The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, May 17, 1888, Image 1

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PIATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA, TIIUKS DAY; K VEXING, MAY17, 1SS8.
f.-
NUMHEU 20-I
FIUST YI2A11
IP n
V
V
GI'llY OFFICIOS.
Mayor,
Clerk.
1 re.eMirer,
AitMrut-y.
I-iiujiif'-r.-
r.i.ic .I'l I'S
M.irrlKiII.
F.M. Ki MKT
W K Fox
Jamkd Pattf.kkon. jh,
- liVICO.M CUKK
- A Maiiomc
S Ci.ir KOitn
W II MAI.lK
. " ( J V WltCKI.A
c'uir.i-.l.aen. HlwarJ, .J A samsbuuV
J V Wbckiiacii
2:id
I I) M Jon ics
I IHt. A Sllll-MAW
J M B MlIlll'IIV
I S W D'TTN
3rd
Ull.
i ton laos.Non.
('OS li't'ON.SOR.
1 Mi CU.I.KN. I'llKS
(J W JitHS .,CIIAIMM AN
Boaid Pub-Work-! ' kki. Cm KK.it
jl) II HawmWuiitii
GOTS'VY OFFIGKlS.
Treasurer,
liiuiy 1 o-isurer, -
Clerk.
If juiiy fh-rk.
it. I.HT I f Ill'flN
liiwitv .I'T
C In ( tMnici font,
SlI.TlU.
Knrrir. - -
Att'irui'V.
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i 'u;i.li J 'I i'-'. ".
I A. CA.MI'KKM.
Tlios. I'wl.l.ot K
hum) i in rcii 1 1 ui
fcXA t'UI 11'iiFIEI.Ii
W. II. I'ihiL
Jo 1 N M I.KVHA
W. hllOWAl.TKIt
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A I.I.IVJ ItfUS N
Jl.1AliS INK
I. 111?-!.!.
i-.. vim .k snjrr.itvis.il:.
A I I - PlnttMHOiilli
I..'.! l -i I- .. .Tin., Wci-plic; VV'ler
A. V.. IM i in. - " Eimwoud
GLVI SOGIJLMcS.
(i.s !. !;.; No. II".. 1 ' F. -Meets
ey.-ry 1 ..i:-l: ' rvi'filliii f e:icli wt'ck. All
lr.ru. i.t l.n l ii- ri ue rei-pectlully invited to
Uttciid.
?i.. riMorui i:sca.mi'Mi:nt No.ji.i.o.
I.. Nllfli !! ' H.tfl"l:lt r'rillil til
-sti-i ii. ..mli in ill'- Ma-Minio JIall. Visiting
l-i.il l.ei- an- i .Micl to attend.
fVu; L ):!: V. HI. A. O. V. W. .Meets
.,,! a. re... i I'll. lay evening fit Iv. of 1.
Ii'lil l'ia'.-.i.,:il brolher-i are re.speetf uily in
v'i .It :''.M'';.t r'.-l M..rjj:ni,Masier Workman ;
i: S l;u-i.. I 'm ennui ; Frank I'.rinvn. Over-t--
i I V. Cui.li-; i,oiK lloufwortli.
I i! .1 .1 .li'u ni. b inaiifiiT ; Wali.
- - r ; M. l:i lnit;lit. Vat-l AI. W. ;
lMi. ! 1 1 i-i . ii.s t!f i.uaul.
j i s- i -II' M. MoDIZKN V.UODMKN
" ..t i i - '. Mi-rti sp.jiiiui a i.l fnurtll Moll
.i :;v t -vi-:; ii ; I K. ! I. hi. II. All transient
ii.-lh.-i - ui.' 1 1' 'iit i'il t liii'ft Willi tin. I.. A.
r...v.c i t. '. .- .i i i'ln foiisul ; !. i''. Nile?;.
V.i.nhy -M 'T; l, !'.. Ssuitii, Kx Hanker ; W.
t'. l:i--t'.s. t'lcliv.
