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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1892)
Tl Hera mouth c FIFfll YKAK. 1M.ATTSMOUTII, NKHRASKA. TUESDAY. APRIL 19, I8. NUM UVAl 18G. .Daily V ' 1 a tDr !. . 1 Sadtfl IFOTI& Absolutely Pure l A cream of tartar baking powder jfiiehest of all in leavening strength ! I Latest U. S. Government food re- EW mkatmarkkt. Frfh Beef. fork. Veal. Mutton. FutUr and eggs kept constantly oa nana. Same of all kinds kept in. Seaeoa SATISFACTION - OARANTEED I SAMPSON BROS. Cor. 6th St and Lincoln Are PLATTSMOUTII, - NEBRASKA. TffE AT HARKED SIXTH 8TKSXT F. H. BLLSNBA VM, Tfp. Tke best of fresh meat always fomad ia this market. Also fresk Egg and Batter. Wild game of all kinds kept ia their :' season ai m sixth biKti' Jfl-EAT MARKET Always has on hand a full stock of Bran, Shorts Oats and Baled for sale as low as the lowest 'delivered to any part of tin- f-0 CORNER SIXTH AND VINE '' riattsmouth, - - NebrPa . , - , JULIUS PEPPERBERG. MAUVFACTUUE OF AJM WKDLESRIEZflKU RETAIL DRALEB IX TUK CHOICEST BRANDS OF CIGARS FULL LINK Or fTOBACCO AND SMOKEK's ARTICLES always in stock o Plattsmouth, Nebrassa W. H- CUSHIXG, Prfxirfeiit, J. W. Johnson, Ytee-Prtt-MeiiL -ooOT EOOo- Citrus - -Bc:ql PLATTSMOUTH NEBRASKA -$SO.OOO I Capital Paid in I F K Gntbman. J W Jolmson. E 8 OreMsel. I Henry' Eikenbary. M W Morgan. J A Connor. W Wettenkanip. W Ty II Cashing A general banNing business trans acted. Interest allowed on de- posxtes. .RST : NATIONAL : BANK OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA Paid up capital fso.ono.oo 10.000.09 , Surplus .- rs the ery bet facilities for the promp transaction of llgitimate ) I: Banking Business Am - - j - - -l-tek-,bondi, gold, government and local -(ir-. Ltte-bought and sold. Deposits reeeive , .Via interest - allowed on the certificate r Drafts aravn, arananin in wj ptr- J uniiea -iae ana vi me pnvniwi w. auxvpo. ',: OOUICnOVI MADE AND PROMPTLY BBMIT- -. . - - tid. -; Blft-esi n.rker ' price paid for County War ranis. SUte ana Couaty beads. . : DIRECTORS r Ooan FlttEjrarald- J-IIHS?LkwWortn y Sam waugo. . ghe glattsmouth gcrald. CORNER OK VINE AND FIFTH STS TELEPHONE 38. NOTTS BROS. Publishers I'ublished every Thursduy, und duily every evening except Sunday. Registered at the I'luttsmouth, Nebraska post pffice as necond class mail matter for transmission through the U. S. mails. , TEH.1S FCK WEEKLY. One year in advance - - - $1 50 One year not in advance - - - - 2 00 Six months in advance - 75 Three months in advance 40 TEKHS OK DAILY. One year in advance - - - $6 00 One copy one month - --. 50 Per week by carrier - - 15 TEN LITTLE DEMOCRATS. Ten little candidates Worked it very tine. One of them was traded off Then there were nine. Nine little candidates ' Feeling good and great. One of them a tumble took Then there were eight. Eight little candidates . . Almost fit for heaven, One of them a letter wrote Then there were seven. ...... i . Seven little candidates . Cutting; up their tricks. One took the silver craze . Then there were six. Six little candidates rYery much alivev . One talked himself to death Then there were five. Five little candidates Set up quite a war. One made a southern trip Then there were four. Four little candidates Went out on a spree, One took the Keeley cure Then there were three. Three little candidates Tried to worry through. One became a mugwump Then there were two. Two little candidate.- Started with a Run, With a free trade load it burst Then there was one. FINALE. One little democrat Sorry, mud and tired. Tried to tight the campaign out But verv soou expired. COLD AND SILVER. I i:ice upon a time a Silver Dollar v, :i standi ng on the dock watching : - earner coming- in. And the sil ver doi: r was looking unhappy, for it was thinking. When the steamer had landed, a Gold Dollar came rat tling merrily along down the gang plank and met the Silver Dollar On the dock. "Where have yoti been?" asked the Silver Dollar, sadly, for it knew all about the state of the case. 