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About Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1890)
VHZKL7 HERALD; PLAITS MOUTH NEBRASKA OC'iOBlR 2, MO 0 CUCOA AND COCAINE 1HEY ARE MADE FROM ALTOGETHER 'DIFFERENT SHRUBS. One I a lcllKl t ful food, the Other I lov-i Cul Nerve Nllmulunt Chocolate nnl Cocou Are Idoutlcul How the l oriiur (Jruwu-llow It I 01tiiinI. Tlio introduction nri'l the common use of !!: Uti:i.i "coci" and "cocoa," appli cable to medicinal substances, have had tin? 'Vcct (it coufiihiny; people's ttrindd with menrd to the eource ami prepara tion, iin-l, in wane cases, creating a prej udice against tho use of wholly different 8nb.,laiice.s chocolato and cocoa. Th irie.licinal wines of cocoa and tho pow erful a'J:.il-)i l.-i ami nervo ptimulants, co caini' and hvrine. are prepared from the l.-avt a of erythroxyjon coca, a shrub i::di p rions to IVrn ")id Bolivia, wholly lii'iVrent to theobroma cacao, a small but beautiful tree, which ?row3 luxuri antly both wild and cultivated in the northern parts of South America, Cen tral America. Mexico and tho West In dies, from the needs of which chocolate nnd cocoa, and (from the oil) cocoa oint ment or "butter." are prepared. When the Spaniards first visited Mex ico, four centuries o, they found the natives using chocolate. It was intro-bv-H into Curope as early as 1520, and lias since been more or less extensively u: ed in ever- civilized country. Lin meus was eo fond of it that ho pave to the tree from which it was obtained the memo of Theobroma food for the g.xU. Chocolate and cocoa are only two forms of the same substance. HOW COCOA IS OBTAINED. The tree twice a year jields a crop of reddish spongy fruit, shaped somewki.t like a cucumber. The ripe fruit being collected ni the decline of the moon, the tree continues its 3-ield for twenty or thirty years. Each fruit or pod con tains from six to fifty beans usually about twentj' and there are from ten to twenty pounds of such beans from each tree at each crop. The beans are usually about the size of large almonds. They are frequently (from a confusion of language) called indifferently "beans," "seeds," "nuts," "berries," and "fruits." but their character will be better under stood by regarding them as beans con tained within a pod. They are gener ally picked out and dried for exporta tion. Besides the beans the pulp contains a creamy and cordial juice, and by steam ing and pressing the beans will yield one-third of their weight of a kind of butter to which the richness of cocoa is due. For preparing the beverage material tho beans are exported in their original state, to be converted into cocoa or choc olate by a manufacturing process. They are first roasted in slowly rotating ovens, then broken by machine into such a state that the husks may be separated from the kernels by a blast of air, and they are afterward treated and beaten and converted into a pulp by means of their own oil. The pulp, when ground between mill stones till it assumes a consistency some thing like that of treacle, is in a state to receive any of the modifications that will fit it for the market. It may be "plain cocoa," or "homoeopathic cocoa" or "vanilla chocolate;" it may have ar rowroot or sago or sugar mixed with it; or if the manufacturers bo tinctured with roguery there may perchance be bean meal or other adulterants mixed with the pulp. CHOCOLATE IN MANY FORMS. The pulp, when fully prepared in any of these diverse ways, is cast into large molds: the cakes thus produced are cut into minute shreds by machine, and the shreds are rubbed, sifted and packed for sale. TIih preparations of cocoa and choco late maJrt in France are more numerous than usually made in England or the United States; they cdmprise vanilla chocolate, milk chocolate, chocolate bon bons, chocolate papillotes, chocolate crackers, chocolate pastilles, chocolate with taraxacum or with sarsaparilla, j-li - --.! ita 1rifV1 f o t it cIt rtT-f" Vi to isa n n end to the list: for once admit the prin cipal of mixing cocoa with vegetable in fusions or decoctions or essences and the-variety becomes interminable. The French limit themselves to the use of the word "chocolate," derived from the Mexican name of the plant (chocolatl): they seldom speak of "cocoa." What are called "cocoa nibs" are the beans roughly crushed. "Flake cocoa," -nlso, is another name for the beans when Crushed between