Hi m I riinn ODOTHINGS IN NATURE R III VI Win 1 DENTIST phb K Office Booms 3 and 5 Walsh Blk McCook Barl3er ShQP I J Hi Mm Uear of 1st National Hank H BL ll9 Newly Furnished IS nBP and First Class in Every 3i IHfSr XSil Particular Jl Earl Murray Middleton Ruby PLUMBING and STEAM FITTING All work guaranteed Phone 182 McCook Nebraska JOHN E KELLEY ATTORNEY AT LAW and BONDED ABSTRACTED McCook Nebraska CSAgent of Lincoln Land Co and of McCook Water Works Offlco in Postoillco building YOU WOULD DO WELL TO SEE J M Rupp FOR ALL KINDS OF ftp fcfr gp P O Box 131 McCook Nebraska McCook Laundry G C HECKMAN Prop Dry and Steam Cleaning and Pressing GATEWOOD VAHUb DENTISTS Office over HcAdams Store Phone 190 ffajfgg Earn More SVjffAWM Bnsinete and Short hand Cons taurht by Moit Experienced Teachers In tho wait Positions for graduate Work for Board Halp for deiervinr atndsnta Addresi Mosner Lampman College Information fre 1700 rarnmn St Okxh Ha3 0 Hi m a fe iwJ0MSiJV8 25TI The Security Abstract and Realty Company I FOR LOANS AND INSURANCE Farms Wild Lands and City Property at owners prices Properties of non residents looked after Write for infor mation W C MOYER mgr ssssssssssssssssssssss Great Lumber and Goal Genler Home of Quality and Quantity where W C BOLLARD sells THE BEST LUM BER AND COAL Are you thinking of building If so it e ten to one our figures will please you M O McCLURE Phone No 1 Manager DrHerbertJPratt Registered Graduate Dentist Office over McConnells Drag Store MCCOOK NEB Telephones Office 160 residence 13r Former location Atlanta Georgia w fem CAPT BARRETT PRACTICAL Architect and Builder Repairing and Remodeling Buildings a Specialty McCOOK - NEBRASKA Shop Phone 324 SOME PARADOXES EXPLAINED How tho Wheels of an Express Train Going Forward at Sixty Miles an Hour Travel Backward at tho Raia of Ten Miles an Hour In Paradoxes of Science and Nature the author Mr Hampson explains the why and wherefore of many things which appear to contradict scientific principle or settled belief For example when a train Is going at a rate of sixty miles an hour what part of It is moring backward This is no trick no sell The whole train Is not going backward and you are not the Innocent goat to be sacrificed upon its rails The train is going forward at the rate of sixty miles an hour and yet a portion of that same train Is go ing In a contrary direction at a pretty fair rate of speed It is not going atirely eren it Is actually and literal ly in a hurry in that direction Yon may prore this for yourself with a bi cjclo Push Its front wheel up against a house wall Make a chalk mark on the lowest part of the wheel and on the ground Immediately beneath It Back the machine a little from the wall and when the wheel has moved an inch the marked spot will not ap pear to have moved at all As the ma chine is slowly backed farther the first risible morement of the bottom of the wheel Is upward from the ground while it is Impossible to see that the marked spot has backed from the wall to the smallest extent This means that all wheels trareling at any speed hare a part the part in immediate contact with the ground which has no morement at all But the wheel of a railroad car hag a flange a portion which juts down below the wheels point of contact on the rail That point of contact then becomes a center the whole wheel passes forward abore it while the flange beneath it passes under it go ing backward That is the part of the wheel that trarels in the contrary di rection And by a simple mathemati cal formula its rate of speed is cal culable at about one sixth of the speed of the axle of the wheel which repre sents the forward rate of trarel So that on every express train going six ty miles on hour toward New York theres a portion that Is trareling to ward Boston Its humble ten The paradox that sail and Ice boats may fly faster than the wind which propels them is obrious and common place to the point of boredom But consider the Intelligence of the arer age billiard ball Place three balls In a row along the cushion touching each other Place another ball alongside the cushion say eight Inches from this row Hit this lightly and smoothly so that it strikes the row It will come to rest at once on striking the nearest ball The nearest ball and the next one to it will also remain station ary But the third ball will start off from the bunch at precisely the speed of the ball you hare struck and it will quietly more off to the exact dis tance from the row that you had placed the ball which you struck The balls will then be in a position exactly the rererse of the one at which you started The ball you struck with your cue will be the third ball in the row and the last ball in the original row will be at rest just eight inches away from them If you had placed two balls eight inches from your row of three and hit them with your cue so that they struck the row of three then just two balls would leare the row of three and retire to the eight inch position occupied by your two cue balls Plainly the billiard ball is smart enough to come in