rx mouth M. 0 JM.ATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA. TU KSDAY. .1 UN.K 21; 1892. FIFTH YEA It. .Daily P atts 1 4 if' if V r 1 v. to ' ( si 5 -1 5 (;4 1 .7 Illy " :PSOBEB Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder Highest of all in leavening strength latest U. S. Government food report. UURUNGTUN & MISSOURI lllV Ell It. V TIME TABLE. J OF DAILY PASSENGER TRAINS GOING EAST No. 2 5:17 P.M. Nu. 4 lu uM a. n. Nv. 7 ; 44 p. m Nu. Id 9 : a. m. Nu. 6 l'-i - Hi GOING WEST Not,.-- 3:45 a. m. so. s. J S" p- u No. 9 :(K) a. m. No. 1 6 'V l ni. No. 9. 4 : P.m- No, 91 4 :13 a.m. Hushiiell's extra leaves for Omaha about two o'clock lor Omaha and will accommodate passengers. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME CAKD. No. 3M Accomodation Leaven. No.Wi - arrives. Trains dally except Hunday. .10.-55 a. m. . 4;00p. in. SECRET SOClETIhj CASH CAMP No. 332 M. W. A. meets every second and Fourth Monday evnlngs in Mtzgerald hall. Visiting neighbors welcome. P Hansen. V. C. : V. Werteiiberger, W. A., 8. C. Wilde, Clerk. CAPTAIN II E PAl.JIElt CAMP NO 50 Sons ot Veteran, division of Nebraska, y H a. meet .-very Tuesday night at 7 i30 o'clock in their hall in Kitlgerald b oek. All s.nand vislilinc comrade are cordially invited to meet with us J.J. Kurtz. Commander ; li. A. iic El wain. 1st Seai gent. OKI)R OK TUB WOULD. Meets at 7:30 every Monuav evening at the (irand -Army hall. A. F. Oroom, president. Thus Wallin. secretary. A o V W XoS-Meet first and ir; Krt (lav eveninj; of each inoutlt at 1 (. ) r hull. Frank Verniyiea M W; J K Warwick, recorder. GA U.McConlhie Poet No. 45 me-ts even Htur-iny evonmg at 7 : 30 in ! heir Hall in I oek wood block Ail visiting comraass arc ....ji.n. i..vitii t iff t with us. Fred Bates, Post Adjniant ; O. F. Mies. Post Commadder. KXIOHTS OK PYTHIAS Gauntlet Lodge Ao-47. Meets every Wednesday, eve ning at their hall over Beniiet A.Tutt s. all viHitine knights are cordially invited to attend M X Griffith. C C: Otis Dovey X of K and S. AO r W No 84 Meet second and fourth Friday evenings in the mouth at 1 O K Hall. M Vondran, M W, E P Brown, recordeJ. D lAUOHTERS OF KEBECCA- Hud of Prom- I r lUUKC TO .n.r- - fourth Thursday evenings oi eacii i -nini the T O. O. K. hi.ll. Mrs. T. E. W Hliains. M ti. ; Mrs. John Cory. Secretary. HEGKEE OF HOXOR-Meets the first - and third Thrursday evenings of each mouth in I. O. O. F. hall. Fitzgerald hUck. Mrn. Addie Smith, Worthy Sister of Honor lr. Xannie Uurkel, sifter secretary. CASS LOIXJE. No. 14. I. O. O. f . meets ev ery Tuesday ntKht at their hall in 'tztterald block AH Odd Fellow are cordially invited Attend when visltinR In t!ie city. Chris Pet ersen. N. O. ; S. F.Osborn. Secretary. DOTAL ARCANAM-Css Coi.ncll No 1021. " Meet at the K. of P. hall in the Parmele & Crali block over Benneit & Tutts. vlsirliig brethren invited. Henry Uering. Regent; Thos WallioK. Secretary. YOUXO MEN'S 'HKIsTIN -SOCIATION Waterman block. Main Street. Rooms open from tt a ni to 9 -to p n. For men only (iospel meeting every Sunday altenioon at 4 o'clock. For millinery atid pattern hats or anything in the line of ribbons, flowers of the latest styles and de signs, call on the Tucker Sisters in the Sherwood block. V tf. For SALE Two desirable resi dence lots in Orchard Hill addition to Plattsmouth. within a block of the Missouri Pacific depot. For particulars call on or address THE Herald office. EQUITABLE LIFE INSURANCE CO., OF N Y. T. II. POLLOCK, Agent, She Committed Suicide. Mrs F. r. Doe, at Watkins.left this letter: "My husband Forgive me if I cause you trouble, but 1 suffer so You do not know what these long, wakeful, wretched nights are to me, ahd I am so tired, darling the pain will never be better. It is not easy to take my own life, but I have been sick so long. Good-be, my husband, I love you your wife. This is but one of thousands that triveup, instead of using Dr. Miles Restorative Nervine, and being speedily cured of their wretched ness Go to F4 G. Fncke and get an elegant book and trial bottle free. 6 For Sale. My house and three lots corner Sixth and Dey, price $1,200. 