J ' ... ..H P 6 T1 era! 'i r. FJFni YKAlt. APRIL 2:3, 1892. NUMB Kit 190. ' . s. i y r mm Absolutely Pure. A. cream of tartar baking powder Highest of all in leavening strength Latest U. S. GoTemment food re port. Kff MEATMARKET. Fra Beef. Pork. Vi al. Mutton. Putter and eggs kepi coit:intly on liana. ianeof all kinds kept in 8eaeo SATISFACTION - OARAKTEED SAMPSON BROS. Cor. 6th St and Lincoln Are PLATTSMOUTH, - NEBRASKA. MEAT MARKET W 8IXTH BTSHT F. H. KLLKNBAUM, Frp. The best of fresh meat al way fomad in this market. Alio freak Egga and Bntter. Wild game of all kinds kept in their season. SIXTH STREET T MARKET Always has on hand a full stock of FLOUR AND FEED, Corn, Bran, Short9 Oats and Baled Hay for sale as low as the lowest and delivered to any part of the city. CORNER SIXTH AND VINE riattsmouth, Nebrf-lva J ULIU& PEPPERBERG. MANUFACTURE OF AND BUNDLES ALEZAND RETAIL DI1LIB1XTBE CHOICEST BRANDS OF CIGARS FULL LIXK OF TOBACCO AND SMOKEK-'s ARTICLES always in stock o Plattsmouth, - - Nebrassa V. II. CUSH1NG, President, J. W. JOHNSON, Yiee-PreidiiL -OOOT H EOoo- FLATTSMOCTH NEBRASKA $so,ooo Capital Paid in F K Guthman. J W Johnson. E 8 Gresel. Henry Kikenbary. M W Morgan. J A Connor. W Wettenkanip. W II Cushing A general banNing business trans acted. Interest allowed on de posited. rlRST : NATIONAL : BANK OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA Paid up capital Surplus ..... .$90.0(10.00 . 10.000.09 re tbe very best facilities for tbe pro rap ; transaction of Ugltlmate - - - '- ' ' Banking;, Business ..t ... v. C .. Stocks, bond, gold, awnent and local -jorttM boobt ud aold. Depoatta revived ud totrnt allowed on tbe certificate Draft draw, available in any part of tbe United State and all the principal tewns of nrope. . ... , r . : ' ; . . ., , - OOLLKCTIOVa MAJX AJTO omT KSKIT. . ..-..(-TBf." '::' BlKbestiMurket price foronty War rants, state ana Coanty benda. . . - llJUtCTOB, V ; 't - J.&'n FlUtrarald ' , . J.H Saas Waucb. F. . Walt J9ha Mdoal COK'NEK OK VINE TKLErno NOTTS BUO' Published every ThurK ... every evening except Sum!.. . Iv'eKi!tereI at the I'lattxnio . pot pfllce as second class in..: tranMiniion through the IT. S .it 1 r r fni iail':. TEKMSFCK WKEKI.1 One year in advance One year not in advance -Six months in advance Three months in advance TERMS OF IAII.r. One yeir in advance ' -One copy one month -Per week by carrier - $1 TiO - 2 00 75 40 . $6 00 - no 15 The "good western democrat" can't carry his own state is the rea son he is not in it. Judge Maynakd of New York has been exonerated by the senate of that state, but the people will never exonerate the senate. ALL the republicans who have been mentioned for the vice presi dential candidacy say that the pres ent oflicial is the rio;ht man for this honor. Morton should be renomi nated. The greatest mystery of which the "oldest inhabitants" have knowledge is why any American citizen with just ordinary sense can be a free trader, or what is exactly the same, a "tariff reformer." A Cleveland organ referring to the Hill faction remarks: "No army was ever weakened by cutting the cowards out." That may be true, but this is a different case it is cutting the fighting mec out. Cow ardice is not Hill's weak point. BIG THING ON ICE. The News stands by Editor Mil ton D. Polk, which pleases The Herald. This is a3 it ought to be; that is, Editor Milton D. Polk uses the News to give himself character; in other words, Milton D. Polk, as editor of the News, sajs Milton is a : .:u, able newspaper and business ia and that The HERALD is green v. !h envy because it hasn't got this I' n agon of honesty on its hands. Tbe Ncvs is hypnotized by its "attache" and there is but one rem edy: We will have to turn our poet loose on that concern to dispel the charm. Of course, we are dead gone because we haven't got the moral influence and business char acter of the "tother" editor of the News. Our