Plattsmouth herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1892-1894, April 06, 1893, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE WEEKLY HERALD: 1 LATTSM 0 1 Tl I . N E 1 1 U AS K A . A I M 1 1 L (I. s;n.
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In Fact all Sinds of Watches.
100 VARIETIES
The largest stock of Jewelry ever seen in the county. All oode
as represented and guaranteed where a guarantee is yood.
J'rices Gold filled Watches f 10 and upwards.
Silverine and Nickel fl.7.") and upwards.
The largest variety of repairing of any firm in the county.
tSTCall and be convinced of the truth of these statements.
THE C Alt RUTH .IKWELKY COMPANY
PLATTSMOUTH, NEB.
goto ISAAC PEARLMAN'S
GREAT OTJERILT
HOUSE-FURNISHING : EMPORIUM,
Where you can get yonr house furnised from kitchen to
parlor and at easy terms. I handle the world re
nowned Haywood Baby Carriages, also
the latest
Improved "Reliable Process" Gasoline Stoves.
CALL AND BK CONVINCED. NO TROUBLE
TO SHOW GOODS.
OPPOhousCeOUBT i
WE MUST HAVE MORE ROOM
.... AND IN ORDER TO GET IT
7E WILL FOR THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS
Make Prices That
Will Move Hardware.
CLEAN NEW STOCK GOES AT VERY BOTTOM PRICES
BURNED HARDWARE AT ANY PRICE
J. W. HENDEE Sc CO.
M 151 SINGER & LO H M ANN,
DEALER3 IN
SOLID COMFORT PLOWS, FARM IMPLEMENTS, WAGONS
BUGGIES AND SMALL FARM SAFES. .
PLATTSMOUTH, .... NEBRASKA.
TUCKER
Latest Spring Styles IVom
eastern cities. All the latest from all the largest
cities Come and see our Silk Hoses, Hat Ornaments,
Fancy Straw Uraid and Hats. Trimmings in velvet
and laces oi all description. In fact everything that
makes a lady's hat complete.
''Triinmiiix is un Ar1, mnl should
oui trimming di:paktmi;nt
Is managed by Miss Kate Nempler, wh only
needs to he mentioned to he patruii.ed.
Geo. Vass' Old Stand - Sherwood Block.
TUCKER SISTERS,
lvccp . . .
"Waltham Watches,
Hampden Watches,
Columbus Watches,
Good Watches,
Gold Watches,
Gold-filled Watches,
Silver Watches.
OF CLOCKS.
"IiATTSMOUTlJ, 1513.
SISTEES
Chicago, St. Lo'iis and other
In' clussod us ti 'J'Ol:$SI().X,'
PENSIONS ISSUED
the following pensions have been
recently issued:
Nt.HKASKA.
Original: Henry Wilson. William
Beswick. J. Gatewood, R. Mitchell.
J. B. Teas. John Craig. James 1',
Smith, Willard I). Paine. William
Crosby, C. Lucas. J. S. Thomas,
George E. l'rudy. David IW.enbury.
Additional: James Benjamin. C. A.
Clark. William K. Kendall. C. C
Greer." A. C. Eberhart. Increase:
William T. Hanchett, Harvey
Hewitt, William A. Brown. Reissue:
William P. Sims, Edward Givenc
Original. widows, ect.: Anna
S.lioepf, Mary Beteem, widow In
dian war.
Nebraska I riginal: Robert Me
Kibbon, Henry Determan, Charles
Stare, William Lancaster. lohn
Hartley, John Scotield, Henry
Crooks, H. H.Grosvenor. Additional:
Menzo Sliatil, George B. Clou h.
Increase: Joseph L. Wright, John
Hill, Daniel Swalley. Reissue; John
B. Weaver. Original widows, etc.:
Nancy Kyuer.
IOWA.
Cyrus H. Clark. Thomas Handlin,
David A. Davis, Calvin Ellis, A.
Green, Bernard Graeser. William C.
Stafford. lohn Maluburg. Addi
tional: Francis Hubbard, Christoph
Gossenderger, John Jones, Robert
Bodell, James H. Poor, Simeon S.
