Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, August 02, 1888, Page 3, Image 3

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l'LATTSMOPTH WEEKLY HfeKALD, Til UKSDA Y AUGUST 2, 18S3.
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A BLOODY FIGHT.
Factions Engage In a Quarrel and
Seven Men are Killed-
I,ii:khai., Kan., July 2. Shorty, a
livery stable keeper at Ilugotown, ojves
tin.' particulars regarding u terrible en
counter between Ihigoton and Woods
dale men, in Stevens county, whereby no
less than seven men lost tlieir lives. Sam
Uobinson. city inar.shnll of 1 lugotuwn,
mid M. Cook, of the same place, went to
Dudley ranch. near lny creek, yester
day, accompanied bv tlieir wives, to
look up soin cattle vhi they wcru try
ing to 1'ijy. Vliil'i tuking diniu r Deputy
Sheiiff Short, a Wood. -id ale man, accom
panied ly five other Woodsdtde men,
rode uj to the party ami ashed Itobinson
to Msrrcndcr, as lie had ti warrant for his
arrest. Uobinson said he would go a
tln.it distance from tlC camp, leaving
tJook ami the ladies behind, and then
gi v his enemies n chance to take him.
lie diil so, and on reaching a convenient
upot both parties opened fire, with the
reidt that four Woodsdale men were
killed. '1 he other two fled to the strip,
and Uobinson escaped without a scratch.
Cook hastened to Hugotown and nave
he n! .nil, and soon an armed sipiad
went to their assistance. Meeting a lot
of Woodsdale men an encounter took
place, in which three more persons were
Killed and a number wounded. Accor
ding to he iiilorinaiion the whole coun
try is at war. John Cross, sheriff of
Keviis county, was one of the killed in
jle uivoiid iiglii.,
The First Train, v
Nkuuasica CYrv, Neb., July 27. The
first train crossed the new Chicago, Bur
lington &. Quiney bridge at o'clock this
eycji'mg. Jt consisted of an engine and
.hree cars. A number of individuals
yeie present and crossed with the train,
which was in charge of Engineer Crosby.
Hon. ,J. Sterling Morton anil a number
i.( oilier rcriin.ent perEonn also crossed,
.'(.'lie I.ridge'w'iil lie p'peji for general traf
jn a few weeks. The test is entirely
satisfactory.
Mr. Allen Becson, who took a trip to
Alabama a few weeks ago in the interests
fit' an Iowa capitalist, has returned home.
;;in. e his departure he has traveled ex
tensively in the south and speaks in the
highest terms of the country and the
agreeable climate. lie says he has re
turn! d to a warmer climate by coining
here. n Miutgouiery die thermometer
ieaohed It) I one day last week and the
papers of that city made the assertion
that decree had been unprecedented
In the history of the place. Mont
gomery is a city of about 40,000 and has
six railroads running into it. They
have the best water privileges, the city
being suplied with about six artesian
wells of about four hundred feet in
depth, and around that vicinity fine,
streams run over the land, fed by springs.
All kinds of fruits, such as peaches,
pears, lis, pomme-granite, and
oranges grow ia great abundance.
The best land can be bought in that
countryfor not more than $10 per acre
and the Southerners offer ever' encour
agement to northern capitalists who will
go in among them. They are not am
bitious people and care little about work
ing at all. The soil with what little cul
tivation it receives, at their hands, which
5 yery little, yields an average of about
4 bushels of corn to'theacre. Plows they
use do not cut much more than an inch
deep and grain is allowed to grow with
but little cultivation. Their corn is
planted in February. Mr. Beeson says n
better opening for an- young man could
be found than there, as all young men
have been moving west, and the country
is filled up with them, but it is not so in
the south. Everything is more suitable
and the climate is as good, if not better.
The best timber land in the country, yel
I jw pine, can be purchased for l:2o per
acre. The plations are divided into large
tracts of not less than 700 acres and some
several times as large. Mr. Johnson
the Io ,va capitalist, has purchased 4,oG0
acres there, for which Mr. Becson was
employed to go and examine the title.
