The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, June 28, 1907, Image 5

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Time Card
McCook Neb
Arrives
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MAIN LINK 1CAHT DUIaKT
Central Timo 0 r
118 A
x 715 a
1K p
740 p
MAIN IINB WUHT DHPAUT
Mountain Tnno o0i a
II S3 P M
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ilrl A m
12J A h
IMIISUtAl LINK
No 175 nrrivoi Mountain Time rK P M
No 17rlimrt 015 A si
Sloniiiiik dining nml rodinlng clmir cars
stmt1 free on through trains Tickets sold
ami lmwio chocked to any point iu tlio United
Stntoi or Canada
For information timu tabloR maps and tick
ets cull on or write Georco Scott Aent Mc
Cook Nebraska or Ij W Wakoloy General
IliBsmiKor AKcnt Omaha Nebraska
RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS
U E Jones of Wymoro is a now ma
chinist
W P Hewitt is back and on the
wheel Inthu
IT O Schrinor ia working in tho mn
chino shop
Willie Wioho is in tho tool room dur
ing vacation
Tho pile driver is down on tho St
lrancis branch
G W Koinhardt left for Atchison
Kns Wednesday
All way freight trains will bo annulled
tho day wo celebrate
Engino 1225 has been transferred hero
from Wymoro division
Thomas Gittings has roturnod from
tho coast and gono to work
Burr Drnliner has losignod and is or
ganizing for tho W of tho W
Sovon engines wore overhauled in tho
McCook shops during June
Dispatchor Knowles is acting as night
chief during Calhouns absence
F M Jierry attended the E D con
vention in Minden Wednesday
Night Chief Dispatcher Calhoun is
spanding his vacation in Missouri
J W Rhodes and Theodore Diebold
were Denver visitors end of last week
Engine 123 of Lincoln division was
broken in yesterday in the local yard-
E S Howell and family are doing
Salt Lake City and other points west
Floyd Curran returned first of the
week from visiting the family in Eldon
Iowa
J W Rhodes machinist has quit
and joined tho Ossawatomie Kansas
colony
The nine hour order effecting all the
mechanical department went into effect
Thursday
Mrs W A Weintz went to Culbert
son Thursday on account of sickness in
her sisters family
Conductor Burney is relieving Con
ductor Willis Miller on the Oxford
Red Cloud run for a few days
Engine 1371 went in this week for an
overhauling No 322 is down on her
wheels and 1026 is over the drop pit
Engine 2152 from Lincoln division
and 622 from Sterling division will go in
backshop for overhauling in a few days
Mondays wind blew down one of the
smoke stacks of steam plant and some
shingles and sheeting from the round
house
The present plank depot platform at
Edison will be replaced with one of
brick as soon as material can be pro
cured
Water invaded the baggage room dur
ing Saturday afternoons storm and run
over the tracks At the foot of Main
avenue
Engine 2814 will bo out Saturday
She is the first engine to have her dri
vers rods and crossheadsjpainted as all
will be in future
Engineer Rodstrom has the 1960 now
and Engineer Si Perkius has Rod
stroms former run on the McCook
Holdrege way freight
George Kaufman had a leg smashed
and one small bone broken yesterday
while working with the gang picking up
the waterworks line wreck
Leon Hileman has gone into the
back shop for a week or so with a
sore head Ho was accidentally struck
bp a hammer on tho head
Sam Simmons barn coal sled and
windmill in South McCook were dam
aged by the wind Monday night Also
A C Harriss mill and tower in same
neighborhood
Mrs E O Scott is intertaining her
aunts Mrs Steele and Mrs Klingel
smith of North Liberty Ind who are
en route homo from a trip to California
and visit to their sister Mrs J J
Garrard
For reasons perhaps satisfactory to
itself the company has again resorted to
the use of Newcastle coal on the Kansas
branches of this division The satisfac
tion seems not to bo shared by the men
behind tho shovel however
Fire gave them quite a close call early
Wednesday morning in the agents office
in the freight house Damage about
200 Records in attic above office were
also damaged by water To an overload
of lightning fire is attributed
No 14 last Monday evening encoun
tered a lively hail storm up near Brush
and got all the worst of it Practically
