Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, February 11, 1892, Image 2

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    The democratic party is getting a
good deal of aid and comfort from
the British presa on the Chilean
question. On most points of na
tional policy the British press and
the democratic party work
together.
In the last year of Cleveland's
administration, the United States
bought $tt,X)0,000 more from foreign
nations than it sold to them, where
as in 1801, under republican rule,
the sales exceeded the purchases
by $131,(X)o,Xl0. Such figures need
no comment.
A. W. Ckandaix, chairman of the
democratic campaign committee of
New Orleans, received yesterday
from New York City forty cases of
Winchester rifles and thirteen boxes
of cartridges to use in the election
dowu there, for the purpose of a
free ballot, as the democrats say.
Democrats in congress will only
work tearing down the McKinley
law during the dark of the moon.
They give evidence of being afraid
to attack it in daylight, or even
when the moon is full. They may
be smart, but the public always
hates a coward no matter how
smart he may be. Inter Ocean.
TllKEE hundred leading citizens
of Salt Lake City have sent a peti
tion to congress asking that that
territory not be admitted to state
hood. They say that the people of
the territory known nothing about
American politics and have never
learned to appreciate or Conduct
free institutions. '
Tnu latest Pittsburgh establish
ment where the process of tinning
is carried on ia that of Griffith &
Cadwallader of the Twenty-third
ward, Pittsburgh, l'a., who com
menced operations on January 1
with a force entirely new to the
business. Thej are turning out a
fine grade of roofing plate at the
rate of .'UK) boxes per week. Amer
ican Manufacturer.
LAST WORDS OF GREAT IViEN.
Elegant extracts from the demo
cratic anthology:
O, go home and soak your head.
Roger Q. Mills.
The hogs hadn't the decency to
stop eating when I got up to speak.
-David R Hill.
Ratsl Rats! Roswell P. Flower.
Next!
New York Tribune.
The New York Recorder has a
novel plan for honoring both the
living and the dead who played
conspicuous parts in the Chilean
disturbance. This plan is to have
three silver statuettes made of
Charles V. Riggin, the marine
killed at Valparaiso, these to be
presented to President Harrison,
Secretary Maine and Secretary
Tracy as the Americans who com
pelled Chile to apologize for the in
sult to the American uniform.
THE SCHEME. -
As moved by David 13. Hill, sec
onded by "Bill" Springer, and in
dorsed by the "dangerously demo
cratic" house caucus, the platform
of that party will read thus:
Plank 1-Yell.
Plank 2-Tackle.
Plank 3 -Object.
Plank 4 Amend.
Plank 5- -Juggle.
Plank 0-"Iloller."
Plank 7 Do nothing.
Plank 8 Resoved that the Amer
ican people arc blanked fools.
Denver Times.
General J. S. Clarkson said in
an address in this city at a recep
tion tendered him recently, that
4il t. . 1 . . . . . .
-me oniy protection in uoa Al
mighty's world the negro had in
the south was his prayers to God."
The tariff, reciprocity, free coinage
of silver were not the only issues
that would be before the American
citizen, as a greater issue had been
overlooked in the past but could
not be in the future, and that (s the
protection of, 7,000,000 people vrho
are the most ' loyal to the white
race living. Avalanche,
JUPITER AND VENUS.
