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About Nebraska herald. (Plattsmouth, N.T. [Neb.]) 1865-1882 | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1879)
v j ) ! 5 ill : i hi iii- ! - u THE HER A LD. All Sorts. The circus man should bo happy. With him it IB always spring. The New OrlcaDs mint, which has been . Idle since 18G0, has resumed operations. The Arkansas wild "rapevine is being shipped to France, to be used for grafting tock. Ths excess of United States exports over im ports for 1878 amounted to $yO i,- The unusually severe winter in Califor nornia has increased the rale of mortality lull 20 per cent. When does the rain become too famil iar with a lady? when it begins to pat ter on ner foaefc. A man who appeared to have "lost much of his old zeal, was advised to im migrate to New Zeal-land. Out of 180,000 in poll tax that should have been raised in Louisiana last year, only ? 3,000 was returned. Althougli women are allowed to prac tice law in all the courts of Ohio, not one is permitted to act as a notary public. Some men are so everlasting hizy that not even the 4spur of the moment'' is pen- ttraung enough to sot them in motion. There is an old lady livin; Ie?f than three miles from this city who firmly le lieves That more men marry than 'women Btecl ships are now proposed as the best for ocean traffic. It is argued that iron, in most respects, is an interior ma terial. The adoration of irolden calves has pone out of fashion, and the average calf- worshiper now raves about those encased in pink silk. The man who wrote that "nothing was inpossible" never tried to find the pocket in his wife's dress when it was hanging up in a ciotiies-prcss. Canadian woolen manufacturers are Urging upon the" finance minister an in creased ad valorem duty, with the addi tion of a certain specific duty. The movement for the reduction of the rate of interest is Incoming general. The governors or legislatures of no less than bix States are giving the matter attention. The picture of Meissonnier's for wliich W. II. Vanderbilt has just paid 20,000, represents an artist at his easel with his wife at his elbow, critically inspecting his work. The hand is the mind's own perfect ras cal, nnd when, through ngc or il.'ness, the connection tat ween them is interrupted, there are few more aaecting tokens ot hu man decay. Leo XIII. is an excellent scholar, and lately produced some charming stanzas in Iarin on the occasion of a well-known photographer visiting ltoiao to take pic tures of the Curia. The happiness of vour life depends up on the quality of your thoughts; therefore guard, accordingly, and take care that you entertain no notions unsuitable to vir tue aud reasonable to nature. A cynical writer say3 take a company of boys chasing butterflies; put loDg t ailed coats on the boys, and turn the but terflies into dollars, and you have a beau tiful panorama of the World." The rivalry tatween the Grr.y end Hell telephones is likely to be fought out in Boston, where each company has com menced a lawsuit to compel the other to cease the use of the disputed invention. The Prince Imperial of France having failed to obtain h commission in the Urit ish army, has proceeded to the Cape of Good lloje, where he wi'l be attached as & volunteer, to the principal fighting col umn. It ia announced that twenty-two hun dred Komnn Catholic ladies iu the lilnns province have addressed a petition toKm eror William against the suppression of the Ur&uline convents ot Nonucn worth and Ahrwcller. King Humbert of Italy lias recognized the eminent legal services of Mr. Kich and 31. Mcbneary. of Ualtiniore, in breaking up the padrone system in that city, by bestowing upon 1dm the order of the Royal Crown. Texas has just executed a man who had committed eight murders and about fifty robberies. Ho said he was going straight to heaven, but some folks are mean enough to say that he stubbed Ids too somewhere on the route. A pauper woman, supported for two years by the overseer