The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, March 01, 1888, Image 3
A WRITKU'S XAME. THERE SEEMS TO DE SOMETHING IN IT, AFTER ALL. Sumo Autlior I.xiis.I1i for AfliIin a I'M-iuliiiiyiii No !( ry In "I.onqfcl low" " I !ia "W;i-uiiIiiv I lun tTt nf I.ltcr-utni-" "Curv," ";lli," "Houui-il." Komcf inn-; :i writer's name i. so urvoiit li or lio common;. !eoe t lint it yi ems of itvlf unfit' tcil for f.ini'v :.i!I :i p .eii.ioii m iii;h-uis to lm lii.i only re -.i !. It 1 . hard t- imagine a jrirl iiaiir 1 :.!..; :n:il. .n; le -r-f faun m.-i ;ix a lyric .n t. or n 1.1 in i..u:. 1 ?! k Incoming a ivorM rciy.wn.-d its. ' !: 1. The d:"i'-ii!ty in BUeli :!';, I. ..''. it, nr eot t I overcst i luntc I, mid :.:if. t 1!' fame v. it li such dravvbac!. ;, v. hi!- it- 1. ...v l.c h:.r.l, is bv no ;mo Npf to it--j.t i, l...d to llihlh then! u.-ro nlu.'iv i to us as f tli - ivn-!i a writer ' il :ii ' u;io;i name, I I i'!y :i ,rov-'l Adam'rt li 11 tu :s inij.o- !.!-. things c.i v.i- il.i'i ' liltiii;; b-ciae t!' . I'.tiW : il 1:1, . the a .; f r t: 1 they are. Las l one li. ami jo: t a inhabitant Midi :!;i ; repulsive, ! tipt 1o l tllO full'" 1 v.nvs -oiii!: represents. v.' : ; . Prol.iii.ly t' : . America t v. , for in ;.i!i. e, (' Eti;.rs-il a poetic nam'-, :m-l -f th yet, "J...fi.. 1: :: itself, i ; t:oi. a 1 ir;, ti.: M.-iouu! '."' ' 11 rc-i:c '. givo imy v.-1 1 for hii-is-lf a jKrarii -; I '1 his I'-.mo i:;:; Ik'.iii t v. rl that lii.i lilcratme." Jrftt-tio .-! ll.-Vlit his worl; 1..:.; tho p::d, if Ih-;;l:u;d p..-: vl.-.l- - '1 l'i.iia. 0:1 in eaiiiii tho " '" :"-':! f- : : :. :i n !i:-ty, :ia 1." : v.- ;i: " ' 1: 1 1 in-f tcrs of 1: vc l,av ill v. tin: work it Ilkn-k, r.:: l I.:. O'.IS C:i i'u' 1" ' ":'! ?..: , Keats t::..i Lav. c-qiin!iy iii.-ll;-.' ! a ;:, mort.ility. V! -.i :. 1.: i: mako hi-; i;:':-:.- I':;;:!- . whol.jr, ia v.r.i. i- : fate did not 1:1:1! !:i;a a ri-h,or a Krva;;:, i;....! :. Jeiikia.1- :ii. The m.jn !! ur. name t!i j man. ." ; :. lin ailva:iL:;, a". 1 i '.1 the your..:; v.i-:: r i::'.- t will conqui-r f:i." i ' t': gnvo hi:.i, v.; IwenIony;:i tlint v : a level Willi : li-r-vl. s i.-i a x a.m; :.' i. !:-.' a n.'iM-il f )( r.-on in 1 il--; Hi'-;.- "Loii;-.!VIIo-.v," 1.0:, ;. .;:! ?-o, i.-.i.l' ration, ! 1. liii!.!; 1. ;.oa-l 1 1 1 " : 1 v i t'ai wi il. r; iiml . .;. ,1 l I:. c-o?::,:.lM- .1 l-y !i- . .!.!, '.vhil'j il ; roanti r- I. .. .. , :.i v:..ii: r r.(in-:!'oi!.;. t ::i.!, !!! :.!.', to a hi every a;; 1 -,: ; li '1 i : v.iii -h voi;M : 1: 1 1 ..!! ti. '.' il il I:i!lliii;J y- 11 'I Ik- eontein- ! .' :.! .. ..!..:;. i::ot!ia.l i- . -..: V::' !i . hea he liit : u r have s:il;;.'.,s;i'1 ; ;.. ';!ay ?u'.v rs of - ('::iiV. i.: ! y ;. in.-aa; s. :;.'.'! I.i:i t he fame of :i.: t a..-i. 1 Ji'-a lauivate soein II. i ;!ic :::; trior, ! thvj Mc.V ia thi : : t. I'ot t-. innlti : :" :i 1 . : 1 e ; a: Sinitfi. ::;:. so i:ntii;;TU : 1 s. i;ae. tut il US . a 1 " '. .; of oll.er.s v: .'. a : hare of iiu : 1 .S! iil.hs can ia 1 i -!oiaii and a '. s, ;:ir L'l-eatibe his LINCOLN'S MILITARY INSTINCT. . i ci" a Jones or a i : rather Hum the e .1 iiaiiic i ; always i::,V a aaturo I'. t ioe x he;h-r ho : '.:; hi.; si'Diisnrs 1. .1 e. loose u WllCll 0:1 IV ho h .:: ever, be it hi.; ov. a 1 fictition.'i ch I -o. he and forever, .cai" enough t iriah mortal, l.::t the othi r ki.'ith W lent The a year or t.'fevclanl a Je;;:,in ; at olieeou l .: a C.uile. ALWAYS. . : :i h:.; name, how ;ht f ! a::.i-:a, or a he si:. 1" . i ri!f ..-.to it .'Jwaj'S aie h:-;:h.s may ho weighty Jtiore iiKiii f:i !::uaj itil-!i--.!:;io i ; ..::: rally of an ritors wh have hahilually useil lacre than :: j;;:r e Iu. ve j.