I wmfrii3jnitnrX 3sSSSSSSSCSSSXZX3 Just OneHalf the money you blow in foolishly if invested in a bank account would soon put you on 4easy street You owe yourself the protection a Savings Ac count will afford you If you are spending all you earn it is unfair to yourself and those who may bo dopendont on you You havo noticed tho manner in which small amounts expondod count up in ajnonth a part of such expenditures saved will allow you to have an account at this bank Start with a dollar have money in the bank The First National Bank of Mccook By F M KIMMELL Laired circulation in Red Willow Co ubsc iDtion 1 a Year n Advance The supreme court of Nebraska has decided the non partisan net of the last legislature as unconstitutional and void It is not tbat Seuutor Aldrich loves the corporation tax more bat the in come tax less If he has bis way finally both will be throttled The vaunted power of the press seems to have received a set back in the pas sage of the Payne Aldrich tariff bill which is neither Republican nor Demo cratic and at best is only a monument to the broken pledges of the dominant party JUNIOR NORMAL NOTES Examinations Friday and Saturday The faculty and local tennis players have had a few contests this week with results favoring the locals Monday Mr Davis of the faculty and MrShirlej of the city played singles the latter winning Tuesday Messrs Garrett and Taylor of the faculty and Messrs Mc Uarl and Tborgrirrson of the city played doubles to the advantage of the locals Special program in assembly this morning Mrs Leiter tomorrow morning and evening See announcement elsewhere Delay in commencing treatment for a slight irreeularity that could have been cured quickly by Foleys Kidney Remedy may result in a serious kidney disease Foleys Kidney Remedy builds up worn out titsues and strengthens these organs A McMillen druggist ANNOUNCeiENT I hereby announce myself as a candi date for renomination 1o the office of County Clerk subject to the Republican primary election August 17th I invite a thorough investigation in to the manner in which the office of County Clerk has been conducted during the past two years and pledge myself to a continuance of this policy of fair and square dealing to all if favored with a re election Chas Skalla ANNOUNCEMENT I hereby annonce myself a candidate for re nomination to the ctfice of County Treasurer subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary elec tion August During my present term of office I have endeavored to treat each -and everyone fairly in all matters pertaining to the records and business of this effice and have made it a point to keep the work up to date If re elected my present record will continue and any support extended in my behalf I trust you will have no occasion to regret Your vote will be much appreciated C Naden COUNTY JUDGE I hereby announce myself as a candi date for ie Et mtation to the iffice of Countj Judge subject to the Republic an jrrinai elrcticn to be held AugUBt 17th If re rh rlrd I il all rrnticue to devote all iry tin e to ibis iffice will endeavor tcntiiifii tl iU fctncid of effi rimj Mi 15 J jHcicmcir and any supjijt pnifc n f will te gitatly ciated J Kccb REAL THREAD OF LIFE A Tiny Wisp of Tissue Imbedded In the Hearts Wails According to trudlUuu It was Atro pofl the blind Fury with the abhorred shears who silt the thiu spun life and tuutiy of Miltons reuders tuu have wundiml whether there was uuj thread in he uutiiomy of man tut severance of which would be iuimedi Mfely fatal Injmies to the biulu tine heart in both or which the priueipii of life has Peeu supposed to reside may be survived for shorter or lougei periods but as an article by Dr 0 h Lea reminds us physiologists have ol lute yen Im discovered u nerve or him die of nerves which might well be de scribed us the threud ol life One ol the developing sciences of our time V cardiography the science of the Mean beat The heart as most people art aware Is divided into auricles and ventricles The vein rides are the pumping chambers the auricles an the collecting chambers of the blood and like the stroke of a raring eight set the rhythm of the heart beat A little instrument called the sphygmo graph is placed on the wrist pulse and magnifies its movements and traces them with a recording pen in a zigzag curve telling the observer what the ven tricles are doing Another instrument the polygraph placed on the Jugular records the more delicate vibration of the auricle With the aid of these two instruments the physician can find what all the four chambers of the heart are doing Now the auricular con traction acts as a