Lincoln County tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1885-1890, March 17, 1888, Image 1

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THE TRIBUNE.
STEpNS&MK Prop's.
TEMS:
-One Year, in Advance, - . $1.50.
Six Months, in Advance, - - - .75.
Three Months, in Advance, - - .50.
Advertising Rates on AppHcafioii:
NESBITT & GRIMES,
Attorneys-at-Law,
NORTH PLATTE, - NEBS.
Office oteb Folet's Stoke.
C M. DUNCAN, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon.
h?' tPstB Block, mp .stairs. Office
honrBfrom9 to 12 a.m., 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. m
Keeidence on West Sixth Street.
NORTH PLATTE,
NEBRASKA.
Jfe to JEeachers.
Notice is hereby iTen that I will examine, all
Pr58. . desire r to offer themselves" as
candidate for teachers of the commoa schools of
this county on the THIRD TUESDAY of every
month:
R. H. LANCFORD,
County 8 dpt.
R. E. HOLBBOOK,
Ltiert.
OFFICE POST OFFICE BLOCK,
H. D. Rhea.
leal Estate and Exchange,
Room 12, Land Office Block.
Sfeneral Law and Land Office Business
Transacted.
City and Farm Property for Sale.
Fire and Tornado Insurance Written.
Money 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,
Pianos carefully tuned. 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 Money Refunded.
REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE.
Spruce Street, bet. Front and Sixth,
NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA.
I. T. CLARKSON,
174 Randolph St.,
All communications to me, with
regard to my interest in lands 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 "SalodDL
Billiard and Pool Hall,
J. C. HUPFER, Prop.,
Keeps none but the finestWhiskies,such as
ROBINSON COUNTY, TENN.
GOON HOLLOW,
M. V. MONARCH,
0. F. G. TAYLOR.
GUCKENHEIMER RYE.
WELSH AND HOMESTEAD
,Also fine case goods, Brandies, Rum, Gin
St. Louis Bottled 'Beer "and
Milwaukee Beern draft.
Etc.
Corner Sixth-ahd Spruce Streets,.
NORTH PLATTE. - - NEBRASKA
i Sea Wonders exist in thousands of forms
i DQimwrpsBwiJ "o '-"-"i' v
rcntion. Thoee who are in needof pror-
Ka rinna vnllA JlT-
ins at home should at once send their address to
Hallett Co.. jPortluid. Jlaine. and receive free,
laU information how either sex, of all ages, can
ara$5to25 a day and upwards wherever they
live. Yea are started free. Capital not required.
Boats kave made over $50 in a single day at this
week- Alleaccaed.
YOL. IV.
NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, MARCH 17, 1888.
NO. 9.
U. P. TIME TABLE.
GOING WEST MOUNTAIN TIME.
No. 1 Mail and Express Dept. 8:15 a. X.
No. 3 Overland Flyer " 8:05 p. at
N 23 Freight A 825 a.m.
No. 27-Freight.i...T. " 7s00 p. X.
toponlyatOgallala, Julesburg and Sidney on
GOING EAST.
tNo. 8-Local Express. " 7J00 A. at.
No. 2 Mail and Express " 730 p.m.
Stops only at Plam Creek, Kearney and Grand
Island ob Second District.
fDaily except Sunday.
J . V. JTEKGDSON. Agent.
" ELJEOIION N0iic
I, 6. B. Hammond. Mayor of the City .of - North
Platte, Nebraska, by virtue of the power, in me
Tested, do hereby direct that . on .Tuesday, the 3d
day of April,'1883, a city election for the City of
North Platte be held for the election of the fol
lowing officers:
One Mayor,
OaeClerkY .:
One Treasurer,
One City Eagiaeer, '
One Police Jadge,
One Councilman, First Ward,
One Councilman. Second Ward,
Two Councilmen, Third Ward,
Two Members of Board of Education, for Dis
trict No. 1. for three years.
That the colls for said election be open at 9
o'clock a. m. and remain open until 7 o'clock p.
m. of said day.
Given under my hand this 3d day of March,
1888.
G. R. Hammond . Mayor.
E. B. Warner, City Clerk.
H. ).
NOTICE.
In the District Court of Lincoln County, Ne
braska.
Mart R- Mason,
vs.
George Mason
To Georee Mason, non-resident
defendant:
You are hereby notified that on the 2d day
of March, 18S8, Mary R. Mason filed a petition
against you in the District Court of Lincoln
County, Nebraska, the object and prayer of
which is to obtain a divorce from you on the
ground of habitual drunkenness and upon the
ground that you are of sufficient ability to furn
ish suitable maintenance for plaintiff and that
you have grossly, wantonly and cruelly refused
and neglected so to do.
