no watasm i i a a MB a iMBMM ooooo90Q0x Imin nan I Hflll PIIITIIRP 1 x uUllJ uUiil UlllJ X THE GREAT SUBJECTS FOR EVERY FARMER AND GARDENER THE WEEKLY INTER OCEAN is the only weekly paper that has a special department for this subject The first of a series of articles on SOILS AND SOIL CULTURE is now appearing in the WEEKLY INTER OCEAN and will continue for several months They are prepared by Mr Wallace E Sherlock an acknowledged authority on subjects pertaining to the preservation and restoration of soils This department is in addition to the complete FARM GARDEN LIVE STOCK VETERINARY HOME and other depart ments making the WEEKLY INTER OCEAN the leading farm home and news paper in the United States Subscription Price 100 per year Subscribe at once and do not miss a article on Soils and Soil Culture In Combination with the McCOOK TRIBUNE Only 105 5bo0i3K303 HOLLISTERS Rooky fountain Tea Nuggets A Busy Medicine for Busy People Brings Golden Health and Eonewed Vigor A specific for Constipation Indigestion Live and KiilHv Troubles Pimples Eczeim Impure Blood Bad Breach Siurash Bowels Headache aud Backache Its Rooky Mountain Tea in tab let form S cati a box Oonuine made by Hol isthp D ua Cjmpanv Madison Wis GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE Bucksfaff HarneSS Best Made California Oak Leather No 1 Trimmings First Class Workmen Look for trade mark ON ENDS of TRACE Ask Your Dealer has a very bad effect on your sys tem It disorders your stomach and digestive apparatus taints your blood and causes constipation with all its fearful ills ThedfortTi Gk Draught1 Is a bland tonic liver regulator and blood purifier It gets rid of the poisons caused by over supply of bile and quickly cures bilious headaches dizziness loss of appetite nausea indiges tion constipation malaria chills and fever jaundice nervousness irritability melancholia and all sickness due to disordered liver It is not a cathartic but a gentle herbal liver medicine which eases without irritating Price 23c at all Druggists m single IIYE STOCK MARKETS AT KANSAS GITY THE WEEKS TRADE REPORTED BY CLAY ROBINSON COMPANY LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS OFFICES AT CHICAGO KANSAS CITY OMAH SIOUX CITY ST JOSEPH AMD DENVER Kansas City Dec 6 1905 Receipts of cattle thus far this week are 44500 last week 30700 last year 29500 On Monday ordinary beef steers were generally 10c lower all other classes of cattle ruling steady Tuesdays trade was steady to 10c lower for beef steers all other kinds firm Todays market was generally steady to 10c off on every thing except stockers which held steady The following table gives prices now ruling Extra prime cornfed steers S3 25 to S5 75 Good 4 75 to 5 25 Ordinary 3 CO to 4 25 Choice cornfed heifers 4 X to 5 00 Good 3 50 to 4 00 Medium 2 50 to 3 50 Choice cornfed cows 3 25 to 4 00 Good 2 75 to 3 35 Medium 2 25 to 2 75 Canners 1 50 to 2 25 Choice stags 3 75 to 4 25 Choice fed bulls 3 25 to 3 75 Good 2 50 to 3 00 Bologna bulls 175 to 2 5 Veal calves 5 00 to 6 00 Good to choice native or western stockers - 3 40 to 3 85 Fair 3 00 to 3 40 Common 2 40 to 3 00 Good to choice heavy nativo feeders 3 60 to 4 20 Fair 3 00 to 3 60 Good to choice heavy branded horned feeders 3 2 to 3 0 Fair 3 00 to 3 25 Common 2 50 to 3 00 Good to choice stock heifers 2 50 to 2 85 Fair 2 25 to 2 50 Good to choice stock calves steers 3 50 to 4 25 Fair 3 00 to 3 50 Good to choice stock calves heifers 3 00 to 3 5o Fair 2 50 to 3 Oo Choice wintered grass steers 4 25 to 4 65 Good 3 75 to 4 25 Fair 3 40 to 3 75 Choice grass cows 2 75 to 3 0G Good 2 50 to 2 75 Common 2 00 to 2 50 Receipts of hogs thus far this week are 41500 last week 32300 last year 33700 Mondays market was 5 to 10c lower Tuesday steady and today opened strong and closed 5 to 10c higher Bulk of sales were from 480 to 495 top 505 Receipts of sheep thus far this week are 12200 last week 7600 last year 13900 Mondays market was strong and active Tuesday strong to 10c higher and today 10c higher We quote choice lambs 8725 to 750 choice yearlings S625 to 650 choice wethers 5 50 to 575 choice ewes 500 to 525 BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES Eczema Skin cancer and all painful itch ing skin diseases treated by the most cer tain methods Moles Birthmarks and facial blemishes removed by electricity Blood poison in all stages All private and genito urinary diseases Calloradd DR ANGLE Specialist Skin Blood and Genito Urinary Diseases 1215 O S reet Lincoln Nebraska PRIVATE HOSPITAL 4 iiL AVEETED A PANIO REMARKABLE CASE OF BRAVERY AND PRESENCE OF MIND MntHuki the Juggler Held an Audi ence Spellbound While the Theatep Attached Were Fighting a Bad Fire Behind the Scenes Satsuma Matsukl a Japanese juggler and acrobat was filling uu engage ment at Burlington Ills marked abil ity as a magician caused the opera bouse to be crowded every evening The steamship Korea which arrived at San Francisco from the orient re cently brought the most valuable con signment of raw silk ever landed in this country It was worth 2450000 It was dispatched east in haste the same night 3500 tales of it J Q PHELPS STOKES Though a Millionaire lie Prcachea Equality and Practice It Too James Graham Phelps Stokes who recently made n strong run for presi dent of the New York board of alder men on the