The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, November 18, 1918, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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PL ATTSMO UTH . SEMI-WEEKLY JOUBNAC
PAGE FOUR.
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1918.
tZbz plattsmouth journal
PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
Entered at Pustofficc. Plattsmouth. Neb., as second-class mall matter
R. A. BATES, Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00
Holidays next.
-:o:-
Tlic greatest day yet.
The 11th day of November.
-:o:-
Ii.m't forget that winter is here.
:o:
And that weather prophets say it
i to he a very told one.
:o:
Than'K.-giviii two wrcks from to
day. Oh. Turkey, where art thou?
:o:
Of course the pacifist will begin
to she.iit for "justice to Germany."
I..i's think about Belgium and
I'ra'ice. first.
We aI.-o liave some hope of re
lief trim tlie wi.-e ones who profess
if s e "a new note" in the latest
German note.
;o:
Poor Holland standing io near
flu1 fclif. !:ad to smier the usual
lut A of the innocent l.ytander. The
ku: r ha takt:i refuge there.
:o:
Not t i: t it imiks anv particular
!i;fT':i'-'-; but did yn'i notice that
the fichting stoppi-d at the eleventh
hour of the eleventh, day of the
h t nt ii month ?
:o:
Tl averane m:in. says the Kumas
1 1!; -tri;ili.-f . very broadly, wants a
r'icioii that will allow how to
piof.tr-. -r si (!;ns in the week and
pr.s ti rontriii.itioii box on the
stv.-nth.
:o:
llowevfr. poor telephone service
shi-ubl not be taken as personal
in i:lt. Tli'T- is considerable testi
mony to the effect that Central fre
quently cuts off other people's con
versation?, too.
:o:
"Old Cilory" has been in evidticc
this w ek more than ever before in
the hi.-tory of Plat t. -mouth. That
mMem of Liberty we arc all proud
of. Kvery child carried one that
was aMe to v;ilk. Many babies in
its mothers arms carried them, too.
:o:
The Socialist r presentat i ve in
Congress remains the .same Victor
Berger takes a seat, and Meyer Lon
don loses his. Hut whether it is an
even trad" depends upon whether
vim arc an American oocialht or a
pro-German Socialist.
:o:
It i-: pretty hard, if you live at
b"Mif. to reduce 0:1 the 2 meal a day
plan. That i -, it requires consid
erable will power. P.u( if you omit
the noon meal and take the other
two at a boarding house, reducing
i the easiest thing in the world.
:o:
Tho: e who ob rvetf the speed
v.ith which the "i'u" few from place
to place li.t niollh pronounced i
remarkable, and It was. But did
you notice bow far-f the abdication
epidemic swept through the royal
families of the- German Umpire last
Saturday?
:o: -
The girl-, bless Yin. are sympa
thetic creatures. Next to getting a
letter from over th-re, nothing
pleases Yin so much as to hear that
fonic other girl's beau has been call
td to service. Th-huh," they say
with great satisfaction. "This time
next week she'll know how wc all
suffer !"
State of Ohio. City of Toledo. ,
Lucas County. s.
I "rank J. Cheney makes oath that n
Is senior partner of the firm of F. J.
Cheney & Cf., do'.n? business In the City
of Toledo. County and State afrfresald.
and that VaiJ tirm will pay tho sum of
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each
"nil vprv case of Catarrh that cannot be
r bvtheiise of HALL'S CATARRH
UFDICIVE? FRANK J. CHENEY.
. , h''0f mo and subscribed In
nr or?ec th Gth day of December.
Trr? ii-6 A. V.'. GLEASON.
l? -.rotary Public.
i7n-. c-r-rrh MeU'm is taken In
terra l" fnd'Irri tnreu.Th th Blood on
U HiuVous Surface of Ui9 System. Send
tcr testi.jonUX?fr-e; Xotedo. C.
PrM tv 'p. flrvirs'-nr. Toe. .. ..
. Kii'- Family v.u or coronation.
PER YEAR IN ADVANCE
Get your holiday stock before the
people.
-:o:-
Peace falls like a mantle over the
battlefields of Europe.
:o:
Buy a Liberty bond. We need the
money to bring our boys home.
Beautiful fall weather. And the
farmers are taking advantage of it.
:o:
Revised proverb: A Ford will go
anywhere except up the Capitol
steps.
