pWtetii0tttl PIjATTSMOUTIrT, NEBRASKA, SATURDAY EVEMN(i, OCTOIiEU 1S87 NU3IRKR A'Z. FIRST YEAR Mayor, i:ii-k, Trviurrr, Attorney, I'olice .lude, MiirKlii.Il, .1 I SlMI'HOM : H s.mi r ii J II Watmiman li ICON I'l.AHIi A Maixii.k . J S Matiikwh V II MAI.IcK i r tr ll'm-vtiirii Councilmeu, is: wril, -( "A w w in t it ..... l M'.Io.nks I VM WK.I'.fK ) M it Mi. ici'ii v ( S W IM1TTO.N 4l!l- " I Mcl'.l I I V I'ltN .1 W.lollNS i,CllAIHMAN (i.lllllKK HawkWoiitii Latest by Telegraph. UOKKOWKO ANI STOLEN. irl l .1 W .loll Bo aid IVo.WorkrK ntifi;. I I II llA Treasurer. le,iuiy Tie.vmrer, - Clerk. llu:y Clerk. Clerk of Di-tiicL Court. Sln-riit. Ix-jiuty sheriff. Surveyor. -Attorney. Suat. of Tub richoids. County J u lire. J A. I'AMl'llKI.I, TlI'M. I'oI.I.'MK .1. M IJolSI NSON :,:. Mci'iiKicsit.x W. C. SHliWALTKIi J. KlICKNIIMt 15. J. Vkhmans A. AlAI'Ol.K Al.l.KX lilCK-S-iN Mavnaiii Si 1XK J. UUSSSCLI.. i;f)A!tl) OK SUI'EKVISOKS. Lorn F-.i.T.. Ch'ni , Weeping Waiter a. i;. ni. - A. U. 1)1 KSIJN', 1'l.lltSlllHlllll bbiitwood GiviG soGU-vrri'tS. t iass coin;". No. us. I o. o. i Meets -A-verv Tuesday evriiiii'i of each week. All transient brolluis an- n-t cctfally invited to MttClld. flMtIO l.i:s-: NO. ."I. A. O. U. W. Meets cverv a'.teraat - Krlday cveniM,; at Jv . of 1. '1 raiisient brother are resi.-i-liii!ly in vited toattend. I '. K W bite, Master Workman ; K. A, ' altc. 1' oieiaa-i .1. K. Morris. Ueeoi-di Ayoub's Companion Hanaad. London, Oct. "jx. Gen. Xur Mahomed, companion of Ayoub Khun in his llight from Teheran, lias been captured an. publicly hanged at Herat. Rewarded for His Bravery. Austin, Oct. 2. J. K. Smith, thy ex press messenger who recently killed two train robbers near LT 1'aso, was paid $'2,000 yesterday ly order of Governor Ito.ss. as a reward for his act. Smith will probably get 2.0!0 more from the ex press company and $ 1 ,0'J0 from the rail road company. Steamship Arrivals- Nkw Yoi:k, Oct. Arrived Tin I'ritannie, from Liverporl; the Canada, froniLondon; the Aller, from Jlremen; the Wieland, from Hamburg. O i' i'.kx.stown, Oct. 2H. Arrived The Wisconsin, from New York. Hamiu-iui, Ovt, 28. Arrived Tin Moravia, from N-w York. Crovsy Threatens to Resign Pauls. Oct. 2'.). This evening l'rtsi-d--i.t ( Jrevev, fit the cali:u t council, in 1"..J Morgan, Overseer ; ! ...,! ,.. ,--,nl.l i v;.ni if ;in inquiry was not instituted into AVilsun's of Aineriira .Meets .second aid fiiurtli SI'in- d ay veiihiii at K. or I". hall. All Irunsieiit brother are reijuesteil to in-'el with ii!. I.. A. N'.vc ner, 'ener:ille I lonsul : 1 . I". Nile-, oil iiy Adviser ; l, !5. Siaitii, I'.x liaitker ; W. O. Willrtts. fleik. in. vTrs.Min;ni i.oixin xii s. a. o. r. w. M-er- everv alternate Kiid.iy i v.-iiin at Kockwood hall at oVI-ii-k. All tla::.-.ienl i);-..:li-ers an- respectfully i t. v it t to :-.t t-n!. -'. A. liiit-iehe, M. W. : S. I', llre -i;. IC-rei!iau : S. C. Wli.le. Ilijisorder ; S. A. Ns.veo:uer. ) ver.-eer. McCOM:HI POST 45 C. A. R. i:osrr:i:. J. W. .TaitNso.-; '(,;,imaader. '. s. viss senior Viea " i K a. rs Junior " ;wu. Mi.i:s .. AlJ't'::i:t. Ac'-susr r.:trs n ! -H- M ai.oX Ii n '.'lileei of the l lj . CilAHLM l'"tit: " " '-u.ird Hkn.i. IIkmi-'.k Serr:t M i for. J A'V)i: f ii !:! .km an. . ..Quarter Mas1 it Seivt. Ai.eiiA Vni.:iT. . l'o I C"ia;lani Meetiii Saturday eveaiu. p. , A. MCtiWai -DEALER IN Watclies, Clocks, Jewelry AND- Sp3ciaIAttsiit on airsuWatGli RepairinE WE WILL HAVE A Fine;-: Line -OF- HOLIDAY GOODS, ALSO Library - Lamps -OF- in ilf VMM mi TTti inn AT THE USUAL Cheap Prices AT- allcged Cdiiiiection with thr- decoration