, - - ' ' v. 111 J mm PLATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY EVENING, JULY il, 18&1. NO. 112. VOL. 2. mm JOSEPH V. WECKBAGH DEALEU IN Choice Family Groceries, AT- THE "DAYLIGHT" STORE, ckxt.:al main street, tlattsmoutii, neb, LUMBBB. HICHEY DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF- - Lumber,Sash,Doors, Blinds Lowest Rates. are slnll We We have got the largest and best selected stock of Choice Family Groceries iu town, and we will sell them just as cheap as we possibly can and not " bust. Our Stock of QueeixsTva-re cured GZasswcure, is not large, but the goods are First-class, and we will give you some low prices. "We prile ourselves on our Teas and Sxxices, Which we take great pains in selecting and can guarantee to be ot the very best quality. All you folks who have been going away irom home to. buy your groceries, come and give us a chance to give you figures. We Will Duplicate Omaha Prices. Fur same quality of goods and on the same terms. Come and see us. BENNETT HENRY BCECK ..DEALER IS FURNITURE SA' A CKAlRP, fcfcTC., ETC., KTC Of All Descriptions HETALLICBURIALCASES wODEU- COFFIN'S oi already made and sold cheap tor cash. lr i?iWS HEARSE 13 NO W ttKAi - SERVICE. With in.viy thank for past parronag. I by lie all to call ana examine my LARGE STOCK OF gut. viiRSTrtK opnes KINKEAD BROS., PAINTEKS & DECORATORS, KALSOMIX1NG. PAPER 1 HANGING. .... A2TC FINE GRAINING, Mara your order with them tr First-Class , Work. PULTT32IOUTH, ' NEBRASKA 9 Carpets, Rags, Etc iTJ MBBH BIIOS, Terms Cash on & LEWIS NEW Furniture Store DEALER LN FURNITURE S C0FFI1TS and all kinds ol goods usually kept in a -1 t9T VLAMM t'tIK.11Tt'BIS TOKK Also, a very complete stock of Funeral Goods MetaMfoouenCofilns Casiets Holies EMBLEMS. &c Our-New and elegant hearse is always in readiness. Remember the place, in UNION jBLOCK, on Sixth Street, TWO Doors sonth of Cass Coun ty Bank. Whear we may be fouud night or day. J. I. UNRUH, 2Un 1 1. .fin C I. NK PLATTSMOUTH fdHJLS TT8MOUTH HER." HEME!, Proprietor -v. .- Htw. Oorm Xftai 6 FttS . ' ecL PLATTSMOUTB HERALD. PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY BY The PlattsmcntL Herald PnWisliini Co. T HTBMS: DAILY, delivered by carrier 10 any part of the city Per Week 15 Per Month 60 Per Year WEEKLY, by mail. One copy nix months 91 oO One copy o,ie year 2 00 Uegistereo: at t ie rust usice, nari.MUOum, ata second clas matter. National Republican Ticket. FOR PRKSIHENT, JAMES G. BLAINE, of Maine. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT. JOHN A. LOGAN, of Illinois. Republican Central Commute IWleetlng. The Republican Central Committee Js hereby called to meet at Weeping Water, Sat unlay, July 12th, at 1 o'clock p. m. All members of said committee are especially requested to be pr scut. M. M. Butler, Ch'n. Call for Republican Judicial Conren tiou The republican electors of the second Judic ial District of .Nebraska are requested to send delegates from the .several counues to n.eet in convention at. i laUsuioulh. Tuesday. August 18, lxs-J. at o o'clock a. in., for the purpose of piae-i.ig in nomination a caii'liilate.for District Attorney, s-lecliii!l a central committee and such otiier business as may properly come be fore the convention. T..e fever.ii cuiiut'es are entitled to representation as follows, being ba-ed up in the vote cast for .1. M lliatt. "re Ken ot ine university, K'viux one delegate at large, and on.- for evrv one hundred and fitly otes and major faction Uiereof : Cass county 13 I.aneisier county il Otoe county H To'al 43 It is recommended that no proxies be ad mitted .o the convention unless held by "per sous residing in the counties from which the proxies are given. Pluttsuiwutu, ieb., July 1,1884. - D. 11. WUEELER, - J. B. Strode, Chahman, Secretary. Republican District Convention. The Republican Electors of the First Con gressional District of .Nebraska are invited to send delegitfS from the several counties there lu. to meet in convention at Beatrice on ,eu nesnay, August 20, at 2 o'clock p. in., lortlie purpose of .placing iu nomi.iatiou a caudi late lor Congress, and f r the transact ion of such other business as may come before the iouveu tion. '1 he several counties are entitled to repre sentation as follows, being based upon the vote ea st for J. M. Hialt, Recent of the University, giving one delegite at large, and one foreveiy one hundred and fifty votes and the major frac tion thereon : Counties Del.lDounties Del. Douglas la! Pawnee 8 Gage li Kichardsou 13 Johnson u Sarpy 5 Lancaster 21 Saunders i .Nemaha 11 Otoe 11 Total 13a Cass 1j It i9 recommended that no proxies e admit ted to the convention, except ucli as are h, ld by persons residing in the counties from whicn proxies are given. c. A. Holmes, Chairman. John Stff.jt. Secretary. Lincoln. June 20. 