7 r f . It. It. TIMK TAIILEH. 1. 3. fi & M. R. R. in Nebraska, MAIN LINK KXPrttHH TRAINS OVl.NO W KT. ST f ions : riAttsiT.om h .. . ! ;iiml!i ... Cm. .1.1 fu.it r t-K . . . LUivlll . ulli IV i:l ... AjLU'-tl. U i r t. a "ixl l.lilCoill Uaslinga Ked Cloud.,... McCuok No. 3. 6 :.V p in 7; l P in 7 :28 p in i .M p in 7 :Mp m n :10 pin 8 ! JO J.I III os a in 8 :45 p in A r. II :V ti in Ar. 1vw Ar. lve AT. L've Ar. U've :.V) p in lo :!! p in 3 :15 a ni 3 -.30 a in 6 :3o a in M :0ft a ill 12 :06p in 1,'ve 12 :J . m Ar. i 2.1 p lve I :J0 p in 4 r. I :6o p in L'vb -M p in Ar. U nop i.i l.'vel. lop in Ar. i 'm a in 12 p in t :X p in Akron Denver Ar. lve Ar. ..II iL've i jua in 6 :00 p ui Ar. -os a in, 10 :00 p in KXritKHrt T11AIKM uoixo r.AHT. STATIONS : No. 2. No. 4. I'lalUiiioulb... reapolls ... . Concord Cedar Creek... vuiville uutU Keod.. AklilaiiU tceuwo.d ... Lincoln HatlDKi Bed Cloud AlcCook Akron ...... Denver Ar. Ar. Ar. Ar. Ar. Ar. At. ft :10 p in 4 ibO p in 1 :30 p in 4 :T1 p in 4 :lfl p in 3 :M p in 3 -M p IH Ar. 9 .00 a in 8 u'0 a in 8 :35 a ui M :'2Xi a in 8 :I7 am 8 :05 a in 7 :48 a in Ar. Ar. Ar. Ar. Ar. Ar. Ar. 3 :13 p m Ar. 2 :0 p in lvn V :I1J pin Ar. i AO a in Lve 10 :loam Ar. Ma ni L'vo ttb a in Ar. ;Uam l.'vo 4 :OS a m Ar. 10 :4A p in lve '0 :55 pm Ivc 1 :06 p ui! Ar. 7 :34 a HI Ar. lve Ar. lve Ar. L've Ar. lve 3 :30 a m 7 :oo a in 10 :15 p ni 10 :30 p in 6 :55 p III 7 :45 p in 3 oo p m 3 :'J0 p III 10 :G6 a in 11 Man 7 UK a in Ar. lve L've Trains 3 and 4. numbeitriK 39 and 40 west of Ked Cloud, run daily except Suuday. K. C. ST. JOE& C. B. R. R. STATIONS : EXPRESS TKAIN9 GOINO NOKT1I. jflattsmouth ... Oreaiioliit La t latte lie levm 11 ni ah a 4 :60 a in 6 M U 111 ft :11 a in 6:S in G -.00 a in r at p in 0 :07 p in tl:lt p in 6 -.'M p ni C :M p IU STATIONS : mxrKKss Tit a ins ;oino SOUTH. I'lattsmoutli . Oreapults .... La 1'lalte ... lHellevue ... . Ouiali a 9 :20 a m 9 :io a in 9 :00 a ni x :47 a in a ni 8 :I0 p ni 8 :00 p III 7 :f5 p in 7 :-t- p in 7 :M p in TIME TA1II.C Missouri Pacific Iluilread. ExpretM leaven eoiiiK lUl'TH. KreiKUt leaves KoiiiK BOITH. leaven Koinu HUUTH. Omaha..- 8.00 a-m. 12.S0 a. i apiinuu. . OpruiKueld. 8.37 " 9.00 " 9.15 " 9.40 9.53 ' 10.VI1 " 7.07 p.m. li.SJ a.m. L',00 p. 3.05 " 3.R0 " 6.00 -5.45 " U.45 " IX)U11V uiw Weeping Water AVOC'ii Dunbar Kausua City St. Lonls ..- (iolu:; I i II. I NO ouiK (ioint; SCIKlll. OKTH. St. Loali-- an.tas CUV unir VUC.I. . v ei pinK Water. i..'u.-ville ruiiilield ! ' ; . .lou. . in.-. Arrives 8 52 .:w &.10 o 45 ecu 6.32 6.51 7.20 8.00 a. m p. in a.m 8.32 7.57 4.24 .54 5.08 b.XS 5,4- 6.15 6.55 p. Ill a. III. p. Ill 1.01 p. 111. 2.10 " 2.45 " 3.50 " 4.25 " 6.25 ' 7.06 M J !v aliove ? Jeflersou City time, wliicb Is 14 ,:. i- faster than Oiualia lime. KKJVA A.l DKPAKTUtE OF IM. T'MlT'riI '.1IA1L.M. V Kl- . I DEFAKTS. p.:; .53SS: I i.oO a UI NOKTH EKX. 4.25 p. UI ;.oo p. III. SOUTHERN. - 9-W a. m U.-O 4. III. OMAHA. ? m- IJM p. in. i OMAHA. i- m I. OO p. 111. WEEMNO WATER. 8.00 a. Ill II. 00 am. ACTOR WILLI!. 1.00 p. m 'Jec. 17, l8hl. 11ATKH C11AIK-KU FOB 3IOXKV OKIIEUM. On orders not exceeding $15 - - - 10 ceule Over 515 aiid nwt exceeding $30-- - I5ceiit " Jo S-W - - 20 eeutii w " - - 25 cents A fingle Money Order may iucium -o amount from one cent to fifty dollars, but iiiust not contain a fractional part of a cent. RATE0 FOB POSTAGE. let c ass waiter (.lettem) 3 cents per A ounce. 2d " fubluber' rates; 2 cts per lb. 3d (Transient Newspeoers and book come under tbie ciase) i cent per eacb 2 ounces. Itb class imerwbaudue 1 cent per ounce. J. W. Marshall. 1. M. OFFICIAL. DIRECTORY. . C1TT DIKECTOKV . CEOKGE S, SMITU. Mayor. WILLIAM H. cusillNti, Treasurer. J. U. SIllSO, City Clerk. WlLLETl Fo rTENOKK. loliee Judire. K. B. WINOHAM.City Attorney. P. H. MUKfUV, Cbiel of lolice, 1. McCANN, Overseer of Streets. C. KOill.NKE. Cbief of 'ir Uepl. b. 11. HICIIMON u, Cb'n Board 01 Health COU'CILUKS. 1st Ward Wm . Jlerold. 11. M. lions, 2nd Ward J. M. Patterson, J. 11. Fairfield. ;rd Ward M. B. Miiriiby, J. E. Morrison. 4tU Ward F. U. LebohoU , 1. McCallan. school board. JESSE B. STRODE, J. W. BAKNES. hU A. HAKTItr AN Wm. WINTEKsTEEN. 