The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, September 13, 1907, Image 8

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INDIANOLA
Mr Noubauer and Mrs Ollio Houchin
of McCook drove down to Indianola
Sunday
1 Jack Hodges is at home for a short
jisit with the folks
Mrs Hamilton and daughter came
down from McCook Sunday and spent
the day with relatives
Mrs Patrick McDonnell has sold his
sesidence property and will move to
Denver in the spring
Mr and Mrs William Herrimon of
Cambridge visited at Roy Manns last
Sunday
Hal Samms left for Los Angeles Cali
fornia Saturday night He will attend
school there again this winter
Miss Tarquar of Guide Rock who has
ioen visiting her cousin Frank Marsh
left this week for Salida Colo where
she has a school
The Rod Willow county fair is now in
progress Come everybody and see the
ice and wonderful things in the var
ious departments
Ernest Dodd of Bartloy is a new help
er in the Reporter office
A show at the opera house every
sight this week Those who have at
tended pronounce it fair
Miss Bertha Walker is visiting in
Lincoln among relatives and friends
Ernest Crabtree and R E Smith
who have been painting and papering
3or people in and around Danbury ar
rived home Saturday evening
The merry-go-round is in town this
week and the kids are happy So are
aot the parents
G W Short finds work for two extra
slerks this week during the rush
George Mick and family will occupy
the new brick house being built by
Jrank Fritsch as soon as it is finished
Mrs Mackechnie who has been ser
iously ill is getting along nicely now
and her many friends hope she may
apeedily recover
Roxy Gentry is very sick with ty
phoid fever as is also Jessie Hadley
Miss Susie Colling is in Lincoln this
xeek taking in the sights
Peter Collings delivery team ran
away Thursday but was stopped before
any serious damage was done Mr
Collings little girl was in the wagon
at the time of the runaway but she
Ttas not injured
Misses Mamie Mann and Margaret
Townly were McCook visitors last Sat
urday
There are quite a number of typhoid
lover cases in and around Indianola
She greatest number being north of
Sown
New Clothing Store
In Diamonds New Block
Full of New
Goods
Dennison Street west of Citizens Bank
3 tAVSvVvvsNsAANvrAAVN
Ed Smith and brother Arthnr went
over to Danbury Monday morning to be
gone a few days
Miss Edna Thompson went to Bart
ley Saturday night to visit with friends
and acquaintance
Miss Lesta Hadley is here now from
Denver taking care of her brother
Jesse Miss Hadley is a nurse
Charley Fritsch is a very sick child
Fred Hughes is expecting a visit from
his mother soon
Miss Maggie Ryan living north of
town is very low with typhoid fever
Mr Andy Lord arrived home from
Iowa last week where he had gone to
attend his brothers funeral
Mr and Mrs J C Puckett enter
tained their clerks in a very pleasing
manner last Friday evening A deli
cious course was served of ice crerm
cake and fruit The party was given in
honor of Hal Samms who will spend the
winter in California At a late hour
the company separated all agreeing
that Mr and Mrs Puckett knew well
how to entertain their friends
R F D No 1
Mrs W S Fitch attended the state
fair and afterwards went to Omaha to
visit her son Frank
Mrs R D Rodgers arrived home
Tuesday night from her trip west
Tho Gorman school opened for the
fall and winter term Monday
The moving picture show at the Nel
son Downs school house last Saturday
night was successful and enjoyed
Little Albert Schlegel has been quite
sick
Mrs M J Stroud expects to move
back to her old home soon
Miss Nettie Endsley is teaching the
Pickens school
W N Rogers sent his cattle to the
Sioux City show and went on to Spo
kane Wash for the long expected bear
hunt
W P Broomfield T A Endsley and
Frank Lofton attended the state fair at
Lincoln
Roxy Byfield is visiting Geneva Fitch
this week
Mr and Mrs J I Lee and Mrs E E
Rogers and Mrs Joe Pesky attended
the Old Settlers picnic last week
Mr and Mrs James Barnes drove
down on the Willow and attended the
picnic
Wednesday while Mrs Lee was up
town someone removed the screen from
the dining room window and helped
themselves to food from the refrigerator
taking a good portion along for future
use
Resolved that i have foumd
A SHOE
THATS COMFORTABLE AND WNDSOME TOO
AMD STRONG IT SIMPLY WONT WEA OUT
A SHOE YOU ALL HAVE -HEARD ABOUT
AND NOW ILL TELL YOU WHATTO DO
just ASr FOR The BLUE jptJON SHOE
BUSTER BROWN
ILLNEVEBEA
5AD BOY AGAIN
