. pi '- U. P. TIME TABLE. OOXKa KA8T. No.l-Atkatic Express DeptUJO a. x. Nn. ft Thin-arci KxnrMM " 630 A. V. Xa.-F-atMail 8 50 A.M. No.2-Ianted ' lA. Mo.28-Frelht ' 730 A. No.l8-Freiht. ' Xo. 22 Freight 6 A. OOXXO WIST MOUNTAIN TIXJC. No. 7-PciIc Express fpiftJi?' 5 No. 5-DesTer Express.. N.. 1 Limited " 1010 P. X No.21-Freitht .V N. B. OLDS. Agent. .pRMES &.W1TjCOX, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, NORTH PLATTE. - . - - NEBRASKA. Office over North Platte National Bank. A. H. CHURCH, LAWYER, NORTH PLATTE, ... NEBRASKA. Office: Hinnan Block, Spruce Street D R. X. F. DONALDSON, Assistant Surgeon Union Pacific Railway and Member of Pension Board, NORTH PLATTE, - - - NEBRASKA. Office over Srreitz's Drug Store. w M. EVES, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, NORTH PLATTE, - Office: NeTille'0 Block, and Children a Specially. NEBRASKA Diseases of Women K0RT PLATTE Marble Works. Manufacturer of and Dealer in Monuments, Headstones, Curbing, Building Stone, And all kinds of Monumental and Cemetery Work. Careful attention given to lettering of every description. Jobbing done on short notice. Orders solicited and esti mates freely given. The appointment of Washington Hesinor. nntil recently a republican, as postmaster at Chicago, is regarded as evidence or viereiauu a ucsuc keep the postal service up to republican standard. to the Send 2c to us for our "Tommy Tapper" book, the funniest book nut, 1.000 laugns for 2 cents. Haller rROP. uo., Blair, Neb, The British scientific expedition to the Philippine islands is said to have discovered 2,500 feet above sea level, on the sides of the extinct volcano Apo, a nower five and a half feet in diameter. Lirer and Kidney Cure. Parks' Sure Cure is the only guaran teed remedy. Its action is quick and positive. Will stop that backache and sick-headache. A positive specific for al diseases of women. Why suffer when will cure you? For sale by North Platte Pharmacy. it John McAleer, of Brainerd, has been found guilty of embezzlement and will be sentenced on the 0th He bought grain for an Omaha firm and the firm got the worst of it. All Ilia That Tills Are good for are treated more success fully by Parks' Tea. Is not a cathartic; no crinintr or Dain. vet moves the bowels every day. Sold by North Platte Pharmacy. Mr. Morton says the seed bureau "offers opulent opportunities for the exercise of the most pronounced paternalism. If profanity is sub stituted for paternalism, the coun try will cheerfully adopt the senti nient. 'OZE5 SLAJL -I. 1G0 acres of land In section 18, town ship 13, range, 27, four miles northeast of Maxwell, in Lincoln county,ebraska; 90 acres good farm land, 12 acres of which is broke; the remainder good grazing land. Pawnee creek, a live stream, runs through the land. Frame house, two stables and. other outbuild ings, good well, an irrigation ditch and a small creek near house. Also breaking plow, stirring plow, riding cultivator and single cultivator, cooking stove, and cooking utensils. Price $800 for the land and implements. Call on or ad dress, Napoleon St. Marie, 463 Maxwell, Neb. $50 REWARD. By virtue of the laws of the State of Nebraska I hereby offer a reward of Fifty Dollars for the capture and conviction of any person charged with horse stealing in Lincoln county. D.A.BAKEB. Sheriff. GEO. NAUMAN'S SIXTH STREET MEAT MARKET. Meats at wholesale and re tail. Fish and Game in season. Sausage at all times. Cash paid for Hides. , E. B. WARNER. Funeral Director. AND EMBALHER. FROM NORTH CAROLINA. "We-uns want you-uns"to no that we uns tuck three bottles uv Haller's Sas prilla and cot clar cured of biles. We uns live at Hill's Korners, Norf Caralin, an' we-uns don't keer if you-uns no rer uns did hev biles. For sale by F. H Longley. A full-length portrait of the late Caroline Scott Harrison, wife of the ex-president, is being painted to the order of the Daughters of the American Revolution, to be hung in the executive mansion, Wash ington. MARK TWAIN Says that you can always cure a mule of kicking if you cut off his tail just behind the ear. Use Haller'a Barb Wire Lini ment and it will do just as well. Sold bj F. H. Longley "Mrs. Lease's glory," says the Wichita Eagle, "is in her irridescent zigzag, her gyrated sciutillization. rather than in her un bifurcated habiliments. It is the dazzle of her unexpected skyward scott and the dead thud ot the subsequent backward flop that at once fascinate and paralyze her devotees." Sing a song of sixpence, Pocket full of rye, Four and twenty blackbirds Baked in a pie; When the pie was opened And the birds began to sing: Buy a bottle of Haller's cough syrup It's just the proper thing. For sale by F. II. Longlej'. W. K. Vanderbilt, who has just started with a party of frsends for I a ten months cruise in the yacht Alva, plays poker every day, but as he is worth $100,000,000 he can afford it. He always plays for small stakes, but he could play :i game at $1,000 limit all day throubg without making any appreciable addition to or diminution in his bank account. A full line of first-class funeral supplies always in stock. NORTH PLATTE, - NEBBRSKA. Telegraph orders promptly attended to. R. D. THOMSON, -aA-xclTLitect, Contractor and Builder. 127 Sixth St. Cor. of Vine, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. H. MacLEAN, Fine Boot and Shoe Maker, And Dealer In MEN'S LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S BOOTS AND SHOES. Perfect Fit, Best Work and Goods Represented or Money Refunded. REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. a NORTH PLATTE. NEBRASKA Ballard's Snow Liniment. This wonderful Liniment is known from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the Lakes to the Gulf. It is the most penetrating Liniment in the world. It will cure Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Cuts, Sprains, Bruises, Wounds, Old Sores, Burns, Sciatica, Sore Throat, Sore Chest, and all Inflammation, after all others have failed. It will cure Barbed Wire Cuts, and heal nil wounds where proud flesh has set. in. It is equally efficient for animals. Try it and you will not. be without it. Price 50 cents. Sold by A F. Streitz. 