The News-Herald LTTMOUTH. NIBRASKA. Entered at the postoffiee at PhUtMnoutb. Cm Oraatr. Nebraska, u seoond-clau nul utter. OFFICIAL PAPER OF CASS COUNTY A. L. TIDU . Editor. R. 0. WAITERS Manager E TES OF SUBSCRIPTION Om Taar la Advance tlM Bti Month " X TELBfttONEa Plattsmouth No. 85 Nebraska No. 85 JULY 12, 1909. ANNOUNCEMENT. I hereby announce myself as a candi date for the republican nomination for Register of Deeds of Cass county, sub ject to the pleasure of the voters at the coming primaries. In asking for this nomination I desire to call atten tion to the fact that my services in the office of county surveyor, while being largely of a "thank yo j" nature, the renumeration being insufficient for the eupport of a family, have eminently fitted me for the duties of the ofTke to which I aspire, and in case I should re ceive the nomination I shall use my best endeavors to be elected, and will give to the office my best attention'. E. E. Hilton. No power, no respect. After clouds there is a clear sun. No man can lose what he never had. Willful waste brings woeful want. Every vice fights against nature. All things are easy that are done willingly. There is no fool wise. art that can make a No one is so wise that he cannot be come Wisen. At least one tin horn gambler has Teen reformed through tfca fTofts of this paper, or rather, he says hfl has quit gambling. Several people nre beginning to wonder if the County Attorney would know a slot-machine gambling device if he saw it. Will "Cass County's Pride Journal" prosecute gambling? Such has been in open and notorious op eration for several weeks. It is up to the County Attorney to do his duty. Senator Cummins of Iowa paid a nice tribute to the work of Senator Burkett the other day on the floor of the Senate when he referred to Bur lett'i Amendment to reduce the tariff on barb wire. He said: "I know that the Senator from Ne braska (Mr. Burkett) has rendered to the farmers of this country a conspicu ous Bervice, and one which will be ap preciated by them, in already securing the reduction from about f 50 to $15 a ton." LET THE GOOD WORK CONTINUE. The effort of Mayor J. P. Suttler to have the weeda cut is most commenda ble. Every citizen should co-operate with the Mayor in this matter. Have you got the ambition, then act at once. If you will not do these little things, then you are surely a tit subject for the undertaker, there can be but little hope of you doing much good in the world l no money ar.u labor being spent so liberally by the most progressive cities to beautify themselves means some thing more than u growing csthoticism, It is prompted also by a recognition of the utilitarian advar.tapes. Of course a beautiful city pivsuMues a clean city, and cleunlincti is a measure of ! economy in aural ways. It means, I too, that beauty of environment has n j moral or social value, since Men grow I better as they bec-.me contented. It mrans. further, an appreciation of the ! fact that the pride of its inhabitants is among the biggest of ti city'b assets, and that by beautifying it shows a self confidence which inspire? the stranger. It is becauso this beautifying move ment has these larger and deeper mean- ings that it may be spoken of as one of tho most encouraging marks of our time. Keep at it Mr. Mayor, we nre with you on this matter and will give you all the assistance we cani THE PRINCIPLE OF PROTECTION If the standpatters in the Senate understood the protective principle and did not tacitly assume that a Hgta tariff ia its own justification, regardless of the extsrtion legalized by needless duties, the debate on the act now in the making wauld be much more en lightening than it has been and much freer from grotesque fallacies and in ' consistencies. As it is the high pro tectionist is often betrayed into using free trade arguments, to the joy of th opponents of the very principle of pro tection; the free trader seizes upon protection arguments where they help him in a concrete case, and one docsh't know at the beginning of a speech what its upshot will be. In opposing free hides, for example some standpatters "vehemently" de clared that it would be dangerous to deprive the farmer rf the hide duty because he would then insist on buying in the cheapest market. The manu facturer must not ask for raw materials because what is raw to him is finished to the fanner, and the latter must have the same benefits from protection as the former. What would the standpatters say to a workman who objected to selling his labor in the open market while buying practically all his necessaries and com forts in a highly protected market? Why, they would say that his view is very narrow, that protection raises his wages and stoadiVs his employment, and that the protective policy must be judged by its national, general and permanent results. Whether hides or leather of shoes or anything else needs protection or not and what degree of protection it needs, if any are questions that cannot be answered by glittering talk about open and closed markets or by sweeping classifications of commodities into raw and finished ones. The right to a protective duty must be deter