REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION. The republican electors of the state of Nebraska are requested to send delegates from their s-everal counties, to meet in convention in the city of Lincoln, Thursday, Sep tember lit, l.v.U, at 10 o'clock a. in., for the purpose of placing in nomi nation candidates for one associate justice of the supreme, court, and iwo mcinuers 01 me ooaru 01 re gents of the state universit', and to transact such other business maybe presented to the convention THE APPORTIONMENT The several counties are entitled to representation as follows, being based upon the vote cast for Hon Geo. II. Hastings, for attorney-gen eral in Ih'.Mj, giving one delegate-at large to each county, and one for each 1.10 votes and the major frac tion thereof: COlINTIF.s. DKL.IeorMTlKS. . 11 Joluisou 1 Kearney Adams. Arthur. -- 7 6 Antelope 6 Banner 3 Keya 'ah,i 3 Keith 2 Royd 1 Kimball 2 Blaine 2 Knox. Boone '.ancaster M Li -coin 6 Box Butte ( Brown 4 Buffalo lti Loau 2 Loup 2 Butler .Madison 6 Burt H Mel, erson 2 Cass 14 Cedar... 4 Merrick 5 yance 4 Chase 3 NVmaha 9 Cheyenne 5 Cherry 5 Clay io Colfax 4 Cuming 7 Cuwter l Dakota 4 Nuckolls ( Otoe I'awnee 9 Perkins 3 fierce 3 Phelps 4 Platte 4 Dawes 7 Polk I iweou 7 lied Willow Deuel a I Kiehardson 11 Dixon tHlipck.. . Dodjie 11 Saline 14 Douglas & Sarpy.. . .:. Dundy 3 Sauiulerx ... Fillmore 9 Scott's Bluff Fraukhn 5 Seward 10 Frontier 5 Furnas 5 heiidan t Sherman 3 Sicux 2 Stanton 3 Oarfleld Gosper Orant Thayer Thomas Greely 1 2 Thurston 4 Vallev 4 itall. . 8 Hamilton 8 Harlan 4 Washington Wayue .'. . . Hayes 3 Webster 7 Hitchcock 4 Holt 8 Howard 4 Hooker 2 Jefferson 9 Wheeler 2 York 12 Total 545 Xo vote returned. it is recomended that no proxies be addmitted to the convention, and that the delegates present be authorized to cast the full vote of the delegation. It is further recomended that the state central committee select the temporary organization of the con vention. John C. Watson, W'ALT.M. Seely, Chairman. Secretary. Messrs. Oliver & Ramge, our en. terprising Main street meat market men, Have an exhibition at their shop, several stalks of corn that beat anything on record, as far as we have been able to ascertain from the numerous exchanges that reach this office. The longest stalk measures 14 feet and the shortest 12; both are well eared and full' devel oped. Mr. Kamge informs us they are fair specimens of the field, from which they were taken, consisting of to acres. We shall claim the belt for Cass county on corn raising untilwe hear of something better. Hank of Cass County and Myrcn Raapka took possession this morn ing at 9 o'clock of Philip Kraus' store, by virtue of a chattle mort gage amount to $1300. Since the above step was taken, other cred itors became alarmed, and claims to the amount of $300 more have been filed to date. n " "It Might Have Been" This morning there occurred what might have been a serious accident. The team driven by Mr Smith was drawing a load of coal up Main r ireet when Dr. Hall drove by, his buggy wheel catching the tongue of Mr. Smith's wagon, breaking it off close up to the place of attach ment, causing the team to become frightened and run. However a halt was soon called and no other damage resulted. Had the team been allowed to proceed there would undoubtedly have been a "smash up" there being no means of steering the wagon. Things were fixed up lutid still the work goes on. Dr Hall's buggy came near being turned over. Caution should be taken to prevent such accidents. Indications are that the price of all breadstuffs will be greatly en hanced next year, as Europe will be '..impelled to draw largely on the Amertcan product, owing to the de ficiency in production in those countries whence Europe's support chiefly comes. It is estimated by good authorities that America will be called upon for 248,000,000 bushels of wheat, and probably more. It appears that next year is to be an "inning" for the farmer, and there is no reason why he should not h.ive his turn. In the event of a good crop, however, and good prices, it will be a bad year for these oily-tongued demagogues that