T I i : it i ,V:.iu a. u : . ; 44 p. oj ' ', :4ft a. m ' J:l4a.n ? 1 :. Jo-'lA p.m ; 1;l0 pacific upLwir . TIMHCAkI), i'""wu .rve....Y. io. w . m. 4 - . i , , n.K-N-T-l-T T .. . ' Am.I.'AXn PORCELAIN CROWNS. yr. Nii-I:injri Hmenhellc. for the palolee. ex , jj ( tiai'iior ill teeUi. ,W 'ne Gold Work a Specialty. " koekwood Block f-lattstnoutu. Neb IjAWSON i PEARCE . HA'B RECEIVED' Their Fall s'nns. fnncj r l)bnn. V) l snd qnllla mm i lot ill new taMiiim vine aiiape hat. la straw ai d d-i. 'liiry h. full line nl l-a1rti"i'il anil In ur- der t.) rlnnn nlit dork nut have r duct J tU'U mr rait'O- tint' to 40 and to ' TS c' Is trimmed, HISS SCHUYLER, TRIMMER. I; IT. WNT Always ho on band a full stock of FLOUR AND FEED, Corn, Bran, Shorts Oatsiand Haled Hay for ale on low aa llie lowetst and delivered to any part of the city. '". CORNER SIXTH AND VINE Plattsmouth, - Nebraska. JULIUS PEPPERBERG. MAKrrACTi'Ri or avd vmni.KSALE n:;n retail DBALSU IX THE CHOICEST BRANDS OF CIGARS PULL LINK OF TOBACCO AND SMOKE&'s ARTICLES always io stock o Plattsmouth, Kebrasaa Shorthand. AND TYPEWRITING COLLEGE Plattsmouth, Nebraska. There are thounand. of young ladles, wing mrl. at-hiiil,teaeliers. cleik. ur alio re eklnii out en eiltenre on a salary barely sufficient to supply their every day want. Hy compla-tlng a eourvi Id short hand and fcy flnhlil'igth.jr ran earn from S40 to IliO per umtli. Kl'iia'lnns rimradteed to eompetent students ludlilivual ilmi uctmn, uen typewriter.. DAY AND EVENING SESSIONS. Rorins over Mayer Ptnra TJE AT HARKED BIXTH STREET F. II. ELLKN'BAUM, Prop. The best of frewh meat always found in thin market. Also fresh KffK and Butter. Wild game of all kinds kept in their season. flp BIXTn BTREEl V OOLD AID FORCKLAIH CEOWN8 Bridge work and Has gold work SPECIALTY. Oft. BTKT5A08 LOCAL M nil M other Ml MtbetleaitlTea for the nalalea cxlraatui U treUk, H9L A. MARSHALL, Titzgenld Blood Lumber Yard THE OLD RELIABLE. IU. WfiTEBIIAN & PIIIF LUMBER ! flliini'leo, Lsth, flaehj Doora, Blindo Can supply ev rw di nmn.1 of the city. C'ttlUnil i,"' term. Fourth street in rear of opcrs hooee. - 1 .pEAT DISvj-.-ES tDuiJE TIME. ny CaaTl tlet In.lile They th rJ 1 Thatth. Eiteriar A fforda, sad Bom Sie That la T.ry Good, Tboa(k a TrHlDBB(eroua, While tAimncrj are of one mind In re gard to tl annuyKiice which tramps caue the ilrosd cotiipanies they dis agree about uiethuds of these indi Tiiiuiils In "(oitig" the coantry. I8 itepf the strVt rule of all railroad. prohibitltn; tru.v, these professional trsrelers get over e road wmehow or other with astonisuVig rapidity. They have been known to cuae from San Fran cisco tq New York inSnt a trifle longer time thua it touk ilr. Jfackey on hia record breaking trip. It h by no means certain that one of thexe nomads didn't accompany Mr. Mackcy part of the way across the continent on the fuit tuaU train, Tramj are partial to mail trains. The trnrk re rnomier than those of the ordinary cwh or freight car. Whatever doubt there waa about Mr. Mackev'i bealini too rrcurd t!,r,a IcerUiiily wau't ai;y ducbt that Mr. . ... V - t . 1. M. ...1 xihuiji ucai iun ruiinjoii cuinivtny. There are tramps aud tratuMk Many, a poor follow who has zpent hi laM cent aud is out al the elbow wants to try his luck in another part of the country, but be has no menns of petting there except his heels. These will not carry him far without hunger staring him in the f;u.-e. lis slinks abuat some freinhtyurd, and when a train is pulling out begs a train man to carry him along bit.' lie ad mit, that he is trump, but be inn't; he's a beggar aud a tenderfoot. There are others, who have Jut got their haud in, traveling from town to town, and when a trainman catches them atowed away in a box car they whins piteoualy and recount their sufferings or thone of a tick family miles away which they are anxious to get to. hOW E&aL Tnaju a ACT. "These are no tramps," said a brake man. "There is nothing interesting about them and they are a nuisance. Tns profe8tional tramp is a