THE DAILY IlEItALD, riAriBaiou i n, .-.iliAMK A. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1868. ThPIattsmouUiDaily Hsrald. UNOTTS 33 12, O Publishers & Proprietors. THE rLATT.-iilOUril HICHAM) t published eterv evening except Sunday ad W -ckIv vcrr I hur"ol;iy morning. Isegi. terctl at tlt poMofllee. I'lal i Mnotil Ii . Vebr.. M J -Us iniiier. Ollice corner of Vine anil rum tr. W. Tifvi run daily. On i)py on jear In ifl;ii by inall.-..$'J oc Ouii co.y rr m.nt li. Iy a r it-r .' One copy pr neck. b carib-r 16 Tau o oirtiLV. Cr.o ?py ouo jfur. in adv.mcu Si r. U"'t C 1 il I Miouili. In U"lV;iiire 75 REPUBLICAN CONVENTION. The lciuUiciu electors of the Slate of Nebraska urc rrpittrd to send li:litj tics from t'jc several counties, to un-tt in cou Ttntian, nt lhs city of Oaidn, Tuesday, 3IJ 15, lfc, ut H o'clock p. m., for the purpose of electing tour delegates to the National Republican (Jon volition, which UieoU in Chicago June 1I, 18-ts. TUB AFPoUTloNMENT. The several counties are entitled to re presentation in follows, lein based upon the vote cast for Hon. Samuel Maxwell, supreme Judge, in 1887, giving one del-eg-ite-at-larsrw to rach county, ami one for rich 150 votes and major fraction thereoff : counties. VOTPH. lU IIYH. VT Adam II Jrffursotl ! Antelope V.IIiiisou h Arthur I Kearney h Plume 2 Keyal'aha Itoone HiKeuli llox utte 4 Knox 7 )(i"wit I, Lancaster '' lluflto II l.luroln Hutler 9 louau i Kurt S lo"l 3 C'as n;.Maili.sou Cedar fj Me hcisou . ' ( hae 6;. Merrick 7 Cherry BjNaiic 5 Cue enue ............ 1 1 'N in alia it Clay UiNuckollit Col I ax ";oiih- lv Cuming -jl'awnee f tluxte' 17, Perkins Dakota f Tierce 4 Dawes 7, Tulle 6 Daw,ou 8, Platte 10 Dixon ; Phelps .. . . 7 Undue 1J! ichanlson 1;; Douglas 37 Red Willow... 7 Dundy 4 Saliue l.t Fillmore loSarpy r. FranUn 7 Sa 4 11 tiers 1? Frontier loSeward If Kurn a 6! theridau 7 iiair l-'heriiian.. 7 C.arfleUl 3:Sioux 2 ;oier 5 st an ton t ran t ... 1 Thayer 7 ireeler .. 4'Thnmas ... ? . . r a Hall lljValley Hamilton lo Aashmgton . Marian... wayne f. llaye 4 Webster llitclic tck 6; Wheeler 3 Hoi' 14 York 11 Howard 7,1'norcr. territory ... . 1 It is recommended that no proxies hi admitted to the convention, except such as aro held by persons residing 12 tin counties from the proxies are given. Gkokoe D. Meiklejoiix, Walt. M. Seei.ky, 'Chairman. Secretary. CALL FOR R PUBLIC AX COUN TY COS V EKTIOX. The republican slectors of Cass county are hereby called to meet in their respec tive wards and precincts on S.iturd-iy. April 2Stli, 183"?, for the purpose of electing delegates to meet in conven tion at Weeping Water, Xeb , on May 5, 18S, at 1 o'clock p. m. f r the purpov of electing sixt.-tn delegates to the re publics stute convention which nicet in O.nidi. Mav 15, 18S8. The wards and precincts are entitled to the fo low ing number of delegates: Tipton 7 Halt Creek 9 hlniw od 8 M'eeuiiig Water 2 J.ouisviiie P J'laltsm-uth l'rec .. 7 - City lt Ward 7 2nd " 9 " " 3rd 13 " 41 ii " 12 It. 8. WlLKINSOX, Sec'V. t!reiiwwnl Stove reek -m.-tli lien-.l Center Avoca I.M.eity Kock Kluilt Mt. Tleasant Elgin Mile Giove m. u. roi.K. ch'm. Primaries will be held in the various wards and precincts on the 2Sth of April at the following places: Tipton at Eagle 7:30, Greenwood at Cornish school house 7:30, Stove Creek at Elmwood village 7:30, Elmwood at Center school house 7:30, South Bend at South Bend 7:30, Weeping Water at Un ion Hall 3i. in, Center at Manley 3 p. in., Louisville Fitzgerald's hall 3 p. ui., Avoca at Ilutchin's School house 2 p. m. Mt. Pleasant at Gilmore's School house i p. m.. Eisrht Mile Grove at Heil's School house 3 p. m., Liberty at Holden's School house 3 p. in , Hock Bluffs at Berger Pchool house 4 p. in.. Plattsmouth precinct at Taylor's School house 3 p. m., Plattsmouth City 1st ward county judge's office I to 7 p. m., 2nd ward at 2nd ward school house 1 to 7 p. m., 3d ward at Sullivan's office 1 to 7 p. m., 4th ward at Rockwood Hall 1 to 7 p. m. REPUBLICAN CONGRESSIONAL CONVENTION. The republican electors of the First Congressional district of the state of Ne braska are requested to send delegates from the several counties to meet in con vention at the city of Ashland, Thursday May 10 1888, at 8 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of electing two delegates to the national republican convention which meets in Chicago, Jane 19, 1S88. The several counties are entitled to representation as follows, being based npon the vote caat for Hon. Samuel Maxwell for Judge in 1887, giving one delegate at large to eaeh county and one for each 150 votes and major fraction thereof: Cas Douglas iace loliicon Lancaster Nemaha.... ... ..ic Otoe ..37 Pawn" ..19 Uiehardon, .. S Sarpv s ...L Y.'