THE NORTH PLATTE SEMI-WEEKLY. TRIBOTE: FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 6, 1895. t5 A. F. STREITZ, Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, PAINTERS' WINDOW GLASS, ZDIa,2nn.a,rLta, D exits oh. e Corner of Spruce and Sixth-sts. V. VonCCEf Z, The North GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, COUNTRY PRODUCE. FLOUR and FEED. I lnv i-fnnrlc: Prices are : T lllOUlC JU a Share NORTH LOCUST STREET, WALL-PAPER, PAINT V H W&7 Cal1 there for ali Muds of I wir l Seasonab,e Hardware. J Cash Tells. "I" 1 'I'll ii - iM I l r f msM n i i vtu p. s-ji . - - , , WINDOW GLSS, VARNISHES, GOLD LEAF, GOLD PA13NTS, BRONZES, ARTISTS' COLORS AND BRUSHES, PIANO AND FURNITURE POLISHES, PREPARED HOUSE AND BUGGY PAINTS, KALSOMINE MATERIAL, WINDOW SHADES. ESTABLISHED JULY 1868 310 SPRUCE.STREET. F J- BROEKER, Ah MERCHANT TAILOR. NOETH : PLATTE : PHARMACY, Dr. N. McOABE, Prop., J. E. BUSH, Manager. IPBTH PLATTE, - - nSTEBASSZA "We aim to handle tlie Best Grades of, . G-oods, sell tliem at Reasonable1 1 -Figures, and "Warrant E!vervtliinr ' us Jtiepresented.. Orders from the country and along the line of the Union Pacific railway respectfully solicited. . JOS Steam and Cesspool and Sewerage a Specialty. nice, xin ana iron itoonngs. Estimates furnished. Repairing of all kinds receive prompt attention Locust Street, Between Fifth and Sixth, ISTorth IPlatte, -FINEST. SAMPLE EOOM Having refitted our rooms in - - -rj i ii j ? is mvireu to uun aim see us, FintMtt Wines. Liauors , uur oimara naius auppuea -arid competent attendants .BLOCK, OPPOSITE SUPPLIES, -: MACHINE OILS, Spectaoles- 3? Side Grocer. film orn t-riin.rnrirp.An h vp.sh. nnv as Low as the Lowest. We ttl.i: . W Ci;u XUJJjyU V CI J 11 C kJUJUUJLL of Your Trade. NORTH PLATTE, NEB. AND OIL DEPOT. A Fine Line of Piece Goods to select from. First-class Fit. . Excel lent "Workmanship. A.pptliek:e F. FILLION, Gas Fitting. Copper and Galvanized. Iron Cor TSTebraska. IN NORTH PLATTE the finest of style, the public i insuring courteous Treatment. and Cigars at the . Bar. , . . - wicu me oesc mane otxaoies- "tt wilUsupply all your -wants! - x'SU UION PACIFIC pEP0Tl$2.an acfe reclaimed. IRA. It. BARE, Editor and Pkopkietor SUBSCRIPTION BATES. One Year, cash in advance, .....$1.25. Six Months, cash In advance 75 Cents. Entered attheNorihIlatte(Nebra8ka)poeiofflceas second-class matter. Judge Maxwell, though a parti san nominee, is announced as a non partisan candidate. "Viewed in this light we presume Holcomb is a non-1 partisan governor. Down in the south part of the county there is considerable feeling nrrnncf ronnminti AfMpccrc Buchanan, Burritt and Miller, but the malcontents will probably be whipped into line by the fellows who handle the lash. Uncle Sam may not want to annex Hawaii to the United States, but should the royalists undertake to turn the island over to Fusrland they would heara noise that would echo around the world, and Cleve land could not stop it. The United States people would speak. The order preventing the Na tional Guard from participating in the sham battle at Hastings last week is' said to have emanated from Maj. Fechet, who is not supposed ,1?Lalth!yo-e-th-lt,at? militia. The general opinion is that Maj. Fechet is entirely too "fresh". The district court at Fremont decided on Saturday last that the board of supervisors must divide . . ... . cue county into seven supervisor districts, in accordance with the! Burns law. The pop members of j Dodsre county "decided" the law unconstitutional," and refused to! o"bey it. Some of the free-silver democrats of this city are making a move to calling a meeting and nominating a full county ticket. Whether this is a smooth scheme to dragoon sound money democrts into a convention that will endorse the populist ticket the same as was done in the state campaign last fall has not yet de- yeloped. If this is the program it ia uuimia tu uuuguuuus llla.t tile yellow boys baulk. When the drunken crowd of Kentucky democrats refused to let Col. Bradlej', the republican candi date for governor of Kentucky, speak at Eminence, on Friday last, they called loudly for Col. Hardin, the democratic candidate, who got up and refused to speak after the treatment Col. Bradley had received, and said he hoped he would never be called upon to witness such dis graceful scenes again. o o "Wong Mow was arrested in Spokane, Was., recently, and as he produced, no certificate, was .ordered to be deported to China. After the