The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, October 30, 1896, Image 5

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* I Why Will You Pass a Good Thing ? J
1 STOP AND SEE
: J OUR J
5 GENT'S , J
H | 5 LADY'S , 5
H | 5 MISS'S , I
Wk > 2 CHILDREN'S , 5
H * > 5 AND 5
V ' S * * BABY'S S
L | shoes |
E § I I Can Fit Them All !
H # THE rV ; .
* * - > * > = k.
| | iliKeiRflN
I J. F. GANSCHOW ,
M * THE OLD RELIABLE <
It FEET FITTER I
WM \ MeCOOK , NEBRASKA. |
K > COMBINATION FENCE \
I PORTABLE , TEMPORARY G0RNGRI8
lSk 1 ' , S UNRVALLED , BY , TS MARVELOUS fa
RE 2 CHEAPNESS. fa
1 \ No Farmer can afford to be without it
4Krj [ Z Made from No. i Yellow Pine * s > . thick and i % in. wide , 4 ft. long ,
k WL X a11 benS bound together by machinery , by 5 double strands of No. 12J2
Mgiv , j galvanized steel wire , and put up in rolls of five rods each. After filling Z
LaJm * 7 UP a crib 4 ft. high , place another length of 4 ft. on top of same , as shown Z
rJSffiHrs M * n co * above- Thus we will have 10 cables of No. 12 } & galvanized steel V
R wre holding together solidly our crib. %
JOE Z Capacity , 500 bushels ; diameter , 12 feet ; height , 8 feet ; price , $3.75. m
H 9 Temporary corncribs do not necessarily require a board floor , except a little B
jHk 9 hay , straw or fodder , just sufficient to keep the com from coming into fe
| / B % actual contact with Mother Earth , and high enough to prevent flooding in Z
I Rv. case of rain. Select a patch of high , level ground on which to place the /
jl B , * crib , and wire the end slats together. When filled , place another length T
f-flp , Z on top of this as shown in cut above. When the crib is filled we advise to m
[ JHHy ' cover the top with hay or straw , shaped the same as a hay stack. Lots of W
lf9Pf Z PeoPle erect the crib "Sbt in tbe cornfield , filling them as fast as corn is fa
IJMK H gathered , where it may remain until the less busy season of the winter S
ySgr months , when it can be shelled right at the crib and hauled to the granary 7
l ibn or market as desired. J
WJ W. G. BULLARD & CO. , McGook , Neb , I
ftL ,
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L *
* " [ 1 1 * J * " s i"j • J *
TIME TABLlf. llHi
ibJP iiccoor , uebeaoia. liiMfll
LINCOLN , DENVER ,
OMAHA , HELENA ,
CHICAGO. BUTTE ,
ST. JOSEI' 11 , PORTLAND ,
KANSAS CITY , SALT LAKE CITY ,
S P. LOUIS anii < u.L SAN FRANCISCO ,
POINTS EAST AND AND Al.l. POINTS
SOUTH. WKsri.
TRAINS LEAVE AS FOLLOWS :
ChN'IKAl. TIME.
No. 2. Vestibuled Express , daily ,
Lincoln , Omaha , St. Joe ,
Kansas City , St. LouisChi-
capo , and all points south
and eat , 5:55A.M.
No. 4. Local Express daily , Lin
coln , Omaha , Chicago , and
all points east 9:00 P. M.
N0.148. Freight , daily , ex. Sunday ,
Hastings and intermediate
stations 5:00 a. m.
No. 76. Freight , daily , Oxford , Hol-
drege , Hastings 6:45 A.M.
No. So. r-reightdaily , Hastings and
intermediate stations 7:00 A. M.
MOUNTAIN TIME.
No. 5. Local Express , daily , Den
ver and intermediate sta
tions SI5 P. M.
No. 3. Vestibuled Express , daily ,
Denver and all points in
Colo.Utah and California , 11:40 P.M.
N0.149. Freight , daily , ex. Sunday ,
Akron and intermediate sta
tions 6:00 A. M.
No. 77. Freight , d.idyStrattonBen
kelman , llaigler , Wrayand
Akron 3:20 P. M.
No. 63. Freight , daily.Siratton.Ben-
kelman , 1 laigler , Wray and
Akron 5:00 : p. M.
N0.I75. Accommodation , daily , ex.
Sunday , Imperial and in
termediate stations 8:00 A. M.
Sleeping , dining and reclining chair cars
( seals fiee ) on thiough trains. Tickeis sold
and baggage checked to any point in the
United State * or Canada.
_ For information , time tables , maps and
tickets , call on or write C E. Magner , Agent ,
McCook , Nebraska , or J. Francis , General
Passenger Aeent , Omaha , Nebraska.
T = = r - . , . .vy7r- = - = : „ l . . = , = = % ;
I RAILROAD NEWS-NOTES. j |
II • •
The depot here has been painted as to its
exterior.
The section men are burning fireguards
along the road.
The freight house is also in for a coat of
fresh paint , this week.
Mrs. C. E. Pope went down to Oxford , last
Friday evening , on a brief visit to relatives.
Conductor Tim Foley and wife will occupy
the Spearman house just vacated by Rev. G. P.
