sWsWsHHMBWBBWsWbWMI r * * II F.H. KIMMELL , III McCOOK , NEB. In Printer III AND II Stationer. Hi if HS Mi H H * m | i publisher or J I'i ANU DKALKU IN II Legal Blanks Kill 11 Note BOOKS , Hi ! I | | Receipt ; Books , l | Scale BOOKS. m a BBBBBK ? • ! ' N" Office Supplies HIfI AND I STATIONERY If H leg OF ALL KINDS. bbbbbbbbbbH I eJ 1 , TRINE OFFICE , H | A FIRST BOOB NORTH OF - * THE POSTOFFICK , McCOOK , - NEBRASKA. ouc or Arc Before the Judge : . ! The questions addressed to Joan and ber answers day by day have been trans- 4' mitted in the records of t'he court. To ' § read them is to understand the brutal K | ferocity with which she was tortured , fl until , turning on her accuser , she cried : if "You call yourself my judge. Be care- H | ful what yon do , for I am indeed sent § toy the Lord , and you place yourself in R | great danger. " BrJ To answers almost sublime succeeded ff answers filled with naive ingenuity. HI Questions were plied , traitorously con- bbbbbbbKI & " * * " t ceived , concerning the visions which J r had come to her and the celestial voices ti which she heard and which throughout _ , her mission had counseled and guided B ' her. But on this point she was firmly Ip silent. It was as-though it were a se- H [ cret which she was forbidden to betray. H She consented to take an oath to speak B nothing but the truth ; but , concerning H her visions , she made a reservation , H "Yon could cut my head off before I B would speak , " she protested. At night , B i ' " - * in tjie darkness of her dungeon , St. H H -Catherine and St Margaret appeared Bi -to her , and celestial voices comforted j ! her. She avowed that she had seen BJ them "with the eyes of her body * * * B and when they leave me , " she added , B "I wish that they would take me with B -them. " "Tho National Hero of BBBb Prance , " by Maurice Bontet deMonvel , B in Century. BBBft * Block Inland. B The hum of the spinning wheel ia BBf still a familiar goundou Block island , a Bi quaint and interesting resort in summer j I ' B' and a miniature world in winter , in B which the habits and customs are those B of 150 years ago. The island is 15 miles BBBj off ( ho Rhode Island shore and almost B ] directly south of stormy Point Judith. BH There are times during the winter B j when the wind sweeps across the fcree- B I ' Jess land at a velocity of 84 miles an B 1 honr , and women take their lives in ' B jjj their hands when they venture out of fl n doers. The isolation of the island is al- H | most complete. Hl John Schoflcld established the first H $ -woolen mill in Connecticut near Oak- Hf dale , where the carding was done by HBf power cards. In 1708 the Block island- H $ ers began to send wool to the mill to be H $ carded into rolls , and generation after DI generation have kept up the practice. DL , < Formerly many bags of grain accompa- Ub nied the wool , and grist and woolen B mills were kept running day and night , K while the fishermen and farmers enjoy- HI od themselves in the quiet Connecticut HK village until the work was done. New HL York Herald. BBBBBBBBB3 BBBfll & ? ± i > v * * 3B - - • • < ,69 * i'l ? * BBBBi ] mww rw " "T , - ' * _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , . . , 'i"l'r' " ' ' BB wwi.ai in i > 'W 'i"l- " " ' ! ' 'j BBBJB _ j v * - * r • 1 I • COLONIAL DELICACIES. TkaaksjrtviBg DIaties That Tickled the I'alste * of Our Forefather * . In later days , when the colonies had just finished the war of the Revolution , the Thanksgiving dinner was not con fined to a consumption of turkey. Tbero were other dainties considered to be finer than turkey. The royal roast geese was a great favorite with the colonial dames who prided themselves upon their cookery. Epicures of the modern school all know that the delicate flavor of the prize canvasback duck is due to the fact that it feeds largely upon juniper ber ries , and iho colonial ladies displayed rare knowledge when they flavored the dressing of the goose with these berries. Another Thanksgiving dish highly prized by colonial epicures was ham baked in cider , and if the sumo delicacy were prepared today it might make the fortune of some ambitious chef. This is the way it was done u hundred years ago : Wipe a whole ham clenn and put in a baking pan , Fkin side down and over the flesh side sprinkle one-half a teaspoonful - spoonful each of pepper , cloves and all spice and one-quarter of a teaspoonful of mace and cover all with a little onion juice. Into the bottom of the pan put a sprig of celery , two bay leaves and a slice of onion. Put a cap of flour in a bowl and add sufficient water to make a paste , cover the ham with the paste as far down as the skin and then turn