Morrow, James C. Wright. Increase:
Davied M. McMilliin, John Phillips.
Reissue: Edward F. Fish. Oripina i
widows ets., Henry Vance, (father)
Mary Cline, Louisa E. Wagner,
Amelia Otto, Harriet Smith.
Iowa Original: John Nutt, A. O.
Mudge, F. Jones, Samuel Oxen
reider, Elisha MyricK, Frederick
Whitley, Ransom Allen, James R.
Ratfeaty. William F. Early, Fred
erick Wicker, John McCoy, Jameb
E. Pattoh, A. Holbrook Ulysses
Kinsey. Additional: Joseph G.
Wheat, C. Phillips. Jonathan Elrod.
John Rush Brown. Reissue: Don
Fike. Original widows, ets.: William
R. Lucas (father ), Maria Lillibridge
F. P. Herrick (father.) Survivors
Indian wars: Robert P.. Wilson,
John R. White.
The Clyde line steamer Saginaw
has arrived from San Domingo,
her passengers bring news of the
arrest of the president of Sau Dom
imro hv French naval officers in
San Domingo City. AccordingTof
their story the president had taken
502,000 from a Faench bank, the
manager of which called upon two
French cruisers lying in the harbor
to prevent the escape of the presi
dent to Monte Christi, whither he
was about to start to quell an in
surrection. The presiden's sudden
descent upon the bank was the
outcome of a legal suit between
him and some of the French
residents, involving the payment
of a sum of money. The case was
sent to the higher court for judg
ment, but apparently this delayed
it too long to suit the president, so
he ordered out the militia with,
instructions to seize whatever
French gold they could find. The
soldiers proceeded to the bank on
March 14, tore down doors, blew
open vaults and carried off iHSli.OOO
in cash. The French commander on
the cruisers was apprised of the
outrage and sent an armed force
ashore, which captured the presi
dent as he was about to proceed to
Monte Christi, a small place on
Dominican and Haytian borders.
The president was held in custody
and word sent to France regard
ing the afiair. Another French ship
on the way to San Domingo City,
with instructions as to how the
case should be disposed of. An
indemnity of $100,000 was at first lc
ininiledj but this demand was
withdrawn pending the arrival of
tWe next French mail. The passen
gers who reached here today state
that there is truble brewing in San
Domingo.
Trapping Wolfe In Franc.
Among other contrivances there is
one that outwits the sagacity of the
wolf with as little hardship as such a
capture admits. Within a circle of
strong stakes not very closely plant
ed sheep or a goose is confined.
At a .distance o4 10 inches is nn
outer circle of stakes having an en
trance 18 inches wide. The path le
tween the two circles is well lionten
down. The door of the outef one,
which folds back against the inner,
is set invitingly ojK'ii.
In marches the cautious wolf pur
sues the path till lie comes to thy
hack of the ojten door, pushes against
the yielding obstacle, and by so do
ing closes the entrance ugainst him
self. The latch falls at the impact
of the door against the doorjiostaiKl
he is hojielessly fast, unable to touch
the decoy animal of the inner circle
or to leap over the strongly planted
poles of the outer one. Thus mglo
riously kidnaped, the victim is soon
dispatched. Black wood's Magazine.
Salti, a Sardinian city, lias no po
lice, no clergymen, no dixitor, no
chaHl. Marriages are ratified by a
priest or registrar at a parish many
miles distant, to which brides and
bridegrooms travel in batches to have
the necessary ceremonial conducted.
mm
PLOWS AND PLOWING.
Ilrlpful Hist, fur KHrmrr ami Mark)
(iurtlnit-ra.
