Ml 4 y; VQL. 12. PLATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA, Fi.IDAY EVENING, JUNE 20, 18&1. NO. 90. -i - s o JOSEPH -V.WECKBAGH. Choice Family Groceries, Carpels, Rugs, THE "DAYLIGHT" STOEE, CEX .VL MAIN STREET, LUMBER RICHEY BEOS, OF IE?:-A-R, .HTZD SEVEUT DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF- - COB1TSK Lumber.Sash.Doors. Blinds I Cmss.t, We are si astd iBsiPECT or arair. We have got the largrst and lft selected stock of Choice Family Groceries in town, nnd we will sell them jut as cheap as we possibly can and not " bust. Onr Stock of Qjzaarts'wcure. cljxcI GZcLSswcure, i nt larre. but the good? are First-class, and we will give you some low prices. "We pride ourselves on our Teas and. Slices, Which we take great pains in selecting and can guarantee to be ot the very best quality. All yon folks who .have been going away from home to buy yonr groceries, come and give us a chance to give you figures. Wo Will Duplicate Omaha Prices. For same quality of goods and on the same terms. Come and see ns. BENNETT NEW Furniture DEALER IN FUR1TITURE 8 COFFINS and all kind ot eoods usually kept In & nits ct,A iruit-nt-rijkK stokk Also, a very conisiots stock of Funeral Goods KBtallicWooienCoiM Caskets Holies EMBLEMS. Ac. Our New and elegant hearse 1 always In readiness. Ueiiiemler the place, in UNION 'BLOCK, on Sixth Street, TWO Doors sonth of Cass Coun- ty Bank. - Wnear.we may be found night or day. J. I. UNRUH, i..Tr-t'fTTtt. NEB PLATTSMOUTH HIWLS TTSMOUTH VMM. DEUEL, Proprietor DEALEit IN 9 Etc- AT- PLATTSMOUTII, NEE, T."U MB"EH .I2TTS, -.iSIS, s9 Hi a8 l!J 8 Elij is & LEWIS . HENRY BCECK IOEALEK IN FURPJITU SAFrf, CHAiRF, 1TC. ETC.,KTC.' Of All Description METALLIC BURIAL CASES u -.7 .ranj made and sold cheap for cash HEARS K IS NOW BEAU With tnan7 thanks for past patronage nvire all to call ana examine my LARGE STOCK OF V. RXTHIR A Wit OlflCKM 31tf. Improved Lands for Sale eoacr b 12 miles fro n Lennra. Kamw scjm l is " Orlean- Neb. om 160 18 - Beaver City. Neb. S30 ix s " Log ;n, Kansas. i.oo These lands ar well Irrmrnv,.? nii v bouKht by pavli gHc sh. and balance on time. Tneyare cheap, the present owners hvlnz bought then at forood sale. all and tee. I have some Cheyenne County Lands for sale yet they are KolDg faat. For particulars call on 8M Cstk. JL JLll&P.u SERVICE. PLAHSMOOTfl HERALD. rCBLISUED DAILY AND WEEKLY BY- The Platlsratt Herald YM&w DAILY, delivered by earner to any.part ff city Per Work ..a I'er Month Per Year WEEKLY, by mall. One copy six. month''....,... .....1 00 Onooopy tue year.... 2 00 Iieglxtered at tne l'ost Office, Plattsmeuth, as second class matter. National Republican Ticket. FOR PKKSIDENT, JAMES G. BLAINE, uf Maine. FOR VICE-PKESIDENT, JOHN A. LOGAN, of Illinois. THE PEOPLE ARE TO BE OBEYED. ".Mark me well, by the ides of No vember tbe patriotism of the people will be thoroughly aroused and the camp-fires that have been slumbering' will be rekindled and burning brightly upon every hill, lighting up every val - ley withiu the confines of the entire United States of America. Applause Notice will then be given that no mau or set of uieu can sec themselves np as dictators to the American people a3 to what they shall do. Applause. That neither the government of the United States, nor the republican party are ready to yield their rights or prerog ative to a few men who arc ever dis satisfied because tney cannot control. Applause. Our goverument is built upou the theory thai the people shall rule. The republican yarty, upon the same theory, demands that the people shall control, f Applause We do not wish to lapse into the condition of the old and eflVte monarchies, where a monarch commands and the people obev. With us the people are ruouarchs, who issue the edicts, and the people are to be obeyed." John A. Logan at Bangor, Maine. Du Miller of the Omaha Herald hoists tbe distress signal and guys the '.New York doctrine is Omaha Herald "doctrine, pure and simple." The New York doctrine was enunci ated by statesman Cooper when he stated that the tariff was a ' techy ques tion" and advised the Saratoca conven tion to dodge that issue, and the New York doctrine is a complete ignoring of that question ; hence, the Omaha Her ald sees the tariff is a tecy question,' and is in favor of dodging it. In other words, the Omaha Ilerald is democratic all over, and its platform is offices for the ofRceless, and