THF DAILY HERALD: Jr'LATTSAIOuTH, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 18S8. ...OM NECESSITY. j of th American of Today. Robbing- Nature. jbj of ui really and truly tit down le, and as wo should, enjoy our eat Jat to enjoy life. We Lave no doubt , that the following narrative will be gnizd as that of a personal experience y many: Arise in the morn early or late, as .be case may, under protest a sufficient tes timony that balmy sleep, bis sweet restorer, baa failed to make proper connections, so to peak; move about, strange to say, stretchy, achcy, even tired yet, eyes bard to get open properly, maybe fall over a chair or two, or stoops over to get some article of apparel and is compelled to make an effort. In fact be must go through a bracing up process. After perforating bis morning toilet be has lim bered up tome, got bis eyes open and floun durvd ilown stairs to the breakfast table. Looked at the watch and mentally concluded or realized that be mtiHt be at business right off. Braces up again and mechanically, may lo vigorously, proceeds to ingest what be can; matter of necessity, never hungry for. bi eak I'afrt, you know. - ' ' ' ' ' " ' ' Hunh out Of bouse for street cars, stands up maybe all the way down town. If be is for tunate enough to get a seat be experiences a sort of relief, and recognizes that bo is still tired. Get to work dull and llst le; Zt-ur-s'tbs exciuinent of work 'fcr five' hours or io ocXupiea bis attention, VVhistlo blow's, M-l) rings, clock strikes or friend conies in. "Jinner j$ sought: feels oiiewhnt empty, hardly hungry; taw a lair iim;u1 an fevU full; empty feeling goro. A desire to rtat is oxpvrlcnccd evcri fclcrp. Braces up and ngain gets to work for five hours or more; Liu to tnigglo for a while; eyes are very heavy; senses of discomfort about stomach. Finally time to stop work comes; closes up active effort, but mind and attention fctill lingers. He biafts bqmo with heavy kgj midfeet: beauactie: inaybommcwhat diMyr V& e'h hi cars fids' way either; rocognUt p.nt La JsVrrj tnx. fjvltf home, crawls up the front steps and exclaims: "Supper readyT "Yes, come right along." He hits down, has no appetite, but rat again, "from iieceity." Not much; easily satisfied. Feel sort of weak about bis stomach, as well as otherwise. Putters n round in or out the house for awhile cr reuds the inper; eels a htilo letter ; seeks; maybe, enf.'i talrinr.ent, the excitement of which fixes )jU) attention from self. At last bo seeks ro jioae exhausted, and maybe fceeps heavy, or pot ct aJJ. "10 next uorn and. day bring the same experience, and so on day after day. Eternal effort; eternal desiro for rest; eter nal lack of enjoyment of life; eternal eating from necessity. Can we wonder that this man eats from necessity I Yet this is an American of today. His distemper is of his own mAking. Ho is a robber of naturo and ,hs failed to pt n' pi acficjf the full meaning pf the divine cornmaudmeut: "Thou sbalt pot. kilL" (ilobo-Democrat. flow Twine Is Made. Superintendent ninde, a big, good Matured and good looking young giant, lod the way into a realm of clatter, roar, rattle and dust, the first impression at sight of which was that it was an inextricable confusion of girls iid machinery, that the girls all had thir tflir in curl papers, -and that they were a line lot of sturdy armed young1 Amazon, ' !.Tho flax fiber," be said "is first combed or, as it U technically termed, Sscutchcd.' fL'hec it goes to the fspread board,' where It is laid out straight and bf as uniform a thick es4 U9 pos&iblo, In four lines, pii endless aprons that carry if up to hackle like teeth, that bold it straight aqd steady white it is subjected to the drawing action of rollers mov'fig faster than Its delivery. The soft, even band of straight fibers thus formed is called a 'sliver.' Twelve of these are put into a 'drawing frame,' extended and delivered as one, and this operation is repeated three times, rveiV'f 'slivers' eaob time boing drawn into 6ne: which" Is no thicker than one of t twelve bad 1 been before drawing. By this ifce fiber3 are all straight and disposed with trcit evenness. Tho 'ullTcr ia now slightly twisted, aud so becomes a 'rove,' ready fox .the spinning frame. The processes of spinning jxd wisting together for the attainment of ny desired degree of stoutness are too gon dii j:- understood to bo worth detailing, ercuiy . t ... n , Hemp is nw.,V V"' " naJ Tow, which is only &wJ fc-c th coarsest and cheapest Strings, is carded liko cotton, instead of being put upon the spread board." The air was thick with dutt from the fibers; tho fioor polished by the flax and hemp waste until it bad the smoothness of Ice. Twelve o'clock on Saturday was draw ing near, and one by one the clattering ma chines were stopped, and tho young women working them set to work like practical ma chinists, taking them apart, cleaning and oiling them, and then putting them together. The whistle lounded, and before its echoes bad died away the head coverings that bad .' i-ucouragtd the universal cyrl paper's theory were w hisked off, hasty washing up was per formed, working shirts were thrown pff, and the week's work was dona. New York Sun. XJUla Men Ate Good Xatured. 