31 DrPR true spirit of Christmas into the hearts of his readers Dickens himself says of it My chief aim was in a whimsical kind of a mask which the good humor of the season justified to awaken some loving and Jorbearing thoughts never out of sea 3on in a Christian land Lord Jeffrey assured the author that ie had done more good and not only listened more kindly feelings but prompted mora positive acts of benevo lence than can be traced to all the pul pits and confessionals since Christmas 1S4 OJd Mr Scrooge grasping avaricious repulsive pronouncing Christmas a Humbug The ghost of Christmas past the ghost of Christmas present and the ghost of Christmas yet to come What can we not make of the Christ mas yet to come Christmas a Hum bug If that is what has been we can turn it into a blessed reality this year Set into the spirit of itj by reading the Christmas Carol again Go to Bob Cratchits for dinner where There never was such a goose Bob said he didnt believe there ever was such a goose cooked Eked out by apple sauce and mashed potatoes it was a sufficient dinner for the whole family And the pudding Everybody had something to say about it but nobody said or thought it was at all a small pudding Jor so large a family It would have been rank heresey to have done so Any Oratchit would have blushed to have hinted at such a thing And after the visitation of the Christ mas Ghosts and Mr Scrooge had been so transformed people laughed at the alteration in him but he lot them laugh His own heart laughed and that was snough for him t lie knew how to keep Christmas well if any man alive possessed the knowledge May that betruly said of as Aud so as Tiny Tim observed God bless us every one Librarian Thousands Of Them That new post card case in this office contains thousands of post cards and exhibits hundreds of them to view Just turn it around and makevopr selection FBANK SEISTLE ENGRAVER and ELECTROTYPER tfOM 1114 1420 24 UMfWtWCE DEHVEB COLO fflilillflilfll - 5wsassss3 6REHM Baking Bswcter Awarded highest honors by the great Worlds Expositions and proved of superior strength and purity by the official tests No alum no lime pliosphates Food officials state and national with physicians condemn the use of alum in food and deplore and denounce the dishonest methods by which alum baking powders are imposed upon the public PUBLIC LIBRARY NOTES A book that is worth while is the one tant you can ind n second time with zest a third time with keen relish and in a fourth reading discover some new joy which had eluded you before The December magazines are coming in and the cover of every one speaks of Christmas in gay colors with holly and mistletoe Santa Clans and Christmas greens The Night Before and The Sarly Morning During these early days before the joyous celebration lot us invite every one to read again Dickens Christmas Carol No other writer has ever been able to so thoroughly put the CITY CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENTS Christian Bible school at 10 a m Preaching at 11 a m and 8 p m C E at 7 p m All are welcome R M Ainswokth Pastor Episcopal Preaching services at St Albana church at 11a m and 730 p m Sunday school at 10 a m All are welcome to these services E R Earle Rector Catholic Order of services Mass 3 a m Mass and sermon 1000 a m Evening service at 8 oclock Sunday school 230 p m Every Sunday Wm J Kirwin O M I Baptist Sunday school at 10 a m Preaching service at 1100 a m Even ing service at 800 B Y P U at 7 p m A most cordial invitation is extended to all to worship with us E Burton- Pastor Evangelical Lutheran Regular German preaching services in the frame building of the East Ward scdool every Sunday morning at 1030 All Germans aud Russians cordially invited Rev Wm Brueggeman 607 5th st East Methodist Sunday school at 10 am Sermons by pastor at 11 and 8 Class at 12 Junior League at 4 Epworth League at 645 Official board meeting Monday night at 730 Prayer meeting Wednesday night at745 M B Carman Pastor Christian Science Services Sun day at 11 a m and Wednesday at 8 p m Meetings held in the Morris block Room open all the time Science litera ture on sale Subject for nest Sunday Ancient and Modern Necromancy or Mesmerism and Hypnotism Congregational Sunday school at 10 a m Preaching at 11 a m and S p m by pastor Junior C E at 3 p m Senior Endeavor