The Approaching Conjunction Is
Phenomenon of Rare Occur
rence. The planets Jupiter and Venus,
which are now very conspicuous
objects in our western sky these
clear evenings, will make a very
close approach, to each other, or
come into conjunction, as it is
technically called, on February 6, at
S 12 a. m., New York mean time,
when . the distance between " their
centers will be only fifty-seven sec
onda (of arc), or thirty-four seconds
between their nearest limbs.. Un
fortunately ' for observers in this
country, both planets will then be
below the eastern horizon, but on
the evenings of February 5 and fr
the one preceding and the other fol
lowing conjunction they will be
so close that the unassisted eye
may have some difficulty in distin
guishing them separately. Such
a close approach of these two
planets is very rare, and those
now living may probably never see
another. In the field of view of a
telescope of very moderate power
the planets will present a magnifi
cent spectacle, JupiUr being sur
rounded by his four satellites
and Venus showing a gibbous
phase, or only four-fifths of her en
tire disk. Although the planets
have such apparently close rela
tions, their distance apart is very
great, being about four and a half
times the earth's mean distance
from the nun. or, in round numbers,
about 418,000,000 miles. In former
tinus, when the cause of such phe
nomena was not understood as
at present, the ignorant and super
slitiouq looked upon conjunctions
of the planets as the forerunners of
Home civil or physical commotion,
such as wars, famine, earthquakes
etc., but it is almost unnecessary to
state that they possess no signifi
cance whatever. The present re
markable conjunction of the two
most conspicuous planets iu the
solar system has no connection
whatever with imbroglio, the Rus
sian famine or any other event that
may hereafter occur. Such phenom
ena take place when the earth and
any two planets come into the same
or nearly the same straight line, and
since alt the planets, the earth in
cluded, revolve around the sun in
the same direction and with differ
ent but variable velocity, they must
necessarily nrrive some time or
other at the same relative positions
again and again, and therefore any
event, whether of a civil or physical
character, " happening at for near
that time i simply un accidental
coincidence and nothing more.
It will be both interesting and
instructive to follow the apparent
path of these two. planets for the
next few months. Both are moving
eastward among the fixed Hars, but
in consequence of the apparent
motion of the sun in the same
direction, which is intermediate
between those of Jupiter anil Venus
the form is apparently approaching
the sun, and will be lost to view
in the splendor of his rays on the
20th of March, after which he will
become a morning star. The latter
however, is apparently receding
from the sun and appronching her
greatest elongation, which will oc
cur on the 29th tf April, when her
anguler distance from the sun will
be about 45 V degrees, and just
about fifteen minutes before her
greatest elongation she will be oc
culted by the moon, but the c-
cultation occurs near midnight,
and, therefore, invisible in this
country. On the 2d of June he will
attain her greatest brilliancy, which
will be nearly three times greater
than at present. At this time she
will be visible to the naked eye dur
ing the day, and at night will cast
quit a strong shadow. On June 17
he will become stationary for a
short time. At tliiB point in her ap
parent course she will be moving
exact, the straight line joining the
earth and Venus moves parallel to
itself so that to a spectator on the
earth the planet will appear to
preserve the same absolute direc
tion in space. Up to this point her
apparent motion has been eastward
or direct; she now, ' however,
changes her course of retrogrades,
passes between us t nd the suu on
July 0, when she becomes a morn
ing star, and again arrives at a
stationary point on July 21, after
which her apparent motion again
becomes direct.
J. Morrison, M. B l'ii. D.
Washington, D. C, Jan. 30.
LOVE AND MARRIAGE IN JAPAN.!
Sir Edwin Arnold, who bus
been enjoying an interestinc trin
through the United States, has
made a careful study of the condi-
tion which govern the familv in
Japan and embodies his ideas in a
paper called "Love and Marriage
in Japan" in the February' number
of The Cosmopolitan. The article
is illustrated by the quaintest pos-
siDie; Japanese sketches running
down the sides and across the bot
tom of each page. An excellent
photograph . of W. D. Howella,
serves as a frontispiece, and his
work as a writer of fiction is re
viewed in the same number by II.
II. Boyescn. The president of John
Hopkins University, gives a most
practical paper for parents on
"Boys and Boys' Schools," illus
trated by cartoons of the famous
Atwood. Murat Halstead turns
lovingly back to his early farm
days, and tells of the "Pets and
Sports of a Farmer Boy." The pe
troleum indntrsy fully illustrated:
An Afghan Story by Archibald
Forbes; The Story of the Brazilian
republic by Adams, late-minister
to that.country: and The Leadin
Amatures of the United States id
photography, are other7 leadin
articles of the month.
NEW YORK'S MOST VICIOUS VICE.