'I Lave a theory," said Counselor Abo Iluramcl to a reporter, "which is not founded on anything that I ever read or anything that I ever beard anybody say. It is en tirely original with me. though it is quit possible a good many other people may have entertained the idea before." " f.' Produce your thp-y, please, and end this terrible suspense." "The theory is concerning little men and -women. I believe that people of small stature are far better natured than those of averago size. Did you ever see a small man who wasn't good humored and inclined to take a rosy view of lifef And did you ever know a little woman' who wasn't jolly and fall of funf I've studied humanity a good deal and I never yet have encountered a small Avon who was surly or misanthropic. Who aro the pessimists? Lank, tall, raw boned, dyspeptie- individuals almost in variably. " Did you ever see a man five feet six inches that was melancholy? No, and yon ore not likely to. I tell you the world would bo a mighty lonesome place without the littlo grown up people. They make moro than half the f uc there is ' in f.hii vale pt tears, "Utile men are Invariably good ktory tell 11 , They are hearty laughers; they are oick to see the humorous side of any quos ion and they relish a joke even if it is at .heir own expense. They make the firmest Jjriends and adhere to those whom they like through thick and thin. They are seldom quarrelsome, and never conceited. They are often sensitive, but quick witted people gen erally are. Altogether they are tho best folks in the world to get along pleasantly with, whether in a business or social way." !'AtLnitting that what ypu say is correct, Low do you account for itf' 'Don't account for it at all, yet I kuow it f true, because ray observation and experi- have taught nu so." Naw Voi-k puic. Found ITsa for Him. Smith, do please introduce Mr. ere to roe!" "It's no good, dear; x" "No, I know; but I want be roes with my drebs so How to Make a Teat. Bnj nine yards of cood, etoat, yard wide cotton, cloth and cut into three strips of three yards each. Sew these stripe together ttecurely by overlapping, ana you will then havo a strip three yard square. Make a solution of twelve ounces of lime unl five ounces of alum in three gallons of water, and soak the cotton in it for a day. Itinse it in warm rain water and ft t retch it in the sun to dry. It will then be waterproof. Having reached your camping out place, cut two iIes eight feet long, each with a fork at one end. Sink the other ends in tho ground about a foot and beat the earth well to keep them firmly in place. These ioles bhould be about eight feet apart. Now cut another pole about nine feet long and put it on the top of me oiner two, resting in the forks. Cut two more tAes ten feet long for the fides t't jour frame, resting one end of each lle on the cross iolo auvl te other end n t'o groui.l. fctretch tho canvas over the frame and tack it to the poles. You can make the sides of your tent weather proof with the boughs of cedar and other trees. This is the sirvji aii iest expensive te.r.fc 'oi can have, and it Will answer your purposes fully. Tho interior of the tent, however, would bo a little movo roomy and comfortable f would put tip n sppf.mj fraute in the rear, dimilar to that in frout, bay two feet high, and fatretch tlio canvat over that and thence to the ground. Select sloping ground to put your tent on, fco that if it rains tho water will read ily run off; and also dig a little ditch around the tent, with an out'.pt furuiiritf down tho incline, as the ficrit' o' thd tent will be open- unlctU jot'chocia' tot provide enough canvas tQ coo j yi.,i jiad place it with lhj front toward tho porth w liorthvrctt, for 6torms, if you have any, will probably come from the south or southwest. Tho rude hut described, for it is little else, will no doubt seem ?, f4u.iy shelter to thce xho iiave nev'er1 occupied one,1 but for ierfect!resf arid fho soundest of sound Sleeping, you will hud it superior to the best room in your city Clucago Trpnnio. '" house.