Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, April 12, 1888, Image 9

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'All right." tiki tjlvckter,
'"'out witb It." Said the dictionary com
piler; "Sylvester, I' kissed your sister."
"That'i not poetry," remarked the scribe.
"No, but it true," taid Johnson. There
are numerous utterances that are true and
to the point, and one of them is, "When
war is near, and danger nigh, God and
the soldier is all the cry, but when war is
ever and all things righted, God is for
gotten and the soldier slighted."
That was wrote long before the war,
but it has particular reft retire to the Unit
ed States government of today.
Every man an honest man and "an
hen:st suan 'a the noblest work of God"
who carried a musket cam J to the
charge and rushed on the enemies of
the Union, and in so doing offered bis
life freely and patriotically as a sacrifice
d the altar of freedom for th safety of
the stars and stripes, such a hero should
be pensioned. There's do doubt about
that.
The we-rd "shame" should be branded
on the cheek of every representative ol
the nation at Washington that won't iin
mediately see that justice is shown to
these veterans.
It is a living disgrace to any form of
government to be dilly-dallying abut
this matter until thoie now living have
passed to the spirit land with the brave
aouls whose bodies now lay in Southern
graves an unutterable memorial of bra
very and noble dseda to all the nations
of tha earth.
"The dead and absent are always
wrong, the living and present are always
right." That's what some of our sena
tors think todty in regard to their opin
ions in this subject. But a time will
come when they too will go. The mem
ories of those silent heroes "who are not
dead but gone before" will live as an
awakening reveille in the minds of every
honest man until the "lie down" is
sounded and their comrades join thsm
to answer the last "roll call" in a place
where all will be rewarded.
Meet boys and shake. Keep the wreath
of glory green. You are fast passing
away. "Leaf by leaf the roses fall," but
their memory is sweet, and other lips and
other hearts will recount their deeds of
glory. "There may, perhaps, at such a
time some recollection b" of "what
might have been" done in the past to
benefit those who sacrificed ties of kin
dred and left their homes and friends,
leaving in many instances only one fer
vent kiss as a last sad memento of their
departure to "fall on the field they'd
won."
"Wlille the sentinel stars set their watch in tfce
ky.
And tlU8Dds thr laid on the ground orer
powered, The weary to rest, and the wounded to die,"
While from many a bosom was taken
a "raven tress that was stained with their
life stream shed," and they would oiaybe
think as the blood gushed from f -ping
wounds, "but like a weary, wounded
dove, that flutters to its nest, I fain
would meet my own true love and die
upon her breast."
"Though lost to right, they're to mem
ory dear."
Elm wood
Ed Jeary talks of uioying to our town
this spring.
B. & M. State Journal has a monoply
on blanks evidently.
W. II Piiddy has concluded to stay in
Cass county.
The K. of P. are having there hall
white-coated and otherwise improved.
Capt. Cremer's daughter, of David City,
has been visiting the parental home the
past week.
A petition will be presented to the
county commissioners asking to incorpo
rate our town.
8. D. Ells has been quite sick the past
ten days with erysipelas bnt is some bet
ter at present.
The public is getting out of patience
with the Omaha Bee. Too monotonous
"Rosy" is putting in too much time with
his new hotel.
The Echo always gives the latest news.
In one column last week it tells its read
ers that J. W. Smith would be here next
week, in another column it had him in
towa this week.
Would Reed, of Weeping Water, like
to go to the national conventention?
Where is Arthur and Church -Howe. Wo
think O. Teft is the person deserving the
honer of going to the Chicago conven
tion. Deputy Sheriff Miller was in our streets
last week looking after the lucky(?) jury
man and others. The Eagle speaks of
"boycotting" news in regard to something
he pumped out of commissioner Dickson.
How about tho Eagle "boycotting" news
when he left Dickson's name out of the
ticket printed in the Eagle in 18SG.
The A. O U-W. Social.
From Friday's Daily.
Tho social last night given by the A.
