The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, May 26, 1893, Image 8

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    L.W.M’CONNELL&CO.
* *;i • ; /
WALL PAPER,
iililiilll'PAI NTS.Iinmlliil!!
IBBRUSHESJiH!
ALABASTINE.
—<sasM^—
L.W.M’CONNELL&CO
Take your old rags
to the McCook Pro
duce Company.
Of Interest to Farmers.
If you want to renew a loan falling
due and make a new one on your farm
patronize the Nebraska Loan and Bank
ing Co. of McCook, a home institution.
Office in rear rooms of 1st National
bank. Interest payable in McCook.
McMillen Bros, carry a complete
stock of dusters—the cheap as well as
the finer articles. Give them a call if
you need anything in that line.
Leave your orders for flour and feed
where they will be filled and delivered
promptly. The old reliable B. & M. flour
store. 2]1 Mam Street.
Stop and Think!
and buy the Encyclopedia Britannica
at ten cents a day to help you think.
You are all suffering for it and you
can get it for ten cents each day. What
—Encyclopedia Britannica.
91 High patent flour $1.10 per sack.
B. & M. Flour and Feed Store.
Wayson & Penny are putting out
handsome rigs these days.
Wanted.—A dining
room girl at the Com
mercial Hotel.
Money to Loan at 9 per Cent.
On first class McCeok or Red Willow
county real estate. Send me your ap
plications. II. G. Dixon,
Kennett Square, Penna.
i
Horses for Sale.
Wayson & Penny keep horses for sale
at their livery barn opposite the Cen
tral hotel. _
Parties contemplating building this
spring who need money can obtain
same at reasonable terms from P. A.
Wells. Office m 1st National bank.
Rear rooms.
Give your orders for 84 Patent, Lion
and Legal Tender, also Wauneta High
Patent,White Fawn and Pride of Wau
neta flour to Hugh Thompson, the oil
man.
No better farm wagon on wheels
than the Charter Oak sold by S. M.
Cochran & Co.
Dr. A. J. Thomas, Dentist, office in
Union block, over Knipple.
If you want fire or
tornado insurance in
Reliable Companies,
call on C. J. Ryan.
Best Refrigerators
in the city at Pade &
Son’s.
The World’s Fair City
Is built of French plaster and will en
dure for only one season. You have
saved your money to go to the fair.
Spend your money for something en
during, something that tells you all
about every country, all people and
every invention in the whole world.
The Encyclopedia Britannica tells every
thing and costs but ten cents a day.
A state and national paper combined
is The Semi-Weekly Journal. The
Tribune is your best local paper.
Subscribe for these and you are fixed
for a year. Both for $2.50.
Put your $ $ $ where they will do
the most good, where they will secure
the best and the most groceries for in
stance. You will make no mistake if
Noble’s is the place of deposit. He
gives the limit in quantity, quality and
value, and his stock cannot be duplicat
ed in Western Nebraska.
Make Noble your family grocer and
many other blessings will fall to your
lot, besides having the best groceries on
your table that the market affords.
Residence property
for sale in all parts of
the city by C. J. Ryan.
Beware of peddlers. Call and in
spect the Household sewing machine
sold by S. M. Cochran & Co. before
buying a machine. There is no better
on earth.
Field and garden seeds at reduced
prices for the next ten days. McCook
Commission Co. J. J. Garrard,
Manager.
You get a Seaside Library free with
a year’s subscription to The Semi
Weekly Journal. The offer will not
last long.
Noble, the leading grooer, makes a
specialty of fresh, clean family grocer
ies. He will treat you right.
Wayson & Peony can fix you up com
fortably and stylishly in any thing you
may desire in the livery line.
Noble carries a large and complete
stock of the best brands of canned
goods of all kinds.
If you are thinking of buying a set
of new dishes call to see Knipple’s stock
and get his prices.
Cash paid for rags
by the McCook Pro
duce Company.
Wall Paper,
_-- H. & M.
Artists’ Guaranteed
Material. Mixed
...Paint..
Paints, Oils and Glass.
♦
A car-load of fur
niture—direct from
the manufacturers—
just received by Pade
& Son.
Quality Up—Prices Down!
Knipple excels in the quality of the
flour he keeps in stock, and in the re
markably low prices at which he is sell
ing. Think of it!
Fancy patent flour at.$1.25
Snowflake flour at.85
And remember that he warrants every
sack. At the old stand in the Cole
brick.
From birth the human being is ask
ing questions. Who, what, why, when,
where—all face him at every period of
his life. Every material problem that
confronts you is solved by the Encyclo
pedia Britannica, and it only costs ten
cents a day.
