-r 3-9- - WEEKLY HERALD: PLMTSMOUTH. NSBR SK APRIL 9, 1891 or 1? .11 u i i I' t. i St i (' 1 t 1 ! i H : "3 1 Post ' iffip nmovil. The i.oKt-oiiice will be removed tonight anl tomorrow into the two nnrlh room of the Riley Hotel building. Thf patron of the office will confer a favor by not bothering about their mail after 1 o'clock to morrow until after So'clock Momlay morning, when they will find every thing in ood shape at the new quarter. Arhur Day. TJie following; !J 11 .U'c-M i n s from Sui inteiu cut Noble choulU beob eervi d: "April 'SI in Arbor Day. The teachern ol this county have Home work to do. .Many school lotn have jio trees. As the members of the school l)i);inl ami all interested to meet a wck before Arbor Day, measure, the ground, determine how jnany trees can be planted to ood advantage, a .u have a committee to secure the decs. They.-hould be arr.t.ied -t to beautify the ground an 1 protect the house. D.) not let the day pass because this is your iirst term, or last term, because your school is small and the people take no interest. You have a -od chance to show your ability by a.vakeiiin an interest. Arrange an interesting program and ask the people to come. The Journal will have a program pre pared by State Superintendent A Goudy. Send 10 cents to hd. Miller, Lincoln, and he will April number. J. II. send County Court. The State of Nebraska vs. John IJuchel. Comi)laint for incorrigibi lity. Court held evidence insuffi cient to convict and discharges de fendant. JohuMcDonald vs. George Leubin Action in replevin. Cause settled and dismissed. Petition filed for appointment of K. li. Crai.tr guardian of lilmer Bar rett, minor. Citizens Bank of Plattsmouth vs Henry A. Thompson. Suit on note, Hearing- April 14, 10 a. m. Wm. Deering & Co. vs Frand Busche. Defatilt of defendant en tered. Judgment for plaintiff for $134.73. John B. Hayes ve NoIIaBka M'f g Co. On trial to jury, llie jury con futed of J. G. Richey and II. M. GtrVlt who looked wise ae owls while Colonel Gering expounded Blackstone and tore a few pages out of Kent, Chitty and Greenleaf. Married. Yesterday at Union, Mr. Kobert C. Kendall to Miaa Rosa Davis, Rev. Nichols officiating. The groom is the son of that ster ling old citizen, Frank Kendall, and the bride is the handsome daughter of Mr. Ben P. Davis. The Herat. t wishes the happy and deserving couple a full comple ment of health, wealth and pros perity. The democratic party has been slaughtered by its first and only representative. Boyd did it with his little pen. D. K. Barr. the Second ward nomi nee for councilman, is celebrating the arrival of a sou and heir. He thinks he now has Jones at a serious disadvantage. Claus Brookcafold s ir-r! --d h?p friends this morning by walkingin to the city about daylight from the direction of St. Joe. Claus is quite a pedestrian but we never expected he could walk from St. Joe in so short a time. The l.itsv t-w:i "-f T'mJoti is booming. Kverv house i;i the town t rK-cr'ti-,1 and more are biiildin:.''. j K. A. Fleming, of Kapid C ity, is one of the latest acquisitions to the bus iness interests, having opened out a first class harness .-hop. The Cass County Teachers' Insti tute will com.iK-.ic- Augut 10 and continue two weeks. A six weeks', summer training school will pre cede it. i he instil. lit- will be held at Weeping Water and the instruct ors wiil be Prof. R C. McClelland of Plattsmottth, Mrs. K. W. Kdwardsof I.lScoln. and A. II. Waterliouse of Weeping Water. C. A. Beach, a prominent young lawyer of Weeping Water, that had the honor of passing a rigid bar ex amination for admittance at Omaha 4lie ther dav. in which he succeed ed with ilyiag colors wild.- ei; 1 1 I.:-,..; 1 1 1 1 i o .1 - 1 i i !V III.' V.M ,-ht f t . . " ' i is-in the city today. He expects to open an office in nu Ore;, a few weeks. ,on city in 1 that all h -.:l n..ic--- ! r " lished in daily newspapers having t h-a.-t .".() circulat.io:i, while at o:-.iy l; ie.mi.i.i county, has pa sued Ihe senate. It looks very much like a nice little ;-a:iie ! iilso ;-ro be pri 1 i of .' c'.iy a - :t s that said article must !i day for the number TO MY GUITAR. Companion of my hours of idleness. How often wo've defied slow Time toetliorl When lightly than thy yielding chords I pren. The world (trows bright, howo'ur ho drr the weuth-rl Am I aweary? Tarn I then to the. To thy reiiHmMive string niy sou) revealing. And tnu thy sympathetic inliutrolKy .Semis nubile blreugth through my dulled M:iiKeji stealing;. In lonely moment, what a friend lliou art! My minor iiiokvIh, my -fleet imz fnn iew luirini;: Thou e. ji.-,t express the secrets of my heart In u'-ct nta of rejoicing or despairing. The cue w iio.