V v .Daily Herald Fl"1- YJSAlt. PLATTSMOUTII, XK Hit A SKA. SATURDAY. MAY 11, 1892. NUMBER 208. Lttsmouth (I : y POUBER Absolutely Pure. I A cream of tartar bkii powder Lllighest of all in leavening strength 4 Latest U. S. Government food re port. N KW NEATMARKET. Freeh Beef. Pork. Veal. Mutton, Hutter and eggs kept constantly on uanu. Game of all kinds kept in Season SATISFACTION - GARANTEED SAMPSON BROS. Cor. 6th St and Lincoln Are ' PLATTSMOUTH, - NEBRASKA, AT MARKET SIXTH STREET F. n. ELLEXBAUM, Prp. The best of fresh meat always fomad in this market. Also fresM EggH and Butter. VilW;:uiie of all kinds I season. "anie of all kinds kept in their I SIXTH STREET JLYiSAT MARKET Aiwa vs has on hand a full stock of FLOUR AND FEED, CLvJrn. Bran. Shorts Oats and Baled Hay for sale as low as the lowes and delivered to any part of t.; city. CORNER SIXTH ANI VINE ,J&ttsmouth, Nebraf-' iULIUS PEPPER BERG. d MANUFACTURE OK AND wnnizsRUZifixn retail DEALEKINTHK r CHOICEST BRANDS OF CIGARS FULL LINE OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS ARTICLES always in stock o Plattsmouth, - . - Nebrassa jW5 W. II. CUSH1NG, t President, J. V. JOHNSON, Tice-PrttidenL -ooOT EOoo- PLATTSMOUTH KEBKASKA $30,000 Capital Paid in Pi iK Cuthman. J W Johnson. K ureusei. ' Henry Eikenbary. M V Morgan. J II dishing general u;i u-n i n j; uueiucs? -f acted. Interest allowed on de- posites. pIRST : NATIONAL : BANK OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA lin ranltnl 850,O,0Cl Surplu 10.000.09 rs the ery Deft facilities for the promp transaction oi iigniunnc anking Business , Stocks, bonds, gold. government and local ie eartuea bought and sold. Deposits received and interest allowed on the certificate Drafts drawn, available in any part of tbe United States and all tbe principal tewn ol Bnrope. OOLLKCTlOJfS MADB AND PROMPTLY MMTT- behest market price pi for County War- nuHi 1 - - - DIRECTORS -John Flturirald JlrHJworUl jit TOxrsra'AM B.WMIB., jTf QUttzmouth gerald. COK.NKK OF VINIi AM) FIFTH STS TELEPHONE 3S. KNOTTS BROS, Publishers Published rvery Thursday, and daily every evening eaceft Sumluy. K'etit-Tcd ut the 1'lattstmxitli, Nebraska )i.-t flice an fecund clas mail matter for transmission through the U. S. mail. TEBMH KK TEKI.Y. 0e year in ik!vmiu-c - - - $1 50 One year not m fh1 vtime - - - - 2 00 Six months in adfiince - 75 Three month in advance 40 TEBMS OK DAILY. One year in advance - rr - - $6 00 One copy one month ------ 50 Per week by carrier - - J Democrats of New York have finally "got together." Both the Sun and the World denounce "this democratic wasteful congress." The Sun says: "Democrats in con gress' have their e3'es on the star eyed goddess (of free trade) and their lists in the nation's money drawer." The Plattsmouth Journal feels very confident that the consumer pays the tariff duty, as all free trade fanatics are. Yet in the same breath it admits that the prices of articles have not increased by a higher duty. This is a big admis sion for a stubborn democrat. But it has initiated the new dodge, which will be sprung on all sides during the campaign, that "goods are not as low as they would be if free of duty." Now it must be plain to even a "tariff reformer" that if "a consumer pays the duty," he will pay more, if the dut is higher. The conclusion is that he does not pay the duty. Nebraska City Press. Woulij it not be exercising a large amount of good common sense if the democratic press would cease criticising the McKinley tarilT laws? This question is suggested by reason of the fact that the popu lar branch of congress is largely democratic and yet that party has v.-ill fail to repeal the very law pretended to fight so bitterlj . i the stump say is systematic y of the people. Every dem- can verj thoiightfulljr ask himself the question: If the tariff law is what my party claims it to be, why does it not make a move in congress to repeal? There is no republican majority in the way, and to say there is no use in the party making an effort to repeal the obnoxious law, because the senate is republican, is no other than a baby excuse for the democratic hotise failing to carry out its pledges to the people. The thinking demo crats of the country will certainly discontinue their abuse of a policy which as a party is fully endorsed by its failure to repeal when having the power to do so. Turn