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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1887)
Mil fitirff itf IfffS 1 lL,ATTSMOUTJI, XEIiUASKA, SATUKIKYY EVENING, OCTOI5KK 1, 1S7. MJMI5EU 1H. FIIIST YKAU 7 .1 1 1 Sim cmon : II smith .1 II V. I I II Al VN UVItoN I'l.AHK A Maimii.k IS Matiii-.ws W II Mai.KjK ( .1 V Wn KKAl'll I A W 'A im ik i II M . I W'M YVKIi'-K i M MlKfilY S W 111' IT(iN 2m. 1 isrd 4tli. i K S l.i: i V Mi l!. I'.l SI I. AM.K.V. ritl'.S 1 J W Johns n,c;iia Km- ! ;n nr i J i II llAWKsWi.irn 11C.M A.N IIom J Tub. Works Treasurer. I ) nitty Treasurer, - Cli-rk. JiepuLV :i-rk. ;lrk of iH.-trict dure, siHTi'r, li. puly Shc-ri!:. Surveyor. Attrn-v. hiit't. f I'"') School-', County Ju.Iiro. l. A. V iAMI'llKI.I, Tllo-t. I'lll.l.lICK .1. M. HoIllNSON !,:. M.- i'll KHHil.M W. C. Sl!iWAI.TKK J. IV l-.l K K.N P.AK V II. f . V HUI ANS A. .Maimh.k A I. I.K.N 15KKM "N M A N Al: l Sl'l X K :. icus.sr.i.i. IKIAHO of SUI'KilVH"i:S. I.ours F.h.tz, firm.. Wi-i.ia,' V.'hUt A. 15. I.I). .-- ri:illsliioutll A. II. 11 KSON, - l; IIIW.IO.1 riniUi"i7ii'-K m. a. . i). v.rMriTs A evi-ry alifi u;u liil,iy evening al It. of p. Ii;ill. Transient liroihi-ri art? rt-sji.-i-ti mly in vited to at ton. I. K. White, Master orkinan ; It. A, ''into. Koivinaii ; K. .1 Morgan, Ovcrsi-tr ; J. K. Mniris. Keronler. 1 ASS CAMP M. XVI, MODKUN v'i lOl I'.i KN of Alii'-TiM Mc.'Ih secniul and fourth .Mon d ay nvriiim; at K. r P. hall. All transient brothers are reiiete. to ni'-el with n". I.. A. Kewco iht. Veiu-rald.! f onsnl ; W.f, WMii-lts, Worthy Advist-r ; P. Merges, lix Hanker ; .1. E. Morris, Clerk. IJbATTSMOUllI l.llllCK M. . A.O. I. W, Meet every altfinate Kiid.iy evening at lNickwood hall at soVhur';. All :ra;isi.-nt hroth ers rn nwpectfully ioviti'.l to alt. -ml. .1. A. Cutsclii, M. W. ; S. i', i;ifi'ii. Kiircniaii : S. f. Wilde, Ki-cordcr; S. A. Neco:n-r. iversi';r. McSUNIHiE POST 45 C. A. R. KOSTKK. Sam. M. Ciiatman ('oamiander, C. S. T-.vihm St-iiior V ice K. a. lH rm Junior " " John W. Won its Adjutant. Ai'iiVHT TAiirw it.V. ItKNM. IIk.mi-uk c 111 iv r of the Hay. John ')Kitn;AN, " " !uard .S. P. Uoi.uowav Serirt Major. J. K. Livings ri in Pot .surgeon Ai.nu WhIuht l'o-.t f li.-iilain Ki'nular meet iiii:. 2nd and Ih Tlmrsdiy of each month at Post Headquarter in liock wood liloclc. B chiwain i III -DKALEi: IN Watte, Clods, Jewelf -AND SpccialAt-eiit oa aiycuWracli Repairing WE WILL HAVE A n a U a s OP Mayor, !lTk, Tn-iwiircr, Attorney, KliKiliwr, 1'oliff tluilK'i Marlr.tll, Couiiclliiicn, 1st ward, Fin Line ,1 HOLIDAY GOODS, -ALSO- Liter Lamps -OF- UnItinB Bosiiins anfl Patterns AT THE USUAL 8 -AT- SMITH & BL ACK S WHEN YOU WAST I M k. vi ci s n tj i m 11 -OF CALL ON Cor. litli ami GianUc Streets. Contractor and Builder Sept. 12-Gni. JULIUS PEPPERBERG, M.VNCFACTUltKK OF AND WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALER IX THE Choicest Brands of Cigars, including our Flor do Pepcorbergo'njnd 'Buds FULL LINE TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' AllTICLES always in stock. Nov. 2G. 1SS5. Cheap Price WORK "5 a g s g 13U i Latest by Telegraph. noItUOWI.Ii A Nil hTUI.l.N'. A PRESIDENTS AL 7 RAIF1 LEAVES WITH FAVORABLE AUSPICES. Creat Crowds of Pcoplo Gather Along the Route and View the Show Vilh Open Moutned Wonder. An Auspicious Departure. Washington, Sept. :'.(). Tin: ircsi(l n tial party Matted on tinio this inoiiiiii";. The station was crowik-d with an im mense, crowd of people, all caer to sec the start and hid jood lye to the presi dent. There was no noisy demonstration, hut all the men in the crowd respectful ly raised the ir hats as tho president passed through the lin whieli had lx.cn formed inside t!iu train yard. There were a ihhuIk r of ollicials and politician.