rollers, but before any thing else has been added to them. The husk of the seed after roasting con tains a good deal of nutriment; indeed, 60 do the pods likewise, and all three are more or less used in making cheap cocoa. The plant is certainly used in more ways than coffee drank as a thick decoc tion (made to somewhat resemble gruel), msdo into various confections .iiid pas tries, eaten aa bonbons, etc. while a poor decoction is drank in some places by boiling the husks separated from the beans. While chocolate and cocoa contain an essential principle, theobromine, com parable to caffeine and theine the alka loids of coffee and tea it is much less potent as a disturber of the nervous sys tem; and chocolate and cocoa are pro portionally more welcome as a beverage, lnsides possessing specially nutritive qualities, which render them much more sustaining than tea. Dr. II. N. Uell in Sanitarian. Pinion Are Wing But Bowles Mr. Stiff any, 1 would like you to fix the wings of this watch. Stiff any Wings? I do not understand you. Bowles Perhaps I haven't got it right. What are those appendages by which a butterfly is enabled to fly? Pin pin StifTany Pinions? ' Bowles Oh, yea; fix the watch's pin ions. .... Stiflanj -Oh! Jewelers' Circular Kubher Ilinga III Feed. 4 for a long time lumps or crude rubber and elastic bands havo mysteriously van- I 4aV.fi! V. ... tlw r i .-JiH-'l liwiil Llrj LUllli HI UJ ...1.171 I V 8 "all night" pharmacy in Brooklyn. No illy was abla to throw any light on the enigma until Drug Clerk Bosworth made a discovery. It was late at night and the store was quiet. Trade had been dull for an hour and Bosworth felt like taking a nap. Just as he was about dropping off to f-Iet'p ho happened to look up and caught a gli tnj.se of "Doc," a big t at that lives in the pharmacy. lie was at lunch, and was feaslmg 011 rubber bands. One In; one he extracted them from their little glass recep'acle and munched away with eviueut nl;.-;h. Bosworth did not disturb him, but sat still and count- j ei tiie rings as taey vanished down the I cat's throat. When forty-three had I faded from view "Doc" stopped eating, j 'gave a wide yawn and stretched himself ! out for an after dinner nap on top of a I showcase. j Having accidentally solved the mys j tery, IJjsvoiLh resolved to 1 ave some i fun at "Doc's" expense, so, after tho cat had been dozing for an hour, ho called him. "Doc" came to the front quickly. In his hand Bosworth held a largo elas tic band. This he extended toward the cat. "Doc's" eyes seemed to sparkle as lie contemplated the luscious morsel, and without hesitation seized it with his teeth. Bosworth, however, had a good grip on tho other end. When the cat pulled, Bosworth pulled, too, but the little tug of war did not last long, for the mis chievous clerk suddenly relaxed his hold on the baud, and as it snapped back it caught the unlucky cat a stinging cut on tho end of his noe. lie dropped the Land as if it were a hot potato, sprang tio?n the counter and ran out of the store with a cry of distress. Since then, although Bosworth and his frien.'..-. to whom ho related the inci dent, have- repeatedly tried to induce "Doc" to submit to being hand fed with ruober rings, he steadfastly refuses to indulge. Hi 3 abnormal appetite ha3 been cured. New York Herald. A Change in the Manner cf Marketing If any one is desirous of seeing the only extar.t specimen of old fashioned marketing it can be witnessed in and about Washington market on Saturday morning. In a former generation the head cf the household rose at daj'light, and grr.t,ping a huge basket betook him self to Washington. Clinton or Jefferson market to secure tho choice cut of beef and the freshest vegetables and berries. The leonino bead and massive figure of Gen. Scott could be seen nearly every morning at Jefferson market, and every burly butcher and red cheeked market woman looked for his greeting as a mat ter of -course. At "Clinton market the heads of the Lord, Lyuig, Griffin, Aymar and other families of social note did not disdain to put in a personal appearance, and amid the jokes and laughter that the wit of the society man and the ready repartee of the market woman provoked the work of filling the basket was a pleasant one. Times change, and the grandsons of the men who carried their own baskets to market are waited upon by the butcher and green grocer at their houses, but some of