1'LA'iTdMOUTii Wj&L rtftHA;;,x;AUK3DAV 11, 1S5. vm n THE HECOCITIZED In Cass County for Superior Makes and Styles, Lowest Possible Prices 1 2sr YOUTHS, BOYS in-xd G - Tc - o - jj' - if -1 - x - Q- Tl-(Fc - LliTKST o HATS, CAPS, SHIRTS SUSPENDERS, Ties, Collars, Etc., TRUNKS & CALL elson. t Plattsmouthj IMeb, -II AS A FVLIi Spring and Summer Goods We have received our Spring and Summer Goods and take pleasure in showing our handsome line ol Dress Goods, White Goods, Dress Trimmings, Jerseys, 2 Aro Complete. We also carry a full line JOSEPH V. II Ml HOT Mouse - jSTOVKlt'TIFcS isx VALISES. SEE MS CI np JU LU1UX J LINE Or- Oiie-Pi OF II. i Hosiery, Ribbons, Laces. Etc. DRY GOOD! of CARPETS and RUG S. WECKBACH J7i? Qhttsnwuih eth1n jQpald KNOTTS BROS Publishers & Proprietors. THE PLATTSMOUTH MKRALD I nuhlWIied evorv eveniir' except Sunday aud Weekly every Thursday morning. IteKis lared at the po8tof)lce, I'lattcinuuth. Nehr..is "wcoiirt-ciasB matter. Olllce corner of Vine and Klltti streets. TKKMS FK DA1LV. One copy one year In advance, by mail.. - SO 00 One copy per month, Py carrier, P" One copy per week, by carrier 13 . TKRHS rOR WHKKLV. Ona oopy one year, in advance $1 Si yne copy six ruonms. in auvance a Judge Oiiesiiam is steadily growing in favor as a presidential candidate. If the Chicago convention will give us Grcshani and llawley, the serried phalanx of He publicans will over-whelm the cohorts of Dictator Cleveland and change his name to Dennis. Mrs. Ci.evei.ai.d has been presented with an elegant microscope by her tem perance admirers, and the (7 lobe-Democrat cruelly remarks that she is busily engaged with it in searching for the anti-saloon sentiment in her husband's pa pers aud speeches. Tiik Baltimore and Ohio Railroad have sold $7,500,000 of a loan mortgage in London, and it has changed the interna tional exchange market in favor of the United States. For the next few days at least there will be no gold exports from this country. The utilization of what is apparently waste material is very interesting in many of its details. The well known article "Featherbone" used for dress stays, tor- sets, whips and other articles needing an elastic, tough and unbreakable material is the result of a shrewd Yankee's thoughts after seeing an immense quau- tity of goose and turkey feathers wasted in a feather duster factory. The compli cated and ingenious machinery by which it is worked up into yarious articles will be shown in constant operation by a corps of skilled workmen from the factory, at the Minneapolis Exposition which opens August 22nd Iiie Mills nee trade gang are figuring on a scheme to down Randall and de prive him of his influence- in the house to command votes for his bill. As chair man of the committee on appropriations Mr. Rauda1! has a iull in many diree-, tions until the appropriation bills are all out of the way, and hence Mills and his friends are anxious to get the appropria tion bills throu-jh before anthing further is dono on the tariff bill. If this is done Mr. Randall will be shorn of one element of strength, and the free traders will breath just that much easier. But from all information obtainable the Randall faction is likelv to cause trouble iu the democratic cavrp, no difference when the final vote on the Mills bill is taken. Lincoln Journal, There seems to be no lack of harmony among the democratic press of the state in regard to the course to pursue on the tariff question. The general verdict is to keep still; you don't want to say any thing but that the tariff is a robery and stick to it. You don't need to give your reasons, and have g republican come along and knock them all over. The tariff robs the laboring classes. It does becauseyou know it docs, aud any one that wont accept this reason don't know what he is talking about. This will be the argument of the democratic speakers and what fine argument it is. It semis to us that our friends forget that we live in a progressive age an age of reason and a statement without principles to suppoit it has very little effect at the prevent time. But our democratic friends remembering that they have a very weak plank to stand on haro come to this de cision, that the only thing necessary is to make the statement and not to try to brace it np with principle for if you do some republican will come along with a few words and down comes your meat house. "O consistency thou art a jewel." Ix three Northern States in which bal lots were cast for Prohibition candidates in ISSt, the vote increased as compared with previous elections, and in four Northern States the vote decreased. The States in which thin vote was larger last year than before are New York, Massach usetts and Ohio, and those in which it was smaller are New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Nebraska and Iowa. Ths decrease of the Prohibition vote in New Jersey and Pennsylvania was due to the fact that the JJeoublicans of those States, from which party iost of the Prohibition strength in the North conies, enacted ef fective high license laws, which pleased all re.3nable temperance men. The Re publicans of ijeiV York passed a high