"Every SATURDAY ervd Pcy-Day Hlftfl(g3 Plattsmoufh, Nebraska These Sales will last all summer and we will add New Bargains at different times. We are sure that we can save you money. Take a good look at this list and save it: As long as they last QCn 4 Cans Corn Sal ni on at d Korn Kinks for 10c 25c a Fine Rice, 3 lbs for 25c Horse Shoe Tobacco JIjQ ! ( Loaves Bread . at 25c "Bitf 4" and "Yankee Girl" Tobacco jflflfl 20 oz for fcfUk Ail Kinds of Pickles at what we pay lor JJ Butter and Eggs g 10 Bars Olienesoap at 25c for Saturday, September 28 g W Rces 17 lie S Butter 23c Beans 6 pounds Trv Our Trv our Diamond Branu of Cuftee every pound guaranteed, per 3 pound, 15 to. . . w Triscuit. per package at 0 G Come early and secure some of the Si Bargains. Gove Oysters 10 and 20c a can Pepper and all Kinds of Spices or 3 packages for 25 cents FRUIT JARS 60c Tea for. 50c DEPARTMENT (Tea Pot and i lb Tea for 25C 5 Ids granulated Sugar for.... 248 in all DEPARTMENTS 1 Crackers, per lb Qc Lye, 3 cans 25c With each sack of flour we give a package of yeast. Flour at the Low est market price. n o DC 3 Photograph Company Will Move The Olson Photograph Company, which has acquired an er.ormus busi ness since it embarked in the post card making, and have long ago outgrown their present quarters, and have been negotiating for larger and more room, where they are now located, but have failed to be able to get it. So they have had to look elsew here finding what they desired at the old Waterman build ing, over the billiard hall, where they will move about the first of October. The Beri-Beri Cases at Alvo Commissioner Marshall was over to Alvo last week, to investigate the cases of beri-beri that seems to have gained a footing in a Japanese camp of rail way workers adjoining Alvo. He said that their were eight cases, that they were now housed in the cars, and that they would he provider! with suitable food. Doctors Jones of Murdock and Munger of Elmwocxl. were in attend ance. It is thought they will get along all right, and proper sanitary precau tions will be taken. The disease affects the heart, and r.erve.3 and mus cles of the lower limbs. When they tried to climb steps they had not the power to raise. It is a common com plaint in Japan, and is said to have been brought here by a laborer who just came over. Weeping Water Herald. Millinery Opening Owing to the lateness of our millinery opening we have decided to hold but one day for the opening of the millinery season at our store. While" in the east I made many new selections in the mil linery line, in fact at our store 5'ou will find all the new creations direct from the style confers of New York, where our big line of goods was purchased and rushed through by express in order to accomodate our many customers as early as possible. We can truthfully say that we believe we have the largest most stylish and up-to-the-minute line of millinery ever on display in Cass county. Five thousand dollars worth of the popular Woo'.tex garments will also be placed on display at the opening day of our millinery sale. See the display in our department store west window. A new world of style and beauty. Make it a point to call and see us Saturday. Yours for many new and startling bargains in our line. M. F anger. The Department store man. DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVENTION Poultry Wanted Highest cash paid for poultry, deliver ed at Mynard any day in the week. Tel. 3 O. W. F. Richardson. Ready to Exccvsta Those who expect to help in the ex cavating at the Christain church will please be on hand in the morning, when the excavating will begin. The ladies will serve dinner for those who work. We want all those who wish to contrib ute work for the purpose of helping to get the furnace in to come tomorrow as we wish to get this and the excavat ing done and the furnace in before it gets cold. The effect c 7 J :?: ETiitsion on thin, cg pale children is rrz.Azc. It makes thr.ni !3-tr:rip, m-y, active, happy. It cc:;!a'r.s Cod Liver OiJ, Kypcphosphites and Glycerine, lo iv.tAzo i.J, blood and bone, and so pui toge'her that it :j easily digested by little folk. ALL DRUGGISTS; oOc. AND SI.OO An Excellent Platform g? Prin ciples Adopted. The first state conventions in Nebras ka under the direct primary system were held in Lincoln Tuesday by the various parties to adopt platforms and perfect party organizations. The democratic convention had delegates present from over half the counties in the state. The great commoner, William J. Bryan, was present and addressed the convention, which was the signal for much enthu siasm. The platform is an interesting document, and says what it means, and means what it says. Tom Allen w as re elected chairman of the state committee, and in the selection of the new commit tee, W. D. Wheeler was re-elected from Cass county. Following is the platform in full: The Platform. We, the democratic party of Ne braska, in delegate convention assem bled, express our continued confidence in, and admiration for, Honorable Wil liam Jennings Bryan; and reassert our fidelity to the principles which he has so ably advocated, and which at this time are so generally accepted by a large majority of the people of the United States. We rejoice at the increasing signs of a moral awaking in the United States. The various investigations have traced graft and political corruption to the representatives of predatory wealth and laid bare the unscrupulous methods by which they have debauched elections and preyed upon a defenseless public through the subservient officials whom they have raised to place and power. The conscience of the nation is now awakened and must not sleep until the government is freed from the grip of those who have made it a business as set of the favor-seeking corporations; it must become again "a movement of the people, by the people and for the peoplt?" and be administered in all it5 ' departments according to the JefFerson