THE SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS-HERALD, PL ATTSMO UTH, NEB., JUNE 26.1897 TtieSeml-Weeklu News-Herald PUBLISHED WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS BY TH& NETS PUBLISHING COMPANY, M. D. POLK, EDITOR. DAILY KDITION. One Year, in advance, ..... Six Months, 2 ne Week, Single Copies, . 00 50 10 5 SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION One Year, in advance, . . . Six Months, tl 00 50 LARGEST CIRCULATION Of any Cass County Paper. - The queen's jubilee continues to monopolize the entire time of every body in Loudon. It will continue for ooe week. Dk. Armstrong of the feeble minded institute at Beatrice, is said to be a defaulter. If true, we hope he will be made to follow Hartley to the pen at a rapid pace. J. G. TATK seems to have a graft with the A. O. U. VV. that's a stayer. It took years to pry him loose from his bold in the state grand lodge, and now he is appointed supreme grand lodge lecturer by that body. Philanthropist Baktley is 6till languishing in the Douglas county jail in the Bahwick of Judge Baker. Its little wonder that Bartley and his counsel were anxious to try the case in Lancaster county, where lawbreak ers If they have pleDty of wealth are allowed to go free County Attorney Baldridge of Omaha, who is prosecuting Bartley, is a republican, and Baker, the judge who is trying tne case, is a republican. To date nobody can be found who will claim there is any'republi- can conspiracy on the part of these officials to make a farce of the trial. Ex. The office of county superintendent. it seems, will not go begging this fall huDerintendent Farley will be a can didate for re-election, backed by a record to be proud of, and A. H Bushnell of South Bend precinct and Mr. Morrison of the west end, both successful teachers, will also be in the convention with an eye turned toward the coveted position. Mrs. Annie Besant, tbe present maternal relative of theosopby, has been preaching the doctrine of re-in carnation of the soul to a 6raall Lin coln audience. If she would explain the best manner of carrying a pri mary, no hall in the town could hold the crowd, but a talk on the soul by a philosopher, isn't a drawing card in the capital city. IT APPEARS that our esteemed friend Maiah Tom Watson, lato candidate lor vice president, is industriously engaged in alienating the affections of the populist party for one W. J Bryan. Tom is opposed to the two- ring circus and wants to go back to the rood old davs when a man didn't have to be cross-eyed to watch the Derformance. lie will not act in Bryan's hipodrome again, and if Mr V. J. doan't look out the Wajson side show will outstrip his tent. TIIE annexation ol Hawaii means a decided victory for the sugar trust. Nebraska City News. For beautiful nerve we certainly commend the above. The chief ob stacle in the way of annexation is this gigantic conspiracy known as the sugar trust, which held absolute on trol of tbe late democratic adminis tration. The Sandwich Islands would no doubt have been annexed four years ago only for the influence of this octopus. It docs not look well to see the democratic press deny its own offspring, and the people will take no stock in such denials. IF the senate finally refuses to ratify the annexation treaty with Hawaii by a two-thirds vote, the island can still be taken in at tbe side door by s simple joint resolution declaring them an nexed to the United States without a treaty. In the same way Texas mnde her entrance under Polk. The ad ministration at that time was unable to control two-thirds of the senate and the joint resolution method worked A. 1 jus as wen ana requires merely a majority vole in each house. All the terms of tbe treaty can then be em bodied in laws passed for the govern ment of the new domain. State Jour na). THE cominer Christian endeavor convention at San Francisco will cost in the aggregate about $-1.000,OuO. Some complaint arises over the size of this bill, and it is . suggested from a number of sources that it would be better to abandon the meeting en tirely and spend vhe money directly in the work of "evangelizing the world." It does seem a large amount to expend in the meeting, it is true, but a larger sum is spent every year in educating tbe