The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, March 28, 1892, Image 2

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    republican: state conven
tion. The republican electors of the
Htate of Nebraska are requested to
Meul delegates from their several
count it- to meet in convention in
tlie city of Kearney Wednesday
April "J7.iv.rj, at II o'clock a.m., for
the purpose of electing four dele
gates at l.ire to the republican na
tional convention to be held in
Minneapolis June 7, IH'JI.
TIIK AIM"' IKTIOXM KNT.
The several counties are entitled
to representation as follows, bein
based upon the vote cast for Hon.
(ieortfe II. Hastings for attorney
general in 1 V.), jrivi.ig one lelegate
at large to each county and one for
each l."0 votes and the major frac
tion thereof:
taouiit i'.H
Ailam
AnteloH.
Haulier
iilaine
Itoytl
II'HIIM-
Mox Itutte. .
Kniwn ... ..
UulTalo
Itiiller. . ..
Burt
Cax-
Celar ... ..
Chaw
Cheyenne ..
l.l
Counti
tel.
lollll-44lll
; Kearney
, . It Keve I'ulii ..
. . "Jl Keith
' Kimball
. . .' Kimx
li; Lancaster ...
. . 4 Lincoln
. It l;iu
7 Iiip
.. e l;nlin
..II Mc I Mi ear.- in
.. 4t Merrick
.. 3 .Nance
.. fit Ncmalia
5 .nckoll
tv '"'''"
O.llux Pawnee
t 'utniiiX
7. I r 1 him .
Ou.tr
Onkotu.
Uawrn
Daw-um
Ieuel
Dixon
r.Mltfe
Dnuu'lin
Dundy
Hilmore
Krutiklin
Prontier ...
Kuriia ...
;t;e . -.
ftarticll
frttSIMT ..
irunt
4reely
Hull
Hamilton
ITarlaii
Haves
rlit'chcock
Molt
Uownnl.
Honker
Jeffersoti5. .-
Yi fierce
t Phelps
7 I'latte
7l'olk ...
H' Willow .
t;
h"icliarl-nii
11
K.M-k :t
line II
Sarpy 4
MuiiniliT4 n
S.otts ItlufT 2
Seward .. l'l
Slieriil.-in fi
Slierman
Sioux '
Stanton -t
l'lioillas -
rimr-iiin 4
Valley J
U'lslllfU'lDD . I
Vavne ;
Wef.ster
Wheeler
York 1
Total M
It is reconiended that no proxies
be admitted to the convention, and
that the delegates present be auth
orized to cast full votes of the dele
gation. It recommended that the republi
cans of every county in tin's state
be requested to select their county
central committee at the first coun
ty convention held in their respec
tive counties. Said committee to
serve until the county convention
f 1S93 be held.
Dk S. D. MEKCEK.
Chairman.
Walt. M. Seeley.
Secretary.
FIRST DIS TRICT CONVENTION.
The republican electors of the
First congressional district of the
state of Nebraska are requested to
end delegates from the several
counties comprising said district to
meet in convention in the city of
Falls City, Wednesday, April JO,
1591, at' 7:30 o'clock p. in., for the
purpose of electing two delegates
and two alternate delegates to the
republican national convention to
be held at Minneapolis June 7. 189J.
THE AKI'OKTIOXMEXT.
The several counties are entitled
to representation as follows, be
ing based upon the vote cast for
Hon. W.J. Council for congress in
1J0. One delegate for each loo
votes and major fraction thereof
and one delegate at large from each
county:
Count ie-i.
1H-I. 'Counties HA.
. .. I'.MUoe !
... 1 Pawnee l.'l
... IT K'ulia rdrMin. ...... . l'l
. . VI
I Total I?
ollllrum
.anca-ter....
X
iiiaha
It is recommended that no proxies
be admitted to the convention, and
that the delegates present from
each county, cast the full vote of the
delegation.
W. II. WH)WAKI.
Chairman.
Fkaxk McCaktxey,
Secretary.
