The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, June 29, 1906, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    r
Well
Meat
You
At the door with a nice roast
steak broil or fry and at any
time you give the nod We
have been in the city long en
ough for you to know all about
us If we have given you sat
isfaction in the past we ask
you to continue your patron
age in the future
Yours to please
DAVID MAGNER
Phone 14 Freeh and Salt Meats
niiwimiwtfur3aniwMiga3weaEWig
CITIZENS
-
j
h
investc a package of
t V FRANKLIN President A C EBERT Cashier
j W B WOLFE Vice President
THK
BANK
OF MeCOOK NEB
c a
Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 4000
a 11
DIRECTORS
J V FRANKLIN IV B WOLFE A C EBERT
t i
Nebraska People Profit by ths
Great Earthquake and Fira at
San Francisco
Two of the largest San Francisco
piano companies wereforced by the
great catastrophe to forfeit heavy
contracts with eastern factories
The Schmoller Mueller Piano
Company of Omaha -were success
ful in securing one hundred and
twenty of these Instruments at a
great sacrifice by acting promptly
and paying spot cash They now
propose to give the benefit to their
customers by disposing of them
quickly at a slight advance over
cost ns follows
Handsome new upright pianos of
New York and Boston manufacture
in Colonial cases of dark Mahogany
or French Burl Walnut finish sev
eral makes to choose from perhaps
your favorite and none made to
sell for less than 300 will he
closed out at the remarkable cut
price of 175 Do not delay Call
or write at once for catalogues and
complete information Over six
hundred pianos in stock Address
The SchmollRr Mueller Piano Co
Established 1S5D
1311 13 Farnam St Omaha
Important Notice
All persons are hereby notified and warned
tliut TRESPASS in any form on the following
described lands in Red Willow county will be
prosecuted to the full extent of the law
WtXVi 9 WJiSWtf 4-4-30 Somers land
EHXEM 9 EV4SEK 4-4-30 Oliphant land
ENV4 8-1-29 Crepar land
D S Farnham owner Newton Centre Mass
6 S Gmos W S Moelax Attorney McCook
NOTICE
To w horn it may concern
Notice is hereby given tliut on the 12th day of
June 11XX5 the Chicago Burlington aud Quuicy
Railwaj Company preeIted to the niujor aud
city council of the city of McCook in Red ll
low count in the state of Nebraska aud fied
in the ollice of the clerk of said city a petition
prajing that the avenue aud laue within the
limits of said city hereinafter described be
closed to tlio public und no further or longer
use of tlio same bo allowed to the public aui
that the tame be declared vacated aud at an
end to wit The crossing and roadway about
one hundred aud teu feet wide between North
Railway street and the south line of Section
Tweuty uineiu Towns hip Three Range Twentj
nine in said city Said crossing and roadway
commencing on said section line nearly south
of where Manhattan avenue terminates on said
North Railway street thence in a straight line
north to North Railway street and crosainc the
main line aad right of way of 9aid railway
company nearly south of where Manhattan
avenue terminates on said North Railway
street Said avenue and lane is now used and
for many years last past has been used b the
public ab a highway and crossing over the right
of way of said railway company
The clerk of said city with the approval of
the mayor and city council has appointed the
13th day of August 1905 as the day ou or before
which day all objections to the vacation of
such avenue and lane aud the closing of -aid
crossing aud claims for damages by leasou
thereof must be filed with said city clerk aud
all objections to the closing of said crossiug
the vacation of said roadway and claims for
damages therefor must be filed in the oflice of
said clerk on or before noon of said 13th day of
August 190G
In witness thereof I have hereunto set my
hand and the seal of said city this 13th day of
June 1905 W A Middleton
seal June 15 4ts City Clerk
State of Nebraska Red Willow County
To all persons interested in the estate of
Bertha MayDevinelate of saidcountydeceased
You are berabv notified that on the lSth day
of June 196 William Bymer filed his petition
in the county court of said county for Iiii ap
pointment as administrator of the estate of
Bertha May Devine late of said county deceas
ed and that the same will be heard at the
county court room in the city of McCook it
said county ou the 14th day of July 1900 ut
the hour of 2 p m
It is further ordered that notice of said hear
ing be given all parties interested in said estate
by publication of this notice for three succes
sive weeks in the McCook Tbibune a news
paper printed published and circulating in
said county
Dated this 18th day of June
seal
J C Moore County Judge
NOTICE
Notice is heraby given that by virture of an
order issued out of the County court of Red
Willow in the State of Nebraska tome direct
ed whereby I am commanded to advertise and
sell the property heretofore attached in an
action pending in said court wherein John
Bartless is plaintiff and Standard Beet Sugar
Company is defendant to satisfy a judgn ent
heretofore rendered in said action in favor of
said plaintiff I will at one oclock p m on the
5th day of July 1906 at the scale house located
on the right of way of the Chicago Burlington
