PLjlflSMOuTfi, WiEilKASKA, FPJ1AY. SEMEMRKK M, 1SS8. ) (. ,AVERY. OF SLAVES GENER 4 ED THEM KINDLY. at Krliool . Tear.ber In Ante -iiy r.y IJf of tin Colored .JarxU Strong Attachment i the mack nn.l Vhlt-. ilirt avcraj) New nnglanil youth who to ir-i:turky to teach kouooI .anywhere ti thirty to lUty year no tho skvcs ap ,cr;rc! to li.ivf n pretty easy tiruoof it. They did Mt work liko tho tsons of well to do farmers in r.Iiino nnl Vermont. They bail Moro money ami more timo for enjoyment. Mason county nt the timo I lived t lie re had ft very laro slnvo lopnl.ttiou. As cooipurerl with ll:o uliiro ojuialiii, I believe it wan lis Jar tis in nn v urt of the south, except a few I'.inVin-s in South Carolina. I rxju-eted t- witnt -H hhk-Ii cruelty, but I iiever iiiL 'J'l: oiviii'M of Kiaves generally treated them kiniliy. Tin-y -ci-tautly did not overwork them. I well rernemlier tho first time I walked out from the villao anion; the j farms. I saw fiftoc 11 nbl liodied negroes sit ting like k'i many black crows on the top rail of a f ik o at !' end of a cornfield. It was l :ti nf I r 1') in the momini;. There was ii- s!:ivt; ilriver, with wlii in Land, mounted ou a Loie, as 1 had expected to see. The men who wero resting, and whoso mules were '.it in.; corn leaves, were bent out to .:. w corn. I hiked the man who was near er t to me if anything wan the matter. "Oh, n, ii i s.i, I..; aiiswcrea: "we was jes.3 n-v.nit in;; Tor il horn to blow for dinner." i found that was nU.ut a samplo of the way hlaves worked, or rather rested. On Safim lay I was Mirprita.il to find most of tho in ro jioj'iilatioii in town. Many of them brought' in wood cut on massa's place, which they hold ami received the pay for. The money they sj-nt as they choso. Others were !rii--d ia their Sunday clothes nm Iliad come i;ito t..n .simply to have a oxl time. I found t'.Kit nearly every blare hiul u plot of ground of his own tm which he raised to barcn, sweet I-! a toes and other things, which ho sold for the puri-j of obtaining spending money. The tvo weeks that included the winter holidays was the timeof jubilee when nearly every slave worked for whom he chose iuu! had the money he earned. If masters ami mistresses deired to have their own . lxiys and girls work ut home during the holi- tlay s aio:i it was necessary to euga;e them some time in advance. Such opportunities for eurning money were unknown to boys Jroiight upon New England farm, as my old friend ami myself could testify to. Tlio next thing that struck me as very Strang" wm the strong attachment that ex isted bf'i v. eeii the whites nill blacks that had the s.ni'e home. Nearly every male slave re jvirdfl his ow ner as the greatest man iu the c-oui.'trv. lie tool: pride iu bim and boasted ;iVut hiiu wh'-uever there was an opior tuniry. If 1" was treated pretty strictly or even Severely he still thought massa was a militv li man who hadn't time to waste over comii;;.iii A-ople. Almost every slave, old or young. Junked ou missus as a saint, cjil was not far out of the way. The south cm woman who was at the head of a large family of whites and blacks was in a worse condition of slavery than any person aliout the plantation. There was a birth, marriage or death in the family almost every week. She was the coufulant of every one and the jxtsoti relied ujn for advice and assistance, licr time was nuylody's but her own. She w.n literally ' the servant of servants." Her lesion. .I'ih'.ieswero many and varioL She fcal V.t'.' i time for reading, rest, recreation or ro'.-iety. The li-.u-.rn u of slaves In-longing on diflVr cr.t f-trins c:v generally taken up by their in.i t.'i s. 2;. white man could abuse a slave Lelougiri. to miotl'er with impunity, lit? was caiied t answer for his act as promptly as if ! i:au mistreatiil a son. In tracing up the can .oof enmities between white families I pencrjillv found them to h-j connected with the tre.itiu. i.t cf slaves. Two nice girls in u,y school r.cvcr talked together, I noticed, though tla ' l lu::ged to the same class and vcreg'-ucraf favorites. I wondered ct this aa.l i7i'.ured aoout it. I learned that the jp-md.'a.her of one of the girls, while in a pa : ion, struck the favorite servant of the jp-andfathcr of the other girl and declined to pologi;u for iu This occurred beforo my pu i .ils were Uirn. 1 lot h parties to the quar rel l:a I long been dead, but the quarrel was not seiih-l, and I question if it is now. There was a law iu Kentucky, as iu other southern states, that forbid giving instruc tion t slaves iri reading aud writing. Still, I was ceiivir.vd that nil the bright negroes wlo v.