McCook weekly tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 188?-1886, August 07, 1884, Image 1
McOooK WEEKLY TRIBUNE. VOLUME III. MeCOOK , RED WILLOW COUNTY , NEBRASKA , THURSDAY , AUG. 7 , 1884. NUMBER 1O. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE MeCook , Nebraska. 0. L. LAWO , Scetttcr. C. P. BIBCOCK ; Beeclver. OFFICK Houns : From ! l A. M. to 12 M.f and 1 to 4 P. M. , inoiintuin time. J. E. COCHRAN , ATTORNEY AT LAW , HcCOOE , BED WILLOW COUNTY , H B. Practice In any Courts of the state and Kan- BIIH , and tlic government Land Ollice of tliis District , and before the Land Department , at WushlnKton. Satisfaction guaranteed , and terms reasonable. Ollice ] st door swuth of the U. S. Land Ollico. ---8. * JENNINGS & STA11BUCK , ATTORNEYS AT LAW MCCOOK , - - NEBRASKA. Wilt give special attention to the practlco of law and tanking collections. { 5 ? omceSccondl > lt > cknortliof diTot.Sdoorsiiortl Grecn'H drug store. 2-5J2. PAGE T. FllANCIS , COUNTY SURVEYOR Red Willow County. Keeps certified plats of all lands in the Hitchcock land district. Special attention jjiven to all such business. Correspondence solicited. 2-22 L. LEE JOHNSON , M. D. , PHYSICIAN & SURGEON , drsdaito Helical Doputnsat University coster. OFFICK : Two doors east of the Tribune Onice , where he can be found when not pro fessionally ciifpafrcd. Residence , corner of Jcll'crson and Madison streets DR. Z. L. KAY , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON , McCOOK , - - NEBRASKA. I. I will be found at S. L. Green's Drujr Store / for the present. All orders left there will re ceive prompt attention. T. B. STUTZMAN , M. D.5 PHYSICIAN & SURGEON , McCOOK , - NEBRASKA. Office one door cast of THE TRIBUNE office , where all calls will receive prompt attention , day or night. Du. A. J. WILLEY , SURGEON B. & M. Railroad. [ OFFICE AT B. & M. PHAltMACV , ] McCOOK , - - NEBRASKA. A. T. GATEWOOD , SURGEON DENTIST. [ OFFICE AT McCOOK HOTEL. ] "Preservation of the teeth a , specialty. JOHN F. COLLINS , CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER , McCOOK. - - NEBRASKA. Jobbing ivIH receive prompt attention "at my sliop oil Dcnnlson St. , opposite MeCook House. Plans and FpeciUcatlons furnished If desired. CONGDON & CLIFF , BRICKLAYERS & PLASTERERS McCOOK , - NEBRASKA. CSPAH jobs promptly tttcnded to. C. L. NETTLETON , Superintendent Public Instruction Teachers' Examinations at Indianola on the third Saturday of every month , commencing1 at 9 o'clock. A. M. 25-tf. W. M. SANDERSON , HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTER , McCooic , - NEBRASKA. J5 ? A11 work guaranteed. Give me a call. WILLIAM McINTYKE , CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER OF LONG EXPERIENCE. AH vrork warranted. All material furnished if desired. Work done on short notice. IIINMAN & CO. , Painters , Grainers , Paper Hangers McCOOK , 2-36. NEBRASKA , 5 Dcslgns furnished for Celling Decorations , cither In paper w Frecco Painting. NEW BARBER SHOP. JACKSON TUBES lias opened up a Barber Shop on AVest Dennlson Street. MeCook , Xeb. , where hols able to do Sharing , Hair Dressing , etc. , at all times. Ladles and child ren's hair dressing a specialty. Call and become -f . acquainted. .TACKSOX TUBES. A. C. TOWNE , REAL ESTATE AGENT. McCOOK , - XEBKASKA. Has for sale Deeded Lands , Timber Claims and Homesteads. Also , will locate parties on Govern- < inent Land. DYSPEPSIA Can be cured by tlie use of Beggs' Dandelion Bit " ters. It will at once restore action" to tlie liver and kidneys , and tone up and regulate the stomach , so that food-will be digested. For tale by S. L. Green. The call for Beggs' Blood Purifier lf dally Increas ing. S. L. Green Is furnishing sample bottles free. It Is an excellent medicine for the Liver , Kidneys end Blood. "Warranted. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington , D. C. , August 2 , ' 84. This is the best Government the world ever saw for purposes of plunder , and the plunderers know it. They seem to have taken it for granted that Gov ernments and this Government in par ticular arc instituted among men to enable the few upon the inside to whack up between themselves , and for this are the offices disseminated. 