' - 4 J H, -, - t- -- . . , 4-.1 - - vr V V To I'rt J The Plattsmouth Journal I'UItLISIIKD WKKKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. R. A. AND T. H. IIATKS, riTllMSIIKUM. SUBSCRIPTION One year Six months Three months Invariably In advance. .$1.00 . .50 r Entered at the postofllce at Plattsmouth, Ne braska, as sccondclass matter. THURSDAY, FK1IKUAKY 12, 1902 It costs your Uncle Sam $1 avyioo annually to predict that to-morrow will he fair, and then it is ten to one that it snows or rains, and Old Sol re mains in hiding for several days fol lowing. Coxukkssmax Jov, of St. Louis, not long since, olTered a resolution calling for the construction of twenty-Qve tirst class hattle-shiis to cost $5,000,000 each. Maylie he is arranging for the enforcement of his election force hill; or he may have foreseen the designs of the I "an titer's captain in Venezuela. Tiik Supreme Court of Iowa has do cided that nnder the law in that state which requires railroad companies to redeem tickets sold and not used, that unless a company fixes a time limit for presentation of such unused tickets there is no time limit and they must redeem them at any time on ten days' notice. Such should be the case in all states.. Heue it is in nutshell: If the peo ple want relief they must look to the democratic party and the remedy pro posed by it, namely, removing the taritl from all articles manufactured by the trust. Without the protective tariff, trusts could not exist, but with out the money of the trusts to corrupt the individual voter and buy entire states the republican party could not exist. Ain't that so? Ficaxk James develops the point that the Younger boys would almost certainly have been Union men but for the killing of their father, a strong Unionist, in a raid of Kansas "Red legs." This is one of the many unwrit ten instances of tragic and strange ro mance along the border in civil war times. Can novelists, poets and dram atists say that America has not the ma terial for a powerful literature? The Louisville Courier nominates liyron Clark, of this city, for federal judge, in case Nebraska is made two districts, which seems probable. Of course it couldn't possibly be a demo crat, that's one thing certain; and un der these circumstances the Journal would be pleased to see Mr. Clark get the place. He is an able lawyer, and has always been an incessant work er in republican harness, and deserves recognition of this character at the hands of his party friends. Gov. Mickey is opposed to the pres ent mode of conducting the public schools of Nebraska because the teach ers, he says, have not sutllcient relig ious training and do not use the bible to the extent to suit his notion. On this account he threatens to veto any appropriation for the state university. The simple fact that our "selfish" gov ernor is a Methodist, does not privilege him to force his own ideas upon the whole people of the state, the great majority of whom, no doubt, disagree with him on this matter. Mr. Mickey is the governor, but this does not sig nify that he is the "whole cheese," by any means. Sexatou Umlmstead has introduc ed a bill designed to give the Nebraska real estate landlord what is known as a "landlord's lien," and which, if en acted into law, will grant "landlord's a lien on all crops grown on leased lands, and also all personal property used in the cultivation of said land." Such a law would be an outrage upon the common people of Nebraska, and it is hoped such a bill will not pass. Sena tor Ulmstead evidently has an eye for selfishness in this matter, as it is shown that he himself is one of the big land lords of Nance county, so that it will be seen why he is interested in secur ing a lein upon everything a farmer las, from the crops to the platform around the pump. Poor men have some rights yet to be respected, even by those who would ape England on the matter of landlordism. ''What Is to bodone for the riero?" seems to be a question thaV is trpper most inthemindsof the leadlngTepub lican of the nation. At the for tieth anniversary of the Union League Club, on Friday night last, by invitation, Secretary of War Root was present and addressed the meeting". In speaking on the negro question, the