The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, February 01, 1892, Image 2

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    i.
THZ BASILISK.
One .r llw- .Vih .;il-t t tiiil: I l.mrMml lc
ll Sinn,. .K,. n:ii ;:. ".Vili lu-h.
f t It- l.i:-llleili.-i-'.
.,!
.' '' .
Was '
laiil I iv t :
janl t I.
lit It.- :i:i
n-ti:il!v f- i
Sl'I'lM',' ...
:ml s ;.:. :
f i : l II J is !
SLOW DY FIVE FECT.
Tlsa Cltl I ;ii i.i r VV'inl.I
llavr li-cu
AU
i t . .11 : id
iM.-t f:i!:iiu:4
M. i ,011 is
! :; it : ). it
' i "i f II
C M ; Ml'd" I t'lc
purler, '"I was
t r.-iiti II ji Ik l i i.
S '! ck v
I -i r- 1 1
Vll'ifrll'
!, t-vy i
err I ll
- .' s::H the
f'ri ::t IV
a I';:--e!i'er
irr nielli at
at a -i-ri:iin
I
l.iivi-il '-..iii l.:i-ili.---
jneainii a mm- i.mr a:cl w is ap-
iih-1 li.(an-e I in eiraiiiie was liil .(!
with a rm-ie .f ivliil, jx.l- on it-. It -inl
w hieli ri's, in 1,1,. :l f-ro A n. Tim 1-atrii-.,
u sn-iii-s of liilik, bohh-s
liavini.-i crown. ,(.s.-i'-;-,-.e ;v comb
vhi' li was an c:ict n.iuiii-rjiart of lhe
ciM'k'i
I "I I iv- llial. ran I ;osi. assures
il that the liasilisk ha. I a voice whieh
"struck terror to the hearts of men.
Iieasts aii'l serpenfv." The Itilili!
classes it willi the lion. t lie serpent ami
the ilra-X'ins as one of the most formM
aMii ereut nres.
OM writers I'linv. Uaselio ami
otliers sa" that its bile was mortal
in every rase; that its breath was suf
focatiii.ainl that no plant would row
in tlx: vicinity of its lair. Its ileal
lioilv was often n.-e.l. suspended in
belfries, to prevent swallows nesting
there.
If ymi have ren! the popular stories
f the lay you have note.! many allu
sions to t he "basilisk glitter" in some
hero or heroine's eve.
This "glitter" was the basilisk's
main stock in trade. With it he is
said to have darted death to every
living tliin-r he looked upon.
Some old histories tell us how a pet
ba.-ili-k elimhed the walls of an Am.iii
city whieh Alexander the (treat was
besrigiiiir am! killed over two hundred
of his soldiers by .simply gazing down
upon 1 1 -: 1 1 .
Ali plains withered when this mon
ster lived his ees upon them. with one
single eee;! ion. rile. The crowing of
a fuck would kill every hasili.sk that
heard it.
Telltale Shyes.
"There is mi i e eh:: ractcr in shoes
than in any other article of a man's
dress." said a 111 ';. 1 ;v ay shoe dealer,
look ii:j on t i:o.i ti.i- p.i.-MM;; throng
one dull day. "A man w.r.y deceive
the eve of all eperl ill every other
i:trt i u'.ar liut in .-hoes. I mean the
kind and tin- way he wears them.
A alkiiig is an hi In:i!arv perform
ance, and is not a in.iflcr of study and
simulation. Kverv man w ill ccrtainly
wear his shoes in a certain way. And
as a rule he will wear shoes that tit his
Imild. his luisiness ;;id his tempera
ment. In nine cases out of ten when
lie comes in here for a new pair I can
tell tic kind of shoe he will want by
the manner in which he has worn out
the pair he has on whether on the
toes, the iti.-ide or outside of the heels.
i.i tin; hall of the foot, inside or
outside of the l'.il!, vr whether
the rest of the shoe irives out before
th
II.
take
it her
kind, hut he'll want the shoes I select.
