THE DAILY UEUaLD, l'LAnsMourxi, nxSUKASKA, SATURDAY APRIL 7, 1SS8. The Plattsmoutb Daily Herald. KNOTTS BEOS. Publishers Jk Proprietors. THB rLXTTSMOOTH MKBALD I published e?ery evening except Sunday .aatd WMklf every Thursday mornlug. Kegls tered at lb uostoOlca. Plaltsinoulb, Nebr.. ta tMotd-fUia matter. Ofllca coraer of Vina and fifth aire at. aa copy ana year la advance, by mall. copy parmoatb, by carrier Oaa copy par week, ay carrier One opy ott year. In advaara naeopytiz months, in advance .$8 00 IS REPUBLICAN CONVENTION. The Republican electors of the State of Nebraska are requested to send delegates from the several counties, to meet in con veatieo, at the city of Omaha, Tuesday, May 15, 1688, at 8 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of electing tour delegates to the National Republican Convention, which meets in Chicago June 19, 18S8. THE ArPORTIOXM&T. The several counties arc entitled to re presentation as follows, being based upon the vote cast for Hon. Samuel Maxwell, supreme Judge, in 1887, giving one del-egate-at-large to each county, and one for each 150 votes and major fraction thereof! : COUNTIKS. VOTBB. COUNTIES. VOTES. Adams 14 'Jefferson 9 Antelope t! Johnson 8 Arthur HKearuey s Blaine vKeyal'aha 0 Boone 8:Keun Box Butte Blown . ... 4 Ivii . T P.Lancaster 25 ftuffA'o .14' Lincoln 8 Butler Logan.. Burt tt loup Cats l Madison ... Cedar jMc hereon Charo B. Merrick 3 8 1 7 Cherry 6 Nanc 5 Cheienue Nemaha .. Clay 11 Colfax 7 Cuming 7 Custer 17 Dakota S Nuckolls .. Oto Pawnee ... Perkins ... 6 12 8 Pierce 4 iliwcf 7 Polk 6 J)awou r Platte 10 Dixon Phelps 7 Ixide 12' ichardson 12 Douglas 37 Red Willow 7 Dundy 4 .Saline 13 Fillmore.. 10 Sarpy 5 Prank lin 7 Sajnder 12 Frontier lOSeward 0 Furnas s.sheridan 7 Gage lit Sherman 7 Garneld 3 Sioux 2 Jos per :. ... i Stanton 4 "Urant liThayer 7 Greeley 4 Thomas 2 Hall lllValley 6 Hamilton 10 1 Washington 9 Harlan ! Wayne. 6 Hayes 4' Webster 9 Hitchcock 6jWheler 3 Holt 14, York 11 Howard T,L'norg. territory 1 It is recommended that no proxies be admitted to the convention, except such as are held by persons residing ia the counties from the proxies are given. George D. Meiklejodx. Walt. M. Seeley, Chairman. Secretary. Mr. Cleveland is again working for public plaudits by using his veto power. The president seems to think veto with a big V is a great card, and he is going to play it for all it is worth. We think, however, he will find the American peo ple are not chumps, (notwithstanding the personal reflection caused 4by his own election,) and that they will see this yeto matter in all its puerile duplicity. The Omaha llerald says "the princi ples of democracy are such that a minis ter can preach the gospel Sundays and democracy the balance of the week." We suggest, the fact that they don't do it noes to prove the aboye statement in correct Where you find one democratic minister of the gospel you will find one hundred others who don't see things that way. Our friend, of the Herald, should discuss a topic with which he is more familiar. If the democratic party should be successful in nominating and electing Mr. Cleveland with his pronounced free trade ideas, we want to predict right here, that should his policy on the tariff obtain, the hard times of 1857 will not compare with those in store for the peo ple of this nation. Ilis message, and present tinkering with the tariff by its enemies are now having a very serious financial effect upon business. Mark our words, as the pernicious doctrine of free trade is talked aad advocated by its friends, the tightening, closuig-in pro cess is gradually and surely going on. If business is so affected by the fear of what may be, what would be the result when the avalanche would actually begin to move. Fire will destroy but not more effectually than free trade. In dianola Herald. The Pinkerton police have furnished a fat text for criticism of the "Q." offi cials, and while we believe it would have been safe for the railroad company to trust their property to the care of their resident employes we think a very great amount of unnecessary buncombe has been manufactured out of th;s special property guard which the railroad auth orities have seen fit to place around their property. Of course, if these men have assaulted anyone without cause they should