The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, August 28, 1888, Image 3

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ZEECED IN PARIS.
OME OF THE TRICKS FRENCHMEN
PLAY ON VISITORS.
American Moot Merclleattly Swindled.
"Vhjt It CotU to Eat t a Flint Clau
Tri t-tiMirant Trlcka of Gulden auI
Walter Th Charge.
"Making a precarious living by taking in
Mfb other's washing. n This wns one of
Grenville Murray's jokef which he applied
to any village or town, the inhabitants of
which hal not any visible means of subsist
ence. Homothing of the samo kind of sentw
ment was et'hoel in a remark niale by an
Americau on the boulevard here a day or
two ago. "Everybody in Pari seems to live
by making a eoinniistWHi out of somebody
elsa.n Tho man hnd In-en sonio weeks in
I'aris, had U-ii flM-d right and left, upend
ing a lot of money and seeing very little and
petting lewi for it. "I'aris is a regular fraud,
le saiiL "You want in Americans to come
over hero and teach you what civilization
really is." The speaker was a practical busi
iicttfl man, as acute as a razor, a self mode
man and an inventor. Yet, in spito of nil
t smartness and his most business like
habits, he had "got left" in Paris.
The fact in that Americans who come to
Faria and don't know the ropes do get most
mercilessly swindled. Fully 50 per cent, of
tl'O Jnrgo sums sK-nt by Americans in this
city brings no return in value of any sort or
kind. Many leave I'aris imiigiinntly and vow
never to set foot in it again. Like the gentle
man quoted, they set I'aris down as a "regu
lar fraud." This is a pity, because It is hard
lines on a man who comes to a city for a
change and a holiday to lie sent away with
Jits temper Hoiled, ami all te more so that
with a little precaution ho could easily avoid
the hirpies who infest Paris perhaps mow
than any other continental city, including
Jfaplea.
codes axd cornntits.
Much good money is wasted on guides and
couriers. The regulation fee for th- services
f these is $2 a day ami a meat Very few,
however, content themselves with such a
salary. It is to tho extras that they look for
their profits. Thus it is very usual at meal
times for the courier to take his client to an
expensive restaurant. His client can't speak
French, wants to sample French cookery and
1 .ids his guide order. The guide order every
thing that he likes and what is most exien
sive. If his client has not the same tastes as
he, so much the worse for him. When the
bill has leeii paid the courier pockets the
document and will call in the evening to get
i."0 per cent, commission.
The American I have referred to had in
tins way been taken to all the lest restaurants
in Paris and hud spent on himself ana
his guide what would sufiice to keep a
French peasant nnd his family for a year.
At ono Louse, which is noted for its good
cookery and tho moderateness of its prices,
ho had paid $107 for a breakfast which he
had been unable to eat. Elsewhere he hail
spent 40 on a dinner which he valued at
seventy-five cents.
To convince him that one can dine well
and cheaply in Taris, I took him to a restau
rant I frequent, consulted his tastes, and
gave him a dinner Winch cost me for the two
of us just $1.40. He said he had not dined
so well since he had lieen in Paris.
There is absolutely no necessity to take
one's guide to lunch or dinner, and if visitors
would remember this they would save much
money and fare very much better. In every
good restaurant in Paris there are waiters
who can speak English to translate the items
ion the bill of fare.
SHOULD BE AVOIDED.
Much annoyance would also be saved to
visitors who dine at the restaurants if they
would avoid visiting houses where the prices
it dishes arc not marked on the bills of fare.
At such houses tho amount of the bill de
pends on the appearance of squeezeability or
otherwise of the customer. The very cele
brated houses should be strictly avoided by
the American visitor, unless he is accom
panied by a habitue. Barring the pleasure
of a tickled vanity, there is scant profit in
paying $-"0 for a dinner barely worth $3.
It should also be remembered that prices
of dishes are for quantities sufficient for two
persons at all the better restaurants. Items
not marked on the bill of fare which may be
offered by the waiters should be left un
touched. Two or three prawns on a plate, a
few olives on another, and such kickshaws,
will, if touched, bring the bill up 25 per cent.
"Waiters are in the habit of putting these on
the table without being ordered to do so.
