Hi Two Thousand Savages Perjoed 'o Their Stroog hold at Bicam. fire Government Is Hurrying Troops Forward as Rapidly as Possible. Chicago, Aup-. 8. A special to the Kecord from Guayma9, Mexico, says: General Torres h:9 almost com pit tely surrounded Hicam, a Yaqui stroiiihiid where ne-.rly 2,000 suv-1 J I ages aro nrise.l. On tho arrival of j of tlij artillery and mnchine guns tho Mexicans will close in on the Indians and precipitate the biggest battle"ever f.nitlit lictwecn tho government and the Ytiquis. Tho reports from General Torres re garding tho killing of Ilcmley and Mdh-r ay their bodies were found hanging fiom a tee with the hands and f.-et cut otT. The uprising reaches down the Yaqui river to th sea and it is not ex Dieted to extend further north than the S.-ihuari district. Tho government now has nearly ",.oo men in tho field. Two hundred volunteers will leave Guaymas to night. A fi'ht is expected on euter Vg tho Yaqui river, where a largo bund of savages are that last week at tacked and burned three sloops. A Kan1, a we 1 known Mexican at Iler iii. sillo, lost his life in tho encounter. Husines in Guaymas and other points in cou'.hern (ionora is practi i; illy at a stand-till in consequence of the rebellion. It has not entirely suspended tho heavy freighting done through Uie Yaqui valley, but has led in-uty M xieans of tho city to retreat hryo:d the prefect's call for volu i-tei- rs . ImOaiiN S 'lied Through Kliuluem. Peter IS. Chisern.a prominent Amer ican merchant in Guaymas anU one of the signers of the treaty made by the Mexican government witn the Yaquis in I8'.7, declares tho Indians have been bpoiled through kindness. The govert tnent has given them tho very choicest strips of land in the valley, containing LoOJU'O acres, encroach ments on which have never been made and wouid - ot be tolerated by the gov ernment. Every man, woman and child on the reservation received monthly thirty-five jounds of corn and 50 cents in money until they be came able to raisQ their erops,the gov ernment furnishing 300 yoke of ffcxon and all the necessary implements and seed as a gift. Hut instead of trying to improve their opportunities, Mr. Chisem says, they considered tho gov ernment's generotdtyextendod through fear and commenced to make unreason able demands, backed by threats of war. A great many of them have been drunk tincc June 21, when their feast U-gan. Mr. Clnsein declared it will require many more troops than are at present ordered to the. front and vigorous measures to smother the uprising. The man-of-war Democrat arrived last night from Kasonada, Lower Cali fornia, with the remainder of tho Sivcnth regiment. The Democrat and the transport Oaxaca left today for San Bias to meet tho Sixteenth regiment, which onroute from the City of Mexico. Mh)o Tril ThrentrnloR. Ciiicaoo, Aug. 8 A special to tho Itecord from Austin, Tux , nays: A iHspalch from Chihuhuii, Mex., a,s there is much uneasiness felt in in i I itary ci rcie-t there over the atti tude of the Mayo ttiheof Indians in the ctateof Sonora toward tho Mexican authorities in tho present uprising of the Yaqui braves. The fighting force of the Miyii trilo is much less than that of the Yaqui. Tho Mayos have for man j years been at peace with tho government, but tho younger braves are now aroused by the warfare that is being waged west of them and an open revolt is threatened. Tho Mayos have long been friends of the Yaquis, but they held aloof from them in their previous war with the government. Tho Mayos are al most whito and are of a higher order of intelligence than tho Ynquis. Some of tho mtmbors of the Mayo tribe are wealthy. Their reservation embraces manv thousands of acres of rich land in the valley of the Mayo river. Stolen Money L.l' Hurled. innitko, Man., Aug. 8 John W. Anderson, sin2l.e, aged about twenty- three, late junior clerk in Molson's hank, now bookkeeper in a wholesale house, was arrested this evening, charged with the robbery of $02,000 from the Winnipeg -branch of Molson's hank nearly a year ago.