The Homhest Man in Plattm cuth
As well as the handsomest, and
others are invited to call on any
drugfiifit and get free a trial bottle
of Kemp's ISalsam for the Throat
ami Lungs, a remedy that is selling
entirely upon its merits and is
guaranteed to relieve and cure all
chronic and acute coughs, asthma,
bronchitis and consumption. Large
bottles Mc and $I.J
Subscribe for The Hekald, only
li cents a week or ."0 cents a month.
Rheumatism cured in a day. -Mystic
Cure" for r leumntisHi and
neural". ia radically in 1 to A days.
Its action upon the system is rem
arkable and mysterious. It removes
at once the cause and the disease
immediately disappears. The first
doseirreatly benefits. 7.i cents Sold
by F. (. FrickeVCo.
The rapidity of its healing pro-c-ss
is marvelous. Rail Road
t'ough Cure is infallible for whoop
ing cough, croup, dry hacking
cough and all lung troubles. I'se
no other. It cures la grippe. 2."c &
rk. at O. "II. Snyder and Hrown
.V Barett.
A O ren I Surpnee
Is in store for all who use Kemp'f
B.ils.tn for the throat and lungs the
great guaranteed remedy. ' Would
you believe that it is sold on its
merits and that any druggits is au
thorized by the progrietor of this
wonderful remedy to give you a
s imple bottle freer It never fails
to cure acute and chronic coughs.
All drugpifts sell Kemp's Balsam.
Large Bottles Hoc anil $1. I
DRIFTWOOD.
A drift wooil fire when day In done!
If you have dreamed your dreinnu by one.
You know the sweet c.tt thing tUure U
In fancy's maze of uiyiilerieit.
Pray liiclit it in the t willlit dim.
Just wt tlio sun thrown liitek of him
Hoft hIimiIowm o'er the niiowy Bwce
Whii h wniiH the luriel eurtlt iu mim
The ininiliii litflitu, within, without.
With playful Im-hiiih will ul to rout
The uhor.tjof ini'iuiiry. mid and i liill.
Ami with hritfht forinn your vision till.
While dull) in toiisjuei of koM and blue.
Of ttearlet. reeii anil violet hue.
All hlcinliiik' into rainlxiw thniie.
Kill you with wonder whence they came.
And oh! if ever in the niitht
Your eye hath watched the strange, weird
lix.it
That followa in a ves.M-1'n wake.
Windiutc along like starry umtke
A hint of beauty, ocean deep.
That to the ntirfaee fain would creep
Tia ea?y now for you to dream
The drift wood's iridescent gleam
Wan caught and prixoned in each fdieat h
While plowing through it, far beneath:
A phantom prenencel held there still.
To dance and glimmer at ita will.
At length nfttronger flame subdues
In one rich glow the varying hues.
While at its bane (ah. legend old
Yet uew! we liud-the "jar of gold."
Margaret May in Cape Cod Tunes.
One Kind of Selflnhness.
There are many phases of selfishness
and TKjrhaiH the most trying of the
various manifestations of this fanlt of
faults is not recognized under this name
at all. What is called sensitiveness,
however, is very often nothing but sel
fishness pure and simple a morbid,
miserable form, too making the person
herself and every one around her un
comfortable. A frank, generous, unsel
fish nature is not forever on the lookout
for slights and unkindnesses on the part
of others. What can be more trying
than a person who is continually having
her feelings hurt, who magnifies every
hasty, unintentional word into a griev
ance, brooding thereon until it assumes
exaggerated proportions?
What can be more distinctly, morbidly
selfish and self seeking than such a dis
position? Yet people of that tempera
ment seldom if ever properly diagnose
their troubles, but if they are honest
they must acknowledge that they are
continually thinking of themselves and
of the relations of others to them. These
people are generally well meaning and
easy to please, not realizing that they
are not living for others but onlj for
themselves by thus indulging their
"feelings" and hyiierseusitiveness. New
York Tribune.
Mirrors Made of Wood.
In Germany wood with a mirror pol
ish is coming into use as a substitute for
metal in the finishing of ornamental
work. In order to make the wood sus
ceptible to a polish of this order it must
first lye submitted to a bath of caustic
alkali for two days, the bath being kept
at a temperature of 175 degs. Fahr. all
the while. Next it is soaked in a solu
tion of hydrosulphate of calcium for
from twenty-four to thirty-nine hours.
