The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, June 07, 1888, Image 3

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    f&E DAILY HERALD; PLATreaoorit, wKASK a, TIIOTCSIM V, .HJNE 7. 1SS8.
..J AND HOME.
EOCIAL PUfUTY AT THE BOTTOM
OF ALL ETHICS.
The Old P.ool Trea A Band of Heroin.
A llo on th Far Southern Woman.
rt and Fashionable Outdoor Cooking
OutUt lllnta. ICtc
It ha taken the race a lon2 climb through
the low. mottled, trivial years" for man
kind to toe that there cannot be two seta of
moral 1.1 . one for men and another for
women. ICvi-n yet people bejanging to the
pny world Inugh such prudery to corn.
Anil they who preach agnlnnt Mormon Uiu
with holy horror regard evils much more trw
rneii'louH In their effect with the moot awtou-l-ililng
IndifTbrence.
Many who look upon this question of social
purity as at the bottom of all ethics have
united to work In the white ernes movement,
a most worthy association, for "whenever
temptations exist a man will hunt for them."
Jn the word of I'rofessor Dowdin, "the sad
dest ordi'nl of love is to witnews the dimin
ishing; purity and splendor of a star like
soul, the clouding over of a heroic nature by
a film of dishonor." -
That need not be. If appealed to the spirit
will command the senses. It will be remem
bered with thank fulness that 'never before
have there bt-en so many who could stand
fur the quaint description by Betsy Babbitt:
"A K'KxI, trtiA, noble man Is the best job old
rifitureever turned off her hands or ever will
a man who would wipe away the tears of a
tuibe with a hand soft as a woman's or who
would 'die with his feet to the foo."
Mr ami Mrs. Sonthmayd's teachings to :
their sons were In effect: "Look upon auy
woman as a possible mother or sister. If she
. be nt-ak you must be strong.. Never soil the
elf respect of your young manhooiL Noth
ing can be meaner than for one having power
to employ it basely Live so that you can
meet your mother's eye, frank and fearless,
every morning of your lives. Ood never
meant that man and woman should have two
sots of mora la, and the opposite belief is the
curse of the world."
Aj tho result of good training, filial and
fraternal sentiments will be strongly devel
oped. No words of Carlyle burn with more
fire and nerve than those in which be de
scribes his parents: "1 have a sacred pride
in my peasant father, and would not ex
change him for any king." Of bis quaint
old mother ho was equally proud. In this
ra.se. as in others, two' characters stamp
themselves upon the young life. The nobil
ity or degradation of the father is likely to
be roproduitjd in the son.
The lineage of goodness is as transmissible
a that of genius. The latter is a culinin.V
ti'in of favorable conditions and qualities
which can occur only infrequently Tha
former Is the adjustment of life t those
ethical laws which are the beatings of that
Infinite heart from which all life proceeds.
It is possible to the majority of civilized
people.
The transmission of great qualities to the
son, rathei .nan to tb daughter, has been
rninarknL It could not well be otherwise.
The one has had a fair field for the exercise
of native powers, the other none, ilaphael
inherited from his father a proclivity toward
W' t. but his sister might possibly give to the
world a Tran.-tiguratiofl, if both lived in the
Nineteenth century. Caroline Ilerscbel in
herited her father's love for astronomy
equally with her brother, and ought to be as
famous. After bis death, and at the age of
7M. she completed the catalogue of stars he
had begun. Hester M Poole in Good House
keeping. May Under the Old Roof Tree,
Roll everything, suffer everything in the
way of privation, was a dying parent's ad
vice to children, bat keep the bouse to be to
gether In, whatever befalL It was sound ad
vice. Bo long as those children, young or
old. hod a roof, they could suffer and be
strong together. Their wants, their depriva
tions, were their own and not public property.
Jf needs that they must starve, they could
starve in silence and dignity, with none but
themselves the wiser or the worse. All their
little shifts were not subjects of general dis
cussion, their work was not on inspection;
strangers were not able to interfere among
them, or to sow dissension thereby, or to
alienate affection. Close together in the
habitual contact of daily life, they could only
be bound the more closely in habits of
thought, in love, and in mutual concern.
And the roof tree was responsible for it alL
The roof tree was the bond and the protector.