- The arrest was made by Chief Elliott of the pro vincial police, and Anderson was lodged in the provincial jail without going to tho police station in order to keep the matter as quiet as possible. Tho money is reported to have been found in hiding buried in a suburb of tho city, and while authorities will not talk it is reported that $60,000 of the amount has been recovered intact. Vhltec Are In Kvlctence. Indianapolis, Aug. 8 A special to the News from BloomGeld, Ind., says: Last night Joseph M. Britton was taken from his home in Newark and severely whipped by whitecaps. Tne house was surrounded by a num ber of men and while several of them guarded the family the others dragged liritton out and unmercifully whipped and kicked him He was so badly in jured that he is unable to lie down. Mrs. Britton says she recognized sev eral of the whitocaps as citizens of the village. Mr. Briton was recently in dieted for illegal 6elling of liquor. While the whitecaps were whipping him some of them exclaimed, "We will learn you how to law." IV SURROUNDED i I AM VARIOUS CENSUS DISTRICTS. Heariqnartern at the Home Town of the uiervkftorik Washington', Aug 9. Letters have been addressed to persons in Oin;ihn, Lincoln, Sioux City and other lure towns in the north we-tern slates by the acting director of the census bureau, asking for the political subdivision of those cities. This in formation ia to be used Jn mapping out the precincts of the various cen sus districts During the last census the districts were outlined by the su pervisors. This was found to be un satisfactory and this work will oo per- r -t -i ..frkOTsttnlaat 1 Ilia Iormea lue l""""", " - ..... 1 . m a ot.W- ' orui tvitn infl I iwi. iniuruiaiiuu cuu- mittcd. The precincts in the larger towns of the country arc being taken up first. Acting Director Wines said today that tho headquarters of the census districts will bo in the home town of tho supervisor, providing such a town is convenient to the other parts of the district, with facilities for transporta tion and communication. Supervisor Rikestraw of the Indian school service, who has been trans ferred to the school- district embrac ing Iowa and the Dakotas, has been ordered to Washington for a confer ence with the Indian officials. The Indian commissioner hus under consideration a report of Special Agent Dixon, who recently made an investigation of the charges filed against Superintendent Davis of the Flandreau, S. D., Indian school. Mr. Dixon has arrived here and has had a conference with the commissioner to day. It is probable that Mr. Davis will be tr.inferred to another fchool. The postoffice at Allerton, la., has been assigned to the presidential clas., and the salary of the postmaster in creased to $1,000. Hour Direct From Afrlt-it. LkMaks, la., Aug. 9. A wild buar has boen imported direct from Africa by John Delaney,a wealthy farmer, for the purpose of improving the stocK on his place. The jungle pigs are free from disease and it is Mr. Dolaney's belief that by cross-breeding he will make his herd immune from cholera. His exjeriment is being watched with the greatest interest by the farmers of the slate. The animal on Mr. Do laney's farm differs in many respects from both the wild pig of India and the comparatively well known bush hog of South Africa. It is of the one-toe variety. Its hoof is solid and round like that of a horse. It is much less leggy than the Indian pig and has a stocky, promising I ody. Its head is long and its snout peculi arly long and blunt. There is a cal lous protuberance on upper side of tho snout not unlike a sprouting rhinocer ous horn. The tusks are not yet de veloped. Tho animal is a little over a year old and weighs 500 pounds. It is expected that at full growth it will balance between 700 and 800 pounds. The four tirst families sired by the African havo just been littered. The young swino, about forty in number. bear strongly tho characteristics of the boar. They aro all of tho one-hoofed variety. IN THE "GOOD OLD DAYS." Gentlemen Had Peculiar Idea of Ea- tertulnlnt; One Another. A physician. Dr. Sped of St. John's was the champion all-round tippler and was specially retained to drink with Cornelius Van Tromp when he honored Oxford with a visit, keeping hinself In form by a continuous round of the brandy shops and taverns in company with the butler of Christ church and