RHINEGOLD. Aanratli tho mynlic winding stream The KhiiiciiiaiiU warded well the (old; And. Iik? dim voicm in a dream. Their Hung a thrilling legeud told. "n who mold a ring from thU Khali rule lh9 earth acid air above; Mut first he niuM renounce I ho dUmm And wondrous Joy of womu'i lore." So ran tho old delunlre lay That aet man's heart and brain at strife; Bat Love proclaimed a letter way. For be is lord of human life. first win the woman's priceless grace. Then weld the riiiR of virgin gold; Upon her hand the circlet place; Then love in xiwcr. and both you hold. W. J. llendenwin in New York Times. A GHOST STORY. "All gheme hiories may Ihj explained," Mtitl Mrs. Marchmont, (smiling rather icornf ully. and addressing a large circle f friends and neighbors who, one Christ man evening, were seated round her hos pitable hearth. "Ah! you think so? Pardon me if I sannot agree with you," said Mr. Hen oiker, a well known Dublin barrister, of burly frame and jovial countenance, famed for his wit and flow of anecdote. The ladies of the party uttered excla mations in various keys, while the men looked attentive and interested. All ihat Mr. Henniker pleased to say was wont to command attention, in Dublin it least. "So you think all ghost stories may be jxplained? What would Mrs. March mont say to our old woman in the black bonnet, Angela?" And the barrister turned to his quiet little wife, who rare ly opened her lips. She was eager enough now. "I wish I could quite forget that old woman, John, dear." she said with a shiver. s- "Won't you tell us, dear Mrs. Hen niker? Please please do!" cried the ladies in chorus. the wife, shrinking into herself as it were. No one knew how it happened that the conversation had turned ujon mesmer- ism, spiritualism and other themes trenching upon the supernatural. Per haps tho season, suggesting old fashioned tales, had something to do with it; or maybe the whistling wind, mingling with the pattering of hail and rattle of cab wheels, led the mind to brood over uncanny legends. Anyhow, all the com pany spoke of ghosts: some to mock, others to speculate; and here was the witty lawyer prepared to tell a grave - tale of his own experience. His jovial face grew stern. Like the Ancient Mariner, he addressed himself to one in company, but all were silent and attentive. "You say all ghost stories may be ex plained, Mrs. Marchmont. So would 1 have said a year ago; but since we last met at your hospitable fireside my wife and I have gone through a very astonish ing experience. We 'can a tale unfold.' No man was better inclined to laugh at ghost stories than L "Well, to begin my true tale. We wished for a complete change of scene last February, and Angela thought she would like to reside in the same county as her sisters and cousins and aunts" "Dorsetshire, I believe, Mrs. Ilenni ker," interrupted the lady of the house. Angela nodded. "I intended to take a house for my family, leave them comfortably settled in it, and run backward and forward le tween Dorsetshire and Dublin. Well, it so happened that I did leave them for a single day during the three months of my tenancy of tho Hall. I had seen a wonderful advertisement of a spacious dwelling house, with offices, gardens, pleasure grounds to be hal for fifty pounds per annum. I went to the agent to make inquiries. " 'Is this flourishing advertisement correct? asked L " 'Perfectly.' " 'What! so many advantages are to be had for fifty pounds a 3-ear?' " 'Most certainly. I advise you to go and see for yourself.' "I took the agent's advice, and Angela was enchanted with the description I was able to give her on my return. A charming little park, beautifully planted with rare shrubs and trees a bowery, secluded epot. so shut in by noble elms as to aaem remote from the world. The house such a mansion as in Ireland would be called manor house or castle large, lofty rooms, thoroughly furnished, every modern improvement. My wife, as surprised 03 myself that a place of the kind should be going for a mere song, begged me to see the agent again, and close with hiin. It wa3 done at once. I would have taken the hall for a year, but Mr. Harrold advised me not to do so. 