Semi-weekly news-herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1895-1909, July 24, 1900, Image 2

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    The Semi-Weekly News-Herald
GEORGE L. FARLEY, Proprietor.
DAILY EDITION.
One Year, in advance, t5 00
Six Months 2 50
One Week 10
Single Copies, ......... 5
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION.
One Year, in advance, .... tl 00
Six Months,,. 50
s ,
w LARGEST CIRCULATION
Of any Cass County Paper.
TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1900.
MORE rain means more corn.
Germany, Ilussia and Franca have
come to an understanding in the
Chinese affair.
The Oregon was not damaged badly
She will be patched up and sent b9ck
for service at Taku.
The forces of the allied powers are
ruliot' tho Chinese in the vicinity of
Tien-Toia "without their consent."
The nation is rejoUdng on account
of News received that Unites States
Minister Conner was still alive July
ISth.
You should plan to attend the log
rolling to be heid here August 18. It
will be a hummer. Your friends will
be here expecting to pp.e you.
There is said to bo no agreement
between the powers as to tho numbor
of troops to be sent into China. Each
Is sending the number she can spare.
The fusionists failed, utterly, in
their efforts to induce the mid-rondors
to endorse any part of their ticket.
They are determined to bo 'true ixp
ulists." Senator Hoar, whilo ho has dif
fered with President McKinley on
some questions, wants it understood
that he is a republican, and .not a
Bryan man.
The fusionists aro fearful of the re
sult of placing "populist" on the ballot
after the names of tho mid-road candi
dates leat some of their number aro
thereby mislead.
The failure of the demoorats to de
nounce the annexation of Hawaii was
doubtless due to the fact that the voto
of Hawaii alone enabled thc-m to re
vive the 1G to 1 corpse.
The Bee says the fusion candidate
for congress in the First district seems
particularly anxious to have his op
ponent help him draw a crowd to listen
to his exposition of popoeratic vaga
ries. Bets of four to one that McKinley
will be re-elected president havo al
ready been made. A New York re
publican, who had $10,000 to wager, at
three to one, found no enthusiastic
democratic takers.
Thousands of Christian Endeav
orers united in singing "Cod Save the
Queen" as her majesty appeared in the
quadrangle of the castlo. She gra
ciously acknowledged tho plaudits,
bowing and smiling.
Congressman FSuuk ett will be
stronger in Itichardeon county this
year than he was two years ago, so
says the Falls City Journal. No one in
Cass county has been beard to express
a doubt as to his re-election.
In THE last six months hogs have ad
vanced $3 a head. Apply this to f0,
000.000 hogs, and there is a profit of
$150,000,000 for western farmers. This
is better than Wall street. It is a ure
thing the result of prosperity.
A FEW fusion politicians attempted
to get in their oar in the Grand Island
convention, but some of the mid-road -era
got right up in the meeting and
pointed the fellows out, whereupon
they were asked to take back seats.
A Democrat remarked to the writer
the other day that one would be sur
prised to know of the support the re
publicans would get this fall from
those who have been voting with the
fusionists. This isn't tho year they
want a change.
IIox. E. M. Pollard of Nehawka,
president of the Nebraska republican
leagues, thinks this state can be car
ried for McKinley. One thing is cer
tain, republicans are going to make
every possible effort to win and they
are indoed very hopeful.
The affiliation of Secretary of State
Porter with the "true populists"
would indicate that they aro to havo a
great many join them from the fusion
crowd. Mr. Porter is looking ahead
a few years and he will probably be a
leader among tho mid-roaders.
In Colorado four years ago it was
worth a business man's commercial
neck to openly advocate the election of
William McKinley. This year his
sanity is suspected if he takes the
other side. The people of the Centen
nial state are enjoying a high decree
of prosperity. Bixby.
Judge T. C. Humphrey or Arkan
sas, a life long democrat,has announced
himself for McKinley and Roosevelt.
He has been an ardent supporter of
the adminstration since tho breaking
out of the Spanish-American war and
is with it on the Philippine question.
He will cast his lot with the repub
licans in the future.
DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM ANALYZED.