bankers, our law3ers, our courts, our merchants, our business men, all want him, all need him, but the News has a monopoly on him it has got him bad. "Alas, poor Yonck!" that is us. WARNING OF A DEMOCRATIC PAPER. The New York Sun takes three defeats which the democratic party has suffered and preaches a homily to its fellow democrats as follows: "In 1888 the democratic party went crazy for tariff reform, and trotted into the mud behind the ele phantine economist of the mug wumps. Licking No. 1. "In 1891 the Ohio democrats, sticking to the same old tariff re form as propounded by the same old corpulent Cobden, became un protected mats for Major William McKinley-, Jr., and the republican party to wipe their feet on. Licking Ko. 2. "In 1892 the Rhode Island demo crats took up the same old howl and fight for the same old tariff reform, and the same old sarcotic dervish. Licking No. 3." But what is the democratic party to do? What can it do? The tariff is the only issue it dares to talk about "until after the presidential election" and even on the tariff the old party is sacred enough, heaven and Roger Q. Mills of Texas know. As a friend and acquaintance of the "new allies of the northwest," the Register suggests that the de mocracy abondon evety cousidera tion except to get back into the offices. On that kind of a platform, with D. B. Hill, they might carry the south. Des Moines Register. HOW IT WORKS. What have reciprocity and the new protective tariff already done for the farmer of the United States? This in part: Reciprocity' has caused Cuba to import 83,643 bags of flour from America during the first two months of 1892. During the first two 'mouths of 1891 it imported only 5,738 bags of American flour. But during the first two months I S aw jlloi. ! rrc. 1 . biiiit- - ! ye n b . . I buying ., ! a ixn uX i -.ii : riling.- i'U.i , , ; - 1 4 ... il T lilt It'i- ' McKinley l)ii.. !.. . .-. na .- .- the Unitt-d i . a.. i: iim j Cuba roM' lin in jf i wo untni ).- in 5,738 haH to Si.(4.i la;.. hii1 1iii . the same jeriotl ot time the Euro pean exports of Hour fell from :1 baja to lot) bajts. But while ilu- tjiiaiitity of farm ex ports has increased reatl3' siiift the passage of the McKinley bil the value of imporis of animals ai d things xrown or raised ly farIller decreased by $2(.51X),40:j during tin year 1891, as compared witli 1S!K). If these conditions are not dis tinctly beneficial to the American farmer what conceivable conditions could be beneficial to him? THE ETIQUETTE OF I Ho TABLE. As a people, we Americans have been laughed at for eating too fast, and we are credited as being a na tion of dyspeptics, writes Ruth Ash more in her interesting department Side Talks with Girls" in the May Ladies' Home Journal. Now, of course, this.is generalizing, but you, the eldest daughter, have it in your power to make the hour at the din ner or tea-table one of real delight. It is an easy matter, you will .find, to start some pleasant topic; to get your father and brother interested in the talk of the day, so that you all will eat your food more slowly, and you will achieve what the Frenchmen consider the great art you will dine, not merely feed your self. But there are a few little ques tions about the etiquette of the table that some girl wants to know, and these I am going to tell her. She must hold her knife by its handle, and never let her fingers reach up to its blade. Whenever it is pos sible, a fork must be used in place of a spoon, and that same spoon, by the by, must never be left in a coffee or tea cup, but laid to rest politely and securely in the saucer. Glasses with handles are held by them. A goblet should be caught by the stem, the fingers not entwining the bowl part. Don't butter a large piece of bread and take bites from it; instead, break your bread in small pieces, one at a time, and but ter it, that is, if you are eating but ter, and convey it to