JUAmH flpK o. tbm F, A pood story ha been told of m lisp ing officer having Wen victim iv-ed by a brother officer who was noted for bis cool deliberation and ntrong nerve and of his -getting square" with him in the following manner: The cool Joker Capt. Blacken' v was always quizzing the liBping oflicer a lieuten ant for his nervousness, and said one day at mess. "Why, nervousness is all nonsense; I tell you no brave man is ever nervous." "Well," inquired his lisping friend, "how would you act thpotliing a thell with an inth futhee thould drop ithelf in a walled angle, in which 3011 had taken bhelter from a company of tharp thooterth ami were it wath thertaiu if you put out your nothe you' get iep Kred P" "How?" said the captain, with a look at his brother-oflicers. "Why, take it cooly and spit on the fusee." The party broke up and all retired. The next morning a number of soldiers were assembled on parade, when along came the lisping lieutenant. Laaily opening his eyes ho remarked to a cluster of officers: "I want to try an ekthperiment thitli morning and thee how ektheedingly cool Tom Blakeuey can be." Saying this, he walked deliberately into the captain's quarters, where a tire was burning on the hearth, and placed in its hottest part a powder canister and instantly retreated. There wm but one door of egrees from the quarters and that opened on the pa rade ground. The occupant gave one look at the canister, comprehended the situation, and in a moment made for the door, but it was fastened on the outside. "Charley, let me out if you love me!" shouted the captain. "Th pit 011 the canither!" shouted he in return. 'V . ot a moment was to ix lost; the captain had at lirst snatched up a blanket to cover him.clf with; but mii dropping it, he raised the win dow, and out he bounded, sans every thing but a very short undergarment, and thus, with hair almost on end, lie dashed itn to a full parade-ground. TI10 shouts which hailed him brought out tiie whole of the occupants of the barracks to see what was the matter, and the digniticd captain pulled a ser geant in front to hide himself. "Why didn't you thpit on it?" in quired the lieutenant. "Hecause there was no sharpshoot ers in front to stop a retreat," an swered the captain. "All I've got to thnv. then, ith." said the lieutenant, -that vou miirht I thafely have done it, fori thware there wathn't a th ingle grain uf powder in it." BELIEVE IN SICttS. ItpMiMMMi la Yariovs A BABY'S DIARY. Ilr Ili)rel It Pretty l.nw Ion 011 I'oor Voiiiis Dud. Ilia first W eek As near as i am able to linssre from appearances my arrnai lias kicked up quite an excitement in the household. I have been weighed and the figures were given at eight pounds, i have also been carefully inspected and have been pronounced sound iu wind and limb. It's a go as far as I am concerned. My young dad seems to be tickled half to death, and his breath smells of beer. When ho heard I was a boy he went out back of the house and jumped on his hat for joy. If I don't make him jump for Mime other caue before I get over this redness of complexion then vou may play marbles on my bald head! Second Week Nurse is here yet, siud I'm on my good liehavior. She looks to nie like a woman who wouldn't take much sass off a young ster, and I don't want a row until my muscle works up a little more. Sev eral parties in to see me, and I had to listen to the usual congratulations. Some talk of bringing me up on a bot tle, but I'll have something to say aUut that later on. I'm hiving low and taking things easy. Dad is still walking around with a grin 011 his fac'. and there was a smell of gin cocktail in the room last night. When l.e remarked that I was just the quiet est and most good-natured baby in New York I came near giving myself dead away. There's a surprise in tore for that hayeed, and it'll hit him like a load of brick. Third Week Everything so so. Nurse goes Saturday niirht. She brags aliout what a little darling I am., but hes talkiivr for wages. I'm quite Mire she mitru-ts me. People keep coming in to p-iw me over and look at my feet. The general verdict is (ahem!) that I'm just the cutet,hand s unest young'un ever born. That's :11 Inish, however, and I'm not at aft tuck on my shape. They allowed dad to carry me around a few minutes last evening, and you'd a-thought h owned the earth. He said lie could walk with me for a week, and I just gurgled. He'll drop to something f-re he is a week older. I haven't said much thus far. but I've done a heap o' thinkiug just the same. I don't pro lse to take advantage of the baby act much longer. Had a row with the nurse and had to give in. Beaten, but not conquered. Fourth Week I told you I'd do it. r:id I did! TV" ;irht after the niire l-ft I tok up