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About The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1895)
. . . . What is 7 JYi ' s- - Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants . : ; ; and Children. It cPntains neither Opium , Morphine nor r . . other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute - = - F ' . . , for ParegoricDrops , Soothing Syrups , and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by 3 J c4 ' Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd , ' cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves _ - teething troubles , cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates the food , regulates the stomach I f and bowels , giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas toria is the Children's Panacea-the Mother's Friend. Castoria , "Castoria is an excellent mrdieine for chll dren. Mothers have repeatedly told iiu of its good effect upon their children ; - Da. G. C. O coon , Lowell , Mass. "Glstorla is the best remedy for children of which 1 am acquainted. I hope the day is not far distant when mothers will consider the real interest of their children , and use Castoria in stead of the variousquack nostnimswhich are destroying their loved ones , by forcing opium , morphine , soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats , thereby sending them to premature graves. " DL J. F. KL.cam os , Conway , Ark. Castoria. "Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend tt as superiortoany prescription known to me. " H. A , ARCRER , M. D. , 111 So. Oxford St. , Brooklyn , N. Y. "Our physlcians in the children's department - ment have spoken highly of their experience - ence In their outside practice with Castoria , and although we only have among our medical supplies what Is known as regular products , yet we dro free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to lock with favor upon it. " UNITED Hosr1T.1L LCD DisPEisany , Boston , Masi. Aus > i C. Serra , Pres. , I , TT Street , New York . II I I The Centaur Company Murray City. I F. D. BURGESS Plumber and Steam Fitter. MAIN AVENUE , MCCOOK , NEB. Stock of Iron , Lead and Sewer Pipe , Brass Goods , Pumps and Boiler . Agent for Halliday , Eclipse and Waupun Wind Mill. ii < TIlE it i < N t FIItST WATIOWAL PAI\IK K . 1. 1.t t , . Authorized Capital $100,000 C pit2dandSurplus 60,000 OFFICERS 2TD DIRECTORS. GEO. HOCKNELL , B. M. FREES , W , F. LAWSON , F. A. PENNELL , Presidenf. V. President. Cashier. Asst Cashier. . A. CAMPBELL. FRANK HARRIS. Gitiz6lls INCORPORATED UNDER STATE LAWS. Paid Up Capital , - $50,000. Surplus , - - - - - 10 000. S DS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS. BUSINESS.t Collections Made on all Accessible Points. Drafts Drawn on all - Principal Cities of Europe. faxes Paid for Non-Residents. iickes or 5a e o a r o Ekiro e OFFICERS. V. FANKLIN , President A. C. EBERT , Cashier. t CORRESPo."rEi rs : The First National Bank , Lincoln , Nebraska. The Chemical National Bank , New York City. Co. , ) o ( s LIME , HARD CEflE iT , DOORS , . t SOFT ' ; IYIND0i4'S , BLINDS. COAL . POSTS. Lt } U. J. WARREN , Manager. I t , . _ _ _ _ _ r ' a j 4 { Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder World's Fair Highest Award. Our stock of Wall I Paper and Paints for spring trade is now complete and we in- vile inspection. Our Prices Guaranteed. MCCONNELL & Co. RED WILLOW. . We are informed that Mr. Helm has an acre of celery planted. Crops are "perking up" and everybody is glad. We don't mind the mud a bit. Mr. Baker has had rather bad luck with his spring crop of pigs , only saving about half of them. We failed to getin our items , last week , therefore the nice entertaii- ment given by Mr. BoYd's school received no mention. It deserved a great deal , however. A nice entertainment was in preparation at the Christian church for Children's day. We presume it was postponed to a more favorable' time. The river canyon "came down" , or the water did , auddrove Nathan Tubbs and sister from their home and destroyed , to some extent , much of their household goods. Mr. Miller's clam in the Willow went out in the freshet , but he won't be likely to need it , as it never rains in Nebraska , but it pours. No more dams or irrigating - ing ditches necessary for this season. June 4th , Mr. Holland's meadow and Mr. Helm's low ground is all under water. The dams in the Willow are all out , and Mr. Tubbs and family owe their deluge of water to the break in a dam up the canyon. Their escape from drowning was narrow. Water , water , everywhere. Knipple is headquarters for garden seeds of all kinds. Call and see his supply and get his prices before laying in your stock for spring planting. Kuipple is headquarters for bulk seeds. Don't fail to consult him before buying your swing supply. We are just in receipts of a new supply of tablets and box papers , memorandums , etc. Knipple is headquarters for bulk seeds. Don't fail to consult him before buying your spring supply. 