Muuicipul Ownership tick et is a character about whom a novel conditions changed even though this may involve personal loss Mr Stokes is thirty years old a grad uate of Yale university and has studied medicine He Is a son of Anson Phelps Stokes and his family has long been noted more for the interest its various had worked bravely and success was members take In philanthropy than for pmwninrr thpir ofpnrrs Thpv hpnrrt its millions though the latter are - t the music of the orchestra and they knew that Matsukl was doing his part to hold the attention of the people A few moments more and all danger of a J stampede would be past Fire Some one had seen a puff of smoke issue from the right wing of the stage Ye ar Aire And Matsuki sent the many He has a sister who is a settle ment worker and a brother who is a clergyman One day not long after he had been a resident of the University Settlement he was interviewed by Miss Rose Harriet Pastor a writer of stories and verse and then a member of the staff of the Jewish Daily News The young woman had known all the table nearly to the celling turning a I Nations and hardships of poverty complete somersault in its flight The audience shouted with delight For twenty minutes Matsuki bad been in constant activity The veins stood out upon his arms and temples like whipcords Fire Another had noticed a puff of smoke Ye ar Aire And again was the ta ble hurled aloft and caught again with the same dexterity The conductor of the orchestra knew not what it all meant At first he thought that Matsuki bad gone mad Never before had he dared so much If he was mad surely no one could deny his astonishing skill A moment later the stage manager walked across the stage and whisper ed something to Matsukl at the same time placing the table on the floor Matsukl was unable to rise Attend ants lifted the brave fellow and car ried him behind the scenes Very shortly the manager returned and when he spoke his voice was sadly broken Ladles and gentlemen said he passing his hand across his forehead I have no doubt that you have great ly enjoyed Satsuma Matsukis perform ance this evening He has well merit ed your generous applause more per haps than you imagine I have to In form you that Satsuma Matsuki alone has stood between you and death for the past twenty minutes or more The danger is past now and you are liberty to leave this building but permit me to say before you depart that our friend Matsuki has lost his entire magicians outfit which cost him over a thousand dollars Fire has completely destroy ed his property I leave It with you to do what is right and those who de sire to show their gratitude for what Matsukl has done this evening can meet me here on the platform There was no hesitation A long line of men and women was quickly formed and for an hour the manager received the contributions of those who wished to show their gratitude When the amount was counted pledges and all something over 1500 was found Forward She Thought of Him She Oh Mr Borem how do you do I was talking to Mrs Nexdore just now and I couldnt help thinking of you He And was she discussing me She Not exactly She was comment ing on the weather and just asked me if I could imagine anything more tire some and disagreeable Philadelphia Ledger and for a time had worked ln a tobac co factory The interview was the beginning of a romance which resulted in Mr Stokes leading the former factory girl to the altar The marriage which oc curred last summer was a very simple one and after a wedding journey in Europe the happy couple took up their residence in a flat in the tenement sec tion where Mrs Stokes does her own housework and where she and her hus band try to carry out the ideas of so cial and economic equality In which both believe Mr Stokes made many speeches during the New York cam paign and ran almost as well as Wil liam Randolph Hearst the Municipal Ownership mayoralty candidate A HISTORIC SPOT Monument at Dcponit N Y Thnt Marks a Siprnificant Event Fifty four years ago a special train rumbled across the state of New York from to Dunkirk Lake Erie It was the first train over the Erie railroad and bore a party of dignitaries among whom were Warn - - mmm life jfmMMaM THE ERIE SIONTJHENT AT DEPOSIT N Y dent Millard Fillmore and the great Daniel Webster Sixteen years before that ground had been broken at De- roau wnere ine nrst spaaerui or earth was dug at sunrise on Nov 7 1S33 a granite monument has been erected It was dedicated on Nov 10 with ceremonies which were attended by state officials and other distinguish- A HORNED PEOPLE Queer Race That Lives Near the Chi nese Prefecture of Chlenchang Adjoining the Chinese prefecture of Chlenchang Is a deep gully barred by a river which no Chinaman Is permit ted to pass until he finds ball for his good conduct In Lolodom might easily be written The story or j The Lolos are a slim well made his career reads more like romance muscular race with oval reddish brown than real life Born to millions he de- i faces high cheek bones and pointed elded to devote bis life to serving the downtrodden masses rather thnn to in creasing his fortune A favorite in wealthy society and a young bachelor One feat in particular interested hlT10 regarded as a good catch by - ui uuuiui ueiressea 01 urn smart ser audience Lying prone