-eneraily a- knowled-etl th-ir 1 1 1 r afier a time, and havo tlevoted l!:a:schis to oie sinatnre, droT!in2 all other.-. A well fcnt.nu Was'u- intou newsj)a; cr eoiixl;oa mora aero ns wri:i.;r U Leader a nt!cs of . i:h-ly tjntleil letters, which ho was siiiiii-j '-(."arj?:"' ai;other series of letters lw was si- niiif; "K C-. C ;: and a series of artielea for u iiews;.::i r .syndieate ho was shTuaif wiia his fuH nante, "Frank O. CarjentT." Oh j day it ihiwued upon him be was doin the work of tared men. making a reutaiio!i for three v -.-iters, and getting the creilii. lV'i' oaly ?n-!u:r:i of the work he did. Frotn that day oa he lias wi.-.t-ly sippifd cverythi:ig Le h.to v. rl'.iea w iih his real uamo in full. tSomefinies tln-re is kii ..iv.iaiatoa news paper writer in siga;.':: h'-: arliel.-s sim.ly with h.is last eaiiie. ins -nature th-n hau to the uahiitiat (i t::o a, ; t ::ra::e. of a fcood pseudonym, while to iho v.ho are Letter informed it rueails the 1 ci soaaliiy of the writer 'llowara ' v;:llll S piaa 'Carletou" mid IVrh known new.-p:-; v. rite names. "Gata" ianh:i. fcisnature that hi; hit r In eaeii eae th. iv u; t: signature that s and he ;cts t:.e advam.. and of his OV."i! : two otuer well , eliose their n-.id lit 1 his iai'i.iU into a h:-vo made f:mious. ::-.ethi:ig about the the writer himself, . f a j.eudoaym, :.t the tamo tiaie. William IL liii in Viie Writer. In.Mfl r!?i! Ji.seraiice. In thew davs life ii!Mir:i:see of uii :iuia has common 1":at ise j.ooret mm r.-.i t hu - ;M- v. . ;hl laugh at the l.vac-v l...iug ." o!-t rur.i'er vi iil 1 .1-1 .i -: l.a- hire-lis tit jr.. - - i e.f mi.-'. :u:;e ltsii-.v.KK: a voynsc wnrae:ieed "ii a Trid iv. J:. dee.!, the laborer now ! beeoi most idea lne the . 1 . . 1 . . 0.1 . . . - - --- has insnr.inee hioa ,!.r t his own tkor, but lUfv.n-uo!.- i...- ' ward follow L;m t his i:-, .-ry nr. I to his , is. ,-t-. !... real V l l--ai e o.l -io Ills liaho in the era-tie, I: shop, his v. ::!s in kiu-hoekers ami eon -i:.-. anil Ins a ants." a. arr.'.H-e,' ready to in . j. .!!:.: infant to the . - TO. at a weeklv Yor! iadustr cond ing th;l! tra-.i. ial iarUiatie;. h acted u:'.oil lh-' lMi.'.n-r.liee up.-'.i '. : o , , dii-n and at. ail3, at w; five to titty cem.s. bei 21 ins:u"iiit e ot s-t week, or for Go York 1'ress. What Ceil, ftherman 8y Military Selene la (Tnterhnleal Terms. He never prof essed any knowledge of tbo law.s and wi-iu:o of war, yet in bis joyous moments ho would relate hi8 largo cxK.rieneo it; a soldier in the Itlaek Hawk war of JSIW, and as an oflleer in tho Mormon war nt Nauvoo, in I wi. JTeverthelesH, during tho progress of the civil war he ovineetl a ipiiek coinjrehension of tho principles of tho "art," though never using military phraseology. Thus his letter of April to Uen. Me- Cli llan, yien lx-sieging Vorktown, exhibits a pre-is knowledge of tho strength ami pur pos' of each of the many armies in the field, and of the importance of "concentric action.' In his letter of June 5, li-'f, to Oen. Hooker, he wrote: "In one word, I would not take any risk of lx-iiig entangled upon tho river (Itapjwihan noek), like an ox jumped half way over a fenec, and liable to lie torn by dogs front and rear, without a fair chance, to gore one way, or to kick the other." Again, June K, 1W:, writing to (Jen. Hooker: "If left to me, I would not go south of the !! ';!ahamiock upon Iti's moving north of if. If you had Itiehuiond invested today, you would not be able to tako it in twenty days. Meanwhile your communications, and with them your uriny, would be ruined. I think Lee's army, and not Richmond, is your objective point. If ho come;: toward the Upper Potomac, follow him 011 his Ihink and on the inside truck, shortening your line while he lengthens his. If ho stop, frcl hitu and fret him." This is pure science, though the language is not technical. It is related by (Jen. Grant in his memoirs that when ho v.asexplaininghow hcproosed to use tho several scattered armies so ns to accomplish tho best results, referring to the forces in western Virginia, and saying that h-i had ordered Sigel to move up tho volley of Virginia from Winchester, make junction with Crook and Avere'd from Kanawha, and go toward fSultville or Lynchburg ilr. Lin coln said, "Oh, yes! I see that. As we say out west, if a mini can't skin, he must hold a leg while .'-.ouieliedy else does." - In his personal interview with Gen. Grant about March 8, I80I, Mr. Lincoln recounted truly and manfully that "he had never pro fessed to lie a military man, or to know how campaigns should be conducted, and never wanted to interfere in them; but the procras tination of commanders, and tho pressure from the i-oplo ut the north and congress, which ws always with him, forced him to issuing his series of military orders, one, two, three, etc. Ho did not know but all were wrong, and did know that some were. All he wanted or ever had wanted, was some one who would tako tho responsibility and act, end call on him for all the assistance needed, pledging himself to use all tho power of the government in rendering such assistance." At last lie had found that man, Gen. Sher man in Tho Century. i-Vone at the Oi-io-.a House. A young and very pretty widow, dressed in v a:s o;w :t u ii.irv..w elcfnnt mom-'u! the custom bo eyed v.oum:i i ioiIs of Par: ered. packag tints. HUidain 00 i 'f-e ti.--' ' I. She s'-;-t of Lin Thes-.' ,1. .!.- s: You eaii set they are my n . . . . . , 1 fi 1-1 loridng. A lyn a- through th? .- her i:":rit pii ., . and palled out a various coIr 1 u- voi:r own , and use. ;,..vt re T! .-.no;:'' r.-;hed the lady, an jjamg to eaeli cheek. out LOSSES OF FREinilT. TRUE COURAGE short clothes, his bys in 1 his si ;ters i l;'s Thii is "iuduitri.d i stir an'.- otv ; r:,;.i 1 : hoary beaded -ratit,.::-.t!. - : rate of t rem live cent.-. 1.0 ..m. There are th.rco coii.;vies only in New want is Known as .1' . Thev are a!l ; l iu i;;le of grant : . , s ,.f Lii'ants. chil y rivn;ii:::is of from" for a "(".;:Jg man of . li f. -r live cents a cents a week. New Iteat Hoys for. Messengers. "What sort of boys do we like best? City bred ones, of course. Tho country lads are as a rule not nearly as bright. Then they do r.ot know their way round. Tho little fellows p.ro the best messengers. When they get to be hi they are inclined to think of themselves as 1210:1. Tho city lath:, especially thtso who havo been newsboys, arc very sharp, Vute chaps, and usually we find them honest. Wo are inclined to take a decent newsboy at any time. Ho will chew and smoke cigarettes ns a rule, but his eyo teeth are cut, ami ho knows how to take euro of himself and the company also. I could tell you some of tho finest ex amples of fidelity from among such boys. Oh, yes, they will swear and drink, too, sometimes, but if they aro all right in other respects that sort of chap gets along. My cxiorience is that tho life of a bard working newsboy, though severe and apt to teach him many things ono would rather not have boys learn, does not make him dishonest or untrustworthy, but rather the contrary. Indeed, be learns to havo a wholesomo fear of going wrong. Then such boys aro usually the children of mothers for whom they are willing to work. Well, we would rather havo boys, of course, for whom some one