Semi-weekly news-herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1895-1909, April 07, 1897, Image 2

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    THE SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS-HERALD, PLATTSMOUTH, NEB., APRIL 7, 1897.
A
Tns Semi-Wceklu News-Herald
PUBLISHED WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS
BY THE
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY,
M. D. POLK, EDITOR.
DAILY EDITION.
One. Year, in advance il f 5
Six Months 2 50
tne Week, J0
Single Copies, 5
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION.
One Year, in advance,
Six Months, 50
THF
LARGEST CIRCULATION
Of any Cass County Paper.
Japan is making rnpid strides to
ward 'a higher civilization by the
adoption of the gold standard. The
Hryan party will now have to be
classed only with China and Mexico.
Col. Fred Grant has been ten
dered the position of assistant secre
tary of war, a most excellent selec
tion in line with the superior judg
ment which McKinley has 6howi in
all his selections of public servants.
TnE popocratic reformers at Lincoln
kill a female suffrage bill every few
days. Wo thought woman suffrage
was one of the original reform meas
ures that was entitled to a free right
of way, but it seems otherwise.
Fred Grant has declined the posi
tion of assistant secretary of war with
its $5,000 salary and emoluments. It
looks like McKinley would have to
tender the place to a newspaper man
they never decline anything that
has a salarv attachment.
The silverites never say anything
more about wheat. The wheat argu
ment is one that went threadbare
when that old plutocrat Mark Hanna
ran it up to $1 per bushel where it has
consistently remained on the seaboard
markets ever since. The boys must
talk corn now, and one of these days
Mark will give the corn a boost and
then the popocrats will die of disor
dered livers.
Hon. A. S. Cooley will be appoin
ted deputy United States marshal to
day. He leaves one of the best farms
in western Cass and we fear makes a
great mistake in accepting a position
that other deputy marshals' tell us is
not worth over $50 per month. A good
Cass county farm beats that sort of a
job out of sight, and Alf will agree
with us before he holds office a year.
senator Tillman, who has just
visited the V hite bouse for the first
time since 1893, says there is more
true "Qeiuw,iu,j ut PrADi'dnnt
McKinley than there was about his
immediate predecessor. He is prob
ably right. This administration is re
publican and democratic in the correct
sense, and persons of all parties are
finding this out. The present presi
dent is likely to become personally as
popular as any occupant of the White
house since the war. Ex.
The Broatch crowd were hopelesly
routed at the Omaha primaries yester
day, but to tho disgrace of the city
no man of character and prominence
seems likely to get the nomination. It
looks asthough tho time was coming
when the honest country folk would
have to take a hand in selecting city
officers. The rings and combines have
grown so strong that municipal offi
cers seem to be little else of late than
public plunderers. There. must be a
halt somewhere on taxes will get so
high that cities can no longer bear up
under the excessive burdens.
TjfE ab sbc i a ted press reported yes
terday that Consul General Lee
would be replaced, to the surprise of
republicans, who understood that his
thorough American policy and watch
fulness of our interests had endeared
him to President McKinley. The re
port is emphatically denied today in a
telegram from Washington which
reads as follows: "The state depart
ment declares that Counsel-General
Lee has not been granted a leave of
absence to take effect April 15, as
published, or any other date. General
Lee has not asked for leave, and no
action looking to bis relief at Havana
or to the acceptance of his resigna
tion has been taken."
A GREAT deal of ink was wasted in
condemnation of Cbas. Mosher who
only got a five yeara terra in the peni
tentiary. The biggest thief who ever
operated in Nebraska is Joe Bartley
and he is today at large on a bond for
a few thousand dollars. A fifty years
sentence to hard labor in the etate
penitentiary would be light punish
ment for this arch conspirator, and
the sooner he gets his deserts the
better it will be for the credit of Ne
braska. The talk about populist des
truction of state credit is all very well
so far as it goes, but the unpunished
actions of such men as Bartiey and
Moore is inestimably worse than the
combined legislation of all the wildest
pops in the land. Not only the state,
but the people of the whole country
are looking at this Bartley matter and
serious hardships will follow if it is
shown our courts are two rotten to
properly try and mete out adequate
punishment to this boss criminal of
the country. The republican state
central committee should meet and
take decisive action looking to the
prosecution of Bartley and Moore.
