The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, October 03, 1883, Image 4

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    N. R. TIMK TABLE".
8 & M. R.R. io Nebraska,
MAIN LINK
KXPHKit TRAIN MtlKO
WT.
STATIONS :
No. 1.
No. 3.
llattamouth .
Orrapolia ....
Courord. . .
tedai t reek.
Loulavllle. . .
ttcuih lieud..
Ashland.
Greenwood ..
I a m
v : j a in
9 :3.' a Hi
9 :H m io
10 .-i4 a in
10 TJM a ru
10 :47 a mi
11 :06 a Hi
6 p in
7:n v m
7 : p lu
:ti p lit
7 :M p in
till plu
130 p Ul
:5 i m
Lincoln 'Ar. li&pmAr. 9 :.m p m
L've 12 -Ji i fti L've 10 :I.S p in
IItlnK" i:UrL' Ar. 2 :15 a m
L've p u l.'v a :Jo a Ul
Bed Cloud r. t -ja p mi Ar. ; -.jo a in
L'vt rvt p in l.'ve s ajft h in
McCook Ar. 11 : up i.i Ar. U.itfuui
l'vt. imL've li:i'piu
Akron Ar. o mi .r I ;J. p in
liL've - a n. L've 6 : p tn
Denver Il-ir. or- am a r. lu M? p iu
KXI'tlkMt TKIN OOINO
STATIONS i 4ArtT'
Wo. 2. No. 4.
flattu.oulb.... Ai. 6:HipinAr. 9 :oo a in
Oreapulli .... Ar. t UA1 p III AT. H:.iOalll
C'-ucorJ Ar. hpin At, Jo a ui
InlM Crotk... Ar. IriJpiu Ar. S:5ui
outs-vole r. 4 :! pi" -tr. K:i7aui
ulll lieud.. Ar 3:ft6piuAr. : a In
Ablai.U Ai. SUUpmAr. 7:aiu
lernwond ... Ar. 3:ltmAr. " JUm
Lincoln Ar. 2:0puiAr 3:30 am
il.'Vi J i6 p in L've 7 .i-O a ui
tlasti"xs At. 9imu Ar. i0:iapiu
L' lu : io urn .'ve 10 -M p iu
ken Cloud 'at. oaui Ar. t :M p m
I l.'ve H !5 a in L'te 7:ftpm
McCook Ar. a ; & u i Ar. a -00 p ui
l.'ve 4 of. H in L've 3 WO p in
Akron I r. lu .43 p ui Ar. lUiWaui
! l.'ve :J5pn. l.'ve 11 ))aui
Denver lL'Vi ? :oi p in lve7j3aau
Tntiur J and 4. liumueiinK JU and 4o west of
Jtetl Cloud, ruu daily excel t Sunday.
K. C. ST. JOF. A C. B R. R.
: I
bTA'I luNM
KXPKIUM TWAINS IHHKU
NulUn.
llallsiiontli .
( mpl'lla
Ijt I lillUJ ....
Jm: levue .....
LUiklia
STATIONS:
4 :50 a in
5Mt In
a :ll a in
n M a lu
u xO a in
5 0t p n
t :fl p iu
ll
b :ll P I"
6 :M i- ui
-.60 p u
IXtHK.S Tlt.tlNS uoiu
nui'iu.
riallsii.oiilb
CieapulU ....
J a liaite ...
v :2o a ni
k :I0 p in
8 :0U In
7 :fifi p in
7 :!-' P in
7 vM V ui
:iu a ni
I i :00 a in
itut-vue.. i
Ouiati a II
:n a ui
: a in
TIJIK TAIII.C
MiM.ouri I'ucilic ICslral.
Express Exiles rreigiii
leave leave leaes
Koii'K Boiuu B'K
Utlll. tmt'TH. bOlTli.
Cmnuu- - "lupii. -.ooa.ni l'.-Va in
lai.iiuxii- .ii " H37 Xtmp. ii..
pimUci-l. .- U " Si" " .ur -
lAui-vnle... -i " '.'5 " :v "
At-t j.iu,; Wan i .J4 i4u - .vim "
.ivwca J " VJ .:4i "
i 'Uuo.tr 1 " "
KaiuAH 1 II : ! :t "
. t.f. -" '' -'
. tioilij; : taoifig i.oll.g
.s.iKI n. Nourili NOK'I H
Vt. Loni, -;i.'i. ..aap-.u.
XauM- t liv . .&! ... a-iu
n,uuu ... ' I -' --4 !" '! p. :
ituc. . . - 1.
We-pnig ' -
lj.UI-V:il.' - " '-j- '
-?lt 111.11 t.'ii. . . " .-7 I"
tafii''uu- - -'' '? i
Ljmxi1a all.. j.k " .ut
Tlir above it Jillersou City linit?. wliica i.t n
n.luu." I ! lu.iu Ouiaita nun.
IIUIIAI, All nKKAUTl ltK O.
fb.l I iniiollll .tl.tll.w.
Am US.