'Take it by the quarter, or at least by the half year,' he recommended. "1 replied that it appeared such a de sirable bargain that I wished to take it by the year. His answer to this was a reiteration of his first advice. I can't tell you how he influenced me, for he really said no more than I tell you; but I yielded to his evident wish without knowing why I did so, and I closed with him for six months, not a year. -Glamor, Mr. Henniker'" "It would seem so. Mrs. Marchmont. We went to the hull, and Angela was de lighted with it. The snowdrops lay in snowy masses about the grounds the warden gave promise of beauty as the season advanced. How the children ran over the house! how charmed we were with every nook and corner of it! Our own bedroom was a comfortable, large room, opening into a very roomy dress ing room, in which my wife placed two cribs for our youngest boys. Hal and Jack" - "Don't forget to say that our bed chamber opened from a sitting room." interrupted Mrs. Henniker. "Well, for three weeks we all slept the sleep of the just in our really splendid suite of apartments. Not a grumble from our servants nothing but satisfac tion with our rare bargain. I was on the point of returning to dear, dirty Dublin ftnn ina rum wu.ip, , "When? We are all attention, Henniker." Mr. "Angela and 1 were sitting in the draw ing room under the bed chamber I have tlescrilwd. when a loud cry startled us Mother, mother, mother!' "The little boys were in bed in the dressing room. Angela dropped her tea cup and dashed out of the room, forget ting that there was no light in the rooms above us. "I caught up a candle and followed her quickly. We found the children sobbing wildly. Jack's arms were almost strang ling his mother, while he cried in great excitement, 'Oh. the old woman in the black bonnet! The old woman in the black bonnet! Oh oh oh!" "1 thought a little fatherly correction would be beneficial, but Angela would not suffer we to interfere. She tried to soothe the little beggars, and in a few minutes they were coherent enough in their story. A frightful old woman, wearing a black bonnet, had been in the room. She came close to them and bent over their cribs, with her dreadful face near to theirs. " 'How did you see her?" we asked. 'There was no candle here." "She had light about her, they said; at any rate, they saw her quite well. An exhaustive search was made. No trace of a human being was to be found. I re frained from speaking to the other chil dren, who slept in an upper story, though I softly entered their rooms and exam ined presses and wardrobes and peeped behind dark corners, laughing in my sleeve all the while. Of course we both believed that Hal had been frightened by a dream, and that his little brother had roared from sympathy. Don't breathe a word of this to the servants, whispered Mrs. Henniker. " 'I'm not 6uch a fool, my dear,' I re plied. 'But pray search the lower re gions, and see if Jane and Nancy have any visitor in the kitchen,' she continued. 'She came through your door, mother, from the sitting room,' sobbed Hal, with eyes starting out of his head. " 'Who, love?' asked his mother. " 'The old woman in the black bonnet. Oh, don't go away, mother.' "So Angela had to spend the remainder of the evening between the children's cribs. " 'What can we do tomorrow even ing? asked she. 'I have it! Lucy shall be put to bed beside Jack.' Lucy was our youngest, aged two. "All went well next night. There was no alarm to summon us from our papers and novels, and we went to bed at 11, Angela remarking that the three cherubs were sleeping beautifullj-, and that it had been a good move to let Lucy bear the other two company. I was roused out of a sound sleep by wild shrieks from the three children. " 'What! More bad dreams? This sort of thing must be put a 6top to, I said, and I confess I was very angry with the young rascals. My wife was fumbling for the matchbox. 