J. 8 & M. E. R. ia Nebraska, - MAIN LINK KXPKKSB TKAIH 04IN0 WlT. STATIONS : Mo. 1. No. S. fbutamouth .... Orea pulls Concord Cedar Creek... I.OUlVlll- South bend.... Ashland. .... Greenwood .... UocolgM noting Bed Cloud McCook.... ... 9 :t)o a iu V :M a ni t A n as 10 Ma ni 10 rn a ui 10:l7iu 11 ;03 a Oi e :fl6 p in 7:i- p an 7 : p ui -,:Z u in 7 M p m :I0 pm a 130 p in :ttl hi Ar. II -M a ni Ar. lve Ar. l.'ve Ar. l.'re Ar. 9 :.H p n L've 12 iJu . u 10 :f p in 3 :I5 a m 3 :30 A ni A r. stft it L've i il" pn ir. ' :M p in l,'V :ZH 6 :30 it ii lAUl 12 :l)6p III 12 pill lAr. Hlpu l.'vt v p in, L've Akron Denver.... Ar. aiaiuiAr .. II L've Oi L've Ar. t oftaiuiAr. 6 .-on p ni lo :0( p m KXf-Ki TKIN0 OOIHU 8TATJON8: AT JNo.. I No. 4- natt.n.outh.... Ar. :lpiiiAr. :OU m Oreapoils .... Ar. liiopinAr. a :M u. C' ueurJ Ar. I:ypin Ar, ' tedur Creek... Ar. I UJ p in Ar. ai. ouivnl . ... At. :KpiuAr. t:l7an utb Knl.. Ar I S ui Ar. H:6ii- Aablaxd . Ai. I Ji Ax. 7:Wui leenwowdr... Ar. l:13pniAr. 7 -J a m Uucolu Ar. zrf'puiAr 3:30an. 3 i 6 p ui L've Uwtlfga Ar. 9J0uiAr. 10 :t p i. L'ta-lo :loui t.'vo lOJOpu bea Cloud Ar. iiu at. 6pi. L've H i'A a ui L've 7 :' P MoCock ........ Ar. J;6a. Ar. 3 -no p n. L've 4 Jit a in L've !siu Akron Ar. lo .46 p ui Ar. ioA6n L'vc n :55 pm L've 11 Man. Denver L'v. 1 art p ui Lve7jjtt n. Trains J and 4. nuiubeiinir .19 and 4 Krd Cloud, ruu daily exc- t Sunday. west ol K. C. ST. JOF. A. C B. R. R. 8TAUON3 i KXfUKliS TKAINS OOI.NO SUHTH. rutisuioutii .. iHCMpollB .. ... La Lute ..... He levuo Ouialia STATKS; 4 :60 a 53 0 :11 a 6 :2tt a o a m in u ui 6'. p 6 :07 p 6:11 p 6 :'Jti . C :.' p BX.rUK.HH TKA1M UOIMI aol'lll. I'latisuiouiu . Oi eapolls .... La 1 laile ... belle vuo ... Omaha. . .. 9 :20 a :10 a :ou a il il MiMouri laciUc ICuilroad. 8 :I0 p li " :V0 i u 7pi 7 :4i' p n 7 :au p ii FreiKiii leavei son rn. OntAA-" - Fupiiiuui. Jlpimgheld Loul-vill. . .. vvttrplu WAter. Avuca HuuOar Kuusa-t City St. Loali l2.ro a .'.Oil p. 3.05 3 Ml B.00 ' &.45 " fi.4o " 4iwluK l,oliiK MOU1 H. I MIKfll. (join;, Kuai u St. Ltoaf- - Vattsa City.." uubar ftVuca. tterpinii aln tiui.-viiTe 'Spriiineld t-apuiiuu. . iliBAiui nrrlvi h 52 a.iu p III j lo a-i M.32 p.tu l.bl a. in 1.24 p. HI .M &.08 " .X1 " ...4a " ta.15 " 0.66 " 1.01 p. 2.10 " 2.4!i J.0' " 4.-5 7.lfcl " 45 n.03 ,. M . JO ' 3.00 ' The above i Jetlvnou City tune, tmuute luster 1 11.111 Oiuulia llin. w hich U I Jtlll AL, AXU HtrAKTlUK HKPAitr. 1 .ou II. 3.00 p. ii ) !.oo a. ni I o.i5 p. 111. p. li y.uo a. j 8.25 a. lu 4.25 p. Ii; ts.oo a. 11 Loo p. o Iitl p. IM. I J.30 O. 111. i d.oo a. 111. 1 Vim p n. f . l.oo a iu ".jo p. 111. a ai. 1 .'.JO p. ui. f j.JO p. iu. KAdTKKX. Wricior. .fuKTHKK.V. SOU1HKKN. OMAUA. WKKI'IMi WATKlt. ACXOK VV1 1-LJ5. il.uoa iu. t-c. 17. lsl. tA(t iH-tKUKU FOB OUUrnn. Un order not exeeediuK $15 - - lo ceui SJVcr ala auU uwt i?xc-Uiiij; - - - lCfUi- .. jjtf j;-) . - 20 ceui - 4U " - - 2&CCUI- A eiugle Mouev Order may mcuw. AiuumiL iroiu uue ceul to Utty dollars. u but tr.ust nut coulaiu a lracUuual part ol a ceut. KAlka VVtt roSTAOK. lat c asa matter vleiierej 3 ceula per H ounce jja ii'uulisUtrr ratesj 2 cla per 10 Hi " v'l ran- .Sev.p!ruer au book come iu.f thl clasaj ceut per eacli 2 uuuces. ttll clasi (,uiert:uauUe 1 cent per uuuee. J. W. MakaUau. F. M. 0'fiCIAJLt DIRLCTORY. CITY U1KKCTOUV . (iEOUGES, SMITH, Maor. WIIXiaM il. CLisiHi0, treasurer. J. i. liraO.. City Clerk. W lL.L.t. 1 1' l 1 1 K.Mi fcii. Police J udtrn. K. U. Wl.SlJtl AM, City Attorney. 1'. tl. AlUbfUl, CUlel ot t'ullce, P. JJcCAAA.UVereeerol SUeel.i. V. KLKilAKb. Ciilfl i tut AX-pl. H. il. aliJUao.tif, CU'u tooaiu u. Health 1st Ward Wiu . ilerold. II. .M. lioui. 2nd Watu J. Al. fattersou. J. 11. rairfleld. SV.t Waru Al. 11. Aiur, uy, J. fc. Jlun iou. 4ia W rd P. u. Leui'Uua. 1. AlcCailan. MCHOOl. BOAKO. JESSE B. STKUOE. J. W. UAUNKS. M a. ilAltl'lii .S V iu. Wi.Mtitii EES. L. Ii. lfcH.XT, V. V . A.fcOAUL, fotmmtttr J N O. W. MAU3UALL. o COCXTV imtKCTOBI. W. II. NKWELL, County lreaaurer. J.W. t.V.l.uj, Cuuuty Clerii. J. W. unfair.'