THE DAILY HERALD, J'LATTS MOUTH, NEUUASKA, Fill DAY, OGTOIiEU 7, 1SS7. $l)e piattsmoutl) Duilji Cjcralii, Publishers & Proprietors. - REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET. KorTiriisiuer I). A. CAMIMIKLL. TorCh-ik liERT CKITCIIFIELD Vor Kecortb-r WM. II. POOL. For Suji'-ii!itciiK'i.t of 1'tiI.Iic Instruction MAYNAltD hi'INK. Kir Sli I'.ii J. V.. EIKKNIIAUY. l-'or JiiJk' CALVIN IlUSSEIJi. i:r Cl;rk of District Court II. J. HTHEKJIIT, Tor County Cominlerdoiicr GEOWJE YOUNG. For Surveyor A. MA DOLE. For Coroner IIENKY IUECK. The republican county central com- mittcc will meet at AWrping AVutcr Mon day. Oct. 10th at 1 o'clock. A full at- tendance is especially desired. Com mittcemcn who can not I e present should send men in their stead, who aresulliccnt lv interested in the welfare and success of the ticket to be of material assis mice. Sakpy county which is but little strong cr democratic than Ca-s i.s republican lias elected but one republican county oilieial in years. "While Cass county i keeping in oiliee three or four democratic tutcsmcn('0 all tho time; let us get pointer from democracy (a tiling that is ordinarily impossible) and vote a straight ticket once. "Wo think our republican friends would feel better the year rount if they pursued this plan, besides it would almost amniount to a guarantee for honest and capable officials. Look not upon the crab apple cider when it gcteth there cli. For at last will yank you up as a witness against the man who sold it to you, and make you accessory to getting him fined a hundred dollars and free board at the county jail jT il. !i 1 i in . i - lor iniriy uays. n no natn woes and headaches? Who hath He that monkeys with extract of malt. "Who and redness of nose and no wherewith? hard cider am hath babblings imagineth him- self a whole circus, with the clown thrown in? He that bloweth in his sustenance on drinks that brace him up. Hard c ider is a mocker and extract of malt is a fraud and he that is bamfoozled thereby named dennis. Tecuniseh Journal. 1S Tho New Pension Bill The new pension bill drafted by the Grand Army of the Republic differs from that vetoed by the president in that it is broatler. It asks for pensions to all vet erans disabled in the war or now in need, and to dependent fathers and mothers and an increase for union children; -T f - ior pensions ior survivors ot rebel pris ons. The bill will pass congress, but it 'will be opposed by those who favor a repeal of the duties on svhiskcy and tobacco, and by democrats who hate the old sol diers, but it received the votes of some democrats who believed it just; and all republicans will vote for it. The passage of such a bill would re lieve the democratic party of the ac cumulating treasury surplus, and save them from the danger of tariff revision; but will Cleveland meet it ? It is hoped that he will not. It has been discovered that President Cleveland's speeches, which ho delivers at western towns, are taken almost bodily from a well known cyclopaedia. That ought to nail Grover in the mind of the average intelligent voter. A statesman who goes around the country firing extracts from cyclopedias and dictionaries at the public as original is not a safe man to hold the highest office in the gift of the people. When 1 copied his epistle to Queen Victoria from a Ready Letter Writer, the people were disposed to pardon him ns the queen's reply was a worse screed than his own 1.... 1 . C k i j mul we mo pcopiu or America ciraw inr line at extracts from such books as the above. That might do in Kentucky, where the papers print the ten command nicnts as a scoop, but it won't work ii Xebraika. Lincoln Journal. Tue cunning and deep laid schemes of the railway, especially the Ii. & M., in attempting to defeat Jude Maxwell's renomination, were with great difficulty frustrated at the republican state conven tion Wednesday. It was somewhat amusing to hear the railway lackeys, compare tho fearless and honest Maxwell who has been tried these many years, withC. J. Dilworth the preferred candi date of the railways. The lack of inter est, or something else on the part of the people almost encompassed Maxwell's defeat, which would indeed have given the antimonopolists some cause for com plaint, but when the anti-Maxwell votes were Ieing cast by'delegatcs from anti monopoly counties it not only looked in- j consistent, but suggested to us the idea that a little more work at the . primarie and a little less shouting and howling about corporate thieves might possibly be of more actual benefit to "the people. Tho American Beer Pool. The pool formed by the cuttle pro ducers promises to become a stupendous affair, if carried out according to present intentions. Jlr. Armour, to whom the association has promised all the cattle under their control, would seem to hold the key to the greatest trust in the coun try. In effect it will give him control of the entire dressed beef industry of t lie land and consolidate all markets into one. It is claimed, however, that tho price of beef will not be raised to the