Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, March 29, 1888, Image 5

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'pe.
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies. A niarvcl,f put -ltjr.trem;'ti
and wholesoiiieness. More eeo
noailcal til u n the ordinary kinds. :tnil cannot be
aolQin competition with the iniiltUuite of low
tt. Btiort weight alum or phosphate powders.
80ia Only 1 II C U.S. ltOYAL BAKINO l'OWUKH
Co..l0l5Wall St. Kew York. 30UH
Mayor,
Clerk,
Tia.isuier,
Attorney,
Kngiuerr,
Marhiill,
Couneilmeu, 1st ward,
2nd "
3rd "
4t!l- "
J 1) MIMI'SON
U 11 SMITH
J II Watkkman
BVU' C'l.AKK
A Makoi.k
J S Matiikwh
W II Ma I.IC K
j J V Vk:khach
A W Will IK
J 1) M Jo.NK.-J
1 vvm Wkb -n
i M it Mum phy
S W iW IT'iN
i K M tiUS.l'SKl,
) r McCallr.n, I'KRS
1 J W JOIIM4 l'.,CHAIM)IA'
Board rub. Works-? ntrci 1okif.k
I l II II A W ivn uuniii
Treasurer.
Ptv.miy treasurer, -
Cleik.
Deputy Clerk,
Iteconler of Deeds
lleputv Keen-.-th;r
tMerk of Uisti IJI 'o art,
SiierllT,
Hurvyor.
Attoru;y.
Supt. of t'ub. -school.
Couuty J u in?:
BOAKD OF M.TPEKV1.HOH3.
riiiltsmout.li
Weeping Water
i) A. t'AMPUKI.L
TllOi. I'ol.l.OCIv
riKii riMTc11riKi.1i
lixACmioinKi.!)
W. II. 1'llOL
Jo I N M Lkvoa
V. WHOM AU'BR
J.O. KlKKN It A II Y
A. MAKOI.K
A LIjE N UKKS'S
I.lAYNAI:l Sl INK
C. l'.USSKl-L.
A. B. To:D,
Louis I'oirz, Ch'm.,
A. B. Ii ksox,
.h.n'.wood
GIVIG SOCIliUMiS.
0 f .j. Zf - 'N
l.ODfltC 'o- 115. I - F.-?.Icp1s
V'every Tuctiday ovoi.ius of enoh w-i'l:. Ail
trunats.'iit brotueis aie respectfully ii.Mted to
Htteud.
ulattmoi:tii kncampmknt x?,s. i. o.
A O r.re' fviry u tei'siie rnn:iv in
eacli ilionVli in ibe M.isoi U.ill. isil!u
Brother art I::vi;etl to attead.
bi a. o. u v . JH'i'IS
t-verv Mluu-iiai Fililay c.ven:ii!r hi iv. ui -
ball. Transient brol Sier rtr resr uu.iy .n-
riARio i.oiic;-: Nr,.
vite;lt. attend. F.J Morgan. MasteiW o; ir.li,
K S. iUrstow, Foie.iiao ; Frank lvoi. "ver
feer: I Bove, (luide ; Ueiiiije llous-.voitli.
i;eeord.r; II. J. Johnson, Financier ; su-U.
Smith, Ueeeiver; M. Ma bright. 1 i.tt M. W.;
Jack Uauaherty. lnsUle Guard.
HSS CAM? N. 3-W. MODERN' Vv'tlODMF.N
t-' of Atnene i Meets second r.iul font th Mmi
ay evening at. lv. of " P. hall. All transient
.....,,.. ,u .-o.nirit.l to meet with us. Ij. a.
v.un.i pr V'ejieiMblo C.i'.isul : 1" , "'e-7i
iu..M,.. i.ivk .,-. n n. Smitu. Kx-Bankcr : V.
HUUIIJ V- ....v. , t
C. Willetts. Clerk.
ULvrrsMOuni loimje . a. o. u. w.
3.
Meets everv alternate Friday evening at
Kockwood hall at 8 o'cl wit. All rransuMit brotii
fi are respeeliuliy invited (O attend. 1. tj.