stimulant oi start iug shock to the ventricular contrac tion Most stimuli are conveyed alone nerves Therefore a little nerve in the heart to act as a telegraph wire between auricle and ventricle was to be expected Such a thing has been found by physiologists but rather than a nerve it is a specialized sensitive por tinn of the heart muscle itself It is a little wisp of tissue not an Inch Ion and only one twelfth of an inch thick On this delicate communicating wisp called the anriciilo ventricular bundle hangs existence Itself Evolution has arranged rhat it shall be so small and so sheltered in position in the heart rhat it Is rarely damaged even by large in juries to that organ Bur if it is sev ered rhen the ventricles must stop and life must instantaneously cease Lon ilon Post THE POSTOFFICE It Seemed to Be Located In a Rather Lonely Place A veteran stagecoucii drivel in Idaui used to tell ot an incident that hap pened when he drove the stage ovei to Boise City from the Union Paeihc line tie had on one trip only a single passengei a little teudertoot of a New England sclioolma am going to takt charge ot a scbool in that town Shi had never before been farther trow Boston than the Hudson river Alouy about dusk one eveuiug as she sat ol the box b trie driver and the tealu wound its wa around the shouidei oi u bleak mouutain a highwayman sud deulj stepped intoThe middle ot the roud and held up his hand A cocked ride rested easily in the hollow ot bis arm and its muzzle pointed straight at the drivers head He quickly pulled up Throw over Wells Fargos box said the man with the guu The driver reached down and thin the box into the road then he started to gather up the reins Hold ou the other cried impatient ly Wheres the mail bag Dont you think 1 want rharV For reply rhe driver swiftly kicked It overboard All right said the man on th ground in affable tone you can drive on now For half a mile they rolled along it silence schoolmaam and driver The former seemed to be In deep study At last turning to the driver she said I dont know anything about the west of course but that certainly does seen to be an awfully lonesome place x have a postoffice Washington Post A Useless Implement Aunt Anu Arkwright the hustllnp spouse of Dncle loshua Arkwright proudly showed him a silver imple ment which a friend had given her as a birthdav present It was shaped somerhing like a spatula but broad ened considerably toward the handle Uncle Joshua inspected it with some curiosity What is it he asked Havent you any idea she said No not the least in the world Well said Aunt Ann its a pie knife Uncle Joshua picked it up inspected It critically and laid it down again I havent any use for it he said as far as Im concerned Its toi wide I couldnt eat pie with it tuoat rutting my mouth Youths Com pan ion Dyed Articles In dyeing at home amateurs often make the mistake of putting the dypri article through rhe wringer possible to avoid staining the hands for one reason or perhaps hopim to dry thi garment more quickly This however should never hp done for the crease fo formed are most obstinate and in fact often only disappear with wear despite all pressing Dyed article should be squeezed from the bath and hung out of doors to dry Adversitys Compensation Rlehlelgh -1 wish I were youk Poor lelgh For goodness sake why Rich- lelgh Why you can have the fun of proposing to every girl you mfcet and be sure of being refused New York JournaL The road leading to justice la the safest HesloA 2GSSS3SBS3XS2SL JOHN E CHILBERG President of tho Big Fair at Seattle Which Is Now Open The success attending the opening of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition at Seattle on June 1 Is In great part due to the energy shown by the president of the exposition company J E Cbll berg The management of the fair up to this point has been characterized by exceptional aggressiveness and enter prise and President Chllberg has en deavored In his direction of the affairs of the exposition to have it make a record for efficiency promptitude and economy of administration He has been a pioneer in the development of the wealth of Alaska and Is at the head of some of the largest financial Institutions of the region especially ex ploited In tlie fair at Seattle Mr Chllberg made an address at the open ing of the fair The exposition management made a special effort to have everything In readiness for visitors on the opening day with the result that when the JOXN R CHILBEItO gates were flung wide to the public carpenters and painters were nowhere to be seen All exhibits were in place except a few in the Hawaiian