The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, August 30, 1888, Image 3

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AN
How Wraith n,l Fame Crew Out of
null of Wrapping Vmpr and Couple
or ItimI IVneiU Ha Story of "Mjr
rartner."
Hartley Camplioll Lad about four years of
such exquisite enjoyment a is permitted to
very few men. Hut ho lucked moral fitter
and Lin great nnceeuwa overwhelmed him.
When he found money rolling in iu a fashion
that roiiii.xl really great wealth in a very
few year he seemed to have nought excite
ment of a different kind, which should bul
nnoe the exhilaration and surprise that he
found in the splendid change of fortune that
canio iu a uight. TlnHafegunrd for men of
Caiupt-H'g teineraiuent at aii'-lj times is tho
family, and he hud a diurtuing one. But bo
wnt his to i:uroo, ojid although ho lavUhed
ull tho money they milled ujion them, yet he
was lj oud tho restraining influences of do
mesticity, and it i no doubt partially duo to
this that he is now dead as ho has been intel
lectually dead for two years or more.
We suppose that Campbell's career will be
come historic as that of the ono American
jiot an actor who made a distinct pecuniary
ticcett.-i an a playwright. It is, indeed, a pity
that ho should have collapsed on the thresh
ed of a career which, with a man of sterner
resolve and greater self control, might per
il .-rpt have uraJleled that of any of the win
ners of great iecuniary prizes in dramatic
-composition. The fact that Campbell actu
ailly became famous and stepiied over the
threshold which difjdes ;overty from wealth
fu ono night is kuonn td every one', ut
tV-ro aro some interesting aiul highly sug
te; live incidents conuected therewith, which
it is possibly to tell for the first time.
In the ifvly sp.ng of 1S79 Campbell turned
upin'Nev. York- almost in extremity, lie
was in.k-l.to.1 to friends for tho bed on which
he slept, and Vhen friend
ho was frequei-aly oon."elled to 6 hungry,
lie haunted out or two newspajHT offices,
and sold a little matter, am." ww extremely
grateful for tho aid thereby ob?JueL
great a.s was his poverty, ho haS c J
ttcteri.stio Irish way of living iu tho l0"
and never lietraying auy of tho servilitJ'N
clestioiideticy which usually beset the persou
who is far to tho bad ecuniarily.
One day in June, 1S79, Campbell met a
friend on Broadway. The day was warm,
and yet Campbell's root ho always wore a
long tailed coat buttoned up to tho
chin. All sorts of reflections were jiossiblo ut
this queer midsummer garb, but Campbell
was as light and trifling as though he had a
tirJ: ook in his jtocket and a breakfast in
liis Rtomai-h. Tho friend pretended that he
was ju.st going to lunch and invited Camp
bell to go with him. If the playwright did
jiot understand the delicacy of the iuvitation
wh'.ii it was given, he could not have failed
to do bo when he saw the lunch, and be paid
his entertainer tho compliment of eating a
tenderloin steak as if he were bungry. As
they separated Campbell's friend said: "I
suspect your ship hasn't come in, Bartley,
.r. i id I want you to tako this to remember me
y." Tiio "this" was a $. bilL Campbell
took it with eusy grace, smiled, declared he
would return it with interest, and he did. lie
afterward said that this $5 bill was tho turn
ing ixint iu his fortune. With it he bought
mo paper and a couple of lead pencils. The
paper was of tho cheapest kind of white
wrapping paper, and on it in two days' tinie
lie wrote that act of "My Partner" which
mailt) his fortune
With n wad of this paper in his pocket he
nailed out of his lodgings to find L lis
Aldricb, who had won repute iu Joaquin
J.Iiller's play of "The Danites." Aldrich
gave a sigh of resignation when Campbell
cornered him, and thought the easiest way to
rid himself of what ho feared would be a bore
was to permit Campbell to read the play.
The playwright, with his flimsy sheets ill
hand, liegan. At first Aldrich was bored,
then entertained, then interested, then ex
cited, and then, with dramatic enthusiasm,
nibraced the colhirless playwright. Aldrich
became moro enthusiastic than Campbell,
nd promised at once to buy tho play and
jravo tho playwright some earnest money on
tho spot. So cuthasiastic was Aldrich that
ho wanted to mouut the play and produce it
ut onco.
