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About The North Platte tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1890-1894 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1891)
f fjr ee li We kifteijs, soiled fyeir syties, And didn't know vhat t o do: " Yill fc'Wise old friend ;Jiii CnlM lrJAUo f i .... V3 5i iffiV So trua. J 13 B Ttflpj flfese Me kilteiR ir nfilfeRS WiilpisSUAPofberlp, I? Quickly &ris)jeci e&cl staty-, Jere as briffi &rd soft as rjev.C Santa Cl a us Soap-Made sslv by MKFa!RBANK&Co. Chicago. A. D. liocKvroRTii, Trest. C. r. Iddisgs, VIce-Prest. J. E, Evans, Cashier, S. Goozee, Asst. Cash North Platte National Bank, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. IP aid up Capital, II W. HAMMOXD, C. F. IDDINGS, A. F. STItEITZ, DIRECTOUS: O. 51. CARTER, M. C. LIXDSAY, H. OTTEK, 875,000. .T. E. EVA'S, SI, OBERST, A. D- BUCK WORTH. All business intrusted to us handled promptly, caref ully, and at lowest rates. t Closing -:- Out -: BOOTS and Sale SHOES I will close out my entire stoch of Boots and Shoes at a ORE AT SACRIFICE. Wishing to quit the business 1 will give bargains on all goods in sioch. Some of the best goods made in this country will be 8LAUG-HTERED . 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 anyone desiring to engage in the Boot and Shoe trade. The reason for selling is that other enterprises engage my attention. Call "for bargains at Otten's Boot & Shoe Store LUMBER II COAL. 9" LUMBEE, SASIi BLINDS, DOORS, Etc. LIME AND CEMENT. Rock Springs Hut, Eock Springs Lunro. Pennsylvania Antliracite, Colorado Anthracite AND Colorado Soft YARD ON R. R. TRACK WEST OF DEPOT, JOS. F. FILLION, Steam and Gas Fitting. Cesspool and Sewerage a Specialty. Copper and Galvanized Iron Cor nice. Tin and Iron Roofings. ESTIMATES ZFTTfcISECEID. Repairing of Kinds will receive Prompt Attention, Locust Street, Between Fifth and Sixth, North. 3?latte9 - "Nebraska. : simple; wncn it is not Mnijue it is 7;.jfl;SVV,'J-.j d. Simple, Beautiful, Good these '---rii- And a good lamp j&l&fo nxrAVAV&S niust be v'i;y(544AWi not coot words mean much, but to see will impress the truth more forcibl tougn and seamless, and made it is absolutely safczcsi wtbreakable, of old, it is indeed a "wonderful lamp," for its mar- 5 velous light is purer and brighter than gas light, SStj softer than electric lisht and more cheerful than either. Lf?.K Ik for this stamp The Rochester. If the lnrm dealer hasn't the genuine Rochcftcr. r.uil the stvle you n-aut. peutl to us for our new illustrated catnlogue, fVajSVand we will .enl jcu n. lamp s-afely express 3"ct;r choice cf over U.000 tAJMTQi varieties from the lhrcsi Ijimp Store in the it'oi !J. J3&ty KOC52ESTJEK SA3Si CO., 42 r.nrlt Tlacr, ?."cv TorX City. m, "The Rochester." I. it" F. J. BKOEKER, Merchant Tailor, LARGE 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. ATT AM. ABOUND DECEIT JE It. The Calolam tight of the Past Tcrned on a Delinquent Brldecroom. CoETLAjn), N. T., Sept. 21. Edward Hamon of Homer, the son of a promi nent church member, was to have mar ried Minnie Johnson of Truxton Friday evening. The lady in question is very attractive, blonde and but 19 years old. Everything was in readiness for the wedding Friday evening, supper, minis ter, guests, etc., but Hamon failed to appear. He was waited for until 10 o'clock, when the company dispersed. The expectant bride was crazed with grief and shame. It has since been learned that Hamon ran away to avoid marrying Miss Johnson, and his previ ous career has been laid bare. He was on one occasion arrested for breach of promise on complairit of a young lady of Albany, but the matter was settled out of court. A lady in Marathon is afterlrim on a aimilar charge, while the father of a Brewery Hill girl wants him for abducting his daughter and keeping her in Binghamton -for three months. He is an all around deceiver. Hamon it about 30 years old and is of a very sanctimonious appearance. His where abouts are unknown. t An Innocent Man Convicted. San Francisco, Sept. 21. Sidney Bell, recently convicted of the murder of Samuel Jacobson, a merchant of this city, who was mysteriously shot on the night of Aug. 16, 18JI0, is probably inno cent. Chas. Schmidt, one of the princi pal witnesses against Bell, has made a confession admitting that all his testi mony at the trial was false. Bell's at torne3s say they have a witness who will swear that the murder was com mitted by a gambler named Max Schwartz, who had been visiting