v.. I he 11101111 SKCON'D YKAll PIjATTSMOUTJf, NIJBKASKA, Fit 1 1 AY EVENING, NOVEMJ5EK 2.5, 1888. XUMISIUt U2. ' jj OFFICIOS. K.M ICICHKY Clerk. Treiirer, W K Fox Jamk.1 P a t t k uso n,jk. - ISVKON t'UHK - A Mauulk S Cl.l VKOUD W II Ma lick Attorney, ktigiiie-r. - - PollC-1 J II lg, Mrli;ill, Couiiuiliiien, 1st ward, 2nd " 3rd " 4tll- " I J V WlCt'KHACH A HALIHBUKY i l M Jon kh IHt. A HlllFM AN t M It MUHPIIV IS W Uu iton ; I Con O'Uosmor. I P McCallkn. Prks I J W Jun.NK HKII (ioiti I I) ll Hawk J W Jon.N IN.UliAIHMAN Hoaid Pub. Work IUKK 'khWokth n GOLTjY OFFICERS. l"re;isircr. Oepmy Treasurer, -Clerk. liepiity Clerk, Kecorder of Ueeds iMpiuy Kecorder Cleric of Dl-trict Co jrt. Slieritf. Hurveyr. I. A. t'AMPHKLL - TlllM. l'OLl.OCK HIKI ('HITCH riKi.a KxAl'KircHriKi. V. II. Poo JOHN M. I.KYIIA W. C. SlIOWALTKK J. C. KlKKNHAH A. Mauulk Attorney. AI.I.KN liKKMON Miint.ul Pull. SchaoU. - MAVNARI) hPIKK County Judge. - C KutU HOAKI) OK HOI-KUVIHOHH. A. It. Tniiii ("li'in.. - - PUttsinoiitli I.oui Koi.tz. - Weeping Water A. I:. Hi -KrtoN. - tiinwoou GIVIG SOGIIVrMS. Ci ASS LOIN I No. ll(i. 1 U. O. K. -Meets 'every Tiieml.iy eveulug of each week. All trait-dent brothers are respectfully invited to attend. lftl.v rr.MnUni KXUAMPMK.VT No. 3. I.O A O. F.. meets every alternate Friday 111 encli month in Hie M.i-ouio Il.ill. Visitiug Krothers are Invited to attend. II1KIO I.ODOK SO. SI. A. O. U. W. .Meets everv itlr.eriiai Krid;iv evening at K. of P h ill. Transie'il brother are respectfully lu- vilel to ;iUe:i l. K.J M rglii. M liter V orKman K. P. Itrwu. Kore nstu ; It. li. Kemsfir. Over- peer; K. A. T.iittt, Financier : . F. Iloune worth. Kecorder; M. Maybright. Receiver l. It Hniith. Pait M. W. : 1. N. Howen, tiulde P. J. Kunz. Inside Watch. I 'ASS CAMP N0.3JJ. MODKKN WOODMEN of America Meets second and fourth Mon day eveitiit'x at K. of P. hall. All transient trother re requested to meet with us. p. A Ntwnti ner, Vener.ible Consul;'!. F, Nile Worthy Adviser : S. C. Wilde. Hanker: W. A lioeck. C'leik. lLTT.SMOUril I.OIXSK NO. g. A. O. V. W. A. Meet every alternate Friday evening at KockwouU hall at mo'cIock. All transient uroi ti ers are respectfully Invited to attend. I. f J .arson, M. W. ; F. Koyd. Foreman : 8. C. Wilde. Kecorder ; Leonard Anderson, overseer, IM.ATrSMOCTII L'MMiK NO.B. A. F..t A.M. Meets on the first and third Mondays ol each mouth at their hall. All transient broth ers are cordially In tiled to meet with us. J. G. KicilKY, W. M Wm. II ats. Secretary. 'EHKASKA CHAITKU. NO. 3. K. A. M il Meets second and fourth Tuesday of each month at Maon'v Hall. Transcieiit brother are invited to meet with us. F. E. Wiiitk, II. P. Wm. Hv. Secretary. 1T. ZION COMMAMARY. NO. 5. K. ,J1-Meetf first and third Wednesday niirlit ol each month at M vso 's hall. Visiting brother are cordially invited to meet with us. WM. Hays. Uec. F. K. Wiiitk, E. C. lASSCOL'NCILNO. 1021. ROYAL RCANUAI yj meets the second and fourth Mondays of tach in inth at Arcauuin Hall. It. N. Gless, Regent. 1. C. Minor. Secretary. PLATTSMOUTH BOARD OF TRADE PresiJetit Robt. B Windham 1st Vice President A. B. Todd 2nd Vice President Win Neville Secretary F. Herrmann Treasurer F. R. tiuthman DIKKCTOKS. J. C. Richer. K. E. White, J.C.Patterson, J. A. Conner. B. Elxou, C. W. isneriiian, t. uor der, J. V. Week bach. McCONIHIE POST 45 G. A. R. BOSTKB. . J. W. Jonxsox Commander, C S. Twiit!) Senior V Ice " K a. Batks Junior " " tuo, Nilks Adjutant. liXNKY STHKIGHT W. M alux Dixok OfUcerof the Day. Chahlkj Kiikd; Ouard A.vuekmi.y Fry Sergt Major. jAcoH(t)HB'.KMAX.. ..Quarter Master Sergt. L. C Curtis! Post Chaplain Meetlo:r Saturday eveuing for an incurable case of Catarrk la ta Head by the proprietors of DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. Symptoms off Catarrh. Headache, obetruction of nose, discharges falling Into throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid ; eyes weak, ringing- In ears, deafness, difficulty of clearing throat, expecto mtion of offensive matter: breath offensive! aiaell and taste impaired, and freneral debility. Only a few of theae symptoms likely to be pres ent at once. Thouundi of cases result in coo Burnption. and end in the grave. By its mild, soothing, and healing properties. Dr. Sare's Hemedy cures the worst cases. 