It would be good sense, good politics,
and common decency demands im
mediate action.
Insure In the German American.
Fred Eblnger, Agent.
INFORMATION AND OPINIONS.
Byron Clurk and C. A. Rawls won a
signal victory before a jury in the
Archer cise Saturday, tried in dis
trict court. Mrs. Archer was ably
represented by E. H. Wooley and J.
S. Mathews, who sued the bondsmen
of several saloon keepers here for $10,
0G0 damages alleged to have been
suffered by the selling of liquor to
her husband. The rase was so well
managed by the defendants' attorneys,
Messrs. Clark and Rawls, that the
jury was out but ten minutes, when it
brought in a verdict for the defend
ants. Col. Cutrighl's zeal lu the cause of
reform does not appear to bave
flagged an iota since the governor
failed, neglected and declined to re
ward his services by an appointment
on the fire and police board. - Col.
Cutright'p long service in the news
paper business has taught him that
resignation that becometh a man
much more than official honors with
cigar-money attachment. Lincoln
News.
j
Florida's orange crop this season is
computed at 400,000 boxes, which at
$4 a box, would yield 1,600.000. Ne
braska's hen fruit for the same year
will more than match the Florida
orange crop in value and our hens
have not been overworked the past
year, either. Omaha Bee.
Governor Ilolcomb has issued the
Arbor day proclamation designating
Thursday, April 22, as the day set
aside for the planting of trees
The German Emperor has stirred
up France into a proposition to build
forty five new battleships. Mr. Glad
stone remarked recently that the
Kaiser's exhibitions of judgment and
experience always create consterna
tion, and, it might be added, chiefly
among bis own subjects. Ex.
Van Court & Lemist received an or
der last week from the Missouri Paci
fic company for twenty-five car loads
of stone for riprapping, with a pros
pect for a much larger order. Ne
hawka Register.
Fort Arthur.
The following item . from the Port
Arthur Herald shows that the new
town must be a varitable Arcadia:
As fine oysters as are produced any
where in the world are sold on the
wharf at Port Arthur for 40 cents per
100, opened. Eleven kinds of edible
fish are found in the waters of the Sa
bine. Among these are the finest fish
known, such as red snappers, sea trout
and pom pa no. Before the summer is
out this will be the centre of a laree
fishing fleet that will supply us with
Lenten fare at the lowest prce and a
large surplus will De suipa to Kan
sas City. The prairies about the town
are alive with quail and snipe and i na
me nee numbers of geese and d ucks find
feeding grounds on the gulf a few
miles away. Strawberries raised right
here in Jefferson county are selling for
15 cents a quart. We are having home
grown radishes, onions, lettuce and to
matoes on the bountiful table of the Sa
bine every day. Think of it, ye dwel
lers of the frozen north, where you are
still running your furnace. When sum
mer comes we shall stll have the ad
vantage of you, for the gulf breeze
tempers our heat while you are swelt
ering. Nowhere is there a climate
more nearly perfect the year round,
nowhere such a combination of re
sources of earth, air and water as the
gu' f coast of Texas possesses, and the
world is beginning to realiO-ilr-""'
AlasfcSu uoillng Sulphur Spring.
JI.bMA, Wash., March 29. Dr,
Spencer Harris, of Circle City,
Alaska, reports the discovery of an
immense boiling sulphur spring near
the Arctic Circle, seventy miles from
Circle City. The discovery was made
by a party of gold miners who were
looking for claims. At the time the
discovery was made the thermometer
registered 46 degrees below zero.
