i i.ilil hull Nir.'kiiiitlt t'Uli 1 UMttiU K NOTTS BnOS Publishers '. .. 0.1 tun, 7hurl vy, km it dally everj , ,i, a ,t. -..,.( )ullOil)f. w-ritrrni i tir Fiucrtmniitli, Nnt), .-..uu u. u. ., i'hiiviiiw r.ur-. 0 IVe entnw Vila i fU Ft Fl rt 4trrw. Telephone " ' tBiiHilirniv, ' ." one jA.tr, In .ivancr. si vi , one year, U"t la aclvm-s .... s no J, tlx montlif, In advinos ,'Vy, three month". In i'h.inee. ... to) J TEKHS FOB DAILt m top one jmtr la adymee t, u) .' onpy per week, by erriiT n --e-jiy, pemuutfr ... ao MONDAY, OCTOHEH. 10, STATE TICKS. i.tnoaats Ju tlee fit (km flupi.n ''" url A. M. I'Oftjtif ntte. r t'-i)U oftlie.tte t'nlvwtty. " H. T. SIICM AV ui l' V'n C. H. MARI LKuf I x P.E!" '2L!CAN COLlJTV TICKET K Clerk Of the District Court : A. SAL1SHUKY. for r asurer : . L.C. KICKHOFK. KorSherU: ' CEO. KDSOX tut County Oik . FRANK DICKSON. Kr Touaty Ji"1k : CALVIN Kl'SSKLL. For Cuua'y Huirlntfndnit : J K IKYDA Kr i'rnr : J. I. UNRL'U. Porlnrveyur : A. C.MAY KS. r(rsniialoner Flril IMtrlet : S. W. DUTTOX. THE REPUBLICAN PLATFORM. The republican party of the tate f Nebraska pives renewed expren wion of it devotion to the princi ples of the republican party and de clared that those principles, as ex pressed by the national republican invention, should be the strong fnnat ut uuiuii bciwrcii ail fepuu liraas in the state of Nebraska. We congratulate the people upon the marvelous prosperity attending the development snd (frowth at the state of Nebraska duriuz its twenty four years of statehood under re publican administration, and which has brought us to the front rank among the leading states of the anion; and we can fearlessly assert that no state which has been con trolled by democratic power, daring aay considerable time of the same period, can compare with us in the economical management of public affairs, in the rapid ratio of Increase in population, wealth and general prosperity, notwithstanding the fact that there are within the borders of the state a number of dissatisfied persons who took ad antage of the genera) financial de pression which swept over the en tire country to pave their way into temporary nrnmiaence by declaira iii IT against the welfare of our peo ple and slandering the fair name of our state. The rains from heaven and the rich soil, vigorously culti vated by the energetic hands ol our farmers, have produced such bount iful crops and such unrivaled pros perity thntshiill silence all calam ity talkers and add to the strength and enthusiasm of the republican party. We congratulate President Harri son upon his eminently wise, loyal and courageous administration, and declare our absolute confidence in his integrity, ability and patrio tism, ana pledge him our cordial support in the discharge of the duties devolving upon him as the chief magistrate of the nation. We rejoice in the res'oMition of dignity, vigor and statesmanship in the conduct of our foreign affairs under the guiding hand of Amer ica's favorite son, James O. Blaine. We approve of the silver coinage act of the present administration, by which the entire product of the silver mines of the I nited States is added to the currency of the people, but we denounce the democratic dactrinc of free and unlimited coin nK of silver mn a fiuHmaal policy liable to precipitate the people of every city and every state in the Union in a prolonged and disas trous depression, and delay the re' vival of business enterprise nil ! prosperity so ardently desired ami now t.o apparently near. The Irel and unlimited coinaue of silver wnnh! id to th !ording of gold and to force the use of cheap money in the payment of wages in every workshop, mill, factory, store and farm, and tend to the sealing down of the wages of the toilers and weakening I In- purchasing power of the dollar which would by used to purchase the products of the farmer. Ve are in