20,000 sweet potato plants for sale at Hnipple's on June 8th. White Pine Cough Syrup-by McMillen , druggist. 20,000 sweet potato plants for sale at Knipple's , June 8th. 1 NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALE. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of a chattel mortgage dated on the 27th day of March , 1894 , executed by E. W. Harps to the CitizensBank of McC k to secure the payment ofthesumof $43.00 , and upon which there is now due the sum of $43.00 , with interest at the rate of io per cent. per annum from June 27th , 1894 , default having been made in the payment of said sum , and ito suit or other proceedings at law having been instituted to recover said debt or any part therecftherefore we will sell the property therein described , viz : One black stallion , weighing about 1,700 pounds , at public auction at the livery barn of Clark & Bowen in the city of McCook , Nebraska on the 22d day of June , I , at ne o'clock p. m. of said day. 1 Dated , May 28th , 1895. THE ITIZENS BANK OF McCOOK 4-31.4ts. Mortgagee. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Land Office at McCook , Neb. , May 28 , 1895. Notice is hereby given that the following- named settler hated notice of his intentin i to make final homestead proof in support of his claim , and that said roof will be made before Register or Receiver at McCook , Neb- raskaonSaturdayJuly6th,1895viz : Thomas Pinkerton , who made Homestead Entry Number - ber 9158 , for the east half of the southwest quarter and the west half of the southeast 't quarter of section ten ( [ o ) , in township four 4) ) , north of range twenty-nine (29) ( ) ; west of the sixth (6th ( ) principal meridian. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous - ous residence upon , and cultivation of , said 1 land , viz : Ira Harrison , Alexander W. Campbell , Stephen Belles , H. B. Anderson , all of Box Elder , Nebraska. s 4.31-6ts. A. S. CAMPBELL , Register. BUCKLEN'S ARNICA SALVE The best salve in the world for cuts , bruises , sores , ulcers , salt nccgm , fever sores , tetter , chapped hands , chilblains , corns and all skin eruptions , and positively cures piles or no pay required. It is guaranteed to re perfect 1 satisfaction or money refunded. rice - cts. 1 per box. For sale by McMillen. t Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. a . . C . . . -wow. . . .e.usws m. > M- ' - if T SOME GREAT WOMEN WHO WERE PRECOCIOUS CHILDREN. Some Notable Examples Which Go to Prove That Ability Is Apt to Beveal Itself as Early With Girls as With Boys-Some of Them Had to Strugglr. "I wonder if most ; famous women were as ambitio s and gave signs of future - ture greatness , . their early youth as famous men ? " asked a thoughtful looking - ing girl , dropping her book , "Tho Lives of the Great Musicians , " in whicth with delight she had been reading of the boy Mozart. "Most great women have been pre. cocious , " answered her aunt , whose busy brain possessed the charming faculty - ulty of storing up all manner of interesting - esting information against a rain of questions from her cli ver niece. "Let us go back to that sweetest character in English history , Lady Jane Grey , and we will find she was only 13 years old when that learned scholar and fine gentleman - tleman , Roger Ascham , found her reading - ing Plato's 'P1Ia don' in the original Greek while the rest of the family were off on a hunting party. But it was not with a knowledge of Greek little Lady Jane was satisfied. She spoke French , Latin and Italian fluently , writing them also , and translated easily from Hebrew , Chaldee and Arabic. When her father took her to court , they found with astonishment - tonishment that this demure country bred girl was a far finer scholar than young Edward 'VI , then a clever boy under the first tutors in England. Yet with all her knowledge of literature and languages Lady Jane embroidered charmingly , saris to several instruments that she played very well , danced and wrote easily and gracefully. "Felicia Hemans published her first collection of poems when she was only 14. "Angelica Kaufman , the beautiful woman and gifted artist , who painted the portraits of royalties , when only 11 used her brush far better than her father - ther , who was an artist by profession. "Mme. Roland never remembered when she learned to read , for at 4 years of ago she was greedily perusing any books that came to her hand. Dancing and music she readily acquired , but geography and Latin were her favorite studies. As a girl of 7 showould eagerly - ly rise at 5 o'clock in the morning to get to her books , and so dearly did she love reading she carried her volume of 'Plutarch's Lives' to church when she was 11 years old and secretly