scandal. (Jrevcy said he did not object to Wilson being tried in th'j regular way for any olTens, but he must .bject to the system of blackening his son-i:i-law,s character, not only through tiie press, but through the committee of the cham ber embracing personal nendes and party hatreds. FhvjUcnt assured the president that the chamber held him in undimin ished respect and urged him to overlook his haMy, unconsidered action rnd recon sider his dcctMon to r sign. It was finally arranged that Grcycy shcul : await the report of the committee. Train Wreckers get in tholr Work. JoMHT, 111 , Oct. 2S. A telegraph pole 1 iid across the Rock Island road track between Minooka and Morris this niornining about : o'clock wrecked a freight train of sixteen cars. The en gine er, John Mills, and the fireman Or)T were instantly killed, and the head brakeman fatally injured. The mis creants doubtless intended to wreck the Kansas City express, due here at 4;:;0. The passenger was fifteen minutes late, and the freight pulled out ahead to run to Minooka, striking the obstacle w ith the tibove result. The excitement here continues to grow since it was definitely ascertained the obstruction was placed on the track with the deliberate purpose of wrecking the passenger train. The excitement is augmcuted by the lnlief th at the Schwartz-Wat- express car mur der and robtbery gang planned the crime. A large reward has already been offetcd by the Rock Island company, ml the detectives are on the ground. WILL THE SEVEN SWING- Arguments in th j Anarchist Appaal Concluded- Washington, Oct. 2$. When the Su preme court opened at noon, Attorney General Hunt stated that lie had practi cally finished his argument when court adjourned last night and would not re sume today, but would give way to Gen. Grinnell, who spoke forty-five minutes paying particular attention to the com position of the jury. After reviewing britily the ground covered by the argument of Attorney Gen eral Hunt yesterday, Grina.;U said so far composition of the jury was con- S31ITH& BLACK'S. I" "7 cerncd, whom any objection was raised by the de fense, and that was the man San ford, L 01 TffYr K ! tempt had been made, he said, to show r fjyj ljH( j J J J j that another juror named Denker had lLll li l! 1 U I Vii U U 1 I ! also been objected to, but in reply to ! that it was only necessary to say that at the time Juror Denker was accepted the defense had the right to 142 peremptory challenges. If they had objected to him very strongly they might have used one of those peremptory challenges to ex clude him. After reviewing at some INSURANCE AGENTS 2.' It ' Represent the following time tried and lire-tested companies: American Central-Si. Louts. Assets SI.US.ff'l Commercial Uaio:i-Er.?lai:d. Fire Association-P!iilade!iIiia, Franknn-lM-.r.aeli'l-.ix. Home-New Yoik. Its. Ci, of crth America. Phil. 1 i.tvtrpool&Lond.Mi & illnbe-Kng North British .t Mercantile-En Norwich ITaion-Ealand. Mprius&cld F. & M.-Spt ingfield, Total A?sets,$2-ll.774 mi Afjnstei ani Paid at tins Agency length tht? cast s of Juror San ford and Denker, Grinnell saidjhit every man on the jury was duly qualified under the common law. It was iu no s. nsi a class jury; three oi the men were in'-n who a'.uzr-G ) labored with their own hand-; cne of 3 ' them was a man of foreign birth and 1 tjj re wa:. uot a ca;:t:dist ameng them. C.l:.