f GEE JUT THATS
I A SMART fAfftOt
M
vvVA
JLJif a
l 3i BY THr BSOAW SHOE CO
BARTLEY
II L Brown and Perry Promor mido
a business trip to Cambridge Tuesday
W V Vickory of Oklahoma i9 here
visiting his daughter Mrs A L Coch
ran
Sol Premor returned from Indiana
Wednesday morning Ho reports the
crops better here than in Indiana and
is glad to get back where he can take a
full breath of pure Nebraska air
McCook was well represented in tho
county Sunday school convention held
hero Tuesday and Wednesday
Mr and Mrs Vindhurst were down
from Indianola Wednesday attending
tho Sunday school convention
Miss Ruby Axtell the accomplished
daughter of Mr and Mrs R Y Axtell
of Bartley was married Monday at Mc
Cook to Mr Rae Uindman of Danbury
Clay Hoover has sold his interest in
the livery business here to his father
and will go west to find another loca
tion
The Methodist church have secur
ed a good title to the lots north of the
church and have voted 1600 to be
used in building a now parsonage
Mr and Mrs James McDowell will
soon go on a visit to Indiana
Parties from the eastern part of the
state are frequently hero looking for
land
Ira Sheets and family have moved
into their fine residence just finished
and now have the finest home in Bart
ley
Mr West manager of the Smith
Cochran store has gone to Naponee
Neb to assist in moving his family to
Bartley
Mrs Dr Arbogast and the baby were
Cambridge visitors with her parents
Mr and Mrs Enlow
S R Grissell of Cambridge was in
Bartley to day trying to rent a residence
to move his family into
RED WILLOW
Mr Holland had another accident
having stepped into a hole at the gra
vel pit which inflicted painful injuries
Holton Longuecker left on Saturday
night for McCook where he will stay
a few days before returning to Colo
rado
Mrs Smiths sisiter Mrs Cunning
ham of California is making a two
weeks visit at the Smith home
Mr Birdsall an old Red Willow school
teacher visited friends and attended
the old settlers picnic
Mr Masters is settled in his new
house just finished
Say you saw it in The Tribune
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k
I C LJji POUY WANT5
111 j VJK f a BLUE RIBBON
Buster Brown
BLUE RIBBON
School Shoes
for
Boys and Girls
Blue Ribbon Shoes are made to wear by expert shoemakers and from
the best tannages of all leathers They are stylish and comfortable
These are the best and most serviceable school shoes you can buy
The Model Shoe Store
Fisher Perkins Props
McCook Nebraska
MM M i - i
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AN EXTINCT ANIMAL
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Tho Saber Toothed Tiger Was a For
midable Creature
The most remarkable of all the ex
tinct feline animals are those known
to naturalists as the saber toothed
cats or timers n group comprising the
greater part of all the fossil forms
They date back to the earliest times of
which we know anything about the
family In North America and reach
down to the time of man himself A
large and powerful species described
from the Indian Territory by Cope
lived contemporaneously with the
hairy mammoth as evidenced by the
commingling of their skeletons There
can be little or no question but that
the hairy mammoth was contempora
neous with man in North America
as well as in Europe Its geological
range Is from the close of the eocene
to the latter part of the pleistocene
The chief peculiarity of the animal
Is the extraordinary elongated canine
teeth The tail is of unusual length
and the legs are short The animal
measures about seven feet In length
aside from the tail The lower jaws
have a downward projection In front
due to a ilangelike widening of the
jawbones which doubtless served as a
protection to the teeth preventing their
injury or loss In some of the larger
forms from South America this flange
was not present while the canine
teeth were even more elongated than
Is tho case with this species attaining
a length of over six inches and pro
truding far below the jaws when
closed
A FAMOUS ROAD
Indias Tree Bordered Highway 1200
Miles In Length
The road I have in my mind Is in
India and stretches 1200 miles from
Lahore to Calcutta It is the famous
Grand Trunk road Let me explain its
nature though one cannot do so by
comparison for there is no road of Ave
miles in England that Is anything like
it It is level Indeed there is not
above a mile the whole distance where
even a lady need dismount to walk
The material with which it Is made is
