The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, April 27, 1888, Image 2

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    TUK OAILV UEKaLI), 1'I.ATgBAmuin, mSiYUASKA, FItl DAY, APRIL 27. 1888.
The Plattsmouth Daily Herald.
KNOTTS ICJ IR, O 3.
Publishers A. Proprietors.
TUE PLATTSMOUTH UKKALD
I
pabllshed wtery evrnlns except Sunday
aaa Weekly every I liursday morning. itegis
tore 4 at tlie oontolllce. riiiltaliioulli. Nebr.. s
coat-ala. matter. OUlcc corner of Vine and
Flfia atrreU.
TMUtrOU PAILT.
Oee copy on ear In adTanee, by mall.. ..$8 no
Ott co;jr periuuntli, by tan ler,. .......... 50
Oat copy per week, by carrier 13
Tiiui ro WIIKLT.
00 eopy oue year. In advaace $1 M
ttoaeouy !& moulnn. in adrauce. 79
REPUBLICAN CONVENTION.
The Republican electors of the State of
Nebraska, are requested to Bend delegates
from the several counties, to meet m coii
vantion, at the city of Omaha, Tuesday,
May 15, lfcSS, at o'clock p. in., for the
purpose of electing tour delegates to the
National Republican Convention, which
meets in Chicago Juno I'J, 19HH.
TUB APPOKT10NMKNT.
The several counties arc entitled to re
presentation as follows, being based upon
the vote cast for Hon. Samuel Maxwell,
supreme Judge, in 1HS7, giving one del-egte-at-large
to ach county, and one
for each 150 votes and major fraction
thcreoff :
COUNTIK.1. VOTKH. TOUNTIKR. VOTKK.
Adams
.14
Jctfi-i.son
.Antelope .Johnson ....
Arthur i;Kcarney
isiauie 2;Keyalilia..
I'.oone Kenli
llox butte 4 Knox
lit own u, Lancaster...
lSufTVo ll'i.tucom
Hutler S Imuran
JSurt tt,l.oup
C'aMS lo'.MiKiison
Cedar 6, McPhersou .
. 1
.2.1
. 8
. 2
. 3
. 8
. 1
Chare ft Merrick
Cherry 5 Nunc 5
t'liejcuue 11 .Nnnalia ... ..... ... u
tUT ii:ucKoim o
Colfax 7,le 12
Cuuilnc
Pawnee .
Cutter 17 Perkins
D ikota 5 Pierce 4
uwes 7, Polk 6
Dawson : Platte 10
Pixou r.; Phelps t
J.-ds 1-1 " ichardson -
1'Jl - ichardson....
. .. 37 ICed Willow
Douglas .
litiudy ...
Fillmore .
Frank lin.
Frontier .
Furnas...
4 .Saline l;i
...... 10 Sarpy 5
7Sajiide.rs iu
.... ..10) Seward lc
iUheridan 7
.. l!Iierinan 7
Carfleld 3
.sioux ,
(in per....
Craiit .
ireeley ..
Hall
ft
Stanton 4
Thayer.... 7
Thomas 2
alley . . c
tVushmgtou 11
Wayne ft
Webster 0
Wheeler 3
0IC - 11
Unorj. territory 1
... 1
... 4
...11
Hamilton
10
Harlan
JIaye. 4
Hitchcock 6
Holt 14
J Inward 7
It is recommended that no proxies be
admitted to the convention, except such
as aro held by persons residing ia the
counties from the proxies are given.
George D. Meiklejohx,
Walt. IL Seelev, Chairman.
Secretary.
CALL FOR RHPUIiLICAN COUN
TY CONVENTION.
The republican electors of Cass county
are hereby called to meet in their respec
tive wards and precincts on Saturday,
April 28th, 1888, for the purpose of
electing delegates to meet iu conven
tion at Weeping Water, Neb , on May 5,
1S33, at 1 o clock p. m. I t the purpose
of electing sixteen delegates to the re
publican state convention which meets
in Omaha, May 15, 1888. The wards
and precincts are entitled to the follow
ing number of delegates:
Tipton 7
Green wooil 5
Stove Creek
South Uend C
Salt Creek
Klmwood 8
Weeping Water 20
Louisville 9
riattsnniitli Prec... 7
City 1st Ward 7
2nd " 8
3rd 13
" 4lll " 12
K. S. W ILKIKSOjr,
Center 7
Avoca 7
I.tbeitv 8
J Cock BlufTs it
Mt. Pleasant C
Fight Mile Grove... 7
M. D. P01.K.
hec'y.
