The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, May 19, 1910, Image 2

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    Old Dutch
Cleanser
V s
W IS
Shortens
your clean
ing work in
the kitchen
through
o u t the
house
This One Cleanser
in handy sifter can
keeps the house and
everything in it spick
and span with half
the time required
with old fashioned cleaners
CI eiusS crabs
SeoursPolisRes
For porcelain ware and on the
bath tub Old Dutch Cleanser
is the one safe cleanser to use
The Mew
and
Better Way
DR B J DUNN
DENTIST phoh
Office Booms 3 and 5 Walsh Bit McCook
i
I Sprinkle Old ISSiS
E Dutch Cleanser on Ej22SjsRSi
w a wet cloth rub pAT
1 well wipe with a fcfGrAc I
ft clean wet cloth Di J B
I Takes off all
i coloration and ftp vV
5 scum and will not iffi lFSflk I
scratch Use it KK SafijKtfaL I
for all yonr clean- ga JjKBLmJI
E ing The one kCr99
I best cleanser for flSlp 1
B the farm ij yRlfTC I
I LRRGE flI
I SBFTERQfiM WMt
EOX ELDER
This is fine weather for the small
grain
Orla Belles spent Sunday after
noon with Hugh Campbell
Leah Doyle accompanied Edith
Lytle from Sunday school Sunday
Mr and Mrs D C Shaw went
home with J A Modrell and family
from Sunday school
Rev P C Tyler was called to
Spring Creek Friday to attend the
funeral of John Swanson
W B Wolfe has gone west to
spend -the summer with his sons and
daughter in Montana and Oregon
A W Campbell and grand-daughter
Mrs Chas Wilson went to Os
born last Friday and visited until
Sunday evening with J L Campbell
and family
The Ladies Aid society will meet
with Mrs J C Dedman Thursday
May 2G
There was quite a gathering at the
Ladies Aid society last Thursday
which was held at Mrs Dora Doyles
and George Harrison came along with
a kodak and shot into the crowd and
hit everyone
Rev F C Tyler preached at Zion
Hill last Sunday
T M Campbell has finished up
his assessor work and returned the
book last Saturday
Uncle Stephen Bolles is able to get
around again He walked to the
garden one day last week
About fifty friends and neighbors
went with cakes and ice cream to
the home of J A Modrell last Fri
day evening to remind him he had
reached another milestone in his
journey through life it being the
33rd anniversary of his birthday
The evening was spent very enjoy
ably The young people participated
in games while the older folks talk
ed of bygone days until the wee
hours of Saturday morning
Dont forget the sock social the
27th
There will be an election of Sun
day school officers next Sunday
morning
MARTIN HANSON D V S
VETERINARY SURGEON
Indianola Nebr Phone 105
JAMES HART M R C V S
VETERINARIAN
Office
Phone 34
Commercial Barn
McCook Nebr
Recollections of Halleys Comet of
1835
How many or how few people re
member seeing Halleys comet whose
last appearance was seventy five
years ago lacking some four or five
months as it appearance In 1835
was in the fall either September or
October My recollection of that
comet is very clear and can recall
its brilliancy as it lighted up the
heavens It was visible in the even
ing in the southwest I must iuve
been nine years of age vi 1 as
born in 1C2G at R ru Ne Yo c
Probabl v it icpr ed this i jnt
ore io iUly on my u1 noi va o
L ct thrt at ks vcv time Elder
I LI lv to oiginal Adventist was
uoiuiug a series of meetings in the
Baptist church in Rome preaching
that the world would come to an end
by fire in the very near future It
is doubtful whether Elder Millers
preaching or Halleys comet had the
greater influence in scaring the peo
ple of that community into repent
ance However between the two
there was a great revival
These new converts were styled
Millerites but some ungodly persons
called them Cometites
Another incident that impresses
my memory of that occasion was that
our family at that time were enter
taining some relatives from the west
ern part of the state who had a very
disagreeable crying baby about two
years old and its mother went to
gether with all the women of the
house every evening to hear Elder
We were wishing while walking the
house and yard with that kid that
office
B N Leisure wdwr to Vir
ginia F Thiessen w d to
e hf sw qr 22-1-28
Ben N Leisure to Sarah H
Lister w d to nw qr sw qr
w hf ne qr sw pr
Benjamin N Leisure to Le
gal Heirs of U S Leisure
w d to s hf nw qr 22-1-28
Benjamin N Leisure to Eli
za Ervin w d to pt ne qr
ne qr 19-1-27
B N Leisure to John L
Leisure w d to w hf sw qr
22-1-28
Conrad Grothen et al to
Charles W Poore w d to
se qr s hf ne qr 1-3-29
8400 00
James N Clark rec to J
Fletcher deed to w hf nw
qr 2-1-30 500 00
Jacob Fletcher et ux to W
L Rcse w d to w hf nw
qr 2-1-30 1 00
Minnie A Everist et cons to
Anna M McKenna w d to
lots 5 and 6 block 17 First
McCook G000 00
P F McKenna et ux to 1st
Natl Bank of McCook w
d to n hf ne qr 31 e hf ne
qr 30 w hf nw qr 29-4-29 6000 00
Manford L Brannan et ux to
Carl Reinmiller w d to w
hf ne qr ne qr ne qr 15
se qr se qr 10-4-29 200 00
J L Sargent et ux to Edwin
G Caine w d to hf int in
lots 3 4 and 5 block 32
Indianola 500 00
Joseph R Stansberry et ux
to Rochelle R Robinson w
d to lot S block 11 Second
McCook 1700 00
John F Helm et ux to Al
bert J Helm w d to pt
se qr ne qr 240 00
Lincoln Land Company to W
S Wait w d to lot 4 block