into the pan two quarts of cider. Put in a hot oven and cook for 8 J > hours , basting every 15 minutes. When cooked , take off the crust , turn over and take off the skin and put in another pan with the fat side up. Brush over with a beat en egg , sprinkle with chopped parsley and bread crumbs and bake in a hot oven for one hour , when it will bo ready to serve. San Francisco Examiner. Boiled Turkey. Many old fashioned cooks and some of the now fashioned consider that the proper way to cook a turkey is to boil it. To do this singe , draw and wash the turkey thoroughly , wipe with a soft cloth and rub the inside with salt. Make a stuffing cf one quart of bread crumbs , a tablespoonful of butter , salt , pepper and chopped parsley and mix the in gredients together with an egg. Fill the breast of the fowl with some of this , stuffing and put the remainder into the body. Tie the legs and wings close to the body and place it in salted boiling water with the breast downward. Boil rapidly the first half hour , then draw it to the back of the stove and cook slowly until tender. Serve with celery or chest nut sauce. If oysters chopped are used in the stuffing , servo with an oyster sauce. An old fashioned custom was to serve ham or smoked tongue with a boiled turkey. Exchange. Dr. Depew Favors Southern Cooking. Chauncey Depew actually licked hifl chops when asked ahout his Thanksgiv ing dinner. "Givo mo , " he said , "a bird from my Hudson river farm cooked by an old mammy from Virginia. No one bnt a southern darky can cook a turkey. A colored woman knows how to spice up the animal until it tastes like a drop of sweet nectar , and she un derstands getting it rich and done. Give mo ole mammy's cooking every time. We used to have au old mammy so lazy she wouldn't move , but when it came to Thanksgiving time she'd rouse her self and cook a turkey to the taste of the queen , or to my own taste quite as critical a one. " Selected. A Reminder of the Fathers. Thanksgiving day comes with its an nual reminder of the fathers , who in the midst of their poverty and distress thanked God for their blessings and had hope for the future. It is the self sacrifice - ' fico of one generation that constitutes the prosperity of the next. The rock .1 , Plymouth is no stony bowlder to ba' shielded from rough contact by a mar- j ble canopy. It is rather a sure faith in the supreme obligations of duty and of personal character as the main element of durable success. Independent. Tliankssiving Bounty. One of the benign results of the ob servance of Thanksgiving day is the en couragement it gives to public benevo lence. While it is a day set apart for the acknowledgment of national , family. . and personal blessings , every American is taught from childhood that on this day he must share the loaf , feed the hungry and give ear to the cry of dis tress. The significance of the day is lost to those who appropriate it solely for personal gratification and selfish enjoy ment Exchange. A Thanksgiving Thought. There is something lacking in the sincerity of the man who goes into the temple on Thanksgiving day to ac knowledge the good gifts of Providence to him if he has done nothing through the year or on this day to uplift his felJ J lows , to bring sunshine into sunless , hearts and to distribute in some measure , the benefactions which we all hold in trust for the benefit of the helpless sons and daughters of men. Selected. Chestnut Sauce For Boiled Turkey. Shell and blanch three dozen French chestnuts. Boil in water enough to cover them for 30 minutes. Drain off the water and pound the nuts to a paste. . Add a tablespoonful of salt and a dash of cayenne pepper. Stir gradually into the paste a pint of milk. Rub the mixj j ture throngh a coarse puree sieve and place over the fire in a double boiler to cook for half an hour. Selected. New England Pumpkin Pie. Take a firm pumpkin , pare , cut up and stew until dry. To a quart of stewed pumpkin add a cup of molasses , a cup of sugar , the beaten yolks of 6 eggs , half a cup of butter , a pint of milk , half a teaspoonful each of ground ginger and cinnamon , with a pinch of salt. Mix well and pour into deep pie pans lined i with puff paste. Bake in a well heated oven. Eliza R. Roper. 