Primaries will be held in
dim.
the various
wards and precincts on the 28th of April
at the following places:
Tipton at Eagle 7:30, Greenwood at
Cornish school house 7:30, Stove Creek
at El in wood village 7:30, Elmwood at
Center school house 7:t0, South Bend at
South Bend 7:30, Weeping Water at Un
ion Hall 3 p. m , Center at Manlcy 3 p.
in., Louisville Fitzgerald's hall 3 p. m.,
Avoca at Hutchin's School house 2 p. m.
Mt. Pleasant at Gilru ore's School house
4 p. m., Eight Mile Grove at Heil's
School house 3 p. m., Liberty at Holden's
School house 3 p. m , Kock Bluffs at
Bergcr School house 4 p. m., Plattsmouth
precinct at Taylor's School house 3 p. m.,
Plattsmouth City 1st ward county judge's
office 1 to 7 p. in., 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
Cerigressional 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 ia Chicago, June 19, 1888.
The several counties are entitled to
representation as follows, being based
npon the vote cast for Hon. Samuel
Maxwell for Judge in 1837, giving one
delegate at large to eaeh county and one
for each 150 votes and major fraction
thereof:
Cass is
Iuftlas 37
C.ace is
Jobn.ou S
1 juicaiter
Kctnalia S
Otoe '2
Pawnee s
Klchardson, 12
arpy 8
Maunders 11
It is rtcommended that no proxies be
admitted to the convention except such
as are held by persons residing in the
counties from which the proxies are
given. D. G. COUUTNAY, Chairman.
T. D. COBBEY, Secretary.
Lincoln, Neb., April 12, 1888. -
Mb. Cleveland need not bo alarmed,
1 only great men are dying off at present
Secketary FAiitcii:LDssys the fraction
al currency, when it was in circulation
during the war period, cost the country,
in expenses fer producing it and loss I
its destruction, a sum equal to the face
valuo of that which remained in circula
tion. That is to say, it was actually mors
expensive than the fractional silyer,
while possessing scarcely a single good at
tribute of that coin. The shiuplaster bil
new before congess should be defeated
No, of couisa not, farmers! Protiction
does you no good whatever, according
a K -- -a - r . a
10 Air. Aims ana Air. Cleveland, it is
simply a blind, you know, the tariff im
posed on your products, a blind, engin
eered by the bloody millionaires that are
eating you up. llcuce the Mills bill
abolishes all tariff on the products of
the farm. That is, not all, exactly, he
has, owing to his dislike of the south
and his desire to see the ngiiculturUts of
that section go to smash, left all their
products highly protected in his bill.
There is rice fof instance. It w'll be
protected in u horn, you know since
protection does not protect, you know
with a hundred per cent tariff. Sugar
will also be well piotccted to the ruin
you know, of tho sugar planter, will
about sixty per cent. Oranges and lem
ons and all those things will be well
protected. This is, brcthern, becaue Mr.
Mills is an enemy to the farmer of the
south and wants te jnnip on him.
But he loves you, northern farmers
Mr. Mills dees- and hence he relieves
you of that odious tariff ou wool and
jjruin and meats and all those things you
raise, because he loves you. Blessed be
the friend of the noithcrn farmer and the
enemy of the southern farmer, brethern.
ins name is Alius, you know, slills is
your ir enu. lne otner men who op
pose the great and good Mills are not
your friends. Do not forget that, breth
ren.
lie is from Texas he wants to relieve
you of the bloody surplus. It is a pity
that he JiaUs ths southern farmer so
much that he will not raise a finger to
relieve them ef their surplus. But we
aro not to blame for that, brethren. We
will take the good fortune Mr. Mills and
the gods bring us without asking any
questions, and soon we will have no sur
plus to curse us. nothing, brethern. but
the blessing of debts and mortsajres.
