3 b. a. TIMK TABLE B & M. E. R. in Nebraska, MAIN LINE TATI:.- ; flat turnout h .. Hraitll . ... ( ui'ri. . . 1 eciar Creek.. oitl-vlll,-. . .. hcutli l.ruU. . . Wil..l.ct. Iil liwovtl .. . (irtoin la--.it;i t..-u Cicua. .. Ys.-C. ok Akmi Iienver KXI-Rfcl rRAIMI iikIMI w t. PUtUmonth Telephone Exchange, t J. r. Young, residence. Itenuett & 1 U, store. M. li. Murphy & Co., tfonner Htaulen. No. I. No. 3 9 in V r.n it II V a in It :rt u in 10 J4 a in In :'-ii a in Hi :I7 h it. I ! a It. .r. II :.v. j. t; Ar. I.'ve li n vi j .r. :&' r. I.e l t--1 li-j .' ) r. ! A'' l IMI Af. !.' ft ll'jl.Afc Ar. 11 ( i.i I vr. .I.'vt 1. in ; i.i I.'ve i A r. In 4 in a r. ilvt i a n.'l.'te .r. i Mam ai. 0 in T. l i ! in '. -.:. iii in 7 :'' in x :!' J 1:1 v in . :IS ; P III I' 'l t III : hi c .. u a in 5 .'l M III W : .i in I- : - iplil t A", m 6 :im p in In .-IK p III STATIONS : '-I'lttn-utu..., I Ormpoin .... . C cwrl , trdw I'iKk... . OUIiVllltf uth Bend.. Athhu.4 , ie?nwo4 Lincoln . .. Uastlngs.... fr 1 Cloud.. AUl'ook .... Akron Beuver KXrUtMt 1K4IMM CJOlMJ CAST. Al. At. At. Ar. Ar. r. Ai. No.Z. 6 :lo i in 4 ui p n. 4 s p in 4 :l p In 3 JA p in ft pih Ar. t M pa No. 4. 2 3 4 - a 7 s 10 14 13 IIS 17 14 is M 21 S 71 JH J'J ; i zi :- ' :j ;: l 11 M U 4". 40 I. i: M &HI 413 Comity Clerk' ofTlcn.l K. II. lwl, r-luiiri. .1. V. Wcckbitcb. "tore. Western L'uluu TcloKtpb oftlre. I. 11. WlinHer, rtliieiice. I. . tiniib-ll, K. b. liiiluaiu, " Juo. VVayiuiui. " J. W. .IfiilitllKi. W. M W ollloe. torrliMt-y l(roM wll!c. W t. Cartt-i. torn. J. S . r'airllf 1I, riliM. M. 11 -.Win vii). l. it. kVinrt,-r Co , nITSo'. J. I', I lor. rHideiu-'-. Ilr-t N.iiiotial l!auk. 1'. i;. JluIliinr'B oitice.. I. I. oiiri!4, tor.. rkint ll'i,o. rt. Hv-i-. riui m-v. Jil?rti;-.l iI:c-. 1 alill.MV iff uUnw, lit n i u i;. i o uiiiue. J. i i '-, ri.lriirf. M. M. I liain.t.tii. V . I. Ii.ii.-,, A.N. .'ill Ivan. II. I'.jii.i i, V.. II. clii!il,vnt-f!ir, o!!ii-f. flllllVail V 'At,. try, .x. v . .Icitul.llij. rosi.lew-e. A. I'alti f-iiiii. Hvvty. '. .M. lloliiii-.i, I.. I. beuiiKtl, rf-lili-iif f . ;!. ci.intii, otllee. I A. Mxre, lior at. .1 . W. H.ITHV. leailr;e. 1C. K. l.lviiiK-toii.ofUcr. J- V. eckitii:ii. reniuVuce. ( lialaln WriKlil. W. II. acbl.iikuecht ' ieo. H Miuiih, K. K, 1-lvlDictoli. C. C liullard. THH f5KEIf WE WIND. (Burlington IIatLvr. If you and I, to-Uy Kuuubl atop and lay Our lifework down, and 14 our Lainl-i fall where they will Fall down to lie ouito till And if some other hand f.boul-1 cotne and ntoop to find The tbrrodi we carriinl, no that it hboulJ wind, 11. giniiing wlx-rw we U''-d; if it fhould "ohm; to kepp Our lifework Kointf, w t To -rry on tn cmk1 df.-sign, HiKtinc-tivoly nuulo your vr mine, W hat would it Undf STL.EET CAR VICTIMS. WOMAN AND HOME. Some wr.rk w e JSotiio Ihrri.ls CX.lIU That we V,U v.; li. ust Lo doing, true or false; uo wind; boino fitirj-jst- s How Conductors Are Festered Chronic Frauds, Mala and Female. A tout Servants Ilousohold Hints and Iteoipos Suggestions for tho Kitchen. to it, or down. As t H vri ' Hid we witi vr t.lm ; - !i ami tljii-ktiivi . Ar. AT. Ar. At. At. At. At. Ar. Ar. 2K'pniiAr. l.'o 2 it pni le Ar. yjtamjAr. Wte la :ioui.i.'ie Ar. 8 tm inlAr. L'i;H;Auj;L'e Ar. 3 & a i a r. JL've 4 jot. auili.'ve I AT. 10 .45 p lliAr. j L't a :U p iii ; l.'ve L' IJttp mlve ! a in H a iu M ui- a in m :Zi a in 8 :i7 a in 8 :o& a in 7 :4l a ni 7 J4am 3 uTO a m 7 0 a ui 10 :I5 p in 10 -M p ui tiipni 7 :') p III 3 -oo p ru 3 ra p iu Iv a m 11 roiaru 7 UI5 a in I bRgw.tcli board conoecti I'lattsinouth will. lilaii L Arlington. I8l;ilr. i oiin. il Uluff-. Ft" ?:"".'.. Un'Vlu' '"U.t KUh.trii Htition. I'upllliuii. SuriuKOelil, mill itavrrly. xtutMVille Uoutb lu-u.l PROFESSIONAL CARDS. To li'.w l.i-1'ir.' Of l..T i. i-i 1 i. hill l-.l.-i An 1 w iii.l ilion r,:njil Till t!:- !.-: 1 1 r Iiin is Imiin l. tii!in.-tiiiie-. loivuttii: ul tii- tu:i9 To itsk Tb- valmi of l!n- tbri-adi, or i-booso JSu uii ' stiiir Vj use. S li:nrj l.'il w.ri is snim thrxiil: Jt ciiiuiot Ktui .l ijilitn htill till it ix il. nd Uilt what it spina and Wimis u lilt'e skein. O'jd iiiikIo isa.Ji hand for work not toil stniit Ik r-iiir-d, hut evrry imml Spin tlioiili, but ivjx-s'of s:i:id. If Iovh should coine, Ntwijin; nlnv ulicn we are d jiie, 1, fill. I t.