The news-herald. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1909-1911, February 22, 1909, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    X
Plattsmouth
get your
dinner at
The Perkins House J f
Outhmann & Cory, Props.
tttttinMtmimi!itn
MONEY FOR FARM LOANS.
II Tn ltd Uu tt ioirtTt4 Ftr
UbJ, it ntiMiklt ratt f littttit. Writ
IU Dtlij. I. SIBBEIKSEN.
208 butti Sttrt Blt, OmU.
BAILEY & MAGI!
A
J.
THE DENTISTS
Uttit All.icti ll. OfJ DfitUlm. !
bit TtUty Bft-'Qlpf Omtil Of
fkf li lk NiMIe Wttl.
tCik OKCOUNTB TO ClTI mliTO.
M floor Intern Elk . Itti. riiniin, OMAHA, NEB.
C. I. M1RSH1LL, D. D. S.
..Graduate Dentist..
Prices Reasonable
All Work Guaranteed
Twenty-six Years' Experience
urnce in ritzgeraia biock
?............... i i --!--,--
V i riAA At- a I I
t TH8 Plattsmouth Stock
ana oram go. y t
Have a private wire to all the
market centers including Chicago,
New York, St. Louis and Kansas
City which guarrantees the best
of service. If interested call for
any information concerning the
market, and ask for our market
letter.
FRANK COBELMAN.MCR
Platts. Phone 45, Coates block.
i I
JAMES SOCHOR 1
TAILOR
Now has the spring styles of
merchant tailoring cloths
in stock. Do not
wait for
YOUR SPUING SUIT
until others have ordered ahead
of you. Be a lender. I am now
using the new French process of
dry cleaning and pressing does
not injure the daintiest fabrics.
v
vvvwvv
4
We now have a Laxative
Fig Syrup Com
pound FOR 25c PER BOTTLE
Sure and effective. Sold by
y.
V
!
F. G. FRICKE&CO.,
DRUGGISTS
Human Hair
NATURAL I
Switch
WAVY
24 Inches, 2 Oz.
nchei
: Inch
A or 22 Inches
fti?
SJi95 Greatest
fit in Hair
Z.'i tti. straight
bargain :
Good I
ever known. Send sample with
money order, and we will match !
your hair pertectly. It not sat
isfied vour money refunded.
OMAHA HAIR CO.
0,dHBoom303Ore HA'
IT'S VERY UNUSUAL
to see such hnndsome turnouts as
goes from Manspeaker's livery
stable. Our rigs are up-to-date,
our carriages are swell in style
and comfortable to ride in, and
our horses are always well
groomed, well dressed and well
fed. When you want a drive
come to Manspeaker's for your
turnout.
M.E.MANSPEAKER
June' Old Livery Barn
Seventh A Main SU. I'lattumoulh, Neb.
When in
Le t
IS3 . a1
Spend a Pleasant Hour at
1,16 Cosy Corner
TOM TROOP. PROPPJErOnj
WYVWVYV
1
THE PLATTS MOUTH
HOTEL
P. F. GOOS. Prop.
j; J
,
W.M:-M"!l":-!--'I-W-;--! j
A. L. TIDD
LAWYER
Befe'uneei:
Bank of Eagle, Eagle.
Nehawka Bank, Nehawka.
Bank of Murdock, Murdock.
First Nat'l bank, Greenwood.
State bank of Murray, Murray.
First Nat'l bank, Plattsmouth.
Want Column
i
WANTED.
WANTED-To trade, a fine piano for
a good single driving horse Platts
mouth Music Company. C3-tf
CIGAR SALEMAN WANTED-In
your locality to represent us. Ex-
. perience unnecessary; $110 per month
and expenses. Write for particulars.
Monarch Cigar Co. St. Louis, Mo.
