The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, July 09, 1892, Image 1

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PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. SATURDAY. JULY 9. 1892.
NUMHKIt 211
FIFTH YEAR.
4
1.7
A,
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I.
r"T7A PROTECTION COLUMN.
f I LJJ j A-IXI I COMU CTKII UYTIIK W. C. T. l
4kiwe
MUM
Absolutely Pure.
A cream of tartar baking powder
Highest of all in leavening strength
Latest U. S. Government food re
port. UURUTfOTON & MISSOURI III VElt 11. R.
V TIME TABLE. J
OF DAILY PASSEXGEK TRAINS
GOING ERST
No. 2 6: 17 P. M,
No. 4 lu::H a. n.
No. 8 7 ; 44 p. m
No. 10 9 : 4.1 a. in
No. tt ni
GOING WEST
Nol 3 :45 a. in.
No. 3 3 :4H p. in
No. 5 y :oo a. m.
No. 7 S si7 p n.
No. 9 4 P.m.
No, 81 1 :i5a. in.
Rushnell's extra leaves for Onialia about two
o'clock lor Omaha and will accommodate pas
BenKers. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY
TIME CAKD.
No. 384 Accomodation Leaves..
No.38.1 arrives..
Trains daily except Puuday.
.10:55 a. m,
. 4 ;00 p. in.
SECRET SOClETlt,
CAS CAMP No. 332 M. W. A. meets every
second and Fourth Monday evDiuRn iu
Fitziterald hall. Vlsitim? neighbors welcome.
F O Hansen. V. C. : r. Werteuberger, W. A.,
8. C. Wilde. Clerk.
CAPTAIN II E PALS Kit CAMP NO 60
Sons of Veterani). division of ebra.ska. V
8. A. meet every Tuesday mulit at 7 o'clock
In their hall In Fitltcerald b'.K.-k. All sous and
visiting comrades are cordially invited to meet
with us J. J. Kurt. Commander ; 1$. A. ale
Klwaln, let Seargent.
OKURK OK THE WOULI. Meet at 7:30
every Monnay evening at the Craiid Arm)'
ball. A. F. Groom, prenideut. Thus ailing,
secretary.
AO V W Xo8-Meet first an.l tliir.1 Fri
diiveventriKol eucli montli nt H() b
ball. Prauk Veriuylea M XV; J fc Ilarwick,
recorder.
GA. K-McConlhle Post No. 4 meets every
Saturday evouinp at 7 : 30 in Mielr Hall in
Koekwood bWk. All visiting comrades arr
"ordlallv invited to meet with us. h retl nates.
Pool Adjutant ; G. F. Mies. Post Comiuadder.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Oatintlet LjkIito
No-47. Meets every Wolneliiv eve
nine at their hall over Bonnet 5e Tutt t. nil
visiting knit(ht ore corli:illy invite! to
attend. M Xuriftitli, C C: Otis Dovey K of
K and S.
AO IT W No W Meet necoml and fourth
Friday evenings in the mouth at I O
O F Hall. M Vondrun. M X', K I lirowu,
recordeJ.
D AUG TITERS OF PEBECCA- liud of Prom-t-e
LodKe No. 40 meets the second and
fourth Thursday evenings of each month iu
the I D. O. F. hall. Mrs. T. E. lliiains, i .
Q. ; Mrs. John Cory, Secretary.
rXEGREK OF HOXOK-Meets the first
U and third Thrursday evenings each
month in I. O. O. F. hall. Fitzgerald I .lock.
Mrs. Addie Smith, Worthy faisterof Ilouor
Mrs. Nannie liurkel, sister secretary. -
CASS LODGE. No. 146.1. 0. O. F. meets ev
ery Tuesday nitht at their hall in Fitzgerald
block. All Odd Fellows are cordially invited
to attend when visiting in the city. Chris Pet
ersen.N. G. ; S. F. Osborn, Secretary.
DOTAL ABCAXAM Cass Conncil No 1021.
A Meet at the K, of P. ball in the Parmele &
Cral block over ttennelt & Tutts, visiring
brethren invited. Henry Gerliijj. liegent ;
Thos Walling, Secretary.
