; THE NORTH PLATTE SEM1-WMKLY ; TEJBTOE '' FRiMF; -BTMINGf,. APRIL 24, 1896. CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS. Allen and Gear Clash. "Washington, April 18. The debate on the bond resolution proceeded in the senate. Mr. Hill continued his speech in opposition, "which is not yet com pleted. 2Ir. Hoar supported the pro posed bond investigation. The debate is proving attractive to the public, the galleries being crowded throughout the day. An exciting episode occurred late in the day concerning Pacific railroads affairs. Mr. Gear, chairman of the Pa cific railroad committee, presented a bill proposing an adjustment of the rail road debt. This led Mr. Allen (Xeb.) to criticise the committee for alleged partiality to "Collis P. Huntington and his lobby." A bitter personal altercation between Mr. Gear and Mr. Allen fol lowed, during which Mr. Allen declared that Mr. Gear had uttered a "fake hood" concerning General Wearer of Iowa. Mr. Hoar called Mr. Allen to order and demanded that his words be taken down. Mr. Allen was obliged to take his seat, but on a motion by Mr. Faulk ner was allowed to proceed in order. House Acts on Private Bills. "Washecgtox, April IS. The approach of the final adjournment of congress is indicated by the great pressure at the opening of each session of the house fos unanimous consent for the passage of minor bills. Several pension hills, bills to donate condemned cannon to G. A. K. posts, etc., were passed by unani mous consent. General Deficiency Bill Passed. "Washington", April '21. The house yesterday parsed the general deficien cy bOL Included was the item in relation to indemnities to be paid F. O. Dawson, wife and daughter for loss of property and injuries received at the hands of the Tic McCarty gang in Ne braska. The amount allowed is $2,200. xioBse unseal loon. gf Washixgtox, Apni xne nousa yesterday unseated James E. Cobb. Democrat, representing the ijifth Ala bama district, and voted yeas, 121 nays, -io to scat Albert T. Goodwin, populist. Sectarian School Question In the Senate Washington, April 22. The senat spent the day on the Indian appropri tion bill, but did not complete it. Ti sectarian school question was taken up late in the day and brought out ani mated debate, Senators G alii u per, Thurston and Teller opposing and Sen ators Gray and Pettigrew supporting the amendment offered by Mr. Cockrell, extending for two years the time for the entire abandonment of sectarian schools. Final action on tfce question was not reached. Most of the day was given to the contest against legal claims in connection with the western Chero kee settlement, and the claims were finally agreed to. pocxlirin Strom In. ashtsgtox, April 2-?. The houso yesterday entered upon the considera tion of the general pension bill reported from the invalid pension committee. It amends the existing pension laws in some very important respoets. Mr. Pickler, the chairman or the committee, addressed the house for three hours in support of it. Before the pension bill was taken up Mr. Goodwin (Pop.) was seated in place of Mr. Cobb (Dem. )frora the Fifth Alabama district. CockrelFx Amendment Adopted. "Washixgtox, April 23. The senate " by a rote of 33 yeas to 24 nays has adopted the amendment to the Indian appropriation bfll offered by Mr. Cock rell, (Ma) providing that 50 per cent oi Appropriation for ludiaji contract schools should bo appropriated in the pending bill for such schools. Amending the Carer Act. Washington", April 21. The commit tee on irrigation of arid lands author ized a favorable report .on a bill amend atory of the Carey act. The amend ments provide that where the greater part of a legal subdivision is desert i .character the whole shall be so consid ered. In order to be entitled to desert lands the states and territories must cause to be irrigated and occupied not less than 20 acres in each 160. Such jracis. muyt be cultivated by. actual set tlers within 10 years from the date of segregation. "Thurston pn IteliIpn. TSashixgton-, April 21. The first 'ses sion of the national congress of religious education was held last night in the Jievr Tork Avenge Presbyterian church. General John Eaton presided. The theme of the evening was "Beligious Education and National Prosperity," the speakers being Chaplain Milburn, Rev. G. E. Grammar of Baltimore and .Senator Thurston. The latter delivered an eloquent address, frequently punctu- ated with applause. National .Arbitration Conference. "Washington, April 0. The national arbitration conference will hold a two days' session in this city during the goming week. Between 300 and 400 written acceptances gf invitations to at tend thelcouferehce have "been received. They represen in all 3S states. It is expected that Senator Edmunds of Ver mont will be te permanent president. Taxor -Transmlss i$i p p i Exposition. Washington, April 21. The house committee on ways and means yesterday decided to report favorably the senate bill to give 200,000 for a govern ment building and exhibit at the Tran mississippi and Interna tional exposition to he held in Omaha in 1893. Black Hill fish. Hatchery. - Washington, April 22. Among the items of increase in the sundry civil ap propriation bill, as reported to the sea kte, is -$10,000 for a fish hatcherjr'ih'tTg Slack H1115, s. rr., - Ti t i . 