Plattsmouth herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1892-1894, April 13, 1893, Page 5, Image 5
w THE WEEKLY HKKAI.I): IM.A rTSMOlTII.NRItUASKA. Al'ltll. LI. IhlU. I'd r 3S - ,a A : Yes Sir, W .4 5 la Fact all Kinds of Watchss. Ill 100 VARIETIES OF CLOCKS. i ,4 ' f5j The largest stock of Jewelry is rejuesented ami guaranteed wliere jvjJS'rices G..U1 flJIcI Watches fin and Siiverine and Nickel il .7." and upwards The largest variety of repairing of l'lie largest variety of T Ij 3TCnll and lje convinced ol the truth THE (AiaUJTII JKWEIJtY COMPANY PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. goto -.;AAC PEARLMAN'S HOUSE-FURNISHING : EMPORIUM, Where you can yet your house furnised from kitchen to parlor and at easy terms. I handle the world re no.vned Haywood Haby Carriages, also the latest Improved "Reliable Process" Gasoline Stoves. CALL AND HK COXVIXCKD. NO TKOl'ULK ro snow goods. joOSlTB COURT j WE MUST HAVE MORE ROOM .... AND IN ORDER TO GET IT WE WILL FOR THE Make Prices That Will Move Hardware. GLEAN NEW STOCK GOES BURNED HARDWARE AT ANY PRICE f Uj. W. HENDEE c5c CO. MKISINGBR DEALERS IN SOLID COMFORT PLOWS, FARM IMPLEMENTS,WAGONS BUGGIES AND SMALL FARM SAFES. PLATTSMOCTII, .... XKHKASKA. TUCKER Latest tyring Styles from eastern cities. All tlie latest, from all the largest cities Come ami see our Silk Kosos, Hat Ornaments, Fancy Straw llra'nl anil Hats. Trimmings in velvet and laees ol all description. In fact, everything that makes a lady's hat complete. "Trimming is mi .lit, ami shoiil'l OU TRIMMING DKPAkTAI ICNT Is managed by Miss Kate llempler, vh only needs to be mentioned to Cieo. Vacs' Old Stand 4 . TUCKER e Keep . . . 1 Waltham Watches, Hampden Watches, Columbus Watches, Good Watches, Gold Watches, Gold-filled Watches, Silver Watches. ever seen in tlie comity. All jonds a piarantee is j;ood. upwards. repairing of any firm in the county. of these statements ,ntMTSMOU;riI, NEXT THIRTY DAYS AT VERY BOTTOM PRICES tv LOHMANX, SISTEE.S Chicago, St. Lo-iis and other ' clnxsoil ns u 'A' It ' Sl(j.. be patronized. Sherwood Mock. SISTERS, Trt British Embasay Of the many notable residences at the national capital, there is none of more individual and popular interest than the square structure of red brick occupying an ample corner at Connecticut Avenue and sreet. which is the home of the Hritieh embassy. The neatly kept square, with its massive mansion, roomy stables, and trim plots of lawn and shrub bery, constitutes, as the exclusive property of the Kiijjlish govern ment, a truly Hritish possession in the very stronghold of our own United States. This establishment has set ved for nearly twenty year as the ministerial residence, and was the tirst erected for that pur pose and owned by a foreign power. As a matter of fact, it is the most import. int of all the foreign lega tions at Washington, the interests bjing legion which bind together the two great Knjjlish sneakitiir nations ot the world; and most momentous questions are contin ually before the two power for consideration and settlement. Knglaud may sometime scold her lusty oifspring, like the cross old lady she is reputed to be, but aside from the vist material interests which she holds Jin every state in the 1'uion, there exists an undercurrent of genuine good feeling between the Knglish people and their American .ousinw. How ever reluctantly the independence of the colonies was acknowledged by Knglaud, she wis quick to see the importance of placeing her representative at the new seat of government; and, with few in tervals, since the permanent establishment of the Republic there has been an Knglish minister at Washington. Some of the most brilliant diplomatists of Great Britain have served here. The Knglish Kmbassy, both in plan and appearance, preserves all the traditions of the mother country. Its solid, uncompromising front is topped by the inevitable mansard roof, is only saved from positive ugliness by a broad porte cochere which bears the Knglish coat-of-nrms, and makes a pictures (pie break in its general severity Like the staring inhospitable fronts of so many Knglish town-house", which, to the surprise of the American tourist, often enclose the cheeriest and brightest of interiors, the ungracious exterior of the Knglish Kmbassy only serves to heighten the contrast of its sunny, spacious rooms, and the atmos phere of genial hospitality which pervades every nook and corner. Pemorest Family Magazine. WAXTKP Agents to sell our choice and hardy nursery stock. We have many new ind special va rieties, both in fruits and ornamen tals to otfer, which are controlled only by us. We pay commission or salary. Write us at once for terms, and secure choice of territory. May Brothers, Xurserymen, Rochester, X. Y. A marriage license was issued to Tom Kgan and Miss Poolin this week. Kobt. Brown and Maud Vivian were married this week. W-R-DS F-I-. ( The above words when properly tilled in compose the name of the great event of the year.) Kvery person who properly (ills them in and returns this card to us with an order for 150 ot our 5 ceni cigars n f)5 per l,fKJ (making snu.li C. t). P. bill of $.").'.'.")) will receive a beautiful and . reliable gold lilk'd watch free (accompanied by twenty year guarantee) full jeweled, stem wind and set. The object of this extraordinary olfer is of course to save the heavy expense of traveling salesmen, and to introduce the goods at once. All goods shipped C. O. P., and full ex amination allowed before you pay one cent. Amkwicax Cioar Co . Winston, X. C. Blue grass seed at, Bkxxktt A: rrvr's. So as tu Know What Vim Tukn. The Berlin ixiliee Lave adopted a common sense method of dealing with persons who advertise harmful and poisonous preparations for sale which bus tho merit of not putting in motiou tho tardy and uncertain ma cuiuuryof tho law. Immediately bo notith the objectionable advert iso meut they publish tho announcement that the preparation above named has been analyzed and is found to consist of such am such a comitosi tion, its intrinsic value mag so much. In this way lately was stopped the sal oof a much advertised cosmetic, the chief compound of which was that deadly salt of Mer cury known ns corrosive bubhnute. Chumliers Journal. Aeuttiix I'lunii'. It is said that a hu ge proortiou of tho plumes worn by the ladies who attend the queen'H drawing room are hired from a shop which makes a business ofreuting plumes. The feathers are worth 1 to i'2 and the rent of them is 5 or C shillings for each ocausiou. Loudon Tit-Bits. A HAPPY MAN. Th I Jul nay of Hit Menial flataar a Happy On, lie Knows No Tomorrow. I have seen at lart a happy man, the happiest I ever knew. He is perhaps 45 years old, and hi happiness has been un broken for two years or more. Hear Ids story. Ha is a Kontletnan in every sense of the word. He has means. Social position and a larjje circle of de voted relatives and friends. He has a fine physique, a handsome face. Hut we did not call him a happy man, "such a happy man," until two years ago, when the great change came. He never mar ried, and the Miss X. of whom I tell you was no mere to him than his lifelong comrade, his best of fri nds an old neighbor, related to him in many ways, but never by the tender tie. Perhaps he had been more of an in valid than he knew or than his friends dreamed. One summer day he went to the little lake nut far from his native village, a popular inland resort, and sjK'iit what he calh d upon his return that night "a perfect day." Slues wt re never bluer, he said, nor tlowers fairer nor the lake so lovtly to him as upon that day. Only he had expected to meet Mi--s X. there and to have hail their usual sail together. He would go again on the morrow, take her with him and so double and in crease the joy. lie went to her house that evening to play whist an usual. It was Saturday. IShe hud gone to spend Sunday at the lak, . lie wi.s very glad she had gone, he said; he would