-.ait. 1 to le:irn to read did so. It is vtrv ii;:".tei:".: to keep persons from acquiring r. k'.ovi ;..-.!go cf a written l.iriguage. If books nn 1 pap. ; a iv e;'osed jcrsons will learn to read tiiem. I noticeil that a .-olored loy vLo l.a 1 a d. z: a h tters to deliver at differ ent places k-i "i e.-.ch at the right place. When n :itw chil i was leing instructed in read ing r-i l:on;i ;i!i n dozen little blacks would lxTlearmug. A little white boy or girl who j Liyed '"keep ::g school" had ngro children for pu;- il?. A siave w ho learned how to read vas u--t lor.g in learning how to use a map. In one short lessen he found out where Can ada was ar.d wLat state ho would have to pass through to get there. Mild as was the system of slavery that pre vailed in Kentucky, there were some who es caped from it. They were not, as is gener ally supposed in the north, thoso who were worked very Lard, were enied all privi leges and pleasures, and were beaten for lit 'eor to cause. Tho class that ran away priaed the petted or spoiled negroes, who -my privileges and ways, of making ' -t who did very little work, those j hard a reputation that they had , iemLs and wanted to try their luck in a jf place, those who bad committed petty mes and were undiscovered, and those had made unhappy marriages. If there ,re two suitors for the same dusky damsel would sometime tell the other that his jester was embarrassed and that there w as anger of his being sold aud sent down the iver. He knew that if ho could scare his rival into running away he could secure the prize both wers eeekiDg. Love is a disturb ing clement in the hearts that beat under LuTck as well as under white skins. Rodney "Velcjj in Chicago Times. -w College 31a. tin Great Progress. -ou are erecting a young men's ir'town," uu4 Alpha to Omega. rogressingr y," replied Omega, "The baser , are already laid out, and ground 7U for the college buildings in a raths." Xorristown Herald. Tollowa Naturally. j id J child P inquired th xna--l :tlewif that applied for txclatmed the ten- to Tribune. jo irxouae. - tb thin- t.bot. NEGnO SUPiiitMlTION. AFRICAN FETICHISM bOFTENED BY CONTACT WITH CIVILIZATION. Cliarma Worn for l'rotectloii -tcalrnt th Kll Onn T!i Itrllef Iu Witches uiid "Cimjur Nlfccni" Slci PortcmliiiE Death Varloun I.iiillorom Xotinim. The contact of tho African with a mighty civilisation modified and softened his f Mich ism, and today his superstition is of u, differ ent fiber. He is a firm U I lever in a personal d'ivil, anil uccepts him wifh nil time l:o:iorel f tago properties horns, tail, cloven foot and ml hot pitchfork. For protection against this awful one tho negro wore tho greatest iiatnl.'T of charms. To vr.r.I of.L:s famiUari t!.-? v itches, every negro nailed to his cabin door a hors'-sho-. This charm, however, had no power unless it had been accidentally found. Tho "white folks at tie big house" were often presenU-d with one of these ifitcb defiers, and if they failed to use it, the giver, pityingly and surreptitiously, iiaihal it SDtue whero ou "marsterV premises. Old negro nurses teach their charges that the tangles which after a night's sleep are opt to apjx-ar in the hair ire knots tied by witches, and everyljody in the southern states is familiar with tho darkies' belief that witches rido horses and mules in the dead of night, exhausting thoir strength. To ward oir tho approach of any of the foul sisterhood silver dimes and five cent pieces with a holo in them, strung on a cord ami susjiended from the neck, are unrivcJed. Ddils and ends of bones sni:ng together, and olessed by a Voudoo priestess, constitute a (Jrigri, which is a marvelous foil uguiust tho Evil One. In southern Louisiana there are largo numbers of negroes who believe that certain other negroes have commerced imb Kitan, receiving from him a liberal endow ment of his diabolic powers. These are known as "cunjur niggers," who can "hou doo" you. To incur tae ill will of one of them is a grievous misfortune. As every negro, even the most debased, is sure of salvation, and speaks with confidence of his place in heaven, where he will "set at do saino table ez de white folks," it is not strauge that ho revels in signs portending