The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, April 14, 1910, Image 3

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H iS ffiuarant of Light SweefD H
Pure WhmSesom FgsS
Jewell
Gasoline Stoves
are sold in McCook by
H P Waite and Co
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STA
RTLING
Avoid Caustic and Acid
Use
GKBsts
This handy all round Cleans
er is entirely free from caustic
acid and alkali it is hygienic
cleans mechanicallynotchem
ically It is not only the safest
but also the easiest and quickest
cleanser ever discovered for
Qiamtig
Scouring
It is the only cleanser to use on milk
pails pans separators and on all cooking
utensils Use it for all cleaning through
out the house
How To Clean Windows The
Best Way Sprinkle Old Dutch Cleans
er on a cloth or sponge just dampened
suffidenuy to hold the powder without
dusting and apply to the glass rubbing
briskly Then polish
with a dry cloth and
a very little Old Dutch
Cleanser If the
above directions are
followed excellent re
sults will be secured
with less work than
by ordinary methods
or with other articles
IO
LARGE SIFTER CAN
BEGGS BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES disease with Pure Blood
Tornrrc crrrrTco e fPnf Ml
SION AHM STACKER which extends af tor
it is half way up with the load and is oper
ated with one horso Also our Pat d
PUSH KAKE and Uenver juaao juuwDiU
Our Clients and Competitors
Acknowledge This
225000 inves tod in our factory to back our
goods Our elegant illustrated printed mat
ter and prices doHvered at your station
sent free lor tho asking
Al CERTIFICATE and SOUVENIR FREE
THE PLATTNER IMPLEMENT CO
DEPT 7 DENVER COLO
Kindly mention this pnper
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Marked Copy
Did ike Trick
MARKED COPY on a newspaper
wrapper Is sure to make the receiver
open and read
Last year a southern man bought
fifty copies of his local paper contain
ing a suggestion for a factory location
marked them and mailed them to fifty
Individuals or concerns that might be
Interested
Result Twelve immediate inquiries
three propositions for the factory site
one thriving factory located which to
day pays wages to 175 persons living
In that town
Watch this paper for such opportu
nltles to BOOM YOUR TOWN
A Preliminary Step
Why in emigrating to America
have you planned to leave your young
est son behind Oh I guess hell
follow later He has just been ap
pointed cashier in a Berlin bank
Meggendorfer Blatter
A Womans Way
A Woman Has Just as Much Right
to Vote As She Has to a New Easter
Hat or a Pet Poodle Dog But She
Would Insist on the Ballot Matching
Her Gown Philadelphia Telegraph
1
GUOD DESSERT FOR ftli
m ui mi mnamimwwwi
Huckleberry Cake Always Welcome If
Supply of the Fruit Has Been
Canned
Sift two heaping tenspoonfuls of
baking powder and one of salt Into a
quart and a pint of flour Chop into
this two tablespoonfuls of lard or oth
er fat and two of butter Beat two
eggs light add them to a pint of sweet
milk Make a hole In the flour pour
In the milk and eggs and mix with a
wooden spoon Turn out upon a pas
try board and roll into two sheets
about a third of an inch in thickness
Line a greased biscuit pan with one
sheet cover it three quarters of an
inch thick with huckleberries strew
these with garnished sugar fit the
upper sheet of dough on the pan and
bake In a steady oven until done Cut
into squares and send to table Split
and eat with butter and sugar
-
Use simmering burner for soups pot
roasts etc boiling vegetables on top
of the same vessel
Apply the white of an egg with a
camels hair brush to fly specks on gilt
frames and they will disappear
Steel knives that are not in general
use can be kept from rusting if they
are dipped in a strong solution of
soda
Keep a vegetable brush to remove
the silk quickly from ears of corn A
new nail brush with a handle is equal
ly useful
To bleach handkerchiefs after
washing let them soak over night in
water in which a bit of cream of tartar
has been dissolved
Butters are made slowly and jellies
cooked as quickly as possible You
will have better success makipg jellies
on a bright day
If dirt seems to settle under the fin
gernails rub pulverized pumice stone
under thew with an orange stick and
wash with warm water
Cut sheets of tinfoil and place un
der the flower vase doilies and you
will have no trouble with any damp
ness affecting the best polished fur
niture
If the housewife who makes bread
will beat it well with a large spoon
before she puts her hands in it she
will find that her broad will be light
and wholesome
Codfish Shaker Stvle
Cover a pound of codfish with cold
water and place it where it will be
come lukewarm When fresh enough
to the taste pick into shreds Place