The third dip is into a bath of concen
trated solution of sulphur. The final
dip is into a solution of acetate of lead
at a temperature of 100 degs.
After being thoroughly dried the wood
is ready to have the metallic surface
imparted to it, which is done by giving
it a rubbing with finely powdered lead,
tin or zinc. Wood treated in the above
manner, it is said, will take a polish al
most equal to that so often imparted to
steel, silver or nickel. St. Louis Re
public. Culture In Itoston.
"Is it," wondered a New York woman
just returned from Boston, "because of
the use of the sounds of a and o' which
we are accustomed to associate with cul
tivated speech that Boston saleswomen
seem such refined and attractive per
sons? They seem a race of gentlewom
en, and it was a positive pleasure to be
served by them. I noticed also that their
hands and nails were beautifully kept,
and many of them really did wear eye
glasses. As to that, however, I got in
two different horse cars whose drivers
had a very scholarly look from the same
cause, and a sign osted conspicuously
on Boston Common read, 'Professor
Brown, Artistic Bootblack.' I begin to
lelieve the stories of the culture of the
masses in Boston." New York Times.
Character Shown in Thumbs.
There is as much character in the
thumbs of people as in their faces. A
long first joint of the thumb indicates
will jKJwer; a long second joint indicates
strong logical or reasoning power; a
wide, thick thumb indicates strong indi
viduality, while a broad nob at the end
of the thumb is a sure indication of ob
stinacy. The thumb is the character
istic feature of the human hand, a char
acteristic in which it differs from the
hand of the monkey, and of all parts of
the liand no one is so strongly individual
or telltale as the thumb. St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
The Arabs, when they wish to pro
nounce their most forcible malediction,
say, "May thy soul know no more rest
than the hat on the head of a Eurojean!"
The hats of kings and emperors must
have been specially in their minds when
they framed this curse.
William Kiustoue, an Englishman,
kept his own accounts, shaved and
dressed himself, saddled and bridled his
horse, threw sledge hammers and did
other see?iihigly impossible things with
his toes.
Careful investigations show that in
ordinary flames charged with common
salt the yellowness is due to too free
metallic sodium and not to thetiudecom
lsed molecules of chloride of sodium.
Who knows that the time may not yet
come when 'sm.ill lioys in this country
will gobble sunflower seeds at the circus
just as they now consume the festive
and odoriferous goolter?
There are -opie who claii:i to love the
Lord who would apologize to the devil
if they thought they were in his way.
Womiu'i Ways.
Women have their own ways of keep
ing their consciences clear and their
minds freed from all nncharitableness.
One woman when she encounters a dis
agreeable tierson goes off into a corner
and counts off on her fingers the agree
able iMHjple she ki.ows. This she. does
not in effect, but literally as she might
tell her "neads, and site keeps on doing jt
until the image of the disagreeable mi?
is effaced.
Another woman in the presence of mi
unusually annoying circumstance was
observed' to unhook and rehook h-.-c
gown. The rebooking miscarried sev
eral times to tier great impatience. She
was asked w by then had sho unhooked
it. Her answer was that hooks and eyes
were the most disagreeable things ever
invented. One always began to hook
them in the middle, and the chances
were ten to one that you linked the
wrong iair. But this you did not know
until you were half through and one
side came out ahead. So with, that,
and the strain upon your fingers, you
were naturally exasperated, and as they
were only hooks and eyes it didn't much
matter what you said. With the chance
to free your mind other disagreeable
things seemed almost pleasant.
It will be observed that it occurred to
neither of these women, who were both
religious, to fall on their knees and ask
in the old fashioned way to be delivered
from anger and ill feeling. This was
not because they distrusted the efficacy
of this method, but simply because they
hadn't at the moment, and seldom had,
the time or place. Also, both being sci
entific minded the one knew that in
thought as in physics two beings cannot
occupy the same space at the same time,
and so pried out one thought with an
other; while the'other, by simply trans
muting her angry force from an incor
poreal offense to hooks and eyes, had
the relief of its expenditure without its
sin. New York Evening Sun.
Such a Romantic Affair. .