. Couuty JuUe. H. W. 11 X' Mia, auerili. Ci'iiCs ai.au. oup'toffub. lustmctiou. t). W. KAiiil'lKL.o, Couuty surveyor. f. r. UAad, Cwruuer. CulJill CUAlMliMIONKlta. JAMES CKAWt Oliti. South Beud rreciact. SAJU L lUCrlAUU-MJ.N, Ml. fleaaaul freciuct. A. ri 1O00, i'iaiuiuiuuiu little haviiift buaiue with the Couuty Couiiuimiuui, will uud theui iu sesaioa the feu l Aluuday ana A'u9sUay ol each uiouth. u BOAKO UK THADB. FILVN K CAKtiUlU. iTesideut. J. a CiJA.NUtt. Uiiii ti.UCK, Vi'w-Freei-deuia. WM. a. Wl.SK. Societary. t"ltti. tKlltutvit. Ireasurer. Ki(ulAr hmmUu of the Board at the Court Uouse.iiio Ini A'uewlay e veuiu ui each uioutut Mi F, B A U if! 1 STEfi FiunhUiea Kiel. Pure MUX 8pdal cail Attended to. mud reh UiU CTOiU - luruiaood Ua waltted. ly 1 ATrCMflllTH MILLS A4kl A klUI W w - TThiiOUTii NKiJ.: Proprietor. C. II CIS El ntvir, Corn Mai & aVsW ExpreHs KXirfs.s leuve leaves goiiiK coIiik kUtlH. SOUTH. 7 40 p e.V u.hi. 8.17 .:7 " AZ " 9 00 " .! " .6 3.40 - :i.j7 " W '" :o.o7 .o.L'i ' H.M a in 7.07 p.m. p. n 12. a.ni ritUnontai Telepboae ExchAore l"J. P." Tounsj. reildeutArr" 2 Bennett 4k Lew la. a lure. , a M. B. iiarphy Lo .. . - 4 Bouaer olaOia. 6 CoMutv Cltrk'a office.! 6 B. B. Lewis, realdenee. 7 J. V. Heck bach, a lore. Weateru Cuto.i I elKiaph office. . 0 . 1. U. Wheeler, renldeuoe. 10 1. .(inpbrll. " 14 H. b. WluUnaui, 1ft J-io. Wayuiau, l J. W. Jiiu1uk 17 W. H WUe.oOire. ! MorrtaMry BruaM ofOce, It W K. Carter, alore. ; 20 O. W. r'airOeld. raaldence. 21 M. B Murohy. 22 l. II. Wheeler St Co . office. 23 J. f. Taylor. rrldeuce. 24 First NalfMial Bauk. Jb t. tC. KuDucr's olUceJ M J.f. Youuk. store. 2a 1 erklns Mou.te. e K. W. llyrs.reslueuce. t jl Journal iifMce. 32 Kali Qeid's ice office. 34 . lin.KAl.il Fill:. Co office. A J.N. W l-e, re Id e nee. M n. M. Chapiuau. " .17 W. 1. Ioua. JH A. N. sullivan, " 3U II. r.. l'aliur, " 40 W. IL feciilldkoecht. office. 11 hulllvan 4X 'Vm ry, VI A. W. Mcututchliu. residence. 43 A. I'allt-rwiu. livery. 44 C hi. Iloiuiei. 45 L. l. Beiiuett. residence. 40 4Jeo. . biuith, office. 17 1 A . Moore, dor si. Vi J. W. Karuos. residence. .jo K. K. Uvliitfotou, ufflce. n J. V. Weckuach, residence. iM Chaplain WriKhl. 40 W. il. nchl.dkuecht M ieo. H smith, to It. K. LivluKstun. " 115 C. C. Ballard, iiieswiicii uoaru couaect riattsmouih win .Mhiaiid, AriiiiKtob, iiuir, l oiiucll Bluffs, I re iwui, uiiunu, wmau.t r.iHUoru ntatuii 1 apilllou. HurlnKDeld, Aiuisville Houth Ben. id avrriy. PHOF.8SIONAL CAKOS. t TTOKNEYS AT LAW. ue Courts iu the state, onal Bank. fUTTHHOUTU Will practice iu a! Office over rirvt Na 4yl NKBK4.HKA. U. A. HAL.ISIIlrK . DETTIST. race over amlth. Black Jk Co'a. Uruic Htore list inasa ueuliairy at reasonable prices, 231 j 11. UKAUK, 21. U.. i ni.iu i i.i aim nE.UI. UlllCe OD Mall. treei. uerwHrs Block, south side. Office tpeu uay anu niui county 1-llVMCIAN, CASS COUNT V. M. O'DONOHOE VTTOKXEY AT LAW & XOTAKV TURLIC. ritzerald Block, ' FLA TTft.MOUTU, .VEHRA.1KA Agent tor Steamship Hues to and Irom Europe. U12W52ly K. K. LI VI l,NTU., 31. PHYSICIAN Jk HUHUKU.N. OFFI E HOC ICS, from 10 a. m., to 2 p. .xauuu.j k Burfceou lor U. 8. 1'ensiou. 1U. H. M1L.I.KU. FUYalClAN AND 8UKUEON an be louud by calling at hie office, corner 7tl. "lu ",1" iu o. ji. vtraiermau s hou.-te. FLATTMMOUT11. KHHAMKA. JAW. f. 1IATUKUN """ 'KHKV AT LAW. ' iffii-e over 1 - Maiu bet & itwoud s store, south sldi least 1 and 6 til streets. 21U 'l'lt01K . TTOKNEYS AT LAW. :.e Courts lit the State. CUUK. Will practice iu a I OutrU-t and Xoturu Public. WHib H. W1K. ATTOKXEYATLAW.Keal K ,.. 'liance and Collection At;eiu Oats -it,,,.. .(M.-k. riatlsiuoutli Nebraska. .u . II. LAW OFFICL. Kenl ICxtntw if......,. urauce Airei.ts. -iit,.,.,i, ' V..,.""?. L,ll 1 tutors, tax -payers: lve "" J.- d titles. It . . t ,, . "'K'VC durll ..I iilans, ,,uj UiU sen real estate. uej; )ti;, 15) 1 J AUKS K. AoliltlNOX, ATTORVEVITF. .A?11 Public. fiUgerald Block KartrUourh.rarkr " vvllcttlUUn Allll U IIJT u .v u . . ala.t. . . J. C ATE It It U It 111 , JUfeTiCE OF THE PEACE r. his fflce in lh frout part of his resident- vunojiu at uue, wDr on in be fouud ii 1ce, UllvUU A.U I. II ( till l&akA fliaa 47tf. KOBKKT II. tVI.MMIA H, Notary Public ATTOHNEY AT LAW. Office over t'arruth's Jewelry Store. taltsmuuth. Nebraska. M. A. HARTICAN. Ta a w y jg k . - " oj.tjik. I LA 1 in MOUTH K.I Froinpr snd careful attention to a genera iiw Practice. A. N. SULLIVAN. Attorney and .Counselor at-Law. OFFICE In - ia Union