This country is being ruined by the sur-
!us.
Paste this iu your hat and do not for
rt to remember Mr. Mills in vour
orisons. lie is a good man. And Mr.
Cleveland is a good man. They wish to
rid the northern farmer of his burden
some surplus. Lincoln Journal.
To the Republicans of Nebraska.
The Republican h desirous of reaching
cyery republican voter of Nebraska dur
ing the ensuing presidential campaign.
To that end we appeal to our friends in
every prec'net to get up clubs for beth
the Daily and Weekly. This will be a
splendid opportunity to spread straight
republicanism before the people. We
want a "rustler" in every community.
Boll in the mames.
Begs's Blood Purifier and Blood
Maker.
No remedy in the world has gained
the popularity that this medicine has, as
n hold on family medicine. No one
should be without it. It has no calomel
1 quinine in its composition, consequent
- no bad effects can arise from it. We
keep a fidl supply at all times. O. P.
Smith Co. Duggist. j'2o 3modfew
Dr. Schliemann has gone to Alexand
ria with Professor Virchew, and will
spend several months iu Egypt making
explorations.
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 lungs than any other. It is
probable that everyone, without excep
tion, receives vast numbers of lubercle
Germs into the system and where these
jrerms fall upon suitable sod they start
iuto 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 as you feel
that soinetlnng is wrong with your throat,
lungs or nostrils, obtain a bottle of Bos
shee's German Syrup. It will giyc you
immediate relief.
SSOO Reward.
We will pay the above reward for any
case of liver complaint, dyspepsia, sick
headache, indigestion, constipation or
costiveness we cannot cure with
West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the
directions are strictly complied with.
j They are purely vegetable, and never
; fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes
containing 30 sugar coated pills, 25c.
For sale by all druggists. Beware of
! counterfeits and imitations. Tho genu
j ine manufactured only by John O. ell
1 & Co., 8C2 W. Madison St. Chicago, Its
Sold by W. .J Warrick.
When Japanese Children Tle.
We stopped one day at a pretty and
rather modest temple shriue, where sat a
clean polled, benevolent looking priest,
with bijz rimmed spectacles astride his
little nose. Before and above and about
the shrine hung little children's frocks,
their tiny shoeH, pretty littlo belts, dolLt,
and other playthings.
"What is this?" we asked our guide.
"When little children come to die their
mothers bring their dresses and play
things here, and put a little money in this
box. Every day the priest offers prayers
that the littlo ones may be made happy
after death, and havo nice things and
pretty playthings when they go to stay
up there with Ood.
As we talked, a heart stricken mother
came and tossed her coin Into the box,
nnd as she placed the little bundle of her
dear one's pretty clothes in the tender
priestly hand, we thought there was but
one thing better than this, the saying,
"Suffer little children to come unto me,
and forbid them not." Japan Letter.
A Carloua Negro Saperitltlon.
There is an old "darky" superstition
which still holds a place iu the miuds of a
great many of our colored population
V lien the ilrst thunder morm or the year
comes the superstitious negro makes a
beeline for tho nearest river or creek. Ho
may be seen watching the rolling waters
for nome time, till at last he spies a dark
object on its surface. He grabs it as it
floats near the bank. With one-exulting
exclamation lie binds the object around
his wrist nnd goes hi3 way in peace, se
cure, as he thinks, from the rheumatism
and kindred ailmeuts. What was the
object? The skin of a water snake. Snakes
are said to shed their skins when lightning
first appears, and the negro believes that
winding a snake skin around his wrist at
this time exerts a counteracting Influence
on nearly all diseases. Charlotte (X. C.)
Chronicle.
The Crow In India.
Crows are as gentlo ns are sparrows
with us. Indeed, much more so. I saw
one iu Calcutta taking its meal from a
quarter of beef which a butcher had on
his head, and several times I have seen
them steal food from a man's dish when
he was eating before his door. They
come within five or six feet of natives at
every railway station, but eye very sus
piciously a foreigner, and can hardly be
tempted with crumbs nearer than ten feet
or so. There are vast numbers of them
in every part of the land. In Burmah
they are black; here they have a mouse-
colored neck, and look as if they wore a
cape. A uative hurts nothing if he can
help it. Carter Harrison's Letter.