-. Secntary Jlay.ird and dani;l)ter, Secretary Fairchild, S cretary Whitney and Secre tary Endicott with Mrs. Lamar and Mar shal Wil-on. They were on hand nearly half an hour lu.-foru tho time ii.vul Uon for th'j .start. Tin; president and Mrs. Cleveland m eompanied hy Mrs. Folsom drove tip in I lie presidential carriage fif teen minutes before 10. Superintendent Ualdwin, of the l'ullm in Palace Car companj-, escorted the president to the train and Major John 31. Carson, cones pondentof the Philhdclphi.-i.tr''1-, to charge eif Mrs. Cleveland. The pre. . nence of tli major caused his associates toll"-" 'et ' - 5 no use. He was Iiu il to keep hack with the comnio:; spectators. Just us the parly arrived at tho station the clouds which h id obscured thu sky for several days bean to break 11 way, and Mrs. Cleveland noticing this remarked to her escort: "Oh, we shall have Cleveland weather. We always take good weather along with its." The train started promptly on time and under the most favorable auspices. Press Aboul fifty persons gathered in front of the white house this morning to witness the departure of thii President and Mrs. CI: veland 011 their western trip. The President, Mrs. Cleveland, 5lrs. Fol som and Mrs. Cleveland's maitl were driven to the Pennsylvania railroad depot and boarded the special train in watting for them. They were shortly followed by Marshal Wilson, Secretaries Fairchild, Whitney, Endicott and Eayard, Miss Iiayard, Dr. Kryant and Mr. Eisscll. The special train at precisely 10 o'clock mov ed off on its long journey. The president wore his usual black suit, while Mrs. Cleveland was dressed in a brown silk bodice with white sprig skiit and bonnet to match. The train looked very handsome in its new paint and glistening bronze fitting--. Through the plate glass windows could be seen baskets of jacquemcnot roses and other cut fiowers. From the waiting rooms a curious crowd had eyed the train and every member of the party as they arrived. The president was escorted to the train by Mar.-hal Wilson; Mrs. Cleve land and her mother came next and a maid followed them. Quite a crowd of newspaper men, railroad ollicials anel other pi iviledged persons had Iron ad mitteel to the platform. Most of them raised their hats and salutes were return ed by the party. The train was draw:: by engine No. -'01 in charge of Engineer Frank Craver and Conductor C. A. llav crstick. WILL BOYCOTT THEPARADE. Chicago Labor and Soldier Organ izations Will no: Doom Cleveland Chicago, S.'pt. 0. At the office of the presidential reception committee it was learned to-day that none of the labor organizations had yet recovered from the shuck of the "corner stone affair," in spite of the assurance that the pres:deiit would not lay it, and it looks as though labor would strictly boycott the parade. Another feature is that very few Grand Army posts are accepting the cordial in vitation extended them anel the reasons given in their declinations are all much the same. Here is a sample received to day from the secretary of the Union Vet eran club: "The cl::b desire to oxpnss their appre ciation of your kindness in extemling' the invitation. Its members entertain the most profound respect for the president of the United Mnt.s. as president, and if necesstry would defeuel him with their lives. O ;r organization is, however, distinctly and wholly republican. Our allegiance is dt.c to the party which saved the i:a i )ii in ;1 c hour of it- deepest net d. We remcm! er w h n An.ly .Joiii.so:i swvmg around the circle, to cr- ate a presidential Loom for himself in tho year 18G7. We cannot coiisi nt to stultify our record by assisting in a similar