the gray haired sons of those venerable men still go down to market on Saturdays, and they naturally have enough imitators to make this personal visitation a feature, on Saturdays espe cially. This set are careful purchasers and only buy after examination and study. They know what is good and where to get it, and evidently it pays them to carry their own baskets. New York Sun. . Two Words. People who wish to send home tele grams from abroad commonly arrange a system of cipher In order to make the expense a3 small as possible. A story is told of one man, however, whose ingenu ity supplied tho lack of any prearranged cipher. A western man who owned a great farm in Dakota was obliged to cross the water for business purposes. For three months he heard nothing from the man whom he had left in charge of the fann, and at last he became somewhat dis turbed, lie was an illiterate person, though a capital farmer, and the writing of a t; '!': "11:1 was a matter cf some diffi- cult;.-. At hist he sent off the following j comj . :e... ve message: "Js ; all right at the farm:" Izu;-..ije:. .y he awaited the answer. It would be expensive, he felt sure, whether it brought good or bad news, judging by his own experience. Cut his trusty foreman was a person of few words and strict ideas of econ omy, and the envelope which his anx ious employer received as soon as possi ble contained simply this message. "Things is." Youth's Companion. A True Philanthropist. A philanthropic lady, Mrs. Magnnsson, ? about to sell her family heirlooms for the purpose of opening a high school for girls in Ireland. Same of these articles are TOO years old, and the unique collec tion comprises belts, clasps, bracelets, brooches, old wood earrings and sjoons. This lady has, by the help of some friends in England, succeeded in erecting a building on a piece of ground which be longed to her, and it is for the purpose of furnishing the interior, of supplying books, and paying teachers that the lady has determined to part with her cher ished heiiloom. The great test of a woman's devotion to any purpose seems to have been, from Queen Isabella down, the sale cf her jewels to forward its in1 terests, and it is an indisputable fact that comparatively few women can en dure this test of her loyalty. New York Sun. All cigarettes contain, according to Professor Laflin. a competent scientist and chemist, five distinct poisons. Three of these are the most deadly oils, one in the paper wrapper, one in the nicotine, and the third, and the worst, in' the flavoring. The other poisons are salt peter and ium. ANOTHER POCAHONTAS. AN ALASKAN VERSION OF THE JOHN SMITH ROMANCE. Ah Wing, m Chlnnae Cook, la Cust Away. IIxm-immI by ladhtno, -and la Il-lng Fat tened Tor lh Pol, When an Indian Mahlrn Save III LHtt. PM-atiouta.s has leen outdone hy an Alaskan maiden John Smith was only in danger of having his. brains spattered over tbf surrounding real estate when I'oeahontas i-scned Liin with her love. The.lohn Smith of Alaska was not only in dumber of being killed, but of being eaten, when the woman in whose eye he found favor savtnl him. The Alaskan .John Smith was not a titl -I explorer when he fell into the liand-i of t he navvies, nor was hi nann Je!in S;:i-.th lie was only a common yel!i.v slnnnod sea cook. His name i.-; Ah Yiu. and there i.i nothing attract ive about lum lie is about as homely a mixture of Chinaman ami Malay pi-rni;- as eonld Iw found in a d;iys wain. His I'oeahontiis answer to the name of .!u!it jnst now, but nobody knows what tier Indian name w.w SUu i;i a long way of leing Pocahontas' equal in Oeanty. and the Siwar-ii features of gen eratioim were consolidated when her fact was nnule Still the romance is tlire. All Wing and Julie, now Mrs. Ah Wing, nrnved here 0:1 a codfish schooner several months since, but have not gone into society yet. They reside on lioss aiiey. m Chinatown, and submitted to an interview. They only submitted to it. they did not take part in it, and when it came to securing the story of their love the reporter was obliged to obtain his information from a third nartv. to whom VVing had confided it in explana tion of his on color bnae, SAVED I1Y JUI-IE. jn w ing some nine years ago was a cook in the employ of thu navy depart ment, and was shipped north on the Jamestown. While on the Sitka station Wing's time expired or he deserted just which is uot quite plain and snipped