The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, April 03, 1896, Image 1

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YOL. XII.
-NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY EVENING,. APRIL 3, 1896.
Kd. 27,
Jlltl i 1 II IW
yfc
-over our Great
Clothing, Gents' finishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, flats, Gaps,
Gloves and
Surprised, First at the Large Assortment;
v . l Second at the Superior Quality:
Third at the
Fourth at
We have been some time in getting these Sur
V prises here and ready for you, but at last are
: able to announce
Bargains all Through the House.
We solicit a comparison of Goods and Prices,
knowing that you will find our stock the Best and the
Cheapest.
Star Clothing House,
WEBER & YOLLMER, Props.
CLOSING
OF ENTIRE STOCK OF
Boots and Shoes
r
- AT
Otten's Shoe Store
FOR CASH.
A large line of the best makes of Ladies, Men and
Children's Shoes. All goods will be closed out for what
they will bring. A large line of over shoes and rubbers
will be closed out cheap enough that you can buy for next
year. A complete line of the celebrated Lewis Boys'
Shoes, Children's Red Sdiool House Shoes the best
made, Ludlou Ladies' Eine Shoes, Lily Brackett1 Men's
Fine Shoes, I will sell cheap for cash to quit business.
Will also sell show cases, counters, shelves, safe, etc.
Otten's Slioe Store.
C. F. ID
LUMBER,
AND GRAIN.
Order by telephone from Newton's Book Store.
NORTH : PLATTE : PHARMACY,
Dr. N. McOABE, Prop., J. E. BUSH, Manager.
USTOIRTIH: PLATTE, - - iTBBBASKA
"We aim to handle the Best Grades of
Goods, sell tliern at Reasonable
Fi ; nres, and Warrant Everything-
Orders from the country and along the line of the Union
Pacific railway respectfully solicited.
e MMcMj
Issued in 10 Parts-:-I0 Cents Each.
FOR SALE AT TRIBUNE OFFICE.
Stock of-
Mittens.
Immense Yariety;
the Low Prices.
DINGS,
NICHOLS MTD HEESHEY 2TEWS.
Miss Hattie Snow returned to
Ogalalla recently after a short
visit with her parents at Hershey,
She is slinging- type iu a news
paper office at that place.
It is stated that a week or ten
days more will complete the work
at the head of the old canal when it
will be ready for business. L
A few cars of gravel with which
to fill in between the main line
and side track were unloaded Her
shey the other day.
Several cars have been loaded
with baled hay at Nichols this week.
Charles Toillion is now a full
pledged Maccabee. He lomed the
tert at Hershey recently.
The Hershey Maccabee goat has
been doing a land office bussiness
lately and in order to keep up his
courage and strength the groom
has been feeding him on carpet
tacks and brass buttons lately
which seem to have the desired
effect
Mrs. W. H. Hill of Hershey was
shopping at the county seat a few
days ago and visited her old neigh
bors A. H. Frames' people in Hiu-
man precinct on her way tome-
Mr. and Mrs. James Welker are
rejoicing over the arrival of a couple
of daughters at their home m the
western part of this precinct on
March 30th. All doinjr well, esoec-
ally Jim, who can hardly laugh for
smiles.
Joe Strickler shipped a car of
potatoes from Hershey a day or two
asro.
Mr. Staples, who is working a
part of the land on section 27 which
belongs to the old canal company,
is breaking sod on the south side
of the track on said section.
Mrs. McCord and children visited
friends and relatives over on the
south side not long ago.
This vicinity was visited by an
other snow storm last Tuesday fol
lowed by a cold wave that night
which froze everything up and de
layed farming to some extent for a
couple of days.
F. L. Terry died at his home near
NTclidlsabouf four o'clock last Wed
nesday morning, after an illness of
several months. The funeral was
held at Nichols at one o'clock last
Thursday and was. attended by a
large concourse of sympathetic
friends. Rev. Snavely, of North
Platte conducted the exercises. He
was accompanied by W. J. Crusen,
of the same place. The Hershey
Maccabee tent, of which the de
ceased was a member, and iu which
he carried an insurance of $2,000.
took charge of the funeral. He
leaves a wife and little daughter,
besides numerous friends, to mourn
his death. The interment took
place at the Ware cemetery.
Pat.
Advertised Letters.
List of letters remaining uncalled for
in the post office at North Platte, Neb.,
for the week ending April 3, 1896.
GENTLEMEN.
Beach Harry B Taylor A
Farradv John Wood Frank
White J L
LADIES.
