- TliK DAILY HERALD, FLATTsMotlM, NEBRASKA, Til UltS DAY, DECEMBER 8, 1887. (T WOMAN AND HOME. HOW SOCIETY MOTHERS ARE SUP PLIED WITH WET NURSES. "Diituvr .itintt" u a rrofeiinlon Dentil In Cm Dlnhclotli Hosing Children T.jLVr. How Woiiin JUnt Sunc fur Uat t'r':il'.'H Iliiil for t ! IloiiMt-hohl. Oil VvVst Kortjr-sowiul titreet Is a inodeHt little ! -iliIiKhn'iit kejt liy a Kwiss hii1 his wif 'f lie man ia atjout years i., of k-ii-tkr.vmlv l-iin-uiior ami ulvvuys iluiuly liitt lu.'jiS !y lrs'l. 1 1 in wif, who npjiars to Ikj nlxj.it yen in yonn;T tlian In-, is a jro-:x- wonuui of full li'in- ami li;iinl l.ifi:irni .-i. Tho Ijusiness Cfiii'liictcil I y these 'o;jic i i jNs-jiliiir, and thuir .U:l.lis!!infit is l-ro!,.iI !y tlo only ono of tLe kind i:i New York, ii' iit-t in tho UniU-4 StJiN-s. At Ii.-n.st a r"-i"i--v fai!l to li.i-l it:; :oiuiti-t-M;rt hern, af.'er c r-j-i-lerj-.hlo -:ii--!i, aul the jiroprktor sail h" li I ii'.t know of Jitiy rival in th- city. TI:; )u.-.ii! Lt ilonu in two io:n:i. The mniii -or f r-mt room i.i furnislicl some! Iiing like it roami ami Li tha rt-feitioii room for visJtoiH. The sts-oml and rt-ar roon is Uk-1 for exusiiinrit ions. The business -on-diK tvil hern i t t'.io Ku;iplyin; of vt luirsts. "Tim sui;lyin of w-t nm-.s-s or f-ist'-r mo'. lien for inf.ti.ts in New Yoi k,' sai.l tho iro::-ii'tor, "will now 1h omc a im!ii.-ti-y. Heretofore pariiit-. had eonsi'lcralili- tronl.le jil fiicliu.; uoo I wet ii'irixs iirul were liahlo to l.o iiiijiofK'l i:mii liy ml viiitmvsx-s. You kiio'.v l hat it has always Is-.-n a muilur fctiTM-rsI ition, ami even an ud.ii, tljat -liko father lie son,' and im half the world U lievcs i:i hcre-'tity. They also U-lieve tJiat faults and te:iij-r are reeoived Ly thei-hiM from 1':.- inotlr r who nur.es it. .-irc;tinjj this c.)iii::i'i:i ln lief as having mueli f truth, JiOW i:nj;orta:it it is then to bo careful in the f a ir.'.rse who is to nurture the lia'xx This It et liie only cause for the t-xl-i--nee tjt a liureai! where nurses can 1m; sup .!: 1. The vanity of women, the demands cf to :;:id tL-vca- il oilier reasons iiiM-egsitate jt, f.o.icly won ten iio-.vail.-tys, uml in fuel ftlnny-jj have objeeel to tho Iuties of nut-ti-rnity. Many of t'wm dislike to niise ehii !rM 0!1 l",t'-l,;i UIl,l cliildreu .ft'i have u ftreii.; nil unccuquerahla ol)jctio:i to it thenvlvcs. Theie f'O a thousand kiii.Ls of i!if:-!it fcKid, a j;roat many 01" t'-ein cheap and even il.inerous nostrums, and tlit ills of baU s am fre-itiontly r.ttriSutaliie to loor foo.l. Isc.iw v.o avoM ull d;tle-i;lies and sui-l-!y vom'-;i morally and physieally jJiIhy to motheiM who o'ojeet to nuisin their own infantj." Hov.' do j'ou get themr' havo ay-nts who vir.it tho village? find f.'r;.i:5 ncar tiie city and tho hospitals. Vv"e none l:it the healthiest women and Eiar.vjt-- tlt-'ir ch".racler. A muulicr of the r-.snila'.d j j.hj s i;!is in the city have indorse 1 our nor!;. Iie:v, yoa see, are some vC tiie i;idorsi-;iie:!ts."' He showed the reporter w-voraj t-t-rtifieutea fignd ly v.-ed kiiowii physicians juoom-n-j:i-iiii3 the i.istitutioii a needed innova tion. "lloiv roany of tin-so- wonjou do you ordi nardy h ivo i.-u hand.'" "U.:.i'.sy rdurut a doen. You have no idea of hovv .o have i:ierea::ed the volume of our Lwskit - - ci:iee we started here, a little over a vctir n:--'. Yes, we usually have a d.,:i) and o:a-.'t more, aad wo don't keep them on lia '.-i sJther. Applications are coming "in ail time, and wo have recently in-crens-vl ;;r force cf f-gents." "JIow lo the piHiplo jij-Ofix-d who want p-.n .'."!h:j1 helpf ' V.'il !. if the mother of an infant is uit&ble to s.v.v it, or refuses to do so for fear of dis jiit : ii.r -n-.n or missiu; social oiitc-rtain-jiiouts, : l -o j;et:. her husband to hxk around for .1 f-u". icute. Of cour.-x tu l.-ottlo is used n greii: iL-al, hut babies won't always take the bottle. A strong, healthy human substitute is t:i-J l' ;t. Instead of advertising through t'ae ::"'..-s;iajicrs and getti.-ig a woman whose ivmnec: i,:is, life and ajifeeedenta are bad, iliuit:; la:ij;ei iaj the moral character of the c'. i!.J, 'w com--s to ns wno are rts;o;isible for t::e re.ir --s wo i.upjily, le is accompanied by the f :;.ily physician. The nurses are brought r.'