Herald.. IMjATTSMOUTII, NK Hit ASK A, THURSDAY. JUNK 23, 181)2. NUMHFK 231. ( FIFTH YFAH. mouth .Daily p Its POTBER Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking iowder Hiirlu-Ht of nil in leaveningstrengm . . . r .1 . Latest U.S. ijovcrnim-m iodu port. re- IWRUNOTOX & MISSOURI RIVER R. y TIME TABLE. J OF DAILY PASSENGEK TKAIN3 GOING ERST No. 2 17 H. M No. 4. 10 :34 a. re. No. 8 7 ;44 p. m No. 10 : 45 a. m. No.ii 12 3 a. in GOING WEST No l 3 :t5 a. m No. 3 3:4 p. " No. 5. :o m. No. I 'f l No. 9 4 :I0 p.m. No. 91 ? :15 a. m. Hushneir.s extra leaves for Omaha oVI.H k fur omaha and "ill accommodate pas sengers. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME CAKD. N. 3H1 Accomodation I.cave.. No 31 arrives.. Train daily except Sunday. .10:55 a. m. . 4 ;00.p. m. SECRET SOVl ETltj ASt OA Ml No. 332 M. W. A. meets every Hfcouil ami roumi - . i. ...... uii.ihiii'm in fiteerald hall. Visitimr iieiKiiuor p V: llaneu. V. C. : 1. Wcrtcnbenrer. W. A. S. C Wilde. Clerk. AITAIN H K I'AI.MKK CAMP NO 50 CAKV0f Veteran.. division of N t L a t..--!: .-verv Tuefdav niuht at 7 --50 o clock : .1 ... f it iir.-mld b tick. All snlH ami IB I - ----. . nvited to meei .I..I. Kurtz. Commander is. A. -c fclwaiu. lt SeaiKent. rUI)KK OK THE WOULD. Meet- at 7 : 30 hall. A. H. Groom, preidelit. J hos Walling. cr.-lary. A o C V XoS-Mcit lirst ami n iir.i rii: .lay evening oi euc. ' ,'2':.C hull. Frank erinyieu .-i . j - recorder. . M.-coitiUie 1'oKt No. 45 me t- ,eT G A-u?h ei "".in at 7 : 30 in heir Hall 11. l-.nkw.. a bl.Hk All vlsitii.u comrade an ....r.lirilv invited to . eet with u. Fred Bates l',.rt Adjiiiaiit ; Sc l'ot,t C""M-daer- K and Xo 81 Meet second anil fourth I t) O F Hull. M Vondrun, M W , fc. 1 lro n. recorded. . John Cory. Secretary OvnKFF OF IIOXOK-Meets the first h i .i !,, Tl iir-idav evening of each ?"!.. l tJ i F tall ritiwiM Id.Krk. Tl" V AddieS Hith. Worthy Si?ter of Honor Nannie Iturkel. sister secretary. er-eiiVN? O. ; S- K. O.born. Secretarj Ret -&AK I-. hadin the . Parn.ere . CraiK bl.ick over wnu. brethren invited. Henry Thos Walling. Secretary. Gerlng. Regent; uw-. u ,.-,, ..irutu i'HRISTION -SOCIATION ?&TZ H-Jay 'men at 4 o'elock. ' For millinery and pattern hats or .ivthiinr in the line of ribbons, (lowers of the laest styles and de ll on tlie inciter oib.iD in the Sherwood block. 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 1IEKALD office. KQUITABLK LIFE INSURANCE CO., OF N, Y. . T. II. Pollock, Agent, sha committed Suicide. Mrs F. r. I3oe, at,Vatkins,left this uit.r- "Mv husband Forp-ive me if I cause you trouble, but I suffer Vit rlo not Know wiuu mete have been sick ho long soeedily cured of their wretched 8f " L t K O. Fricke and cet an elegant book and trial bottle free. G For Sale. My house and three lots corner Sixth and Dev. price 'J: MKS. J. A. G. I1UELL, Central City, Neb., apc.K.K. B. i. : Mr. so. lonir, wakeful, wretcneu nijrnis are to ine, ahd I am so tired, darynp; the pain will never be better. It is .... !,v to take my own life, but I Good-b e, my husband, l love you This is but one of thousands that i ve up, instead of us.np; Dr. Miles T r.;v- Nervine, and beinff THE COLORS OF WATER. A Simple Object LdMn That 1'roveil In tereittln to Child. - "Is it not true, grandpa, that water has no colorr" "Yes, dear child, it is blue, but bo little- so that you cannot see it." "Can you see that it is blue?" "No, but Btill it is blue. Look at this." I took a little- ultramarino on the end of the bruah and mixed it with water. "Does it look blue now?" "Xo; I seo nothing." "Nor I. But you saw how I put a lit tle blue color in it with the brush." "Yes, but there was not enough of it. Put more in." I silently took the glass and set it on a pieco of white pai?r in the bright sun shine. "Now look from above down into it." "It is blue," said the little one, clap ping her hands, "but only a very little." "Look at it from the other side, where the sun is shining into it. Is it not a lit tle bit red, like the bell flowers which you picked yesterday?" "That