14 JL. BENNETT. V. V. LEONAltD, 2otmatlcr JNO. W. MARSHALL. o COC2TTY DIRECTORT. W. II. NEWELL, County lreaarer. J. W. JENNINGS, County Clerk. J. W. . OHNsON. County Judge. K. W. HVEKS. Sherln. . CYKCS AL'ION. sup't of Pub. Instruction. - O. W. FA1KE1EL1, County Surveyor. Jf. P. UASS. Coroner. - COUJiTY C03T31ISSIONEB8. JAMES CUA'VTl'OUD. South Bend Precinct. SiM'L KIC11AKDSON. Mt. Pleaeant Precinct. A. H- TOLl, Platbtmoitb i-hrtlea bavino business with the County Conimiesioneis, wtll find them in session the First Monday and Tuesday of eacb month. - . o BOARD Of TRADE. FRANK CAKKUTH, President. J. A CONNOK. 11ENKV B-liCK, VJce-Presl-dents. sffM. S, WISE. Secietary. FKE1. UOitLiEU. Treasurer. Kegular meetings of tbe Board at the Court House.tbe first Tuesday e venins of eacb month. j. F. U A U ill EtSTEH Furnishes FresV,"FJ' DLL1VLULD UAILV. . pro.rizi coU attended U. and JTreeh Alilk Irci-i a -.'in? luruished when wanted. ly UTTSMOUTH MILLS TTSM.OCTH 2JEB.- Proprietor. NO. 1. 9 :00 a in :"0 h in ! 'J M H II' :4H a in 1 10 :04 :i in 10 :' :i in 10 :47 a in i 7.40 p. Ill S.17 8.42 " 8.59 " 9.24 ' 11.37 " 10.07 0.37 U.IU !JZ p. in . i - - lrir Utrn,Mal & Feed -1 . Plattmnooth Telephone Exchange 1 J. P. Young, residence. - 2 ftennnlt & Lwls, store, a M. B. Murphy t Co., " 4 Bouner Htabfeii. ft County Clerk's offleo.l 6 E. B. Lewi, reildence. 7 J. V. Weckbacb. store. 8 Weitern Union I'eU-Krapb office. 9 l. II. Wheeler, resldwuco. 10 1. .l'siiipbell, 14 K. h. Wliidiiam, " 16 Jno. Waytuaii, " 16 J. W. .IimiiiUiks. 17 W. S. W . otlleo. 18 Morri.iHey Bros,, office. 19 W It. Carter, morn. 20 S.' W. Fairfield, rildenc. 11 M. li Murphy. " 22 I. II. Wheeler & Co , office. 23 J. P. Taylor, residence. 21 First National Bank. 25 1. K. Uul! tier's otllce.! 26 J. P. Young, ntore. 28 1't'l'klns House. 2") li. W. liver, reoluence. Ui Journal office. 32 Fait field's ice office. 34 llKKALII l'UM. CO office. 35 J. N. Wise, refld nice. 3 M. M. Cliapinaii. " 37 W. I. Jones, 38 A. N. Mulllvan, " 31 II. h. Palmer, 40 W. II. Scblldknecht, office. 41 Hull I van Si Wooiey, 42 A. W. Mcutuj;liiu. residence. 43 A. Patterson, livery. 44 CM. Holmes, 45 L. li. Bennett, residence. 46 Geo. 1. Sinitb, office. 47 I j. A. Moore, flor.st. 49 J, W. Barnes, residence. 60 It. It. LIvingMton, office, 37 J. V. Weckbacb, residence. 336 Chaplain Wright. 340 W. 11. Scbildkiiecbt " 348 Geo. s. Smith, 3M It. It, LIvliigNton. " 316 C. C. Ballard, The switch board connects PlaUsmoutliVlth Ashland. Arlington, Blair. Council Bluffs, Fre mont, Lincoln. Omaha Elkhorn Station. Papilllon. KpringQeld, ijuUville South Bend and Waverly. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. SMITH & UUESO.Y, ATTOItNEYS AT LAW. Will practice in all tbe Courts in the state. Office over First Na tional Bank. 4yl fLATTSMOUTn - NEBRASKA. JflC A. NAUSHlltY. DBITTIST. ifflce over Smith. Black & Co's. Irug Store. r lrst class dentistry at reasonable prices, 23ly II. MEAIIK, 31. .. PHVSiriAN mil Hlllfr.Fnv nm.. . . - - . viuto Ull Itlftlll Street. Sherwood's Block, south side. Office open day and night COUNTY PHYSICIAN, CASS COUNTY. M. O DONOHOE ATTORNEY AT LAW & NOTAKY PUBLIC. FitKcrald's Block. rLATTSMOUTII, - NEBRASKA Agent for Steamship lines to and from Europe. dl2w521y IC It. LIVISliHTOX. M. PHYSICIAN & SUROEON. r, , " io z p. m. Examiu.r.i; Surgeon for U. S. Pension. H. 3I1LLKR, PHYSICIAN AND HUHBRns Can bo found by calling at his office, corner 7th u . ii. aiennan s nouse. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. JAM. H. 3IATIIE1VM ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office over Ilnksr a tivnilil's a4nan . . - . t ot Main beie 6th and 6th streets. 21 tf . HTKOIi: 4k. CLARK. ATTORNEYS AT I.iW Win .. the Courts hi Ttbe . slate. in uu District Atbtivity and Notary Public. Mllib . Vl4i:. COLLECTIONS H SZjrcj.Z,xr ATTORXVV at i a w r...., .. ... I. II. WHKI5I.EK A. CO. urr itr.. ieal ICatate, Fire and I i . K'.l:1": ttsniouth; NebrlSkl:": I 'ave a complete lsrr-ut pLtns1.CI:c.li,,y and Se" 'eiU e-tVKffi . f AUKS K. JlUJtltlSOX. ATmRVFViT,.n- ..f?tary Public. and adi.,i,;;,..r.T".f y-" prast.ee in Cass toeoirectiTmJun.i h . 5 K'ves special attention ii 'collections and abstracts of title. Office in HUKerald Block. Plattsmouth, xNebraska? J. C. XEWBERRY, JUSTICE OF THE PFire- oiuce in me iront part of his residence ih,caso. Avtnue- where ue in v be found in readinees to attend io tbe duties of the of- 11... 