CtofECH I If. ' When in the course of human events it becomes necessary to recom mend some brand of Smoking Tobacco, we unhesitatingly pronounce UlttCIVVVCll tsull JJurliam bmoking Tobacco to be the best in the world. Many times imitated, but never equalled. Get the genuine. Made only by Black we IPs Durham Tobacco Co., Durham, N. C Amir nnnniio sear u.tum Mtvju nftuud, FOR EARIEST PAYMENTS. THE MASON & IIAMLIN CO. now offer to rent any one of their famous Organs or Pianos for three months, giving the person hiring them full opportunity to te6t it thoroughly in his own home Mid return if he does not longer want it. If he continues to want it until the aggregate of rent pain amounts to the price of the instru ment. It becomes his propertt witaout further payment. Illus trated catalogue, with net prices tree. Mason & Hamlin Org ah and Piano Co BOSTON. NEW "WAIT FOR a THE BIG m SHOW An entire city by itself Ten times larger than ever. ol J. F. TAYLOR'S t GKEAT AMERICAN. DOUBLE Ilujre Worlds .Museum, caravan, 11 ippuurumv, duugnc mm vwwo of Wild and Living Animals. -WILL KXIIII3IT AT IXOTE Owing to arrangements made by the American Shpwman's Pool Leagne this will be the only great show ta visit Cass county this year. $10,000 That we give the best circus 50 STAR PERFORMERS. 5 FUNNY,' FAMOUS CLOWNS. A show io think and talk about. The greatest number of favorites ever assembled under canvas. A great holiday of rest and recreation for every one. We guarantee to all a most enjoyable, moral, refined and artistic entertainment. The mightiest and biggest brumes that breath, The GolTaths of the Giant tribe. The largest elephant and camele in the world. TIP, the grand old battle scarred war elephant. SAMPSON, the tallest sky-towering camel the world ever saw. Vhe only Fan Eared Elepnant In Captivity. Baby Camel Oniv Ten Month old. And a menagergie containing all the animcls worth seing under the sun 3. QJajD DOUBLtE CIRCUS Of two exalted circus cempanies. Grandest of Hippadrome specialties A street pagneant one mile long, crimsoned with the radiant lustre of the noon .t rjfiwtinir u-.n more fraud than kintr or conn Merer over beheld. Tods upon tons, block after Mock, a solid moving mass represented owe Knignis anu wainui;. Two Performances THE POSITIVE CURE. I BXY BROTHERS. M Warren ' . a.ar,Msaa ,aai , , ! ' ' i.i - i " i i.i - DUJRHAUI nrin ninrNinn YORK CHICAGO. - CIRCUS ----- - " --'!.-i"sf--- performance ever seen in the -west of wealth and splendor. Kvery nation Daily RAIN OR SHINE. IfW1 Art rVft Wew Torte. Price 00 rta Get a move on your secretions by taking "Ralrena for your Blood." Cures the worst Skin and Blood Disorders. Guaranteed by O. II. Snyder and Brown & Barrett. La Grippe. No healthy person need fear any dangerous consequences from an attack of. la grippe if properly treated. ,It is much the same as a severe cold and requires precisely the same treatment. Remain quiet ly at home and take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy as directed for a se vere cold and a prompt and com plete recovery is sure to follow. This remedy also counteracts any tendency ot la grippe to result in pneumonia. Among the many thousands who have used it during the epidemics of the past two years we have yet to learn of a single case that has not recovered or that has resulted in pneumonia. 25 and W) cent bottles for sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. La -rippe SuccessluHy Treated. "I have just recovered from a sec ond attack of the grip this year," says Mr. Jas. O. Jones, publisher of the leader, Mexica Texas. ''In the latter case I used Chamberlain's Cough remedy, and I think with considerable success, only being in bed a little over two days, against ten days for the first attnek. The second attack, I am ratsfied. would have been equally as bad as the first but for the use of this remedy, as I had to go to bed in about six hours after being struck with it, while in the first case I was able to atiend to business about two days before getting down. 59 cent bot tles for sale bj F. G. Fricke A Co. The