character, and sometimes you meet with one so slick that he deserves to beat his way. The real tramp makes no excuse when he is discovered. Nine times out of ten be makes a threat, and as good many of them go armed it is dangerous to meddle with them. For if there is human being who might be expected to value his life cheaply it is a tramp rather than a burglar. liow many times have I had a tramp marl at me with a string of oaths and wind np by threatening to put a hole through meP "Probably tramps will bang on to most anything, from the brakeshoe to the wheel box," suggested the reporter. "No," said a trainman of the Central Railroad of Now Jersey. "Many people have erroneous idoas about the habits of tramps. Personally I never saw a tramp on a track, but others say tbey have. Tramps generally poll for an empty box car, if there is one open. It is carious to see them search the yard over, inquire about the departure of trains and their destination and the stops they make along the way. Why, Satnrday night, jutt before leaving for Puiliiimburg, I went to search my train for tramps, and 1 found an mpty Fall Lrook car full of them, right next to the traiu shed. Tbey knew somehow that the car was going home, and that it went to the end of the journey. They always aeetn to want to 1 go as far as possible. "These fellows set tip a whining aud beirged me tn lt them go along. They all ha1, sick families, or something jnt as ba J, to go for, ana one of them said he r anted to go to PhiUipsburg to attend the funeral of hi bmtber. I drove them all ont. None of them km a profeM-ional. Tbey didn't know one aitotber, and they all scattered in different directions. REVENUE FOR ILL TREATHEjrT. "Of coulee they will gt,t ir.to any car that is left open, and if there is anything eatable they always help themselves. If there isn't an open car they wiii try to una u car or lmniier. That is more ex posed, but there are always some vacant cooks between the piles o boards, and they make very good bonks. When I was rnnning on Long Branch train we had an experience with tramps at Mata- wan. Wepkksd op a ar of lumber there. A gang of tramps had learned of its time of departure and that it was a through car, which Jost suited them. They always try to get a 'through leep er,' like passengers who pay their way. One of them, who had a wooden leg. they pnt on top of the lumber in plain sight, and then they appeared to go away. Of course the train n.en wouldn't pnt a de formed man off, and apparently be waa -the only oot who was going along. But no sooner did the locomotive signal to tart than the gang lit npon the lumber car like a swarm of bees. We went back and palled them all oat from the crev ices, and we got cones in return. "The next night when a freight train caste along the switch at Matawan wu open, and the train smashed a lot of cars on a siding. The tramp were around later to see ths results, and tbey asked the agent whether that was Porter's train. No, said the spent, and they were very sorry that they bad made a mis take. "An empty box car or car of lumber lacking, they look for a car with a good sill at the end. But not many cars are built that way now. Where a car has ladders within reach of the bumpers tramps will stand on the bumpers and make a long jonrnsy sometimes in that position. Hat generally there is nothing to cling to at the end, and many a pro fessional will stand between two cars with a tooios ?se bumper and that oth foot on the other bnmper. Of course this is reckloHA, for trains oftmn break in two, and dr.'Vn goes the tramp and one sec tion gs over him. I'robabJy more rramps are kilVd in this way than any oiher."-NW York Bon. J i ' a 'music ttachervJ. e' town in central Ohii? tells a oV, story, which goes to show what t, preciittive ears cliisiiical music soinei falls on, when the owners of the ililtilr 4 1 1 4 mitlitnrv la friud mnuii. i it.i.i bu mi . iii ..p w uin. til 1. 