vessel on which he was hadsailedit was discovered that Wog Mow had the certificate all right, but that he failed to produce it for he wanted to return to China, and at the expense of the United States that this wily Chinaman had act ually conspired to have himself ar rested on the charge for which he. was deported The democratic squabbles in Kentucky. Maryland and New York- will show, when the election returns next November are all in, that the republican tide in those states has not fallen since last year. The moral effects of these elections will be felt throughout the canvass of 1896, and seriously impede the democracy. With Kentucky, Mary land and New York in the column with the normally republican states, all the electoral vote that will be lefr to the democratic candidate will not be worth counting-. Although things are in better condition than they were twelve! months ago, they are far from being in as good condition as they were i three years ago. No candid and intelligent person will claim that the times are as good under Cleve land and the Wilson tariff as they were. under Harrison and the Mc- Kinley tariff. Even that dyed-in- the-wool democrat Governor Alt- that the democratic party, under the lead of Cleveland, had proved itself the enemy, instead of the iriend, of thcworkinirman. Inter Ocean. Reports received by the state board of irrigation show that there are m .Nebraska 372 irrigation canals either constructed or under construction, in the state at the present time, with a total length of are completed. These canals, when ri'''f - ,915'3 l ui wuivu (iiuuuui hi,(x,ouo nas ill- readv been exoended. The num. " . jber of acres under ditch will be i - 860'180- whlcU 43'i5l were in crops unaerjrngauon in loy-t, ana i2 ononrpinrrnn thUvr Thoc Lotion canals cost, a r It is given out that ex-Postmast er General Bissell has been tendered a seat on the supreme bench of the nation and that he has refused it. This sounds a little fishy. Who ever heard of a democrat refusing- a i position of that kind especially a lawyor, who wouldn't be willing to sit as a member of the greatest tribunal on earth with a, life pen sion.'' The Bissell loke needs a diagram. Fremont Tribune. The advent of cholera in the Sandwich Islands and the possi bility of its reaching San Francisco. present a new danger to be guarded acrainst bv this trovernment. It is katdly probable that there will be " - ,f....i. r xt. anv serious tnreat irom tnis dreaded disease this year, but should it gain' :a foothold in the -Sandwich Islands the mild climate there would allow it to continue and the mild winters in California would not be a bar to its our Pacific coast between now and sprinsr, ready to travel across the continent next year. This is said to be the first time the cholera has ever reached thfe Sandwich Islands, or that we have been in from it cominir from the Orient across the Pacific to our western border. It lias always come from the other direction. A prominent railroad official is J quoted as saying that the freight car equipment of the western roads will be totally inadequate for mov ing the immense corn crop this 3Tear. Such an announcement is not surprising. A freight car fa mine is no new experience for west ern shippers-. Kansas farmers have more than once had to wait impa tiently till the roads could handle their grain. In fact,- a full crop in this part of the country is such an enormous thing that an; ordinary provision tor transportation is in sufficient. And possibly it is just as well that cars are not too plenty ful. The crops are forced into mar ket too fast as it is for the rood of the producer. The over abundant supply exceeds the temporary de mand and demoralization of prices unavoidably results. A car famine although unsatisfactory both to the shi and the railroad s, may not improbably be a blessinc: in dis guise. Kansas Citv Journal. PUT TJP GOOD MEH. Willarp, Sept. 1st, 1395. Ed. Tribune: Politically there is no other question which should have the attention of the republi cans of Lincoln county more than that of selecting good" men to fill our county ofifces. The party's call should be for men of ability and courtesy. Upon our selection large ly depends the success ot the party. Among my acquaintances over the eastern part of the county there are several independent voters who are going to vote the' republican ticket this year and-1 think there are men in ali other parts of the county who would again like the chance of vot ing