ROYAL I Baking Powder Absolutely Tare The only baking powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar made Irom grapes Royal Baking Powder conveys to food the most healthful of fruit properties And renders it superior in flavor and wholesomeness. must be aided in finding work suitable ; and courage arc essential (ualificationa ' to his age. An easy, quick methoil of for public o: ice. The individual who earning money is likely to demoralize , submits himself as n candidate for a ! him, rendering him dissatisfied with a 1 public oTice should posses these q'lalifi reasonablc reward for what he does, j cations, and should be known to be a j Boys living in town and city are re-1 man of high aims and noble purpose to ported to be earning small sums in vari- i entitle to him the support of any intelli- ous ways, both within and outside of gent voter. If an individual is not so! the home; as,, sawing wood, tending qualified, he should not be elected to! i gardens and furnaces, taking care of any official position, whether it bj j live stock and oflices, cleaning windows, ; municipal, county, state or national. selling milk, papers, novelties, and i When you support a man for any oflice, n ! i r ti ii ii mvPi id nr no uo ure.uor aj a b ki Mia mm u n ) i MID ih r h A A ATrnVt. VV. sA 'fW4 iA iA ikl A I i The News-Herald PL ATTS MOUTH. NEBRASKA. working on farms during vacatien. Let the work be difficult while it lasts, but avoid placing the boy to work in the midst of evil influences. It is, of course, easy to find work for the country boy, but many fanneis fail to give their sons an opportunity to re ceive a money reward for a part of Entcrwl at tin- Mjsto!!ioi' at l'liittiMiutli, Cu.-h County. Noliru-kn. us gcrond-rlaMt mail mutt r. OKKIC1A1, l'AI'Kli (IK CAS-! ( 01 Yi Y A. L. TIDl I Kditor. K. 0. WATTKRS Manager j BATES OK SUBSXtllPTION OtM Year In Advance Jl.M) Ii Months 75 1 TELEPrtOISEH I'lattsinouth No. 85 Nebraska No. 85 TEACHING THE BOY TO SAVE. (Ily William A. MchVcver, in I'eurHun'ii Magazine) There is no good reason w hy any or dinary boy should not be taught to work and save and finally to haveaithis: stnrt t,1L" W hy Kiviiiff him a j small bank account of his own, pro-1 fima" ',l"t of K10Uni1 tn tend, either in videdhe be given reasonable instruc- tho ,ieU or the Kar.len; or give him in exchange for some service a (h)mestic i who, in his private life has not demon strated that he posseses such qualifica tions, simply because ho belongs to "my party," then just that far you have betrayed your country and have lowered your citizenship. Just that far you have sanctioned and lent your assistance to lower tho standard of your own municipality, your county or what they do. The ordinary growing boy should not be required to be wholly ! your State. self-supporting, even on the farm. The - best rule reported to us is in substance ' I,,-s-SIM's: ' mental indigestion Tiikkk are many slips after the cup ' leaves the lips. ! TO YOUNG MEN. Young men arc you in earnest? Would you do something, if you had the means to do it? Then, let me ask you one or two more questions. Have you a sound physical body, and good health? Have you a reasonable amount of good, hard common sense? Have you a strong and determined will? Have you sincere honesty of durpose and great courage? Have you an indomit able stiek-toitive quality? If you have these essential qualifications then your capital stock is ample for any enter prise. Young man did it ever occur to you that those who have blazed the path of progress, or filed open the prison-doors if ignorance, brutality, and prejudice, have been either very poor or at best men whom society and the world at large regard as very inconsequential. Young men who leave a trail of glory behind them are not the rich, not the powerful, and not the recognized potent factors of their day, but they are one and all moral heroes. Seventy-eiht years ago a young man, with a limited education and but little means started a small paper in Boston. He placed at the top of this paper these striking words: "I am in earnest, I will not equivocate; 1 will not retract a single word; and I will be heard." The seed sowed by this young man took root in the conscience of the North, and from that seed came the tion in regard to the mutter. The criminal is nearly always a spend thrift. The published records of courts and prisons show that the majority of the men and boys found guilty of crimes and misdemeanors have gone as tray as the result of an effort to obtain money or its direct equivalent by some unlawful means. Theft, forgery, rob bery, and the like, are the most fa miliar terms in the catalogue of crime. The whole fabric of our moral life is thoroughly interwoven with our ideas about money and its purposes and uses; antl yet we are doing little or nothing of a systematic character, either in school or out, to instruct growing chil dren in reference to