Till- Ui 1LV IIEKALD: 1 LArrSJUUuTH, NEBRASKA, TUESDAY, JUNE 19. 188S. The Plattsmouth Daily Herald. KNOTTS BROS., Publishers & Proprietors. THE I'LATTSMOUTil IIKKALD 1 published every evening except Sunday and Weekly every Thurxdiiy morning. Kcli trfl at tlio Kinice, I'laltxinoutl). Nebr.. s Hriiitl-cluH mutter. OIllco corner of Vlu and Fifth streets. TKHMS rOR UAILV. One copy one car iu advance, by malI....$G no One coiiv uor month. bvrariiT !o One copy per week, ly curlier, 15 TKRMS POR WKtKlV. One copy one year, in advance at Due copy tlx uioiuns. In advance 75 Republican State Convention. Tlic republican electors of the state of Nebraska are requested to send delegates from tlteir several counties to uieef in convention at the city of Lincoln Thurs day, August 23, at 2 o'clock p. tn., for the purpose of placing in nomination candidate for the following state ollices. Governor. Lieutenant Governor. . Secretary of State. State Treasurer. Auditor of Public Accounts. Attorney General. Commissioner of Public Lands and nuildings. And the transaction of such other busi ness as may come before the convention. TIIK AI'l'OBTIOXMENT. The several counties are entitled to re presentation us follows, being based upon the vote cast for lion. Samuel Maxwell, judge, in IHH7, giving one delegate at large to each county, and for each 150 votes, and major fraction thereof: rr.ur.VTiK. VOIKi.ll'Ol'MTIM. VOTKS. Adams U! IllllllHOIl 8 Kearney 8 Keyha l'aha 5 Keith 4 Knox 7 l.auc.i.ster 2-" Lincoln .. H l.ovan 2 lMli 3 Mail noil 8 Mcl'lierson 1 Merrick 7 Nance ft N email a a Nuckolls 6 Oioe Vi 1'awnee k I'eiklos 5 Fierce 4 Folk . Flatte 10 Phelps 7 Kiclianlson 12 Ked Willow 7 A n t-lt ie '' Arthur I I'.laine - ltM)ll H r.ox Unite 4 i: I'.ufTulo ... ! ltiller VI Hurt ! 'a V Vdar i Chise i rrv ' I'heyenne 11 ;iay Ni.fax fuming.... C'isler lako!u );iwt'n 7 1 Dawson a. Dixon i oiee i- )iiiiI;lss 27 Dundy 4 Fillmore l Franklin 7 Frontier 10 Sallr.e n Sarpy 5 Saunders. .!! Seward... Sheridan. Sherman .lo . 7 . 7 . 2 Furuan !i tiajre 1!! OaiiieM... '(! iSosper ;"i ;rant ll MOUX. tauton 4 Thayer 7 Thomas ii Valley 6 Washington 9 Wayne 5 Webster 9 Wheeler a York l Ortelev 4 Hall 11 Hamilton in Harlan s Hayes 4 Hitchcock t!i Holt 14' Howard 7 lellerson !i! Unorganized Ter 1 Total 07 1 It is recommended that no proxies be adn.itted to the convention exceptsuch as are held by persons residing in the coun ties from which the proxies are given. To Chairmen County Central Commit tees: Whereas, At the republican state con vention held at Lincoln October 3, 1SS7, the following resolution was adopted: liesolced, That the state central com mittee be instructed to embrace in its call for the next state convention the submis sion of the prohibition question to there publican voters at the republican pri maries, Therefore, in accordance with the above resolution, the several county cen tral committees are hereby instructed to include in their call for their next county convention the submission of the prohi bition question to the republican voters at the republican primaries. Geo. D. Meiklkjoiin', Chairman. Walt. M. Seeley, Secretary. TncKMAN is the G. O. M. of the demo cratic party and Cleveland is theD. O. M. if they only dared say so. The man who reminded the democratic party that it has a nose is nominated amid enthusiasm and called "a noble Roman"; but the man who has offended the entire nose of the American people is adly re nominated, while the fellows wh did the job were holding their noses. " Public office is a public trust," and had I been here with a few of my kidney, things would have been different when tl.ee fellows were trampling upon the constitution and upholding thenefareous amendments to the constitution! " " It's a long lane that has no turn." L. Q. C Lamar. The Omaha Herald has read Senator "Wade Hampton's article on the race issue in the "solid south " and finds nothing in it worth reviewing. It is at least re freshing to find a leading democratic newspaper in the north that docs not en dorse the leaden logic resorted to by South Carolina's senator in his literary endeavor to furnish a reason why the " solid south has re-enslaved the race for political purposes. The opening gun in the democratic campaign was fired from a confederate graveyard at Baltimore. One, Johnston, declared tluit the solid south was now in control of national affairs and that old Jeff Davis was a patriot who scorned am nesty unless it was carried to him accom panied by an appology or words to that effect A confederate graveyard is about the proper place to hold a ratification meeting for the man who placed L. Q. C. Lamar npon the supreme bench of the United States. If the great City of Glasgow - Bank failure a few years back, with liabilities of thirty million dollars, marked an epveh in British finance, the manner its ruinous effects haye largely lcen overcome is no less noteworthy as an example of that "standing by each other" for which the Scotch people are anciently famous. Under the stern law of unlimited liabili ty, stockholders of the bank had to make good to the creditors every farth ing of their accounts. This they did. But the process brought utter ruin to all, except a few who