WE PAY $80 A MONTH SALARY
and furnish rig and all expenses to
introduce poultry and stock powders:
new plan; steady work; Address Big
ler Company, X 900, Springfield, Ill
inois. AGENTS-SALESMEN The best ar
tide wonderful invention just pat
entedtremendous seller, $25 a day
profits easy. Selling the "Patent
Head," a marvelous efficient device,
strongly appeals and quickly told to
grocers, butchers, farmers, hotel
men and others. The "Patent Head"
is the greatest economy ever offered.
It means a big saving. Stops waste
from barrels. Keeps their contents
sweet and fresh. Clamped in place
it remains there as solid as the barrel
itself until released by a simple turn
of the key. Positively make the
barrel germ, dost and air proof.
Agents are telegraphing daily big
orders. Hundreds of letters from
live agents say that they never made j
so mucn money so .ru.L-.wy. i uu tn.-i ,
You can
easily clem up $."00 to $1,000 the
next 30 days. Act quick. Territory
going fact. Particulars free. The
National Sales Agency, 1210 Ohio
Building, Toledo, Ohio. 69-C
FOR EXCHANGE -An SO acre farm
in Kansas and a 1C0 farm in Min
nesota for Plattsmouth property.
Windham Investment Co. 71-3
FOR SALE.
mr? sat.r pass roi'VTY farms-
40 acres, 171 acres, 70 acres, 143
acres, 120 acres, SO acres, and small
acrage tracts. Windham Invest
ment Co. 73-3
ATTENTION-If you want a home in
Plattsmouth, we hnve sixty from
w hich to make a selection, terms to
suit purchaser. Call at office for
particulars. Windham Investment
Company. 73-3
FOR RENT OP. SALE-2S acres ad
joining Plattsmouth. Windham In
vestment Co. 70-1
LITTLE LOCALS.
See us for sale bills.
C. A. Marshall, dentist.
The Majestic, 5 and 10 cents.
Something new in post cards every
week. Nemetz & Co. next to P.O.
We now have Compound Fig Syrup
at 25c a bottle. F. G. Frick & Co.,
Druggists. 72-4.
I Some cigars are only cigars, but
j Pepperburg's "Buds"are a good smoke
I 'Always reliable.
i Photo post cards of Taft at Platts
mouth. Now on sale-Ten different
i views at 5c each. Nemetz & Co.
next'
to P. O.
Now is the time to have your piano
tuned. Mr. Becker of the Plattsmouth
Music Co. is an experienced man in
this line of work.
job printing of all descriptions i
: promptly executed at the News-Hkk-AI.O
olllce. Let us figure with you on
your requirements.
When buying candies, why not buy
the best? We always have a fine line
of the superior grades on hand. Ne
i metz & Co. next to P. O.
w
Chance for Small
Manufacturing is Certain
Cities of This Country.
Under the captain of "A Remedy for
Freight Congestion" the Wall Street
Journal, the leading financial publica-
tion of the country, discusses the trerd
of manufacturing toward the smaller
cities and gives the soundest and most
compelling reasons for that movement
jarticularly in the establishment of
new factories in the general expansion
of business. The Journal says:
"Whether we need more railroads or
not, one thing is certain, namely, that
the enormous cost of enlarging terminal
facilities in great cities and of handl
ing freight under any of the known
methods of carriage at these points is
becoming so great as to force a reform
in the modern methods of terminal dis
tributlon. One plan is the construction ;
of elevated roads above grade so as not
to interfere with traffic and travel on '
Btreet level?. The other plan is to tun- j
nel underneath the city so that the ,
consignee n.ay have his freight deliver-,
ed on his elevator platform and lifted
to whatever story of his establishment
he may wich. This is what the Chicago
Subway is doing for merchandise, which
has to find its way into the center of
the city.