upon his back n nnm r chins from which the beard has been carefully plucked They are fur taller than the Chinese and Indeed thnn any European race but their marked pe culiarity Is the born Every male adult gathers his hair In a knot over his forehead and then twists It up In a he would toss a long light table back- cotton cloth thnt it resembles the plam ooklnff glrl whom ue met ln set so wara ana rorwnru 111 an eonceivania i i x j unUnm positions to the time of lively music a Jewess whose qualities of mind and This horn Is considered Bacred and his tiny feet keeping the table perfect ly balanced It was Saturday evening Satsuma Matsukl bad been performing for an hour He had astonished bis audience- with a score of wonderful achieve- ments but as vet he had not Matsukl passed into one of the dress ing rooms to change his costume Scarcely bad he closed the door when he heard a sound that made his heart Btund still for a moment a crackling and a hissing and the next Instant a long tongue of flame leaped from the stairway enveloping a window Oth ers ln the rear of the stage discovered the flames at the same instant and a fierce battle was begun between the attaches of the theater and the raging fire For one brief instant Matsukl stood irresolute The fire was confined within the dressing room of the right wing and as yet no one in the audi ence had an Inkling of the grave dan ger that threatened the house Those fighting the flames knew that a terriblo heart Avon his respect and admiration panic would ensue the moment that the spectators realized the danger Matsukl understood the situation too dvfrir JAKES GBAHAM PHEIiPS STOKES and finally his love Mr Stokes in view of his possession of a fortune might be supposed to be conservative and ln that moment of hesitation he in his economic views and jealous of saw the part that he must act Matsukl was before bis audience He had placed the rugs hastily in posi tion that he might rest easily A mo ment later and the orchestra com menced playing Matsuki had balanc ed the table and was gracefully danc ing it back and forth keeping perfect I any Infringement on vested rights or opposed to movements looking to any radical change in the existing eco nomic system However the facts are that be believes in many features of the Socialist scheme and is aiding In a plan for intelligent and careful study in colleges and in the home of Socialist time with his dainty feet Shortly the theories He is willing and ready to measure of the music was quickened and bo was obliged to move more quickly At one time the table would be at an angle of forty five degrees and again at ninety degrees and the next moment perfectly perpendicular The long table seemed fairly alive Meanwhile those fighting the fire have the existing social and economic even if a Lolo settles in Chinese terri tory and grows a pigtail he still pre serves his horn The Lolo mans prin cipal garment Is a wide sleeveless man tle of red or black felt tied about tho neck and descending almost to the heels The trousers are of Chinese cotton with felt bandages No shoes are worn but a conical hat of woven bamboo covered with felt furnishes a head covering as well as an umbrella The Chinese divide the Lolos into two classes which they call respective ly Black Bones and White Bones the first being the nobles and the latter their vassals and retainers There is also a third class of captive Chinese and their descendants called Watzu practically slaves rho are tattooed on the forehead with the mark of their tribe The Lolos never many except in I their own tribes captive Chinese worn i pn lipincr civpn tn thnir bondsmen Thii marriage of a Black Bone is a time of great festivities and many banquets The betrothal is celebrated and ratified by the present of the husband to the brides family of a pig and three ves sels of wine On the wedding morn the bride Is richly dressed with many ornaments She is expected to weep profusely whether she feels so Inclined or not In the midst of her tears the grooms relatives and friends dash in seize the bride the best man carries her out of doors on his shoulders she is clapped on a horse and hurried off to her new home Here she finds horses cattle and sheep provided by the grooms family while her own people send clothes ornaments and corn Women occupy a high position among the Lo los and a woman chief is not unknown among the tribes New York Herald POINTED PARAGRAPHS When you die you will die as dead as anybody We all have enough to be cross about Still it isnt a good idea to show It People like to be called enthusiastic but how they hate to be called gush ing The only difference between the mod ern family row and that of the older days is that the modern one Isnt as big a family The good fellow you slap on the back and tell your troubles to may seem good natured but he complains of you to his wife There is nothing so disappointing as to have one take you aside to tell you a great secret and then discover that you already know It Atchison Globe A Bit of Westmoreland The Westmoreland hills are the re mains of an older world giants decayed but of a great race and ancestry They have the finish the delicate or noble loveliness one might almost say the manner that comes of long and gentle companionship with those chief forces that make