J if EMU " dM" 1R5. ALICE J. BORDNER. Airs. Km ma 1 Mumford.No. 1 Olsen's Court, Salt Lake City, Utah, writes: "Four months ago I became chilled through and through by getting my feet wet. "The next morning I was stiff and sore with a severe cold which had settled all over my body. The blood seemed to rush to my head,causincdizzi ness and blinding headaches. "As soon as Peruna was re commended to me I decided to give it a trial and am pleased to say that it cured me after I had used it only two months. "I think you have a splendid medicine and gladly endorse It." People preferring solid medi cines should call for Peruna tablets. Kach tablet is equiva lent to one average dose of Peruna. , -------- - -- - -- - riirf- - -t mm. ODD rs I VAU ,s v ! stiff and sore with a severe I MmF l ll ;?$$Zxxz. w jtr ti a t 1 T t k.H if ., i k yv WMi$g$&&4$ -Z?"' S IX think you have a splendid L S n MMflf It . ' , I I medicine and gladly endorse f WWiiSifififkb It People preferring solid medi-I ; ? ' Wmifffl?f& f J . ' ' f dnes should call for Peruna k$' iXmmiimih LJ ,v tablets. Each tablet is equiva- SP Mr. (ioorgo W. Amory, K17 W't l!Ui Kt., New York City, New York, write: 'Somehow I havo always had a pJndi', agalnut adver tised medicine, but I want to make one decided exception in favor of Peruna. I "l cauylit a cold la.'t wl.ittr and it F.ettled in iiironi and head. devt-loiinir a mnt lx-rhlt-tcii t catarrli. whlcli seemed to defy all medicines until 1 tried IVriuia. Jleforo I had used two ttottles I considered in vself cured." hmmm stir .tr--- . :-t-f::-er-.j7. 17 EMMA" f ' 7 ' 'CVMUMFORD I t" . J PERUNA A REAL MEDICINE Those Who Slander Peruna Know Noth ing About It. THE PEOPLE WHO USE IT ARE ONLY RELIABLE WITNESSES. m GEO.W , AMORY THE r Enthusiastic Testimonials This Pae. on Catarrh of Bronchial Tubes. Mr. Wickliffe K. Smith, editor of The I'otlatch Herald, formerly principal of the schools at Cameron, Idaho, writes: "Kor some time I suffered with ca tarrh of the throat and bronchial tubes. "i tried many remedies, lut could Und notiting that would give me relief. Fi rally I tried Peruna. Three bottles cured re, r.ind and well. I believe it will do as much for others as it did for Gained Thirty Pounds. Mrs. AI2.-y J. Iiordner, 1311 Maple Ave., Ilarrisburg, Ia., writes: "I havo found a cure in Peruna. I cannot recommend Peruna encash, and I also thank you foryourkiml attenlii.-i to me. I am as well as could be ever since I lxan taki:i Peruna. and wili reomnie:id it toothers. J only wriir!i.',-l !5 pounds before taking I'eruna: niw 1 Throat end lleao. Mrs. I. D. Hayes, 10S7 Druid Hill, Bal timore, Md., writes: IVruna is one of the best remedies for jrrinpe, cold in the head, sore throat, nvrv;'is headaches, and coughs that has ever been discovered. After the use of one l ttlo in my family I don't feel safe without Pemti in my house." In a biter letter Mrs. Hayes says : 4iT f.m ri'-ver without r. bottle of Peruna in ! V:c bnue. 1 tind it pood for most every 'i!i"laint. I give the children Peruna if t li y li ive a cold and it always re- li-v-i t! v T I'on't think I could find a b'-tt-.-r remedy t. give jny children." These Te-stimonials Were Given Out of Pure Gratitude for The Benefit Received From Pe-ru-na. It is so easy to criticize things about j as a beverage or to take it in doses sufficient to produce anything like in toxication, if after putting it to this test such a person is still of the opinion that Peruna is a discuised alcoholic drink, he will be warranted in making such a statement Practically, Peruna cannot be no u.?ed. Any one who knows anything about Peruna by personal use knows tjat Prrun i is a medicine. The very la!el on thy b ttle, giving tho prin cipal active ingredients, furnishes in disputable proof that Peruna is a medi cal compound. We will be willing to guarantee that no normal person can or will use Peruna as a beveraire. If any one thinks this remedy can which the critic knows nothing. Take, for instance, Peruna. There are plenty of people who are willing to say Peruna is this and that, who never have tasted Peruna, and have never known anything about its effects upon the human system. There are people who say, and proba bly believe, that Peruna is used as a beverage by some people. It would be the easiest thing in the world to show the falsity of such a belief. Liet any one who reads this go to the drug store and purchase a bottle of Peruna. If, after attempting to use it be so used one trial will be snfnclent to disabuse his mind. Peruna is a great and useful family medicine. It is used In multitudes of homes. It has become a standard rem edy for various petty ailments in the home. J t is especially useful for climatic diseases. It is an excellent remedy for colds. It is a well-tried remedy for ca tarrh in all forms. We have a multitude of testimonials recommending it for colds, for bron chitis, for various affections of the respiratory and alimentary organs. This is well known to all who know Peruna by actual experience. "Cures All Catarrhal Diseases." Mr. I. W. Kightlinger, Cambridge. Neb., writes: MI don't have any more trouble in my throat, and have not had a headache for four weeks. Peruna is the very medicine for ca tarrh. There is no medicine like it in the United States, for I have tried a good many before using Peruna. 