out of the rain It can count and add and sub tract It probably has Its opinion of the people who bat it about the cush ions with not nearly so true an in stinct for angles and relocltles as it has itself Hereafter when coal is high we may heat our houses with Ice for ice gires out heat not much It would take a large chunk to heat the public library but it might be done Erery thing in nature has some heat erery known object eren Ice Ice is cold to us only because it has much less heat than our bodies It hasnt much heat to be sure but still a little You may lower its melting point by mixing in some salt A mixture of water and salt requires 32 degrees of frost to freeze it Therefore the mixture of Ice and salt can be melted by the heat of anything that has a higher temper ature than that Such a thing Is pure ice which has been exposed for some time to the air It remains at freezing or melting point 32 degrees F or zero on the centigrade scale At this temperature then it has heat enough to melt a portion of its own substance that has been made more easily melta ble by addition of salt It proceeds to melt a part of itself deroting a part of its heat energy to this work that is to say that haTlng used up some of its heat It has less heat left And that Is further to say that all the while the ice was melting it was growing colder We come now to the ice furnace J jkcrbole to say that the water wbicfc the firemen turned upon u Ore rather added to the intensity of the confla gratlon The heat of the flames Instant- ly disintegrated the water and con- Every Known Object Even Ice rtln nt0 TItsf titent pses burned them Let only some ContainS Some Heat five gcnJus set himself to work and apply this principle to the kitchen range and he shall have fame and for tune and Ave a cheap and handy sub stitute for anthracite at 7 u ton The soundest of eyes has its blind Bpot Anybody can And his own after a short search On a plain piece of paper place the capital letters R and L some Ave Inches apart like this It L Now close your left eye holding It tight with your hand if necessary Then hold the paper off say eighteen Inches from the open right eye Look only at the letter It But out of the corner of your eye as we say you will catch a glimpse of the letter L Now slowly move the paper closer to the eye keeping that eye peeled on the It all the while When the paper is about six Inches from the eye tho L will disappear You have ceased to see it out of the corner that is you have apparently ceased to see it Mora the paper closer yet to your eye and the L will reappear It has simply passed the blind spot In your organ of risiou We hear a great deal about the heartstrings those famous heartstrings which the theater press agent prom ises us shall be played upon by his drama You sit in your seat before the play turning the leaves of your programme and you hit upon the an nouncement of the next attraction It Is sure to say that this powerful at traction -will reach the heartstrings Now most of us have held those heart strings to be but a figure of speech Poor lay fools that we are we know not that they hare a place in physiolo gy and a rery large place in ereryday life The heart without heartstrings doesnt work thats all We all know that between the auricle and ventricle are ralres But those wonderful automatic ralres are not stout enough in their own tissue to hold back the pressure that the heart Imparts to the flow of blood at each of its beats And nature with her wonderful provision for ererythlng has fitted to those ralres complete sets of tiny guy wires which stiffen them to their work Of course they are not of wire they are tendons but they do rery well considering the double duty they perform Go to the Bowdoln square and learn for yourself the ex tras they are called upon to perform Truly harmonious nature has her ca pricious moments and dearly lores a feat a paradox a bit of sport Bos ton Transcript The Nonchalant Canton Merchant Frequently on entering a Canton shop you will find its owner with a book In one hand and pipe or fan in the other and wholly absorbed In his studies You will be doomed to dis appointment if you expect the smoker to start up at once all smiles and blandness rubbing his hands together as he makes a shrewd guess as to what he Is likely to take out of you and re ceiving you with obsequiousness or with rudeness accordingly Quite the rererse Your presence Is apparently unnoticed unless you happen to lift anything Then you hear that the fan has been arrested and feel that a keen eye is bent on your morements all the while But it is not until you in quire for some article that the gentle man now certain that you mean to trade will rise without bustle from his seat show you his goods or state the price he means to sell at with a polite yet careless air which plainly says If it suits you we will make an exchange Through China With a Camera The Minutest of Shells Among the minute existences upon the face of the globe that hare been elerated by means of the microscope into an honored position of