"V s. sir. there's a deal of character
in the wear of a shoe. Kery clever
detective knows that, (live a good
dcteei ive the i :, ; n t of a criminal's
fi't on yieldii'-r - il and lie can size
his mail up piv.'.y fil. c.-peeially if
the shoe he rath-r worn. Thai's the
only thing a man can't disguise. Lots
of lirst class detective stories have
l'cn written ori this, hut there is
nothing r. -niark.iMe about it to me.
The i!-. :i iduaiity in a footprint is the
Individuality wearer of a .-hoc. and I've
len uoii.-iug that for thirtv years."
A'. '. Ii.ro it.
A TRAVELED WRITER.
TVorl. I-.-:! Kxpi ri tii-i- of lln- ViTMillle
TIi.'iT-ias V. Kn ..
ma: i
ive l. I.,
aru: c" a'. : i'
s-.; ". s f ' t ' . .'
; : r.is ta-"-- :
il-.. 1 h the f.
sin-1 a.l vent u: v
Iailier"- iari'
acid. ::
aviica: j
cars in
: r. i : i : . ".
ion he
1 ir.
Cnvcr:
wound i'd in I at tie.
!;;'.- of ('..!. Th'-rea- V. Knox.
!;-kilow; orite aut !-(r of
v Traci. !-' series and so
uer iuti it -i 'r ;:;d instruc-t-l
. i ! n as varied
a- hi- literary works.
. ' nt i . II'- de cl-
-'Vplorat ;'!! :!i hoy
of !io ks of travel
' al.e livinil on ti 13
at lYmiiroke. N. H-,
',. The ane
1 T ill principal of an
!' l.'i-.'rii.": J' w n. which
il lo seek tiie newly
! :l.',s of Colorado.
I-'ii.diii-i niirnii h .i .i and uncertain. he
iieeam - a n-iMH'ir:". and afterward city
editor on the 11, :..-r Dm'' .W.r.s.
Darliiir the civd war he was a corre
spondent d the N. Y. Ji- rn-'l. also
serving as volunteer aid in two cam
paigns. 1 receive. 1 a commission as
lieutenant crioTiel on the staff of the
ior oi Cai'.iorma. '1' vv:is once
As a statf corre-
.si.o:ident ..f th" X. Y. ll-r-tld he, in
l'l'J. a.-companied an ex pcti: ion sent
rut tiv an AmeriefMi company to con-stitU-t
:; tclegrapli line tlirou-h north
ern Asia, and faveh-d hy way of the
r.icilic ocean. Kamchatka, northeast
ern Si i ria. t lc Ai.io'r river. Mongolia
:uid t "hince Tartary. to St. r-ters-l'U
'Z tii.--: - ; l'aris--a most "x
traordlaarv w..-er and overland route
to Kumpe.
Lier:y and newspaper enterprises,
with travels in Kurope. Asia Minor
'id northern Africa occupied his next
ten years. In 1S77-7" he made a sec
ond voyage around the world, visiting
Japan. China. Siani. Java. India and
Hgypt, arriving in Paris in timo to
take his place as a member of the in
ternational jury of th Paris Universal
Exposition of l"x78. For the merits of
the book. "The Boy Travelers in
Siam." the king of Siani conferred on
Iii xxx the unusual honer of the decora
tion of the Order of the White Ele
phant. Col. Knox is a lar;;e. broad-shouldered,
line-looking man. over six feet
in height. His manner is ipiiet and
Lis expression pleasing and kindly,
lie lives in New York, making his
oni-' it the a tos Club, where his
Mieiorjs haehcior apart mts are dee
cVi.te !. alter a fancy of the occupant,
with .nauv eh-phants ir. ',- nze and
l i
! I '
(i
1 1
1 ,
.1 Ir
e- III;
. bug:
iii ii'ik
1 I.
dit I ju.-t
I he etvss
X . .- M ined
.' On the
him
hivd
missed
i . f' :: i .:i ! do
a :-pok'- .;! of his
dav. on the clown
one up to the engine: as we
town about three miles from
ing. wailing for the express
SCHOOL-ROOM HUMOR.