7M p. III. I
d.ju a. iu.
r. .. 1
MO p. ru. (
. i.o a iu
T.jo p. ui.
a ui. i
.J.i p. ui. f
.ju p. iu.
ll.uua in.
llKl'Aliln
t S.0.J a. 111.
1 3-OJ p. Ul.
M.ou a. in.
I G.5o p. in.
SABTEUN.
WKTfc.U.V.
NOKTIIKKX.
SOII1UMIK.
UMAUA.
WKItmu WATKK.
r AC"! UK V V I Ll-X.
l.si p. ii
u.-.o a. io
a. ui.
4.U p. lu
it.uu a. u
l.LW p. iu
17, ltl.
aAfM I'UAKUKU FUU
uUUhkn.
Iln tinlcni mil exeeedlUK ib - - 1 tinil.
ver 15 ai-d fwl excUiuj: 3i- - - lact-utr
.40 si - - aSreuti-
A .ihiIm Mnnpv I r.1 1 r lll:iV iunui.h . .1
jii.imiiL 110111 uue eesil to 111 IV Uoliurs. l)Ut
U.UAI not coutaiu a irac'tional pait fl a cent.
KATfe.1. KUK IVStAUK.
If t c ass matter Oeileia) a ceuts per !i ounce.
2a " tl'uuiuilitr ralesj 2 cut per 10.
id i'lrauieni Aevn-prueni aiiu
buoka couio uuatr till clasa; I vent pel
eavn Z ounce.
Kb cUm vuielwuauUu-e) 1 Ccut per ounce.
J. vv. Maiuhall r. M.
Oi'lOXAX. DlRXCTORT.
CirV OIUCCTOKV.
UEOKOK , SMITH. Major.
Vv 11.1.1.1 11. CListii.AU, ireasurer.
J. U.Mii'ao., cay Cieik
Wll.l.b.11 fuilfc.Mitit. I'olice Jude.
K. li. tvi.MiiAM,cn Atioruey.
1. it. .Ubut lll.Cuieiul luilce,
V. MoCAN A.uvereeer 01 sireets.
C lvvi.ii. tvl. tuiri ol rue j pi.
H. 11. .1CUj1Ua. , Cli'u 4tward o. Health
MIUtfCll.MlLSi.
Lut Ward Wiu . lleruld. U. AI. Uons,
Stid V axu J. J. i'atieiso... J . 11. r'a.rneld.
;tj iira ji. 1. juur, by. J. Iv. Muriuvu.
4a tVaiUr'. . L:ui'Uuii. f. iiicCaliau.
CUUUL DUAIttf.
JKSSK B. STHOutL, J. W. HAUNKS.
hi. A. ilAiillO Wiu. UAUtorEK.N.
1 1. tUvjtbbtX, V. V . UAAttli,
rwiur-JiNa. w. ai AitsuAU
COC-NTY OIKKCTOUT.
W. IL NKWKLXh County lreaaurer.
J V. K..iua, couuiy Ciera.
J. w. OtloO-. tuuulj Juutfe.
EC W . 11 1 ana. auurin.
ClTiitia AI.10N. aupt oi fub. Instruction.
U. vv. k&i.u, county surveyor.
r 1. CtAs. Cotouer.
LVV1I CO.ltls41U.MJt&.
JaMEj CBAWrOKU. SoutU lieUU ITeclnct.
94:1 L. ttlCHAttU'O.'. J41. rieaeaut flocuicl
A h. iuuo, iuuiuuoulu
luun Uaviua Puiues witn the Count.)
CouuulMlvuvi. 111 ana I lit: 111 iu muuu tue
Irirsi Alouuay whi 1 uemlay oi eacb umulti.
HUAkll or TKADC
KKAN K CAKUtin, freaioeuU
j. a CO.Oifc. Uii.k B.liCri., V--i'rei-Ueula.
WM. o. vVllf. stectetary.
Kt-U. KHjHutkii. treasurer.
KefcOl.ir aieeuu ot lue lioard at tbe Couri
House.tue urt 1 ueday eveuiu ul eaca uioulli.
JL JLn Jt
J. F. b A U :T1 Lib f LH
furutaiie Krv!. fure Asiik
Special oall atlenued to. and I're-n MUk
(xo.a iur.iita uu wauioo. ti
LATTSMOUTH
xivsoutb 5sa
Zoor 6'orn Jfctrf " .
PUttNmwnth Telrphone Exrhanre.
I J.F. Vouou, reldat.e.
5 Keunetl 4k iwli, atore. '
1 M U. Murptiy ft Co.,
4 llouuer nlalifea.
6 County I'll rk a offlce.
K. U. LMla, reitldeuce.
7 J. V. rtecMUAcli, more.
li Weateru Cuio.i teieicraph ultce.
9 ll. 11. W lieelt-r. lealdeuce.
lo l. . iiiuOt-il,
14 K. b. Vt liiduam, "
15 J-o. Wayiiiau.
10 J. W. Jru.iiUKt,
17 W.M W ie. ulllt e.
I a MurrlMey liroaM oiQce.
IV W it. Carter, lore.
M . W. f airfield. raideii0.
il M. U Mur,diy,
Tt i. it. Wueeler A I o . oftlce.
xs J. 1. layiur. residence.
