The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, November 22, 1887, Image 2

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    vl:I)c jJlattsinouti) Dailn tjeralb
K1STOTTS JJBO S.,
Publishers & Proprietors.
A ii.-rAT-n friu S:ui Antonio. Tex.,
pays that tli! Mini rose lit that place on
Friil iv about half his usual size. The
wonder is tli it the sun consents to rise at
nil in a state which mocks heaven with a
a democratic majority of over 100,000.
f o,? A tiotrrnt.
Ir ii both interesting and instructive
t the student of human nature to notice
people at th; many stations seating them-rrdvf-s
in the ears. No difference at
which end of the car they come in at,
they will pass vacant seats to look for
better ones beyond; and often persons
coming in at opposite ends will pass
each other and find seats rejected by the
others and appear perfectly contented
The same principal in human nature is
seen in the ever restless moving tide of
people going 'to and fro," changing
locations, always seeking something bet
ter. I'ut besides the natural unrest in
the human mind winch causes a- desire
for chanire, circumstances often make it
necessary. Many people become wealthy
after changing their location, who would
lia; tif. il poor had I hey remained in the
old h.'m -.-tL':id. Any new rich state like
Nebraska ! any flourishing young city
with tin; advantages i'lattsmouth ha:
can iiickly grow to be great and pros
perous if they will take advantage of
ihi longing in human nature for some
thing better ami will set forth their ad
vantages in such a wav as to be attrac
tive and to be seen by the great multi
tude of seekers for a better place, Peo
pbi go It) tin? town or state of which
they n ail in the pnpers most, of great
opportunities to make golden fortunes
in the shortest time. Pluttsmcuth could
soon double her population, aud her
we:Uh. and then just be at the point
v. here the would begin to grow, if she
would adveiiUe her advantages and re
sources as they are. If all her merchants
an 1 business men of every class voukl
liberally advertise in all her papers, daily
and weekly, and thus show tij the busi
jies of the city, as well as increase their
trade. Anil if the majority of the peo
ple in the city would subscribe for them,
read them and then send them away into
all quarters, ca-t. west, north and south,
to active, industrious, ambitious and
restless men, the increase in population,
value of real estate and volume of trade
would astonish the most sanguine
hopeful niuonir us.
and
hours a il.iy. It Inw now b-en ten noma a day a mind to bid for the same, may see nn
for tenty-llve years or h.ore.ai.d we crumble t d coinllete Progress of the Writs
iit that, though we may get more than twice. . ,
!. :..-.. o .llil f.irtv vnr4 nru an.l we are Of Said Lands 111 tllC llftlUlS Ot lIllUIllS
li'ipliiK toet the same or Maer wages tor "Wilson one of the under Clerks of Ses
working eight Iioiim. I knaw the coiiuitin of I Bjons
the iiuchlnWt I better than It wai wheu I first "
loirie.1 th guild ; he ha better pay, better snowier rcaiis.
houvi, tetter education, better living ; una II 1 he r anions Lozenges for curing the
hono he will keen on improving tor th f;0ld stonninj? and oains in the Breast
11 fly yean. Largo machine shops were started , . ,
i...r.,re i36 : on- iu Low-11 employed over l m he Kmkhost (Anglic, whooping cough)
meu on cotton machinery. New the country are to be sold by George Anderson at the
U dotted with them. rormy part I d-n I warn foot af F:(th Mercot. and at George
any more of the good old times. The present
time i the bent we have had, though I hop
not the best we hall ever see. In liity jean
we have reduced our hours of labor from four
teen to eight hours a day ; eur wages are
doubled and the neceenltiea of life are much
cheaper (a barrel of alt. which cost 93 b) years
ago, has been sold In Michigan for 75 centx).
The grciit cure of dmnkennens Is very much
diiniuished. We live in betir homes, heitei
warmed and lighted, and we arebtterclot!u-it.
