The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, December 08, 1887, Image 1

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    lVaiik CiUTiilh has) the largest, ilnost find most complete stock of Diamonds Oold Watched, L'miiis, Charms, Silver Ware, SpoctftclosFiuidy Holiday (iooJftio nclcct front
'in tho City. It will pay you to call mul sec our diaplay, and our prices areHticli as will sell the gooO.fi Don't fail to call. Everybody Invited. Fit AN K CAltltUTlf.
pikftetiiftiil
Prill
IL,ATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 8, 1887.
NUMBER 75.
FIRST YEAU
CITY" CMKICK tS.
. Mayor,
Tn: i iir .T,
Altriiiy,
Iwiuliio-r,
, Mdl'rilll,
'ouuull.uea. Is', ward,
' ' 2..1 "
3d "
4lh
J I) MMI'NOX
: II Smith
.1 II W.UKKMAN
l U.lN Ci.aiik
- A Maimm.k
IS Mai iikws
V II Mali k
.f V Wwkii :n
I A W Win ik
I l M .ln.NKH
'( W.M Wkis It
) M l( M L it rn V
V lIT. N
IKS ClitlSKL
I l M-Cl.l.f.N. PltKS
I .1 W J.MIKK N.t.ll Al
KoMd rul.Work- MtKi ;i iikh
t It II llAWKiWoIITII
I W.I HI.NS N.tJll AIKM A.N
Tre:isinr.
iMiuuy I'a-iurer, -
CterU.
Ji.la v Cl-rk.
C.trK "i Dixit ict Co li ',
Sheri.T.
lei:ity Sheriff.
I A. Cam I'M k i.i.
Tll'H. I'Ol.l.'X.K
.1. M ItnlllN.HllN
- c. Mc:-iikhhn
W. C. HllOW ALT Kit
J. C. KlK KN1I U
li J. VV.dSIANS
A. .Maioi.r
Al.l.K IlKKS S
Mav.naiiii mxk
C. Kl'MMItLI.
I'KU VI SOIId.
Werpiiii Water
ri,it tsniouth
Kouwooil
Attorney.
it. f r
j -ft. I I i scuooio.
fk.diity J u lite.
HOARD OF SO
Loi.'M F I.TZ. Ch'lil..
A, II. I'i:.
A. 11. lI KSO.N',
CIVIC SOGIJVriJtS.
tiASS I.ODCK No- H. 1 - K. -Meets
'every Tuentlay evening of e:eli w. k. All
trai sit-i.l lirotlurs me reicctlu!ly luvl'.cd to
alteutl.
rpnio MiiMiK X:. si. a. o u. w.-M.-. ts
- ever. :i!tcrn:if Friday creiiiuK at K. r I .
hail Trt::sic:-t brother art rf-ipeeti ii.ly in
vited t lend. F. K. White, Master ..riiii.an ;
I;. A, :iite. r iv:i;;in ; F. J Morgan. Ovel-eer ;
J. K. lis, Kecorder.
(J
MVSOVMl NO.Mi Mt!)KItN WOH1ME.N
l'nl Vii-ric t Meets sec.cxl and fivirtli Mm
d ay evi inn ill li. l - "an "" '"
tlTJritUr are retr.iestcil to m-et with u . I. A.
Uiew-i-r. Vei.erd.h; Cnsul ; !. '. X ';?.
W ifiv vdv'Wer; I), 15. Smiia, Kx 1! mxt-r ; .
C, Will l-),Clcr!.
1"i;.xi.sj;)riii i.(Hjcev s, . o. v. w.
M ( j Hviv a!t'ru:ite Friday rv.-iiiiiK a!
l'a-k-.v I liallat soV-:..ei. All tiaasietil l.ri.lh-
fis are ivspeetfully t..it-l 10 attend. '. A.
iiir :. M- vv-; s- !r"?. ,: '" : c-
Wil.to, .: ; -s .V. N3w utr. . v:i "r.
MJ.IIHil POST 43 G. A. R.
JIO.STKH.
- T ' T.iMSi)N ' 'UliaiKitT.
Ii. cIs.'imi s. ...svuivi Vice
F. . IV r.i3 7u.ar
(irO. Nil. ICS
Au-.it7 -T lAlirs li.
A.IJ iia it.
li. M.
' lllwrof the lay.
