00 V SIXTEENTH YEAR. NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1900. NO. 88. Sate i 10 If k Increasing Business, Have You Noticed That It has and it's our low prices that docs it. Wc are giving the public prices on our line of goods that can't be equaled in western Nebraska. Wc arc at present over stocked on Bed Room Suits. That wc arc letting go at 20 per cent off the regular price. That means "40 per cent less than you can buy any place else. We have a beautiful line of Combination Book Cases and Ladies Writing Desks that wc are selling at prices within reach of nil. A swell line of couches at reduced prices. Now is the time to have your pictures framed. Remember wc save vou at least SO per cent on your frames. Our line of furniture is the most complete in North Platte. .Come in and get our prices. Ginn A fine line of undertaking goods. A good hearse in connection. Mail and telegraph orders promptly attended to. O. F. IDDINQ8 ' X-i-uLrrxToer, Coal a,n.d. G-xaArL Yards and Elevators at North Platte, Neb., Sutherland, Neb., Julesburg, Colorado. NORTH PLATTE MILLS, (C. F. 1DDING3.) Manufacturer of HIGH AND MEDIUM GRADE FLOUR BRAN AND CHOP PEED. Order by telephone from Newton's Book Store. It was cough that carried liim off, It was a coffin they carried him off in. Homely rhyme but expresses a sentiment that oltcn, unfortunately, is true. He needed a 25 cent bottle of our SYRUP WHITE PINE COMPOUND. Toxtli. ZEPlatte -Pliaimacy, ST. XX. 8T03XTJE, Mouagor. BLKCK LEG I -1 fc i TT t 7 SUCCESSFUL REMEDY, Writo for proofs covoring Hyo j oars' ubo in the United Stntcp. Oyer ono million head succesBfully treated. Sinplo Vncoino fl.CO por 10 doeo ' paokets; Doublo Vucoino 82 por lO-dos packets. Outlits complote 85.00. BLACKLEGINE Another form of PASTEUR SIorIo Vno oine, ready for immediate UFe, 81.50 per 10-doso packets; $2.50 por 20 dose pnclcots, $0.00 porCO-doso packets. LIVE STOCK VACCINE ft MEDICINE CO., 27 Railroad Building, 15 & Larimer St., Denver, Col. voi: sale nr a. '. itrur.tr.y south ri.ATTi:. Em Five Cent Cigar TO' .A.T SOHMALZEIED'S. Solid Merit is the foundation on which is ' built the enduring fame of the emington Wyckoff, Seamans & & Weingand. Standard Typewriter Benedict, 327 Broadway, N. Y. NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS. Over 500,000 lambs are in the feeding pens" about Greeley, Ft. Collins and Ft. Morgan, The profit will be about one dollar a head. Think of it. The cleaning up of half a million dollars from the winter's feeding. The Blade is not the repository of the secrets of the B. & M. road but it predicts tha't within two months dirt will be flying on the extension West, and that within a year, the gap between Bridgeport and Kearney will be built. Bridge port Blade. . The last issue of the Bridgeport Blade says: Surveyors on the new line from Kearney to Bridgeport are about fifty miles below town working west. The road is liable to be constructed sooner than the Blade prophesied. Mr. Carolhcr, representing the Allen-Davis Cattle Company of Omaha, has been purchasing calves in this vicinity this week. He ex pects to buy 550 head, and will ship them to Petersburg. Boone couuty, to feed during the winter. Ogalalla Argus. Workmen arc now engaged in digging trenches from the U. P. water tank east, in which a ten inch cast iron pipe will convey water from the tank several hunared feet cast in order that locomotives may take water while uaKiTn)?e express matter and passengers are being placed on or removed lrom trains. Lexington Pioneer. The seal of Callaway, Loup Valley & Northern railway was exhibited at this place yesterday. It is reported that work on the new road will begin in about twenty days, and that it will be built on the old grade from Pleasanton to Callaway. Wc are informed that a iorce of .men arc now in Grand. Island" awaiting orders to begin work Callaway Courier, A sheriff came up from Kansas to Callaway last week to arrest a young man. When he got to Cal laway the young man wa a down with typhoid fever and the sheriff was going to drag him from his bed and take him back. In fact he did pull him out of bed and began to cuss him, when the doctor had ' pronounced him in a critical con- dition. The sheriff barely escaped being lynched by the people of! Callaway. I Ed Smith of Camp Clarke, came! up to Alliance Tuesday for the purpose of depositing in the bank $500 he had won on bets made with 1 the gang that Jimmy Mcintosh' would not be elected county attor-, ney for Cheyenne county. The moral manhood of Cheyenne county on)y needed the. leadership of, men of mental and physical courage to, show the old gang how weak they really were. Smith Bros, seem to i have filled the bill just