W. 0. BULLAKD & CO. -lot- fe LIME , HARD CEMENT , hi DOORS , LUNIBE AND BLINDS.LUNIBE SOFT BLINDS. COAL. O RBD CEDAJR. AND OAK POSTS. J. WARRRN. Manager. B. < fe $ L Meat Market. FRESH AND SALT MEATS , BACON , BOLOGNA. CHICKENS , TURKEYS , ic. , F . F1. D. BURGE.SS , PLUMBERf STEAM FITTER NOETH MAIN AYE. . McCOOK , NEB. Stock of Iron , Lead and Sewer Pipe , Brass Goods , Pumps , and Boiler Trimmings. A gent for Halliday , * .Eclipse and Waupun Wind Mills. DWYER'S LITTLE NELL * A FIVE CENT CIGAR. Try this popular brand. It is one of the finest nickel cigars ever placed on sale in McCook. I Mexican Mustang Liniment A Cure for the Ailments of Man and Beast A long-tested pain reliever. Its use is almost universal by the Housewife , the Fanner , thv. Stock Raiser , and by every one requiring an effective liniment. No other application compares with it in efficacy. This well-known remedy has stood the test of years , almost generations. Uo medicine chest is complete without a bottle of MUSTANG LINIMENT. Occasions arise for its use almost every day. 411 druggists and dealers have it A NATURAL BEMEDY FOB Epileptic Fits , Falling Sickness , Hyster ics , St. Titus Dance , Nervousness , Hypochondria , Melancholia , In- ebrity , Sleeplessness , Diz ziness , Brain and Spi nal Weakness. This medicine has direct action upon the nerve centers , allaying all irritabili ties , and increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects. i A Valuable- Book on. Rervoua Diseases sent free to any address , FREE and poor patients can also obtain this medicine free of .charge , ols remey has been jprepared bytho'BjiWerena Pirtor KocnH ? . o J rt W me. Ind- since 18TO , and Unow prepared under his direction by the KOENIG MED. CO. . Chicago , III. - fi Sold by Druserlsts at SI per Bottle. CforSR IanrcSIro.SI.70. K rwi I 1.S'Wr ' JROUBLlsJL TEA Recently the following Notice appeared In tha San Francisco Chronicle. " Judge S had been sick only about two weeks , and it was not until the last three or four days that the malady took a serious turn. At the beginning of his illness he suffered from diabetes and stomach disorder. loiter the kidneys refused to perform their functions and he passed quietly away. Thus ended _ the life of one of the most prominent men in Cali fornia. " Like thousands of others his un timely death was the result of neglecting early symptoms of kidney disease. are troubled with diabetes , gravel , or any de rangement of the kidneys or urinary organs , don't delay proper treatment until you are forced to give up your daily duties ; don't waste your money -worthless liniments and worse plasters , but strike at the seat of the disease at once by using the greatest of aU known remedies , the celebrated Oregon Kid ney Tea. It has saved the lives of thousands. "Why should it not cure you ? Try it. Purely vegetable and pleasant to take. 11.00 a pack age , 6 for $5.00 , Aff AKESIS " pivcslnstanS relief and iz an nftilliblo Cure for Piles. Pn- SI. By . free. Address'-A A AKliSlS , " Bor Tic , > ' - Vcri ; at.w Oh , What a Cough. Will you heed the warning. The Mgnal perhaps of the sure approach of that more terrible disease Consumption. Ask yourselves if you can afford for the sake of fifty cents , to run the risk and do nothing for it. We know from experience that Shiloh's Cure will cure your cough. It never fails. This explains why more than a million bottles were sold the past year. It relives croup and whooping Cough at once. Mothers do not be without it. For lame back side or chest use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Sold by A. McMiHen. Wonderful. The cures which are being effected by Drs. Starkey & Palen , 1529 Arcli St. , Philadelphia , Pa. , in Consumption , Catarrh , Neuralgia , Bronchitis , Rheumatism , , and all chronic dis eases , by their compound Oxygen Treatment , are indeed marvelous. If you are a sufferer from any disease which your physician has failed to cure , write for in formation about this treatment , and their book of two hundred pages , giving a history of Compound Oxygen , its nature and effects with numerous testimonials from patients , to whom you may refer for still further information , will be promptly sent , without charge. This book aside from its great merit as a medical work , giving , as it does , the result of years of study and experience , you will find a very interesting one. Drs. STARKEY & PALEN , 1529 Arch Street , Philadelphia , Pa. 120 Sutter St. , San Fraecisco , Cal. Please mention this paper. Uhilflren Cry TOP Pitchers Castoria. When Baby was sick , we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child , she cried for Cactoria , When she became Miss , she clung to Castoria , When shehad Children , she gave