: i Special sale . , ( NO. TWO. . On Saturday , April 13th , 1895 , from 10 a. m. to 12 m. , we will sell Ladies' House Gowns at 91 cents each. We have only 10 dozen of these in sock. From 10 to 11 a.m. we will sell black , brown , white , navy and red. Straw Sailor Hats at 17 cents each. . Also at same hour black or I white Leghorn Hats at 24 cents each , Our stock of these goods is not large , so you had better comes early and avoid the rush. Lowrnan & SOll Dry. Goods , Carpets , Millinery , Etc , it i t SIIERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an order of sale directed to me front the district court of Red 'b'illow county , Nebraska , on a judgment obtained before Ilmt. I ) . 1' . Welty , judge of the district court of Red Willow county , Nebraska , on the 15th day of January , 1S95 , in favorof George , 1-lock- nell as plaintiff , and against George M. Chen- ery et al. as defendants , for the sum of three hundred thirty-eight ( $3J8) ) dollars and forty (40) ( ) cents , and costs taxed at S25.IS and act - t costs , I have levied upon the following real estate taken as the property of said defendants - fendants to satisfy said judgment towit : The undivided one-half interest in lot thirteen (13) ( ) in block nv , ntytwo ( z2) in the original town ( now city ) of McCook , I.edtillow county , Nebraska. And will offer the sameforsale to the highest bidder , for cash in gland , on the 13th d n of May , A. D. , IS9J , in front of the south door of theu court house in Indianola , Nebraska , that being the building wherein the last term of court was held , at the hour of one o'clock , p in. of said day , when and where 1 due attendance will be given by the under- signed. Dated April 12th , 1895. E. R. BANKS , Sheriff of said county. W. S MORLAN , Attorney. 4-12.5ts. 1 SEE THE WORLI'S FAIR FOR 15 CENTS. Upon receipt of your address and 15 cents in postage stamps , we will mail you prepaid our Souvenir Portfolio of the World's Colum- hian Exposition , the regular price of which is fifty cents , but as we want you to have one we make the price nominal. You will find it a work of art and a thing to be prized. It contains full page views of the great buildings - ings with descriptions of sameand ) s executed in the highest style of art. If not satisfied with it , after you get it , we will refund the stamps and let you keep the book. Address II. E. Bucklen & Co. , Chicago , Illinois. ALL FREE. Those who have used Dr. King's New Discovery - covery know its value , and those who have not , have now the opportunity to try it free. Call on the advertised druggist and c et a trial bottle free. Send your name and address to II. E. Bucklen & Co. , Chicago , and get a sample - ple box of Dr. King's i\ew Life Pius free , as well as a copy of Guide to health and household - hold Instructor , free. All of which is guaranteed - teed to do you good and costs you nothing. At McMillen's Drug Store. I ; : - - - - Anderson's o l tot I t Ask how Good ? 1 Not holy Cheap ? Active W ork Creates A Hearty Appetite. Liberal Dealings at The Grocers lessen The Doctor's Bill. - R If you eat well you I Will feel well and . . , . . . . Act well. To feel bright eat Well and dress light. J Cheap Groceries like Cheap help costs most . And serves least. r1. , Buy your Groceries at . . i - -Andeion's I Grocery. 0 r - - l -N a : ; _ _ i i..wi-a..w T1M TA RI E GOING P.AT-CENTRAL TIME-LGAVR. No , 3 , through passenger. . . . . . . , 5.55 A. N. No. 4 , Ink al . 9:00 P. M No. 76 , freight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:45 A. M No. 6t , freight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4:30 A. M No. 80 , freight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:00 A. M No. 148 , freight , ntude up here. . . . . . 5:10 : A. M GOING WEST-MOUNTAIN TIME-LEAVES. No. 3 , through . . . . . . . . ] : I' . M. No. 5 , local pussscnger. . . . . . . . . . . 9:15 P. M. No. 63. freight. 5:06 P. M. No. 77. freight . . 4:2' P.M. No. 149 , freight , made up hero . . . . . 6:110 A. M. IMPERIAL LINE : liUNTAIN TIME. No. 175 , leave' it . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 A. M. No. 176 arrives at . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:40 P. M , t3 1 NnTE : No. 03 carri s pa88engers for Stratton , aenkebnar , nod Haigler. A11 trains run daily excepihig 148,141 and 176. which run daily except + undny. No. 3 stops at aenkeluuun and Vra . No. 2 81ops at Indianola. Cambridge and Ar- apahne. No. 80 will carry pns8engers for Indianoia. Cambridge and Arapahoe. Nos. 4.5.148,141 and 176 carry passengers for alt atattons. Y.nl can purchaee at this office tickete to al praccical 1)011118 in the Mused Ftutea and Coo. ada and haggng , checked through to dpstina- tiou withnut extra chargr of transfer. For in formatfou regarding rutps. pie . call on or address C. E MMlNEtt. Aguetl Tuesday was the day called pay day. Conductor Tout Mundy is now able to go out on his run. Mrs. S. W. Gildner arrived home , first of the week , front the visit to Beloit , Kansas. Conductor . G. Reddin is still in a serious condition with an attack of pneu- monia. The Burlington's earnings for February - ary show a reduction of over three hundred - dred thousand dollars. John Carter , a railroed man from Mc- Cook , bought a farm north of here , Mott- day.