effort for Mr. drover Cleveland in the year 1 fib 7. We propose to aid by every loyal and legitimate means, the election of a republican pres ident in As union soldiers ' we love to adhere to the principles, for which we fought during the late rebellion. Tho club therefore most respectfully de cline to accept your invitation." SHE'S A JIM DANDY, SUHE, The Yankee Volunteer Again Hand somely Defeats tho Scotch Thistle. Tho Superiority of American Ship Building demonstrated -Scenes and Incidents. New York, Sept. 30. The second at tempt to sail the ocean race in the two out of three match for the America's cup, was accomplished to day, under circum s ranees that compelled the- most ultra Iiritishir to say the Thistle was beaten fairly and Koundly. The day did not open propitiously. The same old storm that had been hanging around for two days was still hung over t!i; sea. The start was made, however, and every one of the 52."),(;(i() spectators saw as square a nice as was ever sailed in any water. It was precisely 10:30 this morning that the preparatory signal was given. At that time excursion boats and steam yachts had gathered about the line, 111:1k : n irahi day picture. When the gun to start was given at 10:40 the Thistle . nearer the line and went away nearly four i. ngths ahead of the Volunteer. The tim of the start was: Thistle. 10:40.21; Volunteer, 10:40.50. They went over the starboard traek, and the Volunteer at once began to eut point and out foot her opponent. The course was north-northeast for twenty miles to wind ward and return before the wind. The weatheting qualities of the yac hts was si en nt once The Volunteer out pointed the cutter by neatly two points, and won the race by the masterly manner in which she went to the windward. The first tack of seven miles virln.-tlly decided the race, the Volunteer beating to windward of the Thistle in a way that satisfied all spectators who knew anything about it that the American boat would win. The Volunteer not only outpointed her rival, but out footed her as well. Tack after tack showed that the sloop was beating the cutter. There could be no mistake nhcut it. Thy wind at the start was blowing about twenty miles an hour. It maintained that velocity all the way out, except during a period of perhaps twen ty mimutes, when it let down con siderable, during which time the Thistle people claimed they were becalmed. Ileally, the Volunteer was equally afflict ed. The yachts rounded the outer mark: Vo unteer 2:20.40, ThUtle, 2:11. Both yachts set spinnaker coming homeward. The Thistle was the first to take in her spinnaker but the Volunteer followed suit immediately. On the home run the wind let up again but the American sloop crossed the line in a winner by 11 minutes 4S -seconds. The corre. t elapsed time was: Volunteer, 5:42.3(5-; Thistle, 5:.")4. 45. In windward work the Volunteer beat the Thistle 14 minutes 4't- seconds. On tho run before the wind the Thistle beat the Voluntee r 2 minutes 54 i seconds. After the race Mr. Hell admitted that the Volunteer, with her centerboard. had fairly beaten the Thistle in thrashing to the windward. He insisted, however, that the course laid out by the America's cup committee were unfair. lie fully expected to win the triangular or third race because he had no doubt that the Thistle could beat the sloop in running and reaching. Mr. Hell added that the Thistle was for sale for $50,000, and if a purse were offered for another race, she would be entered. Designer Wnlsouand Barr both admitted the Thistle was beaten in windward work, and that the center board had largely helped to do it. Railroad Trouble 3rcwmg. Chicago, Sept. 30. Serious trouble m the Northwestern freight lines is antici pated. The Milwaukee St. Paul and Wisconsin Central roads have filed notice of withdrawal from the Not th western association, basing their action upon that of tho Burlington & Northern. The St. Paul folks claim they wish to be able to make local rates to Council Bluff.