The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, April 28, 1896, Image 2

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THE NORTH PLATTE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 28, 1896.
Davis Seasonable Goods
&sms, the Bicycle Man5
THE VIKING, is the "biking", Best of cycles.
THE ELDREDG-E, strictly first-class
THE BELVIDERE, a high grade at a popular price.
THE CRAWFORD, absolutely the best wheel on
earth for the money. Choice of all kinds of "handle
bars, saddles and pedals.
ALL KINDS OP BIOYOLE ACCESSORIES.
Wavis9 the Seed Man,
Hasafuilline of BULK GARDEN AND FLOW
ER SEED from the celebrated Rice's Cambridge Val
le' Seed Gardens.
Davis, the Hardware Man, :
Big stock of POULTRY NETTING, GARDEN
TOOLS, RUBBER HOSE and the celebrated Acorn
Stoves and Ranges.
ggpDoii't. forget Davis, "that no one owes" when in need of anything
in his line. Samples of "bikes" now in. ,
fUt $ml'-W6tMU WXllmM. is in our Pinion, a wrongccharge;
L! J-i a i j r i f
uis ueieac was aue ro a iew repuou-
i - i- - ,
IRA Li BARE, Editor and Proprietor
SUBSCRIPTION BATES.
One Year, cash in advance, , ?L25.
Six Months, cash la advance 75 Cents.
Entered at the KorthPlatte (Nebraska) postofflce as
V second-class matter.
The initial Kansas cyclone passed
over Clay county Saturday night
and resulted in the death of live per
sons and the wounding of seventeen.
Much property was destroyed.
cans in each precinct who did not
particularly admire his political
course and acts. Had MacColl been
nominated it is almost certain he
would have been elected, but wheth
er he is as strong to-day as he was
two years ago owing to the num
Der or candidates in the held is
questionable. Be that as it may,
it is the duty of Western Nebraska
to support Jack MacColl because he
is a good, clean man and comes
from the western part of the state.
His home county being a part of
this senatorial district, and Lincoln
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
tl BaKing
Dai i ra w
Absolutely pure
Mm
ivy
The house has been breaking all
records by the speed with which it county having a candidate for sen
has pushed the appropriation bills ator, it is only proper and just that
NYE'S HISTORY
OF ENGLAND.
and other important measures.
Next year vigor of of this sort will
trountfor more than it does now,
for the senate and the president
will then be republican also.
this county
MacColl.
cast its full vote for
Constantine Annoyed by, the
Scots and Irish.
acc of tho Cajsars," as the historian so
tersely puts it.
In 418 A. D. tho Roman forces came
np to Loudon for tho summer and re-
pelled the Scots and Picts, but soon re
' Tie I'reHeh Celt.
The common boliof is that tho French
are a Celtic race, but, according to M.
Riviere, the Celt is not even the largest
element in that mixod race called tho
French. It is probablo that they derive
much of their artistic faculty from their
savago ancestors in tho stono age, who
carved quite artistic designs with a flint
bnrin on bones. Tho genuine Colt does
not appear to bo particularly artistic. Tho
Auvergnats aro almost puro Celt, and yet
their reputation mainly rests upon their
capacities as cabmen. Tho truo Celt, M.
Riviere asserts, i3 chiefly to be found in a
belt drawn across Franco from Savoy to
Low Brittany and has not been identified
at all in tho United Kingdom. Tho Tou
tonio faco and head, says tho well known
anthropologist M. Collignon, is long and
narrow, tho Celtic short and broad, while
the Teuton trunk is long and flat compar
ed with tho shortness and breadth of tho
Celt's. Tho genuino Slavs and South Gor-
- ... ltt
mans are, he Mimes, ueus anu prooauiy
turned to Rome, leavinsr the provincial
neonle of London with disdain. Manv number among their famous men Goethe,
of the Romnii officers while in Britain Bismarck and Scliillor. Tho Celts, like
'JSTO. 3496.
ftirst fTational Ban
jSTOHTH PLATTE. jSTETB.
Capital, -Surplus,
50,000.00.
