Plrffewmilj lilf&fffifft '!T)L I f vl ' ' '.- V.' u 45 ito. O PLATTSMOUTH, NKBKASKA, S.CTUIUIAS', AI'KII, t 1833. VOL. 1 il&lIII Will be an attractive place on next Friday and Saturday Afternoon and Evening, When occurs tlie grand opening and display of new and at tractive for the oprinir and summer trade. To We liave selected tor your examination tlie finest line of HATS AND BONNETS, To he obtained iu the market. Pattern and trimmed hats in millans, french chip, lace and satin, tusca ns fcc, from one dollar upward to the fimst pattern obtainable. Hi -A. O IE S, In large atortment. Kihbonti in the latest shades Silks and satind in great variety. JPJLUJJirjES, TTHIPg AMID IHlMAMIEMTrS. In fancy and unique designs and in large assortment. FLOWERS. A complete assortment of erery description and the very latest novelties The ImdleM are Cordially Invited to Visit n on Friday and Saturday at the Oqciiin L i I IJ.'L. EASTWARD i Duy Erw Trala for Oniaba. Cblca-j I' !! k . . . ... . i -ii ....it. I r i Rt nSJi U P.7,rUte Indiana- ritori:Ctrt.cilWf.li. aid tfie entire i Snt EJSt PuUinan Palace Cam and ! West, lhe adve.t of this Jin. rivei the tra 1 Ki""lr-l:5r n through tri.. nd ! velcr a New Koute to the West, with scene- ! inning cars wt f Missouri Klrer. j Throufb Tickets t tbe Lowest Kates are biiiiwiU be checked te destination. Any blM TwTUhe cheerfully fun.Uhed wpo appiwiioo iu any urai or to , Oh, have nirived, nnl I will continue to sell Dry Goods & Notions Dre i...., Tiiiiimini;- Ere., j.ov.n: pkices than i.;iv i.iiivr hu ?.-. ii the country. Abo a full line of Groceries Queensware AND at prices to defy competion. D fio Ho EMU) IT the Ladies WESTWARD. Uftily Kip" Trains for Denver, con-. nilMi.. I., f:nln It not for &11 no in til In ry and adTatft unequaled elsewhere, j en sale at all the Important station, and. information aa to rates, routes or time ta- t. M. KL'ITia, lieaerat Ret Agruk, uiuu, nr. j Yes ! Youra Rtfrjpctfullj, W. H. Baker. of Plattsmouth OPERA HOUSE BLOCK. gk hi I f I f - : -t I 1 CI ; :i OrJon taken for WILSON BROS.' SHlSTftT j.p:tiu o a rrxaxEa attd cigabs. Jniss rata DECKER BROS. 1 I OPERA IICUSE CLOTHIERS, AND GENTS' FURNISHERS. POST OFFICE News Depot, STATIONERY. NOTIONS, MASON & HAMLIN 1 HENRY F. MILLER and 7 If aTT 7TV "TJT -Hf CENTRAL RESTAURANT. P Meals at AU Hours. EEAB. TELEGRAPHIC TKKH1KLK TOHNADO. Surrendered by his Bonds men. An Odd Odd Fellow, AVKENTKD FOK KM11LZZI, KMK.NT. C'knthai. Falls, R. I., April 14. Geo II. Smith, financial secretary of the Odd Fellows lodc, has been arrested for fmhvzz't. iiunt of the Kde fuudrt. A C'lTir OFKKIAL IN' JAIL. New Vouk, April 14. Kx-Major le Btvise, of Ixiii Inland City, wan eur rendered )y bondnineu anJ tttkon to the county jnil. .Iiidmcut for 100,000 was given against him for wrongful con version of the riiy'a hondn. UESTKUCTION A TOKNAIHJ. Oza.uk, Ark., April M. This morn ing a disastroMs tornado btruck tlie White Oak. Little Rock &. Ft. Smith railroad ten ruilea west of here. The wind blew from the southwest and the force was be yond powers of description. Tho birle of the mountain, which before was cover ed with trees, are now shorn. None are standing, even oaks being snapped in twain like pipe Btcme, Afterward came hail, which lasted until the ground was covered with ice, many stones being nearly as large as hen'8 