The Kansas City convention declared
itself on the trust question, and this
plank is a corker declaring in one
sentence and contradicting in the next.
They declare in favor of certain laws
and vote against a bill to provide for a
constitutional amendment extending
to congress the right to enact such
laws.
Oldham said in his speech nominat
ing Bryan that the young giant of the
west bad siezed the mighty octopus
and strangled it. But instead the peo
ple stood by and witnessed Tammany's
huge octopus push out its mighty arms
(Crokerand Van Wyck) and effectually
crush the cowardly, cowering orator
of the west. What a wide chasm be
tween their platform and their action
on thi9 question.
Some of th3 most powerful and
mighty trusts known to this or any
other land wero conceived and given
birth, tenderly cared for and reared to
giant strength under democratic ad
ministration. Thus was the seed sown
and germinated in tho virgin poil or
America. Tho democratic record on
the trust question is as broad as the
mighty reach of the Standard Oil com
pany, and as clear as Van Wyck's ice
crystals. The Standard Oil company,
the American Sugar lletining com
pany (sugar trust,) the whisky trust
and tho great railway combine are
some of tho terrible progeny of dem
ocracy, having their birth almost con
temporaneous with Bryan's congres
sional record, and 3et not a word from
his lips was uttered to strangle these
giant concerns.
The Bryan boodle fund will not be
light with contributions coming from
John D. llockefeller, Henry O. Have
meyer, Andrew Carnegie and Senator
Clark, and with Van Wyck and Boss
Croker to strengthen the contribution
in New York the people can appre
ciate the etering out of the demo
cratic wind blow at trust?.
The Kansas City convention con
demns the Bingloy tariff law. It pro
poses the repeal of the Bingley tariff
law and thereby to discharge 1,000,000
workingmen. What nerve, what ty
ranny Mr. Bryan is ready to impose.
Workmen, think of it! Your vote
cast for Mr. Bryan is a solemn pledge
to your discharge, your less of employ
ment. You havo not the word of the
republicans, but the solemn pledge of
the democratic platform, that the
mills and factories of this country
must close, and you must take the
consequences; you must lose j'our job
and go hungry to gratify tho greed of
democratic politicians. Workingmen,
you have not only the pledge of the
democratic platform, but tho pledge
of their past history. Will you do it?
How dare Mr. Bryan look a working
man in the face and ask his vole? Not
only do they pledge themselves to cut
your opportunity of employment and
your wages, but ihiy further pledge
themselves to pay you your hard
earned shekels in dishonest money.
Not only is tbis the pledge of the dem
ocratic party, but it is the pet sehenio
of their bos, their dictator, Mr. Bryan.
Workingmen, do you want it? Will
you vote for it? Workingmen, do you
want the re-enactment of the Wilson
tariff law, which brought such dire
distress into your camp during Cleve
land's administration? If so, you havo
the pledge of the Kansas City conven
tion that your vote cast for Bryan will
givo it to you. Do you want it?
No work or low wiges and dishonest
money is the democratic policy, its ret
forth in their platform.
Beware, my friend, beware! Bj not
deceived by their 1'Ogy cry of "im
perialism."
AMKKIt t.N "rOLICV IN CHINA.
' As a result of recent cabinet meet
ings, the policy of the United States
in the great world crisis in China was
fully decided upon. It is hummed up
in the following:
1. The United States will under no
circumstances join in the partition of
China among tho powers.
2. Tho United States will use all its
influence, to tho utmost extent, short
of war with European nations, to pre
vent tho dismemberment of tho Chi
nese empire.
3. The United States proposes to
havo a voice in the settlement of the
Chinese trouble and its voice will ever
be raised against spoliation and in fa
vor of preservation of China's terii
torial and governmental entity, along
tho lines-set forth in Secretary Hay's
note to tho powors, dated July 3.
4. The United States will not de
clare war upon China on the present
showing of facts, no matter whit the
other powers may do.
5. Tho United Slates, acting inde
pendently and for ifself, will co-operate
with the other powors in restoring
ordor in China, in punishing all of
ficials, high or low, found guilty of
crimes against human life, in sotting
up a stable government that may give
guarantee! f security of life and prop
ertv and freedom of trade.