O. U. W. lodges of this city, was a grand
success. The hall was filled with merry
making people, who indulged in card
playing, amusing rcercations, singing and
social chat. The evening soon slipped
iway nnd it was lat before all wcut
home. Refreshments wre served during
the evening. This social has suggested
the idea of quoting a litthi in connection
with the order which will be found in
"another column.
i.ad pointed a rtrclrtr ti ! " i
ife didn't know it was loadeJ!"
We often hear it stated that, r :
not responsible far what he "
know. The law presupposes kr
and therefore convict the mr
cuseo crime by ignorance!
"If I ?iad only kne
been an unfortunate"
some evil unknowing
a matter of general in
stance that laudanum k
naphtha is a deadly
blood heavily charged ,
accumulations of the waste of (.- .
tem, I, is one's duty ti know the fact
and the con9eqencs thereof. Our good
old grandmothers knew for instance,
that the opening of spring was the most
perilous period of tho year.
Why ?
Because then the blood stream is slug
gish and chilled by the cold weather, and
if not thinned a good deul and made to
flow qui' kly and healthfully through the
arteries and yeins, it is impossible to have
good vigor the rest of the yer. Hence,
without exception, what is now known
as Warner's Log Cabin Sarsaparilla, was
plentifully made and religiously given to
every member of the family regularly
March, April, May and June. It is a
matter ot record that this prudential,
preventative and restorative custom sav
ed many a fit of sickness, prolonged life
and happiness to a vigorous old age, and
did away with heavy medical expendi
tures. Mrs. Maggie Kerchwal Lexiugton, Ky.f
used Warner's Log Cabin Sarsaparilla
"for nervous sick headache of which I
had been a sufferer for years." Capt
Hugh Harkins, 1114 S. 15th St, Phila
delphia, Pa., says "it purified my blood
and removed the blotches from my akin."
Mrs. Aarea Smith. Topton, Berks Co.,
Pa- says she "was entirely cured of a
skin disease of the worst kind," by Log
Cabin Sarsaparilla. Bad sklo indicates
a very bad condition of the blood.
If you would live and be well, go to
your druggist today and get Warner's
Log Cabin Sarsaparilla and take no oth
r. there's nothing like it or so good,
and completely renovate your impared
system with this simpla, old-fashioned
preparation of roots and herbs.
Warner, who makes the famous Safe
Cure, puts it up, and that is a guarantee
of excellence all over the known world.
Take it yourself and give it to the other
members of the family, including' the
children. You will be astonished at its
health-giving and life-prolonging pow
ers. We say this editorially because we
have heard good things of it everywhere,
and its name is a guarantee that it is first
class in every particular.
Hydrophobia From a Calf's Bite.
Atlanta, Ga., April 6. On a farm a
few miles from Atlanta a Jersey calf,
owned by a man named Milling, today
developed signs of hydrophobia and bit
several other calves, also sheep .and
swine. A young son of the farmer,
while attempting to keep a pet lamb
from the mad calf, was severely bitten
on the arm, and from latest accounts his
injuries are fatal. Tho animals bitten
by the calf have sinco died of hydro
phobia. This is the first instance of the
kind known in Georgia.
Blacklisting Prohibited-
Das Moijjes, la., April 6. The senate
today passed the house bill forbidding
railroads from blacklisting their employ
es. It makes an exception in the case of
employes discharged for gross negligence
or drunkenness, but providee a stern pen
alty for attempting to prevent employes
discharged for other reasons from obtain
ing situations elsewhere. It is designed
especially to cover the case of railroad
employes who are blacklisted for engagr
ing in strikes or who for any reason, in.
cur the disfavor of their superintendent,
Efforts to Remove a General.
Matamoros, M-jx., April 5 A strong
effort is being made here by the state
party, acting through Gen. Pedro Hino
josa, minister of war, to secure the re
moval of Gen. Eulalio Vela, in command
here, and replace on this frontier some of
their partisans, among whom is Col. Vil
lareal, commander of the 4th infantry,
who is extremely unpopular with the
people, being a Texan by birth and also
an officer whose relations with the Amer
ican side of the river are exceedingly
bad, who is a desperate American hater.