independ ence are the foraminefera mostly ma rine atoms inhabiting many uerea ceus At one time they were considered mollusca at another they were ranked among the infusoria and erentually they were settled com fortably in the subkingdom protozoa The calcareous shells hare in the past formed rast deposits of chalk They are often today congregated as realms of sand These animals are not al ways minute but generally they are subjects imperatively demanding the lens An ounce of sand has been known to contain G000 of their shells and in the West Indies the figure once ran into millions Your object under the naked eye seems to be merely a pinch of brown sand under the mi croscope you hare a great rariety of the loreliest lihiputian shells repre senting erery rariety of form known to the conchologlst Pampered Dogs London reterinaries tell surprising stories about dogs There was a poo dle for which a prime leg of lamb was roasted erery day and there were other pets which when tiken into the custody of the reterinary were ris ited erery day by their owners in car riages whose footmen would get down from the box and hand in partridge breasts and other dainties on silrer dishes for the sick dog Old Noble Queen Victorias farorite collie was often taken in as a patient A i by one reterinary and found to be large mass of pure ice Is contained in j fering from orerfeeding It would a galranlzed receptacle baring a flue frequently eat a whole roast pheasant leading from the top About this re- J and the wonder is that it lired so long ceptacle Is placed Ice mixed with salt I A reterinary once got a telegram The salted ice melts In melting it from Oxford to go down instantly and t draws from the pure Ice Its heat Our treat a pet dog that had fallen down- patent flue conducts this heat to all parts of the house And there is a great saring In coal Water may be made serriceable as e fuel It Is no mere reportorial stairs and broken its leg But the veterinary had to wire that the last train was gone whereupon another message came Take special And le did at a cost of 1G0 I ITALIAN BALL GAME A Statuesque Beauty In Pallone Seef In No Other Game Pallone is the king of ball games re retiring not merely great strength and alertness In the player but offering also such a succession of noble plastic poses as may be seen In no other jftiis Goethe who saw his first match with delight at Verona in September 1780 wrote that sucli attitudes were worthy of being put into marble Our more enlightened archaeology would probably declare for the nobler bronze if the pundits could be persuad ed to follow Goethe and occasionally exchange the library for the pallone court Be that as it may the gist of the game Is almost as readily grasped as its statuesque beauty Pallone is merely the perfected and titanic form of the jeu de paume that is played from end to end of Europe You see It in its incipiency when two urchins with tambourines beat a rubber ball to and fro In the open or against a side wall In Spain the thing is done with a wicker racket In a court and is called pclota But pallone the ancient game which is the parent of tennis rackets and half a dozen other wall gRmes Is as far superior to Its ru dimentary forms as baseball is to rounders One look at the big ball the pallone Itself would convince you that here Is n sport for men if not for giants Tho pallone looks like a huge baseball but has twice tho diameter and weighs two thirds of a pound I have seen Its like in Columbia county N Y where years ago the old Dutch game of wicket was played Imagine a twelre pound shell or an enlarged croquet ball soaring from end to end of a 300 foot court or ricoehetting treacherously off the side wall as the agile player gires this or that turn of the bristling wooden cestus This bat Is as noteworthy as the ball A wood en cylinder about eight Inches long and six in diameter with an outer ar ray of inserted wooden spikes and an interior cross grip shaped to the play ers hand such is the arm piece or pracciale It Is so heary weighing at least four pounds that one may rath er say it sways the bearer than he it Once it swings at the hurtling ball the whole body must follow the ges ture hence the remarkable plastic quality of all the attitudes of play And the contestants are dressed In a fashion to glre ralue to these momen tary poses A trim jacket the right sleere short tight knickerbockers stockings and canras slippers all spot less white make up a costume that admits a touch of color only in the gold fringed sash gift of an admirer generally which marks the player as belonging to the reds and blues Re turning to the pracciale it is not a comfortable thing to wear At erery pause the players rap it sharply against the wall to drire the bandaged wrist home and they often breathe on the hot and half exposed knuckles in a rain attempt to cool them Frank J Mather in Century The Triumph of Titus The total number of those who per ished In the siege and capture of Jeru salem Is estimated by Josephus at 1100000 persons 97000 were taken captire by the