The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, July 05, 1888, Image 3

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    TUF DAILY IIERALD: FLATTSMOuTIJ, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JULY 5; 1888.
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SHAPING TIIE FACE.
THE UGLY LINES CARVED BY ENVY
I AND DISCONTENT.
rrrutlcr Slulord'a Advice to Girls. Ilotb
Yoiiug anil Old Thought Blaks Faces
I'leaalng 01 ItpuUlr How Ugliness la
Ill-ought On Think.
You have ft Id your power. If homely, to
utake your fact pleasing and attractive. If
liundcome, you have it in your power to keep
your Uauty up to 40 and beyond it, and to
keep growing more attractive. Your face is
not sliuud by cliaiice, Thtro ia a cause for
the expression usually found on it. If you
nre on the pout much of the time; if you are
grumbling and growling inside alout your
self or somebody elstt, and you have been so
doing for years, your faee w ill wear grumble
nod growl on it, because what jou think most
of the time sha(es your face. If you aredi-ronU-nted,
or envious, or j. Pilous much of the
tim, discontent, envy and jealousy will
carve disagreeable hues on your face. If you
are h;inrlsome at 17, aud growling thought
takes up a good deal of your time, your
lnviuty will be more than half gone by 7 or
30. If you are much of the time discouraged
or despondent; if you give way to the blues
and w ill not try to fight them off, you will in
n few years more find the corners of your
mouth turning downward, as you see today
on the facer of so many sour and ancient
maidens, married and single.
This fact that the state of mind you mostly
"loop iD shapes not only the face, but the
whole body, is nothing new. It is at work all
&boit us. A uiaa or woman who is always
growling looks growl all the time, and it is
not a pleasing look. Their very expression is
a breach of the public peace. A man who
thinks he knows it all and can't bo tol l any
t hing new looks it all the time, and when he
streaks j-ou can feel his ignorance and conceit
in the tones of his voice.
Thoughts make feces pleasing or repulsive.
Tht-y carve lines, put in wrinkles, keep the
mouth open as it should not be or keep it
shut as it should be, and dye the skin sallow
or death color or the pink and w-bite of
hcaltli. They govern the walk and the way
tlie body is carried. A "slouch" or a tramp
without pride, ambition or self respect w ill
have a slouchy walk, his knees bent and the
)oer jaws have dropped or drooping. When
30:1 are firm and decided about anything
there is a natural tendency for the mouth to
close firmly and the lips to be pressed to
gether. Then the mouth and whole lower
part of the face grow into that expression of
lirmness.
If you nre In mind bright and cheerful,
making tho best of ever3"thing, willing to
please othei's, but not to "toady" to them; if
you want to do the "square thing by every
body, and want also and insist on having the
"square thing" done by yourself, your face
w ill take on un expression in accordance with
that kind of permanent thought, and it will
not lo an unpleasant one. And expression is
lour-llftlis of beauty.
There aro handsome faces the same all the
year round. That's the trouble. They never
change. Do they on man or woman, there is
1 rt enough brains inside to make them
t-liange.
It is inind that rules and sways and pleases
and fascinates, and does so to la.t. The
more face will hold but a short time if it has
no change of expression. It is as natural to
like change of expression in the' face as it is
to like changes of fashion in dress. And as
it i3 natural, it Is right in both cases.
I am telling you that your daily thoughts
aro not fog nor air nor myths. They are
f orccs. They are things as real as things you
see and as you think them. They can in
creaso 3-our good looks or decreaso them.
They can make you fortunate or unforUinate
in life or business. They can make you sick
or welL "So," say you. If I were to tell
you at 10 o'clock to-morrow morning that the
building you are working in was to be blown
up by dynamite in an hour, and that you
.must stay there and be blown up with it,
would your face during that hour have on it
theespre--ion it would wear at your wedding!
If you found out that the girl next 3-ou had
caught the smallpox would not that knowl
edge aud the fear coming of it change the
expression of your face! If yoa should be
kept in that fear and anxiety a whole year
would not your faeo grow permanently into
f neb expression? Now, whGn you are worry
ing over anything for hours or weeks ycu are
tutting to work a similar power to make
your face look worry.
