n II " IT '"'l Tt" t it A i ii i i i Th Kjm of Greek Htataea. Professor Erwt CurtiuB, tL famon Crock scholar and archa-ologifit of the University of Berlin, announced ii few months ngo th;it ho h;ul discovered that the (Jrct'k Kculptont always made the ryes of hm-m fclfrr and rounder than thow of woiiu ii. Thu Jillco dLs-ovi?ry wiu considered important, as it wan Lw lievel th;:t il would lead to a prof cl.-u-xifiration of many of the nni.lenti fiwl heads of (irc-k statues. Thu hoj. however, m eni to Jiare U-en ireux;itr.re despito thu fet tiLut Curtins. who Ix-en called "The Modern Greek." fa - ihered them. Dr. (Ireef, of Berlin, in a reeent Ji turo dtliverel before tlie Prussian .ji!- ernyof Keieue.i:, declaro.1 that C.ir;i.;n conclusions were wron, as he had fi uin flat, narro'.v eyes thof women, ac cording to Curtius in the he;;.is of (Jreek Ktatnes of men. He had alw me;isnred jda.st ic rejresental ions of v.u t .en with lare, full eyes. Iji natur. . i. added, there was no difference !! v. . t lie eyes of men and women. lie examined recently in Berlin the eyes i.., a iiuuirei mem tiers 01 eaca sex i hwl found tlmt they were thj same lit jiaie, mzu ana lorm. Lie thu. iiplteld the thnes of Zinn and KomiiierIin:r tliat the Greek sculptors who gave a greater fullness to the eyes of mn than to those of women did not follow the condition of nature. New York Trib une. Plenty of Came In Maiae. There h.is not been a j-ear for some time when came was as plenty and when bo litUo game lias been killed and destroyed as during the past win ter. One reason is that the snow in many localities has not been deep, and at the same time it has been bard, hold ing up the deer and caribou and givU them a chance to protect themselves by flight. Another reason is that the guides and hunters have learned that it is for their interest to leave the game alone, especially during the deep snows. I have made it a point to see many of Ihem in the early part of the winter, and tried to make them understand that it is for their interest for us to keep a good stock of fish And game, as they would get more business during the guiding season. The most of the game that has been killed the past winter has been killed in the back settlements, hunters using dogs to catch deer. There has been a story of ninety moose killed near our border line, in township 5, range It. 1 believe the most of this yarn is false. 1 have been within a day's walk of the township this winter and I did not learn of any such business. In fact there are not moose enough in that locality. It is near the Canada line, and this same re port comes from there every year. Cor. Portland (Me.) Press. Beekeepers and the Government. Foreign bees without pedigrees may be admitted to the United States free of duty. The secretary of the treasury has so decided. Until the last tariff bill wjis passed bees from abroad came in gratis, as "animals imported for breeding j ur poses." The AIcKinley law declared that this ruling should only apply to an imals "regularly entered in recognized herd Ijooks."" Accordingly, bees were assessed 20 per cent, ad valorem, be cause they had no jedigrees. The l-.ee-keepers protested and carried their point. Some time ago the postofiice department declared that bees were "unmailable." on the ground that they would be likely to sting ieople if they got loose. The beekeexers secured the recall of this reg ulation, by proving that the packages employed could not be broken. Wash ington Cor. New Orleans Times-Democrat. UUle Fear of Indian Trouble. A gentleman at Rosebud agency writes that the reports of dissatisfaction among the Indians there have been greatly ex aggerated. Since Lis arrival thero two weeks ago he has traveled quite exten sively through the various Indian camps and thinks the Indians never exhibited a more jeacefnl frame of mind than at present. Never did they take hold of work more readily or more extensively and never did they take more interest in the care of their stock than the jist winter, as can plainly be seen by the condition of horses and cattle this spring. So far as dissatisfaction with rations is concerned, if there is any such, the white employees