B | Mj HE DOES ? J j8 I H 52 This well known and | JXj | E\ \ 1 1 { esteemed citizen buys I DCJ KS ) \ | U if his Stationery at first : [ | Cj BgL y | ; door north of the posti i ; DCj Hrl 5Cf i | office , where nice line j : | g § : of Plain and Fancy i ; jgCj : | Writing Papers , both < : DCj j : in boxes and bulk , can : DCj 1 i - be bought very cheap. | ] § HP B * DO YOU ? | @ B ] i < 1 ESTABLISHED IN J886. STRICTLY ONE PRICE. ' I ft Fan I'lotlmii Compny K ! • • • B OUR ANNUAL D CLEARANCE SALE Hi WINTER GOODS Fv - • * H See our lines of Samples for 10NAS ENGEL Hn Custom Work. A good fit and Eji Lowest Prices Guaranteed. M 3,113. 61. mmL . Hf j E I ts Restore J , j I f fOSfieritg * 3 . riB"-i. te mm mL B-M mMLmM m mm\mMmmmM\mWLmM\mM\mmL U\jmm mMLm m mMM B > Ea / EI I ttcril for fbeMcCoolfrile PMM TIME TABLE. ttBL\ \ HaHlS HeSOOI , HIB2AGZA. Hliilfl LINCOLN , DENVER , OMAHA , HELENA , CHICAGO. BU'ITE , ST. JOSEPH , PORTLAND. KANSAS CITY , SALT LAKE CITY , ST. LOUIS and all SAN FRANCISCO , I'OINTS EAST AND AND ALL POINTS SOUTH. WKS1. TRAINS LEAVE AS FOLLOWS : CENTRAL TIME. No. 2. Vestibuled Express , daily , Lincoln , Omaha , St. Joe , Kansas City , St. Louis.Chi- cago. and nil points south and east 5:55 A. M No. 4. Local Express , daily , Lin coln , Omaha. Chicago , and all points east 9:00 r. M. N0.148. Freight , daily , ex. Sunday , Hastings and intermediate stations 5 : ° ° AX1 No. 76. Freight , daijy , Oxford , Hol- drege , Hastings 6:45 A. M . No. 80. Freightdaily , Hastings and intermediate stations 7:00 A. M MOUNTAIN TIME. No. 5. Local Express , daily , Den ver and intermediate sta tions 8:15 p. M No. 3. Vestibuled Express , daily , Denver and all points in Colo.JJtah and California , 11:40 P.M N0.149. Freight , daily , ex. Sunday , Akron and intermediate sta tions 6:00 A. M No. 77. Freight , daily.Stratton.Ben kelman , Ilaigler , Wrayand Akron 3:20 P. M No. 63. Freight , daily.Stratton.Ben- kelman , Haigler , Wrayand Akron 5:00 P. M N0.175. Accommodation , Mondays , Wednesdays and Fridays , Imperial and intermediate stations 8:00 : A. M Sleeping , dining and reclining chair car. ( seats free ) on through trains. ' 1 ickets sold and baggage checked to any point in tin United States or Canada. _ For information , time tables , maps am tickets , call on or write C E. Magner , Agent. McCook , Nebraska , or J. Francis , General Passenger Agent , Omaha. Nebraska. RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS. Brakeman Otto Ballew is on the sick list. The company will build four new en gines at Havelock. Conductor and Mrs. George Beck were Omaha visitors , this week. Brakeman E. Benjamin went in to Omaha , Tuesday morning , on 2. Conductor L. C. Wolff is laid up with a sprained ankle , sustained close of last week. Dispatcher and Mrs. T. B. Campbell and son Harry were Denver visitors , Wednesday. Charlie McManigal has been elevated to the position of operator ; upon which we congratulate. Fireman William Koll moved into the city , yesterday , and is occupying the Holliday residence. Engineer and Mrs. J. W. Holliday are in the city , todaj' , coming down from Lyons , Colorado , last night. Mrs. H. L. Donovan is entertaining her mother , who recently arrived in the city from Holyoke , Colorado. A one fare round trip rate has been made by all Nebraska roads to the beet sugar convention , Hastings , Feb. 2-3. Mrs. G. R. Snyder went down to Lin coln , Thursday morning , on a visit to relatives and friends in the capital city. Supt. Campbell went in to Omaha , Monday night , on business at headquar ters , returning home on Wednesday night. Frank Harris made a flying visit to Galva , Illinois , going