is wonderful," said the little one. "It is blue from above, a little bit red in the sun, and when we look at it from this side of the room we see noth ing" "Think about it a little. Tko glass is as broad as mv finder is long. But it is at least three times as high as my finger. When you look at it from the side, you see only a finger's length of water; but when you look down into it. you see through three fingers' length of water thre3 times as much. You see it blue from the side, and three times as blue from above, don't you?" "Is that really true?" said the little one, as she measured with her finger. She nodded that she was satisfied. "Now imagine that the water is as deep as the height of the church steeple, and deener that it reaches from here up into Salvan and down to Vemayaz. Then vou would see the water from above it all blue." "Is the lake, then, really so deep?"' "Yes, and deeper." I will not continue the conversation any longer. It went on with various simple experiments, beginning with dif ferently colored stones, which I let drop into the water, and then placed on the white, then with setting the glass with its weakly bluish contents on differently colored papers, and ended with my try in ? to make the children perceive how the colors changed when they were seen through the whole depth of the glass. 1 will not say that the little ones were brought to a full comprehension of the matter, but they stuck fast to the asser tion that water is blue, of an infinitely weak blue, and that the blue color can not be seen till one looks into a certain depth of it. Carl Vogt in Popular Sci ence Monthly. Search Lights versus Torpedo Roats. It is stated that one of the most effect ive means of protecting a ship in these days of torpedoes (the grouping to gether of a number of stationary search lights, each illuminating its own section so that the ship is surrounded by an un broken circle of light), is to be adopted in the new American warships. This has been suggested by a very pronounced defect in the usual search light practice. In order to afford sufficient time for a careful examination of the water's sur face at points removed from the ship, the beam of light must be revolved very slowly, and hence during a great por tion of the time any particular section of the water is left in darkness. As it takes only five minutes for a torpedo boat to run a distance of two miles, it will be seen that the conditions are all in favor of the attacking force. Before the revolution of the search light is com pleted there is plenty of time for the tor pedo boat to run up and discharge her - ,, "V - . fT" ! ueacny weapons. iew xora. xeiejjitm An Electrical Sunrise. A Twenty-third street theater has brought out an electrical sunrise. A curved screen, part of which is made of gauze, so that the light may shine through, extends around the stage, and behind it is an elaborate 6ystem of in candescent lamps. The controlling ap paratus is so graduated that fifty differ ent degrees of light and shade can be produced, thus causing the sunrise to m-nw inmerceptiblv. Another use of the electric current made at the same place is in representing the explosion of a bomb. A paper shell contains just enough nowder to explode ana mane a nasn This is fired by electricity, while at the same moment another circuit controlled by the same key sets off a gun behind tVi scenes, which, furmslies tne neces sary noise. New York World. A Tiny Timepiece. M. Morquet, a friar of the Florentine order in Paris, has constructed a perfect watch only a quarter of an inch in di ameter. Besides the two hands seen on all watches it has a third which mark3 the seconds, besides a microscopic dial which indicates the days, weeks, months and years. It also contains an alarm and on its front lid is an ingeniously cut figure of St. Francis. On the back cover bv aid of a powerful glass, you can dis tinctly read two verses of the "Te De- am." Philadelphia Fress. In the llusiness of Revolution. The Englishman imagines that revolu tion and treason are serious affairs and must be conducted with set teeth and grave face. Not so the men of the Latin races. To. them revolutions are like race meetings, wun s, cv.