THE DA1LV HEBALD: PLAritJiioinn, UA.SK A. TIIirKsDA Y, MAV 31. 16S8. HORRORS OF HASHISH. A REPORTER EXPERIMENTS ON HIM SELF WITH THE DRUa I Hapten from lb Dtnnr'i Narrative. Strange Condition Into Which the Drag Throw It VictimAwkward Feeling of Duality Tho Waking. An hoar had passed, when of a Hidden there shot through every pulso a thrill un- eMUul.lrt. o choking like that of flrnt love. J knew nt laxt the wizard's wonder working hand was upon nie. livery nerve was a tingle, and the only relief was to tighten every muscle and sinew to a tension that Ki'wr-d like to wreck mo. The Mood rushed in vast and ever jrovriu; volume to my brain and the room wm whirling like a flywheel At my throat and heart was that strangling rlnU-h. There was a last on my tongue oa If I had drank from a ueyden Jar, and a con Eumitig thirst was upon me. 1 wondervd w hut enalty must be paid for thus trying to steal over the back fence Into taradLso. 1 he dear, bread and butter commonplace 6i-uiei the one thing admirable. Fear grew with tho minutes. Theiieiiaeof notation was nwfuL No one was in the same world with mn. 1 must enter ujku the abyss alone. A friend came in at the door and 1 could hnve acreumed for Joy 1 wanted to fall upon bis m.ck. Aain, like a cold chill, came the kinwl tl;o be can do nothing, la a voice wlich (unimliil strange and louder than com- mi 1 gave him greotiirj;, then fell back Into the, chitir and went on, holding the book be fore ma It seemed as though 1 should fly in atoms, yet, with a mighty effort, I made a f -reteii.se of talking to him alout the weather. Feet and hands were growing Dumb. The first sensation of beat hud departed. Now tlit marrow was all gone from my bones, and through the osseous chambers a cold wind crept. 1 he clutching at my heart waa as hid. -on as death. 1 felt the center of life within mo freezing up. A great weight held ma To speak was to utter a few ponderous and Arctic syllables, and the st lips took mi nire to form them. The movent At of an arm was like the motion of a vast machine. 1 was freezing. Vet all the time, with . migltty rhythm, the blood kept beating to my brain. Drowsiness came on. and vet closed eyes would bring no sign of sleep. VISIO.V8 or ANOTHER SELF. ITorfl. with the fading eye of reason, 1 couM trace the first 6ouse of that duality which hashish gives. The self material and the self spiritual seemed sundered and mov ing in dilTerent worlds. The more violent the tho more completely Is the outer i..it urv suUlue.!, until familiar surroundings nro swallowed in the vision. It is an incred ible characteristic of bu.shisb intoxication or delirium that whatever visions you see you never seem to see them, but, as it were, to see voursolf seeing them. In all your wander ings vou cannot te alone. There is a senseof companionship of an attendant, familiar, j et strange In an instant there U flashed upou you the knowledge of that duality; that companion is your othor acir. I'iiLS erio of dualitv is doubly apparent In the talk and action of oue anoer tho spell of l.ashish. lhs ordinary consciousness of per sous and things about him is little impaired. Though be lies as in a stupor, and exclaims drowsily at tfco visions before him, the slightest question will receive a ready an swer, but i a a vexed tone, as to say: "Go away and let me alone." The hearing is znarvclously fine. It seems as f all the out ward senses were alert and even had a ra tionality working behind them, while from the disjected utterances of the sleeper you tnny know that behind closed lids he moves in a laud of wonders manifold. When trying to talk sense, he knows bis speeches are broken and wandering. It is a common expression of tho hashish eater, waking or sleeping: "I know I am making a fool of myself, but I can't help it." The thought is for an instant, clear and acute upon any subject suggested, but then the ideas flee from utterance, and In their pur suit the victim gets tired and tangled, and in a moment cannot tell what the subject was. Out at the far conflnes of space there was n great flaming sickle of gold and of infinite circumference. It grew smaller and smaller. Its point curled ever inward. The glitter-, ing, wavy edge seemed to smile, while to 6low musis it girt me closer and painlessly, softly