The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, March 10, 1891, Image 3

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Vallery Meat Market
105 H 0th st.. Union Mock, formerly
415 Min tr-ct.
jj 4 " I A. flplondid Mrkrt, wli.ro Everything
f I ' 1 kept i FirHt ClwMt. We nun to
f V .i t,.i"i it .tin- I'utron-
idea.-, and ho lit it tin- I'utron-
of the 1'lll.lH.
Tin: choicest steaks,
EXCELLEM KOASTS,
THE SWEETEST CUTS,
FINEST CUUEI MEATS,
OaUK FISIf AM oTIIKK dei.icm:iks
' IN SKASltS.
By fair and h.R-Ht dealing I expect to
merit a Hliarc of tl trtidi:.
131-lni. J. K. VALLEltY. l'rop
MIKE SHNKLliUACKlMl.
V;:inn and HUi'kunitli "hop
Wagon, I!ugK7. Machine and
plow lt pairini; 'lone
HOlWESllOEINd A SPECIALTY
He uses the
NEVERSLIP HORSESHOE
Which is the beat ,orsesl,o,; for th.
farmer or for fast .Irivinu, r f"f citj
ru poHCB.v.r invented. It ih h i-h
L .n,.e cun ,.ut on sharp o rt .
,cor as needed for wet ami jl pprrj
'.lay. or Mnooth, dry road . -1
hi shop and examine, the nmkhM.ii
nntl you will use no other.
T M- SllNEI.LKACkhlt.
112 North Fifth St. I'lattsmoutl,
JULIUS PEPPERHERG.
MANUFACTCHKH OK AKT)
WHOLESALE & RETAIL
DEAI.KK IN THTt
Thoiccst Brands of Cigars.
including our
Fiord 3"
FITI.I. LINK OF
TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLE
amaya in stock. Nov. 26. 1885.
Lumber Yard
THE OLD RELfASL!:.
it raw & are
PDF L
""shingles. Lath, Sa.-h,
Doors, Blinds
Can supply everw demand of the city.
Call aud tfet terni.s. Fourth street
iu tear of opera house.
HENRY BOECK
The Leading
FURNITURE DEALER
AND
LIMBER
UNDERTAKR.
1 Constantly keeps on han.l "everything
you need to furnih your house.
COHXUU SIXTH AM) MV!N" STKKKT
Flottsrnout - Neb
P I
tKAi.i:n in
STAPLE AND FANCY
GROCERIES.
GLASS AMI'
OUEENSWARElC A. MAUSII.U.U - Fi.emM Bl-'
nwwl FaeQ a Suecialty;
, tio- Pul'Ie Solicited. ;
si'.r.i.'i.t :
Aru always lUtble to sudden and serero
colds, to croup, sore throat, lung fever, etc.
Uciiiedica, to be effective, must be admin
t.ilcred without delay. 'oUilng Is belter
adapted for au'ii emergencies than Ayer'a
Cherry IVi-torul. It soothes Ui lliflallieil
uiiilr.iiie, promotes exiiectoration, relii-vcs
ci.ukIiIuk. and imliicca Mi-cp. 1 lie prompt us
of tin medii-iiie ban K;ived innumerable liven,
both of youiiK ami oli!.
"One of my rhililn-n li.vl eroun. The can
was attemli'd by our .liysi-i:'ii, and w:i
imsed to be well under control. One niht
I was staitli d ,y the child's hard breathing,
i.ixi on going to u found it
Strangling.
Jt had nearly ceased to breathe. Realizing
that the child' alarming condition had te
i'iiiiik Mssilie in spite of the medicine it bad
taken, I reatoned that such remedies would
be i4 no avail. Having a Iart oT a bottle of
Aycr's I'lierry I'ectoral in the hou.se, I Rave
the child three doses, at short Intervals, and
anxiously waited results. From the moment
the Pectoral was given, the child's breathing
grew easier, and in a short time it was sleep
ing iiietly and breathing naturally. The
child is alive and well lo-lay. and I do not
hesitate to say that Aycr's 'berry pectoral
saved its life." C. J. Wooldridge, Wortham,
Texas.
tfr" For eoHs, coughs, bronchitis, asthma,
and the early stages of consumption, take
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
rciPABin IT
DR. J. C. ATER & CO., Lowell, Mass,
Bold y all 1 rugKi"l- I'rice tl ; six bottlua, t-S
the
IN T E 11 X ATI O iYAL
TYPEWRITER
A strictly first ! nwhine. fully warraiit
ed. Made hi. in tlm very bet nialerial b
-killed workmen, and with the best tools that
have ever been devised for the purpose. War
ranted to do all that can be reasonably ex
pected of the very best typewriter extant,
'anibleof wriMnir IV words hit minute oi
more -according to the ability of the operate.
tkice sioo.
