The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, September 17, 1897, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    it-
itk k , .
\ S ; By F. M. KIMMBLL.
| S1.60 A YEAR IN ADVANCE.
? -
i o •
i
? :
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
6 \ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
j
I ; STATE.
j ; For Supremejudge ,
\ I , ALFRED M. POST.
I * j / . For University Recrents ,
I • = ! * , • , : CHARLES W. KALEY.
S ? ! ' J • JOHN N. DRYDEN.
* ' ,
\ • * - i COUNTY.
"
: ? ' For Clerk ,
, J./ ESBEN P. DAY.
j
{ $ $ * < ' * For Treasurer ,
| ? - & , - O. L. THOMPSON.
IfV * * For Sheriff ,
1 . , W. A. McCOOL.
* 1" For Judge ,
4 • - • G. S. BISHOP.
j If ' For Superintendent ,
| p - • C. N. WHITTAKER.
a % if For Surveyor ,
\h \ A. F. REEVES.
5 ffi J ' For Coroner ,
t , - ft JOSEPH SPOTTS.
SET , . For Commissioner Second District ,
? S fe HENRY CRABTREE.
jj Senator Thurston announcet
; • . that he is and has been for yean
j ; • an ardent annexationist , and thai
; ; ' , - he will do all he can to promote
' K the approval of Hawaiian treaty ,
I" The free silver advocates are al-
; s ? ready admitting and indicating
. , ' that the campaign of 1898 will
i" v ' have to be fought out on a broadei
\ f y platform than free silver alone.
*
. Surely !
; ,4 * * " " " * * * m m * s
\i \ < - With a famine impending , in
: rV Ireland and one decimating the
i ; j ' population of India , where the
' ft tribesmen are also in open rebel-
\ h lion , Qneen Victoria is having
plenty of trouble of her own.
v The Republican ticket , state
and county , is composed of men it
will not be necessary to make any
' . excuses for. They are competent
; . men for the places to which they
aspire , and deserving of a harmonious -
' : ious party support.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ' r
* i , ' . President Andrews of Brown
' ' \ university has resumed his place
j > " " at the head of that university. Sen-
1 sible Andrews * and happy Brown !
I' r Here's to freedom of thought and
{ t ± expression in the universities and
confusion to the money-bags.
' " ' The of the
organization Eepub-
, • lican state central committee seems
* ' " to be meeting with quite general
> \ approval , and the prospects are
bright for a vigorous , effective
campaign. A strong pull , altogether -
' gether , and the Republican nominees -
\ * • nees will win out.
. .I •
; . . ' Labouchere of- ' London Truth
: admits that he is by. no means par
ticular on the subject of good En-
i glish. "The only rule which guides
me in the choice of language , " he
says , "is that which guides me in
- ' the choice of a house or a cigar or
* i _ - a suit of clothes. I am guided not
t 'l by precedent , authority or abstract
* * cannons of taste , but by what best
suits the purpose I have in view. "
f
' " "
H-
Mr. S. N. Dexter North of
; j • Massachusetts has been selected as
V the superintendent of the next cen-
? / ; bus. Mr. North's qualifications
are not generally known to the
; ; - country , but it is to be hoped that
one of them will be the ability to
understand what to leave out of
, ' the census report. The superintendent -
\ * tendent of the census should know
how to "serve the present age , his
calling to fulfill" and furnish a re
port within the lifetime of people
now living and filled only with
matters of interest.
We wish that we could prevail
, • - upon editorial writers of all politi
cal creeds , to be moderate. The
i < • editors and writers who are always
frothing at the mouth bring the
| 4 / newspaper business into disrepute ,
> 'i . and their words have no more ef-
3 feet than tinkling cymbals or
sounding brass. We have always
1' S held that it is possible for a man
• / ' to be a pop , or a democrat , or a
5V prohibitionist , without being of
IJ * ' necessity a barn burner or horse
* * thief. Abuse is a poor weapon
f , used by poor men. Now and then
f the best of editors allow their angry -
* * . * gry passions to rise , and say things
i ' { > that were better unsaid , but he can
i f _ / be pardoned ; there is no excuse ,
< fk\ however , for the man who writes
' • f % % continually at the top of his voice ,
- y * .i - damning everybody who does not
tlti f agree with him. We blush for the
$ -i" few Republican editors who cannot
. ' | j ' . " , mention Gov. Holcomb or the
i W * - other pop state ofilcialB at Lincoln
I fb without having a few spasms.
