The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, May 28, 1897, Image 5

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J HTHE NEW-YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE | §
J S 2 ® FOR S5 _ fe
EVERY member of g
- # llc\ Hl liflSC EVERY village , in ?
SSSEf& EVERY State andTer. g
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% , S Tf wS J FOR Education , § 2
J v - us & jT Si 6r F0E Noble Manhood' 5
5 T EOR True Womanhood 5
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W j j It gives all important news of the gg
% fepS Nation and World , the most reliable gfeg
C 5 3 market reportsbrilliant andinstruegjyp
I ? 3ii tive editorials , fascinating shortsto- § $
| \ S § ries , an unexcelled agricultural e-
| l * &ks partment , scientific and mechanical pfoi
\ > information , illustrated fashion artigsjl
! • rSw eles , humorous illustrations , etc. , etc. raft * ?
f K m
f J J § THE TRIBITNE AND N. Y. WEEEXY TRIBTINE 1 YEAR MjUg
v fe F0E $1,50 CASH m ) VAHCE. 2jg §
JS J" Address all Orders to THE McCOOK TRIBUNE. gfe
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1 * IVr/fe your name and address on a postal card , send it to Geo. W. Best , rCLvS *
/ wSf o * Tribune office , , New York City , and a sample copy of the New-York Weekly Tribune fi } p
S ts " " " " * e ma ' 'erf i0 y ° u'
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| g A CAMPAIGN OF EDUCATION , g
M m HOW TO GET IT FOR $3.50.
v\ hv rj To be educated one must read 3
? 1 AIV e est literature. x s3
mJ j l The best literature is expen- l l
Unparalleled rive - '
rivT , fm
Leslie's Illustrated w tl ,
Ff\ \ Weekly ] |
B | O FFER ' published at no Fifth Avenue , I F § <
j O . * New York , is full of the best ij y
.
sjFjjrJ - i things. Its illustrations are iv
l l superb ; its stories charming ; and its literary departments are y
Sv | edited -with consummate skill. | |
| gt Such a paper is a great popular educator. It should be in j Sl
j ] every home. j Cl
l l The subscription price of Leslie's is $4 per annum. fir l
C | We make the unparalleled offer of a copy of Leslie's IilusjJ j
trated Weekly and a copy of our own weekly for one year , at & ' = = %
( | j only $3.50 for both. IJHj
sFpf No such offer was ever made before. No such offer will ever i n
p l be made again. siOa
faf I Remit by postal order or check to l Cl
Hi * THE TRIBUNE , MeCook , Neb. .jH
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LINCOLN , | DENVER ,
OMAHA , HELENA ,
CHICAGO. BUTTE ,
ST. JOSEPH , PORTLAND ,
KANSAS CITY. SALT LAKE CITY ,
ST. LOUIS AND ALL SAN FRANCISCO ,
POINTS EAST AND AND ALL POINTS
SOUTH. WEST.
TRAINS LEAVE AS FOLLOWS :
CENTKAL time.
No. 2. Vestibuled Express , daily ,
Lincoln , Omaha , St Joe ,
Kansas City. St LouisChi-
cugo , and all points south
and east. 5:55AJI'
No. 4. Local Express , daily , Lin
coln , Omaha , Chicago , and
all points east 9:00 r. 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. Freight , daily , Hastings and
intermediate stations 7:00 A. M
MOUNTAIN TIME.
No. 5. Local Express , daily , Den
ver and intermediate sta
tions 8:15 r.M.
No. 3. Vestibuled Express , daily ,
Denver and all points in
Colo.Utah and California , nqo r.M.
N0.149. Freight , daily , ex. Sunday ,
Akron and intermediatesta-
tions - 6:00 A. M.
No. 77. Freight , dailyStrattonBen
kelman , Haigler , Wray and
Akron 3:20 P. M.
No. 63. Freight , daily.Stratton.Ben-
kelman , Haigler , Wray and
Akron . 5:00 P. M.
N0.175. Accommodation , Mondays ,
Wednesdays and Fridays ,
Imperial and intermediate
stations 7:00 A. M.
Sleeping , dining and reclining chair cars
( seats free ) on through trains. Tickets sold
and baggage checked to any point in the
United States or Canada.
For information , time tables , maps and
tickets , call on or write C. E. Magner , Agent ,
MeCook , Nebraska , or J. Francis , General
Passenger Agent , Omaha , Nebraska.
WALL PAPER and
PAINTS at
MCCONISELI/S.
RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS.
Tom and Ray McCarl were Hastings
visitors , Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Solliday returned ,
last night , from California.
The O. R. C. boys are expected back
from California , this evening.
Straw hats for men and boys at the
Famous Clothing Co.