-.:l.7St ' . , . ..,.. After speaKiitg about lorry miuuies Grinnell clos?d mul G-:n. liutler r.rose and object- d to the latter part of Grin ncll's argument on the ground that it went outside of the printed record and brought in extraneous matter to which no reference had btforc been made. 357S.75 l.Jl".4' 3,04t.al3 (Jen. liutler ctiticised the trial court severely for overruling the defendant.! objection to San ford, the twelfth juror Here was a juror sitting in judgment over the lives of seven men entitled to an impartial trial, that admitted he had formed opinions, hat I expressed opinions and was told to keep them, and who hai decided prejudices against socialists and anarchi.-ts; but the defendants' counsel having exhausted their challenges were conmelled to take him. In fact, the judge of the (rial court said, after over ruling these last challenges, tiiot they would have to accept the juror because thev could not heli themselves. Gen. j liutler in concluding complained that by the course the cause -had been mud'; to take in the supreme' court, the hearin' was upon an imperfect, diminished and untrue record coming from the Illinois supreme court. Gen. Butler finished his argument at 2:45 p. in. This closed the case, and the court at once proceeded with the docket and at 4 p. m. the con adjourned until Monday next. Legal Notice. In the DiVriet '"oinf of C;;ss C'ouuty, Nebraska (U1AKI.KS i:. AT lis, vs. PETKi: F. Ki'KKXM:. ACNVS 1M.TFNEK HIS VVII'K. 1111. Ol.D'S YVAr.OV !) . 'VII. 1,1AM DKI'.KI Ml &.('. AM T!1K 15 V.NK Ol-' rASSCOUN I V. NKHltASKA. Notice to (Vil.'i V;it;on Toiiip my and William I)ennsr &' .. iiffensiaiits. i on win take i.u tiee that on tiic jainl dav oi 0-loli-r. 1-S7 I haiirs I-!, Vates. I'l iintili herein, lllrrl his n-tiiioa in the Histi ir't t'oui t o( t'ass t'ounty. Neh,- tskii against all the above named DefeiKbuiis. t o object and srayt-ri.f which aie to IcivcIom' a pertain i:iortai;j cxetit. il by the Defendants I'eter K. Kiili!vi- and jrnes linlfner to the I'laintiiT iiii'Hi lots 7 stinl i block Pt. eitv of I atts;noti!h. Cass Coin-iy. Netiraska to.-i ei!i-e the payment of a eerlam iifom io: y unto dated .lulv alst lssi for the smn of oire Tbi'i-r.uid 1 lollars i l.O KO wlib-h s id not.? ;i:id inorTea!.'' was ti ne and nay.tble on tin t'.i"st dny of Aumi-t 1SS7. There is now due on said note am! rie.ii t IMire the sum of :ie i'hoitsand l!ol';-.;s (ji.booi teLrether with interest tln-rt'iui at. Ihe r:it f ten percent per annum from the f:rtt tl.iv f Aiifiti'-t l?s, fur " hieh sum I'laintiiT prays or decree ; I hat defendants be r ijnir l t )''' t be sum ef One thousand dollars, or said prei; i-if-s be sold to t-a:isly the auitaoi'lit found due t'.ii. A aintilT. Ymi are r'iilTcrt t- arisw-r said p-i'tlon on or before tlx- 'jsth d,.v of November !ss7. Hated Oetober 22nd 1!S7. CitAs K. Yatfs by AlAKQl'KTTE, IJI'.WKKSK .1- llAI.I.. Attorneys. ANTICIPATION. Our lives are mostly passed ia dim to-morro'.vs. Whose only libt shines on them from todays, Reflected by ourselves, and much or little. According as our brightness throws thu rays. If we remain today within the shadow The morrow looms up darkly in our siLt, Kut if tlit r.unllsbt shin- oat full upea us, The cominjj day conceals nil but the bright. C. M. Hammond. HUNTING SORA IN THE SOUTH. Chasing the Kecd IJiruA in the 7arslics of tlio .James Itivrr A Carious Notion. Tho season for s-ra begins Boptembcr 1. Sora is the local name of the retxl birds which in tho season inhabit the marshes and swnmps in great numbers. They are hunted only at high tide. The creeks, tributaries to tlio James river, aro tide water creeks, with deep currents anl navigable some distance for boats. Spreading out now and then like lakes they aro pierced with maishcs, which