ferald. moutn I l'J.ATTSMOUTII,NHJnt.ASKA. THURSDAY. JULY I I. 1892. N UM UK It 218 FIFTH YEAll. Daily to aits t MUM Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder Highest of all in leaveningstrength Latest U. S. Government food re port. UURUNUTUX Si M ISSUURI Rl V ER R. ' OF DAILY PASSENGER TRAINS GOING ERST GOING WEST Nol 3 :45 a. m. No. 3 3 :JS p. l No. 5. : m- o T 6 :l P No. 9 :Hii.m. No. 91 7 :15 a. m. ft : 17 v. m, 10 :34 a. n.. ....7 :44 p. m 9 : 45 a. ni. Vi a. Hi No. 4.. No. 8.. No. HI. No. U . Rushnell's extra leaves for Omaha about two o'clock IoroT."uaa..a U1 accommodate pas BiiKrs. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME CAKD. No. 3M Acoomodation Leaves.. No Si ' arrives.. Trains daily except Sunday. .10.-R5 a. m, . 4 ;W p. ni. SECRET SOVIET 1 1, meets every CAwrmrth Monday ev-.,u.. i I "$ Hansen. V. C. : l". Weinberger. W. A.. B. C. Wilde, Clerk. rAFTAIN II K PALMER CAMP NO B0 CASnVot Veteran, vision of Nebraska U H A meet every Tuesday i-ipht at 7 :. o clock in their I ball in f itlneral.l block. All sons and lVlU.urade. are cordially invited to meet with us J. J. Kurtz. Commander ; b. A. Mi Klwain, 1ft Beargeiit. y-viriivu oF THE WOULD, Meet at' 7 : 30 0 donnay evening "to'tf&ul ball. A. V. tirooni. president. Thos waning, secretary. AO V W No8-Mcet first ami thir.l Kri; da v evening of ct ".? 'Wick hall. Frank Verinylea l W ; J k "arw ,tK recorder. w Mpf'nnihie Font No. 45 meets every G A?daV "vuu.V at 7 : 30 in their Hall In Kockwood tUk. Ah visiting comrades are i-iWdllllv invited to i.eet with us. t red B.ites, FoA AdjnLut ; . F. Niles. Post Comnmdder. KNIGHTS OF FYT1IIAS Oauntlet Lodge Xo-47. Meets every Wednesday, eve i.imaTtlieir hall over fietmet & Tut f. all tfrittaK knights are cordially in v.ted to attend. 1 jf Griffith, C C: Otis Dovcy Jv of K and S. AO it w No tW Meet second and fi'iir'1 Friday evenings in the tnontli at 1U O F llallf M Vondran. M W, K P Brown. recordeJ. TAAUGIITERS OF REBECCA Mtt oi rrom I ir . . . mania ti se-mid and fourth Thursday eveni.s of each month in thel.o.o. r. iijhl m. - - ti. : Mr. John Cory. Secretary. rEGKEK OF 1IONOK fleets me a nd t h irl Th ru rsd ay X l ,f f "5 : . . , a J ?" Addie Smith, Wort hy Sister of Honor Mrs! Nannie Burkel, sister secretary. CASS LODGE, No. 146. 1. 0. O. F. meets ey A TeBdav niKht at their hall in Fitzgerald bllci All Odd Fellows are cordially invited toSnendVnen visiting in the city. Cnri ret wenVN. G. ; S. F. Qyborn, Secretary. DOYAI. AltCANAM-Crf Council No 1021. R Meet at the K, of f. hall in t he Parmele At Praie block over liennett & Tutt. visiniiK brethren invited. Henry Oerliis. Kegent ; Thos Walling. Secretary. YOU KG MEN'S CIIKISTION SSOCIATION Waterman blck. Main Strret. Kimiiiis open Irom :.w a m to 9 -Jit v For meu only Oospel meatiug every Sunday afternoon at 4 o'elock. According to the ceiismsi of ISiX), Chicago takes rank, by virtue of her population of 1,098,57(5 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 "Hurlington 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. 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. He says: "I felt so much belter the next morning that 1 concluded to call on the physician and get him to fix me up a supply of the medi cince. I was surprised when lie handed mea bottieof Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Piarrhtea Reme 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 efficiency in my case at all events." For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. MILLS ARE LOADED Dosporato Minors to Create Havoc With Dynamito. STKIKhUS F.LOW VI UKIWJLS. If Troops Make Their Appearance tho Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mines Will Ce Blown Up -The Strikers Can not Escape. Wakplkk, Idaho, July i:i.--Out-wardly all is quite in the Coeur d' Alene district, but it is the quiet of desperation. The strikers yester day had a day of uninterrupted vic tory, with the result of complete possession of the mines and mills of Hunker Hill and Sullivan. The non-union men will be drummed out of the country and the strikers are Hushed with victory. They talk confidently of meetingthe militia and regular troops and will light them with rifles and dy namite. . Hunker Hill and Sullivan mills are now loaded with dynamite and could be destroyed on a minute's notice. The same state of affairs exists at Sierra Nevada. It is reported that dynamite has been sent down the railroad track to blow up the bridges to prevent the troops from coming into the country. Armed men have left the town, it is said, to intercept the cavalry f.