Good plows are oti sale at every hard
ware stortK m fact, there are more gotnl
plow than good plowers. for. simple it!
the orntio:i iippturs to W, but few
know how to do it to the best advan
tuge. There is a knack about making
straight lines and even furrows natural
to some plowers. but not easily acimireil
by the average hired man, mid the gar
dener, if lie desires to have the work done
well, must do it himself or instruct his
men how to do it. Suppose wo haven
strip of land to plow of the shnjH' here
shown Hi'd situated between strips of
"""
SAMI'LK OK KAI I.TV IM.OWINd.
stnnl :i:g crofis. Even a poor plowman
will find little difficulty in striking out
the furrow in the center mid go on all
right for awhile, but as the plowing pro
gresses and the team naturally crowds
toward the plowed ground when Hearing
the end of long furrows on each side
the corners become rounded, and when
the piece is all plowed clear to the side
the four corners will still be left un
touched and must be finished with an
immoderate amount of turning, and at
last will be jioorly done or left partly un
finished. A good plowman will strike
his last furrow exactly on the very edge
of the piece.
The market gardener also needs a
good, light 1-horse plow to plow up
smaller patches for second and tliird
crops, in cultivating and hilling up cele
rv and for various other uses. Every
..inlware dealer keeps them.
Subsoiling is not absolutely necessary
for warm loam with jKirons subsoil, but
generally of considerable benefit for
soils resting on a heavier and compact
lower stratum. Such a plow following
the furrow made by the comuion plow
is intended to lift and break the layer
ueit under the top soil, says Griener in
"How to Make the Garden Pay," from
which the foregoing is a reprint.
Henderson, in "Gardening For Profit,"
says the subsoil plow accomplishes the
work of stirring, loosening and draining
the soil beneath the furrow of the com
mon plow, lifting and breaking but not
turning the B"bsoi11
On very stiff soils
he nsed the subsoiler once in two years:
in lighter soils not so often.
To avoid the frequent change of share
and the extra cost of replacing them a
reversible, self sharfiening slip point is
now made. When the bottom of this
point or slip share is worn and the plow
tends to run out of the ground by reason
of the rounded point, the slip point is
taken out and reversed, and thus dou
bles the length of its useful life.
The Firmer'! Hotbed.
Where the farmer or gardener is too
fur removed from business centers to
buy plants cheaply of the seedsmen, a
hotbed will be found convenient for
starting many kinds of plants. The first
step to lie taken is getting ready the ma
nure with which to simply the required
bottom heat. Here is what the agricul
tural editor of the New York World has
to say on the subject:
Fresh horse manure, mixed thorough
ly with one-third to one-half its bulk of
leaves, or straw used for bedding, or
other manure that hits been heated once,
is the material preferred. As soon as
this compost begins to ferment turn it
ugain and let it remain until signs appear
of a second fermentation. Make an ex
cavation about 2.J feet deep and of a size
to suit the sash on hand or nnmlier of
plants required. Locate this pit in a dry
spot facing south or east. One sash will
generally give early plants enough for a
large family.
The frame for the sash or sashes may
be made of boards nailed to small poMs
at the corners. This frame ought to be
about 19 inches high at the back and 1'.'
inches in front to give the projier slot
to catch the sunlight. To facilitate the
opening and shutting of the frame, cross
pieces should be planed for the sash to
slide on. When all is ready, tread the
manure down firmly in the pit to the
J depth of 2j feet, put on the sash a ml
I keep the pit closed until the heat rises.
In two or three days spread on top soil
i to a depth of six or eight inches. In
this seed may be sown in drills two or
three inches apart for early tomatoes,
eggplant, cabbage, cauliflower, lettuce,
pepper, etc.
I'Miiturt-i In harly Spring
1 Do not pasture your grass lands before
I the ground settles and the sod is firm.
I By too early pasturing the tops are kept
closely cut oil', ami the roots are much
injured. To gain and thrive the grass
needs some green leaves. Where thin
and unproductive, harrow the surface
and sow on other kinds of grasses and
i clovers, with a top dressing of some fer
tilizer. If the cattle am fed oilnieal or
j other rich food, most of it goes to ferti
lize the land they graze on. Scatter the
I droppings of the cattle that no offensive
j bunches of tall grass may grow around
I them.
That high English authority, J. B.
