The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, January 03, 1889, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1
1
fetitttiflj
1
SECOND YI5AU
PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY EV ENING, JANUARY , 188.
NUMIJEU U t.
GFJY
Mayor.
:ierk,
Trii.surT.' -
Attm-y,
Kniiio.-r.
J'olice .Jn.le, -Marshall,
Councilman, 1st ward,
2nd
" 3rd "
4th-
OFFIGLIilS.
F. M. Ki'i ii KV
- W K Kox
- J AM Kit PATTKUMON, JK.
- KYUoN I'LAUK
- A Makolk
- S Cl.l KKOItO
W II Mai iik
J J V We, K I.AC H
I A SA I.IHHLH Y
J l M JONKH
I lH. A SlIlfMAM
I M K Ml ki iiy
I H YV IJCTTONC
Hoard Pub. Work
(J WJOH.N
kkk.i ;k
I 1 II IlAWi
) Con o'toN.Ntm.
I r AICUAI.LKN. I'KKH
H.N.(JllAIK.MAN
IKK
KSWOKTII
I. A. Cam km.
1 Host. 1'UI.UlC'K
Biki CidTriiriKixi
Kxa Currcii i k.i.o
W. II. Pool
John M. I.kvoa
W. C. MIlOWAbTKK
J. C. ElKKNHAKl
Treasurer,
l'puly Treasurer, -
Clerk. - - .
lpputy Clerk.
JCeeor.ler of I)eda
llMity Uec.ir.lt-r
Cl-rlc of iJtrtrict Cojrt.
Stier.tr.
Surreyor. -
Attorney.
Hupt. of Pub. School.
Coumy Ju.t(je.
tlOAKD OK HUI"KltVI30K.S.
A. P.. Toj,t. Cli'in.. - - Plattsmouth
I-oris IV.i.tz. - Weeping Water
A. It. Dwk.kiv, - Kmiwood
Killed In a Duel Over a Woman.
Anao.ua, Tex., :). Chat lea tie la Garza
and Jew us Btrbo lought a duel here yes
terday over a 'woman. The first shots
wore fired from horseback, after which
the principals dismounted and continued
firing. (Jara was xhot through the
back and stomach and died instantly.
Harbo was shot through ljoth tint's and
near the heart. He lived only an hour.
Cold In Massachusetts.
IJoston, Jan 3. The farmers of Frank
lin county, .Mass., are greatly excited
over the discovery of gold anion'' the
Buckland Hills. The principal find is at
an elevation of 1,500 feet above the sea
level, and the deposits are found in
quartz veins or reefs, traversing blue
slate rock in a northerly and southerly
. f - .....
V, IMAl'OI.K I T .. , ......
Ai.lkn ISKK.HON direction nearly parallel with the placial
Maynaki si-i.xk I .. 4i , ,
on aid uu me KuriilCd roc.
C. UUHtiKLL.
CIVIC SOGIlcTJiSS.
CiASS I.OIXIK No. 14U. 1. o. O. K. -Meets
'every I iie-day evening of each week. All
traui ut brother are respectfully invited to
Htleni).
1 I. ATT MO L'T II K N C A M PM E NT
O. F.. lueel erery alternate
t'acii ii'oiitti l:i I he Ma'onic
Jr )t In rt are invited to attend.
No. 3. I. O.
ite 1-Hilar in
Hall. Viaitini:
rJUUO I.OIXJK Nt. XI. A. O. U. W. Meets
rv ;il'crii:iti Friday evening at K. ol p.
hall. Tr.iiisieiit brother' arH rew-tf ully in
cited to ; trad. K..I. Morifau.Mastt-rWoikinaii ;
F. P. linitoii. foreman ;li. H. Kenmter. Over
seer; It. A. Taite. Kiuaiicier ; IS. F. lloiine
worlli. Kn-.irilcr ; M. Mii brig tit. Keeelver:
i. U. Mnitli. Past M. W. : I. . liowen, (iuide ;
1. .1. K iii)7. Iii.side Watch.
fiASS CAMP N(.3.r. MODKI1S WOODMEN
s- of Alu.rric-a Meets .second and fourtli Mon
ri.ny eveniiii; at K. or P. hall. All transient
'ii'i;if aie requested to meet with iih. I., a.
r-eweuiiier, eneral'le Consul ; F. Nile
Worthy Adviser; 8. C. Wilde, Hanker; W. A
llui'ck, ClerK.
