CASH ! CAHS ! CASH ! WE "WISH TO SAY TO That as we have no high-salaried book keepers to pay , no "bacLdebts to loose , and no large debts to carry at % &t * a heavy expense of interest , etc. , and that Jby * j cutting down our expenses we are ena bled to sell- our goods at prices * * AVERAGING . LOWER r Than any other Finn ever offered Goods at in Red Willow County ! A PARTIAL PRICE LIST. "Prairie Eose" [ New Process ] Flour. "Warranted. Per hundred weight $2.25 Arbuckles Coffee , 6R > s. for 1.00 Light "C" Sugar , 131bs. for 1.00 LAWNS ! LAWNS ! Lawns ! Per'yard 7c. TEA ! TEA ! Tea ! From REMEMBER ! We will pay the HIGHEST market price for PEODUCE in % exchange for goods AT CASH PEICES. * I- II1 I1-- All EverM Gome and See Us , All j WILCOX BROS. - * I have for sale some of the FINEST UPLAND in RED WILLOW COUNTY. For terms and particn- lars KNELL D. KENDALL'S -4- 9 IIS THE PLAC.E Ice Cold Lemonade , Ginger Beer , Pop , Nuts , CHOICE CIGARS , CANDY , ETC , BILLIARD and POOL TABLE. CALL and ENJOY YOURSELVES SUBSCRIB The McCoDk Tribune ! SUBSCRIPTION $2 PER YEAR. TRADE IN SEA-SHELLS. Bliapc , Size , Color and Characteristic * In Endless Variety. [ 8k Louis Globe-Democrat ] The trade in shells is growing to such proportions as to form one of the lead ing branches of industry in not a few quarters of the world. Shells are the growth of animals , being exuded from their bodies and hardened by the action of the air or water , are always in layers , and in shape , size , color and character istics are in endless variety. The shells of the strombus and triton are used for horns , trumpets , lamps , vases and gen eral ornaments ; other shells are used by fishermen for ladles and spoons , others still in the manufacture of boxes and bangles. The painter's mussel is used to hold gold and silver colors , while in China the shell of p'acuna placenta serves as a substitute for glass.Cowries are still used for money in parts of Africa and India , while in Europe many kinds are used lor- buttons , and some even for jewelry. In commerce , shells are divided into those used for making pearl buttons , iridescent shells for ornamental work , those used for shell flowers and for ladies' bracelets , those used for cameo jewelry , those of which knife handles and similar articles are made , those used for lime and those used for enamel. The bull's-mouth is the one most com monly Employed for cameo jewelry , and the extent of this business may bo judged of from the fact that in Pciris alone there are over 3,000 cameo cutters who work in shells alone. Cowries are still considerable articles of trade , one Hamburg house sending out fourteen ships , annually to Zanzibar for cowries , with which they purchase cargoes of west African produce. The value of the shell depends on the locality. In British India 4,000 of them are worth a shilling , and near Calcutta a church which cost 4,000 pound sterling was paid for en tirely with cowries. In western Africa the market price of a first-rate article of wife is 100,000 cowries , or 7 pounds 10 shillings , while a cheaper article may be had for 20,000 cowries. The tiger cowry is often handsomely engraved and made into inkstands , snuff boxes and the like. The common mussel shell is often used for ornamental purposes , and the Maories also use a pair of them as tweezers , while the Bashee islanders make pipes from several kinds of spiral shells. Some years ago a sailor presented Queen Victoria the shell of a nautilus on which he had engraved the royal arms , the prince of "Wales' arms , the images of two steamships and a number of verses from Pope , amounting altogether to 1,500 words , the lettering being so minute as to require the aid of a micro scope to decipher it , all the work having been done with a jack-knife. Formerly a number of valuable dyes were obtained from shellfish , but the mineral and vegetable dyes are now so numerous and beautiful as to have completely sup planted the shellfish product. Marine silk is seldom heard of , yet is a reality , and a very beautiful reality , too , ob tained from the Mediterranes Peima nobilis or sea-wing. It is really the bunch of filaments by which the shell fish fastens itself to the rocks , but when properly treated becomes a pretty fair article of silk , capable of being woven and spun into cloth , and robes have been made of it , more , however , as curi osities than for any real use they might have. Stage Glitter and Sparkle. [ New York Times Interview. ] "It strikes me that there are effects in scene painting which cannot begot by colors alone. " "You are quite right , " replied the scene painter , "and that's where we have got the 'dead wood' on the other paint ers. Ordinary gold and silver leaf are used to a great extent on the stage in gorge ous architectural scenery or in spectacu lar sets. So