1.1. r . . KOBEBT . WIXOUAM, Notary Public ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office over Carruth's .Toivoi Plattsmouth xh,aBL-a M. A. HARTICAN. A W Y E B . Fitzgerald's Block, Plattsmouth Neb Prompt ;jnd careful attention to a general Law Practice. .A. N. SULLIVAN, Attorney and ICounselor-at-Law. OFFICE In th Union Block, front rooms second story, souti- Prompt attention given t all business . mar25 BOYD & LARSEti, Contractors and Builders. Will give estimates on all kinds of work. Any orders left at the Lumber Yards or Post Office will receive promot attention Heavy Truss Framing, for barns and large buildings a specialty. For refeience apply to .1. p. Young, J. V. Wee Djoi or II. a. Waterman & Son. d&w Dr. C. A. Marshall Successor to Clutter & Marshall,) BEKTIST Preservation of natural teeth a specialty. Teeth extracted without pain ty use of Laughing Gas. All work warranttd. Prices reasonable. Fitzuerald Block. - Plattsmouth,Neb 3. . SilMPSOiy AGENCY FIRE INSDRANGE CO'S: CITY, of London, QUEEN, of Liverpool . . FIREMAN FUND, of California EXPREESS COMPANIES AMERICAN EXPKES3 CO., WELL'S FARGO & CO.. EXPRESS. v nl 1 1 . . ..1 . 1 t . ... . uuico ui ivuviLiTwu DiUkt piiu douuson worn tduiu. COFCLUDED. was overwhelmeI tiy the greater rrriottSh which possessed ber whole boing. ' Farnswortb bad never been more keenly alive in every fibre of bis being than at this moment. All his family pride, his refined tastes, his delicate nature, revolted from a kinship with the ugly, uncouth child who stood grinning maliciously upon bis guilty parents. His impulse, almost too strong to be resisted, was to turn back and bide him self again in tbe world from which he had come to leave this woman and ber loutish child in the quiet and obscurity where he had found them. But he was nobler than bin impulses, and had paid already too dearly for rashneus; the claim of a son upon the father who has brought him into the world grasped bis sense of justice like a hand of stoeL He rose to bis feet, firm and determined. "Go away now !" be said to the boy quietly, but in a voice which even the urchin felt admitted of no disobedience. "I wish to talk with your mother. I will see you to morrow." "Yes, Farnsworth," the mother said pleadingly. "Go to bed now. I will come to you before long. That's a good boy." The boy slowly and unwillingly withdrew. bis reluctance showing how rare obedience was to him, and the parents were once more alono. "You have given him my nanie,M were Farnsworth a brst words, as the door closed behind his son. "It was father who did that. He said he should remember to curse j'ou every time the name was spoken. "And youT' the other risked, almost with shudder. "I did not core. Cursing could not change things. Only I would not let hirn do it be fore the boy; I didn't want him to know what sort of a father he had." In the midst of his self-abasement some bidden fibre of resentment and wounded vanity tingled at her words; but bo would not heed it. "I am not so wholly bad, Delia," ho said in a moment. "I came back to marry you. It will not change or mnd tho past; but it is the best I can do now." "It is of no use to talk of that," she re turned wearily; "you and I are done with each other. Even I can sea that." Sho was spent with tho violonco of her emotions, and only longed to have Farns worth leave hor. She was keenly sensitive now of Uie nicety of his attire, tho contrast between him and her meagre surroundings. The shainefacedness of tho .poor over whelmed her. She roso with uneven steps and trembling bands, and began to put things to rights a little. She snuffed the ill-conditioned candle, and trimmed the fire, whose drift-wood sent out tongues of name. She set back into their usual gaunt and vulgar order the chairs, which had been disturbed. Farnsworth watched . her with an aching heart. "Delia," be said at length, "como and Mt down. We must decide what it is best to do." She obeyed bim, although with evident re luctance. All tho brief dignity which her elevation of mood had imparted had vanished now, leaving ber more haggard and worn than ever. A faded, prematurely old woman, sho sat twisting her red, stained hands in a vain attempt to hide their ugliness in the folds of her poor dress. Even self-pity in Farnswortb's breast