The Codfish. Disappearing.
In about another decade the American
and Canadian legislative bodies will not
be absorbed with arguments on the home
and habits of the festive codfish. He is
slowly disappearing from our coasts, and
the banks of Newfoundland which knew
him once know him no more. Fishermen
now practice deep sea nshing with, very
poor results, as the cod seems to fight shy
of all bait. While we consider these facts
our attention i3 directed to the other side
of the globe, where immense schools of
codfish are reported on the west coast of
Africa, although they have never been
heard of in that quarter before. They
must have grown tired of the eternal
squabbling about their feeding grounds
and have emigrated to neutral territory,
Queer, isn't it? About'the opening of the
next century codfi'h wirl be a rare deli
enev, and in 1930 or thereabouts the set: re 1
of th;it deii-r'.ilfv.l democratic dii-h knowi
us the codfiVh ball wil
memory in the chronic
i'ift'.i "l)jjiler ia Globe
1 on'v linger ns a
Us of the cuiFine
-Domcc'rat.
CM men s rvei are like old men
ricmorics they are s: ripest for thin;,
t long way t ??. George Eliot.
Plenty of Peach Blow, Early Bose,
Clark's No. 1. and Colorado Rose Pota
toes at 3t Lehjjkoff & SONNlCHSEN s.
Southeast quarter section 14, township
10, range. 12: price f 1,800. Northwest
quarter section 8, township 12, range 10;
jrice $2,000. V ixdiiam & LUvies.
Just received two
cases Oc
Calico
tf.
at
Weckbach's.
We are headquarters for California
Canned Goods. Try us on prices.
!i2G-3t LEHjuroFF & Sonnichsen.
J. B. Cox has a full line
hose-reals for your lawn.
of
I103 and
u23nil
Begg's Cherry Cough Syrup.
Is warranted for all that the label calls
for, so if it. does not relieve your cough
you can call at our store and the money
will be refunded to you. It acts simul
taneously on all parts of the system,
thereby leaving no bad results. O. P.
Smith & Co., Druggists. j2o-3md&w
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.
AjViO A. MY CLIMATE. O
Scad Atr Circular.
FOR SAX, IE B'ST
HAVEN & RHODES
Omaha, I"e"b.
t.Namc this paper in jour order.)
Jr. JLlOzj?
OHEPAiEDMJOFlHGr
mm
. aw a
v. -
LIFE IN LIBRARIES.
SOME OF THE QUEER FOLKS WHO
READ PUBLIC BOOKS.
The Sain Old Man Who Head the Sana
Old Volume How the Alitor Library
ITelpa . Young ArtUta Visitor at Cooper
Institute.
Libraries, especially the big public ones of
this tovrn, somehow seem to have about them
something puthetic. Take the Astor, for in
stance -that magnificent stone and iron home
of a quarter of a million volumes. It isn't
tho unidentified books softly growing gray
under the gathering dust of years that ap
peal to ono, so much as the living delvers
who dig through this accumulating forget
ful ness in search of an idea. There they sit,
day after day, generation after generation,
patiently, 6ilently, hungrily hunting a fact.
Tho inarblo stairways huvo been worn into
little hollows by their feet. Some of these
footsteps have long ago lost their way in tho
enchanted region of Bohemia, and some of
tbem, youthful and springy, show their own
ers to be still seeing rainbow visions of prom
ise behind tho soft swinging doors. Minister
and mechanic, artist and artisan, physician
and fiction writer jostlo elbows ono against
tho other, and for each ono the shelves have
a different story to tell. Tho Academy of the
Immortals, tho hospital or the morgue are
tao rewards of those who labor here.
SEEKING MECHANICAL LORE.
