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About Nebraska herald. (Plattsmouth, N.T. [Neb.]) 1865-1882 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1879)
7 iShe Altera: (b. PLATTSMITOTII. NOV. 27. 1879. MaeDonnjisms. (From the Watchman.) Capt. Kuhl has drawn sao.ooo. pen ion moaey from Yarmany. Is dot so? Frod Nye is gwine to jine the stry, ;md become afgoud im. Nye and MaelJonagh are set down as nameless wits, and Hillings and Twain as witless Hiiiutts. ;ple suspected to have been ronnec ted with the hanging:, to leave. The 'Chronicle and the Herald forces have i,i .- ,r.i :r(';-rrd to quit, these papers (having advocated extreme measures to ciiecK t ne outlawry ana cnins wmcn I have been decidedly on the increase of late. j What Feltun sujs About the Iecra I uri tint 4ui.it u'Ate li ti:ivct t lit niin-'niistakes and criminal blunders of that 'extra session our threat to withhold the appropriations until certain repeal measures were approved by the Presi dent; our indiiect announcement to !the world that we iMendeU to ignore A cheating eambler named Duncaa l"e executive branch ol the .vein- was shot and killed by a stranger injinwiit and to make Congress with its iiutte.n...iti. last wek Vu anrs factious turbulence t he absolute d.cta- Wo hPi-or hp-ird of it ! tor of this country: our unsuccessful We never heard or it. efort to he Hect iw, ,aW8t ,iUt A wholesale grocery was recently i upon the ground of inexpediency, but started in an old stable in Omaha, wnd upon t lie ground of their uucoustitu a friend of ours picked up one of nationality, and vehemeiitlv pressing that company's cards, on the back of which objection in the face of the following was written sect'on of the Const it ution :'The time. Fumigato coffee sacks places and manner of holding elections And tea chests at will, rr Senators and Representatives shall The smell of the horse-hoofs ;he prescribed in ach tate by the leg- Will hang round 'em still. islature thereof, but the Congress may ,. .,,,, at any time, bv law, inakeor alter such According to the Jay Gould organs, ;rt,Kll!alioils. except as 16 the places of that hairpin must beemtnpotent. He loosing Senators." The discussions makes "rai roads and cities jump up u ,,0 tiese various question made the and jump down, jump alieaduidjuiiipiin n,ssia) , the Xorthern mind afoot! hat long tails oHr cats have tIfU i)elwocr;i(,v was nothine but State to be sure. rights run mad"; that we would sweep Temperance having cost the Oma!i a from the statute book the last war News 8500 a year, is bounced. The',measur. if we, as a pai ty, were in pow News eharitv hospital will soon be er; that secession and rebellion would ftommenced. After a year's solicita- again follw as necessary sequences of ithisextreme view of State rights. Then we hail the wild effort to create exeite iment about the use of the army at the polls. Had there been an armv at the Lkadville. Nov. 22. At 1 o'clock ' polls there would have been some sense Thursday morning forty-live masked: in this theatrical display, this reheais citizens forced Sheriff Watsoit to sm-'al oT providing an imaginary foe. I render to tiiem a prisoner, named jneed not continue these recitals, these Charles Stewart, a'notoiious foot-pad 'demonstrations of incapacity, of blind who had threatened to kill the men ' passion. Surliee it -to say that our Demo wbo had him incarcerated as soon as ;eratic Congress has alarmed the North he should get out. Stewart was 20 ern people. Tiity are afraid to entrust years old, and begged piteously for his!the administration of the government life, and for time to write lo his moth- to the hands f violent men. They er at Conuautville, Pa., but was only j would rather risk the perils of centra allowtd time to say abriei prayer, and; lization than again endure the horrors was then launched into eternity . The'of revolution. They would as soon see mob then took Ed. Friedsham and al-;the Government "shot to death" as to though he struggled ferociously, hung have it "starved to" death." All this hiin in a workmanlixe manner, that lhas been the work of