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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1888)
IINOTTS BBOS., Publishers & Proprietors. THE PLATT8MOUTH 11EBALD Is published every evening except Sunday biiu wecKiy every mur(i.iy inornin. jiegis- tereu ai tuts iMmomco, I'lallMiiouili. ri . Becond-cUsx matter Ofllce corner of Vine and JfirtU utreets TERMS FOB DAILY. One copy one year In Advance, by mail 58 oo One copy per month, by ran ler, 60 One copy per week, by carrier... 15 TERMS FOR WF-KKLV. One copy one year, in advance One copy tlx months, in advauce... Si no 75 NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. FOR IMiESIDKNT, BENJAMIN HARRISON, of Indiana. FOIl VICE I'KESIDKNT, LEVI P. MORTON, of New York. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. FOR GOVERNOR, JOHN M. THAYER. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, GEORGE D. MEIKLEJOIIN. FOR SECRETARY OF 8TATF, GILBERT L. LAWS. FOR TREASURER,' J. E. HILL. FOR AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS, THOMAS II. BENTON. FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL, WILLIAM LEESE. FOR COMMISSIONER OF PUBLIC LANDS AND BUILDINGS, JOHN STEEN. FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC IN STRUCTION, GEORGE B. LANE. Table Talk for Septemlier another seasonable anil entertaining number. Summer is dead and Mr. Whitton treats her demise with becoming solemnity in his opening poem; then follows a variety of household information the housjwife cannot afford to lose; "New September Menus;" "Coffee aud Coffee Making;'' "Housekeepers' Work for September;" "New Things for Table and Kitchen" all by that famous authority on things culinary, Mrs. S. T. Rorer. And then her answer to "Housekeepers' Inquiries" this momth abound in instructive infor mation. Other articles in the number, very interesting, are Tillie May Forney's "Fashionable Luncheon and Tea Toilets," "Our Cooking Club;" "A Dictionary of French Terms used iu Menus;" "Septem ber Culinary Economies;" also a descrip tive paper "Regarding the Peach." The literary portion of the magazine, too, is well sustained. In it are several original stories by able writers, together with the end of "Johathan Easy's Difficulty." The Prize Problem Department, another very attractive feature, is kept up with skill and ingenuity. $ 1 00 a year, 10 cents a copy. Table Talk Publishing Co., 402, 404 & 400 Race street, Phila delphia. MR. BLAINE ON THE PREST DENVS ERROR. In his article on "The President's Er ror," in The American Magazine for Sep tember, Mr. Blaine says: Strangely enough the president neg lects, either from design or oversight, to notice what effect the serious reduction of the tariff would have on the 1,810,256 men employed in transportation, viz., on the railroads, coast-wise vessels, river steamers and barges, canal, wagon and fctage lines. These varied ways of trans- WWsMBMMiBWMMMWiBWWWMiMMBWWjMWMMMWWiBiWWBMiMiMMMMMMMMfctlftsj ""MMM,lil,,M,a,llM""MMiii a gjgjsppssBjBBjaaj CnTOT "IF IHL IF3. IE ES' JHJIC ILalLa HEs3" '2D' JET IS JF" IEZ 0 EST BZE 2 P T4l 1. As a whole they are the finest lying lots in the city. 2. They are shaded with beautiful lorest trees. 3. They are located between Chicago and Lincoln Avenues, the two finest drives about the city. 4. They are only a ten minutes' walk from the business portion of the town. 5. Ten minutes' walk from the new Driving Park and Fair Grounds. C. By reason of their location between the two main thor oughfares into the city, they are more accessible than lots in other additions. 7. The only addition in the city reached by two established avenues. 8. The only new addition to the city reached by water mains and with a prospect of being supplied in the near future with complete water privileges. V. New sidewalks recently constructed to within a few feet of the addition and will shortly be extended. P rjATTSMOTTTH l ;;UUon rcprecrt an invetrczzt ; of thousands of millions of dollars of American money nod give employment to nearly two millions of men, whose earnings support nine millions of people. Whatever impairs American manufactur ing, strikes at the great transportation interests. Iron ore, admitted free from epain, coal admitted free from Nova Scotia, wool admitted free from Austra lia, all favor British ships at the expense of American railroads. The further the president goes