Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, September 11, 1890, Page 8, Image 8

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s WEEKLY HERALD : PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, SEPTEMBER 11 1890
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BIQ SWAMP ADVENTURES.
"fUf -on the Great Hanh with Deer,
10 Bears, Alligators and Desolation.
The prairie land which covers a con
pdderable portion of the Okefenokee
a" nramp is a very remarkable formation,
Siafl la, I am told, peculiar to this swamp.
;ult is open land, entirely free from tim
latx, and etretching away as far as the
I, ye can reach in every direction. It has
taost of the characteristics og a huge in
JUnd eea except the waves. Intertijersed
,,:fcere and there in this huire prairie are
! small patches of high, dry ground of
l variable 6ize and heavily timbered, called
n; cow houses. I am unable to ascertain
Iltha jiropriety of this name, unless it be
. A that the cattle, deer and other animals
seek these places for shelter and to get
crat of the water.
The surface of these prairies is cov
ered with a deposit of decayed vege
tation that has been accumulating for
centuries, and is called muck. This
varies in thickness from four to ten
feet, with water beneath, and below the
water sand. This singular formation
.gives to the swarcp its name of Trem
bling Earth. It will support the weight
of the average man if he keeps moving
onward, but if he pauses an instant he
eminences to sink, and may go through
to his waist or over his head. At every
tep the water oozes up around the feet,
while the muck will trtmble and quiver
for yards around. .
There is something grand and even
sublime to the visitor in the .cil?nt vast
ness of this prairie formation. It
etretches r.v:iy before the eye in every
direction until only limited by the hori
zon, its perfect stillnes3 only broken by
the occasional bellow f some huge alli
gator or the far distant scream of some
unknown bird. . Here and t!;crj can be
seen the track lett behind by some hunt
er, where p(iblj years ago he had
laboriously poled his canoe along in pur
suit of game, the path as distinct and
fresh now as if only made yesterday.
All around fish of endless Fpecies and
sizes can be Been swimming and darting
about, while not infrequently the eye
may fall upon some immeuse alligator
or snake sunning himself upon the sur
face of tho muck and water, or slowly
sinking out of sight as soon as he is dis
covered. This, description conveys a
slight, but at best a very imperfect, idea
of the prairie land of this swamp.
Upon the island where we are at pres
ent encamped are living two families,
with the aged father, named Cheshire.
The old gentleman is1 nearly 80 years
of age, and has spent thirt3-odd years
of his life here in this spot. He is a
wonderful fisherman and indeed calls
himself the king of the swamps, to
which position he says he was duly ap
pointed and commissioned by Dr. Little,
the state geologist. The two sons of Mr.
Cheshire have their families here. Thn
men attempt to cultivate small crojjs,
but spend most of their time hunting.
Their revenue i3 almost wholly derived
from the sale of hides, alligators, deer
and bear. The quantities of these that
they destroy and many of their stories
of hunting adventures are almost in
credible. Think of a hunter shooting down four
deer with a rifle, one after another, and
without moving from one spot. In sev
eral of the lake3 that are thickly inter
spersed throughout this prairie the alli
gators are so numerous . and fierce that
they will attack a man in a boat as soon
as he appears among them, and shooting
them by night, which is the way they
are commonly killed, is sometimes at
tended with no little danger.
The entire armament of the Cheshire
family consists of one ten-gauge, ten
pound, double barreled Remington shot
gun and two Winchester rifles, one 3S
caliber and one 32. Also a small yellow
pine bow and a few cane arrows. The
latter are used in shooting fish, and I
feel safe in affirming that the dexterity
with which these men use their rude
bow and arrows would put to shame the
average Atlanta marksman with his rifle.
In passing over the prairie one of the
Cheshires will suddenly stop, poise his
little bow and send his little arrow fly
ing into the water ordinarily into a
spot where yon or I would see nothing,
but the way in which that arrow will
dance about for the next minute or two
will convince you not only that there is
ain object on the other end of it, but
that there is an object of some size, too.
When your hunter pulls up his arrow,
behold! A four or six pound trout or
black bass, centrally transfixed, a shot
that very few of our marksmen could
make with a gun. Cor. Atlanta Journal.
The Divine Sa'ata and Her Trunks.
Lady readers may be interested in
knowing something of the trunks of
Sarah Bernhardt, which the other day,
to the number of forty-eight. Interfered
with 4tie traffic at Angers 6tation and
paralyzed nearly the whole of the rail
way staff there. Madame admits that
she had forty-eight trunks with her, ex
clusive of packages great and small.
