it A"' j HURRY AND THINK , "LAST TIME." , I-urn to Kmluro rain Cre ' mala Figure Girls for IIoa 7omno Idflnenc I'ootl for In JoutrlioM Hints, Item, Etc. you ever stop, in the mWlst ft life' .taoun hurry nnd flurry, ami think to rfoursclf About tho "last time"' that is on its ' wy to you ami to inef There will lie a last timo for tho can loss good-by thrown to wife And ehll.lren on you hurry to the morning train. Thero will Le a last time when your sfc-p will tioanl the car nml your form will ininlo with the crowd of thoso who go about business when tho lay in new. There will bo a lst time to iuik a kind word iimtend of n cross 0:10, to give a smilu for a frown. There will t a hist time to mingle In the city' tiny stream of life, to mount your of fice stain nnl sit at your desk. There will lon last timo tOBcizo tho chance of honesty nnd of uprightness. There will be a hu.t time to lunch, a last timo to read the daily lapn, a hist time to watch the sun godovrn. There w ill Ik a last time to sp'iid a happy evening at homo, and bestow your company, i!N-cch and tnaunora upon tho members of your own family circle. There will bo a last time to Bay '"good night," to turn out the lamps ami woo the fickle goddess of slumber. There will lo a last midnight and a last new dawning of ft last day on earth. Knowing all this to bo so true, how shall wo Bet about to keep the vigil of what may lo the last hour wo have to jxmd I Take the children first. If an angel from heaven came tuddenly down and whispered in your ear, "The last day lini oome. You have but twelve more hours w live!" how, think you, would you set about to improve that time? Would you bo anxious about tho practleo hours, tho dress, tho personal nppearanceof the little ones you would soon have to leave? "Would you ato to train them how to dance, how to hold their hands in walking, how to jwse or iwsturef Would you stop to think of masters to tveh them to play, to paint, or to charm tho shallow world with any gift of alluring grace? Would you care whether their drcs was stylishly cut and made, or their garments freshly luuudried and daintily trimmed Would you give a second thought to any gift this world has in its power to bestow, whether of wealth or beauty or social honor? I think not. Fac ing tiiai !nt timo to bo together, I think your mind would turn to sweeter, purer things, and you would say something to this effect "Tho time has come, my littlo ones, when I must go and leave you. You will Iks alone in the world to-morrow, so far as mother love goes, and I pray you heed my last words. Be pure in all things; despise evil companionship and evil conversation nnd evil books. Keep your heart like a spot less flower, however you keep your outward garb. Carry back your soul to God unde liled ns tho June evening carries upon its lmsom the morning" rose. "Be truo alwavs. You maybe poor and lisivo to win your bread, but keep your lips flm speaking untruths and your heart from trooding deceit. Hone3t speech may not win you many friends, but such as it does win for you w ill bo worth the keeping. Re member, in friendship as in precious stones, it is not tho quantity but the quality which tells. "Keep your heart kind. Bo tender to c cry thing that God lets live. Tho child that w ill needles.-ly torture a fly will make a cruel man or woman. You may not have gold to give, but God has given you a purse to draw from, the alms of which, dispensed among the children of earth, turn sorrow into sun shines and tears into smiles. Thoughtful words and deeds of helpfulness are OetUrr than dollars in our pockets to nuikeiiw run smootlu "Be loval to principles, friends and God. The man who forgets a friend in time of need - will make a no-account sort of angel if ever La manages to slip into heaven. lie isn't worth hikeop either here or yonder. And finally, little children," you would say, 're member and let love hold its beautiful sway in vour hearts and homes forever. Xevcr 1.3 ashamed to show the demonstrations of 1 vc, for love is God and where it dwells is the temple of God, whether it bo roofed in by thatch or canopied with royal splendor. ?.o home can le utterly unhappy where lovo Ui no heart can go far astray held by love's bands no soul can peris'a upborne by the wings of ,ar ana u.Oft love." So say ing, you would bid tho wondering little os:e3 good-by aiul walk with covered face into the Shadow of Death's soft and dusky wing. "AmUf in Chicago Journal. Rots Should