.u 5 -aunUcrs 0 It is rtcommended that no proxies by admitted to the convention except such i as are held by persons residing in the ! counties from which the proxies are j given. D. G. COURTNAY, Chairman. T. D. CO OBEY, Secretary. Lincoln, Neb., April 12, 1888. RIGHT EDUCATION. We plead for the children as well as for the parents; and they should be edu cated in the most practical and easiest way. They bliould h ive the best teach ers the youngest, frspctially, need the ! hot. It ia a radical mistake to place them in the hands of inexperience. We should begin right and adopt tho most approved methods. Of one tiling we are convinced. Our instruction h too bookish, too arbitarary, too stiff, too imperious. It prcau:ii8 too much, and taks too much for granted. It hould hu 111 re oral, and verbal ques tioning and explanations ouylit to be more in vogue in t lie school room. A reform is needed in this respect. Let the attention of teachers bo called to this fact, and let thim be more specified and generally reminded of the true art f teaching. Then we may look for more effective and rapid advancement, as well as more permanent result among th youth of our land -National View. 1 ALLISONS FOLLO WING. Seuator Allison will undoubtedly have a very strong following in the conven tion next June. He is at least an able man who would unite and harmonize all contending elements in the great party which has it within its power to elect the next president of the United States if it proceeds rightly. Hastings Nebraskan. Up in Mtine there lives a spirited young school tnitrc&s, who being poor in this world's goods, a short time ago, was content to sport a lover who was ot very rich iiimsclf though he was given to'speculatiou in a small way. To how his good will he invested a few dollars a few years ago in a township or two of cheap California desert and made a deed of the same to his inamorata. The boeni came and the lady sold her land for $256,000. Then she sent the sack to the young man. She was not willing to marry a n.cre fortune hunter, she saif. She suspected fiat the young man loved her for her wealth only. Lincoln Jour nal. As is the custom of democracy they art again following in the wake of ths repub lican party. The recent league of repub liean clubs was an innovation a new de parture over the usual methods. Let de mocracy, that never oiiginated nn idea outside of tissue ballots and the shotgun policy of intimidation, have just issued a call for a league convention which is al most an exact copy of the rcpublica call, the trouble is, however, they are usually too late. With an active and aggressive cam paign, compelling the democrats to take the defensive this fall, will insuresucces to the republican party. GcS'3 Cherry Cough Syrup. Is warranted for all that the label calls for, so if it does not relieve your cough you can call ut our store and the money will be refunded to you. It acts simul taneously on all parts of the system, t!i reby leaving no bad results. O. P. Smith & Co., Druggists: j25-3md&w Di. Schliemann has gone to Alexand ria with Professor Virchew, and will spend several months in Egypt making explorations. The exhausted and drowsy feelings, common jq spring time, indicate an im pure and sluggish condition of the blood which may be remedied by the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It is the most power f ul, and, at the same time, most economi cal blood purifier known. Another Victim. "Who is that ugly looking woman over yonder?" "That is my wife, sir." "Indeed! Here is my card, sir, I'm the most successful divorce lawyer in tho city." Town Topics. A Warning. The modes of death's approach are va rious, and statistics show conclusively that more persons die from disease of the throat and lunrrs than anv other. It is probable that everyone, without excep tiou, 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 i3 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 