3 2 MANIT0BA.GBIZZLIES. FL0WE """""mo-. MONSTROUS BEARS IN THE FOREST8 BACK IN THE MOUNTAINS. Have You Ever Stopped to Think that you are only getting half as much for your dollar when you are taking weekly as you would get it you were a subscriber to the Semi-Weekly Journal? It is a fact, however, because the Jour nal gives you two complete papers each week, with markets and telegraphic news, 104 papers a year, making it almost as good as a daily. Just now wo are offering it to January 1, 1895, for only one dollar. It is the greatest dollar paper in the west. Is both a national and state paper. The best editorials; the best condensed news; the best stories; the bost special departments; the best of everything, all for 51.00 a year. Our premium department is a hummer. Send for a sample copy of the paper and see for yourself. Here are n few of them Handsomely bound copy of Dream Life. Reveries of a Bachelor, or Drummond's Addresses, and the Journal, 81.25; Life of Spurgeon, U. S. History, Stanley in Africa, or Lifo of Harrison and Journal, $2.75; Handy Cobbler and Journal, $2.25; .Nebraska f armer and Journal, 91.50; N, Y. Tribune and Journal, $1.25: and a whole lot more. Write for sample copy. Address, Nebraska State Journal, Lincoln, Neb. 23? aJE- The Inter Ocean is Tin-: MOST POPULAR REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER OF THE WEST HHS THE LARGEST CIRCULATION. TEFRrVIS BY MA1I tAILY (witbwrt Sunday), $6.00 eer year. DAILY Cwith Sunday), $8.00 per yeir. The Weekly Inter Ocean, per year, $1.00 As a newspaper THE INTER OCEAN keeps abreast or the times in all respects. It spares neither pains nor expense in securing ALL THE NEWS AND THE BEST OP CURRENT LITERATURE. The Weekly Inter Ocean Is edited especially for those who, on account of mail service or any other reasoa, do aet take a daily paper. In its columns are to be found the week's news of all the world condensed and the cream of the liUrary features of the Daily. AS A FAMILY PAPER IT EXCELS We'tern J0"""- "n- aists of EIGHT PAGES, with A Supplement, Illustrated, in Colors, ef EIGHT ADDITIONAL PAGES, making in all SIXTEEN PAGES. This Supple, meat, containing SIX PAGES OF READING MATTER and TWO FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS, ia alone worth the price charged for the paper. THE INTER OCEAN IS PUBLISHED IN CHICAGO, the news and commer cial center ef all west of the Allegheny Mountains, and is better adapted to the aeds ef the people ef that section than any paper ten her East. It ia ia accord with the people of the Weat both ia Politics sad Li tern tare. Please remember that the price or The Weekly later Ocean IS ONLY ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. Address THE INTER OCEAN, Chicago. ease of Then Tower Six Feet Aaere Maa, ead It Takes Nerre te Stamd la That Treaeeadeas Presence A Heater Saved Hie Life by Delag a Ctrcaa Aet. fifteen years ago, Bald George W. Kae, a Manitoba pioneer, the grizzly bear was so plentiful among the Mani toba Rockies that the Hudson Bay com pany annually secured many hundreds of their skins from the army of hunters and trappers that had its range in that wild region, but today this fierce and a a a ponaerous oeast nownere so nerce or of suoh enormous proportions as among the Manitoba fastnoacoo is quite a rari ty in its old haunts, and I doubt if one can now be come upon without a diffi cult and tedious journey of at least 800 aailes into the interior wilderness of the province. The grizzly has met with almost as bard a fate as the buffalo, although, from the nature and isolation of its present retreats and the difficulties attendant on hunting and trapping for it, the grizzly bear, like the Manitoba moose, will nev er become extinct in that country. I be lieve that tho moose, although the flesh of 2,000 of them is required to supply the military stations in the territory alone with fresh moat every year, is as plenti ful today in its wild retreats as it has been at any time since the great inroads of for and pelt hunters were begun in the territory. I know no reason why the grizzly bear of the Manitoba Rockies' should grow so much larger than the grizzly of the same mountains in the States, but a long and varied experience in hunting these animals in their respective localities has proved to me that such is the fact. No grizzly bear that I ever captured or that I ever knew to be captured south of Manitoba measured more than 7 feet from muzzle to tail, or weighed more than 1,900 pounds. But it was no un common thing in the palmy days of grizzly bears in Manitoba for the hunter or trapper to be confronted by one of these monsters 9 feet in length and with a bulk of 1,500 pounds or more. I have seen Manitoba grizzlies that when they threw themselves on their haunches and rose erect towered five feet and six feet above me, and I want to tell you that it takes a man with a large quantity and the best quality of nerve to stand in that tremendous presence and prepared to do battle coolly and with a level head. Grizzly bears, like all the rest of the bear family, have the curious habit of rising against a tree, and, reaching up as far as they can with their fore paws, making marks in the bark by digging it with their claws. I have more than once come