The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, September 20, 1888, Image 3
. J an Unclean Cellar, .(nmttle Service Vol no of . oman' Finances Al!iltlc nrtciits flotmeliold flint. ..tolieii is usually the part of the house moftt frequented by the majority of ewiv; consequently, this room, of all ers, nhoiild be the r.lerxsriiitesV " t';e coom U well lighted dark d)ad. on the win- (lows would not In; out of j:l.iee, Imt if it is inclined to lie dark ut all, as is generally the cuse iti tiro Hty, d-irk colored curtain? oiiht not le thought o'f. To le sure, wliito cur tains nre not advisable for this room, for with the Kte.nn and dust they would Im iu a short time unfit to tut; hut there are inuny pretty light nlmdes of curtains that will un wer this jurHjse excellently. A liht slnte makes a very pretty shade for the kitchen windows, hut the lufT hoi hind is as pretty and as serviceable ns most women could wish. There are so many shades of these goods, and none so very dark, that almost any may lio used for tho kitchen with good effect. If the kitchen is a sunny room, which, if wibl, it ought to Ik;, dark shaded are not economical, as they fade so easily that if in a strong sun for any length of time they present a very unsightly apjiearance. Buff shades also fa le when exposed to the sun, yet the contrast is not as jfreat as though they were dark, for in some of the LufT shades the difference in color, when fadod, can only i seen on close inspection. Light colored furniture Is much to le pre ferred to dark in the kitchen. There is nothing can take the place of the white wood table for cooking purposes, and it requires only a little care to keep it looking nice. Washing the top with ammonia water each day, using some good soap once a week, will keep it as white and clean as any one could desire, A kitchen table, should have cue drawer, at the least, and one leaf. Tho drawer is generally used to hold many of the smnller cooking implements, such as knives, fvirks, mm m, etc. " It is not a good plan to keep sharp knivt's in this drawer among the other things, as when the house wife is in a hurry she is in danger of hurting herself by carelessly grasping knives of this kind when they nre put in with other arti cles. If there are children in tho family, this drawer should contain neither knives, forks, or, in fuct, any sharp article; but Tlfese should le placed out of reach of the inpatient little fingers. " ' This drawer is nice to keep clean dih towels, kitchen hand towels, work aprons, and many other things that will be conven ient for the housev. to have when wanted. If there are two drawers in a table one will lo fount! to ls of great service us a catch-alL In this can le put those numerous articles for which there seems to be no place, such as bits of string, wrapping paper, p:;per bags and many other artich's that seem of no ira Hrtance, but nre sadly missed when wanted. If thero is no second drawer n box or bag should Im3 provided for tho purpose, and it will be found one of the most convenient articles in tho room. When a housewife is cramped for closet room, a small wooden Ikdx will be found ex cellent to hold rublers, slippers, etc. Get an empty soap box, lino with stout wrapping paper, and cover the outside in some pretty figured cretonne. Fasten the top of the bos with hinges so that it will lift up like a trunk. 1'lace a layer of cotton Iwitting be tween the cover of the lox on the outside and the cretonne, so us to make a kind of cush ion on top, so it will be comfortable when used as a seat, winch may often be the case. Kasten to each of the corners at the bottom a castor, so that the box may be easily moved from one place to another. Varnished light wood chairs should be wiped over once a week with weak ammonia water, and they may le kept looking nieo for a lon.-j time. It is a mistake to use soap on this kind of furniture, for it will certainly remove the varni-.-.h in a very short time. Too much ammonia will remove the gloss, there fore a teasjnonful to one-half pail of water is usually sufUvicnt. Keep needles, thread, j'ins and sharp scissors in some part of tho kitchen, and it will save some steps. Ilavf two or three small knives for paring vegc ta.b:os. apples, etc., and they will Ie found much c:isier to iwj than the medium size, and do the work Letter. Boston liujget. Diphtheria from u i Unclean Cellar. 