It took the place of parent; it was a -shield
and bulwark against the world. No; the ex
igence of scattered and shipwrecked fami
"lies has everywhere proved that much dis
comfort, much misery, might have been
spared them had they clung together in one
home, that those who have a home should
keep it, it is their safety in worldly ar.J
material comfort. Part with land, part with
Jewels, part with heirlooms, keepsakes, trea
sures, but keep the bouse so long aa the sticks
and timbers bold together. It is a strong
hold, it is a cattle, however poor and old;
Warwick castle itself no better for its pur
jioses. It is not merely that "be it ever so
humble there's no place like home," but that
it i home, the single spot where one reigns,
where one is unfettered and fully one's self,
bere one has one's tools and equipments
loo-sely and at ease about one, where one is at
large liberty, where one exists satisfied with
the natural love of kin if other love is denied
om a place to retire and withdraw In, to fee,
c ifety and' protection in, to live in and at last
to die In. Harper's Bazar.
Nob! Und of nerolnes.
Every day 1 meet working wanujp
women who toil eurly and late merely to
keep alive women who bear themselves in
ttie worlJ as grass does over which tramp
ling feet are constantly passing a little
crushed, but for tha most part brave and
bright. They come into tho car at nig
carrying brndles and drop wearily into their
eat with sighs that tell bow tired they are.
They go and come early and late to earn tha
slender pittance wherewith they keep them
selves in respectable apparel and buy for
their families the necessary commodities of
the butcher, the baker and the green produce
monger. Tbey always look wan and weary,
and there is often a dark ring around their
eyes that tells of tasks carried far into tha
night, when more prosperous folks are abed
and asleep. Tbey have a spurious gayety
about them, something like the picture of a
flower, or the reflection of a grate Ore in a
dim mirror Sometimes they laugh, but I
can Imagine a tear somewhere In the laugh,
like a rain drop in a rose.
Tbey are a noble band of heroines, the
mcet of them. I like tbc-m for their pluck
and their sturdy endurance of a hard lot f
like them because they keep right on, and
always will, until the old switch engine.
Death, scurries them off on tho side track.
I like them because they never break rai-k,
tut keep tp even with adversity for a oom
raJe and grim poverty as captain of to
Lrigad. 1 like them wherever I find them,
working in kitchens, with la.es that He in
the parlor, playing on washtut with fingers
that would grace piano, delving at incon,-
gnlal ocenpatloos because their destiny has
U n overlooked by good fortune, or because
duath. or something worse, boa denied tbem
a protector. 1 like tbem because 1 feel a
fellowship wltb them In my heart, and know
that some day we shall all And our heritage
together. No soul that ever yet wrought
patiently at iu allotted task but what some
time found recompense for every tired heart
throb and discouraged tear. It won't be
hard work always, dear heart. "Amber" in
Chicago Journal.
Have Nothing Concealed.
Always live so that there's nothing to be
found out," writes a matron whose honest,
happy face proclaims her a follower of her
own advice. This advice is good for any
walk of life, and for single ss well as mar
ried people. But who doe not know one or
more households in which "Don't tell papa,"
or "We won't mention this to your father,"
are phrases of frequent use? What an atmos
phere of deceit and equivocation to throw
alout a child's life, and what must be the
consequence of such training! Some women
are cowardly by nature, and their first in
stinct Is to conceal anything which would be
likely to cause themselves to ba reproved or
blamed in any way. Other women become
so because of administered rebukes. We once
knew a man whose pretty little wife never
dared tell him how much she paid for the
new bonnet and gown, even though they
were, bought with "the butter and egg
money," her own perquisites iu the country
where she lived. Bbe usually deducted a cer
tain portion from the price paid for each
article; and she has even left the new bonnet
at a neighbor's for a few days after it was
bought, till ber lord and master should have
become reconciled to the new gown. This
breaking the matter to him gently was abso
lutely necessary to save herself from a storm;
and, in our opinion, the deceit she practiced
will be added to bis account iu the big book
and not to bor's.
But there-are other things, not so trifling,
which are concealed by the husband from
the wife or the wife from the husband. The
conscience may become dulled or seared, so
that it no longer troubles one, but the horror
and constant fear of discovery; to say noth
ing of the pain of the deceit itself to a ten
der conscience, should be enough to keep oue
from ever repeating an offense of this sort or
committing any other. Jean Kincaji) p
Boston Globe.
A flux on the Ear.