for men of ability and men whc will be ready to do the official busi ness of the county in a courteous manner. I have yet to hear of one republi can turning his back to his party and going to the independent ranks. . rour years ago tne country .was full of the "keep in the middle of the road" fellows, always ready to talk politics from United States foreign policy through finances down t0 precinct aifairs. To understand-these things is! all ng-ht, of course. But when these questions were discussed by office seekers who based their policies and politics on the calamity which had befallen our common state, free and independent thinkers of the inde pendent party besran to see where they were being led and they will to-day be glad to vote for clean, able and courteous men. Many of our citizens have left the middle of the road and taken to the cultivated fields and irrigated lands. While this years crop is not in all sections abundant voters see that -a party built up and advanced on the mere misfortune of the country is the worst of political slush. September 14th between the hours ot 4 p. m. and 7 p. m. at the usual voting places is the time and place announced by the republican county central committee to hold, our pre cinct caucusses. At that time public sentiment will be and should sei to meetinan,ventioii at ITorth be iriven to the delegates who are Platte, aept.1, at 10 a. m. Among the republicans there is at present irreat enthusiasm. The opportunity to carry the republican party to victory is ours. Shall we accept it? One word more. To give strength let us distribute the offices we are about to confer to men in different parts of the county to tnus build uo our cause on a- basis of fairness. W. A. Gregg. Homeseokers Excursions. Ou August 29th, September 10th and . 24th, 1895. the Union Pacific system will sell tickets from Mis souri river points and stations in Kansas and Nebraska, to all points in laano, at rate ot one class stand ard fare for the round trip. See your nearest Union Pacific ticket agent. E. Ia. Lomax. Gen'l Pass,. aha Ticket Agent, Omaha, 2Teb. I l.FRAKI IDENTIFIED Insurance Swindler Recognized by a Score of People, MAY BE TELED IN OGTOBEB. All Doubts as to the Identity of the Mas ' Now Under Arrest For Defrauding Ufa lasarsBce Companies Cleared Away. Richmond, Mo., Sept. 5. Dr. Fraker, who is in jail here on the charge of at tempting to defraud insurance com panies, was recognized today by a score f P$t" T. J3IKer CJUHUB wsvoiui uj ' conversing with them. The information leading to the arrest and incarceration of Dr. Fraker has been filed before Justice McCurstonin this city. There are five counts in the information, the aggregate penalty being 85 years in the penitentiary. It is believed that the defense will waive examination and allow the doctor to be bond over to await the action of the grand jury which meeta in October. In case the doctor is released on bail, the amount of his bond it is said, will be heavy, at least $20,000. If an indictment should be found, the trial may come off at the October term of the Ray county circuit court. Kansas City, Sept. 5. A special to The Star from Liberty, Mo., says: As tounding developments, it is rumored here, may be developed in tho Dr. Fra ker insurance case before another 24 hours elapse. An official of one of the defrauded insurance companies, who is here working on the case, it is said, on good authority, makes the statement that the much-talked-of prisoner is not the doctor. Made Civil Service Examination Easy. Washington, Sept. 5. The oivil serv ice commission has been notified of the arrest at Erie of William C. Ebisch, chief mailing clerk; Edward J. Liebel, substitute letter carrier, and William J. Bruce, formerly general utility clerk in that office, on tho charge of general con spiracy and violation of the provisions of the civil service act. Ebisch wa3 the secretary of the board of- civil service examiners for the Erie office and it is alleged that Bruce and Ebisch furnished Liebel a copy of the questions to be asked in letter carriers' examination and a complete set of answers. Had & Rough Toyage. San Fbanoisco, Sept. 5. The British ship Mackrihanisu arrived from Swan sea. Nearly every vessel which has reached here in the past week has had a thrilling story to tell of battles with the elements, but the experiences of the Mackrihanisu were the worst. She was hove to for five days off the Horn, dur ing which the heavy seas swept her from stem to stern. A tidal wave bu riod the vessel at one time, filling her decks, and at another time a blizzard froze her rigging and running gear so that the shin wa3 unmanageable. Lieutenant Helm Testifies. - Brooklyn, Sept. o.