V 1R5. ALICE J BORfiNER Mrs. Emma 1 Mumf9rd.N0. ,wK.-.xy:.:,.rw ' 1 Olsen'a Court, Salt Lake City, NV mmM0!$& - 1(11 - i Utah, writes: " Jlv jWlPlI I! "iW months ago I became :: f nnn , 3T -JtJi J ohilled trough and through JISPW . ODD rfyX ' v ' 1 h? eettlns my feet wet. ! i M 17)CP ' " "The next morning I was ' llS fWCfyrJm. " s JfeX K J ti and sore with a severe !! &h0W A SR' " A : : cold which had settled all over - fSl a WTm$mmr$4 mf 1 ' ' ' my body. The blood seemed to!! WWA miif X I :: rushtomyhead.causincdizzi- & lOP X " ness and blinding headaches. r Ptjk JS (IW:IP i I u "As soon as IVruna was re- ' W "W&ifmr' W "4 I ' 'A commended to mo I decided to- I CN fW M & f ' " i: give it a trial and am pleased 1 v- '$L " W lllmm, M rA - :: to 6ay thatitcured me-fter ;: I Z?-- N f. WMlim I 4 3, 5 , : . I had used it only two months. M py A CS I S WMsilMXfi' 'I : "I think you have a splendid n Kr' ffff&M&k ' " - J T I ' uiciae and gladly endorse ! 4 i. .-MJ YmiMIIIMh ' - X - " - ""' : People preferring solid medi-;: S , V ' - " XmiMggggfflk H- . JK? cinea should call bfor Peruna : ' , ' viigSSsis g$X, iLI fyd$3r ",., ' tablets. Each tablet is equiva- lVfo YfflSffliggifo 0 ' lent to one average dose of 'V v ."'J.I r 1 ' 'fefiV .... ilLjfc Read The tt "w 'Vftww.'.v.v.'.'.'.v.v.'.v.'.-.-.-.'.-.-.-.-.-.v,' I II i i x "V vajujoooc 'v -ooc-.- y sjm: k 111u-m. As These Tcsti r - W For Mr. J'rf;o W. Atiiory, at7 West l!lh St., New YkiK Oily, Now York, write; "SonH'lihW T liavn nlivAvalind n tri-linl!n nimliwt iirli'ir. I tiscd iiiedioim', but 1 wunt t:t mako nm; dwidiil oxccj.l ion in favor of l'erunn. i "I oniilit a colli lat wl.iltr and it nettled In throat and head, developing a most per.i.-teiit catarrh, wlileh Heeined to defy all medicines until J tried I'cruna. Pefnio a I had used two bottled I considered myself cured." " I I f -, ' MR. WICKLIfFE K. SMITH PERUNA A REAL MEDICINE Those Who Slander Peruna Know Noth ing About It. THE PEOPLE WHO USE IT ARE THE ONLY RELIABLE WITNESSES. Enthusiastic Testimonials This Page. on Calurrh of Bronchial Tubes. Mr. Wi.-klitTo K. Smith, editor of The I'otbitch Herald, formerly prineipal of the .-ehools at O;nneroii, Tdaho, wri !-s : 5 or sn.'iw time I sr.lT'-red with ca tarrh of the throat and bronehtal tubes. i tri-d many r"ncdis, but cor.ld I : ml nothing l!?:it would .rive uu re: -f. l'i-i-a i: v 1 trt ! IVi una. Threv !o: I! - s ei;i-ed Gained T!?rly Poim-Ji. Mrs. A li . .1. r.ordnyr, 1:J11 Maple Ave., Ilarrisburjr, la., writ"j: "I have found a euro in Peruna. I cannot rmimm vn-l Peruna rn-j-.i::;:, sii.d I also thank yon for yourkind atteiii ion to me. I u:: a weM as cotild Ixj cv r .ineo I le-z: n taking IVriina, and w:M reeomm.-:id it too! in I o:il v wi i I ami I be ill;! .:.", ponr.ils before taking IVruna: now 1 ts iiu:c!i lor others a3 it uiI .01 wti, Throat and ileao. Mrs. 1. D. Hayes, irC7 Druid Hill, Bal timore, Md., writes: "Peruna is one of the best remedies for erippe, cold in the bead, sore throat, !. rvi.n headaches, and coughs tliat has vr-r b-cn discovered. After t!ic use of ove iM-.t:!.) in my family i don't feci safe without Permit i:i ?y hou In a J::t:r bitor Mrs. 1 1 ayes says : 'T am never without, :i bottle of I'eruna in !! l.oure. I find P : x,d for most every ' m;!::int. I jrive the children Peruna ii t!i- y linvo a n id and it alwivs re ! , 1 I i!oi:'l t!rvk I c ':!d lind ;. !Lcr rcsnviiy ! five :ny chiluna." monials Were Given Out of Pure Gratitude The Benefit Received From Pe-ru-na. It is so easy to criticize things about as a beverage or to take it in doses suflicient 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 disiiuised alcoholic drink, he will bo warranted in making such a statement. Practically, I'cruna cannot lc o used. Anyone who knows anything about Peruna by personal use knows that Peruna is a medicine. The very label on the bottle, giving the prin cipal a-tive ingredients, furnishes in disputable, proof that Peruna is a medi cal compound. We will bo willing to guarantee that no normal person can or will use Peruna as a beveratre. If any uuo 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 novor known anything about its effects upon the human .y.st"m. There are jieople who say, and proba bly believe, that Peruna is used as a b.'vorr.pe by some people. It would b the easiest thing in the world to show the falsity of such a belief. Tet any one who reads this go to tho . i.'rug i-tore anil purenase a uonie oi Peruna. If, after attempting to usa it be bo used one trial will b BUfllciont to disabuse his mind. Peruna i a great and useful family medicine. It is used in multitudes of homes. It has become a standard rem edy for varioni petty ailments In tlm heme. J t id especially useful for climatic diseases. It i an excellent remedy for colds. It id a well-tried remedy for ca tarrh in all forms. We have a multitude of testimonials recommending it for co-Ids, for bron chitis, for varioua 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, Xeb., writes r "I don't have any inoro trouble in my throat, and have not had a headache for four weeks. "Peruna is tho very medicine for ca tarrh. There is no medicine liVo it In the I'nited Slates, fori have tried a good many before using IVruna. ''I will keep it in my honse to guard against catarrh vu it curs ail catarrhal diseases." The Plattsmouth Journul rUBLISHKI W'KEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA. II. A. HATES. Puiil.isiiEK E Here d at the posiofflceat Plattsmouth. Ne nraska. as sccondclass matter. The Taft idea: "Get the nomination, and get it quick." Is he a Cannoneer or an electioneer in his punning for delegates. Republican papers are insisting that business in every line will boom this spring. How about the bread line? March 5, should be sure to attend. Re member it is a duty you owe to the demo crats of Cass county, who elected you as as their representatives. Mr. Bryan will be there, and will deliver a speech which alone will be worth going many miles to hear. last Saturday one would naturally come to the conclusion that the inspiration had , already reached the remotest corners of Cass county. Secretary Bonaparte is sure that the only way to reach the trusts is to fine them. Most other people think that cutting off their tariff protection would make them more miserable and more over help those who consume trust products. Th e Taft boom may be defined as 'that thing ethereal which surrounds the state of Indiana." And what is the state of Indiana? ' 'Frozen solid for Fairbanks. " With prohibition bills passing daily and the announcement that steamship companies have cut their rates it will soon be very easy for us to take to the water. The democrats ofJCass should not only organize in every precinct, but each school district should have a separate Bryan club. Remember that in thor ough organization half the victory is al ready won. It is hard to te'.I who would have carried Omaha at the republican pri mary last Tuesday, had a full vote turned out. On account of the storm which raged constantly during the en tire day but a few voters turned out. And of course the Taft supporters were urged to take advantage of the situa tionwhich they did. Canidates for public office and their enthusiastic friends sometimes lose sight of the fact that the party and the principles it stands for are of more importance than any one man or set of men. Whenever a man gets to the point that he is greater than his party, then the party is committing a grievous error to stand by the man. The prin ciples of the grand old democratic party will sooner or later prevail, and the sooner they dp win the better is is for the people. The money market is "tight" and strangely enough they do say it is to be blamed onto "water," too. The current crop of spring poets seems to be backward. But then, we have hope they will thaw out shortly. As an aid to the propagation of spring fever the baseball "dope" in the sporting departments of the current ' dailies ought to help some. The Denver Rocky Mountain News ays: "John D. got half that big fine n a single dividend the other day. And j still the price of oil is rising." But! why be so unkind? We've been trying o forget that "rise" they take out of John D. every time he does anything. At the regular meeting of the city council Monday night a resolution favor ing the lowering of Main and Sixth streets, as