'.' ' i i nurd
. Serj;t Mhi.-r.
..n.irter M.K'cr Nen;t.
Mali-u :f
Clf AIM Kltlli,. .
htS-i. ltr.:;fi.K ....
Ai.rii x ' liniiiT
1 t l liai'lain
ee;i 14 -uttudAy evening.
ctlwain,
I 6ll
-DEALER IN
Watties, Clods, Jewelry
-AND
SpsciilAr ent Od aiyeaWalcli Repairirg
WE WILL HAVE A
nex
-OF-
l-OLIDAY GOODS,
ALSO
Library - Lamps
-OF-
F
Line
x Uaiane Bt sisns aEflPattBins
AT THE USUAL
Cheap Prices
-AT-
SMITH & BL ACK'S.
a!rner&Son
IHMj V-; CE IV S
It y- :it the iVdltrwii g tin;
tri'.l md fire-teit!il cnmpr.no.-:
Anieriea : o
u?ra!-S . Imi's. Assets ?1 i"s.m 1
C'omsncrciat Uni-W-Easland.
Fir s.ie'.a i t-Pi'i! delptiia, "
rranklin-F.i I h p:: hi i. "
i& Honto-M wYmk.
;. 14
3.! 17.1 6
7.SV.."' 9
S.17: 2C2
c.cn.7.i
3..7S.75:
lS'i.tf'fi
3.-H.9 5
In. -'Nor:!! Air.ei-i fill.
Llvt-rpvi.-tboaaoa-t I-he-Eii "
Nrta i'.rit -'i " Merc inrile-Ka "
Kr 1 Cai i:-Ea?l i-i !.
Bprinjao: I 7. M.-S rin55y. I. "
T.t'j.l Aisets. ?1 ..ll'.7;4
r zy AljiiEilaiiPdiiit MsAgenc
Latest by Telegraph.
IWllltOWLI) AND STOLEN.
An Arizona Coal Road-
Noou.ks, A. T. , Dccenilicr 7. Sur
veyors are now in the ii.-Kl running pre
liminary lines from IL raio-ilIo toward
Mazatian. Tli; work U being ilone for
tlis Mctriolitian IevcloiniK'it Company,
of San Francisco, w hich proposes to build
a railroad connecting those two cities.
The projected road will pass through the
anthracite coal fields of Sonora and tho
agricultural districts of Sinclo.
Canvicrad of OigiJin
Palestine, TEx.,I)cce.nher 3 The jury iu
the case of Detective VS. II. Bpringiield,
charged with bigamy by marrying Alice
Iloswtll, in Southbury, Copn., in 1875
and a la ly in tiiii ciry arly last spring,
after deliberating ten hours, returned a
verdict of guilty and nsv.-sdcd the pun
ishment .t eighteen months in
the penitentiary. It was evidently a com
promise verdict, bepau.se of the one weak
point in the St 'ts pro.tf, whi h failed to
show, except circumstantially, that the
first wife was living wh.-n his second
marriage took place.
Freight Car Thieves Arranged
Kmi'okca, Kan., liecLihber 7.' Thir
teen aner-ts we're made here today, with
more to follow, of boys and young men
catted with theft from cars on the
S.-.nta IV,' For soma r.eckj past the
freight cars on idi; tracks iu the ei'.y
have, been relieved of a portion of their
contents and no clew could be found of
tliL- guilly pruti .s till t;.day, wjicn the
police Kenl.-'d the i igt't track and soon
had several of t!j p:iiti s in j lil. Th o.e
in m:c rated gave oiic by one u iiuj
m ..t! rs t-a-K'ct.-a with x i
..er; is no telling when the oflic; rs will
! through v.itii their V-"H'- ut of
thriu u.c.e school boys with respecta
ble pareius, but some of then arc too old
to be classed as such, and tHescLdior
have I2.n this i.eaiis of drawing th&
younger ones into stealing, judging from,
what could be learned frort Yhe boys,
tlii'niselvi s. Tliy wld pr-olmbly have a
hoLiun'' to- morrow.
THS AUDEBARAN SPIRIT.
"All ye lio seek tbo golden clime,
Co. iiKjui.t v. ith Death his caravan!"
ffant; of old the rhythmic clan.
The bards whose numliers sub!i-r-.