She was a convalescent from la grippe,
and as she leaned back iu the depths of
her easy chair she played with the roses
in her lap, which had been brought her
by the first caller she had been able to
receive, and smiled over some stories he
was telling her of a summer at well,
we'll only say at a certain fashionable
watering place on Narragansett bay.
"One of the beauties whom I used to see
at the casino," said he, "was a young
married belle about twenty-three or
four, 1 should think, and her husband
was about sixty, and it was great fun
watching them. There was such a good
story, bona fide truth it was, too. about
their engagement. He called at her
home one evening and offered his heart,
hand and fortune iu correct style.
Pretty Miss Bud said she 'must ask
mamma,' and coyly tripped up stairs to
mamma, who told her that every girl
did not get such a chance as that, and of
course she was to accept him.
"Down she went, picturing the ardent
lover awaiting her return with anxious,
throbbing heart and found the old gen
tleman comfortably asleep in the big
gest armchair, while an occasional snore
attested to the depth of his slumbers."
"I hope she didn't wake the poor old
thing up," said the convalescent, -when
she got her breath again after her laugh.
"Oh, yes she did. Catch her losing that
chance! She woke him up and told him
it was all right and she'd have him."
Boston Saturday Gazette.
Thackeray's Ileal I am.
Thackeray is verily as great a realist
as a great artist can be. He prides him
self On presenting life as it is, unseas
oned by the hot spices of artificial ro
mance. Nay, he employs devices to en
trap thp credulity of the reader the de
vice, for example, of making Arthur
Pendennis. whom we know independ
ently, tell the story of his young friend
Clive Newcome, and the noble, meek
hearted gentleman with whom he had
seen the boy at the Cave of Harmony.
Yes, Thackeray is a great realist, if
ever there was one. His characters are
no decorative figments to amuse our
fancy. They have become some of the
men and women we kuow best personal
friends or foes of our own. It consoles
us for living in these late days of a re
formed parliament that we have lived
late enough to have known Colonel New
come. They were no tears of unreal
sentiment that we wept over his martyr
dom; it was a very genuine itch we felt
to kick Barnes. Blackwood's Magazine.
The Necessity of the Times.
Inventive faculty will not have
reached high tide until some one per
fects an envelope flap warranted to
stick. One of the considerable discom
forts of life takes the form of a non
adhesive mucilage that allows the en
velope upon which it is placed to ieel
open again and again as it is pressed
down, until in a tine frenzy the letter
writer is driven hither and yon for real
mucilage. And the finer the quality of
the stationery the more trials lie in the
wake of the envelope.
If they are trusted to the mails with
out an extra dab of mucilage, they may
be depended upon to arrive at their des
tination invitingly open or accessible
to the sueakish individual, who in spite
of our civilization does exist, who is ca
pable of going against all written and
unwritten laws and tampering with a
seal. A padlocked envelope is one of
the necessities of the times. Boston
Commonwealth.
The Value of Pearl.
Nothing varies so much in value as
pearls. With them fashion affects the
market constantly. Sometimes white
ones are sought, while other tints at in
tervals are in demand. For some years
past black jiearls have been the rage. A
tine specimen, worth $600, will fetch
$ 1,000 perhaps if another can be got to
match it perfectly. Kansas City Times.
When tt IJuy Shoes.
A customer with tender feet should be
fitted with shoes late in the afternoon.
The feet are then at their utmost size,
for activity eidarges them. Shoe aiul
Leather Reporter.
PLACES OF WORSHIP.
Catholic m. Paul's Church, ak. between
Fifth Htid Sixth. Father Cauiey, Pastor
Services : Visa at n xud 10 :30 A. M. hunday
School nt 2 :'M, wltb benediction.
CiimvriA.N. Corner l.jcust and l-lghth St.
Services morning and nei.!t.g rui-r A.
ial oway pastor. Sunday Scliool 10 a. m.
Kpis'.'opau-St. Luke's church, coiner Third
and Vine, liev II li. liuruew. parlor. Ser
vices : 1 1 A. M . a d 7 :30 P M . tsiiiilu School
at 2 -.: V. M.
i
. IiKkman M ktiiooist i jrner Sixth St and
! Cr;mil. Ki-v. Hut. l ;tf lor. Services : II A. M.