in the direction direction of the doctrine laid down in his message, the more direct and the more deadly is the assault upon the whole or ganization of American industries. AND HE FLOPPED. In his message to the senate of Febru ary 20, 1888, transmitting the Bayard Chamberlain treaty, the president said: " The treatment meets my approyal be cause I believe that it supplies a satisfac tory, practical and final adjustment, upon a basis honorable and just to both par ties of the difficult and vexed question to which it relates." This is a concession that the position of Canada was correct as to that pro vince's dispute with the United States. That Canada was justified in siezing Am erican fishing vessels and that the United States had no commercial rights in the Canadian harbors which it should pay for. Now, then, in his retaliatory flop the president assumes exactly the opposite position. Can the chief executive of this nation, after committing himself and his administration unreservedly to the reject ed treaty which conceded the Canadian demand, be now permitted to say to the advocates of the American claim in the fishery dispute that the American fisher men were right and Mr. Bayard and his treaty wrong? Will he be permitted to turn this somersault without incurring the contempt of all honest advocates of either side of the question? We rather guess not. It is no wonder his henchmen in the south stand dumb in the presence of the ridicule heaped upon him by Mr. Edmunds and his colleagues. Call for Republican Primaries. The republican electiors of Cas3 Co., Neb., are requested to meet in their re spective wards and precincts on Saturday Sept. 22nd, 188S, to elect delegates to a convention to be held in Louisville, ou the 0th day of October, 18S8, at 11 o'clock a. in., for the purpose of placing in nomination candidates for the follow ing offices: One senator. Two representatives. One county attorney. One county commissioner. The several wards and precincts are entitled to the following number of delegates: Tiptou preciuct." 7 Greenwood 5 Salt Creek 9 Stoye Creek 9 Elm wood 8 South Bend G WeepiDg Water 20 Center 7 Louisville 9 Avocn 7 Mt. Pleasant 0 Eiyht Mile Grove 7 Liberty 8 Rock Bluffs 9 Platrsmouth Precint 7 " 1st ward 7 2nd " 9 3rd " 13 " 4th " 12 Primaries will be held in the vnrious wards and precints on the 22nd day of September at the following places: Tipton at Eagle 6 p. m.; Greenwood at voting place 7:30 p. m.; Salt Creek at skating rink in Greenwood village 7:30; Stove Creek at Kluiwood village 7 p. m. ; Elmwood at Center school- house 7:30; Sou'h Bend at school house 4 p. tu.; Mm Ml IP bus Weeping T7ter precinct at Ciszili school house 7 p. in.; Weeping Yater city at Union hall 3 p. ra.; Center at Man ley 8 p.m.; Louisville at Adams' opera house 8 p. in.; Avoca at Hutchins school house 2 p. m.; ML Pleasant at -Gilmore's school house 2 p. m.; Eight Mile Grove at Hyalt's school house 7:30 p. nv; Liber ty at Union school house 7:30 p. m.; Rock Bluffs at Bergers school house' 3 p. m.; Platt8rnouth precinct at Taylor's school house 4 p. m.; Plattsmouth, 1st ward at county judges office 4 to 8 p. m., 2nd ward at 2nd ward school house 4 to 8 p. m., 3rd ward at Rite hey 's lumber office at 4 to 8 p. m., 4th ward at Byron Clark's office 4 to 8 p. in. M. D. Polk, Chairman. R. S. Wilkinson, Secretary. Asleep on the Railroad Track. A little child, tired of play, bad pil lowed his head on a rail and fallen asleep. The train was almost upon him when a passing stranger rushed forward and saved him from a horrible death. Per haps you are asleep on the track, too. You are, if you are neglecting the bil iousness aud constipation which trouble you, in the hope that you will "come all right." Wake up, or the train will be upon you! Constipation is too often the forerunner of a general "breaking up." Dr. Pierce's Aleasant Furgative Pellets will regulate your liver, stomach and bowels, aid restore your system to its normal condition. LOVE'S LITANY. ITclploss! alone I stand! Give me your hand' Ivul me across life's turmoil and despair! Take me away to Love's sweet blossom land. Out of this darkness into light and air! Give me your liuudl.to wander thro' my hair, To pass across my forehead; let it touch Sly Hps, just once, that murmur you are fair And tender, fiweetl I do not ask for much Give me your hand I Midnight