Rawlins, the plumber, says the Gentleman's Magazine. The iillus trious admiral, we are told, "was much gazed at by the boy, who, perchance, wondered to find him whom they found so famous in the Gazets to be at last but a drunken, greasy Dutchman." He proved a difficult guest to entertain according to his likings. He declined the usual doctor's degree as being en tlrely out of his element, and when Dr. Fell Invited him to dinner, "he desired he might have salt meat, he never using to eat any other, which put Mr. Dean much to it to find that which would please his pallet." The only thing he took kindly to wa3 the choice assortment of liquids that Ox ford provided, to the superior strength of which he was forced to veil his flag, "We got a greater victory over Van Tromp here," wrote Prideaux. "than all your sea captains in Ixmdon, con fesslng that he was more drunk here than anywhere else since he came in England, which I think very little to the honor of our university. Dr Speed was tho chief man who encoun tered him, Wt'te mustering about five or six more i able as himself at wine and brandy, got the Dutchman to the Crown tavern and there so plied him with both that at 12 o'clock at night they were fain to carry him to his lodging." "Our baby was sick for a month with severe cough and catarrhal fever. Al though we tried many remedies she kept getting worse until we used One Minute Cough Cure, it relieved at once and cured her in a few days." B. L. Nance,Prin. High school, Bluff dale,Texas. F. G. Fricke & Co. Burlington Konte Half Kates to Llncol August 2 and 9, on account of Ne braska Epworth. assembly. The assembly management has ar ranged a program of remarkable in terest a program extending over a period of nine days ana comprising much that is amusing and more that is instructive and edifying. Many of the best known lecturers, philoso phers, teaehers, divines, and temper ance workers in tho country will tak part. The assembly will be heldat Linool Dark, which ia wonderfully well adapted for such a purpose. Music by the famous Hagonow Mili tary band and the Kentucky Colonel': quartet. Caught I'lontor. : From Wednesday's Daily. A man by the name of. Van Horn' caught a floater in the Missouri river below tho Ben Albin farm, near Union, at 10 o'clock this morning. It was thebody of a heavy set man and had been in the, water a long time, be ing badly decomposed. He had no clothing on except a shirt. Coroner Sattler went down to hold an inquest and the body will be buried down there. Verdict of the Jury. From Thursday's Dally. The coroner's jury which was em paneled to hold an inquest on the body of the floater found in the Missouri river yesterday, returned a verdict that the man, to the jury unknown, came to his death, in all probability, by drowning. A fow days ago a party of men were going down the river in a boat and when near that point they are reported to have become involved in a quarrel, during which one of the party was shot. It was the opinion of citizens living near there that this was the body of the man shot. How ever, an examination of tho body by Dr. Walker of Union revealed the fact that there were no wounds on the body.sothat theory did not hold good. Tho body was buried at the Union cemetery. MORE ABOUT "MUMMY" CORN. A. II. ltuxluiell Tell of It Origin In the State of NebraHkn. To the Kditor ot The News: Ashland, Neb., Aug. 8. Your des cription in The News of corn shown by County Commissioner Turner Zink is wrong as to its origin. This is the second ye ir wo have raised the same kind of corn, and havo also raisod the corn said to have been found in the grave of an Egyptain mummy, both kinds of seed being obtained for us by H. M. Bushnell at the Illinois stato fair during tho summer of 1S97. The tirst kind, which you do.