:o:-
You never regret that you have
helped Uncle Sam by buying Liber
ty bonds.
-:o:-
The Crown Prince is no more. His
enemies got him. Now, what about
the Kaiser?
:o:-
Tiie principal trouble with the
yellow paint treatment for slackers
is that it has always been car
ried cither too far or not far enough.
:o:
When our boyj come home every
one who refused to buy Liberty
bonds will be scorned by them, and
pointed out as arch traitors to the
United States.
:o:
"Barber should scald razor after
shaving each customer," says a
health bulletin. And the barber's
fingers should be scalded, too after
shaving some customers.
:o:
Really, the differences of opinion
among correspondents as to whether
the German morale is low or not
vccm unimportant. The Allied mor
ale is high, which is all we care
about.
:o:
However, Mr. Ford probably would
not have re-employed those enemy
aliens if he had been running a
munitions plant. Let it never be
said that Mr. Ford is a poor busi
ness man.
:o:
Some irreverent cuss has suggest-
d that the first section of the con
stitution bo amended to read, "Con-
Tress shall consist of a Senate, a
House of Representatives and a
House of Texas."
:o:
Briefly, what usually happens to
the longer skirt movement is this:
Kvery time somebody comes out from
New York with the word that the
skirts arc longer there, somebody
cables over from Paris that they're
shorter over there.
-:o:
Plants for the purpose of ridding
returned soldiers of trench vermin
have been built at .several points on
the Atlantic Coast, known as "de-
lousing" plants. The life of the
soldiers is interesting and varied
recruited at the start; decootied at
the finish.
:o:
Are you good at imagining your
self in other people's .places? If
you think you are try to thrill your
self with the sort of thrill those
Yank artillerymen felt Monday
when they loaded up the big guns
for one last, blistering crack at the
fleeing Huu3, just at the tip of the
tenth hour. Then when the boys
come home compare your home
made thrill with the one they will
describe to you.
:o.-
What, by the way, ever became of
that old nuisance who was afraid of
Germany? He didn't say he was
afraid of Germany, but he shook his
head and extolled the power and
elficicncy of Germany and said the
Allies couldn't possibly force a de
cision until 1923, and probably
couldn't hold out that long. You
couldn't find him in this country
today with a fine tooth comb, al
though that would be the proper in
strument to hunt him with.
WAS ONLY A DREAM.
Throughout his reign of a quarter
of a century, the German kaiser had
but one ambition, "to Teutonize the
world." He subordinated everything
else to his ambitions.
It was through the kaiser's de
mands that both were raised to sec
ond place among the nations. It
was the same with the German army.
The vast German military machine
was actually the child of the kaiser's
ambition.
Because he taught and practiced
the theory that only through mili
tary and naval supremacy could Ger
many arrive at a "place in the sun,"
the kaiser became known as the war
lord.
Although he forced out Bismarck
the "iron chancellor," the emperor
followed Bismarck's teaching that
only by the "mailed fist" could Ger
many live and grow.
His oft-repeated insistence that
he ruled by divine right aided him
in carrying out his policies. It
tended to make his subjects, both
high and low, more subservient to
his demands and whims.
As the German empire grew from
a population of 47,000,000 to 67,-
000,000, and to a place in the com
mercial world surpassing in some
lines even Great Britain, his in
fluence and power increased.
The kaiser was born January 27.
1S59. In saving his mother's life
when he was born the main nerves
of his left arm were so strained that
the arm became shriveled and has
hung useless ever since. Since child
hood he has had to us? a specially
made fork with a heavy edge that
served as a knife as well.
One reason for his well-known dis
like for his mother, who was a
daughter of Queen Victoria of Eng
land was laid to this operation, which
resulted in the loss of the use of
his arm.
The kaiser was the ninth monarch
of the house of Hohenzollern. He
was the third of that family to
guide the destinies of the German
empire.
He married Princess Augusta Vic
toria, daughter of the Duke of Au-
gustenburg, in 1881. He was crown
ed king of Prussia and emperor of
Germany June 5, 1S88.
The crown Prince, Frederick Wil- '
helm, was born May 6. 1882. He
was married in 1005 to Duchess
Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwarin.
The crown prince aspired to become
one of the great military leaders of
history. His efforts were all dismal
failures, he being charged particu
larly with the bloody and fruitless
effort to reduce Verdun fortress and
the failure of the scries of German
offensives which began in March,
this year.