bone3 for the hungry. Your dectrine, Doctor, is neither "pure" nor "simple" and it won't "wash worth a cent." The beginning of the end slowly ap pears in tbe South. Intolerance, fraud and crime, skulking behind an organ ized class prejudice and race hatred, may succeed for a time, but the end will surely come. For months, the or ganized protests of the Virginia read- justers, have pointed to tbe fact that forbearance was fast ceasing to be a virtue in that section of rock rooted bourbonioin. Now co: -ies the intelligence that aa independent party has been organised in Florida with a bolting democrat as its nominee for governor. In Missis sippi the cloud3 are gathering and they will surely burst in time, over the dem ocratic camp. Intolerance and race hatred may tri umph ovt-i the poor cojored man of the south, but :is it triumphs, its bigotry and devihsh malevolence is sure to trample under foot the rights of the Anglo Saxon, thereby calling into the the field, a foeman, who, when in the riht, can know no defeat. There is such a thiiig as a machine being made entirely too hetvy and too strong Iwr practical t ie. There is no such thing as a sing!? political parly under a pop ular form jf government like this of ours The -atety of the citizen, the wholesorri enforcement of law, the purity ol . ministration of puUic and gov :t itts! a.ffairs, is guaranteed only by :. ,roper equilibrium main tained l ihe opposing patties who nec Bsarilj control the country hence. out hern ' uibouism is becoming tcp- heavy, it i lieve tht : ;?tin time fall, and we be iu. is not far distant. lr you .t- r:t to get you a broom that ill give. tf:8 lxst satisfaction for th ame money ask your dealer for Dor- A lakqc force ia now at work push ing up the Y ashingtou monument completion. A correspondent says that it is now higher than the church of St Co. Peter's at Koine, and before Christmas it will be forty feet nearer the clouds than any known 6ructure. Yhe mar ble blocks of which it is constructed, which cost about $40 Oii-;h as they come from the quarries, 'rough ash the 15 lers," and $20 more when dressed, are Ml 00 brought from the stouecutter's shops on trucks into the elevator, which occu pies "the interior of the monument. Each stone weighs about three toii9, anil the elevator can easily accommo date two of them. "The man at the wheel" consumes seven or eight min utes in hoisting them. On reaching the top. the cranej an arm of the der rick, takes hold of each stone, and b' a little guiding, the immense weight ae easily placed in position as if it wore a brick. The corner stones are Al ways 6et first. The two stonesetters have each four masons waiting on them, and one cement man for t'ie two. These eleven men make up the complement working each day on the tep, and who if seen at all by people below them, look about the eizo of infants. Ex change. JOHN FITZGERALD ON BLAINE. We notice by an interview had with Johu Fit age raid by the (Lincoln) Journal man that that sturdy Irishman, in whose mind the wrongs of Ireland are ever uppermost, thinks Blaine will receive a large Irish vote because, Hr. Fitzgerald says, when speaking of New York, "I believe Blaine will poll thous ands of Irish votes in that State. "They (Irishmen)waut a vigorous poli cy. They want an administration ''that will make England keep her proj ,-er piaee." THE PEOP'S. There is one refreshing feature alout the average paragraph, and rstiScation speech going the rounds, over which, everybody cau iunoeentiy smile, and that is the sterreotypod gratulatioi that the people triumphed at Chicago, and that at tbe expense of the politic ians. It would appear that all the poit ucians, in the recent Lu'curd conven tion, were supporting Edmunds, Ar thur, Logan, Iiawley and Sherman We suppose the moment those Ohio and Illinois juveniles forsook their po litical idols, Shermau aud Logan, they were entitled to ue caned and became of the people. The Herald has a far greater resptct for the accomplished statesmen and politician than .it has for the professional, sore-toed, reformer and peoples man. A SCATHING REVIEW. Gov. Cleveland, who is now being groomed as a Democratic candidate for President, is thus described by tbe New York Tribune: "No oue can point to any reforms inaugurated by G rover Cleveland. His messages, as stated by democratic news papers, have been ' crude and ill-con- feidered." They do not suggest even a