on Saturday , and returning on Monday night. His moth er is ill. Engineer and Mrs. B. J. Sharkey en tertained a numerous company of neigh bors and friends , Tuesday evening , on a large scale , at High Five. The construction of railways during 1896 reached a mileage of 1,802 according to the Railway Age , and 1,693 taking the figures of the Railroad Gazette. Brakeman and Mrs. Ed. Beyrer and Mrs. V. H. Solliday , Tuesday morning , went down to Red Cloud , to attend the funeral of another of Albert Slaby's children. Mrs. A. Miller and family left on Mon day morning for Goodland , Kansas , be ing accompanied by her sister , Mary Heafy. A brother , Morris Heafy , is quite ill there with inflammatory rheumatism. Mustered Out At McCook , Nebraska , November 26 , 1S96 , by dropsy , Mathias Kessler , Co. B , 104 Illinois Infantry. Mr. Kessler was born in Balgian , Germany , March 20th , 1831. Came to the United States in 1S56 and enlisted in the service August nth , 1S62 , and was discharged June 6th , 1S65 Deceased was a member of J. K. Barnes Post. No. 207 , McCook Nebr. Funeral services were conducted by Indianola Post , Indianola , Nebraska. ( J. M. BELL , ' Committee -j Jacob Stkinmetz , ( A. C. Harlan. Lots for Sale. Lots 9 , 10 , 11 and 12 in block 25 , Second end addition to McCook. Make me an offer on these lots. Address : W. E. Datjchy , Topeka , Kansas. For Rent. 320-acre farm , with good farm house and stabe. 165 acres under irrigation , balance in pasture. C. H. Meeker , tf McCook , Neb. " " rrTTfinTinn tii nnn 1 ir ' m m itjinwiaw Awarded Highesv Honors World's Fair , DR vwco * CREAM BAKING POWDIH MOST PERFECT MADE. A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free from Ammonia , Alum or any other adulterant. 40 YEARS THE STANDARD. Ho Couldn't Explain. - A very small newsboy , who bad just old bis last paper , leaned against the iron lamppost and shouted with all his lung power : "Pa-i-i-perl Twelvy-clack pa-i-i-perl Extry twelvy-clack J" The boy was working overtime , either from force of habit or because of his natural exuberance. It is not uncom mon in Calhoun place for a boy to stop jbort and yell several times , merely to relieve himself. It happened that a pedestrian was at tracted by the shouts of the boy against the lamppost. Ho smiled as he looked at the youngster and then said , "All right , give mo one , of your papers. " That startled the boy. He looked sheepishly at the man , rubbed his hand into his pocket and said , "I ain't got any. " "Didn't I hear you calling a 12 ' ' ' o'clock paper ? "Yes , but I didn't mean" It was too much of an explanation. A professor of psychology who had studied the laws of unconscious cerebration might have told why the boy stood on the corner shouting papers when he had no papers to sell , but the boy adopted a less diffi cult course and ran away. Chicago Record. Taking Exercise. Poor Harry Shelman , the long haired poet who dressed his entire person to resemble Buffalo Bill , and who was , in fact , startlingly like the greatest of scouts , used to tell mo of a literary friend of his who had a novel method of taking exercise. His workshop was on the top floor of his house , far from the noise of the street , and he used to write about 15 hours a day. He was not a Howells or a Bronsou Howard , whose working hours never exceed four in any one day. He worked , he labored , he toiled. He had no time for a bicycle and could not afford a horse. He hated walking. Run he could not. Swimming was out of the question. Still he must have exercise. He kept his dictionary in the basement and his thesaurus in the kitchen. As he used both very often it rras