a tablesponful of butter in a pan
and when melted stir into it one table
sponful of flour add slowly one cup
ot milk stirring constantly season
with salt and pepper When it thick
ens stir in the fish then pour into a
buttered baking dish and drop on top
cne egg for each person Keep in the
oven until the eggs are set when it is
ready to serve Well browned toast
gees well with this dish
Duster Hint
Feather dusters as a rule are objec
tionable anywhere about a house be
cause so few people seem to know
how and when they should be used
For general dusting they are worse
than useless like many serviceable
articles they may be made nuisances
by misuse but every house needs one
large feather duster with a long han
dle for cornices and pictures hanging
too high to be reached with a cloth
And this duster needs washing regu
larly and drying in the open air if it
is to serve its purpose and become a
dust disseminator
Cauliflower a La Hudson
One carefully boiled cauliflower one
ounce of finely chopped cooked ham
two cupfuls of tomato sauce two heap
ing tablespoonfuls of grated cheese
Drain the cauliflower carefully then
with your hands and a clean cloth
press it into a neat shape Put in a
hot dish Have ready the tomato sauce
stir into it the finely chopped ham
then pour it over the cauliflower
Arrange four heaps of grated
cheese round and sprinkle the rest in
two cross lines on the cauliflower
Serve hot
To Make Apple Toast
Core peel and cut into slices six
medium sized apples Put two table
spoonfuls of butter into a saucepan
and when it is melted throw in the
apples with half a cupful of sugar and
two tablespoonfuls of water stew the
apples quickly tossing them with a
spoon
In the meantime cut several slices
of bread and fry in melted butter un
til golden brown When crisp place
the toast on a hot dish sprinkle with
powdered sugar and cover with the
apples
Banana Mousse
Rub four ounces of lump sugar on
the rind of one lemon Pound four
bananas and put with the mixture
place in a saucepan and add the beat
en yolks of five eggs stir over the
fire till it just thickens
Whisk the whites to a stiff froth
and when the banana mixture is cool
fold them lightly in
Pour it into a glass dish and serve
cold
Salmon
Buy fresh whole salmon clean and
bone tie up in cheese cloth and put
in steamer Let steam for one hour
sufficient to cook tenderly but not for
meat to separate Let cool Make a
mayonnaise dressing cover fish with
it on platter lay sprigs of parsley and
slices of lemon on for garnishment
This dish though simple has been
relished by many who were fish tired
PRICE OF HUGOS
EXPLANATION OF CASUALTIES
ON RAILROADS
High Official Tells of Safeguards That
Have Been Thrown Around
Passengers and Employes
Can Do No More
Many famous wars have been
fought with less loss of life and fewer
casualties than
flips
are recorded every
year In the opera
tion of American
railroads The
soldier at the
front again only
faces death for a
day or an hour at
a time while he
enjoys long peri
ods of safety The
railroad employe
on the other hand
and in a measure
the passenger as
well faces a con
stant danger The
astonishing death
rate of our rail
roads is frequent
ly compared unfa
vorably with that of European coun
tries and has been explained by
many conflicting theories
A new light has been thrown on the
situation by W L Park general
superintendent of the Union Pacific
railroad whose views naturally carry
unusual weight
One human being is killed every
hour and one injured every ten min
utes said Mr Park in explaining the
situation There is a steady grinding
and crunching of human flesh and
bone under the juggernaut of modern
car wheels It is the price we pay
for progress for our great industrial
conquest of the country
- Our railroads nevertheless con
stitute to day the safest and most mag
nificent highway in the world No
where are the great problems of safe
guarding life and property being
studied so intelligently and earnestly
as in America
It is a common reproach that they
do these things better abroad But
consider at what a rate we have been
building railroads In 1830 there were
but 23 miles of railroads In America
In 1850 there were less than 10000
miles The next 50 years witnessed
the most marvelous growth of its
kind in all history when 185000 miles
of railroad were laid Then between
1SS0 and 1890 some 70000 more miles
were added
We have not yet slowed down
enough to realize what is best for
safety A careful investigation of the
subject shows that 85 per cent of all
accidents are due to negligence on the
part of railroad employes and the re
sult of carelessness both by passen
gers and employes Faulty equipment
therefore plays a far less important
