The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, October 09, 1888, Image 1
MiATTSMOUTII, NEBKASKA, TUESDAY HVKNINC1, OCTOlSHlt 1, 1888. KUMlIKlt Zl sj:ooni yeak V If- i v. y H.M. ki nv W K hi-x JAM r.lTrKIIH)w. .. .YIt-M t.'I.AMK - A AiAIMtl.X S :ivk..:u w ti jl ALIOS . r. Marshall. -Councilman. 1st ward. I A HAIJfiHUHT 2nd 3rd 4th. I l M JON KH ) lK. A Sill I'M AN j M iS MlIIH H V ft W IIU'ITOM t Con (i'Chnnob. I J W Jl1N .C'llAIIiil AN Coiud Pub.Vork- r-iiki Ookdkk 1 1 II Hawk Wo KTM GOLTjVrY OFFIGLIliS. rrevmw. I!uty rreaturer, -Clerk. Hepiuy Clerk, UeeorJer of UeeU (;i-.rk of District Court. Muerlll. - - -Surveyor. -Attorney. K'ipt. f t'ub. Schools, 1). A. C'AMPHELL TlllH. l"OlUM!K I'KirCII IKIX1 KXA C'KI rCHKIKI.U W. II. Pool. Join M. Lkvua W . O. SlIOWAUTRK J. V. KlKKNIIAKV A, MA1RM.K M.I. KM HKRHO.S MU'NAUII SINK C. Kl'MlLL County Ju li, UOAKD OFSUl'KKVISOKH. A.R.T.mo.Cli'iu.. - - IMattsmouth I. i;i4 FobT., A. 11. lM-KHO.S, Weeping Water Kunwood GIVIG SOGIKTJ5S.- ASS l.ODtiK No. llti. 1 O. O. K.-Meets V-'e v-ry Tuenday evening of ea:W wek. All lmieiil brothers are riitecttully Invited to hit f lid. JUATrMOUTII ENCAMPMENT No. 3. 1. O. lu itirit!i errv alternate Friday enHi liionth in the Maxoiiic Hall. ViiUtlng Brothers are iiivited to atteud. riiKIO LODliE NO. . A. O. V. W. Meets rery alternate KrMay erenlutt at K. of 1. h!'. 'Transient brother are respectfully In viit to atteud. K.J. Morgan. Master Work man ; F. V. Krowu. Foreman I. Kennter. Over seer: K. A. Taite. Financier: . F. Home worth. Recorder; M. May bright. Keeelyer ; 1. B nitth. Pait M. W. ; I. N. Bowen, Uulde ; P. J. Kunz. Iuslde Watch. J1AS8 CAMP NO. 332. MODERN WOODMBN J of America Meet second aud fourth Mon ti ay evening at K. of 1'. halL All transient brother are requested to meet with ua. L. A. Newcomer, Veuerable Comul ; O. F, Nile, Worthy Adviner ; 8. C. Wilde, Banker ; W. A. Boeck, Clerk. 1 LATTSMO UTH I.ODUE NO. 8, A. O. U. W. Meet erery alternate Friday evening at irockwood hall at 8 o'clock. All transient broth era are respectfully Invited to attend. L. . Larson. M. W. ; F. Boyd. Foreman : 8. C. Wilde. Recorder ; Leonard Anderson. Overseer. 1H.ATTSMOUTH LODGE NO. 6. A. F. & A. M. Meets on the nrt and third Monday of each month at their hall. All transient broth ers are cordially Invited to meet with uh. J. U. HiCHKV. VV.M. Wm. Hath. Secretary. V EBKASKA CHAPTER. NO. 3. K. A. M. Meet-H second and fourth Tuesday of each month at Miuon't Hall. Trauscieut brothers are Invited to meet with us. F. E. White, H. P. Wm. II ats. Secretary. Ht. ZION COMMANDARY. NO. 5. K. T. Meet flmt and third Wedpendy night of each month at Mmoi hall. Via'tlntf brother Kfa Wdtallylnvlt to fueet With CASS COUNCIL NO. lOgl, BO VAL 4BCANUM nHt the eeond aud fourth Maudavs of taca ni-jutb at Arcanum Hall. K. N. Uucsrv, Be.ent. P. C. Minob. Secretary. PLTTSMOUTH BOARD OF TRADE Prsl-lnt -,Boht, B WlRdham l"t Viue President A. B. load ill Vice President..: :.......Wm NeyiHe tJfftarV emiAuu Tivasurer OtRKuTOK. J. C. Eicbev. F. E. White, .V. K. Gutliman J. X. Conner. B. EIsm.h, C. W , iberpian, K". Gor" rt-r, J. V- aven. MoCOJilHIE POST 45 C. A. R. BQ8TEB. J. W. Johnso? Commander, ii. s. 1 wns senior vice K. a.Batks Junior " Owo. Nilf.i Adjutant. IIry stkkight , Q. M. HJ-ii.n'i li('-V( ontccr of the Itny. (.UAiiLiti rt,P, - " llj':ird .Mit!6x Fkv.". ..Sergt Major, j !.b OoitK .KiiAJf.. ..Quarter Master Sergf. L. O. Curtis .' .. .... .Post Chaplain "Meet in -"aturday evening WHEN YOU WANT WORK DONE -OF- CALL ON . Cor. 12th and Granite Streets. C infractor anil HtiUdcr V'i'-iiry f feed, flour, graham ami rr.tttl i Jl--i.4.-r mill, tf Tlic finit licdroom seta can be found at 1 1. Buirk'i. McinH Working Suits Men's Business Suits Men's Best Made Suits Men's Custom Made Suits .a. dopant Ztino of .W-ivir. TOOK THE OATH OF OFFICE. Molvilla W. Fuller Installed bo 'Chiof Justico. Wasiiinot,x, ct. 'J CSii'.-f Justice Fuller too lii o all of oiik-e and (ss(i:u s lL.