A high s-hool education is within the reaeii of
every child : books are free to all ; the poorest
ljboier who meet with an accident hi our
streets receives surgical aid that no king eoulu
purchase fifty years a?o. Our great railroads
distribute the fruits of labor so that faminci
are Impossible, Hcef killed on th prairies is
sent a'l ever the country, and supplies the
markets of Europe. Kisli from the salt seas
and from our great lakes ae eaten fret-h all
over the continent, and tropical fruits are
peddled round all our t reels. Sioux City
Journal.
Montray's Shop opposite to the Main
Guard. Tri e 8 sh. the Box."
ROTHSCHILD'S TERRIBLE REVENGE.
SUCCESS DUE TO ADVERTISING.
Interview with Robert Bonner iNe
York Tribune: "Yes, I believe in adver
tising, and have always acted up to my
belief. The first time the New York
Herald printed sixteen pages was when
How ltetributlon One Overtook the Hunk
of Enylaud No Laughing Matter.
An amusing al venture la related us having
hupiened to the Bank of England, which had
committed the unpardonable bin of refusing
to discount a large bill drawn by Anselm
Rothschild, of Frankfort, on Nathan Roths
child, of London. The bank had haughtily
replied that thoy discounted only their own
bills, not those of private persons; but thoy
had to do with one stronger than the bank.
"lYivate persons !" exclaimed Nathan when
the fact was reported to him. "I will make
these gentlemen see what kind of private
persons we are."
Three weeks later Nathan Rothschild who
hod employed the interval in gathering all
the 5 notes he could procure in England and
on the continent presented himself at the
bank. lie drew from his pocketbook a 5
note, and they naturally counted out five
sovereigns, at the same time looking quite
astonished that the Baron Rothschild should
have personally tmubled himself for such a
trifle. The baron examined one by one the
coins, and put them in a little canvas bag;
then drawing out another note a third a
tenth hundredth he never put the pieces
of gold into the bag without scrupulously ex-
I gave them an eight-page advertisement
at regular rates. I once paid the Tlibune amining them, and in some instances trying
:).000 for an adertisement. and I traced them in the balance, as the law gave him the
4,000 letters to it. You ask how I man
aged to do that. The number of ray
office was No. 44 Ann street, and the
press-room was No. 48. In that adver
tisement I used the latter address for the
first and only time. When the press-room
burned out received more pity and con
dolence than I liked."
A RARE OLD JOURNAL.
The Cony pf the Edinburgh Courant
of 1705 Now In San Francisoo.
right to do.
The first pocketbook being emptied and the
first lag full, he passed them to his clerk and
received a second, and thus continued till the
bank closed. The baron bad employed seven
hours to change 21,000, but as he had also
nine employes of his house engaged in the
same manner, it resulted that the house of
Rothschild had urawn 210,000 in gold from
the Bank of England, and that he had so oc
cupied tho tellers that no other person could,
change a singio note,
Everything which bears the stamp of eccen
tricity has always pleased the English. They
were, therefore, the first day very much
amused at the little pique of Baron Roths-
child. Thay laughed less when they saw him
return the next day, at the opening of the
Information to capita! Seeking Investment.
POINTERS ABOUT PLATTS MOUTH.
It is tl.e .Kwny to tho great South Platte country
It is Htuattal on tlic Mi.uuri JJivor at the mouth
'the Platte, at a point about half way listwcen Chi
cago au-1 Jjenvcr, only two hours by rail from Lincoln the capital, and iortv minutes from Omaha, tho
metropolis ol the btate.
Ponlation about 0,000 and rapidly increasing.
Has one ot the linest systems of Water Works in the Stale.
Streets are well lighted by gas.
A street railway in operation.
(trades ol the streets established, and bonds voted lor tho purpose of constructing iseweiagc and
paving of Main Street, work to commence thereon in the spring of SSS.
Jias a fine four story high school building and six ward school houses. Aside from business housei
over 100 residences have been constructed during the year 1S7.
An Opera House costing 50,000.
