1 Y 4 m A v f - . Tne EvehingJaldj"" i :' OFTJO'' y W O T T S BBC S.. Publishers & Proprietors. THE PLA.TTSMOUTH HERALD Is published every evening except Sunday and Weekly every Thurxday tnornlutf. Kegia tered at the pontoRlce, 1'iattamoutb. Nebr.. s second -clan uiatur. Utnce corner of Vine and Fifth streets. Telephone Mo. 38. TUMI FOR DAILY. One copy one year In advance, by mail.. ..$6 00 One copy per month, by rarrler,.. ......... 60 One copy per week, by carrier, 15 TERMS FOR WEEKLY. One eopy oue year. In advance fl fto One copy tlx montns. In advance 73 ABOUT POSTMASTERS. A strenuous effort is being made to create the impression that a clean sweep of postmasters has already begun. Ir responsible gosip as to the intentions of the president and the postmaster-general is caught up on all quarters, and set forth in the opposition newspapers. Every removal is described as being made for partisan reasons, and whenever a postmaster's head falls in the basket through the representations of the con gressman from the district it is reprented that the president has fully surrendered to the theory of congressional control of the oflice. Mr. Clarkson, the first assistant postmaster-general, has male an important statement upon this matter. It appears that practicall all the changes made thus far have been for other than political reasons. A number were of postmasters who were delinquent in their accounts; others of men appointed by the last ad ministration who were notoriously unfit; in many cases appointments were made in order to remove the offices from the vicinity of saloons. There has been no removal, Mr. Clarkson says, without good and sufficient cause. He further directs attention to a significant and in teresting fact which the public will doubtless learn for the first time. It is that during the last four or tig: weeks of the outgoing administration more than 1,000 fourth-class postmasters were ap pointed, in the hope, apparently, that they could thus be forced upon the new administration. Mr. '-CUrksoo un" doubtedly correct in saying that no suuh course was ever pursued by any previous administration. During tho closing weeks of President Arthur's term not one fourth-class postmaster was appoint ed except where necessities of the serttce required it, and when the department was turned over to the democratic postmaster-general there wera more than 3,000 resignations of postmasters oa file. It is gratifying to know that the com missioners of these 1,000 later day ap pointees of Mr. Dickinson wera unheld, and that the filling of these vacancies with others is part of the work that is occupying the first assistant postmaster general. The sentiment of our people has always been againat these last grabs at offices eince the day of John Adam's "midnight appointments." Demoraliza tion of the postal service in order to give places to a great army of hunry and thirsty democrats was one of the chief civil service scandals of the last admin istration. That final effort to clutch a thousand postoffices, long after the peo ple had given it notice to quit, was a forcible illustration of the ruling passion strong in death. New Yoik Tribune. IMPROVEMENT IN BUSINESS METIIOD-f. Within the pist few weeks two things occurrfd without creating scarcely flurry in the financial world which, had they id Ken piace niccen or twenty years ago would have caused widespread busines disaster. One of these was the suspen sion oi woric on tne i'anama canal and tne oiner was tne couapse ot toe copper ring. Both these projects, too, bad their principal support in the same country France and yet the ruin which kas over taken both within a few weeks of each othr has not, even in that country, created anything which can be dignified by the name of financial crisis. There was a tremor on the French bourses, and prices of some securities went down a few points. " Comparatively speaking however, the effect was not felt outside of France, and in France it was virtually confined to the properties immediately concerned. we see in tne comparative narrowness of the area of disturbances caused by the failure of the canal and copper enter prises one of the beneficial effects of the improvement in business methods which lias come into vogue within the past two decades. Speculation in many commod ities is still carried on, of ccurse, and always will be, but it is neither to gen oral nor so reckless as it was once. Busl - oess credits, too, are shorter, and ate governed with more discrimination than was the case formerly. In fact, trade of all sorts is conducted more conservatively and safely