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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 9, 1884)
mm vol. 2. PLATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA, MONDAY EVENING, JUNE' 9, 1884. NO. SO. JOSEPH V. WECKBAGH. DEALER IN Choice Family -Groceries, THE "DAYLIGHT" STORE, CENT :ALXfAINT STREET, I'LATTSMOUTII, NEB, HICEEY OOZLsTZEIZR. OTP TPlUJEIIL, DEALERS IN Lumber, Sash.Doors, m r We sti are Alarm) iBXiPiECar or stta.ie We have got the largest and best selected stock of Choice Family Groceries In town, and we will sell them just not " bust, uar DtocK oi Qizec7LSwarc cuxcL GZcisswcLre, id not large, but the goods are First-class, and we will give yon some low prices. We pride ourselves on our Teas and Sxyices, Which we take great pains in selecting and can guarantee to be of the very best quality. All von folks who have been going r i groceries, come ana give us a ciiance io give you ugure. Wo Will Duplicate Omaha Prices. For same quality of goods nd on us. BENNETT ' NEW Faruiture Btore DEALKK IN FURNITURE COFFINS and aU kladu ol goods usually kept In a FIBHT CI.AMH Kl KHlTl KK HTOKK Also, a very oompleta stock of Funeral Goods MetalMW ooflenCofflns Castets Sates EMBLEMS, A. Our New and elegant hearse Is always la readiness. Remember the place, in UNION 13LOCK, on Sixth Street, TWO Doors sonth of Cass Coun ty Bank. - Waear we may be found night or day. J. I. UNRUH, .bifnoar.i. neb PLATTSMOUTH MIWLS TT8M0DTH NKB. HE 18 EL, - proprietor Floor, Jom Mmd A Fed 9 Carpets, - Rugs, Etc- AT- BUOS, ZrSTID SEVBlfTTl-' ALL KINDS OF- on Due as cheap as wepossibly-fcim and away from home to buy your Si the same terms. Come and see & LEWIS HENRY BGECX IOEALER I.N FURNITURE SAFid, CHAiRF, ETC., ETC., ETC." Of All Descriptions METALLIC BURIAL CASES i i. jfj.wwy made and sol J cheap for cash. . vtf HEARSE IS NOW READ - SERVICE. With many thanks for past patronage. uvue it tu vmi auu examine my LARGE STOCK OF 3Ut. KtaSiTrHK AKI OP now Improved Lands for Sale .coacr-s 12 ralle from Lenora, Kansas $653 co i. Orlean.x. Neb. boo ICO " lit " RpATurPitv Nh v.-i leo , 8 " Logan, Kansas. 1,(00 inese lands are well improved, and can he bought by paying H cj.sti. and balance on time. They are cheap, the present owners having bought their at forced sale. Call and see. I hare some Cheyenne County Lands for ale yet they are going fast. For particulars call on W. WISE, Union BiocTi. jinds. 7 PLATTSHODTfl HERALD. rOBLISHHD DAILY AND WEEKLY -BY The Plattsmontli Herald PnMistliiiE Co. TEEMS: DAILY, delivered by carrlor.to.aay.pttrtof tba city Per Week 8 15 Per Month eo Per Year oo WEEKLY, -by mall. ' One copy six months $1 00 Ouecopy one year 2 00 iiegisiereu at ine rose uuce, nattsmouiu, as second ciohs mailer. National Republican Ticket. FOR PRESIDENT, JAMES G. BLAINE, of Maine. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, JOIIN A. LOGAN, of Illinois. . JAMES G. BLAINE, lu all the arts of management out side of those which strictly pertain to politics, and Blaine inen have also beeti immensely superior to their adversaries. They have won many delegates by kindness whom the others have either not sought at all or repulsed by cold ness. There seems to have been sc Jie thing in the high dictates of the reform which forbid the association of the champions of superior political meth ods with the men who came here niere- vfj nominate a president. The result hia been a count of about fifty win nings for Blaine, with a corresponding number of losings from the other side, Then, too, the local atmosphere has been full of the name of Blaine, and his managers have contrived to send the assurance of victory close in the wake of every mention. The enthusi asts support of Blaine daring this convention finds no parallel but one in American politics. Grant's sup port in 