"OUT1 A tfTIIIS OFFICE IS PREPARED r WOKK. AND DOES IT J? UK -o- IF TOU ARE IN NKED OF HEADS . BILLHEADS, "-. " STATEMENTS ------ S ENVELOPES - - - - - SALE BILLS - . POSTERS LETTEK or in lact anything in the STATIONARY LINE CALL AT KIEIE-LID WE CAN SUIT Qqqi'ntec Satisfaction -o- IF you wish to succeed in your business, advertise it and let the public know your prices. People like to trade with the mer chant who offers them -the best inducements. It might help your trade wonderfully. Try it. As the most important Campaign for years is Coming upon us every Farmer should be provided with a good live newspaper that will keep them posted on all important ques tions of the day- THE HERALD is purely a Republican paper and would be glad to put our name on our list. Only $1.50 a year. See our Clubbing list with the leading pa pers published. -o- tfEiiLcD PUBLISIJsTQ GO. 801 Cor Fifth PLATTSMOUTH A ThV TO DO ONLY FILST-CLASS KK ADLC nuufio. THE OFFICE, YOU, AS WE and Vine St. NEBRASKA For Atchinson, St. Joseph, Leavea worth, Kansas City, St. Louis, and all points north, east south or west. Tick eta sold and ba ae checked to any joint in the United States or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO RATES AND ROUTES Call at Depot or address II, C. TovvNSExn, G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo. J. C. Piiiixii'i'i, A. G. P. A. Omaha. II. D. APGAK. Agt., Plattamouth. Telephone, 77. Millinery and dressmaking- at Tucker Sisters', in Sherwood block. HENRY BOECK The Leading FUHNITURS LEaLEB AND UNDEPTAKR. Constantly keeps on hand everythin you need to furnish your house. CORN Kit SIXTH AXD MAIN STI5ERT Pi n out - Neb i $ y V J Y CM ' THE OLD KUA&Lt. !L A. WATEBIAN k M Shingles, Lath, Sash," Doors, Blinds 3an supply everw demand of the eity. Call and get terms. Fourth street in rear of opera house. MM A "To represent our well known w house. You need no capital to repre sent a firm that warrants stock first-olaes and true to name. WORK ALL THE YERR. Siooper month to right man. Apply quick, slating a(. LL MAYA CO Nursery, Florist and Seedsmen. St. Paul, Minn. (This house is resposible.) - QHSEiblEFFENBACITS FKUIAHUil - GAraULE Sore Care for IFekk Mem. ma proved by reports of leading phy sicians. State ace in ordering. M A 0 A safe and apeedr G o B jyj "iiva fiREEKSPECIFICg-fSSii alona Hra aoasypnuin niiii w- ont mercory. "Price, Order from THE PERU DRUG & CHEMICAL CO. Scientific American Agency forf. TRADE MARKS, . DESIGN PATENTS t COPYRICHTS, eto. For Information and free nandbooX write to MUNN ft CO- Kl BBOADWATv KBW TOBK. Oldest hareau for ecnrint patents in -America. Kvery patent taken ont by us to bronrtot before the public by a notice given free of eharge in tie ' tictiiifif wcttraii iARreet efrenlatlon of any sdenUflc paper in the world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent man should be without it- Weeklr, S3. on a ear; fl.50 six months. Address MtNH & CO.. PtTiiUSHKB 361 Broadway. Kew Vork. W Anted Au active, rpilab'p m?n Palary toSsO moutlily. w it!i m. r, vo rei-rt-'ui 1" ki own section a rr New Y ik House. Keferenoes. manufacturer, loci; Box 155, New York. LUMBER All A Wonderful. ' K. W.Sawyer, of Kochester, Wis., a prominent dealer in general merchandise, and who runt nevera! Ieldlin; wajoiirt, had one of hu liorH.H badly cut and hurtled with lariat. The wound refused to heal 1 lie liore became lame and utill rowwilhstatidiiig' careful attention ami the application of remedies. A friend handed Sawyer Home of Ilaller's Jlarh Wire J.inement. the most wonderful tiling ever saw to heal such wounds, lie applied it only three times and the sore was completed healed. Kqually jjood for all hots, cuts, brttses, and wounds. For sale by all drujfjj'9 Safe and Reliable. "In buying a coiih medicine for children," says II. A. Walker, a prominent druggist of Ofden, Utah, "never to be afraid to buy Chamberlains Cotiifh Kemedy There is no dauber irom it ami re lief ia always sure to follow. I par t icu la rly recommend Chamberlain's because I have found it to be safe and reliable. 