month Daily Herald .0 bits 0 FIFTH YKAR. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY. JVLY 8, 1892. NUMBER 213 9 v -A V Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder Highest of allin leavening strength Latest U: S. Government food re port. BURUNQTUN & MISSOURI RI VEIt R. . V TIME TABLE. J OF DAILY PASSENGER TRAINS GOING EAST No. S 5: 17 P.M. No. 4, 10 :34 a. a . No. 8 7 ; 44 p. m No. 10 9 : 45 a. m. No. 6 l'i 5 a. di GOING WEST Nol 3:45 a. m. No. 3 3 :48 p. m No. 5. KX) a. m. No. T ... 6:1 p nri. No. 9 4:40 p.m. No, 91 7:15 a.m. Bushnell's extra leaves for Omaha about two o'clock for Omaha aud will accommodate pas sengers. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME CARD. No. 384 Aeoomodatlon Leaves. No. 383 arrives. Trains dally except Sunday. ....10:55 a. m, .... 4 ;00 p. m. SECRET SOC1ET1& "ASS CAMP No. 332 M. W. A. meets every second and Fourth Monday evninga in Fitzgerald ball. VlsitlnR neighbors welcome. P.C. Hannen, V. C. : P. Wertenberger, W. A., 8. C. Wilde. Clerk. "AFT AIN H E PALMER CAMP NO 60 Hons of Veterans, division of Nebraska, V 8. A. meet every Tuesday night at 7 -JO o'clock In their ball In Fltlgerald block. All sons and visiting comrades are cordially invited to meet with us J. J. Kurtz, Commander; B.A. Wc Klwatn, 1st Seargeut. O" kRDKB OF THE WORLD, Meets at 7 : 30 hall. A. F. Groom. Dresideut. Thos Walling, secretary. AO U W No 8 Meet first and third Fri day evening of each month at I O O h hall. Frank Vermylea M W;JK Barwick, recorder. GA. K.McConlhle Post No. 45 meets every Saturday evoning at 7 : 30 in their Hall in Boekwood block. All visiting comrades are eordlallv Invited to meet with us. Fred Bates, post Adjutant ; G. F. Niles, Post Coinmadder. KNIGHTS OK PYTHIAS Gauntlet Lodge No-47. Meets every Wednesday eve ning at tbelr ball over Bennet 6c Tutt's, all initio K knights are cordially invitel to attend. N J Griffith, C C: Oti Dovey K of K and S. AO IT "W No SI Meet second and fourth Friday evenings in the month at I O O F Hall. M Vondran, M W, E P Brown, recorde-i. TiAUGHTBKS OF PEBECCA Bud of Prom- l' Lodge No. 40 meets the second and fourth Thursday evenings of each month in tbe I" O. O. P. balL Mrs. T. E. Williams, N. O. ; Mrs. John Cory. Secretary. HEGREE OF HONOR Meets the first - and third Thrursday evenings of each month in I. O. O. F. hall. Fitzgerald block. Mn. Addie Smith, Worthy Sister of Honor Mrs. Nannie Burkel, sister secretary. CABS LODGE, No. 146. 1. 0. O." F. meets ev ery Tuesday night at their ball In Fitzgerald block. All Odd Fellows are cordially invited U attend when visiting In the city. Chris Pet ersen.N. G. ;S. F.Oeborn, Secretary. DOTAL AROANAM Cs Council No 1021, Meet at tbe K, of P. ball in the Parmele & Craig block, over Bennett & Tutts, vt siring brethren Invited. Henry Gerlng, Regent; Tbos Walling. Secretary, YOCNG MEN'S UHRISTION- SOCIATIOS Waterman block. Main Street. Rooms open from 8-JOtmto 9 :30 p id. For men on'y Gospel meeting every Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock. According; to the census of 1890, Chicago takes rank, by virtue of her population of 1,098,576 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 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. Mr. Van Pelt, editor of the Craig, Mo., Meteor, went to a drug store at Hillsdale, Iowa, and asked the phy sician in attendance to give him a dose of something for cholera mor bus and looseness of the bowels. says: "I felt so much better the next morning that I concluded to call on the physician and get him to fix me up a supply of the medi cince. I was surprised when he handed mea bottleof Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrlnea Kerne dy. He said he prescribed it regu larly in his practice and found it the best he could get or prepare. I can testify to its efliciency in my case at all events." For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. WHAT THE MEN SA1 Tho Pinkerton Mon Havo Boon Given Thoir Liberty. M UK llLOOUSHED IMMINENT. Why They Are Opposed to the Sher-Iff-.-Anv Attempt to Install Deputies Jn the Works Will Start the Battle. Homestead, Pa., Jury 7. If Sher iff McCleary attempts toenter the enclosure surrounding the Carnegie steel works with a posse of deputies in the morning, a more serious and bloody battle than that of yesterday morning may be expected. This information was not ob tained 'from the leaders of the strike, nor from the committee ap pointed by them to give out infor mation to the press, but from the strikers "themselves. Nearly 100 of them were seen at their homes by a reporter this afternoon, and they were of one mind. The works must stand idle until the strike is de clared off. The high sheriff, the Pinkerton men, or the state militia will not be allowed to take posses sion. Well Armed and Desperate. Since the awful encounter with the Pinkertons the toilers of this town have become more desperate and determined than ever. They have secured from some source a large quantity of arms and ammu nition. Those known to be good marksmen have been selected to act as a band of sharpshooters. They will be concealed and pick off the deputy sheriffs, Pinkertons or