GO-CARTS S2.00 to $15.00 NEW STEEL RANGES S20 to $45 A few second hand Ranges from $10 to $15. Carpets and Matting, a splendid line just re ceived. Steel Couches. D. r. JACKSON Pearlman's Old Stand, Opposite Court House. A Very Timely Subject Forest Planting on State's Over flow Lands Discussed. Settlers in this part of the country for may years have grappled with the problem of forest planting on lands subject to overflow. Many have suc ceeded in their planting experiments, and some have failed, but interest in the matter ha.s never lagged among progressive owners of land. The ques tion of utilizing to the best advantage the thousands of acres of overflow lands throughout the Ohio, Mississippi, and Missouri Valleys is becoming of in creasing importance. The effect of the recurrent floods has been to permanently damage by ero sion, or to render temporarily worth less for Egriculture by deposits of sand, large areas of previously feitile plow land. Because of the uncertainty of field crops, an 1 Ihe danger of future erosion, much of the flood-damaged land can be devoted profitably to tree planting. The .cottonwood and the black wal nut, two native trees, and the hardy catalpa fulfill the requirements admir ably. The cottonwood may be planted where erosion has more or less com pletely ruined the land, and on areas which have been covered by deep layers of sand. The partially eroded land and land covered with only a shallow laeer of sand, and also such areas which through the protection of surrounding natural forests have be come silted, may bo profitably planted to black walnut or hardy catalpa. Cottonwood is least exacting as to soil fertility and has the advantage of quich growth. It can bo, depended upon to produce large quantities of fuel, box-bjard material, and rough lumber. Seedlings or cuttings spaced G feet by 6 feet or 4 feet by 8 feet apart may be used in establishing plantations. At eight to ten years after planting about one-half of the trees should be thinned out. A second thinning, at the end of fifteen to eighteen years, removes the least promising of the remaining trees. A plantation should begin to yield saw logs when twenty to twenty-five years old. The catalpa requires a fairly rich Boil, but its roots will quickly penetrate to the fertile soil if planted or areas covered with thin layers of sand. Plantations of this tree have been ' known to survive frequent and even prolonged, overflows. The records for a certain plantation in southern Illinois how tjiat within twenty years it had suffered fifteen inundations and that the ground had been under water a month at a time. A three-year-old plantation in Shawnee county, Kansas, ENTRE NOUS The News-Herald is equipped to do all kinds of Job Printing and will appreciate an opportunity to figure with you when in the market for anything in our line. No job is too large for our ability to execute and no job is too small to receive our most painstaking care, we cordially invite the attention of our farmer friends to our sale bill department. This is splendidly equipped for the prompt execu tion of work of this character, and our prices will be found to be as low as the lowest. To the bus iness men, if you will telephone your wants a rep resentative will call and quote you prices an any thing you may need. We earnestly solicit a share of your patronage. Old Papers For was overflowed for about four weeks by the Kansas river flood in June, 1!M)8. On a adjacent tract planted in the spring of l!l08, the newly planted seed lings were completely submerged for an entire week. Some of the leaves were killed and the growth of the trees temporarily checked, as a result of the Hooding, but the trees were not killed. One-year-old seedlings, cither home grown or purchased from a nursery, should be used and it is of the utmost importance to secure seed or seedlings I of the genuine Catalpa speciosa, as this is the only commercially valuable catalpa. Trees may be planted 5 feet by ( feet to 5 by 8 feet apart. To en sure the best results, trees must be given good cultivation for two or three seasons. The plantations ahould also be gone over in the spring for the first two or three years and the surplus buds rubbed off while still tender. This will obviate pruning in later years. Catalpa produces excellent posts, which can be used at a small size. Where the quality of the growth in sures good, straight trees the produc tion of small telephone poles has been found very profitable. For ordinary situations a twenty year rotation is a .visable. Since hardy catalpa is likely to be frozen back by extreme cold weather, it can not be planted with safety north of Nebraska, Iowa, or Illinois. The walnut is suitable for planting on sites which are flooded for only com paratively short periods of time. Where this tree is desired, it would probably be more profitable to plant it in mix ture rather than in pure plantations. If planted in mixture with catalpa, the walnut seed should be planted in the permanent site two or three years be fore the catalpa is introduced. This would be necessary to keep it from be ing overtopped by the more rapid grow ing catalpa. The lacter species makes its most rapid growth during the first tail years of its