-iY, AlvIUt 17, 18S0. t ulh Daily Herald. m IsT OTTO BRCB., Publishers & Proprietors. THE PI.ATTSMOUTII HERALD mbllshed every evenlnj? except Sunday ekly every Thursday morning. Ilt'iils- tered At the nostofllce. Plattniiiout li. Nebr.. hs ecoud-clasM mutter. Of Nee corner of Vine and Klltli streets. Telephone No. 38. I pu and Wi tirms ron iAii.v. One copy one year In advance, by mall-. ..36 00 One copy per mouth, by ran ler 60 One copy per week, by carrier 13 TIIHS FOB WEIKLY. ene oopy one year. In advance so no copy six montns. In advance 75 "I am deroting all mj time now to pious utea," Allen G. Thurman tells a re porter sf "The HarrUburg Call." Thus does the grand old Roman announce that he has withdrawn from the democratic party. 4,Cbjohal" Tanner, the new pen sion commissioner, seems to Leas ardent ly hatad by the democrats just now as he was hated by the same party when he carried a musket in the union army from 1301 to 1SG5. He surrived democratic bullets then, although hit by them sev eral times, an I he will survive democratic abuse now. The interest bearing debt of the United States is now reduced to $915, 000,000. Twenty-four years ago, at the highest point it was $2,331,000,000. The reduction of five-eighths of the principal in a quarter of a century, and of the rate of interest to about one-half of that originally paid, places the United Stttes far ahead of any other country in its willingness and ability to pay its just debts. Congress very generously appropriated five hundred thousand dollars for the support of the Samoan commission. The loss of the three American frigates, to gether with the coat of the naval expe dition! to the Sonth Sea islands, will, at least, foot up to another live hundred thousand. As vet. the return for this vast exponditurs has been nothing, and the prospects are that this investment of a million dollars, or more, is the poorest Uncle Sam has made for some time. Bee. ILAliD FOR EQAN. An enterprising free trade cotempor- ary commenting cn Patrick Egan's ap pointment as minister to Chili says: "3Ir. F?aa is credited to a South American republic whore the English have large interests, an 1 it would not be pleasant for the English representative in Santiago to ru-et Mr. Egan at a state dinner." The Irish World trusts that Mr. Egan's nerves will not fail him in that trying ennrgency any more than did those of that Irish-Sp:iniard, Leopard O'Donnell, when, as Prime Minister of Soain. he ranked with the nroudest in g f European diplomacy, or that other Irish - American, Andrew Jackson, when in 1815 he whipped the flower of the British army at New Orleans, or later, when as president of this reDublic. he ranked as M. t , equal with the soverigns of Europe. "We can easily pardon our cotemporary's ly hit as above qaated, believing it to be bnt crood-humored b&disa&re. but a later sentence in the same editorial jeems positively vicious. It reads thus: "Mr. Blaine was bound to show his appreciation of the Irish support which he has received in his several campaigns for the presidency, but he might have selected a more deserving man iuau Egan." If the able editor will sav how and where "a more deserving man than Egan" is to be found he will place us under most nrofound obligations. In every one of the many trying positions lie has filled he has never failed to be true to his trusts, which he has executed with singular success to his clients and honor to himself. He is now a (exem plary an American as he was t. model Irishman and no crreater praise can be given to any man. Irish World. A Ji.iN IS Till. KiiUil'.N. AND 1h O'l HlR C.i i I'm- I v. A "LI f T Y' KIND. 'Iri-M of the Mi ....;.! iiiten M :!. Y!m-kic Iv: Wrj rill Z If 44'!u..m: "Hetty," llciucvr. Cc-iiI.ii Hall In u Ciilnu S!o;. nimitn iicariiiv . Ufi'iist limy, i-v which is usur.ny meant a iK.il whii i!:-s lii.s HUM- into tin; U-t;iil .( Ikhim !..Ii! ;i uairs. 1;iII)!ch in tli work f i In ki'.rlii !i anl irritates tin lmti.se k'iU- by .'in: iLiiin;. regularly fir occasion illy, fuiictions which !it dei ins cxclu ..ivi io iHTSi-i:. i in ili.siii:c ot women lor this l.iiul of nu n is in l!i main well i-ou:iiicil. The aera-v in::n is, unfor lunuti ly. unabh to make himself ti.si-itil in hoaseliolvl wor!; without making iiii i.' ilf, :ilso, iiior; or kss a nuisance. A 'ie!;tiin of this kind has, however. many :! s. Til.: WOMEN AtlK P.ESPONsIM.E. ill.' woncii who are most jealous of tin ir :rer natives in the kitchen an not ilv.ay. ;o.