22,500.00
H. S. "WHITE, Pres't.,
P. A. WHITE, Vice-Pres't."
ARTHUR Mcff AMAKA,
Cashier.
A General Banking Business Transacted.
A. F. STREITZ.
For the first time since the es
tablishment ot the Oxnard sugfar
factory at Grand Island, the com
pany has been able to secure all
the contracts for beets thev need
without drumming" the farmers.
Ten thousand acres of beets have
been voluntarily offered them. This
would seem to disprove the state- ing" a period, and he is desirous that
An American magazine publisher
offered Mr. Gladstone $1 a word for
an article to be written exclusively
for the Yankee periodical, and the
offer was declined. The "grand old
man" is so comfortably fixed thathe
can afford to disdain anv decree of
emolument.and labor solelv in direc
tions correspondent withliis inclina
tions. He is a hard worker, but he
knows that his davs are approach-
THEY TRY TO P0E0E HOME EULE.
ments that beets are
able crop.
an unprofit-
the closing"
toil of his life shall be
productive of the greatest possible
nmniinf rt linmin YanaKl
jNEbraska may not break the
winter wheat record this year, but Chasing Crane, a Lower Brule
w i
the outlook is promising for a wheat Sioux, who has been in the military
crop such as we have not had since service of the United States, is ask-
the great year of 1892. The grain ingfora pension, on the ground that
is growing- lustiiv all over the nis neaitn was imparea bv the lood
South Platte region. The ground is furnished him by the government.
unusually wet, the weather is all Mr. Chasing Crane wants to know
that could be desired and harvest
is not so far away. The value of
crop alone will be counted in mil
lions of dollars. Journal.
The Nebraska free silver demo
crats seem to see a way out. They
encore Carlisle, s free silver utter
ances of 1878, and, leave it to the
endorse
Instead of
why a debilitated stomach or an en
gorged liver shouldn't rank in the
same category with a shattered tibia
or a disrupted patella. A person
may get along quite comfortably
with a lame leg, but life is of small
use to an individual with a played-
out abdomen. Inter Ocean.
Landing of the Saxons, a Coarse People,
More Noted For Appetite Than Table
Manners Queer Religious Customs In
vention,of tho Walking Delegate.
Copyright, 1KG, by J. B. Lippincotfc Company.
CHAPTER IL
Agricola no doubt made the Roman
yoke easier upon the necks of the con
quered people and suggested the rotation
of crops. He also invaded Caledonia and
captured quite a number of Scotchmen,
whom ho took home and domesticated.
Afterward, in 121 A. D., the Emper
or Hadrian was compelled to build a
wall to keep cut the still Tuiconqnered
Caledonians. This is called the "Picts'
wall," and a portion of it still exists.
Later, in. 208 A. D., Severus built a
solid wall of stone along this line, and
for 70 years there was peace between
the two nations.
Toward the end of the third century
Carausius, who was appointed to tho
thankless task cf destroying the Saxon
pirates, shook off his allegiance to tho
.Emperor Diccletian, joined the pirates
and turned cut Diocletian, Tisurping tho
business management cf Britain for
some years. Bat, alas! he was soon as
sassinated by one of his cwn officers be
fore he could call for help, and tho as-
had their clothes made in Rome, and
some even had their linen returned
every 30 days and washed in the Tiber.
In 446 A. D. the Britons were ex
tremely unhappy. "The barbarians
throw us into tho sea, and the sea re
turns us to the barbarians," they ejacu
lated in their petition to the conquering
Romans. But the latter were too busy
fighting tho Huns to send troops, and
in desperation the Britons formed, an
LANDING OF HEXGIST AXD HORSA.
alliance with Hengist and Horsa, two
Saxon traveling men, who in 4.49 A. D.
landed on the island of Thanet, and
thus ended the . Roman dominion over
Britain.