across these measuring marks of a grizzly, as the marks on the bark are called, 12 feet above the ground. Imagine coming suddenly upon a beast like that in some deep ravine or isolated spot almost impassable owing to the down timber heaped and tangled on the ground and surrounded by rocks and thick underbrush. The sight of his great jaws, open and red, and his eyes flashing in fury at you from the enor mous head that towers so far above you, is something only to be appreciated when once seen. When there were buffaloes on the plains, Manitoba grizzly bears were keen and persistent hunters of them. When grizzly and a buffalo met, there was sure to be a fearful contest, although it seldom lasted long, and the buffalo was usually the victim. The buffalo bull, when confronted by a bear, would in variably charge ferociously upon its big and ugly foe. This was just what the bear desired, and he awaited, erect on nis nauncnes, tne onset or the buffalo. As the latter rushed forward with low ered head and was almost upon the bear the immense grizzly threw himself quickly to one side, and with a blow as quick as lightning with one of his great forppaws seldom failed to break his an- nist's neck. A Manitoba grizzly has been known to engage in rapid succes sion four and even five infuriated buffalo bulls and kill every one of them. It sometimes happened, though, that a bull younger and more agile than his com panion succeeded in evading the fatal blow of the grizzly's terrible paw long enough to give in turn a deadly thrust of his horn into the bear's side, puncturing his vitals and making the contest a mu tual slaughter. In general characteristics, of course, the Manitoba grizzly is not in any way different from others of the family. While I believo that a 'grizzly bear will sometimes wait and precipitate a "fight with a man and take pains to put hiin self in the way of one,-in the great ma jority of cases he will take a second thought about the matter and back out. A queer instance of this disposition came to my Knowledge once wnere a famous Manitoba guide courageously advanced upon three grizzlies, an old she one and two half grown cubs, and, by a series of ridiculous monkeysbines and acrobatic maneuvers within a rod or two of the threatening bears, filled them with such astonishment and apparent fear that they retreated, to the woods as fast as they could go. The hunter's gun had snapped in both barrels, he having drawn on the old bear before the young ones came upon the scene. It was in a fit of desperation that he tried the turning of a handspring and jumping up and down, clapping his hands and resorting to other unhunter like measures. He had been told once that a hunter had frightened a moun tain lion away by similar absurd move ments, and he found that it worked to perfection in tho case of the three griz zly bears, but he never, even in the face of that fact-advised or encouraged any one to go bunting Manitoba or any other kind of grizzlies armed with noth ing more than a capacity to turn gro tesque somersaults. New York Sun. Maidens' Baresaeters Far DItImI. Depths er Their SweetaearU Lore. It is singular to sea how manv maa. ingless ceremonies are now practiced by young women ceremonies which were formerly used in earnest as lore charms or incantations. Most of these have an am atory origin, and in connection with not a few certain flowers are ued,preimably as a means of foretelling the future. Ia several parts of New England when young lady expects a visit from her lover she will pluck a marigold, take it in her hand when he arrives and carrr it nntn the end of his visit, when fromts fresh' j or raaed condition she will judge of the strength of his affection. A German girl, after having- been called on by her lover, will nut a star flower or dandelion in water and leave it there nntil his next visit, drawing an . omen from its condition, while a Spanish maiden will take a moss rosebud, wear it on her breast, and if it expands to be come a perfect flower the omen is con sidered exceedingly fortunate. A super stition of the same kind is shown by the East Indian maiden who places a poppy in her hair. In England the primrose is used for the same purpose, and ia conn--try districts of New England the spikes of the rib wort plantain are taken, wrapped in dock leaves, placed beneath a stone, and if the next day signs of new buds appear the omen is considered happy. In France young ladies desirous of ascertaining the .extent of a lover'saffeci' tion take the common daisy and pull off its leaves one by one, with the question, uoes ne love mer Does he love me little? Does he love me much? Does he love me with all his soul?" Marguerite in "Faust" uses the common blue bottle with similar questions. In England the ash leaf is sometimes employed to ascer tain the faithfulness of an absent lover, and the Irish maiden learns of her future by putting a shamrock in her shoe, after which she walks abroad, and the first man she meets or one of his name will be her husband. New York Advertiser. . Some 2fow Tork Breakfasts. Nearly every German bakery on Third avenue serves breakfast and luncheon to the furnished room population of the east side. Some serve eggs and cold meats, coffee, tea and chocolate. The majority, however, provide only coffee, tea, rolls and cakes. Nino out of ten of the customers take coffee and cake. The latter is not .the French or Ameri can kind. It consists of four varieties dear to the German palate apple, peach, prune and sugar. The last named is also called cinnamon. It is made of bread dough on the upper sur face of which is spread some butter, sugar and cinnamon. Then it is baked hard. The peach and apple cakes are made of