The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, November 30, 1894, Image 8

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What
. Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants
' - and Children. It contains neither Opium , Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric , Drops , Soothing Syrups , and Castor OIL
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by
' Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays
feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd ,
t cures Diarrhaea and Wintl Colic. Castoria relieves
I teething troubles , cures constipation and flatulency.
Cas oria assimilates the food , regulates the stomach
and bowels , giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas
toria h the Children's Panacea-the Mother's Friend.
Castoria.
I
"Castoris is an excellent flWdi : i : f r chil
dren. Mothershave repcatcdir tu.d nu ; of its
good effect upon their children. "
I Dz. G. C. ORrooo ,
Luaell , MUSS.
"CastorIa is the best remedy for children of
I which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not
' far distant whenmotherswiliconsider the real
interest of their children , and use Castoriq instead -
stead of thevariousquack nostrums which are
destroying.Weirlove d ones ; by.forcingopium ,
morphine , soothing syrup and other hurtful
t agents down their throats , thereby sending
+ them to premature graves. "
i DIL L F. Envcnat os ,
Conway , Ark.
Castoria.
" Castoria 1S so well adapted to children that
I recommend it assuperiortoanyprescripttoa
known to me. "
H. A. ARcUE ; M. D. ,
111 So. Oxford St. , Brooldyn , N. Y.
"Our physicians in the children's depart.
ment have spoken highly of their experience -
ence in their outside practice with Castoria ,
and although we only have among our
medical supplies what is known as regular
products , yet we are free to confess that the
merits of Castoria has won us to look with
favor upon it. "
UNITED HOSPITAL AD DISPENsiny ,
Boston , Mass ,
Au.EN C. SMrTa , Fes. ,
3
The Centaur Company , T7 Murray Street , New York City.
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i
I PAI\IK K
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l Capital
CapitalandSwpius ,
OFFICERS AND RS.
1 GEORGE HOCKNEL 1 B , M , FREES , W , F1 IkWSON
. President , Vice President. Cashiers
A. CAMPBELL ! Fi ANK HARRIS.
itizons
INCO.trORATEL UNIE1i STATr LAWS.
Paid Up Caital - - - ' - 50OOU.
Surplus , - - - - - - - 10,000.
wwwwww
BUSINESS.
t Collections Made on all Accessible Points. Drafts Drawn on all
Principal Cities of Europe. Taxes Paid
.
for Non-Residents.
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Tickets ® lls 5a e ar ® Ear e > <
OFFICERS.
V. FRANKLIN , President. A. C. EBEItT , Cashier.
CORRESPOtiDEA'TS-The First National Bank , Lincoln , Nebraska. The
Chemical National Bank , New York City.
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LIME HARD
I CEIiE11T , AND
DOURS , LUT4PEkK SOFT
itii\DOiFS ,
BLINDS. COi Ei.
o
RED CEDAR AND OAK POSTS.
. U J. WARREN , Manager.
F. D. BURGESS ,
Plumber and Steam Fitter le
' MAIN AVENUE , MCCOOK , NEB.
Stock of lion , Tad and Sewer Pipe , Brass Geode , Pumps and Boiler Trim
tinge Agent for Salltday , Eclipse and Ws ipnn Wind Mill.
I
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The Tariff , Financial , Hawaiian
nil other questions of the day do
' ) t interest the people hereabout
{ 5 much as the question where can
get the most and best groceries
= t' the money. C. M. Noble can
answer the gllestiou to the satis
action of all.
When D by tea , sic ! ; we case her Cas oria.
, ' hen 'o acs a CbIJd , she cried for C > stor ia.
; Then s io bnamo Miss , she clung to Castoria.
Win she liad Childrensho gavothem Castorh
MILTON OSBORh
PROPRIETOR. OF TILE
WHITE LINE TRANSFER.
gz"I am well equipped to do
anytlling and everything in the
line of drayillg business. I will
move pianos or household goods
promptly and safely. Your pat.
ronage is solicited. Barn opposite
the Central hotel.
