k-m I $ iff tfl PiWjgWttiS) PLATTS3IOUTII, NEIJIJASKA, WE I N E S DAY EVENING, SEPTE3II5EU 14, 1887. l'lUST YJ2AU JSVMBHU 3. T 7 J! I 1 r .1 I Si y. i-sun II SMITH .1 II 'A' A IH: M AN l'.VUHN I.AKIl A .'.I I"I.K ,1 S Mai i! i ws W II Mai.I .K tounciliiicn, 1st ward, j A NV Whiik. U1 i UM Wkiih: ., , .. t M I'. Mr i! rii V !r'1 ( S W IH Iili.N 4lll t !: s ;i:i-1 -ii i ' I M- C.m.i.kn. Picks (.1 W Johns .,i:iiAii:-.i AS Board riili.Woik.ff Kick:. lioM.i-.it I 1) II llAtt -RHWolfril GOLfjVY OK KKiJ'ctiS. Treasurer, J (m y Tieasurer, Cl.-rk. Jlepllty Clerk, t liM k of Hi-met Court, Ml.Tilf, iJepiity Sheriff. (Surveyor. Attorney, tiuot. ot I ii 1 Schools, County Jn.liif. 1. A. CAM l-r.Kl.l. lll"M, I " I . I. lv J. SI. Kol-.l XrtD.N C, C. Mfl'll K.uson Vv. C. SllKWAl.TKK .). C. Kl K l-.N CAICl It. C Vl-.n.M NS A. .'l.Mii'l.K " Al.I.KX I.KKS 'N JlAV:. A KM Sl'IX K I-.OAItK OK Kt'l'KUVIHollS. J.ouis Ch'ni.. Weeping W:iler A. 15. 'I oii. ... J'l:il!siiiii!li A. It. 1I USDS, - IIlIhw.mhI GIVIG SOGIJ'il'IJ'cS. riMCH) tA)lit',K Ni. M. A. O. V. W. YieTTs every .il::rnat l'i May eveuinir :u K. f P. hall. Transient hiotlier-i are resp-'rll ully in vueil to alteml. K. K . W Lite, Master Workman ; It. A, ' aiU'.lMuv.'nati ; F. J. Alurgun, Overseer ; J. IC. Morns, Uecorder. Tass cAMi' No..i.!.', moih:i:n woihimkn v- of AtlieriiM Meets second ami foill lll M:!l fl ay evening at K. of P. hall. All transient brother are requested to meet with us. I,. A. JSeweieuer. Venerahln Consul ; W.C. Willt-ifs Wurihy Adviser ; P, Merges, Lx lS.inkcr ; .1. ii. Morris, Clerk." IJI.ATTS.MOUni I,(U)(iK NO. 8, A. (. I'. W. JU'ct every alt -rnate Friday evening at Koekwood hall at H u'kIock. All transient hroth rs are respeetf ully invited lo attend. .1. A. iiitsehe. M. W. ; S. C, tlre.-n, Korein.in : S. C. AVilde. ICeeorder ; S. A. Newcomer. Overseer. McCOifJJHIE POST 45 G. A. R. KO.STKlt. Bam. M. ('iiatman commander, C. S. Twins Senior Vice y. a. Hatks Junior " John W. Wiioiis Ailjutant Ai ii;.sr Takt.soji -l- J:kn.i. llKMri.K Oliieeroithe liay. John CuitKKSAN- inard Js. P. Hoi.mmvav, Serjrt Major. i:. 1C. 1.ivim;stox, Post siirtreoii ALl'HA WliliaiT, Pot Clialdain ICeular meelii''s. '-'nd and 4;h Thurxih-y of oaeli month at 1'ost Ileaduuartert in Koek wood lilock. L McElw DEAL12II IX Watcliss, Clocks, Jewelry -AND- SDScialAttentGii nireatcli Rcnairing WE V ILL HAVE A i a u r, -,i . -OF- HOLIDAY GOODS, ALSO Library - Lamps of UiiQHB Besios and Fattenis AT THE USUAL Clie ap rie -AT- SMITH & BLACK'S. WHEN YOU WAN i-i mm -OF- CALL OX Cor. 12th :md Grnr.itc Streets. Coairactor and Builder Sept. 12-G:n. JULIUS PEPPERBERG. MASlTACTfREK OF A"D VHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALKIt IX THE Choicest Brands of Cigars, including our Flor do Pepperbergo':.r.r.d 'Bi ds FULL. I.ISE OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES Mavor, ;i-rk. -Treasurer, Attorney, I' llttlllclT. rollo- Judge, lM:irti:tII. am, H hi una 3a ino wi n vi n kn S 2 S a U WI now always in stock. Nov. 2G. 1SS5. Latest by Telegraph, i P.OKKOWKU AM STOLEN'. Military for Manitoba. Ottawa, On., Sept. 1 :i It is reported here that affairs in Manitoba over the interference of the Dominion govern- j ment with the provincial rights in dis allowing the charter of the Heil Kiver Valley railroad granted by the local government an: daily assuinin u more serious aspect and the Dominion govern ment has ordered militia stationed at Winnipeg to hold themselves in readi ness to suppress any trouble. MAKING SUGAR. ConfTviissjoner Colman Enthusias tic Over the Ft. Scott Experiment. "Washington, I). C, Sept. 12 Com-tn'H.