- active du:i h tu p'i;tiu v ea ter day. An Uonr 'tfutt the time for oitening the cuuaC the narrow space allot ted to the general public in thi court chamber wi crowded by people who wilted to witness tli j ceremony of instal bition. Among the people of note who found places in the room were J udge Thurman, who was conducted to a seat within the small. space reserved for the marshal, and who became the con spicuous center of attraction during the half hour proceeding the entry of the justice: Sirs. Fuller, wife of the chief justice, with six daughters and one son, for whom seats were reserved; Mrs. Jus tice Harlan, Mrs. Senator Cockrell, Attor ney General G.uland, Japanese Minister Matsu,wifeand s::critary; Senators Davis, Butler, Hampton, Far well, George, Mitchell, Dolph aaa Spooner; Congress men BreckenrHge, Wheeler and Herbert of Alabama, and solicitor General Jenks. The chief justice arrived at the capitol at 11:30, and proceeded to the private office of the justice, where he took the oath of allegiance in the presence of the associate justices, the oath beiog admin istered by the senior Member of the court, Associate Justice Miller. At 13 o'clock the associate justices, in their robes of silk, headed by the marshal, entered in procession. The chief justice, also wear ing his robe of office, w is escorted to a place at the olerk's dsk. After a moment of silence Justice Mil ler said: " Gentlemen of the bar: I have the pleasure to iuform you that since the last meeting of this court and adjourn ment. Chief Justice Hon. Melville W. Fuller has been appointed, confirmed by the senate and received his commission. He is here and ready to take the oath of office. The clerk will read the commis sion," After the reading of the commission Chief Justice Fuller arose and, holding a bible in one hand, read from manuscript the oath of office: " I, Melville W. Ful ler, do solemnly swear (or afijrm) tbftt I will adiuipister just$e wltot respect to persona and do equal right to poor and to rich, and that I will faithfully and impartially perform all the duties incum? bent on me as chief justice of the United States, according to the best of my ability and understanding, agreeably to the con stitution and laws of the United States, so help me God." The cljwf justice was then escorted be hind the bar to his oficial scat in the center. The court and assemblage arose. Jnstise MUler tggk, fh.e fand. if i,e chief justice, and with ft a:iUe gf wdeo-u-1 vvU Ulu n low voice: " I wel come you on behalf of thi court as no of its members and r,s fhief justice." The chief justice b,u.wed,:nd was seated, when the assemblage was seated be said: "I will say to the members of the bar that, as a well known usage, the court will tran sact no business yesterday, but application fur admission to the bar will be entertain ed." After some twenty appliuuts were admitted adjournment was taken until noon today. In accordance with time-honored custom pf the court, the members ttf the supreme oourt called at the white house at 1 p. in. this afternoon and paid their respect to the president. All the justices were pres ent except Field atid Mathews, TernblQ Qia&ier In China San Francisco, Oct9 News from China brought by the steamer Belgic re ports the whole of the now embankment of the Yellow river at Chang Chou, begun last autumn and carried on at a cost equal to f 9,000.000, has been completely swept away by a flood. Of the 8,000 lin eal feet ef river wall recently completed not one inch remains, and the waters are i pouring through the immence gap into j Honan unchecked. From BOO to 1.000 I laborers who were on the bank were al- j ao swept away and were drowned. $ 4.95 I 7.80 I 10.00 I 25 00 I Doyo', TouthLo' aad Cblldron'q Ovorooata. WciLtufton'i Lack of Magoelum. I would instsneo Cuexnr. Hannibal. Marl bo roucrh. Nuiolfon and Guu. Lee as men who possessed vrhiit 1 regard as the hlgh ft lvelyuieat of military genius men v. Lu combined with the stratcfrlo grasp of Von Moltke and the calm wisdom and jat reasoning power of Wellington, all the power of Marshal Bugeaud and of Bouwaroff to Inflame the Imagination of their soldiers and impart to them some of the fiery spirit of reckless daring which burned within their own breasts. The personal magnetism which such great men possess so largely, and can without effort impart to others, was, I think, want ing in our "Iron Duke." The marvelous magnetic power of the great generous leader (Napoleon) over his men was cer tainly undervalued by Wellington. lie seems In his mind to have divided his army into gentlemen and common men. placing a great un bridged gulf between the two classes. With one or two ex ceptions, he apparently had the very poor est opinion of the military capacity of his generals of division, while he believed with all his cold heart in the dash, cour age, endurance, loyalty and patriotism of his regimental officers, the sons of Eng lish squires and younger sons of what was then called our aristocracy. ITe seldom, if