part in this death and accident rate
than is commonly supposed Never
theless the railroads are attacking
this problem with surprising energy
The principal causes of accidents so
far as the regular equipment is con
cerned were given by Mr Park in the
following order
To lessen the death rate said Mr
Park it is important that we have
light grades and that all curves should
be avoided Valley lines should be
built above the high water mark Em
bankments should be of liberal width
and all tracks should be properly bal
lasted Bridges and openings in em
bankments should be of a permanent
nature The view of the tracks at sta
tions should be kept open If a sta
tion stands on a curve it should be
on the outside Buildings such as
pumphouses or water tanks should be
set well back All fences should be
permanent preferably of concrete con
struction There should be no grade
crossings and no crossing of tracks at
grade
The number of- safety devices in
actual operation on our railroads will
come as a surprise to the average lay
man
Our lives are safeguarded to day
by electrical devices which would
have seemed magical to the railroad
man of a generation since Mr Park
continued There is the electrically
locked switch the interlocking of
crossings and junctions the alarm
bell at railroad crossings the auto
matic washout and landslide warn
ings the telephone train dispatching
and many other automatic electric sig
nals all of which are being installed
rapidly The total mileage of auto
matic signals on all railroads in the
United States on January 1 1909 was
12190
Stockholders Point of View
Railroad people do not so much
dread strikes as they dread the effect
upon net earnings of granting merely
such demands for higher pay as they
privately believe to be reasonable
Their last experience with wage in
creases was practically awkward
Late in 1907 and early in 1908 when
the higher schedules began to go into
effect gross earnings began to van
ish and between the increase of out
go and the diminished income the
results on income statements were
heartbreaking New York Evening
Post
Enormous Freight Engine
A huge freight engine weighing 300
tons built for the Southern Pacific
railroad is capable of hauling at ten
miles an hour a train of 139 cars
weighing with load 72 tons each
The train weighing 10000 tons would
each for over a mile
MADE HE AUDIENCE LkUZW
Singers Selection of Ditty for an En
core Was Too Manifestly In
appropriate
During the present musical season
much popularity has been gnlned by a
little song with the odd title It Is
Not Raining Rain to Mo Its Raining
Violet It is a tuneful bit of melody
and has been used for encoro pur
poses with great success It was dur
ing a recent reclta1 that the quaint
bit attained real distinction The af
fair took place at the Rittenhouse on
a wet blustering evening and as the
night wore on the storm increased to
the proportions of a buzzard The
wind arose until Its roar blended
weirdly with tho musia ana the inter
missions were punctuated by boister
ous clatterings of hailstones against
tho windows During the tenor solo
by Paul K Harper tho storm reached
the height of its fury and the applause
which followed his effort was mingled
with shrill echoings of the storm
kings wreath
As tho singer arose for an encore a
perfect deluge of rain smote the win
dows and when the orchestra struck
Up the tinkling prelude of the familiar
air a smile broke over the audience
went the torrent out
side
shivered the audience
It is not raining rain began the
tenor but it was too much for even
the politest of audiences and a storm
of laughter followed that even in
cluded the soloist Pittsburg Gazette
Times
IRISH VS ITALIAN METHOD
Former 13 Decidedly the More Effec
tive Taking the Rolated Incident
a9 Proof
Rev Sanford Culver Hearn pastor
of the First Methodist Episcopal
church Yonkers Is relating a street
car incident which concerns a conduc
tor an Irishman and an Italian Each
had given a dime to the fare taker but
had received no change
I wanta da nick complained the
Neapolitan
Youve got your nick No more
nicks for you See And the con
ductor moved to the rear platform
The Italian sat meekly in silence
but the Irishman employed different
tactics He went to tho doorway
Gimme five clnts change said he
to the conductor
Youve got all the change youre
going to get was the retort
See here exclaimed the Irishman
you may play that chune on a hand
organ but you cant do It on a harp
Gimme five cints
And he got it Judge
He Could Not Recommend It
The editor of the Plunkville Argus
was seated at his desk busily engaged
in writing a fervid editorial on the ne
cessity of building a new walk to the
cemetery when a battered specimen
of the tramp printer entered the office
