&2j Jam? 5 " ' JLRAIj BARE, Editor and Pkoprietob SUBSCRIPTION BATES. One Year, cash In advance, $L25 Six Months, cash In advance 75 Cents' Entered attheNorthriatte(Nebraska)portofflce as second-claeptnatter. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1897. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. For Judge of the Supreme Court, A. M. POST. For "University Regents, C. V. KALEV, J. N. DRYDEN. REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET. For County Treasurer, A. C. BARRY, of Buchanan Precinct. For County Clerk, W. M. HOLTRY, of Sutherland. For Sheriff, CLAUDE WEINGAND, of North Piatte. For Supt, Public Instruction, BERTHA THOELECKE, of Osgood Prect For County Judge, A, S. BALDWIN, of North Platte. For Survej-or, CHAS. P. ROSS, of North Platte. For Coroner, N. F. DONALDSON, of North Platte. For Commissioner, First District, WM. WOODHURST, of North Piatte. THE PRINTING STEAL. The Era evaded the question pro possed to it in our last issue. That is: If the publishing of the delinquent tax list in the Era cost $1000 at legal rates, as the Era says it will, would not the pop ulist board of county commission ers have saved the county $750 by accepting The Tribune's offer to publish it at one fourth legal rates? This is a straight forward ques tion that can be answered "ves or no J! It will be no answer to say that at some other time full legal rates had been paid for this work when there was no competitive bid. o o THE COUNTY TREASURY. The Era and the populist officials have had ajjpod deal to say about John Clarlr not haying collected as much interest on the county funds as has Butler Buchanan. What ever difference there has been in this matter was an honest difference, as to what funds were subject to the provisions of the depository law wmch was then new. as it was constructed by the attor ney general of this state. That the courts have since disagreed with the attorneT general's construction of the law is no reflection on Clark. But there is one thing that Clark did do. He turned over to his suc cessor in office every dollar belong ing to the county that came into his hands. Will Butler Buchanan do that mnch? Under Clark's management of the county treasury, the first consider ation was the safetv of the public money and not a dollar was lost. But under populist mismanagement the question has been how to farm out the public mone3T to forward the political fortunes of the populist officials and the result is the loss to the county of many thousands of dollars of the taxpayers' mouer. What becomes of the boasted amount of interest earned oil coun ty funds under the present manage ment. The county treasury would be several thousand dollars ahead if there had been no interest earned and the principal had been safely kept. THE BARTLEY DEFALCATION. Now comes Frank Ransom one of the state chairmen of the triple headed fusion state ticket and charges that Governor Holcomb ap proved the Bartley bond for his second term knowing that Bartley was then a defaulter. This makes Governor Holcomb a part' to Bartley 's defalcation. j The law made it his duty to com- J pel Bartley to account for every j .dollar of the state money at the - 6nd of his first year before approv ing his bond for a second term. JHad he done this the state would not have lost a dollar. We do not condone Bartley's crime bu t coudem n it as has every re publican newspaper in the state and we demand that Holcomb to shall T "be prosecuted for his failure to do ' his duty. No party has a monop oly of honesty or dishonesty. The people have, through their legislature, proyided that the gover . nor, who actually handles none of the money, shall compel thet state treasurer to account for the pub lic funds, that the governor shall requirei&good and sufficient bond of'thlpjate treasurer. While the Bartley bond at the tinie.of its. ppro3 was probably soo&f .now elops that the l nave manipu " propert to cover it up lent or have moved lave at the bond is from the wort now aim PPU Yet we find that tl3 bond reasurer Mesenreties as fchS the le state is again " to nie3 another heavy loss through do his ie' failure of Holcomb to , "nrin from the now almJ that tl samf "W. J. Bryan's Short Political Cate chism, 1896. Edition. What has caused the fall price of wheat? in the Ansxver The crime of 1873 has caused the decline of silver, and as an ounce or silver will alwavs ex change for a bushel of wheat, wheat has declined with silver. AVhafc has caused the decline in the price of corn? Ans Corn has declined with the fall in the price of silver the same as wheat. What has caused the decline in the price of cattle and hogs? Ans Cattle and hoes have de clined in value with the fall of silver for the same reason that wheat has