" I-V--. 7 '.lr"--,:L'.s!t!.'- A 7 rLATISMOHTII WEKIi airJr.K, xyOKSUAV, AUGUST 1C, 1888. 1 WOMAN AND HOME. WHAT HUSBANDS CAN DO MAKE WIVES HAPPY. TO All Sorts of Illuta for ths Iloimchold, Par lor unl KitcUen- Care of Children' Feet Th Ilelle aa a Wit I'et Iog. Item. A writer talka upon the other Kido of a question often discussed. Sho thinks those disquisitions about the duty of the wife to make homo happy are all well In their way, but very pertinently asks If It does not some times occur to the writer that the husband has aught to do with the matter of making home happy. Sho thinks it takes something more than n well furnished house, abundant wardrobe, well filled larder, yea, even than a full purse, to keep a womanly heart al ways in smiling order. "Bo not ashamed to be lover like; do not fancy it is not becoming to middle aged peo ple. A11 tho world loves a lover is a true saying, and the elderly married lover is as much admired, if not more, as the young lover. Except Bomo occasional soured spin ster, or unhappily married elderly people, all hearts warm to tho man who is not afraid nor ashamed to show that he loves his wife. Tho girls envy her and 'pray heaven to send them such a one; the young men learn a lesson of faithfulness, elder people honor him; he wins goldon opinions from all. "Is your wife plain, quiet, old fashioned? Let her but feel that sho is dearest of all tho world to you, in spite of it all, and then a little tender urgency and encouragement will induce her to amend herself so far as she can. Sho does not wish you to call her beautiful if she is not, but only to kuow her self as dear to you as if she were, inasmuch es you chose her rather than any more beau tiful woman at first. "Is sho growing elderly, diseased, de formed, unfortunate in any way? Ah, re member that she gave you her lest years, her best strength; that in loving service to you health and youth havo been lost, and love her all the more. It is more for yonr sake than her own that sho mourns over fading faco and whitening hair and halting step. She sees changes in you, no doubt, but loves you none the less for tho thinning hair, the furrows on your brow, tho changes in face and form from your sturdy youth ; but you aro only the dearer to her. In pity, man, in honor, in all manly nobility, give her back love for love, truth for truth. "You are all in all to her. If you fail her nothing can make good the loss. Your ad miration, your appreciation, aro worth more to her than all the world. If sho had every other good gift, and the love of all other hearts, and the praises of all nations, it would be void without your affection. Is it not worth while to appreciate such love as this and retain it 1 Is it not a prize to bo cher ished! Then strive always to be patient, be sym pathetic. Sometimes children may have been disobedient and trying; sometimes the big boy, in the plenitude of the wisdom of hobbledehoyhood, has scouted her advice contemptuously; sometimes the grown girl has sneered at mother's 'notions.' Then, if you have it in you to comfort and cheer her, to make her feel that she is indeed dear and honored and wise and precious to you, then aro you well worthy of just such a crown of honor as her heart crowns you with. Then if you can show her that she is as dear to you as ever, you have done a deed that God will smile upon. "Many a man says: 'My wife ought to know I love her without my talking about it. I have proved that I did, not only by my choice itself, but by years of careful provid ing and faithful adherence.' "Very true, but do not fear to say so. Man cannot live by bread alono, nor woman either. In no relation of life is it satisfied without definite tokens of appreciation. You comfort your minister's heart with thank? for a helpful sermon; you give a friend a warm hand clasp and expressions of esteem; you delight the heart of your little child with fond embraces and sweet names; nay, you call your dog good fellow and pat his head; you pet your horse, and thase, too, appreciate kind words. Do as much at least for your wife as you did for the friend or servant. "And by all that is true or noble or good, I adjure you, suffer no outsider to comment upon her peculiarities, to depreciate or slight her because of them by look or word. Who so does disrespect of her does double dishonor to you. Allow no criticism of her; you chose once; stand by your choice. Even if it were mistaken, then pride would