In the matter of change visitors should be
very carefuL Certain moneys which have
jio legal currency in France are invariably
nt certain establishments offered to foreign
cr4i Chang for good money. It should be
""noted that the only moneys current iu France
besides French coins are those of Italy,
Greece, Switerland and Belgium. Russian
and Austrian gold is also currency. Rou
manian, Spanish aud South American coins
should invariably be refused. They can only
Le disposed of at a loss of 20 per cent The
coins of the late Tapal states can be passed
at nominal value, but should be avoided, if
possible.
In ordering goods made to measure such as
ladies' or gentleman's clothes, a written con
tract should be made, otherwise the amount
charged will very probably be doubled on tho
bilL The tradesman, if payment Is refused,
has the right to Lave the visitor's truuks
reized and to prevent him froir leaving Paris.
Tickets for theatres should never be bought
at any of tho theatrical agencies in the city.
These charge about double the right prices.
Visitors can always procure tickets at the
booking offices of the theatres in advance.
These are a few indications of how to avoid
bein swindled in Paris, and if people would
observe tbem one would bear less complaints
a visitors: There is do city, perhaps, iu
k world where so much pleasure can Le got
for as little money as in Paris, but in no city
either is the systematic swindling of foreign
ers, and especially of Americans, more ex
tensivelv carried out. li. IL Sherard in Xexr
Yori World.
A Good and Pretty House.
In the" business, bustle and brick of a city
we need to gather all the ideas of structure
-within reach and pluck from our miuds the
"reary wooden box conception of a habita
kin and make that one spot we call our homo
jsX as beautiful as artistic training and the
ngth of our parses can make it. We have
bat one earth life to live, and the quality of
V lie home settles tho quality of that life. A
shower of brown cottages let fall upon a
, breezy greensward and under the shadows of
spreading trees may each contain more hap
piness and contentment than are within the
Teach of the dwellers in as many lovely
palaces frescoed by immortal names. Nor is
it necessary that the man who has a house
fcuilt shall have all the technical skill of an
architect or a builder. lie may know in
stinctively when he has a good and pretty
, just aa ha may tell a good painting
-nit having an expert' artist's incisive
''e of the chemistry of colors.
VARIOUS OLD SAYINGS
Absurd Old Saw That Wr One
lieved by Good People.
We are apt to regard various old saws that
have been preserved to us as the epitome of
the wisdom of old observers, and possibly of
some value for that reason, as tho old ob
server bad so little to distract attention and
thought that his or her observation was
likely to be closer and of nioro worth than
the generalization of today, when people are
skipping from point to point and. like roll
ing stones, staying nowhere long enough to
gather any moss. But how many of these
old saws and dicta are painfully absurd on
their face, almost cruel to recall, when we
remember that there were icople who had
no recourse but to believe in them; people,
too, who could hardly le blamed in their
day for any sort of belief, while both St.
Augustine and Melanctbon hail belief in
the existence and horrors of the wehr wolf.
Among those legends are a huge mass of
instructions as to which day of the week, for
ins'.anco, is the best ono for cutting tho hair
and trimming tho nails; rules, to le sure,
that aro observed by people of more or less
intellect and good breeding today, not, they
will tell you, that they really believe in them,
but that in case tho instructions might be
true, they prefer to be on the safe side and
escape the penalties. Instructions also
abound as to tho fit day for engaging ser
vants, for starting on journeys, for buying
houses, building, and other matters. Accord
ing to these old dicta, if one puts out of lied
in the morning tho left foot first, nothing
could go right for the rest of the day. If ono
did not want ghosts to visit tho lieds'de at
night, one must not put the heels of one's shoes
toward the bed in taking them ofT. In tho
same room with a newborn child a fire must
be kept burning, to ward on the evil spirits
that might make a changeling of it; tho
child must never be taken down stairs before
it has been taken up stairs, lest it should
never rise in the world ; it must not be shown
itself in the glass before it is three months
old, or it will die; it must not have its little
nails cut in that time, or it will prove a liar;
if its mothar touches blade or ax or scissors
on the day "of its christening, it will meet its
death by some sharp instrument; if the sign
of the cross bo not made over the baby's
mouth when it yawns, the devil will enter in
at it.