fallen. What has caused the price of horses to decline? Ans The value of horses has de clined because of the fall of silver, the same as wheat and all other products. What has caused the decline in the value of cotton? Ans Cotton has fallen in price like wheat, because of the crime against silver in 1 873. Why are there two million men in the country who cannot get work? Ans Because of the crime of 1873. What will be the effectof McKin ley's election ? Ans A still further decline in prices and the throwing out of em ployment millions of men and the ruin of all our industries- What shall the country do to be saved? Ans Fall down and worship at the shrine of millionaire silver mine owners and vote for their hired man, W. J. Bryan. W. J. Bryan's Short Political Cate chism, 1897 Edition. Why does silver continue to de cline and the pricp of wheat con tinue to advance. Aus The sh'ortage of the wheat crop in Europe. , Why has corn advanced nearly 50 per cent over the price of one year ago? Ans The shortage of the wheat crop in Europe. Why has cattle advanced in price? Ans The shortage of the wheat crop in Europe. How do you account tor the big advance in the price of hogs? Ans It is due to the shortage of the wheat crop in Europe. What has caused the advance in the price of horses in the United States? Ans The shortage of the wheat crop in Europe. What has furnisherLrp1oyment to the thousands 'of men who were Idle one year ago? Ans The shortage of the wheat crop in Europe. Why is it that there is more money in circulation now, and the rates of interests lower than ever before? Ans U is due to the shortage of the European wheat crop. Why is it that the reports of the clearing houses show that this coun try is doing more business and money circulating faster than it ever done before? Ans It is all owing to the short age of the wheat crop in Europe. Why is it that the railroads are working to their fullest capacity, employing more labor and paving a greater volume of money for labor than ever before? Ans It is due to the shortage of the wheat crop in Europe. Why is it that there are so many men who voted for Bryan and free silver who swear they will do so no more? Ans Owing to the shortage of the wheat crop in Europe. Why was is that the populist party in Nebraska permitted a handful of democrats to force upon them as their candidate for supreme judge a democratic corporation plugger? Ans It was all on account of the shortage of the wheat crop in Euroue. Which was the greater crimp, the demonetization of silver-iu 1873 or the shprtage of the wheat crops in Europe in 1897? Aus The shortage ot the wheat crop in Europe in 1897. Mr. Bryan should know better then to make such a remark as he is credited with making iu his speech at the Kansas City Carni val. "When he said if the republi cans were going to claim the credit for.raising the price of wbeat they should also accept the responsi bility for lowering the price of corn, he deliberately and dishon esty misstated the fact about corn There can be no warrant or excuse for such a falsehood. If he is cor rectly quoted, and we find the false statement in his organ, the Omaha World Herald, the only proper con clusion is that he is either stupid or dishonest. "Why should he want to talk snch nonsense to the American people when. a compari son of market quotations of the day on which he made that asser tion showed corn to be more then 40 per cent higher then on that date one year ago? He is desperate straits when he is compelled to de scend to such depths of dishonesty. He talks too much. Fremont Tribnne. -cate Tour Howels "With Cascarets. CanaGathartic, cure constipation OJLLABY. A dear littlo head of golden hair . Pillowed against my breast, A dear little smile on her faco so fair My darling, sweetly rest! Two dear little eyes of bonny bine, With their lids to my Hp3 close prcsscu, A dear little heart that beats so true Hy darling, sweetly reaM A dear littlo face has my little Loy, - -A dear littlo form to caress, A dear little life that gives me joy Sleep, darling, and take your restl -May Smith Eggleston in Detroit Free Press. SEEBACH AND THE AGENT. A German Story of an American Attempt to Room a Sewing Machine. The following story, which was pub lished in German in connection with the death of Marie Seebach, tho noted German actress, shows very well the conception of American affairs which still prevails in Germany to a certain extent. Seebach was here more than 20 years ago, and it is scarcely possible that such an incident as is described would have taken place then, but many such stories are told in Germany today as illustrative of American enterprise. According to this reminiscence Marie Seebach oue day received a message that a gentleman wished to see