as though I were of air. I felt myself bisected at the equator The two whirling l;emipheres passed away in opposite direc tions into space. Looking back upon this and other things 1 marvel bow they could Lave been so real To sense it seems absurd. Yet the further I pass fromXbat strange ex perience the more distinct, more vivid, more glorious grows Its memory; the more Its In cipient horrors grow small in estimate anJ are crowded out of remembrance. JUE SCE.XB GROWS SOilEZR. I was drifting downward, heavy with the mist that came from the echoing caverns be neath, and the blue shadow of the calling spirit seemed ever to be denser, ever to clop me closer to It. The darkness had its genii, damp and slumberous creaturos, looking from yyes heavy with lethargy Here and there a diamond, huge as the moon, gleamed with malignant light from its black, dripping set t;n in the hideous and world ribbing rocks. Through the blackness of that pi&co I sank till I "as of a weight with the mountains anJ seemed part of them. The blue water rprite I bad gone in pursuit of waa not w ith rae, and looting upward 1 saw jjer, smiling down, her sad, cold face only a shadow be tween me and the far glistening day. Turn in .; my eyes, i pressed into the darkness and t.irjnk from all about ma. The denizens of tht place mads no sound, but black spittle oozed over black teeth and dripped fcni their ringy lips. Again the scene changed. Tts clear, bice sky of eight was all about ma. ISluaiuerjRg cities were mere specks beneath us. From iuliuity a band of light was thrust, at my very side, and hurled into the heavens a fcaxulful of shining stars. It was as when a sower costs seed. They leaped away broad cast, left lines of trailing brightness across the vault in their wake, and took up their stations, like sentinels of the nighp, about the blue serene. What glories passed, what raptures 1 drank, among what strange people !: j I move! I oould hear their cries, yet all nttuaed to softest harmony. All was radi ' iiuea. There was no human sorrow, no earthly suffering. r, 1 lay entranced for tours. 1 remember looting down from the gallery of a church and seeing myself neatly laid out In a colliu at the altar. The mourners passed around an i peered Into tho face, on which a strong light fcIL It was as whita as tho linen tLa wrapped it. 1 remember admitting with eon candor that a a corpse 1 was not alto cctber repulsive and that I seemed to excite rather more interest and attention it f.h$J condition than to life. I felt no hesitation in conceding that for meddling with hashish I Lad met only my Just desert Waking, I wandered in the moonlit streets for a Jcn time. The mists yet lingered In my mind end the pavemmts reverberated auder me like the thunders of Sinai. Jieturning home, 1 wont to bed, and came to in tho morning like nt returned from a long journey. "J IL. il." in New York World.. "helping mother," bat honestly assuming tho labor which belongs to us. Youth's Com panion. French Girls aad Society. The Trench girl can hardly be said to "come out" In society. She is brought out, mid is never seen without her mother or some other respectable and watchful chap eron. Everything, to the last minutiae of dress, is planned and managed for her. She is not supjoned to have a will or judgment of her own, least of all in the matter of mar riuge. I am sj leaking, of course, of the aver age French girl of society. I have known some exceptions outside of Mine, GreviUe's novels some remarkably intelligent, inde pendent girls, whoso hearts chose for them and w hose liand were allowed to go with their heart. Hut the average mademoiselle. modest and docile, usually accepts the choice of her iarents, without much ado some times with alacrity.' lie, the elect man, is profounVlly unknown, but that fact gives to Lim the vague charm of mystery. Watched and restricted as she has been since her school days ended, she sees in marriage not bondage, but release. Through it will come a now name, new dignity, a cnez mol and a coupe of her own. And w hen sho is married, how she blos soms outl She revels in emancipation. Hho who tho season lefore could go nowhere by herself, could not even see her betrothed for Gve minutes alone, can drive about unques tioned, viit and