death. His heaven, like the Mussulman's, is one of sensual delights, and corpses and fun erals are to him a great joy. To put a black pin into a child's dress, to try on any one's mourning garments, to open an umbrella in tho house, to break a looking glass, to carry a spade through tho house, are nil signs of douth. To drive a nail after dark, except in making n coflin, will bring death; and any man so unfortunate as to bury threo wives will bury six. A spider seen in tho morning brings good luck; at noon, disappoiutment; and in tho evening, bad luck. If accidentally a garment ba put on wrong side out, and if it ho worn that way until noon, and then turned, tho wearer will have good luck. To give a knife or scissors to a friend is to sever friendship, except, indeed, a bent pin be given in return, which averts the inqieuding rupture. The Roman Catbolio negroes of southern Louisiana will not cut a banana crosswise, because through its center runs a dark streak, which if cut transversely presents the appearance of a cross. To avoid this sacrilege the fruit must bo broken. Thoy accept tho Bible literally, and as they receive it in most grotesque form from their "preachers," it Is little wonder that their con ception of things spiritual is distorted. With out a pang of conscience they will eat the chickens from a neighbor's hen roost, the pigs from his pen, tho melons from his "patch," but cannot be induced to commit the unpar donable sin of eating a dove. If a black cat enters your house you will receive niouey; nn itching palm denotes the same thing, while an itching solo signifies that you will travel. Should your right ear burn, then some one is talking in your favor; but if it be the left, the tongue is evilly en treating you, aud you must immediately ish that its owner may bite it. Should you succeed in spitting iu your right ear, you silence your enemy. It a knife, fork or scissors in falling sticks up in tho floor, pre pare for visitors; also if a bluck cock crows three times in succession at the back door. The possession of a frizzly hen means good luck to the owner, while two frizzly hens de note a measure of prosperity which rouses the jealousy of "ole Satan." There is a ludicrous belief that to step over the outstretched legs of any one will stop his further growth. But the evil spell will work backward, for by stepping back over the legs they resume their suspended work of de velopment. No work in garden or Geld can bedono with out regard to lunar phases. An old auntie iu my family would never make soap except in the full of the moon, and then the soap must be stirred only one way. Her soap stick, of rare virtues and greut ago, was believed to have certain occult powers, which made it popular amoDg tho soap making sillers. Ask a uegro man why he wears a brass ring in one ear, and ha tells ycu i5 will euro so-.-o eyes. Chills and fever are cured by swallowing cobweb pills, and tho pain from auy insect bite is instantly removed by rub bing the puncture with tur2e hinds of grass. What folly to enduro warts when by rubbing t'.'.em with a piece of stolen fat bacon, and then burying jt secretly, tho warts wilj dis appear in a few days. So, tco, why wearj the flesh with looking for a lost article when you need only to throw something away to tind the thing mislaid? Your mind, however, must be Hzed upon the thing lost to succeed, so that here one of the elements of the faith cure s?ems to come in. Any lady who throws away the combings after dressing her hair will suffer with headache, for the birds weave this hair into their nts. The young generation of negroes, who are now skimming over the contents of a multi tude of text books with high sounding names, are in bpnd to the same superstitions which enchain their fathers. .Not all of the mental and moral philosophj' set down in tho books with which they are burdened can break the thrall cas5 by the witch and the "cunjur man," while tho study oi ibe highi: mathe matics has not yet developed that reasoning faculty which exercises the incarnate devil with oti his gallimaufry of evil spirits into the limbo cf unbelief. Harper's Bazar. Satant j4Cfcl "PJglitif. A London correspondent writes from Fin land thai a property holder in cne of the interior towns of the province left a will be queathing all his possessions to the deviL The dead man's family protested that the will was void, but the Finnish lawyers