Ah, now, n:etliial:a, sorr'O ruer chimQ
Ilust charm jiM ihrough life' little span;
I'ucvi more ye'll read thy lofty rhyme,
O wise, O true, Aldcbaran!
Full well we learn'd, nr-d ong ago,
Thy truth thut from t te-rnity
'l:c'. hath endurctl that still shall be, 'ii
Aud that alone 'tis even sq!
Kterual forces deathlesarciKn;
Wro work with them, or work in vain.
feamuel Waddington iu The Academy,
FERRETS FOR NEW ZEALAND.
T110 Little Aniiuals Needed on Account
of tbe Rabbit IVst Another Ordr,
3Ir. Cross, tho well knp.vr naturalist of
Liverpool who. up iii London looking after
the gat ilia that he has just sold to tho "Zoo,"
paid a call to Northumberland street tho
other tlay to report 011 tho animal kingdom,
of which he is undispu ted lord.
"Tho last now thing " said Mi, Cross, 'is
tho sailing of thp ferrets; 130 of th?m have
just gone off, and with them 750 pigeons, 10
sacks of biscuits and S75 tins of Nestle's
milk. I bought the inilk for them myself."
'But what are the pigeons forf
"That I will explain to you. The ferrets
are for the rabbits and tho pigeons are for
the ferrets. They will eat up the 750 pigeons
on their voyage to New Zealand. They will
also consume tho biscuits and the milk. Then
I have sent sacks upon sacks of hay to make
bedding for tho ferrets, and plenty of Indian
corn to feed up the pigeons. Jt was quite a
fight; f out: big parts and two whole railway
trucks wpro taken up with this consignment.
Two men accompanied tho ferrets, and very
hard work they have looking after both them
and the pigeons. But then, as I told them,
the further they get from England the fewer
pigeons there will bo from day to day."
"And what aro the ferrets sailing for?"
"They aro a consignment to a large wopj
farmer in New Zealand. The rabbit ptt, as
you know, has now broken out very bad
there. The Australians, I see, aro going to
have a rabbit pest conference; but this New
ilealand wool merchant thought he had bet
ter send to Air. Cross, and Mr. Cross is going
to seEd him 150 ferrets. They won't make
much headway, you say, against the rabbits.
Tut then taey breed s fast, and if none of
them ere lost 0:1 tie voyage, in a few months'
tiniD my client ought to have six or seven
hundred cf them at least. 'Don't spare tho
expense,' Le said to me. The rabbits are eat
ing up all the pasture on which his sheep
eu!3i to bo feedlrg, and unless he can get
tl:cri uniler ho will be a mined man. By the
Lent mail I r.m going to send tho same cus
tomer a consignment cf stoats and weasels.
They civ wonderfully tor.gh customers, are
rtcr.ts; they will Lleed tho rabbits to death in
no time.
'Curiously enough," added Mr. Cross, "at
tao very ssme time tiict I received these or
ders for means of destroying tho rabbits in
1'ew Zealand I received also a large order
for rabbi ti, and I am now hard at work get
ting together ?,000 of them as quickly as I
caa. They aro coins to British Columbia,
here they have not got any rabbits, I am
ccrding 2.000 of them 1,500 docs and 600
Lucks. Thi3 is a pretty large business also.
They will want a hundred sacks of oats at
i ast fcr tho voyage, besides plenty of hay,
straw and sawdust." Pall Mall Gazette
DOMESTIC TRAINING.
COMPARATIVE MERITS OF AMERICAN
AND ENGLISH GIRLS.
Good Ilfroet of the fcoclul Intercourse
Thut I'rcvaila ftctuceu the I'eopTe of
Tliln Country - anil En; lund I.uglikb
Girls' Homo Lire.
Tho comparative merits of American and
English girls have been of late frequently ois
cussed. Advocates of each nationality have
mudu inany good points, and victory cannot
honctly bo said to have boon won by either.
There can bo little doubt that tho lurgcly in
creased ami close social intercourse that now
prevails between the peoples of this country
and of England has had the effect of obliter
ntiag many of the strongly marked differ
ences of their daughters.