I see sometimes in the street a really pretty
girl, or one who would be, were not her face
t poiled ar.d leing spoiled more and more by
the peevish and discontented state of mind
she is in a girl who looks as if she had just
got off some "hard words" with her mother
or sister, or somebody else, and is still going
through with it all, and giving them all a
piece of her mind, Dut keeping this up does
her a great deal of harm. It is bringing on
ugliness. It weakens the stomach. It poisons
the blood. It drives the best people from
hor. It attracts and brings the worst It
ruins the complexion.
You may not tako much stock In these
Heas just now, but you will ia time. You
will think more of them three months hence.
You will think of them still more a year
hence. You can't help thinking of them, be
cause these are live truths, and anything
that's alive grows. And as 3-ou think of
them j'ou will almost unconsciously act them
hi:i Le ail the better and healthier and the
handsomer for it. You needn't mind what
the older folks may say about this. Some of
them aro past their time for learning any
thin j new. You are not end never should
be. 1'rer.tieo ilulford in New York Star.
Gen. Sheridan and tho Private.
Now I want to say to you. comrades, this,
thit I am indebted to tho private ia the
ranks for all this credit that has come to me.
Ilo was the man who did the fighting, end
the man who carried the musket is the
greatest hero of the war, in my opinion. I
was nothing but an agent. I knew how to
tako care of men. I knew what a soldier was
worth, and I knew how to study the country
so as to put him in right. I knew how to put
him in a battle when one occurred, but I was
simply the agent Uf take care of him, and he
did the work, Now, comrades, these are
common sensa things, and I can't say them
in very flowery language, but they are true
nevertheless, and they ore true not of me
alone but of everybody else. It is to the com
mon soldier that we are indebted to any
credit that came to us. I often laid awake
planning for my soldiers' welfare, and I
never killed a man unnecessarily. One great
trouble with men who command troops is
that they kill men unnecessarily. You may
kill as many men as you choose if you give
them an equivalent for the loss. Men do not
like to be killed for nothing; they do not like
to have their heads rammed against a stona
wall unless for some (rood results. These are
the points I made during the war. When
ever 1 took men Into a battle I gave them vic
tory as the result of the engagement, and
that was always satisfactory. Gen. Phil
Eheridan's Address in 1S66L
' A layer of leather ia the Iron holder nudcM
It cooler to use.
REMODELING SILK HATVJ.
A natter's Cbat with a tlepafter trwi
(Ins Hat Th btylSff
"Silk hatsl Yea, everybody, almost, la
getting to wear a silk occasionally, If not
regularly. It is the cheapest hat a man can
wear, anyway." Bo remarked an experienced
Nassau street batter the other day.
"How so?"
"Why, becauso a silk only costs from f5
up, but little more than a first class Derby
or soft felt, and it will outlast throe of
either. You can ruff up a silk tile into al
most any degre of unrecognized disreput
bility, and foriI5 cents, or GO cents at most,
it can, if it was a good hat originally, be re
stored to almost its original elegance. A
good silk hat will last a full season if it is not
mashed or wet by some accident, and at the
end of that time will retain a fair degree of
respectability iu appearance. A silk hat
never fades, but constant exposiu-e to rain
and dust will iu time dim its luster. That,
however, is easily repaired by washing and
ironing, it tho framo is broken of course
the hat must bo 'blocked.' Ironing and block
ing are different matters. Now I can have
that hat of yours ironed while you wait, but
to have it blocked would take two hours.
"Watch that hat being Ironed. See, the
iron is already hot. He takes a brush, re
lieves the nap of the hat from accumulated
dust aud arranges the silk fibers smoothly
and in order. Now he takes that small iron
and rubs the brim around. Bee how the dull,
lusterless surface and the abraded places are
smoothed down and how tho original shine
returns. Now that big smoothing iron comes
into play. Ho holds the hat in his hand and
rubs the iron lightly but firmly around the
hat in tho direction tho nap lies. Tho luster
is renewed, battered places are pressed into
shaie and kept there, and now, with artful
usage and an avoidance of rain, tho tile is as
good as new, save that it is a little off in
shape. The styles, changing from year to
year, consist iu a looser or tighter roll of the
brim, more or less concavity to the sides of
tho crown, variation in the height of the
crown and the 'dip' of the brim, and in the
width and material of the trimmings. A
very small reduction in the circumference of
a hat crown In the middle will make an as
tonishing difference in tho apparent shape of
the hat when worn. It is this slight change
in shape which makes the wearer of a srik
tile a well dressed man, a dude or a shoddy
imitation of a careful and correct dresser.