-e lo e I w desire to Kiiin, Would i i.i L'ly eahe to doubt. It seems to me. If nil my 1 miui;, all lny speechless pain. Could find a voice, my loved guitar, through thi-.: Amy r.ii.'.:;l th Leigh in Drake's Magazine. l.pok Him u Iconic While to Sre It. A in. :i wlio returned not 1iij ao from a .stay of several months in Lon loi! ha soiiie fanny stories to tell of his .x;.' . i I'e.- v;ih I.'.:-;ri:-': wit. "Thi'inind .ft; li;i t ' in is .soi.'-l. ) nit idow," lie iiid. "and when it coiiies to his ajeireei'tUon oi'a joke he can b; trusted after a while k'l.t to it, but tin; l-'ect k.s i.S blow. story is a -;iiil;il illustration of .vu.-.t I mean: One day I went into a 01 ; 0:1 tiie Strand and asked for ;.!.;;:.. - . ;.:i,s in London.' fn America iw l(o is sold in one thick volume; the !crl: hrn : it it in two. 'Oh,' I said, as 1 looked at. them, 'you part your Hare in : he middle, d; youl'' "I, .-' r':'" he said with a bewildered look; "oh! no, sir." I saw he didn't Bee the joke, bo iidn't explain, but bought the books and .vent away. A week later I entered the same shop. As soon as the clerk saw me he ru.-hed from the back of the shop lunirhiii"; vociferously, and seized me by tue hand: "toiv1!" lie shonted. "Capital; 'part your Hare in the middle,' that's capital, sir; capital." I had thought it was rather neat my self, and it didn't take me a week to find it out. either. New York Evening San. Kindness Not Apprecluted. A little incident that amused the pas sengers in a Brooklyn bridge car the other day would seem to indicate that the semi-tough young man with a baby in his arms does not appreciate polite ness. As the semi-tough young man is seldom seen carrying a baby it might, however, be hard to prove the rule. k Bat this one was carrying a baby, and the ttreu iooKing woman with mm was lugging a bag that looked twice as heavy as the baby. The woman ras the first to see the only vacant seat in the car and dropied into it. And then a dapper young fellow who had been reading intently looked up, and his gaze fell first on the baby. lie apparently didn't notice that it waa a man holding the infant, for he jumped np, lifted his hat, and said, "Please take my seat, madam." The fellow with the child scowled, but all he said was: "If yer Bpeakin' to de kid, dat's all right, but if yer speakin' to me IU smash yer face. See?" And he stood np all the way over, looking as if he felt much in sulted. New York Times. Mohammed's Descendants. To find families of an antiquity at once remote and certain we must go be yond Europe and seek them nearer the cradle of the human race. Mohammed died in 632, leaving nine wdves and only one child, his daughter Fatima, who was married (as several other ladies wore) to Ali, the prophet's first convert and chief lieutenant. From Fatima have descend ed the numberless sultans, nobles, cher ifa, kins and t-inperors who, ever since the prophet's dr.y, have constituted so important a part of the ruling class in the world which he organized. Today, after the lapse of thirteen centuries, it is the blood of the prophet that constitutes the title to nobility in the several coun tries of the east. Chicago Times. The Earliest Leus. Th.j LMrljest known lens is one made of ruck crystal, unearthed by Laj'ard at Xineveh. This lens, the age of which is to be measured by thousands of years, now lies in the British museum, with its surface as bright as when it left the maker's hands. By the side of it are very recent specimens of lenses which have been ruined bv e.vnosury to Londor fo-c and smoke. New York Telegram. ! r .vty real work of art in copper n v.- exists in India is the casting of l'o::nd "ther images for religious osc-s. These are, of course, mostly v.' found in old temples. Almost all Hi: p;i: the temples which can really claim an tinuity have images made of copper, which are the perfection of art, and which, with all the assistance of ma chinery, could never bo excelled or even imitated by European cities. The largest kitchen in the world is in the Con ilarche in Paris. It has 4,000 employes. The smallest kettle contains Inn fjuarts and the largest 500. Each of fifty roasting pans is big enough for 300 cutlets. Every dish for baking potatoes hoi iLs 2'2j ixmnde? When omelet tea are on the bill of fare 7.S0O egga are need at once. For cooking alone sixty cooks and 100 assistants are always at the ranges. A monkey on shipboard used to amuse himself in the cook's absence by turning tae w::ter cocks, in ordir to enjoy that w r! !. y's surprise when ho returned and found the water running over the flwor. .!!