life and matures early, while the walnut persists in its growth for a century or more. The fact has been demonstrated that trees can be profitably grown on land subject to frequent overflows, and that lands damaged by extraordinary Hoods cin be reclaimed by this method, while in planting land of this character to annual crops, recurrent Hoods will not only destroy the crops but also inflict additional and permanent injury to the land. ' Entertainment Antique. In the dramatic department of the "Kntertainment Antique" April 13th, I will be given: I "The Girls of Our School,"-Mrs. C. ; S. Johnson and a bevy of girls, j "The Wrong Bottle, "-IJen Windham and John Faltr. I "Heading, "What Signing the I'lcdge did lor John ana me, -Mrs. J. S. Vandercook. See Dr. Barnes for your veterinary work. Satisfaction guaranteed. Sale at This QfTiof Gastcr Cbougbts by platts- mouth Bfc: An Easter Message Jesus met the world with a great con tradiction. He did it in his life and character and purpose and teaching. Let me lead you to think on that thought. The world looks on reputation and measures a man by that. If he is loved, petted, honored, if he stands high in the community, though he may not have a particle of morl sense or character, the world passes him as a man. Hut if he is poor or obscure or hated, though it may be unjustly, woe to him. Jesus reversed that. He was despised and hated. The prophet said "He was despised and rejected of men." And yet his character outshines the char cater of all the Kings of earth and the chara"ter of the greatest archangel of heaven. Then Jesus says "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his right eousness." The world says "Gain first; get, accumulate pile u.j miike a bank account.". The whole Gospel story contradicts the world. Doctor Weston, a pastor in New York called a number of young business men and asked them each to give a thousand dollars toward a certain purpose in the church. One of these young men said "Doctor, does this commend itself to you as a good business proposition?" "No," sahl the doctor, "my whole life is a contradiction of business proposi tions. I could advance my own inter ests better at something else." He was simply saying "The world's idea is "to take care of self; Christ's idea is to care for others." Hut there is no greater contradiction to the thoughts of men than the open grave on that first Easter morning. Death is life; that is what it says. Somebody has written "Death ends all." Hut does it? Not under the teach ings of theEaster day. Somebody else has said "The grave is a charnel-house, dark and dreary and desolate." But is it? Not under the lessons of the old Book that reveals the resurrection power. Hear it. "When this corrup tible shall have put on incorruption.and this mortal shall have put on immorality then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy sting? 0 grave, where is thy victory? Thanks he unto God, who giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ." Then men have always said "Life is swallowed up of death." Who has not said it as he stood looking at friends and loved ones that have slipped away from him, and the grave is about to shut out their faces in this world forever. A young man, whose mother I had buried and left him des solate and homeless, said to mp "I get up sometimes and go all over the house up stairs and down, and out into the door yard; it seems to me I must find her somewhere." But she wasn't there. He did not find her, and he was compelled to think of the little mound out yonder in the cemetery and mother there cold in death. So we have writ ten "Life is swallowed up of death." But is it? Not under the light shining all about Joseph's tomb on that first Easter morning. Look at that scene. There is the stone and the seal and the guard. Oh, how dark it is. But wait. The angle de scends his countenance is like lightning and his raiment as white as snow. Watch him. The seal is broken, the stone is rolled away, light shines from the grave and Jesus lives. Turn now in your thought to Paul a id hear him as he says "Now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the tirstfruits of them that slept." Then after you have heard that listen to this same risen Jesus as he says "Hecate 1 live, ye shall live also." That is the mi'ssage of Easter morning. Jesus lives and he lives in the hearts of men. A. Al.l.KN Uanuau.. Divine Origin of Easter The divine origin of the Christian religion depends for ils proof on the evidence that Jesus of Nazareth is "the Christ, the son of the living God. If it he proved that lie is the Christ whose c .iming was predicted by the prophets of the Old Testament and proclaimed as having come by the apostles of the New Testament, his religion is proved to be divine. Unbelief may raise ten thousand questions concerning the Bible, but the religion of Jesus has been so constructed that the man of fuiih has1 but the one question to deal with. The supreme oracle of the Bible is that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and while the Bible presents many proofs of this truth, in reality, all ' pro if depends upon the fact of the ! resurrection of Jesus Chrut. from the jdeiul. If he did no: rise from the d. '.'id. I all is lo.