THE DAILY HERALD, PLATiisaiOuxri, nIoKASK A, SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1SS8. The Evening Herald. J. H. KING, City Editor. A. SalUaary, Deatlt, Itockwood ISaildln;, TaWaboaa Mo. 3. Dr. Mir liar. Offlr and ItfuUfafl Sherwood Block, Trlrphoae Ma. 4i. v CITY CORDIALS. CITY CONOR EC ATIONU. CATiiot.ic.-Kt. Paul's Church, Onk. between FHili and SUtli. Father aniey, I'aalor. Krrlo-a : Ma :il S hih! in :30 a. m. Sunday Hchvol at 2 :. mi ill bt-iietllctioi.. Cliltivn ax. turner Locust ami Klchlh. M. A. Hampton. ail'r. huudy School to 4. m. 1'rrarhiuK l a. .M. and 7 :K r. m. rryr motitiK Wednesday iht. All are cor-Jially in IU-d. ErixropAU-Ht. Luke's Church, corner Third nmt ln. K-v. II It. Knrnein. pae tor. Ker- vlres : it A. u. a d 7 .Mr. m. hunday School at 2 : 1'. m. CjKBMAN Mktiiodist. Corner Sixth f t and Granite. Kev. Ilirt. I'aaior. Service : II A. M. and 7 :H0 r. M. Sunday licit. ol 10 :30 a i. pMRajtvTntiAK. Main, between Sixth and Seventh, lie v. J. T. I'.alr. pastor. Services; usual hour, morning and evening. Sunday School :. Fikst MrrnoilT. Sixth St.. hetvreu Main and I'eurl. Kev W. K. Alexander, pastor, hervlcea :11a. m.. 7 .V) P. w. Mttidat School 2:20 P. ;at. i'raytr nieetiri; Wednesday even ing. Gkkmax I'kpskytkki an. Corner Main and Ninth. Kev V It te. pastor. Service : usual hours. Sunday fdiuol a :M A. M. SwRKDian i o-GK.ro atiuml Craulte, be tweeii nfth aud Mxth. For first class jab work call at the IIekai.d office. The "Youth who never saw a Wom an" will be impersonated bj Miss Eunice Goodrich tonight. "Pocahontas' in which McCann is as kros-aii-kan-h will be produced at the opera house tonight. The opera house will be crowded to night to witness two performances for the one price of admission. Secure your seatj early. John F. Polk vs. F. W. "Welcher and E. D. Vancourt was settled iu the district court yesterday. The jury rc turnd a verdict for fifty dollars. Plain tiff pays hjs own coats. Mr. Kiddle took over the Perkins House yesttrday afternoon. A there is such a rush of transieut trade coming in to the city at present he will not close the house as he at tirt-t intended to while the improvements are bting made. The Frank Carruth cunning factory is having new additions built onto it and another floor put iu. Covered sheds are also erected on the outside for the shipping and receiving of good9. They eipect to have a large rush of business this season. The casa of "William D. Jones and Ed. Fitzgerald vs. The Bank of Cuss county was decided yesterday in the district court. The jury gave a verdict in favor of plaintiff and five dollars damages, which neither the plaintiff, nor hts attorney, had the dim perspective to ask for, but the jury, under the instruc tions of the court, ordered that amount paid. An elderly person suffering from "protrusion of the entero-epiplocele " (whatever that is) was brought in yes terday from somewhere in the vicinity of Weeping Water. The surgeon of this city who is attending the case, treats the matter lightly, and says that a mild ca thartic will soon remedy the trouble and the patient will be as well as ever. " Is that so ?" Jules Strowbery, a farmer from the vicinity of Glenwood, Iowa, was rolling around the depot last night slightly ele vated and under the impression that he was playing base ball aud that theswitch engiues where tlying spheres. Ha tried to catch ns "on the fl j," but was knocked out by a blow on his posterior darvrinus. Tie wa picked up, alightly injured and carried to the "cooler." This morning the umpire decided against him, and fined him ten dollars and costs. Jas. Used, of Ulysess. Butler county, Is In the city shaking hands with many uld fri'-nds and acquaintances. He is about the oldest pioneer of Plattsmouth hiving taken u; hia residtneo in this city about thirty years ago. He formerly run a saloon in an eld frame shanty where the Perkins House now stands and was the Crst man that sold forked light ning in this place. At one lirae he run a brickyard and made the first brick in Plattsmouth. He kit this city about j eighteen years ago. An item is going the rounds of tho , i, r.frVrt thnt