You are required to answer said petition on or
before Monday, the 9th day of April, 1888.
Mary R. Mason.
Plaintiff.
By Nesditt & Grimes.
her Attorneys.
I. K. SOMERS,
Nurseryman,
Florist and Gardener,
(BARTON PLACE,)
NORTH PLATTE, NEBR.
Can f urnisb all kinds of fruit and
shade trees, forest trees, and seed
lings for tree claims at lowest
pricesT Also all kinds of plants and
flowers. Estimates and designs
given for laying- out new grounds:
Yards kept by contract.
PURE ICE!
I have just finished putting up
Three Thousand Tons of Ice
from my well water lake and
during the coming summer
will be prepared to furnish all
with ice far superior to any
ever offered in this city.
WM. EDIS.
P. WALSH,
CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER.
Estimates on Work Furnished.
Shop Corner Cottonwood and Third Sts
east of Catholic church.
USE
a
BEST SIX CORD
FOR
MACHINE OR HAND USE.
For sale by
T. J. FOLEY.
"GUY'S PLACE. "
FIRST-CLASS
Sample :-: Room,
N L. HALL, Manager.
Having refitted our rooms
throughout, the public is invited to
call and see us.
ONLY
Choice Wines,
Liquors and
Cigars
Kept at the Bar.
Keith's Block, Front Street.
NORTH PLATTE, - NEBRASKA.
Ir'-S .
W8
i ' l , V .V".'.- -?. -
: ' ' .- . .
v ' -. J. f
li
Mr. Simon, Manager of the Palace ClQth
ing Company, is now in Chicago selecting
his Spring Stock. Watch and Wait.
- A f' ' ' '
v
7V Wli' -
a
IDDIUG-S,
Succeeding CASH it, IDDINCS.
LUMBER fflCOAL.
LUMBER,
Lath.,
SASH,
BLINDS,
D0ORS, Etc.
LIME AND CEMENT.
SPECIAL AGENT FOR
Pennsylvania Anthracite,
Colorado Anthracite
AND
t
Colorado Soft
CO
YARD ON R. R. TRACK WEST OP DEPOT,
NORTH PLATTE, NEB.
CHAS. W. PRICE,
DEALER IN"
J7mgs & Draggists Scmdries
Pore Drugs and Chemicals, Toilet Articles,
PERFUMES, ETC., ALL FRESH AND NEW
Cigars, Tobacco and Smokers' Articles.
Prescriptions carefully compounded. Headquarters, for Dr. Duncan.
FOLEY'S BLOCK, SPRUCE STREET,
mum platte, . . . Mejskj.
it-
MISCELLANEOUS.
Frank Itfoxic, of Dakota, was about to
be married, but was busy with a game of
poker. The minister who was to perform
the ceremony went to inform him that the
company was waiting, got interested and
took a hand, and the wedding had to be
postponed.
. At the Minnesota state fair a curious
clock is on exhibition. It is made of red
cedar and is the work of an inmate of the
North Dakota penitentiary. Ajackknife
was the only tool used. In the gable of
a Swiss cottago sits the face of a clock,
with balconies, piazzas and windows
around it.
A bed in Nikko, Japan, is eight.or more
silk wadded comforters piledupon the
floor; upon this a very ample wadded coat
13 placed. You slip into this great coat,
put your arms into the long sleeves, draw
it over you and sleep. The pillow is a
block of wood. A paper lantern is lighted
all night, for the people ere much afraid j
of the dark .
i
A strike has just taken place on the
Atlantic and Pacific railroad in New
Mexico which on the face of it would
appear to be justfied. The full particu
lars are not at hand, but a new superin
tendent is reported to have inaugurated
his career by cutting down the wages of
the employees one half. There must be
a remarkable change in the economic
situation in New Mexico to warrant such
an astounding reduction as this.
Chaplain McCabe, where is he ? But
who need ask ? The ashes of the Meth
odist University at Mitchell, D. T., will
not have grown chill ere this remarkable
chaplain of church extension will have
demanded of the faith that they build a
100,000 university where a 50,000 stood
before, and they be not long in doing it,
either, Up and at 'em .Chaplain ; collect
the insuranre and report to the General
Conference that the foundations of the
new school are already in.
It must have been glorious in those old
days when the slugger of the seas, the
staunch frigate, Constitution, was roaming
around for British gore, to get news that
this ship, dodge as she might, had gone
down -in the thirty -ninth round, or that
that one had blown up at the fiftieth. O !
that was war; that was living. For a
time we thought our "Ironsides," John L.