THE Denver Republican, the leading
newspaper in Colorado, supported
Bryan in 1S96. Please noto what it
says now: "So far as we are able to
learn after careful inquiry in many
quarters not one 6ilver republican in a
hundred in Colorado is willing to ac
cept either tho ticket or the platform
adopted at Kansas City. Nobody need
le surprised to see Colorado (jive a
majority for McKinley." The Denver
Times has also swung from Bryan to
McKinley. In two years Colorado's
production of gold and silver has in
creased 33 per cent. The production
of silver has been about the same
while that of gold has greatly in
creased. Hon. E. W YMAN, a former staunch
fusionist and party leader of Buffalo
county and a member of the last legis
lature, has announced that he cannot
longer support fusionism as it exists in
Nebraska today. He says voters must
bo either democrats or republicans,
and that as for him he is no democrat.
TlIE Beatrice Express says: Many
of the most prominent democrats in
the country have announced that they
will vote for McKinley, and give their
reasons. The curreut issue of the
Conservative gives a long list of their
names. There are many democrats
who believe in sound money; there are
man3' who believe in carrying the flag
to other lands, and keeping it there;
there are many who are opposed to
the hurrah methods of the democracy
under Bryan, and there are hundreds
who see tho country prosperous and
want to let well enouerh alone. Such
people will all voto against Bryan.
The Louisvillo Courier says: A
democratic farmer said tho other day
"Times aro pood enough for mo, I can
afford to pay moro for what I buy and
have money left. I havo sold corn at
30 cents and hogs at $-5 and whilo I
have been a democrat all 1113' life I
know when times aro good and expect
to vote to keep them that way. Mr
Bryan, I think, was mistaken about
what he told us four years ago.
never voted a republican ticket in my
life, but I will voto it this year. I don't
care for a change.
William W Uockiull is to be son
to China as a special agent toadviso
the president and the departments of
state, war and navy. There is said to
bo no better qualified man in America
for this most important and difficult
taek, he having spent years as a
student, explorer and traveler in tho
far east, especially in the Chinese em
pire, lie has won world-wide fame by
his works on China and tho Chinese.
A FARMER who lives six miles south
of Plattsmouth and who has b. on a
life long democrat, was talking with
a friend tho other day in regard to the
presidential candidates. Gazing over
his vast fields of grain with a look of
admiration, ho remarked, in a confi
dential manner: "Say, I hope Bryan
don't get there for foar these good and
prosperous times will change." It is
safe to say tho republicans c 111 depend
upon this man to help them elect Mc
Kinley.
INFORMATION AMI OPINION.
Now that Dunroy has severed his
connection with the Piattsmouth Jour
nal, we may look for some real sound
democratic logic in tho editorial col
umns of that pn per. Tho accusations
of The News and Post that Mr.
Groves, the present editor, is not a
democrat, are preposterously prepos
terous. Of course he is a democrat,
and has been a democrat for for ever
so long ; at least since he took ehprge
of the Journal. Louisvillo Courier.
Blod'mfontoin, which under British
rule, after reorganization is completed,
will bo the capital city of all the South
A'riean state-, may he waited on by
high municipal and historic destinies
At pte-ent it is rather a -email town.
but larger than Washington or Mel
bourne was a century ago, and is hand
somely and 'healthfully situated. It
haj room to spread into a fair city and
a dignified seat of magistracy.
General Sir George Stewart White,
the hero of tho si 'ge of Ladysinith
and the soldier who was not afraid to
own up to it when ho blundered, has
just been installed in his new position
as governor of Gibraltar. When the
general arrived at tho famous British
fortress he was given a hearty recep
tion by the soldiers.
After many intricate" experiments.
scientists havo discovered methods for
obtaining all tho natural digcstnnt".
These have been combined in tho pro
portion found in the human body and
united with sustarces that build up
the digestive organs, making a com
pound called Kodol Dyspepsia cure. It
digests what you eat and allows nil
dyspeptics to eat p'enty of nourishing
food while the stomach troubles are
being radically cured by tho medicinal
agents it contains. It is pleasant to
take and will givo quick relief. F. G.