them Castoria. Answer This Question. \V\\f \ do so many people we see around us seem to prefer to suffer and be made miserable by Indigestion , Constipation , Dizziness , Loss of Appetite , Coming up of Food , Yellow Skin , when for 75 cents we will sell them Shiloh's Vitalizer , guaranteed to cure them. Sold by A. JMcMillen. Specimen Cases. S. II. Clifford , New Castle , Wisconsin , was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheumatism , his stomach was disordered , his Liver was affect ed to an alarming degree- appetite fell away , and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electric Litters cured him. Edward Shepherd , Harrisburg , Illinois , had a running sore on his leg of eight years stand ing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve , and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker , Catawba , Ohio , had five large Fever sores on his leg , doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured him entirely. Sold at A. McMillan's drugstore. "That Good Medicine. " Mr. C. D. Cone , attorney , of Parber , South Dakota , says : "I take pleasure in saying to the public , as I have to my friends and ac quaintances for the last five years , that I con sider Chamberlain's Colic , Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy the best medicine for the pur pose it is intended that I ever tried. Since I liave used it I would not be without it. I was always subject to cholera morbus and never found anything else that gives the relict that this remedy does. I never leave home with out taking it with me ; and on many occasions have run with it to the relief of some sufferer and have never known it to fail. My children always call for 'that good medicine , ' when they have a pain in the stomach or bowels. " For sale by Geo. M. Chenery. How Try This. It will cost you nothing and will surely do you good , if you have a Cough , Cold , or any trouble with Throat or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption , Coughs and and Colds is guaranteed to give relief , or money will be paid back. Sufferers from La Grippe found it just the thing and under its use had a speedy and perfect recovery. Try a sample bottle at our expense and learn for yourself just how good a thing it is. Trial bottles free at A. McMillen's drug store. Large size 50 cents and $ i. The following , clipped from the Burlington Junction , ( Mo. , ) Post , contains information of no little value to persons troubled with indi gestion : For years the editor of the Post has been subject to cramp colic or fits of indigestion , that prostrated him for several hours and un- fiticd him for business for two or three days af erward. About a year ago we called on 5. J. Butcher , dniggist , and asKed for something to ward off an attack that was already making life hideous. Mr. Butcher handed us a bottle of Chamberlain's Cholic , Cholera and Diar rhoea remedy. We took the medicine accord ing to directions , and not only found relief on that occasion , but have several times since tried its virtues and found relief in every in stance. We take this method of acknowledg ing the benefits derived and recpmmending the cure to all others subject to indigestion. For sale by Geo. M. Chenery. LUCKY NUMBERS. Humphreys' Specific No. Three cures sleep lessness , colic and crying of Infants ; curing not only the wakefulness. colic und crying , but by aiding the digestion , giving strength and vigor , and so making healthy children. Jn another column of this paper will be found an advertisement of a medicine known as Chamberlain's Colic , Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for sale by druggist Geo. M. Chenery of this place. In almost every neighborhood throughout the west , there are some one or more persons whose lives have been saved by this remedy. It is natural for such persons to take especial pleasure in recommending the remedy to others. The praise that follows its introduction and use makes it immensely pop ular. While it is intended especially for colic , cholera morbus , dysentery and diarrhoea , it is also claimed to cure chronic diarrhoea. If such be the case , it is certainly a "Godsend" to many a poor mortal. Hints by Harrison. I bclittvu our l.'nislntion > limil ( ] In ; lirniid as our territory , hliould nut be Tor classes , but simulil bu alwav.i in the intercut of the people. IF I were to select. ; i watchword that I would have every yottnj ? mail write above bis door and on his heart it would b that won ! "Fidelity. " When hopes o oui oF the heart and ! ic ! becomes so bard that it is no longer sweet , men are not safe neighbors and they are not jjood ; citizens. 