The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, November 03, 1899, Image 1

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    ewi -IKteMjr ftrilrune.
FIFTEENTH YEAR.
NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1899.
NO. 81.
k Jlorth
4
7
Btbn&nr WAGONS
Wooclirjaijsce Wiijctfrfiiis,
Carriages, Buggies, Road Wagons,
Carts, Spring Wagons,
Latest Styles and Best Quality for the Price,
BARB WIRE AND STAPLES. T- n
pumps, pipes and fittings, A oompieto Line
BALE TIES,
MACHINE OIL, AXLE GREASE.
Locust St., North Plntte, Neb.
&9
JUST AT PRESENT
I wSTOVES '
Are our specialty, and the line we are showing is
Jj a little the smoothest we have ever had. Heat-
ers in many styles and eizes, both for hard and
J soft coal. And ranges, lots of them. On stoves
$m we lead, we sell more than any other dealer be-
9 pnnsp. wr linvn TTTTil sf.nn.lr.
ft
O, F. IDDING8
LumToex, Coal
Yards and Elevators at
North Platte, Neb.,
Sutherland, Neb.,
Julesburg, Colorado.
4
NORTH FLATTE MILLS,
(CP. IDDXNaS.) , ,
Manufacturer of
HIGH AND MEDIUM GRADE FLOUR
BRAN AND CHOP FEED.
Order by telephone from Newton's Book Store.
IF IT'S IN THE
DRUG LINE
BUY IT
You can bank on it being
fres,h and as represented.
Hardware and
We carry the BEST lino of
Radiant Home Base Burners, Air Blast
Heaters, Riverside Oaks, Steel Ranges
and Cook Stoves of all sizes.
v.
A Complete line of Pumps, Pipes, Fittings, Windmills
and Towers. Also Carriages, Buggies, Spring
and Farm Wagons, Eto.
rmcns that nmr comj'jstition.
Victor E. Meyer,
i
-JUo. HcKoHci.
.?
H
H
H
OF
STREITZ.
Furniture.
Stoves on the Market I
North Side.
POLITICAL PARAGRAPHS.
Niwell Burritt says that had
he known the campaign was to be
so warm and full of hard work he
would not have accepted the nomi
nation. This means that Burritt
is not sanguine of success and
that he feels that he has wasted
time, energy and money in. making
the, canvass of the county.
The intelligent .voter will not be
influenced by the circulation by the
fusionists of the report that a
banker at Wallace expects to move
to North Platte and establish a
bank for the purpose of handling
the county deposits. This claim,
so assiduously used by the fusion
ists.is simply a campaign lie; there
is not the least foundation for it.
County Cm:kk Hoitry turned
over $800 in excess fees in less
than two years, while his prede
ccssor, iNewcu uurritt. turned in
$240.88 in four years. Iloltry is a
republican, Burritt is a fusionist:
the former .believes in conducting
county affairs in an economical
manor; the latter belongs to
party inat oeneves in larmiug an
office for all it is worth.
Con Scuawarnk has lived in
North Platte for nearly twenty
years and the best people of the
city endorse him as an honest,
straightforward young man, one
who will not allow anything to
swerve nim lrom tlie line of duty
and conscientious work. He is a
young man of excellent morals, is
udustrious, and is deserving of the
cote of all who desire to have good
men fill the county offices. '
In their dig pair over the certain
defeat of their tcket, the fusionists
are circnlatlng more lies in this
campaign than usual. One ot the
rotteuest lies is the claim that it
Carpenter is elected commissioner
the commissioner districts will be
changed so that there will be repub
lican majorities in each district.
This claim is absolutely groundless.
From now on each commissioner
district as at present constituted
will give a republican majority, and
therefore no change would be
necessary to accomplish the end
which the fusionists claim the re
publicans are attempting to attain.
The majority of the voters of the
county are today ready to belicye,
however, that it would have been a
great blessing to the taxpayers
had all the commissioner districts
given republican majorities during
the past eight or nine years
That there is a general revival
of business throughout this coun
try is shown by a canvass made by
the Cleveland Leader. These fig
ures show conclusively that pros
perity has returned, and that hun
dreds of thousands more workmen
are now employed than three years
ago. The Leader has made a can
vass of seventy-eight factories in
that city, showing the condition of
affairs now and at the correspond-
ng time in 18. It appears from
this that the number of men now
employed in these factories is sixty
per cent larger than three years
ago, wliue tlie total sum paid per
mouth as wages is 75 per cent
greater than 18. The average
svages in those factories show au
ncreasc of S7.25 A partial canvass
made in the Miami valley, au i in-,
portant manufacturing section,
shows that in ninety-two factories
and shops the number of men now
employed is G4 per cent larger than
three years ago, the increase in the
total wages paid per mouth is f9
per cent and the increase in the
average monthly wages is 58.31.