of tiic poor at Ja maica, ivOiig Island. Was sent to the luna tic asyium, ami when undressed !?:J00 in ca&h and a bank look representing $3,000 wore found on her person. " In struggling to make a dull-brained boy understand what conscience is, a teacher finally asked. "What makes you feel uncomfortable after you have done wrong r "Father's leather strap," feel ingly replied the boy. "Does he know anything?'' asked one friend of another, referring to a seemingly stupid man. '"Xo' any thing 1" replied the other, "I should say he did. He 'No's' so much it would be an absolute luxury to hear him say 'Yes.' " Teddy, my boy," said an Iii&hman to his nephew, "jist guess how many cheese there is in this here bag, an' faith 1 11 give ye the whole live." "Five," answered .Teddy. "Arrah, by me sow l, bad luck to the man that tould ye I" exclaimed the uncle. An agricultural paper tells "How to Dress a Hog." We know how to dress a hog. Give lilai a cane, a stove-pipe hat .and a p:tir of cye-glass-s. After that he will try to pass for a mail. Uut. pshaw! . a hog will be a h g, no matter how he may be dressed. Chinamen wear five buttons only on their coats, that they may k'.'op in sight something to remind them of the livs principal moral iiiues which Confucius recommended. Thcacarv: Jeu, hunian sitj ; y, justice; ty, order; tcha, prudence: and siu, rectitude. " ' The St. Gothard tunnel, which will con nect Germany with Italy, as' that of Mt. 'Ccnis connects Italy with France, will be completed in three ycarx, the excavations Laving pro ted harder than was anticipat ed. The work has already been ia pro gress six years. "Prisoner at the bar," said the judge "is thore anything yo-i wish to say before the sentence is passed upon?".'. The prisoner looked wistfully towards the door, and remarked that lie would like to say, "o-ood evening, if it would be agreeable tothe company." But they wouldn't lot him. ' The shah of Persia, in recently order ing that no soldier should do anything -. but his mi-iUiry duu.-, has put an end tv - an ancient cu.-.tom, by wi ich private sol diers, by acting as butchers, usoiiey-chaug-ers, doorkeepers, &c. Law adJeii to their pay, which :s o::iy about $10 a year, and three lKjuuds of wheat per day; Hope writes the jtoetiy of ths boy, but Memory that of the man. Man looks fur ward with smiles, but backward with sighs. Such is the wise providence of God. The cup of life is sweetest at tiio biiui, the flavor is impaired as we driuk deeper, and the dregs ale mub bitter that we may not strugg.e when it is taken from oir lips. ... . , To be happy at home is the ultimate result of ambition the end to which ev ery enterprise and la!xr ttnds and of which every deire prompts the prosecu tion. It i-iindccil i;t home that every. ,tuan must be known by those who would make ajust estimate of his .virtue or Ids ; -fHicity ; for smiten and embroidery-nro alike occasional ; and the mind is often dressed for show in painted honor and fictitious lei-" leucc. - - I Heteutlve Memories.' ; A number of instances of great retei tiveness and accuracy of memory are re corded by a wiiter in Chambers' Journal. Among the names mentioned is that of Dr. liotart Chauitars, whose power of memory was very extraordinary. For ex ample, on a certain occasion he was heard to say, "This day forty -seven years ago, at 20 minutes past 2 o'clock, I was passing" such a number of such a street, and met such and such a one. The author finds in Sir Walter Scott and in Charles Dickens a like accuracy of memory, and to this at tributes no small share of their success as story-writers. Then a case, is cited ironi one of Dr. Carpenter's writings of a cler gyman who, on visiting Feveiisoy Castle, lelt convinced he tnuat have seen it be fore, aud that when he did there were donkeys under the gateway, and some people on top oi it. On inquiry he ascer tained mat ne naa ueen mere wim a pic nic partv, who made the excursion on donkeys, when he was only about 18 months old. Sometimes the w hole