One of Browning's most beautiful and pa
thotio poems, and one intelligible to whom
soever runs, commemorates the act of an old
Earl of Arundel, who, having struck his little
child on the bead, bail the picture of himself
and the child painted, the child, as he be
came in after years, imbecile from the effects
of that blow. It would be well, we think,
for parents, and for all those having children
on their bands, to commit these verses to
memory, and put the lesson in practice; for
the injury done to children by the quick and
careless box on the ear that is thought noth
ing of at the time is something incalculable.
' It is impossible to hit a tender child a blow
on bo delicate an organ as the ear, and one
having such close connection with the brain,
without doing an evil and unseen work, even
when the blow is given with the flat and open
hand. The action, it has been fully ascer
tained, has produced violent inflammation in
the ear, and running discharges for years;
blood has been known to follow it immedi
ately; and when this has not happened, par
tial and even total deafness ha been the con
Beqenco in many instances. Intercranial dif
ficulties of a daugerous type are not at all
rare either, as the result of these admoni
tions; idiocy has been traced to tbem; and in
more than one case surgically examined it
has been found that fatal brain disease has
followed a box on the car. Harper's Weekly.
Work of Southern Women.
As in St. Paul's cathedral, London, on the
monument to Christopher Wren, so we can
say of the work of southern women: "Look
nroundf As nothing surpassed ber cour
age, her fortitude, her untiring patience and
energy, her persistent effort during the war,
so the still greater demand for such virtues
after the battle was over, found her as ready
and responsive as before. Wherever woman
can labor without lotting thedignity of wom
anhood, the women of Jtbe south go. In the
home, in the school room, at the ledger and
the desk, with the needle, the pen, the pen
cil, the brush. In music, in useful and deco
rative art, and all handicrafts where deft
ness and delicacy supersede physical strength,
she is at work; in short, whatever her bead
and hands find to do, she is doing willingly
and uncomplainingly.
Out from the stately homes of wealth and
luxury, out from the genial fireside of com
fort and thrift, from all ranks of life and
degrees of fortune, from the stone mansions
of Virginia to the graceful and picturesque
villas of Alabama cauebrakes and the Missis
sippi valley, she has gone, at the call of duty,
into the rank and file of working women,
clad in the invulnerable armor of patient
endurance and womanly dignity. And for
this she is entitled to sympathy and honor.
itella Cocke In American Magazine.
Ultra Fast and Fashionable.
There are ultra fast and fashionable
women, whose salons are entertaining but
not safa Society is a mosaic, in which the
false jewels shine more brightly than the
true. An instinctively pure and imperial
nature, however, walks through such a salon
to repudiate the bad and to extract the good ;
but bow is it for those who are gentle, unsus
pecting, ignorant! How for those who are
only half good and open to temptation, which
fs the position of more than half the world.
The influence of que "ultra fast and fash
ionable woman," whose principles are ques
tionable, does more injury to society than a
thousand essays can tell, and even a woman
who hits no particular vice, hut ony on Idle,
love of pleasure, with this desire for a ce
lebrity which is at best questionable. Is one
of the evil forces which are undermining the
social reputation of American women at
home and abroad. The presence of bad man
ners, loud, unconventional behavior. Is attrib
uted to bad morality, when it is simply a
carelessness of outward appearance.
Now, if there were a beginning of home
influences, home amusements and borne cult
ure, much of this might be obviated. Mrs,
John Sharwood in American Magazine.
Hints Concerning Cleanliness,
The cure for sallowness is open air, coarse
i bread and sunshine. For coarseness, it is the
! bread and wheat, with plenty of bathing
scrubbing with soap and hot water twice a
: week at the very least, and underwear
changed throughout as often as one bathes.
Much is to be said about this changing of
, body wear, which is next to bathing in im
portance. 1 have seen dainty women toss
. aside cambric and lace soiled with once wear
ing in street dust, while tbey wqre the same
body suit of cash mere or cotton by night and
day tho week through, saturated with insen
sible wastes of the skin. If tbey bathed mid-
week the same vest went on again, to return
I its odors and fluids to the clean, open skin.
! A clcaa man or woman should air the person
j and the inner wear every evening and morn
ing, if the room Is warui a it ought to be, or
else change under vest and drawer twice or
t urice a week. This change and two baths a
a-eek are better than dally bathln g without
it Perhaps do change In living show sooner
to the improvement of the completion. TL
rough, red, pimply face of the youth yields
It once to coarse diet, hot soap and water
baths and frequent clean undershirts, SUir-
ley Dare In Boston Olobe.
