELL.
For Clerk
BERT CIUTCIIFIELD
For Hecorder
WM. II. POOL.
For Superintendent of Public Instruction
MAYNAUD SPINK.
Kor Sheriff
J. C. KIKENBAUY.
For Judge
CALVIN RUSSELL.
Kor Clerk of District Court
II. J. STREIOIIT,
For County CommlHsiniier
GEORGE YOUNG.
For Surveyor
A. MADOLE.
For Coroner
HENRY IKECK.
Next month Oregon will vote on
prohibition.
Commissioner Foltz must run this time
on his merits. The county seat racket
can't be worked this time Mr. Foltz!
Wuen Iliggins and Co. ( i. e. Sher
man ) get to be county treasurer of Cass
county, we are going to have
free lunber!
Mn. SnowALTEU for clerk of district
court and Dr. Siggins for coroner are
the only nominees from the east end of
the county and Dr. Siggins is so recent
he can't count.
It is said that Field Marshal Sherman
13 very proud of his county treasurer. If
there is any one thing our neighbor dotes
on, it is finances. How would Bro. Slier
man do for deputy treasurer, any way?
Wiggins for weather, and Iliggins for
treasurer! It seems to us, speaking in a
Pickwickian sense, that about all there
is left of the democrtic party in Cass
county is Iliggins and Wiggins..
The judicial convention meets in Liu
coin Oct., 5th at 4 o'clock in the after
noon. Judge Chapman has no opponent
for a renomination, and A. W. Field who
is a candidate for Judge Rounds' place
on the bench, will doubtless be nomi
nated without much opposition.
Siiat.t, we have free whisky or free
lumber? is the question. The republi
cans want the former, democrats the
latter. Journal.
The head of the man who pened the
foregoing piece of idiocy is hereby tend
ed the democracy of Cas3 county, free
from any duty, except that it be used to
found the prohibition soukey.
From the reports of the new high li
cense law in Minnesota, it is working ad
mirably. There has been a falling off
of at least one-third in the number of
saloons, and the revenue from the liquor
traffic is larger than it was under the old
system, and the business of the police
is less, and public sentiment is strongly
in fayor of the strict enforcement of the
law.
Oxjtino leads off this month with a
thoroughly technical and authoritative
paper on Fencing. In A Boct with
Foils, Mr. Eugene Van Schaick, President
of the Knickerbocker Fencing Club, and
one of the most expert amateur swords
men in this country, presents the exercise
in clear and scientifically explanatory
language, useful alike to the tyro and
the proficient The text is further assist
ed by illustrations taken fron instan
taneous photographs of maitres cT armes
and every position, lunge or parry may
be relied on as absolutely correct.
JetF Davis has written a letter in which
he criticised Senator Reagan for having
introduced a Georgia negro "to the ladies
and gentlemen of Texas," and Mr. Rea
gan replies by admitting that the charge
ia true, and excusing himself on the
ground that the negro in question "de
livered an address which for learning,
eloquence and patriotism would have
done credit to any white people." The
Texas Senator would be much more for
tunate than he is if he could always jus
tify his actions in this easy and conclusive
manner. Qlobe Democrat.
Tub republican state convention will
meet in Lincoln on the evening of Oct.,
Cth to nominate a candidate for judge
of the supreme court and also to nomi
nate two regents of the university. It is
generally conceeded that Judge Maxwell
will be his own sucessor, though ex-atty.
general Dilworth is making a fight for
the nomination, .There are several can
didates in the field for regent, the most
prominent of which is W. A. McAllister,
Sf Columbus , a graduate of the umver
Sty, and a man that has at heart the
best interests of the institution.
It is understood that the comptroller of
currency will in his next report to con
gress suggest au important amendment to
the national bank act with a view of pre
venting, under severe penalties, the com
promising by any bank of any case of
misappropriation, embezzlement, misap
plication of funds or any other offense
which renders officers or employees of
national banks liable to criminal prose
cution under the act now in force. Such
an amendment would be an entirely
proper one. It would only be in the
direction of a further recoguization of
the public nature of such offenses against
the community. Crimes of this nature
arc public wrongs which affect the tvholo
community, and it ought not to be in
the power of offenders guilty of them to
secure immunity from public prosecution,
whether by the favor of bank officials or
otherwise. Bankers arc particularly inter
ested in the maintenance of a high stand
ard of commercial morality, which acts
such as those against which legislation
is sought cannot but affect unfavorably,
and they will doubtless be glad to see
the suggestion of the comptroller embod
ied in legislation. Bradstrect.