Surrounding the spriners are immense
deposits of solid brimstone, and in the
samo vicinity a mastodon tooth, per
fectly preserved and weighing four
teen pounds, has been found. The
enamel on the tooth has not been
broken and is perfect in every way.
The boiling sulphur water bubbles up
out of the ground, furnishing warmth
to those who approach . near
it. All about the springs the ground
is frozen and never thaws under the
covering of Alaska moss, even during
the summer time. The big mastodon
tooth was presented to Dr. Harris by
H. G. Bettig, the finder.
Know Lies Deep In Wyoming. '
Casper, Wyo., April 2. The great
est average depth of snow ever seen in
this country is now on the ground. It
commenced to snow last Tuesday from
the northeast and has kept it up and
at this writing is still snowing. In
town the snow is about two feet on the
level. So tar as heard from no great
loss of sheep has occurred, but if the
weather does not change in the next
twenty-four hours the loss Will be con
siderable. The present storm is with
out wind. This is an unheard of thing
in this country. A report has just
reached here that an inexperienced
sheep herder, in the employ of John
Thorn & Co., is lost. He has not been
seen since last Tuesday. The storm
seems to be general. Every sheep
owner is anxions and unless there is a
change soon the loss will be fearful.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Caotorlc
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Caotorla.
INTER ESTIXU "WAGE EARXEUS."
Some Who Are Willing to" Wear the Yoke"
And Be Regarded As ''Hired Men."
Millionaires have a pleasing habit
when they are advising other folks
about accumulating riches to tellthein
to get the first thousand, go into busi
nest for themselves, and then all will
be plain sailing, says the Washington
Post. Particular stress is laid on the
fact that every man should get into
business for himself as soon as possible.
It is pointed out that the man who
works on a salary and is the slave of
other folks oan never amount to
much.
This appeals strongly to the small
boy who is just beginning to face the
chilliness of a -cold world on a salary
of $2 per week. Quite naturally ho
doesn't s-ee much of the luxurious in
a salaried job, aud he regards the ad
vise of the millionaire as nuggets of
golden wisdom.
Yet a glance at some of tho salaried
men of New York throws a halo of
fiction about these alleged nuggets.
Many of them have never done any
thing but work on a salary, yet they
live in b'ifth avenue; they maintain
magnificent country homes; they go
sailing about in steam yachts; keep
fine horses and a box at the opera; the
diamonds of their wives dazzle the
sun in btilliancy; they eat $10 lunches
in the middle of the day and smoke
cigars that cost $1.25 each; they in
vest a neat pile each year in gilt
edged Wall street securities,and each
one of them could buy and sell a hun
dred ordinary men who are in busi
ness for themselves. What is more,
these business owners tuckle to these
salaried men financially, socially and
commercially.
Yet the millionaire says: "Go into
busiuess for yourself."
Recently considerable attention was
given by the public to John E. Par
sons by reason of the legislative in
vestigation of the sugar trust. Mr.
Parsons is a lawyer, but instead of
looking up miscellaneous clients he
gives all of his time to the sugar trust
for a certain salary, said to bo $50,000
a year. When the sugar trust was in
the process of formation Mr. Parsons
did the work of merging the different
refineries into the one big concern,
and for this he received a fee of $i50,
000. This, by the way, is credited
with being the largest sum ever paid
to a lawyer for a single piece of legal
work. If Mr. Parsons had refused to
enter the service of the sugar trust it
is a question whether his earnings
would be as much as the salary he
draws.