consumer. The cattle producers will have the benefit of the combination. They have always complained- that the middlemen raceived too great profit. No matter how cheap or how high beef on foot might bo, the price to consumers has varied but little. Mr. Armour, it is said, will merely act as the agent of tiie association, recieving pay for services rendered, and assuming no risks. Uut it will be in his power to drain the cattle ranges. Other beef packers cannot enter the combination except with his consent. Representatives of the pool say it will make no difference to them whether one man does the packing or a hundred, and they prefer co-operating rather than fight ing with him. This plan seems to be the final result of the many methods which the cattlemen have been consider ing during the past summer, and it is an attempt to revive the stock raising indus try in the west, which ha.-s been on a decline for sometime. It is thought that this measure will have tho effect tiiey desire. It looks as though Mr. Armour has here the material for the biggst mo nopoly in tho world. Jhe, Wiikn a man comes into the office, planks down the cash and says, "send me your paper for a year," that means business. "When one says, "I want your paper but havn't got the money now," that's all right. When he takes it out of the ost office for several years and sends it back refused, that is meanness. When a man spends ten cents to a dollar a day for beer and whiskey says he cant afford to take his- home paper, t list's a no s;oh thing. When a man borrows his neigh bor's paper to read every week that is cheek. Tecuniseh Journal. Tho Quaker Medicine Company Respectfully ask some very plain ques tions: Can Consumption be cured or even be bene fitted i Can a Cold be cured or even stopped? Can you expect to be even relieved by any medicine or physic ian? No yon cannot, if you simply of your body change the temperature three or four times a day for every chang you add to your cold Mothers, vour children's health and your future happiness demands of you consistent love. Shall vanity make your life mis crable. endins only in death. Dr. Wat son's New Specific Couidi Cure is the re sult of science. Price 50c and 1. It is warranted by the following druggist. W. J. Wahkick. Notice to Ice Consumers. All contracts for ice expired on the 1st day of Oct. All persons in arrears please call at F. S. White,s fctore and set tle the same. Parlies wishing their ice continued can have it at the same rate per month as heretofore. dlw F. S. White. Hon. H. VY. Crady The Statesman, Scholar and True American, set an example worthy of re flection for all True Americans. Healing wounds that no methods except those used by Heaps' Camphorated Arnica Salye which is sold on its merits for any use that a salve can be used. No cure, no pay. For sale by the following drug gist. Price 25c per box. W. J. Wakbick. . Strata of a lirooklyn Street. They are digging for foundations of the elevated railroad or. the made ground at the foot of Fulton street, Brooklvn. Just in front of the Annex ferry house is a hole which has historical interest. At a depth of two feet a brick pavement was reached resting immediately upon a layer of cob ble 6tones. This was the grade of Ful ton street at that point twenty-three years ago, when turntables were used to reverse the street cars. Four feet below the surface is a pavement of rough round 6tones, and this was in use fifty years ago when the old stage line halted there. Eight feet down is a deep black stratum showing the high water mark of the old landing used in colonial times. The piles will probably Lave to go very deep to ob tain a firm hold, for all the old map show that less than 150 years back a littlo bay ran up Fulton street as far as Front street, and Jewell's mill was out on a poiat. New York Sun. Hawk nnd Coyote. A coyote in Walla Walla was attacked by an immense hawk that hit him fair on tho back of the head. The coyote would duck his head, then make a snap at the hawk, but could not reach it, and at the end of twenty i -.inutes was literally pecked to death. lew York Sun. Costa Kick's Miueral Springs. The recent discovery of several valu able springs of different mineral waters in Casta Rica has caused the government to issue a decree declaring all such to be the property of the state, and ordering that in future none shall be transferred to private ownership. Chicago Times. THE FEAR OF SNAKES. NYM CRINKLE WRITES A CHAPTER ABOUT THE OPHIDIANS. fctecle Macknji'H The:, ry of Snake C'lmrm- iiijj Tlio I'bjchlo Kilo of a Serpent'M diameter One of 3Iuck:tye'ii Snake Seances TUc I):iii.-r of Fooling, Steele Mackaye is tlif only man that I have ever mot who Lis mail j a rational study of serpen tology. It is tra.s enough Unit I do not. ngreo with i;iiii in . I i l.i-j conclusions, n.s I will explain presently, I -it I must ncknowl edge hi.i accumulation knowledge antl tho philosophic spirit with which lie has invest! gated what may bo call' d tho mystic side of tho ophidian. Hero lot mo say that I have an antipathy to tho serpent not unu-uil, hut which is ut terly beyond thecontn i of my will or reason. I do not think that I r.m devoid of tho qual ity which passes by tho iiamo of physical courage. On more th.-m ono occasion I have confronted a dog whi -h I had every reason to" believe was rabid r.n 1 from which other men ran away; but on tho sudden appearance of a snake a sensation i dread and weakness overcomes mo that is unaccountable and irre sistible. Once, when with my boy in tho CI came unexpectedly upci with his head and r:' three foot above us. I si to confess it, that for th K.nbing some rocks vat South Talk, we ! a rattlesnake coiled in the air about i nv know, and I wish first ti mo, in my life I experienced tho parted sensation of faint- In?;. My boy knlcd th serpent unconcern wily, but I was unfitted for the journey for an hour. This strange fear is, as I havo said, by no means uncommon. I have encountered it among all classes of niin, and havo even ob served it among frontiersmen, who had been unablo by years of experience in snake in fested districts to overcome it. Whether this is a congenial antipathy and tho result of in herited prejudices or is self mado from early impressions ami subsequent imaginings is an open quGstion. A rnVSICAL. MYSTERY. Mr. Mackaye holds that It is tho inherited result of the mysticism that has surrounded tho serpent from tho tinio of Moses, and that it can be overcoino by a mere exercise of tho will and a familiarity with tho snake. Hero I take issue with him. I cm inclined to believo that tho universal fear and horror inspired by tho serpent havo a psychic cause not yet explained and that this terror reaches its maximum in certain organizations quite Independently of their associations mid train ing. Ko one who has seen a horso trembling throughout his frame and breaking into a cold sweat at an ordinary black snake in the road, or, to take a still letter example, no one who has seen a bulldog, tho most courageous and least sensltivo of all tho canine U'ilie, shiver and put his tail between his legs at tho snifT of a harmless garter snako, can have failed to wonder at the mysterious dread which ap pears to run all through tho animal kingdom or at least all the domesticated part of it With tho einglo exception, if I am to believe common rural superstition, of the hog. Most of my readers who have traveled in the southwest are familiar with tho repug nant experiments of the frontiersmen of cut ting the head from a fresh killed rattlesnake and coiling the decapitated body on tho top of a barrel to see tho involuntary muscular con tractions imitate the striking act of the live serpent. But tho remarkable part of this disgusting experiment is, that not ono man in ten has sufficient nerve to hold his hand up and let the headless body strike at it. A FAINTING FIT. About three year ago I saw a great, brawny man In ISunnell's museum topple over In the crowd. He was carried out, as wa3 then supposed, in a dying condition, and water pourel over him in the lobby. When an ambulance arrived ho had recovered suf ficiently to explain the cause of his fainting fit, and ho attributed it to the serpent exhi bition made by the woman who put the pythons round hor body. 1 took pains to learn something of his antecedents, and found that he had been a soldier and noted for his bravery and courage. I could multiply these instances to any ex tent, but what I want to say is that I never met anybody who had this antipathy mere unreasonably developed than myself. Som? ten years ago Steele Mackayo had some literary work to do in which I was a collaborateur, and ho invited me to his houso in Stamford for a week. Anna Dickinson had told me something about his snake so ances, but I bad forgotten all about it, and I arrived there in tho evening and was con ducted to his study. Imagine my horror ns I stood ct the partly open door, end, looking In, saw my friend seated at a writing tablp in the middle of the room, having for a conv panlon an eighteen foot South American boa, the body of which was partly on tho floor, vhilo tho flattened head, with its littlo lidiess eyes, lay Within a loot or tne manuscript upon which Mackaye was working. The effect of this upon mo was infkantly apparent to Mackaye, who jumped up and began to upbraid mo forgiving way to what he called mi entirely irrational weak ness. He uppealed to my philosophy, to my will, to my manhood. Pointed out to mo that my terror was a childish one, ungrounded in sense, and that tho healthy intelligence over came it. A SUBTLE, SICKENING ODOR. No one but myself can know' how vain were all these apjreals. I distinctly remem ber that tho moment I put my head in that door my sense was attracted by that strange, subtle and sickening odor which emanates from the ophidian, and to which some organ izations are so susceptible. Its effect upon mo is not unlike that of sulphuretted hydrogen gas, producing sensations of vertigo, accom panied by that illusion of surface coolness which is produced on the gustatory nerves by peppermint. "I wiil show you," said Mackaye, "that your fears arc unworthy of you, and con vince you in five minutes that tho serpent, so far from being a malignant, dangerous enemy, is simply an un volitional spinal sys tem, without a corebrum, and subject abso lutely to rhythm of sound and motion." Ht then began a series of Dolsartian exper iments with his snake, as I stood shrinkingly at the door with my hand upon tho knob. He made sinuous and graceful passes with his his handd, in which his arm imitated the con vulsions of a serpent, describing beautiful and graceful curves that seemed pass from his shoulder along u flexible humerus to the metacarpal extremities. The action apparently soothed tho reptile, for it simply moved its flattened head in a swaying, sympathetic motion and allowed Mackaye to grasp it gently at the neck and guide it wherever he pleased. "You can see." he said, "for yourself that the animal i3 soothed by rhythmic motion. low I will prove to you that unrhythmic mo tion irritates it, and so does unrhythmic sound." Ha then began a new series of singularly ungraceful and spasmodic actions with his band, which were not violent, and tho serpent began to raise his head and dart out his black, forked tongue. AN CLI RATTLESNAKE. Soute months afterwards I saw Mackaye go through this same experiment with an ol I Pennsylvania rattlesnake in a wire cngo at what was then tho aquarium on Proadway. Ho thrust his hand in at tho littlo wire cno and did tho soothing busiiieti again, to th horror of Todo Hamilton und an Indian snake charmer, who v tv, with myself, t.'u only witnesses. You ir.w-t remember thittha Biiako was a veteran, and as full of venom ns an egg is full of meat. Irritation hi his caso meant sudden and certain death. When Mackaye had demonstrated his com plete power over the animal, ho withdrew his arm, closed the wicket and began uixm tho outbiMe of tho cago Hquictly irritating system of gestures. In an incredibly hbort hpaco of time tho serjx-nt had thrown himself into bis concentric attitude of d fiance, his rattlu was vibrating and ho was u picture of danger that made us all stand back and hold our breath. Hut imagine my wretchedness that night in Mackayo's house at Stamford. I was given u luxurious chamber. I knew that my door was locked nnd satisfied myself before retir ing that the eighteen foot boa had not by some inadvertence crawled into my room. I felt suit) that ho was securely boxed nnd in tho cellar. And yet I started out of sleep with an invincible dread. Every sense fooled mo. I heard tho hlow, diro, inevitable motion of that spinal body upon tho n wspa;K-r that I hud dropped upon tho floor. I saw in tho shadows the uplifted head and forked tongue. I caught the odor, which sickened me. 1 felt the touch of the cold, writhing coils. And all this was accom panied by tho consciousness that it was noth ing but my own imagination. Well, prido and a feeling of shumo at iy own childishness or effeminacy mado mo en deavor to familiarize myself with tho reptile during the week that I was in tho house. I tried very hard to flght down my instinctive antipathies and got up a personal acquaint ance. I might as well say ut oneo that I ut terly failed. CnURUEU BY A BOA. Somo months afterward I cut from tho London papers an account of the sudden and terrible death of a stiako exhibitor at Pom- bay, and took it to Mackaye. This man had been for years performing in public with enormous constrictors, which bo coiled round his body. One day, while on tho stage of tho Bombay theatre, encircled by tho folds of a tremendous boa, tho audience heard a cry of pain, and tho man with his load of suako staggered and fell over upon the floor. There was a muffled report, as of many bones crack ing. At the post mortem ho was found to havo suffered two hundred and sixty fractures. "That," I remarked, '"is a terrible example of the danger of fooling with tho ophidians." "It is, said Mackaye, "a terrible example of tho carelessness of ezhibitors. It was his own fault." "How so?" "Why, ho forgot to examino his clothing before ho coiled tho serpent round his body and something irritated the animal. If they had examined tho boa they would have found an abrasion or cut, perhaps caused by a pin. At tho sudden irritation ho exerted his wholo constrictive force, which was capabla of f'Vi l V, i" r mi n-rr " "!Nico dynamic phi3"tiiings," I remarked, steel springs and lightning." "Yes," said Mackaye, "you havo to know how to handlo steel springs and lightning. I had a similar experience with my pet." "bmnlar, do you eayr "Yes, he was coiled around the wicker chair you used to sit in, and I was writing. Tho door into tho passage on the other side of the room was ajar, and Tabby came lazily in, "with her tail straight up in tho air. I heard report like a pistol and tho door was slammed suddenly thut. Talk about frac- Ujes. 1 don t think there was a piece of that cuftir lore mat was six mcnes long, ile just pulverized it, anil shot himself against that door like a thunderbolt. It was tho cat, you say! Nonsense, it was a splinter of that chair. I found a cut in his i-km an inch and a half long." "What did you do with j our pet?" "Lost him. It was a confounded shame. I left him in a box hi tho cellar when I went to Boston to lecture, and my men forgot the blankets. My snako was frozen stiff. I could have revived him if I had "got back in time, but tho boys chopped him up in cord wood lengths and buried h:m." Nym Crinkle in Now York World. A His Operator's Generosity. has become fashionable for some it to speak of "Wall street men as thoroughly heartless. T hero is ail impression held by- many that the men in the financial center of thu country are blind to everything ami everybody but money. A reporter was chat ting with ono of the street's biggest operators in his cilice tho other day, when a broker cn- ercd and said: "For heaven s sake civo me ?4,C00 immediately. 1 must have ii this minute. I needed C0,000 at noon, and havo got all but the 4,000. I know I opposed your election aa a member of the stock ex change, and I frankly admit that after your admission I said some mighty uaaty things, but forget these personalities and help me. I only want the money for a short time." The big operator remarked in a genial way: "I am glad enough to help you, not C11I7 to show you that you went oft tha handle i". fighting me (for what the Lord only knows), but to demonstrate to j'ou that notwithstand ing your remarks I f ctl that I am quite r.s manly as yourself." Was this a sneer? Tcr haps so, but the big operator touched the boll button t his dc-sk and directed that a check for the ?4,C00 be given to the visitor. !New YorkSuu. A Monte Carlo Sensation. I remember that during one of my "visits, wheft tho weather was exceptionally hot, a cab horse, after cantering up the hill of Monte Cristo, fell in a fit at tho Casino door. It was necessary to kill the horse, and when the car cass had been removed somo blood remained on the rrravtl. A few moments later a French newspaper correspondent came up, and per ceiving the blood, immediately concluded that pomebody must have committed suicide. The horror of tho imaginative journalist was considerable intensified by the approach of a. director of the Casino, who with greatest un concern, walked on the blood Ftained sand, and unmoved entered the gaming rooms. A few hours later the press of most of tho cap itals of Europe re-echoed with the heartrend ing story of the young man who having lest in a few hour3 at roulette the entire fortune bis father had taken a lifetime to accumulate, blsw his brains out at the very doors of tho Casino. But tho directors, unmoved by tho ruin they occasioned, actually trod in their victim blood. Their consciences were so hardened by perpetual crimo they had not even the decency to remove the blood with which their boots were bespattered. Mem phis Avalanche. On the Streets of London, London papers are printing communica tions from ladies, which seem to prove that respectablo women, no matter how quiet their costume nnd carriage, are constantly liable to insults in the best streetsof the great City through the day. Boston Transcript. What an achievement to know how to bear a corroding sorrow without letting the ulcers fchow ou the faca. Dr. Win. A. Hammond, fcrah M tY--- N sates For the nc be had for xl low s 1 50 wecks 'choice ol lots in Purchaser mav nav all half cash, the oilier hall in ance in one and lv years; or 'J5 cash, remainder in month ly installments of 10; or, a 113' one agreeing to construct a residence worth J,50l) and upwards will bo given a lot with out further consideration. STOW IS THE TIM13 to select your residence lots, contemplate buiiuin'r A 1 . 1 "1 at once. will convince the most skeptical that it is the most desirable residence locality substantial class boast for the year 1 1 1 . in the city, ml r z emu -OF Mr if . 1' 44.1 ound ant 1 through j.ny one desiring 10 construct t tious residence in South Park, ot plans 01 the late.-t style of oiliee. Anyone desirinir to to purchasing, will be driven to the park South P;irk is k-.s.s than ihrccr furl lis of ;i mile from It can bo roaclied conveniently ly either Chicago or or south 011 7th .street. r , CALL. ON B. windhani or 18. Have anything you want from a two wheek go cart to a twenty -four j) issenger wagon. CARRIAGES FOR CO OET are always kept ready. Cabs or and everything for funeral furnished on ehort notice W 1 a. RICHEY Corner Pearl and DEALERS IN 1 tin 1 ZBTTIl nmhpr3 LUihu hi 1 01 South Park maj in rash; or onc- one year; or, one third cash, bal even though should not South Park you to One visit and we will add. mat the most 9 01 Duiidings 01 winch J'lausmonin 18S7, are now being constructed in handsome addition. can this lade Trees it 5 LOTS. mAJD ZImv ! NZLi entire tract. the a cottage or a more preten- can examine a large selection residences by calling at our examine nroncrf v with a view . - ... .. at our expense, tho Opera II011.se. Lincoln Avenues, A onn avies, Effia m S??iU ASURE AND DRIVES, ti'ht carriages. n;ill.tifviror n-oa - rt 7 1 --- . . . uLuiii; Terms cash. BROS., Seventh Street. ALL KIXDS OF ei ni 1 fir Si! r .!!: L;iiiiU0,