To whip a child on Sunday is to ruin it;
but to whip it on a Good Friday is to make
it well behaved all the rest of its life. Nor,
according to theso words of wisdom, can a
child be allowed to walk backward, for the
child who walks backward drives its parents
by just so many steps toward the bottomless
pit; nor may you allow a child to read and
eat at tho noma time, unless you are willing
to ruin its memory. Other matters, too,
como under the jurisdiction of these ancient
prohibitions. The wedding ring should not
bo too small, unless one wishes for misfort
une. Of the bridal pair the one who first
kneels in prayer, or lirst rises from prayer,
is tho ono who first dies. These and a
thousand others like them are the rem
nants of former days, "and we can well
congratulate ourselves that we have escaped
from fno prison walls of reliance on 60ch
notions and cau afford to laugh at our fallen
fetters. Harper's Bazar,
A Shooting Incident In India.
Four Europeans who had been out after
tiger in tlie Maimensing district were, says
a Calcutta paper, returning at the close of a
very long day, and had almost reachsd tho
factory where they were to dine and jiass the
night, when the captain ordered a halt. The
"line" at once pulled up, and ho said: "I hata
seeing loaded rifles taken into a house (it was
tho old muzzle loading days), more especially
where there are children ; I propose that we
firo ours oft." "All right," said another,
"bat we have not had a shot all day; what
do you say to a 'pool T "There's nothing to
firo at," observed a third. "There's that
gburrah," said the captain, pointing to an
earthyrn vessel which some ryots who were
working at a little 3isf:ance had, as usual,
brought their day's supply of drinking water
in. "Very good," said the fourth, "but,
what with bad light and the distance, it's by
no means an easy shot I propos3 we each
put a chick on." "How shall we decide as to
the order of flringr said one. "Oh," replied
the captain, generously, "commence at your
end of the line."
Tho mark was by no means an easy one to
hit, for tho distance was well nigh a hundred
yards, the guns smooth bores and the light
that deceptive kind which one gets just be
tween daylight and dark. But, on the other
hand,-the hunters were exceptionally good
men, all excellent shots, either of whom could
hit a running deer from tho back of an ele
phant twice out of three times. "Fire away,"
said tho captain. No. 1 grazed the right side
of the vessel, and it was thought must have
hit it. No. 2 went just over it. No. 3 went
a little to the left "Thank you, gentlemen,"
said tho captain, "IU trouble you for tboso
12 rupees." He raised his gun as ho epoktf,
and the next moment the jar wa3 covered
with earth; the bullet had cut the ground
beneath it
Presently the vessel was seen to wriggle
and then to kick, while a feeble cry pro
claimed it to be a baby. Consternation was
depicted on every aee. The elephants
bolted, the sahibs jumped down and rushed
to the spot, the parents running from tho op
posite direction. The little mite hadn't been
touched, and was carried off by the father
and mother with great rejoicing. They also
took the "pool" along with them, and right
glad the sahibs were, under the circumstan
ces, to part with it New York Post
Aluminum As an Alloy.
But the chief uses of aluminum are in the
forms of alloy, which seem destined to take
tho place of steel, iron and other metals
where they are exposed to heavy work, its
tensile strength being far greater than that
of steeL The chief alloys aro copper and
antimony, but alloyed with brass it gives
out a clear, ringing sound when struck and
makes an excellent metal for bells. Alu
minum bronzo is used in making propeller
screws, it not being affected by water, and
neither does it corrode Aluminum iron
holds its color, gives a finer grain and pre
vents sand holes in tho casting. Alloyed
with Einc, copper and nickel it has a pale,
yellow tint, while with 5 per cent aluminum
and the rest copper it takes a rich yellow
fcimilar to brass. These alloys are used for
harness, or wherever a yellow metal is de
sired. They ore rapidly taking the place of
brass, being far less apt to tarnish and much
more easily cleaned. The new White Star
steamers now being made in England are be
ing fitted with this metal in preference to
any other. There would also seem to be a
large Held for it in the manufacture of musi
cal instruments that are now made of brass,
I'ew York Mail and Express,
Bad a Trained Ear.
A native of New Jersey, who is visiting in
Detroit, kept brushing around his face in
rather frantic manner .one evening whenever
the boat whistles blew.
At last some one asked him: "Do whistles
disturb youl"
Whistles r be responded blankly, "I
thought those were musquitoes buzzing
ci-ouad." Detroit Free Press,
A BABYLONIAN TEA.
NOVEL METHOD OF
SUMMER EVENING
SPENDING
IN TOWN.
Interesting Story Told by a Youthful UmaJ
of t'MMon-IIoif a Philadelphia Hostess
Filled tier GunU with Amazement and
ItellSht.
A suave youth, of small fortune, but large
social pretensions, who is kept in town by his
duties as a bank clerk $15 a week was a
triflo mystified a few days ago by the receipt
from a fashionable married woman of a
visiting card, on which was written, "Friday
evening, 8 to 10. Tea Babylonian."
"Tea Babylonian! Tea Babylonian!" be
read o train and again. "What new wrinkle
may that bo, I wonder."
It renuired about four seconds for him to
seo that his engagement book was virgin.
He made up his mind to go in a space of time
so small that ho had no method of calculat
ing. For, remember you, divorsions that
promiso anything worth speaking of to a
city bound swell do not como every day in
August
Tho next morning, warm as it was, the
youthful limb of fashion was swinging down
Chestnut street to his desk in tho banking
house as chipper as a boy with a new watch.
"Well," said I, "why so blithesome this
morning!"
"It was tho tea, the Babylonian tea," said
he. "I tell you it was a stuuuer."
"A nd what is a Babylonian tea?"
He was so full of it that ho must have re
garded tho opportunity to talk as a favor.
This is the story ho told:
"When I received the bid," he explained,
"1 had no more notion than tho dead what a
Babylonian tea might bo. However, as you
see. I went The house a charming one in
a fashionable street is the scene of many a
pleasant dinner and dance in the winter, at
which one is sure to meet a lot of agreeable
people, 1 had read in tho 'sassioty' column
of a newspaper that the host and hostess
were in town for a few days on their way
from somo Virginia springs to Bar Harbor.
"I was not at all surprised, therefore, to
find tho front stoop swept and trim as be
came the habitation of a Christian even in
midsummer, nor was I amazed to observe tho
door standing hospitably open. Thero was
something nofquite intelligible, however, in
tho circumstance that the only light to be
observed was furnished by a single gas jet in
tho hallway. A mau servant, however,
standing near the doorway mechanically
drawled out: 'Gentlemen s dressing room
third story back; ladies' front parlor.' As I
stumbled up tho stairs through semi-darkness,
I saw that tho door to the drawing
room was open, and, glancing In, J observed
what appeared to bo women's wraps on tho
chairs and sofas, which, however, were cov
ered with white linen, as when the house was
first put in summer order.
" 'A queer basket of chips,' thought I. 'If
this is tho Babylonian tea I shan't want
much of it, and where are tho Babyloniansf
"I was in tho third story back by this
time, when another scrvaut politely took my
hat and placed it with other hats and coats,
lie tlian opened a door at his left and I passed
down a gloomy passageway into another half
lighted room.
"As I looked blindly round ho asked my
name, I gave it him. He turned, and
simultaneously calling out my namo brushed
aside a curtain of some dark, heavy stuff,
and I passed into Babylonia.
"I fouud myself standing in an illuminated
garden. Glowing Cliineso lanterns wero
strung In fantastic designs along tiie edge
and drawn to a common point over the head
line in the center suggested a great canopy
of light Here and there among the branched
pglsas and the spreading fern varied hued
fairy lamps burned with a mild light, Small
tables were set out on the grass and illumin
ated by tapers burning in heavy silver can
delabra. Tho edgo of tho garden, on three
sides, was marked by a light balustrade. On
the fourtli the garden ended abruptly against
tho wajl of tUP houso. Looking beyond ttw
balustrade I could make out the tops of tvc&t
gently waving in the wind. I felt upon my
cheek also a breath of cool air, and upon my
mind flashed at onoe the truth I was stand
ing on a housetop. People in evening dress
were seated at the little tables or moving
about looking at everything curiously. My
host and hostess were standing near the cur
tained entrance, which, as I looked again, I
saw was not a doorway, but a low window.
I made my regards and they laughed
merrily as they observed my very observable
look of surprise.
" 'It is the same with every one,' chirruped
my hostess. Vmazement, tUeu, if I may be
permitted to say it, delight Pardon me,
but really I never had tho pleasure of gather
ing my friends at any entertainment that
afforded so much fun as this Babylonian tea
is giving.'