and Philippine sections which were de layed by nonarrival of a governmeu transport Seattle has undertaken the task of introducing to each other three-quarters of the world which know of each other comparatively little The Occi dent and the orient will be brouzht close together and Alaska will bo haled out of the north to make the acquaintance of both There have been expositions in the past which have covered more territory possibly expended larger sums in buidings but there has been none It Is claimed so vast in Its scope or covering so many unknown peoples and lands All in all something like 20000000 has been expended on the fair THE ROCKHILLS AND RUSSIA A Family Well Equipped For Diplo matic Duties The post of American ambassador to Russia Is one which demands in its Incumbent a thorough knowledge of diplomatic usages and a more than or dinarily keen perception of the way to conduct oneself amid the pitfalls of a society which considers itself ex- vLs 4vn liiJ 1 r rrTrJrlr ii iriifwli ininiai i n - Mas w w KOCKHILTj and miss b rock- hill tremely exclusive An American who goes to St Petersburg as the accredit ed representative of Uncle Sam has to step careful iiur 1 t oVcri any one Mr William Woodville Hock hill who h - Hy b rpjoite to the pot ha a ivj itatiou as a very clever 1 at v c a shcl of eAcii iiS i iciio His re ord v V niliter t iiMn wrs a envIV Trt do idec on 1 him ior that service b - T cub sy where he an - rM will h more clnu o re al tiii tle expveof 1 ic up a ment at the c ir c ifa will be some what of a strain 1 rie khill for the r f I not wealthy rin He has bci niarrie twice and his present wife i a worn an of much resource w u ill je abl to assist him Mly in kceMinr uj the -social state which Is considered essential for the had of an embassy Miss Rockhill too will be of help In this task The ambassadors familj have a cosmopolitan training and ac quaintance having- lived In almost all parts of the world at one time or another - T SHAKESPEARES POISONS They Are Taken Too Seriously by Some Modern Chemists It Is one of the penalties of Shake speares position as a great poet that his words are taken seriously A learned doctor lii a foreign scien tific review has been molding an iuqiil tuition Into the poisons mentioned b him He points out that the juice or cursed hehetion which Claudius Is en Id to have poured Into the ear of Hamlets rather is incapable ot pieiv Ing the tympanum of the ear and therefore could not have penetrated the body and poisoned the blood as the ghost alleges Again the narcotic which Friar Laurence administers to Juliet was probably either Datura stramonium or innndrngnru root The first Is used by rhe convicts in New Caledonia when they wish to rob their companions but its effects do not last forty two hours nor anything like that time A scientist who experimented on himself with niandragora found that intense sickness is caused on waklm and this did not happen to Juliet As for the poison which was clven to Ro meo it was probably aconite or one of those mixed poisons composed of vege table alkaloids and ptomaine since it was so remarkably rapid in Its effects But that is the fault or too serious people They will take everything se riously Shakespeare probably knew nothing nt all of poisons or of nar cotics He was a poet and not a chem ist and inislit Therefore he allowed rhe usual poetic license- London Globe TWIN EARTHQUAKES Two Distinct Series of Shocks Are Felt Almost Simultaneously Among the most Interesting earth tremors from a scientific point of view are those known as twin earth quakes where two distinct series ot shocks are felt separated by an inter val of two or three seconds In each series the vibrations increase to a maximum and die away rhe whole duration including rhe quiet interval being eight to twelve seconds In some parts of the earthquake zone the most powerful shocks are nearly always of this kind When they occur how ever there is always a strip of coun try where only one shock is felt Apparently there are two distinct points of origin for these shocks and the strip where a single shock is felt is that where the two sets of vibrations arrive simultaneously The fact that this hand is straight shows that the twiu shocks occur togethei and that therefore one is not a consequence ol the other Probably there is an S shaped bend in some interior layer ot rock and the twin foci are at the points of greatest displacement namely the bends of the S The movement that causes such a twin earthquake there fore results in accentuating the form of the fold in the earths crust New York Herald The Fightinq Maoris Some 