I . - " . : . . . . . . . 1..5. . . . . . . .S. . w , a f + We : are not going to leavetown--nor do we . ' * ' sell shoddy goods. , i f. . . . \ : ear is e. . a we se will e , uaran- : teed o e as represented. ! . . SPEdIALI We have placed on sale 10 dozens of Fine Kid Gloves 4 large buttons with C > fancy stitched back ; superb assortment of nosy colors. This quality should A PAIR. sell for $1.00 to $1.25. Our price 75c. A PAIR. . MEN'S ' . U N DERWEAR. S 0 One case , 20 dozens , direct front the j 0 a hills , Natural , Wool Underwear. . . . . i A SUIT. A SUIT , I , . Ladies' ' Winter UnderWear. As a great special we offer 20 dozens r Earn . Heavy Fleeced Vests and Drawers - ers , vests have silk taped necks , drawers - a ers are full'size. , . EACH EACH. Jackets1 An Extra Heavy Quality , All-Woof , $4 $ 40 Chinchilla Jacket , Mandolin sleeves and Iarge buttons at $4.40 . , worth $8.00. . . . . . . . . : Ji.'OW1iThIU $ C . r I P Dry Goods , Carpets , Millinery. . . . n.TTTV. T. I i IJ Fa CANSCHOWJ THE OLD RELIABLE BOOT AND SHOE DEALER. ' ' ! o NOt _ pp000 a ° .0 1 . 0 u 0 0 . o o o/ o ° / o p = ° At'ifAD R r'ASNiON ire ro . .1 tin OECL1 RE AS or. VOICE- phi . r , , 1'HRT 1JERR RESISTERS. . 0 , . . 'f ° ' ( FoFtFoo1'/C11g1 - - . _ _ . OJ .o I IS1HEIRF IRS : cHOtcE. * ° p . . .0 + 0 v ro r q J B-EtJiSC oti o I 8,0570 N , , ° ro ° t o : 'o , o tir oo o 000 / ° ° ° Iltt t l Good Suggestioll Is like a crying baby at a public meeting , it , , H Ought to be Carried . Out : Those J. B. Lewis Shoes are suggestive of all that Pertains to Style , Fit and Good Wearing Qualities at a Reasoltable Price. H r' t Pair THEY ABE SOLD BY-OF COURSE YOU KNOW , .I CANSCHOW , y I ; , . THE OLD RELIABLE BOOT AND SHOE DEALER t li - . " 4XiWFfo la" ± , t. _ , , _ Y r 7 RAILROAD NEWS DEPARTMENT. l J _ . , . . , , r. , , , , . . . . , , . , . , . . . . . . TJ.M : TRLIZ . 0OIN0 EAST-I Y.NIRAL.TIUE--LEAVF. : No , 2 , through passenger. : . . . . . . . 5:55 A. b1. No. 4 , local passenger. . . . . . . . . . . 9:66 P. M. No. 76 , freight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:45 A. M No. 64 , . 4:30 A. M No. 80 , freight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16:00 A. M. No. 148 , freight , made up bere. . . . . . 5:00 A. M. GOING WEST-MnUNTA1N TIME-LEAVES. No. 3 , through passenger..11:4o P. M. No. 5 , local tasseengor. . . . . . . . . . . 6:15 P. DI. No. 63 , freight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:06 P. M. No. 77 , rrelght. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 : P.M. No. 149 , freight , made up here . . . . . 6:00 A. M. IMPERIAi. LINE.-MOUNTAIN TIME. No. 175 , leaves at. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:00 A. M. No. l i0 arrives it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:40 P. , M. 2 NnTE-Nn. 03 earn rs passengers for Stratton. Ilenkelmnn and Haigler. All trains run dally exceplhlg 148.149 and 170 , which run daily exeepL 9nnday. No. 3 stops at aenkelinan and tVray. No. 2 stops at Indianola. Cambridge and Ar- apahne. No. 80 will curry passengers for Indianola. Cambridge and Arapehoo. Nos.4.5.148.149 and 176carry passengers for all stations. When No. So is annulled No. 14S will leave at 8 oo a. m. central time You cao purchase at this nfee tlekltts to al principal pohlts in the United States and Canada - ada and baggage eheckwl through to destination - tion without extra charge of transfer. For information regarding rites. i Io , cull on or address O. E MARNEIt. Agnetl C oca e 's. L J. H. Moore has been laying off ; this week. Mrs. C. A Dixon returned home from Denver , last night on 4. George Brening is down from Slieri- day , Wyoming , on a visit. Assist. Supt. E. F. Highland was clown from Denver on Wednesday. James Kendlen was the guest of his brother Frank , close of last week. The snow fences are being repaired and placed in position for the winter. These are record breaking times for locomotives aswell as for bikes and horses. Sant Giidner moved his household effects to Haigler , this week. He is agent at that station. Mrs. David Magner returned home on Tuesday evening , from a visit to her mother at Holdrege. Mrs. J. E. Sanborn arrived home , last week , from Prophetstown , Illinois , after an absence of a few weeks. That was a dirty Irish trick in Syl. Cordeal-swiping little Dick Carroll's whole check , last pay clay. It is not the intention to put the new class k enginesnow building at Havelock into service until after the new year. C. A. Dixon and daughter Edna went up to Denver , last Thursday evening , returning home on Sunday evening o : : No. 4. The round house at Alliance will shortly have the highest brick smokestack - stack in western Nebraska-loo feet high. . Mrs. J : A. Tuhbs of Sheridan , 1Vyo- tiling , says the Alliance , Neb. , Grip , has gone to Corning , Iowa , on a visit to rel- atives. There was a slight freight wreck at Oxford , last Friday night. Damage was inconsiderable. Ed. Callen was conductor - tor of the train. Frank Harris returned from Denver , Sunday night , much improved in health , and it is hoped on