-. ! tVre ::re scores of authenticated in stances of actual deception practiced by In the West End of Loodua, uX Olytn- pi-t. the 1 !r,e hall there, .which is famous ivl i . -I I t its fancy dress balls, is 4-10 fee z 1 --o, 0 feet wide and 1M feet hia, and contains an area of nearly two and it' 1 ,.U acres. Twenty-seven thousand . - . hiv.v.iit at. a recent balL D. j. .:i i.' -t.-ou rc t!'e C i 1 15 l.f - II: i-f ;-h creates at Swan- j b' 1 il his piays. 1 LEGENDARY WORLDS. Expeditions Set Out from the Canary Isl ands to IXscover Tliein. Stories of legendary worlds have at nil times possessed a fascination for most . minds and formed the subject of much : curious speculation. However childish ' such tales may seem at the present day, : "they once wielded sufficient sway," says M. Flamarian in his "History of the Heavens," "over men's minds as to gain their belief in the veritable existence of the places described, and in this way to iriduence their astronomical and cosmo graphical idtsta." Many such legends originated when geography was in its infancy and the greater part of the wTorld's surface still unknown. From that time, too, travel ers like Sir John Mandeville excited curiosity by relating discoveries which they professed to have made in their dis tant journeying, and which those w ho received them readily accepted as facts. In process of time these mythical ac counts were gradually circulated from one country to another and became in t er wo ven with the traditions of the people among whom they were told. Hence, in one form or another, we find in most parts of the world numerous stories of legend a rj worlds still current, survivals of which may be traced to the literature of modern times. Thus, go ing back to early days, the poets ami philosophers of Greece and Rome gave detailed accounts of the land whither mortals wend their way when this life is over, enumerating its rivers, its lakes, its woods and mountains. Accordingly, Utysses was said to reach the place of the dead by crossing the ocean to the Cimmerian land, iEneas to have entered it by the Lake Avernus, whereas Xenophon informs us that Hercules went there by the penin sula of Arechusaide. In early times the Canary Islands were regarded as the neighborhood of the terrestrial home of the blessed dead, and many wonderful stoiies were told of this enchanted lo cality. Thus, as Washington Irving writes: "Occasionally this enigmatical spot would be visible from their shores, stretching far away in the clear bright west, to all appearance substantial like themselves and still more beautiful. Expeditions would launch forth from the Canaries to explore this land of prom ise. For a long time its sun gilt peaks and shadowy promontories would re main distinctly visible, but in propor tion as the voyagers approached peak and promontory would gradually fade away until nothing would remain but blue sky above and deep blue water be low." This legendary land was, as the Portu guese and Spanish declared, an island which had sometimes been lighted upon by accident, but when sought for could not be found. Bat a king of Portugal is said to have made a conditional sur render of it to another when it should be discovered, and when the kingdom of Portugal cedem to the Castilian crown its rights over the Canaries the treaty included the island of Brandain, de scribed as the island which had not yet been found. London Standard. Queer Filling:. There are numbers of dentists in New York who ought to be sawing wood. I had a friend tell me about a week ago of a severe pain 111 a tooth which he had only recently had filled. He argued that it could not be the tooth, because he had only a few days before sat in the den tist's chair. The dentist was unknown to him, and had been selected because his office was next the place where my friend begirds. I advised him to go to a first class dental practitioner, which he did. Next day he said to me: "Do vou know what was the matter with my tooth? That fellow up by my boarding house did not clean the tooth out before he filled it. He had left pieces of cotton in the cavity and had piled the gold in on top of it. No wilder it ached." New York Press. Kngland's Karly Coins. When England was being made into mince meat and blocks of real estate by the Saxons and Danes silver and brass were in use as currency, but the Nor mans subsequently installed the aristo cratic metal and left the democratic first coined by Henry III, and copper made into British coin in 1CT2. Tin was used for coinage in 1G80, and the national farthing was made of this Cambrian product, with a stud of copper set in the center. In 1690 and 1691 tin half pence were issued in