Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882, March 21, 1878, Image 1

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    HtMpl "r'""" """ K
rpe
THE ADVERTISER
THE ADYERTISEB
a.TsvrATXBBorirxs. T.cirjicxxjt .
FAIRKnOTlTER & HACREK,'
Publishers Proprietor.
O.Vr.rAIKBROTUEE T.C. JIACKIB,
FAEKsiROTEIER & HACKER.
Intjllhcr nnrt Proprietor.
ADVERTISING ItATCS.
Onelnch.one ynr-
Piiblished Every Thursday Morning i
AT BUO-W-JTVILLK. UKItRARKA. !
.IOM
. sn
1 00
. se
Each succeeding Inch, per year
OBelnea. per aoostfe
THItaiS. IN ADTASCE:
a apy. gffryear
Each additional lsch. per nvonto-
.S2 OO
. J on
50
It;al aAve;UpmeBtt at tcxal rate Oar sqanre
(ItiUnetef Xausarrtt.orlessi Hrst lasertloc. r.
etch snhsejnittnsertioii.s?e.
US" ATI traaalC3t&(i?erttBaa:2tsmBat be caU
Ge capy, sn ob
t?aopF. Uire" worths.
ynaFersetryKthee&ceanUlp3,M fer.
rfortK Mi-ance.
1
Z5TA3LISHID 185G.
BEOWNYILLE, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1878.
VOL. 22. NX). 39. . official paper',of the cotst?
&E4.DIXG XATTEIt 05 ETERTP AGE
Oldest Paper in tie State
.
wWAw" avVv1'4 Slfmi' i5fclW'Aw' .4l
i i m-3 7i ewj ihi h v n m: nr ihmi iki m x w mn i i n. mht hhb i h gi -fm k .m -t-j 7 1 nw fn&r 1 h:n
i . - " '
1
. - -
w . jnigM5agfTirellg3acaBMJcarifag:;:i'T's' t ' ' " 1 t ! 1 iiniaiiii iMi 1 . . .
A
I
.
OFFICIAL DIRECTORY:
District Officers. j T
e. s.totst
S.SSITH .
YTILUAX H. HOOVER
O. A. CECII
District Attanter
District Cle'lc. 1
..Dopwty Ulerk.
CotiiitT' OiSccrs.
JOH S. RTUIX
-Cssntr JaAse
"VV ILSON X. MAJUC3.
.Ulert: jmI Recorder ,
A. H- GILXORE
1LY RL.ACK-
Tratwnr'
SherlS
Oorwtet
C B.PARKKR
JAM K X. HACKER.
-Sarvey
?!TiniP CUOTHKR
tittnA S per ia lead eat
KIHTC IT SHlMJK.
JOXATKAS HIOOINS. V
Commissioners
J. H. rKKRV,
Citv Officerst
j.s.sTri.i
- X. E. KRRIOKT
J.B. LOCKEH .
1C. T. ROOKftS.
Mayor
raiteeJedzc
ClerK
Trea5;arer
JBCi.H. USSO..
Marsha!
T- RTrKARIS.
josE'HRcnr. j
vr.A. jniKixt,
J. J. 3JCR'ER.
LEWS- HI1.U
CXEi:HAXT. J
1st "Ward
ndW3rd
3rd"W:ar! .
SOCIAL DIRECTORY.
CliTireicB.
HtlPist K. Ckerrfj.-Services each SbPth
ViSl . . . r, -,i t, m. Rla.v school at
A-L1 m.. tn. ."t a.
l p. a. iraver Xeuns ThBMaay
evestax.
;.. P. TVlIiS . ror.
ChritH Chur-h.-rvir evcrr Sftndiiy.
Mtau a m. i.d . u p. m &uodi schooi t p. m.
m H I1TR rHMMH.
ItgV.XitTMEW i'.EIBI. JHSWWK.i i.. o-ip-.
-iu.i i-r-.hvti.rKn " '
t ef BnTHlT&W'-,
?t. P?eui.Ht Cihr
a nni :nn- '.ill' attain
Tlcea tint rililoah in each
Cari-rH- rT,t,-ch.-?rlc everj-ard Swdav I
ce1t.ir' r SrwST M II a. is. Prayer meet-
wMT)umUT veutn.
rt... ,. .wwh rr 4th fJjjndar nf each!
"tt T icwc u. m. Father Ce.r.
rrh'rwria Charefc.-rrH: vcJS.hbU4 vliiiri.
iMMttor eventiKW. abtoth bcl at eteck j jJ A I
Pr-.t. I CHttlng. or Cnttinc and Making, done to '
; '. ; order on shore notice and at reasonable,
asaeeis. , prjp,, Hk had Ions erperienre and can i
BrornTiUf Union tJrndrdfhKoNJ--W-i-, warrant Kti8fictior. !
r;X:Ira!.I.opin Alex. Itohln.onV old .t.nd.j
Bdtth. lat Pnaary
t. ,. . t -.--. idi-- rTip joaiimd. se rri
Mtk.
EMiry.
" -" I J
I. O. of O. F. j
CroTmvil5r Loise Nb.5, I. f s. O. -Rer I
lac kwwrfi repctti.!ly lavtted. A.U-t'Hmorc. ,
H.U. Jas. Cochran. Secy ,
Nm-iUa Cy Lndao o. .10. I.O.O.T..
a ery Stetardai . O.C2wk..1. Iai
TwOKTKIOTT. Sec
Snients of Pytai&s.
Ii.Tcf!-tor hodse No. 15, K. J'.-Xee8very
Hta(ly evitiitic n MammIUII. VWw
KitiMf rardmJl? invited J. H. McCabk.L.C. ,
W. KaO yr x . K. of 1 S.
Monic.
