Semi-weekly news-herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1895-1909, November 12, 1896, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
THE SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS-HERALD, PL ATTSMO UTH, NEB., DECEMBER 12,1896.
TIieSeml-WeeRlu News-Herald
PUBLISHED WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS
BY THE
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY,
M. D. POLK, EDITOR.
DAILY EDITION.
One Year, in advance, $5 00
Six Months 2 50
tne Week, 10
Single Copies 5
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION.
One Year, in advance, .... fl 00
Six Months, 50
TE LARGEST CIRCULATION
Of any Cass County Paper.
THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE.
President Cleveland's message ap
peared in public print this mornine.
It is really a very common-place state
ment of public affairs. Tbo president
continues to prefer words of six sylla
bles to express meanings that would
be more clearly expressed in words of
one making of the document a rather
bombastic and high-sounding state
ment. It is so long an account,
dealing with details of many subjects,
that the general public will never
take time to read It through. While
the message does not contain much to
be seriously condemned, yet it con
tains nothing to be really commended.
The reference to Cuban affairs is not
what the people had a right to expect.
The butchery of Weyler has continued
without objection, and the American
people, we believe, ftvor decisive ac
tion in the matter, as was clearly evi
denced by congress. In this matter
the president seems to be very
squarely on the fence. He deplores
the butchery, but refuses to take the
part of the struggling Cubans by ac
knowledging their belligerency. One
of the most serious questions in which
the people generally are interested
that of the deficiency in the national
revenues was passed over as it
trifling matter of but little import.
All in all, the message, we believe
19 a disappointment even to Mr
Cleveland's friends.
Leedt, the new pop governor of
Kansas, seems to think he is gover
nor of the United States. His time
since the election is being given to
the spreading of the silver proga
gatida as zealously as if poor old Kan
sas could cut any figure in revivifying
the corpse. Leedy's friends ought to
ask him to subside.
Spain continues to bristle up and
the president's message did not seem
to allay the feeling of Spanish hostil
ity to this government. It is a pity
when an opportunity could so easily be
afforded not to let the ancient grandees
smell American powder, when we
could do so with profit to ourselves
The next president, who did not send
a substitute to the front, but went in
person, may conclude for the general
good, to give the Spaniards a thorough
trouncing.
New York City has paved thirty
five miles of streets with asphalt
since January 1 and claims to have
saved $542,000 on the price of it as
compared with the figures under the
Tammany administration. But just
think of it, how much Tammany has
lost. It is also said that the obnoxious
Raines liquor law has already col
lected from the city of New York
iu,uuu,uuu. it Degins to iook as
though reform administration of af
fairs in New York City would prove
so beneficial that Tammany will have
a hard time getting back again.
TnE very sensational reports from
Cuba indicate that General Weyler's
days are numbered and that Cuban
supremacy is not far off. The worth
lessness of Cuban dispatches has been
shown so often, however, that little
credance can be given them. Tomor
row's telegrams may be entirely differ
ent and go to prove that Weyler has
captured everything in sight. The
American people would have a right
to feel deeply chargrined if the
Spanish should again succeed in their
attempt to take full charge of the
island. As opportunity has been af
forded to obtain possession of Cuba by
this country at comparatively small
cost, the American people generally
beiieve the opportunity should be im
proved. The idea of forcing fair elections in
the south sets the dough-faced demo
cratic press of the north howling wiih
denunciation and abuse of a measure
that would bring about such a result.
The Nebraska City News howls vigor
ously about McKinley's program in
cluding a measure of this kind. It is
very remarkable that a bill to brine
about fair elections in any part of the
country should meet with such strong
opposition from people who make a
pretense of being fair and honorable.
