T7iei Get dffiere Just the same, 'AND SO DOES . SpkOus Son?. MADE ONCr BY N.K.FAIRBANK&.CO. Chicago. A, D. Buckwoeto, Prest. C. T. Iddimgs,- Vice-Prest. J. E. Evans, Cashier, S. Goozee, Asst. Cash North Platte National Bank, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. IPaid up Capital, $75,000. DIRECTORS: E. W. HAMMOND, O. M. CARTER, J. E. EVANS, C. F. IDDIXGS, M. C. LINDSAY, M, OBER8T, A. F. STREITZ, h. OTTEN. A. D. DUCKWORTH All business intrusted to us handled promptly, carefully, and at lowest rates. Closing -:- Out -:- Sale BOOTS and SHOES I9 ivill close out my entire stoch of Boots and Shoes at a GREAT SACRIFICE. Wishing to quit the business I will give bargains on all goods in stoch. Some of the best goods made in this couniry will be SLAUGHTERED. Our goods are all the very best. No shoddy in stoch. Call in for Bargains, for you never bought Good Goods for such prices. I offer at a bargain the entire stoch and fix tures to any one desiring to engage in the Boot and Shoe frade. The reason for selling is that other enterprises engage my attention. Call for bargains at Otten's Boot & Shoe Store LUMBER COAL. LUMBEE, Latin, SASH, 5UNDS, DOORS, Etc. LIME AND CEMENT. Eock Springs Nut, Eock Springs Lump. Pennsylvania Anthracite, Colorado Anthracite AND Colorado Soft COAL- YARD ON R. R. TRACK WEST OF DEPOT, JOS. F. FILLION, 171 BI1TG-, Steam and Gas Fitting. Cesspool and Sewerage a Specialty. Copper and Galvanized Iron Cor nice. Tin and Iron Roofings. ESTIMATE S EXJIlsriSHEID. Repairing of Kinds will receive Prompt Attention, Locust Street, Between Fifth and Sixth, North. IPlatte, - Nebraska. Brick Liyery Stable, 35-cun. TD3T ID- Besacfe, FIRST-CLASS RIGS FURNISHED on short notice and at reasonable rates. Horses hoarded by the week or month. Careful and competent employes. Stable opposite the Hawley TTmisfl on east Fifth street. NOKTH "PXiA-TTTC. - TsTTh1BJRA.SK: A "rj. broekee, Mprrhant Tailor. OXj SAINTS XI. AKTID t. aihh! STOCK OF PIECE GOODS, embracing all the new designs, kept on hand and made to order. PERFECT PIT GUARANTEED. PRICES LOWER THAN EVER BEFORE Spruce Street, between Fifth and Sixth. THE CltlSJS I BUE.YDSTUFFS Germany, France and Kagland Will Have to Draw on Oar Granaries. Washington', Sept. 14. Consul Gen eral Mason of Frankfort, in a report to the state department on what he terms the German crisis in breads tuffs, pre sents some very interesting statements respecting the most notable commercial event of the year in Europe the Rus sian decree forbidding the exportation of rye from Russia to any foreign country. This, Mr. Mason regards as equivalent to an official declaration that the harvests of cereals in Russia is so deficient that the export of rye must be forbidden in order to avert danger of famine there. Mr. Mason presents eomo data which shows how seriously this unexpected edict is likely to affect the bread supply of Germany. Very little pure wheat oread he says, is eaten by the middle and lower classes m Ger many. The "staff of life ' to a vast ma jority of the German people is black bread, made with flour ground from a mixture of rye and an inferior quality of wheat. The con sumption of this material is so enormous that Germany imported 947,375 tons of rye, of which 85 per cent., as well as 55 per cent, of the whole import of wheat into Germany came from Russia. The recent edict, therefore, cuts off nearly five-sixths of the entire foreign rye sup ply of Germany. How difficult it would be to fill this great deficit by increased importations from other countries, Mr, Mason says, will be evident from the fact that the entire export of rye to Germany, from 1884 to 1888, from the six countries which rank next to Russia as producers of cereals, averaged but 6,142,331 bushels a year. This is barely one-fourth of the rye exportation to Germany from Russia last year. Mr. Mason thinks it doubtful, in new of the short cereal crops which prevail this summer more or less uniformly through out Europe, whether Jb ranee, lioumama or bervia will have any consid erable surplus of rye for export, The deficit iu Germany", therefore, can not be filled from any known source of supply on that 6ide of the Atlantic, and the effect of the situation upon the rye market has been startling. A year ago rye sold in Berlin for $o9 per ton of 2,240 pounds. On the third of August last the effect of the meagre harvest had raised the market price to $52.24 per ton. Then came the Russian edict and within two weeks the price had risen to SGI. 88 per ton. Add to this a short and inferior potato crop throughout nearly the whole or brermany, and it will bo seen.Mr. Mason says.that the food ques tion there has assumed an ominous aspect and in the end the people of Germany, France