60c m. Tha Original AeaBaTvt ItvrpDni 'rW"rT Purely Vta lTneiualedasaHTerl,lll. Smalle8t,oheap. est. easiest to take. One Pellet a Oom. Cure Sic It Headache, Isllioas Headache, Dlzzlnea Couatlpatlou, Indigestion llllloaa Attack, and ail deramrements of taa stomach and buwela. 5 cts. by druggists. JULIUS PEPPERBERG. MAXCFACTUKEB OF AKD WHOLESALE & RETAIi DEALEB IX T1IK Choicest Brands of Cigars. including onr Flor do Pepperbergo and 'Bud FULL LINE OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLE. alwar in stock. Not. 2. 188r. Sherwin & Williams' mixed paints, th best in the market, at Fricke & Co's. drue store. 8 tf. offered Four Brothers and Four Siators. IUlsviLl.E, Nov. 2-1. A wedding at tended by unusual circumstance was cele brated yesterday afternoon at St. John, 8 church. The contracting parties are George Hothenbcrger Louise Weigleb, both of Jefferson county. The singular ptrt of the union is that the prospective groom will be the fourth among the Weigleb girls. Three of the groom's brothers are already married to three of the bride's si.steis, and four of the Misses Weigleb have become Mesdames Rothen berger. Will Sue For Their RigMs- Washington, Nov. 23. As a result of the conference between General Mahone and Senator Quay, recently held in this city, it is announced that proceedings will be begun in the Virginia state courts and United States district court of Vir ginia attacking the right of the demo cratic electors of that state to cast their votes for president in the electoral col lege. The certificates of the electors will not be issued until after a meeting of the state board of canya&ers in Richmond next Monday, and the contemplated pro- ceding will be then immediately in stituted. No Trouble in the Nation. Washinton, Nov. 23. Indian com moner Oberly yesterday received a letter dated November 19, fro in Robert L.Oven, United States Indian agent at Muskogee, I. T., in response to nn inquiry as to the truth of the report of disturbance in the Chickasaw nation over the election of governor of that nation. It states tbero lias been no such state of affairs in the Chickasaw nation as the sensational tele grams have reported. The letter says Byrd continues to exercise all the func tion9 of governor, and is practically run ning the government as such, and there is no present cause for interference on the part of the United States government. Thirty Acres of Forest Descend Into the Cumberland Valley. Bond's Mill, W. Va., Nov. 23. The largest land slide ever known here oc curred a few days since on the side of the Cumberland mountain, where, a scope of land, containing not less than twenty- live or thirty acres, slipped from the side of the mountain, carrying its forest of pine, chestnut, oak and other immense trees along with it into a narrow valley below. Ihe slip shot across the valley completely damming it from the moun tain side to a parallel ridge four hundred yards distant. The small creek which ran down the valley was dammed up, and formed a small lake from ten to twenty-five feet deep, and, perhaps, a half-mile in length. The forest trees still stand on the slide, but at an angle of forty or fifty degrees. The mountain side is bare, with the rocks standing ex posed in a line four hundred yards wide and ba!I a mile long. Altogether it was a most peculiar freak of nature. A Panic In a School. New York. Nov. 23.At 1:15 yesterday ifternoon fire broke out in the First ward ublic school building at Long Island City. Over 900 children were studying at their desks in the various rooms of the building at the time. When the children on the first floor saw the flames they raised a cry of fire. Instantly there was a panic in every room in the building. he children rushed pell null for the uar- row doors, crowding, jostling and strik- ng each other in their efforts to get out. Die children were piled up at the foot of he stairways in heaps and attempts to bring order out of the confusion were at rirst fruitless, but finally the police and firemen were able to check