called kunker and If you care to turn
that word into concrete you have an
idea of what it is like It is exceeding
ly hard and as smooth as a prepared
pavement There is no dust When I
first got on this road and enjoyed the
luxury of easy traveling I said This
is magnificent but in a little time I
suppose it will become gritty and un
even I went fO 100 miles 200 miles
500 GOO 700 miles and it was always j
the same with not even a small stone
to give a jog Nearly the whole of the
way is lined with a double row of ma
jestic trees
With two friends I rode across India
during the hottest time of the year in
April and May and was never serious
ly inconvenienced by the heat for at a
pace of fifteen miles an hour one could
create a draft Chambers Journal
Roadside Wit
He who matched wits with the au
thor of The Ancient Mariner had in
deed a lively task before him for Cole
ridge was never caught napping The
poet was so awkward a horseman that
his riding often attracted comment of
anything but a complimentary nature
One day he was riding along the turn
pike road In the county of Durham
when a wag who met him fastened
upon him as an excellent subject for
sport Consequently he drew rein and
said in an impertinent drawl
My graceful friend did you happen
to meet a tailor on the road
Im inclined to think I did said
Coleridge meditatively I was not
sure at the moment but lie said some
thing about my meeting a goose far
ther along the road
The -wag put spurs to his horse and
the poet jogged calmly on his way
Past Salaries of Actors
A number of autograph letters of
Edmund Kean supply some interesting
information about the salaries of actors
early in the nineteenth century One
relates to an offer by Mr Ellison offer
ing Kean 3 a week as acting man
ager of the new theater in Wych
street Later this rose to 23 a month
In 1S20 Kean was offered 12000 a
year to go to America In the prime
of his popularity he received 200 for
a week in Edinburgh and apparently
reached the highest point when Mr
Bunn wrote from the Theater Royal
Dublin on Feb 8 1S29 and offered
him 30 a night to play in Dublin and
Cork Liverpool Mercury
Home Influences
Each one of us is bound to make the
little circle in which lie lives better
and happier each one of us is bound
to see that out of that small circle the
widest good may flow each of us may
have fixed in his mind the thought
that out of a single household may
flow influences which shall stimulate
the whole commonwealth and the
whole civilized world Dean Stanley
Got Too Important
What has become of the maid you
thought such a prize
Oh I had to let her go replied
the second fashionable woman After
her operation for appendicitis she
thought she was one of us Philadel
vhia Ledger
Right On
Wisejay It must be a great pleas
ure to tell a joke to an acrobat Soft
boy Why Wisejay Because he tum
bles so easily Morristown Pa
Times
A Good Guess
Mother Mercy child how do you get
your hands so dirty You never saw
mine as dirty as that Child No but I
guess grandma did Philadelphia In
quirer
Sep
1
PP5
ranms
The Store for Thrifty
People
T a 4
I oep ieni ucr
Means new fall goods Dress Goods
Flannels Cotton Flannels Underwear
and things too numerous to mention
in so small a space Also too jnany
to put into our store even if we have
the largest store in the city Sowe
wish to make more room for ourjnew
fall stock by selling
All Our I
Summer Goods
At Cost
So if you can use anything in our stock i
please call make yourself richer by
buying now and help us make room
for our new goods
Come in and enquire about our
l coupon deal We can show you a fine
I line of jewelry which you can secure
i with coupons by buying Christmas
nresents nnw
Telephone No 16
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MCOOK
DRIVING
PARK
tetnber 26 27 and 2
PROFESSIONAL STARTER
FINE TRACK FAST HORSES
BIG PURSES FINE WEATHER
FINE MUSIC A Bid TIME
nWRFH
The Largest Gathering of Fast Horses
Ever Seen between Chicago and Denver
Frank James
of Missouri Starter
300000
in Cash Purses
Drills Contest Street Sports
Liberal Cash Prizes
The Famous Havelock Drill Team
Up to You
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Yes you want a picture of your residence farm or stock
Call for prices at the NEW ART STUDIO first stair
way south of the postoffice
Special Rates Until the 15th Only
New Art
Studio
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E E Wilson
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