PLATTSMOUTIl WKKk r li wn ill ftin Mi Itt'i -i-ii (J J uf OA V, JULY PJ, 1883. WOMAN AND HOME. PHYSICAL AND MENTAL MENT OF DOYS AND DEVCLOP-GirtLS. Favlnff the 0.I1U nnd Knd Starving to Dead for Iivn At tho rirnie TJeinc I iiHiiltt-d In "Good Soeiety." Overeating. At the bottom of everything lies licaltli Vithout thin, every other pi ft. is more or Jess useless. Though you miss all el so for 3-our children, secure this if possible. Mak.) sure they acquire no health destroying habits. Do not have a loy tied to his mother's apron strings. Lef abundant play and out-of-door BporU creato Ktrenstli nnd animal Kpiritrf. Hoys and girls will need all of both they can Et loforo they have done. Encourage them to obtain quickness, self confidence and graeo for instance, by sparring, skating, liorso liek riding, dancing, ete. They will here after titnnd in good stead. lndeel, this liealLh nnd culture of the body nro no moro helpful, and, indeed, indiKpcnsnblc, on tho economic than on the evolutional side. By all means, make them, if you can, your boys -spcfiully, fearless and self reliant. Keiueni lr that true courage is one of tho richest possessions. As has been said, it is promotive of health and happiness, and essential to, and by tho (j! reeks and Romans was used synony mously with, virtue. A timid man may bo afraid to act right, may not dare to do his duty when opposed by dangers nnd difficul ties. Of this virtu;; everybody is ami. it ions, and none moro so than tho coward, us proved by his vainglorious affectation of it. Thus, tho fool affects wisdom, the knave honesty, the niggard liljvrulity and tho poltroon bravery. vs to what can be done in childhood lo vtnrl tlio higher development: In tho first place, if your son or daughter is gifted with mind or tastes inherently predestined to Iks cultivated, you could not pre vent that con summation iii you tried, .Some men who, in later life, become distinguished exponents of flu? higher departments, in 3routu novtrshow tho)ghtest indication of their future emi nence. Chancellor Kent, for instance, fa mous as ho bwaino in his maturity, up to 124 had never really faxed his mind, and had lived the life mainly of a healthy human ani roal. If j'our child bo 0111 nf this sort, he vil! givo you but little trouble, bet will just t-at, play, grow, Income strong, live in his little body, ;nd it will bo all the better for him hereafter i hat he did not develop his taste. You may, indeed, watch your boy nnd girl, however commonpj.aro they are, uid indulge your heart in tho hoj:- that in tho future they will turn out l'eabodys and (Jeorge Eliots. Others as Mozart aro pre cocious, ami show from tho very start an ticipating evidences of tlwir later growth. These are the diflieult oases. If you sus jiect that j-our boy or girl possesses some strongly j:-ronouiivd talent or lient, by all means do not coddle it. Neither is it neces sary brutally to tamp it out. There hare been in children inclinations that, while not of tho imperious nud supremo yjo that can jiot l arrested, might have been i.rd'ielivo of much pleasure and profit to their 'owners find a wid ? circle, and yet early died out through rough treatment nnd neglect. As time goes on, and tho indications persist, and friends and experts confirm your thought. you may feel assured. All the more because of suspected talent, make health and strength the first consideration. You are much more likely, however, to see in j our child remark able cleverness which have no existence, than not to see those which do exist. Here, it is well to sa3', that too many parents seek to make prodigies of their little ones. Scarcely re they able to lisp when attempt -s are made to teach them to read, recite verses and otherwise anticipate the natural ripening of the intellect. Again, if they aro unusually precocious, instead of being restrained, as they should be, more often a systematic form of instruc tion is instituted, and thus the intellect is prematurely developed, but almost always at me expense ot tho physical constitution. If in early life the mind is overtasked, the de velopment; or tho physical organization is retarded. The vital forces during the first years of child life are especially required by 1110 sy siem at large to maintain 1 ts necessary development. If, therefore, they are too prodigally expended on the intellect, or un equally diverted to tho brain, it must bo at the cost of other functions aud organs, uuuer ucu circumstances, tne growth it generally retarded, tho muscular system but imperiecny ueveioneu, and tho body con