is responsible. Before we embloy a lad we ex amine closely as to where and how he live?, who is working in his family, what they do and how many they are. Our best boys aro often sons of hard working widows. Thero i ; something in tho necessity and love this creates that keeps tho boys steady. Wo like to have a parent or guardian come with the applicants." New York Graphic. v A Xegro'a Voutloo Charm. "Come in here," said Warden MeKinnej, at the county jail tho other day; "I want to : how you something you never saw before." The reporter walked in and the speaker handed him a queer looking flannel bag, tied at the mouth with a yard of string. The strange object was a genuine voudoo charm, which had just been taken from a negro pris oner. The darky had parted with it as a homeless, friendless man, out of a situation, parts with his last dollar. The bag contained bomo hard substance and the reporter's curiosity was excited. He undid the string, and, inserting his finger into the bag, brought to light another mystery. It was a rabbit foot, but so wrapped in strings and red rags ns to be barely recognizable. Next to the fur on the foot was wound somo kind of a flexible reed, not larger than a knitting nee dle, and over this was wound a dozen yards of thread. Dangling from the foot were three small pieces of red flannel cut in the shape of a diamond, heart and cross respect ivelv. Over the whole was slipped a cover ing that might originally have been the fin der of a kid clove. Then the entire arrange ment was inclosed in the little bag and tied alxrat the neck. This was the luck bag or charm which the owner confidently relied on to heal any wound, cure any disease, or win any gams. Birmingham (Ala.) Age. CLAIMS THAT ARE MADE AGAINST A RAILROAD COMPANY. I.rt r.ohin oouhs, through dunt Cud heat, 1 iucf.er.i disaster uti.l defect XL'S ! froiiia.r. Ai.'l, t t.: i-ii'iis :.ii;l i t!v? t'.'vi i" Af'ill.iti tl:'!ri. lie on eilit!i rapine 00 l.)U;,er. II. V. boii..'t "or. holdin j-.-..... ia-1.. ' liere was a vou-cau 1- coute-it-over-me eipres-sieu ou the others face us she replied: iV. pie drai ns you -re do n wc.r color.-1 gloves. "Ah, said t'o i.n-ny widow, with co-empt, "do you PPUrn: going to wear moaning the resfc fpiv lifer The ir.IvctM- crushed k ami replaced the eloves of the la Jy from Pittsr burg.--IoW York l'ress. correspondent writing from Monte Carl? avs that'lhe croupiers . -f that famous gaming resort vouch for the truth of the story that Labouc!ere won rJ-VW) .thereby means d Lis "system." slioeuiiiUintr Conducive to Mental Vigor. Shoemaking is distinguished among me chanical callings for the number of its fol lowers w ho have risen to eminence, It is said that the solitary nature of the craft tends to produce thoughtfulness, and tho hammering at the leather stimulates the mental faculty But the phj-sical results are disastrous. Circulation and respiration are checked by tho position which shoemak ers assume when at work. In tho few who live to old age a hollow at the baso of the breast bone is often produced by the contin ual pressure of the last. (Statistics show that out of 10,000 artisans who sit at their labor" 2.";7T fall sick and 93 die annually, while of an equal number w-ho alternately sit and st- uitl only 1.7W sicken and CI die in the same period. A work bench has been invented at which shoemakei-3 may work standing.