ex pect to attain distinction through the instrumentality of the inde pendent party. Mrs. A. N. Sullivan with two little daughters will visit 111 umaiia ior a few days. Now is the time to get a saddle at your own price atKeefer's. tf Base Ball Notes. Aft-r all, riattsmouth, Fremont and Hastings appear to be the only live towns in the state. They are all hustlers and all have good ball teams. Nebraska City's crack team septus to have faded like the due before the morning sun. The jor old town can't afford a ball club it seems, We want to inform the dear pub lie that if the team wins a majorit of their irames. their return will witness blue-fire and brimstone The town will be theirs. At Fremont Thursday the home team defeated Missouri Valley by to 5. Adams, our old second base man, managed to run in a few er rors but not enough to loose the game, Hastings, defeated Kearney at Hastings by the score ef 10 to 4 Conners, who pitched the second game for Blair here, pitched for Hastings and seems to have done good work. At Beatrice yesterday the Lincoln Giants defeated the home club by the score of 10 to . hrom all ac counts we imagine that the visitors had to light the crowd and um pire to win but they did it. It looks now as if the Lincoln Giants will disband after to-mor row's game at Lincoln. They have played tine ball but Lincoln is too small a town to keep up a western association team and a crack ama teur team. And, by way of remark, we will say riglit here that xapp and Creighton have come as near being V.1111V,I11.11 (111 V -A f i A . I Vt . W V. - t 1 V- ball playrers, as anybody our local team has had this year. Our peo ple realize this and they wont for get it. The team will probably be made up as iollows: c reign ton and Maupin, catchers; Yapp and Sam Patterson, pitchers; Dunn, lirst base; John Patterson, second base; Miller, third base; Tom Patterson, short; Clyde, left field; Schulhoif, center field; Perrine, right field. It is an aggregation of talent sec ond to none in the state and ought to be a winner. The B. & M's. start on their trip to the Black Hills to-morrow morning at 9:25. They have made arrange- nents to play ten games, all of them with strong clubs. If they win six of the ten the' will do them selves great honor. They play in Lincoln with the Lincoln Giants to morrow and will make a great ef fort to redeem themselves from the gnominy of their three defeats. They will present Yapp and Creigh tou as a battery probably, and it oes without saying that, so far as battery work is concerned, they will be in it. Ji. A. stopner or hlinwoou, is njoying a pleasure trip up in Can ada and he writes back that Ne braska knows nothing about kickers against the McKinley bill. He says the Canadians up there go wild in denouncing the bill as being ruinous to their trade. What is ruinous to foreign trade is advan tageous to American trade. This is what the McKinley bill is for. It protects American products against free importation of foreign campetition of pauper made goods Accidents on the B. A M. A freight train struck a hand car near Louisville this morning, de molishing the car, and breaking the leg of the foreman, Joseph Galtzic, Aside from this no one was seriously hurt. This morning as the Schuyler train was pulling out of Ashland at 8:30 Mr. H. C. Henry, who was walking on the track, apparently not aware of the approaching train, was struck and instantly killed. Mr. Moore, the engineer in charge, says that.there was a construction train on the uiaintrack near Schuy ler road, and in all robabilit3r Mr. Henry thought the noise was from the construction train. We are in formed by Mr. Hackney that Mr. Henry has been in the employ of the B. & M. for about 15 years and is very highly esteemed by all who know him. Mr. Henr3 leaves a large family wife and seven children, who-will bare the sym pathy of all. The B. & M.road has authorized its agents to sell round trip, tickets, on the certificate plan to all points in Neb. and adjoining states, to those wishing to attend the state fairs, driving park associations, ane industrial exhibits. We are under obligations to Mr Kli Sampson