Another shining example of the
beauty of the salary system is. that
ever notable gentleman, Chauneey
Mitchell Depew. As pretty nearly
every one knows Mr. Depew is cred
ited with receiving twice as much as
the citizeps of the United States pay
their president. Mr. Depew is pro
fessionally a lawyer, but it is a ques
tion whether he could make $100,000
a year defending people and claims in
court. He labored at litigatiou for a
time, but he never made one-tenth of
the sum he earns by working for the
Vanderbilts. Moieover, his associa
tion with that august family has af
forded him many opportunities for
making money in numerous direc
tions. Ihen there is John A McCali, presi
dent of one of the large life insurance
companies. lie has never embarked in
a single business enterprise on hisown
account, but he is earning $50,000 a
year now. Thirty years ago he began
his tussle with the world as clerk in
the assorting house for state currency
at Albany, N. Y. H.e received $00 a
month and esteemed himself excep
tionally lucky. Then he filled various
other clerkships and finally became
suoerin tendent of the Stale Insurance
Department. Later he became identi
fied with different inauranco compan
ies, and five years a;o he secured his
present $50,000 a your job.
Dr. John Hall, of course, can not be
regarded as a money-maker, but never
theless he earns considerable in the
year. As the minister of the richest
congregation in New York he receives
a salary of $30,000 a year, but this does
not represent all of his eainings.
Whenever be ties the nuptial knot for
any of his parishioners he receives a
handsome fee, varying from $50 to
$1,000. Then there are christenings
galore, and these add considerable to
the ministerial income. This total in
come has been estimated to be between
$40,000 and $50,000 a year.
Joseph H. Choate 'can not be strict
ly called a salaried man, yet he en
tered the law firm of which he is now
the leading active member, as a clerk
and gradually rose, step by step, to a
partnership. Mr. Choate's earnings
are probably greater than any other
man's in the country. It is said that e
receives $250,000 a year, which is as
great as the income of the five-time
millionaire. Yet he was willing to re
linquish this to go to Washington as
United States senator at a salary oj
about one-fiftieth of that sum. .
Fred Taral,the jockey, like all other
jockeys, will, when ho becomes too
heavy to ride, become the owner of a
racing stable and follow the turf on
his own hook. This is the ambition of
most jockeys, yet it will be something
short of a miracle if Taral maKes one
half the money he mikes now. His
earnings in good years have amounted
to as much as $40,000. But few race
horse owners can show a balance as
large as that on the right side of the
books at the end of the year.
There are perhaps 2,000 men in
the city who receive salaries of $25,
000 a year and over, and it would
take more than the unsupported
word of a successful millionaire to
induce any of them to give up their
jobs and embark in business for
the nisei ves.
Farm loans T. H. Pollock.
WHEN THE COOK LEFT
MRS. NOOLIWEDDE HAD A HEART
BREAKING EXPERIENCE.
like a Good Housewife, She Prepared
Luncheon, bat It Put a Bad Taste la
George's Month While He Was Gone to
the Drag Store Old Friends Called.
She was in tears, and her dearest
friend sought to comfort her.
' "What is it?" she asked. "Has some
body given a reception and slighted you
jnst when you have a new gown? Or
have you the invitation and not the
gown?"
"N-neither. Oh, it is something per
fectly awful!"
"H'm! I suppose, then, your husband
has betn treating you badly. Well! as
long as he has you might relieve your
mind by telling me all about it"
"He hasn't either I'd just like to see
him try it! No; the the c-cook is
gone!"
"Pshaw! Is that all? Well, don't cry.
I'll stay and help you. Let me see, I
used to make a lovely omelet at school.
It was cooked in a dustpan. Oh, do let
us give a dinner party! Hasn't George
some nice friends whom he might ask?"
"Ye-es, he he has. I wish I had never
seen any of them ! I wish I had put off
the wedding a year! I wish I had let
George's old maid aunt come to live
with us!"
The visitor looked alarmed. Yon
haven't any fever, have you, dear? And
does your head feel quite right?"
"No, it doesn't. Get me another
hand-handkerchief, and I'll tell you all
about it. Just look at me, will you, and
tell me what I look like. "
"I'd rather not, dear. You might not
like it. I I suppose you have been try
ing to clean the soot out of the kitchen
Chimney, haven't you?"