this very important matter. It is a very common thing in cities and villages to see boys ranging in age from five to thirteen making a be-line for the confectionery stores with a nickel or dime just begged from a parent. This carelessness Woriiy is interest before it fall due. paid on trouble i animal, such as a pig or a calf. Al ter he has been taught to work j ! and to earn money honestly, then it is i Fate is a name many give to their 1 all-important that the boy be instructed ; laziness or carelessness. carefully in the matter of saving. Many can earn, but few can save. The evidence goes to show that a bank or trust company, usually local, furnishes the most common and satisfactory means of saving. The relation of these institutions to the boy depositor is al most alwas one of helpfulness and en couragement. It matters not how little the lad may be earning, so that he saves a portion of it. Give him a toy Everything within reach comes to those who help themselves. The most comforting thing in the ! hour of trial is an acquittal. 1 Every man does not have his price, ; some give themselves away. Some say he is married; and some' sav he is not. Some sav thev ro imir- bank at fi,-st, and as soon as he has ac-1 , , . , ned; and some say they are not. Every-' cumulated a half-dollar or more have , . ., .. j body says, that, if they are not mar it placed to his credit in a bank of de- - , , ., , ' ned, they ought to be. posit. .Develop his interest in the mat- ter by talking to him ami by taking ,.WlT losM its ro,p,Tt with thc him to the bank with you, where hej w,Mn fW?n in comfl5,tiy wilh n.,allco. an(, may see the papers made out. Try to j t() flt the t ,,h , t . .'38 is allowed ,k,vdt i: the young fmancier's mind tllorn in another., i: lo i,, V Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y f t V r V f V f r f f ? ? BEARSKIN HOSE TAKESthe'iIeAD f AAA AAA'Ai. AATiV.' l.T.,.T, V. FOR GIRLSancBOYS MPCD EV FARAMOUNT KNITTING CO CHICAGO Just received a case of this popular Hose. We guarantee them to wear better than any hose you ever bought at any price only j per pair 13L A fine ribbes Hose at the same price per pair The popular Ox-Blood .Hose in ladies' and children. 5c Sun Bonne! .Just unpacked our new Sun Bonnets. Chil dren's Misses and Ladies'.all colors,plain, trimmed, 15c, 25c. Carpet Warp We have a full line of Carpet Warp for those that want to make a rag carpet this spring. We only sell the best grade, Plattsmouth Pil lows, Nebraska Pillows. We will have on dis play several of these pillows already worked and finished. You will be surprised as we have never seen anything as nice. Each 3 vt a Dry (Hoods VURL And G vo c o ri c s . to go on 'till about the adolescent period j some "asonaUc purpo,e for which this a priniipn, in th, nii,(.hk.tV' is reached, when sudder.ly the parent becomes imbued with tho idea that it is time to have the lad earn some money of his own. In the typical case an ef fort is made to force the latter to such a conclusion, but the easy-going free spending habit is now very persistent, and in a short time the father may be seen responding to the boy's financial needs in the same old way. "This habit of getting something for nothing, so thoroughly formed in early life," says the head of a great mercantile estab lishment, "is responsible for the specu lative tendency so common among young men today." It is not enough to tell the boy what he ought to do. It is at first necessary to find reasonable tasks for him and then hold him to his duty till he ac quires something of a habit and a fond ness for work. And then it is not so much a question of amount earned as it t . i i 'ii. ii fruit-the Emancipation Proclamation I ' ono OI "r'"Uin Uie Iau W11" ine that feed 4,0(iil,(i,)0 slaves. t,f imbslry and f ru,llity- A ,iltU' a3 Yimni mm !.. : i.....:...' tm Ct-',,ts u actually earned may - tumijr i.i i i iwk. rv 1 1 at your door at early dawn each day be a sutliicient beginning for a seven- .M l c .1 .-a l:.r, A..l. .U..A. .r...it .., u , ,. - year-o 'i. eicci some i ia e i;isr unit great enough to renounce self for Jinmnnit.-. if i ., . . .1 will be useful as a personal habit or humanity; if you love justice more than 1 1 ease, glory, or fame; if you become so lhat " hd',ful t0 SOmC ne c,se' m,d overmastered by the liuht of love that i Sl'e that he l,orform3 il reKul;irIy and you live the Golden Kule, vou will leave' pU"CtUa"y' A" "00n ""C de8irab,C a splendid influence of imprint on your j habit U HC(,uilvd shift lhe rcwarJ tH own time, you will live in the love of another- Thcn thvre nrc alVayS nVail" the ages, and you will leave behind a ! aWc such ,,racti:rtl aa runninK money is being saved, and lead him bv degrees so have fond anticipations of its final use. When practicable have thc boy's savings deposited in an insti tution that allows interest on such ac counts, explaining to him just how money grows when bearing interest. Some