ever, spoke In appre ciative terms of those brave soldiers who carried him in triumph from Lisbon to Toulouse, and If he had any affection for them he never showed It. lie believed that when restrained by the most rigor ously enforced discipline, and led by Eng lish gentlemen, they were, under him, in vincible. But he never hesitated to de scribe them as a collection of ruffians, the blackguards of every British parish, the scum of every English town. In fact, he was a thorough aristocrat at heart, with all the best sentiments, but still with all the prejudices of that class. There was no genial sympathy between him and his soldiers; they respected him, and during his later campaigns they had the most un bounded confidence in his military genius, but beyond his own Immediate military household, with whom he lived on terms of intimacy, no one loved him. It is for this reason that I think he will never be classed in the same rank of military greatness of real military genins with the five great leaders of men I have named above. Lord Wolseley In Fort nightly Review. The 'AfMtheoeia of Rata. How easily can the names of the great teachers of youth be eounted upon the fingers pf one hand! Of the great teach ers of the common schools we have almost no traditions. Pestalozzi and Froebel made It possible for mediocrity io r-j'a child's mind; but without well learned guiding lines the average Instructor makes the echoo! room a chaos where ignorance becomes ts awn law and shuts cut knowledge. In'lBo.me such, manner the pleader for ystem might argue. But the great diffi culty is that we nave not vet learned the relative meaning of Ignorance and knowl edge. We dq not teach the right things and we da pot get the best results. We use examinations as gas-tnir lines, but our percentages do not show true values. We get bits of information and progressive Series of bits, but we have flooded the child's mind, not developed it. Our school room work too often runs alon he line af mere suppression suppression I teacher, suppression of pupilsuppres sion of Individuality; the apothoesfs "SfciiiidTip elaborate echQOl m uf great cities, U ' , -.wems together la the ti 1 .- -eries of grades, apportion .. nours ior au worn indeed, the very minutes set a thousand machine moved teachers in the schools, and then pour in an overcrowded throng of children and begin to examine them. The children are of all sorts and nationalities: some well fed, well cared for, and well loved; some almost barbario, with generations of ig norance and poverty and indifference to education behind them. But our educa tion of all lies chiefly in onr examinations, In which the teachers are examined with them, for upon the results depend the teaohers' fortunes. This is one of our proud methods of building up the state. Of instruction, of character forming, of Aenta growin. mere is scarcely a thought. Often it seems but a great and complex system fox Wasting the formative years of childhood. -The Century. In the Cause of Science. A man went down from Paris to Autenil a few weeks ago. and, hiring a room in a secluded port of the city, shut himself np in it with a quantity of provi sions. He stuffed the keyholes with paper, pasted paper ove the window panes, and in other wayr manifested a desire for secrecy. After he had remained there several days the inhabitants told the police about him and the doors were burst In. It was then found that be was Inoculating three terriers with his own blood In order to ascertain whether a bite that he had received from a dog was likely to prove fatal. He explained that he was experimenting in the cause of science, and expected to discover some means by which every man could be his own Pasteur. New York Sun. Child V lvilt Suitsfrom Child's Suits from Boys' Suits from Youths' Suits from IIuw much "of your income do you have to pay for offleo rent?" was asked, of a well-to-do lawyer the other clay. Ills rooms are on tho first floor baek of a Dia mond street law building. "Well," said he, "my partner and I have three rooms, way back, as you would call it, and have to nay for their use the modest sum of $600 per year. I feel sometimes that I'd rather be tho owner of a large law building than be an attorney with a big practice." "You say your offices are in the rear; what do the men in the front of the build ing payY" "Not nearly so much. You're surprised? Well, no doubt; but what I say is right, and I'll tell you why. Persons occupying rooms in the rear