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About Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901 | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1895)
X ft V ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY AT PIiATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. SUBSCRIPTION.? One year, in advance, . -. '. . Six months, in advance. . ; . Three months, in advance, . . $1.00 . .50 ADVEB TISINQ . Rates made known on application. Knttred at the postofflce at PUUsiuoui-i, Ne braska, as second dais matter. THURSDAY, MAY SO, 1S95. ANNOCHCEMBNT. The present isaue of The Jouknal is publUhea with its old editor, C. V. Sherman, in charge. The way this came about was that at the vale w liieh had been announced to take plm - n the 27th Inst, the representative of the undersigutd made a tender ot the amount due the mortgagees and the legitimate costs of the foreclosure. This being refused, and bids up to 3-0 being received from G. B. Maun, this tender of payment was made ti e Imis for proceedings in replevin in n.y be half. The sheriff was put in charge, an appraisement made, setting down the value of the property at fSOO, a bend was given and possession whs granted under the replevin proceed ings. The question of rightful owner- snip win come up in tne courts in due i . . ... . . time, iieantime the best energies of I the present management will be de-J voted to the publication of the best I newsnaner that is nosaihle. ami tlie I m m - - m patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. O. G. Sherman. Ik unity is strength. Dropping 1 personalities in the general desire for I he republicans pose before the conn the promotion of democratic principles I try the champions of uulimitetl coin- Is the only hope of success for thewe? democracy of Cass county. It will be! lt not proballe that eiihei patty one aim of The Journal to briDg he democrats together on a basis of Iull.c f this kind cn the silver question. tual respect and confidence. Private ambitions and personal aspirations must be secondary to the common pood. The personal griefs and disappoint menta of the editor of this paper shall not be aired to the edification of the common enemy and the satisfaction of I personal spite or desire for revenge.! Such feelings, whatever their causa or I the extent of the provocation, shall not I stand in the way of party unity. We have principles which are democratic and they will be advocated as becomes democrats with malice toward none and charity for all. Upon this plat form, with no higher ambition than to serve the common good, both of the public and of democracy, which right fully are and always ought to be con sistent with each other, the writer again makes his bow. C. W. Sherman. The form and size of The Journal will bechanged soon and the paperUI,on- No combination was thought of will be enlarged considerably. Many a man who wants to set the world on fire will lie in bed while his wife kindles the kitchen conflagration. It has been decided that soldiers disabled after hostilities closed in July 1865, cannot draw pensions. Here is another opportunity for the republi- cans to roar. More freight cars have been ordered! In the first five months of the present I senseless r i.mor. For more than t wen year than were built during the whole ty 3,.rs ,, has been fiightingrenublic- or iusucer straw snow- ing how business la Improving. The newsDaoer man who ha id and the courage to express them will always have a list of cordial enemies who will sit up nights to hate him. And he will have cause to rejoice more in their hatred than in the friendship! of some of his friends. And now comes the Ohio Steel Co., of Youngstown, Ohio, which has vol untarily advanced the wages of its employes ten per cent. If this in- crease continues as rapidly for the next ix weeks as it has In the past aix wdsV a th renuhlicana will havn noth. lnz about which to find fault with the democrats. The Increase in business is worrying the republicans greatly. They hoped! that the hard times would continue, wages remain low and employment n V.awt rrnti1A nlm m f kaf alt I . .cru.v a. v-; ? these hardships were the result of the ' Wilson bill. But times are improving rapidly and . every day the telegraph announces an Increase In wages in some manufactory. Before 1896 the republicans will have to look for some other causa with which to oppose the democrats. 