"ni Brtes the Horses to Omaha. SsoGGm- Sept 23. H. G. Cfczp mh. -K-io arranged to bave a nice in tgs city next vek between Star Pwirter and Joe Patchen, left last night - o liiiu? cne worses to that place instead of here. iCKUU- UL imsxs irictaoirhetweeir Osapman and the carnival manase saent. . State Board ia Enjoined. Lixcorjr, Sept. 26. The Nebraska Telephone company has made applica tions to J edge Holmes for a temporary injunction against the state hoard of transportation to prevent any further action in the case brought bv John O. Yeiser The application was granted ad notice was served on the members Mdsecreraritsof the board last even ing. Under tie statutes they have three creeks to file an answer. The ap plication sets out that John O. Yeiser or Omaha has filed with the state hoard of transportation a complaint alleimr that the charges forservice by the com pany' are exorbitant and unreasonable and that the board has taken under consideration this complaint and Yeiser 's prayer for a reduction in the rates. Expert's Report Submitted. Lnccocr, Sept. 24. The report of the accountaut Tvho examined the hooks at the Institute for the Deaf and Dumb at Omaha for the legislative committee -was shown to the newspaper reporters here. The shortages reported consist mainly of unauthorized expenditures; items in which school expenses were settled by Superintendent Gillespie out of funds accrued through earnings of theschooh it being held by the committee"-that these funds-should have been covered into the state treasury and the expenses reported under the head of de ficiency to await legislative- action. It is complained by the expert that the records have not been kept as an expert bookkeeper would keep them. In the summary the report shows that there is an aggregate of unauthorized expendi tures of $11,416.37 ; cash-,. May 30, 1597, 273.56 ; shortage in accounts, $1,539.72 ; due children's accounts, $205.87. WOOLWORTH FOR JUDGE. 3V5trline; Morton and 4. C. Crawford For Regents of University. --For Jnrigg of Sgpreme Oottrt. JAMES 3L WOOLWORTH, Omaha. For Rogenti ef UmvprMSy of Xohraska. J C. CRAWFORD, West Point. J. STERLING 3IORTON.Nebruaka City. OiiAHA. Sept- 24. The National Democratic state convention met at "Washington bail in this city last even ing, with 29 counties represented. T. J. Mahoney called the convention to order and introduced "Warren Switz ler and Frank HaHpr of Omaha as chairman and secretary respectively. In accepting the chair 3Ir. Switzler briefly stated the position of the Na tional Democracy in the pendinsr cam paign. He declared that the money question had been settled and that the tarifiFhad no place in this campaura, which was purely state and judicial. Judge HcHHgh nominated "Warren Switzler of Omaha, for supreme judge, and Euclid Martin named A. J. Sawyer of Lincoln, J. Sterling Morton sug guested James il. "Wool worth of Omaha, 2llr. Switzler and Mr. Sawyer withdrew in favor of Judge "Wool worth, and the latter was nominated by acclamation. Judge J. C. Craw ford of "West Point and J. Sterling ilorton of Nebraska City were nomina ted for regents of the state university by acclamation, and the latter was compelled to reply to repeated demands for a speech. GOLD IH HER GRIPSACK. Eae Wan Irish stud Afraid of yotliing That Walks the Earth. Among the passengers who recently arrived in Philadelphia on the steam ship 3-Shynland were about 40 pretty looking Irish girls, whose occupations, "erdiug to the vessel's manifest, in ivd marina makers, cloakrSakers, ii2operatcrs, dairymaids, draper shop clerks and servants. They were all, ex cepting a few, bound for the large cities of the west, and one of the party, who wrote her name upon the register with out a sign of nervousness as Agnes St. Clair Mulcrowney of Harnhead, County Donegal, carried 2,000 in gold and $75 in United States treasury notes in a handbag. "When the intarpreter asked her if she were not afraid to carry so much money with her, she promptly replied, "I am Irish without a mixture of the invader or palatine in my make up and am afraid of nobody.1 "Why do you leave your native land when you prospered soTT was the sec cndi question put to her, and the reply came