bid you let no one know it." Arthur's Magazine. Save the Bits of Soap. Gather together all the pieces of white soap that you may have, castile, ivory and any others that are known to be good. Cut them into small pieces and dissolve in boiling water in the proportion of a teacup of water to half a cup of scrap. As soon as the scraps have melted, and while the water is still hot, stir in ground oatmeal to make a stiff batter. Grease some old cups and pour enough of this mixture in each for a small cake, and 6et it aside to harden and dry. You have now a very nice soap that is excellent for daily use in the nursery ; or the mixture may be made just a little thinner and kept in a tin cup to be brought out as soft, white soap at the children's baths. For the boys' and girls' tri-daily hand scrubbing stir the batter very stiff with oatmeal, bran or wheat middlings, and mold into flat cakes. These have a roughness that 1 necessary to remove ink stains, pitch and the many defiling sub stances with which every healthy boy and girl seems to come in contact. For fancy hand soap, melt all together the pieces of any colored toilet soaps, provided, of course, that they ore good, and do not contain injurious materials; stir in a few drops of perfumery and a very little Indian meaL Pour this into shallow dishes (fancy shaped if you wish) and when partly cold stamp on a pattern and mold the corners of the cakes round, or cut into shapes with a cake cutter. The scraps of yellow soap may be put into the soap shaker a wire receptacle for hold ing soap that is to be shaken in tho dish water; but for those who have no such im plement, this is a way of disposing of them: Dissolve the pieces as before, using less hot water, and when the mixture has partly cooled stir in a quantity (as much as it will take nicely) of scouring sand or bath brick scraped fine; pour into a wooden box and stir often until cold. This is excellent for scouring tins and cleaning unpainted shelves and floors, '.but will, of course, remove tho paint from wood work. Yellow 6oap may, like the white, be simply dissolved and left to stiffen a little to be used as soft soap. Ladies' Home Journal. Odd Sort of Entertainment. A fern breakfast is the very latest Today that is, something as yet undreamed of may be the novelty to-morrow. A girl hostess utilized wide Teranda for a fern morning some time ago. Climbing ferns were trained about the sides to form cool, rcn avails. Masses of lush, rank growing fern were planted in each corner. The taole appeared to be spread on a mound overgrown with ferns. The smallest ferns o! the brooks and the woods, mingled with a delicate orchid or two and green misses, wero ranged about a miniature pool of water, which formed tho central decoration. A delicate maidenhair fern, planted in a tiny vaso of china, stood by each plate as tho breakfast favor. Throughout tho meal the color green was preserved as far as jtossible, all tho fruit being served surrounded by fern fronds. Tho pretty girl who gave the breakfast wore a gown of fern green China silk, which made her look like a wood goddess whose skin the sun had graciously forborno to tan. Fern seed, which is fabled to make ono in visible, was flung in laughing ceremony over the group to make its session the more confi dential, tho ban leing removed later when some tenuis players began to show on the lawn ready for a game. Breakfasts where all the decorations were of striixnl grass have been given, and a variation, still following the fancy for green things, is an oak lunch, oak leaves supplying the basis of the trim mings. New York Mail and Express. Itecklewines Concerning Drags. There is alsolutely no limit to the reckless ness of women with drugs, especially those proper to tho toilet. Ono woman fancied carbolic acid would improve her skin, and so it will, diluted enough. But she used it strong, till the skin of her face cracked, peeled and that was not the worst left a downy growth which spoiled originally de cent cheeks. Another thought cold baths tho finest stimidant in the world, and took a plunge in the coldest well water twice a day in warm weather, till she bad to give up, with her heart probably injured for life. Another believed in hot baths, and after un limited trial came out so weakened that it took years to restore her. Moderation is the rule for all treatment, but most persons learn it too late, and miss the lifelong benefit they might derive from