-- Philadelphia impfl. Tlio Duke's Tenement Upases, Tl'o Duke of Westminster is reputed to have a larger income than any other subject of Great Britain, lie owns, row? u.po.n, r qw oi tenement houses, and possesses many square miles of farming land. He receives $o0 a minute the year round, or 3,000 an honr, or 572,000 a day. Ne' York-World. A lt In the Odd and Itml I)ei:irt mcnt -Way of Hi l'rofcasloiiul Swin dler Various I'l Miululcnt Tlt-tlmtK I.ont Freight Sold nt Auction. "We have, all the ime, a large amount of stuff which uccumulat. on our hand--," f-v.id the "lost baggage" ugeiit of one of the rail roads to a rcjjoitcr; "but most or the prop erty left on our cars by accident is sure to bo quickly called for if it has any particular j vnlue." ! "Any trouble in identifying applicants jus proper owne -. of tho haggag claimed 5" "Not particularly. Our most frequent trouble is tho adjustment of fah:o claims. We etui tell by a it i-son'j manner whether the claim hs a just one or not. Take the pro fessional swindler, for instance. Besides hav ing a brusquo manner, his claim is made in an indefinite way as to numlx r of cheek, style of package and tho contents thereof. The true claima!:V-tlie rs.:i who has realiy lost something has a respectful and anxious ' beuring. lie invariably gives an accurate j description of the lost parcel, uu I is very ; slow with threats of suit to recover dam- j ages." I "I suppose thnt overshoes and umbrellas ; are the articles most frequently left in cars;"' "No more frewuent than sm:i!l parcels of clothing, shawls and rmall vali.-.os, but, us I say, these are always quiekly claimed. It is with frauduh-nt claims for lost baggage that wo have the most experience." i FKAtDl J.KNT CLAIMS. j "What aro the fraudulent methods?" "Most numerous, and :,o:ne of them, most ridiculous. Nov.- he re's an oil claim which, while not fraudulent, is worthless ai:d i:v....l bull headed. .Several weeks i.i::eo a barrel of whisky and u eoso of canned good:: were :-;h;-.-led to a grocer ia the interior of tho slat.;. About the time of .tho shipment thu grocer died. Immediately, his entire sto-.-k was taken by a wholasalo grocer who had a chattel mortgage thereon, and so without leaving a family or any pro'ierty, he was buried. There was no estate and accordingly no executor. Meanwhile the goods shipped over our road lay in the freight house, t!r;ro being 1:0 on-i to deliver them to. I notified the shipper of the situation end he replies by saying that our company must keep the goods and that he will hold us responsible therefor. "I had a traveling man try tu get ?S5 out of us fordumago done to a pair of very rare and fine window curtains. 5amago done, as he claimed, by snow melting through his sample case, which had been carelessly dumied in a snow bank by one of our bag gagemen, and so staining the curtain."." "Had tho sample case been so dumped;" "Possibly. At least we didn't disputa that feature of tho claim. AH we asked w as that ho present a receipt from his employers showing that ho had paid them, as he claimed, tho $S5 for damage done, and which ho had to make good to his firm. He failed to produce the receipt, ami so, of his own voli tion, the caso was dropped. "Another case came from a man who put in a claim for ?5 for new castings and freight thereon, and $2.00 for labor in putting them into a stove shipped over our road and broken while in transit. I investigated the case and found that a leg had been broken out of the stove and that the man had, instead of get ting new castings, paid a villago blacksmith $1.50 tor riveting tho old leg back in its place. No new casting had b:?en bought, 110 freight hatl been paid, and tho entire cost to him had been less than 'J. Yet ho claimed 7.50 from us. "We had another case where one ef our agents delivered some freight with an ex pense bill calling for eleven cases of goods. But ten cases 