Rich Lead Ore Found at Catena.
Gai.kna, 111., Jan. 3. J. Hassig & Co.
of tins city, who have been mining for
many years with iudiiTercut success, dis
covered today, while at work on the
Kuchemann IUngc near Galena, a rich
oony oi lean ore, w inch some experts
pronounce the largest lead ever struck in
this region. Great excitement prevails
among miners in this section over the
lucky find. The ore is the finest and
purest at (Galena.
Why the Hear Got Mad.
Said Mr. Southmayd: "When a man
goes out after them "he wants to bo sure
that his ammunition is all right. Three
weeks ago 1 was out gunning for birds
and happened to run across a big black
bear, lie vas about ten yards away,
standing on n log and looking at mo in
the most impertinent manner.
"I always carry a couple of buckshot
cartridges in iuv left coat Docket for
just such occasions. Breaking otien my
gun, I extracted tho cartridges of 6mall
shot, kept my eye on the bear and in
serted two sheila from my left iockct.
"Then I confidently blazed away at
his head. Ho didn't tumble over as he
ought to have done, but snarled wick
edly and mado a break for me. With
out retreating a 6tep I let him have tho
other barrel, and that didn't stop him
worth a cent.
"About that time I heo-nn
that there was some hitch in my combi
nation, and when he knocked tho gun
out of my hands I inferred that it was
time for me to get away. You ought to
uavw seen mo go. i guess he would have
won the race if it hadn't been for a big
6plit bowlder in the track. The split was
just wide enough for rr"to get through,
and I went through ffiere lively, lie
reached out and got a piece of my shirt,
but he stuck fast in the cleft long enougli
for me to get a hundred yards the start,
and then I was safe.
"When I got home I found two buck
shot cartridges safe and 6nug in my 6ide
pocket. I must have dropped two other
shells in with them absent mindedlv,
and it was just my luck to grab the light
loads when I wanted biir shot. I had
peppered that old bear in the face with
quail shot, and I don't blame him for
getting mtid. I was mad myself when I
fpund it out." San Francisco Examiner.
TO MARRY OR NOT TO MARRY.
to marry or not to marry: that Is tho question;
Whether 'tis wiser in tho man to suffer
The Jeers and taunts or outrageous relatives.
Or to cst-hew the sea of troubles.
And by so doing 'scape themr To love; to marry:
Ah mot and by one s marriage to say he weda
The heaitache and the thousand awful woe
A Ueneilict'a heir to, lis a consummation twould
60em
One should avoid. To love; to mamf-
To marry, perchance to rue it. Aye.'there's the
For in that marriage hate may come.
When oae has taken on this fatal noose,
Ke cannot hope escape from, save through the
door v
That makes calamity of all one's life-
For w ho would bear the Btijjma of the divorce
court.
The uplifted brow, the ill cpneeaied scorn,
The ian?fsof despised love, tho law's delay
The iusolence of wife, perchance of child, '
That a!l too quickly from its mother 'd learn.
When ha himself a life of peace may take
With u brier pijief Who would the firm make,
To griiiit and sweat w ith furnace grate.
But Hint the dread r.l thousands of tongues,
Cv which the Day State's men outnumbered are.
iii.u.-a mo win.
And makes us leave the ills we have
To fly to others that we know not off
ouan sensitive souls ho Cms made uo.fards (Jl
And shall our peace of miud
Be shaken mayhap broken,
And single blessedness happy state
Wit h this regard be ever turned awry
And lost hi bliss of liviugT Soft you now
O Cl itics, Scribblers, in your comments
Bo all pros and cons remembered.
Boston Transcript.
JOE, The Oi Pbice Clothier
Extends thanks f tlio La.liYs and (JontlrnH'n wl
io n.ssiht-
eil
in
counting tlie beans, and to the II
on. A. 15. T,.dil
and F, M. Riclioy ;,- theiv kind and
1'ionijit .'LssiVfatu.,..
11I.ATTS.MOUTII I.ODHK NO. , A. O. IT. W.
- ilevt- every alternate Friday evening at
Kociuvixid hall at oVIock. All transient broth
ers are reseetfully invited to attend. I S.
J. arson, ii. W. ; F. lioyd. Foreman : S. V.
Wilde. Kccorder ; Leonard Anderson. Overseer.
i I f.AT I'm.MOL'TII l,onCK.NO. c. A. F. ,t A.M.