1830 was more dramatic and moie spectacular, but it was not more earnest than Blaine's support in 1884 Tl.ea again, the opposition to Grant was bold, aggressive and uncompromis ing, while the opposition to Blaine ir. weak, divided and hesitating. If the men who arepushing Blaine through this convention will carry into the campaign before the people one half of the enersrv and determination which - ti they have displayed in Chicago the denioratic party will be carried once more to perdition ou the resistless cur rent of enthusiasm. As to his record jou might as well try to stop Niagara by reading an act for the regulation of mill ponds as to beat such a candidate by quoting the Mulligan letters. St Louis Globe. DONE BY "A. SIMPLE TWItsT OF THE WRIST." New York Sun: "It was as good as a circus," saia bergt. Alulhouand. 1 was walking along Broadway this morning when I saw a black-and-tan cab coming furiously up Murray street The driver seemed to be doing his best to stop the animal, but it was unman ageable. A tall, well built man, who aia not see tne runaway, was crossing the street. Everybody cried out to him, but the horse was close upon him be fore he saw it. Quick as thought he put out his right hand, seized the horse by the ii'trils, gave a sudden twist, and the runaway was lying fiat on his side on the crossing. The cab driver Was too much astonished to say a word, and the stranger picked up his hat and walked off as coolly as though nothing La I happened. I learned that he was Mr. Lemuel It. Sturges, the owner of a cattle ranch in Texa;. lie knew a trick the cowboys have of throwing a steer by giving its head a little twist. He practiced it on Broadway, and that runaway horse got a lesson that he won't forget if he has any sense." A REMARKABLE TREE. A man in Wilcox county, Alabama, has a remarkable tree growing in his yard. It is of the China species, is ten feet in circumference, and its top has bsen blow away bya6torm; but six and a half Vrt up the trunk of thia tree two n:t e China trees have sprout ed, taken 5 ct, and grown up as high as the oM tre; ana just half a foot farther up the trunk of the old origin al tree a pencil tree has taken root, grown op to fair dimension, and is now filled with i'ruit. At another place there is a blackberry vine and also an elm bush, all in a flourishiDgcondition. Parlor and bedroom sets in all stylea at lowest prices at Ecesck'a. 59tf TnE republican party has spoken, and the man of Maine will be the next president of the Urited States. It is the will of tho parly that no dark horse, no unkown quantity, no nega tive candidate, be called to leadership, but that the party be captured by a man, who in right of his own reco.d and his own character typplfiea tho virile, ag gressive and progrc stive (urces of re publicanism. Republicanism has been a name for victory and proud achieve ments for a quarter of a century, be cause in it men of such mould and sub stance as James G. Blaine have found recognition. All that the republican party has done to make it 3 record the grandest possession of the American people, Buch men as James G. Blaine have caused it to do, and no man in more liberal measure than lie. it is this identity between his public record and the historic iiccomplimeuts of the republican party,- that stand like milpHf-.nnpq in I.Jir history of the nast Vtweuty-five years of national progress this instinctivity recognized kinship of Bpirit and aspiration, joined with a personality of commanding forceful ness and surpassiug attractiveness, that has so long made James G. Blaine the object of enthusiastic admiration of the great body of the rank and file of tho party. The ifhcontrolable enthusiasm which broke over all bounds of self restraint iu the convention at every mention of his name, and which finally overpowered