Behold, then, on the next morning an ambi
tious author with some money and a strug
gling play wright with none bound for Stam
ford, Conn., to see A. M. Palmer. The man
ager also sighed when ho saw them, and de
rlincd ieremptorily to listen to any proposi
tion respecting the production of a play. Ho
was tirud, he said. He wanted to take his
summer vacation in peace. Besides, he was
on the point of going to New York and could
not listen to them. Campbell's spirits came
to the rescue. "You'll have an hour ou the
train," he said, "and nothing to do. You
.cau hear the play and pass the time away,
nyway." They secured two seats in the
far, turning them so they would face. Pal
mer sat in the rear ono and Campbell and
Aldrich faced him. Tho expression on Pal
mer's face would have appalled a more timid
uvau than Campbell. But he began to read.
Palmer listened indifferently at first, but he
ended by wiping his eyes. lie was affected
to tears the first time and last time in his ex
lerienco as a manager. Said he, when they
reached New York, "You may have the
Union Square theatre if you will mount and
produce tho play. I will risk the rental on
tho success of it."
Mr. Campbell said to the writer when hit
narrated the above history in 1SS3 that t
week after .that play was produced be bad
' received propositions for plays which, could
ho have . entertained them, would have
brought him $40,000 in cash. lie also de
clared that during no season since the play
was produced up to that time, the winter of
1SS2, bad his each receipts been less than
10,003, and at one season be had made
nearly double that. lie declared that ho had
$00,000 invested in securities, which could be
.turned into cash on the spot, and be esti
mated himself to be worth at least $150,000,
lie then expected to make $500,000 within
five years, but said that ho had determined
to take all the profits of bis play himself
ind not allow actors or managers to take the
cream. Mr. Palmer thinks that Campbell,
lisd he poeressed good business sense and
moral strength, would very likely have real
ized this sum. Ho had caught the public ;
car. He bad discovered eractly what the '
great masses of theatregoers like and knew !
Jiow.to utilize it, and be had gained sufficient '
capital to carry on bis enterprises, but be is I
another one of those who endure the sor-
rows and trials of poverty with far greater j
success than the excitement of iro3perity. !
Sfetr York Evcnicg Sun. i
u - I
' . Steamed Potatoes Are Jlet, j
f Professor Wagner publishes analyses in
support of his coyeju-ion that steamed pota
' .toes ore far mora putricious than boill
Jones. In the procesj of boiling, the vege
tables give up considerable portions pf nutri
jcious salts, whilo they also take ap more
iwaier uxa wiieu neamea, ana Decomepro-
- FATAL SUCCESS OF
AMERICAN PLAYWRIGHT.
Tlr C 1 - VL ,
. rurUi. or froad. 8jrs Idy UAd-
Why is It that &s s rule fat men are o much
more amorous than thin menf Is it that they
grow fat on the pleaitaut pastime of making
love, while more intellectual pursuits run to
skin and bone? Many fat men are simply
rather stupid, good nulured and inordinately
vain; they are generally the last, and it may
be that the pleasant sensation of vanity is
good nourishment. But it is surprising how
often, given the opportunity, tho talk of fat
men runs to flirtation or to fooL Of course
I don't mean to say that a fat nun always
talks of various dishes any more than that
his conversation with a woman usually in
cludes an offer of marriage. On the con
trary, peihaJ, knowing his own weakness,
ho is more chary of his proposals than are his
lea uer brethren; by the same token he does
not oienly diwourse on food, :but ho will
amble off gently in its direction.
He will tell you of the best dining places
in every rontinental city ho hoi visited, or
remark on the wretched cooking here, the
insufficiency of service there. Perhaps he
will tell you of his grajn-s or the size of his
cucumliers, though grapes and oucumlers
are not much in his way. He sometimes
prides himself on his cellar, but ho will
of tener know the ingredients of an out of the
way curry, or have at his fingers' ends the
names of places where you can get choice
aud curious dishes.
