! 1 1 11! SI I : I PARAGRAPHIC PLUNDER. Ah enterprising physician ia Australia advertises: " I will pj one-half the funeral expenses in cases where I am not success- fuL" A London- attorney recently tendered a bill in which the last item was thus stated : "To dining with you after the case was lost." A coloued minister prayed the other day that the indolirato miht h mado .irfinatc the intemperate temperate and the industri- ous dnstriniis. ous dustrious As Irishman, who was very near-sighted, about to light a duel, insisted that he should stand six paces nearer to his antagonist than the other did to him, and that they were both to lire at the same time. A gextlehan- vascomplainingon "Change that he had invested a rather large sum of money and lost it all. A sympathetic friend asked him whether lie hail been a bull or a bear. To which he replied: "Neither; I was a jackass." Ax old lady who does not belicvo in the co education of the sexes, was rejoiced the other day to find that althoush the boys and girls in a largo seminary seemed to be play ing some sort of game together, the school authorities had wisely hung a long net be tween them. Scexe Table d'hote at fashionable hotel on Decsidc: bis market day. Farmer of the old school has dined. Waiter "Fin ished, sir?" Farmer "Fat's the charge!" Waiter " Five shillings, please."' Farmer (startled) "Fivo shillin's! Weel, Tmna1 deen yet." Resumes operations. There is a woman in St Faul, Minn., who possesses some handsome diamonds. She puts them in a box, puts the box in a rag bag, puts the rag bag on the closet floor, and at eight puts tho watch-dog in the closet on I top of the rag ba, locks him in there, and every night, hides the key in a different place. Fastidiocs Epicure (to clumsy waiter) "If you can bring me a cup of coffee with out spilling tho coffee into the saucer, I'll give you sixpence." Exit waiter, and re enters promptly, carrying tho cup in one hand and tho saucer in the other. He puts down first one, then the otUcr, and takes the coin in silence. Is attempting to carve a fowl one day a .gentleman found considerable difficulty in separating its joints, and exclaimed against the man who sold hiin an old hen for a young chicken: "My dear," said the en raged man's wife, "dont talk so much about the aged and respectable Mr. B ; he planted the first field of corn that was planted in our tovvn." "I know that," said the husband; "and I believe this hen scratched it up." RAILWAY REMARK. More than a million men are employed by the various railways in the United States. Twzxtt inches is said to be the narrow est gauge of railroad doing regular business in tho United States Railways are said to consume more than half of the world's production of iron, the 10,000,000 car wheels required in the United States alone taking more than 2,000,000 tons. Dcbixg the year 1SS7 the total number of locomotives built in the United States-was 230, the aggregate cost of which is esti mated at ,000,00a, an average of about ,000 each. Tulate railroad war in the Northwest mas cost the companies engaged not less than $10,000,000, which, It may be assumed, is a clear present to the trade of that amount. Uxoeb the laws of Iowa a railroad pas senger who sticks his head out of a car window and has it knocked off by a switch bar is guilty of misdemeanor, and can be sent to jail for three months. Tub railroad mileage of the world is esti mated as follows: America, 155, X7 miles; Europe, 121,205 miles; Asia, 13,791 miles; Australia, 8.015 miles, and that of Africa, 4,285. Germany leads the countries of Eu rope in mileage. Taa Consolidated railroad of Connecticut ia adopted a bell-ringing tell-tale to warn employes of a bridge. The car-wheels strike aa automatic fixture on the track as a bridge is approached, and the warn :ing is then given tho whole length of the train. It is said that railroads in this country are returning to lemon color for the body of passenger coaches. The Providence & Worcester, and the Philadelphia & Read ing roads aro making the change. Expe rience shows that yellow outwears any other -color. Apatext has been granted for methods and apparatus to increase the tractive pow er of