The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, May 25, 1892, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THEY 1)0 NOT MAKRY.
VVHY YOUNG PEOPLE FIND SINGLE
BLESSEDNESS SO-COMFORTABLE.
mo ... . , i -i
.dreary insignificance use
pashL.-San Francisco Argonaut.
Couldn't Do It.
Daahaway-Come around, old f. ellow.
.and help me select a suit of clothes.
TraveVs-Couldn't do it, POf1"
man? You seem to forget that we both
,'S to the tailor.-Clcthier aad
i FumisbT. ,. .
If They CJ.J, Mrrl-l.ThrjViild
t Mk wk lrrt Many Sarrlflo-. or Ko
They Think. and llemilt They
' Keep Away from the Knot of Hymen.
It u an oft rjM-;it'd remark that New
York in the fin.-nt jl;ic in the npuMio
r livo in if you are rich. Unt it is
:rne than tlie iiu-unt euhtirb. the
'arioMt of western "nn towns," tli
lest country village if you are t.
,-his is the rritic ism of thejieraoii who
.i not contemplate life as a is.si1iil-j-or
an arf;dlj tMs.sihility without
ty, in tho narrow wnsw f the word;
,ut the lea.siireH that come from
v". without the hoc-mi ttanmi that
,'xl lank account gives, without !
f, aide "to k-- up with the pne-j-j
i" of those who are well dressed, well
t well situated and well oft.
nffularly enough, those who demand
tbes things who will not accept mar
Tied life without them are generally
not well supplied with this worM'sgootls.
People who have been rich all their lives
do not realize what it means to go with
out their luxuries. Dut people who have
been jMr know just the wretchedness
of having to wear patched boots and go
without lunch; of having to walk long
distances, because car fare "mounts up;
of having to refuse nice invitations, be
cause they have no clothes or no means
of returning proffered civilities. To
these, poverty is a bitter thing, and they
loathe it. Marriage, unless it means
escape from carping cares of this kind,
they eschew as a hopeless evil. Detter
endure those trials that we hare than
fly to others that we know not of, they
eay.
So thinks the everyday, gentlemanly,
good looking, entirely personable young
man of thirty, who draws an income of
from two to four thousand a year, and
is asked out all over because he dances
admirably and is good to look at, and
never does anything gauche. So. also,
thinks the pretty, well bred, well dressed,
moderately bright girl of twenty-five,
whose father spends six thousand a year
mad has five children. Both of these know
just the way they want their lives to go.
Ever since childhood they have associ
ated with companions who have had
more money than they have, and they
know how nice it is to be well off. To
be rich or to remain as we are, that is
their motto. "When we make the great
move, they both think, "we make it t J
better ourselves materially, or we don't
'make it at all.
They do not want to be millionaires,
but they do not want to be really pinched
anywhere. Their house must be large
-enough and be comfortable. It must be
well fitted up no "sheet by night and
tablecloth by day for them. There
must be servants enough to run it. This
girl who has always been comfortably
placed, but never" luxuriously has no
intention of binding herself down to do
mestic cares, of dusting her own draw
ing room and turning up hems in her
own table linen. No; all that must be
done for her. She has made her own
dresses and trimmed her own hats all
her girlhood, and she wants, when sua
marries, to change all that. Detter to
go on doing it in your own home, where
it is all yon have to worry over, than to
do it in your husband's, where yoa
have to keep the house and take care of
children as well.
Thus the 3-onng lady reasons and re
jects her suitors with a peculiar and good
humored indifference. She has made
np her mind that she will not marry a
man who has a cent under five thousand
a year, and is not above telling this to
the soupirants. who take the hint and
strive to realize the ideal. Tho yonng
lady is quite frank. She is not in the
least ashamed of her worldliness or de
sirous of hiding it under a veil of at
tractive coyness. She is not mercenary.
It is not riches that she demands com
fort, that is all. If she is comfortable
she will continue to be a very nice, at
tractive person, but if she has to scrimp
ana struggle and fight over ten cent
pieces, and turn her old clothes, and
have her shoes patched, she will not bt
responsible for her temper. She is a
fin de siecle to her finger tips sensible
where the might be romantic, practical
where she once would have been impas
sioned a person who is bound to make
a success of her life and keep it on the
lines that she regards as the best.