-eribe, has a husk on each kernel; grows a stalk thirteen to fifteen feet high; has pointed kernels like rico pop-corn being, of course, much larger. This is tho original corn, first found grow ing upon the plains of Mexico, and from which our present kinds have originated Tr.e corn of which seed was said to hav- been found in a mummy's grave is a much smaller kind, of a snuff brown color husk, a little larger than pop corn and hard and flinty. Upon rett ction you will see that this more nearly resembles the kinds of corn peculiar to Kgypt. I had samples of this original corn during the winter of ISO" and 1S9S, when I was teaching in the Taylor district and several par ties in that neighborhood saw it, among them being C A. Vallery Yours truly, A II I5USHNELI.. Training Rerry TIuHhen. The German fashion of growing gooseberries on standard bushes that is to say, snipping off all but one stem and allowing the plant to bush out at a convenient height for packing, line standard roses gives a great effect of neatness. The same effect is to be seen In the Scotch way of growing raspber ry bushes, by training two adjacent bushes into an intermingling arch. China's Primitive Postal Service. China still has the old-fashioned sys tem of private letter carrying. Letter shops are to be found In every town. If he has a letter to send, the China man goes to a letter shop and bar gains with the keeper thereof. He pays two-thirds of the costing, leav- ng the receiver to pay the rest on delivery. Horbine is well adapted to the euro of fevers of all kinds, because it thor oughly cleanses the stomach and bow els of all bilious humors, and expels all impure secretions of the bodv Price 50c. F. G. Fricke & Co. Our Fish Industry at Tarls. It has been decided that the fisheries and the forestry exhibit at the Paris exposition shall be utilitarian only. An exhibit of natural fish will be avoided. but tinned, preserved and dried fish and fishing tackle will make the de partment of forestry and fisheries one of the most attractive sections in the United States division of tfhe expos! tlon. Irritating stings, bites, scratches, wounds and cuts soothed and healed by DoWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, a sure and safe application for tortured flesh. Beware of counterfeits. F. G. Fricke St Co Kate for Greater America .Exposition. it -duced rates to Omaha will apply from points on tho Burlington route within 2-0 miles of that city during the entire period of tho Greater Amer ica exposition, which open July 1 and closes October 31. There will be three different kinds of tickets: Ten-day tickets, which will bo sold at 80 ppr cent of double the one-way rate. Seven-day tickets,the rate for iphich will be one fare for the round trip.plus 5 per cent on sale Tuesdays. "Week-end" ticket, which will be on sale Saturdays and for Sunday trains due in Omaha before I p. m. one Tare for the round trio. J. FltANCIS, G. I. A., Omaha, Neb. Ice cream flavored with extracts, 2.5 cents per quart at Holloway's. Sleep and Heat TroHt ration. The first essential for enduring hot weatker spells Is to get plenty of sleep There is eminent medical authority for the atatement that heat prostrations are du much more to the exhaustion incident to Insufficient sleep on sue cesaive hot nights than to the actual intensity of the daily heat. Anything that deprives us of our sleep ought to be shunned during the heated season I The News prints the news. CITY AND COUNTY. WEDNESDAY. Uhece Walker made a husiness trip to Omaha this morning. G. L. Mctz of Louisville was a Plattsmouth visitor today. William Sehiiehtrmier and son Frank from Nehawka wore transact ing busitieorj in 1 'lattsmouth tody. A mai riage license was granted to--day to William A. Baker and Miss Voncla Patterson of R ck Bluffs. The latter is the daughter of Fred Ppt terson. District Clerk George Houseworth went to Omaha again today. He is having some of the court records re bound, and as the contents are very valuable it necessitated his going up to watch them. Mrs. N. Shultz entertained about thirty members of the Woman's Re lief Corps' at her home on Locust street yesterday afternoon. Refreshments were served and a pleasant afternoon spent by the ladies. Mrs. Worth of Leadville, Colo., who has been visiting hero with her sister Mrs. C. J. Martin, left this morning for St. Joe, Mo., accompanied by Mrs. Martin, where they will visit an other sister for a fow weeks. Sheriff Wheeler was notified by the authorities at the Lincoln insane apy lum this morning that they were ready to receive Mrs. Eis nhut, who was ad judged insane last