and Qnincy Rail Road east of the stock yards
in Willow Qrovo Precinct in said couuty offer
for sale at public voudue the following goods
and chattels to wit one scale house and con
tents one large wagon scale and one automo
bile numbered 461 Nebraska taken on a writ
of attachment issued in said action as the pro
perty of said Standard Beet Sugar Company
Sated this 21st day of June 1906
H I Peterson
June 22 2ts Sheriff
When the baby talks it is time to
give Hollisters Rocky Mountain Tea
Its the greatest baby medicine known
to lovifltj mothers It makes them eat
sleep and grow 53 cents Tea or
Tablets L W McConnell
Pat Did you ever see the like in your
loife Niver but onctand that was in
Chicago I mean those fine turnouts
at the McCook Livery
ssSSEJSSSSSaSiKjT A3m T il o
W LHSKVn iMf il
1 - 7
jy CS
teaches you many truths
That soda crackers are the best of all food made from flour
That Ursecda iocult are by far the best of all soda crackers
That Uneeda Biscuit are always fresh always crisp always
nutritious
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
--
Ilinnoeratic Era In Medicine
Richard Cole Newton declares timt
even in the early days of the Ilippo
cratic era the art of surgery eschewed
all forms of superstition and philosoph
ical conjecture attaining practical re
sults by direct methods At a very
earl- age the profession of medicine
was fully recognized in Greece and in
many cases was generously rewarded
We read of swindlers and charlatans
in those days too Patent medicines
were also sold The Hippoeratic oath
which for over twenty centuries has
remained practically unchanged is an
evidence of the sagacity the sense of
professional honor and responsibility
and the clear thinking of the Greeks
Hippocrates was born on the island of
Cos in 400 B C A large collection of
writings evidently the work of many
physicians whose identity is unknown
has been ascribed to the pen of this
leader The Greeks were wonderfully
brilliant In medical attainments for
they studied nature and her methods
and shook themselves free from a
monumental load of ignorance and su
perstition The synchronous develop
ment of mind and body was the funda
mental rule both of health and
I cation Medical Record
The Discipline of Failure
The best skating is always on thin
ice we like to feel it crack and yield
under our feet There is a deadly fas
cination in the thought of twenty or
thirty feet of cold water beneath Last
years mortality list cuts no ice with us
We must make our own experiments
while Dr Experience screams himself
hoarse from his bonfire on the bank
He has held many an inquest on this
darkling shore of the river of time and
he will undoubtedly live to hold many
another but thus far we have not been
the subjects and when it comes to the
mistakes of others we are all delighted
to serve on the coroners jury It isnt
well for us to be saved from too many
blunders We need the discipline of
failure It Is better to fail than never
to try and the man who can contem
plate the graveyard of his own hopes
without bitterness will not always be
ignored by the gods of success Mere
dith Nicholson in Reader
Tree That Gives Liht
Among freaks of nature in trees there
stands conspicuous one known as the
Asiatic star tree It is enormously
tall growing to a height of from sixty
feet to eighty feet while from the
ground up to a distance of about forty
feet the trunk is perfectly bare From
that point there spring a number of
tangled limbs which shoot out clusters
of long pointed leaves and it is these
grouped together that emit at night a
clear phosphorescent light This gives
the tree a spectral appearance and is
very deceiving to travelers who fre
quently mistake the glow for an illu
minated window of a house The light
Is not brilliant but is of sufficient
strength to allow of a newspaper be
ing read by It It does not flicker but
glows steadily from sunset to day
break
Men Who Walked on All Fonrs
In the kingdom of Poland there was
formerly a law according to which any
person found guilty of slander was
compelled to walk on all fours through
the streets of the town where he lived
accompanied by the beadle as a sign
that he was disgraced and unworthy
of the name of man At the next pub
lic festival the delinquent was forced
to appear crawling upon hands and
knees underneath the banqueting ta
ble and barking like a dog Every
guest was at liberty to give him as
many kicks as he chose and he who
had been slandered must toward the
end of the banquet throw a picked
bone at the culprit who picking it up
with his mouth would leave the room
on all fours
No Peace For Discoverers
It is remarkable how few of the dis
coverers and conquerors of the new
world died in peace Columbus died
of a broken heart Balboa was cMa
gracefully beheaded Corte3 was dis
honored Sir Walter Raleigh was be
headed Plzarro was murdered Ojeda
died In poverty and Henry Hudson
was left to the mercy of the Indians
along the bay which he discovered
Detroit Free Press
IVSaking the Flag
largest American Has in the
THE herewith iilustritel was
exhibited last year for the first
time lu Denver It was djsign
ed as an ornament for the building
used for Grand Army encampments
and other great meetings and it
ers almost the entire front of the huge
structure It Is 11 feet in length C3
