I .. . ) ,- " !3 Tempo ili Polka a Uiunmo. si cA? fea 3 8 , 6 a ft --ft - & IjJ ' & 4 3 1 4 6 4 J 1 4 : " -- -tf2- -- " i i: i i v. a v v --r r r i3i sr--- QJ? 1 1 17 1 1 1 ' -i i 1 i 1 - 1 i i f' -0. .,. mB: fefefe -gg gl I i tT""v mh 3fcS 1 13 3EqEE? EE. ) ZL! iq, I 1- Y1 f - y Harrison's Secretary. Indianapolis. Nov. 23. The president-elect this evening tendered Elijah W. Hulford, managing editor of the In dianapolis Journal, the position of private secretary . Mr. Halford is forty-three vcars ot age and came from England with his parents when a child, who settled in Cincinnati, lie began his newspaper career as report er on the Indianapolis Journal twenty five years ago, and rose in a few years, to the managing editorship. He was for a time managing editor of the Chica go Inter-Ocean in its first years. Re turning to Indianapolis, he resumed the managing editorship of the Journal, lis was for a few years private secretary ti the Lite Senator Morton. He h.n taken an actiye and prominent part in In lian i politics, and was a d le gate to the late Chicago convention, rep resenting Indian i oa th j committee on 11 itform, and shares with Hon. Wm. Mc Kinley, of Ohio, the distinction of hav ing contributed no inconsiderable share in the construction of the national j lat form, upon which the late cimo iiga was fought and won. A an editori al write: he is widely J.nnwn for his able and incisive political articles, the pungency of his style giving his writings a distinctiveness leaving no doubt on the reader's mind as to their authorship. For several years past H'l ford has been on intimate and confiden tial t.M-ms with Gjn. Harrison, and his sdocti :i for th"n important, position now tendered him occasions no surprise here. The new private secretary is mar ried and has one child, a daughter of seventeen. lie is the elder brother of J Halford, of the Washington bureau of the Associated press. Will Sue For Their Rights- Washington, Nov. 23. As a result of the conference between General Mahout and Senator Quay, recently held in thi city, it is announced that proceedings will be begun in the Virginia state courts and United States district court of Vir ginia attackiug the right of the demo cratic electors of that state to cast their votes for president in the electoral col lege. The certificates of the electors will not be issued until after a meeting of th state board of canyassers in Richmond next Monday, and the contemplated pro ceding will be then immediately instituted. FOLKS. EELH.CIEU5E. ioo. Composed iy Copyright Kankel Bros., 1884. Thirty Acres of Forest Descend Into the Cumberland Valley. Bond's Milt., W. Va., Nov. 23. The largest land elide ever known here oc curred a few days since on the side of the Cumberland mountain, where, a pcope of land, containing not less than twenty five or tliirty acres, slipped from the side of the mountain, carrying its forest of pine, chestnut, oak and other immense trees along with it into a narrow valley below. The slip shot across the valley completely damming it from the moun tain side to a parallel ridge four hundred yards distant. The small creek which ran down the valley was dammed up, and formed a small lake from ten to twenty-five feet deep, and, perhaps, a half-mile in length. The forest trees still stand on the slide, but at an angle of forty or fifty degrees. The mountain side is bare, with the rocks Btandiug ex posed in a line four hundred yards wide and ha!i a mile long. Altogether it was a most peculiar freak of nature. Shot Dead in Cour Macon, Ga., Nov. 22 The Brunswick & Western railroad company has been missing oranges from its cars at Riverside and on Tuesday morning a white man by the name of Weaver wa3 arrested, charged with stealing the fruit, and car ried to Tifton, in Worth county, for a commitment trial. A colored train man bythsname of Luke B.'owa was sum moned as a state witness in the case, but was warned by Arch Golden that if he appeared as a witness against Weaver he would shoot him. Brown went on the stand, and as he b.gan to tidl what he knew Golden shot him through the bowels with a Winchester rifle. The man is expected to live but a few hours. Official Vote of Kansas. Topeka, Km., Nov. 21. The official vote of the state is as follows : Harrison 181,502; Cleveland, 102,341; Streeter, 36,236; Fisk, 0,432. The plurality tor Ilarrisan is 79.961, a gain of 1,490 over ISS6. Humphrey, for governor, 179,986; M-irtiri, 106. 939; Humphrey's plurality, 73,009. The plurality giyen for Harrison Is the largest giyen by any state, even exceeding Pennsylvania, which cast a vote nearly three times as great as Kan sas. Connecticut's Official Vcte. IIartfgod, Conn., Nor. 22. The of ficial canvass of the vote of Connecticut shows Cleveland's plurality to be 336. i'LattsMoutii Weekly heiiald, ERNEST R. KROEGER. 4 x;;! fit South Bend. Lou Sawyer is improving, but is still very low. Geo. II. McCain and family have mov- ed to Lincolu. Patterson & Hare are transferring their stock to the corner building recently purchased by Patterson. Major C. C. Bennett delivered an in structive lecture concerning the Sandwich Islands, in the school house, Tuesday eve. A quiet wedding occurred at the resi dence of Rey. S. C. Dean. Saturday morn ing. The high contracting parties were Mr. M. A. Daugherty and Miss Emma Butler. A new and peculiar disease has made its appearance here. Our local physicians say nothing like it is mentioned in any of the medical works. Its only victim, one Howard, calls it "exaggeration of the ! brain". It is superinduced by a local external application of a billiard cue and does not appear to be contagious. ' Squeehs. The Alleged Election Frauds. Wheeling, W. Va.. Nov. 22. Chair man Cowden, of the republican state committee, will print a card in the morn ing in answer to the democratic charges of fraud on the