7? TV . Xhajerts FcJtsicm Approved. Washixgtqx, April 22. The presi dent has approved the act granting a pension to Major General John M. Thaver of Nebraska. C JjncTJinc Prisoner Hlee4. Lincoln, April 20. Two long time prisoners were released from the peni tentiarr today on the order of Governor Holcomb. with "good time" allow ance. On April 11, 1SS9, Patrick Shell was sent up from Jefferson county for 10 years for murder. 2u charges of misconduct have; been preferred against nmt and he was allowed. 22. months. James Thomas was sent up from Doug las county for burglary, under a "sen tence of 10 years, on Feb. 21, 18S9. He jrae allowed about "Ih sues "goqS fine" &ad rslead. CHAPTER XIL THKKH FOE TWKSTT-SEVEN. "2ibw, my lads," said Kettle, youve got to hump yourselves, or we'll have the steamer swamping beneath uso It'll be touch and go anyway. Mr. Cambel, you'll have the deck all to yourself, after you've done yonr job on the forehold, of course, and youM better jump lively after that at once. Every gill of water tells now, and it strikes me if we've very much more of the Mexican gulf on board the decks will blowup, and she'll go down liko kentledge ballast" Cambel darted through the doorway. "And now, Mr. Snllivan, understand that, although I still continuo to rate as skipper ot this craft, for the present I'm going to work as fireman and coal trim mer. You will be chief engineer, and I'm tho sum total of -your crew, and between us we've got to do tho work of seven horses and ono mule. Are the bilgo pumps cle-rr" i Ycs, sor." "And has she Etill a gocd head of steam?" "She has. None's beon blown off." 'Then pick up your feet and let's go to your hardware shop and stare in work " "Wait a bit, ser,"said tho donkcyman. "There's things here I don't understand. Aren't the lives of us in beastly danger? Didn't them boats go off because the steamer's sinking?" "Do you," retorted Kettle, 'consider mo one of those fancy sort of maniac who have no wish to survive the loss of a ship? I tell you I should have beon drowned eight times already if that had been my lay. No, Mr. CbieL Fair fight's right enoush, and I'd stand up to Nick in that and value my life at less than a rice mat, hot at other times you bet I'm no fool to chuck it away." "But," said the donkeyrnan, -"wnac gets mes this: If the blooming steamer's bottom's shot out, what's the fun in messing with it? The ilexlcsn gulf will circulate through that hole longer than our bilge pumps will run." "You tire me," said tho little man. "Who said sbe'd her bottom blown out? I- tell you this steamer was sunk a few plates below her usual trim for reasons and now we are going to pull her up again. See here, new Mr. Chief, take the cinch from me and ask no more questions, and you'll get told no lies. Is'll pay you. If you do as vou're bid aboard of me, you'll have sovereigns enough given you to work through tho biggest spree that was ever spread out in a seaport town." The big donkcyman appreciatively drew the back of a hand acruss Ms muzzle. Ah, captain, dear." he said ' coaxingly. "I'd just like to hear ye mention a figure. "Call it two 10 notes." " 'Then, be Christopher. I'm yerman fc any piece of dsTilmenp in tho calendar. Come along, captain, dear. lTis a melo dious little man are, for all they say against ye?-" Meanwhile the steamer was becoming more ami more water logged with every plunge end roll, and Patrick Cambel fear ed that his dangerous straxegem for driv ing awey the crew had been carried too far. It seemed to him impossible that they csuld salvage her now. True, she was brought up to tho wind by the after can vas, and her rollings were not of such sickening strength, bat the stern loomed high in the wild night air, and the bows lunged deep into every sccecssi ve sea that rolled up from the stormy south, taking the green water over the forecastle head hi masses which scourod enchors, and windlass ?q the raised iraa. The wash fcuuJ its way below through that jagged gap in the luwerdcck in crash ing waterfall-, and every moment, too, the opened vnlve beside her keel was gushing- in fresh