- and Omaha in case the Burlington Northern reduces the Minneapolis rates. The Hock Island and its northern connection made a large cut to-day t-n cotton piece goods to Minneapolis and St. Paul. This iu clutles bags and bagging used by millers and all of the cheaper cotton mauufac tureel a: tides, and forms one of the staple articles carried betv.een here and the northwest. The other lines have met the iaf.ei made Prohibition Defeated. Cn atta No-11 : a , Tell 11., S 'j.t. 30. U-turns j from all portions of the state imiieate ' that the prohibition amendment is de feated by 20,000 or more. Th latest election ivtiiriM indicate a majority against the prohibition amend ment of about 15.000. A River Steamer Burned. Mr.vcn.s, Sept. 30. The steamer T. B. Simms, plying between M.-mphis .and St. Louis, burned this morning tit Island Forty, sixteen miles ;;! vc Ih's city. She had about 275 bales of cotton and (i.OOO barrels of flour and meal aboard, all of which was destroyed with the boat. The Simms was valued at $20,000 ami is a total loss. So far as known only ono life was lost a young man named Bunch, from Illinois, who was a passen ger. Mournlnn for a Chlf. Sunnntnmia is dead. His life passer! peacefully away at noon on .'-'und.iy. .cim natonna held two important and lucrative posts. He was nn Otoe chief and n po liceman. His mercenary friends dressed him three times for the '.rave, thinkine;, no doubt, that this word. I hasten his de mise. When the agency people learned this they had him broiierht. in from camp, dismissed his covetous friends, and coa.ed him back to life acain; but his fet Keemed sealed from the first, and the while liae; waves over one mon; jravc on the hillside, and one less is there to receive rations. .Sunnatonna was a clean, tasteful In dian. He h:M a pleasant, face and a :-;miie for every one. The clerk had f.dveu him a pair ef allivcator slippers in -: he.:!-;- f.r a pair of moccasins. SutmatoniKi's wife had made him a dressing i:;wu out of curtain calico; and what with there sins of civilization, and his cleanly l'e.!:ts ,.:wl jjenial disposition, Sutmatuitn:i was be loved by more than the wife whom he left to mourn for lorn, and lie will 1-e missed lv others than his immeuialx' kinsfolk. " Around Funnatonna's deathbed stood hid wife and .some near and di te.e.t rela tives. When it was known that he vr.s dead his wife mourned quietly but sin cerely. She? took the scissors and dipped a piece of her Ion black hair Mid placed it under her husband's hosed. Then she gashed her face with the scissors. The other women were loud in their lamenta tions, especially one, who seemed frantic. The reporter learned liter that the'ono who mourns the loudest receives a & ft of something. However, his wife seems sin cere in her grief. She is beside his grave early in the morning and late in the eveu iner. She wanders through the agency like one bewildered. Her simple- belief points to a meeting in the Indians' happy hunting e;roulldd. Otoe Agency Cor. New York Sun. One of Mrs. I.anirtry's Admlrrrs. One day a youth of ::reat frankness and good humor was introduced to Mrs. Lang try. He looked into ihe ck.1 depths of her clear gray eyes for a moment, and then said: "You had 11 tremendous cfTect on me the first time I saw yon, Mrs. Iangtry." "Did ll-" said the Lily, musically. "Overwhelming. I was strolling down town on a very clear and snappy Novem ber day two years