The young man of her kind holds pre
cisely the same views. Life with a be
loved object sounds very charming, but
it is not to be indulged in unless the in
comes of himself and the beloved object
foot up to from five to six thousand per
annum. The beloved object on three
thousand a year is too expensive a lux
ury. He cannot afford it. What might
have been a courtship dwindles to a
zuild friendship. Not infrequently he
tells the lady of his sad predicament and
how impossible a matrimonial alliance
would be on his salary. She condoles
with him and they become friends, for
no violent fires burn in their hearts and
friendship comes quite easily to them.
.Marriage would mean a series of sacri
fices that neither is willing to make
They would have to live in a flat in HaT
em and no one knows who has not livec
in Gotham the horror in which Harlem
is held or a second rate boarding house
beyond Fourth avenue.
Then come clothes and theaters. A
New York woman spends money lika
water on her clothes. She would mu ;h
rather be well dressed than well fed.
She must be well dressed to be np with
.anything. The moment she grows
.shabby she is no longer of any impor
tance. Then she may as well give up aJ
tne tun anu ... ,
The Eye of Greek HtstuM.
Professor Ernst Curtius, the famous
Greek scholar and archaeologist of the
University of Berlin, announced a few
months ago that he had discovered that
the Greek Fculptors always made the
eyes of men fuller ami rounder than
those of women. -The alleged discovery
was"cou"Iered iiifportaiit.'as it was le
lieved that it would lead to a iroter
classification of many of the unidenti
fied heads of Greek statues. The Iioim-h.
however, seem to have been premature,
despite the fact that Curtius, who has
Ijeen called "The Modern Greek. fa
thered them.
Dr. Greef, of Berlin, in a recent lec
ture delivered licfore the Prussian Acad
emy of Science, declared that Curtius'
conclusions were wrong, as lie had found
Hat, narrow eyes those of women, ac
cording, to Curtius in the heads of
Greek statues of men. He had also
measured plastic representations of worn
en witlT large, full eyes. In nature. in
added, there was no difference In-tw 1 1;
tlie eyes of men und women. He h;.
examined recently in Berlin the eyes oi
a nunureu memiers oi eacu sex nn.i
had found that they were the same in
fchape, size and form. He thus upheld
the theories of Zinn and Sommerlin
mat me ureeic sculptors wuo gave a
greater fullness to the eyes of men than
to those of women did not follow the
conditions of nature. New York Trib
une.
Plenty of Game in Maine.
There h;is not been a year for some
time when game was as plenty and
when so little game has been killed
and uestroyed as during tne past win
ter. One rejison is that the snow in
many localities has not been deep, and
at the same time it has been hard, hold
ing up the deer and caribou and giving
them a chance to protect themselves by
flight. Another reason is that the
guides and hunters have learned that it
is for their interest to leave the game
alone, especially during the deep snows.
I have made it a point to see many of
them in the early part of the winter,
and tried to make them understand that
it is for their interest for us to keep a
good stock of fish and game, as they
would get more business during the
guiding season.
The most of the game that has been
killed the past winter has been killed in
the back settlements, hunters using
dogs to catch deer. There has been a
story of ninety moose killed near our
border line, in township 5, range 18. I
believe the most of this yarn is false. I
have been within a day's walk of the
township this winter and I did not learn
of any such business. In fact there are
not moose enough in that locality. It is
near the Canada line, and this same re
port comes from there every year. Cor.
Portland (Me.) Press.
Beekeepers and the Government.
Foreign bees without pedigrees may
be admitted to the United States free of
duty. The secretary of the treasury has
so decided. Until the last tariff bill was
passed bees from abroad came in gratis,
as "animals imported for breeding pur
ines." The McKinley law declared
that this ruling should only apply to an
imals "regularly entered in recognized
herd books. Accordingly, bees were
assessed 20 per cent, ad valorem, be
cause they had no pedigrees. The bee
keepers protested and carried their
point.
Some time ago the postoffice department
declared that bees were "unmailable.""
on the ground that they would be likel)
to sting people if they got loose. The
beekeeiers secured the recall of this reg
ulation, by proving that the packages
employed could not be broken. Wash
ington Cor. New Orleans Times-Democrat.