population of Platumoutk Is about 10,000, add we would say at least neo-half are troubled with some effection on the throat and lungs, as those complaints are, ac cording to staaistics, more numer ous than others. We would advise all our readers not to neglect the opportunity to call on their drug gist and get a bottle of Kemp s Bal sam for the throat and lungs. Trial size free. LargeBottle 50c- and $ 1. Sold by all druggist. Mothers Friend" iukes child birth easy. Colvin, La., Dee. 2, 1886. My wife uaed MOTHEB'S 7BIEND before her third confinement, and says she would not be without it for hundreds of dollars. DOCK MILLS. Sent by express on receipt of price. $1.50 per bot tle. Book To Mothers " mailed free. BRADriELD KEQULATOR CO, FOR BALK T ALL DDUUMTI. ATUUITA. OA. i iinEtenness Hr tho Lluuor Habit, Positively Curef BY ADf:i;j!sVERi; DR. DAMES' OOIDEM SPECIFIC. It enn bo given in a cud ot co9ee or tea. or in nr. ticies of ood. without the knowledge of the per. i taking it; it is absolutely harmless and will eject a permanent and ppeedy cure, whether thepntientisa moderate drlnkeroran alcoholic wreck, it NEVER FAILS. We GUARANTEE a compiete cure in cvsry instance, ii page book FREE, Address in confidence, VlDEN -SPECIFIC CO.. 1 85 Rkd St.. Crocinati.O Chamberlain's Bye and Skia Ointment. A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Ol Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipple3 and Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by it after all other treatment had failed. Xt is put up in 23 and 50 cent boes. DO LING WATER OR MILK. EPFS' GRATKUL-COMFORTING Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only. pi r paiNEssai Lailr wit. OTADHOISCSCURED lariaibl. Tabafar Bar Caah- WfcioMra heard. Confortabl. frrcrnfulwh.rrailrrawllfail. SoIdbTF.lIlMax,anlT,rDCC 853 Broadway, Saw lark. Wriia tat baok el raafainCC PI ANf!.S$r3 organs $18. Want ajrts. catl'jfue IIJUIUlT free Address Dan'l F Beatty, wash injrton X. J. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Ciraiiii aad beaaufiw tha aaar. Promocaa luxuriant growth. Merer Taile to Beetore On Hair ta itm Vlr1 rvL- Cava aeaJp d in in Iiitt filtaag I w Parker' Oiiuter Tonio. It enrca tea woaat Cough, Wrak Lar.;, Debility, I ndigaitioii. Fain, Tak Ultima. JO eta. HINDERCORNS. Tha onW wan am Tor Coma. Stop. aJpam. Uc at .Drucgiau. or H19COX CO., S. Y. How Lost ! How Regained! ICL'OW THYSELF. Or SELF-PRESERVATION. A new and onlv Gold Medal PRIZE ESSAY ou NERVOUS and PHYSICAL ' DEBILITY, ERRORS of YOUTH. EXHAUSTED VITALITY, PRE MATURE DECLINE, and all DISEASES and WEAKNESSES of MAN. 300 page, cloth, trill; 129 lnralasble prescriptkma. Only 11.00 bj mail, doable ae&led. Descriptire Prospect us wun enaorttmnii mFREE!sneonw1 of the Press and testimonials of the Consultation in person or by mail. Expert treat ment. INVIOLABLE SECRECY and CER TAIN CURE. Addreaa lr. W. H. Parker, or The Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bulfinch 8t.. Boston, Msu. The Peabody Medical Institute has many imi tators, but no equal. tferald. The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation, is a treasure more valuable traa trold. Read it now, every WEAK and XERVOI S man, and learn te fce STRONG . Judical Jievitir. tC'eri rijrhteeV GO C0C0ANUT TREES. THEY ARE GROWN VERY SUCCESS FULLY IN SOUTH FLORIDA. AlthuuKh Introduced Only Slxtren Yriti Ago, the State Could Not Now 1 Yt r Well Without Them Some of the ltti -Uses the Cocoanut Is Put To. While the cocoanut tree alouiifls i South Florida it is not a not a native o. the section nor has the fruit been culti vated here for any great length of time. About sixteen years ago a Bahama vessel was wrecked off the coast, ne;ir J Jupiter inlet. Soon after tho waves lx--gan bringing the cargo ashore, among which were found a large number of cocoanuts. Residents were very few in this section at that time, but they gathered together and appropriated whatever came to them. These cocoanuts were considered gre;t prizes and were at once planted. The soil was found to be favorable to the growth and they thrived