The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, October 28, 1887, Image 1

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    'i '
AS
FLATTSMOUTH, NEI5KASKA, FKIOAY KVKNIXCJ, OCTOlilili !2S, 1HS7.
XUM1U2U 41.
FIRST YEAH
GII'Y O.KJ-TIGJ'irlS.
Mayor,
Cicrk,
TiT:iMiirr,
Attorney,
J'ollCC .llllle.
Mandrill.
Councilincti, Is. ward.
.1 I) Si v I'SON
: 11 Smith
J II Watkic.man
liVlt'lS I'l.AIIK
A M.MOM.K
J S M VI II KMS
V 11 MAI.I..K
.1 V Wkckiiach
I A W Will I K
) 1 MM'iNM
t W'M W'KISf IC
M It .Ml lM'll V
'l S V ii;it n
j K S liKKisi-.i.
I 1 M'.'U N. I'llKS
3;.l
Uli
1 .1 XV Johns in.
15o:ikI Tub. Works Ki:tM. ;ohi.ku
I It 11 llAVKSV(
.1 V. Johns iN.t'n Alit.UA'
oltrn
GOL" VilY OKKlGlcIiS.
Treasurer.
lcui(y r.c.iitirer. -
Clerk.
lti'iMiiv I'l'-rk.
k f li -ii n;'. 'o ii",
siKTitr.
lfiiity Sli-iiir.
hui vi-yi'.
AUoiiii-y.
Hit;t. of I'uh School,
County J u l ie.
II A. I AVI I.KI.I.
J. M i:oi:iNso.- i
1 IIW, I Wl.l.lll I
I'. Ml' MlKHSON
V. li. .Sll.C.VAI.I Kit
J . t K 1 K I . N It A U
IS. C KOMASS
A, AlAOol.K
A i.i.i:n Hicks. x
MWNAIIII Sl'lNK
C. ltt'SSXLI.
r.'i !l Of MUl'l-'.KVlSoltS.
I.wuii I'.vi.t.. rii'm., Wcepin c XV Uer
A. IS. 1 mil, - l"l .t'.si.i.uilh
A. 11. 1)1 KHi.N. - K ll.WOOll
GLVIG SOGIJrU'cS.
1A'SS I .O in;- .Ni. lie. I ). O. V. Meets
v'cvi-rv Ti'i'i-il:!V eveioii; of s:i-li wcei;. All
trai.yinit lu it !!! .s :ne
f ire; lt:liy iiiif-it to
Mtll'Illl.
'i "..Z. r "."'J:. , . V,r : ,:'.
r.wi.. .t t i' il....i.
hail. Tl-i-:s:e.il t-r.l i ' ar- lesp. ;.M : u, ly i:,-
itedtoall I. I . 1. U iiite, .M :!-!'; V nl'U n-i:i ;
K. a. aiii i i i.-.i.e.n ;' i .1 Moi-.i.i. v -r.-i.fr ;
J. li. M.nili. Iti ei.r.!.
. - . , . i , l l . liilil.'I'V M'.'.l .Ultl.'V
J of Vmi-ik'.i Meets e.:i.inl an.l f i;rtli Mori- j
Vit .o-J'ei. il' TTt i
No'.ve. er. Vener :.n ;;.!; . i'. i'ih'--. j
Wortliv r. ier : 1), ii. i-iiiit u, 1-:; -iSauUer ; .
C. Will tis, ii rl..
li,ATrsiut; i ii i.'.iiiwi-; vf. s, a. o. r. w.
A .M-et- ev.-;y :;li-in.iii- l-'iiihsy evening al
Itoek wouil Iniil at s o'elo ; . Al! : I :t!isi.-;.l l:. ! !i
crs an- ivs;ee! t ".illy i -i v i I 1 in alteml. .1. A.
iitit-.eiie, ..1. V. ; :S. (', i..V'-ii. Ivieiii,'.:i : r-. C.
Wil ie, Keciirder ; V. Ae-.ve-.ni.er. ver-.eer.
F.'Ss'JOriirFiE POST 4S C. A. R.
Uovr.-.i;.
J. V. J.IMNSOV
'. S. I'wi - s
K i.
;-. n i i.Ks
A ei; !'::rs n..
M I.:N ll i
Cm i:t.i:s 1-.no
I'.KN.f. llr.iici.i'
Jai'oj. i ! rt : s . h y. s.
..ronniatuier.