thinly rolled bread dough.surmounted by- slices of apples or peaches, as the case may be. "When a little butter and sugar have been placed between the slices, the. baker has approached as near perfection as possible. The dough of the prune cake is mado like the other and covered thickly with mashed stewed prunes. In the best bakeries a slice of any of these cakes from four to five 'inches square is sold for 5 cents. A good cup of coffee or tea with milk and sugar costs the same. Those who like light and sweet breakfasts can thus be satisfied for 10 cents. Probably 5,000 east eiders eat such breakfasts in the bakeries every morning. New York Sun. FOB, LITTLE FOLKS. A Uttle Child's Hanger. Some very pathetio' scenes accompa nied the distribution of bread by the varioas relief committees in the poverty sMekom districts. One woman, with tmagtrV Unas written plainly on her face, easM to the house where food was diatribated, bringing with her a half faauiahed child. In one corner ef the barely furnished room was a wooden ta biepiledbifh with loaves of bread. The anther stepped hesitatingly in, her Utile one .clinging, half shy, naif feared, to her dress. She gave her name and address, as each applicant was re- quired to do, and then started to tell her story of destitution and want. She had hardly begun before the little girl, peep ing from behind tho projecting skirts, spied the bread on the table near by. She sprang forward, and before any one could stop her, even if they had had a desire to do so, she picked up a loaf. Her tiny fingers seemed imbued with an un usual strength, and she tore a large piece from the loaf and began devouring it as fast as she could. "My poor child," gasped the mother as she sank into a chair and burst into tears, "even I did not know how bad your hunger was. We have had nothing to eat for several days excepting a few slices of bread that I guarded for my Uttle girl." The young men hesitated not an in stant to fill the woman's arms to over flowing and told her to come for more when she needed it. Philadelphia Press. The Origin of Starching. The course of history carries us back no (further than the year 1564 for the-' origin of starching in London. It was in that year that Mistress YanderPlasse came with her husband from Flanders to the English metropolis "for their greater safety," and there professed her self a starcher. The best housewives of the time were not long in discovering the excellent whiteness of the "Dutch linen," as it was called, and Mistress Plasse soon had plenty of good paying clients. Some of these began to send her ruffs of lawn to starch, which she did so excellently weU that it became a saying that if any one sent her a ruff made of a spider's web she would be able to starch it. So greatly "did her reputation grow that fashionable dames went to her to learn tho art and mystery of starching, for which they gladly paid a premium ot xa or xo, and for the se cret of seething starch they paid gladly a farther sum of 20 shillings. New York World. A Hair Splitting Bishop. It is recorded of a certain hair split ting English bishop, who was accus tomed to compose his "charges" in the train, and whoso desk was always placed opposite to him, that he invariably .treat ed it as though it were a living vis-a-vis. Tho train being very full on one occa sion, a would be passenger inquired if this place was taken, and the bishop, with his sunniest smile) expressed regret that there was no room. "I don't think that was quite right, my lord," said one of his fellow passengers. "What was not right?" inquired his lordship urbane ly. "To say that the place was taken." "Pardon me, I did not say that it was taken; I was particularly careful to use the word 'occupied.'" San Francisco Argonaut. He Was a Senator. Senator Allen of Nebraska is. a big. burly man who looks like a prosperous dealer in live stock. Shortly after his arrival in Washington he was stopped at the door of the senate chamber by a new doorkeeper, who informed him that no one save senators was allowed on the floor. Mr. Allen smiled sadly, waved his hand and said: "Very well, sonny, I'm a senator. I don't look it, I know, but I am, just the same," and passed into the sacred precincts. Chicago Herald. A Stubborn little Queen. Little Queen Wilhelmina of Holland is credited with the possession of a par ticularly intractable temper, which she inherited from her disreputable old papa. Not long ago, while driving out with her governess, she became sulky and re fused to return the salutes of the people in the streets. As a punishment she was ordered to bed immediately upon her return to the palace. "What!" she exclaimed, "am I, the queen of the Netherlands, to go to bed at 7 o'clock? I won't do it." But she did do it, being persuaded thereto by a sUpper wielded by the queen regent, who brooks no disobe dience. The Blackbird Legend. Jan. 80 and 31 and Feb. 1 are known at Constantinople, Brescia and along the Danube and the Rhine as "blackbird days," through a curious legend that originally all species of blackbirds were white, andthat they became black dur ing' one year in the middle ages when the three days mentioned above were so cold that the birds in Europe took refuge in the chimneys. .DESCRIBE YOUR FRIEND, i ABATaea See Hew Well Tear FlctareWlU sfit Seerea of Others. "He was a young man and fairly good looking; smooth face and without glasses; wore a dark suit; was about 5 feet in height and looked like a married man. Anybody would know him." Such was the description turned in by a young woman who slipped quietly into the city editor's office and wanted to advertise for Chalmers. It appeared that Chalmers bad left home, and nobody knew why, and