YOUNG MEN'S UHRISTION -SOCIATIOS
Waterman block. Main Street. Hooms
open from 8-JOamto 9 :30 p m. For men only
Gospel meeting every Sunday afternoon at 4
o'clock.
According to the census of 1890,
Chicago takes rank, by virtue of her
population of 1,093,570 people, as the
eighth largest city on the globe.
Most of us desire, at one time or
another, to visit a city in which so
many persons find homes, and,
when we do, we can find no better
line than the "Burlington Route."
Three fast and comfortable trains
daily. For further information ad
dress the agent of the company at
this place, or write to J. Francis,
General Passenger and Ticket
Agent, Omaha, Nebraska.
Mr. Van Pelt, editor of the Craig,
Mo., Meteor, went to a drug store at
Hillsdale, Iowa, and asked the phy
sician in attendance to give him a
dose of something for cholera mor
bus and looseness of the bowels.
He says: "I felt so much better the
next morning that 1 concluded to
call on the physician and get him
to fix me up a supply of the medi
cince. I was surprised when he
handed me a bottleof Chamberlain's
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhua Kerne
dy. He said he prescribed It regu
larly in his practice and found it
the best he could get or prepare. I
can testify to its efficiency in my
case at all events." For sale by F.
G. Fr 2cke & Co,
There will be a called meeting of
the V. C. T. IT. at the M. K. church
next Wednesday afternoon. Im
portant business, requiring all
members to be present; also all
interested in temperance work.
Seckktaky.
JO.SI
'II COOK H LATEST TEMPERANCE
ADDKKSS.
The following i.s from an address
by Joseph Cook at the recent aiini-
versaryof the National Temperance
socict3r in New York. It deserves a
wide readingj:
"It is a fact and no fancy, that we
have all lived to see the abolition of
slavery. Why is it incredible that
some of us may live to see a greater
evil, namely, the liquor traffic, made
an outlaw by both state and nation
al constitutional enactments?
There is more money behind the
liquor traffic than was ever behind
slavery. Those who used to be
called by Charles Sumner "the
lords ol the lash" never worked, or
whipped, or burned, or starved to
death in any circuit of the seasons
before the civil war as many vie
tuns as the liquor traffic now de
stro3'& every year in our republic.
Slavery never added as much to the
wastes and burdens of the nation
in any one circuit of the seasons be
fore our military conflict began as
the liquor traffic now doe's every
tr i .
year. oiavery never cost us a
thousand millions annually. Slav
ery never destroyed 80,000 lives a
year. Slavery did not produce
nine-tenths of the crime of the
laud. It is on account of the unity
of the liquor traffic and its growing
audacity that I predict its over
throw. Slavery went down not
chiefly- because it was consummate
wickedness. In the history of our
conflict with slavery we saw the
truth of the old Pagan proverb:
"Whom the gods would destroy,
they first make mad." Public sen
timent rose slowly against slavery,
but when it fired on Fort Sumter
and took the nation by the throat,
then opposition to it acquired
national predominance. When the
liquor traffic takes the nation by the
throat, you will find that although
Americans often wait until the
fifty-ninth minute of the-eleventh
hour before they arouse themselves
in a fgreat crisis, they may, never
theles, unlock from their throat the
grip of the great evil in the sixtieth
minute.
"New York already has this grip
on her throat. Put New York is
only one great city of a nation that
is to be filled with crowded munici
palities. The day is probably not
fifty years distant when the lighted
torch in the hand of thatstatue of
the goddess of liberty at the gate's
of the ocean in New York harbor
will flash on the homes of live or
seven, or some would say, ten mil
lions of people here within cannon
range of the base of her pedestal.
But Chicago thinks she will have,
ten millions of people before you
will. Great cities are growing east
and west, and by and by' you will
begin to put the warp, into the woof
of your railroad sj-slem; and when
your trade with South America is
doubled and quadrupled, when the
south begins to develop her re
sources and you need north and
south lines, then your cities
will grow faster than ever, because
the crossings of railw-ays will
be multiplied. Cities spring up
where great lines of transit inter
sect each other. Cities are growing
faster than ever in every portion of
our great republic; but if you had a
London here at the mouth of j our
Hudson it would be no larger than
our city of the future. Thomas Car-13-le
said to me once in his study in
Chelsea, 'Universal suffrage in
great towns inevitably" lifts the
scoundrel class to the summit of af
fairs in politics.' Wendell Phillips
said to me on the doorstep of his
house iu Kssex street in Boston,
that cherished home of his where
an invalid wife lay sick so long,
'The day is coming when the liquor
traffic, unless we change our fash
ions of municipal government, will
strain the -government as slaver
never did.' When the paths to po
litical preferment lead through the
gin-mills, free government is a
farce, and its future is likely to be a
tragedy."