Sull , but, blast it, we'll get even on
the fish treaty ... We won't sign it Inter
lOccfln., i ...
On last Sunday morning one of the
valuable span of bucking ponies belong
ing to C. Gr. Griswold was found dead in
its stable. Clint is inconsolable. On the
same night John Thurston lost one of the
team of horses with which he expected to
do considerable breaking with this spring.
Mr Thurston tells us the horse fell
through the ice last fall and was so chilled
that it has never fully recovered, which'
he thinks caused its death. Wallace
Herald.
Count divisionists are wasting a good
deal of their time, euergy, and money in
organizing for an aggressive campaign
next fall. Two years ago the proposition
was beaten by 500, and last fall, after a
very enthusiastic canvass, the majority
stood 1,000 against it. People less fanat
ical would see something very discourag
ing in there figures, but the divisionists
are totally blind to the probability that if
pushed to a vote again this year, it will bo
defeated by 1,500. Broken Bow States
men. The "omnibus bill" which provides for
the admission of Dakota, Montana,
Washington Territory and Now Mexico,
will soon be reported to the house. The
report sets forth that these territories
have a population, an area, and resources
which entitle them to statehood, and that
it should be the policy of congress to
admit territories into the Union whenever
these conditions are realized, The bill
provides for the admission of Dakota
without division
Rumors of European wars continue to
be unreliable. The Russian troops were
withdrawn from the Bulgarian frontier a
day or two since, and the cable news
from abroad was that the troops were to
be transferred to the German frontier.
Now it appears that the movemt-nt was
wholly for sanitary reasons, Russia is
going to stay by Bulgaria until a new
tenant, one suited to her own wishes, goes
upon the throne. In the meantime, due
allowance must be made for the imagina
tion in all foreign war rumors.
The women, as in all heathen lands,
have all the heavy work of the family to
do. The men do the sewing for the
family, but the women do all the
farming, bring all the water and wood,
and do the cooking. They do the farm
work with the baby of the family tied on
their back, as a rule. It is wonderful
what cheering straits they develop even
in the face of all this. The husband is
often the husband of many among the
better class. A marVs wealth can easily
be known by the number of his wives.
They all believe in the ability of a "witch"
to take away life. I am told that it is
common to call an uganga (doctor; what
we would call in the south a -'witch doc
tor") for a sick parson to have the spirit
found. This doctor ofteu finds the spirit
in a tree, a piece of wood, or stone, and
sometimes in another person. If th. sick
die, then this person in whom the spirit
dwelt is ndoki (witch). Often a person
dies without an uganga. In this case the
uganga would be sent for to find out who
is ndoki. Congo Missionary in Ghristain
Recorder.
Dr. Asa Gray had a considerable fond
of humor. One summer not long ago he
was with his pupils looking at the Baby
lonian willows in the Botanical gardens.
The willows are very small, and Dr. Gray,
regarding them critically for a moment,
remarked: "Well, all I have to say is
that if the children of Israel hung their
harps on 'the willows of Babylon when
they sat down to weep, as the scriptures
tell us, then they must have been jews
harps."
The Osage Indians are about the only
example now left in the United States of
a real aristocracy. They do not depend
upon Government rations, as do the
Cheysnnes and others, but have enough
A.P.BUCKWOSTX, jAJi.
Preaidrat.
State Bant o
:
North Platte
NORTH
Accoaato solicited aad prompt atte&tioa atTe
to all baaLsem eatrosted to its eve. later
paid on time deposit.
Hade at the Very Lowest Bates of latere-.
black man has only been doing for him
self a few years. The lecturer purchased
a choice Jot before leaving which is cer
tainly a compliment paid our little city.
Kearney New Era.
The Indiana woman who at the oat
break of the rebellion disguised herself
as a man, enlisted as. a private and fought
through the campaigns of the war side by
.side with her husband is, certainly entit-
1 ed to the pension she now asks for. She
served three years and was wounded
twice.
as their own undisnnted nrnnertv. tn maka
.t jl a . . . J
mem tne weaimiest comrauMtr ut ue. t . , . ,
1 1 eree Brisnten. aad voa are aaotaer
1 , " " -
couniry. .Besides ine iana reservation
which belongs to th?m by a title hard to
assail, they have about $7,060,000 bearing
5 per cent, interest in the hands of the
Government. They are paid about $250,-
a year in cash. The entire tribe numbers
only 1,600, so that they are actually the
richest body of people in the country.