at 7 p m Prayer meet ing Wednesday evening at eight oclock The public is cordially invited to these services G B Hawkes Pastor Evangelical Lutheran Congrega tional Sunday School at 930 a m Preaching at 1030 a m and 730 p m by pastor Junior C E at 130 p m Senior C E at 400 p m Prayor meetings every Wednesday and Satur day evenings at 730 All Germans cordially invited to these services Rev GustavHenkelmann 505 3rd street West RED WILLOW Mr and Mrs Cox from Indianola spent part of the week at Owens Long neckers Mrs Sexson left on Friday for an ex tended visit in Iowa to her children relatives and friends Mrs Charle Rinck is able to go about much to the gratification of her many friends Horace Taylor has begun preparations for building a large barn Mr Gregg after closing a successful meeting in Indianola begun a weeks meeting at the Red Willow church preaching to crowded houses Homesteads Homestead land will soon be a thing of the past nave you used your home stead right If not there never was a better opportunity than now Wo have a number of fine claims on which you can file if you come at once Good level land black sandy loam soil which will raise the best of crops For further information write D J Sexsmith Wray Colorado BEGGS CHERRY COUGH SYRUP cures coughs and colds gJWBBBST8SSaIBBnBggrS3BEIg3rrrr BATHING AT DIEPPE When the Comtecsc dc Boigne Tried It In the Year 180G The Comtesse de Boigne in ler mem oirs gives an account of a visit she paid in 1S0G which Is Interesting In view of the position Dieppe now holds among French watering places The poverty of the inhabitants she Kays was frightful The Eng lishman as they called him and for them he was worse than the devil was cruising Incessantly before their empty harbor With much difficulty a boat was able to escape from time to time and go fishing always at the risk of being captured by the foreigner or confiscated upon the return journey if the telescopes of the watchers had seen It approach a vessel As for the comforts arranged for the convenience of bathers which Dieppe has since organized they were nonexistent at that time My brother was able to find a little covered cart and with great trouble and great ex pense notwithstanding the universal poverty a man was hired to lead the horses down to the sea and two wo men to go Into the sea with me These preparations raised the pub lic surprise and curiosity to such a pitch that my first bath was watched by a crowd on the shore My servants were asked if I had been bitten by a mad dog I aroused extreme pity as I went by and It was thought that I - being taken down to be drown1 An old gentleman called on my father to point out to him that he was assuming a great responsibility in permitting so rash an act It can hardly be imag ined that the Inhabitants of a sea shore could be so afraid of the sea But at that time the people of Dieppe were chiefly occupied in of sight of it and in protecting themselves from the disasters which they feared the sea might bring so that It was for them nothing more than a means of annoyance and suffer ing It Is curious to think that ten years later bathers were arriving in hundreds that special arrangements were made for their convenience and that sea bathing of every kind went on without producing any astonish ment in the neighborhood I have thus attempted to point out that the custom of sea bathing which is now so universal is comparatively recent in France for Dieppe was the first place where it began TREE DWELLING ANTS South American Insect That Acts as Plant Guardian Ant defenders of plants and trees are some of natures pretty marvels The Cecropia adenopus is a remarka ble tree of south Brazil widely dis tributed through the tropics Its slen der trunk is crowned with long leaves at the ends of the branches A few active auts run continually along the branches and the leaver but if the tree is shaken slightly an army of ants rushes out by small apertures ready for a savage assault on the in truder The ant is the terrible guard ian that the tree has retained to pro tect it from its most formidable ene my the leaf cutter ant The defenders rarely leave their re treat where they live on small whitish egg shaped bodies about one twelfth of an inch long known as Muellers corpuscles These are formed of deli cate tissue rich in proteids and