-,ie:jscil of th lest capacity for i.i:.i'ii..!;ii!i them: and some of the most m rl'ect hoiiscLeepcrs the writer has ever known. ;sy iiiistrsss of the arts and systems that make up the various de partments of household management ind i'l.hiKtv, have been most indulgent iml iipprecialive of the efforts of hus- :,:!i!l. son or brother to help tiljout the louse, even encouraging original experi ment along the lines which have brought int' being the scornful epithet abovt (lot! .1. i:i ineir nouscnoms tno men were never spitefully ordered to "Let tilings alone." told to "Keep out of my way, or requested to "mind their own busi ness," because, in the firut place, the lousewife respected herself too much to use sach expressions or their equivalents. and l.-ccau.-x;, in the second place, the men had acquired such familiarity with the hia and outs of the kitchen that they were not likely to binder rather thai help when thev had occasion to turn their hand to this, that or tho other mat ter t f housework. This touches the secret of tho wholo matter, and a little thinking along this lino will suggest a query whether women are not, generally spoaklng, to blame for tho fact that the uverago man is a nuisance in the kitchen. A mother carefully taught her sons many details of work usually considered the sole province of girls and concerning which loya generally grow up in utter ignorance. They washed and wiped dishes, learned to prepare plain meals, had practice m sweeping and dusting and putting to rights, and were taught to patch end darn neatly and to sew on buttons, borne or them learned some thing of the "higher branches." When they went out into the world they had frequent occasion to bless the mother for these useful accomplishments: and when they liecame heads of households, they bad W intelligent practical knowi- edgi of thu details of tho work of which their wives had charge and wero able tc make the burden easy in many ways where another man would have made it heavier. THE RZALLY GOOD HUSBAND. i'o man worthy of the name permits his wife or any woman in his house to per.'orm the heavy drudgery of carrying coal and wood, caring for furnaces and stoves, movjng stoves or heavy furni ture, leating carpets, and s pn. But this t .eed not bo the limit of a man's uae fulnc: aliout the house. There is no reasonable reason why a man should not be al it to broil a steak, boil or bake po- Tb Coral Island, It has long been the opinion o f geolo gists that the curious atolls of th a Pacific and Indian oceans, the ..circular coral islands, inclosing a shallow basis of the sea, wero to bo explained as was first suggested by tho late Charles Darwin, through the long continued subsidence of tho sea floor on which tht y rested. The idea was that the coral first found foothold around the shores of a volcanic or other mountain jwak projecting above the sea. It was further supposed that the subsidence of the ocean floor gradu ally lowered the original is' and below the level of the sea, while tlm coral reef, growing steadfastly upward, remained after the mountain had disappeared to mark its original site. Alexander Agassiz and John Murray liave recently held to the doctrine that tho greater part of our atolls at least are not thus formed, and that the central cup of the atoll is not due to tho fact that it occupies the position of a subsid ing mountain, but that it is brought about by a process of solution by which the coral rocks are dissol ?ed away. Dr. II. B. Guppy, a competent ob server, has, during a recent sojourn on the Keeling atoll in tha Indian ocean, been enabled to confirm the opinions of Messrs. Murray and Agassiz. It there fore seems probable that wherever coral reefs attain the surface of the sea the circular basin will naturally be formed, and that if Mr. Darwin's explanation has any truth in it, it is to be accepted only in rare and, as yet, unascertained cases. Boston Herald. HUSBANDS, STAND UP! AMBER THINKS IT IS TIME SOME ONE TOOK YOU IN HAND. wp iio HAS THE LARGEST AND FINEST STOCK OF Tno Ways of Acting AVlicn Von Coma Home Tilings You Should Do uml Thone You Should Not Io Of Course TIiU Don't Mean You, but It Tour Neighbor. There is so much excellentadviee given to wives, suppose, for a change, wo turn around and read the husbands a nice little manual of correct behavior. It is FURNITURE, STOVES, TIITWAHE -AlITID HOUSEHOLD GOODS. high time some one took them in hand; but, although I have had my eye upon In the city, which he is oflerinir at Prices that will make tliein m?11. 