McCook weekly tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 188?-1886, January 31, 1884, Image 1

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OOK WEEKLY TRIBUNE.
VOLUME 2. McCOOK , HED WILLOW COUNTY , NEBRASKA , THURSDAY , JANUARY 31 , 1884. NUMBER K.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
*
.1. E. COCIIIIAX ,
Attorney at Law ,
JfcCOOS , BED WILLOW COTOT7 , HSB.
Practice in uny Courts of the stntc und Knn-
JWR , und the government Lund Oflice of this
District , und before the L.-.nd Bojmrtment at
Washington. Sutisfiiction prtuiruntced. und
terms reasonable. Oflice 1st door ssuth of the
U. S. Lund Ollicn. 2-28.
I. J. STARBUCK ,
Attorney at Law ,
MCCOOK NEBRASKA.
Will cl\e special attention to the practice of law ,
and making collections.
J3 ? Oincc Second hlucknorth of depot , 2 door * north
Green's drug btore. 2-2J.
JOHN A. LEE ,
Merchant Tailor.
McCOOK : : NEBRASKA.
Fit and Workmanship Guaranteed.
PAGE T. FRANCIS ,
County Surveyor.
Red Willow County.
Keeps csrtifiert pints of nil lands In the
Hitchcock hind district. Special nttontion
given to nil such business. Correspondence
solicited. S-23.
L. LEE JOHNSON , M. D. ,
Physician and Surgeon.
Cradcate Meiisil Dcpartncrt TTsivorsit ? T7ootcr.
Oiflcc In rcnr of Cltlrea'a Bank , where he can be
found when not professionally engaged.
JOHN F. COLLINS ,
Contractor and Builder.
McCOOK , NEBRASKA.
Estimates cheerfully piven on nil kinds of
work. Host of references. Address for the
present by wail. 10-lyr.
CONGDON & CLIFF ,
Bricklayers & Plasterers.
All Jobs Promptly attended to.
C. L. NETTLETON ,
Supt Public Instruction
Teachers' Examinations at Indiunola on the
third Saturday of every month , commencing
at 3 o'clock , A. M. 25-tf.
W. M. SANDERSON ,
House & Sign Painter.
McCooK , - NEBRASKA
All work guaranteed. Give me a call.
WM. McINTYKEv
Contractor and Builder
OF LONG EXPERIENCE.
All - workwarranted. . All material furnished
If desired. Work done on short notice.
LANDS AND PATENTS.
E. M. MAEBLE.
Upwards of three yean Assistant Attorney General
of the United States for the Interior Department.
Pratt Ices before the General Land OiHce and the In
tcrior Department in laud nnd mining cases. Ob'
tains patents for Inventions In this and foreign
countries Nwrly three and one-half years Com-
niNMoner of Patents. Oflice , Le Urolt Building ,
Washington , D. C.
Mrs. R. H. HAMILTON ,
DEALER IN
Hair Goods & Millinery ,
Switches , Braids , Waves ,
Frizzes , Etc.
speclal attention paid to the manufacture ol
al kinds of HAIR GOODS. Order by snail will re
ceive prompt attcnthn. *
Ladies' Furnishing Goods
And Stylish Millinery. '
-Zephyrs and Woolen Goods , Notions , Satlos , Lacet
and Trimmings at the
Ladies' Fashionable Bazar
One Door South of Quick's Store ,
NEBRASKA.
HOW WE BUILD A NEW CITY IN THE
FAR WEST AND
OFFER BARE CHANCES
FOR THE
ARTISAN TRADESMAN & SPECULATOR.
THE TOWN OF MTOOK
w
In Ked Willow Comity , Nebraska , lias been surveyed , and
lots in the market , for just one year and has now a population
of 1000 people. This point has been designated by the C. , B.
& Q. as the DIVISION STATION between the MISSOURI
RIVER & DENVER , where the principal shops , a 15 stall
round house and other R. R. facilities have been located on
the Denver Line. A complete system of water works costing
$25,000 is just being completed giving all the facilities for
comfort posessed of old cities. Lots will range in price from
8150 to $500 for business lots , and § 50 to $200 for residence
lots. The history of points like McCook show an increase
of more than three hundred per cent , in from one to five years ,
and this town promises to be an exceptional chance for invest
ments. For further particulars apply to R. O. PHILLIPS ,
Or W. F. WALLACE , Secretary , Lincoln , Neb.
