WHEN YOU ARE OLD. Wh"n yea uro old and gray nnd fall of Bleep . And nodding by the flrc , tnko down this book And rtuwly read nnd dream of the fair look Your eyes hndonconud of their shadows deep. How rci'ny loved your moments of glad greco AnJ luvoJ your benuty with love fnlso or ir. . . - , But. o : o innn loved the pilgrim aoul in you jitl loved ; ho sorrows of your changing fnco And , U i.'in ; ; down bcsido the gl g Uag bars , Mun. ut\l n little sad , "From ttiiilcd lovo. " lie p"tt\l upon the mountains far above And Li.rl.is fnco nmid a crowd of stars. "Poems. " by W. B. Yeuta. FIRE HORSES. The Quickest OIIOH In the World Arc Said to i : i In KIUIHUH City. P. S. Dclliulnugh writes of "Tho Quick Horac" in St. Nicholas , his article telling of the training of horses for the fire department. Mr. Dollcu- baugh says : The quickest horses in the world were at one time in Kansas City at the head quarters of its lire department , directly under the office of the chief , Mr. George C Hale. To Air. Halo's genius more than to any other factor the quick horse owed his first development , for Mr. Halo is the inventor of the earliest swinging harness which made the quick horse possible. When Mr. Henry M. Stanley and his wife were ; in this country , tLey witnessed an exhibition drill of the Kansas City fire department. The drill so impressed the visitors tl-at an account of it was published in aLrv. don journal , and this English urticio brought an invitation to Mr. Hale to visit England as the representative of the A'mericau lire service at the interna tional fire tournament. Air. Halo and a picked corps went to England , tak ing with them the remarkably quick hor. es Joe and Dan , and they became world famous. As the quickest harne&s- iug time of the London fire brigade is , 1 iniuuto 174 seconds and the Kansas City horses were harnessed in 1 % seconds ends and were out of the engine house in less than 8 seconds , there could bo no competition. In Kansas City four line bays were harnessed to the hook and ladder truck almost as quickly as even .Too and Dan could jump into their har nesses. It was a pretty sight to see these four well kept horses spring to their places at the stroke of th9 gong and in two or three seconds stand ready to run with the apparatus. Joe was killed by an accident , but Dan , with a new mate , is still in service , and as quick as ever. The record for quickest time from the engine house to the throwing of water on the fire is held by a Kansas City company. In this instance the horses were harnessed , a run of 2,194 feet ( a little less than half a uiilo ) was made , and water thrown from the hose in the wonderfully brief time of 1 minute 31 y seconds. Schopenhauer on Women. Schopenhauer's mother , Joanna , was a singular woman , with whom he was perpetually at war. She was lively , he was grim. She was a sentimentalist , he detested sentiment. She was devoted to society , to gossip , to the convenances of life. Ho lived for ideas , and with an al most savage moroseness poured scorn on the round of "at homes" and aesthetic tea parties. Both were selfish and quar relsome. We may judge , therefore , that Schopenhauer took his notions of wom en partly from his mother. It goes with out saying that these notions were violent lent in the extreme , yet not without some aspects of truth. The new woman would rave at this satire on her pretensions , and yet it would do her good to read what Scho peuhauer has to say with as much calm ness as she can command. Woman is hero depicted as emphatically "a lesser man" indeed so far below man as to be fit only for the role of the old fash ioned German hausfrau. Self Culture. Time to Stop. Among the best stories recorded by a well known angler is one about a Scot tish laird who was one day relating to his friends at the dinner table the story of a fine fish ho had caught. "Donald , " said he to the Eervautbehiud his chair an old man , but > a new servant "how heavy was the fish I took yesterday ? " Donald neither spoke nor moved. The laird repeated the question. "Weel , " replied Donald , "it was twul' pund at breakfast , it had gotten to achteeu at dinner time and it was sax and twenty "when ye sat down to supper wi' the captain. " Then , after a pause , he added - ed , "I've been telliu lees a' my life to please the shooters , but I'll be dashed if I'm going to tell lees uoo in my old age to please the fushers. " The Heft Wing. "Is there any portion of the fowl you prefer , majnr ? " asked the hostess bland ly. "Tho left wing , if you please. " "Tho left wing ? " "Yes , " retorted the major , gazing dubiously at the platter. "I believe it is always good military tactics to bring the left wing of a veteran corps into ac tion. " London Fun. Daily Output