Lincoln County tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1885-1890, April 07, 1888, Image 1

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    THE TRIBUTE.
STEVENS & BARE, Prop's,
TERMS:
If paid m Advance, only $1.00 per vear.
One car, if not in Advance, $1.50.
Six Months, in Advance, - - .75
Three Months, in Advance, - - .50
Advertising Rates on Application.
U. P. TIME TABLE.
GOING WEST MOUNTAIN TIME.
vA txyress Dept. 8:13 .. at
"'J-P Flyer. swr, p.jt
No. 27-Freight. " ,5:10 p. M.
btow.onlr at Qgallala, Julesbnrg and Sidney on
Third District
GOING EAST.
Sf? iPVfcrl,a?.J HJ"er Dept. 5:45 .v. ai.
Vn S;i?il1 impress 7.-0OA.M.
S '-ul and Express 750 P. M.
Stops only at Plam Creek, Kearney and Grand
iTiMland oa Second District.
TDarly except Sunday.
J. C. Fkkguson. Agent.
NE8BITT & GKDIES,
Attorneys-at-Law,
XOIim PLATTE, - XE1W.
Office oteb Eoley's Stohe. , ,
C. M. DUNCAN M. D. " "
Phvirian anH finroenn
Office: Ottenstcin'-s Block, np stairs. (
hoars from 9 to 12 a. m., 2 to 5 and 7 to U
Office
iiesidence on West Sixth Street.
NORTH PLATTE, - NEBRASKA.
NOTICE TO TEACHERS.
Notice is hereby given that I will examine all
persons who may desire to offer themselves as
candidates for teachers of the common schools of
this connty on the THIRD TUESDAY of every
month.
R. H. LANCFORD,
County Suit.
A.D.inUCKWOBTH, .
President.
JA8. Stl'UBXAIO,
Caakier.
SfatflRanbflffwrfhPWte
YOL. IV.
NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, APRIL 7, 1888.
NO. 12.
PT.
III I MK
' I I V II I I I III I'm
itF fev f IH mm
1.:
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.
P. WALSH,
,-CONTR ACTOR AND BUILDER.
Estimates on Work Furnished.
Shop Corner Cottonwood and Third Ste
east of Catholic church.
Mrs. W. G. JARVIS.
Professional hm.
Residence on West Fiftli Street.
Opposite Iddings' residence.
I. K. SOBERS,
Nurseryman,
Florist and Gardener,
' (BARTON PLACE,)
NORTH PL'ATTE, NEBR.'
Marvelous Developments! Slashing and
Dashing Features ! Stupendous Attrac
tions still holding sway at the
GREAT Ml m
We have the largest assortment of
Can furnish all kinds of fruit and
shade trees, forest trees, and seed
lings for tree claims at lowest
prices. Also all kinds of plants and
flowers. Estimates and designs
given for laying out new grounds.
Yards kept by contract.
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.
Bismark Saloon
Billiard and Fool Hall,
J. C. HUPFER, Prop..
Keeps none but the finest Whiskies.sueh as
J10BINS0N COUNTY, TENS.
COON HOLLOW,
31. V. MONAliGU.
. n Ti a. TA YLOR. I
WELSH AND HOMESTEAD
Spring
Clothing
for men, boy's and children, and last
not leas
Guarantee Our Prices.
Everybody invited for inspection.
Yours truly,
The Slashing arid Dashing
PALACE RUSTLERS.
Alo fine case goods, Brandies, Rum, Gin
. Etc. St. Louis Bottled Beer and
Milwaukee Beer on draft.
Corner Sixth and Spruce Streets.
NORTH PLATTE, - - NEBRASKA
GUY'S PLACE."
FIRST-CLASS
Sample :-: Room,
N L. HALL, Manager.
Having refitted our rooms
throughout, the puhlic 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.
C- IF1. IDDIUaS,
Succeeding CASH A IDDINGS.
LUMBER Pi COAL.
LUMBEE, SPECIAL AGENT FOR
Lentil, Pennsylvania Anthracite,
SASH, Colorado Anthracite
BLINDS, '
nAAno ri Colorado Soft
DOORS, Etc.
LIME AND CEMENT. O Xj -
YARD ON E, R. TRACK WEST OF DEPOT,
HA! HA! THE BEST OF ALL!