. S' l.i.-!- Vice
.,'a-,i.r
Ai.ji'a-it.
i. .M.
! -!liee;-.i I lie 1,: .
.. .. " " ;i:anl
Ser-:r Major.
.iu:ir. er Mas'cr S-n:.
A i. I'll x V Kiie-T,
l'o t L'liat'iaia
Ali-'etini; -altirilay eveiii.i'.
v ILL Wtu
-DEALER IX
r-1
I HI
'ML!:
AND-
S53ciaIAt:eiit on niTeaf atcli Retiring
WE WILL HAVE A
OA s a
3 B J 3 S
-OF-
HOLIDAY GOODS,
ALSO
5"
Liorar? - Lamps i
J Ja I
OF
,
tr.nrtn i
U J- CM r;
hm MM 1
i -J I
uu
VT THE USUAL
Cheap Prices
AT-
S3IITH & BL iCIi'S. ;
I
j
i
GEICERAL
Ilopreseiit
;e
l'IIoWt!:cr
tli'iv'
ti'ie.I
I iii
(.);np.i!)ic? :
At:verli-.n V:i'ri!-S . I. oi's. A--''ts ?:.-2."-s e:i
C-M'.i'.se.V t! U.r-.u-:-: '.vhmd. " 2 '-:). I
Fire A-siK-hci ".-!;f i! ot 'tl'hia. " l.r"..'.
FrasiUbn-riii'--.!, Id's. " S.ltT.I-.-iJ
II :m--X-".v V'.-'i. " 7.s -,.-.!
I s. I' .-.of North .Xo'Cii'l Phil. S.ITI tl
I.'V 'rio.)li!.'.:d li & !;. .!-Mat; " c..-:m.:i
N'rth r.r'ti-!i "'envm il'.'-!:r.g " y..Ts.TC-j
Nir.vieii LTti',-!'.av,;u; 1. ' I --
-
Bpitiigt ehl F. M.-Springaelii. "
s.js...i5:
Tote.! A-si ts.SS il774 ;
j
r
osses Afjustsd aai Fail at tMiency
JBWBln
IP6
r
uaifln
E 5 r" ?! 5 O ' never noeti' l''e:n and pushed out.
!j t Moirnnr o n I A,,o,it h'iIf wa-v vcr tlu-y cluti-rca al,oi;t
i s r f 1 1 v fy s m ii i his ,,i;it s thkk as to imv i
1 S L. 5 S LA S 8 1 I O I Vo vvil j ,,ri.ss anti tK,n hc, s:nv peril- Club-
Latest by Telegraph.
uo:;kvi.i am stoj.kn.
A d'ebraskan Appointed-
WasIUNOToN, !). (.'., Oct. 27. TllC.
president to-day appointed Victor Vil
quaine of N. braska to be United States
consul at Colon, Kiepubiic of Columbia.
Kteamship An iyals.
Sol tiiami'Ton, Oct. ST. Arrived
The Trave, from New York for Dremen.
Ni-.w Y(i,;k, Oct. 27. Arrived The
City of Itichmml, from Live rpool, and
j tll
Stat-.: ol Indiana, from Glasgow.
t)i:KicaToVN. Oct. 27. Arrived The
v '
Germanic, from New "l ork.
A Stancipipo Col!cpscs.
Kociiimi.k, N. Y., Oct. 27. About
4 o'clock this afternoon the 8 necu Falls
Water company's -tamlpipe burst and fell.
It was feet high and thirty-live feet
in diameter. The iro:; w-i;. thrown in all
directions and th; house of Mrs. Charles
Carron was entirely Mibmcrgvd and was
washed. oil its foundation. Tho damage
will reach s.'O.OO'J.
SUortor Time Across tho Continent
Siv l'mvrrvi I'll. (),.tl...r
:
Vioe-F: lilent I'otter, of the I'nion Fa
cilie Kailwav, :-tated this afternoon to an
Associated Frcss reporter that iloaiis
l;vc been been prr.ciiculiy conu.Ictcd lor
- .nin.r the tim J across the rontinent
on west-bound tiavel tin- Lmon and
Central i'ai ilie roads, by which the regu
lar passeng.-r train from tin; F.i.-t, leav
ing Omaha the same, time as under the
present schedule, willanive in this city
sixteen hours earlier. The new schedule
wiil go into eif-ct about November lo.