as you feel that something is wrong with your throat, lungs or nostrils, obtain a bottle of Bos fchee's German Syrup. It will giyc you immediate relief. G sga's Blood Purifier and Blood Maker. No remedy in the world has gained the popularity that this medicine has, as c hold on family medicine. No one should be without it. It has no calomel 1 quinine in its composition, consequent Is no bad effects can arite from it. We keep a full supply at all times. O. P. Smith Co. Druggist. j25-3modw NEW RUBBER SUPPLY. A NEW YORK DEALER'S CHAT CON CERNING' CAOUTCHOUC. The lieason AVhjr the Mtwlorn Rubber Mioe Wear Out &o Qul kly I'ror.i of Making a I Jobber Overshoe For 11 n manlty'a Sake. Oothara rublier manufacturers wcro con sideraLJy. astonished recently by seeing in print an advertisement for a man who lir.d had experience omong the rubler plantations of Central America and Para to start on nn expedition to a new source of rubber supply. "Excuse 1110," said a dealer, with a lau;;b, "tho new source is a secret. KuHieo it to say that in some way I have discovered o new field of ojiorutiojis. It will le a sort of exper imental flyer. Tho new field may not yield five iHunls of rublcr, and, again, it may lo an exceedingly rich source. I want to settle or myself which it is." "Why do you sitart tho expedition," the re porter asked. "Have tho present known sources given evidenco of exhaustion?" "Well, I guess not," tho dealer replied. "We get about 20,000,000 pounds of ruLber yearly from liorneo ami Africa anil Tura, in South America. But so great is the con sumption of rubber in American commerco that there is plenty of room for a new supply of the material. "It is curious how little people generally know about rubber any how," the dealer added suddenly. "They kick up a row and potuibly swear when they And out that their new rubber shoes sometimes wear out in a couple of days, but they don't seem to under stand enough about rubber to know that if they knew more they could get rubber shoes that were really made of rubber gum, and wouldn't wear out in a hurry. Inspired by the complaints that went on all about me during the blizzard by people who had got stuck on what they declared to be paste board and paper overshoes, I made a jour ney into history recently and jotted down some things about real rubber for tho benefit of my friends and the American public that is, if the American public wants the benefit of it. -When Columbus discovered America he found those old Fifteenth century Ameri cans were fussing away making things of rubber, among them rubber shoes. But even before the time of Columbus the Cast Indians knew that rubber was a useful thing, and they made shoes of it, too. They made it out of the juice of a tree called Ficus elasticus, and if anybody wants to know right here why rubber shoes, so called, wear out right off, you can tell them 'that it is because there isn't Ficus elasticus juice, so to speak, in the shoes. BOOTS AND BOTTLES. "Columbus' Indians and the natives of East India made roitgh rubber boots and bottles and things of rubber in those old days, and ever since the rest of mankind woke up to the fact that rubber was a good thing, the manufactme of boots and bottles and thing3 has gone on boomingly. The rub-bei-s of those old days, though, were rubbeis that would wear well, although they had an uncouth and clumsy appearance. Now we get enough rubber from tho valley of the Amazon and from Para and Brazil to justify every manufacturer in making rubbers of rubber fastead of something elso, and tho reason that peopla have a chance to growl so much about "bogus rubbers" is that tho bogus rub bers are not made by tho honest process at all. "The making of a rubber overshoe is an interesting process indeed, if you travel back to the beginning and follow it from tho very outset. To get the rubber in the first place a bolo is drilled in a rubber tree, and tlia sap is drawn oil just like sugar is drawn from tho maple tree, 'and the juiee is dried ovj-r the smoke from a fire of wild nuts in Pura, and when thickened is hung up to dry further. This crude material contains o3 per cent, of raw caoutchouc or rubber. This raw rublier has to be cleaned with great care, and dried afterward to exclude 51 per cent, of water that is part of it. It takes all the way from one to four months