Secretary remarked: "It is probably but a matter of time when the over whelming dominant white opinion will succee1 in excluding the black man from all offices in the southern states." Among those present who discussed the question there was none who held the views entertained by the Resident on the subject, but there were many who agreed that the negro question would not be agitated to-day so incessantly, were It not for an effort by republicans to get the nigger vote at the next national convention and in the next presidential campaign. The I niggers, since they were granted a right to vote, have been a source of trouble to the nation. All this trouble can be adjusted, and the problem as to "what can be done for them?" solved in just five words, Tiz: Eliminate the negro from politics- J J Crisp Editorial Briefs. The New York state republican ma chine Is fast going to pieces. The White House has U'cn renamed It is now known as The Itlackand Tan I loos t. Ordinary discretion and good sense will insure a great democratic victory in 1!H). There are many indications th.it the Parker star is rising. He is the man for the in'ople. The republican majority still con tin lies to obstruct the business of the United State Senate. Senators Hanna and Fairbanks prom ise to make a pretty pair for the re publican party to "draw to" in 1!H4. Republican jealousies of Judge Lit- tlelield portends ill luck for the admin istration anti-trust bill in the House. (lermany is Itelievcd to lie the "nig ger in the wood-pile" who prevented usfrom getting the Danish West Indies Mark Twain is still hammering away at Mrs. Eddy and the Christian Scient ists. Mark has patience as well as humor. President Roosevelt and his Cabinet now realize the truth of Mr. Rryan's contention that silver cannot le dis regarded. A new variety of kippered herring itas iieen phi on inc market, it is called Kiplinged-Uohenollern. It is "hot stuff." The X-rays, applied by Gridiron Club to the head of Senator Hanna revealed the fact that his chief thought was the White House. With a few more days of statehood debate Senator Reveridge will have de monstrated his right to be know n as the buffoon of the senate. "What to do for the niggers of the south," seems to be worrying Mark Hanna as much as Teddy. Only Mark wants to pension them and Teddy doesn't. At Concord. N. H., the home of Mrs. Mary Baker IJ lover Eddy, .the legisla tors are considering the advisability of penalizing the practice of Christian Science. While the republicans are coquetting with the international silver standard the democrats are carefully cultivating the confidence of the business element of the country; The York Teller, an original populist paper of Nebraska, comes out flat flooted for democracy, which tends the way the wind is steadily blowing. The Teller is one the best weeklie in the state. There is no fear of a war with Ger many. What Mr. Roosevelt once re ferred to as "the cowardly business in terests of the country" will prevent any conflict inimical to the business interests. The Gridiron Club of Washington is an association of newspaper men who give dinners during the winter to the most distinguished people in America The name Gridiron applies to the habit of the Club of "roasting" its gusts. Representative Hemenway from In diana has introduced a bill to pension all soldiers and sailors who served at least ninety days in the civil war, at the rate of $12 per month, and all wid ows of such soldiers and sailors who were married prior to June 7, IS!). A well known Westerner who has been watching the antics of Senator Beveridge in the statehood debate gives the following accurate definition of his name: "A soft drink, one that frequently blows out its cork, fizzes, foams and slops over prodigiously, but is weak and insipid to the taste and is seldom swallowed by any but women and children." Perhaps the Kansas women will be reconciled to the defeat of the woman sufferage bill If the legislature will pass the bill now before that body, impos ing a tax on all unmarried men over the ace of 30. There is no use of so many unmmarried men. What a joy such a law in Nebraska w ould bring to the hearts of the many old maids in Plattsmouth. Baron Speck