- - - 9 -
A Trsircy-Fivo-Ton Teloscope
Ci.kvi::.aM). O., Octvb'cr . The .id
inch telescop.', the largest in the woild.
which was dt.v-igir.id and built by War
ner & Swansoy. is linis'ued, and will at
otice bo shipped to its destination, on
Mount Hamilton, Cal., where it will be
placed in Lick Observatory. The col
umn is of c:et-i run, 10 by 17 feet at the
base ami 1 by S feet at the top, and
weighs IS tons. On this column rests
the head, weighing 4 tons, in which a
steel polar axis. 10 feet long and twelve
inches in diameter, sup-ports the declina
tion axes, also of st-vl, 10 feet long and
10 inches in diameter, weighing 2o00
pounds. The steel tube, 5' feet 0 inches
long, is 4 teet in diameter at the center,
tapering to OS inches at each end, and
weighs over four tons. The driving
clock and balcony for the assistant as
tronomer is reached by a spiral staircase
on the south sitle of the column. The
center of motion is .57 feet above the
base and when the telescope is pointed
to the 7.enith the object glass, which is o(5
inches in diameter, is (I5 feet from the
base. The total weight of th.- telescope
is thirtv-iivc tons.
Terrible Fate of a JViai. Carrier-
Jacksonville. Fi.i., Oct. 2-?. Jamss
E. Hamilton, the mail carrier between
Miami and Lake Worth, an th ; South
0 coi:,i ,ct.
at Hillsborough Inlet lursdav. Tiiese
I inlets are dangerous places to cros?, the
i 1 ..i. J . 7- .A ..r. I
swill current iru::i me LUiuuts m.ti-
, , -
SI1 t!ic tuics rinil producing strong cross-
currents. T'uev t'.re cross'.'d in sm iil ooats.
Owing to the immense quantity of lish
i to be found here the ferocious man-eating
sharks abound. Hamilton was an ath
letic young man, and carried the mail
between the. two places, some seventy-live
miles, on his back, walking near the m-
'irc.ditanco t'ae beach. Tuesday he
left the Orange Grove House of lie.uge
and about noon arrived at the inlet.
TIu sharks were unusual! v thick, but
: bing his oars he began striking at thciri.
! The blows only seemed to irritate the.
I tierce creatures, and soon both oars were
; bitt'-n off ami dashed from his hand--.
The ferocious sea wolves scented blood.
and leaped ten and twenty feet out of
i the water in their eagerness,
I Attacks then began on the bot, huge
pieces were bitten out; of th"
b;-g;;n to i'til with water, and
!es. it
1 tamiiton
i. '
became era 7. d vsit'n fee.r. Tearing elf
the s-its, he struck at t!j
h.rks wildly:
hoping to fiiuht n them off. One huge
shirk drove at -the boat full tilt, and
tlie sliock threw Hat.. ilton in tht; midst "
of theexp: ctant tig rs.
A horrible shriek
i. . ,i.
. .
tM a-uii.i lo'ii; on. ii.. i.'uoku x..
i i... i-.e-n-u
Vi..u,.r) nni t.l(.r nothing it'iild be seen,
for th furv of the mad erevtures threw
. , , r ,
up vast shcti.3 Oi wter. .vnid.l nMi.T-
man, who witnessett th tcrnuie scene
from n distance, carried the news to the
next station. A searching party was
sent out, but only the fragments of the
boat were found. The shock is so grunt
tli ere tliat no one has yet volunteered to
c airy the innil over the rout.
A STRUGGLE IN SUGA '.i
A Plantation Striko Which Cails
for tho Miiltla.
2ni:w Oui.KANd, La., O.t. 2
Two
days ago a general striKe occurred on the
sugtr lant:itions throughout a largj por-
tion ,f tile sugar belt of the state. Tin;
n.-gro laborers under the l -t.derJiip ot
o f the Ivnig'.lts of Labor had demanded
advance of 2 j cci.U per dav, the .res-
. . . ' , . . .
cut rat.; being ..,1 rations. llus !.-ing
refused the negroes became violent ami
refused to let others work.
To-day ov. McE:i"ry received a dis
patch from J. .1. Shaffer, a Terre Donne
planter, stating that his plantation was
in the. hands of the strikers, and asking
for assist .'tn''c, the parl'di aulhoritii s be
ing una'.le to protect hi;:i. Thereupon
tliL- governor orde.vd a detachment of
n.iliti t. to the. s.-.-n-; of th-: troubb; to
act uteler orders of ike civil authorities.