to do this thoroughly. Before being fully dried it is kneaded as is paper pulp, and crushed and grouad and torn up generally to remove all tho impurities. All tho time this is going on tho rubber is thoroughly washed by a steady flowing bath of water. With rubber that is treated in this st-! you can make rubber shoes that are lasting and also waterproof, but you will have to pay more than fifty cents or $1 a pair for them. When spread upon the cloth shell of the overshoe, this style of honest rubber shoe makes a shoe that is really a gum shoe, and will keep out the wef and the snow, and will wear without going out at the heel or the too, or breaking en tirely away from the upper. And that's the t kind of rubber that I hope to get from this new source of supply, and if I do, perhaps I will become a sort of publie benefactor by giving to Gotham commerce a material for making gum shoes that my fellow citi zens, after they have worn them once, will not be obliged to sit up the next three nights in succession completing their vocabulary of strong language to furnish fitting terms of abuse for shoes that aren't rubber, The new expedition is a journey for the good o humanity." New York Sun, How Portraits Are Stolen. One of the most difficult duties of a photog rapher is to protect his patrons from having their portraits stolen for either newspaper purposes or to be hawked around the streets as an advertising medium for some patent medicine or hair wash. Correspondents for sensational weekly papers are unscrupulous and often adopt shady schemes to obtain possession of tho picture of some lady or gen tleman of prominence, who has unfortun ately becomo the subject of town gotsip. That is one reason why ladies particularly dislike to see their photographs prominently exhibited in a show window, the butt of vulgar criticism and a target for the pencil of any skillful lithographer in search of a pretty face for a calendar plate, The so called detective cameras, however, have been produced in such shapes that it is almost impossible to detect a visitor who may bo stealing your best studies before your eyes, A fellow of that stamp came into my place recently. He was apparently a stranger, and carried a small alb gator gripsack, suspended by a strap from one shoulder. He was al lowed the privilego of looking at specimens of large work. After a time I thought he was acting strangely, and approached him to inquire into his movements. As I stepped up I heard a peculiar click and tumbied to the trick at once. Tha fellow was working a de txriive camera on me, but as I grabbed bira by the shoulder I quickly made him open that grip and hand out three plates which he had ta'ten. The outfit was a beautiful one, and although I am familiar with cameras of that class, I never saw one that was so nicely furnished on the outside. Globo-Dcmocrat. Something Wrong Somewhere. "How's your grandfather, Herbertr' Tot very wed these days." "Anything serious the matter?" "We fear so. Grandfather has taken to siaokiug cigarettes." Judges 'WORKING ON SPACE." Results of raying for Newapnper Work 'by tho Ynrl" The Jtohruilnii" Hope. One of the most demoralizing features ; of newspaper work is the space system as it is practiced in m.try newspaper flices. It may be the cheaiest for the paper, but it is neither fair to the writer nor tho public. Under tho space system the man who knows enough to stop when lie pets ! through has no show. Iho successful i writer is the man who can reel his story off through a wearying eternity of ver- bfhire. and who has the skill to write so that it is dilT'.rult to cut his matter down. Thus the public, which, pays lor Uie pa pers, frequently gets 11 minutely circum stantial and heavily padded account of some mutter which might well be con densed into a few lines. Quality doe3 not seem to enter into tho question, and brains are sold, like calico, by the yard, and they do not bring much better prices in some markets,- either. Tho supply of ; wordy writers has become so much in ex- ' cess of the demand that space rates have steadily tronc lower ntiu lower. It is the conscientious men, too, who Sillier most. Tho writer, honest to his paper and himself, who writes his story for all it ititworth and no more is handi capped by the facile "fakir," who luts the knack of writing columns and saying