were dioineJ'Tjed to interfere with the rights of so formidable a peaago as the new legatee, aud, tho correspondent adds, the devil ha9 become, by k'gal right at least, a Finnish litdawner. Now Vork Tribune. TVhen you are buying k?4 jrlovfs remember that there is such a thing csa price that is too cheap. It is best t J ra7 a S0011 PvlC9 EEd get tho good lave3 that go with it. Ex amine the stitching to find places where the thread has broken through the Jeatntx, stretch the seams, and if the thread puds j away, leaving a white spot, don't get the i-loveL The leather should stretch easily to STRAY NEWSPAPER ITEMS. It ia announced that there will be an other "Passion Play" at Obcr-Amtnergau in 1800. Of tho 8.000.000 francs worth of china made last year at Limoges, one half came to America. Engines of 20,000 horse power have fr?cn ordered for the new cruiser Blake, at a cowl of 140.000. It is said that barely half a dozen wa- tejinx place hotels thus far have met their expenses. The roorts of extravagance and s.how at our watering places aro not so loud nor bo numerous as usual. The dailv oiK'ning of the churches is i bring sulvDOHled heartily by Ixml Car narvon and the bishop of Cambridge. Parisian swells steadily give way to English fashions. They now wear the regular fehort white tie for evening dress, instead of their former black butter flios. A newspaper in Constantinople says that 212 Christians and Jews have be come Mohammedan during the past year. a lftrger number than those who have abandoned Mohammedanism for other religions. A Michigan peddler who soM goods on tho cars, first singing a comic song to attract attention and please his cus tomers, dropped dead in a train a few days ago. He is believed to have left a fortune of $200,000, accumulated in this manner. Germany is doing considerable kreign inirisionary work nowadays. It has eighteen societies and supports 522 mis sionaries, who look after their 210,000 converts. Liist year the total receipts in money were over $700,000. Threo Chinese pheasants attacked a 14- year-old boy near v mcgar Springs, Ore., a short time ngo, and fought him so hard that ho dropped a sack of wheat he was carr'ing and fled for safety. When the neighbors went to the spot the wheat and birds had both vanished. An Australian football club has ar ranged with au accident insurance com pany to pay any of Its members who are disabled while plaving the game 30s, per week as long as they remain on the tick list, and 200 to the relatives if the injuries received "in the football field should terminate fatally. Tho crcat white marble palace which Wilbur F. Storey, of Chicago, built, and which is one of tho features of that city, is again offered for sale. Although still unfinished, more than 600,000 has been spent on it, while it is doubtful if one quarter of that amount will be offered by a purchaser. Bolivia, which has an area of 500.000 square miles and a population of 2,000, 000, U without a single Protestant mis sionary. Two American teachers, en couraged by Bolivian gentlemen and recommended by the Presbyterian board cf missions, expect soon to establish a school in La Paz, the capital. An Englishman who was playing bil liards in a public house in Bromley made a bet that he could get one of the ivory balls into his mouth. He did get it in, and there it stuck, in spite of all his efforts to dislodge it. The surgeon who was called in extracted the lump of ivory, but only after taking out several of the "experimentalist's" front teeth. At Spezzia, Italy, the whole Italian fleet is to assemble for a two months' ex ercise. One of the items of the pro gramme is to show the facility with which a large force can be disembarked, fully equipped for attack, and English alarmists predict that it will show how easily England could be invaded before a defensive force could bo gathered at uny point. A monument to the ruemorj' of Em peror William will be erected by the in habitants of the upper Fichtel mount ains on a peak rising nearly 4.000 feet above the level of the sea. The spot affords on one 6ide a view of the Saxon lowlands, on the other that of tho Bo hemian forest, with the Keiberg close by and tho spires of Carlsbad in tho dis tance. A Bridgeport paper says that a cat was caught by a locomotive th9 other day and cut in two by a wheel, which passed over the body back of the shoul ders. "After the locomotive had passed," says