Little Fear of Indian Trouble.
A gentleman at Rosebud agency writes
that the reports of dissatisfaction among
the Indians there have been greatly ex
aggerated. Since his arrival there two
weeks ago he has traveled quite exten
sively through the various Indian camps
aud thinks the Indians never exhibited
a more peaceful frame of mind than at
present. Never did they take hold of
work more readily or more extensively,
and never did they take more interest in
the care of their stock than the past
winter, as can plainly be seen by the
condition of horses and cattle this spring.
So far as dissatisfaction with rations is
concerned, if there is any such, the white
employees hear nothing of it. Cor. Min
neapolis Journal.
Confederate Coins.
There has recently been some inquiry
as to whether the Confederate govern
ment coined any gold. The question
was referred to the Hon. Charles C.
Jones, Jr., of Augnsta, who telegraphs
as follows: "The Confederate States, as
I now remember, coined and issued no
gold. A few experimental half dollars
in silver were struck, but they did not
pass into circulation. Charleston News
and Courier. "
A Circus Tumbler Has a Fall.
A disjiatch from Warsaw, Ind., says:
"Charles Neff, a laborer in Lakeside
park, while engaged in trimming a tree
fell from its top to the ground, a dis
tance of 6ixty feet, and was uninjured.
Neff is an old circus tumbler, and the
agility learned in the ring saved his life.
He fell on his hands and rebounded in
the air ten feet, alighting on his feet
without a scratch.
A lawsuit has been commenced in
Marengo, Ind., between Edmund Waltz
and El wood Stout, over the price of two
eggs, bought at seventeen cents per
dozen. Two of the dozen were rotten,
and Waltz demanded a return of the
price.
A young man hypnotized at an enter
tainment in Paris remained Be useless for
two days and was with difficulty
brougt back to consciousness.
A Missouri judge presented to the ex
Confederate home fifty-eight cents, but
they were very old coins and are to be
Bold at auction.
Enaor Liquor Care.
To thohe Heekinjr a rescue from
liquor curse or other evil habits
brougJit about by morphine, tobac
co etc. The Knsor Instituteat South
Omaha offers one of the most relia
ble sml best places to with the
absolute certainty of a permanent
cure. Write cr visit the institute.
th.
A ensilile Man.
Would use Kciiid'h halnntu for
throat and Iuuh. it is curing more
cafes coughs cld.-, asthma, bron
chitts, crsmp ami all throat mid
liuitf troubles, than any other rem-edj-.
The proprietor has author
ized. -my drutfist 1oive you a sam
le tiiitile tree t convince vou oi
I
the merit of
I .a rare bottles i
this great
'c and $1.
remedy.
I feel it my duty to e;ry a few
words in regard to Kly's Cream
Halm, and I do ho entirely without
solicitation. I have used it more
or less half a j-ear, and have found
it to he most admirable. I have
fullered from catarrh of the worst
kind ever since I was a little hoy
and I never hoped for :u-e, but
Cream Halm pectusin do even that
Many of my acquaintances have
used it witu excellnnt results.
Oscar Ostum, 45 Warren Ave., Chi
cago 111.
Wanted: An energetic man to
in an aire branch office. Only a few
dollars needed. Salary to start $7
per month and interest in business
The Western Co., Kansas City, Mo
Some Foolish People
allow a cough to run until itgets
beyond the reach of medicine They
eav "Oh. it will wear away, but in
most cases it wears them away
Could they be induced to try tl
successful Kemp's Balsam, which
is sold on a positive guarantee to
cure, they would see the excellent
effect after takincr the first dose.
Price 50c and $1. Trial size free. At
all drug-gists.
I
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, elecant 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 T. Francis, General Passenger
and Ticket Agent, Omaha.
Wow Try This-
It will cost you nothing and will
aurelv do vou erood. it you -iia-re 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. Iry a sample Dottle 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. ana ifrl.UU
The population ofPlatismouth
Is about 10,000, add we would say
at least "neo-half are troubled with
some effection on the throat and
luncs, as those complaints are, ac
cording to staaistics, more numer
ous than others. We would advise
all our readers not to neglect the
opportunity to call on their drug-
; i 1 . U4il I 1.- ..'r, T., 1
sam for the throat ana lungs, lnax
ze free. LargeBottle 50c- ana $1.