her. She told the servant to send him to her drawiug room in the hotel, and whea he arrived he introduced himself as a certain Colonel Smith. Then ho plunged at the object of his visit and said that ho represented a certain well known make of sewing machines. "I havo already heard," he said, "that you aro a great artist. I want to find out if you aro a good business wo man as well. Do you want to make some money ? ' "Oh, I've no objections to make to that," she said, "if it is possible in a perfectly correct and dignified way." "Oh, it's in the most correct way possible that I propose," the visitor continued, "and I offer you $10,000 for doing it" "What have I to do in return:" ask ed Seebach. "Nothing in the world," the colonel replied, aud as he noticed the expres sion of astonishment on her faco he went ou: "I told you that I camo from a sewing machine company one of the largest in the world. All that I demand of you in return for tho 10,000 is that as Marguerite in tho spinning wheel scene from 'Faust' you will use cue vf our sewing machines instead cf the wheel, and just keep it in motion for a few seconds. Then we would let hand bills drop from tho gallery, saj-ing that tho machine used by Marie Seebach was made by our firm. " The actress is said to have hesitated for a setr-VnA yijtho end, her re spect for GoecJu Ix'agedy is described as the feeling which saved her artistio reputation. This story is of a typo that disap peared from general use. 40 years ago. It is'of the kind told about P. T. Ear nuni in the earlier days of his career, but stories of tho kind still pass muster in Europe, although a press jaenJtJKhf) atteniedairvjlnj.g.nf-itind in this Country would soon lose his job. New York Sun. The Use of the Great Too. The iiegroes cf the West Indies uso the great too constantly in climbing. Several years ago, while spending some time at one of the famous resorts in Ja maica, I had an opportunity to observe tho skill with which the black women, who do a great part of the menial labor, carried stone, mortar and other build ing materials on their heads to tho top of a five story tower iu a part of the hotelmot then finished. Much of the unerring accuracy with which they (women and girls) chased each other up and down the long .lad ders, with heavy loads skillfully poised on their woolly pates, was due to the firmness with which they grasped each rung of the ladders with the great toe. They did not place the ball or the hol low of the foot on the rung, but the groove at tho juncture of tho great tee with the bony of the foot, aud thcy held fast by making tho back 'of tlie other toes afford the other gripping sur face. In much the same way the Abys sinian native cavalry grasp the stirrup. And I have seen a one armed Santo Do mingan black, astride the near ox in a wheel yoke, guiding a lead mule with a rein held between his great and sec ond toes, while his only arm was devot ed to cracking his teamster's whip. Overland Monthly. Endure Hardship. As a gladiator trained the body, so must we train the mind to self sacrifice, "to endure all things," to meet and overcome difficulty and danger. We must take the rough and thorny reads as well as the smooth and pleasant, and -a portion at least of our daily duty must be hard and disagreeable, for the mind cannot be kept strong and healthy iu perpetual sunshine only, and the most dangerous of all states is that of constantly recurring pleasure, case and prosperity. Most persons will find diffi culties and hardships enough without seeking them. Let them not repine, but take them as a part of that educational discipline necessary to fit tho mind to arrive at its highest good. New York Led par Animate Advertising. The latest thing is a human sand wich man trust, tho corporate name of which is the "Animate Advertising company," and the object of which is "the exhibition of animate and inani mate advertising. " IWado For Each Other. Hicks I suppose that it is a bargain between Dick and Miss Sparker. They seem made for each other Wicks Yes. As soon as they met he made for her, andsho inado for him. Boston Transcript. In Brussels the height of house front age in public streets is determined by the width of the street. The maximum height is 60 feet A Sound Liver Ma&es a well Man. Are you bilhous, constipated or troubled with jaundice, sick-headache bad taste in mouth, foul breath, coated tongue, dyspepsia, indigestion, hot dry skin pain in back and between .be shoulders, chill and fever &c. If you have and of these symtoms. your liver is out of order and slowly being poisoned, because your liver does not act promptly Horbine'willcure any disorder of the liver, stomach or bowels. It has no equal as liver madicine. Price 75 cente. ivree trial oottie at