Nebraska Preserve and Canning factory, capital 13,000, capacity 300,000 cans per year and em
ploys 40 hands.
.Brick and Terra Works, capital -50,000, capacity 1 0,00s bricks j-.cr day, employs thirty hands.
Plattsinouth Canning Factory, capital $30,000, capacity 1,500,000 cans" per year and employs 125
hands, turns over in one years business about $100,000.
Two daily papers; one Republican and one Democratic.
Schnelbacher buggy and wagon factory.
Pepperberg's cigar manufactory, emplovs lit teen hands, :uid hir"-olv sin i.lies the trade of southwest
ern Nebraska.
Dufuor & Co's. new Packing House.
The great C. 33. & Q. Kailroad machine shops, round houses, ston -hou cf., occ, are maintained at j
this point for the use of its system west of the Missouri IJiver. eiiinloviiiir i;i:.i:v hunlrels of hands, and
disbursing to employes monthly about 30,000.
One ol the finest railroad bridges in the United States mans the Missouri J liver at the Southern
limit of the city.
Over 2,000 miles ot railroad conveys its freight traliic into ai;d through our city.
Ten passenger trains leave Phittsmouth dailv for north, south, east and vest over the C. li. & O.:
K. C, St. Joe & C. P. and the Ti M. 11. li. in Ncbrnskn.
The cheapness of the land around Plattsinouth and its nearness to Ouk-.Vi markets tooethr with
good railroad facilities, make it not only a pleasant place to
ment oi manuiactories.
ide, but a de;-irable place for the establish-
rruin the San Francisco Examiner. 'j
A venerable .Scotch lady of tiiis city 1 bank, Hanked by his nine clerks, and followed
77.? SALUTARY TRUTH.
Tiie oKl s ivinif about a lie well stuck
to is laving a signal illustration iu the
r, ;;' uss iteration of the "deplorable con
ditio;! of labor." The hard lot of th
iaborluii man is the unfailing theme of
the tlci;i:ig"iic, the crank, of envious and
maiicici: and unbalanced minds gener
ally. The only thing in modern life,
lb'.; sole circumstance in the rushing
lrogrc?-s of the day. that attracts their at
tention, i: the fact, if fact it be, that
"the rich are growing richer and the poor
poorer." They have no other description
of labor than that it is "ground down,"
"robbed of its ju-t earnings," "disinhei
itetl by capital," and so on through the
whol-. gamut of distempered growls.
Ail lh : tilings which modern devel
openii.T.t h.-is lrought forth to the ad
vantage of the workingman, alltlicncw
blessings which go to lighten his life and
to make him and his family comfortable,
:iro seduclv-usly ignored anl the effort of :
the. awragc agitator is bent to distort the
truth and to deceive his victims, and
even honest workingmcn.
Such methods may at times lead woik
intuen into false beliefs and false
:ourcs of action, but only temporarily
so. Tlif xonnd sence oC workini,men
will assert itself. It is not possible to
who'iy ci)',T u; m matter b' what de
ceit ami iteration of falsehood, the fact
that in this country the condition of the
laboring man has steadity and even rap
idly improved; that on an average hini
wlf and his family are able now with
their labor to luanlain themselves iu in
comparably more comfort than could be
done fifty years ago. Intelligent labor
ing men, all laboring men whose memo
lies go back thirty or forty or more
yeirs, understand this fact perfectly well.
