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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1892)
r- iiioutll .Daily Herald PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. 11 DAY, FEBRUARY 6 1892. NUMISKK 1 ji Absolutely Pure. 1 .cream of tartar baking powder , Sheet of all in leavenintr strength Latest U. S. Government food re- Lort. MURLINQTON & MISSOURI RIVER R. R- V TIME TABLE. J OF DAILY PASSENGER TRAINS GOING EAST No. 2 6 : 05 P M. Mo. 4 lo :30 a. u.. No. 8 ... ...7 ;44 p. n Mo. 10 9 : 45 a. m Mo. 12 lo :I4 . n Mo. 20 8d0a.n. GOING WEST No 1 3 :45 a. m No. i, 5 ::J5 p. iw No. i, 9 :05 a. m o. I T M!ia. m. o. i,. .. 6 P, m. No. II. ...5 :05 p. m, I 0.19....... ii aw a. m. , Fushnell's extra leaves for Omana aDout two j 'clock t .r maha and will accommodate pas- engers. ) MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME CARP. Mo. Accomodation Leaves. Mo.3 arrives. Trains daily except .-unday :- .10:55 a. m. . 4;00p. m. TTOKNEV A. N. SULLIVAN. V ill give prompt attentlot Attorney at-Law. lo all ousiness entructea to mm. wm m Union block. East Side. Plattsmouth, Neb. SECRET SOCIETIES KNTGUTs"oV"r"l IlIAf "tJauntlet Lodge no. 47 Meetr every "Wednesday evening at their bll in Panneie & Craig block. All vis lUng knights are cordially invited to attend M . N. Griffith. C. C. ; tin Povey, K. R. 8. A O. U. W. No. 84 Meets second and tourth Kiidav venioKS In the montn av a . jr. hall in Rockwood block. M. Vondran. M W, jftX, Brown, itecoraer. CASS IX) DOE. No. 146. 1. 0. O. F. meets ev ery Tuesday night at their hall In Mtzgerald block. All Odd Fellows are cordially invited to attend nen visiting in the city. Chris Pet rsen. N. G. ; S. F.Osborn, Secretary. DOTAL A RCA NAM Cis Council No 1021. Meet at the K, of i hail in the Parmele & Crate block over Bennett & Tutts, ylsiring brethren Invited. Henry Gerlng. Regent; Thos Walling, Secretary, A O. U. ft..8.Meeis first and th Ird I Friday J. .n.imxnf Pich month at G. A. K. Hall In Roekwook block. Frank Vermiiyea, i. v. D, E. Euersote. Recorder. DEGliEE OK HON R. ir-ee'J second and fourtti Timrsuvs o e. ca n-ootii O. F hall in KitKr'd bi c. . Mrs. F. Doyd. Lady of Honor ; Belle Ver.ny:ea. recorder- Gr A. R-McConibie Post No. to rneta eveyy 9itnr.:iir evonme at. 7 : CO in rineir- nan in bckwoo(l bio- All visitin comraH are cordlail" uvieo .o m -ii . 3. - Post Adiniaot ; G. F. N'3. Po Coinmadder. ORDV.K OP THE" WORLD, Meets at 7 : 30 every Monnav evening at the Grand Army all... A. F.-Groom, president. Tlwe-Walling. ecretary.r. - - , ' ' ' ": rASS CAMP No. 332 M. W. A. Hi?ets evepr record and Furih Monday ey-nings in Fitreraid ha '. Vis-ttng neighbors welcome. P.C? Hansen, V. C. : P. Wertenbenrer, W. A.. 8. C. Wi'.de. ClerK. nAFTAI H E PALMER CAMP NO 50 V gons of Veterans, diviHion of Nebraska. U A. meet every Tuesday night at 7 :30 o'clock In their hall in f'ltlgerald b ock. All sons and visiting comrades are cordially Invited to meet with us J.J. Kurtz, t'ommimder ; B. A. Ale Elwain. 1st eargent. " TA17HTERS OF HEHECCA Bud of Prom I ie Lodge N. 40 meets the second ano fourth Thursday evenings of each month in the I'O. O. I-. hll Mrs. T. E. Williams, N G. ; Mrs. John Cory. Secretary. TOTJXG MEN'S HRISTUN -SOCIATION Waterman block Main Street. Kooins open fr-m 8 Jdamto 9 :30 p m. For men only Gospel meeting every Sunday alternoon at 4 o'eiock. ... PLACES OF WORSHIP. Catholic. St. Paul's Church. aV. between . Fifth and Sixth. Father t'a'rey. Pastor Service: Mass a 8 nd 10 :30 A. M. Sunday School at 2 u.0, with oenedicliou. Ghristiak. Corner Locust and Eighth I Services morning and evening. Elder Galloway pastor. Sunday School 10 a. m. Episcopal. St. Luke's Church, corner Third and Vine. Rev. H B. Burgess, pastor. Ser vices : 11 A. m. ai:d 7 :30P. m. Sunday School at 2 :30 p. M. German Methodist. t orner Sixth St. and Granite. Kev. Hirt. Pastor. Services : 11 a.m. and 7 tso p. m. buoti ay School 10 :30 a.m. rBESBYTKRi an. Services in rew church. cor ner Sixth and Gritnije sts. Rev. J. T. Baird, pastor, suuday-sc; ool at 9 ;30 ; Preaching at 11 a. m.sd 8 p. m. The . K. S. C. F. of ?his church meets every Sabbath evening at 7 :15 in ihe basement of the chucrh. All are invited to attend these meetings. First Methodist. Sixth St.. betwen Main and Pearl. Rev. L. F. Krttt. I. U. i.astor. Service : 11 a. m.. 8 :0 p. m Sunda s-chool 9 :30 A. M. Praytr meetiJ.g Wednesday even ing German Pkebbvtebian. Comer Main and Ninth. Kev . Witte, ; pastor. Services usual hours.' Sunday school 9 0 a. m. 8WKEDHH co(iRPOATiOKAt. Granite, be tween Fifth and sixth. CoM)KUBAPi-i8T.