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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1889)
ptotteiiitmii) muln (('II 8I2COXD Y1SAU PJjATTSMOUTJI, NEliUASKA, FKIDAY EVENING, MAY 17, 1881). IK- i TTi.. f ROYAL ?SS'oN. 1 Mm Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of pur- ii. strength Htid wholeMonieiies-i. More econo mical in in tlic nr.liuary klndx, and cannot be olil tn competition with the multitude of low teat. ,sh rt weight slum or plio-phate powders. <l tmhl in rmiM. I'oVAL 1JAKIMO l'OWDKK Co., li Wall ht. N. Y. crlY oiaaGJ5is. Mayor. ricrk, Treasurer, F, M. UirnKT W K Fox - Jam ic- Pattkiimox. jk. - HVKDN Cl.AltK II. C. h"II.MllT S Ci.irruKD I. 11. DUNN Attorney, Ki'iriiircr. - . Pollee .fu.!j,-o, llarrha.il, Couucilmec, 1st ward, " 2nd " 3rd " 4th " Gill " I A Sa i.i s uii v C liKKKK.N KKLD. j llt. A HlllI'MAN l M JOSKH t M it Ainu i-it v I t'i A. Hl".MIl.E. j Con O'Con.nob. ( I McCai.lk.v. I J I SIMPSON, 1 L O'N KIL. 1 J W JoriN ,Work-( Fkki uouokh I W H Nkwelu W JoriN )V,t'HAIBXAN Board Pub Treasurer, Deputy 'i'reasurei, - Clerk. Deputy Clerk. Kecntuer of l"eI -Deputy Iteeurjcr Clerk of District- Court, Sheriff, Surveyor. -Attorney. Hupt. of Pub School. County Judze. D A. CA5IPUH.L - Tiim. Pollock UlKt ClclTCHi'IPXn FitANK IIK.'KSON W. II. Pool John M. i.kvda V. t Showaltkr J. C KlKKXHAKY 11, c. schmidt Matthew Ckkixo Mav.nahii Spink C. ltUSSSLL KOAkd or f rEUVI30Jt3. A, R.Todd. Loi irf Koltz, A. B. Diouso-V, Ch'tn., - Flattsmouth Weeping Water t- Kiin wood GIVIG SOGIHTMS. 1 ASS L(H'5i' No. US. I. O. O. F.-Meets V'cvery Tud:iy eventus? of each week. All trHiiriifiit bi.;h.!H are respectfully invited to Ilk vrrMoi- ni encampment o. 3. x. o. j V in' s ev:ry alternate Friday n tc n:fi':a in H: M i'ouic Hall. Visiting Ht!i;' iifJ luyUfJ ti u:i;itii.. . t'EHKAKA ClIAPTKK. NO. 3, It. A. M Mo.-ts ,i"ciiu: ::"i'l f:iJt! Tuesday of e:wh month at Maion'. Hall. Tr:t:u!iu;f brothers are icvited to meet vitli us. K. K. 'Vhitk, 11. P. Wm. Jv. Secretary.. iSI.ATrsMOUTil !!)(; E N.. A. F. A.M. Meet on tii fir"t and third Momiays of each motiih at l li-ir hall. All transient hrotli er are cordially in-. l:ed to meet with us. J. G. P.ichkv, W. M. WM. I! at--. Secre! Ary. IJLATTaVOfTi: l.ODCE XO.D.A.O, U. W. Mec-: everv alie-uate Fii.lay even'.u at Rockwood ha'ia: M'ciec.k, Ail transient broth er am resp ctiuiiy invited to attend. Ia. S. Iront M. W. ; F. lloyd. Foreman : S. V. Wilde, Ke-cordcr ; Leonard An Jerson. Overseer. Wi&cn you Men's Custom Made Suits, - Men's Rlack Imported Cork Screw Men's Business Suits Men's Cheviat Suits - - 1A OVMP S0.3M. MODERN WOODMKN of VvtUm. Meets "second suid fourth Mun lay v.-iii,ij; at K. of P. hail. All tmnsieut brother arts rci';e!ed to meet with u. I. A. Kewro iter. Ver.;-r o jii:si'l : Nile' Worthy Advl-er ; S. C. ViSis. liiiuwor j W, A. bote-:. CierX. w BOOTS BJbSM SE&tHSS, TIC TTJKIKS BJSSM ITILiISESS, EVERYTHING MUST GO IN THIS . GREAT DISCOUNT A DAY FOR ACCIDENTS. Two Mori Under tho Influence of Gravity and Another Knocked Out by a Hand Car. All get Badly used up. Last evening just before 0 o'clock, Wm. J. Eagan, a painter in the employ of Peter Ellingston, met with a bad acci dent at the residence of Geo. Weidinan, on North Sixth street. Mr. Eagan was up on a sixteen foot ladder painting; when the ladder gaye way at the bottom without giving him time to jump, and he struck the ground with his head and shoulders, breaking tha right collar bone. Mr. Egan is a young man but exceeding ly unfortunate with his bones, having at' one time before broken hi9 left arm, and at another time had his right elbow mutilated so that that arm is yet crippled; but he has "grit" and was out on the street today. When the accident happened a conveyance was called and he was taken to Dr. Livingston's and the fracture set. IIAMDLED BY A HAMD CAK. A second accident happened last eve ning to Mike Carrol, section boss of section two and half, from here to Orea- polis. With several hands he was coming in from a trip with the car. going at a good rate, which he attempted to stop by setting the brakes. When the strain came on the brake it broke and the lever or handle to the car suddenly started. Carrol was struck on the head and knocked from the car. Ills