foil Have your cake, muffins, and tea bis cuit home-made. They will be fresher, cleaner, more tasty and wholesome. Royal Baking Powder helps the house wife to produce at home, quickly and eco nomically, fine and tasty cake, the raised hot-biscuit, puddings, the frosted layer cake, crisp cookies, crullers, crusts and muffins, with which the ready-made food found at the bake-shop or grocery does not compare. Royal is the greatest of bake-day helps. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. Uniem From the Ledger. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cogdill are re joicing on account of the arrival of a nice new daughter, born Tuesday, November T. II. V. Urown, the veterinary sur geon, came in from South Dakota Wednesday evening and will remain here several weeks. Robert Trook, who has been very sick with typhoid fever, is reported to be improving, and it is hoped lie may soon be out again. Mr. and Mrs V. M. Sikes are the happy parents of a line new daughter, born Wednesday, November 1, but we failed to get mention of it last week. Mrs. E. J. Gamble, a sister of Mrs. II. W. Lloyd, arrived Monday night from Meadville, Pa., to make an ex tended visit here and in other parts of this state. Mrs. Fred Clark departed yesterday for Fairbury, Neb., at which place Mr. Clark has a good position on the liock Island railroad, and they will make their home there. Geo. W. ISrown, of Superior, repre senting the Chicago Telephone Co., was in town Monday to inspect the Union company's equipments, finding them in first class condition and giv ing goo J service. Kelly Met lee, who has been em ployed in this vicinity the past eight months, departed Monday night for his home at Dunnegan, Mo. He made many friends while here, and we all wish him success. i A Great Deal of Truth. The following clipping was handed the Journal by a Plattsmouth bachelor and as "them's our sentiments," we take pleasure in reproducing it: "Be cause a girl has not married young, and is approaching the age where, if single, she will be put into the "old maid" class, is no proof that she is not good and nice, but rather is an evi dence that she knows her own worth; that she has good sense and a proper appreciation of life, and will not "hitch up" with just anybody who might pro--pose. We have a few such in our vicinity, and they are jewels, worth their weight in gold. In this locality, as elsewhere the best are not the easiest obtained, but lucky is the worthy young man who is accepted." Elmwood From the Leader-Echo. W. A. Koyer has sold his eighty acre farm near Eagle. We understand Mr, Koyer expects to buy further west. The L. F. Langhorst family was re leased from quarantine today. Julius Langhorst and family will be out to morrow. School reopened again yesterday. All of the diphtheria cases are getting along nicely and no new cases have 1 been reported. Ilarrv McLaughlin returned Tue day rr..:n his vjoum of several months . remerly. anr otl account of tho ureat in Colorado, where his health was ; merit and popularity of Foley's Honey greatly benel.rted. anfJ Tar ,nany imjtatlons aY offered The busine-s men and citizens of ; fr the genuine. These worthless im Elmwoo 1 and vicinity chipped in and j jtations have similar sounding names, purchased a tine invalid wheel chair . p.eware of them. The genuine Foley's for Dean Hultish. It arrived thislHonev and Tar is in a vHlmv nt. week and Dean is able to use it nicely. Mrs. J. W. (tambie was called to Lincoln Wednesday to attend the funeral of Grandfather Eaton, who was accidentally killed Monday eve ning by a train in the Hurlington yards at Lincoln. Ole F. Carr and Miss Blanche A. Swacker were united in marriage at eleven o'clock, Wednesday, November 8, at the M. E. parsonage in Elmwood, Ilev. J. G. Stanard performing the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Carr left that afternoon for Unadilla for a Male week's visit at the home of Mr. Carr's mother. They will be at home to their friends after November 15th in the Dr. Stockert residence property. The many friends of the happy couple unite in wishing them a long life of happiness and prosperity. G. B. Burhans Testifies After Four Years. G. II. Burhans, of Carlisle Center, N. Y., writes: "About four years ago 1 wrote you that 1 had been entirely cured of a severe kidney trouble by taking less than two bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure It entirely stopped the brick dust sediment, and pain and symptoms of kidney disease disap peared. I am glad to say that I have never had a return of those symptoms during the four years that have elapsed and I am evidently cured to sty cured, and heartily recommend Foley's Kid ney Cure to anyone suffering from kid ney or bladder trouble." F. G. Fricke & Co. Loviisville From the Courier. Fred Ossenkop is- making arrange ments to give a Thanksgiving ball in the Tapper building. In Eight Mile Grove precinct it is said the vote of Tuesday fell short al most one hundred. Corn gathering comes ahead of election with the farmers down there. The village board met last Thursday evening. Aside from the usual numb er of claims against the village there was returned