-r-The mombors of the naval court martial ordered to try e charges preferred against Captain G. W. Sumner in reference to the in juries sustained by cue united states cruiser Columbia while being docked in Southampton two months ago reas sembled today. Lieutenant J. M. Helni, who was formerly attached to the cruiser Columbia, was the first witness called today. "Withdrew the Charges. Westfield, Mass., Sept. 5. W. F. Gill of New York, who recently insti tuted divorce proceedings against Mrs. E. O.' Gill, a sister of Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, and who is at the Gill sum mer house in Granville, has given Law yer Kniel of this city a signed state ment withdrawing the charges made by him against his wife. Cholera Precautions at San Francisco. San FRANCisco.Sopt. 5. With cholera raging In Japan and Honolulu the local board of health has determined to take very precaution to prevent the disease from obtaining a foothold in this city, and to that end Chinatown will be sub jected to a rigid examination.. Ses Moines' Population. Des Moines, Sept. 5. According to the authorized census made by the state Des Moines contains 50,110 people. The Commercial Exchange wants a new count made of the city, and estimates that the assessors missed 11 per cent of the people. Price of Broom Corn Advanced. Amsterdam, N. Y., Sept. 5. The American Broom and Brush company, having factories at Amsterdam, Fort Hunter and i! ultonville, ss. Y., and Dallas, Pa., has raised the price of broom corn averaging 12 to 25 cents per dozen. Killed by His Brother-In-LnTr. Omaha, Sept. 5. Paul Miller was Bhot and instantly killed at Sixteenth aud Grand avenue by his brother-in- law, August Sauerwein, while Miller was in the act of assaulting the aged mother of Sauerwein during a family quarrel. Swell Wedding nt Denver. Denver, Sept. 5. One of the most charming weddings of tho year in Den ver was that of Margaret Montjoy, daughter of Hon. and Mrs. T. M. Pat terson, to Richard Crawford Campbell of Wheeling, W. Va., at tho family resi dence. All Who Fought Are Invited. ' Bockford, Sept. ,C. Commander-in-Chief Lawler has received an invitation for the G. A. B. to attend tho cotton istates international exposition at At lanta the 21st inst., blue and gray day. A Washington Failure. Washdjot w, Sept. 5. Silsby & Co., gtook brokers, made an assignment. "WHEATLAND, WYO. There is no finer agricultural sec tion in all this broad western coun try than can be found in the vicinity of the beautiful little town of Wheatland, Wyoming, ninety-six miles north of Cheyenne. Immense crops never failing supply of water. : rich land, and crreat agricultural resources. Magnificent farms to be had for little money. Reached via the Union Pacific System. -E. Ju. Lomax, Genii Pass, and Ticket Agent, Omaha, Neb. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report ABSOLUTELY PURE CHINATOWN IN A TURMOIL. Boycott War Being Fiercely "Waged Be twecB tke See Taps anil Sam Yaps. San Francisco, Sept. 5. -Chinatown is in a turmoil, and a boycott war is fiercely waging. The Chinese Six Com panies, which for so many yeara have controlled matters . the Chinese quar ter, no longer work in harmony and will probably never be again united. The quarrel nas spread all over the country among Chinese from here to New York. The trouble originated in the murder of Chang Wai, a member of tho Sam Yup company. Mok Tai, a Cay See Yup man, was arrested for the murder, but his company believed him innocent and asked the Sam Yups to call off the prosecution. This they re fused to do, and the Chinese consul sided with the Sam Yups. Then a boy cott was declared against tho Sam Yups by the See Yups. The Sam Yups com prise the wealthier classes of Chinese, who do a big business as butchers, while the See Yups are composed of the labor ing classes, mainly customers of the Sam Yups. The See Yups have started rival shops and a strict boycott is being waged agahi3t the Sam Yups, greatly to their discomfiture and financial loss. RACE FOR THE AMERICA'S CU P. Indications Aro That the Attendance W1U Re a Record Breaker. New York, Sept. 5. The most inter esting topic of conversation among yachtsmen today, in fact the one that is absorbing about all their attention, con cerns the measurements