News Print Pnper. j The daily output of news print paper in. the United States is about 1,200 to 1,500 tons. The production of news print is larger than any other grade. That of book paper is probably as much as 1,000 tons and of writing 450 tons each daily. Natural Suspicion. "What makes you think this man an inrpostor when ho says he is from Bos ton ? " "The fact that he doesn't claim to live in the Back Bay district. " Chicago cage News. _ A man may float ; in salt water with out moving his hands or feet if ho has the presence of mind to throw his head back and allow his body to sink to the position which it will then naturally take. take.A * A Turkish turban of the largest size contains 20 yards of the finest and soft est muslin. DRINKS OF OUR FORBEARS. They Wore FiMtltllnu * In Quality , They UUcd Quantity. Among tbo popular drinlc.svero nnul dog and dragon's mill ; . Their main con stituent was nlo of dift'oront iloyrosH of ago nnd strength flavored with ginger iiicl similar hot stuff. Mad dog \VIIH the stronger of the two. Itiui popular among gcntlotuun of ancient Pistol's stamp , who usually wanted somuthing to grip their throats and put lire into their eyes. Topers ewe great deal to this same mad dog. Ho itvis that in troduced the custom , popular in ether lands besides England , of casing thu ef fects of overindulgence by taking "a hair of the dog that bit yon. ' ' The fastidious IBritni of'tho olden times was also mighty hard to pleat-o as to the qualities of wino.Vo lind record of his nieoty in this regard as fur back as thu twelfth century. An old manu script in the British museum tells UH what wino was most pri/.od : "It should bo clear like the tears of : \ penitent , so that a man may pee distinctly to the bottom of bis glass ; its color should represent the greenness of a buffalo's horn ; when drunk , it should descend impetuously like thunder ; sweet tnt- ed , like iin almond ; creeping like s\ squirrel ; leaping like a roebuck ; strong like the building of a Cistoroian monas tery ; glittering like a spark of lire ; sub tle like the logioof the schools of Paris ; delicate as fine silk , and colder than crystal. " If the Englishman of that day was able to procure this celestial liquor , ho was more fortunate than recent topers and tipplers have been in the triune kingdom. All modern travelers can tes tify that no such wine is to be had now , either in "dear old London" or else where on the inland. Furthermore , the fancy beverages c/f the Elizabethan per iod have disappeared and kfc not a rack behiu I , unless we dignify such wishy washy htuff as claret punch , which holds the place of honor in most metropolitan barrooms , and port negus , which still lingers in the sickroom , by calling them weak kneed descendants of the sturdy , uncompromising Leverages of old. Chicago Times-Herald. AN ANCIENT CHURCH. A lieverly ( Itluss. ) Structure Nearly Two Centuries Old. The remodeled Second church , that of the Congregational society , at North Beverly , Mass. , is 18-1 years old and is the first and only house of worship the society has ever had. The Second parish of Beverly is one of the old societies of the county. When incorporated by the general court in 17Jo , it was as the "precinct of Salem and Beverly. " Ob jection has been made on the part of certain Beverly people to the separation of the parish. The first meeting toward forming the society was held in November , 1713 , and a committee appointed. At a later meeting the sum of 350 was raised to ward building a meeting house. The house was built and finished and dedi cated the following year. Originally it was 50 feet by 40. In 1771 a porch was added to the front end by Caleb Dodge at his own expense. In 1751 a steeple was built and a 400 pound bell was purchased. Two years later Robert Hooper gave a bell to the church. The house w-as placed on its present site in 1837 , when it was en larged and thoroughly remodeled. When General Gage was stationed at Dauvers and lived in the Collins house , at the time he sent his messenger down to Salem to terminate the sitting of the assembly because it was about to form a provincial congress , ho attended church in the North Beverly house of worship. For many years the ceiling was not plastered , but later some of the wealthy members had the spaces over their own pews plastered at their own expense. When. Eobert Hooper gave the church the bell , he was given a pew in the church , and the parish voted to have it plastered overhead at the expense of the society. Boston Herald. The Type In the Oxford Bible. Statistics have a fascination for many people , who will be interested in learn ing that there are 773,746 words in the authorized version of the Bible and 3,500,482 letters , including JE's. These