li cense bill about three weelis ago, which Gov. Hill vetoed. The Republican? cf New York naturally expect that their en deavors to throw all practicable restraint over the liquor traffic will lesson the Pro hibition vote in that State this year. Globe Democrat THE SUPPRESSION OF VOLOIiEl) VOTE. The Republu an of this city is engag-; cd in revamping Mr. Bluing's post mortem Augusta speech relative to the suppression of the colored yote in the south. The chief interest in this speech lies in the fact that Mr. Blaine was afraid to make it until alter he was de feated. So long as he thought he might carry a southern state or two, he permit ted the negro to take care of himself after all the southern states had gone democratic and it vva not possible to as sist the negro in his struggle for suffrage, Mr. Blaine expressed indignation over the negro's wrongs. It must be admitted that in several southern states the negro has not receiv ed the rights promised him by the great amendments. But what does the ht pub lican propose to do about it '. It party was iu power twenty years after the dose of the war and if the lhpnblktin's tig ures show that the suppression of the colored vote in South Carolina was ful ly as extensive iu 1881 as it had been at any previous time. Will the Republican explain its meth od of seeming to the negro his electoral rights ? Omaha World. We hope the R publican will not do what the mugwump editor of the World does, approve of such crime and charge it to the amendments and the republican party. v e have an insullerable con tempt for mugwump appologists for crime committed in behalf of the solid south. The same class of dirt eaters used to do all the whining and lying for the domineering slave drivers and when they lost a runaway nigger they would make more fuss about it than the owner down south did. The republican party failed to do several things for whicn it is not to be condemned; one was to hang a few purjured traitors, some of whom are today administering upon the affairs of this nation. Another was to make the present managers of the democrat-tic party in the south have any, whatever, respect for the principles which underlie the very coiner stone of one republican lorm of government; the whitest and mott precious stone of which is the right of every citizen to cast a free, untrani peled ballot. We can understand why the average doughface democratic or gan will flare up and defend any politi cal ciime committed by his party, he was educated that way. But there is no earthly reason why1 a so-called independ ent professor of political morality should always be the very first to take offense when such outrageous crimes as the World admits arc the adopted practices of the democratic party of this nation and by which alone that party can re main hi power a single day are com mitted, j democrts in Arizona. An amusing incident is told of the Phtnix convention which does not ap pear in any of the published reports of the proceedings of that body. A very violent storm, bordering closely on a po litical cyclone, was racing in the con vention, when Sam Purdy, of Yuma a distinguished member of the party, who was kicked out at the back door of it about three years ago only to walk around to the front to take a leading po sition in the rs,r,ks rose to speak. He had proceeded but a little way in his speech-making, when with a very pro nounced dramatic gesture of his arms. he inquired, with an oratorical flourish: "Are we a mob?" A voice in the audi ence responded, "We arc," when Mr. Purdy wilted int: his seat. Journal Miner Organized labor in politics has not become the power that it promised. It is true that it has just held a convention in Cincinnati, and nominated president ial candidates and adopted a platform. The order of the Knights of Labor has been shipwrecked and is reported to have lost morj than half the membership by factional wrangling, unwise manage ment and unwarranted extravagance and waste of funds. Mr. Pov.derly has lost his grip and his influence is waning. United Labor, his official organ, has proved a financial failure. His latest utterances promise nothing for the labor ing masses but what is to come through educational methods, an excellent idea but mainly applicable to the second or third generation from this. In the face of the fact that most of the benefits ad vocated in the interest of labor cau only come through legislation, and be brought about by active political influence. Mr. Powderly distinctively ignores political action and recommends a similiar policy to his followers, lie surrenders his strongest aggressive weapon and extends to his adherents only remote possibilities in the dim future Even Mr. Arthur has lost his prestige by the discouraging blow organized labor has received in the Burlington strike. When it was demon strated that the strongest union in the country was powerless to sustain a con test upon which it entered with a confi dence that fell a little short of arrogance. A review of other labor organizations would not be cheering to these who would like to see Jaboripg people united for just protection. With rare excepT