ail as rations for the garrison of defender ants to feed upon The curious ar rangement by which entrance is made to the hollow stem has been studied by W Schimper Just above the point of insertion of each leaf extends nearly to the supe rior node a superficial groove at whose end is a rounded depression There the tissue is thin like a diaphragm in a tube and it also is soft The hole by which the ant enters is always pierced at this spot The ants seem to have made their entrance through the groove originally because it was at the top In the course of this plants further development natural se lection augmented these natural ad vantages so that finally the thin frail diaphragm as it exists today was de veloped Chicago Tribune Married the Day They Met Horace Greeley and Mary Young Cheney were married the first day they met They had corresponded for some time a common friend who was something of a matchmaker having brought tuis about She was all his fancy painted her but she was much disappointed in his appearance so much so that when he appeared be fore hr r having proposed and been accepted by letter she frankly told him that although she married him she was not in love with him Their married life was long and happy and the loss of his wife was a blow which Greeley did not long survive Tommys Lunch Uncle who left his nephew refresh ing Well Tommy you see Im back Ar you ready What have I to pay miss Waitress Three buns four sponge cakes tAvo sandwiches one jel ly five tarts and Uncle Good gracious boy Are you not ill Tom my No uncle but Im very thirsty London Tit Bits British Pride British hypocrisy is gradually disap pearing Until a few years ago most Englishmen fancied that to be born in the United Kingdom was to be a para gon of all the virtues Brussels Soir Envy Dont be covetous said Uncle Eben Envy in what yoh neighbor has is mighty apt to put de opportu nity in yoh neighbors way fob handin yoh a gold brick Washington Star THE WHEATFIELD Whero the Billowing Golden Wavea Stretch From Sky to Sky Take a loo at the whciGd that has been brought up to perfection as Ic stands yellow as gold with the sheen of the sea billowing from sky line to sky line like an ocean of gold where the wind touches the rippling wave crests with the tread of Invisi ble feet In California In Oregon in Washington in Dakota in the Cana dian northwest you may ride all day on horseback through the wheatfields without a break in the flow of yellow heavy headed grain no fence lines no meadow lands no shade trees no knobs and knolls and hills aud hol lows of grass or black earth through From dawn till dark from sunrise in a burst of fiery splendor over the prairie horizon to sundown when the crimson thing hangs like a huge shield of blood in the haze of a heat twi light you may ride with naught to break the view between you and the horizon but wheat wheat It is like the gold fields It goes to your head You grow dizzy looking at it You rub your eyes Is it a mirage The bil lowing yellow waves seem to be breasting the very sky You look up The sky is there all right with the black mote of a meadow lark sailing the azure sea lie drops liquid notes of sheer mellow music down on your head does that meadow lark and that gives you back your perspective your sense of amazing reality You are literally absolutely really in the midst of a sa of living gold It is you and not the lark that ii the mote You begin to feel as if your special mote might be a bonni that would get lost in infinity if you stayed there long and so you ride on and on and some more on and by and by come ut of the league long fenceless fields with an odor in your nostril thU iit ex actly like incense its too fugitive too fine too sublimal of earth It is aro matic a sort of attar of roses the im prisoned fragrance of the billions upon billions of wheat flowers shut up in the glumes of the heavy headed grain there And thats the odor of the wheat Agnes C Laut in Outing Mag azine A CHINESE STORY The Way a Mandarins Wise Wife De cided a Baby Case Two women came before a mandarin in China each of them protesting that she was the mother of a little child they had brought with them They were so eager and so positive that the mandarin was sorely puzzled lie re tired to consult with his wife who was a wise and clever woman whose opinion was held