this young woman had faith that her recital of his personal traits would bring him back. It was a good example of the average person's power of descrip tion of a feUow being. It is totally inadequate! Though man be fearfully and wonderfully made, there seems to be an unaccountable in ability in nine persons out of every ten to give a creditable word picture of any one whom they have seen. Because we understand the looks of a person when we meet them, it never occurs to the mind that other people do not grasp a thorough idea of bis appearance with a few passing phrases of description. Your friend comes in, and you ex pound to him that such and such a man has just called for him, but almost in variably your exposition is a jumbled lot of phrases which apply to the human race in general. The other day when I rushed into my office room with a column story on the end of my tongue or at tho tip of my pen, to be more accurate I was given this greeting: "Hello! Aman has just been in to see you." "What did he look like?" "Oh, he was a good looking fellow not very tall, rather heavy, but not too much so." "Was he old or young?" "About 20 or 25, 1 should say." "What color of hair?" "I don't remember now. However, I don't think he had a mustache." "How dressed?" "Oh, just an ordinary business suit." Have you ever heard such a descrip tion? If not, watch yourself next time you teU of some one's call. You will bo surprised to find that your description would fit almost any member of the human race. Why is it? I don't know. We read in books that it's because we don't cultivate the habit of intelligent observation. There was once a boy who learned how to describe what he saw. Every morning he was sent by his father to walk rapidly by an elegantly arranged window, and then afterward to repeat to him all the things he saw at this one glance at the panorama and to describe them. At first the lad could remember but few things that his eye may have caught in the passing glance, but in time he could remember almost everything in a show window by merely seeing it once. Boston Herald. THE MARBLE MAN." A Fattest SaSerlag- Freas a Peculiar Die- ease Ia a St. Louis Hospital. There is a "marble man" at the City hospital. He is whiter than the alabas ter statue Dixey makes in "Adonis," and the "driven snow" would soil his cheeks. Not only is his skin absolutely colorless, but his tongue, gums and finger nails are devoid of all hint of blood dyeing. He is believed to be the first patient suf fering from the peculiar ailment he is afflicted with that ever stepped inside St. Louis. As is proper with such a very distinguished disease, it has a very aristocratic name anchylostomum do denale. A very, very rare little worm is en gaged in merrily sucking the red cor puscles, or life giving, element, from this poor fellow's blood, and if the unwel come tenant is not gotten rid of pretty soon the patient will fade away to a shadow and die from sheer lack of nour ishment, though bis stomach be full of food. Albert Abbink, a young man who came from Germany, is the patient, and he isn't at all proud of it either. He looks like a marble statue, and a very j skeletonish ono at that, and has great difficulty in moving around owing to his weakness. Though this peculiar disease, or affec tion, is very rare in this part of the country, it is common enough in Italy and Germany. The worms are supposed to be in certain kinds of muddy water, nnd it has been noticed that brickmaker. and pottery operatives in tho old country nro peculiarly apt- to get them. VV nen the great St. Gothard tunnel was be ing dug it was discovered that nearly every workman 'engaged upon the job Buffered from this plague. It was first noted in Eyypt, and from this fact the weakness was named Egyptian chloral Scientists are pretty certain thr.t the Pharaohs had it, and some are inclined to believe that tho plague of toads men tioned in holy writ was none other than the plague of anchylostomum dode- nale. Dr. Marks believes he can assist Ab bink in getting nd of Ids high toned parasites, several of which now occupy a glass slide under his microscope. They are about an eighth of an inch in length, and under tho magnifying glass look like white alligators. They have tremendous jaws and wear their eggs scattered along their backbones. St. Louis Globe-Dem ocrat. A LONG ISLAND MYSTERY. Claude Weingand, DEALER IK Coal Oil, Gasoline, Crude Petroleum and Coal Gas Tar. "Leave orders at Evans Book Store. Hershey & Co. i I) CALEBS IN Apiiiral Inl ements hair Edith and Edna. In Homer, Mich., live Edith and Ednr Lovejoy, twins, who look so very mr. alike that nobody can tell themapa Their teachers can't do it. One d when Edith didn't have her lesson h teacher asked her to stay. JustasEdi At the Manicure's. The manicure with the golden was bending over the hand of a new customer. "Do 3'ou want yonr hands bleached? she asked. "Yes." She appUed the bleach, using more than the ordinary quantity upon the thumb and forefinger of the right hand. After working for about five minutes she stopped and said: "It is always difficult to remove nico tine with the first application." "Wh-a-a-t?" gasped the society girl. elevating her eyebrows. "Nicotine? What do you mean?" "The cigarettes, you know," replied the manicure. "It's perfectly awful how they stain the fingers, ain't it?"' And she smiled a smile that even the society girl couldn't resist. That made them friends, and they fell to discussing the different brands of cigarettes. And when the job was done the society girl whispered: "What'll take the stain off?" "Use lemon juice I do wo all do." "Thanks." New York Herald. A Skeleton Declared to Be That of an In dian, but Tliero Are Some