just as promptt "Crops are bad this season, and if I remained" in the old land probably some Britisk landlord might lay claim to a partioijof my money left me by my fa ther. So i-come to this land, which, as I understand, affords an asylum for tha Cppressed-of all lands." " Deputy Commissioner of Immigra tion Hughes ordered 3fiss 3Tulcrowney fOr-be permitted to- pass at once, and one hour afterward she was on board a Pennsylvania, railroad train on her way to'St- PauL Philadelphia Times. THE DUCK DID IT. Hew HdJ Craic Was Convicted of Poul try Larceny. The cackling of geese saved ancient Borne, but it remained for a Kansas City duck to play an important part in convicting a thief. A disreputable looking duck, with a sore head, swaggered around with a rakish air in the chicken house of Poul try Dealer "Wiggins at a Kansas. City market, having for company about 50 dozen chickens, which it bullied and, quacked defiance at. Hpdie Craig, a white boy, 17 years pld liying at Fifth and Cherry streets, passed by the poultry house. Chickens were a rare- die: ac Hojlie's house, and ie looked so long and Jongingly at Wig gins aggregation of songless birds and Jiis mouth o watered at the thought of fried yellow legs that he returned that night, and, effecting an entrance into the poultry house, hurriedly thrust a doses of th1 inmates into a sack. Hodie was arrested, and on the following day was in Justice Wall's court for triaL rWiggins was unable to identify the chickens, aiid Hcdie seemed certain to escape punishment- Suddenly there was a "quack,", "quack, " and to Wiggins delight he beheld his dissipated looking Hyrfc with the sore head. That settled the matter, and the court consigned Ho die to the bastilufcr 40 days. Fan8 FROM .FOREIGN" LANDS. Iaterestins Topics Hiat Engross the testion of Europe M. Hg, the Swiss engineer who fros j-until cow been the principal European adviser and favorite ef the Abyssinian ruler and'the recipient of -all sorts of "aiiningand railroad concessions from iia dusky potentate, has suddenly fall en into disgrace and has been thrown into prison. Ly JMcnelek and loaded with rhafTH. It appears that the mnnnrph been persuaded by some of his French, friends that the unfortunate Hg, who was principally instrumental in bring ing about the peace between. Abyssinia and Italy, had been bribed by the latter to betray the" land of his adoption and to sacrifice the interests of Abyssinia for the sake of money. The aisrmist accounts recently pub lished by the "EnTTgh press, anil espe cially by the London Times, regarding the condition ef the Parthenon at Ath ens are wholly unjustified by facts. There is no danger of its tumbling to pieces- On the contrary, it is well tihortd up and adequately supported by powerful scaffolding, which hs been put up in order to permit of the replac ing of the defective architraves and cap itals with marble extracted from the old quarries at Pentelicus by the Greek. Archaeological society acting in con junction with an in tematiaual commi fc tee of architects and savans. It is announced in London by the South. African Chartered company thrfe the work wita which Dr. Jameson -has been intrusted, and for which he re turned to the dark continent, is the management of the construction of the transcontinental telegraph, line which is intended to span Africa from Cape Town to Cairo. Major Lothaire, the Belgian officer who was dismissed from King Leopold's army for having hanged the English missionary trader Stokes without any form of trial and merely from motives of personal spite, in the Kongo Free State, has just returned to west Africa for the purpose of undertaking the man agement of a Belgian company trading in rubber, ivory and coifee on the banks of the Kongo. The British government has decided to spend .