The news-herald. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1909-1911, May 24, 1909, Image 4

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    i y u sen r" i
in business. We are in the newspaper! activity. His business is organized so
business as a business (reposition and that he can demand of each employee
we intend to push our business. If certain result. If th?re ii failure or
, you want the benefit of our push then dishonesty he ein immediately locate
we are glad to assist you. If you don't ; the responsibility. He is no: compeile 1
' want it, then don't tpieal if some other ' to disorganize his fore? or discharge
fellow pets it.
A. TRIP OF A LIFE Til
Nothing to Adjust, Nothing to Learn.
Simply Lather Well and Shave.
12 Biaaes, 24 inarp cages.
Every Blade as thin as paper, as
hard as flint, as tough and flexi
ble as whalebone, WILL GIVE
FROM 20 to 40 VELVET SHAVES,
The "GILLETTE", is the razor of the
Twentieth Century. reflect 111 ineory,
practise, workmanship, anuquaiuy, n is
i product ox Bcieniiuc reei-ait" miu
chanical skill, covering years of jatitC
udy anu experiment,. oi-i.-iai iu
hinery had to be invented to mak
this wondcriui razor possioio.
This razor Is sotvIHG THE SHAV-
IG PROBLEM for every man.
Though but a new. invention,
it has already attained
enormous popularity, more
. I rr y TUT?
THAU 200, oou ovlv
FIRST TEAR, because this
little invention gives a
better shave m your
own home than it is
possible to get in the
best barber chop in
the land.
GERINC & CO.
I I as mt
I I WATCH. Y :":.":;-Y
I I FOR TEARS. V' ; I
I I Tnplo Bilverx
1 I i . i ... : i u lit
piaie wiin -
IV M it .... i.l iln
1VI with 12 blades,
n l sio.oo. y
i w ,
The News-Herald
LATTS MOUTH, NtlRASKA.
Eatnred at the poatofflce at I'latt'mnuth. Cam
Coaoty. Nebraska, an second-class mail mutter.
OFFICIAL TAPKIt OF CASS COUNTY
A. L. TIDU Editor.
It. 0. WATTEKS Manner
a reduction of 1,3H2 .in the number of
railway fatalities compared with l!t()7.
Uusinehs is impr6ving and -has im
proved greatly. Railway men say that
while' car shortages are still remote
possibilities merely, the tax on existing
equipment is beginning to be seriously
felt in many localities. Increase of
tratlic means re-employment of men
"laid otf" during the peroid of reces-
BATFS OF SUBSCRIPTION
Om Tear in Advance 11.50
Eta Montbi 75
sion.
lELtPftO"E8
Plattsinouth No. 85 Nebraska No. 85
The nearest duty is the highest.
Monotony is what is found by those
who seek sensations.
He who consults only expediency
soon silences conscience.
One or two local merchants have
done some howling because we have
sold some shoe advertising space to
Omaha hoe men. The fellow who hus
done the most complaining has never
bought one inch of space from us. The
present management of this paper ha!
been in business four or five months
During four months we declined Omaha
advertisement to give local merchants
a chance to do business with us. We
presented our proposition to them re
peatedly. In four months we did $1.50
worth of advertising for a local shoe
trade. A little arithmetic wiil show
the folly of those who complain. In
two weeks we have done $50.00 worth
of advertising for Omaha firms, that
would be $100.00 per month and four
months would be $400. We have
sacrificed $400 already to give local
merchants a chance to take space.
is purely and simply a business propo
sition, we have the goods and can Hell
them. Talk about standing up for
your home town is all t ight, but there
are two sides to the proposition. We
know there is not a single merchant in
this city that would sacrifice $100 per
The Tcnnsylvania Railroad has a ' month for the sake of standing up for
There is enough fun in the world for
everybody to have some.
The mark of a free man is that he
binds himself to some high duty.
The things you really stand for are
revealed to those you run after.
IT 18 better to stick to narrow con
victions than to have no convictions.
A man with too tender a conscience
would have done better to have waited
two or three centuries before being
born; and thus spared much grief.
right to point with pride to the fact
that of the 141,IjH, 543 passengers
it carried last year not one was killed.