So in talking to women his conversation
runs to little complimonts, arxia semblance
of love making; he talks of marriage, hedges
round it, aud smiles and looks up to see if
they are pleased. When he sjMJaks of women
it is from the old fashioned point of vfow
that he considers them, for he is too fat to
hurry on and catch up advanced ideas. A
woman, he thinks, should be prettj-, irrev
erent, saucy and given to fcmiliug and blush
It is by a blush or a smile that )npn of
iis typ? OX caught. She has no business to
know anythir about books, except in a su
perficial manner th1 Will nf!le her to talk
for five minutes ouly or Ptry onJ novels.
She should especially know nothing oX PM"
T T .1 . in i
ui-a. no uun iioi ime wuuwu wuu metis ci
tbeir own; they ought to take them distilled
and diluted from men iu general and their
husbands in particular.
I have frequently noticed another curious
trait; it is that after the first few indulgent
minutes ho diverts bis conversation to bis
own unx, and will almost ignore niifl, even
(il a party of half a dozen, for as a rule good
i .-"cdiug is not hi strong point. There ore
..(icms, of course, and I have known
some chJ'rn,S ,es- ' a" on,y speaking pf
tho majority " we a girl I would pray
heaven to savexme from a fat man. Well it
has.
Many fat men have" ppde love, or tried to
make love to me, but comparatively rew
have come to the point. 5ur fat man is
cautious, and does not commit himself to a
direct offer unless he is certain that be means
it, aud is equally certain that he will be ac
cepted. As a rule he is certain of tup latter,
for modesty is not his besetting virtue; be
sides, he is of tho type that thinks all women
are sighing for matrimony, longing for it as
the one grand treat of their lives, and of a
refusal it is difficult to make him believe the
reality. Lady Lindesy in Temple Bar.
A Detective's Opinion of Cri4i
"Yes, I suppose men are growing bettert"
said a prominent detective, thoughtfully.
slowly puffing at a cigar as if be drew trial
balances of good and evil with the smoke;
"that i- to say there is less violent crime.
liut do you Know what kind ol crime gains
relatively yes, and I think absolutely tooft
I deferi-fad to hjs superior knowledge. "It is
what might be called feu gab prjuOrrcrime of
calculation as distinguished from oHms of
passion and violence. A few days ago The
Jew York Herald published a list of great
euib2hnent.s in this country in the past ten
years or to be xac$ ton and a half years.
It shows a total $50,756,473,4-. The fir
months of 1SSS show a total of $2,210,000,003.
That's well up to the average, and the biggest
of them is within a month passed June 27,
when teller Pjtpher of the Union bank,
Providence, disappeared with $,-. Thja
is the growing crime or one of them.
"Tho other is the abuse and abandonment
of wives. You think detectives are hard
hearted, WpIJi they have to be in a way or
they would ireiS at Ibe Cl'gjit of sorrow w
meet day after day. Poor, ha4 Wfir!f!?S
women washing and scrubbing to suppors
louts of men, who drink up all they earn.
Tund'T women with little babes at their
breasts deidrted and struggling from sunrise
till late at night Ut buppcrt t-MT little ones
and scarcely seeing their children that ae Lig
enough to be out of their arms from oue day
to another. That is the kind of experience
that makes a man case harden himself in
very self defense, and it is growing. As we
become more English iu 6ihe? things:, wo be
come liko them in our crimes. We becu
wife Waters and wife deserters like tbeni. I
tell you, if the women would promise to
establish tbr? whipping post for wife beaters
and a chain gang fa? wjfe deserters, I would
bo a suffragist in no time, aud b falked so
earnestly that his cigar went out, and he
flung it from him with an angry vim that
showed one thief catcher hadn't been hard
ened farther than the surface. Buffalo News.