It was under the practical rule of Villa
real that the Martinez revolution was al
lowed to gain strength and become of
somewhat alarming proportions, which
was put down by Vela. The latter gen
eral is in perfect accord with the Ameri
can authorities, has kept the frontier
peaceable, has put down, captured or
hanged or driven out gangs of bandits
who infested the frontier, stewing cattle
abducting prominent citizens and hold
ing them for raiuom, aad committing
acts of rampage. The frontier has not
been so quiet and safe sinco the Texan i
revo'uiion as now. aid the return to
power of men who so 1 ng protected a ,
contrary order ot things is much to be '
dt-plored.
j C
Cured ty 1
' tell you ef 1
TIC HA 1
( til lt ( f .
lixe c-
-. uei it
,itu on, i
. t .e t. lo-i- .....i-u . -
ned ofl g.!D. la viu did i cm
: doctsrs In the country, wtlbeut 14.
up all hops- of n-coYery. I 1 -P-
t I atn sdrertisemrllt lo tle nrws
r our Cutt-'ura Iintdi-s, Mod pur
i -owi my iiruf sist. aiid btsJue.t
r lift. 1 teiaii to noiice
l,m, praduiktiy dropped ott
, t .. t t i on. ii:t have ben
Ju..y cuirj, I t m ,.se thirteen month
bi l-jre i leKtn taking: the utkr Remedies,
and in t ur or Are weeits was otlre!y cured.
My disease was eczma aad psorUsU. I rec
ommend the O.iticura Kenmlies to h'I in mj
vicinity, nnd I know of a griv-a m-tnv wlu hve
taken them nnd thank m for the kiM.wifdn"
of them, especially mothers who l uve uts
with sculy eruptloun on their head and bd 'es
I cuimiit expi ex In wol ds thrt thanks to you for
what the Culicura Kamedies have been to m.
My body vtas covered vrl li scales and I w
an aw'ul sprct;icl to behold. Now my skiu i
as nice and clear as a baby'n
(iKO. JrEY, Merrill. Wis.
Sept. 21, 1S87.
Feb. 7. 1888. Not a trace w atsoov- r of the
di- ease from which I auflered Iihh shewn itself
since my cure. GEO. t:uIEV.
We cannot dojustlce to the enteem in which
Cuticura. the (treat sWin cure, and Cuticuru
Soap, an exquisite skin beautifirr. prepure)
from it, nnd i'uticura Kcsolvent, the new blood
puriflr. are hell by the thousands upon thous
ands whose liw hHve been m:tde happy by
the cure of agonizing, bumiiiatiiiK. Itching,
u.'ily and pimply diseases of the skin, scalp,
aud blood with loss of hxlr.
Sold everywhere. Price, CuMcura, 50c : Sonp
JSc; Kevilvent, $1. Prepared by the Potter
Di n n and Chemical Co., Boston. Mas.
tSend for 'How to Cure Skin Diseases."
64 pager, 50 Illustrations, aud 100 testimonials.
PIM
SoAr.
PLES. black -heads, red, rough. chapped
aad oily skin preveuied by Cuiicuk
Ca.tarrh.al Dangers.
To be freed from the dangers of suffication
while lying down ; to breathe freely, Meer
soundly aud undisturbed : to rise refreshed,
head clear, brain active ajid free from pain or
ache ; to know that nojr oisonoue, putrid matter
defiles the breath and ro's away the delicate
machinery of smell, taste and hearing; to frel
that the system does not, through its veil s
and arteries, suck up the poison that is sure to
undermine and dittroy, Is indeed a blessing be
yond all other human enjoyments. To purchase
Immunity from such a fate should be the obJct
of all afflicted. But those who have tried many
remedies ad physicians despair of re.lef or
cure.
Sanford's Radical Cure meets evt ry phase of
Catarrh, from a simple hadld to the most
loathsome and destructive stages. It is local
and constitutional. Instant In relieving, per
manent in uring, saf-, economical aud never
failing. Sanford's Radical Cure consists of one
b-Htle of the KadicalGchr. one box Cata kk
hl Solvrmt aud one Impkovkd I.vhalbu
all wrapoed in one package, with treatise and
directions, and sold by all druggist fr$l.oo.
