Lincoln County tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1885-1890, February 11, 1888, Image 1

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THE TRIBUTE. tlmifel president
NORTH PLATTE. NEB.
M 4r Atrwitf I A 1 '
: -S . It I I1LUL1I Oar IP., ft IU ULflLX.
-. : : ,
; , STEVENS & BARE, Prop's.
TERMS:
-' One Year, in Advance, - - -
Six Months, in Advance, - -
Three. Months, in Advance, : . '.50.
r Advertising Rates on Application.
.dNESBITT & GUBIES,
.;: . Attorneys-at-Law,
7: WORTH PLATTE, - NEB1L
Office oyeb Folet's Stoke.
C. M. DUNCAN, M. D.
Physipian and Surgeon.
a
Office: Ottensteid's Block, up stairs. Office
hours from 9 to 12 n. m., 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. m
Residence On West Sixth Street.
NORTH PLATTE,
NEBRASKA.
Not
to Tfidififs.
kT A " . . . .mm t
notice is nereoy given, that J. will examine eu
v - pereoRs wno may desire to otter themselves as
, ' - . .awudatee for teachers of the common schools of
. taw county on the THIRD TUESDAY of every
" - ' month:-,
; v- ' - . R. H. LANCFORD,
Cousty Soft.
R. E. HOLBROOK,
YOL. IT.
NORTH PLATTE.NEBRigKA, FEBRUARY 11. L888.
NO. 4.
U. P. TIME TABLE.
OOIXO WEST MOUNTAIN TI3IE.
No. 1 Mail and Express ,. ..Dept. 8:15 A. 31.
No. 3-Overland Flyer " 95 3L
2io. 23 Freight " 825 A. M.
No. 27-Freight " " 70 p. SL
Stops only at Ogallala, Julesbnrand Sidney on
Third District.
GOING EAST.
Ko. 4 Overland Flyer ...Dept. 5:15 A. M.
No. 8-Local Express " 70 A. M.
No. 2 Mail and Express " 750 P.M.
No. 24-FreiRht " 235 P. M.
Stops only at Plnm Creek, Kcirney and Orand
Island oa Second District.
J. C. Feegdson. Agent.
DISSOLUTION NOTICE,
Notice is hereby given that the partnership
heretofore existing under the linn namo of Bin
man & Grimes is this day dissolved by mutual
consent.
Old business pending will bo closed up by
both.
North Platte, Neb., Jan.,23. .1883. ...
xiuiiu j. iuiiv, lieu., dim., ,
SurgeoxL I3ontist.
OFFICE POST. OFFICE BLOCK,
H. D. Rhea.
Reallstate and Exchauge.
lloom 12, Land Office Block.
HSeheral. Law and Land Office Business
''J' Transacted.
City and Farm Property for Sale.
Fire and Tornado Insurance Written.
3Ioney to Loan on Improved City and
Farm Property at Low Rates of Interest.
Prof. N.Klein,
Music Teacher.
Instruction on the Piano, Organ, Violin or any
Reed or Brass Instrument.
.NOTICE OF SALE UNDER' CHATTEL
MORTGAGE- ,j
Notice is hereby given that.by virtuo'of a chat
tel mortgaee dated the.17th' .dayof September,
1887, and duly-filed for record in the,6flfce of tbe
county clerk of Lincoln county, Nebraska, on the'
17th day of September, 1887, at three o'clock and
twenty minutes in the afternoon, and executed
by John Burke to Wuu Grady to Becnre the pay ;
nient of 8800.00, upon which there ia now doe the
sum of $249.82; default having b!en made in the
payment of said sum and no 'suit or other pro-
ceeding at law having been instituted to recover j
said debt oranv oart thereof. therefore I'will I
sell 'the property therein describetl viz: One han- i
drcd tons of hay locatrd on the southwest quar
ter section twelvo (12), township thirteen (13), j
andTange thirty-one (31) .west in Lincoln county,
Nebraska, at public auction at .southwest quarter j
section 12, town IS. range 31, in the county of !
Lincoln, and State of Nebraska, on the 25thday
of February, 1688. at one o'clock p. m: of said'
day.
' Wir. GnADY,
By Nesbits ii Ghimes,
his Attorneys;, j
D. A. Bakeji, Salesman.
WALSH,
3
BUILDER,
, COiSTR ACTORi-AND1
. EstimatesWn Vbrk Furnished.