C. L. MILLER ,
PROPRIETOR OF
Miller's Restaurant an
CHOP HOUSE.
ONE DOOR NORTH OF LRTOURETTE'S.
Short Orders , Lunches , Orders for aanquels ,
( 'ourteousTreatment. iteasonablo Prices.
WI1 L DOUGLAS
IS THE BEST.
NO SQUEAKING.
$5. CORDOVAN ,
_ . FRENCH&ENN7E1LEDCALF
- = 4P350FlNECAF&IUINGAR04
- = - _ $3.50POLIC sSoi. s.
_ so2WORKIN G
EXTRA FINE.
$ $ 75 BOYSSCHOOLSHOES ,
; LA IES
. .3. D
4 4 , . BEST ,
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
' WL DOUGLAS ,
BROCKTON , MASS.
You can acre monPy by purchasing W. L.
Duuglne shoe. ,
Because , we are the largest manufacturers of
advertised shoes in the world , and guarantee
the value b stamping the name anei price on
the bottom. which protects you against htgh
prices and the middleman's profits. Our shoes
equal custom work in style , easy fitting and
wearing quhlities. We have them sold everywhere -
where at lower prices for the value given than'
any other make. Take no substitute. If your
dealer cahnot supply you , we can. Sold by
DEALER whose name will shortly appear -
pear here. Agents wanted.
Apply at once.
t 0 ORE BACK ACHE
M 0E
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CtJr5
AVE L ,
CONSTIPATION ,
INFLAMATION afE BLADDER , MD
ALL KIDNEY DISEASES .
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QURIFIIg _ " '
rtlE iRAOc = MaP
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§ 50.FOR A CASE { T1VILL _ NOT CURE.
It Is an agreeab'e ' Laxative for the Bowels ;
can be made into a Tea for use in one minute.
Prico25c.,50c.andLHOper packHge. ,
An Elegant I OILET POWDER
for theTeeth andBreath-:5e
The
County Pair
affords an excellent opportunity for the
pick-pocket to get your watch. If you
would be proof against his skill , be sure
that the bow ( or ring ) is a
a
I
This wonderful bow is now fitted to the
Jas. Boss
Filled Watch Cases ,
which are made of two plates of gold
soldered to a plate of composition metal.
Look equally as well as solid gold cases ,
and cost about half as much.
Guaranteed to wear 20 years.
Always look for this trade mark.
None genuine without it. ,
Sold only through watch dealers. t
Ask any jeweler for pamphlet or send
to the manufacturers.
KeYstoneWatch Case Co. ,
PHILADELPHIA.
_ -
THE TERRIER AND THE LIONS.
size Did Not Count s Regarded Ownership
of the Cage.
Kindness is powerful with animals ,
but I have often been led to think that
where kindness fails impudence con-
quers. In Lincoln park , Chicago , I saw
a lady put her hand on the heads of
three lions in succession and stroke
their ears as if they were kittens. They
growled when she pretended to leave ,
and when she returned they fought
among themselves for the first chance
of being petted'again. . But this lady
bad nursed these lions , and they seemed
to know her as a child knows its mother.
. There was a little Scotch terrier in
the cage with the same lions. He did
nothing but bark and snarl and snap at
them. One good swish of any one of
the three tails would have wiped him
out of existence. But he just ordered
the big-animals around as if he were
the lion and they the rat catchers. They
obeyed , although with the long deep
rumblings as of muffled thunder.
He was not a pretty dog , nor was his
voice calculated to make him many
friends. Ho was in no danger of being
worried by encores. I don't know that
he had any moral qualities worth bragging -
ging about. But he was Scotch. He had
the reputation of being a terror as well
as a terrier , and he had a broken leg.
Perhaps as an invalid he appealed to
the sympathies of his big companions.
This , however , would not account for
his insolent airs of superiority.