ago, ruminating on the chance of the stock market, when I glanced up suddenly and met your eyes. They were looking directly into mine. You wore a green velve t gown and your cheeks were red from the brisk breeze. I hailed involuntarily and gazed a thousand miles into your eyes, and then pulled my self together, and made an awkward nnology for my rudeness. I didn't know anything during the next ten minutes, but when I came to, 1 was about half a mile beyond, and thrashing ahead in a style that would have dismayed an ex press train. T was almost on a run, and I swept people aside as ihouy.h they were so much chafT" lie .stopped half breath lessly, and then added: "I'm rushing ahead rather fast now, eh?" "llawther," said the Lily amusedly. "Vrell, my object i:i telling you about it is to apologize for staring at you so hard." "I remember the incident very well," said Mrs. Langtry, "and it doesn't re quire an apology at all. Women adore such affronts as that." She kept smiling at the man as she talked with such an air of thorough good nature and good fellowship, that she re duced him in a twinkling to the same ex traordinary condition that had character ized him when he made 1 he run after he had looked a thou-and miles into her eyes that November day. Blakely Hall in The Argonaut. On tlie Afghanistan Frontier. The modus operandi if manipulating the kalian likewise comes in for a slight modification here. The ordinary Persian method before handing the water pipe to another, is to lift oil the top while takiEg the last pull and thus empty the water chamber of smoke. The Tabbasites ac complish, the same end by raising the top and blowing down the stem. Tnis mighty difference in the man ner of clearing the water chamber of a hubble-bubble will no doubt impress the minds of intellectual Occidentals as a remarkably important and valuable piece of information. Not less interesting and remarkable will like wise seem the fact that the flour frescoed proprietors c4ghese queer little Tabbas grist mills are nothing less than the bound ary mark between that portion of the water pipe smoking world which blows the remaining smoke out and that portion which inhales it. The Afghan, the Indian and the Chinaman adopt the former me thod; the Turk, the Persian and the Arab the latter. Thomas Stevens ia Outing. Tho "Jfelsborlng Darner. A new trade for women ia Albany is that of "neighboring damer." The woman who follows it has for her customers a dozsn or twenty households, each of which she visits weekly, and spends a few hours ill doing up tho family darning anel mendin;. 1 P ' 1 V 1 - ...le -.IV :- 4 6 V! 1 O 1 x ;a ' .1 ? 3 ' ; if. "i k -. f : m v hi. U 0 U21C Ye Announce Without Further Notice a a U it u ti W L i. -Z. u -ON Conmicncinr' TO-DAY, vfm ! y w ruin AS THIS IS without reserve, it will be to the ot Cacj County to Having in view the interest? multitude to share the benefits ot c.onsielf-raticiTi sell to other dealers under this clearance sale. B "El 1 fa mi 2. . h a m k (id fi.y h. i m; h " tUI ttl f.. M - r Vi nM V V t'--3 lunJI U2 Ui i tJ U U A bJJ - DO MOT DKLAY I We jro to Xtw Yorlc soon to make our Fall I'urcliasos, and v.-e kindly request all ol'our friends indebted to us to call as early as possible and adjust their accounts. Yours Respectfully, SOLOMON & NATHAN. Wi: lv Y- nt, Dry Goodi -'"ire, MaiuStreet, - PUttsmouih, Neb 1, Jin 1 i? me JLviermo ierwe&r. mm ?.. ; "v- n r 1 bU'i t d r - 1 r I! M ;i fi L Z is ALL- mm JULY IStJi, and September let. continuing until A t'OSITIVK- inliviuul interests of till ctij. ns take sidvantae of the d our customers, an.l to (i;a!iJe iJic this great sale, w;- wi!i r.i..Ic-r ; i wholesale lots of good.- embraced nnprpfi mM nit. mi lib