The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, October 23, 1888, Image 2
Tfca Plattsmoutb Daily Herald. KNOTTS BEC8. Publishers & Proprietors. TUB I'LATTSMOUTH HERALD Is published every evening except Sunday aud Weekly every Thursday morniug. Kegta tered at the poitofrice, I'latti-iiioutli. Nebr.. ffcond-cUa matter. Office corner of Vine and Fifth ttrtets. Telephone Ko. 38. TERMS FOR DAILY. One copy one year In advance, by mail $6 no One copy per month, ly ran ier,. 60 One copy per week, by carrier, 13 TBMS FOB WEEKLY. One dopy Que year, in advance $1 50 One copy tlx months, in advance 75 NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. FOR PKESIDKNT, BENJAMIN HARRISON, of Indiana. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, LEVI P. MORTON, of New York. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS II. C. RUSSELL, Colfax county. GEO. II. HASTINGS, Saline county. M. M. IJUTLER, Cass county. CIIAS. F. IDDING8, Lincoln county. JAMES 3IcNENEY, Webster county. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. FOR GOVERNOR. JOHN M. THAYER. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR. GEORGE D. M EIKLEJOHN. FOR SECRETARY Otf STATE, GILBERT L. LAWH. FOR TREAftL'RER, J. E. HILL. FOR AI'DITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS, THOMAS II. BENTON. FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL, WILLIAM LEESE. FOR COMMISSIONER OF PCKLIC LANDS AND Florida trill cast her vote for Harrison and Morton. Connecticut will come to the front with a handsome republican majority. Missouri will role up a republican ma jority of 50,000. Louisiana will give her electoral vote to Harri sou and Morton. Kentucky will be classed as a doubtful state. The republicans will feel jubilant in Wtst Virginia after November (Jtli. Harrison and Morton will be elected President and Vice President of the United States. John M. Thayer will be re-elected governor of Nebraska. The whole republican state ticket in Nebraska will be elected. W. J. Connell will be elected to Con gress, by a handsome majority. Cass county will elect Milton D. Polk to the state senate, and Cass and Otoe counties will giye John C. Watson a rousing majority for float representative. N. M. Satchel and Edwin Jeary will be elected representatives from Cass county. Allen Bceson will be re-elected county attorney by a large ninjority. Ami IJ. Todd will continue to be coun ty commissioner, Herman Schmidt will be elected sur veyor for Cass county. The sewerage system will be completed and Plattsmouth will have Main street paved. There won't be a vacant house in Plattsmouth. Plattsmouth will enjoy a boom, and the Herald will prosper. HCII.DINOS, rj? JOHN STFit--a' FOn SUPERINTKfii i c tic vt nc ir-nr.m in- I"Wer ro- eru'- STUUCTIOX. GEORGE B. LANE. ?' 5O0 Rexj We will pa v- . " - - j the above reward for any CONGRESSIONAL TICKET. FOR CONGRESS, (First Conventional Distiict.) W. J. CONNELL. COUNTY TICKET. FOR STATE SENATOR, MILTON D. POLK. FOR FLOAT REPRESENTATIVE, (District No. fright.) JOHN C. WATSON. FOR REPRESENTATIVES, N. M. SATCHEL, EDWIN JEARY. FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY, ALLEN BEESON. FOR COMMISSIONER, 1ST. DIST. AMMI B. TODD. FOR SURVEYOR. HERMAN SCHMIDT. Do the democratic officials read the phrase thus: "Public office i a private bust r The republican party has raised the nation from bankruptcy to opulence, and secured for our public credit the faith of the financiil world. This was done under protection, and Gen. Harrison helped to do it. Free trade is no cxperieineut in Aim r ica. We've tried it, and it didn't work. Germany tried it and it didn't work. Why not be guided by experience ? Business men are so guided; and isn'i public business to be couiluc'ed on busi ness principles t Woikiugmen are studying the tariff iuestion. This is quite enough. If workingmen will simdly look into the mutter, not follow blind prejudice, they will soon be convinced that protection is the right policy. This isn't theory. It is experience. Free traders say that one American can do as much work in a day as two Europeans. Well, if he can, then he ought to have twice as much for doing it. The raw material of the cotton manu facturer is absolutely free of duty, and, comparatively speaking, it grows right at the door of the factory. If the asser tion of the free rader be truP, that free raw material will enible the manufac turer to capture the "world's market," then this country ought to be able to