Semi-weekly news-herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1895-1909, March 18, 1896, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS-HERALD, PLATTSMOUTH NEC, MARCH 18 181)6.
me Seml-Weeklfl News-Herald
PUBLISHED WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS
... BY THE . . .
NEWS
PUBLISHING COMPANY,
M. D. POLK, EDITOR.
DAILY EDITION.
One Year, in advance, . . .
Six Months,
One Week, . . .
Single Copies,
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION.
$5 00
2 50
10
5
One Year, in advance,
Jl 00
Six
Months, ........ r 50
LARGEST CIRCULATION
THE
Of any Cass County Paper.
THE Omaha News-Republic, an
evening paper started two years ago,
suspended publication yesterday with
liabilities far in excess of its assets.
It takes money torun a newspaper,
but some people are slow in finding it
out.
Matt Quay thinks if McKinley
were to be chosen president he would
offend all the party leaders before his
term would bo half through. There
is probably some truth in thi3. It is
at least certain that the party bosses
could not use him for any dishonest,
sinister or crooked purpose. And the
people appear to understand this fact.
Fremont Tribune.
The administration wing of the dem
ocratic party has called its convention
fnr Lincoln to meet April 29 to select
delegates to their national convention.
The invitation to measure strength
with the silverites at the primaries
was declined with thanks on the
ground that the true test of numeral
strength was given last fall on the
vote for supreme judge, when Ma
honey, tne adminitration candidate,
ran far ahead of the free siver can
didate, Phelps.
With Colonel Colby, ex-Senator J.
D. Pope of Saline and N. V. Harlan of
York in the field as active congress
ional candidates it looks very much as
if tha "too previous" Mr. Hainer
miffht be consigned to the shades of
r
private life. The result in no con
gressional district in.the state will be
awaited with as much interest as in the
Fourth, which Mr. Hainer not long
ago, was supposed to have a mortgage
on. Let the good work move along.
Either of the first three candidates
would please the people.
In discussing the question as to
whether or not General Manderson is
a stalking horse or a delivery wagon
for some other candidate, the New
York Sun remarks: "The only candi
date who can properly be called a
delivery wagon is the Hon. Thomas
Brackett Reed; and- that in a sense
highly honorable to the speaker. He
has charge of the interests of all the
candidates in common. If he upsets
the vehicle, a republican nomination
this year will be a valueless possession.
'He is at present, and until -congress
adjourns, the custodian of republican
fortunes, no matter who may afterward
become the nominee of the St. Louis
convention."
Nebraska is as fertile in point of
candidates as the Hon. John Milton
Thurston is in point of metaphors. The
state prohibition convention has in
structed for the Hon. C. E. Bentley of
Lincoln as the dry man for president.
The Hon. Charles Francis Manderson
is a republican candidate, and the
Hon. Tobias Castor will be a powerful
and moving democratic candidate, and
every lover of 6ilver wheels and cart
wheels will shout for the Hon. Wm.
Jennings Bryan, the boy orator of the
Platte, as the fittest and highest
sounding chap for the populist nomi
nation. Candidates are as thick in
Nebraska now as grasshoppers were
in unhappier days. And speaking of
grasshoppers, the Hon. Julius Sterling
Morton may be a candidate for some
thing himself. New York Sun.
It is freely predicted that McKin
ley will be nominated on the first bal
lot, a compliment seldom bestowed in
this country. In but two of the ten
national conventions held by the re
publican party, has the nomination
been made on the first ballot when
there was a contest. These were the
conventions nominating Fremont and
Harrison. Pointers in advance of
the convention are often illusive. In
1860, Seward, whose nomination was
generally conceded, was defeated on
" tha third ballot, and in 1876, Blaine,
thought to be invincible, went down
on the sixth ballot. Says the Globe
Democrat: "However, present indi
cations are that McKinley will be
stronger in the convention of 1896
than Blaine was in the outset in that
of 1876, and much stronger than
Seward was in 1869. On the first bal
lot Blaine lacked ninety-three votes
that year of .the number required to
nominate. With such fluctuations, he
increased his vote to the end, but od
the last ballot, when all aspirants had
dropped out except Hayes, who won,
and Bristow, Blaine was twenty -eight
votes short of the. number needed.