1 don't know the exact period in the life of this Government if there ever was such a time when public ofiicials began to steal and get caught at it , but it was as long ago as 1839 that Swartwout with a million of dollars of Government money in his pocket- put his thumb to his nose and gyrated his fingers at Mar tin Van Burcn and the Government just as Tweed did at the New York public thirty years afterward. As time has passed awar , the plundering has gone on with more and more barefaced audacity until stealing is actually look ed upon as one of the privileges of offi cial existence. And the Government in all this time has never learned how to keep its books , nor never looked after the state of its cash account so as to know when , where , who , or how long its trusted employes had been stealing , or whether they had been stealing at all. There was postmaster Fowler's larcenies that covered an aggregate of $515,000 , and a period of peculation extending through nearly four years , yet the Gov ernment's accounts with its chief post office were kept so loosely ( or rather were not kept at all ) that Fowler's dis appearance was the first inkling that the accounting ofiicials received of any sort of crookedness ! The approaching trials of Swaim and Morrow and Burn- side will develop with startling com pleteness the wonderful facilities afford ed and the terrible temptations to steal that comes of our system of Govern mental book-keeping. Two days ago I paid a visit to the Document room of the House of Rep resentatives in search of an item. It is not the busy place just now that it is when Congress is in session , but it is in its . Stowed quite a curiosity-shop way. ed away in pigeon-holed and tied up in bundles are the copies of all Documents printed by order of the House , and all bills introduced. The familiar inscrip tion which Dante put over the entrance to the infernal regions , "abandon hope all ye who enter here , " might well be written over the doors of this room. It is indeed a burying-ground for this kind of literature. Of the 11,000 bills which entered there during the late session , less than 200 emerged in the shape of acts. Of course the great majority of bills and resolutions introduced never liad any chance to become acts , and sad would have been the fate of the country if they had. ' Many of those kept in the background , owe their death to the vig ilance of certain members among whom Ilolman , of Indiana , is the chief. Much has been written about "the great objector , " as he is called , and many have doubtless conceived the idea that he is a stern , cross-grained and morose man. But such is not the case. Those who are familiar with his private ife , know that he has as kind a heart as ever throbbed against a waist-coat. [ t was he who had the provision for the salary of Jennie M. Hunt , a cripple in the Dead Letter Office , placed in the Legislative Appropriation bill so as to secure her against discharge. And through him the little wan-faced hunch- jack who sits at the door of the Appro- matious Committee room , got his place : This boy , whose name is Willie Howard , s the support of his widowed mother. J.c used to stand on the Capitol steps ind beg , where he was allowed to re- nain by the policemen whose hearts were softened by his appeals , and final- y in stormy weather he got a place by the elevator where he often performed ittle services for members. Holman jccarnc interested in him , and got a resolution through the 'House author- zing his appointment as an additional ) age. So the boy is a fixture , and nakes himself useful in keeping the committee room in order , straightening up the papers and books , and doing errands for the members. One of the last nights of the session there was a scene which would make a striking picture oil canvas. The Con ference Committee on the naval bill were in session. There was Logan , the Republican candidate for Vice-Presi dent ; Hale , of Maine , and the'stalwart Beck , representing the Senate , with Randall , Holman and Calkins , repre senting the House. For several hours the committee debated and wrangled ; a good deal of hard talk being heard from all sides. But through it all , regardless of the fate of the new