The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, October 21, 1887, Image 2

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    THE DAILY
arlje fllattsmoutl), Pailg fjeratfj
KNOTTS BBOS.,
Publishers & Proprietors.
REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET.
Vur Supreme Julj;
SAMUEL MAXWELL.
l"or University llogi-nts,
DU.JB. I J. DAVIS,
1)11. QFAMOE KOHEKTS.
Fur Jii"lenof Second Judicial DiHtrict,
HON. SAMUEL M. CHAPMAN.
HON. ALLEN W. FIELD.
REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET.
For Tn':isuriT
D. A. CAMPBELL.
For Clerk
EIIU) CHITCIIFIELD
For KeforJ-r
WM. II. l'OOL.
For Jui1k
CALVIN RUSSELL.
For SuperintonoVnt of 1'iiblic: Instruction
MAYNA11I) SI'INK.
I'i.r Sht-rilt
J. C. EIKENI5AUV.
For Clerk of District Court
1 1.. I. STHEIOI IT,
For County ConuiilMsioiier
OEOltOE YOUNG.
For Surveyor
A. MADOLE.
' For Coroner
1IENKY B(ECIv.
Tho Republican State Platform.
Tliu riiilli::in i:irty of Netr;nk;i. while
ever ciiieful of properly rii;litH, and holding no
sympathy with those who would witli tliecoiti
liiumat divide, or with tho anarchists destroy,
reasserts its determination that the reat rail
way corporations of this state which hold re
lations of cloHe.st interest to the people shall
be the fairly paid servants of l lie sta'e and not
Its masters. I'll work of legislative control in
tho slate ami nation shall continue until all
cauxe of complaint, of exorbitant rat cm and
unjust discrimination in favor of individuals of
localities i-Uall ceasi to exist. Assumit'g' the
responsibility which fairly belongs to it of
liaviut; originated all legislation looking to
railroad control and the creation of those tri
bunals oi;coiumis-ioii! which have, been en
abled to grapplo with corporate power, the re
publican party will see to it that by a 1 needed
enlargements of power these commissions, na
tional and state, shall be armed for battle and
forjVictory. While favoring such ciianire iu
the constitution of this elate as will permit the
railroad commissioners to be elected by the
paople. It hereby voices its confidence iu the
existing board of trausportatiou,and commends
its ellorls to obtain for Nebraska- tho same
tarill of rates for freight and carriage of pas
sengers as id accorded to neighboring states
similarly circumstanced. It is grossly unjust
aud a grevious wrong that Nebraska should
pay mora for the transportation of her products
aud tne carriage of hur supplies than iier neigh
bors, luwa, Minnesota and Jakot:t. wit'i its
XOOOrtiilP of easily constructeil and cheaply
lnaiatalued lines of railroad aud tiie republi
cans of thi stale will not cease tli;ir clturts
until all wrongs be righted.
W ivattirm our an Iterance to the American
system of tarill. under which, with its broatl
protection of American labor, our country has
lrospured beyond any other, as the business
of the country now demands revision, tho re
publieau, alive' to the demands of every mate
rial iuterost. will sec to it that such revision
b ha.1 1 be made at the earliest practical day.
We condemn the action of the democratic ma
jority iu congress iu that after ' repeated
pledges of tatilf reform, it has utterly failed,
whilti h--ing a largo majority in the house of
representatives, where t-irilf bills must origi
nate, to bring about such reform, which must
oine from the party that lias ever been the
f rletid of the American laborer and producer.
'J'he grateful tlia.iks of the American people
are due to those who defended the union in the
late war an I wo are in favor of providing
Kuitablo pensions for solfliers and sailors who
were disabled in its service or who have since,
without thairfault or vice, become objects of
Vublie r private charity and to the widows
and orphans of those who fell In its defense.