He is making arrangements with the "Wa
bash railroad to run an excursion there
this summer, the fare to be at the rate of
one cent per mile. Mr. B. visited Xew
Orleans, Nashville and other southern
cities during his stay.
About six o'clock this morning
some say a few; minutes before, and oth
ers a few minutes after Tucson exper
ienced a sh..Tp earthquake. It was of
but momentary duration, but it shook
things up lively while it was about it.
The motion seemed to be from south to
north. Some people ran out of their
houses, and others were too bewildered
to get out. In Mrs. Driscoll's house on
south Meyer street, it shook the plaster
down and frightened the inmates into
the streets. In the Welisch block it had
the appearance of something giving the
building three or four sharp jerks, while
at the same time it seemed as if some one
was jumping on the roof overhead. At
Mr. Mansfeld's house on Stone avenue,
the same noise that accompanied the big
earthquake of a couple of years back,
was pl iinly heard. The inmates of the
Fashion saloon in the Pearson olock lost
no time in getting out, but the shaking
up was generally felt, and everybody lias
experiences to relate. Arizona Citizen
of July 24.
' MINN fa PI 1 1' LA ,Y. "
Jackson, Miss., July 1!). The
sbife
1 rohibition convention wis called to
order by B. L. Ilobbs, of Brook haven.
Judge (i. iVyton was c hairman. Bish
op Calloway siu cissfully advised against
an electoral ticket, A resolution favor
ing the repeal of all internal revenue
taxes on whisky was defeated, but a res
olution that the state 1 gislattii
prohibitory law was adopted.
pass a
The foregoing seems to fully explain
itself. Nov,' let us hear from Sam Smalls
state where is St. John, the Kansas third
tennerj (f course, having finished his
labors for the cause i democratic in Ore
gon, he will be sent to
Vew Jersey or
New York, In those
states the demo
cratic party seems to be in a demoralized
condition, from the way its hading men
are deserting the free trade ship. It is
evident the Naiid Is not needed in Mis
sissippi, there the Bight Jcv. Bishop
Calloway is looking after the cause of
prohibition ( ?) and in order to save
Johny the trouble of getting out his shot
gun, to carry the state for drover, the
bishop has corraled Uio prohjl; conven
tion for Cj rover Cleveland. Without
passing in judgment upon the motjveuof
the prohibition leaders, the Mississippi
episode, so far as the democratic wing of
the prohibition movement is concerned,
certainly gives color to the. charge made
against the leaders of that party in iHHt,
viz: that the movement ias in the hands
of men who were under the control of
the managers of the national democratic
party. It wont do to. stjy ;h,,; tU, refusal
to nominate un electoral ticket inasmuch
in the interest of the republican as it is
ot the ilemocratie temnei'iinci' men nf
Mississippi; the democratic influence
which dominated the Jackson conven
tion shows its hand too nlair.lv.
- tT 'T
when it refused to even endorse the in
ternal revenue plank" of the Indianapolis
convention. The approval of that plank
in the event of the refund to nominate
in electoral ijtket in tjie support' of Fih
ind Brooks might Jiaye induced, otne
temperuucevutei' to .uim"'' - -
....e republican
piatiorm which contains the same plank
in a modified form; but no, this could not
be tolerated at the solid smith, so it was
striken out and everything relegated to
cue next Mississippi legislature. Unques
tionably there was no real necessity for
the prohibit!- n convention of Mississippi
to strike it? co-ora. The electoral vote
of that state would be counted for Grovcr
Cleveland any way; the singular action
simply illustrated the fact now admitted
'on all hands" that the solid south will
uot tolerate any movement which, even
in a remote degree, impends its regained
supremacy in National affairs. "We await
the action of our temperance friends in
other southern states with considerable
curiosity.
DEMOCRACY ME ANN FREE
I'll A l)E.
I have said there is no gentleman on
this side of the house who holds to the
loetrme of protection for protection's
sake under the taxing power of this gov
ernment. If there is such a one I have
yet to hear him sp-akon this question.
