f .FALL, SNOW. Fall, snow, td cease not. Tlake by fldtr Thc decest winding sheet cospose. Thy task is j oat and pious. Hake Ab esd of blasphemies and Tall, fraow, is stillness fall, like dew- On chcxok 8 roof and cedar's fan, And mold thyself on -pine and yew And oa the awful face of man. On quaking moor and xnoontala moss, With eyes upstaring at the sky, And Rrnas extended like a cross, The long expectant sufferers lie. Bend o'er them, white robed acolyte. Put forth thine hand from cloud and mist, And minister tho.last-sad riter ' "Where altar there is none nor priest. -Aubrey de Vers in "Secoliectioas ef Aubrey de Tcre." TO THE RESCUE. On the morning of July 3, 1873, I. y?&s sitting in the shade of our adobe ranch building on the bank of the South Platte, "when I noticed a man stagger ing along the dusty trail to the north of the horse corral. "Some drunken pilgrim' from Jules burg," I thought, for although Jules burg was nearly 100 miles distant I knew that more than one tramp had there bought enough "tanglefoot" to keep him drunk until he either reached Denver or lost his scalp on the way. I regarded the man lazily until he came so near that his head and features began to take definite shape. Then I saw with alarm that Ms hatless head was literally the color of blood and that his shirt front was marked with dark streaks. I got up and hurried to meet him. To my horror, upon a near ap proach I discovered that he had not , oniy oeen wounaea m tne neaa, duc naa been actually scalped. Twill not attempt to describe his frightful condition. Yet he had full control of his faculties and began rapid ly telling his sad story as I put my arm about him to steady his walk. He had been traveling toward Denver from the east, driving a light wagon which contained only himself, his wife and. a few household articles and pro Tisions. They bad camped on the river about two miles below our ranch the night before. About daylight, just as they were getting breakfast, they had been pounced upon by a party of mount ed Indians, who rode out from the mouth of a gulch close at hand and opened fire upon them. "I was frying a pan of bacon," said the man his name was William Eosa moud "when suddenly I heard them yelling. I looked up and just got a glimpse of them a dozen or 15, I should say when they began firing, and I felt what might have been a stroke on my head$ and no mora When I woke up, I was the way you see ma The wreck of my wagon was there, but my wife and horses were gone. And so I staggered away, and here I am, and whether I ought to thank God I didn't see my wife lying there dead is more than I know. I suppose they've carried her away a prisoner. ' ' At the Eight of the poor man there was in me a fury of desire, to pnuish the fiends who had so mutilated him, and when he begged me to go at once to the nearest post for help to rescue his wife I said: "There's no need. As there were only 12 or 15 we'll try it ourselves." g-' "Bouse, rouse!" I shouted to my men fn the hut. Fortunately there were in it five of them asleep. They roused instantly and were as surprised, horrified and ficrco as myself at the dreadful plight of Bosamoud. While I set about washing and dressing his wounded licad they bolted some food and coffee, saddled horses and declared they would follow the Indians any where, if only their trail could be struck and kept The bullet, I found, had struck JRosa uiond on the temple near the left eye and had not penetrated the skull, but bad passed around under the skin and come out behind the ear. The scalping; knife had bored the skull on top in a circle about lour inches in diameter. I soon had the wounds dressed and band aged thep, at bis urgent request, we left the man to care for himself. With a two days' ration in our sad dlebags and an extra pony for each of us we galloped away in pursuit of the Indians, and soon found the wreck of Jhe wagon beside the trail some two miles from the ranch. After a thorough search for some dis tance on every side, we became satisfied that Mrs. Bosamond had been akcn captive. Then we took the trail of the ponies of the Indians and of the two shod horses they had captured. As this trail led us across the sandy valley to the north we judged-tbe party to be Cheyennes or Sioux, for Arapahoes or Comanches would most likely