mouth Daily Herald.. I FIFTH YFAU. PLATTSMOUTH, N K 15 K A SKA. WEDNESDAY. JULY 27, 1892. NUMBER 25J IXIS 1 0 (I 1 PWJBEB Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder Highest of all in leavening strength Latest U.S. Government food re port. N UVHi.lSUTON & MISSOUltl UlVEll It. V JTIME TABLE. J OF IIAILY I'ASSEXGKK TRAINS C01NG EAST GOING WEST Xol... 3 :45 a. m No. 2 : 17 Y. M, No. 4 ioirt,B. No. 8 7 ; 44 p. m No. 10 9 : a. ni No. 6 12 a. ni n. j. 3:4 p. Ml No. 5. : a. m. No. 7 6 'V V "' No. 9 :) p.m No. 91 7 :15 a. in. Hnhixira Htra Irave for Omaha about two o'clock tor Omaha una ill accommodate as- iiKrt. MISSOL'Ill PACIFIC UAll.WAY TIME CAKD. No. 34 Accomodation leaves... .No.WI arrives... trains daily except Sunday. .lo.-.is a. in . 4 ;UU p. in SECRET SX.'lETtt, "ASH CAMP No. 332 M. W. A. meets every nfroiiil anil Fourth Monday evuiiiK In yitzeerald hail. Visittitir iieinhior welcome ! if" llanxeu. V. O. : P. WerteubenriT. W. A. . C. Wilde, Clerk. CAPTAIN II K PAI.JIKR CAMP NO 80- jUhib of Veteraiif, division of Nebraska, I 8. A meet every Tuenilay iiikiu al 7 isu o ciock In their ball in Htlt'ral il I) nek. All sonsaiid ibUIn comrade are coidially iuvitel v OKUKK OF TIIK WORLD. Meets at 7 : 30 every Monnay eveniii; at the (irand Army hall. A. F. Orooni, president, Thos Walling, secretary. p AO V W No 8 Meet first and third Fri; duv eveninj; of eieri ntotith at KIO K hall, Frank Venuylea l V; J Burwick, recorder. -. GA. K.McConihie Post No? 45 meets every Saturday evounitr at 7 : JO in their Hall in Kockwood l.Wk. All visit iiic comrades are cordially invited to meet with us. Fred Bates, -.K.f !' " J. F. N'ilrs, Font Com madder. xiuutsof "'THL-... ,let Lojjje ao-4i. Meets every Vv cu.LV nine: at their hull over Uentiet Sc Tutt's, all visMtinj; knights are cordially invited to attend. M X Griflitli, C C: Otis Dovey K of K and . A O IT W Xo St Meet second and fourth Friilav eveninirs in the montli at I O O F Hall. M Voiulran, M W, E P Brown, record eJ. l-AUOHTF.KS OF KKREOCA- bud of Prom- I 4. I Jul irt Vn 40 meet the second and fourth Thursday evenings of each mouth in the V O. O. K. h:dl. Mis. T. E. llllains, N H. I Mrs. John Cory. Secretary. DEGREE OK HONOR Meets the first and third ThriirtUay evenings of each month in I. O. O. F. hall, Fitzgerald block. Mrs. Addie Smith, Worthy Sister of Honor Mrs. Nannie Uurkel, si.-ter secretary. CASS LODGE. No. 14C.I. O. O. F. meets ev ery Tuesday nii?ht at their ball In Fitzgerald block. All Odd Fellows are cordially invited to attend when visiting in Oe city. Chris Pet ejrjsarK.-M.-rS. F. Unborn, Secretary. ROYAL AKCANAM Ca Council No 1021, Meet at the K, of P. hall in the Parinele & CraiK block over lienneu et iuiis, visinng brethren invited. Heury Gerlng. Kegent ; Thos Waning, secretary. TTuU.ttS MEN'S CHKISTIONHtKMATIOS X Waterman block. Main Street. Kooip.a open from 8 i a m to 9 to l in. For men only Gospel meeting every Sunday alternoou at o'elock. According to the census of 1890, Chicago takes rank, by virtue of her population of 1,098,376 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 uo 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. He says: "I felt so much better the next morning that I concluded to call 011 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 Diarrho?a Reme dy. He said he prescribed it regu larly in his practice and found it the best lie could get or prepare. I can testify to its efficiency in my case at all events." For sale by F. G. Fricke Sc Co. Complaint was to-day made to the Hoard of Health aa to the condition of the alley back of the Union block. Mrs. Frank I lowland presented her husband with an 8 pound boy baby yesterday. Fred is setting up the cigars to-day. The ladies of the Kpiscopal church have an Edison phonograph on exhibition at Young's old stand, ind they are also serving ice cream to-day. Mrs. Iievdewander of Ft. Scott, Kansas, is the guest of Mrs. C. JI. Parmele. Mrs. H. lived here twenty- seven years ago and this is the first time she has been hen Him-c mm; ing away. . The ladies of the M. K. church will give a lawn social at the home of Mrs. Allen Heeson, corner of Oak and North Seventh street in the Dovey property to-morrow evening (Thursday.) Everybody invited. " A. 