-Mt. Olive. ak, between Tenthand Eleventh. Rev. A. Boswell. pas tor. Services 11 a. m. and 7 JO p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evenlrg. I Youico MIsn'b - Ohristiak association Rooms In Waterman block. Main street. Gos pel meeting, for men only, every Sunday af ternoon at 4 o'clock. Rooms open week days from 8:30 a. in., to 9 ; 30 p. m- Boith park Tabernacle. Rer. J. M. Wood, Pastor. Services : Sunday School, 13 a. m. : Preaching. 11 a. rn. and 8 p. m. ; prayer meeting Tuesday night ; choir prac tice F'riday night. AU are welcome. me Plattsmoulh Herald KNOTTS BROS, Publishers Punish.! every Thursday, aud daily everj e re'nlng except Sunday. registered at the Plattsmouth. Neb. pon o Hcefor transmission through tn I'. K. ma.ls a second class rate. Office corner Vine and F'fth streets Telephone 38. TEKMS FOR WKKKLY. O e copy, one year. In advance SI 50 One copy, one year, not In advance 2 00 On-t copy, six niontbf. in advance 75 O.w c-'py. three months, in advance. . . 40 TKBM3 FOR DAIL1 3 ie cop one yar in advance $6 00 O'lecopy per week, by carrier 15 Ow copy, per montb .- 50 . LOVE AND MARRIAGE IN JAPAN.D Sir Edwin Arnold, who has been enjoying1 an interesting trip through the United States, has made a careful study of the condi tion which govern the family in Japan and embodies his ideas in a paper called "Love and Marriage in Japan" iu the February number of The Cosmopolitan. The article . illustrated bv tne ouaintest DOS- sible Japanese sketches running finwn tli sirlpn and ar.roaa the bot- torn 01 each page of each pasre. An excellent photograph . of . V. D.. Howells, serves aa a frontispiece, and his work as a writer of fiction is re viewed in the same number by IL II. Boyesen. The president of John Hopkins University, gives a most practical paper- for parents on "Boys and Bo3's' Schools," illus trated by cartoons of the famous Atwood. Murat Halstead turns lovingly back to his early farm days, and tells of the "Pets and Sports of a Farmer Boy." The pe troleum indutrsy fully illustrated: An Afghan Story by Archibald Forbes; The Story of the Brazilian republic by Adams, late minister to that country; and The Leading Amatures of the United States in photography, are other leading articles of the month. THE NEWSPAPER THE PARTY'S HOPE. The family in America is inquir ing into political questions for its o.vn interests, and when all people are in an inquiring and receptive mood the most effective agency for the good of the republican party is the party newspaper. It excels all campaign documents; it goes regu larly to the homev ,Thg , local party newspaper ! "is ''"the . campaigning strength of the party. Every county committee should bend its energy to extending the circulation of every county , party, papers Every republican clubshbuld obtain. lists of all doubtful Voters, and should see that such voters are supplied with party newspapers. The local paper should be utilized first; the state paper should stand next, and the national paper come third People believe most in the paper that is nearest to them, and is identified with their interests. The national committee can not urge too strongly upon the party man agers everywhere that the lines of life for the republican party in this contest lie in the strengthening of the party press, in the extension "of its circulation, and in giving it ac cess to every family and to every voter who will listen to reason and to argument. One live, strong, well edited, god-humored, wholesome republican paper will do more good toward making republican votes in a family than a hundred campaign documents. The circu lation of the democratic news papers in this country now exceeds the circulation of the republican newspapers 3CD,CZ3,0C3 copies a year. It shoulo be the first work of all township, county, district, state and national committees to change this situation, and to give to the party of intelligence and progress not only an equal newspaper circu lation, but one larger, more power ful, and more commanding. NEW YORK'S MOST VICIOUS VICE. The New York Vice is constantly brewing trouble for itself and then appealing to the press for assist ance to aid in extricating it from the quagmires it has created only to strand itself in. The Register is juet in receipt of one of the Vice's frequent appeals in which the fol lowing strange question is despar ingly asked: "When postmasters, as is shown iu this paper, become so blindly partisan as to refuse repeat