Ms BURUNOTOX fc UiSSOVRl KTTJtA turn V TIMKi TABLE.-y " ' r DAILY I'ASSIINCEK TWAINS COING EAST No. 2 6 : r I- sr. No. 4 lo :.u. u . No. b 7 l. w No. 10 a : 45 a. in No. 12 10 :M a. ir. Ho.'JO 8 JO, in GOING VEST ' Vol... 8 -AT, a. in i ..i.ft :ift p. in NuA 9 :0 " a. m Vo. I... !. in. n. 6 ?i p.m. No. U. ; ft Mi p. m. o,l 11 s05a. in. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWA Y TIME CARD. No. at4 AccmiXKlatl.nl Leaven.... Ko.3M arrives.... Trains dally except 'umiay .. .jo.-.v; a. hi. ... 4 ;0 p. in. ID n. A. SALSBURY : D-Ii-X-T-I-S-T : cold and J';k'c i:i.ain crowns. Dr. S;Huw:iys aiui-sl liclic for Hie painler1 ex tract 1" of teetll. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Rock wood Block risitlssnoiil !i. Neb. AWSON A PEARCE HAVE RECEIVEI Tlieir l'a'1 travs. lam v riMx iin. tip biso a lot ol new fadii" cone shape hats in Mraw aid fe t. Tliey li vest (nil hue ol baby li"il ami in or der l.i clcse i l'l stork out h:ve re duced Ih' li hlrw Hiiilt-r hat to-luand to "3 ce Is 1 rimmed, MISS SCIIUYIJ-K, TRIM MICK. Always has on band a full stock of FLO IT R AND FKKn, Corn, Hran, Shorts Oats and Haled Hay for sale as low as the lowest and delivered to any part of the city. CORNER SIXTH AN OVINE IMattsuioiith, - - Nebraska. J ULI U S 1' K I' IMC K 1 5 IC KG. M AMFACTUHK OK AND WHULE5ALE I1ND RETAIL DKALFlt IN TIIK CHOICEST BRANDS OF CIGARS FULL LINK OF TOBACCO AND SMOKEaS ARTICLES always in stock o Plattsmouth, - - Nebrassa Shorthand. .AND TYPKWR TING COLLEGE Plattsmouth, Nebraska. There are thousands of young ladies, sewing Oris, schoolteachers, cleiks, etc who ; re eking out rn existence on a salry barely sufficient to supply their every day wants. By completing a course in short hand and by finishing th-y can earn Irom SJO to $150 per mom h . situa'ions guTadteed to competent students Indidivual instruction, new typewriters. DAY AND EVENING SESSIONS. Kooms over Slayers Store. TVTEAT MARKET "J SIXTH STREET " F. II. ELLEXBAUM, Prop. The best of fresh meat always found in this market. Also fresh Kgg!& and Uutter. Wild fjame of all kinds kept iu their season. M SIXTH STREET SAT JL 1 1 1 2 T DENTISTRY GOLD AND PORCELAIN CROWNS Bridge work and fine gold work a SPECIALTY. DR. STEIN A C9 LOCAL as well as other an estheticsgiven lor the painless extraction of teetn. C. A. MARSHALL, - Fitzgerald ElocH Lumber Yard THE OLD RELIABLE. II. A. WaTEEHAH S P1NF LUMBER ! Shingles, Lath, Sash, Doors, Blinds Can supply everw demand of the city, Call and get terms. Fourth etreet in rear of opera house. .,,:..t .,;f r There Ih no moment when our dead lose po wen Unnignalcd, uuannoiliiced they visit u. Svbocalleth them I know not. Sorrow ful, They haunt reproachfully home venal hour In days of Joy, and when the wen-Id la near. And for a tuoiurut acutirge with luuraorios Tho monoy changers of tho teuiplo noul. In the dim tiHU'ii between two fiilfs of sleep. Or iu the btilJucsH of the lonely shore, Tbey rise for balm or torment, sweet or Bad, And most are mine whore. In the kindly woods, Itmdde childlike Joy of summer streams, . The ktately fcvreet nosa of the pine hath power To call tliedr kindred comforting anew. Use well thy dead. They come to auk of thee What thou hast done with all this buried love. The heed of urer life? Or has it fallen unused Iu stony ways ami brought thy life no gain? Wilt thou with gladncMi in another world Sny it Ima grown to fornix of duty dona And ruled thee with a conscience not thine own? Another worldl How shnl! wo lind our dead? Whut forceful law shall bring us face to face? Another world! What ycumiiigs there shall guide? Will love kouIs twinned of love bring near again? And that one common bond of duty held This living and that dead, when life was theirs? Or shall ho mo st rongcr soul, in life revered, bring both to touch, willi mil lire's certainty. As tlie pure crystal atoms of its kinds Draws into fellowship of loveliness? - S. Weir Mitchell. The Oreek IreHH for Women. It is not to he wniljrcd at that those women who rare for their beauty rather than l'r style in their attire should again and again revert to the idea of in troducing among Knglish ladies the graceful fashions of ancient i recce. The flowing draperies and cuuniny folds in which the robe of the Athenian lady was arranged funned the vry id-nl of a suitable attiro for women, if they studied only the art of making them selves appear chann.ng. That the Greek is really the onlv mode of attire suited to the fona feminine is Kufiieiently attested by the fact that no woman of taste wishing a life size statue of herself to bo made would think of arraying herself in any other fashion of clothing. How would the bodice, short or long in basque, according to the pre vailing style, the