mined, in every instance, in the light tf facts-facts as to the chances of foreign underselling, facts as to labor cost, facts as to standards of living, facts as to the balance of national pro fit or national loss. Do the farmers need the duty hides? Do they derive more benefit from it than they would from cheaper leather and cheaper boots and shows? These are the pertinent questions. I The trouble with the Senate is that it legislates in the dark, without reliable data or the machinery for obtaining them. It grants to greed what should only go to need, and mistake appetite in many cases for right. It substitutes catch phrases and unassimilated half truths for scientific tests. HOW FLIES CARRY DISEASE. ( The common house fly is a carrier of disease. Typhoid fever, diarrhoea, dysentery and tuberculosis are carried by flies. The house fly is particularly filthy, because it has its birth place and lays its eggs almost exclusively in refuse. Flies feed on food and also on the worst kind of filth.. They go from one to the other. It is easy to understand how they carry disease germs to our food in this manner. Our domestic animals, the dog and cat, are kept in their proper place. The hou?e fly is tolerated everywhere, crawls over our hands and faces, gets into the milk, walks over all our food, often soiling and contaminating every thing that comes in contact with its filthy feet and tongue. A bulletin is sued by the board of health of Orange, N.J. Typhoid fever is certainly dissemina ted by flies. Flies pollute food and drinks by means of the filth which they convey from refuse. They 'breed al most exclusively in filth. They certain ly disseminate cholera; and cases of tc tanus seem to have been originated tj.iroUKn tncjr cponcy. Therc is only way to combat lhem-by destroy ng ulu, thp,r )!accs, Vfom ft by John IIuber,M. D., f (. ,,, .,1)vmi ,,,,., .,., v.,.,, I York-. COMMISSION FORM OF CITY GOVERNMENT. It is no surprise to hear that the con mittce of five senators which has been j investigating commission government of cities in Texas has come home en thusiastic for that method of govern ment. Tho system has worked wdi wherever it has been tried. By the mere fact that it abandons the division of cities into wards it eliminates a cer tain source of permanent evil in all cit ies large enough tb have slum districts and a mixed populttion territorially distributed. It is the nearest approach in large American cities to that intro duction of honest public spirit into the municipal government which is enjoyed by nearly all French, German and Eng lish cities. Record-Herald. ' "Kunnel" Bates, the Boss of the democratic party ha named D. C. Mor gan for county clerk on tha democratic ticket, and his ring are now proceeding to keep out other good democrats from becoming candidates. The Bates-Grimes-Ruff ner-Fox-Ramsey ring and Morgan the ring candidate do not in tend to allow any other entries for that office. The Boss and ring have also slated G. P. Meisinger for county com missioner, and no other candidate need apply there. Last fall the "Kunnel" and his ring left 0. W. Laughlin to go down to defeat because Laughlin $d not belong to the ring. The year be fore poor Box was unmercifully skinned because he too was not a ring man. Yes, "Kunnel" the people remember your nepotism last winter, when you could get a job for your daughter in the legislature.but the other fellow'sdaugh ter could stay at home. 'es, "Kun nel" the dear people are now aware that you are the political "lioss" of the democratic Bates-Grimes-Ruffner- Fox-Ramsey ring. Yes, the "Boss ' and "ring" are it. Good and worthy democrats can walk up and vote for the "Boss" and "ring" ticket. So the country democrats must consult the ring or stay out. HOW TO KEEP PUPILS IN SCHOOL So much of the educational discussion is necessarily vague and abstract that a fact pointing to a constructive or re constructive moral is particularly val uably at this time. Such a fact, ac cording to the assistant superintendent of the Chicago schools, is the remark able increase in the number of our high school graduates as mpared with any previous year. The course of study in this part of system, explaias Mr. Megan, has been much more attractive this year than ever before, "and as a consequence the proportion of boys and girl's who have remained in school has been so much larger" than usual "as to be notice able," thw being "particularly true of the hiyh schools teaching manual arts and domestic science." The dropping out of boys and girls from the higher grades and the high schools is one of the troubles whic h educators have anxiously studied in the last few years. Of the theories ad vanced to account for the tendency the most probable has seemed th'e one which laid stress on the dry, theoret ical, unattractive character of the studies in the upper parts of the pub lic school system. "The curse of the college" was the phrase employed by one eminent educator to characterize the lack of practical utility and the ap parent lifelessness of the studies. If here in Chicago manual training and other industrial "courses" with domestic science for girls, have per C3ptibly