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About Lincoln County tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1885-1890 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1888)
- mm i ntlMI filMlf From the debilitating effects of summers tr ALL HUH lCrlv heat;ifyoucimHsleep,liavenoappeUteJack "" ambition, and are always tired, you are as much in need of medicine as if sick abed. You need Paine's Celery Compound at this season, when the whole system is debilitated by the wear and tear of work or play in the extreme heat. Can you, afford the time and cost of a vacation? Paine's Celery Compound will remove the need of one. It is the only hot -weather tonic that has true medicinal value. Compounded from the formula of a successful physician, as a general invigoratorithasnoequal. "When all run down from heat or overwork, re- fL BRACE YOU UP member that Paine's Celery Compound : :. Sold by all druggists, $1 a bottle. Sir for $5. WELLS, BICHAEDSON & CO., Proprs, Burlington, Vt. C. S. CLINTON, WATCHES, ujSpmGttBBmmmmmmmmmmm. SILTEEWAEE AND FIT i Pine Watch and Clock Repair- ing a Specialty. Call and see me before purchasing elsewhere. McDonald's Block, Spruce Street. fgm Boot aoi Sk Sioi'e f jP l Sorts, 9uh d Slip till ri ae- Give us a call and " I 1881 1888. BIRGE, 5 w. w. LUMBER, Lath, Shingles, PI P, CO O O Q POSTS, LIME, 0 Building Paper. IN ANY DESIRED QUANTITY. CD1 CO Tl c r Fifth Street, Cor. Locust, Opposite Baptist Church, CD North Platte. Nebraska. E. B. WARNER, Keeps constantly in stock Metalic and Cloth Draped Caskets, complete line ot Trimmings m White and JL5Iack, (jloss White Caskets, Wooden Coffins of all sizes, Shrouds and Shaes. Telegraph Orders Promptly Attended to. Open Day and Night. ENBALMING A SPECIALTY. 30,000 ACRES Desirable Farming; Land FOR SALE IN RANGES 33 to 37. INCLUSIVE, IN Lincoln and Keith 4 Counties, Neb., and lying between the Ncrth and South Tlatj Rivers, on the line of the Pnion Pacific Kailway. Prices and Terms can be obtained on. application at jvhe office of BILLON & COLLINS. A Canada naner calls the atten tion of Canada farmers to the fact that now is their time to engage .in wool growing. Now that Presi dent Cleveland and his fellow con spirators against American industry are doing their level best to kill the wool-industry of the United States, it is extremely proper and business like for the Canadian farmers to be gin to increase their flocks.' . . o Ballard's Horehound Syrup. A single bottlo of Ballard's Horehond Syrup kept about your house for immediate nse will prevent serious sickness, a large doctor bill, and perhaps death, by the nse of threo or four doses. For curing consumption its success has been Bimply wonderful, and for ordinary conglis.colds, sore throat, croup, whooping cough, ore chest hemorrhages its effects are surprising and won derful. Every bottlo guaranteed. C. W. Price, agent. . A well-known manufacturer of knit goods at Sand Lake, Renssalear county, N. Y.. is Mr. Pierce Kane, who has always heretofore voted the democratic ticket. He now declares-that he will vote for Harrison. "I know what my own interests are," said he, "and I will do my best to protect them. 1 am voting for Kane. I am on the side of those who are on the side of protection to my business." Fred J. Nichols, of Austin, Indiana, sajf: A person shomld bo thankful when they find a med icine that will cure them when every other kind has failed to give relief, and I am thankful. I nm subject to cholera morbus in tho summer, and never could get a medicine that would, give rao relief. I saw your advertisement and thought I would try a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrboo Remedy and see if it would help me. It has 6aved me many hours cf terrible suffering. Ifc is tho best medicine of the kind ever made. For salo by F. H. Longley. Is Mr. Cleveland blessed with a short memory or with a chronic in disposition to keep his pledges and the pledges of his party? The plat form adopted by the democratic national convention at Chicago July 10, 1884, declared that the selection of federal officers for the territories should be