von Sternberg has made clever diplomatic bow to the Ameri-i can people. He brought along a bottle of ointment and soothed the troubled atmosphere in his first interview. If he continue as he has begun, he will be in position to do good both for Ger many and the United States. Tf little Venezuela can only get her neaceful creditors to fighting with the belligerant allied Powers, who insist upon being preferred creditors, she may stir up so big a shindy as to find entire relief in the consequent conflict among the world's heavy weights. The confession of Youtsey settles be yond all doubt the fact that ex-Gov. Taylor, now shielded by the Indiana authorities, conspired to bring about the assassination of Governor Goebel, and covers with shame tlie Hoosier state, the governor of which refuses to honor a requisition for the dastardly ex-governor. If further requisition is now refused, the governor of Kentucky would be justified in sending troops to bring back the culpable ex-governor, who should being doing service behind the walls of the Kentucky peniten tiary. . naaair --- -mattigati aaW itniilaTii lain liairnaWi jm Bidding for the Negro Vote. Senator Ilanna's bill to pension for mer slaves has taken the wind out of the sails of the Republican leaders who are bidding for the favor of the negro vote in the south for the next presi dential campaign, and causes the Jour nal to remark, that if Hanna is not a candidate for the presidency he should "take in his sign." The bill introduced by Senator Han na provides that former slaves, more than 70 years old, shall receive a bounty of "o and a pension of $15 a month; those between 00 and 70 years old shall have a bounty of $:'.M and a pension of $12 a month; those between 50 and ;o years old shall receive a bounty of $100 and a pension of $S a month; those less than 50 years old shall be entitled to receive $i a month until they are 50 years old, when the shall receive $Sper month. That it will stir up a warm and friendly feeling among the old former slaves and their decendants may, how ever, be among the calculations of the man who at present fathers it. Senator Mason, of Illinois, introduc ed the same bill two years ago, and at one time or another Republicans have stood sponsor for similar measures. None of these gentlemen has ever en tertained the delusion that the bill could, by any possibilit-, Income a law, nor docs Senator Hanna. However, it will make the race feeling more in tense in the south. The slave pension business has its special champions, and there are rep resentatives thoughout the south at present engaged organizing what they call the liberty party, with pensions for slaves as its principal platform. They require an assessment of 25 cents upon each of the prospective pensioners, and by this means the scoundrels have played upon the credulity of negroes to the extent that more than $250,000 has been collected in assessments of 25 cents each upon the promise that a bounty and pension awaited each form er slave as soon as the bill "reached a third reading," which tney knew could never come to pass. The republican party has a fair sized "elephant" on its hands, and the intro duction of a bill of this character by such an important figure as Mark Han na, although "by request," will have an effect to further intensify the feel ing among the negroes that they are to become pensioners upon thecountry. Not many days ago a deputation of negroes went to the White House to secure from President Theodore Roosevelt his indorsement of this slave pension proposition. The president declined so emphatically that the lead er of the deputation went from the YYliite House swearing vengeance up on President Roosevelt and declaring that they would control 300,000 votes in the close states of the north which would be thrown against Roosevelt if he were the republican candidate. If the negro is to be pensioned, let the republican otlice-holders, who owe their positions to the negro voters of the country, be assessed every year for this purpose. They are very good to work up a sentiment in favor of the negro, but when it comes to helping them they are the last fellows to go down in their pockets and dig up a dol lar of their own to