-t, if he d:1, ho is the Sun of pastors fS God, the Bible is true and Christianity is divine Infidelity may hurl len thousand criticisms into tie Bible, as sail its miracles with scalping knife and trample its message into the mire, but not one stone can be shaken from its place in the temple of faith until it shall be proven that ghouls, and not God, took that crucified body from its Arinathiam grave. Not until the angels shall come down and tell us that our Christ is neither here nor there, and that they were mistaken when they proclaimed two-thousand years ago that he was risen, will our Easter songs of hope cease ringing through the galleries of the temple of faith be low or the anthems of redeeming love be hushed in the chairs of glory ab:ve. No fact in human history is one-half so ; well authenticated as the fact of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Infidelity, j i:i order to secure its cause, demanded j that a guard of Koman soldiers be j thrown around the grave of the sleep- ing Nazarene that his- body might not be stolen. This was all that mortal ' man could do to prevent trickery or deception and had Jesus been no more than human the promulgation of the fact of the resurrection of Jesus which was made a few days later would have S been an intellectual, moral and physical .'impossibility. What infidelity did to I save its cause proved to be the very thing that establishes the fact of the resurrection oi Jesus beyond all Rea sonable ground of controversy. It is a very noteworthy fact that the only evi dence infidelity ever offered in rebuttal to the testimony of the resurrection of Jesus was that his disciples came "while they slept and stole his body away." Preposterous! What court on earth will accept the testimony of a man who relates what happoncd while he was asleep? Do you call these com petent witnesses? Preposterous! Whero 1 13 the man who can believe that sixty four Human soldiers under penalty of j death would all go to sleep at one time? jAnd where is the single man who ; would go to sleep under such a charge and at the very moment when it had j been predicted that the resurrection j would take place? But infidelity has to believe these impossible things in order to deny the fact of resurrection. When we consider that Jesus in all his teach ing threw all his chances of success into his death and resurrection, piled them' all upon Calvary and buried them in that grave, we have a proposition which only God could dare to risk. He did, ami the world knows the result. False Christs have arisen but not one of them I ever selected the grave in which to j work out his supreme achievement and j upon the ruins of which to erect, the I monument of his glory or stronghold of his power. Men may blaspheme the j name of Christ and imitate him by a',1 'manners of fraud and imposture but J they all stopped this side of the cross. I That Arimathian grave is alone and unique for it is empty. Its holy oc- cupant, soul and body, has risen. The starry aisles of heaven have opened their azure portals to the touch of his crucified hand md his feet have walked in triumph back to "the house of many mansions." What mortal folly and suicide to disdain the church of the living God. She is builded upon the j reality of a stingless death, a ruined ! grave and a vanquished hell. Eternity will not be long enough to finish the notes of her Eastersong nor high enough for the octaves of its triumph ant melody "unto the Lamb which was slain." Kenan, the infidel, once wrote: "De vine power of love! sacred moments in which the passion of n hallucinated woman gives to the world a resurrected God!" But death is not so easily de feated. The passion of love pours its tears in vain upon its victim's brow. But for the passion of Christ, the world would never have heard the story of a l resurrected God and the tears of the Magdakne would be flowing styi. Kf,v. .Moor.E. The Origin ! of Easter j This great day is justly called . the i Queen of festivals, and is kept annual , ly in commemoration of the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. According to Bode it is derived fiom Eostre. the Anglo-Saxon goddess of Snrimr. and to' . whom the fourth month -April was do-; dicated. No doubt it comes down from : the Hebrew Pas. or Chaldee Pascha, alluding to the Angel passing over the houses of those of the children of Israel who washed their door-posts with the blood of a lamb slain in sacrifice. All others perished, as Lord Byron sang: "The Angel of death spread his wings on the blast, And breathed in the face of the foe as he passed." There is no express authority for its observance in th" New Testament. It evidently grew up gradually and the eastern churches e!i 1 not follow the rule Painting and Paperhanging Latest Styles and Designs , -OF- WALL PAPER For Sale. M. 5. BRIGGS Plattsmouth Phone 270 White. of keeping the same day as the western churches. At the present time the modern churches are keeping it more and more. This difference in the time of keeping it, brought in an unhappy severance of the Christian union. With the Jewish Christians the death of Christ was the chief thought and they kept the 14th of Nisan. With the Gen tiles the Festival grew out of