II. i rs::l' l il l.4t!CK NO. 8. A. o. u. v.
A- i, rv.-iy alti'i'u.ite Friday evening at
j:,.... l!i.d':i! o"i lui'K. All transient brntli-
an- ri---ii i-;f.:!iy inviti'd io attend. I..
1. MN...I. Si. V. .; K. l;oy.l. I oreinan : S. C.
Wll .t . tl.-t- (i .h r ; I.oonanl AndiTHou. oveise-r.
.McOOIJUIlE POST 45 G. A- R-
KOSTKU.
.1 v. .loiixsoN- Co'iunander.
V s Tivi.-s Senior ice
)' . HT--.s. Junior " "
;k.. Mi.ks Adjutant.
!.s"i!V sr:: i-iii r M-
ji M..v uniccrofthe o.iy.
Ci'':i.ks K-M!i i":-rd
AM'KS'-iN' i' liv Serj;t Major.
.T v. '.!; k.v.ax.. ..(iuarter ; Master sserjjt.
J,, i 'r k . I'ost Chaplain
'J.'c'.liii.. .ituid.iy -veni!i
n i
,9
si,traini8f6i5on
I I MJr.fi CE iGEtrS
lip v j; it t!io following time
tri - I in I iice-tcstcd companies:
-il ii . i:l ' :!'! u!-S-. Louis. Aets .5I.2oS.lft"
e.cn n.T -i ii 1 n ui-ICiiijland. - 2 V
Fir r -i i. '.a i '.-1 ii i lt tthi.i. ' 4.1 iVSTii
rra.rtliii-niiind.-liilii.t. " rt.MT.lOG
U.):ilf-Xw Voik. " 7.S55.M9
Irs. C . of vortli AiiJerie-i. Phil. " 8.1T4.362
Uvrivi.,UL.ti.I.:i Olobe-Kug " 6.6.-59.7S1
Njr! i ::. itis'i v Mrc mtile-Kn 3,T3.75
Vor.vicl Union-Kni'liiud. " 1.245.46a
(jriii-il: I F. M -S uinguI.I. " S.tUl.9'5
Total .V-H.54Mt-".T74
u 3 . J I .i i Virii. i
s. 'f 3 f s 35 H
ir.) ,! ; s 4
-OF-
-CALL ON-
Sa. Sv parson,
Cor. lCt'.t .ut'l Granite Streets.
Cori rcctcr nd Builder
S. j.t. le ;:.
r -r v. ..:-.':i'.ijii to all CU3iue--f Entrust
to li.v
OTARY IX OFFICE.
Tit F I'liined. Alistarc Pompiled, In
tur a;.ei- Wriltfii. i-cal Sold.
r Faciii!io t. r maki'ii; Farm Loan than
Any Other Agency.
E'liilf.irtauJ Si,
ll.V.. Wi rir am. Johx A. IUVJF.
..:try PuWie. Notary Public,
rMiIAM4 HAVIE
OSft ovftr It.-tnl f Cat Coiay.
rL.vTT?MocTn, - - Nebraska.
Tin ITT
If I H
Ll3JllijJ
A New Democratic Papr.
Mumboldt, Neb., BUr 17. A demo
cratic paper will cemmenco publication
- - - I JS
here next week. It will ue ruiwru mu
controlled by J. L. Dalbj, editor of the
Stella Free Press. There are eight papers
iii- this county. .
Run Over by Hand Cars-
Exetkr, Neb., May 17. While the B.
& M. Meel gang were ruturning from
work tonight two of the men fell from
the first car and were run oyer by two
following hand cars. They were ser
iously injured.
Must Close on Sunday.
"Humboldt, Neb., May 17. The City
Council at tln-ir meeting last niglit passed
mi ordinance closing all places of busi
ness on Sunday, and Mayor Cooper has
given. notic; that the law will bo en
forced. Heretofore tho business houses
h ivc p.titly kept upeu on Sunday, and
the citizens have grown tired of having
the law openly violated.