Xentaha Valiry Llse -N o.-i .A.F. . .
rttuWKl m-rims? .- nrday on or beSore the tell
..... ,m n-.iT-. atwn evrr satur- t
dnr eTeninjt for lectur. n.-ociioa C seciii
..1 ....1 ..,..7... .".' - "W - ...
tirr'm iiir unaoirr .mi. -j. v..-.. ---
... na -. A T 4 IT iUTMl I
..it
mjiinr.wrti.1 InnndnTO't-WhaCHlID. J5-W.
Pure. . E H. PAR. IiavBoo. cec
PnruHi CwHHcil No. :t. It. S. ifc !. E. M
kuukI mtiiioiicTnuday of eeh month.
J. V. Xruchw.n. T. i X . A. R- Bavisos. Kh.-
i.CrOTtIC,oiMmideryNo..J.K.T. stated -
atUiKt jd 3J jndv in eaCB IDOIIU. v . I ,
Botren. K C: A. W. NrcKeSl.Rec.
Jlo-r H.oi Lllronlnvf,No. R'i-'I-' cJjJI;'
r C. Mrcu t Mwnic Hall oti Utvtltm Mod- ,
Aav. K. W. Frntana. M P ..-. K- T.afy. .
Mjc-ary. j 2
Arfah (.rr No. tl.rfcrof tcrn Sar. ,
Ktt;il m-i.mir" intra ji"ji --
3r. K. c. xi&itdir; , W X
Sooieties.
Cennrr Pair A-o-tin. P- A. Tlawley.
Preilii . Joua lui. Vi. Prwt4 . -A- Wni.
k.rr. 3 m. Tr. irt.rMt Trejusorer. Xfe-
t2r ';. w.w . . J.w v. vl jamm.
..i , T-. T i' UKmrtl..n Pt0L. J. 3-
Iock.tr. cec.
"Blake JriHiilr AMfulen.-W. T. Itocers.
frtstt J i.. 1 - nei . ic- d 1 r.a.
?trtrtM!ttRR fernet Khim-!' T-Sat,i5'
icl l':r.ir i: Uoddart,Trrrj2reraBS-
ns8 MOaT.
Jlrow-nvWe i.lterarr 8ocictjv-K. W.Paraas,
lrftont. A. o. tul, ee.
z. Q.Zth. T.
OTtANI' LfHWE OFKfCERS.
sim. aha VAX PUIr. W. (i. V. T -JJneoin.
3i V.XbTALF, w .o.u.
.TeatMtfea.
lUTenn.
rw. X. Y. Kartctsi. W. O. V. T
- .i zrvrmi ti ! m
Kearney.
aj.skken v.m; x -"TV.1?-
"?. F. WA .-.K-N'. VI . .,. C.mP Nebraska Clt .
A.J. SKEJJ li. iwi'- & Neman OBenty. t "
KMUeverr Kr-!. e-a5uiniddFenows Hall.
vet Nickett s drus store. Main street. inu-
Kr of our orler vsnint id- wj re . i. -wee
with i. iieitt- B. Church, t . U l . i a. ,
JIoltmrd.Sc i. V. Firrwu.r. sx.,i- U. j
Nrmaba Oi: Loe No. ""l.T !
M. ndar evening b. A. IltinUoaton. W.L.I. J. ,
It.Joe-.-rC. P. Crothrr. L. t. j
A-pinH l.edse No. 1 tl--- vlvj I
nTty rVPolQK. Jtma M. MlnteK. W.UT. T. J. ,
..iv.ru.-... :. - . ... rn
K1IL.S.
Zin
Nt jar. 3I9 stry Thcrsdyevns.
ufjMvsou! Mu. tw n;l i north
w7fBroWBv.:ie. H.o.JClei.I-nJro
-iUe.
ci, v. 13 4ets evrr PtKordoy even-
ril. W. S C:eo. Orow. I- O., Bfownvilte.
1 laea. Vs. J.-Mete verr Pawrdav rBi?.
Sierdcu li - i'. P:mr. L. !-. SherKteo.
- - - . rj. I mt .rwr .47Sir- I
TZL. u'h Rai:v. l. ju Bnuton P. U.
,-j v iitn MOTverv Prlday eveslrw: J )atronuce soiielttjd. Rernemuer the place (
x"ir?ST:r tottl Hun--, four miK. south -arcst ; the old 1'itseoe shop. Muin-t . i
irfKalhaOJr. V. Tmer.L.L . Nemalttt City, j
tierWH.N-.l2.-Mett.verytUirdFereB- .
wlf 'il-.T-.i,drrraSteeeinlS'o"- - 'VcbrctskaA
I Other lad tn Ut eowntv that aestre a ptaee in , j
thV dirt z?y wl.. jea? infurm a of name, nnm-
ber ween a-T w:ier-uaieei-. uuit. K.rj,v.... ,
Ameer and secretary, together with nay other in-
Wrtnauor. J.e na;. r,:i ;o coEmaniK-.
ACTR0SI2ED BT THE C. S. C0TEB53EST. jg
1 9
DMT HITiriHii
or
33xv,0 TT ISrTTJZjEl.
Jaid-vjt Cafiitat.
Authorized
a
-,00,000
IS FREFAItirUTO TRANSACT A
' General Banking; Business !
BUV AST ST.1.1.
COIN & GUEEESOY DEAPT1S
on all tKe principal clUrs of the
Uxtiterl States and S-arope
MONET LOANED
Ob arved secarity only. Time Urafts dleoant
.iacoie?dtdetoslt-
ofs. Dealers In GOVERN3tEXTor.ia. :
STATE, COUKTY & CITY SECURITIES J
i
DEPOSITS' j
..... i
TlocMve jwyBWeonrtbaaaad.anfilNAfiiUihi at-(
Imwtsit tueerUcawc'SCpat.
T-Tr-rfifi, s:.T-lc. U. iT. SaSev. ZZ.A
aAwMV- Frant R- Jonnsoe, Luther Iteadlvy I
VSratPwiblMtr. r
J0H5 Ii. CAHSOX,
a isiiAVTRO?t. Cashier.