Friday. She will probably be taken to the asylum to morrow or Friday. N ck Ilalmes, wife and Mrs. A. Bach arrived home this afternoon from their trip to Gormahy. They are all looking well and report having had an enjoyable visit among old time friends and their relatives and viewing tho places where they spent their childhood days. The only thing Mr. Ilalmes did not like was the Ger man officials he did not like their ways a little bit. Mark White i;nd wife came up from he farm of the former's father lat evening, at which place Mr. White has been ever since the day he ar rived from Klondike. When ho went down to the old farm ho. found his itner in the mi 1st of harvest and short of help. Mark pulled off nis Sunday clothes and helped them out. He says it is easier work than hunting gold in Alaska and more remunera tive. Engineer Joe Lloyd had a narrow escape from a sunstroke shortly after noon today. Mr. Lloyd runs a switch engine in tho Burlington yards, and tho sun beating in from the west, to gether with tho heat from tho boiler. was too much for him. Ho was about to fall from the engine when Switch man Fred Denson caught him. After an hour's rest in the shado of the depot he was again able to resume his work, but was not feeling very lively. THURSDAY. John Weborg mrtde a trip to Omaha his afternoon. George Vass of Kansas City is visit ng his relatives in the city. iMrs. It. A. White of Nebraska City is tho guest of Mrs. F. G. Morgan. Mrs. I.overidgo returned yesttrday from a month's visit with relatives at Arapahoe. Tho Burlington pay car arrived this morning and squared accounts with tho boys who labor for tho compnnj. Recorder Georee A. Hay went to Omaha this afternoon to bring home some county books which have, been rebound. A u trust Tartech went to Omaha this afternoon to meet his wife, who Is re turning from a visit with the Schnase family at Rapid City, S. I). Vern Marshall of Economy, Ind., arrived in the city last evoning and will visit with tho family of his uncle, C. L. Marshall, for a few days. Tom E. Williams, the Eight Mile Grove hog buyer, came down from South Omaha today, where he dis posed of a shipment .ol swine at a good margin. Will White went to Omaha this afternoon to visit his wife at the hos pital. Mrs. Whito is gradually recov ering from her illness, but, owing to the extreme heat, her recovery is necessarily very slow. A brace of local sports are said to have worked a non-resident member of the fraternity for $70 last night The non-resident went into the game with the intention of doing the "work" act, but the tables wore turned on him. Rather than get any notorietv. ho did not make any ' hol ler." Wasted A good girl for general housework. Wages, 3 per week. Enquire at News office. "Klnmpen Clubs." Of all the novel things to be seen In the mountain girl's outfit the oddest of these will surely be her pair of wooden peasant shoes. Just fancy itl It has been cherished as a dead secret, but it's out at last. The girl that goes to the mountain lakes must go tramp ing along damp trails, and so she Is go ing to wear peasant shoes, for they're a lot more comfortable than heavy boots and goloshes. Only one shop in town imports them, and its proprietors have made a small fortune already, for they cost but a few cents on the other side, and here they sell at $5 a pair. There is a lot of fun in learning to walk in them. One must place the heel on the ground first else they slip off, but that only makes it the Jollier, and before the season is half over we may expect to hear from the Adiron dacks a lot of Interesting things about the swell girls "Klumpen" Club. ' The Ebinger Hardware company is agent for the Monmouth filter and water cooler. The finest thing put. See them. FOR "SIR WALTER." The Value ot IScufl Non U n Heading for tlie Young. Above all, write-s it. M.t in the St. Nicholas, Sir Walter Scott was the champion of youth, and it is the fra eratire of the srrinst ime th.it hn-atht-s through his stoi ;e. In his day writiny for young people h.ul not bicome a tro . fesBlon, otherwise there is no knowing ; what he might have done for us; still, he has done enough: and oddly, tco. his heroes and heroines are almost without