CASTORIA * } oo DROPS For Infante and Children. The Kind You Have AyegelablePreparatioiiror As Always Bought similating liieToodandReguta- ling the Stomachs andBowels of j PiomolesDicslionCheeifuI- 'ness andHest.Contains neither Opium Morphina norHmeral. ' NOT NARCOTIC. Ktttpc ofOldErSAMUELEIHUIEIl Pumphn Sefil" /fbr.Senna * JtoJallc Salts - Jlnisc.Sctd. Jmitmdnt - til CattonattSoJa * fitnnSced - Clarified Sugar . UuJuyrttn > fflmv. Apcrfect Remedy for Constipa tion , SourStomach.Diarrhoea , Worms.ConvulsionsJeverish- ncss ondl/oss OF SLEEP. 7ac Simile Signature of rXACT COPY-OF "WBAPPCB , VW.W - . It"//// . . THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY. ROADS ARE AUKS Perfection is the of our long are the product of mechanical ingenuity. Send for 1893 Catalogue. Agents wanted in open territory. MONARCH CYCLE MFC. CO. , Lake , Halsted and Fulton Streets , Chicago * Branches New York , London and Hamburg. Send ten a-oent stamps for a deck of Monarch Playing Cards Illustrating Lillian Russell , Tom Cooper , Lee Richardson , and Walter Jones. FRANCIS E. DIVINE. CANCEU DOCTOR , McCooK. NEBRASKA guarantee a cure. Xo cure , no pay.Vrie insat above address , or call .at my home in Colt man precinct. Tablets and Box Papers. - ' You will find a fine line of tablets and box paperat this office for sale at very reasonable n mes and of the best qual ity. _ SCALE ROOKS lror sale at THE TRIB UNE office. Hest tu the market. ' Q-OOOOO-O O-OO O < X > O < XKK-CK > O - < C * y VETT * ? * Ci * | Webster' * * ; ; g Int ersaatiooai. criitc'- Tim One Great Standard Author.z. ; ttri - Ion I > . . ' . Hrec.or , i - supreme C i utt. or tl-el s.t.if.'iriiiiiiii ' ' I " " . - - ( Hill ( .till' MlJIlt-HH- ( . 'oiut , nil tin.SIMI. . , t ] IH'IMI' < OllllS.illlllol IK-'ll \y : ill tlif Solnoli ! il > > \VarinIy liy State SiUMTinleiiili-nts of Schools , ColU-jri' I'n si dents .Jiililotlitr IMinailoi- iiliuostitliuut iiuiiilx i. Iiivilual2le lit tliu lioiisi-IioM , : iinl tii' teacher , scholar , i > i " ' ' " 111.111 , .mil be i James sent on < rmdlcation to ' . . : ! . , uljlisIzers , ; SpriiiHTfield , Mass. ' , _ , _ _ . 111 ' * Do not be deceived in c- ° ' i - buying smnll so-cnll - ' Dictionaries. " All authentic ' . , , " - of Webster's International Diction-1 iriil ' i ? -nroV ! l.enr our.trade-mark on S r S tli - , , i7es . UK : fiont cover as sliou n In tlie cuts. "DeWitt's Witch Hazel Saiv- Cures Plies. Scalds , Burns. McConnell's Colicure Cures Colic , Cholera Morbus and Diar rhoea Money refunded if not as repre sented. i See McMillen's new stock of WALL PAPER. j , THE TRIBUNE and The Cincinnati j Weekly Knquirer for $1.50 a year , strictly i j in advance. i Guaranteed Mixed Paint at McMillen's ; Drug Stoie. THE TRIBUNE and The Toledo Blade : for 51.25 a year , strictly in advance. When you call for DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve the great pile cure , don't , accept anything else. Don't be talked into accepting a substitute for piles , sores or burns. A. McMillen. ; THE TRIBUNE and The New-York Tribune for $1.25 a year , strictly in ad vance. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve has the largest sale of any salve in the world. This fact and its merit has led dishonest people to attempt to counterfeit it. Look out for the man who attempts to deceive you when you call for DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve the great pile cure. A Mc Millen. DeWitt's Colic & Cholera Cure , Pleasant , Quick "Results , Safe to take. B. E. ASHTON , Pro : . T. E. MeDOHALB , Cash. CLIFFOHD HASS1T , Ast. Cash. BANK OF DANBURY DANBURY , NEB. A General Banking Business J5f Any business you may wish to transact with THE McCooK TRIBUNE will receive prompt and careful atten tion. Subscriptions received , orders taken for advertisements and job-work. , BARTLEY. Another uice , refreshing shower , Tuesday morning. \V. E. llollings .received another threshing machine , this week , for Stadlei & Son. Misses Amy and Cora Daniels are attending institute at the coun ty capital , this weok. H. L. Burl was here , Wednes day , soliciting insurance for the Bankers' Life of Des