- Writers and the "Syndicates." The method of presenting literary mat ter through a "syndicate may have it3 advantage, hut I think it shuts oil in n sense, a great many writers who might otherwise gradually gain recognition. If a syndicate were managed right, i could pay Letter prices for hteiavV matti-r'tlian! any one else; tha! projectors of such! aii enterprise 'could alTord tq pay certain authors enormous sums but, af ho sanu time, suoh a KUeine would work liko having no copyright law; it would enable one class of authors to sit down on tlfo others and keep them out. . A popular journal which had the nerve and enterprise tq securo good authors exi clusively and pay them 'for' their work would put itself ahead of competitors. The trouble with tho "syndicate" is that it tends to reduce ourr.rIa iot a dead level, lipbert Ponner, of The New York Ledger, ' 'tried the former method; ho paid certain authors' good, prices to wnt? exclusively for jn'mi and, fpunt that tnc undertaking fcaui'hiin. So, in 'the pres ent dav, an enterprising editor who U on the alert can find young American writers of promise and bring them out, thus not only starting them on successful careers, but greatly benefiting his own journal. E. 1. Roe in The Epoch. low a gneen tVaa hockel: M. Julien J3iault has just published a volume giying a history qf the tetep.liojS since jts. postmen taj adoption. Vie tella an amusing story of its debut in Brussels in 1SS4. The queen was asked to listen from her palace to a representation at the Monnale theatre. Suddenly, to tho sur prise of all present, she dropped the in strument, giving a little gasp of djsmrjj, The chorus leader-had just been' giving ms lumuiipus crowu buuucii vcpnutancj in the niost unparliamentary language, usin th'p panio'of Pivine Prqvidencg ju a very 1 1 eo and easy' manner. ' "Strict orders were given on the morrow to oblige tho use of more diplomatic speech, and the queen was happy. Brault states that Spain has made no progress at all in the use of the telephone. In tUo f)Ternnient V&gn jo feel some interest in the matter, and va law was voted allowing its use in the princi pal cities.' Even liussia preceded Spain, for in 189 th instrument was. (here .'used quite commonly, and even " at " greater distances' than iu Franpoi Nqw, in France, ia towns boasting of a population of 18,000 inhabitants the telephone is completely unknown. Luxemberg gives the cheapest rates for yearly subscriptions, and Russia the dearest Globe-Democrat, Eellcs of the Ola Stone Age. The Smit'lSonkin institution has sent out an earnest request that all persons interested in science 6balJ corOperato, with the aim of determining - if in America there' existed an bid stone of paleolithic age. To that end t has ro; quested that implepients eupppsab'y ber longing to that age, be sent to the insti tution at "Washington for examination. JIany supposed to te such have already been sent in; and most of them prove to be of a very different origin. Nono truly paleolithic have been found in tho mounds. Meanwhile, a cute Pennsyl vania individual lias put on tho market a quantity of spurious, but well made, arrow heads. lie takes the more modern, chipped flints, which, are abundant, and rechips them" intq curious and antique forms to make them salable. He hag driven a fine business. Genuine Yankee; aro now quite behind the age. Globe Democrat. Transportation of Dead "Bodies. The baggage agents throughout the country have held a conference for the purpose of adopting rules in connection with the transportation of dead bodies over their several roads. They propose consulting the state " boards of health throughout the country and make it ob ligatory that in cases of diphtheria, scar let and typhoid fever, erysipelas, measlea and other contagious and infectious dis eases, bodies must be wrapped in a sheet saturated with a solution of chloride of zinc, or of bi-chloride of mercury, and, encased in air tight coffins, and tho body must not be accompanied by those who have been exposed to the infection. Philadelphia Times, PHYSICAL BEAUTY. A "PROFESSOR" WHO MAKES PLAIN FACES QUITE ATTRACTIVE. Not Recognized as a Regular riijHlclan, but Still lie Is Not Without the Fa- trouuge of tho Fair Sex Fixing Up Faces. "Making people beautiful? Queer profes sion !n mused his audience of one. The dark haired man reclined gracefully in his easy chair, passed bis white aud manicured hand in a contemplative manner over his massive brow, and repeated: "Yes, sir, I devote my- koii 10 making people beautiful." "Doubtless," continued tbo, "professor," "you think me a charlatan. It is somewhat difficult to nitdi people believo that I am not a fiaud. I havo no school and am not recognized as a regular physician." "What, then, is your prof ession V "iirielly, 1 devote my lifo end mind to