Wo heartily sympathize with th ambition
and effort of the patriots of Ireland iu their
endeavor to obtain for their country the
blessings of free institutions and local selt
govcrniueut. We recognize It i'harles Stew
art -aruell and the Ut. lion. Willia n K. Glad
stone worthy champions of the fundamental
Sriacinals of the Declaration of indepen
euce. We eoudemn the action of the president in
hi attempt to return tho trophies won by
bravery on the field of battle.
We condemn tiie narrow, intolerant and par
tisan action of the democratic party in exciud
lug from the privileges of state citizenship the
half milllou peoplo of Dakota, solely on the tin
nanlv and iudetensible ground of :i difference
iu political view. Not content with their ef
forts to exclude the negro from the elective
f rauciiUe, they now seek to proscribe an intel
ligent, prosperous and patriotic people because
of their political opinions.
We view with alarm the abuse of the veto
power py the president of the United States,
A power from the use of which Kugland sov
ereigns have abstained for two centuries; a
power used but six times during the iirst forty
years of our national government, a power by
the people intrusted to the president for the
purpose of preventing hastvlegisimion, has by
tu present incumbent of that .ilice been used
to thwart the well ascertained will ef the peo-
fle and to resist their repeated demands. lie
ins, in oue-half of a single term of office, used
the power more times than all the predecessors
eombined. He has sought by all the prece
sleuted use of extraordinary power, to consti
tute himself a co-ord iuate branch of the na
tional legislature. He has frequently exer
cised this -'one man power'' by the cowardly
method of th "pocket veto" bv which import
aut measures have been defeated without any
reason being given for withholding its ap
proval. Always
yourself.
learn to think and act for
All the crimes on earth do not destroy
so many of the human race as drunken
ness. Learx to say no; it will bn of more
service to you than to bo able to read
Latin.
The Japanese Government has engaged
a young San Francisco woman to organ
ize a school of domestic service at Tokio
to familiarize Japanese girls -with our
customs.
According to the Enylish Women's
Joiimal, there arc now about one hun
dred women serving on school boards in
England and "Wales. Four county dis
tricts have women for clerks. There are
also women overseen, assistant overseers,
and overseers of highways.
Any one who lias a pond and wishes
to have it stocked with fish can do eo by
making application to W. E. O'Brien,
superintendent of the state fisheries at
South Bend, as the fall distribution of
German carp lias commenced and all
applications should be made by Nov. 1st.
As odd time-iiece is shown in a Phil
adelphia window. The front of the
clock is a large, " round" waiter. The
hours are marked on a dozen oyster
shells. A small plate garnished with
eliccs of lemon, conceals the works, and
the hands are a knife and fork. .
A Magnificent incident of how that
sort of politics breaks down the color
line: Rev. Dr. Pierce, a colored divine,
delivered a speech last week Sunday
night at the theater in Knoxville, Teun.,
and three white pastors dismissed ser
vices in order that their congregations
might hear the address. Ex.
One of the latest attempts to harness
the forces of nature for the service of
man is the adaptation of a windmill for
the turning of a dynamo, the electricity
thus obtained being stored, in suitable
batterii:., and afterward tucd in lighting
beacons for the benefit of the maritiue
interests. There is a station of this kind
near the mouth of the Seine, and consid
erable success has been obtained.
From the present out-look all welcom
ing addres.es at the opening of banquets
etc. will have to be dispensed with, or
fortunes paid for them. Saturday morn
ing Judge Elliott fell dead at Memphis,
immediately after welcoming the presi
dent, and yesterday President Montgom
ery, of the jockey club, of the same city
fell deal immediately after welcoming
the delegates to the water ways con
vention. It seems that a meteor has fallen from
the skies upon Maine, and frighten every,
body out of their wits. We wonder
whether the unmanly, debasing and cow
ardly practice of taking a jug behind a
cellar door or a haystack, and there con
suming its contents and defying the pro
hibition laws so widely prevalent in the
Pine Irec state, had anything to do with
the heavenly visitant. Truly the moral
status of Maine and Rhode Island liquor
drinkers seems alraostjto meet the judg
ment of Sodom and Gomorrah. Ex.