and England will have to draw upon the well filled granaries of the United States for a large part of their food supply during the coming year. GIVES THE "WORLD TEX YEAK. Doomsday's Coming Foretold by an In diana Episcopal Clergyman. Indianapolis, Sept. 14. The Rev. Joseph Jenckes, D. D., rector of St. Paul's cathedral, the most prominent Episcopal minister in Indiana, has be come convinced from historical research that the world will end in ten years. When he abandoned a lucrative law practice in Louisville in I860 to enter the ministry it was his belief that the world would end in thirty-five years, and for a long time this was the contrul idea of his preaching, but in time cir cumstances tended to check the order of his convictions. He haa now a thorough awakening through the discovery of an error in the accepted system of chrono logy which had made the time of the judges as governors of Israel 350 years instead of 450 years, He warns all per sons to put themselves in the line of believers "if tbey would avoid becom ing ashes under 'the feet of the right eous," and will begin a series of sermons on the subject. SPOUTING EVENTS. Fifty Thousand to the Winner. CniCAGO, Sept. 14. The Washington Park club ratified Secretary Brewster's suggestion to make the cross value of the American derby for 1893 $60,000, or $50,000 to the owner of the first horse under the wire. Entries for this event are now open, to close Oct. 15. In ad dition to increasing the value of the American derby stake, the- club has de cided on another important event for the world's fair year, to be called the Queen Isabella stake. The event will be a sweepstakes for fillies, foals of 1890, with $10,000 added money. Be sides the regular stakes and those an nounced above, twenty or more valua ble stakes for 2 and 3-year-olds and for all ages will be advertised to close dur ing 1892-93, including a guaranteed stake of $25,000 for 2-year-olds, and the Columbus handicap for 3-year-olds and upward, which will be worth $25,000 to the winner. It is the intention of the Washington Park club to make its meeting of 18U3 the grandest race meet ing ever given in America. Loaguo and Association. Louisville, Sept. 14. President Phelps, of the American Base Ball As sociation, sent a letter to President Young, proposing that a series of games be played between the clubs of the two associations. The proposition is as fol lows: A series of three, five or seven games between any number of League clubs and the like number from the As sociation, a portion to be placed on the League grounds and a like number on Association grounds, the deciding games (if necessary) to be played on neutral territory. President Phelps says: I know that your inclination will be to reply that under the National agreement your clubs cannot play Association clubs, but I beg to remind you that there can ne no agreement unless there be two or more parties thereto, and that the League is now in truth the only party to said agreement." Mrs. Peck's Last and Greatest. New York, Sept. 14. The notorious Mrs. Ellon E. Peck, alias E. Eliza Knight, successful for years as an all round swindler, has outdone all of her previons exploits by defrauding a law yer and his wife out of a quarter of a million dollars' worth of Brooklyn real estate. Her victims are Merritt H. Day and Mary E. Day of Rapid City, S. D., who brought suit in the supreme court. Brooklyn, against "E, Eliza Knight" to 6et aside deeds for property which she obtained from them under false rre-tenses. TwentT-nlne Houses Destroyi '. Quebec, Sept. 14. Fire starts! i i grocery store occupied by Oulelt. r.s Capo Blanc, and before the flames gotten under control had destroyed twenty-nine houses and a portion of the Roman Catholic church. A portion of Onlett's Ttlace was found to li&va been saturated with coal oil. When this fact got noised about an infuriated mob pro cured a rope and, capturing Ouiett. were about to lynch him when the po lice rescued him. He has been safely lodged in the city prison. Kansas City Highwaymen. Kansas City, Sept. 14. At midnight three highwaymen entered the saloon of Tony Crandall, on the southwest Boulevard and "held up" the inmates, five in all, robbing them of their val uables, Crandall attempted to resist and was beaten over the head with re volvers, his watch, diamond pin and all the money in the cash drawer being taken. The robbers then leisurely helped themselves from the bottles ana took their departure. Halifax, N. S., Sept, 14. rjews has been received that the Yarmouth fish ing schooner Georgiana has been righted and the dead bodies of four men found in her cabin. A Big Plan log Mill Burns. Sonbuby, Pa., Sept. U. Clements' planing mill, employing 300 hands, wu