Monies. J. 0. Puckett uill occupy the storeroom recently made vacant by the ivinoval of Mrs. Kite's slock. Rob Roseiifelt is acting in the capacity "J' "hog man" for his 'father , this week , in the absence of .7. R. Sipe. "Pap"Epperly is assisting J.H. Keys , these last days , in the ab sence of H. P. Hodgkin , who has gone threshing. Mr. and Mrs. F. L. En low were visiting under the parental roof at Cambridge , Sunday , returning in the evening on No. 4 , via McCook. C. V. Yicjkivy departed for De- weese , this state , Monday moru- inir , to attend a meeting of foreign missionaries , of which he is one. Prof. L. C. Patch arrived here , Tuesday evening , from Peru , nnd will serve in the capacity of prin cipal of the schools during the corning year. Miss Lena Flint returned from McCJook , last Saturday evening , and on Monday began her initial term of school in the Stevenson canyon district. Perce Catlett departed for Mc Cook , Monday , to undergo the us ual course of treatment before en- teiiug upon his duties as school- marm" over near DAiibury. A. E. Crosby moved his harness shop , this week , into the building recently purchased by him. north of the postoifice. Mrs. Kite is oc- cup\ing the room just \aealed by him with her millinery block. Dr. CHUM'S Elect lie Belt Com edy Co. is occupying the vacant space just east of the hardware store , this week. They are draw- in"larjje n crowds nijjhtlv . and \vork- ing the dear people for the price of electric appliances after a man ner indicative of long practice. VAILTON. Corn is not doing very well at present. C.T.Eller had about 2,500 bush els of wheat. Mrs. Blair of McCook was visit ing relatives here , last week. A light rainfall at this writing , but not sufficient to help the corn. Green and Morrison of Pieasanl Ridge are busy threshing in this neighborhood. Brett and Everist will have about a weeks work threshing. Some of their grain is quite good. A small boy arrived at the J. W. Speer home , last week ; hence great rejoicing and good cheer prevail. Mr. Silversnnil of Indianola will assist Morrison and Green in their labors hereafter , he being a ma chine man of considerable experi- 3 nee. BANKSVILLE. Dry and hot. A good rain would greatly benefit the ate corn and help the fall plowing. Small grain is all in the stack , but no hreshing has jet been done in this vi zi nity. August Wesch , C Kelley , J. II. Relph , \ . Peters , Mr. Hartimin and Mr. Myers vere transacting business in McCook , Saturday The school board is fixing up the chool-house , this week , the scheme to juild a new one having failed. On account of the condition of the ichool-house , Sunday services have been liscontinued Mr. and Mrs August Wesch are the Droud parents of a son , born last week \ugust lias bought another farm and vill fix it up for the new comer. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &c. Invention 13 probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Jlunn & Co. receive Special notice , without charge , In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest dr- culatlon of any scientific journal. Terms , $3 a year : four months , f 1. Bold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co.361Broadwa * New York Branch Office. 625 F St , Washington , D. C. THE TRIBUNE and Demorest's Family rlagazine for $1.75 a year , strictly in dvance. Some More Burlington Route Excursions. Indianapolis and return , 524 68 , Aug. 19-20-21 ; for Grand Encampment of the Knights of Pythias. Cincinnati and return , $24.73 , Sept. 2- 3-4-5 ; for National Kncampment G. A. R. Hot Springs , S. D. , and return , $18.70. Aug. 26 and September 10. Tickets good 30 days. Glister , S. D , and return , $19 50 , Aug. 26 and Sept. 10. Omaha and return , $11.35 extraordi narily low every day until close of the Trans-Mississippi Exposition. Call and see ineuboutnny of the above. A. P. THOMSON , Agent B. . M. THE INDIAN CONGRESS a permanent feature of the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition at Omaha. NOW OPEN. CLOSES NOV i Forty Tribes of North American Indians represented. Unique Ethnological Exhibit. Rare opportunity to see the various