Jacob son's Bister. Jacobson forbade him the house, and finding him on the night of the murder tried to eject him and was shot by Schwartz. Fear or the Penitentiary. Chicago, Sept, 21. The Herald says: Fear of the penitentiary is what in duced Miss Gertrude Potter to discard young Rust and take Mr. Daniels of Ifew York "for better or for worse" in the presence of Dr. Stryker. It may be said'the ceremony was performed mere ly 'for the look of thing" for the pur pose of stopping wagging tongues and reassuring as to there being no scandal but a significant message from New York to the Potters Btating that Ger trude could be punished for bigamy is Enid to have played a most important part in bringinc about the wedding. All Excitement in Oklahoma. Guthrie, Sept. 21. Yesterday had little semblance of Sunday. All day the streets were crowded with prairie Bchooners, carriages, horsemen and foot passengers, all jammed into a shouting, struggling, hurrying mass. At the ne gro settlement of Langston there are i',000 negroes, all armed and on the road. All of these negroes are determined to have a claim or fight. On every side or the reservation the line is one contin uous camp and the number of people in waiting is fully thirteen thousand. Killed His Wife While Drunk. Wilmington, Del., Sept. 21. Howard Cooling, 35 years old, a carriage finisher, while drunk killed his wife Selia, 33 years old. He says she called him a drunken bummer and he struck her with a mustard bottle. There is no evi dence of this blow, but physicians think Cooling choked her to death, as marks found on her throat and blood from the mouth show this. Cooling confessed the deed and gave himself up at the po lice station. They had been married twelve years and had two children. Tockey Stoval Shoots His Man. Philadelphia, Sept. 21. Alexander Robinson, a clerk in the sheriffs office, was Ehot and seriously injured by the well-known colored jockey. Stoval, on the ferryboat from Gloucester to this city. Stoval was on the boat in com pany with two white women when Robinson made some remark which the negro resented. A quarrel ensued dur ing which the shot was fired. The bul let struck Robinson in the left breast. inflicting a dangerous wound. Stoval was arrested. Anti-Wnsner Agitation in France. London, Sept. 21. A dispatch from Pari3 says rumors are current that a Republican ex-minister is supplying money for the anti-Wagner agitation, witn a view to discreQitintr the pro vera ment and compelling the authorities tc confess themselves vanquished by public sentiment in upholding the Germans. The dispatch says that the statesmen in question is either Lockroy, Thibaudin or Godlet, readers being left to guesa wmch ol tue three is the man. tarry Corcoran Dead. ' Key,- York, Sept. 21. ''Larry" Cor coran, the once famous pitcher of tht Chicago base ball club, and for twe ceasone a member of the New York club, died at his home in Newark, N. J., of typhoid fever. He was 30 years old. He leaves a widow and two children. Alleged Pension Extravagance. Washington, Sept. 21. Feeling is growing stronger in the Grand Army of the Republic against the excessive pen sion legislation and the numerous frauds perpetrated under it. There is an un written chapter of history in connection with the last Grand Army reunion at Detroit. That meeting was not charac terized by the demands for more liberal pensions which were made at previous meetings. The explanation is interest ing. Notice was quietly served that if the attempt was made to committ tht Grand Army to any more extravagant pension measures the issue would be raised and a split would occur. Some of the best men in the Grand Army were prepared to leave the organization if it went any further in pension ex travagance and to raise the banner of pension reform. The idea of the pro moters is twofold. They desire to check general pension legislation,, and they also propose to weed out the fraudulent pensioners. It is hoped that this move ment will acquire such headway by the time of the reunion in Washington next year that the Grand Army may be com mitted to the work. A revolution in sentiment among the veterans is pro gressing with considerable rapidity. V is claimed that there are being carried on the rolls thousands of pensioner who are not entitled to be there. ; Cincinnati's Suicide Epidemic. Cincinnati, Sept. 21. At 4:30 a. ra. the dead body of a man about 27 years was found 1 ing on the ground at the corner of Bellevue and Conroy streets. He was