have taken the opposite direction. Bow Legs, our expert tracker, for merly a "pony express" rider, rode in advance at.a jog trot over hard ground and at a gallop across the frequent sand tracts, all the time leaning forward, with his face beside his pony's neck and his eyes following the prints of the shoes of the shod horses. And so about aoon he led us up to the high land rvhich formed tho divide between the Platte and t Crow creek. The day was jlear, hot and fortunately devoid of that haze or mirago which so often prevails n that region. fUow, boss," said Bow Legs, 4get jnt your glass and take a squint down icross 'bout 15 or 20 miles ahead, The (ndiaus have only been riding at a jog, and they ought to-be in sight.1' As I was superintendent of a large round up, I always carried in my saddle roisters a signal service glass of first rate power. JNow, after amoinent's wrutiny, my binocular happened to tch the savages just as?they were go jjg over a ridge. X. had. time to count IG horsemen and a number of led ani nals before they disappeared, "Only 16 of 'eni!" said Bow Legs. Good enough! We'll jnake things- jrarrn for them.' He bad, is fact, "stood oSEV 18 alone one occasion." On another ko had rhipped nioe Ute$ single handed and bad chased the four survivors several pile, k much did his new breeohload: overmatch their vs and arrows and inferior guns. ""kpur iufliaus wero' going north we sr-ere confident they woald camp oa Crow creek, nfl we jogged easily af t them, bey evidently haf o fear of Twrsvit a they were trsTslisg in ky pqaad f3 going -leisurely. In fact, Pfieh isolated' outrages as the one they had " 4 committed nwally went unpuuish itt thorn flays, uu taeJ pujv tkracrbtTtlifiir Mime -woald ixfc soon be (Kscovewia, M tiwy bad 4wsul4?tbe, EosauipBite est m ijid trail that W lit tle used. At 4 o'clock that affernoprrwe-were cautiously trailing within a canyon which led through the breaks or bluffs f south of Grow creek valley.. After we had ridden foe sotn two hoars down the arroyo, which .'deepened and became quite xouch as we advanced. Bow Lees pronounced the trail very fresh. At last ! he halted just as he was on the turn of a sharp corner and motioned for us to gallop -up. As we joined Him he gave a wild yell and clashed the spurs into his horse's flanks. Following close m his wake, I had the "valley of Crow creek burst sud denly upon my view, and I saw that the Indians had picketed their ponies and pitched a couple of teepees oii the banks of the stream, some 300 yards away. Straight at their camp we charged. When I first saw them they were scattering in a dash for their ponies. We dug spurs into our animals and flew at them like rockets. Each of us carried a revolver and a Winchester carbine with 15 shots in its magazine. The evident consternation of the In dians and their rush for their horses took all notion of fear out of us. We went straight for them and began firing before half of them had cut their ponies loose and mounted them. Those who first reached their beasts slashed the picket ropes, mounted bareback and gal loped down the creek at their best pace. Some of the others, however, were too late, and we were fairly upon a half dozen of them when they had no more than got to their horses. It was not a fight, but a rout, for the Indians thought only of escape, and nine of them succeeded in getting away. We did not follow them, for our ponies were worn with travel, and it seemed better that Mrs. Bosamond should be taken to her scalped husband as soon as possible. She was unharmed and had been un bound in one of tho teepees when our firing began. Now she came hurrying toward us. I Ehall never forget the poor woman's wonder when we told her that her husband was' alive. "Why, I saw thorn." And she shud dered and put her hands up a? if to hide tho horrible memory from her eyes. "Yes, they did," I said. "But he will live and be just as well" as ever." The expression of joy on her facowas beautiful to see. Besides recovering Bosaniond's horses we captured seven ponies, three spring field carbines, -ono Winchester and five good saddles. After a few hours of rest we set out for the ranch, which we reached about 10 o'clock the next morning. We found Rosamond in a high fever and danger ously ill. But, thanks to his wife's nursing, he finally