restricted to citizens resi dent therein. Mr. Cleveland a few days ago nominatedrfive judges for Utah, Dakota, Idaho and 'Alaska. Only one of the five is a resident of the territory for which he is named. Are democratic promises made only to be disregarded. . My little boy about eight .months old was taken .with flux. After several days wo com menced giving Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera nnd'Diarrhoea Remedy according to directions. Wo were very uneasy about tho child and sent for a physician. I told him what wo had been doing and showed him the medicine. He examined it and told us the best thing wo could do was to go ahead and give the remedy. We used about half of a small bottlo and cared the child, although tho child was so low he had no nso of himself. Wo thought so much of your remedy that we would let no one else have it. 1 told my. wife a few days ago that I must write and tell yon what your remedy had dono. G. W. Luger, Zion's Hill, Virginia. Sold by F. II. Longley. One of the largesij and pleasau test gatherings to be held in Nebraska this year promises to be the Dis trict It. A. It. lteunion tor JNortli western Kansas and Southwestern Nebraska, which will be held at Holdrece, Nebraska, August 14, lo 10 and 17. Eloquent speakers of National lame, prize bands, cavalry drills, sham battles, water works tests, and scores of minor attrac tious will be on the daily program The beautiful camp ground of 1,000 tents and immense ampitheatre is only five minutes walk rr'om the postomce or depot. A WARNING. The modes of death's approach are various and statistics show conclusively that more per sons die from diseases or the throat and lungs flmn wiv other. It is Drobablo that everyone. without exception, receives Tast numbers of tu bercle germs into tho system ana wnere tnese germs fall upon suitable soil they start into life and ileveloD. at first slowly and is shown by a i. t i ij. 1.1: i - .1 41 . j 1 SUgnt UCJUlUg stJUbUHUii iu uiu uiiwu nuu 11. i- lnwnl to continue, their ravages they extend to the-lungs, producinc consumption and to the head, causinir caiarrn. r;ow an uus is dangerous and if allowed to nroceed will in time cause rlpnth. At the onset von must act with nromt- ness; allowing a cold to go without attention is dnnirerous and may lose you your life. As soon ns you feel that something Li wrong with your Throat, ,1-iungs or xsostnis, outam a Dotue or Boscheo's German Syrup. It will give you im mediate relief. i- - tr rw "An Irishman and a republican" sends the Journal the following ex tract from the Christian Million of London to show "how the English are tickled over the rree trade and the democratic nominations." It is in the line of.nearly all the British utterances on the subject: "Democracy and tree trade won a glorious victory at the renomina tion of President Cleveland. The prohibitory tariffs that have so long oppressed labor on both sides of tlie Atlantic are doomed. Ere long the looms of Manchester and Leeds and the, forges of Birmingham and Sheffield will once again be busy, as they used to be before the war, in the execution of American orders. It is pleasant to notice that the up ward movement has already begun. State Journal. TEE EEV. GEO. H. THATEK, of Eourbon Ind., says: "Both myself and wife owe our lives to Sluloh's Consumption Cure." Sold by Streitz Aro yon made miserable by indigestion, con stipation, dizziness, loss of appetite, yellow skin? Shiloh's Vitalizer is a positive cure. For sale by A. F. Streitz. When an able-bodied man is found lounging about the bar-rooms, the cigar stores and the street corners at this season of the year, complain ing that he is unable to find em ployment, one is justified in sus pecting that he is not looking very diligently for work. The story of the tramp who complained to a sympathetic lady one August day that he couldn't get anything to do at his trade, and who upon being asked. "What is your trade?" re plied "Shoveling snow." was a fair sample of a few who Jiave not yet degenerated into tramps, but are content to live off their parents or their wives. Any honorable man ... r . - 1 -1 would be ashamed to spend 111s days in loafing, but there are some queer human conmounds and none 01 them are more worthy of contempt than those who are too lazy to worx as long as they.xan sponge a living. lew rtftvn riTO, urc amiw , y. They?a1rerfworthonlvf65 cents tiiey; .are,? m u va mutilated their Value fcless. 