necessary to make many trips down stairs and up again , and in that way he kept himself in splendid physical condi tion. A visitor once saw him dashing down stairs like a madman and soaring up again like a kite and was distressed till informed by John's wife that John was simply hunting for a word and had found it. Kew York Press. A CLANKING GHOST. Awful Experience of a Chicago 3Ian In a Missouri Hotel. "The most disagreeable experience iu my travels , " said the man from Chicago cage , "was when I awakened in the middle of the night in a Missouri hotel and heard a chain clank in my room. I don't know whether it is the association of a clanking chain that makes the Bound so dismal or the mere fact of be ing awakened by a noise that shows the presence of something living , but I don't know of a more unpleasant awak ening. "I sat up in bed , but could see noth ing , for the room was as dark as a pock et , and my heart thumped with suspense as I heard that weird clank , clank , clank , accompanied by a strange Bhuf- fling noise that was quite as mysterious and baffling. I reached under my pillow and drew out my" • • Revolver ? " suggested the man who finishes everybody's sentences. "Naw , my whisky flask. I took a pull that would have made my wife give me a temperance lecture if she could have seen me" "And what became of it ? " "The whisky ? " "No , no , the clanking ghost. " "Well , I fell off to sleep after awhile , and when I got up in the morning and investigated , I found out what it was. " "A maniac ? " "No ; I was the only maniac. It was • rled up under my bed , chain and all , and it turned out to be a pet coon * that the hotel people owned and which had escaped from its quarters and found its way to my room. But I wouldn'tput in another night like that for a farm and wood lot ! " St. Louis Republic. Mrs. Anna Gage , wife of Ex- Deputy U. S. Marshal , Columbus , Kan. , says : jflBB k "I was delivered HH k o TWINS Jwi Hg scarcely any pain < Sm > FRIEND" DID NOT SUFFER AFTERWAED. tySent by Express or Mall , on receiptor price. 8l.OO pep bottle. Book "TO M0TUKIIS" mailed free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. , ATLANTA , 6A. SOLD B7 ALE. DBUGGISTS. " minium " * ' W * * SeiW l i i iiiiiii 1 ii.miiitiijAJ _ 1 if H H I jgg JANUARY 9 TO 23. | § I n IS 1 R g iS Prior to our Annual Invgjyn &jk * entory , V.\cr Goods must Im 5 I g | sold to make room for our Spring gj I HP Goods. Come and see what bar- § gv $ gains we have for you. Sn I H * m 1 PS m 1 Sj B2Specia ] Discount on KemE | , [ g nants Short lengths in Dress § fi $ ! H Goods , Novelty Dress Goods , in S jS sgg Dress Flannel , Underwear , Blangjyp I gjta kets , and all Winter Goods. g3 m pi e | § r Men'sandBoys'Overcoats § ? $ H $ $ at and below cost ' 3 fl % m BS Bring us your orders for g Q M pk Groceries , and we will save you p j | & $ g good money. § § H &M AT THE . . . § ? $ .H 1 , = rw e m I B i wash § § I _ > tore..B 8fe G. L. DeGROFF & GO. & * j * M . fh. W T lV\il aMHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHJ jgj j FIRST j Kj M gj jWnational - ] jl H K Authorized Capital , $100,000. 'M H M Capital and Surplus , $60,000 | § | H | Xi GEO. HOCKNELL , President. B. U. FREES , V. Pres. J | | § HHHllH ggl W. F. LAWSON , Cashier. F. A. PEN NELL , Ass't Cash. f | | ] H W A. CAMPBELL , Director. FRANK HARRIS , Director. j | = p IIII1H V. : FRANKLIN. President. A. C. EBERT. Cashier. HH I CITIZENS BANKl # OF MeCOOK , NEB. < > H p & Hi # Paid Up Capital , $50,000. Surplus , Si0,000 i * * H . 1 $ -nz : DIRECTORS irzzzr. jr / . FRANKLIN , N. S. HARWOOD , A. C. EBERT , JJ H If H. T. CHURCH , OSCAR CALLIHAN , C. H. WILLARD. H H