Engliuh girls have caught something of tho
brightness, tho ease aud tho self relianco
which have made certain American ladies
who have married Englishmen tako rank as
favorites almost, indeeel, as leaders ia Lon- J
don society. And even those Englishwomen
who have not succeeded in imitating, or hav
not sought to imitate, will be generally found
Y'illing to admit tho charm of the imported
fctylct, American girls, 011 the other hand,
have not Iwn slow to borrow ideas from
their English cousins. V.ro hnvo only to look
at our girls' tailor made gowns, their "com
mon sense shoes, their round hats and their
ulsters and Newmarket coats, to eco how
much they owe in warm and sensible modes
of dreta to English fashions. Then, too,
English out door games, particularly lawn
teunia, have become ve-ry fashionaukj here,
and their good oliect i tj n txvii in the im
proved heulth, the greater case of movement,
and the rounded figures of our girls.
TLUMPXESS OF OUH GIRLS.
It was only about a 3-ear ago when a for
eign visitor to this country remat'4u.aU that
one of the thinjrs tl.at most impressed her
was tho, plumpness of American' girls. The
remark caustd a great deaf of astonishment,
for we had been so long accustomed to think
tf the American type of beauty as extremely
delicate and spintudle t-ii e, had not
reeogsdaed the ehangV that had been slowly
but surely ei"eeted. Any one whq pp YtUli"
Broadway in thy aftenioj'.jjj f,i;4 wl"- "
enough ty rF!r'f'!''ln't- tii" -
I'rniiuinij fiouuA-- -piJearanc-o of its
ocar' ' oi-s of te:i years jio, can
...y fail to indoisjo tho truth of the
f oix-igner's o'ofer vat ion,
I do i,ot lRUit to f ay that there U on"
jU;tm-urilry and valuable retp-ect in v. hieh I
Leiieve English girls aro suiwrior to Amcri
caa girLi. Tlat rospuc-t is their ability to
conduet tlij aTairs of their homes. This, of'
course, is not an inherited abilitj", but is tl:e
rasult of training mid practice, 1 nm not con
sidering the daughters of the farmers, but
those of mercantile and professional men. la
England, the custom ia to train tho girls to
relievo their mothers of many of tho duties
of housekeeping. Ainoug families where
U;ero are several daughters, it is a common
practice to have each in turn take charge of
i ho house for a week or a month. I do not
assert that such a plan is never followed here,
but at tho most it is done with comuarativt
iufrequeney. Tho system of living in board
ing houses, has in many instances made it im
possible to instruct our city bred girls in
domestic duties, but happily tho increased
facilities for suburban travel have placed it
within the power of many heads of families
to swrure homes of their own.
TWO IMPOP.TANT IlEASONS.
Very probably the daughters of wealthy
parents aro slow to see why they should un
dergo any of the work necessary to tho learn
ing of how all the departments of household
jconomy should be run. There are, however,
two important reasons for acquiring such
knowledge. One is the extreme vicissitudes
of fortune, characteristic of business life ia
this country; and the other is the fact that if
tho mistress does not know when work is
pi'operly done, her servants, no matter how
good at the start, will soon grow careless and
forgetf uL In no other country in tho world
is there so much trouble with "help" as here.
Some of this is duo to the ignorance of serv
ants who have had no previous experience;
but possibly as much is due to the ignorance
of mistresses, who do not possess tho knowl
edge that can give instruction or command
respect.
In England, no matter how wealthy the
parents, the custom of giving the daughters
domestic training is usually observed. A re
cently published "Life of Queen Victoria"
Uates that after the estate of Osborne had
been bought, "the lower portion of the Swiss
cottage was fitted up as a kitchen for the
young princesses, with pantry, closets, dairy
and larder, all aa complete as possible, and
here these juvenile royal highnesses, dressed
a la cuisiniere, and with arms white with
flour, learned to make cakes and tarts and all
sort3 of plain dishes, to cook tho vegetables
which they had themselves cultivated, to pre
serve fruit and to prepare different sorts of
pickles. In fact, they were trained to ba
good English housewives." Tho example set
by tho queen has permeated all tho higher
classes.
Tho cooking schools recently started here
aro steps in the right dfreetion. But cook
ing, though very important, is only a single
branch of the domestic duties. Tho other
can best be learnt at home, I am glad to
hear that the board of education in New
York city is considering the advisability of
giving instruction in sewing and cooking to
tho girls in tho public schools. Julian Mag
nus in Tho Epoch.
The Kxerclse of Economy.