The World's Oldest Rose Buslu
The oldest rose bush in the world is at
Hildersheim. It was planted more than 1,000
years ago by Charlemagne in comroemorar
tion of a visit made ham by the ambassador
of the Caliph Haroun-al-Raschid, of "Arab
ian Rights" fame. A few years afterward
when Louis the Pious, the son of Charle
magne, was bunting in the neighborhood,
moss was said in the open air. On returning
to bis home, the officiating priest found that
the holy i macro was missing. Returning to
to the spot where mas bad been said, he dis
covered the missing image in the branlips pf
a wild rose tree. As it miraculously evaded
his grasp he went back to Louis and his suite
and them of tho wonder. They all
rushed to the spot find fell on their knees be
fore the ndraculous bush. A tthpdrol was
built above it, its roots being inclosed in a
sort of coffin shaped vault, under the middle
altar of the crypt. This crypt was built iu
theyvar 818, and ith Jhe lose tree it sur
vived a fire which' destroyed all the restpf
the cathedral in 114& The roots are over
1,000 years old. The rose plant was, when
described a few years ago, still living and
bloonr ing profusely, and wa twenty.-six feet
high, covering thirty-two feet of wall,
though the stem was only two inches in di
ameter. Sophie B. Herrick in The Cosmo
politan. ptopplrg a Steamer's Headway.
A French inventor, M. Pagan, has discov
ered a way to stop the headway of a steamer
in short order, and consequently lessen con
siderably the dangers of collision at sea. The
Havre and Bordeaux papers speak of a coin
lug if; pf (be machine by one of the French
war steamers. The my.hfpe consists of a
cumber of parachutes, so placed that they
can bo tossed overboard readily and towed
by a cable. Tho resistance, without being
great enough to produce a shock, rapidly
overcomes the headway of the vesseL 2Tew
THE
MANY OLD gUSTO".
Esternal
S,otliiyinK v
- A
Id
Two
Xh n.l MoorUX Tt1UI.
Old MoorU -win.-- t
Abituru
Senorita .
Objection to
Creator Social I re-doni-
rilways. In changing t-ua-
Naturally the r.
flrst show their modi-
toms and ways of lift.. 'js a .r"ar
fying influences in extc. v. J -
house furnishings, but a ch Wfi Und to bj
made in social customs. M. co derlTed ts
habits of life from Siuin at a t we when Spg tn
was still overlain by Moorish . traditions aid
customs. Colonial Mexico fabufulljr coj.ed
the pattern or Mother span, ua stuck to
the example long after manyPpanisb J ut
began to be Euroieanized. But the influ meo
of the dead ami gone Moor is sti 1 stroj ig ia
both Siain and her former colonies, 'fjio
Moorish house holds its own here, vj.th its
quiet exterior and lavish adorument v itbin;
with its barred wiudows and heavy gates
rather than doors, and its grouping of all
tho living room around a courtyard, thus
making a house as open as day insido, and
destroying that privacy we gain in the uorth
irom me system oi placing cnaniDers up
stairs. The Mexican house, with its rooms
communicating by glazed do:-rs, aud each
room opening by another door upon a corri
dor, is almost semi-public. Its air of privacy
consists palely in the big outer door and the
barred window Inside tbeso nouses, many
of them as beautiful as a dream, filled with
birds and flowers, aud gently nojsy by the
plashing of fountains, live the women, whose
outer life is bodged about with absurd old
Moorish traditions, contrary to the native
Mexican spirit of liberty and to the tenden
cies of (he nge, Mexjpan wpn.ea are the
severest critics of the ancient customs. They
rebel against them and tigh for a greater
measure of social freedom. Ask almost auy
sbuoritfc find, she will t,ejl you that "life h
stupid and dull, that there is no social
rvety, and that she is tired to death of it,
and wants to go to New York or Paris."
If you wish to keep & young girl contented
with l.hj p4 prder of tbincs, restrict her
reading to her pray er book; don't let her see
a novel or a newspaj)er, and keep her caged
tip in the house. Then, perhaps, she will im
agine that this is the lot of women the round
wprld vr. fut womeu are keen, and it
doesu't take long for then $q dlscqvcr that
men have made the rules by which one-half
the human race ore expected to live iu meek
subjection. TtlTP is pot a man alive with
tho soul of a mouse who would submit to (lie
rules governing women, even Iu 'iho freest
countries. When a girl of 18 goes out on the
street she does p&fc wh to be "protected" by
a 6-year-old boy cub iu kniokerbooku). Sho
thiuks, and rightly, that she ought to be able
to go by herself , if she so wishes, and that if
meu will speak to her aud annoy her, the
police ought to lock them up. Aud she is ex
act;!y right. A woman, young or old, should
be as free fpcin molestation in the public
streets as a mat), And it tl U uot, thmi the
lamp posts are lacking their fittest orna
ments. l.V THE CITT OP MEXICO.
