iron Clad Overalls, Jackets and Shirts, Celluloid Collars, beautiful ;PIccc Goods, the most sightly line of Autumn and Winter Styles of Clothing ever seen in Fhittsmoutfi. Square (Icalfng at t!ie"Bor,s,v XV. & P. The Herald. The Herald, A li v :-. II TIKI X ti 11 A V f. K . sr. r. l . w. ;: ! .; niT ni7" I YT eublisiied every thersday, PLATTSHOOTH, NEBRASKA. I s.,r... J -! I i. . ; ! ''l ."i .'i'i .'.'a -.r, iK i r ( :, el li" no 'JT. '1-', li '' !.!(.' I " I l '.' J 'i I i"i ( s 11.1 1.; i .i .; i mj .',(,.. y hi 1') IK( J- V -JUKI ;'s(l .,() i i 'i 1 ' , l.ni.i, Isil i ;; . ;mmi 1. 1 14) IVi-i ! .mi ' villi t ,"l) 10 D.i 1,'iii'i I. mil -it's 1 s .-..I.. OFPIC3: Or Vine St., One Dtoc-k North of Main, Cor, of F:fth Street. '2 Col.. I eol... J"- All A-.' vi-i'tisinj; I'ilN Dm- Quarterly. 8 Traiiiitnt AilvrTtNtriMits must lie I'aij' in A'lvuiiro. JNO. A. MACMURPHY, Editor. J PKUSEVEKAXCE COXIJUEKS. 99 TERMS: $2.00 a Year. Terms in Ad v. i nee: rn ropy, cinp vo:ir ?2.C0 I'M ipy, six MMiitus IJ'O . ' i.-y, three i:n:iti: f, -fi f f. Extra Cepios of tho Ilp.itT.n fir si l J. P. Yocno, at Lie I'o:-t -Otlh'e New Denot, VOLUME XV. PLATTSMOUTII, XEBItASKA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, IS79. XUM15EU 21. "XT "71 13 13 A 3 IT" A tv? REVOLUTION! ' Y TUB l?vi Standard Singer. g-0 Knj-s this Style. iv ;: -'iifs var.el i:i every town, Sam;Te im uis).-. iii'i'lii-atimi. 'l U bo ,.11 .,i,!.-il wilU ..nl-r. as ;uai:i! Ne of piod I .' ". -!: l..!:iue Ms. to l.e rani uf rr five .!;.-' i I !. E iv m:n-!iii! win ran I '!. all it ,i tiii.raiiti r" ivfii wit !i ;. li marl' inu to I .,rler i 'l" yi' ii'-i in itiariiiues, l.lics . .-.-; three tt t-li i 1 1 -. i'A : four ...(': "rs -.'): live 1:1.1. l.uu-s, -s.l. Special r on I:i r-,- o: rs. r i:' ins. iv.-.TKi: nv, i T lj". J. ( i;.ik St.. riiir.vro. TU. "HEN RY BOi'-CK dkai.fi: in pV a i ih mm Ti M HJl SAFES, CHAIRS, r.rr., nr.. etc., O ylZ Dr:.-irrijti'.nf. METALLIC BURIAL CASES '.VOODEU COiTXZiTS f .1!'. '.-;. tca.'.y iii;n! an.lsi.l.l cheap for cash. MY FINE HE AltS E .. f T !.i NOW KKA1Y lOiC SKIIYK i!. ORGANS & P1AH0S 1 f Kvi-rv 1 . "ii;''.i'iii, CHEAP FOP- CASH. Tin iVIi'l.r it-.l Whittlesey Patent WIXPOVS SHADE FT.YTUHES, I'm:. I !! v.,th '.:'I'ir, r.-r V'"'H. Lr.inbrequin Windcvz Sliadcs. Ai-'l .1 l.ar'.-i- vaiii'ty f ( iio:ii"r S!i:nt,'S, of ;'.;i .11 11 'lili ri.i'.y tlianN f. r fast iatror.R. I !..-. r.'l 1-1 .::'! l i';i!v;n. my i..!::!-; si ( :; ;" 'Mt. v. :t v ri 'ci; .xu orj"3Ns 7;..'' A".' i;n i 1 ' ..it v.-'i.t ; t'V Tire or Ornarienta! Briclr- ('..!! oil 1!, J . i'. i:lU Cn, r.fn villi:, - - XEnnA.srcA. MQ : FL. CI VY HO i EL- i .; i c;..m r.i.ii.M:':.'. '."..i S.: I'.:p1- l;:!:'. ;'!.'...' t-v.-ry n.i-.f. rt v r3,tf?i m I r l . 1 V i . . : !.: AN.-. (. .'. i 1. -;,, , ..; 1; r. r..o l !.i.'i:-i--i (...! ! Ijhuci:':! -. :.. i-! A. . ! ;!t , is. :irf::r. . -. .' V--T. .'- t ,T''- en-' ; VC tr fni-Trn. iWjpj i . .. . . . . . . i - !.: -. f-i. -M f Hi.,. , .-. - .; . '-;.-. - i- - . ' . rr . : . -'!-. - n e:J- ti.t-kJ .-... . Vv.... l- g .r . ...it : ..; ; .j -u.xj jf I ui jm i I: .-...i . fl nr i : . -l' i --- ' T .T-V.. T ' r.l.l'i'JU Lit. CtlX J i',i..ut.,I:s,'.-.T.-.i.-.Liir::-.,-..J. Pj f.T..r .: ,,l..ii.-rl-,.t;- " . - v.:-':.) fc':i..i;i ! 1 : 'finn ir. I: '.J .1. , . ..j . -' in a--r. -. J iH-.? tlK'.wr-V.:. Co.,f.jr.ii:itr:.r.V.Co!e.,,3cn'.irt A ? -..-v. h --r .-'! ". ' r-,;'.,j j -j ' jj 1 T'-. r"- I ' ? T t : -! 7"! "'VTVl L'l'.'T. ri ;l -i, CL.ru L iX :u M . , . . . i , r t : .-....., In? I l--p It: iter. kIaN &r i a Df , "jv - - . .ii '.-rt' t . i, ihi iii- i i t H-t M ?i f4 ,i t.i-r: r. u P . m rc cum tb .n ill o i rr rmMKs, . r E G ETA E tTM Has been in constant Vv' Ci5T O nse by the public i j ''r--t "V for over tvtrenty years, and Is the best preparation ever Invented for RESTOR ING GRAY HAIR TO ITS YOUTHFUL COLOR AND Si The State Assayer and LIFE. ji Chemist It supplies the natural i of !Ias3. food and color to the hair glands without frtaining the kin. It will increase and thicken the RTowth of the hair, prevent its blanching; au-J falling- otl', and thus and leading endorse and AVERT KALDNESS. 4 recom It cures Inching, Ernp- mend it a3 a great triumpb in medi cine. tion and Dandruff". As a HAIR I)i;iSlN It is very tleKirable, giving the Isair a ilku eoftnesa which, all admire. It keeps tho head clean, sweet and healthy. a WHISKERS will change tle Ixard to a l;l:uVN or P.LACK at discretion. Being; in one prrparatloTi It is easily applied, and. rrodnees permanent color that will not wath cfT. I'ltKi'Altl.I ki B. P. HALL & CO., NASHUA, E.K. Sclii b all Dea'ers in ViJicina. 5 i Is an ; ').. .-?:- ..' '. ;i i .sisi;!::c cure firU N FIEST National Bank M" rj-ATTSMOUTTI, XERUASKA, svrrK.ssoK to tootm; iiaxxa a clakk Tons FlT7.r.FRAI.n K. a. I'ovkv A. W. McI-Al'illI.IN. . . JOMI OllufKKK President. Vice iTcsitU-nt. 