Block, front roonir yecond story, sous 1. frompt attention given 1 imsine . ros,r2r BOYL & LARSEiV, Contractors and Builders. w 111 give estimates 00 all kinds of work, .ny oruen? ten ai ine luiiumt iards or I'ott Office will receive promot attention Heavy Truss Framing, for barns and large buildings a specialty. For refeiencn apply to .1 P. Young, J. V. Wee 1 ! or 11. v warer man Si Hon. d&w sssa a I JTt I . M IYI fl T! n 91 I W as sajTaajMrsk MskssaWshsW I .Successor to Clutter & Marshall.) JLP 3S m T I S T Preservation of natural teeth a specialty. Teeth extracted tcithout pain by use of iavgning nas- All work waTanttd. - Prices reasonable. FiTxoRRAi.n Block. - Platthmocth.Neb J. 1. NIjIPSON AGENCY FIRE INSDfiANCE CO S: CITY, of London, QUEEN, of Liverpool FIREMAN FUND, of California EXPEEESS COMPANIES AMERICAN EXPKES3 CO.. WELL'S FARlio CO.. EXPKEf 0 UOovau iioCitwovd Ig. MrisAuyviavti iiTO T11E BRIDAL GIFTS. f FTftooea A. Bhaw in Boatoa TrtUMcript. To U tUtteljr Tillage bridAl, With iti feAWtinff, dAnoa mad nVrth, There mdm a jfray hatired aingwr - One of tbe poor of earth. Silver and gold and jewels, The rich gueeta brought along; The bard had naunrht to offer, But just one little eong. Int are the bride and brldogrooi:), Hie proud tueHta lowly lie; Thn cosiJy gifts have crumbled Tbe aong ran never die! "HOVELISTIO JOaEHALISM.- Tke Views ar the Heat C-lfted te. Masfrr af the Frfaa. Loiiinville Courier-JournaL Mr. Joseph MuIIiattan in In toivn, and a Courier-Journal reporter who talknd to him last night found him aa gooLnatiirei as ever. "Yea, sir. I have started a new branch in journalism; 4omethin that is an innova tion and a iwccr I call it novelistirr jour nalism. Dickus and Tlmckeray wrotri a novel in a volume and conjiidurcd tliuui elvee fortunate when lOO.OOtl people rurul it iu five yean. 1 write a novel of a thousaud words that is read by more than l,0OU,OU0 people ten hours after it has left my band. Why, what could be morn attractive to a literary man? Nobody is hurt by ray little novels; nobody's murals are interrupted, and all are entaitained and sometimes inHtrucu!. I have selected all Mirts of stibjwta for these rtorios; many of them have traveled over the world aud have been wondered at in twenty nations. I aui just .-') yuars old mid am famous. Thor. is not n man in tliis country who can real and write mid wlioluo. real the newspapers that doejm't know of J (jo Mulhattau. 1 havu fooled every paper of prominence in the United States, and some of my scientific stories have Un dis cussed by the learned societies of Etw-oi.n "When did you lsgin your carc:r of men dacity?" iuterrupN.d the repoi-ter "J. have beeu writing my uoveU fr ten years now. I started on Th f'ittbuif Leader and foo!ed them for thrco or four years. I wrote stories of marvellous oil wells, of romantic highway robli-jrios and things of that kind. 1 then t to soudin my noveLs to other jiroininent journals. 1 started the sUry of John Wilkes Booth being seen in several pluces, aud wrote to circum stautiully that many believed it. I started, aa a joke, tho report that President Lincoln's boiiee would Uj exliibite-l at the Centennial. The press of the country took it up, and for weeks it was a national question. I doiit know how many of thee storius I wrote in the east. The bixest thing I wrote in this part of the country was the Bier Clifty fight. where a drummer wrestled with two high waymen ou a bridge and finally threw them over. My c vo story at uiasgow Junction went all over the world; you doubtless re member that. 1 found a cave there larger than Marnniouth Cave, with navigable riv ers, mummies 2, MMJ years old and a hundred other tilings. The Leitchfield story about the finding of masonic emblems that had tieeii buried for t housauds of years, showing a pre-historic race of masons, caused great excitement. I am prouder of my Glasgow cave story tlian auy of the others. It showed more invention Q.i more imagination." " H'liat was the basis of such a marvellous Uer "You mean such a well-imagined novel," interrupted Mr. MuIIiattan. with a smile. 