The Saxons were at that time a coarse
people. They did not allow etiquette, to
interfere with their methods of taking
refreshment, and, though it pains the
historian at all times to speak unkindly
of his ancestors who have now passed
on to their reward, he is compelled to
admit that as a people the Saxon3 mar
One of the leaders of the free sil-
verites says that they will certainly
control the Chicago convention if
gold cure democrats to his
his utterances of 1896.
Cleveland being the logical candi
date it seems that Carlisle will sup- they are not beaten by the money of
plant him, for with a straddle of
eighteen years he can be made to
stand on a platform which will suit
both wings of his party. Council
Bluffs Nonpariel.
the goldbugs. Such is always the
trouble with the 16 to 1 patriots.
They seem to be so constituted
that is to say, that they are always
in dancer of being" purchased, and
"Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils,
PAINTBES5 SUPHPLITSS,
WINDOW GLASS, -.- MACHINE OILS,
ZDIa,ro.a,rLta, Spectacles.
Dentsolie
Corner of Spruce and Sixth-sts-
A-poth.eke
WALL-PAPER, PAINT AND OIL DEPOT,
WINDOW GLSS, VARNISHES, GOLD LEAF, GOLD
PAINTS, BRONZES, ARTISTS' COLORS AND BRUSHES, PIANO AND
FURNITURE POLISHES, PREPARED HOUSE AND BUGGY PAINTS,
KALSOMINE MATERIAL, WINDOW SHADES.
ESTABLISHED JULY 18G8. - 310 SPRUCE STREET.
R J- BROEKER.
MERCHANT TAILOR.
A Fine Line of Piece
Goods to select from.
First-class Fit. Excel
lent Workmanship.
LITBBT -A-HSTID PEED stable
(013L Van ZTDozrcwo. Stalolo.)
zsrWjt-wa'jiT
Prices
Good Teams, ,
Comfortable IRigs,
Ezcdh&l Accommodations for ihs Farming Public,
thereby prevented from winniturex-
j. he report ot tne superintendent pected victory. Ex.
or tne &an Francisco mint snows
tnat tne output ot gold in California a New Jersey farmer who raises
increased irom fclBoi.'-iSl in lblJ4 i vegetables for the New York market
to $15,834,317 in 1895. Thirty-three has scent S25.000 in electric culture
of the fifty-seven
state are
regular
new mines
every year.
counties of the
producers, and
are being discovered
In the face of these
facts, and the additional one that
her total production of silver last
year was only $599,789, it is impos
sible to understand why California
gives so much support to the free
coinage heresy.
and facilties and is said to have in
creased his production from 40 to
ou per cent, xiiere siiouid be no
trouble in keeping boys on the farm
when the work is confined to touch
a button and cutting coupons.
THE SAXON IDEA OF HEAVEN.
Gen. "Weyler will not personally
visit the back counties in Cuba to
look after the missing election re
turns. There is no evidence that
the General has been five miles out
side of Havana since his arrival.-
sassin succeeded himr In those days as
sassination and inauguration seemed to
go handMn hand.
After Ccnstantiu3, who died 306 -A.
be truly chriracterized as a great, na?
tional appetite.
Dur-jg the palmy days when Rome
superintended tne coiiectinfr ot cus-
tho Jews, aro beginning to claim all the
groat mon in tho world's history for their
own kindred. Saturday Review.
George Washington's Cost.
Wo hear a good deal about thu simplicity
of lifo In America In tbo eighteenth cen
tury, but there was probably greater atton
tion paid by mon to tho matter of dress
than is paid today. Georgo Washington,
who to tho groat and careless world is ei
ther in uniform orsolomn black, was fussy
enough at tho ago of 15 to mako this noto
for tho bonoflt of his tailor: "Memoran
dum To havo my coat mado by the fol
lowing Directions, to bo mado a Frock
with a Lapel Breast. Tho Lapel to contain
on each sldo six Button Holes and to be
about five or six inches wido all tho way
equal, and to turn as tho Breast on tho
Coat does, to havo it mado very long Waist
ed and in Length to como down to or be
Jow tho bont of tho knee, tho Waist from
tbo Armpit to tho Fold to bo exactly as
long orlopgorthan from thence to tho Bot
tom, not to havo moro than one fold in
tbo Skirt and tho top to bo mado just tq
turn in and threo Button Holes, tho Lape(
at tho top to turn as tho Capo of the poat
and Button to como parallel with tho Bntr
ton Holes and tho last Button Holo on tho
Breast to bo right opposite the Button on
tho Hip." Boston Journal.