history of a lifetime will be Hashed before the mind as ia an instantaneous picture. That this occurs sometimes when death, or peril of death, is imminent, is quite cer tain. It may be that this occurs very fre quently before actual death; but this we cannot know, as all the instances of which we have accounts are those in which a man has described his sensations after having been saved, from dying especial ly lrom drowning. "When all hope of being saved is gone," says the author, "and the very struggle with the water is now made without conscious effort, it would seem that, w ithout being prompted by tiic will, the memory suddenly grasps at once the deeds of the life that now appears about to close, and at the same time and this is the most singular tact ot the phe nomenon recognizes the usual rectitude or wrong of each act ?J. There is," he continues, "a case of this kind recorded of an English naval officer, who thus remem bered the events of his life at the moment when he was struggling hopelessly iu the wake of the ship trom wliich he had fal len; and he confessed that he had been especially struck by the sudden coming into his thoughts ol a schoolboy lie that he had Ions forirotten." Jersey Cows. We give room to a short extract from a valuable article by IL Goodman, in the Rural New Yorker, en the subject of Jer seys : "The Jerseys of the present day all over the United States are not small or ill formed, but larger and much more sym metrical than was the average Jersey of twenty years since, the production of milk also being greater, and the yield of butter surprising. In the latter respect the breeders of all other classes of stck, and even the ordinary farmers who have con tinued to swear by their native cows, arc forced to admit that the Jerseys are supe rior to all others. In the Scientific Farm er, edited by Dr. Sturtevant, a noted Ayr shire breeder, it is stated editorially that the evidence we have indicates mat the Jersey cow is a larger milker than the na tive cow on an average,' and instances are cited of nine to ten thousand pounds of milk from several Jersey heifers, respect ively, in one year. The National Live Stock Journal summed up the yield of sixty-five Jersey cows, wliich showed an av erage of 295 pounds of butter per year. Motley's Fiora gave 511 pounds and two ounces in one year. Pansy (101SA 572 pounds in twelve months. A Philadel phia herd of seventeen cows averaged 225 pounds each for the year 187G. Mr. Mackie's herd of fifteen cows cave an av erage of 2S1 pounds on ordinary feed and in a breeding rather than a butter-making herd. In the annual report of the secret tary of the Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture for 1S7G-7, is a portrait of the Jersey cow, Belle, owned by Mr. Elms, of herniate, in mat State, five years old, for which he has refused three thousand dol lars. She made in March, 19 pounds of butter per week; in June, 10 pounds per week; in September, 11 pounds per week; ana in uecemuer, ten months lrom calv ing, she was making one pound per dav. being due to calf in two months. Five quarts of milk made a pound of butter all through the summer, and in December four quarts made a pound of butter. It is not always the Jerseys of the larg est yield of milk which make proportion ately the greatest amount of butter. Those more moderate in quantity are apt to be richer in qualify, and a cow giviDg twelve to fourteen quarts of milk rer dav is usually a more profitable butt" -maker than one giving twenty quarts. We have in our herd Jerseys which produce, when flush, over forty pounds of milk per day, but we set a higher value on otheis which yield less, but whose butter average for the year is greater." Horse Beef. Of the great follies of American farm ing, one is the raising ol horse beef which is never eaten. In France, where tens oi thousands of horses are eaten, the horses are raised from hard-worked sires of great vigor and capacity. In this land, where horses arc never eaten, faint ss is a chief essential in a stock horse. And even in bringing horses from France, the largest, clumsie.