flood Europe and South America with cotton goods. And yet our exports of this clas of commodities arc miserably insignificant. What better chance would the woolen manufacturers have of gain ing the European market if the duty was stricken off wool ? None whatever, and every free trader a sirglc remove alove a condition of pure idi.Kry knows it. The only way in which the United States ran successfully competj with Europe is by reducing wages to the European standard. Cleveland, Carlisle, Beack, and, presumably, Mills are aware of this, hut they lack the courage and honesty to acknowledge it. Glole Democrat. THINGS THAT WILL YET HAP PEN IN 1S8. Indians will go tepublican. New York will cast her electoral vote for Harrison and Morton. The solid south will be broken. New Jirey will give a republican ma jority on Norcmber Ctb. 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 yegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes :ontaining 30 sugar coated pills, 25c. For sale by all druggists. Beware of counterfeit and imitations. The gen uine manufactured only by John O. Wo & Co., 862 W. Madison St. Chicago,and Sold by W. J. Warrick. ftcuie Ntv Found lodian Tribe. The great table land of Matto Grosso, in the western part of Brazil, is still one the least known portions of South America. When Pr. Claims and Dr. vou !ori Sicincn penetrated it several years u.jo. and followed the large Xingu river from its head waters to the Ajaazon, they lioated down about 1,000 miles before they reached the known portion of the river. They did not have time to adequately study the strange and unheard of Indian txibes they met amid these dense forests and barren uplands, and for the purpose f making further researches among them Dr. von den Stelnen returned to the upper Xingu last year. He visited the villages of nine of these tribes, and in a recent lecture in Rio de Janeiro he gave the in teresting results of his studies. There is hardly a corner of the earth whose people have not had some inkling of the great world beyond them. But these primitive natives of the upper Xingu had, apparently, never seen a scrap of trade goods or beard that human beings existed outside their little circle of observation. They use no metal hnplo laents, but fell trees with stone axes to dear the ground for their plantations of i ndian corn, cotton and tobacco Wearing .- hell ornaments, they use hammers and ;ails of stone to perforate them. They uako knives out of shells and the sharp teeth of a certain fish, aud with these ixr tools they carve their rudely orna mented stools and weapons. Dogs and fowls are found in all parts of t lie Amazon valley that have been visited !y traders, but these Xingu tribes have never heard of them. Neither have they any knowledge of the banana, sugar cane and rice, with which natives of the tropical zone are generally familiar. They have not the slightest conception of a (lod, but they believe they will live again ufter death. Their most important myth relates to the creation of the world, which, in their view, consists wholly of the head waters of the upper Xingu and Yapajos rivers. From the languages and pottery of all out one of these tribes the explorer de rived the idea that these isolated peoples are allied to the original stock of the once lowerful Carina, who journeyed from the outh to the sea. One tribe differed so greatly from all others that he was unable to trace its relation to any other people. These people are almost wholly isolated even from each other, and their languages, though of the same derivation, are so dissimilar that the tribes cannot under stand each other. Few people exist today who are so primitive in their ideas and 60 low in the social scale as these new found Indians of South America. New York Sun. Don't let that cold of yours run on. You think it is a light thing. But it may run into cutarrh. Or into pneumonia. Or con sumption. Catarrh is disgusting. Pneumonia is dangerous. Consumption is death itself. The breathing apparatus must le kept healthy and clear of all obstructions and offensive matter. Otherwise there is trouble ahead. All the diseases of these parts, head, nose, throat, bronchial tubes and lungs, can le delightfully and entirely cured by the use of Boschee's German Syrup. If you don't kn"w this already, thousands and thousands of people can tell you They have been cured by it and know how it is, themselves. Bottle only 75 cents. Ask any druggist. The Dailt Herald