"But can manufacturing stand this
expense? Is not the price of land and
the cost of handling materials and pro
ducts gradually crowding manufactur
ing industries out of the more expensive
real estate areas and forcing them not
only to the suburbs but beyond? The
virtual breakdown of terminal distri
bution of freight on the part of rail
roads is having the effect of forcing not
a few manufacturing plants not only to
the suburbs, but to locate well out in
the country, where the Bmall town may
develop as a manufacturing center,
without any of the annoyances of hav
ing to fight first to get freight into a
city and then get it out.
"This development is a most natural
one. The main thing that has kept it
from making great strides has been the
unwillingness of railroads to give local
points on their lines an equal shipping
Zbz 6nd
H
EN MY DRUMMOND the great
philosopher and scientist, in dis -
cusdnir the end of life said: I
"The end of life is, not to do good,
although manv of u? Ihink so. It is not
to win souls, although I once thought
so. ThP end of life is to do the will of
God Thflt may ()(J jn the ,ine of d()ing
, am.u it mav not.
For the answer to the individual, the
answer to the question, "What is the j cau do 88 much- Therefore the su
end of my life?" is, To do the will of preme principle upon which we have to
God. whatever that may be. Spurgeon 1 run our lives is to adhere, through good
replied to an invitation to preach to an ' report and ill, through temptations
exceptionally large audience. "I have prosjierity and adversity, to the will of
no ambition to preach to 10,000 peop'.e, Go1 whatever that may lead us. It
but to do the will of God," and he de- may take you away to China, or you
dined. If we could have no ambition who are KoinK to Africa may nave to
past the will of God, our lives would be stay where you are, you who are going
successful. If we could say. 'I have to be an evangelist may have to go into
no ambition to go to the heathen, I
have no ambition to win fouls, my
ambitian is to do the will of God, what-
ever that may be;" that makes all lives
equally great, or equally small, because
DSW PONDS OF THE ANCIENTS.
Description of Prehistoric Method of
Obtaining Water Supply.
One of the prehistoric methods used
In securing a water supply in sections
where it was Impossible to secure it
from natural sources, or where It be
came necessary to live on elevated
territory for defense was by the con
st met Ion of dew ponds. These dew
ponds were made by hollowing out
the earth for a space far in excess of
the apparent requirements of such a
pond, then thickly covering the whole
of the hollow with a coating of straw.
The straw in Its turn was covered by
a layer of well chosen, finely pud
dled clay, and the upper surface of
the clay closely strewn with stones.
Such a pond will gradually become
filled with water, the more rapidly the
larger tt is, even though no rain may
ran. During tne warnitnor a summer
day the earth will store a considerable
amount of heat, while the pond, pro
tected from the heat by the noncon
ductlvlty of the straw, Is at the same
time chilled by the process of evapora
tion from the puddled clay. The con
sequence Is that during the night the
moisture of the comparatively warm
alr '8 C(,ndensed on the surface of the
cold clay. As tne condensation during
the nights is In excess of the evapora
tion during the day, the pond becomes, '
night by night, gradually filled. Popu
lar Mechanics. ;
One Guess Only.
"What did he ever see In her?"
asked one.
"What did she ever see In him?"
' asked the other.
I Which of these two was the woman
I and which the man'' Kansas City
I Times.
C1 Karma
Cities to Grow
to Drift to the Smaller
rate with those allowed to manufactur
ers at competitive centers. The main
tenance of local freight rates, to tome
thing short of tearing up the industry
by its roots and forcing it to move bag
and bagguge to the competitive center,
had done more thiin any other force to
intensify the traffic conditions in cities
with which railroading is now suffer
ing. "Unless the new interstate law gov
erning railway rates proves to fall far
short of what is expected of it, we may
reasonably hope that the era of the
small town as a manufacturing unit has
come to stay. Some of these towns
win grow up as small cells adjacent to
the irreat municipal organisms, which
threw them on. But the isolated small
town with an individuality oi us own
1,8 n industrial center has a future
ahead of it, because it can grow freely,
unhindered by the things that hamper
industry in a large city. The building
ot Gary well out from Chicago'- is an
1 illustration of the selection ot locality
with a view to take advantage of isola
tion on the one hand and first rate com
munication on the other hand.