9ILVKK IN POLITICS. Chicago Record. The interest that is thus earl mani fested in the next presidential enrn paigne is indicative of a warm contest, but it is curious to notice that this in terest centers not so much in the can didates as in the principles of the cam paign. It is indeed rare that within about n year of the nominating con ventions so little is said of men as can didates and so much about what is in volved in the controversy. It appears as if the issues were to be settled first, and then the search would be made for men to represent them. A politician in Illinois, a u eiubci of congress and a republic an, l.na outlined what be believes is qute likely to take place. He assumes that a btrge ma jority of the people f the west and south are in favor of restoriiig silver to the position it held in 1S72. Whetht r this be true or not it f uri.ishea the ba sis of his calculation. He saja that within 6 I ds after the ineetifgof the ne v congress a free silver cMiinge bill will be. passed and printed to the president; that it will be vetoed, which will put the republican party in the position of favorii-g domestic bime tallism, and the democratic party, in so far as the action of its president can do so, in opposition to it; that the re puMican national convention will adopt a resolution favoring the un limited coiuage of silver, which will foice the democrat to either trad dle" or oppose it, which will icsult in tun election of h republican president. This is a very pretly plan, but what will the next congress do w ith the pies- idr-nt.s veto of an unlimited coiuage bi if it ldsses cougr? It is alu. aether probable that the republi an free silver contingent, with the silver ieinocrats, could pass the bill over the .resident's veto. If this should be l-i,e, the silver, question would be t't- tled so far as free silver agitation is 'Concerned. ir, m I lie oiner nanu.ii ,-,,:, be done, but w as not, bow con d wil1 a,,ow itself io be led into a cull de out miner that the delegaWs at its next convention will outline each pinrs policy and commit the party tc it in ihe platform, Uotli parties in the tu-itrn and middle states are practi cally solid in opposition to free sllvc? althoufih two iepublican (-enatois, cr: from Nev Hampshire and one fic Pennsylvania are believed to be ir. f vor of unlimited coinage. Individi: m5y express their preferences, but ; '-r - t not liable that either party wi'! a positive stand on the silver qt ? before ihe conventions of lS'j and publish their platforms. The riattsmouth News ) currency to a rumor that cer ical "machinations" bad I between The Jousnai. and republicans for future combination. Lest south ODe might believe there was something in that report we take occa sion now to say that there is not a par- - m a. a, ft t . M'1,,U, MMWUi,M SUCM a statement "iU1 ,e " u8Ktssiea uy any nouy. rur- i tnei more the editor hereof would but- I render every rcintilla of right he had I to this newspaper before be would bar- I ter away his political liberty or inde pendence He detests a traitor to hta party almost as much as he does a traitor to his country, to sustain which he risked his life on many afield. The game woul l not pay for the powder. No democrat who knows the writer would place any dependence in such a au9, pe(sji,tently and consistently, on L,,,,,,.. , .,, f . jr.. , uiiu uui VVUliUUC 0J Li c&B Inn tr a u I l hiiliovia .n t A .- l lucimr. Tnut fact' ,, ,wever, should not make tne imJiviI"1s in that party his per- 1 80naI enemies, or prevent a recognition jot services perormed in behalf of the community or town or of personal re- gard. It would be a most intolerant community where personal friendships were confined to one's party, or where one dare not employ a doctor or a law yer outside of his party lines. That day is happily past, and no one should reJ'ce at it more than democrats. T,,IE death of Wa,ter Q Gresham. KB,"rJ OI Btate, takes from the ranks of active life a character that I has made its mark upon the present time. As a citizen he was sans neur 8ans reproche, as a soldier he mad his mark, as a jurist he took hirh tnnrf ing) both as to learning and the eouitv of his decisions. He was known ns a friend of his fellow men, a man who recognized the rights of the natural man as superior to those of the arti ficial, and in doing this he antagonized the representatives of monopolies and corporations. As secretary of state he tin not len fcrn-lm-villi tl.erepnh licans ami jinp-i", ' but has Urn a steaofast mtvc-mie of face with all nations. He will be ii ouii.ed as a friend of humanity. You hear republicans asking "how about the split in the democratic party on the silver question?" While the Globe does not think there is any very lii eat danger of a split in the demo cratic