oemi Weekly News -BE ERAI I'lll'. NKH, ltublMie Not. ft. . Till. III. KALI , i.nt uWi.sh.Ml April 10, 111. 'onB')lloat(l Jan. 1, 1M06. rLA'ITSMOUTH, NKK.. SKlTKMHKIt 4JJ) 18W). VOL. VIII. NO. Wl. 0 REBELS DKIVEN BACK. The (Imcrican Forces In Luzorj Get Mucii the Best of the In surgent Forces. Wheeler, Wheaton and MacArthur In Charge of the (American Forces Engaged. Ii AMI. a, Scpl lis 1 ho movement lignum Ton c, ulinut e itrh t miles from Jl.co.or, in I'. .inp itin. province, whictt 'j,'Hii nt daybreak linn uiorniiif' Jet c mine od personally by (Joneral Mac Arthur. ( rii -r.-il Whee or, with tho Ninth 1 1 ji moo t ami a battery, wan ml vancing by two roods, w h i io General Wlui ton, com inn tiding tho I welfth an Sev.-nti-ont h regiments, is moving to block tho 1 iimu rftirit- from retreat ing to tho north. Tho Thirty-sixth regiment accompanies General Mac A i th ur. Firing has begun nour Angoles. Two Filipino majors came to tlie A nit ri.:ii lines 1 hi night with mes h gc i cam ing tho American prison ers, win w.;r to 'irrivo this morning. Th.-y ulso r quested permission for (Jonerat AL j unit ino, one colonel and two iimi enanl colonels to vir.it (.-n- er.i OtiH. i'lu-y wore i efu-ed en tianct) t tho American linos until noon Friday on account of today's li h i , ;i iid Genctal Alejandrino alono wit be .illowed ti visit General (Ma Th.1 in.-.uig t.ts recently entrenched nnu gurriso ed tho town of I'aeto, on Ij.f-una ! It y, in the province of Lia- guna. SiiD-. q iei.tly Captain Larsen, comm. incline tho gunboat N .ptdan. landed fur a conlcnt ce with the citi ns. Am in: was proceeding up tho main street of tho town with a t-quad ho was received with a volley from a hidden trench. Tho party retreated to their boat under cover of tho build ings and regained thoir vessel. The Napid .n then bombarded tho trench for an hour, completely destroying' it. .';:.';) p. m General MacArthur entered I'orac after half an hour's fighting. The American loss was plight and the. insu-gont loss is not known. The enemy lieu northward. When the Americans entered the town they found it practically deported. The attacking party moved on i'orac in two ciliimn-. 1 he Ninth infantry, with two guns from Sinta llita, was com m i nue,l by Genoi- .1 Wheeler, and tho Thirty-sixth infantry, under Col onel Hell, with one gun, accomuaniod Ge eral MaeA rthur from San Antonio. Doth column -.true! the town at 9 o'clock and opened a brisk fire, which was replied to In the onomy for half an hour. Then the insurgents fled an i tho Americans marched over their trenches anil took possession of the place. Just before the fight Smith's command, ? t Angeles, made a demon stration by firing nrtilley up the rail road tracic. I.ii-eum repotted one casualty and Bell reported four men of his com mmd wounded. The artillery did "not have any men injured. (i:0-" p. m. Today's movement was a straug. cal success, and resulted in tne possession of Prir ic and the clear ing of several miles of country there about. The column-, one f om Santa Ititaand the other from Sin Antonio, united nefore I'orac, according to pro ifram, stretching around the place for : oiue miles. The insurgents are estimated to have number UOO men Ten dead Fili 1 ino were found, and the captain and t- mmissary of tho Mascarnos com l .ana wore takon prisoners. The i raei iean loss is five killed, but there v ore njmy pi ostt ations from the heat. The l'ngli-hmen from tho insurgent li .es reoort that the Filipinos a. Bam t m have 7,000 new Japanese rifles. act cumber Is not known. A factory wai alio destroyed at tnla place. A huge landallda below St Mary's seminary destroyed tho railroad bridge and completely blocked tho road. A breach thirty yards wide has been made and the rails aro hang ing in the air. It la thought the 'reak cannot bo repaired within thirty days. Telegraphic communication between Calcutta aud Durjecling has been re established, but railroad traflio be yond Kursuong is not likely to bo re sumed for a long time. Tho road is impassable fur horses and travelers aro on.y ab.o to journey on foot and with much dilllculty. The Methodists whose statjous and schools have suflorod from the earth quake aro American missionaries. Queen Vicio in, on hearing of the dioaster, telegraphed her profound sympathy to the bereaved families. The story of the destruction of tho Idi Vill.i branch of tho Calcutta Girls' school, supported by tho Ameri can Methodists, is t elated by Miss Stnhl, who saved many