:o:
SAVE US FROM MUSH!
Heaven spare us now from mush.
Save us, oh, Gracious Providence.
from the food of the pacifist, the
dreamer and the mollyciddle. We
have a work to do which calls for a
diet for red blooded statesmanship.
We have been "fed up" on rhe
torical mush; on the theory of do
ing nothing rude to the Hun. The
victory which Americans and the
English and the French and all the
Allies are celebrating is not a paci
fist victory. It was not won by a
gentle slap on the wrist. It was
won by a smash of iron and steel.
Only a week ago the pacifist whs
shedding tears over the fact that
those who demanded unconditional
surrender were asking for the im
possible, asking sbmthing that would
prolong the war for another year at
the los3 of millions of lives in the
futile effort to gain a military vic
tory.
Had it been a pacifist war there
would have been no military vie
tory. It would have been a negotiat
ed peace. There would have been no
white flag for the Huns. It would
have been a situation of compromise
in honor.
Now that there has been a mill
tary conclusion, now that Germany
is broken, the pacifists, theorists
and the parlor Socialists will come
forth, all bearing mush.
We will hear much of "charity
for a fallen foe." We will be ex
"OH, IF I COED
BREAK THIS COLD!
if
(Almost ii3 soon as said 7lth
Dr. King's New Discovery
Get a bottle today!
The rapidity with which this fifty-year-old
family remedy relieves coughs
colds and mild bronchial attacks is
what has kept its popularity on the
Increase year by year.
This standard reliever of colds and
coughing spells never loses friends. It
docs quickly and pleasantly what it is
recommended to do. One trial puts it
in your medicine cabinet as absolutely
Indispensable. Sold by all druggists.
'Bowels Usually Clogged?
Regulate them with safe, sure, com
fortable Pr. King's New Life P1II3.
Correct that biliousness, headache,
sour stomach, tongue coat, by cluxun
ating the bowcl-clogginess.
horted to "show mercy to the de
feated." They will come bearing
bouquets, asking to be permitted to
offer consolation to the prisoner and
to leave tracts and flowers in his
cell.
The terms of the armistice, it was
told in the story of the meeting of
the envoys to hear the terms from
Marshal Koch, wero a "shock" to the
Germans. They were not the terms
of the pacifists. They were the
terms that brought Germany to her
knees, broken and crushel.
The peace terms must also .shock
Germany. They must contain the
stern expression of the world's dis
cipline against the world's greatest
offender. Otherwise, Germany nev
er Will realize the crime she has
committed against civilization. There
must be no paroling of the criminal
to his "next friend." A man or a
nation cannot be saved from the re
sult of crimes by putting on a new
coat. K. C. Star.
:o:
Help fill the war chest and keep
it full.
:o:
Time to display your holiday
... I.-,, ,1......
(,uuua (inn cti7o, iu autviiioc U11.1U.
:o:
Perhaps Karl will be a little more
careful of the company he keeps
hereafter.
-:o:
When the Kaiser signed, it is taid
he "appeared deeply moved." And
considerable removed.
:o:
Judging from the letters they
write home our boys overseas are
finding the French people astonish
ingly French.
:o:
The contest between Itoso and
Martin for Supreme Judge contin
ues to be very close, with Hose a
few votes in the lead.
-:o:
When you become so "sure you
have a quotation right that you are
willing to bet on it, then is when
you'd better look it up.
-:o:-
Thc next map of Austria is going
to look like a crazy quilt, but at that
there will be lots more sense to it
than there ever was before.
-:o:-
The end of the war has brought
the end of autocracy not one of
the rulers of the nations of the Teu
tonic alliance remains on his throne.
A human being is a creature who.
while he has it. denies vigorously
that it is the flu, and then goes
p round bragging that it was, after
he gets well.
:o:-
It is believed that there will be
no further question about Holland's
pro-Ally ism. Indeed, we go so far
as to predict that Sweden may be
found completely converted to the
justice of our cause today.
:o:- ;
THANKING THE VOTERS.
Wm. Stohlman. from Louisville,
was in the city a few days ago, and
paid this office a pleasant call, and
instructs us to thank the voters of
Cass county for the vote he received
in the recent election. He wishes
to thank every one of those who
supported him.