McCook , Nebraska.
CITY BAKERY.
A. PROBST &BRO.
PROPRIETORS.
WE KEEP ON HAND
BREAD , PIES & CAKES ,
GRAHAM BREAD.
Cakes Ma.de on Order.
Lunch Room in connection , where
you can get hot coffee , etc.
D. KENDALL'S
BILLIARD PARLOR
AND
Favorite Resort'
Is the place for
Ice Cold Lemonade ,
Ginger Beer , Pop ,
Choice Cigars , Candy , Nuts , Etc.
Billiard & Pool Table
CALL andENJOYYOUKSELYES
SADDLES & HARNESS.
[ OPPOSITE HOTEL OX THE HILL. ]
Manufacturer and Dealer In
SADDLES ,
HARNESS ,
BRIDLES ,
COLLARS ,
BRUSHES ,
COMBS ,
WHIPS.
Stock Saddles' Cow-Boy out
.fits , and Spurs.
R H , HAMILTON.
OUR CLUBBING RATES.
We will fumlsh the TKinrxE anil any of the puh-
Mentions named to all who will pay up to date , and
renew for one year , at the following reduced rates :
CHICAGO XEWS ? 2.00
OMAHA BEE 2.50
LINCOLN STATE JOUIIXAL.25)
KEW YORK TRIBUNE 2.75
PHILADELPHIA PRESS „ 2.50
PHILADELPHIA TIMES 2.50
Kansas City LIVE &TOCK.INDICATOR $3.50
Any one who has recently paid up and renewed
can take advantage of these reductions.
AVc are also prepared to give reduced rates on al
most any publication In the United Sttes. TVhen
making up your reading for the nest year give us a
call , and we will help lit yon out.
TIIE B. & M. Railroad company are
now actively engaged in fencing their
line through Nebraska and Colorado.
NEW MEAT MARKET.
DUNGAN & SHEKELS ,
DEALERS IK
Fresh f Salt Meals
OF ALL KINDS. CURERS OF
Ham and Breakfast Bacon.
Pure Lard of oar own rendering. Highest cash
price paid for Hides , Furs of all kinds , and Pelts.
One door west of the City Bakery.
DUNGAX & SHEKEL ? . Proprietors.
for the working class. Send 10 cents
GOLD for po taKU , and we will mall you free ,
a rojn ] , laluaMc hot of sample goods
that will put you In the way of making
more money In a fcwda > s than you ever tlunmlit pos
sible at any business. Capital not required.Ve will
start you. You can work all the time or In spare time
only. The uork Is unh ersally adapted to both sexes ,
young and old. You can easily earn from 50 cents to
f5 v\ery eenlng. . That all who waat work miy test
the business , we make this unparalleled offer ; to all
who are not well satisfied we will send $1 to pay for
the trouble of writing us. Full particulars , directions ,
etc , sent free. Fortunes will be nude by those who
phe their whole time to the work. Great success
absolutely sure. Don't delay. Start now. Address
STINSOX & CO. , Portland. Maine. 2-35.
Specialty : I
and the Conrti. Beaaanable terms. Opinion as tel
patentability , free of charga. Send for circular.
a -week at home. $3 outfit free. Pay ab- (
solntery sure. No i Isle. Capital not requir
ed. Reader. If you wont'buslnessat which
persons of - cithersax , young or old. can
make great pay all the time they work , with absolute
certainty , -write for particulars to -HALLETT &
COn .Portland , .Mulae. -2 35.
HOESE AND COW NEWS.
McCook , Xcb. , January 10 , 18S4.
Northwestern Live Stock Journal :
The lowest reglnter of the thermometer here this
w Inter was 6 dcg. below zero. The miow Is now three
Inches deep , with a Might crust , but there Is plenty
of feed on the rier bottoms and hill Bides uncut ert'd.