young people of tbe country in tbe schools and colleges. Why not take them out of the schools and spend the millions thus saved in directly evangalizing the world? Tbe truth about the Christian endeavor conventions is that the journey is worth to everj' person who attends every cent of the expense involved. The good that comes from increased zeal in the cause is a net gain to the endeavor movement ' It amounts to a rekindling of the fires of devotion every year, at particularly no expense to the organization. State Journal. AT LAST a true politica; Moses has been found in the person of Eugene Debs, and his position a- chief and head organizer of new party will make his name a household word. Debs party is to be called the royal democratic party, and all the pops who worship Bryan and other demo crats, more then they do- their own party, will find a home exactly to their liking in the bosom of the royal demo cracy. All silver democrats who have backslid from the true faith of their fathers, but who want to be pop ulists under democratic banners, will And a haven ol rest uuder the uag oi the royal democracy that is exactly what they had dreamed of, but had scarcely hoped for before the Millen nium. Debs has a great head,and with thousands of politicians drifting like a rudderless ship toward a tempestuous sea, he comes in and furnishes a har bor of safety and content like a born patriot. Our Col. Sherman who has wandered around wearing populist clothes that didn t tit him and hun dreds of others in the same condition can now become royal doraocrats and get in the band wagon before the pro cession starts. In after years George Washington rauy continue to be first. but Eugene V. Debs will be a close second as a happy combination of statesman and philosopher. If the fusionists of Nebraska in tend to nominate a candidate for su preme judge with the expectation of electing their man, no better choice could be made than Lion. Basil S. Ramsey, judge of the second judicial district. A wise, considerate and unbiased judge, a terror to evil do ers, and a courteous gentleman. The selection of tuoh a jurist would not fill eastern in vectors with dismay. No railroad hs rwy mortgage on Judge Ramsey and the man with a pull is a stranger in his court. 1 HE News expects to vigorously support the republican nominee for the supreme judgship, but . it takes a neighborly interest in those deservedly promi nent in tbe ranks of the opposition, and if we are not to have a republi can, theu a democrat of character and abilitv is what we would have if Judge Ramsey were elected to this high position. A fine lot of birds with multicol ored plumage ;rot together in Iowa yesterday and nominated a fusion state ticket with Fred E. White for governor, B. A. Plummer, lieutenant governor; L. G. Kinne, sup. judge; S. B. Grain, railway commissioner, and G. F. Reinhart, state superintendent. There was too much mongrel in the ticket to suit the old line populists and a hundred populist9 deliberately bolted the convention. This is a bad start for the fusion idea, as it creates a row at the fixt convention and may be expected to continue until fall, when an open breach will bo formed in every western state. THE convct'on of Joe Bartly, the defaulting ex-slate treasure", after a fair trial in Douglas couuty, will bo hailed with special pleasure by repub licans all over the state, be having basely betrayed the party and ca? t u stain upon its banners that can not be effaced iu a day. The opinion seems to prevail that Judge Biker will now sentence him to the penitentiary for twenty-one years, which is the limit provided by law. Of course, an appeal will be taken to tbe supremo court, but that, it is believed, will only stave off for a brief time the day he. will don the stripes. Special Rates on the Knrliiigton For the Fourth of July. Tickets will be sold the 3d, 4th, and 5th, linal limit te return tho 6th, one fare for the round trip within a distance of 200 miles. Y. P. S. C. E., San Francisco, Cal., from 7th to 12th, tickets on sale com mencing June 29th, at $22.50 one way, same rate returning. . Annual meeting. National Educa tional Association, Milwaukee, Wis., tickets will be sold July 3d, 4th, and 5th, one fare for the round trip plus 12, final