that unlinished business v. ith dad. and along altout 4 o'clock in the morning he was the sickest man you ever siw. I didn't want to kill him in one night and so saved some of him over for the next. Colic, you know. All babies have it and I wasn't going to be left out. Kicks, squirms. wrirles. yells, with dad trotting up anddown until he finally shook his tist under my nose and hoped I'd die. Then I let up a little, but I've got a lot more colic saved up. The happy grin has quite vanished from his face, and the sav he has lost five pounds. i li''.; all right. I propose to take a hand in from this time on. If the old to Imlsre or a tnecker In Mansfield, O., many years ago. it wad generally believed that the seeds "Jo Irs tears," worn around the "neck. would cure goitre, as would amber or gold beads. Lf through New En gland teething children were presented with the same charm, which were kept at the drug stores to ward off sore throat and diphtheria. In Michigan a double cedar knot is carried in the pocket to cure rheuma- a - If -m.T usm, arm in rxew Hampshire a man carried a gall from the stems of golden-rod for the same disease. A small white grub is in the gall, and ho thought as long us the grub remained alive no rheumatism could get hold of him. Hickory nuts, the buckeye and its cousin, the horse chestnut, which brings good luck in New Jersey, are foes to rheumatism in different locali ties. Some people wear a strange ring made of a potato, with a hole bored through it, for rheumatism, and carry a plain itotato in the pocket. The charm is more potent if the potato has oeen stolen. Almost everything seems to have rheumatism-fighting proper ties, for in Southern Michigan a peb ble in the pocket serves to ward it off. A New Hampshire cure for sore throat is to wear about the neck a stocking.in the toe of which a potato has been tied. According to a Maine be lief a nutmegDierced and hung on a string around the neck prevents boils, croup and neuralgia. The effect of a Connecticut wooden nutmeir is un known. Among the negroes the most strik ng remedies are to be found. Witness the combination of cure'and spell, tie- scribed under the name of "coniurinff a tooth," in Alabama. Go into a lone ly part of the woods with one of the opposite sex, who is to carry an ax. The bearer of the ax chops around the roots of a white oak, cuts off with a large jackknife nine splinters from the roots 01 a tree, tucn cuts around the roots of the aching tooth with tha knife, dips each of the nine splinter in the blood llowingfroiu the cuts, and finally buries the splinters at the foot of the tree from which they came. While doing this the operator repeats something you don't understand, which is a charm. From the same locality comes a curi ous remedy for chills and fever. Take the skin from the inside of an eggshell, go to a young persimmon tree three days in succession, and tie a knot ia Mie skin each day. On the eastern shore of Maryland biliousness is cured by boring three holes in a carefully selected tree and walking three times around it, saying: "Go away, bilious." In parts of Massachusetts it is thought that if a girl puts a piece of Southern wood down her back, the first bo- she meets will be her hus band. In Boston if a marriageable woman puts a bit of Southern wood under her pillow on retiring, the first man she sees in the morning will, so says the superstition, be the one whom she is to marry IVashin-jton Slar. TlUi OM M WiW). OICNITY OF THE SEX. Chicago Hod Carrier Drew the l.fae Being: Put iu Order by a Woman. a ask the man srets out to . hw winter vou lust am " - - . me how it happened. I ni kccpin; run of things under the proper dates and now and then 1 11 dish you up half column or so and let yon know i ho s running the house. Dad may go any dav nevt week. bt as for me le cofnu to taT. X J". H orll. One of the hod carriers at work on a brick bHilding out in the suburbs climbed up to the first story Thursday. Then he fell, and the hod, the bricks, and the ladder fell on him. When the debris had been pulled away the hod carrier was lying face downward on the pavement stone senseless. There wasn't a a drug store or a doctor with in half a mile. A bricklayer put on his coat and tore for the nearest patrol box. Meantime the hod carrier was tying there in a mess of blood, ap parently thinking about nothing in particular. The boss was fuming about, kicking blocks of wood into the street, and swearing at the laziness of the police. The big plasterers, who could drive a spike with their fists, were standing around as helpless as children. At this time a young woman in a blue coat came across the street. She was pretty and rosy, with a lot of yellow hair drawn up tightly from her tem ples, and she