figures , says The Periodical , the monthly journal of announcements issued by the Clarendon press , relate to a text Bible and are independent of verse figures and figures ( if used ) in chapter headings. To estimate the total number of separate bits or pieces of metal which together make up the types of an Oxford refer ence Bible there may then be added ful ly 1,100,000 letters , figures , points , spaces , etc. , in the text and 900,000 in the marginal notes , making a total of 5,5Gi,482 ( pieces in all. Chocolate. To those who study the niceties of de tail in the preparation of oven a simple dish it may be suggested that chocolate used as a drink is much improved if blended several hours beforehand. It is better even to break the lumps of un sweetened chocolate into an earthen bowl the night before , adding cold wa ter and covering closely. In this way the flavor of the chocolate is best ex tracted. New York Post. Velvet the Style. Lady Violet Greville , whoso tips on the fashions are always accepted as gos pel , writes from Paris , saying that vel vet will reign supreme this spring iu the fashionable world. She says , "Vel vet in every style , shape and color black , cornflower blue , sapphire , silver gray shot with gold and a host of other startling -ihades will beorii. . " A south sea islander greets a friend by flinging a jar ofarerover his head. Iu Russia it is correct lor gentlemen to press the foreheads of ladies whom they know intimacy with their lijj.s and in Germany nnd other continental nations kissing between men is by no means nu common. THE FIRST PHOTOGRAPHS. Frofaminr Drnpor'H BUtor Hi t Thirty utt'M Kor IIi > r Portrait. Elizabeth Flint Wndu IWH an illuii. trutod paper on "Photography ItH Mar. voln" in St. Kloliolns. Tliu author HUVH : The ilv.st accounts of thin great dis covery nro vwy untortaiiiitiK reading. ProfoHKor iMoi'HO , the inventor of the telegraph , WIIH in PariH whun thu nuw.i \VHH published , and at onuo wont to HCL > Dngnorro'K wonderful piotnron. In do- Eoribing thorn afterward ho tmid Unit- moving objects made no inipru.HHion on the pluto , for n pictnio tukun ol n crowded bonlovnrd Khowcd it an if on- tiruly dusorlod , with the exception of n man having his tihoes pnlishod. The nmn'H foot , ho said , wuru well dtidnod , luotin.uu they wi.ru kept stationary , but ho was without head or body , for tho.s. ) were in motion. To America bolongH the honor of making thu first photographic portrait , the artist being Professor John Draper , n professor and afterward the president of the University of New York. His victim wasi his sister , Miss Catherine Draper. Hu powdered bur face , that the likeness iright bo more quickly im pressed on tbo sensitive plate , and for 30 minutes Miss Draper snt or , at least , tried to sit as immovable as a statue. The first class in photography was formed in Bosto'n in tlio spring of 18-10 by Dagnerre's agent , Gourad of Paris. The Rev. Edward Everett Halo , then a student in Harvard , became an enthusi astic member of the class. In his diary , under date of April 1 , 1840 , is this en try : "On my way homo I stopped at the shop and got my daguerreotype thnr- mometer There seems to be a great de mand ; there were three or four others i there. " ! THE RICH RUSSIAN. He Has a TVenlniess For an Army of Fam ily Servants. Wo were a family of 8 , occasionally 'of 10 or 12 says Prince Kropotkin in The Atlantic , but 50 servants at Mos cow , and half as many more in the j country , VTTC considered not one too i many. Four coachmen to attend a dozen p hortes , three cooks for the masters and | two more for the servant ? , * a dozen men ' to wait upon us at dinner time one ' man , plate in hand , standing behind i each person seated at the table and I girls innumerable in the maidservants' i room , bnt how could any one do Tvith j less than this ? Besides , the ambition of every landed proprietor was that everything required ! for his household shonld bo made at i home by his "own" irfj j "How nicely yonrno is always i tuned. I suppose Herr tchimmel must j be your tuner ? " one of the visitors would remark. To be able to answer , "I have my own piano tuner , " was in those times the correct thing. "What beautiful pastry ! " the guests would exclaim when a work of art , composed of ices and pastry , appeared toward the end of the dinner. "Confess , prince , that it comes from Tremble" ( the fashionable pastry cook ) "It is my own confectioner , a pnpil of Tremble , whom I have allowed to show what he can do , " was the reply which elicited general admiration. To have emhroideries , harnesses , fur niture in fact everything made by one's "own" men was the ideal of the rich and respected lauded proprietor. liismnrclc as Dr. Jclcyll. No greater contrast