0& a- sionalljfce Of trwmAS Drongm mi. . i:-ilj4r.JA' 1ian ohm i x ue time viu .wrr.w lectqrwarpay lff5? trade dofla are becoinin &ol- m. . ay large premiums xor iLikejthe hnffalo they . Awt-, i Mr .Iti- A nasal inj loh's Catarrh' Streitz. HHilohT catarrh, drpnt Streitz. fewiib BMh bottle of Shi Price 50 cents. Sold by 1- aptlwifiker-Bi a Dositore euro for loath. Sold by Potter hotel keej immense g towered ct near Linci called the Chicago, her elder. lion dollars' and-'his big mm in nyc lars a year" "HA0METAC fume. Price 25 1 Shiloh's Core whooping choug WHY WILL will give imme and $1. For sale .... . men the millionaire I . a bf Chicaeo. lives in an stone, tiirreted and on the lake shore, Park. His wife is beautiful woman in Qs about twenty years owns about nve mii irthi of real estate, ftel ;is said to bring ldred thousand dol- Fb lasting ana iragranc per- 50 eta. For sale by Streitz. . immediately relieve croup I bronchitis. Sold by Streitz 1 coogh when Shiloh's Core Price 10 cts.. 50 cts F. Streitz. The ymt Unanimous. W. D. Bolt, wP Bippoa, Ind., testifies: can recommend Sectiio Bitters as the very best remedy,, Every bottle Bold has given relief in every case. One man took six bottles and was cured of rheumatism of ten years standing.' Abraham Hare, dnuanst. Uelivine, umo, amrms: "The best selling 'Kedioine I hare ever bandied Thnnsnnds of others have added their testimony, so that the verdict is unanimous that Electric Bitters do cure all diseases of the liver, kidneys or blood. Only a half dollar a bottle at A. x. Streitz's drug store. Ben. Harrison, when the war broke out. was twenty-eieht years old. He had a wife and family, and had lust been elected to aremunera tive office, entered the army, and served until the close of the war. Grover Cleveland was, when the war broke out, twenty-four years old. lie had neither wile nor child He was an able-bodied man. But he inever raised a hand to help the cause or the Kepublic. lie was that most odious, of Americans, a Northern Copperhead. Atchison Uhampwju An exchange savs: "Miss Ma- tilda Fletcher, the noted lecturer, of Iowa, will speak for the republi can party during the present cam paign. Her subject will be l(rora the Log Cabin to the White House." She is a verv popular speaker and the testimony of those who have heard her is that she carries great force and ability into her campaign work. She can be reached by ad dressing her at Des Moines, Ioiva.' The genius is the man who can apply an idea. List to this from the Indiauola Courier concerning Hart's action in displaying an al leged rebel flag: "In the light of the display of the rebel flag from the United States land office at Mc- Cook on Tuesday evening, we readi ly understand why Register Hart refuses to allow homesteaders to publish their land notices in this paper. He recognizes our loyalty -v n 1 and so tar as is in his power pro poses to reward it just as any rebel would in war times, by cutting off our sinews of war. Lincoln Daily Call. The vote of New York Citv in IBS! was composed of the following elements: One hundred and thirty- three thousand ne hundred and fifty-seven votes for Cleveland, of which 12.000 to 15,000 consisted of Mugwumps, and these Mugwumps were made up of Americans, Ger mans, English, Scotch and Cana dians who disliked Blame for one reason or another, and bolted him, voting for Cleveland; ninety thous and and ninety-three votes for Blaine composed of 12,000 to 15,000 Irish Democrats and some 75,000 or 98,000 straight Republicans, 3,499 Gjreenbackers, mostly ex-Re- publicans, who voted for cutler; one thousand thirty-one Prohibi tionists, nine-tenths ex-Republicans, who voted for St. John. Cleveland's majority oyer Blaine in the State of JNew York was only 1,047 votes. Pretty Women. . All women look attractive when their