locomotives and other'self-propelled rail vehicles by increasing, electrically, the frictional adheskm between the driving wheels and the rails. It is claimed that the tractive power can thus be nearly doubled without increasing the weight of the locomotive, and that sleet and snow dif ficulties will be overcome. It is claimed that the friction obtained is cheaper than sanding without its consequent wear. PARLOR AND PANTRY. To remove the screw tops of fruit jars that can not be started by hand, dip a cloth in very hot water and apply to the outside of the cap; this will cause it to ex pand. Gems fob Dtspeptics One cup gluten flour, one cup milk, one teaspoonful of bak lag powder, one tablespoonful or less of butter. Beat well and bake in hot gem pans in a quick oven. The johnny-cake of New England, made of corn-meal, eggs and flour, thick, light, warm, and soaked with fresh butter, is a better nenve food than can be found on the druggists' shelves. Paste ron Waix-paper Mix one pound of flour with cold water, add about five quarts of boiling water and stir until as thick as starch. Just before using stir in half a pint dissolved glue. Ixdia matting is largely used in summer rooms. The stains, if any, may be re moved by a layer of wet fuller's earth, well rubbed in, and left for a few davs. when it can be washed off, and the stains will have ' Stcdt tables, desks, etc., covered with leather, may be restored to very much of their original freshness by rubbing a little -vaseline over them with a soft rag. Book cases with glass doors should be opened occasionally, as the books are otherwise apt to CCt damn. Aix. curtate must have frequent shak ines. or tho moth millers will be sure to lodge in their folds. Tho great object is to Kthemout ef a bouse, fbr when they nnm locate ana uuw uy - - onC8..wn3- --ht and onlv force cam the "squatter's right,' drive them out, -,iwrrv icliv use thro pinto of rlpe strawberries, a box of gelatine, ajptoit of sugar, one ptatof taj-g I 1""" . ".- slM, nf mint oi com of ld water ana '""J-'r; lemon. jsoaitino8C" !,. with theJ the cold watea. suu TT22Zim. Pour B"TrTtan hours. PowrJ"l4TO'eril,?s? XTT osPJr- - fruit and sugar. lw.th laieefrooi tho strawbernea ana ? .TLZ t irawberriea and Idd it andlhe lemon juice to tne V0, Ctotlne. 'Straia.inrouK" - - - , to moulds and hardczu . WRITERS OF RENOWN. Gronnn Eliot never get less than forty thousand dollars for any of her novels, It is proposed to place a bust of Mr. Matthew Arnold in Poets' Corner, Weat- ' minister Abbey, ' James Whitcomb Host's first versifying was a Valentino of four lines, "when," as ho describes it, "I was just big enough to 1-cac0 iho toP of the table wnere l wrotc-" ' Robert Louis Stevenson was in Chicago a short time since and was interviewed, of I course: '-Henry James, without a reser vation," was Mr. Stevenson's quick reply to tho question of leadership among American novelists. Elizabeth Stcart Phelps, who has been writing for the public over thirty years, is i only iorty-four years old. Youth's Com i panion printed her first story, written when she was thirteen. She began "Gates Ajar," hcr-best known book, ia 1SW. Koeekt Bnowxixo refuses to write for i magazines, preferring that people who de sire to read his work should buy his books rather than find him unexpectedly in tho pages of a periodical. Ho recently declined au. offer of ono thousand dollars from a Boston publisher for a short poem. Tub new order recently created by the ' Emperor of Austria, called "litteris ct artibus," and intended as the highest dis tinction to be conferred upon tho artists and literary men of the empire, has been bestowed upon Munkacsy, Mascjko, and a Bohemian artist, Vasclav Brazik. One of the highest prices ever paid an author for a manuscript was that of fifteen thousand dollars, which Mrs. Augusta Evans Wilson received from her publishers for her " Iafclice " before the book went to prei s. Ucr novels to-day find a more ready sate in the South than those of any other author. A SHORT time ago it did not look as Blanche Roosevelt, ex-actress and later authoress of the " Copper Queen," was destined for es pecial eminence, but her work has suf