4.1. . e i i i t i t i . . . - D A complete line of Window Curtains at a sacrifice. Picture Frames in great variety. You can get everything you need. You can buy it on the installment plan, pay so much each month and you will soon have a line tnrnislied house and hardly realize the cost. Call and see. 2X 2T, The Young Folks' Friend. A pleasant faced old gentleman, who looks as if he had forgotten as much as some people know alout editing news papers, comes over from the peaceful - shades of Newark now and then to ingle in the busy metropolitan whirl of which he was ence an important figure. He is Noah Brooks, long . time an editor of the Tribune, a conspicuous journalist in San Francisco during vigilante times and one of the most popu lar writers for children who wield quills today. Mr. Brooks is a tall, well built man; his white hair has thinned out on top, his eyes keep their light, and his short, white side whiskers and mustache give him a venerable appearance. He is well over sixty and carries his age "like a major. As editor of 1 he Newark Ad vertiser Mr. Brooks continues the active intellectual work widen has char acterized his life. He has given that journal one of tho oldest in the coun try, by the way a standing it was un likely to get otherwise. Besides, in St. Nicholas snd such periodicals, where one looks for the lighter touch and the finer fancies, his name is always welcome, not only to the editors, but to hundreds of the little ones who have learned to look forward with eagerness to his stories for cliildren. New York World. Never Heard of "Davy Crockett' Coon"? That, queer! Well, it whs like this: CoL Crockett was noted lor hu skill aa a marksinin. One day he leveled hia gun at a racoon in a tree, when the animal, knowinsr the Colonel Dftweii. cried at, "Hello, theru! Are yon Dvy Crock ett? If you are, I'll just coma down, for I know I m a gona coon. Jut taks a dose of Dr. Pierce'a Pleasant Purgative Pellets, and see how quickly your biliousness aaj indigestion will emulate the example of "Dvy Crockett's coon," and 'climb down." laJ are cpecifics for all derangements ef the Jiv- er, stomach and bowels. Spectacles at Gering A Co's. To restore, thicken, and give you" 3 luxuriant growth of hair, to keep its color natural as in youth, and to remove dandruff, use only Hairs Hair Renewcr. Fine Job Work Cheap at The Hebald Increase the appetite by the use of Ayer'a Cathartic Pills. They cause ile lomach, liver, and boweU to perform "eir functions properly, do not debilitate j excessive stimulation, and are not Irritating in their action. As an after linner Pill they are un equaled. tatoe1. cook an egg, make coffee pr tea ana prepare other articles of food should an emergency arise to make it desirable (and such emergencies do often arise), and do it too without turning the kjjc'.cn and dining room topsy turvy in the miiftfjon. Some men can and do accomplish sucii wbf and even make biact:.SiM. griddlo cakes and the likp. A woman whose husband is in the hil;t of "taking hold" when needed in hou-.vor!i has been heard to say that she would rather have him to depend on in case of indisposition or other emer gency than any girl that could be lured. He di es not interfere when there is no c.itioe for it. but he saves labor for his wif .nd expense for himself, and he is not at jilf shamed of doing it nor afrail to undertake U. No man need be: rather, any man should ix ashamed of tu: .viliingness and should regret in- abiui-.'to perform any ordinary house hold task on occasion. Sa;oii men have or profess a horror of all IsoixrKutk. lp is often grounded in laziness. Tuey will iro no iiicnt expense and trouble rather than turn their laoda to anything in the house, even to making a fire. The "Bettys" do not come from that -aa. Jypjther are they recruited from the husband. of ponipjon sense tact :.d judgment, who mow 'iiow fp do thinks and know when to do them and when to refrain. The genuine Betty" is a genuine meddler, whose real without knowledge, whose hclp- f nines:! is without discretion, and whoso otiiciit-if'y- and conceit neutralize what might be Usi-tui in hii make up. Wom ankind is excusable for ic-':-.:ip him iet i:er. However, uccepi tnese lines as a plea for withholding the opprobrious title from raen who do not deserve it, And fr a:i honest recognition of the right itvof ulness of a properly taught and 6emnllvuaj (a,r)ut the house, and even iu the ltcJicn.