'showed up,' and the parties to whom tho goods were delivered, while they seemed surprised at the deficiency, at once explained that the missing case contained 'books, a silk dress and more books.' That was their very indefinite inventory, and they stuck to it ouitefirmlv. Invest fgal ion showed that but ten cases had been shipped, that our agent had made a mistake 0:1 his way bid and so on tho expense bill, and liuaily that the people at last eoinessed that they hadn't lost so much as a tin spoon of their house hold goods shipped." SOLD AT AUCTIOX. 'What becomes of 'lost freight' now claimed?" "We sell it at auction. It seldom has a value except to the rag cud junk dealers. ( f course wo sell packages according to the way in which they are billed. Wo cannot toll r. s to their value. Once in a while a purcha se: gets nicely taken in. I recollect at one cf our sales we got 13 for a large crate bili-d 'crockery.' A well known physician was the purchaser, and when tho crate was opened it was found to contain a lot cf plaster of purls images, such as Italians peddle about tho streets." "Worth 05, perhaps, to one of those ped dlers?" "Possibly, but not worth five cents to the doctor. Once in a while, however, a good deal may be made. I recollect we sold a con signment billed 'two boxes and one barrel of dust.' It brought $1.50, and when opened tho barrel contained Paris green and the boxes held two dozen packages of a patent insect powder. I understood that tho pur chaser sold tho lot to a wholesale druggist for 0. Another box billed as '01:0 box of sun dries' -sold for 3, and when opencel by an ex pressman who bought them the 'sundries' were found to consist of a very complete out fit of cutlery samples fifteen or twenty pocket knives, a dozen razors, several pah-s of shears and scissors, two or three carving . sets and a variety of case knives. The name of tho manufacturers was, of course, found on the goods and tho expressman, by corre spondence, returned the goods to the manu facturers and received therefor a stJj cheek' "Does the income from the sale of un claimed property eomo near meeting the cost of tracing up lost freight ?" "No, but in the avoidance of well based claims by tho exercise of greater care in handling freight and in the exposure cf l fraudulent claims, the system itself more than pays. Now look here." Just then a brakeman from a train which had just arrived entered the "lost freight" office bearing in his arms an old umbrella, worth perhaps fifty cents, and a good willow basket, in which was a badly mussed lunch, a button hook and a pair of soiled cutis. That's the way it goes," saitl the agent. "Now it is probable that somebody will call for this basket to-morrow or r.ext dv.y, but the umbrella is a fixture until sold at auc tion.'" Detroit Free Press. SELF GOVERNMENT. Varii'Ii e is fur tii'-ai t lint eir-ek It: :i And pai.!o!i hi-.; Allcli 1. .t!i villi : llol.vetli U-t liini who hill: . If i-.n!r- 11 Jv. i 1 MUNTir THE r.ioosi. Mcli. Tha True Spoi t .cic.i.'m Hircc "S!i!l II nli: I ire Hunt There are t!:r. wn.i of hunting that nre ver.'.iy the .-: sjiorLs.'.'an, vi. : : '.:11 1. and callin g. To 11. ; i a i !.-i f sport is l ! as p 11.1", or r.:rn it to a I: r ; l. .ere 1 ; a -yardinrr." terhr; tii 1 when the Ik avy t hem J i l: oa. 1 .; c!e: c:i feeding ed. ire i.mit i')g :.o:- t'.ir.u ru: .xi d'etre tit-nlar t:i me h r , t! I-. M io.i of the mil i:: r, lire la; r . . :-l are v. ho. . a'.c-h tl; .'. ra : e i. envnnrv p ;r hod h-aown, t : i::e ' v in si;: hk-ciV-p ia a ' wiul'er Lav.: I "oiiiiu ;.;:u-. Ion call r ing ok:h 1. th. .1 ,t 1.1V 1' 1 on ' it of Id. In o-. il f.ee:ns iusl.