JNorin naue rnar-i J. E. Bush, Mgr. QUICK ON THE SHOOT. SOME TRUTHS AND SOME MYTHS ABOUT CRACK SHOTS IN WAR. Lamar Fontaine's Boasted Deeds Impossi ble "California Joe" on the Peuinsala. The Marksman Who Bronchi Down Jab Stuart Corps of Sharpshooters. Copyright, 1S97. by American Press Asso ciation. Book rights reserved. HEN imagiua tion gets to work among soldiers fighting " ' their battles over, it is very easy to over ?v , n rt it 'Ibis Las CPvj happened to ta V y3s mar Fontaine, a xexau ijouieaer ate who puts sill story tellers vto the blush in nar rating his es- , iploits. Ono of Fon taine's tales is to tho effect that he shot and killed (50 Federal soldiers in 60 minutes. He says that he did this at the battle cf Water loo Bridge, Aug. 2G, 1862. Tho fact that thero was no battle at Waterloo Bridge during the Avar probably would not shake Mr. Fontaine's confidence in his memory, butr thero are other facts that destroy the entire fabric of the re markable tale. Fontaine says that he shot one after the other 60 battery men working at tho Federal gun. Triere was no battery on either sido which lost as many men as that killed during the whole war. Fontaiuo claims that General Lee stood by and watched him until the sixtieth man fell and then told him to quit the work of slaughter. There was no occasion at Waterloo Bridge for Lee to call for -any extraor dinary services for disposing of any Federal gun or detachment. The offi cers on both sides and the men as well were extremely reluctant to engage in tho bloodthirsty sport which Fontaine delights in telling about. There were, of course, hordes of sharpshooters, and commanders fre quently had them stationed in special places to do special work, but these were simply regular fighting men, whose methods rendered them especially effect ive on certain occasions. They were picked men, selected over their fellows quite as much for other qualifications as for their good aim. The Confederates had many such spe cial corps. Among the most noted was that led by Major Broadbent in the Army of Northern Virginia in 1864. Broadbent was killed at the Petersburg "crater." In that affair his men were stationed some distance away from the crest of the pit. with orders to keep down the heads of the Federals, who had been surrounded in the crater, slS were making desperate efforts to get out of tJje,tjaDw-' "Detachments of sharpshooters were favorites for advance guard work and skirmishing at the opening of battles, and very frequently individuals among them took up favorable positions for picking off important personages across the lines. It s a wonder that more prominent officers were not shot down by individual marksmen, and more ol them would have been shot down if it had been a habit with them to take po sitions on tho extreme front line, as Fontaine claims that General Lee did It is extremely doubtfnl whether Gen eral Lee or any other general on either side of equal rank and responsibility would deliberately expose himself with in range of a sharpshooter's bullet The Federal generals suffered more from crack rifle shots than did the southern General Reno at South Mountain, Gen eral Reynolds at Gettysburg, General Sedgwick at Spottsylvania, were brought down by men practicing crack shot.' General McPherson was killed iu front of Atlanta by an ordinary soldier, who shot him down at close quarters. The work of sharpshooters w'as mi doubtedly more deadly iu the last years of the war than it was in the first It had become expedient to organize and train detachments with this special work in view Earlier in tho war the practicing of sliarpshootiug was left rather to individual inclination. Men claiming to be crack shots were encouraged- to ply their rifles at wall The Pennsylvania "Bucktails" wero scat tered in companies and battalions throughout tho Army of the Potomac Berdau's United States sharpshooters were also distributed in detachments Some of tho regiments, notably those from the northwestern states, brought to the front companies of trained marks men. "On the peninsula in 1862 I saw a character very much poted in the army at that time, bnt who soon dropped in to obscurity, either becanso he had too many rivals or his performances wes not equal to his fame. This was "Cali fornia Joe. " Dressed in the costume of a western hunter, pioneer and scout, "California .loe" looked very pictur esque iu the camps with uniformed sol dicrs He belonged to Berdan's sharp shooters ' Many stories were told at that time of his clever shots, but my recol lection is that they were not so extraor dinary considering what was afterward done. A story has recently been circu lated to the effect that "California .loe' brought a Confederate sharpshooter down out of a tree at 1,500 