all of the outside sash on the south side
of the coaches were broken out and the
passengers described the experience as
terrifying indeed
ARITHMETIC 1700 B C
Sums Over Which Egyptian Children
Puzzled Their Brains
Probably he oldest copy book for
home lessons In arithmetic was un
earthed In Egypt The papyrus which
was found In excellent condition dates
from the period alKiut 1700 H C that
Is about 100 years before the time of
Moses or almost 000 years ago it
proves that the Egyptians had a thor
ough knowledge of elementary mathe
matics almost to he extent of our
own The papyrus has u long heading
Direction how to attain the knowl
edge of all dark things etc Numer
ous examples show that their principal
operations with entire units and frac
tions were made by means of addition
and multiplication Subtractions ami
divisions were not known in their
present form but correct results were
obtained nevertheless
Equations are also found In the
papyrus Among the examples given
is this one Ten measures of barley are
to be divided among ten persons in
such a manner that each subsequent
person receives one eighth of a meas
ure less than the one before him An
other example given Is There are sev
en men each one has seven cats each
cat has eaten seven mice each mouse
has iten seven grains of barley Each
givlr of barley would if cultivated
have yielded seven measures of barley
How much barley has been lost in that
way The papyrus also contains cal
culations of area the calculation of the
area of a circle and its transformation
into a square and finally calculations
of the cubic measurements of pyra
mids
SHORT INTERVIEW
A Woman Reporters Vicit to Robert
Louis Stevenson
A number of years ago a somewhat
sensational journalist was making a
Hying trip around the world for her
newspaper She stopped in San Fran
cisco Among other assignments for
her brief stay there was a visit to
Robert Louis Stevenson who was then
living iu that city
Calling at his home she was told
that he was too ill to see any one that
daj She wrote him an appealing little
note on the back of her card explain
ing tliather schedule would not permit
her to remain over to see him later
and that as an interview with him
was one of the chief objects of break
ing her journey in California she beg
ged for at least two minutes conversa
tion
Permission was granted for her to
ascend to his room and when she saw
him propped up in bed with pillows
looking pitifully white and frail she
was much shocked and regretted her
persistence For once her usual as
surance deserted her and she stood
silent and shy before the writer
Stevenson too seemed at a loss and
after a moment or two of embarrassed
silence during which his hands were
fumbling beneath the counterpane he
drew forth an unfinished woolen stock
ing and beginning feverishly to push
the steel needles in and out he asked
Do you knit
No answered the reporter and
glancing at the mantel clock she real
ized with chagrin that the interview
was ended Youths Companion
Dog Jealousy
There is a strong trait of jealousy In
a dogs nature A story is told of a
Birmingham dog that had been a great
pet in the family until the baby came
There was suspicion that he was jeal
ous but he could not be detected in
any disrespect to the newcomer It
always happened however that when
the dog was left with the baby the
baby began to cry No signs of trouble
were ever to be seen upon entering the
room and the dog was always found
sleeping peacefully before the fire
Finally one day a peep through the
keyhole disclosed the canine rubbing
his cold wet nose up and down the
babys back Ralph Neville in Outing
Magazine
All Had Meanings
So the proprietor of this hotel has
a big phonograph that plays while you
dine
Yes and some of the selections are
very appropriate For instance if he
thinks his guests are getting impatient
he puts on such pieces as Life Is Too
Short to Yorry and All Things Come
to Him Who Waits
Hm Pretty good idea
Yes but the last selection beats
them all If he thinks you might over
look tipping the waiter he puts on
Kiplings recessional Lest We Forget
Lest We Forget Brooklyn Citizen
One Way
Harry here are three apples Now
suppose I wanted you to divide them
equally between James John and