'Hush! she whisper ed, 'there is somebody in the room. And 1, too, at that instant felt the presence of some creature besides ourselves and the children. The candle lighted, we again reconnoitered nothing to be seen in dressing room, bedroom or the drawing room beyond, the door of which was shut. But the curious sense of a pres- f enee near us stronger than any feeling of the kind I had ever previously expe rienced was gone. You have all felt the presence of another person unseen. You may be writing you have not heard the door open, but though your back is toward the visitor, j-ou know somehow that he has entered. "Quite true, Mr. Henniker but there is nothing unnatural or unpleasant in that sensation." "Nothing, of course; I merely instance it to give you some idea of what we felt on that occasion. We were astonished to find the sitting room untenanted. Meanwhile poor Hal, Jack and Lucy shrieked in chorus, 'Oh. the old woman in the black bonnet! Ob, take her away!' 'Poor Angela, trembling, hung oTer the cribs trying to soothe the children. It was a good while before they could tell what had happened. 'She came again,' said Hal, 'and she came close, close to me. and she put her cold face down near my cheek till she touched me. and 1 don't like her oh. I don't like her, mother!' " 'Did she go to Jack and Lucy too? 'Yes. yes; and she made them cry as welL' " 'Why do you not like her? Is it the black bonnet? You dreamed of a black bonnet last night, you know.' said I, half puzzled, half provoked. " 'She's so frightful, cried Hal. 'How could you see her? There was no candle.' "This question perplexed the little boys. I hey persisted tnat sne bad a light about her somewhere. I need hard ly say that there was no comfort for us the rest of the night. 'If any one is try ing to frighten us out of the place I'll b even with him yet, said L My wife be lieved that a trick had been played upon the children, and she was most indig nant. "Next day the cribs were removed to the upper story, and Charlotte and Jo anna, our daughters of twelve and four teen, were put to sleep in the dressing room. We predicted an end to the an noyance we had been suffering. The nurse was a quick tempered woman, who would not stand any nonsense, and Hal's bad dreams would be sternly driven away. We settled ourselves to our com fortable light reading by the drawing room fire. Suddenly there was a com motion overhead; an outcry surprised more than terrified it sounded to us. Angela laid her book down quickly and listened with all her ears. Fast flying footsteps were heard above: the clapping of a door; then scurry, scurry the pat ter of bare feet down the staircase. We hurried across the hall, and saw Char lotte in her nightgown returning slowly up the kitchen stairs with a puzzled ex pression on her honest face. " 'What on earth are you doinjr. child" cried Angela. " I was giving chase to a hideous old woman in a black bonnet, who chose to intrude upon us, panted Charlotte. '1 saw her in our room; 1 jumped out of bed and pursued. her through your room and the sitting room. Then I saw her before me going downstairs, and I ran after her, but the door at the foot of the kitchen staircase was shut. She cer tainly could not have had time to open it, and I don't know where she can have gone to. "This was Charlotte's explanation of her mad scurry downstairs. Her down right sensible face was puzzled and an ?ry. " 'So you see the little ones must have been tormented by that old wretch, who ever she is. They didu't dream it, father, as you thought. Wouldn't I like to pun ish her! " What a brave girl!" cried Mrs. March mont. "Brave? Oh, Charlotte's as bold as a lion! She went back to bed; and when we followed her, in a couple of hours, she was sleeping soundly. Bat I can't 6ay either of us slept so well. If a trick was being played upon us it was carried out in so clever a manner as to baffle me completely. I need not say that I made careful search of every cranny about the handsome house and offices: and if there was a secret passage or a door in the wall anywhere it escaped me. We had peace for a fortnight, and then the annoyance recommenced. "Angela's nerve was shaken at last, and she began to whisper, 'There are more things in heaven and earth. Ho ratio' " "John, you are making a story." in terrupted Mrs. Henniker. "It is every word true. I am coming to an end. Angela, in spite of her dis claimer, did believe in a ghost in a black bonnet Charlotte believed in her, but did not care about her ghostship. The nurse and cook and housemaid declared they were meeting the horrible appear ance constantly, and they were all three in a mortal funk. As to the children, they would not leave