THE DflLY HERALD: PL ATTS MOO TIT. NEBlQ. w. r- n 1 v rr f -1 I J V I DOW i o 30 V w I LJ WILL OFFEE ON THURSDAY, APEIL 4, ,11 a ran ! fate as 3S5ffmMIIllElIil3ES ever shown iu the city at prices which will be the very lowest. 3 cLiOn fin T7 To) K E2BSBZE2ff3E THE ASSORTMENT CONSISTS OP a 4 3 V' J id i lb jo) from 4 I n If T9 'J r Ea-isSa EPoSsai ITfiouueings, wStla Marrow to MatelK Maialsook IFoiincIaigs, from 14 to 2S IfiaeSaes Wide. attesiastiteSaeii IFouncinss. Marrow Swiss Embroidery, l&ais&lmrglt lEmbroidery, in all widths DOVEY & SON, E. G. DOVEY & SON, E. Gh DOVEY & SON. 3IEX WHO HATE WOMEN. A PHYSICIAN! TELLS HIS EXPERI ENCE WITH MISOGYNISTS. A Mad Musieiuu'i Flight from Hi Fam ily Friijlitt-iu-il by Hie Sicht of a Vo rann Prejudiced by Ilelng Annoyed. Strsnise Cast- of Aversion. "Women haters? Plenty of them!" A Journal reijorter had met a well known phy sician in an uptown cafe and interrupted a conversation that the doc tor was holding with a friend over a cigar anil a bottle of claret. lie spoke easily and with confidence that he knew Iiis subject. To hate a woman, especially one of the d:;inty, loving kind, upon whose glance men hang enthralled, or for whose kindly glances nu n would sacri fice their souls, seemed incredible. Perish the thought! And yet the visi tor's mind brought into remembrance cases in which men had sworn they hated women, only to be captured and put in bondage by a pair of bright eyes. The physician struck a fresh match and watched the smoke from his cigar curl lazily upward as he related a few strange incidents that had come under his observation professionally. THE STOItY TOLD BY IIOL1IES. "One case that I recall," said the doc tor, "was that of a (Jerinan, a member of all the musical societies, who late in life acquired and betrayed an intense hatred of nil women. lie had been hap pily married, and no one suspected him of this new feeling that began to creep over him and destroy the love he had felt for his will and the respect for his .mother. "lie struggled against it and fought it, but it- was "ou.e. and the disease, if such it may be called. Ijegan to show itself to liis family soil friends, and an instant estrangement from his wife was the re mit, lie ran away from his home and was finally returned hopelessly insane. "Now,"' concluded the doctcr. "there was a man who was a woman hater, only he did not know it because he was insane. The physicians had diagnosed hL-i case aright." The conversation turned then on a case that had loen mentioned by Oliver Wen dell Holmes in his book. A very young boy had been left in charge of a nurse, and she had suddenly gone insane. In her maniacal frenzy she tried to strangle her innocent charge, and only desisted when she thought she had succeeded in her object. Then she killed herself with a razor, which left her a most shocking sight. The loy revived, and the first thing his eyes fell upon was the corpse. From that day throughout his child hood and up to the day of his death the eight of a woman was enough to throw jJan into convulsions. His nurses were jnen, and his family decided it best to seclude him. No woman ever entered 3iia apartments, but all the work of tak ing car of him devolved upon.men. He died in those rooms. iicaliai. .54 7irtraeaiiLthe physician, meditatively. "Tail T ThiSrfl know of one nearly as remarkable," and he went on to relate the following: "In the spring of 81 I was called in by a prominent banker to attend to his son, who had suddenly become afflicted with a strange state of mind, which proved to be a hatred of women. This his family could not understand, as ho had always been a leader in social events and fond of ladies society. 1 found tho young fellow's constitu tion very much run down, and inadekini admit that ho was a victim of the opium habit. lie also confessed to mo an ad venture that had happened to him. but which I will not repeat, as it is too long, in which he had been scared nearly out of IiLj wits by a woman. "It was easy enough for me to see that unless the impression caught and retained by hi mind in its enfeebled state could bo removed, ho would remain a woman hater all his life." "Vas it ever removed, doctor," asked one of the listeners. "Never," was the answer, and tho party relapsed into silence for a moment. THEY ANNOYED HIM. A diversion was caused by tho waiter's removal of an empty bottle and tho sub stitution of a fresh one, and tho conver sation was resumed. "Tell us another, doctor," insinuated the newspaper man. "I could tell you several more, but would have to do so briefly, as a patient is waiting for me," he responded. "I recollect a gentleman who stood very high in all affairs connected with educa tion in New York. lie, too, was a wo man hater. As his opinion on school affairs was considered valuable, many teachers, especially ladies, used to run to him for advice, but as he was deeply en gaged in study, their calls were a source of annoyance to him and irritated him into tho state of mind that I have men tioned. "He was a bachelor, but he finally dis charged all women servants, substitut ing men. And orders were given that no woman was to be allowed to set foot within his doora. He has often told me lhat women had prevented his reaching the highest rounds of science and that ha could never regain the time lost. "I knew another case where a man intrusted bis entire fortune to a woman and she made away with it and made a woman hater out of him. He woild ne ver address one. "But," concluded the doctor, impress ively. "1 think that designing