Its significance ought to be more fuliy
appreciated. Workingmen of the young
er generation, and especially those who
have come from foreign shores, can do
themselves no better service than to in
form themselves honestly and accurately
of this dominant tendency in this coun
try to give to labor a larger share of the
joint results of labor and capital. In
stead ;f being embittered with the dem
agogue's cxagitiations or misrepresenta
tions of the hardships of labor, working
man will tiud protit iu such pictures as
the following om.', which was drawn in
an a blivss tiy J unes Uartlett, a Massachu
setts mechanic, not long ago:
The w.iis of a niacliinest in shop were $1 to
$1.25 a "ay ; one nabob of a patternmaker re
coivel tli ureat sum of $1.50. They went to
woi k at 5 o'cl klu the morning and worked
until 7 :.iaoV!oek a night, with an hour lor
Drea.i.it ai'i laree-ijaaricrs ior uiuucr. ii
wa several jear- before ws obtained eleven
t'uis timo by drays to carry away the specie,
They laughed not at all when the king of
bankers said with ironic simplicity:
These gentlemen liavo refused to pay my
t ills. I have sworn not to keep theirs. At
their leisure onlv I notify them that I have
enough to employ them for two months"
"For two months;-'
"Eleven millions in gold drawn from the
I Bank of Unaland which they have never
Tlio nnnriifl : . ...
The bank took alarm. There was some-
iat was originally thick white paper, roar(1 in fhQ journals that henceforth the
looking like parchment and is well jirc- I bank would pay Rothschild's bills the same as
f.rv.1. Th tvna i-. HsMn.-f. ami tli I theu' ovn.--Uctroit Yeo Jress.
iiuumB nuiin i uimiuuu Dealing In Tax Title.
urc ll.l inches. "I deal in nothing bat tax titles," said a
H i.rondlv ehiimo th. rppnirnltiAn nf .ill gentleman recently to a reporter. "The
hue loyalists by tl.e assertion that is is ,hrjim-rM , livtim e. Candidlv. if I wero
has had in her possession for n.any years
the initial number of the Edinburgh
Courant. It was purchased at a snle cf
curiosities by the lady's husband in Scot
land in the early part of the present cen
tury, lias been carefully treasured by
her.
It is now 182 years old.
is printed on both sides of a single page,
Published by Authority," and is for J out of it I would choose some other calling.
There isn't, the money m it that people imag
.... . i . i . .
me. 1 es it is a periecuy nunorauie business,
sale to the people on Wednesday, the 1-tth
to Monday, he JDth of February, 1703.
Xothing could more clGarly demon
strate the progress of journalism than a
comparison of tkjs so-called newspaper
with those of the present day.
At the time of its publication Queen
Anne of England was making history,
and in the whole range of my experience
there is nothing I have to be ashamed of. I
buy utj tax titles t every sale, and depend
for my profits upon the settlements made
with parties directly interested. Frequently
I lot people of moderate means down without
au tppnse t,o speak of, and I must eay that
tho men of the most means arq the toughest
customers I have to deal with. On certain
hers was a ix-jgn of great events, Scotland I property owned by one of the wealthiest
and England had separate pMiimeuts. arms in tne city i noio tax uue ot twenty-
on their land, but I can get nothing out pf
tarv hero and statesman of the day, and them. They simply ay that the matter isn't
. . . . . I 1 n or Viom cr Inntr a Kav 1 nn want. fv
Chester held was a lad. Ja the Low I '' 7iurZi i " " " .
T I kfil .iTnl tlisn thv stoo Most dealers nrsfor
t i . - n i .1 l 17.11 1 ll:... ' . T . ' -
ouuines r.ngiauu aim iioiianu as ames titles on land outsidd the citv. ive me citv
were liyjiihig tho French. Admiral Ben- titles. Settlements are prompter, come easier
i i
i , i i.. rc -rii:,.u iA.. T.,..l 1 wiuuuv ueiwr.