hail a most decided look in her bjue eyes. She brushed the big fellows aside and asked briskly: "What's the trouble here, men?" "One of the boys has busted him self wide opeu." said the boss politely. "Let me see," said the pretty gir, dropping on her knees beside the hod carrier. She took off a dainty kid glove, and with her little white hand felt the man's skull. "No bones fractured here," she said, looking up at the group around her. Then she noticed the pool of blood lying boside the man's right arm, and whipping out a pair of scissors she rip ped up the coat sleeve and the sleeve of the flannel shirt. "Goodness!" she said. "An artery has been cut. (Jive me a piece of twine, quick." The boss pulled a piece of coarse st ring from his coat pocket and hand ed it to the girl. She drew it around the man's arm. made a loop knot, thrust a pencil into the loop and twisted it until the cord sank deep in to the Hesh. "You hold this." she said to the boss, and the big man knelt down and grab bed the ligature. Then she had some water brought.' She washed the scalp Wound in a jiffy. Then she cut among the loose flesh with the scissors and with plater and a strip of linen from the same preposterous bag she made, a neat bandage. Then she arose and viewed a pretty job of emergency surgery with reasonable complacency The patrol wagon and the hod carrier came around at the same time. As the wagon backed up the hod carrier opened his eyes and saw the girl in the bine cloak. "Are you hurt. Mike?" said the boss. "Naw." said the carrier. "Take me somewhere that I can get a doctor. I don't want no d.uu women monkey in' 'round me!" The girl doctor in blue looked at him quizzingly and laughed as she washed his gore from her hands in the bucket of water. Vhirago Herald. . Thars irai prattr old and a preUy erdaat-lookdaf man at the Third treet depot th other day with three ours to wait tor his train, and by and by he approached Officer Button and said he gueissjd he'd wander around for a spell, sa, s the Detroit Free Press. "Well, look-out for yourself," replied the officer. "Any danger?" "There's always slick fellows about." "Yas. I 'spose thar' is, but I shan't let nobody foot me." He was gone about an hour, and when he returned he showed the officer a bank check for $200 and asked: "Does that seem all right to you?" "Right? Of course not. It's a check on a Buffalo bank signed John Smith. u s a dead fake, 01 course. "Fake! Fak ! What's a fake?" ' "You've br m faked. I expected you'd get into trouble when you went out of here. Seems singular that you can't talk common . sense into some people." ' I "then the check is no good?" asked the old man. "Why, of course not. How much did you lend on it?" "I gave him 25." "W ell, you've been confidenced, and now you'd better go and sit down and keep mum?" "Is that what they call a confidence gamer "Of course." "Well, I thought so all the time." "Then what did vou let him walk off with your money for?" "1 didn tv you know. He started to go, but 1 grabbed him by the neck. ike this, and backed him up agin' a wall, like this, and I pulled out this old pistil and laid the bar'l on his nose and he give up that money quicker'n scat." The old man illustrated the case in the most vigorous manner, even to laying on the bar'l, which was a ior- tiou ot a weapon seemingly fifty years old. "So 3-011 got your money?" asked the officer, as he got his neck loose from the old man's grip. "Got 'er right down in my breeches pocket, safe, as a bank. How much more time have I got?" "An hour and a half." "Wall, I guess I'll take another little walk around. Mebbe I'll meet some body else who don't know that I run a side-show with old Dan Rice's circus fur better than twenty years, and who thinks I'm a kitchen door for llies to roost on." Tlie Sec-ret of His Suoces. Taken Up. Taken tap at tur farm 2 milee eouth of Plattemouth, Wedneaday Februry 3rd, one yearling heifer calf and one yearunp; steer can, ootn rea marked with tip of left ear cut off and "V cut on under Bide. Partr mar have same by parinir for acl- rertieement and proving owner ahip. Bb.x F. Horning. Bucklen'a Arnica Salve. Tub Bust Salve in the world for Cute Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. for sale by F. G. Fricke The First step. Perhaps you are run down, can't eat, can't sleep, can't think, can t do anything to your satisfaction, and vou wonder what ails you. You should heed the warning, you are taking the first step into nervous prostration. You need a nerve tonic and in Electric Bitters you will find the exact remedy for restoring your nervous system to it normal, healthy condition. Surprising results fol low the use of this great Nerve Tonic and Alterative, Your appe tite returns, good digestion is re stored, and the liver and kidneys re sume healthy action. Try a bottle. Price 50c, at F. G. Fricke & Go's drugstore. 