be visited, can indulge in her likings and caprices, even when they take in her own husband. It is not till after the marriage that tho French woman is really brilliant, for it is not until theu that sl;o is unconstrained; so, many a man finds that all "uiiliekiiownsftq himself he has won a clever ana charming woman. It la strange how often those made up, haphazard mar riages pi'ove happy and harmonious. I know they ought not to, but ''tho imp of the per verse manages so that they do. while many a union of joetry and passion drags a tangled web of scandal, intrigue, and misery through the mire of tho divorce court. (J race Green wood in New York Graphic. Garments for Stout Women. In the first place if a woman is inclined to embonpoint'' she must wear her dress as long as tossible and well trimmed at the bot tom. The object of this is obvious to ren der her girth the lesser. As an example. look at a fat woman in the street with a plain skirt and a rather full drapery above, gathered up between knee and waist, then a short wrap ending just below tho waist, and. as is frequently seen at the present time. trimmed round this already overdressed or- tion of anatomy with the hideous fur balls. Docs such a woman ever calculate the num ber of inches she lias thus added to her bulk 1 Not a bit; she has gone to buy a wrap, and she has bought it. She would have bought it if the prevailing fashion had been jxjlar bear. She wanted a wrap. To complete her toilet she will wear a bonnet pitched together as tightly as possible, never stopping to con sider that bonnets and bats are to the head what a frame is to the picture. But if di minutive bonnets are the fashion she is go ing to wear one, no matter if her face is twice as big as the bonnet. The remedy is in every woman's own hands. She must learn to use the brains that presumably a beneficent Creator has given her. When she sees a dress that at tracts her, she should reflect before buying how it will suit her, and if the effect she ad mires cannot le produced iu a modified form, then she must use some other style. I am speaking particularly for stout women, who are the most difficult to dress. When a woman is short as well, still greater care is necessary, bue must absolutely abandon the idea of wearing garments of the same falision as would be becoming to a slen der figure. In doing this she need not fear looking dowdy or remarkable. If she wears that which is simple and quiet, she will always look at her best. It is by not attract ing attention that one does not challenge criticism, Selina Dolaro in Globe-Democrat. Utilizing the Drippings. Articles of food fried in drippings are not only more palatable than those fried in lard, but more wholesome. Indeed, there are many persons whose stomachs will fight against any food fried in lard, yet take kindly to that wheredrippings have been used. It ma3r be utilized, too, not only for frying, but for pastry purposes, in the making of which good beef drippings is far preferable to the common butter generally used. Therefore, to the family in which economy is any ob ject, the proper care of drippings is of con siderable importance. The manner of clarifying the drippings, though simple, requires a little time and care. First, every particle of fat should be melted down, and this, with whatever superfluous quantity you may have in 3'our meat pan, bhould be poured into a bowl with some boiling water. Stir it af terwards for three or four minutes, and set it away until the next day. Then take the cake from the bowl, and remove with a knife whatever impuri ties may have settled on the bottom of it. I'ut it into a saucepan, adding a little salt and some boiling water, and ajlow if to sim mer for twenty minutes, skimming off the impurities if any rise to the surface. Then pour it again into a bowl, and when cold, free the bottom of the cake as before, melt and strain it through a seive, and when quite cold, put away for use in a covered stone crock. DriMifr.gs way be used for fry ing purposes over and over again, but should bo clarified after each using. The House hold. Women in Business. TTomon who fo into business, either frpra choice cr necessity, should acquire business habits, adopt business methods, and possess themeplres of all knowledge