recovered, and for two years afterward the couple cooked for us at the ranch, which always seemed Jfco me a most prosaic occupation for peo ple who had come through an adventure so extraordinary as theirs. Youth's Companion. Heel In Peace and AVr. The civil war that raged in our land a third of a century ago operated in a diametrically opposite manner on the two sections of the United States known as the southwestern and the northwest am states. In tho former, composed chiefly of the state of Texas, all access to outside markets was cut oft! to live .stock. The Union forces patrolled "with gunboats tho Mississippi river, and no herds could be taken across to feed the oiain rebel armies. Cattle could not be shipped to3nJja for fear of almost cer tain captnro by war vessels on tho gulf passages, and they conld not be safely driven north or west. So Texas' 3,000,000 cattle multiplied like vermin in an army camp upon the ranges of Texas, Avhere they ceased to have a cash valuo and became only an article of barter, 75 head being ox jhauged for a good saddle horse and 100 abed for a two horse wagon. The stores in the grazing regions exchanged goods ind wares for them, fixing a ridiculoug. Iy low Ecale of prices for the live stook, payable in goods, etc., from tho store. This state of affairs continued until two Fears after the war closed. In the northwest the supply of live .tock was depleted to feed the Union irmies, and for two or three years after e close of tho war remained scarce ind dear in price, so that thcrmasses of boring men and factory operatives iould scarce afford beef upon their ta lies of tener than once a week, and then t was of the cheaper cuts of the carcass. "King3 and Queens of the Bauge." Potatoes and Point, A curious dish, potatoes and point, rras said to le only too common among ihe poverty stricken inhabitants of west im Ireland, who use, according to one explanatory legend, to place a salt her iug in tho center of the table and point .heir "praties" at it in order to get the lavor; according to another authority, ;alt, in the days when there was a leavy dnty upen it, took tho place of lie salt fish. The dish is mentioned in .he "Memoirs of Captain Bock," print id in 1824: "When there is buc a Email )ortiou of salt left, the potato, instead if being dipped into it by the guesfg, a uerely, as a sort of indulgence to. the ancy, pointed at it." B. Anderson, in me of his Cumberland ballads, says: Mnne'rles gang ac liawf o' the week. If we get a bit meat qu a Sunday, flie cuts iuc nae uiair than would physic a snuypo. Then we've tntey and point-evory Monday. Chambers' Journal. Fishes ia Line. It is not unusual at the aquarium to see in a tank the fishes all together side by side and ''eads in a line, like a pla toon or section of men. They remain thus for a considerable time. Mostfishes are gregarious, they keep together in schools in the water, and here they seem to keep together for company's sake. Sometimes all tho fishes in a tank bnt one will be lined up in this way side ly sido and headed in one direction', wh;le$he single fish will be back of thp .others aud headed the other way. Then the suggestion of spldiers,coiiveye4 to the mind' by the fishes in lino' is, strengthened. For the single fish seems, to be a rear guard, looking out for the, enemy ,13 bat directiou.-r-ITeiff q$k Sun- " Tiere is a Gift ef ?ftfi who are injured by the use of coffee. He- cently tbere has oeen piaoea n " tne grocery stores a aew preparation celled GRAIN O, made of pure grains, that .'takes the plaoe of coffee. The moat del ioste stomach receives it without dis tress, and but few can tell it from coffee. It does not coet over as mccfe. Chil dren may drink it with great benefit. 15 'ote. sad 25 cts. per package. Try it. Ak for GRAIN-O. .PITY, THE-REVEALER. I waited loBg for lore. My spirit drooped r Beseatk the withering darts of men's dia-jj-rais 'As fatets ..the Tiaakaded 6war.oH ehb parched 'Neath tropic rays. - - - I waited long for faith. My doubting soul Was like a helmless bark when tempests rear, And stars arc hid, and only breakera' foam Sevaals tho skore. I waited long for peace. 