The south has intimidated and
counted out the majority for so many
years that we doubt very much if Mc
Kiniey will interfere with what seems
to please the minority of the south
and a great many of the people of the
north. However, a new light seems to
be breaking upon the southern people
and they are fast growing ashamed of
their rotten election methods, so that
it looks as though in time the matter
would, be righted at home without the
interference of the national govern
ment. It could have been righted
long ago had the states in the north,
where fair elections are held, opposed
those unsavory southern methods in
stead of supporting them almost
unanimously through the northern
democratic press. We shall await the
dawn of the new era with unfeigned
pleasure when the southern conscience
is quickened, and an election in Mis
sissippi is as free and fair as an elec-
tion in Nebraska. or
TnE fact that McKinley's vote in
Texas is double that given to Harri
son in 1892 shows a gain in that state
which is highly encouraging to repub
licans. As was natural to expect, the
principal part of the gain is in cen
ters of intelligence and progress, says
the Globe-Democrat. The large towns
and the farming districts, where the
j standard of education and general en
lightenment are highest, all give
largely increased votes, as comrared
with previous elections, to the repub
lican party. Among the new repub
lican recruits are thousands of men of
character and standing who have
hitherto been prominent in demo
cratic councils. The bt ains of the old
democracy is coming over to the re
publican side, and as a consequence
the state's credit will be increased,
and it will have new attractions for
capital and settlers. The popocrutic
lead in the state was in the neighbor
hood of 125,000, but if that combina
tion of Blandism, Altgeldism and
Dobsism has enough life left in it to
make a canvass in 1000 Texas will be
a very doubtful state.
The Omaha World-Herald deplores
the alleged fact that the "organs of
the defeated party in Nebraska" are
criticising the original and invigor
ating method of the pop brethern in
distributing pie in public a month be
fore they come into the offices. Bless
the Woild-Herald's 60ul, there has
been no carping criticism. Nothing
but subdued enjoyment of the dra
matic entertainment has been indi
cated so far as the Journal has turned
over its exchanges. Deprived of their
old roles as star actors on the stage,
republican newspapers eit in the
boxes?, tne galleries and the pit as the
audience, and applaud every good hit
made by the new company. Let all
tall hats be taken off so that an unob
structed view of the play may be af
forded us. State Journal.
Mark Hanna has finally declared
himself in relation to cabinet posi
tions by stating that the only occupa
tion he knows anything about for cer
tain is farming- therefore the onlv
place in the cabinet which he feels
competent to fill would be the secre
taryship of agriculture. The farmers
during the last campaign and a great
many of them still imagined Mark
was a plutocrat, bearing some rela
tionship to Wall street. We are glad
even at this late day to show by his
own statement that the farmer's job is
the one he feels at home in.
,-HHtxPeffer got back to Kansas
after the ele ction he found the climate
was a little frigid and to restore him
self to circulation he revoked his re
cent declaration that he would not op
pose a republican revision of the tar
iff during the present session. He
says he will cheerfully fight every
thing that the republicans want. But
as the republicans have about given
uy uuiug aujr iuiOK J II IUB senatorial I
aeoaiing ciud oeioro next spring,
Peffer will not be called upon to worry
himself much about it before his term
expires. State Journal.
THE mathematical editor of the
State Journal has figured it out that
one-hftn of. one cent on the Drice
uluul cuiyiua i.u.-u viup ouiu pay on
the entire Nebraska state debt. e
nave Deen looKing at mis ueot through
Hid co.umnsox tne oopuiist newspapers
uum e uau come vo me conclusion
that . fearful VinrHAn ivne rnntlv roct. I
. j
ing upon me people oi Nebraska, and
we are glad to note how easily it can
be lifted.
One misfortune of the late election
seems to have been overlooked that
referring to the fact that Rainmaker
Wright, whoso party is in the ascen
dency now in this state, will be very
much in evidence all around trying
to find an office that will fit him
? right is one or the most tiresome
freaks that the populist party ever got
loaded up with, and their freak col
lection is not a small one, either.
Roast goose or roast beef is the I
central piece of an English, dinner,
yet when Ambassador Bayard dined
with the queen, as a matter of courtesy,
American roast turkey took the place
of the English dish. It is said that
Bayard was so overcome at seeing the
American dish and with the thought-
fulness of the queen that he fairly
went at the maffnifiwni-n nf natonH
e w p, u
rn.. . I
j.m. couniy commissioners were
v,i,i: .. s .
& imporiaub convention
n T .i n ml n fAGlorHgrr J-i t rr a ma nAl.l
j j- io uu
uujoiuis in iue state oi necessity so
weii-posieu on laws ana their delects
1 1 . -...- I
iccuiuiuenuauon irom mem lo the
eK.iaiureBuouia..nave great weight
ana receive serious consideration at
the hands of the law-making body.