delivered for 15cts. per week. The standard remedy for liver com plaint is West's Liver Pill; they never disappoint you. 30 pills 25c. At War rick's drug store. . : X'". ffl JuU fo) imu flu h nnn u ji 0 D JC) OJV'T you know it ? Of course you do an d you will want warm Underwear, Blankets, etc. QUR Line is Unsurpassed by any other line the city. A handsome 171 fARIETY of Seasonable Dress Goods, Broad cloths, Henrietta, Cloths, Trecots, etc YERYTHIjYG in Blanhets, Flannels, Comforts, Tlosierv, Battings, that you want. Bed will yuo will not regret looking our different De partments over before purchasing. It will pay you. CMYRJVA RUGS and a Handsome Line of Car pets, Matts, Floor Oil Cloths, and Linoleum at Low Prices. C. DVEY & S e lay it Store D " f A' 623 fr Mm - We continue to offer SPECIAL PRICES I and Extra Good Bargains in La dies', Children's and Mbseb' W R A P S Seal Plushes, Short Wraps, Cloaks, Newniurkots, Pluh Sieqiris Et c , Etc. Other Branches, such as In all varieties. Qur Stock of Winter Goods Is very complete. Remember vre offer a Special 1 5 Per Gent Discount On All Woolen Underwear. A Call Will. Convince You, THE RUSSIAN CAPITAL I WacJkTbacJhi Ffrat Iiujr','.': , uT I'nlieultliy I'..::" v Ivowrr Clas.c. : erent llrivt 1 V. i.;:r. The first in. t j . i approaching ? : . !'. at its size air! -. . stretches of .. 1. marsh, cover.-. t i . , . ings; the Mr;;:, chosen by tlm ing to dispen.- : '; tage3. Peter th- ( ; . as being "a v. ' ; Europe." but m;. '. been found i! !. ; dioluto and f:st . i ; holm, which is i.. . water, but whi.-'i ... like a queen ab ;..- : St. Petersburg li . 1 mercy. In tin; v . rough and tstoi i i tho ice is l.n . '.' i greatest. Tin- v. . the streets, the. jjii;::v guns from tic !.' -fired to warn t V while the in!; stories of their 1 , . . paro boats for r . quenen of this i. . - .1 , healthiness, Ti. carried off, thu v. j-, . ; . dysentery mul . . whenever the I'rit to turn eve: - . .. ance of what !.-,,. foundation iipi r. !, years 40,000 nieii v cr : : from all portion'- ',. this poisonous i i I vessel enterii.g ! ! t bring a certain . ;' its streets, and h : : wooden pi!e w Soil was also bio ties to raise t!.- i massive grani..' . :. .. rapid river; but, ;. ' -prevent disabtn,; ; eight of which :::-. since the found-;: At one time tin- i ; But it is not o: . . and of pictun : . ;! to tho visitor; i i lation of the v ;. From tho bu.-.y ; . crowded qunvs come to quiet less rows of i : .. . notonous gn-ml :; ; : evident that t' : ;.. to fill its streets, r: i i lief to enter t ! i i -business and ! tiV i . Nevsky Prospeet. when the court i ; : citizens conio in n- .. . in Finland !::;.: t: : sleighing is li vi !; ;:..'. .-. ! the season in vo;-w, .. show to much !;;;-!:: : . '. We had beeit,:.l : K . luxury and poverty r:i t be most painful, wo beggary on every l..-.:i J. proved to bo tho c. . beggars at tlie i elsewhere, and j obvious and di: . . It is not the pov, . . ; . . almost brutality, i. ; i ;. impresses you t; . . : that j'ou meet i ! their undressed . need nor desire r y ! suitable -to thcri. ' i long, tangled ! dirty, often l:;';lt' ; . ing, you shri:;:: i them. The pi,-i;;: . .1 seen to be fcj;rf::i;; 1 aro less forbi.ldi:: . !. ' .. gence or good L;.. . never seen a Einii. ' the streets here. Nobody i:.-. to uudcrstatid sullen, the we!!-; solcnt. And t!u:s .? i is strange and ut ! .-riy to US, unexplained r mouth are el:t::: -r '.. tho 20th of An-.; n iith. The Ku.- ; .- . . ferent from o:::. i; ! in streets and the yU f might as well v , . very few cf tl. j i better off than y :::.- f ; the shopkeepers .'.--. : : phabet for sett::;:-. IV .' I have complain;, i I.-, tho streets. I i::;i.-t i if. in favor of the (!:. ..':,-.-;. riages fly about iu eve;-, everybody rices. V. .;; I the long quays r;r': ; crs, no lounger.-;, !, . : droskas. They f . ; r each holding twr :?.: driver on a hl'.i s. long bluo blonde. ! !. and a peculiar " ; horses, with t ' ' . ' lars, are act apparently well '. !. know enough l! :: gain, you will I;: I :: sit a cheap and ; tatnly couveniei.t; v..-.t raiso your hand r '': upon you like v;:l:a:e sometimes jotlh:;; t ; :; . deavor to reach j ; i.c i : of the drivers k:;. . v v . but Russian, you i . y i.' easy to make tl.c.-i ycu want to go. VLii :'.:! however, you vru! . rapid rate over vLj l-.:ly You will probcllj- ;.. :: i., snatch oS Lis cry, v. . L: replacing it, cclu c i. . of I lie t ti Uev- : veler on wonder .cry t.ide , !.), flat !.i i.uild ; !ty ever -.:), seek ! r.dvan i i -s snid, ' i:p:!l ! have laless Sioek 1 I by i : i rones . i.