edly to delvier mail thaf has been paid for, properly addressed and ... .... I posted, uecause tney uo not agree with the politics of the sender, is it not time for a protest loud and long from every lover of free insti tutions?" All this frantic hue and cry is raised because the editor of the Vice has entered into a contract with the national democratic com mittee to send out 100,000 copies of the Vice for six months, to such addresses of temperance repub licans as that committee may furn ish, and to work up the 1,C30.000 vote" scheme for a third party pro hibition candidate for president, and thus aid that committed in its desperate attempt to elect a demo cratic president next Novembers The Vice has entered upon its vicious work, and is now sending out the copies contracted for each week. At many points nearly every person addressed has refused to take the vile sheet out of the post- office and the postmasters have so notified the publishers of the Vice, as the reerulations direct. This action has been a flaming red rag to the editor of that paper, and he is now franticall y appealing to all the newspapers in the United States to aid his foul scheme in behalf of the national democratic committee. Out of the thousands of copies of his paper that have been returned he has been able to linu about a dozen persons, by sending letters , to the addresses of all whose papers have been returned, who did not re fuse to take the Vice out of the postofiice, and on this flimsy buse lie is now attempting to prejudice the public against the action of the postmasters who returned the capers as "refused." The editor of the Vice can rest assured that his complaints will be official' invest igated and properly punished, in case there have been any violations of the postal laws and regulations. Iowa State Register. THE SILK WALK. A Curious Motion, Which Causes a Swish Swish. Sound. Two girls were walking down the avenue the other day, says the Wash ington 1'ost. They were both very stylish and well dressed, but they looked as if their clothes had been made at horn by a woman whe sewed by the day. Another girl passed them at a rapid pace whose light cloth suit had an unmistakable Paris cut. Her black hat was very high in the back, her feather was very fluffy, and she walked with a curious motion, a sim ultaneous one of the shoulders and hips, and as she passed there was a sound of silk swish, swish. "I bet that is a New Yorker. Hasn't she got the silk walk down to a fine point?" said the taller and darker of the two girls. "What do you mean by silk walk?" "Why, Alice, haven't you noticed the way all the girls are walking now, and that lovely rustling sound?" "Oh, pshaw! Anybody can have that who has a silk foundation to her skirts." "Indeed they can't, then. Your dress is made up on silk, and I can't hear a sound. No, you've got to have on a silk lining, and a silk petticoat, too. I was wild for one, and when I found I couldn't afford it they were f 20 and $30 I almost cried, until I thought of an old silk dress I had, and I've got it on now. But they don't make a bit of noise unless you wriggle your knees a sort of corkscrew motion, like this." And the taller and darker of the two girls wriggled her way down the ave nue so successfully and with such a rustle of 6ilk that an old colored wo man put down her basket of clothes and gazed after her, saying: "Dat young lady sat'nly gwine to tear dat dress ter pieces ef she don't walk mo' stiddy!" Finding His Bride. In one part of the Canton of Ticino, Switzerland, a very quaint marriage ceremony prevails. The bridegroom dresses in his "Sunday best," and ac companied by as many friends and relatives as he can muster for the fete, goes to claim his bride. Fipding the door locked,he demands admittance; the inmates ask him his business, and in reply he solicits the hand of his chosen maiden. If his answer be deemed satisfact ory, he is successively introduced to a number of matrons and maids, some perhaps deformed, and others old and ugly. Then he is presented to some large dolls, all of which lie rejects with scorn, amid general merriment The bewildered bridegroom, whose impetuosity and temper are now sore ly tried, is then informed that his lady-love is absent, and invited to see for himself. He rashes into the house and searches from room to room, until he finds her in bridal dress, ready to go to church. Then are his troubles over, and his state as a benedict as sured. The owl is unable to move the eye ball, which is immovably fixed in the socket by a strong, elastic, cartilagin ous case. The proportion of Ang'o - Saxon words in" the Knglish Bible is 97 per cent of the whole. EW MEATMARKET. Fresh Beef. Pork. Veal. Mutton, Butter and eggs Kept constantly on nana. Game of all kinds kept in Season. SATISFACTION - GARANTEED SAMPSON BROS. Cor. 6th St and Lincoln Ave PLATTSMOUTH, - NEBRASKA. jyTEW HARDWARE STORE S. E. HALL & SON Keep all kinds of bull ler hardwar- o-t liana .