'l could not understand why that entire family of seven children should be stricken with putrid diphtheria till I had occasion to go into their cellar," a friend said who had been summoned to help care for tho sick and dying children of a neighbor. "We always thought the Wrights, with their trim, whitewa.-hed fences and outbuild ings, their neatly kept dooi-yard and garden, the evident constant warfare against filth and slatternliness iu any form, the most in telligent and cleanly of families in our com munity, and I wondered what possible breed ing place for malignant diphtheria could lurk about that home, till I went into tho cellnr. When 1 opened the stairway door a horrible stench cf decaying vegetables and tainted brine rushed up from the unventi lated, loathsome pit below, tbaMJwy call cel lar. The air was so heavyivfth mold and stagnant impurities that tho flame of the -rndlo I carried flickered and lapped over, as ugh a weight had been laid on it. "lardlyhad I 6lepped from the bottom before my feet struck a slippery, slimy of rotten pumpkin, and I went down dreadful mu&k that sent out its pesti-"-;1m from the very depths of it3 - The candle still burned, and "tig from this unexpected to 1 the cellar bottom, 1 held lgh and low, scanning well i of diphtheria and other .fore cutting the slices of which I La 1 been sent to bind little, swollen, cholied throat yecu with mold and fungi; de leaving vegetables everywhere; d apples oozi::"their pungei.t - bloated staves of a dozen bnr "n cf frozen, then thawed, tir meant development of -h to run an electric plant 'nder tho stairs a heap of "orod iu tho late autuiau, v, months before bad fomn of tho r.insh- ' "Tirectly ia tho the Uy ?mi ,'A-ry chnte that me; anil in every s of turnips end cab- ir penctratirg, loath- k as a coal pit, tie r the dining room the winter bank uncovered. The -h dreadful "tlet of Pithily any and into tho r.nd by -r tie t rjv -Jered why their -Axa they thought to ji every harm, should , -.aeria, and called it one , ,ut mysterious of God's providences nen they were called to lay two o: their darlings under the sod. Clarissa Pcltcr iu The Housewife. Klevutlon of Dnmntlc Service. It is a serious question with one forccl to choose between two n-cessjiry evils, ns to which evil (all things considered) is the lesser viz., the condition of tho kitchen drudge or that of tho city factory hand. Undoubt edly the hired girl gets more foMl, better clothes, and healthier lodgings thun the fac tory girl, but for such advantages she has to sacrifice her own homo and her own inde pendence, to put up oftentimes with the ca price of a sickly, petulant mistress, tho do iiinnds of nn overworked master, and the whims of ill bred children. And it is still mi open question whether ninny men, if brought to choose Ix'tween these two means of sul siitence, would not select the life of the "city slave girl," with all its terrible odds, in prefer ence to that of the average pride of tho kitchen. The very fact thut the factory is overcrowded which is tho chief cause for universal starvation wages rather than the uvarice of any particular firm while the kitchen remains understocked is evidence that to many minds the lifeof tho '"city slave girl" is not the most unlx-arable. Elevate domestic service from tho level of mere drudgery to the proud and independ ent position of "skilled lalor." The public demands it and will cheerfully pay for it. There is scarcely a family to-day which is paying, say, $3 ier week for the presence in the kitchen of a mere slouch but which would willingly increase those wages i-1 per week for tho services of comjietent help. The sav ing in destruction of nrotiertv and in tho supply for the table would of themselves more than warrant tho increased wage out lay. Our American tables are loaded with innumerable dishes to stimulate a waning upiMjtite simply lecause no one dish is pro perly cooked. We are surfeiting ourselves with warmed up trasli. In a land where there's no end to variety in garden stuff, where a dish of cauliflower, of jieas, or other vegetable (if scientifically cooked, as by the French), with good bread and butter and some refreshing drink, would suClco for a meal, it is intolerable that wo should le made dysiieptics and that the lives of our mothers and wives should bo made miserable simply because we don't know how