irt mom rr,r. vv J, 4 ' f ft ,u . ti r .... v- u' 2 r PL.ATTSMOUT1I, NisbjlASXCi, WEDNESDAY EVENING AP.IUL. 17, ', l.89. IN USUI Kit J 81 SECONi YKAli i TO if m - m ! t 1 ? ' C I ' t 1 7 llif Absolutely Pure. This -iwit iirvt-r v:ir'u-H. A in:irvl of pur It str-nirt li :ui. vvlnifineiit-s-. Morn remio Iniral In n fin- oriiii:iry kl ml-, ami :il)iit le Mold in conn-el i'io:i m!li I In- mull It u, if low t'"t. sli rt wt-iilit alum or lio-ha'r powder. Sn!it mily lit fiM. I'm.vL i:.kl . l'OWDKlt Co.. li Wall M. X. Y. GL'Y OFl'IGlIliS. Mayor, rierk. Tr:iHiirT, 1 M. Klf'll KT W K Fox - .Iamkh IMttkkotn.jk. KVKii.V Cl.AIIK II. C. ."('IIMIIIT S r'l.lKKUKD attorney, Kiikiiii-t. Police .f "i-l;, Marshall, Councilinen, l.st w.irI, 2nd " " 3rd " I. II. DON V Wki-kbacii A XAI.IsIIIUIY li M .lllNM I fit. A Sill I'M AN M it M r it I'll v I s v nirrroN 4th. V ll'CONXDR. P Mi Cai.i.kn. I'kki 1.1 W I I) II Johns v,c;iiaikm.vn Board Pub. Work s Kl IIOIIIIKK IIawkoutii GIVIG SOGIKTJiS. 1ASS LdDHK ?. in;. I. U. O. K. Meets 'every Tue.-lay evening of each week. All transient brothers are ret-occllully lovitetl to attend. JLATTMOUrU ENCAMI'MKXT No. 3. I. O. each mouth In the Ma-omc Hall. Brothers are invited to altend. Visiting 1ASS CAMP NO. 3X1 MOD K UN WOODMKN of America Meets second ami fourth Mon day eveiiius? at K. of 1. hall. All transient brother are requested ti meet- with uh. 1. A, Newcomer, Venerable l.'onsul ; i. K, Nile' Worthy Adviser ; S. C. Wilde, Hanker ; W. A. Boeck, Clerk. JEBKASXA CIIAITKIL X- 3, K. A. M. ! Meets second and fourt li Tuesday of each month at MaxonV Hall. Transcient brothers are invited to meet with us. f. E. '.VllITE, II. P. Wm. IJ vs. Secretary- PLATTSMOUTH I)IKIE NO.G. A. K. & A.M. Meets on tin fir-t nud third Mondays of each month at tl:i- hal!. All transient broth ers are cordially in , Ued to et with us J. ti. Kiciikv, W. M. Wm. Hats. Secretary. Ijlattsmou r.'i r.onnE xo. . a. o. u. w. Meeti" every aileruate Friday evening at Kockwood hail at .s o'clocK. Ail transient broth ers are respe.-tfu'ly lnvif.'d to attend. Larson, M. W. ; r Boy 1. Foreman : S. C. Wilde, Kecorder ; Leonard Anderson. Overseer. 1AS3COUNCIU XO. ln21.Itf)YAL VKOAXUM V meets tlie eecon each month at Area? i u in I! ir. X. Ulenn, Kegent. P. C. Mtxoa. Secretary. ZION COM'iANDUlV. XO. 5. K. T. .Mmim flr?;t and third t ediu'sii-ty lilsjnt oi each month at M ison's .'i.i'.i. is;!in Drotlier are cordially invited to nine' with u. WM. Hays. Bee. F. K. Wiiitk. E. C. PLATTSMO'JTH BOARD Or TRADE President Kobt. B Wiudham 1st Vice Presid-ut A- 15- Todd 2nd Vice President . Win Xeville Secretary Treasurer IHKKiT J. C. Biehev. F. E. W J. A. (,'onii-r, B. El-"u. C. der. J. V. VtecUbaeh. ........ r. iiriniiniiu F. B. tiuiliiiian its. in.-. .1 ('.. Patterson. vV. lier::iau, F. tior- McCOrilHic P03 T 45 G. A. tl. IHS TrU. jj pirK-tov t'o'iiinander, Br-xi. HrMi'LK -s "Jiior Vice 8. CABKKiAM J.i.ii.r ' Tim-. Mi.ks Adjutant. A.SHIIMAX h-rs. lLffsKV srKK.i;iif ;.' a TlllSl'l! -iili--i oi inir Jam ics ilicKsox. linard Ser.t Major. AvnKsv . Fit v.. ..!u.irrer Master ert. L iM't'iin Pot Chiplaiu Meetlu-' s-v'ur.lay evenuu t Uniorv News. Fine weather and plenty of ruin in this icinity, what we hve leen iwaitino; lor bo lonj(. Small grti'a 0 ant -next on pro gramme ia corn planting which will noon be CDinmeuced if the weather keeps warm. Horticulture is prospering, most of the gardens made. Corn is scarce in the country but cheap, about 20c to 27c per bushel. A good many cattle are being fed; a few hare sold but the majority are holding for higher prices. Kev. E. F. Perry of Morgan Patk theological seminary tilled the Baptist pulpit Sunday, April 14th. Geo. MayGeld jr., of the Elm wood Echo brother of L. J. Mayfield of our lo cal papcr,pcnt part of lavt week in town. The ladies aid society met at the Bap tist churdh Wednesday. Silas Cox who was injured by the tail ing in of a bridge