A detachment of artillery w-ii leave
ihi; city in the mor".ing for Terre Donne
witii a Galling g;:n and thrt.e-inch riile.
3EFOS:ZTHE SUPHEaIE COUHT.
3o;r.nln3 cf tho Arijurnont m tho
Anarcaist Casus.
Washington. Get. 0 -i. A iargc num
b"r of people went to the capital yester
day to ntUnd the anarchists heating, but
as the court room is .'mall, only about
one hundred and fifty got in and several
hundred jailed to get admission. The
proceedings v.vr:: very solemn. All the
judges paid c lose attention to arguments
nrodueed and several of them inter
rupted th : attorneys to ask
them
;lis.
The
i'liarchists
council made an interesting picture.
Den Dutler was there in line broad cloth,
swallow tail coat, broad shirt front and a
very !ine button hole boquet. Next to
him sat Roger A. Fryor and Randolph
Tucker. Desidc these sat Captain Dlack
and Salmon, the Chicago lawyers. At
the other end of the table sat Attorney
General Hunt, of Illinois, State's Attorney
Grinnell and assistant, all three very plain
matter-of-fact looking men.
Randolph Tucker made the first argu
ment and one thrt surprised those of his
old friends who were present. He has
always been an extreme state's rights m;:n,
but yesterday claimed that the fourteenth
amendment to t'ua federal constitution
virtually makes the supremo court the
guardian of fdl the rights and privileges
i.f every citizen in till the states and con
fcrs upon it the power to practically re
view all license in state courts.
Attorney General Hunt answered in a
clear, calm, plain argument, which was
highly intere.-ting, and was considered
equal to the defensive argument. The
catire afternoon was taken up in lengthy
argument.
Inventor Edison's Method of Fun.
A rcjiorter casually met Air. Edison this
week, and ho happened to be in more than
his usually jolly mood and by the way ho is
apparently in the ruddiest health and best of
spirits. To the inquiry if he had anything
new Mr. Edison replied:
"Yes, I have made a fresh discovery of no
little imjiortanee a great advance in electric
art tested its practicability and realized suc
cess; but I will not name it now. Hereto
fore when I have invented or discovered
something and published its details the scien
tific pajjers have soon after teemed with an
nouncements of anticipations, prior experi
ments, hints about 'piracy and stolen thunder,
etc. According to these I have never pro
duced a prototype, nothing but ioor, miser
able little antityivs. Xow, this timi I'm going
to have some fun v.-i1h the boys. My new dis
covery is fully recorded, but I will not pub
lish it for six months! You may give this
formal notice, so that the bibliophiles and
prior inventors may have the lirst chance, j
with lots of time to get the laugh on me. j
-'IS me oil men , i ui u.oi.n k.j m- on ,
, . , , ,
sand,' but propose to plug the well and hold
it as a 'mystery' tor six months. Jt,
meantime, no claimant appears with a full
description of the 'mystery' I'll draw the
plug, and I think 111 ba entitled to nail ray
sign on that property." Electrical Review.
The Canes of tlio Dudes.
The canes of the dudes take on wondrous
forms. Ed Knox, who went over to London
this summer, told me something about it the
other day. The stick itself is nothing. It may
1h3 baruboo, rattan or witch hazel. But the
head is the thing. The real English fashion is to
have tho head so large-anil so odd that no
one else can have anything like it. These
heads are of carved and stained ivory or
silver. Representations of crocodiles' heads,
clcphants' heads, turbaned Turks, swarthy I
negroes, dogs, horses, birds and rabbits are j
all brought into use.
One car.e made in London for a special I
?7ev.-York order is the head of a menkr of ;
the Old Guard with his bear skin cap. It is !
of silver. Another is a globe with a map cf :
the world, and still another is a cigarette and I
match box combined. Among horseman the j
fashionable tmng is to nave a uoiiow sue. .
rv a v v .u-wa vH J -
i.--ow.-.-".t j .
a measure for the beiznt of horses, iheugly
n measure for the neiznt or dorses, ineugiv
face of Mephistopheles is utilized as a cane
ornament by a i-utn avenue sauntered an.
some Englhmen carry ivory busts pf Queen
Victoria since the jubilee. Tho cost of such
canes is s to jew x oris ir'oun. i
FIFTY YEAIiS AfiO.
