The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, July 06, 1892, Image 2

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    ?
cowmen
ni tt or irauoie
Vj 1 the ordinary pill. Trouble when
i ;fou take it, and trouble when you've
t?ot it down. Plenty of unpleasant'
. "jiess, but mighty little good.
J With Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets,
."here's no trouble. They're made
prevent it. 1 hey re the origi
nal little Liver Pills, tiny, sugar
. coated, anti-bilious granules, purely
egetable, jierfectly harmless, the
raallcst, easiest and best to take.
' Tiey cleanse and regulate the w hoIe
ystera, in a natural and easy way
lildly and gently, but thoroughly
-Lnd effectively. One little Pellet
r a laxative three for a cathar
.c. Sick Headache. JUious I lead -
phe, Constipation, Indigestion, JJil-
us .Attacks, ana all derangements
;f the liver, stomach and bowels are
-revented, relieved and cured.
i They're the cheapest pill you can
Juy, for they re guaranteed to give
nt isf action, or your money is re
amed.
I You pay only for the value re
vived. Can you ask more i
i :
K. REYNOLDS,
' .Registered l'liyflcian and I'liannacist
t
jjecial attention given to Office
Practice.
PCK I J LUFFS
r p.
Xeb.
'O J. tS.JvTSEsr
DKALKK IN-
, STAPLE AND FANCY
iROGERIES
t
i GLASS AND
I QUEENSWARE.
i . . . . .
tronage of the Public solicited.
hrth Sixth Street, Plattsmouth
R. A. SALISBURY
: D-E-N-T-I-S-T :-
OLD AND PORCELAIN CKOWX9
I
tsteinways anaesthetic for the painlee- ex
tract Iod of teeth.
Fine Gold Work a Specialty.
jiwood Block riattsmouth. Neb
217, 219, 221, AND 223 lAIN ST
PLATTSMOUTH, NEB.
;r. guthmanu. prop.
ATES $4.50 PER WEEK AND UP
umber Yard
THE OLD RELIABLE.
it meriuh k m
IF LUMBER !
Shingles, Lath, Sash,
loors. Blinds
;
supply everw demand 01 me city.
Call and get terms. Fourth 6treet
in rear of opera hotiBC
TIMOTHY CLAHK.
DEALER IS
DAL H WOOD
o TERMS CASHo
jrda and Office 404 Jouth Third Street.
Telephone 13.
TT8MOUTU,
Nebraska
&hc gbttsmauth gcrald.
COK.N'KK OF VINE ANO FIFTH STS
TELKI'llONK 3X.
KNOTTS BROS, Publishers
I'ullilicl every Tlmrtnlny, nnd daily
every evening except Sunday.
Kejristerefl at the Plat turnout h, Nebraska
lit pflice n neconl c Iihh mail matter for
transmission through the U. S. mails.
TKK.ISH'k WKKKI.Y.
One year iii ad vatu'c - $1 50
One year not in iilvance - - - - 2 (K)
Six inontliM in advance - 75
Three months in advance 40
TEKJ1S OK 1AII.V.
One year in advance - $T (!
One copy one month 50
Per week by carrier - - 15
WEDNESDAY, JULY 0, 1802.
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL TICKET.
For President
HENJAMIN HARRISON
of Indiana.
Vor Vice-President
WHITELAW KIEI)
of New York.
The democrats in congress have
practically passed a free coinage
bill that Cleveland cannot possibljr
indorse.
The democrats may succeed in
keeping Stevenson still, but they
cannot obliterate his record as a
copperhead and a repudiationist.
IF the country is really in as bad
a condition as the platform of the
people's party represents, how does
it happen to be the only country in
the world which attracts foreign
immigration?
The republican candidate for
stale auditor of Kansas is a negro;
and he is rendered still more of
fensive to the democrats by the fact
that he is the only man on the
ticket who has a collegiate educa
tion. The democrats are greatly wor
ried because President Harrison
saw fit to appoint Foster secretary
of state, but Harrison goes right on
about his business without consult
ing the democrats about the least
thing.