It did not take five years to discover that the
Jewel Grasoline Stove
was the only safe gasoline stove made, but in 1887, the first year it was
introduced in North Platte, FORTY-SIX were sold, more than was sold
of all others combined. We have them with either drop tank or the
pneumatic, and in the language of the poet, "no pump to get out of or
der or gas forced through the room," but can prove that less gas escapes
from it than any stove made and can show it has many points of supe
riority over all others and prove to you that the Jewel is
ihey are all guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction and will consume
less gasoline than any stove in the market. Call and examine the la'te
improved Jewel and be convinced and you will buy no other
RESPECTFULLY,
L. STRICKLE R.
L. F. Simon formerly of the U. S.
Clothing Co., of this place but for the
psst year or more manager of a store at
North Platte, was married to a young
Hebrew-lady in Chicago on March 15th.
The wedding is described as very tony by
a Chicago paper. Lou can fill the place
of a dude or cowboy as occasion requires.
Ogallala Reflector.
Albert Morrish, a farmer living near
Buda. Buffalo county, shot his wife and a
hired hand last week, the woman expiring
almost instantly, but the qhances are the
man it5l recover. Morrish had rea3on
to believe that too much familiarity
existed between his wife and the mun
hence Shede&l. The murderer is in the
jail at Kearney "
F. Ieskind wifcof Prairie Center,
went tu Beaver Ch Monday morning,
to appear In defense a bne of six persons
who are charged with using tar and
feathers on a man in that vicinity last fall.
Attorney J. L. Greene accompanied him
and will take charge of the case. Kear
ney Era. , c
A sad accident occurred about six miles
northeast of Sartoria, Buffalo county, last
week. A son of Mr. A. "Watson, while
Httempting to take a shot gun through the
window, struck the hammer against the
window sill. The gun was discharged
and the whole load was lodged in his
arm, making amputation pecessary. Dr.
Milne, of Litchfield, performed the oper
ation. The arm was taken off at the
shoulder joint. At this writing the boy
is lying in a critical condition and but
little hopes are entertained of his recov
ery. J. 31. Thomas, complainant iu the
Liberty precinct, Perkins county, election
contest, in his petition to the court charges
the election board of that precinct with
misconduct, fraud and corruption, in
allowing minors and repeaters to vote
without attempting to deter them from
doing so ; also in placing 240 fraudulent
ballots in the ballot box after the votes
were counted. The above constitute only
a portion of the charges contained in the
petition of the complainant. The parties
contesting the election have given bonds
to the amount of $10,000, backed by men
worth $100,000 .Ogallala Jlejlector.
L. A. Winchell sheriff, and Wm. Har
ney, constable of Grant, Perkins couny,
Nebraska, arrested David McNeil, cu a
telegram -reived-from Holyoke, for
stabbing a nian at that place last Friday.
The victim was badley cut up about the
face and will be disfigured for life if he
lives, which is uncertain at present. The
prisoner was brought to town by the
Perkins county officers yesterday morning,
and is at present in charge of Deputy
Kiser, in the steel cage awaiting a
requisition from Gov. Adams for his re
turn to Holyoke, where he will be tried
for the crime. Ogallala llefltctbr.
The Sterling board of trade have done
a sensible thing in a sensible way. To
the extent of a double newspaper column
the advantages and resources of that town
and vicinity are set forth. Not being
satisfied with the use and benefit to bs
derived from one lwal newspaper, the
board; placed it in three home papers,
paying each paper at the rate of $800 per
year. That is what wexall business, enter
prise. Sterling may never be a secoad
Chicago, but whatever she does amount to
it will be. brought about by the push and
perservereuce of her citizens. J ulesburg
Tribute.
Cornelius Vanderbilt will sail for Lon
don with Ms family early next month.
He will take- a house in London May 1st
and remain there teur months.
A Racine man said t:white horse" when
he met a red-headed girl the other day.
She fell upon him lustily, knocking him
into the muddy ditch with her umbrella.
Jay Gould claims that the underground
railways of London make no better time
than do the elevated trains of New York,
and the are dark and stifling with
smoke.
A jury at Salt Ltke has awarded $5,000
to the widow of William Openshaw, a
brakeman on the Utah and Nevada Road,
who was killed in the discharge of his
duties.
It is said that the Cornell students are
practicing a now college howl with which
to greet President Cleveland next June
when he comes to lay the corner stone of
the new library building connected with
the university; also, that a donkey is being
educated to add his voice to the lingual
salve.