' Beatrice Express.
v& , " . * , , ' ' ' , , .
JZ axjst&sfts/t&SZ g ; ti'T' ; - .f :
PROSPECT PARK.
W. N. Cratty had his pump up
for repairs , Wednesday.
Jacob Crocker visited his bro
thers near Indianola , Tuesday.
0. L. Thompson is taking in the
county fair at Indianola , this week.
Andrew Anderson and wife vis
ited friends in Tyrone precinct ,
fore part of the week.
E. R Duffey , formerly of this
place but now of Galesburg , Illi
nois , is visiting at R. M. Wade's.
Quite a number from this place
attended the dedication services at
the new Fairview church , Sunday.
There will be religious services
at the Prospect Park school house ,
next Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock ,
conducted by the Epworth League
of McCook. All are invited.
DANBURY.
McKinley times.
Campbell Bros' , show was a
crackajack.
Everybody seems to be taking
in the fair , this week.
Clint Pew is putting up a new
frame house west of town.
H. W. Parker has ordered lum
ber for a new barn to be built this
fall.
fall.C.
C. Naden and Ed. Dennis rode
over to McCook , Sunday , on their
wheels.
" ' Phillip Gliem is making new
improvements in the front part of
the store.
W. A. Minniear and W. T. Hen-
ton attended the sale of state school
land leases at the county seat on
Wednesday.
The Barnett Lumber Co. has re
cently bought out S. G. Bastian
and are moving the lumber across
to the new yard.
NORTH COLEMAN.
A fine rain , Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Rayn and Mrs. Tavisa
Woodard are on the sick-list.
School in district 58 , Coleman
orecinct , commenced last Monday.
The new granaries in Coleman
precinct are making a good show-
ng with their rich store of fine
jrain.
I. B. Stryker commenced sowing
' all wheat , last Wednesday. The
ground is in fine condition for
seeding.
Henry Stryker , formerly of this
section , has traded his farm in
Frontier county for city property
in Beloit , Wisconsin.
Threshing is progressing finely.
James Kelley threshed on Monday
and Tuesday forenoon had 757
bushels of fine wheat. H.B.Wales
did -the work in fine shape.
Joseph Snyder of Panora , Iowa ,
who , purchased the Samuel Johns
farm , has been visiting at Thomas
Whitmer. He and Mr. and Mrs.
Whitmer and Mrs. W. H. Epperly
visited Mr. and Mrs. Parsons.
Threshing machines were quite
thick in this community , Monday
and Tuesday last. James Kelly ,
William Sharp , Thomas Real and
Robert Johns were all threshing ,
Tuesday , so the men and women
folk were very busy then.
There has been a marked tend
ency to bank consolidation since
the crisis of 1893 , but whether this
will continue to manifest itself now
that prosperity is returning is pro
blematical. The comptroller of
the currency states the number of
national banks in active operation
January 1 , 1893 , at 3,799 and the
latest reports to that official place
the number at 3,610. Since 1893
the capital invested in national
banks has decreased $63,000,000 ,
but notwithstanding the reduction
in the number of banks and capi
tal , the deposits are larger than
Bver before , being fully § 200,000-
000 in excess of the highly pros
perous year of 1892. It is ob
served that a significant fact re
garding banking development is
the maintainance of the old volume
Df business by a * greater concen
tration of banking management
and capital. It is to be expected
that the return of confidence will
conduce to the establishment of
additional banks , but it is the
3pinion in well-informed quarters
that the new corporations will not
much more than keep pace with
consolidations. Omaha Bee.
Judge Post's record as a judge
and his standing as a citizen are
such that Republicans can urge
bis candidacy upon the highest
grounds and without resort to any
petty political measures.