Comparative statistics of the pig iron
production show the United States to oc
cupy second place, with all the con
ditions favorable t attaining the lead in
a very short timo. In 1873 the pig iron
production of Great Britain was nearly
three times that of this country, while
last year the difference in favor of the
former was only a few thousand ton?,
and during the first quarter of the pres
ent year until the output was checked by
the coke strike, the production of the
United States was abreat with that of
Great Britain. Fourteen years ago .the
latter country produced 80 per cent, as
much pig iron as all other countries,
while the United States produced 22 per
cent. In 1880 the ratio respectively was
53 and 43 per cent., a material relative
decline on the part of Great Britain and
a notable increase on that of the United
States. In no other respect has this
country made a more marked progress,
as compared with other nations, and with
the increase in productive capacity now
under way, which is far in excess of the
efforts being made tn the same line in
any other part of the world, it is a ques
tion of only a little time when this
country will be first in the production of
pig iron. Ex.
Royalty En Route.
Had General Grant, Rutherford Hays
or Chester A. Arthur in the palmiest
days of republican rule, planed snd ex
ecuted the magnificent state journey
which Grover Cleveland and party are
now enjoying throughout the country,
what an infernal yell of rage and ftar
would have gone up from the combined
democratic throat of the entire country
royalty, depotism, aristocracy, waste
of the people's money, neglect of state
business, "B.vll pups," downright black
guardism, would have been hurled at the
royal procession from every cross road in
the country; yet, Grover Cleveland and
Mrs. Cleveland and their Kitchen Cabi
net can charter one of the finest palace
car trains ever run on this continent and
with the switches thrown open and the
right of way guaranteed on all our rail
roads, sweep across the continent heralded
and preceeded by t painted programme
calling the public together at stated
places in a manner excelling that of
William of Germany, and the republi
can press treat it as an innocent, that
electioneering'schcme under the guidance
of the national democratic committee
and greet his excellency with the respect
and courtesy due the great office he rep
resents. This is the difference between
the political organizations who represent
the sentiment of the American people of
this day. Mr. Cleveland will doubtless
be surpsised at the extent of the territory
lying west of Albany and the number of
people "out west" and verify for him
self that there really are such places as
Chicago, Omaha and St. Louis; and for
this, all good people in the great North
west will be thankful. .
Henry Watterson, writing to the
Louisvill, Ky., Couricr-Jouni'il, from
New York, where he has spent a week
studying the political situation, talks
with characteristic plainness. The fol
lowing is an extract from his letter:
If the leaders of the democratic party
had possessed the wisdom and the cour
age honestly to meet the issues which
have given vitality to this labor move
ment we should not now be menaced by
it. but should have it for an ally. It
should never have ceased to be an asso
ciate. The timidity and selfishness
which have characterized democratic
leadership in the east are responsible for
its disaffections, and, at the same time,
for a delay of ten years in popular edu
cation. There is now, however, no help
for it. The democratic party must fight
its battle next year with the labor vote
cast in the scale against it. To do that
with any show of success it must put it
self right in the comiug session of con
gress with the true interests of labor,
whether the laborer sees it or not. It
must boldly proclaim the truth. It
must boldly stigmatize and expose
falsehood and fraud. It must yield
nothing and f ;cr nothing. The issue is
low taxes n gain.-1 high taxes; cheap living
against free whiskey; manhood against
monopoly. Nor tan we begin too toon,
haying delayed already too long. We
must show by our acts as well as our
words what is the truth that wo are
the workingman's only hope, his only
friend, his shield and buckler, with brains
to know his wants and symynthy to be
impressed by them, and no foolish terror
at being called hard names lor his anil
for our own nukes. Unless the democratic
party be a party of the people, bound
and sworn to save the people'B country
from the money devil, it is a mere bundle
of factions, good only for an occasional
bonfire.
