The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, February 19, 1892, Image 1
Daily Herald.. moiiMi o n 2 FIFTH YE Alt. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. Fill DAY, FEBRUARY ID 1892. NUMBER 135 RSI The Plattsmouth Herald K NOTTS BROS, Publishers RQ17BGR Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar bakiug powder Highest of all in leavening strength Latest U. S. Government food re- port. - - ; . mvRLixaTosr & Missouri rite a R. it. V TIME TABLE. J OF DAILY PASSENGER TRAINS PuMixhed every Thursday, and rtnlly ever 'enlng except Sunday. !testered .at tlie . Plattsmouth, Neb. pot- o lice for trninWion through U. 8. ma. Is a( neffond clasn rate. Office corner Vine and Fifth street telephone 38. TKBMS FOB WKKKL.Y, 0-i copy, one year. In advance . .fl 50 One copy, one year, not in advance 2 00 One copy, six montbf. in advance .. 75 One cpy, three months, in advance. . 40 ' TKRMS FOR DAILY Dcie cop one ynr in advance 86 00 Oae copy per eek. by carrier i5 j Oae copy, per niontb 50 Boies of Iowa says the democrat ic candidate for president must be a western man; but from modesty he will not name him. GOING VEST Not, 3 :45 a. m o. A 6 lb p- II No. 5. 9:05 a. m vo. i, ' us a. m. No. 9. 6 SJ5 p,m No. 11. 55 p. m . 19 11 K5 a. m Bushnell's extra leaves for Omaha about two 'clock for omahaand will acconimouaie pas sengers. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY GOING EAST Vo. 2 6 : 05 P. M, Mo. 4 10 :3oa a. Ho. 8 7 ; 44 p. m Mo. 10 9 :45 a. m No. 12 10 :14 a. m Mo. 20 i 8 U30 a. m Governor Boies, of Iowa, wants to be vice-president of these United States, that he will stand upon .iny kind of a platform they may adopt. The assessors of Montana have completed their tax list and show the real and personal property of the state, as valued on the tax du- The farmer is entitled to full pro tection as mucli as trie tlie wage worker who manufactures woolens. The democracy would protect neither. The republican party would protect both. No possible justification exiets for the Springer measure. It aims to undo all that the McKinley law has already accomplished for the woolen industry. In 1800 the American people paid foreigners $T3,808,814 for woolen fabrics. In 1891 they paid otily $34,010,543. This represents an immense gain o American industry, which the free trader would wipe out at a single stroke. American woolen goods not only command a better home market than they did a year and a half ago, but they are cheaper to-day than when the McKinley bill is in the interest of foreigners and against the interest of Ameri cans. It should not become a law, and it will not while a republican senate is in the capitol and a repub lican president is in the white house. TIME CARD. Vo. 884 Accomodation Leaves... go. 38.1 - arrives... Trains daily except s-unday EXPERIMENTING WITH COLD The laboratory of Prof- Pictet, at Berlin, is designed for the investi gation of the effects of cold. The refrigerating machinery, driven by several powerful engines, keeps the objects under observation at any .10:55 a. m. . 4 ;00 p. 111. that the real value is about three . . jTTORNEV A. N. Attorney at-Law. SULLIVAN. Will eive Dromnt attentloi m &ll himine entrusted to mm. uiuce ui Valon block. East Side. Flattemoutn, Neb. times as much. Assessors found 8,344,884 sheep, and the state will be interested in Brer William Spring er's little bill on the sheep. SECRET SOCIETIES TTNIGHTS OK PYTHIAS Gauntlet Lodge f no. 47 Meete every Wednesday evening at their hll in rarweie & Craig diixik, ah vi urn knttrhts are cordially iuvited to attend M. N. Unflltb. C. C. : tin Dovey, K. R. 8. Wf'P Frlda l f all in Ko it. J, Brov W. No. 84 Meets second and tojrtb Md.. ...KlKin in the month at (i. A . K. n kockwooq uiuck, oi. luuuiau, ju Brown, Kecorder. . . (CASS LODGE, No. 146.1. O. O. F. meets ev ery Tuesday night at their hall in Fitzgerald kiAmt aii tif Fellowa are cordiallv invited I a Attend when IslttnK in the city. Chris Pet I enen, N. G. ; 