1 pity the man who wants a coat .so cheap that the man or woman who produces the cloth or shapes it into a garment shall starve in the process. If no ill happens to you that I do not wish and all the good comes to you that [ wish in your behalf , your lives will be full of pleasantness and peace. Let. us divide upon tariff and finance , but let there be no division upon this question , that nowhere shall the law be overturned in the interests of any body. I hope that sentiment that regards the authority of the United States or its officers , alien or strange , has once and forever been distinguished in this country of ours. The captain who gives to the > ea his cargo of goods that he may give safety and deliverance to his fellowmen has fame ; but be who lands bis cargo has only wages. It is quite worth while , I think , for those who are charged with great public affairs now and then to turn aside from the routine of official duties and look into the face of the people. It is well enough to have trees on the land and mines in the earth ; but trees will be cut down and mines will be dug out , and the only thing that lasts is coed soil in the hands of good C O husbandmen. When a boy begins to wash his neck without being told it is a sign he is passing into the ordeal of his first love affair , says a contemporary , it is either that or for the reason that some other portion of his anatomy has suffered for his neck. THE WRIT. 'WU1TOF MANDAMUS. lamirpmp . ronrt THE STATE oV NEBRASKA , f nupreme To Henry Crabtree. Isaiah Bennett , Stephen Holies and their successors in office : Greeting. Whereas , in an action pending in the Su preme Court of Nebraska wherein you were respondents and Justin A. Wilcox. relntor. judgment was rendered by said court on the 30th day of June , A. D. 180J , that a peremptory writ of mandamus issue in said cause , com manding you us the board of county commis sioners of Red Willow county , Nebraska , at your next session to call a special election in said county and submit to the qualified elect ors thereof the question of relocation of the county seat of said county. Now , therefore , we command you to do end perform each and every , and singular the matters and things necessary to be done and performed in order to carry into effect the aforesaid judgment of our said court ; that you pay the costs of the court taxed at $ and also make due return to said court of bav ins done as you are hereby commanded. Witness : HON. SAMUEL MAXWELL. Chief Justice of the supreme court of Nebras ka , and the seal of said court affixed this second end day of July , A. D. 1892. U. A. CAMPBELL. Clerk of the Supreme Court. [ SEALI" Endorsed as follows : Indianola , Nebraska , July Gth , ISO. . WE , the undersigned , the board of county commissioners of Red Willow county , Nebras ka , while sitting as a board at Indianola , aforesaid , the same being-the county seat of said county , accept service of the within mandate , waiving all irregularities as to ser vice and copies of same. STEPHEN BOLLES. S. S. GRAHAM. SAMUEL YOUNG. On motion of Mr. Younpr the following reso lution was read and unanimously adopted. WHEREAS : The Hon. Samuel Maxwell. Chief Justice of the State of Nebraska , upon consideration of the Supreme Court of this statehas issued a peremptory writof mandam us commanding the board of county commis sioners of Red Willow county at the next ses sion of said board to call a special election of qualified electors of said county , to submit the question of the re-location of the county seat of Red Willow county. Nebraska , and whereas the present session is the first session of said board since said mandate was issued therefore be it resolved said election be , and the same is hereby called to be held on the first day of August , 1893. 0. K. T. Honest Results. 0. K. T. Many of the pioneers of Oregon and Wash ington have cheerfully testiied to the wonder ful curative properties of the celebrated Oregon Kidney Tea. Purely vegetable and pleasant to the taste and can be taken by the youngest child or most delicate woman. O. K. T. is a never failing remedy for pains in the back and loins , non-retention of urine , scalding or burning sensations while urinat ing , mucous discharges and troubles of all kidney troubles of either sex. $1.00 at all druggists. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Beautiful Women. The magic effort of Wisdom's Robertine as a beautifier and preserver of the complexion have been attested by thousands of leading ladies of society and stage It is the only ar ticle ever discovered which gives a natural and beautiful tint to the complexionremoving tan , sunburn , freckles and all roughness of the face and arms , leaving the skin soft , smooth and velvety. AH remark on its de lightfully cool and refreshing properties , a distinction not to be found in any other simi lar article known. S-4ts. A PRAYER. If there bo some weaker one , Give mo strength to hjlp him on : If a blinder soul there be. , Let me guide him nearer Thee. Make my mortal dream coma true With the work I fain would do ; Clothe with life the weak intent , Let mo be the thing I meant ; Let me lind in Thy emuloy Peace , that dearer is i ban Joy ; Out of self to love bo led. And to heaven aeclhnalud , Until all thinps sweet and good Seem my nature habitude. John G. Whitticr. IN A HOT PLACE. There used to exist a grout rivalry between Captains of steamboats ply ing on our larger rivers. To outspeod one another they wouUl recklessly put more steam upon the capacity of their engines than they possibly could stand and in consequence the boilers fre quently burst and the boats were wrecked. I was employed for a number of years on a boat , which had u. boiler explosion in such a race. by. which six persons lost their lives. After the damage was repaired and the six vic tims buried we made the necessary preparation to resume our voyage. Some carpenter-work remained to be done , but the ' . uptuin thought that could be finished wh le the boat was running. We had worked very hard for two days , and the last afternoon was allowed us for recreation , for early ne t morning the anchor would be heaved. So we went ashore. When I returned to the boat the night was bitter < old and very stormy. In tfad of stal.oin.i2T a watt-'iman on deck , the boat-wu , n locked every thing and retired to his cabin. Only the engine-room was open , and the boards and planks which were de molished by the plosion had not , been replaced. The floor was wet , and no place could b3 found on deck as a shelter against the increasing storm. I concluded to leave the interior of the boat and sleep in open air instead of baing expose.l to the feur'.U draft I felt in ths < l..rk with my hands along the engine ; , 'o find a way out , when ray foot u.'i.fst ! on a cover ly ing near. I slum ml and fell with my arms in the o.i opening on the lower end of ti.u boiler through which a man might crawl for repairs , and which , when the boiler is used , is closed with a heavy iron cap. fattened with a weighty clamp-iron , making the boiler air-tight In this opening the blacksmith had gone the daj' before to r a r the boiler. When into falling > open- ins I knocked my head : - the hen not nut < > the c. ept and I bly if thi * eotir.li h : 11jjun a little softer. Bv.t for : -il that i slept , and slept well. I Ii ! ! ihanL'my position several tii > - .ire < u inir t'.y eye.-v First , J < c . - the I art her .Mid ; but [ moved f r\ . ; i-i".n. an.i fr , m time"to time slrelt : . . ny hand lit rough the open ing to i- . t .nee mysei. that it was not yet c'o i.-.l. As 1 < t o not fear that they would close : h - opening without my hearing the ad .1 ; ing of the heavy iron cover , I gra'i ly drew back to the other and w.ierend of the boilor. Here I fell aleep. . all the sounder , as the shock against my head had stunned me. me.My awaking was horrible. I heard divers sounds , by which I concluded that day was approaching , though all around me was impenetrable darkness. The fearful thought struck me that during my sleep the opening of the boiler might have been closed. I crept towards it A chill went to my heart. All was dark , closed , impene trable , within the great coffin around me , without the least opening to ad mit air and light Terror deprived me of consciousness. Moaning , dropped down. How long I lay 1 do not recollect But the physician told me later that it must have been more apoplexy than faintness. While 1 lay there a sensation crept over me as if my feet were lying in water. It rose higher and higher. It already reached toward my knees , and it made me feel uncommonly chilly. The chilliness increased. An indescribable sen atiou crept over me , as more and more the water covered my body. At hI rising slowly , it reached my head : stid finally my mouth. 1 heard the iv.-.uar motion of the pump. pim ing uiler into the boiler. \Vilh ! ' ror 1 tarted up. My ter- rib e tion . - --med to strengthen me. tli..ood ru-hed to my head , but tl o j.-.i-d bo praised I did not faint ag : . - inning ' --or which fell upon me i firdized my fearful sil - . gavt \ - to a fervent de- sji . --li-prt- ; ion. I screamed an ' -.ad x ' 11 my might. I si < : vod vv .e closed opening , st c- . . my arm Ui the place through wh.