than it was at any time in the past. As a consequence the confi ience of the business community is &o so easily disturbed as it used to be, and the dangers of panics are proportionally lessened. The so-called J - .v.. a 1 he nation is greater than ever before. The commercial ties which bind one country with every oiher are more nu merous and intimate than they were even up to a dozen years ago. Yet financial wrecks' which at ono time wou'd have shaken every bourse in Christendom are now felt in the area covered by tho en terprises immediately concerned oDly, and even in that area the disaster is neither so great nor so lasting as would have been produced in the past. Qlobe Drmocrat. The fact that a number of British cap italists are about to form a syndicate, with $500,000,000 capital, to control all the coal mines in England, is taking away the breath of the American free trade editors. When Mr. Blaine, about eight months ago, said that England was plastered all over with trusts, the demo crats declared that the statement wss false. They have found out since then, however, that the Maine stateman's utter ance was true, although few . of them have the honesty to acknowledge it. The fact is the trust scheme is one of the forms of the combination and aggrega tion spirit which is manifesting itself in nearly every productive enterprise, in all countries, free trade as well as pro tectionist. The editors whom President Harrison has selected to represent this country in foreign courts are probably better jour nalists than Benjamin Franklin was, but if thev should turn out to be half as good diplomates as Ben, the country would have no cause to complain. Favorite. F ame is a word ambition loves, A nd art has ne'er its por rait painted Y irtue the heart of avarice moves, 0 blivious to the "shekels" sainted; R arer than even these, by far, 1 s health, defying poet's diction. T hen with it trifle not, nor mar E nd ills that female pleasures bar by taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre srrintirm a remodv so satisfactory for all those weaknesses and diseases pecu liar to women, that they need no longer suffer from them if they will but use thia world-famed remedy.. .Preventives of Disease. In a book entitled "A Bird's Eye View of France in tho Middle Ages," M. Chall uiej Jells some interesting medical super stitions formerly prevalent in that coun try. To ward off fevers one pfgttf re frain from eating meat or eggs at iaster and on ptl)er festivals, or carry about a piece pi human bone, pr pluck and eat the first daisy found in 'the field. If fever had been contracted the best'eurs was for the sufferer to rise early in the morning and go out into the fields, walk ing backwards all the time, pluck a iiandful of herbs, throw it behind him without Jookf eg t it, and then go home as fast as ho .could. The fever would then leave him and attack Jhe' devif in stead'. Running about a church with no aim in particular prevented pleurisy. Earache was cured by the touch of a skeleton hand; headache by binding the temples with the rope by which someone had been hanged; toothache by touching with a dead man's tooth ail sufficiently ghastly remedies. The most ahti-hy- gienlc notion was, perhaps, that of the Bretons, who thought th?7 would save their children from all evils by dressing them in a damp shirt. The Hospital. Lights for Surgjpq Operations. In Vienna Dr. Roth and Professor neij.3 havo devised an instrument for illuminating from the outsido some of the cavities cf tho body, such as the larynx and nose. The instrument ia a well polished glass rod, to one end of which a small electric incandescent lamp u f.stached; . Tho "light of the lamp ij 7c3.-'.'ic8 tfipjajjy through tho whole glass rod t it.- other end, which is placed on tho i;kin of the throat ia the ?sje pf a !arv:ictoscopical examination beinsr re quired. Then the interior of the larynx becomes illuminated sufficiently for laryngoscopy. If this luminous glass rod" u applied to tho sclerotic, the inte rior of tho eyeball can be examined In the same way as by using an ophthalmoscope. As the glass rod remains cold, it can be employed in operative surgery to light the natural and artificial cavities. New York Telegram. America's Fkou Spreading. Let us put two and two together; Jo seph Chamberlain has an American biiJe. Gen. Boulanger was once charmed by a young woman whose homo is in St. Louis, and rumor has it that his motive in seeking a divorce is to secure an American bride. Mr. Cham berlain said wlulo in Scotland the other day that the common 6chool system is the glory of tho