color and complexion is clear, If your skin is sallow eyes dull, you are bilious, secure a box of Wil liams' Australian HVrb Pilln. tnkn Mrlinwtad. and tho feeling of languor wUl leave you, your VJ,"vBngaien, ana you are another woman, u. w. irice, agent. The opinion of Prince Bismark egarding the tariff Question is in teresting, n a speech before the reichstag he said: "The success of the United States in material de velopment is the most illustrious of niodern time. The American nation has not only successfully borne and suppressed the most gigantic war of 111 . m - - . all history, but immediately after ward disbanded its army, found work for all its soldiers and marines paid off most of its debt, given la bor "and Tiomes to all the unem ployed of Europe as fast as they 13 : -ii i t 1 coum arrive wicnin 11s territory, and still by a system of taxation so indirect as not to be nerceived. much less.felt. Because it is my deliberate-judgment that the pros perity of America is mainly due to its system of protective laws. I ursre that Germany, has now reached that point wHere"itis necessary to imi tate the tariff system of the United States. t25.00 Reward. Tho abdvo reward will ha naid for any case of rheumatism not benefi by Ballard's Snow Liniment. There is no pain it will not subduer no wound it will not hdd. It is the most pene trating liniment known f or all pain, for man or beast it steads wkhoatp&ralleL Ladies who havebacknchesboBld seter be.withoat it. Price 50 cents. G.W.Price Afie&t. P CURES vtHaadMfct. TmHhmIw. Evacht, NEURALGIA, SORE THROAT, Catarrh, Croup, Frail Bites, tare Nipples,' Cakad Breasts, Lawe Back, RHEUMATISM Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, OM Sores, tc 'Sold by druggists. 50c. and $1.00. HAMLIN'S BLOOD AND LIVER PILL. Best in the World. Try Them. 25c SONG BOOK MAILED FREE. Address otiamku uiu com P. WALSH, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. Estimates on Work Furnished. Shop Corner Cottonwood and Third Sts east of Catholic church. 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. No. 3406. EIEST NATIONAL BANK, North. Platte, - iNTel. Authorized Capital, $200,000. Paid in Capital, $50,000, Banking In', AH Its Branches Transacted Sell Bills of Exchange Direct on Great Britain and Ireland, Switzer land, France, Belgium, Holland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, Russia, Spain, Portugal, Germany and Austria. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. Al. P1. streitz, WHOLESALE A2vD RETAIL : : pzETc-Gr-xs'x : : AUD DEALER IN REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. Sprnce Street, bet. Front and Sixth, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. I. K. S0MERS, Nurseryman, Florist and Gardener, (BARTON PLACE,) NORTH PLATTE, NEBR. Can f urnisli all kinds o 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. ALL COMMUNICATIONS ME WITH REGARD TO .-."Y INTERESTS I MAY HAVE ;r TOWN LOTS OR OUT LYING LAND IN NEBRASKA, COLORADO OR WYOMING, WILL RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. J. T. CLARKSON, 164 RANDOLPH STREET, CHICAGO. PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES Wall Paper, - WINDOW G-ISS AJSTD BEUSHES. Agent for Sherwin & Williams' Mixed Paints and the Diamond Brand Paints. Corner , Sixth, and Sprnce Streets. HERSHEY & GO., DEALERS IN AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, AND TXragrons, Caxxisigres, ZB-u.grgi.es, :ro-Ajd oabts, etc. Agents for the Celebrated Goodhue and Challenge Wind Mills. Agents for Union Sewing Machines. Locust Street, North Platte, - - Nebraska. TIT ACKER, XT Gr Car I JS T.iS KEITH'S BLOCK, FRONT STREET, OPPOSITE PACIFIC HOTEL. jSTORTHE PLATTE, - NEBEASKA, ITOW'S THE ti:m::e to havo yoar friends corao to -0- Kansas and Nebraska -0- ns eastern lines will sell tickets and ran Ml-Wm LAND to all Kansas nnd Nebraska points ovor tto TJIsriOiT PACIFIC, "The OvmiiAND Route," Until Julv 1. 