mothers are responsible for many of the woman haters, as they frequently prevent their daughters from marrying the men of their choice, and when a girl deserts the man the loves and marries another, it is very apt to do mental injury to the first." New York Journal. THE ROTHSCHILDS. Clear Proof. Mcrritt Nice smoking jacket, that. Hind of your wife to make it for you. Young Husband Why, how do you know mv wife made it for me? ilerrilt I notice that the buttons arc sewed down the wrong side. Woman's I U.V.rt.1 . "li:trcteristics of tho Parent Heads of the Financial J'am'Iy. &jrno ten years ago old Baron Roths child passed away full of years, leaving behind him a gigantic fortune. His three nephews. Nathaniel, Leopold and Alfred, sons of Baron Lionel Rothschild, inherit ed the city business, while his vast riches in cash, lands, house property and se curities were for the. most part be queathed to his daughter, the Countess of Rosebery. The three London Roths childs of today bear little resemblance, either in face, form or business habits, to either their late father or uncle. The elder, Nathaniel, lately created Lord Rothschild, is a far seeing man of great business capacity, and under his gui dance the great house still maintains its supremacy in the world of London finance. He is, however, a man who de votes his attention only to great enter prises, and consequently a vast amount of minor business of a very, profitable nature that used to be executed by the Rothschilds has of late flowed into other channels. His lordship excels as a diplomat, and his relations with Gladstone's govern ment during the Egyptian afTair were close and invaluable to his house. Simple British tax payers who paid any atten tion to the part England was playing in the khedive's affairs for a year or two previous to the slaughtering of the he roic Gordon at Khartoum, roundly as serted that her expensive interference in Egypt would never have been pushed 60 far but for the vast interests of the Rothschilds and their clients there at stake." The head of the firm does not inherit his uncle's love of sport; he neither breeds nor runs thoroughbred race horses, and is rarely seen in the hunting field, though in a perfunctory manner he still keeps up the famed pack of staghounds. Hi3 counsel in financial matters is highly esteemed by her maj esty's government, and his life, like that of his predecessor, is devoted to money getting. More Jewish in appearance than either of his brothers, his cliaracter and habits also more clearly indicate his Hebraic origin. Alfred de Rothschild is also very regu lar in his attention to business in "the lane." He is not generallj' credited with any particular aptitude for playing the great game of finance, but has charge of the routine business of the firm. Almost any morning on the stroke of 11 his neat brougham may be seen pulling up at the corner of Cannon street and St. Swithin's lane, whence its elegantly attired owner proceeds on foot to his office. He i3 a handsome man, of medium stature and dark complexion, and his features are only slightly indicative of his Semitic origin. In private life he is something of a sybarite; his taste in works of art is highly cultivated; he is a liberal patron of some of the first painters of the day, and an ardent and discriminative col lector of old china and bric-a-brac Leopold de Rothschild does not resem ble his brothers either in his features or mode of life. The younger brother takes but little Dart in the business of the great couse, -ana rarciy puts m an appearance in St. Swithin's lane. Ho is a somewhat delicate looking man, of fair complexion, with a mild, kindly face. t A liberal patron of the drama, ho is rarely absent from his box at the opera or his stall at the theatre on "first nights," and he numbers among his friends many of tho leading members of the profession, lie i3 in the Prince of Wales set and i3 on terms of intimacy with tho heir appa rent. But it i3 as an owner of race horses that Leopold de Rothschild is, perhaps, best known to the English people. While lacking his late uncle's enthusiasm in hi3 pursuit of the national sport of Britons, he maintains a large stable of thorough breds at Newmarket, where he also has a residence, and it may fairly be said that there are no colors more popular on tho turf than the Rothschild blue and yellow. One estimable characteristic of the English Rotlischilds may be noted as the common possession of each of tho three brothers. Their charity knows no limit, their sympathy once enlisted on behalf of a worthy object. Their names are never missing from any public subscrip tion list, while their private benevolences are ever dispensed with open hand and presumably cheerful fieart. Philadel phia Times. Coin pressed Sawdust for Fire Wood. "I'm thinking of making a dryer for drying sawdust," said a well known Lewiston man, Tuesday. "It will bo a big business some day. A firm down in Bangor is taking the lead. Their pur pose is, j-ou know, to press it by hy draulic power into about one-tenth its bulk, and sell it for fuel after all the moisture has been excluded. Yen see the effect of moisture. The intense strain created by burning would burst the adhering structure and make it in efficient as fuel. When you come to think of the enormous waste of sawdust it is apparent that modern economics haj hold of the right end of along clew." Lewiston Journal. The Lair of both sexes is worn long, reaching nearly to the waist, and is cut squarely across. Do the dusky children of the desert profane their