ficiently impressed the famous Sardou to ask her to become his collaborator in writ ing a play, so that her money-making fame. at least, is as good as settled. Mrs. Crawford, the Paris correspondent of the London Aictcs, is the most noted En glish woman in journalism. Besides send ing her daily telegrams to tho 2Veu by special wire, she writes for tho Pall Mall Gazette, contributes several columns a week j to London Truth, and writes weekly corre spondence for American newspapercs. Of the original edition of the sonnets of William Shakespeare, published by Geogre Daniel, of London, in 1009, there are two perfect copies. One is in the British muse um. For the ether 15,000 was paid. It is a little book about seven by four inches in size. A somewhat hard-headed clerk figures that at tho price it cost $1S0 an ounce. M. Alexander Dcmas, lives by measure and weight. He rises at C-.30 in the sum mer and at seven in the winter. His first breakfast invariably consists of a glass of milk. The second, which he takes at noon, is a plain meaL Dinner occurs exactly at seven, and at ten he is in bed. He walks three miles every day, and never works after four p. m. Miss Amelia Rives, the gifted authoress of "Virginia," was lately married to John Armstrong Chandler, a great grandson of the elder John Jacob Astor. Mr. Chandler is about five feet ten inches in height, well budt, and wears a black mustache. He is somewhat literary in his tastes, and, it is supposed, was first drawn toward the fair I authoress by reading her books before he metner. He has a mansion at Rninebeck-on-the-Hudson, which was bequeathed to him by the late William B. Astor. Ma. Rcskix, it seems, does not like trans lators and translations. To a foreigner who mado a civil request for permission to trans late his works, he wrote a characteristic reply, the substance of which was: "Let em alone." His idea is that every nation has enough good authors to occupy its thoughts, and that men who waat to under stand authors outside their owa land would better learn the language ot the author they wish to read; then they will not be so likely to misunderstand him. CULLED FOR THE CURIOUS. A Moxtooitert (Ala.) man coughed up a pin that ho had swallowed forty-sevea years ago, when a child seven years of age. "Heroins" is perhaps as peculiar a word as any in our language. The first two letters of it are male, the three first female, tho four first a brave man, and the whole word a brave woman. Dowx at Anderson, S. C, they have two boss curiosities a gourd that holds thir teen and one-half gallons and a grass that exudes a gum which will bold any furred or feathered thing that trios to get over is. To bushel measure used in England two hundred years ago weighed eighteen pounds of themselves, and any one who walked across tho floor while wheat was being measured was liable to imprisonment. Ax old slave has been discovered ia Jonosboro, Ga., who is one hundred and eight years old, has been married nine times and is the father of one hundred and seventeen children. His name is Nero and be devotes himself to preaching at eamn meetings. Ox the 1st of June, 1844, there was a frost about Philadelphia which blackened the corn, and on the 7 th of June that year a frost in Massachusetts which cut the corn there. Eighteen hundred and sixteen is famous for having a frost in every month of the year. Spoxqes are marine animals, not fishes, however. The breeding time is in spring; tho young sponges swim about for some time, but finally become fixed to rocks and grow. The sponges we use are obtained principally in the Mediterranean Sea and Bahama Islands. A xovel letter was received by a guest at a Cleveland hotel the other dayfrom New York. It was written on a gentle man's linen cuff, with the address on the reverse sido. A one-cent stamp was at tached, and it arrived at its destination the same as an ordinary postal card. A well near the house of a citizen of Worcester, which tasted strangely all last winter, was explored recently and a carpet bag was fished out, containing a miscellane ous collection of woman's apparel,, a large quantity of silver spoons and other ware, a German Bible, bottles of