eggs. T. II. Ra son, postmaster, lost his store and resi dence, probably most of the mail. 300 dollars in currency was also scattered by the wind. He was seriously injured about tlie spine. L. Wallace's residence tables and store, occupied by J. E. Cox were all levelled, as were also the resi dence of J. C. Murray and all others on that place. The storm averaged three miles in with. No fences can be seen anywhere. Trees two and three feet in diameter were uprooted, broken and twisted like twigs. Pile after pile of great railroad ties were found blown around as if they had been matches. Reports of destruction of property and loss of life come from every direc tion. Thomas Ross and wife and AVm. Ilerron, one mile north, were fatally injured and their houses sirpt away. W. E. McCain. David Hall, John Bra sure and Wallace all lost their houses. Daniel Wade, Wm. Ilaun and Zach Harper also lost their houses. The Union church and school house, one mile northwest, are also in ruins. At Gay's mill, two miles west, one small residence is all that remains standing F. J. Lewis' house and haif a dozen others are in ruin3. The storm was of such severity as was never before known here. The tornado reached Conway, Faulkner county, at 3 p. m. No one was killed, but several were badly injured. No reports frou the interior. Jkfkeiison City, Mo., April 14. A violent wind storm occurred here to day. It unroofed eeveral houses and did considerable other damage. Sev eral storms in different parts of Kan sas the past twenty-four hours. FROM THE CAPITOL. Foreign Agricultural Re port. Hill to be Investigated, Etc. INTERNAL REVENUE. Washington, April 14. During the first six months of thi9 current fiscal the internal revenue receipts are $108,- 0.798, an increase of $2,551,394 over the. corresponding period of the lat fis cal year. Tu REVOKED. The order suspending James L. Avers, of Huron, Dakota, jis attorney of the land department was-revoked by Secre tary Teller. FOREIGN WHEAT. The report from the London agent of the department of agriculture makes the probalbe decrease in the area of wheat in Great Britain 15 per cent, and 10 per cent in France. There is also a reduc tion of the area in Russia. In Austria and Hungary the full breath has been sown, but the condition of the plant at the present time is not generally very favorable. SMALL POX AMONG INDIANS. Charles N. Hewitt, secretary of the Minnesota state board of health tele- rinlm f n Spprpforc Tpllpr that Indiana in northern Minnesota are exposed to small-pox, and wearing infected cloth ing, wandering arouud the country. In dian Commissiener Price replied that the agent had been authorized to pur chase clothing for tlie Indians, and that a physician was on the spot INVESTIGATING COMMITTEE. Secretary Folgerhas appo n.ed acorn lnittee consisting of J. C. New, assistant secretary, Jos. H. Robinson assistant s" icitor of the treasury, and W. F. Mc Clcnnan. chief of the warrant division. to investigate the charges of official mis- couduct receutly fllcd against Jos. O lill, supervising architect. IIIRBL1XG BOURBONS. Tho Democratic Love Feast. What They Did, And Who They Were. Chicago, April 14. The banquet he 1'almer house ou Friday evening wa- an eloquent commemoration of the na ul day of the father of democracy. The iriuciplts annunciated by Thomas Ji-f