full straight skirt or the i'.ounced petticoat, the tight lacet waist and the peaked shoulders, apiieur when chiseled in marble or rendered in bronze. So far, however, the demand for classic ideals has been made in vain. The attempts to revive the beautiful fas'iions of the Greek women have been desultory and infrequent, and the few ladies who have tried the experiment have either leen soon tired by the extra trouble involved and anno3'ed by the no tice they excited, or they have not pos sessed sufficient social importance for their example to be largely followed. Lady. To Cateli Those Shamming Deafness. "That no man is proof against the love of money is evidenced by the ease with which a physician can expose a man who is feigning deafness," says Dr. Wal lace Smyth. "A man can pretend to be deficient in any one of the senses, and it is sometimes necessary to subject him to an electric shock to break down his self erected barrier. But if a man who is pretending to be deaf is approached from behind while standing on a stone floor or sidewalk and a coin is dropped so as to ring, he will invariably turn sharply around with a view to picking it up. "This simple device is frequently re sorted to in countries where conscrip tion is the rale and where deafness or any other infirmity relieves a man from army service. I saw it tried in Paris on six alleged youths, and, much to the ex amining phj-sicians amusement, it suc ceeded in exjiosing the sham every time." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. We Are Larger Than We Used lo Be. "It is a great mistake," says an archi tect, "to suppose that men are becoming smaller physically. When I was iu Eu rope, in Munich, we gave a grand ball and the city authorities decided to let the artists have the use of the media?val anuor stored in the museum there. There were only two suits of araior which could be worn by ns. These were the suits of giants of that time. The rest, which belonged to the ordinary sL:ed, strong mediieval soldiers, were too small for us. Would not this tend to show that we are larger than our ances tors were?" Detroit Free Press. Willing to Do Anything;. She No, I'm afraid 1 can't marry you. Snooks is such a horribly common name. He (eagerly) I'll get it changed! She But your hair is so dreadfully red. He (determinedly) Fll get it dyedl She And your eyes are decidedly green. He (frantically) TO go out and get 'em blacked! Exchange. Electric Garden Pump. Many of the country residences in Eng land are now supplied with electric light ing machinery, and consequently a great number of electrical adaptations are ren dered possible. Among these is an electric garden pump, which is said to do its work in a most efficient manner. It is only necessary to fix it up hy a pond or foun tain and attach a suction and delivery pipe, and the water is projected as de sired. New York Telegram. The Irrepressible Office Boy. "Is th'r boss in?" "Whose boss?" "Yourn." "I ain't got no boss. Ef ye mean the man what pays me tree dollars a week to answer fool questions, he's out, and won't be in agin till you're gonel" New York Truth. It is estimated that not far from 30,000 persons sleep in rented rooms in Boston lodging houses. Most of these are young men and women from . the country, a considerable proportion of whom are bravely struggling to live respectably on very small salaries. The Imperial university, at Tokio,' Japan, is probably the largest In the world, having an enrollment of 2,000 scholars tnd a faculty of forty members. It is under government control. A Woman's Statement. .. . .. ( They got into an. argument about the money made by people who earn their living on the stage. Of course they dif fered; jieople can't argue satisfactorily nnlctw they do differ. .Uut here is the opinion of a woman who was onco on the stage, who whs considered popular, who w,w clever enough in her work to get applause and prause. who presum ably earned more than the average .ac tress, and yet who is content with her present life: "When 1 take out the money paid for gowns which were useless except on the stage, when 1 make allowance for trav eling expenses, hotel bills, weeks in 'which few performers earn, anytlung; when 1 take into account engagements which could not for many reasons be satisfactory to me; when 1 foot up the salaries which sometimes in my. early work 1 never received, and when i. esti mate tho thousand and one little ex penses which were then necessary, 1 con sider that for several years of my life 1 earned practically nothing but a living and 1 worked very hard, you must un derstand. When 1 got married 1 left the sta;:e. Now it isn't necessary to tell you what my salary was or what my husband's salary now is. but