THE DAILY HERALD : PLi raSaiou To xjSiKAbKA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, lSv ..uth Daily Heraid. ) T T S BRO S., v .Ushers & Proprietors. r r. J .X PLATTSMOUTH IIKUALIJ Mhil vrrv veiilii-r exci-nt Sunday , ekly every Thursday morning. Kegls- 1 i at the Mitufnctf, I'laltfiiioutli. Nebr.. is I nil-cUs matter. Ofllce corner of V lue and , ,uh ttrtel-i. Tout roii IAILV. One copy on ear In advance, ly mail ? wi One copy p-r mouth, t-yearrh-r W One copy per week, by carrier, is TRIMS run Wr.fcKLY. One eopy one year, in advance One copy six months. In advance 75 NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. KOll VKKSIOKST, BENJAMIN. IIAUUISON, - of Indianu. KOlt VUK rilESIlKNT, LKVI I. MOHTOX, of New York. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. KOll (lOVKICNOH. JOHN M. TIIAYEK. FOR LlKl'TKNANT UOVEIlNOK, OEOKUE I). MEIKLEJOIIN. KOlt 8F.CKKTAUV OF KTATK, IILBEHT L. LAWS. KOK TltKASCItKIt, J. E. HILL. FOU AIIHTOK OK I'LMH.IC ACCOUNTS', THOMAS II. BENTON. KOlt ATTOKNKY is EN Kit AL, WILLIAM LEESE. KOlt COMMISSIONKK OK 1'UHLIC LANDS AND 11CILDINOS, JOHN STEEN. KOlt nrPERINTENDFNT OK PCBI.IC HTKCCTION. GEORGE B. LANE. IN- Now what will Messrs. Barnum and Brice do for "a sensation," the "fat wom an," the "bearded boy," and the "old Itoman," are all Iayed out. Let us liave a Chinaman now, an almond eyed, pig tailed, rat devouring, domocratic Chinaman, and let the millionaire Scott jine the stranded circus and exhibit it. The country demands that the show ex hibit. We will venture another gill of butter milk that poor old Mr. Thurman, as sick as he was at Newark, N. J., the other ev ening, amused the democratic ear when lie apostrophized that party as " thegreat democratic party founded by Thos. Jef ferson and upheld by Andrew Jackson." All that was needed for this brief fchetch of the poor old concern was to have added " and pocketed by Grorer Cleve land." It is a pitiable spectacle to see the na tional democratic committee attempting to stay the tide in New York with the poor " Old Itoman;" old, infirm and fee ble; so that his pitiable condition is par aded before the hooting, yelling gangs of paid rounders, who arc employed from the slums of the five points to give effect before the country to the meeting. Mr. Thurman has more than once announced to the country that old age and physical decay had admonished him that he must retire from the arena of American politics; yet we behold him in a fainting condition. exhibited by the managers of Mr. Cleye land's lost cause, attended by physicians who administer nostrums on the stage, to keep life in him until he can be carted to his Ohio home. If this is not robbing a graveyard to boom a political campaign, we wouldlike to know what to call it. 1. As a whole they are the finest lying lots in the city. 2. They are shaded with beautiful forest 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. 0. J'y reason ot 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 avennes. 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. 0. 2ev sidewalks recently constructed to within a few feet of the addition and will shortly be extended. THE DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN. A democratic exchange is wishing that Cleveland and Judge Thurman may take the stump together. It thinks that they would awaken great enthusiasm and that the " plain, straightforward words of the president, and the simple, old-fashioned eloquence of the Old Roman would do much good in the campaign." No doubt of it. The fact is thiscoun try is just leaning forward in its chair, nnd witli one hand behind its ear, is waiting breathlessly for them to begin. When Mr. Cleveland and the Roman get out on this tour a report of one the meet ings will read like this: Mr. Cleveland then stepped forward and spoke as follows: A, the first of the vowels and the first letter of all writ ten alphabets except the Amharic or Abys hiuian, of which it is -the thirteenth, and the Runic, of which it is the tenth. This almost universal precedence appears to be due to the fact that its typical and prob ably only original sound (ah) is the most easily uttered of all sounds, being pro duced by a simple expulsion of the breath through the freely opened throat and mouth. " ' Aa, the name of a number of small rivers in central and northern Europe.de- lived from the Celtic arch, or Teutonica aa, tli) wing water. " Aachen. See Aix-la-Chapelle. 