The sole basis of individual and national
prosperity and comfort is labor. All through
tho process of acquisition and control labor
is present, and her companion, economy.
Means obtained in any other way than by
honest, persevering labor, physical and men
tal, never satisfies and rarely abides. Be
ginning early ia Ufo with industry and
thrift the duty and pleasure of accumulation
goes on, and if carefully (securely) invested
a provision for tho family and old age will
surely be accomplished. In tho exerciso cf
economy it is only necessary to habituate
tho mind to one principle: Avoid all un
necessary expenditure. Tho question should
be: Can I do without this or that? Ain J
really in need of it? Is it essential to my
health, comfort or happiness? If not keep
lao money and let the fancied want go. This
Is tho rulo of thrift for the young man climb
la; the ladder of Ufe.-.-Baoker'i Monthly.
CUSTOM SOLICITORS.
PULLERS IN" OF THE METROPO
LIS APPRECIATIVELY DESCRIBED.
Noted Member of the Profenalon and
Specimen of Their Persuasive Oratory.
Tho Aristocratic "Pure Silk" Vuibrclla
Man Milliners on the Sidewalk.
Tho "puller in" occupies an humble but
important placo in tho economy of the retail
business in New York. At least it is pre
sumable that his place is important, or there
would not bo so many of him. The hurrying
crowd may not notice him. There may not
be one in the hundreds of thousands who pass
him daily who is aware of his existence. His
eloquent appeals on the subject of new hats
and lino coats may fall on heedless ears. He
keeps on with a patient persistence which is
almost pathetic.
There is a middle aged man with a melan
choly face, about tho color of a strawberry,
and a voico of doleful pitch, who is "pulling
in" for a men's furnishing store on Fulton
street. Ho walks up and down a short beat
in front of the store and talks incessantly.
Nobody listens to what he says as far as yoa
can judge. Ho might as well be addressing
tho crowd in Greek. If you were to go close
enough to him, however, you would hear him
saying: "Pure silk, pure silk, only a dollar
'n' a half for a puro silk umbrella." There is
an indescribablo touch of pathos about th,a
way ho says this, as though the sacrifice of a
"puro siik" umbrella for ?1.5Q were too much
for human cpnlemphition. Ho is the aristo
crat i-f tho "pullers in." New York has
many of his prof ession, but none that equals
him.
The man who stands at the other end,
tho profession haunts Baxter stcU
"Now, shents. deed yr. vant ter buy a dica
bair of bads ydly a dollar ad a ballaf "
i'horo arc- no. melancholy notes in his nasal
tone. There aro no evidences of p;4,uuii
anguish at tho sacrilieo ho is nuking lor- th
good of mankind ttt;vka his" fae vlvjrtVtt 1
to about the level of your scarf pin, juid v-
feratta Lis "appeal vith r4 $zotr- '
fifelons apd 'bitlWcoait-'" ru .of
hundred othw--on with tho half
v " . ls profession on tho same
walks not up and down with the
lordly mien of him who has reaeheel tho high
est station. in "puller in" life. He stands in
front of his ding shop, attacks every passer
by indiscriminately, and with startling vehe
mence. His characteristic gesture is made
in ono way, and has been made in ono way
since tho days of Abraham.
Between these two extremes tho "puller in"
has many phases. There is t he leather lunged
young person, who stands 011 Fourteenth
street and advises everybody within three
blocks to "git yer writin' paper an' cnve'l'ps
cheap up stairs," with a tremendous empha
sis on tho "git," dying away into a curious
little impotent squeak on the "stairs." There
is tho thin, stoop shouldered person, with two
fingers on his right hand, who makes this re
mark at regular intervals: "Don't have to
use a knife to sharpen leadponcils." He is
"pulling in" for a stand where a patent pen
cil sharpener is sold, though it take,! a good
deal of patient investigation and skirmish
ing around in the neighborhood to discover
the fact. Then tbero is a consumptive look
ing man, who stands on a horse block in
front of a Park row hat store and implores
passersby in a husky whisper to "buy their
hats and caps of the manufacturer." There
is tho fat man, who points you silently into a
cigar store on Canal street. Thero is the
youth, prolific of hair and dirty of face, who
tries to lure the frugal housewives of Cherry
hill into a grocery store full of last week'
vegetables. There is the well dressed and in
sinuating young man who "pulls in" at tbe
clubs and hotels for tho tailor. And there
are "the ladies."