CurloiiH Mintitkes Mailt- liy I'lijiilA In
HWlTillJC Jlll-Kt iollH.
An
on t -
Wide
Amid the perplexities of a-tenclier's
life, the ii:et, often unconscious
humor of the schoolroom serves to
keep the pedagogue alive
side f the insane asylum.
A iff, e.
Young America is great
fields, hut in t he role of 1
he is probablv at his hest
The following deliiii. ioi'.s and illus-
and
says
in many
lexicographer
t rat ! n e
1. Next
v. lo
run, he c
la at lie
I he -fi i
to i:i-s. says he:
',ii'il,-:i-ln'fi-, ole man. ye -an't do
it! Ye hain't smart "imlT with yer old
snorler to run over me!'
"Are vou the man who crosses at
Dean's at S o'clock every oilier night?1
1 asked.
"I be. I'm the very chap. It's jest
my hour fur gettin' home from here
with a big drink o' whisky behind my
vest.'
"Well, yon want to look out for
yourself or you'll certainly get killed."
"Don't you worry about me! Jist
(rack on steam and let Yr go and
never mind where I am. If my old
boss can't beat your Idler on wheels
I'm williif to be liisted.'
"It was no use to talk to him. He
was bull-headed and conceited and the
very next run he was there again. I
spoke to the conductor about it and I
believe some of the ollieials sent the
man word that he must stop or they'd
have him arrested. He didn't stop,
though. He was there on my run as
regular as clock work and he always
had a Hing ami a laugh at me. This
had been going on for more than a
month, when one night, as I was try
ing to pick up lost time. I caught him
right in the center of the track."
"And that was the end of him," ob
served the reporter.
"It was a ipiecr thing," said the en
gineer, "the horse ami buggy were
thing clear over the fence, killing the
horse instantly, while the old man
went forty feet high and came dowji
on the root ot the toiirth car back. We
came to a stop and found him and got
him down. He had just about a min
ute to live. He recognized me. and
signed that he wanted to speak. When
I bent over him lie whispered:
Did it linallv. didn't ve. but do vou
know win ? The old boss had colic
Mid was live feet slow
l:oa
Si-ho
nr.
senl c
p -I", ..
illii.-;i
s that
s from
p:,..il.
"S some
1 1 : : o- Am
!h
! li
exainma
a Western
of the bold
rica delights
Tiie I'unv Knew His Business.
Dr. Miller of Idaho is the possessor
ot VI . i i in ca.-h
thousand or two
m i! ha", c l x -1 -r to
:. i i era n u;. s:i s a
c-t t the i,o:ii-
an I a iarm worth a
more, which he did
I o'clock yesterday
Memphis correspond
'. u!e ( 'iiuri r-.lmirniil.
i
i i!" a .
: i ! Vi
Willi it
kc I him
ed
all 1'roi.i local sports who
i.i for a sucker. The doc-hen-
a few davs ago with a
I' -i :!-. which he oll'ercd for
-ale a- l.iw ji-. .-.. Among them was
v i:';! ''.-.i-t iiia' pobo.Iy wovdd bid on
: . '1. Tie .loi ior remarked casually
ii. i d that t!. pony which the
l.-iyi rs r. j. -'ei was t!i" h iss of the
1. :. for h-' could pull a ."i ' '-pound bag
of sand attached to a rope half a mile
1 !:g for a distance of ti-.i feet. He
led . ar-'es-Iv that he would bet oil
it. A i i;:.'ii men took him up and in
hs.s than no time about sflP.OO;) in
money md acres of land in Iowa
.ere wagered thai the pony could not
.lo tiie trick. Tiie sports were so sure
liicyg.ive odds and the doctor
calmly covered every bet. The trial
look place several hours later on a
turnpike in the presence of a cotisider
:::;. crowd. Tiie sack of saud was
weigh -il and the rope carefully meas
ured. Then the doctor, accompanied
by one of the judges, took the pony to
the other cud of l he line and fliti-hed
him to the rope. Tii-j little animal
'. oiT with a gradual pull until the
.".-a:ne taut and dragged the bag
'I he gradual oull was the secret
;i a ! ! il.e oonv had often per-
Inl lUc-i i: ii,-.'o!V.