.:t, 1 after looking them over tho father or I ! . d'u-tor selects one. 8ho is then taken into t;.: other roc:a and thoroughly exam- I by the doctor as to her ho.dtlx and geu ' ph-.';:-c;il condition, and samples of her it milk 4 m--- taken to le analysed. It everything " ictory she is selected." lo you get your payf" is Sli;H "Itov. 'Ii.st-i iv -.rtiL-s iay us. v e g.. t a ice irom -e lir.g a nurse, and she pays us t tbajiooplsjn i her wages." COi:iilliS;-!OU o. ow l'l ' ' ' I .:il. f band or ia:nilv has a t. ''nj l. "n "l lue'a 5-.er own child is . t-orncs t , r.,,1,.. ,1 v.-ages by nursing some -t icr woman s child. . :., i-nti-a i" so than her lri'-re laouc! . m nine luoatus . i i i wt;i- f -iiU- ouM earn in hnsViar.-laiintueeut.ne i..mn tv,-ovr.rs. If thev have all llix. Ki"u;? ti-in ; denumdo l bv the parents of tbx ' e,ultl lw nurse-1, and the i)oop!o ore rich, tl "V par l.lg'.. price J. It is not at nil mmsC tor the.-- v o:no:i to get and -";0 a iac nlh bonr 1 included, and hanlxaie pre-.-ents." "Vi'iK i e did this business originater "T nu not sure about tho locality of it or; -iv-.. but it bus existed and flourished in Paris for yers. Y'e brought it from there. My v.-iiVs fli-st child died soon after its birth, and rko Ijoeame a wet nurse through one of these bureaus, which are so plentiful in all the big cities of France." New York Even ing Sua. "Dinner C'ving" a a Profession. Vr-ior, "- tho many occupations invented by Inri's-unious women as a means of support, prcb ib.v the most original is that of a wo man of :.0. who bad been for several years at the bend of her father's luTnrio'.w establish ment, ar. l learned through cxp: rience the art f ei'torUining his many friends at dinner. Ltfft p.v Mealy a.i orphan, and without a cent to cafl i.er own, she legaii to i-ast about ir. l:or min i for soie means of earning her own l!vi. he was not much of a musician, and i'e .Kdn't have cither knack or desire to te-' h v!. :t l:-.n ;:-"' sll0 k:iev.-. She couldn't n-rite o.- paint, a id. in fact, she foun-1 it dif ficult to find within hers--If any knowledge jc;ei-''v exact to le worth money enough to t v.v -her. ' If I oaly know-one thing tho-Z'z hlrrthd cric.l: "but the only thing I k ;o .v i hov- to giro dinner partis I know ,tbat .--.-tiy a:id co:nolctc!y, but the question is how t - got dinners, not how to give them." Thhik'.r the matter over in every light a suddo-i i iSijira'-ioii came to her; thera were aiumbcr; cf i e-iple who omM give .linners, Jbut diun'r know how to and rhe might teach o"T- told Lor idaa to her friends aad Vhev- c -i;-ouragetl her by employing her oa -such o.v.uiona, ar.l relieved thtmsives of infinitv iler : loud::!;: :iro and worry tnereo.. . olhod as this; ".ho writ to the in ducer giver the day tho invitation; 1 and di-x-uSSod ways and means. On tLo :..- of the dinner she ordered all tho i'or.'-r favor and d:r.aer earns, aixangea th-:r. l;er.-;elf, the dining table into proper cr-ntl-.. . , saw that all thB changes of plites r : r ! . were rcadv, nnd. I'ko a ?ajor rcu- stocd mvJ 5?i-e her ordci-s until dessert .. . ' 1 7 .".. .T or do thev abandon themT . ,. ' children die; nut many r f. ,J - - - - wan served, upon which the dreWAtlgh of relief, put on her gloves and slipped away. Hxni her patronage incream-d when the jco ph) who cmployol hir found what clever and oi igiual IdeuM he had und how entirely ho lifted nil care and ntsponsibility from their hhouldcrs. h'.ho ma-lu a businewiof getting all thu lut(.t i-!c:is from the florihta, the ca ten rs, the chin;i shops and tho restaurant, mid applied them while tl-ey were new, and ul'Vr -she Ijri-nme iutercst-d in the work be KU.i to di-vcl'ip all fc'irt of original inspha tloiis, whic!i were opul.ir anl effectivo. She ul i) ma-li; a point .of hunting up clever little vi ; ! taul fpi'l.itioiis for dinner curds, and wrot them out h r.vlf upon cards that sho got from v:i! ions nrti.t friemls wholiuddine-l ni.i:ptn;i'-ly til h-r own table in more pros I rom days nud were willing to be obliging now. She has now wi-ureil a clientele who k ; hT oecupiiil :11 through theseatwn, and kl.