'n liy, there is never auy foundation to iny stories. Tlierein lies my power. Almost any body could write a story with the foundatioi to build ou; it requires genius to construct a novel without any foundation in fact what ever, to evolve it all out of your own head as spider draws the web from its own Insly. I wrote that thing about the finding of a cavo at Gallatin, whore the jewels and gold of tht. James brothers were found. When Franl James read it, he turned to a jailer and said Til bet that story was written by Joe Milt hattan." "What has been your success in Texas!' "Very tine. I suppose you read my me teor story. Tbe Fort. Worth Gazette receivec the day after it was published 1 14 telegram from all parts of tbe world; some were from St. Petersburg; some from London; some from Edinburgh. When I visited Fort Worth afterward they gave me a fine banquet. The Texans enjoyed my novels immensely. Some of my stories have never been contradicted especially that one ab-iut the finding of five skeletons under a tree where the people bad all been killed by lightning. They are talk ing of running me for congress down there. Tom Ochiltree, who used to be friendly with me before, hardly xpeaks to me now. He says the meteor story laid him cold. lie will never amount to anything again as a bar. "That lost balloon story which is going the rounds of a man bunging by two fingers while he was dragged four rujlos reads like you wrote it. 1 Jo," replied the J ules Verne of American newspapers, with a sigh of regret at such good lie having eccaped him; "I didn't write it, but whoevor did was & good one. I couldn't Lave done tbe work better myself." Muinnser flusioc! Overdone. "Gath's" Letter. A prominent hotel man said to me at Long Branch: "I think the summer business has bM?n overdone. If you' count the number of hotels now in existence all over coast, mount ain and stream, and compare them with the number we had at the cIoko of the war, you can easily see that guests do not grow pro portionately with these speculative enter prides. Nobody has a piece of ground that be can by any means dispose of as a summer resort Dut lie nas it surveyed, puts up some kind of a tavern and expects to sell bis farm in lots. . Then the railroad companies find they can carry passengers to the seaside if they provide some sort of accommodations. They have put up some enormous buildings, some very handsome in style, wherever tliey can run a track, and consequently this coast business- is overdone. It will hardly be twe years before there is a railroad along tbe en tire coast of Kew Jersey, touching every spot whore a man can catch a fish or wet bif feet in the surf. They are bunding inland watering places, too, ou every pretext, and the presence of some harmless spring, with a little stink of sulphur iu it, is enough to canst la big betel and cottages to go up. in snort, 'he watering place mania is an artifice to ie- rive the country real estate cruze which oassed out teu Years aeo. The -Vcw Beauty. New X'orkSun. Miss Chamberlain, "f Cleveland, woo is figuring in" London as a osauty, is described by Eliza Wethersby, who happened to meet her in a gathering of the prince of Wales set, as about as pretty as ten per cent, of all American girls. She bad rather a captivat ing way about her, ."oddly combining a spirituelle, Marguerite air with the peculiar dash and confidence common in Yankee irirU." It was evening, and tbe light was electric, so that every bit of artificiality waa made clear oy the glare. Her face waa painted like wax work. The red of her cheeks stood out like daubs. Her features were small and regular, ber figure tall and well shaped, and ber ben ring free and nncon- (traiued. She was dressed in good taste white crape costume embroidered wifb silvw. "I beard ber in conversation with the prince, tbe actress adds, "and abe was de lightfully free from any manner of toadyism; seemed to treat bim with barely respectful deference. Her voice la musical, aud she mapairea it bewitcnicr " llaxw Boats. Home Londoners have taken to the Thames throughout' the summer mouths, and oat. drink and sleep iu what are known as bouse boats. These usually 1 -011 tain a suug dining room and sitting-room combined, two or three small bed-rooms, a kitchen and a veranda. Arkansnw Traveler: A man ken hide de Au-k'dat ire's itndrU but, La ia jufrjjj, g BOUDOIR SLEEPEU8. Fh New Form of Luxurious