Grantities had a jubilee last Friday
afternoon and evening in honor of the
victory in the county seat fight. Anvils
and guns were fired, bonfires kindled,
citizens serenaded and carried through
the streets on the shoulders of happy
men, and at night a rousing dance was
given at Hull's Hall. Everybody was
supremely and recklessly jolly. The
report that four hundred armed and
savage men from Madrid were coming up
to "do" them did not seem to alarm any
body to a preceptible dejrree. It is now
more than a week and still the four hund
red savages are not come . Grant Enter
prise. It is quite likely that many another
poor school marm who is obliged year in
and year out to teach the young idea how
to shoot, on scant wages and poor fare,
would be glad to distinguish herself in a
blizzard and have the grateful gold pour
into her lap, besides having a piece of
blizzard music dedicated to her heroism.
We don't mean that she would like to
loose any of the children in the howling
storm or lay out in it all night herself and
loose a limb or two, but have it just bad
enough to make her a heroine, and em
balm her name in history. We have
always thought that school marms were
heroines and martyrs anyway, and felt
that their trials in life fitted them for a
bright crown hereafter. The wind, ire
presume, is always tempered to the shorn
lamb, but this don't include school marms.
Adversity walks with them, and patience
is their heritage. Tecumseh Chieftain.
Tom Potter was business. A few years
ago a young telegraph operator sent two
heavily-laden passenger trains into terri
ble collision near Tyrone, Iowa. 3Ir.
Potter soon arrived and found the opera
tor tremblingly trying to tell how it
happened. "Not a word," said Mr.
Potter. "The question is, can you still
send dispatches? If so, sit down at that
instrument." The operator complied,
and for ten hours did not leave his seat.
Another style of man than Mr. Potter,
might have scattered the remains of the
operator, metaphorically speaking, over
all Iowa, but neither so cold-blooded or
short-sighted was Tom Potter. He used
the terror stricken man, who had pre
viously done his best to remedy his
mistake with a special engine, and part of
the operators ten hours work was to send
out a truthful and succient account of the
calamity for- the press, prepared by Mr.
Potter himself. Business was Tom
Potter.
Gentlemen are slowly but surely drift-
in? bade to tnose aav3 wuen ngnt ana
fantastic colors were necessary to a hand
some and well ordered toilet. The ladies
are no longer to monopolize the gay lines
with which the rainbow is decorated. In
the animal kingdom, the gentleman
member of the family generally puts on
the illuminated plumage or wealth of
hair and fur . For proof, behold the lion
and the gold or silver pheasant I say
gentlemen are slowly but surely drifting
back to those days of blue silk coats,
yellow vests, green knee breeches, lace
collars and wristlets, etc. Oon't you
believe it? Examine any new tailor made
suit and see if a pair of trousers are ever
made up nowadays without a gay colored
piece of V shaped silp inserted and join.
ing the waistband in the back. A finical
gentleman would not wear trousers that
did not have this literally entering wedge.
The crimson necktie is already the proper
caper, inese colors are oouna to wiaen
and lengthen till they cover the form of
creation's lord.
Ferdinanand Pender, of Pleasant
Valley, brought three mammoth steers to
market last Saturday which weighed re
pectfully 2,000; 2,200 ; 2,300. This is one
of the results of good breeding and care
of cattle. Within a few. years Buffalo
county can boast of as good cattle as can
be found anywhere in the world. All
that is required te bring this about is a
little pride on the part of the farmers
and cattlemen, and a few demonstrations
of the extra profit derived from good
stock Ex-Senator Bruce's lecture on
the "Race Problem" Wednesday evening,
was an able discourse. The speaker can
not be called a model of eloquence, but
of pleasing address, using well defined
language and clear cut ideas to express
himself. He showed plainly the great
superior advantages of the white race
over the blacks, the former having had
influences of civilization thrown around
them for over a thousand years, while the
Pretty Women.
All, women look attractive whea their ooler
and. complexion is dear If yoar alda is ssJUw
eyes doll, yon are bilioae, BOOSTS boa atmU
Hams' Aastralka Herb Pills, take as iBi'Hjjaf.f
s-9 Tmmm IaaM maaaaaV?"
mm. CT
W. Price, Agent.
The much sought for Willie Tascott the
supposed murderer of millionaire Snell,
has .been captured several times this week
in several different localities. Mr.
Tascott is probably the most numerous
murderer that ever alluded the sleuth
hounds of justice. He is captured in Los
Angeles one day and Montreal detectives
clap him in jail the next. He is arrested
on an average fourteen times a week and
is still at liberty.