Conservative estimates at present put
McKinley on the first ballot only forty
or fifty short of the required number.
With that narrow margin between
him and victory it would be impos
sible for his enemies to unite on any
body to defeat him. McKinley is the
' second choice of so 'many men who
have various other aspirants Tor a first
choice that enough votes could not be
concentrated to carry the convention.
It is entirely safe to predict that if
"-JIcKinly comes within seventy-five
votes on the first ballot a .stampede to
him on the second ballot cannot be
prevented."
TRYING TO CHECK UNDERVALUATIONS.
The appraisers' bill to prevent
frauds upon the Treasury by under
valuations has boon practically agreed
upon with a proviso in it which de
clares that if. the appraised value of
any article of imported merchandise
subject to an ad valorem duty shall ex
ceed by more than 5 per cent, the
value declared in the entry, there
shall be levied, in addition to the
duties regularly imposed by law upon
the article, 2 per cent, of the total ap
praised valuo for every 1 per cent
that the appraised value exceeds the
declared value in the entry. These
duties, running to 109 per cent, of the
value of the goods, may be remitted
only in cases of manifest clerical error
in the declared entry. But when the
appraised valuations exceed oO per
cent, of the declared value, except by
manifest error, the entry shall be held
to bo presumptively fraudulent, and
the collector shall seize the merchan
dise and proceedas in case of forfeit
ure for violations of the customs laws.
And this forfeiture shall apply to the
whole of the merchandise of which
the article found to be fraudulently
undervalued 6hull be a part. This will
be a wholesale reform in the appraise
ment aet,and should result in the stop
page of the ruinous undervaluations.
But another important feature' of
the proposed amendment to the act is
that which proposes to take from the
courts in trials of appealed cases the
questions of fact arising, and limit the
court to the questions of law alone.
This will make certain that the
questions of factconcerning fraudu'ent
undervaluations shall rest upon the
decisions of the appraisers and are
not to be combattsd by testimony of
importers or agents respecting the
actual valuation of goods against which
the charge of undervaluation rests.
This will make the appraisers the sole
judges of the questions of fact respect
ing the value of goods, which is of
tremendous importance. American
Economist
Ex-Judge. Chapman managed to
get quite an advertisement in a Ne
braska City paper yesterdav about
how ably he presented a case for the
removal of tho Murdock bank receiver
and how ho roasted the opposing
counsel and pointed out the under
handed methods of the plaintiffs
When he has the closing speech, so
that tho opposite attorney can not get
back at him, the ex-judge is very
brave. When talking of "underhanded
methods" the ex-judge is at home,
as every man in Cass county is aware,
and since his organ has blubbered
over again, we will shortly show where
he absolutely gutted the Chase Manu
facturing company of Weeping Water
at an expense to unfortunate creditors
of nearly 87,000. A more shameless
piece of robbery was never perpetrated
in this county under tho guisa of law
The Kentucky senatorship contest,
which has held the boars for so long.
bids fair only to end with the legisla
ture tomorrow. The feeling between
the tactions is described as running
very high and serious conflicts are pre
dieted for today and tomorrow. Gov
ernor Bradly, the republican execu
tive, has- called out a company of
militia which is armed and stationed
about the capitol to preset ve order
Tho democrats accustomed to success
ful bulldozing tactics in that state are
indignant that the governor should
attempt to circumscribe their inalien
able rights and use fiery language of
condemnation. The opinion seems to
prevail quito generally to tho effect
that there will bo no election and
Kentucky willbavo to get along with
one senator until the legislature meets
a grain.
Spain continues her preparations
for war with the United States, while
tne latter country iooks on as com
placently as the old women did at the
bear fight. The decrepit old mon
archy nxiy got called, in her bluff, and
in that event the entire Spanish army
would soon be hunting for a place to1
hide. England recently very em
phatically disavowed any intention of
assisting or encouraging Spain in case
war should break out between the two
countries.
A FREE silver -paper has been
launched in Nebraska City by Messrs.