are colored foil "papers. Then we have bronze powders , as they are called , of all shades. A coat of glue is laid on and the bronze powder thrown upon it. It produces" rough , metallic- looking surface. Another dodge is the counterfeit presentment of precious stones. For a very moderate sum I can get you up a splendid palace , studded with gigantic , sparkling jewels. " "How do you do that ? " " "We use what we call 'logies. ' They are made of zinc , and can be got in all colors. Then we can produce polished marble of varying hue , or the sun- wrought sheen upon polished metals , just as easily as we can walk. All we have to do is to paint the thing in col ored lacquers , put plenty of gaslight on it , and there you arc. The sparkle of an iceberg comes from 'frosting' of crushed glass sown on a coat of glue. " TVliat a Boy "Won't Uo. [ Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. ] A boy won't smoke his father's cigars when the box is kept in a burglar-proof safe and none of the stumps are left lying around loose. He won't pour a nest of red ants down his little sister's back if the latter wear.- ; a high necked dress and there is snow on the ground. He won't eat a pie , if the pantry-door is locked. He won't tie a tin can to a cat's tail if there is a dog handy. He won't go in swimming when his mother tells him not to , if skating is good. He won't play marbles for keeps when he is busted , suck eggs when the nest is empty , nor play hookey when school is out. In fact , a boy that is a boy won't do anything ho ought not to do , unless he gets a good chance and "nobody's looking. * * Pocket-Glue. [ Exchange. ] Dry pocket-glue is made of twelve parts of good glue and five parts of sugar. The glue is boiled until it is en tirely dissolved , the sugar is then put into the glue , and the mass is evapor ated until it hardens in cooling. Luke warm water melts it very readily , and it is excellent for use in causing paper to adhere flrmly , cleanly , and without pro ducing any disngreeble odor. Julia 0. K. Dorr : To choose and to hold fast to the very best that is within our individual reach is not this the true philosophy af life ? - I. NOW IS THE TIME V Watches , Clocks , Jewelry OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. Rings , Vest and Guff Buttons , Neck Chains , Sets , Etc. AT LOWEST PRICES ] ENGKAVINGr artistically done. Special attention . given to repairing. All work warranted. T F. L. McCRAOKEN. ARAPAHOE WARRANTED TO BE TH FINEST 1C THE 'MARKET. FOR SALE HAYDEN f CO , AGENTS , McCOOK , - NEBRASKA. FREES & HOCKNELL , PROPRIETOKS OF THE H DEALERS IN II Lumber , Lime , Cement , Sash , Doors , Blinds , Hard and Soft CoaL YAE3S AT MeCook , Indianola , Cambridge , Arapahoe , and Oxford. S. M Jt * 3To a Q M -N cc * /2 1 a53&a lJp f * 'JK5S' Z < 5 , r * & & * & JvSJit 1 < ! W O & . hr1 02 - 2 a. hr1O O CC . H 6 1 1 W . _ feiT " ' * ' i * ! " * * " ' * - - T V" ' j 5 s"tzi % * j ? j " SraS ? e a'J'jpSi 5S-iScSS O J. E. BERGER , Proprietor , McCOOK , NEB , Superior lo any on tlie market , liciiiR IIcaier. . Stronger Rulit. ami therefore a more Durable Mill. It la the only absolutely safe Mill built ; anil out of Thousands Erected During 12 Years past , not one lias ever blown away and left the Tower standing. A record no other Mill can show. We oiler to put up any of our Pf.MPIXG MILLS ON THIRTY DAYS TRIAL , Ami If they don't gl\c satisfaction , will rcnuvc Mill at our own expense. Also Manufacturers of the Celebrated ChaUengc Feed Mill' , Corn Sheller ? . Iron Tumps with brass cj linders , Iron Pipe , Tanks. For estimates , catalogues and prices , apply to G. B. NETTLETOX , 3IcCook , Neb. , Agent for Southwestern Xcbroska and Northwestern Kansas Uncomfortable Genlns. [ Xnto Field in The Manhattan. ! - Half a dozen hearts are worth n world of heads. Once upon a time I _ wor shipped intellect. .Brains were all that wore worth having. Brilliant men were . . f VVv „ - - „ UilYO J. V U Vi3 W -1 ciuating genius may be in public , it is not the sweetest of boons in a pnvato family , for nine times out of ten genius is intensely selfish. It wants to bo cod dled ; it rarely coddles. It wants to bo heard ; it seldom listens.Ego is the burden ot its song. Who and what you are , matters little. Accustomed to bo adored , it accepts devotion as a .divine right. To receive is its duo. To give is the privilege of lesser mortals. Now , if I have a talent , it is that of apprecia tion. If tnere is a good listener among women , I am that she. I delight in genius , but I've found it out , and have ilo moro illusions. It is a charming companion for holi days , but for daily breakfast , dinner , and supper nothing is so satisfactory as a combination of common sense and un- selfishnlss. The humblest of us have longings , affections , sorrows , pleasures , and like to be