tjons they have been shattered by unwise direction aud Lad leaders. They have lost ii.fluence. Iu some cases they havu been unable to commend even decent re spect from employers with whom they have taken issue. IS IT THE ULOOlt V SHIRT f A makim.k bhaft is erected to the mem ory of the confederate dead in Mississippi; men high in power in the affairs of this nation aro present to officiate; Jefferson D.ivis,the first representative of secession, too old and infirm to attend, sends a let ter to be read on that occasion, and his daughter, the typical representative of tho lost cause, is made to preside and a silver crown is presented to her for her father, the unrepentcnt rebel who has ever dis dained to ak or accept of amnesty from the government. What does all this m?an ? Are the men who fought in tho cause of the southern confederacy to pass down to succeeding generations as heroes who fell in a righteous cause '. Are the succeeding gen erations to be taught that these men were martyrs to a just though lost cause '. Are the youth of the south to be trained to visit these monuments erected over traitors' graves and there in the times to come study and emulate their illusti ious(?) examples as heroes who did battle for southern homes and southern liberties 'i Unquestionably this is the only lesson the southern youth will ever learn from these monuments. Then when can this nation expect sectionalism to die out ? It was treason to attempt to overthrow this nation for the sake of a southern aris tocricy founded on human slavery. It is still treason to teach that the men who engaged in that conspiracy were heroes whose names and memories should be perpetuated by marble shafts and monu ments aud whose praises should be sung by succeeding generations. How would it look and sound for the decendants of lienedid Arnold to rect a monument to his name at West Point on the Hudson, and crown it with flow ers, and teach the coining generations exactly as our neighbors at the houtli an doing, to emu'ate the dariDg yet un for tunato career of the sleeping hero ( What sort of a lesson would that be for the youth of America I If treason means anything in this gov ernment there should be a universal con demnation of this process of vindicating traitors and handing their names down to history as martyrs. ISA ILR0A1) OPERA TIONS IN ME A' I CO. The annual report of the Mexican CYn trul Railroad, which has just been pub lished. taken in connection with info,- tnation concerning the other roads which lias been made public from time to tinn-, shows that railway operations have hem active and profitable in Mexico in th past year or two. The Central's report covers the year j by, anu gives ngures for the three years immediately preced ing. In 1887 the road's earnings from passengers were $l,2o,284 and from freight !f;3,458,00i. There has been steady increase in the past four years in each item. The percentage of gain in 18S7 was over 12.5 over 1885 and 5.' over 1S8G. The gain in freight receipt last year was 95.4 per cent over 184, 53.7 over 1885 and 37.7 over 1880. The Mexican Central was incorporated about eight years ago, and four years later it began operations along its entire length. As the distance from LI Paso, Tex., which 19 its northern terminus, to the City of Mexico, its southern end, i about 1200 miles, the construction was pushed forward actively. A large amount of United States capital is in rested in the enterprise, as well as in the other Mexican roads running from the boundary line of this country. Much intertst is taken here in these lines. When the Central was opened to through business in 1884, thus bringing the City of Mexico for the first time into railroad communication with the United States, the event was made the occasion of con gratulation on both sides of the interna tional boundary line. The interests of both countries are to a large extent iden tical, and the business ties uniting one to the other are yearly growing closer and closer. The flattering exhibit of railroad earnings, therefore, in the sister republic, which shows that that country is enjoy ing a fair share of industrial and com mercial prosperity, will be pleasing intel ligence to the people of the United States. Globe Democrat. In another column may be seen a wonderful description of a large arebd hand with drops of blood dripping from the ends of the fingers. Many predict ions haye been made in regard to the significance of this wonderful spectacle, but our opinion b that the hand repre sents Cleveland and the democratic party and the blood is the fol lowers of Cleveland dropping out of the ranks, and that ere the November election rolls around they will hav all dropped out and Cleveland sunken into oblivian just as the wonderfnl hand seemed to be The Democratic Club is going to at tend the Democratic convention at St. Louis next week. They will wear a gray plug hat and carry f. dude cane. We acknowledge the receipt of the program of the Chautauqua Assembly, which is to be held at Crete, Nebraska, from June 28th to July 10th, sni we can sy it will pay you to attend the Assem bly. " : OUR ORKUON LETTER. Special i'oMciioiidenre of Tiik Huai l. PollTI.ANP, OliMioN, May 12, IS?;. My residence of a few month in Port land has been one of constant ib liht and surprise. Coining, as I ;did, from the ligurs of midwinter into the balmy air of spring, utmost at a hound, as it were, I was so forcibly reminded of the contrast between the Pacific coast and the, cnMre region from the Rocky moun tains to the Atlantic, that I am not likely ever to forget it. For weeks, even month, I reveled in delightful spring weather, and with the telegraph daily informing nic of cold waves and bliz zards, of snow and ice, in my former home, I watched the opening of bud and flower, mw the fruit trees burst into their bloom of white and red, and heard the cheerful voices of earl' summer bird, as they hopped from branch to branch of the profusion of shade frets which line the streets of this beautiful city. Alrindy (tho second week in May; spring is past and summer is upon us. The lilacs haye long since disappeared, and the beautiful snowballs, whose inassf h of white have appealed to in' eye for admiration from hundreds of well-kept lawns, haye given way to roses. And sin h roses! The yards of the rich and poor alike are a mass of bloom; carnation, yellow, pink, cardinal, flesh, saffron, and all the glori ous hues assumed by that qiuen of flow ers, grett me at every turn. The love of flowers, evidenced by their profusion and the attention giyen them, sp"aks of cul ture and refinement, and in my most pleasant intercourse with the people of Portland I have found them all that their beautiful yards had led me to btli'-yo. I assure you, it was a novel experience for me to see lawn mowers inactive oper ation in .March, arid to behold the Port lander in April nightly handle his garden hose witli all the care and apparent en joyment the resident of Chicago ( r Cin cinnati would display in June or July. This matter of lawn is the Portlander's pride and one of the chief glories of this most delight ful climate. The sight of green grass is not absent from tho eyo from one year's end to another, save, perph:ip, duriug a few days in January or February, w hen the ground is covered by a ljght fall of snow. It is only a foy weeks in t lie entire year that (he seiyL-ca of thy lawn mower are not required to keep in trim the constantly grow ing grass. This perennial green sward, with almost constantly blooming flowers, off. is an oppoitunity for beautiful lawns and pleasure grounds, of which the people of Oregon's metropolis have not been slow to avail themsel ves. One of the pleasures of the cool, call' summer in Portland is that of driving on thewcll-puved streets, or upon the excel lent roads leading along the river, or up on tl.e hills lying west of the city. To the pleasure incident to riding behind a fast horse on a hard, even road, is added the constant presence of beautiful land--eapos, glimpses, at times, of mountains, shading off in the distance from green to blue and purple, and culminating in tho snowy masses of the Cascade summits. Along the river bank to the southward, and pf.s-ing Riyerview conn-try, pue )f the most beati fully located and carefully tended homes of the dead in America, in 1 most charming driv, several miles in length. It is maintained in excellent condition by the Multn 'jmah Driving As sociation, composed of gentlemen ownin" fine roadsters, and in the now rapidly lengthening evenings i.s crowded with buggies, carriages, horsemen and bicycles. fhe word "Multnomah" is a favorite one here. It is tne name of the county in which Portland is situated, and was the iborginal title of the liver jjowinfe through the city, but which now hears the same name as the great valley Will amette throgh which it flows. Other drives lead back between and upon the hills, and in the particular that they open up to view grander scenes and more ex tensive landscapes, arc of greater attrac tion. One in particular, lending to an el evation known as "Portland Heights,'' a ieati ful residence place soon to be brought nto easy access by cabb- cars, should nut be neglected. From the brow of this verdant hill is presented a landscape the equal of which, I am confident, can not id found near any city on the continent With the winding Willamette and the tree-embowered city for the fore-ground, the rolling hills and valleys, clad in the green raiment of forest and field in the nubile distance, while the c-itreme di- tnce is filled up with th5 varying tinU of the nearer and more remote mountains, tbove w hich rise the white crowns of fiv-n great 2eaks covered with the snows of eternal winter, the picture is one of grand and impressiye beauty. Especially at sunset does it evok the deepest admira tion, as the rich tints of gold and crim son and purple move gradually upward finally resting for a few moments solely upon the snowy peaks before fading in to the gray of twilight. If you were here to see and feel what I find it impossible adequately to describe. yo;a would aicQ with me that Portland is one of the most charming places of residence in the Union. L. S. Bring in your job work and keep ug busy. ;1 . 1 X 1 , 4 r t 'i, r i . ! 4 -