For SALE At a bargain two
acres of land within the corpora
tion. Apply to
K. B. WlxpilAM. .
CUPID AMD THE CAT.
A Suffering Feline Came Ttetween Two
Soul That Heat as One.
He lives in Evanston, and during the
papt two years has been paying his ad
dresses to one of the most
charming
girls on the north side,
The wetlJinj?
day has not been naniod, but their en
gagement was announced almost a year
ago.
Several weeks ago, while they were
walking home from church one Sunday
night, they ran across a cat that was
wailing iiteously on a doorstep, f Do
you hear that, Jim?" she exclaimed,
grasping his arm with a closer grip.
'There's something the matter with that
poor little pussy. I'm going to see what
ails it."
"Nonsense!"' he replied. "Let's go on;
the cat will take care of itself."
"No; let's see what is the trouble."
Without more ado the young woman
ran up to the cat and was horified to
find that the animal had evidently been
run over by a wagon, as its spine was
dislocated and it was barely able to
crawl by dragging its hind legs.
"She's done for, sure enough," com
mented the Evanstonian. "She won't
last long. Come on, now."
The girl suddenly straightened up to
her full height. "Do you mean to say
that 3-ou would leave any animal to
suffer like this? There is a drugstore
on tho next corner. Run over there and
buy an ounce of chloroform. Hurry,
now, there's a dear!"
"Nonsense! You don't suppose I'm
going into the business of doctoring sick
cats on tho streets at night, do you? Be
sensible."
"And you don't suppose I'm going to
let this cat suffer here, do you? Go and
bring me a bottlo of chloroform in
stantly." "I won't do it."
"But I insist."
"You certainly can't Iks in earnest?"
"I certainly am. If you don't do it I
will go after it myself."
"You want to mako me appear ridic
ulous?" "Hurry up, dear!"
For a moment the 3'oung man did not
stir. The blood rushed to his face, and
he began to grow angr "See here!"
he exclaimed. "This is canying mat
ters entirely too far. I will permit no
woman to make a fool of me like this,
I'll get your chloroform if 3-0x1 really in
sist, but I warn 3-ou 3'ou'll never have
a chance to do such a trick again. I will
never have an3thing to do with 3ou
again. Mark that!"
"Get the chloroform.
"If I do everything is over between
us."
"All right; bring it."
Two minutes later a fine lace hand
kerchief saturated with the anaesthetic
was applied by a fair, white hand to the
nose of the suffering brute and the wail
ing ceased.
Here this story should end. A regard
for the truth, however, compels the ad
dition of the statement that tho 3oung
man thus far has actually carried his
threat into execution and tho prospect
of that wedding grows, dimmer and
dimmer. Chicago JlaiU
. A Successful Ruse.
A couple of thirsty fellows who had
been loafing all the forenoon on the
qirays at Stockholm were struck with a
brilliant idea. They borrowed an old
brandy" keg and half filled it with water.
Their one of them slung it on his . shoul
der and took it to the nearest spirit
vault, where he stated that he had been
sent by one of the skippers in port to
have the keg filled with brandy.
"The captain is sorry he only got it
half full 3'esterda3T ad thinks it would
be better to have it Jed to the top."
The keg was accordingly held under
the tap till it was full, and the fellow
hoisted it on his shoulder, but as he was
about to walk off with it he was stop
ped by the clerk, who demanded pa3r
ment for the spirits.
"Hasn't our skipper a running ac
count?" "Certainly not."
"Bless me! I must have gone to the
wrong shop!. There is nothing for it
but to empty half the keg back again."
This was no sooner said than done;
after which our hero merrily went in
search of his companion. Dagblaedt.
The Indian Attendants on the Oneen.
