.Daily Herald.. FIFTH YE All. JVLATTSM0UT1I, NKIIUASKA. SATU 11 DAY, J'lJNK 25, I892. NUM1SKK 233. i i tor ect i o n:co i . u m x . WHO LOVES HORSES LOVES WOMEN. - Jk UNFORGOTTtN. Ltismoutli ill! ' PfflUDEB Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder Ilichcfet of all in leavenintr strength Latest U. o. Oovernment 100a port. re- RURUNUTOS & MISSOURI Rl VER R. R. V TIME TABLE. J OF DAILY PAS3ENGEK TRAINS GOING EAST GOING WEST Not 3 :45 a. m. No ' 5 : 17 P. M, No. 4. No. 8... No. 10.. No. 6 .. io Uii a. a . 7 ;44 p. m . .... 9 MS . m l'i : a. ni No. 3 No. 5,.... So. 7 3 :48 p. in ... xto a. m. ... 5 ;V p at. No. 0. ... 4 :W p.m So, 91 7 -.15 a. in. Bunnell's extra leaves for Omaha about two o'clock I.r Omaha and will accommodate pas sengers. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME CAKP. Ni. 384 Accomodation leaves.... No. 31 arnves.... Trains daily except Sunday. ...10.-55 a. m, ... 4 ;00 p. m. SECRET SUCIET1. - " CASH CAMP No. 332 M. W A. meets evepr recond and Fourth Monday ev-nings in Kitzgerald ball. Visiting neighbors welcome, p o? Hansen. V. C. : F. Wertenbenrcr, W. A., 8. V. Wilde. Cleric. I-APTAIM H E PALIKB CAMP NO 50 V Sons of Veteran, division of Nebraska. l 8. A. meet every Tuesday night at 7 o clock In their hall in Kitlgerald b oek. All sons and visiting comrade are cordially invited to meet with us .1. J. Kurtz, Commander; 1. A. Mc Elwain, 1ft Seargeut. OKDKK OK THK WOKLO. Meets at 7 : 30 every Mrnnav evening at tlie Ora'id Army ball. A. F. Groom, prenident. This Walling, secretary. A O V W X. &-leet tirst ami tlirI dav evening of each mouth at Htr hall. Frank Veniiylea M j.J Uurwick, recorder. GA- K.McConihie Post No. 45 we. ts every Saturday evoniug at 7 : 30 in heir Hall in Kockwood block. All visiting comrades are cordlallv invited to i w with us. Kred Hates. Post Adjniant ; O. F. Nile. Poet Commadder. Kniohts OK PYTHIAS Gauntlet LMle ..No-47. Meets every Wednesday eve ning at their hall over Bennet A Tutt s, all . vbdting knights are cordially Invited to attend. M X Uriftith, C C: Otis Dovey K of K and S. ". AO 17 W No 84 Meet second and four1' Friday evenins in "e."12ntJli?t 1 " O F Hall. M Vondran, M V, E P Brown, recorde-i. kAUOHTEUS OF HEPECCA Bud of Prom rr l i xt.. m mt. tha second and fourth Thursday evenings of each month in the 1 O. u. r. nu- .. G. ; Mrs. John Cory. Secretary. rEGKEE OF IIOXOR-Meets the first U and third Thrurlay evenings of each month in I. O. O. F. hall. Fitzgerald Ijlock. M rs. Addie Smith. Worthy Sister of Honor Mrs. Nannie nuraei, isi j 'ASS LODGE. No. 146.1. 0. O. F. meets ey JiTuJimi nhtnt at their hall In Fitzgerald ery l wpw ""P" ,nrAiat invited o attend when visiting In t!e city. Chris Pet eraen.N. G. ; s. r , wsoorn, dcvici,. OOYAL AROANAM-Cass Council No 1021. R Meet at the K. of P. hall in the Parmele & CralK block over Bennett & Tutts, vislring rTrthren invited. Henry Gerlng. Regent; Thos Walling, Secretary. ..itvn nvva i-HHIsTKlN. -JSOCIATION Y Waterman block. Main Street. Koorns open from 8 o a m to S -JO P a. For men only liospei meowius c cl J o'eioen. For millinery and pattern hats or anything in the line oi riooons, flowers of the latest styles and de signs, call on the Tucker Sisters in Uie anerwoou uivb.. Bnu Sat.k Two desirable rest inta in Orchard Hill addition pioHamnuth. within a block of 4i. Miamiiri Pacific depot. For particulars call on or address The Herald ofhee. KfjUITABLK LIFE INSURANCE CO., OF N, Y. T. II. Pollock, Agent, Mrs F. D. Boe, atAVatkins.left this letter: iy niaiav - - - -if I cause you trouble, but I suffer 0 you uonui i rnthi1 nirrhts are to ine, ahd I am so tired, darling- tne pain win . -- not easy io iu, - have been sick so long. Good-b e, . . i t vourwife. mv liusoaiiu, w" j . . . This is but one of thousanda that irive up. instead of using Dr. Miles wootorfitive Nervine, and being aneedilv cured of their wretched- npafl. liO IO r. u. . p elegant book and trial bottle free. 6 My house and three lots, corner Sixth ana "VgTbuell, Central City, Neb apcE.K.B. COXIl'CTEI HYTilK W.C.T. I'.' The V. C. T. 1J. observed Flower Mission day last Tuesday by dis tributing bouquets of flowers, adorned with white ribbons and texts, to the inmates of the county institutions and the invalids and sick in town. The women's clubs, of which this com. try has two hundred, are sound on the question of non-alcoholic stimulation and brain poisons gen erally. The Nineteenth Century club of Memphis, Tenn., with one hundred members, elegant rooms, and all that goes to make a first rate institution of the sort, recently entertained Joe Jefferson, the Victor, and Joel Chandler Harris, the dia lectician in a new sense. Some thought there should be punch, but Mrs. Watson, the president, said NO, and the club stood by her. Indianapolis has .a council of women including the representa tives of forty-nine local organiza tions. . They work for better sanita tion, cleaner streets and education al improvement. One of their rep resentatives Is president of the Laundry