nothing. Again, the unfairness of the space rule is seen in the fact that in most offices the writer has 110 guarantee as to the size of typo his mutter may be set in. It may begin leaded and run down to solid, or a story may be finished in a smaller face of type if the exigencies of make up demand it. Uho Harper's sys tem of S10 a thousand words is fairer, and, in a weekly publication, is the only method of fair compensation which can be made. But the great objection is the element of chance in the space system, which tends to demoralize the working newspaper man and keep him poor. His "string" may only measure up $20 this week, but there is always the glowing hope of a "big sen sation" next week, which will run it up into the eighties or hundreds. As a mat ter of fact, the working journalist makes as much money as the average young pro fessional man. But his business makes him a gambler in spite of himself. He is always looking for a change in his luck. He may stumble on to a "big story" to morrow, which will pay all his debts and enable him to take a vacation besides. It is not from choice that there are so many Bohemians in journalism. They are forced to Bohemia by the men who buy their work. The ambition to make large papers has been one cause of the space system. The value of a newspaper has come to be judged, not by the amount of news it contains, but by the number of pages its news items are stretched out to cover. When news is beaten out to cover so much space, like gold leaf, it becomes very thin. The Journalist. Making an Artificial Si!k. Chardonner recently announced to the French Academy of Sciences the results of his experiments in making an artificial silk, which aro certainly of a remarkably ingenious nature. To a solution of nitro cellulose (gun cotton) in alcohol and ether is added a solution of ferr- nose chloride in alcohol and also some alcoholic solution or tannin. The liquid thus obtained is ejected from fine ducts, like the apparatus in 11 silk worm. As the thread comes from the duct it is received in water acidulated with nitric acid, from which it. is drawn out, dried rapidly and reele J np. It can be obtained of any color by coloring the mixture from which the thread is made. This new thread is trans parent, pliable, cylindrical or flat, and in nnpearance and feel like silk. It is very strong. It burns, but the lire does not go beyond the place heated. In every way it is a remarkable invention, and no one can tell to what it may lead. New York Mail and Express. Cjilchiiic Kunaway Slaves. I learned yesterday a historical canine fact, which will, I fancy, be as new to some of my rcat'ers as it was to me. A negro stevedore, as strapping and power ful a fellow as I have seen for a good while, fell into conversation in my pres crce with a bulldog, remarking that be had a great fondness for dumb animals. He seemed to greet the dog as nn old friend, and be displayed considerable fa miliarity with that kind of beast. Nat urally I joined in the talk, and the man told me that down in North Car'lina, where he was a slave in slave days, bull dogs, sometimes white and sometimes brindle, were trained to catch runaway or refractory "niggers" by the neck. And they did it so nicely, he said, as not to break the skin or soil the captive's shirt collar: they would hang on until told by their masters to let go, but without doing any injury. Uoston I'ost. Earthquakes Terras Nerves. Many persons who experienced the earthquake in the Riviera have since snflered seriously from nervous shock. although they did not at the time appear to be greatly disturbed. This indicates that more injury may be done to the nerves by an undue excitement than is perceived at the time. The nerve centers may, as an English medical journal sug gests, be likened to batteries, and re garded as aDt to be discharged suddenly and sometimes unconsciously; and when once their residual stock of energy 13 con sumed it can be restored only after a long time and by the exercise of extreme care. Public Opinion. Japan's Foreign Improvements. The regeneration which Japan has in recent years experienced, through the in troduction of foreign improvements, is credited to the United States. While eminent Frenchmen have been called in to organize the army, Germans the schools and English the navy, to Americans