3Cy troubled heart Was like a fort besieged yet faction torn. Each paceion promised safety, bnt betrayed To keen self scorn. Then pity carae with gaze of liqnid-Uglit, And cleared ray eyes or-iir of others' pain. 3?eath bardeas grout wy brethren groaned, their "brews Dropped blood like rain. I snatched perforco the weakest strngglei's load (His grateful smile made light its seeming weight). I rang the others songs.They stepped in time, Erect? elate. And as -we marched, my petty, long nursed grief Was made aa by a magic spell to cease, For love divine shone through their eyes, and lovo Brought faith and peace. Good Words. HOW MIKE GOT EVEN. It was a beautiful morning. Not a eloud in the June sky, not a leaf stir ring on the old cotton wood tree by tho spring. Tho cattle, after a restless night, were lying in close order and lazily chewing the cud or stretched out broadside on the thick green carpet. On the edge of the bunch a few calves were frisking about with tails up, and cne impatient youngster, was butting away at his drowsing mother with a vigorous suggestion that it was timo to rise and furnish forth the morning meal. On an adjacent hill the horse wran gler, still draped to the heels in the yel low slicker he had donned in the thun der shower of the night, sat idly in the saddle with a hand on his horse's hips, looking away over the pea green range of early summer to where the moun tain tops glowed in the rising sun. The cook's fire of damp wood, kindled directly under the tree, sent up a thick smoke which spread throughout tho branches, but' collected above them, ex tending one straight, slender; lofty col umn into the blue. Some blackbirds were scolding about being smoked out of their leafy home, and on every side resounded tho mellow notes of the mead ow lark. It was a beautiful morning, but no one in camp was happy, for every man's clothes were wet, aud Mike Tussler had the toothache. i?ow, it is well known that when the. big back tooth of a big buck Irishman takes a notion to ache it is a wholly different proposition from an ordinary case of mal de dents. "You don't know anything about it," Mike deolared. "This isn't just tooth ache. It aches all over. Did you ever see one of them fiery comets with a long, forked tail on to a bright head? Well, this pain is just like that. My j tooth's the redhot head of the thing, and the tails are going all through me." j Miko lay down on his back," and the cook looked in his mouth. "Did you ever see a chestnut or acorn with a wormhole in it? Thatls the way with your tooth. Just a little bit of a hole right into it. It's n terrible small hole to worry about." "Nothing small about tbe feel of it," said Tussler, and he asked for a day off to go and get. it "yanked." He could not be spared that day, but the next morning went away to the nearest town. It was always a day's ride, and, as is the preverse way of ach ing ieeth, his began to feel much better when he came in Sight of the village. He felt so much relieved by the time he had ridden down the one street, with its square front, one story wooden build ings, that when he was finally seated in tho dentist's chair he didn't want to have the tooth pulled. "I was just coming along the street," he said to the dentist, "and I saw your brand on the door. So I come in to ask you to look in my mouth and tell me bow old I be." "Old enough to take better care of your teeth," he announced, after look ing them over, "Have T got to have thelacso on that back one?" asked Tussler. "You have got to have it filled at once." "What'll it cost?" asked the cautious Irishman. "Three dollars," said the dentist. "I use only the best materials and have but one price." "Well," said Mike, "it don't hurt any now. I guess I won't let the job today." . "That's robbery," he assured him self, as he went away to copper the ace for fivo and lose it. "Tho cook said it was an awful small hole." The next morning, however, his tooth baving meanwhile resumed business, he was waiting at the door when the den tist came down, , " You don't get up so early as we do on the range by about four hours, " said, he. "I been standing here all night. I tvaut me tooth filled full." So Mike had the work done and paid 60 cents extra for capping the- nerve 'And the whole thing .didn't take, him m hour," be reported when he returned to camp. "I've been robbed.