aid him. And the sooner he finds this out the better it will be for the "colored brother." The Littlefield "Antitrust" Bill. Representative Dc Armond of Mis souri urged the republican majority in congress to prove its sincerity in the movement for restriction of the trust evil by enacting legislation authoriz ing the president to suspend duties on trust-made articles whenever such ac tion was necessary. An amendment to this effect is proposed by the democrats as a means of making the anti-trust bill genuinely resultful as a corrective of monopoly. The practical value of such a provision may not be denied. The power conferred on the president would be exercised only in cases where the truth was obvious that the tariff was enabling great monopolies to oppress the people. The Republican majority in congress, however, says the St. Louis Republic, could not be induced to accept such an amendment. From the day that Mr Littlefield's antitrust bill was intro duced, the one aim of the majority has been to so modify its provisions as to remove all danger of injury to monop olistic organizations. Efforts to this end have been eminently successful. The Littlefield bill, just passed in the House, is as devoid of any promise to lestrict the trust evil as though it had ;en framed by trust attorneys under e direction of a board of trust mag Ites, which is not at all improbable. Republicanism has 'acted as the agent of the trusts in the shaping of alleged "antitrust" legislation. The Congress men responsible for the adoption of the Littlefield bill have earned the grati tude of the trusts. They have done just as Mr. De Armond says, gone far enough to fool the people, but not far enough to hurt the people's enemy. Yet it would seem that the American public should be so clearly cognizantof trickery in this instance that they would not be duped by the republican game. The cards nave oeen piayea with shameless audacity and their sig nificance cannot be missed save through what would seem the voluntary blind ness of the sharpers' victims. Governor "Penny whacker," of Penn sylvania, is up against the newspaper boys. He will get all that is coming to him and a little more. No wonder the big contractors are so deeply interested in te passage of the contractor's lein bill. It is sj mply a scheme to "cutout" all the little contractors. The matter of feed is of tremendous importance to the farmer. Wroncr feeding is loss. Right feeding is profit. The up-to-date farmer knows what to feed his cows to get the most milk, his pigs to get the most pork, his hens to get the most eggs. Science. But how about the children ? Are they fed according to science, a bone food if bones are soft and undeveloped, a flesh and muscle food if they are thin and weak and a blood food if there is anemia ? Scott's Emulsion is a mixed food; the Cod Liver Oil in it makes flesh, blood and muscle, the Lime and Soda make bone and brain. It is the standard scientific food for delicate children. Send for free sample. Be sure that this picture in the form of a label is oil the wrapper of every bottle ot KruuLion you buy. Scott &Bownc CHEMISTS. 409 Pearl St., N. Y. 50c end $1 1 all druggists. Good Doctrine from a Railroad Man. President Tnyalls, of the Hig Four Railroad, on the subject of taxation and trusts, says: "Publicity and taxation, all agee, is one way of controlling aiid keeping the trusts within the limits. Let the full light of day be turned on all their actions, all their statements and all their accounts, and provide, either by franchise or license tax, that they shall pay their fair share of the burdens of the people. Our case is somewhat different from that of England or oth er countries, and therefore precedents do not apply. In England, for in stance, they are practically free trade, and there is nothing which the trusts want from Parliament. Here we have a tariff, and to a certain extent, it is used as a protection for the corpora tions, and the great danger to our in stitutions is that these great aggrega tions of wealth may endeavor to con trol legislation and do things that smaller bodies could not attempt. "Our system of taxation is the crud cstonthecivilizedearth, with possibly the exception of Turkey