A. I V 1 J Nothing can be said in favor of the best medicine in tbo fworM that may not be said of the -fmost worthless. In one case, it's jtruc; in the other, it isn't; but how 'can you distinguish ? I Judge by what is done. There's .only one blood-purifier that's guar- anleed. It's Dr. Pierce's Golden oftledical Discovery and this is what T)s done with it ; if it doesn't benefit tmr cure, in every case, you get your ehioney back. Isn't it likely to bo lbhe best? All the j-ear round, as well at one ltjime as another, it cleanses and pur ifies the system. All blood-poisons nust go. For Dyspepsia, . Bilious ness, Scrofula, Salt-rheum, Tetter, -fKrysipclas, or any blood-taint or dis order, it is an unequalcd remedy. It's the cheapest, too. With this, jj-ou pay only for the goal you get. 'A Anil nrit It i n f r r!u w ' inst ni crrtnil n p.t may le better for the dealer. Jr Jut he - isn't the one that's ' to be lelpcd. -a Z K. KKYXOLDS. iC 'Ki-ttrcd l'liyiician and riiarm:ici.-t .ppecinl iittentioii given tc Office c: 8 Practice. gocK H luffs - Nek hi O .T. HANSEN UKAI.KH IN- STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES -4 i ; GLASS AND jQUEENSWARE. tronage of the Public Solicited. ti I lrth Sixth Street, Plattsmouth ULR. A. SALISBURY -: D-K-N-T-I-S-T . JOLD AXI POKCELAIX CROWNS Stelnways anxsthetlc lor the palnlewis ex traction of teeth. ! Fine Gold Work a Specialty. jjtwood Block Plattsmouth. Neb -niiiijs:s i(ousii. t 217, 219, 221, AND 223 ylAIN ST PLATTSMOUTII, NKI3. JR. GUTHMAN1T. PROP- 1 jXTES $LfjCPEK WEEK AXP UP lumber Yard THE OLD RELIABLE. A. WATERMAN k m BER ! Shingles. Lath, Sash, oors, Blinds opply ererw demand of the city. ball and get terms. Fourth street ; in rear 01 opera noHse. rJPIMOTIIY CLAUK. 4 ,t i DEALER IN 0 AL WOOD , TERMS CASIIo d and Office 404 South Third Street. . Telephone 13. fTSMOUTII, Nebraska NF LUM 1 C'OKXKK OK VI XK AXI) HI-Til STS TKI.KJ'IIO.NK ' " KNOTTS pnOS;'Publfshe'rs Iiillixicl every Tlmrxfcty, ami itliuly every evening except Suiyluy. , KeKitered .-it 1 lie i'blUniKiitjh Xe,lr.-i!-l;a M.-t pftice w H-c'iilx-1a.-t iimif innlli'f tor trii!ivtntaioii tlirouh the 17 . uinil-fc . tkkms i t k'vi;; i.v. - ( Mie ycjir in iiil Viinct' - One yt'iir nut in a. I v mice - - - - 'I K) Six inoiit lis in ;iI v ;iik t- 75 Tliri'i- iiniiit lis in .-ill viiiii i' . - . u TKK.1S UK li.MI.V. Out' yt-iir in julviiiice - - jU iki One copy one inoiit h 5ti I'er week liy i jirriiT - - - - - 1.1 SA T I ' K DA Y, J UN V. 1 x "1 REPUBLICAN NATIONAL T1CKLT. For President IIKN'JAM IX II A K'K'I S . of I ntli.'iii:i. For Vifi'-Pn .-iilt'iit WIIITKLAW KIKI of Xew York. I.ET the (fnoil work in our school.s o;o on. Ol'K tcliools have atlvanced more in the hift 3'far than they ever lil in aii3' previous three years. TllEK'E is not another city in the Htate that can make such a siiowinf for her puhlit- schools as Piatt; mouth. TlIEKE will he more e.-oflice-holders at Chicago next week than have ever heeu known to he at a national convention before. TlIE exhibit made by our public- schools in K'ockwiKid, hall has changed all the growlers at the school board and teachers into fjiv i n praises t them. TlIE deiiiicrats should take notice of the la :t that not one of the men who tried to defeat Harrison at Minneapolis has said a word about opposing him any further. TlIE closing exercises of our pub lic schools and the exhibit which was made in Kockwood hall, speaks volumes for our public schools and excellent corps of teachers that we now have. THE exhibition ;iveii 1) our schools should by all meaus be sent to the state fair next Septem ber. It will make tine of the best advertisements that the city could invest in. We venture to sa3'that a selection could be made from the exhibit bj otir public schools that would not only rellect credit on our town, but the whole state, if sent to the world's fair at Chicago next year. VlhrcixiA may be the mother of presidents and Kentucky of speak ers of the house, but New York is decidedly and emphatically the mother of vice presidents. Kight New Yorkers Aaron Uurr, George Clinton, Daniel I). Tompkins, Mar tin Van Huren, TAIillard Fillmore, William A. Wheeler, Chester A. Arthur and Levi P. Morton are on the roll already. Whitelaw Keid will make the ninth. SPEAKIXC of "The Red, White and Blue," the Memphis Commercial says: "The republican's love for these colors is due to the fact that they are alwaj's associated in his mind wtth an appropriation. Well, hardly always' they used to float around Memphis when "the bo3-s" thought they