Ton-Uned. ITiaco Albert's father was of opinion that ono of tho most important things in educa tion is to teach children to bear pain with composure. lie never inflicted pain upon hi3 sons, but if they suffered from toothache, or any other bodily inconvenience, ho would not fellow them to complain or cry out. They were expected to seek the proper remedy, but, in tho meantime, bear it ia silence; that is, without Inflicting pain upon others. ' - Prince Albert followed this system in bring ing up his own children, and his son, the rrlnce of Wales, acted upon it also. A guest at Sandringham was much surprised when ; one of the Prince of Wales' children fell ipon an oaken floor with great violence, to e him get up, rub himself a little, and limp way without assistance or sympathy from -y one, though both the child's parents were ant. " guest was informed that this was the ' tho house, tho idea being to accustom 'area to endure pain and inconven which princes and princesses have share. Thero is, la truth, no pro j Europe more arduous and exacting' At of prince. we all have to bear an immense amount i. We all have to do many things that not want to do, and to abstain from many things wo very much want to . ais is tho human lot, and there is no Jilityof avoiding it. No people 6uffer jucn as thoso who rebel against this law -ur being, and no people suffer so little as a wbo cheerfully accept it. hardening system can be carried too , surely it is an essential part of train--aire the power to endure inevitable ' nomo resolution and dignity. ' the other day of a family of "O two of whom could take drink at breakfast. One ono must have green tea; wrefebed without black w no joy ia life until sbs jitai another compromised t sixth could only drink milk, water. These people had ' -,ialgad their preferences " their special beverage es--ution of their lives, ''iloasly nourish such - ,:- by bestow- rery bruise v a habit of m how 1 for . ire that puppy any meat," ays the dog doctor. "But he won't eat anything else," replies the boy. Then," rejoins the healer of !ogs, "leave his meal with him till he does eat it." As it is with dogs, so it is with Ikvb. Fool ish fancies depart from bovs when they are so happy ns to have a keen appetiteand the boy who kuows that no one will pick him up and kiss him will get up himself nnd rub his own head if it is bruised. Yoifln'u Compan ion. To Secure Cwotl Figure. If you want the grand, sloping shoulders ! of tho Venus, which moke the waist small in proportion, you can find no exercise equal to j pumping water, and if 3'ou havo a force pump about tho honse reserve tho use of it ' for vourself. Begin with ten minutes' work, tho wet towel pinned tightly round tho hips, corset off and a Mother Hublwrd gown 011, which is tho liest modern version of tho Greek robe possible. Wet tho hcud well, for tho exercise will pump tho blood well over tho body, heating the templtta and spine; roll up your bleeves, sponge and wijK) tho arms dry, ami go to work moderately at first. In ten minutes or less quit, sioiige off the mus cles that quiver and burn, drop into an easy seat and rest ten or fifteen minutes, then pull again, resting and working for an hour. Keep this up a month and you won't know your shoulders and arms for tho same. Walker in his well known work on artistic lieauryfinys tho absence of fine arms in wo men is due to long sleeves and want of exer cise. Pumping, sweeping, spinning, throw ing stones at a mark and playing quoits ure all better than tennis or rowing to secure finely modeled arms and busts. The way to get the most benefit from work is to time one's self and see how much can bo dono in a quarter hour, a half hour and so on till the sweat flows, that great restorer of the complexion and refiner of tho figure. It carries off the grossness of the body and though it is u proverb in outspoken districts that such a one is "too proud to sweat," and I havo heard ladies of middle station in so ciety aver that they never perspired, as if it were a sign of gentility. They never failed to pay tho penalty in thick sallowuess of face and adipose. Tho moderate, easy going woman grows fat. The active, quick footed one keeps down her flesh and shows as trim a w aist and ankle ut 4o ns sho had at 30. That fatal thickening at tho liack of tho neck, by which men profess to know women past 40, is an unnecessary consequence. The woman who uses tho shoulders freely and rapidly w 111 show us flat and fine an