about right. Grip. i Sheriff Hays has confined in jail at Lexington two men, one being arrested at Omaha the other at Marysville, Mo., believed to have been connected with the robbery of the pobtoflice and jewelry store at this place. They are held awaiting identification by parties who saw them the day alter the robbery making across the country from Brady toward Cambridge or in that direction. There is teemiugly good grounds for believing that at least one of them was connected with the burglary. Cozad Tribune. The Loxiiigtou Pioneer is in funned that about one thousand cattle have died in the last mouth in Custer county and that the state veteiiuary has been called there. He is credited with haying that animals only die which have been turned into btalk fields in the hail belt. That where hail stones bruise the stalk a fungus growth j follows, and it is this fungus that causes the death of the animal that eats it. The Pioneer further says that in the vicinity of Lexington the loss will probably foot up two hundred, including horses and cattle, and other parts of Dawson county suffering equally aa bad. Ih speaking of the coming sena torial struggle, the Ogalalla Argus says: If we could spare him from the judicial bench in this district wc would suggest Judge H. M Grimes, of North Platte, as a man upon whom all republicans could unite, and who would be an honor to the state in the Nation's councils. BETWEEN THE RIVERS. M. McKellips and family have dc parted lor tneir new home in Adams county. His partner J. L, Stricklcr and family, arc still at Hershcy. A few from the vicinity of Her shey attended an entertainment at Sutherland last Friday evening given by the Royal Neighbors o that place. All returned speaking in glowing terms of the affair. G. W, Brown is siding up the north side of his store building at Hershcy. L. A. Rengler has returned from Overton. I. V. Bostwick is done shipping baled hay for tli Ib season. He has shipped several car loads. Chris Pearson's new residence is completed. It is among the finest farm rcsidencs in the valley. 13. C. Von Ohlen has , finished shipping alfalfa hay from Hershcy to Overton for this year. The revival meetings that have been going at Hcrshey for some time, closed last Thursday evening Rev. Wimberly of North Platte. preached the closing sermon. D. M. Leypoldt of ilershev ac companied a car load of hogs to Cheyenne the last of last week. O. H. Eyerly has about forty April pigs that will at this tune average close to 200 pounds each There was a new conductor on the milk toute leading to the Nich ols creamery from the northeast the last of last week, the former one .being on the sick list at that time. Mrs. Emma Ross of Wintered, Iowa, is at this time visiting her sister Mrs. Trent, who resides with her daughter Mrs. 0. H. Eyerly in the valley. She arrived Friday last, E.' C. Hitch of Hastings supreme deputy of the Loyal Mystic Legion was looking after the welfare of the local order at Hcrshey lest week. W. J. Shinkle and crew will be gin baling hay again on the old canal company's land as soon as the 6loughs freeze up ho they can be crossed with loads, R. W. Calhoun returned a few days ago from McPhcrson county with a small herd of cows and calves which he will winter in the valley. E. McCord held a turkey raflte a Hershcy last Saturday night where several parties procured turkeys for their Thanksgiving dinner, Logan Loker and wife returned to lloldrege where they will remain the coming winter. A. A. Leister, the Hershcy black smith, has been oil duty for nearly two weeks caused by falling over a wheel-barrow that a neighbor had just returned home and had left in the pathway leading to his resi dence from the street, and the night being dark he was unable to see it. He was badly bruised about the chest. Several head of cattle have died lately in this locality from eating dry corn stalks that did not contain moisture enough to digest them. Geo. Kefior, C. A. Loker and J. M. Dwycr are among the heavy losers Mrs. D. B. White was the victim of a surprise party on Wednesday evening of last week when about thirty of her young friends called upon her at her home and informed her that they hac' come there for the purpose of assisting her in celebrating her birth anniversary. The evening was pleasantly spent in various ways. Oysters were served as refreshments after which all returned to their homes feeling that it was good to have been there. John B. O'Neal of Odessa, Buffalo county, claims to have realized six hundred dollars from the alfalfa seed grown on twelve acres, besides two cuttings of hay. JOHN BR ATT. ...JOHN BRATT & CO.,... Real Estate, Loans Insurance X NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, X EVUeferouooi-JkMrv JFtanTUr lxi 3Tolox-ai9ls.a. gjumfflttivrttiirjttiirjuffjuwjuiirjttffjttmittifriui 1 YOU MAY NEED S A Stove 3 ANY MORNING it is always well to bo prepared for cold weather. When you arc up against a blizzard, it is not always easy to have a stove set up. They are cheap if you buy P now. 5 g Acorn Stoves and tne uenmne Koutid Oak. g p The finest lino of Heaters in the city. 3 A I HAVK Tho Hardware man that J Wrt T lO no ono owes. rst 7mmmmmmmmmmmmw& BRADY NEWS. From the Review, Iii the Fickcnger law suit against the railroad company for damages resulting trom the prairie fire on April 16. 