(Mr. Hooker, Dem , Mississippi, house de-
oat e.
Except in a humanitarian sense it can
be a matter of no concern to the people
of America as to how numerous the pau
per laborers of Europe may be, nor how
cheaply they work, nor what their con
dition is. (Mr. Hemphill, Dem., South
Carolina, house debate, April 27.
It would be a glorious consumation of
this debate could we only have gentle
men on the other side join in this invoca
tion to paper and to type and to the hearts
of honest men to clear the way for British
Cobden free trade. (Mr. Cox, Dem.,
Xew York, house debatet.
These are the utterances of representa
tive democrats in congress on the Mills
bill debate. How do the laboring men
like the sentiment anyway.
Conundrums.
What makes everybody sick but those
who swallow it? Flattery.
In what month do ladies talk least;
February, because it is the shortest.
Which are the two hottest letters in
the alphabet? KN (Cayenne).
ZOOI.OCilCAL.
"Which animal is never old? The gnoo.
"Which is costly ? The deer.
Which is often elected to office? The
mare.
Which beast is most used by cooks?
The spider.
"Which reptile would - drivers prefer?
The whipsnake.
"Which is best for watchmen? The rat
tlesnake. "Which do the Indians have the most
use for? The moccasin snake.
"Which is best for school children?
The adder. .
THE WIND.
"When is it like a certain fruit? "When
it is current.
When i. it like music? When it whistles.
Whoa is it like a baby? "When it is
squally.
When is it like a fruit tree? When it
blows.
When like a person in deep affliction?
When it moans.
When like a newspaper? When it puffs.
Elmira Telegram.
Remember the grand republican ral
ly at Louisville Saturday evening. August
3th. Clubs from adjoining towns are in
vited to assist in the gcxd work.
NEEDY HUMANITY.
DIFFERENCE IN THE METHODS OF
THOSE WHO ARE HELPFUL.
Moral Courage of the True riiysic-Jan A
Hero Men AVho Know Themselves The
Cuoil Hearted Fellow Who "WIJ1 Give
Ills liht Dollar."
i somewhat extended exiiericnce with
men, and au occasional woman, convinces
mo that thorn is as great a difference iu the
rm-tliods of rKd men who desiro to help
ineir leiiows as mere is In-tween them and
had men who strive constantly to hurt their
brothers and Meters. Every man has UU
own way. It is fo.ly for writers in tho i.ress
J for ministers in the puli.it, fur public teaeh-
eis in any rorum whatever, to insist upon it
mat ineir way is the only way. Effective
work id done Ly upright engines, by hori
V-.lif.-l 1.rI 1 .. . ' -I...! k .
lUaiir-"., ley OM'I IKtlllljj engines, it. is
ty too quality and quantity of effect pro
duced, not the manner in which the work is
done, men must bo judged.
I look at doctors with wonder and awe. In
my judgment a doctor needs, first of ull,
moral courage. It requires no very great
degree of pbysieial courage to stand before a
aian whoso inflamed eye betokens the rago
t. hut roars within him, beeausc, being a man,
you naturally have no fear for another man
physically. The ;.suo of tho fight must to
one of t wo ways. You whip 1dm or he whips
you, and, of course, you are prepared to take
the chance. But to go into u sick room,
where, in tlio first place, your senses are of
fended, you see unpleasant pictures, you hoir
discordant sounds, above all you detect of
fensive t-dj-:s. .oil are brounht in niiitrn
with a condition of things ubuormal, from
which you naturally turn as from any other
nuisance that required moral courage. That
of itself would determine n;e. I could livi
more endure the close tonf'iiit.iiiciits cf a sick
chamber, with its ncvcsaivy annoyance to
every sense, and most especially to the sensi
tive nerves of tho na-sul organ, than I could
draw a weight of 10,000 pounds along a dusty
highway.