the tables and think how utterly ridicu lous it would be if the policy of free trade had prevailed and the republicans out of power had for years been condemning that policy as detrimental to the prosperity of the nation and then, suddenly se curing power, fail to repeal the law they had so severely criticised. A procedu-e of this kind proves to all thinking men the ins:ncerity of the party practicing it and w'll fail to secure the confidence of the busi ness interests of the nation. The action of the present house of rep resentatives is proving to the people that power alone is the ideal of the democratic pariy. This house is making a large endeavor to blind the men who gave it power. It has not the courage dr wisdom to do more than make speeches against what it claims to be a most ruinous policy, uemocrats rail ana wag the;r tongues against the "robber tariff," yet their party now in power in congress by inaction is endors ing the action of the republican house of 18l0. The Herald desires its-republican readers to push this question home to their democratic neighbors: If the McKiuley tariff is ruinous as you say, why does not the democratic house of con gress show its good faith in the doctrine of a tariff for revenue only by repealing the present law and in its slerd place duties on articles or people can not produce, yet must have? Indianola (la.) Herald. FOR SAXE Two desirable resi Hcncp lots in Orrharrl Hill n rl rl i t in ti to Plattsmouth, within a block of the Missouri Paciuc depot. For particulars call on or address The Herald office. tf A Bill Eighty-three Fret Lone. The longest and weightiest "bill of ac counts" ever presented against an estate in the history of Connecticut and issi bly in that of the couiftry was submit ted before Judge iS. T. C. Ilolhrook in the Norwich probate court a day or two ao. It wns fetched into cosrt by one lawyer, but three attorneys a.d a boy had to hold it when it was unrolled be fore his honor for Lus-oction. It was made out on a continuous roll of thick accountant's paper, contained more than 1,000 entries and was 83 feet and 2 inches long. It extended thtee or four times around the spacious probute office after it had been unrolled, and the judge walked back anil forth across the multitudinous entries. . The -sum - total of the account was a little more tliazi $11, (KK). After studying the entries for half or three-quarters of an hour the judjje chuckled aud remarked: "Is there any more of it? Ami what was the objec tion to bringing it in in sections say two or three of them a day? But it ap pears to be all right, and the claims have to bo allowed apparently." All day the Norwich attorneys dropped into the probate office to examine cu riously the extraordinary bill, and a vet eran of the bar said, after he had care fully measured it, "it's unquestionably the longest bill ever presented in the his tory of the law in this country." Cor. New York Sun. Tliey Fooled the Ansrust Senator. Not even the gravest, most venerable ' of senators is proof against the wiles of i April Fool's Day. The senate pages as a rule manage to have a pretty good time in life, but play their pranks far enough from the sacred precincts of the higher branch to escape unpleasant rep rimands. On April Fool's Day thiy started in to test the financial predilec tions of the senate. A line was baited with a fat and juicy looking wallet that lay temptingly in the corridor, just where the senators turned the corner. Along came tall John Sherman. His eyes lit on the wallet. Probably the 6enior senator rfnd great financier had never before found a pocketbook lyin j so carelessly about in his path. He swooped down upon it. His fingers were rapidly closing over it, but they only shut up like a clenched fist, while the pocketbook, like an elusive dream, irlided out of sight as if it had wings. A whisper fell on Sherman's ear, April Fool,v a clatter of scurrying boys' feet accompanied it. Sherman went in to complain to the venerable doorkeeper, who has since been trying in vain tD bring the jolly young pages into a proper frame of repentance. Kate Field's Washington. Married in Their Graveyard. Mr. W. N. Green, a rich farmer liv ing just over the Carroll line in Haral son county, selected a novel spot to be married on a few days ago. Mr. Green was a widower and he courted Mrs. M. A. Sanford, a