Fred. Xve L:is ! written an ar.iele entitled "Mr. Sampson of Omaha." Wc wonder if Fed. is aware that there is a gentleman of that name that rents a desk in a real estate ex change next door south, of the World cf tice. Also that that individual, who wears a dark plaid suit. toe. turned rut very much when walking, and head bowed .down, is a prominent gambler of the West. He has run joints in a good many towns, and plays a square game when he's winning, &td a "skin " ganic when hvs losing. Some years ago he ran two or three different places in Des Moines, Iowa, and before that a regular gambling palace on Spirit Lake, Iowa. Jlis latest venture was over Foley & Darst's saloon, the ''Phenix " on Dotig Lis street, Omaha. Mr. Sampson is as cute and shrewd a man as there is per ambulating around this mundane sphere. All jeb work of every kind done at the Hriiald office on short notice. Two gold watches given away to day at the opera bouse. Mr. J. A. Sutton, principal f the Louisville schools, is in the city today. Jb work of all kinds at the Hkkald office done cheap and neatly. Give us a call. The performances of the Goodrich company are elevating and refining free from vulgar word or action. Theladies af the Presbyterian church are requested to meet at the church at S p. in. next Monday to transact import ant business. (). V. English, trainmaster of Lin coln, was skirmishing around the box cars in tho yards yesterday. He left for home iu tho evening. Judge Chapman will return to this city about next Friday from Tecutnseh. Next Wednesday he will hold court for Judge Applega'e in Pawnee City. Geo. W. Vass, the jeweler, has just bought and placed in his place f busi ness a burglar and fire-proof safe for the storing of work entrusted to his care. Don't miss the play at the opera house tonight, and get a chance on the $15 gold watch to be given away. You may bj tho lucky one to get the watch. J. W. Williams vs. J. C. Eikenbary, was decided in court yesterday. Verdict, $17,000 for defendant. Amotion was made this morning for a new trial. Over ruled. Cream Soda Water at Phil. Young's is dslicious, did you try tho Maple and Cream yeti also the great nerve food 'Moxie" aud "Coca Phosphates" at only 5c per glass. Mr. Maynard Spink, county superin tendent of schools, is holding a teachers' examination today in the county court room. He will return home this evening to Weeping Water. Aron C. Loder, vs. II. Twilegar, which concerns the annulling of the mar riage of Maggie Twilegar on account of her youth is in the hands of referee, At torney A. Bceson. Not yet decided. Can anyono explain the peculiar co incidence that whenever pitchfork falls off a load of hay it nearly always alights with one end on the ground, with the tines up, on which somebody is sure to full. The number of beautiful perambu lators displayed for sale outside our fur niture dealers stores, would suggest the following lines to a spring poet: "I'd choose to be a baby, a tiny little flower, a plaything for the ladies, in chi-ile-dood's 'appy 'ours. W. M. Callicot was arrested and charged last Saturday with "an assault with intent to kill and murder." G-wh?z-z! The case was dismissed. He was again arrested on a charge, prefered by the county attorney, for "assault and battery." The case was heard today and the prisoner was honorably acquitted. All of our citizens, who can possibly find time, should go and witness the pa triotic and interesting exercises of the school children in planting trees on the lrgh school gremds in commemoration of Arbor day. That hi.torip and eventful day comes oh next Monday. Encourage the children by your presence at 9 a. m. It would enlighten the public, if the editor of the Journal, instead of prompt ing men at Bo.ird of Trade meetings to "censure" the Hkkald would devote his lticlieiiea fertility to finding out "where' Charely Hose.' When that fiat is accom plished he might assume the roll of a Pinkertoii detective, and tell us "Wbst has become of theShattuck fund?" -There will be "'eeting for the young converts this evening at tho Pres byterian church, at 7:30 and evangelist services will be held in the