' a ' . : 'There s pne vhuig the average business
nungiwooi ins captains ior running man does not understand. This Is tnaun-
iwai v.'us kins on the seas in those days, cwtainty attaching to what even experts may
- ' i . r :.i art.A u i
wur :ir voi ipo.ment :i transfurorbequest, nyw matter of unpaid
had not been heard rrom ana great uai- I taxes or a lose lieu comes up after 'years ot
ties fousht without his aid. Extracts quiec possessioa eituei luupy iuu H"
, . .. i t i i i r i I paid or possession rorreitea. XjOok at tnat
from hfters published long after the i, file case full of papers there. Every
events occurred ya3 the only medium for J document is a menace to property now owned
rimimr imnortaht intellifirence "from the in the city or county and liable at any time
ss 1 ' J
front." In a letter from the Amsterdam
Gazette it was learned that "the Grand
Prior of France was fighting the Germans
at Hevcli, whipping them and sending the
news of his success to ile Prke of Ven-
io pass into new hands. A very rich citizen
called on mo yesterday and agreed to pay
ns a handsome fee for simply straightening
out the tax records so that he might know
exactly how he stood and how much he
would have to pay ill order that his land
mi-jlit be free from future trouble because
To healthy, legitimate niamirHctonn enterprises, the citizens oi I'hitt. ni-.th would doubtless make
reasonable inducements to secure their location, and correspondence is soliciini.
"While real estate values are growing firmer t-ueh day, y 1 thn; i - n ihi:; - epeculativf; or fictitious
about them, and good rosiuencc lots can be bought at from l.:A) to y.-J-jO; land near the city can bo pur
chased at from 200 to $100 per acre. Within the next twelve months our city expects lo welcome the
Missourri Pacific and the Omaha and Southern Ituihvnys into its corporate limits.
The above facts are given without exaggeration and the prospects for ihc future pro.-q erity of our
city, more man auove indicated. I'avt'.: : .--ec!.-;!: investments
in Kealty
CO
bo
V either (. liicafo or Lin
coln Avenues or by South 0th Street and may be reached in ten minute.-, v;dl; from the business cen
ter! South Park is more rapidly building up than any other part of the c itv. Correspondence solicited.
are earnestly refpicnted to come and make pr-sonnl investigaf ;on. "While here you will be given u fi
ride to South Park, the most beautiful and desirable resiilen-e locality in citv, wliere lots may
purchased at from $150 to 8200, each. This picturesque addition is ;u; !;! iy either Chicago or'j.i
JULIUS PEPPERBERG,
MANUFACTURER OF AND
WHOLESALE & RETAIL
DEALER IN TIIE
Choicest Brands of Cigars,
including our
Flor ee Peppcrbergo and 'Buds
FULL LINE OF
TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES
always In stock. Noy. 20,1883,
V
Eg s
m i mm
A ii brW f-. jri TP. ZA Lf,'i'.
STAPIsU AMD
m
H 3 1 i
b
For Sale On reasonable terms my
residence on the N. W. corner of Elm and
11th streets. Said property consists of
i block with a good story and a half
house of six rooms, two wardrobes and
one pantry; good well and city water;
twenty-scyen bearing apple trees, and an
abundance of small fruit of all kinds.
tf P. D. Rates.
Real estate and abstracts.
dtf W, S. Wise.
i
Y
G-ROCBIBLlKS,
IK
FEMB dz BR a
m. P. MURPHY & CO.
23
dome, his brother, in the camp before of such claims against it. These taxes are
...i 4 i calculated to make trouble and the only safe
u,uc- ",iVA"" "" way is to see that they're fully paid before
accounts were received tnat it,uuu mm- ycu buy land and then settl regularly your-
i',.iifciiU hrul lv lt.cnns of the ice crossed I elf.' Detroit ewe,
- j r . .
t!is Danube, advanced on a suddeu with
in two leagues of Vicuna, sacking and
b;::nini; twenty-tbree villages as tbey
passed and killing many of the inhabi
tants, which put them iu great consterna
tion in the foresaid city."
Hon 1 ckhI is Defiled.
A reel gentleman is not so fastidious in
his tastes in private or public life as tho
fellow who is trying to cut the proper
caper in all Ins actions. One of the lat
ter class will never hesitate to call a
waiter and demand a cbisa of clonn
Other letters add that "An express has wafer should a fly unfortunately disturb
arrived from Madrid, bringing intelli
gence that 2000 French grenadiers had
arrived iu camp before Gibralter, and
they attacked, sword in hand that part
of tlia rock which overlooked the cov
ered way and made themselves ma.-ters
of it, so that they pretend that place can
not hold out uifiny days."