Pottbb Okuo it Chemical Co., Bostox.
No Rheumatiz About Me
IX OXE XI.UTK
The Cntlenra Anti-Pain
Plaster relieves Rheumatic. Sci
atic. Sudden. Sharp ai'd Nervous
Pains. Strains and WeakiiHPse.
fhe first and only rain-kllllne
plaster. New. or'ginftl. iutnntan-
eeus, infallible, safe. A marvelous utitldote to
Pal a, Inflam.ition and Weakness. Utterly u n
Iike and vatly su: erior to all other plasters.
At alt druggists. 35 cents ; five for $1.00 ; orpos
tage free. f
POTTKR DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO..
Bosten MtM,
profits are large and si-r
for every IndustriH1 person, many havewiad
anil are now making novanU bunrttd dollar"
per month It is tiwj for anyone to make IS
and upwards perday, whois willing to wr.rfc
Either sex, youDg'or olJ : capital not need. I ;
we start yeu. Everything new. Jio special
ability required, you, reader, can do it as well
as any one. Write to us at once for full par
ticulars which we mail fr(). Address .tii s- n
& Co., Portland, Maine.
Bucklen's Arnica salve.
The best salre in the world for cuts,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt, rheum, fever
sorts, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and postive
ly cuies piles, or no pay required. It is
guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction,
or money refunded. Price 23 cents per
box. For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co.
s 51-ly.
nventionl
has revolutionized
the world during tha
ait naif e-ntury.
ot least tmo"! the
ondrs of iu votive
oroeress is a method
and sytem of wmk
thatoan be performed all over the country
without separating the workers from thuir
homes. Pay liheial i anytie ean do the ork
either sex. younvor old ; n special ability re
quired. Capital not needed ; you are started
free. Cut this out and return to us and we will
send you free, something .of great importsme
and value to you. that will start you in business
which will briug you is more money right
away than anything else In the wrld, Gand
outfit free. Address True ft Co.. Augusta, Me.
yi-l Sea Wonders exist in thou
I I I I 1 lsands of form", but are s r
I I I jpassea oy tue marveis oi in
Invention. Those who are in
I need of profitable work that
I I I I I can De none while living at
1 I 1 home should at on:e send
their address to HallettA' -o .
Portland, Maine, and receive free full informa
tion bow either, sex. of ail ages, can earn from
S5 to $25 per day and upwards wherever they
live. You are started free ; capital not needed
8 me have made over In one day at this
work. Alieucc-ed.
Tornado at Sioux City.
Sioux City, la., April 6. During a
violent electric storm early last night, a
tornado passed over the city from the
southwest to the northeast. The fnnnel
cloud was seen by many and was accom
panied by a roaring noise. It only struck
in one place in tie extreme northwest
part of tlie city, pushing rftjddly over
the western auhurha. At the plaoe where
the cloi;d struck it picked up the resi
dence of Mark Modlin and hurled it to
the gtound in the rear of the lot. Mrs.
Modlin was seven-ly injurvd. The
neighboring house of Mr. Richmond
wreaked and a barn near by knocked to
kindling wood. Mr. Modlin says that j
he saw two clouds form aud meet to-1
gether, and in a moment his house was I
hurled from its foundation. 1
f III t I Rewarded are those who
I I I I I if reid this and thea art ;
J I Ml H th-v wl;1 fl,ul honorable
I li I I employment that will
I I I I I I I take them from their
I W I E Ihb I h-me and famllirs. The
. -OUSES. Q
1 A rZf.ZXHT WO
- rlor.
. .ve
" 1 steaxi
.s"t - &ne la
Irresistible. Look U. . X. Olancf
at her weapons. Cloths and c jo Is, brooms
and brushes, scrubbing brushes ior the floor,
hair brushes for the wainscots, feather
brushes for the walls, tooth brushes for the
corner, geese wings for the stoves, bens
feathers for cleaning out the key holes, small
sticks of wood for poking out any unhappy
particle of dust which may bare got into the
cracks of the floor, white paste for the win
dows, red paste f er the hearth stones, emery
for the steel, and several other pastes and
polishes as tho occasion may require. These
are the implements a Dutch peasant woman
uses to clean out her cottage home. Dust is
her natural enemy, she is born into the world
to fight it, It is her mission, and she does po
more than her mother and f oremothera havs
done before her. No wonder that such m
home training turns out an exceedingly high
class of domestic servant; and yet, the Dutch
mistress grumbles. Such Is life.
A DUTCH INTERIOR.
A "Dutch interior," from a housekeeper's
as well as an artistic point of viov, is a in.v.t
interesting study. It is ouethiug to kuow a
country well by traveling through it, stop
ping at the best hotels, visiting all points of
interest, taking careful notes by pen and
brush of all worth recording, but it is quite
another experience and fully as interesting
to live among its people as one of themselves
to see how they live and think, manage and
eat; when they are conscious no looker on is
by, and that they need not adapt themselves
to any stranger's custom or fancy. This
latter bos been my good luck to experience,
and I con truthfully say that there are no
cleaner, more hospitable, kind hearted, do
mestic people in the world than the Dutch.
I mention "cleaner" first because with them
it comes first. What would become of a
Dutch woman in a world where there is no
dust is a Bubject for conjecture, and though
I look upon my visit to Holland as part of
the happiest time in my life, still my sincere
prayer is that my Dutch friends may never
visit me. I could never live up to their idea
of cleanliness; the mental strain would be too
great.
Washing is not done weekly as in America,
but allowed to accumulate for weeks, some
times even longer, an unhealthy custom; but
in this as in many other respects the Dutch
can hardly be called a clean nation, from a
hygienic point of view. With them it is dust,
dust, and again dust.
Often the underservanta such as scullery
maid, nurse maid, etc., do not sleep in the
house. This gives more space and room for
the family. Those girls come In by the day,
sleeping at their own homes at night. All
servants in Holland dress extremely neatly,
generally in lilac print dresses, white mu&lin
caps, and large white aprons.
The same dress is worn in the street as in
the house. If the weather is cold, a shawl is
thrown over the shoulders. They do a good
deal of the household shopping. It must be
indeed delightful for the Dutch mistress to
have Betsey Jane all ready dressed to run her
little errands, instead of . having to wait an
hour or more while Betsey Jane curls her
"bang" and bedecks herself with cheap finery.
This a good arrangement for maid as well as
mistress, for with the former it breaks tho
monotony of the daily round, gives her a lit
tle blow of fresh air, besides the opportunity
of a slight flirtation with the butcher's boy
or the green grocer's assistant.
A HOUSEHOLD CUSTOM.
A strange household custom in Holland
is the custody of the "guest money" by the
mistress. Each guest is, as in England, ex
pected to fee the house servants. In Hol
land, this money is at once handed by the
recipient to the lady of the houso, who at
certain seasons of the year such as Christ
mas and Easter, divides it equally among
all her staff. Not a bad plan when one
thinks it over, but rather startling at first to
the guest.
And now for Dutch food. All food is
good in Holland, all cooking excellent, beef
and mutton even better than in England,
vegetables in abundance. Butter is very
good cud plentiful and is used without stint,
but everything is spoiled by being served
cold. Rich dishes, which would be most ap
petising were they eaten piping hot, become
repulsive, indigestible masses of grease
when served from a cold dish on a stone cold
plate. During the whole of my stay in Hol
land I never once saw a dish covered or a
plate heated.
Cakes are a specialty with the Dutch.
Each town has one or more of its own, and
it was interesting to trace the ancestry of
many of our American ones. Waffles met
me at a kermes at The Hague. The koekje,
Which is to be found all over Holland and is,
in fact, the Dutch word for "little cake," is
actually and etymologically the ancestor of
the New England cookie. Doughnuts I met
everywhere, though I cannot imagine from
where they got their ugly name of "dough
put." In Holland tfiey are called spritsen,
and in French Canada, where they are a
Sort of national cake, they are known by the
name of croquignoles, and sometimes beig
net, which latter name is simply the French
for fritter, I imagine that in one way and
another we owe a good deal of our cooking
to Holland. J. E. Brooks in Good House
keeping. The Zulus' Military Tactics.
The Zulus are a war like race, and their re
cent record in the war with England showed
them to have an tetinctive knowledge of
military taotica best suited to their arms and
themselves. For ages they have held their
own against the other tribes, and rose to their
higher point of power under the rule of the
terrible Tchaka,
In the native fights each man throws his
assagais at his enemy, catching his opponent's
on his shield, if possible, then throwing them
back again. Tchaka had his soldiers' assagais
cut nearly through at the base of the shaft,
so that although still strong enough to kill a
man, they would break if caught upon the
shield or ground, or upon the man falling
with one in his body; this expedient placed !
all the sound assagai in the bonds of his own '
men, yrhq then rushed vpon their foes stab-
bing them without mercy.
A curious fact is that over 2,900 years bo-
fore Mariua, the Roman, in his war with
Cimbri, did very nearly the same thing.
Their javelin, called piium, had the rivet
farthest from the point removed and a
wooden peg inserted just strong enough to
carry it in its flight. Tvhakft e,lo invented
the short cr stabbing aagai, and introduced
lh trick of receiving the enemies' secoisd
fire, which exhausted their assagais, and tl.et.
charging home with their deadly short o;:.
He ruthlessly killed every mau who vrat
wounded in the back, or who failed to reuno
bis spear and shield after the battla. Wilf,
P. i'oad iu Drake's MagAziBe I
FURNkw
-FOIl Ai...
FINE
:-: 1-
YOU SHOULD CALL ON
Where, a magnificent
J Vices
UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING A SPECIALTY
II JIN IY BOECK,
CORNER MAIN AND SIXTH
JONATHAN 11a fT.
JTMA.ITISAM MiOriT e& CO.,
WHOLESALE EETAIL
GUTY
PORK PACKERS and dealers in RUTTER AND EGGS.
BEEF, 1'uitK, MUTTON AND VEAL.
THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND.
Sugar Cured Meals, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c., &o
ot our own make. The host brands of OYSTERS, in cans and bulk, at
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
IS
dest Agricultural Dealer
In Cass County.
He also has the latest styles of machinery, such as: New De
parture Cultivators, Buckeye and Minneapolis Binders and Moweri
Plows, Harrows and the celebrated Lister and Drill; Shuttler and
Moline Wagons. He also has cultivators Irom $10.00 up to $20.00;
Harrows and Plows in same proportion. lie has a branch home at
Weeping Water. Be sure and call on Fred before you buy, either at
Plattsmouth or Weeping Water.
PlaliMiiioiitli aud Weeping Water, jVcbrnskn.
F. G.
(SU0CES3OK TO
Will keep constantly on hand a full and complete etock of pu.e
Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oils
Wall Paper and n Full Line
IDZRUTG-G-IST'S STTZSTIDjEIIES.
PUR E L IQUORS
Fme Importing Draft Horse Oo.
LINCOLN,
Is PORTERS OF
Pure-bred French Draft (Percheron or Norman)
AND ENCLISH SHIRE HORSES.
Ylatcon aJwsjrs wvtooma. Call sad see oar bones or sstss (or eatalovo
c, SANGER,
IMPORTERS
WV. .
V HARDWARE.
1BIA1S. J" j.
VJJLS, J frSb
2, 2i, 2 23, 50 & 32 Stresi.
EM POL
1 1
'-ASSES OF-
w 3NITTJBE
stock of Good and Fair
abound.
I'LATTSMOUTH, NEBRAbKA.
J. W. AIartbh.
THE
IU3EAT iuflARBCET.
CKE&CO
J. M. ROliEltta)
NEBRASKA.
JOBBERS
'
C7T1X2T,
area,
T1CXL3
ILL!
4ml le-ef
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