of details and general information. Jheie should be no sentiment about it;' they should expect no immunity from disagreeableness pn th? score of being ''Jadies;" their prospect of marriage should have no more eff pot on thfiir wprk tbao it Las with that of meu. Their dress should suitlhe requirements of the occupation. In no dress does a girl look neater, prettier or more graceful than that adopted for gymnastics or lawn tennis. Let of which give fullest play tor all move ments, liow mulf fcctter would many work ing girls look and feej an4 work in fiuco dresses than in the gaudy, tawdry finery so many of them wear. These should have their business suits jnst as men do. They should also reali?! that in obtaining employment weak backs and paje faces and general debil ity are at a discount" " Tbey siioj;ld expect no favors on the score of sex; they should call for no privileges; they should call for no foolish notions as to chivalry and deference and all that. Business is business, and this is not an age of chivalry, but of political economy antl th? "surviva" of f.ha fittest Bessie Bramble in Pittsburg pispatcb. " Tk9 Armor of Sweet Dignity. Let at least the passerby read fn your face your desire to be courteous. Jf you cannot remember him, at least give him a pleasant bow if be bows to you. Such salutation burt nobody, iX 790 lady, who, if alonet most be circumspect. In the pottte bow of a lady, full gravity and good will, masked with dignity and respect, tha man of irregu- lar lif Cads as profound a check to Insult as In the- haughty disdain of one wh perhaps overestimates bis admiration. There Is no armor like a sweet dignity. It seems to be one of the best qualities of woman, and it teaches her intuitively how to bow, how to smile, how to receive her friends and how to dismiss a bore. Women whose manners are too familiar never have much ower. People do not care for that which they gain easily, and yet cordiality Is a very necessary adjunct to good manners. A woman who can express the true shade of cordiality by a bow is very fortunate. If a gentleman comes up to a lady at a crowded watering place and claims an ac quaintance, if she has no idea who he is, she should bow and frankly tell him her dilemma and ask his name. She can say to him that sht has a poor memory for facets; that she sees many people, and that she begs he will forgive her. Few men are, and never ought to be, so ill tempered as to object to this in quiry. If they are so thin skinned as to care the acquaintance may as well stop there. Mrs. M. E. W. Sherwood in Chicago News. A llosteN at Times. The woman who can truthfully be said to lead a narrow lifo in the sense of being a neighbor is she who passes all her time be tween the four walls of her house who has no interest whatever beyond her husband and children and recognizes no outside claims at all upon her who does not visit her sick neighbor, nor belong to any book club or sewing society or church society. Her paint ing, tier embroidery, her books, flowers, mu sic aud dainty food are expended only on her own home. No one. save those who share her family circle, receive any pleasure, any benefit from her. No one is more lovely to think on than the sweet home keeping woman devoted to her husband and childreu, but in thinking on her the picture naturally includes a woman who is a gracious hostess at times, who is a busy mem tier of some small, pottering society of smne kind or other, and who is an adorable lady bounti ful to at leat one sad heart beyond the cheer ful charm of her own bright homo .and fire side. New Orleans I'icayune. Retween Parents auil Children. I sometimes observe the comity which exists in families that is, the reciprocal seutimeKits that pass between parents and children. I never saw a boy yet who discov ered much affection for "the old man" who licked him upon occasion. Uedid it again and he lied about it, too, if it would redeem tho whip, in families where they keep a whip you do not se much caressing. The little boy, when he comes home tired nil out, does not drop into his father's arms and kiss him as he falls asleep. Little boys think; they observe the ways and tho tem peraments of men. A boy always looks in a man's fuee when he passes by. lie is ever watching for