The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, April 28, 1892, Image 1
P .Herald.. aily nioiu FIFTH YKAK. PLATTSMOUTH, NF Bit A SKA. THURSDAY. A PHIL 28, 1892. NUMB Fit 1.01. 1 r if K i I. x1 mm, fell FOOTER Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder Highest of all in leavening strength Latest U. S. Government food re port. EW MKATMARKET. Fresh Beef. Pork. Veal. Mutton. Putter Mid eggs Kepi couMauuy va uau. ame of all kinds kept in Season SATISFACTION - OARANTEED SAMPSON BROS. Cor. 6th St and Lincoln Ave PLATTSMOUTII, - NEBRASKA. MEAT MARKET Mm SIXTH STREET SIXTH STREET F. H. ELLENBAUM, Prop. The best of fresh meat always found in this market. Also tresn Egga and Butter. Wild game of all kinds kept in their season. mir sixTn street Meat market If. DlTjXN ' Always has on hand 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 ""N city. CORNER SIXTH AND VINE v rr .l .iilstnnulh. NebrnFl-.t! M- ULIUS PEPPERBERG. MAKurAcrcBK or and vihdleshlezfjw retail DEALEIt IN THE CHOICEST BRANDS OF CIGARS FULL LINE OF TOBACCO AND SMOKER'S ARTICLES always in stock o Plattsmouth, - - Nebrassa W. H. CUSHIXG, J. W. JOHNSON, President, Vicc-PridenL -ooOT H EOoo- Citizen? - -Beinli, PLATTSMOUTH NEBRASKA $50,000 Capital Paid in F R Guthman. J W Johnson. E S Greusel. Henrv Kikenbary. M W Morgan. J A Connor. W Wettenkamp, W II dishing A general banXing business trans- acted. Interest allowed on de I oosites. rlRST : NATIONAL : BANK r OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA AiJ up capital -Surplus $.50,000.00 . 10.000.09 n the tery bet facilities for the promp transaction of Ugitimate Banking Business Stock?, bonds, gold, government and local se suritiee bought and sold. Deposits reeeiveu and interest allowed on the certificate Drafts drawn, available in any pan ui ir Jolted states ana aii me prun-iy" l trope. loiXEOIOFi MADE AND PBOMPTXT K EMIT TED. Highest rr.Arket price rd for County War rants, State ana County bonds. DIRECTORS John Fttnrerald D. Hawkswortn Sam Wsugb. F. K. White George E. Dorey Job VtUgwaM. m W&w II 1 luiiavui glic lUiittsmoiith iJcrnid. CORNER OK VIXK AND FIFTH STS TELEPHONE 3ft. . UTTS BROS, Publishers Piitlit-h'd every Thursday, and daily every evening except Sunday. Roistered at the I'lattsiiiouth, Nebraska Mst jjffice as Hecorid cIush mail matter for transmission through the U. S. mails. TERMS FCK WEEKLY. One year in advance -One year not in advance -Six months in advance Three months in advance TKK.1S OF DAILY. One year in advance -One copy one month -Per week by carrier - - - - $1 50 - 2 m 75 40 $6 00 - 50 15 The republican party? is. for a dol lar that is worth 100 cents." Now will the Journal please tell us which side of the silver question it :s on? Wonder if the Journal will have to have a five-story brick building fall on it before it knows when its idol (the silver-tongued Brjran) is sat down upon? A Nebraska statute prohibits the killing of robins, blackbirds and meadow larks from January 1 to November 1, under a penalty of $25 for each bird killed. THE republican party in 1888 was in favor of the use of both gold and silver as money, and it is in favorof the same to-day, ta long as the sil ver dollar contains 100 cents. The Kansas democrats have en dorsed Cleveland, who has come out strong against free silver, and they also endorsed free silver. It takes a democratic covention to be inconsistent. THERE is a pearl button factory in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, and the Pearl Button Republican Club of that city will go to the Minneapolis conven tion wearing pearl buttons and lin en dusters, the manufacture of pearl buttons having been fostered in that ri';. '-y the McKinley law. h E Des Moines Democratic Lead-c.-says: "It is extremely doubtful it" Cleveland could be elected. There is little doubt that Boies would sweep the country." There is a mania just now in democratic cir cles to get hold of some old rene gade republican, such as Boies, Palmer, Gra3', or Campbell. The old wheel horses of democracy have to take back seats when "a convert" wants a place. The Journal asks us to explain our attitude on the silver question. Wewilldoit, as that is the easiest question the Journal could ask us for we were not on the fence like the Journal is. We know right where we are. ' We are in favor of an honest dol lar, one that has 100 -cents in it. One that will pass for a dollar and buy a dollar's worth of goods in any part of the globe. We are opposed to any 70-ceut dollar, stamped with