-t, dullest and most ungainly ani mal is selected. The ones most useless for anv pur!rse except for beef, are the ones found most ratable. And in the selection of a horse to breed from, the average farmer would as soon cat his wheat as it came from the field, as to breed to a horse fit to go to the hunt ing field or the plow field. 1 he demand creates the supply. The jockey buys a horse in the fall and shuts him up and iattens him as he would a steer not to suit the palate of an epicure but to fill the. eye of a practical farmer? lie openly savs, '-Give me a frame and a corn crib aud I will build up the parts all right to suit the patrons." And so he goes to work and in the spring has a gross. Int. pampered, diseased, vicious, piggish animal, plump and heavy, but too tender to run a mile after a doctor or to carry a grist to mill; useless for any pur pose except to mane money lor his groom. fcven when a horse has real merit and value, a vicious public sentiment demand ing the fatness of the steer rather than the muscles of the horse compels the cover ing of his lines of taauty and his fine muscular development, with a mass of adipose tissue that brings the courser and the fatling down to the same dead level of uselessness. As a remedy let the farmers take the control of the horse matters at all the fairs and demand that one-half of all the premiums given to horses shail be ex pended on trials requiring strength as well as speed. Let them remiire that each horse shall ta driven for an hour at speed oeiorc a loan, giving to a roadster his own weight and to a draft horse twice his weight. . Let a similar trial be exacted each spring of the rival candidates for local pat ronage, as the test of merit and populari ty. Let the trial bo protracted two, three, five or ten hours driving, with a rigid de maud that an increase of weight in a horse without a corresponding increase of pow er, shall be regarded as an incumbrance. - Ti.is co;5.se would cause horses to be ex hibit -d and bred ia good working order, free from superfluous "weight and ready lor action. It would soon teach the dif ference between fatness and muscular de velopment, as a measure of strength anil value. It would test the actual merits of each hoie and cause tlus worthless to bo rejected and the fleet and powerful to be patronized.. It would create a healthy public sentiment that would discriminate between an animal intended for beef and one intended for work and travel. It would discourage the raising ""of horsu beef. ... A Xew Idea of Creation. The origin and superiority of the white race is curiously accounted for by the Seminole Indians. They believe that when the Great Spirit made the earth, lie created three white men, and taking them to a lake bade them leap in and wash. One obeyed immediately, and came out whiter than before, the second hesitated, and when he eprang in the water had be come muddled, and he emerged copper colored, while the third delayed until the water was thick with mud, and gave him a black complexion. Then the Great Spirit gave the three men three packages, and in pity allowed the black man first choice. He selected the heaviest, where in he found all the implements of labor prophetic of slavery, the copper-colored man chose the next weighty, which con tained hunting, fishing and war-like ap paratus, and the white man was left with the lightest package, which concealed pens, ink and paper enblems of civiliza tion, and the foundation of his superiori- QATOftnH A FHYSiCIAN'5 TESTIMONY. SO Years a Physician. 12 Yesrs a Suf ferer. Tried Regular Hsmciies. Tried Pateni Medicines. Per manently cured by Messrs wrrrr n por ;::. prc'fo(! r.ifilicluc !ort!ii'i ar, r.r. J UaT8 been a satferer- ivi.cll for trw.