The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, May 05, 1910, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    X
V
u
V
Temple Theatre
Benefit Play
Under the Auspices of
The Ladies of St Albans Church
Guied for the purpose of a
New Building
PARTICIPANTS Mrs Hartfield Mrs Beach
Miss Hazel Herle Mr OBrien
Mr Williams fir Stewart
Mr Kearns
DIRECTION Dr S C Beach
A howling nonsensical wholly
musical side splitting mirth
producing farce comedy
in three acts
The Girl from Porto Rico
May
Prices 75 50 and 25 cents
Jl Jmda
10
Curtain at 845
aaggga eB3 wBnwBwnMMmgBiBMnBBBi
is
Time Card IfiM
McCook Neb
PiUMywi
MAIN LINE EAST DEPAET
No Central Time 1135 p m
8 715 p si
10 500 a h
2 5tt A M
12 705 A M
14 942 pm
10 530 P M
MAIN LINE WEST DEPAET
No 1 Mountain Time 1220 p m
3 1142 P M
5 nrr 850 pm
Jo Jlvii A M
15 1230 A M
J DIu A M
7 930 am
imperial line
No 176 arrives Mountain Time 345 p m
No 175 departs 645 AM
Sleeping dining and reclining chair cars
eoata free on through trains Tickets sold
and baggage checked to any point in the United
States or Canada
For information time tables maps and tick
ets call on or write D F Hostetter Agent
McCook Nebraska or L V Wakeley General
Passenger Agent Omaha Nebraska
RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS
Some cylinder work is progressing on
the 1911 this week
J Rpr Weidenhamer andbrjde re
turned to the city first of the week
from their wedding trip
Conductor J W Ridenour and hride
arrived home last Sunday night from
their wedding trip east
Engineer George Campbells latest
snap is the work train between here
and the east end of the county
The round bouse boys are eagerly ex
peoting Clyde Shirley to take a plunge
60on into the sea of matrimonial felicity
Engine No 1050 Avent out of the
backshop this week after a gener
al overhauling and heavy boiler re
pairs
Mr and Mrs Tomblin parents of
Mrs J F Forbes are here from
Denver to make this their home with I
their daughter
The paint and white wash gang are
putting both the shops and round
house in nice clean shape just like
home the boys claim
General Foreman McArthur reports a
full force now employed in the boiler
making department of the local shops
and the work in that department as
progressing quite smoothly now
J C Van Cleve who has been
manager of an elevator at Red Wil
low Nebr was here on a visit to
his brother Frank Van Cleve before
going to Weldon Colo where he has
accepted a better position Beaver
City Tribune
G L Starkey spent last week visit
ing in Denver
Engine No 318 is undergoing heavy
roundhouse repairs
The 224 R5 is having some front
end repairs this week
Fireman F B Beebles is visiting
in Hastings this week
Engineer McCoy and Fireman Troy
er are on the sick list
Engine No 1762 is being given re
pairs to her brasses etc
Engine No 2710 is over the drop
pit for customary repairs
The driving brasses on No 175 are
receiving repairs this week
Engineer John Thomas and wife vi
sited in Trenton this week
Mrs TJ Cain and children visited
in Culbertson Friday and Saturday of
last week
Dispatcher W C Euans left fcr
Columbus Ohio Monday night called
t here by the Ferious illness of his mother
Mr and Mrs Jamps Tanquary and
daughteVbf were visiting rela
tives in Red Cloud over Sunday Red
Cloud Argus
Florella Cook check girl at the tele
graph office is suffering with the
mumps this week Mabel Wilson is
relieving her at the office
The company is preparing several
bunk houses for its men at this place
in the yard just south of the round
house They are being made comfor
table
Business is dropping off some and
the engines as they come from the
back shop are white leaded and stor
ed until demanded for use in the fall
rush of business
Mrp S C Lane left Saturday for
Indiana where she will visit with re
latives in Terre Haute for the next few
months Her son B J Lane and wife
accompanied her as far as St Joseph
Mo
Engineer and Mrs J C Marshall
have moved into the residence of her
father on 1st street west and Mr J
and Mrs Herman Pade are the new
occupants of the Fitzgerald cottage
vacated by them
Clyde Cox and Harry Long went to
McCook last week and have secured
positions in the Burlington machine
shops at that place The former is the
son of Jacob Cox and the latter of Lin
coln Long Wray Colo Gazette
New Shipment of
Finchs Union Made Overalls
That Wear Like a Pigs Nose
ROZELL and SON
Exclusive Clothiers - Furnishers for IYIenBoys
Phone 280 115 West B St
TRIBUTES TO IV1ARK TWAIN
Humorists Countrymen Tell What Hia
Death Means to Americans