Twenty of her trunks are made of wood,
about four feet high, each divided into
three compartments and filled with her
-most valuable dresses. Fourteen were
-saade ol wicker work, also in three com
partments, some of the heavier being
subdivided into two, three, or four
spaces, filled with petticoats, linen, boots
and robes of small value. Three special
trunks are set apart for hats, arranged
on pegs in such a way as to prevent
them from being shaken or crushed.
The tragedienne's "kit" in all weighed
between two and three tons Pall Mall
Gazette.
Tb VolnbU A
The silver polish man is an artist. He
is numerous and always theorizes. One
of the latest of the kind was in a Lewis
ton drug store the other day and he was
as usual theorizing, and bis theory was
fearfully and wonderfully made. Said
he: "Silver is porous. You can tell that
it is because it sweats fai hot weather.
Fill a silver pitcher with water and the
crater comss through on the outside. "
So on ad libitum, while the druggist
smiled and said, "If your knowledge of
other fubjects is as accurate as that upon
the pores of silver it is valuable."
Xrwiston Journal.
ln II I tVJ
mm0
Ite superior xcellence proved In millions !
Iiumes for more than a quarter fin century.
It is uetti bv i lie Lnltei! Mate government,
Endorsed by the heads of th Ureal Universi
ties i the tronest. purest and mut healthful
Dr. Price' cr am baking powder doeo not con
tain Ammonia, Lime or Allum. hold only In
caus.
PRICE BAKING POWDER CO.,
New York, Chicago. St. Louis.
CALHOUN ON THE DEMOCRATIC
PARTY.
"An Iowa refugee named Vaughn, who
is by an unk'nd p.ud hostile fate permit
ted to issuw in Onialia a collection of
plates in the disgui e of a newspaper,
devotes a column of Mouda's issue to
the editor of this paper. While it's not
the intention to reply to his falsehoods
and inueudoer, their utterance will be
taken as a cause for so.newhut dufinirrg
and explaiuiug what this paper believs
to be sound and honest and proper dem
ocratic policy on the liquor question.
To bttgin tv"tf it will not for one mo
ment admit that the pe n'sionof drunk
enness, with all ii direful accompar"
meuts and result is a democratic prin
ciple at a)1. It 19 true that such 's con
tended by orators who profess a contempt
for cowards. It :s half true tha: the. late
state convention declared it. to lc such
But that declaration was
NOT THE nOXKST CONVICTION
of the honest mass of. the democratic
nartv. Tht cnventiori. like all conven-
tions of all parties, was made up of men
who have more -iterest in votes man any
thing else. They had been promised
many thousands of votes if they would
only pronounce definitley and positively
against prohibition. They yielded to
the temp ition seduced under pron'V
of marriage. The usual result. w"'l fol
low.' The votes will not be delivered
and with the st'og of this fresh betrayal
in their souls the democratic politicians
will do in their .ath what they should
have done from pr' iciple. But n" mat
ter, so it is done.
It is impossible that the maintenance
of the whisky traffic can ever b :nme
cardinal principle, a party test, of de
mocracy or any other great party . Even
he appearance of it for policy's sake is
a serious and lamentable blunder. Let
us look at history a little. The democracy
in an early day looked askant upon the
public school system and thus drove from
it many of the lest and purest men. It
opposed the homestead law and whs
knocked dawn and trampled in the dust
by the procession of sturdy pioneers that
peopled the public domain. The hun
dreds of thousands of foreign born citi
zens who came to the great west attached
themselves to the party that claimed the
credit of supplying L'i homes for them
and free schools for the:- children .
THEY WEBB GOOD THINGS
and the foreigner was properly grateful
for them. Democratic opposition to
them was not very pronounctd just
sufficient to incur ie natr al penn'ty ol
shortsightedness. Jrt as the pr sent
attitude of the party on whisky has been
b'otight about by conservatism e id luck
of thoughtful consideration, so it wa
th n. Th : democratic party chain d itse'.f
to slavery. That institution d:ed, and
democracy clung to the corpse and held
it to its bosom till it rotted e id dropped
away, shred by shred, bone by bone.
The whisky traffic, far more brutalizing,
inhuman and inexcusable than slavery,
13 doomed to the same extinction. Shad
it, when millions are begt'ng it- brave
assistbnc j in striking off the shackles of
tariff tyrany and class rul, by them
WAIT A WHILE
because we are too busy defending the
rights of men to sell whiskey to attend
te them just now? As soon a we have
secured to some men the assured right to
spread brutality and poverty, to sow tbe
seeds of strife and murder, to starve
women and children we will come to
the aid of victims of the class misrule,
corporate conspiracy and tarifli robbery.