feet in width and lias stars two feet
across The stripes are four feet two
inches in Avidth and there are 1ioO
yards of bunting in the Hag The in- j
tention at Hrst was to have Hie Hag
float from a staff in front of the build
inc but no pole of sufficient strength j
could be obtained the bunting weigh-
ing pounds j
You may be interested in learning
how such big flags are made The
bunting comes in huge rolls of solid
Experienced hands do this work These
stripes are then passed to the hands of
girls who sew them on machines of
special manufacture that are unlike
those of the patient housewife The
sMtpll l tlio fltn nP tfln i miimrw I
is the rapidity with which they are
sewed the thread being fed from
spools that hold 2 1000 yards
There is no stitching more faultless
than that on the silk Hag even though
It is accomplished faster than any
other sewed by machinery There are
no skipped stitches a fact proving
that the ingenuity of the machine is
aided by the skill of the girls whose
duty it is to see that the stripes of the
flag never stray from the straight and
narrow Avay that crosses the table on
which thousands of yards of silk and
bunting travel annually The stripes
of the flags now being sewed together
by the aid of electricity the ends of
the flag are hemmed not a broad hem
but a narrow one so finely done that
it would take the eye of an expert to
distinguish it from a selvage
Now the flag is ready for the union
a blue field upon which sparkle forty
five bright diamond like stars a star
for every state The stars are five
pointed and each point is precisely
like the other No hand can ever be
come so skilled as to have every point
a counterpart of the other and for this
reason the stars are cut out by dies
1 I
THE LARGEST AMERICAN FLAG IK EXIST
ENCE
that never make mistakes The white
cloth is folded in forty five thicknesses
and placed beneath the die Every
time the ponderous press comes down
the sharp steel cuts forty five stars a
whole constellation The rapidity with
which the stars are created depends or
the agility and skill of the workman in
removing the cloth
Long rows of girls at each side of
long tables covered with blue cloth
are always ready for the stars as soon
as they are handed to them It is the
task of these people to place the five
pointed emblems of statehood on the
familiar blue fields a feat not so easily
accomplished as might be imagined
The position of the stars must not vary
even a sixteenth of an inch The stars
differ m magnitude to correspond with
the dimensions of the different flags
and each size has its ratio of position
The stars of the union on every flag
are arranged in six rows alternating
eight and seven
After they are placed in position the
basters are summoned who after ac
complishing their task pass the stars
and cloth to the girls who sew them
firmly in place with an artistic stitch
at the same rate of speed that the
stripes were linked together The un
ion as the field with its starry clusters
is called passes to the trimmers who
remove the basting threads and the
stray pieces of silk and wool After
the unions are properly dressed they
are given to another set of workers
who unite the stars and stripes
The flag then passes to the finishers
who sew strong canvas bands across
the headings in the corners of which
are placed grommets or eyelets that
are clinched together by metal teeth
In the large flags rope passes through
the canvas Thus is the flag completed
and ready to be mounted on a staff or
to float from halyards from the
dawns early light to the twilights last
gleaming Los Angeles Herald
Fourth of July Questions
I know that you cannot reply
When you are asked questions like these
Did you ever try
On the Fourth of July
To eat firecrackers and cheese
The Interrogation beneath
To scientists learned and gray
I kindly bequeath
Why are there no teeth
In the mouth of a cannon I pray
And then you can answer this too
Its foolish I know youll declare
But easy If you
Think a minute or two
Why doesnt a hair trigger have hair
New York Tribune
il Si ovei the word milli
ner a jincr having been orlglunl
ly a Milan an Importer of femlnino
Unery from Milan Just as a cordwain
er shoemaker was a worker In cor
douan leither from Cordova It 13
curious to iiute how many words have
come from the geographical names of
northern Italy There Is for Instance
florin the coin of Florence and pis
tol from Pistoja
Dr Johnson said that the word job
was a low word now much in use of
which I cannot tell the etymology It
Is supposed to be really Identical with
go a mcuthful or morsel Pepys
recorus how my lord said to him I
will Co you all the good jobs I can
and Pepys himself speaks of Tangier
as hitherto used as a jobb to do a
kindness to some lord But the sim
ple monosyllabic ugliness of the word
was too much for Johnson
Many words of moat august sound
prove to be of quite commonplace an-
1 cestry when traced to their origins
I T- 11 1 tiA441t -
colors and the Hrst step is to cut it l lMllKa 1S lCilJ1 Ullli
it is ending and was
Literally just
into strips some red others white
formerly used in that very simple
sense in the English language Then it
came to signify settling up with a
creditor ami acquired the special sense
of ransom
Tlie Interior of tlie Earth
A frequeut remark is that mankind
