1 V FRANKLIN rF VfSggj fiuamiiM V FRANKLIN President A C EBERT Cashier W B WOLFE Vice President I CITIZENS BANK OF McCOOK NEB Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 4000 B DIRECTORS W B WOLFE jjfy w to be customer of the t FREE TOJSTOCKflEN A C EBERT VftrtfolWfW WtkSWSb IX S 1 Pleasure New Brick Meat Market They keep a full asssorment of all kinds of meats They treat you so well and so fairly deal with you so squarely that you want to come back Just try it once Phone 95 Main Avenue Paul P Anton b fefebafe a MJiuaaagaBgMapaEBM umKmi zimaBnmamsMaBxnmBnmmBaEnmniMaji i in n rr A 900 LOAN with the McCook Co operative Building Savings Association can be paid off in rt cq monthly payments of P If you are paying more you pay too much We can mature your loan on smaller monthly payments and less money in the aggregate than any comepting associa tion Call on the secretary who will explain our system Office in First National Bank McCook Building Savings Association i P Beautiful six leaf calendar will bo sent by us absolutely free to eveet S stockman who may ship his cattlo hogs or sheep to market and who will write us answering the following questions 1 How many head of stock have you 2 What kind of stock have you not including horses 3 When do you expect to market your stock 4 To what market will you likely ship 5 In what paper did you see thia advertisement This calendar will be ready for distribution in January It is an exceptionally beautiful artistic and costly production printed in several colors representing fox hunting scenes It was made especially for us cannot bo obtained elsewbereand is worthy a placo in the finest home WritS us today giving this information and in sure getting this calendar Address CLAY ROBINSON CO Live Stock Commission Merchants Stock Yards Sta Kansas City Kans also have our own offices at Chicago South Omaha St Joseph Denver Sioux City So St Paul East Buffalo The McCook Tribune Only One Dollar the year XDoxTc x Phonography is so simple as to be readily learned by any one of ordinary capacity and the public benefits to be derived bom it are incalcu lable John Height s In the Bcnn Pitman System cf Phonography Reporting Style For particulars write STAYNERS Shorthand School McCook Neb Dr B Q Valme f Office over Bee Hive UXUiK A XSS T l s gY iTrir concluded fbom last week nnd for one brief moment the crowd stood still watching one of their ring leaders who was turning and twisting on his side half a dozen steps from the bottom Then Paul raised his voice Listen to me he said But he got no further for some one Bhot at him from the background over the frantic heads of the others and missed him The bullet lodeed In the wall at the head of the stairs in the Jamb of the gorgeous doorway It Is there today There was a yell of hatred and an ugly charge toward the stairs but the sight of the two revolvers held them there motionless for a few moments Those In front pushed back while the shouters in the safe background urged them forward by word and gesture Two men holding a hundred in check B one of the two was a prince which makes all the difference and will con tinue to make that difference despite half penny journalism until the end of the world What do you want cried Paul Oh I will wait he shouted in the nest pause There is plenty of time when you are tired of shouting Several of them proceeded to tell him what they wanted an old story too stale for repetition here Paul recog nized in the din of many voices the tinkling arguments of the professional agitator all the world over Look out said Paul I believe they are going to make a rush All the while the foremost men were edging toward the stairs while the densely packed throng at the back were struggling among themselves In the passages behind some were yelling and screaming with a wild Intonation which Steinmetz recognized He had been through the commune Those fellows at the back have been killing some one he said I can tell by their voices They are drunk with the sight of blood- Some new orator gained the ears of the xabble at this moment and the ill kempt heads swayed from side to side It is useless he cried telling him what you want He will not give it you Go and take it Go and take it little fathers That is the only way Steinmetz raised his hand and peer ed down Into the crowd looklntr for the man of eloquence and the voice was hushed At this moment however the yelling increased and through the doorway reading to the servants quarters came a stream of men blood stained ragged torn They were waving arms and im plements above their heads Down with the aristocrats Kill them Kill them they were shriek ing A little volley of firearms further ex cited them But vodka is not a good thing to shoot upon and Paul stood untouched waiting as he had said un til they were tired of shouting Now yelled Steinmetz to him in English jvc mustgoWecan make SOWER By Henry Seton Merriman Copyright 18D5 by HARPER fc BROTHERS 4d3 a stand at the head of the stairs then the doorway then He shrugged his shoulders Then the end he added as they moved up the stairs step by step backward My very good friend he went on at the door we must be- j gin to shoot them down It Is our only chance It Is moreover our duty toward the ladies There la one alternative answered Paul The Moscow doctor Yes They may turn said Paul They are Just in that humor The newcomers were the most dan gerous They were forcing their way to the front There was no doubt that I TiStSR I xyy l vm tTtaaBKyogjrr iV 1 H SCiflS3 -MS Two men holding a hundred in check I as soon as they could penetrate the densely packed mob they would charge up the stairs even In face of a heavy Are The reek of vodka was borne up In the heated atmosphere mingled with the nauseating odor of filthy clothing Go said Steinmetz