'Oh, I've been abroad," chiruped the Gold Dollar. "Why don't you go some timer" "Me go?" whim pered the poor Silver Dollar, as the tears rolled down its face. "Me go abroad? I'm not built that way." Moral Sound money is the life of trade. HOME. SWEET HOME. Not long ago a distinguished .Englishman and jurist visited our country. On the eve of his return, in a public address, he alluded to the fact that wherever he went he was asked whether he was not amazed at the size of our country. This student of law and government very kindly, but very decidedly, re buked this too prevalent pride of bulk, and called our attention to the finer and higher things that he had observed in our American civiliza tion. So to-day. as I look into these in. telligent faces, my thoughts are turned away from those thing's that ( are scheauleu, that have their places in our census returns, to those things which belongs to the higher man his spiritual and moral na ture. I congratulate j-ou, not so much upon the rich farm lands of your country as upon your virtuous and happy homes. The home is the best, as it is the first, school of citi zenship. It is the great conserva tive iind assimilating force. I should despair for 1113- country if American citizens were to be trained only in our schools, valuabld as their in struction is. It is in the home that we first learn obedience and respect for law. Parental authority is the tj-pe of beneficent governmeut. It is in the home that we learn to love, in the mother that bore us, that which is virtuous, consecrated, and pure. I take more pride in the fact that the republican part 3- has al ways been the friend and protector of the American home than aught else. B- the beneficent homestead law it created more than half a mil lion of homes; by the Emancipation I'rociimation it converted a million cattle-pens into homes. And it is still true to those principles that will preserve contentment in our homes. I greet you as men who have been nurtured in such homes, and call , your thoughts to the fact that the republican party has al ways been, and can be trusted to be, friendly to all that, will promote virtue, intelligence and morality in the homes of our, people. Benj. Harrison. - ' ' DIVERSIFIED INDUSTRIES One of the objects and results of a protective tariff is to diversify the industries of a country, both agri cultural and manufacturing. We are all more or less dependent on each other for what we consume, and protection enables us to pro duce -nearly all our wants at home instead of .buying them abroad. If our farmers were to grow noth ing but, wheat and our manufac turers, were to make nothing t but steel rails, they would have no home market of -any value for either; but by protecting every thing that can be grown or manu factured, we make the best use of all the natural resources of our coun try, we lessen the cost of transpor tation, we bring prices down to a reasonable level, and at the same time good wages and good profits are insured to all. For instance, ' by putting an ade quate duty on tin plate we not . only establish that, industry, but . aid a score of allied industries way back to the mining of the ore and coal. Protection brings the farm and the factory together, each helping the other. Kvery new industry cre ated, every new product success fully grown, gives employment to otherwise idle hands and more pur chasing power to consumers of both. " The McKinley law has already started scores of new industries and each has helped those already es tablished. To repeal the present law or any part of it would shut up the mills, decrease wages and sadly cripple if not rain our splendid home m-irket. American Economist. The coming republican national convention will be the first since 1872 without a contest for the presi dential nomination. In that year Grant was renominated unanimous ly. There was an exciting contest in every convention afterward up to and including that of 1888. In 1876 seven ballots were required for a choice, in 