. . . , 5 Famous Ride. The greatest t physical achievement/ ever accomplished this country , ' ' said John F" . Grahnm , "was the ride of F. X. Aubrey from the plaza of Santa Fe , N. M. } to the publicsquaro nt Independence , Mo. , a. distance of nearly * eight hundred miles , through a country inhabited by warlike Indians - dians , a large part of which was" then a sandy desert. " Being urged to give an account of the great ride Graham proceeded : "It was about the year 1851 that Aubrey gave his wonderful test of human endurance , before , which all other attempts ot the kind pale into insignificance. lie was a short , heavy set man 38 years of age , in the prime of manhood and strength. His busi ness for ton years as a Santa Fe trader had made him perfectly famil iar with the trail and all the stop ping places. He was a perfect horse man , and although there were great riders in those days , none of them - cared to dispute the palm with Au brey. On a wa-rer of $1,000 ho un dertook to ride alone from Santa Fete to Independence inside of six days. It was thirty-nine years ago that he undertook the terrible feat. "It waste to be the supreme effort of his life , and he sent a half dozen of the swift est horses ahead to be stationed at different points for use in the ride. "He left Santa Fe in a sweeping gallop and that was the pace he kept up during nearly every hour of the time until he fell fainting from his foam covered horse in the square at Independence. No man could keep with the rider and he would have killed every horse in the west rather than to have failed in "tfie un dertaking. It took him jusfc five days and nineteen hours to perform the feat and it cost the lives of sever al of his best horses. After being carried into a room at the old hotel at Independence Au.brey lay for for ty-eight hours in a dead stupor be fore he came to his senses. He would Sever have recovered from the shock had it not -been for his wonderful constitution. The feat was unani mously regarded by western men as the greatest exhibition of strength and endurance ever known on the plains. " "What became of Aubrey after ward ? " was asked. "After his lide he became the lion of the west and was dined and feted at St. Louis as though he had been a conquering hero. He finally met his death at the hand of a friend. One day in 1854 , in an altercation with Maj. Kichard H. Weightman , the great -rider was stahbed to the heart and dropped dead in Santa Fe. Hs was buried in an unknown grave and all that is remembered of Aubrey is his remarkable ride. Weightman was tried upon the charge of murder , but was acquitted , and joining the Confederate army was shot at Wilson's Creek while leading his brigade into battle. " Denver News. American Fables. THE ASS WHO PREDICTED. An ass who heard a goose observe that the water in the pond was get ting very low , at once offered his ser vice to predict rain. This having been noised about , the hens asktd for continued dry weather , the foxes demanded a snow storm , the oxen wanted frosty mornings , and the mule , the wolf the dog and the pea cock each denuinded that he be fav ored with weather made to order. As a result the ass could please no one , and ns his failure was charged to his obstinacy , the whole crowd fell upon him and wounded him al most to death. He was complain ing of this to the peasant , when the latter replied : Moral : He who speaks to please all will end in pleasingnobody at all. THE BEETLE AND THE GRASSHOPPER. A beetle and a grasshopper met in a path one day , and although there was plenty of room for both neither would turn aside. "Come , now , but why don't you give way ? " demanded the beetle. "Who are you that I must give up my rights5 said the hopper. "Be careful of your language , sir ! " " * ks.d don't you rub against me ! " And they were on the point of com bat when a peasant coming along the path espied them both and gob- tied up both of them. Moral : Men who go to law for their rights always become the victims of their lawyer. THE SAGE'S ADVICE. A sage who was noted for his wisdom * received a visit one day from a man who said : "Oh , sage , but I have a very bad neighbor on my left hand , and I have come to ask what steps I can take to make him very tired. " "Shoot his hens , " was the brusque advice. "But he has none. " "Kill his cat. " "He keeps no feline. " ' "Poison his dog. " "But his dog died weeks ago , and he refuses to get another. " b "Let your wife hire his cook on the sly. " "She has tried it and.failed. " "Have you presented his children n-ith toy pistols ? " v "Alas ! he has no childern ! " "Can't you hire his church pew away from him ? " "I have tried but failed. It is on account of these repented failures that I have come to you. " "Well , there is always one recourse left. Build a high fence and shut ont his view and light.- "Hurrah ! „ That's jfcl I can darken his flitting'-roon : until he must burn frns ! Thanks , OSnge many thanks ! You have renewed my youth ! " MORAL. And he-erected the fence , and every passer-by halted to look nnd to observe : "Ah , but the ass has built a stable for himself ! " Titles From Over the Teacups Oliver cnclell Holmes , Jn the Atlantic. It is n very curious fact that , with all our boasted ' -free and equal" su periority over the communities of the Old World , our people have the most enormous appetite for Old World titles of distinction. Sir Mi chael and Sir Hans belong to one of the most extended ofthe aristocmtic orders. But we have also "Knights and Ladies of Honor , " and , what is still grander , "Eoyal Conclave of Knights and Ladies , " "Royal Arca num , " and "Royal Society of Good Fellows , " "Supreme Council , " "Im perial Court , " 'Grand Protector , " and "Grand Dictator , " and so on. Nothing less than "Grand"-and "Su preme" is good enough for the dig nitaries of our associations of citi zens. Where does all this ambition for names without realities come from ? Because a Knight ofthe Gar ter wears a golden star , why does the worthy cordwainer , who mends the shoes of his fellow-citizens , want to wear a tin star , and take a name that had a meaning as used by the representatives of ancient families , or the men who had made themselves illustrious by their achievements ? It appears to be a peculiarly Ameri can weakness. The French Republi cans of the earlier period thought the term citizen was good enough for anybody. At a later period , "le .Roi Citoyen" the citizen king was a common title given to Louis Philip pe. But nothing is too grand for the American , in the way of titles. The proudest of them all signifying absolutely nothing. They do not stand for ability , for public service , for social importance , for large pos sessions ; but , on the contrary , are oftenest found in connection with personalities to which they are su premely inapplicable. We can hard ly afford to quarrel with a national habit ; which , if lightly handled , may involve us in serious domestic diffi culties. The "Right Worshipful" functionary whose equipage stops at my back gate , and whose services are indispensable to the'health and comfort of my household , is a digni tary whom I must not offend. I must speak with proper deference to the lady who is scrubbing my floors , when I remember that her husband , who saws my wood , carries a string of high-sounding titles which would satisfy a Spanish nobleman. A Cold Hell. According to the Scandinavian' ' mythology , writes F. A. Fernald , in the Popular Science Monthly , all who die bravely in battle are snatched away to Valhalla , Odin's magnifi cent banquet hall in the sky. Those who , after lives of ignoble labor 01 inglorious ease , die of sickness , de scend to a cold and dismal cavern beneath the ground , called Niflheim i. e. , the mist world. This abode is ruled by the goddess of death , whose name is Hel. The place of torment for reprobates is Nastrond , deeper under ground than Niflheim , and lar toward the frigid north. This grim prison is described in the following passage from the Prose Edda , writ ten in Iceland in the thirteenth cen tury : "In Nastrond there is a vast and direful structure with doors that face the north. Ib is formed entire ly of the backs of serpents , wattled together like wickerwork. But the serpents' heads are turned toward the inside ofthe hall , and continual ly vomit forth floods of