to the administrator of the S. P. Metz estate a little over $ 400 unearned license fee. Commissioner Banning was in town Monday evening. He stated that he expected to secure a meeting of the county commissioners of Sarpy and Cass counties in Louisville sometime this month to agree on a plan for the repair of the Platte river bridge. Ollie Ellis underwent an operation for appendicitis Thursday and is now doing nicely. His mother accompanied him to Omaha and will remain with him until he is out of danger. The operation was performed by Dr. Alli son at the St. Joseph hospital. John Gorder is working dilligently on a new invention which he proposes to attach to a bicycle to run on the railroad. Mr. Gorder's business calls him so frequently to Sarpy county that he has studied out this new device so that he may cross the railroad bridge at will and on shojt notice. The mammoth Cottonwood trees at the foot of Main street along the Bur lington yards have been cut down on account of their branches interfering with the semaphore lights. They were old land marks having been set out by the first section boss to be stat ioned here the same year the Burlintr- ! ton extended its line west of the Mis i souri river. Pirating Foley's Hooey and Tar. . Foley & Co., Chicago, originated ; Honev and Tar as .i thrnnt nnrl loner age Ask for it and refuse any substi- tute. It is the best remedy for coughs and colds. F. (I. Fricke & Co. Esxgle From the Beacon. Charlie Brown has given up his place in the barber shop in Pawnee City to assist his father in the drug store and at the switch board. W m. Royer sold his 80 acre farm one mile and a half north of town to Ed Carr this week. Mr. Royer expects to go farther west where land is not so high. A meeting of the village council was held Monday evening at which time Wm. Doran was granted a li cense for a pool hall for another year. A license was also granted to Bert Hudson to run a pool hall. Mrs. J. M. Kay returned home last Friday from Lincoln where she has been having her eyes treated for sev eral weeks. We are glad to state that she is much better and the doctor thinks her sight will not be impaired from the trouble. Ivan Marshall came up from Weep ing Water Friday to visit his sister Iluth, who teaches the Union school southeast of here. Miss Marshall's school closed last Friday for one month to give the older scholars an oppor tunity to husk corn without losing time in their school work. In last week's issue we said that a meeting of the stockholders of the Eagle Telephone company bad been called to consider a proposition sub mitted by the Automatic company. This was a mistake. It should have read a meeting of the board of direc tors of the Eagle Telephone company had been called. Nehawka From the Register. John Blair, of near Murray, caught wild goose on his way home last week. He saw it in a corn field and ran it down. He hasn't hardly regained his breath yet. Mrs. Ada Kesler, of Albany, Indi ana, arrived in our village last Friday, and is visiting at the home of Mrs. Agnes Reynolds and family. She will make an extended visit. Grandpa McBride has suffered a re lapse and is unable to leave his room. Old age has commenced to assert its relentless sway, but we hope the angel will postpone its unwelcome visit for many years. Last Saturday Miss Gertie Pitman and younger sister made this office a pleasant call. This was the first meet ing of our correspondent and the edi tor. Gertie reports her sister, Lora, as almost free from the attack of fever John S. Buck and wife, of Washing ton, are here on a visit to Mr. Buck's mother, Grandma Buck. They visited at Mr. Wolph's a day or two, Mrs. Cross accompanying them. Mr. Buck wiil go to Kansas to visit his sister, Mrs. Gates, and on his return will re new his acquaintances with Nehawka friends. John is an old timer as he came to Nebraska in 1850. The mention was made last week about Falls City getting three car loads of Hour should have read "three car loads of Hour to Scotland, across the ocean." Of course the difference in the distance cuts very little ice, but the local dealers might not think it proper to send such amount to our sister city, however if Falls City peo ple had eaten Nehawka Hour only they might have landed a congressman Who knows? perish Soli Impoverished soil, like impov erished blood, needs a proper fertilizer. A chemist lv analyz ing the soil can tell yon what Fertilizer to use for different products. If your blood is impoverished vour doctor will tell vou what you need to fertilize it and give it the rich, red corpuscles that iire lack in a: in it. It may be vou need a tonic, but more likely you need a concentrated fat food, i ml fat is the element ;i vour system. There is no fat food - easily digested and lacking that is assimi- ..i tod as Scott's Emulsion f Cod Liver Oil it wiil nourish and strengthen ".c body when milk and cream 'A to do it. Scott's Emulsion always the same; always M.itable and always beneficial '; re the bodv is wastinir from iv eause, either in ehildren adults. We will send you a sample free. He sun' that this pic ture iti the form of si labIison tin wrapper of every bottle of Einul