Land is & Burkett, called the Otoe
Chief. It promises to speak its senti
ments once a week, and we must say
the initial number is clean and bright
as anyone could desire. We havn't
been converted to the free silver
theory yet, but we hope the new firm
may bo able to reap a good harvest of
silver dollars.
The hearing for a removal of the
receiver in the Murdock bank matter
which Mr. Chapman and his "protege"
have been trying to the newspapers,
will come up for a hearing before
Judge Ramsey Monday when the ne
cessity for their newspaper trial will
be made apparent. The plaintiffs have
not found it necessayy to resort to any
such expediency to bolster up their
case.
Mexico grows in proportion more
rapidly than Canada, the increase in
our Southern neighbors in four years
having been 9(j0.(jO0, or about 8 per
cent, A republican form of govern
ment is the first element of American
prosperity. Ex.
The vote3 in the senate against the
Cuban resolution came from Maine,
Vermont,. Rhode Island, Mississippi,
Louisiana and Texas. This shows that
the corners of the country can got to
gether, at all events. Ex.
The Seward Reporter i9 an advo
cate for the rcnomination of Congress
man " nainer, yet it concedes the
Fourth district will send a solid Mc
Kinley delegation to St. Louis.
INFORMATION AND OPINION.
There is trouble in Kentucky, there is worriment
in Maine;
The eastern politicians find no rest.
Massachusetts is unlucky. Indiana has a pain;
But everything is lovely inthe west.
The Reed and Morton factions are disturbed with
dread and doubt;
The democrats don't know just where to flock.
But all the western sections, near as I can find it
out.
Are for McK'nley, solid as a rock. -
uixoy.
. . j
It will be generally conceded that
Nebraska has been getting a little
more than her share of drought dur
ing the past several vears many of
our larmers, oeeomiuy uicuiuiaf;
with continued crop failures, disposing
of their farms-and immigrating to a
climo whero the clouds were more
liberal in the distribution of rain.
But if we are to go by present Judica
tions, there will" be an abundant sup
ply of rain forthcoming during the
next crop season, and the farmer will
undoubtedly again wear that hapyy,
confidential smile as he views his
blooming orchard and fertile fields.
If our anticipations are roalized, it
would be a good plan to invito those
hasty immigrants to come back and
take a peep at the barren "fields they
left behind, and it is sale to say they
wili abuse themselves for not staying in
Nebraska.
A deposit of mineral paint has been
disvered along the bluffs of the Platte
river in Sarpy county, and it is said to
be of- superior quality. Tests are
being made, and should It be found as
good as the discoverers claim for it, a
company will be formed to put it on
the market This is about the seven
hundreth find of this kind along the
Missouri river in this state, but the
finest deposits yet found is that just
a mile south of the city, some of which
wns taken out bv the citizens some
thirty years ago. Nebraska City
News.
A cave allegedto rival in extent and
grandeur the great Mammoth cave has
been discovered in Edmonson county.
Ky.,in which the Mammoth cavo issit
uated. The newspapers of that region
tell many stories of the remarkable
character of the new cave. It was dis
covered by a traveling photographer
of Bowling Green several weeks ago.
He stumbled across an opening in the
rocks and following it downward sixty
feet found himself in an immense cave
He got others to accompany him in an
exploration of the cave, and it is al
leged that more than sixty miles of
subterranean avenues have been ex
plored: It is said that a company has
been formed to exploit the cave, that
it will be lighted with electricity, and
that an electric railway will be built
to its mouth from Cavo City.
From experiments at Fremont it
looks is though sugar beet would bo
a profitable crop from which alcohol
would be made.
More triumphs for McKinley are
daily recorded. At .Lincoln j-esterday
out of a little over 3,000 votes cast in
the republican primary those express
ing a first choice for McKinley
reachdd the astonishing proportions of
2,614, while the Manderson strength
was only a little over 300 votes. Even
in Omaha the McKinly force is almost
two to one as against any other candi
date. The "favorite son" idea seems
to havo miscarried.
