The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, July 14, 1904, Image 3
15 4 JrrT Next to Judge Parker's Message As a topic of general interest in this localitv are the prices we are maUim On Our Clothing and Gents' Furnishings The Leading Clothier rWr -mr -w -w -w -w -w -w - -w -w - - ' - - -mm- - ICE The Old Reliable Dealers H. C. McMaken and Son HANDLE THE BEST ICE ON EARTH And are Ready to Deliver it in Any Quantity. Orders Promptly Filled TELEPHONES Plattsmouth os. T, "land 21'J Nebraska No. ,2 Kunsmann & Ramge Still lead all other Meat Markets in furnishing the people of Platts moutu and vicinity with First Class Meats Of Every Description, fresh and Smoked Meats, Fresh Fish, Lard, Etc. Etc REMEMBER They have removed to the first room west of their old stand. I!y courteous treatment to all they hope to retain their present patrons and gain many new ones. Independent Cigar FACTORY! the: cdurj 5c CIGAR, Clmllrinl''" ("I'liumrlvii In yuullty hikI Worknmii'ililp. JULIUS PElTKkT.EKf,, Manufacturer. FOLEYSHONHTAR for children, toft, larc tptatf Ynn Will Alwavs Find S -S a a m Is the Ivst in tho Kn;r run. even if you pay a Sl;ioi1 nriee f.r it. lut you will travel many a lnc. vwary mile before you find any better bargains than v.e are olTerin in Clothing. Better call in and we will endeavor to convince you how interej-tintf our prices are. MORGAN Postoffice Rules. The following rules should deodserv ed in and around the post otlice to make it pleasant and agreeable to all parties: 1. As soon as the mail is brought from the train, all hurry up to the otlice and till the wait m: room, as it is necessary to have the room full before clerks can distribute the mail. 2. Iiefore,you enter the door ligiit a fresh cigiirand when you g"et inside make as much smoke as possible, as it is necessary to have a fog- to reflect the light on t lie addresses of the letters and papers: also take a fresh chew of tobacco as you enter so you can delude the lloor with tobacco spit and slide around easily and at t lie same time do the postmaster a favor, and when you po out he can sweep without sprink ling. 3, Enter into all kinds of conversa tion: talk loud, laugh loud and long-, nse a little profanity occasionally, make a liubbubgenerally, as the clerks need it to keep their nerves steady so they can throw the mail in tin right boxes. 4. When the mail is distributed, rush to the delivery window, call for mail, then ask why such and such a letter or paper didn't come and a.sK a half a dozen other sensible o,uestions and keepothers waiting, it is necessary to learn them patience. '). When you get your mail crowd your way out of the otlice, pay no at tention to no one, run over them if they get in the road, anything, just so you get out and make room for others. r. When you get out on the streets cuss the postmaster and his clerks for being so slow, they need it after you have done so much to help them. All these things go to help make the average postmaster's life comfortable -nit! Cured of Brig tit's Disease. Mr. Robert O. liurke, Elnora, N. Y., writes: '-llefore I started to use Fo ley's Kidney Cure I had to get up from twelve to twenty times a night, and I was all bloated up with dropsy and my eyesight was soimpaired I could scarce ly see one of my family across the room. I had given up hope of living, when a friend recommended Pauley's Kidney Cure. One f0cent bottle worked won ders and before I had taken the third bottle the dropsy had gone, as well as all other symptoms of lirlght's de sease." Sold by F. (1. Frickc & Co. Night Was Her Terror. "1 would cough nearly all night long," writes Mrs. Chas. Applegate, of Alexandria, Ind., "and could hardly get any sleep. Iliad consumption so bad that if I walked a block 1 would 'cough frightfully and spit blood, but, i when all other medicines failed, three l.oolMittlesof Ir. King's New Discov ery wholly cured me and I gained ! pounds." It's absolutely guaranteed j to cure Coughs, Colds, Lailrlppe, Bron chitis and all Throat and Lung Troti hies. Price .Vc and I.IK. Trial twit ties free at F. i. Fricke & Co.'s drug store. ! Paint Bargains-Special. j Unseed oil, raw, 4e per gallon, i Unseed oil. boiled, 4.V per gallon. Carter's white lead, KM per loolhs. Southern white lead, K'.OperhMlbs. Pat ton's Sun Proof paint. 