- manages to live comf-rtably on the pro ceeds of 1-er w..rk, for naturally commissions on all the things s!:c re-o;:nnenLs come into her haii 'n, nn-i this, added to her other earn ings, makes a sum suiii'-r-iit for her needs. New York WorJd. V;i-h tin- I)l .!i loth. Kow that di-n-H are known U le cau:-d by germs, op.e is on t he lookout for death in almost anything. I've;ia dishcloth may gen erate th germs t hat cans;- sickness and death. K il is I I : k and stiir.and sour, throw itintj the lire. Kfep yur dishcloth clejm, if you have to eat without a tabl-s loth, do without curtains to your windows and cako for your tea, and ha. eto let your faco dry after wash ing it. Let the weeds grow in your garden, l.-t the hol-s in the heels of your hiLstKiiid's or children's Iiom; go imdarneil, let the shoes go without blacking for Sunday, if necessary, but do not neglect, to wash the dishcloth. A tidy housckii-r wriU.-s: "I havesmelled a whole' hotts.- full of typhoid fever in one dishcloth. I had some neighlor8 once clover, good sort of folks. One autumn four of them were taken sick with tho typhoid fever. The doctor ordered tho vinegar bar rels whitewashed, and threw about forty cer.is' worth of carliolie acid into the swill pail department. I went into the kitc!on and made gruel. I needed a dishcloth, looked around for one, and found several. And such rugs! 1 burned' them all, ami called the daughter to get me a dishcloth. She looked around on the table. 'Why,' said she, 'thero were ulmut a dozen here this morning.' Sho looked in tho wood box, on tho mantel piece, ami felt in tho cupboard. 'Well,' I said, 'I saw some old, black, rotten rags lying around, and I burned them, for there is death in such dishcloths, and you must never use sueh again,' 1 took turns iu nursing that family for w.sc!;s, and I believo those dirty dishcloths uai'o the cause of all that hard wurk," Cor. Good If ousekecpiny, Itoxlng Children Ears. All babydom is under great obligations to Dr. Sexton, a well known aurist of this city, for recording and publishing the particulars of over fifty eases of car disease resulting from a blow of the hand, either open or clenched. The effects of gient concussions, as thi explosions, upon the ear are popu larly recognized, Jiut it is not gj-neraiiy know n how small a concussion may result in d:v lag.? to or disease of the ear, with the chance of subsequent deafners. This nund-er of crises ia the exierienc3 of one practitioner shows that such results are not s very rare. It is worthy of the con siil.i;;ti ;i- of thoso thoughtless ieople who, for p-uil-laiieut ot s;i!'. t. children's ears. If a parent believes in the hoeefeaiiy of cor poi ;1 punishment, there are plenty of places upn.i tho body where it may be applied with equal con-oe' i .-e ciiocts and with little danger of ivmot;- plivsical damage. Boxing of the ears sh ? i:ot bo indulged ia even in play, for one ca::n't gauge the effect of tho con cuviion. A ; -tlar aurist in this eity iPS: pub lis'aod a c::fa of tleafitcia resulting from an unexpected kiss upon the ear, the person giv ing it coining up from behind the receiver. The force in thia easo must have been much less than that of a playful blow. Babyhood. flow Women Rest. How different!- men ar.l women indulge themselves in what is called a resting siell. "I guess I'll sit down and mend these stock iug.i and iv;t a while)"' says tho wife, but her husband tluwva l-.imself uix! the es k-imge or sits back in his armchair, with hands at rest and feet pla?cd horizontally upon another chair. Tho resale is that his whole body gains full benefit of tho half hour he allows himpolf from work, and tho wife only re ceives that indirect help which comes from change of occupation. A physician would tell her that taking even ten minutes' rest in a horizontal position, as a change from standing or sitting at work, would prove aiore beneficial to her than any of her make shifts at resting. Busy women have a habit of keeping oa their feet just as long as they ?an, in spite of backaches and warning pains. xvs they grow older they see the folly of per mitting such drafts upon their strength, and learn to tako things easier, let what will happen. They say: "I used to think I must do thu3 and so, but I've grown wir and learned to slight things." The first years of housekeeping are truly the hardest, for un tried and unfamiliar cares are almost daily thrust upon the mother and home maker. New England Farmer. ( Care of Silverware. To know how to take cere of silver is a yery important thing when ono has any sil ver to take care of. A good deal of valuable wal "e is reduced t a condition where it is fit only be melted by improper cleaning aad careleflj.