-iuncr Colinan lias just returned from fin oilieirtl visit to Ft. Scott, Ktis., where the department of nyric ulture is conduct ing experiments iu making sugar from sorghum hy tiie difi'usion process, and ca presses himself as heing delighted with the results obtained ulready. lie says the experiment consists of the trial of a new process in making sugar in this country, which dispenses entirely with the costly and ponderous mills, steam engines, etc., and uses a far simp ler and less expensive method for extract ing the juice hy which all the saccharine matter is obtained instead of about Lr as heretofore. The new process is cul.u the difi'usion or saturation process. The cane is ci 'rt "'"' " ' "' "I iu! a battery of iw.iv-viir, e.:-i h. i ii.ig a ton of chips. Hot water is then applied, which rapidly exhausts the sacchaiine matter and so thoroughly that there is scarcely a trace of it left. The cells are entirely practical, being speedily filled, manipulated and emptied, one man at tending to the operation. The mill at Ft. Scott is capable of working up every twenty-four hours 150 tons of cane, making therefrom 18,000 pounds of sugar or more. The yield of from ten to 100 tons of caue per acre was being secured, which would produce by this new process from 1200 to 1500 pounds of sugar. This sugar is worth, by the carload, 5 cents per pound. Nor is this all. To every ton of cane nside from the sugar in it, there arc some ten or twelve gallons of molasses and also the seed raised upon the cane, amounting to about five bushels per acre and just as good for feeding all kinds of stock as Iudiun corn. Indeed the seed, it ii estimated, will pay for the raising of the cane, which is a merit possessed by no other sugar plant. The department is also conducting satisfactory experiments in New Jersey. The result of these experiments upon the country will, it is believed, be most ben eficial. The nation is paying $100,000,000 annually to sugar producers of other countries, and if it can be demonstrated that it can profitably produce sugar on its own farms it is a matter of the high est importance to the country. It wid not only keep this money at home, but will save $50,000,000 annually in cus toms and duties. "I cannot see why our people should not go to making sugar. A complete sm;ar factory will cost about as much as a flowering mill and can be ;un tit a great profit according to the present experi ments. Farmers jare glad to raise cane at two dollars a ton and at that it pays better than other farm products. "I look upon these experiments as im portant to this country as the invention of the cotton gin. They have demon strated that we h ive a sugar plant that can be grown and converted profitably into sugar south of the thirty ninth par allel (out of reach of the early frosts) to the Gulf of Mexico, and the country can and will be independant of every otiier nation for sugar." This new pro cess will be tried on the Southern cane. We have this day reduced the price of lead (best brand) ooc, per hundred lbs., lins cd oil 5c., per gallon, mixed paint 10c., per gallon. On account of our large purchases at reduced rates we are able to make these changes. Allow us to make you prices when in need of any kind ot paint. "W. J. "Wakrick. Piattsmouth. Neb. Sept. 12-S7. dCtw4t. Lead, Oil, Varnishes, Brushes &c. at Warrick's good goods and low prices. dGt-wft "Warrick asks you to compare his prices and stock of school books with others. Second hand school books at very low prices. dGtw4L ivny to ft, Iiowevcr, although I felt the cold Inspiration stanrl out upon my forehead. In the distaueo I Leant u jKjotmriui splosh faintly, then tho owl hooted again in m l.iii'l of unnatural screaming note, and tba wind lxiKnn to moun plaintively through tho trees, milking a heart chilling music. Above vls tho lilack hosom of tho cloud, and lit'iicatli mo swept tho Mnek flood of tho water, uud I felt ns though I and death wen utterly alone between them. It was very desolate. Suddenly my blood seemed to frcezo in my veins and my heart to stand still. Was it fancy, or wero we moving? I turned my eyes to look for the other canoe, which should bo ulonsido of us. I couM not see it, but in stead I saw a lean and clutching black hand lifting itself above tho gunwalooftbe liltla boat. Surely it was a nightmare! At the same time a dim but devilish looking face ap peared to rise out of the water, find then ratno a lurch of the canoe, a quick flash of a knife and an awful yell from the Wakwall who was bleeping by my siilo (tho samejpoor fellow whoso odor had been annoying me), and something warm spurted into my face. In an instant the spell was broken; I know that it was no nightmare, but that we