-1 Mcet-iou thf f)rt and third .Mondays ol
each month at lhe:r hall. All transient broth
ers are coiUially inited to meet with us.
J. Ku iiKV, W. M.
Wm. H ath. Seerelary.
V KKKASKA CHAITF.lt, NO. .1. It. A. AI
Me-t second and fourtli Tuesday of each
inouiti ui .m;u-oii i" nan. iranscitnt brotliei
are ii.vitc;i to meet with us.
K. E. WlllTK, II. P.
Wm. I' . Secivtary.
ZION CUJiMAMUHV, .M). 5. K. T.
le. i- iirst ami lliird Wednesdav niirlit ol
cacli inontii at M:so-i's liall. Visiting brutheri
:tre cordially invited to meet with us.
Wm. ilA, Kcc. F. E. Wiutk. E. C.
Ci A S 1 1 N r I U M ) 1 icl . Ko Y A I. A KOA N U AI
' ii!cct I lie econd and fourth AIondas of
each inoi.ili at Arcanum Hall.
li. N. (iLKsx, Uet'eut.
l . j. .uiM'K. secretary.
PLATTS.V.OUTH BOA ROOF TRADE
Kobt
ivoidenr
1st Vice I'rcsMleut
"nd Vice l'ivijcl.t
Secretary
Tre.i-i.rcr
lIISKrroKsl.
.1. C. ItM hev. F. K. White. J. V. Tatterson,
I. A. ToMier, li. I-.Non, C. W. Sherman, F. Uor
der, J. V. i eckbach.
B Windham
A. B. Todd
...Win Neville j
.. F. Herrmann
F. It. (iuihuiau
Report of Admiral Luce.
Washington, Jjiii. :5.The state de
partment today made public the report
of Admiral Luce in regard to the sur
render to the JJnited States of the steamer
Ilaytieu Republic. The admiral's report
confirms the dispatcbes already received
by the Associated Press from its corres
pondent on board the United States
steamship Galena.
Ot the copies of correspondence en
closed by admiral Luce in his report, the
following from the llaytien secretary of
foreign affairs to our minister at Port-au-Prince,
is the only letter of importance.
It would seem to indicate that the llay
tien government is not satisfied with the
decision of the president.
Pokt-au-Pkince, Dec. 20. To the
Minister: JJy reason of the friendshiu
existing between the republic of the
United States and the republic of Hayti,
the government has decided to give up
to admiral the merchant steamer llaytien
ucpublic, captured m the waiers of the
St. Marie. At the same time the govern
ment makes some reservations in what
concerns the judiciary action io which it
may have recourse before the American
courts. Secretary of foreign affairs,
Eng. Mao hon.
To Mr. Thompson, minister resident of
the United States at Port-au-Prince.
Curious Chinese Notions
Both savage and semi-barbarous peo
ple have always exhibited a great repug
nance to any surgical ojieration, however
necessary, which involves amputation.
The North China Herald, in commenting
upon tliis circumstance, points out that
the Chinese have always shown this
repugnance, not on account of fear of
pain, for they are patient under all kinds
of physical suffering, but because they
look upon it as a duty to keep the body
intact. If they submit to the amputa
tion of a limb, they invariably ask for
lm r-.-..., 1 . I 1 , . ...
oc lucuiucr. auu kppo lr inn
box, to bo buried in. duo time with the
owner. Sometimes they will actually
eat it, thinking it only right that tha't
which has been taken from the body
should be returned to it.
On tho same principle an extracted
tooth will be carefuUy preserved, or
ground to powder ana swallowed in
water. Another curious phase of the
same idea is seen in the belief that a sick
parent can be cured by broth mado from
flesh cut from a living child, and it is
looked upon as a sien of film 1 TOAt v f np
the child to submit himself to an opera
tion for that purpose. The child is sup
posed tq bo of the vitaj essencobf the
parent, and if a portion of tins essence
is returned to the fountain head, the
parent will bo greatly strengthened.
The peace loving nature of the Chinese
is 6aid to bo largely due to this respect
for the human body. Chambers' Journal.
Archimedes at the Lever.