have been given the supervision of the depart ments of finance, postofflce, telegraphs, railroads, telephones and lighting by electricity, embracing the newer and more progressive arts. American institutions are ia high favor in Japan, with the possible exception of modern politics and baseball. Cincinnati Commercial Ga zette. riiase of the "Faltti Care." The blood of dying gladiators in the ancient amphitheatres was popularly be lieved to be a remedy for the "falling sickness," or epilepsy. It was eagerly drunk while still warm by the sufferers from the malady. The practice denounced by Celsus as a '-miserum auxilium," has not died out even in the Nineteenth cent-' ury. Dcs Etanges, in his edition of the Roman Hippocrates (Paris, 184G), men tions the then recent case of an old epilep tic woman in Sweden who, on the occa sion of a criminal being guillotined, was ecen at the foot of the scaffold ready, when the head was severed from the body, to plunge into the blood yet reeking from the victim, a piece of bread she had des tined for her cure, Chicago New. Eureka meat T. J. THOMAS, WllOI.i:.SAI.i: AM) lil-TAII. IiKAI.ru IN liov.f, Pork, button, Ycsi! stnd Poultry. I invito all to give mo a trial. Sugai f un d Meats. Hams, V.uci v., Li r.l, lc, etc. Fresh Oj Mus in Can r.d Iinlk nt lov.ett living 1 ricis. Do i.rt fail to tivc me jt.tir patronage. -AND ALL HOUSEHOLD GOODS KITCHEN, BFD FOOM, (ajO FURNITURE FOR PARLOR FURNITURE. fcT ii ALL WAYS, OFFICES Lowest Prices in th.o Citv. Call and be Convinced. SIXTH STREE T, BET. MAIN AND VINE. PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. FURNITURE -FOIi ALL FINE :-: FURNITURE YOU SHOULD CALL ON Where a magnificent Jriceh UNDER AKING AND EMBALMING A SPECIALTY HLJKTsTRY CORNER MAIN AND SIXTH L. D. BEJSTJSTETT. l I HAYS GOT Early Ohio and Early Rose Seed Potatoes. All kinds of Garden Seeds- California Evaporated Pears, Peaches, Gold Drop Plums, Raspberries, Blackberries, Cher ries, Appl'es, and French Dried Prunes. A Large Assortment of Canned Fruits and Vege tsbl es . Jji. D. Jonathan IIatt. JftoAJEJHLALlS lH ATT & C.5 WHOLESALE A1TD RETAIL (DUTY Cud EAT RJIARKET, PORK PACKERS and dealers in BUTTER AND EGGS. BEEF, PORK, MUTTON AND VEAL. THE BEST TID3 MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Sugar Cured Meats, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c, &c ot our own make. The best brands of OYSTERS, in cans and bulk, at WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HEALTH IS WEALTH ! EATMENT Dr. E. C. West's Nerve and Brain Tratni r,t a guarantee specific for Hysteria D1z7ir.-e.ss. Convulsions. Fits. Nervous Neuralgia, Ib-ad-ahe. Nerveou Prostration caused frv theune f alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness. Mental I e prewlon, Sof teniDjr of t he Hrain result iug in in s'aDlty aol lending t - misery, decay nd 'ieaili. rcinature old Age. r.artet,iHis. Lose f P w er in either s-x. Involut'tary l-cf ani Sper- mat rrhcea eaus-d by ov r-exertirn f ilie brain, seifabuse orr.ver-ir.i!nlirtiice J-'ach 1 x contains one month' treatment.' $1 111 a ! x orsix boxes for 5 00, stnt by n-ail prciaicor receipt c.t price WE GUARANTEE SIS EOXES To euro an case With each order received by us ft' six boies, accoMpan ed with .5 00. we will send the purchaser our written jzuaran-t-e to 'etiirn the n-otiey if the n-af n:t-nt !-c not effect a etire. Guarantees liied oiilv bv Will J. WaiTicU sole ager t. Flattsnmiith. Strli. It may be that there is a lend that is fairer than this, but it would take an art ist to find it. ' J Market. S- :-: FURNITURES KINDS OF- EMPORIUM. CLASSES OF- stock of Goods and Fair abound. BOECK5 PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRAS KA , NSTT.. J. W. Marthih. For sale or exchange. A number of fine pieces of residence property. Applj1 to Windham and Daviee. d-w3w. The standard remedy for livr com plaint is West's Liver Pill; thy nvr disapp int you. 30 pills 25c. At War rick's drug store. One, two. five and ten-acre tracta for sale on reasonable terms. Apply t Windhkm and Davirs. d-w-lm. JULIUS PEPPERBERG. MAKCFACTCBEK OF AND WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEAI.E11 IN THE CiioiYtt Brands of Cigars, including our Flor dc Pepperbergo and 'Bui FCLI, LIKE OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLE always in stock. Not. 20. 185.