join her the next day. During the g one he al luded many time to the happy day he bad passed. And what is there in life after all like a tomorrow full of promise? That night after reaching his room he bad a paralytic stroke not a severe one, only a blight shock, but it clouded his brain, if we can call that a cloud which fixed forever in his mind the happiness reigning there when it came. Kvery day since then has been that happy Saturday to him. lie has just re turned from tne lake. No matter if the snow is drifting or the rain is iH iiting the windows, it has been u jerfect day, everything in divine harmony. He will go over to X.'s for a game of whist. Even if Miss X. meets him he asks if she is at home, us if he were adilres-ing seme one else; then he is so glad slie is up at the lake; ho is going liack tomorrow; there is every sign of perfect weather, etc., all in his old time charming way. Then he takes up his cards and plays a capital game and goes home in the sweet expectation of a happy tomorrow. All else in life seems a blank to him. In that one fair niche of memory ho Lees all of the past, the present and the fu ture. He appears to be reading often times when tho book ho holds ii up side down. Death means nothing to him. When his friends die, he does wot weep nor question nor miss them. He has had such a happy day, and he is going to re peat it tomorrow. Naturally his case is of interest to specialists. Ho is never troublesome. He goes about the village and exchanges cor dial greetings. Nor does he always speak of what is in possession of his mind, un less yon hold him too long. Then he has Mcnso for breaking away. QuestionIf that last day of his men tal balance had been an unhappy one, ay a day black with anguish or remorse or embittered with rage and revenge, would he. now be the opposite of what he is a wild leiist in toils the remainder of his life the horrible evolution of an inci dental, who knows but an accident, mood? Atlantic Monthly. From Klrhri to Abject Poverty. An old man with a thin, bent form and a few l(x.'ks of white hair peeping from beneath a rusty old fashioned silk hat hobbled painfully through Broad street one afternoon last week and took his stand near the Mills building. He leaned wearily on his stout stick and appeared to 1h in pain. His manner was abso lutely passive. He paid no attention to surrounding objects ami spoke to no per m. He simply stood still. Within half in hour after the close of business in the exchanges at least half a dozen well known brokers in passing thisold gentle man slyly slipped a coin or a crumpled note into his hand. "Who is that old nian?" asked the phase writer of a gen tleman who is regarded as a landmark in Wall street. "I won't mention his name." was the reply, "but he used to be one of the high rollers down here. He was probably worth a couple of millions once and was for years one of the best customers ) :hat the stockbrokers had. Some of those prosjK'rous men who give him a quarter )T a half dollar now and then have in I times past m;ide their thousands out of J tiis skill as an operator." New York . Times. To Tax Scenic AilvertUemenU. The practice of defacing natural seen ?ry with great advertisements is not so ! prevalent in tho United States as it was i generation ago, and public sentiment is steadily growing stronger ugaiust it. This practice has recently developed in England to such an extent that lovers of nature recognize that some definite ac tion must lw taken. The Thames val ley, the most picturesque mountain spots .n Wales and the loveliest corners of Devonshire have been greatly injured by mge advertisements. The well known irehitect, Mr. Waterliouse, has pro posed that if they cannot actually bo prohibited they should at least be di minished by the imposition of a heavy 1 .Icetise tax. Chicago Herald. I ' I Knuin.li IIipltal. As regards hospitals, the teeming mil- : .ions of London can count upon only one aed per 1.0IH) a proportion which