began to vanish in the depth of compassion which tbe sexton ex cited. "Delia," be said, "I must think for us both, and for tbe boy. Ho must be considered. For his sake we must be mar ried." It was at once with a sense of relief and of humiliation that he saw how sbe shrank from this proposition. To have fallen from god hood in tbe meanest woman's eyes is the keen est thrust at man's pride. It gave Farns worth a new conception that the gulf be tween them must look as impassable from her side as from his. He had thus far been too uch absorbed in the sacrifices he was himself making to consider that all its desirabilities would not appeal to ber as to him that its very fullness and richness which so held and delighted him would confuse and repel ber. "It is of no use!" be exclaimed, starting up. I must have time to think. I will come back in tbe morning. Think yourself, Delia not of me, or even of yourself , so much as of the boy. It is of bim that we must have tbe first care, xsotbing can much change our lives; but the world is before him. Good uight." However different may have been tlje re flections of Farnsworth and of Delia Grimwet through that long, sad night, their con clusions must have been in some respects identical, for when tbe former came to the bouse in the morning with the astonished clergyman tbe woman acquiesced without any discussion in tbe performance of the marriage ceremony. It was an occasion which the Rev. Mr. Eaton long remembered, and of which he told to tbe end of his life. filling out, it must be confessed, as time went ou, its spare facts with sundry incident, trifling, it is true, yet gradually overlfvyuiS the bare truth with a completeness which the clerical gossip himself, whose lielief always kept pace with his iu vent ion, was far from realizing. The only thing he could with accuracy have told, beyond the simple fact of the marriage, was that when, according to his wont, he attempted to add a few words of exhortation and moral reflection, the bridegroom cut bim short and showed him to the door with a courtesy perfect but irresistible, and somewhat softened by the liberality of the foe which accompanied the dismissal. The boy during these singular proceeding had remained in a state of excited astonish ment almost amounting to stupefaction; but when the newly-united family were alone to gether, his natural perversity broke out, and showed itself in its natural and unamiable colors. To the father the child's every un couth word and act were the most acute tor ture; and tho mother, partly by woman's in stinct, partly from previous acquaintance with her husband's fastidiousness, was to a great degree sensible of this. She made no effort, however, to restrain her child. She seemed to have thrown off all responsibility upon the father, and busied herself in prepa rations for the boy's departure, about which, although neither had spoken of it, there seemed to be some tacit understanding. Tho forenoon was well worn when Farns worth came to the door with his carriage, for which be had gone in person. "Come, Delia," he said, entering the house "We may as well leave everything as it is. I told Mrs. Bemis to lock up the house and see to it. Are you ready f "Farnsworth is," she replied, seating her self in a low chair and drawing to her side tbe uncouth boy, who struggled to get free. He broke in rudely, announcing his readi ness, his joy at leaving Kempton, and his satisfaction at wearing his Sunday jacket, whicb-to his father looked poor enough. "But you, Delia?" her husband inquired, putting up his hand to quiet the child. "Are you ready f "I am not going." "Whether it were relief, remorse, or aston ishment which overwhelmed him, John Farnsworth could never have told. He stood speechless, looking at his wife like one suddenly stricken dumb. The boy filled in the pause, with noisy expostulations, depriving the tragedy of even the poor dijjnity of silence. The father knew from the outset that remonstrances would not be likely to avail, yet be remon strated; perhaps, for human nature is subtle beyond word, he was unconsciously for that reason the more earnest in bis pleading. He would have been glad could this woman and her child have been swept out of existence. Already he had to bold himself strongly in check, lest the reaction which had followed his heroic resolve to marry Delia should show itself; but he cboked back tho feeling with all resolution. "No," Delia persistently said, ber eyes dry, her voice liarsh from huskiness. 