In this big City of Mexico, with rich
houses, great churches, electric lights, street
cars, juxurlpug shops and all the appjiances
of civilization, tliure is not a single, solitary
cafe where a lady can go without a male es
cort to take an ieo or a light lunch. This is a
humbug, and no wonder Mexican women are
beginning, as they learn of foreign ways, to
enter a protest against this selfish system,
which turns a boy of 14 loose iuto a world of
temptations, and forbids a modest girl the
most innocent freedom. I have heard a
lovely Judy, ihfc m&t Lr ut ft large family.
say that she would feel unoomforiahle to so
with her daughters iuto the principal restau
rant here to order ices. But let her take a
hobbledehoy boy along and the proceeding
we'll'! be; proper enough. Greut is the magic
of trousers.' ThVoesrtning tor the Mexican
ladies to do is to get up a social revolution.
and inform "Pepe" end "Pancho" that they
will no longer be governed by the ghosts of
dead end vanished Moors, whose sole living
representative ue found iu the mct do
graded corner of Africa. If nearly 1,900
j-ears of Christianity have not advanced civ
ilization in a great Christian city so that the
mothers of families and the charming daugh
ters of t.boao mothers can go about in public
enjoying all innooeuc liberties, why then we
must confess our civilization a veneered bar
barism, and that the brute mob is still too
strong to permit women their just rights.
The objection frequently made to giving
greater sopia freedom to tho women is that
tho men, being' of 'southet-n bioo3,"ie too
passionate in their addresses, and would, if
permitted to mingle moro freely with the
women, begin to pay court to them and
make love in earnest. But I don't believe
thea ay less chivalry among Mexican
men than exist3 a ni tbern nalipn. The
overt. tress laid on love in Latin nations
comes from tho Moorish seclusion in which
the women live. The young men ore poet
ical, aud talk of love when they should be
plying pp or jiuiitiuf , and the mystery
surrounding the life of '"ie Women stimu
lates their fancies. It is an unhealthy sys
tem when young men begin writing erotic
verses at an age when outdoor sports should
fcngage fbeir attention, ine boy m Latm
countries sees, pf course, his mother and his
sisters, but, like all lads, he has a decided
taste for somebody else's sisters. He can't
on tfleP familiarly, owing tQ tbis fine
old Moorish etiquette, and so hit must cauf&fi
himself to watching balconies and contriv-
in
means to smuggle notes to the adored
one by some bribe ta-ing servant. XI be
had been like an American lad, sent to a
mixed school where he fuund put that tfiv's
were very much like boys, and that soma
are cross and disagreeable, soma too spoony
and others too acid, he would not moke so
much of a mystery pf the female sex. Bnt.
not having passed through that period 6t
disillusionment, he begins to make love when
hardly out of short trousers. Cor. Boston
Herald.
Animals! Fi.-emonitipMS of Dsai!;.
Mr. L. IL Craig writes, affirming that ani
mals often have premonitions of death. In
proof of this assertion be offers certain an
ecdotes. Hero js pne of them: "Years ago."
he says, f.'Iwas staying at a farm house where
it was the custom every evening to' drive a
small herd of cows from the pasture tq a lot
near the barn. t was decided one day to
kill one of the number, yea ling, whose
mother also belonged to the herd. The calf
was accordingly left in the lot, while the rest
were driven as usual to the pasture. No
sooner had the butcher slain his victim than
there could be distinctly heard from the pas
ture half a mile away the mournful lowing
of the mother, the other cows occasionally
joining in what could be described only as a
wail. The circumstance interested me very
much, and I walked over to the pasture.