of tho child ren. A landslip compolled tho occu pants to leave tho building and Miss Slahl, guiding tho children, com menced a perilous climb, finally gain ing the Mull road. All the time ruin was pouring down in torrents, tho earth was shaking and tho children wore terrified. The blackness of the night, tho crashing of trees and fears of earthquake finally compelled the party to lly in the night. ill iJurlee, tho sole survivor of thoe who were caught in the landslip at Ida Villa, says that when it was seen that escape was im possible a sis ter made all kneel in prayer, and, while kneeling, tho house was swept away. It is estimated that the loss to tho tea garden proprietors alono la about $5,000,000. All SPANISH IPS ARE BARRED. ODDS AND ENDS. The cumber of tonnage of Iiiltlih vessels respecting whose loss reports Nothing But American Vessels Are Te VPa ai ino uoar" ,,r xn I uuiiiit uiuui ii ui uiiui)ir aim ill') Allowed to EnterthePhlllp- 'number of lives lost are as follows: plrje Ports. Sailing, 53; tonnage, J,0J9; lives lost, j4P.. Steam. 9; tonnage, 10,351; lives lost. 117. It win he noticed that the average Mope of Spanish Prisoners Lies In Natives Accepting tf)e Arner ican Terms. Commauder Khaw iDtligrnant. Kansas City, Sept. 27. "No greater insult was ever offered the comratos of tho Grand Army of the U -public than that action of the Dewey day committee in New York whon 2, t'OO white haired old eoldiers were not allowed a place of honor in tho great parado." This was tho statement of Albert I). Shaw, commander-in-chief of the Grand Array of the Republic, who spent ten minutes in Kansas City on his way to Topeka, whero ho goes to add ress a reunion of the veterans to day and tomorrow. "No, sir, you can say what you please," continued Commander Shw, but it was an insult, and it was in tended, as one, too. Id was a sln in the face to every one of the 300,000 union veterans of tho civil war now living." "It gives me great pleasure to ex lend to Governor Theodore Roosevelt, as the commander in-chief of SoO.000 veterans of tbro G. A. K , my warm congratulations on the just and pa triotic stand ho has taken in behalf of the aging veterans of tho nation, in urging his influence to have their just request granted that they lead the parade in the city of New York in honor of the groat Admiral Dewey, thus assuring to our newest veterans that, when they grow old in their turn, they sha'.l no' bo tho tail of any pub ic procession." Manila, Sept. 27. 9:53 a. m. Tho American authorities have declined tho leguest of General Jamamillo, the Spnnish officer who is settling Spain's military affairs in tho Philippine isl ands, to send a vessel under the Span ish flag to collect the Spanish prison ers at inturgent ports, as stipulated by tho Filipinos, on the ground that the ports are closed, that Biich a step, there fore, would be unlawful, and because they declined to i.ecept tho Filipinos' dictation. The authorities are re ady to end an Anorican vessel. Tho Spanish committee, therefore, will return to the insurgent lines and endeavor to effect an arrangement for tho delivery of tho prisoners on board an American vessel. Aguinnldo has issued a statement savin"- the warlike activity of the Americans has prevented tho concen tration of the prisoners, as intended but that they will bo delivered up October 19. The Tagals of tho island of Mindanao have expressed their readiness to ac copt American sovereignty in ox chatiiro for protection against the harassing Moros. A native officer has offered Maj r General Otis 1.000 Macabebe tribes men to fiirht. Tajrals of the Lnjuna de Bay district. The troop engage -d in the lighting at Cebu belonged o the Nineteenth infantry. Sixth in f.nntry, 1 wentv-ihird infantry aud Sixth artillery. PRECAUTION IN POWDER MILLS Foimtou Nny We Are Right. Kansas City, Sept. 27. -Geuoral Frederick Funoton, now eurou.. homo fiom Manila, in a letter receivod by a friend here today, predicts that the war in the Philippines will have been ended bv spring. General Funston says: "I would really like to see the war through to a finish, not for tne posi tion I hold, but because my fighting biood is up. I am confi lent that oy sprintr it will ba over. The indica tions are that a very aggrossive c m paign will be inaugurated this fall and they have what they lacked btfore, 3,000 cavalry, absolutely ind si n sible in a guerrilla war. Liord, wouldn't I Uko to command a cavalry o igade. I have never for a minute had any