Over against the alcove where patent re
ports are kept sits an old man. Tho table in
front of him is strewn with drawings on card
board and tracings on oiled paper. Nino vol
nines, an iorojuaing looking, are piled up
about him, and the tenth lie ha3 spread open
before him. For four years ho lias sat tho
same way. As sure as comes the postman
and the s.un, so surely copies this strange old
man, searching, probing, questioning tho
Sphynx pages that say so little or so much,
pieaamg wun tno Diaeis volumes to give ur
their secret. Ho speaks to no one, and is
jealously careful that no alien eye shall rest
upon his drawings. If ho were searching for
the secret of perpetual motion he could not
be more guarded in every action. Now and
then the favorite works on mechanics are re
placed by some raro and all forgotten screed
teaching discoveries made by the old alchem
ists in their experiments toward making
gold. He is only a type. His clothes aro
poor. He spends barely ten minutes at lunch
during the day. Sometimes he does not go
out at all. And, after all, the academy may
not hold a niche for him.
For tho artist the library is a mine, and
the figured wall paper in your hallway has
probably come from some old scroll that
Japanese works here show. Just in the samo
way the delicately hammered griflina that
ornament your silver service may be copies
from some forgotten volume, or if not copies
yet suggested by something seen there. Tho
beautiful in art is tenacious of life, and has a
lucky way of surviving the tooth of time that
bids one hope. There is no busier table than
this at which these workers bend.
When spring comes laughing in, a new
order changes tho routine of tho library.
The very dust upon the books seems to feci
tho quickening breath. Volumes that havo
not been touched for months are taken down.
The number of feminine visitors increases.
There is color and perfumo and lightness to
set ofl! tho Ebade that hangs over all. Tho
far alcove to the south sees pretty heads
bending above colored plates in old books
whose type makes it difficult to tell an S from
an F. And what ore thoy looking for in
these old volumes, yoa ask? For fashions.
With the coming of blue skies there is an in
stinctive turning to new designs in dress.
And where can one get better ideas than
from thoso old plates that tell of "tea cup
times of hoop and hood," when our grand
mothers dreamt of moonlight and blue eyes.
So the pretty Easter bonnet that your Phillis
wears today is only a modification of one
that her grandmother found fair half a cen
tury ago. So, too, when fancy dress balls
ore in vogue, the old library always sees an
influx of feminine readers hanging over old
fashion plates, studying up new ways to be
beautiful, for the beautiful is as old as wo
man herself.
COOPER nfSTTTCTE'S VISITORS.
J ust around the corner tho library of Cooper
institute has very different visitors. Like
tho Astor, it is a reference library and no
books are allowed to be taken away. New
York has no great public circulating libra
ries like those of Boston and Chicago. The
free circulating library of this town and
several smaller ones allow books to be taken
out, but they are supported by private sub
scription and tho city has no voice in their
management.
There is no novel reading at the Astor be
cause no novels are kept, and at the Cooper
library the percentage of fiction is said to bo
smaller than at any other library in the
world. Its reading room is the home of
workingmen, and they read to improve their
minds or for some specific purpose, not for
fun. Early in the morning there is always a
rush for the daily newspapers. The town is
never without its contingent of unemployed,
and these haunt tho files, pouring over ad
vertisements in the hope of finding a clew to
a job. In the good old times when men
feared God and honored the king, before the
struggle for existence became a hand to hand
tight, things were not so. You can tell one
of these unemployed by the aimless way he
walks the moment he enters the room, just
as you can tall a policeman's drawling step
among the thousands that sound outside your
window.
Of course there are the usual loungers
among the 2,000 people that come every day
into the reading room. During the winter
they come into the room to get warm, take a
book in hand, forget themselves and are soon
asleep. These are soon gotten rid of. For
the past four months one Anarchist looking
man has been taking a thorough course in
chemistry. Another middle aged man sits
every day by a post near the end of the halL
For nearly six months he has not missed a
day. Ho comes in early in the morning,
reads until noon, goes out to lunch, and re
turns and spends the afternoon in the same
chair. The ladies have an alcove set apart
for their own use. Many who do not have a
fire at home drop in to read an afternoon
away in a cozy nook. - In the same way, a
number of elderly men who have small in
comes come day after day to their favorite
corners and dream over tales of adventure.
The New York Historical library, a few
blocks away, is saturated with intense and
almost painful respectability. It,, too, is a
reference library, devoted almost wholly to
American history, to genealogy and to
heraldry. In this, our new couutry, the
study of genealogy is not what the library
hopes to see it, and every assistance is given
to the author who compiles a volume on the
decline and fall of the Joneses. F. A. Duneka
In New York World.