your mouth by your fingers. Olives, celery, rad ishes, strawberries with stems, and asparagus are all eaten from the fingers. The old method of eating cheese with a knife has been given up, a fork being used in its place. The uses of many small dishes for vegetables is not in good taste; in deed, many vegetables should not be served at one time. Now Try This- It will cost you nothing and will surely do you good, if you have a Cough, Cold or any trouble with Throat, Chest or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds is guaranteed to give relief, or money will be paid back. Sufferers from La Grippe found it just the thing and under its use had a speedy and perfect re covery. Try a sample bottle at our expense and learn for yourself just how good a thing it is. Trial bottle free at F. G. Fricke & Co. Drug Store, Large size 50c. and $1.00 Beware of the docters and under-take-is; "they want you." Spring time is here and with it a Contami nated Blood, Torpid: Liver, Kidneg Comdlaints and Indigestion Take "Ralrer-' -the Blood" and sim ulate tiie -. - to force the foul secretion;.: -i-i yc;r system. $1 at Brown & Barrett and O. H. Snyder Rail-Road Pain Cure :iever fails. Itch on human and horses animals cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's sanitar3r 'lotion. This never fails. Sold r. G. Fricke & Co. druggist, Plattsmouth. For a number of years. I have been subject to violent attacks of intlammitory rheumatism which generally lasted about two months, On the first of this month I was at tacked in the knee and suffered se verely for two days, when I prenred a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm and it relieved me almost instantly. I therefore most Cheerfully reco niend it to thode who are similarly afflicted everywhere. R. D. Whtt I3' is a very prominent man in this Elace and his disease was widley nown as he suffered aucti severe pain.. W. M. Houstan & Co. , Mer chants, Martindale. X- C. 50 cent bottles for sale by F. G. Fricke A Co. Druggists. Soi AllrtfcU IH it Satlnrlea. The stofT- is leing told in New York that the proprietor of a certain well known morning nevsiai r has male sin offer to a puceeysful publisher of Chi cago to come to New York for Gve ye;: 8 at an annual salary of $100,000. NVhoili. r this reiort be true or not, it has oci pioned a good deal of gossip. Perhaps in nothing more than in th qnestion of salaries ia there 60 111 ivb paid that is untrue. I have notlor-V', there are a email number of gentlemen who are paid from $23,000 to $100,0;;.) a year for their services, but whether tli are worth it or not is another questi . The tendency is always to exaggerm on the salary qnestion anyhow, and is more than lik' ly that not half (i sum mentioned id actually paid to un man. It is the fame way with the antho) . of books. A little while ago it was h:i' that Ward McAllister had received :.". 000 for his published volume on "Soci ety as I Have Found It." Mr. McAllk ter now comes forward and spoils thi. pretty fiction by stating positively that he received only about $3,700, and that is why he hesitates about accepting aa offer made to him by a Chicago firm of publishers. He says there is no money in books. The men who are paid $100,000 a year in New York for any services whatever are so few as to be lonesome. Those who receive $50,000 could probably be numbered insiile of a hundred. Those who receive $2-3,000 a year are of course more numerous, but there are not enough of them to cause any very general dis turbance in financial centers. And I am quite inclined to the belief that any man who receives from $10,000 to $20,000 a year as salary is, like the famous Rjilly who kept the hotel, doing exceedingly well. Foster Coates in New York Mail and Express. A Dog's Fidelity. A living example of a dog's fidelity is presented by that noble Newfoundland owned by the late Oscar C. McCulloch. He is a large dark brown