I 1 , - i i I i 2ia, nr. Sth I 3 .o 'C i -r. it t r.n e 9 u it a - t t 8 U f'l ft) I "3 1 ' 1 Can counted on ire Catarrh Dr. Sage's Catarrh acdy. It's nothing new. For 'cars it has been doing that very c It gives prompt and coin- relief but you want more J that. And you get it, with J M Remedy there's a cure that j Tjpcrfect and permanent. The i iirst chronic cases, no matter of .! r Ions standing, yield to its ;i tnd, soothing, cleansing and heal !f d proj.erties. "Cold in the Head w if iads but a few applications. Ca i whal Headache, and all the c tables that come from Catarrh, at once relieved and cured. j jou can count on something else, 2 c $500 in cash. 1 1 You can count on it, but it's I re than doubtful whether you cc. 9M . U It. JUTho proprietors of Dr. Sage's famcdy, in good faith, offer that tVUUb A V A U 1UVUI 4VW VIMA V '.tarrh. Don't think that you 1(i.n nnn f rirmrrh. thThey'll pay you, if they can't re you. That's certain. T3ut they can cure you. That's o'3t about as certain, too. wCan you ask more ? W. K. REYNOLDS, KegLstered l'byeician and Pharmacist Special attention given io Office rsu Practice. Jwt v-eocK Bluffs Neb. j9 jjtotsen inL n DEALEB IK- STAPLE AND FANCY Hi R0GERIE3 GLASS AND QUEEN3WARL f'Patronage of the Public Solicited. e North Sixth Street, Plattsmouth JJB. A. SALISBURY :- D-E-N-T-I-S-T :- GOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS, Or. Stelnways anaesthetic for the painless ex traction of teeth. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Rrk wood Block plattsmouth. Neb .; ioejIjsts house. l 2 i 7, 219, 321, AND 323 IAIN ST PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. F. R- GUTEMANH. PROP- RATES $4.50 PER WEEK AND UP Lumber Yard THE OLD RELIABLE. II. A. WATEBM & SOB PINF L i Shingles, Lath, Sash, Doors, Blinds n ..nnir ererw demand of the city. Call and get terms. Fourth street in rear of opera house. TIMOTUY CLARK. DEALER IN COAL $ WOOD i TERMS CASHo rdi and Ofllce 404 8outn Third Street. N Telephone 13. UMBER gttelQUttsmonth Vtrald. COKNEK OF VINE AND FIFTH STS TELEPHONE 38. K NOTTS BROS, Publishers Published every Thurtwlay, and daily every evening except Sunday. Kegitttered at the Plattsmouth. Nebraska post pfilce as second class mail matter for transmission through the U. S. mails. TE8HSFCK WEEKLY. One year in advance - - . $1 SO One year not in advance - - - . 2 00 Six months in advance - 73 Three months in advance 40 TEKHS OK DAILY. One year in advance - - - $6 00 One copy one month 50 Per week by carrier 15 SATURDAY, JULY 30. 1892 REPUBLICAN NATIONAL TICKET. For President BENJAMIN IIAKKISON of Indiana. For Vice-President WHITE LAW KIED of New York. For Member Congress, A. W. FIELD. Lancaster County. REPUBLICAN STATE CONVEN TION. The republican electors of the state of Nebraska are requested to send delegates from their several counties to meet in convention at the city of Lincoln, August 4, 1892, at 10 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of outline in nomination candi- r- dates for the following state offices: Governor. Lieutenant governor. Secretary of state. Auditor of public accounts. Treasurer. Superintendent of public instruc tion. Attorney-general. Commissioner of public lands and buildings. Eight presidential electors. And to transact such other busi- ness as may come Deiore tne con vention. THE APPORTIONMENT. The several counties are entitled to representation as follows, being based upon the vote cast for George II. Hastings for attorney-general in 1890, giving one delegate-at-large to each county and one for each 100 votes and the major fraction thereof: Counties. Delegates, ?ohnJon9: Dtgatef; Adams lb1 Antelope 8 iveamey. a Keys Ifl h 3 4 1 Keith 3 1 Banner.... d Blaine 2 Boone 8 kLox.. :::.'.'.".'.'.. i Bovd 1 Box Butte H Brown 5 Buffalo 15 Lancaster 53 Lincoln.... 9 Logan 2 Butler .. 10 Burt 12 Cas-s 20 Cedar 6 Loud.. ...... ...... Madison 9 Merrick 7 McPherson 1 Chase Cheyenne 6 Cherry . ..... 7 Clav 14 Nance 5 Nemaha 12 Nuckolls 8 Otoe 14 Colfax 5 Cuming 10 Custer 17 Dakota 6 Dawes 10 Dawson. 9 Deuel 4 Pawnee 14 Perkins 4 Pierce 4 Phelps S Platte 5 Polk 7 Red Willow 9 Kichardson 16 Kock 4 Satino... 21 Dixon 6 Dodge 16 Douglas 94 Dundy. 4j Sarpy 6 Fillmore. 13 Saunders 12 Franklin 6 (iCotts Blun . Frontier 6 Seward " I Furnas 7 Gaee 28 Sheridan 8 Shprman . ....... 4 Garfield 2 Gosper 3 Grant 2 Sioux ? Stanton ThnvM 12 Greeley 3 Hall 12 Thomas Thurston Hamilton 11 Vallov D Harlan.... 