and put on your doctors clothes I can keep them back for a few minutes There was no time to be lost Paul slipped away leaving Steinmetz alone at the summit of the state stairway standing grimly revolver in hand In the drawing room Paul found Maggie alone Where Is Etta he asked She left the room some time ago But I told her to stay said Paul To this Maggie made no answer She was looking at him with an anxious scrutiny Did they shoot at you she asked Yes but not straight he answered with a little laugh as he hurried on In a few moments he was back in the drawing room a different man in the rough stained clothes of the Mos cow doctor The din on the stairs was louder Steinmetz was almost in the doorway He was shooting economical ly picking his men i ONLY FIVE CENTS MORE than the price of the McCOOK TRIBUNE secures it and the Weekly Inter Ocean Both for One Year THE WEEKLY INTER OCEAN is the only weekly paper published by a Chicago daily and is the leading news farm and home paper of the West Improved and strengthened by the addition of many new features Enlarged farm garden and dairy departments Reliable and practical veter inary department Home Health Club Health and Beauty Hints The most com plete household page Styles for all ages The best Boys and Girls page offered by any paper Queer problems and puzzles Chess and checker columns Best Fiction The International Sunday School Lesson Full and complete market reports The McCook Tribune regular price 100 a year The Weekly Inter Ocean 100 a year Both for only 105 a year This extra dinary offer is made to secure NEW SUBSCRIBERS but old subscribers can take advantage of it by paying their sub scriptions one year in advance Editor H2 mJescEr With an effort Fnul dragged one or twv heavy pieces of furniture across the room in the form of a rough bar ricade ne pointed to the hearth rug where Maggie was to stand Ready he shouted to Steinmetz Come The German ran In and Paul closed the barricade The rabble poured in at the open door screaming and shouting Blood stained ragged wild with the mad ness of murder they crowded to the barricade There they stopped gazing stupidly at Paul The Moscow doctor The Moscow doctor passed from lip to lip It was the women who shouted It the loudest Like the wind through a forest it swept out of the room and down the stairs Those crowding up pushed on and uttered the words as they came The room was packed with them Yes shouted Steinmetz at the top of his great voice And the prince He knew the note to strike and struck with a sure hand The barricade was torn aside and the people swept for ward falling on their knees groveling at Pauls feet kissing the hem of his garment seizing his strong hands in theirs It was a mighty harvest That which is sown in the peoples hearts bears a thousandfold at last Get them out of the place Open the big doors said Paul to Steinmetz He stood cold and grave among them Some of them were already sneaking toward the door the ringleaders the talkers from the towns mindful of their own necks in this change of feel ing Steinmetz hustled them out bidding them take their dead with them Some of the servants reappeared peeping white faced behind curtains When the last villager had crossed the thresh old these ran forward to close and bar the great doors No said Paul from the head of the stairs leave them open Steinmetz In the drawing room look ed at Paul with his resigned semihu morous shrug of the shoulders Touch and go mein Heber he said Yes an end of Russia for us an swered the prince He moved toward the door leading through to the old castle I am going to look for Etta he said And I said Steinmetz going to the other entrance am going to see who opened the side door W CHAPTER XXXIX ILL you come with me said Paul to Maggie I will send the servants to put this room to rights Maggie followed him out of the room and together they went through the passages calling Etta and looking for her There was an air of gloom and chilliness In the rooms of the old cas tle The outline of the great stones dimly discernible through the wall pa per was singularly suggestive of a for tress thinly disguised I suppose said Paul that Etta lost her nerve Yes answered Maggie doubtfully I think it was that Paul went on He carried a lamp in one steady hand We shall probably find her In one of these rooms he said It is so easy to lose oneself among the passages and staircases They passed on through the great smoking room with Its hunting tro phies The lynx with its face of Claude de Chauxville grinned at them darkly from its pedestal Halfway down the stairs leading to the side door they met Steinmetz com ing hastily up His face was white and drawn with horror You must not go down here he said in a husky voice barring the pas sage with his arm Why not Go up again said Steinmetz breathlessly You must not go down here Paul laid his hand on the broad arm stretched across the stairway For a moment it almost appeared to be n physical struggle then SteinmetJ stepped aside I beg of you he said not to gc down And Paul went on followed by Stein metz and behind them Maggie At the foot of the stairs a broader passage led to the side door and from this oth er passages opened into the servants quarters and communicated through the kitchens with the modern building It was evident that the door leadine to the grassy slope at the back of the castle was open for a cold wind blew up the stairs and made the lamps flicker At the end of the passage Paul stopped Steinmetz was a little behind him noming Maggie back The two lamps lighted up the passage and showed the white form of the Princess Etta lying huddled un airainsl the wall The face was hidden but there was no mistaking the beautiful dress and hair It could only be Etta Paul stooped down and looked at her