If there is no agent in your town address the
manufacture.
TH K PAKIkiH M'K'd CO.
Agents vxauted l'arish N, Y.
F. II. SEELEMIItE, Ai;ent.
Lincoln, Nel,
PURE MAPLE SUGAR
aud Syrup.
Lo'. prices u noted cm lare or small lots
Strictly Pure.
Adirondack Maple Sugar Co
12ot5 Monroe st., Chicago, 111.
FULLER & DEXIFON
Western Agents.
K. DRESSLER,
The 5th St. Merchant Tailor
Keeps a Full Line of
Oonsult Your Interes by ilving Him a Call
SHERWOOD BLOCK
F3! ; rt--?T if- Tti
IDZSISTTISTIRY"
VAT
i j 1. 1 ;.v N I TO RC EL A 1 N J C KO W N s
liridixe: workjund tine irold work a
SPECIALTY.
UK. STKtNAL'S LOCAL as well as other .an-esthetie-igiven
for the painless extraction of
teeth.
8trfS( Prompt; J"otiti
Cur for Impotue: Lota
of Manhood, Seminal
2j . v.ttn,
Loit of Utmorit. Ac. Will
matte you a a i nvnu, vigor
ous Man, Pric ft. 00. 6
Bon: ti 00.
8oclal Oiretiont Uajttd
luitn earn Bo. A44re
BU:1 :aoT7jilmst e.
I 2 Oi O Luoa Ave.
a ST. LOUIS. MO
' -"V". TV
-.vV
W3X4IMU
RESTITUTION AT LAST.
THE RESTORATION OF
FORTUNE BY THE
A STOLEN
THIEF.
A Ceremony That V Itelayed Iany
Yearn - Hardship of w I'ttioily ITiat
Hud Iteen Kukliril The ItitHcal Marrln
One of Hie I taugli I er.
Tin' truth of the old saying that fort
une favors those who wait has aain
ln-en illustrated in th raso of Lai Wiek
land, an old man (' j'ears of ai-, and an
einpluyo of tho Illinois Central railroad
at MeConiiell, koiikj fifty miles north of
.Milan, Tenn. The story reads like a
romance. There resided in the eity of
Alierdeen. Si'otland, seventeen years ;i;fo
a rieh a.'id piosperons jeweler, Mr. Lal
iatid W'ii-kham, a man of family, which
consisted of himself, his wife, three sons
and threo daughters.
The iiamo of the eldest fcon was John,
and lie was en.aed to a yoiin;' lady of
his native city by tho iiaim; of Crai, one
f the fun-most of the beau'. il'ul Si-otch
maidens of Aberleen. Tin ir niarri:ie
v:is only deferred on account of some
:i - Mie-s t ransacj i ns.
Oik; day Wickland burst into his wife's
loom, rreaily agitated, and e.cl.iimed:
'.Mary, we are ruined utterly ruined!
The shoji 1::ls been broken into and at
least t'l'.'.niXi worth of plate and jewelry
carried oil". I have been with the de
tectives through all the holes in the city,
"out we found no tract; of the thief or of
!ln? ioods. The det.-ctives think the
.foods will never lx; discovered, and we
ire ruined if it is so." When this rob
bery occurred John Wickland was in
London, and he read tho news in a Lon
don newspaper. He hurried home and
found the family in the greatest distress.
SINKING A NEW FOKTLNT'..
For many days the Wieklands indulged
t hemsi Ives in tho hope that some clew
would Ih; found to the robbers and their
precious wealth bo restored to then-.
These hopes were never realized. The
robbery, as tho police) said, had been
cleverly and cleanly done. No trace of
the perpetrators or any part of the prop
erty was ever discovered.
In the meantime Wickland had paid
ill his outstanding debts, and found
himself a pauper without a sixpence. H"
mi:;ht have urifed the robbery as a plea
for bankruptcy, but he was too conscien
tious ever to think of such a course, so
he paid his debts to the last penny. The
utter ruin which had overtaken the
Wieklands postponed the proposed union
between John and Miss C'rai, and Mr.
Wiclcland struggled on for a f-.-w years,
his son John assisting him all the while,
l)'.lt theV Ci
d not even make ;t livin-'.
It seemed that fate was against him.
