f be itott. i IRA L. BABE, Editor and Pkopktetok SUBSCRIPTION SATES. yim g ASYAircX, - - $1.00 KK AJI9UIC if to fin jk -idtakcx, - $1.50 rzB Amnnc Vatac4 attb North Platte (Nebraska) poetoMce u second-clam matter. 'WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1894. The house failed to pass the Bland seienioraee bill over the President's veto, the measure receiv ing but thirty more than a majority vote. V am mm The Kussian tbistle will grow unmolested bv government inter ference for at least another vear. tbe boose committee on agriculture MCMiog that Uncle Sam s cash box conld not stand the expenditure. mm "rv mm m If, we say it, Aem would be re- noninated by the pops what a alorioMS time he would have in at tempting to convince .his consti tuents that he has given the country aaything in return for the twenty thooMid dollars he has received. Governor Northern, of Georgia. hm appointed Pat Walsh to fill the ysjCMct arising from the death of Senator Colquitt. He is an editor, stands high in the councils of the democracy and is a free coinage man. Ix nearly every large city in the west tbe elections last week resulted in large republican gains, this being notably so in Milwaukee and Chi cago. "In the latter city the repub licans bad a majority of 20,000, while last fall tnev were in tbe minority by 20,000." The result in Illinois and Wisconsin can but be taken as evidence that they are again republican states. But then this is a rtfttblican year in all states. Tn Chicago Tribune thinks that in November a new house of repre sentatives will be elected to replace the om which passed the Wilson bill. The voters thoroughly ac quainted with that measure and its workings, will substitute for the democratic house, a republican one, which will see to'it that no further step toward free trade is taken dur ing Cleveland's administration. Mat Datjgherty was in town tbe latter part of the week and announced that he was in the race for tbe republican nomination for congressman in this district. This has been surmised for some time, but it Was only a week or so ago that be publicly declared himself. As an earnest working republican, loyal to the principles of his party, and a rustler for votes, Matthew bas been a success, and if the con vention nominates him he will make a very vigorous campaign, so vigor ons in fact that a majority of the ballots cast will be in his favor. c-BxpAESEKXAiivE S header, be of. '"Constitution be d d fame, drifted down from the sandhills on Monday and took Tuesday's train for tbe east. It is supposed he has gone to join Coxey and his friend Carl Brown. The seclusion into which Mr. Shrader was forced by the result of the last state election, is felling upon him, and unless he can get a nomination for some office this fall, there will be a lone grave among the sand dunes of Logan county before the fleas nest again to mark the last resting place of a man who could have saved the country had he been given a chance. Callaway Courier. Thi pop fight in the Sixth con gressional district promises to be as dangerous as a gasoline stove. Green, Kem aad Neville are all searchers for Kent's foul mantle. Just at the present time Green is slightly in tbe lend with Kem wondering what kind of an excuse he can weave for a third term. Neville is fighting Green because he does not like him snd' tnn latter doesn't appear to care whether he likes him or not. Hem bat tbe pull and the shekels, how aver.' and may overawe the poor noes with his display of legal tender. Tbe piek of the coop would be bad omnra. but good Lord deliver ns from Kem. Kearney Call. Amor Boot of Douglas county, who for a number of years has been posing as a red hot reformer, is being neatly and widely skinned at tbe nresent time. He has been one of tbe popiest of the pops and has stood high in his party's councils, running for congress in the First district in 1890. But he will quit masquerading now. He is discovered to be a money loaner and a mort gage fiend. He furnished tne testi mony when he went on the witness stand a few days ago at Omaha in a certain case in which he was in volved. He further admitted that be was only supporting the farmers' cause for the money there is in it to itoot for the root of all evil as it were. Thus one by one the roses fall. Fremont Tribune, TTT TV when uongressman Jiem was deputy under ex-Treasurer Weimer, and took $1,100 of county funds to buy him a home in Broken Bow, he knew he was violating the state laws and laying Mr. Weimer open to crimiaal prosecution, but what did be care. He was one of the ducks who howled about "loaning jnoaey direct to the people," and be put his theory into practice as aoon as hegot a chance to get his hands into the county treasury. He was not even satisfied with the $1,100, but later when he made his race for congress be dipped into the county treasury for