Aii elegant stock of
sideboards just re
ceived by Pade &S011.
We are printing the date to which
each subscriber has paid his subscrip
tion to The Tribune along with the
address. Watch the date and you will
know if you are in arrears. If you are
please come and see us.
To go to the world’s fair will cost
you a small fortune. Take the world’s
fair into your home for ten cents a day,
by buying the Encyclopedia Britannica.
Try a sack of Monogram at $1.20, the
best flour in town; or a sack of Charm at
$1.10, a high grade patent flour. Mc
Cook Com. Co. 211 Main Street.
The Great Word Cure.
What does it cure? Ignorance.
What is its other name? Encyclopedia
Britannica. Ten cents a day.
Patronize H. Thompson & Co., deal
ers in flour and feed of all kinds, west
Dennison street, on the corner north of
McEntee Hotel.
IN QUEENSWARE Noble carries
the largest assortment and the richest
designs of the season. His prices are
reasonable.
S. M. Cochran & Co. have an im
mense stock of farm implements on
hand. See them before buying else
where.
You will never know how far your
dollar will go until you buy your gro
ceries at Knipple’s. It will surprise
you!
Knipple leads them all when it comes
to selling a fine patent flour cheap. Try
him once and you will be convinced.
Remember that S. M. Cochran & Co.
now carry in stock a full and complete
stock of builders’ hardware supplies.
Noble is the only exclusive grocer in
the city. His stock is the largest and
his prices correspond with the times.
You can buy more goods at Knipple’s
for One (1$) Dollar than you can any
where else in the city of McCook.
If you want a well drilled in fine
shape see McClain & Co. Leave or
ders at S. M. Cochran & Co.’s.
W. M. Irwin has a fine Holstein
bull for service at his farm northwest
of the city, on reasonable terms.
S. M. Cochran & Co. carry a large
line of buggies in stock. See them if
you want a good vehicle cheap.
Do you know that Knipple pays the
highest market price for butter and
eggs. _
Seventeen pounds of Granulated
Sugar for One (1$) Dollar at Knipple’s.
You can buy a sack of flour for 75
cents at the B. & M. Flour Store.
S. M. Cochran & Co. can sell you a
bicycle very cheap. See them.
Seventy-five cents buys a scale book
of 500 tickets at this office.
Go to the B. & M. Flour and Feed
Store for your flour.
Predmore Bros, keep the best cylin
der oil in McCook.
Knipple makes a specialty of fruits
of all kinds.
Knipple sells canned goods cheaper
than ever.
Machine oil of all kinds at Predmore
Bros.
dF'Groceries at Nobles’.
H I HO Wanted by
K jl I - \ the McCook
11 il U U Produce Co.
MOJAVE FUNERAL RITES.
Grief and Appetite Go Ham] In Hand at
These Ceremonies.
On the banks of the lower Colorado,
among the gravel mesas and mesquite
covered valleys, live the Mohave Indians,
having their commercial headquarters at
The Needles, Cal., famed as the hottest
place in the United States excepting
Death valley, and their seat of learning,
supported by the government at Fort
Mohave, A. T. In western Arizona, where
snow and ice are unknown, clothing is
useless except for ornament, and the
mesquite tree bears all the food needed
to sustain life, we find the Mohave Indians
to resemble in appearance and habits the
negroes of central Africa except in
the particulars of curly hair and thick
lips, having the same scorn for the re
straints of clothing, and the same pas
sionate fondness for brilliant plumage
and gaudy cosmetics. Peculiar are the
customs of these benighted people, but
there is none more unique than the cere
mony connected with their disposal of
their dead.
An Indian woman died at noon, and
we attended the funeral, four of us.
The Mohaves practice cremation, and
the cremating commences as soon as
the breath is out of the body, as wit
ness the fact that the woman died at
noon and was on the funeral pile at 15
minutes past. Indeed it is said that the
mourners are sometimes startled at see
ing the dead come to life again when the
fire begins to grow fervent. Not many
hicos, as the white people are called, are
accorded the privilege of attending these
ceremonies, but as we stand well with
one of the wise men of the tribe we were
invited to be present. As soon as we
could swallow our dinners we started
for the place and were guided there by
the wailings of the friends of the de
parted, consisting of every man, woman
and child present at the festivities. You
can see the reasonableness of my calling
it by such a name when you are told that
the affair concludes by the killing and
eating of all the horses of the departed,
and every one goes to his own hut feel
ing that he has enjoyed himself greatly.