wonderfully. Thus was introduced the culture of the nut upon the soil of the North American continent. In Dade county, one of the southernmost counties of the state, which has a sea front of 150 miles, there are now groves of great beauty contain ing from 100 to 6,000 trees. Cocoanut culture is very simple. The ripe nut is plucked from the tree and, in the outer husk that surrounds it, is put under ground, lightly covered with soil. The first shoot should make its appear ance in one month after planting, but it is often two before it comes. When it is about a foot high it is transplanted to its permanent resting place. If the hut is planted as a nursery stock the. husk in left on, as the young plant is very ten der, and it seems that a growth out of the husk has a tendency to make strong the reedlike joints. If it be first planted where it is to remain the husk is usually removed. For the first year the plant requires careful protection from the winds, but it gradually grows hardy, and at the end of six years begins bearing. The blooms make their appearance a dozen or more fingers, looking like grains of corn strung on wire about a foot in length. These grains are young nuts. They ripen in a year's time, and there after until its death the tree is never without fruit in various 6tages of riie ness, from a tiny lobe the size of a pea to ripe nuts, and there is not a day in the year when the ripe nuts cannot be secured. It has been demonstrated in other countries that the cocoanut tree will bear fruit for twenty-five years. To what age they live has not been ascer tained. The trees make a most beautiful and imposing grove, being truly tropical in their appearance. As they are planted only about twenty feet apart, they cast a thick, unvarying shade. They ar ever green, as is most tropical foliage, and their gracefulness, with the great height they attain, makes them a desirable ad dition to a home in the far south. The diameter of the tree ranges from one foot to four, and they attain a height of 125 feet, having as many as 400 nuts on them at one time. The old fashioned method of grating the nut has been superseded by a ma chine for grinding, and the residents of the southern country keep oh hand for their use a fresh supply of homemade desiccated cocoanut, from which various toothsome dishes are prepared. The product is becoming more generally known by reason of its excellent fiber, and the "cloth," a strong, fibrous bark, that grows far above the ground and is utilized iu many ways. If the use of cocoanut butter ever becomes common the owner of a srrove of these trees will J see his fortune ahead. The butter is made from the oil of the nut, expressed by machinery. Even the raw grated nut is an excel lent substitute for "shortening" in bread, the grated nut in the same quantity being substituted for lard. The cooking process seems to destroy entirely the vegetable taste and appearance, and bis cuit made with it are pronounced as good as real cream biscuit. Shorn of its cocoanut growth, a tropi cal country would certainly be less at tractive in appearance. The long, feathery leaves that undulate so grace fully in the breeze which sighs among them, the "everlasting green" of their coloring, their tall stateliness and their J symmetry beautify the whole country i ii -. 1 1 ii . i wnere iney grow especially me souiu Florida country, where they grow in such profusion. St. Louis Republic. Paris Has Thousands of Trees. Statistics show that the parks and gardens in Paris number not less than 299,294 shrubs and 22,038 large trees. The number of trees which line the streets is considerably over 100,000. The quarter of Paris which is most abundant in trees is that of Passy, just beyond the Trocadero, and 'just across the Seine from what was the site of the g-eat exposition of 1889. New York erald. . The Objection to Sterilized Milk. All methods of sterilization that are in use in this country have the disad vantage of giving to the milk the taste which is peculiar to boiled milk, and also of rendering it less easily absorbed by the