bis campaign funds, that he might travel over the district preaching purity and reform and honesty in public officials. Now be is in Washington drawing a fat nniary, and the idol of his party jrhUe"Mr. Weimer is financially wreaked and threatened with -criminal presecution. This is reform. Chronicle. Fbox personal acquaintance with Mr. Evans, we can commend his candidacy most heartily. His re publicanism is of the.kind that will bear the closest scrutiny and his qualifications are excellent. His term as assistant adjutant general of the G. A. R., enlarged his wide ac quaintance throughout the state, and his nomination will make any ticket stronger, while his election would give to the state a capable ana efficient officer. Cozad Tribune. The Dawes commission which bas been trying to induce the civil- izea Indians to dissolve their tribal relations and consent to an allot ment of their lands in severalty re- ports tne failure of the undertaking uu recuuimenas aroicrary legisla tion by congress to effect the desired object. It is likely that such action will be taken. The Indians have been offered iust and fair ternis. and in choosing to reject them they m m m m. make themselves responsible for the consequence. Mr. Bryan's proposed constitu tional amendment for the election of United States senators by a di rect vote of the people is a very proper one, and will receive the cordial approval of a majority of tbe voters of both parties. But it will never receive the approval of the senate. The members of that body are not disposed to run any risk of defeat at a popular election when they are sure of their ability to buy their seats from the legisla tures. St. Paul Globe. People who own worthless bonds in Kansas have been hurrying them into Topeka at a great rate for sale to the innocent populist state officers, who are seeking sound in vestments for the permanent school fund. A batch of Hamilton county bonds amounting to $10,000 that have been repudiated and are sup posed to be worthless were sold last week at par. It is believed that other blocks of bad bonds have also been accepted by the incompetents that have temporarily found lodg ment m the state house. lis. The absence of Bryan, Mc Keighan and Kem from the house when Colonel Bland made his last desperate charge on the money power and was rolled in the dust of Mr. Crisp's bull pen seems to be the subject of much unfavorable com ment in fiat circles. Their records begin to look a good-deal like the war record of Colonel Van Wyck, who was always at the head of his regiment in winter quarters, but turned up absent, the Lord knows where, in every roll call previous to a fight with the enemy. State Journal. The undiminishing demand for farm lands is one of the favorable features of the year in Nebraska. It is a noticeable fact that the de mand is for improved lands and that the purchasers are the better class of farmers who have made farming a success in older states. The greatest drawback to Nebraska's prosperity in the past has besn the poor results obtained from the labors of men who have lacked the necessary experience in conducting farm work successfully. The time has gone bv when crude methods of agriculture can be made profitable Successful farming is as much of a business as successful banking. Bee. The university of Pennsylvania has adopted a novel plan for secur ing experience for its law- students. The free medical dispensary fur nished the idea. Poor people who are in trouble and need legal advice call at the school and ask for assist ance. Their cases are taken up in the weekly meetings of the law club and both sides are argued exhaust ively. Then the applicant receives advice about now to proceed to get justice, and gets the best the boys have to offer without money and without price. This "free law dis pensary" is so popular among the poor people that it furnishes all the m -m i i cases needed to give tne students a practice that is as wide and varied as it is financially unprofitable. The eight-hour day has been found a great success by William Mather, member of parliament and senior proprietor of the Salford iron works in England. He has re cently made a report on his experi ment, and claims that his 1,200 employes have done more work under the shorter time than they did when the work day was longer. The output of the mill has, in other words, been increased without any increase of expense. He urges the government to adopt the shorter day in its arsenals, dock yards, and other public works. It would appear from the results of this experiment, however, that the adoption of this plan would not result in increasing the area of employment, as its advo- cates so generally claim. spring field Republican. The following are the main points m Iowa s new liquor law: Every saloon keeper must give a bond to the amount of three thousand dol