Sold by all druggist.
Itch on human and horses animals
cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
sanitary lotion. This never fails.
Sold F. G. Fricke & Co. druggist,
Plattsniouth.
For years the editor of the Burl
ington Junction, (ilo,) 1'ost, 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 year he has been using
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhcea Keraedy whenever occa
sion required, and it has invariably
given mm prompt reiiei. &o anu
cent bottles for sale hy F. G.
Fricke & Co., druggists.
According to the census of 1890,
Chicago takes rank, by virtue of her
population of l,09S,oiG people, as the
eighth largest city 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 lind no better
line than the "Burlington Koute."
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.
PLACES OF WORSHIP.
CATnocic St. Paul's Church, ak. bPtwern
Fifth a ml Sixth. Father Cainey, 1'u.slor
Service : Vhhd at A ;iiil 10 :.' a. m. Sunday
School at 2 :3, with benediction.
The Missori Pacific will sell round
trip tickets May 9 to 14 inclusive, to
Portland, Oregan, the Presbyterian
general aisembly being held their
May 19 to June 2. Tickets good un
til May 19 and returning inside 90
days at $60, going via one. route and
returmng via another. Apply at
ticket office for particulars.
Specimen Cases.
S.H.Clifford, New Castle, Wit
was troubled with neuralgia and
rheumatism, his stomach was dis
ordered, his liver was affected to an
alarming degree, appetite fell away
and he was terribly reduced in flesh
and strength. Three bottles of
Electric Bitters, cured him.
Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg,
111., had a running sore on his lea
of eight years' standing. Used
three bottles of Electric Bitters and
seven bottles Bucklen's t Arnicz
Salve, and his leg is sounded well
John Speaker, Catawba, O, Mad -fiv
large fever sores on his leg doctor
said he whs incurable. One bottl
Electric Bitters and one box Buck
len's Arnica Salve cured him entire-
lv. Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co.
Chkitian. Corner Loeust and Klchth Ms
fervlce inorniiiK and vei.tnji. I-.lder A
(ialioway ia-slor. Sunday rW'limtl 10 a. m.
Epis'-oi'AU St. l-uke's liurcli. corner Third
unit V in-, liev. II U. HuriM-pit. i-artor. ser
vices : 11 A. M . Hi d 7 :.K 1- M . Sunday School
at 2 :.'50 I, m . i
(Jx.K.MAN M KTlloniST- 'j riier Sixth Kt and
(iranite. Kev. llli t. l';iMor. Services : 11 a. M.
and 7 :'J0 1. M. Suunay School lo A M.
I'HKHHYTKKl AN. :-ervices In lew church, cur
ner Sixth and Cramte str. l;cv..J. T. Hatrd,
pastor, siinda -sei ool a! . ; ' ; I rciicliinn
at 11 a. in. ;:.l h i in.
1 he . K. S. K of t hi" church lmetn every
Sahhatli eveiiii'C at 7 :ir in the li.is met t of
the chucrh. All are invited to atti t.u thcec
meetings.
Ft It ST M kthoimst. Sixth St., betweu Main
and I'eurl. Kev I.. K. I'.ritt.P. I. nasi or.
Servicer" : 11 A. M.. H :(hi p. n miikI.i School
9:.'tOA m. l'rayer tneetji k ' eiluesday eveu-Iiik-
i Kit MAN I'llVhliVTKIIHN. of ner M iLI II illld
Ninth, liev W :tle, i;isror. Services usual
hours. Sunday -chool a -.w a. m.
Swkf.msh n:uk;.tiNAI. Craniie, be
tween Fifth and sixth.
Coi.okk.ii Hai'TIsT. Mt. Olive, i :ik. between
Tenth and Kleventh Kev. A. l'.oewell, pas
tor. Set vices 11 a. in. ; mi 7 ::;0 p. in Traycr
ineetiiitr Wednesday evening.