qualms as to the justice of this war. We are right and they aro wrong. I hope that when they are conquered they will be made to feel foi many years the iron hand of military rule, tho only kiud for which they aro suited. I think tho islands a most valuable acquisition. Tneir national resources are almost ljeyond computa tion. From a directly money stand point they aro roat." lorKetlesK Clothing rtr :tuplor- ami Trouer Must Xot Ho Tnrnril I'p. The danfebr buildings of a- powder mill are theiuselves so vorstruoted that not a nail head or iron in any shape Is exposed, and the roofs are made slight, so as to give easy vent to ex plosions. The garments of the work ers are pocketless. &o that they fcannot carry knlra or matches or. indwd anything, and are made of non-inflam niable material. F.ven the buttons must not be made of metal. No one is aitowed to go about with trousers turned up at the bottom, because grit is collected in that way, and the mer est hard speck of foreign matter, in a char of gunpowder is fraught with danr. The entrances to danger buildings are protected by boards placed edgewise, so that f hen the dooi is op .i nothing in the shape of dirt can work in. This ateo serves as a W.xxl mill Fir Alea Kill-1. M NII.A. Sept. 20. ( a. m.) It is r :oHeu by a p.-' son just arrived from Ti d o- that Naval Cidot Wood, who w. s in charge of the gunbOit recently en, tur.-d and destroyed by the insur he Orani rivnr. on the north- . r m,i it w.a1 to any one who might thought Vt I MOIUI' -'lJt "I"--' W w pa . oling, and five of ' he enlisteiK men , c- i i i'Osi i u the crew wore killed in the fig t p- evious to tho det: u-'lion of th. ve-si-l. I 1 ie fourotho-- men and tho captured eat. on, a one-poun3er, a rapid-fi o t . i Colt machine gun and a Norden Ale. i two ty-tive millimeter gun, were con 'eil to Maine. HU: DREDS OF LIVES ARE LOST. Ict:' Come In of Trrriltte Flood DIs- astt-rs In India. ('. c i'T'l a. Sept s Lieutenant Gov- ! nor feir .lohn Woodburn an noji od to the council yesterday that Ion I'ves were lost through the floods at D jeeling. c ipital of tho district t rame, in addition" to those d on the p'ai t h.iv c h .s been caused at ntr. The Margaretehopo es . -t 100 acres and the Meadland wn? destroyed. Some coolies of tl ilrow ; Gr. Kurs tate i facto. ;. were 1 iried in the ruins of the mana ger's ou?e. which whs partially de stroyt.!. The Avongrove estate lost thirty .-res and 4.000 ta bushes. The coolie houses were swept away and manv v- rsons were killed, but the ex- lessly eiiter without having first re moved his boots and put on the over- ails that are kept just Inside the door Doors are made to opci outward, so as f.- "i!e ther- 'o escape the more read;' .d on L pproach of a thun e.erstoi m the works are stopped and the operatives repair to the different wacchhouses scaf.cred over the 300 acres covered by these extensive works. Every week the machinery Is inspected and the reports as to its condition are printed and filenl. In the case of a dan ger building needing to be repaired it must first be washed out before a hammer or other iron tool is admitted to it. When artificial light Is required, as when working at night or In dull weather, the lights are kept ontalde, being placed on ti window ledges. In the casf of the -works magazine, which is surrounded with water, no light of any kind is ever permitted near it. These are only a few of the precau tions against accidents at the works. They are sufficient, however, to show how lively must be the sense of dan ger. Men in powder hoiwes tisually have an arranged plan of escape in their minds and at the least unex pected noise have not hesftated to plunge into the canal. A. W. At wood Hells pure drugs and the best patent medicines. Kndortie the Philippine. War. NKW HAVEN. Conn., Sept. 27. The second day's session of the biennial convention of tho National Camp of the Patriotic Sons of America was de voted almost entirely to the reports of committees. There has been some talk of change in the ritual, hat the commit tee on this subject believed it best not to make any chancre until aftea the war in tho Philippines was ended. Consequently the committee will mhe no report until the meeting of the na tional camp two years hence. The report of the committee on the stato of the order showed the organiza tion to bo in a prosperous condition There aro about 250,00u members. The committee on resolutions re ported several resolutions bearing on the matters of