could afford to pay an assessment of $3,000 on each $100 of stock. Thereupon, the Scottish pcopla set to work, quietly and with no appeal to outsiders, to care for the unfortunate stockholders. A fund of $1,1)3.1,000 was raised, and so well has it been adminis tered that not a stockholder nor any one dependent on him has suffered want or priyation, while many have been aided by loans to regain a prosperous business standing. Up to date, 83 per cent of such loans have leen repaid by the bene ficiaries. There now remains of the fund some $00, 000, the bulk of which will be devoted to purchasing annuities for widows and other helpless dependents. The entire transaction forms a notable record at once of generosity and thrift, creditable in the highest degree to the people who have thus turned disaster in to honor. N. Y. Tribune. Up in Dakota county a wily school ma'am, whose pupils were mostly well grown lads and lasses as big as herself, was much troubled about the lack of en thusiasm in the first class in spelling. They could not spell worth a cent and they spent their time ogling each other from the back benches and passing notes and things instead of studying the spell ing book. She thought over the problem until her head ached and then an ' idea struck her. She promulgated a rule the next morning to the effect that every boy who spelled a word missed by a girl and went above her should be privileged to kiss the poor speller as he passed her on his way up towards the head. The effect was electrical. The girls thought it would be a dreadful thing to be kissed, and the boys thought it would be nice to get above the girls with refreshments by the way. They did their level best" the first day and comparatively few boy3 went up. But as the days progressed, while the boys studied as hard as ever, the efforts of the girls seemed to slack. And it has been going that way ever since. The school mistress has finally abrogated the rule. The school was picking up in attendance very fast under the rule but there js a minifest falling off now. The boys have, however, become notable spellers. Lincoln Journal. INTEliESTING PHENOMENON. Captain Friis of the Norwegian steam ship "Viking," reports to the Hydrogra phic Office that he observed at midnight April 20, between Chatham and Davis South Shoal, when the moon was in its last quater and about two hours above the horizon, two darklooking narrow stra ta of clouds; the upper one extending across the face of the moon, the upper and lower limbs of the latter appearing above and below the cloud-stratum. The cloud was moving south-westerly. On the same line with the rneon, and to the westward of it, was a nearly circular lum inous spot, larger than the moon, which looked as the sun might when shinning through a thick mist. The second strat um of cloud was about halfway between the first and the horizon. The phenome non contined until the moon set at two o'clock, when there shot upwards from the upper limb fan-shaped rays of light. $500 Reward. We will pay the above reward for any case of liver complaint, dyspepsia, sick headache, indigestion, constipation or costiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Li yer Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes containing 30 sugar coated pills, 25c. For sale by all druggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The genu ine manufactured only by John O. Well & Co., 8G2 W. Madison St. Chicago, Its Sold by W. J. Warrick. Scarlet fever La at its minimum from Jan uary to May, and at its maximum in Octo ber and November. Diphtheria is mora evenly distributed through the year, and is most dangerous a little later than scarlet fever. Measles and whooping cough seem to be somewhat aggravated by oold weather, but are most fatal in May and June. Hot weather is averse to. smallpox and favorable to disorders of the bowels, particularly in children. An Explanation. What is this "nervous trouble" with which so many seem now to be afflicted? If you will remember a few years ago the word Malaria was comparatively un known, today it is as common as any word in the English language, yet this word covers only the niianing of another word used by our forefathers in times past. So it is used with nervous diseases, as they and Malaria are intended to cover what our grandfathers called Biliousness, and all are caused by troubles that arise from a diseased condition of the Liver which in performing its functions finding it cannot dispose of the bile through the ordinary channel is compelled to pass it off through the system causing nervous troubles, Malaria, Bilious Fever, etc. You who are suffering can well appreci ate a cure. We recommend Green's Au gust Flower. Its cures are marvelous. SHADOWING BANK CLERKS. DETECTIVES WHO ASCERTAIN THE HABITS OF TRUSTED EMPLOYES. Few Hanks That Regard Their Clerks As Above Suspicion How the Shadowed Clerk Gets Even with Obnoxious Deteo t Ives Cases of Blackmail. There are few banks In New York that re gard their clerks as above suspicion. In these days, when old and trusted employes are making hasty trips to Canada, the banks think if they are not able to lock the stable door, the next best thing is to roll a big stone against