'I will keep it in my boose to guard against catarrh, a it cur all catarrhal diseases." The Plattsmouth Journal ri'HLISIIKL WEEKLY AT AlTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA With the projer sewerage as a pre , venting against floods, Plattsmouth can i just as well as not increase its popula j l ition to 7,000 mark in the next two or three years. R. A. BATES, Publisher. Eiwrrd at the postofflceat Plattsmouth. Ne braska, as H-f ondclass matter. "My work to the end of my life shall be devoted to the returning of this gov ernment to the people from whom it has been despoiled." William J. Bryan. South Omaha business have organiz ed a protective association, the object of which is to protect themselves against people who make a practice of neglect ing bills. That would be the proper ca per in some other towns we know of. It is with pleasure that the Journal notes that the democratic precinct com mitteemen are exercising their duties in the way of getting democrats out to the primaries Thursday, February 20. Are the ward committemen doing their duty as well? When those who fought Mr. Bryan so bitterly in his two campaigns for the presidency praise him so highly now, it looks very cheering for the noble Ne braskan. Every day new recruits are flocking to the side of Bryan and the common people. Do you want the flood of last year re peated the coming season? If not, at tend the meeting of the city council to night, and show by your presence that you are interested in lowering the streets for the protection of property from the ravages of high waters. The citizens of Lincoln are making an effort to purchase a forty-acre tract of timber land near that city for a park. If they succeed, which they no doubt will, it will be named "Bryan Park," and in the center of which will be erect ed a large statute of the greatest man of the present age. The movement is a laudable one, and money to purchase the land is being raised by private subscrip tions. When the time- tome lo dedi cate "Bryan Park.": the fceople at the capital will have the' satfsf action of see ing the largest crowd that ever visited that city. Senator Burkett and Congressman Pollard do not seem to exhibit a friendly disposition toward one another over the collectorshin. Have a care, Mr. Pollard. Burkett is a Vvgger man than you not only in averdupo:?., but politically speak ing, as well. through firing it into him, than another pops up to take a whack at him. This time it is Senator Foraker, and the way he shoots direct from the shoulder, the dictator of his successor at the White certainly keeps very busy explaining whv these attacks occur. The State Journal says: "For two years we have contended that John A. Johnson, of Minnesota, is a great man." Of course he is, but the Journal would be the last paper on earth to say so much if it thought there was any possi bility of Governor Johnson becoming the democratic candidate for the presidency. Mr. Carnegie speaks as one with au thority when he says that "no man suc ceeds simply by doing his duty." )uty had mighty little to do with the success achieved by Mr. Carnegie, whose fortune is monumental evidence of the power of ' a trust fortified by the protective tariff. The next move on the part of Presi dent Roosevelt to save this country from disruption should be to advocate the election of Bryan to the presidency and a congress that will back him up in I more extensive sewerage, and then act according to the dictates of their own consciences. To attempt to unite the citizens on either proposition, is futile. his reforms. The republican party is The citizens of Plattsmouth generally seem to be agitating the sewerage prob lem. That's just what they should do, and keep on doing, until the matter is fully settled and the work commenced. If one way costs more than another and the most expensive way is the best, let that method be adopted. Let the work be done right at all hazards. At the reception tendered Willie Taf t at Kansas City Monday night, Willie Hayward, of Nebraska City was allowed an opportunity to shake hands and say a word of encouragement to the robust gentleman from Ohio. Just think of Willie Hayward boasting of shaking hands with Willie Taf t, and Willie Hay ward chairman of the great republican party of Nebraska! The Lincoln papers eagerly refer to the factional fight of the democrats in Omaha as "a democratic fued." How about a republican fued at the state capital? From the tone of Senator Burkett's letter to Judge Field, it looks like one was brewing. The president denies that he is using the appointing power to further the candidacy of Willie Taf t. He may deny it all he wants to, but the people will always look at it in the light that "ac tions speak louder than words." Every body knows that Willie is Roosevelt's favorite for the republican nomination for president. The Otoe county delegates to the dem ocratic state convention have been se lected, and they are instructed for II. H. Hanks for one the district delegates. The Cass county convention will meet on Saturday. February 22, and the dele gates then selected will be instructed to use every effort to have Henry R. Gering elected as a delegate from the First district. The president seems .to" be treading the pathway "between . the . '.'devil .and the deep blue sea." No sooner does one of his former republican friendsjget The Jacksonian andDahlman factions of the democratic party of Omana,seem to be at loggerheads over the selection of delegates to state convention. Shame on you, gentlemen. This is no time for democrats to row among themselves. Remember you live in Bryan's state, and that there