bo punished. Any police officer should bo held responsible in such case. Yet, wo thing the dignity of law-abiding citizens are not injured, neither are their rights menanccd in any wise by these men, so long as the men keep'within the letter of their amplojment The "Q.1 fact tit bill cf tiers eta, tia crca are ia their employ as special guards of their property during their labor troubles, aad Tea Heeald caa see very little differ once between their standing aa employes and that of any other class of men who come here from abroad and enter the seri vice of the railroad. These men don't pretend to be anything but guards pro tecting the property and servants of their employers. We remember a time when our sensitive (?) public winked at and sympathized with some little difference of opinion between the railroad company and its employes at Pittsburg, Pa., and the result was an immense amount of railroad property was wantonly burned and destroyed; afterwards this same sensitive public had to co down into its sensitive pocket and foot the bills to the amount of over a million and a half dol lars. The tax-payer comes in for the expenses just where this striking business generally ends. It is the great public which suffers. If the railroad managers want to pay men four and a half dollars per day to guard their grounds and prop erty, so long as they don't ask our city to foot the bills we need not crow ner vous over it unless these high paid em ployes violate the law. and if they do thcu let them be puuibhed. The C, B & Q. has extensive and valuable property at Plattsmouth and it cannot be denied that its destruction would be a calamity to every citizen of our city; hence, its preservation should interest every one a desirous of our present and future wel fare, and if the management of the road has been particularly vigilent in that be half we should rather approve than con demn them. Thb Herald has no sort of patience with people who are so thin skinned that they imagine their personal liberty is menanced every time they be hold a douchty policeman walking his weary beat. THE BOYCOTT. The boycott is off and the employes of the different roads at Chicago have signified their intention and desiro to re sume work. It is said, by some, to be a stratigical move on the part of the Broth- hood of Engineers; if so, this carries with it the convincing truth that these switch men and yard men who have entered the lists against the railroad are acting under the advice and control of the engineers, and also, the further fact, that the broth erhood management is impotent for the accomplishment of any benefits to the la boring men of these roads. Such mis takes as this boycott business very soon distrusts reasonable men of the brother hood, as well as those of other classes. No one who has any regard for the law can approve of the -boycott in any shape or under any guise; it is born of lawless ness and carries with it its own defeat wherever it is attempted. Labor may combine for its own protection and no one will object, but when the boundary line is crossed and the hand of force is placed upon the business of any one, be it privato citizen or coperation the spirit or toleration should no longer be indulg ed. This country is too free and men have too great regard for right and law to tol erate theboycott. Who Is Your Best Friend? Your stomach of course. Why? Be cause if it is out of order you are one of the most miserable creatures living. Give it a fair chance and see if it is not the beet friend you have in the end. Don't smoke in the mornine. Don t drink in the morning. If you must smoke and drink wait until your stomach is through with breakfast. You can drink more and smoke more in the evening and it will telJ on vou less. If vour food ferments and does not digest right- -if you are troubl cd with Heartbnrn, Dizzniess of the head, coming up of the food after eating, bil- -a a . . . s . - lousness, indigestion, or any otnertrouDU of the stomach, you had best use GreenV Au trust Flower, as no person can use it without immediate relief. Begg's Cherry Cough Syrup. Is the only medicine that acts directlj on the Lungs, Blood and Bowels, it re lieves a cough instantly and in time effects a permanent cure. Sold by O. P. Smith & Co., druggists. j25,3mw,d-w. Dr. Schliemann has