over the Weeping Water last week, is recovering rapidly. Kev. J. G. Day. our local Methodist minister preached at the Union M. E. church last Sunday and will fill the pul pit at the Lcwistou M. E. church Sunday at 11 a. m Every one is cordially in vited. (J. M. Graves fc Co. have teceutly ar rived hrre from Thurman la., and will open up a In ick yard in the north part of town north of the saw mill. Work will be commenced immediately aud if all is well they will be in running order in fifteen days. A new barber shop is being built our town and Geo. E. McDcrmid will in be tliu proprietor. Mrs. C. L. Graves wife of our "local" lawyer arrived here Monday morning ' from Mo. where she has been yUitiug for some time. Miss Jenny June Sweet, of Ashland, passed through here Sunday. Mr. W. M. Conley and wife of Pacific Junction, wh haye been visiting friends in this vicinity took their departure for home Monday morning by way of Omaha. Miss Josie Baruum, of Plattsmouth, called on fiiends near here Saturday and Sunday. Hattie. Horning District Mr. E. G. Fickler, who for the past two years has been out west on a homestead, came down last Wednesday for a brief visit. Mr. Fickler will start for the west Thursday, accompanied by hia sister Lottie. The young folks of this district, met at the residence of Mr. Thos. Sullivan, Saturday evening for a party. They were welcome and the evening was well spent. Joshua Gapen, a farmer living three miles south of town, met with a painful accident which resulted in the loss of his right eye. While he was milking, one of the cows tossed her head aside striking Mr. Gapen in the eye with her horn. Elmer Cole spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Hull. Our spring term of bcjooI opened Tuesday, April 2nd. Miss Lida Corken, a graduate of the Burlington Junction normal academy, of M., is teaching. Next Friday the quarterly meeting at Liberty chapel will begin and continue till Sunday evening. Fanjty Clark. Do not fail to call at Gering & Co's and h ive-your eyes examined by thier optician this week. d-6t A perfectly sound body and a mind unimpaired are possible only with pure blood. Leading medical authorities in dorse Ayer's Sareaparill as the best blood purifying medicine in existence It vast ly increases the working and productive powers of both hand and brain. Call at Gering & Co's this week and have your eyes properly tested and fit ted with glasses They have secured the services of a practical and manufacturing optician tor this week to fit glasses for them. Remember no extra charge for this advantage. d 6t. JL JD WE(BEM(3HI & S(DH SPECIAL ATTliStlb'K- . At Weckb loh ; MHHrverV Dep't- Weiare the lareet-'and tinest assortment ofladies' .Hid children's hats in the city. Call early and select your Eas ter bonnets. Infant's white lace caps from 33 cents upward. Prices sure to suit. Joseph V. "Weckbacii. H-Boeck's Furniture Emporium It is a fact that Henry Boeck has as complete a stock of elegant furniture at his block on Sixth and Main streets, as any store in Chicago. Handsome furn ishings for home and office can bo pur chased there from a fine upright piano to a hand looking glass; at present, how ever, a great demand is being made on his refrigorators, which are such a com fort during the hot summer season. Do not fail to furnish your dining room with one. Attention. Tickets are now on sale at J. P. Young's for the Washington reception and htnquet. The ladies will esteem it a fayor if those expecting to attend will procure their tickets early. Banquet tickets 73c. Gallery tickets 25 cents. tf C. J. Inskeep, is at Gering & Co's. to attend to the optical defects of all classes and eyes of people: if :Your Eyes are Failing: do not delay seeing him. He has optical instruments and is a practical and manu- facturing optician. Ice! Ice!! Ice!!! F. S. White's wagon is now out deliv ering ice and any parties