the Godess of Liberty, that, as soon as it gets be yond our shores, will not buy a dollar's worth of goods. ON THE WRONCITRACK. Last evening's Journal credits an editorial which appeared in this paper the evening before to the pen of Judge Chapman Mr. Journal you are on the wrong track. Judge Chapman did not write the ar ticle.he knew nothing of it till he read it in this paper. It was written by our selves in this office and we con sulted no one out side in regard to it. If your valient Bryan was not sat upon in the democratic convention in Omaha, we do not know what the expression "being sat down on'' means. CRISP'S ADMINISTRATIVE WEAK NESS. Mr. BaUey of Texas, in objecting to the passage of any bill in the house unles a quorum votes, is ad ministering to his party some of the medicine which it dealt out to the republicans in the J i f ty-firs t congress. The Texas statesman, of course, has moral and technical as well as poetic justice on his side in this matter, and his party was right in the proceeding congress in insisting on the observance of this requirement. But the equities of the case had much less to do with the democratic position on this point at that time than had the de sire to impede and embarrass the republicans. At the beginning of that congress the republicans had in (he house only six or seven mem bers in excess of a quorum, and naturally they had the utmost dif ficulty in keeping a quorum on hand at all important exigencies. They were obliged to rely chiefly on their own party in this endeavor, for the democrats often contrived to be absent in critical emergen cies, and thus prevented the speaker from counting them in matting up the quota. In such cases the point of "no quorum," which some democrat left behind for the purpose would make, often placed troublesome obstacles in the way of legislation. In this way Mr. Bailey has been the means of revealing a surprising lack of administrative efficiency in the leaders of his party in the house. The democrats have about seventy members in that body in excess of a quorum, yet on many important oc casions a quorum, even after count ing the republicans on hand, has not been present. For a large part of the time nearly half of the 236 democratic members of the house have been away from their seats. This is a record of absenteeism which is altogether without example in recent years. Apparently the speaker and the heads of his chief committees are powerless in the matter of securing the attendance of their colleagues. They either lack the respect of their party or culpably neglect the elementary precautions to secure the presence of a sufficient number of their fol 1 wers to carr3 on the business of legislation. Their is no cohesive ness or zeal in the party interest and advancement among the members of the organization or else their chief and his "whips" are grossly and amazingly derelict in their duties. At all events the discipline which was en forced in the republican house last year and the year before is utterly and conspicuously absent now, and the democracy, with all its domi nance of strength on the rolls, often finds itself pitiably and contempt ibly weak at important exigencies. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. According to the census of 1890, Chicago takes rank, by virtue of her population of l,098,o6 people, as the eighth largest citj1- on the globe. Most of us desire, at one time or another, to visit a city in which so many persons find homes, and, when we do, we can find no better line than the "Burlington Route." Three fast and comfortable trains daily. For further information ad dress the agent of the company at this place, or write to J. Francis, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Omaha, Nebraska. Subscribe for The Plattsmouth Daily Herald at 13 cents a week. It Pays to Read the Papers, especial' your county paper, for often through this medium busi ness chances and opportunities are presented that might otherwise en tirely escape your attention. For instance, B. F. Johnson & Co., Rich mond, Va., have an advertisement in this paper that will prove of espe cial interest and value to a large number of people hereabouts. Write to them for further particulars.- Railroad Cough Cure is the true Antidote for Throat and Lung Troubles. Fully warranted at Brown & Barrett's and O. H. Sny der's. For a number of years. I have been subject to violent attacks of inflammitory 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 mend it to those who are similarly afflicted everywhere. 