and some of the Oriental countries. The laws of every state are different, and by means of this, large aggregations of capital avoid paying their share of the cost of government. We are just learning that a franchise tax is the easiest col lected of any, and probably one of the fairest ways of raising revenue. Of course, those who manage corporations will object, as everybody does, to pay ing taxes, but nevertheless it is right and proper. Those who should have the protect ion of the state should bear their share of its burdens. "I hare always believed in an income tax, and hare thought that the decis ion of our Supreme Court against the constitutionality of such a tax was one of the most unfortunate occurrences of the age. "We should have a tax on all incomes, large or small, exempting a moderate amount of property from ex ecution and levy." Dr. Elster, Dentist, Waterman Block. I I WURL & COFFEY. The Up-to-Date .GROCERS. Here you can gel anything kept at a first-class grocery store, and at prices to suit the times. Finest lino of Canned Goods on the market. -Don't fail to call on them for anything in X the grocery line. Everything fresh from tho markets. WURL & ' I COFFEY. Ordinance No. 217. An ordinance prohibiting pernors un der 17 years' of age from climbing or in any manner stepping upon rail road trains, cars or engines in tin city of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, an providing a icnalty for the violation of the provisions thereof. liK IT ( )ltlAINKl HY TIIK M A YOU AND ( on nci i. ok tiik City ok Pi.atts moi'Tii: Skc:. I. It is hereby made unlawfii for any person under 17 years of age to climb or in any manner step Umii a railroad train, car or engine, in th Citv of Plattsmouth, unless such ier son is leaving the city, or by reason of his employment, makes it necessary to ie on i rains and cars. Any iierson vio lut ing the provisions of this section shall, on convict ion. Ijc fined in anv sum not to exceed ten dollars for each oll'ense, and stand committed until such line and costs are paid. Skc. II. i.ny member of the police force is hereby authorized to arrest without warrant, anv person violating t he provisions of se'ct ion one ef this ordinance, and retain such persem for a reasonable t ime, in which complaint fan Im made and a warrant issued and serveel. That no 'person arrested under the provisions of this ordinaire shall be placed in e'ontinement until the par ents er guardians ot sucn person snail have lx-eii notified of such arrest and shall have refused to be responsible for the penalty prescriltcd in section one 01 tins ordinance. Skc. III. This ordinance shall take etiect and be in fore-e from and aftei its passage, approval and publication according le) law. r . .1. Mowjan, Attest: Mayor. II. M. Soknnh iiskx, City Clerk. Miss Ida. M. Snyder, Treasurer of tbe Brooklyn Eaat End Art Clnbw " If women would pay more attention to their health we would have more happy wives, mothers and daughters, and if they would observe results they would find that the doctors' prescriptions do not perform the many cures they are given credit for. " In consulting with my druggist he ad vised McEIree's Wine of Cardui and Thed ford's Black-Draught, and so I took it and have every reason to thank him for a new life opened up to me with restored health, and it only took three months to cure me." Wine of Cardui is a regulator of the menstrual functions and ia a most as tonishing tonic for women. It cures scanty, suppressed, too frequent, irreg ular and painful menstruation, falling of the womb, -whites and flooding. It is helpful when approaching woman hood, during pregnancy, after child birth and in change off life. It fre quently brings a dear baby to homes that have been barren for years. All druggists have $1.00 bottles of Wine of Cardui. MULE SOUNDED A WARNING. Instinct Told the Animal There Was Danger in the Mine. In one of the mines in the Pittsburg district au ever-patient mule proved himself possessed of an almost hu man sense of coming danger. A chamber had been closed on account of gas, and the men were thinking of what that might mean, when sudden ly there came a clatter of hoofs, and a mule appeared its long ears quiv ering, ard its