"There is no man living," said a public
school teacher the other day, "that knows
every one of the 75,000 words in Webster's
Unabridged Dictionary, nor half, nor a
third of them Nor is there a man who
could define them if he were asked.
Shakespeare, who had the richest vocabu
lary used by any Englishman, employed
only 16.000 words. Milton could pick
out from 8,000, but the average man, ar
graduate from one of the great universi
ties, rarely has a vocabulary of more than
3,000 or 4,000 words. Right herein
Buffalo there are Americans born and
bred who contrive to express all their
wants and 'opinions in 300 words, and In
the rural districts the knowledge of 150 or
200 words is sufficient to carry a man
through the world. So the unabridged
dictionary is cluttered up with 60,000 or
more technical or obsolete words that yon.
never hear in ordinary conyersation or see
in ordinary books or newspapers." Buf
falo Courier.
Bor throat may be cored in a few hoars by ap
plying Chamborlain's Pain Balm trhen the. first
symptoms apiear. If the case is a bad one,
thoroughly saturate a flannel bandage with it and
apply to the throat. Chant berlain'a Coogh Rem
edy should be taken internally and a core is cer
tain. Sold by C. W. Price aad F.- H. Loa3ey.
There was a special dispatch this week
in one of the Omaha papers stating that
the Sidney oil company had struck oil
near Lander The company is not drilling
at Lander, but is engaged at putting down
an artesian well at Laramie for the county.
However our company owns several
hundred acres of good land in the heart
of the oil regions and the members con
sider their prospects very bright: . . . Sher
iff John H. Ward, of Evanston , Wyo., an.
old time freighter on the Sidney and
Black Hills road, was a passenger on No.
2 yesterday in charge of three Wyoming
prisoners enroute to the Illinois peniten
tiary. One was a Chinaman named
Ah You, who killed a Chinese woman
the year before. He was going up for
life. The other two were Chas. Cameron,
horse stealing, three years, and Chester
Springer, burglary, five years Thurs
day night of last week A. Green, a negro
who had, been employed at the Pacific
hotel as porter, stole a role of bills
amounting to a hundred and twenty five
dollars, a pistol and a watch from the
trunk of a fellow laborer, and departed
on the "flyer" for Omaha where he was
arrested and held by the police until
Marshal Miles arrival in that city Wed
nesday from Sidney when he was turned
over to the latter and brought back to
Sidney. He was taken before Judge
Shu man Thursday on a charge of grand
larceny and the case continued until next
Tuesday. Sidney Telegraph.
Try St. Patrick's Pills and compare their effect
with any other kind made. They contain the
good properties of the older preparations in the
market combined with the most valuable medi
cines discovered in modern times. As a cathar
tic and liver pill, St. Patrick's are perfectioa.
Sold by C. W. Price and F. H . Longley . ,
Mrs. W. G. JARVIS,
Professional lira. .
Residence on West Fifth Street.
ESTBAYS TAKEN UP
By the undersigned on Sc. 13, Town 14. Range 30.
who there resides, on the 1st day of March, 1868.
One Bay Mare branded TE (conneated)on right
thigh;
One iron gray colt, two years old this spring,
branded 33 on left thigh-
The owner is requested to prove property, pay
charges and take them away.
86 FEKD SrXVKBXAXL.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of execution directed to me from the
District Court of Lincoln County. Nebraska, oa
a judgment obtained before tho county court of
Lincoln county, Nebraska, on the 3d day of May,
1887. a transcript of which was filed in the office
of the clerk of the said district court in favor of
Mollie Gafford as plaintiff aad agaiastDanS.
Dickinson as principal and Sue C. Dickiason,
surety, as defendants, for the sum of one thous
and dollars and no cents, and costs taxed at $9.10
and accruing costs, I have levied npon the fol
lowing lands and tenements taken as the prop
erty of said Sue C. Dickinson, defendast, to sat
isfy said execution to-wit:
An undivided one-half of lot 1 and that portion
of lot 2 lying east of the center line of the county
road running across- said lot coaaectiag the
bridges across the north and soath channels of
the South Platte River in section 9. town IS.
raM SO, and all of lota 5. 0, 7 and 8. in block 11.
inker's addition to the CityofNorth Platte,
all la Lincoln county, Nebraska,
And will offer the same for sale to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, on the 14th day of April.
A D. 1888, at the east door of the coart hoase. iav
North Platte, Nebraska, (that being the baUdina
wherein the last term of court was held) at th
hour of two o'clock p. ra. of said day, whea aad
where due' attendance will be given by the under
signed. Dated March Gth. 1S86.
D.A.BAKXB,
84 Sheriff of said Cooatr,