outline of tho back at 80 ns my beautiful Italian "Reading Girl," and there is hardly a pleasanter sight after tho roses and lily figure of 10 than ono of theso trim, pice, wholesomo ladies of CO, with a waist as fino as that of her own granddaughter. A woman w ho is too fine to work is too fine to le fair, and she will be stout tho one fatal defect in a woman of any age. To secure the round slenderness, which is far enough removed from vulgar plumpness, care must be given to the nutrition of the skin. Tho hot soap and water bath should be taken and tho skin dried in a warm rooa by brisk rubbing with a towel. Friction with tho band should follow, and when the skin glows to redness it is to bo anointed from head to foot with plenty of pure olive or almond oi, These are chosen as being nearly identical with tho composition of human fat and quickly assimilated. When rubbed with oil tho person should sit over a hot air register or in a sun lighted window until the oil is absorbed. The skin will take in this way ten times tho nutriment tho stomach is able to manage, and tho result, in very emaciated bodies, is a marked soft ness, trarwlucency, and gain in flesh. Tho rays of the sun, falling directly on the skin, have tho most potent effect, iucreaslng its activity for tho exchange of worn out parti cles and deposit of new ones. Shirley Dare's Letter. Cirls for Ioin llonseuorlt. Tho people of New England not many years ago were "wiser in their generation." They designated tho female who was em ployed to do housework us the "help," though she'discbarged tho same duties as the "hired girl"' in a western village or tho "domestic servant" in any of our largo cities. "Help" soun.U much better than "hired girl" or any kind of "servant." It implies an associate and suggests somo sort of equality. Tho in ference is that a hc-lier 1j somewhat inferior to tho person she assists, but a jeasonablo explanation of this is afforded by the cir cumstance of youth and inexperience, condi tions that are very nattering to a young woman. The word "help" or "helper" docs not suggest positive inferiority, but inti mates that tho person to whom tho term is applied is fairly enable, trustworthy and is in tho way of advancement. A bad word or phrase often does a good deal of njischief. When this is tho case it is best to allow it to become obsolete. Many a good woman has lost her "help" by referring to her as he servant. Most persons are servants one way or another, but no one likes to be called so. Tho question of how to obtain and keep reliable, efficient and capable girls for doing housework, like tho poor, is always with us. Tho demand for such girls constantly in creases. The supply in city or country is never equal to the demand. In turn. Amer ican, English, Irish, German and Scandi navian girls have show n a disinclination to engage in domestic service partly on ac count of the unfortunate name. 2fo intelli gence offico is needed for supplying "sales ladies," dress makers, milliners, stenogra phers or typewriters. It is seldcm neces sary to advertise for any of them. They do their own advertising and make personal ap plication for positions. Chicago Times. Xood for an Infant. In regard to the quantity of food suitable for an infant, there are a great many very erroneous notions which should be corrected. Tho stomach of a child uuder 4 m.mths old will old, in its natural condition, only about & small wineglassful. Of course by stretch-iui-for it is very elastic it can be made to hold several times that quantity, but, when so distended, it pi-esses upon the other organs, pushes them out of place and causes pain. When this fact is known, tho folly of allow ing the child to feed from a bottle containing half a pint or more of food will at once ap pear evident. When the stomach is distended vomiting is often tho measure of relief. In distention, when the superfluous food is not thrown off, the baby is f Atf ul aud cries with pain. It is overloading the stomach which frequently excites colic. Mothers seldom recognize tho fact, however, and, as a rule, interpreting the littlo one's cries as an evi dence of hunger, go on giving it more food end making masters worse. Permanent dis tention Of the stomach is not infrequently the consequence oi overieeumg, iuc ui au, miu is elastic, losing its power of contracting to its original size. When such a condition ex ists, the sufferer waste away even when tho proper food is given in correct quantity. Bc&tou