1. 7.1 per gallon: gallons or more, fl.tm pergal. Turpentine, 7.V per gallon. fiK.uiNo & Co.. Druggists. sa mm 8 8 1 1 Plattsmouth, Neb. N Whektose . Absolutely free - from huik or fibre -: 2 lb. packages. All hlgh-cksa grocers. A Valuable Discovery. One of the greatest discoveries of the age is that of the Vitaopathlc system of treating- and curing disease. It heals all manner of curable diseases in which applied and a lanre per cent of cases given up as incurable. It cures without the use of drugs, medicines or the surgeon's knife. It cures patients at any distance from the operator. We otrer the advantages of thissystem of healing to all those who are suller ing from ch ionic or other diseases. Ap ply toT. H. 1'ollock, room 222, Coates block, I'lattsmouth, Neb. No Pity Shown. "For years fate was after mecontin uously" writes F. A. Gulledge, Yer liena, Ala. 'i had a terrible case of Tiles causing 24 tumors. When all failed Eucklen's Arnica Salve cured me. Equally good for burns and all aches and pains. Only 2.c at F. (J. Fricke & Co. 's Drugstore. Weak Hearts Are caused by Indigestion. If you eat a little too much, or if you are sub ject to attacks of I nd igest ion, t he stom ach expands swells, and pulfs up against the heart. This crowds the heart and shortens the breath. Ilapld heart beats and heart disease Is the fi nal results. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure di gests w hat you eat, takes the strain olf the heart, cures Indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach, and contributes nourish ment, strength and health to every organ of the body. Sold by F.G. Fricke & Co. Farmers, go to Dawson county, Neb. Cheaplands. Maks more money. Free alfa'fa pamphlet. Write J. M. McColl, Lexington, Neb., or the Putnan Co., Omaha, Neb. Your Hair "Two years ago my hair vis falling out badly. I purchased s bottle of Oyer's Hair Vigor, and soon my hair stopped coming out." Miss Minnie Hoover, Paris, III. Perhaps your mother had thin hair, but that is no reason why you must go through life with half starved hair. If you want long, thick hair, feed it with Aycr's Hair Vigor, and make it rich, dark, and heavy. ti.H a irftit. ail iniriiu. If ymr ilruL'ifi.t mnnnt ui'pljr yoa, trni in on dollar anil Kill iirt you a bottle. It t ur nit sir tho nani of your DfrM hmmh ntllce. AJilrtu, J.C. AV tllCO., Lowtll.MiM. NEWS OF NEBRASKA. Farmer Killed by Lightning. Rcott's lllufr. July 7. In a terrific; torin that passed over tills place J V. Draper was strmk ty lightning anil instantly killed. Thrown Frcm Hons and K.ile.-t. Edgar. Net).. July 7 - Kiwood Daw son, a young ir.an living tuar hero, Instant !y killed hy being thrown from a h"re. The J.ill broku Ills' nock. You; g Woman Kills Herself. LiUioln, July S. license her lover persisted In iniportun.ug her to puny him. Marie Johnson, u doni stlc em ployed at Kit I. street, committed suicide by turning on the gas 1st her bedn em. Burglars Make Start at R.iVk. fiercer City. Neb, July 7. --Itutyhrs broke into the hiinU at Kdbdi and sue eooded in gaining entrance to Hie vault. Imt were frightened a.vay he fore they could Mow the safe. Thoro Is no cine, except that one of C'e men rut himself en the hrol.cn window glass and h it considerable hlood upon the window casing a id hank furnitiim. Boy'i Finger Sewn on Again. Blair, Neb.. July 11. While the lit tie son o John McMahan was runnln ; a lawn mower on hit lather's lawn lie fell with