a protection against any fu ture floods, was adopted. Also one adopt ed instructing Mayor Gering to employ an experienced civil engineer to ascer tain the probable cost of the work. This should be done as soon as possible, and the work proper began as early as con ditions will permit. There should be no unnecessery delay in the matter. The Kansas City Post is one of the most reliable democratic papers in the west. Incessant in its support of W. J. Bryan, and most remarkably well ed j ited. Ever since the old Kansas City Times fell into the hands of the Star :- gang, an effort has been made to estab lish an up-to-date democratic daily in that city, but they have all failed until the present publishers secured the Post. It is bright and newsy and its editorial page teems with well written article upon the leading issues of the day, and they are right to the point. It is just such a publication as the Journal can conscientously commend to every demo crat in the land. Regardless of the fact that death and disease lurk in old currency, lots of us would take a chance on a bundle of the filthy stuff. The Toledo Blade takes a shot at Col orado: "Out in Colorado thev have dis covered a woman by the name of Dinah Might. Of course they handle her with care." And the Richmond Times-Dispatch proceeds to explode with: "The Denver Post reported a lady named Dinah Might in Colorado the other day, but very likely she has gone off now." Next! Every delegate selected last Saturday to the state and congressional conven tionswhich meet in Omaha on Thursday, "This is as true: The man who desires to stop boozing can accomplish the pur pose if he will. If he won't that set tles it. You might as well try to move a brick house by talking to it as to influ ence a man to sober up who is deter mined to keep on drinking. Lincoln Journal. Perhaps Bixby knows from experience. A man has to possess suf ficient will-power to quit the drink hab itthat is the only and true sequel to it. The outlook for democratic success in both state and nation is enough to in spire not only every democrat, but also every opponent to the republican pro tection:trust party. And from the turn out at the democratic convention here Senator LaFollette recently tele graphed a statement to a paper in his home state. Hear what he had to say by way of introduction: "There can be no agricultural, industrial or com mercial freedom without government control of transportation. Railways are inherent monopolies. So long as their stocks and bonds are subjects of gamb ling speculation there can be no sound basis for things transported and no reli able rules for the conduct of trade or industry. The strengthening of the in terstate commerce law, the basis of rate making on the true -value of railway property, the control of service as well as rates, are all necessary to preserve this government for the people. We should make the law effective now. " Isn't that awful? And from a republi can, too! The Central City Record,an indepen dent paper, says: "It is reported on the authority of the Omaha Bee that Gov. Sheldon made a statement the other day to the effect that any candi date the Republicans may nominate for president will be a better man than the Democrats can put up. We sincerely trust, for the Governor's sake, he did not make any such statement. If he did, he is to be severly condemned. It would show a narrowness of mind and hide-bound partisanship not met within these days in men of intelligence. It represents the feeling that in past years has put men of acknowledged unfitness in office simply because they were on the regular ticket ajfeeling that the country has slowly been strug gling away from but here lately. It shows forth the old-time "yellow dog" party spirit, that branded as a traitor every one that dared to "scratch his ticket," no matter how notorious a reprobate a candidate might be. Worst of all the statement is not true, and everybody knows it. To say that an untried man like Taft will make a bet ter president than Bryan, Folk, or others that might be mentioned, is certainly open to argument. To broad ly assert, however, that any. man the republicans may put up, even such a man