23 and HO cent bottles for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. t Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The Best Halve in the world for Cuts Bruisea, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever Sores, Tetter, Clmied Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Truption?, and posi tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to uiv; satisfaction, or money refunded. I't ice 2." cents p.;r bos For sale y F. O. Fricke Do not confuse the famous Blush of Roses with the marijr worthless paints, powders, creams and bleaches which are Hooding the market. Get the ienuine of your druggist, (). II. Snyder, 7." cents per bottle, atid 1 guarantee it will re move your pimples, freckles, black heads, moth, tan and sunburn, and give you a lovely complexion. 1 Electric Bitters. This remedy is becoming so well and s.o popular as to need no special mention. All who have used Klecl trie Uitters sinif the same sontr of praise. A purer medicine does exist and it is guaranteed to do al- that is claimed. Klectric Bitters will cure all diseases of the liver and kidneys, will remove pimples, boils, salt rheum and other affec tions caused by impure blood. Will drive malaria from the system and prevent as well as cure all ma larial fevers. r-or cure of headache, constipation and indigestion try Flectric Bitters. Kntire satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded. Price 50c and $1 per bottle at F. G. Fricke & Co's drugstore. 3 A Fatal MistaKe. Physicians make no more fatal mistake than when they inform pa tients tha'; nervous heart troubles come from the stomach and are of little consequence. Dr. Franklin Miles, the noted Indiana specialist, has proven the contrary in his new book on "Heart Disease" which may be had free of F. G. Fricke Sc Co., who guarantee and recommend Dr. Miles unequalled new Heart Cure, which has the largest sale of any heart remedy in the world. Ii cures nervous and organic neart disease. short breath, fluttering, pain or ten derness in the side, arm or shoulder, irregular pulse, fainting, smother ing, dropsy, etc. His Restorative Nervine cures headache, fits, etc. It Should be in Every House. J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St.. Sharps? burg. Pa., says he will not be vv'th out Dr. King's New Discovery foi Consumption, Coughs and Colds that it cured his wife who was threatened with Pneumonia aftei an attack of "Iai Grippe," when various other remedies and several physicians had done her no good Robert Barber, of Cocksport, Pa. claims Dr. King's New Discovery tias none mm more good than any thing he ever used for I.nno Trouble. Nothing like it. Try it Free trial bottles at F. G; Fricke & Co's drugstore. Large l'ottle, 50c and $ 1.00. A Mystery Explained. TheL papers contain frequent no tices of rich, pretty and educated girls eloping with negroes, tramps and coach men. The well-known specialist, Dr. Franklin Miles, saj-s all such girls are more or less hys terical, nervous, very impulsive, un balanced: usually subiect to nead- ache, neuralgia, sleeplessness, im moderate crying or laughing. These show a weak, nervous system for which there is no remedy equal to Restorative Nervine. Trial bottles and a fine book, containing many marvelous cures, free at F. G.FricKe & Co's., who also sell and eruarantee Dr. Miles' celebrated New Heart Cure, the finest of heart tonics.Cures fluttenug,"short breath, etc. Cough Following the Crip Many person, who have recovered from la grippe are now troubled with a persistent couirh. Cham berlain's cough remedy will promptly loosen this cough and relieve the lungs, effecting a per manent cure in a very short time. Sand 50 cent bottle for sale by F. i. Fricke & Co. Startling Facts. The American people are rapidly becoming a rase of nervous wrecks and the followtng suggests, the best remedy: nlphouso llumpfling, of Butler, Penn. swears that when his son was spechless from st. Vitus Dance Dr Miles great Restorative Nerving cured him. Mrs. J. L,. Miller of Valprai and. J. D. Taolnr, of .Logausport, Ind each gained 20 pounds it an taking it. Mrs. li. A. Gardner, of Vastulr Ind, was cured of 40 to 50 convulsions easy and much aeadach, dizzness. bockach and nervous prostiation by one bottle. Trial bottle and fine boek of Nervous cures free at F. G. Fricke. &. Co., who recomends this unequailed remedy. Fl's Cream Bahn is especially adapted as a remebv ior catarrh ..