1880 thirty-six ballots, in 1884 four ballots and in 1888 eight ballots. For a number of years. I have been subject to violent attacks of inilammitor3r rheumatism which generally lasted about two months, On the first of this month I was at tacked in the knee and suffered se vereljr for two days, when I prenred a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm and it relieved me almost instantly. I therefore most cheerful reco mend it to those who are similarl3 artlicted ever3r where. R. D. Whit ly is a very prominent man in this place and his disease was widley known as he suffered aucn severe pain. W. M. - Houstan & Co. , Mer chants, Martindale, N- C. 50 cent bottles for sale by F. G.Fricke & Co. Druirgists. Beware of the docters and imder takeas; "the3r want you." Spring time is here and with it a Contami nated Blood, Torpid Liver, Kidneg Comdlaints and Indigestion Take "Ralrena for the Blood" and stim ulate the organs to force the foul secretions from your system. $1 at Brown & Barrett and O. II. Snyder Rail-Road Pain Cure never fails. Brought Into Court. ' . - Messrs. fcCage and Sherman, of Alexander, Texas, write us regard ing a remarkable cure for rheuma tism there, as follows: "The wife of Mr. Wm. Pruitt, the postmaster here, has been . bed-ridden with rheumatism for several 3rears. She cogld get nothing to do her an3' good. We sold her a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm and she was completed" cured by its use. We refer a 113- one to her to -erif3' this statement."' o0 cent bottles for sale bj- F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists The promptness and' certainty of its cures have made Chamberlain's cough reniel3" famous. It is intend ed especiall3" for coughs; colds, croup and whooping cough, and is the most effectual renied- known for these diseases. .TO cents bustles for sal bv F. G. Fricke. Itch on human and horses animals cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's sanitar3" lotion. This never fails. Sold F. G. Fricke Jt Co. druggist. Plattsmouth. Whj'wiUj'ou cough when Shi loh's cure will give immediate re lief. Price 10 cts.. 50 cts. aud $1 For sale l3" F. G. Fricke & Cc Not Kea Uta Commonest Civility. Women who think . it bo strange that New York men occupy seats in crowded ears, elevated and otherwise, while femi nine passengers clutch for Btraps, should draw the moral from an incident th;. happened in a Fifth avenue 6tage u lev. days ago. One of those clumBy vehicle was lumbering up the avenue, with U c passengers, one a middle aged man nil ting by the door. , At Nineteenth streei the stage stopped, and an old lady, af U-. bidding an affectionate farewell to friend at the step, climbed in and down opposite the middle aged passozi ger. The. latter was gazing idly it:tc the street, when he felt a touch, hii.1 suddenly found himself in possession of a nickel. - Evidently it came from : tl -newly entered passenger, though si t favored him with neither word u4 glance. It was equally plain that t was her fare, and that she expected tl:j middle, aged man to deposit it in t: box. . ..- After a moment's hesitation he aros. groped his way to the forward en'd '. ! the stage, dropped the nickle intoii proper resting place, and return.: glancing involuntarily at the old laly for some word or look of thanks. Nun came. She adjusted her fur wrap a.vl seemed oblivious of his presence. The 'bus rumbled on up Fifth avenue lor some minutes without incident, when the old lady suddenly leaned over aud said, "Stop the 6tage at Thirty-fourth street.' The middle aged man flushed slightly with evident annoyance, - and said decisively: "Madam, you compelled me to deposit your fare a few moments ago, and omitted the commonest civili ties in doing so., I am neither the drive' nor conductor of this stage, and though I should instantly respond to a courteous request, you may stop this stage wL-jr ever you please for yourself I" and thp did. New York Tribune. . An Jneffablo Cruelty to Children. . . Mrs. . Fenwick