dwells on a thin crust encircling a
molten mass and that the journey of
life is practically on a fire ball incased
in a fragile shell that has cooled and
that as it cools further contracts with
earthquake shocks Much virtue in
rhetoric if the purpose is to elevate
the hair and induce cold thrills and
goosellesh The internal fire of the
earth is an inference and in any large
sense historically harmless if true
Persons who worry over cosmic prob
lems might also keep awake of nights
over the palpable truth that the earth
moves through space without any visi
ble means of support On the planet
are the plain marks of epochs of ice a-
well as of Intense heat Scientists
agree that glacial ages will come
again but geology teaches that they
are gradual and of limited extent geo
graphically St Louis Globe-Democrat
Microscopic Writing
Thackeray could write the Lords
Prayer on a sixpence which is the
size of a dime but it is now possible
to write the praj er on a surface so
small that one grain of sand would
hide it completely Microscopists sell
copies of the Lords Prayer written in
a circle only the five hundredth part
of an inch in diameter To read the
prayer it Is necessary to use a lens
magnifying 500 times Writing so in
credibly small is accomplished by
means of levers six feet long These
levers are so adjusted that the motion
is gradually lessened as it travels
along them till when it reaches the
delicate end armed with a minute dia
mond pen that rests on a glass surface
it causes the pen to register on the
glass writing so small as to be invisi
ble New Orleans Times Democrat
A British Blunder
There is an old story of the foreign
office in connection with the small
French colony of Chandernagore This
tiny possession is situated on the
Hooghly twenty one miles from Cal
cutta It extends two miles along the
river and one and a half miles inland
from it During our wars with France
the settlement was taken and added to
our dependency but when terms of
peace were arranged our minister of
foreign affairs in total ignorance of
its position and of the importance of
its retention agreed to its being re
stored to France It turned out that
he thought it was a small island in
the West Indies and of no conse
quence Westminster Gazette
Cinderella of the Canary Islands
Hierros can hardly be called al
though nominally entitled one of the
fortunate isles It is the Cinderella
of the Canary group and in its south
westerly isolation may be said to live
on fog But for the mists that drench
Its shores the little island would die of
thirst and no vegetables could be sent
to market Its western promontory
Debas once enjoyed celebrity as the
spot through which was drawn the
first universal meridian
Iilcssinprs of IVorfc
Thank God every morning when you
get up that you have something to do
that day which must be done whether
you like it or not Being forced to
work and forced to do your best will
breed in you temperance self control
diligence strength of will content and
a hundred virtues which the idle will
never know Charles Kingsley
Business Education
Nothing will stand you in better
stead in the hard cold practical every
day world than a good sound business
education You will find that your suc
cess In trade occupation or profession
will depend as much on your general
knowledge of men and affairs as on
your technical training Success Mag
azine
More Important
Nell May doesnt seem so quick to
deny her age now as she used to be
Bell No Shes got very stout lately
Nell What has that got to do with
it Bell It takes all her time now to
deny her weight Philadelphia Ledger
Olden Times
Why do you say olden times ask
ed a little girl who had been listening
to a Bible story Times are ever so
much older now than they were In
those days
A man never shows his own charac
ter so plainly as by his manner of
portraying anothers Rlchter
My Hair
Ran Away
Dont have a falling out with
your hair It might leave you
Then what That would mean
thin scraggly uneven rough
hair Keep your hair at home
Fasten it tightly to your scalp
You can easily do it with Ayers
Hair Vigor It is something
more than a simple hair dress
ing It is a hair medicine a
hair tonic a hair food
The best kind of a testimonial
Sold for over sixty years
nawwami inmr
I
ilado by J C Ayer Co Lowell mass
Also raanuiaoturera 01
u xyers
9 SARSAPARILLA
tffii rc
PILLS
CHERKY PECTORAL
FRED R BRUNS
Barber Shop
Bath Booms Rear Citizens bank
C II HOYLE
C E Eldreu Co Atf t
BOYLE ELDRE0
Attoknkys at Law
Long Distance Phone 41
Rooms 1 and 7 second lloor fllCLOOK Nh
Postollice Building
DR H M IRELAND
Osteopathic Physician
Kelley Office BIdg Phone No 13
MeCOOK NEB
Consultation free
C L Walker
PAINTING
and
PAPER HANGING
First Door North of Suttons Jewelry Store
McCook Neb
ureal
Lumber and Ooal
Center
Home of Quality
and Quantity where
sells THE BEST LUM
BER AND COAL
Are you thinking of
building If so it is ton
to one our figures will
please you
M O McCLURE
Phone No 1 Manager
WE NEED
NO LAWYER
to argue our case when our
flour is on trial The super
ior quality of our
Milled Products
speak for themselves
We have no competitors as
no mill outdoes us Our
flour is always in class No i
Our reputation will not dim
inish but rather enlarge
For best flour use ours and
dont change
McCook Milling Company
r
r
W
f