But that is not alL Ce it smallpox, diph
theritic soro throat, yellow fever, any one of
a score of contagious diu' r.sc-y, ii .j Uoet '.r
must bo so uuuui k-s in tho altitudes of Lis
moral courage that he not only feels no fear,
but is absolutelyj-egnnnt v ith joy at an op
portunity to wrestle with a foemau wort hy
of his pills. A true physician is a. yeritalTo
here, ' ;' -
I hayfe c.-iiio to the conclusion Uat intelli
gent men do k ho v thcjUSejYOS, VYifc
it is to, :;mgi!it fu
anient that a well
iuiud doesn't fully, accurately, ab
solutely estimate himself. Could you con
vince Bismarck, as he sits in the calm seclu
sion of his innermost study, smoking the fra
grant pipo of happy rellection, that he has
not been a successful diplomat?
You're a merchant. Continuity of en
deavor has brought you, step by step, from
tho humility of an office sweeping $2 a week
lad to tho proud pre-eminence of a merchant
prince, with au income, net, of $1,000,000 a
year. Your credit stands regal in the marts
of commerce, your name is a synonym for
6olidity throughout tho world of trade and
dicker. Could anybody convince you that
you are a failure? Don't you know, as you
look at your bald head and wriukled face and
shriveled neck iu the too faithful mirror that,
though you are decaying physically, -ou are
a superb success along the line of mercantile
endeavor and commercial enterprise?
Of coarse, you know yourself. And pre
cisely as ou, a success, know yourself to 09
a success, so you, a lizzie, know yourself to
be a lizzie. Every man is a type. Why it i
a fact that we are all, in certain lines, unique,
peculiar, individual, it ia equally a fact that
wo all represent great bodies of similarly
organized, identically developed men or wo
men, here, there and everywhere. Some
people say, "Oh, he's a good hearted fellow,
he will give his last dollar."
Well, yes, but is it a good heart that gives
its last dollar, but would hesitate, even if he
didn't refuse to give literal, personal, indi
vidual, hand to hand, heart to heart, body to
body comforts? Recurring to tho doctor
thought a moment, I don't believe it would
be a physical possibility for mo, who have
pretty good control of my physical organs at
that, to make a practice of visiting hospitals,
of coming into personal contact with disease,
of upsetting my stomach by annoying my
nose. It is one thing to draw a check ami
send it by mail or messenger; it is another
thing to go about doing good, visiting the
sick, helping the friendless, uplifting tho be
reaved, attending to the literal, physical
necessities of poor, dirty (levels in the very
gutters of humanity.
Talk about giving money as an evidence
of generosity. That's all nonsense. It all
depends upon circumstances. "What sort of
generosity is it when you have 100 in -our
pocket and somebody comes along c sking jou
for live or ten, that you give it, without re
gard to anything under heavens except the
particular 100 you have in your pocket ?
That f 100 may belong to some creditor. You
may owe that money to some man to whom
its payment would be a positive relief. You
don't think of equities, you don't care the
turn of your hand for your creditor; you let
Browne walk all over creation rather than
deprive yourself of a moment's comfort,
peace, happiness, luxury; yet because you
give- hvo or ten dollars to some poor devil
who happens to want it, you are credited the
world around as being a generous hearted,
free handed man, who would give his last
dollar to help a creature iu distress.
Y ou buy a paper of a newsboy. Y"ou hand
him a, dime. Rather than be bothered to
wait for the change, or to havo his dirty
little fists pawing over a handful of coin to
find the change, you say, "Oh, keep it. Never
mind that." "Why do you say iti Are you
touched with pity for tho boy's necessities?
Is it the logical sequence of any careful
thought, estimate, judgment of the little
chap Do you even go so far as to think
that it would please the boy? Not a bit of
it. It is, nine times out of ten, an inchoate
desire, an unthought of impulse to be rid of
the annoyance of the boy and toe unpleas
antness of his dirt; yet some benevolent old
lady, looking over her spectacles and her
stomach, seeing -ou let the little boy go off
with live or six cents more than belong to
him, smiles all over with cherubic gleam,
and tells her family, whom she joins in hum
ble home that evening, about "tho generous
man who gave five cents to a little newsboy."