lars and pay for license a tax of 600 a year, wnicn latter amount, How ever, may be increased at the option of the town where the saloon is established. Such license, how ever, shall not be issued without the consent of every property holder within fifty feet of bis building,and liquor cannot be sold within 300 feet of any church or school house. No screens must be allowed before the windows, no seats provided in the place where the liquor is sold, neither billiards or any game of that kind. A strange feature of the law is that the old prohibition law m m m is not repealed, and any saloon keeper can be arrested and fined under the old law, whether he pays his license or not, One half of the license fee goes to the town and the other half to the county. Another requirement of the law is that no license can be' issued if no petition is presented signed by .sjxty-fiye per cent of the legal voters' of the .pre;-. cinct where the saloon is to be established. Popmlkts aid Weel Daties. It will not be easy for any popu list, senator or representative to explain to his wool-growing con stituents why he voted in support or tne Wilson bill. The United States ranks third among the wool-producing countries or tne world, and the increase or decrease of its products has been in proportion to the increase or de crease of protection. The increased wool duties of the McKinley law were followed by an increase of 31,- 000,000 pounds of United States wool in the year 1892-93, bringing tbe product of that year up to the great sum of 364,000,000 pounds for the year ending June 30, -1893, The number of sheep owned in the United States in 1893 is given in the statistical abstract prepared under direction of Mr. Cleveland's secretary of the treasury at 47,273,- dod, which is an increase of more than 2,500,000 over the number owned in 1892. So much for the increase of wool and sheep, as com puted by democratic authority. under the operation of the Mc Kinley law. The mere probability of the passage of the Wilson bill, with its repeal of the wool duties, has lessened the number of sheep reared in the United States from 47,273, 353 in 1893, to 45.048,017 in 1894. The decrease in the first six months of the probability of free wool has been 2,225,000; the increase in one year of the increased protection of the McKinley law was about 2,500, 000. And these are democratic estimates. The monev loss to the farmers is about $37,000,000, the value of flocks being $124,906,264 in 1893, and $89,186,110 in 1894. These are democratic 3stimates. With these facts in view, how mm can populist congressmen explain to populist farmers their votes in favor of the Wilson bill s free-wool clause? Inter Ocean. The decision of Judge Caldwell in the Union Pacific wage case can certainly be counted a great and complete victory for organized labor and a triumph for the cause of peaceful adjustment of labor diffi culties. The reasons for the court refusing to accept tbe schedule of wages prepared by the receivers are as follows: First, because the re ceivers are no better fitted to judge what are just and reasonable than is the court. Second, because the receivers adapted a wrong method in procuring the original order for their schedule. In adopting such schedule without notice to or hear ing of the men or their representa tives they violated the agreement existing between the company and the men, by the terms of which no change was to be made without notice to the men and granting them a hearing. This action, in the eves of the court, was better calcu lated to provoke a strike than to allav the difficulties. Finally, be cause all the testimony went to show that the men were earning all they were receiving. It would be in on strous injustice to scale down their wages for the purpose of creating dividends for stock for which only two cents on tbe dollar was origin ally paid, or interest foe bonds by means of which the construction company made profits of nearly $45,000,000. As employes of the court the men are to receive no worse treatment than was accorded tbem as employes or tne company previous to the receivership, and therefore tbe old wago schedule is to continue in force with only minor modifications. ..Eferj aVsVBBsnT liiiiiiiiiiiHiiik.iiliflBliiiiiiiiiiiiifllC BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBnl -m BBBBBBBr?ilBBBBBBBBBBflLfl BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBkn eLsnV BBPVBBLIiiW U aaSFwOsBBBBBBBBBBBk BBBBBBBBbV BBrQsBBlBBBBBBBBBrll With a manifest misinterpreta tion of public sentiment presented through the Wilson bill; with cur rent history verifying to an unfor tunate degree all predictions made bv the .most ardent protectionist with reference to the destructive evils to follow the abandonment of the protective policy; with closed factories and open" soup houses; with disorganized business and organized