mili tia, as the case may be, as soon as a landing is attempted. The strikers are not boisterous, nor do they show signs of excite ment. But there is a more ominous sign, if there is anything of truth in the saying, a calm precedes a storm. Fortunatel3' the strikers are not all Hungarians and Slavs. Fortunate ly the men in the lead are men who know their success depends largely on their bravery. But the talk of the men them selves will show which way the witid is blowing. They gave their honest opinions, unbiased by any crowd or agitator, for they were away from their companions and at home. "We will see that the works are not harmed, and that nothing in the way of property belonging to Mr, Carnegie is destroyed, unless it be the boats used in attempting tq land officers," was the reply made ly D. Corker, a steel worker, yesterday "The managers of the works know this as well as we do. What they want is to put the sheriff in posses sion of the,works and then the coun ty will be res'posible tor any dam age that may result from any dis turbance that may follow. It will insure him against loss and we property owners will have it to pay. You see, as soon as the managers install a sheriff at the- works, they will then bring in the 'black sheep.' They know this may incite the strikers to riot and that serious damage to the works may follow. They know that many of us own our homes, and that we do not care to incur heavy taxes to pay for dam ages done to the works while the sheriff is in possession. We do not fear that thePinkertons or any oth er body of officers will gain posses sion of the works, but we do fear another battle. Ready to Die If Need Be. "Not that we are cowaids, for every man of us is prepared to sac rifice his life if necessary in this struggle for what we believe to be just and right. But we are fearful of the sorrow it is bound to bring to many of our homes. We are not thirsting for blood, but we will not stand idly by and see the bread wrested from the mouths of our wives and children without making a vigorous effort to prevent it." This story in substance was re peated scores of times by men in all parts of the town and men from every branch of work at the mill. Ma ii3T added that arms had been supplied and that they had secured plenty ot ammunition to use in case an attempt is made to put the works in the hands of the high sheriff of A lleghany county. The expression of the men found backing from the aged paator of one of the Methodist churches here, who in a very remarkable sermon preached over the body.of Johu Morris, the best known and most popular of the killed workmen, said in unmistakable words that in his opinions the Pinkertons had been sent here for blood if that were ne cessary for the non-unionization of the mills. He gave commendation to the workmen and evidently is firm in his belief that to Mr. Frick is to be attributed all the trouble between the employers and employed, and spoke of him in scathing terms as a man with no more sensebility than a toad. His speech aside from the negative feature of the almost un natural quiet and hush of the town, was the event of the day. There were three funerals during the afternoon and it was not un naturally expected that they might culminate in some sort of disturb ance, but they passed off with all the decorum that should attend such a solemn celebration. Up to a late hour there are no deaths in addition to those named. Three men are in a very dangerous condition and it is doubtful whe ther or not they will recover. V WHAT THE CARNEGIE STRIKE IS ABOUT. As we understand the situation at Homestead three questions are in- volved: 1. A reduction in the scale from $23 to $23 for 4x4 Bessemer billits. 2. A change in the date of the ex piration of the scale from Tune 30 to December 31. 3. A reduction in tonnage rates at those furnaces and mills ; where important improvements have been made and new machinery has been added that has greatly increased their output and consequently the earnings of the workmen. Where no such improvements or additions have been made no reduction is asked. American Manufacturer. PATH'S WONDROUS WARDROBE. Her Collection of Kiueraldit Pats to Shame the Majority of Royal Gems. Patti's wardrobe is something that fashion writers rave over. At every performance she of course wears the newest concert costume. In the opera that follows 6he wears the dress requi site for the part she plays. The concert costumes are the productions of the first Parisian milliner, and one may be sure that the wily milliner, getting an ordei from Patti, would exert himself for this queen of song as he would for no crowned head. Her jewels are the most elaborate worn by any woman outside of royaly, and even royalty s gems fade before hex matchless collection of emeralds. In some concerts Mme. Patti wears a cos tume of pink and silver brocade, ovei which is worn a delicate green satin d imperatrice. With this costume sht wears a dog collar of emeralds set with diamonds, a bouquet of roses made of diamonds and emeralds completely cov ering the front of her bodice. Also tiara, garniture and comb of emeraldw and diamonds. This bit of jeweled