whisky, lauda num and paregoric, a mult and four hair brushes. A Savannah lady went to another lady to leave some flowers to be placed on the eravoof afrieadwhodied a fsw da js be fore. While returning home she was frightened by a sevcro shock of lightning I and was stepping into a store to wait for the storm to pass whon she fell dead. The Bowers which she carried to- plaea oa the grave of her friend ;wcre placed upoa aer own. j r of Jerow wTth ive j able appetite. "The animal eats c A citizen of Marion (la.) township is ths remark- ' iipciiM;. iqb aninii wtB uvcrjr uh i that comes within its reach. Already this PnnBsnenas eaten flvo cats, ana wnen- v eTCr . mes witain her range of vsnom ' IT ",TLT" !" ?1 TJTT ::.J. Tr! kT1" .4UUX,72T" ( labononninnep iaaUj. ondisnosltion. Bhe three years aid and has bItMa psculiaritr over since she was a call. ERfe VMACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THE COUNTRY WILL. OBT .: MUCH USEFUL INFORMATION FROM A STUDY OF THIS MAP Ofr THE CHICAGO, ROGK. ISLAND & PACIFIC R'Y. Its central position and clc30 cennecticn with Eastern Lines at Chicago and continuous lines at t erminal points ''.Vest, Northwest and Southwest, make it the true mid-link in that transcontinental chain of steel which unites the Atlantic rid Paciflc Its main line r.nd branches include Chicagc, Joliet, Ottawa, La Salle, Pecria, Gcncseo, BColine and Rock Island, in Illinois; Davenport, Muscatine, wasrungton, iairxicia, ottnmwa.Osicaloosa, westUberty.IowaCity,De3Moines. Tsuianclr., Winterset, Atlantic, Xncsville, Audubon, Harlan, Guthrie Centre fPHHFBHHBBB and Council T;mTr. in Town.: Gallatin. Trenton. Cunomn. mtt& CHOICE OF BOUTES to and from the Pacific Coast and intermediate places, making all transfers in Union Depots. Fast Trains of fine DAY COACHES, elegant DINING CABS, magnificent PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CABS, and (between Chicago, St. Joseph, Atchion and Kansas City) restful BECLIN I27G CHAIR CABS, seats FBEE to holders of through first clas3 tickets. THE CHICAGO, KANSAS & NEBRASKA R'Y (CREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE) Extends west and southwest from TTTian city and tit. Joseph to Fairbnry, Nelson, Horton, Topefca, MBJIHlBPHHB Herington, Hutchinson, Wichita, Caldwell, and all jl p1 J fd mWM Points in southern Nebraska, interior Kansas and beyond. SCI k 2 3 1 Entire passenger equipment of the celebrated Pullman a J W ! M B manufacture. Solidly bal lasted track of heavy steel OBHMHHI rail. Iron and atone bridges. All safety appliances and modern improvements. Commodious, well built stations. Celerity, certaintT, comfort and luxury assured. THE FAMOUS ALBERT LEA ROUTE la the favorite between Chicago, Bock Island, Atchison, Kansas City, and Min neapolis and St Paul. The tourist route to all Northern Summer Besorts. Its Watertown Branch traverses the most productive lands of the great "wheat and dairy belt" of Northern Iowa, Southwestern Minnesota and East-Central Dakota. The abort line, via Seneca and Kankakee, offers superior bjbssjhsjshsmsj facilities to travel between Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Lata- lsllftlM yette. and Council Blufls, St. Joseph, Atfhiaon. Leaven lii 31 ftl SI worth, Kansas City, Minneapolis and St. Paul. lilJIllSUS Por Tickets, Maps, Folders, or any desired information, HHiHIHHHV apply to any Coupon Ticket Office in the United States or Canada, or address. E. ST. JOHN, OftBtral H CLARKE, President, Albany, N. 7. J. A. TTJLLEYS, Viee President Kobt. V.SHJREY. Treasurer. NEBRASKA & KANSAS. FARM LOAN CO PAID UP CAPrijiLf$50,000. Red Cloud, Neb. Albany, New York. DIRECTOhS: H. Clarke, Albany. New York Geo R. Beach, BalstonSpa N.T. W. H. Robeson, Altar.v, N. Y. E. S. Francis Pittsticld, Mas R.V. Shirey D.H.Piatt K. V. Highland. J. A. Tulleya M.B.McSit MONEY LCANED. On improved larms in Nebraska and Kansas. Money furnished as Boon a the security is approved Pnncmi and interest payable in Red Cloud HIGHLAND & WECLH Addition to the city of Eed Cloud By far the most desirable property in Red Cloud TENTH " T" 2! 