-" . Mike clings to an opinion with proper tenacity and the conviction that the 3entist had "beat him outof good $2" laida debt, and a duty upon him which ae had no idea of shirking. "What you going to do about it?" the boys asked. "Wait," says Tike. The hard routine work of the spring roundup went on for Eome.weeks. Again the boys asked, fWhat are you going to 50 about your dentist?' ' """Wait;" says Mike again, r When there is work to be done, a cow amp is stirring at daybreak. Getting Mt in the gray dawn one morning, it ivasseen that a regular tenderfoot outfit with tents had ooroe In during the night and pitched their camp near the cow boys. Mike stToUed over and poked bis"head into several covered wagous, bringing back the report that no one; was awake. "What are. they loaded with?" ft as tsked. "fertilizer," said Mike. "Gome off," they all cried; "not in those dude wagons!" "Give you my word," insisted Tuss ler; "not a thing.in 'em but old bones. ' About this; time Mike became very solicitous for the safety of his bed roll. ."Handle it like osrsv" heinld, tbn dri ver of. the mess wagon. 'It's loaded. ' . When the outfit got aroasd to the home ranch . and there waa at leagth i few days' rest for horses .aad urea, Tuss? ler said: "Boys I'ye got to see joy den tist again. Come along to town." " " They came along to the number of eight, and leaving them -at tke.Caynfe saloon Mike went over .and had an in terview with the dentist: ' sf " " xou remember," he said, "pligging a tooth for me last spring?'' x The dentist remembered, .very well. "Isn't it all right?" "Sure," said he, "and I'got a1 friend who likes it so well that he wants me to let the job of fixing one for him." "I have but one price for filling," said the dentist. "But this is a big back -tootifjtbat'll take more metal to fill it tban jsine, " insisted Mike. "The size of the cavity has nothing to do with it. Unless I have to-kill the nerve the price is absolutely the Eamc." "I think the nerve is. already dead in his'n,1' ventured Mike. "When can he come?" - "Tell him to come tomorrow after noon," said the dentist end added face tiously, "and bring his tooth with him." "Yessir," said Mike. The boys killed time as"best they might until the appointed hour. Then, with becoming gravity Tussler lead ing and the cook second they filed into the dentist's office. There was scant room for nine men, but they ranged themselves against the wall, and Mike said, with a wave of the hand, "These are all my friends, but," indicating the cook, "this is my particular friend that I spoke to you about " "And this," said the cook, stepping forward and depositing on the table a large parcel, "is my tooth."- "Open it," said Tussler. ' The dentist did so, revealing to his astonished gaze a tooth of Brobdingnag ian size. Its length was not less than ten inches, of corresponding breadth and thickness. It bad a cavity equal to 12 cubic inches. "That's the tooth," said Mike. "This is one on me, boys," said the dentist. "Come oyer to the Cayuse." "Pill tho tcoth first, " suggested Tuss ler. "Yes," said all the boys in chorus. Tha dentist looked at, the tooth. He looked at tbe nine impassive faces along the wall. "Why, certainly," Jie said.. It took all the alloy, amalgam, ce ment, concrete and gntta percha in the laboratory,, but it was dono to the satis faction of Mike aud his friends, who as sured the dentist cf their future patron age and filed out as solemnly as they had come. "How did you rnako the big hole in it?" asked one. "The blacksmith did it," replied Tussler; Professor March of Hale, college has long mourned the loss of a magnificent specimen of tho mammoth's tooth 'One of three segnred on his last fossil hunt ing expedition to the bad lands. It dis appeared upon the return trip and has never been accounted for. Should these lines meet the profess or's eyes, he is. advised to seek his prop erty in a dentist's window in a certain small town on tho overland railway. G. B. Durham in Argonaut. Color Photography. At a recent meeting of the Boyal Photographic society in Loudon Profess or Gabriel Lippmau described his sys tem of color photography, whereby a photograph showing the colors of nature is obtained by a direct process and with one exposure of the plate. The film, which might be of any sensitive snb fauce, he explained, was exposed, de veloped and fixed in the usual way. Two conditions, however, must