'aliifr. .Assista I'axliier. This P.ank is now open for lmsinen pt tlieir new room, eoi nt-r ."Ma.n ami Sixtli st '-tH, and prepared to tiansacl a general BANKING BUSINESS. Stocks, Condi. Gold, Governmenl and Local Securities I'.OUOIIT AND SOLD. Deposits Received and Interest Allow ed on Time Certificates. ivailalile in any part of the Tinted States and In all the Principal Towns und Cities )I l-'.nropc. AGISTS ri)U TJIK CKI.KI'.KATPn hman Line and Allan Line OF NTKAIICK X. Person wishing to brin out their friends from mupe cn rURfHASK TfKKTrt KIIOM CS Througli to P 1 n t t n m o 11 t li . Wl S Eb IS . J. F. BAUIY1EISTER Furjiislie? Fieh, Pure Milk, Special cal!-- :( tended t . and Freli Milk fioai same cow furiii.slied lu-n .;nled. Excelsior Barber Shop, j. c. BOONE, Hair, Street, 'Wisiie Saunders House. "ETIIV O ITT TING, S 11 A Y I X C. A N I) S 11 A M V O O 1 X O Especial aUeiilimi given to JUTTIXH CHILDREN'S AND LA DIES' HAIR. 'jAi.L ax n skj: nooxi:. gents, A. id ' a luion in : A. Schlegel & Bro MaTi lilact'ii crs of rZISTTtl CIG-ABS, FANCY SMiMCEPS .' l.'TICI.IVS, SMOKiNf! I ;.i.Y! N; r" A T t i l A -1 -v V? . Special P.PAXDS :url s:,:t s of CJCAPS made to rli r, at:.l satisfaction gi:ar:.ntced. I'igar clippings Isold for si'Hikii'g t lia"co. Main St. three Uei'i" v.e-.t of Sa';niler- House. I'LATTSMOCTi!, NEIL 101 y llf'HAifAH'B gll J. S. DUKE II. s j;ist opei.. 'I an enli. e new stock of hard a a re. on a wt ts-' nK rr- T jss - 7 ri - Ne: t door west of Chapman Smi'li's Drug SI. He. A Pull I.!:ie f SHSL7 HARDWARE, SHOVELS, RAKES. SI' A PES and ALL GARDEN TOOLS. NAILS, NAILS. NAILS, by the Key ir J'innd ROI'E, POWDER. SHOT, GRIND- 77HEEL-3AEE077S. A FulM.iiie of Ci'TM-IKY. Sp-.i-:Ij;.tiis t'j J! a i.'u'tis and Con ttaitors. AH vr . I sold as low ns- they poibIv enn be and live. ' 41y V ILL! A M HEROLD7 dealer In niiv oood., cLOTri.-s. IJLAXKETS, FLANNELS, FURNISHING G00D3. GROCERIES OF ALL KINDS. I-irge stock of BOOTS and- SHOES tr be CLOSED OUT AT COST :o: Notions, Queenswaro, and in fact everything you can call for in the line of General Merchandise. CASH PAID FOU HIDES AX D FPPS. All kinds of corntry r.Kc.ucc taken in ex change for goods. SAGE BROTHERS, Dealers in STOVES, u.'' Tea: rvv -ts," uss. m. a - r, FTC, VTC, KTC. One Door East of the Post-Office, l'lattsmoiith, Xebr.iska. Pnietieal Workers in SHEET IRON, ZINC, TIN, URA ZIERY,dc.,Sr.. Large assortment of Hard ann Soft l'umps, Gass Pipes and Fittings. CJOJL. STOVES, Wood :'itd Ci::I Stoves for IIEATIXti Oil COOKING. Always on Hand. vry variety of Tin. Sheet Iron. ?nd Z:nc Work, kept m stv-k. MAKING AND REPAIRING, Done m Short Notice. ( fii'Rrni.v(; '.t;(.M.7rD.' r.r; VHHF.H t.nX 4t. SAUli EROS. PJiOFESSIOXAL CAltDS DFXTIST. and Homrepatlilc Physician. Of fice corner Mam and Mil Rt's., over llerold's .store, Plattsmouth. Xel. -'' T. It. iril'MOS, ATTOHXEY AT l.WV. Prncfices in Sn in ders and Cass Counties. Ashlaad, Nebraska. ;t.".im" U. it. aviaihiai, ATTOKXKY AT LAW, Plnttsniouth. Xeh. Of fice Front Iiooin over Chapman tc Smith's l:-ii Store. -n'y WILL K. WISH. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Peal F-lnte. Fire Td uranee and Collection Aenrv. Oiiice in Fitz fteralifs block, l'lattsmoiith. Xelnaska. lvin:j n. n. LiviX(is-ro, .is. i., IMIVSICIAK .t SCIliiEON'. OFFICE HOCKS, from inn. m.. to 2 p. m. Examining Surgeon for I". S. Pension. 1K. XV. II. WCHII.IU.K IIT, rRACTISIXO PUVSICIAX.Mill attend calls nt a:i homs. nijrlit or day. l'lattsmoiith. Ne braska. OHice in Chapman t Smith's Drmr Store. -KO. KM ITU. ATTOP.XEV AT LAW and Pe;tl Estate Pro kT. Special attention civen to ColleclioiiS and all matters affecting the title to real estate. I mice on -Jd lloor, over l'ost OKiee. l'lattsmoiith, Nebraska. " t. JAMKS K. MflKKISOV, W. t.. HKOW.NK. Notary Public. 1IORKI4K &. BltOAVXE. ATTOKXKYS AT LAW. Will practice in Cass and adjo.nini; Coiiatlcs ; jsives special attention to collections and abstracts of title. OHice. in Fitzgerald Block, lMatti-mouth, Nebraska. i:v m I. II. VIJEi:iKK A. '. LAW OFFICE. Peal Estate. Fire and Life In surance Atrents. Plattsmout h, Nebraska. Col lectors, tax -payers. Have n complete abstract of titles, liny and sell real estate, nipiiiate loans, S;c. 1 J. SI. HAH., yi. I?. I'HYSICIAN- AXI SUKCKOS. OFFICE with Dr. Livingston .Soutn Side of Main Street, bet wceiHUk and 7th streets. Will attend eails prompt';:. - 4'-'vl TVf7 C H'TT K It. DBKTIST. IMAttsraouth. Xtraka. OiTice on Main Street over T. W. Shn'"rks Puri.it ir.e Store. SI'V KAJI, Zl. 'iIAI3I.V.V. ATTORNEY AT LAW, And So'ieiir-r in Chancery. fJfT.ce in Fit'ger ald Pluck, . -. p.ivl PLATTSMOtTil, NEE. Tonsorial Artist. eIjATTioi't:i sr.BJtAsMA. Place of business on M;'n St.. bet ween ll'l :;n...tll sin els. Siiampfo.ii. Shaiic;, e!i:l divu's hair cult im;. etc. etc. l'.'ly co 3i m I: i c ia 7 ot-: l7 LIXv'OI.N, NEC, J. J. 1 31 II OFF, - - J'ropri' for. The bi-sf Iniown and most popular Lai;-l!ord ill ;hc State. Always slop a; i Commercial. JENI10FF i'ONNs, Morn inu: Dmv Siiloon ! One door east of the Saunders House. We keep till" best of Beer, Wines, Liquors & Cigars.. rt:m9 Constantly on Hand. J.S.GREGORY, - - - Pioprutor. I.ocr.tion Central. C.ood Sample Poom.. Fvi-ry attrnli'in paid to ciums. 