It is a sublime spectacle. Six millions of
men on a crusade for a good government
pursuing an errand of liberation, pause
in their march until the saloon keeper
has been placed beyond all danger of re
sponsibility. Such an incident is with
out a parallel in human history. It is
the colossal blunder of the age if it be
seriously undertaken.
Should the democratic party all over
the nation adopt as a settled policy what
has been undertaken in Nebraska as a
vote msking expedient.it seals tbe doom
of the party. The human race advances
as steadily as time moves. What is civ
ilization today is barbarism tomorrow.
Men are pushed and drawn forward and
upward by forces as irresistable and un
ceasing and undeviating as gravity.
Within two score years it will be as im
possible to make liquor as it is today te
own an African slave.
A MTTIK KOBE HISTORY.
When the war ended the democratic
party, weighted with a bad odor of sym
pathy with the rebellion, fought steadily
o-sinfit the alreadv accomplished results
It denied and - protested against negro
suffrage. It protested against the con
stitutional amendments. It ended by
accepting them all. In spite of it blun
ders in spite of being cheated, defrauded
and overawed in spite of its own blun
ders, it held together with the tenacity
that commanded the admiration of its
enemies. Its bases rested upon one or
two fundamental principles that will
never change so long as men herd to
gether. Upon these it rallied and re
cruited its forced after each freeh defeat,
But now, while it proposes to burden
itself with a predestined corpse, a mon
ster in whose vitals the javelin of Jehova
is already thrust, its enemies are robbing
it of' its principles taking from it its
soul.
In Iowa and in Kansas the party man
agers pursued the same course upon
which their fellows are now treading in
Nebraska. They had at first a trainsient
success, such as may be achieved in Ne
braska this fall. In Iowa they parleyed
with the saloon and made it their tool in
stead of their master, renewed the strug
gle on the old lines of free trade and
corporate regulation, and won a partial
victory at the last election. In Kansas
they have succeded in exchanging thous
ands of the best and purest men in the
party for half the number of vagabonds,
bootleggers and rumsuckera.
IT IS CTTE1H.Y IMPOSSIBLE
in this age ot human progress to build
and maintain a great party founded upon
he 6aloon. To assert it can be done is
to deny all the evidence of history. Ard
if it could be dou", if it were possible,
the men who should accomplish it are
criminals too deep for any conceivable
damnation. A people that wiuld con
sent to it would be unfit to exist, and
would cease to exist as rapidly as Nature
could wield her deadly engines of des
truction. Their downward course would
be as rapid and as sure as that of other
peoples who have forfeited their right to
bo. .
. The forces that sustmn a people are
virtue, intelligence, sobriety, energy
judgmen;, perseverance, fidelity, truth
fulness and industry. Alcohol is the
destroyer of all these. There is not a
good quantity it does not subvert. There
is nut n weakness or a vice that it does
net develop and foster.
But the race will grow upward. It
will put alcohol and nil other great curses
under its feet, and any party that links
it ?1 f to any obstacle to progress will be
crushed to powder.
This is a feeble, tame and imperfect
representation of the case, but it is
enough to justify every democrat in dis
avowing any responsibility for t ie dis
graceful blunder perpetrated by his party
at its late state convention. And should
a wicked and reckless subserviency to
the rum power become tha permanent
policy of th p. rty it will justify every
self-respecting citizen in shaking if s dust
from his ft-et. "
The Foregoing from the Lincoln Her
aid speaks a language foreign to democ
racy and must convince any one tht the
man who penned the endictment is neith
er of nor indigneoas to the climate and
atmosphere which surrounds him in the
democratic pastures of Nebraska. What
a history? Hear him? Opposed to the
public school system! Opposed to the
homestead law which opened the great
west up to the poor man and gave him a
cheap home! Opposed to the abolition
of human slavery and in favor of its
maintenance and exteution over the free
territory. Opposed to all reconstruction
measures after the war of the rebellion
which insured the permanency of free in
stitutions of this continent. Opposed to
the constitutional amendments. Oppos
ed to the advancement of the human
race in everything which tended to ele
vate and humanize and christianize. Op
posed to the principles of sobriety and
swift to write its condemnation of such
prii ciplrs in the platforms of its party
as an oath of allegence which its adher
ents must take and subscribe at this day
and age before they will be permitted
to fra'ernize its elect. What do demo
crats, we mean fair minded intelligent
democrats, think of this indictment of
..1 - 0
that party ot puma remimssanecss
If a republican journalist had writtm
it it would have been hailed as a p' em
of partisan hate and republican malig
nanty, but coming from the leading and
polished journalists of the democratic
party, one who gave evidence of tbe
courage of his convictions both during
the war of the rebellion and ever since,
;t cannot be passed over as the 'die word
of partisan feel:ng. These words of the
editor of the Lincoln Herald are as true
as the fateful -denunciations which the
great teacher uttered as he scourged tbe
theives and fakirs from the Holy Temple
And, Bro. Calhoun has no more business
in the democratic camp a9 a loyal mem
ber of that party than the ice man has
in that warmer region designated in
these effe.ninate days as Hades.
