L I I K iA tit 1 y A t Op No Ill B street W Mens fords Mens fords Mens 400 Mens 400 ening Thursday Friday September 10 11 A fords 3v Fall and Winter Millinery The Latest and Choicest Fancies In Tasteful and Stylish Millinery Yr p are just home from eastern markets with such stylish and up-to-the minute millinery as will appeal to the fancy and pocket books of the ladies of McCook and vicinity whom we urge to attend our opening from 2 to 1 1 oclock p m Come and see An expert trimmer as usual Lovell Nies McCook Nebraska feeMi9 Great Fall Op ening To the people of McCook and our regular patrons we wish to announce that we are now showing our complete line of Fall and Winter Shoes We cordially invite the public to come in and look at the different lines and compare prices and we feel sure you will say we are giving you the same styles and values to be found anywhere else in the state 5 I Special Discount for Cash on All Spring and Sum mer Shoes and Oxfords Patent Ox 500 grades Patent Ox 400 grades Tan Oxfords grades Kid hoe grades 450 350 350 350 Ladies Patent Ox fords 400 grades Ladies Patent Ox fords 350 grades Ladies Tan Ox- rades Ladies Pat Shoes 350 4 00 grades 350 300 300 300 Headquarters for School Shoes Now is the time to be looking for strong ser viceable shoes for the boys and girls We have just what you want and at prices that you will say are right Come in and let us fit the bo s and girls We take just as much pains in fitting the children as we do the older people The Model Shoe Store x ilCCOOK Nefo FISHER PERKINS Props Qa fefefe0feVfefefefer Mutilated Stamps Dont Go Hereafter A new order has just been promul gated by the postoflice department by the terms of which postmasters are in structed that any mutilation however small such as tho tearing off of a cor ner of a postage stamp will render it worthless The postmasters are in structed to hold letters bearing such stamps for two weeks for recovery and if they are not claimed at the end of that time to send them to the dead-letter office However persons wishing to mark stamps for the purpose of identification in the matter of anony mous letters theft or mutilization of private mail are permitted to make a reasonably small perforation in the stamp si No 6 2 V u 10 Time Card McCook Neb MAIN LINE IAfiT DEIART CeutralTimo 1027 p si CvU A 9J2 P M iW v si MAIN LINE WXHT DiPAIlT So 1 MountniiiTimo 9V A si 3 UMpu 5 Arrives b0 P M 13 10ii A M 15 1217 A M IMlKUIAT use No 170 arrives Mountain Timo 505 P 31 No 175lujmrt8 710 A JI Slopping dining nnd reclining cliair cars son In fno on through trains Tickub old and baggago checked to any point in tlio United States or Cunada For information time tnblos maps and tick ets call on or write 11 E Foo Agont McCook Nebraska or L Y Wakeloy General Passen ger Agout Omaha Nebraska RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS F J Kolfo went up to Denver today on a visit to his son Conductor Clydo Dalton baa gone to Illinois on nn exconded furlough Engine 19G3 is getting n new spark arrester and some work on her brasses No 7G Thursday morning consisted of HO cars of range cattle all from the Moffat lino Conductor E M Cox returned to work yesterday after about three weeks on furlough Conductor Bagloy and family return ed early in the week from their vaca tion in Colorado Engine Inspector Ferry is on this di vision conducting some experiments with the lignite burners Tho stock pickup west was annulled Wednesday on account of the prevail ing shortage of stock cars J M Butler chief clerk of railway postal service Lincoln went up the Mc Cook Imperial line Tuesday in his oflicial capacity I S P Weeks tho well known civil engineer of the Burlington system died in Lincoln Monday of this wsek after an illness of some length Conductor Foley was sick first of the week and unable to come out of Denver on his run Conductor J A Roaik had the turn on 1G and 15 The chairman of the grievance com mittee representing the trainmen on this division are in Omaha this week con sulting with the general manager Conductor and Mrs G L Burney went to Harvard on No 2 Sunday and he returned on No 3 to umpire the ball games at Cambridge this week Dispatcher T B Campbell and broth er Jim from Memphis Tenn went up to Denver last Friday night to 9pend a few days there and up on the Moffat line returning here on Wednesday of this week A BROKEN PANE OF GLASS One That Once Cost Citizen George Francis Train 60000 A broken -window pane once cost George Francis Train more than G0 000 It was this way Citizen Train with tho brains of twenty men in his head all pulling different ways went to Omaha in the spring of 1SG4 At that time he was the most talked of man in America He had not a thing but money He bought 5000 city lots and altogether spent several hundred thousand dollars He boarded at the ITerndon House the best hotel in sight The quixotic Train was regular in only one thing his habits He always oc cupied tho same seat at the table One morning a pane of glass was broken out of a window directly behind his chair He protested and was advised to change his seat He would not In stead he paid a servant 10 cents a min ute to stand between him and the draft After breakfast he expostulated with the landlord but received no sat isfaction Never mind said Train In sixty days I will build a hotel that will ruin your business And he did The contract was let that day Scores of men were put to work The site selected was Ninth and Harney streets near the Missouri riv er Citizen Train went to New York and engaged Colonel Cozzois a noted caterer of that city as mau sger for his hotel The building alone cost 40000 The furnishings cost 20000 more In the basement was a gas plant the only one west of St Louis The work was done on timo and true to his word sixty days after he threatened the man ager of the Herndon House George Francis T ain citizen of the earth opened his hotel which he called the Cozzens House The grand opening ball was attended by the governor of Nebraska and his staff the mayor of Omaha and many notables from other states The house was a blaze of glory and a scene of almost oriental magnifi cence Just when the big reception was well on there was a sudden dash a strange noise and then total dark ness The gas plant had collapsed The Cozzens House did a flourishing business for a year or two and the Herndon House was badly crippled Finally Train fell out with his man ager and the place was closed After the business part of Omaha moved back from the river the Hern don House