for natu ral beauty with air and water with temperate suns and too abundant rains Beside them the Alps are Inhu man the Apennines mere forest grown heaps mountains in the making while all that Scotland gains from the easy enveloping glory of its heather West moreland which Is almost heatherless must owe to an Infinitude of fine strokes tints curves and groupings to touches of magic and to lines of grace yet never losing the wild energy of precipice and rock that belongs of right to a mountain world Mrs Humphry Ward in Century The Arab Steed An Arab steed of pure breed would probably be outpaced in a race by an English thoroughbred but In other re spects it outshines Its western rival It Is so docile that it is treated by Its owner as one of the family and It has an iron constitution for it sleeps out at night without covering or shelter Nature protects the Arab horse with a thick furry coat which Is never touched by brush or comb and which falls off at the approach of spring when the body and legs which had been shaggy as those of a bear again resume their graceful beauty and glis ten In the sun like polished marble London Chronicle North and Sooth Korea In the northern part Korea is cov ered with transverse mountain ranges which gradually sink to a well marked 1 lowland The principal mountains j however occur on the side of the sea of Japan The rocks of the country are chiefly old formations archaean and Palaeozoic The easiest passage across the peninsula is along the depression of Chyukkaryong South of this line lies the Hanland south Korea which differs in history climate j posit N Y for the construction of the raphy and people from north Korea Her Unseemly Perversity Mrs Hunks I wish you wouldnt be so positive There are two sides to every question Old Hunks with a roar Well thats no reason why you ed persons The completion of the Erie should always be on the wrong side marked an epoch in railroad building Chicago Tribune F D BUKGESS Plumber an team Fitter pi m KHftmia Iron Load and Sewar Pipe Brass Goods Pumps an Boiler Trimmings Estimates Furnished F -e Base ment of Posofnce Boildmg McCOOK NEBRASKA Mike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY and EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash New location just ncroas street iu P Walsh buildiiiK McCook 1 Nebraska 60 YEARS EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights c Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion frco whether an Invention Is probably patentable Communica tions strictly confldentlal HANDBOOK on Patents sent free Oldest agency for securing patents Patents taken through Munn Co receive rpecial notice without charge ln the Scientific American- A handsomely illustrated weekly Largest cir culation of any scientific journal Terms 93 a year four months L Sold by all newsdealers MUNN New York Branch Office 625 F SU Washington D C I Dr O C Reynolds I I Rooms 19 20 Burr Block I 1 Surgery and Gynecology 1 1 nn JAal9Bell UnCOlll M I oming DR CALDWELL Of Chicago PRACTICING Aleopathy Homeopathy Electric and General Medicine will by request Tislt professionally McCOOK NEB DEC 22 At Palmer Hotel Hours l p m to 9 p m Returning every four weeks Consult her while the opportunity is at hand DR CALDWELL limits her practice to the special treatment of diseases of the eje ear nose throat lungs female diseases diseases of children and all chronic nervous and SHrsical diseases of a curable nature Early consump tion bronchitis bronchial catarrah chronic catarrh headache constipation stomach and bowel troublesrheumatism neuralgia sciatica Brichts disease kidney dizziness nervousness indigestion obeity interrupted nutrition slow growth in children and all wasting diseas es in adults deformities club feet curvature of the spine dilates of the brain paralysis epilopsj heart disease dropay swelling of the limb stricture oien pain in tho bones granular enlargements and all long standing diseases properlj treated NTvVl J BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES Pimples blotches eruptions liver spots fall ing of the hair bad complexion eczema throat ulcers bone pains bladder troubles weak back burning urine passing urine too often The effects of constitutional sickness or the taking of too much injurious medicine receives search ing treatment nromnt relinf nnil a rnra fm- Diseases of women irregular menstruation fallingof the womb bearing down pains fe male displacements lack of sexual tone Lotv corrhea sterility or barrenness consult Dr Caldwell and she will show them the cause of their trouble and the way to become cured CANCER GOITER FISTULA PILES and enlarged glands treated with the subcutan eous injection method absolutely without pain and without the loss of a drop of blood is one of her own discoveries and is really tho mot scientific and certainly sure method of tins ad vanced age Dr Caldwell has practiced her profession in some of the largest hospitals throughout tho country She has lately opened an ofhee in Omaha Nebraska where she will spend a portion of each week treating her many patients No incurable cases accepted for treatment Consultation examination and ad vico one dollar to those interested DR ORA CALDWELL CO Omaha Nebraska Chicago Illinois Addrees all letters to 103 Beo Building Omaha i u ll I I 4m vV m m a