yards range. It is said that he performed this feat in the presence of distinguished personages and that President Lincoln was one who saw the deed. I do not recall any stories of that kind during the war, but I do remember that "California .loe" was a noted character among the soldiers He parried a .harp's rifle which . he had used iu California. One of his exploits was the killing of a colored sharpshoot er at about 500 yards distance, the marksman shooting through the hole of an old chimney in front of Yorkrown. Berdan's men," like the famous Penn sylvania "Bucktails," needed no fancy marlismraiship to give them fame. Both m Y it .11 corps were mane up ot nrst- cir.ss -an round" soldiers, whicb included a very clever aim with.thc rifle. Berdan's men were selected for their excellent habits and good physique as well as their effi ciency with the. rifle. Their test was to put fen consecutive shots within au av erage of five inches from. the center of a target, shooting offhand at i00 paces and 200 paces at a resk Many hit the bullseye every time at that distance. When the men reached the front, they were again specially trained for scout ing, .harpsbooting, skirmishing and Awarded'. Highest Honors World's Fair, . Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. V CREAM BAKING POWDER A Pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. 40 YEARS THE STANDARD. buShwliacklng, wotk tbat proved In tho end indispensable in great battles. Unt of the ranks of Bcnhm's First regiment came tho crack shot who dis tanced all his fellows in picking cfE high game. Jeb Stuart fell under a bnl- let fired by John A. Huff of Company E, Fifth Michigan cavalry. Early in the war Huff had been cuo of Berdan's prize marksmen. Afterward he enlisted in Colonel Russell A. Alger's cavalry regiment. At the battle cf Yellow Tav ern in trout of Richmond tho Fifth Michigan charged and drove the Con federates through a wood into an open space, and the order was given to ceaso firing. A Confederate officer surrounded by his staff rode up within 80 yards of the halted Michigan squadrons. One of the men fired at the Confederate with out effect. Huff said to the unlucky marksman, "Tom, yon shot too low and to tho left. " Colonel Alger sat on his horse near by, and Huff turned to him, saying, "I can fetch that manl" "Try him," and Colonel Alger. Huff had dismounted, and, taking deliberate aim across a fence, fired. The officer fell, and Huff said to Colonel Alger, "Thero is a spread eagle for you. " Tho officer proved to be General Job Stuart, a man whose death was mourned in tho Con federacy as much as Stonewall Jack son's. Huff was a remarkable shot He was killed shortly afterward iu a cav alry battle iu front of Richmond. The kind of work which .Fontaine unblushiugly beasts as having been en gaged -in was looked upon by men of "cai.ifu:n-ia jof." both sides as cold blooded murder. There were soldies, so called, who dis graced their colors, both of blue and of gray, by a fiendish revelry in Llcod. I know personally that in some cases whero these savages met their deserts men who had the misfortune to be their comrades rejoiced quite as heartily as did the enemy 4 At Spottsylvania the sole resource for drinking water was a spring in a ravine just outside of the lines cf the Second and Ninth Federal corps. The pathway to that spring was lined with the corpses of men who risked their lives to get a drink of water The bloody work was done by a single sharpshooter stationed in a tree some distance up the ravine Many good shots had volunteered to si lence tho wretch, hut had not succeed ed Filially some one willed in a well known Indian marksman, from a Mich igan regiment. I think. Ho took some time to the work, part of a day and a night, bnt when he got through thero was no move shr.rpshoctir.g down that ravine at the men going to the spring The Indian Lronght in seme tangible evidence of bis skill I have forgotten just what the evidence was, bnt it was in tho nature cf a Confederate body dressed in gray or a .scalp At .any rate, tho murderous rifle was silenced, aud after thaf there was no scarcity cf wa ter in our camp I say "cur" because 1 was there, and I remember cue day tak ing a long and wistful fc.ck ('.own the ravine toward that spring. Let a look was enough I cr.t a piece cf bright lead out of a bullet, held thut in my uiontli to assuage thirst and concluded to wTait. The Confederate sharpshooters at Gett3-sbnrg were wonderfully proficient Given a few more cf them and a little more time, they would have destroyed our line upon Littlo Round Top. As it was, they killed two generals, a com mander of a battery and scores of men in the ranks. But at Gettysburg tho Federal sharpshooters were a match for the men in