L - . - t Ml mmt ...1 VOL. 'J. PIwVTTSMOUTII, N'EKUASKA, WEDNfSSlJAY EVENING, JUNE 25, 18S1. NO. 100. fttte 1 ' 1 i'.- JOSEPH V. WECKBAGH. dealf.i: in Choice Family (JriM-riiis, AT F&T&IGHT" STOEE, CENT :AL MAIN' STKEKT, HICHEY COBirEB OF PEARL IsTD SBVENTl DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF- Lurhber,Sash,Doors, Blinds MIXED I AXXTTS, XiiME, Stl are aistd iEs:iPiEDrn1 or STTAr. We have ot the largest and best selected stoek of Choice Family Groceries in town, ami we will sell them jnst as cliean as to? possibly can and not " bnst. Our Stock of QizeeJZSTvara cuxd G-lctsswcure, is lift lar-e, but the goods are First-class, and we will give you some ' low-prices. We pride ourselves on our Teas arid. SiDioes, Which we take great pains in selecting and can guarantee to be of the very best quality.. AH vou folks who have been going away Ironi home to buy your groceries, come and give us a chance to give yon figures. We Will Duplicate Omaha Prices. For same quality of goods and on the same terms. Come and see BENNETT NEW. Furniture More DEALtK IN FUBNITTJRE S COFFINS nt all kind ot Roods usually kept in a riKT CLAHM Vl'lunTBE WOBE Also. t very complete tock ol Funeral Goods Metallic&foaaeflCofflns Castets Holies EMBLEMS. Ac our N and eleaant hearse U always In readiness. Keinember the place, in UNION BLOCK, on Sixth Street, TW O Doors sonth of Cass Coun ty Bank. Whear we may be f ouud nlnht or day. J. I UNRUH, PLATTSHOUTH MILLS TTSMOCTH 2TXB.3 UEISEX, proprietor Carpets, Ru;s, Etc PLATTSMOUTH. NEB, BROS, on & LEWIS HENRY BCECK DEALER IN FURNITURE SAF A UHAiRF, ETC.. ETC., ETC. Of All Descriptions. METALLIC BURIAL CASES ,v-oo"DEiir coFPiirs .: s.rHiy made and sold cheap for cash , : i VE HEARSE IS NOW KEAU - SERVICE. With inauy thanks for past patronage, i nvite all to call ana examine my LARGE STOCK OF 3trf. K4. KJTtTHK AX OWt'. Improved Lands for Sale .60acr-s 12 mil troro Lenora. Kansas SG50 is " Orlean Neb. 900 160 " Is " Beaver City. Neb. 5.VJ 1008 .- Log-fU, Kausa. 1.100 These lands are welt Improved, and can be nougat by paying H ctsh. and balance on time. They are cheap, tne present owners having bought their at forced ale. Call and see. I have some Cheyenne County Lands for tale yet they are Kolng last. For particulars call on W. S. WISE, 7Vdw3 Coioo Block. 8GL PLATTufflOOTfl HERALD. ITBUSHF.I IAILT AM) WEEKLY HV TIB Plattsmoath Mala PnWisliiii Co. DAILY, (It.-liv.'iH.l ly earner to any. part of the eiiy I't-rWi'ttlc 15 I'er Mniilii Per Year 00 WEEKLY, by mall. One copy six months St 00 One copy one yar 2 KeKl3terel al tne Post Office. PiatUluonth, us s;coud clik-s matter. National Republican Ticket. FOR rKTCSIDENT, JAMES G. BLAINE, of Maine. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, JOHN A. LOGAN, of Illinois. THE PEOPLE ARE TO BE OBEYED. "Mark me well, by the Me9 of io veuibtT the patriotism of the people will he thoroughly aroused and the camp liren tliut have le'ti slumbering will be rvkiudletl and burning brightly upon every hill, lightiug up every val ley withiu the conrim-s of the eutin United states of America. Applause Notion wfll then Le irivtn tbat no man or set of men can Bet th;nselve3 up as dictators to tne .inencau puupic i what tbey shall Jo. Applause. That neither the government of the United States, nor the republican party are ready to yield their rights or prerog ntiua tn fetv mftn wlui are ever did satisfied because tney cannot control. Applause, Our goverunient is huilt upon the theory tnat tne peopie snaii rule. The republican yarty, upon the inm. Hioorv. ilfiTiands tliat the Deoole shall control. Applause. We do not u-icli in knen 5ntr thr rnnriitiori of the old and effete mon?rcliies, wliere a mnnsrrh rntn 111:1111 '.a ami the ueople obey. "With 113 the people are monarch?. who issue tne edicts, ana tue peopie are to be obeyed." John A. Logan at Bangor, Maine. DO YOU THINK IT A SIN? Do you think it a tin in the gloarnicg To xit near a neat, fitting dresn. With the daiutiestof maidens within it. And lily white Augers to press? Or softly to lift a f tray ringlet. That floats o'er a ''osoin of snow' Or to peep into eyes that are gleaming From darkly fringed eyelids below? Or to see just beyond where she's fitting. A something you ought to repair. And pass your arm round her to fix it. And then to forget your arm there ; Or, just in a fit of abstraction. To trll her there's something yon miss. Aud while she's helping you find it, To steal from the mouth a sweet kiss? And as she's reproving you mildly. You draw in your aims rather tight. And tell her yi-u're sorry you did it. If she does not think It quite right ; And then in your penitent moment You say that to you it is nlaiu You ought. as a matter of honor. To give her the kiss back again ! Yet