Fricke & Co.
Taenia's Fourth of July Horrow.
Tacoma, Wash., July 23. S. Z.
Mitchell, of Portland, general man
ager, and P. Ij. Dame, general superin
tendent, of the Tacoma Street Kail way
company, have been formaly charged
with manslaughter. This is the result
of the Fourth of July street car acci
dent in which over forty lives were
lost, sixty persons injured, twenty of
whom are still in the hospitals.
Locomotive Jumps a Iroatlr.
Zanesville. n. .Tnlv 2.1 A rViliim-
bus. Sanduskv and Iloekinor Vallev
comotive Jumped the track on a tres
tle uetween crooksville and Saltillo,
falling sixty-four feet. Engineer Holla
Clauss was killed and tho fipAmnn in
jured.
A sallow, jaundiced skin is a svrantom
of disordered liver, as it springs from
biliary poisons retained in the b'ood.
which destroy energy, cheerfulness.
strength, vigor, happiness and life.
Herbiue will restore tho natural func
tions of the liver. Price 50 cts. F. G.
Fricke & Co.
One ot Lincoln's (iflli eri Dead.
Burlington, Vt., July 23. Hon. L. E.
Chittenden, reeis ter of til troiii.v
during the Lincoln administration, died
uere j esieruay. ne was 77 years old.
It 8afrt III Leg.
P. A. Danforth of LaGraneo. Ga..
sugered for six months with a fright
ful running sore on bis leg, but writes
that Bucklen's Arnica Salve whollv
cured it in five days. For ulcer's,
wounds, piles, it's the best salvo in the
world; cure guaranteed. Onlv25cts.
Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists.
When a minister fails to stick to his
text it may be because he believes
scattered shot hits the most birds.
GOV. ROOSEVELT COMING
Iistiiiuislit-l Kou;li liidcr to
Visit Nebraska.
state Institutions Converted Into Asylums
for liroken Ilowti Party Satellites
and Incompetent.
Omaha, July 23. It ia definitely
settled that Theodore Roosevelt will
pay Nebraska a visit during the
pending campaign. This statement
is made on the authority of Chair
man Lindsay of the state central com
mittec, who says that Governor Roose
velt will devote at least a week to the
campaign in Nebraska. It will be
great treat to tho people of Nebraska
to see, not only the next vice president
of the United States, but one of the
foremost scholars and statesmen of the
nation a man of high distinguishment
in civil and military life. Tho exact
time Governor Roosovelt will be here
has not, as yet, been determined.
The list of speakers for the campaign
will contain among others the names of
many noted statesmen and orators, the
object being to so present the evidence
that the verdict rendered in the high
court of public opinion shall be based on
an intelligent understanding. It never
has been, and is not now, the desire of
the Republican party to acquire public
stewardship by falso pretenses. Moro
than once the Republican party has re
sisted supposedly popular vagaries in
the face of a popular demand for their
adoption, because it was confident that
it was right and that the vagaries were
not alone wrong, but fraught with
great public danger.
It is the party that struck tho chains
of slavery from the black man when
more than half of the nation opposed it,
It is the party that disciplined a dia
obedient, and rebellious confederacy and
established forever the unity of the re
public wliile alt tite "world looted on in
amazement.
It is the party that for 40 years has
maintained an industrial policy which
distinguishes American labor from that
of all the rest of the world, and which
has elevated it to a standard unequaled
in the history of civilized nations. For
40 years the Republican party has stood
guard at the doorway of labor, repuls
ing again and again the attacks of
Democratic free trade. Defeated in
their repeated efforts to bring American
labor to a level with the pauper labor
of Europe, the fusionists have
adopted a new scheme and that is to
lnre labor away from its safe moorings
through alluring promises contingent
upon a change in the monetary system.
It isn't free trade now, though the
fusionists are jnst as much for free
trade now as they ever were, it is free
silver. One is fraught with as much
distress to the American people as the
other. Neither can be adopted with
out being . attended by inconceivable
disaster. The Republican party believes
in a tree people, iree nomes ana tree
government it does not believe in free
trade or free tilvcr.
Expansion.