desiring that article will leave orders at the store. dlw F. S. Wiiitb. It is a very important thing to have glasses properly adjusted for defective eye sight. Germ? fc Co, offer special in ducements to those needing glasses this week. d-6t NO SMOKE OR SMELL. To the new COAL Oil. Store just recelvedat Jolinson Bros. Call and see them. They will not explode. Easter Hats, Bonnets and Flowers at Mrs. J. F. Johnson's. For all optical troubles go to Gering & Co's apd see Inskeep. I have 500 acres of good pasture, and any one having horses or cows to pasture will do well to call on me. J. B. Slater, tf Plattsmouth, Nebraska. Eyesight treated at Gering & Co's. Plenty of feed, flour, meal at Heisel's mill, tf graham and Millet for sale Enquire Burke's implement store. at F. A. Inskeep, the optician, at Gering & Co's. "1 never saw that 'ero child in those parts afore," 6aid an inquisitive dame to her equally curious daughter in this city, a day or two ago, "and I mean to find out who her folks bo an' where she lives when she's to hum." A minute later a nasal twang was heard on the air calling, "Sis, sis, say, 6is, who be you an' where do you be long?" A proud little figure drew herself up haughtily and a childish voice responded, "2Iy mauama has taught me never to answer impert'nent questions." 'Du tell," wa3 the rather subdued re aoonse of the disappointed riewsmonser Ie fined. When the late Professor Proctor was an English school examiner, he one day asked a little girl to tell him the differ ence between a man and a brute. Sh said: "A brute is an imperfect beast. Man la a. rip.rfect lieact." Yoixlh'uClomruxnl'w This Space SHE KNEW. TJn fh front row we aat, ' Whilo'lier ir?fe opera hat Quite tlieitered us both from the raar. And enabled ns well My great (taaslon to tell ' To ber charmingly shell like pink ear. Twoh an opera troupe. Where the star was a "supe,"1 Ballet large and of scenery a lot. "Now, what think youf" I said. As the lime light shone red "Tout ensemble is fine, is It not?' As I spoke came a blare From the orchestra there; All the braaa bonis were put to the test. Ah ! no Boston girl she. With her "thisness" of "tho" My companion came from the far west. Sho said as she smiled On the great ballet wild: "They ure gaudily dressed, no dispute; The ensemble's mtentie. And the. chorus immense, But there's for, for too much of the toot." Oraaha World. A Great Composer. George Frederick Handel, although a native of Germany, being Imrn i i I !.!?. Saxony, on Feb. 2i, 1G83, passed the greater part of his life in England. Even in childhood ho sacrificed his hours of play and his meals for t'ae study of music, and at 10 years of age composed a set of sonatas that wero not without value. As a composer, TTandel was great in every style. In his choral works, he throws at an immeasurable distance all who preceded and followed liirn. Very soon after Ids arrival in London, in 1710, Handel attracted the attention of Queen Anne. A Te Deum and Jubi late, composed to celebrate the treaty of Utrecht, gained liim a Tension of 200. Handel died on Good I Yiday, April 13, 1759, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. The composer ave a perform ance of his own compositions in 1749, by which 500 were realized for the Foundling hospital, which institution re ceived 7,000 from the annual repetition of this performance during the ten fol lowing years. Philadelphia Times. A Shrewd Otter. One day as I was s';andingon the shore of Cranberry bog pond j saw a large flock of ducks near the nr.ddle of the pond and soon after discovered three otters in front of me, but not near enough to shoot. While watching tie maneuvers of the otters they started down the pond in a straight line for the ducks. The old leader struck out lively, leaving his mates far behind, and as he neared the ducks he dived and presently I saw one of the ducks disappear beneath the surface