The Mohaves believe in demonstrating
their feelings through the agency of the
mouth and limbs, and this woman being
much beloved the mourners were many,
and their grief could bo heard a mile
away. If ever you have heard a pack of
coyotes howling forth their misery in
the middle of the night, when they howl
most artistically, you have this noise to
u. uuu
Arriving at that place we found a hole
dug in the ground about 10 feet in di
ameter and 2 feet deep, heaped full of
wood and surmounted by the body of
the deceased. This was burning, and
around it in picturesque attitudes were
all the friends trying to outdo each
other in exclamations of grief. The head
doctor, for the Mohaves have physicians,
stood by the side of the genius who
stirred the fire, giving directions for the
most rapid destruction of the body,
which he had, no doubt, with great skill
assisted in becoming a corpse. He thus
carried his functions a step further than
the physicians in civilized life.
One old fellow, who seemed to be the
minister, was standing within the circle
haranguing the assembly doubtless on
the many virtues of the departed, and
when he seemed to make an unusually
good point the mourners manifested their
appreciation by an increase in the force
of their groans.
Finally the relatives and friends ate
the horses that were the property of the
deceased and went home firmly believ
ing that the dead woman’s spirit is roam
ing untroubled in “Ghost mountain,”
just across the river.—San Francisco
Chronicle.
The Women Du Maurler Draws.
We should feel as if Du Maurier had
been fickle and faithless if he were sud
denly to cease to offer us the tall, tran
quil persons he understands so well.
They have an inestimable look of repose,
a kind of Greek serenity. There is a fig
ure in a cut of which we have forgotten
the “point” and the date (we mention it
at hazard—it was one in a hundred),
which only needed to be modeled in clay
to be a truly “important” creation. A
couple of children address themselves to
a youthful aunt, who leans her hand
upon a toilet table, presenting her back,
clothed in a loose gown, not gathered in
at the waist, to the spectator. Her charm
ing pose, the way her head slowly turns,
the beautiful folds of her robe, make her
look more like a statuette in a museum
than like a figure in Punch. We have
forgotten what the children are saying,
but we remember her charming attitude,
which is a capital example of the love of
beauty for heauty’s sake. It is the same
bias as the characteristic of the poet.—
Henry James.
Are Spats Fashionable?
There is one point on which consider
able doubt exists in various quarters.
Are spats fashionable? is the query in
which this doubt is sometimes expressed.
The fact that some well dressed men
persevere in wearing them does not ex
actly answer the question in the affirma
tive, for there are old army men and
others who will continue all their lives
to wear the same sort of things they wore
some 10 or 15 years since. That spats
since then have descended in the social
scale may be otherwise conceded.—Lon
don News.
A 3Iodel Husband.
“I defy you to find a man who loves
his wife as dearly as I love mine. To
render her happy I would undertake to
go and live alone at the top of a moun
tain.”
“But you would never come up to
Puntolini’s uncle, who, when he ascer
tained that his wife looked best in mourn
ing, went and committed suicide.”—Cor
riere della Sera.
Lore as a Disease.
May—Why is it that people really
know so little about love?
Frank—Because it is a disease that
leaves its victims in such a pitiful con
dition of imbecility that they are wholly
incapable of rationally describing their
symptoms.—NewYork Herald.
Wide apart. The Towering Mastodon of Tented Shows. Reigning
by right of eminence, by right of merit, by right of superiority, and
by right of popular will, the exalted rulers of the museum ream
F. J. TAYLOR’S
Huge World’s Museum, Ancient Egytian Caravan, Royal
Menagerie and Great Roman Hippodrome.
- ^ /aK% n _ —_— *_
Will Exhibit at
Afternoon and Evening, on
Wednesday, June 7th, 1893.
Note:—Owing to special arrangements made by the American
Showman’s Pool League, this will be the only big show to visit Red
Willow county this year.
$10,000 that we give the best Circus
Performance ever seen in the we6t. This year larger, better, and grander tliun ever. 50 star
performers. Five funny clowns. A ebow to talk and think about. The greatest number of
great favorites ever assembled under canvas. A great holiday of rest and recreation for
everyone. We guarantee to all a most enjoyable, moral, reflned and artistic entertainment.
Wonderful collection of wild animals.
Jip and Sampson, the goliaths of the giant
Tribes. The largest elephant and the largest camel in the world. When compared to these
massive monarchs all other giants are dwarfs. JIP, the grand old battle-scarred war ele
phant, the largest, costliest, and most world-famous elephant ever seen in a Christian land.
