The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, September 17, 1897, Image 5

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    I _ _ i . E
I - * _ _ TIjT *
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r
1 Clearing §
I Out Sale. . . I
| lj Having * accumulated a large iss
HI lot of small sizes in Ladies' Shoes ! @ .
| | j and Slippers , I will dispose of | X
vj them at the following * prices : | H
1 All 2 Sizes , $1 a Pair. |
1 All 3 to 3 Sizes , SI.25 a Pair. |
I AM4to4 Sizes , Sl.50aPair , 1
The former prices of these pig
Q shoes were from $2 to $5. Your gg-
1SJ little girls can wear them. Come yS
Xj and see. We have many more of Lg
V [ such bargains at the only S |
i Oli lal Si Store |
11 J. F. GANSCHOW , McCook. g
I GRAND |
I MILLINERY OPINING
| | Friday and Saturday 8
l | SEBTEMBER 24 AND 25. $1
- < >
| / | iS The public is respectfully Iff
l < invited. Come everybody. | ? l
I ' ' LOWMANS. I
1
I j GRAND | 1 1
| Mitftnerij * : # Opening , *
p FRIDAYS SATURDAY , | |
j ! SEPTEMBER 24 AND 25. - j
$ I The ladies of McCook , neighboring f j 1 1 1
5 I towns and surrounding- country are j J 1 1
f f cordially invited to toe present. j ?
,
f - Mrs. m. e. Bargee. 11 > i
I
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TIME TABLE. HBjB |
KeCOOX , VZBSA8IA. _ ! _ [
LINCOLN , DENVER ,
OMAHA , HELENA ,
CHICAGO. BUTTE ,
ST. JOSEPH. PORTLAND ,
KANSAS CITY , SALT LAKE CITY ,
ST. LOUIS and AIX SAN FRANCISCO ,
POINTS EAST AND AND ALL POINTS
SOUTH. WEST.
TRAINS LEAVE AS FOLLOWS :
CENTRAL TIME.
No. 2. Vestibuled Express , daily ,
Lincoln , Omaha , St Joe ,
Kansas City , St. LouisChi-
cage , and all points south
and east 5:55 A.M.
No. 4. Local Express , daily , Lin
coln , Omaha , Chicago , and
all points east 9 = ° ° p.m.
N0.148. Freight , daily , ex. Sunday ,
Hastings ana intermediate
stations 5:0 ° A-iL
No. 76. Freight , daily , Oxford , Hol
drege , .Hastings 6:45 A.M.
No. 80. Freightdaily , Hastings and
intermediate stations 7:00 A. M
No. 64. Freight , daily , Oxford , Red
Cloud , St Joe , Kansas City 4:30 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.Utah 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 , Haigler , Wrayand
Akron 1:3 < 3 P. M.
No. 63. Freight , dailyStrattonBen-
kelman , Haigler , Wray and
Akron 4:10 P.M.
N0.175. Accommodation , Mondays ,
Wednesdays and Fridays ,
Imperial and intermediate
stations 7:00 A. M.
Sleeping , dining and reclining chair cars
( seats free ) on through trains. Tickets sold
and baggage checked to any point in the
United States or Canada.
For information , time tables , maps and
tickets , call on or write C.E. Magner , Agent ,
McCook , Nebraska , or J. Francis , General
Passenger Agent , Omaha , Nebraska.
RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS.
The new depot at Red Cloud is now
well under way.
L. E. Cann entertained his mother and
sister from Danbury , yesterday.
W. C. Perkins , a nephew of Mrs. Web.
Josselyn of Orleans , is a new operator.
Rumor has it that one of our popular
young freight conductors will soon wed.
Abner Clark is a new passenger brake-
man. He made his trial run on Monday
night.
The station at Mascot has been reop
ened , as well as the one at McDonald ,
Kansas.
This -week E. C. McKay sold his old
West McCook property , lots 12 and 13 ,
block 10 , to Jacob Getman.
Conductor L. C.Wolff went up to Den
ver , Saturday night ; returning on Wed
nesday morning , his mother accompany
ing him.
Extra freights are a regular thing now
and numerous enough to make the aver
age trainman's heart palpitate when he
thinks of the dimensions of his next pay
check.
The Burlington is preparing to spend
a half million dollars or so in new termi
nal facilities in Kansas City , their pres
ent terminal being inadequate and too
cramped.