burned; loss, $75,000. A CANAEY WITH TALENT HE GREW UP AMONG FOUR GOOD NATURED BACHELORS. He Could Sine and They Taught Him Many Airs Each Man Became At tached to the Bird, and When They Disagreed One of Them Stole Him. In a gilded cage in the top flat of a bisr house in East Sixteenth street is a little ball of yellow feathers that is cared for as tenderly as any baby in the land, It is only a very tiny canary bird, with the unpretentious name of Pick, but in suite of its size and its name it is the master of a great wealth of music. Dick never knew the pleasures of lib erty, having been born of captive pa rents in another gilded cage in- another bier flat farther up town. Up to the time when he was G months old he never did anything that was worthy of especial attention. Then he was re moved from the parental cage and a pri vate cage was bought for him, and he was sent down town under the charge of a liarum scarum boy as a present to four young men who lived in a flat in Ninth street. ne was accepted as a matter or cour tesy, and the cage which imprisoned him was hung on a string in a rear window, and the servant was instructed to feed him whenever it became necessary. The young men were free and eas3, and was their habit to lean out or this win dow in their idle moments and whistle at Blind Tom, who used to exercise on the rear piazza of a house on Eighth street, and at other times to whistle at the neighbors' daughters in the nearby buildings. Blind Tom responded with a whirl wind of music on the piano, and the neighbors' daughters frequently showed their appreciation of the attention be stowed on them by the young men by singing. Une of tho young men occa sionally played on a tin flute, while an other whistled an accompaniment dick begins to slnq. Nobody paid any attention to Dick until one morning when the sun shone on him, making his yellow feathers glow line a burnished lump of cold, he trilled a bar or two sweet enough to attract the young men's attention. One of them whistled, and he instantly caught tho refrain and turned it promptly. Noth ing more was needed to make him great favorite, and one of the young men poked a finger at him playfully. Dick did not flutter away in fear, but hoppeii toward the finger, and with outstretched wings, picked at it fiercely, and at the same time pecked his way into the hearts of all the occupants of the flat. After that incident it was a wonder that Dick's health and morals were not ruined, for the young men insisted on feeding him all sorts of stuff and whistled all the vulgar airs of the day. Tk 1 Ml mm - due no maiierwnat Kind ot iood was offered to him, he ate it promptly and seemed to thrive, and no matter how vulgar the air that was whistled, he re peated it with a sweetness and clearness that would have filled the author s soul with delight. One morning the door of Dick's cage was opened, and he caino out and looked about him with a great expression of wonder in his little bead like eyes. Then he piped forth a few low strains, flew to the table, and began to peck a loaf of bread. "I wish he was bigger, so I could pet him," said one of the big men. Every morning afterward Dick had breakfast with the young men. He would hop on the table, sampling every thing he came across, and bathing fre quently m the goblets of ice water. Breakfast over, Dick would fly back to his cage, and getting into the little swing at the top of it, would sway madly to and fro, and sing everything he knew. That was regarded as an offering of praise, and quiet reigned during the per formance. DICK'S PRESENT H031E. mi. i m j.ne tnai came, wnen rue young men failed to agree, and it was resolved to sever tho family. Each of them was willing that the other should take every i1 ' 1. Jl . II I 11 ming eise in me uac lr tney would give Dick to him. But that was not to be thought of for a moment, and the young men kept together for a month longer than they intended in order not to be separated from their pet. 1'inaUyone of the young men delib erately carried Dick away and kept him in hiding for several mouths, and guard ed him as carefully as a miser watches over his money. Then he rented the flat in Sixteenth street, and a few nights ago invited his former companions to see Dick. As lie ushered his guests into the hall they were greeted with a burst of music. They recognized the voice of Dick. The moment they entered the room where the little songster was he flew as near them as ho could and cooed softly and ruffled his feathers gently. 