off clinging to their mother, and fretting and tremb ling when evening came. The milkman, the baker and the butcher all told the servants that we would not be long at the hall, for nobody ever remained more than a month or two. This was cheer ful and encouraging for me." "But you iiad never seen the charming old woman all this time?" "No; but I saw her in the broad day light. I had a good long look at her, and a more diabolical face I never saw no, not even in the dock. I was writing let ters in the study about 12 o'clock one morning, when I suddenly looked up. to see the appearance that had excited such a turmoil in" my family standing near the table. A frightful face a short set wo man dressed in black gown, shawl, bon net this was the impression I received. But she looked quite human quite ev eryday there was nothing ghostly in her I air only the evil face curdled one s blood. I stared at her, and then I took up a fold ed newspaper and tlirew it at her. My motive in so doing was to frighten her who had frightened my wife so m ;":rh Courtesy such a creature need not expect from me, being, as her villainous counte nance proved, one of the criminal class. The newspaper fell upon the floor, after apparently going through the figure, and there was a vacuum where it had been I was not much shaken, however, al though my theory of a human trick ster dressed like a woman seemed over turned." "Did you tell Mrs. Henniker what you had seen?" "Naturally I did. At this period we talked of nothing else. She saw the ap parition twice herself. Once she entered our dressing room and saw the figure bending over a sleeping child (it faded as she looked); another time she was with me in the drawing room, when she laid down her book and whispered, 'See, see, near the door!' There, sure enough, was the appearance that had visited me in the 6tudy in clear daylight. 1 did not make her out quite as distinctly now be cause our candles did not light tip that end of the long room, or my older eyes were not as good as Angela's." "What did Mrs. Henniker do? "She started up and ran to catch the old woman in the black bonnet." "And did she catch her?" "She caught a shiver nothing more! "After this 1 resolved to give up the hall at once, sacrificing four months' rent for the sake of my wife and chil dren, whose nerves would have soon be come shattered had we remained. I went to Mr. Harold and told him how disagreeable the place was to us. He was grave and very guarded in manner, confessing that no tenant stayed more than a couple of months at the hall that his client certainly made consider able in consequence that he had done his utmost to find out what was wrong with the house, but all in vain. Mr. J would not speak about it, and when strenuously urged to explain re plied emphatically, 'I shall never tell you the story of that house.' "We dismissed the servants with hand some presents at once on our return to Dublin, so desirous were we that the children should never be reminded of their terror. I think they have not heard the old woman in the black bonnet spoken of since we left the hall, and the younger ones have probably forgotten her. As to us, we can only say that the mystery is unexplained." Argosy. Whoa. A little Indian boy who attends school at Old town. Me., takes an intelligent in terest in his lessons and does not simply learn them by rote. The teacher had been giving instruc tion, in punctuation, and closed by say ing emphatically: "Now, when you come to a period yon must stop!" A little black eyed girl then got up to read, and went on in a reckless manner, paying no attention to the periods, whereupon the bright little Indian boy poked her in the side and called out lustily: "Whoa!" Youth's Companion. A Difficulty Overcome. Tommy Papa, they say Jordan is a hard road to travel, don't they? Papa Yes. "Jordan is a river, aki't it?" "Yes." "Then why don't they swim it." Texas Sifting County Court. The case of A. X. Sullivan vs. the City of Plattsmouth is on trial to day to a jury. Judging: from the testimony, Sullivan was having; things pretty much his own way. luge Chapman testified that it was worth ifTi.OOO to try the bond case in the district court, and that Judge Sullivan's services were worth $1,(XK'. Hvron Clark testified