hear nothing of it. Cor. Min neapolis Journal. Confederate Coins. There has recently been some inquiry as to whether the Confederate govern ment coined any gold. The question was referred to the lion. Charles C. Jones, Jr., of Augusta, who telegraphs as follows: "The Confederate States, as I now remember, coined and issued no gold. A few experimental half dollars in silver were struck, but they did not pass into circulation. Charleston News and Courier. A Circa Tumbler lias a Fall. A dispatch from Warsaw, Ind., says: "Charles Nefx, a laborer in Lakeside park, while engaged in trimming a tree fell from its top to the ground, a dis tance of sixty feet, and was uninjured. Neff is an old circus tumbler, and the agility learned in the ring saved his life, lie fell on lus hands and rebounded in the air ten feet, alighting on his feet without a scratch." A lawsuit liaa been commenced in Marengo, Ind., baiween Edmund Waltz and El wood Stout, over the price of two eggs, bought at seventeen cents per dozen. Two of the dozen were rotten, and Waltz demanded a return of the price. A young man hypnotized at an enter tainri.ent in Paris remained senseless for two days and was with difficulty Lront liack to consciousness. A Missouri judge presented to the ex Confederate home fifty-eight cents, but they were very old coins and are to bo sold at auction. lloitwiftly Kncllah Sparrow. , A loving student of the English spar row as .ho bird is to be seen in Brooklyn finds that the little creature has in Li domestic relations many human traits. When the sparrows are mating and building, the male sinks into insignifi cance Jeside the female. When a nut-ting place L- to be selected the male looks jauntily about and is ready to accept anything that comes to hand, but the hen examines each proposed site with critical care, apparently studies tho re lations of the place to sun. wind and rain, and tinally decides tho question with small consideration for the opin ions of her spouse. When the ne.-st is to le built tho house wifely character of the hen again asserts itself. She is busy all day long gather ing sticks and straws to serve as building material. Nothing is taken haphazard, but every stick or straw fits to a nicety and is admirably adapted to the end for whic h it is selected. As to the male, he gives moral supiort and little else. While the hen is devoting all her ener gies to the task in hand he sits on a neighboring bough and encourages her with music. Nor does she expect or wish more at his hands. Now and then, apparently pricked by conscience, he leaves his perch, picks up a clumsy stick or straw and carries it to the scene of the building ojterations. But his contribution is seldom received with favor. The hen usually examines it with the ill concealed scorn that wives sometimes accord to domestic perform ances of husbands, and in nine cases out of ten she tosses away the proffered ma terial as soon as the back of her spouse is turned. New York Sun. A Cowboy' Senile of Hnmor. A globe trotting Englishman told mo this st ory: "To show you that the cow boys are not aa bad as they have been painted in fact, that they are opposed to anything like lawbreaking and vio lence let me relate an incident. There was a poor clerk standing up over his books at a desk in a shop on the main street, and there was a cowboy riding np and down the street. Well, the cow boy saw the clerk and his sense of hu mor was aroused by the idea of shooting at him, d'you know. Those cowboys have a very remarkable sense of humor. So the cowtboy ups with his pistol, d'you know, and he shoots the poor clerk right through the head, killing him instantly. " W eli, now, that sort of thing is very distinctly frowned upon by cowboys, as a rule, and in this case the cowboys held meeting and resolved that the fellow with the lively but dangerous sense of humor should be hanged at once. They put a rope around his neck, and there being no tree anywhere in sight they hung him to the side of a Pullman as the train came rolling in. I've seen a number of occurrences of thr.t sort, which makes me quite positive in stat ing that though they are a very rum sort of beggars they are really