8. F. Osborn, Secretary. I nnvAT. imiiMM Rs Council No 1021 I 1 Mt at thA K of p. hall in the Farmele & fV -Xraiz. Mock, over-Bennett & Tutts, vlsiring 1 iLethren Invited. Henry GerlBg, Regent; V I JV Walling. secretary. .J r n it w n Meets first and third Intra nfeh month atG. A. R. a-.n Rockwook block. Fraak Vennilyea, M, W D, B. Enersole, Recorder. Listen to thn moan from the Iron and Steel Trades Journal of Lon don: -'Through the course of Brit ish trade in the coming year is still shrouded in uncertainty, we can without fear of fallacy, predict a period of great prosperity in the great trans-Atlantic republic. The good things in store for the Americans in 1892 we do not be grudge them, although we cannot expect to participate to the full as we did in by -gone days in the pros perity of the states." Friday Ball EG REE OF IIONDR. meets second ana fourth Thursdays ox each monin in i.u. O. F hall in Fitzgerald block. Mrs. F. Boyd. Lady ot Honor ; Belle Vermyiea, recoraer- GA. R-McConihie Fost No. 45 meets every Saturiay evonmg at 7 : 30 in heir Hall in Roekwood block. All visiting comrades are cordiallv invited to reet with US. Fred Bates. Post Adlniant ; G. F. Kites. Post Commadder. Meets at 7 : 30 every Monnav evening at the Grand Army preeiueni, -11109- nailing, ORDER OK THE hall. A. F. Groom, secretary. WORLD. ide rASH CAMP V rtitnnil and No. 332 M. W. a. meets every Fourth Monday ev-nings 111 Fitzgerald hall. Visiting neighbors welcome. P.O. Hansen, V. C. : P. w ertenoereer, w. a. S. C. Wilde. Clerk. CAPTAIN H E PALMER CAMP NO 50 sons of Veterans, division of Nebraska. U S. A. meet every Tuesday night at 7 flo o'clock in their hall in Fitlgerald b ock. All sons ann visitinir comrades are cordially invited to meet -with us J. J. Kurtz. Commander : B. A. Ac Klwain. let Keargent. DAUGHTERS OF REBECCA Bud of Prom ts Lodge N j. 40 meets the second and 'fonrth Tbnrsdav evenircs of each month in the I'O. O- K. hull. Mrs. T. E. Williams, N O. ; Mrs. John Cory. Secretary. YOCXG MEN'S rnRISTION cSOCIATION Waterman block Main Street. Rooms open from 8 :30 a m to 9 :30 i in. For men only Gospel meeting every Sunday afternoon at 4 o'elock. PLACES OF WORSHIP. Catholic St. Paul's Church, ak. between Fifth and Sixth. Father Carney. Pastor Services: Mass at 8 and 10 ri a. m. Sunday School at 2 -J30, wltb benediction. Christian. Corner Locust and Eighth Sts. Services morning and evening, t-ider a. Galloway pastor. Sunday 8cbooI 10 a. m. Episcopal.-St. Luke's Church, coiner Third and ine. Kev. 11 11. liureess. castor, .ser vices : 11 A. M. and 7 -J30 P. u. Sunday School at 2 JO P. M. Gkbmax MrrHomsT. comer Sih St. and Granite. Rev. llirt. Pastor. Se. v'ces : 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. it. sund ay School 10 -20 a.m. Pbesrytfbian. fervlces in new church. cor ner sixtn and (iranite sts. lcev. J . T. Kairri, pastor, sunday-scnool at 9 :30 : Preaching at U a. m.'jn p. m. E The Atlanta Constitution is after the Cleveland contingent ' in New Yoik with a sharp stick. The Con stitution says: From beginning to end the move ment which will culminate in the cooper union meeting to night and then collapse, has been anti-demo cratic. The very men who are en gaged in it have J or years been try ing to knife the democratic party. They held a meeting to protest against the nomination of Hill for governor, and the result was Hill's nomination and election by 40,000 majority. In the whole swarm of mugwumps, republicans and assis tant republicans, not one- demo crat who would hesitate to sell out his party for an office or sacrifice it to a personal whim. Republicans can afford to stand back and say: "Go it woman, go it bear." I 2f V R. S. C. of this church meets every attend these bbatb evening at 7 :15 in the basement of ; cbucrh. All are invited to ,eetmgs. Virut Mbtthodist. Sixth St.. betwen Main and Pearl. Kev. L. F. Britt. I). I. pastor. Services : II A.M..S :00 P. M. Sunday school -JO A. M. Prayer meetirg Yi ednesday