9 Seventh McCook 200 00
Adam Bauer et ux to Conrad
Hoffman w d to lot 14
block 7 Willow Grove 825 00
L J Powers et cons to Hen
ry S Veeder w d to w hf
w hf 30-3-30 1675 00
R F D No 3
Farmers are listing corn
Ida Clamp has gone west to look
after her claim
G W Sigwing and wife have an
other boy
Mrs W G Dutton is away on a
visit
R F D No 4
Small grain looks good and farm
ers have begun listing corn
Milt Clark delivered hogs to town
fore part of the week
W G Dutton is irrigating his
wheat
Bill Wood is breaking sod He
says walking is all right but it is
out of date
George Wallen has finished plant
ing corn
Young Brothers are breaking some
prairie
E Jaques bought a team the other
day Ed says the roads are good
now Yes Ed no dust today
GOOD IN SPOTS
One Mqn Who Discovered That War
Vas Not Wholly Bad
Lem Jnckson loved to loaf He lived
In the mountains not far from Green
ville Tcnn with his wife and a large
brood of children Lem had a honn
Qawg that he set great store by and
lie spent most of his time lounging in
i runway waiting to shoot a deer driv
en in by old Bose or sprawling on the
bank of a stream fishing In that way
1 was a good provider after a fash
I but not all the urrliir scnhliir
i -ring and brooiiisiieking f his
wish wife could drive him to vtU
Lem led the lazy life of a Wip 11
Winkle until the outbreak of the civil
war and then he joined the Confed
erate army At the end of six months
Lem was shot through the right thigh
and it was long before he was able to
limp out of the hospital and back to
his regiment In the second year he
was shot in the left shoulder and when
he returned to duty his left hand was
bent far back by a shortened tendon
but ho was still able to raise his ritle
Early in the fourth year they got him
again a musket ball through the body
but he was back in the ranks long
before the fighting was ended Every
one wondered at Lems persistence in
sticking to the terrible trade of war
Dr Girdner met Lem hobbling down
the street in Greenville one morning
in June 1S53 still pale and weak from
his latest wound his right leg short
and wabbly his left hand stiffly beat
back
Glad to see you alive Lem said
the doctor I suppose youre glad to
be home again
Waal Lem admitted without en-
Millers burning words leaving the thusiasm I spose I had to git erlong
Giral Lee he surriudered
qrying kid for a brother and myself us
down to Appomattox an we all had
to care for until eleven or twelve
xrtl rtrtl Airnmr 5 rrl 4- Fsw n rsT
- CCJ lWfal 1 U WCCiY Mt nn nlnl tn honnrnvfrnm
the dangers of war
Why doc war haint so bad cried
Elder Miller and the comet would honest Lem war haint so bad
subside
JACOB WIGGINS
Real Estate Filings
The following real estate filings
Theres lots of days when you dont
have nothin to do Harpers Weekly
A GAME OF BALL
have been made in the county clerks How MaV strike a Stranger Who
1 00
1 00
1 00
sees it t or tne rirst i ime
Nothing has set America so high in
the estimation of foreign nations says
Ellis Parker Butler in Success
1 00 ziue as the adoption of baseball as the
national sport If a foreign spy wan
ders into America seeking to fathom
our real inwardness and sees a game
of baseball any feeling of contempt
for our newness gives way instantly
to awestruck admiration- At his first
glance baseball is to him a mystery
and it remains a mystery to him He
sees 30000 men and women suffering
2500 00 the tortures of the lower regions on
hot grand stands He sees a niau pick
up a small white ball as hard as a pine
knot Facing him is another man who
holds a smooth but deadly club in his
hands Behind this second man is a
third man whose face is hidden behind
a birdcage Suddenly the man with
the ball raises one foot in the air and
shows the man with the bat the sole
of his shoe The man at the bat sees
j that there are spikes in the sole of the
1 shoe and it angers him and he raises
his bat to throw it at the man with the
ball But ah ha the mau with the
ball is too quick for him He throws
the hard white ball at the man with
the bat with all his strength The
man with the bat waves defiance up
swinging the bat in the air The ball
proceeds The batsman never flinches
Will the ball kill the man or will the
impact crush the ball But see The
ball finds man unflinching the ball is
panic stricken the ball dodges around
the man the ball is lost buried in the
huge leather chair cushion that covers
the hand of the birdcage man behind
the batsman Strike one says the
umpire Thirty thousand cheers
Why
Grub Streets Pawnshop
If the Avant is uot the oldest and
best known pawnshop in the world it
deserves to be It has been in exist
ence ever since the days of Shake
speare and Ben Jousou It is in Fleet
street Grub street and has been the
poor writers uncle for all these cen
turies and years It has an old legend
something like this Old Literary
Friends Never Forgotten There are
many souvenirs sayings and tradi
tions of the greatest men on earth
who going broke had to patronize it
Outside of its own name it is well
known as the Grub street pawnshop
London Mail
Unspellable
The Newfoundland seal folk for some
reason not given by the St Johns
correspondent of the New York Sun