tpes of American Indians in their native costumes and habitations Nearly a Thousand Indians on the Great Encampment Grounds within the Exposition Enclosure. Under the direction of Capt U" A Mercer , U. S. A , these Indians trities participate in their spectacular dances nearly every evening THE WAR DANCE THE GHOST DANCE , THE SUN DANCE , THE SNAKE DANCE , THE MEDICINE DANCE , and other traditional rites of the red man are performed by these Indians. This great ethnological exhibit , in aid of which the United Slates Congress appropriated $40,000 , will con tinue to the end of the Exposition. Reduced Railroad Rates from all Points now in Force. One Minute Cough Cure surprises people ple 1) } ' its quick cures and children may take it in large quantities without the least danger It has won for itself the best reputation of anv preparation used today for colds , croup , tickling in the throat or obstinate coughs A. McMil len. Spend August in the Black Hills. Go first to Hot Springs There > ou can bathe , ride , bicycle , climb moun tains , dance and play tennis to your heart's content. If your limbs are stiff your kidneys out of order or if you are troubled \vith eczema or any other fern of skin disease , a month at Hot Springs will make a new man of you. Sylvan Lake and Spearfish ate wilhir a comparatively short distance of Hoi Springs and everyone \\ho visits the Black Hills should see them. Sylvan Lake is the prettiest , coolest summer resort in the west. Spearfish is reached after a railroad ride that rank ; among the experiences of a lifetime. There is nothing like it anywhere on the globe. During August , the Burlington Route will run two low-rate excursions to Hot Springs ; one on the gth , the other on the 26th , of that month. Tickets will be sold at one fare for the round trip half rates and will be good to return any time within 30 days Organize a part- . Arrange about your hotel accommodations at Hot Springs. Get your tickets from the Burlington agent and pass the most delightful month iu the year in the most delightful suinuierland on the continent. 8-12 Dr. J. I. Terrv , of Trimble , Tenn. , in speaking of Chamberlain's Colic , Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy , says : "It has always become a necessity in this vicinity. " This is the best remedy in the world for colic , cholera morbus , dys entery and diarrhoea , and is recognized as a necessity wherever its great worth and merit become known No other remedy is so prompt or effectual , or so pleasant to take. Sold by McConnell. " Before my wife began using Mother's Friend she could hardly get around. I do not think she could SuU f aioiig > 8&lsiF i * . , without : it now. She has " | used it for two months and it is a great help to her. She does h e r housework without trouble. " is an external liniment for expectant mothers to use. It gives them strength to attend totheir household duties almost to the hour of confine ment. It is the one and only prepara tion that overcomes morning sickness and nervousness. It is the only remedy that relaxes and relieves the strain. It is the only remedy that makes labor short and delivery easy. It is the only remedy that puts the breasts in condition so that swelling or rising is impossible. Don't take medicines internally. They endanger the lives of both mother and child. Mother's Friend is sold by druggists lor $1. Send for our free illustrated book. The Bradfleld Regulator Co. , Atlanta , Ga. Letter from W. T. Coleman. In fulfilment of my promise to friends , I write yon the following sketch of onr trip lo the south-land : Mrs. Colenuui , the children and my self left McCook on the morniiiK of July 27th. via Onmha On the way we viewed vast crops of wheat nnd corn on either side of the road as far ns the eye could see. The sight was perfectly beautiful , although at that time it was extremely dry and hot.Ve noted 60 steam thresh ers between Holdrege and Lincoln and only two from Kansas City to St Louis. At Omaha we sent Montie and Worthie on to Yale , Iowa , via the Chicago , Mil waukee & St. Paul , where the ) ' will visit until onr return. Mrs. Colemrui , the baby and myself