-Holbrook Herald. J. R. Roxby went down to the farm near Arapahoe , last Friday night , to spend SundayMrs. . Roxby is expected n1) tonight. It just took a certain railroad man a few brief hours , Tuesday afternoon , in a friendly card game , to lose his entire pay check , the labor , hard labor perhaps. of a whole month. Does it pay ? Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wilkinson have gone to housekeeping in the George Leming residence on north Marshall street. Mrs.Vilkinson arrived in the city , Tuesday night , from her extended visit home. Cards are out for the wedding of Will D. Beyrer and Miss Cora M. Thompson , Wednesday , April 17th. They are among McCook's most highly esteemed young people , and THE TRIBUNE wishes them an advance a running-over measure of connubial bliss. Don't forget the first annual ball of the Railroad Employes' Club in A. O.U W. hall , next Monday evening , April 15th. Tickets are only 50 cents. The Pythias orchestra will provide the music. It will be one of the terstchorean events of the season. Dig up two quarters and go , if you enjoy a good dance. A young nan named Ed. O'Conner , who has been in the company's employ , left the city , Monday night , forgetting to make it square with Charley Leach for a watch which he took with him. The marshal at Oxford took the young man in hock pursuant to a telegram iron ) this place. O'Conner gave up the ticker and he was allowed to continue on his way. The Burlington Route will , until April 15th , haul seed grain tree of charge from all points on their lines east of the Missouri - souri river to points in Gosper , Furnas Frontier , Red Willow , Hayes , Hitchcock , Chase and Dundy counties , in cases only where the grain is to be given to the farmers without charge ; in cases where grails is to be placed on shares , or where it is to be paid for by the farmers in casher or otherwise , the emergency rates in t t effect will be collected. C. E. MAGNER , Agent. Some time ago Mr. Charles S. Fee , the general passenger agent of the Northern Pacific , advertised for competitive styles of railroad advertising in the first.class magazines of the country. These specimen - men ads. were to be either full page or half page. In response to his liberal offers fers of prizes several thousand railroad men and other enterprising competitors sent in their ideas of the best form of railroad advertising in the magazines. The Journal takes pleasure in announcing - ing that a well-known Lincoln man , A. C. Zeimer , ticket agent of the Burlington - ton , drew the first prize in the great competition.-Lincoln Journal. Hon. C. F. Manderson , general solicitor - itor of the B. & M , railroad in Nebraska , will , as soon as some changes are made , take up his headquarters in the general offices of the Burlington company at Tenth and Parnam streets. It is proposed - posed to give Mr. Manderson two rooms on the east of the building , en suite , with the offices of the general manager , moving the telegraph and claim account offices farther to the north. Until these changes are made Mr. Manderson will continue to occupy his former office over the Omaha Savings bank. Under the terms of his contract with the Burlington - ton Mr. Manderson will d&te his whole time to the law business of tie' Burlington - ton , and will be assisted whenever necessary - essary , by C. J. Greene , who has been connected with the B. & .M. for some 1 years in a legal capacity.-Bee. FREAKS OF NATURE. $ ome Curious Things That Amnne and A. . tonish Men of Science. Nature's freaks of fancy afford a atrango study. People are constantly sending to the National museum supposed - posed fossil animals and other oddities which are in reality mere accidental forms carved by water. A pebble in a stream gathers about itself grains of sand until an odd shaped lump is made. A favorite shape for such lumps is that of a turtle with four legs , a head and tail , even the lines of the shell being - ing sometimes distinct. Similar concretions - tions of carbonate of iron and clay assume - sume the appearance of petrified pea- nuts. Break one , and you will always find aside a small spiral winkle shell , which has served as the nucleus. A queer counterfeit of this kind , forwarded - ed to Washington not long ago , was an alleged fossil foot of a child , with a little - tle stocking on , the latter showing signs of wear on the ball of the foot and on the heel. It was only a concretion , as was likewise what appeared to be a pet- rifled oyster on the shell. One eminent scientist has been amusing - ing himself of late by making imitation spider webs out of quartz fibers. It is well known that copper wire aan be drawn to a fineness much less than the thickness of a hair-in fact , to the diameter - ameter of the one-thousandth pat t of an inch. But glass may be spun finer than copper , while even the finest spun glass is not so flue as silk fiber. The latter , however , is coarse compared with the threads that can be obtained by inciting quartz under a blowpipe and pulling it out. Such threads may be reduced to a thinness of one-millionth of an inch. Drawn to such tenuity , they art ; invisible - ble under a microscope of the 1).ga st power. Yet they arc stronger in proportion tion to