Figures obtained from .255 shops
and factories scattered through the
state show 68 per cent increase in
the number of men employed as
compared with the corresponding
lime in 18 and 8'J per cent in
crease in the total monthly pay
rolls.
The Political Falso Prophots.
There have always been false pro
phets, who for a time thrived on the
gullibility of unthinking or unsus
pecting people, but there has never
been a more pestiferous and prcsist-
ent lot than the breed of 1896
These latter-day prophets predicted
all sorts of disaster should McKiu
ley be elected. None of these irruc
some misfortunes have come to pass.
and now in impotent rage these pro
phets ol poverty are venting their
spleen on tlie administration of the
successful party because of the
failure of their own prophecies. It
would certainly seem that the limits
ot patience have been passed with a
suffering people, because the
present prosperity of the countrv
not only surpasses all claims made
by republicans in 18, but is mov
ing on au asccudinir. scale that
promises to still fnrthcr discount
all expectations.
The republican party has been in
power only two years and eight
months, and four months of
that time had elapsed before the
enactment of the new tariff law.
Business confidence was restored
immediately when McKinley's elec
tion became known, and money
immediately came out of hiding.
Everyone knows, even if it is not
generally admitted, that the con
dition of the country has been
greatly improved, that all classes
of the people are more prosperous
that the trade balances have been
reversed and are now in favor of
this country, and that agriculture.
manufactures and labor are pros
pering uniformly as never before in
our history as a nation.
This is not an age of miracles,
et if it were we could readilv he.
lieve that a miracle rdulrl lmv
fleeted this magical trausforma-
tion. Instead this beneficent result
has been wrought by the applica
tion of correct business nrincinlos
and the adoption of wise economic
laws. These are no more matters
of chance or "luck" with nations
than with individuals. If we admit
it to be coincidence that democratic
politick Have been detrimental to
tlie country's interests, still the
fact stands, and whether we attrib
ute the fact to coincidence or "hard
luck" it is no longer worth while for
tlie American voter to experiment
with fatal theories or temporize
with an ovcr-indulgent providence.
me democratic oartv has been
so often tried and bo often found
wanting and the attempts to nut its
economical theories into practical
operation have so invariably been
accompanied by disaster, that it is
worse than folly to listen now to
those discredited prophets of dem
ocracy who are going up and down
tlie land begging and beseeching
and berating the voters to give
them still another trial. Kearney
uuu.
Botweoh tlio Rivors,
A majority of the cattlemen in
the valley are at this time fecdinir
their stock a little something to
stay their stomachs as pastures are
getting quite short.
A. A. Leister the Ilershev black
smith had a hand badly bruised the
other day by a horse that he was
shoeing stepping upon it.
A few fusion lata and also a few
republicans from this vicinity went
to North Platte last Tuesday to
sec and hear W. J. Bryan expound
the political gospel from a fusion
standpoint. There were none of
them very highly elated over what
he said,
The fusionists in Nichols precinct
could not get a man in their party
to take tlie nomination of overseer
of highways against J. B. Toillion,
Jr., the republican nominee for that
office.
S. J. Koch went to North Platte
Wednesday after a herd of caitle,
Matt Claire, of North Platte, was
talking Bryanism and fusionism
badly tinged with democratism at
ucrsney lafct Monday and Tuesday.
1 lie enorinouB number ot five
people occupied the platform of the
uersiicy depot on Tuesday last as
the special train bearing V. J.
Bryan and patty passed through
there.
Parties passed down the line
Tuesday peddling antelope meat
which they claimed they killed in
the vicinity of Ocring.
llungerford & Lokcr are at this
time baling hay at Nichols for See
berger &. Co. which wim put up on
old canal land by the Sullivan boys.
THE FAIR'S
FALL OPENING.
g The first three days of our Grand Fall Opening
has passed, and as those clays were a great suc
cess, wc hope to make the remaining days of
g this opening still more so. Our store has been
5 visited by more people these few days than ever
before on such occasions, and we are glad to say
SZ that each one had a good word to say in our fa
gs vor. We are receiving new goods every day.
Come and examine them. Have you seen our
Sg latest fads in GOLF CAPES? They are the
g latest creation
g Millinery Dept.