4 Aaborg, a seaport and city of Den mark in Jutland, capital of a district of the same name. " 'Aali Pacha, a Turkish statesman, born in Constantinople in 1615, died there September 7, 1871. The son of a priest, he entered the public service at an early age as it protege of Rcshid Gildeifluke." The intelligent raader will of course observe that thi3 is an extract from the first chapter of the American Cyclopedia, Mr. Cleveland's favorite. As the campaign progressed he would probably work on over into the " B's," " Cs," " D's," etc. Continuing, the account will say: " The Old Roman then stepped to the edge of the platform and in a few well chost n words addressed the audience. There was, he said, a tax on every man's shirt. This was not good for the man nor the shirt, lie doubted if there was an entirely free and independent shirt in the audience. No man knew what it was to live so long as there was a tax on his shirt. It was" better to have worked and got only fifty cents a day than never to have worn a free shirt. Better fifty years of a paper collar and your coat buttoned up close under your chin than a cycle of taxed shirts. (A voice: 'That's right.' Man removed by the police and restored to the institution for the insane, having escaped from incurables' ward afternoon.) Continuing the judge said the taxed shirt must go. He offered to read statistics proving that shirts really were taxed,but desisted owing to loud cries of 'don't.' At this point the judge reached in his pocket, and w ith an effort exti acted his bandauna. Three cheers were given the bandanna, and during the confusion the judge was lost sight of." Mr.. Thurman again doubled up at Newark, N. J., and had to be "doctored" in the middle of his "greatest effort" with the "greatest show on earth." The colic took the old gentleman immediate ly upon his proposing that wormy chest nut that the "Mills bill didn't reduce the tariff duties more than 7 per cent." The average democratic editor cant even pro pose that fashood any longer without having a severe attack of "the botts." There is some difference between t carying Arkansas and Vermont upon a ' irrea industrial question: About the i diffeience between an ilicit still and a school house. Vermont is a school houeo state and Arkansas isn't. I EKE IF IKL PDRGHAS I MAINE VOTES TODAY. It is a significant fact that the election of president of these United States is confined entirely to the northern states and to elect Mr. Harrison the republican party is compelled to secure out of the 248 electoral votes cast by the free north, 201 while the democratic party has to secure but 48 votes. In other words, 48 electoral votes cast for Mr. Cleveland, in the north, will continue him as president of the United States; while Mr. Harrison has to obtain 201 of these yotes if he ex pects to occupy the White House. In this computation wc of course count the solid south solid andif anyone has the temerity to doubt the ability of that sec tion of the union to remain solid let them look to the late election in Arkansas where ballot boxes are stolen in republi can counties by the democratic 1'o.sse Comitatwt. "The law being suspended" in the south for election purposes, like the writ of habeas corpus in times of war, it is wholly unnecessary to take the 153 elec toral votes in that solid sectional section into account in speculating in adyance n what the sovereign yoter is liable to do with the claims of Messrs. Cleveland and Harrison hence we conclude, our boast id theory of "the majority rule" in this country presents a curious spectacle when Mr. Harrison must obtain 201 electoral votes to Mr. Cleveland's 47 to enable Mr. Harrison to claim that he has a ma jority. If Mexico can beat thu state of affairs we would like to know how the greaser works it. Woman as a Martyr. History records the sufferings of count less martyrs, and we read of them with wonder and sympathy. But there are living today in our midst thousands of other martyrs who have far stronger claims upon our consideration women who are sufferers from those ailments peculiar to their sex, our wives, daugh ters oud sisters, perhaps, whose liyes are an unmitting round of suffering. "Is there no relief V they cry. Yes, there is; Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will remove that "dragging-down" feeling, will banish that backache, will restore every function to its normal condition. To all sufferers from female complaints and their name is Legion we sa3T: get the "Prescription" at once: It will be worth far more than its weight in gold to you. Jtvnelltit or a Merry -Iintt. But who gains through any one's grieviDg aud crying for months over anything? Is it pleasant to visit the friend who is always doing the doleful and pumpiug from lachry mal fount and treating you to tears? The same strength that pumps up tears can pump up smiles. If the boiler bursts and I am blown up sky high and come down in small. pieces, and you can stick me together again nnd put me on a bed, don't stand around it crying and sobbing and wringing your hands as if your hearts would break. I don't want your hearts to break. But call in a fiddler and set him to work on the "Arkansas Trav eler," "Yankee Doodle" and "The Girl I Left Behind Me," or the girl who left me behind in the cold. That'll do me some good. "A merry heart," saith the Scripture, "doeth good like a medicine." Why? Be cause a cheerful, merry mind sends from it to you a current of life, health giving ele ment thought as different from a thought current of gloom as champagne differs from tar. It's a current as real as a current of water as real as the current of invisible water that in warm weather runs just abovo the visible water and along with it is drawn from it by the heat of the sun. Prentice Mulford in New York Star. ... REPUBLICAN PLATFORM. The republicans of the United States, assem bled by their rielipates in national convention, nance on the threshold of their proceedings t tionor the memory of their first great leader and Immortal champion of liberty and the rights of the people. Abraham Lincoln, and to cover also with wreaths e( inierishabj6 re membrance and gratitude the heroic names of our later leaders wno have been more recently called away from our councils. (Srant. Garfield, Arthur, Logan and Conkling. Way tlieirniem ories be faithfully cherished. We also recall with our greeting"1 and prayer for his recovery the name of one pf our living heroes whose US. "IFlLJLnlLn IlEF OFIHEIES IE -Twenty-One 0 JO. New brick school house now being constructed. 11. Will certainly have street car privileges at no distant date 12. If you wlfh a. fine view of the river, locate on a lot in South Park. 13. It you wish a sightly and picturesque view of Platts moiith, it can be had from a South fark lot. 14. To persons in the railroad employ i the eastern portion of South Park is the most desimible residence locality in the city. 15. To persons desiring a residence on Chicago Avenue, the western portion of South Park is available for that purpose. 10. The B. & M. railroad track runs near the east line of the addition, furnishing good facilities for manufacturing industries. 17. If yon locate in South Park yon will have good neigh bors : Mayor Simpson, John 11. Cox, John A. Davies, John L. Minor, J. V. Weckbach, Chas. Harris, John II. Young, Henry Waterman, W. C. In graham, Jerry Farthing, Thos. E. Reynolds, S; A. Davis, L. A. Miner, C. M. Weed, Frank Irish, J. N. Glenn, C. t, Coletnone, g. A. Speakman, A. .Peeson. Chas. iiirinory will be treasured In the history both of republicans and ol the republic. The name is that of the noble soldier and favorite child of victory. Philip H. Sheridan. Id the ptrlt of flume great leaders and or our devotion t i human liberty, and willi that hos tility to ml forms of deKpotli-m ai.d oppression which Is the fundamental Idea of the republi can party, we reutl fraternal coiigrat illations to our fellow Americans of Ura.ll upon their gi cut act of emancipation which completed the abolition of staverv throuhotit the two American continents. We eariifcstly hope we may noon congratulate our fellow citizen of IrMi birth upon the peaceful iccovery ol home rule for Ireland. WK AFKllt.M unit VNHWKHV1KU KKVOTION to the national constitution and to Ihe indis soluble union of states to the autoouiny re served to ihe states under the constitution, to the personal rights and liberties of citizens in all iates and territories in the union and es pecially to the supreme and sovereign light of every citizen, licli or poor, native or forcigu born, white or black, to cast one free ballot in the public elections ami to have that ballot duly counted. We hold a free and houest pop ular ballot and Jut and equal representation of all people t be the foundation of our re publicHii government and demand effect ive legislation to secure the integrity and puiiiy of elections w hich are l he fountains of all pub lie authority. We charge that the present ad ministration a::d the democratic majority In congress owe their existence, to the Mipprccslon of the ballot by the criminal iiullillcatlon of the constitution and laws of the United Stales. We are uucromproinisiiigly in favor of the American system of protection. We protest against the destruction proposed by the prel dent and his party. They terve the iuteret-ts of Europe WK WILL SUPPORT INTKltKSTB OF AMERICA. We accept the Issue, and confidently appeal to the people for their judgment. The piotective system must be maintained. Its abandonment has always been followed by general disaster to all interests except those of the unmrer ami sheriff. We denounce the Mills' bill as destructive to general bueinens, labor, and the farming inter ests of the country, and we heartily endorse the consistent anu 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 on the free list aud insis'- that Ihe duties thereon slia l be adjusted and maintained so as to fur nish full and adequate protection to that