Through thirty years that pathetic picture
of maternal grief has remained with me. It
seemed to me that lUein yeas tui ac'ual sob
bing of a bursting heart, and to my childish
eyes there were tears moistening the face of
the poor, gentle, sorrowful creature before
me." North American Review.
Walter RrMatt paper.ou cer-
' . t 1 DO -M
Science mowu.j - ---- fClty u a; -
4InvatTons to these ,
connnes ui or Bty ,
The disuse of IIiaJority of
m.,..lar exertion by J.ne 6 t loUe of
...l women. - .. . t.iu n
mt - ,.. jarring ot i
laTcoCrdybyconUuual Treading !-
snit. . nr.fordi
.ieati -t these lniiuc ... bility
Theeifect . undermu.o tae ta
Dr.
Piatt, t Yf."r -vu effects
f!Utv: generation
--rted that
the nerv.
lation and gene,
accumulate with e,i-..
liondou I
of city dwellers, and it is
are very few families now livin ' .
who, with their predecessors, have' resiu.
there continuously for three generations.
In regard to tho lack of arm Ull,l Moulder
exercise, tho doctor joints out that it has nn
militant bearing on tho genera, helhh o
both men and women, since it increase. t).
or the lung tissue, so essential to tho m-oner
fication of the blood. In tho VSZ
through gymnasium work, or som f-...
S9" puUins-weights, dumb
upon arm exercise r,c-.u. . . .
Physical condition and to t7e preve m.i
nervous irritabilitv n,i .,!iIll,oa t
disorder. --ucuu menial
The injurious effect of incest nf.
an irritant to tho irv. . T
demonstrated by experiment, as well as
r " . v "urvai- A large share of thi
s
in mo residential rort'oMSf f r
lirt tir-i a 1 i -
i
loud rineina of churh liiu
lopjivd. "'J'ho
at all hours of
...
tlici tiav mikI nifrlif 41.: .
r - ' mis ago, wnen every
ono knows tho hour of service, hardly recom
mends the religion of good will to meu, MVs
tho doctor. Streets of residenooa -hould L
paved with asphalt:
should. ssFf?an fclevated structures, and all
unnecessary noises or street traffic and vend
ing should be forbiil
To prevent the shock to the h..:..
spinal cord causal by tl?u jfti' of walking on
f;rjcH pr qltine the doc-tor suggests an elastic
rubber boot heeL In this country very little
heed is paid to the nerves of the i.r,). i.Q
are lucky to escape with their lives from the
.miy jH..rus. uut anything thtut tends to
mae city uie mar-e agrecaWo and beautiful
onght certainly to bo encouraged ew
York World.
The Writer As lie Writes.
When you just betriu to be an Hiitlmv ill.
sight of the blank sheet of paper gives y-ou
an appetite instead of depriving you f it.
You long to be at work and cover it with ink
marks. A new writer not ouly enjoys writ
ing, but rewriting also; 1 have known authors
who will copy out a piece, over and over
again, until tho page appears without au
erasu-o. That is not a Lad thing by way of
practice, and would no doubt be advocated
by the printers. But it is not likely to bo
kept up more than two or threo years. After
that the writer kuows what he is going to
write before he writes it; ho has learned "the
art of putting the contents of his mind di
rectly on the paper; besides, he has not the
time tq make ceppui- plate repiocluctior of
his work. Ha is moro apt to put it off to tho
last practicable moment, and then to do it as
rapidly as he can. And by and by it will lw
irksomo to him to do it at all; and ho w.Ul
wiah that fortune would present him with a
year's vacation, during which he could lie on
his back and do nothing.