'Ihero may be persons m the world who would scout the suggestion of a bird remembering faces for so long a time, but there is not the slightest doubt that Dick remembered the young men and that he was welcoming them with all his heart. During all the time they were in the flat Dick sang all the old tunes. He stopped only when one of them spoke to him, and then he would be silent and cock his little head on one side and peep intelligently. The young men readily accepted an invitation to remain all night, and the next morning before they were out of bed they heard tho magic music of the little songster. At breakfast he hopped on the table and flopped in all their glasses of water in order to let them see that all were dear to him. Before the three visitors left the man who had stolen Dick from them made each one promise that ho would not attempt to steal the bird. New York Sun. Not a Theory. "Do you believe man sprang from tho ape." "2so; but I believe woman springs from the mouse in fact, I've seen her do it." Harper's Bazar. Strong "Writer. Uncle Stephen, an old negro, had come to cut the grass in the front yard, and as Colonel Winter started out to his office he stopped to greet the old man. "Well, Stephen," said the colonel, "I hear that you intend to give your son an education." "Dat's what I does, sab. I knows what tis ter Etruggle erlong widout larnin'. an' 1 is 'tenmned dat my son sha nt trabble bar'foot ober de same hard road dat I did." "A noble resolution, Stephen. I wish all fathers felt as you do. Is your boy learning rapidly." "Ez fast ez er hoss ken trot, sah. Why, last week he wrote a letter to his aunt dat libs mo' dan twenty mile from yere, an' atter a while he gwine ter write ter his udder aunt dat libs fifty mile away." "Why doesn't he write to her now?" "Oh, he kaint write so fur, yit Es ken writo twenty mile fustrate, but I ; tole him not ter try ter write fifty mile till he got stronger wid his pen. But he's gwine ter git dar, I tell you. Won't , be more'n er year fo' dat boy ken set down at one eeud ob de gumbronment: an' wnto er letter cl'ar ter de eend." Exchange. LONDON WATER PIPES. for which get your case you isn t a "cure-all," but it does cure all diseases arising from a torpid or deranged liver, or from impure blood. For all Scrofulous, Skin and Scalp Diseases, it's a positive rem edy. Even Consumption, or Lung scrofula, is enred by it, if taken in time and tnven a fair tnal. i hat's all that's asked for it a fair trial. Then, if it doesn't help you, there's no pay. We claim it to be an nnequaled remedy to purify the blood and in- vigoraie me liver, w o ciaim id io be lasting in its effects, creating an appetite, purifying the blood, and preventing Bilious, Typhoid and Malarial Severs, if taken in time. ine time to take it is when you hrst feel the signs of weariness and I. T w - . toeuKnew. xy aruggisis. Land Office nt North Platte. Nob., (. Autrust 18. 191. i Notice is hereby Given tlmt the following- named settler bus hied notice of his intention to mnko final nroof in BQDnort of hi claim and that said proof will bo made, before theReRister nnd Keceivornt North Plntte. Neb., on September ailn, lP'Jl, viz: lvl l. uaker "wno made Homestead Entry No. 14761 for the southeast o.narter of section 22, town 12, range 31, west. lie names the following witnesses to prove lus continaons residence upon and cultivation of fund tend, viz: John II. Ciinpen, .Tohann Cleman, Jolin W . uood, i rnncH Montjicue, all of North Finite, reU, 32(5 John I. Kesbitt. Register. WM. NEVILLE, Attorney-at-Law, Office: N vills Bi,ock, Sixth STnEk NOltTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. GRIMES & WILCOX, Attorneys-at-Law, NORTH PLATTE, - NEBB. OJIico over North Platte .National Hank. C. M. DUNCAN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. OFncK: Ottenstein's niock. no fctnirs. Office nours from 9 to 12 n. m., 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. m Kesiaence on West Bixth street. NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. "Win. Eves, 3S. 33., Physician and Surgeon. DISEASES of WOMEN and OHILDBEiT A SFECIALTT. McDonald Block, Kobto Platte, Xeb. !D ENTIS TUT. Of- A. B. AYRES, D. D. S., las located at North Platto to stav. fice over Foley's Store. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Gas Administered. "w. c. LEivioisr, Land Attorney and Loan Agt. Money constantly on hand to close farm loans nt lowest rates Riven in Western Nebraska. All kinds of business before United States Land Office attended to. NORTH PLATTE, NEB. WHY NOT HAVE YOUR LINEN DONE UP NICELY? Take it to our agent, Frank Sujli- van. at C. Wein gaud's store. Anything laundried from a hand kerchief to a fine lace curtain. Launurv leaves Tuesday and is returned the following Saturday, A. P. CARLSON, Merchant Tailor. fHEY ARE NEAR THE SURFACE AND THE WATER FREEZES. , Can't be found -the equal of Dr. Pierce's Golden JUedical Discovery. If other medi cines of its class were like it, they'd be guaranteed. This is. If it doesn't benefit or cure, in every it's recommended, money back. It GBAND ISLAND STEAM LAUNDRY, v Full line of piece goods always on hand and made to order. Tho Pcoplo of tbo City and Suburbs Havo lleea Troubled with Frozen Watei Flpes for Generations, but the 11 pes Will Xover IJo Placed Beeper. If it were not for tho inconvenience and discomfort of the thing the plight in which London finds itself with its water supply frozen would be comical to a practical Yankee. Tho water pipes are frozen Bimply because the Briton haa never prohteu by nis espenenco ot ins native winters. Year after year they have freezing weather in London, and year after year Lionttons water pipes freeze, burst, and there cometh a water famine. The Londoners' water pipes freeze not because the weather is intensely cold, but because the pipes are insufficiently pro tected. Too often they aro left exposed to all the winds that blow. Entire districts in London, square miles, districts as large as many good sized American cities, had their water supply entirely stopped one winter. Im- the inconvenience, even the dis tress jind danger, attending such a con dition of things! But the fault has been with the Londoner, and not with the weather. I passed through a district thus afflicted one dismal day, and saw the workmen digging up the road to get at the pipes. In the street where these operations were going on tuo supply pipes lor ail the houses (the pipes running in from the water mains) were all laid within a foot of the surface of the ground. The water was frozen in .nil tho pipes. Eight een inches below tho surface the frost had not penetrated. But the English man deliberately puts his supplj pipes within reach of the frost A PItDIITIVE SYSTEM. The pipes would never freeze if they were put a few feet under ground, for the frost in London rarely penetrates the earth more than a foot or two. But the Londoner does worse than this he often runs tho water pipe up the outsido wall of his dwelling, without protection of any sort. He has another cheerful habit, which is fast becoming the fashion, and which is now put in practice in all the better class houses. The drain pipes, at any rate those from the sinks and bathtubs, are carried down the outsido walls, with a break at every story, where another inlet or outlet is made into a small open trough, from which another pipe leads down another story, and so on to the bottom, where the water flows into a gutter and thence into tho sewer. The system fully ac complishes its object sewer ventilation, but this could be equally well secured by a less, primitive arrangement, and with one that would not freeze in tho winter and cover tho side of your houses with dirty ice. When I said that tho Londoner is not prepared for tho annual freezing of his water pipes I did not adhere strictly to the truth. For the good gentleman is prepared in a certain way, or perhacs should say that the water companies aro prepared. And the preparation is pecu liarly British, as you will see. When your street freezes up that is to say, when it freezes down a dozen inches be low the surface and blocks all the supply pipes, an oluciai trom tne water com pany puts in an appearance, after a day or two, and has an apparatus fired into a little hydrant close by the curbstone. xne apparatus consists eitner of a wooden or an iron pipe, as the case may be, which stands upright above the which has an inch faucet To this fount the entire neighborhood must come, with pails and pans and caus and jugs and mugs, and carry away the precious fluid. WHY THE BRITON BEAKS IT. The water companies keep these prim itive plugs in stock, some thousands of them, but it never occurs to anybody to place tho supply pipes deeper in the ground and thus prevent freezing. This, then, is the way tho Londoner, or his water company, prepares for the annual visit of Jack Frost. But tho preparation is effective only when the water mains are laid well below the surface. When they aro not there is a water famine throughout extensive districts, as at Brixton, at Hampstead and other places in London town. Why not lay the water pipes deep enough? If j-ou had ever lived among tneso droli people j'ou would not ask that ques tion. The pipes have never been laid deep enough, and therefore never will be not this side of tho millennium. The water supply of London is bad enough at its best. At its worst, in the winter, it is too bad for words. Nobody but these droll people would submit, year after year, to the ridiculous system of supply and tho outrageous charges. But tho Briton is a patient soul. He be lieves that whatever he has is the besf of its kind, and he resents any suggestion