else where border them. Theso wo tho hunting grounds of the sera. Tho tide rises, when full, about two feet above the level of tlio marsh. At this timo the hunters set forth. Each man gets in a flat bottomed boat with a negro to push with hi: paddle, or when the tide falls a little tho darky has no hesi-r-ti in jumping out into the mud and puihlug the boat. With tho rise of tho tide the sora, that has duck like habits, rises to tho tops of tho marsh grass and skims along tho water. As tho boat is pushed through tho grass it sturt3 them. They are considered poor flyers, flying low and slowly, and easily shot on tho wing. Sometimes during one tide a skillful shot will bag a hundred birds, but forty is about tho average. The food of tho sora is tho wild oa and where it grows abundantly the birds gather i:i great numbers. Up among the swamps of tho Chickahominy is the home of the wild cat, and there hunting tho sora is done after another fashion. Tho hunter, with his boat and his negro, goes out by r.ight. In the bow of tho boat is fixed a torch of burning pii'O knots. Attracted by the light, the birds come toward it in eut-U numbers that they are killed with the paddle. This i3 sport of a brutal kind, but very successful. A l.e sora is a peculiar bird. At low tide a man can walk in the marshes from ono end to the other and although he may Lear the bird occasionally, he is not to be seen. But with the tide ho comes to the surface in num bers. After tho first white frost he is seen no more. Aa old hunter savs: "I have been in the marshes hunting sora one evening and found then thick; but the next morning, there having Wen a frost in the night, not a bird conld bo found.:' All sorts cf ideas are held as to what be comes of tho sora so swiftly and mysteriously disappearing. There are people there who gravely believe they go down into tho mini and are changed to frogs. I have heard a voting girl object to eating sora because she always felt sbo was eating a frog. This idea gams from the fact that tho sora has such a bad l-eputation for flying. Hunters say tney aro too fat to Cy. They are tho richest bird cf this country in flavor, and ry much better worth eating than the Sivinny reect uira that is served in rew i ork restaurants. The probability is that with tho first frost theso birds leave in a body overland, flying by mht, aru! that their powers on the wing lsr.vi been untierL'stimated. It is very strange tha r.o pornon has ever seen thcia in flight. tince the flocks must be innncnse, as a whole district is depopulated at once. ICew York Evcninrj Sun. - Caused by Fright. Savants have discovered that tho hair of tho prong -hornetl antelope, like that of man, is made to stand erect by sudden fright. In vestigation in this lino might toko in the hedgehog and the ridgepole cat. New York A NOVEL SPECTACLE. CONTEST BETWEEN A BULL BUFFALO AND AN ENGLISH BULLDOG. nir iz v rr.jn J X y JLLi JJXi. J. JLJL VJ( 21 STORE An Kxritliije; Inridcnt 'Which Orcurn-J when Herds of Itlson Uoumcd the IMaius of the West Ztciiiurkublo Kx umplo of Cfeuino Con ray.t: Tho nearest herd swerved; but, contrary to their instincts, camo roaring down Lo'do and parallel to our mounted Jfroojicrs-. Thfs was a liitlo too much, even for well trained, disciplined cavalry soldiers, and the men, in their intense excitement, forgetful of order.;, commenced a rattling fusilado from their saddles. Tho buffalo veered off, but not lo fcre several were wounded. The firing wr.J .sternly ordered to coast-. One gigantic bull, a lea.ler, was nearest; ho was badly wounded. As was tho