gailuns la her swamping holds. Any larger sea which swept up now might well settle over her solidly and launch her with bursted decks onto tho sponges and the coral growths 200 fathoms below. Some men, in the face orsach condi tions, wonld have been amazed, helpless," physically incapable in the presence of that solitude to making any necessary effort, for it 13 one thing to do a desperajq matter before the. eyes o an applauding crowd and another, when the devil below is your only appreciative onlooker. Is would have been beyond the capabilities of Captain Kettle, for instance, Cambel, however, w&s the one man in the million to wnom tbe adventure was as meat and drink. If he succeeded, then the pxcSt was his. If be fa Dec. death would be use ful to him. end anyway therv was the wild excitement of the moment, which was a meal to bo enjoyed, and one which rtttfh. ing could snatch away. It was Jn this raocd of mind that the man on whose actions the very outer air existence of the Port Edes depended left his fellows In the chartroom and raced forward to where the jagged lip of the forehold hatch yawned to the splashing brine. VTithcnt lantern, without so much as a look before him, he lowered himself on to the twisted battens below, with the clean water raining on to him from above and muddy waTclets squirting up from below, and then when the steainer'gavo a" ho loosed his grip and dived like a stone through the brimming shaftway of- the batch. Seconds passed, a minute, two minutes, and still he did not reappear. Three min utes. Then tho rounded outlines of seme: thing black roiled to the surface and turg ed abou$ limply With the swUl of the water. For awhllo it staid so; then, swung by a heavier pitch of the steamer, was washed to the back of a stanchion, where it hung. The slopping water beneath ebbed steadi ly. The valve in the steamer's bottom had been closed. During a whole hour Patrick Cambel lodged behind that iron pillar, a mere boneless mass of flesh and clothes, and? then the pains of life came into him again with shivers and shudderlngs. Tb2 thiS gray light of the" dawn wa3 filtering down through the jagged opening above when' first the trembling lids slid from his ever balls, but far still another 30 minutes he was a thing of no wit, breathing, truly, but caring naught for all theworleoni pained. " . T-hen a sucking, sobbing noise from the depths of the hold far beneath broke upon his car, and the languid brain, began to work. With an effort he sat up, dizzily holding to the pillar, trying to think where he was and how ran recent history, and by degrees the details strolled back, to him. Before, however, he had gathered all his senses or a working quantum of strength he had a visiter in the shape of the donkeyrnan, who clattered up over the decks with plate shod boots and crouchid at the top of the gap above on knees and hands. Have yn been getting hurt now?" in quired tho newcomer. About nine-tenths drowned, I fancy, If that counts But I'na abgqt all rigat again now." 5 'Ye ccn'c look it," replied t&e denkev- raan candidly. Barring the tan ye'a o bine and lard color about tho face this minute. But I feared there was something gone wrong through not seeing ye on the bridge, so I nipped into the chartroom and pocketed a whisky bottle thas was lying convenient in case Pull at tho small end, sor." ' The bottlo was handed down, and Cam bel lifted it, his teeth chattering against the nozzle liko castanets, but the spirit drove up coicr into his face and set the sluggish blood once more on its appointed journey throngh his hands and trunk. "What lias occurred since I left yon?" he asked. "Well, first, sor, the captain and my self had a little- friendly discussion about what's been happening and came to a bit of financial agreement. But I will say that I figured me new terms very low when I understood it was a thrifle of a conspira cy that yo wanted me to stand in at. And then, sor, wo went below to the engine room and turned steam into the" bilo pumps to heave this nasty slop of water overboard, after which, as chief. I set about making a thrifling repair to the low pressure engine. Yo see, when that ex plosion took place a bit of a casting jump ed into the crank pit and. got jammed thero hard before they could Eton her. I've had a fair do at elbow work cutting it out cold, but it's clear now, and she runs as sweetly as she did the "day she lcrt the shops. But, oh, Mr. Cambel, I wish you could see the old man! Tho sight of that little chap shoveling coals and swearing and tumbling and burning himself is enough to make the ghosts of some dead firemen I know about grin and dances and jigs in their graves." Tho donkeyrnan was inclined to bo