$14,000,000 in the construe tien of an elaborate system of new docks, basins and coaling jetties at Simon's Town, Cape of Good Hope. The plans have already received the ap proval of tho admiralty, and work is to be begun at once. The docks will be of sufficient capacity to hold the largest ironclad afloat. England's prison authorities are abol ishing the use of the treadmill and oak um picking in the penal institutions of the United Kingdom and are putting convict labor to a more profitable use; Army and navy stores, especially the mnhing of garments and aceouterments, are now engaging the attention of the inmates of her majesty's jails, who like wise manufacture the msxTbags of the postal department and the shirts, uni forms and boots of their archenemies, the police. The result is a vast saving all around, and an announcement is made that the government has some 300 badly worn treadmills for sale to the highest bidder. The returns just issued by the British government show a remarkab'e decrease in. Irish emigration for th last 12 months, the figures being the lowest since IS 71. This, together with the de clining death rate, a birth rate consid erably above the average and a very ex tensive immigration of Irish citizens returning from America, would seem to indicate that, in spite of the famine which is nw declared to be imminent, Ireland has been enjoying recently a greater degree of prosperity than for a long time A sensation has been created by the discovery that both the Austrian and Italian governments are busy day and night constructing the most costly and elaborate fortifications at the points where the empire and the kingdom meet in the southern Tyrol and in the neigh borhood of Pontebla. This, it would ap pear, mean that neither at Vienna- nor at Home i thcrv much confidence on the part cf the authorities in the exten sion of the existing triple alliance, since allies do not. as a rule, consider it aeccssary to adept such means of de- feudisg their dominions against one an other. Tlf. ro are ao fortifications of any kind along the frontier of Germany and Austria. Why should there be any cn the Austr-Iftilian boundarv line? How little Kkelihoed there is of either Russia or France joining Emperor Wil liam in his projected coalition against England will be seen by the recently issued official trade reports, which show that more than 30 per cent of France's foreign commerce is transacted with Great Britain, a country which consti tutes the market for more than a third of the entire prodrction of France's in dustry. No less than 32 per cent of Russia's foreign trade is with Great Britain, which is the best customer for JIuscovite grain; 590,000,000 poods go to England each year, whereas Ger many takes only 5S.000..000 poods. It is ridiculous, therefore, to imagine that either France or Russia would sacrifice its best markets and subject its staple industries to downright ruin solely for the purpose of satisfying a purely per sonal spite of the kaiser against his relatives. New York Tribune. Improved Bathtubs. A new attachment for bathtubs con sists of two curved arms hinged to the wall above the tub to support a wash basin, a clamp under the basin allowing the arms to, be raised and lowered tq any position or tilted to empty the war ter. AS trrerpartjetJCtnsstellecti Ha sat oa the jury. He noted with care EverytMag thasms offered ia evidence there He took the exhibits with caution ia hand Xnit heard what the witnesses said on the stand. As the da 79 passed along ho felt snre he could trust , H1 judzment to offer a verdict quite just. But his confidence straightway gave place unto doubt When the experts their theories gravely brought out. OC anatomy- now he knows much that is new Of heredity's pranks, toxicology to&. Cnujptg3ij3 yeSiidSts ae's aBjs talxseo, st h'i VehoIIyiorsciteri the ci!i in the ram DIVERS ILLS CURED AT THE HOLY HILUSKRiNE. Wltbia Seeeat Days Jfssakers of SicJcFiT xiiBS te the .Saered Spot Save Seen Mjuie VVkale Battles Filled as tt "oa taia and Carried Away. This has been the banner year for miraculous cures at the famous shrine of worship at Holy Hill, "Wis., and quite recently the news of wonderful healings gone forth with startling frequency. Cozens of cures have been reported and in the chapel crutches, spectacles and other reminders of p'hysical defects or ailments are found in a showcase. These have been, left as proofs of tlje afflictions that have been cured. Many cases might be cited, among them one that occurred a few days ago at the end of one of the pilgrimages which took place recently. Miss Anna Davlin of