-id-l !! '('.; ict hi the 111-.- 1 e.:..S. to o v 1. . -dale If t! wa! 1:: i.tai.o ; l'i pri;: with th'.er pro jeds i ir r of a igr.r, 1 th-.t hofahsri , k!!-.-i:jthe la sir.lmr.l, ft.-alj 1 h:i:o in a 1 a::oc, h ntern !: !d hi up: .1 tho moo.. ::::. from t he r-'i f : the noble ere be', raved. The art of calling, rare indeed, ev n a:;,o! :. es it is 1 torch !i;; '.,-, a' Tho m- io (i ; of the v..! .is dair.lv, whi ' Is :sa pal- th . o d...v;i deep i: (!i . .. i-i SUCC" fill :-:ehii-: one c:.;! l 1 iti-ifactio-.t, wl. IS' -:rlh 11. Ler ll i f'.' i; thi. the n ahi t! io tl. tne a:i- einutio-.i lliat lire l.-;s for the : t ly nlonrt the surface of ti e wd.'i a blazing t-..vh r dark he b.i'.V. As tho 11 :hf tails irsj'-.irin ; eve th-v shine ; lu.'iti;.';-; :?: -anfy I. he 1 v. in sdm-.-d bullet eairi :: death lure thoy l avo so i::nt:tvntly in !gt! e!i tru:. com lii d bv i.iear.s .01 c re: pet. Arm-'d with anled bv the lain' 111-', betake themselves he ids out most pro. ni -c experienced ni' o-3 hm' following r.s enseut i.-.l pit iil calling. Ti:o ii?ht calm, for the moose perfection, is 1 men. It is i.r birch bark his the Indian, ac r carrying the i e-t to tho spot which f ;o- .1 fortune. An lays t'eiwn the llmiivaricsto sueee.-w :i".st bo aisolii:e!y ivary that i;i coiiii::-; up to the rail he will invarhihly makeacirclo down w in l m ortler to .et ; e.'.-n mal t!iat is calling him, ar.1 as catch a wi lit' of th hunter can cat eh a ; it musl, be inoordigi to see your mo. s o v. 1 invitation? Third ! moose unmntcd wit 1 mid, fourthly, you on, well sheltered by 1 I nil round it, i; cross wl. u ot U:0 hispow,: he ii sir. :r 1 ef-.--.- 1:1- of ti:e srent are idmo.t beyond belief hunter 1' jilt '1 1: ; olhervn e:i he res ', thero in reach ar.l I'nd a dry spot to be s, with open ; ;i-,u:i i 1 the- moo.je ha; to i:.:. 1 eeoiituj , 1 o h-r.v t:reyo: porvis to your must be bull of your call; come 1:1 r'.pproac.imj you. till hunting or creeping trto-i the m.ioso is, no dou" it. of r.ll three 1:1 Jiods ta; mo. i. portsr.ia'.i!i!:.. It can he f..-i!owed thr u tke autumn month's ml i.:to . ie.t. r 1. ;. :I the sr.o.v I cconus to d harrw the poor me-os cut thvor.r.h the crust l- vv 1. t hoso thin. .-. v.xul-i a ho: is notuin-r sL" ot n cj'.vi:rt: v '-r; Macdo.ial I Oilev Li Co-.io-.-oiilan. s s i: ,i. . ltdtv. J. An Actress ''I'lrst Tho delight of the 11 career is enough to out RU.1 ictlium . f rehears, drco-ing for her part t agreeable frame of .u d.eiielous uiic'vtainiy r.hh-ii can only he cor: A a ht r.-e race'. The "hmrair" uo:.-j and fas -.-.out the " Ie it of : :i ; fir: aces the M th-.r re !.; i.:s I trae! i sTi I line i you; "Wh: i. in r.r fa'l.t novice, the ':-::; r: she Is 1 1 enter t . .e -.::' The fatal wo gather : her err. O.i the :; .1 ? h, . .- L'-r, wi 1-1 .:i ii. to r: be' li me::: face'; hrl. e th t if I !.h ;:g on .h 1 i o:n sta.s ad i a n i r - l-i the . ll'ioil the'. diss po.I. in lew, i;uc iier is;-.-' ta: vtriolm: .;. and . thro :.n-l a v. 1 a.eh.p:esvntU io other char.", cat takes her Lee:i Lorn t.i in l..e great deal cf i:o:v e i VP'or. Ic i ; one t:f preey.nalik-.-rn.-i: chine. The chief r is thnt their parts a: heavenly i::to::ic.it:o;i o !.o ! hort a time.-i-C'iuirio J oiiruah :::i;o on, a s:: :tltettr:5 o'.'.t e S: wo.na:: ' 'fherc ..Oat i.. i 1.'.' Wi Ll.e.l L. ;;:d 1 h: In ..t . wh Iir Ir:.ai:e 1:1 company d o.:t ; ra: rtecily da; f, I v D.dl, who. though 1 1 w5.ii tho haliuehuuioa tent voice- t-Uirc:.i:ig h fiat-?, who:;; reap face be lent health, yet is a prey :.r 1, 01 tr; auo: :;rs the f ' to 1 he of ills; and further on is a Jan itulitv, more mon.