gar-, mlons and evidently lusted for a consider able chat, bat with returning strength Cambers anxiety grew on him again, and ho climbed out on deck keen to be once mora In action. His knees were tottery, and the donkeyrnan gave him an arm aft. But when ho had climbed up tho lad der and gained tho bridge deck he stood The girl mt on the coaming of the cockpit for a minute staring, then threw up his hands and pitched forward onto the plank ing as though a bullet had smitten the life in his brain. The big onkeyman also was startlsd. Out of- the morning- mists of tho south there had come up" a small centerbjcard Echooner of somo 15 tons, an oysterman perhaps in tho season and now a sponge gatherer or a mere coaster. She was com ing down over the seas as dry as a gull, driving along under her boom foresail and jib. The donkeyman's eye hung on her as she surged past the rust streaked flank of tho steamer some 20 fathoms awayr not tccaase the sigh e. a little white painted schooner was new to him, not be cause he was impressed by tho danger to the Port Edes' enterprise in her being seen by any one, but on account of the. $ny; vessel being handled, in what to her was distinctly ugly, weather, by so extraordi- nary a person as a young and pretty girL No one else was on deck, and tha jirl sat on the coaming of tho cockpit, tiller in one hand, tiller rope irj the. otheV as un concernedly cs ifcough she had been an ancient mariner bred and aged in fore and afters. She was a girl, too, with losks much t the Irishmsa's liking, with copper re3 hair wheso ends blew out from beneatn a green Italian nightcap laughing, impu dent features, with the color whipped up into warm pinks by tho wind; a figure of pretty curves, and the shapeliest litrla brown fists in tho world splayed on the tiller and gripping tho restraining tiller rope. She was pretty much up to tho eyes In her steering, but she found time to throw an ceiliad toward the steamer, which Mr. Sullivan answered with a yell intended to show his cosopleto admiration and a swirl of his greasy cap. It was then that Cambel fell, and tho denkeyman took his eyes frcon the schooner, end picked him up and once mem applied "tho whiskyi bottle "More, drowned than I thought for," he muttered. "It'll bo a pig's mess for us if he goes ill." But Patrick Cambel aad not fainted through the effect of his recent strngglo. clone. It was quite another matter which had dealt him the sufficing shock. In the steerer cf that little schconer ha bad seen the sister of the woman to whom he had once been affianced; who had dis carded him for another man; who had driven him from a sedate English life to be a wanderer and a vagabond upon the face of the earth. His roamings had be gun and continued only because the im ago of this ono woman hadrefused to leave his thoughts, and the half sarcastic nickname of the great traveler had been gained without any seeking on his part. Five long desperate years h.a.d passed since tho blow fell upon him, and time was doing its work. Ho had begun to for get her, to premise himself that, this pres ent enterprise accomplished, he would eliminate tho past and lead a newer and different life, and yet there, on the most unlikely comer of God's earth, her sister passed like a stage figure befcro his eyes, the sister from whom she was never parted. The shock came upon hjm as a thunder bolt from a bin sky. He bad fancied her to be in England, Europe, Australia anywhere but here and In his weak stntn ! the surorisa was too rrmt ipnin tim I gush of the waters thundered in his car, f acain the lieht faded fmm hi pt nnr this time ho dived into blank nnconscious- CHAPTER TTTT A PIKATE'S EA3330B. Windless -swell and a burning sky. Ahead broken palings cf mop headed tree trunks growing straight across t the sea. On one beam scattered patches of white where tho. sur crumbled overbidden coral reef, on tfca other the bright blue water bt the Her! can gulf, with its yellow float ing tangles of weed. A steamer lunging Oh her decks was visible one man, and one alone, and he was on the upper bridge, with his fists on the spokes of the steam steering wheel. He was swaying with weariness; his eyes were dull and leaden; his cheeks were of an unwholesome yellow bocaase the tan would noi let them turn pale white. Yet his task was ono which put to strain every piece of Els alertness. He was taking a steamer drawing 19 feet through a channel whose very existence no man on earth besides himself had ever guessed, and already ho was deep in sea territory which the charts of 1S93 still mark as unsurveyed. He had vaguely found the channel some months before in an open boat and written cross compass bearings on the back of a crumpled