Girls' union, and it is interesting to see this bright woman hobnobbing with 'the president of the Art institute in the common interest of the council. The Baptist Union Theological Seminary at Morgan Park, 111., has made the study of the temperance question a subdivision of the re quited work in the department of ethics. The students are now study ing the relation of the christian to politics. This is a new departure, and the temperance people have ex pressed their wisli that it might be come universal in all theological schools. . " Some of our honored leaders ask "What would become of the prohi bition part' if it should head its ticket with the name that stands first on the ticket of the people's party in' the pending presidential campaign?" The answer is not far to seek: The prohibition (home protection, reform, independent whig, Columbian, or some better name) party would remain in full for;e, with its autonomy complete, its platform, its committees, nation al, stale and local, and its constitu ency, as we believe largely to be in creased this year. But if the other reform party should nominate, in Omaha July jh, as there is reason to believe it will, a man thoroughly- committed to our principles of pro hibition and woman's enfranchise ment, why not put his name on our ticket and thus mass the reform vote of the country? Meanwhile at our own convention, we shall, as a matter of course, nominate a complete ticket, but the lack of lead ing candidates this 3-ear renders it practicable to have an understand ing that if such a coudidate would give place to him rather than retain ac empty honor of holdiag on, with a divided vote among reform ers. If the question is asked: "Why not let the people's party take our candidate instead of we theirs?" Our answer is, "because that party would not do this," and if thetques tion then occur, ''why would it not?,! we must in all candor reply, "Be cause it is not so well schooled as ours; it is younger and less way wise; it is not made up of veterans, like ours, and is less skilled in pa triotic strategy than ours is or ought to be." All of which is humbly offered for what it may be worth; with unal terable loyalty to what our clans and chieftains mav see fit to do in Cincinnati June 29th. The new excise law in the state of New York practically' pives more privileges to the saloon business than it has ever before enjoyed. The liquor capitalist is given absolute power and can take out as many li censes and open as many saloons as he desires, employing men to run them. It is said that Gov. Flow er, of New York, has presented the pen with which he signed this mi quitous bill to the president of the wine, beer and liquor dealers' as sociation as a trophy. The Nation al Temperance Advocate expresses the sentiment of all right thinking people when it says: "If it had been dipped in the bottomless pit, it would have been still more ap propriate." A nasal injector free with each bottle of Shilohs catarrh remedy Price 50 cts. For sale by O II Sny der and F G Fricne. Perhaps Koine Girls Look Unhappy hind Speeders, but Don't lie Too Siirc. The usually apparently endless ftrciim of wagons and carriages, two wliei-lrrs, drags and sulkies was filing along tljo west side drive in Central park, and a wide awake citizen was seated- liesido a reporter looking on, when the wido awake citizen relieved his mind by t his speech: "I never can understand the women and the horsey men how they get along together. Several things are common to most men who are what I call ad dicted to the horse. They either wear the most peculiar and pronounced hats and coats that attract attention from afar, or they pay no heed at all to dre.-s and look shabby even thongh they are rich. Next, they are rough in speech and often profane. Then again they are so fond of what is called 'talking horse' that many of them seem to warm up on no other topic. But last of all, they are all fond of women. That is no new discovery of mine. I suspect that, though women were men's first compan ions, the horse has been coupled with woman in man's admiration ever since the quadrnied attained sufficient devel opment to create the race of horsey men, and it has long been a rule that the men who love horses are also especially fond of women. But what I can't understand is what fun the ladies get out of the sit uation. "I sit here in the park on every fine day and study the case. The horsey men do not talk to the women beside them. They are the most tiresome companions in the world. They never, as a rule, know anything about the scenery they are passing through. They see and en joy nothing but the horse they are driv ing. They sit bent up on their seats with a rapt or a stolid expression of face watching the animal they drive. Whether there is a magnetic tingle in the reins, such as we fishermen feel in the pole that is tugged by a trout, I can not say. "Either that or the mere delight of watching the rise and fall of the horse's back as it warms to its work suffices to satisfy the man, and there he sits, silent, and engrossed about as admirable a companion to the woman by his side as a mummy or a statue, but that is not all. He has taken the precaution to put on big goggles to protect his eyes from dust and flying stones and clots of dirt. She cannot so disfigure herself, and therefore has to hold her head down and strain the rim of her hat to make it help protect her face. Sometimes she has all she can do to keep her hat from blowinj' away. What fun any woman gets out of such a companionship is more than 1 can see. "But," said the wide awake man. "I was once speaking to a woman of this view- of the case, and she plunged me deeper into the mystery. 