ebon locks with brush or comb? Not to any great extent. They follow a device at once economical, unique and effective. They make a thick paste of the adobe soil and water, and, having wound the hair closely around their heads, they smear it from brow to occiput with sticky gray mud and let it dry. When thoroughly dry it is cracked off and the hair emerges therefrom clean, smooth and glossy as the proverbial raven's wing. Compared to this the shampoo of civilization is foolishness. Chicago Tribune, Mrs. Hobbs Blue Book. Hobbs Where're you going with that dress? Mrs. Hobbs Out calling; this is my new directory costume. Hobbs Ah, I see, it helps you remem ber the names of the people you want to call on. Those directory publishers have , lonjc heads. Detroit Free Press. I Catarrh, when chronic, becomes very ofTensire. It is impossibla to be other wise healthy, and, nt the same time, af flicted with catarrh. This disagreeable disease, in its most obstinate and danger ous fo.-m3, can be cured by the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Public Notice. Notice is hereby given that the huard of health will make a public inspection of all streets and alleys iu the city on Thursday, Aril 11th. Person who have any complaint to make mny file the same with the city clerk, city marshal or any member of the Board. tf W. K. Fox, F. E. White, Clerk Chairman. For "run-down," debilitated and overworked women, Ir. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the best of all restorative tonics. It is a potent Fpeciflo for all those (Tlironio Weaknesses and Diseases peculiar to Women: a powerful, Ren ral as well aa uterine, tonlo and nervine, it Imparts vljror and strenirth to the whole system. It pro roptly cures weakness of etoraacb, nausea, indifrestion, bloatlnjr, weak back, nervous pros tration, debility and sleeplessness, in either sex. It is carefully compounded by an experienced physician, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. Purely vegetable and perfectly harm Ices in any condition of the svstem. Ii-avoriie rreicripa tlon la the only medicine for women, nolo by druKiflsU, nnuer a. positive guar- One might as well try to stem the rapids of Niagara, as to expect perfect health while a Scrofulous taint exists in the blood. Through its alterative and purifying properties, Ayer's Sarsaparilla removes every vestige of Scrofulous poison from the blood. F. Ortmann has opened a new bakery and restaurant in the corner room of the Riddle block. Fresh bread, cakes, pies and pastry coastantly on hand; confec tioneries, fine nuts and candies; day and week boarders meals and lunch at all hours; he will also open an ice cream parlor next Sunday the 7th of April. High -Pressure Living characterizes these modern days. The result is a fearful increase of Brain and Heart Diseases General De bility, Insomnia, Paralysis, and In sanity. Chloral and Morphia augment the evil. The inelicine best adapted to do permanent good is Ayer's Sar saparilla. It purities, enriches, and vitalizes the blood, and thus strengthens every function and faculty of the body. " I have used Ayer's Sarsaparilla, in my family, for years. I have found it invaluable as A Cure for Nervous Debility caused by an in active liver and a low state of the blood." Henry Bacon, Xenia, Ohio. "For some time I have been troubled with heart disea.se. I never found any thing to help me until I began using Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I have only used this medicine six months, but it has re lieved rae from my trouble, and enabled nie to resume work." J. P. Carzanett, Perry, 111. "I have been a practicing physician for over half a century, and during that time I have never found so powerful and reliable an alterative and blood purifier as Ayer's Sarsaparilla." Dr. M. Maxstart, Louisville, Ky. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, rCEFABED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer St Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1 ; six bottbs, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. antee of satisfaction in every case, or price ($1.00) refunded. This jruaranteo bun been printed on the bottle-wrapper, and faithfully carried out for many years. For larjre. illustrated Treatise on Diseases of Women Wi pa?es, with full directions for home-treatment), send ten cents In stamps. Address, World's Dispensary Mkoicax, Association. 663 Maim Btnwt. Buffalo, N. X. (( OLr2(TT eURVETOR.) Civil Engineer Surveyor and Draftsman Plans, Specifications and Estimates, Ma- nicipal Work, Maps ic. PLATTSWiOUTH. - - NEB. C F. SMiT H, The Boss Tailor Main St., Over Merges' Shoe Store. Has the best and most complete stock of samples, both foreign and domestic woolens that ever came west of Missouri river. Note these prices: Business suits from $16 to $35, dress suits, $25 to $45. pants $4, $3, $6, $G.50 and upwards. CWill guarantee a fit. Prices Defy Comoetilion. BUSINESS MUKCTOUY. ATTORNEY. S. F. TFTOMAS. Attornev-at-Law and Notary Public. Office In Fiizgera'd JMock. 1'lattvruoutb, Neb. ATTORN tY. A. N SULLIVAN, Attorney-at-lw. Will glre prompt attention to all bucitie intrusted t him. Office In L'nion Block, East side. Plattsmoutb. Neb. GROCERIES. t'HRIS. WOHLFARTII. Staple and Fancy Orrcerics, Glassware and Crockery, Flour and Feed. J.H.E3E0NS,M. D. IIOVOZOPATHIC Physician Surgeon Office and residence corner of Seventh street and Washington Avenue. Telephohs No. to. Chronic Dieaes and Diseases of Women and Child rsn a specialty. Office bourt, 9 to 1 1 a. in. a to 5 and 1 to p. m.