Lursoii, M. W. ; F. Boyd. Foreman : b. C.
Wilde. Kecorder ; Leonard Anderson. Overseer.
fVlcCONIHlS POST 45 G. A. R-
KOSTF.lt. -
J W. .Tnxsov o nmander,
V S Taiss Senior Vice
K. a". Baths Junior
fliro. N1I.KS Adjtitaet,
Mau-n I)i xoy . r.ieer or the Day.
OHAK1.KJ Fim ' i;u-
Axdkkpox Fky .fP'Bl MiOJ.
.lAOOulioxB -.kmax..- ..Quarter Master Seit-
JL.. C. I'UKTssi Post Chaplain
Meetinir 'aturday eveuins
wur T t? (1 w
OFFICE.
Personal attention to all Business Entrust
to uiy care.
J iit-
A Memorial "
SlOUX ClT". , i.iuOfiai
t.t-'-li't ill lionur i,t . li.Q Ute It'.'Y. Ceo.
Haddock, who was murilurut Autst it,
1883, was unveiled toniht at tlie Fitit
MtthodUt cluirtli in tliu rv- nco of an
imiii.-nse uudiciirc. Very intercstiug
ceremonies were oflVred. Addresses were
made !y ministers tnid ttliers who were
associated with Dr. Haddock in temper
ance, the work in. which he lost his life.
Kev. Dr. Knox made a (ireful compari
son showing that there U not a tingle
saloon open in Sioux City toiXW whereas
there were nearly one hundrea saloons
open the night of the assassination.
Tho Chautauqua at Crete
Ckf.tk, Neh., "March 27. The Chau
tauqua assembly for 18SS, which opens
in June on their h.rautiful grounds on the
Big lilue river, promises to be mote sue
ccssful than any of its predecessor. One
of the great attractions will bo the licv.
T. DcAVitt Ttlmage, whose name is a
household word throughout the? land,
and v. hose eloquent sermons are read
with delight wherever tha English lan
guage is spoken. Dr. Talinage has kind
ly consented to be at the nssetnbly for
two days, liishop II. W. Warren of
Denver, Kev. Dr. J. T. Duryctir of- Bos
ton, and Mr. Helijainin Chirk, England's
great lecturer, will al?o take part and
lend their aid to the instruction and t n
joym:'iit of thos:; v.-ho liny come. The
musical part of the entertainment will lie
something that will b;j especially enjoyed
by those who delight in good vocal ar.d
instrumental music, which will be under
tho immediate supervision of Prof. W
F. Sherwin, of Boston, asiscd by IVof.
J. P. Vance an I Mr. G.- G. Vance,
cornctist.
An American PoS9 Arresterf.
Tucson, Ariz., March 27. United
States Marshall M-adn has forvarded to
Secretary of Stat-- Bayaivl an account of
the arrest of himself and deputies by
Mexican o'ticials wliilo pursuing the
Southern Paeitic train robbers' on Mexican
soil. He received information February
21 that a train on the Southern Pacific
had been stopped by robbeis near Stein's
Pass, and that the United Status mail
agent had been iired at and the express
robbed. lie summoned a po.-;s j consist
iucr of ten men, among whom were four
Indian trailers. The party Mtbsequenlly
retunvd to Tucson and then followed
the robbers to Mexican territory. Meade
went to Janoo to report to the Mexican
authorities there, and to ask their assis
tance in catching the rubbers, when him
self and party were arrested and their
arms and horses taken. At Hid expira
tion of fourteen days they wore released,
and for the first time wore informed that
their arrest was on Recount of their be
ing an armed posse. The marshal's re
quest for a return of their horses and
arms was refused because he ould rot
sign a statement which exonerated the
Mexican authorities. The party .vas com
pelled to return without horses, transpor
tation or arms as best as they could.
SOTARY IX OI'FICE.
Title Examined. Abstaicts Compiled, In
surance Written, Heal Estate Sold.
Better Facilities for making Farm Loans than
Any 'Other Ageacyv
IMattsmositli, - Xcliraslia.
B. Windham, Juun a. Paviks.
Kotary rublic. Notary Public.
IV 1XDHAM& DAVIKH,
Attorneys - at - 2Lcw.