tinues spare and devoid of its fair propor tions, luo complexion will, moreover, be - pale and sickly, th circulation and digestion feeble, and nervous affections or other infir mines 01 1.1:0 nesu are HKejy to .supervene, overburdening existence and shortening its term, A he lutureof children, therefore, in ft "cry great measure, depends . upon the management which they receive during the first few years of life, and this truth should be deeply impressed upon the minds of all parents. Especially should they appreciate the dangers of interfering with intellectual development. The immature brain of child hood is such an exceedingly delicate organ that grievous consequences often, in later life, result from efforts toquiekeu tho under- standnig. in the natural order of things the powers of tho mind are disclosed grad ually and in harmony with the advancement of other functions of the system. But to return to our subject. Unexcep tional children who are destined, too, to prove unexceptional auuits, constitute the great majority, it is much, safer to encourage in tellectual tendencies in them than in children who are pronouncedly intellectual Peculi arly thoir property, however in addition to those among tho qualities we have already al luded to, which should obviously be secured for them are tho moral graces which most adorn childhood and are due to all. These, in later life, wo find to be our dearest treas ures and highest incentives. Those lessons of right and truth and uprightness which a mother's heart wisdom liest knows how to write- upon her children's souls ranks first here. Nothing can outweigh them, nothing can fully replace them. They sow the seeds cf the highest future character. As nir and exercise make healthy bodies, they constitute the health of the spirit. Next comes the education in love, kindness and courtesy tc thosa about us, conferred by tho same pre ceptions, which makes life uow and in memory afterward rich, and creates natures capable of later expansion of joys. Integrity and a loving heart are tho brightest jewels you can give any child. Boston Herald. Mio ljoginniivj of their richfa back to tho time when they carefully saved pieces of twine, never cutting it from a bundle, but carefully untying it and laying it away for future; use, until they must have had a bar rel or two of old tivino lying around some place. Oiwo I read of a millionaire who net his fellow men on example of thrift by get ting out of his carriage and picking up a y nail ho saw by the roadside, and I em ulated his example until I had about forty pounds of old, rusty, Iwiit and broken nails lying around; and about 0111-0 in six months I used a )Hund or two of them in trying to find one that I could drive into a board with out lx-iiding or breaking. At last I sold tho lot for old iron and got ten cents for them. Then I ln'gan to reform, and tho other day I began reforming my wife. I was cleaning out tho accumulation of years in a clow t in the basement and piling most of its contents up for the ash man when rny wifecamo down stairs. "There aro some, things in that closet I want saved," she said; "they'll como handy fiomo time." Ihit I resolved to n firm. "You don't want this?" I said, holding up 1111 old tea kettle without any spout and with six big holes in tho lioltom of it. "Well, it might come handy for something somo day." I tossed it into tho ash barrel and held up a pair of very old boots, discarded four years ago, and now green with mold. "To use in saving these, is there?" I asked. "Well, I don't know. A little piece of leather often comes handy in a house for a hinge or something." I called to mind a pair of leather hinges I once made, and the hoots followed tho tea kettle. "What do you want this rusty old hoop skirt forf "Oh, a piece of hoopskirt wire often conies in useful in u house." "It hasn't been nsked for in this houso since before tho war," I said. "Here's an old hat of mine that's been lying around nine years. Better throw it a way, hadn't I.m "Well, perhaps so. I've often thought of giving it to some poor man, but I forget it every time a tramp comes round. I gave it to one tramp and he wunt oh and left it on the front gate post." "ShowM his good sense," I said. "Do you want all these old broken dishes" "Yes; I'll have them alt mended someday. I've intended having it done for five yeari." When her back was turned they went into the ash barrel. "No use in saving these old bottles, eh?" "Well, a bottle's a handy thing to have irontid. Better save them." 