Who Doubt It. Justice Cooper and a jury, in the ab sence of Coroner Moore, held an inquest at Babylon, N. Y., the other day over the skeleton which was unearthed on the property of John S. Foster yester day by some men engaged in digging post holes. A number of old residents of the village were sworn, but were un able to throw any light on the subject or identify the remains. They all stated that they could not recollect the sud den disappearance of any man. The oldest witness, however, said that tho ground where the skeleton was found had never been used as a graveyard. Charles I. Bedell, a resident of that portion of the town and a farmer, owner of the property, stated that he had plowed the ground in question about eight years ago. From this it would seem that had the body been there then it would have been unearthed, as it was only 18 inches under ground. The jury returned a ver dict stating that in its opinion the skel eton was that of an Indian who had been buried about 40 years and'had come to his death from natural causes. Tho village people generally believe that it was the skeleton of a murdered man whose body was brought ashere and buried. OF ALL KINDS, Farm and Spring Wagons, Buggies, Road Carts, Wind Mills, Pumps, Barb Wire, Etc. Locust Street, between Fifth and Sixth CENTRAL MARKET F. M. EEGK, Prbp. DEALER IX ALL KINDS OF hi Salted and Smoked MEATS. Hams, Bacon, Fresh Sausage, Poul try, Eggs, Etc. Cash Paid for Hides and Furs. Your patronage is respectfully so licited and we will aim to please you at all times. SSI Mil I. A. FORT, Has 200,000 acres of U. P. E. R. land for sale on the ten year plan. Call and seo him :f you want a bargain. HUMPHREYS' KTERiKARTSPECIFICS For Sonet, Cattle, Sheep, Sogs, Een, AJTD POULTBY. SMFmge Beek en Treatment ef Aalawle and Chart Seat Free. comb c FeTers,CeBsestleas.In Saatatatlea A. A.lbpiaal Meningitis, Milk Fever. B. B.8traiaa, .Lameness, KheimaUaem C. C. Distemper, Kaaal Discharges D. p.Bets er Grabs, Warms. i5,"0?.-M8 Heaves, Paeasaeala. "Si"5 r Grlaee, Bellyache. t'-O. Miscarriage, Hemorrhages. 5H.U. Urinary an Kldaey Diseases. .I.ErastiTe Diseases, Mange. .K. Diseases of Digestlea, ParalysfsV Stogie Bottle (oTer 50 dosesx - -Stable Case with SpeelBea. HansaL Veterinary Core Oil and MedfcjatorTfT.S Jar Veteriaary Care Oil, . . SM ay BrttMs r Ml'miiH saraWr aa la mf KMy ea tnHt T yrfea. aTXrHUTS,JiXB.ca,lllliaWH(aSt.,XwTtrft. was going out at the door the teacher said, "Didn't I tell you to stay?" and she did stay without letting any one know of the mistake. Once, a few weeks ago, while they were in Chicago with their mother and sister, they had been going through one of the big dry goods stores. Edith missed her sister and started to find her. Then she saw, or thought she saw, Edna some distance off, and called to her. It was only when the crowd jostled her against the frame of the big mirror that she found out she had mistaken herself for her sister. But tne insiaes oi tueir.neaas aren't a bit alike. One girl is very sober, and one. is very jolly and full of fun. About Opals. The prejudice against opals appears to bo disappearing. Anyhow the are pop- I ular. There are several varieties of opals and therefore several degrees of merit. The precious, or noble, or oriental opal is the supreme. This has all the colors, and when these colors are broken into spangles it is then called the harlequin opal. Then comes the fire opal, or gira- sole, with hyacinth red and yellow reflec tion. The former comes from Hungary, the fatter from Mexico. The common, or semiopals, aro nonopalescent. The hy drophane, or oculus mundi, is nontrans- parent, duc oecomes so Dy immersion in water or any transparent fluid. The cachalong is nearly opaque and of a bln ish white color. The hyalite is colorless. pellucid and white. The opal jasper or wood opal is tho petrifaction of wood, opalescent, but without tho coloring which makes the "noble" gem so pre cious. Chicago Tribune. Mrs. Grant's Hunt For a Horn. Mrs. Grant has determined to make her future homo in Washington, and during her recunt sojourn here spent most, of her time in house hunting. Al most every available residence in the West End now vacant was offered for her consideration through the various real estate agents, and it is safo to assert that she made an exhaustive ex amination of no less than 50 before Ieaviug for New York with her daugh ter, without coming to any definite con clusion in regard to a selection. Those that suited her fancy did not suit her purse, nnd when houses desirable in both these respects were offered for her ap proval, the locality, as a rule, proved unsatisfactory. Mrs. Grant has not giv en up hope of ultimate success, and can didly avers her preference for Washing ton as a place of residence. Washington Post. 'REAL LONDON SOCIETY." to' A public library and literary resort exclusively for the blind has been opened in Chicago. Told at the Liars' Clnb. "No sooner was I seated in the chair than the barber commented on the weather and directed a current of dis course into my ears. " 'Jene comprend pas,' said I, with an inward chuckle, thinking his volu bility would be checked. iiT- 1 r 1 a . ... -on very gooa rrencn ne started in afresh. I looked at him as if bewildered and then interrupted him by asking: " 'Was sagen Sie? "He began to repeat in German all that he had been saying, when I shut him off with: " 'Oh, talk to me with your fingers. I'm deaf and dumb!' "Truth. Their BelieC Bloomfield There are very few infi dels in Arizona, New Mexico and the ether territories. Bellefield Is that so? Bloomfield Yes; every man there believes in a future state. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Method fa like packing things in a box; a good packer will get in half as meh again as a bad one. Cecil. It Contains Two Classes Whose Rights Be So Identified Differ Radically. A London correspondent in a recant letter to a Now York paper says: We have been told this week bv Ladv Charles Beresford that the real London society, which includes "those who are there by right, and whom nothing can remove as long as their fortunes sur vive," consists of only 30 or 40 families. So called London society, she declares, includes two classes, one of them being those who are there, not of right, but by force, and who remain by dint of labor, thinking no cost too excessive to pay for the privilege of meeting with the great, The other section consists of those who are still anxious to obtain admittance into what appears to them to be a social paradise, and who still hope, and have every right to hope, to succeed, despite all the ridicule lavished upon them. On the delicate and much-vexed Ques tion of the morals of society, Lady Beresford says that the real question is whether the rircle in which immorality is so openly practiced is widening. She tninKS it is not. it is generally noticed: she says, that tho most pronounced set has, for some time, found it difficult to rather fresh recruits. "See here," said the m - TI-1V t ' married a widow, "hasn't vonr h: turned gray rather suddenly .in. were wed?" un, said she, "that's from fria-ht My Tarty. I've had a party 'cause I'm six years old. And 'cause I did last week as I was told, And always shut the door, and fed my cat, Nor once forgot to hang up my new hat. Mamma Invited Are boys, friends of mine Though Tommy Kngleficld is almost nine And coolc made cakes all full of fruit and spice, And lots of other things that make a party nice. But Willie had the mumps and couldn't come, And Chester fell down stairs and broke his thumb; Burt had the croup, and Leo a sore throat. And Tom had gone to Boston on the boat. And so papa, mamma and I we three Had just a lovely, lovely party tea. 'Too had!" said every one; but don't you tell I think I liked it Just about as well! Youth's Companion. Xa Frozen Itassla. In Bussia, where the cold is very in tense, the markets are Tery curious things. The meat is frozen; the carcases of dead animals, as sheep and pigs, stand upright outside the stalls; everything, even game and poultry, requires to be thawed before it can be cooked, and the market people's dress is as picturesque as it is warm and comfortable. Then the rivers are frozen over all the winter long, and so thick is the ice that every one can skate, anywhere and any 'time. 5-Stalls are put-up on the ice and busy markets held there. In the Asiatic part of Bussia the peo ple live chiefly by hunting and fishing, and the fur of the Russian animals is Tery beautiful the ermine, fox, sable, sea otter and others. At the end of the winter, when the snow melts, the huntsman pursues the elk. v. aring long shoes, in which he can glide over the snow very quickly;1 while the poor elk sinks into the snow deeper and deeper every step and is at last overtaken and killed. Good Words. Working For a Holiday. An Englishman stopping at one of the hotels was commenting upon the ex treme restlessness and incessant go of Americans. He said. "You Americans have such a beastly idea of tho compen sation of work." "What do you mean?" questioned a Pitt8burger standing near by. "Oh, you people work forinoney," was the explanation. 'I don't see anything beastly about that," was the retort. "May I ask for what you Englishmen work?' "Why, wo work for ourholidav," was the reply. Pittsburg Dispatch. Vienna. Vienna is of nearly circular form, be ing 12 miles in circumference. The old city, or city proper, is, however, scarcely three miles round. It was formerly in closed by fortifications. Immediately outside of these was a wide esplanade called the Glacis, which has been ele gantly built up and is called Ringstrasse, one of tho most splendid streets in the World. Brooklyn Eagle. Tollemaclie's Consideration. Of the late Lord Tollemache's consid eration for others an amusing instance has been related by his brother. One day, at Peckforton, he came down ear lier than was his wont and happened to look into the drawing room. He found the room "not done" and littered with brushes and dusters. Extremely dis pleased he rang the bell impetuously, and the inculpated housemaid was sum moned, but when she appeared, instead of administering the intended rebuke, he apologized to her for coming into the room so early, and was so full of excuses for his untimely visit that she said at last, "Pray, don't mention it, my lord." London Tit-Bits. Queen Victoria's "Jubilee Book," the volume containing the jubilee speeches When you speak of bees, designate the kind referred to. There are 4.500 suedes popularly known as "wild lees," 3,200 being natives of the Americas Britain has 70 species of bees and 16 of wasps. Of the latter there are 170 species known to entomologists. In the Vatican library there is a trea tise on dragons, a manuscript in a single roll 800 feet long and a foot wide, the material of which is said to be the was iso scared when you proposed tome: aad addresses, is 18 inches thick, has aon t you know!" Indianapolis Journal ' lsares 2 by 3 feet and weighs 68 pounds. I "tanned gut of a great dragon Telephoning Through Snow. Professor A. H. Thompson, chief of the United States Geological survey, re turned from the Black Hills a few even ings ago. The government has two par ties in tho hills, one at Rapid City and the other at Deadwood. The professor found the Rapid City party entirely snowbound and tells a tale of how ho got communication with them. He worked his way