Cfflce over Bark c t Ca Comity.
Plattsmouth. - - Nebraska, i
Ths State Teachers Association.
Fkemost, Neb., March 27. Fremont
was captured today by Nebraska school
teachers, 300 strong. They came by
scores on all trr.ins, and were received by
the local committee and assigned to lodg
ing places. The headquarters of the re
ccptiou committee are at the Eno hotel.
Active work has been done all day hy
I those haying charge of the school exhib
its. These are made at the Congregation
al church and high school building.
4 ,.t-s'jiit is
. . v. ....v-- objective ducation of thu
past. The remedy is in in -inu.il training.
The substance of real practical know
ledge is largely lo.-.t in grasping for furms.
Committees on resolutions and nomi
nations of otiiecrs were selected to report
tomorrow. The Wayne quartette fur
nished vocal music for the evening. The
session closed with' the presidents recep
tion and social.
Exhibits are here from over thirty towns
and cities of the state. These wdl not
be fully arranged until tomorrow. The
first session of the twenty-second Annual
! meeting of the Nebraska "State Teachers'
association was called to order at 8
Tha Storm in Nebraska. . ; o'clock this evening in the auditorium of
Lincoln, Neb., March 2(5. The storm i the Congregational church, which was
til nt has been general over Nebraska for j completely tilled. Prof. Jame, of Oma
ttic last twenty-four hours lias been of , h:l ..Csldcd. Rev. Hilton, of Fremoi.t,
unusual severity, the fruit tr-.-fS ar.d . T. , T- ,
u u i i mii i . offer. (1 prayer. Frof. Bcsspv. of .Lincoln,
young tiuibt r all beinrr heavily loaded; 1 J - ' .'
' with ice and sleet. Winter grains nre ! ,r';l'le tlie report of the executive commit
undoubtedly injured, an I tha outlook t?c, and II. M. Blake, of Beatrice, tr. as
for fruit in this state i; poor. j urtr r0j;orted on hand 118.
. ,, , , Z ' George L. Farr.bam, president of tha
plaint is West's Liver Pill-: they never
disapp' int you.
rick's dru store.
City property of all kinds in exchange
for lands improved or unimproved. Apply
to Windham rind Davies. w-it.
5,000 posts for sale, leave orders with
John Tutt at L. D. lieiinctt's grocery
store. i'2o-d w ltn
Outlaws Killed by Indians.
3Usii(M.Kii, I. T., M uch 2(5. News has
just been received here of a double kill
ing whi -h occurred on Friday la-t near
Werraka, Seminole Nation, some eighty
miles west of Muskogee. Tom Couard
and Abe Lincoln, notorious outlaws, both
being ingaged in horse stealing, whisky
selling and kindred crimes, ami Conard
also an escaped murdirer, under sentence
of death, were t lie victims. The report
comes that these men made a seouti. g in
Kansas during the. patt six months, and
while on their return to this nation they
stole two horses from the- Shawnee In
dians, near Sac and Fox ageu y. Pur
biiit was made by a party of sev. n, who
alter sevt ral days' chase came upon the
outhtwn near t erraka. Turn Conaid
tircil tho first shot, killing tlie horse of
one of his pur-.urers, who, incensed tit the
deed, gave :i warhoop and swept down
upon the outlaws, titing as they rode.
The outlaws were literally riddled with
bullets.
One, tww. five and ten-acre tracts for
sale on reasonable terms. Apply to
Windham and Davies d-w-lm.
Ftate normal school ut Peru, prcsidi nt of
8J 'lills 23e. At War- ' tile nssiciaiion, was mtroiiucen and ite-
liyered an address. Subject: "Are Our
I
I4'or sale or exchange. A number of
fine pieces of residence propeity. Apply
to Windham and Darics. d-w:3v.
FROM AN- UNPUO'-ISHED SONNET.C
T'sereero tliree thlug-s Vx'iieath tlta blessed skies
For which I live black eyes and brown aad
i.lue;
I ijoM them all most clear; but O black eyes!
1 live and dio and only die for you!
Tennyson.
THE HUMANITARIAN STANDPOINT.