after a considerable struggle, the remainder of i ine iiock rising anu iiymg away in great commotion. The otter had gone under the floc k and selected a certain duck and pulled him under. A few minutes later tho otter made his appearance near the south shore of the pond with the duck in his mouth. Forest and Stream. Improvement in Farm Tools. Wo hear very little about the advance of improvemenl; in agricultural imple ments and farm machinery, but that branch of the industrial pursuits of the country is keeping abreast of the times, nevertheless. The plow of twenty-five years ago is now a curiosity, and those who sold and used it cannot realize how it was made to serve tne purposes for which it was manufactured. And the plow of a dec ade since, while perhaps not so crude, has been abandoned for a better implement. And so it is all through tho list of agricultural imple ments and faim machinery, and in an other quarter of a century it is possible that the farmer will walk no more in the cultivation of his farm. St. Louis Globo- Democra"- tlapaoese Oranges. Japanese oranges are different from our ideal of an orange as they can well be, separating from the peel almost as easily as a grape, dividing into sections at the slightest pull, each section like a separate fruit, dissolving its piece into your mouth with flavor of cherries, leaving no pulp behind. Very good, ex cellently good, they are. They, the latest of her fruits, add the crown of ex cellency to the already overflowing cor nucopia of this "Beautiful Land of the Sunrise." True Flai;. is Reserved By f GRANDEST BUSINESS OPENING Ever seen in Plattsmouth. Everybody pleased with our Exhibition. It was the universal expression of everyone that examined our Suits that they were Cut Gracefully Well 1 J No one desires to have Tailor-Made Garmentsjwho has fitted on one of our Suits. OUR HONEST ENDEAVORS are to sell only the Best Clothing. The Confidence of all classes al ready gained is a Feather in our Business Cap that will continue to wave gracefully in the balmy days of t) present Spring. Kemember also that WE WIU UTPBSU any prices quoted to you in C. ! Tho Leading Clothiers, - 5tl & Main St. JULIUS PEPPERBERG. MANUFACTURER OP AND WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALER IN THK Choicest Brands of Cigars, including our Flor de Pepperbergo and 'Buds FULL LINE OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES always in stock. Nov. 2tJ. 1885. $di tO A MONTH can be made i u i w eyttvr worK11,s f((r us. Agents preferred who can furnish a horce and give iheir whole time to the business. Spare mom ents my be proiitahlv employed also, a tew vacancies in towns and cities. Ii. F. JOHN SON & CO. , 1003 Maia-st.. Kichmood. Va. Tf. B. Indies eintUiijed alo. Ntver mind alunit tending lnmp for reply. Come qwiek. Your for biz, U. F. J. Co. B.&. M. Time Table. GOIJTG W1CT. No. 1, a H a m. No, 3. S :1C p. in. No. 5 8 :0l a. la. No. 7.-7 :05 p. m. No. 9. --6 :Cfl p. m. OOINO KAST. No. 2.-4 :44 p. m. No. 4. 10 :23 a. m. No. 6. 7 :28 p. in No. 8. 10 :00a. m. No. 10.--9 :54 a. in. All trains run daily by wavof Omaha. xcept Nom 7 and 8 which run to and from SchuyWr daily except Sunday. Fine Job Work Cheap at The Herald Smccess m Pern Fill anything in our Line of goods. Dr. C- A. Marshall. Resident Dentist. Preservation of the Natural Teeth a. Specialty. Auesthetics given for Pain less Filling on Extraction op Tkktii. Artificial teeth made on Gold, Silver, Rubber or Celluloid Plates, and inserted as soon as teeth arc extracted when de sired. All work warranted. Prices reasonable. FfTZfBltLr'f KOOK. PHTrrf-tfOUTH. NKK WM Id BROWNE XiA.W OFPIGE. 9 P rsonal attention to my care. to all fiusine Eotrust- NOTAItY I.V OITIC'K. Titles Examined. Abstarct Compiled. In surance VVi ittvH, Keal Estate hold. Better Facilities for mating Farm Louo than &&Y O tiier Ageacj Plnttsmosifli, - rbraitka SfSAYER,