4J:n.l Pl.ATTSMMI Til. ----- N"K!t ATTSrIC5UTiFMILL PLATTSMOL'TII, XI'.B. c. sss::.m:z, - i'rtpi ictor. Flour, Corn 31 cal d- Feed Al-.vavs on l::uid and forsrtle at lowest cash Pl iers. The huliest prices ).iid lor Wlieat ai.d Com. Pal ;ii-i;l..r attention jjveu cusioni work. AND MACt;IN'K SHOTS ! JOSCTsT WAYMA1T ri.ATTSVUtj't II. X Kl".., Hepaircr of Steam Eniincx, Boilers, Saw and Grist Mil If UAH AM STEAM KITTIti. Crnii-rht Iron Pipe. Force and Lift Pipes. Steam l.;al!;;cs. ;'.iet v- Vil'.vc lie. ,-ri!rs. anil all kinds of I'.ra- s E::.iiie Fittings, repaired ou short noti-e. FARM MACHINEK A. L. MARSHALL Successor to PROUTY & 3IAKSI1ALL, Dealer in . ?iKiti ixi:.!i& -m:,!iii-. PEHFUM K 1 1 1 EX. XO.IPX. TOILET A T2TI rl.KS. I'AIXTS ,t ofLX. LAMPS ami L MP 4llS. STATHiMJIV. COX F EC TIOXEHIES, To'iACCO. CHiAUS, Ac 1'sjpc WIih-m ami BJipioi-s, Fur MciUcinnl rurie, jPrescriptious Carefully Comoutidcd day or niht. Kcuionil.or liie iilace, .ilar-h;ill "Poot & shoe" (: Jriiji Stote. Wceyinsr Water, - Xehraska. 17 -. e-t-O O o 3 C3 e - O 5 3s e -J. 3 ? 3 -3 - x ZT. "6 S M sET CO CD CO c O ' 1 7 II. A. WATERMAN & SON. Wholesale and Ketail Dealers in PINE LUMP. E It. L.ATIT. MIINGLEs:. SASIT, D001IS. BLINDS, i:tc. ETC., ETC. Main street. Corner of Firth, PLATTSMOUTH, - - - - NET. Still Eetter Rates for Lumber OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. ,9rti 7)iretory. A. S. rAPPOCK. V. H. Senator, F.e.itrice. AI.VIN SAt'N fiKUS. lT. S. Senator, Omaha. THOS. J. MA.IOKS, ISepresentative. Peru. ALUIXrs NANCE. Covfinnr, l.inc.ilu. S. J. A I.KXA N DKif, Secret. .rv of Siate. F. W. LKIPTKE. Auditor. Lincoln. (',. M. liAUTLE'lT, Treasurer. Lincoln. S. P. THOMPSON. Sunt. Public Instruction. DAY IS. Land CoinniisMoner. C. .1. DILWOIM'H. Attorney OeneraL KEY. C. C. HAUKIS f'hp!afn of Penilentiary. DIt. II. P. MAllilEWSON, Supt. llo,jiital lor the Insane. Supreme Court S. M AXWELL. Chief Justice, Fremont. V. FO. IS. LA K '', malia. AM ASA COPP., Lincoln. Second Judicial 2)ittricl. S. P.. FOT'NP. Juil'.'e. Lincoln. .1. C. WATSON, i'roseciui.i-Att'v. Xeb. Citv. W. L. WEIJ.S, Clerk iJi't. Court, PlutUsuioutb. Connfy 7ircctory. A. X. SCLLIYAX, Countv dudye. .1. D. 'J I TT. Countv Clerk. .1. M. PAT'l KiiSON, County Treasurer. 1. W. MY EPS. Sheriff. ;. W. FAli: FIELD, surveyor, t;. lilLDESiKAXD, Coioner. I-III NTV C()MMISIflM-.RS. HEXTtY WOLFF. Libe.tv Pieeinct. 1AM ICS CK. WFOl:l. South Pond Precinct. SAM L KiCMAPDsON. Mt. Phnant Precinct. City 7)irefio y. ,T. W. .IOMNSON, Mavor. .1. M. PAT'l EPSON. Treasurer. .1. D. SIMPSON. Citv Clerk. KICII AUD YIYIAN. Police Judge. P. I'.. Ml'KPHY. Citv Marshal. WM. L. ELLS. Chief of l ire Dept. COl. NCll.M K.N. 1st Ward .1. PEPI'EKPEI:;, Y. V. LEOXAPD. 2d Ward C. W. FAI lil'i KLD, J. Y. WEOK- I. PACM. 3d Ward P. V. Cl'SH I NO. TIIOS. POLLOCK. lh Ward i". Mi CALi.AN, E. S. MIAlil'. 2"oMtntuxei NO. W. M A KSIIALL. B. & M. R. R. Time Table. Takimj Ffe't May 1, 1879. rou omaiia ri:o:.i n.ATTMOPTir. Leaves 7 :m) a. m. Arrives S -15 a. m. J :if p. in. " 4 lijj p. in. FKOI OMAHA FOi: PLaTTSMOI Tn. Leaves 0 :1 ) a. in. Arrives in : !t) :i. m. o :ijo p. in. :-ri"i p. in. tOP THE WEST. leaves PlatTsiii'iiith ! :t". a. in. Arrives Lin coln. 12 -4.j p. in. : Arrive- Pearuey. T: v. ii. m. Freight leaves'.) v.. in. Ar. Lincoln 2 :'' p.m. PPOM THE WEST. Leaves ICearnev. 6 :.o a. m. Leaves Lincoln, 1 . : 1. in. Arrives l l.it isinoutll. 4 :-H l. u Freliiht leaves Lincoln 11:4) a. in. arrives Pl.i! tsiuouth, 4 ji. in. OOINO EAST. En press. 6 a. m. l'a.sse:rri r. t train each d::y I p. m., ereept Stuiday. Evi-rv third Saturday a tiviti e.m-liL-ct-, at the u-iij.1 time. II. V. 51. . Time Tattle. Tdl.imj j:frct Sioi'.V'i. .l.'i'ird C), lsT!. SOITll. ; :.v.ita ! r. i i; , 7 I 7 i X ; S :.';" ::lil i !t :L:.i!ii ; STATIONS. 1IASTI NOS. A VP. p.r.ci: PILL. I WLl S. PED !. ' I'D. 1 NAY A I.E. i.: son. t i.A i KLIN. p. Li ';.i i m; I'tiv. ! XfiKTTT. :..ilil ' S ; 7 : in ' 7 :'' G :"5 0 :!i 5 1 5 Mi.am V. IS, & J. EJ. II. TS11J: TAE2I.S: w est '. ai::. Exi-tess Mail. Leave Chicairn.. .. M' n tot i ai--sl.iii !T ... " l'.-ini' !on . ' 'UM:i.a " iiaiii-.il ' Cres;:in ' Pcd Oak ' o . 'am in "-j.!.i ! 1 J-'iplH 1 4Aatit ' 4 .rpm Tj :.."aia . 7 -: i;n.i K loam In "'.i:i 1 1 Sim , 1 4".aiu 1 1 . . ; ll i . 4 .aia ."i 1-Vpiu 7 Xiam i. onijiii , I'l.'ulil , A rr. 1 ia!tM..i-i;:h .- EASTWAED. 1"iitss Mail. Li-ive I'laltiiionih... Pel i ak Creslon " h.iriton Oituni'.v.i Pairlin-jton. .. Oale.-iluii'i: Mendota Arriv Cliic.iuo :t .-'pin r. ;.;.iii s (iioni s "nam In ..".;.iu II 1 IMII ll' .",."aii: I I ' p I i :t --.i ni; i npiii n .'.e ue u iiiju s .V.am 1 1 (..Vim t-' l 'ini : l'lam .". : Ji i j m 7 (Kiam ONLY J7 l!(' i:s TO St. Lod'S 1 v the new POl'TE just ooeiu-d via i N i t 'Til. PELL MAN PALACE SLEEPlXti CA US run from itu: lin;-t'.i;i t.)S. Lo:.i- without ch.ilie. liY LE.WlNi; i r.ATISMiHTil AT ?. P. .M..yo'i .irnve m S r. LtH'lS t!;e t-.r-:! eveninat S :L'i'. and lea hiz S. Louts nt s :l'ii a. in . you rT live in riattsvinus ti : the net ia. lining. Coupon Ticki'is :.r -aie for nil points North, South, Las: .".d V(-;t. SAM EEL POWELL. D. V. I!lTC!MOC:-:, Ticket Awat. Cen. W ei-leiii T.iss. Ajjei.i. .1. M. P.F.i 'ill' A I-, A.;. -lit. PlutisM-' iilh. 111 h Vllll.SD i V MAM HOLLOWAY'S PILLS. "I had no appetite ; Ho'.'