The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, June 09, 1893, Image 8
-ij iff.'McConnell& co. jjfr Wall a ^ a Paper. We are Selling. Brown Blanks, per roll, 4 and 5 cents. White Blanks, per roll, 5 and 6 cents. Gilts, per roll, 6 cents and upwards. Nine inch Border, only 1 cent per yard. We Carry The. Largest Stock and Will not be Undersold. 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. 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. WANTED! WANTED! 150 head of horses and cattle to past ure. Ranch three miles east of Mc Cook. Good water and fine pasturage. Call on or address W. N. Rogers. Horses for Sale. Wayson & Penny keep horses for sale at their livery barn opposite the Cen tral hotel. The burning question with house wives of all lands, all creeds, and all ages is: “Which is the best Cooking Stove?” S. M. Cocbran & Co. answer this question today by proclaiming the “Charter Oak Stoves” to be the best in every conceivable shape. Give jour 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. Leave your orders for flour and feed where they will be filled and delivered promptly. The old reliable B. & M. flour store. 211 Main Street. We can and will save you money on wall paper. Examine our prices before buying. McConnell & Co. No better farm wagon on wheels than the Charter Oak sold by S. M. Cochran & Co. 91 High patent flour $1.10 per sack. B. & M. Flour and Feed Store. Wayson & Penny are. putting out handsome rigs these days. Hr. A. J. Thomas, Dentist, office in Union block, over Knipple. Predmore Bros, keep the best cylin der oil in McCook. McMillen meets all prices on wall paper. Machine oil of all kinds at Predmore Bros. ^“Groceries at Nobles’. If you want fire or tornado insurance in Reliable Companies, call on C. J. Ryan. Fut 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. 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. 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. Field and garden seeds at reduced prices for the next ten days. McCook Commission Co. J. J. Garrard, Manager. IN QUEENSWARE Noble carries the largest assortment and the richest designs of the season. His prices are reasonable. You will never know how far your dollar will go until you buy your gro ceries at Knipple’s. It will surprise vou! We can and will save you money on wall paper. Examine our prices before buying. McConnell & Co. 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. If you want a well drilled in fine shape see McClain & Co. Leave or ders at S. M. Cochran & Co.’s. We can and will save you money on wall paper. Examine our prices before buying. McConnell & Co. Noble, the leading grocer, makes a specialty of fresh, clean family grocer ies. He will treat you right. Wayson & Penny can fixyou 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. Ice cold meats at 8. & M. Meat Market. McMillen meets all prices on wall paper. Residence property for sale in all parts of the city by C. J. Ryan. Wall Paper. McMillen meets all prices on Wall Paper from 4 cts. per roll up. Call and get Prices before purchasing. McMILLEN, Druggist. Money tb Loan. On farm or city property at four per cent, for five years or 2-and-one half per cent, for ten years. Principal payable on installments. I. T. Benjamin. The Midsummer Number of “Talcs from Town Topics,” including a $1,000 prize novel, “Six Months in Hades." is on the news stands, and is a very lively volume, particularly suited to the season and a very engaging companion for a railroad or steamboat journey.—Town Topics, 21 West Twenty-third street, New York. I would sing you a song of a beautiful land, that far away home of the soul: where no winds ever blow eyes and ears fall of sand,[and they don’t pay two prices for coal. I long to cross over and be with the blest, where life is one fourth of July—a jolly and well-beloved saint as the best, and likely I will, bye and bye. —Col. Bixby. Try one pound of McKenna’s un colored Japan tea at 45 cents per pound. Guaranteed to be as good as you can buy elsewhere for 60 cents. A fine assortment of dusters may be seen at the harness shop of McMillen Bros, on east Dennison street. They are very reasonable in price too. McMillen Bros, carry a complete stock of dusters—tfie cheap as well as the finer articles. Give them a call if you need anything in that line. When you want New Orleans mo lasses go the C. O. D. store. There you will get the genuine article and at a reasonable price. We are still selling tae best grades of flour cheap. Give us