A Freight Ditched-
Nkiiawka, Neb., May 17. An engine
riiniiiii:; :i wink train on the Missouri
Pacific was ditched about three mites
east of thi. pi ice lat night by the rough
track and rapid speed.
No lives lost.
Korulmastur Clark immedu.tely built a
temporary track around the overthrown
engine and trains are running as .usual.
The M. E Conference.
NkwYouk, May 17. At the Metho
dist conference a motion carried which
provided that hereafter it shall require a
two-thirds vote for the election of bish
ops. A memorial service, which was
conducted by Bishop Bowman, then took
place and memorial addresses were made
by many of those present. The services
of the dav closed with the benediction.
A Mail Blockade.
Holyokf., Colo., May 17. Railroad
mail was put on between Curtis and
Sterling, Colo., on May 13, and on the
same date the mail carrier between Jules
burg and Ilolyoke was discharged. Since
then six sacks of mail matter have accu
mulated at Julesburg and there it is de
stined to stay, The Julesburg postmast
er cannot deputize anyone to carry it to
Ilolyoke and is awaiting orders from the
supermtedent of mail service.
The Drunk May Prove Costly.
Oakland, Neb., May 17. The two
boozers, one representing a patent medi
ciue house of Elkhart, Ind., the other a
tea house of Chicago, who got gloriously
full of Oakland's booze last night and
for a time held possession of John Swan
son's saloon, after being arrested at Tek
a ni ah this morning, were sued by Jack
Tranmer, a liveryman of Lyons, for $200
damages sustained to a bnggy and two
horses. They put up cash for their ap
pearance tomorrow.
A Runaway.
VAnrAii.Mso, May 10. This afternoon
as Miss Ella Hull, Jennie Whitney and
Emma Dougherty were out driving their
team became frightoned, ran away ttnd in
making several sharp turns the ladies
wen. thrown to the grourd with great
force. All were picked up in an uncon
scious condition but an hour afterwards
the physician reported no serious injuries
and all are getting along well. The team
after in. loading the buggy ran into two
or t'.ir. e wire femes, escaping with only
slight scratch on one of the horses and a
r.ry little damage to tin: buggy.
Tho H;r?hess for Many Years.
Quirrv. 111., May 16. The Mississippi
river has risen i ii;e audits today arid is
now higher than ever before known, ex
cepting during !h tlood.of 1 $51. Hail com
municalion with the wc&t is entirely cut
off tonight, the tracks of all the roads
on tho Missouri side being flooded.
Bridges and trestles are held down by
trains of litt cari aaded with railroad
iron. Nearly every levee in iu'3 ccci'n
is now broken and the loss to farmers'
interests w;ii h' enormous. Thus far no
loss of life has been reported bfct many
escapes are recorded.
Des Moines la, Lincoln 5
Lincoln, Neb., May 16. The Dea
Moines Western association club and the
Lincoln Western legue club played an ex
hibition game in this city today. The
wc.;thcr was cold and the home club
clearly outmacched, but the game was
nat without interesting features to the
500 spectators. The score by innings:
Lincoln 0 00001 2 0 2 5
D s Moi.s. . , . .0 4 7 1 S 0 0 3 18
Earned i nns Des Mo!es C. Base hits
Lincoln 11. Dts Moims 14. Two base
hits Quinn. Van Djke, Moore, 3Iussey.
Three W,h bit Quinn. M iccullar Wells.
Bhsi-s i-n balls Well 2. Struck oat By
Wells 4. B.iie on balk Wells 1. pass
ed balls Fiick 2. Hit by ball Lincoln
1. Errors Lincoln 4. Umpire Hunjby.
FOLKS WHO GET FULL
THE QUEER ANTICS OF VARIOUS PEP.
60N3 WHEN FUDDLED.
Couiical Items Picked Vp bj m Chicago
Reporter Peculiar Delusions of tbe In
ebriate Merrjr Old Chaps Seeing- the
Elephant A Scare.