President, i
I
TACOB MAttOHN.
HSRCHANT TAILOR,
tnd-dealerln
FlnoBngtlsh, Vrrnrh. Scntck snd Fancy Clotli
TesHacs. Etc. Etc.
'fii-ownviilf.. Xohraslta.
m-s.lw
BUSINESS CAUDS.
HULBURD.
ATTORSET AT I.AW
And JnstJce of the Peace. Office in Ctrart Hone
Brtldios. Brownville, -eb.
1QTUL.L & THOMAS'.
0 AT'l'ORXEyS AT LAW.
oract. over Theodore Hil! !t CJo.'u sterc, Brotva-1
Till.yeh. ; j
rp l. FCHIf'K.
At ATTOROTT ATLAW.
OShce over J. L.iIeUeefcllro'sstore,BrownTlIle.
Nebraska
T H. BROADY,
d , At
Attorner and Connnelor at Law,
( OftceaverState Baw'.Browritvim -eu.
WT. HOGERrf.
Attornev unci
Conne)orfitIiair 1
wiltfx-r)lliL'otiutntion tnanvlep&l business
ea:rMiteiohis"cre. Oflice in the liny building, 1
firowntiile. Neb.
A ?. HOLLAD'AY,
Xi t
rnVMCian, anrKl!On. "Cliin.
. . . ..-
fir&daaiod in 151. ocst d in BrownvIIle J aaa.
SDeciai j.ttenUt mld'to Ottetriee aHd dHeates i
oi women aaowiiMiren. un. .'imusino. i
- s.bj rui la -rI -...
Q A. OSBORN.
Of ATTOIIXET ATLAW.
Oflice, Uo. SI .Main street, Erownvile. 2feb.
;J.
W. GIBSON,
BL.ACES3IITII ASD HOUSE SUOER.
TVnrfc done to ordr and BttafarUon smarantf ed
First street, between Main and Atlantic, Browc
C I I N K ,
i T,"
W, jt
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER f
CUSTOX WORK mud to order. and fitsslwaye
CnM - XMuriK; ihuIj d promptly die.
.MARSH.
TAILOE.
,T.-...,T ,
iinu-iin. - - uiwioiv..... j
EBRASKA
----- - r
FASHIONABLE
BOOt aild Shoe
-31.
tvr a zr i: "??.
Jwf . . .
r-navuijrt liavintr uoncnt tne cus- .
l 1A tom snoP of A- Robison
-- -- Fr&zs r ,,;:: f-- i
I am prepared todo work
"4 -SSCaS
of ail Kinds at
Reasonable Rates.
JS-Repa!ring neatly and
prompuyaoiie.
Shop No. t2 Main Street,
Brown viHc Nebraska.
WITCEEELYg; HAWKINS,
mn i i i m ,
" i
lt door west First National Bank.
Brownville - Nebraska.
NEW RESTAURAJST.
Ji.fs IV2 XL"NCK;
AT ALL IlOUJiS.
CONFECnOMERY.UKES.HUTS, I
juniLUi
II
FRESH AND CHEAP.
Oysters Cocked to Order.
Tos?Kel5 G11 ?taiicl.
a?, j.. bts:
Is now proprietor of the
i-hrMnnfl
bllJIfMLllMil
and is prepared to accomodate the
pablic with
GOOD, FRESH, SWEET
Hv:EXA
clerks
n - ill at all llme he In attendmice. Yoir
PB.AI-IZ S3I.3SESS,,
Iagoh &Blacicsmith?hop
V V
oyz noon west of court house.
:"W
TAGON S1AKING. Repairing,
Plows, and all work done in the best
manner and onshore notice. Satisfaction truaran-e-d.
OiTfiilr arall r34-ly.
B. B. COIcHAFP.
Manttfactnrcr of
59 Main Slroot.
J5roTvnvIIIc, Tiebraska..
Orders From Neighboring Towns
Solicited.
SA1TS TOTJ SHEIS"
..
(i
iiilj jjMiiiiiiil
Haring purohnsed the
E 3L. 2H 2 XI J. ZX T '
jijhdv n mn mww
' Itcjohtoitnnoancetbnt I amprepared to
' do r ht olR-fc livery UuMness.
-Toslh Iioyers.
1 . 1 1
i
t
I
i
j
b" I Si !? I i I?? PL i i
i
!
vtv.
it h mm
B
HllTl I Ifi I M A 0100(1. tSfiTIO"
;l ul ,uw t-llc u,uuu XLllJ
vales and Invigorates
the Whole System.
ITS iTJEHJICirTAI. PROPERTIES ARE
Alterative, Tonic , Solvent,
?? Jjiuretic
Te&ctinc j Eeliabls Evidence.
T S
3Tn. H. K. Stevens.
f UaCimC ' 7,.rTrL-ll!mntrhporfll!v
jh ,,im r ,,k .o.
. ' ....-h.rrAnhuri.MlmutTnwlvPd
. raTiT TT I - "- j - -- - --- -
t tpciiit la lavor of vour treat aud sood
medicine. Veoetixk. for I do not
Too-nlnn I think ecoueb can be said In its
T t:et.iiiit, prai-e: lorl was troubled over 30
' year-, with that dreadful disease.
Tegetlue
Tesretine
Catarrh. and bad such bid conRb
inp spells that it would Eeem as
thougb I iiever conld breathe any
more, and Verktine has cured
me: and and 1 do feel to thank
God all the time tnut there i- ?o
good a medicine as Vkoetikk,
and T nlso think it one of the btir
Tereliiie
ycsrctlnc
m-dicines for coughs, and weak, j
tanking teeltugs at the stomach,
and ad vise everybody to take the
Vr.nETUfh.. for I can assure them
it is one of the best mediants that
crer was. 3Irs. L. GORK.