The New York Vice is constantly
brewing trouble for itself and then
appealing to the press for assist
ance to aid in extricating it from
the quagmires it has created only to
strand itself in. The Register is just
iu receipt of one of the Vice's
frequent appeals in which the fol
lowing strange question is despar
ingly asked: "When postmasters,
as is shown in this paper, become so
blindly partisan as to refuse repeat
edly to delvier mail that has been
paid for, properly addressed and
posted, because they do not agree
with the politics of the sender, is it
not time for a protest loud and
long from every lover of free insti
tutions?" All this frantic hue and cry is
raiaed because the editor of the
Vice has entered into a contract
with the national democratic com
mittee to send out 100,000 copies of
the Vice for six. months, to such
addresses of temperance repub
licans as thut committee may fit r n
ih, and to work up the "1,(XJ0.(XX)
vote" scheme for a third party pro
hibition candidate for president,
and thus aid that committee in its
desperate attempt to elect a demo
crutic president next November.
The Vice has entered upon its
vicious work, and is now sending
out the copies contracted for each
week. At many points nearly every
person addressed has refused to
take the vile sheet out of the post
office and the postmasters have sd
notified the publishers of the Vice,
as the regulations direct. This
action has been a flaming red rag
to the editor of that paper, and he
is now frantically appealing to all
the newspapers in the United States
to aid his foul scheme in behalf of
the national democratic committee.
Out of the thousands of copies of
his paper that have been returned
lie has been able to iind about a
dozen persons, by t-eiiding letters
to the addressesof all whose papers
have been returned, who did not re
fuse to take the Vice out of the
postofliee, mid on this flimsv base
he is now attempting to prejudice
the public against the action of the
postmasters who returned the
papers as "refused." The editor of
the Vice can rest assured that li is
complaints will lie officially invest
igated and properly punished, in
case there have been any violations
of the postal laws and regulations.
Iowa State Register.
A HILL has been introduced in
congress by a democratic member
from Ohio, re-establishing "wildcat"
currency, or issue of money by
State banks. When old timers
think of their experience with that
kind of paper, they will invariably
conclude that the money we now
have is good enough. To have
plenty of money is one thingand to
have it worth its face value is
another. The idea seems to obtain
with some people that state banks,
or even the government, could issue
good money and distribute it
around free gratis, thus increasing
the rate per capita and conferring a
great blessing on the country.
Sarpy Sentinel.
The reduced duty on American
flour to Cuba, under the reciprocity
treaty, went into effect on January 1
last. Consul-General Williams tel
egraphs the state department that
the receipts of flour at Havana for
January last were as follows: From
the United States, 02,371 sacks;
from Spain, none. The receipts for
the month of January, 1801, were:
From the United States, 2,720 sacks;
from Spain, 38,400 bags.
The exports of flour from Cuba to
New York, New Orleans, Mobile
and Key West in January, 1802,
amounted to 07,478 barrels of sacks.
The exports from the same points
in January, 1801, were 9,234 barrels.
Associated Press Dispatch from
Washington.
PROTECTION VS. AMERICANISM.
TheCharlPBtnn p
in the miliar nf nil ilanniav onllmii.
asm for tariff reform, declares that
a protective duty should be levied
on Egyptian fine cotton for the
benefit, of the sea island cotton
planters. Atlanta Constitution.
The fact is the policy of the United
States has been an uninterrupted
illustration and defense of protec
tion. No party ever undertook to
upset it until in 1888 the passions of
the free traders were so disastrous
ly aroused by a democratic presi
dent in search of a renomination
Up to that time protection had
been one of the most fundameuta
of national traditions, shared by
democrats and other parties with
out material distinction. If . the
recent tariff-smashing rage of our
old contemporary, the Charleston
News and Courier,; subsides for t
moment in favor of a little nritec
tion sentiment, it is but going back
to first principles. Our contempo
rary is no rebel against American
ism after all. Sun,'; .,'. ';; ' "."
. . Attention) Attention!)
All Persons flnvlnir hnnVn In thoit
possession, taken either from the
i . pi. Ks a. rooms or the Y. L; R. R
A. room, will please re
to J. P. Youngs store,,
return at once
Safe and Reliable.
"In buying a cough medicine for
children," says II. A. Walker, a
prominent druggist of Ogden,
I'ictll, Ill-It I lO I'l' HlltlKl IU IMIJ
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.
; There is no danger from it and re
lief is always sure to follow. 1 par
ticularly recommend Chamberlain's
because I have found it to be safe
and reliable. 25 and 50 cent bottles
for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co.