1881. They have fed Ben. Butler a stone at Chicago, and tilled John Kelly with viuegar and gall. This is hardly the kind of meat to feed Caesars upon ex 6 t n? them t do good fighting in the campaigj to rome. TnERK are no L'huratou's iu the derx ocratic di legaiioa at Chicago. Not oue of i hem have seen tit to be haard yet, except -.Motto:, and whatever he sa d in behalf o; Mr. Bayard was not thought woitby of reference to by the Chicago pre;?. Mr. George William Ccrtis should i n.loubtedly have a seat in the present Na ioncl Democratic Convention. We would piace t is reformer umoni; the Kelly forces and have the great par; y, from which h ; expects reform and civ i. a rvice ieeuei stioo, apply the unit ga t h s aristocratic lips We would have Brag. of Wisconsin, ehake his demo.ratic li-t under Mr. Curtia're ilned and -e .sitive coie every time Mr. Curtia protested. In fine, we would urject luar, feminine reformer to al; the chas! niug rigor there is in and tbout th.' discipline of a great demo cratic national convention; we would io this ii: order that Mr. Curtis might se3 nd iu ler3tand tiust where the re form w-i3 i t come in. In order that .Mr. Cm t i-t should have it impressed upon bis tst asii! ve uature just how much respect '.he demotuatic arty has, and will l.avv., for the individual indepeud enceof the modern kicker. To sum it all up, in u der that Mr. Curtis might nave a lull and fat appreciation of Mr. Flanagan's interrogatory when that statesman exclaimed: "What in are we here for ; and forever under stand that he (Cartis "should not mon key with the buzz saw," we would bt participant in the rext democratic convention, t!i-re to have aud receive his full sh-re cf the alory and assume his just proportion of the rbks MR. BLAINE'S FOREIGN POLICY- Mr. .lames M-rria Morgan, who wa an oflictr in tin Cuffdcialo navy anl ws sul)j que utly connect yd with the Egyptian uiy, has issued in pamphlet form a defense of Mr. Iilaine's foreign policy, entitled "America's Kypt." It ii a strongly written document and de rives its chief int rt from the skillful manner m which he contrasts the peo ple ot Mexico und of Egypt and the pernicious results which must follow from m v. j .lication ot t!i methods England bus imrsucd ui var;!s Egypt, growing ou! of its ownership in the ifuez ciin-il, nn 1 those of a similar na ture which would be ai plicd should England obtain an interest in the pro posed Panama carat. The parallel which Mr. Morgan draws between M cxico and Eypt is aston ishingly close. In the similarity of appearance and custom?, in agricultu ral methods, in the habits of the peon aud the fellah, in all their social an i political conditio; ?, in their form of government, in their treatment of for eigners, the two people are. much alike, and "i he tourist tailing asleep at Alex nndria and waking up at Vera Cruz. would scarcely know that he was in a new land." lie goes on further, and with numerous illustrations shows that Americans have not been treated with justice in the Mexican and Central American republics, and that these re publics have not been hekl accountable for infringement upon theii rights. When Mr. ISiaine entered President Gai field's cabinet he conceived that there was but one way in which these outrages could be stopped, and that was to hold those who perpetrated them responsible, and that there was but one way to prevent the establish ment of a European protectorate in Mexico and the Central American states, and that was by the interposi tion of the Monroe doctrine. As Mr. Morgan says: The control of the Pau ma Canal, he said in substance, must not pnss out of the hands of the United States govern ment. e are the masters on tuts c ntiuent. We do not intend to see Great Britain acquire a predominating nfluence in these parts aud lord it over America as she does over Asia and Af rica, l can cauy unaersiana wny Great Britain would not like to see Mr. Blaine in the Presidential chair. For, "wherever Mr. Blaine can oust the British from the position they hold