body. In France and Germany a method has been adopted which ac complishes the purpose without injuring the taste of the milk. Professor H. W. Conn in Popular Science Monthly. Cause ot AVJnter's Coldness. The earth is nearer to the sun in win ter than in summer, but the cause of the cold weather of the former season is the oblique inclination f the sitn's rays. Did the sun shine as directly on the earth's surface in January as in June the winter would be the hotter season. New York Journal. To Remove a Mole. : To rid one's self of a mole, trj- to re j move it by tying around it white sill: j thread. It is claimed that the mole will j drop off in a few days. Good House s keeping. TelrifTmptilns; Without Wtiwa. The problem of "telegraph without wires' luus often Iwen broached, but, ko far a9 I know, even the theoretical reali sation of this project has never Ix-en fceriotudy attempted until recently, when Mr. Edison guve forth Ids views regard ing the matter. It would seem that Mr. Edison has actually patented "mean for transmitting signals electrically without the interiosition of connecting wires." What he has to say regarding this subject is well worth our attention, lie begins with the announcement of his discovery that, if a sufficient eleva tion le obtained to overcome the curva ture of the earth, and to reduce as far as may be the earth's absorption, elec tric signaling may be carried on by in duction without the use of wires con necting the distant points of signaling stations. For signaling across oceans, says Mr. Edison, this method will be very service able, inasmuch as it does away with the use of submarine cables; while for communication between vessels at sea, or between vessels at sea and points on land, the invention would be equally important. There is also no obstacle to its employment between distant points on land, but in the latter case it is nec essary to increase the degree of eleva tion or height from which the signaling operations are conducted, because of the induction absorbing effect of houses, trees and hills. Mr. Edison states that at sea he can communicate electrically to a great dis tance from a height of 100 feet. Thia height could be secured from the mast of a ship, so that signals could be sent from ship to ship, and communication be established, in this way, even over oceans themselves. Dr. Andrew Wil son in Illustrated London News. Queer Lobsters. Visitors to Portland pier who hap pened to drop into the lobster house of Mr. Lewis McDonald were favored with a view of a bright .blue lobster. Thia lobster was caught off Cape Elizabeth by a Peak's island fisherman, and yes terday was still alive. The color was decidedly different from the green of the ordinary lobster. On the back the blue was of that deep variety that be longs to indigo, and toward the extremi ties and under parts shaded off to a faint, but still unmistakable tint, and thence into a pure white. The under part of one of the claws is almost a pure white. The lobster is about eleven inches long. One claw is full size, while the other is very small. It is said that one other blue lobster has been caught off the cape this season. Mr. McDonald thinks of preserving the spe cimen. He has also a pure white lobster, caught about five years ago and pre served in alcohol. Mr. McDonald thinks it is the only pure white lobster ever caught. Portland (Me.) Press. A Rig Peach Crop Predicted. If the experts who have recently been examining the orchards in the fruit sec tions of New Jersey have read the in dications correctly, the peach harvest of the coming season will be of a phe nomenal nature. They say the glut of 1891 will seem insignificant compared with the colossal crop impending. The fanners for tho most part are a little skeptical about this prediction. They say a good fruit year is almost in variably followed by a bad one; but prudent housewives, remembering that last season the hogs were fed upfn peaches and vast quantities of the lus cious fruit were allow to rot, because there were not sufficient cans to hold it, are taking time by