practicing the arts that r.iobeautiful. Every thing concornhig beauty is to nio of absorb- nf uiipoitance. The development of the Iiure, the art of pleasing and the nvysttries or tuo toilet aro tuinirs I uniCMiutautlv studv- ing. How to inaVe tl face beautiful, tho figure synvnutiicjd, the manners eueaeiujr. um improve the contour of tho body and iu icrsoimi make up, una to turn out a it- fectly harmonious U-inir, is worth knowing: iion t you tiuuk sof" "Yes, it is," said tho reporter. llll'LM. Ii . . uiio it is nos poss;nie to mate every wonan beautiful, it is iiossibie to improve ninioea every body s personal apieurance. corioreai beauty is development pf facr nsijro, fwdut, uisfsiticn, ttvsle. vedeo, niaa- nti. bvei ihei o is uu ai t in di-essiii'' the face, just us there is iu clotbinz tho ficrure. Evoryloiy Vnows tho arts thut dressmakers brin to thoir aid in making a dunipv fiuro look tall, and a tall figure look dumpy I mean symmctrioal. In improving tho faco I bring well known principles of t ;o boar upon my work. F.-y in-U.ioe, iv is a well eu'Vv,i.e4 mufc rvu wiuens. J lius a 1. 1:. I , 1 . . A V. L .i 1 ; 1 hutchet faced ' woman comes to seo mo with her hair iartcd in tho middle and drwu l . 1 :. .11 i . . . uu t ou euuer smo iroin ner Taaead. ller face is too Iocs;, k tb.in aud" too sharp. Tlit-i is a fciiaight lino that riius directly throush the part In her hair down betweeii hur eyes aud over Iirr pdse and to her chjn. in piauwmg fit frr lua ia-st impression one roceivea is that of great length and narrow ness. 'To make this woman beautiful 1 first tako down her hair and part it on one side. Then I dress it down over her temples and pufi $t out abovo the ears, brinjiiij it duth a bit toward her eLeks. Then I -tako 'sorn'o red ana wore it in heavily on her cheek bones. After this tho eyebrows are. darkened a little ut the euds farthest from the. nco, IhU al ways increasps iUe, injassiou cf width. The sanit ! done to the eyelashes, making the eyus appear broader than they are. This simple work changes the entire appearance of tho woman. You cannot imagine wt difTereuco it makes. I"?4,' of tho' eyes catcbivg viuigut Une Ch'at rans down over her Tj'ead Into5 the chin,-it is caught by the hair, whfch is parted on the side, and follTv an imaginary line runnmer i .vaihy with this part difgpr,,liy across the face." " ,,aujposio"a Woman with a broad aud fat face auks to be made beautiful f "It is much more diff'ouli o. handle a broad faco than, f, atj.ow. one!' "r make a theory for every yomah. T ajej and carry it out in ba? individual " case. But io geiieral oy say, if t.ho is a Vlvndv tho eyebrows, should bo duvkened near tho noso aud allowed to re main light and indistinct at the ends. Then some red should be put in front instead of at tho side, so as to increase the depth of the face; and the hair, which is noT7 blwavs banged, should bo arranged in "ringlets," So that iho (ortiiicad mdy be seeii through it This further heightens the. face. A WRn.ja.n, with a fat face should always, paft herhuir i:i iua nimujc. - 'Tiati'' added the "nrofessor," stretching himself and again passing his hand over his raven locks, "I perhaps made my most Hignal success when I proJueed my celebrated skin bloach'-T. It set tho women wild. AVomcu come to me with dark faces or with wrinkles. They use this bleacher and, presto I tha b'eny Lshcs and the wrhikl? nre g-ciA.'.1 '' " "lo you niean't'o ay that it permanently removes vrinklesi'' "No, not iermauently," said the . "nrof &sr sor," thoughtfully; "jpuiariiy. Still it rcnyjves vhem. and that is one thing." "What sort of people come to j-ouT' "All sorts. Many women who aro evi dently in fine society, but are not as beauti ful as they wish to be, come here. Also many who would bo prettv bvt vv, on'of two defect". Scj;-,6 ot them La' ve 'dark spots on their aims or shoulders. ! I- bleach them. Others have moth spots, freckles, sallowness, I simply make them beautiful. Qthers iiav what they call eTpiion wvinkles-thafc is, wUou they sroo. 