"No, but I've been trying to cook
luncheon. George said he didn't feel
quite well after it was over, and he
went over to the the drug store to get
something to take a queer taste out of
his mouth. I don't see why he need act
that way when I had the loveliest roses
on the table and other things too!"
"Well, don't be low spirited. We'll
manage dinner, and there are lots of in
telligence offices in town. We can buy
things ready cooked too."
"I I don't care. I just don't care for
anything. I can never hold up my head
again as long as I live."
"You don't mean to say that George
took too much of something to take the
queer taste out of his mouth?"
"Of course I don't mean anything of
the kind, and you are not a true friend
or you'd never suggest such a thing. I
cried a little after he went out, aud I
must have got some soot on my face and
rubbed it in. Just then the doorbell
rang, and, thinking the cook had per
haps relented and returned, I ran to an
swer it. It was not the cook, and, oh,
Laura, who do you think it was?"
"I don't know. Your mother-in-law
perhaps. "
"I wish it had been my mother-in-law.
She can cook. No; it was that hor
rid girl George used to be engaged to
before he ever knew me. I never met
her, but I recognized her from her photo
graphs." 'If you never met her, how do you
know she is horrid?"
"Humph! Any girl who could not
get along with George must be horrid.
Besides he has no taste at all I can
never see a trace of beauty in the wom
en he calls pretty."
' But tell me about opening the door. "
"Oh, when I came face to face with
her I thought I should die ! Her husband
was with her. Neither of them of course
knew me, and"
"I should think not, if you looked as
you do now. How did you manage to
tear your gown so?"
"Caught it on a naiL They both
smiled when they saw me and asked if
Mrs. Nooliwedde was at home. I saw
they thought I was the maid, and, as
suming a brogue you know I was al
ways good at amateur theatricals I
said: 'Faith, and that she is not Who
shall I say was afther askin for her?' "
"Oh, you clever girl! Why, I should
never have thought of such a thing not
in a thousand years."
"Yes, wasn't it clever? But while
she was taking out cards and expressing
regrets I beard George come in the back
way. In my agony lest he come out and
betray me, I ran back to the dining
room door, but before I could stop him
he cried out, 'What is it darling?' "
"You don't say so! Did they hear
him, and what" -
"I caught a look of frozen horror on
their faces as they turned and fled down
the steps. Oh, I thought I should just
die, and I I wish I had."
"But perhaps, after all, they really
thought you were the housemaid."
" George says he he hopes not for
in that case what would they think of
hiia for c-calling me 'darling?' "
And there was a sound of weeping in
the room. Elisa Armstrong in New
York Journal.
Mary Seymour Howell.
Mrs. Mary Seymour Howell, who is
far from well, made an eloquent speech
at the recent county convention of suf
frage clubs held at Dansville, N. Y.
The Dansville Advertiser says: "Mrs.
Howell's address could not have been
more earnest, more eloquent, more pen
etrating and convincing had it been her
farewell talk on earth, and it seemed to
have something of that impressive qual
ity. Her hearers can never forget it, nor
cease to be influenced by it, for her
whole strength, body and soul, seemed
to plead for justice to women. "
Taste.
"Who is that young woman near the
other end of the table who has been
talking about correct taste in art?"
"Which young woman? There are
several." .
"The one with the wooden'tootbpiek
in her mouth. " Chicago Tribune.
Dr. Marshall, Graduate Dentist.
Dr. Marshall, fine gold work.
Dr. Marshall, gold and porcelain
crowns.
Dr. Marshall, crown and bridge work
Dr. Marshall, teeth without plates.
Dr. Marshall, alt kinds of fillings.
Dr. Marshall, all kinds of plates.
Dr. Marshall, perfect fitting plates.
Dr. Marshall, all work warranted.
All the latest anoliances for first
class dental work.
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
That is what it was saads for.
CLEAN PARIS KITCHENS.
Ko Ashes or Garhage There, Says lecturer
Clarenoe Cook. .