(
WORD
To the Wise is Sufficient.
ii
i
dleofyth(is---ihnth for the -purpose of
selecting tlie balance of my spring
stock. I will assure my friendsancl
patrons a most beautiful ' and complete
assortment in styles both beautiful
ajiid novel, such as you have iieyeseen
before, j'ecotienro be
$MMtoiver-than the lowest, llie stpmavill
-PW-.?'';- . n n . . 7 7 7j:7,' "
cpjisiso of june oaibor-maafr vvummi,
also medium and cheaper grades in
Shop Corner Cottonwood and Third Sts;
east of Catholic church.
1 1. BOMBS,
Nurseryman,.
Florist and GarMer
Pianos carefully tflned. Organs repaired.
NORTH PLATTE, - - NEBRASKA.
H. MacLEAN,
Fine Boot and Shoe Maker,
And Dealer In
MEN'S LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S
BOOTS AND SHOES.
Perfect Fit, Best Work and Goods as
Represented or ISIoney Refunded.
REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE.
Spruce Street, bet. Front and Sixth,
NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA.
J. T. GL4RIS0N,
fl 74 Randolph St.,
(BARTON PLACE,)
NORTH PLATTB,-
INfEBB.
1-
Gan furnish -all kinds of fruigfaiid
ft j QJ1 styles; a choice selection- offSats,
mm .
trffW Underwear. Hosiery, and Jhuamiei
'Ji
'i.A
r Shirts, of which all designs willbe ex
elusive, new, arid nobby. Donib buy
until you see my line and convince
yourself of facts. ' I will $ai;ry a
siiaqe trees, ioresp trees, t ana
aZ before in one store. Don't be mis
led by red-letter signs, but ivait and
be rewarded. : : f .
prices. Also all kinds of plants and
flowers. Estimates and designs
given for laying out new grounds.
Yards kept by contract.
USE
Very trioly yours,
L. F. SIMON, Mgr.
Palace Clothing Co.
All communications to me, with
regard to my interest in lauds in
Cheyenne and other counties in
Nebraska, and as to lots in Schuy
ler, Alda, Paxton, Julesburg, Sid
ney, Potter and Kimball, addressed
as above, will receive prompt and
careful attention.
J. T. CLARKSON.
Bismark Saloon
Billiard and Pool Hall,
J. C. HTJPFER, Pbop.,
Keeps none but the finest "VVMskieSjSiich as
ROBINSON COUNTY, TE2TN.
GOON HOLLOW,
M. V. MONARCH,
0. F. C. TAYLOR.
GUCKENUEIMER 11YE.
WELSH AND HOMESTEAD
Also fine case goods, Brandies, Rum, Gin.
Etc. St. Louis Bottled Beer and
Milwaukee Beer oh draft.
Corner Sixth and Spruce Streets,
NORTH PLATTE, - - NEBRASKA
DEEP
Smi Wonders exist in thousands of forms
hut are surpassed by the marvek of in
BSTrtnT. Those who are in needof prof
itable work that can be done while nv
ltaoiB , , .. . address to
SgiT.xCo PorHandr Maine, and rdceiverfrec,
Hallett&Uh, rP thersex. of all ages, can
fuUi
earn
ia Tday and upwards wherever.they
45 to ronJtol Tinf rwinired.
Kme a"S5W at
work. All succeed.. . . - m- -
BEST SIX CORD
FOR
MACHINE OS HAND USE.
For sale by
T. J- FOLEY.
PURE ICE!
I have just finished putting up
Three Thousand Tons of Ice
from my well water lake and
during the. . coming suxiimer .
will be. prepared to f urriish all
with ice far superior to any
ever offered in this city.
WAS. EDIS.
"GUY'S PLACE."
:-: Room,
fl" L. HALL, Manager.
Q Having refitted our rooms
throughout, the public is invited to
call and see ns:
ONLY ni-
Choice Wines,
Liquors and.
Cigars
Kept at the Bar.
Keith's Slock, Front' Street,
NORTH PLATTE,-. -. jjNEBRASKA.
Succeed ing CASH & IDDINCS.
LUMBER M COAL.
LUMBEE,
SASH,
BLINDS,
- DOORS, Etc.
LIME AND CEMENT.
SPECIAL AGENT FOR
IPennsylvania Anthracite,
Colorado Anthracite
AND
Colorado Soft :
c o
YARD OX R. R. TRACK WEST OF DEPOT,
NORTH PLATTE, NEB.
CHA8. W. PRIOE,
DEALER m
3r.cigs 8- iDraggists Sciiidries
Pure Drugs and Chemicals, Toilet
PERFUMES, ETC., ALL FRESH
Cigars, Tobacco and Smokers
AND NEW
' Articles
Prescriptions carefully compounded. Headquarters for Dr., Duncan.
Foley's block, speuce street,
NORTH PIATTE.