'There is a period, iu tha writing of every
book when if iffectus impossible it should ever
bo Gu'shed. What has gone before seenis bml,
and what is to ccuiie is cither a blank, oj- it
promises to be worse than tho beginning. An
apathy, a paralysis, settles upon the worker;
he wishes he bad taken up butchering or
liquor selliug for a living. Every day that
ho postpone' thn completion of bis. task it air
pears niore hopeless; his mind is gloomy, his
conscience oppressed; ho haunts his study,
but effects no more than a ghost might i be
draws pictures on scraps. ff ttiper, reads
books tha? do &ot interest him, or even plans
out work that can only be executed at some
indefinite future opportunity; at last his
final moment of grace expire.?, and ho sits
down in desperation aud plunges his per, nu
tho inkstand. Tho wprlj gA ua, andtheu
he vii"4-'l"s. ,of ho could have Imagined anv
difficulty. The word "Finis" is written, aud
ho experiences an uplifting of tho spirit.
Thackeray, according to all account?. v;
subject to distressful periods cf this kind:
but he declares, in one of his essays, that
after finijshiug a given book it was his'custoia
always to begin another before going to bed
in the mood of reactionary lightheartedu.;ss
lollowuig upon his depression. Julian Haw
thorne iu America.
Priving Opt Iip Cattlpar,.
Immigration is coming with a resistless
tide. Ex-Goveinor itouit, oue of the ereat
cattle owners of tho wcst, when speaking of
how the ranges were being so rapidly set
tled, recently said: MThe cow musi give way
to Naiicy and th? Ijalif." The iudiuo
tion of the coining of this groat tide of im
migration was manifested by cattlem n put
ting up wire fences and inclosing vast areas
of land. This sufficed for a time, but immi
gration still continued, and then after much
litigation the pourte said: "Take dQY4 your
wire fences." As the cattlemen occupied
these great ranges for a quarter of a century
before it was ever thought poiLle for them
to have any value for agricultural purposes,
it is not strange that they should have mado
the determined fight they have. The plow
share now glistens in the old ".A.meii.jau
Desert"' and the old pattle trails are being
turned into farms." The east can tardly
realize the wonderful changes that are tak
ing place. Within twenty-five years thij
buffalo, which us! o foam these plains by
tne sen ot thousands, aro almost extinct.
Tho great herds of the cattle kings took tho
place of the bison, but now the cattle rnugc-s
aro being turned iuto farms.
What will be the result Tho gnii-al im-
preaoion is. that there will bp. nioro cattle, but
With more owners. The public domain will
soon all be taken, which will necessitate the
dividing and subdividing of the great herds.
The result will come about in a natural way
and without loss, but rather with profit As
lue grazing area becomes more circumscribed
the greater the necessity for winter feeding
and the production of some k.ind of ( oed thai
will moie readily prepare stock for tho
market. Such feed consists of alfalfa,
sorghum Lay, Johnson and other varieties of
farm grasses, oil cake, roots, etc., while in
parts of western and southern Texas prickly
pear la species of cacti) is being largely use
with cotton seed nval 04: oil cake,' with
which, it iu claimed cattle may be easily fat
tened. The beef from animals thus fed is
said to be of a most excellent quality and
flavor. Denver Cor. Globe-Democrat." ,
The principal foreign missionary societies
of the United States send in the aggregate
$3,o06,2M annually for the spread of the Gos
pel in heathen lands. Great Britain through
her various societies expends on nussionaries
1
AIX
of
there V
uKl,T(ONSTANTLV
2?ICTT7H. .
SIXTH STUKKT, IJKT. Mv.
i
o e q q e
-ii:aij:hs ix -
Fine Staple and
-lk';i(ljiiurrer's
Fruits and
On
mm.1.-
I.ttiiun-;,
CaimtMl
Jianans
Fruits
PRICES LOW.
T
2ain Street
Jot
NATHAN JlATT.
ffWAAIB"
TYMEATIfflA
POM. PACKEI5S and dkai.kkk in 15UTTKK AND IX'CS.
BEEF, 1'OIIK, MUTTON AND VEAL.
THE BEST THE MARKET AFFOHDS ALWAYS ON HANI),
Sugar Cured Meals, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c., &c
of our own muke. The Lest brands of OYSTEHS, in tuns ni.d l;iilk at
"WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
CHT7II 'vC J. T3 3k TT.-r-
WatciiGc ! Watokes I i
H. M. GAULT
Hus moved mul is now in the Sherwood
room, Cor. ftth and Main Sts., v.liore
he is better able to .show his
Large Stock of Watches,
CLOCKS AND JEWELRY !