.oway s Pills j;ave i;i.' a hearty one " " Your Pills are mai vellous." "1 semi for ano! her box and keep them in the house." "Dr. Hiiilmviiy hns cured my headache Unit ;' ciil otiie.'' "I y..ivi- one of yiur Pills to my by be for chol era morbus. 'The lit I .e liear ini ell in a day. "My nausea of a i : c : t : is now cured. "Your box of II. !'..' .a 's Hut meni i-ured me of aoin.-s in he lii-a.l' I rub'.n d collie of vour Ointment behind ilic ears, and the noise has left." "Send mc two boxes ; I waul one for a poor family." "1 enclose a dollar ; your price is2." cents but the medicine to me is worth a dollar." "Send me live boxes of your 1 ids." "Let me have I lire" boxes of your Pills by re turn mail, lor Chills and Fever."" I have over oo such testimonials :i these but wai.t of space compels me lo conclude. For Cutaneous Disorders, And all erupt ions of t he skin, t hi i Hutment is most invaluable. It does not heal externally alone, but penetrates wth the most .-earcliin effects t;, t ne very root of t he evil. HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT Possessed of this PEMEDY, Evcrv Man mav be h.sown Doctor. It may be nibbed into'the systom. mi as to r.-aeh iiii'y internal complaint : bv these means it cures sores or Clcers in the TIIPOAT. STOMACH. LIV EE. Sl'lxE. or oth er pans. If is an Infallible Pemedv for P.AD I.EOS. PAD 1, UFA Si's. Contra. ;'ed or Slitf .loinls. ;ol'T, PliEEMAT 1S.M, ai.d ull Skin 1 liseases. Imi'pktant Cai:ti.. Noiie arc genuine unless t lie signature oi . I. ii.vviii . h, as acent for the l'nili-d States. siiiiouimIh each box of Piils and liniment. P.oxes at c uts, C2 cents, aul si each. i.f"' There is considerable saving by taking the larger i-ize. IIoi.i.ou a v Co., New York. Oily PAPER HAKGING AND M- rrlcEIwain, tShop over JO.Y-YEi I TAP.LES.on PINE STREET. Ralisfactioa Cuaranteed. Pin'! STIiElGiiT A: 311LLEIJ, Harness Ma n nfact u rers, SADDLES EPIDLES, COLLARS. and all kinds of harness stock, constantly on hand. FR UIT, CONFECTIONE Y, AND GROCERY STORE, NUTS, CANDIES, TINAS' corrz: Sl'CAKS, TOPCCOES, FLOrK. fi t. ITememher the place f-pposite E. (?. Iive's on lower ia'.ii Street. 2 1-1 v A" TR EIGHT & MILLER. Little Erown Hands Tltey drive home the cows from the pasture. Up through the lonjr, shady lane : Where tho quail whistles loud In the whei.. fields. They are yellow w ith rlpenlnar grain t They find In the thick, waving grasses. Where the scarlet-lipped strawberry grows t They gather the earliest snowdrop, And the first crimson buds of the rose. They to?s the new lmy in the meadows. They gather the e!dcr-l loom white, They find where the du-.ky grapes purple, la the soft-tinted October light. They know where the apples hang ripest, . Ai.d are sweeter than Italy wines ; They know where the fruit clusters thickest. On the long, thorny blackberry-vinos. They gather the dolica'o soa-woeds, And lui'ld tiny Ci.htles of sand ; They pkk up (he beautiful sca-shrlls Fairy barks that have diified to land Those who toil bravely are strongest. The humble and poor bi-come gr- at. And from those brow n-handed children Shall grow mighty rulers of State. The pen of the statesman and author. The noble and wise of the l.-nd. The chisel, the sword, and the palette Mj all be held in the li.tlo brown li jnd. OUR NEW NEIGHBORS AT TONKA POG. AJT TTNSOCIAIILE FAMILY, AND WHAT HAP PEN KD TO IT. When I saw the little house building nn eighth of a mile beyond my own, on lhe old Bay road, I wondered who were to be the tenant"?. The modest structure was set well back from the rod, amooy the trees, as if the inmates were to care noihiug whatever for a view of the stylish eij u images which swept by during the Summer season. For my part I like t; see the passing, in town or country; but each lias his own t.iute. The proprietor, who seemed to be also the architect of the new houSv.', superintended the various de tails of the work with an assiduty that gave me u high opinion ot his intelligence and executive abioty, and I congratulated myself on the prospect of having tome very agreeable neigubors. It was quite early in the Spring, if I re member, w hen they moved iuto tiie cot tage a newly ma.riod coiipie, evidently; the wife very young, pretty, and with tii,j air of a lady; the husuand tomewiiat old er, but still in the lirst Hush of manhood. It was understood in the village that they came from Plliuiore; but no one knew them personally, and they broughf no l jl tei's ot iiitrouiii lion. (For obvious reasons I rcfiain from mentioning names.) It was clear that fur the present, at least, their own company was entirely sulliek-nt for them. They made no advancem-jnU toward the acquaintance of any of the frtiniiies in the neighborhood, and conse quently were left lo themselves; that ap parently was what they desired, and why they came to Poykapog. For, after iu black b;i.