John Inhelder. Jacob inhelder, Mary Shirk
ey, Ulricn I.nelder. Baibara Gauor, Catherine
Bue che. Clave Sherman Inhelder, Burkhard
Inhelder. Christian Inhelder.l Maggl" Lfueht
weis. Mathew inhelder and Henry Inhelder,
children and only heirs at law of John In
helder. deceased and all other persons interest
ed will take uotioe that on the 13th day of Au
gust. 18W Louis C. Eickcff an administrator of
the estate of John Inhelder, deceased, filed h's
petition in the district, court of Cms county.
.Nebraska against paid heirs, the object and
prayer of said petition heing to procure from
aid district court a judgement and order
authorizing said administration to convey to
Harry Meisinger lot seven (7) in b'ock three
(3) in Cedar Creek in Cas county, Nebraska,
nnd further to authorize said adminis-rator to
convey to Bertha Frey lot three (I) in b'ock four
(4) oaid Cedar Creek; said conveyances to be
made by virtue of contracts entered luto be
tween !aid John Inhelder, deceseed, and said
M'singer and Frey. hearing w ill be g-ven
on said petition on the 13th day of Oct ber.1890.
t ten o'clock in the forenoon f t-aid day, In
open court at the regular October, 190 term of
the district court of Cass county. Nebraska.
23-6t Louis C Eicroff
As administrator of the estate of Johu Ia
helder, deceased.
Road Notice.
To all Whom it may concern :
The commissioner appoiLted to vacate a
road now runninir across block ! north, and
e west and 11 north and 6 west in the town of
Rock Bluffs has reported in favor ol the vac-
tioa thereof, and all biection thereto or i
claim it damage, wind be filed in tte Coue-' '
tv t lerk'n ofh r (in or bef 'te nmi'i on the 8th
day ofNevember A V. 1890. or such rot,d will
I"? vrj ated without reference thereto. t
4t PiHDCaiTCHjaLO, County Clerk.
Skins on Fire.
With ltning, Burning Bleeding
Ecxemas Instantly Relieved
by Cut' cura Remedies.
Ourflittle on will be four year old on the
30th inet. In May. 1885. he wad attacked with
a very painful breaking out of the tkln. We
tailed In a phynician, who treated him for
about four weeks. The child received ilitle or
do good from the treatment, as the breaking
mat. supponed by tbe physician to b hives la
an Hggregated form, became larger in blotches
and more and more distressing. We were fre
quently ob'teed to get up in the night and rub
hin with soda In water, strong liniments, etc.
Finally we called other physicians, until no
lees man fix had attempted to cure him. all
alike failing, and the child steaiily getting
worse and w. rse, until about the 30th of last
July, when we began to give him Cuticuka
Hkholvknt internally, and the C ticuka
and CuticuraSoai" externally, and by the
last of August be was so neatly well that we
gavt him only one dose of the Kksoltf.nt
about every second day lor about ten days
Irneer, and he has never been troubled ince
with t'e horrid malady. In all we used less
than one half of a bottle of Citicura Kmdl
vent, a little less than one box of Cuticuka
and only one cake of c uticuka noap.
H. E. RVAN.
Cayuga. Livingston 111.
Subscribed and rworn to before me, this 4th
day of January, lf87. C. N. COE. J. P.
CUTICUKA 11E31KDIKS.