even ing. The farmers that are dependent upon the Fremont hemp and twine factory are anxious to know when Congressman Bryan proposes to introduce his bill placing binding twine on the free list. It would doubtless be a great consolation to tne young man to see trie pauper manufactured article of the old country displacing our own pro duct, the wheels of this growing in dustry stopped, our laborers thrown out of employment and "our farmers rendered dependent upon a foreign trust as we were a few years since, bvery iarmer in this state is perfectly aware that since the manufacturing of binding twine has been stimulated by the tariff that the price of the article has ueen precipxiDiy reaucea. ao, no, gentle Annie, consult your farmers constituents before introducing the free twine measure. Beatrice Re publican. Gkrmax Prhsbytkkia.n. Corner Main and Ninth. Rev. Witte. pastor. Services usual hours. Sunday fcnool 9 :30 a. m. 8WREDISH ('OKnBPOATIOKi '.ween Ftfth and Sixth. Jranite, be- t'KKu Baptist. Mt. Olive. Oak. between nth and Eleventh. Rev. A. ftoswell. pas tor. Services 11 a. m. and 7 -JO p. m. rrayer meetina: Wednesday evening. Torwo Mf.Vr Christian Association ! Rooms in M aterman block. Main street. Gos ; .pel meeting, for meu only, every Sunday al ; -noon at 4 o'clock. Rooms open week days , m 8:30 a. in., to 9:30 p.m. ,Th Park Takkkxaclc-Rev. .1. M. r'ood. Pastor. Services : Sunday School, 0. m.: Preaching, 11a,. m. and 8 p. an. ; raver meeting Tuesday night: choir prac tice Friday night. All are welcome. SPRINGER'S WOOL BILL. Tlie purpose of the democrats to make foreign wool free, 011 the ground that it is "raw material," is squarely opposed to the interest of the agriculturist. To carry it out would be to reduce the income of every farmer whose sheep contri buted to last year's American wool product Jof 350,000,000 pounds. So far as the farmers is concerned, the wool he sends to market is not raw material. It is a finished product which represents his own labor, the cost of his farmthe interest on that and all of the expenses of running his farm and making it pay a profit- below zero c. as long as may be re quired. The cooling is effected by the evaporation of liquids, and is divided into three stages, each with its special apparatus. For the first stage is used the mixture of sul phurous and carbonic acids known as "Pictet's fluid," which is con densed at a pressure of about two atmospheres in a spiral tube cooled by water. Oxide of nitrogen laugh ing gas is the liquid chosen for the second stage. It is condensed at a pressure of 10 or 12 atmospheres in a iube kept at about 80 below zero by the action of the first circuit For the third stage air is employed, and passes into a liquid state at a pressure of 75 atmospheres when the temperature is kept at 125 0 be low zero by the other circuits. The evarjoration of the liquehed air gives a cold of about 2C3 below zero. Absolute zero is placed at 273 below zero c, but Prof. Pictet regards 255 0 below zero as about the lowest attainable artificial temperature. One of the effects of great cold has been the conversion of quicksilver into beautiful fern like crystals. Glycerine also has been crystalized; and cognac has been given by freezing the peculiar mellowness commonly attained only by long keeping. The nlost important result thus far, however, has been the purification of chloro form, the crystals that form in the commercial chloroform at about 68 below zero being almost abso lutely pure. OUT IN THE WORLD TO FIND HER. The Vow or an Obitcuro Admirer of m New "ork Act reus. Seeing Nellie McIIenry frisk about n the staje a few nights ao remind ed me of an obscure admirer of hers who is buried in the Virginia mount ains, says Jean Merry in the N. Y. World. He has "never toM his love" and probably never will, but it is none the less sincere for all that. More than a year aro I found niV' self, jtiHtas darkness was falling, at the door of a cabin in the heart of the