1 . . - jT - i i i i I An Imitative XmIm ? . Ono of the drollest instances of tfee monkey's keenness of observation and power of mimicry that we have met with is the following : A retired admi ral and Us vifc living at Cheltenham hud a favorite ixoukey. One day the lady , hearing a strange noise in the dining room , looked in to see what it was. The sight which met her eyes was a ludicrous one. Seated in the arm chair , with the admiral's smoking cap on his head and the admiral's specta cles on his nose , was the monkey , and in his hand was the open newspaper , which he shook and patted , while ho jabbered and gesticulated with great emphasis at the cut , which lay blinking on the hearth rug. It was a clever and carefully studied imitation of the testy old admiral's tone and manner when reading to bis wife some passage from the newrpappr which excited his wrath or indignation. It is strange that so little attempt is made to utilize this strong imitative faculty in monkeys. They might easily be trained to perform as athletes and acrobats. Some 50 years ago an Italian count , who had a villa on the shore of Luke Albano , kept a monkey which ho had taught both to row and sail a small skiff. The monkey used to navigate this tiny craft with great skill , but unfor tunately one day , when climbing the mast , ho capsized the boat and was j drowned. As jockeys , monkeys might surely bo made useful and would fulfil every purpose for which the manikins who ride on rare horses are artificially stunted and sweated. Chambers' Jour nal. lighthouse Iilghts. In a scries of papers contributed to Engineering by Du Riche Preller on lighthouses m Europe the remarkable statement is made that the luminous range of a light of 500,000 candle pow er in the Mediterranean (44 miles ) is equal to that of 5.000:000 candles in thd channel eqnal to a ratio of one to ten hence , it is added , that , with the excep tion of the electric flashing light of Plauier , near Marseilles , of 600,000 candle power , the most powerful min eral oil lights recently installed on the French , Corsican , Algerian and Tunis ian coasts of the Mediterranean do not , exceed 35,000 candle power , having a luminous range of about 30 miles iu av erage weather. On the other hand , in the channel and in the bay of Biscay the largest mineral oil lights have lu minous powers up to about 200,000 , and the electric lighting flash lights up to 22,500,000 and 87.500,000 candles. Further , the maximum light of French lighthouse towers that is , the height of j the focus above ground varies from about 50 to 70 meter3 , but some towera are , of course , on very elevated posi tions , so that , taking the height of the focus above the sea level , the highest light , that of Cape Bream , is 751 feet above the high water sea level , while its luminous power is 0,000 candles and its luminous range 25 miles. This light is an oil light , and the geographical range , or direct visibility of such lights on high elevations , is " usually in excess1 of their luminous range , the reverse of this , however , being commonly the case with electric coast lights. Maclilnery Lubrication. The results of some valuable experi ments on the lubrication of machinery bearings have been set forth by Mr. Dewrance in an address before the Civil Engineers' institute , London. His ob servations show that olive oil becomes black and thick after passing through the bearings several times. This oil , after filtration , was composed of 16 per cent of oleato of lead , 9.57 per cent of , oleate of acid and 74. G2 per cent of olive oil and glycerin , the oleate acid in the olive oil appearing to attack lead , zinc and copper with great activi ty. Thus disks of metals used in the manufacture of bearings were immersed in oleato acid , occasionally drawn up out of the acid so as to be exposed to the air. Lead and zinc rapidly corroded away , copper was corroded to a less ex tent , while tin and antimony were not appreciably affected. In regard to the compressibility of alloys , it is suggested by this authority that no alloy be used until it is satisfactorily demonstrated that its point of first yield is consider ably above the greatest load or shock to which it will be subjected in use. In testing the effect upon soft metal bear ings when the shaft sustained a heavy pressure a piece of iron was found to leave no mark upon a surface softer than itself. Rome's Great Fire. In A. D. 64 , 10 of the 14 municipal districts of Rome were destroyed by a conflagration instigated , it is said , by the Emperor Nero. The number of lives lost is known to amount up into the hundreds , but the value of the property destroyed cannot even be estimated. By the emperor's command , thousands of Romans rendered homeless and desti tute were employed in removing the de bris and rebuilding the burned city. Nero , to divert the odium of the crime from himself , charged it upon the Christians , and thus began one of the greatest persecutions in the history of the early Christian church. Gun Barrels. To brown gun barrels , wet a piece of rag with chloride of antimony , dip it into olive oil