cruisers , curled up in a great arm-chair , sleeping a peacefully as a kitten on a hearth-stone lay the little hunchback , tired out wit the cares of state. After the committe adjourned in a passionate disagreement Holman noticed the boy , woke him u ; as tenderly as a mother would , and tel < him to go home. DOM PEDRO. THE latest sensation in the amuse inent field is a troup of colored trage dians. They opened the season ii New York last Tuesday evening to crowded house. The play producet was "Othello , " and the fun was fas and furious from beginning' to end. One report says , "The audience was a very noisy , but a very witty one and had abundant opportunity to dis play its humor. Othello was an es pecial butt , the gallery recommend ing cholera medicine for his cram pi when the historic mole was writhing in the agonies of jealousy , and enjoin ing him against squirming too mud lest he lose his liver pad. But lago was their meat. He was a very black lago who played the part "for all il was worth. " He wouldn't lose a sin gle squirm nor abate a single wriggle or scowl that he could get into his part , and the audience were convuls ed over his antics. "Look out , Cassio , he's got a ra/.or , " yelled a voice from the parquette. "Slug him , Roderigo , he's playing you for a , sucker , " scream ed a gallery god , when lago was get ting in some of his- fine work. Then when Othello went for lago there was a general O cry t. of "time , * " and puinlis- tic injunctions came from all sides. The scenes between Desdemona and her lord aroused side splitting jokes from the front. She was advised to "get a divorce' ' and "go for alimony" and one wit posted her to the effect that her coon had made another mash. The whole entertainment was uproar ious in front of the house , but the colored actors continued their busi ness gravely and paid no attention to the hullabaloo among the audience. The enjoyment of the latter was in tense , even old and dignified men unbending and taking part in the riotous merriment. The only draw back was that as the tragedy -.vorkecl up to a climax the earnest tragedians worked themselves up into a perfect foam of perspiration. This is the only way they got "square" Avith their tor mentors. The performance Avas better than a circus in many respects. " Topics. . Two little creatures were sitting in the oloaminoin one of those old- O O fashioned , dizzy , delightful gloamings that female novelists tell us about. They were sitting there , and the gloaming gleamed away , and the creatures sat and sat. The two creat ures were a dude and a duclelet , and they were too-too. "Adolpheus , " ut tered she , with a sigh like unto a sleepy cat0 , , Adolpheus ! " "What is it , my beloved Alicia ? What wouhlst thou of thine Adolpheus ? " "I would " I would " " Speak , dearest ; thine Adolpheus is ready to do any thing to please his ownest own. " "Then , Adolpheus , 0 , Adolpheus , kiss me ! " There was a slight convulsion of the atmosphere , a trembling of the young boughs over-head , and the gloaming had it all bis own way thereafter. The verdict of the core ner's jury was , "Swallowed each oth er. " San Francisco News-Letter. A WJIITEI : asks , "Can Democracy soar ? ' ' It can , but it doesn't spell it tuat"way. In the matter of sore the Democracy takes no back seat nor any other seat. It's too sore. Her Monument. She built it herself , and yet she did not know that she had a monument. She lived in it , but she did not know that it existed. Her monument was her home. It grew up quietly , as quietly as a flow er grows , and no one knew she did not know herself how much she had done to tend and water and train it. Her husband had absolute trust in her. He earned the money ; she ex pended it. And as she put as much thought in her expenditure as he put in his earning , each dollar was doub led in the expending. She bad inher ited that mysterious faculty which we call taste , and she cultivated it with fidelity. Every home she visited she studied , though always unconsciously , as it were a museum or an art gal lery ; and from every visit she brought away some thought which came out of the alembic of her loving imagina tion fitted to its appropriate place in her own home. She was