'My dear," I said, "hero are at least seventy-livo old bottles, aul o my certain knowledge wo don't use ouo a yeat,;yid I think we can trust our great-great-great-great grandchildren to get their own bottles, so here they go." In tho same daring, reckles? way I threw away tiireo old bustles, old bonnet?, hreeehos, lamps, skillets, hair combings, shoes, suw dust, tin pans, old papers, pop corn, wormy walnuts, soap grease, broken lamps, snout less teapots, bottomless coffee iots, bracked kettles and ten thousand ot her things that had for years and years waited their turn to "come handy," but which never would or eouhl "como handy" in this world or in the world py come. Zenas Dane in Detroit Free Press. f iir object of his silent watchfulness revealj now charms, if she lays asidu her "company manners" and becomes an unaffected j;irl for tho day; if she look after tho littlo folks and finds keen joy in the udded pleasure she con fers upon them in tho many ways that a wo manly woman is mistress of ; if sho cures less for trying hard to win attention than to lo stow it, ujKdi women older and less attrac tive than herself; if she does these things then is she a woman to "tie to," a girl that, as u wne, win i.e a capital prize 111 the lot tery of matrimony. Per contra, if the umbrageous canopy of tho picnic grove casts its latticed shadow upon a damsel who regards the affair as only serving us a background to a picture in which she is the self appointed central flguro of the foreground; if she is a creuturo of many needs and makes these known in an importunate manner; if she invests a green worm with a horror that upsets tho peace of mind of all about her; if she permits a va grant spider or investigating ant to destroy her good humor for hours and to engender the wish oil tho part of her acquaintances that she had been prevented from leaving home; if, in short, she conducts herself as if she was conferring a favor on the entire gathering by coming at all, thou does sho stand revealed as a young woman that, liko dynamite or rough on rats, it is well to leave alone. Pittsburg Bulk-tin. A TTXIfNICAL SCHOOL IN NEW YORK CITY FOR TRAINING EXCLUSIVELY GIRLS. $f;irving o DcaJli lor love. Ouida says that ft woman has the heaii' of a dog, meaning by that, I suppose, that the more sho is beaten tho more she loves tho hand that beats her. But it is not true. The strongest Jove of tho strongest of us can be bent and broken iikf a lily by indifference or leglect. The man who hold his heart proud and high, too often takes the love of a woman for granted. Having oiiu won it, he feeU too sure that ho can keep it without n'y trouble, at least without any extra trouble. "I've eot her now," he savs to himself, "Klie belongs to trtc much as my horse does: I will see that she is weil el, well stabled, well groomed and well shcxl. and what ihulq could a reasonable woman desire," and he picks the little mote he laid at her feet before lm "got her," and which he was pleased to call his heart, and holding it up proud and high ho turns tho key and leaves her, But some women aro not reasonable, they don't pro tend to bo reasonable, and sometimes when the man who has "got her" is poising his heart high up in the cool regions of solf com placency and waiting for the unreasonable woman to climb for it, she simply doesn't do it. Sometimes she just quietly begins to pack the ice- around her own heart until it freezes even stiffcr and colder than his; and some times she beats her hoi, impetuous, slighted 1 ! 1. it . I " ' .. ueai i, uga ju.nl me uars 01 lier prison imtiJ fiu$ Unas her way out to sunshine and to freedom, T--.fc 1 1 T , - ... uui, aias iuui x muse com ess it, sho more often starves to death from love hunger witmn ner prison waits. Men may laugh of it, but there are such deaths, and women die there daily and are shrouded and cofij-cod and buried without the world's ever knowing that ihro is even so much as a faint bruise 011 their tenrlor, loving, patient hearts. It is the men who hold their hearts "proud and high," who kill Not Tsaotly What Wo Seem. Do many of us strive to make ourselves seen in our little worlds.' Do we not rather hide under all manner of disguises, do we not try to seem better, kinder, more inno cent, purer, wiser, wittier than we are.' Do wo show to everybody tho testiness of our temper? Do we go uLvt admitting freely that we told an untruth this moii.i..g- that we havo been guilty of listening to' what was not intended for our ears; that we ate a gluttonous meal; that we hurt tho feelings of all our family by our malicious speech ;lhat we