has closed me round! Give meyout eyes That I may woke to see life's loveliness, And gaze into a mirror'd Paradise, Where we may wander on, no less! no less! Give me your eyes! that 1 may look you through. Unfold your soul, discover how your heart Trembles at love's awakening Ah 1 you You will be merciful ! Ere I depart Give me your eyes 1 Behold your suppliant! G i ve me your heart ! All that is in it that is very pure. Tour woman's sanctity; the counterpart Of gifts the angels pave you that endure! Give me your heart! that I may set it round With pearls of prayer, and rosaries recite Of deep thanksgiving! Let me feel I've found A way to peace out of life's dark night! Give me your heart! Clement Scott In America. i.z '.utj truLia ueer ruiiy Known 1 think it will be revealed that the tailors have hod about as weary a time of it as the dressmak ers. I saw in a tailor's shop the other day a sensible enough looking man of about 40 years, who was greatly distressed over an imaginary wrinkle in the back of a coat he was trying on, and he "was so afraid" that the trousers were ''the sixteenth of an inch too loug." No woman ever stood before her mirror in her first ball dress in greater anxiety as to "the fit" of the thing than this man of six feet two seemed to feel about that wrinkle and some other imaginary defects in his clothes. Ue turned and twisted and screwed his head around in his vain efforts to see the whole of himself at once. A mirror was placed before and behind him and the tailor tried to calm his fears about the wrinkle, but did not wholly succeed, and h went away looking gloomy and miserable. Only tailors know how "fussy" many men are over their clothes. They are as bad as women, but they won't acknowledge "It. When you see a man with the ends of his mustache daintily curled you can set it down that that mustache has been in curl papers while the man's barber was shaving him. I have seen five men at one time in a Boston barber shop with ikeir mustaches in curl papers, and I one knew a sharp, shrewd, successful young business man who won corsets.' O vanity I thy name is not always woman I "J. L H." in Detroit Fre Press. REPUBLICAN PLATFORM. The republicans of the United States, assem bled by their deligates in national convention. Pilule on the threshold of their proceedings te Honor thf nemory cf their first great leader and iiiimot'ial hampinn of liberty and the rights of the people. AiuaUam Lincoln, and to cover also with wreaths of iniferiitiale re membrance and gratitude the lieroio namea our later leaders who have been mora recently called away from our councils, Grant. Garfield, Arthur, Logan and Conkling. May thelrniem orles be faithfully cherished. We also recall with our greetings and prayer for his recovery the uiune of one of our living heroes whose a 10. 11. 12. New brick school house Will certainly have street fooutn 1 ark. 13. It you wish a sightly and picturesque view of Platts mouth, it can be had from a South Park lot. 14. To persons in the railroad employ, the eastern portion or" South Park is the most desireable residence locality in the citj 15. To persons desiring a residence on Chicago Avenue, the western portion of South Park is available for that purpose. 16. The B. & M. railroad track runs near the east line of the addition, furnishing good facilities for manufacturing industries. 17. If you locate in South Park you will have good neigh bors : Mayor Simpson, John K. Cox, John A. Davies, John L. Minor, J. V. Weckbach, Chas. Harris, John II. Tonng, Henry Waterman, W. C. lograham, Jerrv Farthing, Thos. E. Reynolds, 6, Ar Dtlvis, L. A. Miner, C. M.'Weed, Frank Irish, J. N. Glenn, C. L, Colemone, S. A. Speakman, A. Beeson, Cha6. I " U13L-- ilJ ' C- I of rer ... and of tie re, ..IJ. 4 ? iftt&atof tie noble soldier and favorite chud of victory. Philip H. Sheridan. - In the spirit of those great leaders and of our devotion t Human liberty, and with that bos tllity to ad forms of despotism aid oppression which is the fundamental idea of the republi can party, we rend Irate-nal congratulations to our fellow Americans of Brazil upon their great act of emancipation whioh completed the abolition of slavery throuhout the two American continents. We earnestly hope we may oou congratulate our fellow citizens of lrieh birth upon the peaceful recovery of home rule for Irelaud. WK AFFIRM