Mornin boss said the caller Got
any work for a print
I have answered the editor You
happened in just right this time Ive
got only a boy to help me in the office
and I need a man to set type for about
a week I have to make a trip out
west You can take off your coat and
begin right now I start to morrow
morning
All right said the typographical
tourist removing his coat What
road are you going to travel on
The X Y Z mostly Ive never
been on it Know anything about it
I know all about It Ive traveled
It from one end to the other
What kind of a road is it
Punk said the printer in a tone
indicative of strong disgust The ties
are too far apart Youths Compan
ion
Russian Wheat Production
An enormous crop of wheat has
been grown in Russia this year plac
ing that land for the first time at the
head of wheat growing countries Its
harvest of 7S3000000 bushels exceeds
that of the United States by 26000000
bushels and is greater than its own
previous record by about 100000000
bushels The development of wheat
growing has been most rapid along
the line of the Trans Siberian railway
As th home consumption is small in
proportion to population this has
made Russia one of the great sources
of supply for tho rest of the world
France consumes much of the wheat
that it grows The present price of
wheat in the United States when
placed against the surplus product of
Russia makes it more difficult for this
country to hold its place as an ex
porter of that cereal
Unfairly Taken Up
JUllil V Utt v w0
address before a Methodist confer-
ence wherein he advocated hard work
and condemned cambling
The DaDers said Mr Gates with
his good humored smile are taking
me up for that address Ill have to
be careful what I say
Ill have to be as careful as the
young Altoona viveur who was sued
for breach of promise because at
supper after the theater he asked his
lady friend if she would have a little
lobster
Has a Balloon Record i
The Hon Mrs Assheton Harbord is
an Englishwoman who has a balloon
record not likely to be soon equaled by 1
any other woman She has crossed
the English channel in a balloon and
has made over a hundred ascents be
sides taking part in six balloon races
She owns two balloons which are
stabled near
Her Boys Book
A certain woman Is going to keep
diary of tho clever things said anl
done by her boy Sho expects to bujf
a large book and Jot down all the
terestlng event in the childs Ulc
keep Jt n secret and give It to bias
when he Is of nge The mother Ik dS
literary turn of mind and this becfc
if ever completed will be valuable to
the owner as many pleasant llifi
childhood Incidents occur that one qspi
gets
Iron Cross of Prussia
The iron cross Is the Prussia order
of knighthood instituted M ch 10
1813 by Frederick William III as
conferred for distinguished service ha
the war when carried on The decora
tion is an Iron cross with silver iiruost
ing The grand cross Is one of dwAc
size presented exclusively for tie
gaining of a decisive battle or the cap
ture or brave defense of a fortress
Cloying Sweetness
People who have no opinions are xr
Interesting they never quarrel
I
We Make Portraits
That are Different
Styles Up-to-date
Methods Modern
Kimmell Studio
1st door north
Commercial Hotel
Phone red 428
NEW SUPPLY HERE
We have plenty of hard
coal nut stove and egg
sizes New supply just
arrived
BARNETT LUHBER CO
Surveying
and Engineering
no
Lost town lot and farn
corners re e tablished
town additions a n d
cemeteries platted and
staked irrigate n later
als sewerage disposal
for country paws
Municipal Enginw rmj
F A ROLAND C E
Court House McCook
Jennings Hughes Co
Plumbing Heating
and Gas Fitting
Estimates furnisbed free
Successors to
ISurKs Son
asi I6i 4i
DENTIST
ilione2S
IJasenifht PGLj
buddiu
Phone 112
Office Booms 3 and Walsh Blk McCook
JOHN E KELLEY
4TT0ENEY AT LAW and
BONDED ABSTBAGTE2
McCook Nebraska
SSAKentof Lincoln Land Co and of McCoar
Vate rWorks Office in Poatoffice bnildinsj
CW DEWEY Auctioneer
McCook Nebraska
Will cry sales anywhere any tinvk2C
reasonable prices Dates made at tfc
First National Bank or phone Red SSL
CHAMBERLAINS
ugh Reme
Cures Coughs Colds Croup G125
and Whooping Cough
We are pleased to inform onr readeSL
that Chamberlains Cough Reinedy drae
not contain narcotics of any kind 3dn
makes it the safest and best for children
It makes no difference when you cangis
that cold you have it and want to get xi
of it quickly Take Chamberlains Coasar
Remedv
It wont do to fool with r bad ce3
No one can tell what the end will bt
Pneumonia catarrh chronic bronciasas
and consumption invariably result frsz
a neglected cold As a cure for cous
and iolds nothing can compare wSir
Chamberlains Ccngh Remedy Sag
everywhere at 25c 50c an 100