self-constit uted indicated familiarly with the hang-jleaders." man's trade. Friedsham has been! The most stalwart Republican could jumping lots, driving off occupants by! not have made a more severe arraign foree, and conducting himself in a gen-'ment of the last session of Congress erally objectionable manner. Tho ftl-' than the preceding. What gives a lowing note was pinned to his back: 'greater significance to Mr. Felton's "Note to all thieves, bunko steerers.jstatements is the faet that he is sup footpads, and chronic bondsmen for J ported by Alexander H. Stephens, and "the same, and sympathisers of thelseveral others of his State colleagues. anything to do with the circulars stint out to influence the voters of tht state against Gannett the Republican candi date for regent of the University. These pugnacious editors are loth to believe anv such thing. "Who," sav, He Liked his Mother-Tongue. A bhifl. heartv. well dressed pail in sitectacles had just banged his lis; upon too co.iuu.-i .iid regislei his nniue. Want some rooms. v lie and I St. tion there are ?2G in the treasury. Pandemonium Broke Loose. aoove class of criminals: This is to be your end. We mean business. Let this be your last warning particular ly Cooney, Adams, Conner. Collins, Hogan, Ed. Hums, Ed Champ, Pat Kel ly, and a great many others who are well known to the organization. We are seven hundred strong." Pat. Kelly, who has been accused of taking bribes while City Marshal, and Jim Bush, have been warned to leave or share the same fate. The "thugs" and bad characters have also banded together, and claim that, having 750 names enrolled, they will immediately begin avenging their comrades' death, and will panish every one of the vigi lants who executed them. They have already threatened to burn the town, and have seat notices to some peo- Omaha Bee. That Sn-in-liw. Tli Wahoo Independent is hard on Brother Brooks. This is the first open charge of Son-in-Law" we have seen. There are a certain class of editors whose bump of pugnacity is apparent ly much larger than their brains, who must persecute, slander or pull down somebody. Of this class, Datus Brooks ef the Omaha Republican stands at the head, and a small army of the breth ren of the quill throughout the state, stealing his thunder and influenced and prejudiced by himself, have begun an attack upon the chancellor of the state university. The chancellor and cler gy of Lincoln deny squarely having they, ''could have ibeen interested in this 1n(H.t lllc',M.n. to-morrow, but Chancel lor an held ? -Chancel- k oW a,v ,.,, tix,Hi? lor r airnnwi wistigaieu me pioi. l es, ..Tha win 1(t, (.M fllil IVII,.irks t! I riianceuor i an tieiu is a sneaK ana a c,(M.k fiive yt) a n;rc Mlite j,ist Vl liar. His word, his honor, are to bt ,,v Count Sahunayundi, and " counted as nothing, when the proof, .juv that he must havo been more interest-: ..j a,--,! that it would he au fait, ed than any one elsein this plot, 8tandsnij 1 1 k:1 1 we could sive vou a nuite." out against him. It appears verv plain i (jrf"j mw Yiuig man, what to the Independent that those circulars gort things are llion;? This is Bos were put out with the names attached !0na M,t ';" of the most prominent ministers in "Ves, sir, that is I " Lincoln, forged as they declare, by; Well, won't you be kind enough to democrat demagogues who used this; talk EnglUh? it is ?khI enough for means to gain votes for their candidate.jine here.''' The Lincoln democratic ring had some-; "Well," said the clerk, flushing red thing to -gain by this nefarious strata- jn the1 face, "anything to please you, gem. uev. YV olfe, that orthodox uena-: sir." agog tie of the democracy, from all; The bind", hearty party turns awayi the proofs in t lie matter, appears to and strides in the direction ot th- have in vented those circulars and fore-, reading-room, but the word "boor ed the Haines of the Lincoln clergv. (which reaches him causes hiin to looi The Omaha Republican has from the. back and remark : , first conducted this war upon the chan-i "Mv friend, I am no boor. U cellor from personal motives. It -ses'sixwk and write nine " languages the same unfairness that it did last .cnotiirli o tc-ich tliem in I winter when the "investigation" was in! vei-hitv. 1 like, my mother-to .... -m : - 11 4 1 a. I progress. 