11 r Irat Natiuiial liauk.
P. A. Kutluer'a utnee.!
J. 1. Vouuk, alurd.
x I erkiua iluune.
in H. w. llvra.reatueuce.
i Jourual olllce.
Si Kail Held' Ice office.
34 llr.KAl.D fVH. ;o oiliffl.
X J. . Wl e, reMdeuce.
Ml it. M. Cliapulau. "
37 V . l. lone.
M A. S. .Sullivan, "
ii. r.. 1'aliuer,
40 W. II. nciiildknecht, ofllce.
41 Sullivan 6i 'Voo ey,
42 A. W. Jicututliiiu. residence.
43 a. fillusiiu, livery.
44 C. M. iloluiet.
4-i L. U. lie. limit, retldenrf.
4U lieo. buiilli, oiilce.
47 l A. Moore, Itur at.
19 .1. V'. Uaruea. residence.
5)1 It. K. Uviugatou, olUce.
art J. V. Weckuauii, remdence.
335 CUaulaiii WriKiu. "
340 W. 11. nchl dkuecht
3Pi (leo. S niuiih,
3"o It. K. Llvlunton. "
315 C C. llallard,
lbewltcli board connects I'latttinoutli win
Aalilaud, Arllnglou, Ufair. Council KlutTa. I re
...vhw. l... vi.iaua r.iiiuru niaiiou,
1'apillioii. SoriuKfield. )ulville Houth Jieud
llii.il I I......I. U I - - .. ....... 1
aou aveny.
paoF .s&ionau cards.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW Will nr-iotio In Jill
tlie U.urw in the Htate. OiUce over Kirt Na-
uuuw aua. 4Vyl
P1.ATTHMOUT11 - XKBKlBKA.
UU. A. MAlilSUtL'U V.
Jflice over siuitb. Black & Co's. Druu Store.
i-use class ueuustry at reasonable prices, 23ly
M. MUAUK, 31. U.,
fIIVNIi:l IN mill KITlrilPllM rtlAAn..
v.. v v . .lllV- Skl 1.1 Mill
ttreet. rilier o.l's Biock. boutu wide. Ouice
uptu ua uiu uigut
cuumtv divaiciAN. CAt3 COUNTY.
M. O OONOUO
ATTOKNEY AT LAW NOTAKY PUBLIC
Fitzgerald a Block.
FiarrMouTH. - kkrraska
Agent lor Stea-nsUip .lues to aud from Europe
nizwoiy
K. M, LIVIil.lTO.. 31. 1
fHVHlCIAM A OUKUltO.
OFF1 E HOUKS. from lo a. ui., to 2 p. in.
oxauiin.i v Surneou for U. S. Peusiou.
H. M. 11ILLKU,
PHYSICIAN ANO SUKdRnv
tan be found by callius at bit office, corner 7U
u w. . naienuau s uuu.se.
I'CATTHMUUTH. MCKUAUKA.
JAM. . JtATIlCWN
'"'HKEY AT UV.
nice over ! km vtuood's store, aouth sld.
- ... matM.j iiu oiu a tree la. 2111
nl'KOIli: alt 4'l. V.IIK
iCTM.J f:A.W' WUI Police ii. al
VVH.U ... . a4,lyC.
!.4r.ct UV..,j i.ij X-ttaru Public.
1V1-4K.
Ai lltCMl AI CAW.Keai ! nt . virl,,
iiuiiee and Collecliou Ageuci . Ofloe - I iu
i tK. i'lail-tiuoutn eorasa . ..
. . il.il.Kit k t:o.
1.A W OKK1C1., lieal ltitle. Fire an.l l,i -
1.5. tola. MA pay t ra. Ilave a coiii.-inle .h-tr ..
,. Utle. ,,UJ ia ,ell real eJ!SSr..;JJJi-
B i
Tajiks t.. xiititiKo..
ArrOKNEYAI LAW. V
K u"S aT' us"-cl' of title. Utliee I
Htgerald iBlock. rtattsuioutb. Nebraska.
J. V iUIUKRl',
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE.
.mr..1!," in '.,,e rtPrtof his residence
riinV:-- ... w"r "i be found in
nri MM!U o me duties of th-
47tf
ROUKHT . UI.VOIIAn.
Notary Public
ATTOBNKT AT LAW.
Office over Carruth's Jewelry Store.
.... Nebraska.
M. A. HARTICAN,
i A WVER.
i w
FirzoRKALD's Block. Plattssjouth Nkb
.
lractJc.03'6 attentioa to Kenera
A. N. SULLIVAN,
Attorney and .Counselot-
at-Law.
OFFICE Tn fi ITntn ni r .
MdDiiscar umit.. Uvin.n ..-.: .
all biiainena . n..r-K
BOIL & LARSEN,
Contractors and Builders.
Vi 111 give ettlm.itet on all kinds of work. Any
waTTac ici i o nir LiUiiiur IftruA or I out
Office will receive pro mot attention
Heavy Truss Framing,
for barni
Kor refeienc apply to J P. Younic V. Wee
lit Or tV V IVlfAP tt-A n JrV 2ak l
Dr. C. A. Marshall
successor to Clutter A Marshall,)
UEMTIST
Presenrailrti. of natural teeti a appcialty.