1899, which was tried at Lexington this week, the jury awarded them $1,750 damages. While absent from his ranch, at the head of Pawnee creek, Mart llolcomb's frame house in which he 'batched", was entirely destroyed by fire, burning up some of his clothes and a number of valuable papers. Mr. Holcomb has no idea how the fire started, as everything appeared in good shape when they left. Gus Miller who works for R. C. Burke ou his ranch west of town was thrown from a horse Thurs day and knocked unconcious. He remained in that condition for about twenty minutes and when he came to found himself lying on tiie ground with a large gash cut n his head from just above his left ear to the back of his neck and cut clear to the skull and so deep that tin scalp could be raised from bis head. He got down to Brady in the afternoon and Dr. Ward was called. The docter was compelled to take seven stitches to sew the wound together. . At this writing he is resting easy. Every woman loves to think of tho tlmo when a soft llttlo body, all her own, will nestle In her bosom, fully satisfying tho yearning which lies In tho heart of every good woman. But yet there Is a black cloud hovering about tho pretty picture In her mind which fills her with terror. The dread of childbirth takes away much of the Joy of motherhood. And yet It need not be so. For sometlmethero has been upon the market, well-known and recommended by physicians, a liniment called Moiber's Friend which makes childbirth as simplo and easy as naturo Intended It. It b a strengthening, penetrating liniment, which tho skin readily absorbs. It gives tho muscleselastlclty and vigor, prevents soro breasts, morning slck noss and tho loss of tho girlish figure. . An ,.'J,,?"Be.nt mother in Dutler, P osaln, I would obtain 0 bottlet If I had to pay $6 per botf.? tor it." Get Alother'a Friend at tho drujr tore. 91 per bottle, K THE BRADflELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. Write tor our ireo llluttritwl book. "Befor llaoy U ilurii." ' ' E. R. GOODMAN. NOW. Ranges HUMPHREYS9 VETERIMARY SPECIFICS not., Grub.. PrmiU MI8CAHHIAQK. fvui KIDNEY BLADDER DIHOII DKBH. SM?cl?.B'te' Kr"',,"'" :hl IPAP CONDITION. Fturlnit Coal. ."JL5St.bI.e.C"7' Tou BPeolOci. Book, fto.. IT. ASSESS ?f Snf r?li'1 on rwelnt of prlcS. NERVOUS DEBILITY, VITAI, WEAKNESS and Prostration from Over work or othor causes. No. B8, In un ovor40 yoare. tho only auaoeaarul romody. iL?dbTDl'0T"pcl",pBck",wl,Upowdorfor3 HiarHRlIf HICK. CO., C.r. ffllUta Jot. (.,. Itrt Fred Younirbird. accomnanied bo his sister and Ida Norlandcr boarded No. 102 Thursday morn ing and went to Lexington where tie and Miss Norlander were' united in matrimony. They returned on No. 101 the same afternoon and went to their home on the south side" where a reception was given liiem the same evcninir. The Re view extends congratulations. While our neich borinir town in Cheyenne county, Sidney, is felic itating herself on .the pros)cctof a boomlet m the Bprinir time, the following Chicago special appearing in yesterday's Omaha I3ce will prove pleasant rending to the citizens of that hnuilet: "The Chicago, Kock Island & Pacific railroad, besides building, its Oklahoma and Texas branches the coming Bpring, has decided ou building a road from Colby, Kan., to the Wyoming. coal fields. The road will leave the main line at Colby, crossing the Burlington rail- road at bt. Francis, Kan,, and Holyoke, Col., and the Union Pacific at Crook, Col., and Sidney, Neb. The. contemplated route from Sidney will be yia Frcefiort and Goring on the North Platte river, thence along the fertile valley of Mitchell to Fort Laramie, ultimately reaching the coal, oil and iron fields of-Wyoming, Well posted authorities assert this will be the coming transcontinental line to the Pacifia coast." A locomotive by the name of Dorothy'1 passed through the city Monday on a Jlat car for Omaha for repairs. The locomotive is small and has been used 011 the narrow guage line to Pike's Peak. Round and Half Hound Stook Tanks, all sizes, for Bale by Jos. Hershey. 161? FARNAM ST., OMAHA.