When President Tn ft was Informed
of the death of Mr Clemens he wrote
personally this statement
Mark Twain gave pleasure real In
tellectual enjoyment to millions and
his works will continue to give such
pleasure to millions yet to come Ho
never wrote a line that a father could
not read to a daughter His Iniino
was American but he was nearly as
much appreciated by Englishmen ami
people of other countries as by his
own countrymen lie has made an
enduring part of American literature
The death of Samuel L Clemens
Mark Twain has meant to Ameri
cans everywhere arid in all walks nt
life what the death of no other Ameri
can could have meant His personali
ty and his humor have been an In
tegral part of American life for so
long that it has seemed almost impos
sible to realize an America without
him Something of this feeling Is ex
pressed in the tributes to Ids memory
which following hard upon his end
have come from all parts of the Unit
ed States Some of these tributes are
printed below
William Lyon Phelps professor of
English literature at Yale university
The death of Mark Twain is a very
great loss to American letters I re
garded him as our foremost repre
sentative in literature at the present
day Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry
Finn his two masterpieces will live
for many years as illustrative of a
certain phase of American life
Colonel Thomas Wentworth niggin
son in Boston It is impossible to ex
aggerate the loss to the country
Mrs Julia Ward Howe now In her
ninety first year in Boston The news
of Mark Twains death will be sad to
many people Ho was personally high
ly esteemed and much beloved a man
of letters with a very genuine gift of
humor and of serious thought as well
namliu Garland novelist in Chica
go Mark Twains death marks the
exit of a literary man who was as dis
tinctly American as was Walt Whit
man The work of most writers could
be produced in any country but I think
we as well as everybody in foreign
lauds will look upon Twains work a
being as closely related to this coun
try as the Mississippi river itself We
who knew him personally hardly need
to speak of him as a man for all the
world knew him No one ever heard
him speak without being inspired and
no one ever saw him without being
proud of him
Geoige Ade at Kentland Ind I
read every line Twain wrote for he
was a kind of literary god to me His
influence has already worked itself into
the literature of our day We owe
much of our cheerfulness simplicity
and hope to him
Eooth Tarkington at Indianapolis
He seemed to me the greatest prese
writer we had and beyond that a
great man His death is a national
loss but Ave have the consolation that
he and his genius belonged to and were
of us
Charles Major at Indianapolis ne
created a new school of humor the
purpose of which was not only to be
funny but to be true
James Whitcomb Riley The world
has lost not only a genius but a man
of striking character of influence and
of boundless resources ne knew the
human heart and he was sincere He
knew children and this knowledge
made him tender
NEW PATRIOTIC ORDER
Society of Colonial Descendants Or
ganized In Washington
The Society of Colonial Descendants
has been organized with headquarters
in Washington and expects to have
chapters all over the United States
Brigadier General Carl A Woodruff
TJ S A retired is governor general
and Dr Joseph G C Bulloch a rela
tive of Colonel Roosevelt is deputy
governor general A pernauent home
to be known as Colonial hall will be
erected in Washington
Its objects are to preserve the spirit
of the colonial fathers and mot her
and to perpetuate rlie principles for
which they stood George Washing
ton chapter of Washington s J vn
formed for men Martha Washington
chapter is to formed for wcjaei
The organization is after the style
adopted by the Society of Mayflower
Descendants
MONUMENT TO THE HOWES
Three Brothsrr Inventors to Co Hon
ored in Their Cirihpi cc
A 3000 monument paid f r wiri
Mass on Jiav v to commemorate
the three brothels who w re invent
ors Elias Howe Jr William Howe
and Tyler Howe all of whim were
born in Spencer
Elias Howe invented the sewing ma
chine William Howe the truss bridge
and Tyler Howe the spring bed The
formal exercises at the unveiling will
Include an address by Andrew S
Howe of Worcester Mass
Legacies to Five Belles
The will of Julia Lord Taintor gives
300Q to Bacon academy and 2000 to
the First Ecclesiastical society of Col
chester Conn and bequeaths her per
sonal property to the wives of her five