Y
NEBRzdSiKA.
MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
Jay Gould's son, Howard, was taken ill
with typhoid fever at Alexandria, and as
soon as he is able to travel the family will
roturn to America.
The young women in the Lehigh
Valley are backing up the strikers, and
at a dance Saturday not a scab could find
a partner to dance with.
A Memphis woman made of her bustle
a hiding place for seven thousand dollars,
but a thief made off with bustle, money
and all. Truly the bustle is not a thing to
be ignored.
A Maryland man lately caught a large
terrapan in the Choptank river, upon the
back of which grew a huge oyster. The
terrapan and- oyster were both in a nour
ishing condition.
A letter was delivered in a Pennsylvan
ia town the other day that was mailed
twenty-two years ago. The letter had in
some way became secreted in the post
office and was accidently discovered re
cently. A shaving match occurred recently in
London in which the contestants shaved
against time. The champion barber
shaved seventy-seven persons in sixt'
minutes, receiving a prize of seventy-five
dollars.
A private communication from a Eu
ropean resident in China to the London
Times says that the loss of life in the
Yellow River disaster is but little less
than 2,000,000.
Mrs. Elizabeth Weaver Hendrickson,
of DuQuoin, 111., claims to be the oldest
.Methodist iu America. She is 102 years
old, and has always been "a shouting
"Methodist."
Dr. Coan, of New York, says: "Water
is the most dangerous drink known to
man. Rum and whisky have slain thous
ands, impure drinking water has slain tens
of thousands."
The Indianapolis Board of Trade has
adopted a resolution memorializing Con
gress to appropriate $20,000 for a monu
ment over the grave of President Harrison,
the hero of Tippecanoe.
It is not generally known that Samuel
J. Randall was a private in a company of
cavalry during the late war of the
rebellion. In the abnndance of other
fame, his military record has been lost
sight of.
A delegation of business men from
Jacksonville, Florida,-aro iu Washington
to invite President Cleveland and his
wife to visit Florida on or about Feb. 22.
A New York Herald correspondent
estimates that there are over 40,000 per
sons in the Lehigh Valley receiving
assistance from the Knights of Labor.
A pumpkin weighing 250 pounds was
lately displayed in a store in Newburg, N.
Y. It was said that during the last two
weeks of its growth this pumpkin con
sumed a pint of milk a day, it all being
drawn through a single root which was
placed in a basin.
On a farm near Albert Lea, Minn., a
short time ago a discovery of natural gas
was made which led to the opening of a
small basin containing a thiu, yellow oil.
When the oil was disturbed it was found
to contain a large number of small fish,
that were swimming about as though in
their native element.
A strange sight was recently witnessed
by a small party iu passing an Iowa farm
yard. In a lot among a lot of hogs a
young miss well-grown, was amusing
herself riding the porkers around the
enclosure . She met with several upsets,
but would mount again and pound the
animals with her heels to make them run.
Mr. Conkliug was recently asked if he
believed there was such a place as heaven,
and he replied that if there was any place
where politics never was and never could
be heard of it would deseservo that name.
Three years' experiment in state prison
reform in New York has resulted in a net
loss of 1,333,633. The state has paid
$194,000 more to keep the prisoners at
work than it would have cost to keep
them in idleness. No statistics are at
hand to show whether the abandonment
of the contract system has any moral
effect upon the prisoners or any economi
cal results affecting the free labor of the
state suScient to offset this drain upon
the treasury.
The widow of the late Mayne Reid, the
widely knowd and popular novelist, is en
gaged in writing his life, and will be
much aided in her interisting work if
favored with any letters written by him
to friends in the United States aud such
reminescenses of his life and adventures
here, before and after the Mexican war.
Matter of this character will be promptly
forwarded to Mrs. Reid if sent to Col.
Donn Piatt, Mac-o-chee, Ohio.
American flour is becoming a leading
factor in European imports. Our people
can make money by converting wheat
into flour and save money by reducing
the cost of transportation. The exporta
tion of raw material is a business of small
profits, only adapted to a country where
land is plentiful and cheap and population
thin. We are growing out of those con
ditions and must modify our business!
accordingly.
Pretty Women. !
All women look attractive when their color ,
and complexion is clear If your skin is sallow j
dnll. von are bilious, secure a box of Wil- !
liams' Australian Herb Pills, take as directed,
and the feeling of languor will leave yon, yonr
eyes brighten, and yon are another woman. C,
W. Price,Agent.
irnnce Albert victor ot Wales, now
24 years old, says ho does not want an
establishment of his own until he gets
married, an event which he has not yet
even begun seriously to contemplate.