toward the men until he came -within speaking distance. By that time further passage seemed to be impracticable, but by accident they had occasion to resort to a peculiar expedi ent. They talked through the snow. The snow acted as a conductor of sound, and with some difficulty they made one another understand. Denver Republi can. ISroirno on Insomnia. Sir James Crichton Browne, the Eng lish expert on brain diseases, asserted in a popular lecture last week that insom nia is not attenaeu witii sucn uiastrous consequences as is commonly supposed. It is not as dangerous as the solicitude of the. sufferer. Ho suggested that the brains of literary men, who are the most frequent victims, acquire the trick of the heart, which takes a doze a fraction of a secoud after each beat and so man ages to get six hours' rest in 24. Some brains in cases of insomnia sleep in sec tions, different brain centers going off duty in turn. Smelling Out Bank'ills. If a bill must be sent in a letter, the safest plan is to roll it tightly into the shape of a lamplighter and lay it in the fold of the sheet inclosed. Arranged in that fashion, the fact that it is money cannot well be distinguished by the "feel." A thread, with a knot at the end, will not be so likely to fetch a tell tale fragment of the fiber paper when drawn by means of a needle through the envelope, and the smell of it will be less perceptible. So peculiar is the effluvium belonging to bank or treasury notes that experts at the bureau of engraving say that they can distinguish them when eealed in envelopes by the nose every time. A thief once showed to govern ment detectives who had caught him thathe could pick out, while blindfolded, from a pile of 400 letters everyone of seven which contained paper cash mere ly by scent. Washington Star. The strongest animals in the world are those that live on a vegetable diet, say the vegetarians. The lion is ferocious rather than strong. The bull, horse. reiiideer, elephant and antelope, all con spicuous for strength and endurance, choose a vegetable diet. H0MZ0PATHIC SPECIFIC No. 28 -la ate 3B years. The only meeaetfal remedy far fcjWK Driility, Vital Wiafaak and Prostration, from o-ar-work or otbr eamee. 9 1 par vial, or 5 vials and lares Till powder, for St. Sold by DraccisU, ornat pottpald ea rtetipt ef pric. aTnTHBXlS'UB. CO., Ill a lit Wata SU, XreTak. bob! &HM0i VrS f - r slaO.ras A CASE it wiluno QjDEE kTusSsssI , It in an ngrecabla Lazativo for the Bowel ; can bo carle into a Tea for use in one minute. Price 2 jc.. SOc. and Sl.flO pcrtiackage. O R3ra An lacjraa- toilet powder for tho Teeth and Breath 25c Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment Is a certain cure for Chronic Sore Eves, Granulated Eye Lids, Sore Nipple, Piles, Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum and iicald Head. 2-3 cents per box. For sale by druggists. TO HORSE OWNERS. For putting a horse in a fine healthy con tion try Dr. Cadv'a Condition Powdere. They tone up the system, aid digestion, cure loss of appetite, relieve constipation, correct kidnev disorders and destrov worms, riving new life to an old or over worked horse. 25 cents per package. For sale by druggists JR FUTURE r L V II V ss Z X ,? 5 IS IN YOUR OWN HAND. rairalstry a&ume to teU what the lines ia yoni band indicate. It will amuse yoa, If nothinjj more. The above diajam atmoyt explains it?elf. The; length or the LINE OP LIFE indicate probable c;:e to which you will live. Each BRACELET irives you thirty years. Well-marked LINE Of liEAD denotes brain power; clear LINE OF yOUTUNS. fame or riches. Both combined xnean mcccss in lire; botyoumnst kecpnp with modem dead to win it. You will find plenty of these in Oemorc-t's Family Magazineso attrnctirely pre tcntcri that crery member of the family Is enter tnined. It i it dozf-n magazines In one. A CLEAR LIKE OF HEART bespeaks tenderness: a straight LINE OF FATE, peaceful life: the reverse if crooked. A well-defined LINE OF HEALTH" pares you doctors' bills ; so will the health hints in Deinorest's. No other magazine publishes so many stories to interest the home circle. Ton will be subject to extremes of high spirits or despond ency if yon have the GIRDLE OF TENUS well marked: keep np yonr spirits by having Demorest's Marine to read. By subscribing- to it for li9l you will receive a nllery of exquisite works of art of creat value, besides the superb premium picture, 17x22 inches. "I'm a Daisy I" which is almost a real babr. and eqml to the original oil painting which cost $300: and yon will have a magazine that cannot he equaled by any in the world for Its beautiful illustrations an 1 subject matter, that will keep you posted on all the topics of the day, and all the fails, and different items of interest about the household, besides furnishing interesting readinz matter, both grave and gay, for the whole family ; and while Demorest's is not a fashion magazine, its fashion pages are perfect, and yon get with it, free of cost, all the pattern- yon wfth to nse during the year, and in any size yon choose. Send In yonr subscription at once, only $2 00, and von will really get over $5.00 In value. Address the pub lisher. W. Jennings Demorest, 13 East 14th 3t, New York. If yoa are unacquainted with the Kagazlne.sendfora specimen copy. A IarOUAD RANGLE means honestyta Jarre TRIANGLK, wnerosity: lone FIRST DIVISION OF THUMB, strong will ; LONG SECOND DIVISION, reason ing faculty. The MOUNT OF J U TITER betokens ambition; that of SATURN, prudence: the SUH love of splendor: MARS, courage; MOON, iaagina tion : VENUS. love of pleasure ; and MsRCUST,. intelligence. Take onr advice as above and yee will be sure to posses the last sad oust vataaass snail ty. - -