-t. .l.ft ll.t.l v ...... ... .yi.t, vul CSatO That we have IkiIJ, that it may spin thoic iiy;T n:ii iiin Khreis Thalltnrak wlien touched bow col. 1. iul, shivf-rin, iortioulss, tbo hand wil'. bold 1 1 1 lirokeu Ktmnd-t, aiul know I'rnsli cause for more. SMITH & IIUESO.Y, ATTOKNEYH AT l.iw win ... .k. 1 .i pdt lltC IU All Che t4turta in the ataie. Onlce over First Ni. 41 XEEH4MKA. lloual Balik fLATT8MOt'TH Truius 3 and 4. numbeitnx 39 and 40 west of lieti Cloud, run dally except Suixlay. K. C ST. JOE & C B. R. R. .TATl'VSi . - NOKTU. 5 at p m 6 p in 6 :ll p lu G :'M if m 6 'M p ni v j lii. 'j 4 'JM a m ? x-';l.i ....... B .-03 a in til u. ... . . ) MU in t.l I- -. - ar a iu ' I'l.t- II a mo a m ! liui..i.ii. ! 9 30 a ru jipolU i 9:10 1 M - . liallt . 1 U :O0 a IU . lit i.e . .. , :47 a lu 't uab u. . . . I b a u n . mxrumnH trains ;ofu SOLlll. 8 :io p in 8 lifO p 111 7 :6ft p ni 7 :42 p in UU. A. HALISUtlll . BB1TTIST. K..C,?ver ? mUh' ,IlsMJk ;,,, 'niic Store. t ust cbws deutiatry at reasonable prices, 23ly M. MKAIIK. Jf. !.. Street. Mierwooa'a Block, south side. Cilice open day and nlbt w countv rnveiciAy. CASS COUXTV. M. O'BONOHOE ATTOKXEV AT LAW A NOTAliY rUBLIC. FltZtferald'a Illock. ruirsJlODTU, - KBRASKA Agent for Stea-nsLIp Hues to and from Europe dl2w521y li. . LI VI UNTU.V. W nilHICIAN A SUKOEO.1. OFFI HOURS, from 10 a. m., to 2 Kxaium.r.t; urieon for U. 8. Fen.sion. p. iu. ll.UE TABLE Pacific Railroad. iu. H. PHYSICIAN E rapuiiou. Spilulielil Louivi!:. . . Weepiu Water. 'fifwea )UUUIH' .. ... - ?t. It.UIlt t it. Loal-. - f XiUlia" V 11 V iunb:ur 1 tToca. Vei'piuj' W:ilt-r ' OUllile . pi i;.niii-;a .. kll.lou. 1SUU AITl. 1 . jTUe .ibovf i . ; ;ukU" I iw li, KxpreiM ,res ireiKiit leaves leaves I leaven golUK goiiiK I going SOUTH. BOLTli. I hOlTH. 7.40 p ni" 8.ooa.in a. m. .17 " 8.37 " 2.uup. n. .42 a oo 3.o 4 ! " l. IS 3 60 " ' 9.40 - 5.00 ..J7 ' J 53 .,.45 " i;.4j V. .. l i'.t7 p. HI P.t y.' a... txtout; IjuIUK . Iioiuk NOKIH. ( NOKTH. .NORTH. S 52 a.m 8.32 p.m. t 1 li. 7.6; .1.111 .. iv u.i. 1.21 p.m. i.oi p. in !. . u im :.t I -a.: . I .. - j a ; .r- I ...A " . KlLLEll, AND S It B n y n w Can l f.niiifl i.v uii;.... . ..... " , o oriocK. Burr bunseif, with anHd &raSi'3f ttTOiK0' off their coat, nnd began to PLATTMMUUTH. XFKKA8KA. I AH. . 3IATIIEWM ATTOKif KV AT LAW. OAlce over fit ksr& Atvood's store, south olAlahi beiMtea Stli and bill streelS. 21tf side NTKOUK A tlTOKXEYS AT LAW 'lie Courts iu the State. OMrict Att,. ;u.j aul Sutary Public. t'lilKK. Will practice In all VOLLECTIO.YU rt rECJ.HZI 1 YTTUK..-KV AT LAW. Real Esr:,.. Fire In- ivuidAH.- 'erwiii t'.l time, xinri: i -. . 'lii;i-.i,K;s - K .. i.cai lii n. . - i latluitc.-u.il, " re. M;. . . I fcil !-: 1 . . i" an. i lj. it,-:.;.. , it-r.. f, 'i. . il-. .! IK l-i I .!(. t J i I I t " -a. t . p. III. i ' f i in. Ij j'Xi A I.I. ,. fXC. 17, 1; juVTl,M llt ri i:t; H.lll,. !iM" UI : i -i I M KK.N. .-its : ii fci..s. OLil:l. OMAHA. 1 KKflJCJ A i .. t.C"K V 11.. It. . III. AK(.fil 1'Uil c ... i- t :.v a i !-.5i 1'. 'i ). i.. . " U. !.i I.J." p. lu. 0. 0u a. u 1. W p. u iio;, J:il ''i.l!u':.r I .v llif.O.V. . iNofarj I'iiT.i'.- ;A1 I.AV.. W .1 ..... .Ul.tif ; ir.vcs?elit..t;K.1u.. - .'.-J'itvrs .i tub. i.v.n .. ; ;-:.-iin. ;uli. Nei.i.tik... i I iii oliit-i; Ol- THE PEACE. Ii tin r...., ....... ... ..1 i C i.ieujn . v..,.,... .V. " 1 " s resiae.!".- ;;;;'.m to att.-,.., duties of l.f " ' ! 47:f. "OATH" TELLS THE STORY Or the Fatal fuel Whiela 1 ak Flncit Brlwffn ItHrr and Hamilton. George! Alfro.1 Towns. ni! in Tho Kuquiivr. Aaron ISurr hud nlreaily fought one duel ihore four yirars imivionsly, and (Jfii. Hatiiil- Uui m son 1i.