2,1X111 B Mrs. T. A. G.' Bcell, Central City, Neb., ape K. R. B. OFFICIALLY- NOTIFIED . President Harrison Notified of . . His Renomination. Till: ADDRESS AND THE KEl'LY. Governor McKlnly's Address Brief and to the Point The Reply by the Executive One that Appealed to the Amer . lean Hearts. The committee proceeded to the executive mansion at about 1 o'clock. Some 200 guests were assembled in the east room. Without any pre liminaries, Governor McKinley made his speech notifying the pres ident of his nomination. It was in substance as follows: Governor McKinley's Speech. "President Harrison: This com mittee, representing every state and territory of the union, are here to perform a trust committed to them by the national republican conven tion, which convened at Minneapo lis June 7, of bringing to you the official notification of your renomi nation as the republican candidate for president of the United States. Your nomination was but the regis tering by the convention of the will of the majority of the re publicans of the United States and has been received in every quarter with satisfaction. "Your administration has more than justified your nomination four years ago and the confidence of the people implied by your election. After one of the most careful, suc cessful and brilliant administration in our history you received a re nomination furnishing an approv al of 3 our work which must bring to you the keenest gratification, Difficult and embarrassing ques tions which confronted your ad ministration have been met with an ability, with fidelity to dut and with lofty patriotism which fill American hearts with glowing pride. ' We beg to hand you the platform of principles unanimously adopted by the convention which placed you in nomination. It was au American document. Protection, which shall serve the highest inte rests of American labor and Amer ican development. Reciprocity, which, while seeking the world's markets for our sumptuous products, shall not destroy Amer ican wages or surrender American markets. Honest money, which shall rightly measure labor and exchanges of the people and cheat nobody. Honest elections, which are true to the situation of public authority, are the principles which constitute for the most part the platform principles of which you have already by word and deed given your earnest appeal and of which you stand to-day an exponent and representative. "In conclusion we desire to ex tend to you our hearty congratula tions and express our gratification at the holior paid you by arenoiu ination " The President's Reply. The president in accepting the nomination said; "Gentlemen of the committee: When four years ago, in the anniversary declaration of national independence, a com mittee designated by republican National convention, held in Chica go, came to my home in Indian apolis to notify me of my nomina tion for the presidency, my sense of gratitude was forced into the far background by an overwhelming sense of responsibility of a leader ship in a civil contest that involved so much to my country and my fel low citizens. No one so much as I realized that the strength of the campaign must be found in repub lican principals, and my hope was that nothing in life or word of mine might weaken the appeal of our American policies to American hearts. "That appeal did not fail. A re republican president and vice-president and a republican congress were chosen. The record has been made and we are now to submit it to the judgment of the patriotic people. Of my own relation to the great transactions in the legislation and in the administration which must be the basis of this judgment, it does not become me to speak. I gratefully accept, sir, the assurance given by the republican state con ventions and by the national con vention, through you, that no charge of inadequacy or delinquen cy to principle has been lodged against the administration. Faith ful and highly successful work has been done by the heads of the exe cutive departments and representa tives abroad. I desire most cordial ly to acknowledge and commend the work of the Fifity-first congress, in which you, sir, bore such a con spicuous and useful part, will strongly and most beneficially in llueiice national prosperity for gen erations to come. The general re sults of three years of republican control have been gratifying. Home market for farm products has been obtained and enlarged in the establishment of great manu facturing industries, while new markets abroad of large and in creased value which hail been ob stinately closed to us, have been opened on favorable terms to our meats and breadstulfs by the re moval of unjust discriminations and by numerous reciprocal trade agreements under section 3 of the McKinley bill. These acts of ad ministration and legislation can not fortunately be judged by their fruits. In lS'.W it was a conflict of predictions, now our adversaries must face the trade statistics and the prices current. "But it is not appropriate that I should at this time discuss these public questions. I hope before long to be able by letter to convey to you a more formal acceptance of the nomination which the republi can national convention has ten kered me and to give briefly my reasons for adhering to the declar ation of principles adopted by the convention and wich you have so admirably summarized. Will you accept sir, for yourself and your associates upon the com mittee and for the whole body of the great