SAMSON, the most stupendous and stately, the ta'lest sky towering camel ever seen. The
only umbrella-eared elephant in captivity. A grand double circus of two exalted circus com
panies. Grandest of hippodrome spectacles. Famous and champion riders from every
known circus aud amphitheatre of Europe.
Grand Free Street Parade, Crimsoned witli
the radient lustre of the noonday sun, reflecting scenes more grand than king or conqueror
ever beheld, tons upon tons, block after block of costly gold and glitter, a 6treet pageant one
mile long, noble knights and ladies fair on prancing horses, huge camels and elephants led
oy their native keepers, blooded horses from Asia, England and Kentucky, open dens of
wild and ferocious animals, every nation represented Hands of music virtually filling the
air with melody. A sight worth coming one hundred miles to see.
A Free Exhibition. See the Perilous Trip to
the clouds. Two performances daily, ram or shine. Doors open at 7 p. m.t performance
commences 1 hour later. Do not let other advei tisements mislead you; we never disappoint.
TTSTT^L-Hj ZFZRXCES.
A Bicycle
Will exercise your boy’s muscles and
give him a chance to break his neck.
The Encyclopedia Britannica will ex
ercise his mind and give invaluable aid
to information and fit him for any avo
cation in life. All for ten cents a day.
MALARIA.
Humphreys’ Specifics Nos. Ten and
sixteen speedily and permanently cure
malaria and bilious fever. Price 25
cents each at all drug stores.
There is something in the idea that
the woman who cannot be deceived is a
trifle unfeminine.
When Hannibal,
The great elephant got a sore foot they
used Haller’s Barb Wire Liniment and
cured it up in four days. For sale by
McConnell & Co.
Chicago is vainly endeavoring to run
a world’s fair and a base ball club sim
ultaneously.
North Pole, Dec. 25, 1892.
Haller Proprietary Co:—Be sure
and send me a lot of Haller’s Sure Cure
Cough Syrup. I get lots of letters
from the children asking for it. For
sale by McConnell & Co.
We ask of men results: why, then,
ask of women only good intentions?
Shiloh’s Vitalizer is what you need
for Dyspepsia, Torpid Liver, Yellow
Skin or Kidney Trouble. It is guar
anteed to give you satisfaction. Price
75 cents. Sold by A. McMillen
Wednesday was Queen Victoria's
birthday.
Captain Sweeney, U. S. A., San Di
ego, Cal., says: “Shiloh’s Catarrh Rem
edy is the first medicine I have ever
found that would do me any good.’' Price
50 cents. Sold by A. McMillen.
If the care of the hair were made a
part of a lady’s education, we should
not see so many gray heads, and the
use of Hall’s Hair Renewer would be
unnecessary.
Shiloh's Cure, the Great Cough and
Croup Cure is for sale by us. Pocket
size contains twenty-five doses, only 25
cents. Children love it. A. McMillen.
druggist.
WONDERFUL!
The cures which are being effected
by Drs. Starkey & Paleri, 1529 Arch
St., Philadelphia, Pa., in Consumption,
Catarrh, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Rben- ■
matism, and all chronic diseases by
their compound Oxygen Treatment is
indeed marvelous.
If you area sufferer fromany disease
which your physician has failed to cure,
write for information about this treat
ment, and their book of two hundred
pages, giving a history of Compound
Oxygen, its nature and effects with nu
merous testimonials from patients, to
whom you may refer for still further
information, will be promptly sent,
without charge.
This book Sside from its great merit
«s a medical work, giving as it doe9„
the result of years of study and experi
ence, you will find a very interesting
one.
Drs. STARKEY & PALEN,
5129 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.
120 Sutter St., San Francisco, CaL
Please mention this paper.
God has never been able to makfr
much use of people who have no busi
ness of their own to attend to.
The vast facilities of the J. C. Ayer
Co., of Lowell, Mass., enable them to
place The Superior Blood-purifier—
Ayer's Sarsaparilla—within reach of the
poorest invalid. Don’t be induced to
take a “cheap” substitute. Always re
member that the best is the cheapest.
It is hard to understand how anybody
can doubt that there is a devil who
knows that there is a Texas.
In all cases where a mild and effect
ive aperient is needed, Ayer’s pills are
the best. They improve the appetite.,
restore healthy action, promote diges
tion, and regulate every function. No
pill is in greater demand, or more high
ly recommended by the profession.
Among the changing fashions in call
ing-cards it is a comfort that four ace^
can still hold their own.
Karl’s Clover Root, the new Blood
Purifier, gives freshness and clearness
to the Complexion and cures Constipa
tion. 25 cents, 50 cents and $1. Soli
by A. McMillen. a 26-lyr.