wero attacked by swimming Masai. Snatching at tho tirst wcajon which came to Land, which happened to bo Umslopogaas' battloax, I struck with ull my force in the direction in which I had seen tho flash of tho knifo. Th blow fell upon a man's arm, and, catching it against the thick wooden gunwale of tho eanoo, completely severed it from the body just abovo tho wrist. As for its owner, ho ut tered no sound or cry. Liko a ghost ho camo, and like a ghost ho went, leaving behind him a Moody hand still grip ng a great knife, or rather a short sword, that was buried in the heart of our poor servant. Instantly there arose a hubbub and confu sion, and I fancied, rightly or wrongly, that I mado out several dark heads gliding away toward tho right hand bank, whither wo wero rapidly drifting, for tho rope by which wo had been moored had been severed with a Li.aU: As soon as I had realized this fact, I also realized that the scheme had been te cut tl.o boat loose, so that it should drift on to tho i ij'ht bank (as it would havo dono with tho natural swing of tho current), where no doubt a party of Masai were waiting to dig their shovel headed spears into us. Seizing one paddle myself, I told Umslopogaas to take another (for the remaining Askari was too frighteiK I and bewildered to bo of any use), and together wo rowed vigorously out toward the middle of tho stream; and not an instant too soon, for In another minnte we should havo been aground, and then there would havo been an end of us. As soon as wo wero well out, wo set to wof k to paddle the canoo up stream again to where the other was moored; and very Lard and dangerous work it was in the dark, and with nothing but tho notes of Good's stentorian shouts, which he kept firing olf at intervals liko a fog horn, to guide us. But at lost wo fetched up, and were thankful to find tha they had not been molested at all. No doubt tho owner of the same hand that severed our rope should have severed theirs also, but was led away from his imrpose by an irresistiblo inclinat ion to murder when ho got the chance, which, v. hilo it cost us a man and him his hand, undoubtedly saved all tho rest of us from massacre. Kad it not been for that ghastly apparition over the side of the boat an apparition that I shall never forget till my dying hour tho canoe would undoubtedly havo i'. -if ted ashore before I realized what had Lappened, and this history would never have been written by me. CHAPTER III. THE MISSION" STATION. Wo made the remains of our rope fast to the other canoe, and sat waiting for the dawn and congratulating ourselves upon our merci ful escape, which really seemed to result laore from the special favor of Providence than from our own caro or prowess. At last it came, and I have not often been more grateful to see tho light, though, so far as my canoo was concerned, it revealed a ghastly sis'ut. There iu the bottom of tho little boat lay tho unfortunate Askari, the siinc, or sword, in his bosom, and tho severed baud griping tho handle. I could not bear the sight, so hauling up tho stone which had served as an anchor to the other canoe, we mado it fast to tho murdered man and dropped him overboard, and down he went to the bot tom, leaving nothing but a train of bubbles behind him. Alas! when our timo comes, most of it?, like Lim, leave nothing but bub bles behind, to show that we havo been, and tho bubbles soon burst. Tho hand of his murderer wo threw into tho stream, where it sank. Tho sword, of which tho handle was ivory, inlaid with gold (evidently Arab work), I kept andusftdes a hunting knife, and very useful it moved. Objected to Too Many of Them. Within the borders of Lincoln county and not over twenty miles from old Lin cclnton there lives a respected citizen who numbers in his family some as pretty daughters as can be Kmnd in Dixie. As usual, his house was the rendezvous of the neighborhood gallants, and one fa vored young man wooed, won and wedded one of the fair ones. Not long since a brother of the proud bridegroom ap proached and astonished our hero by ask ing the hand of another one of his daugh ters. "Good Lord! do you think that I raise my girls to give