-rVvne of tUp "Jicn folks A f'l'M-k with Many Pace. Prof cu o." M. L. Iluey is now the .iizar.l of HdLon's old home, and ha ix-c:i tit:Lii::g with t M clocks for years a:;tli ;.; lus til:::t.!r.cd a contrivance -.vhrr.-by t-t;7 t-f I've l:::r.dntl rooms nay liv- the wrin,V J,'""1' 111 'viry UTaI-::.:f:,; l:v a nvst i:i of tUviiw fv.'.rti' ix,';ia; u-.l v. i:"i a dynamo Li.iicalor i:i r; will Water Tight Match Box Wanted. Bishop, who made a thousand mile voyage in a paper canoe, says that R. B. Forbes, of Boston, once gave liim a water tight pocket match box, that he lost jt, and was never able to find an other. Thousands of hunters, canoeists, and others have hunted and longed for a match box that would be water tiorht ono that would preserve its contents dry even though the owner was com pelled to take a swim with tho box in the pocket of his pants, and the pants on the swimmer. An upset in tho wilderness or on the coast, away from dwellings, often destroys every match a man has with him, and places him in a position of great danger, Though match boxes are made in in numerable styles, we have never been able to find one which was suitable for carrying matches in the pocket and would ftt the same time prptect tjiem from water. There are some diftioulties in the way of inventing such an article, because when carried in the pocket the air within the box is rarefied by the heat of tho body. When the box is plunged into cold water a partial vacuum ia formed, and this aids in forcing water through the jomtsr- bejenunc American. Napoleon. The duke said: "After the retreat of Bonaparte from "kejpsio, he never, in fact, had any hope of getting over his bad fortune. Mole, then minister of war, told me that shortly after Napoleon's re turn at that time to Paris he was playing at billiards with him when he became thoughtful and. laying down his cue, be gan talking tQ. lHm.? th? impossibility of ever reviving the spirit of the uatian guf ficiently to expel the northern powers. Had these reverses, he said, occurred in the first days of the republic, there would have been a freshness of spirit that might hay.e saved the game, but tliat 6pirit was ii'ow worn out and never could again be expected to revive". Yet, with this de pressing conviction upon his'm'in'd, he went through his wonderful campaign of Piiwiipjigne wit!) an nctfvity perhaps un pmaliebd in liis fqimef " liars," The duke's invariable comment on Napoleon was: "He was not a gentleman." Per- j de Eos in Murray's Magazine. them for a good while, I have been both ered to find a ripe opportunity. In the first place, to plunge right into the midst of things without further wait ing, how do you go home to your wifeat night? Chapters have been written as to how she ought to receive you; now let me say a word about the other side of the question. When you find a tired little woman who h;is been so hard at work all day with five babies and an in competent girl, callers, and miscellaneous jobs of mending, pastry making and pickling, that she has found no time to curl her hair and put on her best gown to meet you, what do you do? wmcu IS YOUR WAV? Do you, like a dear old sympathizing fellow, take her worn face into a warm embrace and whisper in her ear: "Never mind, dearie; I have got home, and we'll share the cares for the rest of the day. You go and rest j-ourself while I put Johnnie and Trot and baby to bed?" Do you see that she sits in the easiest chair while you skip around and minister to her wants? Do you keep silent while she reads the evening paper (to herself), and are you mindful of draughts and slam ming doors while she takes her ease in slipixred content? Do the stars dance me rtewport, ana uoc-s the moon sing psalm tunes? Just about as much as you do all this. V ou expect the hushed home, and the siesta with the paper, and tho slippers for yourself, to be sure, and if you don't get them you think you're ter ribly abused, and ten to one flounce off to the club to escape the noise and con fusion, but you never take it into your head to consider that the day has been just as long, and just as busy, and a thousand