-m1 boeu killed tb-ro in the autumn of 1VM tbroiiKh a quarrel that Uik place ia n tlH-ntra l he youn;j man was shot in thsi riht side, atiove the hip, tlirough -tli liody. and the ball lodged in the left arm. Like his father, ho was boated over to the city. niui iiiea in a few hours after. The ern.:n:ut Do Witt Clinton also fought a duel on this spot about two years before Hamilton fi ll with one of Col. Burr's ad herents and twice wounded his auUizoni.st. Tho cause of Burr's challenging Hamilton, as Is well known, was the opixxiitiou tho lat ter made to his arty, the Federalists, assist ing Burr to defeat tho regular Republican candidate for governor of New York, as he IiikI previously opposed the Federalists elect ing Burr president in place of Jefferson. Burr spent the night before the duel writ ing lettors, one to his daughter, who wa uinrried in South Carolina, and in the morn ing a few of his friends came together at his house iu what is now Fulton street, and c.ir ried him to the river shore and crossed with him, arriving on the fatal field at half-pact 6 oVloek. Burr himself, with his second- remove the underbrush, and while they were doing so Hamilton s party arrive. I, and principals and seconds bowed to eac h other. The distance was measured, ten full paces. Hamilton chose the best position, and had "the word, and he faced the city of New York, which he had wen to grow, partly under his wise providence, to bo already the emporium pf tho new world. Burr faced tho rocks,, hard as his destiny was heuceforward to be. The grandfather of George H. Pendleton, of Ohio, gave Hamilton his position, saying: Will you have tho hair spring setf ' ' "Not this time." The word wus merely "present" After the first shot from either, the opposite? second be gn'i to c.tunt, "one, two, three tire!" and during this recital the fn-e ha lto bo returned. Tho two eminent tnen lired nltno.st together, t'l.l IlaiiiiUou's-pisto! seemed to luive goneo.T inci!ui:t.-sr;iy. Hamilton, sank down, ani Jut ahamliy a stop, as if to help hiru. ful deidy turned aroiir.J, au l a frieu I i-iisi-.l n:i ! liiuiv.iA over hit.i and harried -hitu t Uis b-.;.c, when he immediately wei.t tc Mew Wk--:i'.:d lo lir'.-u'f.Tst. i .-ii' ii.ui stru.-k iiamiai ni oi.o of U:t ri'o. nnd fnirtuivd it, passing throu-'a t i:-; livi-r mi a flutphrngnt and hvlgisl :u one of the vt r i i-ui in-nariee assuiue.ia llviae.T.i,-i f?ion iin i : utteied the words,-"Tais is a ;:.'jttr.l wound, coctor," und swooned. He j-n-rk.l iiitohLs loat and rowed over the river ..ud iiea tuo follo-.viiig day in the af teraoou, at the eariy age oi s. New York WorliL . "That woman's a frauJ." said a tn?ct car conductor to a reporter of Tho World as he pointed to a woll-dres! woman kitting in ono of tho forward neat. "She has lieen pitying a game on these cars for soveraJ months. I collected her fare at tho ferry, and just now when I passed h. r sho asked me for her charge. She had given me a niekel, I and w lr n I tr,l her so she bec--m anryand : threatened to r rt ino if I i.i(n'r jjivo her i clur.n for t!ij 50.ciit -.:-e whu!t slic ! c'uirne.1 to hnv. given in.-. Site's doii-j the w.n- th'-'ig ltii u half (Iozi n n:.-n ti the I ;ia i. ''!) v:i h:ivf inaaj nf turt rl;..-i of p.to- r " " r, an 1 wont.'ii arc .-'..rr.l-y ti . v. rsL. They j.!iy nil sorts ui' tricks on us. 1!t y iv.? at tin? m ml troubl . You want to ku.iw th -r ti i-ksl f-mme seel 'i'h'Te's tho woman who has a $f bill and 4 cents. We have to chaege th former or accept the latter. "Then, there's lue woman who has a cart load of Uiskets with her and won't pay any iare lor em. "There's the woman who has a whole school bouse foil of children. They are all big enough to vote almost; yet sho is willing to take an oatU that none of them is 12 years of age. "There's the woman who halls the car and then stands on the curb, kiss all her friends, tells them all to cull on her, and then gets altoard. After tho car is started she sud denly remembers that she s iu the wrong car or has forgotten her pocket-book. There's tho woman who ex poets you to know the exact number of tho street to which sho is going and threatens to report you if you in form hor that jou are not a directory. Thei-e'4 tbo woman who stands on tho corner and lets tho car iss and then hails it and looks daggers at you for not knowing that she wanted to ride. There's the woman who will let you pass by her a dozen times, and, although., you stare her out of countenance, but will never offer her fare, and when you ask ber for it will either say that she has