slandered an acquaintance; that we took more than our share of tho duyj pleasures, tho liest chair, the first reading of the daily paper; that we snubbed our dependents, and were rude to our superiors and were alto gether unlovely I No: we carry the blandest expressions that wo know how to wear, on tho side toward the world, portraying tho best disposition that wo know how to counterfeit; wo turn up our ey?s in horror at tho person who dot's tell uutiuths ; w speak w ith scorn aud old saws "f jcopln' wq do listen to what was not meant for them to hear- we wish aiud thai, wo had moro appetite, for we eat no moro than the girl in tho fable, with her grain of rice; we despise gossip and slander; wo rise from the comfortable chair when mamma comes in if there is any one present to seo us do it; w air the paper for grandma without so much as giant-ma M.t we speak with a voice o! silver to our 'inferiors; co nr our uncon scious power of imposture goes we appear ic be altogether too sweet and irood for humin nature's daily food. It is, in fact, our aim to seem j.:o much better than wo are that it amounts .to sc-eiuiii That wo aro not, to an actual disguise, ana if ouo who tuiLi ha I knows us well should ever chance to meet our soul wandering in tlio No Man's Land of the other life, he will certainly not, havo !ht least idea that he has ever met thai 3oul fcg- tore. Harper s Bazar. Tl Slwlfni Movement ly AVlilcli AVuincu Have I'.ntered So Many epartmciil of 1 mlii-try Subjects Taught in the School. S.une Suijest loin. ' Saving: the Odds and EntU. "What 60rt of insane folly is it that pos sesses some ot us at timp, and makes us save ' all our odds and ends of every description under tho delusion that they will "com.. Landy"some time? iliey never ao "come handy," but we cling to them with great tenacity instead ot having tho good senso to bestow them on the ash man as his rightful ureroeatives. My wife and I have well developed economi cal tendencies, and we pride ourselves on never wasting a tiling that may "bo useful" or "come handy" at any time in tho dim future. t I have read of men of weolih who traced women in this noiseless, stealthy way. It is a strange fact that cold, reticent, un demonstrative men who hold their hearts proud and high, and who weigh out in homce opathic doses the words of affection they givo to a woman lest they should cive her the hundredth part of a grain too many, have often the power to awaken the passion ate adoration of tho most intense and lovin" est women of us aii. She thrills with bliss at tho lightest touch of his hand and turns pale with emotion at the very sound of his voice or his step. When ho smiles on her she goes right up to heaven, and when ho frowns sh Irops down to earth with a sickening thud. She would climb the highest peak with bare md bleeding feet just for otic soft look from his hard, cold eyes. Sho would wado ankle deep through the burning sands of a desert to win one word of love from his cold, dumb lips, tshe would throw herself between him and death and gladly die on his cold bosom for the sake of one warm and tender kiss; and sho would lay her prettiest tea gown pn tho altar of self sacrifice as a burnt offering if he would only call her "darling" just one time. But even the most intense, constant and lovingest woman of us all cannot go on climbing high mountains, wading through hot sands and sacrificing her liest tea gowns forever. Sho is human, and she will faint and die on the way, leaving her broken heart as a warning to others who stake all on love and lose; or she will get tired of striving for the love that is held out of her reach, and will comfort herself with some tenderer heart that loves her and is not too proud to tell her so. Pearl Rivers in New Orleans Picayune. A Place to Study Womanhood. It is rather a credit to a young woman that sho can heartily and unaffectedly enjoy and help others to enjoy a good perchance old fashioned picnic. It will redound to the life happiness of a young man to take a lay off and attend such a cicnio. if only to studv womanhood from a uicnic standpoint. If. from such a point of observation, his facul ties are rightly employed, he may detect qualities in the yotuiff women of his circle that, until the advent of an all day picnic, have remained latent, unsuspected. If the Attracting tlio "Wrong: Element. I know somo women who are always bein ".col .