it. The stone iu this case is the de tective. Most of the banks employ detectives to shadow their clerks and study their habits. It is the rule to keep a detective on the trail of a clerk for about two weeks every six months. When a clerk has been but a short time in the employ of a bank he is watched even more closely than this. An old employe, whose habits are known to be steady. Is shadowed may be only once a year. Then a clerk may be shadowed two nights in succes sion, and not again for some time. Besides, the clerk may come within range of the de tective's eye when the sleuth hound la en gaged in shadowing some other clerk. So a bank clerk cannot be too particular where he goes and with whom he associates, for he never knows when the eye of the de tective is upon him. Just a little too much conviviality with one's friends may cost him his Job or prevent what was almost certain promotion. There is practically no chance for him to explain or excuse his conduct, for there Is probably not a bank president in the city who will admit that he employs detec tives to watch his clerks. THXT GET USED TO IT. While the system is an offensive one, aside from the banks being justified in adopting it, it results In some good to the clerks. On ac count of it there are any number of bank clerks who could not be even induced to enter a saloon or a place of questionable reputa tion. Naturally, a person feels, to say the least, uncomfortable when he thinks that his steps are being dogged. Particularly is this so if he is going to call upon his sweetheart, and he reflects that the detective will prob ably not be contented until he finds out all about the young lady, and in consequence imagines that his courtship may become com mon gossip about the bank. "A person can get used to almost anything, and we get so that we don't mind it much," said a clerk in one of the Broadway banks, when speaking of this system to the writer. "When I first became a bank clerk and learned that I was to be occasionally 'shad owed I shuddered at the idea. I bad been given to reading detective stories and 1 im agined all sorts of horrid things. What worried me most was to think that so far as the bank officials were concerned my char acter was not above suspicion. Now, I seldom give the subject a thought unless it be to have some fun with the detective. One night recently I discovered one was follow ing me and I kept the fellow walking over half the night" There have been several cases recently where detectives have attempted to black mail clerk. One of the worst cases of this sort was that attempted in a bank on Fifth avenue. The plot was a deeply laid one, as the story shows. The young man was teller, his father was rich, and the detective ex pected to make u large sum. The teller was a model of good habits and did not touch liquor of any kind. He was passionately fond of the theatre and liked the society of actors. One night after the theatre he went to a Broadway cafe to have a bite to eat. fie had been 6eated at a table but a few minutes when a young man, who bad been seated at an adjoining table with a companion, come over to him, introduced himself and said be was an actor. He mentioned the name of a gentleman who was a particular friend of. the bank teller. "I have heard him speak of you, so that I feel that I have known you for years," said the stranger. TWO JOLLT COMPANION'S. The teller invited him to sit down and join lira, and gave him permission to bring his companion, who was introduced as a fellow actor. They both proved jolly fellows, and the bank teller was taken with them. They were together for two hoars, and when they parted the bank teller bad promised to be their guest the following evening at the theatre. He kept his promise, and after the performance he accompanied them to the cafe where they had met the night before, and there another two hours were pleasantly passed. A few nights after this a man accosted the teller late one night on a lonely portion of Madison avenue, near Sixty-first street. He 1 said be was a detective employed by the teller's bank. "It's my duty to report to the president of your bank that you are the associate of crooks and ex-convicts," he said. "It's a lie," retorted the teller. "But 1 can prove it. You have been seen two nights in succession with two men whose criminal history is well known and whose pictures are in the rogues' gallery." The teller immediately thought of his new acquaintances. Could it be they had de ceived him and they were as the detective saidf It it wa? true it would be difficult to explain to the officers of the bank. "If you have any terms to offer, I might neglect my duty," continued the man, while, the bank official was thinking of the plight he was in. "This is blackmail, and I wont snbmlt to it," answered the clerk, regaining his courage. "If those men are crooks you are in with them." Then, turning on his heel, be walked off, while the detective muttered a threat. Going home, the teller awoke his father and told him the story. They were both con vinced it was a case of blackmail. The next day the father of the teller visited the presi dent of the bank and laid the facts before him. The bead of the detective