0 Do not confuse the famous Blush of Roses with the many worthless paints, powders, creams and bleaches which are flooding the market. Get the genuine of you druggist, O. IT Snyder, 73 cents per bottle, and I g larantee it will re move your p m .jles, freckles, black heads, moth, tan and sunburn, and give you a lovely complexion. 1 'sAwd reading!" he said. "Why, it's the simplest thing in th world. I've followed it as a business now for five years, and I don't recall that I have made a failure." "You can read any one's mind?" asked the caller. "Well, no; not exactly that," replied the long-haired professor; "but I can make any one think that I can do it, and that's just as good from business point of view." "Make them think so!" "Certainly, i wouldn't like have my system generally known, nut 1 don't mind giving you an insight into it. You see, I put a man in a low arm chair so that he can't get up easily and then I make some passes before his eyes and fix his mind on some certain thing; it makes no difference what. Then I pass my hand back and forth slowly across his forehead and finally let it rest in one place for a moment or so." "I don't see what good all that does." "Of course not. Neither does he. So I swipe him." "Hit him?'V "Slap his face and tell him to stop that. Then I hit him again and tell him that I won't stand that from any man." "Wrhat's that for?" "What's it for? Hang it. man! What would you be thinking if I were going through all that foolishaess with you?" "That you were a scoundrelly fraud, a confidence man, or an inspired idiot." "Precisely. Same with my victim. That's why he's satisfied when he gets the second swipe that I have read his thoughts. It's no trick at all when you tnow how to do it." Chicago Tribune. MThy He Iid It. A short time ago, as I was crossing Market street, near Twenty-secon3 street, a boy not over ten years old, who had been walking just before me, ran into the street and picked up a broken glass pitcher. I supposed he in tended the pieces as missiles, since the desire to throw something seems in stinct in every boy. Consequently I was much surprised when he tossed the pieces into a vacant lot at the cor ner and walked quietly on. As he passed me, whistling, I said: 1 "Why did you pick up that pitcher?" "I was afraid it might cut 'some horse's foot," he replied. Mv next question was a natural one: "Are you a Band of Mercy boy?" He smiled as he said: "Oh, yes; that's why I did it." The bands of mercy were drawn very closely around the dear little fellow's heart, I am sure. Sclutol and Home. History ItepeAts Itself. "H'm." muttered the tramp, as he surveyed his one remaining cent in a loving way. "I reckon me an' ole man Gladstone has one thing in common auvwav." -And what's that?T-fcked Wily Walt. "We both grow shorter as we grow older." .si. ,foffk !Ai?y AYw. Change in Liatitnde. A few years ago .it; "was 1 'suspected that the latitude of,placea .on the earth's surface changes.,- .A number of astronomers agreed to. make obser vations for two years and the result has just leen made public. Latitudes do change. Berlin, for example, was 60 feet nearer the north pole in Sep tember than it was in March. This change is not of course, a shifting of anv one point on tne earth s surface. It is a tilting of the axis of the eartk. Specimen Caes. S. II. Clifford, New Castle. Wife was troubled with neuralgia and rheumatism, his stomach was dis ordered, lus liver was atlected to aa alarming degree, appetite fell awai and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strenirth. Three bottles oi Electric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Ilarrisburg 111., had a running sore on his leg of eight years' standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven bottles Bucklen's Arnics Salve, and his leg is sound and well Tolin Speaker, Catawba, O., had fivt large fever sores on his leg, doctors said he whs incurable. One bottl Electric Bitters and one box Buck len's Arnica Salve cured him entire ly. Sold by F. G. Fricke Co. A Fatal Mistake. Physicians make no more fatal mistake than when they inform pa tients that nervous heart troubles come from the stomach and are of little consequence. Dr. Franklin Miles, the noted Indiana specialist, has proven the contrary in his. new book on "Heart Disease" which may be had free of F. G. Fricke & Co., who guarantee and recommend Dr. Miles' unequalled new Heart Cure, which has the largest sale of any heart remedy in the world. It cures nervous and organic heart disease, short breath, fluttering, pain or ten derness in the side, arm or shoulder, irreerular