OUR UNSWKBVIKrt PKVOTION to the national constitution and to the indis soluble union ol states to the autoonmy re served to the states under the constitution, to the personal rights aud liberties of citizens in all stated and territories in the union and es pecially to the supreme and sovereign right of every citizen, rich or poor, native or foreign bom, white or black, to csiBt one free ballot in the public elections ami to have that ballot duly counted. We hold a free and honest pop ular ballot and uwt and equal representation of all people tt be the foundation of our re publican government and demand effective legislation to necure the integrity and purity of elections which are the fountains of all pub lic authority. We charge that the present ad ministration ar.d the democratic majority In congress owe their existence to the suppression of the ballot by the criminal nullification of the constitution aud laws of the United States, We are uncrompromisingly in favor of the American system of protection. We protest against the destruction proposed by the prei dent aud his party. They serve the interests of Kurone WK WILL SUPPORT INTERF8T9 OF AMKRICA. We accept the issue, and confidently appeal to the people for their judgment. The protective svstem must be maintained. Its abandonment I has always been followed by general disaster to - all interests except mose oi me uubuier and sheriff. We denounce the Mills' bill as destructive to general business, labor, and the farming inter ests of the country, aud we heartily endorse the consistent ana patriotic action of the re publican representatives in congress in oppos ing its passage. We condemn the proposition of the democratic party to place wool ou the free list and insist, that the duties thereon shall be adjusted and maintained so as to fur nish full aud adequate protection to that iu-au-try. The republican party would effect all needed reduction of the national revenue by repealing the taxes on tobacco, which are an arrogance and burden to agriculture, and the tax upon spirits used in the arts and for mechanical pur poses, and by such revision of the tariff laws as will tend to check imports ot such articles as ae produced by our people, the production of which gives employment to our labor, and re lease from import duties these articles of for eign production, except luxuries, the like of which cannot b( produced at home. there hall still remain a larger revenue than is requisite for the wants of government, of internal taxes rather than surrender any iart of our i rotec tive system at tee joiut behest of the whisky ring and agents of foreign manufacturers. AGAINST PAUPFR AND LABOR TRUSTS. We declare hostility to the Ji. traduction into this country of foreign contract labor and of Chinese labor alien to our civilization and our constitution, and we demand the rigid enforce ment of existing laws Hgalust it and favor such immediate legislation as will exclude such la bor from our shores. We declare our opposition to all combina tions of capital organized in trusts or other wise to control arbitrarily the condition of trade among our citizens and we recommend to congress aud the state legislatures in their respective jurisdictions such legislation as will prevent the execution of all schemes to oppress the pet pie by undue charges on their supplies or by unju t rates for the transportation of their products to market. we approve legislation by congress to pre vent alike unjust burdens aud unfair d.bcriin inatiou between nates. PUBLIC LAND LEGISLATION. We reaffirm the policy of appropriating the public lands of the L' hi ted States to be home steads for American citizens and settlers not aliens, which the republican party established in lc 2 aga'nst the persiste.it opposition of the democrats in congress, which lias brought our great western domain into magnificent de velopment. 