-icu amount of danger added. An English man feels disgraced at the idea of recur rent revolution. IS ot so a Frenchman or a Spaniard. London Spectator. Why lie IleHlred a Cuiinon. It is related that an Indian chief once approac hed General Crook and wanted to lMjrrow a cannon. "Do you exiect mo to loan vou a cannon with which to kill my soldiers?" the old veteran in quired. "No," the chief replied; "kill soldiers with a c lub; want cannon to kill cowlwya." Cor. Topeka Capital. Fat People on a Hot Day On one of the recent hot, soggy after noons, when every man hated his neigh bor and tried to keep at a distance from him. a perspiring, heavily clothed fat man waddled into an elevated train at the city hall station and pre-empted one of the cross seats. He breathed like a iwmoise and moined his face with a large handkercLief. Just before the train started a wu;:"i, heavy almost beyond description wiili adipose tissue, entered the same car. The car creaked beneath her tread. The passengers were many, and those who adjoined empty seats watched her prog ress with a nef vous glance. But with as great a degree of blindness of choice as is sometimes said to prevail in mar riage, she plunged tc the center of the car and pressed herself down into the space beside the fat man. The fat man looked at her a moment, but she seemed oblivious of his regard. Then he braced himself for a move and got out of his seat. Then the fat woman became aware of his presence. "Don't move plenty of room," said she. "Madam," Raid he, and his voice wa3 hicrh and clear, "it's a hot day. 1 am fat. You are fa.t. We've got no busi ness to be any where near each other. So vnn'll excuse me." And he moved away with an imitation of dignity while the nnssemrers laujrhed at hid forcible English. But the fat woman, nettled at first, thought better of it, and as she spread herself over the entire seat murmured to a crowded neighbor, "lucres soinu advantage in behvjr fat after all. Iter Point of Vifcw in New York Times. Clouds of Locustts. The locusts are reappearing in Algeria in greater numbers than ever, in spite o. the efforts that were made by the French administration last year to annihilate the pests. It is now believed that they come clear across the desert from the Soudan. The period of incubation varies from twenty to thirty days, and the locusts require only about two months to attain their complete develop ment. This fact gives a realizing sense to the prodigious numbers in which the terrible insect may' multiply during its nroirress across the Sahara. Great clouds of the locusts have already been seen on the northern edge of the Sahara making their way north, lhe news comes from Touggurt and Ghardaia in the Sahara that early this year the locusts suddenly invaded those places in such enormous numbers that for four hours they fairly darkened the heav- . . . J T T f T ens. About a monm ueiore similar clouds of locusts were reported m the valley of the Niger river in the Soudan, and it is believed that in the four sue? ceeding weeks they had journeyed to the northern part of the Sahara. New York Sun. Italy's New Prime Miuister. Siimor Giovanni Giolitti, the new Ital- ian premier, is saici to do rue younge&o ' i ii ,. -.A. head of a ministry that Italy nns nan since Cavour. He is barely fifty years of aire, and has only been in parliament ten years. In the caricatures of him in The Don Chisciotte he used to be rep resented, owing to his being one of the tallest of the deputies, by what might be called a hop pole clad m a long over coat and very high silk hat. W hen he was twenty-two he took his degree or doctor of law, and m 1376, when bignor Depretis was in power, he had become director of customs. Signor Cnspi made him minister of the treasury in March, 1889, and in November, 1890, minister of finance. A month later bignor tjio- litti