aooarti a wnaier. tuo wiialer was wrecked and Wing was cast upon an in uospi table ice tio Julie was the daugh ter of a chief of a trilxi of Indians, and while hunting with her father discov ered Ah Wing, who was as near dead from starvation, cold and exposure as it was iiossiblo for him to be und retain life. For days and days Julie nursed him. and he finally recovered to find himself the object of n great deal of at tention on the part of the Indians. They could speak no Ciune; or English, and Wing had no comprehension of their dialect. He was at a loss to understand tlie solicitude with which they fed him, and the interest they took in watching he accumulation of fat on his ribs. At last the horrid truth dawned upon him at last so he says. They were going to barbecue and eat him He attempted to escape, but was captured and returned to the village and put under guard. The fatal day arrived. Wing was informed by pantomime that an incision would be made in his neck and his life fluid allowed to escape into a soapfcrtoue basin. He gave all np for lost, when he was inspired by the sight of Julie in teara. He made love to her. She comprehended and went to ask papa. The old chief was fond of his daughter and could refuse her nothing. He issued an edict against baking Wing. fhe remainder of the village protested, and the chief was obliged to state why be dewnd the stranger s" life preserved. The objectors gave in, and Wing and Julitf were married in Indran style. Wing lived with the tribe for some time, but never became very popular. He was not much of a hunter, and pre ferred to lie around the house, sewing with the women, to chasing polar bears, walruses, seals and the like. Finally he had a chance to escape. A boat's crew came in from a schooner to trade for skins. Their cook was dead, and Wing begged them to take him away with them. Wing's father-in-law gave him leave of absence for three months and sent Julio along with him to insure his return. MIXING THREK LANGCAGES. They sailed away, and after much marine wandering and transferring from one vessel to another, arrived in San Francisco. Wing had a taste for the needle and secured a job at tailoring. The faithful Jn'ie proved an adept and shares Wing's labors. They still find some difficulty in conversing. Wing knows a few words of English and a few of Indian. Julie know3 a few of En glish and a few of Chinese. When their discussion becomes ani mated they resort to ail three language? at once, and the talk is very exciting. There is a little Wing now. and Le is learning all three languages. Their home is on the top floor of a'Jloss alley tenement, where Julie is rapidly being converted into a Chinawoman by tier fellow lodgers She ia quiet at ail times, and is presumably mourning for the freedom of her native snow fields. She does not go out, because the noise and the bustle of the streets frightens her. Wing's leave of absence has long 6iuce expired, but in the confines cf civilization he has become the master, and has no intention of returning to the land of his wife's people. The story has been pretty well authen ticated, with the exception of the inten tion of the Indians to eat Wing aftor killing him. His own countrymen do not believe this part of hi3 storj', but Wing adheres to it stoutly, and the strongest tie between him and his wife is his gratitude to her for saving bim from euch a fate. Voyagers to the far north state that they have heard of cannibalism among the Indians, but it has always been at tributed to isolated instances of starva tion's necessity, and not habit. San Francisco Examiner. Jnde J. P. Rmith. of Fort Worth. Tex., whoso wealth U now estimated at $lt0C0.000,-onc walked from Kentucky to Texajvecanse he did not have mon ey enokgb to pay bis parage. SEVERAL PARISIAN DENS RARE COMBINATIONS OF LUXURY, COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE. The Sanrl 1111m of Scion 1 1st , Crltio atn4 Ii:vi:sry Gonlunea of Hoilil Wide K-p-utiitioin Where the Ilrl-ht l.ltU llo tire to Do Their Chosen Work. The Kanetum of J.I. Louis Pasteur, for exair.ph?. i.-, one of the most tdmpleintho high order of truly physical comfort. It is not ri.-mnbeivd with the trientific par.-.; ri:;:li:t often met wilh in the l'f.".:.;.ii : medical men. A large earned ('"'; f-.l ! st;:':Is by the side of I'm arm- c .: r i'l v.. .''10 .'.1 (j'l :i::h the t v.kA and iv of grc :o::-:l great sclent i t often eiuplaiioll of l.i.