how to do so Is a puzzle. For in viewing the matter all o'er. If I gave back the kiss I have stolen, She mighi say. I'd taken one more. Oh ! I'm sadly perplexed and confounded, I want to be just and polite, Don't you think it were better to coax her, To give me to kissing the right. I'm afraid I've committed a blunder. And acted somewhere like a dunce ; I think 1 must get up m courage. And ask her to wed me at once. I've done it and she has consented. What a uciunate man I have been. And now you may keep vour opinion I don't think I've committed a sin. Tim Liukinwater. THE WALTZ. That whirl of waltz, that whirl of waltz. It turn my head to dreaming. That she through jut a siDgle waltz Was miue at least in seeming. Xy lips so near hergolden hair 1 reall could have kissed it ; Made tieUrr by a joy so nr.t While she would not have missed it. Her hand so softly, lightly laid Upon my shoulder duly. Uplifting me as though she eaid, "1 bless thee, bless thee." truly. That whirling, whirling, whirling dance I wonder if a pleasure Exists tli ;it eeuM the boon enhance Of it. :md endless measure ! The gauzy gown of floating blue-- A ha?y r'.oud enfolding. F10111 ail life .-i;rious world, us two, EacIi of.u r e!oeIy holding. In whirl ol waltz across the floor Oue wavy pulse as oeean His puist d forever, o'er and o'er. In fauit:?ss rhyme of mo. ion. As crenel waves the winds cbey-- Si e spu-ric law thtir maker We swept H'lwn the tuneful way. Now siower and now taster. Nor step, cor note of music false: 'Twas harmony completed. Th J treat ilea rapture o: that waltz In urcinj aooe repeated. i INCERSOLL. His Arguments and His Methods. VIII. j Life in: child of tuilli. 'I : at which j livf.s through centui ics nii 'tiHst- the j iittHcks of 1 : : iiuH of !,ii;i intei j K'l-t has in it vitality ;' authentici ty Tcuipora mntuulnr t 1101 htutw inn in Wit. Things um plainer-than they were and the world is growing retsonable. The contraction which bigotry urged has gone out of fashion, aud the newer doctriue of breadth is nioie in consonance with what wad taught by the 2Jzart-ne. 'J he centur ies have outworn t' e places wl.eru h wulki and talked. Feilility hu.se.oue Ironi Il.e liclns ol (ialilee. The popu-. Ioi villages which once li:eJ. Umj snores 01 me Maiiican "ea are ruincu and desolate. The fisleimen who etopped in thtir hauls to hear His words, are far away outlines. The long trains of pilgrims who . toiled tip the steep sides of the Mount of Olives and found the first sweeping view of the Holy Citj', with its magnificent temple and glittering architecture, reward enough for alt I lie uinls which had been endured, struggle no more, along the paths which their lect had made. The gossips who gathered by the wayside and in the shop, to chatter garrulously of tht peasant who called himself the MctMaii, aic l''ldt"i in Ihtf ilencs. The Ihiiuan soldiery who ioung -d eireles -ly in the tribute piovmces, Lave gone back t the earth fiuin vhenco they came. The time and its teeming- life, form a picture vague and ubtaut. I'ast it. events h;ive swept. New years have been horn and jjrwn old, and died, and history ha added manv chapters to the. world's story. Wars aad woes have been thrown heterogeneoualy into the lumber room of thc.ccnluries, cov ered with .lust ar.d wrapped with the noiseless mantle of forgetfulness. Mil lions upon millions of lives hand in hand with sorrow and solace, out ol the mystery into the ttiASiery again. King ioms and crowns h ive i i.eeu and lal.'ca in the jug'eriet and jea!ousie of national livalrie", and the glory ol one epoch has become th hopeless pride of eyes that, looked back from another. Vet his doctriue still lives. The growth of civilization 13 its growth The progress ofintellect is itsirogress.. The scoffers may cry out at it. Ribald tongues may turn the weapons of hate upon it. Hypocrisy may stab it undft the fifth rib, while heresy buftets i: in the face. But it is Eternal. Above the clamor of cant, above the desperatt declamation of infidelity, above the te liou3 twaddle of formalism, above tin discordaut trivialities of little-br duei pretenders sounding clearly tbroug' the discordant chorus vibrates th last appeal which came frura tho uu crowned aud Crucified Kinr, and it i au appeal for them Father, lcrgivt them, tor they know not what they d' OTTAMAIi II. KOTUAKER. THE PURE IN HEART. Who are the pure in heart? Not those whose outward lives wear the somblance of extreme sanctity noi tho-i whose voices are loudest in songs of praise, and whose good deeds an blaui.e i lorth to the World. The tru ly pure in hear? are sensitive, shy, un obtrusive men md women, who tra verse their appointed way as modestly as some hiddeu rivulet flows througi a quiet vale. There is no fretting 01 foaming, or