Dixon, His., who had been suffering from nervous prostration nine years, arrived at the shrine early in September. She remain -ed at one of the hotels and immediately began to visit the stations with her sister. Her physicians had given her up and told her she would surely die if she made the trip to "Wisconsin. She was unable to walk, hut began to receive strength, day after day, resulting in a -complete cure the day of -the Feast of Nativity. She walked up and down the hill twice and attended mass three times. There was never a year when so many afflicted were - present as "this one,' and at tftfs time many persons are found ev ery day on their way to the hill, for the season will be over when the cold weather sets in. At the register in the chapel names of visitors are found who have come from all parts of the country. Besides the pilgrims there are hun dreds who come to view the scenery from the summit. It is picturesque to a degree. One is struck with wonder at the grandeur of the panorama present ed. Hills, ravines, lakes, rivers, log houses, barns, farms, church steeples, villages and cities meet the spectator's gaze. Off to the east Lake Michigan, 25 miles distant, may be seen on a clear day, and the tower of the new city hall of Milwaukee, 35 miles .distant, may be seen with a spyglass. Hartford lies seven and one-half miles northwest. It is to this place all Chi cago and Milwaukee pilgrims are brought to be Transported in buses to the shrine of worship. Oconomowoc, the famous summer resort, is 12 miles southwest and Watertown lies in a westerly direction. Originally the hill was 20 feet high er, but in 1S79, when the present chapel was built, it was dug down to make a broader base. The chapel was built at a cost of over 20,000 and a few years ago-was frescoed -at a cost of $1,200. It has a seating capacity of 4Q0, and when ; it is considered that the attendance on some feast days averages between 3,000 j and 5,000 it will be readily seen that j the edifice is too small to accommodate i the crowds that throng the hill every j year. . ! Near the church cn the south side is a bell tower, and 25 feet south of the bell tower is a, grotto which was erected this summer by a Chicago man at a cost of $300. It was-tcently dedicated and represents the original grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes, the famous shrine of worship in France, which sprang into prominence on account of its supposed curative properties in 1S58. On one side is the Virgin and on the other the shep herd girl, Bernadette, to whom the ap- a cave 01. scone ana in uie loregrouna is a - t f - i a fountain. Some of the pilgrims bottle the water and have the priests bless it. The chapel is used only on spvrial oc casions. No funerals or marriage cere monies have been conducted in it. The following feast days are observed regu larly at the hill by the priests of the neighboring parishes : May 24 The titular feast of the church termed Feast of St. Mary, Help of Christians. June 17 Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. July 2 Feast of the Visitation of tho Blessed Virgin. Aug. 15 Feast of the Assumption. Sept. 8 Feast of the Nativity. The Feast of the Holy Rosary oc curs the first Tuesday in October. Car. Chicago Post. They Wear Good Clothes. The Missouri farmer today is as well and comfortably dressed as his fellew of any other state- The Missouri coun try lawyer or country editor has no ex cuse for being ill dressed. Therefore for the Missouri candidate to assume a garb pf rural quaintness which does not pre vail among the people themselves is a sort of "character sketch" which it is no wonder Misspurians have resented of late years. It is all right and proper for Missouri candidates to he sleek and well groomed. The state itself is sleek and well groomed, and the state should be fittingly represented in the appear ance of its public men. The day of Uncle Josh Whitcombs in Missouri po litical life has passed- Exchange. The Acme of Convenience. The house of Dr. Siemens, 'the Berlin electrjeian, is known throughout Ger many as "the wonder of Wansee." It is fitted from roof to cellar with elec tricity. The dining room, kitchen and wine cellar are all