Tattle nnd homes arc ull doing well. ThU Is a sort
of ' "ulf-and-'alf" feeding nnd range region. Most
atockmcn own nent , easily handled herds. Weak cut
tle are not lit good xhapc. They were all cut out In
the fall and put under fence till winter In well over.
During the su\cre bpells of wcuthcrllke those of late
these "weak brothers and sisters" of the herd arc
fed hay and \ cry of ten corn. Strong cattle are left
to rustic for themseh es on the range , without fear
of much loss. There Is no Irrigation and consequent
fencing off of range stock from water hereabouts.
Hay for fecdlngsells at ft In the stack. "Where pro
curable , com raked Is worth -10 cents per bushel , and
If shipped from Franklin , Webster or other eastern
Nebraska counties , It Is worth 43c. per bushel deliv
ered here , freight paid. No hogs or geese are used
to follow up fed cattle , as Is customary In many feed'
ing regions In the states. Only a. small quantity of
grain enough to tide weak stock through tough
weather Is fed , anil all fed Is thus thoroughly digest
ed and utilized. Mr. J. II. Jlescne , an eastern
man about one year Interested In stock here , feeds
310 head of weak cattle fifteen bushels of corn In the
ear dally , allowing seventy pounds of ear corn to
nuke one besliel of sixty pounds of shelled corn. Ills
experiments lead him to prefer com at even fifty
cents per bushel to hay at ? 4 per ton for feeding.
liccres are shipped from this region to Chicago at
Indianola , t\v ehe miles distant , und Culbertson , 12
miles west of here , there being no stock yards at
this place.
From reliable parties I glean the following :
John B. Il.itlleld i Son , formerly of Dccatur , 111. ,
who e ranch Is on the Republican rler , four miles
southeast of here , brought from the east , a j car ago ,
: i50 yearling heifers and 13 short-hum Duiham bulls.
He has puisued the plan of feeding the weak ones
only , and has promise of a tine little graded herd.
V. V. Fisher & Sons , whose range Is at the Falls
of the Frenchman rh er , are not feeding any , their
herd being haidy nathcs. Their cattle arc doing
finely. Mr. Fisher came out here from Illinois In
1878 , "busted. " Now he owns -100 head.
Doyle & Bowles , whose range It * on Red Willow ,
ten miles south , own about 800 head , of which they
urc feeding about 75.
William Procter , it hose range Is on Red Willow ,
northwest of here.wlth a herd of 1,100 head , Is feed
ing hay und millet to 150 weak ones. Mr. Fisher says
Mr , Proctor Is down on "sklui-mllk" Imported east
ern catte. During freeze-ups they shuttle out on the
Ice and drown In air holes on the river like rats , and
they will follow a team and wagon to well , warm
regions where tilings never freeze. He would rather
have a hairy , rustling nrUUcor rawhide Texan year-
Hug any day than th < : smoothest eastern skim-milker
that was ever brought out here.
Charles Babcotk , the gentlemanly Register of the
Land Olllce at McCook , bought 15U Texan mares , last
fall , which are doing well In care of a stockman 35
miles north of here.
There Is no kicking here about Irrlgators * fencing ,
as theic Is farther west. People belie\e runuJng
block on the range and feeding the same a little pajs
better. Corn has not averaged a yield of tlx. bushels
to the acre for Ue years past , but some stockmen
prefer trj Ing to raise their own corn to shlpplrg it
here from points east of here. Next jear Is always
the one they are gohig to raise rank corn. Farther
cant there arc a good many sheep , but horse and cow
men here say that the few bands on this range are
not , so far , detrimental.
W.M. Porter , a cow-boy of the stripe that can heel
a cow the first throw and set a bucking horse very
deep fn the saddle , and who Is now emplojed by the
half-circle A outfit on Red Willow.says Henry Church ,
a Fiontler county stockman , Is bidding ? JO for j ear-
ling steers and ? 29 for twos , to be dell\cred this
spring. No taker * .
In conclusion , McCook Is a vigorous , growing year
ling town , and Its resident stockmen and other citi
zens nice , pleasant people to do business with.
PONY BILL.