What becomes of the ashes and gar
bage in Paris was a question raised and
partially answered by Clarence Cook in
an address delivered at the regular meet
ing of the League For Political Educa
tion on "Little Housekeeping In Paris."
The Paris which Mr. Cook talked
about was that of some 25 years ago,
when the differences in domestio life in
that city and this were much greater
than at present Since then New York
has adopted the flat system in all its de
tails, but there were still differences,
chief among which was the handling of
garbage and ashes. In the apartments
which Mr. Cook occupied in Paris, and
which he described as being delightful
ly situated, though "on the wrong side
of the Seine," according to the ideas of
a fashionable friend of his in the Amer
ican colony, there were no ashes that he
could The stove consisted of an iron
top, with six circular holes in it When
ever anything was to be cooked an iron
basket of charcoal was put into one of
these holes, and the food placed over it
When the charcoal was burned, what
was left fell through the basket and dis
appeared.
In the way of food everything came
to the apartment fully prepared for
cooking. In a mutton chop the.re was
nothing but meat and bone, and when
the meat had been eaten the bone was
deposited on the charcoal fire. Potatoes
were bought already peeled, carrots
without their green tops and all green
vegetables without any of the supernu
ous outer leaves or husks or skins which
would go to make up garbage. All of
this cleaning and peeling was done at
the markets, and the resulting material
was saved in a clean condition. Even
coffee grounds, Mr. Cook said, were
nsed after leaving the fiat
No one in Paris ever bought enough
of anything to be left over, aud no one
was ashamed to ask the dealer for a sin
gle mutton chop or a small portion of
any article of food. If tltcra were any
crarbaee or ashes in Paris. Mr. Cook
said, no one ever saw either of them,
which was certainly different from the
experience of a New York woman he
told of, who after a year's residence in
the city wrote to a friend that life in the
metropolis meant the taking care of an
ash barrel. New York Times.
ATTAR OF ROSES.
How This Delicious and Kxpenslre Per
fume Is Made.
The word "attar" is from the'Arab
"itr," and means perfume. So attar of
roses is simply perfume of roses. It is
brought from Turkey and the East In
dies in small vials and is very costly.
Even on the spot where it is manufac
tured it is extremely dear, because it
requires 100,000 well grown roses to
yield but 1 80 grains of attar.
Its high price causes it to be often
adulterated with some essential or fixed
oil or with spermaceti. However, the
adulteration may.be detected by testing
it in a watch glass with a drop of sul
phuric acid. If the attar be pure it will
remain colcrlcss, for pure attar cf rosea
is colorless, but if it be adulterated it
will become darkened.
In rosefields, where the roses are
grown for the purpose of making the
attar, the bushes are planted in rows.
In the early morning they are laden
with beautiful roses, but ere noou comes
they are all gathered and their petals
distilled in clay stills, with twice their
weight of water.
The water that "comes over" is put
into perfectly clean vessels and is then
carefully covered with damp muslin
cloths to keep out dust and insects. It
is afterward exposed to the night air or
to artificial cold. By morning a film of
oil has collected on the top of the water,
just as cream rises on milk. This film
is swept off with a feather and very
carefully transferred to a small vial.
Night after night this process is repeated
until, all of the precious oil is separated
from the water. Philadelphia Times.
The Largest Poultry Farm.
Farm Poultry says that Isaac Wilbur
of Little Compton, R. L, has the largest
poultry farm in the world. He ships
from 130,000 to 150,000 dozen of eggs
a year. He keeps his fowls on the col
ony plan, housing about 40 in a house 8
by 10 or 8 by 12 feet in size, these
houses being about 150 feet apart, set
out in long lows over the gently sloping
fields. He has 100 of these houses, scat
tered over three or four fields. The food
is loaded into a low wagon, which is
driven about to each house in turn, the
attendant feeding as he goes. At the
afternoon feeding the eggs are collected.