knowledge of National affairs, and show nothing original in regard to state questions. All the partisan measures rushed through the ecauda- iuu ucmucrauc legislature oi ioou were approved by the Governor. He nominated for the responsible office of Commissioner of Emigration a well known political tool of Boss McLaugh i . j a t t r , rifl lin, and tried to force on the merchants of this city a lot of bankrupt demo cratic politicians as Harbormasters and Pert Vardens. Ha approved such par tisan measures aa that to put money in the Sheriff's pocket by transferring, at great expense to the city, prisoners Irom the Tombs to Ludlow street jail a measure denounced by the Roosevelt committee. And although the Sheriff aud other democratic county officers were shown months ago to have ille gally withheld large sums of the pub lic money the Governor has taken no steps to recover it or to remove tliem. though it ia by statute made his special buiiues3 to do so: aud he has gained credit for approving some of the splen did reform measures passed by the last Republican legislature, llut for orig inating ami pushing Juiwaru those fI tied to . act on I measures Gov. Cleveland is euti no credit, uud h'9 failure to he testimony developed by the legiiS la ive committees is positive!- discred it able to him, wniie bU veto of' the Tenure-of-Oflke bill ia a direct insult to every honost man in New York. Thetruth Is that fov. Cleveland avail ability as a democratic candidate rests wholly on the fact that be ha3 little kcowJudgt of NaUooai quegtiocj ftod no record concerning them, and that he was elected Governor by a large major- to ty. A fortnight before his nomination ho was almost unknown outside of Erie county. He was elected upon an issue regarding which he was not a leader. If the democrats can afford to pass by their natural leaders, such men as Carlisle, McDonald and Bayard, to take up Cleveland no friend to James Q. Blaine will regret tbe choice. ELAINE'S AMERICAN POLICY, Oue of the strongest arguments ad dressed to the American people in fa vor of Blaine's election comes from England. We refer to the comment made by the Tall Mall Gazette upon Blaine's nomination, published in yes terday's Tribune. His selection is re garded with apprehension on the other side of the water because, if elected. Blaine will do more to advance Ameri can trade interests than to favor Engi lish trade interests. After explaining Blaine's Ameiican policy, the Pall Mall Gazette proceeded to say : Of course, he does not propose to drive us out at the point of the bayo net. He is not a lunatic, but a very able and 6hrcwd Yankee. But where ever he can, he will oust us lroui the position wnicn we noiu; whenever anl opportunity offors, he will use it to the uttermost to replace our influence and our trade by the influence and trade of me u lined oiaies, ana ne will regaru jt as his chief object to promote a great American confederacy under the aegis of the Government at Washington, which would tend to increase the ex port trade of the United States at the expense of that of G reat Britain. This is no mere inference from his acts. It is avo wed in almost so many words in an article which he published two years ago in a Chicago magazine, aud it is confirmed by evtry dispatch which he wrote during his short tenure of office under Garfield TIi above is a veiy fair statement of Blaine's policy, He proposes by peaca f&l uieans,.aa the' English writer ad mite, to supplant European influence and trade wherever he can on the American coutiitent by the influence and trade of the United States. It 13 easy to understand why the Engpoh stioul 1 dep'oretho successful maugura tiou of such a policy and would there fore prefer to see Mr. Blaine defeated But the very same reason which the English have for opposing his election i3 the best reason in the world why the A mericans should elect him. England may be the loser by Blaine's policy but the United States will be gainers. It is not because we love England less, but the Uuited States more, that Mr. Blaine's policy should be received bv the American people with an approval aud a support fully eo-ual to the disan-1 provai auu oppotsiuon it receives at the hauds of the English people. The extension of the political and commer cial influence of the United States by peaceful methods is the most glorious ambitior which could fill the bosom of an American