-'iw-i. . , ..- ..ii-.. i:.. . dusd and dry' wind-. W. A. Hover, Druggist, Denver. Freitkn of Memory Great men are ulway eceentrio and men who v:int the worhl to think they are jjreat Infill the jufiflfrv of ec-r-iii ricrity early in lifn ami keep it up. Tim yr'iiiiii)(; treniiM h: a rreal deal of tronhle wiih hi ummory. Hfiiry Cl:i3- couldn't repeat a verity of any poem, lie couldn't repeat IIih old Ion -.J metro iloxolojjv. "I'lai-m God f:om Whom All li i-sxin Flow," hut he never forgot au argument, a name, or a face. Dr. Lcrden. an intimate friend of Sir Waller Scott, could repeal an net of parliament afu-r lu-ai io; its lirst read ing. It is an old blmy that Milton could repeat Homer. Charles James Fox once paid a visit to tlm town ot Gorctim. lie was re lating au iueideul l hat occurred there, hut could not think of the name of the town. The next day he was ; i v i 1 1 g a dinner ami while carving In) startled his guests hy calling ' (ioreimi, Gor 01111." The name ot the town had just occurred to him. Sidney Smith pretended to despise memory. Ho said he saw no more sense in remembering all he had read than the dinners that had made him fat. The story ha9 been told for 100 years that Cyrus knew the names of all his soldiers. Emperor Hadriau could repeat 2.000 words in the order he heard them. Angelo had all of 1) ante and Petrarch in his memory. It is said that Pascal knew the bible by heart. Leibnitz couid repeat nearly the whole of Virgil. A London reporter took no notes and yet, when an unexpected debate sprung up and he was left alone, he couid write it out verbatim. When lisleniug he closed his eyes. He called it "being held up by the ears." Prof. Lawson boasted that ho could, if the bible were lost, repeat the whole of it with the exception of a few verses. Lord Maeauley ma le the same boast about 4 Pilgrim's Progress" and "Para dise Lost." It will bu remembered mat none oi toe wrks nameu were lo-t, so that the gentlemen were never put to the test. It is a fact, however, I Mat JHacuuiey nail a wooden ill mcr.i- orv. When a boy he went with his father to call on a gentleman upon whose table lav Scott's ' Lay of the Last Minstrel." Young Macaulcy read it and when he readied home repeated it. The most remarkable feat of memory on record was that of an itinereiit actor of England. William Lyon. He won a bet of a crown bowl of punch that he could repeat the whole of an issue of the London U-ii'y Alvcrlijcr after hearing it read. J nis was the more remarkable because, as readers of toe newspaper know, there is no sort of connection between advertise ments and the variety is endless. Jedediah Buxton was illiterate. II could tramp over a tract of ground ami tell us contents m square lect or inches with exactness. Cincinnati Com mcrcitU (JuzttU:. All Sizes of Shoes. A third of an inch gives us a full size in length ofsiioe; a sixth furnishes the intermediate point between two sizes, the saving of which is desirable if not practicable; a small fraction of breailtii goes a good way in securing comfort, and in girth of ball or instep au infinitesimal part of au inch is sometimes an ell of freedom; a quarter of an inch is a good deal of letting down or elevating at the heel, and the difference of a sixteenth is really per ceptible at the sole. For these reasons sudden and extreme changes in size or wui:!it of s2;ocs arts injurious. Even the "paper sole" (which ouirht never to be worn in anv place) should