The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, March 06, 1889, Image 1

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second yi:ak
PliATTSMOUTU, NEBRASKA, WEDNKSDAY EVENING, 3IAKCU O, 1881).
NU3IIJEK 148
MEAT
UT
if1-
T?9 - 5IECLnIESJ -
jHL TTJT 3H5 IES 12.
2
LOSING
IS A X IS
i
My Eritii-e stock of Boots, Shoes, !Ral3T3ei?s arLvl SlipPers
Musi Be Sold By April 1st. Whoever Wants to Buy Cheap, Come. Now is the Time.
I thank the Public for their past generous patronage, and will bo pleased to see all my old customers and others to avail themselves of this rare opportunity of Cheap Goods.
All those knowing themselves indebted to me mast come and settle by April 1st, a3 all my accounts will be placed in the collector's hands, and costs added. "
3 3
Cia.ts i.LfN. 1 Jii, 'f .' I . K. "Meets
'every Tue.il;iy evening of each week. All
transient brothers are respectfully luvlied to
attend.
IILATT.MOU I'll KXCAMIWIKNT No.3.1.1).
- O. K.. meeis every alternate Kriil;iy til
each inmitli In iho M.i-vmie Hall. Visiting
Brothers are Invited lo attend.
rititlo Mmjgk No. m, A. u. u. . .ieeis
- every aiteruac - Friday evening at Iw. f 1.
all. Transient brother are respectfully lu
lled to at tend. V. P. Brown. Alius ter work
man ;; If. K- Ulster. K.. reman ; V. ll.Steiuiker
Overseer; W. h. Millr, Financier; . K.
Jioiisewoiih. Kec.irder ; V. J Morgio, Kecelv
er; Win. Cri lian. e : Wiij. I.udwig. Inside
vVatrli : L. Olsen, Outside Watcu
CtA.HS OAMl N.a.a. MOIM'.KN WOODMKN
' of America Meets Necod and f nin th Mon
day evening at K. r I, hall. All transient
brothers are renuewted to meet with u. I,. A,
Newcomer, Venerable Consul ; . K, Nilew
Worthy Adviser ; S. V. Wilde, Banker ; W. A.
Boeck, Clerk.
1JLATTSMOUTH I.OIM1E NO. 8. A. O. V. W.
-- Meets every alternate Friday evening at
Kock wood hall at H o'clock. All transient broth
ers are rsperfully invited lo attend. I. S.
Larson. M. W. ; K. Boyd. KoremaD : S. C
Wilde. Htjcorder ; Leonard Anderson. verseer.
IM.ATr.SMOUTf! LOIICE NO.6. A. P. . A.M.
Meets on th firt and third Mondays of
each mouth at their hall. All transient broth
ers are cordially ialted to meet with us.
J. O. Kichky, W. M.
Wit. Hats. Secretary.
T EBKASKA rilAI'TKlU NO. 3. K. A. M.
Meets second and fourth Tuesday of each
month at Mvon Mall. Trauscieiit brothers
are invited to meet with us.
K. E. White, II. P.
Wm. It v. Secretary.
T73) TSf srra
Pfin -TOO. ULTJ Utt El)
THE CABINET.
President Harrison Redeyes the
Anxiety of the Country by An
nouncing His cabinet-
Absolutely Pure.
1 h:s powder never varies. A marvel of pur
ity, sirengin and wnoicxomenes-i. More econo
mical tnn the ordinary ki nils, and cannot be
sold in competition with the multitude of low
teft. shrt weight alum or phoxphate powders.
.Soitl unly in can. HOYAL liAKIVd I'owdkk
to., iw wail St. N. Y.
CASS COUNCIL NO 1021. ROYAL KOANUM
meets the second and fourth Mondays of
each month at Arcanum Hall.
K. N. Glenn, Regent.
P. C. Minor. Secretary.
McCONlHie POST 43 C. A. R.
KOSTKK.
M. A. Dicksov Commander.
Bkn.i. IIrmplk Senior Vice
8. Carrkiax Junior '
. Nii-ks Adjutant.