The Convention and The Ticket
The republican convention which clos
ed its labors in our city Saturday evening
was an intelligent, representative body of
men. Among the delegates were many
old settlers; men, who came to Cass coun
ty in territorial days and braved the
hardships and perils of frontier life, to
better their condition; men who have by
their energy, industry and honesty, built
up for themselves prosperous homes and
business and for the state of Nebraska
ono of the wealthiest and most intelligent
counties in this young common wealth.
Such men were strongly represented in
Saturday's convention, and, as was their
duty, came together to placo a ticket in
the field which the republican party of
Cass county can afford to support with
out apology.
FOR COUNTY TREASURER,
Mr. D. A. Campbell of Plattsmouth city,
was re-nominated by acclamation. This
to Mr. Campbell, is a deserved compli
ment to one of the best and most compe
tent officials Cass county has ever had in
charge of her finances. And, as we are
informed, according to an established,
and unbroken, precedent, since the days
of Shepherd Duke, Mr. Campbell will
be given his second term by the people
of Cass county.
FOR RECORDER OF DEEDS,
Mr. William II. Pool, of Elniwood pre
cinct, was named without opposition.
Two years ago Mr. Pool was defeated
for this office, not by the voters of Cass
county, but by a blunder of the legisla
ture in the passage of an act creating the
office of "register of deeds," on account
of which, the supreme court of the state
declared the act unconstitutional; and,
although Mr. Pool was chosen by the
electors 'of Cass county by a very large
vote, he was thus denied the office. Now,
there being no question as to the office
itself, the people of Cass county will
without doubt re-affirm their work of
two years ago.
Mr. Pool is a young man of family,
about 33 years of age, who has resided
in Cass county for the past fifteen years,
is well educated and qualified for any
business position within the gift of the
people of Cass county is a farmer by
choice an'l a successful one, although we
are informed, he has during the past four
and a half years had charge of the lum
ber interests of Messrs Beardsley & Clark
at Wabash, in this county.
FOR COUNTY CLERK,
Mr. Bird Critchfield. of Mt. Pleasant pre
cinct, was chosen without opposition.
Mr. Critchfield, is also a farmer, a
bright intelligent young man of good
habits, and in every way qualified to suc
ceed Mr. J. M. Robinson, the present
clerk. If, what the Herald hears of Mr.
Critchfield, is half true, our friend Rob
inson will find all the employment he can
master to hold the democratic vote of
Cass county without borrowing republi
can votes as he did two years ago. The
Herald predicts Mr. Critchfield's election
by a handsome majority,
FOR COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT OF 1'UHLIC
schools,
Maynard Spink was re-nominated by ac
clamation.
Mr. Spink was comparatively an un
known man two years ago, when the re
publican party of Cass county nominated
him for this office. To-day he i3 know
in eve.iy home in the county as a faithful
competent superintendent, and a splendid
educator, who has the welfare of our
educational interests at heart. Maynard
Spink is a good worthy citizen in every
sense of the word and will be re-elected
by a handsome majority.
FOR SHERIFF,
Mr. JVC. Eikenbary received the high com
pliment of a nomination for a third term
after a short and close contest with his
old deputy, Mr. B. C. Y'eomans of Weep
ing Water. Nothing, save Mr. Eiken
bary's high qualifications for this office
could have overcome the prejudice
against a third term and the deserved
popularity of Mr. Y'eomans, who is well
qualified to till the office of sheriff and
who received the unanimous support of
that portion of the county where he re
sides; and although there was some feel
ing among a few of Mr. Y'eomans friends
over his defeat in the convention, the
Herald believes, the calmer moments of
those gentlemen will convince them that
Mr. Eikenbary 's nomination came direct
ly from the people and that in all fair
ness, the nomination being perfectly fair,
Mr. Eikenbary should receive their cor
dial hearty support. The Herald does
not believe our friend the common
enemy have any timber in their party
that can compete with J. C Eikenbary
before the people of Cass county for this
effice wliich he h rs so ably adminstcre 1
for four years.
YO II CO l , N TT Y J L 1 M i H ,
Calvin Russell, our bluff, hearty, honest
county judge, was renominated over the
aggressive young attorney, Mr. Woosley,
of Salt Creek precinct. The fact if, the
people of this county understand the
fidelity with which Mr. Russell has dis
charged the duties of county judge;
that his office is in excellent condition;
that estates of decedents are speedily,
honestly and correctly administered up
on and closed up; that civil business is
transacted on that principal; that he is
always to be found at his office; and
last but not least, that when the young
men of Cass county seek to wed, they
always find the county judge at his post
appreciative of the gravity and solemnity
of the occasion. That Calvin Russell
will head the list on majorities is our
prediiion.