1 lien, as now, it puoiislieu ocst oi an, anu ncncvc urn n ans every scrap that it could raKe up an pnu'iicai purposes in uus com i gainst the chancellor, every thing that! In your intercourse wiui me ne Tom. Dick and Ilarrv. enemies of enough to use it, and you will do Chancellor Fairfield and" the Uni versi-' pu licilnr favor." sity, might say against him. but not: - - ...i.;.. i. niu.i i,;,o,.if ;.. k ...L Disannearanee of the Bowery n vr ill. ii lie ici.i rii in i line 1 1 in viic nullum - - i of all honest thinking people, did the The New York Times laments' Republican ever publish in its columns, disappearance of that afnusing am Mr. Brooks is interested in having the; particularly wicked product, ' chancellor step -town and out of his Bowerv Bov,'' and repeats an oft- high position, because he has a son-in-' taJe which seems to lose nothing law one Prof. Emerson, who, as the age and repetition. I wenty-ti ve y? proofs elicited from last winter's in- ago, 1 hackeray. iK'ing desirous to vestiaation go to show, cordially hates "Bowerv Bov." went with a lYienc' the chancellor, because, perhaps the; the haunts of that peculiar crcaturd latter gentleman looked with some dis-, look lor one. cry soon Ins coin favor upon his tipplin" habits, and ion pointed out to him a genuine s this same son-in-law he'would like to imen finding against a lamp-post see chancellor or hitih up in public fa-'the corner of a si rcct, ivd--hirted,bl vor. Instead therefore, of being. ini-"oii.screu, sonp-iocKeo, smuy-nai portial aw.l fair in this matter, Mr. with cigar in mouth elevati-! at Brooks publishes nothing except on ;angie oi ioi iy-nve iegie's. irer fiiM siile of tfif miMtinn ml wliil. h : teiii pla 1 1 ug linn for a lew mom is very industrious in searching out (Thackeray wanted to hear him small rtings that this, that.' and tlie:and ask the way to iitliern.irti7.ni n;iier in;iv rrive evnies- P-'t't i (he City. Slid, politely, sion to and publishing the same, he j friend, I i'M ''ke to go to" si seems never to se anything that goes:I)l:uc; ,"U n . '-.-plied the Bov t( vindicate tho chancellor in the minds !u". " V""V"" of all unbiased, honest, thinking peo-!!,lUK' lone u"l . wimoui hmmii. pjg : thing except his lips, as he looke While the Independent is not theIazilv at thc iv-haired uo snecial anoloeist or defender of Chan-; "wen, sonny, vou can go it you " it,. v..:..ni.i e ..r : stay to long. lhackcRiy was L ;v, f 4.1 TT Oilll.lif-11. Xllt- Xlllll'? cl.1.13 lll.lb IIIC I'l LI1TT Ulil'iii 1 . . ti,u m-ni ,, Bowerv boy s successor has more I he moral and ... . . . . n:-..- UIS ices illKi IIOIIU Oi IIIS Vll lUUO. God aud morality versity management elevating principles of the christian religion are demanded by a large ma jority of the people of the state with-; Tho British board of trade stati out sectarian bias, m the condact of j niai-e Innro anj lllorc apparent, yea me uinveiii. ... ivn. oh-um wouiu year, the tacts that steamships are 1 do well to heed this fact dependent. -Wahoo In- Ncarly all of iTie "nun e are women pawnbrokers ol A grindstone has been running for 1GJ years in an On-low, N. C. family. When ladies consult on wardrobe questions they are all clothes conimu nionists. The man who sits down on a bent pin may not renin rk th;it. he hns felt that pin afore, but he certainly per forms a comic hoppery. ii.. 1- . , iuiv euperMitiuig siuung vessels i for home and foreign tnide. In 1 foreign trade alone steam tonnage thc-V, an incivjise of 10 per cent, in the la- returns as compared with those of ' J preceding year, while a correspond f decrease is noticeable in sailing sh employed in the same trade. "I didn't at all cxiect company t dav " said a. l:idv to her visitors, wi a not very pleasant look, "but I ho, vou will ke vonrsel ves fit home "Yes, indeed," replied one of then starting ofT, "I will make myself a home as quick as possible."