could possibly bo imagined than that which existed he- tween the Bismarck of private life and the Bismarck of politics. "In the home circle , " writes a correspondent who knew him well , "he was perfectly charming , easy going and good iiatured. Ho was passionately fond of children , and I have seen him over and over again have a , game with the little ones of his gardener , who were very familiar with him and would not hesitate to climb upon his knee. "Once when his gardener's little girl died the great statesman went to con dole with him. He was dreadfully up set and while holding the poor father's hand burst into tears , for he was very fond of the child. Ho kissed the little corpse and himself placed a hunch of roses in its hand. He was always eager to assist his poorer neighhors and en joyed chatting with them on all snb- jects but politics. These ho never men tioned. " London Chronicle. The Professor's Wisdom. The stern professor of the feminine preparatory school sat at his desk try ing to unravel a knotty problem when a fluffy haired miss of 16 approached. "Please , sir , " ehe began in a tremu lous voice , "will you grant me permis sion to go out riding with my brother this afternoon ? " Now , the old man had not forgotten the days of his youth , neither was he a fool , and looking over his spectacles he slowly said : "So you want to go riding with your brother , do you ? By the wajis this brother of yours any relation to you ? " Chicago News. Servian marriages. Servian men do not marry lor love , but to secure an additional worker for the household , so very young men mar ry women several years older than themselves , as girls are less experienced in housework. In the lower and mid dle classes women are always helped last , and may not sit down unbidden in the presence of the men. There are only 3,842 left of the Aiuos of Japan the "Indians" of that coun try. Nearly all of them live on the northern island of Yezo. It has been estimated that it would take a man o. 000 years to read all the standard works. The British postoffico makes $20.00 ( a year by unclaimed money orders Valentino HolliiiKHWorth accompanied William I'Ciiiu in tbo n od hip Wol- some and HUttlud in Delaware upon the bimlcH of thu Uraiidywlni' . Kathorinu , bin daughter , "a ihlcctablu Quaker nialdun , " thu prldu of thu l.'tilu Hottlo- inont , wan wouwl and w < ,1 by big ( Suorgu UobliiHjn. lint ( .u'o.t ) was or thu duirdi of Knghiinl , and JCathorinu "must liu niarrlud in mooting. " "Uuorgu , "wriiuM thu author of "lloir- IOOIIIH in Miiiluturi ) , " "wan willing to join the Houiuty , bu a Friend and ho niarriod in mooting or anywhere elnu that Kathurinu nuid Accordingly hu and Kntlu'i'ino niado thuir flrnl duuluru- tion otli day. Int inontb , 1088. " The uldurH , howuver. hud "wcrupluH. " musing that CJoorgo'H uonvurhioii wail very Hiiddun. and tboy nuked linn thin Hoarohing qiinhtioii : "Friend KolniiHon , dost tlioii join thu Sociuly of 1'riundH ironi conviction or for the love of Katherine HollingH- worth:1" : George hohitatod. Ho pri/.od thu truth and hu did wish to niarry Kathorinu. tin hu answered : "i wish to join tlio Kocioty for thu love of Kathurinu Hollin swortb. " Thu Fnunds counseled "tlulay and that Friend Kobinson hhould bu persua sively and instructively dealt with. " Shrewd men as they wore , they allowed Katherinu to dual with hint , and with in a year Gooryo joinud thu hociety ah a trno convert. An old manuscript reads , "Hu and Katherinu wore permitted to begin a louy and happy married liiu together , being for many years an example of piety and goodnc&s to the e around them and rutiiining their love of truth and loyalty to thu society to the last. " Nimrs of StreetH. There was a discussion in progress on the question of naming the new street ? of Washington and making some changes iu the names of those already christened when a man , who has lived in the city long enough not to bo face tious at the expense of anything so trodden underfoot as a street is , began to say something. "What's the use of doing anything with the names of streets , " ho in quired , "especially with the names of those that are lit as they are ? Now , take the lettered streets as an example. They are named appropriately enough if the inhabitants would only live up to their opportunities. For instance , the first people s-hould live on A street and the sweet people on B street , the navy people on C street , though the blind people would prefer it ; the profane people ple on D street , the egotistic people on I street ; the rurals arc not to be pro vided for , because there is no ,1 street ; the Ingersoll people CM L street , the printers on M street , the debtors on 0 street , the billiard players on Q street , the Chinamen on T street , the unselfish people on U street , the married people on W street , the pest people" "Stop him , " interrupted o listener , "stop him ! It's his treat ! " And then each man named his treat to suit him self , and the facetious man paid for all. Washington Star. A Closa bhave. A darky was suing a railroad com pany for damages caused by the killing of his cow. 