-s :'.. L tur; bop";;. In l!:::t ;:i c.-;-::,'? at v! ::;h he vi :c i 1 ;r.i (. 1.0L. s - - - es - Vi ar cias j 1.1 1 rfect ord 'iO re . r. r refereiK-t Ionia a f;v!i pro! .:'; in tlie- c -. :. of hu in brSiigli-g ;.,ont the prevention or t-.iiv c' terrible nfiJivlion t tlm .u:d :'.i lie has .1. vote 1 so manv ivs e: i:.s va Pa-r.er.r r.si :i 1 MICce.-;:-"r.i lii'-. a -!ve- fitti: :a:!'u:u. 1I3 i.i :i j" Honor, liier: t;. and perpetual my of Sciences. 1 r.rt i;c!-D-;r. iv; cngln-'er who: e h:'.s '.Town ::. i;:p- it I'll.) :i 1:1 ' 1 "e T in.r.f the French at fevt tary ef tho Ac: Tnn e::iT '. M. Cu-'avc lliil woi'dtrful pnpul::' i.'.'. is Jic'-iisi o:;; tj"!!-t looiviag bnt oL' librarj". lie i-; wlu-n i;i d. c-; en' Uin'.'e;; a h;.l!: ia f ei.bjij.iey ! .-co, ' '.. :iy?u:;ted by a very ' 1 1 ' o runnua in a 1 mv:. vry comt'rt: fv.i.'lofwai: i: et Vu.. :: and ! 1. bust U:l e ic!l of t1 ncy piece is a fcandt-o.,:- ' Ve.nrtian mir rov. Ii was in this s.iiiciuj.n, i.itnaled in the P.uade Prory, that M. (3i:slave Mi .Ted ?olved the last fow serious dihicullies w'iich at cci'j time threatened the com pletion of his Champ :I ; Jlnrs triumph: and there it is that ho now ni'j.Iitaies over the opposition formed by so.vie or the meuibers of th j iiivniv ip d couavil tc his project for the c.;ii: :.uctin 01 t!ie M'eiroiioliran railvray for Pari:'. liie main objecVi'n.s t) the metropolitan sehome are that it wo'tM destroy thvi beauty of th.j 1;o;l!; vr.r ls and ruin the1 line of omr.ibu 'Oo 1 a-:.:i.rj from the jladeleine to th ; B.itLiI-. , It is not at all unlikely that tho engineer wiio iri u:nihed so gloriously in the caso of his tower will achieve anot'i?r victory with tlie railway he propooi-.-i to construct. The man of the iron tower is an officer of the Legion of Honor. M. Francisque Sarcey, the well known theatrical critic of The Temps, and one of the brightest of the galaxy of Pari sian chroniclers, inhabits during his long working hours a library in which he is almost surrounded by his books. M. Sarcey is beyond what is usually consid ered the prime or life, yet he look.- well as, "with spectacles on nose," and wearing a soft and smooth white beard, he poses himself carefully and closel- over his table in front of the copy he is carefully preparing. He is reputed to be a model of gallantry toward the la dies; but the case might be reversed when it is considered that the lady art ists whom it is his duty to criticise not infrequently call at his house to ask a favor or an act of justice for their pro fessional requirements. There are two places where Sarcey may very often be met with; one is his library, and the other 13 his fauteuil d'orchestre, when ever a grand performance or a premiere representation is given at any of the principal Parisian theatres. WEAVERS OF ROMANCE. M. Georges Ohnet, the celebrated ro- mancist and dramatist, still young and nancisome, witn ms smoom uark nair carefully brushed and parted, usually sits in pensive attitude in one of those luxurious armchairs with which his study abounds. The sculptured chimney piece by the side of which he take3 his place in winter is a work of art in three stories, surmounted by a beautiful clock and a looking glass out of old or young human reach. The author of tine "Maitre de brges" is one of the most amiable of Parisian litterateurs, as all Who have visited him at his charming residence in the Avenue Trudiane can affirm. M. Georges Ohnet is as young in the Order or the Legion of Honor as he is in his age; but with time both may surely be expected to ripen and advance to a brill iant maturity. M. Emile Zola dwells in the artistic quarter Clichy, where, in the Rue Ballu, he possesses a sumptuously furnished sanctum, provided with sofas, ieaeock pictures of the greatest beauty, stat uettes, evergreens and objects of art in every variety. All these strikingly ap parent comforts and delights combine to encourage that inclination for the dolce far niente to which the indefatigable pretender to academical honors does not for one moment yield. With his limpid hair falling in a loose style on each side of his head, after the manner of many popular knights of the palette, he con-tiuue-s to wear the same binocle as when he wrote "L'Assom .ioir'' and "La Terre." In fact Zola, by his free and easy ap pearance, looks more like an. artiste peintre than a literary man. He may be