of Defender and Valkyrie. There have been several estimates made on "guess" figures, and they grant to tne Defender a time allow ance of anywhere from one to two minutes. Just what it is willnot, how ever, be made known until about noon tomorrow, when Mr. John Hyslop will officially take tho measures of both boats Indications point to the largest at tendance at a yacht race that the world oversaw. Every idle steamboat and tug about the harbor will be brought into requisition on Saturday, and dozens of regular liners will be taken off their usual routes to carry people to see the greai marine pictures. Parties from Philadelphia, Boston, New Haven, New Bedford and many other places will come on chartered boats. NEBRASKA BEET SUGAR. Tield of 7,000,000 Fcands Promised This Fall. Norfolk, Sept. 5. There are 4,000 acres of sugar beets in the Norfolk dis trict all "laid by" and in much better condition thau-in any previous year. Recent rains haya benefited the beets greatly, and with continued favorable conditions for root development the re sults of the harvest will exceed other seasons, and probably will be moro than 40,000 tons, which would mean an out put of 7,000,CC0 pounds of granulated sugar. It is believed that tho enormous sugar output of the state will be a fac tor in the world's sutrar market. MOONSHINE KS SHOT BY A MARSHAL. oay Roddy and Jim "Woodlcy Seriously Wounded at Tracy City. Nash"ville, Sept. 5. Jay Roddy and Jim Woodley were shot and seriously wounded at Tracy City by Deputy Unit ed States Marshal J. M. Hall while ef fecting the soiznre of some contraband whisky. Woodley is dying. NEWS FROM ABROAD. Nihilists Again Active. Berlin, Sept. 5. The Anzeiger's correspondent at St.Petersburg confirms the statement recently published that in consequence of the activity of the nihilists it has been found necessary to Snara Cvar s every sicp as complete Jl t ly as the movements of his father Alex ander HI were guarded by the police at the most periicus period of his reign. The czarina is suffering from extreme nervousness in consequence of the dan ger threatening the czar. Parliament Prorojjued Until Nov. 18. Loxdon, Sept. 5. The house of com mons in response to a summons in the usual form appeared in the honse of lords todav, where tho royal assent to tho acts passed during the session was announced. A decree was then read proroguing parliament until Nov. 18. Jllore Chinese Outrages. Lyons, Sept. o. The newspaper, Missions Catholiqnes, publishes a state ment today that at the beginning of July the mission and orphanage at Vounsy, China, were attacked by na tives and demolished. In the riots sev eral Christians were killed. Ku Chens Inquiry Bearing Frnlt. Shanghai, Sept. 5. Tke inquiry into the massacre at Ku Cheng is proceed ing to tho Eatisf action of the American and British consuls. There havo been a number of important convictions. Among those condomued are some of the ringleaders of the riot. Bomb Failed to Explode. Paris, Sept. 5. La Poste states that a man dropped a bomb in front of the Rothschilds bank today. The bomb did not explode. Tho man, according to The La Poste.whou arrested, declared that he hadTorgottcn to attach a fuse to the bomb. Will A!c For an Additional CrcClt. Paris, Sept. f. The Matin announces today that the chambers will, upon re assembling, bo asked for an additional credit of 50,000,000 francs on account of the Madagascar expedition. Chauncoy Coming Back. London, Sept. 5. Among the pas sengers abn-rd tho steamship Paris, which sails from Southampton on Sat urday, will be the Hon. Chauncey M. Depew. Short Eighteen Thousand. Paulding, 0.,.Sept. 5. Ex-County Treasurer Finnan, whose term of office expired Monday, is declared by the treasury examiners to be short 18,000. Reserve Below the Limit. Washington, Sept. 5. Today's state ment ot the condition of tho treasury shows: Available cash balance, $181, trf,7C&r; gold reserve, 127,5(57. 