Aa Outdoor Cooking: Outfit.
Purchase an alcohol lamp with attach
menta, four and a half Inches diameter by
two Inches deep.
Get made six tin cups, with wire rim, to
Ot outside the spirit lamp one upon another,
viz: (In nests) to six and a half inches by
two Inches. Have the seventh tin cup say
three Inches deep, so a to bold four to six tiu
plates, nested on top of the cups. '
Pit a cover into it tight; this is to be used as
s teapot, with a sieve strainer and wire fold
ing handle, around the side of the teajot.
Fit two tins made of light copper, tinned,
over the bottom and top of number seven,
meeting in the middle, each one and one-half
inches deep inside, and no solder used on bot
tom, to be used as a dish, or frying pan,
with a folding handla Inclose all in a can
vas bag, with a pocket for knives, spoons,
and an alcohol bottle.
You will then have a mess outfit complete,
taking up little space, by which a good meal
for four persons can be prepared on a camp
table in the tent, free from wind and rain.
O. W. Pueblo in Detroit Free Press.
Fashionable Hoarding; riouso Life.
The life is contemptible. There is nothing
real and earnest, nothing manly or womanly
in it It is full of the idleness which invites
the satanio whisper. Its perfumed breath is
fetid. Its glitter is a sham. Transplanted
by a thoughtless husband to the environment
which murders the maternal instinct, a
young woman lapsing into idleness finds oc
cupation in gossip, relief in admiration, joy
In the pique of envious sisters, a dash of ex
citement in the knowledge that she hnx made
her husband suspicious and jealous. She
taxes his purse that she may outshine the
other genteel loafers of the establishment and
better equip herself for the enjoyments of
flirtations. She becomes the incarnation of
selfishness. Sue loses ber own and respect for
her husband and thinks willingly of the
sweetness of stolen waters. Chicago Times.
Myaterlos of the Toilet.
I had always thought that Spanish women
were coquettes, but they don't begin to com
pare with the French women in this resjtcct
The French woman makes a toilet for the
bed as naturally as she does for the day time,
and that is where she is very wise. The nor
rors of hair In wipers and faces smeared all
over with some toilet mess is a condition so
dreadful that it should be reserved for the
dressing room in the day time with locked
doors. A woman in curl papers is an a bom
ination in the sight of heaven and earth. If
1 were a man 1 should consider curl papers
cause for divorce; and as for crimping pins,
tbey are a step further in the career of vice,
although their use is usually short when any
thing masculine is about, as they have a
horrid fashion of getting Into his eyes.
"Bab" In New York Star.
Do you use eggs for frosting! Don't do
it. Take five tablespoonfulsof milk, one cup
of granulated sugar, flavor nicely with lemon
or vanilla,' then boil Ave minutea Beat it
hard until it is cool enough to spread on the
cake. The beauty of the frosting is that it is
ready to cut as soon as thoroughly cold. It
is very nice withoocoanut or grated chocolate
stirred in it When eggs are high it is quite
a saving.
We all know how soon cheese dries up and
Is unfit for the table, but tbU same waste
cheese can be made as good as new, and yery
nice looking, ' by grating it fine on a horse
radish grater. Prepare only as much as is
needed for Immediate use, and you will find
it good for anybody.
When a lamp bums poorly boil the metal
burner in soda and water. The gummy ac
cumulation from the oil will be removed and
the light will burn brilliantly.
Put tea and, coffee away In airtight re
ceptacles as soon a they are brought to the
bouse. They lose much of their Savor by
standing uncovered.
A few drops of ammonia In a cup of warm
rain water, carefully applied with a wet
sponge, will remove the spots from paintings
and chromos.
Paint on windows can, it Is said, be re
moved by melting some soda in very hot
water and washing them with it, using a
noft flannel
A half cupful of ammonia to a pail of
water will cleanse bard finished walls nicely.
Change the water when it becomes fouL
A good substitute for buttermilk is a thin
batter made of flour and tepid water, and al
lowed to remain long enough to scour.
To remove mildew, rub common yellow
soap on the article, then sift starch on that,
rub well and place in the sunshine.
To extract Ink from wood, scour with sand
wet with water and ammonia, then rinse
with strong saleratus water.