and rub the barrel over. In 48 hours it will bo covered with a fine coat of rust. Then rub the barrel with a fine steel scratch brush and wipe with a rag dipped in boiled linseed oil. To rebrown , remove the old coating with oil and emery paper ; then remove the grease with caustio potash. Peacocks generally scream vociferous ly when a change of weather is impend ing. In the countries where these birds are native the sign is regarded as un failing. Eublai Khan , the first mogul em peror of China , was called the Mur derer , from the tragedies in bis own family. . . I..M , ii . . ! . w in inn nnK , , ? mtrrSx3-TSry5 * Clovers and Shamrock. Euglihh clovers are Irish shamrock. Perhaps no greater myth exists than that relating to the ehamicck. St. Patrick would fiud clover in almost all parts of Ireland , as he would in Englaud , and it wns a fitting emblem of the Trinity. Consequently there is little doubt that he used it as au illustration. How the little fiction that it iB a distinct plant and will grow only in Ireland has been maintained so long seems incompre hensible unless it is duo to the pecul iarity of Englishmen when regarding most things Irish. It is almost as ab surd as regarding Lever's characters as typical of the Irishman of today , prob ably of any day , as ha appears to have had as great a genius in inventing char acters as in inventing stories. Ireland largely owes its clovers and shamrocks to its limestone. Around Dublin , where limestone is not very prevalent , the in ferior typo of clover , the yellow trefoil , is commonly employed as a > badge , its convenient shape , owing to its top root , rendering it convenient as a buttonhole flower. In limestone districts the white clo ver is more commonly nsed , though there is no definite rule , as is shown by the specimens collected by natives in all parts of Ireland now to bo seen in the Dublin museum. These specimens were allowed to go to flower , and four dis tinct varieties of clover are represented , each frequently. Even the large red clover is included. There is no other plant shown , because there is no other shamrock. The myth is destroyed , but the clovers remain , and it is due to their presence that the Irish pastures are so rich and so valuable for grazing. They have accumulated fertility , and they have done so in England. There fore their presence in lawns must not bo regarded as prejudicial. London Standard. Visibility of Lights at Night. The results of the experiments in light visibility conducted by the inter national committee on behalf of the governments of the United States , Ger many and the Netherlands have been handed in. The German section gave as the distance at which a light of 1 candle dlo power became visible 1.40 miles for a dark , clear night , and 1 mile for a rainy night. The American experi ments show that a light of ono candle power is visible at 1 milo and ono of three candle power is plainly visible at 2 miles. A 10 caudle power light was seen with a binocular at 4 miles , ono of 29 at 5 miles , though faintly , and ono of 33 caudlce at the same distance without - out difficulty. To he on the safe side the experiments were made with green light , as it has been conclusively proved that if a light of that color fills the required tests a red light of the same intensity will more than do so. It was found that the candle power of green light which remained visible at 1 , 2 , 3 and 4 miles was 2 , 15 , 51 and 106 respectively. It was noticed , however - j ever , that great care had to bo exercised in the selection of the shade of the col or , so as to give the minimum interfer ence with the intensity of the light. The shade adopted is a cl ar blue green. Yellow and grass green should not be employed. The tests may bo of interest , to railroad men and seamen. Progress ive Age. A Alan Is No Hero to His Typewriter. The mystery of men's lives in the world , out of which illusions are spun , has always had a greater influence in determining the fate of women than is readily admitted. To feel transmitted through the ring finger the electric thrill of business , of politics , of clubs , of the stirring movements in the life of men , gives any woman vantage ground over others of her sex. But in the actual commerce of business , the community of affairs , the wear and tear of daily life in offices and elevators , this mystery i vanishes. A couple of typewriters at luncheon will illustrate badly a situa tion yet too new to be fairly reckoned up. Over knife and fork they will match employers as small boys do pennies. Out of hours the boss is only a man of whose necktie they may disapprove , or of the way he wears his hair or per haps of his