Tttth extracted without pain by use of
Laughing Has-
AH work t nittd. Pric reasonable.
FlTZilItBAI.D RLk I, - Pl.TOMorjTH.NKB
i. i. sijirsox
AGENCY
FIRE INSURANCE GO'S:
CITY, of London.
QUEE.of LiverpooJ
FIREMAX FUND, of Calif ortiia
mEESS COMPANIES
AMERICAN EXPRESS CO..
WELLM FARUo & CO- EXP HE S
O 22 DO Ul AttaAwmnl .Um-n, nUU trValtlaVa) fXG9
FP.EE -LUNCH SALOONS.
The Bum's Faradlae, and the Impe.
cunlou Man's Last Ilopa.
Chicago New.
"They are varioua, of coune, and rlfpond a
oor deal on the claat of customer to be
catercl to. There are German poMleru who
risit the free lunch place every inornln? with
a supply of sausage, twlona, beef, bunea and
egefab'ea. The proprietor buys what he
want for the day, ami utually geta it cheiip.
lie adds to tli is assortment aweitcer cbeose,
rye bre I aa 1 tnmtir.l. an 1 probibly the
wliole outfit ousts blm 75 cents or tl. Borne
curtail expo.ise by buying taintel mnat,
aecond han'l mutate and stale thiu freu
e rally, cookng the tneat till the bad
flavor is well nigh Krparate.1 from it.
Much lunches are furoinhod at a very
triflins outlay. But many of the low clas
of xaloons uruo an entirely different
method of procuring material for their
lunch table. They havt a special arrange
ment with certain eating houses and hotels
by which they obtain the offscourings of the
tables, and the scraps and remnants from
the kitchens, such as would b- thrown away
if not thus utilized. This stuff cost little or
nothing, and the safooniet is euabind to
spread a decent looking lunch, incliMiiig hot
soup, to the surprise and delight of his cus
tomers, who wonder how he can afford it.
If they could see how it is prepared, they
would not only cease to wonder, but in all
prolaibility would lose their uppetites every
time they looked at it."
"Are not tiiese saloon-keepers annoyed a
great deal by ravenous bums who attack
their luncbekf"
"Yes, they have the professional lunch
fiends to deal with. The free-lunch saloon is
the bum's paradise and the impecunious
man's hope. But it doesn't take long for a
sharp "bar-tender to spot the man who spends
a nickel and devours a quarter's worth of
grub. Notning is said to him the first time,
lut a rejietition of the offense is pretty cer
tain to call forth a polite but firm invitation
to make himself scarce in that hou.e, and to
remain away in future. Why, there are
men in this town who sulaLst in
traveling ' the free lunch routes,
never paying a cent for wuat
they eat All they spend is the necessary
nickel for a glass of beer, without which they
cannot consider themselves a welcome guest
at the bamiuct. Nevertheless, when the
saloon is crowded, there are always a few
slick ones who sneak their grub without buy
ing any been, and are not detected There is
iiauy a well-aressed clerk in Chicago who
i lakes a practice of lunching on saloon fare,
lie Itelons to the poorly paid class of counter-jumpers,
and with 5 cents siut for beei
or a bottle of op he secures uil he wants tt
eut, such as it is.
"But such customers aro not profitable f
"No; but they dress well, and look like
millionaires, you know, and the shrewd pro
prietor has an idea that their presence in his
saloon lends an air of dignity to the place and
helps to attract trade. He makes it up off of
another class of customers. Regular boor
guzzlers are never satisfied with one glass,
and if they are attracted to the place by the
lunch, they spend the amount that a good
meal would cost for beer. It is usually the
case, too, that the more a man drinks the
less be eats. Pretzels are the principal fea
ture of the Dutch beer saloon lunch. They
are salty and create u thirst, which makes
them profitable. "
"How about the lunch of first-class sa
loons, such as yours?"
"They are always first-class, like the sa
loons themselves. My lunches are always
preitared under my own supervision and in
structions. You can get no better food at
the Palmer housa. We have a class of custo
mers to please who don't patronize beer
shops or even cheap restaurants, and wa
ould not afford to offer them inferior quali
fies of either liquor or lunch, in some of the
: st saloons it it the cust m to hand each
. 'istom-T a hot fried oyster on a silver fork
;uo moment lie swallows his liquor. There
ui nothing more delicious than a fried oyster
after a drink."
The saloon-keepers, however, no longer
have a mono;xly of the free lunch business
in Chicago. To offset this attraction, which
is calcu.ated to entice young men into the
pider web of intemperance, the cold water
people of the ciry are opening free lunch
rooms about town. O.ie of these is on West
Lake street, near Paulina, where any one
will be cheerfully provided with a first-class
lunch without being required to spend a soli
tary nickel, and will be treated to a temper
ance lecture to booL
The National Capital a INaeeaf Hmall
Income and Mraall Outgoes).