1 21 2 21 2 20 3 20 " 3 19 ; 19 4 w . v: , 7 t " B e c ! gj ; K 7 IS 15 8 14 9 14 9 13 10 13 1 t2 11 iVlt CO o 3 NINTH Lots reasonable, location easy of access, Beautifully situated. Buy now ! GUMF & WARKER, REAL ESTATE&L0AH BROKERS Negotiate Loans, Pay Taxes, Insurance Written, Call and examine our bargains. Correspond ence solicited, GUMP & WARNER. Opera House Block Red Cloud City Harness Shop J. L. MILLER .DEALSKIN HARNESS COLLABS, SADDLE HORSE-BLANKETS? WHIPS I 'T v mw ; . "-' Mn .mnal keot in first clnf s g"ij ------ - harnesa shop. St. Joseph ar.d Kansas City, in Missouri; Leavenworth and Atchison, in Kansas; Minneapolis and St. Paul, in I Minnesota; "Watertown and Sioux Falls, in Dakota, and I raanv other rrosneroun towns and cities. It also offers n. E. A. H0LBR00K, CHICAGO, ILL. J rt Ticket PmT AVENUE 5 AVENUE qEO. o. and r. d. yeiser, FKOPKIETOBS OF THE f intiT Cout; Abiirtd Qist. BED CLOUD. NEB. ComDlete and only set of abstract honks in Webster county. Grazing and arming lands and city property for sale. R. V.Sbiky, Pres. Henry CLARKEVice-Pres. Jxo. R. Shirey, Cashier Howard B. Cather, Assistant Cashier FIRST NATIONAL BAnK,- Red Cloud, Nebraska. CAPITAL, - $75,000 Transact a general banking business, buy and sell county warrants, also county, precinct and school district bonds. JJuy and sell ioreign exchange DIRECTORS: Jas. McXenv. J. A.Tulleys, G. AV Lindscy. R. V. Shirey. John R. Shirey. E. F. Highland. Henry Clarke, A. J. Kenney. Furniture, Furniture New stock and almost at your own figure. Come and ;et bargains. F.- V. TAYLOR, Opposite First National bank and Post Oflice. Special attention given to undertaking-. ED CL0UD pUGWIb iPl J. W.siierw owl. President. W. E. Jaekson, Vice-President. L. P. Albright, Cashier. P. A. Vi is:iy. Assist.iut C iV.iier. "" . Capital $50,000 nrrj- Special Attention Given Collectionr DIRECTORS J. W. Sherwood. II- Sherwood L. P. AHrt;:lit. 1-evi Maore. W. E. Jackson. Wm. Duiker and S. Xorris. Buy and sell Exchange make collections ami uo a 3eneral Banking Business. Interest allowed on tme deposits THE TRAbERS LUMBER CO.. WllX MAKE TtAWm POSITIVELY Lower than any yard in the world J I adl rf f wJVb- Fine office work a Specialty Toughing Gas always 01 Band POPE keep on hand Farm Implements of all kinds, which they sell at the Lowest Living Rates and on the Best of Teiins Aisong their goods we call attention to the following: Brown Planter?, Checkrowers aai Caltivatojs, Manufactured by Geo. W. Brown & Cs.,.Galesburg,IlSnoi8. Eagle Listers and Golden Eagle Cultivators, Manufactured by Eagle Manufacturing Co. Standard Plasters, Checkrowers,. Cultivators and Mowers,. Manufactured by Emerson, Talcott & Co., of Rockford, Illinois. Hoosier Rakes Manufactured by Hoosier Drill Co Barnes Combined Cultivators, Tongue Walking Cultivators, Haj Rakes and Tongueless Cultivators,. Manufactured by the Barnes Manufacturing Co., Freeport. III. The well known New Departure Cultivators, Manufactured be the Pattee Plow Co. Stiidebaker Wagons, Buggies and Phaetons, the Best Goods on Earth Manufactured by . Stndebaker Bros., Manuf g Co., ef South Bend. Indiana. The weP known and reliable Deering Steel Binders aad Mowers Manufactured by William Deering & Co., Chicago, 111. And Last but not Least, the World Renowned BUCKEYE MOWER and the Light Running BTJCKEYK BINDER . Manufactured Aultman, MU'er & Co,, Akron. Ohio m They have sold these goods for twelve years and time has demonstrated '?. that they are unexcelled. Star Wind Mills, Manufactured by Flint & Walling Manufacturing Co. Also MonitorWind Mills and Waupun Vaneless Wiad Mills. You will observe that all the:r goods are. first-class and maauiactured l.y firmswho have an established reputation. A full line of repairs for above goods. 1 The motto of the firm is "No Penitentiary Goods handled ana no p m enis made with new goods at expense se.i i5I .si -it. -OS S EMIGH DENTIST. VCD CLOUD NEM4SKA. BROS. a full line of f ot eu'imers." . d&sJgr' a' L 9 " 1 1 J. -t . .A- SnrfSkD-.ftal2.fe .. -.1 - l&3SJFi5&sS&L -.- -it Air'imtBaPfm e- 'CZ .r -?s?i tJ a7"ieBK.-,ca ,. r i - t? nij w i iJi iim i rf ;t'.i ir;,-- aBBBBBBBBalBBBBaPtJI-Tt? X J ' aaHSkSfe i 1 Si Al ul i i il 7t -41 ! 31 . A Hi: I l SAt m i Z.H 3 l-:?.i C-1 r."' . .. -j ..V i -. . v'i Jj-J a?j '-,. I