1 he restoration of unearned land grants to ilie public domain for the use of ac tual settlers, which was begun under the ad ministration of President Arthur should be continued. We deny that the democratic party has ever restored one acre to the people, but declare that by the joint action of republicahs and democrats about fifty million acres of un earned lands, originally granted for the con struction of railroads, have been restored to the public domain in pursuance of conditions inserted by the leoublieaii party in the oi initi al grants. We charge t e democratic adminis tration with lailure to execute laws securing to settlers title to tlieii homesteads and with us ing appropriations made for that purpose to harrass innocent settlers with spies and prose cutions under the false pretense of exposing frauds aud vindicating the law. ADMISSION OF TERRITORIES. The government by congress of the territor ies is based upon necessity only to the end that they may become states in the union: there fore, whenever the condition of population, material resource", pi.blic intelligence and morality are sueli as to itmure stable local gov ernment therein the people of such territories should be permitted, a right inherent in them, to forin for themselves constitutions find state governments and be ad itted into the union. Pending preparati n for statehood all officers thereof should be selected trom bona fide residents and citizens of the territory wherein they are to serve. South Dakota should f right be immediately admitted as a state in the union under the constitution framed and adopted by her people and we heartilv en dorse the action of the republican senate in I twice passiug i'iis lur ner aui)tssioi. -j pp rer fusal of the democratic house of representor tjyus, 'or partisan purposes, to favorably con sider these bills is a willful violation of tjie Ra. red American principle of lopal self-government, and merits the condemnation of fall jiut men. The pending bills in the senate for acts to enable the ueople of Washington, North Dakota and Montamia territories to form con stitu ion and establish state govemmeMs should be passed without unnecessary delay. Tbp republican party pledges inself to do all in is pnw?r fa facilitate fhe admission of the ter ritories pf Ne Mexico. W-pming. ldajip aftd Arizona to the enjoyment of seu-govern.rienL us states. Such of them as are now Qualified as soon as possible. and others as soon as tney IUOJ VGWUIC OV9 Ml 'Z- UJ now being constructed. car privileges at no distant date The poilt.1 i-.. . . i . 1 J the territories as exercised Xt' ' - menace to free Institutions too : .eroim to be long suffered. TLerefure v e p. edge the re publican party 1o appropriate lerUlatlon. ai-sertlng the sovereignty of the nation In all the territories where the same Is questioned, and in furtherance of that end to place upon the statute book legislation stringent enough lo divorce political from eeclesiat.ilcal lower. ud thus stamp out the atteudaut wickedness of polygamy. ; The republican purty is lu favor of the use of both gold and silver as money, and con demns the policy ol the democratic adminis tration in its efforts to demonetize silver. We demand the reduction of letter postage to 1 CMit, per ounce. , . In a republic like ours, where the cillzens is the sovertign and the official the servant, where no power is exercised except by the will of the people. It is Important that the sover-elgn-reople should possess Intelligence. The free hchool is the promoter ol that lu;el.lgeme which i to preserve us a free nation. 1 here lore. the state or nation, or both conbined. should support iree Institutions of learning sufficient to fiord to eveiy child growing up in the land the opportunity of a good comiuou tcl.ool education. OUB M KIICHANT M AKIN K, We earnestly recommend that prompt action be taken ii c..riess iu the ei act mt-iit of such legislation as will best becure the rehabilita tion of our American merchant marine, and we protest against the passage by cougress of a free ship bill as calculated to work injustice to labor by lessening the wages of thoe en- aged iu preparing materials as well as those irectly employedin our shipyards. e de mand appropriations for the early rebuilding of our navy, for the construction of coast fortifications and modern ordinance and other approved modern ineans of defense for the protection of our defenseless harbors and cities, for the payment of just pensions to; our soldiers, for necessary works of national im portance in the improvement of the harbors and channels of luternal. coastwiser aud foreign commerce, for the encouragement of the shipping interests of the Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific states as well as for the payment of the maturing public debt. This policy will give employment to our labor, activity