Styles in hats are beginning to repeat, and
the man who has an old shape of some years
ago is right in style,"
"Do many people have hats blocked and
Ironed?"
"Well, I should say they do. Every con
dition of man and woman, too comes in
here to get his or her hat blocked to tho cor
rect shapo and ironed if it has been wet."
New York Mail and Express.
Co ITee Culture In Cuba.
Coffee culture is not difficult. It is very
profitable. And a coffee plantation in bloom
is the most beautiful spot 011 earth. If a
planter decides to begin at the beginning and
create his own "flnca" or coffee plantation,
there is first tho selection of ground. This is
not difficult, for coffee thrives anywhere iu
a proper climate aud fairly well drained
soiL A level surface is not necessary,
though usually chosen. Ilillside reaches
and even hillocks answer admirably. The
selection of seed is simply a matter of
choice. Seeding is carried on after this
fashion. An especially rich bit of ground is
chosen where the scmillero or seed bed i3
made. In this, In drills not over ono inch
deep and about ton inches apart, the coffee
beans, stripped of their outer husk, but re
taining tho second or inner shells, are gently
laid and barely covered with loose soiL Some
six months ore required for germination,
sprouting and sufficient progress of the plant
to render transplanting successful. Then
tho j-oung shoots are placed In the almaeiga
or nursery ground from ten to twelve months
from seeding. Here they remain under a
sufficient amount of cultivation to keep tho
soil loose and mellow and prevent weeds
from collecting, for about two years. They
have been set eighteen Inches apart, and fully
50 jer cent, more in number than will be re
quired have been allowed to grow, so that
tho most vigorous plants may be selected for
permanent use.
When the latter stage is reached tho entire
plantation, where it is sufficiently level to
permit, is laid out in rectangular plats of
about 200 varas or 600 feet long and half that
width, with caminos or roadways of from
twelve to fifteen feet between the plats. The
plants, of coffee trees as they aro now be
come, are set in cross rows about twelve
feet from center to center, in each direction.
This done, and the roots well set for the
roots develop rapidly and profusely, throw
ing out myriads of fiber from a great carrot
shaped tap which often reaches a length of
ten feet and your plantation is provided
with a coffeo orchard which with a fair
amount of caro and attention will need no
removal of trees for from a quarter to half a
ceutury, and will increase in yield each year
until about the fifteenth year, when the trees
may be said to have attained their best bear
ing ago; though many will continue increas
ing ia yield until two score years old. Edgar
L. Wakeman's Cuba Letter.
Methodd of City Schools.
In vain have I told you that five hours'
daily attention to books, to recitations, to
instruction, is all that any growing child can
safely endure. "No, nol" you cry, "give
them more lessons give them tasks to do at
home;" and your children go through their
school lives with the shadow of the coming
task always falling upon tho task just fin
ished. Tho gentle, obedient, loving and
affectionate little ones suffer, while the dear
bad boys won't even make an effort, and
thrive accordingly. The teacher can some
times go home with bis work finished for the
dav, the pupil never.
Now, if I will not permit this wrong to be
perpetrated in the school under my charge,
you take your boy away and send him to Mr.
Examination Hunter's school; and 3-ou tako
your girl out of Miss Ilcnest's department
aud send her down to Miss Showoff's school;
and then you point with paternal pride to
the great load of books your little ones
stagger under as a proof of the superior effi
ciency of those two principals "whom we all
respect." Then, when your little girl gradu
ates, and Miss Showoff orders all the gradu
ates to wear white dresses and tea roses and
to come in carriages, and to drape their desks
in white, you all say: "She has no right to
give cu7 such orders, and it ought to be
stopped, aud" you get the dresses and the
tea roses and the carriage, and you attend
tho reception; and it is all so beautiful, and
tho members of tho mutual admiration
society do speak so mellifluently buttered
honey, as it were that you are as proud of
your daughter as a drum major on parado.
And then you go home, and your daughter
ha3 typhoid fever or spinal meningitis or
some other Latin disease, and you lay tha
blame on Providence, "Who is to blame if
the supply of sham education be exactly pro
portioned to your demand for it? Cor.
Science.
Tho ravages of a new green bug are
causing a steady and increasing dec lino in
coffee production in Ceylon.
PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS.