1888. tickets sold for these excur sions wiU bo good thirty days for the round trip, and can be used ten days going. When purchas ers aro ready to return, these tickets will be good five days for that purpose. If purchasers wish to stop short of destination on our lines, agents will stamp tickets good to return from such point. J. S. Tebbetts, E. L. Lorn ax, G. P. & T. Agent, Ass't Gr. P. & T. A. 03IAHA. NEB. WE AIM TO HANDLE THE BEST GRADE OF GOODS, SELL THEM AT REASONABLE PRICES, AND WARRANT EVERYTHING AS REPRESENTED. Orders from the country and along the line of "the Union Pacific Railway Solicited. IT. J. B R O E K E R, Merchant Tailor, per 33 LARGE STOCK OF PIECE GOODS, embracing all the new designs, kept on hand and made to order. PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED. PRICES LOWER THAN EVER BEFORE. Spruce Street, next door to Post office. $1,500 in Cash Prizes FOR THREE BEST ADVERTISEMENTS. The Chicago Daily News has reduced its price from two cents to One Cent per copy. For a year past its sales have been over ''a-million-a-week," and it believes it now sees the way to safely lead in placing an ideal American daily paper upon the basis of the lowest unit of American coinage ONE CENT. To successfully accomplish this end two things are essential : Krst To make as good a newspaper as the best, if not a little better; second to let every man, woman and child in the Northwest know it's being done, and done at one cent a day. The Daily News believes that it is competent to take care of the first named condition, and knows of no better way of meeting the second than by general newspaper advertising. To do the latter most effectively it here solicits the co-operation of all who believe themselves competent to write an effective newspaper advertisement. To induce the best effort in its service in this matter The Daily News will reward the writers of the three best advertisements submitted, with three cash prizes, aggregating Fifteen Handled Dollars, divided as follows : s First Cash Prize For best advertisement, - $1,000.00 Second Cash Prize For second best advertisement, .... - 300.00 Third Cash Prize For third best advertisement, - 200.00 ; T Total, - - - - $1,500.00 The advertisement may be a single announcement, or a series of announcements not exceeding six in number. The spaot required must not exceed that occupied by this advertisement eight inches deep, six and one-quarter inches wide. For the general guidance of all who enter the competition, the following ten points are briefly stated as being those which Th Daily News will require to be most prominently brought out The advertisement must emphasize : lThzt The Daily News is first, lost and all the time, a frizur-paper. Because that should be the first and controlling consideration in the production of an American Daily paper, and it isn't always so. It costs money, enterprise and hard work in unstinted measure to make a genuine fffzur-paper. t TI..Tiii.TitttK.:.. .1-1-. r1 - 1- T7 Tr - -t nmAiii undUAiMiiy paper iwr uuay ptupic jucuiuaciua 15 a country of busy people, and the North-west is the busiest part of it. Most people haven't the time or patience to read a "blanlcet- after all, is but an incident of life, not its chief business. Therefore The Daily News is a short-and-to-the-point-papcr 3 That The Daily News is an independent, truth-telling newspaper. Because the American people tire jntclligentenough to prefer honest, impartial journalism ,10 the misleading, truth-discoloring dishoacsty of the regulation political "organ." Everybody really wants to know" the truth in political matters ; the most violent partisan doesn't want misinformation for a daily diet. And as to editorial expression. at an adverse opinion, so long as he is confident of the hoiuttyof upiuiuu. ii s not uic mere jact 01 cus agreement that makes trouble, it's the suspicion of insincerity. Make Uux Point very strong and clear. -Ifs because The Daily News Aw won its way to the confidence of its readers of every folilicat faith that it has aarculahon efover " a-million-aaeek:' 4 That The Daily News, is a family paper. Because this is the age cf !.n.wP.tpcr'a Uma wen everybody reads it. and it is all-impor-unnhat the newspaper should be made with direct reference to the needs of all the members of the family. Woman and her interests