the children. ilthough they had to contend with an xcite 1 mob of mothers that had appear- J as soon as the news of the fire spread through the neighborhood. The fire tself amounted to little, and a9 soon as t was extinguished, an examination of the injured was commenced. It was t'ound that while hundreds were badly jruised and shocked, no one was fatally or seriously hurt. General Sheridan's Views- New Yohk, Nov. 23. General W. T. Sherman was interviewed last evening in regard to his speech of Tueeday night it the chamber of commerce banquet, in which he said he was glad of General Harrison's election because it meant that the American people would be rep resented in the cabinet and in foreign ouutries by those who fqught for the country and not against it. " I meant every word of it," he said. " If you were a young man jn Vienna, and'a man should come oyer there to represent this government, who had once borne arms against it, you wqqld make up your mind thai the cause ho battled for could not have bet n a bad one. I want to keep the people over there edu cated up to the fact that we crushed rebel lion. I uin not opposed to ex-rebels holding ollice among their own people. Indeed, I have recommended the appoint ment of rebels' to local oflices. Rut I'm opposed to sending them as representa tivis to foreign governments." "Do you know General Harrison well?" 'Know hitn? I've known hitn evr since lie wore pantalettes. I knew hi grandfather and his father, lie was one of uiy soldier boys, and we can all go to sleep for four years fully assured that we will havp a strong union government.' COUCH! and COUCH! and COUCH w uat in me worm is the reason you will cough and keep coughing and still keep trying inferior medicines when REGGS' CHERRY COUGH SYRUP will positively relieve your cough at once? Tins is no advertising scheme, but an actual fact, and we guarantee it. Sold by O. P. Smith & Co., druggists. u. i'. oiniin cc uo. are making a spec ialty of Christmas and fine New Years cards this season. HOW CAN PARENTS allow their children to cough and strain and cough and calmly say: "Oh! it is only a little cold." and keep giving 'hem cheap and dangerous medicines, until they are tlown with lung fever or con sumption, when they can be so easily re lieved by REGGS' CHERRY COUGH SYRUP It has no superior, and few equals. For sale by O. P. Smith & Co., druggists. If yon want a good clock, go to II. M. Gault. He has a large assortment to pick from at prices that can't help but sell them. Men's Overcoats at Elson's, the One Price Clothier f 1.90. Gold and silver watches enough to supply the country at II. M. Gault's, cheap and warranted to give satisfaction. WHAT ON EARTH Is the reason people will not, can not, or do not sec any difference in cheap nos trums put up by Cheap John houses or irresponsible parties at enormous profits, rather than take a .medicine of world wide reputuation and one that is giving universal satisfaction at eoual once? No medicine in the world is giving such un- oaralh'Ied satisfaction for nnri f vinr tlii blood as BEGG'S BLOOD PURIFIER & I ' " I - J BLOOD MAKER, aud ever bottle that does not do its work will cost you noth ing. For sale by O. P. Smith & Co., druggists. Dont go to Omaha when you want to get your beautiful parlor and bed room sets but go to Henry Boeck's fur niture emporium where you can get every thing in the furniture line that will go to make your home beautiful and comfort able; and above all you can get it cheap. Remember that he who sells most can sell cheapest. Notable Improvement In Switching. The interlocking of switches and sig nals (the arrangement in a frame of the levers moving the switches and thoge moving signals in such & way that the sjgnal which tells the engineer to come on cannot be given until the switch is actually in proper position) is one of the notable improvements or tne last twenty years and is a great boon to F.wuchmeD as well as to passengers and the owners of railroads. By the aid of this apparatus and its distant signals competed by wire ropes, the switchman's anxieties are reduced immeasurably. By concentrating the levers of a number of switches in