dressed in a dark suit and by his side was found a 38-calibre revolver with one chamber empty. He had shot himself. The remains were taken to a morgue. Two letters addressed to Al phonso Keck, the man who committed suicide Saturday, were found in his pocket, but his identity has not been fully established. Wm. Amlung, aged 36, a woolen hoisery manufacturer, 5G8 Main street, committed suicide by shooting himself in the right temple with a revolver in his room. No cause is known. When compelled to travel all night, the Siberian natives always makb a prac tice of stopping just before sunrise and allowing their dogs to go to sleep. They argue that if the dog goes to sleep while it is yet dark and wakes up in an hour and finds the sun shining, he will suppose that he has had a full night's rest, and will travel all day withont thinking of being tired. One or even two hours' stop at any other time is perfectly useless, as the dogs will be uncontrollable from that timo forward until they are per mitted to take what they think a full al lowance of sleep. St. Louis Republic. Consultation Free IF. YOU; SUFFER After reading thisIT'JS-XOUR OWN FAULT. if T in ivieaica LUVVWlVUi illll Surpa SPECIALISTS Electricity is the Germ ot Life. ; .---:--gv v The Celebrated English Electrician and Optician. The only practitioner in America who administers elec tricity, animal magnetism, and massage in one treatment. He guarantees to cure Rheumatism, Ecema, Paralysis, Neuralgia and all nervous diseases, both male and female. The Doctor passes the electricity through himself before reaching the patient, thereby avoiding all shocks, and rendering the treatment such that the weakest and most delicate person will enjoy, thereby imparting the great est possible benefits: OFFICE AND PARLORS: NEBRASKA HOUSE, pen Thursday Next. J. L. GARNER, M. D. Three Diplomas. Pysician and Surgeon. He guarantees to cure all diseases pertaining to the t Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat The Blind to See! The Deaf to Hear! He is here with special and specific remedies. He radi cally cures the following Chronic Diseases: Catarrh, no matter how long standing, Deafness, Inflamed or Granu lated eye lids, Cross Eyes straightened in one minute without pain, Bronchitis, Asthma, Hemorroids or Piles, Fistula permanently cured without the use of the knife or loss of time. Liver, Kidney and all affections of the Urinary Organs. To Ladies Especially. Dr. Garner holds a special diploma for the treatment of Falling Womb, Ulceration, "Whites, Irregular Menses, and all female troubles. 'Barreness removed . Private Diseases. All private diseases, no matter how long standing, quickly and permanently cured. We have made a special study of private diseases for years and promise positively to cure syphilis, gonorrhea and restore lost manhood, and cure all blood and skin diseases. Shrunken organs re stored to their natural size. Teeth extracted free and without pain. Mm A Tho room's in diacrder. The cat'a on the table. The flo wer-etaa d u pset. an d the mischief to pay: Ann jonnny is EcrcsuniDg As loud ns lip's nble. For nothing- goes right when mamma'i away What a scene of discomfort and con fusion home would he if mamma did not return. If your wife 13 slowly breaking down, from a combination of domestic cares nmi icmaie disorders, make it your first business to restore her health. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription i3 without a peer as a remedy for feeble and debilitated women, and Is the only medicine for the class of mala dies known as "female diseases" which is sold, by druggists, under n potilive puaraniee from the manufacturers that it will give satisfaction, in every case, or the money will be refunded. It is a positive cure for the most complicated cases. It's an invigorating, restorative tonic, and a soothing and strengthening nervine, imparting tone and vigor to the whole system. It's a legitimate medi cine, too carefully compounded by an experienced physician, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. Land OiEce at North Platte. Neb., I Augu?t IS. 18D1. ) Notice is hereby piven that the following caraod settler hr.s hied notice of hi.- intention to mnko final proof in snnnort of his claim and thatBaid proof will bo mado before the Kegister nnd Iteceivcrnt North 1'Iatte. Neb., on September 3ith, 1&91, viz: Levi L. liaker who made Homestead tntry fto. 117GI for the southeast qnarter of section 'ii, town 12, rnnce 81, west, lie names tho following witnesses to nrovo hid continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz: John It. Chnpen, Johnim Clemnn, John V . Wood, Francis Jlont.