Parents do you realize how you- little ones
suffer, wlien their tender skins are literally (in
fire with itching, burning, scaiy, and blotched
skin and scalp i!i-eaies? To know that a sin
gle application Of the Cl'TICUKA Kj-MKIIUS
will often afford imdaiit relief, permit ret and
sleep, and point to a permanent nd oeonowii
cal because so speedy) cure, anit not .to ue
them, without aiiiomei ts delay, is to b? guilty
of D 'Sitive inhumanity. o greater legacy can
be bestowed upon a child than acinar t-kin and
pure blood. Cuticuka Ukmkuiks are abeo
lu ely pu'e. ami may be used from infancy to
age, from pimple to scof ula.
old everywhere. Price. Cuticcka, 50c Soap
2.1c, Kksolvf.ni', al 1'rej ired by the Pott k a
I)KU(i AND CliKMlCAL C OR J'OKAllON, Bjfton
Mass.,
tSf-end for "flow to Cure hkin iseases."
P 1 D YKskil1 ' nriSca'p purified ;ind beniitifled
DliOl Cby ur xitA o.xi-. At sole ely pure.
NO EHEUHATM ABOUT LIE.
In one minute tho Cviticu
ra Antl. Pain P laster relieves
a -rt i " mane, t cia ie mp.K .inev.imis
Uml:tr ami cliesi pain. The flrtand
only lnii'iiuta. eou- pain killing strengthening
plaster.
Notice.
Andrew .1. Hansen ill take tm-!ee that Mary
J. ltmseii fild li'-r , etir n ataint him on
the. 19th Oay of August 1 :(!. iu lhu district
c.-urt ol Cass un y, ill3 object and player of
which are to ota'ii a divorce fr-nn said An
drew J. lL.nsen lobe ha e restore to lu-r. her
maiden name and to havti fie. reed t iier the
care and cueto :y their lrinor children. s a
ground for s. eli'ielief said pcti-.i n alleges that
you have wilfully d sorted olaintiu for more
tllHIi two veil s i;;St pest.
You e.re requited to an- wer s:ii1 fi. t'Tion by
MoudfcV the 21tli ay of September. 1KK.
M AltV ' . Hanskv
Ay her Attorneys, Beeson & Root.
Legal Notice.
Anne Rchrumr. defendant, will take notice
that on the 2nd dav of Henteniber, lsjto. Chris
tian Hchrmiip. plaintiff, herein filed his peti
tion in the d strict com t of Cass county. Ne
braska. against said defendant, the object and
praver of which are to obtain a decree of di
vorce severing the bonds of matrimony here
tofore uniting plaintiff and delendaut.
You are required to anuwer said pelition on
or before the 13th day of October lO.
Christian Schrump
By Wooley & Gibson his Attorneys. L'4-4t
Legal Notice.
To Lol-v I.Todd, non-resident defendant, you
are h- reby notified that on the 1Mb day oJ Au
gust. 190, Harry G. Todd filed his petition in
the district court of Cass county. Nebraska,
against you, the object and prayer ot which
are to procure a di orce from you on the ground
that you have wilfully de-erted him for more
than two years last past.
You are required to answer said petition on
or before the -2itl day o September, 190, or
your deiault will be entered and the allega
tions contained in said petition taken astru-.
Hakky G. 'I oir. Plaintiff,
By his attorneys Beeson & Koot. 22-4.
Estimates of the expenses of the city
Plattsmouth for the year of 1890.
Mayor and Ccunc l $ 950 00
City clerk 3"0 00
lty treifurer 3(H) 00
Board of public works 3no to
City attorney 3?0 00
Boarding city prisoners ssoj0
Printing 2no 00
Incidentals 1.500 00
Gas lighting 4 ooo oo
Omaha Southern R K bond . 3 000 00
BSMEK bonds l.00 00
street, grading and bridging 2,ooo oo
Fire hydrant rental 5,000 00
Kearton refunding bonds 1 0 00
High school bonds . 3.5'0
Storm water sewer bonds 2.508 00
Inte section pv ng bonds coo 00
Fire and water 6f0 00
Total, 27.900 00
Total receipts for the year ending July
1st 1800 as reported by the city treasurer
$26,155.21.
( A. Salisbry
Finance Com. P. McCallek
( C. IIkmplk
IN THE DISTRICT COURT, CASS COUNTY
Nebraska.
American exchange Bank, Plft 1
I
J. A. Phelps, first name unknown.
and S. P. Phelps, first name un- y
known, and os, M. Beardsley. I
Tom K.Clark, Geo. Wone and A. J
B. Dick-ion. company firm of Beard I
sley Clark & Co, Defendants. J
Jo J, A. Phelps,(first name undnown) non
resident defendant, you will take notice that
on the 2th day of .Inly 1890, tbe American Ex
change Batik, plaintiff, h reio filed it petition
in the district court of Cass county, Nebraska,
against said defendants, the object and prayer
of which a- to foreclose a certain mortgage
exeeu'ed by defe- dants J. A. Phelp and .S. P.
