The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, May 11, 1892, Image 1
mouth Daily Herald. sutts r PLATTSMOUTH, NE1J11ASKA. WKDNKSDAY. MAY 11,1892. NUMISHll 205. FIFTH YEAH. i I hp MUM Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder Righest of. all in Icaveninir Htrentftn Latest U. S. GoTernment food re port. EW MKATMAKKET. a- w Dof Trrlr V pal. Mutton. Imci - V.n.a II1 lw" kept : tantly oa ha.d. Same of all kinds kept in Season SATISFACTION - GARAMTEED SAMPSON BROS.' Cor. Gth St and Lincoln Atc PLATTSMOUTII, - NEBRASKA MEAT MARKETJ Ms SIXTH STEBKT F. H. ELLENBAVM, Frpp- The best of fresh meat always fod 4,;a mnrket. Also fresh in Eggs and nutter. tTUd game of all kinds kept in their f - season. am Mi SIXTH STREET Meat market I If. Always has on band a full stock o VI.OUR AND FEED, tj-., tir.rts Oats and Baled Hay for sale as low as the lowc and delivered to any part of t Clty" CORNER SIXTH AND VINE Plattsmouth, 'Nebn- ULIUS PEPPERBERG. J MAKt FACTVKE OF AND UIEDLESMLEinND RETAIL DEALER IN" TIIE CHOICEST BRANDS OF CIGARS FULL !!' OF TOBACCO AND SMOKER'S ARTICLES always in stock Platt9mouth, Nebrassa W. H. CUSHING, President, J. W. JOHNSON, Viee-PridmU -OOOT H EOOO- Citizens - Bqrl FLATTSMOUTH NEBRASKA Capital Paid, in $30,000 v k r.nthman. J W Johcson. E 8 Greasel. Henry Kikenbary. M W Morgan. J A Connor. W Wettenkamp, W II Gushing A general banNing business trans acted, interest auoweu on ue posites. ClRST NATIONAL : BANK r OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA Paid up capital SutdIua 10,000.09 rs the very best facilities for the promp transaction oi ngiiuuBic Banking Business Stocks, bonds, gold. government and local e ouritle bought and Bold. Deposits received n ini.it iiinvivi on the certificate Drafts drawn, available in any part of the rrnttMl States and all the principal tewns of Europe. riOIJ-ECTlOyS MADE AND PBOMPTXY REMIT TED. Highest market price pnid for County War " U..aA ...... 4"Aa tvnn Am DIRECTORS John Fitzgerald D. Hawkwortn 8am Wauj?b. F. K. White v tleorge E. Dovey gluf'gUttsmouth Qerald. COKNKV OF VINE ANI FIFTH STS ' t. TELEPHONE 3N. K NOTTS BROS. Publishers Published every Thursday, uml duily every evening except Sunday. Kejfintered ut the I'lattHinouth, Nebraska pot ii llice us Hecoiiil claf iriuil matter for transmission through the U. S. mails. TKVUHHK WKI KLT. (lie yt-arin mlranrf -One year not frti arivttnr " $1 at 2 ) Six iiioiitliti in uitvuncr Three months, in udvnnce 73 40 y, (io no 15 One year ill advance One copy one month - 1'er week ly carrier - FARMERS ALLIANCE, SOUTH. The recent conference of presi dents and other high executive ofli- cers of southern alliance organiza tions, which met at Birmingham, Ala., was timid in giving advice, but its address leaves no room for doubt as to its real effect. It is bound to be interpreted as a wet blanket upon independent political action. The members of that con ference are democrats first and alli ance men next, lne states repre sented were Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, West Virginia, Florida, Missouri, Texas, Kentucky and.Louisiaua, ten in tjl. .Virginia and Carolina were conspicuous for their absence. The action oi this conference was due to the fact that the southern democrats are afraid to divide up on any issue, national or state, for fear the republicans might slip in. "White supremacy and home rule is still their cry. At the north the two great parties are divided on live national issues, but at the south the bogy man of an irrational appre hension stands in the way of inlel ligent politics. It is only because the democrats keep up the color line in politics that it contin ueB to exist. Take Alabama, for ex ample; there is a large element there which would be glad to go with the republicans in favor of protectior, for the iron and coal of that .iate are better than mines of ".!! and silver, provided only pro- m be maintained. Many .;: sands of the 120,0" ) democrats . uit state would regret exceed irt,ly to have the free trade deraoc icy rule i i 4i, congress umi ivpe.u mc McKinley act, but they are so afraid of "negro rule" in the state that thev can not be trot away from the old party. The Omaha convention will no doubt contain a good many dele gates from the south, but the sup port of the Omaha ticket is not to be made a test of loyalty to the farmers' party. Aa well not have any farmers' alliance ticket in the south. It is none the less true that the south has far more sympathy with alliance ideas than the north Were it not for the paralyzing fear of "negro sup-eruacy" the alliance might carry several southern stales. As it is there is not the re motest prospect of it. Inter Ocean TAR IN THE ARTS. In the preparation of tar, pine wood, which is unfit for use as tim - ber. is usualW emnloved. It ia rut