Tins new college of physicians and
surgeons in New York city, to which the
late William II. Vanderbilt contributed
500,000, will be opened to s'udents
Monday. In addition to this institution
there are in the same city the Vanderbilt
clinic, founded by the sons of the late
William II., and the Sloane maternity
hospital, due to the munificence of Win.
D. Sloane, who married Mr. Vandctbilt's
daughter.
The fact that there is some fear among
certain classes of business men of the
occurrence of a panic next year or the
year after is a good indication that jt will
not take place so soon. This fear has al
ready produced one good result in cur
tailing land speculation, shortening the
duration of business credits, and curtail
ing loans by banking institutions except
upon the best of security. Heretofore
panics have come without warning, and
there are many reasons for believing that
this will lie the case, to a large extent, in
tho future. In this particular sense the
expected seldom happens. Olnbe Dem.
The liberals have made a great hit in
Great Britain by introducing the magic
lantern in a political campaign. They
ordered a very large number of slides
and lanterns and every speaker and lec
turer that goes out is well supplied with
them. He relieves the monotony of po
litical debate by throwing on to a screen
in his evening meetings political cartoons
and pictures of evictions in Ireland pho
tographed on the spot. The effect has
boen to greatly increase the attendance
at the meetings. The government has
had a committee meeting and has deter
mined to follow suit. It will supply its
lecturers and stumpers with tory pictures
and endeavor to stem the tide by fight
ing the evil ono with tire. State Joiir
nul. " Ax important article for health-seekers
will appear in the November Harper's,
under the title of'The Winter Climatic
Resorts of Three Continents," by William
Smith Brown. Mr. Brown has for forty
years made the matter a special study in
his wide travels, and masses into nine
pages the net result of his researches re
garding the invalid resorts of Egypt,
France, Italy, Algiers. Spain, Switzerland
and the United States. He specially em
phasizes the vital characteristics of the
chief places in this country to which pil
grimages are made for recuperation of
health and shows that each particular local
ity has its own quality of iniluence.adapt
cd to a certain class of invalidism, and a
limited season of benefit, which must be
carefully regarded if any remedy is to be
derived. What tiie medical profession
has failed to do he has accomplished, by
a broad and careful investigation of all
the health resorts of Europe, Africa and
America, revealing the short-comings and
the advantages of each site.
Tnis free trader acknowledges that
there lias been unexampled development
of the resources of the country since 18(10.
He conccdes'that the wages of Jwoiking
men are higher aud 'the cost of living
lower now than then. The tariff, how
ever, in his opinion, has had much less
to do with this change than inventions
and thcij cheapening of labor processes
have. Therefore it is to the mechanical
skill and dexterity of the people rather
than to any statutory enactments that; the
improvment is doe. Inventiom Las un
doubtedly been one of the immediate
causes, but the chief and primal cause
has been the tariff. This policy has kept
the Amarican market for the American
producer, and thus built up vigorous do
mestic industries. The competition to
which this state of things gave rise, has
as the pioneers and teachers of ths pro
tective policy predicted, proven an
indicative to the development
of inventive skill and thus
simplified, improved and cheapened the
methods of production in nearly every
industry. If there had been no tariff in
the past quarter of a century, there
would have been comparatively little
inducement for invention, and conse
quently the workingman would get less
for what he sells (his labor), and be com
pelled to pay more for what he buys than
he docs to-day. Olole Democrat.
Dr. Depew Talks of Blaine.
Fro. n tlio Chicago Times.
"Well," said Mr. Depew, while his left
foot beat a tattoo on the carpeted floor
of his apartment, "I know that Mr. Blaine
docs not particularly desire the nomina
tion, and yvt, as a matter of fact, he has
no opposition to that ollice. It is a pecu
liar condition of affairs, but there is prac
tically no opposition in the country to
Mr. Blaine's nomination."