Mrs. W. O. Simons went to Hannibal ,
Mo. , fore part of the week , on a visit.
Lawn and silk neckwear specialties at
the Famous Clothing Co.
Mrs. Will McCarl returned , early in
the week , from visiting her mother and
sister in Lincoln.
Three stock extras , this week , and two
more coming. Through passenger traf
fic has been good , too.
Katie O'Connell returned from Con
cordia , Kansas , first of the week , where
she has been attending school.
Herman Hegenberger and lamiiy are
visiting MeCook relatives and friends.
Herman is braking out of Horton , Kan.
Frank Harris will leave for Dubuque ,
Iowa , tomorrow , as one of the Nebraska
delegates to the head camp of the M.
W.A.
Less than half rates to San Francisco ,
June 29 to July 3 , via the Burlington
Route. See nearest B. & M. R. R. ticket
agent.
Mrs. W. A. Lawrence and mother left
on Tuesday morning for Superior , Nebraska -
braska , where they will visit while
Mr. Lawrence gets a house in Hastings
ready for their occupancy.
Invitations are out to the wedding of
Bert Godwin and Grace Waldo , which
will take place in Sheridan , Wyoming ,
on nest Wednesday , June 2d. Both are
well and favorably known here , where
they formerly resided.
Two small washouts were caused near
Atlanta , last Friday night , by a heavy
rain , and passenger train No. 3 was laid
out two or three hours in consequence.
The washouts were discovered before
any trains approached , so no damage of
consequence was caused.
• Frank White , formerly in the Burling
ton employ as freight conductor , was
killed near Akron , Colorado , Wednesday
afternoon , by a stroke of lightning. He
has been on a ranch since quitting the .
road , and has only been married a few
months. He did not keep up his Pythian
or O. R. C. insurance and there is some
doubt whether he left his wife any insurance -
ance at all.
To California , Comfortably.
Bvery Thursday at 11:40 p.m.itf. T. , a
tourist sleeping carforSaltLakeCity.San 1
Francisco and Los Angeles leaves Omaha -
ha and Lincoln via the Burlington Route. ]
It is carpeted , upholstered in rattan ,
has spring seats and backs and is provided - •
vided with curtains , bedding , towels , 1
soap , etc. An experienced excursion (
conductor and a uniformed Pullman porter -
ter accompany it through to the Pacific
coast. While neither as expensively finished -
ished nor as fine to look at as a palace 1
sleeper , it is just as goods to ride in. .
Second class tickets are honored and the ,
price of a berth , wide enough and big
enough for two , is only $5.00. '
For a folder giving full particulars ,
call at the nearest B. & M. R. R. ticket
office , or write to J. Francis , Gen'l Pass'r
Agent , Burlington Route. Omaha , Nebr.
December 26-35t
1
One Minute Cough Cure , cures.
Tfcnt isn bat it was Bade for. <
Memorial Day Program.
The Brigade band and Rogers' Drum
Corps will play on the street in front of
opera house at 12145 P- ' " • ald the people
will assemble in the opera house at 1 p.
m. sharp , when the audience will be
called to order by Comrade J A.Wilcox ,
president of the day.
Music K. P. Band
Song Vive L'America School
Prayer. . . . . . ,
Reading of orders
Song Memorial Hymn St. Alban's Choir
Reading Lincoln's Gettysburg Oration.
Pupils of the Public School
Song "Cover Them Over" . .SLAlban's Choir
Oration Gen'J H. E. Palmer of Omaha
Song Tenting on the old Camp Ground. ,
- School
Music K. P. Band
The following is the order of parade :
Band and Drum Corps , Mayor , Common
Council , General Palmer and President of
the day , old soldiers.Relief corps , Flower j
committee and decorating girls. Sons of
Veterans , Civic Societies , School Board ,
teachers and pupils of the public schools ,
Fire department , citizens in wagons.cor-
riages and 011 horseback. Col. J. S. Le-
Hew will rnarfchal the parade.
At cemetery entrance G. A. R. com
rades and old soldiers will form in ranks
and march through the cemetery and
will decorate the graves of all soldiers
buried there , assisted by the flower girls
and decoration committee.
It. has been the custom of many
thoughtless persons as soon as the parade
is formed to rush by the procession with
carriages and wagons and pull out for
the cemetery in every direction , driving
hard so as to be at the cemetery on time.
Such conduct is reprehensible. The com
mittee requests that all keep in the line
of procession until the cemetery is
reached. Those in the van will await
the coming of those in the rear before
decoration exercises will begin.
All those having flowers are requested
to preserve them as best they can until
morning of Ma3'3 ist.Decoration day.and
then bring them to Mrs. A. P. Welles
and her flower committee at the opera
house , to be used in decorating the
graves of our honored dead.