j iafi maxim, "equal rights to all and 1 special privilege to none." ; We heartily approve of the laws pro- hibiting the pass" and the rebate, and j insist upon further legislation, state and I national, making it unlawful for any j corporation to contribute to campaign ! funds, and providing for publication, i before the election, of all individual contributions above a reasonable mini- mum. j Believing with Jefferson, in "the j support of the state governments in all their rights and the most competent administrations lor our domestic con cerns and the surest bulwark against anti-republican tendencies, " andin "the preservation of the general government in its whole constitutional vigor, as the sheet anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad," we are opposed to the centralization implied in the suggestion now frequently made, that the powers of the general government should be extended by judicial construction. While we favor the exercise by the general government of all its consti tutional authority for the prevention of monopoly and for the regulation of in terstate commerce, we insist that fed eral remedies shall be added to, and not substituted for state remedies. We favor the election of United States senators by direct vote of the people, and regard this reform as the gateway to all other national reforms. ; A private monopoly is indefensible and intolerable. We, therefore, favor the vigorous enforcement of the crimi nal law against trusts and trust mag nates, and demand the enactment of such additional legislation as may be necessary to make it impossible for a private monopoly to exist in the United States. Among the additional remedies we specify three, first a law compell ing corporations engaged in interstate commerce to sell to all purchasers in all in all parts of the country on the same terms, after making due allowance for cost of carriage; second a law preventing the duplication of di rectors among competing corporations; and third a license system which will, without abridging the right of each state to create corporations, or its right to regulate as it will foreign corpora tions doing busincs within its limits, make it necessary for all manufactur ing and trading corporations engaged in interstate commerce to take out a fed eral license before it shall Itv ermitted to control as much as 2-j per cent of the product in which it deals, the license to protect the public from watered stock and to prohibit the control by such cor poration of more than f0 per cent of the total amount of any produce consumed in the United States. We insist upon the recognition of the distinction between the natural man and the artificial person, called a cor poration, and we favor the enac tment of such law as may be necessary to compel foreign corporations to submit their legal disputes to the courts of the states in which they do business, and thus place themselves upon the same footing as domestic corporations. We favor an immediate revision of the tariff by the reduction of import duty. Articles entering into competi tion with articles controllvtl by trusts should be placed upon the free list; material reductions should be made in the tariff Upon the necessaries of life, and reductions should be made in such other schedules as may be necessary to restore the tariff to a refonu btM. We favor an income tax as a part of our revenue system, and we urge the submission of a c6nst!tutional amend ment specifically authorizing congrens to levy and collect a tax upon individ ual and corporate incomes, to the end that wealth may bear its proportionate share of the burdens of the federal government. We favor a national in heritance tax to reach the swollen for tunes already in existence, but we be lieve that it is better to permanently prevent swollen fortunes by abolishing the privileges and favoritism upon which they are based. We assert the right of congress to exercise coYnplete control over inter state commerce, and we assert the right of each state to exercise just as complete control over commerce within its borders. We demand such an en largement of the powers of national and state railway commissions as may be necessary to give full protection to persons and places from discrimination and extortion. We believe that both the nation and the various states, should, first, ascertain the present value of the railroads, measured by the cost of re production; second, prohibit the issue of any more watered stock or fictitious capitalization; third, prohibit the rail roads from engaging in any business which brings them into competition with their shippers; and fourth, reduce transpartation rates until they reach a point where they will yield only a rea sonable return or? the present value of of the roads, such reasonable return bping defined as a return sufficient to keep the stock of the roud at par when such roads are honestly capitalized. To supplement the reductions made by the various states in passenger rates, we favor an act of congress, requiring the railroads to sell interstate tickets at a rate not exceeding the sum of the local rate. We favor the establishment of state and nationals boards cf arbitration which shall have authority to investi gate either upon their own initiative or at the request of either party, any in dustrial dispute between corporate em ployers and their employees, the find ings of such boards not lo be binding upon either party but to serve as a guide to public opinion and as a means conciliation between labor and capital. We favor the eight hour day. "We are opposed to government by injunction," the system under which the writ of injunction is used to deny to laboring men the protection of trial by jury. We favor full protection, by I both national and state governments inheres, of all ! soon as a stable government can be es tablished, such independence to be guaranteed by us. as we guarantee the independence of Cuba, until the neu tralization