The official canvass shows that Wis
consin eave McKinley 105,000 plurality.
And yet this state was one of the
"doubtful" ones, accordiner to Senator
Jones' bulletins. And so was Illinois,
with 137,000 and Iowa with 68,000 and
Minnesota with 51,000
P-uiauijr, i
Jones beats Brice as a rainbow chaser,
Fremont Tribune.
California has a
nnnliliitn t I
tauuiuure iur .1 I
government position in the person of
Juuge Way mi re oi San FrancUco. I
The judge may be all right, but his
name is against him. However, if
President McKinley is for him we
nereny waive ail objections on account
of name.
From a cursory glance at the presi
dent's message it is very evident that
he has not profited very much by his
four year's experience with free trade
low tariff.
Secretary Morton's recent re
port, that part of it relating to farm
mortgages, is interesting. It shows
that the statements of the populists
that the farms of the country are cov
ered with plasters is only imagina
tion. In point of fact 72 per cent of
the farms in the United States, occu
pied by their owners, are absolutely
free from mortgages or other incumb
rances, and a majority of the 23 per
cent of farmers whose farms are mort
gaged are solvent, are getting much
more benefit out of the money they
have borrowed than the rent they
paid for it in shape of interest. Lin
coln CalL
The worst public evil the people are
called upon to grapple with is the
combines known as trusts. They are
institutions of modern craft and are no
respecters of the government. Blaine
went to England for a study of that
country and when he returned he
reported England as being plastered
all over with trusts. These combina
tions of capital gather together for
the purpose of controlling the prices
on many of the necessaries of life and
must be checked as their greed seems
insatiate. How to do this best with
out losses to trade is and hue been a
very diffcult proposition.
Senator-Elect Dundus of Neaa
ha comes back at Church Howe in vig
orous fashion for giving away
the fact that he could not pay his
taxes. The feilow who, just now can
keep his taxes promptly paid up is
unquestionably a plutocrat.
INFORMATION anu opinions.
Some people think
That printers' ink
Won't smooth out business hitches;
But they who're wise
Will advertise
And pile up wads of riches.
Beatrice Express.
The crop of weather just now ripen-
ing is extra fine, but it will not bo re-
ceived on subscription at this otfi
ce
for more than bullion value.
Lincoln is getting ready for another
election. Primaries are being looked
after, aud the festive candidate is
much in evidence. The people up
there would die of ennui if they did
not have some sort of an election
every three months.
The Minneapolis Journal runs a
col umn headed, "If I Could Change."
A prize of $10 is offered to the one
who will best tell what he would do if
be could change. One woman would
like to be tho wife of a noble, loving
man. Someone with flattery in their
heart would like to be as popular as
the Journal. Some of the answers are
ludicrous, some are sensible, but most
of them show a decided yearnin
towards that $10. Ex.
iinst otusn ii iooks as 11 it was
how down f ir that Alton man to sell
nia wife to a St. Louis mntnrmnn fr.-
motorman
1U, but when it is considered sh
eloped three times with the motorman
before the sale was effected the price
seems high and extravagant. Ne
bi aska Citv Press.
The Lincoln Call tells an amusin
story about how a hungry item chaser
for the State Journal was mistaken
for a highwayman by a policeman wh
tried to hold him and he in turn sup
posing the policeman was a highway
man trying to hold him up; the resul
i l . ...
oi wuicu was mat the nowsnanerman
had such a frisrht that he ... nhi
to walk home
The work of foot pad
in Omaha and Lincoln is of such
frequent occurrence that "hold ups'
are naturally Jooked for in those
towns.
the Plattsmouth warriors who
started for Cuba several weeks aim
have not bean heard from. Thev
have probably been detainei in cros
sing the "irocha" at New Orleans.