meant more than that, and democrats in Memphis thought so, too, didn't the3-? Our esteemed contemporary will do well not to sneer at the "colors." The'are there to sta3". Whitelaw Keii is described as a typical American b3 Chauncey M. Depew. Mr. Keid's career entitles him to this distinction. Starting out a poor boy at Xenia, Ohio, he educatetl himself, taught school, edited a small country paper, went to the war as a correspondent, won distinction as one of the best war correspondents of the Union army, became editor of the New York Tribune and then its proprietor, and distinguished himself as an American diplomat who could sa3" what he meant and mean what he said to the people who once had a very different definition for diplom acy. Mr. Keid has not only been thoroughly American himself, but he has spread American ideas in his letters from the battle-field, in his editorial utterances in a great newspaper, and as a United States minister. No man better deserves the name typical American than the republican candidate for vice president. Shiloh's catarrh remed3' a posi itive cure Catarrh, Diphtheria and Canker mouth. For salt hy F. G. FrickeA Co THE NOBLER LOVER. If ho lie u noMt-r layer, take hirul Vim In you 1 M-vk.'auil not myself; Lovo with wen's what women choose to tnaUe him, " rrnih Ktrorijf to Hoar, or fawn eyed elt . All I inn or n ii. your beauty gave It. Lifting me u moment nigh to you. Ami my hit of heavun. I fain Would ttavo IV- iliiio I thought It wan, I never kDew. VYhut you Ink mt rtio la yours to servo you. , All I iflvu, yvu'jave to rue before; tn'Mlni winyoUl- If 1 hut deserve yon, 1 kueo all vnu irraut to- him and no morei . Vdu shall iimko me dare what others darooi Yqii bhali keep uit natnro pure as snow. And a liht froru'yoti that others share not ' Shall Iransliuro mo where'er 1 go. Let me bo yoiir'thrall! However lowly He the txjiKUmun'a service I can do. Loyalty shall make It high and holy; Naught can be unworthy, done for you. ".ti n shall hay. "A lover of this fashion Such an ley mixtress well beseems." Women say, "Could we deserve such passion. Wo illicit be the marvel that he dreams." James Russell Lowell. Cats of LiOng Ago. The- piercing and cutting teeth of some of tho cats of long ago are the most per fectly adapted instruments for putting imrx"wos that ever wero seen, being tin equalled by any manufactured tools for such uses. For example, there was the "gompho- dns " which was as big as the largest panther and had two teeth in its upper jaw resembling daggers, each five inches in length. As weapons for penetrating flesh they are unrivaled among carniv orous animals, recent or extinct. The3 are rather like the teeth of some huge flesh eating dinosaurs, the "terrible rep tiles" of the Jlesozoic epoch, which had cutting teeth that nothing could resist. Doubtless this creature was inconceiva bly bloodthirsty. Quite as fierce, how ever, and even more formidable by rea son of its greater size, was the contem porary "pogonodon," Which was as large as the biggest jaguar. There were two species of this animal, which held the field in Oregon during the period 1 sjieak of against all rivals. It was undoubtedly a great destroyer of life among the horbivorous beasts. In terview in Washington Star. Carrier Pigeons In France. Englishmen, it appears, enjoy in France a curious privilege, which is rig idly withheld from Germans and Bel gians. It is that of flying carrier pig eons. This, however, as explained by Mr. Tegetmeier in his curious lecture on this subject, is on the 6trict condition that both the birds and the senders are English. In Belgium alone, according to this authority, there are 600,000 racing birds, which in case of a war would be put at the disposal of the government, and every one of these is a trained bird. They used, it is stated, to train them over the south of France, but that is now interdicted, and no bird from Bel gium or Germany is allowed to be trained in France. The fear of course is that in the event of a war these trained pigeons would be smuggled into the in terior, and thus information could be carried out. London News. How the Kngliahman Likes Ills Game. One fad I noticed among the English I am unable to express my contempt for. The Britisher, you know, is nothing if not outre, and this is as true of his eat ing as others of his affairs. What would 3'ou think of the restaurant or hotel that would serve you a duck or other bird that smelled like a dead mule that the buzzards wouldn't eat? And yet that's the way the Englishman