favor of having every dollar as good as any other dollar. We demand the tuninteuiim e of the American system of protection to American industry and labor, the policy that has been identified with every period of our salional pros perity. We admire the genius of that heroic statesman. William Mi hin lev. Jr., whom the people of Ohio wfll make their next governor as a recognition of his magnificent ser vices to the rotintn . We also com mend and endorse that policy of re ciprocity by which the Central and '. hellion, but went to tin- front as a South American nation and the ; )(, ,t ,(ly at the iige of 1 years; we Spanish , Indies are being opened U. , , h rt.f)ll,)lirllI1 to our trade upon favorable terms,' e . and by which all the surplus and a perfect gent lemiin in every products of our country may find n ' sense of the word. Vote for him milk, t and bj -which nil our people j ,rj,.Ml ,) l.,, ,.ect a man that Htrdl receive ,,. exchange therefore credit.- Elm- ii h.iiij line of products which do j , not produce ruinous competition wood Echo. atnonp; our own people nor drsti'. the di:vrkininir ind nutria tA country. Wt tiic heartily iu i;ivtr o the general provisions of the uiti-rw ate 'the l cimynerct act, and we demand 'ebullition of all r.iilwuy and tr; pollution linen m Mich a manner to insure fair and reanoiial le ra to the producer and consumers tiie-country. We favor sui h li s? ielatum a tr of prevent ;iU illr.ii tunilwuati, ' ., ,,,, ... . , .. nrt hv n::i'''''' t,. capital .a,,, c1r;.,.,u- '. - , "'" f ..11 lllM.-t l.j I , trusts, Hiiilled In pricn !( I; i V. . r. .; i the pupi'" ,1... , . v mt 1 1 nv i. .,,.,!-(. tile irhliciali 1 i.-M of life. necr-:-'- , ., , .. . ,11,;., .tlli J'i'i important event in . ' ' 1,-i.irv and we lire Ml the wori'l -'V. ......r ..n.,,. Ileal tv .-"'I'-""? w"" r l. Id i,, II l , d a success. We should creditable .exhibit of : v'k , products, and we favor ;,,!litional appropriation by the Lt legislature for this purpose, lit our prosperity and greatness i iiiiiv be fully exemplified. We take ' Vide i0 tl,i8 B,1,te We m'K"ue ! that its growth and power, its pros .'perir and good UalllC h.!VC been i the fruits of its industrial people, and we believe in such oiicies, j state and national, as will promote ! Justice and widen the opportunities I among Ihc.-.e classes, T their sup- , I port in the future, as in the past, we , uled-e our most intelligent judg ment and most sincere endeavor. We denounce the Crand Island pint form of the deiwK ratio party as framed with the deliberate purpose to mislead and deceive; wherein sympathy is expressed where none is felt; wherein help is proposed where none is rendered; wherein purposes ate avowed which are not entertained. In support of this in dictment we tioint to the pretended friendship for the soldier, while at the same time the democratic party has always proclaimed against the granting of liberal pensions; to the free silver plank, intended to deceive the supporters of free and unlim ited coinage of silver, when it is known that many of the leaders of the party are opposed to the doc trine; to the failure to give the re lief from exborbitant freight rates while it was afraid to either ap prove or censure the action of its acting alien governor for vetoing the Newberry bill. We denounce the democratic party for its insinuations against the inteirritv of the supreme court of the state as an effort to make the judicial powers subordinate to political parties and as disgraceful to a political organization. We denounce the democratic party for its double dealing with the civil and political ritthu of the people, wherein it appears to favor free and untrammeled elections in the state of Nebraska, but never raises its voice against the political outrages Dracticed airsiust the re- publican voters, white and black, throughout the