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. Druggists. Brought Into Court. Messrs. iCage 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 years. She cogld get nothing to do her any good. We sold her a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm and she was completely cured by its use. We refer any one to her to verifj this statement." 50 cent bottles for sale by F. G.Fricke & Co., druggists Irena for the Complexion" re moves Pimples, BlacUhiads, and all Facial Blemishes. Warranted Jby Brown & Barrett and O. H. Snyder. Preaching Over Old Scrnionit. The scandal arising from bought sei mons, which imfortunatly are often sold in duplicate mid even triplicate, has caused at least one bishop hence forth to forbid their use in his diocese, lie has no objection to his clergy preach ing the sermons of other divines if the authorship is acknowledged, and ever considers that an original discourse once a week is as much as can be reasonably expected from the average curate; but there must be no duplicity in the mat ter. There lias always been a danger in the purchased sermon. Recognition of the borrowed work, if from a well known source, is also al ways possible, or nearly always. A Welsh curate confessed to the following ingenious plan for evading it, whicL must, however, have given liim a, great deal of trouble: "I've got a volume of sermons by one Tillotson, and a very good book it is; so I translate them into Welsh and then back again into Eng lish, after which Tillotson himself would not know them again." Illustrated London News. Exercise in the Open Air. A man should take exercise in the open air if possible," said he enthusias tically, "but some kind of violent exer cise just before going to bed. There u no medicine that will do him as much good or put him to sleep quicker. When I was a boy I smoked a great deal, and finally became so nervous at twenty-one that 1 couldn't keep the covers on my bed at night. The doctors told me to quit cigars and take exercise. I followed their advice. 1 never go to bed now without taking a handspring or two and swinging the clubs, and I sleep lik e a top." This man is a reporter on a New York daily paper, and his suggestion cuts a new artery for gentlemen of that seden tary occupation. New York Herald. Pavements of Jerusalem. xie principal pavements made in Pal estine are in Jerusalem, and it is only within recent years they have been con structed in accordance with anything like modern requirements. The superior and massive Roman pavements, over 2,000 years old and still in fair preservat ion, are here not taken into considera tion. The material for streets is stone, cut about the size and shape of ordinary bricks or a little larger. This is laid ic sand, the long and narrow side up. The stone used is the well known Jerusalem marble. The cost varies from one to two dollars per square yard. The foun dation is almost invariably the rubbish of the ancient city, which has accumu lated during centuries. Philadelphia Ledger. Can't Always Depend on What You See. While it is very reasonable to trust the verdict of our consciousness, yet it in equally desirable that this confidence should be accompanied by an under standing of the conditions under which the evidence is presumably valid and when likely to mislead. Sense decep tion, faulty observation, exaggeration, neglect, fallacy, illusion and error abound on all sides and emphasize the need of a calm judgment, a well equipped . intellect, a freedom from haste and prejudice, an appreciation of details and' lice distinctions, in the determination jf truth and the maintenance of mental; aealth. Professor Joseph Jastrow in Popnbir Science Monthly. The wisdom of him who journey eth is known by the line he selects; the judgment of the man who takes the "Burlington Route" to the cities of the east, the south, and the west, is never impeached. The in ference is plain. Magnificent Pull man sleepers, elegant reclining chair cars and world-famous dining cars on all through trains. For information address the agent of the company at this place, or write to J. Francis, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Omaha. 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. Trjr 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 - A Great Surpriee Is in store for all who use Kemp'f Balsan for the throat and lungs the great guaranteed reined-. 