Potter Miss Lizzie White Mrs Annie
Persons calling for above will please say
"advertised." M. W. Claik. Postmaiier
Dr. Sawyer; Uenr Sir: Having used your Pas
lilies, I can recommend them to the public. I
have been attended by four different doctors, but
one aud a half boxes of your medicine has done
me nioro good than all of them. Tours respect
fully. Sire. Maggie Johnson, Bronson, Branch
County. Mich. Sold bv F. n. Longley.
AT THF
UV1
We announce tq the pub
lic that our line of ladies',
misses and children's Hats,
Sailors, and Tarn O'Shan
ters are now ready for in
spection. Everything of
the latest designs are now
open for your examination.
Prices to suit the times.
The Boston Store
Boston
V.
TEACHEES' MEETING AT OG ALALIA
The annual meeting- of the WestT
ern Nebraska Educational Associa
tion will be hel4 at Ogalalla Friday
and Saturday, April 24th and 25th.
The Association grows in members
and interest each year, and the pro
gramme, hereto attached, is one
which will prove profitable to al
-teachers who attend:
FRIDAY MORNING.
Music Opening" song. Chorus.
Invocation Rev. W. S. Hampton,
Ogalalla.
Music Song, Solo and and quar
tet.
Paper Miss Anna Stocking,
Big-springs, "Organization and
Classification of Country School."
Music Chorus.
Paper Anna Simpkins.Paxton,
Correlation of Studies in- the
Lower Grades."
Paper "Intellectual Growth,"
Geo. A. McMichael, Brady Island.
AFTERNOON.
Music Chorus.
Address of Welcome H. L. Goold,
Ogalalla.
Response C. E. Doran. Sidney.
Paper Miss Justina Whitehead,
Sidney. "Uses and abuses of the
Note Book."
Music Chorus.
Paper Miss Bertha Walker,
limball, '-Supplementary Reading"
n the Primary Grades."
"The County High School." (a)
ts Relation to the District School.
C. E.. Barber. North Platte, ftrt
ts work as a Training- School, J.
H. Miller, Lincoln.
Muic Chorus.
EVENING.
Music Chorus.'
Invocation Rev. D. W. Crane,
Ogalalla.
Music Male Quartet.
Recitation Miss Rachel Caress,
North Platte.
Lecture State Supt. H. R. Cor
bett, "New Fads and Old Fogies."
Music Quartet.
SATURDAY APRIL 25.
Music Chorus.
Paper. "You and I," Prin. 55. O.
Davis, Kimball. '
Paper A. W. Norton, Pres.
State Normal, Peru, "Higher
Grounds of Interest."
Music Ladies quartet.
Paper "Driftwood," A Softly,
Madrid.
Paper "Summer Schools," Mrs.
A. K. Goudy, Lincoln.
Music Gents Trio.
EVENING.
Music Chorus.
Invocation Rev. W,
Ogalalla.
S. Hampton,
Recitation Wesley Tressler,
Ogalalla.
Music Vocal duett, Mrs. Myrtle
Boss and Mrs. Edna DeBoise,
Ogalalla.
Lecture Prof H. B. Ward. Lin
coln, "Recollections ot German
Student Life."
Music Closing song.
Arrangements for the
wedding
ot the Princess Alexandra of
Co-
burg and Princess Maud of Wales
are now almost complete. The
wedding of the former with Prince
Hohenlohe-Langenberg will take
place April 20 at Coburg, and will
be in full state, but-the Queen will
not be present. Her majesty will
be represented be one of her sons.
Princess Maud of Wales' wedding
to Prince Charles of Denmark will
take place in the early part of July
at the Chapel Royal, St. James'
Palace, and will tje a quiet affair.
The Queen will be present, but there
will not be any state procession
through the streets. The ceremony
will be similar to that of the
Duchess of Fife.
The dispatches from Havana, as
revised by the censors, report a
shooliug of 'one insurgent leader
under sentence of court-martial and
the garroting- of other, not as pris
oners of war, but as bandits. This
is the beginning- of a bad business.
If Cuban prisoners are to be shot
at the pleasure of the Spaniards
then the Spaniards may be shot at
the pleasures of the Cubans. If
the rules of war are not to govern
one side it is not to be expected
that they will govern the other.
Barbarism follows.
The recent speech of Samuel
Smith of Flintshire in the British
Honse of Commons doubtless ex
presses the feeling- of most English
men. He said that the restoration
ot a cordial understanding with
America was ten thousand times
more important than the Schom
burgk line or any other line between
Venezuela and British Guiana.