agency was summoned to the bank and the president told him he believed the teller, and the de tective was discharged. Out what be had said about the new acquaintances of the teller proved true. As there was only the teller's evidence as to the blackmail, the case was not pushed against the detective. All detectives are not like this. Many a good hearted detective has shielded bank clerks guilty of little indiscretions, which, had the facts been reported, would have re sulted in dismissal. New York World. But Not the Right Quality. First Boy Does your grandpa smoke a pipe? Second Boy Not now, last week he went to sleep with a short pipe in his mouth and the fire reached bis celluloid teeth and they exploded, bursting his bead open. First Boy What a fool I Didnt be have any brains? Second Boy Oh, lots of brains; they've ruined the frescoed ceiling. Accident;, News. The Cule Reversed. Two persons were arrested yesterday for cruelty to cats. What this city needs is the arrest of several thousand cats for cruelty to ,fr Rftwn i tygaltimore mexcan. Keal Estate Bargains EXAMINE OUR LIST. CONSISTIN OK CHOICE LOTS South - Park 21 lots in Thompson's addition. 40 lots in Townsend's addition. Lot 10 block 138, lot 5 block 104. Lot 1 block 0, lot G block 95. Lot 11, block 111, lot 8, block CI. LOTS IN YOUNG AND HAYS' 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 be bought on monthly payments. Before purchasing elsewhere, call and see if we cannot suit you better. mrfSm T ZD 5 acres of improved ground north of the 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 sec. 14, T. 10, R. 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., 160 acres and on reosonuble terms. Windham & Davies. ISO RAM Consult your best interests by insuring in the Phoenix, Hartford or Etna 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 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 1888. Call at our office and secure a Tor nado Policy. Unimproved lands for sale or ex change. WINDHAM &DAYIE8. PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. Eureka Meat - .Market. T. J. THOMAS, WJIOLK8AI.K AND Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal sum I'oiiHiy. Z invite all to give mo a trial. Sugar Cured Meat?, Ham?, Iliucn, Lard, etc.. etc. Fmh OvMuh in Cr.n it d I.ulk at loweat livinrr Driers. Do not fiiil to five me V tir I Iiiltiunc ' n i X3 3B ul. IE3 Hi ZLvdl 7 DEALER IN STOVES, FURNITURE, -AND ALL HOUSEHOLD GOODS. -LATEST KEPT CONSTANTLY ON HAND. PICTURE FEAMES SIXTH STREET, BET. MAIN AND FURNITURE -FOR ALL FINE :-: FURNITURE -YOU SHOULD CALL ON- Where a magnificent J 'rices UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING A SPECIALTY IIEN R,Y BOECK, CORNER MAIN AND SIXTH Begged Tuft- Will call your attention to the fact that1 they are headquarters for all kinds of Fruits and Vegetables. We are receiving Fresh Strawberries every day- Oranges, Lemons and Eananas constantly cn hand Just received, a variety of Canned Scupe. We have Fure Maple Sugar and -no mistake. BENNETT & TUTT. Jonathan Hatt. WHOLESALE AXTD ZtETAXX OOTY Owfl EAT m Aim LET. PORK PACKERS and dealkrs in BUTTER AND EGGS. BEEF, PORK, MUTTON AND VEAL. THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Sugar Cured Meals, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c, &c of our own make. The best brands of OYSTERS, in cans and bulk, at WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. GIVE 'E3333I J. CALL HEALTH IS WEALTH ! ll C V is Dr. E.C West's Nerve and Brain Treatment a guarantee specific for Uysteria Dizziness. Convulsions. Fits. Nervous fcieuralpia. Head ache. Nerveous Prostration caused ly the ue of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Sof teniDg of the l'rain resulting in in sanity and leading t- misery, decay and death, r remat ure old Age, Parretnens, Loss of Pow er in either sex. Involuntary Losses aufl fpf r iiiat rrba-a caused ly over-exertion of the brain, telfabuse or over-indnlgence. Each box contains one moiilh'e treatment, $1 CO a box or six boxes for S5.C0, sent by mail prepaid or receipt of price WE GTJAHATE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for fix bojres. accornpan'ed with 35.00, we will send the purchaser t-ur written Kuaran tee to return the ironey if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by Will J. Warrick sole agent, i'latt.mouth. .Neb. If yon rant a good silver watch, end us 30 subscribers to the Weekly Herald. JtKTAII. DKAM II IN ---- - - - . KINDS OF- STYLES OF- MADE TO OIDDEH. VINE. rLATTPMOUUJ, NEU. EMPORIUM. CLASSES OF- slock of Goods and Fair abound. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA J. W. AIabtiiis. The standard remedy for livur com plaint is West's Liver Pills; they never disappoint you. 30 pills 25c. At War rick's drug store. We will give a silver watch, that is warranted by the jewelry men of this city, to any one who brings us 15 yeaily cash subscribers to the Daily Hkri.d. JULIUS PEPPERBERG, MANCFACILELR OF AND WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALER IN 1IIK Choicest Brands of Cigars, including our Flor de Pepper berg', end 'Euds FCLL LISE OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES always in stock. Not. 20, 1665.