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 sample bottle free? It never fails to cure acute and chronic coughs. All drugpists sell Kemp's Balsam. Large Bottles 50c aiid ?1. Itch on human and horses animals cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's sanitary lotion. This never fails. Sold F. G. Fricke & Co. druggist, Plattsmouth. For millinery and pattern hats or anything in the line of ribbons, flowers of the latest styles and de signs, call on the Tucker Sisters in the Sherwood block. tf. 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 cae exactly ALL THAT WE WANT IS Your Trade on HARDWARE,, STOVES, TINWARE, CUTLERY, TOOLS, WOODEN WARfa, u. - That is allj'-Nor do we want it long" just for a few years, say twent-y or more ancLHbi-ou will grant us this "little" our cup of happiness will be full to overflowing. In return yon will have little to want, lor in these goods we offer the best and most complete line made in this country to-day and Prices so Low 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 ourselves. WILL YOU NOT GITE US THE "LITTLE" THAT WK WANT. J. W. Hendee, k Co. UNEUH Z.BBPS Whitney's IMP 4 CALL AND SEE SECRET SOCIET1 K . T-xiGHTS OF PYTHIAS Gauntlet Lodtfe Xo-47. .Meets everv Wednesday eve ning at their hall over Hennet k Tutt's, all visiting knights are cordially invited to attend. M NT Griffith, c C: Otis Dovey K of K and S. A O V wXo Ht Meet second and fourth Friday evenings in the month at It) O F Hall. M Vondran, N V, K P Brown, recordeJ. A O U W ?Co 8 Meet tirst and third Fri; dav evening of each month at I O O F hall, Frank Vermylea M W;JB Harwick, recorder. DEGREE OF HONOR-Meets the first and third Thrursday evenings of each month in I. O. O. F. hall, Fitzgerald block. Mrs. Addie Smith, Worthy Sister of Honor Mrs. .Nannie Burkel, sister secretary. CASS LODGE. No. 146.1. O. O. F. meets ev ery Tuesday night at their ball In Fitzgerald block. All Odd Fellows are cordially invited to attend when visiting in t!ie city. Chris Pet eren. N. G. ; S. F, Osborn, Secretary. ROYAL A EC A NAM Cass Council No 1021, 1X Meet at the K, of P. hall in the Parmele & Craig block over Bennett & Tutte, visirtng brethren invited. Henry Gerlng, Regent; Thos Walling, Secretary. GA. R.McConihie Post No. 45 meets every Saturday evomng at 7 : 30 in their Hall in Rockwood block. All visiting comrades are cordially invited to meet with us. Fred Bates, Poet Adjniant ; G. F. Niles, Post Commadder. ORDER OF THE WORLD, Meets at 7 : 30 every Mcnnay evening at the Grand Army hall. A. F. Groom, president, Thos Walling, secretary. CASS CAMP No. 332 M. W. A. meets every second and Fourth Monday evnings in Fitzgerald hall. Visiting neighbors welcome. P. O. Hansen, V. C. : P. Wertenbertrer, W. A., S. C. Wilde, Clerk. pAPTAIN H E PALMER CAMP NO 50 Sons of Veterans, division of Nebraska, U S. A. meet every Tuesday night at 7 -30 o'clock in their hall in Fitlgerald block. All sons and visiting comrades are cordially invited to meet with us J. J. Kurtz, Commander ; B. A. Mc Elwain, 1st Seargent. lAUGHTERS OF REBECCA-bud of Prom-i-e Lodge No. 40 meets the second ano fourth Thursday eveniDgs of each month in the I" O. O. K. IimII. Mrs. T. E. Williams, N G. : Mrs. John Cory. Secretary. OUSG MEN'S t:HRIT10N" -SOCIATlON Waterman block Main Street. Rooms open from 8 :30 a m to S :30 p on. For men only Gospel meeting every Sunday afternoon at 4 o'elock . For years the editor of the Burl ington Junction. (Mo,) 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. Carriages And the PRICES Are away down f fej W fed M TTORNEV A. N. SULLIVAN. Attorney at-Law. Will give prompt attention so all business entrusted to him. Office to Union block, East Side. Plattsmouth, Neb. BARG-AIISTS N H UN 1ST WATCHES, - CLOCKS, - SILVKKWAKE and Jewelry. KEPAIKS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED N N N N : H. M. GAULT. : s Room with Snyder, Soutn Main Street. jCR. A. SALISBURY : D-E-N-T-I-S-T : GOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS. Dr. Steinways anaesthetic for the painless tx tractioD of teeth. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Rockwood Block Plattsmouth, Neb. lOEIflIjNrS house. 217, 219, 221, AND 223 JAA.IH ST PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. F. R. GUTHMA2TU. PROP- Rates $4.30 per week and up : UOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS Bridge work and fine gold work a SPECIALTY. DR. STEIN A US LOCAL as well as ether an eathetlcsglven for the painless extraction ot teeth. a . 'MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald Block n h t