yourself How would you do it
Id give them one and keep the
others
Why how do you make that out
Well you see it would be one for
those two and one for me too
His Status
Uncle Mose youre very unsociable
Yes sah I likes to keep tub mysef
sah
Dear me Uncle Mose I hope youre
not a misanthrope
No sah Ise a Baptis sah Bal
timore American
It Would Be Uncomfortable
Angry Scot Look here Mr OBrien
Ive the verra greatest respect for yer
country but ye mauna forget this Ye
can sit on a rose and ye can sit on a
shamrock but- O man ye canna sit on
a thistle London Sketch
Though we -travel the world over to
find the beautiful we must carry It
with us or we find It not Emerson
A WONDERFUL CREATURE
Born of a Snowdrift Crossed With a
Little Brown Hare
Nature has tried many means of sav
hig her own from the snow death
Some like the woodchuck she puts to
sleep till the snown shall be over
Others she teaches to store up food
and to hide So she deals with the
wood mouse To still others as the
moose she furnishes stilts The last
means she employs Is snowshoes
Tills the simplest most scientific and
best is the equipment of the snow
shoe rabbit the wabasso of Hiawatha
a wonderful creature born of a snow
drift crossed Avith a little brown hare
The moose Is like a wading bird of
the shore that lias stilts and can wade
well for a space but that soon readies
the limit beyond which it Is no better
off than a land bird But the snow
shoe is like the swimmer it skims
over the surface where it will not car
ing if there be one or a thousand feet
of the element below it In this lies
Its strength
Wabasso has another name the vary
ing hare because it varies in color
witii the season and the seasons in all
its proper country are of two colors
brown for six months white for six
So all summer long from mid April
to mid October the northern hare is
a little brown rabbit
Then conies the snowy cold The
brown coat is quickly shed a new
white coat appears the snowshoe
grows fuller and the little brown hare
has become a white hare the snow
shoe hare of the woods Everybodys
Magazine
SQUIRREL WAYS
Th5 Little Animals Are Great Actors
on a Rail Fence
It is the furry gray squirrel that I
love to watch as he makes his way
along the fence says a writer iu For
est and Stream He Is fond of sitting
on the top rail and surveying his little
world but if anything disturbs him it
is worth a long tramp to watch him
as he zigzags back and forth follow
ing the riders toward his home tree
If not suspicious however the gray
skips along from rail to rail turning
back now and then to jump down and
examine something on lower rails or
on the ground Often it Is a nut that
he thinks he buried in a certain clump
of grass in a fence corner Frequently
he is mistaken in the exact place but
he finds it farther on and comes back
to the rider to eat it Watch him close
ly when he finally sees you blocking
his way
He looks at you with his head tured
sideways and you wonder that he
shows no surprise and cannot make out
whether he knew you were there all
the time or Is only blulling Now he
turns back and traverses a few rails
gets down on the next one and makes
a pretense of searching for something
there comes back to the rider again
and feigns perfect composure slips
down to the ground while as he seems
to think you have been thrown off
your guard and then makes his way
now slowly now like a streak to th
shelter of the woods just as though
you did not sabe squirrel ways
Hard on Schoolmasters
It is a notorious fact that schoolmas
ters were once regarded as a servile
class and treated accordingly Their
remuneration was ridiculously small
often amounting only to the right of
living from house to house But It is
doubtful if a more peculiar method of
paying schoolmasters was ever devised
than that which prevailed in certain
English counties notably Cumberland
during the early eighteenth century
Just before the beginning of Lent the
boys would arrange to hold a cock
fight and each boy would makea pay
ment to the master for the privilege
The cock penny was regarded a le
gitimate item in the masters income
Minneapolis Journal
Carrying Secret Dispatches
Apropos of secret dispatches carried
through the lines John H Surratt then