read it during the long prayers. "There is not a more touching story of a child's quick 1uiud starved of its proper food than Caroline Herschel. Her mother was a stupid woman , who kept her daughter purposely so busy about household work she could neither study nor practice on her violin she dearly - ly loved and in which her father wished to instruct her. It was with an aching heart and tearful eyes Caroline plied her needle , while her father and his sons held their little family concerts in which the girl longed to join. She begged - ged to be allowed to study French with her brother , and dancing also , but this her mother forbade , though her gentle , clever father was anxious his Caroline should have a goad education. It was not until later in life , when her beloved brother William , the great astronomer , sent for her to join him in England , she had any opportunity to exercise her fine mind. "Mary Somerville says that as a little - tle girl she had averybad memory , and at 10 years of ago was sent to a boarding - ing school , where the chief lesson for each day was a page of Johnson's Dictionary - tionary committed to memory. She never excelled at school , and yetathome no one sympathized a little later with her desire to study Latin except an uncle - cle , who gave her some valuable in- structiou. She was very much interested in two celestial globes the village schoolmaster taught her to use , and yet , on the whole , she was rather in awe of the big constellations , whose brightness reminded her of lightning , of which she was desperately afraid. At length she persuaded her brother's tutor to buy her au algebra and Euclid , which she studied at night until her mother , in horror at the idea of a girl wasting time on studies meant for boys , deprived ier of a candle to read by , and her father - ther feared she might go crazy. It was long after that she really found the courage - age and sympathy to take up her great studies in earnest. "It was as a pianist George Eliot waa noted at her school , and with the most amazing ease she acquired languages , yet as a very little girl she showed no great promise , much preferring a romp with her brother to her books. "Fannie Burney , who is also known as Mme. d'Arblay , published her first and cleverest novel when she was only 15 , and yet she was 8 years' old before earning her alphabet and scarcely received - ceived any regular education at all. "Rachel , you must remember , was a girl just turned into her teens when she borrowed a volume of Racine from a Jewish peddler in old clothes. On ng the great French tragedies she deg tided to become an acress , and this poor , pretty little Jewess , the youngest I of seven children , who had began life as a street singer , on her second appearance - ance on the French stagewas greeted as great genius. So , you see , my dear , ability isapt to reveal itself as early with girls as boys , and these are a very , very few of the world's great women who eyed books in the nursery and gave the mast glorious promise while still in aort frocks.-Chicago Inter Ocean. I 3ressenger Girls. i And now there is talk of substituting girls for boys at the district telegraph offices. At the Chicago headquarters of one of these companies the matter is be- ng seriously considered , and the exper- ment will undoubtedly be made. If he change becomes permanent and general - eral , the humorous writers w ill have to harpers their pencils for a new theme - Y , 17. - f Y ' . . gn , v + . 4RaPAS t. . , N' Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorsa A VALUABLE FIND. After years of study and labor there has at last been discovered a sure and never-failing remedy. It has been tested on patients who have despaired of ever being curets , and the results have been m every case wonderful. Goff's rheumatic cure is unequaled as a positive - tive remedy in all cases of chronic and acute inflammatory rheumatism , gout , lumbago , sct- atica and neuralgia ; especially ovarian neuralgia - ralgia , d smenorrbu a and all kindred affec- tions. It is also a valuable blood purifier , being - ing especially useful in eczema , psoriasis , scrofula , all glandular enlargements and diseases - eases of the liver and kidneys. It is absolutely - lutely free from all narcotics. Severe attacks are relieved in from one to three days and a positive cure effected in from five to eighteen days. For sale by McConnell & Co. 3.29.3m. SEE THE WORLD'S FAIR FOR 15 CENTS. Upon receipt of your address and 15 cents in postage stamps we will mail you prepaid our Souvenir I'ortttolio of the 1Vorld's Colunt- bian Exposition , the regular price of which is fifty cents , but as we want you to have one w e 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 is 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 H. E. Bucklen & Co. , Chicago , Illinois. Is the truthful and startling DON'T title of a book about No-To- TOBACCO Bac , the harmless , guaran- SPI'1' OR teed tobacco habit cure that SMOKE braces u t the nicotinized YOUR LIFE nerves eliminates nicotine AWAY poison , makes weak men regain strength , vigor and manhood. You rim no physical or financial risk , as No To Bac is sold by druggists everywhere - where under a guarantee to cure or money refunded. Book free. Address Sterling Remedy - dy Co. , New York or Chicago. -t r. Sold b McConnell Co McCook , b. 