tho agencies thoy wear out in a 3-ear or two. Electricity has been sadly overdone by women who fancied they knew enough to treat themselves, bought a small battery and tried to use it as a bank of vitality. Students try to do double work by aid of this fearful stimulant, and find out it shatters their nerves in less time than alcohol. It is of no use to try to find a philosopher's stone, or an Aladdin lamp, or any substitute for the painstaking process of developing care and judgment for one's self. You caimot by any marvel of science give health or beauty by pressing an electric button, or holding the handles of a battery, or swallowing any bolus, or lathering yourself with sweet scented lotions, although cosmetic recipe books and dealers may tell you so in flourish ing sentences. Shirley Dare's Letter. Care of Children's Feet. "Aristocratic feet may bo cultivated," re marked a fashionable shoe dealer the other day. "You take the grandchildren of such ple beians as Jay Gould and old Commodore Vanderbilt, and they all have beautiful feet," he continued. "It's all a matter of shoes, bathing, stockings and care of the feet "How so? Well, take one of the Vander bilt grandchildren or George Gould's baby, for instance. The child's feet from its birth are carefully attended, bathed daily, and only the best kind of shoes and the finest of stock ings put on it. "Tho difficulty with many parents is in selecting shoes that are just the length of their children's feet," continued the learned shoe dealer. "Xow, there is nothing mora injurious to the shape of the foot than a short shoe. People of wealth soou learn this, and, while the narrowest possible width is chosen, the shoe is always an inch longer than the foot "Children who are permitted to walk or run about much need not have large feet The secret is to bathe the feet each night in warm water and each morning in cold water and a little salt, rubbing vigorously. Then, if fino, darnless stockings are worn, and shoes that fit snugly without being tight, a beautiful foot is sure to be the result "Old shoes, shoes of different makers, and shoes of various sizes are more trying to the beauty of feet than either tight or narrow ones." Baltimore News, The Belle as a Wife. If a young lawyer should be disbarred, a young clergyman degraded from the minis try, should a merchant fail or an engineer lose his position, be would scarcely suffer a greater sense of change than does the young belle when she finds herself ineligible to the post which has been hers by the consent of her parents and by the approbation of the world. She misses the bouquets, the mur murs of applause, tho atmosphere of adula tion. Why should she not? The lover, a creature all smiles, who came bringing gifts, has become a stem taskmaster, scolding over bills. The belle has become a slave to the cook, of whom she is afraid, and to the grocer, the baker, the candlestick maker. However, if "Love goes like a light in the pathway," all this becomes right in time, and the young wife will accommodate her self to circumstances, and when she emerges, after a year or two of seclusion, still beauti ful, 6till young, still pleasure loving, there is no doubt an added appetite for admiration from the long fast. TUo husband is absorbed in money making. He cares little how his wife spends her time, and so grows tho mar ried flirt, innooently at first Innocent at first; but alas! a dangerous game, fraught with possible misery to herself; for even the most innocent flirtation is a troublesome affair. Its essence is secrecy, and that is a boro ana a nuisance to an honest heart Mrs. John Sherwood in Once a Wsek. The Loud Voice In rublle. The ill breeding that manifests itself in loud talking in public is entirely too preva lent hereabouts among women whose attire and general conduct stamps them as other wise well bred. That womanly trait, a low voice, which Shakespeare found so excellent a thing in women, is noticeable by its rarity in most American communities. The im pression conveyed by hearing such a voice in public places and convej-anees is that the forte speaker's usual surroundings are the factory or the rattle of the kitchen dishes, each resulting in enforced elevation of speech to a key high enough to drown other noises. The factory girl or the dishwasher has every excuse for loud talking, for with her it is the force of habit Other women have no such excuse and their vociferousness may be set