Trar lincc. Doston Harald. The New York Tribune of flatnrduy afnted that the Mann Boudoir C.ir romi auv haa close.1 an ngrrcmeut with the New York, New Haven & Hartford and the Poston & Albanv railroad roiumiiiw for running the Mannludoir sleeping on the New York & IioMton route, by way of hpriugliold, ITiest" cars diiTer so radically from the Amer ican nalare oars, and apparently otfer somo such deridcl advantages, that a description taken fnm The American Tourist Guz-tte will bo of interest. They aro extent inlly "throuch -ars," i. e., while fornung com for table ltT at night, they are readily con vertible iuti luxurious day parlor can, a bidicatioiM of sleeping arrangemmits disap pearing. This is a desideratum, the long dis tances traveled by the same car iu this coun try rendering it indispensable that it l u only a good night car, iu which regard our nalaee cars ctrtalnlv loavo much to Isa de- iiil. The boudoir car has at cither end vestibule, fioiu which cjen naqwtively laiiies' and gentlemen's dressing rooms and closetx The lavatories are supplied with both hot aud cold water, while the closets are real water clow-Li. thus oreventiiiK the dis agreeable odors incident to tho system in 1 iu this country. Connecting the vestibules, and Khut 1 At from them by doors, is a com niodious itirridor numinsr nloiicr the side of the cur. (.)s-niiig off this hallway by doors are .several i-omiuirlments or boudoirs, some ariuiigeil for two and some for four persons. liy ifciy tlje-M rooms are simply pretty cabins, with hih, .irehc.l, clear ceilings, large plate glas-i windows and one or two luxurious sofas with Inirh soft l acks and cushioned arm rests. Th sofas are athwart the car, aud uuder tbem nml Is hind the inclined backs are car rier I tin? mattresses and bedding. Thus tho thief wighl is near the Coor, while the enor mously heavy palace car bed, hinged up in the top of the car, rendering it unstable and toi .heavy and shutting otf half tho window Sluice, is entirely dispensed with. At night the back of the sofa, hinged at its ton to the cross partitions, is raised to a horizontal jxjsi tion, where, automatically fastening itself, it forms tho upjicr bed, tbe sofa seat becom incr tho lower U-d. Thus, with the addition of bedding, two wide beds are made up from each sofa. The boils are longer than those of tho aluce car, and the head is made up next to tho corridor partition, bringing the vital parts of the body in the middle of the car, a safer position than along the side by the win dows. In beds so arranged across the car the sleeiier avoids the rolling motion cxy-icrr puced in longitudLial beds, while the head is removed from the noise incidental to close contact with tho car wall. Tlie ventilation of the car is by a novel system, without tho dangerous draughts and smothering dust from the windows in the elevuted roofs of American cars. This roof, a great top weight, and an element of weak ness in construction, is superseded by a sim ple high dome, or Norman arch. Abundant air is takn in at one end of the car by funnel and forced through an ingenious filler, freeing it of all dust, after which it ii discharged into the heater room. In wintei the purified air is thus healed, while in sum mor tbe heater room is converted into a hugf refrigerator with j-e. From this room tbe air passes along a flue inclosing tho beatei pipes down tho corridor, and is discharged through registers opposite the door of each compartment, which doors, being provided with slats or louvres, a.laiit the fresh heated or cooled air in great quantities to the com partments. lu each compartment are three exhausting ventilators, which, while they cannot admit air f 10m without, constantly draw off tho air from within. All the air in the car is changed every five minutes, ab solutely without draughts or dust. The iin- tiortance of good ventilution in cars cannot be overestimated. It should lie mentioned that off the ladies' vestibule is a two-place boudoir, always re served for lailies traveling alone. In this a young girl might journey across the con tinent without escort with perfect propriety. Connecting with tbe gentleman's vestibule are a smoking room and buffet. In each coin partmenl aro electric bell communications