limit for return July 12th. Trans Mississippi, Silt Lake, Utrh, tickets will be sold July 9th, 10th, one fare for the round trip. Utah Pioneer Jublieo to be held 17, and 18, one fare for the round trip, with final limit for return 30 days from date of sale. Hot Springs, S. D., tickets will be sold June 2oth, one fare for tbe round trip, for further information apply at ticket office. W. Lu Pickett, Agent. The Bent Remedy For Rheumatism. (From the Fairhaven, N. Y., Register.) Mr. James Rowland, of this village, states that for twenty-five years his wife has been a sufferer from rheum atism. A few nights ago she was in such pain that she was nearly crazy She sent Mr. Rowland for the doctor, but he had read of Chamberlain's Pain Balm and instead of going for the physician he went to the store and secured a bottle of it. His wife did not approve of Mr. Rowland's purchase at first, but nevertheless applied the Balm thoroughly and in an hour's time was able to go to sleep. Che now applies it whenever she feels an ache or a pain and finds that it always gives relief. He says that no medi cine which she had used ever did her as much good. The 25 and 50 cent izes for sale by all druggists. Rates to Milwaukee, Wis. . For the annual meeting of the na tional educational association the B. & M. will sell round trip tickets July 3, 4 and 5 for one fare plus 22.30, final limit for return July 10, 11, and 12 only. An extended limit may be had by depositing tickets with joint agent at Milwaukee until Auerust 31. W. L. Pickett, Agent. INFORMATION AND OPINIONS. Pawnee couaty sends up tho cheer ing news that it has ruined down there every night but one for a week, and that more seasonable weather for growing crops was never enjoyed in that bailiwick. A Missouri Pacific track walker at Papillion threw that somnolent vil lage into a frenzy of excitement Sun day morning. Ho camo into town from his beat filled wilh excitement and telling a lurid talo of how three band i is had planned a hold-up of the express train; how he had discovered their purpose and frustrated it after a red-hot fight with them in which he was as valiant as old Jack Faistaff. A posso went in hot hiiste to the scene and the e mipany began a rigid inves tigation. It was finally found that the fellow wa3 under a fit of insanity and that the plot and the encounter were all in his mind. Ex. "AN Indiana farmer who had been reading the newspaper was accosted by a p irty of three card mouto shai p.. He excused - himselT to go into the house to get some money, but appear ed soon after with a shotgun. There was a suddon exodus of his visitors." Ex. Nebraska City will celebrate the Fourth for three days, beginning on the morning of the 3. and continuing to the evening of the olh. Each day is supposed to ba a hummer within itself. The rehandling of grain at Buffalo, made necessary by the chance from lake vessels to canal boats and railway cars, cost during the season of lN'.tG not less than $2,500,000. This is so large a tax upon tho business us to constitute a serious obstacle to the use of the water route. The people of Buffalo are hopeful that this disad vantage will be overcome, however, by the erection of v;st flouring mills operated by the cheap power from the Niagara electric companies. They hope to grind so much grain that virtually all of the cargoes brought in by the lake lleet will be turned into the mills for manufacture instead of going to the elevators for trans-shipment. Tbe extra handling at Buffalo will then not b3 an unnecessary tax upon the commerce, but oul3T the us Uiil charge connected with milling, no matter where it may happen to be done. State Journal. A letter was received Tuesday from Ed Stackhouse containing the news of the death of bis daughter, IMith Young, who has, since moving to L moni, Iowa, with her parents, married. She received a sunstroke and lived only thirty minutes. Her husband is almost crazed with grief, and her parents as well. She died on Thurs day and was buried Saturday. The friends of the family here will be deep ly grieved to hear of the sad affair. Weeping Water Republican. F. M. Timblin presented the writer with a cane which ho says was made from tho largest piece of a twelve foot scantling he could find in tho