' and 7 ::;o r. M. Seuoay School lo :30 A M.
Pkkmiytf ui an. etvi,es In new chinch. cor
ner Sixth and Craiute sir. ICev. J . T. lairi.
pastor. Sundav-se-i ol at 9 ;30 ; Preaching
at 11 n. tn.a:,(l x p in,
1 ! "V . K. s. C. K of ihix ''lunch luretH evety
Sahbath eveuii'K at 7 :15 in the haseiuent o"f
the clmcih. All are invited lo atti nd tlicee
meeting.
Kikst M KTiloinsT. Sixth St.. Iietwen Main
and Pearl. Itev I.. F. Hritt. I'. I), tiastor.
Service : 11 A. M. 8 :U0 P. M Sunda. School
9 ::jo a m Pray r ineetii j; ednesday eveu
It'K. Ukkma.n I'K'Hivtk.hiaN. Corner Malu and
Ninth, liev Witte, pastor. Services usual
hours. Sunday .-cliool y :30 A. M.
SWKK.IHMH CoNiiKfOATIONAl
tween Fifth and Sixth.
-Granite, be-
Coi.okkd Baptist. Mt. Olive. oak, between
'lenih and Kieventh ICev. A. Pofwell, pas
tor. Sei vices II a. in. and 7 :U0 p. in Prayei
ineetinir Wednesday evetiiri;.
You;.o Mkn's CtiitisTiAN Association
Koomsin A alerinau block. Main street. Gos
pel meeting, for men only, everv SiiKday af
ternoon at 4 o'clock. ICooin open week day
fioin 8:30 a. in..l'j a : 30 p. i.i.
south PAhit Tabkh.naclk.-Kcv. J. M.
Vv-jod, ! astor. services: Sunday School,
. i a. in.: t riichii i. Ma in. and 8 p. m. ;
prayer meeting Tuesday nifiht ; choir prac
tice Friday nii;ht .U' are welcome.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The Best Salvk iu the world for Cutt
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains,
Corns, and all Skin Sruptions, and posi
tively cures Piles, or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to give satisfaction, or
money refunded. Price 25 cents per box.
For sale by F. O. Fricke
The First Step,
Perbaps you are run down, can't
eat, can't sleep, can't think, can't do
anything to your satisfaction, and
you wonder what ails you. You
should heed the warning', you are
takinp; the first step into nervous
prostration. You need a nerve tonic
and in Klectric Bitters you will lind
the exact remedy for restoring your
nervous system to it normal, healthy
condition. Surprising' results fol
low the use of this great Nerve
Tonic and Alterative, Your appe
tite returns, good digestion is re
stored, and the liver and kidneys re
sume healthy action. Try a bottle.
Price 50c, at F. G. Fricke &. Co's
drugstore. 0
Do not confuse the famous lilush
of Koses with the many worthless
paints, powders. creams and
bleaches which are flooding the
market. Get the genuine of your
druggist, O. II. Snyder, 7.) cents per
bottle, and I guarantee it will re
move your pimples, freckles, black
heads, moth, tan and sunburn, and
give you a lovely complexion. 1
Specimen Cases.
S. H. Clifford, New Castle, Wis
was troubled with neuralgia anc
rheumatism, his stomach was dis
ordered, his liver was affected to at.
alarming degree, appetite fell awa
and he was terribly reduced in fie sr.
and strength. Three bottles o
Electric Bitters cured him.
Edward Shepherd, Ilarrisburg
111., had a running sore on his leg
of eight years' standing. Usee
three bottles of Klectric Bitters and
seven bottles Bucklen's Arnics?
Salve, and his leg is sound and well
John Speaker, Catawba, O., had fivt
large fever sores on his leg, doctors
said he whs incurable. One bottb
Electric Bitters and one box Buck
len'a Arnica Salve cured him entire
ly. Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co.
A Little b"lr!s Experience in a LigMt
house.