For tho "pulling in" profession has both
rexes and all ages, conditions and voices for
its own. It is in tho region of Division street
that the woman "puller In" flourishes. Tho
sixteen millinery stores on that ancient
thoroughfare know her welL She lies in
wait in front of each of them for unwary
womankind. She is as energetic as her broth
ers in tho profession, and far more volub!t
Strife runs high, too, between her and her
neighbor. A good "puller in" is worth $4 &
week in Division street. It is one of the dear
est objects of the designing ladies who minis
ter to the wants of their sex there to get a
sidewalk operator who will bring her busi
ness, more especially if she can get the coveted
customer away from a hated rival.
Two of Division street's fair milliners came
to blows the other day about tho possession
of tho best "puller in" in tho street. Tho
modern Solomon, who presided over the
police court in which tho somewhat damaged
modistes figured after this interesting event,
was equal to tho emergency. Ho proposed
that since tho claims of each belligerent
seemed about equal, tho peerless manipulator
of business who was the sourco of all the
trouble chould "pull in" one day fcr one of
tho milliners and tho next day for tho other.
This settlement was thankfully received by
the excited contestants and peaeo reigned
onco more in Division Etrcet.
Space is lacking for the full description of
the fat lady, apparently speechless, who sits
all day in an ample arm chair in front of a
Park row clothing storo. Her place in the
profession of "pulling in" can never be as
certained, for no one has ever seen her do
anything: but sit still and look solemn.
Neither can justice be dono to tho silent
and clean shaven man who operates tho patent
gate in front of a hardware storo on Barclay
street; to the determined race of "pullers in"
who burden tho lifo of women visitors to the
markets; to tho street car conductors who
turn to "pulling in" in tho vicinity of the big
dry goods rtores; nor to the man who stands
in front of tho sub-cellar shoe store on Beck
man street and tries to charm people into his
placo with a smil as broad and vacant as a
ten aero Jot. "C. F1L" in New York Com
mercial Advertiser.
The Vv haling Uuainesa.
The- catch of Arctio and Okhotsk whal
ers during the past season has been one of
the heaviest oti record, amounting in nil
to 41, COO brrrclsof oil and nearly C00.000
pounds of bone. The low price of oil and
bono lias led to great trouble between
owners arid sailors. Several whaling
vessels have been libelod here for wagee,
tho sailors claiming thut they were de
frauded. New York Tribune.
In 1600 there were in all the United Stata
only six cities of over ,000 inhabitants. Iu
ISSdtUcre weru 286 and by this time inany
1 uiore.
vntT iz v a vt
A full line of
STREET - JACKETS
FROM $2. TO $10.
JOS. V. WECKBfCh'S
DAYLIGHT STORE.
oseph
W D
Great Sales combined in one, Opening-MOIT3D-A.2"
2vGUSrZITC, NOVEMBER 21.
For Ladies', Misses' and Children.
"Wo sire determined to close out our Entire Stock of Cloak, with
in 30 days our assortment will be found the most complete in tho
eity and a3 this sale is especially introduced for rivalry we guarantee
to discount any Sample Lot Sale on record 10 per cent.
150 Psis of Blanket
Slaughter sale on Ihese Goods to Close. The season has been mild,
and to close out quickly", great reductions have been made.
TWO HUNDRED COMFORTS
Ladies Gents' and Children's
UNDERWEAR SALE,
Fifty Dozen Pieces.
Astonishing vali:es will be offered in this Department for
the next Two Weeks.
3E3EC
For Holiday gifts, Headquarters long since Establish
ed for iiseful presents, embracing fcilk Mufflers, lace and
bilk Handkerchief, Toilet Sets, Albums, Tidies, table
Scarfs, Hammered Urass "Whisk liroom Cases, Piano and
Stand Covers, and fancy Goods. -An Inspection is Re
spectfully Solicited.
SOLOMON
While Front
PLATTSUOUTH,
t7 irn c ohaiiz
mm
FKOM $.1 TO o0.
Misses, :: Cloaks
FROM 2. TO
o-
t-
IN ALL STYLES.
Rich Atraciian aiil For t rimming:?.
FROM $3. TO
CLOAKS,
& NATHAN,
Dry Goods House.
NEBRASKA.
Wraos
fecracL