5 Haves 4 Washington 9 Wayne Webster 10 Wheeler 2 York 18 Hitchcock 5 Hooker .. .... . Holt 11 Howard 6 Total JefTerion 141 It is recommended that no prox les be admitted to tne convention and that the delegates present be authorized to cast the full vote of the delegation. S. D. Mercer, Chairman Walt M. Seeley, U. B. Balcombe, J. R. SOUTHERLAND, Secretaries. A CASE IN POINT, The pearl button, industry is yet young and comparatively small in Omaha, but in Newark, N.J., it is an industry of considerable impor tance , giving employment to about 3.0U0 operatives. The manufacture of pearl buttons was little Jcnown in this country until after the passage of the McKinley bill, by which the American manufacturer was pro tected and able to compete with cheap foreign labor. It was the passage of this measure that caused the establishment of the pearl Dut ton business in this city, and in Newark and other places where it had previously started the business was very largely increased inconse quence of protection. One of the Newark manufactures says: "My business began with eight em ployees. To-day I employ over 100. When my new factor.'! is completed I shall employ betwt la 250 and 300 x ,ia , -ir mJ orders now 000 a year. Before jhepaBeage T J. InrrPfl to be uic i-ii,juuijr m. in the tariff has resulted in the building up of large pearl button business in a very short time and it is as much to the advantage of the employe as the employer. Under the old tariff the wages of the pearl button makers in this country aver aged between $8.50 and $12. Now they are from $18 to $24. Yet the buttons are cheaper now than they were before the McKinley bill was passed. Waeres are so low in the old country that the foreign manu facturer can still compete on even terms with the American manufac turer on some of the smaller grades This is where the question of wages and protection comes in. There are in Omaha two small pearl button factories that came in existence eolelv in consequence of the increased tariff. They are pros pering and are giving employment to people who, in turn, give employ ment to others, and thus increase busines of the community. In this instance, as in many others the republican protective policy has produced benefits which the people of Omaha and of the whole state can see and estimate at their true value. The market that has been opened to the Omaha pearl button 1 makers ia a irrowincr one. and will continue to extend under the benef- iceni inuuence 01 numc pauuuag., . t ' n i T - Mni ..si w n ma which has already done much to demonstrate that it is needless to go away from home for good article at moderate prices. A continuence of the policy which made it possi ble to establish the pearl button in dustry in this city will bring other manufactories here, and it will be found that the fruits of he protec tive tariff will become more prec ious to the people the longer they enjoy them. Bee. AMERICAN SYMPATHY FOR HOME RULE. The underlying American senti ment is undoubtedly in favor 01 home rule for Ireland this apart from all merely political reasons why American political parties may be supposed to favor the American-Irish vote. The underly ing reasons for American sympa thy for home rule are set forth, in an interesting article in the Forum for August, by Richard Henry Dana, who makes an instructive historical study to show that the causes of our colonial ancestors and of Ireland to-day are substan tially the same. He draws a paral lel between the treatment of the American colonies by Great Britain and her treatment of Ireland. The parallel is much more accurate than one wouia suppose trom me first glance. For instance, the English argument is that the con- duct of the Irish shows that they are unfit for home rule. I he same argument was used to show that the American colonies were unfit for independence. Mr. Dana goes on to point out that the parallel so often used by the English tories between the English-Irish situation and the Union-Confederacy in the United States is no parallel at all, for the j reason that the Confederate states were in armed rebellion against the Union and wished to secede from i. wVi Prpa a f Vio Ti-iaVi dn nni wiali in secede trom Great Britain, but to have home rule with union. How well this plan would work can be guessed from the real Uniou-Con. federate parallel that would hold if Ireland were granted home rule with union, because the Southern states alter our civil war were I granted home rule only on the con dition that they would remain in the Union. This is an instructive