to tho contrary. A water supply that was good enough for his grandfather is good enough for him; moreover, it is good enough for yon. There's the rub of the argument. "It's good enough for you." Why, in tho name of justice, should you, a foreigner, complain? Out upon you for an ungrateful alien. Nevertheless, one has to suffer from this drollery. When he does not suffer ho can smile. But that is the atmost he can do. You cannot change the habits of a nation. And you cannot induce 5,000,000 people to put their water pipes hve feet under ground if they think five inches sufficient, and if they have had them five inches under ground for gen erations. Boston Herald. ground, and affixed to it. Don't Rush. That i3. do not leave a comfortable country for an uncertain city home. Here is a paragraph saying that the average wages of 150,000 girls in the city of New York is sixty cents a day, in cluding the cash girls at two dollars. Deducting room rent, tens of thousands of these trirls cannot have enough for comfortable clothing and nourishin; food. This should serve as a hint to country girls who are planning to seek their fortunes in cities. Even in a young city like Minneapolis the cases of disappointment and destitu tion aro numerous and painful, There are scores of applicants for every place, and it is getting worse all the time. Better keep away from cities unless you have remarkable, ability. Inis ap plies even to those who are seeking for ordinary housework. An advertisement for a cook, a chambermaid or a girl for general work will be answered by twen ty or thirty the samo day. Tne intern gence offices aro continually thronged with jxrang women looking for work of this kind. There is a demand for young women who can do good work in private homes. Some of these places are not desirable, perhapt not tolerable, no matter how hich the wages. There aro mistresses of homes of wealth who aro ready to pay any price for thoroughly competent girls, but they do not know how to treat a girl. They do not intend to bo unjust. The trouble is, they do not know a good girl when they have one. Allowing for these and other exceptions, thero remain hun dreds of homes in Minneapolis where first class domestics would be welcomed to fair treatment and generous compen sation. Housekeeper's Weekly. Too Much Femlnliio Politeness. A street car conductor said "Young women in Washington indulge in a pe culiar sort of politeness which is more calculated to injure tho feelings of others than any rudeness of a deliberate nature that they could very well contrive. Yon will often see a girl of twenty odd get up in a street car to give her seat to a lady, quite a stranger, who is no more than middle aged. This is intended for a courtesy, presumably, but it is a very silly one, because its obvious intention is to exhibit a deference to superior age. Now, no woman likes to find herself re garded from that point of view, and the worst of it is that it is impossible for the victim of such a performance to show any resentment. All she can do is to decline to accept the place vacated, which is not very much satisfaction. "I niyself havo frequently noticed women who had perceptibly passed their first youth offering their seats to others hardly older than themselves, so that it might seem as if this was a novel way of claiming to be young at some one else's expense. My observation is that few people, however old, aro otherwiso than mortified by being given seats in this manner on the cars. Old gentlemen are not less sensitive on the point than old ladies." Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat Only first-class workmen employed. Shop on Sprnco Street over Hans ficrtlcr&Co. 0 R. D. THOMSON. .rclItect, ontractor and Builder. 127 Sixth St. Cor. of Vine, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. E. B. WARNER, Funeral Director, AND EMBALNER. A fill line of first-class funeral supplies always in stock. Ufiast Sixth street, next door to First Na tional Bunk, uddeTj. A Chivalrous I.al. "Mamma," said Willie, "that little Susio Harkius called me a donkey to day." "What did you do?" "Well, of course I couldn't slap a lit tle girl, so I told Sister Mary, and she just scratched Susie ont of sight." Harper's Bazar. Strawberries. Why are they called "strav"berries? Smart men differ on that. Some sa- it is on account of their hollow, strawliko stems. Others think it is because they have to be covered with straw or similar protecting material in winter. Tho most classical explanation that our Anglo Saxon forefathers used to raise them and they gave them this name because the berries are generally on the ground, that is, "strewed" or "strawed" around. Exchange. Acres of ground around Sandringham, the Prince of Wales' country seat, are devoted to tho cultivation of lilies of the valley, the sweet scented and ever popular spring blossom. In the little village near there is little else except a remarkably fine ruin of a little church. and hundreds of thousands of the pure bell shaped blossoms are sent up to Lon don evenr year. NORTH PLATTE, - NEBBHSKA. Telegraph orders promptly attended to. Quite Fatal. Mrs. Spiggit Do yon think thatsmok- ing shortens life? Mrs. Gazlay I think sure some of the cigar3 smokes would kill me if I staid room. New York ' Epoch.