Joe Howard s letter in Boston Globe.
Her Hoar of Triumph.
Dr. Meanwell And how are you feeline
today, ill's. Moribund?
Mrs. Moribund Poorly, doctor, poorly.
When I am gone, I hope you will look after 1
tha health of Johnnie and tho baby. j
Dr. Mean well Oh, I wouldat take so;
hopeless a view of the case. You will get
better.
Mrs. Moribund lio, doctor: I will not'
feed upon false hopes. In fact, I don't wish j
to live. Airs, bictles baa always tried to 1
make out that her health was more seriously
affected than mine. When she sees my pulse
less form, and those rows of empty medicine
bottles on the closet shelves, she will have to
acknowledge that I camo out ahead. Wo-uiau.
DAUGHTERS OF CVE.
Qiiocii Victoria' favorite color is blue.
Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt pavs bor
physician $10,000 n year.
Emily Faithful decries tho "shabby
genteel" idea that work is degrading for
women.
Miss Edna Dean Proctor has given a
drinking fountain to her native town,
Heimiker, N. II.
Miss Ames, daughter of the governor
cf MussaclniM'tts, is said to look wonder
fully lik the Princess of Wales.
"Jenny" is one of tho baptismal names
of the new empress of (iermany. That
has a pleasant, hoinclik,. sound."
The death of cx-Empresi Carlotta, of
Mexico, may occur at any moment in
Bel-iuin. She is rapidly .sinking and has
become entirely helpless.
Some forty-throe descendants of Re
becca N011r.se, "the pious wilchof lCDi."
picnicked in her lienor at Danvers Cen
ter, M:ins., the other dav.
Miss Agnes Brown Bhickwell. a dan 'li
ter of Rev. Antoinette L. Brown Biack
well, was 11 warded the l.iehost 01 ize in
the "life class'' at Cooper Union at its
late annual examination.
A school of housekeeping has lieon
started in Brussels bv tho con lit rss of
Flanders. Forty girls thero receive a
practical training in domestic ooonoinv,
marketing, cooking, mending i;nd laun
dering. An Englishman thus describes Ouoen
Margherita of Ttalv in (!- !:'! y-'! r,..
zette: "Ifer Le e i.s .so spoiiwuicouslv in
teresting and vivacious that it iniirlit lx-
long to any high born Jady untiammeled
by cares pf state. Her smile, her low.
h r ready words are the perfection of
royal mi, or, perhaps, rather the un
learned perfection of a royal nature."
The Journal lu Havre has found the
acre do naissance of Sarah Bernhardt.
C I 1 - - . . 1 . T r
0110 iwis i.'orii 111 in- , rir ll.-icro
mother was tho da""'..tci.oi a tVrh'n oon-
'i-;t, ,!id lt C frilbl-r :is !l vM-rr?i mn:i
official, who liter ward Committed sui
cide. Sarah s original i;.nie was R
This disposes of thf- story time fh
:i:!0.
was
uutcli.
Princess Irene of- ITesse. who hjts
married prince 4Jejry of '
cehvd a fcl ..s,a. has re-
.igii housewife's training,
...no can sow, make bread, and d every-
tiling -liu would have to do were she
fated to become tho wife of a poor man
All the Princesses of lles.-e were trained
in this wav bv their mother, the late
grand duchess, daughter of Queen Vic
toria. The French minister of war has de
cided to award the crosn of tho Lotion of
Honor to Muio. Diouan at the coming
July fete. Siio was tho faithful attend
ant ot tho r lity-nintii regiment ot in
fantry during the war of 1870, behaving
with the utnior-t valor during the buttles
about Metz and attending to the okieers
and men. even win n thev were under a
heavy tire, until she was taken prisoner.
I'reserve the (Jovcrimient f.:uim::rks.