the paper, "the forward parts of the cat's body dragged themselves to the home yard, two or three rods distant, and, there the little life remaining flick ered out in a few seconds." The Little Seal Cried. A seal about two months o!J was seen yesterday on the d.eok of the schooner Arizona, which was moored at the Com mercial wharf. He is the skipper's pot and a great favorite with the cvew. Ihe captain said: "I have had the little fel low about six weeks, having caught him at Stable Island, ne was asleep when I came upon him, and before he knew it had him in my arms. In three days from that time he was as tame as a dog, and will now follow me all over the ves sel. In the morning at about 3 o'clock the seal takes his position over the hatch, and there he will cry until some one cf the crew goes on deck and feeds him. When we are outside I throw him over board and let him swim until he is tired., and then he is only too glad, ftp ba taken on board again." The little fellow seemed to enjoy him self on the vessel's deck, and was very fond of the caresses of the crew. When he saw one of the men approaching hitn he would hobble toward him. and tease for a mouthful of nsh that was generally forthcoming. Portland Press. Automatic Machine for Perfumery. One of the latest projects for catching the pennies of the public is an automatic machine for perfumery, a number of which have been set up in the approaches of ferries and other public places. By dropping a penny into a slot, in the same manner in which nickels are dropped into the patent weighing machines, an automatic fountain is made, to send out a spray pf perfume for the handkerchief. The crowds of people who go down to the eea from Thirty-fourth street ferry take op so much of this perfume that tho odor has become disseminated through the cars of the Long Island railroad, and in eome measnre acted as a public bene fit in offsetting the horrible smells of Hunter's Point. New York Tribune. TO ENJOY YOURSELF 15 AS MUCH OF AN ART AS ?f '.S TO MAKE A FORTUNE. I1or ty Acquire tlie Power of SIf KutT talnment The Training Vhlcli Ante date the Three The (hlM'a I'lvn geiihei iirmiliie Culture. Every or.e thiul.s that lie can enjoy liim belf, and does not lack for efforts to realize bin nmbition, but it is ns much of an nrt to have n good time us it is to make a for tune. Tho latter does not come, by whistling for it, and tlie good time does not follow be cause one is on a vacation and in search of it- The larger nunilier of jersoiiR enter iijmii life without any special consideration of its meaning or its opportunities, or what they can do with themselves. If they can earn u living they think that they do well, and if lliey earn more than n living, they ure pretty suro to show th:it they do not know how to make a wiso use of their surplus. This is seen of ten enough to almost allow tho form ing of the rule that ieople usually enjoy life in inverso ratio to their oport unities. They find themselves, for instance, able to take a va cation after perhaps twenty years of incessant activity in business or manual labor. The fuel of a month or two to siend, not under tho click of the telegraph, but in going about at Mieir own sweet will, is so new, so out of range with all their antecedents, that they do not know whut to do with themselves. They are like Adam und Eve when cast out of paradise. -They have all tho world before them, in its most inviting aspects, ami they stauu Deiore it in in" fry . : ri i.;i,..o i..jo do not know what to turn to. THE EARLY EDUCATION. One can have deep sympathy with these persons, but it is easier to save the younger generation from repeating their mistakes in life than to rescue them from their jierplexity. Tho difliculty lies deeper than the wenfion that discloses it. It lies in the early educa tion. Tho greater part of our people aro edu cated in the three It's, but they are not edu cated through their natural instincts or tastes. Many break through their bread winning service, and follow some aide for its own sake, and it is not necessary to tell such persons how to employ themselves iu their vacation, be it a day or a month. They have tho power of interesting themselves in their self activity, and there is a perennial fountain of life in this capacity. It is the power of self improvement. It is the ability to make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before. But those who