'too, much' Jittle. wrinkles will c.oma in the. corners of hf jywutU er up about the eyes. TUj ladies usually who have advanood to middle age, and it af fords me great satisfaction to mitigato their afflictions. Besides this I often color the eyebrows and eyelashes of light Lhixi women. Theu there Is . jyJ deal done in penciling thft eyebrows." The rarest effects re obtaiuect by mingluig black with brown. Vivacity of expression can bo givcu to .o dullest face by skillful penciling in. colors. "I do not preter,d, wwever, to have orig inal creations in everything. For instance, I have photographs of Langtry, Sirs, Potter, Betty Rigl, Slaud Graugea-, Fanny Davenport, aud o.thcr beauties, aud I often make women up after one or the cuher cif them, according to espreasod pitfetenees. These phQtQgrapha are taken in different poses, fco that a fair, all around idea of the style of beauty of each woman can be ob tained by my 'patients.' Maud Granger has the most perfect pair of arms on the conti nent, and only the other day I mado up a pair of arms on a society belle who left for Saratoga the next day after this glorious model. It was an almost p& jc.f success,' and Miss Susies h'n is reported by the telegraph tq Lave' captured a wealthy youug fellow the day after her arrival with those same arms of hers." Chicago Herald, How to Eat a Watermelon. A watermelon, even though it bo a sixty i pounder, is not intended to bo devoured in public, nor is ono watermelon, no matter J what its weight may bo, more than enough j for .one healthy person. Thi3 fact ia prbr ; bably well known to every country school . boy. The art eating a ' water-melon and peeping cool is as simple now as it was in the : days of long ago. The rind 6hauld lie Blit with a short bladed knife, so that when the melon is divided the heart of it shall rest in one of tbo halves in ono luscious, juicy lump. The knife should then be carefully wiped and then put in the pocket. Then the coat should be taken off and the sleeves rolled up. Plunge the right hand under one end of the heart and the left hand under the other; lift the dripping mass to the mouth and fall to. The juice will trickle down yoor arms and satur . ate your face, but what of itf There is . plenty and to spare, though the feast ia the , rarest to be found on earth. Atlanta Con- statntion. ANCIENT EGYPTIANS. NOTIONS OF THE PEOPLE WHO BUILT THE PYRAMIDS. Their Theory Concerning "loutilea" Orl Kiu of tho Practice of Kmbulminj; llodies of Stone or Wood Why I'dJl- tlan Aro So Frequently Mutilated. The oldest form tliu ancient Egvpiians at tribute! to tho soul was that of a shadow a double boru with each ;erson, and following lum through the vurious stages of lif , grow ing as ho grew and declining as ho declined. They applied this theory not only to human beings, but also to gods and animal ?, trees and stones. Everybody and everything wus held to havo its double, even beds, chairs auj knive. Tho component particles of these doubles were so miuuto and subtle that or dinary j)Oople could hoc perceive them. Only a special order of priests or seers, gifted or trained for tho puriso, could identity the doubles of tho gods, and obtain from them a knowledge of past und future events. Tho doubles of men and inanimate objects re mained securely hidden from sight i:i tho or dinary course of lifn. Still, they sometimes left tho budv, endowed with color and voice. and went away to manifest themselves nt a distance, after tho manner of modern ghosts. THE "DOUBLXS" AhTElt DEATH. After death tho doubles maintained not only tho characteristics of the particular man they had leeii associated with whi.'.oin tho flesh, but were subjected tr tl,o common wants and pains of luunanity to hunger aud thirsi to heat aud cold, to futiguo and illuesSa with tlio term v.vt :'! .' tho living havo and moans oi self pro- j tection against tho evils which befall thri, J tho dead aro utterly destitute. t felt (ja ineiiiseives iney were uoonnv; u roam abon tho places they liail iUii-iied', nnl fogti upon tho refnsr el v.vses, with a certainly of por lc.iz al ter prolonging their- miserably ex istence for a Khort time. If prc.i.erly at- tendeil to if provided with food aud other necessaries thev bid a fair chanco to live on and pj, ior an mdcfiiu'to poiiod. They did not become unmortal: "tho splendid iu veution of immorality, us a prominent American ttntcuoan has called it. was uu- kv.o.vairj pr unit ive Egypt; but at least they often bad facilities for survival that wero ul- tnost equivalent to immortality, as is pointed out by Mr. G. Maspero, in an interesting contribution to The Princeton Review, enti tled "Egyptian Souls and Their Worlds," from which tho facts it this aticla aro mainly derived. It ia, ersy tc behovo'that tho gin or the latter conviction of another und evei lasting life was present in this crude notion of a double a soul apart from tho body which might continue its existence, under favoibio conditions, for an unlimited timet. Since the double was a perfect impg& of the beins: to which it had hovi linked al birth, it was natural ;uat it should remain near where. tUo corpso was buried, ancl yar- tieipato in its destinies. Having nv r with tho body, it ought logically t;a decay with tho body, and thus thra was reason to believe that tho n'twal term of its existence After the body's death might bo