FOR C LERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT.
Henry J. Streight, one of Cass county's
oldest settlers, although but a compara
tively young man, was chosen after a
short contest with Win. Hayes and Geo.
K. Staats. Mr. Streight is a first class
business man of much more than average
accomplishments, has a largo acquaint
ance throughout Cass county, and is a
very popular man who6o friends will
rally to his support and that of the ticket.
On every hand we hear words of com- j
mendation Jin regard to Mr. Streight's
nomination.
for county commissionhr of toe shcond
district.
Mr. George Young of Mt. Pleasant
precinct was chosen over Geo. Switzerof
Avoca and Walter J. Cutforth of Louis
viile. Mr. Y'oung is a prosperous, w ide
awake farmer, an old citizen of Cass
county, a good thorough going business
man well acquainted with couuty affairs
and will make a careful, competent, com
missioner. FOR COUNTY PURVEYOR.
A. Madole of Stove Creek precinct
was chosen without opposition. Mr.
Madole is a good civil eugineer and has
performed the duties of this office accept
ably for the past two years as ho doubt
!ess will do the coming two years.
Mr. Henry Bceck, present coron r, wfts
renominated. Mr. Bo-ck is one of Cass
county's oldest and best known citizens
and may expect re-election with tho mt
of the ticket.
Judge Chapman was complimented ly
being asked to select the delegates to
the district convention of this judicial
district and also by a unaniuous resolution
of confidence and endorsement. The
convention also by unanimous vote in
structed the delegates to the state con
vention to support Hon. Samuel Maxwell
the present chief justice of our supreme
court. Judge Maxwell's long and dis
tinguished services to the state has made
his name a household word with the
people of Nebraska and his sterling
integrity and great worth entitles him to
the respect and confidence of all classes.
To displace JudgeM.ixwell for an untried
man at this time wetild, In the opinion
of the Herald, be a great blunder on
the part of the republican party of this
state: and, unless scheming politicians
and corporation influences secretly con
spire to unseat the honest old judge w hile
the public unsuspectingly fancy his
pos:tion s- crre. Wc have no doubt as to
his renomir at'on.
One word now B9 to the duty of re
publicans; a good representative ticket
has been placed in t ie field; ti e private
character, the qualifications and the re
publicanism of the several gentlemen
named are unexceptionable, not a word,
we believe, can be said against any man
on the ticket. It is well distributed
throughout the county. Every man
ought to be elected and no good reason
can be given for not supporting the
ticket as a whole. Our democratic friends
cannot place better men in nomination;
then, we say, there can be no sensible pre
text for republicans going off after the
common enemy and voting against their
principals and ticket. Local prejudice
should have no weight, to gratify a per
souul feeling never warrants a man in
voting agiinst hi principals. Our clem
ocratic friends don't vote that way, and
they only hope for success through re
publican dissatisfaction with their own
ticket on local grounds and prejudices.
Our democratic neighbors will ask repub
licans in the enst t-ud of the county to
vote the democratic ticket; on precisely
the same grounds they will ask the west
side republicans to also vote the demo
cratic ticket while they themselves exhort
theirjown rank and file to vote from princi
pal for a democrat first,last and allihejtime.
We have not been very long in charge
of the Herald, but we are told tho fore
going is the fact and we want to a-sure
our republican friends that unless the
Herald has a better reason than "county
seat" prejudice or local prejudice it will
be fund supporting tne regular ticket
when good men are honestly placed
thereon. So, we say, to republicans bury
all disappointment, all local differences
and support the ticket straight and
square and once more place your party
in full position of county affairs which,
by the right of majority belongs to us.
Warrick asks voj to compare his
prices and stock of school books with
others. Second hr.nd scl ool I ooks at
yery low prices. dCtwlt.