Jdashing impetuously on ward. Their course is marked onlj by the fertility and bautv which at teud it. The poet, if he be truly giltcd with 'the vision and faculty divine," should, above all mr-n, belong to those privi leged beings, who, in their exalted mo ments, stand face to face with Divinity itself. His studies, his solitary mus ing?, his close observations of the chang ing aspects of aarth and sky, all tend to elevate his thoughts and purify his heart. When after long and intimate comtnunou with the spirit of Nature, he enters her solemn temples, the veil that hid the mysteries of the universe 13 drawn aside, and he leels himself in the presence of the Infinite Then, in winds and waves and whispering leaves, he hpars a melody which is, to his exilted serse, the voice of God. But those who, by their inmcen! purity of heart, most truly realize the meaning of the phrase, are litllj chil dren. Watch a little child in some of those little troubles which pas, like a summer cloud over the pure mirror of its thonght3. - Is it not evident some seraph hand dries the tears ere the' have Uoft to leave one etaio on the rosy cheek? Watch that little child in its moments of happiness, mark its radiant eye, listen to its accents of joy, aud you will be sure that some spirit -voice is whispering ecstatic promises to its soul. Talk to a little child of heav en, and straightway beaveu is mir rored In its face. Watch an active, healthy boy in his outdoor pastimes; he is always darmg, always recklew, al ways in peril of life or limb, yet al ways uphold by some angel hand. Selected- While our western democracy are shouting Cleveland I Cleveland! with out Showing why, except ihat he is a democrat without a record, who, they iguorautly believe cau carry New York, it w ill be tfell for them to exam ine the prtss of that State aud nee if Mr. Cleveland has a walk over. The Citizen, of Chicago, jxa . Irl&h or gan, sums up the Irish situation in New York a follows, and as it it a fact, that, the Citizen quotes the Irish press of the Empire State correctly, there is but oue inference to be drawn from the situation. Mr. Curtis, with his Harpers' Weekly, and The Pot, and Times, all unhr JJritish influences, are far more than offset by that portion of the democratic press of that state, which, will in no event support a man like Grovcr CIcverand. Here is w hat tne Citizen says: FACTS FOR DEMOCRAT. "Governor Cleveland' gub ernatorial career has hardly been such as to commend him to democrats, lie is styled a reformer. His reform work has consisted in approving measures introduced last . session in the New York legislature by Mr. Theodore JloooPvelt aud other republicans, vir tually depriving New Yoik City of self-government, and in every way an 1 agonistic to the home rule principles of the democratic party. ''lie has also vetoed measures which his party and the people demanded, no tably the Ave cent lare bill, for which he has been denounced by every labor organization in New York State, and by many democratic leaders. "lie is also accused, we do not know with what reasca, of know notbingism. J It is certain that be is not popular with 1 he masses of the Irish-Americans of New York and other Eastern States. "The lioston Pilot, whose democracy is above question and above reproach, a ludes to him Inst week in an editorial a a candidate 'whose nomination .voultl unquestionably have the result f affecting some hundred cf thout mds of votes' either by giving them to Claiue or keeping them from the p')is.' the same journal in another part ol die same article says: 'There are a lozen democrats who can beat Blaine iad Ljogati 1a a canter. Bayard cau beat them; Tildeu cau beat them; but Blaine and Logan can beat Clevelauu and any other democrat like him." "Father Croniu's paper, the Buffalo Catho ic Union and Times, published at Cleveland's home, says that if the 'wrong man' is nominated by the dem ents, 90 per cent, of the Irish-American vote will be cast for Blaine.' The 'wroug man is supposed to be Cleve laud. "John Devoy's Jrish Nation bitterly denounces Cleveland as a know noth ing, and that the Irish Nation 's r.o without great influence in New York State was shown last year, when its op position to Maynard, democratic can didate for Secretary of State, was large ly instrumental in securing the defeat of that gentleman, though the balance of his ticket was elected. The Irish World is aiso opposed to Cleveland, and says that if he is nomi nated Irish democrats in large numbers will vote for Blaine, whose fo.