\ ! ByiiSU55 ; McCOOK NEB. 5I5 ! Il iLCR\ \ " ' :
\ SEE OUR
Latest Styles
© IN © '
I SI li Soft i
HATS , I
, Neckwear ]
SHIRTS |
I Business in j
i
COLEMAN.
Frank Carothers drives with a
new whip.
S. D. McClain brought out a
new wagon , Wednesday.
Tom Real evidently believes in
"diversified crops. " It's a boy
this time.
School in district 58 commenced
last Monday. ' Miss Anna Irwin
has charge of it.
Mr. H. Phillips of Guthrie coun
ty , Iowa , is here visiting his daugh
ter , Mrs. J. W. Corner.
Dallas Divine bought a brand
splinter new buggy and in less
than six weeks he got a brand new
wife.
wife.Will
Will Bixler purchased a new
buggy and Charlie christened it
by taking his best girl to the show
m it.
it.M.
M. H. Cole fell off a wheat stack
and might have got hurt had he
not hung on the ladder by the ear.
He is all right now.
D. P. Taylor of Avoca , Iowa ,
was here , a few days last week ,
looking after his interests. He
owns a half section of fine land
here.
here.Wm.
Wm. Coleman has sold the Rob
inson farm , five miles north of Mc
Cook. He spent three days , last
week , driving over the country
with some land-seekers.
&akinG
POWDER
Absolutely : Pure.
Celebrated for its great leavening
strength and healthiulness. Assures the
food against alum and all forms of adul
teration common to the cheap brands.
Royai , Baking Powder Co. , New
York.
A CHOICE LINE
\ MEN'S SUITS ,
I YOUTH'S SUITS (
; BOYS' SUITS , 1
: CHILDR'S SUITS i
. . .An. . (
Assortment >
. .not. . I
I V
Equaled i
. .in. . S
Western /
Nebraska. t
\ All Goods Sold by Us are Guaranteed to be j
| Just as Represented. |
I
; *
- _ H
TYRONE.
The rain makes all feel better.
A large acreage of rye and wheat
will be sown here , this fall.
Mrs. L. D. Kimpton is sick and
threatened with typhoid fever.
Schools commences today , Tuesday -
day , with Frank Moore as teacher.
N. Walton and daughter Louie
attended the reunion at Indianola ,
last week.
Mrs. Haviland , a missionary
lately returned from South Africa ,
lectured to a full house at this
place , Monday evening.
GOLD YERSUS LIFE.
Men are at present risking their
lives for gold. There is a stam
pede of eager , willing martyrs to
the inhospitable country of the
Klondyke. Many will perish fiom
cold and hunger. Not one quarter
of the people who go there will
ever return. Not one-half of those
who do return will return any rich
er than they went. They will not
only endanger their health , but
their lives , for the sake of gold.
And yet everybody says that health
is more precious than gold. The
thing which restores health is ,
therefore , more precious than gold.
Pe-ru-na restores health , cures all
forms of weakness , all forms and
stages of catarrh.builds up broken-
down constitutions , brings new life
back to all those who have become
prematurely old. The latest and
best book ever written on the sub
ject of female diseases will be sent
free , to women only , for a short
time. Address The Pe-ru-na Drug
Manufacturing Co. , Columbus ,
Ohio.
The bondsmen of the defaulting
treasurer of Boone county , Iowa ,
have set an example by making
good the shortage with cash pay
ment in full without waiting- be
sued in court or calling into ques
tion the validity of the document
which they each signed voluntari
ly. If some of the bondsmen of
Nebraska defaulters would do like
wise they would afford the de
spoiled taxpayers a most pleasant
surprise.
'
A COMPLETE LINE <
1
6 OF S \
<
Extra Pants \
FOR • (
MEN , i
BOYS and |
CHILDREN \
It pays to trade ?
where Goods are /
Marked in Plain 1
Figures and sold /
alike to all. ?