paid it or will hunt down in the bottom of her valise for it, and finally fish it up after you have waited ten minutes for it. ''There's the woman who insists that she has told 3'ou where she wants to get out when she knows sho never did anything of the kind. Five or six will get into a car together, and when the conductor comes around they will all look the other way. Then, when they are asked for their fare, they will quarrel about who Is to pay and will finally end by each paying her own fare. Men are not so troublesome. Bat there are a number of frauds among them. For in stance, there's the man who always gives you a 3-cent piece and swears he handed you a 10. The man who has a cent ready, and when j-ou come for your faro he covers it, holds out his hand and purposely droits the cent in the straw, or into the street if it's an open car. Tho man who insists upon smoking on the rear platform, and when you tell him to go front ho goes there and puffs the smoke from a grocery store cigar into the front window. The young man who jokes and always says: 'One and a hair when ho pays for himself and bis girl. The drunken man who wants to occupy the wholo car. The tough who attempts to run the whole machine and frightens everybody and then reports you when you break him in two and fire him into tbo middle of tho street. The man who pulls the indicator strap instead of the bell scran and keeps rolling up tho number of fares, im agining that he is going to stop tho car. The man who eats peanuts in the car and gets angry because you ask him to throw the shells out of the window. The man who rides in tho wrong direction' and tb.- want's his fare back when ho discovers his mistake. Tho man who insists upon putting his feet on the s.ats i nd hundreds of others I can't now reeu.il. Ilonr. ltelaUon---IreM anil Woaiaa- liood Adornment of C'hlldreu -Tlie Koollline of 'earlesi' Women. Jano Grey Swinshelm In Chicago Tribune The outrage and murder of Mrs. Ambler is a lesson which should not pass unnoticed by that largo number of "youii2. stronc. fear less" women whom vouth. strength, and )urao lead to forgi-tfulness or unconscious ness of the iK-rtiliar clanger of their tex. When I think nf tho miiiiliers of such women for -!:om I have trc-mb-isl, I wonder that Fuch criir.os are oi m rre occurrence. That spirit of iudeeiideucc, that claim of equality with meu, w hich has been so dili gently fostered by the mistaken frienls of woman suffrage, is resonsibIo for a good deal of recklessness on the part of thousands of women. From the first woman-rights convention it ha . been common for the people who origi nated and maintain them to ridicule tho idea of woman's need of protection. In tho third one ever held I was voted down and ac counted an enemy of my sex for insisting that ono of the primary rights of woman is protection by her male friends from all phys ical danger, and for urging that there never could be a time when woman could afford to dispense with protection. The flood-tide of "reform" was so strongly Bet against mo that, it being my first appearance in such convention, it was my last for twenty years, and for over thirty years I have been much more anxious to see woman emancipated from the influence of the false cniJcs of equality and independence than from any form of oppression consequent upon the old order of things. This unfortunate woman. Mrs. Ambler, was in the habit of walking alone a short dis tance from a railroad station to her father's house, and of positively refusing the escort of the man whose first duty it was to pretect her.. This habit was known, of courso, and was a notification to all ruffians, just as the keeping of large sums of money in a house is a notification to burglars. Tho independence which leads any woman torely upon herself in such manner is criminal,' and one who per sists in it should bo treated by her friends as a lunatic and f urnished with a guardian. Any woman who attempts such a role to' be in tho least consistent should be thor oughly armed and accustomed to the use of dirk and pistol, besides having given proof of coolness in the face of danger. The horror one feels at - thought of the fate of this "young, strong, fearless" woman should bo turned to account as a warning to all other women, both for their own sake and for that -of the men who are in sorao degree unmanned by being discharged from their post of duty as the natural protectors of the women they love or respect. KM.. " i f' 1 : : """ C02vlPX.ETE Livery, and Sale Stable. RIGS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION DfcY OR filGHT. KVEKYTIIINi; IS FJIIST CLAS.S-TIIK lilXr TEAMS I.N THE CITV .SIXGLK AND DOUHl.E CAKIUAd'ES. Travelers will fiirl coiuj.letc mliils by caJUno; at the Corner A'iiie and Fourth Streets, ilfccHLTfcDiL, I'LATTSMOUTII. .j;ii. PR1N1IKU AKD PTJBLISHI O. J03B JEJE311SrI?JLlXrCZ- f Work JV hi:i lo enil r lj ceul 'ju feni -Ji Cftii but t ": der not t.x.;t.ei:ut; m - - ci u uit I .; excceUu.ii - - 40 -C - 1.... . I . . ' . . ...wuc III UI , lilt. J ,. iouni iioiu one ct-cl lo Uiiy dollars. 4sl noi couluiu a Irac.lonal pari ol aceul. HAIfcs Vuu i-cniAciK. c aas luilr iellei 3 ceult per H ounce. " luolwUeriMeacis er lit. ilraiialeui ewcpi'(ters ana book eouie uuer Uiia ciaa t cent' pel eacn t ounces, clits iuieruuUirte; i cent per ounce. J. V. JlAJtBUAlA, r. M. I - t: I I ; i.i.i am u. ccsii j. iAiru, cii t 1 LXJs.rr hiiTE-N f l kl. W1MJH AAl.Clty ; ti. MUKfUV, Cbiel f McCA.NN.Coenteerc vi.i)iui, Notary I'ul.'U Ari.uKV AT LAW. Office ovtr Carruth's Jewelrv stnr- i.nouth. .... yetnwhj M. A. HARTJCAN. 1a a xv v hz it . Ki rzcjKRA Lit's Block. Plat fsmo uth k Pw0,ract.ce.Care, atte,,,lon to a Kener; iiic;i;ye. OITICIAI. DIRXCTORY. CITY niBKCTOBT, A. M. SULLIVAN. Attorney and Xounselor-at-Law. JOBGE S, SMITH. Mayor. ;sui.ci. ireasurer. City Clerk. cit.it. foiice Judee. Attorney. t of folice. of Streets. :,A 4.1KLHJ. Chief ol lre LlepU t , U 1UCUA1UX u. Ch'u Hoard oi Health t 1 1 CnCJfCILMKji. V Ward Wm . Herold. U. M. lions, f : Ward J. M. Patterson. J . 11. Fairfield. W sr.l Avl a-t Mnr..liv ft, nrnui.n Ward F. U. Lenuhoil. F. McCallan. SCHOOL BOAKU. iEB. STRODE. J. W.BARNES. L. HAttlTU A.H W ra. W 1 TEitSTEEN. BENNETT, V. V. LEOXAJiO. Umar-JSO. W. MAUS11ALL. OFFICE-In the ecnd story.soaci. all business . Union Block, front rooms Frompt -mention siren t mar25 I 1 COCNTY DIKECTOET. jl. NEWELL, County Ireasurer. iioo, vouuiy ciers. .OHNaON. County Judge. . Hi' EES. sueriC. ALluN.suu'tof Pub. Instruction. V. VAdttifl ElO, County surveyor. , vorouer. lAiVUTt COXMISSIOXKBS. ES CRAWFORD. Soutii Bend Precinct. i'i. KlCHARliso. Mi. Pleasant Precnsct. . lUlJU, riaiismouili jriles ftavlng busiues with the County uiutalwiMUs, wUi nnd tbeui in session the Monday ana luesday oi each mouth. u BOARD 4r TKAOE. XK CARttUfil. President. CON OR, BJiCK, Vlcs-Presl- deuis. s. WISE, Secietary. L. UUEliER, Treasurer. uUr moetiugs of ihe Board at tho Court .lue nrsi xucod Ay evening ol eacn moutn. BOYD & LARSEN, Contractors and Builders. W ill give estimates on all kinds of work Any orders left at the Lumber Yards or Post 7 Office will receive proraot attention. Heavy Truss Framing, for barns and large buildings a specialty. For refeience apply to J. P. Young. J. V. Wee o . or a. a. Waterman & Son. dlw Dr. C. A. Marshall Successor to Clutter & Marshall,) If H'-'iSffl-Jl Xa M. . it- B A U IY1 L 1 b 1 h h i FurnibL-e Fre'i, Pure Milk 9 Ui.lv Ukimp UAIL1. ;iai calm attended to. aim rreca ifgn inruiUra wtieu wiiuMii. Mli- . - - r". : .- - i Preservation of natural teeth a specialty. Teeth extracted without pain by use of Laughing Gas. All work w&rranttd. .; Prices reasonable. JiTwir-BALD Block, - Plattsmol-th'zb . J. i. nihpsoXc AGENCY rum -iiiouiij Character m Texas Siftings. ineeye shows character. . If tho eye has Leen blacked, for instance, it means impul- siveness on the part of the man who Lla-kl it, and recklessness on the part of the owner, who probably called the other party a liar.' The eyes of great warriors have always been gray, their brows .oworing like thunder clouds. To verify this statement, examine ino eyes or a target company, or a iioliceman. rnuosopnera have large, deep-set eyes, and usually two of them, unless thev hannon to uve in Arnansaw. roets have large, full eyes, from having taken too much beer tho day before. Button c insiders that the most oeautir ui eyes are black eyes. You can see a ueautiful lot of black eyes by going to the re corder's court on a Monday morning. Mary queen of Scots had liquid gray - eyes. She also had her head cut off. At the same time it does not matter what kind of eyes a decao- i ... 