intelligent eyes full of terror. It gave a shrill bray, and then was gone down the entry, broken traces flying after it. The men, with one impulse, dropping picks, made a headlong dash for the open air. With seared faces other miners joined, and while they were wondering what it all meant, a dull, deep explosion went rumbling through the hollow back of them, followed by wave on wave of noxious vapors. When the bodies of the few poor men who had been hopelessly entrapped were recovered, another was tenderly carried out with theirs that of the little gray mule that sounded the warning. Business Opportunities. -GET IN LINE- FORTH E- -Nl2w YEAR 1903- OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS We Have our Own List: HOTELS, RESTAURANTS, ROOMING AND BOARDING HOUSES, GROCERIES, MEAT MARKETS, BANKERS. CONFEC TIONERIES, MILLINERIES, DRUG STOKES. FUR1TUUE, HARDWARE, BOOK AND STA TIONERY, ALSO GENERAL MERCHANDISE STOCKS, LIV ERIES, PLANING MILL, BRICK AND TILE PLANT, BARBER SHOPS, FINE BATH HOUSE. FISH AND OYSTER MARKET. VLSO -FURNISH CAPITAL FOR- PA TENTS MONEY ADV -EASY ANCED TERMS. BUYERS WE HAVE SEVERAL GOOD PROPOSITIONS FOR PARTIES HAVING CAPITAL TO INVEST WITH SERVICES. IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A BUSINESS WE CAN SA I ISFY YOU, HANDLE ONLY FIRST- CLASS, LEGITIMATE OFFERS. SHOULD YOU WISH TO SELL YOUR BUSINESS, SEND US DE TAILS. WE HAVE A SPECIAL SYSTEM OF BUYING AND SELL ING. -SEND US YOUR WANTS : MARKS BUSINESS COMPANY Promoters of Industries. 430 GOOD BLOCK. DES MOINES. u THE BANK OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEB.: Capital Stock Surplus WE WANT YOUIl BUSINESS. v OFFICERS: ('HAS. !. I'A KM ICI.K. Pn-Nl.i.-nt. .1. M. I'ATTKUSON. VI.--rr'Ulfiil. T. M. I'ATTKUSON. e'usl.l. r. n N ECE S Wo linve n now lot of Fine Hair I'ruslies, Fine Dre-Hsiiitf Combs, Kit, gent Hnnel Mirnrs. ("II prit-e's) Our Toilet Sot unil Travel, ing Cnseis are extrn gool vuluo. Our lino of Xnuirf I Vrfume-H is well worth weing unel prit-e-.s right: TOILET SOAP FROM 5 TO SO CENTS. V G. LEADING STRIKE IN JAPANESE SCHOOL. Students Demand the Dismissal of the Entire Faculty. We had to report recently a strike on the part f tin; Ktudeuts of the Mlye Middle V,(.:ihh1, writes the Japanese Mail. On that eiccasion the fault seonu-d to m largely on the side of the facility of the; school and the governor of the prt-fectuie. News now comes of a strike at tho Middle School of Oila, in which the sHu dents appear to he chiefly to blame The account given in Tokyo journals is that the elder students, angered by some severe strictures passetd by Mr. L'ki, one of the teacners, against an increasing habit of imbibing sake, demanded his removal. Apparently the principal yielded so far as to sus pend Mr. Ukl, but, at the same time, he rusticated some of the students. This led to a renewal and stronger demonstration on the latter's part. They drew up a document arraign ing the principal and the teachers em various counts and demanding the dismissal of the whole faculty. Thir teen of them were now expelled, with the result that meetings began to be held outside the school for the pur pose of planning a general strike. The trouble is not over. Of course this version comes from the side of the teachers. Aristocratic Japanese Actors. In Japan there Is an aristocracy of actors. None can belong to it unless their ancestors have been ac tors for many generations or they have been adopted into a great the atrical family. These professional leaders enjoy special privileges. One of them is the right to advertise their names over the doors of the houses where they play. But foreign cus toms are beginning to affect the stage. In Tokyo they have got tho length of a performance down to eight hours, though in the provinces they still run fifteen. Generally parts of two or more different styles of plays run on in succession, three or four days being thus occupied in the one series of productions. This Is with a view of giving everybody tomething to their taste. Increase of German Commerce. Twenty years ago only fifteen Ger man vessels passed annually through the Suez canal. Now the number is 462 a year. Little Light from Moon. If the sky were filled with full moons the light