to live, or, knowing Low, find it impossible to live as we would. If the average Ameri can wife were a lioness she could fill the bill; for, generally speaking, she is nn excellent housekeeper. Hut knowing just how things should Ik done, and lacking the physical strength to projierly do them, is u combina tion which is iuccs antly racking her body, mind and souL This much for a present great public demand to wit, the sjeedy evolution of tho conventional hired girl into a reliable and competent housekeeper. Chi cago Times. Health As an Inheritance. Yes, we all value health, and yet bow Tre waste it! There is no way in which we do not disregard the rules that compass it Wo read, for example, in the dark, and in bed, mid in the cars, instead of waiting for light r.nd quiet; wo sit all day at work when we should vary the day with exercise; we eat in a hurry, ns if we feared each morsel was to be snatched from us, when wo should eat slowly and invoke the powers of digestion; we steal from sleep the hours that belong to that lienign restorer of tired nature; we de light our gustatory nerves over banquets which millstones could not grind to diges tion, nnd we drink draughts which inflame the stomach and set the brain on fire, and bring the body to naught. And when all is done we go about, if we nre still able to go about, complaining that thero is no health in us, and we blame fate and the divine law when wo have ourselves to blame and our ancestors. But tho worst thing of all that we do is so to beggar our own stock nnd amount of health that we have none to give to our children, and wo let them como into the world with impaired physical systems to be gin with, and often let them run for luck in tho care of those systems afterward. If we have no sense of the attention we should git'e our own health, if wo neglect and injure cur own bodies those temples of the spirit that deserve religious care we have no right to take liberties with the bodies of others; bat the moment that the health of the children intrusted to our care is injured, either by neglect or by wrong indulgence or by want of wisdom, we aro culpable; for we not only rob those children of a birthright, but we rob also t he whole race of which they and their descendants aro a part of that which is their portion, and which they have a right to ex pect, since health, iu any normal state of so ciety, should be as much tho inheritance of a child ns its mother's lifo blood or its father's n:.me. Harper's Bazar. Woman and Her Finances. "T7o occasionally tako the biggest kind of risks in the matrimonial market," said I; 'but 1 will confess that when it comes to wheat markets we aro a little cautious, and it is well that wo are, for it is a thousand times worse for a woman to bo beggared than it is for a man to lose his fortune." "How do you make that out?" "Because," I answered, "a man is like a cat that always falls upon its feet, and a woman is like a bydroeephalous infant suro to tumble on its head. A man can, iu ways peculiar to himself, get back his money by merely snapping Lis fingers in tho air. Ka can get a loan an hour after his bubblo has burst that will fill up his basin with fresh suds, and a light whiiT on t he same old pipe wiil fill the air with larger and brighter globes of iridescent light than any that went before. But a woman can't raiso a lean without she mortgages her imraortnl soul to do it. You needn't look shocked, I mean j'jst what 1 say. A woman gets her money as berry pickers get their fruit, by steady ctteatiou to work and no fooling. There ia a vast difference between blowing bubbles and picking blackberries, let mo tell you, and a tipped over pail of fruit just on the edge of snudown 4ocsn"t stand for greater discour agement than does the upsetting of a wo man's patient and toilsoma schemes for get ting together enough money to keej her out of the Old Lady's Ilome or tho poor Louse when her strength and her youth Lavo van ished; her ability to refill aa overturned basket after sundown is quito hopeless. " "Ambler" in Chicago J ournal. Shall Ilrbo Become Hercules? A creat deal is being said just at present cbout athletic maidens. You may call them jjirl gladiators, if you choose, or gladiatorial cirls. It is permissible to call a girl any thing that is nice (if she is a nice gir!) ex cepting "sweet girl graduate. That Las been quoted about