for a basket of line apples from his farm near Kock Bluffs. Mr. Sampson has some trees on his farm of the pound pipiu;the apples are a winter variety and they are now as large around as a saucer. Mr. John (Juick anil family are receiving a visit from a lady friend who arrived on No. 8 last evening. IT WAS A GREAT SCHEME. But Lack of Capital Ireventel the fit veiitor front Making a fortune. My friend B. isn't rich. It isn't likely that he ever will bo rich. But he firmly believes that he would have been u vert rich man by this time if he had only bef n able to command a little capital a few years ago. When he conceived the great schema which ought to have realized a fortune for him he was-a clerk in a gas .works. ft wasn't one of your new f angled works where they make gas out of water. and heaven knows what besides, but one of the old fashioned, honest sort in which gas was extracted from coal and nothing else. Everybody is supposed to know, and of course doesn't know, that one of the chief impurities of the crude gafl, after it is expelled from the coal by the fierce heat of the retorts, is sulphur. This sulphur, or the larger portion of it, is got rid of by passing the gas through a series of boxes called purifiers filled with lime. When the lime has absorbed all the sulphur that it is capable of hold ing it is removed and fresh lime is sub stituted . The 6ulphur saturated lime emits a verg pungent and disagreeable odor, especially when the cover is first lifted from the box and the lime, being hot, throws off clouds of steam Some doctors have a notion, whether well or ill founded I don't pretend to know, that this hot, foul smelling vapor is a capital remedy for whooping cough. At all events lots of mothers believe them, and when whooping cough is prev alent bring their afflicted little ones to the nearest gas works to inhale it. It was when several suffering youngsters were snuffing up the vapor and the odor around one of the purifying boxes where he worked that the inspiration seized him. It was nothing less than to take this foul lime, bottle it up, give it a high sounding name and sell it as a specific for whooping cough, offering a reward of $o00 for any case that it couldn't cure and all that sort of thing. "Jeewhittaker!" he exclaimed, enthu siastically, when expounding the scheme to me. "Just think of the dead loads of money that is in it! The lime doesn't cost anything; the company pays to have it carted away. I can make a contract with them to do the carting and make some money out of it. Then all the ex pense I will be put to will be for bottles. laoeis ana advertising. At nrtv cents a bottle it is bound to go like hot cakes There is always more or less whooping cougn arounu, 'it is an ill wind that blows nobody good.' If I am not a rich man inside of twelve months my name isn't B." He invested fifty dollars the sum total of his accumulated savings in bottles. Then he sought the assistance of capital ists. That is where he struck a snag. He found their lack of faith was propor tionate to the extent of their resources. His name is still B. ; he still has the bot- ties, but not even he beginning of a for tune yet. But it was a big seheme, and he was very proud of having hatched it and de- lights to talk about the millions that are still in it for somebody with faith and capital. New York Herald. Shooting Guns at Night. Illuminated night sights are now in use on the guns of many of the British warshina. The front siffht consists rf a nal rrrpen e-lasa. nnintriTi hpriPnth whioh X O 0 - f "XT 1 - is piacea a sman incandescent lamp. 1 The rear sight is similar in principle, ex cept that instead of the cone there is a metal crossbar with a V notch in the middle. There is a polished under surface to this 6ight from which light that first passes through ruby glass is reflected In sighting the pale green point of light which constitutes the forward sight is brought to the bottom of the V notch in the rear sight and the line 6f the ruby light is brought into coincidence with it. The electric current for each gun is supplied by a battery of two elements, so arranged that the