I Lawes. says it is better not to feed young
. grass the first year. Heopioses mowing
i it the second year, having found from
. practice that this destroys the clovers
uud the lesser grasses by encouraging
the stronger species. Instead of mowing
; he feeds off the grass with cattle. He
prefers to sow a variety of grasses, leav
ing the bt to hold tlieir own. A pas
, tare cannot do much above ground until
after the formation of a large bulk of
roots Ulow. A pasture often falls off
after two or three years. This can lie
avoided by feeding the stock that graze
on it oilmeul or oilcake,
HOMIMADE IMPLEMENTS.
A Whrel Hm For a Small O.ardrn-Spnd
Fur britrovlng Ilurdorha.
The wheel hoe depicted in the first cut
is an excellent little tool for the cultiva
tion of garden crops, eiiecially in a
small garden where it is hardly practica
ble to use h horse and cultivator, and
where vegetables are planted close to
gether, such as onions, etc. It is de
scribed as follows by the one who made
nil used it in the Ohio Farmer:
The wheel is elT of a mowing machine
ami is 8 inches in diameter. The axle is
N inches long. The cutter is a piece of a
buggy spring 26 inches long and about an
eighth of an inch thick and Wiita.s shown
m cut and attached to the handles (I inches
from axle. The two braces are each t
inches long and attached tothecnttei
about 2 inches above the band. Ther
are two holes in the end of each brace ami
also m each end of cutter to regulate
the depth. The handles are attached tc
the axle by two pieces of strap iron, and
a bolt through the axle lmlds the part
together tightly. It cost 60 cents foi
cutter, braces, bolts, etc.
With such an implement much work
can be accomplished, provided the soil
be free from stones or rubbish, ami thu
is just the way a garden should ulwayt
A rONVKNICST WHKIX 1KE.
be. It should not be allowed to bnke.
No wheel hoe can be successfully used in
crusted soil. Work as soon after a rain
as the ground will crumble nietly.
In the second cut is shown a spud,
which isdescrilied by another Ohio Farm
er correspondent who has used it for IS
years to destroy burdocks. His farm was
overrun with that i st when he came in
possession, but now theyiirenearly wiped
out. By cutting them off below thf
crown they never sprout. He had a spud
made at that time in the following man
ner: He got a broken crosscut saw plate,
took it to a blacksmith, had it cut alniut
11 inches long and cut tajiering, the tor
of plate cut square across, and thejKiint
ed end cut a little rounding, as shown in
Fig. 1. Then he punched two J-ineb
holes, the first one about one inch from
upper end of spud and the other two oi
three inche below, according to thf
length of spud. Then he made it a littlt
I
IIANM.E ASK Srri) COMH.CTE.
concave, which gives it strength to resist
any pressure on the handle, which is cut
beveling, as shown in Fig. 2.
Any tough spade or fork handle will
answer the purpose. The handle must
lie riveted on the concave side of blade;
the head of rivet should le long and T
sluiH'd to bend over the handle to keel
it from splitting. He says: "I have n
large and Mmill spud. The latter ismadt
from a hand saw, plate about eight inchet
long and two inches at pointed end and
tHjiering, as shown in Fig. 1, made in
every way as the one described. My large
one 1 use for spading in the garden. They
are thin, light and easily kept sharp."
Tha Vegetable (arU u.
The farmers who have made provision
for starting seeds under glass will have
the earliest and the lu st gardens. With
the aid of hotbed or cold frame, or both,
all the vegetables that will liear trans
planting (and most of them are all the
better for it) will be greatly advanced.
The garden ought to have a south oi
southeastern exposure and 1e well
drained. To produce best results there
should lie at least one foot of good, rich
soil. The practice of rotation is an im
portant matter in the vegetable garden.
As a rule, never let the same crop or
kind of vegetable occupy the same lied
or spot two years in succession. Pota
toes, onions and a few other things may
form an exception to this rule, but it is
nevertheless better to keep up the rota
tion. Every year these beds must be
warmed up by a lilieral coat of manure,
which should be thoroughly mixed with
the soil. (Jrow everything in drills or
straight lines. Larger crops from a given
surface are grown in this way, and culti
vation becomes simple and comparative
ly easy.
riruru-iHMMimnnia In ('aiiaila.