Herald, ' Influence of a OooU Woman. And still we respect and admire a gentle man, and we take off our hats and worship a gentlewoman. Still we like to VLsj tho Land of a poor and innocent girl and listen to the ..:XD : I'LA fiSaOQTii. ntBKASKA, TUESDAY. SKPTKM HER low soft voice and refined thought of an educated and delicate woman. Isu't tho luooDligbt brighter, th sight air purer, the world better worth living In when we leave the presence of a good woman than when tho swinging door of a saloon closes behind us and a burst of fetid atmosphere follows us into the street? No man ever yet reformed unless under some such iiiflueno, and I don't Ix-lieve any man over felt such influences without a seuso of his own unworthiness and a momentary resolution to cut his low ac quaintances ond habits. I am not saying that be did it. There's nothing so wenk in the world ns a man's resolution to reform. Bat you can always tell when a man has been sending an evening with a charming, refined womaiu You sometimes, you know, meet a man coming down the street about 11 o'clock. Ho is walking with a firm tread, his head up in tho air. He may lo humming something; ho is proud of himself; ho bus a dignity about him that you can see in the dark. Ho nas been there and bo can't help showing it. You nre a very common, ioor object to him. He despises you; for hasn't ho been virtuous? Yes. It does him good, and years after the odor that came from her dainty jKx ket hand kerchief may strike him in far different soci ety and recall the resolution ho mado under tho delightful influence, forgotten next day. San Francisco Chronicle "Undertones." Hygiene for tho Iiaby. The better hygiene you can observe for the first eighteen months of baby's life, tho hot ter chanco the ehild has of living. A slight ailment, eucii as a cold, a littlo irritation of tho bowels from solid food may be tho match to gunjKwder, and uuother life is chilled in tho building, another homo is made sorrow ful that else would have been happy. It is a fallacious idea that a young child needs any thing but milk, if that agrees, until tho teeth aro present in numbers sufllcient for masti cating food. Even 6oft foods often work mischief. Starchy foods need ptyalino for their digestion; this is a chemical ingredient of tho saliva, but infants have very littlo saliva and less ptyaline, therefore the cus tom of giving potatoes, crackers and so on, dining tho early months is jiernicious. While it may not harm nine out of ten, the tenth one may die. Amelia A. Whitefield in Good Housekeeping. Creation of the Home. Tho modern ideal homo is just as much an intellectual aud emotional work as an essay or a poem. A book is n collection of thoughts. Such also is a dwelling house, anil the woman who has in some degree fashioned it is as much an intellectual creator as is tho masculine toiler whom we call an essayist or ioet or dramatist. While, there fore, the now home of our age is the result of tho great and free woman, it is also tho cause and has mado woman tho xssessor of an intellectual power which sho could not cluim in the cabin and tent ieriod. Tho houso has helped to create the new woman. Good Housekeeping. Care of the Xalls. The linger nails of Americans are likely to bo dry and to break easily. Vaseline rubbed on the nails after washing tho baud.? will do a world of goxl to dry nails. Manicures first bathe tho hand a long timo in hot water, then ith scissors and knives clean and cut tho nails, remove tho suierfiuous skin about the onyx, then polish tlie nails with buckskin and fino powder, washing tho hand again in hot water with soap. After drying, tho nails ore polished with a fine brush and are finally rubled with a rosy unguent to give them a shell pink. Good Housekeeoing. Treatment for Freckles. No cosmetic, however well advertised, re moves freckles. It may temporarily hido them, but it will bo at the expeuso of tho tex turo of tho skin. A lotion of Jamaica rum and lemon juice is frequently effective, but strawberry juiee applied at bedtime is decid edly the best, both for freckles and those an noying moth or liver patches. Strain the berries through a thin cloth and apply two or thieo times before going to bed. This is excellent for sunburn or redness of tho skin, as well as for disccflorat ion. Lucy C. Lillie Truth fulness of Children. It is in youth that tho spirit of truthfulness may best be cultivated. Few realize how strong are the impressions made upon