of the island t an be secured j by treaty with other powers. In recog nizing the independence of the Philip pines our government should retain such land as may be necessary for coal ing stations atid naval basis. Desiring the prevention of war, wherever possible, we believe that our nation should announce it determina tion not to use our navy for the collec tion of private debts, and its willing ness to enter into agreements with oth er nations, providing for the investiga tion by an impartial international tri bunal, before any declaration of war r commencement of hostilities, of rvery dispute which defies diplomatic settlement. Undoubtedly the railroad commission which was created by uu MvHdnnt to tho constitution baa no power to tx, rates, thereforo ve demand that the" governor shall call an extra session of the legislature and that that body shall establish maximum rates ijn grain, live stock, fruit vegetables, building material, fuel and such kindred product, as enter into the necessities of lif--K Also h stringent anti-pass law, a re ciprocal demurrage law, and a law di recting the governor of this state to appoint a competent commission of at least fiv!, no more than two of whom shall bo of one political party, who shall after due investigation report up on the physical values and the market values of all common materials doing business within the state for the guid ance of the legislature and the taxing powers. DAN CUPID GUTS MORE GAPERS Mr. John Carmack and Miss Mary Kunsman Married Last Evening. In the presenc e of a very merry crowd of very earnest friends of both parties, at the beautiful home of the father of the bride, Carl Kunsman last evening, standing under a large bell, constructed from Smilax, using the beautiful ring ceremony, and using the impressive ceremony of the Episcopal Church, Canon II. B. Burges joined the lives of two of our young people, Mr. John Car mack and Miss Mary Kunsman in holy matrimony. In the ceremony as used, Carl Kunsman, the father of the bride, gave her away, and the groom, Mr. Carmack, passed the ring to the clerg man, who in turn passed the same to the bride, who receiving her ring, in return passed hers to the groom. Then followed the beautiful and impressive ceremony, followed by the benediction," asked by Canon Burgess, congratula tions following. Miss Minnie Guthman acted in the capacity of bride's maid and Earnest Wurl aa goomsman. All sat down to a delightful feast, at which all dicl Kmply justice, and a very happy time was had. The newly mar ried pair departed for Omaha on the late Burlington train, where they were the guests of Mr. Carmack 's sister, Mrs. Hooper. This morning they de parted for Cedar Rapids, Iowa, passing1 through here, where they will visit for some time at the old home of Mr. Car mack and with his mother's folks. From there they will go to Chicago, where they will visit for some time, returning via Des Moines, and arriving at home in about two weeks- They will make their home at the old home of Mr. Car mack's parents, on Third and Oak streets, and will be at home to their friends .fter November 1st. Robb3rs 'Face the robber and never gi ve him 'r""- -. a ensree to attacx vou unawares." is foreigners residing in the United States under treaty, but we are opposed to the admission of Asiatic emigrants who cannot be amalgamated with our popula tion, or whose presence among us would raise a race issue and involve us in dip lomatic controversies with oriental powers. We welcome Oklahoma to the sister hood of states and heartily congratulate her upon the auspicious beginning of her great career. We favor seperate statehood for Ari zona and New Mexico and demand for the people of Porto Rico the full enjoy ment of the rights and privileges of a territorial form of government. We sympathize with the efforts put forth for the reclamation of the arid lands of the west, and urge the largest possible use of irrigation in the develop ment of the country. We favor the speedy completion of the Panama canal. We favor a generous pension policy, both as a matter of justice to the sur viving veterans and their dependants and because it relieves the country of the neceseity of maintaining a large standing army, We condemn the experiment in im perialism as an inexcusable blunder which has involved us in an enormous expense, brought us weakness instead of strength, and laid our nation open to the charge of abandoning the funda mental doctrine of self-government. We favor an immediate declaration of the nation's purpose to recognize the the independence of the Philippines as the advide of the editor of a Medical Journal, in his lending article. Every disease is a robber, always read- to at tack our body, but a careful observer easily notices his approach and faces him. He wrl notice some sort of un easyness, weakness, tiredne.-.-:, loxs of appetite, dull headache; he is not feel ing well. Then it is time to use at once Triner's American Eiixir of Bitter Wine, which will promptly check the advance of the .sickness. Every dose helps. This remedy will quickly re store the functions of the digestive or gans and will soon give the body new strength and energy. In maladies of the stomach and of the bowels, from whatever cause, Triner's American Elixir of Better Wine is she only rem edy you can depend on. At drugstores. Jos. Triner, jfJ S. Ashlar.d Ave., Chicago, 111. The New Pure Food and Drug Law. We are pleased to announce that Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs, colds and lung troubles i3 not affected by the national pure food and drug law as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we recommend it as a safe remedy for children and adults. F. G. Fricke & Co. Mrs. E. P. Bayless, of Watson, Mo., who has been visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Brady, for some time, departed for home this morning via the Burlington. Mrs. Brady, her mother, accompanied her a3 far as Pacific Junction.