Colonel Fred Grant intimates that Gen
eral Badeau began to push his claim
against the Grant estate when he (Colonol
Grant) was selected as the head of the
republican ticket in New York last fall .
The inference is that Badcau thought
Colonel Grant would settle the claim
rather than stand a public discussion.
It now appears that Tate, the defaulting
treasurer of Kentucky, was a church
member aud was known, foryears past as
"honest old Dick," always made a tearful
appeal in his speech of acceptance to the
democrats and urged them not to trust the
affairs of state to republicans. Yet it is
possible that treasurer Tate was no deep
er in the mud than other officials are in
the mire, and that he is simply the victim
of the demcratic ring. He was bound in
honor to loan money to all the state
officers and leading politicians in the
state, and the auditor is beginning to hunt
matters up to secure himself. This is
advantageous to the Kentucky treasury,
but rather rough ou Mr. Tato.
The farm mortgage alarmists have got
something of a set back in the report of
the commissioner of labor and industrial
statistics in Michigan. The commissioner
was naturally anxious to make: as big a
report as possible, in order to -magnify
his office and the necessity thereof to
save the people. But he :oulil only find
as the aggregate farm mortgages of the
state about $04,000,000. The "estimate"
made by the alarmists was 125,000,000,
about double the actual amount.' It is
probable that the "estimates" that have
been going round the circle of the of the
alarmists press for some time are just as
far out in the other states that have been
'estimated" with Michigan. Nebraska is
one of them. Ex.
When Senator Palmer was in Marquette
during the campaign of 3G he wandered
out of a barber shop without settling his
bill, and it was not until recently that the
eminent Percheron statesman learned of
his careless trick. He wrote his creditor
that while he was without doubt a mighty
hard citizen he didn't propose to shave his
barber, and enclosed a bright new 1
greenback.
Miss Isabelle Blanche Singer, daughter
of the man who made $13,000,000 out r.f
his sewing machines, is to be married
April 25th to the Duke de Cazes of Paris,
and she has written to the executor of her
father's estate in New York for $00,000
to defray the necessary expenses connected
with the wedding. Miss Singer says she
"will need the money to pay for her
trousseau, jewelry, the furniture, horses
and carriages, expenses of the wedding
trip, and incidental expenses connected
with the wedding." Here is an American
girl who is marrying royalty with her
eyes open, for she is to pay all the bills
even to the marriage contract and govern
ment tax, which in Paris will be about
$6,000.
The saddest occasions in life sometimes
expose the meanest traits in the human
character.. If was so with a mill owner
in this city, whose name it is not necessary
to give. His father died last week and
he attended the funeral in company with
his only brother, whom he also employed
in his mill at $12 a week. When pay
day came on Saturday the younger
brother found that the time lost in bury
ing his father had been deducted from his
wages by his brother. PhiladelphiaPw.
i
NORTH PLATTE, NEB
i
-.i j .
Accounts Solicited and prompt attention. fiTem
to all business ea trusted to it care. Interest
paid on time deposits.
za:r;:m: hl-cxajsts
Mndo at tlio Very Lowest Kates of Interest.
GOODS GIVEN AWAY !
7
For a. very little money
in any part of the
and delivered
City. V
OraiigfcutbiiirskiHlaud juicy, per dozen,.
Lemons;Mallrfruit, per dozen,
12 poadoilPr.anulated Sugar all for
13 pounds of IMra "C" Sugar all for
14 poundf "Eiiie Prunes all for
12 pounds Fine Fancy Rice all for
4 pounds Arbuckle's Coffee all fpr
8 Cans Tomatoes, good goods, all for
8 Cans Sweet Corn, good goods, all for.
25 Bars Good Soap all for
40 cents.
.vAL40-cents.
1.00
40 cent&buys a, pound of Uncolored Japan Tea, others ask-
60 cents buys a pound of Fine Gunpowder Tea, others ask.
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
.50 to 60
-70 to 80 cents.
We have the finest line ot California Canned Goods in the city.
Barnum has added to his show in New
York a company of Arabs who will give
a picturesque and thoroughly realistic
representation of semi-savage Easternilife.
Last season these Arabs created a furore
in the Hippidrome at Paris where they
exhibited all summer.
"Father" Custer, as the father
of the late General Custer is familiarly
called at Monroe, Mich., near which town
he lives, can be found at the Methodist
Church in that place every Sunday, no
matter hojv stormy the weather or now
muddy the roads. He is S3 years old, hale
and lieartv " .
Mrs: Langley was tendered a rcceptiou
by Mrs. Trenholm at Charleston, S. C,
the other day, but she declined when it
was learned that many of the aristocrats
of the town intended to remain at homo to
avoid meeting her.
The late Duke of Rutlaud had at Bel
voir a "confession book," in which the
Princess of Wales recorded that her
favorite artist was Rubens, her favorite
author Dickens, her favorite dish York
shire pudding, and her favorite ambition
non-interference in other people's busi
ness. When Mr. Cleveland entered upon his
office ho declared that appointees in the
Territories should be selected from resi
dents of the Territories . As in the case
of his civil service reform promises, he
has failed to make good his words. Every
Govenor and leading official has been
chosen from defeated and broken down
politicians from distant states.
Legands about the dead Emperor are
already iu process of formation. The first
is with regard to a great white wild swan
which hovered over the cathedral during
the funeral services, and then, as the coffin
was carried out, slowly winged its way
over the silent palace toward the Char
lottenburg tomb.
The Nebraska man who leaves the
state with the expectation of findings
land more favored in wealth of soil, eood
climate and with better society conditions,
will make the greatest mistake of his life.
It is perhaps inelegant but it is very ex
pressive to call him" the biggest kind of a
"chump."
"Fishing" sociables are about becoming
a novelty. The ladies.pccupy one room
and the other, which is supposed to repre
sent a fish pond, is occupied by the gentle
ment, each of whom has a string tied to
his right hand. These strings are passed
over the transom and tied to a chair. Each
lady selects a string, and whoever happens
to be on the other end of it is to be enter
tained by her during the evening.
The keeper of the Tillemook Oregon
Light Station has written to the Light
house Board describing a storm which
visited that coast iu December. The
action of the sea was so violent that the
waves broke over the light house tower,
one hundred and sixty feet above high
water mark. There is no other authentic
record of the breaking of the sea at such
a.height.
The present German Empress is the
fifth English Princess who has held that
rank . The others were Edgyth, daughter
of Edward the Elder, wife of Otto I.;
Gunhild. daughter of Knut, wife of Henry
III. of Germany; Matilda, tho link
between the Norman and Plantagenet
dynasties, wife of Henry V. of Germany;
and Isabella, daughter of King John t
wife of Frederick II. the Wonder of the
World. This last named Princess was a
direct ancestor of the late Prince Consort
of England, and therefore of the present
German Empress.
Colonel Bob Ingersoll says that he is in
favor of the nomination of some man who
can be elected. That covers well the
ground. Republicans are not going on a
picnic this year. There should be earnest
work to find just such a man, aud when
fouud to nominate and elect him. The
Colonel further along names General W.
Q. Gresham, and a great many earnest
republicans have similar thoughts. There
is one good feature of the contest that
whether it be Sherman or Gresham or
H arrhson or Lincoln or Allison, the party
will have a strong leader.
"What signifies such wide brims?"
Asked a correspondent of Mrs. Allen, who
has spent much time in Corea. "Surely
the Corenns are not Quakers."
"Thereby hangs a tale," she said. Long
ago the king ordered his subjects to wear
hats with enormous brims, three or four
feet in width . The object was to prevent
conspiracy. The rooms in Corea are
small, and with such hats on not more
than four men could get into the same
room at once. But with the passing of
generations the brims of the Coreanhats
have been growing gradually smaller
until they have reached their
dimensions."
present
M M. Karri n gto n , Th e F irst Ward G ro ce r
Presideut Cleveland is now on trial, the
charges against him being hypocracy,
t.iini..M aiupuui), uuuuiu ueaiing, an
inborn lifitrprl fnr tho Tin
trucKier to southern politicians and an
attempt to crush the industry of America
for the benefit of British manufactures.
The republican party appear for the
prosecution and a few guileless mug
wumps are conducting the defense. The
twelve million voters of the country are
setting as the j ury, and it is now reasonably
cerram tnat tney will bring in a verdict of
"Guilty,, early in next November. The
the judge will banish the culprit to the
obscurity of perpetual oblivion. Let tke
trial proceed. Ex.