Se mi Weekly (1 eiv ERALD TIIK NKWH. KBlahlntied Nov. 5. lHfci i TUK U KHALI). KutubliBhed April lu. lnci. f LouHolldated J&u. 1.1H9S. PLATTSMOUTH, NER. JAMJAKY 21, 189$). VOL. VIII. NO. 23. i Z HI t, It). mm MA! U 77 0 l)i i. i. i ii i in i r For That lleasort He Has With drawn to liemedlos Will Km., tin '1 Ii.t! I'nill the Army In I'm hi OIT - l'uliix Cltilm That MIU 000,000 14 Nrnlril Kur Unit I'urpoiie V M VIi-kIiiIi KyiulK-utw lluya Culmu Town Mite-Ollirr I nte r-nl tofc New. Ukmkimos, Culm, .l.-wi. General Mjixi:i:o (imuz, :oininundor-in-chief of the Cuban army, has withdrawn to this part of the island. An Dreviounly cabled he was not in vited to bo pro.seut at the evacuation ceremonies at Ha vana on January 1, and he ia now hero nursing his feelings of alleged injury hutained at the hands of our govern ment. Ah a f-alvo to tho injured feelings of neglect he has been receiving1 the adulations of tho Cuban populace of tho various towns through which he has passed. General Gome, remains at tho head of tho Cuban army, tie considers this to be his pest until tho army is paid oil'. The amount needed for this purpose, according to the Cubans is $10,000,000, which would give nearly $1,000 to each soldier. General Gome, will soon proceed to Santa Clara. This city is the capital of tho province, and was such a hotbed of Spanish sympathy during the Cuban war that Cubans today, in their hour of victory, ignore the town's name and have ch ristened it Villa Clara. Here he follows the same course aa adopted at Kemedios and Caibarien, namely, tho uniting of Spanish and Cuban in terests for the immediate establish ment of tho Cuban republic and the furtherauco and growth of the new united party of Cuban independence. This idea is already abroad in tho province of Santa Clara and newly established Cuban newspapers are taking it up and eiving it a guarded prominence. General Gomez, aa the head of the Cuban army, occupies a position of importance and influence which should not be underestimated. He has bis enemies and detractors in this same army, but the fact remains that he is the leader of the one tangible thing the populace of Cuba today possesses upon which they can shower the ex pressions of their joys and satisfaction over the departure of the Spaniards. If the army wore disbanded General Gomez, who is primarily a fighter and a man of action, would bo without an occupation, unless of course, he tan in the meantime organize and establish the new united party of Cuban inde pendence that a political career will open outlefore him and hold possible honors for his declining years. Hujh I p a Cuban Towuttlte. Havana, Jan. 12.5 Jeremiah A. Miller, cashier of a prominent bank in Wheeling, W. V'a., has purchased for a West Virginia syndicate the site of the ancient town of Cabanas In the province of I'inar del Rio, about forty miles west of Havana. The former owner was Manuel Ortiz. The syndi cate purposes to dredge the port, to build warehouses and a railroad and make Cabanas an outlet for the pro ducts of Pinar del Rio so as to divert the trade from Havana. Hannis Taylor, former United States minister to Spain, who is staying at tho Hotel Inglaterra, was waited on today by a deputation headed by Domingo Menguez Capote, secretary of the department of government, and Perfecto J,acoste, mayor of Havana, who expressed in the name of their compatriots their high appreciation of Mr. Taylor's services at a critical stage of Cuba's struggle for liberty. Chief of Police Menocai, ex Superin tendent McCullagh and Colonel John G. Evans, superintendent of the de partment of corrections, made a num ber of police appointments today, choosing 120 men, ammg them fifty members of the old guirdia civile. Drills have been begun and the newly constituted force will take control of the city within the next ten days. One hundred and fifty uniforms have been finished and the rest will be ready by the time they are needed. SOLDIER FRESH FROM MANILA. H Cecil Jack Arrive Home and Is Kept ituoy Aoiwerios yaestlons 13. Cecil Jack, a member of tbe First Nebraska regiment, arrived in this city on Monday from San Francisco, having landed there January 10, and was disc haiged, with 180 members of the First. He was kept pietty busy answering questions which were shot at him from all sides by his friends, and the story he tells of his experience since enlisting in the army is quite interesting. He says his regiment is stationed one mile frt m the outskirts of Manila, and thit the other members from Plittsmouth are well, but are anxious to get away from there, now that the war i over. They left Manila Decem ber 18. and the only stop made was at Nagasaki. Jjpan, at which place a five days' stop was made. This was a very interesting point, he states. It is a city of 60,000 inhabitants, beauti fully situated on a bay. He saw two trees in a park the.