of a building are will ing to pay a little more than for front rooms. This is because they are not an noyed by habitual office loafers, of whom there are many; then the man who runs in 'just to write a note,' as he says, or wants to use your desk a minute,' is un known. Fakirs don't find you in the recesses of your rooms, and the ncise and rumble of wagons aud street life do not annoy you. These are a few reasons why back offices are preferable and command a higher rate of rent." Pittr.bv.rj LM: The Italian' Ugly "Weapon. A knife, commonly carried and fre quently used by criminal Italians, is what Professor Seannapieco, the Neapolitan fencing master, calls tho "molletta." The molletta bears some resemblanco to a razor, though considerably longer. There is only one edge, and the blade opens like a penknife It swings loose, however, ana when drawn is opened by catching hold of the handle with the fingers and throwing the blade outward. This re quires practice and dexterity. A small spring catches the knife and holds it open- It is closed by pressure upon a tiny "button" on the handle. Though not as effective a weapon as the stiletto, it makes an ugly wound when used by an expert, and can be opened almost as quickly as a stiletto can be drawn from its sheath. The ease with which it can be concealed adds to the frequency of its use. The handle Is hard wood or bone. New York Graphic. Belgian Watch Doers. Among the exhibits in a Belgian dog show is a breed of dogs, the Schipperkes, found only in Belgium. They are made use of tvs watch dogs on board the numer ous Inland navigation boats. They are email black dogs, without tails and wJ4,1, pointed ears, of extraordinary lTljo-enoo and fidelity New Yori--UIU "tlJ'eMe B. A, M. Time Table. GOINCl WKHT, No. 1. 5 :0 a. til. No, S. ti :-0 , m. No. 6. 6 :47 a. in. No. 7.-7 :ao p. m. No. 9. 6 :17 p. m. OOING EAST. No, 2. 4 A'J p. in. No. 4. 10 :30 a. in. No. C 7 :13 p. m. No. 10. 9 :45 a. in, iso. lio ;-J7 a. m. All trains run dally by wavof Omaha, except Nos. 7 and 8 which run to and from tichuyler daily except Sunday. No. 30 Is a stub to Pacific Junction at s.30a m No. 19 Is a stub from Pacific Junction at 11 a.m. Gr- B, KEMPSTER, Practical Piano ciil Onan Tuner AND BEPAIRFH. First-class work guaranteed. Also er in Pianos and Oraaus. O- ,, furniture store. -' -yce 9 . attsmoutli, Nebraska. J. C, BOOSTS, BARBER AND HAIR DRESSER. All work first-class; west Fifth Street. North Robert Sherwood's Store. R. B. Windham. John A. Da vies. Notary .Public. Notary Public. WlXUHAHa IIAVIE8, Attorneys - at - Law. Office over Bank of Cn?s County. PliATTSMOTJTH, - NEBRASKA for an incurable case of Catarrh la Um Head by the proprietors of DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. Symptoms of Catarrb. Headache, obstruotion of nose, discharges falling; into throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid ; eyes weak, ringingr in ears, deaf nea. difficulty of clearing; throat, expecto feation of otten.lre matter: breath offensive: smell and taste impaired, and general debility. Only a few of these aym ptoms likely to be pres ent at once. Thousands of cases result in con sumption, and end In the grave. By its mild, soothing, and healing properties. Dr. Sage's Remedy cures the worst cases. 60c. The Original UTTLK Liver Pills. Purtlv Vtgtta ' bit & BarmUttt UnequaledasaUverPIll. Smallest, cheap est, easiest to take. One Pellet a Doee. Cure Sick Headaches Hilton Headache Dizziness. CouetlpaUou, Indigestion, Bilious Attack, and all derangements of the stomaca and bowels. 25 eta. by druggists, ZJX. $1.90 to 3.75 9.80 .00 to 3.25 to 10.90 4.00 to 15.00 sue. You mioa it if you don't buy your Olotiiiiia, ZXato, Capo, ZTur- -IS BOOMING GettheLow - -BEFORE VIeifs ant D GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, Hats, Caps i cJT O IES' s the Leader At Solomon 2Ta.tliaa's Old Stand. THE HAS A FULL DAYLGHT Cloaks & Wraps Por Winter Wear. DUESSOOODS OFFERED AT THE LOWEST PIHCES. FLANNELS, YARN'S. ETC., And Everything kept in a First-Claas Ilonsf, lor Winter "Ware. CARPETS, QIJvOLQTHB, MATTINGS, ZiA.CE WZ1TX)0"T C"CT:PuTI1TS. A Full and Complete Stock of LADIES' AMD CHILDREN'S SHOES I New Goods Jleeeh-ed Daily. Giv0 s a Call. IT WecklbacIhL 3r j&l. 3E 3XT S i Men's Overcoats -Men's Nobby Check Overcoats Men's Fur Beaver Overcoats -Men's Black Worsted Overcoats BUSINKSS WITH- WaterPrice YOU BUY - coys Lioining and Trunks. of Low Prices! STORE LINE OP LADIES' 2 00 5.00 12.50 1000 n ii J1