The wings of turkeys, geese and chickens
are good to clean windows, as tboy leave no
dust -
Rub the bottom, of the sauce pan with a
little batter to prevent the mjik from stick
ing. '
To remove Ink spots, dip the article in pure
melted tallow, then wash.
A smoky ceiling can be cleaned with soda
and water.
Use newspapers to polish window glass and
mirrors.
'
Exposure tq the sun wiQ remove scorch
tnarks, -
Wash the batter stamp in cold salt water.
Dire BesoJta of Draw Reform.
Jt would be curiously interesting to Inquire
what baa modified the "evils" of our grand
mothers toilets into the tolerably sensiblo
apparel worn by women in this year of SS&
Perhaps the interminable crusade of newspa
per anijsoieQoe journal essayists. Imagination
staggers at the effort to picture the direful
dearth of topics that would afflict these
wordy philanthropists were the whole race
of American women to put into practical
operation their suggested dress reforms.
If we were simultaneously and dutifully to
adopt divided skirts, broad, beei'.ess shoes,
combination garments ofj.sa-'.tary flannel,
loose waists with never an ai loial bone or
brace beneath them, short d srt , few in num
ber, hung from the shouldei , a i wide brim
med bats; if were to esch lis, gloves,
Jet trimming and crepe,', 1c all things
which our censors enjoin, arl 1 ve undone
all tbey condemn, tbeoccapat f hundreds
of excellent bread winners paragraph
makers would be gone. -liar. Garland ir
Philadelphia Times.
HEARD AND MUSTACHE.
TODAY'3 FACIAL ORNAMENTS ONC
MUCH RIDICULED.
Whisker In History The Father of tt a
Itepubllo Were Kntlrely Ueardlena or
Smooth Shaven Facta Concerning Presi
dent atiil Presidential Candidates.
The beard and mustache as an appendage
to the face la of comparative recent date
In the United States Thirty years ago a
beard was an exception, and thirty livo
years have scarcely elapsed since the
wearer of a lieard was either ati object cf
ridicule or suspicion When a boy 1 1 jo
writer listened to u sermon in which tin
smooth faced preacher descanted on the
6in of tho beard, and conclusively proved
that Aduuf was not endowed with this
facial appendage until after his fall, and
that it constituted tho actual thicket bo
hind which ho sought to hido liiiiisolf
from tho sight of Ins maker.
It is quito evident it was at least ns
diilicult for tho ancients to keep down the
growth of the board as it is for tho modern
youth to raise one. Before tho Invention
of the razor, which dates back less than
two centuries, tho hair was kept from no
cumulating on tho face by rubbing tho
skin quickly with pumice stone, which
gave it that peculiar polish and hardness
of outline noticeable in old paintings
Barbers aro lirst mentioned in English
history ahout the veur 1029. durinjf tho
rein of Charles I, when a number of
Puritans were ordered to bo punished by
having their "beards shaven from their
faces with sharp knivrs. and t!:o t;:
be cropped closu to their heads therewith,
ill addition to having their ears cut oil
and tongues bored with a red hot iron,
and to bo thereafter stood in the pillory."
A 6CIMECT OK IIIDICUl.IC.
About lSo.T beards and mustaches leg:r.t
to make their aj-j earanco in this country
on tho streets of tho cities, tou were
everywhere the subject of ridicujn, no
much so that i-iw wero vaiu enough to
cultivate them In the fad for wear
ing hair on the face was given a j.reut
thrust forward by a picture of Count
D'Orsay, published in l'razer's Magai'.ine,
illustrating how copiously a chin could bo
cushioned.- and which, it was conceded,
reached the climax of hair arrangement in
that quarter.
Still for a number of years later long
beards wero considered disgraceful ; as
masks behind which criminal: and out
laws sought to hide their identity. As
late as ly-iy tho writer remembers to have
see n a Jew with long hair and beard
bated" on BeaVer street, in this city, by
a crowd of boys, who chased him with
sticks and stones through the streets and
alloys of what was then one of the most
attractive portions of New York, and for
no other reason than tho great mass of
hair which concealed his features. And
on this occasion tho sedate business men
of that part of the city gathered at their
doors and cheered tho boys with their ex
pressions of approval.
One or two judges abont that time be
gan to make their appearance on tho
bench with whiskers. This the public
took ft.s an offense, tind the papers seri
ously discussed it as a matter of prime i
importance. "Whiskers." says Tho
Democratic Review, "are bad enough at
the bar, and even then they are pestilent
accompaniment for counsel. There is no
gentlemanly managing a jury with them.