their thickness than the best quality of bar steel. Enough thread like this could bo made from a single cubic inch of quartz to go around the world 658 times. A SI'aill 0f sand bagely large l enough to be visible to the naked eye would yield 1,000 miles of thread. Obviously 110 practical nsa can be made of threads so extremely fine. Comparatively coarse ones were woven into cobwebs by the scientist aforesaid. They would not catch flies because tlo , were too slippery , having no gluten on them , like real cobwebs. This difficulty was got over by moistening a straw in castor oil and gently stroking the threads with it ; then the webs captured flies fairly well. But a cobweb is incomplete without a sPider , so it occurred to the I experimenter to attract aui araclmid to his web by the buzzing of a fly. It was difficult to make a fly buzz to order , but a satisfactory imitation was prochiced by permitting a tuning fork to vibrato i against the quartz fibers. This fetched the spider right away. The scientist also amused himself with blowing bubbles of quartz , which looked exactly like I the most beautiful soap bubbles. - . Washington Star. I Sponge Fishing. The Greeks are considered the prin cipal sponge fishers , and it takes much experience , skill and hardihood to quail- fy a man for a first chess place among sponge divers. Many of the most valuable - able specimens are found at a depth varying from 10 to 35 fathoms. To aid in the descent , the divers make use of a triangular stone , with a hole in one cot ner , through which a rope is spliced. On reaching the deep sea gardens , where the rock ledges are clothed with marine growths , the diver , retaining a hold on his rope , dexterously breaks away th9 holdfast of the sponges and places them under his arm until asufficient load has been gleaned , when a pull on the rope signals his cempanirns above that 1)e is ready to ascend , and lie is then hauled to the surface , bearing his ocean treas- ures.-Exchange. Manuscript of "The School For Scandal ? No printed version of "The School For Scandal" was prepared for publication - tion by Sheridan. He always alleged that he could not supply one with which he was perfectly satisfied Yet ho made the attempt , and Mr. Fraser r. , , s discovered the copy containing his final corrections of passages in many scenes , which Moore must have overlooked , the documents at his disposal having recent 1y been put into Mr. Fraser Rae's hands by Sheridan's descendants for the purpose - pose of writing a complete biography of the great dramatist and orator. The manuscript is imperfect , yet enough is extant to show how effectually Sheridan could add a fresh charm to his polished phrases.-London Athenamm. Itulers of Horses and Men. It is instructive to compare the visage - age of the ruler of horses with that of the ruler of men. The horseman's face shows command in the mouth ; the drill sergeant's in the month and the eye The last is undoubtedly the most effective - ive instrument in exacting obedience front our own species. here we t to a hint of the cause of that want , . ; ' - city , that element of coarseness , which is discernable in the countouances of some men and women who have much to do with horses. The higher and no- bier method of expressing authority it outweighed by the lower and more animal - mal one.-Blackwood's Magazine. Are Men Getting More Vain ? A local philosopher , who stakes a practice of observing other people's manners and commenting upon their habits , states that nearly every man now carries a pocket mirror. According to him , this habit has grown immensely of late , and nearly every man can be observed at frequent intervals pulling a glass out of his pocket and looking at the set of his necktie or the appearance of his whiskers.-Philadelphia Call. Out of Order. Little Girl-We has a new baby. Neighbor-You have ? Little Girl-Yes'm , an its eyes open an shut , too , but I guess there's somefing zee matter wif its works , 'cause zee eyes don't always slut when you lay it dowv.-Good News. } I : _ % - , , - 6 Spring Capes. I Li Wee have a sample line of Spring t t Capes to show you. Will be here for two weeks. Call and see them. - I , , , -w'--'d--w tl Ladies' Waists. . t ; ' t a The latest stles . and assortment mu- , , mug fromcent to X5.00 pieces. 3i 3 i 3i i i Serges , Henrietta , Novelty Dress Goods. Large stock t T'affatta ? Jolres , Pongees , I'reucl } Ginghalns , Dimitries. Jaconets , etc. Olie thousand yards o LL illuslin to sell at T cents per yard. # I / I AT TIIE . . . H tvs t n vs fsa i'1 k + r $ - - - - _ . . . L. DiG1LFF & C ® . r \\o7/ \ _ Pt j l G ijJ f , I A x 4' ' d 15 /0J\ Is the Tian Who Sells Fresh . ES. vrv And He Sells Them Right , Too. When you want to buy anything in the Grocery line , Noble is the man you want to see. He keeps the I very best goods and sells them at remarkably low prices. He also carries a magnificent line of Lamps , Queensware of all kinds and Crockery. His line of Hanging and Stand Lamps is undoubtedly the finest in Southwestern Nebraska. Remember the Holiday season is approaching , and no more appropriane present - ent can be imagined than a handsome Lamp or a set of Dishes. You can get them at Noble's. . .Z. . . 1 Go and See 1 Noble He Will I TREAT YOU RIGHT. / , fi