A. Shi pm ax Sun;.
llZNKY STKK.IUHT Q, M.
A. TARirii Officer of the bay.
JAMK Utckiov Ouard
Sert Major.
Axdbrhox Khv.. ..Quarter Master Serjjf.
l- C.C'UKri.4 Post Chaplain
Meetinz Saturday evening
Mayor, ... jr.jr. Kiciirt
Clerk, - - - W K Fox
treasurer, - - Jamk Patterson, jr.
Attoruey. - Bvron Clark
EnKineer. - , - a Ma dole
i-once.iudge, - - S Clikkokd
Marshall, - - Okobgk Poisall
Councilmen. fst ward, A & AH
DM JONES
I lR. A SHIPMAN
1MB Murphy
1 S W DUTTOX
2nd
3rd
4th.
Board Pub. Works
I J W J
4 Krkd
I D H I
1 Cox O'Connor.
I P MfCAI-I.EN. PRCS
Johns n,Cuaihman
tiOKDRR
Hawks Worth
Our First Spring Surprise!
With New Goods at
L SOBE
Men's and Youths' Suits, 4.95, $7.85, $10.00.
For business, 12.50, S15.00, $10.50.
lkya' Long Pant Suits to IS years, $2.95, S3.45, $5.45 to $13.50.
Boys' Knee Pant Suits. $1.45, 1.95, $2.45, $3.45, $5, $6, S7.
Boys' Knee Pants 35 cts., 50 cts., 75 cts., $1.
Men's Merino' Underwear 25 cents to 2.50 a suit.
Calf Shoes $1.20 to $5.00 a pair,
Men's Latest Styles of StilF Hats from $1.50 to $3.50.
All the .Latest Styles In
Shirts and Neckwear-
One-Pnce
ciofc
Hard Worker for Your Trade,
Plattsmouth, - - Nebraska,
Prompt Action of the Senate in
Confirming tne Nominations.
"VA8niNOvoN, March 5. Long before
noon eyery seat and standing place in
the galleries of the senate was filled, and
the stairs and corridors were packed with
people. After reuding of the journal.
Edmunds reported that the committee
which was appointed to wait on the pres
ident of the United States and inform
him of the meeting of the senate in exe
cutive session, had performed that duty
and had been informed by the president
that he would, early today, communicate
with the senate in writing Cockrell
offered a resolution (which was laid
oyer) for the appointment of a comiriltee
of live senators on the methods of busi
ness in the executive departments and
causes of delay in the transaction of
business.
Stewart offered a resolution declaring
it to be the sense of the senate that the
business interests of the country require
the purchase by the secretary of the
treasury of $4,000,000 worth of silver
bullion per month for coinage. Laid
over.
Blair presented the credentials of Mr.
Marston, appointed by the governor of
New Hampshire to fill the vacancy caused
by termination of Chandler's term and
the failure of the legislature to elect a
a senator. The credentials were read
and Marston took the oath.
President Harrion sent to the senate
the following nominations:
Secretary of State James G. Blaine of
Maine.
Secretary of the treasury Wra. AVin-
dom of Minnesota.
Secretary of war Redfield Proctor of
Vermont.
Secretary of the navy Benjamin A.
Tracey of New York.
Secretary of the interior John .
Noble of Missouri.
Postmaster general--John Wanamaker
of Pennsylvania.
Attorney general W. II. U. Miller ot
Indiana. "
Secretary of agriculture Jeremiau
Busk of Wisconsin,
On motion of Hale the senate pro
ceeded to consider with closed doors.
Th aeiinta nromtjtlv comfiruied them
all and adjourned at 12:45 p. m.
Onoen Elizabeth's Po rtrait.