pulse, fainting, smother ing, dropsy, etc. His Restorative Nervine cures headache, fits, etc. AMttle lrl8 Experlencein a LigMt house. Mr. and Mrs, Loren lrescott are keepers of the Gov. Lighthouse at Sand Beach Mich, and are blessed with a daughter, four years. Last April she taken down with Measles, followed with dreadtul Lough and turned into a fever. Doctors at home and at Detroit treated, but in vain, ehe grew worse rapidly, until she was a mere" handful of bones Then she tried Dr, King's New Discovery and after the use of two and a half bottles, was completely cured. They say Dr. King,s New Discovery is worth its weight in gold, yet you may get a trialj bottle free at F. G. rnckey Drugstore. A Mystery Explained. The papers contain frequent no tices of rich, pretty and educated girls eloping with negroes, tramps and coachmen. The well-known specialist, Dr. Franklin Miles, says all such girls are more or less hys terical, nervous, very impulsive, un balanced; usually subject to nead ache, neuralgia, sleeplessness, im moderate crying or laughing. These show a weak, nervous system for which there is no remedy equal to Restorative Nervine. Trial bottles and a fine book, containing many marvelous cures, free at F. G. Fricke & Co's., who also sell and guarantee Dr. Miles' celebrated New Heart Cure, the finest of heart tonics.Cures flutteringshort breath, etc. Cough Following the Crip Many person, who have recovered from ' la grippe are now troubled with 'a persistent ' cough. Cham berlain's cough remedy will promptly, loosen this cough and relieve the lungs, effecting a per manent cure in a very short time. 25 and 50 cent bottle for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. Jhey wash their clothes WITH C!yS MADE ONLY BY N.KfAIRBANiv8cC0. CHICAGO. A Regular Scimitar That Sweeps all before it , OPfTKWPOD 11'- r mm m Mm w m w . v . aa aaa. mi a . 1. in -1 ' 1 nese win aimosr men in your mouth. Charmer" is very productive, high Quality and sugar flavor. Hat ereat stavin? dualities. Vines 3K to 4 ft. hieh. In season follows Little Gem" and before the'Chamnion of Enc-land." We have oroughly tested it, and confidently recommend it as the best ever introduced. mce Dy man, per packet, 10 cents pint, o cents. GIVEN FREE, IF DESIRED, WITH ABOVE, VICK'S FLORAL GUIDE 1892, which contains several colored plates of Flowers and Vegetables. 1,000 Illustrations. Over 100 pages 8 x lO inches. Instructions how to plant and care for garden. Descriptions of over 20 New Novelties. Vick's Floral Guide mailed on receipt of address and 10 cents, which may be deducted from first order. JAMES ViCK's SONS, Rochester, N.Y. Mexican Mustang Liniment. A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast A long-tested pain relieyer. Its use is almost universal by the Housewife, the Farmer, the Stock Raiser, and by every one requiring an effectiye liniment' No other application compare with it in efficacy. This well-known remedy has stood the test of years, almost generations. No medicine chest is complete without a bottle of Mustang Liniment. Occasions arise for its use almost ereiy day. All druggists and dealers have it. JJJkAAA4f HENRY BOECK The Leading FURNITURE DEALER A N D Startling Facts. The American people are rapidly becoming' a rase of nervous wrecks and the followtn; sujrifests, the best remed3': alphouso Huiiipflinf, of Butler, Penn, swears that when his son was spechless from st. Vitus Dance Dr Miles erreat Restorative Nervinjr cured him. Irs. J. L,. Miller of Valprai and. J. D. Taolnr, of Logransport, Ind each gained 20 pounds if an taking1 it. Mrs. H. A. Gardner, of Vastulr Ind, was cured of 40 to 50 convulsions easy and much aeadach, dizzness. bockach and nerroua prostiatiou by one bottle. Trial bottle and fine boek of Xervoiig cures free at F. G. Fricke, & Co., who recomends this tinequailed remedy. For Atchiuson, St. Joseph, Leave- worth, Kansas City, St. Louis, and all points north, east south or west. Tick ets sold and baf gage checked t o a n y point iu the United States or Canada. For INFORMATION' AS TO RATES AND ROUTES Call at Depot or address H, C. Towxsexd. G. P. A. St. Louis. Mo. J. C. Phillippi. A. G. P. A. Omaha. H. D. Apoak. Agl.. Plattsmouth. Telephone, 77. UNDERTAKR. Constantly ' keeps on hand everythia you need to furnish your heuss. - . - - . 1 COK.VH HIXTH AND MAIN ITIIET Plattsmouth Neb Lumber Yard TIMOTHY CLARK. SALKR IX COAL WOOD -o TERMS CASH Ely's Cream Balm is especially adapted as a remebv for catarrh which is aggravated by alkaline Dust and dry winds. W. -A Hover Druggist. Denver. r4 aa OUci -M4 SHt T!r trrt. Tf ! 13. THE OLD RELIABLE. H. L WATEBIIAW & P LUMBER 1 1 Skiaglea, Ltk, Sak,T Doors, Blinds 8a aupply everw demaad f the city. Call sad get tern. Feurtk street s 1