ferson, and living still in the platform ol he democratic party, were again given utterance last uight under the auspice of the exponent organization of that tarty in the northwest and southwest. ucorporattd Oct. 19, 1881, the Iroquia ciub has assumed a position of national mportance, and today thousands will reud the published peech- deiivertfd it its bauquet boar-i, ami make auguries for 1884. The gath ering was a large one aud many a name among the list of guest is known where reputation and brain are respected and admired. The large main dining hall of the Palmer afforded barely sufficient apace for the accomodation of the guest, and when all weie seated the array presented was one worthy of description. The room was brilliantly lighted, and the ap- ! point menta and decorations were superb. A raised platform at the north end of the hall a table stretched from end to end, and before eight long tables, all covered with snow white cloth, reached to all the extremities. Interest was centered, however, on those who occupied the prominent po sitions at the raised table. The fol lowing gentlemen were seated at this table: Erskine M. Phelps, president of the Iroquois club, in the center; on the right president U. S. Senator T. F. Bayard, of Delaware; Hon. Thos. Ioyne, William F. Vilas, of Madison, Wis.; Judge Lambert Tree. Col. W. C. . Breckinridge, of Lex ington, Ky.; A. F. Sneeberger, Hon. Lyman Trumbull, James G. Jenkins, of Milwaukee; Hon. William Springer, of Springfield, 111.; Ion. Carter II. Harrison, Judge J. O. logers, S. Corning Judd, Judge Gary. On the left Rev. Galusna Anderson, James 0. Broadhead, of St. Louis; J. T. Doane, Wm. Henry Uurlbut, of New York; L. Z. Leiter, Gen. J. C. Black, of Danville, 111.; Everett P Wheeler, of New York; Judge. T. yle Dickey, J. Sterling Morton, T. M. Shaw, of Springfield, 111.; J. U. Ure gory, Hon. J. R. Doolittle, Hon. R. W. ownshend. The toasts of the evening were: "Our country," responded to Senator Bayard, of Delaware. "Thomas Jefferson," by Hon. James O. Broadhead, of Missouri. Democracy past, present and fu ture" by Col. W. F. Vilas, of Wisconsin. "The constitution ? bj Hon Lyman Trumbull, of Illinois. "Manifest destiny by Col. W. C. P Breckenndge, of Kentucky. A tariff for revenue," by E. P. Wheeler, of New York. "Temperance a virtue, prohibition h vice, responaea to uy j. u. .1 en kins, of Wisconsin. 'The Democratic Press," by Wm. II. Hulburt, New York World. "The Great Northwest," by Gen eral John C. Black, of Illinois. "Monopolies Should N-t Rule by Congressman Win- M. Springer, of Uinois. Public Office, a Public Trust," by Mayor Carter II. Harrisou. Harrison's speech created some sensation. He arose to speak at 2 o'clock and at once deserted his original text and entered Into a fiery denunciation ofiree trade doctrine in its broadest sense as previously adro cated by Col. Vilas and other speak ers. The mayor predicted dire disas ter to the democratic party If it abandoned moderate protection and user ted in an out and out free trade plank in its national platform. His remarks create 1 considerable dissatisfaction among other speakers. The speech credited to Harrison in the morning papers was not spoken. T-morrow his real speech will bo published. Letters of regret were received Samuel J. Tilden, Gen. Hancock, Samuel J. Randall. Abram