envel ope. These he carried in his head now and used as the sea marks closed, but they were a frail reed for much dependence .For such work a leadsman is an abso lute necessity, and on board the Port Edes a leadsman was an absolute impossi bility. The remaining two of her man ning were working as ten men to "keep up any head of steam for her engines. And so Patrick Cambel took his soundings with eye and nostrils, as do soma of the more ancient cf tho coaster folk, and in Etinct did not, upon the whole, servo him badly. Twice he scoured the steamer's bottom plates over branching coral plants, which broke away with clattering jars and let her through to deeper water beyond, and onca he ran upon a tail of white sand, which- pinned her just forward cf mid ships. Bat he rung off the engines, waited till the scream of the escape pipo showed a full head of steam and then on a flowing tido put her full "speed astern and slid clear. The skipper in the stokehold below waxed blasphemous at tho man who had "got tho shore on board," but ho did not csaso from shoveling coals. Neither did the big denkeyman, savo at those mo? mentswhen the clang of tho telegraph bell called him to stand by the throttle or reversing gear in tho engine room. So the Pert Edes drew up this narrow unknown sea river through tho shallows which fill that bight of the southwest Ploridian coast, and the tired man who was governing her steered every hour with stronger confidence end duller conscious ness. Now he held on to what was ap parently an unbroken lino of sand, where, If tho steamer stuck, sho would bo a stove in wreck within the hour, but as sho closed with it a passage opened out which took her through in clear water, although the yeasty surges cf the backwash would leap liko live things far up her sides and scream and bellow through the scuppers. Now he dodged, with helm hard starboard one minute, hard to port the next, among an archipelago of unnamed keys, where the first mangrove trees were getting to work at building these outlying scraps of animal stone into part of the North Amer ican continent. Beyond was a broad, smooth lagoon shimmering in the sunlighs, daueing with little silver wnves, "and beyond again was a wall of woodwork growing in one solid mass of trunks from behind the tangio of slimy mangroves which sprawled along the water's edge. Bara land was, to be seen nowhere. All was blotted out by the rank luxuriance of the subtropical flora, Tho steamer held on her couipo athwart this placid sea lake, aiming straight as a rifle shot for what appeared to bo tha densest par? of the forest. But as she neared an overlapping cape gradually dis tinguished itself from the rest of the greenery, and directly afterward banks of milky sand sprang out, with a gut cf river between them. Cambel steered on, sitting upon the grating now and holding the wheel one handed by the lower spokes, and in the fat, hot stew cf tho stokehold below Ker tle end the donkeyrnan shoveled coal to the light of reeking slush lamps and the tune of f nrnace roar. Tha steamer in the. ih? of- tho river stream swung round the bights and iwistr ings, finding ' deep water everywhere, though' often she could not mako the turn quickly enough od bruised with her forefoot ho slimy msngrovo stems which marked tho bank. But tho current was strong and each timo swept her clear, and thos3 below were scarcely conscious cf the graze Knot by knot tho brine of the Mexican gulf was bring left behind, 134 tha soisss cf the woods end odors of tho trees and the swamp; were closing in on them. The swell fanning out from the steamer's wak'o wet the alligators in their baskins places behind the sawgrass, and the. ree from her smokestacks Era red. she stils leg ged water fowIaSsh in tho shallows. Sho coasted round a bayou nf black water woiled in by stern ranks cf cypress trees. She cut across another with graceful leav ed palmetto scrubbed on either hand and ragged cabbage palms spouting out from above, And then she swung again where the river forked and Eteamed down a straight, unswerving water lano which led to the very heart of tha Everglades. . Bat the pt.ro was slowing now, slowing indeed till the steamer would hardly steer against the current, which ever and anon gripped her by the head or tho tail and carried her with sullen sheerings dead onto mangrove cluster or tree clad bluff, and tho reason was that tho head of steam was faiiing. Captain Owen Kettle, liko more Christian men have done before, ig nored his own previous preachings when the application came In and proved only human soon after he had taken up the role ' of fireman. Driven half lunatic by the heat of the work, he kept dipping his lips in the water bucket and drinking heavy drafts. As a consequence that unpeet ical complaints-cramp in tho. stomach Overtook him at last and tied him into those, ungalniy knots of torture which he had so frequently observed upon scientific ally in others. But as thero was none at hand to administer the heroic remedy of chlorodyna cam rhubarb cum laudanum cum pill and give him somethin else to think about in the original hind of knots he remained. The donkeyrnan, with a hearty Belfast curse, tried to do double work, but as he had teen laboring quite to the top of his strength for many hours previously the effort did not meet with unqualified suc cess. As any ono with less dogged wooden pluck might have known. It is impossible for one man to fire a 12 furnace steamer, wheel himself coal for tho bunker and Hut as engineer and greaser when required, however great be the initial supply of brute force with which God has endowed him. Every tfme he wiped tho wet from 5fs eyes and looked at the steam gauge it had climbed down since tho time before, and however furiously ho might heave new fuel onto tho caking clinkers tha? jumping index would continue ta down ward crawL The oiled, rumbling- of the engines slow ed and grew more sluggish, and then the ponderous cranks took to stopping on a turn as though to gain strength for the next round. But this did not go on for leng. The donkeyrnan felt a gentio heave of the footplates beneath him and then a heel which was not recovered. Eo gar," said he, '-the bloody old tramp's tuk the ground at last. Thanks be." He-pitched his shovel through a dull glowing furnace door and turned to where the little captain was lying on the polish ed footplates, holding a yellow flaring slush lamp before him to sec through the stifling dusty glccm. '"GuiaVlie com mented. "The old man looks, pretty sJck. I'll crane hun up in the ashlift." This he did and took his commanding officer into the main cabin, where the air was bright and baking, and the mosquj toes were biting like dogs. Then, throw ing back tho lid cf tho medicine chest, Which stood tesido the door into the com panion way, he gazed appreciatively at the rows of bottles, unstopped one or two and sniffed at their contents and then slammed down the lid again as a thought struck hun. "No," he said. Bcd Ket tle wouldn't give me physic last time I thought I'd like a dose, an now I'll see how he fancies getting round on nothing. Pair play's a jooL I'll just report to tho pilot an then turn in." The "pilot," however, when the donkey man had wearily hauled himlf onto the upper bridge and stood by his side, proved to be so dead asleep that no amount of shouting or shaking would wake 'him. Even tho flies did not make him wince. "Sor, wake, or yell bo sunstrook, If ye're not that already. House, sor. I can't lug ye below, an I can't rig an awning. I'm too tired to speak again, but if yez Etay here ye'll fry like a rasher an be ate by flies. There's a whopping skeeter in each of yer eyeholes this minute, an a kind o locust browsing on the end cf yer snout, listen. I'm knock in wid a boot toe on yer ribs. Yfell, raan, if ye won't listen to reason, it's just leavin yez I am to stew in yer own juice." The donkeyrnan climbed heavily back down the ladder cad went with weary steps aft along the bridge deck toward hi own place. But at the break of the deck he paused, spread his grimy, shiny elbows on the rail and indulged in a thin, small whistle. 'Now, here wo have come, cs the skip per remarked, up an unbeknown drain to whUcb .man's improvements have not been introduced, an there's callers turnin up already. That was the nose of a gaff taups'l squintin between those tree tops down stream a minute ago, or I'm a Dago. D'ye know, Mr. Sullivan, chief of the Port Edes, I'm beginnin. to think ye'd have got better value if vyo'd gone cruisln off by an large wid the other boys in the lifeboats. Thtue, there's the 20 1 notes o dbraw, an a daisy of a spree to have if yez can get anywhere to hive jt, bui ye've worked that wago put already, an it rather seems as though there's more la boriousness to follow," He yawned cav ernoasly, 'Tisn't often I'd 537 no to a bit of a. scrimmage, but theatricals are net to my taste just now at all. Too much overtime ruins the sense of humor." He yawned again and blinked his eyes drearily. ''Yo must turn in now, Mr. Sullivan, or ye'lifall down here an be ate alWe by the skeeters an other wild beasts of the fcrrust, and if tho explorers who ore underneath thatwhitogafTtaups'l want to come aboard here an make trou ble, so far as you're concerned, thev'll be let." And with that the donkcyman staggered away to his room beneath the poop, sat over the edge of bis bunk and was snoring melodiously before his head and his heels were on the blanket. Meanwhile a mile lower down a small centerboard sloop was turning to wind ward P the river, but making little bead way against tho current. A negro stood in her forescnttle, with his elbows on the deck. Two others prawled on either side of him. A White man lay spread eagled on. the top cf tho ccach roof of the cabin, and another stood in the cockpit steering. Of all the quintet tho man at tho tUl er was tho only ono who showed signs of energy, and his energy had sulphurous an ger mixed with It. He was a bowed, shambling creature, with one eye red and the other mission; trith. long, hairy, ape like arsis, with n dumb impediment of speech which threw him into paroxysms of temper every second time he opened his lips. Onca or twice when his malady stuck him voiceless in the middle of a santence the other whita tp-- laughed, and then when his tongue, served hhn again ho would break off from tho text and rap out a sxearA fit poisonous cuts- (CVn.tinn.ed in next issue.) mm I11 Plain and Decorated, Will be sold in sets or by the piece. The finest line of goods ever shown in the citv. We have also in stock seven different patterns in English a China. These goods are in 100 piece sets, and range in price from 11 to $15. An inspection of these goods is respectfully invited. Y. YonGoetz, Grocer. Ottenstein Block. HUMPHREYS' VETERlNARYSPECinCS Fcr Scsss, Cittls, Shsep, Ecs, Zt, USD POUTTXY, 599Tsjft Bosk 9b Treat wrt ef Asisals ccE3(7Ters,CBetaKS,lBfla.snsatiea A. A.i spinal 3f eaiBsitis, Milk Ferer. B. B.?irlHS, Laaems, Kkeasatissu C. C Distemper, asal Discharces. D. D. Bets r Grass, Warms. K.E.CaBsb?s Heaves, PaeaaisBia F.F. Calic or Griaem Bellyache. fl.G. Miscarriage, Hemorrhages. II. II. Urinary and Kidney Diseasae I.I EraptiTe Diseases, Mailf. J.K Diseases fDisemiiss, Paralysis. Sirrle Bottle (crr deeeaX - - .60 Stable Casv wlta Specifics. Vtrm Veterinary Cure On and HedkaSx; $7.00 Jar Teteriaary Care Oil, . 1.00 S14 irJmrrf; or rt jrrtid BryrimtMi lassy BTXrSSXXSXXBL CO, 111 jtUSTCEaa St, Srvfrrft. SPECIFIC Ro do la 33 T5es- Tri nrTr iim 1 m' 11 t iimrfT U r t!"il wi -1 U1..1 Jl pr rial, cr 5TixJaBdUrKBTitI pcrwtier,lOT-i. Soil SRolia,r acsl rrnrytaca Teetipt fi imnicrrs'XEa. ca, 111 mKcsc, WW MECCA COMPOUND 00 presi - c 12s. tiTHisz fevers ard Fain Kel-rv:- Properties as to sees irpos. J :c iron a Noa-Poc-jr-cus Preprabec tbar$aa fee Bsed vi&all frec&xs. Far Beras alone it is ohea Tonh its -arcigijt in Gold, vesksvefceea sawed by its csc aad f'TOealjtj; all kzsdsof sores it xaer itezrccc!saJ exyeciaaocs. Prjcipt tscu most efFtnne and ttslc-J be in ever fae aad -worisbrp. i rc pared by tfci Foslrr Mfj Col. C jc dI EIc-j.Icto. Sold by the trade SSolci Toy .A Staroxtx. m Rattle) PLUG As good as'can Be'made regardless of prjc V i for Other Brands Only ay5 for I O cents DohT take our word for it, but buy a piece; and see for yourself 57 U. P. TIME CARD. Toting effect Janeary 5th, 1835. EAST BOUND Eastern Time. No. 2, Fast Hail Departs 9:00 a in No. 4. Atlantic Express 11:00pm No. 28, Freight " 7:10 a m WEST BOUND "Western Time. No. No. No. 1, Limited.. Departs 3:5 p m 3. Fast Mail.. 17, Freight.... " ll:25p m 1:50pm - 7:50 a m No. 23, Freight.. N. B. OLDS. Agent. JjlRENCH & BALDWIN, ATTORXETS-AT-ZA TF, NORTH PLATTE, - - NEBRASKA Office over X. P. Ntl. Bank. 1 a PATTERSON, J-VL i'OHNEY-KT-Li, Office First National Bank B, NORTH PliATTE. NEB. jTIECOX Jb HATiTjIGAX, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, rfORTH PLATTE, - NZBEASKA. OfSce over North Platte National Baci. E. E.NORTHRUP, DENTIST. Room No. 6, Ottenstein BuikKng, NORTH PLATTE, NEB. D R. N. F. DONAI.DSON, Assistant Sargeon Union pacfic R?n and Member of Pension Board, NOBTH PIATTE, - NEBRASKA. OfSc over Streitz's Dreg Store. Legal Notices. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION'. TJ. S. Land Office, North Platte. Neb April fa. f Notice is hereby giTtn that the folloriBg Baraed settler has filed notice of his intent! ob to make final proof ia support of his claim aad that said proof Trill be made before the Register aad Re ceiver at North Platte, eb., on May 8th, ls6, riz: ERNEST J. BAKER, -xho made Homestead -Entry No. 15746 for the lots 4, 5, 6 and 7, Section 6. Torasbip 1 X Raage 32 W. He names the following witaesses to prove his coatisneos residence npoa aad culti vation of said land, tlx: Wiley Matthews. Oscar M. MattheTTs. Bilhcgs P. Baier and Jasen B. Cos selman, all of Dicfceas.Neb. 28 JOHN T. HTNMAN, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Euro Otttce at Nosth Platte. Neb ; April 20th. 13W. J Notice is hereby given that the folle wins-named settler has filed notfce of her inteation to male final proof in support of her claim, and that said proof -arill be made before the Register and Re ceiver at North Platte, Nebraska, on May 27th, 1SS6, Tix: Marea S. JorgoasoB. videv of Rasmus Jorgensoa. ho made Homestead Entry No. lirS-1, for the Northeast qearter of section 30, toTmship 10 range 23 W. She names the following -sritnees to prove her cootiasoas resi dence upon and caltivatios of, said laad. viz: Rasmas Hansen. Peter Home, Los C Haasen and George Schmid. jr.. all of Curtis. Nebraska. 