In person Elizabeth was a littlo over
ltklle height, and when sho came
o the throne sho must have been a
!eautiful young woman, with a pro
fusion of auburn hair, a broad, com
manding brow, and regular features
that were capable of rapid changes of
expression, as her hazel eyes flashed
with anger or sparkled with merri
ment. Her portraits appear to have
been all more or less "idealized;"
their number is so great that jt is to be
wondered that no monograph lias yet
been attempted dealing with them at
all adequately. By far the most im
pressive picture of her which has been
engraved is 3iarlt uerara s portrait at
Burleigh IIouso; it forms the frontis
piece to the first volume of Wright's
.blizabcth and Her limes. Ihe
daughter of Henry VIII and Annie
Boleyn could hardly have missed in
heriting some of the personal beauty
of her parents, but sho was emphati
cally her father's child. From him
she got her immense physical vigor,
her magnificent constitution, tier
powerful intellect, a frame which
seemed incapable of fatigue, and a
nervous system that rendered her al
most insensible to fear or pain. Her
life was the life of a man, not of a wo
man ; sho could hunt all day, dance or
watch masques and pageants all night,
till the knees of strong men trembled
under them as they v warily waited in
attendance upon her person; yet she
never seemed to suffer from the im
mense tension at which sho lived.
With her amazing energy, her want
of all sympathy for weakness, her
fierce wilfulness, and self assertion,
and a certain coarseness of fiber, it
was inevitable that she should be uu
feminine. Dictionary of National Bi
osraDhy. -
THE SWALLOW.
O, to feci the wiij thrill of the swallow.
The wonder of the wirjR!
On the soft blue billows of air to follow
The summer, to soar and sing I
To drink blue air and to feel it flowing
Through every duinty plume.
Uplifting, pillowing, bearing, blowing,
And the earth below in bloom t
"Is it far to heaven, O swallow, swallow ?"
The heavy hearted sings;
"For I watch your flight, and long to follow,
The while I wait for wings."
Anna Beynton AverilL
Kate Castleton at Home.
One would not think it probable, after
witnessing pretty Kate- Castleton dance
about the stage, kick up her heels and
smile in euch a 6uucy way, that her pet
hobby is to arise in the morning at her
charming home, Castleton manor, near
Oakland, Cal., cook the breakfast, and
then tramp all over the place. But she
dws. Alter breakfast she takes a peep
in the stables to see that her horses are
being properly fed and cared for, mean
ders around to the hennery to feed the
poultry, then to the garden to water the
(lowers, and last, but not least, to the
kennels, where she has the finest selec
tion of dogs on the Pacific coast. In
fact, there are very few kennels in the
world that can equal it, every one of the
dogs lieing a prize winner.
She frequently spends hours in their
company, ana it really seems as though
they expected her visit3 as a part of their
daily routine. Big Ned, the dog for
whom sho would not take a fortune, once
saved her life, Sho was taking her morn
ing canter one summer two years ago,
and was about to alight from the horse,
when her dress caught in the saddle.
Tho horse became frightened, gave a
sudden start and dragged the fair actress
along the ground. Big Ned jumped to
tho rescue, seized the bridle rein and
held the animal still until she was res
cued from her perilous position. Nothing
is too good for Ned. Miss Castleton is
also a great lover of old bric-a-brac, and
her summer liome is filled with rare and
costly specimens. Chicago Herald.
Tho Snakafe Charm.
A gentleman from Iowa says that one
day while going through his poultry
yard he noticed a turkey hen with neck
stretched to the utmost, eyes distended
and wings 6lightly raised, gazing most
intently upon some object on the ground
three or four feet from where it stood.
Watching it for some moments, he found
that the turkey moved slowly around the
attracting object in a circle without
withdrawing its gaze for a moment.
After it had made a full circle he ap
proached to learn tho cause of its extra
ordinary behavior and found that the at
tracting object was a small striped snake
partially concealed by some small weeds,
and not tuitil he touched it did the turkey
notice his presence, though ordinarily it
would not permit him to approach
within two or three yards, liven when
driven away the turkey persisted in re
turning and working around in a circle.
Other fowls were then driven in the
direction of the snake, and all on catch
ing a glimpse of it were strangely af
fected. Finally, satisfied that the con
dition of the fowls on seeing the reptile
was purely an objective one, the writer
took a stiek and a pproached the snake to
kill it. It was dead already ad most
noteworthy point of all its head wr.t
crushed out of all semblance to its orig
inal shape and covered with dirt.