Hewitt, and S. S. Cox, of New York; Gen. Geo II. McC -an and Got. Ludlow, of New Jersey; Governors Stoneman, of California, Crittenden, ot Missouri, McEnery, of Louisiana, Adams, ot Nevada, Wallace, of Connecticut Berry, of Arkansas, ckqorn, of Kentucky, and Cleveland, ot New York. Ex-Senator McDonald, of Ic diana, ;u A nnicro- s .hern, sent let ters of r grct. During h liv ihf rooms of the Iroqu i club vr r" filled with visitor aud tho pr s.ucntlal utlsx-k was can raised at 1 nih. The general drift of opinion teemed to favor Samuel J. Tildcu f3c3v democratic standard U ircr in '1681. APer Tilden, Me Doiu 1 1, or Indiana, was th favarlta choice. To da 8 nstor Rayafttam a number of other dutluguIsheJ deaa cratic visitors tlsited the ''modal, city" of Pullman riatUmoot'i'VM) Harlet rnoviMOxs, rauir. bi ac. (aaraJ.) Reported by M. B. Marpby a Ce. Butler Ctic(part saint) per is ( her (full creani) Hug-sr Cured llaius . .....It Bacon. U - nunuiurri.. " . Dried Beet " f ouitry 4.80 o see per ax. tui loi2e. - Cbbas:e.. ... Ciiolce rotatoes 4BS et. per . HMt Si. so in or Dee is , Onions Apples (wlutsr) Sweet Cider Oysters, select " Common .. UCt " Ijso ft fi.as " . is r iu oa per os riatbtta..Rili erp. one Iflrtarggs 1 J. f. Youok, resldct.ee. 2 10 14 14 Bennett t lewia, store. M. B. Murphy A Co.. " Bonner Mlables. Coantv i'U rk's offlce. K. B. Lewis, resldeaee. J. V. Weckbacn. storo. Western Colon Telearapa oOc. 1). 11. Wbeelrr. residence. It. A.CamubeU. R. B. wiudnam. " Jqo. Waymae. J. W. JeuulBHS. " W. H. W1p. office. Morrlaeey BrosM office. 14 17 IS IS w i. W. Kairfleld, residence. 21 M. 11 Murphy. tt 1. II. Wlteeier & Co . office. 23 .1. e. Taylor, residence. 'H First Nattonel Bank. P. K. Kuttner's office. m J. P. Younir, store. 2 Perkln House. 29 K. W. livers, resMeuee. si Journal office. 34 IlKHALU PL'S. CO. OflWe. 35 J. N. Wise, residence. 34 H, M. Chapmitu, " 3T W. U. loues. " 3 A. N. Bulllvan, " . 39 II. K. PsJuier. - 40 W. II. riciitldknecut, oSoe. 41 Bulllvau & Woo ey, 42 A. W. McLaughlin, restdeae. 43 A. Patterson, livery. 44 CM. Holmes. " 4A L. II, Beunett. residence. 45 jo. H. tjuith, offiue. 47 LA. Moore, flor.st. 4a J. W. Barnes, residence. M It. R. LlviiiKston, office. 307 J. V. Weckbttch. resldeuor. JM Chailaln Wright. - 84i W. II. Hchl.dknerbt ' 340 Geo. H Hiuith, ' 460 K. It. MvliiKUn. " 313 C. C. Ballard. Tbe switch board cvmects Plattsmouth with Ashland, ArUntoo, IValr. Council Blufsfre nioat, Uuc-ila. itiDi'it and KikUornStatloo. BLANKS! WARRANTY DEEDS MORTGAGE DEEDS CHATTEL MORTGAGES QUIT CLAIM DEEDS AND LEASES Secure them at the Plattsmouth Herald Office MIKE SCHNELLBACHER, KLJICKSJillTH HOi.SE 8H0EI5O AWAOON KEPAIfitNa. ill imis of Fan WmiW Heilel fit! Neatness and Dispatch. Horse, Mule & Ox Shoeing, In ehort, well shoe anytbinf that baa four feet, from a Zebra to a u trace. Coma and sea ua. jbi lj w shop n Plttb St. between Mala amd vnse Htreew. uat across ie corner iron we kw orrica. For Sale ! N E Sec. 3, T. 12; R. 13. S E , Sec. 3, T. 12, B. 13. S. W. i, Sec. 3, T. 12, R. 13. and N. W. Sec, 10, T.12, R. 13. S. W. Sec. 34, T. 13, K. 13 E , Lot 10, Block 28. 3, 59. 7 &0, " 23. Sft, " 9, " 11. Duke's Addition. - The above described farms axe for sole on long time, with 7 per cent, interest. Apply to R. B. WLNDHAH, Flour sjoeo 4. Uatrevt. Mal v Hrmn S e i. 5 -" ir ' ,n -. , '