Cor. Xaearine an I Walnut Sts.,
Cambridge, ilaaa.
! Yejretlne
YeSTCtine
Veet,",C
GIVES
Fegetlne I Health.. Strength,
Tetine AXD APPETITE.
My daughter has received jrreat ' tier iemaie acquaintance, in n
enredaecH "ad decided
Teprctine
Af irS'onSrl: ;
aSeUte." HTfffil:- j
Insurance and Rea Estate Aent, j
Boston. Aiass. ,
-
Cweiine
vVptinn
"
CAJTSOT BE
EXCELLED
VCffCtine
Tcprellne
CRAEtESTOTVy. MAS3.
bear sir. Tins h to certify that I
I have used your "Blood Prepare-
tion" in my family Tor several
u'rSunedrou'UHmo
Sf.S.IilLaia; !
vpirpfino
VegetillC
V&'SSS&SfSSi ;
emetine
almost evertbing i can cheer- j
ITcetine
need of such a medicine.
Ynnrs rnprrfnllv.
iiss.A. a. niNsMor.E. ! Her ways were so di.tractinciv he
No. IB Kusaell street, t J -
: t witching that you wouldn't have
Tcsctiue
i r . . . " ,
rm.t- raiuaoienenieay
r - t
south Boston-, Feb. -. isni. ( She was twentv-two quite a little
Mr. .stkvkxh. . , , ,
Irar&r. I hare taken several i woman but you never would have
bo:tles ofyoar Vboktis-e and ' , . , .. . . .
am convinced it is a valuable rem- thouglit her more than eighteen.
edv for I'yspepia. Kidne-7 Com
plaint, and general debilitj or the l It is with regret we admit that she
oyiem. i,, ., ..' ,, .,
lean heartily recommend it to ' took to flirting as naturalli B3 a duck
all snftVring from the above com-J ,jt.,ii.
ptint.. takes to water. She couldn t help it.
Yoars r"pertfully. !., . .l. -i. .
iias.MUNROEPAEKER, There was not the slightest intention
: Athens street. Qn hpr parfc tQ be heapre!,a . but those
Tegetfne
Teg'etine
j Yegreline
I Voaretine
tTEGETEJE
PREPAKKD BV
'. .
SH.E.STEVMSIB0ST05T,MASS.
1 ' '
Tegetine is Sold by all Druggists.
S. HTJDSAET'S
Jr clCG fMTX.Cl WCLlt '
. . -i .-n. . ,
Saloon and Billiard Hall!'
TflE EEST OF
: Brandies, Wines. Gins. Altmhafs
)) UHIOJ
And Wlii&JlcIcss.
JTo.4fl.MRln Street, Opposite Slierman
lioitse, Uro-ivnvilJe, Nebraska.
ORGANIZED, 187G.
rr
ill of I
AT 5ROWXVILLE.
CAPITAL, $100,000.
TranFRctsngcncralbaDKinEhUElness, sells
PikJUou all thoprmc lcitlebofthe
TJHTEED STATES MB EUEOPE
3-Special accornrnodations granted t
depositors.
STATS, CQTJ1STY' &, CITT
SECURITIES,
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
OFFICERS.
Y.H.IncCREERY,
V.W.HACKNEJT,
H. E. GATE5, : :
: : President.
Vice President.
: : : Cashier.
BIRECTOR55.
I.. HO A niEY. J. C. PKU5ER.
WM.lt. HOOVER, C il. KAUFfJJAX.
W.W.HACKXEY. H. C IJiTT.
W.IT. McCREERT.
Meat Market.
BODY" & BBO.
BUTCHERS.
j "xoorX. S"WGe"fc. 3?resll- -5WI"fn."fc
; ..
Always on hand, and satisfaction jmar-
anneOto ail contomrrs.
i K -
i fiTF
151
.
J IhUl
nn . n .n
liilUIIIIJlJ
I "
t
''Baby Cnnting."
Baby, Baby Banting
Must take her morning nap,
TJpBaby Bunting,
Into rnamma's lap.
Off with shoesand stockings,
Jibw be a mouse,
"Whll I tell the story
Of footles keeping house.
This toe to market Trent
To buy a piece of meat.
This toe stayed at home
And found enough to eat;
This one no dinner had; ,
This cried tor some;
And this little fellow said,
"When will mamma come?"
Restless feet are quiet,
HandsTire still as death ,
"Anoder 'tory, mamma."
Comes in the faintest breath.
Stealthily the Shadow
Over blue eyes creep.
Hush ! Baby Bunting
Has fallen fast asleep.
Youth's Companion,
THE EEST OF PEOOF.
A Pleasant LoTe Story.
There could be no doubt of Nellie
Brainard's pood looks. The town
poet, in rural rhymes, bad compared
her complexion to roses and lines, to
the immense disadvantage of those
flowers.
that, while she was pretty, her beauty
s of th- doll order.
jf tne poets rhymes were not, SUre-
v fhf iodine' HpfMsinn was convincintr.
"Doll-babish" is the term women al
ways apply to the beauty of which
' they are jealous.
To say Nellie was pretty, is to put it
., ., oi .. ;. i t c
mildly. She was bewitching. JiV-
about her was bewitching
from her blue eyes to her little feet-
thB M" oncased in slipners at .sight
of which Cinderella
ed green with envy
0f which Cinderella would have turn
blamed anybody for being in love
with her.
j blue eyes of hers insisted on looking
tenderly nt everybody and every-
K
When she gazed at the moon (yoa
i should have seen her with the moon-
" uon heru!) K y1"1 as,m,nch
l.r.lnv.jT..r.K..,rwlf?h.nl.nl,A.AHflara
: iciiiici ucT5Pt iijuuiipucuciirvcu mcir
j wa really a man in it. It was unfor
j tunate that she was possessed of such
ieyes, but she really was not to blame.