Tito liijjMs of Children Our Debts to the
I-itlle Ones A Needed Lesson.
In lUJiIer-taking this work, let us not feel
too complacent, too virtuous, too generous.
To pay our debts is not to be generous.
Children, all children, come into tho world
our creditors, and they remain our creditors
is long as they remain children. Tbo task of
living seventy years in this world of ours is
thrust upon them. That alone makes them
our creditors. What we owe, what society
owes to the children, to all children, is gentle
Bess, tenderness, compassion, protection, nur
ture. Every child born in this world, in my
view of tho matter, has a right to food, cloth
ing, shelter, education, kind words, gentle
courtesies, careful protection.
But what poor paymasters we are. Instead
cf what is due them, how often do they get
blows, cruel words and cimc-1 neglect, I have
seen in New York -400 children from C to 10
years old crowded into an unwholesome gas
lighted, poor ventilated room, and kept at
work twelve hours a day corking and labeling
bottles twelve hours a day, six dayg
a week, and fifty-two weeks in
tho year. But I believe the world's
eyes are opening. We are coming to see that
we owe more to the children than they to us.
Our ambition to get glory pnd honor from
our elescendants rather than our ancestors, is
growing. We are appreciating our debts to
the children more clearly. If children are
ill treated they become cruel. And why
should we bo so shocked at this or that crime
committed? Is it not natural that they should
pay in kind; that they should say we owe
society nothing but just this?
Ill treatment of children i3 something hid
eous. The brute world is not cruel in the
sense in which men are. We need another
word for many of these human passions com
monly called LrutaL When we designate
them as brutal we are unfair to the brute
world. Cruelty, like tho other selflbh pas
sions, is binding. Tho more wo practice it
the less we are aware of it; or if wo cro
dimly aware of it, it no longer seems hid
eous. Cruelty is a universal passion. V'e
are all subject to it at times, for we are all
cowards. It is in the air of the world wo
live in. The selfish struggles of life blind our
eye:?, deaden our sensibilities, benumb us. A
stronger strikes U3 and we strike a weaker.
Our heari3 grow less easily touched. We
harden and petrify. The turn, dirty, de
praved faces of ragged and neglected chil
dren, which wo see to-day, do not startle and
haunt us as they once did. And may it not
be that we need a new lesson even more than
dumb brutes. Willis Gleed in Topeka (Kan.)
CaDitaL
Ptrangcr (to Washington hotel clerk)
Will yoa direct me to the barroom!
-Clrk Yes, sir; fellow the procession.
ilia E;-K-h.
x . e be
..i.)o of inastcr
wr whom no one w.-.s
.wit, and those who sheltered him
,. t.i e fain to do it by stealth, fur if :i ma:i
stayed with you more than a tonple of
days you were neceuntable, not only for
anything he might then do, but al.-o fur
hi.s antecedents.
Mr. liibtou Turner thinks race had ;i
good deal to do with bese.ry. When joii
take away a man's means of life lie nm-.L
cither starve or rob or beg. The ohlc-t
natives of Creat .Britain were short, dark
people Basques, say some, Esquimaux
say others; the tall, light haired liael beat
them out from almost everywhere, except
part of South Wale... Then the Cyi.iri,
another Celtic people, ccnie jaeross from
the Cimbric Chersonese (Denmark), landed
in Aberdeen, spread over Scot land a.i
I'icts. and coming southward wore met Vv
the title of S-T .
prefer to call it, "Kurdish" invasion, ami
turned aside into Wales. What the round
skulled Gael had done to the short skulled
people who had preceded him the Saxon
did to the Gael, lie took his tilled land
from him; in thi.se days it was not much,
nine tenths of the Island being forest and
marsh, and he gave him no chance of set
tling near him and bringing In tome of
the wild country.
That was not done till later, when th?
iiioiia -1 cries (true agricultural colonies)
s-et the example of milking the desert
smile. The conquered had nothing for it
br.f. to submit to slavery or to "move mi :'
If he moved onwMh a lot of frit-nds he
might settle down somewhere in W'a'ea, or
on the Cornish moors, or in the wild dis
trict called Cumbria (Cymri'.s Land) fro?