And we are all entitled to congratulate
ourselves upon the fact that the
this city. We reach about 4000 or 5000
readers every issue of of the paper and
we know that the space we sell to ad
vertisers is worth more money than we
a-e now charging. We know what is
official statistics for l!K)8 show right in business, and what is wrong
IHMHMMIimiMMMMMMMMMMHOHmH
! Have Your Clothes
to Order
Made
ABOUT ADVERTISING.
A broad, undeveloped field of mu
tual benefit and profit is open to
the merchants and newspaper pub
lishers of small towns throughout
the country. Through co-opeiation
in buying and selling advertising
space and in the planning and writ
ing of advertisments, the publisher
can render great assistance to the
merchant and the merchant in turn
reciprocate by "making good"
when prospective buyers are drawn
to his store.
The publisher can show the mer
chant how to make the best use of
the space he has bought by helping
him write clear, convincing copy
and then displaying it to the great
est advantage. Iiy thus assisting
the merchant and insisting that
only the truth be told in the adver
tisement he increases the attractive
ness and dependability of his paper.
This cannot but redound to the cre
dit of the publisher und make itself
felt in a steady patronage, a dual
patronage of publisher and mer
chant. 15ut the merchant must be sure
to do his part in the mutual uplift
or it will necessarily be only half
hearted. If the merchant docs not
"make good," then both himself
and the publisher are put in a bad
light. -American Press.
The editor and manager of the News
Herald are ready to do their part to
make the space of every merchant, who
purchases advertising space in this
miner tret his money's worth. That is
our business policy and we stand ready
to "make good."
TAFT INTERESTED IN TARIFF.
President Taft contemplates taking a
hand in the tarilY question before it is
finished. Unless congress makes a
just and fair tarilF law it is more than
probable that the President will veto it
andvmake specific recommendations, to
congress in behalf of the common peo
ple. He is fortifying himself for pro
per consideration of the tariff bill when
it reaches him.with the interest of the
consumers in view. He is seeking his
information outside of Congressional
sources and evidently has no intention
of relying on the Aldrich-Payne figures
He has directed the treasury depart
ment to compile for him the approxi
mal,e amount of duties on such article
as men's and women's clothing, stover,
furniture, china, tinware, hams and
bacon, certain vegatables, sugar, coal,
salt and other articles of common use
in every househould.
Mr. Taft i3 seeking to inform himself
whether proper reductions have been
made upon articles in the household of
every ultimate consumer. He has the
treasury experts to tell him the duty
paid (l)underthe Dingley law (2)under
the Payne bill (3) under the Senate bill,
and has asked that the duty be comput
ed upon the common retail prices of
the articles. For example, how much
duty does a pair of $2 shoes pay?
The figures that have been complied
show that the common charge Is true
that the poor pay a larger proportion
of the tariff tax than the rich. A $15
suit of clothing pays a duty of 71 per
cent while a $40 suit pays at the rate
of (54 per cent. The import tax on a
$15 rug is 62 per cent; on a tapestry
rug costing $30, the rate of duty is only
54 per cent The same holds true of
other item9.
all his employees to re-n3 ly tho weak- . . . t ,if t- . hnf tha Mffmunn i
ness in his institution. that the Coast trip .;s (i;recty within your reach at a far less cost
There is not a citizen in KansasCity, than any other extensive journey can jtossibly be made. May Cth to
Kas., or Kansas City, Mo., either for j 13th, only $50.00 to California and back, and co:r.mencinjr May
that matter, who would allow his own! 20th, through the summer, only $50.00 to Seattle and back; for
. , ijio.uu more you can inc:uue caniornia. une maKes aiouroi irom
Single uu-k fu; ,:., fUvlrrli n -rnI n i A vur.lnfo Tt-itVi mmlom in
terest, linked with a romatic past.
business to be conducted for a
day as the city business is conducted,
a id yet the biggest business institution
in the city, in which every property
owner and every citizen is a stockhold
er is the municipality itself.
Commission government makes a
business institution out of the muni
cipality, and in Leavenworth and Gal
veston and Des Moines, aud wherever
it has been tried, it is paying big divi
dends to the people. It gives them
value received for every dollar invested
in taxes; it reduced the "fixed charges"
and operating expenses, and ubove all
gives them good government every
day in the year. Kansas City Star.
Write me for "Alaska Exposition" leaflets. "California Per
sonally Conducted Excursions," "To the Great Northwest," "Yel
lowstone Park."
Let me help you plan your tour.
W. L. Pickett, Ticket Agent.
L. W. Wakeley, G. P. A., Omaha.
, in- mmiiiwiifli
I
Proper Proportions.