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 et a trial bottle free. Send your name and address to 1-I. E. Bucklen S Co. , Chicago , and get a sam ple box of Dr. King's C\ew Life Pills free , as well as a copy of Guide to Health and I louse- hold Instructor , free. All of which is guaranteed - teed to do ynu good and costs you nothing. At MCMillen's Drug Store. When Baby was sick , we gave her Castorla. When she was a Child , she cried for Castoria. Then she became 31fss , she clung to Castoria. When she had Children , she gavethem Castoria. Children Cry tor Pitchers Castoria. CARSON & TAYLOR , Proprietors of the. . . A SUNNY . SIDE DAIRY. - - - y- We respectfully solicit your business , and guarantee pure milk , full measure , and prompt , courteous service. ELMER ROWELL , Real Estate , Collections , Insurance MCCOoiC NEBRASKA. T Notary Public. East Dennison street. ' S. GORDBA1 , V v . I : Notary Public , : Reliable , insurance , Collection Agent. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I J. S. I + feBRAYBR PROPRIETOR OF TILE 7 . c oo Transfer Line. BUS , BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS. 'Only furniture van in the city. Also have a first class house moving outfit. Leave oi'ders for bus calls at Commercial hotel or at office opposite the depot. Chase Co I land and live Mock Co i I . a Horses branded on left hip or left shoulder. P 0. address Imperial. Chase county , and Beatrice - rice , Nebraska. Range. Stinking Water and the Frenchman creeks , in Chase county. Nebraska. Brand as cut on aldeof some anfmatson hip and sides of some , or anywhere - where on the animal. . , I I t n a I - . .I 11' pU FORA LIMITED TIME A HANDSOME 1 ! kather ! I I. I I Docket s ( ICase I 1 FREE . 1N EKCt1AriGE FOR 10 TEK CEKT PAQER TACS TP'S 't FROM , JPER. . t * a I HEIPSUG II TOBACCO I CHAMPAGNE FLAVOR 11 , e American Tobacco Ca l NEw YORK , f I. . 1 . ' 1,11 ws Lr DOUGLAS 'I 1 S3SHOE ISTHE BEST. _ FIT FOR AKING. } ' 9 CO R DOVAN if FRENCH&ENAMELLWCALF. ' 1 , , FNECAIF&KANQARaa ( $3.PPOICE,3soLEs. ( , t $ . WORKING 25O$2. r -EXTRA FINC , I " " s2.I75BOYS'SCHOOISHOE3. f < , , -LADIES. $3. B Es T DONGotq , f , SEND FOR CATALOGU E z , , , , L DOUG . BROCiCT01'l5. 1 Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes . All ourshoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value for the money. They equal custom shoes in style and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform---stamped on 5010. From $ t to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply youwe ctn. Soldby / r DEALER whose tiame will shortly appear - pear here. Agents wanted. / Apply at once. I Ra A.'OJO LE LEAVING 1 TAILOR 1 , OF McCOOK , has just received a new stock of CLOTHE and TRIMMINGS- you want a good f1J- ting suit made at the very lowest prices for good work , call on him. Shop first door west f of Barnett's Lumber Office , on Dennison street. street.MCMILLER' MCMILLER' BROS. 1 DEALERS IM 1t Haroess&Saddlery airing Promltl ) Y Attended to. East Dennison St , McCook , Neb. JuLIUS KUN ERT Carpet Laying , ' sl Carpet Cleaning. : : i-I am still doing carpet laying , carpet : leaning , lawn cutting and similar work. See or write me before giving such work. My char es are very reasnabl. Leave orders l'RIRIJNE office. JULIUS KUNER:1' . W. V. GAGE , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON MCCooK , NEBRASKA. ' 'Office hours-9 to it a. nt. , 2 to 5 and to 9 p. in. Rooms-Over the First National bank. Night calls answered at the office. J. A. GUNN , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON McCooK , NEBRASKA. -Office-Over G A. Leach's jewelry store. Residence-lot Main street. Prompt atten 1 ion given to all calls. I AUSTIN J. RITTENHOUSE , , ATTORN EY AT' LAW McC0oK , NEBRASKA. r Office-Over the Famous clothing store. CHARLES H. BOYLE , ' ATTORNEY AT LAW McCooK , NEBRAsK.t. ° Office-In Phillips-Meeker building. J. E. KELLEY , f ATTORNEY AT LAW McCo0K , NEBRASKA. ' 'Agent of Lincoln Land Co. Office- i ' tear of First National bank. t - J. B. BALLARD , ' - I 0 DENTIST. O All dental work done at our office is guar- nteed to be first-class. We do all kinds of I Cmw n , Bridge and Plate Work. Drs. Smith : Bellamy , assistants. f i MRS. E. E. UTTER , MUSICAL INSTRUCTOR. . piano , Organ , Guitar and Banjo. VOICE TRAINING A SPECIALY. 1 'Studio-Comer of Dodge and Madison sts. .4