''I tell you," he added after a quiet
pause, during which the nervous foot was
also inactive, "the American people have
instinctively a deep-seated sentiment in
favor of fair play. When Mr. Tildcn
was a candidate for thj presidency there
was a large public sentiment, in which I
as a republican did not share, that resolv
ed itself into an almost general belief
that Tildcn was elected as president of
tho United States, and if he had been
nominated again he would have been
clecteii, as sure as guns," and Mr. Depew
brought his right hand down upon the
arm of his chair with forcible emphasis.
"Now," said he, "the people are of the
firm belief that a hysterical response to
an asinine address, delivered by a phe
nomenal jackass with a reverend cogno
men, resulted in the defeat of Mr. Blaine
for the presidency at last election, and if
he should be nominated again the result
will be far different. As it was, he was
defeated only by 700 votes, and since
that time the people have had an oppor
tunity to estimate what they got and
what they have lost by that result."
New Deoarture-
We the unsersigncd druggists of
Plattsmouth do hereby announce to our
patrons and friends that we oan heartily
endorse and recommend the following
remedies of the Quaker Medicine Com
pany: Balycat's Fig Tonic, Dr. Watson's
New Specific Cough Cure, and Heap's
Arnica Salve, for the reasons that we
know what they contain, and are the re
sults of science applied practically.
Will J. Warrick.
He Knew Better Than to Claim It
There were about half a dozen of them
and they had been off somewhere in the
country. They were all piled on a wag
on, and ns they passed one of the num
erous cottageB a pretty woman accident
ally turned a white handkerchief loose.
There were six handkerchiefs waying
wildly in the breezes in one instant.
"By Jove, she's pretty. I wonder who
she is? That Was meant for me."
"It wasn't; it was meant fcr nic," said
everybody but a little old man sitting
on the wagon hidden from sight.
"Well," he said, "1,11 bet it was not
meant for me."
"Why?"
"Because that was my wife."
And a'dead'silence fell on the picnic.
Procrastination.
Time once gone can never be re
called." is the remark only too often
said by those who neglect themselves.
Dr. Warner's new SpceilieCough Cure
Comes to the world's rescue
And denies death of its rightful due.
Please report your experience to your
druggist and neighbor, that the world
may have proof no cure, no pay re
quired Price 50c and 1. For sale by
Will J. Warrick.
Raising a Church Debt.
Circus Agent (to Deacon Jones) Will
you allow me to put some posters on the
church fence?
Deacon Jones (reflectively) Well, I
dunno as t'would do any harm, but you
would have to pay something for the
privilege. The church is trying to get
out of debt, and every little helps.
Cricus Agent I'll give you a couple
of tickets.
Deacon Jones All right, co ahead.
Hon. H. W. 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 Sal ye
which is sold on its merits for any use
that a salve can bo used. No cure, no
pay. For sale by the following drug
gist Price.2jc per box.
W. J. Warrick
Pick out the piect of Real Estate you
wnnt and then call for j rice and terms
upon Windham & Davi s. Over Bank
of Cass Co. 18tf.
TIIE SHOEMAKER.
HOW MACHINERY HAS SUPPLANTED
THE MAN OF THE LAPSTONE.
Mlaerlo WliUU tho Knlgbt of St.
CrUpln Inflict on Their Fellow Crin
t lire Fact Concerning it Kuvolutlon
izetl Trade Manufacturing I'lunt.
' "Ah, but I have no trouble with new shoes,"
explains the self complacent egotist, who al
ways has a patent for everything. 'I only
wear them n few hours each day, and some
times take a whole mouth to break in a new
pair."
But why does lie only wear them a few
hours each day? .And why does he need a
month to make his fret comfortable? Simply
because if a mini in in any respect a tenderfoot,
ho must always keep his new shoes from ono
week to thirty days on probation before ho
will bo quite certain that he will not have to
throw them away or give them to the poor.