took the first train on the Burlington for Kuiisab City and St. Louis. We rode all day through Missouri. It was a brok en country , with small fields of corn about knee high , kept back by a late spring , but really there was no such farming land as we saw iu Nebraska. There was considerable timber along the road , but nil the prairie land seems to have a hard pan bottom , for \\herever the farmers wanted a pond they threw a dam across any draw and there the water would stand , showing the sub-soil as clay. A farmer on the train told me that a week of real rainy weather would drown then , out , or if it got extremely dry and hot for a week the gror.iid would dry out , as this sub-soil is so near the surface that they can't stand either dryer or wet weather withot injury to the crops. \Ve passed through no large towns cross ing the state of Missouri , few if anv larg er than SlcConk , until we got to the Mississippi river. Here we began to see the colored population in all its reality. The country is densely wooded , and as the train flew by you could see the log houses and cabins of the negro in his native country and state. In the Missis sippi valley the land is so low that they raise nothing but frogs and mesquites , while the more elevated land is extreme- Spending a day in St. Louis , we con- tinned our journey southward , along the Mississippi river , through the wooded country , until about noon when we swung off to the south.-vest and took to the hills , . \here it is very broken and no farming , to speak of is attempted ; and every station has a saw mill. Entering Arkansas , we struclc a low , level country , and for miles and miles it was swamps on either side of the road. This country is the breeding ground of fever , chilis and malaria , and is only in habited by a few negro families that are ting to eke out a miserable exist ence on the knobs of land that stick up out of the s.vamps. About dark we got out of the swamp district and into a fairj country for Arkansas , \vith some good ! farm houses , and in the morning we , reached Little Rock. At Malveru we changed cars to a plug road that rurs to the Hot Springs , where we arrived at | eight o'clock , Saturday morning. Scores j of hotel and boarding house representa-1 lives greeted ns and importuned us to , stop with them , and the only way we j got rid of the mob was by telling them we had friends here with whom we would stop.Ve learned from an officer that there are about 475 hotels and board ing houses in the city , so we had plenty of places to select from. We chose the i Moody because of its occupying high I ground , as the valley is very suffocating on a hot day. There are hotels everywhere , big and little , cheap and expensive , tony and common , some costing over a million i dollars and accommodating more than a I thousand guests. I ] There are 72 hot springs , where the ! water conies out of the west side of the mountainsand they have all been piped to 20 different bath houses. The gov ernment made a reservation of the Hot Springs mountains in 1832 , and the bath houses are all built on government land and controlled by the government. There are 495 tubs iu the various bath houses and the government collects $30 apiece for each annually ; in addition there is a public bath house where the poor may bathe free. The bath house people j charge from $3 to $10 for 21 baths , ac cording to the accommodations. We are bathing at the Palace for $9.25 each for 21 baths , and we furnish our own rotes and towels , but servants and attendants are included in the price. The water as it runs into the tubs is 157 degress hot , but it is cooled to 98 de grees. After a thorough rubbing down you are placed in the tub for ten min utes , and again you are thoroughly rubbed with towels and placed in the vapor room , which is filled with steam ust as it comes from the springs , so hot that many weak-lunged people faint away. From here you are taken to a hot room , heated by radiators to 125 degrees dry heat. After sweating in perfect streauis for ten minutes , you are taken out , rubbed and wrapped in blankets , and laid on a cane bottomed