party, it nevertheless feels in clined to ask: How about the Hplit in the republican party? Hill McKinley sweats he won't stand on a silver plat form, while Allison is teported as say ing the'Mreiuonetiz;itti n of bilvtr was a mistake," and Tom Ueed as "place me, gentlemen," lieuny Hariis.iii don't seui lo know wheie be is at. and the republicans of Oregon in their state convention hae given it tut unmib takably that if the) tan't have h silver p!ank to stand on the pait inn) go to thedemtiition low-wows.ho to speak, while the leading iepublican :'-hn of Iowa gives it out that lher- n n sil ver lining to the i li nit" i-ow on hai.iJMig the pattv in thn6 h'ate. Talk :ibut it division on tlnhilvrr qmstiii. in tin ileunxT.ttic party, we houl.l like to know what's the matter with the republican party and the nilver ques tion? Where are you at as a party, anjbow?- Council Muffs Globe. Wash: ... t 11 be the i . , eout nou , ',ltl iiv findi .V. . that n r 'i qura- tioi . v. . . : ..-suiedlv gi j ..... - 1 J who are ir.fe- lbut rsac' Iluchanaii took ' filer, drh'p for Tl e wl inflt t C'llice br gade and o jents whs used to ove.: las sentiment, and eves . ... - he regulat oign.7.i tic.:? r . . but all to no pur p uking up f the p.irt) ur.it. ii. ruing f the ataU .vei t Q V 'Mis. Ditnoiiacy r;tii- f tj. h and is iic t the jtm-U . ' I .lion. It i time tht r at dothersoi his,aup irrlhat the people w ill te .ut iuu or bossisrn from . delinii g legal newspapeis . oiling tlie printing of lt at r newenapeis vvbkh had not ..j ibhed fifty-two weeks, parsed ' ht Iegislat uie, lias been de- : t ucoustitutioiial by a district Grand Island. He claimed did not say in the title what proved to be, and was defective ;r matteis. IG'iER IS CUT CTYl.CL the Ifllt uu.t .! ;:tty Nit A.iiAi Air I ConnlJf rr 1 L:t Frr the moment t any rate. J' ger is net the fashion, my', the l.'"f.U.n Spectator. The io,t ion.s an' reeable form of !cil a.-.j.rtio , tvhicb corji.-.t3 in inalii: .r(.r dc bcious of their infei-haity "oy iuten.,- ly unpleasant auu Kiii-eri'ilicu bebuvi.- r. has, of course, bc-cn dutl uiio" ttonc w ith. as a i-ocial claim, fur half u fci'.erutiuu. The hiKb-borii and wealthy heroes of the old novelist, who ere too rjreut t pak at the brc.il. fa.c t table, and "turiied to fiinr a ruon-el to their dgn with an tlrof high-brvil nonchalance," exibt no longer in fiction, and very rure- ly In life. Mr. Grantu ocrt was. per haps, the last of them, liut swagger lo Its minor aud more amusing inaiiifesta tions Is also dying. One of the later forms of swawrger much affected by men of the bachelor leisure class, and especially by the mueh-abus-d "lotus-eaters" of club land, was the nil adinirari attitude. It had quite a vogue for a time, and in addition to conveying an Impression of superiority, it mi v eel a great deal of trouble. Older men who hud seen life were spared the effort of hearing abaut it again, and young men who had not were enabled to convey the impression that they had. This lorm of nwagger is still in use as a weapon against the bore, but as a fashionable cult it exists no longer. The leisure class, aa such. does not assert itself by any explicit form of swagger, and would seem for the moment to get before it the ideal of the "plain man" in its dealings with the world. Trobably the strongest guarantee for the continued decline of swagger is the growth of frank nesa. Formerly, to refer to money as a con sideration in action was considered ill bred. That, form of swagger Is certain ly a thing of the past. Nothing hi more common than to hear the remaoc: "I wish I cotdd afford it," or "I can't af ford it" Faneral Customs In Bulgaria. When the head of a Bulgarian family perceives that he is about to die h sends for the priest and begins to bar gain with him about the cost of his fu neral. The moment he dies all pota, pans and kettles in the house are turned upside down to prevent his soul taking refuge in any of them, and great care is taken to prevent either man or animal especially cat or dog from . stepping across his body, as otherwise, in tho opinion of his family, he would turn into a vampire, and so be a continual nuift ance to them and their neighbors. Chi cairo Mail. I fan? Different Observance of TtiU Pen teutlal Season. The first week of Lent is remarkable, in some places, for its curious mixture, of penitential observances with gayety and feasting. In the United States, with the exception of Mardi Uras at New Or leans, and which is practically a bui vival of the days of French ascendancy In Louisiana, we have nothing' special In our way of keeping