uiv viitvio wa wwkvuwa- wauf -. are arranged into large conical stacKs, or, as is sometimes tne case in Lurope, are closely packed in clay furnaces of a suitable shape. Tii atnf-fca or riia urn. mvprprl with n liver of earth md i-,,ited with a layer of earth and ignited above, and the draft is reglated o as to sustain a slow combustion without flnmp.. Thp ta rrv nrnrlnrts. thev are formed rrraduallv de- as they are lormea, graauany ae- scend and collect in a cavity at the dnction and use makes it very pop base of the pile. The tar as ob-1 ular. 25 and 50-cent bottles for sale tained by slow combustion as de scribed above, is largely employed in the arts for various purposes and when divided into its constitu ent parts is in one form or another daily prescribed by the best physi cians. It has long been known for its gteat anti-septic and healing qualities, and for external use has been prepared by Messrs. Jas. S. Kirk & Co. in a most convenient and delightful form, in their Dusky Dia mond Tar Soap. In this form it should be classed among the necessities of every household: it is equally suitable for the delicate skin of the mother or the baby and the hardened cuticle of the work man, keeps the skin soft, clear and healthy, is a sure cure and preven tative of dandruff, and, used once a fortnight by ladies for shampoointr. adds length, lustre and strength to V5r hair THE FUTURE FOR FARMERS. vThe American Agriculturist is of die oiinion, after careful research and conserTative investigation, that American farmers, as a class, are more prosperous and in a belter con dition to-day, 'both mentally mid lituncially, than they were one year sijo. There is thus a most hopeful outlook for farmers during the year before us. The country generally is prosperous and affluent, which means that the people have a good purchasing power. Where farmers can find a mnrket cloe to hand, they generally obtain more remunerative prices than if compelled to ship their produce abroad. It is thus to the interest of all farmers to help build up their own particular sec tions, thereby providing markets at their own doors. If these fail, or are lacking, we have the world before us, anj we believe that the exports of our domestic produce in the pros pective season will- approximate even those of the unprecedented season just completing. This may seem a rash conjecture, but let ns analyx it. We have still available all the markets that have heretofore been open to us, and even to a greater ex tent, for one result of low prices is a larger consumption, and when peopie once become accustomed to consuming AuieiCFan prouuctsf they will continue to demand them, even if prices be higher, because the quality was satisfactory. In addi tion, we have-a larger number of new markets' opened to us through the reciprocal trade relations that have but recently been established. Heretofore such markets, with their millions of people creating a large consumptive demand, were practic ally closed by the high tariffs im posed upon our production, but we now enter them as a favored nation and at an advantage over our com petitors in the world's food supply. The American Agriculturist. TIN PLATE. We had no tin plate industry when the McKinley bill became a law on October 1, 1S90. - In the preced ing twenty years we had sent $307,000,000 335 across the ocean to uuy tin plate. The tin plate mills already- built or projected under the new tariff have a capacity of 1M3.0CD,000 pounds a vAnr wbirh. at the nresent average import value, means about itu.uuu,- CD0 annually, or in twenty years $140.000.000 which will stay in this country and pay American wages, develop Amer ican mines and turn, the wheels ot American mills. New York Press. According to the Topeka Capital mortgage indebtedness in the state of Kansas is being reduced at the rale of fl,033,COO a month. At the same time we hear that the con stituents of Jerry Simpson are pre paring to retire the Kansas states man to private life next November. It's a bad year for the calamityites. English Spavin Liniment reniovea all hard eoft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavins , curbs splints, sweeney. bone 8tiflee. sprains all rswoi- 1 len throats, coucrhs etc.. Save 50 cent bv use of one bottle. Warrant ed the most wonderful blemisk Kricke & Co druirsrists Plattsmoth jn aimost every neighborhood I throughout the west there is some I one or more persons whose lives have been saved by Chamberlains Col. Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem- ed v or wi10 have been cured of I chronic diarrhoea by it. Such per I sons take especial pleasure in rec- ommending the remeay to otners. Tfae ise that f0ii0Wa its intro- by F. G. Fricke & Co. F. G. Fricke & Co., the druggists desire us to publish the following testimonial as they handle the rem edy and believe it to be reliable: "I bouerht a 50-cent bottle of Cham berlain's Pain Balm and applied it to my limbs, which have been a IllCieu Willi lucuuiaugui ai iia iti vals for one year. At the time 1 bouc-ht the PaiH Balm I was un able to walk. I can truthfully say that rain Balm has completely cured me. R. H. Fakk, Holywood, Kan. Mr. A. B. Cox, the leading I druggist at Holywood, vouches for tne truth ot tne aoove statement. Hot Springs. Ark. Carlsbad of America. On April 6th, 7th and 8th the P. will sell round trip tickets to Hot Sprinc-s. Ark., at one lowest first class tare, cooa returning until June 10th, on account of govern ment sale of lots and meeting UI U1C OUUIUCIU VCUtlilt IUIUVC11U Association. Call at office for par THE FREE PASS FIEND. He Make the Life of a Tbeatrieal Man mc'mr Weary. 'Thm, aaid'a theatrical manager, "ia a vory pretty town; it ought to have m hall built artmad it, that might reflect in the sky bo that the surrounding countries could see and admire. Betweeu while, when you are not being stood up and sand bagged for your money, they shind you up for passes. Ujon my honor I was in troduced to a man on Monday and on Tuesday he buttonholed me on Fiftl avenue and said he woukl like to conn down and see us.'" "St you shall, in.' boy, mil I, 'the box office is open froj 9 to and your dollars are ol.mya wel come. "Another tinio I wm s eurt of e: forced escort to a yr nng lady who v; belated and had missed her friends. I knew her slightly, and, as a gentleiii;u; '-should, offered to eeeher home. The. isn't a blessed relative she has thai t haven't p:ussed into this house, and oi;l the other day the young woman met n; and said her sister was going to be mar ried, and wouldn't I give her a hox.su her brother-in-law-to-be could give farewell stag party. I dined at-a iir. class restaumnt last week, where tl; serve second class meals, and the cler!. as he struck , me for two dollars, n -marked, 'You might just as well u , the other side of that check to make xn out a pass.' "1 chucked an infant under the chin the other day and said it was the living image of its mother. I got a letter f riuij its father the next day asking for two seats at the matinee, 'and please,' he added, 'keep the third chair vacant if you can. Baby is going along, as it i nurse's day out, and the little follow may want to have his mother's knee." Another day in a crowded street car J exchanged my seat for a strap, to which a young lady was holding on. What u-. you think, she came into my office only this morning and wanted to know if 1 wouldn't be so 'perlite' as to give her a seat in the theater also. She thought I was so much of a gentleman she didn't mind in the least asking me. "My pastor begs for passes. My land lady demands them and pays off her milk bill with them. ' When I treat a man he looks as if he expected a pass at the bottom of the glass. The street car conductor thinks one ought to go with every fare I pay him. Young women pre sent me with roses, wearing a 'won't-you-pass-me-through-the-door' sort of expression, and their brothers walk along the avenue with me and call me 'my boy' ac l want to know what night 'me and sis' can find a couple of seats. Then they take some other fellow's sis ter. But for the cock of the cake walk give me a fellow on Fifth avenue whom I asked Monday to send me down some things C. O. D. " 'We don't trust theatrical people at all, my dear sir. We find it doesn't pay.' l wanted tne tmngs straigniaway and with difficulty made up the sum out of the change in my pocket. The next night the gentleman was at the theater door just as 1 cam forward. " 'I suppose it s all right.-" he said. " 'What's all right? said L " 'Oh, yon know me. You did busi ness with ine yesterday. 'Isn't it all right? "I didn't wait to say a worn, but l rushed home and for five minutes yelled blue devils up the chimney of my fireplace, after which I went hack to the theater and for two hours couiont break the line of people waiting for passes." Then the manager, sighing wearily and wiping his perspiring brow, wrote on the margin of a newspaper, "Pass Mr. Jones and party to box." When he finished he whispered: "My best girl's mother's divorced husband, who at the present time is standing in again with the old lady. If things continue Dioom ing there will be a double wedding." Pittsburg Dispatch. Women Being; Recognised in London. Women are fast obtaining substantial recognition in the governing of London, There are women members of the board of education and various other important bodies, and if women choose there may now be women dock commissioners, in a bill before parliament dealing with the election of dock commissioners, JMr. Courtney, chairman of the committee, took a novel and, as the newspapers de scribe it, "praiseworthy" step by