gone to Alexand ria with Professor Virchew, and will spend several months in Egypt making explorations. Begg's Blood Purifier and Blood . Maker. No remedy in the world has gained the popularity that this medicine has, as s hold on "family medicine. No one should be without it. It has no calomel u quinine in its composition, consequent ly no bad effects can arise from it. We keep a full supply at all times. O. P. Surra Co. Druggist j25-3mod&w If Diosenes lived today he would be out with a lantern looking for a Demo cratic lawyer who hasn't been mentioned for the oflice of chief justice of tue su preme court. Begg's Cherry Cough Syrup. Is warranted for all that the label calls for. so if it does not relieve your cough vou can call at our store and the money will be refunded to- you. it acts aimut-1 taneously on all parts of the, system, thereby leavine no bad results. 'O. P. Smith & Co., Druggists. j35-3md&w An observant metropolitan barber says that he can tell one's physical condition by the state cf tzs txirl A FAMOUS OLD PRISON. CRAWFORD'S PEN PICTURES OF THE INTERIOR OF NEWGATE. England's One Noted Prlaon Now Merely a Hons of Detention Ventilation, XJght and Iryne Cells, Cbapel, Exe cution Shed Md Whipping- FuL Newgate Is the most notorious prison in England. Its history" is connected with tho story of the crimes of this kingdom for the last 800 years. The present prison, was built toward the close of tho last century, but it is upon the site of the original prison where a Newgato has stood since 1070. Newgate has held in it long history every kind of victim of the law. It is at the end of tho Old Bailey, very near Smithfield, where the martyrs to fanaticism were publicly Lurried. The exterior of Newgate resembles an old fashioned fortress. Its walls are of a rough gray stone. They have become nearly black by exposure to tho sooty atmosphere of Lon don. There are but few windows in the out bide walls. The main buildings of the prison are in an interior court not visible to the public. The principal entrance is most for bidding. The lower half of tho door is a locked and barred square of wood surmounted by sharp iron spikes. Just above this is a network of iron. Over the door hung chains and bolls, symbols of the old Newgate. There is a blackened board at the right of this door upon which is now placed the offi cial record of an execution when it takes place within this prison. Newgate has been the scene of every form of execution. The breaking on the wheel, tho drawing and quartering, and every kind of old fashioned torture bos been tested to the full extremity of barbarous law within tboso blackened walls. Today Newgate is used as a prison of detention for criminals who are to be tried at the Old Bailey. If they are sentenced to death they ore kept at Newgate and executed there. If they are sentenced to penal servitude they are trans ferred elsewhere. The other day, through permission from the homo secretary, I visited Newgate, jl was turned over to one of the chief warders, a man who has been in Newgate for thirty years, and who has assisted at thirty-five ex ecutions. He was tall, broad shouldered, with regular features and a full, long brown beard and flowing mustache. He looked as dignified as a colonel in the Horse Guards. He spoke good English, without the slightest Cockney accent, and did not drop one of his h's, which is more than can be said for the attendants at Windsor castle. Common report describes Newgate as damp, unwholesome and badly lighted. This is incorrect It is a model prison so for as ventilation, light and dryness are concerned. The cells aro large and high. They are heated by hot water pipes, and are as com fortable as a prison should be. Prisoners in Newgate who conduct themselves well are entitled to an hour's daily exercise in the court yard. Refractory prisoners who refuse to submit to ordinary punishments are given twenty-four hours in the dark cell, with a diet of bread and water. The warder showed me one of these dark cells, and kindly closed me in it for a moment to give me an idea of this kind of punishment The cell was so closed out from the light that I could not see my hand directly in front of my eyes. Tho warder said that this form of punishment was not at all appreciated by prisoners who had never undergone it