If Senator Thurston wants to keep
his name untarnished as a loyal,
brainy leaderjhe will stop this non
sensical talk of compromise with Man
derson forces. Nebraska is for Me
Kiuley. The people are paramount
and they will see that only McKinley
men are sent to St. Louis. There will
be no' half-way business transacted
Ihe Spanish government has now
practically said that if we acknowl
edge tho belligerency of Cuba, she
will fisrht. It remains to be seen if
this wrinkled, decrepit old monarchy
can run that sort of a
blutt on vour
Uncle Samuel.
V
At an early hour this morning a
mayoralty boom started out after
Charley Grimes, and he made Quite a
spectacle running bare-headed like a
frightened Indian to keep out of its
reach. By artful dodging he finally
evaded it, and at last accounts was
thought to be entirely safe from an
other attack.
A telegram from Washinston, D. C,
says that six delesratos were yester
day elected to tbe democratic national
convention, and that Frank Morgan
was one of the number. It adds that
the administration was endorsed. Tho
Frank Morgans are evidently getting
mixed on politics, and we suggest that
our Frank do a little missionary work
and get the family in line.
Mark Twain, theonly real American
humorist left since the death of Bill
Nye, is reported by cable to bo dan
gerously ill in India.
Nearly 2,000 Columbia bicycles- were
destroyed by fire in Boston yesterday
by the burning of tho Pope Manufac
turing company's ware house.
From two to four inches of enow is
reported out in the central and west
ern portions of the state.
C H. Morrill, the Lancaster Land
company's hustling vice president, was
in town several hours on Wednesday
in company with an Otlumwa, .la..
manufacturer who is in search of a
location further west than the Iowa
towo. The Ottumwa- factory manu
facturers farm implements on a rather
large scale and if they move it is the
intention to enlarge their output. The
land company has offered to donate a
free Bite and is making a strong effort
to bring the concern to Havelock.
REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION.
The republican electors of the state of Ne
braska are requested to send delegates from their
several counties to meet in convention in the city
of Omaha, Wednesday. April 15, 195, at 5. p. m..
for the purpose of choosing four (4) delegates
and four (4) alternates to the republican national
convention to be held in the city of St. Louis,
Missouri, on Tuesday, June 10, 1890, at 12 o'clock
noon, and to transact such other business as may
properly come before the convention.
THE APPORTIONMENT.
The several counties are entitled to representa
tion as follows, the apportionment being based
upon the vote cast for Hon. Joseph S. Bartley for
state treasurer in 1894, giving each county one
delegate at large and one for each 100 votes and
the major fraction thereof:
Counties. Del.iCounties. Del.
Adams 19 Jeiierson . . . If
Antelope 10 1 Johnson 14
Banner 3 Kearney 11
Blaine 2 Keith
Boone li;Keya Paha
Box Butte bjNimoau
Boyd
tiiKnox 11
Brown...:
Buffalo
Burt
Butler
il Lancaster 1
19! Lincoln 11
14 Loeau
14iLoud '
Cass
U6!Madisoa H
Cedar
V McPherson .'.
Chase
4 ! Merrick 10
OiNance S
Cherry
Cheyenne
Clav
5 Nemaha 1
IS Nuckolls i:
Collax i
Cumincr 1
Otoe 20
Pawnee
custer.
10! 1'ei kins
Dakota
Dawes
Dawson ....
Duel
Dixon
Dodge ......
Douglas ....
Dundy
Filmore
Franklin
Frontier
Furnas
Gage
Uarrield
Gosper
Grant
Greeley ....
OJPheips
.. Pierce
.. 12lPlatte 11
... 4'Polk
.. 9' Red Willow U
. . 19 Richardson
..lltlSarDv
.. 4'Saunderson 19
... lS Scotts Bluff
... 9'Seward 1S
.. h:Sheridan 6
. . 18 Sherman 5
. .. :S0!Sioux.
. . 3 Stanton
. . 5 Thaver 17
.. 2'Thomas
.. 4iThurston 4
.. IS iVallev ?
Man.
I Inmiltrtn
. 14' Washington 14
Harlan vys ayne
Hayes 14 Webster 1
Hitchcock tt'Wheeler
Holt HVork 21
Hooker II
Howard... s) Total 1.05
It is recommended that no proxies be admitted
to the convention and that the delegates present
be authorized to cast the entire vote of the dele
gation of the county which they represent.
E. J. HAINER, Chairman.
T. E. SEDGWICK. Secretary.
A Prize to Writers.
The Nebraska club desires to an
nounce cash prizes for articles show
the resources of Nebraska and the aa
vantages it offers to homeseekcrs as
follows: For the best article, $lo; lor
the second best, $10; for the third, $-5,
Two conditions only aro imposed:
First The articles not contain more
than 1,000 words.
Second The articles bhall be ac
companied by at least $1 for a subscrip
tion to one share of the stock of the
club.
The articles shall become the prop
erty of the club. They will be sub
mitted to the publication committee
who will award the prizes, and they
must be filed with the secretary on or
before March 1, next
For a copy of "Stand Up fo No
braska," an address of the president
and executive committee, write sec
retary Nebraska club, Beo building.
Omaha, Nebraska.
"Keacl This."
On account of hard tunes, and in
order to encourage orchard planting.
I will furnish to responsible parties on
three years time, good first-class apple
trees. Plant now; do not wait; two
years after trees are paid for they will
very probably pay for themselves. En
quire of, or address,
Will T. Richardson.
Mynard, Neb.
A tiood Thing-.
J. W Campbell of Glenwood has an
arrangement for sharpening the discs
on disc, cultivators and harrows that
is very simple yet quite ingenious
Every farmer ought to have one. Ap
ply to agents or at J. W. Uendees
hardware store in Plattsmouth. Mr.
Pollard down near Nehawka used
one of these sharponed disc cultiva
tors last spring- on some raw Drairie
which was thoroughly pulverized
without use of plow and was put in
corn, raising a splendid crop, Get a
sharpener and it will quickly pay for
itself.
Tom Henderson, an experienced
workman on wells and cisterns, will
dig or repair the same on short notice,
and in the best manner possible. It
will pay you to see him or write, as
nis charges aro reasonable. Leave
orders at Cummins Lumber office,
Plattsmouth, Neb.
A high liver with a torpid liver will
not bo a loner liver. Correct the liver
with De 'Witt's Little Early Risers,
little pills that cure dyspepsia and
constipation, b . G. h ricke & Co.
pirnirog
Gvfledicine
Your blood in Spring is almost certain to
be fall of impurities the accumula
tion of the winter months. Bad ven
tilation of Bleeping rooms, impure air
in dwellings, factories and shops, over
eating, heavy, improper foods, failure
of the kidneys and liver properly to do
extra work thus thrust upon them, are
the prime causes of this condition. It
b Cf the utmost importance that you
Purify
Your Blood
Now, as when warmer weather comes and
the tonic effect of cold bracing air is
gone, your weak, thin, impure blood
will not furnish necessary strength.
That tired feeling, loss of appetite, will
open the way for serious disease, ruined
health, or breaking out of humors and
impurities. To make pure, rich, red
blood Hood's Sarsaparilla Btands un
equalled. Thousands testify to its
merits. Millions take it as their
Spring Medicine. Get Hood's, because
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. St.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
ww , , rM are the only pllli to take
11UUU ri!IS with Hood 'a Saraaliariiia.
Promises Worth Accepting:.
In 189G the 7oth year of its publica
tion The Youth's Companion
promises more varied attractions for
its readers than ever before, and the
promises of this old favorite with the
public are worth accepting, fo they
aro .always more than fulfilled.
Articles will be given from three
Cabinet Ministers, a feature which
has never been equalled by any other
publication; the Princess Louise,
daughter of Queen Victoria; the Lord
Chief Justice of England; Four Ad
mirals; Speaker Reed and Justin Mc
Carthy, the famous home-ruler, are
among the prominent names on the
list.
Among other announcements are
four Serial Stories, each of which will
make a good-si zed book wheti com
pleted; a series of personal articles
describing "How I Served My. Ap
prenticeship by Maj.-Gen. Nelson A.
Miles, Andrew Carnegie, Frank Stock
ton and others; fascinating s'.ories of
travel, and the usual carefully pre
Dared "departments" which everv
Companion reader enjoys.
Send $1.75, the price of The Com
panion for one year, and enjoy each
week the fulfilment of tho promise of
the paper for 1S90.
To all of its new subscribers, and to
all those renewing their subscription,
The Companion sends a very handsome
Calendar lithographed in nine colors,
each of four pages, containing a pic
ture representing one of tbe seasons
of the year. Address Tho Youth's
Companion, .19.5 Columbus Avenue,
Boston. Mass.
Soothing, healing, cleaning, Dc
Witt's WTitch Hazel Salve is the
enemy to sores, wounds and piles,
which it never fails to cure. Stops
itching and burning. Cures chapped
lips and cold-sores in two or three
hours. F. G,. Fricke & Co.
Not to be Trifled With.
From Cincinnati Gazette.
Will people never learn that a
"cold" is an accident to be dreaded,
and that when it occurs treatment
should be promptly applied? Tharo is
no knowing where the trouble will
end; and while complete recovery is
the rule, the exceptions are terribly
frequent, and thousands after thou
sands of fatal illnesses occur every
year ushered in by a little injudicious
exposure and seemingly trifling
symptons. Beyond this, there are to
day countless invalids who can trace
their complaints to "colds," which at
the time of occurrence gavo no con
cern, and were therefore neglected.
When troubled with a cold use Cham
berlain's Cough Remedj. It is prompt
and effectual. 2o and 50 cent bottles
for sale by all druggist's.
Quick in effect heals and leaves no
scar. Burning, sqaly skin eruptions
quickly cured by DeWitt's Whitch
Hazel Salve. Applied to burns,scalds,
old sores, it is magical in effect. Al
ways cures piles. F. G. Fricke & Co.
A too! Companion,
ever delightful and welcome, is found
in The Youth's Companion, established
1S27, yet growing more vigorous each
year. Its Announcements for the
coming twelve mouths are well worth
reading. Tho remarkable weekly cir
culation of The Companion testifies to
the general appreciation of its worth;
to the elevated tone of everything it
prints, as well as of its interest for boy
and girl, father and mother, alike.
Those who make the acquaintance
of The Youth's Companion for the first
time this year will find it entertaining
instructive, generou$nd healthful
Tnose who for many years nave re
ceived its weekly visits will find in it
an old and true friend, more welcome
than ever.
To all new subscribers, and to those
renewing their subscriptions. The
Companion sends free its handsome
four-page Calendar for 1890. The four
seasons have been appropriately
pictured in water-colors, reproduced
by lithography, size of each page 7x10
inches.. Address I he louth's Com
panion, 195 Columbus Avenue, Boston
Mass.
All last winter Mr. Geo. A. Mills
of Lebanon, Conn., was badly afllicted
with rheumatism. At times it was so
sever a that he could not stand up
straight, but was drawn over on one
side. "I tried different remedies
without receiving relief," he says
"until about six months ago I bought
a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm
Alter using it lor tnree days my
rheumatism was gone and has not re
turned since. For sale by all druggists
Home Seekers Excursion.
Missouri Pacific will .sell homo
seekers ticket at rate of one fare, plus
$2 for round trip, with stop-over
priviliges to points in Iowa,Minnesota,
Wisconsin, North and South Dakota,
Arkansas, Indiana Territory, Okla
horaa. Texas and Arizona. D.ites of
sale March 10, April 7 and 21, and
May 5. For further particulars call at
Missouri Pacific depot.
C F. Stoutexisouolgii, Agent.
Simon S. Hartman, of Tuonclton,
West Va., has been subject to attacks
of colic about once a year, and would
have to call a doctor and then suffer
for about twelve hours a? much as
some do when ihev die. lie was taken
recently just the s:ime as at other
times, and concluded to try Chamber
Iain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy. He says: "I took one dose
of it and it grave me relief in five
minutes. That is more than any
For sale by all druggists.
Team of Males for Sale.
Good weight. Enquire of Frank
R chardson, Eight Mile Grove.
When Baby was sick, -we gave her Castoria.
When she vas a Child, she cried for Castorta.
When she became Miss, she cttaig to Costeria,
When aha Lad Children, she gave them Castoria.
for Infants and Children.
SW1 OTHERS, Do You Know that Taregoric,
II Bateman'S Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine?
Tift You Know that opiuni and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons?