1 icuc-iui uniciai nasi ii, in accordance with the civil service reform rules, a federal official fails to pay his assessment to the cam paign fund, off goes his head, even if one of his eyes should be a pea green and the other a. Solen no red. Red eves indicate a tmuW w " j. Him luunuK wnissy, ana occasionally both. "Who hath red eyes' asks Solomon, and before you can answer he replies, "Those wno larry at the wine cup." Monsters have green eyes, bhakespeare noticed this pecu- naniy possioiy at a menagerie for he fre quently refers to the green-eyed monster. Whom the Ioctorn Might Have Saved Chicago Tribune. "A Frenc h medical journal has been amus ing Itself," says The London Graphic, "by prescribing for the ailments of illustrious people who have been long dead, but who. according to this authority, ought not to have died as early as they did. It seems that Moliere could have been saved by a few grains of cafeine; Racine's neurosis would have yielded to bromide of potassium; while any modern doctor could have cured Nano leon of his biliou sness, and altered the course of history by making the great emperor live to a green old age. All tms brings such sat isfactory evidence that our descendants may wonder bow trambetta was allowed to die in the prime of life, and why the most expert physicians of a knowing age have found it so difficult to understand the Comte de Chambord's illness." This maUQ no account The Joys ot Anticipation. Detroit Free Fress. A colored man o'er whor- l.c.td about sev enty summers had passed, was quietly but earnestly wrestling with a watermelon near the market, when he was disturbed by tho appearance of n small boy of his color. The boy sat down on a box aiid lookoj grudgingly at the melon, and th ull man looked up at him an.l queried: "Youtv. man, I reckons I could givo you half dis niellyn an' hab plenty left" "Thanks, Uncle." " "But I shan't do it, kase it might be the spiliu' of j-e. In de fust place, de law am plain an' cl'ar on de pint dat what I leave behind goes to my nateral heirs. . In de second place, a pussou widout anticipashun nius' be dreffully onh appj'. As de case now stands you anticipate. You an ticipate dat half dis yere mellyon prill stuff me full an' I'll have to leave all de rest. You anticipate dat I'll git choked on do seeds, or git sun-struck, or be 'tacked by de colic. As de mellyon gradually disappears youH anti cipate dat I won't gnaw de rinds werry. dux. As de rinds disappear you'll console yersolf wid de fack dat de seeds am left. As I wrap de seeds up in my handkerchief you'll reckon on lickin' de bo'd whar de mellyon ,was cut an' eaten, but as I lir up dat bo'd an' cin ve a whack on de backye'll anticipate better dan to crowd in wbar ye ain't wanted. Now von skip!" A Theatrical Jfanacer's la vi tat Ion. New York Tribune 'As to carrying my scenery, I have struck a 'boss racket. A little invention of my own which I haven't thought it worth whilo to patent." "What is it, Jimr "A wagon, my boy. which I can load at the theatre and put straight on board the car at the depot. They cost .me f 15,000 apiece, but tbey save the expense and labor and time of loading and unloading at the depot, which makes all the difference when your company leaves the theatre at 11 o'clock and the train starts at 12. - Then the scenery is packed by my own men, who know how to handle it, instead of by igno rant train hands and baggage smashers who knock it all to pieces. How does it work? Why simply enough. I have my wasrons made of such a sire that they just fit on to an open freight car. Well, they are loaded at tbo theatre, driven down to the depot, run up a couple of skids from the truck, and there you are. Simple, isn't it, and the sort of things, any one would think of. Just so, but you see no oie ever did think of it until I did." One