times more full of petty cares for her as for you. You bolt into the house, and the first thing you say is: "Why isn't 6upper ready? I'm as hungry as a hound!" "Great Scott! Can't you keep that child quiet?" or, "What's the use of burning so much coal? Turn off the damper! You are enough to ruin a Vanderbilt!" That's tho keynote of the song you sing, and yet you think it is dreadful if she ever makes a remark harsher than the bleat of a lamb. Suppose you had been a hansom cab driver, a board of trade man, cook in a restaurant, cash boy for a dry goods house, a kindergarten teacher and a hospital nurse all combined for the whole day long, wouldn't you be more tired, and wouldn't there be more excuse for your irritability than when you have simply attended to a single systematized branch of business. I. SIXTH STREET, BET. MAIN AND VINE PI.ATTFMOt.TII, M I. PLATTSMOUTH HERALD PBIUTTS ALL THE NEWS POLITICAL AND SOCIAL, TO It 15 CENTS P ER WEEK. DELIVERED BY CARRIERS TO ANY PAET.OF THE CITY OR SB NTT MAIL. mTbscriTbe For It A woman is required to be everything Tu Daily and Wekklt IIbuald is the best Advertising Medium in Ciis coantv. Two Smart Maine Women. Two spinster sisters up in Maine who run jx eitfj-fiye acrp farm, are credited with being the smartest women' in 'the state. One of them chops every winter the year's supply of fire wood, going into the woods early in the season and re maining until the work is completed. She works in the hayfield in summer and digs from seventy to one hundred bush- f is pf pcjjatQee yearly and puts them in the ppjlaj:. 'j'he pt Her" sister : is 'the car; penter of tho family and lias added glj manner of Improvements to tho farm. -Pittsburg Dispatch. ru:i l The p; so t i. 1. '. j:i ro::i:f the i.ii-. i- l! : :i:'j:i hi f-l cjri. ..;. ; 1.- i: c ;::i i . .:. :.. fo -1 lUi. i !.i,;c.t i'.-i'i T:-id. A white tongue is said to denote a febrile disturbance; a brown, moist tongue, indigestion; a brown, dry tongue, dC'pfjj.'.n, blood poisoning, typhoid fever: a red. inoisi tongue, jnfiainmatory fever; 'a' red.' glazed' "tongue, general fever, loss of digestion;" :a 'tremuloii-f! moist and flabby tongue, feebleness. from a reception committee to receive calls in the parlor, to a nurse in the nur sery, and a chief executive in the kitchen, while a business man devotes himself to a single trade or profession. co:;'t be afraid of "spooning. " And next, how do you entertain your wile evenings? Jf ypu, were invited into a neighbor's house to spend a couple of ho::rs with his wife and daughter, how would you entertain them, I wonder? Why, you would put a posy in your but tonhole, and slick up your hair, and blow a little perfume out of the atomiser all over yourself, Sfld throughout the even ing you would overflow with bright anecdotes and be so racy and charming tnat ai ter you had gone away everybody would say: "What a perfectly delightful man Mr. Perkins is! What good com pany!" Now let us see, sir, how you entertain your wife. You stand in front of he fire and pick your. te.etl a wooden toothpiPk until she starts to put the chil dren to bed, and every now and then you make a few cheerful remarks about the scarcity of money and the general cussedness of children who run through shoes and clothes so fast. When the time comes that all is still and every thing nicely adapted for a chat or a game, you draw out your miserable newspaper and begin to read. And you read that paper dj ypyrgelf, word for word, "and line for line, straight through from edi torial to market report, as if it contained the secret of youth, wealth and eternal salvation! In the same way one might drink soda water by the pailful, or con sume caramels by the ton! Newspapers, read by husbands in selfish solitude, are answerable, for. many wifely heartaches. Hqw naany good stories and racy anecdotes do you tell your wife to make her laugh? How many roses do you pin on your coat and how careful are you of your appearance ia the long evenings, when there is nobody by but her to be captivated by your charms and bewildered by your manly beauty? There is just exactly as much excuse for her (and a little more, it may be,) if her dress is slatternly and her hair untidy as the is fof j-wu. khd thel is precious little for either of you. You excuse your indifference and neglect and the withdrawal of fond and foolish attentions, just as dear to her . at forty