He took the best of the food. He got
the first and the last shake hands from
the lady. His barefaced impudence was
more powerful than all the kindness and
attention of the gentle nurse. And he
gave nothing for his living except his
bark. , For.tllo struggle of life he had no
equipment but impudence , and yet he
kept three lions in what must have been
literally a condition of galling servi-
tude. There is room somewhere here
for a moral. But . .sop is dead. And
when he lived he tacked morals only to
fables , where indeed 'they seem to be-
long.Donaice's ) Magazine.
THE TELEPHONE DEADBEAT.
How lie Gradually Comes to Believe That
Ho Owns Your Instrument.
"If there is a variety of deadbeats , "
said an eminent citizen the other morning -
ing , "which annoys me more than all
others , it is the man who moves into
your building because you have a tele-
phone. At first he drops into your office
and tells you his wife bade him order a
steak before noon and that lie had forgotten -
gotten whether it was porterhouse or
sirloin. He says that a family across
the street from his house has a phone ,
and that with your permission he'll
just ring 'em up and have 'em send for
Mrs. % Walt , that doesn't bother you
much because you are thinking of the
family across the street , but in a week
or two Mrs. % . begins to call you up
with the request that you step across
the hall and bring her husband to the
phone. Then the husband begins to
drop in to telephone his commercial acquaintances -
quaintances until two-thirds of his entire -
tire business is done over your wire.
There is only one more step. One of his
agents is up , say , at Mount Morris , and
it is very necessary to communicate
with him immediately. As much as $4
may depend upon a word. Ho hurries
in and says of course you have connected -
ed with Mount Morris. It is marvelous
how man's inventions put the miles at
naught :
"While you are chalking up 25 cents
to profit and loss ho has become thepos-
sessor of your telephone. From that
time on , if you are using it when he
comes in , he waits impatiently and
gives you a look when you ring off as
much as to say , Sir , you are taking
liberties with my property which I
must resent. ' There are but two things
left to do-take out the telephone or
move out yourself. I am fond of my
offices , so the telephone had to go. ' -
Rochester Standard-Union.
A Cat's Breath.
All the feliday ' possess poisonous
breaths , intended by nature to act as an
anaesthetic on their prey. If a person
cares to experiment by inhaling , for instance -
stance , a cat's breath , they can easily realize -
alize the truth of this statement Carefully -
fully watch a cat playing with a captured -
tured mouse You will discover that
the mouse does not suffer , but is sort of
stupefied , as if by chloroform. In the
"Life of Livingstone , " written byhim-
self of explorations m Africa , he states
that once when he was seized by a lion
and his arm broken the crunching of
the broken arm gave him no pain , so benumbed -
numbed were his senses by the animal's
breath. A cat seeks the child for its
soft bed and the warmth of its bed and
lies down on the chest of the infant. Its
weight impedes respiration , its breath
anaesthetizes the child , and death fol-
lows. This circumstance has actually
occurred , and medical records conclusively -
sively prove it-Brooklyn Standard-
Union.
Sir Richard Owen and the Fakir.
A novel story of the late Sir Richard
Oweu is going the rounds. A snake
charmer at Cairo , reckoning without
his host , appeared before Sir Richard to
go through a deadly performance with
cerastes-the horned wasp. The reptile
was placed on the ground. Owen looked
at it a moment , then stepped forward
and picked it up. Before the luckless
performer could interpose the savant
plucked from its head its projecting
horns , which on closer inspection proved -
ed to be fishbones. The fakir was somewhat -
what disconcerted at the rapid unveiling -
ing of an actnallyharmless animal , and
the entertainment was withdrawn.-
Landon Figaro.
Science Right.
Husband-A great scientist says that
women are less sensitive to pain than
men.
men.WifeI
Wife-I presume it is so. I can suffer
orments and go right along with a
smile on my face , while you swear and
tear.aronnd like mad if you bump your
head while hunting a collar button.-
( ow York Weekly.