The democrats seem to think
they ought to have been consulted
in regard to the appointment of the
chairman of the republican nation
al committee. Because a man was
appointed who knows his duty it is
giving the democrats lots of worry.
Ex-Gov. Anthony, of Kansas,
states the whole case in a few words
when he says that "the republican
party went down with the McKinley
law on its back, and the McKinley
law came up with the republican
party on its back." The democrats
would like to dodge this large and
significant fact, but circumstances
compel them to face it.
ENGLAND'S SYMPATHY.
Cleveland would run magnifi
cently in Kngland.
Over there they are all for him.
His free trade policy, if adopted
in this country, would mean mil
lions upon millions to British man
ufacturers and British workingmen.
But it would come out of the
pockets of American manufacturers
and out of the wages of American
labor.
Long before the revolution, Eng
land resolved that America should
never manufacture for herself.
During the first half of the eigh
teenth century the poor colonists
made a feeble beginning in the
fabrication of coarse woolens, linen
and hats. English manufacturers
complained of this to their govern
ment and parliment interfered in
what manner we shall let Adam
Smith, the founder of the free trade
school, relate. We extract from his
Wealth of Nations, published in 1776:
"England prohibits the exporta
tion from one province to another
by water and even by land upon
horseback or in a cart, of hats, of
wool and woolen goods of Ameri
can production, a regulation which
effectually prevents the establish
ment of any manufacture of such
commodities for distant sale, and
confines the industries of her colo
nists in this way to such coarse and
household manufactures as a pri
vate family common- makes for
its own use, or for that of some of
its neighbors in the same province."
That policy was adhered to with
relentless vigor by England down
to the revolution.
Since that time she has watched
with impotent rage and maddening
envy our advance in manufactures,
under the shelter of a protective
tariff which rendered futile her mal
evolent attempts to destroy them.
Is it any wowder that her sympa
thy in this campaign is with the
party which in effect proclaims in
its platform its purpose to reduce
us once more to that deplorable
state of industrial vassalage from
which the Revolution freed us?
Can a true American vote for the
candidates'of such a party?.
Speaking of American vs. British
trade with Canada, Consular Ryder
of cjuebec says: "The United States
monopolizes the importation of ag
ricultural. implements, printing
machinery, electrical supplies, fine
papers, leather and manufactures
of leather, rubber boots, shoes and
belting, watch and clock move
men fa, field and garden seeds, bin
ders twine, etc." A fine catalogue
this of articles which testify to the
surpassing skill of American me
chauics and workingmen.
Fell Dead.
These words are very familiar to
our reader, aa not a day passes with
out tlie report ot the sudden death
of some prominent citizen. The ex
planation is "I leart Disease. There
fore beware if you have any of the
following symptoms: Short breath,
pain in side, smothering spells,
swo'ien ankles, asthmatic breath
ing, weak and hungry spells, tend
erness in sliouiuer or arm. nutter
ing of heart or irregular pulse.
These symptoms mean heart di
sease. I lie most reliable remedy is
ir. fines' Aew Heart Cure, which
has saved thosands of lives. Book
of testimonials free at F. G. Fricke
& Co., who also sell the New "Heart
Cure.
WANTS FRUITCAKE OR NOTHING
The republicans, according to
Miss WillartJ, have nominated for
president an honest man and a
Christian gentleman. "It was" a-
tribute," said Miss Willard, com
menting on the Minneapolis con
vention, "to the clear record, the
manliness, the remarkable ability
and the pure home life of our chief
magistrate." Now she wants to
blow up the party which made such
a nomination and the nominee with
it. The trouble with the talented
editor of the Union Signal is the
disease which afflicts all her sisters
and brethren; she is covetous. If
she can't get fruit cake she wants to
starve. If she can't wear angels'
robes she insists on the garb of a
Fiji Islander. In other words, if she
can't get a prohibitionist for presi
dent she is going to do her best to
defeat the man whose nomination
is "a tribute to the clear record, the
manliness, the remarkable ability
and the pure home life of our chief
magistrate." For that is all the
vote for the prohibition candidate
can accomplish. Every vote in
favor of that candidate is a vote in
favor of throwing the election for
president into the house, where the
result can be anticipated. Minne
apolis Tribune.