be ob servedthe film must in the first place be transparent and grain less and in the second it must be in contact with a me tallic mirror during exposure. The ef fect of tha mirror, which was formed by running a layer of mercury in be hind the plate, was to reflect back the incident colored rays and thus make the incident light waves stationary. These stationary vibrations, falling in tbe in terior of the sensitive film,. impressed their own structure upon it, and by vir tue of the structuro thus imparted to it the brown deposit of silver, when viewed by reflected whi to light, appeared clothed with the same colors as were possessed by tho image in the camera. The colors were produced by "interference" in the same way as those of the soap bubble or mother of pearl. That this was their 3ause, M. Lippman said, was proved oy the fact that the tints of a negative jhanged if it were damped in conse quence of the gelatin swelling slightly ind thus altering the structure of the ilver deposit. The nolors produced by ibis process were true and bright pro dded that exposure and development had been properly conducted. They were, moreover, completely fixed and resisted the action of light and time. Eg had not yet succeeded in taking prints from his negatives, but was con Finced that to do so would be found possible", Tho Eight Word. "Did you say, sir, that I was not a nan of veracity?" "No, sir. I said you were a liar." "X supposed so. It is not possible for on to make the simplest statement of !acfe in a gentlemanly manner." De roit Free Press. Evidence. "Think of it I" exclaimed the some what pedantic citizen. "A generation or so ago boys were supposed to have a good knowledge of Latin before they were 16 years of age," "What of that?" inquired the mild mannered friend. "Doesn't that showthat our pretend ed advancement in refinement is a mis apprehension?" "Net at all. It proves that we are more considerate and humane, and therefore more refined. Think of the amount of corporal punishment it must take to give a boy a good, knowledge of Latin before he is 1G years old I" Washington Star. Try Grais-0! Try Graia-O! , . Ask your grocer; today to show you a package of Grain-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The chil dren may drink it without injury ae well as the adult All who try it, like it. GRAIN-0 has the rich seal -brown of Mocha and Java, but itris made from puregrains, -and' the . most delicate stomach receives it without distress.- the- price of coffee. 15c aad 25c;per package. Sold by all grooarar Prirfteee Pain 1 11VV1VJJ X UsLU . . . 1 . . "If a. price can be placed on pais, 'Mother's Friend' is worth its weight in gold as an allevi ator, ily wife suffered more in ten minutes with either of her other two children than she did al togetherwith her last, having previously used four bottles of 'Mother's. Friend. ItisabiessiBg to any one expecting to become a.mother," says a customer. Thus writes Henderson Dale, Druggist, of Carmi, IU., to the Bradfield Regulator Company, of Atlanta, Ga., the proprie tors and manufacturers of "Mother's Friend." This successful remedy is not one of the many internal medicines ad vertised to do unreasonable things, but a scientifically prepared liniment especially effective in adding strength, and elasticity to those parts of woman's organism, which bear the severest strains of childbirth. The liniment may be used at any and all times during pregnancy up to the very hour of confinement The earlier it is begun, and the longer used, the more perfect will be the result, but it has been used during the last month, only with great benefit and success. It not only shortens labor and lessens .the pain attending it, but greatly dimin ishes the danger to life or both mother and qhild, and leaves the mother in a con dition more favorable to speedy recovery. ' ' Mother's Friend "is sold by druggists at $1.00, or sent by..express on receipt oi price. Valuable book for women, "Before Baby is Born," sent free on application. THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. Legal Notices. NOTICE OF SALE. Notice is hereby riven ibatb virtue of ver. bal chattel mortgage dated on or about May 16th, 1897, and not recorded.antl executed by Carl Lank wtz to William Roberta to secure the payment ot 137.50. aad upon -which there is now due tho sum ot $37.50; default having been made, in the payment of said sum, therefore I will sell at public auction the property therein docribed, to-wit: Four hundred and ninety-two bushels of corn in ear: all ot the above described o"rn was grown upon the glity acres oi 'and lying alongtho west line or the vre-t half of section 1, township 11, range 33, at the house of T. A. Itoberts situated on the northeast quarter of section 2, township 14. range 33. Ill the precinct of Blrdwood, Lincoln county. Nebraska, on the 2d day of April, lifts, at one o'clock p. m. of said day. Dated this lltb day or March, lfcfttt. W1LLTAM HOBERTS, Mortgagee, mll3 By his Attorneys, Davis &I5idoley. In the matter of the Estate of George W. Dlllard, Deceased. It' appearing by the petition ot James M. Bay, Administrator of said Estate, filed this 21st day of February, 1698. that thero is not sufHclent per sonal property in the hands of said Administrator to pay the, claims and cnarges allowed against said Estate, and that it is necessary to sell the realty of said Estate, to-wit: Lot 5, in block 159, and lot S, in block 149, all in North Platte, Lincoln county, Nebraska, it is oidered that all persons in terested in said Estate appear before me at my of lice in North Platte. Nebraska, on tbe 7th day of April, 1S9S. at ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, to show cause why a license should not be granted said Administrator to sell so much of said realty aa shall be necessary-to pay the charges against said Estate. Notice thereof will be given by publication for four successive weeks prior to said day of hearing in the Tuibukk, a legal news paper published in our said county. 25 1 II. M. Grimes, Judge. .NOTICE FOK PUBLICATION. Land Office at North Platte, Neb , ? March 21st; 1833. J Notice is hereby given that the f ollowiag named settler has filed notice of bis intention to make proof in support ot his claim, and that said proof will be made before Keglster and Receiver at North Platte, Heb., on April 28th. 1898, viz: WILHELM MULLEB. Who mode Home Stead Entry No. 16194, for the ne H sec. 20, tp 14 n, r 29 w. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of, said land, viz: William. Schutt, John Saltow, George W. Long, rad Bichard Pittman all of North Platte, Nebraska, JOHN F. HINMAN, . m-2341, Register. D, M. HOGSETT Gonfraetop and Builder, AND AGENT FOR ECLIPSE and FAIRBANKS WINDMILLS. NORTH PLATTE, NEB. J. F. FILL10IH, General Repairer. Special attention given to WHEELS TO RENT HUMPHREYS' CUBES No. 1 Fever. Congestion. No. 2 Worms. No. 3 Infants' Diseases. No. 4 Diarrhea. i No. 7 Coughs & Colds. No. 9 Headache. No. lO Dyspepsia, Indigestion. No. 1 1 Delayed Periods. No. 12 Leuchorrea. No.-IS Croup. No. 14 Skin Diseases. No.. 15 Rheumatism. No. 19 Catarrh. z No. 27 Kidney Diseases. No. 34 Sore Throat. ' -No. 77 Grip & Hay Fever. , Dr, Ham oarers' Hoopathio Haass! $l Diseases at your Dragjdsta or Mailed Tf. -; art Jetet St.tXW To. Plnmbep Tinworker I'm -H; First National Bank, h F, J. BROEKER, . " '" Ready for the Spring trade fine line of choice suitings- A. F 8TREITK, I Druggist DRUGS v MEDICINES ' I PAINTS OILS- - T "4. r Diamanta ZDe-u-tsoixe I DAVIS, THE HARDWARE MAN, Exclusive (SEE 'THE AME IE Arid the Celebrated fail Roil Oak Ilea ACORN STEEE 'BffiGES. 1 The only big stove house in Xiincoln 3 T County,. Call' and get prices. 3 Foley iiock.., A mTT M LUMBER, AINU UKA1 Order by telephone from Newtons Book Store. N. McCABE, Proprietor. North Platte Pharmacy. :3Jrugs ,and Druggists' Sundrieg-j. ." We aim to handle jfc Sell everything at warrant, all goods to All Prescriptions Carefuily'Filled by a Licensed Pharmacist, j Orders from the country and along the line of the Union , Pacific Rail way -is respectfully solicited. First door north of First National Bank. ' 9496 - GAPlTAt, - - - $50,000." iik wiiito PfActtenf $ MA. White, - - Vice-Prest r Tinnur Mcwamara, - uibmci. general banking business MEKGHANT TAHOK. with SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. , , J r t t Painters1 Supplies,- Window Glass, Machine Oils. Spectacles. potlefee. agent for the ON THE LEG.) (Who no one owes.) T 1 m mil A , J. E. BUSH, Manager. tne aest grades oi gooas -fr reasonable prices, and be, just as represented. IDBINGS, COAL 4. 4