stnk ins? out the words "male persons, so that the franchise might be conferred on women. The promoters of the bill said if ladies might vote they might also be come commissioners. "And why not," asked Mr. Courtney, "if they are good business women?' London Letter. A Fast Growing Tine. The Kudzu vine is probably the most rapid growing plant in the world. It belongs to the bean family. The leaves look something like a Lima bean, and was once called Dolichos japonicus. It will grow easily sixty feet in three months. It was introduced into Amer ica by the Japanese during the Centen nial exhibition. It is said that in its own country it has flowers like hunches of wistaria. For some reason American summers do not seem long enough for it. It rarely blooms. Meehan's Monthly. Mok than 100,000,000 Chinese, u is said, are engaged either directly or in directly in the tea industry. A bright scholar in a Vermont school stated in a composition that doughnuts were first made ia Greece. Spot Cash MANY TEA ' KT WKOTK: "Man wants but little here below, Nor wants ihat little long." It was true then and just as true ALL THAT Wli WANT IS Y T our tl 3 II It vi a K K, CUTLKRY, STOVLS, That is all; ''Nor do we want it long" just for a few years, Hay twentr or more ami if you will grant us this '"little" our cup of happiness wW be full to overflowing. - In return you will have little to want, lor in these goods we offer tke best iind most complete line made in this country to-day and u-t Prices so XjO"x7" That every time we fill out a quotation sheet we feel that we ought im be accorded a place in history-among the philanthropists for we are givig the trade all the cream and keeping the skimmed milk for ourselves. WILL YOU NOT GIVE US TUE "LITTLK" THAT TTK WANT. T. W. Hendee, & Co. UNEUH Whitney' s . ft 't':i "';: CALL AND SEE .emtLV?eWZLCi?L. T Mil ?Ti - THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY WXyVHXZS. 00 Warraa SECRETSOCIICT1 K . A O U W No Meet first and third Fri day evening of each month at I O O F hall, Frank Vermylea M W ; J E Barwick, recorder. GA. R.McConihie r"OBt No. 45 meets every Saturday evonins at 7 : 30 In their Hall in Eockwood block. All visiting comrades ar cordiallv invited to meet with us. Fred Bates, Post Adjniant ; G. F. Kites. Fost Coinmadder. Knights OF PTTHIAS Gawntlet Lodge Xo-47. Meets every Wednesday eve ning at their hall over Bennet & Tutt's. all visiting knights are cordially invited to attend. M N Griffith, c c: Otis Dovey K of K and S. AO IT wXo W Meet second and fourth Friday evenings in the month at I O O F Hall. M Vondran, M W, E F Brown, recorder. riEGREE OF HONOR Meets the first and thir ird Thrursday evenings of each month in 1. O. O. t . hall, titzgeraia oiock. Mrs. Addie Smith, Worthy Sister of Honor Mrs. Nannie Burkel, sister secretary. CA8S LODGE, No. 146,1. O. O. F. meets ev ery Tuesday night at their hall in Fitzgerald block. AllOddFeliowB are cordially invited o attend when visiting in the city. Chris Pet ersen. N. G. ; S. F.Osborn, Secretary. ROYAL AKUANAM Caes Council No 1021, Xv Met at the K. of P. hall in the Parmele & Craig block over Bennett & Tutte, visiring brethren invited. Henry Gering, Regent; Thos Walling, Secretary. ASS CAMP No. 332 L W. A. meets every second and Fourth Monday evenings in Fitzgerald hall. Visiting neighbors welcome. P. C. Hansen, V. C. : P. M'erteuberirer. W. A., S. C. Wilde, Clerk. CAPTAIN 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 El wain, 1st Seargent. AUG HTERS OF KEBECCA Bud of Prom -le Lodge No. 40 meets the second and fourth Thursday evenings of each month in the I O. O. F. hall. Mrs. T. E. Williams, N. G. ; Mrs. John Cory, Secretary. OKDER OF THE WORLD, Meets at 7 : 30 every Monnay evening at the Grand Army hall. A. F. Groom, president, Thos Walling, secretary. TKDflP SCHIFFM ANN'S Asthma Cure Kevor fails to (ne instant raliaf in to wont mm. and effaeta nm whars athara nUl. TrW fiitui rUKE mt nMi i ar T YOUL-A Hardware. to day, and Cls our case exactly ,4 -TOOLS, WOODKNWARJv And the PRICES Are away down "1 'tow St, w Ysfc. PrtMWdai. JCJR. A. SALISBURY : D-K-N-T-I-S-T :- GOLD AND POKCKLAIN CROWNS. r. Stainwayi aasrsthetlc for tke alUs ex traction of teeth. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Rackwood Block Plattsaiouth, Neb. 217, 219, 221, AND 223 yVlAIN ST PLATTSMOUTH, NKI3. F. R- GUTHMAN1T. PROP- Rates $4.50 pek week and up GOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS Bridge work and fine gold work a SPECIALTY. DR. 8TEINAU8 LOCAL as well as other an estheticsgiven for the painless extraction of teetn. C. A 'MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald Bloc TTORN.EV A. N. SULLIVAN. Attorney at-Law. Will giv prompt attention to all bueinexs entrusted to hiu. Office ID Unloa block, Eaet Side. PlatKmouth, Neb. Carriages LPJ