a sin gle room one man can do the work of several, and to the lookeron the twrplexi- ties of tho position seem to have been Increased instead of dimin ished. But the switcliman's task now s of a different sort- Under the old plan he was constantly on guard lest he make a mistake and derail an engine or car. Under the new his calculations are cliiefly about saving time and facilitat ing the work of the trainmen. Ques tions of danger do not come up, being provided against by the perfection cf the machinery. By long familiarity with the ground and the ways of handling the trains, the switch tender in an "inter locking tower" is enabled to safely t pn ducta score pf trains through "a" Jaby rinth of switches in the time that the novice would be occupied in making the first move for a single train. B. B. Adams, Jr., in Scribner's Magazine. Diseases of Man and Horse. There are various diseases which affect horses more severely than mankind, and vice versa. For instance, inflammation of the bowela Js not a disease pf a" hope less character in th'e'human being, wlule it is invariably fatal in the horse. If a horse said to be suffering from this dis ease recovers you may safely make up your minu tnat he diagnosis was wrong and that the animal had acute Indiges tion, Impaction of tho. bowels, or some trouble not or an inflammatory nature. In some lung troubles the reverse holds good. Horses suffer a great deal from bronchitis and pneumonia, but the death rate from these affections, is nothing Jik as high as in the human subject. This is probably because the use pf stimulants enters so largely into the treatment of these troubles, and that a man's svstem does not respond as. quickly to alcohol as the system pf ho water prinking horse. There is much to be learned from a glance pver comparative pathology, though very few physicians know any- thing pf disease except as It is exhibited in the human race. Dr. H. F. James in eloberpemocrat. I A LIF LESSON. There' littler"'!: don't cry They huve lrokcn younloll. I linv; Ai:d J'onr l.-on-t l.lue, v Ami your pLuyhouse, too. Are things of the long hj;o; IUit ehilili.- h trouMttt wiil won jiuhs ly. There I little K'rl: don'tcry! There: little pirl; donHcry! They huve broken j our blute. 1 kn-jw; And tljegluil, wild ways Of your school; 'il l days Are things of the lonjr it'O; Uut lite r.i:d love will boon tome by. There: little girl; don't cry I "There: little girl; don't cry! They huve broken your heart, I Lnow. Au'l the rainbow fleams Of your youthful dreams Aro things of the lonao; But heaven holds all for which you slh. There! liitlo girl; don'tcry!" J. Whitcomb Riley. The Man of Many 1'uskch. Life with the general passenger agent of a railroad is ono continued round of pleasure. Ho i.-i about the only otlicial connected with tho management of a railroad who can travel around tho coun try without money and without price. His fat iocl:ctbcuk obtain.-, tho muyical open sesame to all lines of road in tho country, and ho also possesses the iiotent pasteboard which gives to him the privi leges of the Bleeping cars and tho dining cars. When tho general freight agent travels ho has his annual railroad ja!;sest but ho is obliged to produce to tho repre sentatives of tho sleeping car companies and pay the usual tariff for bis meals in tho dining cars. A general passenger agent can btart .for New York with only las collection of annuals and the price of two cocktails and return homo with th? entire outiit, as some ono will certainly turn up to purciiase M3 cocktails lor him. To paraphrase the old time chest nut, the e-eneral passenger agent could go around the world with a pajer collar and a 2 bill and change only the collar. t-lucago llerald. Silk Thrcadn in Bank Notes. The paper on which bank notes are printed is called "distinctive paper," be ing used exclusively by the government for tho printing of bonds and current notes, ine mills where it is manufac tured are at Glen Falls, West Chester county, Perm. An agent of the treasury department receives the paper uirect from tho hands of tho mamif acturer. and every precaution is observed in order to prevent any loss, bhort scraps of