Voij.m Mkn's l iiKi'ii Association
Kooins in V aiertnan block. Main street, (los
pe! meeting, for niei. only, ever Sunday af
ternoon at 4 o'clock. Kooiiih open week day
from 8:3 a. in., i ) 'J : 3o p. i.i.
South 1'auk Tahkkn aclk. Kev .1. M.
Wood, I astor. Services : Sunday School,
.')!. in.: I reaching, 11a in. and 8 p. hi.
irayer ineetlnir Tuesday niirlu ; choir pra
t ice Friday nittht All are welcome.
Tho First step, .
Perhaps you are run down, can'
eat, can't sleep, can't think, can't do
anything to j our satisfaction, and
you wonder what ails you. lou
siioulci need tlie warning, you are
taking the first step into nervous
prostration. You need a nerve tonic
and in Electric Bitters you will find
the exact remedy for restoring your
nervous system to itnormal,healthy
condition. Surprising results tol
low the use of this great Nerve
Tonic and Alterative, Your appe
tite returns, good digestion is re
stored, and the liver and kidnej-s re
sume healthy action. Try a bottle
Price 50c, at F. G. Fricke & Co's
drugstore. 6
At-ittle ttirls Experiencein a LigUt
house.
Mr. and llrs, lvoren irescott are
keepers of the Gov. Lighthouse at
Sand Beach Mich, and are blessed
with a daughter, four years. Last
April she taken down with Measles
followed with dreadful Cough and
turned into a fever. Doctors at
home and at Detroit treated, but in
vain, she grew worse rapidly, until
she was a mere" handful of bones
Then she tried Dr, King's New
Discovery and after the use of two
and a half bottles, was completely
cured. They say Dr. King,s New
Discovery is worth its weight in
gold, 3et you may get a trial; bottle
free at F. G. Frickey Drugstore.
How's This!
We offer 100 dollars reward for
any case of catarrh that can not be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co. Props, Toledo,
Ohio,
We the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last lo years
and belive him pefectly honorable
in all buisness transactions and fin
ancially able to carry out an oblig
ations made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Drug
gist, Toledo Ohio., Walding Kinnan
& larvin, Wholesale druggist lole
do Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cnre is taken inter
nally, action directljr upon the blood
and mucous surtaces or tlie system.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggist; Testimonials free.
HENRY BOECK
The Leading
FURNITURE DEALER
AND
QNDERTAKR.
Constantly keeps on hand everythin
you need to furnish your bouse.
CORNER SIXTH AND MAIN STREET
Plattsmouth
Neb
Lumber Yard
THE OLD RELIABLE.
II. A. WATERMAN k SON
i
PI F LUMBER
8hingles, Lath, Sash,
Doors, Blinds
Caa'eupply everw demand of the city.
Call and get termi. Fourth street
in rear of opera hous.
SAYS
SHE
CAN'T
GET
ENOUGH
OF
W.flUS
SOAP
WANTS iTTOoar fr i i h 1 Alt cm ch& o.
. cm,
C3-0 - TO-
House Furnishing Emporium.
W
HERE you can et your house furnished from
kitchen to pnrlor and at easy tearms. I han
die tlie world renown Haywood baby carriages, also
the latest improved Iteliable Process Gasoline stove
Call and be convinced. No trouble to show goods.
I. Pearleman
OPPOSITE COURT
HOUSE
F Q $ G2
WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI)
A Full and Complete line of
Drugs, Medicines, Paints, and Oils.
DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LIQUORS
Prescriptions Carefuily Compounded at all Hours.
TRY THE
If ;E:j:A:L:D
Jkclvertislmg - &nd - JFofo - Work
EatesOn Ipplica tiorx.
s
A. B. KNOT
BUSINESS 31 A3 AGE IS.
SOI Cor Fifth and Vine St.
PLATTSMOUTH - NEBRASKA
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment.
A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast
A long-tested pain relierer.
Its txse is almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the
Stock Raiser; and by every one requiring an effective
liniment.
No other application compares with it in efficacy.
This well-known remedy has stood the test of years, almost
generations.
No medicine chest is complete without a bottle of Mustang
Liniment.
Occasions arise for its use almost every day.
All druggists and dealers have it. f
I