- it "docs. I'm my husband in tho- A Table 3Iado of Human Flesh. A writer in Harper's Magazine of Feb ruary, 1855, gave the following descrip tion of a remarkable table made by Pro fessor Segato: "It comprises every por tion of ihe human body transformed into stone, destined to endure as long as the world itself if not ground to pieces by violence. There aro really two tables, one finished and polished, the other in complete, made of mosaics formed by sections of hnman bones, brains, lungs, blood vessels, intestines and muscles, all as firm as marble, anu snowing tne in ternal structure of each. "Without an explanation a visitor wonld supposo them to be from some mosaic manufactory, for thej' are sym metrically arranged in squares, triau gles and circles, with the great variety of colors nicely graduated. Different portions of the human body, showing tho internal anatomy, aro so perfectly petrified as to form a fiuo object of study for the medical student. Even morbid anatomy wa3 subjected with en tire success to this process. Animals of all kinds, chickens and reptiles, in short, nothing that has blood was capable of resisting Segato's petrifying touch." Hard to Get. Doctors are sometimes more consid erate of their patients' needs than they aro of their circumstances. It is easier to prescribe a journey to Europe or Ber muda than it is to fill the prescription. A gentleman whose affairs had be come very much embarrassed, and who was overworked and overworricd, went to a celebrated specialist, broken down with nervous exhaustion. "Now," said the doctor, "there is only one thing that you must have, that is absence of worry, absence of caro and freedom from all preoccupations." "Much obliged for your prescription," said the gentleman, "but you've left out one important thing in it." "What is that?' "You haven't put in the apothecary's street and number." Exchange. Graduates Who Use Ribbon. A grave professor concerned with read ing the essays of a large number of grad uates from a co-educational college demolishes an old respectable tradition wfcen in a private letter he writes: "Brass clamps are a great improvement on pink ribbon for tying up the loose pages of wise young women s wise essays, but the present generation of girl grad uates would never think of nsing ribbon anyhow, it commonly chooses cotton twino or mucilage." Herein is shock ingly exemplified tho influence ofthc mind masculine over tho character feminine. The knot of ribbon is still very much tho rule m schools where girls alone do congregate. Exchange. BAD BLOOD I: PiaplM on tho Pace j ; BreikiEg Out ) S Skin TrtnUet f - Little 8crj Hot Skill ; Sails I Blotekesj Z Gold Sorest BadBmthf Sow Month or Lips : Jtymn iifcr from r of ; theso naitou, take - I DOCTOR ACKER'S ! i ENGLISH i IBL00D ELIXIR! WHY? " KKH8nOOB I ; Hits yon erer used mercury! It so, did yoo agt to yourself, ths needed attention at tne timet. Z wo n-ed not tell you that you require a blood ; medietas, to ensure freedom from th after ef- Zfects. lr. Acker" KnltlUh Tllood Kllxlr isth-? S ; only known medicine tnat willthoroochJT eradl- ; catetho poison from the oysteitu Get it from Syoar draprfst. or write to W. II. IIOOKF.n b ; JCO.. 4UWet BTOwur'-,7",j.r,,f,'J';, ; H. MacLEAN, Fine Boot and Shoe Maker, And Dealer la JIEN'S LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S BOOTS AND SHOES. Perfect Fit, Lest "Work and Goods Represented or Money Refunded. as REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. Bank Counters, Tyler System, Port able, Unequaled in styles. Cost and Finish. ISO rue CaUlogae af Comntfn, Desks etc., Illutrtted U Colors. BmIs Free Postage 11 Cents. Also lyier's Office Stki and Type writer Cabinets. 0O Styles. Best and cheap cat on earth, with great reduction in prices. ISO pace eataUcM Tree. Poalage 12 eta. roll Use mt Deaka, Ckalra, Tables, Book Cara, Cablaeta, Legal Illaak Caklaets, elf., slwsja la stack. Bneelal work aaad ta arser. 