is jnique aiming the large towns of (treat Uritain. (ihisgow, Newcastle. Wulver- lampton have ;!J lieds per 1,1100; Kdin- ourgh, 3J: Dublin, 0J; Norwich, Belfast, Brighton, Liverpool, Manchester and Bristol have an average of ImmIb per 1,000. Exchange. W liHl Imli-eill Hunker Do you propose to marry. Spatts? Spat ts Well, what other object would I have in proving? Vogue. A Ttrrlblt Threat. A janitor in a bine nhfrt was cleaning the windows of a bank at Broadway and Park rise the other day after office honre, when a tramp cme along, who, arter eying mm a few moments with envy, yelled to him: "Hello, there, yon chap in the bank, can't yon throw a fellow out a little money? I'm clean broke, and almost anything would le welcome." The janitor went on cleaning the win flows. He heard what the tramp said, but wouldn't admit it. The tramp paused a few moments and th en yelled: "Come, now, don't lie a hog. There must be a million dollars in there, and all you've got to do is to chuck a bundle of it out. Are you going to do it or aren't you':'" Still no response, The tramp liegan to chafe under the galling hauteur with which he was be ing treated. "If yon don't give me some of that money, I'll start a report that the bunk's in trouble." lie yiiled. "If ever there was a lirst rate liog, it's you." After 10 minutes had elapsid and no one had taken the least notice of the tramp he began to walk slowly away. As he reached the gutter he turned round, shook his fist at the window clean er and muttered: "When the commune is declared, any one who wants money will only Imve to walk into a bank and ask for it. I'll be there, my beauty, when tho day conies, and I'll point you out to the fellow citi zens as an insolent and bloated svinbol of wealth. You just wait, my friend, till the call to arms is sounded, and you'll find mo right on the spot ready to tell what I know about tho enemies of the proletariat." New York Herald. A TlienlrlCHl l)rcer. There is one difference between Amer ican and European tin titers as marked as their schedule of prices and their usher ing system, and that is in tho mutter of "dressers," The European manager em ploys about half a dozen dressers who act as body servants of the leading actors in his company and a reregular employees of the house, like ifas men, cleaners ami scene shifters. The American actor, however, dresses himself or else hires a man to assist him. When he does hire a man, it is usually a fellow player who is "doing" small parts and is glad of the chance to increase his flO wages by fi from the leading or heavy man or first comedian. The dresser has not only to assist in changing his master's costume, a jer formance requiring great expedition, but makes repairs, folds and puts away tho clothing, packs and unpacks tho trunks and sees that the dressing table is sup plied with paints, wigs, combs and other needful articles. In the European thea ters the dresser seldom or never nets, though he is often an actor who has lieen forced off from the Mago by illness, lameness or loss of voice. Ho is gen erally prompt, qniet, a little obsequious and hopeful of tips at tho end of a run or of a season. New York Sun. They Did Not lo to Sleep. "The itinerary of a Methodist minister may have its unpleasant features," re marked a well known divine to a news paper man yesterday, "but it has Its ad vantages too. "There is one little dried np Scotch man who used to be on tho southern Ohio conference list who never failed to get even with his congregation. At one station he fared badly, and on the last evening he addressed the church he be gan, as all settled back to listen with ease: " 'Now, brethren,' he said, 'it is not fair to go asleep as ye always hit' done until I get alang wi' my sermon. This is my last one so wait a wee till I get alang, and then if I'm nat worth hear ing sleep awa' wi' ye, audi will not care, but dinnat go lieforo I ha' com menced. Gi' mo this one chancel' "And they were all pretty well awako by that time, so ho went on: " 'I shall take for my last text arming ye the two strong words "Know thy self," but I will suy before I begin tlx main discourse that I would nat advise this congregation to make many such profitless acquaintances!' "Yon may believe that there was not a snore or a nod in tho house that even ing." Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. I'ruiiipt wiiil Kn'crtlvK. Detroit has a bachelor of the coripul sory sort, but Detroit won't have him long. He lm been disappointed so many times that lately he has been almost im petuous in his attentions. She is a wid ow and an improvement on all her prede cessors in his heart. The matter was settled a week ago iu a rather round about way. They had been talking on woman in general. "So you think," he wild, "that woman is prone to jump at a conclusion?" "I certainly do," she responded ear nestly. "And you are like all the others?" "I hope so." A great thought came to him then. "Would I were a conclusion," he sighed, with such a sigh that within five min utes two h'-arts were consolidated. De troit Free Press. Unliving Hint l nrly Art. It may create some surprise that we regard the dance as the earliest form of irt, or even that W"j allow it anyplace iniong the fine arts. To many it will teem a kind of sacrilege to combine in the same category, however broad, such Extremes as a dancing savage and a painting of tho last judgment, and if the connection must be made some would choose to maktt it along other lines than those of art. But. in truth, tho dance supplies us with the key, so to peak, of tho development of the fine arts. David J. Hill in Popular Science Monthly. The Value of Women Act onllng to Silken. "He who builds a house and takes a wife heaps heavy afflictions on his head," leclares some Hindoo sage. Their rela tive value is fixed by other proverbs, mill as the Venetian's, "If woman were of gold, she wouldn't be worth a farthing." Absolutely Pure A cream of tatar baking powder. Highest of all in leavening strengtli.- l.atot I'uited States food report. b'oVAI. IIAKIN.: l'oUIU-K' Co., 1 Mi Wall St., X. Y. XVhe, raver the KiikIUIi I.aiitriiitKS Spoke, n titer, are Heard Trainee of Ihi V?i OlfUl, Ih licit CiUhl, Th Moit Pcoalir con ., - - - . UlLUlIil Iu America. No oilier 1'h.vnlcliin In the I nileil suite have, treatcil as many euKO of IJ! SYPHILIS, GONORRHOEA, CLEET, SEMINAL WEAKNESS, STRICTURE, HYDROCELE. VARICOCELE, PILES, CATARRH, SEXUAL WEAKNESS, Ami all Ncrvou, Chronic, ami I'rlvate Die e', ns th cue unrlvaleil Siecliillt hare cured Ourlng the. pant U7 yenri. Senil 4c for their Illustrate!) honk of 1UO n;e. " aullntluu free. Call upon, or alilre wllb tump, DRS. BETTS & BETTS. Sunt li I llh i-trc ft, MHilhciiHt cor. l it li mill iinti'.iiH tree". Oui.-li;i. Isi ebi io . JULIUS : PEPPERBURG, M il ll u f m t li ri-r i f unit Wholesale mill h'etnil Hi nlir In the Choicest Brands of Cigars. A Kl'LL LINK OK FINE TOilACCO AMI SMHtf ARTICLES ALWAYS IX STOCK. PLATTSMOtl IH, : NEBRASKA l.)ENTIST.RYr. c.a-?T,Tl4r. 1l(fAl.IlS., JfCoLD AM I'OKKI.aIX CK'OW.XS. Hridge and bine (iold Work A SPECIALTY. HIV. SI KI.XAI S LOCAL ii- well lis other iiiuii'st lietirs ni (ul I In- pniiilcsA ext met inn uf leet h. C. A.MAKSIIAI.l . Fitzgerald Hlock FURNITURE, AND UNDERTAKING. House Funishbfi Goods STOVES AND RANGES. Mir Murk in nil lines is cmiplt'tt-iiml we iiiviti'inir fricnil- tn t onic in mnl look us 1 1, r u k I . Wc will c mien vor tn pleie-e miii. When in thecitv cull in noil mt iis. STIII'MJ IIT & SATTLUK, Irtiiecessnrs tn Munrv llnei k.) .TJ'J Main Street, I'latt-ononth. rt. IC. II AI.LiSc SON .... M AM FAC I I'kKk'S Ol- .... Tin, Copper and Sheet i:r,o:n"wa.:r:e! w p p? W o 0 'T3 C3 3 ---! CP in W o H ts- Country Work Attended to . ... OX SHORT NOTK'K GIVE US A CALL. cokv-:ksi.viii am i-kaki. srs. Attok.xey-at-Law ;: A. X. SULLIVAN. Will n'w c speciiil nMi'litiiill tn'iitl luslii entrusted to him IB is S OFKICE-l'nion Hlock. riiittfinouth f