interest to. tho order and presented tho following, which was passed: 'Resolved, That while this order is absolute. y non-partisan the national cmp, in convention a--sernrled, would be recreant in duty and faithlj-s to the patriotic ciiizjnship it represents ilitdid not declare in the pi -i nest possible way the fea'ty of the entire brotherhood to the flag and principles of liberty and enlightenment of which it is the emblem, thit in the effort now in progress in the Philippi es to -uppress a wicked ana causeless re bellion the government at Washing ton represents American manlood and has our symptbj and r-uppor-t, that the Hag, the sign aud token of the best typo of government mankind ever saw, must never be pulled down in the presence of HLy foe, and thoe-e who ad vocate such a cowurdly and contempt ible ijoHcy that would make our re public a laucbing stock for the civ ilized world arc recreant to tho plain est obligation of American citizenship." Aiuerirati More on l'rac. Manila, .epi. 2S, S a. m General MtcA ihu , Wheaton and Wheeler, with four regiments aud a battery, ad vanced at daybreak this morning on Frac, about eiht miles northwest of Cacolar, in Pampanga province. The News office is tne best equipped job office in Cass county. Firai ciasp work done on short notice. loss of life in the case of the sailing ships Is less than one per ship, whereas the average for the steamers is thir teen per ship. Tho largest moose head on record Is in the possession of Mr. W. F. Sheard of Taconia. Wash, it Is the head Of an Alaskan moose, and the antlers measure from tip to tip ; feet 0 inches. The widest moose tiers in Kngland wero in the possi ,m of his royal highness the duke of IMinl.iir. They measured 59'4 inches arms- ,r three quarter!) of an inch iruier five feet. The Alaskan specimen, .-'ix inches higher than a six-foot man. s also immensely wide and massive in the "paint" of th horns. One of the oldest uuiritiui" fictions has received its denth Mow by the raising of the Aineii.-aii i'.ng over Guam, in the Lad rone i-lan i.-. Ac cording to sailors, thousands of ves sels chared for (J nam from ports nil over me world each ycar.mit none ever arrived there. Clearing for Guam was don by ships which wished to con ceal their real domination. AccordiiiK to maritime law, when once a vessel has cleared for a port it must proceed there by the most direct route or give a satisfactory explanation. Guam was a closed port imder tho Spanish rule, and ships could always ive that as a reason for not going there after having cleared for the place. The houest and efficient collection of customs revenue at Santiago de Cuba by the American officials has thrown unexpected light on the extent to which the Spanish government was de frauded there by its own officials. Last month $100,000 was collected in cus toms, which is at the rate of $1,200,000 a year, and it is believed that.as trade is increasing, the intake will l.o $1,500,- 000. But before the war the port col lected aud sent t. the treasury at Ha vana only $473,000 for the last com plete year! All the merchants at San tiago knew how the officials were en riching themselves and paying tribute at the same time to higher officials at Havana. Dobbd th Grave. .V startling Incident, of which .Mr. John Oliver of Philadelphia, wns tho subject Is narrated by him as follow?: "I wan in a most dreadful condition. My f-kin wns nlmost yellow, eyes sunken, tongue coated, piin con tinually in back and sides, no appe tite gradually growing weaker day hy d ty. Three physicians had given mo up. Fortunately, a friend advised trying 'Kleclric Hitters;' and to my great joy and surprise, tho first bottlo made a decided improvement. I con tinued their use for threo weeks, and am now a well man. I know they saved my life, and robbed tho pravo of an other victim.'1 No one should fail to try them. Only 50 cts , guaranteed, at F. G. Fricke it Co's. drug store. Lurgr-M midge 4n Fttrth. St. Paul, Minn , 'jirn to possrs-j tLa largest biii'.- n .t ..niv In the Fnited .states but the ,..,. ,Oii.n hoth l.-i..;th aud height are . on l.l.-i ed. Then- are loriRer bride.; and higher bridges, but none r.f once so hlh nd so U. . Thr structure In qi.iv-.tlon is the Smith ave nue populai iv called !Ik1i"- l.rld;;e across fhe Mississippi. Its b-n'-th is 2,770 feet, i(s height nt the h.rfhest point, above th mean ilvep level. Is 200 feet, and its width 12 feet. It has a roadway 21 feet wMe, with an x-foot sidewalk on each side. The bridge contains 27 truss and girder spans, j The structure was completed In ISS'.t' at a cost of Sixo.tioo. St. Paul also has the largest law book publishing house in the count r v. In Intent in I'lujliifr Cards. order to be strictly in line with A rrlcjhtful Blunder Will open cau-o a horrible burn, scald, J lb n.