-urue, all of North finite, hcd, 32U Jou;: I. Nesbitt. Uegisior. "WjVL InEYILLE, Attomoy-at-Law, Oi kicc: N ville Block, Sixth Stczi NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. GRIMES & WILCOX, Attorneys-a,t-Law, NORTH PLATTE, Office orer North Platte National Dank. C. M. DUNCAN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Orncx: GUeastoin's Block, np stairs. OIEce hours from 9 to 12 a. m., 2 to 5 nnd 7 to 9 p. m .Residence on West Sixth Street. NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA "Wm. Eves, M. XX, Fhysician and Surgeon. DISEASES of 0ME1T and 0HHDEEU a specialty. McDoxald Block, North Vljltie, Xeb. D ENTISTBY. or A. B. AYRES, D. D. S., Has located at North Platte to stay, lice over Foley's Store. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Gas Administered "W. C. LEjVIOj, Land Attorney and Loan Agt. Sloney constantly on hand to close farm loans nt, lowest rates siven in Western Nebraska. All kinds of business before United States Land OUice attended to. - NEB. NORTH PLATTE, WHY NOT HAVE YOUR L X TST E 1ST DONE UP NICELY? Take it to our agent, Frank Sulli van, at C. Weingand's store. Anything laundried from a hand kerchief to a fine lace curtain. Laundry leaves Tuesday and is returned the following Saturday. GEAM) ISLAND STEAM LATJNDBY. A. P. CARLSON, Merchant Tailor. Full line of piece goods always on hand and made to order. Only first-class workmen employed. Shop on Sprnce Street, over Hans fJertler&Co. R. D. THOMSON, Contractor arid Builder. 127 Sixth St. Cor. of Vine, NORTn PLATTE, NEBRASKA. E. 13. WARNER, Funeral Director. AND EMBALMER. A full Hue of 0rst cl:i3S funeral supplies always in stock. East Sixth street, nfsxt uoor to First Na tion:;! H::ulv, NOTiTII PLATTE, - NEKBRSKA. Telegraph orders promptly attended to. A Strange Case. Sioux City, Sept. 21. Tho post mor tem examination of the body of Charles Barouski, which was conducted in the presence of twelve of the leading phy sicians, reveals a case which they de clare to be witnout parallel in tne nis tory of medicine. Barouski waa a vet eran of the late war, in which he re ceived a rifle ball through the month. which lodged in his head. He died Fri day and the examination was held. The ball was found lodged in the lower or vital part of the brain, or, as the doc tors call it, the posterior horn of the left lateral ventricle. The only trouble the deceased ever experienced was dizzi ness when he stooped over or lay on his leic sme. Texas Ferer In PonnsylranU. Huntingdon, Pa., Sept. 21. The cat tle in this and adjoining counties are ueing attacKea witn a peculiar and thus far unidentified disease, which in nearly uvery instance proves ratal. Tne dis ease first appeared about two weeks ago, and already hundreds of cattle have perished. When attacked the animal's head falls helplessly and its legs seem unabte to bear the weight of the body. It is believed that the disease is a form of Texas fever and was brought hero by southern cattle. There Were Tow Dry Eye. Chicago, Sept. 21. Two thousand persons crowded into the great St Michael's Catholic church to hear the sol emn service over the remains of Gottleib Schalk, his wife and four children, who were suffocated in their home on Sedg wick street. The assemblaee was in dicative of the deep bereavement which the whole commanitv feels, and there were few dry eyes while the ceremony was being celebrated. Starving Peasants Barn and Pillage. Vienna, Sept. 21. Numerous incen diary fires are reported as occurring in Russia. Tha starving peasants set buildings on fire in order to share in the plunder of such places. In the Kief district nine places were burned in two days. JVlany arrests nave been inade. Frankfort's System of Banks. Of all tho schemes designed for small savings and to enconrage the poor to lay by small sums the penny savings stamp system, established in 1882 atFrankfort-on-the-Main, is tho most unique. Frank fort is distinguished among European cities by the large average wealth of its citizens, and by its exceptional promi nence in all that pertains to banking and finance. Many great banking fami lies had their origin in Frankfort, from which branches have been established at Paris, London, Vienna and New York. There are todav not less than 200 bank ing houses, public and private, in the city. It might naturally be