A TM WHEN RAILROAD TRAVEL
WAS VERY UNCOMFORTABLE.
l'ashnK'r Carried In Ojicn Triuko I'it
tetl with Wooden .Scats Tlio Story Tohl
by an I'tigliKli Kitilwuy Journal Utile
iijkI ICei;u!Cioun.
Fifty years ao third cJa-ss i;as.senfrs were
' carried in ojhii wagons or trucks, fitted with
..,s.v.i i ... i - 1 ,
riflf,..s wenj ult:lL.Il(,, t ,,!(. Uninil T!u.
ic-on 1 class e.nriages were, in regard to com-
fort. Lut if ""ytliing, Utter ti.an tlio
hUk T1h ,0 was no ;;!ai.-r, and tho parti-
tions above tho level of the doors, dividing
t:'? ca:ria-e into six nmii'iartmt-ts, cacti
made i.li seat twelve pfrsti.-.s, wen- formed of
;a:i!S iIltt.rial, and udniittin- free currents
of wind an. I air, to tlio discomfort of t'ao un-
! fortunate travelers. I ho jassenord for tho
various intermediate ttations wero put into
s parato compartments and the doors locked.
Tiio clear length of i-ach compartm-'iit ou
some lines wan only 8 feet 7.1 inches, and the
widtii 4 fef t 4Yt inches, c a-eh seat being 15
leches m width. Stout pa-singers had some
diiiiculty in squeezing through tho doors.
which wero only IS inches u ide. TLo first
glazed and ineh fed second class carriage that
ever ran upon a railway was i:i tho lir.-t ex
press train that ran between London and Ex
eter. Tho journey was made i:i five hour,
and the performance was regarded as nno i f
tho marvela of railway traveling. Today
there aro in tho United Kingdom about ."t,
OOy carriages, many of which aro fitted with
tho luxuries and beauties of a drawing room,
and even tho third class are more comfort
able than tho first of fifty years ago.
X'ot only are most of these carriages com
fortably and conveniently arranged, but tho
safety of those woo use tumi j.s increased b'
appliances which wero not, even dreamt of by
our railway forefathers. Oc tho total rail
way carriages 91 per cent, aro now fitted
with continuous brakes, while!) I p-r cent, of
the dowsdo lino of the country is worked on
tue absolute blocK system.
TfCtvETS AND IlA'tGAGi:.
The method of issuing tickets fifty years
ago was very dilrereat from that now in us
From the earliest liiu.-.s of railway traveling
tin' tlato was required ta bo written on tho
ticket, as well as the amount of fare and the
timo of tho train by which tho passenger was
to start. These particulars had to bo entered
on a counterfoil in th" hook of tickets.
mo arrangements lor luggage wero tie
light fully simple. ''Each passenger's luggago
will," said the time bill, "as far as practicable,
be placed on the roof of tho coach i;i which
he has taken his place; carpet bags and small
luggage may bo placed underneath tho seat
opposite to that which tho owner occupies."'
A capital arrangement for securing punctual
attendance was tho announcement:
"Passengers intending to join tho trains at
any of tho stopping places are desired to bo
in good time, as the train will leave each
station as boon as ready, without reference to
the time stated in the tables, tho main object
being to perform tho whole journey as expe
ditiously as possible. Passengers will bo
booked only conditionally upon there being
room on tao arrival of tho trains, and they
will ravo the preference of seats in the order
in which they aro booked. Ko persons are
booked after the arrival of the train. All
persons aro requested to get on and alight
from tho coaches invariably on the left bide.
as the only certain means of preventing acci
dents from trams passing in an opposite di
rection." NO SMOICIXG ALLOWED.
What would modern travelers snv to the
following notice:
"Xo smoking allowed in the station houses
or in any of tha coaches, even with tho con
sent of the passengers. A substantial break
fast may ba had at tho station house at Bir
mingham by parties going by the early train,
but no person is allowed to sell liquors or eat
ables of any kind upon the line. The com
pany earnestly hope that tha public will co
operate with them m enforcing this regula
tion, as it will bo tho means of removing a
cause t f delay and will greatly diinink-h tho
chaiica of accident."
Tho engines in use on tho Stockton and
Darlington line in 1.7 weighed about twclvo
tons, and had li.V.j inch cylinders and a piston
stroke of 15 inches. Ths tiuve p dr.? of wheels
were each 4 feet in diarei?rcr, an-1 t ho pressure
of steam varied from H:i pounds to GJ pounds.