to call tho porter. The chief feature of these cars seems to le the vary desirable privacy of one's borne or hotel attaiucd by the division into compartments. Every traveler has ob served the necessary exiosuro and incon venience of dressing or undressing iu a palace car; so objectionable is this that many ladies doc line to travel in them. Again, there is great annoyance at night by con ductors, trainmen and way passengers pass ing tit and fro I et ween the long lines of cur tains, ull of which is avoids by the fully partitioned corridor of the boudoir cars. The entire interior of these cars is finished in Amaranth woodwork, embossed with illumi nated leather and French tapestry. It is claimed that the dead weight of these cars per juissengor carried is fully 15 per cent, less than that of the palace cars. This would be a vast recommendation of them to railroad managers. Tiie interior partitions necessar ily strengthen the cars against crushing in accidents, and would greatly retard the pro gress of lire through the car, which has so often been the cause of fearful loss of life The c:us will bo lighted with incandescent electric lamps thus averting the danger of mineral od lighting. The electricity is stored and regulated by accumulators under the cars. Killing; the Cholera. New York Sun. M. Pusteur, in his instructions to the French scientific commission sent to Egypt to investigate the nature of cholera, acts on the hypothesis that the disease enters the bnmau organism by the digestive canal, and throng!' the air jwissages. It is directed tliat all articles of drink be well boiled and wine thoroughly heated before use. Food must be thoroughly cooked, and it, as well as liquids, must be partaken of from vessels previously heated. Water, after being boiled for use, must lie kept only in vessels that hove been heated, and, when wanted for washing purposes, must le treated with two per cent, of carbolic acid. Bread must be cut into thin slices and heated, and fruits washed in lioiled water before eaten. Boiled water should be used several times daily if washing tlie hands and face. 4. Ten -Cent Clear Recipe. Chicago Herald. An Indianapolis man makes a flavor that turns a ba! .Vni.-eut cigar into a 10-center that can be smelled a mile. His recipe is as fol lows: Gum guaiac, gum tolu, tonqua beans and essence of pineapple, of each one ounce; valerian root, two ounces: laudanum (tinc ture of opium), one ounce; oil of rose, six drops: Jamaica rum, half a pint; macerate for thirty-six hours and jour off, using one ounce to a pint of port wino to blow on the fillers. Caught the Hound. Tlie Biblical Recorder says that a young colored preacher in a receut sermon, wishing to display his learning, wou'd occasionally use the word "curriculum," and as of u ua be used it some of the sisters sdd ''Glorj." Bean Oae for tlie U'suta. Boston Transcript. o, uvorge," said a sagacious wife at a wmnwr hotel, "I cant think of having yon come here to spend Sunday, after working bard in your olilce all the week. . You need rest and recreation. Nest week, now, bs sure and stay in tbe city and enjoy yourself.' George vows a vow that bis Sundays shall be. passed at tbe bote wbile his wifo remains. Score one for tbe woman. Woman, you know, dont know bow to carry a point Oh, do! That i to say, she can't reason her way, but she can now and then get along by hei iotiiitivo.fcnlriea just about twice Stf f"-T- u '4ja4 widpaDAgbfijBAa ... too mraiiTB with a ma." Am Kxperleaee ( William Mawar4 lttiell mm Jeara.allat to (loyalty. Now York Sun. 'At the outbrmk of tho Franco- Prussian war, Mr. liana en?ogod William Howard Russell, thou of Tho Loulon TIuim, The Times being perfectly willing that Mr. Rus sell should earn I l5,uOC a year for giving out bis letter in duplicate to a newKpaicr print ed 3,000 milof away from The Times olllco. "Mr. Ilussell, after accepting an engage ment at .5,000 a year to write for The Huii, wrote to Mr. Dana asking how ho should send his letters. " 'By cable,' was Dana's cablegram to the distinguished military critic. "Now everylsjdy knows that William How- ami Russell's letters, whether from tho Army of the Potomac or from any other point, will average from li.iK) to 10,000 wonls, and