wreck of a house at Bradshaw in 1S)0. The cane is feruled and has a bone handle. We shall keep the cane as a relic from the worst cyclone that ever struck Nebraska. Weeping Water Republican. The State Journal says Dr. Arm strong's shortage amounts to about $2,000, according to the report of the investigating committee. - , Tbe captain of tho f-tcamer Benton which is now on its way to Sioux City is quoted as saying that his company proposes establishing a freight ard passsenger line between. St. Louis ar,d Sioux City and that it hoped to secure enough business to keep t n boats busy. Ex. G. Victor Lindon, who came to this county on the May flower, and stayed because he couldn't get a way, says dry weather, or in fact anything dry, is very distasteful to him, and unless it rains between now and next spring, he will leave for Honolulu. Dr. Ilobbs of Elm wood, and Dr. M. M. Butler of Weeping Water, were yesterday appointed members of the pension examining boardfrom that part of the county. The board in this city consists of Dr. E. W. Cook, Dr. T. P. Liyingson, and Dr. Cum mins. Tho two latter are democrats and a move is said to be on foot among tho old soldiers to replace the last two with republicans. Notice to Water Takers. The use of water for ' sprinkling lawns or gardens must bo confined be tween the hours from 6:30 in the morn ing, to 8 o'clock a. m. and from G to 8 o'clock in the evening. Any one us ing water outside of above hours (ex cept consumers taking water through meter; and they must not use water for above purposes after 8 o'clock p. m. ) will be shut off and the sum of two dollars ($2) must be paid before water will be turned on again. Plattsmouth Water Co. By T. K. Pollock, Receiver. Special Examination. A special examination for thoso de siring teachers' certificates will be held in Plattsmouth, at office of county superintendent, on June 28, 1897. Geo. L. Farley, County Supt. It 4 the Rest On KartU." That is what Edwards & Parkers merchants of Plains, Ga., Bavs of Chamberlain's Pain Balm, for rheu matism, lame back, deep seated and muscular pains. Sold by all druggist. Eat Mrs. Morning's home-made bread. SQUARED ACCOUNTS. HOW DE SMITH TURNED SEVERAL TA BLES ON HIS FRIEND JONES. Started In With a Shower Rath, Followed . With Several Other Annoying; Pleasan tries and Wouud I'p With a Grand On slaught of Life tumran.'e Agputs. "Well. I gnoKi I've get even with Jones all right cuonh for all tho prac tical jokes he has been playing en me for tho last week," said Do Smith gleefully, as he hang np his coat and took his e.oat at the luncheon table with a party of friends. "How's that?" HFkcd one of the friends. "Well. Joiifs is know," fsphiiJcd a grrnt joker, you D( MnitL. "He thinks it's n good tiling to thump and pound like tho deuce on a fellow's door as he goes down tho hotel corrido abont 2 o'clork in tho inoiiiing. He nev er goes to tal when a decent man should, and he rather resents it if any of his friends do. He h:;s been ponud ing oi my door that way now almost every morning for tl-e put week." "Why didn't you get np and kick him?" asked one of the party. "I did try to three or four times," re plied Do Smith, "but he always got dowu the hall a little way and theu laughed at inc. But I'm even with him now. I was fixed for him when he came along this morning. I had a big pail of water fixed over the transom, and when old Jonesiecame along and began thump ing I pulled the striDg fastened to it, and I heard old Jonenie cniFO under his breath and mutter, 'Darn you, De Smith, I'll get even for this.' Then ho walked down the hall and I looked out in time to rcc him sliaLing the water off his roat and h::t. " "That was getting even pretty well, old inau. I with I could have seen him when the flood struck him," pet in one cf the party. "Oh, that was all rig!: t for a starter,"- Fuid Do Smith, "bat it wasn't half tho deso I gave hivi after. You see, Jones has been breaking my sleep for a week, r.nd it took more tban a bucket of water to ii?nro accounts. I anticipated his visit cf this morning, so last night Leforo goi.;g to bed I left an order to call him at (J o'clock. Old Jonesio didn't get to Led before 8 o'clock, so lie didn't get Tmieh tier p lie foro 6. Then a bell boy I egan to pound on his door and shout that it was time to get up. Jones shouted back to tho bay to get ont or he'd I reak hi.