his earn ings are less than mine were. But we two live much better on his smaller salary than 1 alone could live ?n my bigger salary. We have a pretty homo and all that we need to lie happy. We save a little money too. So I suppose this is a fair answer as to what one makes on the stage. There are a great many circumstances to be considered." New York Tribune. Ten Anxious Minutes. Captain Anderson rescued the crew of a Dutch schooner from a wild part of the i island of Formosa, after tiring upon some ! of the natives. His return is thus de- ' scribed in "A CYuise in an Opium Clq ! ier:" "Our way took us in single tile through a narrow pass, anil as 1 entered i it at the head of my men, for a second startling sight that met my gaze. "Tue pass was lined on lioth sides with ferocious looking natives amied with pole axes, s tears, huge knives and many other death dealing instruments. "Although 1 was taken Hat aback by the sight, some instinct earned me for ward sword m hand, looking to the right and left with a cool, staring eye. which seemed to curb the revengeful spirit of the natives. "On arriving at the other end of tho defile 1 stopped, tumed round, saw all the men safely through, and then told them in unmistakable English to make a clean pair of heels for the ship, while 1 brought up the rear at a sharp pace as soon as 1 had got a little way from the entrance of the pass, so that the natives might not see ns in too great a hurry. "How they let us through without touching a hair of our heads or once making a motion toward us passes my comprehension. " Letters That Never Came. They tell a funny story of a man who rented a box in the postoffice awhile ago. He appears to have been new to the business and failed to get the hang of the thing. After a month or so he called on one of the postoffice officials and be gan to kick about the box. "The blamed thing never had any mail in it." was his complaint. "I have looked in that box every day since I rented it and it hasn't had a thing in it the whole time. I even addressed a letter to myself and never heard from it." The two took a look at the box and the postoffice man inquired if the box renter had ever opened his box Why, no; of course not. Couldn't he see that there wasn't anything in it. Of course it turned out that he had forgotten the number of his box though it was on his receipt, and had been watching and swearing over an unrented one. He found a stock of mail in his box at last and went away feeling small enough to crowd inside of it. Buffalo Express. The Wooden Indian. I used to live in Spain, and after ward in the West Indies, before I came to the States. I met the wooden Indian long before 1 came to this country. 1 have been asked before where the wooden Indian got his start. 1 only know what I have heard about him in the Old World. There was an adventurer named Rutz who left his old city, Bar celona, and came to Virginia SOO years ago. When he returned he executed the wooden Indian in a rude way, as a type of the sort of animal he had met in the New World, and the figure was set up in front of a shop where wine was sold. Finally it became a sort of trade- J mark. There were smokers in those days and they assembled around the In dian. And the wooden Indian is now seen in front of nearly every cigar store. Interview in Chicago Tribune. Watted Until the Child Was Safe. An interesting little war story haa Governor Jones, of Alabama, for its hero. At the time Gordon was resisting sSherman's advance, Jones, then a staff captain, was delivering a message from his chief when he saw a little child, clad only in night clothes, hiding in terror behind a frame house in the direct range of the bullets from each anuy. Jones rode forward, took the child on his horse and galloped back with her to the Con federate line. When the Onion forces saw the act they ceased firing, and there was an impromptu cessation of hostili ties until the child had been carried to a point of safety. Charleston News and Courier Thieves Trust in Fortune Tellers. The thief has implicit reliance in the foreknowledge claimed by gypsies and other people, and he has been known to pay blackmail to professed exponents of the "black art" who threatened him with all manner of perils. Exchange. His Error. Husband Thank heaven I am not as other men they wno snonia oe inanKrau uetroii Free Press. vas ::-oj CARRIED MESSAGES. MESSENGER BOYS WHO HAVE AO QUIRED FAME AND WEALTH. Messrs. Carnegie, Oliver, Pltculrn, Ble-Carg-o ami Moreland Were Youngsters In Ptttsburs; Telegraph Office To gether II otr They Were Promoted. The story of five messenger boys be gins in the early days of telegraphy. In a dingy office in Pittsburg, about 1848. Andrew Carnegie. Henry W. Oliver, Kotiert