Than ever licforo, and will as an induce
ment it'll you Watches way down. Call
find get the Special Prices in Gold Watch- ;
es; it will surprise you. A Full Line of
the Left styles o! Jewelry and Silverware, j
Itepairiuii will be given Special Attc-n- '
0011. au work warranted to give satis
faction. HEALTH IS WEALTH !
Ur. Y.. C, Wfi -s Nerve and I'.ruin Treatmnit
a ai riiiu'e sfiecilic for Ilvstt-iia Di.ziness.
Convulsions. Fits. Neivous Keuralfria, licad
aehe. NerveoiiB l'rostijitioii cm used lv the i!e
of alcohol ortil?aeco. Wakefulness. Mer.talDe-lire-fion,
SofteuiDfr of the F-raiu remit inr in in
sanity and leHilirg t iniserv, tlecny nd 'Jeath,
-reuiature oUi Ate. linnei uess, Loss itl'o
er in either m x. InvoliiLtary Lcsves liiid S;n-r-mati
iiIki h caused ly over-exertion of Hie
brain, selfabu.se or over-indulgence. J-'ueh box
contains oce mui'ih'rt treatment. Si a tinx
or six boxes for ?5.K), seut by luail ii(j,uidor
receipt of price
WE GCARAKTEE SIX EOXES
To cure any rae. With eaeh order reietvrd
by us for six boxes, accoii;iiu:fil w itn is (hi,
we v.'i(l send tli purchaser ur written fMiai aii
tee to letuin the ironey il the tn atn.c nt does
not eiteet a cure. Cuaryntees issu d cnlv by
ill J. V. 'aniek se!e k ut, I'latlMnontii. Neb.
wll s hi
g!5imf 'ail
oa s ms d v,i. w
GOODS.
ON UAl-
Fancy Groceries
lor all kinl of.
Vegetables I
ami all varieties f
euristantl y m haml.
In -si
i ami
GIVE US A CALL,
& TUTT,
2?J attcnou.tli.
W. .Mai'.thh.
JIATT & L'APm.
j. .
R0BBINS, ARTIST,
1NSTKIXTIONS J1 VKN JN
FINE OIL PAINTING
W AT EK COLORS, KTC.
ALL LOVKliS OK Al:T A 11 K INVllKD
TO CAM. AM)
EXAMIiTli 1ALyT WOBK
STUDIO OVER OLIVLII A IIAMSE
OVER
M E A
MAHKET.
O. B. KEMPSTlR,
Practical PiEin tnd Organ Tnucr
ANJJ ItKl'AIUMt.
First el asa work guaranteed. Also deni
er in Pianos ami Orpins. Ofiiec at i'oeck'n
furniture store, Plattsmoutli, Nelrasku.
MEN OF MARK."
WRITIXN BY
' Rev. J. W. Simmons, D- D.
This book is one that every loyal j;er
t son should possess. It tells of nil the
i foremost colored men of the United
1 Stares. It jiiviK their biographies, arid
! lias over 100 line steel engravings.
J OHN O, BOONE,
! Agent for C'tiss Cjuntv.
C. F. SM I TH,
The Boss Tailor.
Maid St., Over Merges' Shoe Store.
lias the best and most complete fiior k
of samples, both foreign and domestic
woolens that ever came west 'of Missouri
river. Xote these prices: Ilusinese suits
from ill! to .',. dress mil, to $45,
pants $4, $., $ti.fjM aud upurd..
4'?"WilI guaranteed a fit.
Prices Defy Compelilion.
OO TO
Win. Iferohl & Son
Dry GoOuS. Notions Ecots suet Stccs
or Ladies and Gents
FURNISHING - GOODS.
lie keeps as large and as well
SELECTFI- STOCK"
Af can be found any place in the Pity and make
you prices that defy CGiiipPtiiiuu.
Aiceiits for
Bazar P.tterm ul
1
Ball's ccneti.-
V
roraonateiyjWeftKer. images.
I Yi
i. ork Bun. ....
1