Many of the engines had only four wheels,
and ii was considered a great step in advance
when bix wheel engines were placed on tho
railway-", the argument in t-ia';- favcr being
that, if by air-' accident oiiv; i f tho six wheels
broke, the e.:gino would sr;!l remain erect,
while if one of the four c-k2;;j.s1 t!. j result
would be the downfall of th .- lee.-K-iotivo. Ou
the Birmingham and Derby j:;:ietio;i line tho
engines wjighed ten tons ten hundredweight,
and tao two driving whe-'ia wero 5 feet 6
inches, and the four carrying wheels 3 feet 6
inches each.
In contrast to the above, we subjoin an il
lustration of the famcu3 "Marchioness of
c, .., . . ., ,
StafToru enenic, exhibited Lv tho London
. ,T . t ' - ' , "oon
' tions exhibition in li-o, and adopted as the
i type of the company's espress locc-motivc-s.
i ilu tender, this tytx? cf c-i:g;ne weighs lirty-
four tons eleven huudi edweight, and tho
cargo cf coal is five tons. The driving wheels
are G foet 0 inches in diameter, and the en
gine is worked at a pressure of 170 pounds to
the square inch. The greatest novelty in
theso engines is, however, tho adoption of tho
"compound" system, by which tho expansive
power of ths steam is fully utilized. London
Railwav News.
Blemish on Our Hospitality.
"It seems ta me we have quite a ?rious
blemish upon our hospitality to cur public
men in subfcctiutr them under ail cH-enm-
stances to the ordeal of the Land shake,"
aij a we; known public man. "Every re-
snect is dua to the risht han-1 of fl;rn.vl,irv
i;Ut when it conM to taking i:,A i,-a ,,t
same fiftv to sixty of vour fellow boimrs ner
mi!lcte for hours at a time tho act assumes a
monotcnv that is excruciatingly painful to
ho sut iect inteuded to Le
however satisfactory to the cotni.limentin"
people. Posiibly there is soma compensation
1.1 Lit' LIlIMli'I'L ( 1 LUt ' ' M H I nil I llo I. tl'f'ti.
laiueiaougiiiui
ntt oofirs Tt i to 1 hr.-i ..,..-..;,
nrt. wonAm
j-.nd, in tha painful haurs succeeding this
well inienttoued martyrdom, may all th3
consolation that pan be derived from such u
source belong to tho recipient of the honor."
rhjladeloliia Call.
Mi
mm
A i'ull iino of
FROM if 2. TO :;!0.
Mit-fitatWKnriiiicui-iaiU
JOS. V. WECKB'CH'S
DAYLIGHT STOI1E.
i
G3
If
& B
1 ill U
1-E DliYIIQlT STOE.
ALL
The citi.ens of C....S count v . iil iccoLHiize
- C
county roo-tor ' ; -jv. ;:ig loud
uiun. qi
il( .Vi -
FiHEST
i.lUUU-:UL
s
MILIKARY AND CARPETS
exhibited oyer all ciunpi .tit or. The award is significant in point if M.-piininy
t-tyle. value antl quantity at: I will command your hearty conctii rei.ee
uli-.n we a.-se: t that we have this season the grandest
and !.;o.-t varied line of
Fine Br? Ms. Mm, Camels, Mssimid
To lie found
The ladies of Plattsmouth and vicinity are respectfully invited to call and inspect
some of tuc wonderful Manufactured Textile Fabriques of the age.
Mpccissl t:tle cf Jircxx
This Sale will continue this and all next
"Vc nvo rather late in jilticiitg our rooster on the prch owiv.p; to Ihe
great ri;.-h ami receipt oi new roods usakinr; earlier aTinotwtce.'neiifc
impossible, but Irotn this date watch ot;r advertieintnt ainl jiroL't
tiierebv.
'if
White Frent Dry Good3 House.
Main street
Wi'.l To $.v.
IT
jf i. 1 . ).. t. i1 j
FROM $'.. TO $12.
ix all sTvi.::;.
Rich A'tioclKiu ail:! For Tiirarp.
FJvOM
TO
COMPETITION.
ut a 'dance thai the above l.irl ; a f,..a
- . -3 b -V 0-
iind over thevictory gnined by
ex xc
ii' 01'
JJi imL Vi IJiti UUU1JL
iti the citv.
GoosIk, Carpets, filks
week. Great bargains will lis offered.
'lattsmouh, Neb