Romans Of these 700 of the finest and strongest were select ed to grace the triumphal procession of Titus The old and the weak who could not be used the Romans had butchered in cold blood Those orer serenteen years of age were part of them sent into the Egyptian mines part of them forced to appear in bat tle with wild beasts and be torn to pieces by them or to fight as gladiators with one another to delight the eyes of the heathen populace In Caesarea Philippi alone at the celebration of the birthday of Domitian more than 2500 Jews shed their blood in the arena The males under serenteen years of age and the women were sold directly into slarery Titus with all his prisoners and all his booty marched to Rome where he had a bril liant triumph in the year 71 A D The sacred ressels of the temple were carried before the imperator and Simon and John for the first time shoulder to shoulder were obliged to march before the chariot of the rictor with the 700 chosen captires Simon being the real leader was first scourged ana then throttled at the stake in ac cordance with Roman custom John finished his career in prison A Magnolia Elysium When good Charlestonians die their bodies it is said go to Magnolia ceme tery and their souls to the Magnolia gardens Indeed it were quite ex cusable in a wandering spirit if chancing on these gardens when th azaleas were in their radiant perfec tion he should mistake the place for Eljsium especially if looking for such a gardenlike Elysium as Ilerricks Although widely known and risited yearly by hundreds Magnolia is not a public garden but a noble old estate on the Ashley river belonging now as it has belonged for 200 years to the Drayton family of South Carolina Very much as the folk of Tokyo go out to worship the beauty of the cher ry blossoms so in March and April Charleston people and any strangers fortunate enough to be within their gates make a pilgrimage to Magnolia During the season the little steamer plies between Charleston and Mag nolia making the trip twice daily Francis Duncan in Century Horse Sense Mr Jogtrot I dont want this horse He hasnt any sense at all Every time he sees an automobile he wants to climb a tree Dealer Well thats good horse sense It seems to me Chi cago News jsssBg JTJf NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION To James D Wright non resident defend ant You aro hereby notified that on tho 22nd dnyof August 1107 Alice Wright tiled her pe tition against you in the district court of Red Willow county Nebraska the object and prayer of which aro to obtain n divorce from you on the grounds that you have willfully abandoned the plaintiff without good cause for the term of three years Inst past and for the custody of loin Wright a child born tho issue of said marriage You nro required to answer tho suid petition on or boforo Monday tho 29th day of September 1907 S-23-Uh Alice Wright Plaintiff My Starr iz Roedor her attorneys To George Lithe non resident defendant You arts heroby notified that on tho 12th day of August 1107 Annie Lillie tiled a petition against you in tho district court of Itcdwillow county Nebraska theobjcct and prayer of which are to obtain a divorce from you on the ground that you hnvo been guilty of extreme cruelty toward this plaintiff and that you have willfully abandoned tho plaintiff without good cause for the term of two years hist oast You aro re quired to answer said otitiou on or before Monday tho 23rd day of September 1907 8 lfMts Annie Lillie Plaintiff By Starr Rceder her attorneys NOTICE OF HEARING On petition for distribution of residue of es tate State of Nebraska Red Willow countyss To all persons interested in the estate of James Cain deceased Notice is hereby given thnt Mary Cain ad ministratrix of said estate has filed her jieti tiou in the county court of said county the ob ject and prayer of which aro thnt n ilecreo of distribution may be made of the residue of said estate now in her possession to tho parties en titled by law to receive tho same You aro heroby notified that said petition will bo heard by tho county judge at tho county court room in tho city ol McCook in snid coun ty on the thirty first day of August 1107 at ten oclock a m It is ordered that a copy of this notice be pub lished onco each week for three successive weeks in Tho McCook Tribune a newspaper printed and published in said county Dated this sixteenth day of August 1907 seal J C MooitE County Judge No 8S23 NOTICE OF AUTHORIZATION Treasury Department Offico of Comptroller of tho Currency Washington D C August 5th 1107 WrrEKEAS By satisfactory evidence presented to the undersigned it hns been made to appear that THE McCOOK NATIONAL HANK1 in the City of McCook in the County of Red Wil low and State of Nebraska has complied with all the provisions of tho Statutes of tho United States required to bo complied with before an association shall bo authorized to commence the business of iianking Now Therefore I Thomas P Kane Deputy and Acting Comptroller of tho Currency do hereby certify that THE McCOOK NATIONAL HANK iii tho