considered a painter also, since he writes pictures with his pen almost as vividly as those who paint them with theii brushes. M. Emile Zola is a chevaliet of the Legion of Honor, and the red rib bon is well placed and well merited as the reward of his profound thought, bold imagination and vigorous expres sion that are sometimes severely criti cised but invariably admired. Galig nani's Messenger. " The Phoenicians axe amongst the earli est nations which are supposed to have used the saw. The scholar i3 not sur prised to find a. very pretty story ac counting for the discovery of the saw ia Grecian mythology. ' Here the inventcr is said to have found the jawbone, of a snake. wWch he imitated by jagging J3 iron plate. ' Cast or ia is Ir. Samuel I 'if cIkt's proscription for Infants and Children. It co:it:ii:..'j neither Opium, Morphine nor . other Narcotic 1 ::st anee. It is ix harmless Mibstituto for Paregoric, rropn, i.kotliin Syrups, and Castor OIL ic is Ilea:int. Its 7tar;mteo is thirty years use by Millions of 3Itt3:''rs. C.istoria destroys "Worms andallaya feverish ii ess. Casloria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Iiarrhi.a uiid V.'ind, Colie. Cawtoria ilieve teething troubles, cures constipation and llatiilency. Castoria assimilates tlio food, regulates tho tomaclt and bowels, healthy and natural sleep. Cas- toria is tho Children's Panacea tho Mother's Friend. Castoria. "Castor! is an excellent nie.Iicin" for chil dren. MuLhcrs have n.'ix.-a.tedly tolil me of its good eTec-t upou iheir children." a. C. Osnoon, Loweli, SIa;.a. Castori.a is tho bct reniody for children of which I am acquainted. I hopu the d iy ismot far distant when mothers will consider the re.".l intercut of their children, ami uso C.istori:i in stead of tin; vnriousquaek ritwitrtrtns w hich are destroying their loved ones, ly forcing opium, morphine, 5oothiiif syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, therehy sendiuij them to premature graves." 'lit- J. F. Kinchi:i.oe, Couwuy, Ark. The Centaur Company, TT Everything' to I. PEARLMAN'S . GREAT MODEUN .HOU Under WaU'riiiais's Opera House You can buy of him cheap fir ppot cash or inau-iioo on uie liMM aIjL.misa i i-j.v. STOVES, RANGES AND ALL FURNISHINO". Agent for the Celebrated White Sewing Machine. The largest and m;si c iui'ete s ock to select from in Cass Coutity. Call and see me Opera House Block THE W. D. JONES. Proprietor. HAS THE FINEST RIGS 11N Carriages for Pleasure and Short iLept Ueady. Cor. 4th and Vine Insure your property against lire, lightning and Tornado, in the AMAZON INSURANCE COMPANY. Of Cincinnati, Ohio. Com axe need Business October CASH CAPITAL Stockholders individually liable , under the constitution of the State of Ohio which together with the present net surplus is a net Guarantee of about 700,000,00 to policy holders. Losses paid in nineteen years, (since organization) near) v four million dollars J. .II. BEATTIE, Secretary. Wm, L. BROWNE, Resident Acailainy and Select School "LINCOLN, This Institution conducted by the from Sharon Hill, Philadelphia, Penn., will open as a Boarding and Day School for Young Ladies Parents will find in this cademy fined home lor their daughters. A thorough, Useful and accom plished education is imparted, and particular care is bestOwed on the moral improvement of the pupils. Difference in Religion no Obstacle to the Admission of Pupils For Particulars, Address, BE Convent of the Holy Child Jtaw. What is . Castoria. " Castoria In Powell adapted to children that I recommend it asKiiperior to any ireMcalpUufi known to 1110." , II. A. AnoiiKR, M. D.. Ill So. Oxford St., UrookJyn, N. V. "Our physicians in tho children's depart ment have 8iokeii highly of tliclr exj!ri enee in their outside practice with CaHtoria, and ulthough we only have anion; our medical supplies what is known, as regular products, yet wo are freo to confess that tli merits of Castoria has wou us to look with favor ujxin it." United Uosi-ital. and Dispensary, liobton, Maua. Ali.ev C. Smith, Ve., Murray Street, New York City. Furnish Four Mouso. AT FU iHITVlNG ERiPOJilUK. can eecurf. what you need to fumir.li a cottage or j ONNER STABLES. Drives Always Jlattemouth, Nebraska $3oo, 000.00 GAZZAM GANO, President. Agent, Plattsmouth Nebraska of tlie Holy Child Jesus. NEBRASKA, Sisters ot the IJoly Child Jesus all the feature ot a secluded and r - IIOTHER SUPERIOR. IjINCOIN NEIEJ