M. E. church tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock to which every body is invited and at the Opera house at 3:S0 in the afternoon, to which all are invited and tho address will be es pecially for tha young converts. Services v ill alsi be held in t lie Opeia house in the evening at 7:;10. These services will close the work of the evangelists here. This morning, about nine o'clock. a oy n;tir,ed F . W. Levings, who is n uepimw of John Waterman, the lumber merchant, wa3 heated in a buggy, corner Vine and Fourth. The horse took flight at a printed "censure," dated April 20, that vas flying about, and started cS at a mad gallep for the Journal office, where it was stopped with ths buggy overturned and slightly deuicrulized. The horse was not injured. The boy forlpuately saved his obitunry by jumping out of the bugy. Wo have just received the report of the Missouri lUver Commission. Thank you, gentlemen. The isosceles triangle of our serum is so warped that we are are unable to fairly criticise the work. It is an expensive book nd lias required more brains than is iu our scat-of-lbongbt to compile it, but the diagrams repre senting the course of the river around n-cks, snags and sandbrirs, reminds us of some drawings we once saw in a medical work illustrating cutaueous complaints in eruptions of the ep dermis. SENSIBLE AND CERTAIN. Colonel Stewart's Pontoon Pro position. The following proposition or agree ment, also the matter of renaming the streets of this city, will be presented and explained at the next meeting of the city council, Monday, April 22, by a committee composed f Messrs. Skinner, Polk and Waugh. We have no doubt but that it will be approved of and our city be allowed to take anothtr stride forward in modern progress : "If shero can not be secured witnin 500 feet of the B. & M. bridge at Plattsmouth, I will place a Pontoon bridge across the Miss ouri river sufficiently large for Uann, and maintain it five years for $10,000 and tolls. Tolls over aud back, or one way: Single or double-team and ve hicle, fifty cents; saddle-horse and rider, twenty-five cents; pedestrian, five cents; led horses, fifteen cents; cattle, fifteen cents; sheep and hogs, five cents. I, to be permitted to use either a bridge or ferry from November 10th each year to April 10th of the following year. Ferry rates to be the same as bridge. I, to forfeit ten dollars per day to the city of Plattsmouth for cyery day ex ceeediug twenty days of each year (and a frozen river) that a bridge or ferry is not ready for passage. But the total forfeit of any year is not to exceed the annual payment due from the city. The $10,000 to be paid as follows: $2,000 and accrued interest to be payable an nually at the close of each year of main tenance." S. N. Stewaht. Last Night's Performance. "Dad's Bov" is a brilliant conception of romantic phases of frontier and city life illustrating incidents of everyday occurences and full of fun and pathos. Lotta, Anna Pixley, and Jennie Yea meas have a very favorable competitor and rival for public favor in the person of Eunico Goodrich. Her impersonation last night of the romping, generous, light-hearted tomboy, was the pink of ideality. The song "I'm so Shy," which is dedicated to newspaper reporters, on account of its appropriateness, was re ceived with unstinted applause. Miss Mate Stevens played the thank less part of the adventuress in a very able manner. Miss Maud Durand, iu a small part, did not have the opportunity of displaying her recognized ability as an emotional actress. It is needless to make mention of Jas. R. McCann's performance as a typical generous, bluff gold miner, with the heart of a lion and the tenderness of a lamb, for he has been, for a long time, an acknowledged star in the theatrical firmament, Lewis M. Mabb as the drunken, dis sipated "Dad" was inimitable. His "make up" as a debauched sot was marvelous. In comedy, emotion, or artistrocratic bearing, many actors can excel because "they are built that way" which is an aid to them. Mabb's part is a study without any outside aid. It "was tho best old-man character that we have ever seen. That is