widow, and an agreement to marry was made between them. Mr. Green sent for Squire Newt Tillman, to perform the marriage ceremony. Mr. Green has a beautiful home and near it has a mill. Between the resi dence aud the mill is a beautiful grass knoll, and on this elevated spot Mr. Green selected his family cemetery, and also selected the exact spot where he and his future wife must be buried, and on this spot Squire Tillman made Bill Green and Martha Sanford man and wife Sunday morning, in the presence of a half dozen witnesses. Cor. Atlanta Constitution. One Way of Settling a Difficulty. Two prisoners, Francisco Brionea Gamboa and Victor Higuera, were im plicated in a murder, at Guara. The Guayaquil court, being unable to fix the relative guilt of either, passed the. fol lowing sentence, "They shall draw lots, and the one favored by chance shall not be executed and shall have his sentence commuted to that of imprisonment foi life, which sentence he shall serve in the prison of the capital of the republic, after being present at the execution of the other murderer." Panama Star and Herald. Salt in Egypt. A discovery of salt, which seems hkely to have important consequences, has been made by the officers of the Egyp tian salt department twenty or thirty miles west of Minieh, a point on the Nile about 150 miles up the river from Cairo. Specimens of the salt show that it is of very fine quality. The deposit is said to extend over an area of 1,000 acres, and the department is about to make a further survey of it. Chicago Tribune. A Tripnle Wedding Feast. A unique triple wedding feast was en joyed in a Bohemian village early last month, when a young couple were mar ried on the same day that the parents of the bridegroom celebrated their silver wedding and his grandparents their golden wedding. On the same day a diamond wedding was celebrated at Heiligenkreuz, near Vienna. Klectric Stamp Canceling Machines. Four electrical machines are to be set at work in the Chicago postoffice, and electricity will soon cnt a very large fig ure in the handling of letters. Each machine will cancel 28,000 letters per hour. The motive power is electricity. The four machines will perform tbe a uioa oi f amine aud Plenty. While the inhabitants of south and eastern Russia are starving, a large pro Iortion of the population of eastern Siberia and Turkestan have so much grain that they do not know what to do with it. In the province of Semiret chinsk the jeasants have- enough grain to last them for ten years, and in the provinces of Yenesei.sk, Yakutsk and the Transbaikal the price of wheat is one-eighth what it is in the Volga pro vinces. The best beef is being sold at the rate of about d. a ound, but as there .are no railways and few or no roads in these rich jortions of the em pire, this superabundant wealth cannot be put to account. London Tit-Bits. Dininlintd to Ite Kiid. f. - " iutld-' !.t ha3. come to light at Mount Pleasant, la. A good looking young woman came to the marshal and asked for the arrest of her husband, who was ill treating her. The man was placed in jail, but when the time of trial came the wife did not appear to prosecute her case. The husband was released and then explained that he had attempted to kiss his wife. She object ed, and he forcibly put his arms around her and kissed her. Chicago Inter Ocean. An Aluminium Lifeboat. A lifeboat of aluminium has recently been built at Stralsund. It is a matter of considerable curiosity to see how this boat will answer when thoroughly test ed, as it is thought to be more than like ly that its obvious good points will bo more than counterbalanced by various disadvantages. New York Times. A WeWHiis Journey. A -man named Thomson passed through Buchanan, Ga., a few days ago, who had traveled on a cart from Dades ville, Ala., to Salt Springs, Ga., to get married. Thomson and his wife weigh at least 400 wunds. The distance from Dalesviiie to Salt Springs is about 200 miles. A rat plague in Dorset is inflicting loss on the rarmers. One farmer at Wareham, noticing that three ricks were infested, ordered them to be thrashed. The ricks were found to swarm with rsta. H no fewer than 5"0 Villed. No Luck iu Tills Horseshoe. Some time ago a St. Louis man nailed j a horseshoe over the door of his house for good luck. Tuesday as the man wa3 about entering his home a bolt of light ning struc k lnm and knocked mm sense less. It transpired later that the elec tric current had first passed through tha horseshoe. . 