democratic states of the south. , ,. . W'e arrsitm the democratic party as the enemy of labor, schemiug to break down the defense of protec tive laws, to block the wheels of home industry, and to degrade the masses of the people party con trolled by aristocratic and sectional tendencies, the legacy of slavery. The republican party of Nebraska appeals to the intelligence and to the integrity of the people of this slat and from all. good cititrtis we invite support Tub republican ticket will be ivirtivu ii cicl i ItictjiRrtrl in ut it t . .1. party will do his duty. TUB president and his cabinet are said to be discussing several new reciprocity treaties with Kuropean countries. Dfc. SALlHiii'KY is a man who would run the affairs of tfie offlceof istrict clerk in a highly satisfac lory manner. He is an energetic, capable business man that has few equals. Cass county will make no mistake if she elects Dr. Salisbury district clerk. Fol'K hundred pounds of block tin is beinir taken out of the Tciues cal, Cal., mines daily. This is suf ficient to coal a good many tons of iron plates, making the commercial tin plate. Such items as this are very depressing to those who are declaims iliut till CuliliOt be pro duced in tl.U country.- Fremont Tribune. Il'lrt ElcKHOFF is one of the most (Mipular candidates on (he re publican ticket He is a practical farmer, a successful financier and if elected he will make a record of which his party may feel proud and with which his constituency will be perfectly satisfied. Vote for Imis Fwckholf and your confidence will not be misplaced. OUR NEXT SHERIFF. In the person of (. f. Kdson our republican cundidate for sheritf we have a man whom the people can safely trust that important of fice with, and one who need not send out of the county to import a deputy to handle the business for him; we hae a good bom st farmer, who owns a fine farm of his own; we nave a man who was not afraid t face the ncili) in the laic re BLAINE-i 1KUE POSITION. Several f democratic papers tiiroiifliout the country have been asserting that Maine was opposed to the Mi Kinley bdl, 1 hey sought to prove this by crediting him with the a-ecrtioii that the bill did not open up a in.H kct for a single bar rel of pork or bushel of wheat. The Journal of this city as usual was ready to chime in with 1herlher free trade organs, but TtlK III kW.l called a halt by ut once reminding our esteemed contemporary that Mr. Maine used those words before the reciprocity c lause bad bet u . . . . i . i :..... li i. I atl'leu alio ant r i ut- i tomo o added that clause be was a warm supporter of the bill. .Mr. Maine recently wrote the following letter defining his true position: "A rot sr A, Me., Oct. Mi I" John Hopley, Esq. E I tor of tl e J mrnal, ltuc rus, O.-My Dear Sir: You in form me that the democratic paper in )oi;r town, and man) democratic papers throughout Ohio keep the following paragraph standing in t) pe: "Hut there is not a section or line . . , - 1 ., i ...'fr in the entire urn tyiciiuic mini; that will open a market for another bushel of wheat or another barrel of pork.'--James G. Maine to Sena- loi I ije, Jul) "This sentence is garbled and taken from its proper connection. It creates a wrong impression. What I did say is the following: I do not doubt that in many re spects the tariff bill pending in the senate is the just measure and that most of its provisions are in ac cordance with the wise policy ol protection,' but not that 'There is not a section or line in the entire biil that wiil open a market foi another bushel of wheat or another barrel of jsirk.' "The letter in which this para graph occurs was written for Sena tor Frye on July 11,1H'J, and the McKinley bill did not become a law until Oct. 1 - nearly three months thereafter. In my letter to Senator Frye I objected to the bill, because it did not contain a reciprocity clause which would provide a market for wheat and pork, for other products of the farm and for various fabrics. "Before the bill was finally passed the" reciprocity clause was inserted and a large addition was made to the free list It will, there fore, be seen from what I said in my letter, that the objection which I made to the McKinley bill was en tirely removed before the bill be came a law. "Let me further say that the reci procity clause has given ample market for many barrttls of flour and many pounds of pork. "Hraxil, some months since, en tered into a treaty by which many American articles are admitted free. Flour is made free and pork is admitiei at a nominal duty. Cuba and I'orto Rico have re duced the duty on flour from $3.H0 a barrel to $1.00 (which gives us the market) besides putting nearly one hundred articlea of American pro ductioo on the free list. "San Domingo has made a reci procity treaty with flour and pork uHn the free list, besides a large number of other articles. Other treaties for reciprocity are in progress. "Germany, without negotiating a formal treaty, has removed the pro hibitioa on pork, and our govern ment, in consideration thereof, has left her sugar on the free list. This opens to us an entirely new market and between 1.(X)0A0 and t3b&t), (XX) of American pork will be con aumed per annum, where not a pound has been taken for ten years. "The reciprocity ptovision is proving very successful, and es pecially in farm products and more particularly in the case of the two articles mentioned iu the paragraph ,j,iov-d- flour and pork. "I am not, therefore, hii opponent of the McKinley bill as the demo cratic papers of Ohio are constantly alleging. On the contrary 1 have continually supported it ever since it was perfected by the insertion of the' reciprocity clause. Very respectfully yours, J AMI S 0. IlLAI VK." Tile Forum for November will be a number of especial political interest, for it will contain articles on "The Degradation of Pennsylva nia Politics," by Mr. Herbert Welsh of Philadelphia; "The Regulation of the Lobby in Massachusetts,'' by Josiuh Ouincy, selling forth the operations of the law to restrain the lobby; "The .Danger of the Fanners' Alliance," by Senator John T. Mor gan, of Alabama; and "The Death of Polygamy in I'lsh," by Chief Justice Z.uie, of Sail Lake City. Appla. During balance of pickiugseaHon I will continue to pay the highest market prices for good varieties of winter apples at canning factory. 'it El SoMhks. Window Harrett's glass at Drown A tf ' , ' r, Wis.. ' . iiAnru . . ao runs severa had one of lib mert pedd liorsJk ' y cit and burned with I lariat, h wound ret (used to h jne norsif iiecatrie lain line and Hlil liowwitJisVandoie Vaieful litleutioi Lanlu a.i of H and the applic.it a.iof n medics. A friend banded S.iwver some oi Halter's Hnrb Wire) J.inement, tin most wonderful thi-T ever f-aw h, heal such wounds, lie applied it only three times and tlie sore tvio completed healed. Equally good for allsors, cuts, hruses, and wounds. For sale by all druggist Curo for Paralvtls. Frank Cornelius, of l'urcell, Ind Ter., says: "I induced Mr. I'msou. w hose wife, had paralysis in the fact to buy a bottle of Chamberlain' I'ain Halm. To their great suprise before the bottle had all been used she was n great deal better. Her lace had been drawn to one side; but the l'ain Halm relieved all pain and soreness, and the mouth assumed its natural shape." It is also a certain cure for rheumatism lame back, sprains swellings and lameness. .") cent bc.ttica for sale by F. G. Fricke A Co.. Druggists. (teducad Rata. The It. &. M. will sell tickets on the certificate plan at the rate of one and one-third fare for the round trip, as follows: To Kansas City, Mo, Oct 3) 23, on account of the annual meeting of tiie American i'ubiic Health Asso