- handling. Silver articles, when not ia use, should be kept in prepared cotton flannel btigs to protect them from the sul phuretted hydrogen of furnace and illumi nating gas. They should be kept in a ciry plaoe, and if likely to remain a long time tho silver should 1x5 perfectly clean and the bags closely wrapped in stout paper. For daily care of silver it is best to use hot water, castile soap and a stiff brush and chamois leather. In using plate powder to restore the brilliancy one should always go to a reli able silversmith for a good article, ns much of the powder indiscriminately sold is no better than a fine sa w or a lot of quarts sand to wear off the surface cf metaL Gilding ought to be rubbed as little as possible and silver etched, decorated with colored alloys or onidired, can be kept in condition by rub bing with a damp linen cloth with a very iitU-2 plato powder. Chicago Herald. Odious Comparisons. "I imagine that American girls think more of their dress than our own do, but they the fatal mistake of 'dressing up,' I ir.c i that the;.' nrc do wdies at one time and c laborately gotten up at others. They do not ho v.- so well at breakfast, for instance, cs an En- h sh girl does. There is a certain want of iinsh about tho coiffure aad, indeed, the general outline of their figure. A really proi.tr English girl never looks mora charm ing than when she appears in the morning fre h from the toilet. Her American cousin is U:rp at breakfast, and imparts no idea of frc4.hut:3to the Ichold.r. But then, whei; ,he is attired for tho promenade she is s nart- cr ir-.d Letter thought c-ut tliao any of cs as a rui Thus savs"iladge" fa London Truth, utter I f failing to see that she is confirming d; i popular belief on this side of the water that : English girla are always dowdy, whether i drwBaed up or not. New York Commercial Advertiser. Food for Utile Folks. Ia the midst of an elaborate spread of ex cellent recipes for ingenious and toothsome, if sometimes rather indigestible dishes, do we consider as we should tho need of the chil dren for simple, wholesome and nourishing meals? Childivn do not require, nor khould they have, pii-kles or salads tliat tho torj'id livers and ab-.Lsed stomachs of older people crave. Neither Khould little folks bo compelled or even coaxed to cat hearty food when disin cline!. Dut certainly no wise parent will I-rmit a child to gorge itself with rich and useless desserts, candies, or cookies letwren meuls when unablo or unwilling to partako cf bliMKluiaking, tissue building, inusclo de veloping material. And thus it behooves us to concoct all tho schemes jxissiblo to tempt Ly jvcrfoctly natural means tho weak and wayward, ax well as to control the riotous apjH-titus. Good Housekeeping. The CarrlcHS Nurse. Few chili Iron escaiio certain unfortunate consequences of their incessant activity. The child who has never been cut, bruised or burned has probably not led the happiest nor most healthful life. Tho pliable bones, tho highly vitalized tissues, enable tho little ones to witlistand an astonishing amount of vio lence. On two occasions has tho writer seen picked from the bricks, where it had fallen from tho third story of the fronting house, a soft, plump, round luby, as bruisuble appar ently us a ripe peach, yet showing no syui tom nor sign of serious, injury. On the other hand, a careless nurse swings tho little one by its wrist or thoughtlessly twists its arm in putting on or taking off a too tight garment, and thero is a sprainud joint ir bi-oken bone. Edward Martin, M. IX, in Babyhood. ITINERANT