to our various industries. Increased security to our country, promote trade, open new aud direct markets for our products and cheapen the cost of transportation. We affirm this to be far better tor our country man me uemocrauc policy of loaning the government's money without interest to "pet banks." FOREIGN RELATIONS. The conduct of foreign affairs by the ptesent administration has been distinguished by inef ficiency and cowardice. Having withdrawn from Die senate all pending treaties effected by republicau administrators for the removal of foreign burdens and restrictions upon our coimneice and for its extension into a better market, it has neither affected nor proposed any others in their stead. Professing adher ence to tne Monroe doctrine, it has seen with idle complacency the extension of foreign in fluence iu Central America and of foreign trade everywhere among our neighbors. It has re fused to charter, sanction or encourage any American organizytion for constructing the Nicaragua canal, a work of vtal importance to the maintenance of the Monroe doctrine and of our national influence iu Central and South America, and necessary fo' the development of trade witli our Pacific territory, with Sou'h America, and with the further coasts if the Pacific Ocean. FISHERIES QUESTION. We arraign the present democratic adminis tration for its weak and unpatriotic treatment of the fisheries question, and its pusillanimous surrender of all privileges to which our fishery vessels are entitled in Canadian ports under the treaty of 1818. the reciprocate maiin tiue legislation of 1830 and comity of nations, and which Canadian fishing vessels receive in the ports of the United States. We condemn the I -licy of the present administration and the democratic majority in congress towards our livneries as unlrienulv ana conspiciousiy unpatriotic and as tending to destroy a valuable national industry and an iudispenslble resource of defense against foreign enemy. The name of American applies alike to all citizens of the repjbli. and imposes upon men alike the same obligation of obedience to the laws. At the same lime citizenship is aud must be the panoply and safeguard of him who weais it, should shield and protect him whether high or low-, rich or poor, in all his civil rights, it should and must afford him protection at home and follow and protect him abroad in whatever land he may be on a lawful errand. CIVIL SERVICE REFORM. The men who abandoned the republican par ty iu 1884 and continue to adhere to the demo cratic party have deserted not only the cause of honest government, but of sound finance, of freedom and purity of the ballot, but espec ially have deserted the cauee of reform in the civil service. We will not tail to keep uiir pledges because they have broken theirs, or because their candidate has broken his. We! therefore repeat our declaration of 1884, towit : The reform of civil service auspiciously begun under republican administration should be completed by a further extension of th reform sstem already established by law to all grades of the service to which it is applied. The spir it and purpose of reform should be observed in all executive appointments, and all laws at varience with the object of existing reform leg islation should be repealed, and that the dan gers to free institutions which lurk in the pow er ri off cial patronage may be wisely and ef fectively avoided. The gratitude of the nation to the defenders of the union cannot be assured except by laws. The legislation of cougress should conform to the pledges made by a loyal people, aud be so enlarged and extended as to prov'de against the possibility that any man who honorably wore the federal uniform shall becon e an In mate of an almshouse or dependent on t rivate charity. In the presence of an overflowing treasury it would b a public scandal to do less for those whose valorous service preserved the government. We denounce the hostile spirit shown by President Cleveland in his numerous vetoes of measures for pension relief, and the action of the democratic house of representa tives in refusing even consideration of general pension lngitflafiop, In support of the principles herewith enun ciated we invite the co-operation of patriotic men of all parties, especially of all working men whose prosperity is seriously threatened by the free trade policy of the present admin istration. The first co- ceru of all good government is the yjrtue and, sobriety of the people Mid tho p,friy of thetr liojnes. The republican part v cordially sympathises wjtfi all wise and well directed effort for the promotion of temper ance. In A. Pankin, Sarah E. Alexander, John Moore, M. A. Shipman, Lillie Kaliskj, T. W. Faugh t, Clayton Barber, T. J. Hesser,' Harry Kneller, J. E. Barwick, J. G. Royal, W. N. McLennan, P. C. Minor, F. McCourt, J. C. Fought, W. J. Warrick, Judge A. N. Sullivan, and other prominent citizens are owners of SoutluPark property. 18. Over $14,000 worth of this desirable property has been disposed of within a short period and no part has been sold to outside speculators, which is solid proof of the substantial growth of this part of the city. 19. More substantial houses have been built in South Park during the year pat than in any one locality, and still the building boom continues. 20. Terms, one third cash, balance in' one and two years, or lots may be purchased on monthly payments. " ' 21. Purchase a lot and we will loan you money with which to build. N" 22 Thoroughly cleanse the blood, which It the fountain of health, by uBimr Dr. pierce s uoia en M- 'cal Discovery, and uood digestion, a fair i u buoyant spirit, and bodily health and vi-or will be established. Golden Medical Discovery cures all humors, from the common pimple, blotch, or eruption, to the worst Scrofula, or blood-poison. Es pecially has it proven its efficacy In curing Salt -rheum or Tetter, Eczema. Krysipela. Fever - sorts. Hip -Joint Disease, Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, Enlarged Glands, Goi tre or Thick Neck, and Eating" Bores or Ulcers. Golden Medical Discovery euros Consump tion (which Is Scrofula of the Lungs), by its wonderful blood - purifying-, invigorating, and nutritive properties, if tkn In time. For Weak Lungs. Spitting of IJloodL Short ness of lireath. Catarrh in the Head, Ilron chiUs. Severe Coughs, Asthma, and kindred affections. It is a sovereign remedy. it promptly cures the severest Coughs. For Torpid Liver, Biliousness, or "Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, and indigestion, it la an unequaled remedy. Sold by druggist. Price 11.00, or six bottles for 5.0O. JULIUS PEPPERBERG, MANUFACTURER OF AND WHOLESALE & RETAJ- . DEALER IN THE (X Choicest Brands of Cigars, including our Flor de PepperberBO tr.cl 'Bus FULL LINK OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES always in stock. Nov. 2G. 1885. J". O, BOOITE, BARBER AND HAIR DRESSER. All work first-class; west Fifth Street. North Robert Sherwood's Store. A Warning. The modes of death's approach arc va rious, and statistics show conclusively that more persons die from disease of the hroat and lungs than any other. It is probable that everyone, without excep tion, receives vast numbers of Tubercle Germs into the system and where these germs full upon suitable soil they start into life and develop, at first slowly and is shown by a slight tickling sensation in the throat and if allowed to continue their ravages they extend to the lungs produc ing Consumption and to the head, caus ing Catarrh. Now all this is dangerous and if allowed to continue will in time cause death. At the onset you must act with promptness; allowing a cold to go without attention is dangerous and may loose you your life. As soon as you feel that something is wrong with your throat, lungs or nostrils, obtain n bottle of Bos shee's German Syrup. It will giye you immediate relief. For Sale. To be sold in ten days Lots 5. C and 7, in block 4, and lot 8 in block 12 in South Park; also one srpmrd Grand pinno. Enquire at B. & M. store department or on p rnvses. tf J. D Simpson. $500 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 Li ver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely yegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes tontaining 30 sugar coated pills, 25c. For sale by all druggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The gen uine manufactured only by John O. We & Co., 802 W. Madison St. Chicago, and Sold by W. J. Warrick. The standard remedy for liver com plaint is West's Liver Pills; they never disappoint you. 30 pills 25c. At War rick's druur store, . Fire Insurance written in the Mtna, Pheenix and Hartford by i B IR .A. S E A 3 1 h 1 1 on 1 it A