convention, whose dele gates you ire, my profou nd thanks for this great honor, and will you, sir, allow me to express 1113- most sincere expreseion of the gracious and cordial terms in which you have conveyed this message?'' A Conduit IClectrlc Kailway. A conduit railway system has been de vised in which the current is transmit ted to the car by induction. It requires no overhead wires, storage batteries or sur face or underground conduits, the ar rangement of the transformers being such that the primary circuit is underneath the roadbed, while the secondary is car ried on the car, so that there is uo metal lic connection between the car and the main circuit from which the current is derived. New York World. Twenty years ago a party of Mormons made numerous proselytes in the upper Androscoggin valley, and last week an emissary of the Church of Latter Day Saints baptized four converts at Dixneld f!ntr. in the same region. Utah's First Pavements. After a long fight in the Ogden city council over the relative merits of sand stone, brick and asphaltum for street paving purposes, it has been decided to use native sandstone from the quarries a few miles distant from Ogden, and that only home labor shall be employed by contract. The district to be paved includes a number of blocks in the busi ness part of town, for which paving bonds are now being negotiated. It will be the first paving done by this city or In this territory. Utah Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A Priceless Diamond Found. A remarkable diamond has been re cently fomsd on the Koffeyfontein Dia mond Mining company's ground in Aus tralia, which appears to be of such value that even competent judges .hesitate to name a price commensurate with its worth. It is said to be of a beautiful shade of pink, entirely devoid of spot or blemish, and to weigh 13 carats. Katnral Gas In Utah. A flow of natural gas has been struck at Salt Lake City at a depth of 600 feet, the pressure being 160 pounds to the square inch. Several companies are en gaged in sinking wells in that locality, with favorable indications of finding the gas in considerable quantities. New York Journal. FAIRYLAND. Under the branches they went tOKetner, Tho blmfcoiiiinK branches that break the sky. All in the morn of the young, swoet weather. When softly the prc-n on the bills doth lie; And Dorothy thought it was over the meadow. And Cicely said it was chiee by the ftpring. Cut I'olly was sure that the woodland's shadow Sheltered that magical fairy ring-. So vcr t'10 meadow they swiftly fc'isd them Oh, but the bird in the bluo sang sweet! They saw not the blush of tho brier beside them. The violets smiling beneath their feet. Long by tho spring they lingered and listened; Twua a diadem set in a mossy rim. And oh, the beauty that clustered and glis tened In frail ferns falling about its brim! They sought in tho wood for a wonder reveal ing. And saw not the leaves in ft net o'erhead. Oh, but the song through tho pinctops steal ing. And oh, that hush down tho dim ways shed! Then, when the sun leaned lower to find them. Homeward they wandered a sorrowful way. And knew not the laud they were leaving be hind them. Tho raro new land of a young Juno day! But Dorothy thinks it is over the meadow. And Gicely says it is closo by tho spring: While Polly is suro that tho woodland's bhudow Shelters the magical fairy ring! Virginia Woodward Cloud in St. Nicholas. Theatrical Superstition. Among country companies supersti tions are more varied and extended than among metropolitan ones, and are of course more blindly and religiously ad hered to. If, on entering a town where tho next "stand" is to be made, a gravr yard is visible on the right side of the railway track, the country manager's heart swells with bright anticipations. But if, on the contrary, the tombstones loom up on tho left of the road, ho be comes depressed, as he takes the fact as a warning that his "business" will be small during his engagement in that place. Such a manager will be apt to give some man or boy a free pass to the theater on a first night, as he would fear a run of ill luck in case a woman should chance to enter the house liefore a member of the opposite sex had found his way with in. Chicago Post. Pig Iron In March. In the first week in March the iron furnaces in this country are said to have produced more pigs 193,900 tons than in any previous week in history. One curious circumstance is that there were fewer furnaces in blast than in the pre ceding month. New York Times. The largest shipment of apples ever made from the United States left Port land recently in the steamship Labrador, which carried more than 13,000 barrels of fine fruit to England. A fine collation of Seventeenth cen tury tobacco pipes has just been found under