ITEMS. Iarui-alii of Interest to Almost Every lo;!y Clippings from tho Kxcliaito. "Wla-n the smokestack of the Allen town thread mill ia completed it wid be 227 feet high, the loftiest ia the United States. As a prevention against trichincr.is small quantities of pig's meat coming from l'olaml into Silesia are now exam ined at auv of the toll stations at a fee of Cd. The Chicago Itoard of education has decided to name o:e of the tew public schools in that city "the AVnshburne school," in honor t the late E. B. WaJi burne. A tower now being erected on the highes:t point of the Mount of Olives by the Russians will be so hih that the Mediterranean and Red eeas may HSl'Tieen from the top of it. Sam Jones, ' the revivalist, had tlse audacity to say l.tfore a Boston audi ence that ho did not believe in '-culture with a Litc 'O.' " And IJpston now be lieves in Jones with a small There is a 6trange natural curiosity in Fayette county, Indiana, known asShaky Ilill. It comprises about twelve acres, and is occasionallj' subject to tremulous movements affecting several acres of land. This phenomenon has len noticeil for fifty -seven Vf.at. An American dentist lias been fined in Berlin for putting the title "doctor" on his cards. The judge said the law ap plied to all foreigners; he would line even the crown prince's doctor, Br. Mackenzie, if he attempted to use the title "doctor" in Prussia, ' The remains of John Oakly were dis interred and reburied near Albuquerque, N. M., recently, and it was discovered that his face and head were covered with a thick growth of hair, although when he was buried ten years ago he was both bald and beardless. Mrs. Craik was prompted to write her last book, !'An Unknown Country," which discusses the condition of the poor in the north of Ireland, by overhearing the remark of a laboring man, who, when rallied upon helping a little girl across tho street, replied, "Av, but a 'andful of Yip is worth a cartload of pity." Poultry men say that pullets hatched by incubators and raised in brooders lay much sooner than those hen hatched and raised. A Trenton man has one of these artificial young hens that began larini; when 10 weeks old, and has laid ah egg a dav ever since. At a public auction of old furniture in one of the Lancaster, Pa., market places the other day, a claw foot mahogany ?ofa that had belonged to Thaddeus Stevens was knocked down for $10; a 'hree legged table that once occupied a place in "Old Thad's" office brought only $3, and an old quaint looking glass that liad belonged to him sold for 1.50. The Guild of the Iron Cross is a new Catholic organization liaving for its ob ject the spreading of the principles of temperance reverence, and chastity. Fa ther Field, of Philadelphia, the guild's chaplain general, has just returned from a successful tour in the west and in Can ada, and reports 2,000 members, 117 priests and 7 bishops connected with the guild. It is stated that a German steamship recently took to Colon from Africa 700 Liberians, men of gigantic stature and Iowerful physique. They were half naked, carried queer looking bundles upon their shoulders, and spoke a Lm guogo which no one else on the isthmus understood. It is said that 1,500 more will follow, and that these men wili work on the Panama canal. Chief Drummond, of the United State". '. secret Service, in reporting on n band cf Italian counterfeiters now operating in this country, lias called attention to the existence of a formidable secret organi zation originating in Sicily, but having branches in New York, Boston, Chicago, St Louis, St. Paul, San Francisco and several other cities. The members of this society are described asassassins and villains of the worst type, engaged in all sorts of criminal schemes, but especially in the counterfeiting business. Debts on the Bank of ene. The way to have a good credit u to keep out of debt. To be intelligent is to be honest, kind and trood.