nen
1" .pe b
"'." feel
of I he
a g
An I'litaui'lit Iiploi;iat.
u know. Xiek." said his mother.
litleiii.in never :isi-.s ior iiiings.
no matter how "badly he wants them."
"Why doesn't he?"' said Nick, opening
wide his round 1-year-old eyes. "IV-eau-e
it is impolitic and greedy. That
is whv it annoys me so to have you
a-k your Unci'.! John, whenever hi;
conies, if he has brought you candy.
Remember, no-.v, you must never do it
any more." "iJut it's my candy he
savs so and he wants rue to have it."
"Then he will ccrtainlv give il to you.
vou must wait his time for it. If
you risk for it I will
it. So promise me
I know my little
gentleman." Nick
and
I ever again hear
n-,t let you have
that you will not.
boy wants to be a
made the promise wit h a very sober
face. He was the normal small boy,
not a little angel, yet he had been
trained "upon honor." and felt that a
made ouiM not be
is the way he kept it.
John came again, his
greeting him. leaned
igainst his chair, and
Anything but
oi. Uncle
promise
broken.
When Uncle
once
This
nephew, after
meditatively
said: "You didn't bring
vourself this time, did
John:-"' "Yes. I did," said Uncle John,
with a laughing shout; "I brought a
whole pound of candy, and after that.
I wish it was two." Il'irnr'n Young
1'copU.
lleiiable authorities say that the
death penalty is always inflicted in
Siani on every one who is heard to
mention the king's name.
Naming the Iiaby.
Miss (iish:
is the baby
mother:
Algernon
And Ethel, dear, what
name?" Mrs. New-
I've named him Ethelbert
Miss (iush: "But I alwavs
thought the father named the bovs."
Mrs. Newmother: "If you could hear
what his father calls him when be is
walking the floor with him in the early
dawn. you wouldn't wonder I took mat
ters in'niv own hands." -.'..
Forty-eight different
found in M'.- vico.
dialecta
Are
l e -
t;
pi;
uf.oie a magpie for
lie has a hot lie of routine.
She is a very noxious girl.
A place where graduaters
e!i:
in:
Ma
dinner,
limit i tn
Novioio
Collegi
Kebel A kind of hawk.
College -Ccinctarv of lcarniii".
Hy da u lies A disease.
Angle She made a left-angle.
Wampum A kind of a bee.
Sylph One's own sylph.
IJcacon A minister.
League Ten dollars.
Maximum Surname of an Indian
chief.
(iuerrilla An animal.
Tariff a sofa.
Charlatan a musical instrument.
(Iuerrilla A man-eater.
Tariff An animal found in Africa.
Tariff A stuffed seat.
Tariff A place for worship.
Creole A white descendant from
black parents.
Plumbago A blockhead.
As a high-school student of history
and science. Young America has some
peculiar views:
"The time of the best literature of a
country is called the Augustus period."
"King Philip w as a great hider and
seeker."
"Artless Ward was an American hu
morist." In answer to the request to name
three American poets, a boy mentions
"Benjamin Franklin, Shakspeare and
John B. Cough."
A young high-school student has
made the discovery that "The spinal
cord serves as a support to the back."
During an al tempt to "develop" the
idea and use of the superlative degree
of the adjective, the following conver
sation took place.