action may be stopped by turning the battery upside down. Philadelphia Record. The Effect of Travel. It is impossible to compare nations aa if they were individuals. Each nation hast, so tct RrtAftV. prawn nn in an ar.mns- I phere of its own. We must recognize the peculiarities of other people as neces- sary features of them, and by no means as characteristics meant to esrcit lansrh- t.er in the resf. of th world. When first I I traveled abroad I was much amused by the way the common German eats with bis knife. But habit and a meas ure of experience have toned down these feelings until they hardly exist in me. And nowadays I am as much at home with the long haired woodman of a Sar dinian forest, in his grimy little hut, as in my own English den among my booka and pictures. Ail the lear noun a. Nose Ornaments of Barbarians. The ornaments put through the walla of the nose vary greatly. There may be but one perforation in each wall or there may be several-. In New Zealand flowers, in New Guinea a boar's tusk, in the Solo mon islands a crab's claw, in New Britain thorns, 6et upright, are the objects thus worn. These are all original and primi tive; after the natives come in contact with whites, these give place to metal J lection is a rather pretty nose ornament from New Guinea. It is V shaped, and p the arms fit by stud shanks, one into each wall of the nose. Professor Frederick Starr in Popular Science Monthly. A a Estimate of Woman's Value. A voanii Scotchman was once halting betwixt two loves, one possessed of beauty and the other of a cow. In de spair of arriving at a decision he' applied for advice to a canny compatriot, who delivered himself thus, ".Marry tne lass that has the coo, for there's no the deef- erence o' a coo's value in any twa weem-1 in in Christendom." San Francisco Ar gonaut. A Good Opinion of Himself. Snodgrass (after Snively finishes a fish story) Well, I like a liar. Snivel v You ecotistl. New York Enoch. 1 1 n Centos lo Offer ths Opr innityfor Investment. No Excuse for not having a Home ot Your Own. Put What you are paying out for Rent into a home. 7 Per cent money for persons j wishing to build in South Park. Look to the Future anc invest now in South Park. 1HE OPPORTUNITY OF A LIFE TIME. Among other re.'isons why it is better to invest in South Park than elsewhere in the city, are these: Property is more saleable u 3 011 wish to sell, more rentable if you wish to rent; if looking for an in crease in value, no other part of the city will compare with it in prospect The 5th ward composed largely of South Park, less than three years ago could hardljr muster up a vote at the last general election the vote was 139 and all were not polled. It i has been less than two years since the city invited us into the corpor- ate limits, yet we have over one hun- dred newly built house ond others in process of construction, owned. with few exceptions, by the parties now living in them. This part of the city has a store water mains, electric arc lights, !ltlH sri10oI nriveledires aiu 1 new criurcn euince jiisi cictuu- of which the whole city is proud. Plattsmouth's steady growth for five years past almost doubling its population; the advance stand it has taken regarding public im provements, the certainty of a new $80,000 court house; the completion of the great Missouri Pacific rail way into this city, giving us anoth er great trunk line and competing market; the constant increasing pay roll of the C. B. & Q. shops, to gether with many other well known reaaons assure a steady and perma nent advance in realty, which will ,; doubtless effect South Park more favorably than any other portion of Plattsmouth. With a view to the encouragement of a still greater growth of this part Gf the city, we will continue to sell lots 011 monthly payments, furnish m oney with which to erect houses will exchange lots for other im proved citj- property or for desir able improved or unimproved lands It is not so much the speculator as the permanent resident that we wish to purchase this disirable Property, uut 01 over iom 1 x PreS- t owners of South Park property none are speculators hence there