Cor. Philadelphia Record.
There is no such thing as extravagance in
Washington that is, New York or even
Philadelphia extravagance. Washington is
a city of small incomes, small outgoes and
small economies. Some of the latter are very
funny.- There is my friend the . prosperous
lawyer, who pays a hotel nows-stand 5
cents a day for the privilege of reading all
the morning newspapers. If he takes one he
pays the newsman another nickel. There is
my friend, his wife, who always secures a de
duct iou on the medicine she buys by promis
ing to return the bottle. This lady is also
one of a number who sell their old dresses and
what not of fixings to a . shrewd old colored
aunty in a smart red and yellow bandana,
who in turn sells them "on tiuio" to well-to-
do servants.
A prosperous merchant, whom I know,
thinks nothing of paying his own far vben
he takes a party of ladies down town in the
street car and letting each of his fair coni-
imnions do the same. A street railway presi
dent, so they say, sometimes utilizes his car
riage horses on "the line," and the (resident
of a steamboat line di 1, and . I think does,
save his board by riding up and down the
Potomac on one of his steamers.
This is a town where the leaders in politics,
finance and journalism lunch on milk and
pie in a dairy, ride in 3-cent cars, drink
Vcent soda water, and patronize barbers
who shave for 10 cents, where men of all
sorts of prosperity dine for a quarter, and re
fresh their minds in the evenings at the hos
pitable newspaper correspondent's offices,
which stand open from sunset almost to sun
rise. I upiiel everybody within alv miles
of Washington knew all this until I saw that
nor Senor Barca was charged with ex
travagance. Sen or Barca would have found
great difficulty in getting the patent medicine
millionaires! of the east or the pork and lard
kings' of the west to his modest entertain
ment had be not been a representative of
royalty." He lived like a Washington gen
tlemen on bin twenty thousand a year. He
roil id not have lived as a New Yk gentle
man on anv such sum.
Eaehr an Meven.lTp la Iaa4eau
A few years ago games like poker, euclue
and seven-up were supposed to be the exclu
sive property of Bill Nye.Trnthful James and
the other heroes of the verse and prose of Mr.
Bret Hart. Tb'ngs havecbang: sino thtn.
Euchre is quite a popular game Li Ixndoa;
poker is now likely to be so.
Texas S;f tines: True. "Hope snriuirs eter
nal in the human breast," but it too uiror
cases it is a backward spring.
FLOATED wr-H THE TIDE.
The tl'le comes ii. u. . v- - uJi goo? out, .
And ma duns tboy buff t the wave:
Tbore'-i a tragely h.tclud to tlto tail oS a
swim.
Of which I will tell you about
Tli maiden so rosy and buxom to seo,
Sttolle-l over the crlisuMiiug sa;i l;
Bo pretty her smile and so biajbitg her
cb-"ek
Nor lairer could ever be.
Bar low be wtttohe-J bid promijrl brilas,
As a wave sJoptvi over oer f-e.ia:
And groaned la dismay w he j bBuw hat
Wbil her Mush floated nnt wl-'i the tide.
Solomon "Go to the ant." but the per-
Var wUib wl ttMW 93 to 4U "wekL
GONE OVER.
(Jean Ingelow la Longman's Magazine.
Come hither, come hither V the broouf was la
LloMKMii all over yon rite,
There went a wile murmur of lirown bees
about it with songs from the wood;
"TTe shall never be younger: O lov ., let
forth for the worla 'neath eyes
Ay.tlie world is made young eVn u.t we. and
right fair is hor youth and right good."
Then there fell the great yearning upon toe
tliat never yet went into words.
While lonesome and moansome thereon
spake and faltered the dove to the dove,
And I came at her cailin;: "Inherit, inherit!
and sing with the birds."
I went up to the wood with the child of my
heart anil the wife of my love.
Opuro! O pathetic! Wil I hyacinth drank it,
the dream liht apace.
Not a loaf moved at ail 'neath the bluf, they
litm wuiiiun for miaj;ers kind;
Tall cliorry trees dropiaxl their white blossom
that drifted no whit from its place.
For the kouUi very far out to noa had the
iul.ing low voice of the wind.
And the child's dancing foot gave us ni t in
the mvithiiient alrnoit a jwiin;
An infinite tremor of life, a fond murmur
that cried out on time,
Ah short! must all end iu the doing and s-nd
it.self sweetly in vain,
And the promise be ouly fulfillment to lean
from the height of its prime!
"We shall never be yrnnger!" nay, mock me
not fancv, none call fi-om yon tree;
They have thrown me the world, they went
over, went up; and. alas, for my part,
I am left to grow old, and to grieve and to
chance, but they change not with me.
They will never lie older, the child of rav
love and the wife of my heart
For mankind aro one inspirit, and an instinct
bears along.
Round the earth s electric circle, the swift
flash of right or wrong;
Whether conscious or unconscious, yet Hu
manity's vast frame
Through its ocean sundered fibres fouls the
gush of joy or shame.
la the gain or loss of one race all the rest
have equal claim. Lowell.
A LOVE EPISODE
Why Pauline Slelntyre Hank Into
the Calin, Cold Asony of Iepair.