He urged the arbitration of the dis
agreement, ajid suggested that one
of theUnited States Supreme Court
Judges be selected to represent
Great Britan.
WHAT WILL THEY SOI
Editor Tribune: The reverses
'of the past five years have taught
certain lessons; but the question
rises, will our farmers avail them
selves of the benefit thus jriven
them, or will they follow in the foot
steps of their predecessors that had
these lessons to learn, or follow old
Jines that have brought so manv
disasters to the experimentalist of
the past who have endeavored to
compel stubborn nature to bend to
their theories? Will. they continue
to bet and gamble on hoped-for rain
falls, knowing that they must acr
cept nature's dictations?
These are serious questions for
those engaged in agriculture to con
siaer. it is not necessary tor our
upland farmer to abandon their
farms and move down on to the
bottom lands where irrigation is
carried on by the means of canals.
By means of the. new improved
methods of soil culture now com
mon in the sub-arid portions of Cal
ifornia and other sub-arid states.
crops can be grown successfully
even with our limited rainfall.
The method now recommended
by those that have both practiced
and followed these systems adapted
o partially dry regions are for
subsoiling the lauds to the depth
of sixteen to twenty inches everv
three or four years. Then in the
cultivation of crops to follow this
up by endeavoring to conserve all
he rainfall and allow it to become
absorbed into the soil. Shallow
and frequent cultivation of crops is
now generally followed in those
parts of California that has a cli
mate and rainfall similar to ours.
hat region to follow
up the rainfall and showers with
cultivation as rapidly as possible.
All that is required is to break the
crust that has been created by the
packing and plasterinsr effects of
the rain in order to prevent the
steaming and scalding effects that
follow if the latent heat in the earth
is not allowed to escape through
the surface. The theory now ad
vanced is that this heat or steam
thus generated and held uhdefflie
crust formed by the rains, girdles
the plants with a ring of burnt or
baked vegetable tissue and
the
effect on a stalk of rye. wheat, oats
or corn has precisely the same effect
that a hot wire would have "around
the trunk ot a tree. The tree might
live but it would become seriously
damaged. So in order to prevent
girdling of the stocks of grain they
harrow their small grain with their
sixteen-foot harrows with the round
teeth reversed and thrown back so
as not to tear up the plan ts. Their
methods are valuable where crops
have been hailed down, as the gird
ling has been found more injurious
than the hail.
The same method is adopted with
corn culture. In place of the shovels
that go down into the soil and throw
up a large quantity of damp earth
that loses its moisture very rapidh
a block of round reversable harrow
teeth are attached to the plow
beams of the cultivator that rapidly
and easity break the crust that has
been formed by the pattering of the
rain or beating of the hail. The
excess of heat is thus liberated and
a mulch of lose earth is formed that
prevents evaporation. By this
method the damagedone by hail is
frequently overcome; all the moist
ure is held in the soil for the use of
the plants and excess of heat is not
created in the earth about the roots
of the growing- crops which tends
to check the growth of all our agri
cultural plants. This is an im
portant question with our farmers.
Will they adopt the methods of
plowing, planting- and soil culture
adapted to this section ot America,
or will they risk their prosperity
on theories that were practical and
beneficial in Illinois or Ohio, but
are in every way hazardous and im
practical here. What they will do
is a serious matter with all of us.
I. A. Fort.
Piatt is understood to desire to
throw the New York vote to Reed
after Morton drops out. but the
McKinley strength in the state is
so great that the boss stands a
poor chance of holding away from
the Ohio man five-sixths or nine
tenths of the delegation which he
controls at the beginning of the
convention. Apparently a major
ity of the New York delegates thus
far committed to Morton have
McKinley for a second choice.
When the break comes the bosses
who get in the way of the avalanche
are crushed.
Dr. A. P. Sawyer I have had Rheumatism since
I was 20 jears old, but elnce using yur Family
Care have been fre3 from it- It also cured my
husband of the same -disease. Mrs . Bobt Con
1 nelly, Brooklyn, Iowa. Sold by if. Longley.
Grand Easter Opening.
BEAUTIFUL
Li Jut m miUj
New Spring Bonnets, New Spring Wraps, New Dress Fabrics of
wool, of linen, of cotton. Exquisite Dress Trimmings, Snowy Embroid
eries, Filmy Laces, Hosiery, Real Lace Curtains, all at close cut cash
5gures that makes this store without question the birth place of
Low Prices.