-lv f:rt n-uli tiirrh tr tlie nana! .i.i;: .l'inrm nu! )fi' V,,x I have used evrrylhinpr in the ntfrif vitrei with out iiy permanent relief, until i:nVuf I r. ?i m-'uetd to try patent i!dirinn (iion:i-t!iin thai wr a.io. pathists an rr ioth to ). I tvl'A f.;il divers nthpra nn'til 1 fro V-V! nfj-cur.. Ti' d the dlrrrtions to th. lticr. nnd liprrv rr, feave hd a permanent r::.tr. V..n- 'f.kTjK L CL'RE is cr.rtainly .1 liunrv ombinatiOfi f"r ;::e car. of thst tuotl Uiirlciiut uuU cin.:fcerou-i vi Usea.es. Tonrs. rm-efWr, j. v. ckay; r tv. Of Dr. D. W. Crrv Soi , hii'-fic'a 11 And Itrnif.'Mi, V ii-catlctlowa. Muscvrras. Iowa, ;a.-d! 27, isi:. ThffTslncof th! remedy tenet sot beovcrlootcS In tlie cur. of those SYMPATHETIC DISEASE Aff-'-Ho'X of tTi T.yr, T.;.T. Thint, Ixnrs isronrliiul Tube trhtrii In iu .m -. a ct. irpri a tewvTf crtm- of ' .l.-ilr.'i. 1 In? r.r.aiTV d an., i.ii ea.efl comtinon of in- r.iurouR in mbr:i r tv" cau.0 of all thi'itc fmiMmj n.i ii:iUl t!.? nvi'in bas hern liroiiscLt .r -r-crlv tr.5 r t e I::'.' irn ' the RADICAL C(!i.K. t 'l.-'-t frirJoin C.nnul b rrsnua1,iy r vp ct. U. It in lmt tlnr. rv.'.rm t.rm t?.W"OT?T'3 V.f.Tl' CAL CPI1E Wiuipl.icJ I -.of :.-r 1 !,e r-'l''". ' u i; that fcliort time It n.-s f-mn-l in v:iv .-.,:u !i.i:i- K California. nl ia pverwS.-r r.i'Usx-r.-;. t'.-;: ti V v drutirlats and s!:vi?'nrs he t.: & mrmi ut preparation for the ei. -(. ih tr-; i.t of C.-.f .rr.; ever crmpI'.'-.li !. J:i-.t w.ii ! c crrriir;! of n.ore Import:!.- . wli' 1 i; U ur.n'i'i! tit t!u Zat 0 ravnt tli nt ithln l.vs y.-ar c.r-T iZ-) cittcrc&t rcrredie frr Catarrh I a v.; b-2i r.l .cii on calo, arnl to-lny, one or t' o rriiion.;t th ir rnio" cannot bororaiicd tv !!.e I.Lr-i:.i'ciuu'J drufitt. A1rfrtjitir rawy u-?r. i! In fi-r!".r a f w sr't?, but. nnlfH tlio rerj'.r poj n-i-nht'! lr,rlit;al prop. rt.rs. it '13 tLi-jicttly ccrirjrj 10 Jaii lcto iccracu 'jLsc;.i.:y. Eact pocV.-rs c ' EWFOr.!)" r.Dir.L C"r:Z contains IT. i-aiifor;:'! Ia;;i-'.v. a J-ii::i.i I'ulif, Tc-jth fuM 3!rcf!ur.o for !'t u-! 1 d'l fii, . ITice' l.;jn. 6ol1 by nil v-!:o!r-r,l- nrii M..! t.-rlrr-. r.nj d.-alt-r. thri:nff,-r.B Th t'rir: ri j t.r sn-'i-T . ' VJ..KKS PoTTI "It. r.rr.il i".K nls kr.C V. i.o.c- IS SIMPLY VvGMDERfUL. A;.r:!C. 1-r:. f . I coM'irr Cii:.lis' Yolta: J Tusiu;: 1.1c liL.t plurtcr 1 evtr pEd aui ricom-e(.:s Uitui to a'l. C. VclIOBEOW. JT...T I.T A ir.'. Vslsr. t Ith9Jor.ir.y iMjyuior. 4;o.-.d tl;a:i ail oilitr'ncu.! !; . j;o Sow t,'s i.j . liiicl. lor tuc first time i:i tnr t ri rs. i-MlTA. Iif... i :1 i. XirisrrjeoT.fflro! '.. are t:i-1: t pj;crs. r 'k it. in U:o wurlu. t. 1.. Mc-tjii.1.. Marrh 2i. 13'. S. j Accpt rv il;-.r.K5 f'-r tha pno.i ! r:v-il fr'.; i t!.r t V'.C; I r:.Ttn ; ri i t ::?.-. rn:-;3 t:uie fijo. tT. C. ;coui.. ccLUfiS' vslt&s msm for lopnl plTl. 1:ir!rnn?5, SO-?"-r.J, vi';-r! r.utnhntj, 1 .-tl r:n:!ion rf tr iu:ir-, i..r kiOuf.rtt. ap'c-.i. :.;. L-i.i J Vv. hcai-.u.i J :r.r.t clc-. iarquai to aa arn-yii Uoclu: cuil tirts tl pl.iiiL tnu burul.9. fold n"l V.Vl, tlir'.iiWi.nt tli- l 1 WEEtP FOYIE.:. IT Xt'tri! 'ri:--"'-t il Car .-Ir.'.. : V.U I j TUTT 9 PILLS I j a A NOTED DIVINE SAYS1 THEY ARE WORTH THEIR WEIGHT in GOLD READ WHAT HE SAYS: Dr. Tctt : Dear Sir : Tot ten roars I hare been a martyr to IT8jrT:a. Cotttripation and Piles. Last Sp'inK your PiUrt weie nfoininendid tome; I used tln;m ( but with little faith). I am now a well man, nave pood apietite, cliiree- tion pTfect, tvfnilnr Btoo!i, pilps goim, and I navo gaiwu iorty poanos eoaa iiestu worth their Wichtin e-okl. They ara TUTT'S PILLS . CCBK CICK IlEAIJ ACBI. Dr. Tntt una boen en fingvd iu the tractic of mt'diciue SO years, and for a long tinitf was Denjonetrutor of Anatomy in the Med ical College of Georg ia,hence persons atUu bis PUU have the gnar autee thnt they am prepared on aciJntiftc priiicipU's.and are free irom all qunckery. lie haa succeeded Jn combining in them the heretofore antagonis tic qualities of a Urengthrninr!,pUT(tatire and a fVTif ying'tmic. Their first apparent effert ia to increase tlie appetite by caucing tlia food to properly ai siinilate. Thns theeye tem is iiourit-lied, and by their tonic action on the