Pitcairn. Major William C. More land and David McCargo were messen gers. It is said that they took the oppo site of other boys and stent their 6pare moments in learning useful lessons. An drew Carnegie is the oldest of the lot, and he was the smartest, leading all in learning how to telegraph. He was one of the first operators in the country to earn to take the Morse Bystem by sound, whic h in those days was considered a remarkable achievement. It did not take Thomas A. Scott long to snatch Mr. Camejcie from the telegraph oflice in Pittsburg into his ollice as private secretary when t he great railroad genius took charge of the Pittsburg end of the road The education the young Scotch man received from a greater mind lifted him from a secretary's seat into the place of division superintendent when Mr. Scott was made vice president of the railroad The industry, the subtle cunning and watching faith of Scott taught him to lay his lines in other di rections than watching the divisions of a railroad, and Scott helped him His place gave him the opportunity to look into other lines of industry, and he drove a drift ltito an iron mill. His pickax was uot ?lirge. but his cunning and thrift made up for the size of his ax. J. Edgar Thomson, who was the president of the Pennsylvania railroad, then gav'e a great name and money to the works now dominated by Mr Carnegie. At that time Colonel Scott was a tower in the nation as well as the railroad, and Car negie liegan to gather wealth. illl. CARNEGIE'S EARLY AMBITION. 'My ambition in those days," he said recently, "was to write for newspapers. 1 took in material in that direction whenever it was possible. 1 haunted the public library in Alleghany, and caught on to the fact that a distinction was made by the attendants between tha jtoor boys and the sous of well to do parents. It made me indignant. 1 wrote my first public letter to the board of con trol, and a change was ordered. This result more than ever resolved me to fol low journalism, but an accident drifted me elsewhere, and 1 became a manufac turer." Thrift and industry were the derricks which lifted Harry W. Oliver out of the telegraph chair next to Mr. Carnegie, and made him a clerk for a big iron firm. He is an Irishman, with a head full of cunning about the business economies of life. It did not take long for him to re alize the possibilities of the iron trade, and one day a slick, working block and tackle hoisted him out of his seat at the desk in tho big firm's workshop and landed him in a business that has since grown to be one of the greatest concerns in the world. He has grown very rich, and one railroad and seven manufactur ing concerns now feel the touch of his hand. . Another Scotchman of the famous five is Robert Pitcairn, who sits in the 6eat once occupied by Colonel Tom Scott and Mr. Carnegie. He went from a telegraph chair into the railroad business, and he lias been a master in all the best condi tions of railroad life. He is many times a millionaire, but he lives for his rail road, although interested, like Mr. Oli ver, in many large manufacturing en terprises. He does the work of about three men every day, and takes recrea tion only when he wants to talk with a big friend or indulge with Lis country men in the melodies of Scotland. He has denied himself promotion many times, because he likes to cling to the lo cation where he began as a messenger boy and has had so many triumphs. A TKICliril IN TELEGRAPHY. The fourth member of the gronp is David McCargo, the general manager of the Alleghanj' railroad. His strong Scotch character lifted hin into big railway concerns early. He left the telegraph office soon after the other boy3 and took a place on the railway. "Think of it," said Major William P. Moreland, the last, but not least, of the famous five. "1 stood at the key with Carnegie, Oliver, Pitcairn, McCargo, and heard the first message pass over the wires that was sent between the north and south. James D. Reid, who was general superintendent; David Brooks, now living in Philadelphia, and Jackson Duncan, of Cincinnati, had charge of the experiment. We had to work on short circuits in those days, and we thought it was impossible to send a mes sage to New York from New Orleans. Brooks and Reid walked over and in spected the line from the Crescent City to Pittsburg. After arriving here and assuring themselves that the line was perfect, the effort was ordered and every telegraph operator on the line, and in fact the whole country, was waiting in suspense to know the success or failure of the effort. Every magnet was ad justed, and every electrician on the line stood at his key listening for the result At the signal New York called Philadel phia, the