has his bird served, and he is bull headed enough to swear that he loves game meat only when it is tainted. I hope that form of Anglomania will never run riot in this couutry. Interview in St. Louis Globe Democrat. r How Ue Came to Write a Book. How Professor E. A. Freeman came to be the author of the famous work on the Norman Conquest is curiously in teresting to those taking part in com petitions. That subject was selected for an English prize essay at Oxford, but the essay that he sent in did not win. He went on studying the matter, wrote the foregoing standard book .and was, in consequence, afterward elected by the university to the lucrative post of professor of history. London Tit Bits. Mothers Afraid of Sterilized Milk. Sterilized milk in bottles, one for each feeding, can be procured in almost all large cities, but it is generally beyond the reach of the really poor. One of the greatest difficulties, however, to be en countered in establishing the general use of this milk will lie in the effort to convince mothers of its desirability. Lippincott's. A. Poor Contrivance. Mamma You are not satisfied with your new doll? Wny, it creeps and says "mamma, and opens and shuts its eyes. and I don't know what alL Wee Pet Its fingers doesn't move, an its tongue doesn't wag, an it never frows up. Good News. In some strangely shaped fossil trees accidently dug out of a stone quarry were found treasured up the petrified looking bodies of reptiles, birds, bats and such small deer, which had thus been honored by preservation in massive mausoleums. Through the whole range of human. plant, goat's hair and sheep's wool, how ever, nature shows such close gradations that it would be difficult to draw an ex act line or to distinguish beyond a ques tion of doubt between wool and hair Few accidents approached in horror to that at the Victoria hall, at Sunderland in 1383, when 182 children were crushet to death. That disaster was all due to a block on the staircase. Instantaneous photography has shown the former method of representing light nincr as a fierv ziszas to be quite as false as were the old pictures of racing horses. TTia total inonev of the world in cold and silver coin is given at $7,862,072,000. an average of $5.31 for each individual Half Rates to New York. To accommodate Christian Kn deavorers and their friends along its line who desire to attend the national convention of the Y. I. S. C. K. at New York, July .7-10, the Uurlingtoti route will on fuly 4 run H special train from Omaha through to New York, via Chicago and Niagara Falls, leaving nt 11:10 p. m.; after arrival of all trains from the west. A rate of one fare for the round trip has been authorized and will be open to the general public. Tickets, good to return- any time within thirty da3s from late of purchase, will be on sale at dates to be announced later. The low rates in force, the through car facilities at the tlisposal of travelers l3' the liurliiigton route, and the delight ful season of the 3re;ir, coiifbine to make this an unequalled oppor tunity of visiting the east. ICemeni ber that you can purchase tickets from 3'our station agent through to New York. Full information may be had upon application to the local agent of the H. V M., or 13' ad dressing J. Francis, General Pas senger Agent, Omaha. The Homdliest Man in Piattemoulli As well as the handsomest, and oth ers are invited to call on any tlrug gist and get free a trial bottle of Kemp's balsam for the throat and lungs, a remedy thatjis selling en tit ely upon its merits and is guar anteed to relieve and cure all chron ic and acute coughs, asthma, bron chitis and consumption. Large bot ties .r0e and 21.00. Orefioi, Washington and the Nor west Pacific Coast. The constant demand of the trav eling public to the far west for a comfortable and at the same time an economical mode of traveling has led to the establishment as what is known as Pullman Colonist sleepers. These cars are built on the same general plan as the regular first class Pullman Sleeper, the 011I3' dif ference being that the3r are not up holstered. The3r are furnished complete with good comfortable hair matresses. warm blankets,snow white linen cur tains plenty of towels, combs, brush es etc., which secure to the occu pant of a birth as much privac3r as is to be had in firs-t class sleepers. There are also separate toilet rooms for ladies and gentlemen, and smok ing is absolutely prohibited. For full information send for Pullman Colonist Sleeper leaflet. K. L. Lo max, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Omaha Nebraska. Nothing New Under the Sun No! not even through cars to Den ver, Ogden, Salt Lake CH3', San Francisco and Portland. This is simply written to remind you that the Union Pacific is the pioneer in running through cars to the above mentioned points and that the pres ent through car arrangement is un excelled. We also make THE time. For details address aiw agent of the company, call on your nearest agent or write to E. L. Lomax, G. P. & T. A. U. P., Omaha Neb. The following item, clipped from the Ft. Madison (Iowa) Democrat, contains information -well werth remembering: "Mr. John Roth of this cit3r, who met with an accident a few da3'S ago, epraining and bruising his leg and' arm quite severely, was cured by one 50-cent bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Halm." This remedy is without an equal ior sprains and bruises and should have a place in every household. For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. Financially Embarrased A large manufacturer: whose af fairs were very much embarrassed and who was very much overwork ed and broken down with nervious exhaustion, went to a celebrated specialist. He was told that the onld thing needed was to be re lieved 01 careanp worr3r, and have change of thought. This doctor was mora considerate of his patient health than of his financial circum stances. He ought to have adviced 111m to use Dr. Miles Kestoative Nervine, the best remedy for ner vous prostration, sleeplessness, diz ziness headache, ill effects of tobac co, coffee ,opium; etc. Thousands testyfy to it. Hook and trial bottle trf at F G Fricke & Ce's. The wisdom of him who iournev- eth is known by the line he selects; tne judgment of the man who takes the". "Hurlington Route" to the cities of the east, the south, and the west, is never impeached. Tlie in ference is plain. Magnificent Pull man sleepers, elegant reclining chair cars and world-famous dining cars on - all through " trains. For information address the agent of the company at this place, or write to J. Francis, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Omaha. . The Missori Pacific will sell round trip tickets Ma3" 9 to 11 inclusive, to Portland, Oregan, the Presbyterian general aisembly being held- their May 1U to June 5s. tickets good un til" May 19 and returning inside 5K) da3Ts at $00, going via one route and returning via another. Appl3' at ticket office for particulars. Some Foolish People allow a cough to. run until it gets be3rond the reach of medicine Tliej' 8a3. "Oh, it will wear away," but in most cases it wears them awa3 Could they be induced to to the successful Kemp's Balsam, which is sold on a positive guarantee to cure, they would see the excellent effect after taking tne tirst dose. Price 50c and $1. Trial size free. At all druggists. Miles Nerve and Liver Pills Act on o newpriciple regulating the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A new discov ery Dr. Miles pill3 speedil3 cure biliousness, bad taste, torpid liver, piles, constipation Unequaled for men, women and children. Small est, mildest, surest. 50 doses 2.1 cts. samples Jree at r. G. Jincke.v co s. Shilohs catarrh Remedy a posi tive cure for catarrh, diptheria and canker mouth. For sale b3 O H Suj'derand E. G Frieke. t-Uf -I-- f IS FAR SUPERIOR TO ANP IS MADE. ONLY PY CHICAGO. (3-0 - TOs- House Furnishing Emporium W HEKE yon can get your house furnished from kitchen to p-irlor unl at easy tearing. I han die the world renown J lay wood baby carriages, also the latest improved Kelhihle Process" Gasoline stove Call and he convinced. No trouble to show goods. I. Pearleman OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI) A Full and Drugs, Medicines, Paints, and Oils. DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LIQUORS Prescriptions Carefully- Compounded ut all Hoiuk TRY THE li;E:IiA:L-:D A d vertl s ! 22 - - Job - Work EatesO n A. B. KNOTT 501 Cor Fifth PLAlTTSM'OUTH MexiG Mustang 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, : 'nd" by every one requiring an effective liniment," " No other application xompares with it in efficacy. This well-known reiiiedy ' has stood the test of years, almost jrenerations. , No medicine chest 'is '. complete without a bottle of Mustano I.IXIMENT. Occasions arise for its use almost every day. All druggists and dealers have it. 9 WILLIAM TELL fAckhir TO USE NO OTHER SOAP FOR LAUNPRY r ANPH0USEH0LP PURPOSES. THAN WW. OA P. ANY OTHER IN WE MARKED Complete line of .lioatiozx. and Vinebt. NEBR -.SKA an s