down to innate vulgarity. Such women focus the eyes and arouse the attention of every occupant of a street car. There it is simply amusing and perhaps annoying. In the place of amusement the loud talker, man or woman, is simply a pestilence, a reminder that the Nineteenth century is prolific of barbarians and that rudeness is the rule and refinement the exception. Pittsburg Bul letin. Advice to Anxious Housemothers. If your husband's salary is small, don't try to live in the same style as your neighbor who has twice your Income. It will cost you dearly in tho end. Don't dress your children and furnish your house the same as theirs. They can haw their sewing done and their rooms dusted; you cannot Don't .wait until you can get as costly books as they; a cheaper edition will furnish just as much in tellectual food. Bo content in a cottage when you cannot afford a mansion. Don't send your daughter to Vassar because they do, or that she may associate with them as equals, while you siend the weary hours from 5a.rn.to 11 p. m. to dovise to means. Do try, by all means, to give her a solid, prac tical education first; then, if circumstances permit, the ornamental afterward. Be systematic, but do not be so systematic that you cannot drop your work for a holi day or an evening out Slight it, if need Lo, and let me say, you can slight systematic ally. For instance, don't mind ironing those sheets or dish towels nor those woolen hot-o. Don't scrub the kitchen floor every day. There will bo time enough when it is soiled. Have a place for everything, a certain day in tho week for certain work, also a certain portion of each "day for recreation. It maybe only a few minutes, but it is wonderful what you gain in that short time. New Orleans I'icayune. Keeping Up Appearances. IIow many a roof, transparent to the mi nd's eye, discloses anxious fathers and harried mothers, sacrificing everything to keep up appearances. The underclothing may be patched and insufficient, but it is covered by stylish gowns. Slipshod, ragged and unkempt at home, when abroad one would suppose thorn to live luxuriously. Scrimping on the necessaries of life, eating crusts, shivering over a handful of coals, piecing out whatever is needed by makeshifts, such are destitute of refinement as of com fort. This course of action should not be con founded with that forethought and thrift which hoards remnants and looks decent and trim on what would be impossible for a wasteful person. It is merely a pretension and obtrusive assumption. They believe "we live amid surfaces, and tho true art of life is to skate on them well." They have not grown to tho understanding that the object of existence is the culture of soul and body, and that the condition of tho latter depends upon tho former. Hester W. Poole in Good Housekeeping. IIow to Use Rugs. Hugs are such delightful "properties" that there can scarcely be too many of them in a house, and they are utilized in every possible way. No longer condemned to a monotonous existence of lying on tho floor, they are fre quently suspended as portieres, elevated to the position of wall hangings, and even em ployed (when thin enough) as table covers. They afford so much more variety than car pets and are so much less trouble, besides be ing cleaner and less expensive, that their popularity is not to be wondered at Ella Rodman Church in AVoman. Something for Sunburn. Young ladie3 who expose their faces much, be it in riding, boating or playing lawn ten uis, will find the following recipe very effica cious in cooling the parched skin and remov ing the brown appearance which their face and hands assume by being exposed to the sun: Sprinkle unripe grapes with alum and salt, and soak them in water for four hours. Then wrap them in thick paper and roast them in hot ashes. Press out the juice and wash the face with it once each day. "Aunt Sally" in Once a Week. Many of the so called cheap cuts of meat are preferable; for instance, the shoulder of mutton is much more delicate than the leg, and, as few persons know, the price is low. The English, who of all people know what good mutton is, always give the leg to the household and save the shoulder for tUa guests or first table. The daily vigorous use of the flesh brush for those parts of the body that are covered by the clothing increases the energy of the circulation on the surface of the body and in the extremities, and is thereby a panacea for premature decay and