his hand 111 the knives ami hud the two middle lingers oi one hand cut off between the tlrst and sec ond Joints. lr. Koblnson and l)r. Hlnchinan were hurriedly summoned and the fingers were pluc.d hack and sewed on after heini picked up In the Krass. He U reported an gitlliif aloiiK nicely. Wheat Makes Excellent Crop. Ooehncr. Nih., July 11 Harveit 1b In full Mat, with wheat letter than was expected, labt wiH'k. Oats Is very nisty. Corn In in excellent condition. Tho farmers' elevator project Is gain ing In favor and $TitiO was added to the stock subscriptions that now reach about iJ.riiui. Th commlitei' expects S(Kn to raise th list to $4,000 or 000. Vice 1'rePldent 11. 11 1' inks of Nebraska City Is expected to be here to complete) tho negotiations. Find Body of an Infant. Lincoln, July 9 The dead body of a baby Klrl was found In a shoe box at the Iturlinxioi) depot. Tho police believe It Is a case of murder. The box had been at tho depot sinco Wed nenlay. It waa found back of a utovo on a lturlltiKton train between Pai IHr Junction and I'lattsmouth and placed in the depot awaiting the owner. Cor oner Graham saya the child was alive when placed in the box, and that it bled to death. Detectives are. seeking the parents. Governor Honors Requisition. Uucoln, July 13. Governor Mickey honored tho retiulsltlon ot Governor Odell of New York for the return uf John X. Hitter, charged with Mcalim; $25,000 from A. P. Ordway & Co. of Now York city, a firm of manufactur ing chemists Hitter, who was confi dential man, cashier and head book keeper, lied from New York last, fall and since that time has been operat ing a hoot blacking parlor at Colum bus, where he is now under arrest. Ho will be taken back in the custody of Detective Sergeant Robert Mc- Naught. Out at the Morton Plant. Nebraska City, Neb., July 13. Tho employes of the Morton-Gregson Pack lng eompnny went on mntrlke, and the plant Is practically tied up as a consequence. Tho trouble, started pome timo ago, when the employes and one of the company's watchmen Jack Farley, hail some trouble. A strike wag threatened at that time, but Farley resigned and no trouble enaued. Farley returned to work and the men went on ntrlk aa threatened. The Mf)rtons''a.re hero trying to Fettle tho matter, and the trouble is not fr pected to last long. . Double Murderer Captured. Omaha, July 12 Michael W. Z-l er, murderer of his wife and father-In law, William R. Rurkamp, after being a fugitive for flfty-threo hours and, according to his own statement. within a few hundred yards of his home all the time, was captured by John P. Peterson. Zel'.er now occu pies a cell at the city jail, groaning from a self-inflicted knlfo wound that was made at the time of his capture. Whllo It Is believed that Zeller In tended to kill himself, hla wound Is described as being very slight The apprehension of the murderer was effected when he came out t hla hid lng place to his house for food and water. NEBRASKA CROP CONDITIONS. Continued Wet and Cold Weather Is Unfavorable for Growth of Grain, Lincoln, July 13. The continued wet weather has been unfavorable for crop Interests. Winter wheat harvest is Just beginning and the crop Is found to be much more damaged by ruft and ergot than had been previously sup- jiosod. In most central and western counties this damage la nut great but in southeastern counties It Is se rlouR. The damage Is variously cstl mated In different localities, but a large proportion of the estimates range from 30 to 00 per cent of the crop. Oats have also been damaged some what In eastern counties hy rust and lodging, but oats are doing well In central and western countlea. Spring wheat generally Is doing well. Grass has grown finely. The second crop of alfalfa promises to be largo. Corn has grown well and Is a good color, but Is till small and many fields are weedy Yar.