United States, and he suggested free schools for Ireland. Gen. Boulanger has within a week spoken in tho lughest terms of "that splendid fab ric, tho American constitution. He furthermore said that he first learned miu irue meaning of the w ord liberty in America. Of course any ono is at lib erty to draw conclusions and it seems to us that Gen. Boulanger has been brought under the influence of a fair American dictator, and that Joseph Chamberlain has taken his first lesson in home rule. Springfield Republican. . Not Desitablo for Suipldes, The Eiffel tower is 6uc4i a blot on the artistic beauty of Paris that it offers no temptation to the would be suicide as a jumping orf place. The true Parisian is nothing if not consistent in his art in stincts. To throw one's self from the top of the Arc de Triomphe is one thing; to plunge headlong from a structure so de void of beauty as the Eiffel tower is quite another matter. The authorities need lin.4& fna 41.1. ..:1.K 1 i, nrirf ti be utilizl for nnw cufli purpose. Boston Herald..,' SONG. O lore! I oral lovel of every bliss the fleetest. O queenly rose! of nrrry rose the sweetest. O rosel Imprisoned on my throbbing heart, We two shall never part Shall never part. doe time one time the golden sun beam ci uws! thee. And all the rwes sighed and loved around thee, thou wert the chosen of the silver dew. And bees did come to woo Vltl come to woo. What time the bees and buds and sun did lore thee. Then thou wert young:, with spring around, above thee, And rich In all that beauty could endow; But would they love thee now? Ah, would they nowT Now that aU withered on thia heart thou Uest, And tender tints are gone, and that thou dlest Foldeat gray petals o'er thy poor, dead heart, From which all sweets depart All sweets depart. O rose! rose! rose! so like this heart thou seemest! 0 foolish heart I thou throbbest yet and dream est Because of youth and Joy time has bereft us And oil our love has left ua Love has left us. Cora FabbrL IN JAIL AT CAMDEN. I have nothing in particular against the town of Camden except that it lies opposite Philadelphia. The railroad de pot is on the wharf, where the nicest view can be obtained of the golden hued waters of the harbor, and where the odors stirred up by paddle wheels come to the nose before any of their original freshness has been lost on the summer breezes. The waiting room was erected for the convenience of those who have to wait. Everybody has to wait in Cam den. If they didn't have to wait, why have a waiting room? I was waiting there one day last sum mer, and after putting in two hours at iV had just commenced to study the won derful architecture of six New Jersey apples spread out in a reckless fashion on a news stand, when I observed a man sizing me up. It was his bounden duty, as a good citizen of New Jersey, to ascer tain whether I was a pirate looking to capture one of the big ferryboats, or only a humble citizen making a quiet sneak down to Atlantic City. I saw him slyly comparing my height, weight, dress, pplor of eyes, etc., with memoranda in a book, and I felt that I was a goner. The wicked may dodge the lasso handled by Nemesis now and then, but the loop is certain to fall sooner or later. I had eluded all the officers between Detroit and Camden, and was wearing my hat on my ear and feejjn$ pu? UP bufc lo' Nemesis was here. ' ' ' ' ' My first thought was to walk over to the stranger and surrender myself and go to the gallows without a complaint, but my second was to get away and hunt for fresh fields of crime and shed more blood. ' I had two hours tq spare, and while the man seemed to' be 'asking the price of a dime novel I slipped aboard a ferry boat. The craft had only started yshen f discovered the man be side me. We crossed over' fa Philadel phia and returned on the same boat. Onoe I thought of ending it all and find ing rest beneath the tan bark waves of the historic river, but I hated to get wet and therefore abandoned the idea. When the boat suddenly brought up in 'Camden I made a rush, for a street car. I didn't know whether the car ran to a coal mine in the center of the town, or out into the country where stumps, haystacks and brush heaps would give me a show for my life, but I took it. So did the strange man. Why he did no put the handcuffs and shackles on me at once, ana observe tnat 1 had run my race, I couldn't understand. Perhaps he was uot 3iJFe of ray identity. Perhaps he wanted to prolong my torture. He looked out of the window on his right and seemed to be thinking of the past and gone. I looked out of the win dow on my 'eft nd was