He never saw a prisoner who dreaded this punishment for the first time, and in the history of Newgate punishment no prisoner, however bad, had ever placed himself in a position to receive this punishment a second time. Twenty-four hours alone in absolute silence and darkness breaks and cows the most stubborn spirit. and if continued much bevond this limit would inevitably lead to madness. The cell of the condemned prisoner is near the dark cells. It is a large room, double the ordinary size. It contains a plank bed, upon which a light mattress is laid. There are two or three religious inscriptions upon the walL A table, a stool for the prisoner, and two for the warders, who are alwavs with him day and night from the time he is con demned, compose the furniture. Execution follows a sentence very swiftly in England. The utmost period of delay does not go be yond a month, and often execution takes place within ten days after a sentence. There is no appeal to any one except the home sec retary. He alone has the power to stay the execution or to commute a sentence. It is very rare that he interferes. The odds are ninety-nine to one that a man sentenced to death in England will be executed. From the cAl I walked with the warder to the chapel of the prison upon the first floor. This is a handsome, old fashioned chamber, high, well lighted, and finished in dark woods. In the center is a lofty pulpit Upon the left of this is a gallery box for visiting justices. Around the room upon the right and left are cages or subdivisions behind strong iron bars, where convicts used to sit. Those who are on trial sit in front of theso bars. There is an upper gallery arranged with slats for female prisoners. These great wooden slats are so turned that the women can see only the preacher, and not one of tho prisoners. At the right of the pulpit is a lit tle black chair, the seat of honor in the chapel. This is reserved exclusively for prisoners under sentence of death. Formerly there was a pew for this class. After leaving the chapel I walked with thft warder around to the place of execution. The prisoner marches from his cell through the prison wing' into a narrow court and around this court, not one moment's walk, to a wooden shed made of unpointed pina, which is built in a corner of the court against the prison walls. This shed has a cement floor with a wooden trap in the centre. Over that is a simple beam across, from which hangs a rope. The only furniture in ths place is connected with the trap, which is worked by a black iron lever. There is a commission now experimenting in Newgate as to the best methods of hanging, so as t secure a breaking of the neck when the trap drops. In one of the large rooms looking on to the court where the execution shed is there is kept the whipping post. Under the Eng lish law any attempt to rob a person accon panied by personal violence constitutes the technical offence cf "garroting." This is punished by from twenty-five to fifty lash ess. The men under sentence for garroting are seated upon the black box with their legs fastened upon what was an old pillory post. Their arms are fastened above their heads. Then the lashing is well laid on until their backs are completely cut to pieces. The warder said that there was no object in giv ing more than twenty-five lashes. After twenty-five lashes the men were numb and felt no more pain. He said that it was a most effectual form of -punishment ' and reached a class of street ruffians who cared nothing for imprisonment. " London swarms with this class of criminals, who are now pretty thoroughly restrained by the whipping post. There is no form of punishment so much dreaded by these men as the lash. This room where the whipping post now is was formerly used for prisoners when they were kept together in numbers instead of beinz trMsen separate cells. Peonla ' im prisoned for debt used to be kept here. T. C. CrawXcr la Iw Ycrk WcrU, Real Estate Bargains EXAMINE OUR LIST. consisting of CHOICE LOTS X 3NT South - Park 21 lots in Thompson's addition. 