"How much fuel do you compute we
shall need on our motor trip?" "Well
Why would not the commission form' suppose we say two gallons of gaso-
of city government be a good thing for ne, and t,m"e EaiIuns of Scotch."-
Milling.
Plattsmuoth?
iin.'T .... :n .. i w
vi. . Sirc uji-um j Kv K""" County ol Caaa. I
Notice to Creditors.
StH'Pff Nebraska. Us rvntv Court
price for what you give up.
I In the matter of the estate of IV.T Turn
No'ico is hereby civen that the crciliturs of said
i!eceal will meet the AilminiHtratrix of aul en
Tree Has Many Qualities.
While the seeds of the dorowa, an ;
East African leguminous tree, are ex
tensively used' for food, the pods and
leaves form an excellent cement wheD I Six month are allowed for the creditors of Fnid
B. A. McElwain. Mrs. J. W. Gamble
and Miss Estelle Baird were over t
Pacific Junction Thursday evening to
furnish the music for the graduatii.g
exercises of the schools there.
Notice To Creditors.
State of Nebraska, i
t
rs. In County Court.
County of Casn.
In the matter of the estate of Wac lav Kruwl.-k.
deceased.
Notice is hereby given that the creditors of said
deceased will meet the Administrator wilh will
annexed of said estate, liefore me. County Jiidire
...... n. fV.xntll lit...... I Iltfri I IllinrV
ST' . " : i,r.l..: lot Casn County. Nebraska, at the Uiunty Court
"'""; , . ' . iV" .L. u. .t,.r ii.- room in l' attsmouth. In said County, on the 'Jin
mouth, m said Cm,n y, ami on the "V "' I day of June. WJ. at 10 o'clock, A. M.. eael, day.
cember. VM. at 10 o clock A. M . each day, for ,lr,.. ,,, ,h..;r claim, W ..-
I the purpose of presenting their c am for examr r,,justment and allowance.
mixed with crushed stone.
All One to Nature.
A waistcoat of broadcloth or of fus
tian is alike to an aching heart, and n-s
we laugh no merrier on velvet cush j
Ions than we did on wooden chairs.
I. K. Jerome. stnt
, deceased lo present their claims, and one year for
the Administratrix to settle said estate irom me
21st day of June. V.m.
Witness my hand and seal of ?ail County Court,
at Plattsmouth, Ntbra.-ka. this 21st day of May,
1909.-
Al.LF.N J. IlF.rsoN,
Seal County Judge
Six months are allowed for th- creditors of said
deceased til present their claims, and one year for
the Administrator to settle said estate, from the
21st day of June, 1909.
Witness my hand and seal of said County Court,
at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this 19th, day of May.
Wj9.
Al.l.EN J. Bf.fson.
11-8 (SEAL County Judjre.
Notice To Creditors.
jte of Nebia.l;a, ( S;3 , Cot)nt Collrt
ss County. )
Notice of Final Settlement..
I state ..I .-je .rasna County Court,
j County of ( ass. I
Cass County. J " ' j In the matter of tho estate of Frederick D.
In the matter of the estate of Anna Krnwlek. de-j Lehnhoft". deceased.
c, me,), ; To all persons interested- l oil are hereby no-
No'ice'is hereby eiven that the creditors of said tided ibat the Executrix of the estate of Fredci-
decea-ud will meet the Administrator uf said es- ' ick t). I-ehnhotT, deceased, has bled her final re-
Spanish Executioner's Remorse. I
A curious story conies from Seville. I
On Slllldav nlcht the lnr:il pveeulinnor i,.t.." iu,fn m.. rvvintv .In.l .o rf fnss C.nntv nort and petition nrayinir therein for final settle-
died Ills death hell!" lino tn rr mnrsr. : Nebraska, at the County Court room in l'lutts- ment of said estate. thaL her account be allowed.
Ulld. IUS a Hill ueillj, title to remorse. mmlh jn fui,i t-ounty,on the21st iliiy of June, a'd that the p-rsonal and real estate ts nss.rned
1-or several years ho had not carried 19 u. and on the 21st day of Oecemb -r. 1! 09. at 10 to her as provided by the term of the la.-t will of
hilt recently he 1 " cl"ck A- M- ''"rn ,a'' u" '?' l;urpos of pre- mill Uoaai, ano uuiy praaira inu nnoivra uy
and allowance. You are further notified that there will lie a
Six months are allowed for the creditors of said 1 hearing upon said petition before this court in the
deceased to present their claims and one year for county court room at Pluttsmoulh, in sn'd count
iimfrntiir to sett e niil estate, from t ho i on t he 1M (lay or J Une IHU. at JO.O CIOOK J. lu.M!