'Tve no place anywhere but here. It is too late now. re more feeling than Ithopgbt, Jor I do care something eveuT now to be an bbnest woman in the sight of my neighbors; and that'll help me bear it, I suppose. Take tbe boy, and do for bim all you owed to me. . I should spoil all If I went. He Is best quit of me if he's to please you and grow like you. Ill stay here and dig graves; I am fit for nothing el. 1 want nothing of you. I married you for the boy's sake, and for his sake I break my heart and send him away; but I will have nothing for myself. Tbe days when I would have taken a penny from you are long gone." She spoke calmly enough, but with a cer tain poignant stress which made every word fall like a weight. He did not urge her far ther. He held out his hand, into w hic-h she laid bers lifelessly. "Good by," be said. "As Coil see rn Delia, 111 do my best by tbe boy. I will write to you. If you change your decision but no matter now. I will write to you and to the minister." All other words of parting were brief and soon spoken. The boy showed no emotion at leaving his mother, as be bad throughout exhibited no tenderness. He climbed noisily into the carriage, and the father and son, ho strangely a sorted, rode together up the hill. past the stark meeting-house, and so on into the world whose seething waves seldom troubled, even by such a ripple as the evente just narrated, tbe dull calm of Kempton ; and to John Farnsworth it was as if the woful burden of remorse which had so long vexed heart and conscience had taken bodily shape and rode by his side. Delia had been calm until the two were gone so calm that her husband thought her still half dazed by tbe excitement and an guish of the previous night. She stood steadily at the window until tho carriage dis appeared behind the grave-covered hilL Then he threw herself groveling upon the floor in the very ecstasy of woe. She did not shriek, strangling in her throat into inarticulate moans and gurglings the cries which rent their way from her inmost soul ; but she beat her head upon the bare floor; she caught at tbe furniture like a wild beast, leaving the print of her strong teeth in'the hard wood; she was convulsed with her agony, an inar ticulate animal rage, a boundless, inex pressible anguish which could not bo measured or expressed. She clutched her bosom with her savage hands, as if she would tear herself in pieces; she wounded and bruised herself with a fierce ness so intense as to be almost delight. In tsie midst of her wildest paroxysm there came a knocking at the door. Sho started up, her face positively illuminated. "They have come back I" she murmured in ecstasy. She rushed to the door and undid its fasten ings with fingers tremulous from eager joy. A neighbor confronted her, staring in dismay and amazement at ber strange and di shevelled appearance. "What's come to ye, Delef he demanded roughly, though not unkindly. "When ye goin' to put the box in Widder Pettigrove's graver' She confronted bim for an instant with a wandering look in ber eje, as though sbe bad mercifully been driven mad. Then the tyranny of life and habit reasserted itself. "I ll come up now, Bill," she said. And she went back to her graves. The Sectional Traits that Hmacu i the Moll. Boston Courier. We want local color. National and sec tional traits are what differentiate masses of human beings. Denver is highly civilized, but do we go across a continent to see a dinner-table laid like those we left at home, and surrounded by gentlemen and ladies in avening dress? Flannel shirts and buckskin trousers are what we look for, and red wood cabins up in the mountains and grizzly bear tracks to make us. fearful. How tiresome is the prosperous new south? Our sympathy is with the old regime, more interesting than aver in its ruined remains. We demand weed-grown plantations and tumbled-down negro quarters, and a deserted mansion with an air of romance and grandeur about it. The inhabitants must be melancholy old gen tlemen, formal in manner, sesquipedalian in language, steeped in prejudice or else hot