The only local matter that their report
ers could dig up was an item that the
.Mary Galley had arrived, full of wiue
and brandy.
The advertisements were three in nuni-Lvi-,
The first reads oddly now:
"The Lands of Print at own, lving
within the Regality of Stow, and Shcr- ! P1" by means of powerful presses, and
. f. J . finally elongated by rolling into long sheets
iLdom of Mid-Lothian, are to be ex-or Etrip3 these sheets, which are now of all
posed to a volunteer Roup and Sale, in : colors yello-w, red, green, -white, gray and
o. . tt.,.- t t..,.o n:i. w-;t. Hack are made into scarfs and neckties,
. which, being indestructible, are consider e.1
ing on the Advocate Clcss, opposite the of practical worth. This novelty, It
Old-Kirk-Style, on Thursday the 12th appears, Las found great acceptance abroad,
d,y of April next 170.3, betwixt the hours SSBSi!SS
of 2 and 5 in the afternoon, wLoeyer his 1 ccce i.Vw,
its surface. If the same nice diserimiua
ti'nw;;s always exercised, such fellows
woul-J die of starvation. Every article of
f'od in defiled in some way before it
readies the consumer. Cigars, which,
have their wrappers sealed with Chinese
lips, wine that has been pressed out with
naked fec-t, fruits that have been stored
in filthy cellars, are taken without com
ment, while, for the sake of appearances,
unsturts will send a hotel to perdition on
account of a single fly. Waiter in Globe
Democrat. A "ct.v Metal Indaatry.
Kuhlow's says that In Germany gold,
platina and silver strips are welded, after
tho mosaic stylo, upon a metal ground pre
pared by the incandescent process, then com-
GENUINE :-: SINGER
with high arm and vibrating shuttle,
sold on time. Easy payments or cash
F. J. BICKNELL,
Manager Plattsinouth Branch
WHEN YOU WANT
-OF-
II AS A FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF
AND OTHER LEAUTIFUL THINGS TO RE SEEN.
CLOCKS : Of all rzc, makes nnu nrraMed.
AVATCIIES :-Iockfor1, Frclonin, Clu.abus, Aurora
these movements are so l;i:ov.n that il
All are varraiited.
CHAINS : In this li: e ofood
quite. Ladies' and Ocnl.- .-i;(,.'t (.r
any other kind. Alo en.I.Uni j ins
lockets, l ingt, c-tili button-, .d pe;
SILVKilAVAirr-: d every tic-imp::,.:
: I
ill-
r 1
&c All
need no commendation.
every J. in almost, if J10tl
f ; toJuJ, jolltd jilaie, ,r
x- fecit t oidus ; thaims,
:y jricc..
CALL OX
IL?. 83
Cor. 12th and Granite Streets.
Contractor ami Builder
Sept. 12 Cm.
rrsrr
Dr. C. A Marshall.
3U
ST!
3 JL'iS
rreeervati a f catur:.! teeth a iprc:al.y.
feet h trtracled tr if hout pa in lyu-e of Laughing
Ga.
All work warranto:!. Prices reasonable.
Fitzgerald Ei-ock. I'lati .-siocTii.Ni.B.
2.I2T STH2
a.
tr rrw- i
J. v.
Jo
fuAN II ATT
rOHK PACKLIbS and jkali-:i:s
BEEF, PORE,
LL'TTER AND EGGS.
T i lrn i i
TIIE BEST THE 21 AHMET AFFOIIDS ALWAYS ON HAND.
Sugar Cured Fileals, Hams. Baco r,, Lard, c, cr
ine uci-i ir:i:iis ot Oi., I S. in o,r,c 1 .
UlLS.ij. AaI) HE TAIL. t
CAT ,ir B ,
ot our own make.
vnio
9
".13,..