-: neck, but the boy replied that he had orders to get Jones cnt of bed and he was go ing to do it. Finally Jones get np in his mgo and hustled dowu to the hotel office to find ont 'what i:i thunder they meant by breaking his Floep that way.' Tho clerk told him there was an order for a call at G o'clock, and that was all ho knew about it. "Well, Jonesie went back to bed, but he didn't get to sleep apain. I paid the bell boy enough to prevent that, and at S) o'clock he came down to break fst. 1 was dowu town by that time, so I rang Jonesio epeu the telephone. Jly ollico boy got him on the wire and told him to wait juht a moment, please. Well, JoncEio waited about five minutes and then gave the bell a vicious ring.' Tho boy answered tho ring and asked Jonccie What be wanted. 'I want to know who rang mo up,' said Jonesie. .'Nobody here, said the boy, and he said he heard Jouesic swear as he rarg off. "Well, I pave him that telephone racket three times before ho caught on. Ho was pretty hot, I guess, when he reached his office, but I had a reception for him there. Iliad telephoned to a lot of my lifo insurance friends that Jonesie wanted to take out a policy be fore leaving the city in the afternoon and advised them to send a man around to see him. Thoro were two in the office when ho reached it, and five more came in during the morning. "Jones thought ho was going to do a lot of work," too, but as a mattpr of fact he spent the day explaining that ho didn't want any life insurance or any thing else but a chance to tend to his own business. One of the agents finally let it ont that I had recommended Jones as a good risk, and ho rang me np at once. 'I've got enough,' he says. 'I'm willing to call it all square if you are. You'vo got the best of it, I admit, he squalled, so I told him I was willing to call it off if he would remember not to hammer on my door hereafter when he was going by at 3 in tho morning. lie replied that he wouldn't rap at my door again if the hotel was afire, and so we called it off. "Jones has beaten me out of a whole lot of sleep cf late, but I guess I'm even, fellows. What do you think?" And De Smith leaned back in his chair and looked at himself admiringly in the mirror across the room. Chicago Times Herald. The Harvard Spirit. Whero so many men are working on independent lines, with so much to keep them apart and so little, comparative ly, to draw them together, one may rea sonably wonder whether such a thing as a common Harvard spirit any longer exists. It does exist, so men say who abide by tho university and who ought to know. They see it and feel it. It does not penetrate all individuals in the same degree, but it is reckoned with and observed as a definite force. Tho men best qualified to judge of it insist that it makes for veracity, for a high sense of honor and for good manners. Indifference has sometimes been charged against Harvard, and perhaps not without sonic basis, but not indif ference to truth. That is her qnest in science and in philosophy and the basis of her law in matters of conduct. Veri tas was .not written on the Harvard shield for nothing. The Harvard spirit may need to be awakened and nourish ed and kept alive, but it is worth keep ing alive, for truth is its most perva sive e'ement. Edward S. Muitin in Scribu-r's. Khenniatism Cared in a Df. "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 onco tbe cause and tho disease immediately disappears. The first doso greatly benefits, 75 cents Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co.. druggists Kidney Diseases Are the most fatal of all diseases Foley's Kidney Cure a guaranteed remedy or monej' refunded. For sale at Smith & Parmole. POPULAR TRADITION. INSTANCES WHERE IT WAS FOUNDED ON HISTORICAL FACT. The Missionary and the Old Stone Bench. The Tradition of the RwioVliracians About the 111 ark Sea Key to the Wicked Karl' Treasure. There was once an energetic and strong minded missionary in the south seas, who took a great deal of interest in the folklore of the island where he dwelt. After years of study he made up his mind for good and all that there was not a particle of fact in the legends professing