Sometimes they revive a latent corn which
tho old shoes in their turn had brought to life,
and then permitted to lie inactivo for a fow
months. Sometimes the leather proves to lo
too hard and inflexible, and binds tho foot
like a vise until the bones nehe and the
niyscles become benumbed. There are men
who can hardly pass a shoo btoro without a
pang, and whose keenest sense of human
misery is derived from their experience with
new shoes.
It may bo held that the shoemakers are not
altogether to blame for the miseries which
they inflict on their fellow creatures. Not
many years since women prided themselves
on having small waists, and sought by arti
ficial means to muke their figures look like
hour glassed. But the corset makers were
not the parties to be held responsible. Tho
fault was to be charged to a jHjrverted artistic
sense, to a conviction that an unnaturally
small waist added to tho feminine power of
fuscination. It did nothing of the sort. It
only made the female figure look ridiculous,
and such also is tho effect of many of tho
fashions which obtain iu shoes on tho shape
of the feet: But no matter. If the shoe it
self, without any reference to the purpose for
which it was fashioned, bo only an ugreeable
object to tho eye, there will bo a man found
to put his foot in it.
And what is the result? Hard nnd soft
corns, bunions, much suffering pnd some
times profanity. "What, too, is the artistic
result? Wero any artist to paint a picture
with baro feet, aud follow accurately tho
most perfect model that could be found among
tue adult shoo clad population of Europe or
America, he would fail to get a place for his
work in any respectable exhibition. To this
complexion has it come at last. Wo must go
to the nursery, tho savago tribes, or to the
antique, if wo wish to know what nature in
tended to create when she fashioned a human
foot. Babies, North A merican Indians, aud
statues have toes, but civilized men and
women havo them no inoro. They have only
a compressed mass of bones, muscles, and
corns where toes ought to bo permitted to
grow and expand. But wero tho fashionable
shoemaker to defy the prevailing taste nnd
offer a covering for tho foot that would per
mit a natural growth, ho would find no cus
tomers. According to tho modern conception
of what Ls shapely, nature made a mistake
when she fashioned a foot broader at tho toes
than at the instep. But tho modern idea of a
pretty foot is about as nearly coiTect as tho
recently modern idea of a pretty waist; ami
were shoes modeled after tho exact natural
form of tho foot, we should soon learn to won
der how wo ever tolerated any o'.her model.
No industrial revolution was ever more
complete than the revolution which has taken
place in shoemakiug during the last twenty
five years. Tho cobbler we shall have alwaj's
with us; but thehoemaker has almost com
pletely changed his form. It is to ho feared,
too, that he is no longer entitled to claim tho
protection of his tutelar St. Crispin, for ho
has become the servant of a witch. And such
a witch! Driven to its highest capacity a
singlo McKay machine has been known to
clap the soles upon 1.200 pairs of new shoes
within ten hours, aud it takes 300 hands,
working in great part with yet other ingeni
ous labor saving machines, to feed one of
these insatiable stitchers, and clear away the
tables after it has finished. It will bo seen,
therefore, that the McKay machlno is not
only a witch itself, but that it is a boss witch.
In the best provided shops tho side stitching,
heeling and even the lasting are done by sub
sidiary machines, and so also would be ths
cutting, wero it not for tho Imperfections of
tho leather, which demand the services of a
practiced ee iu selecting the parts that are
fit for use. Yet the work is done with so lit
tle effort that a motor of singlo horse power
would drive a half dozen or more of the Mc
Kay machines at one and the same time.
After this statement of its capacity it will
bo seen that it is only fair metaphor and not
hyperbole to call tho machine a witch. It is
eminently proper, too, that the chief seats of
its activity should be found at Iynn nnd
Haverhill, cities in the same state with witch
killing Salem, and not so distant as to be un
congenital in their origin. But the city of
Lynn, notwithstanding its reputation, is not
so much a monopolist at shoemaking as
Bomo persons suppose. New York claims
everything, and within her wilderness of
brick and mortar she is continually evolv
ing phenomena that are a surprise to even
her own citizens. Who would beliovo that
within a mile and a half of the city hall,
mainly, indeed, within a quarter of a mile of
that place, there are almost as many firms of
shoe manufacturers as are to be found in
either of the cities of Lynn or Haverhill? The
statement would not bo believed were it not
possible to furnish tho figures. But it is quito
possible. There are ISO firms in Lynn, ITS in
Haverhill, nnd 172 in New York.