checked the dropping-out pro cess, the educational world has been supplies with a very important hint a id a basis of reality for an interesting theory. Study is not play, but cer tainly the curriculum can be made more "vital," more responsive to the needs of the pupils, as they or their parents feel them, not only without lo3s, but with positive gain to discipline and moral culture. Attractive studies are not necessarily ornamcmental and comparatively useless studies; they may involve hard work, application and adaptation to tho efficient and ! strenuous life. Chicago Record-1 ler- a'd. Keeping the 9 Soil Fresli The first thought on buying n farm, h how can its value be increased? This, naturally, will mean more profit. While making the soil richer is the so lution, it is not so easily done, when the entire farm is considered, while con stantly cropping and selling produce from it. In a great many Instances" the far mer engaging on new land endeavors to make it more productive, and in his efforts lessons the soil fertility. For a long time tho farm muy be steadily growing poorer and yet annually pro. dicing bigger crops. All the manure applied has its value returned in one or more crops, and fiese rob the soil of some kind of fer tility that the manure itself does not supply to them. Wherever potash and phosphate have become so exhausted that grain crops cannot be grown with out an application of these minerals to each crop it is an indication that the soil is becoming poorer. The farmer manures for tha crop rather than for the land, and is satisfied if in each crop the money value of the fertilizer used ia retimed, with a reasonable profit. Bat there are other methods than making land rich to increase its value. Sometimes better cultivation alone will accomplish this ihough always with this beAer cultivation comes more rapid soil exhaustion. In order to secure his living, the farmer must exhaust fertil ity. Fertility is the raw material that natare supplies, and the farmer turns it ioto as many forms as he chooses, and of kinds that will most likely give him a profit. Hera, then, is a call for energy and skill, and if these are prop erly applied, the farmer receives his reward and the faYm becomes more valuable. Every farmer should en deavor to find new and profitable crops, so that he may secure a much greater income from his land. Success is more apt to come to the farmer in?idently than from the direct product of his land. The first step necessary, he soon realizes, is to stock the place with animals that are needed in working it or tc consume such pro ducts that are otherwise unmarketable. The stock increases, and the farmer finds inoome from the sale of it3 sur- plus. After a while, by better feeding and better breeding superior strains are produced, which sell at better prices, for the reason that they will make so much better use of all that they consume. Should the land not produce sufficient for the stock, or probably can be put to better uses, it will pay to buy the grain and produce only corn fodder and some clover for coarse feed -and this improve ment of the stock is often found to be, an easier way of making money than improving the land. However, much to the surprise of the farmer.he often finds that after a few years of improved stock growing his land has grown so rich that It can be put to uses that at first were not exected. It has been truthfully said that there are thousands of farmers whose land is poor, and try the best they may, they can not get manure enough to make it rick. If they increase crops by mora ? y y y y y t A A A. .A. A. A A A f y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y f y t y y y y y y r E. G; BCWEY a SON Queen Quality Oxfords - Pumps Hot Weather calls for Cool Clothing and Cool Foot wear. We are showing a nice line of Pumps and Oxfords at reasonable prices for first quality goods. New Tan Pumps at New Tan Pumps Col. tie Premier Blucher Oxfords pat Castilian Blucher Oxfords pat Grecian Blucher Oxfords tan Gth Avenue Blucher Oxfords pat Piccadilly Button Oxfords All the above are high grade and usually sold Black and Tan t I y y y y y A aWaWmVVWAaVV E. G. DOVEY-fc SON 1 . 1 through cultivation they find that.while Henry Donat departed Friday morn temDorarilv their Drofits are lareer.it U i ie for a trio in the northwest, where at the expense of greater soil exhaus. tion, that must be compensated for afterward. If they keep largely of young itiimals such stock doubles in numbers very quickly, and if it be pro perly bred it will double in value in the same time. It has often been said that some men work hard all their lives, and, after, all have nothing to show for it, while others, who take things more easily, find wealth coming to them from un expected sources. It is easy to gaess, if these different classes are farmers, that the man who works hardest and has least is the man who is consciously trying to make land rich, while all the time doing his best to get the largest crops from it; while the man who makes money easily has had the good sense to secure the best possible stock, and by its increase make both himself and his farm