Way ot Treating: Servant. Boston Budget. I never shall forget the servants' sloepin? rooms in a very simple household I once was in. Everything was fresh and clean and wholesome looking. The two iron ttctclstenils comfortably made, the window curtains spotless, the two bureaus neatly arranged, the floor nicely matted, and with a strp of carpet beforo each 11, and on tho wall sonio pretty colored pictures. The mistress of this genial, simple house told me that she laliored for a year before sho could induce her two maids to see the beauty an I comfort in such order, but now they felt it keenly, and it had affected their work and spirits very visi bly. Near their kitchen was a small room, which Mrs. had fitted up snugly for a sitting-room and a place to take their meals in. There was a chest of drawers, in which were their napkins and table-cloths and their own bed linen, and a nice, trlass-doorcd mm I showed their china. My friend toldm.-tli.it for some time her maids actually nicf.-m J to u.tj iuo mhucu, uut see niiaiiy won lliom over to a great pride in their neat lift V room, and she said the effect niton their characters and work was speedily visible. Oc cn-i t.ially she would bring in stun- ?1vs or P'ctty, inexpensive ornament f.n- libera; olio took a good illustrate! w.klv leper .entirely lor I heir u.e requiring thorn to file it. and before long a genuine taste for refinement and surround ings and manner had developed. . Thcw I uo servants hat! come to her very uncouth and untutosjed. but certainly w hen : I saw tbenri after Jflree years' residence with Mr. , they were by far tho most refined, respot tful and well-niannered servants 1 hive ever seen in America. Of course some people would aver this sort of consideration would "spoil" a servant, but it seems to me that, the very first means of teaching the servant of to-day what she ought to do. is to make her feel that her mistresses s house is her home, the place in which she is to live, not tho plaeo she is to work in as little as possible aud escape from during every possible hour. The .'.ATTSMOUVII HERALD PUIJEISIIIXC; CO-MI'A.NY has every facility lor first class JOB In Every Department. batalogues i Pamphle A.TJO0?lO3Sr BILLS, COM JVEEHCXXj Slocz of Blctrclc JPapem And materi;il- is larp? and complete in every dfpartinrtf BY MAIL SOLICITEI? VLATl SJIOUTJi lit KALI) OFFICE vibscrU,c fa- (Ju DriiLy JlarxtLd Oizi RICHEY BUOS, OF PEABL DEALERS IN A2STXD SEVEWTI A.LLK1XDS OF Lumber, SashiDoors, inds of Garfield and his surgeons. Texas Siftings: 'ATgood stretch .on the longitudinal cusboneu seats of the cabooso of a freight train is mafly' points ahead 6C tha. best upper berth ever mvewtea for. a . palace Veepmg-car, and we don't care who 1 aowsL fCE GO'S: ATTSiMOU.H, MU-LS i nsrott r 'KB CITY, of London. QUEEN", of Liverpool FIRE MAX FUND, ol California ESPREESS COMPANIES ' . AMERICAN EXPRESS CO.. ' V. KLL'i- FAR'"." A TtS :tf J i ; :ocil VfOvd ii '.'JUi, CO.. tXTRESS. l4?i.Joiicsou Bros A Ilnrmle Hair" Restorer. - San Francisco Chronicle'' :- f It is said tbafcfuafparls ot,a.iiutternu5 bark and black teay-wititwatoi-in wb(ch"a few msty naUs h4Ve been thi-oWnVwai restore ban- that is prematurely larmn grnv to it or;g:ual color, Steep well'and-satmrrta alia K' hair ouce a day. There' otiiin? iiurrfodi.'L iiiixtivro ftfany rata,T--Vil 1 " V.J Jsnnt Par mat dlonotonouM icoar. New Orleans Times-Democrat. She had a liotle boy with her as she sat down in the street car beside a lady ac quaintance, and drawled out: "Ob, you don't know how glad I am to tret home again. We were away seven weeks." So long as that?" Yes, indeed. You don't know how monotonous the roar of the sea becomes after' a week or two." ; "Tve heard so." "Ma, what sea are you talking about F .