Bucklen'a Arnica Salve.
Tuk Best Salve in the world fur Cut
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever
rWes, Tetter, Glmpped Hands, Chilblains,
Corns, ami all Skin Eruptions, and posi
tively cures Piles, or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to i;ive satisfaction,' ot
money refunded. Prire 25 cents per box
For sale by F. G. Fricke
January is gone, yet some papers
are still publishing those lists of
marriageable young men.
Do not confuse the famous Blush
of Roses with the many worthless
paints, powders, creams and
bleaches which are flooding the
market. Get the genuine of your
druggist, (). II. Snyder, 7.) cents per
bottle, and I guarantee it will re
move your pimples, freckles, black
heads, moth, tan and sunburn, and
give you a lovely complexion. 1
Electric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming so well
and so popular as to need no special
mention. All who have used Klecl
trie Hitters sing the same song of
praise. A purer medicine does not
exist and it is guaranteed to do nl
that is claimed. Klectric Hitters
will cure all diseases of the liver
and kidneys, will remove pimples,
boils, salt rheum and other affec
tions caused by impure blood.
Will drive malaria from the system
and prevent as well as cure all ma
larial fevers. For cure of headache,
constipation and indigestion try
Klectric Hitters. Kntire satisfaction
guaranteed, or money refunded.
Price 50c and $1 per bottle at F. G.
Fricke & Co's drugstore. 5
Church Howe has $100.(XH invest
ed iu his Nemaha count)- stock
farm and has 125 head of trotting
horses.
A Fatal Mlstane.
Physicians make no more fatal
mistake than when they inform pa
tients that nervous heart troubles
come from the stomach and are of
little consequence. Dr. Franklin
Miles, the noted Indiana specialist,
has proven the contrary in his new
book on "Heart Disease" which may
be had free of F. G. Fricke A Co.,
who guarantee and recommend Dr.
Miles' unequalled new Heart Cure,
which has the largest sale of any
heart remedy in the world. Itcures
nervous and organic heart disease,
short breath, fluttering, pain or ten
derness in the side, arm or shoulder,
irregular pulse, fainting, smother
ing, dropsy, etc. His Restorative
IServine cures headache, tits, etc.
It Should be In Every House.
T. H. Wilson, 371 Clay St.. Sharps
burg. Pa., says he will not be with
out Dr. King's New Discovery fo
Consumption, Coughs and Colds
that it cured his wife who was
threatened with Pneumonia after
an attack of "La Grippe," when
various other remedies and several
physicians had done her no good
Robert Barber, of Cocksport, l'a.
claims Dr. King's New Discovery
has done him more good than any
thing he ever used for J.unp
Trouble. Nothing like it. Try it
Free trial bottles at F. G. Fricke 4
Co's drugstore. Large bottle, 50c
and $1.00.
The girl's industrial school build
ing at Geneva is Well along toward
completion, and is said to be admif -nbly
arrangek for its purpose. .
A Mystery Explained.
nThe papers contain freotient no
tices of rich, pretty and educated
girls eloping with negroes, tramps
add coachmen. The well-known
specialist, Dr. Franklin Miles, says
all such girls are more or less hys
terical, nervous, very impulsive, un
balanced; usually subject to Head
ache, neuralgia, sleeplessness, im
moderate crying or laughing. These
show a weak, nervous system for
which there is no remedy equal to
Restorative Nervine. Trial bottles
and a tine book, containing man y
marvelous cures, free at F. (r. hricne
& Co's., who also sell and guarantee
Dr. Miles' celebrated New Heart
Cure, the finest of heart tonics.Cures
fluttenng,;short breath, etc
Cough Following the Crip
Many person, who have recovered
from la grippe are now i troubled
with a persistent , cough. Cham
berlain's ; cough remedy will
promptly loosen this cough and
relieve the lungs, effecting n per
manent cure in a very short tune.
25 and 50 cent bottle for sale by F.
G. Fricke & Co.
The principal of the Ulysses
schools has been arrested on the
charge of unmetcifully beating his
pupua.
Startling Facts.