blooded gallants, indebted, dissipated and dueling. Our English visitors do not come to Boston to see people who carefully say a jug of warm water, and are particular about their rising inflections, and talk of The Saturday Review and tho queen, and the nuisance of tricyclers in London streets. They look for the man who guesses and reckons and talks talL Kindly favor them with more of the amazing Americanisms that apppear in Eng lish contemporary literature and nowhere else, save of malice pretense; solemnly tell humorous stories smacking strongly of the soil; express sympathy with the Irish, and explain how we could proceed to victory in case of another war with Great Britain. Let all your metaphors be those of business, especially of stocks, and let your comparisons be either of size or of value in dollars. Be unconscious of immaterial value, and con temptuous of what makes life a fine art spaciousness and gracefulness of style. So if you are from the western prairies, but translated to the east, be sure it is your west ern ways that eastern people look for. Boast, be familiar, tuck your napkin under your chin, else you will be as disappointing as is the ordinary. Frenchman who is fat, dull, disinclined to compliment, absorbed in business and quite uninterested in any woman but bis good wife, and she a too domestic creature, always puttering about the kitchen and totally without talent in dress. If it were not for national and sectional faults, so undesirable in the individual, so restricted in their sway, and so exaggerated in the telling, social life would be too tame to interest the observer. Our crude tastes demand strong impressions. What Hakes Slans Successful. Boston Courier. Successful slang, that is to say slang that lives, is always intensely humorous, and for that reason becomes of necessity the keenest and readiest weapon against all cant and humbug. But let it be remembered there is slang and slang, and we are only referring to that kind which, being an involuntary out cropping of the time or situation, gets a grip upon the heart of humanity, and is, in nine cases out of ten, finally received into the brotherhood of accepted words. At the out set it is impossible to state with certainty what will turn out to be successful slang. The immediate universality of a phrase docs not settle it. To have the staying qualities slang must be anonymous, its paternity once accurately established, it begins to dwindle, peak and pine, and finally fades altogether. If a child has parents let them see to its welfare, but when a child has none the world itself is sometimes willing to adopt it. And this not from any pity of its helplessness, for such children are not seldom hardier and brighter than others, but from very admiration of their audacity and self-reliance. Of such slang words and phrases It may be said as of tbe bastard in "Lear," they are of that breed and blood who "in the lusty stealtb of nature take more composition and fiercer quality" than it is possible to their soberer and more respec table half-brothers. Once adopted into tbe family, however, legitimized and made equal with the rest, they take on new airs and graces that render them in finitely more agreeable to good society, with out in anywise detracting from their native vigor and flavor. It is a wild fruit grafted upon a tame stock if it strikes in and flour ishes, both sides are benefitted and improved ; if it withers and dies, it is because the graft- 1 ing was done untimely liecause the sap of the cultivated tree still boils and ferments in full and sufficient force, and has not yet sunk to that dead level of placid insipidity which nls th stinging touch of tbe wild infusion. Slaug is Uie recruiting ground of language wbere multitudes are always ready to enlist, and out of a profusion of tall, lawless fellows taken into the ranks, a limited number turn wit in time to be cood soldiers. Jerry Greening: AUeis provide fcr ev'iy thiug beforehand, 'cause since things in: vnrinhlv turns out different from what you've 'ranged fer, it '11 make ye familiar with di- UlbUiVW i ss FATE IN THE FINGERS. Variations of tbe Fingers and tLu Significance of Each Typo. fall Mall Gazette. Teople who reject as fanciful the distinc tions of Spurzheiin and Lavater still telieve that