-'Hush, child." f '"Bub Uncle George lives up in the woods in Isabella county , ami it was all woods and Uiosquitos and snakes, and such old beds aud pCor liying that you cried to como homel I fliis tin? fwind of roar you heard The oUier lady was awful good. She Jooked.owt of tLo car win.iow and began to lal t about the weather. The Perils or Ua.l Rread. Scientific American. We will assume the bread in all cases to be made from a mixture of flour aud water; we will say nothing of the other ingredients, for these two only are to the purpose. Such a mixture taken into the stomach in the state of a raw paste is almost absolutely IndA gestible. It becomes a solid mass, whose fer mentation is absolutely full of danger. If on the contrary it is cooked, say baked, it forms a firm, hard substance, which can be eaten, as we know, for a time, but which' few persons choose to eat in continuance. What we do, therefore, is to puff up they paste of flour and water by means of an elastic gas, and it is largely in the chancres con nected with this gas and its development that the evil resides. If it is formed properly, and tho formation finished, wholesome bread is the result. There are. however, two sources of danger here indicated, only one of which we can at this moment consider that is, that. the pi-ocess is not completed. Here is where the whole evil of -hot bread in all Its evil shapes reaches its culmination. The changes in chemical composition, with the nioloeular structure necessarily connected with them, which are required to transform paste into dough.donot cease when that dough is baked, and has thus become bread. Tbey continue for quite a time afterward, and until they have entirely ceased the material has uot Ite come what it ought to be bread easy of di gestion. It is a burden to any stomach, to a weak one it is simply poison. Here in lew words is tho source of un bounded difficulty and suffering. Hot bread, in any form whatever, ought never to be eaten. Some forms are very much worse than others, but all ar bad, nnd should in reason be banished from every table. The manner in which the changes are wrought we may consider at another tuna. ALWAYS AHEAD BEMNETT& LEWIS THE LEADING UHUGEnS Come to the front with a complete Hoc f Staple and Fancv Groceries FRESI7 AND NIC?'. AVe always buy the best goods in the market, and we sell We are sole agents- in this town for the sale of guarantee evervthlno PERFFCTION" GROUXD SPICES he tUe IresIur. Lounge tulUs.v Now Orlenps Times-Democrat- , Cheese- rfclh, er, as it in ' soipHmeaca lie"-!, cotton Lap ting, iu-..scarlet, . LHie, or cr-.nri colors ii oo.I material firr-Tn;ro- milf-,: ,...! F. hi t'ur th. niKt. .imiiwr Ti.i .t.irT or pi aisoti.or L'lOBlCU n is lifjin'ut very nrm, nci .' wears wellVfc. is alto tuncii osoJ for iinins lacd sprahiL;jAm. Inflneareof JenniJune. ' Stage dressing exercises an enormou? influ- Lence upon th dress of n crcen in general. xcetner for good or evil. auJ it is a pity ihat b:s potent factor is nobk taken more largely Intj heco ant and made l.fejl its respotuiU1-V't- .Iretofore it has -ijn either ignored, oj-piaisod.or blamed w-.i-ut diicriniinatioa ana wiiuoDtany seuso or vknowledge of ihe uuu"S3 or u'juta-iss or v. 's:it -v tulc-uej e&y4red:; " ... Fixing I'p a Corn Sauce. Progress. "What is that you're doingP I asked a young lady at the d:nner table of one of the great summer hotels, as t uotnv-i her fixing a mixture of batter, sai. and iejter ipc u t small butter plate "ThaUsh-," she atuw "is orn sauce; an excellent article it is, I as sure 3 on. It sivec: you altogether j'.t ha yon need to flavor your corn with, an 1 nv.v v the not ovc-r-p!easant ei'swim of taking s;dt peprr ar.a bjtt.-r at diffjj-ent times: ujt over-p:c?.aiit even w hen you use you individ ual receptacles -for those articles. A'l you have to do is to slit gently with you:- kniTo the rn'itv kernels of the ear, apply tire saute, add vou have a fo;rt fit for'the gvls." I trid it. it is as the said You follow suit, an i yen willa.-ver theirs 'ot go back on the oid iv iy. AND THE CELEBRATED "BATAVIA" CANNED GOODS g finer n ha n.l. m the market riaiii Tiper Cnme and Kf ut and we willrnake you ela l l-r?nd of Ualti n ir Oy cr Jerry Green ng: t Alien provide tr v'ry- tii'n- Ijt-f.nchaivl, 'ca't. s.'nt-e tbirg in' variably t;ir'.iir!.iir .liiT'tvut from what you've 'ranfieiil Tw-r. i''l 1 niak'; yo.tuuiU.u' vji diir A N D- At Wholcsaleand 115 ef ail. Cash paid for all kinds of country produce. Call and sec me. Opposite JPirst National Bank. sMlB c j iv i 'M