A carpenter by the name of M. S.
Powers, fell from the roof of a house
in East DesMoiues, Iowa and sus
tained a painful and serious sprain
of the wrist which he cured with
one bottle of Chamberlains pain
balm. He says it is worth $5 to
a bottle. It cost him 50 cents. For
sale by by F. G. Fricke & Co.
A Sight In a Graveyard.
Two visitors to Trinity churchyard, in
lower Broadway, attracted a large share
of public attention Wednesday after
noon. One was a well dressed blind
man and the other was a boy of sixteen
or eighteen years of age, probably a rel
ative of the blind man. The boy led hia
sightless companion to the grass bor
dered slab that bears the name of .Char
lotte Temple. Dropping on his knees at
the side of the grave the blind man
passed his hands eagerly over the face
of the stone and an expression of su
preme gratification came into his coun
tenance when his fingers touched the
sunken letters of the name. The boy
called his attention to that part of the
6lab from which all of the original in
scription except the name is said to have
been cut.
There is a hollow place there at least
1 inches deep. It forms a basin to catch
water for the birds to drink and bathe
in. It was nearly full of water on
Wednesday afternoon, and the blind
man dabbled in the little pool gently.
He hovered over the grave for several
minutes, and became an object of curi
ous interest to at least a hundred per
sons who 6tood on the sidewalk and
watched him through the fence. New
York Times.
"Old Ironsides."
If the portrait of some grandam who
lived in the early days of the century
could "materialize," and, stepping down,
take her place beside the "tailor made
girl" of today, the difference would be
no more marked than that between the
good ship Constitution and a modern
"ocean greyhound. Nevertheless, in
spite of the topheaviness of the old ship
as compared with the new, if the two
Bailed down our harbor there would be
no necessity for an order of "Hats off,"
and our heartbeats would tell us for
which rang out the "three times three."
Well does this great f oremother of
ours command both love and reverence.
Stanch was she with the strength of oak
from the forest primeval; unwavering
ever as the pole star in the path of duty,
and like a true woman of the olden
time, ere "rights" and "suffrage" had
lifted their heads from the neither chaos,
she obeyed her master, while he, true
and brave man of the olden time that he
was, loved and honored her. Jane de
Forest Shelton in Harper's.
A .plu WWt
In one of the Comstock mines a new
water wheel is to be placed, which is to
run 1,150 revolutions a minute and have
a speed at its periphery of 10,805 feet
per minute. A greater head of water
than has ever before been applied to a
wheel will be used. Exchange,
Half Rates to New York.
To accommodate Christian En
deavorers and their friends along
its line who desire" to attend the
national convention of the Y. P. S
C. E. at New York, July 7-10, the
Burlington route will on uly 4 run
a special strain from Omaha
through to New York, via Chicago
and Niagara Falls, leaving at 11:40
p. m., alter arrival ot all trains irom
the west. A rate of one fare for the
round trip has been authorized and
will be open to the general public
Tickets, good to return any time
within thirty da3's from date of
purchase, will be on sale at dates to
be announced later, lhelow rates
in force, the throligh car facilities
at the disposal of travelers by the
Burlington route, and the delight
ful season of the year, combine to
make this an unequalled oppor
tunity of visiting the east. Remem
ber that you can purchase tickets
irom your station agent through
to Aew lork. .hull inloroiation
11133' ue had upon application to the
local agent of the B. & or by ad
dressing J. Francis, General Pas
senger Agent, Omaha.