to be historic which he had laboriously gathered. In distrust at his own credulity, unwilling to let peoplo know what a fool he had been, he toss ed his whole collection into tho fire. Some days afterward there was a terrif io hurricane. The islanders had told him that once upon a time long ago a certain famous chieftain used to sit on a stone bench beneath a tree which grew close to tho mission house. That bench had disappeared, no one knew when or how, but in the days of hea thendom they need to place offerings to the spirit of the old chief near the spot where it had stood. When the mission ary sallied out on the morning after the storm, the first object he noticed was this tree overthrown and in the midst of its upturned roots hung a stone bench. The reverend gentleman Whiting was his name, if we remember right stood in a maze. The legend was true, then. Examination proved beyond a doubt that the bench had rested against the bole of the tree in some distant age, for there was no trace of an incision. The wood had grown smoothly round and over it So far as ho could roughly compute, four centuries must have passed since it stood outside the trunk. For that time the islanders had pre served the memory of a circumstance fo trifling, for to question that this was the bench they assigucd to their mythic hero would have been silly. And then the good man mourned bis haste. He had destroyed the patient labor cf years because he would not credit the ac counts of grave events given in all se riousness by members of his flock, and it proved that they were trustworthy even on such a detail as the personal habits of a man who died 400 years ago. The story is ono to be borne iu mind by all students of folklore and of that early stage in human annals which is based upon tiadition. But it does not follow that Mr. Whiting had good cause to lament his burned manuscripts if he valued them only for the records of events they might contain. That there are particles cf fact in the most gro tesque of these legends, which profess to bo historic, we find more and more rea son to believe as our knowledge widens, but it is rarely possiblo to sift them from the mass of poetio nonsense. Sav ages everywhere keep the memory of startling incidents which occurred, as we learn by internal evidence, an in definite number of ages ago. Geologists 1 recognize that tho Black sea was once a lake, with no outlet to ward the Mediterranean. They incline to think cr believe that it escaped through the Bosporus and tho Darda nelles shortly after the glacial period.' But Diodorus Siculus mentions a tradi tion of tho Samothracians exactly agree ing with this account, which learned men of the day have framed upon the teaching cf science. Did the Samothra cians exist in the glacial period? They say that when the Black sea broke its barriers at last all their country was drowned that was tbe Samothracian flood. And it is evident enough that such must have been the result of the cataclysm. There is a passage in Pin dar also which some commentators in terpret as an allusion to the same pro digious event. Traditions of the mammoth are so general and so vigorous in the extreme north of America that savants of repu tation are not unwilling to admit the possibility that it survived 200 years ago, and others who have no scientific reputation to hazard go very much fur ther. Very small details are preserved by the popular memory sometimes. When tho wizard Earl of Foulis was carried off to be boiled alive as the only means of killing him, tradition report ed that he threw away the key of his treasure chamber. It could never be fonnd. Bnt less than 60 years ago schoolboys playing in tho haunted ruins unearthed a great key which might very well have been tossed through the airhole of a dungeon opening the point is significant beside the road along which the wicked earl was hur ried. Many cases might be cited where even antique stories of buried treasure have been proved true. A notable one is told by the worthy Dr. Plot in his history of Herefordshire. Bransel castle had a specially fine tale of this sort. alleging that a king's crown was sunk in the moat. In 1 6 50 a cottager named T&'lcr, planting a hedge along the moat t(m protect his children, found a