ail resistance in the con vention, was no temporary spasm, no mere accident. In tho conventions of 187G and 1880 the spell of the name of Blaine was almost equally potent. The only satisfactory explanation of the action of the convention is that it is the response to the irresistible force of the de3ire of the masses of the party. Never before in the history of the re pbblican party, or any other party, have the impulse that controlled a conven tion come fresher from the people; never ha3 there been less of arbitrary interference from boasism; never has there been freer conference and a firmer determinatian to avoid prejudgment and to reach deliberate conclusions, apart from mere personal prcfe.H nces. Tmw Pu.11 ?Ic;i Qt.25.tti dooj not bake kindly to the nomination of Blaine. It does not say a word as to his character, but makes his foreign policy a subject of considerable comment. The repub lican party is not naminz candidates iaat at present with a view to satisfy ing our English brothers, neither is it naming candidates who will approve or work for the English theory of free trade in America. Nothing will recommend Mr. Blaiue's candidacy to our aaturalized voters so much a3 the brilliant and aggressive foreign policy that he inaugurated in the early days of the Garfield edministration. The Irish Amen can citizen of this country see in Mr. Blaine's past course enough to satisfy them that he abova all others is the person to protect them in their rights abroad. It is easily understood whv the election of Mr. Blaine is viewed by English journals with soli citude. His election will mean an aasertion of America's greatness, of iustice to her citizens abroad, and of tho doctrine of non-interference of foreign powers with the aff-iirs of the powers ou thia continent. Omaha Re publican. COINC MIGHTY FAST. Detroit Free Press: Ve were goinz west on the Great "Western Division ot the Grand Trunk, aud the night was chilly for the latter end of May. "Hi! porter," said the commercial man in the buuk overhead; ''caa't you give us another blanket ? It's deuced cool tonight." "Ain't got another blanktt boss." "Well, just see what you cau do for a fellow," said the c. m., putting his hand out through the curtains with a quarter in it. "Dunno, boss, but I'll do what I kin." There was scarcely a prcccptible pause in the porter's measured tread as he passed our section fifteen minutes later, but the curtains parted and a blanket went through the opening as if it had been shot out of a cannon. "Thought I felt somebody earring off part of my bedclothes last night." eaid a passenger in the further end the car as lie worked himself into his boots in the morning. "Dunno, boss, went mighty las' las' night, making uptime; probably run from under 'una." . Emerky A. Stokics, In an open air r.itlfic.ition meetlnir in Chicago after the nomination of Blaine and Logan closed his speech .in the following elo quent mannei : "Now, gentlemen, you are go'.ng to bo escorted from this place by a band of music. Music is in all the air. I feel its old pulsings in my very voice tonieht. I know what this fels like, and I know what the awakened excite ment and enthusiasm of a great and inizbtv party indicate. I hear the old soncs of tho old days. I 6ee the old flag, with every star glistening like a planet. liUiuir all the Bkies. I see the old procession formed. I care not where my place in that procession may ne whether it be up in tne iront, un dtr the light of the blessed old banner or down near the rear 1 Helen to ine order 'Forward." ' and I march, as yoa will march, with your faces toward the flag." BANKS, t THE CITIZENS B j-KT SSL l'LATTSMOirm. - NEW EA.SK A. OFJ-T.A.Xi, - $75,000. OVVICY.KS JOHN 1JI.ACK, .'HANK CAUitUTH. President. Vlce-J'mIJeDt. W. II. CUSUIJiQ. Cashier. DIKECTKS. John