The Indian attendants who now invariably-
accompany the queen are a source
of great trouble to the court officials
who have charge of the various arrange
ments. The Indians require to travel
by themselves in a separate saloon, and
their meals and all refreshments must
be served to them in the train at the
stopping stations instead of their going
to the buffets with the suite and the
European servants.
Special arrangements have also to be
made for the Indians at the hotels, which
cause much bother and considerable ex
tra expense. Yet they have practically
no duties and are perfectly useless ex
cept for show. London Tit-Bits.
Taking Oft a Horse Collar.
It is not always ignorant persons who
fail to observe closely. Coleridge and
Wordsworth took a drive with a friend.
After great difficulty the horse was un
harnessed, except they could not get the
collar off. One of them said it was a
"downright imiossibility" and that the
horse's head must have grown since the
collar was put on. "La; master," said
a girl,. "turn the collar upside down."
Housekeeper.
THE BELLBUOY.
Like a restless, troubled spirit.
Self accuned beyond excuaint",
Seeking rent where none is offered, .
Vainly striving for release
XVrithea the bellbuoy In the ocean
As each wave in mad commotion
BufTets it without relenting.
Or a whispered word of paoe.
Sunbeams may each day caress It,
Or the storm king howl above it, .
To each one the wail goes upward
Iu a never endiug moan.
And the glistening sea gulls hear it
As they hover and pass near it.
And the rocky shores repeat it
In a uiutned undertone.
Oh, tho pathos of its life song,
Cliiinging not as years roll onward
Its one uote of weary walling
Outward borne unceaslnglyl
Prisoner iu Neptune's clasping,
Cliafliig under cord and hasping
Angel thou of mercy! warning
Countless sails that pass thee by.
Katharine II. Terry in Good Housekeeping
Polite Photographers.
The knack which French photogra
phers, and especially those of Paris
possess in relieving their sitters of a
constrained and distressed look while
sitting for their portraits has long been
the envy and perplexity of photogra
phers of - other nations. An American
photographer, on a recent visit to Paris,
took pains to study the means by which
this very desirable result was reached.
He reports that it all lies in a very
simple device, which well illustrates
the nature of the Frenchman.
When a lady, for instance, ia sitting
to a photographer for a portrait, the
operator does not, in a perfunctory
manner, coldly request her to "Look
pleasant now, ma'am!" He says to her.
in the most natural and graceful man
ner in the world:
"It's quite unnecessary to ask madam
to look pleasant; she could not look
otherwise!"
The lady of course acknowledges the
compliment with her most gracious
and highbred smile. "Click!" goes the
camera and the picture is obtained, re
vealing the sitter at her high water
mark, as it were. Youth's Companion.
How a Prisoner Escaped.
If we will only rightly use little things
it is surprising how much may some
times be done with them. A vizier, hav
ing offended his royal master, was con
demned to lifelong imprisonment in a
high tower, and every night his wife
used to come and weep at its foot. "Go
home," said the husband, "and find a
black beetle, and then bring a bit of
butter and three strings one of fine silk,
one of stout twine, another of whipcord
and a strong rope."
XV hen she came provided with every
thing ne told her to put a touch of but
ter on the beetle's head, tie the silk
thread around him and place him on the
wall of the tower. Deceived by the
smell of butter, which he supposed was
above him, the insect continued to as
cend till he reached the top, and thus
the vizier secured the 6ilk thread. By it
ho pulled up the twine, then the whip
cord, and then a strong rope, by which
he finally escaped. Detroit Free Press.
The Earth to Be Like the Moon.
The water of the earth is all destined
to disappear from the surface of the
globe by being absorbed by subterranean
rocks, with which it will form chemical
combinations. The heavenly spheres
exhibit sufficiently striking examples of
such an evolution. The planet Mars
shows what will become of the earth
in some thousands of centuries. Its seas
are only shallow Mediterraneans of less
surface than the continents, and these
do not appear to be very high; and in
the appearance of the moon, all cracked
and dried up, we have a view of the
final state of the earth for the absorp
tion of the water by the solid nucleus
will be followed by that of the atmos
phere. Popular Science Monthly.
The Modern Way.
In India they drown a great many of
the girl babies. It is a time honored
custom, but not universally approved
from a therapeutic standpoint. In civ
ilized countries they put corsets on the
girl babies, which brings about the same
results, without the shock, which is a
sure concomitant of the Indian method.