Muller, a London writer of note, comes out strongly on the subject of Lady Montague's methods of discipline, and incidentally has some plain words to say about punishments for children in general, and specially is she moved by that ineffable brutal ity, the shutting up of 3-oung children in the dark. "Darkness is full of ter rors to a child. Out of the gloom come all sorts of horrible imaginings, and many a child has been half ruined for life bj' the terror of darkness, will fully inflicted bj" some woman either too brutal to care or too ignorant to un derstand the infernal cruelty of leaving children, whese imaginations are . often far more vivid than those of adults, in all. the horror of blackness, out of which they, in their combined fancy and ' ig norance, ring forth all kinds of terrible and threatening things. No young chil dren should ever be left without a glim mer of light in a bedroom all night long, as a touch of indigestion, a trou blesome dream, a sudden awakening, afraid and into darkness, may work nerve mischief that may last a lifetime. "There is no crime that a child can commit that would entitle ns to expose him or her to the mental agonies of soli tude in darkness, many peopled as it is with phantoms and terrors. We know that even in our prisons this terrible punishment is only resorted to to subdue the most violent and refractory prison ers, and that even then it is hedged round with many restrictions, and only permitted to be used for a limited space of time. If there is a woman living whose heart does not respond to these strong words there is something very radically wrong with her." Egyptian Architecture. Eg3"ptian architecture, the oldest of known stj-les, placed the weight firmly on the ground. In the first stages of building the strength of materials and the art of construction were but imper fectly understood, and to obtain security masses of material were placed on a broad base, narrowing upward in the form of a pyramid. It suggested secu rity and permanence. The earliest extant monument . of the work of man th pyramids by the Nile still rest on the sand of the desert in their majestic massiveness. The Egyptian buildings were constructed on the model of the pyramid. Truncated at various heights, details and ornamentation, however varied, left the same impression of se curity and permanence. r The shelving base, from which springs the propylon or porch, the multiplica tion of short, stunted shafts, the shallow reliefs, are all subservient to the one idea. The building rests on the ground, and 3ou know it. The slender obelisk placed in front as a foil brought into prominence the massive solidity of the building. The accessory sphinx, with its front paws placed flat on the pedes tal, the body firmly recumbent and the head solidly draped was a tj-pe of im mobility and rest. London Tablet. Learning to Pop. ' It is queer how small an occurrence serves to attract a crowd. The other evening a popcorn kiosk at the corner of D street and the avenue was surrounded by a gaping crowd, ranging in character from gamins to gentlemen, all breath lessly watching the proprietor as he shook a popper over the gas flamer. A couile of j-oung ladies happened to lie passing, and one of them inquired: "What are those men staring at?" "They are learning how to pop," re plied her companion. "Oh," sighed the speaker, "how 1 wisKTJharlie would take a few lessons!" Washington Post. Spot Cash MANY YEARS AGO THE POET WROTE: , "Man wants but little here below, Nor wants that little long." It was true then and just as true to day, and fits our case exactly ALL THAT WE WANT IS Your Trade oil HARDWARE, CUTLERY, STOVES, TOOLS, ' That is a!l;"Nor do we want it long" just for a few years, say twenty or more and if you will grant us this "little" our cup of happiness will be full to overflowing. In return you will have little to want, lor in these goods we offer the best and most complete line made fn this country to-day and That every time we fill out a quotation sheet we feel that we ought to be accorded a place in history among the philanthropists for we are giving: the trade all the cream and keeping the skimmed milk for ourselvea.