Teacher I see a pretty girl, and
you see one who is belter looking than
the first. Now-, how can you describe
the second girl by the use of the word
pretty?
Pupil The second girl is prettier.
Jeacher Very good. Now,
pose you see a girl who is better
ing than eil her of the others.
oiild vou call he!"?
Pupil -I should call her a daisy
JOKES THAT RECOILED.
suj-look-whut
Safe and Reliable.
"In buying a cough medicine for
children," nsiya J I. A. Walker, a
prominent druggist of Ogden,
Utah, "never to be afraid to buy
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.
There irt no danger Irom it and re
lief is always sure to follow. I par
ticularly recommend Chamberlain's
because I have found it to be s;ife
and reliable. 2.1 and .") cent bottles
for sale by V. (1. Fricke iV Co.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
Tiik I5kst Sai.Vk in the world lort.'ati
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt h'heuiii. Fevei
Sores, Tetter. Chappi d Hands, Chilblains,
(turns, imd nil Skin Eruptions, mid posi
lively cures Piles, or no p'iy required.
It is gU'irnnteeil to L'ivc Mitisiaciion, oi
money refunded. Pi ice 2'. cents per box
For sale b F. (J. Frieke
Ghaxnberlain's Eye and Skla
Ointment. (
A certain enro for ChronitSorojpyos
Tetter, Salt RheunvcalJjle OK
Chronic Sorc3, iFeTer,. Soroft EcZpma,.
Itch, Prairio Scratches, : Soro ITIpplc
fciid Piles. It i3'coolUig' and soothing.
Hundreds of ca3C3 Lave been cured by
It if tor r.:l ether treatment l;ad failed,
it ii pat up ia 23 and CO cent bosej.
.1
January is gone, yet some papers
are still publishing those lists of
marriageable young men.
I I
l
. i.J ion-.. l !
i...r ("KI.L-
il,,
joi
FHcE
Do not confuse the famous Ulush
of Roses with the many worthless
paints, powders, creams ami
bleaches which are Hooding the
market. Get the genuine of your
druggist, O. II. Snyder, 7.1 cents per
bottle, and I guarantee it will re
move your pimples, freckles, black
heads, moth, tan and sunburn, and
give j'ou a lovel' complexion. 1
PAS!.!. Ck'S
HAIR BALSAM
tykCiJ.'te'Jx'"? Yfl Clean und tit-naimr t;:s hair.
"r'''I lfji.ii- t r. it-a Vrtuilittil rrl-
Curva nru!n iiiM-am A hu'r talAtnr.
0".-, nun 51 ivm 1 rniri"TB
HENRY BOECK
U g3Thei'teaciing
mm'vmK lealer
Electric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming so well
and so popular as to need no special
mention. All who have used Kleel
trie Hitters sing the same song of
praise. A purer medicine does not
exist and it is guaranteed to do al
that is claimed. Klectric Hitters
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 sj-stem
and prevent as well as cure all ma
larial fevers. For cure of headache,
constipation and indigestion try
Klectric Hitters. Entire satisfaction
guaranteed, or money refunded.
Price 50c and $1 per bottle at F. G.
Fricke & Go's drugstore. 5
Church Howe has $100,000 invest
ed in his Xeninha county stock
farm and has
horses.
l'J." head of trotting
itr ?:irli:iril I!nrt.ii ami I'm- Young Man
M in) Was Siaa.-ti-r Ticui' He Looked.
The beauty of a novelist's plot is an
unexpected denouement, says 'awtl'tt
tournnl. In like manner the outsider,
at any rate, is specially dhevted when
a jest takes an unlooked-for turn, and
perhaps victimizes the original jester.
In the course of one of his journeys
Sir Richard Purlon entered a Persian
village disguised as a fakir. The make
up was perfect, and. moreover, t he part
was being played by a skillful and con
summate actor.