Newspaper Comments Concerning Men
and Women of Store or lwt I'umo.
-v Lady Londonderry U trying to make
green fashionable i.i London.
Prince Ilcnry, of Russia, va3 tho first
German rinco who ever railed round
the world.
Mile. Loblois is tho fuvit womnn in
Paris to be awarded a diploma of lv
teur dea Sciences.
Nilsson 'a farewell scries at Albert 1 ::!
began with great success. Her voli 1
said to be as lino as ever.
Miss Amelia Hives received (!.'
from the Lippineotta for her uov .', 1 ;
Quick and the Dead."
Mrs. Gen. Kilpatrick has f--.il. .; ;
eyes, raven black hair, olive ci-m; I.-...
nnd vivacious manners.
The Prince of Wales i ; so r.: In v. i:!
social duties that t;t tii:n-s he ..: !.:
servant changes his toilet.
Jciui Ingeluw gives a dinner thr;.
times a week to the sick poor and ili
discharged convalet-centa from Ijosj.imU.
A temperance- paper w;:s recently cs
tabliblicd at Tokio, Japan, by Miss Asia
and Mrs. Tusuki, of the Tokio W. C.
T. U.
MUo. Ilelene Iinx-he, a Paris ballet
girl, recently drew 200.000 francs in a
lotU-ry and donated it to an orphan
asylum.
Mrs. Zerelda G. Wallace, xvho is gen
erally referred to as tho mother of Gen.
Lew Wallace, is in reality his btep
mothcr. His mother died when ho was
a hoy.
Tho new Japanese minister at Wash
ington was in 1877 uit to prison for live
years for a political oilensu. During his
coniinement he translated 'John Stuart
Mill's works on political economy into
Japanese.
The first Mrs. Tabor, the divorced wife
of tho Colorado ex-senator, is living
quietly in Denver and is worth nearly a
million. She is a shrewd business
woman and makes money speculating in
stocks and mines.
Mrs. Labouchere, wife of tho editor of
Truth and member of Parliament, has
recently made her debut as a public po
litical speaker in her husband's interests.
Mrs. Lalouchere was an actress before
her marriage, and it was, therefore, no
new tiling for her to address an audi
ence. Dr. Annie Pombcrger, of Philadelphia,
boars the enviable distinction of being
the first woman in America who was
granted the degree of D. D. S. by a
dental college. She looks hardly older
than 23, is thoroughly womanly in her
ways and earns an annual income of
$(5,000 by her profession.
Mrs. Julia Ward Ilowe apparently did
not look upon her marriage as an end of
her school days, for since her marriage
sho has learned to speak Faench, Italian
and modern Greek lluently, and has ac
quired a prfound knowledge of the
works of KaC.t, Hegel, Spinoza, Comte
and Fichte.
Sarah Winnemucca. the Indian princess
who attended Wellesley cclloge, and un
der the non de plume cf "Bright E3-es"
has written some charming frontier
stories, is now teaching an Indian school
of her own. She reports that bhc has
fifteen or sixteen pupils, and is getting
along nicely.
A feature of James Freeman Clarke's
life was his correspondence with Mar
garet Fuller. "From 1829 till 1S33," he
wrote, "I saw or heard from her almost
every day. Thero was a family connec
tion, and we called each other cousin.
Sho needed a friend. She ac
cepted me for this friend, and to mo it
was like a gift from the gods, an in
fluence like no other."
Gen. Boulanger's mother, who is a
Welshwoman, is 84 3-ears of age. She
lives quietly at Villa d'Avray. Her fa
mous son is very kind to her and has al
ways shown her a great deal of attention.
The old lady's mind began to give way
about two years ago, but she is by nc
means an imbecile. Gen. Boulanger has
just sent to her house all the decoeal ions,
gifts, pictures, bric-a-brac, etc., which
used to adorn his etudy at Clermont
Ferrand. Mr. Wilkie Collins is described as one
of the most courteous of correspondents.
He is always prompt with his reply, and
his letters are as gracefully written as his
books. No curt laconics and brusque
brevities with him; thero is good nature
in every line, and somehow when we get
to the end of his chatty epistles we feel
there is less of the usual formalism in Ids
"Believe me, faithfully yours." IIi3 let
ters, which are headed "Gloucester place,
Portman square," have a monogram,
with a quill piercing the letters, winch is
quite a trademark it its way.