"Among the remedies for car short
age, none will probably play a larger
part in the future than the removal of
manufacturing plants from congested
centers. Plants already ettablishtd
may be slow to fold their tents, but
new capital is not going to make the
mistake of putting its head into a noose
by location in large cities where rail
way facilities have practically reached
their limits. As beginnings are made
in this direction, the locality with a
population from 1,000 to 50,000 people
will in due time demonstrate its superi
ority for the investment of millions
that are awaiting to be launched in
profitable enterprises. It will be found,
a) the social and econotnic phases of
the question are studied, that the
standard of welfare of the men, women
and children can be maintained at
much higher level for the mass of the
population than i3 possible in a city of
highest rank."
of Life
! the only great thing in a life is what of
; God's will there is in it. The maximum
achievement of any man's life, after it
is all over, is to have done the will of
Go'I- No man or woman can have done
any more with a life; no Luther,
no
on
i Spurgcon, no Wesley, no Meluncthon
can have uone anymore
with their
' lives; and a dairy maid or a scavenger
I'usiness, and you who are going into
business may have to become an c van-
Kt,,st' ,lut '"ere is no happiness or
success in any life until that rinciple
is taken possession of."
! SAYS OXEN LAID OUY LONDON.
Swayed
as They Plowed, Hence
Crooked Streetc.
the
Lord Avebury has sugg'-tted an ex
planation of the crooked streets which
have puzzled so many visitors to Lon
don. Presiding at the first of a series
of addresses on the history of this
city, he nit id it was remarkable how
the Ioiidon of to-day bore traces of its
ancient history.
I let ween London and Westminster
there were formerly open fields di
vided Into long strips of an acre each.
These strips, he said, had a tendency
;o curvature owing te the way in
which the oxen walked while plowing
the ground. An Instance of that was
seen In the curious way in which
Longacre curved. Several of the
strips abutted at right angles on Hyde
i park, and the fact that they did not
end In one line suggested a reason for
the singular Irregularity of the line
of houses forming Park lane. The dip
in Piccadilly, added Urd Avebury,
was the site of the old stream, part 'it
which formed the Serpentine.
World's Sugar Production.
An estimate by the Hrltihh board of
trade of the sugar production of the
world for 1906 makes a totnl of 14.
312.716 long tons, of which 7,317,472
tons were cane and 6,99.1,241 tons beet,
the production of both kinds advancing
practically at the same rate since li'iS.
In the production of cane mgnr Hrltlsli
India had the largest output of 2.22.1,
4(10 tons, and In beet sugar Germany
runked first, with an output of 2,:!ri2.
1S7 tons. In consumption of nv,ir
per head Australia stands first at 12!t
pounds, the I'nlted States coining next
with 89 pounds, and the I'nlted King
dom following at bt pounds.
DOUBLE ENTRY AS HE KNEW IT.
.'i-n'i Simple System That, Strange to
Say, Cauied Discontent.
Hm Saunders, the veteran oyster
dialer of the village, was mad. Ills
honesty had never before been lin
lieacl'.ed. lie stood In the open door
w.iy of Ids one-room shanty down near
the station, eatclilim each passerby In
tiiMi and pouring Into his ear a re
hearsal of his woes. The country doc
tor was the nineteenth by actual count
who had passed that way since early
morning.
J 1 in drew himself up proudly and
wiping the tobacco Juice out of the
coiners of his month with Ills coat
eeve. Hiiswered. stoutly:
" Taln't. doctor 'taln't that. I
keeps double entry. js like till the
storekeepers hereabouts, I reckon, and
I never overehaiKes."
The doctor smiled qntir.lcally.
"What do you uiiilei stand by double-
entry bookkeeping. Jim?"