Get the Genuine
and Avoi
Watte
Economy
Tn Every Cake
NOTICE OF ADMINIS
TRATOR'S SALE
In the District Court of Cass Coun
ty, Nebraska.
In the Matter of the Estate of
William A. Kdmisten, Deceased.
Notice , is hereby given that, in
pursuance of an order of the Hon
orable James T. Begley, judge of the
District Court of Cass County,
Nebraska, made on the 7th day
of September, 19 IS, for the sale of
the real estate hereinafter describ
ed, there will be sold at public ven
due to the highest bidder for cash
at the front door of the Bank of Un
ion, in the Village of Union, in said
County, on the 7th day of December,
1918, at 11:00 o'clock A. M., the
following described real estate, to
wit: tho of the N E of Sec.
29v Twp. 10, Kge. 14, and 10 acres
along the west side of the NW'i of
the NWU of Sec. 2S, Vwp. 10, Kge.
14, all in Cass county, Nebraska:
alf-o Lots 2 and 3, in Block 3, in the
village of Union. Cass county, Ne
braska. Said sale will remain open
one hour.
Dated this 4th day of-November.
19 IS. DAN LYNN',
Administrator of the Estate of Wil
liam A. Edmisten, deceased.
('HAS. L. GRAVES.
A. I j. T1DD.
Attorneys. 4-5 wks.
IN 'I II: IHSTItlC-T It T Of TIIK
U TV !' SS. .NKIIIt SlvA.
I'tsarle.s I'jirmole, IMaintlfT,
VP.
.laeob P. Falter: Mary Falter: . P.
olsen. first re;il n?nio unknown; Mrs.
o. r. Olson, lirst real name un
known: wife of . I'. Olson: J. N.
Kini;: first real name unknown: Mrs.
J. N. Kin;r. first real name unknown,
wile of .1. N. Kintr: W. l- Kinslow,
first real name unknown; Ohirenco
A. .Xtkinson: Krnost ;. Sliallent'aig
er; Texas Kio (iramle Company, a
cm poration. and Fred Warner,
Defendants.
Nolle- of tiilirnlion for Appointment
of lt--fl rr.
To I lie defendants. J. N. Kincr, first
real name unknown: Mrs. J. X. Kinp,
first real name unknown, wife of J.
X. Kin; O. I'. Olson, first real name
unknown: Mrs. o. 1. Olson, first real
name unknown, wife of . I. Olson;
V. F. Kinslow, first real name un
known: and the Texas Bio Grande
c 'urn pa ny :
You are l.ereliv notified that Jacob P.
Falter and wife Ma ry Fall er, defendants
in tlie above entitled eause, upon ans
wer duly filed in said cause have made
aoplieation for tlie appointment of
.1 lines Hot.ei tson. Clerk of tlie District
Court as receiver to take hare of
tlie rents and income from the build
in us and property described as lots
eleven (111 and twelve IlL'), in block
t went v-seven 7, in tlie City of
I 'lattsmout li. Cass county, .NePrasna;
that i:. F. Cat terson and J. M. Kobeits
ire proposed as sureties for said pro
posed receiver, and that !eorj; K
I love v and Frank Schlater are propos
ed as sureties for said applicants; that
aid application for the appointment
of said receiver will lie presented to
tho Jud-re of the District Court or tlie
Second Judicial District of tho ir'tate of
Nebraska, in the District Court Koom
in the court house in the City or
I'lattsmoiiili. Cass County, Nebraska.
on the JKIh day of December, 1918, at
1 o'clock -- M.
Dat.d this Slst day of October. A.
d.. i;m.
of all of which you will take clue
notice.
JACOi: !. FAl.Twi; and
JIAUY FALTKi:,
11-l-bv Defendants.
NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE.
