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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1892)
! V SMOKED. FOR OVER 1 Has been popular with smokers everywhere for over twenty-five years. It is Just as Good Now as Ever. Its Flavor, Fragrance and Purity have contributed largely to the growing popularity which pipe smoking enjoys. Pipe smoking is growing in favor because finer, sweeter and better tobacco can be had in this form and at much less cost than in cigars. BLACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO., DURHAM, N. C. lirculation Large. Rates Reasonable. Returns Remunerative PLATTSMOUTH HERALD t WrrIiIv . v 1 - j qrjd special e i'- i i i i i i iii v-. i i i i i w -- 1 I 1 x . -I r -4 -I "f Ur 1 O money.- .-.eno us tet SGGlS to l'Ccldl Tcl1T?lllGS tlll'OtlSlHp, I I jili iit-w-i. whirl, will in vf vim Iht-ith t.rorit 3 it couqy. tJCLll Inforrciation .izlcL lEw-ates On --VPP licatL on.. B. KNOTTS BUSINESS MANAGEI?. SOI Cor Fifth PLATTSMOUTH Everything to Furnish, Four House. AT I. PEARLMAN'S ; ' " GREAT MODERN .HOUSE FURNISHING EMPORIUM. j ing uurchaqeil the J. V. Weckbach store room on touth a street where I am now located can sell goods cheap than the cheapest having just put m the largest stock f rtflw foods evpr hrnupht tn t -ww wj - v id iumilure ot all Kinassoldon ) X. THE POSITIVE CURE. TLX BROTHERS. M Vim 8C, Kw Tt Prtre to cU.I TVJEltTY-FlVE YEARS. Blackwell's Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco Publication of 11 - t I qlqc qs qq qel- i i ii rill vv .li i i l i I v 4 and Vine St. - NEBRASKA th r-itv rnrlii-f ctrivos w,v m w j -" - a . V hJ,Vr" the installment plan. PEARLMAJN. LaCrippo. No healthy person need fear any j dangerous consequences from an I attack of la grippe 'f properly I treated. It is much the same as-a severe cold and require precisely the same treatment. Remain quiet ly at home and take ("haml'.T).iinV Cough Remedy an dir.'.Med I t a -e vere cold and a prompt ;i . I com plete recovery is surf to follow This remedy also coiiniei ac s au tendency of la grippe to r.v-uli ii pneumonia. Anions tlie man)' thousands who have used it luring the epidemics of the past two yeari- ; we liave yet to learn of a single case that has not recovered or thai has resulted in pneumonia. fi) cent hottles for sale li Fricke A. Co. ;ind '. g y 1 La -rlppe Successlu'ly Treated "I have just recovered from a sec ond attack of the grip this year," says Mr. Jas. (). Jones, puhlisher of the leader, Mexica Texas. -'In the latter case I used Chamberlain's Cough remedy, ami I thin with considerable success, only being in bed a little over two da , against ten days for the lirst attnek. The second attack, I am ratslied. would have been equally as bad as the lirst but for the use of this remedy, as I had to go to bed in about six hours after being struck with it, while in the lirst case I was able to atiend to business about two days before getting down, fill cent bot tles fcr sale h F G. Fricke & Co. The population of Platismoulh Is about 1().(XX), add we would say at least neo-half are troubled with some efTectioii on the throat and lunH, as those complaints are, ac cording to staaistics, more numer ous than others. We would advise all our readers not to neirlect the opportunity to call on their drug get ana get a bottle of Kemp s IJal sarn for the throat and lungs. Trial size free. LargeBottle 50c- and $1. Sold by all drug-gist. Every Month many women Buffer from Excessive or Scant Menatruatioo; they don't know who to confide ia to get proper advice. Don't confide in anybody but try Bradfleld's Female Regulator .pacific lor PAINFDL, PROFUSE. SCANTY. SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION. Book to " WOMAN " mailed free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Ga. Sold fcy all Draarlata. runlieniiess t.. mo Liuuor naoit, positively turet FY ADSIU'SERKJO DR. HAIIES' C010EN SPECIFIC li can be given In a cup of codee or tea. or in at tide of ood. withou: the knowledge of the per tun taking it; it is absolutely harmless aurl win effect a permanent and speedy cure, whe(hr t!ic patient is a moderate drinkeror an alcoholic wreck, it NEVER FAIL8. We GUARANTEE it complete cure in evsry iust fcuce. 4H page book FREE, Addrens in conflfiencp, ViacN -SPECIFIC CO., 1 86 fiaoi St. CracinnatLO A PTI'TO !' '" want to make n and (luick ales. Steutlv employ- meiit guaranteed. Address arsh & Co., Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment. A certain euro for Chronic Sore Eyes Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Bead, Ok Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples and Files. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by U. after all other treatment bad failed. It is put up in S3 and SO cent boxes. BO LiMG WATER OR MILK. E p p s GRATE Ulr COM PORTING Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only. I N ESS AHIAD HOUM CUftKD by Pack'a InTWbU Tabafer Xr Cab IMS. WUmra har4- Comartabla. BucrrstalwamallrrardlMfail. SoidbrV.HIx,oalr,rDCC 853 Bnainj, . lrk. Wriw fur koak ot rouC.TnCC KER'S HAIR BALSAM Clean aad beautifi the hair. Promo a loxwisnt growth. Never - Fails to BMtar - Oraor Hair to ita Tontaral;Color7 Ctm Jp dimin a hair feiiic. W.adlUat Or aK ' i'ai Jior' Qia&rer Tonio. Jt chit the word Couea. ' lAPf. Drbilitv, IidixeMion. Piu,TakJn tima-JUcta. HfKDttRCORNS.. The oaWrureenn for Corn. How Lost ! How Regained the? jaowav kcgv thyself. Or SELF-PRESERVATION. A new and only Gold Medal PttlZK ESSAY on NERVOUS and PHYSICAL. -DEBILITY. ERRORS of YOUTH, EXHAUSTED VITALITY, PRE MATURE DECLINE, and all DISEASES and WEAKNESSES of MAS. 500 pages, cloth, pUt; 185 invaluable prescription. Only $1.00 by mail, doubia aealed. Descriptive Proepect- ns with endorsement rflfr"! FNn of the Press and voluntarv lKIr I Snw testimonials of the cure. a nun. Consultation in person or by mail. Expert treat ment. INVIOLABLE SECRECY and CER TAIN CrKE. Arid"-- I. W. H. Parker, or The Peabody Medical Inutitute, Iso. 4 Buluuch St.. Buaton, Mam. The Peabody Medical Institute haa many imi tatora, but no equal. Uer''l The Science of Life, or-lf Preaervation, ia a treaaure more valuable tban uolii. Head it now, er?rv WEAK and NERVOUS man, and learn to be STRONG . Jfejicat Jtetictr. (Copyrighted- Tfca SCrvos Band. "I like the dashing cornet and the prightly clarinet," said Colonel Calli )er, "but 1 luce best of all that braes fountain of cheerfulness, the big bass horn. Care takes a back neat when the big horn sounds. It mints the air red and defies all creation, but it is vastly good natured withal, and it never fails when its friends the cornet and the clari net pause for breath to come in with its oomph-ah! oomph-ah! oomph-aht pre serving the harmony unbroken. "Relieved from this duty, it rolls off over the edge of a cliff and brings up suddenly at the foot with a tremendous oomph! lieliounding, with dignity un rullled, with undiminished vigor, and with undimuu'd, inextinguishable and overwhelming good humor, it tosses off sound in large decorative effects that excite the wonder of every hearer and fill every hearer with broad delight. "Just why the big bass hOm is usually played by a thort, stout man, while the slender clarinet is played by a man who is tall and thin is one of those things that uoliody knows. The time may come, indeed, when the short, 6tout man will play the blender clarinet and the tall, thin man will play the big bass horn; hut by whomsoever it may be played let us hope that the big horn's thunderous jollity will never bo abated." New York Sun. Too Jlurh. Mrs. Laverty, an Irish lady, who lived thirty miles from the American Rich mond, wiw in the provident habit of laying in a etore of groceriea to last an entire qiiitrter, since she could not repair to Richmond oftener than four times a year. On one of these provisioning ex peditions she laid in a store of matches a disastrous investment, since not a match would strike. Wild was her fury, which was kept alight and aglow by her recurring daily trouble to get her fire alight and aglow without a match. Her wrath, thus kept at boiling point for three months, gave the storekeeper a hot quarter of an hour, when she burst at last into his store and thundered down the parcel of matchboxes upon the counter. Having waited with defer ential patience until the storm had spent itself, he said suavely, "Allow me, madam." Taking a matchbox from the parcel and a match from the box, he struck it, after the manner of men, upon his trous ers. "See, madam?" he exclaimed in smug triumph, holding up the kindled match. "The divil fly away wid ye!" shrieked Mrs. Laverty. "Do ye think that ivery time I've a fire to light I'll thravel thirty miles to sthrike a match on the sate of yere breeches?" Richard A. King in Belgravia. A Gallant Irish Hoy. The biographer of General Crawford tells the following story: During Wel lington's campaign in the Peninsula, the Light division was defeated by the French under Marshal Ney, and forced to retreat across a river. A young sol dier from the north of Ireland, named Stewart, was nicknamed "The Boy," as he was only nineteen years of age and of gigantic stature. He had fought bravely, and was one of the last i.neu who came down to the bridge, over which the division was re treating. He refused to pass over, but gazing at the French with a grim look, said in a loud voice: , "So this is the end of our boasting! This is our first battle, and we retreat! The Boy Stewart will not live to hear that said." Striding forward, he fell upon the ad vancing Frenchmen with his bayonet, and died fighting. "Gallant, but rash!" the reader says. Yes, hxit so were the unyielding warriors at Thermopylae. Fly Fishing. There is no doubt