Quaker City signaled Harris burg, and then in quick succession Pitts burg, Cincinnati, Louisville and New Orleans were opened to the metropolis. No one drew a breath scarcely until the tick came, and in a minute an unbroken message was sent between the north and south. That may seem primitive in these days, when there is no measuring electric power; but then it was the talk of the nation. This is a bit of untold history; but 1 shall never forget that hour." New York Sun. The beat conducting qualities of the metals range as follows: Silver, 100; cop per, 73.80; gold, 52.20; annealed alu minium, 38.87; unannealed aluminium, 37.96; tin, 14.50; iron, 11.60; steel, 1L60; lead, 8.50; platinum, 8.40; tesmuth, leu. ..' ' ' A Hoble.Fi'nUy. The many '.frienda' of County Superintendent' Noble and Miaa Jessie Fiudley in thia vicinity and Cass county will be plcaHed to know that these two youngf people were principals in an important "Noble Affair," that" took place at the resi dence of the bride's parents in Atlantic, Iowa, on Tuesday, Dec. liJ. Mr. and Mrs. G.'W. Noble took the train nt 5 p. ni. for Oho where two weeks will be spent with the relatives of the groom, when tiny will nlmn to Weeping Water for a visit before going to housekeeping in IMatts uioiith, where they will reside for the next two years. Mr. and Mrs. Noble will please accept the hearty cotigratulal ions of hosts of well wisiiers here. Weeping Water KepubJican. Mrs. J. M. Leydn left this morning for Weeping Water spend Sunday. Miss Kilile K'ussell returned to Weeping Water this morning after a weeks visit with the family of A. li. Knolts. A Mistake. These curious personal resemblances, which are not uncommon, liave given rise to tho popular belief that every man has his double somewhere in tho world. It appears that the double of a well known professor of the Rush Medical college is a hairdresser, whose shop is situated in the immediate neighborhood of that institution, and who, well aware of his likeness to tho learned doctor, carefully copies the latter in dress, liear ing and demeanor. A few days ago thfc professor was walking homeward from his lecture room, when a gentleman, en tirely unknown to him, stopped him in the street, sayiug: "Follow me to my house. I want you to cut my hair." The amiable professor, one of whost principles of life it has al ways been nevei to withhold from a fellow creature an service that it might be within his jtowci to render, meekly accompanied the stran ger home and there addressed Irruself to the task thus imperatively prescribed ti. him. Lacking professional scissors, ht picked up a pair of shears, used for cut ting paper, from a writing table in tht dressing room to which he had been con ducted, and with this Implement pro ceeded most conscientiously to cut hi victim's hair down to the very roots. When he had cleared about half the skull he accidentally stuck the point ot his shears into the scalp of his patient, who, springing to his feet in great pain and wrath, exclaimed: "Can't you take care what you're about? Do you call yourself a hair dresser?" "A hairdresser!" returned the aston ished sage. "Certainly not. I am only Professor Blank, very much at yom service, as you perceive." Chicago Intel Ocean. Too BInch Lynch Law. First Citizen Wall, we caught up with the feller wot stole your new over coat, an lynched him. Second Citizen Ha, hal that's some thin like. Teach these coyotes they've gotter obey the laws o' the land. Hung him, eh? "No, we shot him full o' holes." "Gee whittaker! He didn't have my overcoat on, did he?" "Jerusalem, partner, come to think, I'm 'fraid he did." "Ye oughter be arrested, every one of ye. This ere lynch law is a disgrace ter civilization." New York Weekly. Streets of a Chinese City. Consul Gracej- summarizes the condi tion of streets and highways of Foo chow, China, in the following report to the department 'of state, Washington: "There are no roads in this part of China. The streets of Foochow are from six to twelve feet wide, many of them covered with stone slabs, which are filthy beyond description, and are perfectly execrable. We have no wheeled vehicles, and as a consequence merely footpaths all through the country." Pets on Shipboard. Cats and dogs have been found on wrecks which apparently had been aban doned by their crew some time previous. In several instances when vessels have been abandoned the crews have, at great risk to themselves, rescued their marine pets. Pet monkey? make themselves very much at home on board ship, and are great favorites with Jack. London Tit-Bits. The Planchette. The plar'iette was the popular craze in the year 1887 in Japan. The instru ment used there consists of three pieces of bamboo of a specified length