ten million times too much. Having become a household word, it j sliould bo left at home and not dragged into print. You may coll a girl who practices outdoor scorts an Amazonian, if you prefix "g2ntle.'It wculd bo proper to say of her that she was "divinely tall and most divinely Lar,"if thut expression w ere notum'prtLo beau baring been used rather too formid ably i. Jh. We believe In girls being ath letic to 'certain extent. But as a rule, a girl who aoes all her duty at home will hnw had enough exercise in making lcN and sweeping eariK.Os. without swinging 'Indian clubs and putting up dumb bells. Chores promote the chnrin of chubbiness, but we do not lelieve in Hebe's lcoming Ilercnles. No woman is altogether esteemed whose musclia arc so big that her Imsliand has to be afrai 1 of her. KnthiiKiastic soldiers may shoui, "We will die for our king, Maria Theresa," but they prefer reiuemlM-ring, after all, that their king is a queen. New York Journal. Women Who Knjoy Housework. Women generally enjoy housework ; it ia "bred iu the bono" with most of us, and it is only the protests nnd complaints of married women who have to licg fur every cent they i-jiend thut make the rest of us lcwjk askance Ht it. Once married even the mo.-.t enthusi astic practitioner takes up household duties ns i::tt in ull y iis a due! swims. 1 know one ludy physician who made a bargain with her intended husband that she should not have any of tho responsibilities of housekeeping. They would not board, but they secured a well trained servant and determined to trust everything to her. But don't laugh the ludy broke the agreement herself. Mr. never blamed her for any hitch in tho do mestic machinery, but a dusty tablo or un overdone steak seemed to her to be living ro proaehes to her management or lack of man agement. So she now spends her vital force lavishly in trying to do her duty in two ex acting professions and housekeeping, let mo tell you, is not tho least exacting of the two. She seems to enjoy it all, though thinks she is getting the cream of life. "VV. 11. V." in Detroit Free Pi-ess. The Small Courtesies of Life. The whole world is like the miller nt Mans field, "who cared for nobody no, not he because noliody cared for him." And tho whole world will servo you so, if you give them tho same cause. Let every ouo, there fere, sec thut you do care for them, by show ing 1 hem what Sterne so happily calls "tho small, sweet courtesies of life," those courte sies in which thero is no parade, whose voice is too still to tease, ami which manifest them selves bj' tender and affectionate looks, and littlo kind nets of attention giving others the preference in every little enjoyment nt the tabK(, in the field, walking, sitting or standing. This is the spirit that gives to your time of life, and to 3-our sex, their sweetest charms. It constitutes the sum total of all the witchcraft of women. "Advice to Girls," The Craze of "Smocking. Tho newest industrial "craze" is "smock ing." Now "smK-king" is a revivaL Years ago our grandmothers "smocked"' or "honey combed" their lst bedspreads ami towels. Now it is being used considerably for trim ming dresses. It is very ornamental. The putteru is usually a diamond shaped design, and it is said, tho knack once acquired, the work is easy and rapid. Curious it is how fashions reassert themselves in all branches. Take u group of ladies chatting over their morning fancy work. The needle of one speeds over a band of smocking work; an other clicks a bewildering number of long steel needles, rounding tho toe of a silk stock ing, and another crochets a quaiut coin purse, just as did the dames a century rsgo. Table Talk. Training tho Furs. Erect ears, like pitcher handles, may bo taught better manners by barfding tho hair over the upper part and wearing a closa night cap to sleep in. Sometimes a linen band is worn day and night around tho head and ears for weeks to press the latter into place. The cartilage of the ear is suscepti ble of mnch training, r.nd advantage is taken of this to mold the broad rim over a shell of metal covered with wax. The flap of the ear is shut between two such clnso fitting molds and held by a bandage around the head, the result being a curled shape, which much improves it. Doctors profess to pare an offending ear into good shape, but the idea is too much for common nerves. Shirlej- Dare's