injuries amounted to a sculp wound and bruises on the head and knee. FELL OVEIt A BANK. Jasper Clauser, a section hand from icifio Junction, carqe over yesterday with a friend to have a time and they rocccdcd to do so by taking on a load of hilarity liouid and also purchased a quanity to keep up the glory tUl U;ey should get home. They went to the depot much to late to catch the passen ger over the river and proceeded to the switch shanty above the depot on the river bank, to wait, thinking they would grab a freight. Shortly after 9 " o'clock Clauser left the shanty and went out in the rain nd darkne. Soon afterward howling groans were heard and Cilauser!s friend, with the section men, went out to ook for him with a lantern. Clauser was seated on a tie about twelve feet btlow. The men went to him and helped him up the bank and to the doctor's office for ;is face was badly mutilated, and as tye expressed it his countenance was spoil ed." In the darkness, and tipsy condition of limself he ljacj stepper jyep the rnfe which is very steep and tumbled to the bottom. Just what hurt him is not known but his nose was badly m illed aod broken; a severe gash alsa extended across the right eye. The b,ank is uaed for a dump and there was anything from cinders and glais to railroad iron, to do ha work, In its treatment of rheumatism and all heumatic troubles Hibbard's Rh umatic Syrup stands first and foremost above all others. Read their medical pamphlet, and learn of the great medicinal value of the remedies which enter into its com position. Freeze your ice cream with the lightning freezer sold by Johnson Bros. 9wlm TTTTVOTlTt Tre- can buy a Tliis (Krent IMscount Sale will only continue sliort time longer. FORMER PRICE. XOW. 25.00. 33 per cent off, $10.67. $20.00. 44 $13.35. 15.00. " $10.00. S 10.00. S 6.65. Now Telephones. . The telephone list still continues to grow and thus manifest tiie general im pulse of all Plattsmouth enterprises to getjto the front. Tho numbers recently added over a hundred, are as follows: 102, Dr. Marshall, res. 102, Wm. Turner, res. 103, Soennichsen & Schirk, grocery. 104, Dr. Cook, room. 105, II. A. Waterman & Son, lumber. 10G, Sel Kinkado papering and painting 107, Richey Bros., lumber. 108. II. C. Schmidt, Surveyor. 110, Poor Farm. Fine Job Work a specialty at Tiie Herald office. Fainting aa a Flue Art. "IIow does a woman faint f asked a law yer after adjournment of court yesterday. "We had a young woman on tho stand who declared she had seen a hundred women faiut, and that they all fainted with out stretched arms. Now, how does a woman faint f I declare I don't know. I have seen tho interesting phenomenon a few times, but tho trouble is there's so much excitement that n man forgets to take observations. I think it would bo an interesting question for the court to sift to the bottom. Wo would probably be deluged with contradictory tes timony. In the first place, does a woman faint with outstretched arms? Are out stretched arms a sure sign of a faintf I be lieve it must depend a great deal upon what she fatuts for. Why does a woman faint, and what does she do when she faints "On the stage we have seen, for instance, Cecilia faint with Modus, but as I have seen it represented sho held his hands tight in hers and then on his shoulders and then half way around his neck. I have seen the Mountain Maid faint. She begins deliberately to say, 'I am fuinting then she repeats, 'I must faint.' and finally declares she 'will just bo J real down sick if she doesn't faint.' Are these i true reflections of feminine fainting off the stage? "I am afraid the resources of testimony will be exhausted before giving us any rules for a genuine faint. There is such an infinite variety of phases that codification of laws of fainting is impossible. I confess I don't know when a faint is a natural phenomenon ancj when it s a fine art." Philadelphia, In quirer, She Got the It rush. In th 3 broad hallway of John B. Jeffery's residence, on South Park avenue, hangs a silver mounted fox's brush. One evening a party of friends who wero calling there' hap- then Mr. Jcffery took them out into the hall and pointed up at the brush. "That was captured at a fox hunt by my little daughtep, She was little then only 13 yar.s of age-r-but she is grown a grea! deal since, as yoy caff see- This was an English fox hunt, too, There wag po play about itit was hard vovk. They rode all day and came home clad in tatters." Theii Mrs. JelTery spoke up. "Yes," she said, "it was glorious. Emma was invited to ride, and when sho loft the hotel r the morning I was on tb? vtvV'vw io see the party cf?. Svtno young English snips who did not' know mo sat near by and quietly laughed at the idca of a little American gir', riding in a fox hunt vriih Ensrlis ."iplo.'