tied in the middle to form a tripod, over which is inverted a shallow circular tray of lacquered ware about a foot in diame ter. The legs are 1 foot 6 inches, Japan ese, in length. All present put their hands gently on the tray, and the cokuri, as the object is called, or cokuri san, san being honorific, is politely asked to an swer the proposed questions by raising one leg for "yes" and another for "no." Or for "yes"' by turning around, many such devices being used. The operation will be seen to be more closely allied to "table turning" than what we know as the planchette. Philadelphia Ledger. It Went Off. One of my fellow students once bought an old gun, which he intended to use in some private theatricals he was produc ing. Several of his fellow comrades were in his room one night and the gun came up for criticism. One of them picked it up and pointed it, pulling the trigger. The others followed suit, but after six or seven of them had tried it, the next one pulled the trigger, the gun going off and blinding one of the poor fellows for life, as iell aa disfiguring him. London Tit-Bit SEE THOSE FINE CHRISMAS SLIPPERS AT SHERWOOD'S r A PUPUL.AU FAMILY. . Jetctcik : " Mow is it, Knto, tlint you always aet-in to c;it:li on 'to thulusi new tliinir? Do whut I may, you always stem to Rft ahead Of II1.' Katk: " T don't know : I cfrtninl v do not niiikoiiiiy I'X'-rl ion in Hint iirc-lnii.' Jdsnik : " Weil, during tho IhsI lew months, for exumple, you have taken up painting. without any tem-hrr ; you enmo to the rowue when Miss biitiirj-o le-erted tier IlelmtrtmrliiM so suddenly, and eortuinly we lire all improv ing in trraee under our iiiftriK lioii ; 1 lieurd you tell i ni; Tommy Enuies lust evening how lus eluii m.eli; mistakes iu playing Iium IihII: you seem to Iih up u sill t lie lnleiL ' liel.i,' uill know just, what to lo lui'ler all eireiiinslii:r-n ; you entertain leaut I ully ; iiml in the Inst monthyoii have nil proved so in health, owin-, , yoi: tell me. to your physieul eultureexfre'viT Where do you ret all of your inloi inulum from in this little oul-ol tlio way Jiluci if fur you never no to tho eity,", . Katk: "Why, Jennie, you will nuiko ma Viiin. I hiiveoii.'y one sourer? of informal ion but it is surpri-in:f how if unfit nil whiiIs. I very seldom hear of anything new hut what the next few days l.r:nr me full information on thii sult.jeet. Mauie? Nol MaKiiuifl A'i'i a irreut treasure it is to us nil, for it really furnishes tho rending for the wholo household: fal her has jri ven up Ills nuirM.lno that he. lias taken for years, as he wiys this one jrives more mid letter Information on tho subjects of tho day; and mother pays that it is that that makes lier sueh a famous housekeo kt. In fact, wo all liKree that it is the only really family magazine published, as we havo sent for samples of all ot theru. and find that one is nil for men, another U for women, and another for children only, while this oho suits every one of ns; b we onlv need to take one instead of Beveral, and that is where the economy comes in, for it is only $2.00 a year. 1'orhaps you think I am too lavish in my praise; but I will let you see) ours, or, better still, send 10 cents to the pub lisher, W. Jennings Ilemwrest, 15 Kast Hth street. New York, for a sample copy, and I shall always consider that 1 have done you a great favor ; and may bo yW will be cuttir x us out, as you say we have rei'""'"'" being tho best informed fuV-y " V:wu- . y that lie so, it is Deinorest's Aauiy aiagazia ujuuiy , ily Jj.to.1, Uiat does it." A fiberal ofler only $j.,v,ior TIIK WKKTLY IIKRALIX- " and Detnorest Family Magazine. tSend your subscription to this KJ 111 For Atchinsoti, St. Joseph. Leaven worth, Kansas City, St. Louis, and all points north, east south or west. Tick ets sold and ha ae checked to any point in the United States or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO RATES AND ROUTKS Call at Depot or address II, C. TOW.VSE.NI), G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo. ' J. C. PHILLIPPr, A. G. P. A. Omaha. II. D. APGAK. Aeft., Plattsmouth. Telephone, 77. in his own section a responsible New Ycrlti House. Hox 158T. References. MAM. FACI t'HKlt,. IXCtf New ork. Scientific 4per ican Agency lortf ftAVEATS. A TRADE rfDESICN PATENTS COPYRICHT8, etc TRADE MARKS, For Information anil fre Handbook tW ' MINN A COn n IJKOADWAT. EW OKK. Oldest buresu for wninn pstcts in Am"" Krery patent taken out by r is bmnsbt bel'tra the public by a notice given free of charge In tbe West eiraalatum 7J?UX?Z&1 world, r-pienmuiy Vi -t ttd A man should be without It- W eekjy, f ." ' year; flJO six months. Addres MU.- PtmujuuuiA, sta Broadway, nw xoriL. A. I A. SH.- wrc rnat tie torrvrs rrjm. - --r -T.