A cordial invitation is extended the
public generally , the churches , civic so
cieties , and teachers and pupils of the
public schools to be present and assist
the Grand Army in the beautifnl and ap
propriate ceremony of decorating their
honored dead.
J. S. LeHew , J. H. Yarger , Dr. A. C.
Harlan , J. A. Wilcox and Jacob Stein-
metz , Committee.
True Hospitality.
I pra3' you , O excellent wife ! cumber j
not yourself and rne to get a curiously
rich dinner for-this man and women who '
have just alighted at our gate , nor a bedchamber - '
chamber made ready at too great a cost ;
these things , if they are desirous of then : ,
they can get for a few shillings at any
village inn ; but rather let the stranger j
see , if he will , in your looks , accents and
behavior , 3our heart and earnestness ,
3'our thought and will , that which he
cannot buy at an3' price , in any city.and
which he maj" travel miles , and dine
sparsely and sleep hardly to behold. Let
not the emphasis of hospitality- in
bed and board ; but let truth and love ,
and honor and courtesy , flow in all 3'our
deeds. Emerson.
Meyers-Helm.
Married on the evening of the 19th ,
Mr. William H. Meyers to Miss Luetta
Helm , at the home of the bride , by Rev.
E. ; J. Vivian. There was provided a
most sumptuous supper by Mr. and Mrs.
Helm ] , to which fifty or more friends of
the \ bride and groom sat down and did
ample justice. A number of valuable
presents | were given by friends of the
bride and groom. It was indeed a most
enjoyable time to all those present , long
to be remembered. Congratulations
were extended the bride and groom ,
wishing them a happy and prosperous
time through life. V.
Only $22.50 to San Francisco ,
June 29 to Julj' 3 , account National
Convention ( Christian Endeavorers. Spe
cial trains. Through tourist and palace
sleepers. Stop-overs allowed at and
west of Denver. Return via Portland ,
Yellowstone Park and Black Hills if de
sired. ! Endeavorers and their friends 3j
who take the Burlington Route are <
guaranteed 1 a quick , cool , comfortable
journey , fine scenery ( by daylight ) and
first-class : equipment. Berths reserved
and • ' descriptive literature on request. *
See nearest B. & M. R. R. ticket agent *
or ' write to J. Francis , G. P. A. , Burlington - <
ton Route , Omaha , Neb. s
To Subscribers of The Tribune.
Readers of The Tribune will please
remember that cash is an essential in
the ] publication of a paper. The publisher - *
lisher has been very lenient during the i
past few years , on account of crop fail j
ures and hard times , and as a consequence - j
quence many hundreds of dollars are !
due on subscriDtions. We are now compelled - j
pelled to request all who can to call and '
make settlement in full or in part. In < j
view of the facts , our subscribers must i
feel the justice and urgency of this re • j
quest. The Publisher. ,
Read the best coun1 | 1
fcy newspaper that's J 1
The MeCook Tribune
every time. %
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ISPMC MB SUMMEfil
H
. . DRESSES. . | |
dfiSi Now is the time to buy them. | p
§ H Our line of Dress Goods is large. | | f
| H Prices are very reasonable. Come W
pg and see the line of wash fabrics for jjg
P | Summer Dresses , the assortment is
j | | good. Buy now before the best § | |
gj | & things are gone. You can save Sag
§ § money by buying Ladies ' Shirt § §
& § Waists , Ladies ' Sprino- Capes , and 3&2
ps Ladies Dress Skirts of us. $232
Wm We still sell the G-D Corsets.
ffife No better Corset sold at $1.00. § fi $
m • a
p $ Grocery Stock is always comjp i )
& | g plete. Get our prices. &
dgg M
S S AT THE . . . EftS )
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P - . i as"
Sfe C. L. DeGROFF & GO. g
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| 8 Authorized Capital , $100,000. jlfj
m ' Capita , ! and Surplus , $60,000 | | j
| Xl GEO. UOCKNELL , President. B. M. FREES , V. Pres. | | §
g - FLAW SON , Cashier. F. A. PENNELL , Ass't Cash. l j
gjl A. CAMPBELL , Director. FRANK HARRIS , Director , i
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% f V. FRANKLIN , President. A. C. EBERT , Cashier. &
# #
1 CITIZENS BANKJ
ii OF MeCOOK , NEB. #
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# Paid Up Capital , $50,000. Surplus , Si0,000 *
# | | h
§ DIRECTORS ' z _ § \
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| / . FRANKLIN , N. S. HARWQOD , A. C. EBERT , | |
? H. T. CHURCH , OSCAR CALLIHAN , C. H. WILLARD. * J
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