Sir Kichiml was familiar with eastern
ways, lie knew what he had to do
and how to do it. but the humor
seized him to figure as a holy man of
phenomenal powers and to trick the
simple Persian further. lie had ob
tained the grant of a house in the
village. and he secretly wrote up a text
from the koran on the outside of his
door; it was done in phosphorus, and
burton waited for darkness, when he
expected to enjoy his jest and reap new
advantage of notoriety, but the furor
led to a catastrophe and the joke made
burton homeless. Every one wanted a
relic of the house which could show
such a marvelous sign, and it was torn
down about the fakir's ears.
.V writer in a popular monthly men
tions the e;ise of a kinsman of his own,
who was a .schoolboy at Harrow. Out
in the fields one day he went to the
assistance of a portly farmer on horse
back, who could not easily open a gate
and did not care to put his horse to it.
This was an act vhieh indicated a
well - conditioned mind: the farmer
thanked hi:n and asked his name. The
youth at once saw an opportunity for a
good joke.
"Green." said the Harrovian.
'"What is your father"
"A cheesemonger in London, in
Theobald's road rather a small shop."
was the wholly imaginative answer.
"Vou are a capital young chap; I
sha'u't .forget you," said the farmer.
And he left the youth chuckling over
the incident ami the sell."
1 ears passed, and the lively :.:--:
of the Harrow scholar proved io have
cost him a fortune. The newspapers
had advertisements for a young gen
tleman of the name of Green, whose
father some time kept a cheesemonger's
shop in Theobald's road, ami to whom
a large legacy was devised in recogni
tion of a service rendered at Harrow
about ten years before. As the pub
lished clew to identity was wholly
false and mistaken. through an ill-timed
levity, the money could never be
claimed.
In the correspondence of Sir John
Iiurgoyne there is the story of a girl's
warlike jest that recoiled. It was dur
ing the height of the Crimean battle
storm. A young lady was correspond
ing with an officer at the front. She
wrote in a lively fashion, and. she asked
that when Menschikoff was taken her
soldier friend would be sure to seDd
her one of the buttons off the prince's
coat. It so chanced in the fortunes
of the campaign that the letter con
taining this paragraph fell into Rus
sian hands, and reached Menschikoff
himself.
The commander-in-chief was grimly
equal to the occasion. . He .returned
the letter to its writer, and with it he
inclosed a coat button and a message
intimating that, as he might not be
taken prisoner for some time, he pre
ferred to avoid delay and oblige the
lady at once.
A Fatal Mistake.
Physicians make no more fatal
mistake than when they inform t:i-
tients that nervous heart troubles
come from .the stomach and are of
little consequence. Dr. Franklin
.Miles, the noted Indiana specialist,
has proven the contrary m 111s new
book 011 "Heart Disease" which may
be had free of F. G. Fricko !fc Co..
who irunranlcc and recommend Dr.
3Iiles' unequalled new Heart Cure,
which has the largest sale of any
heart remedy in the world. It cures
nervous and organic heart disease,
short breath. 11 uttering, pain or ten
derness in the side.armorshoulder,
irregular pulse, fainting, smother
ing, dropsy, etc. H is .Restorative
Nervine cures headache, liis, etc.
It Should bo In Every House.
J. H.Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps
burg. Pa., says he will not be with
out Dr. King's New Discovery for
Consumption, Coughs and Colds,
that it cured his wife who was
threatened with Pneumonia after
an attack of "La Grippe," when
various other remedies and several
physicians had done her 110 good
Robert Harber, of Cocksport, Pa.
claims Dr. King's Xew Discovery
has done him more good than any
thing he ever used for J.un?
Trouble. Nothing like it. Trj' it
Free trial bottles at F. G. Fricke &
Cos drugstore. Large bottle, o0c
and $1.00.
The girl's industrial school build
ing at Geneva is well along toward
completion, and is said to be admir
ably arrangek for its purpose.
A Mystery Explained.