the road to permanent - manent and complete recovery. Mrs. James Roonev of Hastings and Mrs. Delia Collins of Creston , Iowa , departed - parted for home , last night on 4. They have been the guests of Conductor and Mrs. Frank Kendlen. L. B. Stiles was in Alliance , close of last week , in the interestof the Crabtree packing the invention of Thomas Crab- tree of our city : Two locomotives of the Wyoming division are equipped with the packing. No. So met with a damaging mishap , early Thursday morning , on Schramm's hill. The freight broke in two and the sections coming together with great force caused a bad smash up. The wrecker and crew have not returned from the scene of the accident. Supt. J. R. Phelan of Alliance arrived in the city , last Friday night , on matters of business , remaining here until Sunday evening. Supt. Phelan numbers friends and admirers in McCook by the score , and they are always pleased to welcome him upon his occasional visits to the city. city.We We are in receipt of a brief epistle from Dr. Odell of Los Angeles , Califor- ma , in which he regrets not having the wood to send on subscription , but makes up for the lack by remitting a draft. The genial doctor explains the numer- otis changes of address on the theory that it is cheaper to move than to pay rent. "California is all 0. K. " he writes , "but McCook is good enough for me" . l R. R. News. The boiler of a steam shovel on the Canadian Pacific railroad exploded , recently - cently , wrecking the machine. A railroad will be built at once from Flagstaff , Arizona , to the Grand Canyon of the Colorado river , a distance of So miles. The Chicago Tines-Herald states that the railroads running into that city have , this year , bought I5,0o0 freight cars and i6o locomotives. ' The Boston and Maine road gives away , annually , $820 in prizes to agents who make the best display of flowers and cleanliness about their respective station grounds. . - ) - 1 R' wAS J ASa w The Bozeman tunnel on the Northern Pacific in Montana is still burning. Sev. eral falls of the roof are known to have occurred , and the tunnel is probably badly injured. In the laboratory of the C. , B. & Q. at Aurora a series of tests are being con- dut.tcd on stay bolts to determine the number of bending strains they can stand before , breaking. The usual car famine when the west has good crops is beginning to show up. The C. , M. & St. P. claim to have 28,000 cars of their own and several thousand more under lease and still claim to be 1,200 cars short. In Great Britain during 1894 there were 1,115 persons killed and 4,120 injured - jured iu railway accidents. The proportion - tion of passengers killed and injured to the total number carried was r in 7,789- 854 and I in 780,319 respectively. England and Wales on December3rst , 1894 , had 9,281 ] miles of double track , Scotland had 1,289 miles , while Ireland had 613 miles , a total of 11,183 miles for the United Kingdom , of which : 1r,168 miles are worked by the absolute block system. At a recent meeting in Deaver the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers , Order of Locomotive Firemen , Order of Railway Conductors , Order of Railway - way Trainmen and Order of Railway Telegraphers decided to amalgamate according - cording to the Cedar Rapids plan. Here is a lucky accident : An engine lately on the C. , St. P. , M. & 0. road came in off of a long run , went to the coal chute and across the turn table into the round house , when one of her main driving wheels 'fell ' off. The axle was broken squarely off at the wheel hub. A fast passenger train on the Pennsylvania - vania was passing Manor station , Pa , October 9th , one of the cars jumped the the track , pulling the next car with it , wrecking then : both. 25 passengers were injured more or less and one man standing - ing near the track at the time was killed. The Populist railroad , known as the Gulf & Interstate , after many vicissitudes - tudes , has 31 miles of road built in Texas. Cars and two engines have been ordered and operations will begin , November - ember 15th , from Beaumont to Point Bolivarthe terminus of the road opposite Galveston. General Manager Merrill of the C. , B. & Q is reported as saying that the fast ) nail train on the Burlington uakes a higher speed than the Empire State express - press of the New York Central. It runs from Chicago to Council Bluffs , Iowa , daily , 500 miles , in io hours , and the time lost in running through city limits and stopping at railroad crossing and changing engines , when deducted , makes tle actual speed of the train when in motion 62 miles an hour. The Burlington has put into service a new engine on tlte fast mail between Omaha and Chicago that promises to be something of a record breaker. The engine is No. 590 and has justbeen given its trial tests at Galesburg , and is being used for a few days on passenger trains between Chicago and Galesburg and will then be put in the fast mail service. On the trial trips the engine , attached to four cars , made a mile in forty-three seconds - ends , and on longer distances struck and maintained a speed of sixty-six miles an hour. In spurts it made an average of seventy-six miles an hour , and when once in active service is expected to furnish - nish some records in fast time. Lumber rates are to be restored on November 4th , hard coal rates on November - vember 11th , and grain rates are to be strictly maintained on and after Novem. ber 4tli. This restoration of rates is the resultof a meetingof the western freight agents. The meeting refused to put the hard coal rates back to $3.25 , the old tariff , but agreed that after November 1ithi no less a rate than $2 to the Missouri - souri river and $2.5oto Sioux City should be made. Some fifty votes were necessary - sary before the coal question was finally settled and the struggle took up the better - ter part of two days. The rate clerks met , yesterday , to check the rates on the new basis.-State Journal. The railroad managers may be able to figure out a gain in their receipts if they put the proposed excess baggage charge on bicycles after November 1st , but they must not be too cock sure about it. A man who is going to take his bicycle on a comparatively long journey may not object to a small tariff on his wheel. The objection will come from the large number - ber of riders who are in the habit of making short runs by wheel , returning by train. In many cases a charge of 25 cents on the wheel would double the cost of such an excursion. Instead of going one way by train the riders would make the whole trip on their bicycles and not contribute a penny to the coffers of the railroads. The bicycle is a very attractive and a rather fast vehicle. It is so attractive , in fact , that the railroads cannot afford to antagonize is riders. They are independent enough of the railroads already. Whea Baby was sick , we gave her Castorla. When she was a child , she cried for Castoria. When she became ? Lis s , she clung to Castorla. When she had Children , she gavethem Castoria. IF TROUBLED WITH RHEUMATISM READ THIS ANNAPOLIS , Md. , April :6 , 1894.- ! have used Chamberlain's Pain Balm for rheumatism - tism and found it to be all that is claimed for it. I believe it to be the best preparation for rheumatism and deep seated muscular pains on the market and cheerfully recommend it to the public. ] NO. C. Baooxs , dealer in boots , shoes , etc. , No.1S Main St. ALSO READ TIES. MECHANICSVILLE , St. Mary County. Md.-I sold a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm tea a man who had been suffering with rheumatism - tism for several years. It made him a well man. A..MCGILl. . Forsaleat o cents a bottle by McConnell .C Co. . druggists. / 4 . , ' . I . ' . t t 4 . F 9 i 11 CLOTHING. , A11 g1'ades of CLOTIIING have beeii reduced 25 1W ' cetit within the , past year. We have sAlendid values { 111 Men's Shits from $3.50 to $15.00. Overcoats front $5.00 to $15.00. i challenge consParisou. Be , careful. Don't be "taken in" with Shoddy and Shop Worn Stuff before ' you have etaminel our stock and iiI ii I 1 heard our prices. Boys' and Child- 1 ells Stilts , fi om 75e. to . 12 a suit , i t 1. OLOAK I9Oul' ; Cloaks ai11(1 Capes a.n(1. Clzii- t dren's Cloaks are going fast ; but we , still have a good assortment of cor- feet styles. Look at them before you 1)tl3 , UNDERWEAR. Our Underwear ( le1)a1'tonent has proved a winner. e still have Illo1' ( ' to select fi'oni than all other stores ill IIcCooh co'viilitll , . BLANKETS - gvi11 treed blankets ; ) ow. We have the best values ever SIHW1I at 50c. $5.O ( ) , pair. r f CARPETS. Over 100 samples tor ; select from. At 37'c , to : ' ' 1.25 a 3rd. Cut IitI made. GRO OERIE . e have exclusive sale in i ieook of Chase & Sanborli's coffee.ri'r r u s on other things ill this hue. You can save money. AT TIDE . . . Jj 4 icar9cuH - ' . l Stare. . - . . . , C. L. DEGROFF & CO. i People ' . I V Who V Write--------- - - - - - - - - - Might as well get something - thing that's neat and stylish - ish tas to buy something ' , that isn't. + e : + . What's the use of buying - / ing a poor article when + you can get The Best for the same money r The Tribune Office. . . . o + r.F Trythat 15 ceutbox paper at THE Ti iBuxE office. Worth 25 cts. Also cheaper grales. Read the best county - ty newspaper--that's The McCook Tribune every time. , . 'I. . .yy. _ r y- NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Land Office at McCook , Neb. , Oct. 23 , 1895. Notice is hereby given that the following- named settler has bled notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim , and that said proof will be made before register - ister or receiver at McCook , Nebraska , on Friday , November 29th , 1895 , viz : Eugene Flower , who made homestead entry number 89:6 , for the northwest quarter of section 18 , township 5 , north of range 2S , west of the 6th principal meridian. lie names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of , said land , viz : Cyrus Blake , Santford T. Goddard , Charles Blake , Frank Boyd , all of Box Elder , Nebraska. Oct. 25 6ts. A. S. CAMPBELL , Register. -4