citizen. England's pre-eminince in the world s . ... m u uc yumaiiiy iu a oiei-u I fast adlierence to the very policy which meets with English opposition when it is proposed for the United States. Whenever England has gained a foot hold in any quarter of the globe she has watched it protected it, and devel oped it. The unpopularity with which Gladstone's Government is threatened today is due to remissness and tardi- nes3 in defending England's interests on foreign soil. Mr. Blaine's ambition does not contemplate conquest, nor ac quisition of territory, nor complica tions of an' Kind with foreign govern ments. But he looks forward to the development of more intimate politi cal and trade relations among the na tious of tbe American continent. et laud is not to be driven out by the sword, but the geographical advantages and material resources of the United States are to be developed and im proved by Government support to the tnd that the people of this country may enjoy them in the fullest extent, Englaud may not like that prospect; but is there anything aoout it which is calculated to excite the opposition of the American people? It is to be hoped that the English newspapers will con- . 6., . , ,. tiuue to veutilate Biaine- policy, aud . .... . that they will be aseisted by the dudes and cowurds oa this side of the Atlan tic, fur nothing will reach the hearts of the American people more quickly or more directly than a vigorous Araeri cuu policy. Oicago Tribune. In purchasing a refrigerator see Hen- rv litB 'ilk'ti.llMV-' slocli nnrl trot before pnrcicli. C9tf BANKS.' THE CITIZENS 3Z3 w 1ST OESL ! PLATTSMOUTII. - NEBRASKA. CAFXTAX,, - $75,000. OKKICKHM JOUX JILACK, I'KANK CAltKUTH .'resident. Vice-President. W. H. ci'SOUro. Caenier. CDIItKCTOBH John Black, W. II. Cuahlmr. Frank Camith J. A. Connor, Fred Herrmann, J. W. John son, F. It. Outumaun. retrr Mumm. Win. Weteocarap, Henry lloeck. Transacts a General Hanking Iiuine All Who Have any Hanking buslue, to transact are invited to tall. M waiter how iare or email the transaction it will receive our careful attention, ami wo promise always cour teous treatment. Issues Certificates of DoiKsIts bearing Interest Buys and sells Foreign exchange. County ami Cltv 'curltls. "uy Jons KiTzoKnAi.n, W. MCJ.AUUH1.IN TreUdeiit. - Cashier. NATIONAL FIRST I OF PLATTSMOUTII, tfKBKASKA, Offers the very best iacliltle lor the prompt transaction of legitimate BANKING BUSINESS. Stocks. Bonds. Gold. Government and Loca b Uf1 HOUKllt ai,d oI. deposit recelS? ed and interest allowed on tlVne Certifi cates, drafts drawn, available in any part of tbe United Htats and all tiie principal towns ol Europe. Collections made & promptly remitted Highest rket prices paid for County War State aLd County Bonds. DIRECTORS i ' John Fltzffirs.id WEEPING WATER WEEPING WATER. - NEB. E. L REED, President. B. A. GIBSON, Vice-President. It. S. WILKINSON. Caahiw. A General Mmu Business Tramtsi SoceivM, nut Interest allowed oa Time Certi ficate.. WBAKTH Drawn available in any part of the United states and all the principal cities of Europe o Agents for the celebrated : Mmi Line of Steamers. Bank Cass County Cotner Main and Sixth Streets. PIiATTSKOXTTH JSTttB Transacts a General Baniins Business. HIGHEST CASH PRICE Paiifor County and City Warrant. '"CWOSS ADK, I cxUfl crouiD..iv rAmltf An fA. DIBXCCTOB s Ii B Windham, J. M. Patterson, C. II. ram-el r. it. cuthmann. W J. Agnew, A. B. Smith. Fred Gerder. Louisville Bank. -LouISvIUc Nebraska A general Bankincr bii . - .!. -v.-v.--, iuuucji i uan, Xai, allowed On time deposits. Collections made and promptly remitted. J. J. Mantceb. if. v. Ui vrvn Pres. ' -wli rw-.-lLwL.ik Cash. C. A. Masker, Asa't Cash. CALL AT THE OldReliable LB-B YMD b. l 9 mm i Wholesale and Eetalt Dealer U PINE LUMBER SHINGLES, LATH, SASn, DOORS, .. ouhMreet.,nreaaf'IcD;0S: . -.'LATTSMOUTH, . NEBRASKA fifteen percent discount on all cus torn made work hereafter, at Sher- wooa s fob cash. To establish my UrrVi p"ment on strictly cash basis this inducement ia mJH tn oil V inaacement uaaae in all custom made wnrir ouPiness In everv denartm custom made work. 'Uud.r tbe reduction a shoe that coats 83.00 now, costs $7.65 for cash. A boot that costs $8.00 now coat t& " 80 cash. ' Vf '-. ; '.it: ' ".. A boot that costs C6.5D, now ooits 85 60 cash at Sherwood'. " r 58dw6tf A Iarg stock of watches, chains and ca-vrms, Just received tUC. Ervt?. -f 1: