f-LS Jwtwi NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, TUESDAY EYEJMG, JUM 30, 1896. VOL. XII. HO, 52 It Pays To hurry sometimes. Haste doesn't always make waste. The man who hurries into one of our Ten Dollar Suits saves money, for no where else can he huy the same quality of good? the same fit for the same money. in But, perhaps, he wants a swell suit, better fabric. If so, he can lay dowa Eighteen, or Twenty Dollars and take away from our store a suit good enough to wear to any party or reception. Our ""line ""'- is so large, so complete, that we can satisfy anybody, everybody. In Furnishing Goods, Hats 'and Shoes, we also take the lead. THE STAR CLOTHING HOUSE, WEBER & YOLLMER. si FINEST SAMPLE KOOM IS NORTH PLATTE Having refitted our rooms in the finest of style, the public 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 an your wants. ft4KEKDH'S BLOCS?, OPPOSI-T-E x'flE ONION PACIFIC?-DEPOT- Sacrifice the Millinery. impvhrc aim mm m l iJJU -AT- RENNIE'S. This month is the last. Millinery positively at ONE HALF PRICE. Come to Rennie's unparalleled MILLINERY SALE. S7.00 Hats atS4.00. S6.00 Hats at $3.50. $5.00 Hats at $2.50. $4.00 Hats at $2.00. $3.00 Hats at $1.50. We will positively do as we say, to close the millinery season. THE FINEST LINE IN TOWN AT RENNIE'S HAT SALE. Jos. Hershey, DEAU.R IN kicultal : hi ements OP ALL KINDS, Farm and Spring Wagons, Buggies, Road Carts, Wind Millsr Pumps, Barb Wire, Etc. Locust Street, between Fifth and Sixth MECCA COMPOUND So great are its Healing 1'owcrs and Pain Relieving Properties as to seem impossible from a Non-Poisonous Preparation hat can be usct? with all freedom. For Hums alone jtls often -worth its weight In Gold, lives have been saved byitsnse) and for healing all kinds of sores its mer it exceeds all expectations. Prompt use is most effective nnd it should be in every home and vorfcshop. Pre pared by the Foster Mfs Co.. Coun cil lilufii. lowru Sold by the trade. Sold "toy 3E S-troi-tas" mm Lamplugh's Lake. A Pleasant Resort. Many people are. making- inquir ies relative to the charges for privi leges at Lamplaugh's summer re sort. In answer I will state that bathing1 parties numbering sixteen or more can get round trip tickets, which includes bath, for torty cents. My carryall will comfortably seat thirty-two persons. Special arrangements can be made by parties wishing the ex clusive use of the dancing pavilipn, boats and baths. No charge for people visiting the resort. If the citizens of North Platte will appreciate the necessity and value of building up a home resort I will use extra efforts to build first-class accommodations in every particular. Isaac Lampeugh. EEPTTBLICAH CONVENTIONS. The republican senatorial and representative conventions met at Ogalalla yesterday afternoon, every county in the respective districts beingTepresented. At two o'clock the representative convention was called t order by L. B. Rector, chairman of the com mittee, and after the committee on credentials had made its report, J. H, Abbott, of Big Springs, was by acclamation-nominated for repre sentative. Following the nomina tion speeches were made by a num ber of thosepresent.. The following representative committee was selected: Julius Neubauer, "of Sidney, chairman; Frank P, Morgan, of Chappell, sec retary; Banner county. William McKee; Deuel county, O. M. Gun nell; Keith county, E. M. Searle; McPherson county, L. 33. Dolph; Scott's Bluff county, C. B. Wood; Cheyenne county, George W. Heist; Lincoln county, 13. F. Seeberger; Perkins county, Isiah Babcock. Following the adjournment of the representative convention, the sen atorial convention was called to order by Chairman Warner, of North Platte. The committee on credentials reported, and Judge Grimes in a brief speech placed in nomination for senator J. S. Hoag land, ot this city, and moved that Hoaglaud's nomination be made by acclamation. The motion was seconded by W. R. Akers and the motion prevailed unanimously. Mr. Hoasrland was called for and re sponded with one of his character-, istic speeches. The committee on resolutions, composed of Messrs. Hill, Akers, Pringle and Neubauer, reported as follows: We, the republicans of the 30th senatorial and 54th representative districts of the state of Nebraska, in convention assembled at Ogal alla, do hereby heartily endorse and pledge ourselves to the untir ing support of the platform adopted at the St. Louis convention and congratulate that bodv pf republir cansuph&enoSinatiorifWm? McKiriley, of Ohio, whose name stands for the protection of each American industry, and the pros perity of the American people, for we believe in America for Ameri cans, whether of native or foreign birth. The following gentlemen were selected as members o he sena torial central committee: B. F. Hastings, of Grant, chairman; A. S. Baldwin, of this city, secretary; Deuel county, R. T. Thompson, of Big Springs; Cheyenne county, L. B. Cary, of LaPere; Logan, county, Owens, of Gandy; Dawson county, J. T. Thomas, ot Lexing ton; Perkins county, I. Babcock, ot Grant; Banner county, E. F. Bar foot, of Harrisburg; Lincoln county H. W. Hill, of North Platte; Keith county, Thomas Blackburn, of Ogalalla; Grant