Francis Hodson Burnett ond Amelia
Rives, two prominent European auth-
ors, ar now visiting this country. As
each of them had to throw her hus-
band overooard there is probably a
bond of close sympathy between tho
two. They are being entertained by
the literatea of the east,
turns out to be a fact that Presi-
dent Cleveland will reside at Prince
loa J., after the expiration of his
term of office
j u uittia in i no
world, or. rather. th smniuat r
bicycles, are owned hv Cn,,t m...i
' . . . ., u uu v i
. - . "
ol Uome, who gained fa inn smri
...II r . '
uuuiaiir.a iortuno. hv mrr,inn.A
widow of Tom Thumb. The en.mr
exactly thirty inches in height and
V. AO
romia timn tho,r r....-
Jiiiuiiiar
to Roman citizens, ridins? in a tinv
carriage drawn by two diminutive
j
Shetland ponies. The turnout was a
gift from Queen Victoria. The count
and his wife got the bicycle craze,and
gave an order for two machines to a
Boston firm of manufacturers. The
weight of the wheels is ten pounds
each, and the diameter of the front
and rear wheel is ten inrtho nn
1
mac nines cost nn p uh
built for rough work. It is no unusual
thin
" r wuui iu wneei. n i teen
or twenty miles, whir-h ia om.oi i
nnv milP-l hu
r . .
man of ordinary
stature
The freightmen on many of the east-
ern railways are now wearing uni
rorn! the same as passenger conduc
turs ana oreamen do here. The uni-
iuriu ou one oi tne roads is a comnletn
suit of brown corduroy, while another
has a pale violet colored corduroy
The engagement of Dr.
i aimage,
the crrAn.t. mil nit rrn t n . ; . . &
o . vi aim , .u ii iss ivian-
gum, his daughter's sister-in-law, is
announced. This will make the doc
tor the brother-in-law of his son-in-law
and the uncle of his grandchild
ren and otherwise complicate his
family relationships in a maze that
will take a Philadelpeia lawyer to
disentagle. For instance, if there are
any children from the new marringe,
they will be nephews and nieces of
their half sister, and their father will
be thei." great uncle also. Ex.
Pneumatic tubes will in a few weeks
perform the service of carrying letters
from the postoffice ia Philadelphia to
the two great railway stations in that
city, experiments between the main
postoffice and sub-station having
proved a success. "Who knows but
the time will come when passengers
as well as freight will be shot through
great underground and underwater
tubes as sraootrly and rapidly as the
piston slides in the cylinder of an en
gineV" says the Railway Age
1 he son of a German count, con
nected with the street cleaning de
p irtment in New York,very foolishly
shot himself through the head instead
of marrying a New York heiress,
In conversation with F. S. White
today in regard to the death of Miles
Morgan, Mr. White told The News
man that he first met Miles Morgan
in 18-37 out in the vicinity of Eight
Mile Grove. He had a voke or two of
cattle that had strayed away, and he
was out in the wilds of Eight Mile
Grove looking for them, when he met
Mr. While, who was coming to Platts-
mouth with a team, of course, from
salt LuKe City. 31r. Morgan did not
find his cattle that trip and accepted
Mr. While's invitation and rode into
town with him . He was, therefore,
the first Plattsmouthian or resident of
Cass county that Mr. White met.
The contracts for the state printing
was awarded yesterday, Lincoln firms
capturing the work, as follows: Jacob
North & Co., Woodruff-Dunlap Print-
ing company and the State Journal
'pk .v.- . i -j
company. lhere were thirteen bid-
.... lto uu
ders, including Omaha. Fremont, Be-
atriee and Kearney firms, but none of
the outsiders seemed to be as hungry
for work as did the Lincoln offices.
H. W. Rust of Cortland got mad and
stopped his paper, the Herald. Shortly
after this he gave a small party at his
residence, wrote up the affair in a
grandiloquent way and sent it to the
Herald to be published. Editor Wil
son made a note of tho circumstauces
here related and added that a man
who had withdrawn his financial sup
port from tho paper could not consist
ently a?k to be boomed socially by the
pap r. Rust got madder than ever
and pied the editor's form, whereupon
the editor had him arrested for as
sault, which cost him $10 and costs.
There are several large morals con
ceaiea in mis true story oi western
social life. Fremont Tribune
The crowd is gradually thinningout
in the lobby of the Lincoln. Last week
it was a difficult matter for a person
to make his way through the crowds
that were waiting patiently for the
fx T t i "' ,.T 1 e lDac
tl II m a t i-fc rlsivt nrwl . . a. . . a.
v,w ""ulu u mere wouiu
De
imploring looks for him to go give
s tree a gentle littlehake at least.
the
But now only a few are left, only the
few who never give up hope until the
last place is filled, but who sit about
with faces as woe-begone and forlorn-
looking us a prohibitionist in Milwau
kee. Lincoln News.
l our Uncle Dickey Bland is slam-
ming tho wheat through his thrasher,
and remarking anent the lat lln.
pleasantness or November 3. 'It
never pays to send a boy." Minne
apolis Journal.
T .11 T , .
"""'y-Jropper, wnat is the wire
nail trust?
Mr. rerry I don't know whether I
cm explain it to you exactly. Per
haps you had better ask your mother.
And also tell her, by the way, that
your poor father said he had hn
trusting nii t ..t ..
r " " o un iieu- i
der button for the past three days.
Cincinnati Enquirer
Take off the Horn
Ihc undersiened is now ready with
a good po table chute and tools, to re
move the weapons of horned cattle at
ie a ceu is per neaa. it never gets too
cold to dehorn cattle. Any time after
fly-time, until the'first week in April
is tne right time. After that it is too
late. If those who wish to have such
woriv uone win address me at Rock
Bluffs, eb., they will be promptly
answereu. s. T . piTi,rnv,i
Klieuiuatism Cured in a Day.
Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism
and
liiuicauv cures in
one to
. i -i
wn-ee uays. its action
upon
the ays-
tern is remarkable and mysterious. It
removes at one tv .n,.Q nn,i v,
removes at onc tv v,
disease immediately disaoDears Th
.--ww wus UM UU W U W I
h rat . 1 i .a. I
ud Kican v oeuems. a cpnta
Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists,
Plattsmouth. Nflh
Take Notice.
e are now prepared for tikin"-in
uorses and colts for pasturing by the
Wm. and A
A. Wktenkamp.
UisHolation of Partnership
notice is herebv
given that th
partnership heretofore existing hJ
'WUJ' ".ageandS.H. ShumnUr
n t 1 1T r-, I
uuuer me nrm name of Sage & Shu-
J A 1 . "
maKer, was this dav dissolved
by j
ujuiuii consent, ah v;n. a..
the
oldfirmarBhrroo
able to j. w.a.::::,; ?i.r.Li25and60cent Q by
the business at the old stand
r lattsmouth, Neb., Nov. 24, 1806
J. W. Sage.
S. IL SllUMAKER.
DeWitfs Colic & Cholera Cure.
PleaMnt, quick result, cafe to use.
William Morris and Music
Some idiot, says a writer in The Sat
urday Review, takes it on himself to as
sure the world that William Morris had
no musical sense. As a matter of fact,
he had a perfect ear, a most musical
singing voice, and so fine a sense of
beanty in sound (as in everything else)
that he could not endure the clatter of
the pianoforte or the squalling and
shouting of the average singer. When I
told him that the Amsterdam choir
brought over here by M. de Lange had
discovered the secret of the beauty of
mediaeval music and sang in with sur
passing excellence, he was full of regret
for having missed it, and the viol con
certs of M. Dolmetsch pleased him
greatly. Indeed, once during his ilness,
when M. Dolmetsch played him some
really beautiful music on a really beau
tiful instrument, he was quite overcome
by it.
I once urged him to revive the man
ufacture of musical instruments and
rescue us from the vulgar handsomeness
of the trade articles with which our or
chestras are equipped, and he was by
no means averse to the idea, having al
ways, he avowed, thought he should
like to make a good fiddle. Only neither
in music nor in anything else could you
engage him in any sort of intellectual
dilettantism. He would not waste his
time and energy on the curiosities and
fashions of art, but went straight to its
highest point in the direct and simple
production of beauty.
The Child of a Village,
All the scenes and atmosphere of one's
native village if one is fortunate
enngn o have been born in such a lo-
cality lie around the memory like the
horizon line, unreachable, impassable.
Even a socalled cosmopolitan man has
never seemed to me a very happy being.
and a cosmopolitan child is above all
things to be pitied. To be identified in
early memories with some limited and
therefore characteristic region that is
happiness. No child is old enough to be
a citizen of the world. What denatiou
alized Americans hasten to stamp as
provincial is, for children at least, a sav
ing grace. You do not call a nest pro
vincial. All this is particularly true of
those marked out by temperament for a
literary career. Literature needs for its
matea only men, nature and books,
aDd of hefe ,the first tw? are everv"
where and tbe last are easily transport-
Li -, -
able, since you can pile the few supreme
authors of the world in a little corner
of the smallest log cabin. The Cani-
bridge of my boyhood afforded me all
that human heart could ask for its ele
mentary training. Those who doubt it
might perchance have been tho gainers
if they had shared it. "He despises me,"
said Ben Jonson, "because I live in an
alley. Tell him his soul lives in an al
ley." uoionei l. w. iiigginson in
Atlantic.
Sladame's Quiet Answer.
It would not do to specify the restau
rant. It is enough to say that it happon
ed in a French restaurant well patron
ized by thoso whose French consists of
"garcon," "oui" and "demi-tasse."
The place was well filled, andmadame
at the receipt of custom was busy mak
ing change, smiling to the customers,
frowning deep French frowns, at the
waiters and Bhrngging her shoulders
and eyebrows at M. le Mari.
In a little lull a man, evidently an
habitue of the place, walked up to
madame. In one hand he held a plate.
in the other a napkin.
"Liookbere, madame," he began.
held them up for inspection. The pla i
was shining, but the napkin, where ho
had used it to wipe the plate, was
grimy, almost black.
Madame looked at him carelessly,
.If monsieur would wash his hands
before he came here," he said softly,
I with a shrug of her shoulders, "then
pair-haps"
But tne man had gone back to his
seat and ma3ae made change for some
one else. Philadelphia Ledger.
Guileless Loie Fuller.
Loie Fuller has never worn a corset
in all her life. Her figure is round,
oeautnui, nrm. lier gowns are fashion-
ed in the empire style, her hats are inl
I mense and beplumed. and her manners
are gracious and altogether delightful.
Her modesty is possibly her greatest
charm. She told the writer recentlv
x see posters aoout the street, and I
think Loie Duller must be someone
1 T ... - .
uiro. m. uou got ubcu iaj mo same part
01 mv Career. Ill Paria xehara T hwmo.
known, I was driven to the theater and
home again without knowing how I
was being talked about. One day I re-
quired some Pocket handkerchiefs, and
y motner ana I walked into a shop,
?ee mamma, i cried, 'there are Loie
u'n u - r t.i ...
Fuller handkerchiefs, and there are silks
named after that person too. I wonder
who can have my name.' It turned ont
that I was the namesake of all mantipr
of wearable articles of femininity."
JMew urieans Times-Democrat
A Story of Lord Amp thill.
The following story is told of the late
Lord AmpthilL When he was a junior
clerk iu tbe foreign office, Lord Palmer-
Bton, men roreign secretary, introduced
u .uuu.aouu nuerecy insieaa oi ftemi?
. . - C3'k.WJ .invb.l, 1W 1 , ' I.J I I. , ......
Duimiuij BuuiuiuueQ Dy a veroal mes
sage the clei ks were expected to answer
his bell. Some haughty spirits rebelled
against being treated like footmen and
tried to organize resistance, but Odo
Russell, as he then was, refused to join
the rebellious movement, savinsr that
wnaiever method apprised him most
quickly of Lord Palmerston's wishes
was the method which he preferred.
The aggrieved clerks rperarrtnri him o -
J-ne aggrieved clerks rperarrtnri Uim o -
. O v m 4U1 tW I
.traito to his order, but he died an em-
umwauui.
And She Went Quickly.
Mamma has iust cone across tho
street, ma'am," said the demure little
0-year-old to the caller.
Did she say when 6he'd be back?"
asked the lady.
icsm," as demurely as before.
"inoi n n n .. , . L 1 . . .
juov us ouuu iia juu uau gone, ma am.
St Paul Dispatch.
After heiring some friends continu
ally praising Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,
Curtis Fleck, of Anaheim, California,
purchased a bottle of it for his own
use and is now as enthusiastic over its
WUHUenui worK as anyone can be.
a r i i
Sold tbe Distillery.
The distillery at Nebraska City was
sold this morning for f 60,000 to chair
man Kenna of the reorganization
committee. It will therefore continue
in the hands of the trust.
iCv Fill Dl t
for Infants and Children.
THIStTY year oTnervatioa of Castoria with tho patronage of
millions of persona, permit ni to speak of it vrithont Rnesinq:.
It is nnqnestionably the best remedy for Infanta and Children
the world has ever hnown. It is harmless. Children like it. It
gives them health. It will save their lives. In it Mothers have
something which is absolutely safe and practically perfect as a
child's medicine.
Castoria destroys "Worms.
Castoria allays Feverishnesa.
Castoria prevents vomiting Sonr CnrdL
Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Collo.
Castoria relieves Teething Troubles.
Castoria onres Constipation and Flatulency.
Castoria neutralises the effects of carbonic acid gas or poisonous air.
Castoria does not contain, morphine, opium, or other narcotic property.
Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the utomach and bowels,
giving healthy and natural sleep.
Castoria is put up in evee-frizo bottles only. It i not sold in bulk.
Pon't allow any one to sell yon anything else on the plea or promise
that it is "just as good" and
See that yon pet C - A - S - T -
The fac-simile
signatnre of
Children Cry for
Careless NiniroiN.
John Bauman, while riding
jvlon;
the road near Patrick Roddy's place,
north of the city, yesterday, was slmt
in the face and his horse was shot in
several places by hunters who wcro
n the timber near tho road shooting
quail. A single shot struck .John in
the face to the right of the no.-.c and
just below the eye, and it was with
ditficulty that it was gotten out. It
was a narrow escape for him, for had
the shot struck a little higher ho
would have lost an eyo. II niters are
entiiely too careless in shootir.g while
out hunting and it is a wonder that
there are not more serious accidents
than there are. Nebraska City News,
The t'aite St-ttltMt.
The celebrated case of Henry Suck-
against the Missouri Pacili 2, i ailroad
was called in Judge Hall's court in
Lincoln yesterday, a jury impaneled.
and then the case was settled bv the
plaintiff accepting $750 and signing a
receipt in full for all damnges. On
Christmas eve, 1801. Steele c; mu in
from the South on the Missouri Pacif
ic, having a live turkej- in his posses
sion. He had been drinking quite
freely and when the train stopped at
depot he did not get off, but rode
as far as Sixth. He then attempted to
get off.but fell under the cars and had
both legs cut off. lie wanted $i,000,
but compromised for $760. John 'J.
Watson and J. W. Orr appeared for
the company. Nebraska City News.
Colonel Kroelilrr'M Kooster.
In Plattsmouth one beholds on en
tering the town a w'eather vane re
presenting a large sized rooster and
underneath is painted the names
Bryan and Sewall. Tho only thing
that prevents tho rooster coming off
the perch is the old colonel who put it
there refuses to cut tho rivets. Ne
braska City Press.
lAt of I.lttrs.
remaining uncalled lor at tho po
office at Plattsmouth. Dec. !). lfs;0:
I '
I Buckles, Win liuyder. Miss lotuinnah
I 1-ong. lienry Leonard. 1) W
Powell, Chas Peacock, (.'has
When calling for any of tho above'
letters please say "advertised."
W, K. Fox, P. M
Soup
The pop editors and the fanneisi
were the main body of the lighting
force th it won the battle in this state.
How mjch will they get out of it?
Nebraska Independent
HoinP8M'k"rs Kxruntion
For the above occasion the B
; i i i t t . - i
will sen ucKeis on iov. anu n.
7, Dec.
ad 15 for one fare for the round trip
plus $2 to points in the following tern
tory: Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado,
Snntt, n.,Lii, w, ..i.i,r riv,,,,n
Arkansas, Indian territory, Louisiana,
New Mexico, Oklahoma iind Texas.
The minriimutn c'unrgo will not be
less than $7.
How to lure ICilioim Colic.