resigned, owing to a difference with the minister of public works, whose ex- nenditure he wished to cut down. He then helped to bring about the fall of the Crispi cabinet. Signor Giolitti is the leader of the Piedmontese group of the left center. London News. Sheep from Persia. Thirteen sheep and three lambs are on their way consigned to the agricultural department at Washington a fact that presents considerable interest for the agriculturally minded. They were ship ped from Persia, and an attempt is to be made to introduce their breeding into this country. These sheep are said to be noted for the beauty and richness of their skins, which are the purest astrakhan. As a warm climate is necessary for their ex istence, at least for the present, they will probably be sent to southern Cali fornia or to some other warm climate, where their value and adaptability to this country can be determined. Wor cester Spy. Fruits Attract Them. ' Hosts of unemployed men and others seeking temporarily to better their con dition are flocking to the Delaware pe ninsula now to pick small fruits for the markets of Fhiladeipma anci xew iorit. The fruit growers erect rude sheds in the open fields, and here the berry pick ers eat and sleep while tne season lasts. m earnings or nerry picKers are con siderably above the average pay of farm hands. Later in the season come the "Ieach plucks," a race of tramps from all parts of the northern Atlantic shie, feared by the native farmers and hated as competitors by the negro farm labor ers. Said It. and Then He Hied. Burt C. Hunter, a prominent mining man of Neihardt, Mou., died recently from a sixty grain dose of morphine, taken with suicidal intent. Physicians worked over him for seventeen hours without success. Toward the" "last, while being jolted on a board, slapied in the face and shaken to keep him awake, he looked up ruefully and mut tered, "Oh, what a difference in the morning." Cor. San Francisco Exam iner. Iron Deposits in Finland. An important discovery of very ex tensive iron ore deposits, which are even supposed to rival me enormous iron ore mountain at Gellivora, in north Sweden, has quite recently been mude in Finland by M. Stjeruvall, the geol ogist. Two StwrSns of Lucky Miners. A few of tho many stories that are told of mijwri' luck will enable the reader to understand how and why the heads of whole communities may bo turned in mining regions. Jim Whit latch, the discoverer of the Whitlatch- Union mine, near Helena, led a typical western miner s lifo. The mine m ques tion is now owned in England and has produced $'20,000,000 in gold. After Jim Whitlatch had sold tho property tor $1,500,000 ho went to New York "to make as much money as Vanderbilt. He was a rare treat to Wall street, which fattened on him, and in one year let him ;o with only the clothes on his back. He returned to Montana, began "pros pecting" again and discovered a mine for which he got sfJoO.OOO. llo went to Chicago to rival Mr. Potter Palmer in wealth and returned just as he did from New York "Hat strapped," as ho would have expressed it. He mado still an other fortune and went to San Francisco, whore he died a poor man. Another Lewis and Clarke county mine the Drum Lunnnon provides an other such story. It was discovered by an Irish immigrant named Thomas Cruse. Although he owned it, lie could not get a sack of flour on credit. lit" sold it to an English syndicate foi 1, .-;',), 0i). But lie remains one of lhe T i; II .1. 1. wealthy men or u.