The dance at the opera house on Thursday evening
last , broke up In a row. It seems during the evening
s-cvcral parties had Imbibed more whNky than was
peed for their Judgment and an altercation took place
between a man named Frank Young and E. F. Qulg-
ley , In which the latter tried to use-a re\olver. This
mo\ was frustrated by bystanders and Young got
In his work on Qutgley with a chair , cutting the lat-
ter's head open. Qulgley who was the aggressor was
put out of the house. He returned shortly with a
carbine and threatened to shoot e\erybody. Finally
! kfesri. A. W. Hamilton and Andy Barber took the
guu away from Qulgley , and put him to bed as he
had grown weak from loss of blood. To say that the
affair is simply disgraceful , is drawing it mild. In
our opinion the time for such scenes lu this county
has passed nud the sooner owners or managers of
public dance halls recognize the fae : the better. No
man under the Influence of liquor should be allowed
to enter such a place on any pretext whatever , as
his presence Is au lobtilt to every lady there. Indian
ola Courier.
SOCIETY is very queer. The people
raosfc sought after are those wJio do not
pay their debts.
A MAX at Grand Rapids , Mich. , has
been fined six cents for "sassing" his
mother-in-law.
- - .
IF "brevity is the soul of wit , there
is a good deal of Jua in .a dudes ! - coattail
tail
BY OUR ASSISTANT EDITOR.
"NVomuii is the Sunday of 111:111. : No ,
wo think poker has the precedence.
TIIK young women of Blountville ,
Tenn. , have organixed with a motto .
"Total abstinence , or no husbands. "
"Die graves for old follies and er
rors , " says Ella "Wheeler. That's the
way to do , dear Ella ; but where can
you get enough cemetery room for
all the cor rpses
Ax exchange . says "A man
O J O
as well borrow his neighbor's cow and
milk her , to save the expense of keep
ing one. as taborrow his paper to wivo
the expense of buying one for himself. "
TIIK following is said to be the set
form of instructions that Missouri hus
bands give to new wives : "My dear ,
I'm a bad man from away back when
aroused , but gently treated , I'm as
docile as a lamb. You just induce mete
to do always as I please and there'll
never be any trouble in the family. "
IT seems that Fred.Doujjlass wanted -
f >
ed to show his sympathy with the wo
man's rights movement by marrying
Miss Pitts. His wife is one of the
strong-minded agitators of woman
suffrage , and being in despair of get
ting a white man anywhere near her
equal , she concluded to tie herself to
an intelligent contraband. Bee.
THE Faculty of "Williams College
have substituted German in place of
the Latin for the winter term of the
Sophomore year , and the University
of Indiana has dropped Greek and
Latin from their curriculum of stud
ies entirely It seems as though the
classics must go , and the classic pony
will needs fall into disuse. Fresh
man : Hence these tears.
KATE FIILI > says : "Matthew Ar
nold may talk forever about the su
periority of American women over
men , and I know better. All a man
wants from a woman usually is recep
tivity. American women are more
sympathetic to him than men , Tience
in his estimation superiorDon't talk
to me of the superiority of my sex.
"When , women are superior to men
they will demand the suffrage , and
several other things. "
GEORGK A. Po.vr , who represents
the Fifteenth Pennsylvania district
in the National House of Representa
tives , enjoys the distinction of being
the youngest member of that body.
It is said tftat recently , when Susan
B. Anthony wrote him a polite letter ,
asking his vo.te and influence. for a
certain resolution in behalf of woman
suffrage , he replied , "Dear Susan :
No. Yours , truly , Geo. A. Post. "
Ex-GovxRNOii BUTLEII'S farewell
gift of a Bible to Massachusetts re
minds a "W-asliiisgton Post writer of
the time wjien Mr. Bell , on becoming
Governor .of Texas , began liis inaugu
ral address with : "Fellow-citizens ;
In the chaste and beautiful language
of Job , 'Novr is the Winter of our dis
content made glorious by this sun of
York. ' " The result of this remarka
ble proQOunciamento was that the
Governor was presently overwhelmed
with gifts of Bibles from every state
and from foreign lands ; Bibles iu En
glish ; Latin , French , Russian. And
Hiudoo- ; illustrated , illunmiatedpoLy-
glot , hieroglyphic ; bound in jaapeiu
leather , velvet ; sent by mail , by ex
freightby special messenger. .