as Foraker, would make a better president than either of the two Demo crats mentioned, is certainly a most foolish and unwarranted assertion. The Record has always had a good deal of respect for Gov. Sheldon, deeming him a man above the average office holder in honesty and a desire to do the right thing. If it should transpire that he has been correctly reported, we must confess our respect would receive a hard jolt. If the republican papers are sincere in saying "that Bryan cannot be elect ed," why are they opposed to his nomination? There's the rub. presidency. .Those pape: s have been too long in that kind of business. The Kansas City Times says: "The Nebraska supreme court has ruled that a woman is justified in getting off a street car backwards thereby bringing ! the law and the facts into harmony." j And now St. Joseph has become so morally esthetic that the police arrest men for winking at the women. The man with twitching eyelids must traverse the back alleys in that city or run the risk of being arrested for wink ing at the women. Here is one place where "a wink is good as a nod, " won't work. DeYoung and "Billy" Ramsey were on the campus Saturday. It is suspi cioned that they are hatching up a political deal. This new coalition ought to carry anything. Daily (Lincoln) Ne braskan. Among some of Billy's friends i around Plattsmouth, it is suspicioned j that the political deal was in the interest ! of Hon. A. C. Shallenberger for gover- ( nor. There seems to be a few of those old disgruntled gold-bug democrats, or rather side issues of the republican party, who are attempting to have their say in the selection of delegates-at-large to the Denver convention. It will be well to spot those fellows at the state convention in Omaha next week, and spot them early in the organization of that body, too. The State Journal and Omaha Bee are i making a desperate effort to raise "a! muss" among the democrats of the state. They see that the only chance the republicans will have to carry Ne braska this year is to get the leading democrats into a racket. But, bless their dear souls, they cannot come it this year - of BryaA's election to the Senator Stone the other day set forth his views in a letter to the New York World thus: "You ask me, 'What is the best principle and what the best policy to give the democratic party new life? I think the best thing those who claim to be democrats can do is to quit raising hell by abusing demo crats and the democratic organization, and get into line and tight for and not against the party." To which all loyal democrats will heartily subscribe. Mrs. T. Filzgerald Dies This morning Ed. Fitzgerald received a message from his brother, Thomas for Peshtigo, Wisconsin, telling of the sudden death of his wife at that place this morning. The news came as a shock to the relatives at this place, as it was not known that Mrs. Fitzgerald was sick, or in anj way out of her usual health. Mrs. Ed Fitzgerald and Joseph and James Fitzgerald departed for Peshtigo on the evening train. Little Things. It 13 said that the success of Napo leon I was due to his strict attention to details, and his fall to neglect of them. If you will study the lives of success ful men and women you will always find the same. Are you not willing to follow them? You know how many lives were lost on account of neglecting the first slight symptoms of sickness. An indisposition, loss of appetite and tiredness escape often our attention; we think they will pass just as quickly a. they can. If they do not, we call for help, but too late. How many lives could be saved by using at the first ap pearance of such symptoms, Triner'3 American Elixir of Bitter Wine. It goes to the root of the sickness, to the digestive organs. These organs quickly respond Jto it and call for food. This good being thoroughly digested makes pure blood, strong nerves, per fect health. This shows that Triner's American Elixir of Bitter Wine should be used in all cases of indigestion and tired feeling, combined with loss of ap petite. At drug stores. Jos. Triner, 61-522 South Ashland ave., Chicago, Illinois. Baled Hay For Sale Good baled hay. For particulars see price and J. Rhoden.