red silk are mixed with the liquid pulp in an engine. Tho finished material is conducted to a wire cloth without nassimr through anv screens, which rniglit retain the bilken threads. An arrangement above the wire cloth scatters a shower of fine scraps of oluo silk thread, which falls upon the paper wliile it is being formed. The side I paper -on which the blue sUk isdenosited is used lul ",0 .""S Yl wo nueuus are so deeply imbedded as to remain pcrma nently fixed. Each sheet is registered as soon as it is made. Rehoboth Sunday iieraiu. A Uouso liuilt of Paper. There is a paper house in Atlanta. No wood, brick, iron or other material is used about the building. At 108 Decatur street a neat little store, painted Kky blue, has attracted considerable atten tion recently. Tho gaudy color is not the cause pf the littlo building being tho object of so much attention, but the ma terial of wliich it is constructed makes it a novelty. It is made entirely of parer. The store was built by a Frenchman named Smith (spelled, of course, in a r rencli way), who is agent for the paper of which it is constructed. The rafters, the weatherboarding, tho roof aiid the flooring are all made ot tluck, compressed paper lioards, impervious to water and as durable as wood. T.he house cannot catch on lire as easily as a wooden build ing, because the surface of the paper is smooth and hard. The building is used as a store by Neal Kelly, who says he nncis it warm la cooi weatner ana com fortable when the weather is warm. At lanta (Ga.) Journal. Secret of a Good Memory. In memorizing, the unknown should lie associated with the best known, ac cording as tt may resemble it, or frtand m contra: to it, or can bo associated with it br contiguity pf time or place, so tht when we may again think of the familiar it will recall the unfamiliar. Ira.; m really the wuole secret of a good ineiucry. .hen one clearly ncu hrmly uiakc5 tho cc;iiieet:oii between the old and tho new l-i tluj manner, he may rotit assured I. tat when one is thought of it will Ku;-jebt the other. Systems of what Li called "natural memory," sim ply teach Low to make these associa tions, cr "correlations," and insist that tlsey he made '.:ily until the memory lias been lucrou.'.iily tueiigthCTitU'-J. C. Moilett in The V'yifpr, Hull riIitinj in Spain. Although there have been reports that bull iightm;' i.i JJtiaia showed a tendency of tloclhuiig. the iacls arc that more new rings have been built and more plazas repaired during tho last twelve, years t;ia:i i.i the preceding tweutv. Beats bring higher ?,i ices than formerly. Ihe pay cf the c nadas has risen, l'vascuello and Lagarlijo get $1,15 for each per formance. Out of thia they pay toeii two picadores. three bandilicma and a puntillero. t'io man who kilia the bull with a dagger in cso he refuses to rise and face the cspada. New York Sun. To Start a Coat I'ann. A Brooklyn man intends to start a goat farm, wliich he thinks will bring him $10.b0 per day. tie will tock t with seventy-live goate, '$md as, Jthe ordi nary goat vill give three pints of milk a day, lio calculates upon, pinety quarts per qay at i-eivs to Ulteen, cents a quart. -Chicago, llerai4i f he United States fa said to bo the eost fully represented among tho tour 3 through the oldest land where civil ition has trod, which is Egypt. A womrn i.T Vptw TVwlr moVoa m living preparing calf a foot ielly for the wt 3 Only One-Price In Plattesirouth, is very sorry MONKEY To get win 1 Would advise Mr. Monkey menagerie and charge admission, nun mmi com t ii sin ess. petitor much hotter JT O Competitors are mad heeause he mad because he has destroyed selling Honest Goods at Honest Trade is getting larger every day, destroy it by misrepresentation, or MAD peojuo won c nc misled any longer, tor they know J OK is sellin goods at an Honest Profit And at One RE JOE U selling hotter goods for 1 ess m I'lattsmonth. fflAElPT 9 To guess on JOE'S Deans. It costs "monkeying" business, either. The Clothing Hustler, Solomon & Nathan's Old Stand. XTobraslsa'3 Xoading Newspaper, Qhaha Republican DAILY H3c Fer Month. KI1ITIOX. WIO.OO Per ear. WEEKLY KIHTJOX, To January Imt, 1HUO, Sl.OO. This relUWe an.1 furlm ir..