on the American continont." said the Pall Mall Gazette of London, after the nomi nation, 'he will endeavor to replace English influence and trade by Anieri- can tngiauu win watcn wnn extreme sohcituele tha progres-9 of the Electoral campaign." We Americans understand such language as that per fectly, and will act as the interests and honor of our country dictate. We do uot want France or Great Britain to build a Suez canal iu America, as they did in Egypt, and then establish men acing naval armaments to protect that canai. We do not want to be stopped, at we travel from New Yoik to San Francisco by a Fiench oflicial or a British otilcial . We ar.', and we want to retrain masters of our destinies. Add to these steps namely: his in tention to maintain the Muroe doc trine and the maintenance of our rights in Mexico, Central America, and South America the proposed issue of his invitation to all the independent gov ernments of North and South America to meet in a Peace Congress at Wash ington, and we have the whole nf Mr. Blaine's terrible war policy. AtL the laboring men ot'the countiy need to understand of the great dtmo cratic par'v, is to read today's proceed in j of its national convention in re gard to the adoption of a platform. Old Ben Butler, of Massachusetts, on behalf of the laboring classes he represents, took the platform and open ly protested against tha memingless and dishonest platform reported by the m jority in regard to the tariff, and asked the convention who could under stand it. In its place he offered the follow iug substitute in substance w bieh declares, "Duties must be carefully ad justed so as to promote American en terprise and foster industries and American labor. Also favoring labor tribunal to settle coa ioversies between capital aud labor.' The old war horst yarned the con vention that Hancock !met his defeat Uoo an equivocal and dishonest plat form, lure the present one just reported to the convention, yet the old m&n'a Mr. John Kelly made a good point which was. not sulHciently noticed, in hie argument against the unit rule Tuesday, lie said that while the pro tectants against the operations of the unit rule were in a iniuoritv ol the New York delegation they probably represented a majority of the votrs in the State, or at least they came from the counties which cast the heaviest democratic majority. There are, iu fact, lees than a dozen democratic coun ties in New York. The democratic vote is massed iu such couuties h New York aud Kings. If Mr. Kelly and his u6sociates were expelled from the democratic parly, as some of the hot headed bulldozers in the South desire that tiiey should be, and their follow era should go with them, as we have no question a majority of them would do, the democratic party would not carry the Kmpire 'State (New Yor ) once in a hundred years. It is well enough for the boasP3.s from Mississippi and Texas to talk about putting the knife to the throat of John Keliy, but the moment they fulfill their pi umises they may bid good-bye to tbc prospect of seeing the ilemocratic patty in power as long as they shall live. Carter Harrison made the same old speech to the Chicago convention, in which he reiterated over and oyer again that the democratic party was die pocr man's party, gotten up express ly for the poor man, and adapted to all his wants; especially the Irishmen and German, and that Cleveland was the especial champion of thebe classes. It was a good speech of the kind only it was made in an unhealthy locality for such speeches. John Kelly, Grady, and such champions of the foreign races had made a great mistake if Mr. Cleve land was their hest friend, and had come up from New York expressly to tight the man Carter thought was their best friend. To reael the Chicago mayor's speech one would think Cleve land was running for mayor of Chi cago. The Cleveland supptirters must be verdaut in politics to attempt to catch old birds with chaff. The offer of the Treasury Portfolio to old Ben, Butler for his support iu the nominating convention was indignant ly refused by that gentleman with -the remark that when he tooK a cabinet po sition in an administration it must be undei somebody who has had some ex perience and knowledge of American poliiics. Benjamin did not bite! Vital Question ! ! ! ! 