ciation. Mt. Pleasant, la., Oct. Hi r, annual meeting of the Y. M. C. A. St Ixmis, Mo., Oct. "Zl 'SS, annual meeting Motherhood of St Andrew. Waverly, la., Nov. 1012, annual convention Iowa IiutUr and F.gg Association. Des Moines, Ia.,nnnualconvention Iowa State Farmers' Alliance. Capt W. A. Abbett, who has long been with Messrs. I'recival and llatton, Keal Estate and Insurance Brokers, Des Moines, Iowa and is one of the best known and most re spected business men In that city suys: "I can testify to the good qualities of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Having used it in my family for the past eight years, I can safely say it has no equal for either colds or croup." 50 cent bot tles for sale by F. G. Fricke St Co., "Druggists. We have received a nice line of pattern hats and would be pleased to show them to the ladies ot Platts mouth and vicinity. We have se cured Miss Hemple as trimmer, tf Tl't'KKK Sister. Apple. During balance of pickingseason I will continue to pay the highest market price for good varieties of winter apples st canning factory. 21 ot EnSoMEKH. Wanted Some good cotton rars at this office. ... tf HENRY BOECK Tha Leading FURNITURE DEALER ' . AND f; . -J UNDERTAKE CoiuttDtly keep oa bud everjtliia joa oeed to furnish jour house. 00HNKR SIXTH AND Mill 1T1IIT Plattsmout Neb MIKE SIJNKLLBACKLlt. Wsk'ih ind Hlifkirollb thus Wagon, Mutiny, Mcuin and plow Rc-pitir'uiK dnus HORSESHOEING A 8TECIALTY -IJa UW UlS- NEVERSLIP HORSESHOE Which il (Us best barKshne for til farmer, or for but driving, or fur citj purposes ever invented. It la ao msds that SDjono cut) put ud sharp or flst eorki, as Doetled for wet and limierf Atjt, or smooth, dry roads. Call at Ii' shop ana cxsaiiDo the jixvxiui.tr urn) you will use no other. J. M. SIIXEf.LHACKEIl. U North Fifth Ht PUtUmmth PERKINS- HOUSE, 217 210, 221 nd 2j:i Mnin Rt., Plattsmouth Nebraska H. M B0K3, Proprintor, lho lVrkini Liu buna lhorouihl) reaovsleil imm ton to .Xitt.u, auj 'J OOW ODD Of the bunt hotel in the atuuj.. HWdur) will ha Ukvn by tho wuuk st 4.n0 and op. GOOD BAR CONNECTED; You me vljy T!5 oo ry' I O ML". r OCo,. n,. V 111 N.K.Cairbank&Co, WEIDMA1T Z : A ICE THE In all that gne p ninke t:j) a finst tovii and thus are enabled to are oisr exhibition .A.T OTjn s: The IIaliant Home urn celel.ratod Thia fli in iins the ex clusive ngency of the celebrated anti-rusting tinware guaranteed for one year. A large tine of Cop perware, tinware, and Oraniteware. The Place for bargains iu every department of our mammoth stock . Hardware. WEIDMAi: I'LATTSHUl'TII, 5c NEW LUMBER YAR J. I). GRAVES & C). OIALRM IN PINK LUKBRR, . ( 8UIN0LES. LATIL 8a8IL ' DOOIW. BLINDS. and all buildia Material Cull and see us at the corner of 11 t)i nml Elm north of Hcinel's Plattsmouth, Nobraska Everything to Furnish Your House. I. PEARLMAN'S -ORE AT HOUSE FURNISHING EMPORIUM. Having ourcliaHt-tl the J. V. Wi-ckbach Htore room on bouUi Main "trect where Iain now located I can h?11 good-cheap er than the chcapt-Ht having j'unt put iu the ltirget Btock. of new goods ever brcight to the city. Gauoline Btovc. andfiirniture of all kindrtold on the installment plan.- I. PEAIiLMAN. WILL KEEP COXSTANTL ON HANI) , A Full and Complete litis of Drugs, Medicines, Paints, and OM DSUGCISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LIQUORS j ..' t if ii ' P. .11.. J. ....... nt nil llotia 1 TCSCripUOIls curi'iuil J t THE POSITIVE CURE. - . . .i tUViiiKit. SjriiA ' ' . j'x . y .- ' ' f-K.- - : . - - 'f . iV'.v.Wnl WWW A V . CH1CA( BllHKENFE. LKaDEKS : ' clA-ii ol lUruwaru. - Piutrn in undersell all competitors! Hound Oak are their Fp They also i. fine assortment t, - penter tools, . and shelf hardw C Prices have bei. right down to suit times. BR EiCEUSTFELX NEDKAHKA. ' Htreet, one block f mill. MODKKS- tumjiuuiiutu f n u" In A ! s, n. Vn.b l nn m L w w 'C cTAr i". I . (In I Jil I