300 Maoris were shut up in In trenchments at a place called Orakaw Without rood ex ept a few raw pota toes without water pounded at hy ar tillery and under a hall of rifle hnllcts and hand grenades unsuccessfully as saulted no less than five times they held out for three days completely surrounded Jeneral Cameron hu manely sent a flag of truce invirina them to surrender honorably To this they made the ever famous reply Enough We tight right on forever Then rhe general ottered to let the wo men come out and the answer was The women will tight as we At length on the afternoon of rhe third day the garrison in n body charged at quick march rinht rhrouirh the Knglish lines fairly jumpiiu over the head of the men ot the Fortieth revriment as they lay behind a hank Half of them fell the remainder got clear away The earthworks and the victory re mnined with us hut rhe glory was theirs - The Long White Cloud by W P Reeves Forgot Himself Absentminded persons are not infre qietiriy met among the medical pro fessiou who of all men should al ways have their wits about them It is related that a well known doctor was once present in a public place when an accident occurred and see ing a wounded man went about call ing A doctor A doctor Somebody go and fetch a doctor A friend who was by his side ven tured to inquire Well what about yourself Oh dear answered the doctor suddenly recalling the fact that he be longed to the medical profession I didnt think of tbat To Ferment You know Elsie that ferment means to work said the teacher Now you may write a sentence on the blackboard containing the word ferment After a moments thought Elsie wrote as follows In summer I love to ferment among the flowers in our garden Chicago News The Real Object Induigent Papa Why my dear you had a party last month How often do you wish to entertain your friends She This one Is not to entertain my friends papa but to snub my enemies -Life He Struggles In Vain The cynical bachelor rises to remark that when a girl makes up her mind to marry a struggling young man all hls struggles are useless Philadelphia Record Man must always In some sense cling to the belief that the unknowable Is it M5fr5f Sf TMI - Great Reduction b21e on all Millinery We have a large assortment of very pretty hats that we are selling at 50 per cent discount to reduce the stock WINTER WOOD lakes the Best and Most Lasting Kind of Timber It has long been known that winter was the be t time of the year for cut ting down trees for their timber but until the American bureau of forestry published the results of some experi ments no one was sure why The bu reau of forestry selected four pine trees of the same age and of equal vigor growing In the same soil and felled them the first at the end of December the second at the end of January the third at the end of Feb ruary and the fourth at the end of March They were hewn into logs of the same size and dried at the same place Then the legs were tested The December log resisted a flexile strain twice as strong as that which the March log resisted It furnished piles which were still perfect and un decayed sixteen years later while the piles made from the March log had rotted within three or four years Wnnfl thnt t follofl iti December Is South Americrn Drtz3 2 vl Imi tated lha Frmch Dcsi The dictatorship f X in Vcie zuela has been compared with that ot President Francia who ri J iv aguay for over rhlity years Fra vl 1 was a worshiper of Xawieou whom he endeavored to imitate in every pos sible way lie possesses only one por trait of his idol a German caricature which depicted the emperor wearing an exaggerated version of the famous gray overcoat Francia took this pic ture seriously and for many years pa raded the streets of Asuncion clad in a gray dressing gown and a cocked hat which he fondly believed to be the habitual garb of the French des pot Castros most distinguished predeces sor was also a Napoleon devotee but Bolivar had seen his idol and could thus imitate him more faithfully He managed to acquire the emperors brusque speech and other mannerisms pulled peoples ears when in a good humor and dictated dispatches to sev eral secretaries at once He founded an order closely modeled on the Le gion of Honor surrounded himself with a guard of negroes from Haiti after the stvle of Napoleons mame lukes and endeavored to codify the laws of his country When he return ed to America after witnessing I ieon s curuuaiiuu uuinui kuicicu racas standing In a Roman chariot j drawn by twelve maidens belonging to the first families of the town London Chronicle The Newsboy Do you see the newsboy You