grammar , and it may bo he appears greatly to the advantage of some young man at a neighboring ma chine. Mary Gay Humphreys in Scrib- ners. Bonnln Pasha. Bonnin Pasha , the chief of the sul tan's private police , is a plump , thick set Frenchman. In 1884 he went to Constantinople as a detective with the French embassador. Abdul Hamid took a fancy to him and desired him to or ganize a detective force for service about the palace. A corps of bludgeon men was the result , and their tactics much surprised the Parisian agent , Soudais , a few years ago , when he invited his colleague's help in arresting a notorious swindler. Tapping at the malefactor's door , the Turkish official felled to earth the servant who opened it , and the par ty proceeded through the house , knock ing insensible everybody they met Soudais was busily engaged in succoring the wounded , while Bonnin collared the real criminal. Bonnin has a comforta ble house in Pera , and his wife , as court dressmaker , has considerably in creased his savings. New York Trib une. Source of Her Confidence. Uncle George I really can't under stand you , Hattie. All the married wo men you know you say have made bad matches , and yet you are quite ready to try matrimony yourself. Hattie Don't you know , Uncle George , that there's an excellent chance of getting a prize in a lottery where so many of the blanks have been drawn ? Boston Transcript. An Exchange of Compliment * . He Yon may be engaged , but I can never conceive of your being in love. She And you may be in love , but I can never conceive of your being en gaged. Detroit Free Press. . BH * jBJ I BLiKs rvwir I HJ k1iphi1 „ , fill WfMEliSPRMM - \ jaI I DURHAM \y - „ & , Yon will find , one coupon / g Js kIfkf \ Jv J B Inside each two ounce Itug , \i \ --w' ' rfk'V jk/j f\J jt J and two coupons lnnltic iihIi J , ' st.fcS lillj /Y | ! | | ' | / four ounce bag of IJlmK- it / ' / /Z . M J J' ' ,11 , f [ * * ' M well's Durham. Buy n > nK /S. _ > . c VjS MM3 JffirpF' | of this celebrated tobiicio VNSfeHjtS- i'J > \ " "ffi * i 'b ' " Sag 5 fl and read the coupon which " Si * jS i3tfS- > " ? > At\ > * l ; ' kfl gives a list of valuable , , • * - ( % * $ - Tp f ' ' * " ' ' " ? JM ' " " ' ' ' ents and how to get thom. ' f" J- F ' tlflj Don't be persuaded into huyinu liniments without leputation or merit Chamberlain's Pain Halm costs no more , and its merits have been proven by a test of many years. Such letters as the following , from 1. . G. Bajjley , Hueneme , Cal. , are constantly being received : "The best remedy for pain I have ever used is Chamberlain's Fain Halm , and I say so after having used it in my family tor several years" . It cures rheumatism , lame hack , sprains and swellings. For sale by L.V. . McConnell & Co. , Druggists. Wanted-An Idea Bs Protect your Idea * ; they may bring you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDEKBUBN & CO. . Patent Attor neys , Washington , D. C. for their $1,800 prize offer and list oC two hundred Inventions wanted. i | Scaly eruptions on the head , chapped hands and lips cuts , bruises , scalds , burns arequick- I ly cured by DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve It i at present the article most used for piles , and it always cures them A. McMillcn , Urug- S' ' t. t.DeWitt's DeWitt's Little Early Risers , The famous little pills. , \ FKEE EDUCATION. \ I j S An education : it Harvard , Yale , or anv other J | | college or institution of learning' in the "United 5 * . States , or in the New England Conservatory of * Music , cin be secured by any _ younjj man or J 5 woman who ii. in earneM. Write for particulars 5 quickly. JAMES D. IIAI.I. , ) 1 36 ISroomfield Street , Boston , Mass. J j Farmer's Sons I 'C ' Clr-f\ Wi-will employ you at $50 per $ " month. Write quickly. < j > C C w J I'L'KITAN I'UIILISIIINO Co. , 5 IS 5f > HriKHiifield Street , 5 C * ltoston , Mass. J FAR1NGTON POWER , LAWYER. J5f Practice in all the courts. Collections. Notary Public. Upstairs in the Spearman building , McCook , Nebraska. JOHN E. KELLEY , ATTORNEY AT LAW McCook , Nebraska. ESfAgent of Lincoln Land Co. Office Rear of First National bank. J. B. BALLARD , 9 DENTIST. © All dental work done at our office is guar anteed to be first-class. We do all kinds of Crown , Bridge and Plate Work. Drs. Smith 6 Bellamy , assistants. t.MRS. E. E. UTTERIZ MUSICAL INSTRUCTOR. Piano , Organ , Guitar and Banjo VOICE TRAINING- SPECIALTY. 