'warrant for $ 1,7.11. 97 was to-day given toTIenry Uueck as a part of the verdict for'damages sustained by the sewer which damaged his building. The court allowed him a judgment for $2J0CV Word reached thicity that Chas. M. I teach, city editor of the Wayne County Democrat, published at Oregon had died froi" injuries sus tained by a lire. Mr. Deach's father and mother, Mr. ai" -rs. A. U I leach reside at Wabash. August 11, at 10 a. i'-. -a the time set by Judge Kamsey'fp" Ava Forn- hoff to appear before h arid snow cause why John II Meisinger should not be appointed her i;:ln It ;.4 lnimi'd by her friends that she is entirely incom petent to transact her bt siness. For wtie. three l-jts My house corner Sixth am' Price jji,ra Mrs. J. A. G. Ihtell, oriitral CH3', Neb., apc.K.K. H Rock Bluffs. JweryDouy says it is warm wea ther. Corn is growing fast and will soon be lafrd by. Mr. and Mrs. Smith of North Platte are visiting relatives in Rock III tiffs. Grandpa Walstow is very poorly this summer. Miss Fvdith Shrader is visiting friends in this village. Our Suuda3r School is increasing in number and interest. Charley Carroll is on the sick list. .,ThSLrOWi?nite,m' "'ned from the Ft. Madison (Iowa) Democrat, contains information, well worth remembering: "Mr. John Roth of this cit', who met with an accident a few daj-s ago, spraining and bruising his leg and arm quite severely, was cured by one 30-cent bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm." This remedy is without an equal for sprains and bruises and should have a olace in every household. For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. Attention I A meeting of the Young Men's Republican club is hereby called at the G. A. R. hall Frida3- evening, July J, at 8 o'clock p. m. Jesse L,. Root, M. N. Griffith, President. Sec ret a r3. Soma Foolish. People allow a cough to run until it gets beyond the reacli of medicine They 8a-. "kjw, it will wear away, but in most cases it wears them away, Could they be induced to try the successful ivetnp's Balsam, which is sold on a positive guarantee to cure, they would see the excellent effect after taking the first dose, Price oOc and $1. Trial size free. At all druggists. ACCIDENT INSURANCE, T. H. PoLLOCK, Agent. One Tear's Sale of Stamps. The number of postage stamps used in a year is something enormous. For instance, the ordinary postal revenue for the year ending June 30, 1891, exclusive of the money order business, was $G3, 063,293.87. Of this fl 1,432, 129. 50 came from letter postage. The bulk of this is of course in two cent stamps, and it is safe to put the whole number of this denomination used at more than two billions per annum. Kate Field's Wash ington. What is now North Berwick, Me.. was known as IJonguty falls thirty years ago. A postal clerk says that oc casionally letters are even now addressed to Doughty's falls, and that he has ha one such in his hands within the 1; month. In the recent elections in England nf fewer than six members of the So t of Friends were candidates for pariin nientary seats in the tract of nort eastern country between the Tees ; the Tyne. The Centenary of Coal Gas. It is just a Lumlred years since Wil liam Murdoch diseoverod that cor.l gaa might bo usod &h an illuminant. In hi Cornish home he heated coal in an iron kettle and applied a liht to the end of an iron tube coining from the kettle. How many jieople today havo ever hoard the name of this William Murdoch' Watts, with his kettle, discovered the use of Bteam, whii " is effected th greatest jteaceful rcv.tition the world has ever seen. Murdoch, with his ket tie, also made a wonderful discovery the value of which it is impossible to overestimate. Electricitj as an illr.iH naii r is now fast replacing its elder brother, but it is quite young. For sixty years and more gas has been a familiar friend, and its civilizing in flnence has been enormous. Feeble ah its flame is compared with the brilliant arc light, those few among us who re member the old wooden posts with theii sickly oil lamps that did duty in nni streets, and served only to make dark ness visible, can testify to the gratitwh we ought to feel to the Cornishmaii. Nothing has helped more to repress th ruflianism in our streets than this 1: ,! ing up of dark places. It has in ever sense been an enlightening power, an. it is not exactly to our credit that we have forgotten tho man who gave it us London Public Opinion. A Wonderful Music Itox. An interesting arrangement of pneu matic mechanism for the production of high class music has recently been ex hibited. The instrument has two and one-fifth sets of reeds, the regular action of the air grooves being located above, and on top of the board containing these is a row of small pneumatics correspond ing in number to the keys of tho instru ment; underneath this board are font rows of large pneumatics, one beueat L the other, and from an ana on each ol these pneumatics hangs a wire attached to a lever operating on the coupler but tons on tho pitinans or wooden r ;: connecting the keys of the instrmiKi.. with the reed board valves. By means of these lovers, operated by pneumatics, the movement of the valves becomes automatic, subject t the passage over tho air board of perfo rated paper. A peculiar characteristic of the motor which operates the music roll, which distinguishes it from all other appliances of the kind, is it adaptabilitj to running to the right to wind music and the left to rewind, 01 vice versa. When the instrument is in operation the keyboard becomes a thing of life keys dropping with the exact rapidity required by the selection ren dered. Philadelphia Ledger. Young Love's Dream and Awakening. Ilarry Hamilton, aged sixteen and Annie Mead, aged fifteen, went to th same school in Philadelphia. The3r be came attached to each other, and aboni a 3'ear ago became engaged to be mar ried. Owing to their 3-011 th, however, the engagement was kept a secret, and the parents endeavored to keep. them apart. t" Monday Hamilton succeeded in getting a note to Miss Mead in a grocerj- pack age. The 3-oung girl escaped from home and joined Hamilton. They went t Camden and were married. They then took the train for Wilkesbarre and se cured board at Mrs. Reeves', on Union street. Hamilton had a ten dollar note He gave it to the landlady, sas-ing, "Wi are solid for one week, am-how, and can spend our hone3moon in peace." The young husband endeavored to sc cure emploj-ment as a clerk, but as h was not known he failed. His father ar rived and took him home by the eai The young wife's sister came here 01: Saturday and marched her back io Phi adelphia. Wilkesbarre Cor. Philadel phia Record. California's Jelly Palace. The jelly palace which tho wor-.en of California will prepare for the worms fair exhibit will be 10 by 20 leei ana reet high, with two open doors approached by three marble steps. The framework will be of wire. On this will be firmly placed several thous and jelly glasses cup3, globes, prisms, etc. filled with jelly of many shades of color, arranged in artistic and beautiful designs. The interior will be brilliantly illuminated by electricity. The cost of the framework and glasses alone is esti mated at $2,700. Danger In Ice Water. Many people owe summer sickness to the too free use of ice water. It is a question if any real ice water is safe. That which is cold without coming di rectly from the ice is quite as satisfvinr and is not dangerous. Strong men have died in fifteen minutes from the effects of drinking copiously of ice water while highly heated by hard work or the sun. New York Press. Feeding Cattle with Asparagus. It is not often that asparagus, the daintiest and most expensive of vegeta bles, is used as food for cattle, but the asparagus crop has been so large all over Brunswick, Germany, that in some vi3 lages nobody could be found to pay v. cent for a pound, and whole basketful were given to the cows and sheep. Chi cago Herald. It is proposed spending $900,000 in eir larging the docks at Liverpool. Emi nent shipbuilders recommend that t. prepare for the future it will be neces sary to consider that vessels will be Tot feet long and that the docks should be 100 feet wide. A LKCiAL INCIDENT. A TRAGIC ENDING OF AN UNJUST CRIMINAL CONVICTION. What Strnog Circumstantial Evidence Ilil in tho Case of a Trusted Clerk. He Hied When Ho Learned That He Was Innocent Ilefnre the Law. The following thrilling story comes from tho lips of a well known member of the Pennsylvania bar: A very bad and disjlunst failure had occurred, in which tf certain trusted clerk seemed to have been guilty of the larger share of the crime. He, with his employer, was arrested and charged with the crime. The clerk stunt ly pro tested his innocence and denied all knowledge of the fraud or ai)3" connec tion with his employer. However, there was a chain of cir cumstantial evidence woven around him which was exceptionally strong and which his counsel could not break down, although he was firmly convinced him self of his innocence. The clerk was convicted and sent to jail for a term of jears. Alter being confined in prison for alxmt a 3-ear the poor fellow's mind be gan to weaken, and fiiiall' he broke down complete-. He was taken from prison and transferred to a hospital fo the insane. All the time the clerk en: tinned to protest his innocence. Al'ti he had been confined in the hospii three or four 3-ears, certain facts in t; failure were elicited which clearly prov that tho unfortunate clerk was entire! innocent of having committed anj- crinn Of course steps were immediately, taken to secure the pardon of tho man: the facts were laid before the pardon board at their next meeting and an order was given for his immediate release. It now became the delicate duty of the counsel in the case to break the happy intelligence to the pardoned clerk. But the question tnut confronted them was what could be done to restore his reason, and would he believe the news? If his mind could not bo restored he could not be taken awaj What could be done? After a consultation between the counsel on both sides of the case it was agreed to call upon the ioor clerk and make an attempt to rouse him from the apathy and lethargy into which he had fallen. This the- decided to do b accusing him again of the theft of the funds. Whenever this subject was broached he always roused himself and becauiti greatly wuimarred, alwayv vigor ously denj-ing it. ' ... While his mind was aroused hy this stimulus it had been decided that one of the counsel was to announce that the matter had been fullj' investigated and his innocence fully established. The parties to this strange drama assembled 10. the room of the- stricken man. He sat silent and immovable, with his head in his hands. As the old and ever rankling charge of dishonest- fell upon his ears the ef fect was exactly that which had been foreseen and expected. Ho slowly raised his head. Locking his pseudo accuser straight m the eye he repeated, in a loud tone of voice, with a rising iuflec tion and with great energj-, "It is a lie." The critical moment had come. The lawyer who had prosecuted him ami se cured his incarceration then stepped up to him and said: "You are right. It is a lie, and you stand before the community a vindicated man. I have the order for 3-our release in mj- pocket." Then the lawj-ers stood off to watch the effect, hoping that the joj- at the prospect of release and vindication would have the effect of putting the clerk again in his right mind. But no sign of jo' overspread the man's features. His face bore its usual stolid expression. It seemed to have no apparent effect upon him. The clerk turned his face toward the speaker, as if he did not understand him. Then Ins head fell forward, and the man was precipitated upon the floor at the feet of the lawyers. A single glance sufficed. He was dead. Green Bag. A Wooden Statue in Tokio. In Tokio, the capital of Japan, there exists a gigantic statue of a woman, made of wood and plaster and dedicated to Hachiman, the god of war. In height it measures fift3--four feet; the head alone, which is reached by a winding stairway in the interior of the figure, being large enough to comfortablj- hold twenty persons. The figure holds a huge wooden sword in one hand (the blade of the weapon being twenty-seven feet long) and a ball twelve feet in diameter in the other. Internally the figure is fitted up with an extraordinary anatomical arrange ment, supjKised to represent the differ ent portions of the brain. A fine view of the count r- is obtained by looking through one of the eyes of the statue. London Tit-Bits. Too Much of a Good Thing:. A French paper relates that Baron de Lutz, late prime minister of the king of Bavaria, was much addicted to shroud- g all his actions in mystery. Having, seriously hurt both his legs on one occa sion, he consulted a separate doctor for each of his injured limbs. The one who treated the right leg was totally un aware that a fellow practitioner had been called in for the left one, and vice versa. Just fancy that, instead of his two legs. each of his ten toes' had been diseased! WI13-, it would have taken a fortune to pa- the bills of ten doctors. La Setti- tnar.i "Would you know.jrijy. Vfiih plewure Qiirfaces oobeanlf Our Servants Teer grumble, I IL f ft nVi -rTli i C If ! f MTTi ii s 'JRP for rT ATI A iv is ine cause 01 pur diisb; -v For all sorts of cleaning It ne'er. C0Tne8 airiiss. Made Only by MK.Fairbank & Co. Chicago. SIKHS: WW H Parties 4 J. I. Unruh.;'' PLA r rSMOl'TII, F G FQiQriE gr 02 ( WILL KKEP CONSTANTLY ON HANI) A Full and Complete line of Drugs, Medicines, DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES Prescriptions Carefully O-O - TO- House Furnishing Emporium. w 1IEIIE you can get kitchen to p-irlor die the world renown Haywood baby carriages, also the latest improved Reliable Process Gasoline stove Call and be convinced. No trouble to show goods. I. Pearleman OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE Allow me to add ni3 tribute to the eflicac3 of Ely's Cream Balm. I was suffering from a severe attack of in fluenza and catarrh and was induced to tr3r 3-our remed-. The result was marvelous. I could hardly articu late, and in less than twent3r-four hours the catarrhal symptoms and my hoarseness disappeared and I was able to sing a heav' role in Grand Opera with voice unimpared. I strongly recommend it to all sing ers. Wm. II. Hamilton, leading basso of the C. D. Hes Grand Opera Co. .I TV Our Hfo I ,JjffiSsk dream. J. I.UJVIUJJI m V YA FIRST CLASS FURNITURE. K HANDLES the Whitney baby Carriages and can offer good bargains in them desiriiiir to furnish a house complete could not do better than to call and inspect his line of furniture, in the wa3r of Parlor sets, Dining room sets, lied Room set, and evenylhing'kept in a first-class-eslablishmetit. - -NEDRASKA. Faints, and Oils. , I AND PURE LIQUORS Compounded at all Honrs, j f your house furnished from and at easy tearms. I han m 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 MiTes Nerve and Liver Pill. Act on o newpriciple regulating the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A new discov ery Dr. Miles pills speedily cure biliousness, bad taste, torpid liver, piles, constipation Unequaled for men, women and children. Small est, mildest, surest. 50 doses 25 cts. Samples Iree at F. G. Ericke & Co's- f 9 I e. i f SI RS 1 n ex ;tiver PI .ve reg I land J jgV nevr 1 opeed Zt torr1 Ineqt dren. ( , Odose EncV A r