-u. x iiwi i wonuer at it. niey lro abroad ex.kecth.g punoyaijpo, slight or in civility. They are the bristle rcntm-ail", amt the first thought 'in their minds, on being surrounded by men, is, Ton't any of ycu miserable creatures dare to touch me." So I believe that those who carry that mental makeup about with them will attract the element of incivility. They get what they expect, 'f 'a peisyii g ,, cr.t in the world w ith his or her fists doubled up, and is 011 the war path all tha iimn, whether there bp any thing to war with 01' not, he or she is much moro likely to havo trouble than the peace ful. You can so go out, with 3-our mental fists doubled up when j our physical ones are not; but the iniluei.;: ci: -;th("- js 00 which courts trouble, and is likely to get it. They told me in California that tho man who al ways carries a pistol is much more likely to get into a fight than he who does not. I think tho ri.-tt.soii for that is that merely having a deadly weapon about ono inclines to the combative spirit, and as that gets hold of the pistol bearer jt arouses the same spirit 111 others. Then there are other women who must flirt anywhere and everywhere, if not with one man with another; no matter the qualitj-, so long as it is a man. Their minds are perma nently made up to flirt. They don't know this. They'are quite unconscious that this is their mental condition'. They would not be lieve you if you told them so, and they would 111 men- oenei. 1 uey are ve liable to get into scrapes. TLey like, in this way, to play with a little fire, which some times becomes too hot for them. Cut thev Kiuuie it inemseives. a.ncl a woman with this sort of mind attracts to her the very ele- iuciio vmicu may give kei trouble thano-h she may not lift an eyelid or raise a'flner. i rentice JHullord in iNew York Star. What Aro They Proud Of? A chronic grumbler caught the Rambler's ear recently, and this is what ho hud to snv An aristocracy in a republic is a pestilent. uiioiimi , anu yet that is precisely what is growing up. A self made man who lias worked for his wealth with unflagging indus- neeii luueiiigence, retains his democ racy, but not so his wife and daughters, who have done nothing but cultivate exnensivo tastes. They elevate their A- A- . I 1 1 . tenuous neignuornoous and lament thnfc their parent has no dignity whatever. They manage to tolerate him " because he keeps their lily white hands from the necessity of wju, out mey maice mm teel his immeasur 1 1 - "A 1 . uuio luienonty wuen any social question turns up. What are they proud of? Thev are prouu oi uoing noining ana or bein" no earthlj' use to anybody or even to themselves. Usefulness of any kind is horridly vulgar. They call themselves 'good society ' and what with holding their heads very high and keeping everybody except their own partic ular set at a distance, they have managed to persuade a great many that they realiy are superior in some mysterious fashion to other citizens." For a Hal Breath ;V woman with every charm of an (incienfe or modern Venus ceases to bo beautiful if, when she speaks, her breath is hot and fever ish, or worso still, absolutely tainted. Nat urally sho does not know this, and it is only proper that somebody belonging to her should tell her, If it comes from her teeth it is something very quickly remedied. If it comes from her digestion then it is her doc tor's business to get her in good order, but very often in this country of invalid women it comes from the uso of very strong medi cines. Dr. Wilson advises for this the use of lemons, claiming that they are the most puri fying of nil fruits, and tho aromatic odor produced by lemons rubbed on tho teeth, gums or nps lasts longer man any other. For a feverish breath that results from the stomach a few drops of lime water used as a gargle, or letter still, a half tfaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda in a litt'e water will have the desired effect. "Bab" in Philadel phia Times. We imagine that it will surprise most jk-o-ple to learn that thero is a technical school in New Y ork, exclusively for girls, which has been iu existence fourteen years, and gradu utcu this year aciassoi vji memiiers, or moro than tho united members of tho graduating classes of lioys 111 all tho technical schools in the western hemisphere. It is true that tho sciences taught in tho school are not of a very abstruse character, but they aro of tho sort best udupted at present to help girls to earn an honest living, and many a woman must bless tho thoughtful charity by which she was put in tho way of 'ndejiendciioe. Thero is still something strange to an Ameri can in tho modern movement by which wo men have entered into nearly all tho depart ments of