Notice is hereby iven that pur
suant to an order of sale issued to
me by the District Court of Cass
County, Nebraska, on the 4th day
of November 101S. In an action
pending in said court in which
Carey H. Stotler, was plaintiff and
Loren B. Stotler, Sarah Irey, Eden
Irey. George Stotler, Nettie Stotler,
Walter Stotler, Ella Wayant, Clar
ence Wayant, Mabel Speakman,
Harry Speakman. Mary Pope, Joseph
Pope, David Stotler, if living, if de
ceased, his unknown heirs, devisees.
legatees, personal representatives
and nil other persons interested in
his estate; J. F. Clugey. as admin
istrator of the estate of William
Stotler, deceased, are defendants, I
will on the 9th day of Decern her
ID IS. at one o'clock in the afternoon
of said dav at the South front door
of the Court House in Plattsinouth,
Cass County, Nebraska, offer for sale
at public vendue to the highest bid
der the following described real
estate situated in Cass County, State
of Nebraska, to wit:
The East thirty-live (35) acres of
the Northeast Quarter of the South
east Quarter of Section nineteen (19)
Township ten (10) Kange fourteen
(14) East Gth l M. Cass County,
Nebraska.
The terms of said sale being Five
Hundred ($500) Dollars on the day
of sale, and the balance of the pur
chase prico on the day said sale Is
confirmed by the District Court of
Cass County, Nebraska.
Said sale will remain open for one
hours.
CHARLES E. MARTIN,
C. A. RAWLS, Referee.
Attorney. 4-30t
l.tMM. XOTItT.
Notlrc tit N.ii-lt evident IlrfrndaiHw,
i heir Uir. la Rntee. Il l, l'rr
...iiiiI ltepreentle B". 1
moii Interested lu llieir I.Mate, or
..their Jucee.iort
To tho unknown Tioirf, devisees, lec
nttcs. personal representatives and all
other persons interested in the estate
of George 10. Harding, deceased; WH
Uam II. Price. Wm. M. Price Albert
KtVley, executors of the last will end
etanVent of Gcorm. K Harding", de
ceased,, if living, if deceased tlie un
known heirs, devisees, legatees, per
sonal representatives and nil other per
sons Interested ' in the estate of each
of them respectively or their succes-
SYoii and ench of you are hereby no
tified that William J? . Schlie re 1 1. as
i plaintiff, on the 21st day of Septem-
v v - veer "7v V
iMmm urn
nvA
WE HAVE ALL HEARD OF THAT "RAINY DAY." SINCE
CHILDHOOD WE HAVE HEARD OF "PUTTING SOMETHING
ASIDE FOR A RAINY DAY." THAT RAINY DAY COMES VERY
SUDDENLY TO SOME PEOPLE.
IF YOU HAVE PUT SOMETHING ASIDE, HAVE IT SAFE IN
OUR BANK. FIRE CAN'T BURN IT. BURGLARS CAN'T STEAL IT
AND YOU CAN'T LEND OR SPEND IT SO EASILY.
EE PREPARED WITH A BANK ACCOUNT.
WE ADD 31-2 PER CENT INTEREST ON SAVINGS AC
COUNTS AND H PER CENT ON TIME CERTIFICATES.
COME TO OUR BANK.
Farmers
THE NEW BANK.1
her, IMS. filed his petition in tlie Dis
irict Court of C?ss County, Nehraska,
wherein you unit each of you are de
ft nd;ints. the oh.iect mid prayer of
which petition are that you and each
of you. a lol all persons claiming' by,
through or under you adversely to
plaintiff, ho adjudcred to have no inter
cut, rirht. estate or lien In or to:
TIrj Northwest Quarter of Section
Seventeen (17), Township Klcven (11)
Uanvn Klevcn (11), Cass County, Ne
hraska. ir anv part or portion thereof, and
that the plaintiff. William F. Schlie
fert, toKftlier with his prantors he ad
jiifietl to have been in the adverse
possession of said land for more than
1 n years last past, and that the lejral
litie thereto has become fully vested
in WMliam F. chlkfert. notwithstand
ing the claims of you and each of you,
or anyone claiming by, through or un
tler you. and that the title to said land
be forever iuieted in tlie said William
F. sichliefert, a.s a.srainst you and each
of you, anil that each and all of said
tit fc-ntlants named, and those whose
names are unknown anil net stated.
be forever barred from claiming or
asserting any rltrht. title, interest or
t state in and to paid real estate, or
fMiy part thereor. and for such other
and further relief as to the court may
seem just ami equitable
You and each of you are further
notified you are required to answer
vajtl petition on or before Monday the
Und dav of December, 1018.
Wlf.l.IAM F. SC11 LI EFErtT,
o. a. i;.ni.s. riaintiff.