Lent. Foreign countries present the most attractive field for the pencil of an artist in de picting the color of the brilliant carni Tal scenes, as well as the more somber aspect of the religious incidents. In Venice, when King Carnival le about to commence his sway, the reporl of three guns Is heard, and the rejoic ing citizens throng the approaches, by land and water, to the city ox Dogea. The poor people have been looking for ward to carnival-time for many weeks, denying themselves to the last limit d endurance in order to save enough money to provide a suitable festa-dresa. Fisher men In green coats and scarlet caps, the Chiozzotl, as they are oalhrd, come in from the fishing villages to the lagoons where the people are supposed to hart remained unchanged since the olden lays. These fishermen carry baskets ot fgs and fowl. Kitjg Carnival lands from a boat and ascends his throne am lotfgiu of the palace, where the Doge) used to sit In the past. He Is balled by enthusiastic crowd. It was on this same loggia, in carnival days gone by, that the young gondoliers, divided InU two factions called the Custelll and the Kicoletti, engaged in wrestling: contest be for the Doge. Many and brilliant are the varied scenes of carnival-time. The street are thronged with revelers disguised by grotesque masks and wearing fantastic costume, and the air resounds wHth the curVou carnival cry of do, cio" (your slave), varied by playful shouts of 'bon tl conosoco cara," aa the male and female maskers trip past one another, and thus pro claim their mutual recognition despite the adventitious aids of holiday dis guise. At night the pleasure-seekers crowd the galleries of the Proeuratlc, and In the caffe, among the grave por traits of the Doges, they sit sipping their coffee, and making the air sound with conversation and laughter. Out side, under the canopy of stars, the young fishermen ln In dancing the Manfrena, accompanying the motion with the rattle of castanets, and danc .Ug Indiscriminately with peasant maiden or raarciuse, while tlie glare of red Are, Ignited In the top of the Cam panile on St. Mark's piazza, luridly Il luminates the scene. llehlnd the piazza the halls of the Hldotto are brilliant with the scenet incidental to the progress of the man nerade ball. The Hidotto was once occupied by a gambling-hell largely patronized by broken-down aristo crats who fancied thai there lav the opportunity of rehabilitating theit shattered fortunes: but the place eventually grew so hot that the government atepped in and closed it up. Not the least interesting part of the carnival display Is the pro cession of the old aristocrats who were rich and powerful under the eighteenth century republle. These dilapidated old swells are known as the lustris sima. They wear the old red cloaks which were once the Insignia of theit rank now little better than a mock ery. The parade tf the lustrissima it regarded very much as a joke, and it la joonetlmes snggeted that tlie lustris sima. shvnld Invite the "crowd" to a re ception at their ancestral palaizJ; and this badinage U taken In very good part by the old, shabby geoteels wh4 are themselves by no means unconscious of the pathetic humor of their own po sition. In Russia, Leo ten times are strictly a period of fasting and abstentation from mundane Indulgence. Shrovetide, how ever, Is marked by a general feast ot eggs, pancakes cheese and tuUk, which is kept up during the first vretk of Lent. But this is soon succeeded by a seasoti of great severity and self-denial. In fact, when Lent draws to a close, the nation may be said to have reached a condition of temporary physical deteri oration in consequence. During the Crat weeks of the Russo-Turldsh war of 1877 the Russian army became so weak ened by the observance of tlie fast that the czar, as head of the Greek church, was obliged to issue an edict suspeud ingthe operation of the ecclesiastical law enjoining fasting. Had this not been done, the soldiers would have been unfitted for the arduous fatigues of tha campaign. Church services during Lent in Russia are most imposing. In Moscow, at the church of Vassili B la Jenny, the metropolitan (or archbishop) holds the Inspiring services at the head of his priests, attired in their splendid vestments. There are no statues lc the church and no Instrumental music The singing, on the other hand, is woo derfully fine, and those who have not had am opportunity of hearing it can hardly conceive how exquisitely har monious purely vocal church music can be made. In Syria the Marronitee, or Christian Syrians, who are adhorentsof the