fellow and is well known to the congregation of the Plymouth church. He was generally permitted to attend church services dur ing the life of his master, and in fact was considered a privileged character about the institute. On rare occasions he was even dignified with a place at the Rev. McCulloch's feet in the pulpit. At the meeting of the National Assacia tion of Charities last year at Plymouth church this dog appeared regularly every morning and afternoon upon the ros trum with his master. The dog still goes to church and walks about the room as though he were look ing for somebody no doubt he is. Fre quently he curls up under a seat in tbe auditorium at the beginning of services, and if anybody attempts to take the seat over him he offers a prompt protest that settles matters. This dog is very popu lar about the church and is as dignified as any potentate under the sun, but when it comes to a question of personal rights the handsome canine is decidedly patriotic. Indianapolis Journal. - Carried a Barn on His Hack. Matthew La Page, of Woodhaven, had a small barn he wished to move to another site. He told Cyrus E. Smith, superintendent of the Woodhaven pub lic schools, of his plans, and explained that it would cost him considerable to put the building on a new foundation. Smith laughingly offered to move the barn for nothing. La Page ridiculed the idea, when Smith asked to be Bhown the spot to which the building was to be carried. Upon learning this he visited the barn, which is a shell, weighing about 500 pounds. He rigged a number of ropes so that he could take the weight across his shoulders. Harnessed in this fashion, the man of muscle lifted the barn with ease, carried it twenty-five feet and set it easily on the new founda tion. New York World. A New Musical Instrument. The "pedal clarionet," as it is not very happily called, stands an octave below the bass clarionet, and in one of its two varieties produces the lowest note yet attained by any instrument, with the one exception of the organ. Its tone is wonderfully distinct, even in its deepest notes, and it is far more agreeable than that of the double bassoon, with which it is most closely allied in compass." It has a range of three octaves. Its quali ties were elaborately exhibited by Mr. Bretonneau, of the Paris opera. Bos ton Courier. Tbe Green Carnation in London. The credit of introducing the new flower, the green carnation, to English society has been given to Oscar Wilde. While it is true that he wore one in his buttonhole the evening on which his play, "Lady Windermere's Fan," was first publicly enacted, it was already known to a few leaders of fashion in Great Britain and was becoming popu lar there without waiting for his sanc tion. The green carnation had been worn for weeks before that time on the Paris boulevards. New York Tribune. Colofea Statues. Boston has a new fad. ' At the Mu seum ' of- Arts ' two - statues, 'one ' the Hermes of Praxiteles the other Venus Genatrix, both colored In the manner of the ancient Greek statues, are displayed. The statues are in the colors of 'nature, and the critics are enthusiastic as to their beauty. ' The artist is Mr. Joseph Lindon Smith. Boston Lettrr. Spot Cash MANY YEARS AGO TIIE 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 oar case exactly ALL THAT WE WANT IS Your Trade on HARDWARE, CUTLKRY, That is all; '-Nor do we want it long" just for a few years, say twenty or more ami if you will grant us this "little" our cup of happiness will be full to overflowing. In return you will hare little to want, lor in these goods we offer the best and most complete line made in this countrj' to-day and "t ZEPzricoa so Iotx7" That every time we fill out a quotation sheet we feel that we ought to be accorded a place in history simong the philanthropists for we are giving the trade all the cream and keeping the skimmed milk for ourselves. WILL TOU