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 bought a 50-cent bottle of Cham berlain's Pain Balm and applied it to my limbs, which have been af ilicted with rheumatism at inter vals for one year. At the time I bought the Pain Balm I was un able to walk. I can truthfully say that Pain Balm has completely cured me. R. II. Fark, Holy wood, Kan. Mr. A. B. Cox, the leading druggist at Holywood, vouches for the truth of the above statement. Ice. Ice. McMaken & Son are delivering ice daily. Call on them for your sum mer's ice. Hot Springs. Ark Carlsbad of America. On April 6th, 7th and 8th the M. P. will sell round trip tickets to Hot Springs, Ark., at one lowest first class fare, good returning until June 10th, on account of govern ment sale of lots and meeting of the Southern Central Turnverin Association. Call at office for par ticulars. Catarrh in New England. Ely's Cream Balm gives satisfac tion to every one using it for ca tarrhal troubles G. K. Mellor drug gist, Worcester Masc. I believe Ely's cream Balm is the best article for catarrh ever offered the public. Bush & Co. druggists, Worcester Mass, An article of real merit.C. P. Alden druggist, Springfield Mass. Those who use it speak highly of it. Geo A, Hill, druggist pring field, Mass, Cream Balm has given satisfac tory results. W. P. Draper, drug gist, Springfieln, Mass. Some of the Grand Army bo3'S ma' be interested in the following from Alex. B. Pope, A. D. C4 Com mander, Dep't. Tenn. and Ga. He says: "We have had an epidemic of whooping cough here, (Stewart, Tenn.,) and Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has been the only medicine that has done any good " There is no danger from whoeping cough, when this remedy is freely given. It completely controls the disease. 50 cent bottles for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Thx Best Salve in the world for Cuts Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For Bale by F. G. Fricke Why will you coujh when Shi loh'e cure will give immediate re lief. Price 10 cts., 50 eta. ad $1 Fr m1 hv F. f. Fricke St Co Spot Cash MANY YEA2-S ",,T" "'MiT WROTE: "Man wants but little here below, Nor wants that little long." It was true then and just as true to day, und fits our case exactly ALL THAT WE WANT IS Your Trade on 5iIIbrtAl'K, CUTLERY, STOVES, That is all; "Nor do .ve 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 hare little to want, tor in these goods we offer the best nd most complete line made in this country to-day and -iut Prices scJ Ijo That every time we fill out a quotation sheet we feel that we ought to be accorded a place in historj- among the philanthropists for we are giving the trade all the cream and keeping the skimmed milk for ourselves. WILL YOU NOT CITE US THE "LITTLK" THAT WE WANT. J. W. Henclee, Sz Co. mSTRtJH Wriitney's CALL AND SEE UiJUKuu'.Mt iUXJlliXliA, GS VrMTCa TIMOTHY CLARK. DEALER IX WOOD - TERMS CASHo ri and Rice 404 South Third Street. Telephone 13. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBKASK J E. REYNOLDS, Hgistered Pbysiciaa and PharmacUt Special attention given t Office Practice. Rock Bluffs N p J. rTfipTSE T DEALER IX- STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES GLASS AND QUEENSWARE. Patronage of tke Pablic Solicited. Nortk Sixth Street, Plattsaaeuta Hardware. '! I i vr I-j TOOLS. WOODEN W A RE Carriages And the PRICES Are away down I i l 6 1 t t t kU-. Pvr TOTE. i.-tteG0 JCJR. A. SALISBURY : D-K-N-T-I-S-T .- GOLI ANTr PORCELAIN CROWNS. r. Stinway anaesthetic for the paialeg ex traction of teetli. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Kockwood Block Plattsmouth, Neb. i9EIjSTS HOISIS. -- 217, 5219, 221, AND 223 yflAIN ST PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. F. R. GUTHMANN. PROP- Rates $4.50 per week and up 1 : HOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS Bridge work and fine gold work a SPECIALTY. DR. 8TEINAUH LOCAL as well aa other au eettietlcsKlven for the rainless extraction of teeth, a . .MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald RlocV TTORNEV A. N. SULLITAN. Attorney at-Law. Will gtv proaipt atteatlea to mil butitN eatruaUd to him. Office 1b nlna Mntk.tMt Wit Plattamnatk Malt -,- -'-.-li - 7. ... v