digestive or gan?, regular and wealthy evacuations re produced. The rapidity -with which prrunu take vn fifth, while under tlie intlnence of tlioee pills, of itself indicates their adaptability to nourish the body, and hence their efticicy in cunnc nervous debility, n-P aucholy, dyejiepcia, wactiiwof tlie mnecles slujp8uut30f the liv er, chronic constipa tion and InipartinfT TUTT'S PILLS Ccrb Dyspepsia. TUTT'S PILLS Ccbk Constipation. TUTT'S'PILLS Cubs Tiles. TUTrSPILLS CrilE Fever axd TUTT'S PILLS Ccbb Bii.ioi'3 Colic. TUTT'S PILLS Curb Kidxet Cox- PUAIST. TUTTPILLS Ccrb Torpid Liter. VQLlfiU-ri.Hd!&:H neaitn ana strength to the system. A DOCTOR SAYS. Dr. I. Guy Lewis, of Fulton Ark, writes ; "One" year ago I was taken sick, a friend atyned so strongiv in favor of Tutfs Pills that I was in duced to nse them. Never did medicine have a happier effect Uian in my case. After a practice of a quarter of a century I proclaim them the bet r.nt i-btlions medicine ever used. I hovo pr scribed them in my practice ever since." SUPERIORITY OF TUTT'S PILLS. Tiicy are coniponndod from medicinal subHtnu cc that are Kjitivehr f reo from any properties that can in the least degree injure the most deli cate organization. They search, deame, purify, and invigorate the entire system. By relieviug the engorged liver, they cleanse the blood from poisonous humors, sud thus impart renewed health and vitality to tin; body, causing the bow els to act naturallv, without which no one can . foci well. A TORPID LIVER is tlie fruitful source of man; diseases, prominent t imiig which at e ljpi pt.ia, Kick-Iieatliaclit1, Coptiven'.i!rs lysntery. Bilious Fl-vcr, Aue and Fever, Jamidjce, I'ilcis liheuoialism, Kidney Complaint, Colic, rtc. Xutt'u P'.'dx exert a tlirevt aa.1 pOMxrfiU iuila- ence On the I jver. and will, with certainty, nii.-.-u t'-.ut iin;Hi-tsnt orj;i;u i'ro::i UiseSv-, and rettoro Us normcl functior.s. SOLD EVEHYVIIEaE, CCFICX, S5 MTJESAT ST., KEW T0E2' r- - x" ' KEEN AX & GRACE. Retail LianorDealers. CIGARS AND TOBACCOS. PLATT SOUTH. - - NEB xiso liiiiiara nan ana saloon on Alain street, four (roors from Sixth at isevilles old place. Store and saloon on Main St. two doors east of the Post office. BEST BRANDS OF CIGARS, ALES, WINES,dC, AT BOTH PLACES. BenifmltrThn Xame and Flute. 211y Keenari & Grace. THE CMcao Bnrimsion & Quincy R. R. IS THE DIRECT ROUTE BETWEEN THE Hast and Wft. Running Through Cars FKOM -TO Council Bluffs, COXXECTIXO WITH THE UnionPaoific'Railroad I'OH AM. TOINT8 IX XEUIZASKA. COLORADO. wroMixa, MOXTAXA. X EVA DA, ARIZONA, IDAHO, AM) TH U O 17 G 13 CARS TO KANSAS CUT, TCPEKA..ATCHISON 4 St. Josepli And tie S!IOl!T LINE to all po'nts on the .MlSSOi iU. KANSAS & TEXAS, aud HOl'SlON & TEXAS CKMilAL kaili:jads, Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars. AND THE ! CELECATED C, . & Q. DINING CAIJS. BY THIS ItOUTE All information about rater of fare will be eheerXuily tiveu by a;i;1y''"fc io , . C. W. SU5T1I, Trafli Manager. " Jam cm It. Wood, g"t, Chicago W. D. JONES' Again takes" the Brick Livery Stable ILATTSMGUTII, XEEKASKA Th old Honner Stable, in Tlatti-niontri. a' f now leased by Wm. I . JONES, and he lias or. hand new Dd liantUoute accomuiodatious. it, tlm siia;c ol . If OR VES, CA RRTA GES, B UGGTES. SADDLE HORSES. . I r.m pmpared to kc p HOUSES FOR SALE TRADE! And will Train and Break Celts Ou KeaiO'.iable Terms. ALSO ItEUOIBEIS, That with 'iilenty of room (that every or knows I have) in my tlabif. I can ct FaiiiiHr-' rtock :ui.l v.aaons. loads ol liav, &c., under cov r. where they will keeji iirv. Thankinir all tnv old i.ations for their liberal ity. I solicit their tra.lf fur the future, ati-iiW that I can accommodate them belter aud do oencr fiy mem tn.in everbebn-e. 3vl WM. D. JOXES. JOHN SHANNON'S LIVERY SALE AND FEED Carriages always on Hand, AX1 HEARSE I FUNERALS. XVA-IHITi: UOTICS I I want all of my accounts settled to date mi'! I shall do no iiior;' credit business. All ol; aceooiiis nifisi nc st u ten ii). and no new ones will i? mane. I nle.ss sueli accounts aie cettlcd siii-rtiy iney w in he Mied. I wish to do uMiictlyeash business in future JOHN SHANNON'. 