brothers who are named in the will as
follows Isabella Comstock Joes
Belle Isabella Ryan Taintor Smiths
Belle Isabella Spencer Jims Belle
Annabelle Taintor Eds Belle and
Georgiana Taintor Charlies Belle
when m
3 3wia
OSEVELT
Features of Welcoming Gefonra
tion to Former President
BIG NAVAL AI1D USD PARADE
Down on the river front nt New
York city It was said the other day
that there was an unprecedented de- j
maud for ocean going excursion boats
for June IS when Colonel Theodore
Roosevelt former president of the
United States returns from Europe
Nearly every big organization patri
otic political and social In New York j
and scores from other cities it is un 1
derstood have engaged or are tiding
to engage steamboats for June IS
and though some of the railroads
using boats on regular runs will char-
tcr them for the celebration there are
far from enough to go around at any
ship comes up the bay and the latter
after he lands u hue it Is not y
klinwn wlinMinr wnr T occola will fi4
m
go to
aval
Forts Hancock Wadsworth and Ham
ilton salute Colonel Roosevelt as he
comes up the bay
itougn nuers military civic and m
litical organizations from all parts of Jj
me uniteu states are almost begging
ivi jnn o in LUU muu IUUUU I Cj
tain Arthur F Cosby secretary of the ik
general reception committee displayed
recently a great batch of letters and X
lyiugruuis iiuiu many oi uoionei noose
velts old friends in the far west some
of them de Inring that if a parade
William A Campbell telegraphed to ess
William Loeb Jr one of the special black 292
Roosevelt reception subcommittee men I
H
m
i
n
r
A
Remarkable Demand For Tugboats by
Greeting Parlies Who Plan to MectiJ
the Colonel at Sea Ranchmen Rough
Riders Military and Civic Societies
Clamor For Places In the Parade
u
m
0
n
iii
m
i
t
price borne or the greeting parties Lfd
plan to o far to sea and it is expect 1 M
ed that there will be a race to be the j
steamer fra
Some of the organizations planning 5
to meet Colonel Roosevelt it was said l
are negotiating for all sorts of noise 4
making instruments such as foghorns
and whistles which can be heard at hi
great distances One organization
more ambitious than the rest it was
said was trying to get a great sawmill
whistle now in use in the northwest
forests which can be heard twenty
miles
Two Parades Planned
The plan of the celebration already p
has been decided to the extent that EJ
there is to be a big naval and land i
parade the former as the colonels il
- v
-
riL r lift
I fm
l
i
1 1 i M S II
4
I
Iff
were held they would bring their own
horses all bedecked with new western FOR SALE FOR RENT ETC
saddles bought for the occasion and - rCVTT 7C r
b0R SALL Oneset double
i driving
make a showing which would stir up
pvpii Now harness and one set double work barn-
ret Uj
Newv York to take part In the j tj
parade there is talk of having lT
I
600 Silk Petticoat
Any Coor
Both
from Omaha saying that 100 Omaha j FOR SALE White Pokin duck eg s
business men and stockmen from South by the setting Phone red 292 MrsP
Dakota Nebraska and
Wyoming in-
j Morrisey
sisted on coming to New York to meet J
Colonel Roosevelt and had determined j
to bring fifty horses
These men he wired dont want
to break in too strong or annoy your
committee but want to know if they
can have any sort of recognition from
the committee in charge be permitted
to ride In any parade or have repre
sentation at any of your functions For Sale A driving horse Appl
They are nonpartisan and nonsectarian J to J F Cordenl for price and particulars
mends of the distinguished ex-president
from the west
Colonel Zach Mulhall wrote also to
Mr Loeb from Oklahoma City Okla
that he wanted to bring a lot of flne
fellows such as the colonel would be
proud of He said
Many Ranchmen Eager to Come
I would like to show my apprecia
tion love and admiration for Colonel
Roosevelt at his homecoming and have
in New York as an outfit of the west
ranchmen from the different states
mounted on the best horses of our
kind ever produced in the great streets
of New York These men would be
big clean fellows and Colonel Roose
velt would be proud of them It would
be my aim to cause New Yorkers to
tip their hats to this delegation and
would take such men from the west
as have always been admirers of Mr
Roosevelt I would have every man
purchase the best new western sad
dle used in our country for the occa
sion
He adds that between fifty and sixty
subscriptions frmn mnl cr of rh men will come auvwav
Howe fariiy in f t o United j J Edwin Browne of Baltimore na