'A man with a horse has a tremendous advantage over those who have not got horses in gaining favor with j'oung girls,' said she; 'a horse will cover many deficiencies in a man, and a girl will take him and drop a dozen better fellows.' 'Why? I asked, 'are women so fond of horses?' 'Well,' she replied, 'they like men who own horses; such men are not so numer ous as those who don't.' " Is ew York Sun. A Fly That Kills riornei. All white men who visit regions in Africa infested by the tsetse fly have much to say about it. There is now evidence that the tsetse is moving grad ually to more northern regions, and the cause ia supposed to be that South Africa is depleted of its large game, much of which is moving northward to get away from hunters, and the tsetse fly is going with it. The insect is only a little larger than the ordinary house fly, and it resembles the honey bee. Its sting is hardly as annoying as that of the mosquito, but near the base of the proboscis is a little bag which contains its poison. It lives on the blood of animals, and only a few species are fatally affected by its bite. Cattle, horses and dogs, however, can not live when bitten by the tsetse fly. Natives who herd cattle and travelers who depend on horses and oxen must avoid the fly regions or lose their stock. For human beings its bite has no serious consequences. Pittsburg Dispatch. A Perfectly Healthy People. The Parsees are sun worshipers, and it is an interesting sight to see throngs of them on the shore of the bay as the sun rises, apparently from the sea, per forming the simple rites of their religion, the fluttering robes showing their fine figures to the best advantage as the day begins. Their religious practices are simple in the extreme, consisting main ly in strict dietary rules and personal cleanliness. The rigid observance of sanitary laws produces the natural result of perfect health among the adults, large families of active, healthy children and immense numbers of old men, gray bearded, white haired, but erect and princely in their gait and attitude, despite the naturally enervating character of the tropical climate. Cor. Washington Star. Good Dentistry by a Coir. An Oak Hill (Litchfield) man had an aching tooth out in a novel manner the other day. He was. removing a poke from a cow, when the animal threw up her head, striking the bow pin which he held in his hand against one of the lower front teeth, knocking it out. It happened to be the one that had been aching. Winthrop (Conn.) Banner. Tho inorninij hours w'ere merry, . The Rental moon is calm. The frutfrauoe of tho wild roso Is like a healing balm; Tho birds within the woodland Carol a happy soncr. But in my heart abides still A sorrow dorp and strong My poor lost lavJ The glittering streamlet murmurs Over its pebbly bed. The lleecy cloud Is sailing So linhtly overhead; The southern breeze is playing Among tho hazel boughs; I'ut, uli! remembrance dies not Of hopeful, happy vows My poor lost love! The calm lone hills ascending Toward the clear blue sky, OYrlook the smiling vtUJcy Where here at rest 1 lie; . . Those lone hills are tho tmblem Of that far f ilent laud. Where she I loved U resting. One of a countless band My poor lost love! A vision of a yew tree A narrow, turf clad grave Tho winter of a country Where winds tempestuous rave; A lit t lu torrent falling. With moaning, mournful sound. Fills my imagination Far more than all around. My poor lost lovel Ah! gentle. Joyous Nature, Thy wearied, mourning child Delights in thy rejoicing, l'.ut may n7)t be beguiled From thinking of that dear one. With dull heart acbing sore; My own, my vanished loved one. My soul's light evermore My poor lost love! Gentleman's Magazine. A Leaky Sausage Apparatus. A little lady walked into a butcher chop and asked for two pounds of beef steak. When it had been weighed she told the butcher to put it in the mincing machine and chop it up so that she could make meat balls out of it for dinner. The meat expert, quite an ordinary looking man, entirely unsuited to be tho hero of a story like this, followed the instructions, minced the meat and hand ed it in a paper to the customer. Then he turned in his matter of fact way to attend to a man new to housekeeping who was inquiring if he had any nice mutton steak, and if so how much it was a yard. The little lady