It- is amusing to sec how the western
country editors kick and abuse the pres
ent tariff made by the republican party
when just such a tariff was needed, but
which every body agrees ought before
this to have been remodled and changed
to suit the changed condition of the
country. They seem to think when they
splutter around and say hard things
about this tariff that they are fighting
the republican party. They forget that
all their leaders in the last congress knew
that the people both expected and wanted
them to change it, and though fhey had
a large majority in the house of represent
atives and a democratic president to
back them they failed to change or modify
it in tho least. They'talked a great deal
about it and discussed some plans of
changing or remodeling it but finally
let it bo as it was, not being able to
make a better one. They thus adopted
it as their child and as the best thing in
the way of a tariff that they could give
to the country. So that w hen tho demo
cratic editors and polititions hereabouts
with frantic zeal abuse this tariff they
abuse the adopted child of their party and
are actually fighting their own party,
foolishly thinking they are fighting the
republicans but while they themselves
may be deceived they cannot deceive the
people. A much greater than any of
these was sacrificed for his honest zeal
in trying to reform thin tariff. There
was, perhaps, among all tho democratic
members of the late congress none more
honest than Mr. Morrison and he honestly
tried to induce his paity to give the
country a new tariff but they refused all
his propositions and efforts to change
the present one and his constituants pun
ished him for his efforts by failing to
re-elect him. Had the last congress have
been republican the tariff would have
been changed to suit the present condition
of things. There would have been u
check to the increasing millions going
into the treasury. Such industries as
needed the fostering care of the govern
ment would have been protected and
such luxuries as only the rich use would
have been taxed for the necessary revenue
to carry on the government. Money
would now have boen comparatively
plentiful, labor better paid and living
cheaper than it is. Even tluse western
democrats admit that under this tariff
which is the best they have yet been able
to give the country, it costs the poor
twenty-five per cent more to live than it
would have done if they had discharge 1
their duty and remodeled it. Who w ants
to keep such a party in power? Sure
ly not tho toiling millions of the west.
The Republican Party as a Free
Whiskey Party.
By a yery far stretch of the imagination
certain parties in this and other states are
trying to make it appear to the careless
and unthinking, that, because the great
majority of republicans are in favor of
prohibition, that therefore they are in
fayor of free whiskey. And some honest
but thoughthss people, even here in
Plattsmouth, have taken up that cry, and
there are those who have gone so far as
to suggest that the democratic war
cry 6hall be "down with the republican
party because they are for high taxes and
fiee whiskey." Such nonsci se would
not be worth noticing wen; it not th: t
s me good people sometimes hear such
things so often that they conclude it may
be so.
Now the history of the republican par
ty is written. Their record is clear.
They fought slavery till they destroyrd it.
They are the only strong party that ever
declared squarely against whiskey and
in favor of prohibition, which they have
done in several states, and it is admitted
by the best informed and bitterest ene
mies here in Plattsmouth that "there can
be no doubt, but if the republicans had
elected a solid state legislature last yenr,
Nebraska would to-day have a prohibi
tory statute."
Now, if prohibition or no whiskey at
all, and free whiskey are one and the
same thing, then the republican party is
a free whiskey party. But if prohibition
or no whiskey at all, is not free whiskey,
then the republican party is w hat it pro
fesses to b an enemy to free whisker,
drunkenness, vice and crime, and is the
friend of the home, and is squarely
against the saloon.
It is gratifying to know that the ene
mies of the party have to resort to such
far-fetched, illogical and untrue charges
and arguments. For if they had any
grounds for lighting the part for what
it is, they would certainly do it with a
vim and an energy much greater than
they are able to do in their unfair way of
trying to make the part' appear to be
what they, and all well posted people
know, it is not.
Who wants to keep in power a party
that resorts to such unworthy modes
of fighting their opponents? ccrtanly
not the temperance and christian masses
of the county of Cass and of the great
state of Nebraska.
Itch, Prairie Mange, and Scratches of
eyery kind cured in '30 minutes, by Wool
ford's Sanitary Lotion. Use no other.
This never fails. Warranted by, F. G.
Fricke & Co., druggists, Plattsmouth,
Nebraska, 34-lyr
For Sato-
A farm c ontaining iJ0 ju.res of land,
well improved, timber and water. Ihkt
stack farm in Cass county. For term
apply to 14tf JJekson & Sullivan.
T ROYAL ItMl J NJ
fplf
1
PSWili
Absolutely Pure.