can hear the newsboy a long time before you can see him What does the newsboy say It doesnt matter what the newsboy says You know he is the newsboy because he has the papers to prove it What has the newsboy concealed in his hand The newsboy has a cigarette butt in his hand He saw it smoking In the gutter and was afraid it would set fire to the street so he picked it up JJood little newsboy you will be a fire chief some day Did ever you try a trick on the newsboy Give him a nickel some time for your paper and tell him to keep the change Ten chances to one he will do It Does the newsboy never sleep Oh yes the newsboy sleeps but never on his job P S Lots of people can learn some thing from the newsboy Boston Her ald I lfflk t f A villi vlmsdmxM Mml i Now is the time to get your mid summer hat Miss Anderson 217 Main Ave McCook Neb ADDITIONAL PERSONALS Miss Nellie Coupe of Falls City is the tjuest of C J OBrien D E Eikknukkky is down from the San Luis valley Colorado on business C W SHUUTLbyF of Stratton had business in the city Monday and Tues day Da J A Token is absent from the city for a while on u vacation for his health Mas C J OBkikn arrives home to night from visit itig in Falls City for a few weeks Miss Peaul Mitchell arrived from Lincoln Tuesda on No 1 joining her mother hern 4K Miss Sadie Cciylk arrived home last Thursday night from a phabant vaca tion absence of a few weeKH Mb am Mas C D Ritchie are now ensconced in their cosy new bungalow borne on north 1st Htreet east Walter McCarty who has been few months in the west spending a less porous than that cut at other j tlmes It has been proved that oaki ved in the cit lastaiuroay ana win felled in the spring allowed water to percolate throuch It In from two to three hours while similar wood cut in December was seeminly impermeable There is a very im le irethrd of as three hours while similar wood cut in winter or in spring Th former con tains floury particles -which turn blue when tincture 01 iodide is pcurccl upon them The latter 1 rescr it natural tint or merrly bc cm a li tie darke at the contact of iic pw Ycr World coii visit awhile J 11 Snyder who is running a mov ing picture thow in Norton Kansas came over to the city Werineeda on matters of business Mr and Mrs G II Watkins are much interested in that young man who came to their home and hearts Tues day afternoon of this week E S Byfield of the Indianola Re porter was in town Monday securing advertisements for the premium list of the county fair association to be issued by him soon M i3s Lucy Young arrived from Cleve land Ohio Tuesday on No 1 and with her sister Mist Jennie who recently came from Denver is a guests at the S B Rankin farm on the Driftwood Mios Emma Burrows principal of one of the Fond du Lac W19 public schools arrived in the city last Thurs day night and wii spend her summer vacation with her sister Mrs Herman Pade Clarence Peitygrove wife and two children who have been tcuring in Colorado in their automobile drove in to the city Monday evening on their way home to Oxford and were the guests of his sister Mr9 E S Koller over night H C Clapp writes from Washington that he and Mrs Clapp have been en joying several days at the national cap ital and with the assistance and courtesy of Congressman Norris have been doing a lively stunt in seeing places of inter- 1 est and sights there Prof W R Eastman of Winona Lake Indiana spent a few days in the city guest of bis aunt Mrs E S Waite this week He left Wednesday for Denver and the coast He is a graduate of Ames collpge and is a teacher in the agricultural college at Winona Lake Mrs W F Jones left on 14 last Thursday night for SaliDa Kansas to visit until Saturday the 17th when the doctor will join her and they will pro ceed to Ohio to the doctors old home Returning west later via Chicago and Omaha they will make Norfolk where Mrs Jones will visit the homefolka a couple of weeks Mr and Mrs C T Eller formerly of this city offtlate years of Long Branch California are now at Hastings oa a visit We are sorry to learn how ever that Mr Eller is ill with an at tack of typhoid fever He is receiving every medical attention and nursing and the case is progressing to date regu lar andfaTorably Mr and Mrs Howe Smith arrived last Thursdayjnight from a visit to rel atives at Atwood Kansas They drove over to Atwood from Trenton and re turned via the Orleans - St Francis branch Howe Bays he never witnessed such a marvelous wheat crop panorama as is presented on the way over to At wood and that corn in the Beaver val ley coming home was simply Buperb i j V J K f J 1 H V r t 1 h rt 4 v m f 1 t A H m i