an old London cellar and deposited in the Guildhall museum. How Mines Are Salted. The gullibility of persons -who buy mines has passed into a proverb. It is said that such properties have actually been salted with half melted silver dol lars and sold to investors, who did not realize that the precious metal was not found in nature with the stamp of the mint upon it. Undoubtedly the most scientific method of accomplishing this sort of swindle is to apply the silver in the shape of a nitrate solution. When it is ready for use some salt is put into it and it is squirted over the rock, the salt causing an immediate precipitation of the metal in a manner that is equally conspicuous and deceptive to the eye. Kansas City Times. The Indian Hunter's Stone. The Indian hunter will cut the shape of an animal out of stone, have it "blessed" by the medicine man and be lieve it gives him good fortune in the chase of the beast represented. When he kills one he dips the fetich in the blood. Perhaps he wraps about it beads, signifying money, and attaches to it little arrowheads, which represent the executive function of slaughter. So as to secure as much help from the un known as possible, he hangs charms all over his person. Washington Star. Meerschaum Artists. The artist who carves meerschaum is required to pass through as severe a school of apprenticeship lasting from three to ten years as though his work were in marble. Meerschaum carved and in the rough resembles the ordinary plaster cast. The outlines being com plete, it is scraped with a knife, filed, soaked in a preparation, and then pol ished with a linen cloth. New York Times. Cannot Be Both. A good body is necessary to a satisfac tory expression of the mentality. But no man can be a Daniel Webster men tally and a John L. Sullivan physically. The possibilities of either the mind or body can be fully developed only at the expense of the other. The college boy who becomes a great athlete will not be a great scholar. Genius is almost always associated with soft spots. Troy Press. A Paying Business. Money Lender You want to borrow a hundred pounds? Well, here's the money. I charge 5 per cent, a month, and as you want it for a year, that leaves just forty pounds coming to you. Innocent Borrower Then if I wanted it for two years, there'd be something coming to you, I suppose, eh? London Tit-Bits. - At Both fends. "By Jove," said tba youngster, "I'd like to have $100,000 to go into business with in the proper shafe." "Ugh," growled th Veteran, 'Td like to have $100,000 to g out of business with in the proper shape." Detroit Free Press. , c .? The oldest pensioneM on the rolls of the New York pension office and two of the 'oldest in the United States, although pensioners are proverbially long lived, are General Tapper ad General Dalley. They are veterans of ttl2. The city of Paris has 87,655 trees in its streets, and each tree represents a cost to the city of lt5 francs. This makes in round numbers $3,000,000 worth of trees in the streets. V Hi J. I.UNRbK h 3i .fT4, 7mT H Foil Fl IIS T C LA SS FUllNI TUllF. ! V. HANDLES the Whitney baby Carriages a can olfer good bargains in (hem Parties desiring to furnish n house couplf J could not do better than to call and inspect his linel , furniture, in the way of Parlor sets, Dining room h Bed Room set, and evenylliing kep( in a lirs(-ch establishment. J. I. Unruh, PLATTSMOUTH, NEB RASH W A Boeck & Co j WE INVITE YOU TO CALL AND SEE OI LOW PRICES IN MENS. BOYS, LADIES M1SSE AND CHILDREN'S SHOES THAT ARE GOING AT BARG W.jl. JJOJUCJC J- CO i - - ELY BROTHERS. G6 Warren SU, New York. Prico 60 eta J X N EW MEATMARKET. Freeh Beef. Pork, Veal. Mutton, Putter and eggs kept constantly on hand. Game of all kinds kept in Season SATISFACTION - GARANTEED SAMPSON BROS. Cor. 6th St and Lincoln Ave PLATTSMOUTH, - NEBRASKA. J ULIUS PEPPERBERG. Among Tobacco, Havana alone pleases the taste of the critical connoisseur. No artificial process can en hance its value. The "Bud" cigars are always made of the finest Havana fillers and has always been esteemed above every other brands made ar sold at Plattsmouth. FOR RELIABLE INSTJRAlsrCE Call on SAMX PATTERSON Plattsmouth - . NebraM Plattsmouth, Nebraska A nasal injector free with each bottle of Shilohs catarrh remedy. Price 50 eta. For sale by O II Sny der and F G Fricke. GOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWN&-; Bridge work and fine gold work a; specialty! DR. STEIN ACTS LOCAL as well as Other I. estbetlcsgiven for the nalnless extraction r teem, y 0. A. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald (T8ENO FOR C combi-natio urniu. .. J ttutA fa MM 1 1. Wi ill !4-iMk, to7' fair Ml' r - . Vmc,heltf r-'l' ' 1M.. Ball Tt -. MMk. rm,mm)o- n 4Mfc.QaaM' - vwv. 4fl E. C. MEACHAfJ ARMS CQM ST UTCiS.il r