Chester to the Sol way. But there v.ouM
generally be somebody- to turn our, so, ii'
he wa- alone or wit h a few, be 'tig or
ro'ibiiig (the two Were intelclii.i '-a le)
w,-.s his only resource. All ti.f Ye.ir
1 lotitld.
StMiieilihit; Atxnit V.';ib;nts.
The walnut, is indigenous t Upper
Asia and in the inountaiiions regions of
Persia, is found i.rouing wild. Ir was
known to the Boman e.s Juglans He .
or royal tree of Jupiter. It was inl:o-
iiiced into Italy at the b."r inning of the
Christian or::, and uradually spread over
we.-tetti Europe. It was introduced h'to
England many cent uries ago from Era; - e,
which count ry. was then ca'.h-d Caul, and
some authorities s;-y the word "walnut"
is a cortuption of "Gaul-nut. " (Web. ;ev
L'ives the dcrival ion. however, from en
Anglo-Saxon vwird, "weaLh-htitit"," front
'wcnlh" a foreigner, a stranger, fi:;u
-hunt," a nt;!). In Ecrope it is c:-cd
si.i'.p'.y '-walnut," and the name Env.Ii..-h
walnut u-ed in this country washer-towed
by the colonists of Virginia to dist ingtti-h
it from the imtive American black wal
nut. The trr-c seems to lloiiris'i every
where. It thrives in rich and poor land,
on mountain mid in valley, in rock and
barren soil where hardly anything ci-e
can be grown. But in deep soil with a
moist bottom the English walnut grows
luxuriantly null yields large crops at. a
comparatively young age. Amer:uan
Grocer.
A Itelie of Ilarbavism.
It is many years f-ince the traveler who
was advised to go and see India remarked
that he did not care to do sr, irs the gov
ernment had abolished hook swinging and
widow burning. But some of the inhabi
tants of that vast peninsula are still given
to a .strange custom, of which little or
nothing is known to Europeans. It seem-;
that in the uizam's dominions there is a
caste in which this practice prevail.-1.
When any of its members die a Hag is at
tached o a band.H and the bamboo is
given to a man to hold over the corpse i,
the deceased. Then, having retired t :i
convenient distance, tho men of the ca-:rc-open
lire on the Hag, probably by way of
showing their distress and of helping the
soul of the deceased on its journey to some
other world. But not everybody is a
William Tell, and sometimes it happen.
that the man holding the Hag is hiv..
This actually occurred on a recent occv
sio:i, and notice was -taken of it by the
liiznm's government. In The Tar'ula, or
government gazette, it is made known to
all concerned that no flag hel l over v.
corpse is to bo tired at in the future. St.
James Budget.
"Noticeable "Meleorolosieal 1'lienomcna.
The meteorological' phenomena accom
panying the building of railroads in
Mexico are receiving the attention of
scientific men in that country, lleco-it
serious damage ilone by washouts on t he
northern section of the Mexican Central
roael wis v.-: water -pouts burst it: g mi
the track. i.vA it is a curious fact that
waterspouts set-m to lie attracted by the
iron track ami telegraph wires. Engi
neers on the line of the Guadalajara
branch of the Mexican Central railway
have noted that as fast as the construc
tion aelvances rain follows, and they hold
that this is due to the large hit of stf-el
rails on flat cars which are cr.rried f- r
ward as fast as the work cf c"; st rr.c.ion
permits. The most noticeable i':;ct is thirl
the country is dry in advance of the c-.r.:
f-truction trains, and also behind them
fi.r many miles. Rains beat Jvn, as de
scribed, in bucket fnls just where the steel
rails are, but o:dy in circles a few imies
i.i diameter. Frank Leslie's.
vo ttdtice
, u rat her 1 1 1 .. i) to
.... Vt'e are willing to toll ot:r
fiitire Winter Goods tit c bt. Staple we
baveal.trgi; quantity and oiler them
cry low. Cidioo j : to .r cents per yard,
making tl.t: hist s!alidalil of tlx m nt t!U
yards for :-l.(;. Gingham best dress
s! i. s 1 1) cents per aid. Du n g. od.t
till kinds ut the very lowest prices, (mm
." eeiiU per yattl upward. Woolen lms-j
we oiler at co.-t, extra fnc. Ladies ca-h-mere
hosv. worth tfl.oo. now 7t cents,
fine heavy wind -10 cents, now child
ren's fine ribbed woith ".(, now IK). I n- '
tier wear iim-t go at lo-v priei s, as we
will not ki-op iiieiii over.