Texas Siftings.
Pauline Mclntyre crushed a note in her
delicate, taper fingers, and with bloodless
cheeks and a weird, Btrange look in her large,
lustrous eyes, sank upon a fanteuil in the
salm, cold agony of despair.
"Pau'ine," said Mrs. Mclutyre, bending
tenderly over her daughter, "do not tike it so
hard. Rememler that cruel treachery and
foul deceit walk hand in hand, at times,
attendant on a thing in human form who
wears the outward seal of manhood. You
will, of course,' have nothing more to do with
him."
"Never I" hissed the poor, stricken girl from
between her own teeth. "I have sot my life
upon a cost, and I will stand the hazard of
the die! The vile, knock-kneed dude forgive
me, mamma," sobbed Pauline, breaking com
pletely down under the terrible strain, "for
give me if I appear too harsh and rude, but,
oh I you little know what 'tis to lose your
faith iu man, to have your heart turned into
a sidewalk lor fiends to tread upon. O,
mamma, pity and forgive your daughter,
uml"
"I do foi-give you, Pauline," replied Mrs.
Mclntyre, bravely suppressing her emotions,
aud stroking her daughter's pale brow and
commercial hair, "1 do forgive you and pity
you with all my heart Do you think he had
the least reason to write you such a cold and
cruel letter F
"Not the slightest," replied Pauline,
bristling with hauty indignation. The old
blue blood of the Mclntyres was coursing in
her veins. "Have I not always treated him
with due deference f Has not his slightest
wish been law"
"You are quite sure, Pauline, that you love
him J"
"Sure! mammal Dost mock thy daughter's
passion f
'It changing cheek, and scorching vein.
Lips taugnt to wricne, out not complain;
If oursting heart a ad ma. tdeniiig brain,
And daring deed, aud vengeftii seel.
And all that I have felt and feel.
Betoken love, then love waj inane 1'
Pass the pie."
"Tiue, daughter," said Mrs. Mclntyre,
virh a perp.ex;d expression hovering upon
r strong, matronly features, "I believe
yo . Won't you pie ise read me the not of
e ujortless wretcaf"
i will," passio.iu.sely exclaiinod the girl
"Listen:
"'mis mackintire, wont yu al pleas put
sum more starch in my cufs an col lards they
cum bak on ire as thin an phlimsy as a oih
of hotel kaupby I ays a washer woman an
I want my close did up in sum k nd of stile
"'JOH.V POPPLETON.'"
Trepanned iS'tntls lu France,
Dr. Broca describes the trepanned skulls
which have been discovered in some of the
caves of France, belonging to the earlier
periods of the new stone age. He asserts, in
regard to this remarkable disclosure, that a
great number cf these skulls were trepanned
during lifetime, probably in infancy and
early youth, and that they healed
up again, the subject of the operation
surviving it for many years. The
theory is that the practice was
a sacred rite of some sort, it being found
that the skulls of those very persons who had
undergone the operation in their lifetime
were after death subjected again to the
same operations; a number of small dis s
were cut from them in such a way that e& a
disk contained a portion of the cicatr; 4
edge made by the original trepanning, U. s9
disks being used as amulets by living -t
sons, the skull thus treated being in its turn
also provided with one of these talistnaniv
disks in place of those surrendered.
A Xew Hnehreoa,
New York Sun.
A lady living in Clinton. Mass., recently
mixed a batch of bread which failed to rise,
even after a delay of twenty hours. She did
not wbh her father to see the waste of Hour,
so she buried the dough in the garden. The
next- morning her father called her out to
see an enormous white mushroom of an un
heard of variety that he had discovered. He
was calling his neighbors to see the curiosity,
when bis aughter enlighted bun as to the
tiature of the plant
The Poatase ft el net lea.
Scientific American.
There has heen a good deal of sqaibbing
in the newspapers because, afcor October 1,
it will cost as much to send a letter around
the corner as it will to send it to San Fran
cisco. But one thing at a time Tribune.
And the next thing is the quick delivery
of letters tr. cities and towns. More benefit
can be secured to the pubac by the prompt
delivery of letters than by the reduction of
postage.
PbetotTrapklnz Lightning.
Chicago Herald.
Dr. Haessel, a German savant, has suc
ceeded in photographing several h'ghtning
flashes, and with such success as to enable
the length of the course of the electric cur
rent to be computed and also the locality
where the lightning struck to be estiu a ted
with occur t.cy. Valuable results are ox
pectfed from further experiments.
HER ROSES.
M. & Urilges.
Sweet love, f jr tha nwes that you wore
Azaiust you waist, a k ug insht. lga;
H' re on my troub e 1 heart t ty lie
Cradled in rest, to rest no more.
Crushed, faded, but forever sweet
Ah, was it fate, or was it chance,
1 bat shook them downward in the dance,
And dropped them gently at my toeti . .
You did not dream, wtn we should i art
You, in your stately lovelinc
How close againsv my heart tibonW pre.)