-.. .i ii;. i..,iJ leiiKeJ the almiratiiu t'i tfie country in the cai!i!;ii.nu Just elvt. It was the ri.iS!'uta tive ISepuUiicstn daily of Nebraska, xu 1 is one ol the leading newspapers of the country. In the future as iu the ijist he li h u'i.k an' will c 'lititiue to excel In everything. It prints a i.i. the news. It is bilglit. cJeau. enn;'ellc and l-ewiiy. I hk UKfiisncA.v anneals to lis frieHds In every voting ir-.-inct to nive their personal as isiance In extending Its circulation. Snd for sample cop es. .Mail LUt ot ii imef. Kaife IT IS THE PEOPLE'S PAPER. Th ! WKKKI.Y R Villi ICAX inafei iallv fm- rove-l fr -published every Tlntis'lav. contains all th-. news of the week lit a con lensfd foin. It is the ba-t and cheapest vetkly newspaper p :ldished an) where. , CST-AU yea-Ittane !iou'il be addressed to T11K OMAHA KEKUBLICAN C .. Oniah i. Nebraka. J.H.E3IM0IVS, M. 1). H-)VU:oiMTiliC Physician Surgeon Oflice o'ver We'CottV store. S'ain street. Kefidenee in ir Seh'ldknecht's i.ioierlv Chronic DiHUP tl':d Dise.es of Women aud Children a specialty. Office houri. 9 to 11 a. in. 2 to 5 and T to 9 p in. If yiu want anything in the jewelry line, ro to II. M. Guult He will sell you good goods at low prices and guarantee them as represcrttiwi. The finest bedr''m s?U can le found at II. Boeck's. Smith & Co. will give aw.iy a fine louse and lot in Vallery place during the next sixty days. Each person Inlying f of goods during that time is enti led to a chance on the house and lot. Elson the One Price is selling Chinrhil- as Overcoats, Beaver Collars and Cuffs, at $15.00. Everything necewmry for furnishing a house can be purchased at II. Hoeck's. Gold and' silver spectacle at IL II. Gault's GDIS Clilli isslcr his .Jar of J Jeans caused one ol his COMPETITORS JOE is s .n-y lor lli, n-.'iglili.ir.-i of this in.i.l, windy Competitor. I Competitor to sell out ami start a for JOK has no tlouht it would pay than continuing in the Clothing IES' & has destroyed High Prices. They are a Usurer's L'n. lit. JDK believes in Low Prices. and his mad competitors cannot by ee colled reduction o rices. The Price Only. RflBE money than ever heard of hofore FORGE you nothing t and no HUSiMlSS DJKECTOItY. ATTOHNKY. S. V. TIW'MAS. Attoriiy-at-L:iw anil Notary I'lilillr. i nznnald IJlock. riatibmou'tlj. Je-t. Oflice In A TIO li M Y. f. A- N". Bf'M-IVAN, re.ya.'", aw1' .Wl" ,?iv, Pr,"Pt atfentloo to all buHines IntniKted to him. onue In l.iiion Itlock. Kast side. I'lattsiuouth. Neb. TJAKUKIJ-SHOP AM' HATH 1SOOM. tf Ko. MOKI.KY. Hot Co, Ua hs at :,U hours. Ladles An. etiiirlren's JIair'utliiig a upeciulty. Cr. &tli and Main, under CarruOiV. niCXTIST. ' ri, . . r,'J- A. T. WITH Kits. The laii.lrss OcnO-ls." Teell, exlracle.l ollhoutlhe least pain or harm. Artificial teeth inserted immediately after extracting na.ur;,! olien when deBired. i,ii ami oMicr KlllilliiS, ftnctlj first cl;i.-s. Ollice In I'nion Islock. n.i:ocEi.JKs V CHK IS WOHI.KAKTII. -Kipitr aiiu r aney lirCiT'e.s C'rockeiy. Flour and l-'eed. oi.iMsw;irj and C. F. SMITH, The Boss Tailor Main St., Over Merles' Shoe tfoie. Has the l-tt and ruot-t coir (h tr rfock of samples, both foreign nr,d th n.efctic woolens that ever came west of MiVmurl river. Note these print : UusinepH Miit from to f:J5, drif-s suits, f25 to 45, pants $4, $..r0 and upwuids. t5"Will guaranteed a fit. Prices Defy Compelition. K. 15. WlNI.JlAM. JollX A. DAVIFS. Xotary- TuMIc. Notary Public. WIMHIAJIA IIAYIKM, .ttornoys - at - Law. Office over Uai.k of.Ca C unty. PLATTSMOUTH. - . KkEHAPKA C3-. 13. KEMPSTER, Practical Pfeno m Dran Tuner AND BF.PAIR1T.. First-class work guaranty d. Also deal er in Pianos and Organs. Oflire at Hor-ck's furniture store. PlattMnoulh, Nebraska. B.A. M. TlmeTable. OOlVfl WW. ;nlMi piast. No. l.5:lo a in. No, 2 -4 AT p. m. Ni.3.--6 :Wp.m. No. 4. 10 ::iO a. . No. fi :47 a. m. No.'6 7 :I3 K m. l "l 2 " ,n- No. .10. b m a. m. o.K 6 :17 p. in. No. 116 ;27 a. in. All train run daily hy w'avof rfnalia. exrept Nos 7 and R which tmu to and from Seamier dally except Sunday. Nn. m Is at uh to Pacific Junction at So in No. lit la a stub from Pacifle Juuctiou at ua w.