expected, then, in view of these facts, that some original features in the line of savings banks should be found there. Tho Frankfort Savings bank is a pri vate corporation established in 1823, nearly seventy 3ears ago, when Frank fort was a free city and independent of all state allegiance and control. It be gan with 294. depositors, with 80,934 marks to their credit. In 1889 there were 56.G97 depositors, with an aggre gate capital of 38,215,097 marks, the re ceipts and withdrawals that year being G,319,27G and 5,151,G02 marks respec tively. There are three departments connected with this institution. The Savings De posit bank, which comprises a central office and two branches in different parts of the city; the Weekly Savings bank, a separate bureau, under the same man agement, but differing from it in that it collects from each depositor a stated weekly deposit, and the Penny Savings institution, which is adapted to the "V!!!?5 the finesritoci Recorder. (atllMIMItltllMMMIItlSMMIiliflllttM BAD BLOOD I: Kusplea on tha Pe BmkiBg Oat J ; Skia TtosMm i S Littla Sena i HetBtta S Boilj! Blottkeaj : Gold Sores Btd Ersathj : Sore Xsota or Lips f : If Tel nfer frta HT f " MMe iibiUmi, take i DOCTOR ACKER'S ! : ENGLISH IBL00D ELIXIR! (WHY? "eflUHMu)00i - Hare yon ereroMd ercoryl If se, did yon; fftro yourself the oeedad attention at the tlmo I ; We ned not tell yon that yon roqnlre a blood medlctae, toenrare freedom from the after ef- Ifects. Br. AekeKaEaKlUhBlMAKUxIrlsthe; S only known medicine that will thoroughly eradl- ; cato tho poison from the sjstem. Get it ; from lyour dromUt. or write to W. II- HOOKER 4t S ; CO.. 4SWeat Broadway, c w 1 ork City. - 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. NORTn PLATTE, NEBRASKA. Bank Counters, Tyler System, Port able, Unequaled in styles, Cost and Finish. ISO Fin CsUUgw mt Cmlm, Dttka ttc, Hlutni4 la Clr. Bwlh Fff FHtlp It OaU. Also Myler'a .Koyai Office Detki and Type writer Cabinet. XO Styles. Best nnd cheap est on earth, with great redaction In prices. ISO p esUteca Tn. PMlan It rta. Fall Uw mf Beit, Oaln. Tables BmIe Caaea, CablaeU, Lefal Bla.k Cablatta, etr., alwij.la ttatk. Boeelal wark aiida ta ararr. TTtS DESK CO., St.IoaIa, Mo.,U.a.A. H. W. FOGEL, 119 119 I I WON! The Tea Houses of Japan. Mousinees, ricksliaw3 and tea houses are the three institutions one associates with Japan. Kiplmg has made the rick shaws hardly more of a phantom than the three-horse car, while Sir Edwin Ar nold and Pierre Loti have pictured the gentle mousniee with such exquisite finish that people ignorant of the mean ing of the word a few months back are in love with her quaint beauty and rav ishing smiles. Tea houses are simply inns or restau rants where tho principal refreshment (olteu the only one) is tea. In tne cities they are the favorite evening resorts, for there yon can hire tho gaudy Geisha girls to dance and sing or play the samo sin and koto between the intervals of love making. She is a mistress of this art. Nara, one of the most beantiful places in Japan, has no other accommoda tiou, and notice must be sent the day bo fore to tell tho owner how many guests he is to accommodate. Rickshaws laden with supplies start a few hours ahead, the coolies who draw them acting as cooks and house servants during your stay. Stowed in these use ful vehicles is all you require food and the utensils for cooking and eating it. The teahouse supplies nothing but chop sticks, fresh eggs and rice. The little teahouse at Naru was like a white parch ment box. with wooden comers, and stood in the shade of a crystomoria grove, in tne neat of the day the parch ment walls disappear mysteriously into tho wooden corners; then the entire houso looks like a platform, with high wooden corner posts, raised a few feet frsm the ground, covered with dazzling white matting. Once a Week. Horse Shoeing a Specialty. Shop on I.ocnst St. North Platte. Neb. Billiard : Hall, J. C. HUPFER, Prop, The Casino is supplied with am ple billiard and. pool tables and is a pleasant orderly resort at all times. , M. lind (Ms be found-U the bar.. Comfort for Corpses. Among the inventions that commend themselves to public notice during the last fifty years are those relating to cof fins, graves and burials. One of these is intended to furnish the tenant of a grave who has been buried prematurely with a means of escape or arousing the neigh borhood. Tins invention is a simple af fair, being merely an open tube provided with a rope ladder and a bell and