but he did not touch her He went a few paces forward and closed the door Beyond Etta a black form lav across the passage all trodden underfoot and disheveled Paul held the lamp down and through the mud and blood Claude de Chauxvilles clear cut features were outlined Death is always unmistakable though it be shown by nothing more than a heap of muddy clothes Claude de Chauxville was lyine across the passage He had been trod den underfoot by the stream of mad dened peasants who had entered by this door which had been opened for them whom Steinmetz had checked at the foot of the stairs by shooting their ringleader li - L De Chauxvilles scalp was torn away by a blow probably given with a spade or some blunt instrument His hand all muddy and bloodstained still held a revolver The other hand wa3 stretched out toward Etta who lay across his feet crouching against the wall Death had found and left her in an attitude of fear shielding her bow ed head from a blow with her up raised hands Her loosened hair fell in a long wave of gold down to the bloodstained hand outstretched toward her She was kneeling In De Chaux villes blood which stained the stone floor of the passage Paul leaned forward and laid his Angers on the bare arm just below a bracelet which gleamed in the lamp light She was quite dead He held a lamp close to her There was no mark or scratch upon her arm or shoul der The blow which had torn her hair down had killed her without any disfigurement The silken skirt of her dress which lay across the passage was trampled and stained by the tread of a hundred feet Then Paul went to Claude de Chaux ville He stooped down and slipped his skilled Angers inside the torn and mud stained clothing Here also was death Paul stood unricht and looked at them as they lay silent motionless with their tale untold Maggie and Steinmetz stood watching him He went to the door which was of solid oak four inches thick and examined the fastenings There had been no damage done to bolt or lock or hinge The door had been opened from the Inside He looked slowly around meas uring the distances What Is the meaning of It he said at length to Steinmetz in a dull voice Maggie winced at the sound of it Steinmetz did not answer at once but hesitated after the manner of a man weighing words which will never be forgotten by their hearers It seems to me he said with a slow wise charity the best of Its kind quite clear that De Chauxville died in trying to save her The rest must be only guesswork I suppose he went on after a little pause that Claude de Chaux ville has been at the bottom of all our trouble All his life he has been one of the stormy petrels of diplomacy Wherever he has gone trouble has fol lowed later By some means he ob tained sufficient mastery over the princess to compel her to obey his or ders The means he employed were threats He had it In his power to make mischief and In such affairs a woman is so helpless that we may well forgive that which she mav do in a moment of panic I imagine that he frightened the poor lady into obedi ence to his command that she should open this door Ho spread out his hands in depreca tion In his quaint Germanic way he held one hand out over the two mo tionless forms in mute prayer that they might be forgiven We all have our faults he said Who are we to judge each other If we understood all we might pardon The two strongest human motives are ambition and fear She was ruled by both I myself have seen her under the Influence of sudden panic I have noted the working of her great ambi tion She was probably deceived at every turn by that man who was a scoundrel She must have repented of her action when she heard the clatter of the rioters all round the castle I am sure she did that I am sure she came down here to shut the door and found Claude de Chauxville here They were probably talking together when the poor mad fools who killed them came round to this side of the castle and found them They recognized her as the princess They probably mis took him for the prince It Is what men call a series of coincidences I wonder what God calls It He broke off and stoopinc down he drew the lapel of the Frenchmans cloak gently over the marred face And let us remember he said that he tried to save her Some lives are so At the very end a little reparation Is made In life he was her evil genius When he died they trampled him un derfoot in order to reach her Made moiselle will you come He took Maggie by the arm and led her gently away She Avas shaking all over but his hand was steady and wholly kind He led her up the narrow stairs to her own room In the little boudoir the fire was burning brightly the lamps were lighted iust ns th mn i had left them at the first alarm Maggie sat down and quite sudden ly she burst into tears Steinmetz did not leave her He stood beside her gently stroking her shoulder with his stout fingers He said nothing but the gray mustache only half concealed his lips which were twisted with a little smile full of tenderness and sympathy Maggie was the first to speak I am all right now she said Please do not wait any longer and do not think me a very weak minded per son Poor Etta Steinmetz moved away toward the door Yes he said poor Etta Tr fa of ten those who get on in the world who need the worlds pity most At the door he stopped Tomorrow he said I will take you home to England Is that agreea ble to you mademoiselle She smiled at him sadly through her tears Yes I should like that she said This country is horrible You are verv kind to me J Steinmetz went downstairs and found Paul at the door talking to a young of cer who slowly dismounted and lounged into the hall conscious of his brilliant uniform of his own physical capacity to show off any uniform to full advantage COXtxxCKD OX TxntB TAQH tr f i f