orna ment is said to be worth over $50,000. It is a peculiarity of Patti's that she will wear nothing in the way of decoration but what is absolutely real. The jewel box and jewels in "Faust' are her own, and the pearls are positively real. Her courier, whenever she sings, is on the stage, waits for madame in the wings and accompanies her from the stage to the dressing room that is, when her careful husband, Signor Nicolini, it not around. He is very careful of his precious wife, and she is never on the stage but that he is an intent observer of everything that is going on. Patti's passion, of course, is her appear ance before the public. She is one of those creatures who, without the excite ment of public applause, could hardly exist. The applause of the public is positively meat and drink for her. There is no debutante more eager to know whether she has done well than is Patti at this day. She comes off tht stage smiling and pleased. . Her eyes sparkle, and the first thing she asks her husband is: "Well, was that good? Listen how pleased they are." On being reassured that she is the darling of the public's heart, she is in an ecstasy of pleasure, and for the next performance she is all the more eager to do her best. It is this wonder ful desire to be at her best that uphold., her in her magnificent art. There are few people who have achieved the fortune, the fame and the great notoriety that Patti has who would deny themselves the many human priv ileges that she does merely to preserve her voice and to be able to maintain the matchless charm of her art. At every hotel where rooms are en gaged for herself special stipulation is made and rooms selected for her servants as well. The price is never an object. Mme. Patti and suite generally occupy about ten rooms and a parlor in every city in which she sings. She gives two concerts a week, and never travels on the day she sings. She requires perfect rest and refuses to speak to any one on the day of a concert. Spare Moments. THE BELLBUOY. Like a restless, troubled spirit. Self accused beyond excusing, becking rest where none la offered. Vainly striving for release Writhes the bellbuoy In tbe ocean As each wave in mad commotion buffet it without relenting. Or a whispered word of Sunbeams may each day caress It, Or the storm king howl above it. To each one the wall goes upward k In a never ending moan. And the glistening sea galls hear It As they hover and pass near it. And the rocky shores repeat it In a muffled undertone. Oh, tbe pathos of Its life song. Changing not as years roll onward Its one note of weary wailing Outward borne unceasingly! Prisoner in Neptune's clasping. Chafing under cord and hasping Angel thou of mercy! warning Countless sails that pass thee by. Katharine H. Terry in Good Housekeeping Polite Photographers. The knack which French photogra phers, and especially those of Paris, possess in relieving their sitters of a constrained and distressed look while sitting for their portraits has long been the. envy and perplexity of photogra phers ' of other nations. An American photographer, on a recent visit to Paris, took pains to study the means by which this very desirable result was reached. He reports that it all lies in a very simple device, which well illustrates the nature of the Frenchman. When a lady, for instance, la sitting to a photographer for. a portrait, the operator does not, in a perfunctory manner, coldly request her to "Look pleasant now, ma'am!" He says to her. in the most natural and graceful man ner in the world: "It's quite unnecessary to ask madam to look pleasant; she could not look otherwise!" The lady of course acknowledges the compliment with her most gracious and highbred smile. "Click I" goes the camera and the picture is obtained, re vealing the sitter at her highwater mark, as it were. Youth's Companion. How a Prisoner Escaped. If we will only rightly use little things it is surprising how much may some times be done with them. A vizier, hav ing offended his royal master, was con demned to lifelong imprisonment in a high tower, and every night his wife used to come and weep at its foot. "Go home," said the husband, "and find a black beetle, and then bring a bit of butter and three strings one of fine silk, one of stout twine, another of whipcord and a strong rope." When she came provided with every thing he told her to put a touch of but ter on the beetle's head, tie the silk thread around him and place him on the wall of the tower. Deceived by the smell of butter, which he supposed was above him, the insect continued to as cend till he reached the top, and thus the vizier secured the silk thread. By it he pulled up the twine, then the whip cord, and then a strong rope, by which he finally escaped. Detroit Free Press. The Earth to Be Like the Bloom. The water of the earth is all destined to disappear from the surface of the globe by being absorbed by subterranean rocks, with which it will form chemical combinations. The heavenly spheres exhibit sufficiently striking examples of such an evolution. The planet Mars shows what will become of the earth in some thousands of centuries. Its seas are only