Moreover, babies last longer under the
modern system, and it is especially
prized by people who prefer to keep
their girl babies for a few brief years.
Detroit Tribune.
What a Flood Leaves Behind.
The worst feature of a flood is the fact
that the river is apt to leave a deposit of
sand, varying in thickness from one inch
to ten feet, over a large extent of land
that wa3 formerly fertile. In the flood
of 1838 a great many farmers in the
American Bottom on going back to their
premises after the subsidence of the
waters, found their property covered
with river sand in beds so thick that
two or three years elapsed before good
crops could be raised. St. Louis Globe-
Democrat.
The Place for Him to. Call.
Mrs. Witherby Your old clothes man
was around today.
Witherby (grimly) Tell him next
time that, if he wants to look at any old
clothes of mini, he will have to call at
the office and see them on me. Ex
change. How Ants Are Eaten.
Ants ara eaten by several of the minor
nations. In Egypt they are eaten raw,
with sugar; in Brazil they are served
with a resinous sauce, and in East India
stewed in buffalo grease or frit, v. in
butter. St. Louis Republic
1)1. KS
fler
Parties
00
Bed K00111 set,
establishment.
HK H AN
can of
J. I. Unruh,
PLATTSMOUTII,
F G r7fjICrtB $ C2
WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI)
A Full and
Drugs, Medicines,
DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LIQUORS
Prescriptions Carefully Compounded at all Hour?.
House Furnishing Emporium.
."V TC T11EIIE you can get your house furnished from
v V lv-itelipii to narlor and at easy tearms. I han
x
die the xvorld renoxvn Haywood baby carriages, also
the latest improved Reliable Process Gasoline stove
Call and be convinced. No trouble to show goods.
I. Pearleman,
oppositecouht j MiilTTSlfOLTTlX, jTK15.
How's This!
We offer 100 dollars reward for
any case of calarrh thatcan not be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
K J. Cheney & Co. Props, Toledo,
Ohio,
We the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years,
and belive him pefectly honorable
in all buisness transactions and fin
ancially able to carry out an oblig
ations made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Drug
gist, Toledo Ohio., Walding Kinnan
& Tarvin, Wholesale druggist Tole
do Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cnre is taken inter
nally, action directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the 83-stem.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggist; Testimonials free.
For Sale ok Trade A desirable
lot in Plattsmouth. Will sell for
cash or will take a good buggy
horse and horses in excliang-ci
For particulars call on or address
this office. tf
Colorado's Cool Retreats.
Duriner the "tourist season" from
June until September the Burling
ton route nas on saie rounu trip
tickets, at very reduced rates, to the
principal resorts of Colorado.
xo Uenver, uoioraao aprings,
Manitou, Pueblo and Estes park
(the most attractive spot in the
whole state) particularly low rates
are in force.
Tulv and Aucrust are the best
months in which to visit Colorado's
unrivalled resorts, to all of which
the Burlington, witn its connec
tions, offers unequalled service.
The local aerent will ie Kiaa to
give you any desired information.
Notice.
I will be at the meat market on
payday to settle up all accounts
due the late firm of Sampson Bros.,
and would like to see all who owe
us for meat on that day or the day
after. Thos. Sampsox.
M J. I.UNRUII m'
FOR FIUST CLASS FUIINITUHK.
the Whifney baby
Carriages and
good bargains iu them
desiring to furnish a house complete
could not do better than to call and inspect his line of
furniture, iu the way of Parlor sets, Dining room sets,
nd cvenytliing kept in a first-class 11
NKBkASKA.
Complete line of
Faints, and Oils.
IDIEZsTTISTIRY"
rtOLIi AND TOKCKLA1N CKOWN8
Bridge work and fine gold work a
SPECIALTY.
OB. STEIN ACS LOCAL as well as other an
estheticsglven for the painless extraction of
teeth.
0. A. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald BW
ULIUS PEPPERBKRG.
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 ? lwa3'H been esteemed
above every other brands
made ar sold at Platts
mouth. Plattsmouth,
Nebrask
et.
JOHN A DA VIES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Correspondence Solicited.
jea
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Office in Uuion Blook
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Plattsmouth, - - Nebraska
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