-om Fort Pencer. Mills are Loaded. Wallace, Idaho, July is. The night passed without incidents, the miners resting on their arms. . The colored troops arrived at Mul lans at 2 o'clock this morning. It is feared if they come to Wal lace every mine of the associations will be blown up. KtTorts are being made to hold the troops at Mullans to avoid this. All the mills of the mines where non-union men have been employed are charged with magazine and fuse. At a signal it is said all will be blown up, but only in the event of troops arriving on the scence. consternation prevails. liridges were blown up at 9:30. No trains are running between Wallace and Mullane. SURRENDER OR FIGHT. Bunker Hill aud Sullivan are to surrender at 1 o'clock this after noon. If not surrendered at that time the battle will begin. If sur rendered the troops will be allowed to come and take possession of the Coucr d'Alene countty. United States Troops. .Vancouver, Wash., July I'M Five compauiesof the Fourteenth United States infantry leff thitf morning for the Coeur d'Alene mines b' special train. Bridges Blown Up. Spokane, Wash., i Jul' 13. The strikers blew up the railroad bridge at Mullane this morning to prevent the troops from Missoula from ef fecting an entrance. All the Couer d'Alene mines are filled with explosives preparatory to a general destruction. . She Surprised the Youngster. Two boys, not quite in their teens, got into a quarrel in Twenty-third street, near the Fifth Avenue hotel, the other day, and after exhausting their respec tive vocabularies they fell to pummeling each other, viciously.. They were of the toujjh siecies, lnt h physically and social ly. Their altercation naturally attract ed much attention in that thoroughfare, and a score or more persons stopped to watch the conflict. Nobody showed any desire to interfere until along came a bright and breezy tailor made girl, walk ing as erect as a soldier and with a quick, springy step. She took in the tight at a glance, and stopping within an arm's length of the combatants she commanded them to desist. Each hoy, with scant breath, conveyed to her in a rude, slangy way his desire that she should mind her own business. "What's that you sayV" said the young woman, as she stretched out two gloved hands toward tho boys. 'Olind my own business, eh?" and the next instant the two hands were drawn back with a vigorous jerk, Vith a hoy dangling from each hand. With a firm grip on their coat collars the athletic girl knocked the heads of the bellicose boys together as easily as if she were handling a pair of three pound dumbbells. Then she shook out what little breath had re mained in the lads and threw them away from her, one toward Fifth avenue and the other toward Sixth avenue. The lads gasped and made as much haste as they possibly could to get away from the pretty amazon. New York Times, I'aylnu Women the Same an Men. Tho school board of St. Paul has alol ished tho distinction of sex in the mat ter of salaries. Hereafter the women teachers will receive, equal pay with tho men. In establishing tin schedules of future compensation for tho teachers of tho high school and the manual labor school no sex distinction is made. Here after it will bo purely a question of ca pacity, individuality aud eflieieucy. The schedule adopted reads: Grade 3 First year, ifS.lO; second year, $1,0)0; third year, $1,000; fourth year, $1,100; fifth year, $1,100; sixth year, $1,200. Grade 2 First year, $1,000; second year, $1,100; third year, $1J0(5; fourth year, $1,:!00; filth year, $1,400; sixth year, $1,500. Grade 1 First year, $1,000; second year, $1,200; third year, $1,400; fourth year, $1,500; fifth year, $1,000; sixth year, $1,700; seventh year, $1,800; eighth year, $1,000; ninth year, $2,000. Thus, no matter whether tho teacher bo man or woman, tho salary for the samo service- will bo identical. Boston Woman's Journal. Animal Wisdom. In moving to a hew place of residence we found on the premises a large cat which had been left there by the former occupant. She was not of the real do mestic kind, but lived principally in the barn, occasionally venturing into the house to obtain her food. On one oc casion, much to the surprise of my wife, she came up to her and mowed several times, turning each time toward tho door leading to the barn. This she re peated until Mrs. N was induced by curiosity to follow her, when she led the way to a barrel half full of straw, up the side of which she climbed, all the time mewing and looking at my wife, and there were live kittens, cold and dead. Mrs. N remarked, "They are cold and dead, pussy," and tho cat went away satisfied. She would sometimes scratch the chil dren, and wo were fearful she would seriously injure them, and one day I said in her presence that "I would shoot her." She- was missing for about six weeks, and of course I had then "got off the notion." Forest and Stream. Why His Eyesight Failed. Dr. Optycuss You aro standing at eighteen feet. Can you read these letters? Patient No, sir. Dr. Optycuss Approach two feet nearer. Now? Patient No, sir. Dr. Optycuss This is strange! Come four feet nearer. Now? Patient No, sir. Dr. Optycuss Most remarkable case I ever met. Stand four feet away from tho chart. Can you read now? Patient No, sir. Dr. Optycuss Great Pisistratus! ami mad? Young man, you are tho most re markable case that has como within my experience. You conquer me. You can know more about yourself than I do. Have "you any idea why you can't read these letters? Patient I never learned to read. London Tit-Bits. The Tall Hat in England. No one ever sa-s a good word for the tall hat. It is reviled and abused on all sides, and yet it holds its own against all comers with an immobility worthy of a better cause. Nearly all the syn onyms and they are many adopted to designate the tall hat are of a disrespect ful character. Men liken it to a stove pipe or chimney pot; the name "topper" itself is decidedly lacking in dignity. But though we are told that nothing kills like ridicule, ridicule has wholly failed to overthrow the dominion of the tall hat. If the last man be an English man, we can well imagine that his im pavid front will face the ruin of the universe beneath the shelter of a silken tile. London Globe. Images from Easter Island. In the etlinological collection in the University museum are two carved im ages from Easter island. They are made of hard native toromiro wood, with eyes of bone and obsidian and breastbone and ribs sharply defined. These figttres have been called house hold gods, "but it is said they were never worshiped, although they are regarded as representations of spirits. It is said they were meant to represent deceased chiefs and persons of note, and were given a place of honor at feasts and cer emonies. Philadelphia Ledger. Jonrney of a Italloon. A Harrisburg boy sent up in a balloon on the Fourth of July last year a bottle with his name and address in it, request ing the finder to return it to him. About ten days ago the bottle was picked up by a gentleman on the shore of Lake Superior, near Duluth, who im mediately forwarded it to the lad. Every year sees diminution in the im portance of the walled city as a military obstacle. Nuremburg is to lose her walls so that the modern idea of defense by seDarate fortresses can be carried out. Satan's Sign Manual. A Bates county farmer saw a holt of lightning strike in the center of one of his fields, and being curious to see the effects of the stroke visited the spot. He found the subtle fluid had left its mark in the shape of an enormous "D"' of an angry red color, and had no doubt that it was the sign manual of the arch fiend himself. Kansas Citv Journal. CUPID AND THE CAT. A Suffering Feline Came Between Twe Souls That Heat One. Ho lives in Evans ton, and during the Xast two years ha been paying hia ad dresses to one of the most charming girls on tho north side. The wedding day has not been named, but their en gagement was announced almost a year ago. Several weeks ago, while they were walking home from church one Sunday night, they ran across a cat that was wailing piteously on a doorstep. "Do you hear that, Jim?" she exclaimed. grasping his arm with a closer grip. "1 here s something the matter with that poor little pussy. I'm going to see what ails it." "Nonsense!" he replied. "Let's go on; the cat will take care of itself." "No; let's see what is the trouble." Without more ado the young woman ran up to the cat and was horified to find that the animal had evidently been run over by a wagon, as its 6pine was dislocated and it was barely able to crawl by dragging its hind legs. "She's done for, sure enough," com mented the Evanstonian. "She won't last long. Come on, now." The girl suddenly straightened up to her full height. "Do you mean to say that you would leave any animal to suffer like this? There is a drugstore on the next comer. Run over there and buy an ounce of chloroform. Hurry, now, there's a dear!" "Nonsense! You don't suppose I'm going into the business of doctoring sick cats on the streets at night, do j-ou? Be sensible." "And you don't suppose I'm going to let this cat suffer here, do you? Go and bring me a bottle of chloroform in stantly." "I won't do it." "But I insist." "You certainly can't be in earnest?" "I certainly am. If you don't do it I will gq after it myself." "You want to make me appear ridic ulous?" "Hurry up, dear!" For a moment the 3'oung man did not stir. The blood rushed to his face, and he began to grow angry. "See here!" he exclaimed. "This is carrying mat ters entirely too far. I will permit no woman to make a fool of me like this. I'll get your chloroform if you really in sist, but I warn you you'll never have a chance to do such a trick again. I will never have anything to do with you again. Mark that!" "Get the chloroform." "If I do everything is over between us." "All right; bring it." Two minutes later a fine lace hand kerchief saturated with the anaesthetic was applied by a fair, white hand to the nose of the suffering brute and the wail ing ceased. Here this story should end. A regard for the truth, however, compels the ad dition of the statement that the young man thus far has actually carried his threat into execution and the prospect of that wedding grows dimmer and dimmer. Chicago Mail. A Successful Ruse. A couple of thirsty fellows who had been loafing all the forenoon on the quays at Stockholm were struck with a brilliant idea. They borrowed an old brandy keg and half filled it with water. Then one of them slung it on his shoul der and took it to the nearest spirit vault, where he 6tated that he had been sent by one of the skippers in port to have the keg filled with brandy. "The captain is sorry he only got it half full yesterday and thinks it would be better to have it filled to the top." The keg was accordingly held under the . tap till it was full, and the fellow hoisted it on his shoulder, but as he was about to walk off with it he was stop ped by the clerk, who demanded pay ment for the spirits. "Hasn't our skipper a running ac count?" "Certainly not." "Bless me! I must have gone to the wrong shop! There is nothing for it but to empty half the keg back again." This was no sooner said than done; after which our hero merrily went in search of his companion. Dagblaedt. The Indian Attendants on the Queen. The Indian attendants who now inva riably accompany the queen are a source of great trouble to the court officials who have charge of the various arrange ments. The Indians require to travel by themselves in a separate saloon, and their meals and all refreshments must be served to . them in the train at the stopping stations instead of their going to the buffets with the Buite and the European servants. Special arrangements have also to be made for the Indians at the hotels, which cause much bother and considerable ex tra expense. Yet they have practically no duties and are perfectly useless ex cept for show. London Tit-Bits. Taking Off a Horse Collar. It is not always ignorant persons who fail to observe closely. Coleridge and Wordsworth took a drive with a friend. After great difficulty the horse was un harnessed, except they could not get the collar off. One of them said it was a "downright impossibility" and that the horse's head must have grown since the collar ova s put on. "La, master," said a girl, "turn the collar upside down." Housekeeper. H Parties irZrZ J. I. Unruh, PLA TTSMOUTH, F Q miam & QO WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI) A Full and Drugs, Medicines, Faints, and Oils. DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES AND PURE LIQUORS Prescriptions Carefully Compounded at all Hours. House Furnishing Emporium. WliEliE yon can get your house furnished from kitchen to parlor and at easy teanna. I lian die the world renown Haywood baby carriages, alfio the latest improved Reliable Process Gasoline etove Call and be convinced. No trouble to show goods. I. Pearleman OIPIPOSITE 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. J. 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., Walding Kinnan & Tarvin, Wholesale druggist Tole do Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cnre is taken inter nally, action directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. 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 exchanire. i For particulars call on or address this office. tf Colorado's 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 Denver, Colorado Springs, Manitou, Pueblo and Estes park (the most attractive Bpot 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 settle 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 fter. Thos. Sampson. M J. I. UNKUII w FOR FI11ST CLASS FUliNl TURK. E HANDLES the Whitney baliy Carriages and can offer good bargains in tbem desiring to furnish a lioune complete could not do better than to' call aud inspect hit) Hue of furniture, in the way of Parlor sets, Dining room net, Hed Room set, and evenything kept in a brut-clans establishment. NEBRASKA. Complete line of OOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS Bridge work and fine gold work a SPECIALTY. OH. STKINAUS LOCAL &a well aa otner an. estheticsKlven for the painless extraction of teetti. 0. A. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald RU J ULIUS PEPPERBERG. 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 eeteemed above every other brand made ar sold at Platts mouth. Plattsmouth, Xebrask JOHN A DA VIES, ATTORNEY AT LAW Correspondence Solicited. Office in Uuion Blook Plattsmouth, - Nebk aska V