certainly think ing of the days and nights, to come. When we had gone about a mile he sud denly rang the bell. You stop a Camden stivct car that way, samo as In Detroit or DalTalo. When tho pair of mules had coruc to a dead standstill the stranger brushed las eoattail aside i:i a graceful way. showed mo tho Liend of a big re volver and gently remarked: 'Nov cqmo along without any non sense t You know me and I know you!" If re was a point for dispute, but 1 didn't accept it just then. You can al ways get along better with a stranger by seeming to let him have his'own way. I didn't even protest against leaving the car at his dictation. After a man has been in the army five years he is ready to take orders from any one. When we descended from the car he took me by the right arm. This, was very kind in him, as I might have fallen down. In front of us was a structure labeled "Police Station." It evidently had some thing to do witff the Camden police. I didn't care about going in, as I had seen the interior of so many others; but the man tightened his grip and I did not dis appoint him- lie walked-me up to the sergeant's desk, heaved a sigh of relief, and fanned himself with his hat as he softly observed: "Well, I've got him.' "Hanged if you haven't," replied the sergeant. "Say, Bill, tins is a stroke of luck." "I guess so." guessed Bill. "Call the captain." Tho captain was playing euchre in the next room.; j.ie pamoout at. the call, brightened up at the sight pf me, and waved his hand and said: "Good! Search him and lock liim up in No. 4." Wliats tne charger asseu Hie ser geant as he lifted his pen. "Obtaining money under false pre tenses. We'd better telegraph Red Bank that we've got him." The captain disappeared to see about the telegraphing, and the detective be gan to search me. He came across my name on cards, envelopes, collar and cuffs and pockets, and before I was half searched lie began to look anxious. 'Sailing under stil) another name, ain't yon?" he queried, "It's the only name I ever had." "And you claim to be this man?" he demanded, holding up one of my cards. "And what are you doing, here in town?" "On my way down to Atlantic city." "And do you know any one hero or in Philadelphia?" "About twenty people, I guess." He stood off and looked at mo with an expression of mingled disgust and anx iety, but tho sorgeant braced him up with: "He's giving you a stiff. Bill. Don't let him scare you!" Bill braced up, completed the search, and I was locked up in a very roomy and well bred cell. The furniture was ancient, but combined art and conve nience, and the hangings and mount ings were all that could be expected of a small town. I whiled away an hour, and then four or five men came rushing in upon me. They began to abuse each other and apologized to me before they trot the door open, and when they led mo out it wa3 to the captain's room. "Say, old fellow, can you ever for give us?" gasped the captain as he put his arms around my neck. "If ho won't, then I might as well shoot my head off!" added the detective. "He must forgive us indeed, ho must!" finished the sergeant. "Gentlemen, you seem perturbed," I observed. "ILv anything gone wrong in this case?" "Oh! como off!" replied the captain. "We como right down from the limb. It was all a mistake, and we'll stand on our heads all tho rest of the week if you say so. Why in blazes didn't you talk deny it claim a mistake?" "And be told to shut up for my pains! How did you find out your mistake?" ; "They got the right man up the road, and the hotel keeper hero identified you as you came along. Say, what'U you have?" "Twenty thousand dollars damages "Then tho three of us will commit sui- j cide! Say a basket of wine and five j boxes of good cigars. That'll bankrupt the trio of us, but we've got to suffer." I let 'em off at that, and they were so glad that I didn't get out of town until the next day. Folks ought to be careful how they seize strangers and walk 'em around and feel in their pockets, but strangers shouldn't be mean about it when it proves to have been a mistake made pro bono publ;pq,T-3IV Quad in Detroit Free Press. '1 never saw that 'ere child in these parts afore," said an inquisitivo dame to lier equally curious daughter in this city, a day cr two ago, "and I mean to find out who her folks be an whero sho lives when she's to hum." A minute later a nasal twang was heard on the air calling, "Sis, sis, say, sis, who bo you an' where do you be long?" A proud little figure drew herself up haughtily and a childish yoice responded, "My mamma has taught me never to answer impert'nent