crown set with diamonds. He sold it to a jew eler at Gloucester for 37. The jeweler transferred it to a Lombard street gold smith at a great profit, and he sold the diamonds" alono for 1,500. London Standard. Whet Else Could She Do? "I was surprised to hear that Pen el nrift Imd lirnken her eniratrement. It thought she was determined to stick to him in spite of the opposition oi ner la ther." "She was, but the idiot wrote hel some poetry, as he called it. And he rhymed her name with 'let ns then elope.' That settled him." Cincinnati Enquirer. The loneliest house in the British Isles is said to be the gamekeeper's cot tage in Skiddaw forest, approached from Keswick by a path along Whit Beck, which offers miles of aa rough walking as can be well compress ed into that distance. According to the r.ewspnper, an Ohio husband became the father of seven children not long ago. Of the seven all lived but onj. ll is to be hoved h laid in a supply of Chaiober laiu's Cough Remedy, the only sure cure for croup, whooping cougb, cold and coughs, and so insured his children against these diseues. For sale for all druggists. Hungarian seed in quantity maybe had at my place, four miles southeast of Murray. R. R. Moklks. The highest tobaccos is "Just as good as Durham." Kvery old smoker knows there is none just as good as adkwefliFs fill! H III JV I Sdi .ting FobsKDUB Yon will find each two ounce pons inside bag of Black well s Durham. Buy a bag of this cele brated tobacco and read the coupon which gives a list of valuable J to get THAT OLD FUR GARMENT? d.iy you bought it; but you the skin it is GOOD. Moth eaten or worn spots can v taken out without even showing a seam The only question is what can Ih3 done with It. Its out of sty'o und worn. Maybe it nads new lining, or should le stylishly ti iiimied. The rid coat would make a benutiful full sweep cape, X" and capes aie ju.-t the thing this season. There's that ild fur gar ment 3 ou haven't worn for years, becauso it is nil "fagged out." Why, that will make n beautiful collarette; just tho thing for fall and spring wear. Then just look at that garment. It is entirely "gone up." Tho hair stands the wrong way on it and it is worn and m:itted. 'Iis no earthly uso." Well, it does look bad, but by iho process of glazing the fur is brought out and cleaned and then, when lemodolcil, it is like new. During July and August of thU year, wo will mako a speci alty of A LTKIIATIONS and 1UCFAIRS. Our nj HltiinoI measure ment is uch we can lit you as well by mail as by personal measure :r.Mil. WemakoNHW FUR and FLUSH CAKMKNTS to YOUR ORDER. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. Write to us. iiiii rViC o rn iwis-ao w,iiait stkket, Vnl UltlC i LUi, Kn CHy. MlHHiMiri. IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF I UUS. " GO Injs a Fine Violin ami Vi)!eie Outfit. Fully (iuaisateed. y 1 00 buys a Mandoline, ' . it liirdseye Maple, Mahogany or Rose- wood Finish. Fully guaranteed. C i CO bays An American Guitar, y- guaranteed to stand. Steel strings, in Mahogany or Rose wood finish. EEXD FOR CATALOGUE OF SHEET MUSIC. 3 GO buys a $ioo Organ. Kimball Pianos e Organs ON EASY PAYMENTS. Titinas, little nscd, for $50, Writs for Catalocnea and oar terms. FACTORY PRICES. A- HOSFE, JR., 1513 Douglas Street, OKAHA. NEB. ARE THE MOOT FATAL OF ALL DIS EASES. FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE is ) guaranteed remedy for all KIDNEY and BLADDER Diseases. THIS CREAT REMEDY IS SOLD BV SMITH & PARMELE, Druggists W. STILI IN B 1'-1 Mt'' EST riijs for Weddings, Funerals or Plon-mrx I 'artin, etc. Hick orders attended to promptly. Terms reasonab'a dn.i ri:fr-ii. C.-ill ;nd pel rates. Telephone 76. N. B. W. D. Jones auctioneer all disposed of Also White Lead, Linseed Oil, Brushes, Var nishes, Glass and Putty. F. G. Fricke & Co., Druggists. Evenino News. i5o week 5V claim for oilier tpv nn mm m one coupon inside bag, and two cou cacli four ounce presents and how them. worth almost :is much today as tho don't know it. As long as the hair is on $G0, $80 to $100. m& v.fe mm inn L i 1 1 1 n mil '1 fif A I 12 14 Wl PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA. M D. JONES... Ciss County9 m Oldest : Liveryman, 613 MAIN STREET. BUSIiMKSS. kinds ot eoodt and farm Htoch