-v WILL YOU SOT GIVE US THE "LITTLE" THAT WE WANT. '"' J. W. Hendee, & Co. c'Niiu n :a:j j.i 1 Whitney's ( CALL AND SEE SECRET SOCIETIES INIGHTS of' PYTHIAS -Oauu Met . Lodge i No-47 Meets everv Wednesday eve- visiting knights are cordiallv invited to attend. M TGriffitb, C C: Uti.i Dovev K of K and S. . , A OV W No 84 Meet second anil fourth Friday evenings in the month at I () OF Hall. M Vondran. M V, K I' Ilruwii, recordeJ. A o V W No 8 Meet first and third Fri day evening of each month at I O F hall, Frank Vermylea M V; J K Harwich:, recorder. DEGREE OF HONOR Meets the first and third Thrursday evenings of each month in I. O. t. F. hall, Fitzgerald Mock. Mrs. Addie Smith, Worthy Sister of Honor Mrs. Nannie Hurkel, sister secretary. CASS LODGE, No. 146.1. O. O. F. meets ev srv Tuesday night at their hall In Fitzjrerald alock. All Odd Fellow, are cordially invited .o attend when visiting in the city. Clirl Fet ereu. N. G. ; S. P. 0born, Secretary., ROYAL A KUAN AM Ci Council No 1021, lx Meet at the K, of P. hall in the Parinele &. Craitc block over Bennett & 'iutts, vixiriiiK brethren Invited. Henry (ler'ng. Kepent ; Thos Walling, Secretary, A. K.McConihie Poet No. 45 meets every Saturday evonmjr at 7 : 30 in their Hall in Hockwood Llock All visiting comrades are cordiallv invited to neet with us. Fred Bates. Pot Adjniant ; G. P. Niles, Post Conimadder. fvRDFK OF THE WOULD. Meet at T : 30 every Mcnoav evening at the Grand Army hall. A. P. Groom, president. Thos Walling, secretary. CAS- CAMP No. 3.T. M. V. A. mets every eeoud and Fourth Monday ev-ninji" in 5itzgerald hall. Visiting neighbors welcome. P. r. Hanfen. V. C. : P. Werteubertrer, W. A.. S. C. Wilde. Clerk. . . " -"APTAIV H E PALMER CAMP NO M Sons of Veteran, division of Nebraska. I S. A. meet everv Tuendav night at 7 :3 o'clock in thr hall in Fitlgerald b'ock. All sons and visiting comrades are cordially invited to meet with us J. J. Kurtz. Conimaiidt r ; B. A. Ale Elwain. 1st Seargent. 4 DAL'u HTKKS OF KEBECCA bud of Prom '1 e Ixdge No. 40 meets the second and fourth Thnrsdav evenings of each month in the I'O. O. r . "hall, Mrs. T. E. Williams. N G. ; Sire. John Cory. Secretary. YoUG MEN'S CHKIsTION. -SOCIATIOX Waterman block Main Street. Booms open from 8 a m to 9 -.30 p rr. For men onlv Gospel meeting every Sunday alternoon at 4 o'elock . For 3-ears the editor of the Uurl ington Junction. (Mo.) Post, has been subject to cramp colic fits of in digestion, which prostrated him for several hours and unfitted him for business for two or three days. For the past 3-ear he has been using 1 f 1 1 . . -Tl . 1 - - ' L. . . , mW unumuciiciui 0 -011c, jnieiii iiim Diarrlnea Remedy whenever occa sion required, and it has invariably given him prompt relief. -!" and 'Jo cent bottles for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists. Hardware. TINWARE, WOODEN WARK Carriages And the PRICES Are away down ) i y i n $ I TTORNSY A. N. 8ULLIYAN. attorney at-Law. Will giv prompt attention 'o all business entrusted to hint. Ofllce la Onion block. East Side. Plattsmouth, Neb. N M N S rxr WATCHES, - CLOCKS, - SILVERWARE und Jewelry. REPAIRS PROMPTLY ATTENDEI TO. SATISFACTION lil'AKAXTKKI) NNNS : H. M. GAULT. :--: Room with Snyder, Soutn Main Street. JCR. A. SALISBURY : D E-N T-1S T :- GOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS. Or. Sieluways aija-sthetic for the painless ex tract iop of teeth. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Hockwood Block Plattsmouth, Neb. KlIjxTS HOLTSI. -A- 217, 210, 2t,' AND 223 AIN ST PLATTSMOl.'TH, NEK. F. R- GUTHMAH2T. PROP- Rates $4 .."() per w.ek and up 3sr?is?i"S" OOLD ANI PORCELAIN CKOWNb Bridge work and fine gold work SPECIALTY. OR. 8TKINAU3 LOCAL as well as other an estheticagivaa for the painless extraction of teeth. C. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerayi Rlocb Ctox3?