!A they rode off JT.ir.nia ayed her. fcana at me and I 4i.fi 'lion cotiie ouc!; without that brush," daughter!' Theu tho young English men siuuk away. Thai evening, while we were nt dinner, t he party returned. Emma dashed hito the dining room, her habit in tatters, and, waving tho brush about h.ef head, sho shouted: '1 ant, tt Uiuumial' I tell you it vui the proudest moment 'of : my life, and thoso sneeriiig young Englishmen were tho first to make a heroine of her." CUicsg'4 Herald.- Women In the Garden. Why not! I have at least three personal acquaintances who owe much to old Dame Nature for renewed youth and new beauty of face and form gained by work in the garden. One is a lady of amplo fortune, who loves her lawn, with its trees and vines and flow ers as things of beauty. I dcuDt if the thought of health ooour-s to her, but the ef fect is patent to all her f rieuds. Another U a lovely little woman who has been in ill health for years. This season, moving to a now home, where her friends and acquaint ances were scarce, sheer loneliness drove her to her crarden. There the needs of the erow- LTTTiTI of (Clothes for a Men's Business Suits Men's " " -Men's Working Suits Men's Custom Made Pants HOW BEP PlattoimoutIto9 ETebraska. ILower Main t lug r.i;r; appeaiea u A:ei , una n. her vLsits were repeated, until at last ad her morning hours woro spent among them, iiiunting, traiiiing, woe. ling, thinning and digging. Tho result i.s tho renewal of health and strength unknown before for years, and new happiness and greater contentment. Tito third is a good woman whoso sorrows seemed piled mountain high through the loss by death within a few months of her husband and child, and of property as welL Trained to no work as a girl, she seemed helpless. But her little garden demanded attention, and her very losses compelled her to work with her hands. Here, too, the soothing halm of pure air, exercise and occupation worked its marvels in recovered health, contentment and a spirit of self helpf uluess. Vick's Mag azine. A Good Natured Wife. The old lady who never spoke ill of any one, and even intimated that Satan himself set some good people an example of perse verance, must have been a relative to the woman who lived in Sussex, England, in tho days when the kettle was hung from the crane in an open fireplace. An English clergyman tells the story: A man, whose wife wr Ij'-wl vr"i -. re markably even temper, cl ovci iuj .uy to a neighbor one evening and said: - "Neighbor, I should like to see my wife cross for once. I've tried all I know, and I can't make her cross, no way." "You can't make your wife cross?" said his neighbor. "I wish I could mako mine anything else. But you just do what I tell you, and if that won't act nothing will. You bring her in some night a lot of the crookedest sticks you can get, them as won't He in no form, and see how she makes out then." The pieces of wood were accordingly brought in, as awkward and crooked and contrary as could be found. Tho man went away early to work, and at noon returned to see the result of his experiment. He was greeted with a smile and tiie gentle request: "Tom, do bring me in some more of those crooked sticks, if you can find them; they do just fit around the kettle so nicely 1" Youth's Companion. Somhvis fcw and Wonder fuL I heard something this morning which was new and wonderful. It was not the song of tho robin. Neither was it the sound of any angel trumpet blown at sunrise across the sparkling worlds. It was no herald of good fortune announcing royal news. It was some thing better than any of these, and far more strange. It was the bona fide voice of a flesh and blood man singing the praises of Lis iiiother-iu-lawl In