all diseases of old age. Pongee silk must be washed in tepid lather; soap must never touch it, as it makes it harsh; hung to drain without wringing after being well rinsed, then folded while very damp, rolled in a. cloth and ironed after twelve hours. Freckles may bo removed by bathing the skin with distilled elder water, or using the honey wash. The latter is prepared by mix ing one ounce of honey with a pint of luke warm water. It is used when cold Green corn and Lima beans aeteriorate more quickly than any other vegetables; they should be spread out singly on the cool cellar floor as quickly as possible after they come from the market To keep green vegetables for a day or two, sprinklo with water and place them on a cel lar floor. Fruit should not be kept in the cellar, but put out singly and stood in a dark, dry, cool place. To render a roughened skin soft and smooth, wet in warm soft water, then Vub thoroughly with oatmeal flour and wash off with water containing a teaspoonf ul of pure glycerine. Visit the market yourself rather than order by mail or messenger; be more interested in your own welfare, and you will supply your table with better food at one-half the expense, Newspapers are the best thing fcf cleaning lamp chimneys. Put the least bit of kerosene on a piece when filling the lamps, then rub the chimneys until they shine. The best way when hot grease has been spilled on the floor is to dash" pold watcc on it, so as to harden it quietly and prevent it striking into the boards. Matting should be washed with strong salt water and a clean cloth, and do it if possible at midday, to insure quick drying, which prevents discoloration. For stains on the bands nothing is better than salt, with enough lemon juioe to moisten it, rubbed on the spot and then rinsed off with clean water. The essence of happiness in married life is 6elf sacrifice; and in the practice of this both man and woman find their characters raised and ennobled. Rub your lamp chimneys, after" washing, with dry salt, and you will bo surprised at the new brilliance of your lights. The rooms of a house need ventilation in tho daytime as well as in the night; in the winter as well as in the summer. It is false economy to buy stale anything; the freshest is none too good, especially dur ing the summer season. Twenty drops of carbolic acid evaporated from a hot shovel will go far to banish flies from a room. Young veal may be told by the bone in the cutlet If it is very small the veal is not gocd. Many persons prefer almond meal or oat meal to soap for washing face and hands. DAD BLOOD There is not one thing that puts a man or woman at such disadvantage before the woild as a vitiuteel state of the Mood Your ambition is gone. Your courage lias failed. Your vitality has left you. Your languid step and listless ac tions show that you need a powerful in yigorator, one bottle of Ueggs' P.lood Purifier and Mood Maker will put new life in a worn out system, anil it' it Ioes not it will cost you nothing. O. 1 fc Co., Druggists. Smith The pay car, the name of which is consoling to the many hundreds who are in the employ of the JJ. & M. here, arrived in the city yesterday. The coining of the pay car is talked of by all people of I'lattsinouth as much as the expected ar rival of the president, if he had conde sceuded to ftop off a day in the city. $500 Keward. "We will pay the above reward for an case of liver complaint, dyspepsia, sic headache, indigestion, constipation or costiveness we cannot cure wit West's Vegetable Li yer Pills, when th directions are strictly complied with l ney are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes Containing CO sugar coated pills, 25c For sale by all druggists. JJeware o counterfeits and imitations. The genu ine manufactured only by Juhn O. Wei & Co., 802 W. Madison St. Chicago, It Sold by W. J. Warrick. "We acknowledge the receipt of a ticket to the second annual festival and corn palace to be held at Sioux City from Sep. 24 to Oct. 0, 1888. The corn palac is worth going to see. When your skin is yellow. When your skin is dark and greasy. When your skin is rough and course When your skin is inflamed and red. When your skiu is full of blotches. w nen your sKin is lull ot pimples you need a gootl blood medicine that can 1 relied upon. Beggs' Blond Purifier and Blood Maker is warranted as a positive cure for all of the above, so you cannot possibly run any risk when you get a hot tie of this