measutod by the time required for tho lu:iou framo to disin tegrate comp'oWly. Therefore, tho Egyptian sav;;i decided tho best means of mrosting the decomposition of the sou? was to stop the decomposition, o? tho flesh, and to this, Ar. Maspoj'G, bnggests, wo probably owo tho pvubtieo of embalming. The drying up and hardening of the mummy enabled it to last for centuries, and to serve as a kind of stay for its double. STOXK on WOODE.X BOPIKa, But this extediesie was not wholly satis factory:, since even tho bifc of mummies could not endure forever and then what would becoTRa of the double? The only way they found out of this difficulty was to pro vide stone or wooden bodies against the pos sibility of tho mummy raolderiug away. Most of tho statues discovered iu Egyptian tombs, Mr. Mnsporo assures us, wero only bodies for tho doubles of tho men buried in them. To prevent them from being broken to pieces or carried away, thev w.'dled them up in dark cells some standing, soma sitting, somo squjittirig, according to. taste oc con venience; and all'wero us liko tho model as art could mako them, thai tho soul might moro easily adapt itsiJf to them. Thej-ta was no limit to the number of such eitigies but tho piety or wealth of the surviv ing relatives; tho moro numerous they were tho better it was for tho dead. Ono statue was, after all, only ono ehanco of n pet-iiity', and 2, 3, 10 or 20 statue?, gi.v-t tho double eo many chance Vutue, The statues in the tem pi had tho same meaning as those in the tombs; the doubles of kings or g-Ja not the whole, but certain prrt;c-ifcfi were lixed upou them by prajf.is and consecration, and ani mated them.' Thus it was that they wero able to. move head, or- arirss, to answer questions, and to give fca th oracles. Statues wero nci Tncpa works of art. they wero things aJtvo, and are even to this day, Mr. MxJipero'di. clares, only tho double of old, has turner', into a bad spirit in motley tigypt, oi haunts the spot wV.f4'i is was reverb ages ago as a saiVjtiy soul or god. It Is wont to frighten men out of their wits, to drive them raving mad, and sometimes to kill them. But it loses its powcy when the body of stono with which, ii consorts has been mutilated. That is. tho reason, Mr. Maspero informs us, why so many statues in our museums display a broken vostor a battered cheek; tho fella heen who found them defaced them in order to. lame the double in them and prevent it from doing any harm. Tho tomb was tht hoiiao of the double, and tiuve on certain days the family brought provisions of ah kiuds a custom which ultimately took -the form of offerings that were mere painted or carved imitations of natural meat and drink. Globe-Democrat. An Artistlo TVorn Shrewdness. A well kuo.wn New York real estate man baa a nother who has made a fortune by her own shrewdness. Yet every one who has contributed to hor accumulations thinks her a publio benefactor. It i3 a well known fact that people who accumulate riches in New York desire nothing more ardently than a beautiful and artistically furnished borne.. Mrs. discovered this, and, having very artistic tastes, set to work investing in houses in the fashionable uptown thoroughfares. Then she went abroad and picked up inter esting br-io-.a-.brao and works of art, and when she had completed her purchases she returned, furnished the houses from cellar to garret, and advertised them for sale. Her excellent taste soon brought custom ers, and in a very little whilo she disposed of many buildings, with their furniture and all, at a very comfortable profit. Her fort une, made in this way, is estimated at be tween $230,000 and fOOO.OOO, and the pur chasers of her property are happy because their friends visit them and congratulate them on the excellent and artistic way ia which they have furnished their residences. The visitors are never informed that the houses were bought furnished. 2?ew York What' the difference between an eg? and the scene of a rural romance J None. The; are tya laid in tha country. The Plattsmo uth Herald Is 032. joying a DAIIiTAND JEIDITTOIN S. Tear Will ho ono 1 at i-i national interest strin-l v a'itate! -i-i -. - o - , President will take place. 'J he people ol Cass County who would like to learn of Political, Commercial and Social Transactions of this year and would keep apace the times should I'OIi Daily or Weekly Herald. Now while we have the suhject before the people we will venture to Hpeak ot our Which is first-class in all resp2cts and from which our job printers are turning out much satisfactory work. PLATTSMOTJTII, Boom in both, its 1888 which tho Fuhjct-tK of (1 importance will he and the election ot with kitiikk tim: irnn mm WW NEBRASKA.