shallow Mediterraneans of less surface than the continents, and these do not appear to be very higli; and in the appearance of the iaoon, all cracked and dried up, we have a view of - the final state of the earth for the absorp tion of the water by the solid nucleus will be followed by that of the atmos phere. Popular Science Monthly. The Modern Way. In India they drown a great many of the girl babies. li, is a time honored custom, but not universally approved from a therapeutic standpoint. In civ ilized countries they put corsets on the girl babies, which brings about the same results, without the shock, which is a sure concomitant of the Indian method. Moreover, babies last longer under the modern system, and it is especially prized by people who prefer to keep their girl babies for a few brief years. Detroit Tribune. What a Flood Leaves Behind. The worst feature of a flood is the fact that the river is apt to leave a deposit of sand, varying in thickness from one inch to ten feet, over a large extent of land that was formerly fertile. In the flood of 1838 a great many farmers in the American Bottom on going back to their premises after the subsidence of the waters, found their property covered with river sand in beds so thick that two or three years elapsed before good crops could be raised. St. Louis Globe Democrat. The Place for Him to Call. Mrs. Witherby Your old clothes man was around today. Witherby (grimly) Tell him next time that, if he wants to look at any old clothes of painu, he will have to call at the office and see them on me. Ex change. How Ants Are Eaten. Ants are eaten bv several of the minor nations. In Egypt they are eaten raw, with sugar; in Brazil they are served with a resinous sauce, and in East India 6tewed in buffalo grease or fried in butter. St. Louis Republic. prog H Parties EfSSfle J. I. Unruh, PLATTSMOUTH, F Q WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI) A Full and Complete lino of Drugs, Medicines, DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LIQUORS Prescriptions Carefully Compounded at all Hours j. PEABtEWAW'S House Furnishing Emporium. t "T TT T1IERE you can get V V kitchen to parlor die the world renown Haywood baby carriages, aleo the latest improved Reliable Process Gasoline stove Call and be convinced. No trouble to show goods. m I. Pearleman OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE How's This! We offer 100 dollars reward for any case of catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F.T. Cheney & Co. Props, Toledo, Ohio, We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and belive him pefectly honorable in all butsness transactions and fin ancially able to carry out an oblig ations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Drug gist, Toledo Ohio., Waldmg Kinnan St Tarvin, Wholesale druggist Tole do Qhio. Hall's Catarrh Cnre is taken inter nally, action directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the sj'stem. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggist; Testimonials free. For Sale or Trade A desirable lot in Plattsmouth. Will sell for cash or will take a good buggy horse and horses in exchange. For particulars call on or address this office. tf Colorado'a Cool Retreats. During the "tourist season" from June until September the Burling ton route has on sale round trip tickets, at very reduced rates, to the principal resorts of Colorado. To Den ver, Colorado Springs, Manitou, Pueblo and Fetes park (the most attractive spot in the whole state) particularly low rates are in force, July and August are the best months in which to visit Colorado's unrivalled resorts, to all of which the Burlington, with its connec tions, offers unequalled service. The local agent will be glad to give you any desired information. Notice. I will be at the meat market on pay day to nettle up all accounts due the late firm of Sampson Bros., and would like to see all who owe us for meat on that day or the day after. Thos. Sampsox. m J. I.UNRUH FOR FIRST CLASS FURNITURE. K IIANDI.KS the Whitney baby Carriage and can offer good bargains in them desiring to furnish a house complete could not do better than to call and innpect his line of furniture, in the way of Parlor sets, Dining room sets, j Bed Kooni set, and evenything kept in a first-clasu establishment. N Kill A SKA. 02, Faints, and Oils.;-. o your house furnished from and at easy tearms. I han 1UI ai DE1TTISTET I.tv HOLD AND PORCELAIN CKOWNH.,1 . . . . . .Will Bridge work una fine cola work - OTDT7PT A T TVti. OX JJ y i- -TX J A er OK. STEIN AUS LOCAL as well a otbei eetheticsKlven for tiie nainless extractlcr r t leein, ; a A. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald - lit U A iULIUS PKPPKRBKRG. a fCl. m sad Among Tobacco, Havarr alone pleases the taste me critical connoisseur. . t tfl arfifirial rrAfp u u pan I hance its value. The "Buc,,-j cigars are always maae .vh the finest Havana fillers ar"b: has always been esteemt- above every other brand 1 made ar sold at Piatt m mouth. . t- Ite . Plattsmouth, I JOHN A DA VIES, ATil ATTORNEY-AT LAW Correspondence Solicited. - Office in Uuion bJ ii p Plattsmouth, - Neb fir fe I I s