not a bad lot." Julian Ralph in Harper's Weekly. A Lazy. Though Shrewd Fellow. Tulkinson a barrister and bachelor combined, by the way is a very sys tematic man. The other day he had his house fitted with electrical appliances. and giving instructions to his servant Joseph, he said: "Now I want you to understand, Joseph, that when 1 ring once that means for you, and when 1 ring twice that means for Aitiggie, the housemaid." Joseph, who is the laziest wretch that ever accepted wages he did not earn, bowed respectfully and withdrew. A little later the bell rang. Joseph never moved. Presently it rang again, and according to instructions Maggie came hurrying to her master, who was very angry. "Why didn't that rascal, Joseph, come when 1 rang for him?" said the bar rister bachelor disgustedly. "Why, sir," answered Maggie, ."Jo seph is busy in the office reading your newspaper. When he heard the first ring he said to me, 'Now, Maggie, wait until he rings the second time, and then it will be you he wants.' " London Tit- Eits. Strange Cave Dwellers la Spain. At a meeting of the Royal Geograph ical society, of Madrid, Dr. Bide gave an account of his exploration of a wild district in the province of Caceres, which he represented as still inhabited by a strange people who speak a curious patois and live in caves and inaccessible retreats. They have a hairy skin and have hitherto displayed a strong repug nance to mixing with their Spanish and Portugese neighbors. Roads have lately been pushed into the district inhabited by the "Jurdes," and they are begin ning to learn the Castilian language and attend the fairs and markets. W. II. Larrabee in Popular Science Monthly. - The Growth of Railroad Mileage. In 1830 there were twenty-three miles of railway in operation in the United States. By 1832 the mileage had in creased to 229 miles, and in 1835 Hit country had 1,098 miles of railroad. The first through railroad from the ear4 westward was completed in 1842 between Boston and Albany, connecting at the latter place with the Erie canal. In the same year the last link of the line from Albany to Buffalo was opened. At the end of 1848 the total mileage of all the railroads in the country was 5.99G miles, or about 500 miles more than there are now in the state of Nebraska. Edward Rosewater's Omaha Address. The Flute Is Very Old. The flute is very old in its origin, but the flute of today is different from that of the ancients. It has been improved upon from time to time, and the old Ieople would probably fail to recognize it now. The flageolet, which is some what similar, is credited to Juvigny about 1581. Harper's Young People. Tall 3Ien lo Asia and Africa. - The tallest men of South America aro found in the western provinces of the Argentine Republic, of Asia in Afghan istan and Kaypootana, of Africa in tho highlands of Abyssinia. Yankee Blade. Ennor Liquor Cure. To those seeking a reHcue from liquors curse or other evil ha oils brought about by morphine, tobac co etc. The Elisor Institute at South Omaha offers one of the most relia ble and bef t places to go with the absolute certainty of a permanent cure. Write or visit thu institute. I fuel it my duty to say a few words in regard to Kly'w Cream lialm. uutl I do so entirely without solicitation. I have used it more or less half a year, and have found it to be most i:lmii able. I have suffered from catarrh of thu wort I kind ever since 1 was a little boy and I never hoped for :u-j, bu. Cream liaJm si n-s to c! even th: lany of m- acquaintances have oed it witu excellnnt resultfv 0car Ostnin, !." Warren Ave., Chi C. ';() III. Wanted: An energetic man to manage branch office. Only a few dohars needed, --alary to start $7." Ier month and intere.-t in business The Western Co., Kansas City. Mo. itie wistioni oi mm who journey uth is known by the line hu selects; tlie judgment ol the man who takes the "Durlington Koute" to the cities of thu east, the south, and the wust, ia never impeached. The in ference is plain. Magnificent Pull man sleepets. elegant reclining chair C irs and world-famousdining cars on all through trains. For information address thu agent of the company at this place, or write to i. J-rancis, fieuursu 1'assciiger and Ticket Agent. Omaha. It Should be in Every House. J. 13. Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps burg. Pa., nays lie will not be with out Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds tnat it cured ins wite wlio wat threatened - with Pneumonia aftei an attack of La Grippe," wheii various other remedies and several physicians had done her no good Kouert iJarOer, ol Cocksport, lJa claims Dr. King's New Discover Jias done nini more good than any thing he ever used for I.ung irouDie. rvotmng liKe it. Iry it Free trial bottles at F. G. Fricke & Co's drugstore. Large bottle, 50c and $1.00. The population of Plattsmouth uidW Is about 10,000, add we wo 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- sam tor the throat and lungs. Trial size free. LargeBottle 50c- and $1, Sold by all druggist. Itch onhur.in and horses animals cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's sanitary lotion. This never fails. Sold F. G. Fricke & Co. druggist, Jflattstnouth. A Million Friends A friend in nood is a fried indeed, ana not less man one million peo ple nave lound jusl such a mend in Dr. King's New Discovery for con sumption, coughs, and colds. If you never have used this eat cough medicine, one trial will con vince you thai il has wondertil cur ative powers in all diseases of the throat chest and lungs. Each bot tle is guaranteed to do all that is claimed or money will be refunded Trial bottle free at F. G. Fricke & Co's drugstore. Large bottles 50c and $1.00. For years the editor of the Burl ington Junction, (Mo.) Post, has been subject to cramp colic fits of in digestion, which prostrated him for several hours and unfitted him for bnsiness for two or three days. For the past year he has been using Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy whenever occa sion required, and it has invariably given him prompt relief. 25 and 20 cent bottles for sale hy F. G. Fricke & Co., druggists. How's This! We offer 100 dollars reward for any case of catarrh thatcan not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F.J. Cheney & Co. Props, Toledo, Ohio, Wethe undersigned, have known h. J. Cheney for the last lo years, and belive him pefectly honorable in all buisness transactions and fin ancially able to carry out an oblig ations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Drujr- gist, Toledo Ohio., Walding Kinnan & Tarviu, Wholesale druggist Tole do Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cnre is taken inter nally, action directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. IJrice, oc. per bottle, bold by all Prmgist; Testimonials free. The Missori Pacific will sell round trip tickets May 9 to li inclusive, to Portland, Oregan, the Presbyterian general aisembly being held their May 19 to June 2. Tickets good un-! til 5lay 19 and returning inside 90 I days at ?00, going via one route and returning via another. Apply at ticket office for particulars. Specimen Cases. S. II. Clifford, New Castle. Wris was troubled with neuralgia and rheumatism, his stomach was dis ordered, his liver was affected to ac alarming degree, appetite fell awaj and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles oi Electric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111., had a running sore on his leg of eight years' standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven bottles Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well John Speaker, Catawba, O., had five large fever sores on his leg, doctors said he wh9 incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Buck leu's Arnica Salve cured him entire ly. Sold by F. G. Fricke & Co. Shiloh3 catarrh Remedy a posi tive cure for catarrh, dip f beria and canker moiiih. or sale by O H Snyder and E. G Frieke. PLACES OF WORSHIP. Catholic St. raid's Church, "akTbH.wee KUth and hlxth. Father Carney, Pastor Herviceg : Vass at 8 and 10 :30 a. m. Sunday School at 2 :M, with benediction. . CHHiiTiAjf. Corner L.wut and Elphth Services moriiiiiK tiud tvenlnc. Kldrr alow;ty pastor. Sunday 8ctiool 10 A. M. Eris'jopAi St. Luke's (.hurch. corner Third mid Vine. -ltev. Ii l;. IIiii.t.'ph. aMor. Ser viees : 11 A. m. a d 7 3oiv x. Sunday School Rt 2 :.' e. m. (J Kit ma N M KTitoiiiHT. oriier Sixth St. and timnile. Kev. Hiit. Kat-lor. services : 11 A. M. and 7 ::0 v. i. S-iiucUy Scli ol lo :30 a. m. I'KrSitYTFKi AN. services in Tew church, cor ner J Sixth and Ci'Mulc m. Kcv. J. T. Itairri, i nvtor. Mindav-.M'i.iKii af ! ;30 ; I'leacliini; at 11 a. in. ;i;.t x m. The . U. s. '. K oi th' church meet every Saldtath evetiliij.' at 7 :l,r in tlie basement uf the chtiri h. All are Invited to attend these meet injjs. Kikst M ktiiokist. Sixth t., ttetwen Main and Pearl, i.'ev 1.. K. llritt. 