in-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, aud the tax upon spirits used in the arts and for mechanical pur poses, and by Mich revision of the tariff laws as will tend to check imports oi such articles as a-e 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 be produced at home, there hall still remain a larger revenue than is requisite fort lie wants of government, of internal taxes rather than surrender any part of our i rotec tive system at the Joiut bell st of the whisky ring and agents of foreign manufacturers. AOAIKST PACPFK AMI IJk P.OK THUS t 8. We declare hostility to the h.trod action 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 against 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 orgnnized in trusts or other wise to control arbitrarily the condition of trade among our citizens and we recommend ro congress aud the state legislatures in their respect ive jurisdictions such legislation as will prevent the execution of all schemes to oppress the pec pie by undue charges on their supplies or by iinjii-t rates for the transportation of their products to market. we approve legislation by congress to pre vent alike unjust burdens and unfair d.scriui ination between states. PUBLIC LAND LEGISLATION. We reaflirm the policy of appropriating the public lands of the L'hited States to be home stead for American citizens and settlers not aliens, which the republican party established in i:2 aga'nst the persiste.it opposition of the democrats in congress, which hiis brought our great western domain into magnilicciit de velopment. Ihe restoration of unearned land grunts to ihe public doiiMin for the use of ac tual settlers, which was begun under the ad ministration of I'residj'iit Arthur should be continued. We deny that the democratic partv has ever restored one acre to the people, but declare that by the joint action of republicalis and democrats about fifty million acres of un earned lands, originally granted for the con struction of railroad, have been restored to the puMlc domain in pursuauco of conditions inserted by the renublican party in the 01 Initi al grant. We charge t -e democratic adminis tration with lailurc to execute laws securing to settlers title to theii 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 and vindicating the law. ADMISSION Off TF.PR1TOKIKS. The government by eongreps of the territor ies is based upoa necessity only to l be end that they may become states in the union: there fore, whenever the conditions of population, material resources pi blic intelligence and morality are such as to insure stable local gov ernment therein the people of such territories should be permitted, a right inherent in them, to fonn for themselves constitutions and state governments and bfi ad fitted into the union. Pending preparati n for statehood aTJ officers thereof should be selected from bona fide residents and citizens of the territory wherein they are to serve. Smith Dakota should if right be immediately admitted as a state in the union under the constitution framed and adopted by her people and we heartily en dorse the action of the republican senate in twice passing Pills for her admission. J he re fusal of the democratic house of representa tives, 'or partisan purposes, to favorably con sider these bjlls is a willful violation of the sa red Aiueiican principle of lopal self-government, and merits the condemnation of 11 just men. 'I he pending bills in the senate for acts to enable the people of Washington, North Dakota and Moiitamia territories to form con stitirioni and establish state governments should be passed without unnecessary de'ay. The republican party pledges inself to do all in it power U facilitate the admission of the ter ritories of How M.xjuo. Wyoming. daho and Arizona to the enjoyment ' of self-goverpnient as states. Such of them as are now iuaimed as soon as possible. and others as soon as they may become so. Kea-sone Por- (Ml u Til K MOlj w 1 - - The political poAcr of the Mormon rltu.vh In the teriltcilcsi exercised la the past i a meiiance u lice Institutions too danueioim to be long sullen 1. 'UhtI..ih ve p eilge ihe re publican party o appropriate leu Ixlattou. assertlug the sovereignty of the nation in all the teiril'Hles hcie the sslne is auctioned, and In lui tlicraiice f that nd to place upon the statute book legislation stilugent enough to divorce l oliib al lroiu ei elo-laM ical power, smt thus stamp out the attei (iaut wickedness of polygamy. 