40 lots in Towusend's addition. Lot 10 block 188, lot 5 block 164. Lot 1 block 6, lot 6 block 95. Lot 11, block 111, lot 8, block 61. LOTS IN TOCjrO AND DAYS' ADDITION. Lots in Palmer's addition. Lots in Duke's addition. Improved property of all descriptions and in all parts of the city on easy terms. A new and desirable residence in South Pnrk, can 6e boaght on monthly payments. Before purchasing elsewhere, call and see if wo cannot suit you better. Z-i A 3ST ZD S- 5 acres of improved ground north of tho city limits. 5 acres of ground adjoining South Park. 2 acres of ground adjoining South Park. li acres of ground adjoining South Park. 20 acres near South Park: Se I sec. 14, T. 10, It 12, Cass county, price $1,- 800, if sold soon. nw i sec. 8, T. 12, R. 10, Cass Co., price $2,000. A valuable improyed stock fram in Merrick Co., Neb., 1C0 acres and en reosonvble terms. Windham & Davies. Consult your interests by insuring in tho Phoenix, Hartford or .Atna com panies, about which there is no question as to their high standing and fair dealing. TORNADO POLICIES. The present year bids fair to be a dis astrous one from tornadoes and wind storms. This is fore-shadowed by the number of storms we haye already had the most destructive one so J far this year having occurred at Mt Vernon, 111., where a. large number of buildings were destroyed or damaged. The exemption from tornadoes last year renders their oc currence more probable in 1838. Call at our office and secure a Tor nado Policy. Unimproved lands for sale or ox- change. WI HH EA Q ft- D ITT IB 8, PLATTSMOUTH, MED. INSURANCE Eureka Meat Market T. J. THOMAS, WHOLESALE AND Beef, Pork, Mutton, Voal and Poultry. Z invito all to givo mo a trial. Sugar Cured Mcat9, Hams, Bacon, LnrJ, etc., etc. Fresh Oysters in Caa aad Balk at lowest liying prices. Do not fail to give me your patronage. -AND ALL HOUSEHOLD GOODS. KITCHEN, BED ROOM, fX-") FUBMITURE FOB PARLOR FURNITURE. c J HALLWAYS, - OFFICII. Lowest 3?rioos in tno City. Call and bo Convinood. SIXTH STREET, BET. MAIN AND VINE. PLATTSMOUTH, Nil. FURNITURE EMPORIUM, -FOR ALL FINE :-: FURNITUKSS YOU SHOULD CALL ON Where a magnificent stock of Goods and Fair J'rices abound. UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING A SPECIALTY HENRY BOECK; CORNER MAIN AND SIXTH L. D. BEJNfJNTETT, JUST RECEIVED. I have just received Neufchated Che, Edam Cheese. Bosuia Prunes, Macedonia Prunes , Cal if or nia and Turkish Prunes. Celery Relish; Clam Chowder; Beef Tea-- very fine. Fresh Dates and cheap. L. D. BE3XS NE T T.' Jonathan Hatt. (DOTY ITJuEAT AimCY. PORK PACKERS and sealers in BUTTER AND EGG!. BEEF, PORK, MUTTON AND VEAL. THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Sugar Cured Meats, Hams. of our own make. The best brands WHOLESALE HEALTH IS WEALTH ! lav; Dr. JC.O. West's Nerve and Brsln Treatment a guarantee xpeclfic for Hysteria Dizziness. Convulsions. Fits. Nervous Neuralgia, Head acne. Nerveous Prostration caused by tbe u of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness. VeDtal De pression, Softening of the Brain resulting in in sanity and leading t- misery, decay and death. Premature old Age. Barrenness. ios of Pow er in cither sex. Involuntary lxsies and (sper matorrhoea caused by erer-exertion of the brain, selfabuse or over-lndnljfence Each box contains one month's treatment. $1 00 a box or six boxes for S6.00, sent by mail prepaid os reoeipt of price WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order recelred by us for six boxes, accompanied with S3. 00, we will send the purchaser our written guaran tee to return tbe money if the treatmeut does not effect a cure. Guarantees Issued only by will J. Warrick sole agent. Platumoutn. Neb. It may be that there is a land that is fairer than this, bnt it would take an art ist to find it. jVa I mau w"5' yHtwTH l ATM t NT? BETA 1 1. DEALER IN KINDS OF- CLASSES OF- PLATTSMOUTH, NIBRAHKJL. Figs; Oranges, Banana. J. "W. llXMTUU. Bacon, Lard, ; fie, flo of OYSTERS, in cans aad balk at AND RETAIL. For sale or exchange. A number mt fine pieces of residence property. Apply to Wiudham and Dayiee. d-wSwv The standard remedy for liver casa plaint is West's Lirer Pills; thay never disappoint you. SO pi 11a 23c. ' At War rick'a drug store. One, two, five and ten -acre tracts for sale on reasonable terms. Apply t Windham and Davies. " d-w-lsa. JULIUS PEPPERDERG, MXWVW ACTUXKX OT A YD " WHOLESALE & RETAIL DKALKK IK THJB . Choicest Brands of Cigars, including our Flor d Ppprbreo' and 'Out TVTH. LOT OF TOBACCO AND BUOmS' ARTICI tlwaya ia rtrci. IT;t. r:,r