the forelock and providing themselves with preserving vessels far in advance of the promised harvest. The canning establishments, too, will be prepared to do an enormous business. New York Times. The Snake AVas Too Slow. With the approach of spring flowers and mild weather the crop of Georgia snake stories begins to increase. The latest comes from Albany, in that state, and is to the effect that two or three days ago a Mr. Watson, a reputable citi zen, stepped on a big rattler. All that saved the man from being bitten was that the snake had just begun to swal low a rabbit and hadn't had time to get the morsel down. The snake struggled first to complete its meal, in order to get in its fine work on Mr. Watson, and then, failing in that, tried to disgorge the rabbit, but before it could accom plish its purpose was killed. Exchange. Argentine a Good Market. A settler in Diamante, Entre Rios, Ar gentine Republic, writes that over eighty reaping machines and forty-five thrash ing machines were received in that lo cality last year, while the cost of the twine used for binding wheat amounted to f60,000, and estimates that this year $150,000 worth of twine will be used. He says that the settlers this year will need 600,000 bags. Within the last two months Diamante has purchased $582, 000 worth of agricultural machinery. The yield of wheat during the past sea son has averaged almost a ton an acre, and is of a superior quality. Philadel phia Ledger. A Bottomless Cavern There is an extensive cave in Gilford township. Six rooms have been visited. In one of these there is a rift several feet wide, extending downward to an un known depth. A stone dropped therein cannot be heard to 6trike a bottom. Some interesting mineralogical speci mens can be found in the cave. It will be explored as thoroughly as possible some time this spring. Cor. St. Paul Pioneer-Press. E. R. Watson, of Arcadia, Ga., has been made happy by the return of his milch cow that disappeared over two years ago, during which time he never heard of her. The figures of the last census are not yet completed, but it is estimated that about 17,000,000 persons derive their liv ing from agriculture that is, about 21 per cent. TO SHIPPERS. Dtitter, KtfpH, Cliecu, ild Game, Poultry, Meat, Applet, Potatoes Green and Dried Fruitc, Vegetable Cider, I lea tin, Wool, Hidt-H, Tallow Sheep PcltH, Furn, Skiiif. Tobacco, Grain, Flour; Hay, Jleenw;ix, Feath ers, GinHinjr, Ilrooincorn, and Hop. M. E. II A L L A K I) (Jen. Com, Merchant and HIiIpikt, 217 Market Street - Ht. l-ouH, Mo. WANTED-A (rent, yne acxualntid with Farm ers and hbti'-r. TIMOTHY ('LA UK. DEALER IX COAL WOOD -TERMS CASIIo raa aad Office 44 South TMia Street. Telephone 13. PLATT8MCTH, Nekrask J E. REYNOLDS, JUglstered Physlclaa and Pharmacist Special attention Rive to Office Practice. Rock Bluffs - Hum. IK1L1S IV STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES GLASSQAND QUEENSWM. Patronage, of the Public Solicited. North Sixth Street, Plattsmouth Lumber Yard THE OLD RELIABLE. il. A. WATERMAN k M BER Shingles, Lath, Sash. Doors Bisnds Oun supply ererw ucmand of the city. Call and get terms. Fourth street in rear of opera house. For Atchineon, St. Joseph, Leaven worth, Kansas City, St. Louie, and all points ncth, east eouth or west. Tick ets sold and bag gage checked to any point in the United States or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO RATES AND ROUTES Call at Depot or address H, C. Towxsexd, G. P. A. St. Louie, Mo. J. C. Phillippi, A. G. P. A. Omaha. H. D. Apgar. Agt., Plattsmouth. Telephone, 77. English Spavin Liniment removes all hard soft or calloused lumps and blemishes? from horses, blood spavins , curbs splints, Sweeney, ringbone, stiflee, sprains all 'swol len throats, coughs etc.. Save 50 cent by use of one bottle. Warrant ed the most wonderful blemish cure ever known. Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co druggists Plattsmouth Shiloh's catarrh remedy a posi itive cure Catarrh. Diphtheria and Canker mouth. For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co LUM