1. L. nastor. Service : 11 A. M.. 8 :0l . M. Sunday (jchool :.' A M I'ray- r meetii j; ednesday even ing. (irnMAN Ninlh. hours. I'iccshvtkkia .Corner Main and ICev W itle, pastor. Services u.siiat Sunday -chool 0 :ao a. m. Swkf.dkh onckpoatiokau Graulie, be tween Fifth and Sixth.- Colokko I'.Al-nsT. Mt. Olive, t'lik. between Tenth i.nd Eleventh, llev. A. ltoowell, pas tor. Se. vices 11 a. in. fiid 7 :30 p. ill. I'rayer ineeiuiir Wednesday evening. Voiix, .Vfn's I'hkistian Association itooms in v aterman block, Main street. Cos l e! meeting. f-r men only, every Sunday af ternoon at 4 o'clock. Koomc open week day irom s:ao a. in .13 : 30 p. ia. South I'auk Tabkknacle. Kev. J. M v'jod, l astor. Services: Sunday School . in.: 1 react. mi;. 11 a. m. and 6 v. m prayer meeting Tuesday night ; choir prac- iice. rruiMy nigni Ah are welcome. Always has on band a full 6tock of FLOUR AND FEED, Corn, Bran, Shorts Oats and Baled Hay for sale as low as the lowest and delivered to any part of the city. CORNER SIXTH AND VINE Plattsmouth, Nebraska W II. CUSHING, Predcrif, J. W. Johnson, Vice-Prttid4nL -ooOT EOoo- Citizeqs - Bqqli!, fLATTSMOUTH NKBivASKA Capital Paid in $30,000 F li Guthman J W Johnson. E S Grensel. tienry KiKenDnrv, ivi w Morgan, j A Connor. W Wettenkamp, W II Cushing A general banNing business trans acted. Interest allowed on de posites. . pIRST NATIONAL : BANK OF PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA Paid ud capital ... $50,0(10,00 10,000.09 Surplus i the ?ry best facilities for the promp transaction of ligitimate iianking Business Stocks, bonds, sold, government and local se curities bought B-nd sold. Deposits received nd interest allowed on the certificates Drafts drawn, available in any part of the United States aDd all the principal towns ol Surope. OOLI.ECTIO8 MADE AND PROMPTLY REMIT TED. Qlghest market price pntd for County War rants, state ana county Dende. DIRECTORS John Fitzgerald D. Hawkewortb Sam Waugh. F. E. White Georce E. Dovev John Fitzgerald. S. Waugh. rreetdent UaBie- HENRY BOECK The Leading FURNITURE DEALER AND (JNDERTAKR Constantly keeps on hand everythin you need to furnish your house. CORNER SIXTH AND MAIN STREET Plattsmouth Neb Lumber THE OLD RELIABLE. A. WATEEIAI & SOU ii. PI LUMBER ! Shingles, Lath, Sash, Doors, Blinds Can supply ertrw demand of the city. Call and get terms. Fourth Etret in rear of opera house. Yard 5 O-O - TO- G-IR,:E.An7 HALOID IE ZEZLST House Furnishing Emporium. WHERE you can get your house furnished from kitchen to parlor and at easy tearms. I hau die tlie world renown Haywood baby carriages, also the latest improved Reliable Process Gasoline stove Call and be convinced. No trouble to show goods. L Pearleman OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND A Full and Drugs, Medicines, DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES Prescriptions Carefully TRY THE t;E::il:L:D w l?m - asicS - cITob Work A. B. KNOTS liUSLMSS SOI Cor Fifth PLATTSMOUTH Mexican M ustang Liniment. A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast A long-tested pain relierec Its use is almost uniyersal by the Honaewife, the Farmer, the Stock Raiser, and by eyery one requiring aa ttffectiye liniment. No other application compares with it in efficacy. This well-known remedy has stood the generations. No medicine chest is complete without a bottle oi Mustang Liniment. Occasions arise for its use almost erery day, All druggists and dealers have it. Compk - te line of Paints, and Oils. AND PURE LIQUORS riu pounded i Hour?. AG lOR. and Vine St. - NEBRASKA - tmm.mf HtuUll, j y