t-ion you buv. scon 4 BQWHf CHEMISTS 409 Pearl St.Jew Tor 50e. and $1.00. All Drufrgiata. THE SICK. s MhS. I.EN3IETTA MARSH A VICTIM OF LA GRIPPE. Mrs. Henrietta A. H. Marsh, 759 W. 10th St., Los Angeles, Cal., President Woman's Benevolent Ass'n, writes: "I suffered with la grippe for seven weeks, and nothing I could do or take helped me until I tried Peruna. " I felt at onee that I had at laat ecu red the right medicine and I kept steadily improving. Within three weeks I us fully restored, and I am glad that I g:ive that truly great remedy a trial. I will never be w ithout it again." In a letter dated August 31, liKH, Mrs. Marsh says: " I have never yet heard the efficacy of Peruna questioned. W still use it. I traveled through Ken tucky and Tennessee threo years ago, where I found Peruna doing its good work. Much l it ia being used here als." Henrietta A. S. Marsh. Address Dr. Hart mar:. President of Fhr Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. Takes Their Eye. "When lovely women crops the strict. If It's a windy day. Men should be looking at the Miics. Hut they're not built that way. So Called. the legislature -What is wrangling about?" "A bill to suppress disreputable, sa loons." "Sort of u 'joint debate, I take it." The Last Resort. "He had pawned everything else he had, so as a last resort he put himself in soak. "now could he possibly do that? "lie jumped in the lake." Autumn. Comes autumn with its paints and brush. Its colors bright and glowing. And other artists puts to blush "With Its tremendous showing. The forest is a crimson flare Of red and yellow shading. And in the meadows everywhere Is goldenrod parading. The tree tops In the ancient wood Their banners gay are flying To celebrate in merry mood. Although the year Is dying. And Jn the valley down below And In the distant hollow The yellow and the purple glow Far as the eye can follow. No Miracle. "Did I understand that he claimed to be able to cast out devils?" "No; he is just an artist at throwing would be sons-in-law out through the window." Great Possibilities. "What was it Sampson slew so many with?" "The jawbone of an ass, I be lieve." "Oh, yes. I was just thinking what he might have done if he had had an auto mobile.' Sluggish Liver a Foe to Ambition. Vou cannot accomplish very much if your liver is inactive, as you feel dull, your eyes are heavy and slight exertion exhausts you. Orino Laxative I ruit Syrup stimulates the liver and bowels and makes you feel bright and active. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup does not nauseate or gripe, and is mild and very pleasant to take. Orino is more effec tive than pills or ordinary cathartics. Refuse substitutes. F. G. Fricke & Co. Pain may go by tbe name of rheuma tism, neuralgia, lumbago, pleursy. Xo matter what name the pains are called, Ilollister'j Rocky Mountain Tea will drive them away. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Gering & Co. HOPE FOR A it a Ax. LLHRING'S discovery Famous Physician Confident He Has Cue For Consumption. EXPERIMENTS PROMISE MUCH. Br Method of Treating Tabrr. euloala lie Ham Karerud In lira tiering; Animals Immune, nnl They Can 1'robably lie Cured When the Disease la Fully Developed. Whatever may be tin practical value of Dr. Hehring'H new treatment of tu berculosis, tlje announcement of Ida discovery has created a sensation both In scientific circles and with the gen eral public, says a Paris cable to the New York Herald. 'The exact facts are that I have lieen studying for a long time a new meth od of treating tuberculosis and think I Lave broken fresh ground." said Ir. Ueliring in speaking of his ! isrnvery. "There are certain aiiimaN which con tract this ma lad v with great facility and have hither! proved rcfradorv to all attempts at vaccination. "I have finally succeede-.I in render ing them immune as regards the bacil lus and probably can even cure them when the disease is fully developed hi them. "Experiments on mankind have not yet been made, but there is ground for hope In this respect, the path I am fol lowing being totally different from those explored up to the present." Ir. I teh ring went on to Indicate that he found the germ of his new depar ture In works on pathology written by the French scientists Hayle, I,aennec, Liebert and Robin In the early part of the last century. He noticed that they classified tuber culosis In two categories, one charac terized by gray transparent granula tion, known as Bayle's granulation, and the other, which developed toward suppuration. Yirchow's discoveries have created a tendency to class both categories ns one and the same thing. Dr. Ilehring says this tendency is er roneous. Ills studies have convinced him that the old distinction established by the French pathologists is well founded and may be fecund in results. He continues: "Iiayle's granulation does not contain a microbe. It is not accompanied by suppuration. The other species of tu berculosis, on the contrary, swarms with microbes. A minute Investiga tion on the evolution of both species in the lungs and spleen has led me to wonder whether the cure of the mal ady might not be found In the malady