About this time thousands of people
were leaving tho jl ! c i; : ie:- EurojH'
and heading for Americi. Mr. Wick
land caught the emigration fever and
longed to come to this country. He sold
all his personal effects, and securing
steerage passage for his family lauded in
New York. He had some money and it
went fast. He began to realize that he
must find something to do.
lie left New York and went to St.
Louis. When they arrived in that city,
some fifteen years ago, they had very
little left. The boys found employment
as hands on the railroad. In s:j they
came to Cairo, Ills., and the boys stayed
there, while the old gentleman secured a
position further south, at McConnell. as
track walker and keeper of the tanks in
that vicinity.
HAPl'INKSS AT LAST.
For years they have battled with difii
cuiiies. During all this time John and
Mis- Craig kept up correspondence until
in November, 1S!)0, Miss Craig was
agreeably surprised at the sudden and
unexpected appearance in his native city
"f John Wickland, who bore the joyful
intelligence that his family, their fortune
rest. red, would soon be iu their old home.
How was it?
This happy termination came out in
this wise: A man named Johnson located
hi .-lf at McConnell as a merchant,
running a plantation and supply store.
!Ii wealth in ready money was the talk
A the town. He sold goods rapidly and
made money hand over list. He took
gre.-'.t interest in the Wieklands and
si-emed to evince especial interest in the
facts relating to their robbery aud utter
ruin. It finally came out that Johnson
had been a prison bird and the cold
shoulder was turned to him by Lucy
Wickland, to whom he was paying at
tention. This seemed to nettle him, and
he sent for the old gentleman to come to
him.
Their interview lasted two hours. At
length Johnson confessed that it was he
who had rubbed Wickland of his wealth,
and coming to this country had trebled
his possessions. He gave the old man
i::s cht ck for ")0.(inO. So soon as this
h
ppeued the Wieklands decided to re
rn to th'-ir native laud. Wlien John
;; heard of their determination he in-t-'d
on paving their passage- back to
oilai.d.
"i,e strangest featured the affair was
,t Jo'tm.-oii immediately sold out ail
I
ti
bvloiigiugs aud went baes v cent
land a month after the family of Wick
land had returned, and a letter from him
to a friend announcing his marriage to
Miss Lucy Wickland. eldest daughter of
the man wti-m he had robbed, has been
receive J. St. Louis Crlobe-Dcinocrat.
He Had lliuxl Iteason to IS Afraid.
"Your uncle," said a friend to a young
fellow who has great expectations from
i ricn uncle, "told me today he was go
ing to seek a change of air."
"What? Oh. don't say it. Not that,
of all things. What would have pos
sessed him to do it?''
-Do what?"
Look for a change of heir." St. Jo
seph News.
It appears that out of tiS.soO letters
poste.l by the bank c.f England authori
ties, notifying the conversion of stock, no
fewer than l'.'.Too were returned through
the dead letter office, owing to change
ot addres-. aud the bank learned br the
first time that hundreds of - t.ckliolders
were dad and their representatives unknown.
Nipnlrun Stlt with CouTulnlon.
I received instructions to accompany
Napoleon to Sira-bur, so as to be ready
to i. 'Iliiw his headquarters according to
cir umstances (September, 1).". An at
taci which the emjM-ror HUlIered at th"
beinnimr of this campaign alarmed m
peculiarly.
Tiie very day of his departure from
Strabnrif I had been dining with him;
on rising from the table he went alone to
the Empress Josephine's apartments, and
after a lew- moments came out aaiti in
an abrupt manner. I was in the dniw
i iilt r muii ; tie took me by the arm and
brought in t' his roi m. M. de Remiisat,
Ids fir.-t chamberlain, who had certain
instruct ii 'tis to ijet. and was afraid Na
poleon illicit ko without iriving them to
him. entered at the same time. We were
barelvin when 1 he emperor fell to the
t' or. -'aic' had lime? to tell me to
close t lie door. I tore ojien his Ilecker
cl.ief, as he seemed to be suffocating, lie
did no! vomit: he groaned and foamed
iit tiie mouth. M. de liemns.it ,- ive him
M-iiie water: I inundated him wilii cau-de-coIoL:iie.
lie had soun tiling in tile
u::: ere
of I'dliviil-lnii, wliii'!
l-easei
1 in
quarter i !" an hour.
.--d him in an armchair. He
.1 I.
.-peak aifain, iIie.-..-e u iiimsi If,
o'i n ; to :a y not hi n:; of this oc
. ati i ii.di' an hour later lie was
.el to ( 'arlsruhe. On reachimr
curie-
I ,'l tin
.Si
'
to
iii;'ail he h i me know how he u
. ! ! ti ; ended with the words: "I am
1. The duke (of Wtirit iubi-rLC) came
meet me as far as outride the first
ifate of his paiace. lie is a clever man."
Auoih-'f letter of his. from SiutlLcart,
and daied the same day. said: "I have
in -a nl of iim-k'n doings. !! is K'ttiii'-f
on as if I led him by the hand myself.
He will lie trapped in I'lm like a dod
hopp. r." Talleyrand's .Memoirs in C'eut
ury. lull).
many pe pph
There are many people, old and young
as m in" who are old, perhaps, as
yo'.:::g who never slop to 1 liink of the
words they are using; who, for in-t.ance,
in ver examine their speech to e? whet It
er t'.iey an; not employing one word over
nin'l over again in such a way as to make
th'-ir friends weary of il, even if the
word itself has no sense of being over
worked. The other day an actual conversation
w.iich was much like the following was
h--..rd on the street near a public school
i!i r..se:
-Say, Edith, my father gave me the
,joiIii-.-.L sled you ever saw for Christmas."
"Oh, so did my uncle give me one!
j.j i ne's awfully jolly, I tell you! Been
coasting on it?"'
"Xoi, yet, but they : iy ther.Vs jol'y
coasting down by tin- Fails."
"O'n, es. Marian and Henry and the
Wiiliamses and all of us w :i! down yes-
: :''.;;.' a!'t rii' :i. an ! i'"
aud here come El
and let 's all go now! Wt
jll -! t!l" .jolbest
a.'ior and Dick,
:'ll have just the
Joillest
"Oli. well, but if my mother don't
know Fin going she11 be jolly angry
about iv."
"Weil, I guess We"i! go; but if ,"OU'd
come too it would be lots jollier."
"t":. yi.r.ug pe..ple disaj pea red, still
t.. iking. :i!:d how mail" times they used
t
ie word "jolly" before they separated
would !' usel'-ss to try to conjecture.
Youth's Companion.
Winning Over a .1 ur ni:m.
It Is related of M. La haud, the most
f;.--:iuus of French criminal lawyers of
:',.( j resent century, that in pleading a
i-r ;; case he petvei ,-e 1 that one of the
j. S .eiued to be ho.-i lie to him and
iiis argument. In the faces of all the
other men in the bi.x he siw with his
practiced eyes signs that his oratory or
- shrewdness was having its effect, but
;i;is man, in spite of ail he could do. re
:iia:ned frowning, suspicious, obdurate.
M. L.ichaud kept on with his work, and
pn sently saw that his opportunity had
c- mie.
It was a hot day, and a ray of s-tnlight
h id penetrated a crevice of the curtain
and was shining upon the top of the head
of this juryman, who was quite bald.
The lawyer paused in his argument and
addressed himself directly to the court.
"If your honor would please." he said,
"to order that the curtain in yonder win
dow be lowered a. trifle I am sure that
the sixth juryman would appreciate it."
This sign of watchful attention won the
obstinate juryman's heart and M. Lac-hand's
case. San Francisco Argonaut.
Ineoiiveiiiene of Having : Douole.
In the north of London resides Mr.
Lovett King, a humorous siur and song
writer, who, a short time ago, met with
a cm-ion? adventure. He vr-is out walk
ing one day when a lady a total stran
ger f him burred his further progress,
greeted him and forthwith commenced
to dilate upon the ailments of her daugh
ter, who appeared to be a great invalid.
Iu vain did. Mr. Kirg e'.rl-.r.-oi-1 : : :t
the tide of her el iiut-nce and to answer
that i'.e 'n.v! net ?':.- L-.n-.r of her .te
as trr
-a v
goes, "to ge a vv i i-ULcn-ir. s. a.n
ri lliui.v' iiiqCiiied i 'J WiioU.'. ti.e la-.lj
took him for.
"Why, Dr. So-and-so," naming a well
known local practitioner, was the reply.
Mr. King speedily eniighte:i--d Lis fair
interlocutor and went on hi- way laugh
ing. It is a fact tii.it the medical man
in question has very of ten been i. :taken
for Lovett King. London Tit-bits.
Got the Worst of It.
Even the preachers are not averse to a
joke that lies in the line of the profes
sional funny man. One of them told
the following in an east side church
lately when he was invited to speak: A
traveler discovered a man lying on the
ground one warm day within afoot or
Two of the shade of a tree. "Why don't
you lie in th shad"?" he inquired. "I
did." replied the man. "but it ha moved
awar from me and I can't afford To fol
low it!" "Well, if you are not the best
.'pec. men of a lazy man I hav -:i y-t.!