, c apologize for mistakes made in all
iormer issues and say thev wero inex
cusable, as all an editor has to do is to
hunt news, and clean tho rollers, and set
ie, iiuu sweep me noor, and pen 6hort
items, and fold papers, and writo wrap
pers, and make tho pasto, and mail the
papers, and talk to visitors, and distrib
ute type, and carry water, and saw
wood, and read tho proofs, and correct
tho mistakes, and hunt tho shears to
write editorials, and dodge tho bills, and
dun delinquents, and take cussings from
the whole force, and tell our subscribers
that we need money. We say that we've
no business to inako mistakes while -attending
to these little matters, and get
ting our living 6n gopher tail boud
flavored with imagination, and wearing
old shoes and no collar, and a patch on
uui pan is, oungea to turn a smilinf
countenance to tho man who tells us our
i.Mn,y.onn ,i anyhow, and that
, t "v- t ueiu.T one with his eves
Shut. Lfiin.in Tnwn r-ii
v tivsuv.
JJ 0 EES'
Extends thanks to the r) people of IattP,noth fr
their liheral atfendat:e
The Following Guessed Nearest the Number:
Ilobert Patlon, .O Suit.
JIiss Emma Kline, Silk Mnlll
t'V.
Mrs. Came Watson, Sill; Handkerchief.
45 C. A. R.
...f'onimander.
Vice
McCONIHIE POST
KOSTKK.
.1. XV. .T.IIXoV
CI t. Twit ,., Senior
r. A.mrf-s .junior "
;:. NH.K4 Adjutant.
llXVUV STKKtilHT i. M.
Mai.on Dimiv Ohictrof the Lay.
Cm aki-Ks Fonn " Onard
AMiEh-ox Kitv Sergt Major.
.(.o;;ouB:.KMAJf.. .. Quarter .Master Serjit.
I,. '. crKTM Int Chaplain
Meeiitur Saturday evenin;;
MIKE SCHNELLBACHER,
W;gon and HlucKswiith Shop.
-r, f
Buggy,
jiacitine una now
A Specialty.
c. tlK'
33 S
ishoeing
He uses the
I .st Horsc&hoe for ."the
:r for Past P.iving and City
ever invciitcil. it 13 made so
;i c i:i put in sharp or flat corks
for v.vt a;iil rlippery roads, or
rv mf's. Call ami Ksnmine
these S'r.'escmi io i will have no other.
J. M-Schnellbacher,
,th St., Plattsmouth, Neb.
IIrtrti
Fari:u
purpus. .
anyoir- c.
as need. '1
smooth 1
JULIUS FEPPEMBERG,
M.VNUKACTCRER of akd
WHOLESALE & RETAIL
DK.VT.Hn IN TnK
Choicest Brands of Cigars,
including our
Flor do Popperbergo and 'Buds
FULL LINE OF
TOBACCO AND S3IOKERS' ARTICLES
always in stock. Nor. 26, 1885.
Send your job work to the Herald
office.
No Clemency For Foreigners.
New Yorr, Jan. 3. A special to the
Mail and Express from Port-au-Pnuce,
dated December 31, says: "Articles in
the llaytien papers contain furious threats
against Thompson, minister of the United
States to Hayti. Mary Americans have
been arrested, both men and women. The
American consulate is filled with refugees.
Ilippolyte's army js marching on Port-au-Prince.
In an interview Legitime said
he would show no clemency for foreign
ers who interfere with llaytien politics.
Legitime said that he would shoot five
hundred if necessary. The excitement
hare is intense. The Americans at Port-au-Prince
are in danger of their lives."
In regard to tbs published report3 of
ill feeling against Americans in Hayti on
account of the Ifaytien Republic matter,
Minister Preston 6tates that the reports
ire unfounded. Ilesnys, however, that
it is not certain that the little republic
will pay Hie 200,000 to the United States
government for demurrage, and that there
may be a counter claim put in.
Food for Consumptives.
Snails, in the opinion of WilUoh, are
equal in value to oysters. They are, he
says, equally nourishing and wholesome.
On account of their gelatinous nature
they have lately been much used in con
sumptions; and as these complaints are
now very frequent it were to be wished,
says Medical Classics, that such patients
wouiu give tne remedy a fair trial by
boiling a dozen of the red garden snails
every day in a quart of sweet milk or
whey for half an hour, then straining
the liquor through a coarso cloth and
eirinjang it with sugar every mornin
gradually upon an empty stomach, and
repeating these draughts for a month or
two if required,
This red garden snail has also been
used externally in the open hemorrhoids,
where fresh 6nails were applied every
two or three hours, in a raw state, with
remarkable success.