Qreelt church, lead very strict and devout lives during Lent. Their ceremonies are elaborate and multifarious, 1'or the Mar ronites are distinguished by a certain predilection for religious emblems of all kinds, and possess the natural eye foi picturesque ceremonial characteristic oi semi-barbaric races. In Central America the Indian popu lation Is supposed to have conformed to the religion of those regions, which is, of course, the Catholic faith. Once a Week. "T5.V " T-" All I I lh i n .U. First Ma ihcr Well, did you aiuUn tli acquaintance of that stranffo g; l $ou were ravin j over? Second Ditto - Y.?s. followed her homo. - First 2l. ilow did the strike you? Second Ditto She dida t at all; she (Tot her big brother to do it. lioitc. iJldbc. LENTEN CUSTOMS. MOTHtrt'a GRlfci A Touching- Iuel.'leiit K'tated tter.,.a. In the rounds of duty ha-i l-'nt to the business of stock raising. 1 eurnped one night on a little creek within the bor ders of the great Scz I r. cs Indian reservation. It was a cold evening in early spring, and no notes were taken of the surroundings before darkness settled over the sheltered little plat of wild meadow and brought to a close a day of hard work. There were Indian cabins of dingy, un pain ted boards, and smoky old log houses up and down the river, but the peaceful owners were not astir, and I heard not a sound to denote the presence of mankind. This silence and inactivity is not unusual iu the set tlements of the native red men. Poor shaggy saddle ponies were feuding about on the scanty grass. The dogs were barking in answer to the shrill notes of the howling, hungry coyotes and the echoes played from side to side of the rocky canyon. The river, too, ent up a changing rumble, rising and falling like sighs from a troubled heart. But my loneliness did not keep me from sleep. I was . tired aud slept soundly for several hours, when I was aroused by the beating of rain drops In my face. The wind had whirled down into my sheltered cove and carried away the blanket that formed my tent. The calm, cold evening had become a blus tering, stormy night. I gathered my blanket about me for protection from the storm as best I could and tried to sleep again. As the wind lulled I heard a strange noise. It was the voice) of some one a child. I thought in distress. It was dark and it would be impossible In that storm for me to prepare a light. 1 tried to resist the impulse that urged me to go to the relief of the one In distress, but again and again I heard the cry some one weeping sod wailing iu dis tress. I hastily put wn my clothes and started La the . direction from which same the pitiful cry. I clambered over stiff, unyielding brush and cragged rocks till I reached a bare knoll that stood out from the mountains like a mound. I came in contact with what I knew to be the fence around an Indian grave. The strange cry came to ma more distinctly. It was the pathetic wail of an Indian woman. I had heard the same sad cry of hopelessness before. I wm within a few feet of her. She must have been aware of my approach, but so Intense was her grief that she was not startled to such an extent that It called her mind for one Instant from the dead. I turned away and left her to bear her burden with only tlie darkness of night and the fury of the wind to help her. When daylight came 1 went again to the grave. It waa that of a very small child. Its heartbroken mother was the mourner whom all the world could not comfort. There wa a rude fence around the little new-made grave and there were little flags waving above It to frighten the wild beasts that howled ao ffhoulUhly the evening le fbre. The storm that came so suddenly that night was the first to be-at upon the lonely resting place of the little I one, and the mother came from her ! J . I 1 IM nouN near uj axiu imrw nci x-n ii"ii the grave because it in some way re lieved her to protect all that remained for her of her heart's treasure. Detroit Tree Prose. , The landlord may be a square man but you can depend on finding1 him round ou rent day. IUngbamton Lead er. Most women have a pood dei oi romance in their dispositions. If they hadn't, very few wen would ever suc ceed in getting married. SouiervilU Journal. Tonison "Jackson is a wlv man.' Johnson "In what refpect, prayf Tomswn "You surely must have no ticed it. lie always laughs at his ecu ployer's Jokes." Ll, girls. k'Jii with car; Lep w.tii a ii- t ruur irtnr. No iaur u. fv.r tiap tul auar. Pop. git U. ix. p U tt LacbeUtr. Lowel 1 Arena. LEGAL NOTICES. Notice of Sale la lUe m iller or ihe ttu of Hn...tt I'nn v. Om aeil : Nulw is