a call and get our prices. McCook Com. Co. 211 Main Street. We can and will save you money on wall paper. Examine our prices before buying. McConnell & Co. S. M. Cochran & Co. have an im mense stock of farm implements on hand. See them before buying else where. We can and will save you money on wall paper. Examine our prices before buying. McConnell & Co. Don't eat tainted meats. Buy them from Acme Cooler. Ice cold and sweet as in winter at F. S. Wilcox’s. Noble is also strictly in it when it comes to selling fresh vegetables at a reasonable price. If you want a luxury go to the C. O. D. store and get a pound of English breakfast tea. The successful exploit of the “Exposition flyer,” covering the distance between New York and Chicago in the reduced time of twenty hours, is a theme of general newspaper comment. It demon strates that those who are able to pay may expect to soon have tran sportation at their disposal with a minimum speed of at least sixty miles an hour on all well-equipped roads. But the feat of the million aire train does not prove to the public’s satisfaction that the great mass that patronize the railroads are to derive any benefit from the fast train service which has just been inaugurated. What the com mon people want is lower fares not fewer hours. One per cent of the traveling public may be willing and can afford to pay extra for saving a few hours by riding on a luxurious flyer, but to the other 99 per cent a saving of cost and not time is the great desideratum. It would seem as though regard for their own interests alone would lead the roads to adopt the policy the popular demand suggests. It has been discovered that the democrats have made preparations to bring out a succession of raw head and bloody bones stories of pension frauds from different parts of the country in order to stiffen the back of Hoke Smith and pre pare the country for an era of “pen sion purging” unequalled in the history of the nation. The old sol diers will have to take their med icine. The government is no longer in the hands of their friends. Ex-Senatob Ingalls struck a hornet’s nest when he urged that the negro population of the United States be deported into Africo. The colored people do not take kindly to the suggestion. Mr. In galls may run short on the negro vote if he should ever again venture into the political arena. But— The Greatest of All. As circus day approaches interest in coming exhibition of the Great Sells & Rentfrow’s shows which will exhibit here Wednesday, Tune 21st, increases, and the excitement in young and old American circles expands. The reports of the big show’s success this year have been so general and the leading features have produced so great a sen sation elsewhere that public interest has been aroused to a greater extent than usual, and the big show is certain to coin money. It must always be a source of satisfaction to an audience when it feels it is getting an equivalent for its money, but when the features —both in the menagerie and ring— are out of the established “rut” of the average circus, and developes into a series of surprising novelties, any one of which constitute a “feature” strong enough to draw a public, an audience must become enthusiastic in its pleas ures. This seems to be the effect Sells & Rentfrow's Shows have been this season, and no doubt will be the effect here. Among the new features the most prominent will be the largest elephant that walks on the earth. The free exhibition on the show grounds af ter the parade is said to be the best ever given. We expect to see an enor mous crowd on June 21st. A Summer School. If a sufficient number of pupils can be secured J. H. Fowler will conduct a private school in the east ward building for the benefit of those pupils whose promotions are conditional and those who wish to enter a grade higher than that to which they are promoted. School to begin on Monday, June 19, and con tinue six weeks. Persons interested are invited to communicate with him in writing. 