There is sometimes a sort of picturesque
ness about tbe peculiar delusions of an ine
briate which reaches beyond the mere dis
gusting and borders upon tbe realms of tbe
pathetically grotesque, and while we cannot
but regret the weakness of tbe individuals
we are forced to smile at his idiosyncrasies.
One of these peculiar cases occurred tbe other
evening at one of tbe prominent hotels in tbe
city. Tbe hour was late and tbe majority of
the sedate and well regulated guests hod re
tired. Suddenly tbe front doors were throvvu
open with a bang, and through tbe aperture
emerged a young gentlemau who but a few
hours before bad departed in all the glory of
spruce clothes and fine linen. Now his hat
was on the back of his head, his clothing was
disordered, and there was a drunken leer
upon bis handsome face. As ho staggered to
ward the desk it was noticed that he was
dragging behind him one of those dressed
models which the clothiers of.the present day
exhibit in the front of their stores. Ap
proaching tbe clerfc with an unsteady gait,
the intoxicated individual colled out:
"1 shay, hie, ole boy, can't yer take, hie,
care of Harry f He's shoo drunk to shtand.
He wautsh to go to bed."
The clerk obligingly took care of the
"mummy" which the inebriate fondly im
agined to be his friend, and promised to see
him safely to bed, after which the young
gentleman consigned himself to the care of
two stalwart porters who conducted him to
his room.
LIBERAL OLD FELLOWS.
Another of the picturesque drunkards is
the liberal old bachelor who, when he is in
clined to be merry, insists that all his friends
shall join with him in the worship of the
rosy god Bacchus. His importunities become
wearisome, but he is not in the least non
plussed, and when friends fail to respond to
his call be seeks tbe companionship of the
general loungers about the fear.
One of these generous individuals was seen
the other evening on Clark street. The hour
was late, and the jolly old gentleman was
seated on the sidewalk with a demijohn un
der his arm and a well rilled glass in his right
hand. He was jolly and generous, and
wanted the whole world to enjoy his liquid
hospitality.
"Come, boys," he cried, "let's all take a
drink. Whisky's as free as water, and since
the flood water tastes too much of drowned
sinners. Who wants water? Let's all take a
drink."
He was only brought to a realizing sense of
his condition when two guardians of the law
took charge of him and escorted him to bis
hovel, after appropriating the demijohn for
sheir own uses.
The other evening the police discovered a
well preserved and well dressed middle aged
individual calmly sleeping in a mortar bed
which stood in front of a half completed
building. The somnolent gentleman had
taken off his hat, but without taking the
trouble to further disrobe had quietly settled
himself for a snooze. Considerable effort
was needed to arouse him, and when he
finally gained his consciousness he looked
helplessly around him and murmured:
''Purty good bed, but the feathers stick to
a fellow's clothes."
SEEING THE ELEPHANT.
There is a young gentleman in the city
whose fancies, while under the influence of
liquor, are most peculiar. He is an ardent
lover of animals and his pets comprise al
most the entire animal kingdom. He seldom
goes to excess iu drinking but when he does
there is no limit to his bibulation When in
the lost stages bis younger days invariably
return to him, and he imagines himself tbe
small boy at the circus. The elephant ap
pears to be his chief source of delight, and
instead of snakes, and scorpions, and crawl
ing things, his dreams are peopled with the
sportive elephant, and he babbles on as
happy as a child with its first bag of peanuts
lieneatb the canvas of the peripatetic
menagerie.
Then there is the picturesquely rapid young
man. Bustling and active while sober, his
ruling passion while under the influence of
liquor is to keep things moving. A case of
this kind occurred a few evenings ago when
one of these rapidly inclined inebriates eu
tcred a railroad depot tQ wait for a train and
cany him to his suburban home. Be
coming tired of the monotony of the sit
uation, he wandered down the track, and
fi.-iding a puffing engine without its usual
occupation of engineer and fireman, he reck
lessly stepped aboard and pulled the throttle
wide 0cn. Iu an instant tbe engine began
to move and the rapid young man, in
thorough, affright, leaped from the cab, sus
taining' serious injuries. The wild engiue
sped upon its way, and had it not been for
the coolness and foresight of a switchman
A terrible disaster mght have occurred. As
it was, the rapid young man was arrested
for his freak, and now in a dungeon cell as
asserts that John Barleycorn and he are
sn orn enemies.