connected by means of a miniature electric railway. In or der to convey things from one room to another the article required has only to be placed on a little car, a button press ed, and the car is almost instantly "pfhere ?t ought to be. The greatest Traveler. The Great Western railway of Eng land has made a present of IQ0 guineas o the greatest traveler in the world," one of its employees who hjts traveled pver 4,QQ0,0GQ miles in 40 years service. Steam Saow Sleds. It is said tlias Secretary Alger's" scheme for supplying transportation over the Yukon by steam snow sleds has been anticipated by the Klondike Transportaticn, Express and Commer cial company of St. Louis, whose secre tary says that the company has already arranged to run trains over the Yukon river in December. T Cure Caastipailoa Furever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c. cr 25c. If C C. C. fnil to cure, drccgists ref und. ratmev. WHERE MEN ARE SCARCE. Sfeipwreeked Sailers Thsd "WiTes Awaitic Tfa" aa a -Taxsiway lalaad. News of a shipwreck just received at the state department, "Washington, has behind it an undeveloped sequel which will undoubtedly prove mteresting. The -rrecked vessel was the bark Nonantum i Seattle, Wash. The Ncnantmm t?hich had been blown hundreds of miles off her course,, went ashore on Easter island. The crew of 15 took to the boats and landed safely. Eight of the crew were taken to Valparaiso, but the others decided to stay on the island Easter island is a sort of Adamless Eden of the Pacific. Men are scarce there and women plenty. Half a dozen of the sterner sex are all that remain of the former male population, which has been decimated by the roving tendencies of their fellow citizens, who deserted by the wholesale in every ship that stopped at the island. For a number of years efforts- have been made by the inhabit ants of the island, to induce visiting traders and sailors to remain. The pick of a wife was one of the inducements held out. A story went the rounds some time ago that a boat from Easter island in command of a gray bearded old man and with a crew of young women in tercepted a ship and held out the prom ise of a happy and prosperous career to any man who would return with them. It is believed at the department that the ' seven sailors were captivated by the in ducements offered them to stav, if not by the charms' . of the Easter island maidens, and that they have alrendv married and settled down. Exchange. SAW CANAAN. A 2Ian Says He Was Called Back to Xlfe by the Cries of Hia Wife. William Graham, a consumptive, and his wife lived in a cottage in Santa Monica, CaL The other night Graham apparently died. An undertaker was called in anrt prepared the body for bur ial. The frenzied young wife was final ly allowed to go into the room, and in a paroxysm cf grief she threw herself upon the body, straining it to her breast and calling to her loved one to come back. It was some minutes before she could be led away, and then it was no ticed that a slight shudder ran throng! the man's body Restoratives and mas sage were applied,and within an hour Graham was able to speak. Graham says that he went out of this life and jcunieved into another country. He describes a beautiful road lined with stately trees, strains of music were in the air, and he savs that alomr a pathway his father came to meet him He tells of their greeting and conversa tion, and then of bis being torn away, called back to his worn and aching body by the insistent calls of his wife. AN EXPERT THIEF. She Has Been Arrested a Thousand Time For Her- ailsdeeda. Emma Thompson, alias Little Louisa, alias Laura Eigelow, a little, wrinkled woman of nearly Go years, said by the police to be an expert thief with an ia- ternational reputation, is locked up at headquarters in Chicago. The woman during the past five or six years has been in Europe, most of the time in England, and returned only recently from Windsor. Out. About Windsor, Out. About Detective Sergeant Hart- rom a trip to Des Moines. the same time ford returned from a trip The two met face to face on the street. and the woman was compelled to ac company the officer to the police station. It is said that Emma Thompson has been arrested no less than 1,000 times during her life, but she has seldom been sent to prison, because, the police say, she is too clever. TJshtnlns's Qnecr Treaks. Lightning killed Major Jameson at 1 Guildford. England, the other day and gave a remarkable illustration of what the erratic fluid can accomplish. Major Jameson, who was picking mushrooms in an open meadow, was found, face downward, almost denuded. There wa; only one vivid flash, and it must have been this, the coroner's jury decided, which killed him. One of the man's boots was torn from the foot and hurled some yards away. The other boot, torn into bits, was scattered around Major Jameson's cap, shirt, undershirt and trousers were in fragments. The light ning struck him on the head, and pass ing downward tore a hole in the ground 18 inches in circumference and 3 inches deep. A gold watch in the man's pocket stopped at 5:10 o'clock. The glass was pulverized and. the works were twisted into a "bunch." What Collar Wheal I Do 135, The merchant among the farms "is stocking up;' the wholesale dealers are thus compeilf d to increase their orders; the manufacturers fill their shops with men to fill these orders; the railroads buy more csrs and employ more men to move the product and the goods; the men thus employed buy more goods from the local dealers, and the local producers of milk, vegetables, eggs and the IikB sell where they could not sell before. The last named in turn buy more goods, and the ascending scale of purchase and production f gins again. This is what dollar wheat means, not only in tJ e wheat belt, but throughout a full half of the countrv American Machinist. THE DIFFERENCE. How Ttro Biy Cities 3Iade a Public, k- ao once meat. The following araiouncsiiiinfe is pest- eo. in tne tkstoa street cars: "The board cf health hereby adjudges wias me oepcsic pi spnrrmi in street cars is a public nuisance,, a source of filth and cause of sickseis, and hereby orders that spiiting on the floor of any fe t?ee5 car ue and acre by is prohibited. 1 44ie tallowing sign appears in the street cars of New York city: ' 'spitting on the floor of this car is positively prohibited. " Gotham and the Hub have different ways of arriving at the same statement Electrical Review.- A Sore TkJn- fair Yea. A transaction m which you cannot lose isasurethin-. Bilionsnefs, sick head- acfaerfarredtonsue, ever, s -thousand other 15 ase caused by stroatcnand sluggish liver. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, tke wonderful new tr l i t . .... vtif sfcic.mant auq intestinal tonic are by all druggists guaranteed to cure or tnonMr refunded. C C- C. are a sure thing-. Try a box to-day j IQe 25c 50c SagDtoaad booklet free. 1 w A Modern Lazarus Inherited blood diseases are rrraci more. diScalt to cere tTra-n those which are acquired. One of the most comxaor hereditary diseases is Scrofula, which tne medical profession aarmt is most obstinate and deeoseated, and their ef forts to cure it meet with little; ssccess. A child afiicted with Scrofula & always puny and sickly, and can never grow inte healthy manhood itft the disease is eliminated. Scrofula leads into con sumption nine times oat of ten, so that it is important for this reason, that im- mraiate attention oe given to ail cnii drea who inherit the slightest taint. Mrs. S. S. Mahry, 360 Him St., Macon, Ga, writes: "My boy, Charlie inherited a scrofu lous blood taint, and from infancy was covered with terrible sores, his sufferings being such that it was impossible to dress him for three years. Head, and body were a mass of sores, and his nose was swollen to several times its natural size; to add to his misery he had catarrh, which made him almost deaf, and his eyesight also became affected. No treatment was spared that we thought would relieve 9 - j'-t-3r arm, out ne grew worse until nis condi tion was indeed-nitiable. A dozen blood remedies were given him by the whole sale, but they did not the slightest good. I had almost despaired of his ever being cured, when by tne advice ol a inend we gave him S.S.S. (Swift's Specific), and at first the inflammation seemed to in crease, but as this is the way the remedy gets rid of the poison, by forcarg