" 'But tbo idea,' said X, 'where did you get
nr
"Then she was good enough to explain that
her husband, who is a member of the tre
mendously rich 'Manufacturers' club,' had
casually mentioned that a feature of tba
club's new house, which is now being built,
will bo a summer garden on the roof. She
caught at tho remark as containing the sug
gestion for something altogether unique in
the way of entertainments. The develop
ment of the idea was manifested in the 'tea'
called Babylonian, of course, for a reason
that is clear to you with your recollection of
the celebrated hanging gardens. The roof
on which wo stood was that of the back
building, which was a stor3' or so lower in
height than the front The grass was in
sods, bordered in long shallow boxes, neatly
concealed by the green. The palms and ferns
and other exotics were of course in tubs, all
from tho stock of a florist A servant had
strung up the lamps, and a carpenter, with
out much ado, had put up the balustrade
against the possibility of anybody's stepping
Off the roof and tumbling into the back yard.
"As our hostess finished her little story soft
musio of strings came floating on the air
from somo invisible quarter. I determined
for myself that the orchestra was placed in
a room just off the garden out of sight, but
near enough to bo heard in a degree that was
pleasonter for being soft and low. Ices and
salads and some other things were served at
the little tables, and altogether everything
went on much as it would at a lawu party of
the every day kind. The company was not
a large one, but still it was numerous enough
to send everything with go and spirit Nearly
all the men were people who, as I knew, were
kept in town by the demands of business.
and usually appear more or less miserable at
the clubs. Naturally enough in August iu
town they outnumbered the ladies two to
one. Most "of the ladies were, like our host
ess, passing through town from one resort to
another. Some had come in for the 'tea'
from the country places at Bryn Mawr and
the other fashionable places regarded us
eubnrbs. They were so pretty and gracious
that they merited ail the attention they re
ceived. It was quite midnight, instead of
11 o'clock, when the 'tea' was over, end as
wo went out the rooms and passages, which
earlier were so dark,were brilliantly lighted,
making clear what 1 had supposed that is,
that the preliminary gloom bad been ar
ranged to make one the more susceptiblo to
tho glowing beauty of the roof garden."
Phihvdalpbia Cor. New York Herald.
JOHN G. GRAPHOPHONE, ESQ.
A New Entertainment for Midsummer
Gnet Correct Artlculatlou.
The latest invention of the day, the graph
ophone, has also been seized upon by nov
elty hunters, aud graphophone parties are
anion ir the midsummer season's festivities.
The host begs, borrows or buys a grapho-
phone. Then she sends out cards for an in
formal reception "to meet Mr. Grapho
phone." An expert operator is on hand to
present Mr. Graphophone to the guests, and
bring out his strong points. But that
worthy is generally allowed to introduce
himself in a harsh voice, somewhat after the
following manner:
"How are you? (whir). How are you,
ladies? (irr), I hopo 1 (snappp) see you well
this evening (pop-pop-jiop). Let me intro
duce myself (whir). I'm um-m 'raphophone,
(jiop), John G. Urrrapbphoue, Esq., etc,
eta"
After the professional has put the thing
through its paces, tho guests are invited to
"tackle" it. It is worth tho full price of ad
mission to see the scared, nervous look with
which a woman puts the receiver up to her
ear, after her doubts as to its diabolical na
ture have been silenced, but not obliterated.
The novice who tries to talk into it looks us
sheepish as though he were being compelled
to make love in the presence of a congrega
tion, and everything, even the most ordinary
platitudes of the telephone service, fly from
his memory and leave him speechless. There V.
generally a rising young ttyior in the party
who sings his latest song into tho machine,
and is a good deal astonished at the timbre
of the voice that comes back to him. It is a
fact that while the double mirror has long
enabled us to see ourselves ns others seo us,
no one, before tho introduction of the jrraph
Ophone into society, ever l. J.; ua
others hear it No person living could recog
nize his own voice when reproduced by a
graphophone, while from a medley comjiosed
of the utterances of a dozen of his friends he
will be aide to recogiiizo and name each
voice instantly. When a person speuks tho
sound is conveyed to his ear through tho
vibrations of tho skull aud not through the
vibrations of the air, the medium by which
other ears are reached. There is generally an
elocutionist on hand to declaim into the ma
chine, and unless he is a model of his kind,
he learn a few things about his own faults.
If the graphophone ever comes into general
use it will be the most powerful agency ever
designed for tho improvement and perfection
of articulation. Every indistinctness, ellijisis
or slurring of a syllable or consonant, is mag
nified by the machine, atid frequently leaves
a blank of half or three-fourths of a word.
After everibody has talked, whistled and
sung into the receptive ear of Mr. Grapho
phone, that gentleman bids them all a tear
ful adieu and the party breaka up, Wash
ington Cor- Nw York Tribune,
Making: Designs for Advertisements.