are no fictitous values and lots are selling at about the price they were immediatly after it was platted a strong argument why the present is a most desirable time for investments. Much addi tional information regarding South ' Park may be had by calHng at my office on Main street over Bank of Cass County. E. B. WINDHAH. SO C. MAYKS C O V N f V - H V II V V. Y O li AMI) CIVIL ENGINEER All order left with the county clerk villi he lronitiy attended to. OKKICK IN COl'KT HOUSE, Plattsmouth, - - Nebraska P)PW? j ULIUS PKPPERBKRG. MANUFACTIHK OF AND urn dies ale mm retail DEALER IN THE CHOICEST BRANDS ()K CIGARS FULL. LINK Or TOBACCO AND SMOKEx S ARTICLES always in stock -o- Plattsmouth, Nebrassa PAW? IRST : NATIONAL : HANK OF PLATTSMOUTH, NEBKASKA Paid 1111 canital SSO.OdO.nr. SuiplU?..... lO.OOO.WI Jflers the very beet facilities for the prorap transaction 01 agminate iianking Business rttockc bonds, gold, government and local e- (uriti. hniiL'ht 4,nd sold. Deposit receiver mil inrrtsf. allowed on the certificate Drafts drawn, avutlaMf in any part of the nited states ana an me principal iwwun u Europe. COLLECTIONS MADF AND PROMPTLY REMIT TED. Htghest market price paid for County War rants, state am iummy uouub. DIRECTOUS John Fitzgerald D. Hawkswortb Sam Waugh. F. E. While George E. Dovey lohn Fitzgerald . Waugh. President Oati er. JHE CITIZENS BANK. PXATTSMO0TH - NEBRASKA Jayltal stock paid in $5" 0 t Authorized Capital, $100,000. OFFICERS 'RANK CAKKUTH. JOS. A. CONNOK, President. Vlce-Pres; lei i w. H. UUSHINCh Cafbier. DIRECTORS rank Carruth J. A. Connor, K. K. Guthmant J. W. Johnson, Henry Boeck. John O'Keefe W T). Mfrriam, Win. Wetencamp. W. H. Cushlng. transacts:! general banking BDS1NES ssues certificates of deposits bearing interest Buys and sells exchange, county ana city 1 ( u B ANK OF CASS COUNTY Cor Main and Fifth street. Paid up capital $50 000 Surplus 26 ".000 a. H. Parnele President Fred Gorder Vice President J. M. Patterson Casheir T. M. Patterson, Aest Casbier DIRECTORS A. B. Smith, K. B. Windham, B. S, Kamsey and T. M.Pattersoa A. GENERAL BANZ1NC BUSIHESS TRANSATED Accounts solicited. Interest allowed on time deposits and prompt attentiongiveu to all bus iness entrusted to its care. SIXTH STREET i,T F. II. KLLKNBAUM, Prop The best of fresh meat always found in this market. Also fresh Kggs and Butter. Wild game of all kinds kept in their season. m EAT MARKET! JJlUCKER SISTERS. CARRY A FULL LINE OF yVilLLENERY AND J-RENCH LOWERS. -o- We also have a dress niakiug departmeiit. Sat isfaction guaranteed. Sherwood Store. Plattsmouth AWSON & PEARCE Carry a Full Line of FINE MILLEXERY'AND CHIL DREN S CLOTHING. ALSO FliESII CUT FLOWEKS ROOM 2, R. LEV BLOCK, PL4TT3I0CTB A. 19HILIP THEIROLF HnnOpenwl upThe FireBt. ('learnst, - Co-ust SALOON IN THE CITY Where may be found choice wines liquors and cigars. ANIIEUSKR BUSCH J JEER. AND IJASS' ALE WHITE LABEL, always on linnd, -o- CORNER OK MAIN AN'K'FOUKTIl ST. P"PP"? 'DMONDS & ROFT. THK riONKKH MKRCHABI Of 2sTT:R,:R,-A.ir Carry a full stock of general mer chandise whibh the Bell very close. Highest price paid for all kinds of farm pro duce. Generous treatment & fair dealing is the sncret of success -o- CI IAS. L. ROOT, NOTARY MUKttAV KKBKA8KA IJCKWEILER & LUTZ, (Successors to) SOENNICIISEN & SCHIRK. The Washington Avenue O n O G E n S AND- Provision Merchants. Headquarters for FLOUR AND FEED We pay no rent and sell for CASH. You don'tjpay any bills for dead bee when you buy of this firm. The best SOFT COAL always n Hand. DONT FORGET AT THE i OOZEZCnTIEIES 5 THE LEADING GROC-ER HAS THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK IN THE CITY. EVERYTHING - FRESH - AND - IN - SEASON ATTENTION FARMERS I want your Poultry. Krrp-s. nut ter and your farm produce of all kinds, I will pay you the highest cash price as I -am buying lor a firn in Lincoln. B. PETERSEN.' THK LEADING GROCER Plattsmouth v.i,l. p J. II:A:X:S:E:N DEALER IN STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, v GLASS AND QUEENSWARE FIodf i Feefl a Suecialt iHtronarre d tho Tuble 'Solicited. 5 JOHNSON. BDILDIHGN Siltl St If 1, 1 w t ii 1. t 1 1 it- li V