away to one family How many more of you want raj to save up my girls any more?" "Yes. sir. . think brother Ed wants one." Lincoln- Lincoln as a Dry Goods Clerk. When Abraham Lincoln was a clerk in a dry goods store he sold a woman a little bill of goods, amounting in value by the reckon ing to $2,063". He received the money and the woman went away. On adding the items of the bill again to make himself sure of cor rectness, he found that he had taken 6 cents too much. It was night, but closing and loching the store, he started out on foot, a distance of two or three miles, for the house of his defrauded customer, and, delivering over to her the sum whose possession had so much troubled him, went home satisfied. This is a very humble incident, but it illus trates the man's perfect conscientiousness, his sensitive honesty, better perhaps than if it had been of greater moment. Toledo Blade. It has lately been discovered than an Italian nobleman, who frequented the most exclusive London society and dabs at night, sells tin ware from a handcart in the suburbs during I in the suburb during j (he day. LOVE'3 SEASON. Th time of lovers Is brief: IVom tut fair urt Joy o the rrlaf .5 That tells when 1ot la grown old, From thn warm, wild kiss to th ooM, " From tho red to the white rose leaf, They Lbta but a enaaon to seem As ros learws lost on a eta-warn, "7V; That part nnt and poaa not apart. As a spirit from droam to dretuu. As a sorrow from hwart to heart. --Swinburne, HORACE GREELEY'S FARM. The Famous Philosopher Hot Xotnd for Manual Dexterity Fond of ForoRts. Everybody who has been at Chappaqua re members the plcturesqueness of the Greeley farm aud the beauty of the woods, the d?ep avine, the stream flowing through it and the broad meadows, rescued from a swamp hy drainage, below. It has a number of springs at accessible points, where Mr Greeley used to stop and drink, rarely skipping one as he went along. A tin cup adjuceut to each might be found always, whun no ill iuten tioned wayfarer had spirited it away. Once I amused him exceedingly when a cup was missing at ono of the springs by folding up a capacious leaf and improvising a cup from it, from which we both drank. He had no idea so simple a trick could be done. I am sure manual . dexterity is something to which I can lay but the feeblest claim, but now I think of it I do not remember that Mr. Greeley ever exhibited it even in a primitive form. No utensil on the farm was ever con structed or repaired by him, I imagine; nor Lad he any faculty, you would observe, in a mechanical direction. He could chop down a tree, but more often his work was trimming the trees up and cutting away the under brush on the hillside. Ho often poinUd with pride to the tall branchless polos in Lis woods, from which the ship builders might select their masts if occasion demanded. I once asked him, when ho was vigorously at work there in May, cutting down the al ders full of sap and leaf, if spring was not tbe wrong season for that kind of work. And I mildly suggested that if they were cut iu the fall his toil would be much more effective But he said: "Now is always my time for anything. Pretexts for putting olf work are the lazy man's argument." He had a fond ness for forests, as if tho spirit of the Dryad naa somehow infected him. lie was proud of his meadow, converted from a swamp, but tho woods he worshiped. He bought eighty acres or timber land, I think, at one time, find sowed tho portion that had been deforested with locusts and chestnuts. He thought that every barren Knou or rocky summit that the plow could not ameliorate should be sown or planted with trees. Joel Benton iu The Cosmopolitan. Civil Service In En eland. A large portion of the real work of the do- pnrtmeuta in England is done by what are known as "writers," who are paid thirty shillings, or about $7.50, per week. Theso men are employed by the hour, and a 'tem porary tenponny," as he is called, is bandied aboufc liko a shuttlecock from one department to another. No matter how much ability those men have they never rise, and some of them havo been known to remain thirty years in tho service at this rate. Marvin, ths