! It, i iitinepp'sarv In tnfa that, ahp
1? responsible for terrible laceration
; of the hearts of the village beaux.
' There was none other umoug them
1 who had arrived at the desperate con-1
dition of Mr. Frank Gray. The deep-
est depths of the blue ocean were
mere shoals compared to the depth of
his love.
t His annetite had become such a
shadow of its former self that his j
. landlady contemplated bis symptoms j
with mercenary iov. Thedimensions
of his wash-bill were past all belief.
He was utterly miserable!
He saw the "loadstone of hi3 exis-
i tence" smile impartial! on all men.
He called himseifa fool for being iu
love with such a flirt, and no doubt a
1 nrrl mam nannla airrauil ii?ttH him
IgUIIUUIUlj V-W.l. Up.V.U ITIIU ....... ,
Tht. sIhIp nf Xellip's hpnrt in rprrii i
. .
to him is none of our affair.
Upon a bright spring day these two ;
wprMBirtiiuron f orftPk'a hnnt Rrnnt ''
or river would have been more ro
mantic; but with that strict regard
for historical fact which should be at
once the ambition and pride of all
chroniclers, we repeat it was a orpek.
Frank was fishing, while Nellie
was watching with expectant face the
bobbing cork.
Our love of historical accuracy again
compels us to be unromantic. Nellie
did not fall in the water. Frank did
not jump in, and, seiziug her hair, af
ter a prolonged struggle bring her safe
to shore, and, as a result they did not
get married and live happy ever after
ward. This is probably the only case on
record where this has not happened.
It is well known that young ladies
are in constant practice' of tumbling
in the water, and that young gen-
,'tlemen always save them. This ex
, ception only proves the rule. There
j would have been no earthly object in
i Nellie doing such a thing, as the wa
j ter was hardly deep enough to drown
! a kitten.
I Nellie watched lhe bobbing cork,
eagerly waiting for the expected bite
j that is, Nellie was eagerly waiting,
not the cork.
When it went under, and Frank
; pulled out a struggling, gasping little'
fish, for all her eagerness an express
inn oi sympathy came into her face,
i "Ugh!" she exclaimed. "You hor-
jriri fellow! What cruel sport! You
men are heartless monsters!"
Frank replied, meaningly, looking
very hard at her:
"No more heartless than some wo
men I know."
Nellie's eyebrows arched, and her
lips pouted, as she answered :
"What a horrid remark!"
"It is horribly true," rejoined he '
sun looKing very hard at her. "Thev
catch men's hearts and throw them
away again as pitilessly and careless
ly as T do this fish
Nellie replied, somewhat earnestly
'BUt. Fmnk. Vttn rtnnt 1 "..I1
I throw the fish awnj, do ou ?
' - -. !UH ava
But the remark was lost on him. i a visit to Nellie, who answers the de- j mangers or pastures, and even bees ; ede that my old dad prefers a ten
He sat eilent for a time then only J ecription of that middl-aged lady, will sip a solution of salt wih avidi-; cent-soup-bone to fifty cents worth
paid: Nellie, no donbt had one hundred ty. Men will barter gold for it in j of rising younggenlua. DetroitFree
"I am tired of fishing ; let as walk
up to the hoae.'
Wa3-that a shade of disappointment
on NellieVfaee? Who knows?
That nisht there was to be n party
at the house. Of course Nellie was
there ; and, as a consequence, Frank,
too.
We forgot to mention and for such
an unpardonable ommisaion we apol
ogize that Nellie Brainard had quite
a snug little fortune of her own. Per
haps this had quite as much to do
with the number of her suitors an her
beauty..
On this particular evening, her ad
mirers wre so many and 60 attentive,
and Nellie was sq delightfully pleas
ant to all, that Frank was in a con
tinual white heat of jealousy and rage.
Had he been melo-dramatic in his
chnrcter, nothing but an unlimited j
quantity of gore would have satisfied
him.
Major Bernard, a military gentle-
man from the city, very proud of his
name and the handle to it, was his
particular aversion. It would have
given Frank great pleasure to have
waded in the blood of the whole .Ber
nard family.
At eleven o'clock the Major and
Nellie left the dancers to stroll in the
moonlieht. Oh, if Frank could only
hae got at him ! The conspicuously
tender way in which tha Major put
her shawl around her created a vol
oauo in Frank, compared to which
Vesuvius was mildness. When he
went to bed, that night, it was with a
determination never to make love to
Nellie again.
That was how it happened that for
six months he never called to see her.
When they met In the street, she
gave him reproachful, almost plead- J
ins looks, hut he only bowed coldly
He would have given anything to
have taken her in his arms, but con
gratulated himself that he was not to
be deluded by her arts. Foolish fel
low, not to know he might have done
so for the asking !
It was a tima of great financial de
pression. Frank Gray's business was
good, but collections were slow. For , these four slunfc out of the iNornen
a year he had found It hard work to j tane Gate together like commo'u way
meet his obligations. A note of his j faring men, they could hear the sol
for three thousand dollars would be ' diers in the Praetorian camp, on their
due in a few days at the town bank.
The man to whom he had civen it a
rich old miaer with a heart of stone
bntl-rofuseli-ta-ranatr it either wholly
or in part.
In vain, as the day drew fatally
near, Frank had endeavored to col- i
lect the money. That failinsr. equal
ly vain was his endeavor to borrow It.
Every one seemed to be in the same
condition as him?elf. He found, too.
that most friendship won't stand a
three-thousand-dollar test.
Of course the whole town knew he
was in trouble. Blow your nose at
one end of a country town and some
oody at the other end sneezes.
Nellie Brainard had heard of his
difficulties, and taking into considera
tion the fact that he had not called on
her for months, eeemed to takea great
interest in Frank Gray's affairs. She
nUS'lillliCU Ullll l3-'TUMlii:u ui.i.i
sbe hid ascertained the amount of the
note, and the day upon which it
would fall due.