little acts of courtesy or a recognition from older persons. Speak to him pleasantly, and notice what a joy per vades his face and shines out in his eyes. He sees the little manhood that tills his jacket is recognized and he goes on his way happy. William Allen Wallace in Granite Monthly. Qnilt of Cheese Cloth. Cheese cloth quilts are the new coverlets. and commend themselves, being warm and inexpensive. The materials needed are ten yards of tho cheese cloth and five one pound rolls of cotton. The cheese cloth when cut into lengths of two and a half yards is placed on a bed or table. Over this is laid a laj-er of cotton batting, which has previously been placed before a hot fire or register, unrolling it from the bundle over a chair or clothes horse. This causes the cotton to expand to twice its first thickness. A second la3'er goes crosswiso, and so on until all the cotton lias been utilized. Over the last layer is placed the second cover of cheese cloth, and the whole tied with worsted in bed quilt fashion. A feather stitching completes the edge. New York Commercial Advertiser. Viidt the Schoolroom. Is it possible that not one woman in ten in this city bas ever been in the schoolroom in which her children are being educated, and where they spend at least six hours of their day? She does not know what sort of desks and seats are provided, anything about the ventilations of the rooms or anything, 111 fact, that concerns the healthfulness and comfortableness of tho place in which her children remain for so long a time. It is as much her duty to inform herself of the con dition of the school at which her little ones attend as it is to see that the child's brain is not crowded and that she goes off in the morn ing neatly dressed and presentable. New Orleans Picayune. A Rational Companion. The husband needs to bo taught that bis wife is not simply a slipper provider, and a dinner orderer, and a pleasant, babbling stream of smal. talk to soothe his domestic evening, but a rational and competent com panion a good comrade, quite able to con verse with Inm upon the same topics his male companions introduce, and also pYivileged to be weary, and silent, and in need of enter tainment when the day's duties are over as well as liimself. Jii-s. Frank J,sua, fVarnlns Ajrainst Hope Junipln;. A physician saj-s: "I would warn children against rope jumping, ana would auvise par ents and teachers to prohibit it under aX cir cumstances." Not only is theip ganger of injury to tho bones and' joints of the legs, and to the spine, but 3-oung girls frequently receive other Injuries which cause them un toli suffering for years, if not for life. Jfew Orleans I'icayune, It is well to remember that too much blu ing renders clothes yellow after a time. In experienced or careless servants think tho more bluing in the water the better for tho wash, and it is a difficult matter to convince them that the clothes wjji'look fa' better if only a sinall quantity is used. If, when obliged to be on jour feet all day, you change 3-our shoes several times for a fresh pair, j-ou will be astonished how much it will rest the tired feet, for no two shoes press the foot in the same part. Turpentine mixed with carbolic acid and kept In open vessels' about; the "room will, it is said, greatly lessen the risk of contagion in scarlet fever, diphtheria and kindred dis eases. Nice tablecloths and napkins should not be allowed to become much soiled, so that they "will require yigorous rubbing with soap or in hot' water. -" " Soap should be bought by the box, taken oat of the wrappers and stood in a dry place, aa it improves by keeping. A small bag of sulphur kept in a drawer or closet that is infested with red ants will quickly disperse them. ' To clean windows, try baking soda on a damp cloth. It i also said 0 be excellent to clean glassware. A solution of equal parts of gum arabic and plaster of pari cements china and earthenware. WOMAN AND HOME. THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HOUSE KEEPERS AND HOME-KEEPERS. A Fine Daughter of the Klnj- "Mother' Work" rtilisliis "Drlpplnjji." I rmrli (Hr !!