-ment, it its '. va is when -r 1 . vel of ei ilow; - t.udly j i-il. upper pro CilllSO i - s Ull perly 'v-, and irevail ' : . tiio i.'nor i. i.l its : many draft tl -. . rlc in ;t and .:.-ed to l.) pave ids of ti. pths. and :.', tho . ..ih-d to ven or : . t ioned ;.i 170;. . i'cet. : vulion ; .. -sing . j ileso rliy. '. -.j and . i. liavo .:, :Ud" , mo lt i3 i people ,' re .; whero i iis tho v. -titer, . ri.-hest : ! .jines V :i tho .: -.; of j; . ould ' . -ts of ; v.ould to meet .-.y.i not id ways r v Idom vsis so v (it ies. - i, ess, e:i that !. inon i . .-j or : -t to It is -. with i iy :; i.i are wi.::ir:i :::e!li i have Ji iu l.'er. v. i. -dies ; ts i v ht that .- : i-ll'.C, ; e.; the ' '. was i ; t:,c . -y dif - the " ; :iops : As -. ore peet. ' rI . ::rein - ; ptiou ; ; : j car for ' :!e of Widk 1 S.':e . : u Ics. v"ith a ; '. La a . : :-u:3 TL.3 ; c..I C!:d i ; you ;' bar ." t ran- - i cer i y to : dovra "- i-rey, . ir en ':or.o : -niug i: veiy i v.-lio;o - i.i a A SAD CITY WITH A STRANGE LCK Or UFZ. Ho rr.i cor- cross by toticiili:;,' - - : each shoulder in iv.'.-i.:.' I..:. :. c church is passed, .-d h ct the sacred tuiii'.ci :.ul iaon aiaoiur Loth v.-uilivi-a uiu i. Thers is iio vlvlA.ii ; . L..-.1;- to religious fcra t s i.: tauLly none v.Licu l-:..jv:3 ; ; . .itiy In the value of t.y-i t:i i iua. It is strange eccvr-u t . n- crowd which fills tho ciiUrch J-.:..y :.jivice i time. There are utve-r r.:.y :-. .-..x ; all, I rich and poor, tlarl tvgsiLvr; but in place of atandiiig quicliy, cr. a; Liost, kneeling occicioiialiy, liko tho cce-reg-a-tioa in a Catholie church, vLa wlioio body of worshipers iu a tiivoli cLurli aro ia motion; bowing, prostrtin t!:tr;.elve3, waving the arms up ivJ dv.r.. coutino ally making the eigu cf tho civ-s de scribed above, they t repn.LIo a garden tossed by a great v. iud. Cor. Laa Fran elsco Chronicle. CiiuMnenrot of PhjTilrnl Inertia. An American business tuati appears io bo boru with a di.'.lnclination to walk. 1 have seen imlf a dozen at a time stand around tho ontrauco to a hole! elevator, wasting several minutes in waiting for tho machine to como for them rather than mount ono (light of Mops. As a conse quent of this physical inertia most busi ness men of tho present dny have weak muscles, and especially weak hearts, ao that should they bo obliged to exert themselves to even a slight degree their limbs become exhausted and tremble like "a reed shaken by tho wind," (heir respi ration becomes hurried and difficult, and their pulses beat at tho ruto of 1:.'. a min ute, or even more. It is only necessary to stand nt, tho cor ner of a street through which a Mreet railway passes ami to watch tho Men and women leaving their homes directly ufter breakfast, and running a hundred feet or so at tho top of their t-peed to catch an approaching car, as though it was tho only ono by which they could go down town, and their lives depended on getting into that particular vehicle. I low they pant and blow and turn red in the face;, and gesticulate wildly at the conductor and drop into their heats thoroughly ex hausted from 1ho comparatively Might exertion into which they have been forced by their love of business! .'. minutes elapse before t hey recov -r tl. :r mental and physical equanimity. !!. nlf ,'tr passes that tho newspapers do not rTyord several deaths thlt have oeei ire ! IVom this practice, aud' wbch would i ' t t; ko place if the 3Ub"':I'.,,t L'"l I habit of taking a) ibeicnt mm-cuh eiso. In such p,I'1" be '' dcnlv subieeted !u 11 trutn t-- v. I in the ii excr ix ftlld rh it in in tho f. ;i:iired of I u;ie who OTtteL e-'-'i I'va! ed r:df-' leases with out having tho action of tho heart nearly doubled in frequency. A rapidly beating heart is almost invariably a feeble heart. Dr. WiJliam A. Hannm-nd. 1 1 1 kf 11 IIMt rttl-ilJ triort to uccotrtiiisli rno it. I ventu'-i to nav that read" those observations not can ascend tho steps of un el way station as siowiy (is no p i ll ;yi ves v. i Cjc-llng Dukii a "loniitiii f-i;'.'