EASTER MILLINERY
Just received, .and to be shown to -
Slegant Pattern Hats. New
Easter Hate in mauve and violet, New Easter Hats in grass shades.
Superb Novelties in Toques. Magnificent display of children's hats.
LKDIES' CMPES,
Stylish, silk velvet capes, the newest idea in beaded effects, lined in
silk Louiseriue, $7.00 We will offer
lined, worth $8.00, for S5.00. You
want here, all the way from 1.50 to
Thev are beauties.
RICHARDS BROS,
NEBEASKA NOTES.
Tecumseh will not try to
organ-
ize a ball team this vear as the one
last year proved a very expensive
luxury and cost them enough for at
least two years.
The Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben will
present a new allegory during the
state fair at Omaha next fall, and
it will be the "Feast of Olympia."
It will surpass the Feast of Monda
min, given last year.
George Willey, living ten miles
northwest of Shelton, has a badly
broken leg. The horse he was rid
ing fell and the boy wasn't switt
enough to get out from under.
Mr. John Reimers of Grand Island
is feeding 400 head of cattle at the
sugar factory and 600 head at
Albion. Later in the season he ex
pects to make a shipment to Europe
of 500 head, selected from both herds
John A. Spiker, an employe of
the Grand Island office ot the West
ern Union Telegraph company, has
made an application for a patent on
an electrical switch for use in tele
graph offices, which is considered
to be quiet an invention.
Phil Unitt, one of the largest
stockraisers and shippers in Seward
county, shipped a train load of fat
cattle to England yesterday. The
train consisted of fourteen cars,
twelve containing cattle, one draft
horses and one feed. The Stand
ard Trotting Horse company also
shipped eight thoroughbred trotters
in the same train. The train was
elaborately decorated with banners
advertising Seward and Seward
county.
The officers o"f the Pennsylvania
railroad are making arrangements
to appropriately celebrate the fif
tieth anniversary of the road's
organization on April 13th. The
property is said to be the largest
money-earning one in the United
States, and the celebration will be
conducted on lines befitting" the
greatness ot the system. The cere
monies will be held in a prominent
place in the City of Brotherly Love.
THE HUTTED FAST EXPEEES TBAIfl
leaving Chicago daily at 1:30 P. M.
via the Nickel Plate Road arriving
at New York City the following
evening at 9:30 and Boston at 8:45,
is unrivalled, peerless and incom
parable for speed, comfort and safe
ty with rates that are as low as
the lowest. Trains consisting ot
baggage cars, buffets sleeping and
elegant day coaches, lighted by gas
and heated by steam and with all
modern improvements are run
through without change from
Chicago to New York with through
cars to 'Boston. J. Y. Calahan,
Gen'l Agent. Chicago, 111.
Pale, th.Int blood people should use Dr, Saw
ycx'a Ukatme. It is Ihe greatest remedy n the
world for making the weak strong. For saleby F.
II. Longley.
-OF-
NEW GOODS
-AT-
JET mnT hi ii rTw-
morrow for the first time. Fifty
Easter Hats in black and white, New
a very handsome silk cape, silk
can always get the kind of capes you
$10. Come in and inspect them
THE FAIR.
11
Plain and Decorated,
Will be sold m sets or by
the piece. The finest line
of goods ever shown in the
city.
We have also in stock seven
different patterns in
English s China.
These goods are in-100-piece
sets, and range in price
from 11 to 15.
An inspection of these
goods is respectfully invited.
V. VonGoetz,
Grocer.
Ottenstein Block.
Jos. Hershey,.
DEALER IX
Agricultural : Implements
OP ALL KINDS,
Farm and Spring Wagons,
Buggies, Road Carts,
Wind Mills, Pumps, Barb
Wire, Etc.
Locust Street, between Fifth and Sixth
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
U. 8. Land Office, North Platte, Neb.,
April 2d, 1890. f
Notice is hereby given that the following named
settler has filed notice of his intention to mako
final proof in rapport of his claim and that said
proof will be made before the Register and Re
ceiver at North Platte, Neb., on May 9th, 1396,
ERNEST J. BAKER,
who made Homestead Entry No. 15746 for the
lots 4, 5, 6 and 7, Section 6. Township 10 N.
Range 32 W. He names the following witnesses
to prove his continuous residence upon and culti
vation f said land, viz: Wiley Mathews. Oscar
M. Mathews, Billings P. Baker -and Jasea R. Cos
pelman, all of Dickens. Neb.
2a JOHN r. BINXAN, Epgisr.
iriiiii