rich. Exchange. John and Ernest Black, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Black, who have been visiting in the city with the families of E. R. Todd and P. E. Rufrner, for sev eral weeks departad for their home nt Los Angeles, Calif., Saturday morning. John and Ernest are both bright and dependable young men and hold respon sible positions in tht'ir home town. The boys enjoyed their vacation immensely and greatly appreciated the hospitality and good will of their many friends in Plattsmouth and vicinity. Mr3. Bernard G. Wurl and little son Carl were Omaha visitors Saturday. They were accompanied by Miss Marie Ilofaith of Plain view, Neb., a niece of Mrs. Wurl, who has been visiting with Plattsmouth relatives for a few weeks. Miss Dora Horn of Omaha returned with them in the evening to visit over Sunday with her mother and sisters. It is reported that Foreman Richards of the freight repairing department of the local shops has tendered his resig nation, to take effect the 15th of this month. C. M. Parker, who has been connected with the department for a number of years, will probably succeed to the position. He is said to be a thoroughly capable man. The ladies belonging to the Cedar Creek Degree of Honor lodge will be entertained at the hame of Mrs. Will Seybert at Cullum all day Thursday, July 15. Many agreeable surprises are in store for those who attend. Bring your friends and enjoy a day of rest and amusement in the country. A A A A A A A A A A A A Blucher Oxfords, $2.00, $2.25, &2.50. 4AA AA 'A A.1 4i.TaaTAA' a a a a a a he will spend several weeks. Mr. Do nat recently moved his family into the Patterson house formerly occupied t Fred Murphy. The owner, Miss Mae Patterson, has made expensive repairs tj the dwelling and with the additional work done by Mr. Donat on the premis es this is one of the most desirable rental properties in the city. Solicitors Wanted. The News-Herald is in a position to use a couple of good solicitors either all or part of the time. We have a good proposition -one you can make some money with. Please write im mediately, or call at the office. Diamonds. Crabill's. Investigate prices at Notice To Creditors. Slate of Nebraska, I Cuss County. SS. In County Court In the matter of the estate of Addison H. Jack man deceased. Notice is hereby given that the creditor of said Ipcefuwd will meet the Administrator of Haiti I HH- 1 1. 1 1 1 1 17 1 1 1 IT. lJU II MUMKC VI. UUD lliUT i t .. . .. i ... j .. . ' r..... Nebraska, at the County Court room in I'latts mnuth, in Raid County, on the :10th day of July, 1910. and on the Slut day of January, l'.IO, at 10 o clock A. M each day, for the puruoae of pre senting' their claims for examination, adjustment and allowance. Six months are allowed for the creditors of said deceased to present their claims and one year for the Administrator to wttlo said instate, from tht 30th day of July. 1!XJ9. Witners my hand and seal of said County Court, at I'luttsmouth, Nebraska, this 1st day of July, 1!K)9. Allen J. Beeson. 23-8 Seal. County Judge. Legal Notice. The defendants Mary Masrowan. Harriet L. Carper, Caiper. (Ilrst natno unknown), William Rolls. Joshua Stroud, Surah A. Stroud, Iximbard Investment Company, Harry E. Mooney, Sanfonl D. Ladd. and Frank Hairorman, lieceiv ers Lombard Investment Company non-resident defendants.a-d the unknown heirs of hiley Jont's. Tennessee Kolls, nee Jones, Wiley O. Jones, Isabell Kuhy, nee Jones, and Ueorife S. Ruby, deceased, wirl take notice that on the 9th day of July 1909, John C. Knabe. the plni.ntin" tiled his petition in the District Court of Cass counly, Nebraska, irninst tho above named defendants, the object and prayer of which is to cancel u certain mort gage triven by Onwakl llaier, and wife, to the Lombard Investment Company, dated March 8, 1M9. and to iuiet the title in the plaintiff to the following described real estate situated in Cass county. Nebraska, to-wit: The West one-balf (!' of the southeast quarter (l4. the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter C) the south twenty-five '!") acres of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter ' ) the east fifteen (15) acres of the northwest quarter (') of the northeast quarter ('). the south six (il) acres of the remainder of the northwest quar ter (l4 of the northeast quarter (L) the west 17.63 acres in lot Uiree (3) In the northeast quar ter ('( of the northeast quarter v1) lot six (6) containing l.t.21 acres in the southeast quarter !) of the northeast quarter ('' all in section Thir tytwo Township Eleven (ID Range Thirteui (13) containing U.X1 acres, and that each of sailmfle' fendants and those claiming under or thro. any interest in sail teal estate, and tor equitable relief. ' You are required to answer or plead to said pe titien on or nekM the 23rd day of August. 1909. Dated at I'kiftkmouth. Cass county, Nebraska, this 9th day of July 19ot. John C. Knabe. Plaintiff. LI1UII1. IK 1UITVUI Ullim nm imk " t-iuimiiii. y y y A A A A A A A A A A A T y y y y y y y y y y y f y y y T y y y f y y y y t f f V .$3 00 , 3 oo 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 50 3 00 at $4.00 to $4.50. f y