that certain flies are best adapted to different seasons, times of day and conditions of weather, but a dozen flies of different names will fully answer all of these requirements. An angler's flies resemble nothing when cast upon the water. They are simply a something which attracts the trout. Color has more allurement than form, a nd as there are not so many colors there is no use for many flies. The general rule is for light flies on dark days and dark or darkish flies on light days. Sizes are more to be considered than form and mixture in makeup. A large trout wants something worth his making an I effort to secure. It . is doubtless true that an arbitrary cast of flies cannot be made up which will be adapted to all waters. Forest and Stream. Looked Like Her Doll. A little miss at the South End haa a favorite doll, which ia of Celestial out line and bears the name of Chum Chum. Until within a short time she had never seen a Chinaman, but the other day, while walking with her mother, one chanced into view. The young woman immediately recognized the similarity between the life and the facsimile at home. "Oh, mamma," said she, "there's Chum Chum." But almost instantly the difference in size appealed to her and she corrected herself: "No, no; Chum Chum's dad." Bos ton Times. How Interest Accumulates. If one cent had been loaned out at 5 per cent, interest per annum with tlie beginning of the "year of one," that cent and the interest on the first day of January, 181)2, would have amounted to the enormous sum of -JM-l.lS-V T4T,5tW,12G,25s,JKw,o.'.j.20: in other words and characters, 58 thousand 4o4 quadrillions thousand 339 trillions 747 thousand 56S billions 420 thousand 28 millions U6o thou.sand 55-j dollars and 20 cents. Cor. St. Louis Republic. The HfMt Part of the Music. "Shall I play the rest?" she asked, as she paused in her jerforuiauce at the piano. "Yes," lie answered; "by all int-ans. I enjoy the rests very much. I hope you won't think of skipping any." Wash ington Star. VULGARITY IN DESIGN. Jawelry, Furnltur and Brlc-t. lira Tba4 Shock th VKntl.ete. There is nothing in modern life more discouraging to the jierson of taste than the deliberate vulgarity in design which it so conspicuous in modern umtiufac tures, and thi is especially true in those matters of adornment or luxury where it would be supped that if anywhere would be found the evidences of refine ment and cultivation. If in the articles with which the dwellings and the per sons of the rich are adorned one dooe not find evidences of good taste it is in deed a discouraging outlook for the seeker, and yet it is in precisely in these things that the most flagrant violations of all a'sthetic canons are encouraged. One has but to consider the tricks of the makers of jewelry to understand the extent to which this evil has gone. The last whim of the makers of slang is to be seen in tho windows of the jeweler wrought out in precious stoims. Now tho art of the cunning goldsmith is do voted to the making of pigs in gold and gems, now it is some other beast equally inartistic, again it is some idiotic pun, which is er.sJuined in cosily stones or rich enamel, and yet again tho panv phernalia of the turf, tho gaming table, or what not, absorbs the lest skill which the modern world can show in this line. Even worse are the coarse and vulgar designs which are to lo seen in the cases of respectable jewelers of the feminine leg or foot, the suggestive and semi-indecent ornaments which aj- peal to the taste of certain classes, not only of men, but of women, who are u pareutly perfectly proier members of society. The designs of furniture and bric-a-brac are, if anything, worse. It is true that there are good designs to be found, but it is no less true that the reign of cheap vulgarity is at its triumphant height. The hard and unsympathetic execution of mechanical means which would be tolerable only when directed by the most delicate and sympathetic taste is made tle more detestable by the coarse and forced manner in which it is used. When the designer goes to the past to purloin a design, if he wishes to hit the jopular taste he selects some ro coco motive of the worst period, and as a rule it is popular in direct proportion to its worthlessnoss. When one compares the ornaments of today with those of the times of our grandfathers he may well ask whether our grandchildren will have as much reason to resject their heirlooms as we have to look with pride upon ours. If one takes the so called souvenir sjoons with which the shop windows have been filled, how many of them are even toler able in design? It is always easier to find fault than to find out a remedy, and it is undoubt edly true that in the present case the matter is largely the result of the in crease of material prosperity among those classes where neither taste nor in telligence has had