Black, W. II. CujjhinB, Prank Carruth, J. A. Connor, Fred Herrmann, J. W. John son, F. It. GutUinaun, I'eter Muuim, Win. Wetencamp, Henry Boeck. Transacts a General liankinir lJuniness. Alt who have any Banking buHluess to transact -. & are Invited to cull. No mutter how large or email the traumictlon. It will receive our careful attentlou, t and we promise always cour teous treatment. Ishucs Certificates of Deposits bearing Interest Buys and scIIh Foreign Exchange), County and Cltv .securities. John Fitzgerald, President. I. W. MOLAUOUUM Cashier. NATIONAL FIRST OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA. Offers the very best facilities for the prpt transaction of legitimate BANKING BUSINESS. Stocks, Bonds, Gold, Government and Loca Securities Bought and Hold, Deposits recolr ed and interest allowed on time Certifi cates, Drafts drawn, available in any part of the United .States aud all the principal towns of Europe. Collections made & promptly remitted Highest rket prices paid for County War State atd County Bonds. DIRECTORS John Fitzgerald John B. Clark. A. W McLauuhlin. A. E. Toazaliu D. Hawkswortlt F. K. White. WEEPING WATER WEEPING WATER, - NEB. E. L. REED, President. B. A. GIBSON, Vice-President. B. S. WILKINSON. Cashier. A General Banting Bnsiness Transacted. UKI'OMITS Received, and Interest allowed oa Time Cert! flcatos. DRAFTS Drawn available In any part ot the United States and all the principal cities of Europe.' o Agents for the celebrated Mmi Un of Steamers. Sauk Cass County Cotner Mala and Sixth Streets. plattsmotjth: ustibib . C II. I'ARMELE, President, I 1 J M. PATTERSON. Cashier, f Transacts a General Banting: Bnsiness. HIGHEST CASn PRICE Paid for County and City Warrants. COLLECTION X1UE; and promptly remitted for. DIBKOCTOKS t E B Windham, J. M. Patterson, C. H. Pamcele F. R. Guthmann. W J. Ague w, A. B. Smith. Fred G order. Louisville Sank. Louisville Nebraska A general Banking business trans acted. Money to Loan, Int, allowed on time deposits. Collections made an J promptly remitted. J. J. Hanker, Li. E. Uankeh. Pres. Cah. C. A. MakkR. Ass't Cafch. F. S. White, The old stand by ice man, is now con tracting for the summer season, and will deliver yon your ice promptly at any time called for. Make your con tracts for a summer supply. 15dtf ClotLes, Hair, Nail and Tooth Brush es, Combs, &c, nice line, at Fi9hers. euat Main street, 49d t' If you want to get you a broom that will give tlie beat satisfaction for the same money ask vour dealer for Dor ack's brooms. d 28-1 ma CALL AT THE Old Reliable LUMBERYARD H. 1. ffATlfllH i Wfeolee&le and K4ta!l Dr&lftr U PINE LUMBER SHINGLES, LATH, S.VSIT, DOORS, BLINDS, A,C. Fourth Street, in tear of Opera House. .-LATTSMOUTIL NEBRA8KA CATARRH CURE, COUGHXURC. BLOOD CURE. rOIt SALE BT WILL J. WARRICK. MIKE SCHNELLBACHER, BLACKSMITH HOUSE SHOEING & WAGON P.EPAIl:i( ) -( AH Unto of Farm imDlsments Mended witl Neatness ad Dispatch. Horse, Mule & Ox Shoeing n short, well shoe anything that hai four feet, from a Zebra to a Giraffe. Come and see us. ISnETW SHOP Fifth St. between Main and Vine Rnts just across i corner from the Nkw llKllALL) Omen- ROBERT DONNELLY'S aud BLACKSMITH SHOP, Wagon, Buggy, Machine and Plow re pairing, and general Jobbing I a, now prepared to do all kinds of repairing of farm and ether machinery, as there la a go4 lathe in my shop. PETER RAD EN, The old Reliable Wagon Maker Haa taken charge of the wagon sncp He Is w 1 knows as a NO. 1 WORKMAN. w Wacou and K merle a made t Order SATISFACTION OUAKANT CO a 0 o c-t-IS CD w SO -J CP 1 s 03 GO CD H 0 CO o P7 C- O. HEBOLD, The Boss Clothier of Lincoln, baa opened out a clothing store in this city where he would be pleased to have hia old customers call In. on lower Main street, one door east of court hnpffe. mm SKIN CURE. 39 p in Cj BS H S