The flowcra that peifrapq on your uui 'U
Ah, so f kep tbem Half dlftne "
I the dwar mystery they reveal;
And in my happy dreams I fool
Tbte Uatinijctyw heart wtuiaa r
Wnr THE CLERK OPT MAD.
The Trae Mtory of aa t'afortoaata
IXiipture In a Pike Cfeunfy l-'lre Ie
part nie ut.
The county clerk has resigned as a member
Of tiki Miiford 11 ro department, of which he,
tog.-tticr with a fifty-foot book mid lad ler
truck an 1 the ex-dutnet attorney had long
been an important appurtenance. He warf
led to sever his connection with the drirb-liR-nt
by what he alhei was a piece of de
ception on the part of tho ex-district attor
ney, by which deception his usefulness and
two panels of board fence were aiiiiultano
Oiuly imiKiired, and his dignity ua a citizen,
a man, and a grandfather gn atly injured.
One night Jake Hcnorr, the stage driver,
who was returning from a lato truin at Port
J ci vis, came dashing down the ioid with his
team, and crying "Fire!" "Fire!" a.', the top
of his lungs.
Then th.-re was hurrying to nnl fro among
the boys. Tho hook aud ladder truck was
housed iu the Crissman house barn. Tho
county clerk and the ex district attorney
rushed for it at once. The former seize.
hold of it al tin rear, while tho latter handled
the tonirue, Tho night was very dark.
The truck was quickly taken out, and tli
county clerk stioutod:
"Now let her go, lx's! I'll push behind and
you handle the tonu." Then ho added to
himelf : "I'll soo how much pciie.str' iiiism
there is in that district attorney, no v, you
bet He's got to be a good un if . doa '
wind him liefore this run is over.
Away they went Tho fire wa. up town,
three-quarters if a mile away. Ik-foro they
bad gono half a block the county cleik was
clearing U-n feet of ground at every step.
"Sweet Christmas!" thought he, -what an
infernal gait them Imys have struck! If they
keep that up, the district attorney'll be dead
before be gets there, and I'll bet on it."
Bv this time the county clerk's feet barely
had lime to touch the cround at all. His hat
was gone, and he swung along behind the
truck like a kite tail iu tho wind.
"If ho nin't a runner, I'm blowe.11" ho
iaiiL "Jf they don't get to that fire blome
joon, or if he don't fall dead, I'm a gonei."
A still greater burst of hpecd on the jiart of
tho truck lifted the county clerk on his feet,
&nd ho stuck out bjlmi 1 the mar-hiue as
Straight a a coupling polo. An instant ho
auug poL-d. Then he lost his grip. Hoshut
bis eyes and went right on. Ho rushed
through space for fifty feet. Thn he mo at
?ourd fence. He took two panels of it with
lim as he went th. ough it. As ho rested in
be middle of a five-acre potato patch be
laid:
"Well, I've heard of good running, but if
that don t rather knock tho spots off uuythin
ever done, I'm a three-logged pot!"
So, when the county clerk learned tha he
had been following that truck withJaket
Schorr s horses hitched to the tongue and
taking it over the ground at twenty miles an
hour, and that the ex-district attorney ha 1
coolly ridden on it every step of the way t
tho lire, he felt hurt Ho said that if the.f
wanfd to run a fire department ou such
principles they could, but us for him, no
And he resisrned.
THE CINCHONA TEEE.
The Experiment of Cultivating O.ol
nine About to be Undertaken.
Chicago Times.
President Barrios, of Guatemala, ha.1 made
airangemenU to try the experiment of culti
vating the cinchona tree. an. I W. J. Forsyth,
a plauter of Ceylon, who has ridden a thou
sand miles through Central America, explor
ing the country to dix-o.er the best fiite fot
ilaiitation, is now iu New York on his return
to East India to select the seed for five
million trees. Speaking on the subject. Mr.
Forsyth said: "The rapid increase in the
number of uses to which the bark of tbj
cinchona tree is put, not only for the ma.iu
facture of quinine and as an ingredient in the
substitute for bops, but for various com
morc-ial purposes, induced Piesi lent liaiios
j to try this exjierimeiit. Although the ciu
' chona tree is not a native of lu-iia, but was
introduced there in 187'J by the celebrated
botanist, Clement Markliam. at tho instance
of the British government, the culture was so
profitable that not ouly has the original in
vestment ot l.A),0.)0 icen repaid, bat the
trees have been valued at A'l.iKJsi.OuO.1
There are many varieties of the cinchona.
One is the cali-nvn, whii-h is rich in alkaloid.
Another variety is the officinalis th" bark of
whic h is known as crown bark. Oilier varie
ties are coiKlamanca an 1 tlv succirubra. Tue
last named is rat ier larger than th others
an.l more robust and of quicker growth, but
not so rich in alkaloid, though it yields plenty
of bark. These barks are gonei-ally known
to commerce as Peniviau bark, tho igh not
cultivated in Peru nor grown there to any
great extent The trees aro plaufd from
tuive to four feet apart, and mature ia about
six years.