Mak" m-' another remark on a ptrwith
that and I'll give you a quart r." The
man said. "Put the quarter into my
j viclet." He got it. Buffalo Expre-s.
ESC
What is
Castoria is Dr. Sumner Pitcher's inrseription for Infants
ami Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic stihstanee. It Is a harmless siihtftituto
for Parejror'o, Irops, Soothing Syrups, aud Castor Oil.
it is Pleasant. Its puaranteo is thirty years' uo by
Millions of Mothers. Castoriadestroys Worms and allays
feverish ness. Custoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd,
cures Diarrhoea and AVind Colic. Castoria relieves
toothing troubles, cures constipation and flatulency.
Castoria assimilates tho food, regulates tho stomach
and bowels, giving healtliy ami natural nlcep. Cas
toria is tho Children's Panacea tho Mother's Friend,
Castoria.
"OaBtoria. is an excellent nieiUln for rhil
drini. Mfitliers U.ivn rejieotedly told mo of its
ood MfTvtit upon their children."
Du. O. C. Onoor.n,
Lowell, MaiM.
- Castoria In thn Im'sI rwmeily for children of
which I urn (-iiiuiint"d. I hopo tlio day i.i ot
far (iittaiit when mothers wftlconwiler the real
hiten-Bt of their children, and uho Ciistoria in
sU ad of the vuriousquark niwtnims which tiro
destroyiriK their loved ones, ly forcing opium,
morphine, tnx,thing synip and other hurtful
aei'ls down ihi-ir throids, thereby Buudiuj;
them to premature graves."
Da. J. F. KiNcncLOK,
Conway, Ark.
The Centanr
Company, T7
'4
1?,
'tit
'lh
J. 0. fi RAVES & CO.
1JEA LEHS IN PINE LUMHEIt,
SHINGLES. LATH, SASH.
DOORS, rLIXI),aau 1.11 building material
. Call and see us at the
11th and Elm street,
north of Uoisel's mill.
lattsmouth, Nebraska
PLATTSMDUTH
IBuy yowr ts'ee; of tiie Mome
urcry wSaes'e roai can efict
your ows. tree tlmt wiii 5e si
greaiC privilege and benefit to
you. II have all fthe leading va
rietie antl know better what,
varieties will do here than
agents and yon can bwy as
cheap again.
Apple trets. 3 years old - - -
Apple trcts, 2 years old - -
Cherry, early "Richmond, late Iiehmond, wra;
l'lnm, Pottawattamie. "Wild Goose
1 1 asp be riles, Gre Tyler
Strawberries, Shai pless C? escn
Concord vines, li year- !d -
Moor- Early grapes, "J ycttr old -
Currants. Cherry Curra.nts
Snyder blackberries
Industry Gooseberry - s
Downing Gooseberries, 2 years old
Houghton Gooseberries, 2 vears old -
Asparagus - - -
Rosses, red nios and white moss
Shrubs, Hydrangea -
Honey Suckle -
Snow Balls -
Lilacs -
Evergreens, Nor way 'spruce B. Fir
Knrsery one-half mile north of
town, end of th Street.
Address all Orders zo
JT. E. ILEESJLE
PLAT1SM0UTR, - XEB.
Castoria.
" Pantriria i o well adnprrd tochlMrr-n thaw
I rei-i'iiiiiK iiii il aamJpunur t-. any priwcriptkar
Luuwu to luo."
II. A. Annim, M.
111 Sin. Oxford .St , IIr.Mklyn N. T.
"Our pl.yih-iinti in tlin chi'ilnvi's ilrpart
ineut h.ivo mi-ji-i ii highly oC their expwt-eiic-c
in tlieir tutsiil) practie wil Ii Puhtoria
und nlthoin;h wo only nav aimini; our
iuediea.1 Kiicplies w hut is known iim rerrnhir
pnxluctH, yvt woaro fr -o to eonfeKH that th
in.-ril.'i of Custorl lull won us look wlUi
fuvi.r Ukiii it.
U.N11KO IIoMITTit. IMl PlHl'KNHAaY,
I;ittu, Hj
Aijjin (. Siirrrr, Itrt.,
Mnrray Street, New York City.
corner of
one hlock
MISER,
T3
rs
-t
O
o
25 2
50 1800
120 2
00
GO
00
25
75
00
00
00
50
1500
2500
15XJ
150
250
500
' (KX)
3C0
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!::n:i
1.4- ...
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KM
101
4(
40
SO
00
20
40;
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125
JOHNSON B8ILDINGs:NortH 6MI
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