Postmaster General Gary iB de
voting considerable attention these
days to an investigation of the
wisdom of establishing postal sav
ings banks. When in the last
congress a bill was sent to him
providing for such institutions he
declined to eudorse it becanse , as
he said , ho had not an opportunity
to investigate the subject. He
has since taken up the matter ,
reading all literature bearing upon
it he could procure and seeking
opportunity to discuss its merits
with those familiar with it. The
result is that he has become con
vinced of both the Avisdom and the
utility of postal savings institutions
and has decided to have a bill pre
pared providing for their estab
lishment and to recommend its
passage by congress. He has not
yet decided upon the details of
any plan , but will soon give bis
attention to them.
Nebraska's beet sugar factories
are at work on the 1897 sugar beet
crop. While the area of Bugar
beet culture has not been enlarged
as it should have been and would
have been were there more fac
tories in the state , its success
wherever tried has been demon
strated and ought to stimulate the
erection of additional factories.
A California court has ruled
that a bicyle is personal property
and exempt from execution if used
by the owner in his daily business.
A young woman was recently
put off a street car in Philadelphia
by her fellow women passengers
for smoking a cigarette.
One of the worst toughs in Chicago - j
cage is named Makepeace. ii i
= i
Twenty-five cents will pay for the
Twice-a-Week State Journal from now
until January i. 1898. The State Journal
is Nebraska's greatest paper and gives
more state capital news than all other
state papers combined.
A trial subscription to the SemiWeekly
ly State Journal from now until January
t , 189S , only costs twenty-five cents. You
: an send stamps.
Machine oil , 25c. per gallon , atMcMil-
len's drugstore.
; CUSTOM DEPT. :
eD-WE MAKE A-&o f
' SPECIALTY I
Clothing to Order ?
Have large 111 irat
! > er of samples of J
piece goods to select - J
lect from. Take i
your measure , we J
• guarantee a good J f
fit , first-class work
and lowest prices , 5 , .
To California , Comfortably. fl
Every Thursday at 11:40 p.m.M. T. , a H
tourist sleeping car for Salt Lake City.San H
Francisco and Los Angeles leaves Omaha - |
ha and Lincoln via the Burlington Route. M
It is carpeted , upholstered in rattan , M
has spring seats and backs and is provided - M
vided with curtains , bedding , towels , |
soap , etc. An experienced excursion H
conductor and a uniformed Pullman porter - M
ter accompany it through to the Pacific jH
coast. While neither as expensively finished - H
ished nor as fine to look at as a palace |
sleeper , it is just as goods to ride in. M
Second class tickets are honored and the M
price of a berth , wide enough and big | |
enough for two , is only $5.00. |
For a folder giving full particulars , M
call at the nearest B. & M. R. R. ticket
ofiice , or write to J. Francis , Gen'l Pass'r M
Agent , Burlington Route. Omaha , Nebr. jH
December 26-351 ' H
To Subscribers of The Tribune. H
Readers of The Tribune will please H
remember that cash is an essential in J |
the publication of a paper. The pub- _ H
Usher has been very lenient during the 4 H
past few years , on account of crop fail M
ures and hard times , and as a consequence - H
quence many hundreds of dollars are H
due on subscrimions. We are now compelled - H
pelled to request all who can to call and H
make settlement in full or in part. In H
view of the facts , our subscribers must / H
feel the justice and urgency of this re- H
"uest. The Publisher. H
You ought to get the Semi-Weekly H
State Journal during the campaign. Doings - |
ings of all parties fully reported. Lincoln _ H
is the political center of the State and the H
Journal gives this class of news ahead of / H
other state papers. Twenty-five cents H
will pay for this splendid paper from now j |
until January 1 , 1898. H
To Cure a Cold in One Day. M
Take Laxative Brome Quinine Tablets. j H
All druggists refund the money if it fails H
to cure. 25c. M
$3.co will buy a good hand-made harness - |
ness of Selby at the "Bee Hive" . |
Machine oil , 25c. per gallon , atMcMil- H
ten's drug store. H
Awarded j H
HighesV Honors World's Fair , H
DR
BAKING I
MOST PERFECT MADE. M
\ . pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free |
rom Ammonia , Alum or any other adulterant. H
40 YEARS THE STANDARD. j H
_ _ _ - _ - - : y. _ _ _ i