as to the nature of the employment and valued the services at froniUO to $1,000. Sullivan placed his services at 300 all along until a few days ago, when he amended his bill, asking for $1,000. . Jcse Koot will testify this after noon on behalf of the tax payers and will probably not value the ser vices so high- The case will doubt less occupy the most of the after noon. , , , Sullivan appears for himself and City Attorney C. S. Polk for the cor poration. Simon Mayer and wife, and Chas. Mayer and wife are in the city to day. For lame back, side or chest, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, i'rice cents. lor sale ly i. Co. and O. II. Snyder. G. Fricke & 3 Croup, whooping cough and bronchitis immediately relieved by Shiloh's Cure. The fragrant Heliotrope in bloom wonderfully cheap at Moore's Green House. dtf "The Fair" has only a few more velocipede's left, which are being closed out at cost. tf If you want and dolls J. P. Youngs is the place as he will close out his stock of dolls regardless of cost and quit handling that line of goods. This is "your chance 23c dolls for 10c. Marriage license issued to Mr. Harris G. Todd, and Miss Alice Brown both of Murray. I am now prepared to deliver ice to any part of the city. Telephone 72. tf II. C. McMakex. Dr. K. L. Sicrgens has returned and may be found hereafter at his office over Gering's drugstore. tf Cough syrup. Koch's Lymph is good in its place but no remedy has been put on the market and had such marvelous sales in so short a time as Ilaller's Sure Cure Cough Syrup. We guar antee it to cure any cough, cold, bronchitis or sore throat. For sale by all druggists. Rheumatism Cured in a Day. "Mystic Cure" for rheumatism and neuralgia radically cured in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. It re moves at once the cause and the di sease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. 75c. Sold by F, G. Fricke, Druggist, wt X -A w New Millinery Store. Mrs. C. M. Graves, dressmaking and millinery. New goods, new prices, latest styles. Store No. 110 South 3rd St. Plattsmouth, Neb. dim Pansies. Yes! Iii bloom, of the most gorgeous colors. They will con tinue to bloom all summer, too, and can be selected at Moore's Green House for from U) to 30 cents per dozen. tltf A restore, stricken, and give you a luxuriant growth of hair, to keep its color natural as in youth, and to remove dandruff, use only Hall's Hair chains, rings, crosses and hair work of all kinds to order. Mrs. A. Knee. tf 1720 Locust St Brown & Barrett have the largest and finest stock of wall paper and borders in Plattsmouth. wtf Will you suffer with Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint? Shiloh's Vit alizer is guaranteed to cure you. 2 Our Clubbing List. Globe-Democrat and Herald $2.25 Harper's Magazine " " 4.60 Harper's Edznr " " 4.8 Demorest's Magazine " 3.10 Omaha Bee " " 2.40 I oledo Blade " " 2.45 Lincoln Call " " 2.15 National Tribune " " 2.45 The Forum ' " 5.55 Inter Ocean ' ' 2.25 Lincoln Journal " " 2 30 The Home Magazine " " 1 85 SoBiiclseii - scMri The Washingtton Avenue GROCERS -AD- Provision Merchants. Headquarters for FLOUR AND FEED, We pay no rent and sell for CASH. You don't'pay any bills for dead beats when you buy of this firm. The best SOFT COAL always or, Hand. DONT IF OR GET AT THE Opposite Ilichey Bros Lumber office Time Table OOINO WEST No 1 3 :30 a. m GOING EAST No 2... " 4... " 8.... " 10.. " 12... " 20.. 5 :03 p. TO. .10:30 a, m 7 ;44 p. m. .... 9 :45 a. m. 10 :14 a. m- 8 :30 a. ni. " 3.... " 5.... 7 " 9 ' n.. " 19... ....5 :45 p. m 9 :25 a. in. . . . 1 ;15 a. m. 6 :25 p.m. ....5 :25 p. m. 11 :05 a. m. THE LEADING GROCERS HAVE THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK IN THE CITY. EYEPJTM5 - FREEH - AND - IN - SEASON ATTENTION FARMERS u e want your Poultry, KggS, Hut? ter and vour farm nr,t.7.Z 't v , " J' wv wvv, vii ill! kinds, we will pay you the highest ,Ve as we are buying for a firn in Lincoln. " d R. PETERSEN, THE LEADING GROCERS Plattsmouth Nebraska. The Oitizens BANK fEATTSMOCTH NEBRASKA Oayital stock paid In AuthoruedCapUaiiVlooVoor orricKns - DIUKCTOllK frauk Carruth J. A. Connor. K it nnth W. D. Mernain. Wm. Wetencamp. W H. Canting. " TRANSACTS! GENERAL BANKING BUSlftfo: agues aureuea. ' ,j