Upon that ..day. at four o'clock,
Frank sat in his office waiting for the
protest. He had requested the teller
I of the bank, a friend of his. to bring
it.
He had suffered much all day. t
He was a proud fellow, and would
. .
rather have lot hh riglit arm than
his financial honor.
. . ... ..
In a little while his friend entered
and exclaimed :
"Why old boy, how pale you are!
Cheer up!"
But he only answered, .In a despair
ing way:
"Give me the protest."
"Frank," was the reply, "there is
no protesc."
The astonished man sprang to his
feet.
"No protest? I cannot under
stand !"
"Now," said his friend, "if you
will sit down again, and not act bo
much like a wild Indian, I will ex-
plaiu.'
"Go on go on
t
"The note was paid at ten 'minutes
of three."
"What mystery is this?"
"Will you be quiet? It is no mvs
When I had given up alf
tery to me
h
ope that you might by some chance .
iise the money, a middle-aeed lady ;
raise
entered. I had neverseeu her before.
She-walked up to mv window, and ;
Paid, in quite a matter-of-fact way:
.th..,o. ; o .,ti t Mi. TTrontr f3rni7K !
for three thousand dollars, due here
to-day.' I assented. Believe me I
was astonished when she said, 'Here
is the money. I do not wish the note;
t1ito il to Mr Orov
"The mystery is greater than ever!
Frank interrupted.
"Not so fast my boy," his friend
went on
"You need not blush when
Itfcll vou I know you love Nellie
r.-. i v-.. .! .. V- tn
.DraiUUru. iU uu Jib rjjvr naiit
until I am through. You may blush
if von wish when I sav thatl believed
! all along Nellie Brainard loved you.
j Now I am certain of it "
Frank gasped actually gasped.
"You know she has quite a large
inosit In our bank. Well, this
' depo
I morning she came in, and, to my as
tonishment, drew twenty-nine bun
dred dollars. At ten minutes of three
Ihe.note was paid by the middle-aged
- tt nf nrhnn. T hHA told VOU. I
I iiui ..w.... -- -
i)ffvmCe learned there Is an auntonrTded with lumps of rooS Rlt intwir
i dollars in ready cash, and drew only
twenty-nine hundred as a blind."
It was plain enough now. Frank ; rents their children. In some dis
was dazed. j tricts of Africa salt Is far more expen-
Of course he didn't dress himself re-' sive than the purest white sugar in
gardless that evening before he start-1 Europe, and children will suck a
ed to see Nellie! Perhaps he didn't lumpof it in preference to sweetmeats,
walk along the road as though he was But the existence of a greater or less
floating! Oh, no not at all ! appetite for salt in all individuals
j Perhaps he didn't see through her'
' .
rr . w, ., .. ,... ... - .
Perhaps it wasa long time before they
understood each other !
At all events, if there had benone.
: peeping into the parlor at about niuei
o'clock, he or she would have seen a
very pretty face looking up from a
manly shoulder, and pretty faces do
not grow on manly shoulders of their
own accora.
Whether the chirping sounds that
J T
occasionally broke the low conversa-
tion were kisses, will always remain
a matter of conjecture. We expresM i
no opinion ; and the wedding that
oon followed will help our readers to
form their own opinion on to delicate j
a topic.
Tho Death of Xcro.
Nero wandered out into Lhe streets
of Rome, knocked at the doors of
friends; none would answer to let him
in. He came back to his bedroom,
called for Spicillu?, the gladiator, to
kill him, but Spicillus was gone
What!' said he to Epaphroditus, his
Secretary, who had now joined him,
'have I neither friend nor foe!' And
he rushed out again to throw himself
into the Tiber; but, hi3 courage fail
lug him, and, his reason growing clear
once more in the face of appalling ca-
latnitv, he wished for some quiet
piaCtt where he micht consider his
strange and sudden position, aud col
lect his thoughts for death. With his
head muffled up, and covering his
face with a handkerchief dressed on
iy in a tunic, with an old soiled cloak
thrown over im phoulder, he trudged
along barefoot in the gloom of the j
early twilight, nccompauied by Pha- j
on, Sporus and Epaphroditus. As
right, cursing Nero the beast, aud hail
ing Galba as Father of hie country.
They are in pursuit of Nero.' said a
man as he passed them. 'Any news
in the city about Nero?' asRed anoth
er. There was no time to spare. They I
found him a brotcen down horse.which j
he mounted, and they hurried on. At j jns; aufj then they smoke and swear ""'end, with upturned eyes, absolute
last they reached the villa of Phaen, and drink; and it is not much of aj 5 refused to accept my prescription.
parched with thirst; the Emperor
lapped up some water with his hands.
from a running tank, with the bitter i
jest : 'This is Nero's distilled water.'
He crept quietly into the house on
all-fours, through a hole in the wall, j
and threw himself on the first mat-1
tress, prostrate with hunger, misery, j
ana latigue. men ne oraerea a
grave to be du? before his eyes, for he
refused to fly. He bade them to pave j
uie pit wuu inaruiu, ami, ep"S I
theatrically, he prepared, surrounded ,
l 1 ' !- !! X .! I
ere the words I ft his lips a dispatch!
from Rome arrived, which he snatch
ed out of Pnaon's handt. He read it
and shuddered. He had been con-
demned by the Senate to be beaten to j
, ji. i j i i i. i i, .., i
". " ssu ".
!..., :. II.a Tmn. Cn.vi..r. rnrn .