A 6rioas Sentiment.
Those who know him only superficially
would never suspect "W. IL Foster, manager
of the Boston Ideals, of sentimental phil
osophy; yet he is the man who 6aid "You
never know who likes you after your mother .
dies." '
Eureka Meat Market.
T.
WHOI.KSAI.i: AM)
Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal and Poultry.
Z invito all to givo aao a trial.
Sugar Cured Mcnts, Hams, Bi;r i, LarJ, tc, ir. Fro-h OvMtrs in Can acd Eulk
at lowest liying prices. Do not fail to uivc me your patronage.
T. IT. THOMAS.
FINE
AND ALL
HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
KITCHEN, BED ROOM.
PARLOR FURNITURE.
Lowest Pricos ia th.o City.
bo Convinced.
SIXTH STREET, BET. MAIN AND
NITURE
-FOR ALL
FINS
FUR
YOU SHOULD CALL ON
Hhere a magnificent
i
ricess
UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING A SPECIALTY
CORNER MAIN AND SIXTH
L. D. 8EjTjTErI
I HAYB G-OT
Early Ohio and Early Rose Seed Potatoes.
All kinds of Garden Seeds.'
California Evaporated
Drop Plums, Raspberries,
ries, Anples, and French Dried Prunn.
A Large Assortment
Vegetsbl es .
Ij. d. bemst
Jonathan IIatt.
WHOLESALE
CITY IRA EAT iifflARIK
PORK PACKERS akd dealers in BUTTER AND EGGS.
BEEF, PORK, MUTTON AND VEAL.
THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND.
Sugar Cured Meals, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c, &o
of our own make.
The best brands
WHOLESALE
HEALTH iS WEALTH !
Dr. E. C. West's Nerve and Brain Treatment
a guarantee specific for Hysteria Dizziness.
C'ouvulsions. Fits. Nervous Neuralgia, Head
ache. .Nerveous I'ro&tration caused by the use
of alcohol or tobacco. V. akefulness, Mental De
pletion, Softening of the Brain requiting in In
sanity aDd leadiuK t nuaery. dee.iy and death,
resnature old Age. HarreMiess, Loss of Pow
er in cither sex. Involuntary Losses aud Sper
nint rrhea caused by over-exertion of ihe
brain, eelfabuse or over-lndnlsfence Each bf x
contains one month's treatment, $1 00 a hex
or six boxes for $5.00, sent by wail prepaid or
receipt of price
WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES
To cure an v case. Willi each orrfer received
by us for Mx boxes, accompanied with 5.00,
we will send the purchaser our written guaran
tee to return the money if the tratirient does
not effect a cure. Guarantees issued onlv by
Will J. Warrick sole ageDt. Plattsmonth. .S'eb.
It may be that there is a land that is
f. ...n. tl.an tViia Itiif- if zr-vtil1 tol'O Oti'arr.
. .J '
1st to find it
1 "artei .r.v;..i
J. THOMAS,
It ETA II. UKAI.KU IN
KINDS OF-
FURNITURE FOR
HALLWAYS, OFFICES.
Call and
VINE. PLATTSMOUTH, NEB.
EMPORIUM.
CLASSES OF-
FUBNITURE
stock of Goods and Fair
abound.
BOECK,
PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA.
1 rn
JL .
Pears, Peaches, Gold
Blackberries, Cher-
of Canned Fruits and
T.
,
c.5
HETAIL
of OYSTERS, in cans and bulk at
AND RETAIL.
For sale or exchange. A number of
fine pieces of residence property. Apply
to Windham and Davits. d-w2w.
The standard remedy for liver cem
plaint is West's Liver Pill; thay never
disappoint you. SO pills 25c. At War
rick's drujr store.
One, two, five and ten-ncrc tract for
sale on reasonable terms. Apply te
Windh&m and Da vies. d-w-lm.
JULIUS PEPPERBERG.
MANUFACTURER OF AKD
WHOLESALE & REtAIL
DEALER IN TUB
Choicest Brands of Cigars,
including our
Flor de Pepperbergo' and 'Euim
FULL LI5E OF
TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES
always in stock. Not. 86, 1C89.
IT.