industry and trade which were once monopolized by men. It is not many years since a young girl's face was a rather rare sight on Wall or .State street, and those, that were seen generally lie longed to persons who were shyly hurrying by on their way to a ferry or railway sta tion. Now nearly every broker's or lawyer's ofiico and merchant's counting room has its gentle, industrious bookkecjiers and tj'po writers, aud in many cases these modest and faithful assistants aro intrusted with very great responsibility. All the girls who wish to lw employed, however, cannot find places as typewriter or bookkeepers, and it is a matter of much importance to tho welfaro of the sex to increase tho number of occupa tions iu which it can be of service. This sort of work is just what a technical school can do, and those who would like to sec the weak er class of their fellow citizens placed in a position where tlicy need not be dependent for support upon tho uncertain mercies of their male relatives will do well to keep the New York example in mind. Among the subjects taught in. the school are stenography and bookkeeping, mechani cal and free hand drawing, sewing both by hand anl machine, cutting and fitting, music, designing as applied to textile fabrics, wall papers and tiles and modeling. All the instruct Lm given is free, and the salaries of the twelve teachets'ci'u'ployerj, as well as rent and other expenses, 310 paid by subscription under tho earo of the Young Women's Chris tian Association. So far as tho public are concerned the education of women in ail these, as well as other kindred subjects, is an unmixed advantage. Not only aro thou sands intelligent persons changed from idle end often very poor CuiuuniT: r in- tlustrious aixt comparatively amuent' pro ducers, but tho introduction of so much trained skill into the practice of tho tlomes f arts must before long show itself in the development oil thosa arts. The manufacture of wall paper in this country certainly owes to a few clever ;.romeu a great part of tho extraordinary artistic success vhich it has achieved; and to t;tke nnother example, lW decorative em broidery of tho associated artists, and of Mrs. Holmes beforo thein, givo a promise for tho future of American art which is hardly to be found in the painting or sculpture of tho country. If we could suggest anything which might viih advantage bo added to the curriculum' ,of '' h'is' or similar schools, it would certainly bo tho development of the actual practice' of artistic industry in other ways besides embroidery. There is no reason, for instance, why women here should not be as successful in decorative painting as U-c Mis;s Cnrrptt and their rivals aro in England, Most women are somewhat sensitive to color, but are so persuaded of their natural gift iu this direction that they scorn to learn anything about the subject, and make, iu consequence, laborious attempts at decora- Liuii v.-):ioh, to everybody but themselves, ap pear painfully ignorant and bald. If the same women would get rid of the notion that heaven has already taught them a busi uraa niiicu liien uruiuars spenu. years m learning, and would, like men, make them selves acquainted with the observations of such masters as Owen Jones, Dr. Dresser and llham Morris, and compare the work of different ages and countries, the beautiful forms of the antique and tho Renaissance tho brilliancy of tho Japanese and tho inef fable coloring of the Chinese, they could, iiiui u vusuy man most men, acquire a re source and certainty which would make them the best and most rapid of decorators. the same sort of training would fit them r . j 1 . . - . 1 ji outer aiTistis proiessions. Vo cannot say that we think the s3-stem of making de signs for tlle3 and similar things, for indif ferent workmen to carry out, is calculated to develop tho highest artistic capacity or pro duce tho most beautiful art. The highest beauty can only bo added by the artist's own hiuiui, without the interyention of mechan ics, and there is just now a wide field for the use of works of decoration which shall be as much autographs of the designer as an easel picture could lje. To take a single example, a great deal of mosaic for the adornment of buildings is now made in Venice by an asso ciation of girls of good family, who ' draw and color tho designs, pick out tho bits of glass or stone, and send them to bo put in positica. Although mosaic is now a rare luxury with us, it might be popularized in this way to the general advantage. Ameri can Architect. A PERFECT COMBINATION Of harmless vegetable remedies that will restore the whole system to healthy action, is absolutely needed to cure any disease "for the disease that affects one organ weakens all." Paine's Celery Compound is THIS PERFECT COMBINATION Read the proofs I territ.ly rrorn nervousness und kidney o bottle! of I'ul lie's Celery ( 'oniiKiund. cii'l till, how It Uid help me ! 