The large Roman or edible snail is re
nowned lioth as a delicacy and on ac
count of its reputed virtues as a remedy
in cases of consumption, which it is 6aid
nasn several instances been entirelv
cured by a regimen of the mucilage from
these snails. On the continent the Ro
man snail is considered a great delicacy;
but the garden and yellow banded snails
are tho kinds uioro commonly eaten.
Oldest House Jn Chicago,
Tho oldest building'in the city, which
stands at tho corner of Jefferson and
Jackson streets, has been sold, and is to
be moved to a lot on Owasco street, east
ot California avenue. The building is a
two story frame, and as near as its hia
tory can lx traced was built in 1838.
- iiivi ciiuuwis was eiriipr a
swamp pi- under cultivation. It was
owned by old Dr. Ingalls for a number
of years, but at the time of its sale be
onged to Arthur Farvar, It was sold
through McAuley & Elliott, tho real es
tate tiealcrs, and came about in the regu
lar course of their business. They had
. lw u. iur. carpenter, and in
looking for a house to put on it found
the (structure iu question, which was
bought for a mere song, neither they nor
the purchaser knowing anything of its
history at the time. It had been unoccu
pied tor several years, but beyond the
windows and doors being broken was in
lemurKauio state ot preservation.
Chicago Times.
An Infallible Coin Tester.
The Siamese ape is said to bo in nrfnt.
request amonjr Siamese mprrdirmt oo
cashier in their counting houses. Vast
yuanuues oi Daso com obtain circulation
in Siam, and the faculty of discrimina
tion between good money and bad would
put-in- io ue possessed by these gifted
monkeys in such an extraordinary de-
f,cvrui uutiopmeni mar, no human be
ing, however careful v trained, can
compete with them. The cashier ape
meditatively puts into his mouth each
com presented to him in business oav-
uivuio, .luu ic-sia n wiui great aelibera-
nuu. ins metnoa ot testing is regarded
m tumiuutiai circles as mialiible; and
as a matter of fact, his decision is uni
formly accepted by all parties interested
m tho transaction, London Tid Bits.
FUBNITURI
Parlor, Dining
G
PORIUM.
Room and Kitchen
The Largest ai:d Most Complete Stock in the City.
CASKETS
FUKNI
OFFIN
3
AND A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
the
Mississippi Regulators Take
Farms of the Dead Men.
Mkmpiiis, Tenn., Jan. 3. From a
gentlainun jijst arrived from Mississippi
itislimed that bands of self-stvled
regulators' are still keeping up the
search for darkies supposed to have been
concerned in the Wahalak affair. With
in the past two we?k' four negroes
whom the "regulators have epoitcd
havi been shot down without mercy, and
their bodies buried where they fell.
The merchants of the country haye be
gun to write letters to Sheriff J. It. Key,
at Dclvalb, intimating that it is time to
stop the bloody work. All the negroes
killed owned little farms, worth from
$.j00 to $1,00. All of these farms have
been relocated at DeKalb by white men.
Thiu circumstance has aroused indigna
tion among conservative) men here. 2L
Roseubaum, a merchant of DeKalb, who
passed through yesterday on his way to
Wt, Louis, said: "."e can see now what
all this fuss was about ft was simply a
neighborhood row. They wanted these
negro i' land, and they're got it."
The "Block" System.
The block system, as it is now termed
in railroad parlance, is simply the divis
ion of a railway into a certain number of
what are called telegraphic districts, the
distance between" which is determined
by the amount of traflio, and each block
station has pi-'naling instruments by
which the signal man can communicate
with the box on each side of him. Now,
when a train enters any block, a sema
phore signal is lowered, and no train is
allowed to follow until the one in front
has reached the end of the block, w hen
the signal is raised and at the same time
lowered for the block ahead, etc. The
block systems in use in Europe and in
the United States employ mechanical
devices for lowering ana raising the out
door signal; but these, it is thought, will
eventually be replaced by automatic dV
vices.
Ho Comes nigh,
Frank R. Stockton, the author of "The
Lady or tho Tirer';" is a ainnll n irv n,n
with eleetrto eyes and a swarthy com
plexion. He measures vou in hi minv
eye much as a tailor does from tip to toe.
"o ociuotii bcaiis aDove a subdued con
versational whisper and never until
spoken to. His copy is legible as print
and singularly free from erasions. In
nin lihvrM'C' nr. Mnt.,. w i i. i " '
n. ut: iias l
hammock in which he thinks out his
ideas and ho will, if necessary, spend
three days in writing 200 words, hence
me mosaic penection of hi3 works. He
will not write a short story for less than
1,000. Cor. The Epoch.