The celebrated John Dunn, who turned
himseld into a Zulu, and is now one of
the ten chiefs of Zululand, has just pub
lished a book giving some of his experi
ences in wild Africa during his thirty
years' residence there. Dunn was a big
hunter before he became King Cety wayo's
right hand man, and the stories ho tells
of some of his exploits aro enough to
make our crack shots open their eyes.
Ono morning he bagged twenty-three
hippopotami in thirty 6hots, and during
that season 503 of these river horses were
viotims of his rille. No wonder big game
in Zululand became scarce, witli 6uch
hunters as John Dunn continually blaz
ing away at every animal worth shooting.
Dunn, unlike the other hunters, did not
go further afield in pursuit of sport, but
6ettled down, took to politics, married
into the best families of the Zulu aris
tocracy, and today is the most important
individual in his adopted country.
Strang-o Sjght In Maine,
Between 9:30 and 10 o'clock the Other
nignt a strange sight was observed by
several people at Portland, Me. "What
appeared to be a huge illuminated cloud
passed over the houses at a height of
about 100 feet. It actually lighted up
tho street and caused no little amount of
wondering among thoso who observed
the phenomenon. One gentleman's curi
osity led him to the roof of his house for
purposes of investigation. He then,
found, to his astonishment, that the
strange appearance was a large swarm of
lightning bugs flying slowly north.
Chicago Herald. .
A TERRIBLE ACCOUNT.
SINS WHICH ARE COMMITTED BY THE
DYSPEPTIC
Non of Us Entirely Guiltless Hating la
ft Hurry At Eminent Physician's Ad
vlcoXcive the Stomach a Cbauee An
Excellent Tlaii.
There are two mental sins against the
stomach, which bring about a terriblo run
ning account, the full payment of which
often completely ruins us. Theso are haste
and worry. None of us are entirely guilt
less in these respects. Wo tell children that
it is "bud manners" to eat fast; we likea
thorn to pigs when they do it; but I have
often questioned whether they were half as
much to bo blamed as either the mother, who
could not find timo to eat her own meal be
cause she was full of caro for othei-s, or the
father, whoso one thought Is to swallow his
boiling coffee aud get through his steak or
chop in timo to catch the train.
How mauy homes there are in which
breakfast is, in reality, a scramble, hurriedly
prepared, hurriedly eaten and hurriedly di
gesscd; while dinner in the middle of the
day, hi a houso where there are many chil
dren, is scarcely less so as far as the mother is
concerned, and the evening meal ilnds every
body too tired to care to linger over it, or
there aro constant calls upon the mother for
her attention. This is bad in itself, but it is
ten times worse when worry, auxiety, or ex
citement adds its quota to the disturbance.
DUE TO TllfcJU OWN FA.ULT.
American women suffer from nervous dys
pepsia to a distressing extent; and they
very seldom stop tr eoii;,idr !rvv ; :; vv'.
duo to their ovm iduiL or indiscretion. Jut
to the extent to which they hurry and worry
they aro distinctly blamablo; and where is
tho woman who does neither Certainly she
is rarely found in the working or profession
al clasoos. The homes in which jeaco and
quiet reign at meal times, in which food is
slowly eaten, and the practice of cheerful
conversation persisted in, are few indeed;
and still les3 frequently met with are those in
which rest for all who arc actively employed
precedes or follows the midday meal.
Ono of our most eminent physicians, w hose
specialty U disorders of the digestion, told
me that he found the most effectual method
of relief from dyspepsia was an hour's rest
lief ore tho heavy meal of the day, and forty
minutes' rest after it. There are, of course,
but few of our active population who can
easily secure so much leisure as this implies,
but every one can, in sorao degree, attain to
calmness and quiet before dinner every one
except the cook, or possibly the mistress; and
every housekeeper, no matter what her cares,
ought to secure a quiet half hour after din
ner. Nature is very patient, but thero comes
a time when she no longer tolerates our ig
norance if we persist in disregarding her
gentle admonitions. She punishes us heavily
at last. Thousands of intelligent people con
sider it no fault of their own if, after gulp
ing down a hasty aud often ill prepared
meal, they have recourse to potash or soda for
relief from flatulency, or undergo tortures
from heartburn. It is quite fashionable to
be dyspeptic.
QUIFT, LEISURE AND CALM.