wonderful medicine. For sah by O. P. Smith & Co. A Short-Tailed Comet. Gekeva. N. Y., August fl. Prof. Brooks secured a good observation this evening of the new comet just discovered uy mm in uiso junior, it is moving easterly about one degree, and is now just above the &tar Lambda. The comtt has a large head and a short tail, whicl strangely enough apparently points to the sun. Colic, Diarrhoea and Summer com plaints are dangerous at this season of the year and the only way to guard against these diseases is to have constant ly on hand a bottle of some reliable rem edv. Beggs' Diarrhoea Balsam is a POS ITIYE BELIEF in all these disagreeable cases and is pleasant to take. It will cost you only 05 cents. O. P. Smith S Co., Druggists. Wife (retrospectively) 1 can remember so well, John, how fond you and my fii-st hus band were of each other. You were boys to gether, and your friendship lasted to the end. Husband (sadly) Ah, y6s, poor fellow I his death has been a sad blow to me. Hui-perY Bazar. Bucklen's Arnica salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruiser, sorep, ulcers, salt, rheum, fever sores, tetjer, chapped hands, philblaius, corns, and all skin eruptions, and postive- ly cures piles, or no pay required. It guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. 51-ly. Better Be Getting Away. I would etropgly advise every German ir tha United States w ho has any idea of assii'S ing his friends or relations from Fatherland, to perfect his arrangements and get them out here at once. I say this because one of the first things the new emperor is likely to do m pursuance of his policy will be to pre vent emigration by all the means in his des potic power. He is for war, and will want them to do his' iigljting not alone the high born dandies but the hard handed soldiers from the plow and the work bench. The emperor is wild for the grandest game in life; he iongs to bear the earth quiver with the thunder of the guns yes, even to hear the bullets singing in his ears, though that is a pleasure not often enjoyed by men in his bigh station. His ancestors won fame; he. with his lame left hand, must have like glory, and he must have men who will saori flee their lives in slaughter so 'that tie may nan under the Landen m triumph. Therefore, friends and fellow citizens, you who have fathers, brothers, sons and friends who are liable to carry a gun, not for vater Iari 1, bu6 for the glorification of Wilheli tho Second, look lively, before the ports are closed and emigration to this land of peace, freedom and plenty Lecomes a crime by order of the emperor. Once a Week. Growing by Klectric Light. It is said that tree planted under the elec tric light inertjase in ize much more rapidly than those st out under ordinary circum stances, t is iin!y illustrated iD Fairfield just at present, wuero at a street corner 6'ands a little treo that was tet out there last spring. It grew fairly well last season with out the electric light, but this season, under its effulgent rays, it ha3 stretched out with grat rapidity, tar outstripping all its fellows at the same time. The explanation of this umyual growth, given by ihe scientist on the opposite side of the street, is that th tree grows both day and night, the electrto light; taking tho place of the sun at night Under all tho circum stances this would seem a very plausible ex planation, and if it is true the electric light will coma into general usb in hot houses and ether place There it is desirable to force vegetation. -Fairfield Journal. English Spavin Liniment removes all Hard, Soft or Calloused lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Curbs. Splints, Sweeney, Stifles. Sprains, Pink Eye, Coughs and. etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Every bottle war ranted by F. G. Fkicke & Co., Druggists, Plattsmouth, Neb. DrunUennessortha LiauorHabit Posl tively Cured by Adminisleriiiji Dr. Humes' Golden Specific. It can bo given in a cui ot collee or tea without the knowledge of the person taking it; is absolutely harmless and will effect a permanent and speedy run whether the patient is a moderate drink er or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Gulden Specific in their coffee without their knowledge, and to-day believe they quit drinking of their own free will. IT NEVE It FAILS. The system once impregnated with the Speci fic it becomes an utter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist. For