In every walk of life work is a power
ful antidote for low spirits. The busy have
no time to be sad. The saving, "Labor is
prayer." is never truer than when applied
to the grief stricken ; and to those whose
woes are more fancied than real, but none
the less productive of discomfort on that
account, toil will afford a speedier and
surer relief than any other remedy ever
devised by man. Try hard work then,
bodily or mental, or both, as the best cure
far a fit of the "blues."
The freezing up of the pump is a great
annoyance to those having one on their
premises. Some expert says that when
a pump tube freezes solid, do not pour in
hot water in the common way with the
hope of thawinjr. The hot water will
stav at the top, and that will be the end
of it. Procure a lead tube, or any other
kind of pipe, place the lower end of it
directly on the ice iu the pump, with a
funnel pour hot water in at the top. The
weight of the water in the pips will drive
it hot against the ice, the pipe settling as
fast as the ice melts, and the whole will
be cleaned out in an increditable short
time.
A peculiar state of affairs exists in the
school at East Haven near White Haven,
Penna. Miss Caffrey was appointed
teacher in September last, but the people
of the district objected to the change, as
the present teacher was very popular.
"Since thtn they have refused to send
their children to school. For three moths
past Miss Caffray has kept the school
open, but had no pupils. During the last
month one boy, 4 years of age, has attend
ed, and now complaint is made to the
directors that the boy is under age and
demand his removul . Miss Caffray draws
her salarj regularly every month."
Nothing seems too base and heartless
for the man to whose hand has been in
trusted the machinery for coercing Ireland
into a condition of abject dependency.
The statement is made seemingly on good
authority, that Mr. O'Brien is to be
arrested again in spite of the feeble con
dition of his health and his apparent
inability to undprgo another term of im
prisonment. This is sheer cruelty. It is
not believed that Mr. Balfour is sustained
.by public sentiment in England. If he
carries out this plan it wjll certainly go
far to confirm belief in the report that he
declared not long ago his fiendish pur
pose to crush the Home Rule movement
by imprisoning the leaders and killing,
them off by inhuman treatment in jail.
The total wheat crop of the world is
about 2,000,0000,000 bushels, and at least
1,500,000,000 bushels are consumed in the
countries in which it is grown, leaving
a balance of 500,000,000 to supply countries
growing no wheat or growing less than
they consume. Speculation deals only
with this balance that jmes into general
trade, and the speculators of the world in
a single year will sell or transfer in their
peculiar way forty or fifty times 500,000,
000 bushels of wheat. In New York a
single day sometimes witnesses a sale or
transfer of 30,000,000 bushels of wheat.
The damage done by speculation consists
in lowering the price of the whole
amouut of actual wheat by this enormous
inflatation of "paper wheat," not one
bushel in a thousand of which is ever
delivered.
The hobby of Prof. L. E. Hicks, is ir
rigation in Nebraska, and he hss just pub
lished a treaties on the subject which con
tains many valuable susgestionsas to how
the high dry table lands may, by irriga
tion be made to nearly double their yield
by a very slight outlay. One of his sug
gestions is to tap the Platte river at
Kearney, and cam' the water through a
ditch over the high iands of Kearney,
Adams, Clav York aud other counties
south and east. Of course, this plan pre
supposes an unlimited supply ef water in
the Platte, which as a matter of fact is
not the case, and if sucli a ditch was con
structed, it would sometime be found that
during the dryest season, when crops
were needing water most, the river bed
at Kearney would be as dry as a boue
yarg. This has occurred several times
within the knowledge of the writer.
Exchange.
Let us go to California and be happy.
There is a boom there, and everybody is
rapidly achieving wealth. People buy a
lot one day for 200 and sell it the next
day for 2,000. There is no reason why
we should not charter all the passenger
coaches in the west and emigrate. Los
Angeles is one of the towns blessed with
a boom, and the News-Item of that place
furnishes some very interesting and
attractive facts concerning the luxury of
living there. Coal is worth 20 per ton
and wood 18 per cord. Potatoes sell at
the rate of three cents a pound, and
groceries are so high that none but real
estate agents can afford them. The News
Item frankly predicts that the boom will
.soon throw up its hands as a result of
wild speculation with nothing to back it.
The boom out there is doubtless a nice
thing to have around. It is attracting
people from all parts of the country who
go to California to get rich by means of
buying and selling pieces of the desert as
they rushed there forty years ago to wear
out their lives hunting wealth in the gold
mines. For every man who strikes it
rich and rides back to the east in a special
car, thirty will start for home on foot and
fctMtio& tit
to all business entrusted to its care. lnwre
paid on time deposits.