in great repute in the neighborhood She requested five minutes in which to deliberate At the end of that time she spoke Let the servants catch me a large fish in the river and let it be brought here alive This was done Bring me now the infant she said but leave the two women in the outer chamber This was done too Then the mandarins wife caused the baby to be undressed and its clothes to be put on the fish Carry the creature outside now and throw it into the river in the sight of the two women The servant obeyed her orders flinging the fish into the water where it rolled about and strug gled disgusted no doubt by the wrap pings in which it was swaddled Without amoments pause one of the women threw herself into the river with a shriek She must save her drowning child Without dcubt she is the true mother she declared and the mandarins wife commanded that she should be rescued and the child given to her And the mandarin nod ded his head and thought his wife the wisest woman in the Flowery King dom Meanwhile the false woman crept away She was found out in her imposture and the mandarians wife forgot all about her in the occupation of donning the little baby in the best silk she could find in her wardrobe Bystander White nd Red Wines White aud red wines owe their dif ference to the fact that while the for mer is permitted to ferment without the grape skirts these are allowed to remain in the case of the latter The color of the grapes makes no difference whatever to the color of the wine which they produce for the juice of all grapes is as nearly as possible col orless For instance the grape w1ikIi yields champagne is almost black in outward appearance Over the Telephone Is this Dr Smith Yes Well this is Mrs Jones I wish you would over as soon as conven ient My enckco clock has a little throat trouble Harpers Weekly His Mentor From the time a boy sits under a street corner electric light playing with toads until he is blind and tooth less lie hasto account to some woman why h didnt come home earlier Atchison Globe Not Like Hi- Parent Do you think Mr Skinnums baby will take after its father Not at all The other day they per suaded it to cough up a nickel it had swallowed Exchange Doing Good Service Bill Is that watch your father gave you ten years ago still doing good serv ice Jill Yes I pawned ic again today for the twentieth time London Opin ion It never occurs to fools that merit and good fortune are closely united Goethe Real Estate Filings The following real estato filings havo been madi in the county clerks office since last report C L Adams et ux to J R Stnns berry wd to 7 und8 in 23 Mc- Cook r ACT QUICKLY Harry Pool to S C Lyon bill of sale to chairs lamps etc belonging to barber shop 175 00 Emory E Rogers et ux to Ben jamin Meyers wd to e hf 8 nhf neqrl722G fHJOO 00 Edward Hanshaw et ux to Verna M Ilaushaw wd to i in4McCook 500 00 Edward Fitzgerald et ux to J W llupp qcd to w hf nw qr 1C0 J A Scott ut ux to A M Shoroy wd to w hf nw qr w hf sw qr 31 1- 2000 00 Lincoln Land Co to Laura A Hughes wd to lot 9 bik 11 2nd McCook 250 00 County of Red Willow to An diow J Crawmer qcd to part lots 9 11 bik 48 Hartley 1 00 Charles F Bush et ux to Belle Osborn Webber wd to lot 1 bik 27 2nd McCook 1650 00 W II FergiHon et ux to John E Kelloy wd to hf int lots G 7 shf so qr 31 3 29 no qr G nw qr nw qr5 2 29 100 II P Waite Co to The Public Cert of Co Partnership Delay Has Been Dangerous in McCook Do the right thing at the right time Act quickly iz timo of danger Backache is kidney danger Doans Kidney Pills act quickly Cure all distressing dangerous kid ney ills Plenty evidence to prove this Mrs B Hurley of 201 E 24th St Kearney Nob says Last winter I caught a heavy cold which settled on my kidneys aud made mo miserable I was rarely freo from a dull aching in tho small of my back and the kidney secretions passed so frequently as to annoy me greatly I drank largo quantities as I always felt thirsty aud a doctor whom I consulted told me I was in the grasp of diabetes He treat ed me for the trouble but I became no better and was suffering intensely when Doans Kidney Pills came to my atten tion I used this remedy and tho first box brought me such relief that 1 con tinued with it until completely cured I sincerely hopo that my statement will be tho means of benefiting other persons