The American people are rapidly
becoming a rase of nervous wrecks
nnd the followtng suggests, the
best remedy: alphouso Humpfling,
ot Butler, Penn, swears that when
his son was spechless from st. Vitus
Dance Dr Miles great Restorative
Nerving cured him. Mrs. J. 1
Miller of Valnrai and. I. IX Taolnr,
of Logansport, lnd each gained 20
pounds if an taking it. Mrs. Ji. A
Gardner, of Vastulr lnd, was cured
of 40 to 50 convulsions eas.y and
much aeadach, dizzness, bockach
and nervous prostiation : by one
bottle. Trial bottle and fine boek of
Nervous cures free at F. G. Fricke, &
Co., who recomcuds this unequailed
j nucuj, ,... 1 '
Ely's Cream Balm is especially
adapted as a remeby for catarrh
which is aggravated by alkaline
dust and dry winds. W. A. Hover,
uruggiBt, uenver.
Chamberlain's Eye and Skm
Ointment
A certain cure for Chronic- Sore Eye
Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, 01
Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema,
Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples
and Files. It is cooling and soothing.
Hundreds of cases have been cured by
tt after all other treatment had failed.
It Is put tip in 23 and CO cent boxes.
NE8SHS1D5018ESCURED
bv l'.ck' Inr.iblf TobHUr lUr Cut-
Wm. WhUotr brard. CorafArt.bl.
hmnafiilali.rtallriitintiMfajl. Sold by r. Hlwol.mly , T 0 CC
853 bnaaaa, ktw Iwk, Wnu lor few ( yrwibinLC
PARKER'S
HMD RAI CAU
CTwum and beautirw iht talc.
rroimxrf a laiu,iant growth.
Nerer Fails to Bmore Gray
Hair to lta Youthful Color.
Cum scalp diatatri Ji hair in'Uwg.
w.aflsi.nja Drungim
r . rarker'a uiuvr Tonlo. It ruiei the wor.t Couh,
wak Ijuiika, Detitlitv. Iitiliuaatioa. Fain. Taka in lima AUrta.
HINQENCORNS. Tha only mrecure for Corel,
slupa aHjmo. ai tiiuaguta, or U1SCOJL a CO., N. V.
GRATIS UL COM PORTING
tpps uocoa
BREAKFAST
"lty k tluirmiKh knowledge of thH nutnriil
Ihws which govt-rn lhe opt-taMoi of (Illicit on
and nutrition ami by careful applioalliin of
I he flue nr'ipe lienor well nelec i i'o- om Mr.
Klips has provided our break fust table with a
leliciiiely tl voie. heve itHH w hich' inay 8 ive
in many li 'avy iloctor'bl Is. Hi- hv the jipllo
l"iis use of such article" o diet III t a enn--lluri
n niav be until ually built up until xttoiitt
etioiiL'h to resist ev-.v t nilcncy to disease,
lliiiiilredM of bmIiiI liiiiii- are ll iailuK
around ii readv to a'tacK wlnr .'r herein a
wtk point, rte limy eHc:ipe manv a fht;tl
shaft bv keeidnjji'iiri'e veH well for (fled wl'h
purebloo and a properly nourished f.aine."
Civil 'ervlce Cazctto. Molnul slinidy with
hoillnc water o nil k, Sold only in hull-pound
li'-, li t?ro, erls alielled thir:
.lA.MKs KITS & DO., lloimi'imuthlo. Chemist
I.onilon. Knul ind
How Lost ! How Regained !
KNOW THYSELF.
Or BELF-PKESKKVATION. A new and only
Oold Medal PUIZK VMS A Y on NEK VOUS and
Fill nICAL DEBILITY, EKKOK8 of
YOUTH, EXHAUSTED VITALITY, PRE
MATURE DECLINE, and ail DISEASES
and WEAKNESSES of MAN. 800 pages, cloth,
gilt; 126 invaiuable preacriptions. Only $1.00
j mail, double aealed. Deacriptire Proxpect.
di with endorsements cXMn
of the Press and Toluntarj FRF P I fiW.r
testimonials ot tha cured. I 1 1 LI. I NOW.