"Drunkenness may bo picturesque," said
one old stager,"but as for me, I'll take mine in
sum other chape. When it comes to ringing
your own door bell and asking your wife to
come down and pick you out of a crowd who
don't know their own names, then its time
ro quit, and I don't want any more pictur
esque in mina.!'
Altogether it may safely bo argued that
the safest, pleasauteft and easiest way of en
jtiyilig life is to djsoreptly svuid the pieritr
esuue, the unique or the deoidedly unusual
drunk. Chicago Herald.
Tbe Coaching Fad Spreading.
"How the taste for and interest In four-in-hand
driving," said a member of the Kew
York Qoaching club to a reporter recently
"have increased is sufficiently ' demonstrated
by the number of coaches owned In Boston,
Philadelphia, Chicago, Cheyenne and San
Prancisca tb,o List agricultural fair and
horse sbqw of tbe Genesee f alley, held lass
autumn at Mount ' Morris, in the western
part of this state, a prise was offered for
focr-in-hands and It drew nine entries. All
pf tnm prscntp4 a most excellent appear
ance and woulddo credit to any city'-HSew
York Mail and Express.
0 CupU. thou mad. Irresistible elf!
Lot my sleeping heart be, leave my t noughts to
.myself:
1 crave oot thy fever of rapture and pala,
O let me go back to my dreaming again t
VThat Is this rLsIon tbat makes my heart beat
With a passionate longing, so subtle and sweet f
O' Cupid, thou madcap' nee what thou tiaKtdou,
What rare woman thougbbt In my heart have
begun!
Breathe forth, dainty wild rose, your perfume so
sweet.
Look up, little pansy, my lover to greet;
Riug sweet, bonny bluebell, to rapture give
toDgue,
For love is our life, sad our life ever young!
Florence Evelyn lYatt in Homo Journal.
Wanted a Glass of Water.
After a stay of some months in Vienna I
went up to Nuremberg, and from there to
the Streiburg Wbeycure. where I boptvl to
recuperate from the effects of tbe cholera
which 1 had in Vienna. At this place you
get nothing to drink but whey, except in the
morning, when they let you have coffee and
rolls. No water or milk or anything but
whey Is allowed, and 1 could not drink it
Every time I did it seemed as if I should !'
for an hour, and thi worst t!:::.- ii. , ..u
were always thirsty.
I could not speak a word of German, and
even if 1 could have done so a Bavarian could
not have understood it. The vice consul's
daughter, who had come up with me from
Nureinburg, had been my translator, but sho
went on a loii walk, ami when the man from
the "Curhniis" brought the fatal glasses of
whey 1 determined to have a drink of water
anil so by showing him a florin, talking and
by dumb show I rnado him, as 1 fondly
hoped, understand that 'every titno I even
saw a glass of whey itcreated a revolution iu
my internal economy and 1 wanted a drink
of water. At lost ho brightened and ! felt
that 1 had for once succeeded in introducing
an idea into a Dutch head; but he sat down
the glass of whey and disappeared, nodding
his head reassuringly. I waited patiently
for a long time, when ho at last appeared,
bringing with him, not a glas3 of water, but
a carpenter's brace and hitl Thus lie had in
terpreted my intelligent pantomine. Olivo
Harper in Philadelphia Times.
Feet of American Women.
Tho feet of American women are small
compared with those of English women, ni
everybody . knows. Means are offered of
making notes of this fact in traveling in
England. At Abbotsfcrd not long ago a
party of tourists, chiefly women, were seated
in the waiting room till the guide should ap
pear to take them ou a tour of inspection.