Attorney. 10-14-4W.
i.kuai, .notici:
TO FMCIfAHD CONWAY OLDHAM
AND WIFF. Kf .MA OLDHAM; LAEl'NA
CON'N 1-JLLY ; JOHN J. OLDHAM AND
WIFF. COSH OLDHAM; .IFSS1K D.
SNYDKK AND HI'S HAND H10NU V
SNYDFi:: AND MAliV L. CKA1G, Dli
FKN'DANTS. You will take notice that on the 24th
day or October 1!1S. Fay Oldham,
plaintiff herein, filed her petition in
tlie District Court of Cass County. Ne
braska, apainst von jind Cuzia J. Bak
er, Pauline Oldham. Kllison L. Oldham
iintl wife Maud Oldham; James W.
Oldham and wife F.ffie Oldham: Vera
II. Oidhnm. Polly Younpr and husband
Homer Younsr, the object and prayer
of which are to partition between
plaintiff yourselves and the above nam
ed defendants, the following described
real eslate. to wit:
The West half of the Northwest
Quarter of Section thirty CH: the
West half of the Southwest Quarter
of Section thirty (30: and Lot two (-)
in the Southwest Quarter of the
Southwest Quarter of Section nineteen
1 St all in Township eleven (11 Kanpe
fourteen (It) Cass County, Nebraska.
You are required to answer said pe
tition on or before the lfith day of
December 1 01 S. FAY OLDHAM.
C. A. KAWLS. Plaintiff.
Attorney. :S-lwks.
-:o:
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.
Do not imagine that because oth
er cough medicines failed to give you
relief that it will he the same with
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Bear
in mind that from a small begin
ning this remedy has gained a
world wide reputation and immense
sale. A medicine must have excep
tional merit to win esteem wherever
it becomes known.
There Three Books
"Goto Southwestern Nebraska."
"There's a Farm for You in Colorado,"
"The Bis Horn Basin of Wyoming."
Describe sections with low priced lands that grow large and high-priced
crop3 and should appeal equally to investor and home-maker. If you are
searching for a home where wheat and live stock farmers flourish, where their
families enjoy modernized farm life and where Burlington lines afford quick
service to every market eenter, visit SOUTHWESTERN NEBRASKA and
NORTHEASTERN' COLORADO; see these great, fertile prairies and locate
your son or yourself where you are sure to prosper.
Or, if you prefer irrigated farming, go to the BIG HORN BASIN OF
WYOMING, where every irrigated acre is sure to reach a high price. Take
an irrigated homestead in the Deaver project one of the best projects the gov
ernment has developed 20 years to pay for water rfght no interest and no
1 profit taken.
B - - '
prtiRp
THAT
RAINY DAY
DOES COME
State Bank
EVER HAVE IT?
If You Have, tlie Statement of This
Plattsmouth Citizen Will
Interest You.
Ever have a "low-down" pain in
the hack?
In the "small," right over the
hips?
That's the home of backache.
If it's caused by weak kidneys.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills.
Plattsmouth people testify lo
their worth. Read a case of it:
Mrs. Harry Kuhney, Eighth &
Pearl Sts., Plattsmouth, says: "I
couldn't say anything but good
words for Doan's iKdney Pills for I
know from personal experience that
they are all that is claimed for them.
I use Doan's when my back aches
and my kidneys are not acting as
they should and they never fail to
give quick relief. We use Doan's
Kidney Pills in our home when nec
essary for kidney trouble and they
always give good results."
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy
get Doan's Kidney Pjlls the same
that Mrs. Kuhney had. Foster-Mil-burn
Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
Greatly Benefited by Chamberlain's
Tablets.
"I am thankful for the good I
have received by using Chamber
lain's Tablets. About two years
ago when I began taking them I
was suffering a great deal from dis
tress after eating, and from head
ache and a tired, languid feeling
due to indigestion and a torpid liv
er. Chamberlain's Tablets corrected
there disorders in a short time, and
since taking two bottles of them my
health has been good," writes Mrs.
M. P. Harwood, Auburn, N. Y.
w Trv i i i rn i
W. A. ROBERTSON,
I Lawyer.
Bust of Riley Hotel.
Coates Elock,
Second Flcor.
Let me assist you to a full understanding of these ex
ceptional investments. Ask for the folders today.
S. B. HOWARD, Agricultural Agent, C. B. & Q. R. R.
1004 Farnum Street, Omaha, Nebraska