Mr. Rusboll, fui' I ing himself engage 1 to telegraph so voluminously to 'a little two-cent nper in Now York City.' undoubtedly said to himself: If I have employers so enterprising it be hooves mo to t.tir myself, and show tuoin that I am worthy as much as their enterprise would sccru to demand that I should l.' And, by the force of habit, ho forthwith posted olf for Kins William, not then, the reader of course will understaud, tho em peror. "Well, tho old kin?r in etended to 1)0 sur prised when Mr. Russell entered his tent, as though William Howard Ru;sell could crosa bis lines aud he not got notice of tho approach of such a man. " 'I nm glad to see you, sir. and welcome you as tho most renowned of militaiy writers Make my tent your h w. Dine with me. 'And William Howard Russell fell into tbe trap. He dined with the king, and after the champagno and cigars turned to his portman teau to eo " 'What are you going to do?" the king in quired. " 'Telegraph to The London Times and Tho New York Sun.' "Oh! no! no! That would be giving in formation to tbe enemy. I thought you had come to le my historian of the war.' "Tho result was, if a month after that Rus sell had telegraphed a lino to either of the two great journals by which he had been em ployed he might jiossibly have boeii suspected of violating the confidence of the king, lie was trapiied. He necessarily became the king's historian of the war, and 'Tho Lon don Times and The New York Sun did not get a line from William Howard Russell con cerning the Franco-Prussian war. Meantime George W. iSmalley, who, as everybody knows, has lieen for years pa-st the London correspondent of The Tribune, went to Furis, aud engaged a corps of the smartest reporters to bo found in that c-ty, old them to skirmish around the armies, accept no body's hospitalities, got all the news thev could by hook aud crook, and telegraph to him every night in London. "Result: Mr. Smalley's fii-st telegram to Tho Tribune covered a iago of that journal, and a rortnight later every newsjwper in London reproduced that page, tho original of a practice that was afterward repeated." A Dentiftt on the IVewervatioii ol the Teeth. "Betty Blunt" in Chicago Herald. "Doctor, aro not a great many teeth ruined b3r having the enamel worn o.T with tooth powders r' "No; that is a most pernicious fallacy. I wish all this world kne-.v tbe ti uth, that the enamel of a tooth cannot lie vorn off with a brush and any kind of tooth powder; not if it were scrubbed five hours a day for 15" years. aiore teeth are ruined by a rear or scouring them than by all other causes put together. The best way in the world to preserve a tooth is to keep it higmy polishe 1; thou no foreign substance adheres to it. Those adhesions and gradual mstings are what destroy teeth. If you wish to keep a piece of steel you polish it. If you do not it will rust away. It is precisely the same with a tooth. Ths only danger that can arise from the use of the harshest tooth-powders is that they may in jure the gums, oon t ever use charcoal or salt, for, while they are excellent for clean ing, they are ruinous to the gums. Charcoal is full of little, sharp slivers that get under the gums or cut into them and cause trouble; and grains of salt, you know, have very sharp edges and corners. Cuttlebono toothpowders are the best, I think. Bu1; by all means keep the teeth clean and highly polished. That reminds 1110" continued the deutist, "a handsome and well-dressed lady came here yesterday and wished her teeth 'fixed up.' I looked into her mouth and saw about the foulest chasm I ever cazed into. Why, it was worse than a sewer. I told her would give her a prescription, and when 6he had used it thoroughly for a week I .vouid see her again. The proscription was for a tooth brush and a box ol powder. Doubtless she was vexed when tbe druggist 'com pounded' it, but it was what she most noedod, nevertheless." 