- j You Have as much right to put your hand into another man s pocket as your nose into another man's business. A kind word costs you nothing, and the return of it may come at a time whet) vou need it most. ECONOMY IS WEALTIT. HOW RESPECTABILITY IS SUSTAINED ON $15 A MONTH. rrt About Financier of t!i Puctfie Cowl How the Ilnblt of Clone Eoosto iii y lit Acquired A Millionaire' fctra tcglc Generosity. Half a dozen gentlemen in the office of tho I'alaco hotel were talking tho other evcuin,'; of the coinjarative extravagance cf jjeojdo iu Bun Francisco. Ah old resident who owc3 Lchl-cs by tho block and lots by the acre, and is fiimudf regarded as a champion economic., remarked that a ood deal of tlie talk about the exti uvagance of tho Kan Francisco com munity was fiction. "I'm inclined to think,'1 said the thrifty cupitulist, "that thero uro just as many eco nomical people in San Francisco oh any town in the country. How do you account for the immense deposita iu the local savings banks if the community as a community is not strictly economical P "I don't quite agree with you," said a well known young grain speculator who bus mad j and lost millions without being very pcm-?v tibly affected thereby. "I think tho com munity as a community is recklesi in it: estimate of tho value of money, but there are no doubt as notable exampkn of economy to be met with in San Francisco as in imy cit y in tho Union. Kvory poinocr knows tor ci ample a well pnwerul man with gray I -curd, neatly brushed clothes and sLiuin :lk Jiut. In early dys he waa a well to do young jeweler and saved liis money, so tluit lie will never need tho osslrtanco of bit society to apjiease hia undertaker, lie ln'gcn years ago to cut down his living expetuios us u matter of principle, and now, when he's old and comparatively con, -.rtable, Le Las got it down so fine that sum of $15 a mouth supjx)rt5 him." HOW HE MANAGES IT. 4,IIow does he do it Well, in tho first place he has hunted up a room on tho top of Telegraph hill, where ho hoa to ascend by a rojie ladder, The marine view is excellent, but the work of getting up ia frightful. Stiil ho doesn't mind, for tho rent is only $4 a month. He blacks his own shoes, shaves himself and walks down town to breakfast, making sure that the establishment which be patronizes is able to supply a square meal to a healthy man for fifteen centj. Before be orders he makes it a point to devastate the pickle jar, stvecp the table of bread and crackers, radishes, beets or an3'thing else furnished gratis. Then he wades into Lis mcdest order, and after demolishing that strolls up to read the papers at th Pioneer halL lie alvays carries his overcoat thrown loosely over his shoulders, as tho common practice of thrusting the arms into the sleeves has a wearing tendency, lie invari ably spreads a couple of ne-.vs;aiers over his eUair in the reading rc-om, so that the cane sqpts may not too sudden ly remove the nap of his already long worn but well preserved pantaloons. He has a patent for hanging up his hat f.o that it will lose none of its beauty of outline by contact with the wall, and when h dusts it ho invariably uses his hand kerchief, a brush being calculated to shorten its term of service. He could afford to live at the rate of ?li00 a month, so that be will fully puts in the savings br.nk at his time of life, and without having any family to leave Li3 savings to, some 2JS5.'' "A good many rich people who made their own money make themselves apnea? mean without puspeeting it or being really as par simonious as they seem," remarked a full blooded cattle king. "They got into tho habit of driving close bargainswhea they were poor, and it used to be necessary as well as a matter of principle with them to see that they weren't cheated. They seem, to forget, though, that wht looks all right with a hard working man ou a small salary or his wife, isn't quite the correct thing with the same man or his wife when they have 20,000,000 or $30,000,000. Now thero was 's wife and daughter. The market people used to talk about them in a way that would p?ralyze them if they only heard it, and all on account of their mistaken ideas of what they had a right to do. ' Host ladie3 in their position give' their market orders and wait till the 'bills come in to see what the meat is a pound. OS A MARKETING TOUR, "These millionaire ladies used to go round the stalls some time ago