There is surprising reckic -sness regard
ing the preservation of monumeul;
erected ov tr.e government survevors
throughout the northwest. The surveyor
of Brown, county. Dakota, gives this
timely warning in a local paper: I
notice a lamentable want of care- of the
government corners among the farmers
and landowners of the country. Where
stakes existed they are rotted off. often
pulled out and used for firewood; the
mounds arc erased by cattle or travel.
I the pits. are filled up and obliterated, and
soon, if not already, 110 certain evidence
will remain of their exact location. Now I
need r.ot enlarge on the very great import
ance of preserving thse points to mark
011 boundary lines. Residents from the
east can recall any amount of trouble
arising from tome "lost corner," doubts,
disputes, litigation and perchance a big
surveyor's bill. Therefore, let every one
of these corners receive the prompt at
tention necessary to make it doiiiuie and
permanent. Since c-ach corner has an
individuality of its own, owing to the
marked irregularities of the government
surveys, it is a mistake to think that ;i
lost corner may readily be restored by
measurements from adjacent corners.
For enduring monument I would sug
gest a pointed sioii.e or i.on rod. or when
practicable plant a tree. To forer tab
any subsequent di..::t; two or more oi
the adjacent owners fhouhl i:v
planting of 1 ho corner. I won it
lon:im:.sier.s :igai:;.-.t c:.:t -:s-:ii
Kirov ing i-r borying too h ;
landmarks. Chiv:v.:o Times.
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!
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tt::: f. ! have
o-iU 1 use
alino-.f -o.iv-
')..: 10 t-i n '.::iaij ,
tiling t v. l,i.-!i I t .;.
ttiile, i :,i:i fl
my !- . , ,. . ; ;
i i 11 1. il- l.f ::':. 's
.ei.-.ht I h-iv.-evi-r :
iiid the highest- l::-ay.-:'.
' i' 1 1 !-,, 1 - ro
'-t .-i d t..--l.iM..'U'7..':; :
s:ij.erii'i'!U-; JV.-h. iu
Uvie.: ' '
v - -
.1 1 iiiid lav.i
'', '. .. : .oa ii 0, ,!!)-i'l-
penalty. JL is
.' tav.M-if il e.' ti to
t.. ivdnee
i'll'-.'i . 1 wa,
h
jii
of
1 It. wa
Uial' r-
iteeinuulat in weight
.01 rapidly i he;:
.:ig s'.wat'-rs un.l
:i t 1 t.-tke lou wallcs, wear-l!i-
hi.ivie:.!- winter elot h-
.1 j lt. l!!eli IS not es,-ec!:;:iv en ic'.yiil.ilo In hot
whieh
.summer weather. waik of from eijjhtto
tell mile.-;, dre.--ed in the condition described,
will usually dispose of from 0110 to two
pounds of extra l!eIi. These walks are in
dulged m only when the neees.sily le'pii res,
mid are by 110 means of daily oeenrrence, for
which I am duly thankful.
Tho ono ail important requisite for a suc
cessful jockey is to ke. ; a cool head and to
ossess an unerring judgment, for if he loses
one and fails of having tho ot her at a critical
moment, ho will never overcome the many
obstacles that meet him with every turn of
tho track, and never win a raeo unless ho is
mounted upon a horse, that will carry him
through ia spite of himself. Thero is ns
much strategy and finesse to he exercised ou
the race course as on the battleiield. One
must know his enemy thoroughly, and must
be alive to take instant advantage of an'
errors his opponents may make. lie must
endeavor to make his rivals use up all their
strength before the critical moment comes,
ami must reserve for himself suflieient force
to carry him safely through the final
struggle.
A KNACK OF RIDING.