itself. "By means of a process which I shall explain later I utilize Bayle's granulation 1o eradicate the evolution of the other form of lesion, the one that Is really dangerous, the one that con tains microbes, suppurates and re sults In purulent consumption of the lungs." Discussing this matter editoriallv the I medical ditor of the Furopean edition of the Herald says: "Fvery one was strut k by the sen pational communication made the I i Matin by Professor Ilehring. The mat ter in question is nothing less ihan the discovery not only of the meain of prevention of tuberculosis, but of a cure for that disease. Dr. Ilehring will not make this discovery known before r year has elapsed. He reserves for I llilJ1sef lhe right of exii0jtalj0ll dur. Ing a certain period which will enable him to prosecute other researches. "This news is of a nature to hold out marvelous hopes to unfortunate eon sumptives in the future. But how sad for the present sufferers, who know that a decisive remedy will be made known when they can no lonsrer jroflt by it! "Immediately after "Or. Bearing's communication the Herald made an in quiry. Without going so far as to make an affirmative statement, for the reason that what it knows has been learned through indiscretions, it is in a position to state that a portion at least of Dr.'- Behrlng's remedy comes from the milk of cows previously ren dered Immune against tuberculosis. A it is scarcely probable that this milk can be used In Its natural form there Is some reason for believing that serum alone is employed and it could scarcely be utilized in any other way than that of subcutaneous Injections." Berlin's Dtint Calthfm. An investigation is ging on in Ber lin as to the danger of tho dust of the streets causing sickness, says the San Francisco Chronicle. The royal board of health at various places in The city for instance, at the Opera platz and near Unter tlen Linden and other I r al ities has had erected so caile 1 nt catchers. This apparatus consists of round boxes about one and a half feet high, put on a post at a height ..f sir feet above the ground. Th" boxes :ire left open to collect the du.-t living in the air. After some time the boxe-; are closed, and the dut collet-ted is anal yzed to see what subtauce-i dangerous to health are contained, in the street dust. And ow It'n Motor Hoot. Motor boots ::re the latest sturtlinc production of eontineutal inventors. A young Swiss eugineer is said to have succeeded In manufacturing a pair of boots endowed with motive power of their own. The new Invention consists of a pair of stout boots, each of which Is nothing more or less than a minia ture motor car mounted on four wheels. The boots are worked by pe trol on a new plan, which the Inventor keeps secret. It Is claimed that an or dinary pedestrian can travel all day over average country roads at a paca of twelve miles an hour without ex periencing the least fatigue. PERRY'S Restaurant Fresh Oysters in any style Short Orders Regular Meals Our 5pm olalllmt. If you are hungry we can supply you witb the pick of the market 5th door Cast of Cass Co. Bank Mr, Smoker, do you smoke Buds? I f you d n't you nro not. ettint; y our moneys" worth. Buds are...... Always ( Joorl. Always ( 'lean. A I ways to la- had ! On the Market for 19 Years Smoke Buds For a clear complexion take mo Laxative Fruit Syrup Pleasant to take ORINO cleanses tho system, and makes sallow blotched complex ions smooth and clear. Cures chronic constipation by gently stimulating tho stomach, Jivcr and bowels. Itefusc substitutes. l Columbia Cylinder Racords 25c each t hey an- c.M i .i speed moulded. loi.tl, hih which for sweetness of low n. volume urn nil in : i H.V ar surpass all others, select from. L;n- stock to Phil. Sauter, Sixth Street Plattsmouth, - Nebraska Strength to Weak Men PEFFERS NERVIGOR The world admire mea who .r (tronic la phyMal, mental and nerve f ororj nea of ambition, enertry ana pvrnonal raatrnetlara ; the true type of perfect manhood. To attain thin tbe llrat reqnlrlte la rood. Deal til Nerves, whlrn irlve capacity for full development. PerrER' HEKVIOOR make treat. Calm Nerve. Cure Nerveu Debllltr. ralllnf Memerr. Vital Weaa Preatratien. Sleeleenee d other troubleaduo aj ',vnr work, worrv. etnokinic. or TlHoua habit. V..-r rl-h. hrtlthr blood and repair wasted nerve. V t'lillv VM! for womti. t'okl-t free. r,. fi Ihit. six for ".'. postpaid, with m gtiar "tor i f nt firwl or lnvllt-d . r : CAL ASSOCIATION. CHICAOO. U. S. A. For Sale by G?nn r & Co. ..BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES," Eczema, BklnAnrer, and all painful itr b tna; skin diasK treated by trie incwt cer tain method.. Molfts, Birthmark, and facial blemiiihna removed by elotri;ity. Blood poison in all nt&gva. All private and (rnito nrinarydnwases. Call oradd. Die AtiI.K, Specialist Skin, Blood and Oenito-Urinary Diseases. 1215 O Street. Lincoln. Nebraska. PIUVATK HUSVITAL. Bucksiaff HarneSS Best Made. California Oak Leather No. 1 Trimmings. First Class Workmen. Look for trado mark ON ENDS of TRACE Ask Your Dealer BB fz Dr. O.-C. Reynolds Itooina llatrr lllock. Surgery and Gynecology p.,.,. ;....; i. Lis::!:, Ksj. 01