-mlt cut or brtt c. P.iicklen's Arnica Salve, the best in the world, will kill the p iin the latest fancy it is necessary to have tm,i promptly heal it. Curo old sores, your playiner cards made to order. In the east it is quite the thing for (lie hostess at a card party to surprise her guests by supplyirfg them with cards on the back of each of which is a re production of her own photograph. f.iike of KollluR Mud. Near Grobogana, Java, there is a lake of boiling mud about two miles in cir cumference. Immense columns of steaming mud are constantly ascending and descending and on tho western t-dge the gigantic bubbles are continu ally forming and exploding at the rate of three a minute. "Th y me him ply perfect," writes Robert Moore, of La Fayette, Ind., of De Witt's Littlo Early IMsers, tho famous little pills" for constipation and il liver aiimonts, never ripe. F. G. Fricke Co. How'H Thlft. We offer One Hundred Dollars Howard for any case of tatrrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. T. y. CHENEY & CO.. I'rops.. Tolodo. O. Wo tho nndorslirned, have known I- J. Cheney for the last l. years, una believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and fluanclHlly able to carry out any obllz itlons iniido by their firm. West & TuirAX, Wholesale ItruKlsts. To ledo. O. W.ii.niMi. Ki.nnan A: Maknin, Wholesale OrutruiMts. Toledo. . Hall's Catarrh Curo Is taken internally acting directly upon the blood arid mucous surfaces of I ho iy stem. I'rluo T.'.i;. per hot tie. rWild by all Oruglsts. Testimonials f roo. Hall's I'amiiy I'ili.s are the bi-st. fever sores, ulcers, boils, folon.s, corns, all f Ic i ti eruption. Hest pile euro on earth. Only 2 cents a box. Cure guaranteed. Sold bv F. Fricke A Co. It. 11. l VetiliLM-PO has iust rocei veil 100 doen children's bicycle bo-o ' which will go at 171 cent) a pair reg ular 2"-cet)t yoeds. Try Grain Ol Try Grain O! A-k your Grocer today to a how Vi u a r ncl:n'-- of Grain O, the new f..ot drink that, takes tho place of colic.-. Tho cl.l'ilren may drink it without In jury as well as thoiidult. All who try it, like i i. ( Ji nin has t lint I ieli ji-enl brown of Mocha or .lava.l.iit it Ii made front pure grain-., and the most deli- cato t. in Hi-h reccivcH it, without dis tress. Ouu-fourlh the pr ico of coffee. IV! and 2"ic or package. Sold by all grecer-t. Iloii I, (in-; Oho Slay I.lvr. A niafhi matM i.-.n in Ih lyluui baa re vive mi old no tli-... ,,f calculating how long a i r.Kni ni.i.v reasonably be ex pected to Ihe. 'j he method Is ;ih fol low: Suhtra. t vonr present iik- front S'l, divide the remainder by two. aud will elve the number of years which you m,iv expect to live. The rule, of coins., is only approxi mately correct, and reprer.enis the ne, ire.-i Milntlon .) no insoluble prob lem at It (ill mi" .iay hope to arrive. The rule npplic.- only to .-iki-h h-tween 1 2 and sr. ve.-u s. F. S. to Drowsincv am's Pills. i itisnidled by Iloech- !s ! ( iimi lei White is now ready to deliver bis customer in ar.y jiianti- ties desired. The ice is the lineslevcr harvesLe i. Telephone-, I M :i 1 1 tnon t Ii 2110, Nebraska 71 Tin: Nkws prints the Tons of Clfinri. The Companla General of Manila, the largest cigarrnaking concern in the world, employs 10,000 hands and turns out every year 80,000,000 cigars, 40, 000,000 cigarettes, and nearly 3.000 tons of cut tobacco. GANG-NEEDLE MACHIN-S. One of the lUany Varieties o 1 Sewing: Machine Made Nowadays. It is a more or less familiar fact that sewing machines are used nowadays for sewing many dirTerent materials, as leather, paper, canvas, carpets, rub ber. They are used for making but tonholes and sew-pg on buttons. Thes are made of many types and in simply hundreds of varieties for special uses. But it may not be known so common ly that there are many sewing ma- hines now made with more than one needle. The first of these, a two needle machine, was made in the early eighties. about fifteen years ago. It was used by manufacturers of heavy clothing, perhaps linn of all by the i overall manufacturers, making seams stronger by putting in two rows of stitching. The utility and economy of the two-needle machine soon