would be no brighter than that of ordinary daylight. Testing'a Baby's Mind. In an exDeriment whose DtirDose was to trace the stages of development of baby's mind the infant was placed before a mirror daily. During the earliest stage of the test he simply looked at his reflection, as birds do. He next showed fear of it, as do many of the higher animals. He then grasped at it with his hands, as cats and monkeys have been known to do. But on the 420 day of bis life he delib- irately turned the glass at different meles to obtain required reflections, an intelligence not possessed by any animal other than man. New York's Poor School System. When the public, schools of .New York opened 493,000 children applied for an education. Only six new school buildings, with a total accommodation of 8,200, were opened, when there should have been at least ten. Laurier Going to Rome. Sir Wilfrid Laurier is shortly ex pected in Rome to discuss with the Italian government a commercial con vention and further to arrive at some understanding in regard to Italian em igrants to Canada. "tniq qij.vi uoas aq oj pouiuqsu e ajM. (re? 6q asneodq ojjoajp v aoj bjjpb oboi ijoa mojj uoqs y 30JOAIQ joj uoseau pooo S8I nf pajp 811 tnm nodn paxiajuoo jauojeq jo enil 9.) axuq oj pnaduo 3Jtf 311 SB- edsjej v Moqqadfdf ddf-dsiacf Jg )auojrg Cu3jo J('J CASS COUNTY, . $50 000 00 ... ) 000 00 33Y 1 "J" I IS S! Sc Co., PMARMISTS. Time Table :jiiiiiio(ii Plattsmutith. neb. Lincoln. Omaha, Chicago, St. Joe, Kansas City, St. Louis and all points Last ami South. Denver. Helena, Iluttc, Portland Salt Lake City, San Francisco, and all mIii1s West. Trains Leave as Follows: No.rtl yM'iil tii I'.'wlllit .liiiK-t Ion v ,:: um No. 4 - I m-uI 'Xin-H, l:illy. :ill miiiIh i :isL:iiiI south IO:(XJ Mill No. :ki I'n-lt'lit. dully x- l Htiinluy. to I'iK-llic Junction 2:4)1 pin No. X lM':tl to l':iclflir Juiii-I ion 4:4i pin No. 2 - Ik':iI express, to Iowa mIijLh. Cliii ao :iul the eust 4:Z2 pin No. Hi - Fast express, dally,-from Lin coln to St. .loM-pli. Kansas City, ft. I in Is. e'dlratfo. au! all jxiliits eat and south H:'J7 put No. P.I laical express, dally, Omaha, Lincoln, Ik-uvt-raud lutermi-dlaU' stations 7;04 am No. 27 local express to Omaha, via Ft. Crook mid South Omaha, dally except Sunday 0:20 um No. 'J! - IH-al freight, to Ctilar Creek, liulsvllle and Siuth Jlend. dully except Sunday 0:41 h in t No. 7 - Fast mail, dally, to Orualiii und Lincoln 2;2 j,ui No. 1) -Through vestihuled express for nil points east 7:2h am No. 3 - Vestlliuled express, dally, len vcr. all xiiils In Colorado. 1,'tah and California 3:;j;j pm No. 13-Lliicoln. ;rand Island. Itlaek ,fT Hills. Montana and I'acllhr north- west; J:in pm No. 33 - lK'al express. I loulsvllle. Ash-f land. Wahoo, Schuyler, dally ex cept Sunday 3: wipm No. 20 From Omaha 3:17 um Sh-eplnj?. dinlntr and reclining clmlr ears (seats free) on through trains. Tickets sold :iik1 bmrifaicu HiiH'ked to any point In Hie I For Information, lime tallies, maps und ' tickets call on or write to V. K i'lckelt, local 1 agent, riattsmoiilh. N"h., or J. Francis, Ken- eral passenger airent. Omaha, N l. 1 Missouri Pacific Time Table TKAIN'S euiiNei nokth. No. 5.37 am I No. 17 5.40 prn , TKAl.NS liOINO SOUTH. N' J. 2 11.34 pm No. 122, local freight 7.35 am No. 1H 10.45 am JOHN M. LEY DA, ATTORNEY MT-LMW. ABSTRACTER OF LAND TITLE. Preparing attracts of title, conveyancing and examining titles to real estate a special ty. Work proerly done and charges reason able. Office: Kooms and 7, John timid ISulliiing. near Court House, I'luttsmouiU, Neliraska. . W. B. ELSTER, DENTIST. office: Plattsmouth, ' Waterman Block , Nebraska I'latts. Phones j JJ" Q1C MARSHALL, IlKNTIST All kinds of lietital work. Plates made that fit. -U year experience. Prices reasonable. Work guaranteed. OFFICK FlTZdlCKAI.D ItMXTK. Telephone No. S ok 47 V Abstracts of Title V Tf?oma$ JLalli9$. OFFICK A nheuser-nuHU Work. - f II. TItAVIS. I attoi;nev-at-law ICoOm K 0, 10 a nii II, Watekmak, Huk k, PLATTSMOUTH. NF.I1UASK A. J MKRKASKA TKI.KPHOKK. OrriCK KO. 62. ( KIXIUKKCK. 41. Dr. J. M. GREEN 13 w Allopathic Physician.- ....Surgeon.... Ofllceover Dovey'siStore. Ni'KA' ateifllce. riattsmouth Telephone No. .200 , u- it r r I- , --'