-tmaaar Clrardy KIMti. Nebraska City, July S Jack C.rnr dy, yaniuiustiT for the Itiirlinton, wn Killed in the yards here l.it-t ovenlui;. C.lrardy was en the pilot of a hwltch eiiKlne and lost his balance, lallinn henea:!i the engine. His body was badly u'utdicd and deatli was In.-'aula in ous. Tornado in Nebraska. Lincoln, July 1J - A tornado de stroyed seven fane houses mid bartu aiu. oiit'MiiUiiiKa near Iturwell. The Inn M Ui c on .Nir llnttalu's farm wus dm ed to bplilitcrs. Tho lofcers Wi le Fanners l.ons, UniniiiKo, Campbell, Dul ton and otheib. No lives were st. The list of Injured Is Hot ob tainable. Severe hailstorms ruined tups at tlrecley Center, uear Old, ft Hastings and Arcadia. llU'h winds, with tornado features, iw down several biilldinns in the vicinity oi' Sliilton. Neb. wecked the am of Henry Welsh, near Tobias, ami did damage to the crops In many eel ions of the stale. STRIKE ORDER IS ODCYED. Four Thousand Men Quit Work it Packing Houses. July 13. Four l In m I the four packing South Omaha Seith (linalia, sand ciunlovcs pnnts here, Armour's, Cudahy's, Swlit's iiml the Omaliu. obeyed the strike order. Fvoii before the strike was in progress tho packers began to levy tribute for carrying It on from I'm public. Just before the men unit work notice wiih served upon local butchers that prices on all grades, of fresh meat had been advanced 2 cents per M mini. Notwithstanding that the packers deny there Is any community of Interest among them the advance was strangely unanimous, all houses advancing the prlceu almost a the Fame moment. TAKES LIVES OF TWO. M. W. Zeller Kills Wife and Her Aoed Father, W. R. Burkamp, Omaha, July 11. Crazed with drink and frenzied with linger, Michael W. .oiler, a gardener, committed a double murder, slabbing to death his wife and slaying her father, Willlum H llurkamp, who ran to the Uhslsianee of his daughter. With his two victims bleeding and dying, Zeller (oolly turned from tho scene of his crime and walked up the hill with his knife still in bis hand and dripping with the life blood of father and daughter. The tragedy was enacted at the very doorstep of the llurkamp rest deuce, ut Forty-second and Kedi k avenue. There, was but ono witness to tho awful crime, Mrs. Stn iberg, tho wife of a farmer living neur Forest Lawn cemetery. William llurkamp was the sexton of tho Pleasant Hill Jewish cemetery ami his residence was Just adjoining and on Itcdlek ave nue. Mrs. Strotnberg witnessed the stabbing of Mrs. Zeller only, Ib-iing from the scene) In a buggy, Zeller planned bis murder with de liberation and cunning and made good bis alleged Inhuman threat, ol't-ro- peated and of eighteen years' stand ing. He first fatally stabbed his wife. iiuiKainp, who was slxtytilne years of age, heard the scp'ams of his daughter and hastened to her aid, only to be struck down an I sent to his death. BRYAN SUPPORTS TICKET. Issues Statement Saying He Will Vote for the Nominees. Lincoln, July 13 W. J. liryon gave out the following statement: "I tdiall vote for Parkfr and liavls the noniliKvH of the Democratic na tional convention, and shall do so for th following reasons: "First Ilecause tho I)eiiio'ratic ticket stands for opposition to impe rialism, while tho Republican ticket stands for un imperialistic policy. "Second Mr. Roosevelt la inject ing he race Issue Into American pol itic nd this, If it becomes national, wii. uake It ImiKisslble to consider economic questions that demand solu tion. The election of the Democratic ticket will put a quietus ujnin this at tempt anil permit tho race question to work Itself out without the bltternnss which Mr. Roosevelt's conduit has engendered. "Third Mr. Roosevelt stands for the spirit of war. Hla friends present htm as s man of blood snd iron. He believes In slronuousness and indi cates a love for war-like things. The Democratic ticket stands for peace, for reason and for