not our private opinion, but that of a medical gentleman who witnessed the true-to-life actiens of the trembling hands and head, and the convulsive' movements of tho body which are so closely allied to long excess of drink which usually ends in delerium tremens. The "make-up" and nctiors of the old man in the transition from the drunkard to the demented parent, and the recovery of dethroned rcn.'nn, stamps. M abb as a model for other ambitious actors to imi tate The tone of voice as it adapted itself to different sentiments, or forms of expression, showed a thorough compre hension and careful study of a very dif ficult prt. Evangelistic Meetings. The theme of the afternoon service was thanksgiving to God for the blessing en joyed during the meetings. Many of those present testified that they had per sonally experienced gracious reviving, that their prayers far others had been answered and that they thanked God most hcartially for awakening such a deep interest in spiritual things among 60 many young people. Before the usual hour of service in the evening at the Methodist church, there was a half-hour meeting of the young converts in the Presbyterian church, cmi t acted by llev. Mr. Clagett. A devout enthuslam and rcadiacsa to testify of the grace of God marked the occasion. Many gave voice to their spiritual joy and expressed the hope that they had passed from death to life. Twenty-five cxpresed a desire that Christians would pray that they might experience the new birth of the soul. During the meetings 150 persons have publicly acknowledged their de&ire to live a Christian life. Subscribe for Tnn Hekai.d. Largest List, Best Terms and Lowest prices on lots, houses and lot.", half acres, acres, five and ten acres. Property shown free of charge. Call and see me. Ride out and see if I cannot show you ' some Bahtjaixs. a20tf W. S. Wise. HIGH SCHOOL NOTES. Court seems to have more attractions thau the high school for our janitor now adays. The high school grounds are being1 graded and leveled preparatory to the tree planting Monday. Miss McDonald has been absent for the last three days; having gone to Green wood to attend a wedding. Miss Kate Oliver supplies her place in tho school room. We have reliable information that Mr. Chalbuin will not fctay with us another year, lie intends to seek pastures new, where he will have more room for im provement. Mr. C. has many friends in Plattsmouth who will very much regret his departure. Monday, Arbor day, will be celebrated in an appropriate manner by all the city schools. Nearly two hundred trees and shrubs will be planted on the high school grounds jdone. We can realize the necessity of observing the day when we learn that thousands of acres of timber ure cut down cyery day. to 1 used in the various manufactures of this country. Parts of tho United States which were forests a few years ago have been entire ly denuded of their verdure, but Nebras ka is becoming more enriched with syl van beauties year by year. Let the good work go on until the celebration of .A r bor day will stand second only to the natal day of the republic. Ci.aha Wilson. Smoke the Pappoosc and Love's de sire 5c cigars; also some excellent 10c cigars, warranted to give satisfaction if you giye them a trial at J. P. Young's. Dogg's Cherry Cough Syrup. Is the only medicine that acts directly on the Lungs, Blood and Bowels, it re lieves n cough instantly and in time effects a permanent cure. Sold by O. I'. Smith fc Co., druggists. j25,3mo,d w. MEDICINE FOR THE IMAGINATION. IIow r&ralysis TVIay bo Cured A Hypno tized Subject Puraplojiia. Wo must be permitted to dwell for a mo ment on this medicine for tho imagination, which is entitled to tho name of suggestive therapeutics. Tho process is as follows: In fluenced by a persistent idea, suer;ted by external circumstances, a paralysis is devel oped. The physician makes use of his au thority to suggest the idea of an inevitable, incontestable cure, end tho paralysis is cured accordingly. This euro, as well us tho devel opment of functional disturbance, was di rectly effected by an idea. An idea may, therefore, bo, according to circumstances, a