--.ign pol icy the Irish World praises. "We do not sufficiently unders'and the reasons why three journals of such influence as the Irish Nan, the Bos ton Pilot, and the Irisf.Vorld, largely circulated in the pivotal state of New York, are opposed to Mr. Cleveland. We only state the lacts. They, cer tainly should noi be lost on the demo -cratic managers, who have hitherto re lied on the Irish-Amejican vote for their successs in the Northern .State?, notably in New York. "No doubt all the facts in thecase will be fully preseuted to the demo cratic rlelegates. It tbi-y ignore facts, they will be alone responsible if defeat awaits them in November. "Fur our own part, we deem it a du ty to state these facts la advance of the convention.' " Fresh new Lemons, only 25c per dot eo, atTUe Fair. - The Citizen, Mr. Congressman Fin erty's paper, published at Chleago, iu an article the other day entitled "1'rcs dential Dunces" gives vent to the fol lowing utterances which, we believe, voices the sentiment of every true Irishman iu this country. The Citizen says: "The Democratic party will commit a great mistake if, at the July conven tion, it picks out some dullard to curry its standard. Couipariocs are odious always. Therefore the Citizen will refrain from naming any man. It Is safe, however, in saying thtno Demo crat who has shown his teeth as a "kuow Nothing"' or a "Free Trader" DAHE bo placed in nomination If the Democratic paity think otherwise, the verdict upon it atjtho polls next No vember, will bp, "Woe to the Van quished!'' J ' " " - - - HOME" ITEMS "All your own fault If you remain nick when you can Get hop bitters that never fail. The weakest woman, smallest child, acd sickest invalid can use hop bitters with safty and great good. Old rneu tottering around from Rheu matism, kidney trouble or any weak ness will he almost new by using hop bitters. My wife and daughter were made healthy by the use of hop bitters and I recommend them to my people. Methodist Clergyman. Ank any Roorl doctor if hop Kiltrn Mn 11 I tlie tiesl family llieil k-liic Oa earth. Malarial fevc-r, Ague and Billious ne9M. will leave everv neighborhood a soon as hop bitters arrive. "My mother drove the paralysis aud neuralgia all out of her system with hop bittcr." r.r. oswotO sU.n. Keep the kidney n healthy with hop l".. "1- - 1 A. A 1 - ' tuners ana you ueeu 1101 leur MCKiieba. Ice water js rendered harmless and more refrshing and reviving with hop bitters in every draught. The vigor oi youth for the aged and infirm in h p bitters! "At the ch.intre of if nothing efjuaN Hop hitter to ally all troubles iuciib-nt Thereto "The beBt periodical for ladies to take monthly aud from which they will rc-ive the greatest benefit is hop bitters." Mothers with sickly, fretful, uuis ing children, will euro the children and benefit themselves by taking hop bitters daily. , Thousands die1 annually from some form of kidney disease that might nave deen preveuted by a timly use of hop bitters. Indigestion, weakstomach, irregu laritics of the bowels, canot exist when bop bitters are used A timely uie of hop Bitters will keep a whole family ' l'i robust health a year at a little cost. . To produce real genuine sleep and child like rcos all night, take a little hop bittets on retiring. That indigestion or stomach gas nt uight, preventing rest and sleep, will disapear by using hop bitters. --Paralytic, nervous, tremulous old ladies are made perfectly quiet and sprightly by using hop bitters. June 12 1884 wlra Some Foolish People Allow a cough to run until it gets be yond the reach of medicine They often say. Oh, it will wear away, out in most cases it wears them away. Could they be induced to try the successful medicine called Kemp's Balsam, that I sell on a positive guarantee to cure, they won'd immediately see the excel lent effect after taking ibe first dose. Price r.0f and 81; trial size free. Resp'y, faprS 4m W.J.Warrick. , M O Connor keeps on hand the cel ebrated An her.se r Burch St Louis Bot tled Beer and always ready to pay par ticular attention to bis customers. . - - 155tf Spearhead tobacco is all the go new. All chewers seem to be anxious to get that farm, which will be given away in June next. Call at Malt Schlegel's for a circular. ltf All the lest houses in Plattsmouth will sell you Bremner's choice cracker at reduced price by the box or barrel!, aud don't you forget it. Oet these and you get the lest. tf ii you want to get you a broom that will give the best satisfaction for the same money ask your dealer for Dor set's brooms. d28-lmo Try the Bina'ia plu chewing to bacco, it is by far the finest plug chew ing made. Matt Schlejrel sella ii. ltf If your beard is uot of a pleasing shade, remedy the defect by the use of Buckingham's Dye fur the whiskers. d-6tw.lt Orders for hand made brooms at tended to promptly at "the Western broom factory. - d28-lmo ' Refrigerators in all sizes ' at Henry Bceck'a. 59tf The best beef in tne city always can be found at Peterson Bros, market.