-s, wild thick, and teal, soiilude is the chief staple of Ponkapog. Perhaps its perfect rural loveliness ttiiouid be iu cldCled, Lying high U up Jer the winga of the blue hills, and in tne odorous breatli of pines and cedars, itchanccs to be tho most enchanting bit of genuine country, within fifty miles of lioston; which, moreover, tan be reached iu half an hoar's ride by ittilway. Put the railway station (heaven be praised) is two miles distant; und the seclusion is without a llaw. PouLonog has one mail a day; two mala a day would render the place uninhabitable. The village it looks like a compact village at a distance, but unravels and dis appears the moment you drive into it lias quite a large iloating population. I do not allude to the perch and pickerel. Along the Old Day road, a highway even in colonial days, there are anumber of at tractive cottages straggling oil toward Milton winch are occupid lor the Sum mer by people from the city. These birds of ptussage are a distinct class from the permanent inhabitants, and tho two seldom closely assimilate unless there has been some previous connettion. It seemed as if our new neighbors were to come under the head of permanent in habitants; they had built their own house, and had the air of intending to live in it all the year round. "Are you going to call on them?" I asked my wife one morning. ''When they call on us," 6he replied, lightly. "But it is our place to call first, they be ing strangers." This was said as seriously as the circum stances demanded; but my wife turned it oil" with a laugh, and I said no more, al ways trusting to her intuitions in these matters. She was right. She would not have been received, and a cool "not at home" would have been a bitter social pill to us, if we had rrone out of our way to be courteous. I saw a great deal of our neighbors, nevertheless. Their cottage was between us and the postollice, where he was never to be met with by chance and I caught frequent glimpses of the two working in the garden. Floriculture did not appear bo much an object as exercise. Possibl-y it was neither; maybe they were engaged in digging for specimens of those arrow heads and flint hatchets which are contin ually coming to the surface hereabouts. There is scarcely an acre in which the plowshare has not turned up some primi tive stone weapon or domestic utensil disdainfully left to us by the red maa who once held tin's domain an ancient tribe called the Punkypoags, a forlorn de sccudeut of which, one Polly Crowd, lig uies iu the annual blue book, down to the close of the Southern war, as a State pen sioner. I quote from the local historio grapher. Whether they were developing a kitchen garden, or emulating l'rof. Schliemaiin at Myccna?, the new-comers were evidently pel sons of refined musical ta.ste; the lady had a voice of remarkable sweetness, al though of no great compass, and I used often to linger of a morning by th i hiirh gate and listen to her executing an ope atic air, conjectural iy at some window up Btairs, for the house was not visible from the public road. The husband, some where about the grounds, would occ.ision aliy respond with two or thieu bars. It waj all quite an ideal, Arcadian business. They scLiucd very happy together, the&e two persons, who asked no odds whatever of the community ia which they had set tled themselves. There -wn a queerness, a sort of mys tery, ulxmt this couple which I admit piqued my curiosity, though as a rule I have no morbid interest ia the affairs of my tieigiiiK.is. They behaved like a pir of lovers m ho had ran oil' and got married fcljudjLiufcl4'. I wilihujly acquitted tlioui, the one nnd the other of having no legal right to do so; for, to change a word in the lines of the iet, "It Is a Joy to think the best We may of human kind." Admitting the hypothesis of elopement, there was no mystery in their neither sending nor receiving letters? But where did they get their groceries? I do not mean the money to pay for them that is an enigma apart but the groceries them selves. Ko express wagon, no butcher's cart, no vehicle of any description, was ever observed to stop at their domicile. Yet they did not alter family stores at the sole establishment in the village an in exhaustible little shop which (I advertise gratis) can turn out anything in the way of groceries, from a handsaw to a pocket handkerchief. I confess that I allowed' this unimportant detail of their house keeping to occupy more of my specula tion than was creditable to me. In several respects our neighbors re minded me of those inexplicable person? we sometimes come across in gieat cities, though seldom or never in suburban places, where the Held may be supposed too restricted for their operations per sons v ho have uopciccptible mcan-ofbub-sistancc, and manage to live royally on nothing a year. They hold no govern ment bonds, they p'Jixess no real estate 4 our neighbors did own their house), they toil not, neither do they spin; yet they reap all the numerous soft advantages that usually result from honest toil and skill ful spinning. How do they do it? But this is a digression, and I am quite of the opinion of the old lady in "David Copper Held" who says, "Let us have no meauder ings !" Though my wife had declined to risk a ceremonious call on our neighbors as a family, I saw no reason why 1 should not speak to the husband as un individual, when