- Sirt Dignity Women In llul iia lllut mi l Helps, What 1 -t out to tell you was the differ ence U-tween houses, and how 3-011 would lis--cover it. The end is that women also eieof two kinds. l'.leKS us! hud you not discovered it Yew, there ure two kinds of women, cud it stands you in hand to know which kind 3'oti select for a wife. There are the hor.10 fceepers and there are the house-keeix-rs. Thoy are distinct sjecies. The houso-keeper keepa her house; don't imagine she will keep you, unlo&r it lie as one of her bric-a brae, sho will select, you for that purpose, and yo-i will to co:njieIljtJ to poseassuch. "Yes, rny !.". r fllrs. Jones, you have secured a troa-iiro a real, genuine Sevres.' Ah, but mine! in deed, if 1 must own it, I was cheated, flu is a good enough sort of husband, iudimtrioii. kind, and minds his own business; but he n cracked! Ho would like a house full of chil dren! Hates sieiet.v! A'nd his room! HI era my soull my dear ilrs. Jones, but youthouH see it. lint I cau't shew it to you. !!(, al ways carries the key iu his pocket says it's the only room in the house fit to live in." Y as, there are two species. iJless the lionl! there are I wo, and theynre not alike. The home-keeper has only o:ih bit of furni ture in tho house, that is It own b! ss:-d self. Go where you will, it is her tint yn see and teel, ami every : ivs r (:.-.: (..; -. her presence and tne babies! they mv her also. What the mother is. that also will tho young ones be. So, so, aud what-better cat. one want than a house full of a IciinPv ,-m honest presence that 3'on can trust, iui 1 1 1:;: gives you more rest than a dozen .:.U-.i rockers, niui more inspiration than a g:oJerv of uutiquesl A house should to inspi.-cd. do assure 3-ou a good soul gets into tji walls and the furniture, aid you will be ih.' l eli for such a one, go wlr.ro j'ou will even to the garret. Aud u bad soul that. to:. is everywhere: und it gets into voii t!i i i:;to the utniospiiere you breal ho. Uut what c:ui one doalo;jt. it? lie sura to iret a good so-.il to go into the house with 3'ou, and there stay to -bo a home-keeper. lUat is what 1 irieaii by house -keepers, and by home-keepers. Tiw fii-st kept nothing else, alas, but houses; tii second keep also that which turns a Louse into a home. Cor. Globe-Democrat. True 'laughter of a King:, She was a demure lool:iti girl of IS, wit! rosy cheeks, a Mully ban; of blonde b:iir, u::d light brown eyes, iliif concealed V.y tho lapel of her sacque was a silver cross tied with roj'al purple .ribbon, dins proclaimed ber one or the Uing s uaughters. As she en tered the Sixth avenue elevated car at Four teenth street yestenlay afternoon she at Uacted general attention. The car w;is well filled, but a seat was offered to her immedi ately, and she sat down beside an elderly woman. "1 see 3'ou wear the cross of the King's Daughters," said the matron, as she exhibited one she herself wore. "Are 3-ou a!.-lj to do much i" The badge made them confidants at once, and the3'omiger Daughterof the KingquieMy replied: "Oh, not near enough, but 1 havo just discovered a new and elfective little way to work. J have tried it a dozen times tliis afternoon, and it hasn't failed once. You see, 1 have lceti greatly anno-ed by seeing women, who were out shopping with their little children, shake or smack them when the little ones attempted to uso their percc p tive faculties. Todaj' I saw a woman vigor ously shake a little girl of three or four years old, and to comfort the child I smiled aud nodded to her. The little thing seemed to appreciate it, and looked timidly at mo and then at her mother. But tho mother loo Led even more pleased than tho child, as though it hail awakened all her maternal pridi f-jho smiled at me, looked tenderly at the child, and apparently drew her gently forward, so she might np;ear to tho very best advantage. There was not. a trace of vexation left in ti.a mother's face then, and when the' jiasKed 0:1 f saw she was still regarding her child with love and pride. I felt so encouraged I trie! it successfully all the remainder of tho after noon." Then the train reached Thirty-third street, and as the writer on reaching the platform turned to pet another look at tho vouii2 Daughterof the Kiug she had just risen fo give her seat to a shabbily dressed woman in black that got on the train at that station. Somehow, the bright spring day seemed a!J the brighter for