should be no factional fights j among the democrats of Nebraska, this i year, especially. split, and the reform element of that I party should throw their support to the man who advocates reform and princi ples in behalf of the people, regardless of party affiliation. The reform element of the republican party can never expect reform through support of candidates who are backed up by the special inter- ests of this country. Married in Otoe County. A special from Nebraska City, under date of February 11, says: "Charles Fleischmann, a prominent young far mer of Cass county, who lives near Ne- hawka, was married this noon to Miss I Pearl May Fentimen, at the home of j the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Fentiman, in the northern part of this county. The wedding was a very elaborate one and a large number of guests were present." A number of prominent democrats, among whom is Henry Watterson, who has opposed Mr. Bryan's candidacy un til recently, tried awful hard to get up a boom for Governor Johnson, of Minne sota, but Mr. Watterson has resigned to the inevitable the nomination of William Jennings Bryan. With the great commoner" out the way, there is but little double that the democrats of the west would rally to the support of Governor Johnson. Way down deep in the hearts of the American people there in a feeling for Mr. Bryan that.will not wear off, and no other man can'change that feeling in the west, in the east, north or south. In County Court. Today was set for the hearing of the appoint ment of an administrator for the estate of J. W. Thomas, and as an agreement could not be reached, the matter was continued until March 3. Will Make South Omaha Their Home Philip Sauter was a visitor in the city this morning, looking around the city and renewing acquaintances. In the city of Los Angeles, in the far west Mrs. Sauter did not have good health, there being something about the clim ate which did not agree with here. So sometime since they removed to South Omaha, where they will make their home for the present. It is understood that Mr. Sauter ha3 engaged in the Phonograph business in the metropolis. Fire Department Meeting. Last evening being the regular meet ing of the fire department, a goodly number of the laddies were present when the meeting was called to order by the president, John G. Claus, and the minutes were read by Secretary George B. Mann. The business of the meeting consisted mostly of routine mat ters, looking after the making of re ports, and taking steps toward the betterment of the service. The mat ter of checking up the number of keys to the various fire houses was began, but as a number of the members were not present, it could not be completed, but will be looked after by those having the matter in hand during the interval between this and the next meeting. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy a Favorite "We prefer Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to any other for our children," says L. J. Woodbury of Twining, Mich. "It has also done the work for us in hard colds and croup, and we take pleasure in recommending it." For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. Mrs. Dalzell Still Very Sick. Mrs. Bertie C. Dalzell, who has been sick for some time with a complication of the grippe ; nJ neuralgia, is still no better. Her n.oir.-i . Mrs. Delia G. Cox came this moi..,:.. rr.:n Watson, Mo., to see her and v. a. ! ay -luring the re mainder of the wtt-A ar.u help care for hre daughter. The Lincoln Star raps the State Jour nal pretty severely every once in a while. The Star says that the Journal opposes a state printery. Of course. When the figures show that the Journal company has collected over $1,000,000 the state in thirteen years, and over $100,000 from Lancaster county in the same length of time, is it any wonder that the managers of that paper is op posed to a . state printery? Any news paper with that kind of a graft would be foolish if they didn't. The Journal is pleased to note that there was a splendid attendance at the at the council chamber last night to give expression as to the best method j of protection against future floods. The opinions of the citizens varied some what as to manner of the work, and it was finally referred to the proper committee, which will report at the next meeting of council. The council had just as well take the matter in hand first as last. They will have it to do. If they wait for a united voice of the citizens regarding the matter, the streets will never be lowered or anything else done in the way of protection against the destruction of property by future floods. The council has power to act in the matter, and there is no use of dilly-dallying about it. The work must be done, and commenced as soon as possible. ' Let the . council unite on the matter, whether loweringjthe streets or Most people know that if they have been sick they need Scoff' r Em til" sion to bring back health and strength. But the strongest point about Scoff s Emzzlion is that you don't have to be sick to get results from it. It keeps up the athlete's strength, puts fat on thin people, makes a fretful baby happy, brings color to a pale girl's cheeks, and pre vents coughs, colds and consumption. Food in concentrated form for sick and well, young and old, rich and poor. And it contains no clrugs and no alcohol. ALL DRUGGISTS; 50c. AND SI.OO. 4 O & O O O O O O J i hi i ? 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