. The long seven milo coast began. The road wound down around horso-.hoo ctirven and loops without number, and as it was on tho east side of tho t-maller valley which led down at right angles to tho Rhine valley I bad to rido on tho outer side of the roadway in order to be on the right side. At first, in turning soine of the sharp curves to the lc-lt whero I could see nothing ahead but air and tho hills of Switzerland twenty miles away, I slowed up some, for tho road was vi:;itlo for only twenty or-thirty feet ahead, and whero it went to then I was totally ignorant, but after riding a mile or two down over roads so smooth that the running of tho machine was scarcely audible, 1 let up on the brako a little ami away 1 went faster and faster. One linger was sufHeieut on the brako at Crst, but after a few miles that oih began to et cramped and two lingers were applied. Then the brake spoon began to get hot, but still I could not s.-pi tho foot of tho n-ountain. About half way down tho water of tho icldno began to show itself over the edge or' the road as I came to those sharp turns to tho left, and then I knew where the bottom was. It actually seemed that, if I went straight ahead, 1 should hind in tho river, how many hundred feet' below my blurred eyes could not clearly discover. Once I met a team and yelled, but the oxen were on their own side and I went by them with a rush all right. Another time koiiio children saw me coming and ran down the sides of the mountain scared out of their wits. Still I went like tho wimftL over the same steep grade and .smooth ' road down from top to bottom, without miohap, but with a feeling I never before experienced in coasting that I was glad I was at the bottom. Jiow long u took iv to come down I do not know, but 1 waiteWt sso for the Iuglinli- men. Bicvclist George li. Thavcr in Now York World. To Keep the Eyes Iicaul if;i!. To have beautiful sightly eyes, we inu;-t have strong, sound ones, and avoid all causes, of harm. Never rend, write or work with the light from a window iu front of the eyes. Arti.-ans injo.ro their sight past recovery by working at a bench directly in front of a window, when they should be placed with tl.o baek to it. The light in front . fall.- into tho eye, which contracts to lessen wlutt it cannot bear, with tho invariable result of weak--ened sight. Lamps, g-is jets and student lamps are often placed bo near th-jLeal as to heat the eyes injuriously. The sim plest shade stops this by making a current of air between itself and the lamp. I quote from Dr. Jeffries' highly inter esting pamphlet on '"Our Eyes and Our Industries." Iio speaks very decidedly on tho injury to the eyes of wood engrav ers in cutting from photograph: o;i the block, making the blurred and misty pict ures too familiar iu papers und magazines. The work is cheaper, but, oculists find, most destructive to tho eyc3, and the bel ter class of engravers either refuse nich work or raise their prices nearly double. The wear aud tear comes of looking con stantly from the photograph to the orig inal picture hung before it audeontinn; lly changing tho focus of the eye. I am gl id to know this has awakened "attention, for I know that looking at the soft, blun y wood cuts is very trying to sensitive eye... So is the satiny, calendered paper whitu certain publishers protest is accessary fo fine impressions, although finer work ia . done abroad upon dull paper. The giot-si and glitter of much of the modern house decoration injures tho eye by the broken reflections it is forced to meet on ail Bide. The varnished paint, tho metallic hnish, of walla and fabrics, the breadth of iWii glass and painted glass are simply dcstr.icJ tive to crood sight. Thc-y may answer for people who never read, like tLc Turks and Bulgarians, but eyes overtaxed like thoso oi our professional ana many c: our arti. chisses are, quickly fiud this glitter ciuai. cciriey uare a lotlc-r. Sail BU'sIit Impurities la 2Ic-JaLi. The astonishing1 c!ianr-c3 thr.t emnl'i proportions of foreign matter w ill produ ii.ei.aas ere not necessarily ti t. practical importance, cs very slight purities in mctaJs lor cerUm purposes might lead to serious consequences, ilo'o- erts-Acstm gives two striking ilhis tions of this tossihilirv. A .-"rl' 1 : of bismuth in copper will reduce tha t triwa conaucttviiy suiaciently to ca any subciaiind cable mtdo with it become a cxunmercial f;iihiv.- e,,A laessaee carrying power of copper cables bhiu v nave aouoieo since tue early iay s of telegraphy on eccouat of the in creased purity of the copper. Pure gold has a breaiiing strcia of from eixteen to seventeen tons to the Equaro inch, but when alloyed with but two-tenths of o-j per cent, of lead 1 will break v.itU a blight blow or - under c tii: s train. Axkansaw Traveler. - iri. lec to the t ( i t 1.1 II i! i I-