gray Berdan's riflemen ad vanced early on July 2 far to the front and discovered that movement of Long street's corps around the left flank of the army which came so near proving fatal to the national cause. They fought a sharpshooters' battle there for a ecu pie of hours and afterward plied their rifles from behind hayracks, wheat shocks, trees, bnshes and rocks. During the struggle in the peach orchard around pcvil's Den and Little Round Top ono Confederate battery was silenced, and a pharging regiment in gray broke three times in the face of the bnljseye shots pf Berdau s rifleuieji. Gkokgj: L. Iviljjek. When tlin Mouarchs Met When Willie Hohenzollom Mot Frankie of Austreo, Oh, 'twas a most nfTccting siht For all the world to scc-I Thero wore hues and Sines of soldiers. And thc-y !ll wont real in-sane When Willie dodxrd the tiorter And dLsiuounted' fium the train. Then Frankie sobbed with soulful joy, The ioep!o yelled a peck, And Willie grabbed him to his chest And shed tears down his neck. Then these nay and roya! frikers ' pacli JiLs fierce mnst:iek;o cm led, gfised tho other by the whiskers, Aud the smack wont round the world. Oh, happy, happy rulers, And happy all Austree, Jo live so Ions uiron the earth That happy sight to see!- New York Pres3. HORSE NEWS. Efne Powers heat Ella T at Toledo. Aiix, will soon be seen in public. Tho veteran Fred B seems off this season. Lodis victor cut his record to 2:1 0j at Readville. Little Van Zandt, 2:12, ssems cf rc account this year. The pacing filly Eabiua, 2:25, ty Eonny Boy, has worked in 2:12. . woousued nas a bad foot, but is rac ing as gamely with it-as a sound horse James Dnstin is now driving Jupe (2), 2:132i, audthe rest of D. A. Snell's horses. Ttie iubmcer stable surely nas a pair of queens in Grace Hastings, 2 :C8, and Pearl Onward, 2:0GK- It is reported that PJauet was timed the last quarter of the' sixth heat of his raco at Readville in 29? seconds. George Turley, Albany, has bought the Ohio pacing gelding Billy O, 2:0S, by Hideaway, nt a reported price cf $2,600. Two great horses were never owned by two better sportsmen than James A. Murphy and C. W. Marks, owners of Star Pointer and Joe Patchen. Stam B, 2:llr. who broke down at Anaconda, it was thought permanently, is now eo far recovered that Keating has begun work on him again. Edward Appel writes from Rochester that ho has given his 5-year-old mare Alida, by Allertou, dam Young Bird, sister to the dam of Axtell, a record of Grattan Boy met defeat for the first time in some weeks at Elmwood, Ills. Regret heat him in straight heats, but had to step tho half milo track there in 2:15 to do it. Charleston,2:12, the former great wi rr t nvco r 1 1 it rw n-ri- pn linn dnAti firs t? nam as biui uu jLit, ins. , uuuunu xi la iu.u sou, Sir Charles, 2:15. When John R. Gentry paced the Syracuse half mile track in 2:06), he finished the laht quarter in UOJ sec onds. When RoLcit J, on the same day, paced it in 2:05, he stepped the third quarter in 2954 seconds. Horse Re view. STAGE GLINTS. Maurice Grau aud family aro at Bai- reuth as guests of Mme. Gosima Wag ner. Richard Golden has been engaged to play the leiding part in the "Isle of Champagne. " "Tho Railroad King" is the title of a new melodrama announced production this season. for early An official report shows that there are issued yearly in the theaters 01 Paris 2,890,000 deadhead tickets: Mildred Holland, a Chicago actress, is to play the leading role of Fan Fan this season in "Two Little Vagrants." Mr. Charles Hoy t" has decided to term the comedy which will he given its first production in Detroit, in December, "A Day and a Night." De Wolf Hopper made his dramatic start 17 years ago in the New York Comedy company. John Philip Sousa was the musical director. The manager cf tho Bostouians con tradicts the statement that "Robin Hood" would be withdrawn soon from the repertory of tho organization. Charles Frohmau has arranged to present Paul Potter's new play, "The Conquerors," simultaneously at the Empire, in New York, and at St. James', in London. Some one has discovered not only that William E. Gladstone, England's Grand Old Amu, wroto a play long years aco, Lut that at one time he as pired to be an actor. WINKS AT WOMEN. Your rival nearly always has dimples A woman's call has a postscript, the same as her letters. Tho real treasure of a homo is the woman with an aptitude for finding ar ticles that are lost. When a doctor calls on a sick man, his wife always has a private consulta tion with him outside. This world will not be entirely satis factory to the women until some man has givcu birth to a baby. When a woman is anxious about her husband, thero is a glitter in her eye that does not show at any other time. Wneu a woman gets a