too genuine to be an imitator for imitation is al ways akin to falsehood and she ab horred falsehood. She was patient with everything but a lie. So she never copied in her own home or in her own person what she had seei : elsewhere ; yet everything she saw elsewhere entered into and helped to complete the perfect picture of life which was always painting with deft fingers in everything , from the honey suckle which she trained over the door to the bureau in the guest's room which her designing made anew work of art for a new friend , if it were only by a new nosegay and a change of vases. Putting her own personality into her home , making every room and almost every article of furniture speak of her , she has the giftto draw out from every guest his personality and make him at home , and so make him his truest and best self. Neither man nor woman of the world could loner resist the subtle influence of that O home ; the warmth of its truth" and love thawed out the frozen proprieties from impersonated etiquette , and whatever circle of friends sat on the broad piazza in summer or gathered around the open fire in winter knew for a time the rare joy of liberty home was hospitable because her heart was large ; and any one was her friend to whom she could minis ter. But her heart was like the old Jewish temple strangers only came into the court of the Gentiles , ii lends into an inner coxirt ; her husband and ler children found a court yet nearer icr heart of hearts ; yet even they cnew th.it there was a holy of holies which she kept for her God , and they oved and revered her more for it. So strangely was commingled in her the nclusiveness and the exclusiveness of eve , its hospitality , and its resefve. Ah ! blessed home builder ! You lave no cause to envy women with a co-ift. " For there is nothing so sa- 3 * creel on earth as a home , and no priest on earth so divine as the wife and nether who makeit , and no gift so jreat as the gift which grafts this bud of heaven on the common stock of earth. "His children shall rise up and call her blessed ; her husband ilsh , and he praiseth her. " F MUCH has been said about the reck- FI essness of the cowboys of the bouud- ess. But they are careful. It is a I natter of record that one party in "Montana has huiif * thirteen horse- CJ liieves within a week recently and nade only one error. What supreme court can show a better retnrn V THE opposition of the Harpers to 31aine is attributed to the fact that he "Plumed Knight'1 did not have O hem publish his book. This is prov en pretty conclusively by a letter rom one of the Harpers , written on he 18th of March , 1883 , and now nade public for the first time. THE cholera seems to be on the de- line in Europe , and it is quite likely hat it will not reach America this rear if ihe precautions that have been aken so far are kept up. W. 0. LaTOURETTE , II DEALER IN | | HARDWARE , STOVES , QUEENSWARE , AGRIGUTURAL IMPLEMENTS , BARBED WIRE. The Largest Stock and Lowest Prices in Red "Willow County. CALL AND BE CONVINCED , Sign of BIG AX. Three Doors South P. 0. McCOOK - - NEBRASKA. LYTLE BROS. , . -GKXEUAL DKAI.KUS IX- Agricultural Implements and Barb Wire , HEADQUARTERS FOR XTKTigon The Best Wagon in tlie Market ' MANUFACTURING AND REPAIRING OF Tin , Sheet-iron & Copperware By Practical and Experienced Workmen , Promptly and Neatly Executed. Werner Store , Opposite Citizen's Bank , McCOOK , NEBUASKA. HAVE IN STOCK A LINE OF FINE TOILET ARTICLES , Combs , Brushes , Perfumery , Extracts , Etc. WINES AND LIQUORS Will Ibe sold only in cases of sickness , and then , only 011 Physician's Prescription. Descriptions Carefully Compounded , Day or Night. Doctor's Choice , America's Finest Five Cent Cigar. McCOOK , - - NEBRASKA , THE CITIZEN'S BANK OF McCOOK DOES A GENERAL ANKINC BUSINESS Collections made on all accessible points. Drafts drawn directly on the principal cities of Europe. Taxes paid for Non-Residents. Money to loan on Farming Lands , Village and personal property. Fire Insurance a specialty. Pickets for Sale to and from Europe- COHESCP01T3EHSS : J.V. . DOLAX , President. First National Bank , Lincoln , Neb. V. FHANKLTN. Vice President. Chase National Bank , Xcw York. AV. F. WALLACE. Cashier.