; "The papers contain frequent no
tices of rich, pretty and educated
girls eloping with negroes, tramps
and coachmen. The well-known
specialist. Dr. Franklin Miles, says
;11 such girls are more or less hys
terical, nervous, very impulsive, un
balanced; usually subject to Head
ache, neuralgia, sleeplessness, im
moderate crying or laughing. These
show a weak, nervous system for
v.diich there is no remedy equal to
Restorative Nervine. Trial bottles
and a fine book, containing man v
marvelous cures, free at F. G. Fricke
oi Co's.. who also sell and guarantee
Dr. Miles' celebrated New Heart
Cure, the finest of heart ton ics.C ures
ilutteriugAshort breath, etc.
Cough Following tho Crip
Man- person, who have recovered
from la grippe are now troubled
with a persistent cough. Cham
berlain's cough remedy will
nromntlv loosen this cough and
relieve the lungs, effecting a per
manent cure in a very short time.
2.1 and aO cent bottle for sale bv F.
G. Fricke & Co.
The principal of the Ulysses
schools has been arrested on the
charge of unmetcifully beating his
pupils.
Startling Facts-
The American people are rapidly
becoming a rase of nervous wrecks
and the follovvtng suggests, the
best remedy: alphouso Humpfling,
of Hutler, Penn, swears that wSien
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 Logansport, Ind each gained 20
pounds if an taking it. Mrs. H. A.
Gardner, of Vastulr Ind, was cured
of 40 to 50 convulsions easy and
much aeadach, dizzness, bockach
and nervous prostiatipn by one
bottle. Trial bottleajid fine boek of
Nervous cures free at F. G. Fricke, &
Co., who recomends this unequailed
remedy. .
Kly's Cream Halm is especially
adapted as a reniebj' for catarrh
which is aggravated by alkaline
dust and dry winds. W. A. Hover,
Druggist, Denver.
1 ! Farker'H Ohik!i Tonic li i-iim-j the wtrl Cti;!ti,
VV.'ak I.iiiil'm. I'liiilv, I.HliKcetton, i'uiu. Take iu tilue.AUctJ.
HINDER CO RMS. The only mire cure for Comt.
btupn lui ii-uo. 10c HI XijUfctmts, or iiiiiCUX CO., H- V.
G R A T K UL-COM FORT I X G
V,
WJ
mm
a
HRIiA K FAST
"Hy a tlioroudi knovvleilire of th natural
laws whieli govern the operations of ditfest'oii
and niUrilion. and liv a careful ai lioaliou of
the fine iiropertiiw of well si'lccNul ''o-oa. .Mr.
Kups has provided our breakfast table with a
delicately II -vol e.l lie venire which may cave
us many havy doctor' lib Is. 1 1 is by t he judic
ious use of kurIi articles of iliet th-t a oen
(itution may be uradually built up until strong
enoiiuh to resist eveiv ti iidein-y f disease.
Hundred of subtle " elaiiies are II aliii g
around us ready to attack' wlierev.T here in a
we-'k point. V e may eccape manv a fatal
shaft by keeping eiuelve well fortified, with
pure bloo and a properly nourished frame."
Civil Service (Jazette. Mudosi simply with
boilinir water or milk. Sold only in hal'-pouud
tin, bv i;roecrics. labelled lliu::
JAMEs ETl'S & DO., Iloniu onatlib- Chi-mist
London. Knlad
UNDERTAKE ,
Constantly kecpb 011 hand everythin
you inv-d to furnish jour houne.
COKNKIt SIXTH AND MAIN ST II BUT
Plattsmouth - Neb
mlmm
mi
in
How Lost ! How Regained !
lENCEfi
For Atchinson, St. Joseph, Leaven
worth, Kansas City, St. Louis,
and all points north, east
south or west. Tick
ets sold and bag
gage checked
to any
t? r-LJt t, ,rh inrL-o
KM? THYSELF.
a FREE! now!