Itching,
Burning,
Eczema
The proposition to admit woman
to lay representation in the general
conferences of the Methodist church
nas taiien just eighteen votes short England's surplus this year, the
of the three-fourths necessary to its largesrt in its history, is $40,670,000,
adoption. It received 7515, and
there were but 2929 against it. The
next time a vote is taken the result
will urdoubtedly be favorable. Mr
Buckle says that all great reforms
go through three processes, ridicule
argument and adoption. This is a
case where ridicule and argument
have been exhausted, and adoption
is now in order.
Mr. Bayard should present his con
gratulations, but keep quiet about
the balance sheet in this country.
In speaking of the date of the
congressional convention the Kear
ney Hub of last Saturday says:
Phil T. Lambert, of this city, sec
retary of the congressional central
committee, informs the Hub in re
ply to an inquiry that it has been
decided to hold the convention July
a, ana tnat tne can win soon oe out
fixing it on that date. This en
ables the Sixth district people at
tending the state convention to go
direct to North Platte and attend
the two conventions at one outing
and with a saving of expense and
time.
ELDER &c LOCK.
SSfNorthwest corner of Courthouse square.
JOS
F. PILLION,
Steam and Gas Fitting.
Cesspool and Sewerage a Specialty. Copper ind Galvanized Iron Cor
nice. 1m and Iron xloofings.
Estimates inrnisned. Itepamng of all kinds receive nromnfc attention
jjuouou uwctii, .ueuwetiu iiiLii anu oixin,
North. IPlatte, - - - Nebraska.
EfflEST SAMPLE E00M IN NORTH PLATTE
Faring refitted our rooms in the finest of style, the public
is invited to call and see us, insuring courteous treatment.
Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars at the Bar.
Our -billiard hall is supplied with the best make o tables
and competent attendants will supply all your wants.
KElXrTS BLOCK, OPPOSITE x'HE UNION-PACIFIC DEPOT
J- he ivearney hud takes excep
tions to the course of the republi
can papers in this city in fighting
Akers, Daugherty and MacColl, and
especially the attitude of the Tele
graph toward the latter two-gentle-men.
The Tribune answers only
for itself, and its" remarks concern
ing Mr. Akers have been only such
as he deserved by reason of his
action in the senate during the last
legislature. As to the candidacy
of Jack MacColl for governor, The
Tribune believes that western
Nebraska should and will almost
solidly support that gentleman. In
the selection of candidates for state
officers the Sixth congressional district-has
in the pasl been almost"
wholly slighted, and when a good,
sound and competent man has been
presented, combinations of the east
ern counties have been the means
of defeating him. Two years ago
the rank and file of the republican
party desired the nomination of
JackMcColl, but he was defeated
in the convention and his success
ful opponent was defeated at the
polls. To lay the defeat of Majors
at the feet of the friends of MacColl
MECCA CATARRH REMEDY.
For colds in the head and treatment
of catarrhal troubles this preparation
has afforded prompt relief; with its con
tinued ueo the jiost stubborn cases f of
catarrh have yielded to its healing
power, it is made from concentrated
Mecca Compound and possesses all of its
soothing and healing properties and by
absorbtion reaches nil the lnnatnad
parts effected by that disease. Price 50 !
cts. Prepared by The Foster Mfg. Co.
Council Bluffs, Iowa. For sale by A. F
btreitz.
D., camo Constantine the Great, his son i fnTT1o -rmrl rPlntM th fnrmsiHrm nf
by a British princess. j onmnmrirms flm Tnininp- mid smpTHntr
Under Constantine peace again reign- nf irnn wrn ptpncivplv onrripV? nn nnrt
ed, but the Irish, who desired to free the "wnlldissr delprnite" -wm invpntMl.