The Republican party believes in ex-.
pansiou. it believes in extending tne
benefits of free citizenship and self
government o every possible clime. It
believes in progress in commercial and
territorial expansion, to the end that all
may be benefited and the world in gen
eral brought nnder tho benign influence
of Christianity and intelligence.
Tho history of the United States ia a
history of expansion expansion in ter
ritory, as well as in trade, art, science,
and literature. Expansion upon any
pretext was until recently opposed by
the fusionists. They charged that the
Republicans were imperialistic when
they declared in favor of territorial ex
pansion. The' have, in a degree, since
changed their orthodoxy. The Demo
cratic national convention at Kansas
City which handled the expansion
question with such passivo delicacy was
held in territory acquired by expansion.
The site of Kansas City is part of the
Louisiana purchase. Nebraska, the
home of W. J. Bryan, the Democratic
candidate for president, was Spanish
territory when Jefferson was made
president. Nearly 800 members of the
Kansas City eonvention came from ter
ritory acquired through expansion.
More than 40 of the delegates came from
territory annexed in consequence of the
war witn Mexico. aiinnesota, .Mon
tana, Missouri, Nebraska, Arkansas,
Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, North and
South Dakota, Oklahoma, Wyoming,
and part of Colorado, had 180 votes in
the convention, and expansion re
claimed this territory from Spanish
dominion less than 100 years ago. It
would appear that the only kind of ex
pansion which seems to soar to the apex
of fusion estimation and expectancy is
pulmonary expansion. Give them this,
coupled with nncircumscribod loquac
ity, freo from the moral restraint of
ethical jurisprudence, and in the fusion
way of looking at it, the problem of ex
pansion is solved. Forced by public
opinion, However, ana oy tne logio oi
the situation to acknowledge the wis
dom of the Republican policy of expan
sion, the fusionists are now for expan
sion conditioned on a most incongru
ent contingency. In other words, they
favor a policy of expansion that would
not expand and would benefit all the
other great nations of the earth at the
expense of the United States.
I'liillpiiine Islands.
The Pliilippino islands have been
added to the territory of the United
States as a legacy of conquest. These
islands had for two hundred rears been
under the sovereignty of Spain and for
all of that time had felt and experienced
all the iniquities of monarchical rule.
When the hand ot president jucis-iniey
was raised against Spanish atrocities in
Cuba and the Philippines, it was not
for the purpose of acquiring new pos-
Fessions in the Orient. Naval and mili
tary strategy alone directed movement
toward the Philippines, and those
waters were invaded with no other
object in view than the destruction or
capture of the Spanish squadron. Not
nntil the treaty of ' Paris was entered
into did the United States undertake to
exercise control over the Philippines.
This treaty passed sovereignty over
these inlands from Spain to the United
States, and it is a forcible reminder to
Bryan and those fusionists who are
finding fault with the, McKinley ad
ministration for attempting to restore
law and order in the Philippines, that
this very obligation, this verr duty, is '
the result of Senator AllnTa rote aad
the personal efforts of W. J. Bryan to
have the treaty ratified. Witheut
Senator Allen's vote and without the
personal efforts of W. J. Bryan the
treaty could not and would not have
been ratified, and the Philippine isl
ands would not have passed to the
sovereignty of the United States.
After being largely responsible for the
acquisition of the Philippines, Bryan
and the fusionists have adopted a plat
form of repudiation and they hold up
their hands in abject . horror at the
spectacle of an honest, commendable
and patriotic effort on the part of the
president to suppress domestic lawless
ness and rapine in the islands. Like
the copper-heads of 1861 they are cas
tigating the. McKinley administration
for exacting obedience to the well es
tablished rules and ethics of popular
government and at the same time are
encouraging insurrection by seditious
utterances secreted in expressions of
sympathy for a people bearing arms
against the United States.
It is a prerequisite to popular govern
ment that the governing power shall it
self be capable of self government. So
soon as the Filipinos shall demonstrate
their ability to maintain a government
analogous to a republio just so soon will
the Republican party through its au
thorized representatives encourage that
undertaking.
Of Commercial Importance.