The conclusion the writer reached was
THE POPULAR
-PRICE CLOTHIER
lias left lor the East to buy the Finest, Largest and Cheapest
Stock of
Oft
Spring end Summer
Clothing
E
ver
Brought
to Cass county. Jiemember JOE will Buy
Finer Clotliing,
gT G-oods,
gmd. Caps,
Than You Ever Saw in Plattsmouth.
LOOK OUT FOK JOE'S
GRAND
SPRING OPENING
cJT 0 IES-
Has not got one dollar's worth of Spring Goods, or old Shelf
Worn Goods. Everything you will see in his store
will be Bran New, of the
LATEST STYLES A1TD PATTERNS
At Such Low Prices it "Will Astonish Y
ou.
that 6mall animals passed into a sub
jective or hypnotic condition on being
suddenly brought in view cf serpents, of
which all animals, great and small, ap
pear to stand in dread. Accepting this,
he says, we have the fascination of birds
and small beasts by snakes as a scientific
fact. Popular Science Monthly.
lltct .-icti'.OH it.
I met the Hon. Fernando Jones yester
day and, among other things, he asked
rae if I had read the recent discussion
about the headwaters of the Mississippi.
"It revived an old story ta my mind," he
said. "Henry R. Schoolcraft, a cele
brated traveler and writer, in his account
of it said the lake was called Itasca, after
two Latin words signifying true head. I
puzzled myself over this a good deal and
asked him one day how ho made it. He
replied: 'Quite . easily. Veritas means
true and caput head. Striking off the
first syllable of the first word and the
last syllable pf the other ono you have
Itasca--verTjtaa ca-put. It is equal,"
said ilr. Jones, "to Lorenzo Dow's cele
brated text against tho fashion of high
head dresses: 'Let him who is on the
house top not come down. " Chicago j
DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY.
Symptoms of Catarrh. Headache,
obstruction of nose, discharges falling into
throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid.
ml otners, tnicu. tenacious, mucous, purulent,
bloody and putrid : eyes weak, ringing in ears.
deafness, difficulty of clearing throat, expecto
ration of offensive matter; breath offensive:
smell and taste impaired, and general debility.
Only a few of these symptoms 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.
Blacksmith
5U
The Original
UTTU
ABStlTVt I tvrn Dn i a
ble fc Harmltu.
TJnequaled as a lit ver Pill. 8mallest,cheap
est, easiest to take. One Pellet a Dose.
Pure Sick Headache, Bilious Headache,
Sirzineae. Constipation, Indigestion,
lllons Attacks, and all derangements of
tae nomaca ana bowels, zo cts. by drugrgigta,
C. F.SMiTH,
The Boss Tailor
Mala St., Over Merges' Shoe Store.
Has the best and most complete stock
of samples, both foreign and domestic
woolen9 that ever came west of Missouri
river. Note these prices: Business euita
from 1G to $35, dress suits, f 25 to $45.
pants $1, $5, $, $8.50 and upwards.
t2T"Will guaranteed a fit.
Prices Defy ComDetition.
"We will give a good siUtr watch to
anyone who sends ns twenty-five yearly
Bubscriberg to the IIekalo. -
Wagons, rUKiie. Macli:iisfii;-k y Hepstired ;
Tlows Sharpesie.1 an.l Oeneial
Jobbing Done.
Horseshoeing A Specially
I USE THE
2iTEVEB.SI.XF
Horseshoe, whfen Miarpein list-l? a If wears
awy. so there Is never any danger of your
Ilorsrt slipping and hurting Itself, fall
and examine thia hnexnd you will
Have no other. Bet Shoe matte.
ROBERT. DONNELLY
SIXTH ST., - - PLATT3MOUTII
Lumber Yard.
THE OLD RELIABLE.
H. A. WATERMAN 4 SOU
Wholesale nd Retail Dealer ta
PI LUMBER !
Shingles, Lath, Saah,
Doors.Blindc.
Can supply every demand of the trado
Call and get terms. Fourth street
la Rear of Opera Boose.