States is to be mivt Hed in Spencer tional commander of the Army and
Navy union writes that the union is
most anxious to take part in the re
ception to Colonel Roosevelt and has
among its members 150 of the finest
New York policemen who would be
proud to act as Colonel Roosevelts
guard of honor at the homecoming
Civic and military organizations In
New York city have been among the
foremost to ask places in line C S
Busse has offered the rough riders of
Company F Seventh regiment to act
as escort Herman Veiler centurion
of the New York division of the Cen
turion Road club which he says is
the largest and oldest bicycle club in
Ameuica wants to put 200 men in line
as a bicycle escort
These are only a small part of the
letters received by the committee j
ther directly applying for places in line
for organizations or making inquiry
regarding the program with that end
in view
Fon Sale All or part of my alfalfa
and fruit farm Call or inquire W M
Morrisey Phone black 292
FokSale Alfalfa hay 1st and 2nd
cuttings Phone ash 3852 J A
Scbmitz
Foa Rent Furnished rooms
2nd street east Phone black 227
with any
Ladies r Misses
Suit 15 or up
Sale
Extraordinary
of this summers
unparalleled
Spring
Suits
Finest qualitj Worsteds
Homespun Basket
Weave Cloths
1 nals Etc Coats lined
with Taffeta and Mes
saline silk 15to 40
L BcGroii Co
Phone 22 McCook Nebr
ISBPR
in good condition Phone
W M Morrisey
401
ForRet Two small unfurnished
rooms 419 1st street west
Wanted Two girls at once
Star Laundry
WANTED Girl for kitchen work at
the Bon Ton
For Rent One large room furnished
for light housekeeping Mrs J I Lee
Phone 43
ADVERTISED LIST
The following letters cards and pack
ages remain uncalled for at the McCook
postofnee May 5 1910
LETTERS
Beck Miss Mabel
Evans Mr Ed W
Hattan Mr Earl
Jackson Mr W F 2
Rowland Mr Elmer
EniK or Helng Mr
Garlin Holley
Hiddleston Cliff
Harriet Wm
Ray Mr Jesse
Tobias Mr G R
CARDS
Conley Mrs Frank Mnnson Mrs Chas
Ryan Mr John Ray Mr Jesse 2
Scott Mr Ray C
PACKAGES
Shaw Mrs Pansa
When calling for these please 6ay
they were advertised
Lon Cone P M
C R Bauer night operator at
this station was called to Gree
ley Colo by the serious illness
of his mother Wednesday morn
ing and his place is being tem
porarily filled by B E Tetter
ton Mrs Bauer has gone to In
dianola on a visit during her
husbands absence BenkelmaC
News
C JJ Israel has removed to
McCook where he has formed a
partnership with Mr Savage in
the clothes cleaning and press
ing line Benkelman News
lWfJtfiJfftfWrl
Hew Engines Coming
Burlington hnt r west will gwt twenty
five of the order of fifty new locomotives
Some of these am now on th av wpt
They are both ji opjf r ami freight en
gines being resignf d to require
ments in bran h of the pervicii Very
few of the nev r gires will b usod now
Some may be put in the pappgpr ser
vice but the othprs will br stored nt
Havelock probably for upe during the
fall rush Lincoln Journal
Mrs R E Walker of McCook visited
with Mrs B C Meradith from Snndnj
until Tuesday morning when she left
for Omaha where she expects to visit
friends for awhile- Iloldrge Citizen
For More Than Three Decades
Foleys Hone and Tar has been a
household remedy for all ailments of
the throat chest and lungs For in
fants and children it is best and saf
est as it contains no opiates or harm
ful drugs None genuine but Foleys
Honey and Tar in the yellow package
Refuse substitutes A McMillen
Commander Julius A Pratt Post No
RED WILLOW
Two of Mr Smiths horses and a
mule got out of the pasture and
thought they would explore the coun
try They were found north of Mc
Cook
Mr and Mrs A R Clark return
ed from California Tuesday morn
ing
Owens Longneckers family are
still troubled with the prevailing epi
demic
The setting sun on Tuesday was
as red as during the summer pre
ceding the Indian scare when It
seemed ominous and superstitious
persons were frightened
Mrs Clarks sister accompanied
her from California and expects to
spend the summer
There- was a quiet wedding Wed
nesday evening at Mrs Hatchers
when Miss Claudia became the wife
of Gary Dole L B Cox the Chris
tian minister of Indianola officiat
ing
The Worlds Work in its May issue-
is highly complimentary to oor
Mr Norris and from such a source
it is certainly worth while
The census enumerator is aroitad
It is enough to last ten years
A new Watkins agent has tkis
territory which is a convenience c
housewives
Lewis Elmer and family were ac
Louis Longneckers on Sunday and
attended Sunday school