liert-(.) fclvrl) ILmI in (' nual. c t ( Kit onlrr of iuul M i'1i whh J h)k- ut (In UlstiU t court, of t' uniy, Nrt'm-. a, on the 13th ilny of May. iC.V for the H of ll.f rAl ( iiti herlnari-r lrinlcl. U-rt? will lo tuM at the foil h lor of tli court lioii-e In riallmoiilli. Nrhralca. on Ntr..M, Ihe Mh U of June. iKUTi, at So'ilork p. m . at public vendue to the hlht-tt Miler for rah. the fol-lowimrleai-rliel real eta'e. t w!i: I. dim nfiern 13 and aixieen (16). t.lm n nine (9 In Nouth 1'ark ai1.ll lion t the i'ltt of PU' tsiuouth. Snhl ale will remain oj en one lunr. Waltri. J Whitk. Ailinli.Utrator -f ihe vtate f He i. lie it W. Pierre, deceased. Dated at Plattamoutti thia 13th da? of May, 185. Notice to Creditors. . . - ...... tT atk or Nkbkika Caw Coi'XTT. I KB 111 ( illll.ir IUII1I. In the matter of the e late of Mmy llahnhelt. deceuaed: ; Notice Is hereby pi en that the cUlms and j demandhof all pers na aKalust Mary lltnhflt. j rfiKMipil lila nf aalil emilitv Mini kl.Hlt w 11 I e I received, examined aud adjiiHted by ihe county court at the court house In Plattsmouth, on the lith day of November A. D is9 at the r ore noon. And that fclx month" from and fter the lh dav of MaT. A. D. 1W5 la the t me limit' d for creditors of ald deceased to present thelrclalma for eamlnatlon and allowance. j lilven under my hand thia 8th day of May, A. r 1) 1511. ' H S. Hamsbv. County Judge. ' Sheriffs Sale. Uy virtue of an order of sale issued by w . H. I Deailnir, clerk of the district court within and 1 for Caas county, Nebraska, and to me directed. I will on the 4th day of June A. D. 1WS, at lo o'clock a. m. of said day at the aouth door of the court house In the city of Plnitmionth. in j said comity, sell at public auction 10 theblKh-4 est Iddder for cash, the folIowlnK real estate to wit: The east half K S) of the n.irthwcn j quarter N W () of northeast quatti-r ( N K ; u)of aectlonNo. one (1). township twelve (12, ram e number thirteen (13), and the east half of the southwest quarter of the northeast quar ter of said ectl n one I), excet'tinjrslx c) rota In width off the east side or last described tract, and excepting right of way f ti e H. A M. If. R. Co., all being In Casa county, Nebr.inka, together with the prtvllegee and appurtfinuircs thereunto belonslngor in anywlcetppurtaluing. The a-tme l elnv levied upou and taken as the property of Charles Vandeventer aud Hattle Vunr'eveute-. defendants to sbtlsfv a Judp ment wf said court recovered Ly Anselmoli. ; Smith, plaintiff, against Bald defendants , J. C. KlKtNBiHT, Sheriff. Cass Cotiot. Nebraska. ' Flattsmoutb, rasta, May 1, A. D. 1605. j AH INDIAN T.J. THOMAS & SON KKKI UN T1IKIK 1IOOK3 FtK SALE AT THi;lK - YIIMT iY AKKK 7 lib m The best me.tlH in the market liEEF, PORK, MUTTON, VEAL, POULTRY, FISH. CUBED . . . HAMS, BACON. CANNED GOODS, Etc. In fact, everything you want that is the most palatable for the table, and in the best style and form. H rinl we will prove it. T. J. THOMtS Zl SON, Fitzgerald blk. Main St , I'UtHtnouth DR. A. MATTHEWS, t i ( ; i : ; r Thi PuiiilcsB Dentist. Weeping Watrr, Nebr., MikkfM S'i- uity of Fine (Jul. 1 KlUIn-s i-o'..l nl I'mitHmIii Crown, lirMe wruk, U TEETH I -SlIIVEI-Y KXTK.MTtU U lllI"iI"T PAIS OR I A N G E P. . in ir i.l i'-f k Liveryman HAS PUKCHAS!:t THE Sixth Street ChsckerRd Barn. j AND WILL KUN ll !. i in-i.;i-jr. lo F'u:o.-il. uV.-tr ...Mia m . t :;.-. ..i i "i'fis:;ii.' I Mr'.itT ta ! i . - Zuchweiler & Lutz ! Tlao Grocers. : Cct. Pixth and Pearl StsM i KKKI' KVMiYTHINO .IN THEIR LINE. iSell Cheap, Give Good Weight, Deliver Promptly. c vouk rrTini m oi.u itkd P. J. HANSEN, I ! IUALER IN Groceries, Crookory - a rv i - Glassware. ' FLOTTR AND FEED j A Speoinltr . !One door North of Postofiice ! First National Bank I'LATTSSIoUTlI. N Kit. Onpitnl, paid tip iCC.OOO : OFFICE US: Ueoruk K. Povrt PreMeut 1 F. K. Whitr Vie president i S. Wacoa Cashier j II. N. Povbt Assistant Cashier I DIKECTOUS: I Oeorire K. Dover. F. 15. White. D. Ilawkewi-rth Dovejr. I v-ni an.r n k Careful attention glren to the interests of ! customer. Collections maie and promptly j remitted for. HUtictd market pric paid for county warrant aud state and county bonda : W. L. Douglas 3. CORDOVAN, 3.5P rOUCE,3 SOLES. EXTRA riNB. N5. a2. 1 BOYSCHOOLSHQEil LADIK3 3: :-., ,5tND rpn CATALCCUC Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value for the money. TIeiv iul custom shoes in stylr und fit. 1 hslr rvenrlntr qualities are uas urpaecd. The prices are uniform, sf amrx -a cn so!. hrom Si to $j saved over ether ivs, If your dealer tannot supply you . SJH by JOSEPH rKTi:i. T