charity; with breadless homes in the midst of the world's greatest granary; with the increase of the flocks of Australia and of South America simultaneously; with the disappearance of tbe flocks from our own pastures; with New England idle and Old England i active; witn assignees and receivers prominent business factors through out the land; with organized labor seeking, not higher wages, but any wages; with decreased exports and increased imports; with cheap things and no chance to earn a dollar to buy them; with idle miners and flooded mines; with increasing farm products thrown into decreasing markets; with our foreign policy reversed, to the humiliation of the nation, and with confidence and hope supplanted by doubt and un certaintv who can question that the contrast of worse with better days will result in the overwhelm ing triumph in 1896 of the party of progress, patriotism and prosperity? Chairman Carter in North Ameri can Review. The introduction of chicory as one of the crops of Nebraska farm ers is evidence of the constant ten dency toward a diversification of agriculture. The prosperity of the farmer is to be promoted bv devot ing a part of the acreage to products that will find a remunerative market for consumption right at home. tiee. Burning Pain Erysipelas In Faos and Eyns Inflammation Subdued and Tor tures Ended by Hood's. "I am so glad to be relieTtd of lay tutHy,(t that I am willing; to tell the benalt I hare de rived from Hood's Sarsaparilla. In April tad May, I was afflicted with erysipelas la ray face and eyes, which spread to my throat and neck. I tried divers ointments and alteratlres. bat there was no permanent abatement ox the burn ing, torturing pnin, peculiar to this complaint x oegan to uuce iiooas aarsapanua ana Felt Marked Relief before I baa fiuisnca tne nrst Dottle. I een tinued to Improve until, when I had take torn HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES bottles, I was completely cured, and felt that all signs, marks and symptoms of that dire com plaint had forever vanished." Mat. X. .. Ottawa, Hillsboro, Wisconsin. Hood's Pills are prompt and efficient, yet easy in action. Sold by all druggists. 29c. NOW -ft: That tbe various causes which are regarded jts obstacles fo lively times to all ia tbe future have not yet all been removed, now that the many hands that have been idle for the past months and have not yet been re warded by labor of any kind, which many energetic ones would be glad to obtain, is it not time for you who have been in repose to wake up and get out among the people and see where you can do the best with what little you have left. Our aim is to reach the people in the most effective way, and at as little expense as possible so that we may be able to give you the bene fit. If you are seeking practical, pop ular goods a low prices, why not come to us. We have just opened a fine line of LADIES' SHIRT WAISTS, CAPES, JACKETS, Ready-made Calico Wrappers MUSLIN UNDERWEAR, and SHOES, in all styles and widths, from the cheapest and most durable up to the finest. Give us a call. The Fair; fa Offer to to Ml; We Will Sell Sweet, Orr & Co', 07EEALLS AT 75 CENTS, COATS AT 85 CENTS. Best in the world. Never known tdisellf for less than One Dollar each. TTT t 1 i . v v orKmen ana teams arc out in full force on tbe Bratt ditch, and bv next week the North river coun try will realize what has long since been predicted the greatest boom of any section in western Nebraska. Tbe management bas been steadily : ; ii. i . r increasing ine worxing rorce, wnicn now numbers about twenty-five men and teams, and when tbe contract for excavation is definitely settled upon, the North Platte valley will go on record as the greatest irriga tion district in the western states. Its chief promoter and overseer. John Bratt, informs tbe Gazette that the freeholders have loyally come to the front in granting right or way, wnicn is sureiy evidence or tbe high esteem and respect enter tained for this gentleman along the line of this gigantic undertaking, and the only obstruction now exist ing is tbe soil between tbe starting point and its mouth which, as stated above, is being removed as fast possible. Big Springs Gazette. WELL! - WELL! Here we are again ready, willing, and waiting with a big stock of 9 The Star Clothing House WEBER & V0LLMER, Props. , - . at. No. 3496. Authorized Capital, $200,000 Paid in Capital, $50,000. as The more- Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is used the better it is liked. We kuow of no other remedy that always gives satisfaction. It is good i ti a wnen you nrst caicn coin, ox is good when your cough is seated and your lungs are sore. It is good in anv kind of a cough. We have sold twenty-five dozen of it and every bottle has given satisfaction. JIEST NATIONAL BANK, PLUMBING MATERIAL ISToftli Platte, - NTeb. on our hands spoiling to be worked up at Prices to Suit the Stringency ot the Times. All material and workmanship guaranteed to be FIKST-CLASS. Gasoline Stoves and Bicycles Repaired. Difficult Repairing of all kinds a Specialty. A GENERAL BANKING BUSI NESS TRANSACTED. ? ; A- Sells Bills of Exchange on all Foreign Countries. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. Don't Forget the Number. Louis Morris, wbo- was drowned Stedman & Friedman, druggists, U few days ago at Majville, Pa., had Minnesota Lake, Minn. oU celt. bottles for sale by A. F. Strejtz an4 North Platte Pharmacy. Heary Watterson Ia Sab raaelace. San Feancboo, April "11. Henry 'land self-reliant. Watterson. arrived ben to visit the Mid winter fair. bis life insured for $205,000 the largest , amosnt of insurance ever carried by a man of his means. Morns possessed, great physicial strength aid gixe and was active Railroad oh th Block. Norfolk, Va., April 3. The Atlantic and Danville railroad will be sold today by order of the united States court. Four Perished la thm Flamet. Ixdiaxapolis, April 8. A big irt is reported raging at Hebart. Four per sons nave been burned to death. Rook Xslaad Bettorei the Bat on Kgn. Kansas City, April 8. Tbe Rock IaW and has restored the through eastern rates on eggs. Omahoes Doing San Francisco. San Francisco, April The party of 23 Omaha city officials have arrived from Portland, and are doing the town. Demise of Mrs. Doroth Pyle. Nebraska City, April 8. Mrs. Dor- otha Pyle, one of the oldest settlers of the county, died at her home in this city) aged 74. The deceased came to this city i in 1858. When Stanley was exploring in Africa he found an obelisk with these letters engraved: B. S. C. C. S. No one was able to decipher them, but since, eminent professors have actertained that it means Haller'sSnre Cure Cough Syrup. For sale by F. H. Longley. To the invitation from the Birm ingham camp of Confederate vet erans to attend that order's big re union this month Mrs. Grant replied: "San Diego, Cal., March 21. I feel greatly complimented .bv renewal of invitation to attend reunion. Being so tar awav i win beg vou to convey my compliments and sincere regrets. Julia D. Grant." Sam Jones defines a negro as ua m m colored man ana a nigger as "a black rascal that steals chickens and votes the democratic ticket.1 WHEN HANNIBAL, Tbe great elephant, got a sore foot they asea nailers unto wire liiatment and cured it up in four days. For sale by F. H. Longley. A, F. STREITZ, 'lay. Drugs. Faints, Oils, Death of Cmptaia Davisoa. New London, Conn., April 10. Cap tain Thomas Davison, the -.last survivor of the battle of Stonington, when the British fleet bombarded that town in 1814, died at his home here, aged 9;i years. Bomb Explosion la Sfaaeer. Madrid, April 10. A dispatch from Mancor, on the island of Majorca, states that great excitement has been caused there by the explosion of a bomb in the house of the municipal secretary; All the Bodies Becovered. Milwaukee, April 10. The body of Assistant Chief J ansa en who lost bis life with eight of his companions in the Davidson theatre fire was found in the ruins today. i t Serin? Sea BUI Bead Ia the Irfwds. London, April 10. In the house of lords the Bering sea bill was read for the first time. The second reading of the same measure will take place on Thurs- dayinext. AccldentaUy Exploded. Providence, April 10. A dynamite cartridge was accidentally exploded in the Crawford street bridge, tearing up the Street. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until tbo last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many vears doctors pronounced if a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and there fore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on tbe market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo, O. tSfSold i y Druggists. 75c, "The Hon. Silicia S. Coxey' says 1 1 -T 1 CI I 1 ... rue mew ionc oun pleasantly, "is a compound crank of 82,000 ass power dragging an advertising cart, and the Hon. uarl Jorowne s head shell without partitions." is a LETTER FROM JACK FROST. "If you don't stop curing chaps and frosted hands with your old Australian Salve I'll make it hot, or rather cold, for you when I come down." For sale by F. tl. iiongley. PRINTERS' SUPPLIES, Window Glass, Machine ils Diamanta Spectacles. : ?