the heartof childhood by the examples which are given to it. Let no one imagine that to teach a child not to tell a lie is sufiicientto make hini really truthful. He must bo imbued with tho lovo of iositive truth; and that can be infused only by those who are themselves inspired by it. Once a Week. People whose lungs are not strong Eecd not necessarily get out of breath in climbing a slope or a pair of stairs. Before beginning the ascent, take a deep breath, at a certain distance pause and take another. I am as sured if this is done correctly, no ono need arrive at the end of the climb panting and gasping. If you are afraid that your yeast cakes aro a little stale, put ono of them in a cup of warm water with a good pinch of hops; let this stand for an hour or so beforo using; it will have an excellent effect on tho yeast and will insure good bread. A niece of heavy flannel doubled two or four thick and placed in the bottom of wire hanging baskets before tho dirt is put in will keep the water from dripping if caro is used in sprinkling the plan's. Wild moss is also excellent. If you have occasion to uso clothes wet in hot water about an invalid, do not try to wring them out of the water. The best way to prepare them is to steam them; they can be handled with comparative case. To remove paint from windows, take strong bicarbonate of soda and dissolve it iu hot water. Wash tho glass, and in twenty minutes or half an hour rub thoroughly with a dry cloth. Sprinkle salt immediately over any spot Where something has boiled over on the stove, and tho place may bo more easily clcaued. This also counteracts the bad odor. To removo mildew, rub the spots well with soft soap, then cover with a mixture of soap and powdered chalk and lay upon the grass. To removo tar from tho hands, rub with tho outside of fresh orange or lemon ieel and wipe dry immediately. Green blinds that Lave faded may bo made to look like new by oiling over with a brush ing of linseed oil. Indian meal and vinegar or lemon juice used on the hands will heal and soften them. Have your shades begin below the stained glass, to that the color w ill show iu the room. Evidence of Prosperity, "They say H inkle's started a resteiraEt over at Bigsby." ; "Heard how he's makin' it goP "Good, I guess, I seed 'im last Monday, an' be bad a plus hat on." Harper's Bazar. MILITARY TACTICS. V'HE CHANGED CONDITIONS OF MOD ERN FIELD WARFARE. Individual Inilrpvaalrncr, Strategy and Oiitu Order front In Il;ttl Kequircd by tho New Vruuona The Line of Iiutilo Tint Utile Maneuvering. When wen ions were not so formidable or deadly wo depended on the united action and constant co-operatioi of lurgo.eompact masses of men moving as a unit, seeking to crush tho enemy by their very weight, and giving to each other that moral support which re sults from companionship in danger. IJut new weaions will require ls attention to the discipline of the mosses and a moro per fect disciplino for each individual soldier, who must rely more upon himself and regard his weapon rather than his companions as his best and surt defense as well as tho means by which ho may contribute most to the defeat of tho enemy. Ho must look less to tho support of his friends and inoro to his own individual movements and to tho judi cious expenditure of his ammunition. Ho must be taught with more care to tuko cover, to advance by rushes, to practico tho princi ples of strategy, while exhibiting tho same personal bravery as in times past. The experience of the United States array on tho plains in the numerous Indian wars has been of the most practical and trying kind and iieculiarly applicable to modern tactics. There aro no moro wily strategists than tho Indians. Their tactics havo always been characterized by great persons! rhi-ov.-d-ness, wariness and tti-..u-ey. ia them indi viduality is developed to tho fullest extent. Their movements are quick and free from all stiffness, while they ore celebrated for their ambuscades and ruses, their great endurance, accurate marksmanship and tho habits of taking cover and securing every possible ad vantage for personal safety, with great brav ery at tha same time. All these principles aud iioculiarities of Indian warfare with open order fighting find practical application in modern tactics, and the urmy officers who have fought this foo for many ears, learn ing all their tricks and checkmating them at their own game, are well equipped with ideas that may well be embodied in