"". """ "JC u. oC..mK -
ri'irrrrors no loir rnpir nrwrirs i-rp?r
daggers, he felt their points. Greek I
verses occurred to him, and he began
fa FAitfA T-Ta arrrrar Qnnfilt t r caf tir
i r i : r i-:i" i.t. i.ni '
a wail for him to kill him to kill ,
i- i, , . .t.s m. '
himself first. At this moment the
tramping of horses and clash of arm
ed men were heard below. He broke
out in a verse from the "Iliad :' 'The
noise of swift-heeled steeds as?ails my
ear.' In another moment he would
be taken alive. 'Come then, courage
man !' he cried, and feebly pushed the
noint nf the da?rer into his throat. I
But his nerve was gone, and Epaph-
roditus came to his help and pressed
it home. The guards burst in and
would have siezed him. 'Is this your
fidelity?' he murmured, and expired,
with starins eyes, to the terror of ail
j who beheld him. It was bte last pose.
and, as the end of a life, it could not
have been outdone. 'Is this your fi-
delity ? 'He had never made a bet-
ter comic hit,' writes M. Kenan. 'Ne-
ro uttering a melancholy plaint over
the wiekedness of the age, and the
disappearance of good faith and vir-
tue! Ti u applaud! as the drama j
is ended and the curtain falls. Oace
is ended and the curtain fall5?. Oace I
in history. O Nature, with a thousand
mosrCP. thou hast had the wit to find
an actor worthy of such a role.'
Good Words.
Salt.
Not more than twentv-years ago a
learned doctor published an elaborate
treatise to prove that salt was the 'for-
bidden fruit,' through eating which
our first parents fell, and had ever
clnnn Y.rmt, rim minii nf 1! nnf dispAa-
uy uuumj .cuimuiuK miiou, u P.v to r opjnion a3 anybody; but
hi- last act. 'What an artist is now j come Qnce an( ju(je for VOQTK i
about to perish !' he exclaimed, but , n ,,..,. Hk. ,. need., 0 bnck.
nuit; ucsu nt. wuuoi, v.. ..-. . - ,..... .... .... w.. . -
! es and Ills, though only a fanatic? Tom-usGrim! you'd better oh ! !
, would deny that salt serves some ira-
j portant and essential uses in the ani -
mal pennnmv. The deire for Kalt;bla of drum nor a bugle's bea
seem an instinct implanted in tiiet
animal creation, and there is a natur -
! al craving for it when it does not ex-
ist in suffioient quantity in food
t i. .i . i i A;r-nn
Viiiujui.i win iravei iuii uia.ivo.
and brave great dangers to get at sa
line earths, called salt licks ; horses
and cows are most healthy when pro-
j
i countries where it fc pcarce, and for it
, husbands will sell their wives and pa-'
shows that the substance serves more'
'
...F. 4H.-o w. -..
ly gratifying the palate.
Salt being a larue constituent of the
human body and forming about half
the total weight of the saline matters
of the biood.theconstant loss of it by
thesesretions.tbc b:!e, and even tear?
requires to be made up by its empjnv-
I ment as a condiment.
The tree acid j
found in the stomach, and
which
forms an essential constituent of the
gastric juice, is obviously derived from
the salt taken with our food ; and the
soda of the blood and -some of the
secretions id doubtless obtained from
tV. ,rl,;fS,. ; !, D..tr.
r,9 ucuuui jjvrsibiyii ,u
the system of
common salt, which is the only min
eral food of man and the only saline
condiment essential to health.
STOSIES FOE YOUNG PEOPLE.
I Am Afraid.
'George, let's go down to old Reed's
a little while,' said Dan White to a
companion one evening, just after the
lamps were lit and the day's work was
done.
'I've got to study,' replied George.
'Let the studying do itself and come
ou,' said Dan.
I can't, I must get that lesson.'
Wellget up in tb moruing and
frof if "PrnYosanr .Tnnoa oavq mnrninf !
is the richt time to study any way, and
he ought to know.'
I am afraid, 'said George.
A roar of laughter was the reply
that greeted this frank confession,
joined in by all the boys who stood
around.
'What are yen afraid of?' inquired
Dan, as soon as he could command his
tongue.
George hesitated.
'Of his morals,' sneered one.
'And his manners,' added another.
And his mammy,' supplanted a
third.
'Let him speak for himself,' suggest
ed Dan. 'What are you afraid of,
Georse?'
Whv whv.if weiro there wemight
stay late; then I might oversleep my-
elfaud not get up early In the morn-
nlace-
.o hire a hall ! go hire a hall,' wa
echoed on all sides.
jt js not pleasant to he laughed at,
and George wajust ready to cry.when
one 0f the larger boys silenced the
clamor and said :
,Come on b w,m carg3 for mor.
als.or man ners.or grand mot hers, come
ahead; come Geore,' he added en-
treaUng,yf donH be backed down .
the fools don-t knovr wUat thev are
jauellne af you've a3 good a. ri"ht!
I
I am sorry to soy the honied word
had the desired effect, and the whole
troop, George and all, went rushing
down to the lowest little dram-shoD
-n aH tfaat comniunitv with a3 ralieh
bravado i there was
not a con-
science in the crowd.
Late in the night, or rather, early
in the morning, George slipped quiet-
Iy Into his home at the back door.and
J
crept noieles-'lv up the back stairs.
v - ....
Tn.Hiw a hlnntci iiit.rn!of1 illnrt-
ed, confirmed drunkard, whom in-
temperance, as a strong man armed, I
has overcome and taken captive, will
tell you with tears of shame in his j thread aud altaoli it ftrmly to the fln
eyes. that he is going straight down j ?er above the ring; Uin wind s
tn ruin, with no nower to save. because , around the ringer tHrntly till you
in his youth he waa afraid to say T
( am afrdld-
A Hip Tan Winkle Failure.
j The other night Tom Grim, the
j newBboy.got to thinking how nice it
! must ,,ave been for Rlp Van vViukle
to fn the wav he did, and how
mucb money had been made by the
j p!ayt and ho determined to go home
j and go to bed and 3eep fot a gtraicht
hundred Years. He cave away his
, jHCk-knife, threw his tobaeco-bor in -
lo ;he aliey, and requested the boys
not to jet the papers Hpeak ill of him
i in cae hs turned up 'mysteriously
. miinjj.' When Thomas got ready
j for be(1 he kK-d tis mother, smiled
at his father, and hugged the baby
i with unusual vigor. He dropped eQj
to sleep wondering ho much of Can-
ada Detroit would cover when he
awoke, and that was the last he knew
till 7 o'clook, a. m. As be did not
arise at his usual hour hi father oail-
J ed
Tom ! Thoma Grim !