2S Studio Rear of C. L. DeGroff & Co. W. V. GAGE , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON McCook , Nebraska. JS Office hours 9 to II a. m. , 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. m. Rooms Over the First National bank. Night calls answered at the office. J. A. GUNN , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON McCook , Nebraska. , JSyOftice Over C. A. Leacljs jewelry store. Residence 701 Main street. " Prompt atten tion given to all calls. ELMER ROWELL , Real EstateCollections , Insurance McCook. Nebraska. /"Notary Public. East Dennison street. ANDREW CARSON ] 1'ronrit.tor of the . . . . A SUNNY SIDE DAIRY. T I We respectfully solicit your business , ' and guarantee pure milk , full measure , and prompt , courteous service. JULIUS KUNERT , Carpet Laying , Carpet Cleaning. fcs < "l am still doing carpet laying , carpet cleaning lawn cutting and similar work. See or write me before giving snch work. My charges are very reasonable. Leave orders at Tribune office. JULIUS KUNERT. - "wiC * ' ' - > ' { < * . ' - - - \ . * * . . . _ Do Not Stop Tobacco ! \ 1 How to Cure Yourself While i rA , Using It. \ fl The tobacco habit * ; rows on a man until his H nervous system is seriously affected , impairing ' | health , comfort and happiness. To quit suddenly . | ia too bev ere a shock to the system , us tobacco to 'F ' < l au inveterate user becomes : t stimulant that his ttH system continually craves. "Ilacco-Curo" is a * | scientific cure for the tobacco habit , in all its forms , M carefully compounded after the formula of au em * j H incut lierlin physician who has used it in his private H practice since 1S7Z. without a failure. It is purely H v egctable and guaranteed perfectly harmless. Yes • j H cm use all the tobacco jim want while taking > H "Uacco-Curo. " It will notify jou when to stop. H We give a written guarantee to cure permanently y t any case , with three boxes , or refund tin * money H with 10 per cent , interest. "Itacco-Curo" is not a | substitute , but a scientific cure , that cures without | the aid of will power and with no inconvenience. t It leaves the system as pure and free from nicotine H as tiie day you took your first chew or smoke. H Cured by Baceo-Curo unci Gained H Thirty Pounda. H From hundreds of testimonials- , the originals ot I H vv Iiich are on file and open to inspection , the fol M lowing i& presented : M Clayton , Nevada Co. , Ark. , Jan. 28. r * H Eureka Chemical A.Mfg. . Co. , La Crosse , Wis.- J | Gentlemen : For forty vears I used tobacco in alt H its forms. For twenty-tive years of tiiat time I | H was a great sufferer from general debility and heart H disease. For fifteen years I tried to quit , but H couldn't. I took various remedies , among otlieri , H "N'o-To-IJac " " " fl - - , "Tbc Indian Tobacco Antidote , "Double Chloride of Gold , " etc. , etc. , but none of M them did mc the least hit of good. Finally how- J t ever , I purchased a box of your "Iacco-Curo" and H it has entirely cured me of the habit in alt its forms , M and I have increased thirty pounds in weight and M am relieved of all the numerous aches and p.11113 of M body and mind. I could write a quire of paper upon - M on my changed feelings and condition. M Yours respectfully , I * . II. Makiiuky , | Pastor C. I * . Church , Clayton , Ark. fl Sold by alldruggistsatSl.ooperbox ; threeboxes , M ( thirty dayb treatment ) $2.50 , with written guarantee - , | tee , or sent direct upon receipt of price. Write for M booklet and proofs. Eureka Chemical A'Mfg. Co. , { H f.i Crosse , Wis. , and'TSoston ' , .Mass. H J. 8. MCBKAYEK , . M PROPRIETOR OK TIIK ' J f Stjg I McCook Transfer Line. ' ' ? vvi ! BUS , BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS. JSp Oiily Furniture van in the ' city. Also have a first class house moving outfit. Leave orders for bus calls at Commercial hotel or at office opposite the depot. Chase Go. Land and Live Stock Ge. rillg mJKtNptvPwM . JIM nI HoreeB brauded on Ion hip or lert shoulder " " fl < dflMp P O. add reaH Imperial 'H r -Ohuee county , and Beat H V HPQferh-e. Nebraska. Uaage , .JS fiff 'tinkinjr ' Water and the ! * BHHH Lijf Frenchman creeks , in t VHHBMVI Conge county. Nebraska. g S _ .w. _ HI Brand as cut on stdeof H Hb l1t > oraeanimaBonhlpand [ f fl HHHK * sides of some , or anywhere - & 1 where on thp animal. , tfS * -t 1 R. A. COLE , MERCHANT TAILOR ' J ' OF McCOOK , Has Just received & new stock of OLOTHt ' | ind TRIMMINGS. If you want a good It- iH ting suit made at the very lowest prices fo | good work , call on him. Shop first door west Bfl of Barnett'a Lumber Office , oa Deanlio * A ] itreet. H I R-I-P-A-N-S u. Hi tt ] tflj The modem standfl W ard Family Medi- .H w cine : Cures the . - : M r ; common every-day jK J ills of humanity. trial til TMOt Hk iWfl * " * " % 9 ! sf sflMBI . . * * * SH m - w * „ * HHHHHH1 ' - ' i mbsAbbbbbbI * T . _ • - V * - u - * ; < & - / " * & W B BBBBBBBBBBBBBBb1