The importance of the United States
retaining the Philippines, from a com
mercial standpoint, is not to be dis
counted. It is an important link in the
policy of commercial expansion. Par
ticularly is this true when considered
in connection with American trade in
China. It is only recently, and it is
due to the wise statesmanship of Mc
Kinley, that American products have
found their way to China in any mater
ial quantity. The "open door" policy
recently promulgated opens up to the
farmers and producers of the United
States a market, the consuming capa
city of which challenges computation.
China has an area of more than one-
twelfth of the globe and a . population
variously estimated at between 300,000,
000 and 450,000.000. Her export and
import trade reaches enormous propor
tions and it will require time and en
ergy alone for the United States to de
velop an enormous trade in that
country and with these people. It is a
mild assertion to state that China alone
can consume every bushel ox surplus
farm products in the United States.
The farmers of Nebraska, as well as the
farmers of other agricultural states,
should, therefore, in considering the
policy of this government toward the
Philippines consider the importance of
a commercial footing in China, an es
sential of which is control of the islands.
This is not imperialism, but commer
cialism; is not militarism, but far-reaching,
far-seeing, intrinsic statesman
ship.
State Issues.
Important as are the national issues
of scarcely less importance to the people
of Nebraska are the state issues. It is
no secret that under the Poynter ad
ministration widespread corruption has
been practiced, to say nothing of the
evil effect of ignorance and incompe
tency. Out of the many state institutions
there is scarcely one whose manage
ment is not contaminated and tainted
by fraud, corruption and spoliation.
The state has been swindled out of
thousands of dollars, and that, too, by
the representatives of the very party
that promised the people of Nebraska
an honest and economical administra
tion of public affairs. Not only have
state institutions been made asylums
for broken down politicians, but the
public faads have been exposed to their
rapacity with the result, that while the
26th general assembly or session of the
legislature appropiated the enormous
sum of 12,591,373 for public purposes,
there will be a large deficiency at the
end of the current year. Nearly every
institution has already exhausted the
amount appropriated for it and there
are yet six months of the time unex -
pired. In some of the institutions
laborers have not been paid for several
months and they will have to wait nntil
the legislature meets and passes an ap
propriation before they can draw
their pay. There is scarcely an insti
tution, in fact, there is not one, but at
the end of the present year will not
have a sadly depleted exchequer.
What Is equally as bad as raiding the
treasury is ignorance and incompe
tency in managing the public institu
tions. Evidence of this evil is abundant.
Scarcely an institution has escaped.
All have been used to reward party
satellites regardless of qualification or
fitness. Poynter has gone farther in
making the public patronage a legal
tender for the payment of personal ob
ligation than any other governor has
dared to go. Positions requiring skill
and knowledge of particular branches
have been given to party favorites ir
respective of their ability to flu them.
BrCHAXAX,Mich.,May 22. Genesee
Pure Food Co., Lo Roy, N. Y. Gen
tlemen: My mamma has been a great
coffee drinker and has found it very in
jurious. Having U9ed several pack
ages of your GRAIN-O, the drink that
takes the place of coffee, sho finds it
much better for herself nnd for us
children to drink. She has given up
enfTee riiinklncr nntirelv. W use a
nncLtnoTA of fJrnin-O evorv week. I am
ten years old. l ours respectfully.
Fannie Williams.
Took At oiiite ly Mistake.
flrnj -ville. Ills., July 21. Prince Cal
vin, a prominent farmer residing in
Calvin. Ills., died from the effects of
an overdoue or aconite taken by mis
take.
White Mao Turned Vt-llow.
Great consternation was foil by the
friends of M. A.Hogirty of Lexington,
Ky., when they saw he waa turning
yellow, li s skin slowly changed color,
also hi? eyes, and he suffered terribly.
His malady was Yellow Jaundice. Ue
was treated by the best doctors, but
without benefit. Then he was advised
to try Electric Bitters, tbe wonderful
stomach and Liver remedy, and he
writes: "After taking two bottles I
was wholly cured." A trial proves its
matchless merit for all stomach, liver
and kidnev treubles. Only 50c. Sold
by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists.
The amateur fisherman can reel off
just as big nan story as the profes
sional.