The company is building new stock
yards at Wilsonville , and the Review is
objecting because they are being built
within two blocks of the main business
center of town. 1
/
Charles Lundburg , who has been fireman -
man on the switch engine in the yards at
this place for the past two years , has a
run now between McCook and Hastings.
William Larue takes Mr. Lundburg's
place in the yards and Newton Smith
goes in the place made vacant by Mr.
Larue in the round house. Holdrege
Citizen-Forum.
The work on the new coal chute at the
railroad yards is being rapidly pushed
forward , and when the writer was there ,
yesterday , they thought the work would
be completed in about a week so that engines - J
gines would be taking their coal there.
The trestle work has been completed and
the track was being laid up the incline-
plane , yesterday. The cars of coal will
be run up the incline and then can be
dumped into the chutes ready for filling 1
the engines , as it can be dumped into 1
storage-way , underneath from which it l
can be hoisted by machinery into the
chutes. There are ten of the chutes and
are what is known as the Kera improved.
This is the latest and most improved *
chutes and is a big improvement over
those in use in Hastings and McCook ,
which were at the time they were put up
considered something fine. Everything •
about it is substantially built. Eight '
carloads of lumber were used in the construction - I
struction of the trestle and chuteswhich '
will probably cost upwards of $3,000.
Each one of the chutes has a capacity of
five tons , but they will be filled with dif
ferent amounts so that an engineer can J
select the chute having just the amount •
of coal that he wants for his engine. All <
he has to do is to pull down the grate 1
and when he has filled his engine close *
it up. It will be as easy and quick to 1
take coal as water. At the present time 1
something like thirty tons of coal is -
taken here daily , while probably still '
more will be used in the future. It will i
cost 7 cents a ton to handle coal now (
whereas it has cost 14 cents under the
old method besides the cost of unloading
the coal into the bin. Holdrege Citizen- 1
Forum.
i " ( I I I I ' Illl I I
! J CITY CHURCH ArTrTOUHCEMEirTS.
Gekman Methodist Regular s > rr-
-vices at 9 o'clock , every Sunday morn *
ing , in the South McCook Methodist
church ; services in German.
Rev. M.Herrmann.
Catholic Mass at 8 o'clock a. in.
High mass and sermon at 10:30 , n. m. ,
with choir. Sunday school at 2:30 p. m.
All are cordially welcome.
REV. J. W. HlCKEV , Pastor.
Episcopal Morning service at 11:00.
Evening service at 8:00. : Sunday school
at 10:00 : a. m. Evensong on Wednesdays
at 8 p. m. A. F. Morgan ,
General Missionary.
R. A. RUSSELL , Assistant.
"Baptist The Bible school is prepar
ing for Rally Day exercises to be held
Sunday morning , September 26th. All
members of the school are urged to be
present next Sunday , September 19th , to
complete arrangements for this.
Christian Services every alternate
Sunday , commencing with the first Sun
day in May at 11 and 7:30 o'clock in
McConnell hall. Sunday school every
Sunday at 10 o'clock.
Elder C. P. Evans , Pastor.
Congregational Morning theme ,
AH for Christ. Evening topic , The Mes
sage of Christianity. Sunday school at
10. Endeavor Society at 7 ; topic. Loosing
ing One's Life and Finding It. Prayer
meeting Wednesday evening at S. All
are always welcome.
Hart L. Preston , Pastor.
Methodist Sunday school at 10.
Preaching at 11 ; subject , Childhood in
the City Slums. The Lord's Supper at
the close ; reception of new members.
Junior League at 2:30. Epworth League
at 7. Preaching at 8 ; subject , Gathering
up the Fragments of Life. Farewell
sermon of the Pastor before Conference.
Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 8.
All are cordially welcome.
J. A. Badcon , Pastor.
ADDITIONAL RAILROAD NEWS.
C. W. Eaton is a new brakeman.
Conductor J. S. Cromwell is laying off ,
sick.
Operator Culbertson is doing a trick
at Holdrege. *
Conductor T. M. Mundy is on the sick-
list and confined to bed.
O. D. Keith of the Hastings-Oberlin
run is now running out of McCook.
Train-master and Mrs. Web. Josselyn
were up from Orleans , Saturday night.
Walter Stokes and Jack Henderson are
enjoying a 30-days la3'-off in the north
west.
Conductor W. D. Beyrer is conducting
the bridge special over the Western di
vision , this week.
Engineer Dave Magner returned to
work , Tuesday , and is running 210 on
passengers 4 and 5.