1 1 1 o I- . . it is "fast and lively." The imide- enrred during a concert given by An Wllhelmj, the great German violiuu .'' Wilhelmj, as is known by musicians, I particularly excels in rendering andai.t or adagio movements, containing much pathos and deep feeling. , The proprietor of the town hall had heard of the great artist, and although be had n more idea of what ibe per formance of a solo violinist of tlie first rank would be than h had of the pres ent system of political economy in the ' plauet Ma.s, he thought it would be a psyltig speculation to eunu'e the j,'rent ' violinist for a concert, and accordingly ' did so Ht a price which looked ruinrtua to ! his townsmen. The attendance on the nk-ht of the concert proved, mifnrtunately, that the , musical culture of the. place was fit suf ficiently advanced to fill the Iioiik;. for there was only a handful of people in the ball at 8 o'clock, the time fur com mencing the concert, I The mii'-iu to.u her who ti !ls the story arrived aft'-r the concert ci untu "tired. He fontid the munai-r taking tkki-td at the door. , , -,- , "Weil, Jim," he aVked, '.'how's it go. The manager lonkud up with an air of deep dejection. If" Said fintbtti? but plncking bin friend's Wve lie led hiin silently to the door of the hall and j looked in. On the stage stood Wllhelmj withsll the clonic rep- of a statue. ' lie was playing a soulful udaio. As Ini j drew his bow slowly across the fcnn;: he drew forth tones which seemed I almost like melodious sob ia their j sweet pathos. His great lemon colored Stradivari us violin, "the Mi-wlth," seemed to sing almost like a thing of life. The few pwipln who were there &at entranced utid breathless drinking in the matchless tones. "Well, yon see for yourself. 'prof.,'" said the manager to the muiic teacher. "I'm paying that chap f !00 for this con cert, and iookee how slow he's a piayiu." New York Herald. Iloaaehold IefMliirlsera. A deodorizer, it hould be remem bered, simply neutralizes the unpleaKint odors of a room, and is in no sense adis tnfiitant, Whenj a disinfectant is tii-diil, aa in case of sickness, it is always better to obtain one from a phy sician. OfT la im of the lieat doodur izers which we have. It should be sim ply gronnd and passed around the room on a hot shovel, on which two or three live coals have been placed. Hurned cotton or cotton rags are also valuable for this pnrpose. Aromatic vinegar aud coi phor are both excellent deodorizers. an6 may be sprinkled freely in a sick room. The practice of some curees who nse cologne water, sprinkling it freely through the room by means of an atom ixer, is very commendable, as it prove grateful and refreshing to a patient A pail of clean cold water set in newly painted rooms is said to have a neutral izing effect on the poisonous odor given out by new lead paint It is safer, how ever, not to occupy such a room until it has become thoroughly disinfected aud deodorized by pure fresh air. One of the simplest and safest deodorizers to nse about the bouse is chloride of lime. Care should be taken to bay only the bent quality and to purchase it only of a thoroughly trustworthy chemist or drug gist Even fresh whitewash is a power ful purifier and disinfectant of the at moepiiere, aud for that reason the cellar and the outbuildings, where there is any tknger of poison from decaying animal or vegetable matter, "honld h frequently whitewashed. New York Tribune. Dlanara la K.w York. There is one enjoyment of life pose--ed by New Yorkers wLich is rarely fonod in any other of the large cities of this country. Tho resident pf the me tropolis who prefers to live In f umbhed apartments snd 'line hervver his fancy j suiu h.m-a practice common enough in London and in Continental cities-can ! mane a selection irom among a Iiunureil or more restaurants wnere meals ar served table d'hote at prices consider ably less than would be demanded for the same meal at an ordinary American restaurant These (daces are to be found in nearly every section of the city, but tney are tounl uuuieiuCa is ths neighbor hood of upper Broadway. There are