county, R. T. Alden, of Hyannis; Thomas county John H. Evans, of Thedford'.Scott's Bluff county, Fred D. Walt, Gering; McPherson county, L. C. Reneau, of Lena. A PLEASING ENTEKTAINHENT. The entertainment given at the opera house Saturday evening by the members of Miss Miles' class in elocution proved a very pleasing one to the audience numbering nearly two hundred. Those par ticipating acquitted themselves very creditablyr and gave evidence of Miss Miles' ability as a teacher of elocution and Delsarte. The program rendered was as follows: PAST L A Hindoo's Paradise . THERESA AUSTIN. Adcle Danorav Eugene Hall IRENE SWARTHOUT. Violin Solo Selected AIVTNFOOIiE. Death Bridge of The Tav W. Carleton GRACE BRATT. Her Excuse CATHERINE OSGOOD. Arathusa's Torment CARL HOLLMAN. TABLEAU PABTIL Un Potpourri de Elocution. .1 MAY VANCE. Pride of Battery -B"' .F. H. Gassoway MAY HARSHMAN. The Elf Child J. W. 'Riley NELLIE BRATT. Violin Solo Selected PROF. E. A. GARLICHS. Auntie's Courtship MRS. HOLLMAN. Pictures in the Glass HERSHEY WELCH." TABLEAU. Reports from a few sections in the country are that grasshoppers are iujuring the crops to some ex- tentt but as yet the damage done by the insect is not serious. They appear to have been hatcbed wher ever found, and infest oat, wheat and alfalfa fields. Serious damage, it is said, is never done to crops on the hatching ground of the hop pers. The great injury is done after the insect is full grown and flies away to other localities. Lex ington Pioneer. THE EAINFALL OF NEBRASKA. An extremely interesting bulletin from the University of Nebraska experiment station has just been j issued, from which we make a few extracts. The bulletin is known as No. 45, and may be had for the asking, by addressing1 the director of the sta tion at Lincoln. The total amount of precipitation from a.tjout .thirteen inches at the extreme southwestern corner of the state to about thirty-four inches at the extreme southeastern. The average for the state is 23.33 inches. Although the total yearly rainfall of the state, and especially of the western parts of the state, is rather small, a very large portion of it falls during the month ot the grow ing- season. Thus of the 23.33 inches of annual rainfall in Nebraska, 16.08 inches, or 69 per cent of the entire amount, falls during the five months of the growing season, April to August inclusive. That we may see how we compare in this respect with other states, the following table. compiled from the record of weather bureau stations, shows what per cent of the total yearly rainfall occurs in these same five months in other localities: STATIONS. PER CENT. St. Louis, Mo 48 Cheyenne, Wyo .71 Dodge City, Kan . .; 73 North Platte. Neb.' 72 Omaha, Neb . . . 67 Huron, S. D ".V 74 St. Paul, Minn........ 61 Duluth, Minn 57 Davenport, la i 55 Keokuk, la . 54 It thus appears that the states of j Nebraska, Kansas, Dakota, and Wyoming, with their none too i plenteous supply of yearly rainfall, have, on the other hand, the ad- intage over the states lying "far ther, to the east, -that a large per centage of this rainfall occurs in the growing- season when it is most useful, and that as we go eastward the percentage gradual faHsoffj, paTFiaifarlTtowlirSs the southeast. or in other words in the direction towards which the actual amount of rainfall increases most decidedly: so that if we compare the rainfall of the growing season alone m different localities, Nebraska does not appear in so unfavorable a light as her small yearly rainfall would indicate. At the western end of the state the largest monthly rainfall occurs in May; farther east the rainfall of May, June, and July are not greatly different; while at the extreme eastern end of the state the period of greatest rainfall is delaved until June. TEE CONTEST FOB GOVERNOR, The republ ican state convention meets in Lincoln at ten o'clock to morrow to nominate a state ticket. Speaking of the contest for gover nor, last evening's Omaha Bee says: ue gubernatorial candi dates include Meiklejohn, MacColl, Hayward, Moore, Adams, Filley and Richards. The first four named are the leaders in the race, while there seems to be little chance tor the success of any one of the others. Neither of the leaders has a majority. Each one, of course, has a private estimate of his own strength, but these estimates are largely made up of delegates they hope to get, rather than of dele gates they know they have. But few estimates are shown to the gen eral public. One prominent repub lican here, who is working for the success of no particular candidate, and who has been in every conven tion since Nebraska became a state gave to the Bee to-day a few figures on the governorship which he made after a very careful study of the situation. His estimate places the relative strength of the candidates in the following order: Meiklejohn, 315;- McColl, 310; Hayward, 135; Moore, 110; Adams, 85; Filley, 50; Richards. 