full particulars, address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO., 185 Pace st., Cincinnati, O. a:J lv l-"uieroi-s and XewiirM. Old Emperor William disliked to road newspapers, and had his secretaries road them for him and clip out the very impor taut items for him. Emperor Frederick, on the other hand, read them all through him self. New York Tribune. London omuibusses aro to be illuminated with the electric light, the storage Lattery to be carried under the seat of tho dri vers. A Warning. The modes of death's approach are va rious, and statistics show conclusively that more persons die from disease of the hroat and lungs than any other. It is probable that everyone, without excep tion, receives vast numbers of Tubercle Germs into the system and where these germs fall upon suitable soil they start into life and develop, at first slowly and is shown by a slight tickling sensation in the throat and if allowed to continue their ravages they extend to the lungs produc ing Consumption and to the head, caus ing Catarrh. Now all this is dangerous and if allowed to continue will in time cause death. At the onset you must act with promptness; allowing a cold to go without attention is dangerous and may loose you your life. As soon a you feel that something is wrong with your throat, lungs or nostrils, obtain a bottle of Bos shee's German Syrup. It will giye you immediate relief. Which are the two hottest letters in the alphabet? K N (Cayenne). State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ( Lucas county, ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the flrm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city Toledo, County and state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Ham's Catahkii Clue. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Cth day of December, A. D. '80. A. W. GLEASON, (Seal) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly upon the blood and mucus surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free, F. J. Cjiknkv & Co., Toledo, Ohio. EST'Sold by Druggists, 75 cents. Any one paying up their subscription and 25 cts. can have the Omaha Weekly Bee till January 1st., 1889. A Wpjrnanfs fjiscoyery. "Another wonderful discovery lias been made and that too by a woman in this country. Disease fastened its clutches iiiion her and for seven years she with stood i s severest tests, but her vital or gans wfie undermined and death seemed imminent. For three months she cough ed incessantly, and could not sleep. She bought of U3 a Lottie pf I);, bjing's New Discovery for Consumption and was so much relieved on taking first dose that she slept all night, and with one bottle has been miraculously cured. Her name is Mrs. Luther Lutz." Thus write Wr. C. iiamnch. ou ,o., oi oiiemv, ..N. J. jtt a it 1 t ri r .-.11 , --r . . . free trial bottle at F. . Fricke & Co. '3 Drugstore,'. ' ' : ' "'." For Sale- A thorough bred. Polled Angus Lull calf, enquire of Judge W. H.Newel or C. rarmele. tL Wm. Gilmocr. Tho Verdict Unanimous. "W. D. Suit, Druggist, Bipnus. Ind.. testifies: !'I c.an recomaiend Eleciric Bit ters as the very best remedy. Every bot tle sold has given relief in every case. One man took six bottles, and wan cured of rheumatism or ill years standing." Abraham Hare, druggist, Bellvile. O'.do. affirms: "The best selling medicine I haye evr handled in mv 20 years" exper ience, is Electric Bitters." Thousands of others have added their testimony, so that the verdict is unanimous that Elec tric Bitters do cure n diseases, c.f the Liver, Kidneys pr Blopd. Only a half dollar a bottle at F. G. Fricke & Co.'s drug store. 2 The republican congressional con vention will be held at Lincoln on Mon day, Aug. 20th, and the state convention on the 23rd, at the same citv. Itch, Prairie Mange, and Scratches of every kind cured in 30 minutes by Wool ford's Sanitary Lotion. A sure cure and perfectly harmless. Warranted by F O Fricke & Co. druggist, Plattsmouth Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. When B.by wm sick, ire g&re her C&storia. When he wm a Child, &he cried for CMtoria, When she became Kiss, she clung to Castorla, When she had Children, She gave them Castorla DON'T SCOLD a man for groaning when h has lihi urimu.'ni orfv'eursJtria. The pain in pimply awful. No torture in lh nueient times wm more painful than these twin disease. Hut ouchtu'l a man to be blamed if, having Hhru inatism or Neuralgia, he wont lua Ath-lo-pho-ros, when