Phelps to Plaintiff upon lot number eleven (11).
in block number four (4) in the village of Elm
wood, Ca s county, Nebraska, to eecure the
paym ntofacertnia promissory note dated
March 10 1890 for the sum ef f G5 and due and
payable ninety days after date, Th it there is
now due upon said note and mortgage the sum
of with interest from maturity at the rate
ff 10 per cent per annum- Plaintiff prays for a
decree that defendants f. A. Phelps aud S. P.
I'helps be required to pay the sum or that the
property described 1 said mortgage may be
sold to satisfy the amount found due and that
judgment rendered againet said desendant J.
A. Pheips and S. P. Phelps for anv deficiency
found due. You are required o answer said
pel it lou on or before the 2ith day of Septem
ber 1890.
22-4t WINDHAM & DAVII8,
Attorneys foi Plaintiff.
Sheriff sale
By v rtne of an order of tale Issued by W. C.
Phowalter, elerk of the district court within and
for Cass county, Nebraska, and to me directed
I will on th 13tn day of October A. V. 190 at
10 o'clock a-m. of said day at the south door
of the court houe in the cltvof Plattmouth
In said county, sail at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the following real
estate towit : Lots two (2) three (3) and forty
elgbt (44) in section thirteen 13 township
twelve U2) north of range thltteen 13 east of
th6th rincipal Me rid an in Cass county. Ne
braska, together with the privileges and ap
pur ancea thereunto belonging r in anywise
appertaining.
The am belne levied upon and taken as the
propertTof Caroline M. Dodge, Moses Dodge
and C. J. rarmele. defendants : to satlffy a
judgment of aid court receverea by Anselmo
B. Kmith plaintiff aalnat tald defendant.
PI tt mouth. Net-.. September 10. A. D 190.
VVT' MAM Tiov,
Beeson Root. Fhenff Ca Co., Jeb
Attorneys lor riaintiff.
SPECIAL SALE THIS WEEK.
In Childrens Shoes. Do not miss this . Ppportunity but
take advantage of the low prices we are offering.
FOR ONE WEEK ONLY
Bargains Bargains Bargains
w. a. boeck & co.
F, G FRICKE & CO
Will keep constantly on hands a full and complete line ol pure
DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS. & OILS
DRUGGISTS SUMUtlKS.
PURE LIQUORS.
Prescriptions Carefully Compounded at nil Honrs.
RESTORERS -H
AND
Thee Lenses are tor superior to any others sold in
the city. Possessing a natural transparency and strength
ening qualities which will preserve the failing eyesight.
Plattsmouth Nursery
Buy your irees of Ja ffionae
Mnrsery wlaere you can select
your own trees tlarat will fee u
great privilege aud benefit to
you. I Ssswe all tlae leading1 va
rieties assd know better wlaat
varieties will ilo laere than
agent and you can buy as
ebeap again.
Apple trees, 3 years old -Apple
trees, 2 years old -
Cherry, early Richmond, late
Plum, Pottawattamie, Wild
Raspberries, Gregg byler - - -Strawberries,
Sharpless Cresent -Concord
vines,, H years old - -Moors
Early grapes, "1 years old -.
Currants, Cherry Currants -Snyder
blackberries - -Industry
Gooseberry
Downing Gooseberries, 2 years old
Houghton Gooseberries, 2 years old -Asparagus
- - - -
Rosses, red moss and white moss
Shrubs, Hydrangias
Honey Suckle -Snow
Balls -Lilacs
- -
Evei greens, Norway spruce 5, Fir
Mursery one-balf mile nortb of
town, end of tb Street.
Address all Orders to
PTjITTSMOUTH, - - NEB.
i Bm Ctottffn Medicine. KeeommMl K tk I
Jlessrs F. G- Fricke & Co.,
are the Only Parties Selling
our Alaska Crystal Brilliant
Combination
1 5
AS-
-0-L AS
WES.
is O
a o
252 001800
20 I 75 1500
403 GO 2500
4 00
25 150
150
10 GO 500
Richmond, wragg
Goose
30 3 00
101 00
25 3 00
250
10 1 50
101 00
125
40
30
25
20
40
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