No answer, and after a few minutes
the old gent put his head into the
' cr.ira'ni.' nnil oultad
you'd better be gitting down here !'
, But Thoroa? slept on. Not the
awoke him. He waa pegging away
i at his hundred years when Sleepy;
Hollow was suddenly inraded by a t
J man with a shingle. Atthepostoiliee:
. i t! iii.
, esieiuay wuuise(jioiui:u.
Yes, I know I walk lame, look as
If death had 3truck me, and .can't
have fun-with ye, but I tell yet boys,
;tbe hartiest tmno: tn i mfrso...?.. rtti
1 ...... .
j JPress.
I'll pay jou for That.
A hen trod on a duck's foot. She
did not mean to do it, and In did not1
hurt much. But the duok said, '111
pay you for that !' So the duck flew
at the hen ; but as she did so, her
wing struck an old goose, wh stood
, ,
close by.
.j,,, fQr that!, Jad h
goose, and she flew at tha duok ; but
as she did so, hsr foat tore the fur of
a cat who was just then in the yard.
I'll pay you for thatl cried the
cat, and ahe flew at the goose; but as
she did sn, her tail brushed th eye of
a sheep who was near.
TMI T-.nT- r.nn .,. Wtr n-t-.,1 U
! . . .
sneep, ana sne ran at tne cat; nut as
! L.Vla Hill en ha, fnrt Ktf- Vin ut a.
' "
uk, nnu laj ii tvue pun.
j 'I'll pay yoa for that! oried he.tmtl
. . ,
. ""., "- w"t "" c...
by the gate.
'I'll j.ay you for that!' cried she.and
he ran at the drg; but as she did n,
her horn grazed the skin of a horse,
who stood by a tree.
I'll pay you for that!' ori&d he, and
he rau at the cow. What a ruu
there was! The hrse flew at the
cow, and the cow at the dog, and the
dog at the bheep, and the sbefrp at the
cat, and the oat at the pfDosf, and the
goose at the duck; aud the duck atth
hen. What a noise they made, to be
sure!
'Hi. hill ! What te all thte?' crkd
the man who had the oare af them ;
'I cannot, have this noise. You
may stay here,' he said to the hen.
But he drove the duok to the pond.
and the goose to the field, and the cat
to the barn, and the sheep to her fold
and the dog to the house, and the cow
to her yard, and the horse to his stall.
'I'll pay you for that !' said the man.
Nursery.
An Old Shirrcr."
An English physician relates an an
ecdote of one of his patients, which is
not only amusing, but expressive of
that particular type of man who, as a
rule, does not practice what he
preaches :
A patient of mine, ft middle-aged
clergyman, was sotlering from some
slight symptoms of gout. I recom-
j mended a glass of hoc whiskey and
water every nay, in preieranef to
i pbysics of any kind, but my reverend
saying,
"No, no, doctor, I have all my life
preached against alcohol in any form.
If that is the only remedy I must oon
tinne to suffer. Besides," said he, "if
I rang for hot water my servant
j would guess its purpose."
Said I, "you shave, ring the bell for
shaving watsr, mis your gla; of
medicinal whisky, and who will be
the wiser hut yourself?"
The pardon at last submitted n
o warmly shook hands and parted
- .-.-
in a iew weeira' time, my oarrKtKe
pasing the clergyman's ttoor remind
ed me of my clerical friend. I touch
ed the bell, aud tho thin. afte-worn
fuoe of a onee rofeuefc liuskerr ans
wered me.
"Well," I sold, "bowB your mas
ter ?"
"Strrk, stsrltT sad, etr road as he
can be."
"Maii how! what! bow mad?"
'Lor utr, mad as ho can be ; why,
he shave airossl'f nbwet tweaty times
every day?" was the iinoeeat rep!y
To' Remove a Tigkt Jtltog.
Takea piece of fine but stroa silk
reach the ring, anderwkiefcyou must
work the end of the eilK by threading
a nesdle with it; then dtp the finger
! in sweet oil and saturate it Choroug'i-
Iy, and finally begin to unwind the
silk firmly and steadily. If the ring
cannot be removed Jn this way then
yoa must have it filed off.
Bill "I say, Mary, tuh awd
ask
Jule to come and play with U9.'
Mary "You know. Bill, mother
j says you ain't U oall him Je hi-
name's JHu3."
Bill Well, w
what a she eall nf
I Bill for, then ? I shete'S eaWhtraJuf-
ios until she calte me 3ill-ici."
Fim.
Two Irishmen were prwoeedinj in
company to a jail-yard t witness as
execetibn. when one saW tethe other.
3Qyt pat, ?r here wed yes be If the
hangman had bis does?"
"Begorra," said Pat. "I'd jfc br
walkin down this sthreet aJ
I A foolish young fellow, boatiag rn
,L wa?
" .
asked by one present how he tnfidf
his way. "By my wits, replied" th
' other. 'Indeed !' says he ; then you
I
mnn have traveled sry efcacrpQr
i c
Vti b bafc4 nhe
undertake to . a Uea befb.e she w
P. . !.... i .!.. tt -.
j ,.... ,. JV. MW
I contuse tne nen
"imayara wine ana wwr i
the Iveonoky way of desrttg
.; tii . . - r t-m .