But above all, he should ho very intimately
acquainted with the capabilities of his own
horse, and must bo thoroughly conversant
with all its points of weakness, ns well as its
elements of strength, for tho former may
often bs taken advantage of if they are not
known to his opponents. There is a certain
knack of riding which it is diflieult to ex
plain, but which has a substantial existence
just tho same, that enables one to almost lift
his horse along, especially in passing under
the wire, when a fortunsdo leap will carry
you to tho front by even a nose. Many ri
lucky win of mine has been made in this
way, noticeably in the recent race where
Tea Tray and Tristan were at the fore,
and Tristan won by so small a fraction that
it is said that no one on tho track saw the
true result, excepting the judges. In that
race, which was one of the most exciting iu
which I have ever been engaged, I was able
to lift Tristan almost by main strength,
when I felt that I had surely lost, just enough
to win.
Tho sensations which a jockey experiences
in speeding around the track are many and
varied, and there is always the utmost ex
hilaration of mind, and every muscle of his
body is drawn to a tension approaching the
breaking point. He has little time to view
the landscape within tho inclosure, or to see
the mad crowd that is cheering him on from
the grand stand, or at the fences close by the
track, even if his eyes are not blinded by the
showers of n;ud or the clouds of dust with
which the enemy in front delight to greet
him. But he knows instinctively that the
landscape and the crowd are there, and he
hears tho cheers of the mob faintly above the
clattering of the horses' hoofs. These are
quiet and subdued sounds at the start, which
are completely lost tho moment the first turn
is made, and then they cease altogether until
the homestreteh is gained, when the noise
grows gradually loader, but seldom becomes
a good sized one for the jockey's ears. It is
whe:i the race is over and the victory is won
that the jockey remembers all ho has pas.-ed
through. The nervous exhaustion occasioned j
by a record breaking mile is excessive, but a
bath and rub down soon puts the jockey in
healthy trim for the nest race. William
Hayward in Inter Ocean.
Vhen Acuoycd by Musqni.'oes.
From country places all around New York
I hear a wail of agony anent tho ferocious
uiusfjuito, which this summer seems to have
broken his record for frequency and viru- !
lc-n.-e of executive abiUly. It seems that the
p'c uliar climatic vagaries of this uncomfort-
Lbli summer have just suited the musqmto s j
peculiar taucy. Anyhow he is out ia lorce,
and tho discoverer of. A preparation which
wtd prevent
ankle-s io Mire
s attacking bauds, faeo or
or an uoiung reward Lota now ;
and 1:1 liio hei eaiU r. ..iy own eiperien.-e
teaches iiv; that the neare&t apwoacii to this
desirable compound is ztra; t of j-ennv
royal, which should b J ie::tii'uliy' smeared
ou ail -x-'.s&l p-irtioiis of tho pt -r;o:t. The
.-.-.or is :.et uupleasaut, and as the extract
oMs;:.;s largely of :;'euhul, evaporation is
steely and a. 1 le.i..aa; coolness re.-u3t.
W'hi'u tli odor is sarent no musquito will
;.ut his j.rol.vocij ia working distance. To
relijvo tho itching of bites nothing u mora
eTectu-d th-n e-omaioa washing sud"a, s:,.dct
j.ie l an 1 rubbed oa this fejiot. " li. ii." in
1 au Cp-Jclu
3IaiJL.f:e!e.
A Loud.;:i co:n'a
re r-f
tv-orted to hava so-
cared .u-'iiLS f-r ih-.- c
V,-;;::1 -f- ;
jioiiu;:!, alia tj oe j
Rhr.uiiiur.i, scj;u:a a
iL.e to cia:.u:aecar rduin..iu:.i at cons-dorr,
i.-i-i thau oat, ..iilli3 tor oouiuL Arkau
i
THE CITIZENS '
23 nxr jzsl 1
rhATTSMOUTII. - NKI'.KA.sKA.
CAPITAL STOCK PAID IN, - $50,000
Authorized Capital, $100,000.
ntucmirt
'HAMi CAKKUTII. .los. A. CoMNoit,
l're-i.elit. Vlrr-l-rcNlileUt .