the doc trine of the Bessurreciion. At first, it may be that every Sunday was an Easter, then there was craved an an nual festival. St. Paul seems to allude to it. But there is no express authority for it anywhere in the New Testament. It is simply a custom, and a very beau tiful one. For centuries it has been growing in importance to the comfort a id instruction of Christian believers. Hymnologists as well as preachers have kindled the flame and the flow of solemn gladness. After the Council of Nicea in 'Vl'i, called by Constantine to settle the controversy pertaining to that time, it was agreed that the Bishop of Alexandria should settle the date by astronomical data, then publish it in his his own See and send it to the Bishop of Home to announce it to those Churches under his jurisdiction. The early Brittish and Irish churches always kept Friday for the Cricilixion and the Sunday following as the Resurrection Festival. In 17."2, when the New Style of time reckoning was adopted in the United Kingdom, the standing rule of deter mining Easter is to make it fall "after the first full moon after the vernal equinox; that is, the following Sunday." The day is kept with varying cere monials and chiefly as one of the days of obligation for the celebration of the Holy Communion, Christmas, Easter and Ascension being the three days f obligation. As a custom it well de serves the approbation of all devout minds. Just as custom often counts for more than law, children have their share in the joyous festival. They I wk forward to their olored Easter eggs with great delight. They may not always know of the eymbolism of "Omnc vivun ex ovo," alls life come from an egg. That certainly is a strik ing idea. An egg apparently without life, or motion, and from it coming the swiftest moving creature that can be found. The greatest and most sacred of all thoughts is that Christ hath sure ly brought life and immortality no light by his gospel and given to us the certi tude of a joyful resurrection through Him. . "He will not be in glory; And leave us behind." The whole of Easter Day is redolent with "glory, honor, immortality, eter nal bliss," in body, soul and spirit. Cannon H. B. Bi;i;k.ss. For Hot Fires gcr's Sure .satisfaction every time you light a fire if on top of the kindling is ebony fuel from our yards. It's heat and light giving and slate-free when it leaves the mines, screened and cleaned again here and served to you full weight and with celerity of delivery. Order any way that suits you. Doth telephones. J. V. EGENBERCER m jf 1 1 Easter Reflections j Broken bonds, release, confinement, escape, imprisonment, liberty, sorrow, joy, interrogation, amazement. Possi j bly man, surely God. 'Work in its in I ception, work accomplished. Earthly i duty preformed, the divine seal atiixed. The human life went out on a bleak i hill; the Divine re-expresses itself in i the garden, midst flowers and beauty, j Day was turned into mid-night darkness ' at His death, but He came forth trium j phant in the full flush of the rose color ; ed dawn. No sun ever climebd to the zenith surrounded by more of glory than ! did He whom we praise on Easter, j Had Christ sought the spectacular, he ; would have burst the tomb at mid-day i when men were about. Every lesson of : Christian teaching receives some new emphasis when we contemplate the , scenes which shaped themselves around j this remarkable character on the day of ; His resurrection. Humility, retirement ; philanthropy, charity, singleness of purpose, hope confirmed, strength bo I stowed, and atonement accomplished. ! It was a keen people who sought to ' cast a cloud upon the authenticity of 1 these happenings and to throw back in j to Egyptian darkness a race of people, ; but they failed, and they did far more I than some of their kind are willing to do today, they perforce acknowledged their failure. BENEDICTION-May the joy of a true Easter the resurrection of Chi.-t in many lives, where up to this time, he has been imprisoned -be given to mul- ! titudes today. And may the grace of our risen Lord, and the power of the Holy Spirit, open our lips to shout with gladness that "Christ is risen from the dead." Amen. ' J. II. Salsbury. Good South Dakota Farm. 100 acres, located 1J miles from Hu ron and only 2 1-2 miles from Broadland, Beadle county. Sixty acres broken and farmed 2 years. Every foot of the I quarter can be plowed and in fact, lies exceptionally well. A number of Cass county men own farms near this one. Land is rapidly increasing in value in this section. Can sell this quarter for $2ri an acre, if taken soon. For further particulars, call upon or address. OKORr.E L. Pauley, Office in Coates Block. Telephone 127. Hiss Crete Briggs came last evening from her school work at Lincoln and will spend a few days with the home folks. New bulk garden seeds at John Bauer's. Get Egenber- Coal! . YOUR WISHES ARE CATERED Just as you would have them at Barnes' restaurant. The viands nr of the best, the cuisine is perfect, and our sauces, entrees, fish, meats, oysters, clams, des erts and pics are prepared by exports. Our price-well, voii will say they nre small when you test the culinary gems that'we present for your delectation. DR. A. P. BARNES V. S.