Fuson and family.
Charlie McManigal took in the Republican
rally at Cambridge , Tuesday , George Lei lew
delivering messages for him.
Mrs. W. D. Burnett was the guest of her
parents , Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Smith at Red
Cloud , early part of last week.
Fireman Charlie Benedict is figuring on
buying the Spearman cottage on Melvin street ,
just north of Conductor P. F. McKenna's
place.
The company is building a new bath house
here. It will be located on the east side of
the round house and will be better equipped
than the old one.
Charles Emerson's second son , who has
been absent on a visit , arrived home on Satm-
day last , with a badly mashed foot , the result
of a'cow stepping on his foot
Knud Stangland , Roy Smith , Rufus Carlton
and Charles McManigal went down on No. 5 ,
Saturday evening , to Oxford , to see that the
girls got home safe from their trip to Bloom-
ington. How "nitty nit. "
Ode Forbes was injured , last week , while
breaking on the Ilolyoke branch. He was
caught between the bumpers and had one
hand badly lacerated. Whether amputation
has been necessary we have not learned.
Republican City Democrat.
The Burlington's shortage on freight cars
continues all over the state. Not more than
one-third enough cars can be obtained to meet
the demand for grain cars. In some instances
cattle cars have been rigged up for the pur
pose , and giain taken at the company ' s risk.
It is really amusing to observe how readily
some people catch at conclusions. Merely
because Superintendent Campbell accompan
ied the special train to the Warner meeting at
Orleans last Friday , the assertion was made
that he came along to pass , indiscriminately ,
everybody who would join the crowd. But
then politics would not be interesting without
the campaign prevaricator and these things
must be expected and accepted as a matter of
fact. Oxford Sentinel.
SUNFLOWER SILHOUETTES.
11. C. Wieble went to Naponee on Tuesday
to take charge of the station while "Sunshine"
Carter takes a trip to Denver.
Mrs. T. W. Benjamin spent the first of the
week with her parents at Republican , celebrat
ing her mother's birthday.
Mis. W. II. Benjamin returned to her home
from Oberhn on last Sunday , after spending a
week with her son. Conductor Benjamin , and
family.
E. L. Mason and wife , who have been visit
ing friends in Franklin , returned to their home
on Tuesday. Mr.Mason is in the mail service
of the Florence and Ciipple Creek Road.
Awarded
Highest Honors World's Fair ,
vWCfj
CREAM
BAKING
POWDER
MOST PERFECT MADE.
A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free I
from Ammonia , Alum or any other adulterant ,
40 YEARS THE STANDARD. I
Daabed H U Ecoao y. I
This 1 * 8 a Etory nboat a man over 1b
Alexandria who has a great deal * of
money , to which ho is deeply attached.
He is , in fact , ko attached to it that he
j bates to be separated from a dollar of I
it He has a silk hat , too a well pro-
I served silk hat of great age and un
doubted respectability. Ho is fond of
his hat , and ho'd like to wear it every
i day , bnt silk hats , yon know , are expensive -
pensive , so he has been wearing his for
these many years just on Sunday. On
week days ho wears a shocking bad hat I
which does not concern this story. The
last time the storks visited the Alexan
dria man's house they were generous.
. They brought twins , a boy and a girL
The father was sitting in the parlor
when somebody entered to bring the <
news. 1
"Well , you're a father now , " said
the somebody.
"Boy or girl ? " asked the Alexandria
man.
man."Both
"Both twins. "
"Great Scott , " cried the father ,
springing to his feet. "Give me my
silk hat ! I might as well wear it every
day now. What's the use of trying to
bo economical , anyway ? " Washington
Post j
LotreU'jt Greatest Defect. ,
In this same year , 18-18 , Lowell sent
forth also "Tho Vision of SirLaanfal , "
his first attempt at telling a story in
verse. Perhaps it is the best of all his
serious poems loftiest in conception
and most careful in execntiou. His
habit then , as always , was to brood over
the subject he wished to treat in verse ,
to fill himself with it and finally to
write it out at a single sitting , if possi
ble. Ho rarely rewrote , and his verse
lacked finish and polish , though it never
wanted force. It was at this time that
he told Longfellow he meant to give up
poetry because he could "uot write
slowly enough. " .
His poetry also suffered from another
failing of his. He was not content to set
forth beauty only and to let the reader
discover a moral for himself. Longfel
low , Whittier and Lowell all insisted
too much at times on the lesson of the
song. And Lowell knew his own defect
and wrote later in life , "I shall never
be a poet till I get out of the pulpit , and
New England was all meeting house
when I was growing up. " "James
Russell Lowell , " by BrauderMatthews ,
in St. Nicholas.
1
Bicycle Wheels.
It is not as generally understood as it
should be , perhaps , that bicycle wheels
seldom or never are subjected to lateral
strains. They need to resist only those
strains which pass through their own i
plane , and in this plane only have they
any strength worth speaking of. This is
worth remembering when the use of
wheels of this type is being considered
for three or four wheeled vehicles , where
the conditions are essentially different ,
and where , in turning corners rapidly ,
or in going over ground that causes the
vehicle to be inclined sideways , a very
considerable lateral strain may be.
brought upon the wheels a strain . '
which the ordinary bicycle wheel is ,
very properly , entirely unfitted for.