ArWa 000.13$,
HEARSE FURNISHED FOR ALL FUNERALS.
HENRY BOECK
J. II. EMMONS, M.I).
noA;a:oPATiiic
Physician I Surgeon
Ofllee over WeKcoft'n store. Main strrot
Kemlenop in Dr. S-h:ldkneclit s properly.
ironic Diseases and lJNe.ist-s of Women and
Children a specialty. Ohice Iioiiih, ii to H h. hi.
2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. in.
fceTeleplione at both GlTce and liesidffcce
An irebi iated fellow was prowned in
a sti.eot. gutter at Stockton, CaL lie
fell to thoEidewalk, and then rolled oil
into the -utter, which contained abou
iour inches ot water. He was fou
a icw muiiimis iaier, out lire was
tinct.
Tlie Mnd Supply.
,7?,ie question agitated years ago,
' What becomes of all the pins?" might
be supplemented by the query, MtVhere
does Pittsburg's mud come from?" From
some unknown and mysterious "source
there comes to the streets of the Iron
City tons upon tons of mud. It is carted
away, washed away, scraped away, only
to reappear and to grow in bulk as rapidly
as did J onah's gourd. Known causes for
this Increment are pof sufficient to ex-
)lain the presence of these muddy ava
anches. The debris of new buildings,
the droppings from wagons, tho wash-
ujgs nvm uijjutT porxions or me city;
these do not wholly account for the
perennially gathering deposits. It must
be that Pittsbure mud, like Topsy, "jes
Chandler Jones, a burglar, was identi
fied at Hazlohurst, (Ja.. by two tooth
marks loft in an apple where he had
committed a robl.ry. One of the prints
was c f an ingrowing toctii.
Moderate work, alternating with mod
erate rest, gives a brain which, taking
the whole life through, will accomplish
the most and the best work of which a
human being is capable. The brains are
to be improved and developed by reason
able exercise and reasonable rest. The
pee Is aj essential as the other. Oncb a,
Veek.
Digby Aw've jawet thavrt awf aw
scheme taw keep I haw mawthd awt awf
maw clawthea, daw yaw kna?
JJigby Whawt is it?
haw
Digby Aw give awrn awxvtv Law.
iwi-Life.
C. F. SMITH,
The Boss Tailor
Maiu St., Over Jlerg-s' Klioe Store.
Has the best and most complete stock
of samples, both foreign and domestic
woolens that ever came west of Missouri
river. Xote these prices; iiusiness suits
from ?H1 to $35, dress fruits, $25 to $45
pan'i f4, $3, (), $G.50 and upwards.
3P Will guaranteed a fit.
Prices Defy Comoetition.
B. tjfflt:Time ITable.
COIXQ WET. OOINO KA ST.
0. 1. 5 :10 a III. Xo, 2.-4 3 p. m.
No. a -fl :4n p, m. k. 4.10
No. 5 6 M? a. in. So. 6 7 :13 p. in.
No. 90 :17 p. in.
No. 11 6 ;27 a. ni.
All train run daily by wav or Omaha, except
Jos . and 8 which run to and from Schujler
daily except Sunday. -
vU VJ? is a sti' tQ Pac'"c Ju notion at R 30a ro
o. 9 u a at nh from Paoifio Junetiou at iu m.
THE FACTORYYILLE
ROLLER MILLS
Have again been ut in f-hajie to
Grind Buckwheat !
Rring on your Grists nu, get s.m.c
of th Rest Plonr manufactured ja
the State. -
FLOUR AND CORN MEAJ.
on hand for Exchange for
and Corn. (iV(1 Hs iu
pectively,
WltCfit
Res-
Proprietor,
cliion, Cass Co., Xeb
have Wale lie f rom &:i oo
1 otel OO for (.ciiiieiiiiii Ull.
am alilo Io null any oi.e It.
i'"" quailly and
rant all g.ois muiu to
repreMiiitcl. lve me
and Nee Tor vnr.i
II. HI. C.41I.T.
war
Ite aw
a call
The City Meat .Market is the l-nt lae
to buy fre..h meats, pork cliotm, poultry
and game of all kinds. ff 3
Please call and settle your account will
m at once and oblige,
rt-w 2w 7. J. WAnmcK.
I
4