questions." "Du tell," was tho rather subdued re roonse of the dsap.pontec newinonsrer. T3AjSr3S.. THE CITIZENS 33 JSil. 3NT 3EL ! PuATTaaiOUTU. KEUKAsCA. APITAL ST00K PAID IN, - $50,001 Authorized Capital, $100,000. OFFICERS 'RANK CARKDTH, JOS. A. COKNOK, President. Viee-Presiden W. H. CU8HING. Cashier. DIRECTORS frank Carruth J. A. Connor, F. K. Guthmaci J. W. Johnson, Henry Bceck, ,Hhn Q'Keefe, W. D. Memam, Vn. wetencamp, W. H. Cushing. Transacts a General Banking Business a 1 who have any Banking business to transact are Invited to call. No matter h- lare or email the transaction, it will receive our careful attention, and we promixe always cour teous treatment. -fues Certificates of Deposits bearing inter' Buys and sells Foreign Exchange. Count j ana l iiv securities. FIRST NATIONAL OF Pi-ATTSMOOTH. NfcBKAtiKA, .... .. Offers the very best facilities for the proas i transaction of legitimate BANKING BUSINESS. itocks. Bonds, Gold, Government and Loo 1 Securities Bought and Said, Deposits receiv ed and interest allowed on time Certifi cates, Drafts drawn, available in any part of the United States and all the principal towns of Kurooe. Collections mode t promptly remittee Highest market prices paid for County War ' State aid County Bonds. DIRECTORS f John Fitzgerald John R. Clark, S. Waukb. JOHlf KITZGKBALD, President. D Baksworth f. r. White. . 8. "WABC-H Cashi r. Bank of Cass County ,r, c. . Cor. Main and Fifth Sts., Plattsmoutb. PAiDCP CAPITAL. SUKrXUS $50,000 25,000 OFFICERS: C. H. Parmki.k rrestdent Fkkd Gokdkk Vice President J. M. Pattkhson Cashier Jas. Pattkksox, jr Ass't Cashier DIRECTORS: C. n. Parmele. J. M. Patterson,- Fred Gorder, .K. Smith, R. B. Windham, B. S. Ramsey, Jas. Patterson jr. A General Mlw Business Transacted Vccounts Solicited. Interest allowed on time deposits, and prompt attention girea to all business entrusted to its care. H. C. SCHMIDT, (COCHTV SUHVKVOB,) Civil Engineer Survyeor and Draftsman Plans-, Specifications and.Eitioiates, Mu nicipal Work, Maps &c. PWATTCSOTH. - - RE3. I0 HAS THE LARGEST FURNITU RE, HOUSEHOLD GOODS.'' In the city, which he is offering at A complete line of Window Frames in great variety. Yon. can get everything you necu. You can buy it on the installment plan, pay so much each month and yon will soon have a line iurnished house and hardly realize the cost. Call and see. I. IE3 IE Xj 3 3T, SIXTH STREET, BET. MAIN AND VINE. PLATTSMOUTII, NED. GOTO HBNRYBOECK'S FURNITURE EMPORIUM! Parlor, Dining Room and Kitchen I he owns ins own building, FY INTO KJEISTT" And therefore can soil you go.ds for less Money than any other dealer in the city. HE ALSO HAS A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF HEARSE FURNISHED FOR ALL FUNEIULS. HENRY COB. MAIN AND Will B.M. F. JANSS Be in Ptatts mouth, at the Riddle House, Thursday, Ap i OFFERED r an incurable case of Catarrh on. GAcro catarrh remedy. . y"FOIM Catarrh.-. Headache. UH Jtaad hvth Drnnrun ax ebatruotion of nose, discharges failing' into throat, sometime orofuse. wtten. onH at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent! Moody and putrid ; eyes weak, rinD in ears! deafness, difficulty of clearing throat, expecto atioa of offensive matter: breath offensive ameii and tasta impaired, and general debiiitv Only a few of these symptoms Bkely to be pre ent at . once. Thousands of cases result in oon- iBy its mild, soothing-, and hcalino; properties. Dr. Sage's Remedy cures the woret SuS? f u u u u u a i. luu Kin?. D : 1 J l ; , . A The Oriffinal i m m iiVsTf n w -PDf?J?fJfd.M J "TerPIlL , t3mallest,cheap Nt. easiest to take. An . ' is CareMck Headache, Bi Hou Headache! J. H. EMMONS, M. D. HOMCEOPATHIC Physician I Surgeon If2wti?id rf,dn eorner of Seventh street AND FINEST STOCK OF STOVES, that will make them sell. T.'ilil-a Prices Curtain ins at u sacriiicu. j. TUK BOKCK. SIXTH STREETS. rii 4, 1889. swess m kectoky. A TTOKN E Y t S. F. THOMAS, at-lyaw anil Nr.t .r-i v..i.ii tornev era d Block. i'latimr.ii'ti. " Office In u a 'ATIOf?X! y A. X. Attorn'Vy-at-i R1TLL1VAN. -Law. yi.i Mive prompt attention ; '"trusted to !,i,n. Oflice 2 . Kast s.Ue. Plaltsmouth. Sh. to ail buii union Block (IKOCEUIE. W I'MHTQ U'nTi i . rJJL - a,; Crockery Hta,,!e and Fail c v ( ; r.inJr-Ji. . ' . utvswart and ' ouii r etu. SM I T H. rr-17 jThe Boss Tailor" Mam S;., Oer M lbrx-8 Shoe Store. Has the bet- t Ullil mutt ! i . of samples, ,,uth foreiJu ami 1";: 3w NSr04 Wtbt of Missouri from ux Ci rnoc6; B"neM suits from f l i to dress suit, $25 to 145. Pant, 4, $3, tQ 60 w J tW Will guarantee a fit. Prices Defy Comoetilion. 1 Fine Job Work Cheap at Tut Uehald