But Lynn will boast of the size of her fac
tories, and point to the annual value of her
new shoes as evidence of her general superi
ority. It is certain that she has some pretty
largo factories, and can point to one firm that
turns out 10,000 pairs of shoes each day. But
there is a firm in New York that produces
shoes to tho value of about $1,000,000 annual
y,and there are others that run well up among
the hundreds of thousands. Estimates differ
on tho comparative valuo of tho products of
the two cities, but in this respect wo must
concede to Lynn a long lead over tho me
tropolis. Judging from the report of goods
shipped through Boston between the first of
last January and tho last of August, and giv
ing to Lynn her probable proportion of tho
total, her annual product cannot amount to
much less than $25,000,000, whilo tho annual
product of New York is not estimated at more
than $10,000,000.
It has been said that the capacity of the
shoe manufacturing plant in the L'uited
States is equal in three months to the market
demands of one entire year. This may bo
true so far as the shoemakiug machines are
concerned, but it is evidently not true when
the question of skilled workmen for feeding
and operating the machines is involved. Say
that the manufacturers in tub city make
4,000,000 pairs of shoes each year. That
would be about the proper estimate on a valu
ation of S 10,000,000. But there arc 1.500,000
pairs of fet in New York city alone, and
they would manage to get through with
pretty nearly 4,000,000 pairs of shoes in ono
year, even were thero no demand from
abroad. New York Sun.
0150
GPIf
For tliu next few weeks choice of lots in South l'nrk wn
be had for Sli0 Purchaser may pay all in cash; or one
half cash, tho other half in one year; or, ono third cash, bal
ance in one and two years; or cash, remainder in month
ly installments of .?!(; or, any one aroeini to construct a
residence worth $'2jO0 and upwards will heiven a lot with
out further consideration.
MOW IB THE TIME
to select your residence lots, even though you should not
contemplate building at once. One visit to South I ai'K
will convince the most skeptical that it is the most desirable
residence locality in the city, and we will add, that the most
substantial class of buildings oi which riattsmoujh can
boast for the year 18S7, are now bein constructed in this
handsome addition.
ieauliful Shade Trees
OF
STUBY DESCRIPTION
soa rrnTTM i
around and through the entire tract.
Any one desiring to construct a cottage or a more preten
tions residence in South Park, can examine a lare selection
of plans of tin; latest style of residences by calling at our
ollice. Any one desiring to examine property with a view
to purchasing will bo driven to the park at. our expense.
South Park i.-; less than th;c- Joi-lhs of a niihj from th;1 Opera JIoiisu.
It can he reaclit-il eonvenien! 1 y y t it her Oliicao or Liiwoin Avenues,
or south on 7th street.
CALL ON
i. ix winanam or
Sfij
ZDZE-AJEjIEIR. HUNT
TAPIaU AND IPAHGY
f&qub. emeu
WIS HAItK A"M,i:s'i 5.T
M.
Have anything you want fio:.-i l
i!jr:.T
r is n n i ,, r T" r t: r,
SHORT
are always kept rcaoy. CaV? or ti-ht earnams, pall-hoarer w
and everything fur fiuieral iurnished on sliorfnotice. Terms caSi
sap
mm
MOST
A
" -'T-T-iTrTran mm i .1
& BRQwmmm
(it- J ki:i.v
B. MURPKY & CO.
two v.h,-hi ciu-i iu n t wenty-fou
v.-a-'Ji.
r
7 H f
AND
DRIVES,
t$mm&
olio
id