I happened to encounter him by the wayside. I made several approaches to do so, when it occurred to my penetra tion that my neighbor had the air of try ing to avoid me. 1 resolved to put the suspicion to the test, and one foicnoon, when he was sauntering along on the op posite side of the road, in the vicinity of Fisher's saw-miil, I deliberately crossed j over to address him. lhe brusque man ner iu which he hurried away was not to Le misunderstood. C f course I was not going to force myself upon him. It was at this time that I bewail to form uncharitable suppositions touching out neighbors, and w ould have been as well pleased if some of my choicest fruit trees had not overhung their wall. I deter mined to keep my eyes open later iu the season, when the truit should be ripe to pluck. In some folks, a sense of the del icate shades of difference between mcum et luum does not seem to be very strongly deveioped ili the moou of cherries, to use Jie old Indian phrase. I was sullieiently magnanimous not to impart any of these sinister impressions to the families with whom Ave were on visiting terms; for I despise a gossip. I Would say nothing against lhe persons up the rond until I had something definite to say. My interest in them was well, not exactly extinguished, but burningow. I met Lie gentleman at intervals, and passed him without recognition; at rarer inter vals I saw the lady. After a while I not only missed my oc cnsional glimpse of her pretty, slim fig ure, always draped in some soft, black stutl", with a bit of scarlet at the throat, but I inferred that she did not go about the house singing in her light-hearted manner, as formerly. 'What had hap pened I Had the honeymoon suffered eclipse already? Was she ill? I fancied she was ill, ami tliat I detected a certain anxiety in h.r husband, w ho spent the mornings diggingsolitarily in the garden, and seemed to have relinquished those long jaunts to the brow of the B.ue hiil, where there is a supurb view combined with several venerable rattlesnakes with twelve rattles. As the days went by it became certain that the lady was routined to the house, seriously ill, possibly a confirmed invalid. Whether sh-j was attended by a physician from Canton or Milton, I am unable to say: but neither the gig with the large white allopathic horse, nor tho gig with the homeopathic sorrel marc, was ever seen hitched at the gate during the day. If a physician had charge of the case, he visited his patient only at night. All this moved my sympathy, and I reproached myself with having hard thoughts of my neighbors. Trouble had come to them early. I would have liked to ofl'er them such small, friendly services as lay in my power; but the memory of tho repulse I had sustained rankled in mo. So I hesi tated. One morning my two boys burst into the library with their eyes sparkling. "You know the old elm down the road?" cried one. "Yes." "The elm with the hang-bird's nest?" shrieked the other. "Well, we bot'.i just climbed up, and there's three young ones in it." Then I smiled to think that our new neighbors had got such a promising little family. T.B. Aldrich in Atlantic. Desolation of Palestine. In Palestine you are nearly as much in the wilderness as in Arabia; as to inhabi tants, they are precisely the things that do not exist, for all you can tell, except in the towns and villages you pass through. You can ride on day after day, and you tisc over each hill uud sink iuto wich val ley, and except tin occasional solitary traveler with his servant and muleteer, or a Turkish oliictr with his party, rarely does a moving object appear upon the landscape. Ho cattle me en the laud, and no passengers on the highways. The lone lint ss strikes you more like tiiat of the desert, for it seems unnatural, because here taere should be life, uud there i3 none. Sometimes you may make out at a distance on the hillside a siugle figure, a manor a donkey. It is the only moving thing you can detect all around. From Jerusalem to Bey rout you scarcely light on one single ol-ject that can be compared with those on the Arab pastures fioni the top of Jabel el Suf.ir to ttu scene of rural industry. There iu places, the country was full of people anu children, and Hocks and herds rejoicing picture of pastoral existence in iu wealth; while here, in the country of tillage, aud towns, ai.d vil b.ges, the whole laud teems to lie under a bpell. The reason wliy wgamy is of so rare oc currence in Khcde Is. and is, that onca on a time, a man who was convicted of this crime was sentenced by the court to live for two years with both w ives. The pun ishment was terribly cruel, but it had the desired clTect. Tho cultivation of sugar is rapidly cx teneling in New South Wales, Queensland "Western Australia, and the northern part of Southern Australia, and the production has increased this year by nearly two thirds over the production of last year. CORRESPONDENCE. From Alton. A ro. 25, 1ST0. "We are having :i severe dry spell at present ; has been dry for about two weeks, late corn and vines are suffer ing. Millet is snfe in stack; has yielded from 2 to tons per acre. Small grain are mostly ;i failure. Grapes of good siz and flavor, and very abun dant up near head of this creek. (Deer) plums are new ready for pick ing; plenty of tl.em tco. Xo one poi soned, suake bitten, sick or absconded 50 but little chance for news. As evtr, P. S. Child. Iaclla I tens. There is a great deal of sickness in our vicinity. Squire Zink ia vefy sick ;-disease, bil ieus fever. Colonel McCarty is fixing up his hpuse as neat as a pin. James Colbert is building a new barn. Middleton and Son left for the west this week. Alvin Hayward, of Iluinbolt, Xeb., is visiting bis brother at this place. Taylor Richard is building a new house and barn. School commences at patella. Oct. 1st. Have you not room for a teachers' column in the IIekald? "Willet Pottonjjer. Jr., is a son of San ford Pot tender, ;i name-sake of lawyer Pottanger, and we beiievs a distant re lation of the samp. Further than this we can not give his pedigree. JlKl'OKTEK. Ticrht "IlleGrore Notes. Et. Hepald:- The weather is very hot and dry. Not many sick at present. The farmers are very busy making hay, ;ind the weather is very favorable. Winter wild fruits and nuts are very scarce this fall, although the prospect was line last spring. Politics already are geltinrj to be the leading topic of conversation. We will not ask who are running for ofiiice but wait just as patiently as ever we can until after fall fleet ion, and then we will all know. Still we would liko to know, who they are goin;; to run for Justice of the peace for J-ight Mile Grove? Greenbackers havn bern Ivtst of us stump speaking. Well most anything fgr a change, one thing over and over every day soon grows to be monota nons. We are sorry to learn that Mrs. Jno. Pool fell b;st .Saturday, and broke her arm. Mr. O. IT. King, tho Kingsvillo P. M.. v.-as thrown fion a waon tho otber day, and was badly hurt, but not seri ously. We learned that Mr. Chns. B ites has taken three negroes out on his farm, and is giving them employment; near Jy eveiybody is getting them a nijycr, guess we will have to get us one too. Quite 'i number of farmars are los iughos (inoiily shoats) with the chol era, of late. Mr. Sam'l Richardson is putting up a large amount of hay this fall. Miss May Kennedy is going to tench in the country this winter. Great excitrneitt prevails at Eight Mile Grove over the petition they have in circulation to change the name of the Post OHice back to its former name. We learn a certain person has said, that he is going to follow up said petition with a remonstrance; guess he will have to go farther away from home this time, than he did before, for he will have a few influential, reso lute, and determined men to work against. Sii'THRori-;. From Louisville. An;. 27th, 1870. Ed. Herald: Yeur Lueila corres pondent asks for tho minutes of our Institute. N. minutes were kept, but I will be able in a few days to give au outline of what we did. Thirty-eight teachers present at the last examina tion, and csnoequently my time will be fully occupied this week in looking over their manuscript and sending out their returns. The general routine of work was the same as last year's institute except the addition of a first grade class. We made a general review of the various common school branches, classifying their divisions rtrd reciting by topics. Instead of the instructor lecturing to the class the teachers were requiird' to do most of the taiking. They there-' by acquired the strength that is gained j from exertion. Instead t f being made passive recipicais of a lecturer's ideas, the teachers were encouraged to give their er.vn with their reasons therefor.' No one was expected lo accept a state-' ment as true that he did not thorough- ! ly understand. The asking of qucs tions and the interposition of objee-; tions by members of the class, were! cordially welcomed by the instructors. Instead of teaching by authority of in-; structoror text book, wo aimed lo teach by illustration and demonstration, di-j rected to the intelligence of lhe class In fact, we conformed ns near ly to the rtdrs of dtdibera: ion asseni-; blies as circumstances w ould allow. ! Last year at the close of the insti-j tute, several teachers expressed them-' selves as not satisfied with a second certificate; and this is tho reason why we organized a first grade class this year, and confined ourselves to tWiJ branches named by law relating to first and second grades. Ten entered tho first grade cl.ts, and eight wrote for first giivdo certiKcatd. One already holds a first grade and tho attic rs pur sued only a portion of the branches. About forty have commenced study preparatory to filtering the first gr.vl' class next year. So we may expect that onr next sts.sion will bo an inter-' eating one. Further particulars will bo given in a future communication if agreeable to "ve editor." D. D. Maktixpalk. 