NOT GIVE US THE "LITTLIi" THAT VTK WANT. J. W. Henclee, & Co. UNRUH Vtiitriey's Carriages rSjCA S CALL AND SEE SECRET SOCIETIES XISHTS OF PYTHIAS CJauntlet Lodgff No-47. Meets everv Vlrnsilav ninc; at their hall over Bennet Je TutVs, all visiting knight are cordially invited to attend. M X Griffith, c C: Otis Dovey K of K and S. A O lf W No St Meet second and fourth 1 Friday evenings intlie month at I () () F Hall. M Vondran, M W, K V Brown, recordeJ. A o V W XoS Meet first and third Fri da v evening of eacli month at I O O F hall, Frank Verrnylea M V; J K Barwick, recorder. DEGREE OF HONOR Meets the first - and third Thrnrsday evenings of each month in I. O. O. F. hall. Fitzgerald block. Mrs. Addie Smith, Worthy Sister of Honor Mrs. .Nannie Burkel, sister secretary.. GASS LODtiE. No. 146.1. O. O. F. meets ev ery Tuesday night at. their hall in Fitzgerald block: All Odd Fellows are cordially invited to attend when visiting in toe city. Chris Pet ersen. N. G. ; S. F. Osborn, Secretary- ROYAL A KUANAM Cii"i Council No 1021, Meet at the K, of P. hall in the Pannele & Criip block over Bennett & Tutti, visirinu brethren invited. Henry Gerlng. Kegent ; Thos Walling, Secretary, rL A. R.McConlhie Post No. 45 meets every Saturday evonuitr at 7 : 30 in their Hall in P-ockwnod block. All visiting comrades are cordially invited to 'ueet with us. Fred Bates, Poet Adjniant ; G. F. Niles, Post Commadder. fKDEK OF THE WORLD. Meets at 7:31 every Monnav evening at the Grand Army hall. A. F. Groom, president, Thos Walling, secretary. fASS CAMP No. 332 M. W. A. meets every second and Fourth Monday evnings in Fitzgerald hall. Visiting neighbors welcome. P. C. Hansen. V. C. : P. Wertenberirer, W. A., S. C. Wilde, Clerk. CAPTAIN H E PALMER CAMP NO 60 Sons of Veterans, division of Nebraska. IT S. A. meet every Tuesday night at 7 :30 o'clock in their hall in Fit Igerald block. All sons and visiting comrade are cordially invited to meet with us J. J. Kurtz, Commander ; 15. A. Mc Elwain, 1st Seargent. AUGHTERS OF REBECCA-bud of Prom ise Lodge No. 40 meets the second and fourth Thursday evenings of each month in the n O. O. F. halL Mrs. T. E. Williams, N O. ; Mrs. John Cory. Secretary. YOUKG MEN'S CHRISTION -SOCIATION Waterman block Main Street. Rooms open from 8 :30 a m to i-jopm, For men only Gospel meeting every Sunday afternoon at 4 o'elock. For years the editor of the Burl ington Junction, (No,) Post, has been subject to cramp colic fits of in digestion, which prostrated him for several hours and unfitted him -for bnsiness for two or three days. For the past year he has. been using Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy whenever- occa sion required, and it has invariably given him prompt relief. 25 and 20 cent bottles for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists. Hardware. STOVES, TINWARE, TOOLS, WOODEN WARIk And the PRICES Are away dowa j 5j TTORNEY A. N. IULLIVAN. Attorney at-Law. Will giv prompt attention to all business entrusted to him. Office la Union block. East Side. Plattsmouth, Neb. N M M M IiT WATCHES, - CLOCKS, - SILVER W A K K and Jewelry. REPAIRS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. SATISFACTION' GL'AKANTEED N N N N : H. M. GAULT, :-: Room witli Snyder, Soutn Main Street. QR. A. SALISBURY : D-K-N-T-I-S-T :- GOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS. Dr. Stcinways anaesthetic for the painless ex traction of teeth. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Kockwood Block Plattsmouth, Neb. iOEPIjNTS HOUSE. 217, 219, 221, ANI 223 yftAIN ST PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. F. R. GUTHMANN. PROP- Rates $4.50 per week and up GOLD AKD PORCELAIN CROWNS . , . ... , . - Bridge work and Ine galsl work a j 1. 1 .SPECIALTY. i , B. STKINACB LOCAL as well as other an Mtaetlcstrlvsa far tbe aaialess extraetlaa 4 teeth. a A. (MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald VLtdS