have tho natural gift cf self entertainment aro tho e mailer part of the community, and if-the multitude aro to enjoy themselves, how is the result to be reached i It is a process of unconscious education that goes back to one's childhood, that be gins with the mother's education of the child's five senses before the days of the pub lic school, that marks her trysting time for the child to ascertain where he is strong and where he is weak. It is in such touching of the indefinite in the child on the part of a judicious parent which is the beginning of an education that gives one the command, in the course of time, of faculties that most per sons have never ueed, because neither in youth nor in ripened life have they ever found out that they had them. It is this sort of training that antedates the school, and, when the education of women has advanced less than a thousand leagues beyond its pres ent reach, and most women are where the really intelligent women are now, we shall have an education through tho instincts, as well as through the purely working qualities of the brain, that gives us the education. 0f the entire man or woman. AX UXFAILIJra METHOD. This is a glimpse of what is meant by go ing to tho bottom of things and beginning nt the foundation. The capacity to "enjoylife above the animal nature is largely the result of a careful education of the senses or in stincts, so that we shall naturally aim for the best and assimilate it to our life. You caunot transform grown up people into what they are not, and it would be cruel to pain many persons by pointing out to them the; deficiencies. That is not required, but it is one of the gweet amenities of existence to assist our fellow men, where it is iossiUc, in widening the circle of their faciliti&s for en joying life. It can be done by suggestion, by example, by ministrations of affection, and where it is done vith discretion one is almost sure tj receive the hearty thanks of those wha have been led to feel a new inter est; in, the things that are around them. It is said that a humorist is one of the most valuable members of the community, though it is impossible for such a person to be taken seriously; but he communicates so much good feeling throughout society that he does for the dull and over serious what a thunder storm in a season of dull weather does for the Atmosphere, Ue electrifies the air and gives pslief to pent up natures. The persons who n joy life through having an aside that gives them genuine culture, and w ho have the caiacity of communicating the suggestion of this power to other or of awakening it with in them, are the benefactors of society. If they happen to be landlords, they always have crowded houses. If they are teachers, they ahva3 s awaken their pupils and push them forward. If they are parents, their children in mature life are sure to rise up and call them blessed. There is the capacity in nearly every one to get more out of life in a good sense than tney are getting, and the secret of it is to use one's little spare time every day for the purpose of advancing on tho line of what one likes to do to the things that lio outside of one's immediate industry or calling. This is an unfailing method for reaching out to permanent supplies of en joy ment. Boston Herald. A Tobacco Hungry Indian. In 1SS3 and 1SS3, while traveling for a large St. Louis hqusd ia the Indian territory, I learn.ed more of Indian traits and Indian character than I could have found out from reading 100 Indian stories such as were written by J. Fenimore Cooper, Mark Twain and Bill Nye, You never meet an Indian on the road in the Indian nations, but your na tive quietly and suddenly emerges from the tall grass or brush of the wayside, stands on the highway in front of you and says: "How." ou tell him you are well and he says: 'Whisky." When he is informed that you are out of that drug he puts to you the single word, interrogatively: " 'baccoif" ou hand him your plug, expecting bim to cut off a small corner, and in a second the whole plug disappears between his molars in his capa cious mouth. My Indian host, who spoke fair English, advised me to cut the remaining plugs I had into small pieces and give only one piece at a time. Six different times between Muskogee and Okmulgee, in the Creek country, at places a quarter of a mile apart, did the same Indian spring out of the grass on the road in front of