about twenty years old acted as a
Confederate spy traveling between
Washington and the enemys boats on
the lower Potomac carrying his dis
patches sometimes in the heel of his
boots and sometimes between the
planks of a buggy He said that he
never came across a more stupid set
of detectives than those employed by
the United States government and that
they seemed to have no idea whatever
how to search him David Homer
Bates in Century
The Way It Acted
Mrs A You say brandy is a good
remedy for colic but I dont agree with
you Mrs B What do you know
about it Mrs A A great deal Be
fore I had brandy in the house my
husband never had colic more than
once or twice a year but as soon as
I kept a supply he had colic almost e -cry
day
Alike
Yes indeed said Miss Uppisch
my great grandmother on my moth
ers side was noted for her proud and
imperious bearing How strange
exclaimed Miss Knox Our servant
girls the same way Philadelphia
Press
The Alternative
Suburban Hose to unexpected sup
per guest Now then Miss Hobson
will you have a little of this rabbit pie
or er or looking around and discov
ering there is no other dish or not
London Tatler
Constant success shows us but one
side of the world for it surrounds us
with flattereFS who will tell us only
our merits and silences our enemies
from whom alone we might learn our
defects
HUMORS OF WAR
A Federal Lieutenant Who Was Worse
Than Surprised
During the civil war the commander
of a marching detachment looked along
ids line scowled at Its Irregularity
then shouted aloud Close up Close
up you fellows Why if the enemy
were to fire on us now hey couldnt
hit one of you Another commander
while a battle was in progress came
upon a straggler who was running
away with tears streaming down hi
cheeks My man dont be a baby
the general remonstrated thinking ti
shame the renegade Roo hoo Wisht
1 was a baby and a gal baby at that
was the answer that showed him the
case was hopeless
That is less humanly amusing than
the answer of a guileless lieutenant
who with half a company had been
captured and paroled by the ubiquitous
John Morgan Upon reaching Federal
territory the lieutenant made haste to
report to tho nearest post commander
who after duly welcoming the new
comer said Tell me how all this
happened Were you surprised
Surprised A heap worsen that I
tell you I was plum astonished lo see
them gray fellers I was for a fact
colonel the lieutenant answered with
the air of one who fully covers the
case Success Magazine
BONANZA POKER
A Game That Staggered a Haughty
Cimmsrcial Traveler
Poker xty those who can remember
back to the limes of the old west has
seen its best days No longer are such
royal battles waged over the green
cloth as when the newly Hedged min
ing millionaires met with money to
burn and with plenty of sporting spirit
to burn it
It was in the famous Silver Bow
club at Helena Mont that they used
to play big poker says a man who re
members At the game one night
sat Marcus Daly Senator Hearst and
J B Ilaggin when there burst in a
radiant New York drummer who had
a two weeks caul to the institution
He marched up to the players and po
litely asked if he might take a hand
Why yes come right In said
Daly
The drummer threw a hundred dol
lar note on the table Let me have
chips for that he said gravely
He went to hang up his coat and
hat When he returned the bill still
lay on the table
Whats the matter gentlemen
the traveling man haughtily inquired
Aint my money good
Why yes to be sure said Daly
Hearst give the gentleman one white
chip Scrap Book
Schopenhauer on Hypocrisy
Oh for some Asmodeus of morality
to make not only roofs and walls trans
parent to his favorites but also to lift
the veil of dissimulation fraud hypoc
risy pretense falsehood and deception
which is spread over all things to show
how little true honesty there is in the
world and how often even where it is
least to be expected behind all the ex
terior outwork of virtue secretly and
in the Innermost recesses unrighteous
ness sits at the helm It is just on this
account tl it so many men of the bet
ter kind have four footed friends for
to be sure how is a man to get relief
from the endless dissimulation falsity
and malice of mankind if there were