strecher to cool in a room that is 88 degrees hot. A.fter 20 minutes of this you are so weak ai you can scarcely stand up , ant you are again rubbed down and put in a shower jath , where for five minutes you are showered with hot and cold water. After more rubbing you are put in a room to cool at a temperature of 85 degrees. ? roui here to the dressing room and the operation is finished. Hot Springs has a population of about rs.oco. It is situated for the most part n a valley , surrounded by hills about a and covered with thousand feet high timber. There is just about * s much there is timber fa p airie in Arkansas ns onk ami P n& Nebraska. Hickory , varieties. abound , but there are other The soil is so poor they can scarcely grow anything about here. There is government land two miles from here , j and twenty-five miles north there is a sparse settlement with lots of deer , tur keys and bear , and some quail. The farmers are all poor , and they use cast- iron plows that cut about eight inches , for that is all they can pull through the rocks and stumps. There is hardly enough soil among the rocks to make the water muddy after a rain. They all want to sell out. There are many other items of interest in this section , but I forbear. A stubborn cough or tickling in the throat yields to One Minute Cough Cure. Harmless in effect , touches the right spot and just what is wanted It acts at once A McMillen. Tribune Clubblnj ? List. J For convenience of readers of THE TKII- UXK , we have made arrangements with the following newspapers aiul. perodicals whereby we can supply them in combination with TICK 1'KIHUNF. at the following very low prices : wir" I'UUUCATIO.V. I'KICK. TKIKUNK Detroit Free Press $1 oo SI50 Leslie's Weekly. 400 Prairie Fanner I OO 125 Chicago Inter-Ocean I oo 135 Cincinnati Knquirer. I OO 150 New-York Tribune I oo Demorest's Magazine I oo 175 Toledo Mlade - . I CO Nebraska Farmer i oo 165 Iowa Homestead I oo 175 Lincoln Journal I oo 175 Campbell's Soil-Culture I 00 i 5 New-York World i oo 105 Omaha Hee 100 150 Cosmopolitan Magazine. I oo i So \Ye are prepared to fill orders for any other papers published , at reduced rates. THE TKIKUNK , McCook , Neb. You invite disappointment when von experiment. DeWitt's Little Early Ris ers are pleasant , easy , thorough little- pills. They cure constipation and sick headache just as sure as 3-011 take them. A. McMillen. Mr. A C. Wolfe , of Dundee , Mo. , who travels for Mansur & Tibbctls Imple ment Co , of St. Louis , gives traveling men and travelers in general , some good advice. "Being a Knight of the Grip. " he says , "I have for the past three ytnrs , made it a rule to keep myself supplied with Chamberlain's Colic , Choleia ami Diarrhoea Remedy , and have louud mi merous occasions to test its merits. m-t only on myself but on others as well. I can truly say that I never , in a single instance , have known it to fail. I con sider it one of the be t remedies travel ers can carry and could relate manv in stances where I have used the remedy on skeptics , much to their surprise and re lief I hope every traveling man in the- U. S will carry a bottle of this remed\ in his grip. " For sale by McConnell CASTOR ! A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought , Bears the Signature of 0. L EVERIST & CO. , PROPRIETORS OF THE McCook Transfer Line BUS , BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS. furniture van iu the uity. Office one block north of BnniPtt Lumber Yard. Leave or ders for bus calls afc Commercial betel ; orcleisfor dray ing at Ev- Brist , Marsh & Co.'s meat market. Satisfaction guaranteed. F. D. BURGESS , Plumber and Steam Fitter McCOQK , NEBR. iron , Lead , and Sewer Pipe , Brass Goods , Pumps , and Boiler Trimmings. Agent for Halliday , Waupun , Eclipse Windmills. Basementof the Meeker- Phillips building. JOHN E. KELLEY , ATTORNEY AT LAW MCCOOK , NEBRASKA. of Lincoln Land Co ORice of 1-irst National bank. JB. . BALLARD. O DENTIST. © = = = = = = = = = = = = = = McCOOK SUEGICAL HOSPITAL , Or. W. V. GAGE. Mccook , - Nebraska. HTMassace given in appropriate cases. McCook ANNETTA BALL , Surgical Hospital. re * .