part of the republicans, in which he says that in all counties in which frauds are charged by the demo crats the election machinery and return ing boards are in the hands of the demo crats. He adds that he is prepared to proye, and will prove at the proper time and place, that all sorts of violation of law were committed in the interest of the democratic party. He claims GofF s election as governor. Four Brothers and Four Sisters. Louisville, Nov. 23. A wedding at tended by unusual circumstance was cele brated yesterday afternoon at St. John,s church. The contracting parties are George Rothenberger Louise Weigleb, both of Jefferson county. The singular part of the union is that the prospective groom will be the fourth among the Weigleb girls. Three of the groom's brothers are already married to three of the bride's sisteis, and four of the Misses Weigleb have become Mesdames Rothen berj;er. Appointed by the Covernor. Des Moines, Nov. 22. The governor has appointed Miss Lucy Curtis, of State Center, a membet of the state board of school examiners. She is at present coun ty superintendent of Marshall county. Thursday novemp.fk 20, Dc&. y. ?cb. - ! 1 g ' zzz zm ! ! --r r r r f n X) 6 i TT 6 1 4 t 6 ill r" IMUmJ- ft R ) rr-s. j 1 -ir - -& Lr m-& - BtU. Pt6. ?tJ). jprt! pb pib ) pb. e. ........ . ------------ - -Fr" ttltEEE ttrfrtzzr tfrtr p-.t- P tawd ?T ft r, mm ft i ll ft 4 ' 'n : 1 a ft gtt: tLt tit jbzrrE -EzE tb. pt. 4Jb- Inr f 5 5 P- P'f- Prt. PA. PA. PA. $A. ''et. e '0: Jill I ,ir::TL - li1 isr-. -.Ssr ia p . $tb. pA. PA. Peb. PA. PA. Ceneral Sheridan's Views. New Yokk, Nov. 23. General W. T. Sherman was interviewed last evening in regard to his speech of Tuesday night at the chamber of commerce banquet, in which he said he was glad of General Harrison's election because it ineint that the American people would be rep resented in the cabinet and in foreign countries by those who fought for the country and not arainst it. " I meant every word of it," he said. "If you were a young man in Vienna, and a man should come over there to represent this government, who had once borne arms against it, you would make up your mind that the cause he battled for couhl not have been a bad one. I want to keep the people over there edu cated up to the fact that we crushed rebel lion. I a m not opposed to ex-rebels holding office among their own people. Indeed. I have recommended the appoint ment of rebels to local offices. Hut I'm opposed to sending them as representa tives to foreign governments." '"Do you know General Harrison well;" ''Know him 2 I've known him ever since lie wore pantalettes. I knew his grandfather and his father. He was one of my soldier boys, ana we can nil go to sleep for four years fully assured that we will have a strong union government." No Trouble in the Nation . Wasiiinton, Nov. 23. Imlian com sioner Oberly yesterday received a letter dated November lO.from Robert L.Owd, United States Indian agent at Muskogee, I. T., in respouse to an inquiry as to the truth of the report of disturbance iu the Chickasaw nation over the election of governor of that nation. It states there has been no such state of i.ffairs in the Chickasaw nation as the sensational tele grams have reported. The letter says Byrd continues to exercise all the func Hons of governor, and is practically run ning the government as such, and there is no present cause; for interference on the part of the United States government. Arkansas Democrats Cry Fraud. St. Louis, Nov. 21. A special to the Post-Dispatch from LUtle Rock. Ark., says warrauts have been sworn out against nearly fifty persons, principally negroes, for illegal voting in the recent election in Jefferson county. Democrats are complainants. -The Daily Herald delivered for !cts. per week. isss. - V 8 Repeat frviii If You Are Sick With Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism Pyspcp sia, Biliousness, Iilool Humors, Kiduey Disease, Constipation, "cmulc Troubles, Fever nnd Ague, Sleeplessness, Partial Turalysis, or Nervous i'ro tration, use Paine's Celery Compound und be. cured. In each of these the cause Is mental or physical overwork, anxiety, exposure or malaria, the effect of which is to v. euken the nervous sys tem, resulting in one of these diseases. Remove the cause with that great Nerve Tonic, and the result will disappear. Paine's Celery Compound Jas. Iu Eowen. Springfield, Mas., writes : " Paine's Celery Comixjund cunnot be excelled as a Nerve Tonic. In my ease a single Untie wrought a great change. My nervousness entirely disappeared, and with it the resulting alleetion of the stomach, heart and liver, and the whole tone of the system was wonderfully invigorated. I tell my friends, if sick as I have been, Paine's Celery Compound Will Cure You! Sold by druggists. SI ; six for ?". Prepared only by Wells, Kichakdson &. Co., Burlington, Vt. For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated. IS Oldest Agricultura In Cass hi; kkf.i-s ox hand AGRICULTURAL -WITH A FINE LINE OF- Shettler, Molme.Ketchum Wacons FOR SALE AT Nichols and ahefanl Threshing Machine?. Peter Shelter and all the leading Wagons' and Buggies kept constantly on hand. JJranch House Weeping Water. Ue sure and call on Fred before you buy, either at Plattsmouth or Weeping Water. Plntismoutli and Weeping Water, Xebrnaka 5 FIXE. Cantnliil'-. dolct. I the leyiiuuit'j to 27J Warranted to color more goods than any other dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and durable colors. Ask lor the liiamond, and take no other. A Dress Dyed A Coat Colored 0 m n I FOR SO uarmenis r.enewea ) cents. A Child can use them ! Unequalled for all Fancy and Art Work. At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free. WELLS, RICHARDSON L CO., Props., Burlington, Vt. THE County. a fill i.i.ni: of- IMPLEMENTS ! A BARGAIN. 4 J 1 t 4 Dealer, J !