-e which were planted by General Grant and wife in 1879, during their trip around the world. The eea was very rough all the time during the trip. The thing of interest Mil 1 1 ) 1 UUJIIMJ which happened was the exploding of a comet near the ship, which lighted the h eavens for miles around, tho re port b"liig plainly heard by Uih pas son gors. Tho s initary condition of Mnnil-i is improved considerably frnn what it was when th soldiers went Ihero, and as a result tho soldiers' health is much better. They are al.-o being fed much better than they were. An order, which is rigidly eofo cod, is that uny soldier found drinking water bef ro it has been boilod will be court-martialed, which would give one an idea of the quality of tho water. He visited the elect rie light power houe of the city and says the machin ry is all of American make and the service is the best ho ever saw. One of tho points of interest visitod by himself, Charles Searle and an-' other soldier was the city of Mnlabon, i fifteen miles from Manila with 100,000 1 inhabitants. They saw soma old, but J beautiful churches, the bell in the, tower of one bearing the date l.'JtiS. j Thoy were tho first Americans the natives had ever seen and were looked upon as curiosities, but were royally treated. Tho 6oldiers of Manila at e favorable to expansion to a man. HIGHLY ENTERTAINING LECTURE. Dr. St rat Ion Lectures luder Ankplci'K of the Itoys' HUtory Class. The lecture delivered by Dr. Station under the auspices of the Boys' His tory class Saturday evening on "IJ.ioks and Heading" was one of tho most in teresting which has ever been de livered in this city. Tho lecture was listened to by a fairly good-sizjd audi ence, but not nearly so large as it merited. Willie liamsey, president of the club, introduced the speaker with us much ease a9 many older ones could. The executive board, consisting of Willie Ramsey, president; l a ley Campbell, vice president; Robert White, secretary, and Wade Windham, treasurer, occupied seats on the plat form. The members of theyoungr his tory class were guests of tho boys. Tho boys, as well as the entire audience, paid strict attention to the speaker. Dr. Stratton mentioned the class of reading matter which should bo used, named many magazines and period icals as the proper class. The lecture will be of permanent benefit to all who heard It. About $15 was cleared out of the lecture, which vill be given to the public library, and as this was the boys' initial effort in the way of giv ing a public entertainment thoy are quite well pleased with tho result. TEN SONS IN THE ARMY. 'Jaeeu Victoria's titfts Urine to Light Some Curious Fact. The gift by Queen Victoria of $30 ind her portrait, which her majesty sent to a Mrs. Keveth, of St. Bieward, Cornwall, in appreciation of the ser vice of Mrs. Keveth's seven sons in the army, has had the effect of bringing to light several other cases of large families who have uphehld the flag of old England. Whether these cases have been discovered with a view of shaving the queenly reward or merely to show that there "were others" does not seem to be clear, but the fact is that there have been not a few fami lies In which a large number of sons have fought in the same regiment. The Battye brothers are believed to have been the most numerous of any one family of fighters. There were ten of these men, and they were all In the army at one time. Battles took off four, but the others went on fighting, and made good records without meet ing disaster. One of them achieved signal distinction, being appointed military knight at Windsor. This was Col. Montague Battye, and his instal lation took place not long ago. Eight sons were given by Mrs. Margaret Clark, who died at Plymouth in 1817. Seven of these sons entered the naval service of John Bull, the remaining son donning the uniform of a soldier. The navy boy had harder "going" than the one who fought on land, for in an engagement commanded on one side by Admiral Keppel five of the sons were killed in one day. The Klne of the Belgians. The King of Belgians takes a gre