Oeliability
.THAT'S WHAT
..Buggies,
Road and Spring Wagons.
See our Racine Buggies the
buggies in large lots and get
also sell them reasonable.
Hand -Made JIarnoss
Genuine Oak-Tanned Leather.
..VIJCS! U&T 3JOlSD0a:..
Plattsmouth, Nebraska.
A BOON TO MANKIND!
D" TABLER'S BUCKEYE
-A
m l f-ir o c
N4 co grim a o
01 1 Z
cn a tn
tn I
CO I
A New Discovery for the Certain Cure of INTERNAL and
- EXTERNAL PILES, WITHOUT PAIN.
CURES WHERE ALL OTHERS HAVE FAILED.
Tubes, by mail, 75 cents; bottles, 50 Cents.
JAKES F. BALLARD, Sole Proprietor. - 310 North Mala Street. ST. LOUIS, MO.
F. G. Fricke & Co.
Sherwin-Williams Paint.
Covers Most, Looks Best, Wears Longest, Most
Economical. Full Measure.
For sale in Plattsmoutn fy
F. G. FRICKE
For Thirty Days-June 25 to July 25
In order to adverliso my Kino Photos ilurinjr tho
dull season I will make Photographs it .
a
a Greatly Reduced Prices
a
REGULAR FKK'E Kl ll ( I i T
83 00 Aristo Platino Mxnti'lio Cnhim-t 1
3 50 Arifto Platino CoUm-cii Panel
2 50 Aristo Piatino C'ahinet I '1
1.75 Aristo Platino Half Cabinet H
1.50 Aristo Platino Card Oval
1.50 Aristo Piatino Square
2.00 (;iot-s Finish Cabinet 1 -"
1.50 (JIosh Finish Half Cabinet S
1.25 (ilosa Finish Card Oval
1.25 GIohs Finish Square
NOW IS 1 HE TIME to have that picture
taken while you can take advantage of the re
duced rates. Remember the place
Corner Fifth
c
Trrr fl WHITE'S CREAM l
i VV ORMS! VERB1IFUCE!
I ! For20 Yea rs HanenuVTom Remedies. rilT
, aOIiU 2-1 T Alili DKUOGIHTS. ?
I Spared by i, JlE31LjS
F. G. FRICKE & CO.
if WEBSTER'S I
H MTEKMATUNM. I
V fMCTUNAKrV
A Dictionary of ENGLISH,
Biography, Geography, Fiction, etc
What better Investment could 1 made than ia a rr.py r.f tlio
International ? This royal quarto volume U a va-t MT.-hue.f
valuable information arranged in at onvcui. ni form f-r hand, rye,
and mind. It is more widely used as standard iiUt lu.riry than any
other dictionary in the world. It should he in every lni elir.M.
Also Webstrr'i Collegiate Dictionary with a Prott:h
Glossary, etc. " First t-Ja- m iia!it y, w coml i i hia:"
..SMOKE..
Bookmeyer's Cigars
HAVANA TAG, 5
PURO. 10c
J.I. unrudandT.Janda
7 n n ti
rr f
,m
Funeral
Directors...
and....
Embalmers.,
ALLr CALLS ANSWKKKU
AT ALL HOURS.
Plattsmoq th 'Phone.
Store 137
4 Residence 303
in Vehicles..
YOU FIND IX OUR.
Carriages..
best manufactured,
them at the right
We btiv our
ligtirf.. We
J?!LE
o
c
73
mZ
21c
O rjj
BBBBH 1 mm. a a mm
- V,
CURE
& CO., Druggists.
51 S
ami Main Street.-
PETER NORD,
The Platte
River
JPerwmon
-
Is ajain prepared to tl a
i'c:ieral ferrviii: lutein
Teams will le cros-t'l at
all times
A1AV OK sun I T.
Ilis Iw.ats will le foun.l u nr
the IJurlintrtoM' r.':.t:e
River liriile
o
TERMS ARE REASONABLE
..II. .iisr.iV..
H. Ph.yl. O- C.,
"Vetei;iiiiiiiJiii
Weepltp Water, Neb.
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