little money ahead, instead of spending it ou her husband she spends it on the spare bed room. A woman feels that she ha9 treated all her neigiioors justly it she never tried to get their hired girls away from them. Every woman, according to the story sho tells to her second husband, was forced into her first marriage by the wishes of her parents. Atchison Globe. FOREIGN FACTS. The British mint coins 25 tons of pennies every year. The average rent of houses in Eng land is 21 per annum. The Japanese, who aie getting to be great cig:iretto smokers, now use every mouth 1:3,000,000 imported and 52,000, 000 native cigarettes. Palermo, Sicily, has an averaco of 16? cloudless days a year and 02 of par tial cloud and partial sunshine which elsewhere would bo classed as fine days. At Lille, France, tho police airested, a few days ago, an engineer aud fire man who, it is believed, have been do- ing a smnggiing Business en a large Gcalc for years from acrosg the Belgian border. When arrested, 10,000 cigars and many other dutiable articles were found on their eugiue. Ballard's Snow Liniment. Mrs. Hamilton, Cambridge, IiK, says 1 had the rheumatism so bad I could not raise my hand to my head. Ballard's Snow Liniment has entirely cured me. I take pleasure in informing my neigh bors and friends what it has done for me. Chas. Handley. clerk for Lay & Lyman, Kewanee, 111., advises us Snow Liniment cured him of rheumatism. Why not try it? It will surely do you good. It cures all inHammation,wounds, sores,'CUte, sprains, etc. Price 50 cents. Sold by The North PJatte Pharmacy, J. E. Bugb,Mgr. All the poetry, all the romance, all that is ideal in the wide, wide world, is bound up in that one word: "Mother hood." A wo man's greatest happiness, her greatest duty and her greatest priv ilege is to become the mother of a healthy, happy child. Untold thousands of wo men fall short of this because of weakness and dis ease of their wo manly-selves. Either they live childless lives, or for a brief spell are the. mothers of puny, sickly children that bring them only pain, and leave them only sorrow The woman who suffers from weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine or gans is certain to become an invalid. No woman can suffer in this way and be a healthyi happy, amiable wife and a compe tent mother. Troubles of thjs -nature sap the streneth. rack the nerves, painTllnes of suffering upon the face, destroy the temper ' make the once brisrht eves dull and the once active brain sluggish, and transform a viva cious woman into a weak, sickly, invalid. This is all wroncr. it is all unnecessary. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a mar velous medicine for ailing women. It acts directly on the delicate and important organs that bear the burdens of matern ity and makes them strong and healthy. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration. soothes pain and tones and builds up the nerves. It banishes the discomforts of the expectant months and makes baby's com ing easy and almost painless. It guarantees the little new-.comer's health and an ample supply of nourishments Thousands of women have testified to its marvelous mer its. An honest dealer will no.endeavor to substitute some inferior preparation for the sake of an extra little selfish profit. I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription previous to confinement." writes Mrs. Corda Culpepper, of Tanks, Cottle Co. Texas,. " and iever did so well in my life. It is only-two weeks and 1 am able to do my work." In most healthv families you will find Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Ad viser. For a paper-covered copy send 21 one-cent stamps, to cover mailing only. Cloth bound .-51 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. - ; d KUbKbK b i U i r b ALWAYS FIT, We have been making garments for North Platte citizens for over, twelve years, ana it our work ana prices were not satisfactory we would not be here to-dav. We solicit your trade. F. J. BROEKER, MERCHANT TAILOR. SMOKERS 1 In search, of a good cigar will always find, it at J. F. Schmalzried's. Try them and judge. J. F. FILLION, General Kepairer. Special attention given to BZC70LB Hi. WHEELS TO EENT I the Platte Collegiate Institute.,. A Home School for Boys and Girls. Best in the State for price and advantages. For cat alogue, address. HARRY N. RUSSELL Kearney, Neb. ....Principal. F. C, Company Corsets, MAKE American Beauties EC.C0 GORREOT SHAPES, ARTISTIC EFFECTS. An Lengths. Oa Each Uox. NEWEST MODELS. 1 FANCY and PLAIN. FEATHERBONE CORSET CO., SOLE MANUFACTURERS. SOLD BV BOSTON STORE. NORTH PLATTE, NEB. Merchants are authorized t refund tbo monoy if corset is not found satia- aotory after dO days trial. ,,r; ruber Tmworker - - j s 4-t