deal of outdoor exercise, and partic ularly so when at Ostend, his favor ite resort, and where he has a charm ing summer palace. Although he suf fers from lameness arising from a stiff knee, he usually walks fully twenty miles a day. The cause of his lameness occurred many years ago when he was quite a young man and Queen Victoria was visiting Brussels. Prince Leopold, as he was then, was In command of Her Majesty's escort, necessitating his being in the saddle for many hours during a heavy down pour, from which he caught a chill. It settling In his knee, causing per manent lameness. Fastest Four-Footed Swimmer. The otter is the fastest swimming quadruped known. In the water it ex hibits an astonishing agility, swim ming in-a nearly horizontal position with the greatest ease, diving and darting along beneath the surface with a speed equal If not superior to that of many fishes. Tbe Sultan's Oold Plate. Among the sultan's gold plate there are dishes of solid gold of extraordin ary size, and there are plates, cups, and eaucers, tureens and pitchers, massive and heavy, made of the same precloua metal. ' WHITE SLAVES IN HUNGARY. , Hungary I..nt, IIarne..a to flow I.Ike lieasts of Harden From the London Mall: Stephen Var konyi, the leader of the peasants' revo lution which convulsed Hungary dur ing the early months of this year, has just been sentenced to one year's im prisonment for high treason. The movement which was inaugurated by Varkonyi was a revolt against the remnants of serfdom which still exist in some parts of Hungary. In these districts each peasant is compelled to work fifty days in the year for the landowner without pay. These fifty days of compulsory labor are not suc cessive or at fixed intervals, but when the landowner has work to be done he -sends a drummer through the village and every male Inhabitant is obliged to respond to the summons. There upon so many men are selected as re quired. Tho landowner almost in variably exacts this labor in the sum mer, when the peasants' time Is most valuable to him. In summer the peas ant can earn as much as one shilling a day; in winter not more than four pence or sixpence. In winter the peas ants are compelled to act as beaters in the magnates' hunts for a wage of twopence a day. The occupation is a dangerous one and the time Is not counted in the anual fifty days' com pulsory labor. The wives of the peas ants are required to sweep and scrub the local manor house once a week without pay. Finally, many landown ers use the peasants as beasts of bur den, harnessing four men to plow in stead of two oxen. Stephen Varkonyi, who instigated the revolt against these degrading con ditions of labor, is a sort of Hungarian Wat Tyler. He 13 the son of poor peas ants, was educated In the farmyard and graduated in the fields. He Is quite a typical horny handed son of toll, la physically tall, stoutly built, and small eyes, with their suggestion of the Mon golian slit, and has that rough kind of natural humor which appeals to the simple peasant mind. Varkonyi.whose power over the agricultural population of his country Is unbounded, is one of the most interesting figures In modern Hungarian life. How's This. We offer Orie Hundred Dollars Howard for any case of Catarrh that cauuoi tie curetl by Hall s Catarrh Cure. V. sJ. CH KN BY & CO.. Props., Toledo. I) We the undersigned, have known F. J Chenev for tho last 1.5 years, nnd helleve him uerfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any omisatlons maue by their tlrm. West & Tucax, Wholesale Druggists, To ledo. O. Wai.ding. Kinnan & Marnin, Wholesale Druccists. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 7"c. per bot tle. Hold by all Druggists. Testimouials free. Hall s Family Hills arc- the bet. Ulberuatiau of a Frog. According to Simon Henry Sage, the frog doos not hibernate in leaves or the trunks of trees, but in a dry hole in the ground not likely to freeze. He scratches the hole with his hind feec and enters backward. Once inside there Is apparently no trace of the fact outside, says the London Globe. Frogs found under frozen leaves are still able to move about. Mr. Sage has found hibernating frogs with their extremi ties and skin frozen, tut their vital or gans were still intact, and they recov ered their activity on being liberated. The Way to go to California is in a tourist sleeping car personally conducted via the Burlington Route. You don't change cars. You make fast time. You see the finest scenery on the globe. Your car is not so expensively fin ished nor so lino to look at as a palace sleeper but it is just as clean, just as comfortable, ju?t as good to rido in, AND XEAKLY $20 CHEAl'EH. The Burlington excursions leave every Thursday reaching San Fran cisco Sunday and Los Aneeles Mon day. Porter with each car. Excur sion manager with each party. For folder giving full information call at nearest B. & M. R. R. depot or write J. Francis, General Passenger Agent, Omaha, Neb. Czarina's Exqnlslte Piano. Czar Alexander sent to Stuttgart for a suitable present for the empress on the occasion of her recent birthday cel ebration. He selected an ornate up right piano for her boudoir. The case is in the richest Louis XVI. style, and the front board is jeweled with bril liant gems. The black keys are made of real ebony and the white ones are covered with mother-of-pearl. German experts say it is the most costly and exquisite instrument of its kind ever made. Cleverest Horses. The broad-headed horses are the cleverest. In the British household cavalry the horses with broad fore heads learn their drill more rapidly than the others. Well Put. Smith "Every time my wife wears a bonnet it affects her." Jones "Goes to her head, I suppose." Comic Cuts. The wor-t after effects of Influenza arise fr in de: angej funciions of the liver. Clear thu blot d at once with Herbiii-', lor it wiil strengthen the liver to withdraw from ciioulation the biliary poisons. Price :0 cents. F. G. Fi ioke & Co. A Verdict of Itorder Days. "He died through his own exertion, with some slight assistance from his neighbor?," was the verdict of an early day coroner's jury in Ellsworth county, Missouri, after it had heard testimony to the effect that the vig ilance committee had made a horse thief climb a ladder against a tele graph pole and jump off with a rope around his neck. hliiHlll I . Information lias been received by , tLe Ho.tn, )f Hoallh lhal MIl;iHpox exist- in the country, and that a num ber of people have boon exposed to tho di-cas. Notice is hereby given that anyone who has been e.osed to smallpox or variloid, if found on tho ttroets of Plat,tincuth or in the outftkirtu of the city, will be arretted and promptly quarantined af the pest house until they are in a fit condition to bo re leased. F. M. Hichby, Chairman. E. D. Cl'MMlNS, M. 1)., Secy. The Oldest Dressmaker's lilll. Most likely the oldest dressmakers' bill in the world has been discovered on a Chaldean tablet, dated 2,800 B. C. It has an entry of "92 pure vestments for the priests." Among the items are "ten white robes of the Temple, eight robes of the house of his lady, ten collars of the house of his lady, ten pair of gold collars, two white robes, and four scented robes." Also "two winders," probably scarfs for binding about the waist. Stands at the Head. Aug J. Uogel, tho leading druggist of Shreveuort, La., says: "Dr. King's Now Discovery is tho only thing that cures my cough, and it is tho best sel ler I have. J. F. Cambell, merchant of Safford, Ariz., writes: "Dr. King's New Discovery is all that is claimed for it; it never fails, and is a sure cure for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. I eannot say enough for its merits." Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, Coughs and Colds is not an experiment. It has been tried for a quarter of a century, and today stands at the head. It never disappoints. Free trial bottles at F. J. Fricke's drugstore. 1 Christinas with the Danes. In many countries the Christmas feast formerly lasted from two to three weeks, and it was believed that the angels partook of the earthly food. Denmark, even at this time, consid ers it obligatory to have breakfast. dinner and supper of distinctive dishes on Christmas. Beefsteak and reindeer cutlets form part of the menu for breakfast. The dinner consists of grod (a soup of oatmeal and rice) roast goose stuffed with apples, and roast pork and beet roots and gherkin pickles. TO ClRK A COLD IN ONE DA V Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to euro. 2vie. Tho genuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet Clerical Permits 18t. Clergymen and others entitled to clerical permits are respectfjlly re quested to call at tho Burlington ticket office and arrange about their 1S! permits. Notice. Good small farm live miles south of Plattsmouth for sale cheap if sold bo fore February 1. K-ay terms. Apply to J. M. Rohekts, South Omaha, Neb. Notice to Creditors. State of Nebraska. ) Cass County lty ss. In County Court. In the matter of the estate of Franklin Xeinian, deceased Notice is hereby given that the creditors of said deceased will meet the administrator of said es tate, before me. county ludffe of Cass county. Ne braska. at the county court room in Plattsmouth in said county, on the ith day of March, A. D. im'H. and on theithdavol Ausrust. mm. at 10 o clock A. M. eacli day for the purpose of pre senting their claims for examination, adjustment and allowance. Six months are allowed for the creditors of said deceased to present their claims trom the lth dav 01 reDruarv. li9. Witness mv hand and the seal ol said county court at flattsniouth, Nebraska, this 24th day January. 18W. UEOKGE M. bPLRLOCK, (Seal) County Judge. ALWAYS USE COCOA PURE! HEALTHFUL !! For Rats, Mice, Roaches. and liP Vermin. IT'S A KILLER. After eating, all vermin seek water and the open air. Hence this killer is the most cleanly on earth. For Sale by all Druggists. Price, 15 Cent. FEWTON MANUFACTURING & CHEMICAL CO., 93 William Street. New York. 0 0 Dyspepsia Digests what you eat. It artificially di pests the food and aids Nature In strengthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive or gans. It is the latest discovered digest ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It in stantly relieves ana permanently cures Jjyspepsia, inaigesuou, iieariuuru, Flatulence. Sour Stomach. Nausea, SickIIeadache,Gastralgia,Cramps,and all other results of i mperfect digestion. Prepared by t. C. Dewitt A Co.. Chicago. F. G. FRICKE & CO. Cure LA GRIPPE FOLEY'S HONEY and TAR Cures LA GRIPPE and prevents PNEUMONIA. it Heals the Lungs and Stops the Racking Cough Usual to La Grippe. HKCOMMKNDED FOR LA fiRIPPK. N lAC'KSON. Danville. III., writes: "Mv daughter had a seveie attack ol i.ariic seven eais iigo and since tlien when Mie takes cold a terrible cough settles on hei lungs. We tried a great many remedies with out giving relief. She tried Foley's- Honey and Tar, which cured liei, She has nev-i been troubled with a cough since.'' "c. IT IS GUARANTEED. F. G. FRICKE &, CO. A BOON TO MANKIND! DR TABLER'S BUCKEYE ,z2 7x" D n 33 A New Discovery for the Certain Cure of INTERNAL and EXTERNAL PILES, WITHOUT PAIN. CURES WHERE ALL OTHERS HAVE FAILED. Tubes, by Mail, 75 Cents; Bottles, 60 Cents. JAMES F. BALLARD, Sols Proprietor, - - 3!0 North Main Street, ST. LOUIS, MO. F. G. Fricke & Co. SUBSCRIBE veninn The Leading" Paper or A7 tho JLocal iVews . . It Is the Only Six-Column Daily in the City. Larger Than Any Other Local Daily. A Superior News Service. If You Don't It The NEWS The The LirSfiERIINn LA umppi: COUGH CURKD. M K. (. YACHAK. r7 Osgood St.Cliuag "My wile had a seveie rase ol I .a ( ji ippe three years ago and it lei I her withaety bad cough. She tried a bottle id Foley's Honey and Tar and it gave immediate rebel, tine bottle cured her cough entirely. Now we are never without a bottle ol this wotidei f n I Cough Medicine in the house." PILE 2 2 73 KIZZ 03 -H C in dn CO n FSsEJIiTjjPILE TUBE a in. CURE -wFOR THE-v i II IT COA'CrVtA'S .And has been Reduced in Price to ..lO Cents per Week Forty Cants per Aoitj. See It in Never Happened. Does Job Right Kind of Work Right Kind of Prices GIVE US A TRIAL ORDER Hi GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE, LOW RATES ON OUR PERSONALLY CONDUCTED TOURIST EXCURSIONS. I.'juvea KiiiiHiiH City overy I'VIduy vi:i Cohtrmlo Spring mid Sconic Southern Kotilc Ii-mvch Kansas City every Wcilnenliiy via Ti. Worth and I'M I'urto to Los Anoolos. Tht'Bo oxi'iirtiioii c.itH lire nlliK'lii-d to fasi paasoniii- trninn, mid thnir popularity i-t evidence that we oiler the tObt. Write for handsome itinerary which rive full information and now innp, Huntfreo. I'r complete information, ratert and herth reserv.itiotiH, nee your local ticket njreiil or addrenH ). V.. Ma:Lkoi. A. (i. I. A., TopeUa, Kan. John Skiiastian, C 1. A., Chicago. IAK VrrAiKUAlA) Han now stock, now rig and in prepared hotter than ever to tako caro of ft General Liveru BusinCcScS Quick tripB mado to all parti of tho county. Low prices and courl ooub treatment asnurcd. STAHLES SIXTH AM) VINE ST.S., riullpmoiitli, Nebraska. HARVEY HOLLOWAY Con trn clor Hull tier. Contracts taken ior the erection l Residence Harris and any kind ol caiicnter woi'k, in anv part ol the county. Call on u aihjress . . . . HAKVEY HOLLOWAY, I'JttHinoutli. Neb JL the City. THE NEWS, Printin NOW I VI i I Gl II 1 u o u 1 i I