25; Majors, 25;Broatcb,2. These figures were made up after a close scrutiny of the list ot dele gates already reported, together with an estimate of the manner in which the votes controlled by the numerous candidates for places on the ticket would be divided between the aspirants for the governorship. As it will require 529 votes to nom inate, it will be seen that each of the leaders is still short many votes of the needed number. Dr. Sawyer; Dear Sir: Having used your Pas tilles, I can recommend them to the public. 1 have been attended by four different doctors, but one and a half boxes of your medicine has done me more good than all of tbem. Yours respect fully, Mrs. Maggie Johnson, Bronson, Branch county. Mich. Sold bv F. H. Loagley. WOMAN'S WORLD. MRS. M. S. WARREN SERVES ON A - JURY IN COLORADO. Women and Literary Careers A Word For Saleswomen Working Wesaea oi Iondon Accomplished Lady Tennyson The Story of 21 me. Rnppert. Colorado has experienced the novelty of having a woman serve on a jury, and a jury which stayed out all night at that. Mrs. 1L S. Warren, who has a large millinery establishment in Denver, and who never uses her full given name, was accidentally drawn on a venire, her registration as a voter giving no clue to her personality. When she confronted the judge he was astonished and imme diately dismissed her. It was at this point that the second surprise came. As a legal voter and a real citizen Mrs. Warren refused to be so easily sent home. She insisted upon service with the other peers of the man who was a defendant iu a civil suit Gaining a lit tle time tho court delayed decision until next day when a learned opinion was handed down. Tho opinion was to tho effect that jury duty was not imposed upon tho gentler sex when the ballot was bestowed. It happened at last that 2L S. Warren was duly accepted and sworn. The case did not amount to much, but while it was being heard all the lawyers took a keen interest in it. At 5 o'clock p. m. the case went to the jury. It was sup posed that a verdict would be reached before dinner timer but an hour later there was a reqnest for something to eat. Then it dawned upon the court at taches that the jury might bo out all night. After dinner, when the evening shad ows fell, it became the bailiff's duty to lock up his charges. Mrs. Warren, who had been gallantly chosen by her 11 as sociates as forewoman, was given a lit tle room off that ocenpied by the others. It is related that so lightly did her. duty to the public weigh upon her spirits that she was soon heard snoring with -j MRS. M. S. WARREN. such a lustiness that it was difficult for the 11 to hear one another talk about the warm weather and the latest slump in mining stocks. Early tho next morning the jury raised a chorus that demanded breakfast in a firsfc class restaurant The bailiff marched the 12 out upon the streets, and aside from some slight timidity about insisting on the honor of walking with tho forewoman, the men acted as if it was nothing unusual in the jury line for equal suffrage possibilities to be come real, hard facts. It was after breakfast that thero was a moment of embarrassment, for the 12 had to stand in a row on the sidewalk while the meal was being paid for and the crowd was mistaken for a lot of personally conducted tourists in the act of having their pictures taken. "When the judge looked at the jury box a little later, his voice bdtrayed some trepidation as ho asked, "Is tho jury ready to report?" "We are," declared Forewoman Warren in a tone that didn't hint at any indecision. "Have you agreed upon a verdict?" the court inquired. "We havo been unable to agree," said the forewoman. "Havo you differed on a question of law or a question of fact?" asked Judge Palmer. There was a moment of hesitation while Mrs. Warren consulted one of her companions. "They all understand the law pretty well," answered the forewoman, glanc ing down the line beside her. The lawyers who were gathered as spectators laughed and then the woman juror added: "We are all mixed up over the evidence. We would not agree in a month." "The jury is discharged from further consideration of this case," announced tho judge, wiping his forehead and crossing his legs. It was evident that a great weight was lifted off the judicial mind. Mrs. Warren shook hands with one or two of her associates and then, draw ing on a pair of suede gloves, she left the courtroom. "Why, it was not a bit hard," she declared as she stood in tho hallway. "The men were just perfectly lovely to me. Did they disagree on purpose? What a horrid suggestion! Of course not. Did they stay out all night just to make me wish I had never tried to be a juror? That is absurd. I had a very pleasant experience, taking it altogeth er, " Chicago Tribune, Mib.t Be Useful. Merchant You say you are an or phan. Applicant "Bor Position Yea. I haven't a Ii'iSg Kliltive, Merchant-Well, I'll take you. I ought to get a lot of work out of you during the baseball season. Philadel phia Record. Veils are one of the most ancient of txticles of dress. They were used so ong ago that their origin is lost in remoteness. Fire Crackers Giyen Away For 8 Days Only, -FROM- Saturday, June 27th, -TO- H July , H fATrfAMoS0if With every 50 cents worth of shoes purchased of Richards Bros: If you buy a pair of shoes worth 1.00 you get 2 bunches of Fire Crackers, and if you buy a pair worth j1.50 you get 3 bunches, etc. Remember that our prices will not