pathogenic and a therapeutic agent. This notion is not new, but, since ifc was misinter preted, it has remained unfruitful. The most important of the organic disturb ances produced by an idea is en experiment on vesication, performed by Focaehou, a chemist at C harmed. Lie applied some posr- ago stamps to tho left Khou'.er of a hypno tized suujeec, Keeping tr-cm in their place wiLa bomosu-ips or diachylon and a com press; at tho same time he suggested to the subject that ho had applied a blister. The subject was watched, and when twenty hours naa eiapsea the dressing, which had re mained untouched, was removed. Tho eni dermis to which it had been applied was thickened and dead and of a vellowish-wh'to color, end this region of the Bkin was puffy nn sqrrounaea uy on intensely red zone. It was in lSGt) that Russell Reynolds firs; holc'cj. iae existence or motor and sensory disturbances, developed under the influence of an idea. Tho motor disturbance some times consists in spasms, in ataxic or inco- ordinated movements, and more frequently . n nAralirm'a .-!-. ."..'.- .... . I i lm oao ; uivu uimuLa Lilt) upjjer i LIU OS. Erb gives to these symptoms the name of imaginative paraplegia. Tho type of this paraplegia is afforded by Reynold's first ob servation, which concerned a young woman who was affected by paraplegia under the following circumstances: She lived alone with her father, who tvJ undergone a re verse of fortune, and who tecanio paralytic in consequence of protracted anxiety. She supported the household by giving lessons, which involved loDg walks about tho town. Influenced by the fatigue caused by so much walking, it occurred to her that she might herself become paralyzed, and that their sit uation would then bo terrible. Hauii-ed Ly this idea, sbo felt a growing weakness in her limbs, and after a whilo was quite unable tc walk. Tho pathol.,.gy of the" affection was understood by Reynolds, who prescribed a purely mtral treatment. IIo finally con vinced his patient that she was able to walk, and, in fact, sho resumed the practice. AIAI. Rinet and Fere ia PopulLV Science ilontaly. ?p.-l cf fi TpchnTtjal EuhooJ. "When the I'itlsburg father of a bright boy wishes to ma!o of t'ae lad a man skilled ia mechanical matters, a mechanical engSieer competent to be Lis father's right hand man in tho big workshop or factory or mill, tho boy muut be scai 500 mile3 from homo to re ceive tho education desired. This busy, industrial city is full of men with muscl3 and eyes trained to. mechanical work. But their knowledge is superficial and their brains have not been developed as have their muscles and their even. They can carry out but not evolve mechanical ideas. That power must bo conferred by institutions way off at Troy, at Boston, or at New York. There is not even a good industrial school in Pittsburg, a place where the sons or mill owners can acquire practical knowledge of tho processes which in after life he will be called upon to superintend, or le set down as knowing less than the cheapest mechanic in his employ. There are bright boys whoso fathers do not care, for maay reasons, to send them to a distant institution. Tho al ternative is to let him go right out among the workmen, and there plant his feet firmly upon the lower rounds of the ladder leading to mechanical expertness. One such boy, a few months ago, deter mined to obtain a practical mechanical edu cation, and was encouraged by his father in so doing, and his first week's experience was among colored workers in a steel milk He id now foreman of one department. Most boys would find this a debasing companionship, and most fathers would find it impossible to permit a son to acquire information in such a way. Meanwhile, home institutions teach boys everything except practical knowledge of their father's business. They can, leaving adjacent colleges, boast of thorough knowl edge of the dead languages, but they do not know the difference between crucible and Bessemer steel, and to detign an improved furnace or bit of machinery would be harder for theni than- the integral calculus. The founder of a school of technology in Pitts