2S5 JOHN F. HLNMAN, Register. PROBATE NOTICE. lathe matter of the Estate of -naa Bzskins, deceased. Ia the Coraty Coart of Liacoin Cooaty, Ne braska, March 2Sth, lsOL Notice is hereby given, that the creditors of said deceased nil! meet tho AdmMstrator of said es tate, before the County Jadge ef Lincoln County. Nebraska, at the County Coart Room, in said Coenty, on the 31st day of Jaly, 1SS6. oa the 31st day of August. 1556, aad en the 1st day of October. at 1 o'clock p. ra. each day. for the perposo of presenting their claims for examiaatioa. adjast mest and allowance. Six months -are allowed far creditors to present their claims, and one year for the administrator to settle said Estate, from the Zlst day of March, lt-S6. This notice wfH be pab lished in The Tsiecwe. a newspaper printed ia t-aid County, for four weeks successively, oa and after March 31st, 1-15. M-31-1 Ja3zs M. Rat. County Jadge. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER CHATTEL. MORTGAGE. Notice is herebT given tha,t by virtue f a. chattel mortgage dated oa the 5th dav of October. IS&i. aad 0Ky Sled in the o&ce of the coBHtr clerk of Lincoln countr. Nebras ka, on the Sth" dav of Aagast, 1S9. and exe cuted by W. M. Rkeno'ir to the North Platte National Bank to secure the payment of the sum of S2Si2Q. and upon which there is now due the sum of SS1.2T; default having been made in the payment of said sum, and no suit or other proceedings at law having been instituted to recover said debt or any part thereof, therefore I will sell the propertv therein described, viz: One gray mare. One gray horse. One larm wagon. One set f arm namess. At public auction at the corner of Sixth and Spruce streets, in the Citv of North Platte, in Lincoln county. Nebraska, on the 3d day of May 1E56, at 2 o clock p. m. of said dar MILTON DOOLnTLE. Receiver. North Platte National Bank. , . North Piatte Neb. Dated April 17th, laL - Ounces IO cents Ounces 1 OBDER OF HEARING. The State or Nebraska, Ltscols Cotnerr. At a coantx cocrt. held at the mar aecrt room, in and for fi& ceaaiy. April lfck, Present Jarae II- Bay, Coanty Jadge. Ia the matter of the estate of 3ferdeai O. On rea&sg ao! filial the petitioa ef Abigail E. PnrBL-h prayins that adialaistrattea f ?Id estate may be granted to her as admiaistrator. Ordered. That Hay id, at 1 e'cleoi, p. m is assigned for heoriar raid petition. Trhes alt persoas isterested is said matter raay appear at & county court to be held ia and for 3ald ceeaty. aad shercr eate why the prayer of petitioner skeald not bepraated; and that notice of the peadeacy o said petitioa and hearing thereo,he given Ut aU per ?ens interested ia said matter by pabHshte; a copy of this order in The Texsttce. a legal BeWspaper pristed in said county, for thrte saceesive -weeks prim- to said day of hearing. a31 J Astra M. Ext. Coraty Jedge. Claude Weingand, DEALER IN Coal Oil, Gasoline. Crude Petroleum and' Coal Gas Tar. Leave orders at Newtons Store f jos. Hershey, DEALER IN Ipultal : Implements OP ATjTj kinds. Farm and Spring Wagons, Buggies, Road Carts, Wind Mills, Pumps, Barb Wire, Etc. Locust Street, between Fifth and Sixth NORTH PLATTE MARBLE : WORKS, W. C. RITNER, Maa-Prof sad Dealer ia MONUMENTS, : HEADSTONES, Curbing, Building Stone, And &S tiads ef Mooessental aatt Cezaetecy work, GEO. NAU MAN'S SIXTH STREET MEAT MAESET. Meats at wholesale and re tail. Fish and Game in season. Sausage at all times. Cash paid for Hides. & Cure for Piles, ain sssnre all who snif: -with Irr tesaaJ Piles that in Hexnorrhoidiae we havo apogtiw cure. 'Hie treatment is oalikeany thing heretofore used ami its application so periecs thaterary ves tige of the disease is eradicated.- Hcm rrhokiiTHj is & harmless coBtjKMDtl. 11 be used for an eye ointment, yet jm -cs such healing power that "when 2 plied to the diA-fiPed parts, it at oace re lieves and a cars is tlte sore result oi its continued te. All at ho snlFer -vrkh pSesr suffer from Constipation ato and lieat-' " orrhoidine cure! lodi. Pri$l 50. For Salehy Prnj::. :ts. TI1 be sent irrm the factory 1.- m" ly . c i price. Sewi io The Foster ilisVo Co. Council BInfis, Ioira, for testiTr.oaiaLi and infermaiion. Sold TayL. JE. JSlaroltv.