time to be developed. The markets are controlled to a great extent by the new rich, and it is not un natural that the impress of their vulgar ity should be left in a broad mam upon the arts of the time. It is no less true abroad, however, than it is in this coun try that the designers have apparently degenerated, and the explanation given does not so well apply abroad as in this country. No doubt the taste of the world is being educated, but the problem today is to educate the taste of the many in stead of the taste of the few, and it is far more difficult than any which has ever been presented to the devotees of the aesthetic in the history of civilization before. Boston Courier. A Snap Shot at AIhuiti-rqiir. We were driven through the streets (if they may be called such) of Albu querque. Past the wretched mud hovels of the stooped and wrinkled Mexicans, who opened their weak eyes in indolent curiosity which scarcely tempted them to turn their heads for a further view. They seemed to have nothing to do but sun themselves in the doorwaj-s and on long board benches by the side of their mud walls. The only ones we saw en gaged in any occupation were those who sat combing out their long, black hair, and these were the women kind. If there is a sjot on the face of the earth without a hint of home or cheer, it is this mudbuilt town of winds and sands and flat topped roofs of Mexicans, Span iards, Indians and cowboys. Salt Lake Tribune. Study Your Own Case. I always insist on my patients study ing medicine to the extent of their disease at least. Of course all pa tients cannot do this. But where it can be done the disease yields much more readily to treatment. There is nothing remarkable about this. It is reasonable that if a sick man knows something as to the nature of that portion of his anatomy which by reason of its disorder brings on disease, he can the more intelligently assist the doctor in bringing about a cure. This rule, if observed, will ma terially assist in a general improvement of health. Dr. Merriiuan in Chicago Tribune. Children's Play in Germany. It is a common belief at the present time in south Germany that if children play soldiers very often jn the street there is a war coming, and if the- play "funeral"' an epidemic will come over the land and inauj- deaths will result. The relator of this tells that, when a boy, he with others played "funeral" in front of the house of an old miser in his native town in Germany. The miser became much excited and exclaimed, "1 will not die jet!" and made complaint to the mayor that the loys should le arrested and punished. Philadelphia Ledger. No Two Women Alike. Any man who knows much alout women knows "all women'' never do the same thing. . Women are uncertain creatures, and what one has done is no indication what the next ill do. There has to le a new rule for each woman. Cor. Boston Glolje. j TO SIIII'PKKS. flutter, KtftfHi Cheese, i I 1 (lame, Poultry, Neul, Applcn, Potatoes I Green ami Dried Fruit, Vcietull-n . t , - , 1 1 i 'i ..ii CHUT, JU'illlH, WOOl, IllUl'tt, lillMIW Sheep IVItH, Finn, Skiiif, Tobncco, Grain, Flour; Hay, I'ccmwiix, Feath ers, GitiMing, lit it corn, it nil Hoj. M. li. II A I, I. A K I) Gen. Ci'in. Merchant a U Hliipper. 217 Market Htnet - Ht. IamiIm. Mo. WANIKll-Atieiit. ue ac ualiitcd with Farm era ami Shli-r. T1JI0TIIY ( LAKK. DUAUH IN COAL WOOD o TICK MS CASIlo rda aad OWe 44 Heath I bli.l Struct. Telephone 13. I I.ATTSMOTH, Nkmkask 15 K. KKYXOI.DS, KeKistered I'lijflrlaii ami riiann;t(-it Special attention iv,.n j0 oilier Practice. h'OCK HM'FFH - .Nun. J9 J. l-IAjTSFsT DKAI.KK 1N- STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES GLASS AND QUEENSWARE. Patronage of the Public Solicited. North Sixth Street, Plattsmout 1j lard THE OLD RELIABLE. !!. A. WATEiiMAK k Ml Efi! riliiDgiet), Lath, ShhIi. Doors, S.inds Cun supply ?verv oemand of the city. Call nnd get terms. Fourth street in rear of opera Iiouhc. For Atchinson, St. Joseph, leaven worth, Kansas City. St. Louis, and all points nr-tli, eat south or west. Tick ets sold and bag--jjjage checked to any point in the United States or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO KATKS AND KOL'TKS Call at Depot or address II, C. TOWXSEXI). G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo. J. C. PHIIXIPi'l. A. G. P. A. Omaha. H. J). Apgak. Ajjt., PlattBinouth. Telephone, 77. Knfrlish Spavin Liniment removes all hard soft or calloused lump and blemishes from horses, blood spavins . curbs splints, sweenejv rinjf 'join, stillee. sprains all ."swol len throats, coughs etc.. Save jO cent bv use of one bottle. Warrant cd the most wonderful blemish cure ever known. Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co druggists Plattsmouth Shiloh's catarrh remedy a pos itive cure Catarrh. Diphtheria and Canker mouth. For sale by F. G Fricke & Co. Lumber