Consultation in pernon or by mall. Expert treat
ment. INVIOLABLE 8KCKKCT and CER
TAIN CI'KK, Adcire lr. W. H. Pnrker. or
The Peabody Medical Iiwtltute, No. 4 Bulflucb St.,
Bonton, Mau.
The Peabody Medical Institute has many lmi.
tatora, but no equal. Herald.
The Science of Life, or Self Preservation, ts a
treasure more valuable than gold. Head It now,
every WEAK and NERVOUS man, and learn Is
be STRONG . Miitical lieview. (Copyrighted-'
CHicnesTER'S Fhcuc.i.
THE criminal AN J GCNUlftC.
S I "Ui'4, f.
' ! I Uul'T't.V,!! Tur
ft, f 111 ('!;, v. p. ,-!... -,l wrk
B tV 1- .I- - .u
. pr ...r-. V. V 1 . 'W.r.
I u.l'l f-:r ttlcA.'lii'-'l
e io
l1 '
A Regular Scimitar
That Sweeps &ll before it
il"DFAVlrJA"P0D ts5S -s
1PEXSINAT0D
Theso will almost
nil... n.J ... H
'y sxea it, ana confidently
Price by mail, per packet,
vary nrnHiirtlua, MivU ...
k U t:L .7 ' m.v ?,i 'y "&ar iiaor. nas greaT Slaying qualities, vinos oniB
h' ,n ?an follows Little Gem " and bsfore the'diampion of England." We
nave thoroughly tested it, and confidently recommend it as the best ever introduced.
GIVEN FREE, IF DESIRED, WITH ABOVE,
VICK'S FLORAL GUIDE 189a,
which contains several colored plates of Flowers and Vegetables. 1,000 Illustrations.
Over 100 pages 8 x io inches. Instructions how to plant and care for garden.
Descriptions of over 20 New Novelties. Vick's Floral Guide mailed on
receipt of address and 10 cents, which may be deducted from first order.
JAMES VICK'S Sons, Rochester, N.Y.1
Mexican'
M
Liniment.
A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast
A long-tested pain reliever.
Its use is' almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the
Stock Raiser, and by every one requiring an effective
liniment ; '
No other application compares with it in efficacy.
This well-known . remedy has stood the test of years, almost
generations. ,
No medicine chest Is complete without a bottle of Mustang
Liniment. .
Occasions arise for its use almost every day.
All druggists and dealers have it.
HENRY BOECK
The Leading
FURNITURE DEALER
AND
UNDERTAKR.
instantly keeps oil hand everytbii
you aef-d to furnish your house.
CORNER BfXTH AND MVIN STREET
Plattsmouth
Neb
HSR
a
For Atchin8on, St. Joseph, Leavea
worth, Kansas City, St. Louis,
and all points north, east
south or west. Tick
ets sold and bag
ajfe checked
to any
point
' in ' '
' the
United
States or
Canada. For : .
INFORMATION AS TO RATES
AND ROUTES
Call at Depot or address
II, C. TOWNSUXI),
G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo.
J. tJ. IrlllLLIPrI,
A. G. P. A. Omaha.
H. D. Apgar. Afft., Plattamouth.
Telephone, 77.
HAYE
YOU
SCHIFFMANN'S Asthma Cure
I Nerar fails to (In toataot ndiaf in tba wont
MS, ana rare wacre ataer lau.
Hal rta rKKB sf hntM ar to Ida
lna PB. R. 8CHIPFMANN. 81 Paal. Um.
Red Cross
Diamond Bhaho
TIm vnly Puns mkI rtlktU, nil tor n't VjT
anjl'fV iar"Mi ftrur.d ia ltl aa-1 UM4 nW.tli;o
uiaer ami. .-:. hsrVfMrjt ma imitation.
fa
' 1 sV
I
E
wtppm arv amicer,..! wntrfVt(a. At lir.iciu. r area as
CMiCHiuTCii r.rir.ttici Co.,
i- Iwr ,,r ijll. a." w tax.; return Mali.
.. . I.I. .IIA.TA. ,
melt In your mouth. The "Charmer" Is
II . I a I'.
recommend it as the best c
15 cents pint, 75 cents.
ustang