'iiJL-rf was a strong suspi cion that be had purposely driven the cow on the track. "Did you not drive the animal it front of the engine' : " asked the lawyer for the road. "No , tub , I didn't ! " "You'll swear yon didn't ? " "Yes , sub , ten times over. " Ho won the case , but as ho pocketed the check for his money some one over heard him say : "Dat wuz a narrow escape I had , 1 tell you , but i tole him do truth. It wuzu't me what driv' do cow in front er do engine , but my brother-in-law he do one done it. I mighty glad dat lawyer fatop when ho did , 'kaso he wu2 right in do fambly. " Atlanta Consti tution. Curious Customs. A curious marriage custom obtains iu the island of Himla , just opposite the island of Rhodes. The Greeks , by whom it is peopled , earn their living by the sponge fishery. No girl in this island is allowed to marry until she has brought up a certain number of sponges , which must bo taken from a certain depth. In some of the ether Greek islands this demonstration of ability is required of the men , and if there are several suitors for the baud of a maiden her father bestows - stows her on the man who can dive best and bring up the largest number oi sponges. Her Nose Also. She was a bride of only three short mouths , but she had her troubles and naturally made a confidant of her mother. "My dear child , " said the mother , "if you would have neither eyes not ears when your husband comes home late from the club , you might ho hap pier. " "Perhaps so , " answered the young wife , with an air of weariness , "but what am I to do with my nose ? " Chicago cage News. The Tie. "I hear that Throggins and his wife have separated W hat wab the trouble ? ' ' "He loht his magnificent tenor voice , and she ceased to care for him. " "Thou it was nothing bnt a vocal cord that bound them. " Chicago Trib une. All the houses in London and New York could bo built out of the lava thrown out hy Mount Vesuvius since the first recorded eruption iu A. D. 7 ! ) . An Irish tenant observed thst it was a "hard thing for a man to bo turned out of the house which his father built and his grandfather was born in. " An expert declares that eating beef regularly is bad for the tempdr. Tribune Clubbing List. Kor convenience of renders of THK TKIH- UNK , we linvc made arrangements with the following ncivspnperc and pcrodicals whereby we can supply them in combination with TlIK NK at the following very low prices : I'UIII.ICATION. I'KICH. Detroit Free I'rc * * . Si CO St S ° Leslie1 ! . Weekly. . j oo 300 Prairie Fanner . i oo 125 Chicago Inter-Ocean . i oo 135 Cincinnati Kmuirer | , . I oo 150 New- York Tribune. . . . . . . I co I 25 Dcutorckl'ft Mnga/inc . ice 1/5 Toledo Hlnde . I oo 125 Nebraska Farmer . i co 165 Iowa Homestead . I co 175 Lincoln Journal. . . . ICQ 175 Campbell's Soil-Culture. . i co 150 New- York World . i co 165 Omaha lice . i co 150 Cosmopolitan Maj.'i'/iiic . ICO I Ho We are prepared In fill order * for any other papers published , at reduced ratcx. TIIH TKIIJUNK. McCook. Neb. } 3 Exposition Kates. I Tickets from McCook to Omaha and i return will be sold from Sept. ist to Oct. J3ist , inclusive , for 8.95. return limited | to .seven days. i - - - _ _ _ . j One Minute Cough Cure surprises peo- j pic \ > y its quick cures and children may I take it in large quantities without the I least danger. It has won for itself the I best reputation of any preparation used today for colds , croup , tickling in the throat or obstinate coughs. A. McMil- len. * THK TKinu.vu and The Cincinnati Weekly Knquirer forJi-Soayear , strictly in advance. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve has the largest sale of any salve in the world. I 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 jjreat pile cure. A. Mc- Millen. _ More than twenty million free saiii- I pies of DC Witt 'sWilch Hazel Salve have been distributed by the manufacturers. What better proof of their confidence in it's merits do you want ? It cures piles , burns , scalds and sores in the shortest space of time. A. McMillen. "I can't see ho\\ any family lives \\ith- Chambeilain's Colic , Cholera and , Diarrhoea Remedy , " says J. R. Adams , | a well known druggist of Geneva. Ala , i in a letter inquiring the price of a dozen bottles , that he might not only have it for use in his oxvn family bnt supplv it to his neighbors The reason some people get along without it. is because they do not know its value , and what a vas-t amount of suffering it will save. Wher ever it becomes known .and used , U is recognized as a necessity , for it is the only reined- that can ahvays he depend ed upon for bowel complaints , both for children and aduhs. For sale by L. W. AlcConnell & Co. Triennial Conclave , Knights Templar. 