our new system. " A foreign officer who was sent to witness the grand review of our armies in Washing ton at the close of tho civil war and report thereon, declared to his sovereign that he had never seen an army so remarkable for "moral discipline." In this he referred to tho great intelligence of tho rank and file tho indi vidual disciplino and independence. Many foreign officers were inclined to crii iciso tha peculiarities of our soldiers their freedom of action, which the foreigner thought tco moblike. But the bravery they displayed, tho terrible loss of life inflicted nnd the dress parade precision in masses which they would exhibit whenever it was applicable only proved the tendency to select the methods best suited to tho circumstances and tho na ture of tho case, to the ground and tho pecu liar country in which they fought. They were simply practical, and precision of move ment was not always possiblo nor desirable. But today clocklike movements of masses under lire are not permissible, and it follows that the qualities for which our soldiers wero criticised iu 1805, as well as thoso for which they were praised, will bo tho ones most to bo cultivated in the future. In short, the in dividual intelligence and independence of our soldiers w ould iucreaso their efficiency under the changed conditions of warfare, and diminish greatly tho advantage possessed by foreign armies duo alone to their perfection and permanency of organization rather than to the superior intelligence or strategic abil ity of their officers and men. Tho general principles whica will govern tho new tactics are pretty well understood. On former daj s tho skirmish lino was throvi out, under cover of which the troops were deployed and formed in two ranks for battle, the skirmishers being then withdrawn or re placed by tho compact line. All this will now be changed, and means will bo provided by which troops in any formation may bo quickly deplo3'ed in three lines for battle. The first line, composed of from one-third to one-half of each battalion, will be thrown forward, as was tho old skirmish lino, to open tho Lattle, followed at a distanco of several buudred yards by a supporting lino of about one-third of each battalion, while tbe re maining force will bo held several hundred yards in rear of tbc supporting line, massed and under cover if possible, ready to be de ploved when most needed to cover a retreat, to meet or to make a turning movement, or to join the main body in the final rush. The men in each of the three lines will be assigiuyl to small groups, ei?li with its leader, whoce movements and directions they aro to follow. Individual freedom will therefore bo perni it ted with the singlo qualification that the groups be kept intact as far as possible, ral lying or deploying, advancing or retreating together, thus insuring control by tho officers through tho group leaders of non-commissioned ofScers. The first or firing line will seldom be with drawn or received under fire, but will gen erally remain and fight to the finish, being re-er.forced by the two lines in the rear. Am munition must therefor bo carried in ns larga quantities as possible and husbanded with care. Tho new small caliber, high powered rifles now being adopted by foreign powers will enable the men to carry many more rounds of ball cartridge than formerly, and, although the smaller and lighter bullets will not kill so often or produce such ugly wounds, their increased velocity ani greater range and accuracy will make up somewhat, aud the number of wounded will be in creased. Wounded men embarrass the move ments of an army more than the dead, and in short campaigns cripplo it more effect ually. Men from the supporting line will be graduallv thrown forward into tho filing lino to take advantage of any weakness of the enemy or to meet a heavy attack, tho men always attaching themselves to tho groups as they come up. Whole groups from the supports will frequently te thrown into tho intervals in tho firing line. There will be little maneuvering under the deadly fire of modern arms; the lines will be ablo to do little more than advance or re treat, rally by groups to fire volleys, or to carry some point of advantage by a rush. The reserves will be depended on to meet emergencies. Flank attacks -and turning movements will be .the rule, and strategy must be practiced more in the future than in tho past, or at least it will have a stilt greater influence in determining the result of a battle. The supports will finally become merged in the firing line, giving by their impetus a for ward movement to the whole line or enabling it to withstand the enemy. There will thus be a constant push from the rear under the direction of the officers. One side will event ually give way, and the time will come when the victors must make a united rush in a more or less compact body or in a line of groups. Tew York Times. In Chill the paper money is so depreciated that hotel charges are about 1500 a day and loot blacks ggt $10 for a shine. 