- m Wanamaker is insured for $1,700, U0O, and so leads all Amencans this line. He pays $90,000 a year to carry this. Depew carries more insurance than anybody in New York. His policies aggregate $500,-000. CORNER OF SIXTH AND SPRUCE STREETS. The rather surprising result of the election in Kansas City, where the republican nominee for mayor received 7,000 votes more than his nearest opponent and a clear ma jority of 2,259 over all, has led the democratic Star "to the conclusion that Kansas City has come to be a reliably republican city when issues are drawn on national lines. My wife was confined to her bed for over two montns with a very severe attack of rheumatism. We could get nothing that would afford her any relief, and as a last resort Al t T- T- l gave .unamrjenain s ram caim a trial. To our great surprise she Korron tn l'mnrnue aftv flip firsfc William Johnson of Boston, whohaf i:.; u taken weather observations at 5 a. m.l ?FFl "1T" ui "1 A j up mm Parks' Sure Cure is a positive specific for women who are all "run down" and at certain times are troubled by back. aches, headaches, etc. Sold by North Platte Pharmacy. How lour ml If the average business man would work as unselfishly for the interest of his town as the average editor does, the boom that would follow Do they ache, burn, itch, water or tire upon continued use? If they do would be unparalleled in the history they are defective and should be carefully fitted with glasses. Are you of the country. North Bend Re- l t-j.i' n' mi. i- j t , ... - ... ouujcuk lu lUluuiVy ucuuaoilM. J. uc niUU bllilb UCglUS 1U LUC reglUU UHCiL publican. W. I. Church, of Staunton Post, i3. A. R. says 'I have tried nearly every congh rem but have found nothing to compare with Parks' Cough Syrup. There is othing on earth like it for bronchitis. I have suffered ever since my discharge from the army and Parks' Cough Syrup is the only remedy that has ever helped mt. Sold by North Platte Pharmacy. of and around the eyesj making the eyes feel bpavy and dull? If so, the eyes are at fault, and a pair of glasses are needed. DON'T NEGLECT YOUR EYES, Marquis of Allesbury Death JLondon, April 10. The Marquis of Auesbury is dead, V. every day for yean, report that the glass averaged at that hour ill decrees all last month, and that it waa the warm est March within the 40 years he has beem keeping a reoord. lv she was soon able to get attend to her house work. E. H. Johnson, of C. J. Knutson & Co., Kensington, Minn. 50 cent bot tles for sale bv A. Jf. btreitz and North Platte Pharmacy. Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair. PRICE'S ns fipafllBaking USJPowder: Thojaly Pore Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum. TJsd in ifollions of Homes 40 Years tlie Standard. Little Rhode Island that kicked out of the traces last year and the vear previous and muewumped, has repented and brought forth the indelible proof of repentance by electing a straight republican roster of state officials and a republican legislature. They elected forty democrats to the house at tne last general election, and now they per- ! mit only four of the unterpfiert tp have seats in that body. Just enough to swear by and preserve tbe remnants of the organization as . 1 l it ' . lan awful example 10 ine rising generation. Is it more ungodly, asks the Grand Island Independent, to take your family out for a bicvele ride on the holy babbath than to pile a dozen youngsters into the familv buckboard and worry the Door ol5 horse to death to draw them about? When vou can call and consult PROP, ophthalmologist. Remember the dates, HIIiSGHBERG, the eminent APRIL 11th, 12th and 13th, At the store of A. F. Streitz, who is sole agent for North Platte. GIVE THE BOYS A chance to be strong and healthy, feed them with good plain food and keep their blood in good order with Haller's Sarsaparilla and Burdock and who knows but they will be president or aldermen. For sale by F. a. Longley. Two prisoners escaped from the jail at Sidney Tuesday night, by cutting a hole in the roof. They were witn tne above result, une was the man who was accused of kid napping, the claim being made that he arrested a man in Nebraska and took him to Wyoming for trial without the proper credentials. He was tbe deputy sheriff from Chey enne, Wyo., and was put in the jail at Sidney for safe keeping. No clue to their whereabouts. JOS. F. FILLION, Steam and Gas Fitting. allowed unwarranted liberty Cesspool and Sewerage a Specialty. Copper and Galvanized Iron Ccirri nice, nn ana iron roonngs. Estimates furnished. Repairing of all kinds receiye prompt attention Locust Street, Between Fifth and Sixth,- North. Flatte, Nebraska. 3- Mrs. N. Meyette, tbe Genesee county treasurer of the W. U. T. U. ana a very influential worker in the cause of women pays; 'il have used Parks' Tea and find it is the best remedy I have eyer tried for constipation. It requires smaller doses and is more thorough. I shall use nothing else in future." Sold by .North Platte Pharmacy. FINEST SAMPLE K00M IN NORTH PLATTE- Having refitted our rooms in the finest of style, the pnblic is invited to call and see us, insuring courteous treatment. Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars at the Bar.: Our billiard hall is supplied with the best make of tables and competent attendants will supply all your KEITH'S wanis. BLOCK, OPPOSITE THE UNION PACIFIC DEPO