'I he republican party Is In favor of the use of both gold soul silver as money, aim con demiistlie policy ol ihe dcumcial it: udnilii's- t ration in 11 ettor's to demonetize silver. We demand the reduction of Idler postage to 1 flit per ounce. In a republic I ke ours, w hre the citizens is Ihe stiver ign and the i tlicl d the sen nut where no nowsi- isexeiclseil except by the wi I f i he ix'oiili Ir is iiii'..orlant t hat the Mover iiii reonle should nosess intelligei cc. The free uliool is the promoter ol thai lurel.lgcnce which isto preserve us a nee nam-u. inci--tore, the state or nation, or both eoiibmed should support Her Inst it ill Ions of IcarniliK sufficient to Milord to eveiy child growing up In the land the opioituiuty ol agooii common scl.oi 1 education. i;k mklchaxi makink. We earnestly recommend that prompt net Ion be taken il ci'i truss in Ihe e act nit lit of such legislation as will best scenic the rehabilita tion of our Aiiicricfii merchant inaiiue. and we protest against the passage by congress of a free ship lull as caicuiaieu to woik injustice to labor bv lessening the wages of these en gaged in preparing materials as well as those directly employed in our shipyards. we de- maua appropriations for the enrly rebuilding of our navy, for the construction of coast fortifications and modern ordinance and other approved modern inea-s of defense for the protection of our deienseiess narnors anu cities, for the payment of just pel sions to. our soldiers, lor necessary works oi national important'- in the improvement of the harbors and channels of internal, coastwiser and fore'gn commerce, for the encouragement f the shipping interests of the Atlantic, (lulf and I'aclllc states as ell as for the payment of the maturing public ueTit. J ins policy win irive employment to our labor, activity to our various industries, increased security to our country, promote trade, open new and direct markets lor our products and cheap n the cost of transportation. We atliim this to be far belter for our country than tue democratic policy of loaning the governments money without interest to ' pet banks." KOKKION It KL AT IONS. The conduct of foreign affairs by the present administration has lieen Uilinguislieii iy inel ticieucy aud cowardice. Having withdrawn from the senate nil pending treaties effected by republican administrations for the removal of foreign burdens and restrictions upon our comtiif ice and for its extension int. a belter market it has neither affected nor proposed any otlieis in their stead. Professing adher ence to the Monroe doct ripe, it has seen with idle complacency the extension of foreign in fluence in Central America and of foreign trade everywhere among our neighbors, it has re fused to charter, sanction or encourage any American organizytloii for constructing the Nicaragua canal, a work of vtal importance to the maintenance of the Monroe doctrine and of our national influence in Central and South America, and ueeessaiy fo- the development of trade with our Pacific territory, with Soit'li America, and with the further coasts of the Pacific Ocean. K18HF.lt I FS QUF.STION. We arraign the present democratic adminis tration for its weak aud unpatriotic treatment of the fisheries question, and ils pusillanimous surrenderof all privileges to which our fishery vt sseM are entitled in Canadian ports under the treaty of iss, the reciprocate liiarin tine legislation of 1830 anil comity of nations, and which Canadian fishing vessels receive in the ports of the United States. We condemn the i clicy of the present administration and the democratic majority in congress towards our tivheries as unfriendly and conspicioiisly unpatriotic and as tending to destroy a valuable national industry aud an indispenslble resource of defense against foreign enemy. The name of American applies alike to J-U citizens of the republic, aud imposes upon men alike the same obligation of obedience to the laws. At the same time citizenship is and 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 right. It should and must afford htm protection at home and follow and protect him abroad in whatever laud he may be on a lawful errand. CIVIL SEItVICK RKFOKM. The men who abandoned the republican par ty in ISH4 and continue to adhere to t lie demo cratic party nave oeserteu not only tue cause of honest government, but of sound finance, of freedom ;and purity of the ballot, but espec ially have deserted the eaue of reform In the civil service. We will not tail to keep our pledges because tl ey have broken theirs, or be -ause their candidate has broken his. We therefore repea' our declaration of ih4, towit : The reform of civil service auspiciously begun under republican administration should be completed by afurther extension of th" reform system already established by law to all grades of the service to which it is applied. Tlu spir it ape! purpose of reform should be observed in ail executive appointtiiepts. and all laws at varlence 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 of off cial patronage may be wisely aud ef fectively avoided. The gratitude of the nation to