Letter. The following is recommended as a cure for neuralgic headache: Squeeze the juice of a lemon into a small cup of strong coffee. This will usually afford immediate relief in neu ralgic headache. Tea ordinarily increases neuralgic pain, and ought not to bo used by persons affected with it. The old fashioned theory still prevails that even brie-a-brnc adds to the apparent warmth of a room, and careful housewives store their wealth of china away on darkened shelves to reproduce it and renew their delight in its possession when once the cool weather re turns. To cleanso porcelain saucepans fill them half full of hot water and put in tho water a tablespoonful of powdered borax nnd let it boiL If this does not remove all tho stains scour well with a cloth rubbed with soap and borax. For chapped lips uso beeswax dissolved in a sm&ll quantity of sweet oil, by heating carefully. Apply the salve two or thrco times a day, and avoid wetting the lips as much as possible. To clean pie plates that have long been used for baking put them in a largo kettle cf cold water and throw on them a few hot ashes or cinders, and lot them boil for an Lour. To revive old silk: When silk has lost its gloss and becomes limpsy it may be restored by sponging with a solution of half an ounco of gum tragaeauth in a pint of hot water. To protect children's clothing from fire add cue ounco of alum to tho last water used in rinsing clothes. This renders them uniu a unliable. To tako ink out of linen, dip tho ink spot in pare melted tallow; then wash out tho tallow, and tho ink will coma cut with it. This is unfailing. You can mako cloth waterproof by var nishing it with linseed oil, coating with solu tion of rubber in naphtha. A truo test of eggs is to drop them in wa ter, and if the iargo end comes up they are not fresh. In warm weather put your eggs ia cold water some timo before you aro ready to use them. If clothes are absolutely dry before they arc folded and laid away they will not mil dew. In roasting meats do not salt before put ting into the oven, as salt extracts tho juice. Blood stains from fur can be removed by nibbing well with dry piaster cf pi:ris. Gum camphor scattered about mice haunts will drive them away. An experimenter has mado a lens of it with which he was ablo to liht a pipe 1 ij means ot the sun's rays. TOE' SNAKE CHARMER. LADY WHO CAN FAGCINATE SER PENTS AS WELL AS MEN. V.Cfit of the Mrsim-rlo k.wto of Iter I.ns (roiiA I U:ic!i Kycs .Methods of Kubiltiln& u 1 1 AiiiicoiKlu His uiiLcs Troubleiiii to Keep. Tho snako charming woman was sea fed on chair and a big anaconda ivos wound oiut r.round her waist, tho rot of its length lying loose iu her I up. in her rig :.t hu.'id she ln-ld tho snake's ugly bend. Siio was a brunette ur.J handsome enough to charm ani'tiiing. Tho reporter murmured something to that effect. "Yea, you hud better speak low when you pay n:e compliiiK-nts," sho replied, her ryes twinkling mischievously, "for t!i giant over I hero is my husband, lie's awfuliy ji-nlous, und when he gets mud ho weighs ten times is much as he does now." "Ah, there," said a littlo dudo disposed to Ia.' facetious; "is that a-aw-a worm, donchrr knowf "No, it's a-aw-a masher, doncher know, woidd you like to try ho.v it can-aw-inashf rescinded Mrs. Hmith, alias "Madamo Jean etto Do La." etc., witlj excellent mimicry. Tho dudo dropped his eyeglass nnd becarno deeply interested in the KgypLan mummy. Tho snake began to stir its coils in the wo man's lup. "Don't speak, please," sho said earnestly. Sho moved tho hand which held thetuake's head until the hea 1 was pointing straight t;t her face. She then fastened her lustre ins lil.-ielv eves oil flu I wn vn H 4.-..,.'. ... of tho snake. Her ejia aevmed to expand and tho snake's to get smaller. t5ujeib, queenly, she looked; her features und whole bearing seemingly expressing intense mental effort. Tho suako appeared, ut first, to avoid her gaze; then it ceased stirring and its head drooped, limp and listless iu her hand. "Now you may siiealt," she said. "That was very pretty." NO nUMiiCO ABOUT IT. "Oh, indeed, thero v. as no 'fake' about that. If I hadn't mastered tiio snako ho would have whipped hi;, tail ii.to that third loop ho was forming and squeezed me until in bones cracked unless somebody camo to my assistance and cut him in two. A bear can't hug tighter than an anaconda can