on a regular mar keting tour, and display the same keenness about the price of porterhouse steaks and o tatoes per pound cs if a few bits more or less were matters of vital importance. I used to hear the marketmen comment on them, but I knew that it wasn't pure meanness cs sup posed, Jt was j'.ist a mistaken idea that it was good American horse sense and com mendable smartness to go and haggle with several butchers instead of picking out o good, honetit man who sold prime meat, and telling him as a wealthy lady should gra ciously do to send up so much beef or muttor. or whatever she wanted without mquiring about te market prices of the day. O: course, the patronage of such a cuKtomei would be worth keeping, and an honest and competent butcher would take pains to set that sho got the best in the market and at market rates. Of late the ladies I alluded to have ceased to visit the markets altogether, and, like other rich people, order through e servant," "You ere right about rich people being both mistaken and misjudged," said a prom inent bond and stock broker. "If a man is worth a hundred thousand dollars they say he's got million at least, and if Lo is &t all saving when he has got a million they say he is a miser and starves himself. There was , who was a rigid economist and great money maker. They said bis death was caused by trying to climb over the grave yard fence where bis parents are buried, in Germany, and thus beat tho gatekeeper out of a fee of five cents. That showed the pub lic estimate of fcis economy. Yet I know the man lsad a toft spot in his heart One time I told him about a widow lady, whose l-.it band ho used to know years before, when they were well olf. Tho woman wa3 about starving, and he promised to do something for her. A few days after he saw her going up Market street, near the new city hall, and and taking five 20 pieces out of his pocket he wrapped them ia a piece of paper, and walking up to her said: 'Good morning, Sirs. ; yon dropped this package,' The woman protested that she had lest no 0 pieces, either wrapped up or loose. She would know if she had, sho said. Ko insisted, however, that she had, and compelled her to take tho money and ure it as her own.' "You can edvertise it," said he, "if you like, though I'm sure yoa dropped it your-K-I. If it turna out, though, that I'm mis taken, send the owner to mo and IU settle with him." San Francisco Chronicle, Figures Versos I ictloa. A New York paper says that Howella, Curtis, Warner and Lawrence Hutton draw together S25,C03 a year from Harpers. Let' figure that up. W. D. Uowella gets $10,000 ; ayear. fco does W. . . Curtis. daries u;ia Ie7 Warney get 7,000. That i3 $2T,000, Bo 1 poor Hutton hai to work for nothing and has ! evidently to pay Harpers (2,000 a year for being allowed to do so, Petroit Free Fresa, The winic qualify' ot goods 10 jut cent, cheaticr thau any bouse west ! the Mi--f-is.ijii. Will never be untlcrFolu. Cull and Lcconvinccd. AIjSO tt.3UJJL JEHlLlSTCSr PETER MERGES. T2IB FURNITURE EMPORIUM PARLOR Su ! , FOIl ALL IE0 U" 3KT FOII- Parlors, Ilcd rooms, Kitchens, Hallways and Offices, Where a magnificent stock of fioods ami Fair IViec abound. UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING A SPECIALTY CORNER MAIN AND SIXTH (SUCCESSOR TO Will keep constantly on band a FRlCKE 8 I Drugs and Mediciens, Paints, Oils Wall Paper and PUR E L E. G. Dovey & Son. We tl pleqstii'G iq sqyiqg tlllt SOHlGS lilG Of Fall and Winter Goods Ever brought to this Market and shall be pleased to show you a Superb Wool 'Dress Goods, and Trimmings, Hoisery and Underwear, ' Blankets and Comforters. A splendid assortment of Ladies' ilissses' and Childreng CLOAKS, WKAPS AND JERSEYS. "We have also added to onr line' of carpets Rome new patteici, Floo Oil Glotljs, qtts q!! tls. In men's heavy and fine boots atd shoes, also in Ladies', Mifpf s and Childrens Footgear, we have a complete line to which we INVITE your inspection. All departments rull a'ud Complete. BEDROOM SET ! CLASSES OF- E; 3T "O" 3 zsmsg-r.ooms. TO- I'LATTSMOUTM, NEWtAhKA & CO J. M. i:rl:fM,) full and concrete nt vli ,I a Full Line of IQU ORS. E. G. Dovey & Son. Line OF m