In our Millinery Department you can get the
g finest hats for the least money In the city. The
j matter of buying a hat should be of the greatest
S importance to every lady, and they can best ob
g tain them here. Our hats possess that style and
EZ finish which adds grace and case to the wearer.
I SHEET MUSIG FREE.
Commencing Monday morning wc will give free
with each purchase' to man, woman or child a
piece of fine sheet music, instrumental or vocal.
This sheet music cannot be bought anywhere
for less than from io to 40 cents, as they are the
latest and most popular productions. Come
early and get the best of the stock.
S, RIQtfRDS.
Mrs. V, J. Shiukle, of Ilerahey,
is reported on the sick list at this
time.
Xavier Toillion is tenderly nurs
ing a lame hand at this time.
W. II. Hill and S. L. Funkhouscr
were at Paxton on business last
Monday evening.
The Ilershcy and Nichols section
crews have loaded the last of the
steel rails which were shipped to
Ilerahey last spring when rumors
of the north river road were rife.
The O'Fallons school was dis
missed Tuesday in order that the
teacher and several of the pupils
might go to North Platte to hear
Bryan.
It iB reported that Otlo ISdstrum
can easily "shuck" a hundred
bushels of corn mi a day.
John Cordes' has lately been
loading baled hay at Ilershcy from
over south for Harrington & Tobin
of North Platte.
If you want your children taught
by up-to-date teachers for the com
ing two years as they have been in
the past two vote next Tuesday for
Miss Bertha Thoelecke for county
superintendent.
Nebraska- has been reimbursed
by the federal government for the
cost of mobilizing the Bt'ate troops
at the opening of the Spanish
American war. a treasury draft for
$14,090. 85 having been received by
the governor this veek.
is that when her
little ones
aro born,
2?thoy will
v no vigor
1 out! and
nonituy.
Ilcrhopcs
will bo fully realized if she will
prcparo herself during prcKnancy
with MOTHER'S FRiEtiD, tho
widely-known external linhncn
which 60 many women ubo. It not
only paves tho way for easy de
livery, but insure strength and
vigor to tho now-born.
Nolil by llriiRKl.tfi Tor 81 11 linllln.
fk4 rf mi fM iiiar. j i tioTiirtri) rauxn.
HIE DIUDFIEU) IlEQOLATOn CO., tthaU, Uu
4 12 F.7SaxlsIl. v
1
3
3
3
3
THE FAIR.!
A half section ot land near Hcr
she', most of it in crops and alfal
fa, with four water rightB in the
North Platte ditch. For further
information address W, O. Thomp
Bon Hershey, Neb., or A. J. Eaton,
Eaton, Colo.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
jl P. DENNIS, M. D
HOMOEOPATHIST.
Over Firtt Nntloiml Bunk,
NOUT1I 1'IiATTK, . NEBRASKA.
0, V. liKDiau
DEDELTj A: mWIV
O, I), Dint
D '
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS,
Onicos: North Plntto National Bank
liuildinK, North Platto, Nob.
D
It. ANNA PEOKIIAM-
Onieo-Cor. Locust and Gth-etB.
Snoial attontlnn in il
i i it i .w...,vu ui nuiucu
nnd children.
JjJ E. NOIiTlIRTJP,
DENTIST,
Oflloo ovor Modol ClothinR Store.
NORTH PLATTE, NEB.
rAVIS & ROAOU
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
NORTH PLAITK. . . NEBRASKA
Qrndy Block Rooms 1 & 2.
J.J S. RIDQELY,
A'J'TO RNUiV- A T.T . A w
Ofllcn in fllnmnn 111, in!,- t
NORTH PLATTE" . NEuWkA
I''. H. KDMOMUS. J. M. CALUOUK.
Edmonds & Calhoun,
LVV ND COLLECTIONS.
Over I'OHtomcc, NOKTII PLATTE, NEII.
J. S. HoACHiAND, W. V. HOAOLAND.
Hoagland & Hoagland,
rrORN EYS ND COUNSELORS
Office ovor
McDonnlil'H Dank. N0UT1I PLATTE, NE1J.
yiLcox & iiallwanT'
ATT01WEY8-AT.LAW,
ffOllTH I'LATTE, . . . NEBRASKA
OA' over North I'latts National Bank,
rjl 0. PATTERSON,
HTTO R N E3Y-KT.-L.K3nT,
Ofllco over Yollow Front Shoe Store
NORTH I'LATTE, NEB,