The fowls are fed twice a day. The
morning food is a mash of cooked vege
tables and mixed meals. This mash is
made up the afternoon of the day before.
The afternoon feed is whole corn the
year round.
New York Chess Women.
The Women's Chess club of New York
is regarded with much interest as it is
the first incorporated chess club started
for women in this country. The incor
porators are Miss Eliza Campbell Foot,
Miss Jean L. Nesbit, Miss Emily Som
era Haines, Mrs. Winthrop Parker and
Miss Sophie Downer. The chess season
begins the first Tuesday in November
and ends the last Tuesday in April, 26
meetings being held during the season.
Altogether the idea of a woman's chess
club has proved most successful. The
membership is not large, as compara
tively few women play the game, but
the club is growing. New York Sun.
In the library of Lambeth palace there
is the shell of a tortoise which was
brought there in 1623 and which lived
until 1730. Another, in Fulham palace,
procured by Bishop Laud in 1628, died
in 1753, and one at Peterborough lived
220 years.
In proportion to its cize Britain has
eight times as many miles of railway as
the United States.
Eckerson Succeeds Joel West.
Creston, la., April 2. The pro
motion of Master Mechanic C. W. Eck
erson of Beardstown, I1L. to succeed
the late Joel West at Burlington gives
the many friends of that gentleman in
this city the highest satisfaction. Mr.
Eckerpon was master mechanic at this
point for several years. Mr. Edward
Button, round house foreman at Cres
ton, fucceeds Mr. Deems of Ottumwa
as master mechanic. He is an able
man.
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S25C
for Infants
HIRTY year observation of Castova with the. patrrms ge of
millions of persons, permit tis to speak of It witaont guessing.
It is unquestionably the best remedy for Infants and Children
the world has ever known. 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 si a
child's medicine.
Castoria destroys "Worms.
Castoria allay freveriwhncss.
Castoria prevents vomiting Sotir Card.
Castoria cures Dlarrhoaa and Wind Collo.
Castoria relieves Teething Troubles.
Castoria cures Constipation and flatulency.
Castoria neutralises tho effects of carbonic add gas or poisonous air.
Castoria does not contain morphine, opium, or other narcotic property.
Castoria assimilates tho food, regnlates the stomachand1owelst
giving health y and natnral sleep.
Castoria Is pnt sp In one-size bottles only. It Is not sold In hulk.
Don't allow any one to sell yon anything else on th e plea or promise)
that it is "Jnst as good and " will answer every purpose.
Sea that yon pet C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A .
The fa-c -simile
signature of
Children Cry for
PEARL
THE OLD RELIABLE
DEALER IN
TORE
Has a larger stock than ever which must be
sold and he has made prices that will sell the
goods.
FOR.
PRESENTS
Nothing is nicer than an Easy Chair, an ele
gant Picture; or a convenient Writing Desk.
Pearlman has them to
thing to it.
He has the sole agency for the best Stove
on earth, the
"GOLD
in all sizes and designs. No other house in
Cass county carries half so large a stock and
none can compete on
for his goods.
YOU ARE...
Specially
to call and see our splendid stock and get
prices. No trouble to show good. Remem
ber the place.
I. PEARLMAN,
Opp. Court House.
Then Baby was rick, wt rve her Castoria.
When she vas s CSUld, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Was, she chm to Castoria,
Vhen shs had Children, she gare them Castoria
,BBS - TJ
-H4
and Children.
4. n ...r
wrapper.
Pitcher's Castoria.
give away or next
COIN"
prices, as he pays cash
Invited
Plattsmouth, Neb.
JuULnM
7
MAN
STOVES
(Kheninatism Cured In a Day.
"Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and
A'turalgia radically cures in one to
; three days. Its action upon the oys
jtem la remarkable and mysterious. It
removes at onco tho cause crd the
disease immediately disappears. The
first dose greatly benefits, 75 cents.
Sold by P. G. Fricke & Co., druggists,
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