An American, who had a place outside tho
partial circle made by tho visitors, happened
to have his eyes attracted toward the fifteen
or twenty pairs of feet before him. Without
looking up he glanced from ono pair to an
other. After the examination he decided
that all but two of tho women were English.
When he turned his e3-es upward to the faces
he found that tho owner of ono of the pair of
shoes he had picked out as American was his
ownsistor. Theother, who soon after twanged
out her contempt for some article under in
sjiectiou, could not be mistaken in either ac
cent or tone of voice for any than a "down
east" country woman of the most pronounced
type. New York Press "Every Day Talk."
John Ro3-I O'Retily oil Holing,
John Boyle O'Reilly was once urging a
friend to join an athletic association somo
what famous among the sports of the town.
"Doctor," he said, "3-ou want to go there
with your boy; you don't really know what
is in the lad until you've stood up with him
in tho ring with the gloves oil And boxing
is such a splendid sport! It's so manly, so
vigorous; and," he added, with a twinkle in
his eye, and the humorously persuasive tono
he can so well give to tho voice, "there's a
tenderness about it only equaled by making
love!" Mr. Q'Rsiily has long been recognized
us an authority on many sports. It is ro
tated that upon one occasion Mr. George V
Cable, who was lunching with him, leaned
over to ask him, with the air of oiw who pro
pounds a great ethical CQiiumii-um: "Mr.
O'Reilly, can J'&u tell mo what a slugger isf
a question which, coming from Jlr. Cable, tho
meekest of men in appearance, must havo
been deliciously funny. Tho Book Buyer.
tfotaen ana incir uogn.
In an afternoon's walk on Broadway, from
Nineteenth street to Thirtieth street, or in
a stroll oti Fifth avenue, from Delmonico's to
the park, I can find you, lolling back in car
riages provided by husbands, brothers, fa
thers,' sons, lovers, women by tho score hug
ging at onco their futile fancy and their
shivering dogs, and I can find you in every
great baa.tr, in every hugo warehouse
where women congregate, simpering dames
from the knowledgeable age of 10 to the very
verge of decay, "ladles," so called, in whose
muffs, in whoso arms, ileitis lap dogs, pugs,
black and tans, King Charles spaniels, and
every variety of imaginable pup. Oitonri
bly there tosh rp, iu rcaity they watte time
nud wear out o.-.iiciice while they caress
their dogs. TLt-y may intend to purchase
clothing for the children at homo, but their
chief thought is the comfort of their little
darlings, Kisses, love- taps, little squeezes,
everything that affection can suggest as
normal outworking toward one's baby, these
people lavish 0:1 their dogs. Joa Howard i:
Boston Globe.
The "l:m'i" Changes fTumI..
After all, it is perhaps better that tho '
child should bo. a little spoiled rather than 15
should bo unjustly punished. Tho latter
sometimes make.? a very unhappy memory
to carry about with one. A gentleman said
a short tima p.gq;
"I shad never forget, though I have
wished a thousand times that I could, how I
punished little Mamie for continually pro
nouncing a word wrong S3 I thought will
fully after I had tried hard to make her
say it correctly. She was quiet for a few 1
minutes after I had punished her, and th
she looked up with a quivering hp and said:
'Papa, you will have to whip me again; I
can't say it.'
"You can imagine just how I felt, and how
I kept on remembering the look on her face
and the tone of the sad, little voice." Dc-tru
Tribune.
nought It Conditionally.
A genius has invented a clock, which he
warrants to run a hundred years. A man,
bought one of them the other day on condi
tion that if it didn't run over 93 years ho
might return it and get hi3 money back.
Norristowu Herald.
7VO T
We earnestly request id To f Jour fiicnds
indebted to us to call Ht once and Kittle
accounts due. We have Mistaincd heavy
loss by the destruction of our Hi until
House at Fairmont, Neb., by lire and now
that we need money to meet our obliga
tions, wc hope there will not be one
among our friends who would refuse to
call promptly at this particular time and
adjust accounts.