Tills powder never varies. A marvel of pur
itv, ft rent ii and wlioieoinesicss. Mure eeo
nomical than t lif. ordinary kinds, and cannot !
bold in competition witli the multitude f low
teft, short weight alum or jili isiluito powders.
Sold Olllv ill e LtiS. KoVAI. 1IAKIM! 1'OWUKB
Co.,10CWall t. New York. J'.itlS
1ST?
U 0
nunent
Sciatica,
Lumbago,
fchenmatism.
Burn3
Scalds,
Btings,
Bites,
Bruises,
Bunion
Corns,
Scratches
SprainB
Strains,
Stitches,
Stiff Joints,
Backache,
Galls,
Sores,
Spavin
Cracks,
Contracted
Muscle
Eruptions.
Hoof AiL
Screw
Warms.
Swinney,
Saddle GaJ2k
THIS GOOD OLD STAND-BY
Aooompllahes for everybody exactly what la oIaIhmA
for ic One of the reasons for the great popularity oi
the Mustamj Liniment 13 found in its nnlYerso
applicability. Everybody needs such a medicine
The Lumberman needs It In caso of accident
The Housewife needs It for generalfamUy UA
The Canalor needs It for bis teams and hlsmQv
The Mechanic noeda U always oo U Wqg
bench.
The Miner needs It In ease of emergency.
Tho I'leneerneedsit can't get along without 1
The Farmer needs It la bis .boueo, lilt nt&blQ,
and his stock yard.
The Steamboat man or the HoatraiuiOcttJk
It In liberal supply afloat and a&hore.
The Horse-fancier needs J-U I? Mi tS
friend and safest reliance.
The Stock-srrovFcr needs It It "wtn sevg tid
thousands of dollars and a world of trouble.
The Railroad man needs It and will need ft K?
long as his life Is a round of accidents and dangers
The Backwoodsman needs It. There is noW
Ing like it as an antidote for tho dangers to Vify
limb and comfort which surround tho ploneee.
The Merchant needs It about his store among
his employees. Accidents will happen, and when)
these coma the Mustang Liniment is wanted atones
Icep a Bottle in tho House Tls tLfi best oj
economy.
Keep aBottle In the Factory Itslmmedl&te
Use la cose of accident saves pain and loss of wages
Keep a Bottle Always la the ttabje (flj
use when wanted
It. H. WIXDHAM, 1 laint :lT. )
L, O, MILLED, Ie:en.!;i:,t. f
To the non-rrsj.U iit dffcml;mt : You vi 1
take no! re Put on the lutli d:iv of September
17, K. I:. Wi rlluori. U,; plaintilT. lien-in tiled
liisjivt; :. t'l'the Ownty :'..uit of 'a Co.,
Neb.. :i'.-si::'t yo:i. the object and prayer of
which an- to recover tlie sum of even and
70-HO dollars. (7.7") immev advaueel for a
jiol cy of insuiancf written by I aintiil at Ie
fpndauf s reiiiest. May ah. and inf rest
tlier-.-oa fron said date. You are f or! Ik r noti -lieu
that Plaintiff tins n-.ied out an anachnieii t
and in aid f wliich ha" had anihliec iirums
issued. Th'-re is :ov. due the sum of ,7.7 an d
interest. You up- n-onired to answer caid pe
tition oil or before the V.ilh r!ay of October
1S7.
wimjiiam i
an i V Att'ys f r riff.
26-4r. JOHN A. iJAYII'S,
ARBUCKLES'
name on a package of COFFEE is a
guarantee of excellence.
AR10SA
COFFEE is kept in all first-class
stores from th.e Atlantic to the Pacific
COFFEE
is never good when exposed to the air.
Always buy this brand in hermetically
sealed ONE FOUND PACKAGES. .
FIRST PRIZE HEREFCSD KZ2Q
At the prcat Pt.TuIs Fair. 1v.hcit!!fcd FC2TLT.T3
203. by Sirllichard 2nd. F 1 1 1 V VELVN 0 .i7ll-l
Wilton. CKOVE 'h Vi.'JS. by The Crovo W
UWSBUUV 2ad L-W7. by Teller, bro.
ircnisaiu. nerd numbers 2"5 head, f cnJ f.ir
atiJ catalogue. j. u niivru '
pricir
Colony, Asiisnan Co., &aiu:uv
mexican
Most
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