4A; the most eminent physicun Ol any school, what is the best tiling in the worltl for quieting and allaying all irritation of the nerves, and curing all froms of nerves, complaints, giviug natural, childlike refreshing sleep alw-ays? Aud they will tell you unhesitatingly 'Some form of Hops I ! " CHAPTER I. Ask any or all of the most eminent ph)sicans: "What is the best and only remedy that can be relied ou to cure all diseas f the kidneys and urinary organs; such as Bright's disease, diabetes, retention, or inability to retain urine, aud the diseases and aliments peculiar to Women" 'And they will tell you explictly and emphatically " Buohu ! ! ! " Ask t he same h leims What is the most reliable and sureBt cure tor liver diseases or dyspepsia; con si pat ion, migesriou, billiousncss, malaria fever, ague, &c.,?,and they will tell you : Mandrake ! or Dandelion! ! I Hence when the-e reme-uies are com- binded with others equiiy valuable. And compounded mio Uop liittees, such a wonderful and mysterious curative power is de vep.ped, which is so varied in irs operations that no disease or ill health can possibly exist or reeist its power auel yet it is harm less for the most frail woman, weakest invalid or smallest child to use. chapter ii. "Patients "Almo3t dead or nearly dying" For year?, and gave up my physi cians, of Bright's and other kiduey idseases liver complaint?, Bevere coughs, call'-d cotisumtpion, have been cured. Women gone nearly crazy ! ! f From agonv of neuralgia, nervou sness. waKeruuness, ana various diaes-8 peculiar to woman. People draw oat of shape from excruciating pangs of rheumatism. inflammatory and chronic or suffering fiom 8crofuln. Erysipelas! "SHltrheurn, blood poisninz. dvsneDSi indigeting' and, in fact, almost all diseases frail Nature is heir to Have been cured by Hop Bitters, proor or wmcn can oe round in every neiznooroooa in ine known world. fT None geuine without a bunch of green Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile, potsonons- stuff with Hop 'or "Hops" in their ntr . G. Fiicke & Co.. SUCCESSOR TO J. M, ROBERTS, Will keep eonxtantly on hand a full and complete stock of pure DKUGS AND MEDICINES, PAINTS, OILS, WALL -PAPEIl . and a full line of DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES. PURE LIQUORS For Me '.loan Purpose. Special attent'ou given to Compounding Pre scription. diuJif. BANKS. THE CITIZENS :o nxr :esl ! Pf.ATTSMOUrif. - NEI RASKA. O.IT.T-A.Xi - 075.000. one Kits JOHN RI.ACK. .'RANK CA ItltUTH, President. Vice-President. W. H. CUSUING. Ca-liier. OIKKCTOItS John Hlaek, W. II. Cu.ilihig, I rank Carrulh. J. A. Connor, Fred Herrmann, J. W. John foil, 1". R. Giitliiiniuii, Pen r .Mumm, Win. WetCLcamp. Henry Hock. Transact a tJcnmal Hanking iiu-iiiie.s. All who have any Hanking Limine:, to transact are invited lo call. No n utter how larije or ftuall t lie tranc-lou. It will receive our careful attention, and we proini.se always cour teous treatment. Issues Certificates of Deuosit hearing interest liuyand sell Foreign KxehaiiK, County and Cliv .siu-untle. John kitzokkalo, a. v. mcUuuhun President. Cannier. FIRST NATIONAL OF PLATrSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, OffArstue very best facilities for the prompt transaction of legitimate BANKING BUSINESS. Stocks, Rouds, Gold. Government and Loea oecuniiee nou;iii ana woia, UepoMts receiv ed and interest allowed on time Certifi cated, Oiaft drawn, available hi any part of the United States and all the principal towns of Eurojie. Collections made & promptly remitted Highest rket prices paid for County War- State &Ld County Iionde, DIRECTORS i John Fitzgerald John R. Clark. I. If awk worth A. w AicijKUKhlln. F. K. White. WEEPING WATER WEEPING WATER. NEB. E. L. REED, President. B. A. GIBSON, Vlce-rresident. R. S. WILKINSON. Cashier. A General Banting Business Trasaitei. UKPOM1TS Received, and Interest allowed on Tlne Certi ficates. IIBAKTS Drawn available in any part ot the United States and all the principal cities of Europe. Agents for the celehrated MM Line of Siaaners. Bank C CL3S County Cotner Main and Sixth Streets. XiA.i"X'S lcotjth: ztstieib , C. H. PAKMKI.E. Prasldent, (. 1 .1 M. HATTERSO:.. Cashier. ( Transacts a General Baniing Business. HIGHEST CASH PRICE Paid tor County and City Warants. COI.LKCTIOXH HADE stnd promptly remitted for. DiKFCc-TOKa : R B WinJham. J. M. Patterson. C. n. Parmele F. R. Guthmann. W J. Arnew,A. B. Smith. Fred Gorier. mm CATARRH CURE. COUGH CURE. ; DLOODCUn: AXJX BT IB BHiia SKIN CURE. i : V tr f m cat hnirl. i! ..: j