'eJ;rnimA Weather Service. TtVXLETIN POP Jl'I.T, 1873. Temperature. The highest report-' ed noon temperature were: Iuvalo, 10"; Table Bock, 102; Camden. I'dJi; Palmy ra and Uutubo'dL each, 10?b Meu tf all maximum temperatures, yTdcgiets. Two stations report temperatures ns low as C dog., and one CT. Mean of all minimum temperatures, 71 dg. Mean for month for all stations, H- de grees. Raixeall. For all stations east of the Sixth Frir.cipal Meridian, the rain fall was 4.4 inches ; aud for all west, 7. no inches. Aa Omaha (United States Signal Service) it was :J.17, and at North Platte, 8.47 Greatest & umber of days ou which rain fell, 1"; and av erage for all stations, 'J. But two se vere storms were reported in tho mouth. 'flic following items wore furnished by the U, S. Sig. St. at Omaha: Mean daily thei moiueter, 78.7 dfg.; highest '.ii deg. tin tho 10. h: lowe.st V.'J, on the 20; h. Prevailing wind, s c; highest veloei ty, !!') miles per hour. Total movement of the wind during the mouth, o'J7,.'$ miles. Note. In observations at tho cen tral station during July, three rain-' gauges were used Ono was three iu. in diameter, one 0 iu. and one 12 in.; all iSci s.i'ne depth and all made in tho same fotm and similiarly exposed. In measuring the rainfall by these differ ent gauges, no difference in utriount was i miicated. l MMAHV FOR YKAR. -V. PU!.l: Om.ih.t. :.oi; 'JA-i 3.2 0 ,V 0.2.) 0.27 0.07 (i '" t 2 17 1.77 r..r..t 4 '.". K. ll tlf. 7.-IJ l 1,0 6.21 0.41 O.JO 0.M o.r,7 n.4t 0.7.') 2.01) 3 .2 t.s jr. jjvjk. 3 lit a. mi 0.17 0A 0.75' (I .W n.vi) ti r.i 0.19 Mi .Julv... Ainrust i r.3 S.';.l. ii:hcr..( .i I leloher I) I t Noveuihf r. .ii.P". Decivnher. .0 :'0 ixr:i. January. E.-l.ruai". Marea..'. A ;u i! VI. iy ... .June .2.33 .0 41 .till . I.''". Total... IT.' 5 -'Ji'3 "OH Columns marked "cut half" and "lA-isf- h-i'f" t!.r Mvi'r:iri nf nil ob servations taken in the Eastern half of th'; State and western half, respec-' lively. The first two columns arn from t'.ui reports of the. U. S. Signal Service; From the t.an-e source I give the rain fall at Omaha for several years past. Each year begins with the month of July ; 1877-8. US.OS inches; lH7f,-7, 40.fl., lH75-o,:J2..H ; 1S74-."",, 42.M1) ; 1873-4, 25.73; 1372-3, 27,'iO. S. R. TnoMrov, Director. Why Our Ma nuf.iet tires arc Crowding: British Wares. A writer in lhe London Times, on the cotton trade of England and America, calls tho attention ot the English to the fin t that "the rivalry of American inanu fact tires is a phenomenon" of such magni tU'le that it deserves the most anxious iu ve.-iigation. lie says: "America h;.s more than one-fourth tho number of spindles which we posets;she is able to find employment for these, and he is constantly adding to their number, ller ccnsuiiipii'.n of cotton is equal to one half of ours. To-day she ii able to sup ply uhno.-t the whole of her own wants;-t-ho meets us in tho market of South America ami the East nay, her cloths are to be found in all our large towns, competing fairly w ith our own. A strong popular bent intent supports this aggressive movement, and an export trade iu manu factured goods lias become in America au object of national desire. Journals spec ially devoted to this trade have sprung up, and appear to llourish. Government h;u lent it aid by directing all its consular ageats to collect inf'rin-.uiou lilted to be 8' rviceable to manufacturers. A rivalry which has already achieved so much aiI alms at so much more cannot be regarded otherwise than as mot formidable." In assigning the causes of this formida ble phenomenon, the writer places first tho rapid progress the Americans have made in lhe improvement of their pro cesses of manufacture, and he states the following facts : "In lo.i the average English produc tion j er weaver of f ,'.4 lb. blurting wastf2. yards per week of otl hours. In lt7 tho Wo; king bouts had fallen to 57, and the production had risen to S7.j yards. An increased production of 23 per cent is thus uue to improvement in the processed of manufiictuie. "In ISO! there were 2-1,151 persons em ployed in Massachusetts in the pi eduction of cotton goods, aud they produced 17.3, -0o!.i,(.0J yards. In Ibio tho operatives numbered (10,176, ami their product was bi4,0U!,000 yards. lhe opeiatiVcS had increased 1"U per tent, and ttuir product had liicrcaotd -jM per cent. "The increase ol production due to im proved methods was tiius in England 2-i per cent, and in Massachusetts 100 per cent. I do not, of couise, suppose tiiat the American niHiiufacturer is m advance of the English rival to the extent of this Uilloielice, for I presume that he staited upon the career of improvement from a lower platform."' Oce the Americans imported theircot tou machinery f.om Jhigiaiid. They do to no more, as the 'i.iuve machinery is cheaper than the British," and also -requires less power for equal production." As to wag. s, the bhotting is that factory l..bor costs tibout per ceat more iu Ameii. a than in Buy laud for the time oc tupied, but American mechanics are ahead i:i iu'.e.liu'eiic.', piec'.oion, aud s wifluess of manipulation tiiat is, they will do more-' work iu a "iven time, and do it better. The drunkenness and degradation prevailing in the low quarters of Liverpool are attracting the attention of the whole of England. An agricultural firm in Germany ha ordered "' hoiae-rakes frorjv Wive.heiv donr Mites.