J 1 in stared at the doctor, astonished,
his big slothful brown eyes opening
wide as he ran Ills band -throimh his
shock of whltenliiK brown hair.
"Well, do tell, doctor, don't you
know? An' you a college man! Why.
mail, it's jest as simple as rollln' off a
log. A man comes along and asks
fer orsehers, and you glveH 'em to 'Itn.
and ef he don't put the money down
on the counter, then, you chaiKes blm
up In the book for 30 days. Then ef
he don't pay up In :i0 days, or, say, bIx
weeks, you puts htm down In the hook
again. There ain't thr.t simple?"
By' Pttng Fireo.
"Ruggles, how did you catch that
cold?"
"Well, I'll tell you, ftaiuage. I lost
my Job the other day. It was the first
time such a thing had ever happened
to me, and 1 got kind o' reckless, you
know, and exposed myself, and
and"
"I see. You cauglit It on the first
bounce."
Geo. E. Dovey, President.
F. E. Schlater, Vice Pres.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
PLATTSMOUTH, NEB.
Transacts a General Banking Business
and Repectfully Solicits a Share
of Your Patronage.
Interest Paid
11
A Farm
IN
Sunny San Luis Valley
OP COLORADO
Free Trip To
WE HAVE DIVIDED A 54,000-ACRE TRACT
INTO TRUCK FARMS CONTAINING U
10 TO 1,000 ACRES
PER FARM AT $200 EACH
$10 CASH AIID$fD PER MONTH
No Interest! No Taxes!
We want a reliable and energetic man in every
town to form clubs of 15 prospective purchaser?.
We will furnish round trip railroad tickets FREE
to one member of each club to inspect land. We pay
liberal commission. Full particulars upon request.
Reference Any Bank
Kansas City or Denver.
San Luis Valley Land and
Irrigation Co.
u
n
Bank of Commerce Bldg.
, spENT MUCM FCR EMCr00V.
Napoleon I. Had Ccctly Coronation
Robe and Throne.
An old I'ailslan Mini which (leafs In
embroideries am supplied artistic
needlework to the court of Louis XV!
Is still in possession of the accounts
of former centuries, and an Inspection
of these books reveals some Interest
ing facts. Napoleon I. was economical
as compared with the Kmpress Jose
phine, but his bills were conslder.tlile.
The einlnobleiy on his coronation
robe cost 10,r00 fi sties, and an etn
broldeied coat cost 3,!i00. Thlt coat
became too small for him nfter h bad
worn It a year, and he ordered pie
if cloth to he inserted at the seam
and covered Willi embroidery.
The bill for'Hie lrt Napoleon's
throne amounted to 63,970 francs.
The outer di apery of purple velvet
trimmed with gold lace cost I0.I0O
francs. The red velvet panels were
strewn with embroidered golden bees
at five francs apiece. The Inner
irapery of blue satin, with gold lace,
was 9,600 I'ranes, and the gold em
broidered stripes for the Inner trim
ming cost H.fiOO francs. The em
broidery on the blue velvet rushion
cost 3,020 francs, and the foot cushion
1,200. In addition there were .1.0T.O
bees embroidered on the panels ot Ibo
canopy at a cost of 6.2f0 francs.
During Gun Firing.
The Itrlllsli admiralty has given at
tention to the question of ear prutec
tlon during heavy gun firing, and it
has been decided to use plasticine,
with the addition of cotton wool, but
the form of ear protection to Ih uned
Is to be left to the Individual choice of
officers and men. Plasticine may be
supplied to ships and gunnery Kchools
It specially demanded. The additiou of
50 to CO grains of cotton wool baa
been recommended to Insure rfoct
safety. It Is pointed out that the cost
of the material Is very small and Its
use is often desirable.
II. N. Dovey, Cashier
C. G. Frickh, Ass't Cash.
3:
On Time Deposits.
for $10
TIIE-
Examine Land rj
or Banker in St Louis
:i-s
KANSAS CITY, MO.
t