it out of the system, we were encouraged and continued the medicine. A decided im provement was the result, and after he had taken a dozen bottles, no one wno knew of his former dreadful condition would have recognized hfm. All tne sores on his body have healed, his skin is perfectly clear and smooth, and he has been restored to perfect h 22.1th.' Mr. A. T. Morgan, one of the promi nent druggists of Macon, and a member of the board of aldermen of that city, says: "I am familiar with the terrible condition of little Charlie Mahry, and the cure which S.S.S. effected in his case was remarkable, and proves it to be a wonderful blood remedv." S.S.S. is the only cure for deeps eat ed blood diseases, such as Scrofula, Rheu matism, Cancer, Eczema, Catarrh, etc It is the only blood remedy guaranteed T-k "V T f f rUTtiY V CSClpJOi O e and contains no potash, no mercury or other mineral, which means so much to all who know the disastrous effects ol these drugs. Valuable books mailed free to any ad dress by the Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga. . All you guess about difficulty in sell ing Stark Trees may be wrong. If you wish to know the truth, drop postal to Stark Nursery, Louisiana. Mb., or Rock port, 111. Name references. Cash pay to salesmen each week the year round. Outfit free takes no money to tut the work. Also want cr.es makers get their trees free. PURE LAKE ICE I am. again in position to snpply the people of North Platte with a snperior quality of pure ice frozen from well water. It is as clear as crystal and of good thickness; not rrozen snow and slush. A trial oraer will convince yoa of its last quality. I have plenty to through the season. WM. EDIS. BROEKER'S SUITS ALWAYS FT We have been making garments for North Platte citizens for orr twelve years, and if our work and oriees were not satisfactory we would coi fee here to-day. We solicit your trade F. J. BR0EK5R, MERCHANT TAILOR. SMOKERS In search of a good cita will always find ?t at T F. Schmalzried's- Trv t them and judge. You Need . ICE, We haye it have plenty of it STlfl JVt-m tcTi rnn otttt rtttT-nfrr r - 7, - -i - 15 SOQd-n0DS "?we mase prompt ae- 1IVCX1CS. We solicit your trade, feeling- vre can please you. Keliner d Fmk First National Bank, XOBIffPZAETB, XEB, A. F STRElIrZs Druggist. DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS OILS. " ZDe-cLtscixe gi THOSE NEW STYLE 3 REFRIGERATORS E: Are selling rapidly. The many good ' zs points possessed by them, can easily he ascertained by an inspection. ... 3 H GASOLINE STOVES 5f Are being sold by us cheaper now than f2 EE ever before in fact we are making a :3 "leader" of them. We handle i&e best 3 in the market. Come in and see them. 3 g GARDEN HOSE SPRINKLERS, and other seasonable goods are car- E: ried in stock, together with a complete 3 P line of Hardware. We still sell Bicy- E: . cles and bicycle supplies- 3 Foley Block. C. F. IDDINGS LUMBER AND GRAIN Order by telephone from Newton's Book Store. jp v v N. McCABE, Proprietor. North Platte Pharmacy. Drags and Drug-gists' Sundries. fz We aim to handle the Sell everything at 3jr warrant all goods to All Prescriptions Carefully Filled by a Licensed Pharmacist. Orders from the country and along the line of tbe Pacific Railway is "respectfully solicited. First door north of First National Bank. -FPiA-Nj-g; WALL-PAPER, PAINT AND OIL DEPOT. WTXDOW GLSS, VARNISHES, GOLD LEAF. GOLD PAINTS, BRONZES, ARTISTS COLORS AND BRUSHES. PIANO A2D FUSNJTUEE POLISHES, PREPARED HOUSE AND BUGGY PAINTS KALSOMTNE MATERIAL, WINDOW SHADES. ESTABLISHED JULY 1868; - .HO SPRUCE STREET- &TTg?jSL JE2Li ACE FINEST SAMPLE BOOM IE U0ETH PLATT1 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. Oar billiard hall is supplied with the aesu make of tables and competent attendants Tvill supply all your wants. EEITHSI.OCK. OPPOSITE x'EE USION PACIFIC DEPOT $50,000. - President 1 H.S. Mte, - -P. A. WMte, - - Arthur McNamara, - CasMen A general banking- business transacted. Painters1 Siippiesy CAPITAL, -SUEPLDS, - Window Glass, Machine Oils. Diamanta Spectacles. -i.-ootie32:e. "Who no one Owes. 9 J. E. BUSH, Manasec- best grades of goods reasonable prices, and 4 be just as represented UaioB COAL