French, Italian and German resorts ot this description and the price range from fifty cents to three or four dollars, Including wine, so that the most imps enniona individual can take bis eoa dinner regnlarly at a small xpanae. Boston, lTilladelphls, and even in Chi cago, table d'hote restaurants are prac tically unknown, wbil ia New York they are as numerous, and many ot them quits as excellent In every way, as in any or the principal cities abroad. New York Oor. Brooklyn Eagle. tittle law. Aaal Birds. For nine successive summers a pair of rexj wings built at the base of a button bash, and year aftw year more and more nesU were made until every sjiot was oc cupied for many a rod around. Ia Au gust the dan gathered, and, as a little flock that seemed scattered by day, but reassembled at sunset, these birds were a feature of the meadow for two weeks or more, then they disappeared. I never saw them finite with a passing flock, but this is what they did. Suggestive aa is every flock of birds, we reairy know bat little about them. Noestnralu'shMyet Nthouied the myatury of bird life, and bird slaughter has accomplished nothing. Dr. C C Abbott in Montreal Star. Ha, He Fait Afcoat It. The sermon had been long snd proey. Finally the Rev. Mr. Tonndor cried out, "And is this to lat foreverr "It lixiks that way," growled the sleepy parishioner. "If it is, I'm going home." Harper's Bazar. CI i 1....K. freC I r V TO CLOSE B UYER8 OVKP,COATS M FOR LESS Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps, Trunks, etc. at It will I "Wlio will chow yon better nifikep, qniility and for less buy wefct ot Cliicngo. A CHILD CAN IJUV AS CHEAP AS TOE HZac Cm.l3r Oxio OPERA HOUSE CORNER, ! As well aa the handsomest and others are invited to call on any druggist ami (ret free a trial bottle of Kemp's BaHani for the Throat andjl.iingn, a remedy that is aellinir entirely upon its merits and is g-unrantecd to relieve and cure all chronic and acute coughs, tiethmn bronchitis aud consumption. Large bottles 50c and $1. Some Foonari Ptopl-j allow a rough to run until it grin beyond the reach of medicine. They nay, "Oh, it will wear away," but in inoet cases if wears them away. Could they hp induced to trv the Hticcesful Kemp's Balsam, which is nobl on n Mnitive uar antee to cure, they would sec the excellent elfcct after takitiij the first does. Pricf i c and $1. Trail nie free. At nil ilrueiHts. A son of Mr. ?i. I). Puier, a merchant nf (.ilimlt.ir, N. C, was ho badly afllU'U-d with rheumatism f(,r a year or more, as to be unuble to work or gr to school. His father concluded to try Chamberlain's l..:.. i . . i i. .1... i .. . - " .""1 ow ,, la, ,)lil(. , .lo(), BM(, iu , ,.v,.ry .CI10i ,ay. .'i()rfnt Lot- tie for sale by K i. hrlcke Co.. drugKii-t . The MiHrtotiri Pacificwill eel! tick ets on December 2i, 2.1 31 and Janu ary I, jrood to return January 4 at one and one-third fare for round trip within two hundred miles of Plattsmouth. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Tui Bbst Halve ia ths world for CuU Bruises, Soros, Ulcers, Bait Rheum, Fsvef Sores, Tetter, Chapped tlsnds, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruption., and posi tively err Piles, or no pay required. It Is guaranteed to give satisfaction, or noney refunded. Price tt cents per box. For sal by F. 0. Fricka Mr. Otto Herold left this morning for SL Joe, Mo, where, Dame Rumor has It, Otto will be But we wouldn't jrive him away for tV world. Tl: tnumnial of tv Invention and operation of the cotton gin will ba cele brated next year in Aogusta, Ga., by an international cotton exposition, and the unveiling of a statue of the lnveutor, Ell Whitney. Ex-Governor lleiweather, of Ken tucky, baa very lately been celebrating his ninety-second birthday, and seemed to be as hsie and hearty as any ot his guect. The new structure over the liiatis sippi at Msophuj will be 8,000 foet long. It viU b supported by eight piers, vary ing in height from 117 feet to 17 foet The late Archbishop Mapee used to divide speakers