SO painful thilt he Was llliable to faCO 1 21st day of June. 1M) j that ul objections if any must De UleU on or lie
1 Wiin...u m hun.l ril e!il nf an-.) rmmtvPnnrt ! fore -laid dav and hour of hearinu.
the ordeal When Summoned to execute ! nt I'lnttsmouth. Nebraska, this l'Jth day of May.! Witness my hand and the seal of the county
out any executions,
was summoned to Cordova to Inflict
the final penalty on some criminals.
fti lm i,rol.n ,.,.1.1., ....... 1,1... 1
1 nt- uuiup.-iuii muni: iijiuii 111111 nus 1 tho Admii
the last criminal condemned in Seville,
and the sentence will have to be car
ried out by the Madrid executioner.
1909.
11-8
ISEAI..1
Ali.en J. Br.rsoN.
County JudKe.
! court of said county this 21th day of May: 1909.
I ALI.KS J. Hi'.eson.
1 11-6 SEAI-1 County Judge.
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E. G. DOVEY l SON
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If we make them the price is no higher than you
ray for pood ready made clothing. If we make
them the fit, stylo and workmanship is guarranteed
to be first class. Next time you are in Omaha
come to see us. Our cutter takes your measure
and cuts a pattern for each and every order.
If your garments are to lit right careful
measures should be taken end by the man who
cuts them. The meaMiring is a matter to which
vc give careful attention. Our garments are all
made by homo workmen.
Suits to order $25 up.
Two piece suits to order $20 up.
butinessano politics.
Commission government means that
the city is in business for itself. In
my home city we decided to go into
business and since making that resolve
we have prospered as we never did be
fore. We have almost entirely done
away with politics that is, the bad
T ; kind. It is true that at the last city
election an attempt was made to inject
T politics into the campaign, but the citi
zens defeated the political ticket by an
overwhelming . majority. From a
speech by Judge M. L. Hacker of
!
Leavenworth, in Kansas City, Kas.
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RUGS
To our line of rugs we have lately added the Olson Fluff-a rug you are no
doubt acquainted with and which gives the best of wear at moderate prices:
Size 27 inches by 45 inches U 4")
" 30 " " CO " 1.88
" 27 " " G3 " 1.98
" 36 " " 72 ' 2.50
If in need of small and medium sized Rugs you should see these. You will
appreciate at price offered.
A lot of Carpets and Rugs about 27x54 inch sizes at from 79c to $1.25. A nice
selection of Moquette Rugs in popular sizes-27x54 and 0x73. Also large size in
beautiful patterns.
Summer Underwear
Ladies Uuion Suits, low neck, sleeveless, cuff knee, 3:c, ,'Oc and $1 00. Low
neck, sleeveless, lace trimmed, 35c, 50c 75c and $1. Low neck, sleeveless, extra
sizes, 40c, 50c, 75c and 1,25. Ladies' knit pants, cuff knee and umbrella style at
2."c, 35c and 50c. Extra sizes 45c and 50c. Ladies' Vests good quality at 10c,
15c, 25c and 50c. Extra sizes 15c, 25c and 50c. Long sleeve vests at 25c, 30c and
r.0c. Knit Corset Covers at 25c, 35c and 50c.
Just received for the sweet girl graduate a beautiful full line of fans. Prices
from 25c to $2.50 Hand embroidered handkerchiefs, exquisite designs-all new.
Fancy hose in all the late shades-plain, gauze, lifle and embroidered; New and
up-to-date things in Umbrellas and Parasols.-
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In this analysis of Commission !ov
i t, i . i :..
ernmeni Juuge uacKer oa t-jnn mi.-.t-i i
IlllflllflSlllI
the whol? spirit if the
plan. It :na'i,es a buVmess proposition
on', of the admi'.'i.-s'nitii n ofCi'y alVairs
,ed ! itllXM
Commission
i.iste.'id d' a political ir-mf.
r v--i M '1 i' ! r.: i''nd:i:-t 1.
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