-iena. .jiiu.iu uajpn in Harper's. IS tin- Opium Is Gathered. It is a sort of garden cultivation, the poppy plants being grown m nine squares or beds intersected by tinjr wa ter channels for irrigation wherever this is possible. The growth of the plants is carefully tended, and at length the time comes when thej- burst out into flower, and tho fields look like a sheet of silver as the white petals of the flowers glisten in the morning dew. These beautiful petals are the first produce of the crop, for the women and children of tho cultivators' families come forth and pick them off one by one and carefully dry them, so that they may serve afterward as tho covering of the manufactured cakes of opium. Then the poppies, with their bare capsule heads, remain standing in the open field until it is considered tflat they are ripe for lancing. The cultivators then come forth in the evening, and, with an implement not unlike the knives of a cupping instrument, they scarify tne capsule on its sides with deep incisions, so that the juice may exude. In the early morning the cultivators reappear with a scraping knife and their earthenware pots, and they scrape on: the exuded juice and collect it in their pots. And this is crude opium. Black wood's Magazine. A Tragic Kindergarten Episode. A certain kindergarten is blessed with the attendance of a very original youth named Richard. He is a very honest little boy and highly respected by his parents, but tho other afternoon when he came home he acknowledged frankly to his mother that a punishment had been inflicted upon him at the kinder garten. "Why, what have you done?" "Well, you see," he answered, "John ny and I got tired of being good, and we made up em minds that we would just get our heads together and holler out the verv naughtiest word we could think of, both together." The mother was inexpressibly shocked. Johnny was another very nice and well bred boy. But she mar aged to ask: "Well, what did you y?" "We just screamed out 'Bedbug!' as loud as we could 1 Probably this tragic episode has never had its duplicate in the history of kinder- gartening. Boston Transcript. Probably no issue or a newspaper was ever put in type under more trying cir cumstances than this issue. The type was badly pied, and as it was put in position it was necessary to wedge it securely to keep each shock from undo ing the work of days. The compositors stood bravely at their posts, even in mo ments of the crreatest danger, wnen the brick walls threatened to collapse and bury them in the ruins. We were com pelled to move our office after Thurs day's shock, and much more damage was done, but we, after all, were de layed but three or four hours with our I edition. Dixon (Cal.) Tribune. iESJbU JbLr J. H Parlies e.st.ibli.sliniont. PLATTSMOUTH, v J- I W A Boeck & Co 'JffjEiiiuBiff Tr 3 iffiiiiTiTttfiW' WE INVITE YOT LOW PK1CES IN MENS, HOYS, LADIES MISSE AND CHILDREN'S SHOES THAT ARE GOING AT HA RG TF. yl- J30J3CJZ & CO l pJ & "the positive cure. KL.X UitUTllKK. bO WFJTWi TJLIUS PEPPER BERG. Among Tobacco, Havana alone pleases the taste of the critical connoisseur. No artificial process can en hance its value. The "Hud" cigars are always made of the finest Havana fillers and has always been esteemed above every other brands made ar sold at Plaits mouth. Plattsmouth, Nebraska List of Letters Remaining unclaimed in the popt office at Plattsmouth: Bowlin, Esther Baly. HL Clied, Annie Chandler, Fannie Grant, Joshua Hewitt, Frank Haines, Mrs Nettie Brown, B V Beverage, Wash Calloway, James Kerjjiison, John C Gutsen, Mat Hood, F B Kelly, Geore Mendenlialf,.Mame Keller, Levj' Ortmann, Ferdinand Odell Bros Pultnan.Xr Electa, Shaffer, Mrs Sarah E Persons calling for any of the above will please ask for "adver tised" mail. II. J. Stkeight, LUNItUJI J ')Ii Fl liST CLASS FU HJVI TURK. V HANDLES the Whitney baby Carriages u can offer -ood bargains in them ( desiring to furnish a house coiupl could iHjtl.o lieller than to call and inspect his line, furniture, in the way of Parlor sets, Dining room s (. lied h'ooiit set, and evenythiiig kept in a first cl. f ..... ' ' Un ruh, NEHRASI TO CALL AND SEE Ol; O'-, inn. iiw-w FOR RELIABLE INSURANCI1 Call on SAM E IViTTERSON Plattsmouth - N-j IDEILTTISTIRJ GOLD AND PORCELAIN CRCj Bridge work and fine gold - SPKCI ALT' DB. STEINAUS LOCAL as well m'J eHUieuCMKlven lur irn- imuirMoi, teeth. y if a A. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerf SEND FOR C ATIO BAFK-Tll.- Mud IMM, UnkM WbA Bon' Cirld Vto-a ImnloB Pi inn In:. 1 Titm 1 E. C. MEACHAM ARMS CO.. Sf 3 . V ft J