Oregon, Washington and the Nor
west Pcific Coast.
The constant demand of the trav
eling public, to the far west for a
comfortable and at the same time
an economical mode of traveling
has led to the establishment as
what is known as Pullman Colonist
sleepers.
These cars are built on the same
general plari as the regular first
class Pullman Sleeper, the only dif
ference being that they are not up-
lioistered.
They are furnished complete with
good comfortable hair matresses.
warm blankets, snow white linen cur
tains plenty of towels, combs, brush
es etc., which secure to the occu
pant of a birth as much privacy as
is to be had in first ;class sleepers.
There are also separate toilet rooms
tor ladies and gentlemen, and sraok
ing is absolutely prohibited. For
full information send for Pullman
Colonist Sleeper leailet. IS. L. Lo
max, General Passenger and Ticket
Agent, Omaha Nebraska.
Nothing New Under the Sun
No! not even through cars to Den
ver, Ogden, bait .Lake Citv, ban
Francisco and Portland. This is
simply written to remind you that
the Union Pacific is the pioneer in
running through cars to the above
mentioned points and that the pres
ent through car arrangement is un
excelled. We also make THE time.
For details address any agent of
the company, call on your nearest
agent or write to h. L. LOMAX,
G. P. & T. A. U. P., Omaha Neb.
The following item, clipped from
the Ft. Madison (Iowa) Democrat,
contains information well worth
remembering: "Mr. John Roth of
this citr, who met with an accident
a few days ago, . spraining and
bruising ms leg and arm quite
severely, was cured by one 50-cent
bottle of Chamberlain s Pain Balm.
This remedy is without an equal
lor sprains jind bruises and should
have a place in every household
For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co.
' Fail to do Our Duty. .
Everbody has at times failed to do
their duty towards themselves.
Hundreds of lady readers suffer
from sick headache, nervousness,
sleeplessness and female troubles.
Let them follow the example of Mrs.
Herbecthter, btevens Point, Wis
who for five years .suffered greatly
from nervous prostration and sleep
lessness, tried physicians and dif
ferent medicines without success
But one bottle of Dr. Miles' Nervine
caused sound sleep every night and
sue is like a new person. Mrs.
Elizabeth Wheeler, Laramie . City,
Wyoming, who tried all other reme
dies, declares that after three week's
use of the Nervine tor headache,
nervous prostration, etc., she was
entirely relieved. Sold by . F. G.
Frick & Co. Trial bottle free. 1.
For Sale or Trade A desirable
lot in Plattsmouth. Will ,sell for
cash or will take a good buggy
horse and horses in exchange.
For particulars call on or address
this oilice. tf
Some Foolish People
allow a cough to run until itgets
be3'ond the reach of medicine They
say, "Oh, it will wear away," but in
most cases it wears " them away.
Could they be induced to try the
successful Kemp's Balsam,- which
is sold on a positive guarantee to
cure, they would see the excellent
effect after taJting the first dose.
Price 50c and $1. Trial size free. At
all druggists.
Mi!es Nerve and Liver Pills
Act on o newpriciple regulating
the liver, stomach and bowels
through the nerves. A new discov
ery Dr. Miles pills speedily cure
biliousness, bad taste, torpid liver,
piles, constipation Unequaled for
men, women and children. Small
est, mildest, surest. 50 doses 25 cts.
Samples Iree at . tr. fricke & co s.
Half Rates.to Saratoga.