arbitration rather than for force, conquest and bluster. "Fourth The Democratic platform dwlarcs In favor of the reduction of the standing army, and as tbla plank was unanimously ac pted there Is reason to believe that a Democratic success on this subject would bring tome advantage to the jwople. "For these four reasons I feel Justi fied In supporting the ticket, but I shall not misrepresent the situation or appeal for votes for the ticket upon false ground. A Democratic victory will mean very little, if any, progress on economic questions so long as the Tarty Is under the control of the Wall street element. "As soon ns the election Is over shall, with the help of thoso who be lleve as I do, undertake to organize for the campaign of limS, he object being to marshal the friends of pnpu lar government within the Democratic party to the support of a radic al and progressive policy." Mrs. Thornet Kills Herself. New York. July 13. Mrs. Minnie Thornet, aged thirty years, formerly of Otnohs, where relatives are said to reside, and recently a well known actress In Columbus, and In stock compftnlci at Detroit and other west ern cities, died here at lUKevuo hos pital fnm an overdose of morphine. . - -. - "Good K.3a!?:i"fti ilOrii..,. t;u ..e , i X V HO I Kit,,; .V l'KKILl-S Hl.I.K Absolutely pure, delmuuft. , Ak f,M.r -' lrv tnr, KanSL'S JolmW.Crabill RELIABLE JEWELER Union Mock I'lattsmouth. Neh. Fine Willed ami Clock KeKiiting- a Specialty. A complete line Watches, Jewelry and Silverware. Ixtra Fine Light (iiiaranteeil "" $2,75 Parker Alarm Clocks, Guar anteed $1.00 NOW'STHETIMETO VISIT. The Burlington's Low Rates to Sum mer Tourists. (in Miinewdere tdK summer: If not, to St. I .mil-, Hull to the iiioiintailis, lakes and seasloue. Kvaminc tliis great Miicine of vacation tours: A I la hi le ( it y ami ret urn, July and In, .'il,oo. Cincinnat i ami ret urn, July l." In IT, Denver, ('oloi:n! sprint's, petidlo, Glenwood Springs, Salt Lake, lllack Hills practically dall tales all sum nler. Micdiifiin, Minnesota ami Wisconsin, tde lake resorts and lake steamer tours -very favoradle rates stop-overs at St. Louis on tlirougli tickets. Ste tde grandest creation ley tde Lund of man. Ask tde aent for full details, or write L. W. WA K F.LF.Y, General Passenger Agvnt. Omaha. World's Fair Rates to St. Louis Via liurliii'ton Route. Tickets to St. Louis and return - (iood fifteen days, i:i.xo. Good sixty days, 1 .". :t.". Good till summer, 4i4o. For full information adout train ser vice and older details see tde ticket at-'cnt. Tde St. Louis F.x posit ion-tde great est sdow Die world das ever wen -is now complete and in harmonious oper ation and it will de a lifetime's regret If you fail to see it. Piles Upon Top of Piles. Piles upon top of piles of people have tde Piles, and Hewitt's Witch -Hazel Salve cures tlietn. There are many (1 life rent kinds of Piles, hut if you tfet the genuine and original Witch Hazel Salve made hy K. ('. He Witt & Co. of Chicago, a cure Is certain. II. A. TIs dale, of Snmincrtdii.S. t'.,says, "1 had piles Jo yearsand HeWitt'sSalvecured me after everything- else failed." Sold hy F. (;. Fricke & Co. Driven to Desperation. Living- at an out of the way place, re mote from civilization, a family Is of tendriven to desperation incase of ac cident, resulting" in hums, cuts, wounds ulcers, etc. Lay in a supply of Puck leu's Arnica Salve. It's the best on earth. at F. i. Fiicke Co.'s drug store. CONTINUE Those who are Raining flesh and strength by regular treat ment with Scott's Emulsion should continue the treatment In hot weatheri amaller doee and a little cool milk with It will do away with eny objection which la attached to fatty pro duct during the heated eaaon. Rfnd for (rw umplf. SCOTT ft HOW NE, ChtmUtt. 409.4'! l'fM Strtet, Nrw York, joe. Ind 1 1 on; ill drutftuu. i ,-J il imiii.-...tj-.,,iu Hr'.t3iT y' '''.' r",' y"YC!