became apparent and it came into widespread and diversified use. Whenever two rows of stitching were to be made, a two-needle machine was used. A fa miliar illustration of the work is seen in the two parallel lines of stitching running with perfect exactness around the top of a shoe vamp. Shirt sleeves are stitched into the body of the shirt on a double needle machine, the two rows being made in the same time that it would take to make one. Collars and cuffs were stitched on two-needle machines, as were a sreat variety of these things, and later there were pro duced machines with more than two needles, the first of these coming into use within five or six years. There are now made sewing machines with as many as twelve needles. A twelve needle sewins machine simply has twelve needles where the ordinary sewing machiue would have one. In stead of a single spool of thread on the top of the machine there appears there a rack of twelve spools. Tlu-re are twelve tension-disks. The thread Troni each sjtool runs through its o. n ten sion disk to its own needle. There are below twelve shuttles, one for each needle. When this machine is ouer- ated, it makes twelve rows of stitch ing, just as an ordinary machine would make one. The twelve-needle machines are used chiefly in the manufacture of corsets. Kill Tu In. The natives of Central Africa kill twins as soon as they are born, and forcp the mother either to kill herself or become on outcast I. O. 1 ladle1, tho carpenter and builder, will do all kinds oT carpenter work at right prices. Small jobs promptly attended to. Furniture and Stoves IVISTV GOOD8.. ..'Iopiilm in elegant stock of FALL have just received and WINTF.ll ..Orv Goods,. m to which we wish to call tho attention of I ho.-:.- who nr.- in n.-.-i ' flood (kmils at Low Prices. An extra large stock r.f. . . . ..Ladies' and Children's Underwear.. Or.c hundred dozen pairs of Children's Micyci.- Ilo-e. whw-h will told at 17c. These aro regular 2."e ho.----. I of l.'-" F. very thing in Plain and Fancy (Iroccric. ..TI1H 66 Cream da mat m so er o6 I. Pcarlman ilcsircs to call attention to the trade that he has the largest stock of stoves and furniture ever shown in Plattsmouth and that he can not be undersold by any dealer in the great state of Nebraska. 7e made his purchases before the recent great advance in prices, and is giving1 his cus tomers the benefit of that fact. These are facts which 3-ou cannot afford to overlook when in need of an'thing in his line. If von are wise vou will take a close look through h ij Store rooms before buying. I. PEARLMAN, Opposite the court house, PI .M-m nth ..IN ALL FLAVORS OUR Chocolate and a Ger ill q Beat the World ..DRUGGISTS.. XX n m m m m " 5s1? 5 5 W w w w y w w w v- v DeWitt's Little Early I Risers perma nently cure chronic constipation, bil iousness, nervousness and worn out feeling; cleanso and regulate tho en tire 6vstem. Smtll, pleasant, never ripe o sicken "famous little pills." F. (;. Fricke & Co. GroutH of Ilollanil. It la a curious countrj- over which Wilhelmina, the girl queen, reigns. Eight hundred years ago less than &)0 square miles of Holland were beyond the reach of the tides. During these eight centuries 12,000 square miles of land have been "taken" from the ocean by dikes and drainage, and now. at i cost of about 1-3.000,000, a part of the Zuyder Zee is to be drained and no less than 800 square miles added to Holland's present territory. Dr W. G. Dean, dontist, 409, 410, MoCaguo building, northwest corner of Fifteenth and Dodpre strer-t.OmHlui. nTailor-Mailetij Suit tor. ... i ) The only way to get a Puil of clothes that will fit ye-' rep erly is to have it m mo by a aa: petent Tailor. We will mike you a suit tht we will guarantee to (it. from good cloth, nice fin ish and up-to d.ite throughout, fo- $20. There is no u9eof send ing away from homo or wearing ready-made clothes when you can get a suit at euch a bargain. We solicita share of ) f your patronage Hudecclv & McElroy The New Tailors, Rock wood block, Pl-itUmouth Paint for Everybody And for even-thing; under the sun. Every home has need of paint Bach kind of The Sherwin-Williams i Paints is specially suited to some Lome use either outside or insid. It's knowing the right kind of paint, and piitting it on tlie rigut place that makes painting a sucefss. Tell us v.lnt you want to paint, and we'll tell vou the ru'i: kind to usi-. For sale in Platt?muth ry F. G. FRICKE Si, CO., Druggists. THE NEWS does Job Printin