1'ittsburg , Oct 10-14. One fare and the round trip to Pittsbury is the rate offered by the Burlington Route for the occa.sion ' named above. Tickets will be on sale Oct. 7 , S , o and 10. and will be good on regular trains of the Burlington Route as well as on the' Knights Templar official train which will | leave Omaha at 5 p. in , Saturday , Oct. I S , reaching Chicago at 8:20 next morning and Pittsburjj at 5:50 ti.ni , Mondav " , Oct. ' 10. ; For tickets , berths in the through , sleeping car or information about return : limits , excursions from littsburjetc. } see nearest B. S : M. R. R. K. agent. 9-30-21 $ . For broken surfaces , sores , insect bites , ' burns , skin diseases and especially piles there is one reliable remedy , DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. When you call for j DeWitt's don't accept counterfeits or frauds. You will not be disappointed ( with-DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. A. McMillen. THE INDIAN CONGRESS a permanent feature of the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition at Omaha. NOW OPKX. CI.OSKS NOY i Forty Tiibes of North American Indians repiesented. j Unique Ethnological Jvxhibit. j Rare opportunity to see the various typos I of American Indians in their native costumes and habitations. Nearly a Thousand Indians on the Great j Encampment Grounds within the Exposition Enclosure. Under the direction of Cant. W. A. Mercer , U. S. A. , these Indians tribe1 ; participate in their spectacular dances nearly every evening THE WAR DANCE ; THE GHOST DANCE , j THE SUN DANCE , THE SNAKE DANCE , \ THE MEDICINE DANCE , j and other traditional rites of tinml ' man are performed by these Indians. i This great ethnological exhibit , in aid ot i which tin' United States Cougioss I appropriated Sjo.ooo , will -con- | tiutie to the end of the Exposition. Reduced Railroad Rates from nil Points now in Force. DeWitt's Little Early Risers , The tnmous little pill * . ALLAGREE. AGREE. A druggist in Macon , Ga. , says : " I have sold a large quantity of Mothers Friend , and nave never known an in stance where it has failed to produce the good results claimed for it. All women agree that it makes labor shorter and less painful. " Mother's Friend is not a chance remsdv. Its good effrcts are readily experienced by all expectant mothers who use it. Years ago it passed the experimental stage. Vh'ie it ahi-aj s shortens labor and lessens the pams of deliver. ' , it is also of the greatest benefit during the earlier months of pregnancy- Morning sickness and nervousness are readily overcome , and the liniment relaxes the strained muscles , permitting them to expand without causing distress. Mother's Friend gives great recuperative po er tz the mother , and her recovery is sure and rapid. Danger from rising and swelled breasts is done away wh completely. Sold by drujjtfsts Jerfl a bottle. .THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA. GA. Sod for OCT free U vn g 'juot icx ediat aMkren. 0 L EVERIST & CO. . mr.J-RtET 'K. - > f i.HE McCook Transfer Line BUS , BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS. furniture van in tti- city. Office one block north : " Barnett Lumber Yar-1 Leave or ders for bus calls at Commercis. . hotel ; ordets for dravins at Ev erist. Mar h \ : Co "s uje&t mark- * Satisfaction ir va F. D. BURGESS , lumber and team Filler McCOOK , HEBR. Gooas S.TS a- Ae t * oHa sa P" os cc -g JOHN E. KELLEY. ATTORNEY AT LAAV : ent of Lincoln Land Cvx Re.tr of First National bank. J. B. BALLAKD. DEXTIST. All vlent.ilo k done at o..r v anteed to be lir > t cl.i \\e .V 1 Crown. Hruijieand PI ate \\ork McCOOK SURGICAL HOSPITAL , Ur.V. . V. GAGE. McCook. - - - Olijce and Hospital vcr Frst Nlu > n 5 K - - Office hoursat residence. 701 Marshall \ 1-efore Q a. m. and after C p. tn. given m appropriate c-s MI < N Avxvn v Ru t , McOook S B r. ASSTCS. ft . ? . S. XcKSXtS. C \ J BANK OF DANBURY DANBURY , NEB. A General Blinking1 - fm IniMm 1- \ MI tv.u wish i transact \\ith I'll * MV vTKiKl \ > williocoi\e prompt awtl caurtul * tt * tion. Swbsciipiions rec * > veo , HUv t.xkcn for .t < iwiliemrnts an J oS work I-KANCIS U. norroK . NhUK\sK\ > ; u t utrr .1 cmo No cm * piv : \Vutc tno.it , ho\e x.Kh.sM . . nt inv homo m Oolcnnn jM-mvii CASTOR I A For Infants ami Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Boars the Signature of One Minute Cough Cure , cures That l.t what It wmade tor.