Tho accompanying illustration shows
an ancient strike
Rome no doubt did much for Eng
land, for at tliat time tho imperial city
had 384 streets, 56,567 palaces, 80
golden statue 2, 785 bonze statues of
former emperors and officers, 41 thea
ters, 2,291 prisons and 2,300" perfumery-
stores. She was m tho full flood cf her
prosperity and had about 4, 000, 000 inr
habitants.
Ii those days a Roman sennrcr pould
not live cn less than SO,000 per year,
and Marcus Antoninus, who owed $1,
500,000 cn his inaugural, March 15,
paid it up March 17 and afterward
cleared 720,000,000. This he did by
the strictest economy, which he man
aged to have attended to by the peas
antry. Even a literary man in Rome could
amass property, and Seneca died worth
Kthe external indication of a con
dition of the blood which produces a
fiery irritation almost uubearable. It is
a mistake to think that thi local irrita
tion is the disease itself it is simply an
evidence of a disordered condition of the
blood. The seat of the disease is in the
blood, and this is why the various salves
and ointments usually applied have no
effect whatever. They cannot possibly
reach the origiu of the trouble: onlv a
blood remedy can do that. S. S S. is
without an equal for blood diseases, and
promptly and permanently cures Hce:na
and removes all taint.
Much torture could be avoided if the
first itching symptoms were heeded and
a course of S.S.S. taken promptlv, as ap
parently insignificant sin irritations
usually- develop into the worst form
of Eczema unless properjy treated.
It matters not wnat otljer treatment
has been tried in vaiu, S, S. always
gets at the seat of the disease, and
forces it out.
Mr. William Armstrong, an old resi
dent and highly respected citizen of
De Pere, Wis., writes on April ist, 1S96.
Anton Itnbhuteln.
That Rubinstein played at times incor
rectly, wildly, oven insolently, Is quite
true, and the critics who enragod him so
were quite right to say so. What happen
ed was this: Rublnstoin soon perceived
what, alas, all good virtuosi aro not slow
to discover that tho English, or n good
leaven of thorn in overyaudienco, "are not
a musical peoplo. Thoy can be tacon
with a claptrap offect whilo deaf to more
subtle and legitimate efforts. Rubinstein
would seem at'tinics to play down to them
in scorn and mock them or stalk through
his port in a rago. The critics reprovod
him, sod ho left the country in a huff, but
it was temper mid wa.nt pf patience with a
puuno wno, tnougii nop musicaj, pam wen
and offered him every kind of homage. He
should havo been contented with the culti
vated portion of It who had realjy prpatcd
the taste for him, but Rubinstein was exr
tremely irritable. I have known him tQ
get up from thetablo in the middle of din?
ner and leavo tho company for no reason
.except that he was bored. Fortnightly
Bovlew.
ASSASSIXAIIOX OF CARAUSIUS.
Ireland even if they had to go abroad
and neglect their business for that pur
pose, used to invade Constantino's ter
ritory, getting him np at all hrmrs pf
fjie mgnt and demanding tiiat he should
tree Ireland.
These men were then callert Tiers;
hence the expression "picked men,"
They annoyed Constantine by coming
over and trying to introduce heme rule
into the home cf the total stranger.
The Scots also made turbulent times
by harassing Constantine and seeking to
introduce then ultra religious belief at
the muzzle ci the crcssgnn.
Trouble now came in the latter part
;t the fourth century A. D., caused by
State np Dwrn Httv op Torino.
Lucas County, )
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is
the senior partner of tho firm of F. J.
Cheney & Co., doing business in tho City
of Toledo, County and State aforesaid
and that said firm will pay the sum of
One Hundred Dollars for each and every
case of Catarrn that cannot be cured by
the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subcribed in
my presence this 6th day of December,
A. D-1886.
( , A. W. GLEASON,
seal y x Notary Public
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally
and gets directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Send
for testimonials free.
F, J, Cheney & Co.. Toledo O.
Sold by Druggists, 15 q.