4'Jly l iatismouth. Xeb, MIKE SCHNELLBACHER, HORSE AlIOEING, AND waoox KErAii::xG All kjuJs of fa km mrxnuEXTs men tied Neatly rf: Promptly :0: Horse, 3Iulc& OxSlioeini;, In short, we'll shoe anything that har four feet, from u Zebra to a Giraffe. Come and see us. onrirth5t.. between Main and Vine Streets just across the corner from the xi:w IIEHAI-' utKItB. ioy" Cl X. Z. 3i T DICK STREIGHT'S LIVFRY, PEED AND SALE STA BLES. Corner 6th and Tearl St , nmtsp.a r.oAiiiKX bv tiik DAY, WEEK, OK 3IO.TJJ. HORSES BOUGHT, SOLD OE TRADED. For a Fair Commission. TE .32S AT"i'M, IlOUSiS. Taineular atleiuiou paid to Driving and Training TROTTI STQI'K. AGENTS WANTED FC!? TME c 3 vT? "a" K:l 111 1 HIST0RYW0RLD WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE CEOCRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL SEE BY EXAMINING THIS OO-rTVjTF V-SSj --..;0v gr& jli' jjvmZ f ' CHICAGO, PMK ISLAND & PACIFIC R. R. IS THE GREAT COSXECTIXU LIXK BETWEEN THE EAST AND THE YTEST ! Its main line runs from riiipo to Council niu.Tj and Oiuniia, parsing tnr'i'.uih Juliet, t t:aw v, Iji Palle, Gcnoseo, Mollne, lioct Ilund, Davtuport, ' West Libert loan City, Murcnvo. lSrooklyn, (irinnell. nnl Ts Uciiies, (tii'i :ipuol of leva) TTith brunches Ir-mi li.ire:;'! Jiincti n t. Peoria; Wilton Junction to llu;eaine, Wu-i'uintini. Kuir BelU, iCblon, 14elkD, Cei'UtfVille, Tnivt)wn. Tren ton. Gallatin. Cameron, T.eavnxrpnh an1 Atchison; Washington to Siiiourney, ot-.l-ai i iuiu Ivo-vvillc; Keoknlt to Farr..i:i;;ton, iiiturtA, linUinHport, lnUtpeadent, l.l.lna, tlte.::nvs. KilJyviile, s!ia Idohh. I'ella. Monroe, nnd les Mrtne: los M'.iacs, to lmlianola mi-l Vbittrt; Atlantic t Audubo'i and Avoca to Harbin, 'llos in positively tbo only Kailioad wUicb owns. omtrolH Mel operate a tbroutti lino between t hie o nnd Kansas. 'i'hiu Company own a-iUc uirol tianffcleepia Carg, which re lnf trior to none.aad irive you a dnuHo bcrtb between Chicneo nnd Council Ultitfi. Leaveii worth.or Atobison tor TaroDollat anl l'itty Cunts; and n yecl::!i tor Kive ioll:., wu lj all oil:'r lin.s tlianse l-twen tto mino ;i-jlnH. Vhre i'lttiara tut a iiiniti!n tierth, fid ;;.x J ' -illur f.. a ':! in. Whatwill I'l-aseyoii niostu'Mb tli' pleasure of cnioviiur your meafs, v.'nK- ;!!-...'.:i.ver th bei'iiti ful prani'i.s of tiliuois uiol ln, iat neot' our inpn nidcent lini:i!i nn-.l I'e!i'irunt urs lmt ao. ocnpnnT all throunh l-xprea 'i r iins. Vo.: t u uul iro mo . I, aa ioe-l i'.b is crvcil ii pnv iir i-aas hr.tel, lor aoventy-ti ve c:ita ; or.waua urilui .at j-uu like, and p ;v fir wii::t v i t.' r. Ai'Mr"eciii:iui ta ; tac; last a mj"rit if Oio people prefer sepurate npartinenta fur difiort r"'T'1''91 (nnd tho enunaom pa.-seiiiivr S.uslncs-. if t iis lino warrant Ins It.) vo r.re jslenui-.l to hihi"i..-c tiMti:l t'oiapany runs its ACii f IJK.t'lN'V C.'.liS for Sleepiu purpoMbS. rntl its P.AI.ACIJ MM.V-1 OAKS lor iCiu.; iiusiotVi., O;.o o'.Lrf truuw i-turj of PAI.AC5 CAS nrc rm tbroat-h t yEOSIA, DES HOIXrS, COT3TCII. BLUFFS, ATClliWIS and I-E VVE-VMUUiUi Tli'krto viae tin itn--. Known ita tho "Great Xtoelt Xalancl Route," are sold by all Ticket AircnM In th-5 I'nited itatCB ard Canuda. For Ini'urmfld'ia uot oolivlui. b; j At JUr lioxic ticket ofiicc, address, A. lillIIi.VTT. Iu. ST. .TOTTX. Goa l uin:.iuUmdcat. Geu'l TLt. and I'ass'trr Aet Chicago, 111. THE CELEBRATED Dexter, Dexter King and Dexter Queen GAEBXAGE SPRINGS Are Unsurpassed for Easy Riding-, Durability, and Beauty. Many Thonsands Now in Use. Send for Circular Giving Price and Fuli Description to bextee gprnme go,. Near Pittsburg. James Pettee DEvLK't IN Musical Instruments, Sole Ajypointiny Agent for Tltc i'urivalled Vinson & llaiiiliu CABINET ORGANS. Al-.o. the Sieck, ll-.irv 1. Miller, r.n.l Iljillt & Cuiii-itoti I'ianos for I. as-, ami .Sarpy counticf, 'el. C'l'l and wee SAMPLE 1XSTIIUMEXTS at once. Pit1i. one iloor sontli of Main St. ri..rrsMorT;r. xeh. u Mir Scliclai-K Will Uo well to examine cur Xew Tilason & UsvaUw os.ovrsr uststetjctok 52 5l A. G. HATT JUST uriiXKil AGAT.V. Neir, Clean, First Class JIttil Shop, on M;iin Street in HnU Krneliler'x old staiul Everybody 011 liaud fvr frcsl., lender meat. T .