-- , . it in , aad came to the con- clus. - > at I was buried alive. I yelle.i ; . , in and again in my fear so that tii."alls of ray iron coffin sbook. But tae regular pulses of the pump gave answer as if in mockery. I gave up all hope at last and be came tranquil. The though ! of my death , and in such a horrible way. had now nothing terrible to me. It was nothing new that man had to die such a death. Thousands are often caught in such small spaces of a ship , have sunk to the bottom of the sea , have in despair beaten against the too-well closed hatches and been drowned. Why should I not also die in this way ? But after I had accustomed myself to the thought , another came to me. felt the water becoming hot I heard the crackling of the fire , which had to change the water into steam , before it could rise high enough to drown me. I shuddered. My fearful aitua tlon overpowered mo again. Feebly 1 funk back upon the floor of the boiler. But roj full consciousness returned again. As I was too hoarse to shout very loud I beat against the wall louder and louder with increasing orce and with a strength which only de pnir ould Impart There were men close by who ought to hear my knocking. Could 1 not hear iho shu 'ing of their feet the dull falling of the wood ? Could I not hear even the laughing of the liroimm. who was only a few inches from my tomb. But the singing of the water which surroundedmy knees made in the steaming boiler more noise than my weak knocking against the iron wall. wall.Then Then suddenly I stopped upon u raovcablo object , for the increasing heat forced mo to keep my feet in motion. Mechanically 1 reached out and touched a heavy hammer that the blacksmith had accidentally left there. With what delgM I took this tool ! Witn what renewed hope I beat against the iron walls of my living grave. But oh. horror ! I had s-carcely listened for a moment when 1 heard the clinking of the iron doots. which the fireman opened. I per ceived how the ( ire which was about to torture me to death would be fed with a now supply of fuel. Suddenly new hope sprang up in my honrt There was no choice. I mixht have been saved if I had found the hammer even a few minutes sooner. Now I had to take the last means left to mo. which might save mo or might causa mo u death still more horrible. I recollected that I had a chisel in Imt. nn1 in Insa time than it \voam nave uccl'i sluppeu in a few minutes had I not put mv finger in tlie hole. That linger is a shapeless stttiTip now. but it did a service hardly to bo expected from such an insigni- ficr.nl moM-'ber. It saved my life. National Tribune. What a hard time of it" says a. correspondent "Brazilian bookkeep ers m-Jat have , with the long line of figured which represent the ordinary commercial transactions of a banking or mercantiV house. For example , a real , the unit of the monetary system , is written 0001 and is equal to the value of one-twentieth of the Ameri can cent There is no such coin in circulation , the smallest being 10 reis. There is a copper coin of10 reis. and a nickel coin of 100 reis. and another of 20U rei. . Next comes the paper- money in notes of 1.000 reis. called milreis. There are two milreis. 5 , 10. 20. : " 0. 50 and 1'Jii to a maximum of 500 milrois. numerically expressed this way : GOO$0O. Then there is an imaginary denomination named a conte. which means 1.000 milreis ana is expressed on paper 1,000The par value of the paper milreis is equal to about 51 cents American money ; but of course it varies with the times. IVot 5fcr.'ou < . The protection which British juries afford to men who abuse their wives is extraordinary , and this is a striking case. At Leeds a man named Kn ght. whose wife had deserted him on ac count of his violence and intemper ance , went to see her to ask her to re turn homo , and becau-e she refused he fired three shots at her. hitting her each time , wounding her in the arm. back and ear. The jiry found that the prisoner fir < jd only with the intent to rig/net his vife , " and the man had tc oc discharged. Pccr \ cd Uenry A. Bower of Adams town ship. Hamilton. Hamilton county , in J8. i4 Dipped a small cucumber into a glass i-ottle. and he peroutted the vine j fiu rush nourishment until the cucumber had tilled the available space inside the bottle. The vine was then clipped o.Y. the bottle was filled with alcohol and carefully sealed. The cucumber still retains its original appearance , and it looks as perfect a3 it did when bottled up thirty-eight years ago. One ZItriulrcaar * Old. J. A. Buchanan , of Obion county. Tennessee , has in his possession an old hunter's powder gourd , such as was used by all the old pioneer hunters , in which they carried their powder , that belonged to his grand father. and is. according to Mr. Buchanan's estimation , over 100 vears old. In Berlin rails for railroads are be ing manufactured solely of solidified paper. Paper wheels have been in use for years also , and are said to be superior to iron in many respects.