vemon , in which wade all those-who commit murder or who forswear themselves. " According to the Voluspa , a poem of earlier date , the evil-doers in Nas trend are also gnawed by the dragon Nidhogg. Telling Time By Flowers. Detroit Frets Press. There is not an'hour in the day that is not the beloved hour of some blossom. Linnaeus , the celebrated botanist , conceived the pleasant no- tiun of a flower clock. Instead of a rtide metal bell to thnmp the hour , there is a little flower bell ready to open at 3 o'clock , a flower star that will shine forth at 4 and a flower cup , perhaps , that will appear 5 o'clock to remind old-fashioned folks that it ; s near tea time. Claude Lorraine , although he did not , like Linnaeus , make a clock of four and twenty flowers in his garden , was a land scape painter most familiar with nature ; and when he was abroad he could at anytime know what o'clock it was by askingthe time ofthe field. Past and Present Her mother found the young bride of only three months in tears. "What is it , darling ? " she asked , with that solicitude of mothers-in- law anxious to make out a case. "Why , Albert , " shesobbed , "spoke this morning before he left of what he used to say was love's kiss on my chin. He said the dimple there was" "Well , well ? " "He said when he came to look at it closer it was nothing but a pirni i ple.Philadelphia Times. ( I How They Carry Money. One of the queerest sijrhts istose how different immigrants carry their money. Most English immigrants carry their coin in a small cnse attached tea a chain , which they keep in a pocket as they would a watch. Irishmen always haye.a little can vas bag in which notes and coin are crammed together. Irish girls , on [ the other hand , generally have their money sewed on the inside of their dresses. Germans carry their money in a belt round their wnists , and the belt is usually an elaborate and costly affair , no matter how poor the im migrant may be. . The French mostly carry a small ornss tube in which they can place forty or fifty twenty franc pieces and remove-them very rapidly one at a time. There are very few Italians who do not carry a large tin tube in which they keep their paper money or silver coins , and this tube is hung round their neck by a small chain or cord. Swedes and Norwegians are sure to have an immense pocket book thut has generally been used by their fa thers and grandfathers before them , and which has in it enough leather to make a pair of boots , f The Slavonians r.nd Hungarians carry their money in their long boots , together with a knife , fork and spoon. Chatter. riood and the Hypochondriac * Hood used to tell a story of a hypo chondriac who was in the habit , two or three times a week , of believing himself dying. On a certain occa sion he was taken ill with one of big' terrors while out riding in his gig and happening at the time to see in the road ahead his family physician riding in his carriage in the same direction , he applied the whip to his horse to overtake the old doctor as soon as he possibly could. The doc tor , however , seeing him coming , ap plied the whip to his own horse , and ns he had a nag that was considered a "goer" they bad a close time of it for about three miles. But the hypochondriac , driving a fast horse , finally came alongside of the doctor , and exclaimed : "Hang it , doctor , pull up pull up instantly. I am dy ing. " " 1 think you are , " cried the doctor. "I never saw any one go ing so fast. " Hot Water Always Ready. The boiling lakes of Sierra Nevadas are a greatsource of interest to trav elers west. About one hundred miles north of Oroville , at the foot of old Lassen , there is a boiling lake cov ering several acrps. The depth of the lake is unknown , but its entire surface constantly boils like a huge kettle. It would scald the skin from the fingers in a very few seconds , and would boil an egg in lour minutes. The smell of sulphur prevaded the at mosphere about thelake , and around its borders something like sulphur could be scraped up in handmls. This hake is near Hot Spring Val ley , at the base of Mount Lassen. Between it and the mountain there are perhaps , a thousand boiling , bubbling , hot springs , and in tramp ing about these springs the soles of a person's shoes become uncomfort ably warm. The Stock of a Cigar Store. Ottawa Corr. Toronto Empire. The order from the Indian Eevenua Department , requiring the destruc. tion of cigar boxes as noon as their contents have been sold , was loudly complained against by the small dealers , their plea being that the empty boxes "were used by them to fill up vacant shelveb and give the appearance of carrying alargestpck. Several ot these having complained to the commissioners , that the order was rather a hardship 1 o them , that official replied : "Well , just knock the bottom ont of the boxes and keep them if you wish. " Mr. Miall informed your correspondent that this treatment of empty cigar boxes would be considered a compliance w it'll the law. Origin of the Word "Fence. " The orgin of a slang phrase ia sometimes a difficult thing to trace , but surely it is easy to understand why a person who buys stolen goods from a thief is called a "fence.3 * Obviously if a robber were seeking to hide the evidence of his crime when the officers of the law were in hot pursuit of him he would , if he could , hide his "swag" behind the nearest fence. Hence "fence , " a place to hide his swag , and by easy transition the person who provides Buch a place. New York Press. Ants in Ansonia. Ansenians up in the little Nutmeg State were treated to a shower of ants lasting for two hours a day or two ago. The air was completely filled with the insects. They seemed to come out of the ground. They came out along the street for a hun dred yards , and after circling around in the air started in a body down , the street. They evidently had mid air combats , as the streets were full , of dead and injured and the wings of ] other unfortunates. KILPATRICK BROTHERS. Rorsei branded on left hip or left abouldet P. . O. address , Impsrlal , Chase county , nnd Beat rice , Neb. Knutre. Stink- Injc Water and French" man creeks , Cuaso Co , Nebraska. Brund as cut on aids of some animals , on hip an/ sides of some , or an ] To euro Biliousness , Sick Hcadaofco , CouatU pation , Malaria , Liver Complaints , tolt the cafe and certain rewcdy , SMITH'S pss Use the 831 AI/LSIzo (40 little Beans to th.8 bottle ) . THET ARE TUB HOST CONVENIENT. Suitciblo ox * all -A-goa. Price of either aizo , 25c. per Bottle. 17 * " Tfr'PHOTOQRAVURE PANSI , 8IZB. . ( copptri or tt&ayit ) J.F.SUITH * CO.Uakeriof"BILEBBAH3"ST.lOUIS 120. J. S8 McBRAYER , House Mover % Drayman , McCOOK , NEB. | 3F" House and Safe Moving a Spec ialty. Orders for Draying left at the Huddles ton Lumber Yard will receive prompt attention. F. D. BURGESS , PLUMBING , Steam and Hot Water Heating , North Main Avenue , McCOOK , - - .NEBRASKA. A BtocTc of best grades of Hope. Latca Sprinklers , Hose Keels and Hose Fixture * oonttantly on band. All work recoirea prompt attention. DRYSDALE , LEADER IN And what is of more importance , Quality--and.-- Why not have a suit that fits you , when one which is both stylish and serviceable can be bought for $22.00 A pair of trowsers which are really elegant , DRYSDALTS will build you fo $5. Fine fabrics cost but little at DRYSDALE'S now , less than misfits in fact. Look him over. You will plac * your order. . Save money. Feel bettej and look better. Buying for cash an < light expenses does the business af DRYSDALE'S. ALLEN'S TRANSFER , Bus , Baggage Dray Line , F. P. ALLEN , Prop. , McCOOK , NEBRASKA. p3T"Be8t Equipped.in the City. Leave order ? at Commercial Hotel. Good well water fun Ubed on abort notice. I will buy stock cattle of any age , from calves up. Also , stock hogs. At Brush creek ranch , 3 miles southeast of McCook , Neb. J. IS. R. A. COLE , Leading Merchant Tailor. Will sell English , Scotch , French and American cloths AT COST foi the next sixty days. Come and get a first-class suit of clothes cheap. It is a. rare chance. Shop two doors vrcsof the Citizens Bank , McCook , ' Nebraska. I . -"W ? f . Has moved across JJennison street into ? the building recently vacated by P. Penner. His stock of spring goods is new and complete and he-will make clothing at LOWER FIG URES'than any tailor in McCook . CL BTTLLARD & CO- -JoJ- LIME , CEMENT , DOORS , WINDOWS , BLINDS. -Jot- RED CEDAR AND OAK POSTS. Ti ill BUY OK US. do not sell ONE ARTICLE BELOW COST and make it back sev eral times by selling1 other goods for- MORE THAN THEY ARE WORTH , but we can SAVE YOU MONEY on Goods , Notions , % Hats and. Caps , Boots and Shoes , Groceries , Flour. Everything at Bed-Rock Prices ! We Mean Business ! AND SRE. US. Wileos $ Fowler. Boat andchoapcot Veterinary Rcmedlee- Stowart'sHealingr Powder 20 yearn in use for all open sores , cm man acd beast , barbed "wira cnta.ffslla , bams , chnflnx , etc. 16 cannot bo equaled. OclylCoabx. Stock Eomedy Iflnot made of bran , nabos and eaiardnt , to show iTge box for little money ; bat is a Tonic and mood Pniiflcr , for nil live stock. It io the beat condition powder la tha World. 3 ° 25 cents a box. STSWABT'S 2s the beat remedy for Ehecia- , Lameness , Swelling. Back- echc , Sprains , etc. , in nso for con and beast. A trial order will Large bottle , 25 cents. STJSWABT'3 HOOF OH , Hothlng Ilka it for Dry , Cracked , JJrittto or Contracted Hoofs xaaScea them soft acd tough. Keep then in good condition with this oil. It pays to use It. Remember 2fo foot no horse. Large bottle 25 canta. 3rSold Ciomlosl Co. ; St. Louis Suo'rs to Stewart HeallngFowdor Co. Private EKledlcaS Aid ST. tOUIg.BIO. Special attention 1 j an to all diseases or troubles to mal cr feraale , marrtad or cln le , brought about by expos nre , abases , excesses orimproprietioo. TK OLD DflGTOR. "comulteii by wall , or t tfce office , free ot charge , id-Reliable , Skillful Treatment Guaranteed. Board and apartments furnished to those Trad dwlre penonal c re. Sand P. O. tamp lor circu lar * , etc. AddiiJi letters , Br. Tferd Office , 110 K. 7tb Sbrsst , ft. oals , Ko , CI-O DOCTOR'S . _ LADIES' FAVORITE. Always Reliable and perfectly Sofa. Ths pane as uiad by thousands of iroRien alt over tha IJidteaSiet < .Inthe Old Doctor's prtrate U practice , for 38 yean , and notaalaglo bad rwultJ , 1KDI8PBHSABIJS TO LADIES. < Money returned If not as represented. Sand 1 rent * ( rtaajpgfor lesltd particulars , aad recelra the cnlj o T r k&aira to fall remedy br P 'V . B. 7TARD & CO. , ' i 116 Nona Sore'nUi 8U , St. i iUaKa. . J3gf Blank books , scale books , copy ing booVs , Bchool books , etc. , at TttE office. HAUD AND SOFT COAL. . O R. M. SNAVF-LT , ATTORNEY--AT : - : - LAW , INDIANOLA , NEBRASKA. Will practice in all the State and States Courts. Also before the Land Office a Mccook and the department at Washington. . A. J. WILMST , Jf. D. . B. & M. SURGRGOST , McCoos. NEB. . Otters his professional services to thepeoz > 7 of McCook. Will not no in the country ex cept iu consultation with other physicians. " SANDERSON & STAKR , Sign , Carriage & Wagon Painters ; Paper Hanging and Decorating. Shop in old land office building. Dn. HUMPHREYS' SPECIFICS ar carefully prepared prescriptions ; u eil f or many ydare in.private nractk-e with&uixe * } , EdforoTer tnirtvyearsusea by the people. Every single Spe cific Is a special cure for the disease named. These Speclflcs euro -without drujrsinfr. FOTC- Jng or reducing the system , and are In fact and deed the sovereisu remedies of thc"VVorId , " LISTOFPEnfCIPAt.S03. CERES. TRICES. it IJryine Colic , orTeethingof Infanta SJ5 4 Diarrhea , of Children or Adults. . . . .25 9 Heailach es , SickKeatlache. Vertigo .25 JO I > yspep < iia , Bilious htomoch , i5 31 Suppressed nr Painfnl Periods. .25- 1-J Whites , too Profuse .Periods 33 Croup , Congb , DJSlcultBreathlngr. . . . , ti5 14- Salt it he nin , Erysipelas , Eruptions. , y. - Ithcnmatiatn , KheumaticPalr ? . . . . .iiS > 1O Fever and A sue , Chills , 3alaria .5O > 17 Piles , Ullnd or Bleeding. .30- .39 Cntarrlt , Influenza , ColdlntheHead . .Itt- ao Wlioopinjr Co u eli Violent Congha. ,5I > ! i4 < Jcneral nehilUy.l'hysicalWeaknesa .flU 5i7 KidncyUisonse. . . . . SO a8 Nervous Jlobilitr l.OU 3O Ilrinary Weakness , WettlnjrBed. .5I > 3' t Uiseascs of thellcarttPalpltatloal.oy Sold by Druggists , or cent postpaid on recdji ot price. DK. HUMPHBETS * JIANUAL , ( M4 pase- richly bound Jn cloth and gold , mailed trtc Hnmphreya-'JIedtciacCo.lCarviUonSlLyT. &PEC9F8CS.