11 1SR8. j Ubrd to The Importance of tho rosult3 of tho prenent political campaign Ca. overestimated by thooo who desire tho succosw of tho Republican part j. Democrats, besides tho " Solid South." arc, in tho North intrenched tx. breastworks of public patronage. It will tako utcady. camo-it, and ur... work to dlslodce them. No'hing will act surely bring about that relr. nest And united work as the circulation oi sound political litermtur. and C THIS CLASS NO OTHER 13 AS EI'FICIENT A3 THIS DAILY AND WEZS LY NEWSPAPER. Speeches and documonuj aro road Ly tho fow, and when road aro laid aside; tho now;3pxpur la tho firesldo fnond. tho trusted family companion. It3 inlluncol i continuous, constant. Tho Republicans can not aid their pai ty bettor than by circulating HtTbcQ Dail5 Infer 0cean$r It is a live RepubllCtn Newt punor. and ha-5 been faithful among tho faithless in Chicago. No manTiaa ever questioned its eoundnesa on tho pUtfora. bocauoa the principles of tho pla form havo been advocated by THIS INTER OCEAN SLy yeara PROTECTION TO AMERICAN INDUSTRIES AND AMERICAN MARKETS FOR AMERICAN PRODUCERS have been lta battle crloa from the beginning. It did not tako it Ux. weoka to ascertain whether it could etand on the platform or not. , Republicans hivo dono much to aid in tho inculcation of also politic! doctrines ty patronizing pipers that advocate thorn. Why t-hould they do ao when thoy can avoid it by subscribing lor THE JNTtR OCEAN, which Is acknowledged to bo The Best and 7ost Reliable newspaper PnMtehFvd In Chicago? Ii en'.erpTi? niwn, odltorlal ability, and ovorvthinff that goelto inako iV COMPL12 IE NEWSPAPER it la unxcolled by any o? it3 conemporarie3. Every Republican ought to subscribe for it. . . Every workingman ought to t ubscribo for l. It is tho papor for all classes of patriot lc peoplo who bolleve in protecting the hemes of America. You can subscribe through your n jwjdoalor or po3tma3tor. If you are unable to do that send direct to tho offico ol publication. Sample copies are slwayj c-':-.-. 'J':'1'- '!"" A -'-"' THE IKTHirR OCEAN, CHICAGO. IE3 33 -A- 23 3Lj 3xl ju 2T , DKALKIl IX STOVtS, AND ALL HOUSEHOLD GOODS. -LATEST WlXf DOW CURTAINS K Ei'T CONSTANTLY ON HAND. PICTURE 2TB.I23s"iiZx)S TO SIXTH STREET, BET. MAIN AND VINE. I'LAITEMOUI If. EI1. Bennett t n t i -DEALERS IN FineStapie and -Iletvlrmarters 'raits and Oranges, Lemons JJamui.s and Jill varieties of fresh and n Canned Fruits constantly on hand. PRICES LOW. GIVE US A CALL. e Street Jonathan JIatt. rsa e PORK PACKERS and dealers in BUTTER AND EtHJS. BEEF, POltK, MU'iTON AND VEAL. THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Sugar Cured Meats, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c, &c ct our own make. The best brands of OYSTEKS in cans .ml bulk, at WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. W y g S CQ o I O 3 n i wiVl ,uil C 3 Q S 1 Mi 4 CI 1 ft O ID? 8 1 oi i?3 oi g3 Send your job work to the Herald office. FJepublifc S KINDS OI STYLES OF- Fancy Groceries for all kinds of- Vegetables ! & TUTT, Plattsmouth. J. W. AIakthis. cap gk Ra C. F.SMITH, The Boss Tailor. Maiu St.. Over Merst-s' Sl - St.u-. Has the be&t and most complete t-tot-k of samples, both foreign arxl domotic woolens that ever came west of Misconri river. Note these prices: Business suit from 1 to fi, dress suits, $2-1 to $4., pants 4, 5, ?. sind Tp J'Will guaranteed a fit. Prices Defy Compeiilion. DRSCAVE & SMITH, "Painless Eentists." Tr-e only Pentiet in tti West cnutrollnjr tld v System i t Extracting nl KiiliiiK J eeu without I'aln. 'iir anaeMlietic i en tirely tree from ClILOROFOKMOJtKTIIEK ANI IS AliSOLUTElA" Harmless - To - All. Tt-e'li extracted and JTtiflci:.! teeth lnrilet n-xt ilaytfdemred. Tlio preservations! th r.atnral teetli a specialty. rOLD CROWNS, GOLD CAFS, BRIDGE WORI. Tbe vctj finest. OfTW In I'nlon Iiloek, over Fricke'a Drugstore. t a i rr run Nl I SJlit,