never occupied so large a share of the world's thought as to-day a. fact not to be overlooked. The moral tone and influence of a daily 5aper must also be constantly watched, for children read it. The )aily News is for the home, and therefore it follows 5 That THB Daily News is against the saloon. Because "the liquor Sten?5" arroJSantlJr assumes to dominatejn American politics, aad The Daily News believes that it is not for the country's good that any one interest should thus over-ride all others, much less one which stands as the representative of all that is mostun-American among us. The Paily"Nkws is not the organ of prohibition. It is notsure that prohibition is the best thing. Good people who have made this sub ject a life-long study do not agree as to the remedy. TheDailyNews has no eutopian hope that it is possible to legislate men into good-, Other points will suggest themselves to the regular reader of the paper kself, and may be introduced according to the judgment of tie advertisement writer. Outline illustrations and poetry may be introduced if desired, but they are not necessarily essential to success in the competition. The prizes will be awarded to the three most successful advertisements, the publisher of The Daily News being the sole judge, whatever may be the absolute grade of their merit. All advertisements must be received before September 1st next! and the awards will be made at the earliest date practicable thereafter: Intending competitors must apply for the paper's complete pros? pectus, and advertisements must be submitted under the conditions therein named in detail. , , ". VICTOR F. LAWSON, Publisher The Daily Newary Chicago. ness, but it has a very positive conviction that it is entirely practica ble, and altogether desirable, to legislate saloon-keepers into their proper place, as being engaged ia a traffic which here, as everywhere else in the civilized world, is only tolerated as, apparently, a neces sary evil. There must be no uncertain sound en this joint. 6 That The Daily News is a happy paper. Because it believes in the practical wisdom of being good natnred; of being generally satisfied rather than everlastingly dissatisfied. The chrome fault-finder is a nuisance, and The Daily News will have the least possible of him. The world is better than it used to be, and is getting better every day. It's a good place to live in let's make the best of it. 7 That The Daily News costs a great deal of money to make. Because thee is sometimes no way of demonstrating the value of a thing, to some people, so conclusively as by showing, even in part, what it costs to make it. There are 30a people on the regular weekly pay-roll of The Daily News, and their salaries ranee from $5,500 to 6,000 per week, aggregating; $300,000 a year. The white paper costs another 300,000 a year. The aggregate expenditures of The Daily News for x8SS will vary but a tnfle either way from 1900,000. And yet S That The Daily News now costs the reader only One Cent a Day. Because this is the most wonderful thing in modem journalism, and deserves telling o'er and o'er. Tkxre is little danger of making tea muck of this pointy 9 That The Daily News is now literally everybody's paper. Because heretofore metropolitan daily papers have been too exfnsive, both in price and in time required to read them, to stake it practicable for the fanner or the mechanic to take them. Now this is changed. The farmer particularly should take a daily paper now that it costs but little more than the old-time weekly, and is condensed so that he can also afford the time to read it. Hell save its yearly cost over and over again by knowing the market prices every day, instead of weekly as heretofore, 10 That The Daily News now inaugurates a newspaper revelation. Be cause such a combination of values as it now offers the reader is absolutely without parallel among American newspapers, and it is bound to make the dry-bones rattle. The result ot this revolution is that every English reading person living within daily newspaper dis tance ef Chicago can now afford, both as to price and time, to hav his city daily.