V. II. Cl'SlMNii. Ca-tihr.
OlItKClOliS
Frank ( an utli, J. A. I'uui.iir, r . K. (Jutliiniiim
J. V. Johi.eoii, liei.ry Uo 1, , Joliu O'Keefe,
V. I. iMfiTiain, Win. Weleuiaii,,., y,
11. Cuilnnj;.
TransactH a Central Itanklnc ltiiBlii n
who liavo any Hankhm liuslness to trammel
are tinited to eitii. St, inciter Ii
larnH or Miiali tin- I lai.i-iiel tun, It
will receive our careful at lent leu.
and we iiiiuiiise j,l w ay ft ctmr
teiius tleatnieiit.
Issues Certificates of IM uaits heiirlnK inten t
iiuynanu sfiin riioiiKii Kxriiatiijo. fount v
aU fltv .seem it;,.,..
JOHX KlTOKKALl, fj WAUUH
rrettldent. Caelile
FIRST NATIONAL
IB ZnT IKI j
OK fl. A TTS MOUTH, NKJUtAHUA,
fT-r. t:ie very host taellith-s lor the. prompt
transaction of le.nitiiuaty
BANKING BUSIJRESO.
eit
.1 tiitert-Mt allowed tin lime ei I
eaten . Ih-al lftirawii.aKiUalile in any
l-artof the I tj 1 -.1 staleK and all
f I I It 1 .t'l ... . .. I A ... . .
I . o.'.i ". I HIM 1 H Ol
Klil OIM-.
CiAlectiuns made d-promptly rai.UUd
if" . .
market price!' paid for County War
fjt:tte ai d County liniidv.
DIKECTOliS 1
John YWyvviMA
John K. Clark, . Milkwort h.
S. W :c:i;h. f ym vvj,t.
Sank Cass County
Co'uer Main and Sixth Streets,
LATTS MOUTH U7 .11: 113
It.
M.
1'A KM U.K. l're.si.leiit.
resident. I
i'A'i'l KKmu.W Ciu-hier. (
Transacts a General BaniiRE EcsiEess
HIGHEST CASH PJtI.CE
Paid tr County and City Warants
and promptly remit led for.
;i;;(i. 'j;TOitn :
C. II. Tarn ele, J. M. J'atterson,
Fifed J eider, A. K. Smith.
It. II. Vludhain. M. Moriist-y,
James ralterson. Jr.
ROBERT CONNELLY'S
SHOP,
Wagon, Buggy, Machine and Plow re
pairing, and general j oiling
ai, now prepared to do all kinds of repairing
or farm and other machinery, as tfctre
Is a good lathe in my shop.
PETER RAVEN,
The old Reliable Wagon Maker
has taken charg,; 01 the wagon sncp
lie Is well known as a
NO. 1 WORKMAN.
and Ilsrzlm
IS tdu
rrtf-r
SATISFACTION fJIIAHNT
The 5th St. 2erchant Tailor
Keeps a Full Line of
Foreign & Domestic Goods.
Consult Your Intereet by Civu Ii in, a Ca
SHERWOOD CLOCK
Plattsiaioutli. - TXri
Dr. C A. Marshall.
Preservation cf natural teeth a f ifclalty.
Vccth ej tnS(:Ui' U'"ut pain ., v,c of Uiuvhing
t;.i.
All work warranted. Prices reasonable.
Fitzukhai.h's liLXJi rLHTSiiofTH, Nkh
DRS. CAVE & SMITH,
"Pair-less Dentiets."
Tl:e oi.Iy I)criti.-t In th West cr.ntrollnp thi
ew .System -f Kxtraciinn ami h'illinn Tt-etn
withimt 1'ain. Ctir an;tet!ietic is eii
tirely free from
CIILOIiOFOIIM Oil ETHER
AM) IS ABSOLUTELY
- To -
Teeth extrnrred and artificial teeth inserted
nj.tuay if desired. Tht?prt.ervHtionoI the
natural teeth a specialty.
GOLD CEOWNS. GOLD CAPS, EEIDGE WOHI.
auc ny iiucm. om.'ein i.nmn UICCK, over
The Cit:zeie Bauk,
K. DRESSIER,
n..vtx3Ei.o-u.ri,
si
I !
; i