be .any higher, but we guarantee that they will be: as low as the lowest. . . . Yours for business, Richards Bros., "The Fair." And now comes a genius with a patent ice making" machine, who promises to worry the life out of the ice monopolists. The invention consists. of an. ice-boxreontaining a cylinder filled with water. This cylinder is surrounded by a chemi cal substance, which is worked upon revolving fans propelled by muscu lar exertion. The inventor claims that the cost of making ice with the aid of his machine will not exceed $1.40 per season for family use. The life of the ice baron would seem to be short. Your Boy "Wont Live a Month. So Mr. Gilman Brown, of 31 Mill St., South Gardner, Mass., was told by the doctor. His son had luDg trouble, fol lowing typhoid malaria, and he spent three hundred and seventy-five dollars with doctors, who finally gave him up saying: "Your boy wont live a month." He tried Dr. Kings New Discovery and a few bottles restored him to health and enabled him to go to work a perfectly well man. He says he owes his present good health to use of Dr. Kings New Discovery, and knows it to be the best in the world for lung trouble. Trial bottles free at A. F. Streitz's drug store. The blue laws of New England are not in force in Chicago1, but it seems to be dangerous for a man to kiss his wife in public. George Be ban and his wife started out Wed nesday evening, and when the hus band had to go to his lodge he kissed his wife good-bye, but did not leave her. Two policemen saw Beban kiss his wife and arrested both of them for disorderly conduct. They were locked up at the police station for five hours because two policemen regarded kissing in public as dis orderly conduct. Bncklen's Arnica Salve The best salve in the world far cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, teter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by A. F. Streitz. Thousands of acres ot winter wheat and rye have been cut during the past week in Dawson county and from now the harvest will steadily progress until completed. Both the wheat and rye are of good quality and the latter, es pecially, promises a big yield, some fields requiring as much as four pounds of twine to the acre to bind it. If is said the harvest is fully two weeks earlier than usual. Lex ington Pioneer. Pree Pills. Send your address to H. E. Bucklen & Co , Chicago, and get a free sample box of Dr. King4s New Life Pills. A trial will convince you of their merits. These pills are easy in action and are particu larly effective in the euro of consitpa tion and sick head ache. For Malaria and liver troubles they have been proved invaluable. They are guaranteed to be perfectly free from every deletertious substance and to be purely vegetable. They do not weaken by their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the system. Regular siza25c per box. Sold by A. F. Streitz druggist. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to . cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafnlss is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eus tachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it "is entire ly closed, Deafness is the result, and un less the inflamation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal con dition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by ca tarrh which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars; free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. VW Sold by all Druggists, 75c. THE TTNI0N PACIFIC WILL CELEBRATE by giving its many patrons a rate of one fare tor round trip to points in Kansas or Nebraska, not more than 200 miles distance, on account of the 4th of July celebrations. Join in these celebrations and visit your friends. Full informa tion will be given by N. B. Olds. JOB SALE. Lot 5. block 66, having theron a 5-room house, city water and mod ern improvements. Lots 5 and 6, block 55. 160 acres of farm land situated in Baker precincts. For particulars call at this office. Maccaline will cure any case of itching piles. It has never failed. It affords nstant relief, and a cure in due time. Foster A. F. Price 25 and 50 cents. Made bv Manufacturing Co. and sold Streitz. by NEBRASKA SILVER TRACT. The route of the "Nebraska Silver Train" to the democratic na tional convention at Chicago, July 7th, is via the Union Pacific and Northwestern R'ys. Many prominent democrats and other believers in bi-metallism have signified their intention of going on this train. A large delegation is already assured. One fare for the round trip is the rate author ized, and parties desiring to go on this special train should reach Omaha via the Union Pacific not latar than 8:40 a. m., July 5th. For full particulars call on or ad dress N. B. Olds, Agent. Smwr Sc At North Platte, Neb., Jaly 6 to ki 15, 1896. Six weeks of normal instruction. We offer more for the money than any summer school in Western Nebraska. Good board and rooms at $2.50 per week. Tuition $5 per term, or SI per week, payable in advance. A lecture on some educational topic, by a popular lecturer, each week. 0 For further information address J. C. Orr, Principal, or Mrs. P. A. Franklin, County Superintendent.