banking institutions will olTer as an investment small interest-bearing securities, sometimes netting the pur chaser as high as live per cent or more. Explain to your children the source of your own income (if you are not ashamed of it) and the fact that there is a limit to the ordinary bank account. Many children believe that you simply have to go to the bank and ask for it in order to obtain money. Talk over oc casionally with the boy the family ex pense account, especially that relating to him.self, with now and then an ex pression of the pleasure you take in nlanninir and workintr and snondinir for him so long as he is worthy of it. Take i him with you on your shoppirg errands j Sheri dan. For line oflice. job printing call at this Did Papers For Sale at This Office Y Y Y Y Y Y Y t It it it it t 1 TaT E.G.DOVEY&SON V &AjPaaA4& a trailing path of glory. Are you in earnest? Have you good health, common 'sense, and moral courage'' Then you can succeed in any field. ; errands, carrying in kindling, and doing other light chores. Heavier duties are to be assigned with the advancement of age; but "let the beginning of this important instruction date from the i time the lad is old enough to count THE Nkws-Hekai.i is a believer in ; money," says a father. If theordi deceney, and therefore it is an advo-! nary father will show the same interest rate of decency. It has always been a ' in training tris son in these practical booster for Plattsmouth and Cass ! subjects that he does in training his county. It advocates those things ; carriage horse to drive or in preparing which are for the substantial develop-, his live stock or merchandise stork for ir.cnt of this city. The Xkwh-Hiorai.d i the market, then the boy will grow sur plant is paid for. There is not a dollar j prisingly in grace and morals and of debt against it. It is the best news-1 thrift. paper plant in this city that is paid for. j As the boy grows toward maturity be once in a while Knd give him gome prac-! tical lessons in spending judiciously, j Thus he will gradually grow reasonable ' and sympathetic in regard to the family budget, and amply considerate of the way in which his own money should be J used. The aim of this teaching is not ; t that of qualifying the coming man to, accumulate wealth, but it is that of de- j veloping in the youth moral self-reli-; ance and an otherwise efficient person-! to a'ity. The man who is careful in hus- I: 1 . .... i i I oanuing ms resources nas a great no- j f vantage over his financially incompetent neighbor in such matters as 'true kind ness, rational generosity, and high spirituality. A TRUE FUNCTION OF GOVERNMENT. Among the true functions of govern ment are the securing of justice to all people, the diffusion of useful know ledge, the promotion so far as possible V I V Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y v A A. A A t "And only tho Master shall praise us, and only the Master shall blame; And no one shall work for money, and no one shall work for fame; But each for the joy of working, and each in his separate star, Shall draw the tiling as he sees it, for the Cod of things as they are." -Kn'LiN;. Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y the well-being and hajipincss of every j .,;t;., .,.i ...i ..:.. A i im-i. ii) unit Liiv iiLiriiu; tint) ni.lliuc- nance of self-respecting manhood. This last object is of far greater importance in a republic than in any other form of government; for upon the intelligence and moral rectitute of the pend the healthy progress and the stability of the State. The individual should be encouraged in every legiti mate and rightful aspiration. His high aims and noble purposes should be given the fullest opportunity for de velopment. As these are developed so the citizen becomes a benefactor to thc State. Sobriety, honesty, capability Queen Quality Shoes Oxfords For fifteen years we have sold the Queen Quality footwear and must say that no class of merchandise we turn out gives such universal satisfaction as the Queen Quality Shoes, Pumps and Oxfords. We extend to you a cordial invitation to inspect the new Queen Quality styles for this spring. Corsets! Corsets! Thejustrite G-D Corset is always right. We have them in extra long hip at $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $2.00 and $3.00. Long and short hip Corsets, good style, at 50c. We have some odds and ends in G--D Corsets which we want to close out at half price. Remember that when you buy Carpet Warp to ask us for the Buffalo Brand, the best on the market in colors and white. Butterich Patterns were the first paper patterns brought out and today are in advance of all others. We sell them at 10c and 15c. None higher. intelligence , ........ " i? voters de- I E.G.DOVEY4LSON 1 !$ : $ T Y T V f V ? V T ? ? f ? ? 3 f v t t f r f f Y Y Y v t f Y Y i T Y V f f Y T Y f Y f Y f Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y m A