alllicted as I was Plenty more proof like this from Mc Cook people Call at L W McCon nells drug store aud ask what custom ers report For sale by all dealers Price 50 cents Fostor Milburn Co lhiilalo New York solo agents for the United States Remember the name Doans and take no other A Guaranteed Cure For Piles Itching Blind Bleeding or Protrud ing Piles Druggists refund money if Pazo Oiktmext fails to cure any case no matter of how long standing in GtoLl days First application gives ease and rest 50e If your druggist hasnt it send 50c in stamps and it will be for warded postpaid by Paris Medicine Co St Louis Mo Patronize home industry by smoking Commercial Club 10 cent cigar and the Smoke 5 cent cigar i oo JH 4Pl rCaZtML 3B Tie nly hg 055 Ptffl Baking Powder old at M HQN a moderate price u W WWW ww I E ONE on That is the No of ONE of the best Lumber and Coal Concerns in a No ONE town which is located on ONE East Street But if you cant find it call phone No ONE when you will be informed that you can get No ONE lumber No ONE coal No ONE service No ONE treatment in fact No ONE first last and all the time 9 Ballard Lumber Co TEMPERANCE COLUMN I Coaducted by the McCook W C T U t SAr What Is the Price What is tho price of the boy who stands Noble and fair as a god of old Reaching to life his innocent hands Dreaming tho dream that lips never told Whnt is his prico kind fathor Bay What is his pricf f nd mother I pray But tho runisler says To make him my pre I bid ono thousand dollars What is tho price of tho daughter who leaus On the arm which supports her noble and fair A being of beauty one of oarths queens Pure as a lily glorious and rare What is her price Oh ask of thy heart Parents who love her whoever thou artl But the rumseller says For her in my mart I bid one thousand dollars Selected Moscow home of the University of Idaho and one of the most progressive cities in the Inland Empire of tho Pa cific Northwest has struck a telling blow for practical prohibition and nailed as false tho chief argument used during the recent campaign that a closed town means a dead one Merchants travelers and visitors com ing to Spokane declaro that without reservation any apprehension which may have been felt in the minds of business men in rogard to a depression caused by prohibition has been dissipated as all line of trade have established new sales records in tho last two months Not only have tho morchants been doing a greater volume of business but they havo been making better collections in adjusting old accounts Business is brisker than it has been and the sales of every morchant havo in creased while the hotels havo been filled with a throng of traveling men who secure largo orders for fall delivery Six merchants who may bo classed as leaders in their respective lines declared that never in the history of Moscow have business conditions been better With fair crops good prices and general pros perity tho shoppors have plenty of mon ey which thoy are spending liberally for a better grade of goods Three of these men were originally op posed to closing the saloons believing that business stagnation would follow but they are now thoroughly converted to the principle of practical prohibition The factors in their conversion are the growth of business and the greater per centage of cash payments A retail mer chant said that many of his customers who formerly spent considerable money in the saloons are now buying more of the necessities as well as the luxuries of life and are paying cash for groceries TAKE THE BLUE BELL LINE TO HEALTH THEY MAKE YOU FEEL LIKE A BLACKSMITF Ask for and try once BLUE BELL Cough Syrup Pile Remedy Mans Pain Liniment oi BLUE3ELL Stomach Tablets Diarrhoea Croup Nerve Cough Hay Fever and Catarrh Blood General Tonic Bright Sunshine Heart Worm Kidney Headache Summer Complaint Soothwf Tablets for Children Liver Female Regulator or Quinsy Tablets Sold by AMciMILLEN iMcCook Nebraska NSssrsaxsNsrsssEJsassasssrs hssts crsaissrssssysx saava sSE235SLSVgSSs ESsSSs5Sn Eaa8E23s EsaSHss2SQ JfljZtW S2SiSlSL tStr t fnimi im r A r T v f rinraftUPi rRESiDE n a o tacrw uashier JAS S DOYLE Vice President THR CITIZENS BANK OF MeCOOK NEB B O B Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 15000 b a DIRECTORS V FRAHKLIN JAS S DOYLE A C EBERT jSWS VVVVvir5 iJ V fl ij 4i o