1YLEK DESK CO., St.ioula, Mo. U.S. A. H. W. FOGEL, EfsseFalilacksmiihiWagonWorks Horse Shoeing a Specialty. Shop on Locust St., North Platte. Neb. Billiard : Hall, J. C. IIUPFER, Prop, The Casino is supplied with am ple billiard and pool tables and is a pleasant orderly resort at all times. Lipors and Cigars of the finest stock and brands be found at the bar. Neville Block, North will. Platte. Humphreys' Dr. IIcmfhrets' Specifics arescientiacally and carefully prepared prescriptions ; used for many Sears In private practice with sncccss,and f orovcr ilrty years used by thopcople. Erery single Spe cific is a special euro for the disease named. These Specifics cure without druKsln?, purg ing or reducing the system, and are in fnct ami deed the sovereign remedies of thcYVorld. LISTOFPMSCIPAl.a0S. CTUES. PRICES. 1 Fevers, Congestion, inflammation... 14 Worms, Worm Ketcr. Worm Colic. . ,V5 3 Cryine Colic,orTeethlngof Infants .4.1 4 ninrrhen, oruninirenor acuiw 5 Dysentery, Griping. Mllous Colic-., .li. I) uuoicra illo lolcru 7 (,'ocgb. Cold, Bronchitis rbns, Vomiting t.J .'.i.i as .as .25 Ncaralsia. Toothache. faceache ! neadacbes, Slcklleadache. Vertigo iu jiyttpcpsia, uiiious siomacn 11 Suppressed or Painful Periods. ivinesi loo rronue serious l.'t Croup, Cough. Difficult Breathing.... 14 Halt IMifiim. ErrslDelas. Eruptions. 15 Hheutuntinui, Ithenmatlc Pains 25 Ki Fever and Acne, Chills. Malaria.... .SO 17 Tiles, mind or llleedlntr SO 1H Cntnrrli, Influenza. Cold In the Ilead .St) iU Whoopin? Cough, Violent Coughs. .SO a t ;-neral Dehility.lhyslcalWcaSnesa .SO 27 Kidney Disease ... .SO 2S Nervous Debility l.tMl 30 ITrinary Weakness, Wetting Bed. .SO 32 Diseases of thcl!cart,PalpltatIonl.OO Sold by Druggists, or sent postpaid on receipt or price, dr. uuMrnitETS" jiaxual, (i p richly bound in cloth and gold, mailed Manual, (144 pages) goia. maiieii iree. umf nnnio iiuiuiwuia wis.. Cor. William and John Streets, New York. SPECIFICS. J. E. SQMEBS, Nurseryman, Florist and Gardener, NORTH (BARTON PLACE,) PLATTE, NEBR. Can furnish all kinds of shade trees, forest trees, lings fruit and and seed- xo Details Needed. Mrs. Blank The paper tells of a post master who was appointed by John Qnincy Adams, and has held the position ever since, was ho an unusually good man, do yon thmk? ilr. 131ank (an experienced citizenl un, not at all, not at alL It was an un usually poor office. New York Weekly A Modem Solomon. A famous Chicago lawver nnco Ti.nl a Bingnlar Case tO Settle. A Ilhvsirin n nnmn mm in great distress. Two Risf iiuSnuuusame nouse. had lmKitx nf equal age, who so resembled each other that their own mothers were tin.iW t distinguish them when they were to gether. Now it happened that by tho carelessness of the nurses the children had become mixed, and how were the mothers to make sure that they received back their own infants? "But. nerhaTw " said the lawyer, "tho children weren't changed at all." "Oh, but there's no doubt they were changed," said the phy sician. "Are you sure of it?' "Per fectly." "Well, if that's tho case why don't you change them back amW T don't see anv difficnltvin tii PICA ,J . W J - WMW WMW Boston Satorday Gazette. : DOCTOR IACKERSJ PURE I PINK PILLS. Thesa Celebrated ENGLISH; Plus are a PoiUIre Cure for Sick: Headache, Billawneius aadS Constipation. Small, plena.; nnt and a Tarorlte with the! ladle. Sold in England for Is." 1KL, In America for 2 5e. Get; them from your Druggists, or: lend to W. II. HOOKXR a CO., for tree claims at lowest prices. Also all kinds ot plants and llowers. Estimates and designs pi ven for laying oiit new grounds. Yards kept by contract. Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment. A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Old Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Edema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples and Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by it after all other treatment had failed. It is put up in 23 and 50 cent boxes. S50 REWARD. By virtno of tho laws of the State of Nebraska, I hereby offer a reward of Fifty Dollars for the captnie anil conviction of any person charged with hi use 8tenJinK in Lincoln county. d. a. bake;:. Sheriff. COXSl'JIITIO.V CURED. An old physician, retired from practice, having had placed in his hands by an tast India missionary thn fnnntn .. simple vegetable remedy for tho speedy and permanent euro nf pnn,,l.t: Bronchitis. Catarrh. A'" -"YW"V, throat and and Lung -AfFffi Tone ntfn r positive and radical euro for at ' Debility and all Nervous after having tested its wondfufTura- ;IT?-J?!,re58 in thusands of cases has felt it his duty to make it, Immn ' x.: suffering fellows. Aot.n.ntAi i. motivo and a desire to rRi: u.. suffering. I will Knr1 f r i " I all who desire it, this recei fo TCema French, or English, with full dirSS ior preparing and using. Sent by mail by addressing with stamp, naming Thia Paper. . w. A. Nov Z, H KiO Powers' Block, Rochester; N, Y