'I liave heard that many medicines given by tbo physicians injure the teeth. Is that true, doctor V 'No. not to any considerable extent. Ill tell you where that idea comes from. You know,- when a pei-son is sick be is not so apt to clean his toeth as when be is welL That is one trouble; but a greater is thac the teeth are uot used much. Kieli persons cat but lit tle, usually; and what they do ear, is often in tlie form of pastes or gruels that do not de mand much chewing. Now, tho teeth are like any other part of the person; if they are unused they liecome soft and more subject to the decaying influences. Put your arm in a sliug tor a mouth aud tho muscles and whole member will become soft and ilabby. So with a tooth that is not used for some. time. Now, when a tooth isgrowingsofter each day, and it is not being cleaned as often as it was when it needod cleaning less, of couse it rap idly fails. This is why the medicines are chargod with the destruction." A Journalist in Bronze. A statue of the late Charles do Young, edi tor of Tho San Francisco Chronicle, killed by the son of Mayor Kalloch, of that city, has liecn cast in bronze, says The Philadelphia Times, by Charles F. Heaton, from a model by F. Marion Welli, of San Francisco, and is now on exhibition at 2So. 5iw orth 1 welfth street. This statue was made for the brothor of the doceised, Mr. H. de Young, the present proprietor of The Chronicle, and meets the approbation of every critic who knew the original in life, the fae and ex pression being especially commenced. A he statue is seven feet eigat inches high and represent a well-built, finely proportioned man in the prime of life, standing easdy, with the weight of the body thrown on the left foot, while the right is slightly advanced. Tbe right arm Ings straight and th hand, holding a pen. r. sts open on a pedestal cov ered with manu.-'cripts. The left arm is bent, bringing the hall-opened haud forward, up ward aud near the waist, ma!; ing a tine dis cui'sivc gesture. Ti.e fojo, with side whis kers and mustache, Is clear cut and full of expression. A frock coat fills eoily frooi the shoulder an 1 is as gracefully haudied as possible, considering the fsw liues of beauty which such drapery gives. A posthumous work is almost always a boob that one bas forgotten to bury v itb tbe author. Xo lurrinseoieut of Copyright. New York World. Simultaneously with tbe announcement that Clara Luiio Ivelioggbad sailed from Europo may bo liotod ftoaUnir about 'among tho ext'liaiigos a beautiful little htoiy about flam frightening ber iiiutSiei by ssugiug in perfect time and tune a soug at tbe age of uino months. Tho rust ui tho story as toll by her mother is as Tollows: "I exclaimed, 'That nino months' balx) has been siugiag wonderfully the nurse's song, ami it, is guin to die, I know it is!' and I went almost tvild in my alarm. But tho baby did not dio, and thank Uod that it diln't, for it was tioru to bless, as only music can biess, the heait of a world." . riewspajiers wislnug Uj copy llus Jtory aro uot liable, to be pui-sued.lMr iu rie&utuoto copyrigbt. - -. j.- S ' f i " ' -. r : , , ft ' I I jf.CS-- -a3 CCMPLETE Livery, and Sale Sfcafole. RIGS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION UY OR KIGHT. EVEKYTIIINCJ IS FII.'ST CLASS THE HE.sT 'lEAM.s IN THE CITY- ' SINGLE ANU DuUHi.i: ( 'A Cl'IAft E$. Travelers will iiml complete oiiila.s by calling t iH. Corner Vine and Fourth Street h. rRlNilNG AM The ATTSMOUVII II KHALI) I'UItLlSlIINd COMPANY linn every facility for lirnt class JOB PRINT25iTC, In Every Department. Catalogues LEGAL BL ATnTTT5! A.TJCTIOIT IBIIjIjS. SALE E ? I I f COM MERCJAL Ou7 SLodr. of And materials Is larR? anl ORDERS BIT PLArrsjiouTJi STibscnLbe far Ul HICHEY O IP tT?.AEi.TL. DE VLB IW IN stes. ALWAYS Lumber, S BEJNNETT&L THE LEAD Cocae to the front with IDG Staple and Fancv Groceries FRESIJ AND NICE. We always buy the Lest poods in the market, arrl we sell We are sole agents in tbi3 town for the sale of PERFECTION" AND THE CELEE RATED "BATAVIA" CANNED GOODS p finer n band. in the mHiket Corn' Htid i-ff rinD tin i iid FLOUK, '9 A N At Wholcsaleand llelail. Cash paid for all kinds of country produce. Call and sec inc." Opposite First National Hank. 3J: ""ray I'LATTSMOUTH. EI J. PLJ9L1S1 I Q. Pamphlet Work J3la.nl r, JDa i;oiupitue: 111 every Mcpart mr t MAIL SOLICITED JIKRAJLJ OFFICE Daily JJr.ru Id BEOS, - Hj7ID SEVBTTTI ALL KINDS OF-- ash.Doors, Blinds .Plaster. lES&ir. Terms Cash A EAD EWIS GROCER a complete uu- guarantee evervthin? GROUND SPICES Tioer" l.rpn.l of Bdti irun- Oyi uill n.aU ymi un FEE,