cord. Should the ocenpant of the coffin awake from the trance he could climb the lad der and make his way back to the world, or pull the bell and alarm the township. For those whose only fear is that they may not oe allowed to rest undisturbed a considerato inventor has provided a "torpedo grave," which, if distnrbed, ex plodes at once and scatters the vandals to the winds. Chicago Times. Milwaukee, Sept. 14. By tho capsiz ing of a row-boat on Lake Michigan Frank Huennar. acred 27 years, and Robert G-uerth, aged 22, were drowned. Norman Reeves, who was one of the party, clung to the boat till rescued by n passing tug Fifty Lives Lost. Rome, Sept. 14. A dispatch from Athens says it is now known that fifty persons lost their lives in the collision between the steamers Taorina and Thessalia off Cape Sunium. : DOCTOR lAMER'Sl i PURE ! PINK i PILLS. These Celebrated ENGLISH; Pills are a Foal tire Core for Blek ; Headaebe, Bllloaaaeaa, and: CoaatlpatloB. Small, pleaa-S aat aad a favorite with, the" ladles. Sold In England for la.5 lHd., In America for 2Se. Got; them from joar Druggists, or: send to W. H. UOOKXK CO;. ' 48 yfnt Braadwar, Sew Tark. 5 inaumta , Neville Block, North Platte. HUMPHREYS' Dr. nuxriiBETs' SrEcincs art icientlflcallr and carefully prepared prescription; nsed for many years In private practice with suecess,and for over thirty years used by tho people. Every single Spe cific Is a special cure for the disease named. These Specifics cure without drugging, purg ing or reducing the system. and aroln fnct and deed the sovereign remedies of the World. LIST CIV PRtSCTPAI. SOS. CWUB. RICM. 1 Fevera, congestion, lnnammatlon... .US ti Worms, WomrFever. Worm Colic. 3 Crylne Colic.orTeethlngoflnfanu 4 lllarrhea, of Children or Adults a 5 DyseHtery, Griping, Bilious Colic... .25 I'bolera Morbus, vomiting ttZ 7 Cough", Cold, Uranchltls U.I H Neuralgia, Toothache, Faceache tt.l 9 Headaches, Sick Headache. Vertigo .! 10 DvsDeDala. Bilious Stomach .!.! 11 Suppressed or Painful Periods. ,'2li Itl Whites, ton Profuse l'eriods 1.1 f.'roao. Couzh. Difficult Breathing 1-t Malt Kheam, Erysipelas. Eruptions. .MS 15 Kheuuiatiara, ltheumatlc Pains '25 Hi Fever and Asa e, Chills, Malaria.... ..IB 17 Piles, Blind or Bleeding .If 19 Catarrh, Influenza, Cold In the Head .5A tiO Whooping Cough, Violent Coughs. .3 tit Krneral llebility.l'hyslcalWcRkness .50 5i7 Kidney JUncane 5ft 1M Nervous Jlebility 30 Urinary Weakness. Wetting Bed- ,5 33 Diseases of thollcart.ralpltatlonl 88 Sold by Druggists, or sent postpaid on receipt of price. Dr. Htjmphbkts' IUnual, (144 pages) richly bound In cloth and gold, mailed free. HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE CO., Ocr. William and John Streets, New York. SPECIFICS. I. E. SOMERS, Nurseryman, Florist and Gardener, (BARTON PLACE, NORTH PLATTE, NEBR. Can furnish all kinds of fruit and shade trees, forest trees, and seed- ngs for tree claims , at lowest prices. Also all kinds ot plants and flowers. Estimates ana designs given for laying out newvgrounds. rarus Kept oy contract. i Chamberlain's Eye and awn Ointment. A certain cure for Chronic Soro Totter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Old Chronic Sores, Fever Sores. Eczema. Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples and files. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by it after all other treatment had failed. It is put up iu 25 and 50 cent boxes. S50 REWARD. By rirtne of tho laws of the Stato of Nebraska, I hereby offer a reward of Fifty Dollars for tha cnptuie and conviction of any person charged vfith horeo stealing in Lincoln county. U.A.BAKEll, Sheriff. For lisme back, side, or chest; use Shiloh'a Porous Plaster. Price 23 cents. COXSnilTIOX CUKED. An old physician, retired from nractice. having hnd placed in his hands by an East India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption. Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma, and air throat and and Lung Affections, also a positivo and radical euro for Nervous: Debility and all Nervous Complaints.. after having tested its wonderful cura tivo powers in thousands of cases, has felt it his duty to make it known to his. suffering fellows. Actuated by this motive and a desiro to relieve human suffering. I will send free of chanre. to .111 Willi lieMlTH 1 1 - Llll FclTH 1 1 1H- 111 11H French, or .hnirlish. with full T " 11 ifir nrpnnnnir .inn usinir. re hv nnilraosinir with fitnmn VlflTW,. W 820 Powers' Bl 4 J . r ' 3 . .,, . : J- i