I suffered for weeks with colic and
pains in rav stomach caused by bihous-
De8s and had ,md to taKc m
the while until I used Chan
dicino all
ine while until 1 used Chamberlain
Collc. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy
which cured me.
mended it to a
l nave since recom-
good many people.
Mrs. F. Butler,
Fairhaven, Conn
Persons who aro
subject to bilious
colic can ward off tho attack by takin;
mis rcmeay as 6c on as the hi et
symptoms apueur. Sold by all drug
gists.
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
That is what it was made for.
Home Seekers' Excursion.
Tv, n .
.mo luifwun x aciiic railway com
pany will soil tickets at rate of one
fare plus $2 for round trip September
1, lo, 29, and October 0 to t-'O, to anv
point in Kansas, Missouri, Texas, Ok-
alahoma and Louisana.
C. F. Stoutenhorouoii, A;'t.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castoria.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castoria.
Jiirpose."
O - R - I - A.
i on every
wrapper.
Pitcher's Castoria.
Comfort to t Hlif ornlit.
Every Thursday morning, a tourist
sleeping car fur Salt Lako City, San
Francisco and I.-i Angeles leaves
Omaha and Lincoln via tho Burling
ton Route.
It is carpeted; upholstered in rat
tan; has spring s?ats and lac'csand is
provided with curtains, bedding,
towels, soap, etc. An experienced
excursion conductor and a uniformed
Pullman porter accompany it through
to the Pacific Coast.
While neither as expensively
finished nor as line to look nt a
palace sleeper, it is just as good to
rido in. Second class tickets aro
hfnii-red and the pr'co of a berth,
witle enough and lig enough for two,
is only $").
For a fouler giving full p i rticulars,
call at iha nearest 11 .& M. R. R. R.
ticket office. Or, write to J. Francis,
Cen'1. I'ass'r. Agent, Burlington
Route, Omaha, Neb.
The Tol.-.lo Weekly Hla.lo.
Every intelligent family need- in
addition to their IoohI paper, a good
national weekly. The greatest and
most widely known general family
newspaper is the Toledo Weekly
Blade. For thii ty years it has been
a regular visitor in every part of the
union, and is well known at almost
every one of tho 70,000 poslollieos in
the country. It is edited with refer
ence to a national circulation. It is a
republican paper, but men of ail poli
tics take it, because of its hones-ty and
fairness in the discussion of all public
questions. It is the favorite family
paper, with something for every mem
ber of the household. Si rial stories,
poetry, wit and humor; tho household
department (best in the vo: Id ), young
folks. Sunday school lessons', Talmage's
sermons, the farmstead, tho question
bureau (which answers questions for
subscribers), the news of tho week n
complete form, and other special
features. Specimen copies gladly sent
on application, and if you will send us
a list of addrcsM's, wo will s -nd each
a copy. Only si a year. If you wish
to raise a club, wi ite for terms.
Address Til j: lil.ADi:,
Toledo, Ohio,
Co to Bob
abstracts of
liuil'ling.
rt .1.
title.
Vass for
Office in
rel iablo
Briggn
People fiiul just the help they so much
need, in Hood's Sarsaparilla. It fur
nishes the desired strength by puri
fying, vitalizing; and enriching; the
blood, ami thtis builds wp the nerve.-,
tones the ptomach and regulates the
wliole pvstem. Read tills:
"I want fro praise Hood's Sarsaparilla.
My health run down, end I had the grip.
After that, my heart and nervous system
were badly affected, so that I could not do
my own work. Our physician pave mo
some help, but did not cure. I decided
to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. Soon I could
do all my own housework. I have taken
Hood's Tills with Hood's Sarsaparilla,
and they have done me much good. I
will not be without them. I have taken 13
bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and through
the blessing of God, it has cured me.
I worked as bard, as ever the past Bum
mer, and I cm thankful to suy I am
well. Hood's Pills when taken with
Hood's Sarsaparilla help very muefc."
Mks. M. M. Mkssexger, Freehold, Penn.
This and many other cures prove that
n n
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All drugpfstj. !.
Prepared only hy C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell. Ms.
m-w . w-ff act easily, promptly and
flOOdS PlIIS effectlvel. 25 cents.
"will answer every ;
7