squeeze. This is only the third time that I Lavo i.rformed with this suako, and ho is disposed to bo ugly unless I look after him. While I was chatting my eyes went off him, and I supxxKO ho felt thero was an oppor tunity to exercise what ho regarded ns his legitimate business. You ob.crve that I always hold tho snake by tho Lead, so that I chu compel it to look mo in the face. Then when I get my eyes on it I can tubduo it." "Howl" "Ah, that's more than I can tell you. What causes tho bird or tho mouse that I feed to the snake to become powerless when tlu snake fastens its eyes on it? What is it t'.iat enables ono man to mesmerize another? All I know is that I look at the snake's eyes end will it, with ull my might, to yield to me. When I do that I seem to feel something going out from 1110 electricity magnetism I don't know what. I feel afterward as though I hail engaged in a physic; 1 struggle with something and conqueieiL There's where the pleasure comes in. You may not behevo it, but when 1 concentrate my will tosubduo that snako tho excitement is in tense tho enjoyment exquisite, lsiiTtosoit is something like what a soidier feels when the music plays as Lo marches to battle." "How do you acquire that power" "It isn't ucquired; it's born. Many people possess that wcr, undoubtedly, who don't know of it. Quito accidentally I found that I had it. I never had that fear of snakes that most people have. Till: MYSTERIOUS POWEU. "When quito a girl I noticed soma children running from a gaiter snufce. What pes f-cssnd me to do it 1 don't know, but I picked it up, fastened my ejes on its eyes und found Myself willing it to submit. Then it fell intc a sort of stupor, and 1 found that I could dc with it what I liked. This discovery that I could subdue tho snalce so that it became en tirely passive in my hands pleased me. I be gan to experiment with other nnd larger snakes, always selecting, of course, snake? that nro not venomous. Then when circum stances took n turu so that I had to oari?my own living I took to tho business. It paj-s a good deal better than sewing or school teach ing or selling dry goods." "How do you first go to work with an ana conda?" "I first give it a bath of warm milk. This it seems to enjoy hugely, and is soothed by it and gets languid. Then I try to get it in a position where I can fasten my eyes on its c-yes. This often requires a great deal of pa tience, for the snako tries to avoid it, seem ing to feel that it means a contest in which it will get worsted. But tho opportunity comes at last, and when the snake droops its head listlessly I know that I have charmed it and can safely put my hand on it The next operation is easior and tho snako is more quickly rendered xassive. With each opera tion it becomes more docile until I can per form with it in public. But always one hos to bo careful, for tho snako is liable at anj timo to try squeezing. You can tell by tho way it moves its coils when it is going to do that, and can then charm it or mesmerize it until it is passive; but if you aro frightened and get bewildered you can't exercise any control over the snake, and the snako will tctually try to charm 3ou. I have had one or two narrow escapes through carelessness. The worst place to have a snake is around your neck, because it takes very littlo squeez ing there to make you feel exceedingly un comfortable, "Arc the anacondas troublesome to keepp "1 should say so; they require u great deal more care than a baby. They are so liable to catch cold when confined. You Lave to throw warm blankets over them and exercise all sorts of care to keep them properly warm. Then they are mighty particular what they eat. The only things that seem to thoroughly agree with them are white mice and guinea pigs, chickens and squabs, and these have to be given to them alive. The snake doesn't seem to enjoy eatiug unless it can first charm the animal or bird. I have never found it possible to keep one long, and they are ex Ieusive to buy." New York Tribune. JCoali's Ark AVootl Discovered. "Within a radius of sixty miles of Nash ville, Tenn., there is said to be found a tree that is Eaid to be the shittini wood of ark fame. Celebrated botanists from all over the country have examined the trees and asrec that they grow nowhere else on tko globe. Tbey have decided that it is the shit tini wood ' of which Noah's ark was con