having seen such a Kiu-r's Daughter and overhearing her storj-. Iev.' York Fivening Sim. It Is Culled '3Iothei-s ATorlc." One chapter of Mrs. Diaz's "Bybury to Beacon Street" is so full of sound sense that it deserves to be quoted entire, and net par tially, and we mustq'.iote it. Ia brier, the mother of a family, after a hard forenoon's work, ha 1 given up to tears, for her girl and boj' had gone away leaving their tasks un done, and the burden of the da- seeded to be growing greater than sho could bear. Her husband, finding hep thus di?our egetj, inquired ii.to the matter, and came to the conclusion that the children should bo made to realize that a part of the household work belonged to tliein; und not that they were generously "helping mother" wu:i t'tpy gave assistance. one evening, after Laura had finished her xj-fiiipies, her father askod her to write down all the different things I bad to tlo in the different days of the week. She began to write, her father and Fred prompting whu4 her memory failed. '.'Tl:f hsj coveiird. both sides of the Iutc Husband wrote at the beginning for a title, Mother's Work,' aud then remarked that it waa a good deal of work for one person, " '1 help her some,' said Laura. " Yes,' said he, 'I suppose you call what you do helping her, and that Fred calls what j he does helping her, but after all you are ! only helping yourselves, pother rats a. s.:na!l j part of th9 food sh poohs, and. wears' a small 1 sifj; of the clothes the makes and washes and irons aud mends. So all this work is not really hers, but only hers to do.' "Then he rubbed out the title and wroto ia its place: 'The Family Work whiih is Callexl Mother's Work. ' 'Xow, I shpuli like to know said he. fiF&y members of the' family consider it a favor to mother when they do parts of their own work. " 'For instance, I have noticed that to jret a meal and clear it away there mut bo wood and water broitghf;, vegetables got, cleaned and cooked, other things cocked, thi tablo se, dishes washed, knives scoured, and soma tidying of the room afterwards. Now it doesn't seem right for one person tq do al j this labor ancj fur Pthr persons to feel that their part is only the eating part. That ku't fair play.' " . Having convinced the children that it ma not, Indeed, fair play, be proceeded to a Hot them a certain portion of the family woi k for their own doing. Let us all profit by the bint, no longer pluming ourselves ou DON'T READ IFnl you want to I liow ( Darguin C3 ha -We ure nyW ollVrin Special Prices in 101B .-mwmn 01m i And the most we pride ourselves on is our excellent line of Ladiek' HandTurned Shoes AtiHfcSi'ir Present Low Prices. Shoe should a 5 As 1 have sold 1113' lann aii'l utcusns that have to be it 10 o'clock a. in., at nty farm, The foil owiiirf is a partial list : Six uid heifers, two Polanfnis hoilers, one y.ir nr. thirteen breeding sows, two brood vcarling colts, one single buggy, , , 1 11 11 cutters and corn shellers, a large ot articles too numerous to mtntioi:. wagon, liav racks, narrows, tioo-sieos, mowing mucin TEIiMS: All sums tinder $10, cash, all sums over that amount, time 'will be -given at 1" er cent cent oil. Ts enjoying a E3 iL-S The DITIONB. Yea f Will bo one during v.hicli the subjects of national interest and importance will le strongly agitated and the election of a President will take jdace. Hie people of Cass County who would like to learn ot Political, Commercial and Social Transactions of this year and would keep apace the times should -Foli Daily or Weekly Now while we have the subject before the people we will venture" to tpeak ot our "Which is first-class in all from which our job printers nit much satisfactory work. PL.lTTSMOUTJr, THIS where to the J.Vht (.vh 111 AISTB SHOES I Ladies looking for such a il to call on not 7 o V?v for have ft lot oi" Iioivo: cows, jnoa Jdlhlic fin;1 ami suit!, I ofh-r -nU'iu at ,7 JUNE '88, st. three nines wet ol JMuttPtiiotli. fiv.-h milch cows, twenty (tow I il.iniis Ml, e mares, lour work hoix'py two e harness, fprii.'g ines, ftt'fdcrfctuek cue set of sii.gh number of clm-kens, and a lmtiintj. All have got to behold. with good security or cash. 1 I er u t h Herald 2L?oora ia botli its Willi KITH KK TIIK- respects are turning NEBRASKA. Herald lErlliMElTo T