the defenders of the union cannot be assured except bv laws. The legislation of congress should conform to the pledges made by a loyal people, aud be so enlarged and exteuded a to prov'de against the possibility tnt any mail who honorably wore the federal uniform shall become an In mate of an almshouse or dependent on private 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 legislation. Iii support of the principles herewith enun ciated we invite the co-operation of patriotic men of all parties, especially f all working men whose prosperity is seriously threatened by the free trade policy of the present admin istration. The first co-cern of all good government is the virtue and sobriety of the people Mid the purity of tjieir hopies. The republican party ordia'i sympathises wjt)i all vvis.e and well directed efforts for tne promotion or ti.iupei ar.ee. ' V PARK A. Iiankin, Sarah E. Alexander, John Moore, M. A. Shipman, Lillie Kalisky, T. W. Fanght, Clayton Barber, W. J. Hesser, Harry Kneller, J. E. Parwick, J. G. Royal, W. N. McLennan, V, C. Minor, F. MoCourt, J. C. Fought, W. J, Warrick, Judge A. N. Sullivan, and other prominent citizens are owners of South Park proper ty. lb. Over S14,000 worth of this desirable property has been disposed of within a short period and no part has been sold to outside speculators, which is fcolid proof of the substantial growth of this part of the city. 19. More substantial houses have been bnilt in South Park during the year pat than in any one locality, and still t' building boom continues. 20. Terms, one third cash, balance in one and two year, lots may be purchased on monthly payments. 21. Purchase a lot and we will loan you money with wh: to build. Thoroughly cleanse the blood.w. fountain of health, by uslnir Dr. I'let en Medical Discovery, and Rood dlt fair akin, buoyant spirits, aud bodily . 1 and viirur will bo established. Uoldon Medical Discovery cure all htltv from the common pimple, blotch, or erupt, to the worst Scrofula, or blood-poison. peclally bag it proven its efficacy in curing Salt-rheum or Tetter, Kezema, Kryaiixdas. Fever-sore. Ilip-Jolnt Disease, Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, Enlarged i lands, Uol tro or Thick .Neck, and Luting Sores or U leers. Golden Medical Discovery cures Consump tion (which Is Scrofula of the Lungs), by its wonderful blood - purifying-. Invigorating, and nutritive properties, if taken in time. For Weak Lungs, Spitting of iilood. Short ness of Itreatb, Catarrh in tlio Head, llron chitls. Severe Coughs, Asthma, and kindred affections, it Is a sovereign remedy. It promptly cures the severest Coughs. For Torpid I.lver, biliousness, or "Liver Complaint' Dyspepsia, and indigestion, it Is sn une(iialed remedy. Sold by druggists. Price fl.ou, or six buttles for 5.00. JULIUS PEPPERBERG, MAN UKACTL'llKlt OP AND WHOLESALE & RETAIL DKAI.KK IN J IIK Choicest Brands of Cigais, including our Flor do Pepperbero tr.d 'd I Kl'LL LINK OP TOBACCO AND SMOKEKS' AKTICI.KS always in stock. Nov. 21!. lSH.r. J. C, BO CITS, BARBER AND HAIR DRESSER. All work first-class; wot Fifth Ft ret t. North Hubert Sherwood's Store. An Explanation. What is this "nervous trouble" with which so many seem now to le alllictedf If j'ou will remember a few years ago the word Malaria was comparatively un known, today it is as common ns any word in the English language, yet this word covers only the mi tilling of another word used by our forefathers in times past. So it is used with nervous discuses, as they and Malaria are intended to cover what our grandfathers called Biliousness, and all are caused by troubles that arise from a diseased condition of the Liver which in performing its functions finding it cannot dispose of the bile through the ordinary channel is compelled to pass it off through the system causing nervous troubles, Malaria, Bilious Fever, etc. You who are suffering can well appreci ate a cure. We recommend Oreeii's Au gust Flower. Its cures are marvelous. $SOO Reward. We will pay the above reward fcr any case of liver complaint, dyspepsia, sick headache, indigestion, constipation or costiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liyer Pills, when the directions are fetrii tly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes rontaining 30 sugar coated pills, 25e. For sale by all druggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The gen uine manufactured only by John O. We & Co., 8C9 W. Madison St. Chicago.nnd Sold by W. J. Wan-ick. The standard remedy for liver com plaint is West's Liver Pill?; they never disappoint you. SO pills 2r,c. At War rick's drug store. Fire Insurance written in thn Etna, Phoenix and Hartford by Windham L Davies. Wocd for Sale. Leave orders with J. 1). Tutt, at Ben nett & Tutt's store. tf. Q 3" 2 3 s?i3 Oiy gi PLATTSMOTTT