me and greet me with a friendly "How? He had cut a circuit in the grass each time to come out ahead of me, and housed slight disguises of dress, thinking that I did not recognize him as the man who got the first chunk of tobacco. But I made him run about eight mites for about a plug and a half of robacco. -G. A. Schmidt in Qlobs-Diitnocrat. J Vjtjj f ive rtjeptibliear; fJt,r Now ia the time for Republicans to exert thomselvea to dlat: political doctrine among tho people, and in no way can they do it f. eubecriblm? for THE DAIL Y INTER OCEAl, , Which ia a reliable, activo, ar.d ablo exponent of Republican ldeaa and trinos. ASA NEWSPAPER it ia unexcolled by any publication In the Wa lt has beon FORQINCJ TO THE FRONT rapidly In tha last two yoara, and elnco the issue BETWEEN PROTECTION AND FRE.2 TRADE bjcamo bo promi nent, it baa had A REGULAR BOOM. Th cauae 1 3 apparent. 7 US INTER OCEAN la the only RELIABLE PROTECTION MORNING NEWSPAPER Published in Chicago, and PROTECTION 13 NOW THE REPUBLICAN IS3U2, Every frlond oi tru:: Republicanism ought to holp bwoU the tide of its growth. Why chould a Republican aid the onomy by patronizing FREE-TRADE NEWSPAPERS, and thu i dilemma ix? fal io pollticil doctrine j 7 Sour ia the. time to xuhscribe unit to induce others to Jo thti auutn thing. Subscribe throuch vour noWodo ller or podtmastor, or send direct. Spo flal rates offered for tho campaign. S IE3 DKALEIl IN . AND ALL HOUSEHOLD GOODS. -LATEST WINDOW KEPT CONSTANTLY ON HAND. PZCTTOE FPwMES TO OrcDEE SIXTH STKEET, I5ET. MAIN AND VINE. l'LATTMIOUTIl, NKI5. r;.-.iiic -DEALERS IN- apie and -Ileadonarters Faults and Oranges, Lemons, IVmans Canyu Fruits :ioe St PRICES LOW. GIVE US A CALL, BEiVJfolETT TUTT, Main Street - - PUattsznouth.. Jonathan Hatt. w- Wabtiiis. WHOLESALE 1 baa m y q ew PORK PACKERS and dkai.krs in I1UTTER AND EGGS. BEEF, PORK, MUTTON AN I) VEAL. THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Sugar Cured Meals, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c, &c ct our own make. The best brands of OYSTERS, in cans and bulk, at WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. w 3 My m hjf y Q Z rrX f 4 S Hi i S 8? Mi! Ss m "Mir K r. X U ' J ' s 2 DRS. CAVE 6s SMITH, "Painless 2Da.tists." Tre oulT Der.tifto in tlie "West rnntrolinj? tin New System t f Extractin: hii1 Ftlliim TeetU without Tain. Our anaesthetic is en tirely tree Ircm CHLOROFORM OK ETHER AND IS ABSOLUTELY Harmless - To - AIL Teeth extracted and irtifieil teeth Inserted next day it desired. Thoine'ervHtion oi the natural teeth a specialty. GOLD CROWNS, GOLD CAPS, BRIDGE WCBL The very fineit. Office in Union Block, over Fricke'B Drug Store. 3 l,Vtxsa.e-c.tX3. - - 2T.r3e I r. m m tmplo copicj uont on request. j r THE INTER OCEAN, Chicago, L FURNITURE, KINDS OK- STYLES OF- CURTAINS k 11 Fancy Groceries lor all kinds of- Vegetables and all varieties of fresh and constantly on hand. L?JT1D HETAIL 5T VXk few" M HEALTH iS WEALTH ! Dr B.C. West's Nerve and Hrin Treatment ajjuH-antee specific f( r Hysteria Dizziness. Convulsions. FitH. Nervous .Neuralgia, H-aC-aehe. Nerveouf frustration eunsed by tbenee ot alcohol or tobacco. aktfuluess. MeMal De presfinn, Softenlnjr of the rirain rectiltiiiK in lit sanitv an leading t misery, decay iiid 'leaih, ' reniauire old Ae. JJarreiiiiess, Lof of I'ow er in either sex. Involuntary Losxs alio per mat rrhwa caused by over-exertion of the brain, gelfabuse or over-lndnltfence. hach box contains one month' treatment. 51 W a box or six boxes for S&.OO, sent by mall prepaid od receipt of price "WE GUARiKTEE SIX BOXES To cure an v cafe. With a-h order rnceivert by us for six bones, accompanied with we will send the purchaser our written guaran tee to return the money if the tieatment (lc not effect a cure. Guarantees Issued only by Will J. Warrick sole agent. flattMuouth, Neb. Cr. 13. HEMPSTER, Practical Piano ancL Organ Timer AND KKI'AIKFI!. First-class work guaranteed. Also deal er in Pianos and Organs. Office nt Hoe( k'e furniture store, Plattsmoutli, Nebraska. C. F. SMITH, The Boss Tailor. Main St., Over Merges' Kh e Store. Has the best and most complete stock of samples, both foreign and domestic: woolens that ever came west of Missouri rivt:.-. Note these price?: liusinB Miifs from $16 to ?33, dress suit, $25 to 4", pants $4, $3, $0, $.50 and upwards. CWill guaranteed tt fit. Prices Dcfv Competition. make a good fit and to wear wall. ...