declined and Anally re lapsed into a state of innocuous desue tude A few years later it became the property of the Union Pacific railroad Sarcastic He Look at this infernal bill You know I cant afford it Now Im go ing to give you a piece of my mind She Are you quite sure you can afford that papa dear London Opinion TILSlilALS Curious Custom That Prevailed In the Middle Ages PROSECUTED FOR HOMICIDE A Bull That Killed a Man Found Guilty Sentenced to Death and Exe cuted Fate of a Cock That Was Charged With Having Laid an Egg Among the many curious customs of the past is recorded a singular feature of the jurisprudence of the middle ages when animals were indicted for injuries inflicted upon human beings The custom was not abolished in France until the middle of the eight eenth century and the French court records show that at least ninety two trials took place between 11U0 and 17 11 There is some Biblical precedent for these proceedings for in the twenty first chapter of Exodus one finds If an ox gore a man or a woman that they die then the ox shall he stoned and his flesh shall not be eaten An early instance of the custom was In loM when a hull escaped from a farmyard in a village in France in the duchy of Valois and gored a man to death The Count of Valois being in formed of tho case directed that the bull be captured aud formally prose cuted for homicide This was done and evidence was given by persons who had seen the man attacked and killed The bull was thereupon sen tenced to suffer death which was in flicted by strangulation after which the carcass was suspended from a tree by the hind legs In 13S a sow was executed in the square of Falaise for having caused the death of a child and throe years later a horse was condemned to death at Dijon tor having killed a man In 14f7 a sow and her six young ones were tried at Lavegny ou the charge of having killed and partially eaten a child The sow was convicted and condemned to death but the little ones were acquitted on the ground of their extreme youth and inexperience the bad example of their mother and the absence of direct evidence of their having partaken of the atrocious feast One of the most grotesque of these trials took place in Basel when a farmyard cock was tried on the ab surd charge of having laid an egg It was contended in support of the prose cution that eggs laid by cocks were of inestimable worth for use in certain magical preparations that a sorcerer would rather possess a cocks egg than the elixir of life and that Satan em ployed witches to hatch such eggs from which proceeded winged serpents most dangerous to mankind The prisoners advocate admitted the facts of the case but contended that no evil intention had been proved and that no evil result had taken place Besides the laying of an ess as an involuntary act and as such was not punishable by law also there was no record of the devil having made a com pact with an animal The public pros ecutor stated in reply that the evil one sometimes entered into animals as in the case of the swine which drowned themselves in the sea of Galilee So the poor creature was convicted not as a cock but as a sorcerer or per haps the devil in the form of a cock whereupon the bird and the epg that was attributed to it were solemnly burned at the stake Even stranger than this were the proceedings instituted in 144 and 14S7 against certain beetles which had made havoc in the vineyards of St Julian Advocates were named on behalf of the vine growers and the beetles re spectively but by n singular coinci dence the insects disappeared when cited to answer for the mischief they had done aud the proceedings were in consequence abandoned That was in 1445 In 14S7 how ever they reappeared and a complaint was thereupon addressed to the vicar general of the bishop of Maurienne who named a judge and also an advo cate to represent the beetles A com promise was finally agreed upon wherein the vine growers consented to cede the beetles certain fields to their exclusive use Some time after the beetles through their attorney pro tested that there was a right of way through these fields which would be to their detriment Consequently the case had to begin again but how ir ended is not known owing to the muti lation of the records F C Evans in New York Pest Lotteries The first scheme for the distribution of prizes by chance in modern times is generally attributed to oue Bene detto Gentile of Genoa who establish ed his lottery in 1020 The proper lot tery in which each person takes part by means of tickets costing each a fixed sum of money bad its origin in more ancient times being known even in the middle ages Such a lottery was established at Florence as early as 1530 New York American Ladylike You say you acted like a perfect lady throughout Sure yer honor When he tips his hat to me an me not knowin him I ups with a rock an caves in his face Houston Post Habit Action repeated becomes habit Habit long continued becomes second nature We are today what we were accustomed to do yesterday and the day before Lyman Abbott Evil comes by talking of it Irish Froverb - ifv N o S Do9t you vjL it will be well for you to leed tre writii 09 tle wII 9i buy your FII outfit 90W If you buy your FII ad Wi9ter tli9gs 90 w you will fydive just tlpt npucl Io9er to e9Joy tlen Axi iS9t it delist to tyve tlcjs vipiie tley re09ew itysted of witigg U9til tley re pickedUoverJad picked out It reIIy sves you njorje to buy your clothes erly 19 tle sesoi because you C9 use tlperr Io9er Tlese re sonje of tfye erly fell ternptktio9s Ladies iuits Ladies Cots Dress Goods u3r 90W Cordially C L DeGROFF CO For Sale Chea Fine Busines Close in Farm Good Business McCook Holier Mills 90 barrels good running order good patronage excellent location Eighty acres fine farming land 55 acres in alfalfa Splendid build ings new modern house seven rooms and bath completed three rooms unfinished hot and cold water furnace heat two miles from this city My residence corner of D and 5th street E 100 feet front and house and lot corner A and 4tn street E about GO feet front both 140 feet deep I wish to sell any or all of this property at once on account of sick ness in my family E Ho Doan Pro No 310 5th Street E rTYYYYYTYTYTH McCook Nebraska -1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 -4 -4 -a 4 4 4 -4 4 4 4 SI r1 I1 Ill hi ii iim m mvjm ii m mi i iiavimniiwi nrtsauni White House Grocery WIJPHMUI t wm i 7i Fone 30 Ask Scott About It McCook Neb 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