Or SELF-PKKHKKVATION. A new and only
Gold Medal VlilXK KSSA V on NEKVOUS and
PnVSICAL DEBILITY, KKItOKS of
VOUTII. KXITAIiSTF.L VITALITY, I'KK
BIATIJHK 11KCLINK, and ail DISK ASKS
and WKAKNKSSKS of MAX. 300 paees, cloth,
gilt: 125 invaluable prescriptions. Only tl.ou
by mail, double eealed. lleecriptive lroBpect-
U9 with endorsements
of the Press and voluntar;
testimonials of the curei
Consultation in person or by mail. Expert treat
ment. IN'VKILABLU SKCKKCY and CER
TAIN CI KK. Addrean lr. W. IT. Pnrker. or
The I'eabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bullinch St..
BoBtou, Maaa.
The Peabody Medical Institute has many Imi
tators, but no equal. ft-rahl.
The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation, ia a
treasure more valuable than pold. Head it now,
every WEAK and NKltVUL'S man, und learn to
be S1KO.VU . Medienl Jlevieic. (Copyrighted-
Canada. For
IN FORMATION AS TO KATKS
AND ROUTES
Call nt Depot or address
II, C. TOWN'SEXI),
G. I. A. St. Louis, Mo.
J. C. I'JIILLHTI.
A. G. P. A. Omaha.
II. T. Al'CAK. Agt., Plattsmouth.
Telephone, 77.
HAVE Fi 6nn$iH
SCHIFFM ANN'S Asthma Cure
I Never fails to rivo instant rwlief in th worst
Scuuti, and e-Term t'urtn hero oinern itui
TrUI rkM FlftCK of Drnr;it or by Muu,
Chchestfr?. rxausH. Reo Cross Diamond Brand
y-'f'i THE ORIC1'! ' .NC. Th. onlr lnfc '' 'ttUhtt V. .r f-.
'SA
l . ; Liu.'., ic- .l'"! vim i
Ki.l.'Hl 1
a-a lJt.J. yiuk wr.ipj.eri. are dmiff-niuib tuunU'rf' llR. t :.'... or o
. :....!:J). t;J 'Vi.-iu-f I'nr l.HOi.. it Irf.'-r. I t -Mnra Mali.
v -: : itA. ja.
V
A
s J
IX.
iGULAR Scimitar
That Sweeps all before it
OPEAP05
J
--a,n ,i . f ' i
V
very prociuci.va, hi.w.i ciualitv
4 ft. '.'."-.. In season fcMc.vs
These will almost n
nd sugar fisvrr.
L:tt!e Gem "an J J
! in your j-pquth.
have thoroughly tested it, and confidently roconm
Price by mai!, per packet, 15 cent
GIVEN FREE,
Tore toe
nd it ai
lb , j.1.11;
The "Charmer" is
unities. Vines 31 to
r r' l a I
;crr! :ci ct trgi2ra, vvs
tho host ever intrcduced.
75 cor.'.-:-.
IF DESIRED, WITH
;OVE,
x f yr -r r - T "
802,
which contains several colored plates of Flowers at:,! Ver'.-ralilf
Over loo pages 8 x io, inches. Instructions how : i pi ::
Descriptions of over 20 New Novelties View's ? w;
receipt of address and 10 cents, w hich may be deduce. 1 :r- :.i
James Vick's SoNsRoch-
TV-.
: J
I "
.1."
-.! ions.
r.if'kn.
1 .
Y
Mexican
M
ustang
Liniment.
A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast
A long-tested pain reliever.
Its use is almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the
Stock Raiser, and by- every one requiring an effective
liniment.
No other application compares with it in efficacy.
This well-known remedy has stood the test of years; almost
generations.
No medicine chest is complete without a bottle of Mustang
Liniment.
Occasions arise for its use almost every day.
All druggists and dealers have it.
r
t
1
I
5
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