structed, mention of which is made several times in the Bible. The tree is medium sized, with very dark, smooth bark, and the wood is of a Lright gold color. Ia early spring the trees are laden with Ions, white blos soms, clostly resembling great ostrich plumes. Tbore seems to be no denbt about the identity of the trees, and it is remark- i able that ti.?y are found only iu this small ! area and so few at that. Scientific Auieri- I can, -- ' f Uorti Tho lmportnnco of tho results of tho prce . overestimated by tbouo who desire the euccosac v Democrats, betildos tho "Solid South." are, In the . breastworks of public patronage. It will tako etoad work to dislodge them. No'hlng will bo eurely bring & nest, and united work as the circulation of sound poll) THIS CLASS MO OTHER 13 A3 EFFICIENT AS THn L.Y NEWSPAPER. Speeches and documents are roa read aro laid aside; tho newspaper lathe firoaldo fric. companion. Its Influence i i continuous, constant. Tho aid their party bettor than by circulating -$icbe& Daily o InteroQcean, It la a llvo Republican Newspaper, and has been faithful among the faltLT Chicago. No man has ever questioned its eoundnoss on tho platform, bC tho principles of tho pla form havo been advocctod by THE INTER OC- many years. PROTECTION TO AMERICAN INDUSTRIES AND AMERICA; MARKETS FOR AMERICAN PRODUCERS havo been Its battlo crioa from ttc beginning. It did not tako it tLx weeks to ascertain whether It could stand o3 the platform or not. Republicans havo dono much to aid in tho lnculcitlon of flso polities! uuw.utro -y iciui w.iiint; tue-ia UMt when they can avoid it by eubocribing for THE INTB.U OCEAN, which tm acknowledged to bo fhe IJest and TVlost Reliable newspaper Published in Chicago? In cn'.erprlsr?, nowa, odlorlal ability, and everything that goes to mako A COMPLEX K NEWSPAPER It Is unexcelled by any oT Hs contemporaries. Every Republican ought to Eubscrlbo for it. Every worklngman ought to oub3cribo for it. It is the paper for all classes of patriotic peoplo who bollevo In protecting the home3 of America. You can fcufcscnba through your n-jwsdoaler or pojtmastor. If you aro unablo to do that send direct to tho off ico of publication. Samplo copied or iiw-y- -c.'. ... . r:.':c: a.'u.c-. the: irvi-TEir? cdctezaim,- CHICAGO. I. -DKALKIt IN- AMI ALL HOUSEHOLD GOODS. -LATI'ST wi: i w KEPT CONSTANTLY ON HAND. SIXTH STREET, LET. MAIN AND B e q ii e -DEALERS IN Frine Stap e and -IIe:xiiu:u-rt'i' Lemons Ilaium.s Canned Fruits PRICES LOW. 2ai. Stroot Jonathan 11 ait W Mii Ui -333 WHOLESALE B fA KgZi JT1 PORK PACKERS a.nd dealkhs in UUTTER AND EO'GS. BEEF, FOHK, MUTTOJi AlN'i) VEAL. THE REST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON HAND. Sugar Cured Meats, Hams. Bacon, Lard, &c, &c of our own make. The Leht bnmcl of OYSTERS, in cans and bulk, ui WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. CSrXES 'ISH&S: CAT nl OS I SSI 0 2, -4 m j -Send jour job work to the Hei:ali office. . - ii nuvuuiuj Uium. W ily Huoulu laey uO BfiP 3ST , KINDS OF STYLES OF- cxj; VINE. I'LAVi SMOL'i H, rocenes am ull varietieo of fresh and constantly on hand. T U RE, Fancy G ior all kiikIs ut d vegetables GIVE US A CALL. UTT, iattsmoutii. BE AW & C. uI'TjD XlTIX H MB ETv4 B. til u ia W4 HEALTH iS WEALTH I iJr. I. ('. Wesf'i Nerve unit Urain Tretinr.t a ifuaraht'-e s;eeific f-r liysw-iia Inzzlr.es. 'onviiNioiis. Tils. Nervous NeunJfa. Jliil-ii'-lit. Nerveou rrcMr.'itiou c.-ium (1 ! Mi- i:m of alcohol or ttiliaciri), Wak-fuhiet. !M;il le-pres-ion, Koftridui; of the I'.i ain ! niltii.t; in In sanity a.urt leadii;i?-t im.se ry, decay nl !ealli, r:iature old Aj:e. ItarreLiiess, Ia.su .f I'ow er in either sex. InvuiuMary L' sctj anlS er niat riiid'i caused !' over-exertion of Hie brain, seifabuse or over-iiirtiilem-e. I'ach t x contains one iiion'.h' treatment. 1 to a box ursK toxes for f sent by tuail ieiUbo re''el;t of pi ice "WE GUAFiVKTIE SIX ECXES To cute any cjif-e Willi eali order rerefvrrt by i;s fur t-ix lxes. uceou pan eil wftli tdiw, w'e w iil semi the purchaser nir uiilten guaran tee to return the n'oney if the ti alnient doe not elTect a cure, fluarai'tces isyv.i d f itly by Will J. Warrick sole agect. riatUtiK-utli. 'ei. Gr. 13. ZEMPSTEE, Practicel Pisno ecd Organ Tuner AKD RKPAIIiK P.. Firtt-claea work guaranteed. .lcOk til er in Piano9 and Otgnnn. Office nt Boerk'a furniture store, PlatUir.outli, Xtbrafka,