On the occasion of the National
Educational Ass'n's annual con
vention at Saratoga, July 12-15, the
Burlington route, from J ul3' 6 to J u-
lv 9. inclusive, will sell round trip
tickets from all stations in Nebras
ka to Saratoga at one lowest first-
class fare, plus two dollars (mem
bership fee N. E. A.) Tickets are
good for return passage from July
15 to 21; an extension of time limit
can, however, be obtained by depos
iting tickets at the office of the joint
agent of terminal lines: 369 Broad-
" , T1 1 T 1 ' .
way, Saratoga. uv ouruusiuu
route will run special Pullman
sleeping cars and reclining chair
cars from Lincoln and Omaha
through fo Saratoga, leaving Lin
coln at2.40p. m. and Omaha at 4:45 p.
m inivO A frlder. rHv-infi-all par
ticulars, may be had upon applying j
to J. Francis, general passenger and j
ticket agent, Omaha, to whom, or to
local agent B. & M. R. R., requests j
for reservation of births should be I
addressed.
Your n& week's washing
trill look whiter, will be cleaner and will
be done with ltJ Itbor if
SANTA CLAUS SOAP
used. The clothes will smell swee-te-t-and
will le-st longer. SANTA CLAUS SOAP is
pure, it cleans but doet not injure trhe.
f a brie, rfc daes iot roughen or chap trhe
f)&nda. Millions uoo.lt. Jo Yqlu P
N.K. FAIR DANK UC0y IMffe CHICAGO.
WABoeck?&Co
WE IXVITF: YOU TO CALL AND SEE Ob
LOW PRICES IN MENS, BOYS, LADIES MISSE
AND CHILDRENS SHOES THAT ARE GOING
AT BARG
w. l. sojscjr & co
Qqs liqi'icls,
Dealer in
All kinds of fresh, salt and
smoked meats;
I make the best of all kinds of sau
sages and. keep, a gooc, supply
constantly., on hand. .
MARKET - ON - SIXTH - STREET
Between Main and Pearl v "
Plattsmouth, , - - w Nebraska.
Cholera infantum has lost its
terrors since the,-. introduction of
Chamberlains colic, cholera and di
arrhoea, remedy. s When that remedy
is used and the treatment as direc
ted with each bottle is followed, . a
cure is certain. Mr. A. W. Walters,
a prominent merchant at - Yalters
burg, III., says: It cured my baby
boy of cholera infantum after sev
eral other remedies had failed, the
child was so low that he seemed al
most beyond the aid . of human
hands or reach of any medicine."
25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by F.
Cj. lricke & Co. .
The Homdliest Man in Plattsmouth
As well as the handsomest, and oth
ers are invited to call on any drug
gist and get. free a trial bottle o.f
Kemp's balsam for the throat and
lungs, a remedy thatjis selling en
tiiely upon its merits' and is guar
anteed to relieve and cure all chron
ic and acute coughs, asthma, bron
chitis and consumption. Large bot
ties 50c and 21.00.
For Sale.
Mv house and three lots corner
Sixth and Dey, price $1,200.
MRS. I. A. J. liUELL,
Central City, Neb., ape. E. R. B.
The B. & M. will sell round trip
ckets for the Council Bluffs and
Omaha Chautauqua assembly, July
to 16. to Omaha for one fare for
the round trip from Plattsmouth.
Tickets on sale July 2, 3, 4, 7, 8 and
15, and limit for return to five days
trom date of sale, this limit in no
case to exceed July 17.
J. Fkancis,
General Passenger Agent.
For Atchinson, St. Joseph, Leaven
" worth, Kansas City, St. Louis,
and all points nr-th, east
south or west. Tick
:" ets sold and bag
gage checked
to any
point
in
the
United
States or
Canada. For
INFORMATION AS TO RATE
AND ROUTES
Call at Depot or address
H, C. Townsend,
G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo.
J. C. Phiixippi,
A. G. P. A. Omaha.
H. D. Apgar. Agt., Plattsmouth.
Telephone, 77.
i&W ml
IVa. ALTHFUL. AGREEABLE. CLEANSING.
Tor Farmers, Miners and Mechanics.
A PERFECT SOAP FOR ALKALI WATER.
Curts Chafing, Chapped Hands, Wounds, Uuroa.
Etc A Delightful Shampoo.
white Russian soap.
Specially Adapted for Use in Hard Water
M0M