case on nearly all marches of troops changing station on tho frontier, many dogs of all ages, f;i.s and degrees had, under protest, aceo.iipaiitsl tho column b the Colorado river; hero many of tho woill less ours were left or drowned while, fordimj but there wero eaveral remainin-' and it wt: theso that had turned thebuibilo down tho column. Tlirro was among them a large, white En;. Dsn bull clog belonging to tho regimouCl baud, lie ws a ihjw jr.'ul brute, and had boon tramed to pull uowu beovea at tho Slaughter corral at Kcrt Concho. Ho wa-i, withal, a prime favorite with tho soldiers notwithstanding his ferocity. Tho pack .f dogs were in full cry after tho rtainpodin.-i herd of bellowing Leasts as thoy rushed unit toro along tho column with their peculiar roHaig gait, liui "King," tho bull dog, sin Pied out the immense wounded leader, who bad now slackened his speed and was falter ing 1:1 Ins tracks, lie sprang at his throat with great courage, fastened upon him, an J tlio battle coimueuecd, with tho column as silent spectators. A KOVEL, SPECTACLE. 1. was n novel spectacle. Tho bron::e?l t!-:ojH-rs; the great shaggy beasts thundering by; tho white topp-ed wagon train clo!-d no aiKl lialtot; the iieeimcr shadows, mid t'm most limitless streteh of .suri-oiind.'ncr l-rairio and vast, f.olitude. The bu:l went tlow n upon bis knee;, but so great v. aa Lis stren gth that he quickly arose and whirled tho dog in great circics over ins lioad. "img ' had been taught never to lot go. Thu ent.ro command now watched with breathless attention the apparently unequal struggle, expecting every moment to cee the d-jg Tinned to death. Down went the bull again on his knee ;, thi:; time not from any weakness, but to gore th' uog; rising, be would .stamn his tect in ratf. .i ....,.- ,.- , . . ' ii.-.i MHth.ig iiim a wane, no would resumo swinging and snapping him liko-a whip cord tnmugn tbo air. iho foam, now blood v. flecked tho long, tawny beard of tho bison bull, ills eyes, nearly concealed iu tho long, matted hair that covered his shaggy head, nasuci lire, and his rage knew no bounds. The dog, which had commenced th'j fight a pure white, now turned to a spotted crimson lrom blood which had flowed from tho buiialo?s wounds, and still his bruto instincts. tenacious courage and training led him to hold on. Had ho let go for u moment tho ta-acd bull WOU.U uav gored bin to death before ho could havo retreated. The bull crew perceptibly weaker; ho rose to his feet less ol ton. Ho could no lontrer throw tha rio in circles above his Lead. The blood stained "King"' to a more vivid red. and bearimed with dirt, he had lost all semblaneo to hia former self. All wero anxiouslv loobinT foi- thf eti-uggle to end. Impatienco was ohreadv h'spla j-ed uixu tho men's faces, when suddenl v Gen. .Mackenzie shouted, '-Ilitho animal end f ut liim out of his misery !"' It was a merciful command. Two men stepr.ed forward to the enormous beast now on his knees and rock ing to and fro, tho dog still holding on and placing their carbines behind the left s'noul- t-r. to roach a vital point, fired. Ho gavo one great quiver, one last r.pasmodie rocking, and spread himself upon the vast prairie dead. Not till then did "Kiu:r" lot col So great had been tho courage of this favor ite dg m his fearful struggle that months after, when an order had been issued for all cur dogs always an accumulative nuisance at a frontier post to bo exterminated. King," iho white bulldog belonging to tho Fourth Cavalry band, was erempted by a peeial order. K. Carter, U. S. A., in Outing. Why tiie Petticoat Must Go. Few people seem awaro how enormously a etiieoat dress of any sort mcreaes tho ap parent sie of the hips until they have seen e same persons m a dhTcreut i. e., two- legged dress. Tho habit of wearing a thvss which, causes iho duality of the form to bo concealed is the true cause of all the errors and strange contortions which seem insepa rable from women s drer.