:eajr,:m: XjO-ajsts
Made at the Very Lowest Rate of Interest.
live on turnips and sleep in hay stacks by"
the way" The man who is doing well la
Nebraska should remember the sugges
tive old parable about the two gentle
men of ancient times, one of whom built
his residence on a rock, while the other
erected an imposing structure on the
sand. The latter was swept away, but
the former is probably standing yet Ne
braska's prosperity is founded on the
rock, so to speak, and that of California
upon the sands shifting, uncertain sands.
The fate of the thousand and one booms
which swept the country la9t spring
should be gravely considered. It is liable
to convey an excellent lesson in practical
economy. Lincoln Journal.
, Necklaces of colored stones, as the sap
phire alternating with the ruby or the
emerald with the turquois, have lately
driven out the diamond in Paris.
Wm. G. Dudley, a gray-haired resident
of Oberlin, Ohio, was recently married at
Cheyenne to Mrs. Emma Latham, the
sweetheart of his youth, whom he bad not
seen for thirty years. Each had been
married twice before .
Joseph H. Ogelsby, brother of Governor
Ogelsby, and President of the Louisiana
National Bank, died at New Orleans on
the night of the 2d. He was in tne 66th
year of his age.
Cyrus S. Oberly, of the Galveston
News, whose death at Houston, Texes, oc
cured a few days ago, was a native of Cin
cinnati, born in 1839, but resided in Cairo
for some years. He was a brother of
Civil Service Commissioner Oberly.
The examination of the steel cruiser
Atlanta in the Brooklyn dry dock shows
that though when she ran ashore in Nar
raganset Bay she struck the rocks with
tremendous force, it only bent the plates
and damaged the propeller. Not a single
rivet was started. This crucial test of the
Atlanta's strength speaks a great deal bet
ter for poor, dead John Roach, who built
her, than Secretary Whitney, who tried
very hard to condemn her.
The papers that use plates labor under
serious disadvantages is evidenced by the
fact that about 1,200 of them are now
publishing a story entitled "The Breton
Mills," treating of the horrible condition
of those people who work in woolen
mills, and similar factories, which is too
absurd to merit criticism. Each succeed
ing chapter of the narrative displays a
more profound ignorance of the subject -than
the one before it, and the whole
business reeks with maudlin sentim'mt
alism to a sickening degree. The editor
who is obliged to fill his paper with plates
is worthy of commiseration. Topics.
The Chicago Inter-Ocean says; "No
American is acting in the best interests of
the colored people of the south who is
encouraging them to emigrate either to
Brazil or any foreign country. They are
needed in the south as laborers, and, with
all their disadvantages, they are far better
off than they would likely be in South
America. It is only a ouestion of time
when the colored man will have his rights
in every state in the union." This we
believe to be true. Tho negro race has
made great progress since the war, and in
this is seen the hoDe of its future eleva
tion above the level of servants. It would
be too much to expect that it would in so
short a time liave accomplished much
more tnan it has. In America, great
though the disadvantages are, there is
more hope for the negroes than in the
countries of South America where the
average of intelligence is very low.
Died in the Jail.
Shelton Reddon, a colored man, well
known as "Nigger Redd," died Wednes
day night in the jail. He returned from
North Platte in the evening on the 11
o'clock train in an intoxicated condition,
going from the depot directly to the
section house, where he awoke the section
men. They arose, and supposing from his
actions that he was intoxicated, bore him
to the jail, four men being required to
convey him to the jail.
At the time the party arrived at the jail
Jailor Kiser was asleep. On awaking and
learning the mission of the party he
naturally supposed it was a common
drunk, and immediately placed him in the
cell. John Hunter, an attendant upon
the insane prisouers, noticed that the
negro was gasping for breath, and Dr.
Line was immediately notified, and upon
arrival at the jail found the prisoner
dead .
"Nigger Redd," as he was known, came
over the trail from Texas in 1875, in the
capacity of cook, and some time after
was employed by Seth Mabry as cook on
a ranch, for whom he worked for eleven
years. Discontinuing there he was em
ployed by R. E. Bean at the Keystone
ranch, where he has worked during the
past year, dishing up savor- viands for the
men who follow the festive cattle of the
North River country.
Chas. Gifford, who has known Nigger
Redd since 1875, states that he was a good
cook and faithful darkey. Even were his
virtues no further extolled, the fact that
he was a good cook will cover a multitude
of sins, and entitle him to a favored seat
in the great beyond .
The body was examined by County
Physician Ketner, who found no bruises
or marks of violence, and it is supposed
he came to his death from the effects of
too much North-Platte whisky. Ogallala
News.
71
r