be re placed by one only a liille thicker at ni'st. Afier the summer shoe the proper thing is one of medium weignf. hef.ire the winter article is in order and even that doesn't now mean a thick, cum bersome shoe, as it, once did. Shoe uwjt Lcutk-:r ll-.jhtrttr. BELIEVED IN FAIR TaY. Om I.Hwyer Sustained in the Forenoon, tlie Other in tti Afternoon. "I was new in the business and as ambitions as Ctesar. I would tackle anything, and like most lawyers ia the early stages I had no trouble in con vincing myself that my client was right and the other fellow a rascal. An old granger near the city m which I Urst swung my shingle to the freeze was always in trouble with his neigh bors, and was a rich mark for lawyers. He gathered in some cattle that "had broken into the Highway irom tne field of a farmer near "by. stabled them, and refused to give them up un less paid an exorbitant once for dam ages that were Dever committed. "A writ of replevin was issued. I took the case- for the owner of the cat tle, and early one morning drove out to an office of an old German 'squire, or justice of the peace. His temple of justice was an old rattle-trap of a liuilding with no ceiling, but stringers across where the clapboards termin ated and the peaked roof began. The occupants of these stringers kept all below busily tlouging tooacco juice. The jury was made up of a lot of hon est old soil-tillers, whose faces were as sphinx-like as that of a professional gammer. His honor occupied a very uncertain chair that had earned au honorable retirement, aud kept his owl-like wisdom iu activity by con stantly whittling on a hardwood broomstick. Pitted against me were two old lawyers, and it was their pleasure to constantly utilize my yoiuhfuioess in impairing tny standing w ith the jury. I was full of tight, but what almost drove me from the shanty was the fact that the 'squire ruied dead against me every time. I argued, pleaded, read authorities, kicked and upbraided, but the whittling representative of the blind goddess neyer turned a hair. He would simply say: 'Don't got ex cited, young man. I vo3 der shudre. Yust go ahead mid der case. Shustice is shustice. uud don't you forgedt it. "The two old attorneys were not slow to catch on, and they took the wildest liberties, disregarding every thing and chuckling at every objectjou I made. I was on the verge of 'insan ity, ami my client looked like a thun der cloud rampant. Dinner time came. ki'ix l.i6 squire nun a sprenu mi jorurs, lawyers and litigants. My opponents were in hi'jh feather, while my food nearly choked me. "After eating I handed thu Vquire a ci'ir and we walked out inio the olt hald, where I Upbraided him for the CMiirse he had pursued. Young man,' ho said, 'vol is der reason mil you? I know vol van law und yu-liee nod equity. (Jive elery man der same chance. Iu tier fore noon 1 lei dose. Iwo old lawyers have der hay. Now it vos yourdurn. (in iu. 1 peliee in fair May. I don't iiart! how touch tloso fellow object, our din ii! ' "Did 1 go in? I claimed everything and conceded nothing. I rode rough shod over thu rules of testimony and the twoold laajfih. 1 had I hem v ild, pawing the air aid frothing at the mouth. The 'squire, was deaf lo their appeals ami blind lo their agony. '1 gif half a day apiece.' was his sole justification. I won iu a walk. 'J he other side wauled to appeal, but their client was so mad that I wo old-l imers should be so iiruomiuiousiy beaten by a young lawyer that he Hell led then and there, hired mo by the year, and gave me my first good start." Detroit Free 1'nsi. CAN T ALWAYS TELL. YVIiy n K"rT V Olven nn AIC" mrnt lliat li.pt lliiu Iu the Cold fur Fuurtrrli 111. ur. The reporter was telling the slory of a scrapping match and the city editor strolled iu to listen, says the Detroit Free 1')'' ss. "A I was saying," con tinued the reporter, "there was a crowd iu McClackery's saloon and a big dulTer got up and wanted to eat the entire house; and use the table legs