as at twenty, with the thought: "O, well, she knows I love her; what's the use of 'spooning at our age?" By and by there, will cornea, tiiua wTienTy on shall see Jut Jyjug in her coffin, perhaps, and you would sell your sou tha day to le able to shine away long years of cold neglect with the manifestation of the love that was always in your heart, cer tainly, but carefully kept on ice. Call it "spooning." if, you like, or any other name of contempt, but I tell you there is nothing so sad in all life's history as the vanished opportunity to manifest ft love for which some friend wcr.t hungiy througl. sloyy yy;ar pf undemonstrative and stupid reserve. Amber in Chicago Tribune. uecause it rescues tne lurgest number or people. Advertising rates made knowu on application. If you have property to rent or sell it will be to your interest to ad vertise in the IIkkalp. Advertise and be Convinced THE CITIZENS PL.ATTSMOUTH. - NEBRASKA. CAPITAL STOOK PAID IN, - $50,000 Authorized Capital, $lOOtOOO. Bn nk of Cass County Cor. Main and Fifth Sts., Flattsinouth. PAID UP CAPI1AI SJruw SURPLUS ri.OOO OFFICERS: C. H. Parmkle PrciMfnt Kkki (iOKUKR Vice I 're i.l frit J. M. Pattkhm.v CHMliter Jas. PATTKmox, jr. Asm'i Cashier di Ulcerous : C. II. Parmele. .1. M. Pa.ttpr.son. Vred :iri... WmUliani, IJ. H. Kainsejr, orriciRfl - JRANK CARKPTU. JOS. A. CONNOR, Pre.ii.lent. Vie-President W. U. OUSHINa. Caahier. miticTOKa Frank Carrutb J. A. Connor. K. K. GiithiPann J. W. Jotinaon. Henry Boeck, Jolin O'ICeefe, W. D. Mvrriam, Win. Wetencamp. W. H. Cushing. . H. Smith. K. B. Jas. Patterson jr. Transact a General Banking Burlnes Al who uare any Uankiug buxineM to transact ar invited to call. No matter h larife or aiuall tbe transaction, it will receive our careful attention, and we promise alwayi cour leoua treatment. Issues Certificates of Deposits bearing 1dW- Buy and sells Foreign Exchange. County and City securities. FIRST NATIONAL IF3.A.:fcTjK: l OF PLATTaMOUTH. NKBRA8KA, Offers tbe rery best facilities fertile prompt transaction of legitimate BANKING BUSINESS. XtocV. Bust;. Gold, GoTerument and Local Setfufttitt Bought and Sola, Deposits reced ed and interest allowed on time Certifl ates. Drafts drawn, available iu any -part of tbe United States aad all tbe principal towus of Eurooe. . A General Bailing Business Transacted Accounts Solicited. Interest nlloweil on tiin deposits, ami prompt -ttentua f'veu to all business entrusted to its care. Collections mads & promptly rtn.itUd Highest market prices paid ter Cuty War 8Ute U.4 QvMtfj Jkuidi. John Wtyteraid XXKRICCTQRS i , Wauh. PKaKtont. O. Tlaksworth. r. k. whit. 8. MASOH Caahitr. Notice to Contractors. Sealed bids will l rcc'.vei by tli Cliaii rnRk of the Hoard of Pnlli Work until noi u Hi. 17lli dav of Apr 1. imi. f ir filling tli- ot V ttvtks bed at the following i:i.-4 towit : Contract No. 1. 1.:; eu!. y,N m ir ie-s o Vine street btweeu 6tli aiifl 7tl rot. tra-t No 2 1.B-JS cuO. vd. itor vr on lrl St between Bth an.i Tth Su Contrary: No 3 8C8cub. vis. more or lewj K st f .Vh St 1. tween Mai a and I'exrl ts. !.uitr.iot n j vim cub. yds. hi.. re n? iss on e ist. side of 4rh' si between Main and P-.irl Ms. Two classes of bids will bo .-ey-.ived f,r ii. work : Ci;is ' " the Coiu.iii.ior to tuniisii earth from iriva rroiiud , :j.-s -n the coiitra-f..r to tak ,. tuu-tli from audi phifs in the nu.ic itret the riia.'riiian of tne Board of Public Work-, may dirv ct. Knplneer's Estimate Contract No. 1. Clw A 12'4 cts per cubic yard. Kncineer'a Kstimate Cintract Na. t Crass B 25 cts. per cub. yrd. Fnifiueer's Ks-ifi;tte Coutra V. S. CIa.su A. 12V4 cts per cub. yrd. bngineerV Kstimati. Contract o. 2 Class B 25 cent-s pr rub vixi ,n1inee,,a- l:s:i' Contract No. 3. Class A 12'4 t.. ix-. Mtb. yrd i Euii.eern Klimate ontract No. 3. C a-s $4cts. per cub. yrd. v' EtiBineer's Estimate Contract No 4 las a 124 eta per cub. rd " Afc ti?Vti,,COU r"t ..Oas. B lowest and best bidder. t vlit Is reserve J to reject any a-.d all H. l.r part m uUm In quire of the Chairs Board t-JZ ,,rhl 0301 tl.'m Board Public- Works. B. A, W Tlm Table. GOIVO WKST. No.i.-a in. No. . S :1 o. in. No. 5 8 :01 a. m. No. 7.-7 :05 p. in. No.. :C6 p. in. Ooiko hast. No. 2. I :44 p. in. 10 Ki a. ni. .No. . 7 :28 p. ip o. 8. 10 niOa. o. 10. 9 - ..." AU tralnn run daily by wavof f . j , Nos. 7 aud 8 which run t.. Mnrt r.Jl- i"-f xePr daily iwpt Sunday.