and impassionate explanation of the deep-rooted American sympa thy for Ireland's cause for purely historical and not for partisan rea sons. IOWA and Illinois have never been in doubt that the republican party would carry them this fall. The only question in doubt that arises is how big will the republi can majority be? THE metal known as didynium is worth $1,500 per pound. The fellow who finds the first mine will strike it rich. THE Journal does not say anything about the billion dollar congress any more, wonder wnyr Senator David Hill has conclud ed to tTQ to h.urope this summer. He cannot swallow Cleveland. WHAT has become of the calamity hnwlcra about the billion donar congress? Dan't Tobacco Spit Your Life Awav." truthful title of a ! i:t4i hnnV in at received, tellinfr all k Nntobac. the wonderful, harmless, economical, guaranteed cure for tobacco habit in every I fm. Tobacco users who want to r I . HAO Indiana Mineral vu., With on t Bene. A funny mistake occurred lately In printing labels for a meat preserving company. The printer had been in the habit of labeling tins of beef or mutton, aa the case might be, with the words "without bone" prominently uiepiayea. The company having added kidney soup to its list, the new article was duly tick eted as "Kidney soup without bone." London Tit-Bite. Intelligent Ants. Several species of ants in South Amer ica make raids on the black ants, rob them of their larva? and compel the poor black ants to be their slaves. In the burying of their dead, ants show won derful intelligence, having cemeteries, and even bury their slaves in a ditterent place from their masters and are quite up in funeral pageantry. JViucn may oe learned from ant life in their wonder ful government, sanitary arrangement, common brotherhood, nursing and care of the young, temperance and love of fresh air. Cincinnati Commercial Ga zette. She Married a Lord. "What has become of your niece? asked Miss Donahue of Mrs. O'Raff erty. "Och, sure, an she's done well wid hereilf. She married a lord." "Why, you don't tell me! An English lordr 'No; I don't think he's an English lord. He's a landlord. He kapes a summer hotel." Texas Sif tings. A Mat Made of Jewels. The costliest mats in the world are owned by the shah of Persia and the sultan of Turkey. The shah and the sultan each possess a mat made of pearls and diamonds, valued at more than $2, 000,000. The largest mat ever made is owned by the Carlton club, of London, and is a work of art. New York Sun. ' The- Korth Side of a Tree. The side of a tree on which most of the moss is found is the north. If the tree be exposed to the sun, its heaviest and longest limbs will be on the south tide. Boston Globe. Chinese and the Telephone. According to a telephone authority, the easiest language for telephoning is Chinese. It is principally monosyllables, and is made up of simple rising and fall ing inflections. German, it seems, is not as bad a language for telephoning as might be thought. French is not bad, but it is almost as sibilant as igusn. Yankee Blade. Nothing is more disheartening to a man than the discovery that he has mar ried a woman who loves to keep his writing table In order. . She Committed Su.cfde. Mrs F. T. Boe, atJWatkins, left this letter: "My husband Forgive me if I cause you trouble, but I suffer -m V a 1 so. xou ao not Know wnat inese long, wakeful, wretched nights are to me, ahd I am so tired, darling the pain will never De Detter. it is not easy to take my own lite, Dut x have been sick so long. Good-b e, my husband, I love you your wife." This is but one ot tnousanas mat erive up. instead of using Dr. Miles' soeedilv cured of their wretched ness. Go to F G. Fricke and get an elegant book and trial bottle tree, o a Colorado'. Cool Retreats. Durinerthe "tourist season" from Tune until September tne uuning- ton route nas on saie rouna xnp tickets, at very reduced rates, to the nrincioal resorts of Colorado. in uenver. uoioraao apnngs, - Manitou, Pueblo and Estes park (the most attractive spot in the whole state) particularly low rates are in force. Tulv and Autrust are the best months in which to visit Colorado's unrivalled resorts, to all of which the Burlington, with its connec tions, offers unequalled service. The local aerent will be giaa to give you any desired information. Nothing New Under the Sun No! not even through cars to Den ver, ogden, oait Lase tJity, san Francisco and .Portland. Inis is simply written to remind you that the Union Pacific is the pioneer in runnine: 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 n,. lv. lomax, li. if. & r. A. u. Jr., umana rveo. Cholera infantum has lost its terrors since the introduction ot Chamberlains colic, cholera and di arrhoea remedy. 