mountains. .My horse was tired and so was L They took me in and kept me over night. I needn t tell you how I slept with the ten or twelve members of the mountaineer's family, and how we all washed in the same tin basin in the morning. -That's another story. But 1 do want to tell you of the work of art which hung on the log walls. It was a poster, representing Nellie Mc IIenry. It was old and stained and time worn, but it was the shrine at which the oluest son of tlie house wor shiped. Shep ain't . studyin' about marry in'," said his mother to me next morn ing. "Hut he does 'low that ef he met that gal he'd think a heap o' her. He's a ra'l fool 'bout thet, 'n' won't hev it tuck down, nohow. He 'lows some day 't he'll go out in the worl' tuh tin' her." So if a tall, raw-boned mountaineer with flowing locks and a determined look penetrates Nellie's seclusion some day she may know that it's her Vir- Sinia lover "out in the worl' tuh tin' er." For I told him where she could be seen. A PHANTOM FACE. She Asked for Sign, and ; Her. It Was Given Dog with the Jim-Jams. Edmond Gros is the owner of a bull terrier which is pronounced the great est inebriate canine of his breed. Gros is a medical student, and as such he had gathered a number of specimens and preserved them in alco hol. His studies for examination came to an end some davs ago, and having no further use for the specimens he had the jars and their contents re moved to the cellar of his home for future disposal. Sport, which is the name of the drink-loving dog, smelled out the alco hol and immediately proceeded to up set the jars, thereby breaking them and causing the spirits to form a pool, which he lapped up. Gros' attention was first calle-t to what had happened by the peculiar antics of Sport. He howled during half the night, which was a strange contrast to his ordinary food behavior, and when Gros went own to see what was the matter he found him jumping about in the most unaccountable manner, snapping at the floor and the air, and howling all the while. The dog recognized 1m master and sought shelter behind him. as though from some invisible foe. He was per fectly exhausted from the exercise he had gone through and fell asleep, only to awake a few minutes later and bite his own paws. All these symptoms, as well as the empty specimen jars, were indications enough for the student to diagnose his first case as one of delirium tremens. Sport grew better, but could not.be coaxed back into the cellar, where he saw green-eyed rats, with blue tails and lots of teeth. San Francisco Call. Chinese Tea Culture. It is estimated that 100,000,000 of the Chinese people are engaged in the culture, preparatiou, sale, carriage, and exportation of tea. and their in terest are adversely afferted by the rivalry of id !i'r i'oiinlrie-4. I stood alone looking at the uncon scious face before me, which was dis tinctly visible, though the light was heavily shaded to keep the glare from the dying eyes, writes Sarah A. Under wood in the Arena. All her life my friend had boen a Chr.-stian believer, with an unwavering faith in a life be yond this, and for her sake a bitter nrriff fom unnii mp liranco en far t could see, there were no grounds for that belief,. I thought I could more easly let her go out into the unknown if I could but feel that her hope would be realized, and I put into words this feeling. I pleaded that if there were any of her own departed ones present at this supreme moment could they not, and would they not, give me some least sign that such was the fact, and I would be content? Slowly over the dying" one's face spread a mellow, radiant mist I know of no other way to describe it. In a few moments it covered the dying face as with a veil. and spread in a circle of about a foot beyond, over the pillow, the strange yellowish-white light all the more dis tinct from the partial darkness of tne room. Then from the center of this, im mediately over the bidden face, ap peared an apparently living