looked at the minced meat and asked the butcher to weigli it again. He did so, and there was jut 14 pounds. "There!" said the little lady indig nantly. "Your sausage machine has stolen a quarter of a pound of my steak. I've suspected that machine for a long time. You've got to make it good." "I will not," retorted the butcher. "It's a case of natural wear and tear. Maybe some of the weight of the steak has vanished in the process to which it has been subjected, but there's two pounds of notmshment there." "The machine either leaks or there's a secret trap that steals my steak," the little lady insisted. "1 won't take the meat till it weighs two pounds." And she didn't. New York Herald. The Saltest of Salt Lakes. A lake with a salt roof isn't frozen salt, and it isn't underground. On the contrary, this remarkable lake may be seen at any time during the year, fully exposed, being even at its best when the sun is shining directly upon it. This wonderful body of water is one of the saltest of the salt lakes, and is situated near Obdorsk, Siberia. The lake is nine miles wide and seventeen long, and within the memory of man was not en tirely roofed over by the salt deposit. Originally evaporation played the most prominent part in coating the lake over with salt, but at the present time the salt springs which surround it are add ing fast to the thickness of the crust. In the long ago rapid evaporation of the lake's waters left great salt crystals floating on the surface. In course of time these caked together. . Thus the waters were finally entirely covered. In 18T8 the lake found an underground out let into the River Obi, which lowered its surface about three feet. The salt crust was so thick, however, that it re tained its old level, and now presents the curious spectacle of a salt roofed lake. The salt coat increases six inches in thickness every j-ear. The many is lands with which the lake is studded are said to act as braces and to help keep the arched salt crust in position. St. Louis Republic. The Innocent. She stood looking up at him so inno cently from under the sprig of mistletoe that still hung in the parlor as a re minder of the Christmas season; she was 60 pretty, and she was under the mistle toe, and he couldn't help it he had kissed her. It was an ungentlemanly and unmanly thing to do. He knew that now, as he remembered her frightened, startled look, and the miserable excuses he had tried to stammer out; yes, and the tears in her eyes, and the little choking 6ob with which she had received his stum bling apology. "Who could think she would feel like that about it?" he thought; "dear little innocent!" And she after he was gone, she lay down on the sofa and cried. "I like him so much and now to think that he should kiss me at last and then say he didn't mean anything by it. What does he think I stood there for? the little idiot!" Lvf The highest salary drawn by a diplo matist is that of the French embassador to London, which is f 60,000 a year. SIB IE H J. I. Unruh, J'LATTSMOITTII, W A Boeck & Co W K I.N V I T K Y )lT TO C ALL AND SKK Ob LOW PRICKS IX MENS. BOYS, LADIES MISSK A XI) CIIIU)ki:.NS SIIOKS THAT AKK GOING AT BANG D' . jl. jjojzcjk: cj- CO m THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY BROTHERS. C6 Warren j ULIUS PEPPKKBKKG. Among Tobacco, Havana alone pleases the taste of the critical connoisseur. No artificial process can en hance its value. The "Bud" cigars are always made of the finest Havana fillers and has always been esteemed above every other brands made ar sold at Platts mouth. Plattsmouth, Nebraska Admitted the Fact. Newspaper editors have to be very careful in opening their columns for statements. But aware that the Dr. Miles Medical Co. are responsi ble, we make room for the following testimonial from K. McDougall, Au burn, Ind., who for two jrears noticed a stoppage or skipping1 of the pulse, his left side got so tender he could not lie on it, hi9 heart fluttered, he was alarmed, went to different doc tors, found no relief, but one bottle of Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure cured him. The elegant book, "New and Startling Facts," free at F. G. Fricke & Co. It tells all about heart and nervous diseases and many wonder ful curss. 3. M L I.UNRUII h FOU J'IIST CLASS FUUNITU11K. IC IIANDLKS the Whitney baby Curriagen uudj can offer gool bargaum in them ) could not do better than to call mid iiiHpect Ills line of, furniti. ju the way of Parrtir sets, Dining room net,j Bed Iv'oom set, and evenything kept in n first-claS8 establishment. NKBKASKA. 6U, New York. Price 60 ett FOK RELIABLE INSURANCE Gallon SAM'L PATTERSON Plattsmouth - . Nebrask ZDIEZSTTISTIRY" GOLD AND PORCELAIN C&OWMB Bridge work and fine gold work a SPECIALTY. DR. 8TEINAU8 LOCAL as well as other mr estheticsgiven for the painless extraction of i teeth. I a . A.. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald Hlo lSTSEND for c Icoiuo-oatio 8A1TII.1. ... . AM. If ttirto' (I t ' I . ' Mrf tr m w Et C. MEACHAM ARMS CQ ST v n i