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 orominent merchant at Walters- burg, 111., says: It cured my baby boy ot cnoiera iniantum aner sev eral other remedies had failed, the child was so low that he seemed al most bevond the aid ot human hands or reach of any medicine." 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. Oregon, Waahinaton and the Nor - west Paicific 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 ih in the establishment as what is known as Pullman Colonist sleepers. aamt These cars are " Xl."!" tne reirnicti moi- ference being that they are not up- 1 1 ninf Tfnw are furnished complete with trood comfortable hair matresses. warm blankets.snow white linen cur tains plenty of towels, combs, brush es etc.; which secure to the occu- nt Hirth as much privacy as is to be had in first class sleepers. There are also separate toilet rooms r i;a anH rrfn t lenien . and smok :..,, ohanlntelv urohibited. For AUK " " J . aS23KJSS.& Ticket I max, wuwo o '""""IjJgZnt, Omaha Nebriska Flriorlnu Gnn. Fluoritie g;is i3 oi a yellow color, with a smell resembling f;leacuing powucr. It ha3 not been liquefied, and still ro- laains gaseous at 1 2' :og:. i anrcniieit. Every precaution has to bo taken in studying its actiun on other bodies, both on account of ita :aiig"msly irritating action on the eyes aii. mucous mem brane of the operator and its marvelous and wonderful energy, far exceeding that of anything hitherto discovered. There is hardly a gae, liquid or solid, that it does not attack, usually with the greatest violence; in fact its mere con tact with any other substance is nearly always signalized by the sudden evolu tion of intense heat and light and fierce detonations. It almost realizes the fond est dreams of the alchemists, and might fitly be their long sought liquor, alka hest, or universal Bolvent, for even dull, inert flint takes fire instantly it is ex posed to the vapor, and the whole mass becomes luminous with a grand incan descence. As a supporter of combustion it leaves oxygen far behind. Lampblack bursts immediately into brilliant flame and gets red hot in a current of fluorine gas; and charcoal is made to give an inter esting exhibition of its porosity by first filling its interstices with the gas and then burning spontaneously with spar kling scintillations. The diamond, how i ever, is able to withstand its action ovii j at high temperatures. Chambers V car nal. The Danger of Mettrhor. Metaphor and simile, pc.gnant wea pons in the armory of a skiled debater, produce disastrous effect" in the hands of the inexpert. Certain figures, orig inally of force and f reginess, cause a bleak sense of depression from the fre quency of their employment by halting speakers, and one wholesires to engage the understanding of tn audience ought, at whatever sacrifice, to take a pledge of total abstinence rom such outworn phrases as "the thin 3nd of the wedge," "oil on the troubled Vaters," etc. Some times, it must be coniissed, the audience derives unexpected nd lasting enjoy ment from the deligltf ul incongruity of figurative discourse. The pages of Hansard bear, or at least ougnt to Dear on -record, tne poeuc flights of a certain honorable baronet, who became in parliament the very dar- linz of postprandial debate. Those who were fortunate enough to be present on the evening whcn he was denouncing the course taker.- by one of his colleagues in the representation of Ireland will re member the ricli brogue in which he re ferred to him aa "the young sea serpent from County rClare," and how he was promptly calld to order by the speaker for using ther expression. "Very well, Sir. Upe&kct:, " he rejoined, "I bow to your ruling of court-.e and beg leave to with draw the sea oorpent." Blackwood's Magazine. The Migration of Reindeer. The annual migration of tifce reindeer from Lapland in search of food ia now become a serious matter. In the ttlrst place, it necessitates the migration oj man, tor li owners wans io .ee iucu deer and their property they must fol low them wherever they wander. Sec ondly, the migrating animals travel in such great herds that they do not a little damage to the meadows, plowed lanas and forests. There seems to be no stop ping it. The deer migrate with more or less regularity, ana