exception very y Ijr; e no older, indeed, than many scho(irls and boys, and . certainly not so well educated, though, j poor things, the stress of the times made them sadly wiser in the way3 of the world. It is only necessary to cit a few examples. Naturally, "Ivanhre" Is the first suggestion. Rowena was 15 when the story opens, Rebrcca was lit tle older, and Ivanhoe himself was not of age. Quentin Durward was 19, and Isabella of Croye, his sweetheart, was scarcely 15, while her Aunt Hameline was thought quite elderly at 30. Cath erine, "The Fair Maid of Perth," was not more than 17. Edith Plantagenet. the heroine of "The Talisman" was about the same age. Mary Avenel, In "The Monastery," was somewhere be tween 13 and 15, while the two broth ers, Halbert and Edward, were about 17 and 15 respectively. Catherine Sey ton, In "The Abbott," was not above 16, and Roland, the page, was scarcely older. Di Vernon romped with the dogs and the horses. Annie of Geler sitein was a child, and Arthur Stanley merely a precocious boy; and so all through his stories, except In a few rare Instances, when the tales treated of a later epoch, when maturity was not forced upon children. The same may he said of the characters In his poems, and here it Is more especially apparent among his heroines; his men are more thoughtful, and certainly older In most Instances. The spirit of youth runs through everything Scott touched, and la the secret alike of the unwavering Interest in his works, and of the love and veneration for the man. Lint of Letters. Remaining uncalled for at the post office at Plattsmouth, Aug. 10, 1Ki;: Black, Miss Myrtle Hammers, John K Martin, Mrs I.aura Hakes, Mrs Mary Thomas. John U C Wood, Miss tlthel Wood, Mrs O E Vouur. Mr T A When calling for any of the above lettors ploaso say "advertised." C. H. SMITH, I'ostmaster. THE PULPIT AND THE PEW. Minister Makes the Congregation and the Congregation the Minister. Between a minister and his congre gation there is an action and a reaction bo that the minister makes the con gregation and the congregation the minister, says Ian Maclaren in the Ladies' Home Journal. When one speaks of a minister's service to his people one Is not thinking of pew rents and offertories and statistics and crowds; nor of schools and guilds and classes and . lectures. The master achievement of the minister is to form character and t make men. The chief question, therefore, to cousider about a minister's work is: What kind of men has lie made? And one, at least, of the most deci sive questions by which the memlers of a congregation can be judged is: What have they made of their minis ter? Uy that one does not mean what salary they may give him, nor how agreeable they may be to him, but how far he has become a man and risen to his height in the atmosphere of his congregation. Some congregations have ruined ministers by harassing them till they lost heart and self-control and became peevish and ill-tempered. Seme congregations. again, have ruined min-istors by so humoring and petting them that they could en dure no contradiction and became childish. That congregation has done Its duty most effectively which has cre ated an atmosphere so genial, and yet so bracing, that every good in Its min ister has been fostered and everything petty killed. One Minuto Cough Cure quickly cures obstinate eummer coughs and colds. "I consider it a most wonder ful medicine, quick and safe." W. W. Mertoo, Mayhew, Wis. F. G. Fricko & Co. Mew ltlood 1Ik him-. Hermology.acomparatively new med ical term, Is a knowledge of blood and disease as evinced by th changes ob served In blopd. The St. Louis Medical and Surgical Journal siy. this has al ready made such artvanrc? that many diseases may be Tecozowcri by exami nation of the blood. From a mere ob- seryatlon of the relative number of leucocytes (white blood corpuscles) and erythrocytes (red blood corpuscles') it has advanced to elaborate analysis of other elements of the blood and the recognition of bodies foreign to nor mal blood. This 'ology premises to be of especial value to mankind In giv ing early warning of disease ot?rwise not manifest, and showing the advance or decline of abnormal conditions. For Sale. A good 160-acre farm two miles erst of Murray. House and barn; about 100 acres under cultivation. For particu lars inquire of J. II. Thrasher. To the Public. Notice is hereby given that my wife Elise Eisenhut has voluntarily left my bed and board and that I will not be responsible for debts contracted by her. Cap.l Eisenhut, Murdock, Neb. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS Probate Notice. In the County Court, Cass county, Nebraska. In the matter of the estate of Isabelle Emery, deceased: All persons Interested in said matter are here by notified that on the 2Hth day of July. 1M.. Henry J. StreiRt't hied a petition in said court, praying that his tinal administration accounts be settled and allowed; that he be discharged and relieved from further duty as administrator of said estate, and that upon a final hearing T. M. Dolan. Maggie Kern and Ellen E. Little may be adjudged the heirs at law of said deceased and entitled to inherit by descent the residue of her oroperty after the indebtedness is paid, and that if you fail to appear before said CuuUou the 1st day of September, 1M9, at 0 o'clock a. m., and contest said petition, the, court may grant the prayer of said petition and make such other and further orders, allowances and decrees as to the court may seem proper, to the end that all mat ters pertaining to said estate may be finally set tled and determined. Witness my hand and the seal of said county court at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, this 1st day ol August, 189U. George M. Spurlock, (Seal) County Judge. By L. K. Hasse, Clerk County Court, ItHl EVERYTHING IN MU8IO A BOON TO MANKIND! DR TABLER'S BUCKEYE 2ZK A New Discovery for the Certain Cure of INTERNAL and EXTERNAL PILES, WITHOUT PAIN. CURES WHERE ALL OTHERS HAVE FAILED. Tubes, by Mail, 75 Cents; Bottles, 50 Cents. JAMES F. BALLARD, Sols Proprietor. - - 310 North Main Street, ST. LOUIS, MO. F. G. Fricke & Co. t 4 4 4 i 4 4 t t j ? t if Plattsmouth Neb. August 7, iSyg. I bejjf to inform my friends and the public generally that I have engaged in the Wholesale Liquor Trade and am now able to supply patrons in anj' quantity from one pint to twenty-five barrels. Have just imported some fine old French Cognac Brandy Also the genuine Rhine Wine for strictly medicinal purposes. As I handle nothing but first-class goods and sell at lowest prices,, it will pay 3'ou to buy your Whisky, Brandy, Wine, etc.from me. Do not forget that this is the time to order your case Beer and that this is the only place in the county where vou can get the genuine ANHEUSER-BUSCH BEER. Give me a call and be convinced. , PHIL THIEROLF, Agent for Yellowstone (Kentucky) distillery and Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass'n, St. Louis. ..MILWAUKEE.. Self-Binders 1 Mowers. All Kinds of Repairs.. The Best Binding Twine ..Best Machine Oil Egenberger & Troop Lower Main St. Bet. 3rd and 4th St. The Platte Mutual Insurance GL, $150,000 Insurance in Force. HOME OFFICE AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEB y II Y will you psiy your money to foreign Insurance companies, who take it ' ' out of tho state, when you can get Insurance for less coit from a Nebraska Company. Only the Best Class of Business and Dwelling House Property Accepted. Oflicers and Directors Tom. E. Parmele, President; Geo. E. Dovey, Vice-prc-i Jf-nt; T. Frank Wiles, Secretary; Frank J. Morgan, Treasurer; C. E. Yo-e;tt, W. J. White, Henry BoeckD. O. Dwyor, Geo. A. Hay, H. 14. Goring Zockweiler Continue to do a leadingbusiness in Fancy and Staple Groceries. Because they carry an immense stock, buy for cash and sell at low prices. Everything good to eat of Best Quality. Call and try us. Horner of Sixth and Pearl Streets. Subscribe for ..lOc A BEAUTirlTL ATTACHMENT IBITATUta STRINGED INSTEUXENTS has been added to the well known Hospe TEEZSl 25 CASH. $30 KOCTCLY. With Stool and SobTT. BADE CI OAK, WA1KUT 83d IU73AOT Write For Particulars. I a 'iGEf mm m PILE en wO-: CURE -1- m I 4 4 4 4 t i 4 4 t t ; 9 iWLtii,unrj r 7 ....OFFICE OF- .. PHIL THIEROLF, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in nnq -a bo . . J u & Lutz Plattsmouth. Neb The News,' 91 a week 40c a month