for toot hpicks. and nobody piped. "Thai's the way with the big cow ards." put in the cily editor with snap ping eyes. "Yes, I've noticed it." continued the reporter, "and il was the same thing here. The duller siting himself over people and smashed a hat or two and swung a pair of pistols, and cut a wide swath through the whole place." Didn't any bod j" have the sand to stop him?" asked tlie city editor an grily. "Not at first, but pretty soon a dude looking chap got up slowly and took olF his overcoat." "Ah!" exclaimed the city editor, "vou can't tell about those dudes. They are the old Harry when they get right, down to it." "Yep. and this one was there in fine style. He was little and thin, but that doesn't make any difference, and he waited quietly for the big one to come his way." I like a man like that." snorted the city editor, after the manner of Job's war horse. "There is business iu 'em clean to the bone. Did the big one tackle him?"' "He didn't notice him at first, but he caught on in a moment or two and made for the dude straight as a string." "'Kah for the dude," yelled the city editor. I5y gum, I like that chap al ready." "Well, the big one came on aud th? dude laid for him." "Uiiily for the dude," shouted the city editor. "111 but the drinks he swiped him in the lirst round. They always do. These big fellows are cow anliv bluffer. lilood and training tell." "So they say," continued the re porter, "but it didn't work in this case, for before the dude had a chance tM wink UK'? big one yanked the chair from under him. dragged him to the front door, liretl him though the giass, grabbed the overcoat the dude left on toe chair and walked off with it just as the policeman came around the corner and ran the. dude in for disor derly conduct." Tne city editor got up silently, ami going to his desk gave the reporter an a.-isiijn menl that kept him out iu the cold for fourteen hours. One of A melie Hives' Whims. "According to St. John" lias its lit tle hi.-tory. A N. Y. IJress reporter was lold the other day by one who is in position to know that this story was refused by at lenst one first-class pub lisher in New York, and was finally taken bv a magazine for the sum of .",000. The proceeds were spent upon an unfortunate young cousin, physically nfllieted, but intellectually brilliant, iu Paris a successful operation was performed whereby a face, before dis figured, was made natural and comely. On her return home with her bene factress the young cousin was not recognized even by her parents. For the authoress had kept the whole mat ter secret, saving tlie result as a jov- ous gift. Thus the storv was called Accord ing to St. John," based upon the lines in that book. "Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friend.'' His Little Joke Failed. An excellent story is told in the Lon don Tid-Uit of the late Prof. Koger aod Dr. K. Dale of Birmingham. Those two gentlemen were giving a series of lectures in Lancashire, aud at every town he visited Dr. Dale noticed thai his colleague, who always spoke first, made the same speech. In fact, so often did the professor give that speech that the worthy doctor knew it all by heart, aud this led the latter to think of a way of taking the wind out of l is friend's fails. On their arrival at a town in south Lancashire Dr. Dale asked Dr. Rogers- to allow him to speak first, au arrange- men to which the latter readily agreed, so Dr. Dale arose and proceeded to de liver the speech of Dr. lingers, looking every now aod then with the corner of his eye to see how that worthy gentle man'was taking this practical joke. Dr. Rogers sat calm and composed, and when at length his turn came to speak he just as calmly rose and de livered, to Dr. Dale's utter astonish ment, a new speech. At the conclusion of the meeting Dr. Dale said to his colleague: " I thought I had taken the wind out cf your sails to-night! ' Dr. Rogers replied: "Oh, no; I de livered that speech when I was here a month SJT 11