witnin a weeit or two of the usual time a hundred thou sand reindeer come to Tromsoe, which is the meeting point. The owners simply see that their herds do not get away. But this invasion of reindeer is viewed with alarm bv Scandinavian farmers. who have their crops trampled down, The farmer may sue for damages, but if he obtains a judgment in his favor how is he to find the defendant? Some seven or eight years ago a special law was nassed to meet the case. The country is divided into districts, and if the own era of the destructive animals cannot be found the district i3 held for the dam age, eacn iamiiy paying m yrupoi nun w the number of reindeer they possess. J. L. Vance in Our Animal Friends. Ilandcl, the Composer. George Frederick Handel, who was a .... 9 1 1 composer at tne age or nine, ana nau written three operas before lie was fifteen, was a man of uncommonly large appetite, and it is told of him that when ever he stopped at an inn or elsewhere where the host was not familiar witn the ereatness of his hunger he would order dinner for three. Upon one occasion he gave his order for three as usual, and when the hour for dinner arrived he called to his host "Ees de tinner retty?" "It will be served, sir, immediately n-non the arrival of your company," was the response. "Ach! said llanaei, with a laugh "Den you may pring it up right avay. am de gompany." Harper's Young Peo ple. Country Folk Are Tender -with Birds. Real country folk are very tender in their dealings with the birds that live ner them. In the course of my experi ence, extending over many years, I have never known a case of wanton cruelty occur in regard to wild birds. The la boring man, whose work so often lies far from the haunts of men, seeks com panionship with the birds. Of these none is more friendly than the robin. who is sure to appear, however lonely the place. Cornhill Magazine. A Clever lletort.- A legal dignitary, who had risen from an humble rank of life, was twitted by an opponent for "having begun life as a barber s boy. "It is true that I did so," was the answer; "and if you had begun in a similar station you would have re mained there till the present day. London Standard. Not at Home. Stranger Is your father in? Boy Nope. Stranger Where cau I find him? Boy Dunno. North Pole, I guess. Mom's cleanin house.-j-Good ifewa. Soajr The skin ougM to L clear; there is nothin; strange in a beautiful face If we wash with proper soap, the skin will be open and clear, unless the health is bad. A good skin is better than a doctor. , The soap to use is Pears'; no alkali in' ft. is perhaps Afr-y soap in thrfrorld with no al- fcainn it All sorts of stores sell it, especially druggists; all sorts of people use it Qtis t(iiincls, Dealer .in All kinds of fresh, salt and s moked meats. I make the best of all kinds of sau sages and keep a good supply constantly on hand. MARKET - ON - SIXTH - STREET Between Main and Pearl Plattsmouth, - - Nebraska. B. A. McELWADT - Carries an Elegant Stock OF Jewelry, Silverware, fratcheSiW . l3iocks. y Everything kepi that goes to constitute a first-class - iewely store iskept in his " . - -r- 3 siock. .Repairing uuue uy first-class workmen and sat isfaction guaranteed or mon ey refunded. B. A. McELWAIN, First door fouth of Post Office, PLATTBMOUTH, - Neb The octors are Cullty I Grave mistakes are made by phyJ sicians in treating heart disease! The rate of sudden deaths is dail increasing. Hundreds become viif1 time of the ignorance of physiciajf in the treatment ot tins disease. in four persons has a diseased h Shortness of breath, p'alpitatio fluttering, irregular pulse,, c sensation, asthmatic breathi ' or tenderness in aide, she:' arm, weak -or hungry Bf, symptoms of heart die'-. Miles' New Heart Cure f ; reliable remedy. Thousa to its wonderfnl cures, v Sold by F. G Fricke & QS How's Thl We offer 100 dollar.' any case of catarrh tl? cured by Hairs eatai j. j. cneney & l;o. Ohio, 8L" v the nndprBiim. v. F. f . Cheney for the and belive him pefeV- - in all buisness trans& xE ancially able to carry ations made by their 1 West&Truax, Whol."4 gist, Toledo Ohio., Wald & Tarvin, Wholesale drujLv do Ohio. ' Hall's Catarrh Cure is t H--nally, action directly upoi eh, and mucous surfaces of th ae Price, 75c. per bottle. Sole Druggist; Testimonials fret" , - borne Foolish People ' allow a cough to run until itgets beyond 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 taking the first dose. Price 50c and $1. Trial size free: At all druggists.