considerable quantities. The only pure gold coins issued in En glish history were those of Henry III. Age of Steel. Cutting Behind. When we harge a youngster with "cutting behind" we make a charge that cannot be proved. Every boy knows that the cutting behind is done by the man who sits in front with the whip. He cuts behind at the boy who hangs on behind, but the latter is uaed to it, and enjoys his ride as much as he does the jealousy of his companion afoot, who out of revenge yells, "Cut behind!" to the driver, and then maliciously informs the teacher that it was the boy who cut be hind. Harper's Young People. She Never Had Seen It. The other day a little girl was paying her commandments. "For in six days," she repeated rapidly, "the Lord made heaven aad earth, the sea and allthatin themi.T.' Thn stopped. "- f"?u?ra." she said, "I've seen the Leaven, and the earth, and the sea, but I never saw any alltbatinthemiz. Where does God keep that?" The child had really believed that there was a certain separate cre ation called "allthatinthemiz" that she had never been able to find. New York Evening Sun. The Sailor's Iiit. JTerchant You made tro -d ti tLe I r'.t-l i 1;. i.uS. II. .. BuckUn'H Arnica Salv. TUE HfcST SAi.TK In V.t M t,. Cij,. Bruises, bons, Ulcere. S,iJt Kti iim. F Sores, Tetter. Chuppd lUn N. Chilblains. nd ull Skin Iropriotis, ati I poi iirelj cures I'Ut-s. or o pti r. quired. It is gunrnuteed to iy -.tiHfctioii, or money refunded. I'rict- cent per lnx. For sale by F. G. Kricke A C. The Cratest Strike Among the great strikes that of Dr. Miles in discovering hi New Heart Cure has proven itself to be one of the most important. The de- nand for it has become astonish ing. Already the treatmentof heart disease is being revolutionized, and many unexpected cures effected. It soon relieves short breath, llutter- ng, pains in side, arm, shoulder. weak and hungry spells, oppres sion, swelling of ankles, smothering ind heart dropsy. Dr. Miles book on Heart and iServme Diseases, free. The uneoualed New Heart Cure is sold ami guaranteed by F. G. Fricke it Co, also his Restorative Nervine for headache, fits, sprees, hot flashes, nervous chills, opium habit, etc. 4 Some yeur9 ago Chaiubeiiiiin & Co., ol Des Moines, Iowa, c mim-nccd die inun ufiicture of a couli syrup, lli'Ving it to be the most prompt und reliable pn-para tion yet produced foi-coughs, colds and croup; that the public npprecritn rue merit, and in time it was cirtuin to be come popular. Their most sanguine 1 opes have been more thin realiz-d. Oyer three hundred thousand bottles of Chamberlain's Cough Ib-medj are now sold each year, and it is recognized as the best made, wherever known. It will cure a severe cold in less time than any other treatment. For sale by F. O t ricke & Co. The New Discovery. 1011 nave neara your menus ntu neighbors talking- about it. Yot may 3'ourself be one of the many wno Know lrom personal experienc just how good a thing it is. If you have tried it you are one of its staunch friends, because the won derful thing about it is, that when once given a trial, Dr. King's New .Discovery ever alter holds a plac in the house. If you have never used it and should be afflicted with a cough, cold or any throat, lung or chest trouble, secure a bottle a once ana give it a lair trial, it is guaranteed every time, or money retunaea. inai bottles tree at .b. u Fricke & Co's drugstore. Ths following advertisement, pub hehed by a prominent western patent medicine house, would indicate that tbey ragard disease as a punishment for ein 'D you wish to knew the quickest way t curea severe cold 1 We will tell yon. To cure a celd quickly, it must be treated before the cold has become set tied in the system. This can always be done if you choose to, as nature in her kindness to man gives timely warning and plainly tells you in nature a way. that as a punishment for some lndiecre- tion, you are to be afflicted with a cold unless you choose to ward it off by prompt action. The first Bjmptoms of a cold, in most cases, is a dry, loud cough and sneezing. The cough is soon fol lowed by a profuse watery expectoration and the sneezing by a profuse watery discharge from the nose. In severe cases there is a thin white coating on the tongue. What to do? It is only neces sary to take Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy in double doses every hour. That will geatly lessen the severity of thy cold and in most cases wul effeetualle counteract it, and cure what would have been a severe cold in one or two days' time. Try it and be convinced." 