-. and will supply contractors on most fav orable ter s TI2ST ROOFING "pouting and all kinds of tin work prom tly done. Orders from th country Solicited 616 Pearl st. PLATTSMOUTH. N KB. J HE CI1IZENS BANK. HLATTSM'MJTH tpttal stock paid iu Authorized Capital. $100,000 OFKlCKltS V. H dishing, J V Johnson : t'. 't-nt . 1e- ' W. H. CUSHINM. !ehir - PH'Kfn'fH - F R Guthman J W Johnson E S Greusel Henry Kikenbary. M w Morgan. J A Connor. W Wettenk nip, W II Cuslukg TRANSACTS!! GENERAL BANKING BDSlNEI ssues certificates of deposits bearing interest Buys and sells exchange, county and city nil pIRST : NATIONAL : BANK OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA Paid up capital $50,0110.00 Surplus 10.000.09 rs the very best facilities for the promp transaction of ligitimate Banking Business Stocks, bonds, gold, government and local se lurities bought and sold. Deposits receive tnd interest allowed on the certificate Drafts drawn, available in any part of th United States aud all the principal towns o Surope. TOLLKCTION8 MADB AND PROMPTLY REMIT TED. Highest market price piid for County War rants, State ana County bonds. DIRECTORS John Fitzgerald P. Hawksworth 8am Waugh. F. E. White George E. Oovey John Fitzgerald, S. Waugh. President Caef- J ULIUS PEPPERBERG. M AXCFACTURE OF AND WHOLESALE AND RETR1L DEALER IN THE CHOICEST BRANDS OF CIGARS FULL. LINK OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS ARTICLES always in stock o Plattsmouth, - - Nebrassa p J. ItajTSEfT DEALER IN STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES GLASS AND QUEENSWARE. Patronage of the Public Solicited. North Sixth Street, Plattsmouth. -Local 'oirtdirpv ravelingOntiDUUDII To represent- our well known house. You ned no capital to repre sent a firm that warrants stock first-class and true to name. WORK ALL THE TEAR. 9100 per montb to ngnt man. Apply muck, stating age. I. L MAY A CO Nursery, Florist and Seedamen.se Paul, Idina. (This house Is respmible ) nnn vw.ted "" ' T ATTENTION LADIES. JtfoAv' is tl)e Time to liqy yoq lqts Boqqets qiid DAWSON gs FEAB.CE RS. DAWSON expects to leave our city in a short time and Mr Pearce does not wish to continue the business. So for the next o THIRTY D A"5 S o will sell goods at cost. Any one wishingto go into the millinery business can do so at once at your own terms as we wish to sell our entire stock as it is. We hare a splendid location and a good trade. Eqsor S PeqicefE ttTT-jlL-y: BLOCK Two doors south, of Post Offico into v is Youri -AND- Home Magazine Toledo Blade Harpers Magazine -Harper's Bazar Harper's Weekly $ 1 8Ti - 2 l." 4 IX) - 4 HI) 4 HO Y, o is 11 501 Vine Street. Everything to Furnish Your House. AT I. PEARLMAN'S GREAT HOUSE FURNISHING EMPORIUM, Having purchased the J. V. Weckbach store room on Foutk Main street where T am now located can pell goods cheap er than the cheapest having just put in the largest stock of new goods ever brought to the city. Gasoline stovf and furniture of all kindssold on the installment plan. I. PEAKLHAAi. F G Feoffs 02 WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI) A Fall aud Drugs, Medicines, Paints, and Oils.. DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LIQUORS Prescriptions Carefully Compounded at all Hours. FOR SALE OR EXCHMGI ejon ACRES of Col ora lo land for sale or trade for Plattsmouth real-- estate or for merchandise of any kind. This is a bargain for some one; the land is Al. For further particulars call on or addret THE HERALD, Plattsmouth, Neb. 5 V- THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY BROTHERS. M Warren I. IT- DUJJR Always has on band a full stock of 1 FLOUR AND FEED, ' Corn, Bran, Shorts Oats and Baled Hay for sale as low as the lowest and delivered to any part of the city. CORNER SIXTH ANO VINE Plattsmouth, - - Nebraska. -o- -O etiajcK. Iowa State Register Western Rural -The Forum Globe-Democrat -Inter Ocean 3 09 2H5 n ra H 10 3 25 e Tirqc o Stjbsci'ibe MODERN- Complete line of t ?rv'rv.;v K STVewTork. PrioeSOcUJ 917, 919, 221, AND 225 ST. PLATTSMOUTH, NKH. F. R. GUTHMANN. PROP- Rates $4.Tio i'kk week Asn ri i