Men are not open to reason or pathos that
might issno from any part of a face thus
cultivated. They continuall', and for
good reason, suspect those who talk to
them in a mask. But to carry whiskers
up to the tribunal is unbecoming tho
judge as it is unfortunate for tho wool
sack. What would men have us think?
Do they mean to enforce decisions by the
ferocity of their countenances? To ruuUe
us fear instead of honor them? Or would
they, wherever they may bo, have us
understand that their strength, like his
of old, lies in their hair?"
None of tho fathers of the republic ever
wore a beard The appendago of hair is
not to bo found on the face of any of the
signers of the Declaration of Independence,
and it was unknown to all the otBcere of
tho revolutionary army. Those men of
great minds, iron will and strong purpose
stood forth in the broad light of day with
faces so clean that their every thought
might be read.
Tn"K CHOPPED SIHE WlIISSETt.
The war of 1812 brought no generals to
the front with beards, but all tho com
manders of the navy appear to have culti
vated the "mutton leg," as it was once
called the side whisker reaching an inch
or so below the ear, but always kept
dropped. This is the whiskers wo End on
the pictures of Perry, Bainbridgo. Deca
tur, Lawrence and others, and is tho
plant which was afterwards built out and,
in connection with the mustache, beeamo
the "Burnsida. " All the principal oCiccrs
of the Mexican war were also beardless,
although tho mustache and beard began
about that time creep into the army.
Of the presidents of tho United States
John Q Adams and Zachary Taylor had
a mere bunch of hair, extending tho
length of the ear. Martin Van Buren
had more of tho "mutton leg." which
curled forward, and beng of a sandy
color, gave that peculiar expression to
his' face which caused him to Lo nick
named "Tho lied Fox of Kiuderhook" or
"Foxy" Van Burcn All tho ether presi
dents had faces shaven of every partielo
of taU. and np to 1SG1 no man had oc
cupied a position of prominence in tho
national government who wore a beard on
his chin or a mustache. John C.. Fre
mont, tho first candidate of tho Republi
can party for the presidency, also capti
vated his entire cheek and cli,in space for
hair, and Abraham Lincoln, his successor
on the ticket four years later, ami the first
Republican president, also wore a full
beard.
The cabinet which Lincoln assembled
was composed largely of bearded men.
The despised abolition sentiment bad ob
tained tho ascendency, and men by the
thousands who ten years before would
rather have been caught burning a house
than raising a beard, threw away their
razors and turned their faces out to nature
for ooverings. The officers in the field of
both armies let the beard grow or cut it
in shapes to suit their particular fangy of
appearance, until a smooth faced tnan be
came almost as rare as a bairy pue ha(J
been a few months previous.-
' Presidents Gran,t,layes Garfield all.
appeared in full beards, and wo all ra
member the luxurious Burnsidesof Chester
A- Arthur, tho pre-eminently gentlemanly
occupant of the White House. Cleveland
la the first president that ever was elected
backed by a mustache only. New York
press '
Eight Acree a Day.
The Dutch are taking Holland at the
rate of eight acres a day. During tho last
two centuries, it is estimated. 1.000 acrei
of land hare been reclaimed from the sea.
DON'T ,READ THIS !
ITnlees you want to know where to jet the )ct 4,Ciih"
JJargain in
BOOTS AND SHOES I
We are nv oilerin Special Prices in
Ami the most we pride ourselves on is our excellent line of
Ladies' Hand-Turned Shoes
At their Present Low Price?. Ladies looking for Mich u
Shoe shouM not fail to call on
tl n
g r
a o
Is enjoying a
DASLiT AND WES
EDITIONS.
T5
Will be one during which the subjects of
national interest ami importance will be
strongly agitated and the election of a
President will take place. Ihe people of
Cass County who would like to learn of
Political, Commercial
and Social Transactions
of this year and would keep apace with
the times thould
TT-eC RIBB-
FOU KITlIKIl tiik
Daily or Weekiy Herald.
Now while we have the Bubjeet before the
people we will venture to speak ol our
Wiiu'ii is nrst-ciass
fVtmi which our job
out much satisfactory
PLATTSMOUTH,
:ck & co,
Ulan nuidiu
Boom in both, its
eaa' 1888
iErihlfeClylln
in an respects ana
printers are iurnin
rr
work
NEBRASKA.