( ur ( Jetits Sd vcr Grey Mitlno Skills
ami elrawt rs, former prices .o now
Our (tents Silver grey marino rhiits
and drawers, extra quality 7."i now .o.
III'1 S -rirb I fill . - I -!in ! ; .j,.,! dia-.v-
j 1 ... . 1 . ;a lion to t il.t-.
Our scarlet all-wool shirts and draw
ers, fine quality l.'.'o now l.OO.
Our scarlet all-wool shirts ami draw
'is. tine quality 7.1 now l,2o.
O :r scarlet all-wotd sliirts iind tliav.
crs, fine quality -V '2.00 now 1 -10.
E'H'M-'-V AS CHEAP.
)ur p( r c:'!;l. di eoimt on cloak ., is
still goo. 1. 'A'l-rri-1 !t -termini ,! to !o--out
our entire .-ink and ii(--r b.fo,,
has s mil a n o; i n at n i.i ; v bei n tdl't-nd !o
economical l.'tiyoj-s t(i pii-t b-. ,, t.,. !.; -t
qualities for o litth' m.-iu y.
Joseph Y. IVcckhac?:.
1
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Xj KJ h xj s a Li a is -l---J V. m.a t: V. Li rL m i a
s r.. : r. n
i
U rz? csu til Vas'
1
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A 'IT jirevitiii.s stniiuiH'i-n.r v. f Ju.rl
litilv ilc-fcriii i nt (1 to !i. -contij.in: 1 i;.-ii-cs.s in
IiuttsiiKUtli :tbl to tidve-i tist 1 ;:c-.- i 110 ly biul
now, ji.'j tati-f;;ctory arj-ntsfincuts Lave; 1)( tn
-rlectcil fcr the co::lii:!i:n.cc- A t:uv tibe.lt. r tho
lnar.ager.n'bt d Mr. J. i-'i:!rv v.vA I". Wu'X
iK'i as l)ook-Ki'(.'it'r u:k1 c-.shie r, we Imtcwi'I li
botiiy oiir lVicjiii'.s abd j.atix,:i:s eif'tnu- lii:;;l dc-
eioion tiiul mil v .-i-lici5. a I o:;t e of your i
1
hind j);ili'oi:;!.-c, so trccly cxtci;!. unrin tlfy j-'-j
past sixtctMi years, hy ihe' .'uWitnm ed eoinj.e- l
tent clerical l'jrco.
On t-ce'otibt of Mr. Solon. on leaving the)
city and hy the adoption .f the sn:n n.v
1
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M
r ;i
Co'.irteon - treatment, and an elegant new
1
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;tj
i " ,5 S
r t: it -ii is i u
Mi
hi
i.
Bed-Rock Prices,
Vvre trust to merit y.-uv good will and pa.tr
itge.
XFAIY JiESl'KCTFCLLV.
: t i
y i
1
it
M E
on- n
:.i
1 .
v. if tho benefit of those who ere rrettiug
! tlrc-d of -Truly rural"' as a cure for sLam
i lawing, the following is reeotfully submit
ted: 'l'rjnounce rapidly, ".She sells tcj,
shells; shall she sell sea shells f"
1 j
: Simply inhaling fresh air largely, by deep
iu--piratiou is sufficient to nip an incipient
cold in the bud. -
Louisiana has twenty-one industrial school
with "3,000 boy pupils,
There is more genius in application than
hi anything else,
p pis? pnntnorrq
s
n
iiualiu
"Will he open January 21th, at the
OLd) S'TiIJTD OFF. 1-1. G'-IFplU'l
All work warranted fir.-t-elf.tT-.
"W".'E. GTJTIj IEo.
-.
to" .
tatt.