It has been officially declared by the
authorities of (treat Britain that con
tagious plcuro-pneumonia exists in the
Dominion of Canada. With a view to
protecting the stock interests of the
United States the secretary of agricul
ture has ordered that all cattle to lie im
ported from Canada into the United
States be made subject to the same con
ditions arid requirements as if they were
imported iuto the United States from
(treat Britain or the continent of Europe.
It is also ordered by Secretary Itusk that
all neat cattle imported from the Do
minion of Canada must lie entered at
the iHirt of Buffalo, which is distin
guished as a quarantine station.
II ITU anil There.
The phosphate deposits in Florida are
apparently inexhaustible.
The territory of Arizona is, so far as
the sheep industry is concerned, in as
prosperous a condition as any state or
territory in the great southwest.
Farmers' wives Mid daughters will
doubtless lie interested in the women's
congress of household economics, which
will meet ill the Art Institute building
at the Lake Forest park, Chicago, during
the week beginning Oct. IB. The world's
agricultural congress meets in Chicago
the same week.
It is a mistake to think that horses at
light work can b kept entirely on hay.
Such horses aotiu 'ill off in fiesh and Jo
not thrive.
jBaking
JlbsoaUIy
Pure
A ere. mi of tatar baking powder.
Highest of all in leavening
strength. - Latest United States
food report.'
Royal Dakix ; I'lmmiK Co.,
HM Wall St., N. Y.
DISEASES
SYPHILIS
II ONI or THI
MOST O'tTRItl-
ins mm
oni or thi moar
oaNGiaoua or
PRIVATE
OR
BLOOD
DISEASES.
WE SPCCDILV, COMPLtTCLV AND PERMa
NCNTLV CURE SYPHILIS, WELL At
GONORRHOEA
GLEET
STRICTURE
VARICOCELE
: HYDROCELE
SEMINAL WEAKNESS
EFFECTS OF EARLY VICE
NO ALL WEAKNESSES AND DISEASES OF A
PRIVATE, OEUCATE OR SEXUAL NATURE.
consultation ran.
call ur-ON, oa aocnett with it,
ORS. BETTS & BETTS,
lilt South lit It -tree!. miiiiI liinst cor.
lCih uud I tiiii initio street.
Oijim1i. M(?b',nr.ca.
JULIUS : PEPPERBURG,
MimufiK turt r of Hint Wlmleaale
mil Keliiil 1 iciiler in the
Choicest Brands of Cigars.
A r'ULX LINE OF
FIXE TOBACCO AM SMOKERS' ARTICLES
ALWAYS IN STOCK.
PLATTSMOUTH. i NEBRASKA
DENT I STRS
IT
rGnLD AM) POKKI.AIN i'KOWNS.
Mridge and Fine (iold Work
A SPECIALTY.
Hh STKIXAI S I.OCAI. mm well hh other
iionesthetii civeu t ir the painless
extrnc lino of teeth.
C. A. MARSHAL!,. Fit.gerald Block
FURNITURE, AND
UNDERTAKING.
HouseFurnishinR Goods
STOVES AND RANGES.
( hir ."tuck in nil line" i complete unci we
inviteoiir (ricii.N tu come in anil look
us through. Wt- will ciiileiivnr to
pleiisv tun. W in ii in the city
cull in mnl see us.
STKKIHHT & SATTLKK,
(Succewnrn In Henry llnei k.)
.7J2 Main Street, I'latfsmouth.
S. K. J IAI.I.tScSON
.... MA.NTK.VCI l'KlikS OK ....
Tin. Copper and Sheet
IRONWARE
Country Work Attended to
- - - - ON SIIOh'T NOTIC E.
CIVJ-J US A CATjL.
IIKVKK SIXTH AMI I'KAKI. STS.
Attokney-atLaw
A. X. SI LLIVAX.
Will ulve sperinl nttetitinu to'ull business
eiiiiusteil to him
Tk. m aVirUaV.A m
mm
mm
5 llS CO
km
itmgb 1
OKKU K-l'iiion blink.
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