+
Conductor C. E Pope and wife were
summoned down to Wymore , this week ,
b- the death of his brother's wife.
The air-car will leave here , tomorrow.
The bo\s have all been brightened up
considerably during its two weeks so
journ here.
Agent Thomson has rented the Louis
Lowman residence and will occupy the
same shortly. Mr. Lowman and family
expect < to occupy quarters down town
nearer to business , possibly over the old
postoffice.
It is reported that a close traffic alli
ance ' is to be made between the Burling
ton 1 and the Kansas City , Pittsburg &
Gulf. Burlington officials refuse to dis
cuss < the report. Such an alliance would
give 1 the Burlington a valuable entrance
into : southwestern and southern territory
and 1 would be of equal advantage to the
Gulf < line.
The interiors of one thousand of the
most attractive homes in the United
States have been photographed by The
Ladies' Home Journal. One hundred of
the ' best of these pictures will be repro
duced ' in that magazine. The first article
of ' the series "Inside of a Hundred
Homes" will appear in the October
Journal. Bed-chambers , reception and
dining ' rooms , bathrooms , halls and
apartments of every kind will be pictured
just as they are in daily use. Each pic
ture ' contains dozens of suggestions.
Every woman is interested in taking a
peep into the most attractive homes in
the land , to see how they are furnished i
and arranged. She wants to get practi
cal ' hints and new ideas for furnishing
her 1 own. The houses photographed by <
the ' Journal are those occupied by per1
sons of moderate income. Their interior {
arrangement ' shows what perfect taste
can < accomplish with a little money and
the ' touch of a woman's deft fingers.
Homes in every state in the Union '
from Maine to California were photographed - i
graphed for the Journal's unique and <
useful series ,
{
Burlingrton Route. *
Another excursion to Hot Springs , S. '
D. The last of the Burlington Route's
1S77 Hot Springs excursions will be that t
of Tuesday , September 28. As usual , the f
rate will be one fare for the round trip
and the return limit thirty days. For
tickets and information about trains , see *
the local agent of the B. & M. R. R. *
For 24 page booklet descriptive of Hot ;
Springs , Sylvan Lake , Deadwood and (
Spearfish , write to J. Francis , G. P. A. ,
Omaha. Nebraska.
_ i
Hammocks at McMillen's drug store. <
One Minute Cough Cure , cures. '
That is what it was made for. i )
' _ whftwi man
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fttBIG STOCK ] ' H f
H § OF ] fM. ?
gg ? _ _ _ _ _ I I 8f3 fr
ft • IUllgoods ] j ;
jgg NOW READY FOR INSPECTION , p "i
ft NEW DRESS GOODS m
gig JUST RECEIVED. | &S. 9
| & $ gj I
5Sg Come and be convinced that it _ j&2 &
pgkj is the largest and best selection pf j
| gg | we have ever shown. Prices are gpfi |
j&n lower than they ever were before. I ji " . 1
H CLOTHING , H I
UNDERWEAR , B I
CAPES , JACKETS H i
H h i
g | § We bought them all before ig 1
ggj [ _ prices went up. Come , buy early ggg 1
SS53 and get the benefit of low prices. S O H
ggj Get our prices on Groceries , ggg.fl
dws at the . . . % ! M [ I
T7 f .Ml fl
H * 1 ISaraain jf • J
m > tore , § $ HI
pEfei C. L. DeGROFF & CO. Sfe * . il
_
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r NATIONAL l M I
Authorized Capital , $100,000.M \
Capital and Surplus , $60,000 | S I
GEO. HODKNELL , President. B. HI. FREES , V. Pros. jg §
W. F. LAWSON , Cashier. F. A. PEMNELL , Ass'i Cash. fV ]
A. CAMPBELL , Director. FRANK HARRIS , Director , jfp
p V. FRANKLIN , President. A. C. EBERT. Cashier. | | H
* * r-v T - v _ _ _
- THE -
f #
j CITIZENS BANK | I
# OF MeCOOK , NEB. # fl
| | h H
§ Paid Up Capital , $50,000. Surplus , Sioooo II
ei * ffy _
| -r-ZDIRECTORS = = _ : fl
| - = - 5 = - - | | ;
A g. V. FRANKLIN , / / . S. HARWQOD , A. C. EBERT , | | " aH
J ? / / . T. CHURCH , OSCAR CALL/HAN , C. H. WILLARD. * | | t H
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ rj _ bjaac3gcAJlS _ _ y _ H