Trusting this will receive your kind
consideration and prompt attci.tion, we
remain, Yours Truly,
S0L0L1YI0N & NATHAN.
i
GO.TO
m. Heroic! & Son
r ry Goods. Notions Eoots M Slices J
or Ladies and Gents
FURNISHING - GOODS.
He keeps as large and as well
eiEx.dzioTZErirz. stock
a s eau he found any place in the city and make
jou prices that defy toinpMitiuii.
Agents for
Hirer's E2Z3r fr'Atm and LaTs Corsets.
C. F. SMITH,
The Boss Tailor.
,"-!;ti:i Ii-'.., Ove.j ".lergts' Shoe Store.
lias tho bc-t and mo-d complete stock
i.t s.-.mpl' s. both foreign and domestic i
wc'-lcr." that ever came west of Missouri j
rivrr Yi.to t!ir ui-ici-e- Tinsinrss suits.
r . V V-
ii.i!!i !ji 11 to o.j. urets mis, - 10 it',.
pants 4, .", $i, G.0 and upwards.
"i7'Will -iruarantecd a fit.
Prices Defy Competition.
J. E- BOBBINS, ARTIST,
1XSTKUCTIOSS GIVEN IN
fine oil- paintincH. P. Whisler's,
WATER COLORS, ETC. .
ALL LOVERS O? A HT A HE INVITED j
T ; CALL ANI
STUDIO OVER OLIVER A RAMSE i
MEAT MARKET. !
" ft 'C.-'T. L.11
PretrYfltl'n 'r:' tfeUa a xpeclalty.
ftt,itxfrc..v..t u :!--.; ra;'t H i.f Latujhmg
nc.
All v.ln k warranted. Prices reasonable.
FiTztiK.t vi..,-8rii. tk ri.iTTFViiUin.NKB
a K
DRS. CAVE & SMITH,
"ainloas ID outlets."
Tl-e ordy DentinU In the West, cnutiolii.g this
New System ft Ex tract inn and HllinK 'J eelli
with. ut rain. Our iiiiuesllietie is en
tirely tree Iiom
ciii.okofoi:mojm:tiii:k
AN I IS ABSOLUTELY
Harmless - To - All.
Teeth extracted and ferliflcfid teeth Inserted
next day If desired. The preservation of the
i!ittniul teeth a pecia.l:y.
COLD CfiOWKSL GOLD CAPS, BRIDGE WOEL
The very finest Ofll'-eln Union P.lock, over
'I lie Ciliei.e' l.'tlik.
Piatumc-Ati:
isnerw ice mbu
We have our Louse filled with
A FINE QUALITY OF ICE,
And are prepared lo deliver it daily to our c-us-t
' 1 1 1 e j s in any quantity desired.
I ALL 0EDEES PEOMPTLY FILLED.
Leae 01 tiers with
j- np-p-; TT.T"P"!T- rT"T'Er.
. ..
-At tore on .Mxtn street. We n:;.ke a Spec
ial;y of
CUTTING, PACKING
Aiid Loading Cars. Kor Icrnis see us or
write.
If. C. MrMAKEH & fcON,
Telephone 72, - - Flatttmoath
-CO TO-
AT
The City Bakery,
FOKFINE
New England
Home Made Bread,
I lie has prorurrd Uie ferviees of I. .1. Siraycr,
1 of Omaha, whese m ccsaiiy is In making
I NDTEITIOTJS S33!S.A.D
i run-have a five cr ten cent loaf ai.d you will be
cm. viiurd of its merit.
J C, BOOSTS,
EAREEK AliD HAIR DRESSER.
AU work nrst-ehus; wft Fifth Stret.
Noith Robcil Sdiei wood's Store.
A X. Kl'LLIVA.V. Attorney m t-w- Will
; f,,isted to Mm. on'ee In r L;.fc, l w(
i side, l'lattsrncnt n. Neb
; if it I, rnUMtVxcJ, arc WlnA
h?m & levies column on. second page..
4