Let us remember that quiet, leisure and
calm are essential to digestion. The scholar
who sits at his writing table all the morning,
and leaves a treatise to come to dinner,
hastily devouring his food while his brain
is hard at work over some some knotty
problem, and returning at once to his theme,
Lsas guilty in thi3 regard as the business
man who rushes from counting houso or
bank, with a thousand cares upon his mind,
or tho mother who cannot find time to sit
down for Ave minutes before she has to at
tend to tho hungry demands of her family.
Each has, in his or hor way, sinned against
nature, and must pay tho penalty, sooner or
later, fn impaired digestion, nervous irrita
bility and exhaustion. Give tho stomach a
chauce. It is all a matter more or less of
habit. Even tho overworked employe has
his hour for dinner, and the least tho mother
or housekeeper should exact is tho same
privilege.
It is an excellent plan In family lif o to keep
somo light but interesting book for meal
times. In one or two families of my ac-.
quainEance tho practice of reading a short
psalm or chapter at the breakfast tablo has
an excellent effect, aud equally good results
follow from a paragraph from Emerson or a
good selection from somo poet as au inter
lude during dinner. Two good ends aro
gaiued by this. First, tho minds of tho com
pany are raised above potty details and in
terests, and, beyond this, tho fact of listening
to something that calls for no effort, aud j et
is pleasing, is in itself calming. Worry is
for the moment, at least, set on one side;
anxiety sleeps; and if tho dinner can be fol
lowed by a short rest half tho evils of dys
peptic conditions will vanish. Worry is a
prolific cause of suffering, if we come to think
of it, and probably the most useless and
foolish of all tho causes that exist for d3-s-pepsia.
Dcmorost's Monthly.
Southern KtiKsia's Coal Uasiiis.
An important report from tho British con
sul at Taganrog on tho coal industry of
southern Russia has just been laid before par
liament. Tho five coal basins of Russia aro
the Donttz, sub-Moscow, Dombrova (Poland),
Ural aud Caucasus; of these the first is the
one described iu tho present report It
stretches over a considerable portion of New
Russia, between the Don and tho Dnieper,
and includes many extensive seams of bitu
minous and anthracite coal, but it contains
all kinds of coal suitable for manufactories
and household purposes. Tho report goes
seratim through six groups of collieries pro
ducing different kinds of coal, and describes
the modo of working and the results of the
more important collieries in each group.
Thero are in all 200 collieries in the Denetz
basin, many being thoroughly equipped, but
others being wholly unprovided with modern
appliances. The recent rapid development
of the coal industry in this region is said to
owe much to the annual conferences of the
representatives of tho mining industries.
The annual output at present exceeds 1.G00,
000 tons, of which about l.SOO.OOO tons are
carried by railway; but it is calculated that
nearly 3,000,000 tons will bo available for
transport during the present year, besides
the quantity consumed in tho neighborhood,
Boston Transcript
A Hint to loiter Writers.
Last year I had occasion to write, for an
absent friend, somo very important instruc
tions. I wrote them carefully on a half sheet
of note paper, which I then handed to a lady
to forward to our distant friend. She also
wrote a half sheet, and placed them, side by
side, iu tho envelope. Timo passed, and
although the lady's letter came to hand, my
far more important one did not, and serious
con&equences followed from tho failure to
receive it. After the trouble was over it all
came to light. Iler letter was taken from
the envelope and minewas carelessly loft in.
Moral: When you Inclose a number of
pieces of paper In an envelope, be careful to
enfold them in one outer sheet, so that all
must como out together. SJ. E. S."in Tha
Writer.
ie Plattsmouth Herald
DTc cm joying aUBoomixi "botli its
EDITIONS.
Year
llie
Will lu one during which the subjects of
national interest siml importance will he
strongly imitated and the election of a.
President will take place. 'Ihe people of
Cass County who would like to learn of
Political, Commercial
and Social Transactions
of this year and would keep apace with
the times should
ISIJBSC I.I'RKi
101:
Daily or eekly Herald
Now wliile we have the subject heforethe
people we will venture to speak of our
Pili
ess m.
?. f .!
9. H Mil iii
1 ? r 01
"Which is first-class in all respects and
from which our job printers are turning
out much satisfactory work.
PLATTSMOUTH,
AND WBimXSIS'
1888
KixiiKK Tin:
NEBRASKA.
J