into three claws: The speaker you cannot lUteu to, lhesxaker yoo can listen to and the speaker yoo J cannot help listening to. BEAR IN MIND THAT O 'I SAT S3 IT OTT LION FOR IvTETsT -A. 1ST ID BOYB MONEY THAN EVER HEARD OF pay you to'come fifty miles to trade TOE NO TROUBLE TO SHOW GOODS. . J Balling- 0?r Sukiaarlns'Cratera. The American bark Husper has ar rived from Kobe, after an excellent pas sage of twenty-sevea days, with a full cargo of tea and a graphic account of an experience with a submarine volcano, hot sea water and sulphurous gases. Captain Bodurgren stab's that about 6:43 a. tn. on Oct 24, while living at anchor in Kobe, the bark received a sud den shock that caused the masts to strain and creak. Homo of the standing rig ging snapped like a piece of twine and all hands were thrown from their feet The vessel pitched heavily and caused one of the croHstreo to break from its fastenings and fall on dock. The watr became still an hour later and the bark pnt to sea. Early on the morning of Oct 80, when about seventy-five miles off tho Japan coaet, the liark was almost thrown on her beam ends by tb sudden eruption of a submarine volcano. The water be came so hot that when a sea was shipped on duck tho crew took to the rigging. Tho heat became so intense that the piu h io the Axi -was melted and the seams ois-neil. "Great blasts of hot air with a strong sulphurons smeii," said the captain ew tcrday, "would come np from the break ing surface of the ocean and almost suf focate us for the moment Tueu th membrane of the noetrils became irri tated, causing ns all to have a fit of sneering. This phenomenon laatod for several hours. I bv h4 all I want of the Jspan side for some time to come." San Francisco Chronic!, Tkoodore Tkaaaaa' It at a. Ths baton presented to Theodore Thomas by the Oormanla club, of Chi cago, is made of the whitest ivory, fif teen inches long and three-quarters of an inch thick. It is bespangled with jewels and arabesque tracing and bears the initials of th leader in diamonds and rubies. At the head la an Ameri can eagle In gold corresponding to aa imperial Oennan eagle at the lower end, also in gold. Altogether ths baton is a very elaboraU work of art Detroit FmPreas. Olrls Will rorat.k (tie Ollrla, Several moutlia ago Ernest Schmitx, ot La port, Ind., was severely burned with gasoline, and bis physician has decided that the only way his injuries can be healed is by skin grafting. A It will rqnlre a considerable, quantity of eji diTtnis, the young ladle of the Laport Cliarity circle have consented to furnish the necessary amount of cuticle. Oper ations will be commenced ImuiodiaUdy, providing the young ladies adhere to thoir agreement. Cor. Baltimore Ameri- A Bay's Thaak.f l.laf . "Well, Johnny, what are you thank ful for?" asked the invited gtuwt "Nuthln," said the boy. 'i ain't had any Itu k this year. On'y had one cold all ths fall, 'n that wasn't bad enough to keep nie out of b.l inore'n a day. My chum's had mump, 'n (nut bivn out tbre weeks." Harper's I!ajtr. SUITS, BEFORK Jobbers Prices .with money than you can A MAN UPrlco, PLATTSMOUTH. J. HENRY BOECK Th Leading FURNITURE DEALER -AND a. 1 . A I &iJF.-&J -jU .j n'J UNDERTAKR. j Onitantly keeps on bsnd evurjthin yon need to furnish' your houvs. COtlJIRH StXTn AKD MAIN STUKPT KUsmout - Neb a...4 w QflT Z iV.i For Atchlnaon.St Joaeph, Leaven worth, Kanaaa City, St Louis, and all points north, east south or west Tick eta aold and bag;, gage checked to any point la the United State or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO RATES AND ROUTES Calient Depot or address II, C. TOWNSR.ND, O. P. A. St Louis, Mo. J. C. Phillpti, A. G. r, A. Oma. II. D. Apoah. Atf., PlnUsmotH Telephone, 77. WAnted-An ette, rMsWe msn-anlarr S'S . " "" "'-"'f. "'Hi InereaM.. to .,Zjn reH.i,ih k,., HOIIe. e.'(.Tr.,ir(. b" hew Voik. Voia MAM CAl-tl MHIl LO Ha eu nou !!! yen dra U the the the exci Rev con Wai bib tint for i Tl iiinj Jud Ictif titer the expo jud. intei fully and Inlet rele cIioh placi V