Some six months ago an artist of my ac
quaintance complained to mo in bitter terms
about the difficulty ho had. in making both
ends meet He was a painter of decided
ability, whose works should certainly have
sold upon their merit, but he was unknown
outside of artistic circles, and even in the
auctions to which he occasionally sent them
when driven to desperation, his canvases
brought no remunerative prices. Last week
I encountered my artist friend again. He
was doing the swell on Fifth avenue, with
tho most stylish of summer suits aud a gen
eral air of aifluenco. He informed me that
ho had just came to town from Atlantic
City, and was going to take a run down to
Newport for a couple of weeks. I asked
him if he had coma into a fortune, and lie
laughed.
"2ot exactly," said he, "The fact is, it is
soap. When I got so deucedly hard up that
I could uot have been any worse off, an ac
quaintance of mine, who is one of the edi
tors of a big magazine, sent f ir me to desig-a
a soap advertisement for that periodical I
was well paid for it Since then I have
been kept busy making designs for adver
tisements in the newspapers and magazines.
It pays cash, and more cash in proportion to
the labor thau painting pictures, and there is
more of it than I care to do. I have fre
qently to decline orders iu order to find time
to continue my painting."
It is a fact that few of the public are
aware of, I suppose, that many of the adver
tisement designs which appear in the various
publications of the day are executed by the
most prominent artists in the country. If
they were signed by the designers' names
they would be recognized as the productions
of men whose pictures receive high praise
at the regular art exhibitions ami whose
reputations are high in tho roll of American
artists. What with designing advertise
ments and making illustrations for books
and magazines, it is a very poor artist who
nowadays cannot earn a good living. For a
long time many of our painters held out
against the seductions of the commercial
community on the ground that it was be
neath their dignity to sacrifice their art to
business, but it is a rare case at present when
such a commission is refused. Alfred Trum
ble in New York News,
Keeping Track of Strangers.
It's easy enough to keep track of single in
dividuals in a crowd, if you are only looking
for some distinguishing mark. Things you
would not notice if you had no occasion to
identify a man will fairly crowd themselves
on jour attention when you are trying to
keep his name and personnel paired off to
gether. Some peculiarity of facial expres
sion is, of course, a common meaus of identi
fication, but there are other ways of keepiug
track of strangers who possess no glaring de
formities of form or feature. The quietest
dresser on earth may have some little pet
notion as to ties or jewelry or boots that
spots him at once to the shrewd observer.
One man may have a patch of gray right in
tbo middle of a brown or black beard, one
shoulder may be higher than the other, ono
front tooth missing, a small dimple may
divide the chin, his hair may be peculiarly
kinky or straight or long something's bound
to show me whether he has entree to the
floor. Doorkeeper in Globe-Democrat
Why We Have Bright' Disease.
An Albany physician saj-s Americana
suffer more generally from Bright's disease
and nervous complaints thau any other
people, because they sit down so persistently
at their work. When Englishmen, Germans
and Frenchmen walk and exercise, au Amer
ican business man will go to his office, tike
hi-: seat in his chair, and sit there all day
without giving any relief to the tension of
the muscles of the back. Tho result is that
these muscles surrounding the kidneys be
come soft and flabby. Thy lose their vital
ity. The kidneys them-ives become weak
and debilitated. If business men would walk
more and stand instead of sitting at their
desks their health would be much improved.
Chicago Herald.
Where They Should Vie.
"Peat's thimf said Mulcahey, pointing ts
the life preservers on deck. "Those are life
preservers," said the officer. Ob, life pre
sarvera, are they I Thin why don't yez send
thim to ther hospitals, where there's plintj
dying an' dying all the toixue, betladr
Oceau. -
The Plattsmouth Herald
Is on joying aSoamin both, its
EDITIONS
Year
Will be one during which the subjects of
national interest and importance will le
strongly agitated and the election of a
President will take jdace. 'lhe people of
Cass Count' who would like to learn of "
Political, Commercial
and Social Transactions
of this year and would keep apace with
the times shcnild
SUBSC Ta ttrtc
FOU F.1T1IEK THE
Daily 0-r Weekly Herald
Now while we have the subject before the
people we will venture to Bpeak ot our
re ss
0
I
Which is first-class in all respects and
from which our job printers are turning
out much satisfactory work.
PLATTSMOUTH,
AND WEEELT
1888
rvn
M
U Q
NEBRASKA,