it hi cured tiiou.'ftinl-t who have suffered in tha same way ? It has cured hundred after physicians Lave prouounccd them incurable. "Til kill of f)v pliyilel.itu emM not eur in ul Kliuumnti-Tu winch tin 1 wttli.rl In thi hip, uok iuiA uliuulclmr. R mtnix wan thv iwln tlitt ulavp u liot Imfx- lllle. Tho 6rl dram ot Athlrniluilfi rue niliof, an-1 ht ilurd nnhlwl nm W fli fur four RH1 li&lf lionni without nkinn'. I contmuml iU n. unil am now U." Kkv. S. II. TilOYfc.lt. Now Alhitny, IiiA. 43Scni1 fi renin for the In nut i Hil foloivd ; 'is lure, "Mooilnh Maiden." THE ATHLQPHQRQS CO. 112 Wall St. N.Y. CUfiES Whtht ALL LLSL UiLS. BestOotitfli Syrup. Timti'M pxxl. U60 1 in nm. r-toM r-v firiif'ifi-iH. 4 I boliovo Pi no's Cure for Consumption saved nif life-. A. II. Dowtr.r., Editor Enquirer, Ednn ton, N. C, April 17. Tho bknt Cough Medi cine is Pisd's CuitK nm Consumption. Children take it without objection. By all druggists'. ii5e. CUHES WHEfiE ALL ELSE 1AILS. Best Couch Syrup. ThhIch iroixl. Vbo nber 1 J u si n M THE OLD RELIABLE. fl. A. WATERMAN li M Wholesale and Keta'.l Dealer In N D oors Can supply every demand of the trade Call ami get terms. Fourth street In Itear of Opera House. lia s re vol .1 i(si if 1 the u;i i ui i i ' a I Iks A 11,1 .V 1 . I.l ,.l . hat can lie performed lv,.r t. ,tl v without sioarat ini; !!: v.oi!;i-is lioiu II:, -i'r home. J'.iy liHci al ; an- 1, m- ran , (, -,; ei-her sex. yum:,' or old ; ,. ',r. j.,l al.il'ily ! iUiifil. Capital not, n-.-l.-( ; you ale slailcl free. Cm ! his out. . mm return to usai.il we win send you lice. miiih I liin of u real importune 4 and value to you, tliar, will Mart ou iu liusiness "liieh will hrliifr you In more money rluht away than any! nm: i lnr in the world " ;-ai d outllt lree. Address 'line .v; Co.. Augusta, Me. I Kew aided are IIiom: who I read this ; d t hen net t liey v ill li ii I lionoraljle. e in p 1 oyineiit that will not take tlicni from their hon es Htid families, 'i J: -. profit-, a iv i.irt'H ;mj su4J for PV( i y Industrious peixui. many liavemaiij and are now making f-evera! l.'uiidi: d dollatx per month . It is easy !' i .'my ne to m:.e and upwards per day, who is v iiiintr to work Kit her sex, j ouiik or o i ; eapll al not needed we Mart yen, Kv'ervililun new. No special ability required, yen, reader, can do ir as well as any one. Write to us at oi.ee for lull par ticulars which we mail free. Address Mit roil & Co., Portland, Maine. Sea Wonders eiM Iu tiio-.-"aiiih i form, hat ae s lasi:-d b tli? ,aai i-li of j,, , vent inn, Tii,,i. ae tu need or protllalile work that can be done while living at home, should at cne send t heir ail d res- to I f m1I..i t . -r. l.ort.and, Maine, and receive free full infer,:,. Hon how either, nex, of all ayes, C;,n earn Horn S- to t per dav and '.pwurti-. hIitpvi t they li',"?. o:i Hi..: started free ; capita! not neceij s me have mads over iy ii. one da, at tlni wtirlc. AliMKved. - PARK2NS CtftQR TOfJIO Invaluable for Couglia, Colds, Iuward I'a.o., Launui.tlo.fc Dr. C- A. Marshall. Preservation of the Xatural Teeth a .Specialty. Aursthetics given fur Pai.v l.KS S FlIMNf: oh Exthachox OF Tl lIIf. Artificial teeth made on Gold, Silver Rubber or Celluloid Places, nnd iiiMitcd as soon as teeth are extracted when de sired. All work warranted. Prices reasonable. FiTzr,fcH.''s Block Pi. ttsmocth. Nm Legal Notice In District court of Ohm County. N-'r.ik;i E. G. Uovpy & ,on, plaiiit'ft. vs. John H Betver, def-ndant. John II. Beaver, defendant ill take not p" that n tip" -'tti day of May K. ;. I)ov-v & Sou. plaintiffs, commerced :ln ai ti.ui in the district court of Ca,s f-HMv, N br ika. t he ob ject of which is to o-covn from said de'leudaii t the sum of $d").sj witn int-iet al ten per cent from April , lsf and that the -merest of SMi.i n'n-resident, defendant in and to the nonh west quarter of sedion o-ie in town-h p twelvo Borth of rang twelve, eat t-f the i;ti, y y j., Cacs county. Nebraska, has been attached un der process issued in said cause:. Von are required to answ er in said cause on or before the Kill day of September iss. ilated thin Xil-l day of nly ivss By A. N. Sullivan, Attorney. hi if i i M 9(1 Liiii INE LUMBER Sliiiiloy, Latli, Sasli, ma m n nni nluriLi IllJlJl KA2R BALSAM S&S"fea$2lean!,c" n"d lx itirl. th hair. rftlfcrir-1 J&Qd ""I" Fails Restore Gray 'SK-i&l Hair to ' Youthful Color. lCiirt;SBcaIn(liM-as sand httirfullint' JJl-Ly ,S fre tit Prng-i.iMtH. i i 'i