no dogs into whose honest faces he can
look without distrust
It Blew
When a British battleship was lying
in New York harbor a lieutenant of
the visiting vessel was discussing
rough weather with a group of Ameri
can naval officers one of whom re
peated the tale of the day that was so
windy that the crows had to walk
home
Still that wind was nothing to one
we encountered in the bay of Bis
cay laughed the lieutenant Why
it blew so hard that it took four men
to hold Prince Louis hat on and even
then ic blew the anchors off the but
tons on his coat Womans Home
Companion
Vanted Help to Be Thankful
The ministers children were out in
the field one day while visiting on a
farm when suddenly a ram came to
ward them all ready to butt in Lit
tle Arthur aged five said to Dorothy
aged three Oh Dorothy say your
prayers
She said I cant think of any so
her brother told her to say any one
that she heard their father say The
ram was getting closer and in her
fright she said the only one she could
think of
O Lord help us to be thankful for
whit we are about to receive
Got Mixed
Alice Shes angry Kate Why
Alice He asked her for a lock of her
hair Kate Well Alice Then aft
erward she asked him to send it back
to her Kate Well Alice And he
sent her a lock that wasnt the right
color Somerville Journal
Be Prepared
In every avenue of life great opportu
nities are constantly confronting us
Who are ready for them Who will fill
the positions It is the prepared men
those who are equal to the places who
generally get them Success
Strong Influence
Friend You have great influence
over your husband He never left your
side all yesterday How did you man
age it Wife Oh I just sat firmly on
the tails of his coat thats all Meg
gendorfer Blatter
He who despises small things never
fcecomes rich Danish Proverb
STYLES in NECKWEAR
Sell resser
TrftdeAWk Fl inVS
S 33
m K ov
WE CARRY ONLY THE KIND OF NECKTIES
YOUD LIKE TO WEAR
JTYLE 5 ON TIME
THEVLL NEVER HANG VS FOR ROBBING
YOU ON THE PRICE EITHER
ALL 50 CENT NECKTIES ARE Not THE
SAME QUALITY
SEE OURS
UNDERWEAR
YES
SHIRTS HOSIERY EVERYTHIM6 YOU NEED
FOR YOUR BODY
YES
WE MAKE A PROFIT
C L DeGROFF CO
n
kki
r
r
Day Celebration
At McCook Julyftland 4
v
f MID SUMMER RACE MEET Ten big events 1250 purses
Best horses in the west Automobileraces
t
PATRIOTIC CELEBRATION
Good speaking Chorus of 500 voices amuse- 1
montr foni crouic dicnlo ir nf fiipnrlC
r illlil 13 UCUlv uuo uijiaj ui uivnuij j
5 Barhecue at Noon j
Music by McCook Band j j
A Guaranteed Cure For Piles
Itching Blind Bleeding or Protrud
ing Piles Druggists refund money if
Pazo Ointment fails to cure any case
no matter of how long standing in Gtola
days First application gives ease and
rest 50c If your druggist hasnt it
send 50c in stamps and it will be for
warded postpaid by Paris Medicine Co
St Louis Mo
All ladies appreciate suggestions for
receipts patterns and formulas by other
ladies because the ideas are practical
The Weekly Inter Ocean prints seven
columns of such information each wek
This paper is S100 a year but subscrib
ing through the Triecnk the two papers
will cost only SIOj
Get The Tribune to do your printing
e
APPLICATION FOICLICVV r
McCook Nebra iu nine -
r ntiro U lierehv iiiii that PerrMlian
inin a firm compo ecl of Perry Herryman aid i
W H ha filofl in the city clerk-
ollice their bond and petition for a licen e lo
sell malt and liquor in tl e J
building on lot 13 14 and l block 21 original j
town in the ward of the citv of McCi ok
Nebraska for the ear endinir April 30 IMto
111 rem n A O pplicant -
M fr
Mike
Walsh
DEAiEP IN
POULTRY
and EGGS
01i Rubber Copper and Brass i
Highest Market Price Paid in Cask
New location ju -- -- t in P Waltfe
ricCook
Nebraska f
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-six j
A few doses of r iaedy will in
variably cure an orimary attack f
diarrhoea
It can always b depended upon
evon in the iiwre cvcre attacks d
cramp colic aid choi ra morbus
It is equally scc sfal for summer
diarrhoea and chlera infantum is
children and is the means of saving
the lives of many children each year
When redn Ht wifh water and
sweetened it pia ant to take
Every man of a family should fee3
this remedy in his home Buyitnow
Price 2jC LaposSize 50c