- r v . .. . ty . . . s MAP THAT THE onr ra'af-e Carn li n FMOKINfJ SALOON where you can enjoy your "Havuua 'utull hours ol the day. Mapniticert Iron Ttrirtjrcs spnn the Mint3sippl and Missouri rivers at all puinls crossed, by.thbi line, and tranpfers ere avoided at Council ft luff. Leaven worth :ii't Atchison, connecuoua bciui; niade In Union ueDots. TIIR I'lUNCIPAI. R. n. COXXECTIONS OF THIS GliEATTIlltlil'liH l.INR AKK AS FOLLOWS Att niCAviO, with all tlivcrini; lines for the East and South. At K.noi.f svoon, with th Ijike Shore & Mlchiean Southern and Itttsburu. Ft. Wayne Ac Chicago R. Kda. At Washington lltiuHTd, siin i-iusburtt, Cin cinna'i : Louis R. K. At La Sai.lk. w itii Liino's Central It. R. At l'KOiUA, with I'.. I'. A .1.; P., L. U.; I. B. A W.; 111. Midland: nnd T., I', i W. Railroads. At KoOK IfLASK, with Western. Lnion R. R. and Rock l-land fi 1'tirin Railroads. At iiAVKNPOKr, wiiii the Lhtvenport & North-WestP-.-n It. It. At V.'Kbr Libeptt, with the Burlington. Cedar r-apk's &, IWtlicra It. R. AttlRIXNCI-U wiih Central R. R. of low. AllMMniSCS, v.itli 1). M. . Kt. Jiodcell. R. At CofNCiL Bl.t'l'i-S, w -it la Union I'aciMc It. H. At f)MAHA. with H. .t M. 11. It. It. (in Neb.) At Coi.f.ics J l'Nitioj;, witii llurlinxtou. Cedar Rjpii;S Nort.'ieru IL 11. At OTTrMWA, with Ontral K. R. of Iova; St. Louis. Kan. t:ity iz Northern and C. H. &. (,. It. Kds. At Keok't'K, with Toledo, l'eoria and Warsaw; Wabnsh, aod tt- !,ou;s. KeokuK & N.-W. It. lids. . AtKKVKKLY. with Kan. t ity, St. J. & C. IV, R. it. At Atchison, with AtchiHoii. Topeka k Knnta Ko; Atchison X Neb. and Con. Iir. I'nion laritlc it. Kds. At LtA VENWoltiU, with K. 1. aud K.Cou. it. Kda. 1IULTOX. PA. III zr. C2 I- ROBERT DONKELLY'S 5 w.c3-or AND BLACKSMITH SHOP. Wagon, Buggy, Mcu-hinc and Plow re pairing, and general jobbing I am now jnejiured to do ail kiwi of repairing oi lann Tim nt ner tiineiiiii-rv. ;is mere is ngooj lathe ia uiy rliop. PETER RAO EN, Tlie old Reliable Wason Maker lias taken clianr? of tlie wagon shop. lie is well known as a NO. 1 WORKMAN. Xew WasoDM find Utiyrsiew made to Order. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. Shop on JSixthatreet ooposite Streiuht's StaWe J. G- CHAMBERS, Mannfaeturer of and Dealer in SADDLES, COLLARS, HALTERS, WHIP ! ETC., ETC., ETC. REPAIRING Dona with Neatness! Dispatch. f c only place in town whew "Tmley's oat ent self adjustable horse collars are told." " At 1IWIY 1 DURRITORE DEALER Omaha, Nebraska. T'&e Iciest 21 They Invite Everybody Visiting Omaha, to Call ami Examine their Large Stock. m-187 FARHAM STREET,' OZMZ-A-ZEaZ-A., - TIB- SPRING IS AgzicuUiixal Implements, From a Threshing Machine to a Hoe! AND WAY DOWN CHEAP. The of King Corner and aiti Stree-ta. LA.TrrS3EOTJa?X3:, HEE. IS HEADY TO TALK TO THE FAll EES OX eelcas asEd TTTPftfl nr?Ei 7 v o T T s, shovels, Hoes, Spades, and Hand-rakes, 1 U (In pring All kinds of HARVESTING xJachines, JL Vibrator Threshers, has come has brought And he Dress Mr Goods, Staple Goods, Fancy Goods and N-otionsyou ever saw. le hj the acre5lfe4 mMl lioe fill yona ensa94 rest li&ts aosal caps till Spring and Summer Goods Now ia your chauf-o bound to $t 11 up. I want to go Eaut raA DAY GUARAft? ZED oting ou WELL AUGER & D:LL in good territory. Endored by Governor, ef iOWA, ARKANSAS & DAKOTA and ScagGst COMING! P Plow Sellers. Stalk -pcn with or without Cull L ' rUo v 'S, ons I "'"ade ITT hi ILL Lome, the finest line of ever and ever so chea and under. II anybody. Hurry again next month. UJI'i '.V. I'll C.ftlTO. ftfiblCTfOU St. tlAl.T, ri. Waq ; s f i Ji C u iw-ss 1,-1 Mma W U W W W 1J. H US cent w.int-1. llut te. ParrlriilnrsfreT i i. t A I; i 1 rV. t i c 1 f i i I