treated as though we filled a place in the world. Wo want to feel * that those upon whom wo lavish thought are not unmindful of our welfare. Genius hasn't time for such common places. It is too engrossed in the evolution of a sublime idea to dwell upon the individual head or heart ache. I'm persuaded that this is the reason why very clover men and women marry those who are considered their inferiors. The know by introspection the egotism of brains , and seekan unselfishness which will minister to their comfort. \ Intellectual companionship maybe found in books or society , but that thoughtfulness - ness and care upon which the happiness of daily life depends , can only proceed from human beings possessed of hearts. As there are exceptions to all rules , so are there great hearts allied to great heads. Such creations are the glory of the universe , and to bo honored with out stint. War Songs. [ Philadelphia Times. ] Songs that appeal forcibly to some strong sentiment which is uni versally felt are apt to have a wide sale and hence the late civil war afforded golden opportunities to popular song writers , of which they were not slow to avail themselves. It would be difficult to enumerate the authors and the songs which made triumphant suc cesses during that time. One of the most pronounced of these'was that achieved by a ballad called "When This Cruel War is Over ; or , Weeping Sad and Lonely , " of which more than 300,000 copies were sold in a few months , real izing a fortune for the publisher. George F. Koot wrote and published a song called "Tramp , Tramp , Tramp , the Boys Are Marching , " whieli made him rich in both money and reputa tion. "Just Before the Battle , Mother , " "Who Will Care for Mother Now ? " and "Kally 'Round the Flag , Boys , " also enjoyed widespread popu larity. Among the greatest favorites of ' the war time was "John Brown's Body Lies a-Mouldering in the Grave , " while -4 "Tenting on the Old Camp Ground" is a very pretty ballad which has outlived the ephemeral popularity of most of the other war songs , and still has a steady sale , being sung by children's voices at the firesides of many who in the saddest days of our country's history did indeed tent on the old camp ground. Of comic and serio-comic war songs there were a host and they all sold largely. Among the best known of these were "Dixie's Land , " by an old- time negro comedian named Dan Em met , "Kingdom's Comin' " and "March ing Through Georgia , " the two latter being the productions of Henry C. Work , who died only the other day : The last named of these has continued 4 one of the most popular of all campaign songs to the present stime. "Johnny Comes Marching Home" was also one of the cleverest and most successful of the war song hits. Origin of Sonic Queer Words. A correspondent of Notes and Queries writes : "Modern fiction has contributed but few common nouns , adjectives or Terbs to the English language , and it is curious to note the souices' whence these come. Thus , 'Gulliver's Travels' fur nishes three words , 'brobdingnagion ' 'lilipution' and 'yahoo1 ; but from , the whole of Shakespeare wo get only one , 'benedict , ' while from Scott I can recall no example. Other instances from English literature are 'braggadocio' 1 'eaphuistic , ' 'lothario , ' 'Utopian. ' Cer vantes gives us 'dulcenia' and 'rozinante ' > as well as 'quixotic ; ' and to the list may be added 'chauvinism , ' 'knickerbockers' and 'rodomontade. ' It might be consid erably extended by examples from Greek and Latin writers. Has an ex haustive list ever been attempted of the English words derived from the proper names of real life ? I believe 1 could give upward of 300 , from 'mausoleum' and 'laconic' to 'boycott'and 'magenta ' " The editor points out that Scott con tributed to the y language at least one word "Dryasdust. " Appreciation In Pompeii. [ Texas Sittings. ] It has been said that the ancient Ro- mans did not appreciate women RoWe are not sure of that. The frescoes and wall painting unearthed at Pompeii dis close the fact that all the choppnV' and sawing of wood was done by the'softer sexThl , ; - - ? ldca is corroborated by the additional fact , that all the axes and bucksaws found in the ruins of Pompeii are of light make , as if constructed es pecially lor women's convenience The ancient Piomans knew what they were about. Prompter tlian ilial. . [ Xorristown Heral J. ] An Atlanta man who was given a let ter to mail eighteen years ago , posted it last week. If the letter containedTre- mittance for a suit of clothes bought on "tick , " the creditor will not manifest any surprise at the long delay. He will r.iu-ely remark as he pockets the money : "Barkins is a'little moro prompt than usuaL" During the present century 150.000 . 000 copies of the Bible have been printed in 026 different languages. , v