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S TTOEN'S
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Special Sak : : : . , I
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FOR 3Q DAYS
For Cash . 01 I
Everything Goes. MY Stock ,
Must be Reduced. (
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We are not going out of business , but have taken this l
method to reduce our stock. .Pula will give the people of )
McCook and vicinityy a grand opportunity to secure their
Holiday Goods at prices never heard of before in this part
of the country. My stock is the largest found iii the entire
Republican Valley , consisting of" Watches of all kinds-five '
hundred to select from-in gold , gold filled , etc Diamonds ,
a complete stock. Rings-well I should say so-too many r
for you to count. Jewelry , the very latest styles. Silverware -
ware , plated and solid , of all descriptions. In fact anything
found in a first-class jewelry store will be found in my store. .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CLOCKS , CLOCKS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l
Onyx , Marble , Wood and Stone.
We Engrave Our Goods Free.
Pianos , Organs and . a
Musicad Instruments
. . .CALL G0. .
Everything Warranted as Represented. '
'Remember , my entire stock on sale
at and below cost for 30 days , for CASH
. 1 Jeweler
1 ,
McCook , Nebraska.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
J. S. MCBRAYER
PROPRIETOR OF THE
McCook Transfer Line.
BUS , BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS.
'Only furniture van in the
city. Also have a first class house
moving outfit. Leave orders for
bus calls at Commercial hotel or
at office opposite the depot.
CHASE CO. LAND & LIVE STOCK CO.
Horses branded on left hip or left ehouldor.
p. o. address Imperial ,
Chase county , and Boat-
ri e. Nebraska. Raege.
Stinking Water and the
Frenchman creekR , in
Chase county , Nebraska.
Brand as cut on sldeof
some animalsou hip and
sides of some , or anywhere -
where on the animal.
ELMER ROWELL ,
NOT.titY FUBLIU ,
a Estate , Collections , I
AND INSURANCE' .
IVIc000K , - NEBRASKA.
J. E. KELLEY ,
.iLJ
,
AGENT LINCOLf L&ND CO.
afc000K , - - NEBRASKA-
Office In Il aror First National Bank.
CHARLES H. BOYLE ,
ATTORNEY - AT - LAW
MCCOOK , NEBRASKA.
Buy 3your tablets ,
iiik , 1)ens , pencils and
s fationerYof all hinds
at The Tribune office
next door to the post-
office.
office.FOR
FOR SALE !
We have seed wheat , seed rye ,
and corn for sale at the elevator ,
H. H. EABTEPD&Y & CO.
Tablets , inks and pencils at this
office.
R. A. COLE ,
LEADING
1EROHANT TAILOR
OF McC00K ,
has just received a new stock of OLOTHS
and TRIMMINGS. If you want a good fitting -
ting suit made at the very lowest prices for
good work , call on him. Shop first door west
of Barnett's Lumber Office , on Dennlsoa
street.
W. V. CAGE , .
SUflOOfl ,
arcCOOE , NEBRASKA.
t -Orca UOCRS-9 t0 11 a. m. , 2 to 5 and t
f to b p. m. Rooms over First National bank. '
Night calls answered at office.
I
J. A. CUNN ,
Sllrflon
, /
afcCOOK , NEL'IASKA.
-Orricz-Front rooms over Lowman , t
Son's store. REsmENcn-402 McFarland St. ,
two blocks north of McEntee hoteL Prompt
attention to all calls. '
1
MRS. E. E. UTTER }
-MUSICAL r I
_
INSTttUCTUR. !
Piano , Organ Guitar and Banjo :
VOICE TRAINING A SPECIALTY.
STCDIO ROOM S , Ovxa GANSCHOWS. ' V
McCook ,
- -
- Nebraska ,
A USTIN J. IITTENHOUSE ,
y
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MoC00i , NEBBASg
I 'Ofee over the Famous
I
Clothing Sto
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