50 cent bottles for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists. The First step. Perhaps you are run down, can't eat, can't sleep, can't think, can't do anything- to 3-our satisfaction, and you wonder what ails you. i ou should heed the warning, you art taking tne nrst step into nervous prostration. You need a nerve tonic and in Electric Bitters v ou will find the exact remedy for restoring your nervous system to it normal, healthy condition. Surprising results fol low the use of this great Nerve Ionic and Alterative, lour appe tite returns, good digestion is re stored, and the liver and kidneys re sume neyitny acuon. 1 ry a oottie. Price SOc, at F. G. Fricke & Co drugstore. Hair Work. Of all kinds to order. Hair chains, pins, rings, cossres, etc., a specialty. Orders left at Dovey's store or Mesdames Wise & Root, will be promptly attended to, or postal card to Mrs. A. Knee, Hair-dresser. Will be Given Away. Our enterprising druggists, F. G. Fricke & Co, who carry the finest stock of drugs, perfumeries, toilet articles, brushes, - sponges, etc., tire giving away a large number of trial bottles of Dr. Miles' celebrated Res torative Nervine. They guarantee it to cure headache, dizziness, ner vous prostration, sleeplessness, the ill effects of spirits, tobacco, conee, etc. Druggists say it 13 the greatest seller they ever knew, and is univer sally satisfactory. They also guar antee Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure in all canes of nervoueororganicheart disease, palpitation, puin in side, smothering, etc. rme book on Aervou8 and Heart Diseases, free. 4 "Ilss" Nerveand LlvorPIl!. Act on a new principle ruuiuting the liver, stemach and bowels through the nerves. A new discovery. Dr. Miles' Pills speedily cure bilioumes, hud tate, torpid liver, piles, constipation. Une qualed for me, women, children. Smallest, mildest, surest 1 50 doses, 25c. Sampla free at F. G. Fricke & Co's. Xedles, oils and part for a'.l kins of machines can be found at the Sli e;- of- ' ' What is vt v''TVvmvr'vmvv'vuv.T vw.1 Castorla Is Dr. Kcmuel Pitcher's prMtrftrtin tar In And Children. It contains neither Oplara, Morphia) nost other Narcotic snbstance. It is a UanulAvs substHnte for ParegoHc, Drops, Soothing Syrup, and Oaurtor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty jmtmw nte farf Millions of Mothers. Castorla dfttry Worms and allnrys feverishne-ss. Castorla prevents vomltiac ft our Card, cures Diarrhoea and AVind Colic Oastoria relievos teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Cast or ia assimilates the food, regulator th stomou and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Ciu toria, is tlio Children's Panacea the Mother's Friend. Castoria. "Cantoris la an excellent inetllclDS for tifl drou. Mothers have rerxxUefllr told lue of its guod oiXuot upon Uieir ohJUireo." Da. a. CJ. Oboooo, Lowell, Mb us. Owitoria is the I tout rwraxly for children of which I am acquainted. I hoixj the day iamot far distant w1m:ii mothers m-flf eomkler the real liitTt of their children, and umt Castoria in stead of the various quack nostrums which aro destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing gyrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature grave." Da. J. F. KvrmKUom, Conway, Ark. The Centanr Company, T7 'sifjaaai J. D. GRAVES & CO. DEALERS IN PINE LUMBER, SHINGLES. LATH, SASH. DOORS, BLINDS.and all building material Call and see us at the corner of 11th and Elm street, one bloqk north of HeisePs mill. Plattsmouth. Nebraska to aDVMrfrisE Call .-1 AND BRING YOU MENT If You Want to AdTcrtise it. TTIE IIEKaLD'S jod r1o;irt:neiit has bee;i fitted with nevr. jpe and is able to do the finest of t joa want falo bills call on th; oflice and yet our prices which are i-L-as"ii;t bl u an d T- - y" "? TT3 v , - . . . : 1 Castoria. M Cassoria is no wall adapted to children Chat I rvmjrit?nd K a superior toajiy prosartytlus! known to m.M H. A. Aaorm, M. D, 111 Ro. Oxford Si.t Urooklyu, N V. Out phyirirluns in the children's dparV ment Lava ppokon highly of their expert ! in tlittir ouUido pracUoo with CaaUoria, and although wo only oavo anions oar medical supplies wlint is known, as rgular products, yet we are f roe to oonfesa that tlM merits of Oautoria has won us to look Visit favor upon it." Ukited Ilosprrxx. inn DtspawaAKS Bostoa, Aiuir C. Hurra, Fa., Murray Street, New York City, On -'vri x.f .j , J,A jJy R ADVERTISE loll o work and on t-hort notice. V3 aiii-; e to a! Pi 7Ht :ne from :v. ;-'k. 1 1- : 1 with Il.-ury Hot-ck. - v., 1? a '! a iid :ibitj iii the town, fur everybody I S Gccd 1 ., 1 I A vvr Cu::i r?a ir ?!;.';;.' :t- r Lril ;i.MUiil, WtiUKlljIiA ever. 'tGUCUiu itlizer is guaranteed to cure you. 1 ,OW JC it Til AND