City of McCook in the County of Red Willow and State of Nebraska is auth orized to commence tho business of Hanking as provided in Section Fifty one hundred and sixty nine of the Revised Statutes of tho United States In Testimony Wiiekkof witness my hand and seal of this office this Fifth day of August 1907 T P KANE j official I Deputy and Acting Comp- t seal f troller of the Currency First August 9 1907 Last October 11 1907 Americas Greatest Weekly The Toledo Blade Toledo Ohio The Best Known Newspaper in the United States Circulation 185000 Popular in Every State In many respects the Toledo Blade is the most remarkable weekly newspaper published in the United States It is the only newspaper espe cially edited for National circulation It has had the largert circulation for more years than any newspaper printed in America Further more it is the cheapest newspaper in the world as will be explained to any person who will write us for terms The news of tho world so arranged that busy people can more easily com prehend than by reading cumbersome columns of dailies All enrrent topics made plain in each issue by special editorial matter written from inception down to date The only paper published especially for people who do or do not read daily newspapers and yet thirst for plain facts That this kind of a newspaper is popular is proven by the fact that the Weekly Blade now has over 185000 yearly subscribers and is circulated in all parts of the United States In addition to the news the Blade pub lishes short and serial stories nnd many depart ments of matter suited to every member of the family Only one dollar a year Write for specimen copy Address THE BLADE Toledo Ohio BEGGS CHERRY COUGH SYRUP Cures BRONCHfflS CITY LODGE DIRECTORY A F A It McCook Lodge No 135 A F A M moots every first and third Tuesday of tho month at 800 p in in Masonic hall Charles L Fahnestock W M Lon Cone Sec DEOUEKOF HONOR McCook Lodgo No 3 D of H moots evory socoud and forth Fridays of oach mouth at 800 p in in Gnnschows hall MlW LAUttA 09BURN C of H Mas MattieG Wells Roc EALK3 McCook Aerio No 1511 F OE meets tho second and fourth Wednesdays of each month ut 800 pm in Gnnschows hall Social meet ings on tho first and third Wednesdays W II Cummins W Pres II P Peterson W Sec BASTE UN HTAR Eureka Chapter No SO O E S moots tho secoud and fourth Fridays of oach month at 800 p m in Masonic hall Mrs Sarah E Kat W M Sylvester Cordeal Sec KNIGHTS OF COLUMIiUS McCook Conncil No 112G K of C moots tho first nnd third Tuesdays of each month at 800 p in in Ganschows hall C J Ryan G K F G Lechleiteb F Sec KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McCook Lodgo No 42 K of P moots every Wednesday at 830 p in in Masonic hall J F Cordeal C C C W Barnes K R S KNIGHTS TEMPLAR St John Commandory No 16 K T meets on tho second Thursday of oach month at 800 p in in Masonic hall Emerson Hanson E C Sylvester Cordeal Roc locomotive engineers McCook Division No G23 U of L E moots overy first nnd third Saturday of oach month at 8 00 in Berrys hall W C Schenck C E W D Hcenett F A E LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN McCook Lodge No 599 B of L meets every Saturday at 8 00 p in F L in chows hull W R Penninoton M W S Bixlee Sec MODERN WOODMEN Noblo Camp No GG3 M W A meots every second and fourth Thursday of each month at 830 p m in Ganschows hall John Hunt V C Barney Hofer Clerk ODD FELLOWS McCook Lodgo No 137 1 0 0 F meets every Monday at 800 p m in Ganschows hall E H Doan N G Scott Doan Sec p e o Chapter X P E O meets the socond and fourth Saturdays of each month at 230 p m at the homes of the various members Mrs C W Britt Pres Mrs J G Schobel Cor Sec RAILWAY CONDUCTORS Harvey Division No 95 O R C meets tho second and fourth Sundays of each month at 300 pm in Berrys hall Joe Hegenbergee C Con M O McCluee Sec RAILWAY TRAINMEN C W Bronson Lodge No 487 B of R T meets every Friday at 800 p m in Berrys hall H W Conover M F J Hcston Sec R A M King Cyrus Chapter No 35 R A M meets every first and third Thursday of each month at 800 p m in Masonic hall Clarence B Gray H P Clinton B Sawyer Sec EOYAL NEIGHBORS Noble Camp No 862 R N A meets every second and fourth Thursday of each month at 230 p in in Ganschows hall Mrs Mary Walker Oracle Mrs Augusta Anton Rec b s M Council Nol6RSMmeetson the last Saturday of each month at 800 p m in Masonic hall Ralph A Hagberg T I M Syvlester Cordeal Sec WORKMEN McCook Lodge No 61 AOUW meets every Monday at 800 p m in Berrys hall Web Stephens M W C B Gray Rec ts TTLTTTfcTTTT D ITT A v FENNE Y WALKER General Contracting Painters and Decorators Not How Cheap but How Good with Us Office and Shop west of Fitst National Bank Leave Orders with C R Woodworth Company j one r rrj in a Stock Certificate of the McCook Building Loan Association No better or safer investment is open to you An investment of ioo per month for 120 months will earn 8o nearly 9 percent compounded annually Dont delay but see the secretary today Subscriptions r e ceived at any time for tne new stock opened just nriMiBin iiwiM ITi -a