Dr. A. P. Sawyer I have had Khenmatisoi Binca
I -was 20 years old, bat since neing yenr Family
Care have bee a frea from it- It aim eared xay
husband of the saas disease. Krs . Eobt. Coa-
nelly, Sreeklya, lews. Said by F. H. Xosgley.
X )
THE PICTS nULCAT;:.G 'IZ'V. ZiVLE PKICI-
P" ES.
the return of the regular Roman army,
Which went hack to Heme to defend the
imperiaj city from tho Goths who
j sought to "stable their stock in the pal-
DISCOMFORTS OF THE LABOR AGITATOR.
$12, 000, 000. Those were the flush times
in Rome, and England no doubt was
greatly benefited thereby; but, alas!
' 'money mat ters became scarce, ' and the
poor Briton was forced to associate with
the delirium tremens and massive diges
tion of the Saxon, who floated in a vast
11 -a t ?
ocean 01 laru anu wnssau aunng ma
waking hours and slept with the cun
gipg little piglets at night. His earthen
floors were carpetefj "with 'straw and
frescoed with hones.
Let ns not swell with pride as we re.-
fer to cur ancestors, whoso lives were
marked by an eternal pombat between
malignant alcoholism ami trichinosis.
Many a Saxon would have filled a
tfrunkard's grave, but wapblecLso in his
gait that he walked past it ah4 missed
it,
To drink from the skulls of their dead
enemies was a pare ox men: religion,
and there were no heretics among them.
Christianity was introduced into Brit.
ain during the second century, and later,
binder Diocletian, the Christians were
greatly persecuted. (Christianity-did not
come from Rome, it is . said, but from
GauL Among the martyrs in those early
days was St. Alban, who had been con
verted by a fugitive priest. The story
of his life and death is familiar.
The Bible had been translated, and
in 31-1 A. D. Britain had three bishops
-viz, of London, Lincoln and York.
BillNys.
MR. WILLIAM ARMSTON'G.
"I have been a sufferer for eight ycara
with that horrible disease, Eczema, at
times all over my body, aud no p rson
can describe the burning and itching I
had to endure.
1 ."The extent of my sufferings can be
appreciated when I state that my con
dition was such that I couM not take
my bed, and fop three months I never
Jaid down, but Was compelled to sit in
my chair when not mqyin around. I
was treated by the best of physicians
with no success, aud tried all the patent
medicines recommended for LJaxema,
without any good results. I then went
to the Indiana Mud baths, with the s'uua
results, aud then to Mt. Clements, the
celebrate! medical resort, where the
treatment partially help: d me, bit the
disease shortly returne I. I went to
Florida, thinking that a chiuge of cli
mate and water and the citron fruit
might cure me, but found no cur...
"I theu tned b.b.b.auu alter IhreeiW-s
the burning aud itching subsided, aud
I continued to improve steadily uutil
was well entirely cured. After com
mencing b. b. b. 1 never put an . exter
nal application to my limbs or any part
of my bod. You may refer to me auv
person suffering from Eczema. I will
always keep the S. S. S. in my honie.
for I consider it the best blood medicine
pf the pres'ent age. 'I am'seventy 3-earj
pf age and am now in perfect health,)?
For real blood diseases' rcli f frui oiiiy
be obatined bv using a real blood rem
3v. So many people who ae sufferer?
from an obstinate qr deep-seated blood
disease make the mistake qf taking remr
cdies which at best are only tonics aud
pannqt possibly reach thci? trouble. It
is in Just such casps Which othjsr sq-callet
has made sqine of the most wonderfuj
cures.
S. S. S. cures permanently- Cancer,
Catarrh, Rheumatism, Eczema, Tclteiv .
; Contagious Blood Poison, Scrofula, and
an otner diseases Having ineirorigm m
the blood. It is a
A Real Blood Remedy
and gets at the seat of disease and forces
it out promptly even after other so-called
blood remedies have failed. S. S. S. is
guaranteed purely vegetable.
Books on blood and skin diseases will
be mailed free to any address bv Swift
Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga,