Herald.. T.T.CiTi 111 FOURTH YEAR. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, MONDAY JULY 27 1891 NUMBER 276 1 Try .Daily UHa ft n U A V a a 4 7 ft. R017DER Absolutely Pure. A cream of t;irl:ir baking powilt-r. Highest of all in leavening strciith. Latest V. S. ( loveriiiiient Food Re port. TTOKNKV A LAW. WINDHAM te DA VIES. K. H. W1M)11M. J'MIN A. DAVIFS Notary I'uMtc Not;- i'ubln Offli ivt llauk olCii-s I'otiiil) Platttmouth ... - f.r:isha TTORNEV A. N. SULLIVAN. Attorney at-I-aw. Will it prompt atTpntloi, to all Mi-ines rr.tnir-ti-.l to liiui. office in Union block. Kat Stile. I'lattxinouth. Neb. IT C. MtGF.K. M. I. -L is LOCATKO I lot-atfd ;it Kiitht Mile "! rove. He b: ob tained the oltice lonnerlv occupied by MR. MI LUCK Of that dliicc ami cu be foiintl at all hour ex cept wlieii professionally out. TIJUCKER SISTERS. CAKkY A FULL I.1XK OK yVllLUENEKY AND J-RENCH LOWERS, -O- We also li:tve a ilress making department. Sat isfaction guaranteed. SnEKW(.H)lST()kK. PLATTSMOUTH CAR. A. SALSBURY : D-IvN-T-I-S-T : ;otl AX1 PORCELAIN CKOWNS. J)r.f.reiiiwaysan;-stbetic fertile painleKc ex traction of teetli. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Kockwood lUoek IUattsinoiith. Neb. JJRV.IOLA M. FRENCH rilYSICIAX & SURGEON J? ice with Er. Shipmdn HOU1W 10 : 00 to la : 00 a. ni. 3 : 00 to 5 : 00 p. In. 9 : 00 to 11 : 00 a. in. 2 ; 00 to 4 : 00 p. ni. Telephone No 12. i.a itsmol'th Nkh jJEW HARDWARE STORE S. K. HALL & SON Keep all kinds of builders hardware on hand and will supply contract r ou most fav rable terms j TI2ST ROOFING : Spouting and all kinds of tin work promptly one. Orders from the country Solicited 616 Peasl St. PLATTSMOUTH. NEB. IS THE L-K-A-D-I N-G 1 1 -O-U -S-K IN THE CITY KOK NOTIONS. ki:kmsiiin; uoons LACKS E.MbKOlDKKIES K 1 fC H EN NO V KI.T1 ES TIN WAKK. (rLASSWAKE ETC. ETC- The good e ottVr on our 5. 10 and 25 cent "uterscaunot be duplicated elsewhere We hare but one price, aud that the cheapest in town. "THE FAIR" 415 nVE-A-IlNT STEET 1OOL AND PORCELAIN-CROWNS Bridge work anil fine gold work a SPECIALTY. DR. STEINACS LOCAL as well as other fan estheticsetven for the painless extraction of teeth. a A. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald Blec I'KKSOXAL J. II. Waterman spent Sunday in this city the guest of friend. Jacob Vallery, Jr.. boarded the earlj' morning train for Omaha. Mr. C. T. Fleck and wife ami Mrs. G. L. Prentiss are in Omaha to-day. A. J. Graves. Ksq., was called to Nebraska City to-day on legal busi ness. Prof. Kir.nmerow ami his friend, Philip Andres, went to Omaha this morning. Charley Coleman came down irom Omaha Saturday night and spent Sunday with his parents. Miss Phelps, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. K. Phelps, went to Omaha this morning to visit friends lor a few days. Mrs. Niles and daughter Jessie accotnpainied by Mrs. Niles' mother will spend the day in Council Bluffs. General Sherman Sage is off duty at the shops and has gone to Chey enne ami other western cities for a ten clays vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Wash Smith's daughters. Mattie and Lulu, started thin morning for a few days' visit with friends at Geneva. J. P. Young and wife went to Lin coln yesterday morning. Mis. Young returned home to-day while J. P. will remain until Wednesday. Mrs. Dana Hewitt departed this morning for Denison, Texas, where her husband is in charge of a roundhouse for the M. K. & T. rail way. Mrs. Tom Carver of Red Oak vis ited Mrs. J. M. Johns yesterday and departed for home this morning by the way of Omaha and Coihicil Bluffs. Ouite a number of the singers from the turner sociely made up a private picnic party out at Lou Karires olace Yesterday. 1 hey re port a very pleasant time. Mrs. Win. Alexander will start on the flyer to-morrow for a three months trip through the Central States. She will visit at Chicago, at Three River Michigan and at Klkhart Indiana her old home. Sam Hinkle drew a lot at the G. A. R. drawing which was given here nearly a year ago, but to this day he has not received a deed to the premises. Sam is justly indig nant about the matter and certain ly no one can blame him. The latest and one of the great est wonders of the Nineteenth cen ttiry will be on exhibition this week, on Main street. This is a view of the moon in seven different positions from the great Lick Observatory. To see this then is the same as looking through the great telescope. The Plattsmouth club went to Lincoln 3-esterday morning with the full intention of a gain floor ing the Lincoln Giants. But the weather was against them, as it rained in Lincoln all afternoon They returned last night and were not a little surprised to find that not a drop of rain had fallen here The)' will try again at a date to be iixed later. During the storm last Wednesday morning lightning struck the fence near this oflire and gave quite a shock to several persons. Mrs. Win. Brissey was thrown several feet. Geo. LaRue had his pipe knocked from his mouth and a number of others felt the effect quite plainly. No one was injured but the call was just a little tco . i . r . 1 , . t ? - Close 10 ie comionanie, 1 niou Ledger. Mrs. Kmnia Kwing gave a forcible' object lesson on cooking to an eastern Chautauqua Assembly the otherjday by serving them with 400 cups of delicious home-made coffee which she said cost only twenty cents, or one-twentieth of a cent a cup, and desserts that cost one and one half cents a plate. There is a vast different in the ex penses of living where women know how to cook and where they do not. Our Allison Knee now stopping at Nebraska City is getting up an exposition down there. As an ad vertiser Allison is a beauty. The state press has been full of exposi tion notes for the last two weeks and now comes the Daily Inter Ocean all the way from Chicago with the following editorial: Nebraska City will be the exposi tion center in Nebraska this fall, as the Nebraska City exposition will be the only one in the state. It will open Aug. 31 and close Sept. 14. The Grand Army will also hold its district reunion there during the exposition. The exposition ought to be a success with Nebraska ex hibits alone. This is a great year for farmers and Nebraska is one of the great farmers States of the Union. AN AWFULSLAUGHTEH A Tr!be of "Hoboes" Known us the 'Farmers' Alii, iic. " Cruelly Maltreated by the "Bache lor"' Club. And lo! there was a mighty city within the confines of the county of Cass and state of Nebraska and within that city there dwelt a race of "Hoboes." Ami these "Hoboes'' did form of themselves a tribe and they did emblazon themselves with the cognomen of the "Farmers' Al liance," and they did procure for themselves a room and did during the winter months pass their time in said room in a state of torpor. And they did really think them selves some pumpkins. And in the same city then- dwelt another tribe of "Hoodoos" who callrd themselves "Bachelors," and they were always awake and they did esteem themselves lit com panions for Kings and Princes. And the members of both of these tribes were what is known in base ball wlang as "fans," and they all di 1 "hoOi."' loud and long for the home cl ub. And it came to pass that one day Kichey, the One Kye, or Klder, being a member of the tribe of "Hoboes," ami feeling at peace with all the world, did banter one Starch, or March, or Tartsch, as the case may be, to take their respective tribes and hie them to the base ball park and do battle. And Tartsch, etc., did think it a great scheme and he did accept said challenge at once, and both tribes did yesterday collide with great violence at the aforesaid base ball park to the everlasting damage and mortifica tion of the tribe of "Hoboes." For lo! there was in the tribe of "Hoodoos" a spellbinder by the name of Clifford, and he did weave a spell over the tribe (if "Hoboes" so that their eyes were as the eyes of a dead dog sightless. And they could see not the ball to hit it. neither could they see it to catch it, and they were buried amid the lilacs, and buried so deep that the trump of the angel Gabriel can never awake them. And for the "Bachelor Hoodoos" White, Green, Reinhackle, McCarty and Clifford did take the most de light in scalping the unfortunate "Hoboes," while "Hoboes" Murray, Grimes, McCoy, Vallery and Cole ably assisted them in the execution. "Hoodoo" Green took great and exceeding pleasure in fanning the "Hoboes" out. having in the neigh borhood of eighteen strike outs. "Hoodoo" Clifford performed a marvelous stop of a grounder in the fore part of the game which woke applause in the grand stand and bleachers. And at the bat he was out of sight. His frequent home runs and three baggers caused the audience to roar with enthusiasm. It was vaguely hinted that Anson was after him. "Hobo' Vallery made a great circus play that established him in great favor with the crowd. He stopped a hot grounder and after turning around six times threw the runner out at first. The game aroused all the latent energy in the spectators and the applause was sharp and fre quent. This is the unofficial score: UACHELOKS Green, p Reinkackle. lb . White, c Morgan, 3b Starch. If Cliiford. rf Grassman, 2b. . . McCarty, 2b.... Kuhney. cf Totals All K HA l'O A K a ." .1 5 5 5 o 5 5 2 1 1 1 1 5 1 1 1 1 0 0 5 0 1 0 17 2 22 17 7 16 2i 0 0 9 4 0 0 M 13 14 la 2 17 S 5 4 0 0 10 .45 16 11 (TilOa 44 ALLIANCE AU K HH PO A E Johnson, p 5 2 1 0 22 o Murray, c 5 0 1 17 12 37 Grimes, lb 5 2 0 24 12 8 Young, rf 4 1 2 0 0 0 McCoy, 2b 4 1 1 5 4 3 V Kichey, 3b 4 1 1 9 11 2 Haves, If 4 0 0 2 5 6 Vallery. ss 4 1 1 0 37 12 Cole, cf 4 0 0 0 0 4 Totals 39 8 7 56 103 77 SCORE BY IX.NTXG. Bachelors 01315 2 10? 16 Alliance 10 2 00203 0 8 SUMMARY Karned runs Bachelors 17. Alli ance 1. Bases on balls Off John sou, 4, off McCoy. 5. off Green, 2. Hit by pitcher By Johnson 3. McCoy. 2 Green 3. Badly rattled Alliance 3 times. A soft pudding the Alli ance. Crank umpire Streight. Time of game 3 hours and 62 min utes. Umpires Streight and War ren. Special Meeting O of R. There will be a special meeting of Bud of Promise lodge, Daughters of Rebecca at their hall this evening at 7:30 for the purpose of arranging to attend the funeral of Infant Beng ston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bengston. HATT1E SHIPMAX, Nobl Grand. A Bury u la r Bagged. The Bee this morning says: About 1 o'clock last Thursday morning Officer Cullen saw a man working at the side window of Neu's saloon 011 South Thirteenth street. The policeman slipped up on the thief, but he fled. Cullen tired a couple of shots but failed to bring down his man who ran faster than ever and was soon lost in the dark ness. I'poti investigation the window was found broken and directly under il in the alley lay a silver handled silk umbrella. This was taken to police headquarters and was the means of capturing the crook. The case was given to Detectives Savage and Dempsey, and their first move was to have Mr. Neu identify the umbrella. This the saloon keeper 1 i I by stating that a man who had fre quently visited his phu t- of late had carried such an article. A good de scription was given the detectives and they sallied forth to look for the man who had carried the um brella. Yesterday afternoon the officers were successful and arrested Jacob Kumpultz on suspicion. At the police station he was searched and a fine gold stop watch and two gokl chains were found 011 h is person. Jailer Harvey looked up his list of stolen property and found that the description tallied with the losses of Joe Klein at Plattsmouth and word was immediately sent down. Deputy Sheriff John Tighe and Joe Klein went up on the early train this morning and found the thief was one Krumtihultz who used to work for M. B. Murphy and for the last two years had been em ployed at the shops inJSteitnkers de partment. When caught with the property on his person he weakened and admitted his guilt. In com pany with the sheriff they to-day made the rounds of the pawn shops, and a telegram received at 3 o'clock this afternoon by Mr. Klein shows that much of his property will be recovered. There are three other men implicated but Krum- phultz has so far refused to give their names. He will be brought down on the llyer this evening. Pork for Mexico. It pays to raise good blooded stock. Monday we were called to the stock yards to notice three cars of hogs that were being shipped to Mexico. We were surprised and could scarcely believe our eyes. There 118 head of full blood Poland China hogs as fat as could be and all of even weight and size. Ir. Keyburn. our buyer, informs us that these were the pick out of the entire neighborhood and while not weighing as much as others, yet owing to the smoothness and pure blood he was able to pay 50 cents per hundred more than the mar ket price, aud alsoj that owing to the quality he had decided to ship to Mexico via Kansas City, where they est one day and are then loaded into the Mexican transporta tion cars and taken across the line. The three cars" were composed of ni nety-two head from A. K. Hess, who received just $1,287.50; "eighteen head were contributed by Sam McClintic that netted him $297. and eight from Mr. Krewer that brought a check for $142.50, or just $1,737 for the 118 head. It would seem from this that it does pay to raise good stock. Kagle Kaglet Reduced Ratrs Have been made to the Detroit meeiMig of the G. A. R. tickets go on sale July 29th. The limit for re turn has been extended to Sep tember 8th thus giving the old soldiers time to run down into Ohio, Indiana and other states on a short visit as well as take in the national encampment. .Sleeping car rates have also been reduced so that a berth can be obtained to Detroit for ?i by applying at once. The Ne braska official train will leave Lin coln at 7:25 p. ni. Saturday August 1st. Omaha 9:30 p. m. Greenwood gets a reduced rate of a fair and a th'rd f"om all points within 50 miles for the G. A. R. district reunion, on August 3rd to 6th. The biennial encampment Ne braska brigade, uniform rank Knights of Pythias have a rate of a fare and a third. August 17 to 21st, tickets limited to return Aug 23rd. The Soitix City.corn place. Oct. 1 to 17, gets a half rate from all points in Nebraska. A round trip rate of one fare, has been made from all points within 275 miles, to Hot Spring, South Da kota for August 11th and 12th. Take your prescriptions to Brown & Barrett's.they dispense pure med icines. tf Additional local on last page READ AND LOOK SPEClft - AT THIS 117 OEDSa TO REDUCE OUR LTOCK OF EMBROIDERED FLOTJJTCINGS, VK HAY 10 eep Out One. lot of Floiineiiigs at '.V.k worth double. One lot of white Flomicinif at 2.00; pattern worth One lot of white cream and Flouncings reduced to M.20. A pattern of this lot comprises goods j ALL OF OUR FAN0Y REDUCED TO F. HERRMANN HARDWARE FOR CASH ONLY Having purchased the U. V. Mathew's in terest in the firm of J W, Hendee & Co, I now propose to stay in Plattsmouth and sell hard ware FOR - CASH -ONLY At prices that are within the reach of all. Everything in our stock a bar gain. Look over our list and see if you cannot find some thing you need. 00O00 4500 lbs cut nails, 3c per lb to close 200 doz carpet tacks, lc per paper 75ct grass scythe fornocts Best clothes wringer made,$2.10 Step ladders from 60 cts up 80 cent spades for 65 cts. Tinware at reduced prices 80 ct handsaws for filets Brooms. 15 to 25cts Ch urns, 80c ts to $1'00 Chopping bowls, 19 to 34cts Wash boards, 19cts Bushel corn baskets, 19cts Leather back all bristle horse brushes, 75c. Leather back all bristle horse brushes, 40c. Cook stoves at cost to close. oO )( o Other articles too numerous to mention at correspondingly lowf prices Come and see us. Remember we sell to everybody alike NOT - ONE -CERT-ON - TIME. . J W HENDEE CIAI IN 0UH COMPLETE STOCK OF Ladies, Misses, Boys, Childrens and Infants Summer Goods. THEY ARE FIRST GLASS AND OF THE VERY LATEST STYLE. BARCAOIS CALL AND BE "W. SALE l 1 M.DK A in Prices worth up to .0() a pattern. One lot of white and black Flouncing reduced to $5.60. A pattern some floods in this lot for merly sold at 5510.00 a pHtter. All our patterns contain 4 yd of material. PLUSH ORNAMENT 5 CENTS EACH. A1LE FR ALL CONVINCED Cs OQ.