a man with a big brow U likely to be clever, and a man with a strong chin to be determined. Ordinary people do not get the same suggestions from tlw hand, and yet it may be capable of affording them. Tbe French professor says it is. We shall soe wbat are the rules be lays down. To begin with the fingers. The variations of these are not numerous, and any hand may be referred to one of some three or four type. These are the pointed fingers, whsre the finger tips are small and conical and the fingers themselves sleek and soft. They aro no uncommon iosseisiou, and admit of no doubt when they are found. It is said that they indicate a divamy disposition, a ten dency to poetize and srieculate. Men with such hands are enthusiasts aud orators, have Uie gift of imagination very prodigally be stowed upon them, but at the expense of coin mon sense and knowledge of the world. Such bands are claimed for Shakespeare, Schiller, and Goethe, and certainly by Victor Hugo and George Sand. With the soft fingers and the conical tips there is no necessary alliance. The fingers may bo sleek and the tips may bo square. And this combination gives us another class of character. Here we have the tendency to art and poetry, but better under control. These are instructive rather than imagina tive. The fine frenzy gives place to an eye for symmetry and an car for rhythm, and the the types are to be found in Moliere, Toussm, Vauban, and Turenne. It is a pity that we have no bving examples. Portrait-painters a century ago bad a fashion of taking the face from the sitter and the bands from a favorite model. Vandyck's warriors, diplomatists, and courtiers hod all precisely the same kind of fingers. The fingers may be even more than square. They may be patulous, widened and rounded at the end like a chemist's blender or an artist's palette knife. This is a very practi cal hand indeed, widely removed from the dreamer and the visionary, the hand of a man fond of movement and of action, the hand of a man fond of horses and dogs, and hunting and warfare, or, if he is more peace able, of commerce and mechanism, a man of order and contrivance, a merchant, a financier, or, it may be, only a church war den. The spatulous hand is generally found supplied with large finger knots ; but where the fingers have no predominant joints the artistic character prevails. Men act from impulse rather than from knowledge or rea son, it is not laid down, however, tnat tne tendency of rheumatism is to convert poets into politicians, though it painfully develops the knots of the flngei-s. Lastly, there is a general rule that large hands deal best with details and short ones with general effect. It would be interesting to test this by examin ing the hands of the royal academicians. But the art descends into minuter detail. Each of the fingers has its special character istic, and a system of mythological nomen clature has been adopted, based on the at tributed distinctions. The fingers known to us as first, second, third and little, are called respectively Jupiter, Saturn, Apollo and Mercury, and if it is thought that we are now getting into tho region of the fantastic, it is only fair to the professor that his state ment be heard and bo tested. There is ranged across the palm of the hand a series of little cushions or hills, one at tho base of each finger, but a little way from the thumb. Character lies in these, and the character may be told by their examination. The first finger indicates ambition. If tbe mound is large, its ownerwill have a love of power coupled with a desire to shine, great ga3etj-, somo pride, a tendency to supersti tion, and a fondness for nature. If the mound bo wanting, the life is one without dignity, the tastes are common, and the man is narrow, selfish and interested. The second finger is said to control his bfe, as it shows the extent of his prudence and tho proba bility of his success. But if the mound be preternatural, we are to look for silence and solitariness a Hamlet kind of disposition, Verging on asceticism. The third finger, however, supplies us. with more cheerful re flections. It is tho finger of the arts. It shows the presence of genius and the proba bility of fame. The man with a large mound near his third finger will be amiable end hope ful a delightful