10GGISTS AT mm Proposed Plan to Prevent Cutting of Prices Discussed. MEDICO-LEGAL G0NGBES& Addresses by Prominent Lawyers aad Deb tors oa Sociology and Criminology. Papers Read at the Meeting oCtha Social Science Association. Denver, Sept. 6. The national wholesale druggists spent the forenoon in discussing the proposed plan for the handling and sale of proprietary arti cles designed to prevent the cutting of prices. The plan proposed was sub mitted by N". M. Kline, chairman of the committee on proprietary goods to the Western Association of Wholesale Druggists at a meeting in Chicago June 5, 1895, anfl was cordially approved. It has been favorably received here, and with slight modifications will be adopted. The National Proprietary association elected officers a3 follows: President, R. E. Queen; vice presidents, Edward G. Wells, Thomas Doliber, C. C. Voor his and A. Cressy Morrison; secretary, Joseph Leeming; treasurer, H. B. Hard ing; board of control, Dr. R. T, Pierce, Brent Good, George A Kelly. Thomas Leeming, BL M. Sharp, Charles P. Fletcher and E. L Hazelrine. The proposition to fuse the two as sociations will not carry. SOCIOLOGY AND CREUINOLOQYt Subjects Discussed by the 3redlco-Legal Congress at New York. New Yore, Sept. 5. Sociology and criminology formed the subjects dis cussed during the second day's meeting of the Medico-Legal congress. The ses sion opened with Hon. Moritz Ellinger" presiding. The business opened with five minute addresses. The chairman in opening said there was no more Im portant matter between the legal and medical science than the point where they met. This was important, especi ally in the matters of public health,, and moro particularly of insanity. Dr. T. D. Crothers read a paper on "Legal Responsibility in Inebriety." He said that inebriety was a disease, and that excess of alcohol paralyzed the nerves and brain. In. the discussion of the paper, Albert Bach said tho courts very properly held the inebriate responsible for crime be cause ho knew what the effect of his ' taking alcoholic drink would be. He admitted that a man in an alcoholic trance was not really responsible forrhls actions, yet it would be a dangerous thing to permit the inebriate to escape punishment for his crime. Dr. Forbes Wiuslow said the only cure for the habitual drunkard was to lock him up. In England, however, a man in delirium tremens, when he got well, could bring a civil action against the doctor who restrained him. There should, he thoaght, bo a distinction made in the matter of responsibility be tween the mau who got drunk occasion ally and tho habitual drunkard. Dr. Crothers, in a 5-minute talk, said criminology was in a state of chaos at x the present time. In studying crimo the man should be considered, and he ' believed the criminal was stamped on the physical body. Social Science Association. Saratoga, Sept. 5. The opening re marks of tho morning session of tho de partment of jurisprudence, American Social Science association, were made by Professor Fraucis Wanland of New Haven. Edward W. Reynolds of New Haven read a paper on "The Social Ref erendum." A conference on the pro vision of the amended constitution of New York concerning prison labor was opened by Eugene Smith and contin ued by W. J. Prentiss of New York and others. New York Republicans. Binghamton, Sept. 5. The number ot delegates present at the state Repulf lican League convention today is large ly in excess of last night's attendance. Alfred Conkling of New York an nounced that ho intended to introduce a local option resolution. Colonel Rob ert P. Porter of Cleveland, O., was in troduced and addressed the convention. Utah Democrats. Ogden, Sept. 5. The Democratic, hosts aro gathered for tho territorial convention today. The possibilities for. governor cover a wide field. It is likely the convention will instruct fcr J. L. Rawlius and Moses Thatcher for the United States senate Several county delegations have already so declared. Democratic Societies of Pennsylvania. LANCAST2R,Pa., Sept. o. Tho seventh annual general assembly of the Demo cratic Societies of Pennsylvania met in this city today. Representatives of Dem ocratic organizations from all parts of the state to the number of about 000 were present. President Chauncey F. Black called tho gathering to order. Innovation In Yacht Itrtce Reporting New York, Sept. 5. Tho public of both the old and the now world are to havo prompt and accurate information of tho yacht raes between Defender and Valkyrie HI as they progress through the enterprise of the Commercial Cable company. This company's steam er will lay a submarino cable to thea scene of tho yacht race. Hint Elected Delegate. Huntington, Sept. 5. S. N. Hirst of Wheeling was elected supremo repre sentative for the Knights of the Golden Eagle to represent West Virginia at the. Jupreme meeting at Washington. Convention of Iowa Baptists. Hawarden, Sept. 5. Tho 22nd an-' nual session of tho Sioux Valley Baptiste association is being held here with & good attendance of members fromhorth-t west Towa.