1 have ho niin-U faith iu your I trout ilr have. RiifiiTod I bou'-lit two hottlci (if 1 'nine's t'eli medicine, fur I know what it did for me, Ontario Centre, N. . Mkm. J. J. Watsow. PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND " For five yours I suffered with malaria and nt,rvati.neNS. I tried ruine's Celery Coiiiioiinl, ntnl 1 enn truthfully sny that live bottles completely cured mo. I cheerfully recom mend it, for 1 know it to be a eod medicine." Ciias. L. Steakns, Letter Currier, Klutiun It, Iirooklyn, N. Y. CURES ALL NERVOUS DISEASES, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Paralysis, Biliousness, Dyspepsia,Costiveness,Pile3, Liver Com plaint, Kidney Trouble, Female Complaints, and all diseases arisingfrom Impure Blood. f I. six for ". kuN At Co., t'n Wki.iji, rtreiiABn. ., lluiliiiKtou, Vt. For tho Nervous, 1. nix fur 5. S- thiit rach Imt llu U-arH tiio Colory truilu murk. The Debilitated, 1, nix fur 5. Wki.tji. Kioimmi. bun 6i Co., l'rui'H.. iiiirluii.-ti!i, t. The Aged. FURNITURE EMPORIUM. FOU ALL CLASSICS OF- FINE FTJBNITURE -YOU SIIOLL1) CALL Whore :i iiiniriiifitt nl J'licc; sore z-: (i;o1k ;iiul I'liii' s stock of abound. UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING A SPECIALTY COUNKlt MAIN' A N 1 ) JXT,U I'LAVj MOL'l ir, K i;i;;.M'A 1' 1 1 Wi 1 call ycur attention they are headquarters l'or ail and Vegetables. We are receiving Freeh to ki th: th fact of r r ui at. Strawberries every Oranges, Lemcns and Bananas ccnetently cn hand Jtist received, a v, We have Pure Maple i r i e ty Sugar cf Canned and Scup s no nr. i e t a k e BMNNE TUTT. J CO NATHAN LI ATT. J. V. M A liTll I- Inventor of the Catcher's Mask. Fred Thaj-er not Duly inscribed Lis rame on the tablet of "great Harvard ball hav ers," but be did more than that. The catch er's mask was tho creation of Fred Thaver" Yankee ingenuity. It came about in this way; After catching Ernst for a season, Tyng went to Thayer and said tan xvoiilil n-,- stand up any longer and run the risk of l o- ing his face stove in. Thaj-ex had no alxr nativo. He must either devise some pro ec tion for Tyng's face or lose him as a catcher Why not cover the face with the quick witted captain. No sooner did die idea occur to Lim than he went to work to carry it out. He spent his snare tim in nding wires aud exnerimentino- ,ir,;i ,, had constructed the first catcher's mniw0 used. It was a primitive affair as coinparnl with the masks of today, but it answered the purpose and kept Tyng behind the bat That original mask was hano-ino- r- Wrights ofliee the last time 1 xcn v,. n J ryi . .. J 3. rreu xuayer is now makin wool business in Boston. kTMA J, nUTTKIi AND KGCS. BEE POIIK PACKERS am) ii:.u.j,ns in PORK, MUTTON AKi) "VEAL. THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Sugar Cured Meals, Hams. Bacon, Lard, c., of our own make. Tlio lf st 1ii:hk1 "WHOLESALE of OYSTI AND RET RS, AIL. in cans tind Lulk, at I Ml m p I! u c p p U it! N l h Cf T 1 p I E C XV. 5. .JOSTEM, Proprietor. a pbc f-irutss i k Go ilr ti-ie cirri?, Carriages for Pleasure and Short Drives Always Slept Heady. Cor.4th and Vino - 2 lsLttj32aa.es vj"h. PEED O-OjESXD eze Old IS THE est Agricultural er money in -Iiastqn Globe. tl To Keep Away riles. The San Francisco Medical Joumni -c : is stated that oil of bay is used in Switzer land by butchers to keen their shon f. from flies; aud that after a coat of the oil has been applied to the walls none r,f iw troublesome pests venture to put in an ap pearance. This remedy has also been tried aud found effectual in the south of France in pr serving gilt frames, chandeliers, etc from becoming soiled. It is remarked that fliea soon avoid the rooms where this application has been employed. Frank Leslie's. In Cass County. -hi: klki-s s ham) a Fi i.r. mm: .i-- HyliluuL I unftLliffirLikviEry I h To .suit all seasons of tl ie venr. He keeps the line eye. Minneapolis and Mc-Coi-mIc JJirder tf r- iicjioia anu cut laru 1 jiieMiiiig aeiunes. i'eter hLelfcr and leaning unions and logics kept constantly on Land. V eepmg Water. He sure and call on rred before Plattsmouth or "Weeping "Water. you buy ill the Jirar.cJi Jror.se l-'UV. either ut Plattsiuouth and Weeping Wnler ahrnsUu