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. IEP“Noble, Purveyor to tne Great Common People, is now exhibiting about the handsomest and largest as sortment of plain and fancy lamps to be seen in Southwestern Nebraska. Don’t build a fence around your property until you have seen and priced that woven wire fencing at S. M. Cochran & Co.’s. Nothing cheaper, neater or better. With our Acme Cooler we are en abled to furnish meats in better condi tion during warm weather than any other market in the city. F.S. Wilcox. Try a sack of Monogram at $1.20, the best flour in town; or a sack of Charm at $1.10, a high grade patent flour. Mc Cook Com. Co. 211 Main Street. Patronize H. Thompson & Co., deal ers in flour and feed of all kinds, west Dennison street, on the corner north of McEntee Hotel. Noble is the only exclusive grocer in the city. His stock is the largest and his prices correspond with the times. We can and will save you money on wall paper. Examine our prices before buying. McConnell & Co. You c?n buy more goods at Knipple’s for One (1$) Dollar than you can any where else in the city of McCook. 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. If you are thinking of buying a set of new dishes call to see Knipple’s stock and get his prices. 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. 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. Get prices on wall paper at McMil len’s drug store. Knipple sells canned goods cheaper than ever. Sewing machines at $5.00 per month on the installment plan at Pade & Son’s. SOLID - STATELLE1TTS1 Tlie Largest, Strongest, Greatest and Best RAIL - ROAD - SHOW On earth, and the only performance of the kind in the world. This big show will exhibit at McCook, Wednesday, June 21. SELLS & RENTFROW’S Collossal Aggregation of Sensational Features. Monster Museum, 3-Ring Circus and Great Double Menagerie. Real Roman Races. You can’t afford to miss seeing World’s Fair on Wheels The most extraordinary of principal bareback equestrians. William Sells, a veritable centaur; a paragon among all horsemen; none dare to challenge his supremacy; the pride of America; the wonder of Europe, who for over three continuous months was the popular nero at Olympia, London; received the most enthusiastic recognition from royalty, nobility and commoners, and was unanimously recognized by the British press as the pre-eminent leature or the circus in which he was then performing. Mr. William Dutton, in his brilliant feats of Equestrianism, performing at will forward and backward somersaults on the bare back of swiftly running steeds. One of the most dash ing equestrians of the age, engaged at an enormous sa'ary to ride at this faultless exhibition. Mr. Charles Watson, the greatest 6-liorse rider the world ever saw. A wonder to behold. The Dutton sisters, undoubtedly the finest lady riders on earth. Miss Mildred Murray, the finest menagerie rider. Edgar Wilkinson, the celebrated European hurdle rider. The great Livingstone family, 4 in number, aerialists, gymnasts, acrobats, bicycleists. in sensa tional aerial flights, dazzling and intrepid feats. Fearless and astonishing features that heretofore have seemed impossible accomplished by these wonderful artists with such ease and grace as to establish them the uudisputed champions of the gymnastic world. Two Immense Menageries of Wild Beasts. Open' dens of savage brutes; mammoth elephants, lions, tigers, hienas. bears, wolves, leopards and panthers. Zebras trained to drive like horses. Knights in armor, ladies as princesses, male and female jockeys, squadrons of princes, nobles and cavalier in royal robes and rich costumes, mounted on spirited horses like in days of old. The best performing elephants. Sea lion, leopard and baby camel. Twenty great circus acts. Three great bands in street parade. Courtly knights and dames. A dro\re of monster Cn?eis2 j“ebra8» bears and baby monkeys. Twenty great ieapers. Richly carved carved and gilded tableau wagons. Myriad cages, dens and iairs. See the twenty clowns; first in wit. first in fun, first in the hearts of the public. A Mile Tumble from the Skies. Grand Balloon race and double parachute jump by Miss Anna Bell Holton and Miss Lillie Rice, lo be witnessed positively each day of the exhibition at the show grounds. Be sure and ask your agent for cheap excursion rates. Every rail road gives cheap ex cursion rates to this big show. At 10 A. M. a glorious grand holiday free street parade. One day only; afternoon and night. Doors open at 1 and 0 o'clock. No extra charge. One ticket admits to all. iou all know U6. . Our past record a guarantee of the future. McCook, Neb., Wednesday, June 21st, 1893. ^ grAa^ fOPENlNGl i o-OF-o W. M. ANDERSON’S -«|4NEW oooooooooo oooooooooo GROCERY AND QUEENSWARE oooooooooooooooooo oo STORE, ON Saturday, June 10th. Everything fresh and clean and pure. Lar gest stock in Red Willow county. Prices as low as the lowest. Call in to see his stock. The as sortment is complete. Remember the place. MORLAN BUILDING.