Mr. aud Mrs, Lorcn Trescott are
keepers of the Gov. Lighthouse at
Sand Beach Mich, and are blessed
with a daughter, four years. Last
April she taken down with Measles,
followed with dreadful Cough and
turned' into a fever. Doctors at
home and at Detroit treated, but in
vain, she grew worse rapidl3r, until
she was a mere" handful of bones".
Then she tried Dr. King's New
Discovery and after the use of two
and a half bottles, was completely
cured. They say Dr. King.s New
Discovery is worth its weight in
gold, yet you may get a trial; bottle
free at F. G. Fricke- Drugstore.
r ough Following the Crip
Matjy person, who have recovered
Irom la grippe are now troubled
with a persistent cough. Cham
berlain's cough remedy will
promptly loosen this cough and
relieve the lungs, effecting a per
manent cure in a ver- short time.
J."i and 50 cent bottle for sale by F.
CFricke & Co.
How's This!
We offer 100 dollars reward for
any case of catarrh that can not be
cured by IlalTs Catarrh Cure.
F.J. Cheney & Co. Props. Toledo.
Ohio,
We the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheiie3" for the last 15 years,
and belive him pefectly honorable
in all butsness transactions and ti in
ancially able to earrr out an oblig
ations made by their firm.
West A: Truax, Wholesale Drug
gist, Toledo Ohio.. Walding Kiniian
& Tarviu. Wholesale druggist Tole
do Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, action direct J3- upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the s'stem.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggist; Testimonials free.
Take Kalrena for 3 our blood, liv
er and kidneys. It" cures Nervous
and general debilit-. Kheuniatism
suppressed orpainful periods. ds
pepsia. indigestion, billions attacks
skin eruptions., urinarj-complaints,
and the worst blood disorders
known. It is the best tonic on earth
for the debilitated. Price $1 at O.
II. Slider and Brofr-11 & Barrett.
I am a Trav'Hng man I I'll teil you of my plan.
In spite of all temptation
I pursue my old vocation,
I'm still a Trav'ling man ! A jolly Falrbank man !
CHORUS:
For he himself has said It,
And it's greatly to his credit.
Thai he is a Trav'ling man ! That he is a Fairbank man !
SANTA CLAUS SOAP
Sold by Traveling men and Grocers Lvery where. Manufactured only by
N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Chicago, III.
rr
M
Liniment
A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast
A long-tested pain reliever.
Its ase is almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the
Stock Raiser, and by every one requiring an effective
liniment.
No other application compares with it in efficacy.
This well-known remedy has stood the test of years, almost
jrenerations.
Mo medicine chest is complete without a boctle of Mustang
Liniment.
Occasions arise for its use almost every day.
All druggists and dealers have it.
F Q Fm2M & C2
WILL KEEP CONSTANT1. Y ON HAND
A Full a'.d
DrugSj Medicines, Paints, and Oils.
DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LlOUJfiS
Prescriptions ( nivl'ully Com jh.ini.jri! . .;J! ;5ijrs.
Healthful, Agreeable, Cleansing,
Cures
Chapped Hands, Wounds, Burns, Etc.
Eemoves and Prevents Dandruff.
WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP.
Specially Adapted for Use in Hard Water.
FOR MEN WlI
YOUNG MENOLD MEN
BET IH THE IUIIS Or IHt SlKPta.k or MUHOt.
Thty mk haroic effort to tree t&emieira.
1 DVT. not snowing now vo ncceHiuuy
3SHAKE0FFTHE HORRID SNAKES
tbry ffi up id dei pair ana nnlElotoao tij
OUR NEW BOOK
ft iTHmlteI tlme.'pliM
tbo phUotopby of DIMM-
Orrana of Mn, how by
Lin ki C TH PATMr NT
by mothoda axclvaiTely ear
w. wrt fe of
loot or Failif Maood,
eomtraJ n Berroma De
bility. Waakaote of Boar
aa Mia. Efloctaof Errora
ar lacMif.
CftSARS PAETS of B0BT amado pUl; to aU -
to. tn -rit . Ft Rok. full -ip j.r.:.-t projft. 4dra
ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO.N.Y.
HAYE
YOU
SCHIFFM ANN'S Asthma Cure
Nw faila to a!' instant relief in tho wont
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