burg would rear unto himself a better monu ment than if ho gave a costly library build ing to each city. Chicago Bulletin. j F- HERRRWK! SCO . CORSET IDEP-A.X.TXI3SITT, (I o O O O fl 3D T7 IS. .A. 3 1.31 AND ECONOMIC Al O O O ) ) This waist is dcsignetl to meet tle requirements of ladies who eannot, eomfortiibl y, wear a still and rigid corset,, while it can he worn with as much comfort as an ordinary drens waist. It will give the -ame elegance of contour as the heaviest boned corset in the market, while the stays are so arranged that they will give sup ort to the Lack md sjiino and in nowise interfere with the freedom mid comfort )t the wearer. The weight of the clothing is trnntfenxd fix in the lips to the shoulders by means of the i?houldcr-stiaps, which are ad justable to suit any form or length of waist. "We have these waists in "White, Cirey and (Jold r.nd the price (o introduce them will be $1.00. Sjzes IS to 28. 78 also Garry a Fall Lias of liie following Corsets : .Dortrees Duplex, IWtrces Skirt Ibiipportii.g, ZS li 5 o Corsets, Loomers Elasting Comfort Ilip, Satin Corset:-, V. C. Corte f s, " J. C. Corsets, C. 1. Corsets. Our Cleopatra is the lni-t Si.ro corftt ever brown over any counter; our THO French "Wove fit $1.50 cannot be du plicated in this city; our Ulanche Extra T-ong (:.-et jit $1.0 i a bar gain; Childrc-Hs Corset "Waists at -15 and Go cents. sea a ttiat&u&KsJsSa vf Ca feeYij Ono Boor Sast T ?TT B. &. M. Time Table. GOIXG WKST. vO. 1. 5 :20 a III. VJo, 3. C :40p, m. Vo. 5 I) :.5 a. 111. N'o 7.--7 -.45 l. 111. Vo. .--6 :17 p. 111. No. 11 6 :05 a, 111. GOING KAST. No, 2.-4 :' p. 111. No. 4. 10 :.'i(J a. in. No. C. 7 :15 p. in. No. 8. 9 -JtO it. in. No. 1-J :45 a. in. No. 12. -0 -AO 1 . ki. A'l trains run daily by wavof Omaha, exer? t 'os 7 and 8 which run to and from Sehujler daily except Suixhiy. No. no is a ptul to Pacific Junction at s r.ti.a m . ly is a sluh from 1'acific Junction at 1 1 a in. Pf.tfMINENT BUSINESS MEN. FOl! . LE On. r-'M inutile If tins my it"i- loiiceon the N. W. r-jrucr or Elm and lilh Ms. sakl in -iiei ty con-iist - of U block v. ilh a jroou tory and a half house i f ix rooms. ward robes and one p.iatry ; good wll aiwi cjy water ; twenty-seven le;:iin aj;!; tiri x. anl n abundance of sina'l fruit of ajl kin;-, tf V. It. H A'l E-i. Win. Meroid & Hon ry G83& Mm Boots iU llm or Ladies and Gents FURNISHING - GODS. lie keeps as large and as well Ae can be found any place in thp eit v ami make sou iriee$ that defy coiue thiun. Agents for Harprr's Eszsr P.ttsra; ni Ea'l's Csrcst C. F. SMITH, The Boss Tailor. Mala St., Over Menrt-s' Slice Sioie. lias the liest and most complete stock of samples, both foreign and d iiK-stic woolens that ever tame west of JlissonrS river. Xote these prices Basinet f-uits from lo to ft.-fsg suits. to $45, pants f 4, $0, sG..l0 and upwards. C5TWill guaranteed a fit. rices Defy CompeiHion. Shado Tree?, If yon want any kind of trees, e dl on M. Arc-her at Poist 1 & Spencer's if ore, on lower Main street, Plattsmouth, Neb. 4t Southeast querter section 14, township 10, range 12; price $1,800. Northwest quarter section 8, township 13, ja-.ge 10; price $2,000. Windham & ' Da vies. Subscribe a p II o (- o o COfrlFQRTAB LE AND ( o o o o Mbia i sta s2Va sa? ITirct ITct'l 73axiZz. Herald. f 1 A TT V 'Ire Niht3 and Saturday HatiEee COMMENCING Eunice Goodrich i:rr. uild - BY A COMPANY OF MERIT. JtEl'EitT.JlK!-:. THURSDAY - - i'KAKLOFVVOr. I'lilOAY - ... hAU'S BOV." s.vn ao.w - v a vri i). a iic-ranu. G r h d In m'AjLL t i l c e a: 2 p. u. Saturday ao EJissic i;c 15. 3 zri, Zho ctm. As .-onw-.i.i" f U,f. ."!,!,!, IW,KrVDt two ;,.h u M,i;,.s v.m -.rLway. one Mioir ::y Aia'.i.iee. i.i.t Sii'urday ti':ht. Dr. C. A. Marshall DB,MTSST( I'l enervation I nntui;.l te-eth a cprcialty fetfi extracted u ithvvt ixiin tnj u of LauQh'lna at.' All work warranted. Prices recallable.. flTXr.KKAI.irs IiLOCK I'l-ATHstoUTH. Nkb, N. SULLIVAN. A Harney at Law. Will .. g.ve vrr.mrt .mention to ail .i i7.a In" rusted t him. OUire Iu fn son EWfc East -ide. riaHsmoulh, N-l. tasc If it is real estate you want, see WintU ham & Daviea column ou second page. If.