face, with smiling eyes which looked directly in to mine, eazmg at me with a look: so full of comforting assurance that could scarcely feel frightened. But it was so real and strange that I wondered if I were temporarily crazed, and as it disappeared I called a watcher from another room, and went into the open air for a few moments to recover my self under the midnight stars. When I was sure of myself I return ed, and took my place again alone. I hen 1 asked that, it that appearance were real and not a hallucination, would it be made once more manifest to me; and again the phenomenon was repeated and the kind smiling face o-,i!;ed up at m a face new, vet won- droitsly familiar. Sunset Cox in 1850. CLEARING OUT FOR SPRING STOCK. -o J o- :xt;wkkk dawson & pearck wilx sell, a JOB LOT OF TKIMMED HATS AT $1.00 KACIf, WEIX WORTH $3.00. ALSO A JOB EOT OF SAILORS AT 75 CENTS, WELL TRIMMED, WORTH $1.50. CHILDRENS HOODS, AT 25 CENTS EACH, AND A FEW BOYS SPRING CAPS AT 25 CENTS. -o o- E,IXjE"Y" block PLATTSMOUTII. NEBKAltKA Vp VV IS YOUfj Clj&CE. Home Magazine Toledo Blade Harpers Magazine - Harper's Bazar Harper's Weekly $1 85 - 2 45 4 00 - 4 80 480 o is Iowa State Register Western Rural -The Forum Globe-Democrat -Inter Ocean 9Qt 2 m 39 811 3K 501 Vine Street. "The first time I ever saw Samuel Sullivan Cox, known as Sunset Cox was in 1850." said 1 nomas Kuick to a St. Louis Chronicle reporter. "I was then superintendent of bridges on the national turnpike in Ohio and Cox was making a tour of taverns on the road delivering political speechs. "The turnpike in those days was the great highway between the East and the West. It was thronged night and day with teams from every part of Ohio, and country taverns, with big wagon yards, were located ten miles apart. "Every night these taverns were crowded with teamsters and travelers and Cox spoke at every one of them, beginning at the Indiana line and end ing at the Pennsylvania border. "Mr. Cox was a young slip of a fellow with real dudish ways, Lut his speech es were so inexpressibly funny that he captured the hearts of the rough team sters, who carried his fame to every part of the state, and as long as he lived they .were always his solid friends. "Ex-Governor Allen once made a tour of those taverns and made friends that stood by him for3'ears, and I have no doubt but that that influence still existed and aided in electing him gov ernor thirty years later." Too Old to Be Interested. . Not long ago, in a public school amination, an eccentric examiner demanded: "What views would King Alfred take of universal suffrage, the conscription and printed books if he were living now?" A pupil wrote in answer. "If King Alfred were still alive he would be too old to take any interest in nj thing." London Figaro- Everything to Furnish Your House. A.T I. PEARLMAN'S GREAT MODERN HOUSE FURNISHING EMPORIUM. Having purchased the J. V. "Weckbach store room on soutk Main street where I am now located can 6ell goods cheap er than the cheapest having just put in the largest stock of new goods ever brought to the city. Gasoline stove and furniture of all kinds sold on the installment plaa. I. PEARLMAN. C2 WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI) A Full and Complete line of Drugs, Medicines, Faints, and Oils. DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LIQUORS Prescriptions Carefully Compounded at all Uour. FOR SALE OR EXGMNGA. nOn ACRES of Colorado land for sale or trade for Pl'attsmouth reai estate or for merchandise of any kind. This i3 a bargain for particulars some one: the land is Al. For further THE HERALD, Plattsmouth, Neb. Call bargs on or address M'TfM () ftfl iu THE POSITIVE CURE. slt BwrasRa. M Wsrat BL,NeToik. PrtoeneU. I. IT- DxrjN Always has on band a full stock of 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 AXI TINE Plattcmoath, - Nebraska 19EISTS IJOLTSE. 1 7, 21 , sat,, and 223 Main ET, FLATTSMOUT JA NEB. F. R- OUTHlIAinr. PROP. Rates $4 60 per wekk and nr.