author of "Our Public Ofncrs," declares that merit is a term not recognized in the civil service of Great Britain. Advancement abovo the line proceeds by means of seniority, incessant re organization, or influence. The system, ho says, "puts a premium on incapacity; and if it makes a mistake now and again iu getting rid of a man of merit, it i wf. -tickc 't .u its noodles." The underlying rice of the British system is utter lack of ambition aud idleness. The efforts to kill time take various forms in the departments. In some, newspaper reading; in others, political discussions, and in others, tippling. Many of tho government clerks, I am reliably informed, keep liquor of all kinds in their desk, and refresh thomselves behind the lid. A man has to be a confirmed drunk ard, indeed, before you can dismiss him from the British service, if he happens to be a clerk. The work required of him being prac tically nothing, his habits do not interfere with that, and his associates, as a rule, make no complaints. The beads of departments have no authority over the clerks, for they come and go, but the barnacles go on for ever. No supervisory visits tro ever made to any branch of the service, and the clerks who cannot be removed are masters of the situation, and, as a rule, laws unto them selves. Whenever a spurt of work comes on, enough "tenpenny writers" are put on to do it. Robert P. Porter in Chicago Inter Ocean. A Strange Mixture of Blood. Probably the strangest mixture of blood that can be found anywhere iu this country among what are known as the upper classes occurs in our northwestern cities, notably in St. PauL In the early days the French voyageurs and the Scotch employes of the Hudson Bay company frequently intermar ried with the Indians and brought up large families of half breeds. These intermarried with the Americans who settled in this sec tion of the country, and in the course of a few years became the social leaders in the cities that grew up as if by magic. Indian blood, therefore, U, in the northwest, never considered as a disgrace, and the most sty lish young ladies thought nothing of enter taining their grandmothers, who were Indian squaws. The Indian men seldom appeared, but the women were very fond of visiting tin cities for short periods and then returning to their tribes. In one case the ancestress of one of the most prominent families in St. Paul used tc visit her descendants twice a year, but never could be induced to sleep in a house, and the entrance to the handsome mansion was occu pied by the tepee of the old grandmother whenever she paid a visit to her grandchil dren. This was not an isolated instance, but one of a number, and thirty years ago tht spectacle of a lady dressed in the height oi fashion, accompanied by a withered squaw clad in skins and a blanket, was so cornmor on the streets of St. Paul as to attract littlt attention. George L. Bostwick in Globe Democrat. Quick Work. Upon a bet a Kansas man killed, cleaned, cooked and ate a chicked in less than fifteen minutes. Lots of women take longer tlm than that every morning pounding the dish rag to make the next door neighbors believa tbey are cooking beefsteak for breakfast. Phiiadejpnia Herald. This space belongs to JToscnh V. Wcckbach. many goods and not write an ad. We Announce Without Further Notice a -oif mm Commencing TO-DAY, JULY 12th. and continuing untQ September let. Valoes Wi in ffl -AS THIS IS without reserve, it will be to the individual interests of all citisen ot Cass County to take advantage of the nparaiEeled Bargains Offerei Having in view the interests multitude to share the benefits ot consideration sell to other dealers under this clearance sale. DO MOT DELAY! We go to New York soon to mko our Fall Purchase, and we kindly request all of our friends indebted to us to call as early as possible and adjust their accounts. Yours Respectfully, SOLOMON & NATHA3XL White Front Dry Qtwfc House. Main Street, - Pletfcmoutn, Nob He is receiving a& is buy h can- lor a few daye. REDUCTION al: A POSITIVE- ot our customers, and to enable th this great Bale, we will under 110 wholesale lots of goods embraced L Girt I if: - .K