-. it con-nlytely alters the character of ti. figure and eausts an ordinary waist to look l.trge and clumsy. Dress a man in a woman's skirt and his waist immediately appears largo, out of ell 2ropor tion to his height; and ti-is result is the true causo of the compression cf the waist among most European nations. Till it is re moved, it is vain to argue against tight lacir?g. Tho majority cf women also seem unaware how unbecoming a thing is tho tight bodieo, which is the stereotyped form on which their dress bodices uro made. They unconsciously try to improve upon it by making imitation vests and waistcoats and falls of lace down thertmt. But with a loose, flapping skirt an artistic and becoming form of bodice is out of the question, for only a tight bodice can givo the hour glass pinch rendered necessary by tho globular form the legs assume when incased in skirts. Dress. CesocnUar.ts of the Dirt Eaters. Thei-o is a race of negroes in the United States that must be desec-nelants of the dirt eating tribe of Africans known to exist in the interior of iho tlark continent, for I hail a, cook who came from tho back hill country o Ixniisiaiia, which, by the way, is very little known hy outsiders, who was a dirt eater. She said one day that she was going back to the hills, as the black tlirt at Xew Orleans was not good, and she piae-1 for some of .the kind she had always been used to eating, and she went back. I was teild that in certain 6oil where these people live there wes a strong alkali taste whivh they faucied very much. Eating tlirt becomes a habit with them, and when they wander away they still keep up tho desiro until they gut tired of tho mud that is unlike the home article, I have heard of white men who eat dirt, but this negress Is tbo only genuine &y"t eater I ever saw. Ccl George L. CoianiTiglyttn is. GlobDemocr-. Fi:oM To :.f. Klio.M t. TO il'J. sir Wiis IN ALL STYLliS. Eicli kiVcMw nud For Trimnii i. FROM i-i. '! ( A full line d mm - JACKETS FllOM ?2. TO ;10. J0!. V. WECKB-Cii'S DAYLIGHT STOKE. E P i CB Pi il OVEE ALL C0HPETITI01T. The citizens of Cass county will recognize at n glance that the above, bird is a'Ciiss county roo.-t(;r cro-.v.ng loud and over tlicvictory gamed by Soloniqn jTcfjlqn mm m wmi dim of wi goods, MI LI NARY AND CARPETS exhibited oyer all competitor. The award is significant in point f s-i.pnu ay titvle. value and quantity and will command your henrty co;jcuitl-iic ' t . . i 1 ii-. . I . . . .7 , . Wlien we assen mat we nave uas season tne -lainnr. and ino.st varied line of Eii Bry fxGOds, Mwi Osrpl MM L'UliilU To bo found in the city. The ladies of pfaltsmouth and vicinity are rt-vptct fully invited to r dl mu ir.sjict some of the wonderful Manufactured Textile Ftibiiqut-s of the age. Special &ale oi" Stress Cioosls, CJiisiicri, NIk This sale will continue this an J r.ll next week. Great bargains will be olT.r.-d. Vi'o or rcitbor lutf iii idr-iii'r our roo-?ter on the t)3i-; li owii.ir fu ihe cre.it rush and receipt of new goods makinc f-irlier .i;i.oui:een:cnt r ...... ., . . . i .. .i a.: - i :. impossible, but trom this date watcu our auvtrustuRai yivut. thereby. Main street ST White Ffent Dry Goods House. Plattsmouh, Neb