companion and an excellent friend. But if the mound be excessive, the results are disastrous. A love of notoriety converts the life into a vainglorious exist ence, with a tendency to avarice and a cer tain direction toward envy. Lastly we come to the little finger. It is the finger of invention, of industry, of quick ness, of ingenuity the finger, probably, that makes us a nation of shop-keepers. It is the finance finger, and an excessive mound might even be found among the less attractive types of the British bankrupt, as it indicates sharp practice, disastrous acuteness, dishonorablg trickerv. aud a love of evasion. THE SENTIMENTAL SIDE or Whistling en a Train at Eventlme A Tinge of Melaneholy- R. J. Burdette. The man just in front of us is whistling. Now listen. The man opposite has heard him, and now be is whistling too. The same air or another one; nobody ever knows what tune a man on the train is whistling save only the whistler's self. The sad passenger just behind us cannot whistle, so he sings. And the man on tbe wood-box plays a little accompanyment to the sibilant aria which he whistles between his teeth by drumming with his heels. This sets four or five other men to drumming on the windows with their fingers. Sad indeed at this hour, devoted to railway minstrelsy, is the lot of the man who is crowded to the end of the seat and has no window to drum upon. The tall, thin passenger adds a little variety to the general effect by whistling against the strident edges of the leaves of a book. Not one of all these passengers hears the mellow piping of his fellow-passengers. Each man is absorbed in his own hum or whistle. And if you can by listening intently, and by call ing to your aid a very vivid and charitable imagination, detect a tune in any of the whistles, you rarely hear a lively air. The general tenor of railroad music is tinged with melancholy, like the dash of the wild waves on the shingly beach. It has a plaintive, longing quality, a nocturne builded on a theme of home-sickness; for it is when the day is done that the whistling mad ness seizes upon the traveler; when the hurrying landscape robes itself in cool shad ows, and a quiet and peace, hallowed as an Easter dawn, broods over the farms where lie "the penned flocks in their wattled lodge, and sweet-breathed kine, with Here's eyes, stand in the perfumed clover, or move slowly down the darkening land ; when, as the night draws on and the stars come out, the train dashes past a cottage set in the background of a wooded knoll; in the open door, bathed in a flood of light from lamp and cheery fire place, a woman stands shading ber face with open hand, as she peers down the winding road, and the little child at her side, waving a merry signal with dimpled hand to the passing train, turns the rosy face and in the direction of the mother's, look to welcome papa" home; when cosy tea-tables seen through quick glimpses of the windows in the towns paint beautiful pictures of far-away homes on the heart of tiho travel er, then it is that he breathes his soul s plaintive longing through his puckered lips, and the tenderness of his dream softens tho grotesque lines of the pucker les he might see its wruikled caricature, and, like Athene, ;ast awaj' bis brrathmg flute for sver. ' Listen, and you shall hear that longs of homo and old love ditties are ail the sirs they blow who whistle in tbo car at JYrfntfma, - . . .. g lit, ; IUftTj' ;" ':.;; ".' ri!'.A k'l air n1 ' ' ". COMPLETE Livery, and Sale Stable. RIGS OF EVERY DESCPIPTFON m OR KIGHTV EVERYTHING IS FIRST-CLASS-'! II E I! EST TEAMS IN THE CITY-SINGLE- AND DOUIiJ.E CaEHI Af.'ES. Travelers will ihi.l complete outfits ly culling nt the Comer Vine and Fourth Street, PRINTING AKD JOB The ATTSMOUVII IIEWALI) I'lJULI.SlIIXi; COMPANY hits every facility for fi rut cIjish JOB FB.X2STT22TC, In Every Catalogue LEGAL BLANKS, A-TTCTIOUST BILLS, SALE B JUJr OOlvl MERCIAL Oii7 Slodc erf ' in.i n.i,.:..in i -l ...ivt jii.iit-ii.ua i liiitftf hiki OH.Di.RS 33 "Y" MAIL SOLICITED PLATTSMOUTH II lilt ALU OFFICJJ Szibsc7'ihc 'or Lite JJetUu JwciLti LUMBER EICHEY DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF Lumber.Sash.Doors, Blinds MIXED I .IITTS, Cement, Plaster laowest Hates. 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