this flippant age when newspapers abound in poor jok?3 f.t the ex pense of womanhood conwiwa-attid by mother hood tb,e sound oi such speech struck wonder to m'y sout "There is no other woman on earth," said the man, "beforo whom I would kneel as be fore a heavenly shrine. She is the noblest and sweetest woman Qod ever made, save One, and thai one is her daughter and my wife," Wasn't that speech worth recording in this year of our Lord, when men tire of their wives as they do of their hats and change them quite as often! To hogYm.k: die aged man with seven clnldivn talk like that about his wifft and his wife's nt'her seemed, U ue he ' opening not ta the millen nium cadenza! I only hope he meant what -e am- "Ti'e" in Chicago Tribune. Her Lit tie ah. Jklrs. Hichurch Edith, I was pained to soo that you put only twenty-five cents in the con tribution box this morning. Edith It was every cent I had in tho world. Father gave me S'iO yesterday, and after paying for my spring boimet and buy ing a pound of candy I had just twenty-five cents Hi I gave that willingly, gladly to the church, and you don't seem to appreciate my good deeds at alL Pittsburg Bulletin. The Inconsiderate Children. Mistress Well, Bridget, what is it? Bridget (fresh from the old country) Sure it's the childer, mum. Don't I clano the scraper by the dure, as ycz tould me? An' whin the childer kim homo from school sure they plastered it all over wid mud intire-ly. Will ye belave, mum, they rubbed their dirt shoes on it? Divi a bit will I bo after clan ing it pgain! Sure it breaks the hairt of mo to be t lira ted so. Harper's Bazar. A Jamestown, Pa., baby wa3 photographed thirty-five minutes after it was born. The harpy father took tho picture. Tiie IIekald Job Rooms arc the most comp'ete in the county, j A mere song? 3 FORMER PRICE. KOW. $ 8.00. 33 J" per cent off, $ 5.36. S 6.00. " " $ 4.00. $ 5.00. 3.34. $ 7.00. " $ 4.65. OISE IT IS TO TO BE TOP Given Jbui . ion Away A r? s s on mm ESegant EVEIiY PURCHASER OF Clothing HATS, CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, or anything in our Elegant Line of Goods, WILL RECEIVE A Entiteling them to a chance at the Drawing which will take place October 1st. , Tho Leading Clothiers, Buy Furniture at Boeck's. Those who delight in looking at L"ne bedroom suits and upholstered furniture i can be completely gratified by stepping into the furniture stoic of Henry lintck, coiner Main and Sixtli streets. You can I purchase at thi store any furniture f;o;n I j the common chair to the finest tij-hol-1 stored. See my fine Alatka Refngeictors and bargains in odd pieces. IIunky Boi-XK. "JULIUS PEPPERBERG" MANUFACTURE! OF AND WHOLESALE a RETAIL DEALER IN TIIK j Choicest Brands of Cigars. ! i including our Flor de Pepporbsrgo and 'Suds FULL LINK OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES aiways in stock. Nov. 20, 1885. "F" 1-S tram sia&rkeii price of Boj-s' Suits - - - Childs' Suits ... Working Shirts 35 cents. Shirts Call and be convinced that what Xj--T 1 1 I I I TO BE Away tvery daturaay 1 l k t Lore, a T ONE DOLLAR'S WORTH OF 11 5th & Main St. 5 flfj OFFERED for an Incurable case of Catarrh In the Head by the proprietors ol DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. Symptoms of Catarrh. Headache, obstruction of nose, discharjfi faliintr into throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid ; eyes weak, rinrinif In ears, deafness, difficulty of clearing throat, xpecto vation of offensive matter: breath offensive: nsell and taste impaired, and general debility. Only a few of theae symptoms hkcly to be pres ent at once. Thousands of cases result in on umption. and end in the (rrave. By its mild, soothing-, and healing properties Dr. Safe's Remedy cures the wornt cuaea. 60c. The Original IITT1B Liver Pills. . c vk n cyyvT. bit & llarmUf. TTnonnnlxl an n L,Iver PHI. Pmalleflt.cheap- ast, easiest to take. One Pellet a I)oe. Cvre SIcfc Headache, lliliou Headache, nizzinea. Constipation, ludineatloii. HUioua Attacks, and all derangements of th stomaob and bowels. 25 ct. by dxutrgiata. TMf . . (7 FORMER PRICE. NOW. - $ 3.50. 33 per cent off, S 2.34. $ 2.00. " $ 1.32. and Drawers 35 cts. Overalls 35c. we say is true. SALE ! 01 &ifff Furnishing Goods, IC FT AYEFL