-trotn t.r.tn Dr. Jekyll and lir. Hyde, i er tl woman whose fraino i rxodier. bv the sriirit of a man. Tho nu rOBMITORE IPOFIiUM ;:v; nv ;,-----;:Jtijv-;;- OM M - Parlor Sets, Bedroom Sets. FOU A LL CLASSK;? Ol'- e o 618 Foi; TO i oi ulAy aru.xJ Vlm' WUl-vc. a uiniiUici nl slot-k of (iootls ami I'air rr'ict-.- aix.uml. s UNDER AKIKG AMD fMBALfiilRG A SPECIALTY COHNEIi MAIN AN!) SIXTH I ' L A Y I MI 1 1' Til, N J'PIJASK A. t) T7 AT T L j3 lli n 7 i VI il l JUST RECEIVED. Finnan Haddies. California Evaporated Nectarines ,--they are delicious. Boston Brown Bread Mixture , --Something new and nice. Prunella and Apricots. Asparagus in Cans. Clam Chowder. T ut m sYi n J 1 I t' a ft R K 3 R u v. ii 6 J t. H u 8 . t, t 5 J l: 2 Tl rp ..1 mifjm i-m 1 1 1 f 1 l-lp.ra H :0 Mi 13 IT X O IS1 S, 1 r.t n Li. tr.r..M. h 888 ii ; a .ithtnuj i:i C'ou: ier- W ill Le obe (Iiirin which the .-dihjcc-ts 'of national interest :.:;! in. j.;i-f sJice will !.e ptronuly aoitateil nul tii'..- !(! ion of :i J'rei-i.lent will take i. :.;;. 'i hit j.cotile of C;i.-i5 (Joiintv wlio woisid like to le:irn of Political, Commercial and Social Transactions of lliis yea;- ;t:il wov.M keep :ij.;iee with the tin.es hotilol .t.i x rote es a wo:.::..:i her utifortu of excel . hole pjr.mut :e tie c:: e of 1 he caso of e victim is a lie i:mabi:ed se following with her eye:i LOOi uoio-i ujv.n tue i reocr.; tions. How they UifTer from the old regime! Isone of tho vigorous reihcdies. not even r. cold water douche wa-s prescribed in n smr;:e instance. Each patient v.-as- treated fer the primary causes found in the physical de-i-auc-iiic.it. How truly it can be t,aid that Pinel broho the chains of these unfortunate creature ;J. 'With what extreme K'-.:: leaess and kindness they arc treated ! The doctors listen to all their eomplaiuts and im :,ai::ury ills without a wvrd of imprtier. 0 r harsh ness, eud treat them with the c-:i.-i.:e;-.:te i:i duljjenco u-.e;i toward waywartl eLt.tl.-en. Ve jjassetl to the i.rdc wards, where the pa tients were breahf i-rtiu. Tho mad win no laurels from their i.l.a-; not aiuglo orator broke the I e f silence aioa lire li:;. -pf tables. Another-peculiarity: the a cohoiics Eeatexl at a tide table Ic-it their wiuw un touched. rarij Cor. New York i'v:t. SIJBSO lEXIE roji rniiMi: the y Hera I 1 R !f t'i 111 Xotv while we have the tdihjeet Lefoix the people we will venture tu t-pcuk ot our g M fil h t-t r-j H vSi ::M 4 AVages of a Japanese Tarni llaud. Au unskilled Japanese farni hand, accord ing to a correspondent who writes from Hi ogo, receives enly from live to ten cents a day for bis labor, and out of this smiti! turn lie is expected ta buara hiuis-eh". Shiiled farm labor commands from ten to fifteen cents a day. 2Ccw York Evening World. Ve til JVJ fit Hh-etric Club houae. Tlu o" tho aii wi:erei chair, and han-.in;; of w.id the shape t : The Eales c f diamonds ia ICew York ar cs- 1 tlmated to foot up $00,000,000 a year. fhocs I'ulishrd by IClecti-icity, I'erhnps vou would like to have you? fchoes pol shed b' elect r. guide in the new wav is let! to a comer there is a ct.-:nf art:iL.ie beside it a i-ou:.H nieeo a iioiieemaii's l..-aust. Close inspection siiovr : this to be a flexible shaft, r.t the end of v: Irh is a circular bru-h. Touchirj; n butlOTi v." ' connects with a siroxli mofe-r. tho t rush iv voles rapidly, and as it do; s: ;: k:i attendant moves it oyer your shoes imd they are i-oi-ibbed in a jiify. iiome Journal, rt-i.'-.'-'avt-i il. it'i.i.r:. - ,i . Vriiich i lu'st-ehts in all respects timl tVoni which our job printer: fire turni:- -Hit much tfttishtctory woik. P L ATTSMo UTII, KEBRASKA. K I' V t k h V N