Do Yotl Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted tosell narcotics
without labeling them poisons ?
TQ Yon Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your child
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
To Von Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and thrit a listf
its ingredients is published with every bottle ?
Ho Von Know that Castoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel ritcher.
That it has been iu ue for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined ?
Io Yon Know that the Talent Office Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. ritcher and his assigns to use the word
' Castoria and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense ?
rp Yon Know that ore of the reasons for granting this government protection
was because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
ro You Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 33
eitts, or one cent a dose?
llo You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may
be Kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest ?
Well, these tltliigw are worth knowing. They are facts.
TP lie facsimile
signature of
Children Cry for
1 11 1 1 1 r-
Of unusual interest to every reader
of this paper is tho announcement
made elsewhero in this issue by the St.
Louis Globe-Democrat, unquestionably
the greatest of American newspapers.
The mail subscription price of tho
Daily and Sunday Globe. Democrat is
reduced at one blow, from twelve to
six dollars a year, placing it within
the reach of all who desire to read any
daily pa;er during the comming great
national campaign. The Weekly
Globe-Democrat remains at one dollar
a j'ear, but is issued in Semi-Weekly
sections of eight pages each, making
practically a largo serai-weckly paper
This issue is just the thing for the far
mer, merchant or professional rr.an
who has not the time to read a daily
paper but wishes to Keep promptly.nd
thoroughly posted. It is mado pup
with especial reference to the wants of
everj- member of the family, not only
giving all the news, but also a great
variety of interesting and instructive
reading matter of all kinds. Write
for free sample copies to GL.or.0 I'kixt
ino Co., Sr. Louis, Mo.
Go to Tom Walling for reliable ab
stracts. Conveyancing a specialty
Office first door east of the couert hous
Rheumatism Cured in a Day.
"Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and
Neuralgia radically cures in one to
three days. Its action upon the sys
tem is remarkable and mysterious. It
removes at once tho cause and 'the
disease immediately disappears. Tho
first dose greatly benefits, 75 cents.
Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists,
Plattsmouth, Neb.
We have $100,000 to loan at a low
rate of interest on well-improved
farms.
The National. Exchange Co.,
Plattsmouth, Neb.
'As good as can Be made
regardless of price
for D
ther Brands Only
M
for GO
S7
'DonT take our word
for it, butbuya niecci;
and see foryounselft
TLrwOJ
j jr. i- ,v
la on every
wrapper.
Pitcher'c Castoria.
lt-attyH Organ ami l'i.iiios.
Hon. Daniel F. Bentty, of Washing
ton, New Jersey, the great Organ and
Piano manufacturer, is huilding and
shipping more organs and pianos than
ever. In 1870 Mr. Iieatty left home a
penniless plow boy, aod by hia in
domitablo will ho has worked his way
up ;o as to sell so far, nearly 100,000 of
Beatty's Organs and Pianos since 1S70.
Nothing seems to dishearten him;
obstacles laid in his way, that would
have wrecked an ordinary man forever,
hef turns to an advertisement and
comes out of it brighter than ever.
His instruments, as is well known, are
veiy popular and are to ho found in all
parts of the world. We aro informed
that during the next ten years he in
tends to sell 200,000 more of his make;
that means a business of $20,000,000, if
we average them at $I( 0.00 each. It is
alroady the largest business of the
kind in existence. Write or call upon
Daniel F. Beatty, Washington, New
Jersey, for catalogue.
Tke OfT the Horn.
The undersigned is now ready with
a good portable chute and tools, to re
move the weapons of horned cattle at
ten cents per head. If those who wish
to havo such work dono will address
me at Hock Bluffs. Neb. , they will lo
promptly answered. S. L. Fl'KLoxo.
Dr. Marfthall, (iratluHte Dentist.
Dr. Marshall, lino gold work.
Dr. Marshall, gold and porcelain
crowns.
Dr. Marshall, crown and bridge work
Dr. Marshall, teeth without plates.
Dr. Marshall, all kinds of fillings.
Dr. Marshall, all kinds of plates.
Dr. Marshall, perfect fitting plates.
Dr. Marshall, all work warranted.
All the latest appliances for first-lass
denti'.l work.
niece
fiances
cent