There are three methods of treatment in
cultivation. One w by thinning out, or &j
lecting the largest trees to lie retained. An
other is by coppicing, which is simply cutting
the trees down to a ;tufup and permitting the
shoots to grow. At the harvest these shoots
are cu." off. The third method is culled the
Mclvor system, and consists in taking the
tark from a part of the matured tree tnd
mossing over the stripped place until the bark
is renewed. If the mossing is carefully done
the bark will renew itself continually. The
bark is sold at 2 shillings to 13 shillings a
pound, and is sold readily, for th supply has
never yet been too great The cinchona tree
requires a tropical climate and a plentiful
rainfall. It would not grow in tho United
States, but can be cultivated in Mexico. The
tree requires careful cultivation.
His Houor and ltifah Beuked.
Detroit Free Press.
When the repo-ter3 got down Bijah was
dusting off thj chairs and sinking "Only a
Pansy Biossom." Ho was offered 50 cents,
tl, $2, and finally as high as $4
and a Laud-ded if he would quit
at the end of his first verse, but he indig
nantly spurned all overtures. One after
another the prisoners called out to him
to have me-cy and let up, but it was not until
the occupant of cell No. ? fainted dead away
w ith a cry of despair that tho old janitor
hushed his song and said:
"I don't see why it i3 that everybody
pitches into niy sinking. Is thjre anything
the matter with my voice f
"Anjching!" shouted thi reportorial band
in chorus.
"1 have been told that there was a touch
of pathos in it."
"Pa ha I ha! thoa!"
"And that it reminds the hearers of their
childhood da5's."
"Child-ha! ha! hool days!"
"Oh. well, it's no use to combat such jeal
ousy as yours. No one can blame the crow
for bearing the eagle. All of you go to
Texas."
The first prisoner out was Abner Johnson,
the victim wao had fainted. Ho looked pale
xnd weak, and his honor gazed at him and
laid:
"Prisoner, theise sprees are using yon up.'?
"Sprees!. Why, last night is thu fust time I
lave been drunk in two years f
"AT ell, it soems to have exhausted you."
"It wasn't that, sir. 1 could stand four or
3ve dmn-ts und not feel tho worse for it, but
when you come to lock a man up u a close
celi. keep him without breakfast, and start
fifty hyenas to bowling rfore his door, some
thing has got to give way."
Bijah," said the co irt. as he tamed to the
janitor, have oa bec-u aiuiug again this
moniiiigi"
Y-j es, sir. That U, I warbled off a verse
ortwov"
"A,id it rawed me to faint away, and gave
the man next to liie q.ick cuusumpaoa,"
added lb. ris-iuer.
"Bijah, 1 have warned you for the la't
Ume," solemnly ounounceJ his honor. "You
have got to stop nnui 5 or t!u court m tst
bica'i upl Pruoner, you buve -suffured
enough aoJ are dLclM.ud. .' Cj your
wr.y!"
It was no more than Bija'i dcderred. and
yet when lv? was seen tiiro-ih the d.ior of the
coindor wiping his sal vyei on apieteof
CoiIeeuckiug. a majority of Uij ffjjHjff
CriVEPI-ETE
Livery, and Sale Sbable.
RIGS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION HY OR NIGHT.
EVKUYTIIINO IS FIiasT ( LASS-TH j; HE.sT" TEAMS IK THE I'M V
SINGLE AM) DOUItLE CAlililAd'ES.
I'ravt'lera will liud coinpleti- oulfils li cullinjr at the
Corner Vino nml Fnurlh StrcK.
iRlMINU AM
Tht :.ATT.SMOUilI I! EH AM)
every facility
jo:
In Every
Catalogues $
A-UCTIOIT BILLS,
COM jVTEICX JJL,
Oii7 Storl of J3la.Jz lDa,pers
And materia' ia larj?? and complete in every oVp.trt mr r ''
ORLliRS JJTJL, SOLICITED
PLATTS3I0UTII UEllALb OFFICE
Sizbsc7i?,c for t7ie Da.iLy JlenaLd
EICHEY
DK ILEUS IN ALLKl.Ni)S OF
Lumber, Sash, Doors. Blinds
MISED I AINTS, XixJMIE,
Lowest "Rics.
ALWAYS
BE1NNETT& LEWIS
THE LEADING GROCffi
Come to the froat with
Staple and Fancv Groceries
FRESIJ AND NICE.
We alwavs buy the best eoods in the market, and guarantee evervthlct'
we sell We are sole agents in this town
(
PEUFKCTIOX" GROUND SPICKS
AND THE CELEBRATED
"BAT A VIA" CANNED GOODS
pr Cner in the market Plain Tiger" trend of Ualti rrtire Oy
n band. Come atid hp" un Mid i- u ill mke ymi uaI
WLmm
9
A X
At W holcsalcand 115 olail. Cash
paid for all kinds of country
produce. Call and see me.
Opjiosite IFirst National ittank
. ,-4
rLATlS.MOU'l II. NEU.
PLBLISt I O
riJIJEISlIIN(J COMPANY lu
fur DrHt-cIiiH.s
Department.
Pamphlet Work
BEOS,
Terms Cash
AHEAD
a complete -toe- f
for the sale of
D-
FEE