This is to be considered also in connec
tion with devices for attaching two bicycles - 1
cycles side by side to make a duplex , or
four wheeled machine , of them. Neither
the frame , the bearings nor the wheels
of a properly constructed bicycle are
adapted to such use without injury.
American Machinist.
1
June Vat r.
A quaint old superstition as to the ]
medicinal virtues of "June water" still
obtains in Hingham and other old towns ]
in Massachusetts. It must be caught
from the first shower that falls after 12 (
o'clock en the night of May 31. An old
lady of Hingham tells a writer , who
sends an account of "June water" to
the Boston Transcript , that it is bottled |
and used for sick folks mostly. "You
' ' in ordinary (
oughtn't to give 'em medicine -
nary water , didn't yon know ? Why , I'ver
had my son's wife send up from Boston
for a bottle or two when the boys was 5
sick. Then if I feel as if I can spare it
I use it for preserves. They'd never
spoil done in June water if you'd kep'
'em 100 years. Why , there ain't a speck
or a mite of dirt in it. It's real different
from other water when you come to
look. " '
Kelsufaed From tlie Polpit.
Preaching in the abbey Canon Wilber- |
force told a good story of the celebrated '
Welsh preacher , Christmas Evans , who-J
dared publicly to express his thankfulness - j
ness for Jenny Lind's beautiful singing. ;
A member of his congregation , a straitlaced -
laced Calvinist , standing on the steps of
the pulpit , asked the preacher whether
a man dying at one of Jenny Lind's con
certs would go to heaven. "Sir , " im
plied Mr. Evans , "a Christian will go
to heaven wherever he dies , but a fool
remains a fool even on the pulpit
steps. " Even the sober abbey congrega
tion could hardly stifle its enjoyment of
this repartee. Westminster Gazette.
1
Resigned to It. 1
"What does this here 'new woman' !
talk mean , John ? "
"Hit means , Maria , " replied the old
farmer , "that women air a-takin the
places what men occupied. You'll find
the plow right where I left it. an when
yon sharpen the ax you kin sail into a
dozen cords 0' wood , an I'll have supper
a-bilin when you git homel" Atlanta
Constitution.
Appropriate.
"Papa , " said a boy , "I know what
makes people laugh in their sleeve. "
"Well , my son , what makes them ? "
" 'Cause that's where their funny
bone is. " London Quiver.
Historians are now trying to prove
that the little village of Yaleta , Tex. ,
is the oldest settlement in the United
States.
The highest steeple in the world is
that of the An twerp cathedral 17 feet
I
1 Dress Goods I I
I _ _ j
WtsS & 3gr0nr stock the largest , our prices thn lowest. D/S ? H
$ | JS Elegant variety of Novelties and Plain Goods TIm-bm Jj S H
pgjfcJ goods were bought before the final dry spell on prosWttS |
fc > 5 pects of a good crop. Our loss is your gain. You J |
yfej can make money by buying dress goods of us. t > r > 1
dft2 § 23P We sell the celebrated G-D Corsets. Kv- § f g |
jjj KJ ery corset guaranteed to give satisfaction. SJ J ' HH
'
M' i |
m Winter Underwear ! § f |
m m |
WW ir\Ve excoll in this. We have the b t mid S f H
5 g cheapest line in this .section. BLANKETS at f > ( > < . . & H
fV 2 ft pair and upwards. Come and inspect tlimu. S&S 1
U CLOTHING [ f
KSW 23rHats and Caps , I3oos ! and Shoes nil < r < > § ? © : ; H
at hard times prices. lXu + t M
jnj j
| grogery | I
JSgTStock ' fresh. fc H
Jj fe nlwiij's Highest raiulc-'t piu-c *
otjm paid for country produce. ra > ri 1
w | | s se- SrcS ] ' H
@ | g AT THE . . . § ? $ H
- . jaat gain M
p gg
H s Store . . H V
5 § G. L. DeGROFF & GO. gW M
Over 2,000 samples of Fall H
and Winter Goods. I l
MEN'S SUITS - . 89.00 ] H
BOYS' SUITS 3.5Q . I.H
? YERCOATS - 8.00 \ H
These are all wool and well made. 400 \ H
Ir.e samples for Suitings , Overcoats , Ladies' | H
Cloaks , Jackets and Capes to sell by the yard. H
" ull line of Trimmings. Call and see them I H
Satisfy yourselves. H
LI BENJAMIN , McCook , Nell. ) I
First Door South Commercial HoteL % H
ssfe People lH II
il Who m I
wk Write- § | i m
Wd Might as v/ell get some3& § it l
! fo thing that's neat and styl Sfe 5 M
t % a ish as to buy something E $ S vl M
M < fo thatis ' m Am
T > What's the use of buy- S §
gjft2 n9 a poor article when § § 1
n > TO you can get The Best for $ & ? |
RVJ3 the same money gj i % M
dp T skS \m
ass The zM -r
Us Tribune % M
m Office. . . . BI 1 I