describe their greasy spoil as swoils
and they also say they spell an ob
ject when they mean to carry it One
can imagine the amazement of the
young cleric who on one occasion ask
ed a burl hunter how he spelled
swoils
We dont spell em we hauls em
was the bewildering reply
The Retort Courteous
I hate to press this bill Mr Slow
pay said the tailor taking a much
wrinkled memorandum of accounts
from his pocket but
Oh dont bother Snip said Slow
pay genially You dont need to press
it 1 dont mind the wrinkles in it at
all Fact is Ive got a dozen fresh
copies of it at home already Judge
A Wide Waist
Miss Tbynn I saw Jack put his arm
around you Miss Plumleigh You
didnt either Miss Tbynn Well then
as far around as he could get It Bos
ton Transcript
BRITISH NfflL DRILL
Practice That Keeps the Crews
In Fit Condition
CLEARING SHIP FOR ACTION
A Lively Time While the Decks Are
Being Stripped of Everything That
Would Impede the Fir- of the Guns
Working the Torpedo I jts
Il is a Utile afti r I v- hells in the
forenoon watch r in hore going talk
I a in and the officers and men of
the battleship wear an expectant air
The ships company is fallen in at sta
tions for general exercise The com
mander surrounded by his staff a
midshipman a bugler and the chief
boatswains mate is standing on top
of the after barbette A kind of tense
hush Is over all hands and Indeed
over the rest of the squadron at anchor
in the bay It is a general drill morn
ing and the ships of the squadron are
about to compete against each other
at various evolutions
On the after bridge the glasses of the
signal boatswain and Ids yeomen are
glued on the flagship Presently a
couple of gayly colored flags are hoist
ed at her main Hardly have they left
the rail when the signal boatswain
spins round Signals place net de
fense sir he cries Out nets
bawls the commander Out nets
shout the boatswains mates Instant
ly hordes of men dash at the neat roll
of wire nets lying on the shelf round
the ship and push it overboard One
edge being held in place it unrolls as
it falls making a veil on the side
Clear the net shelf The men van
ish Man the purchase Somewhere
above a bugle blares out a G
The marines handling large bearing
out spars shove the upper ends of the
booms ftrom which the nets hang out
board They revolve slowly about their
lower ends which are near the water
line and hauled by the steam capstan
on one side and the seamen on the
purchase on the other extend them
selves at right angles to the hull
Break bellows the commander and
a signalman jerks the halyards A
red white and blue pendant hitherto
waiting in a bail at the topsail yard
arm breaks from its conflnement and
floats out on the breeze announcing
to all and sundry that the ship has
finished the evolution and is now pro
tected from torpedo attack by her
crinoline of nets First ship sir re
ports the signal boatswain and the
men once more at their general sta
tions grin contentedly and make con
temptuous comments on the struggles
of the remainder of the fleet There
is a short pause till these are ended
then another hoist rises from the flag
ships bridge In nets is the order
and the ships company is once more
galvanized into action Amid a scene
of orderly confusion the huge booms
return to position shut back against
the ships side the brails which pass
beneath the nets every few yards are
manned all hands haul with a will
the mass of steel meshes is rolled up
and secured on its shelf ami the bright
pendant at the topsail yardarm is
again brokeu bj the signalman
A short Stand easy follows soon
ended by another signal Clear for
action To the mind of the bewilder
ed spectator pandemonium follows
But it is only in appearance Each
man knows what he has to do and
does it Under the onslaught of the
seamen davits stanchions rails stove
pipesin fact all tilings that can pos
sibly restrict the fire of the guns dis
appear with a rapidity that gives the
impression of their being mowed down
skylights are masked by steel hatches
boats are turned in and secured and
in two or three minutes the decks are
stripped bare and the men again fall
en in awaiting the order to replace
gear This done a longer job but
still accomplished with celerity the
last and most exciting signal of the
forenoon -appears Away all boats
crews pull round the fleet
The men tumble into their boats at
the davits the lowerers pay out the
falls and in a few moments the cut
ters whalers gigs and galleys are
pulling for dear life a midshipman in
charge of each On the after bridge
the commander waving two small
hand flags which control the huge
steam derrick is lifting the pinnace
and launch from the boat deck and
depositing them in the water Men
drop into them double and treble
banking the long oars and soon these
are pounding after the lighter boats
The evolution is a race ship against
ship Who will have the first boat
back Who will have all boats back
and hoisted first Midshipmen prob
ably with bets on the matter are urg
ing their crews on Every man is
putting his back into it for the honor
of his ship Telescopes watch prog
ress from all the vessels of the fleet
Here comes the galley the captains
boat manned by a picked crew and
dancing through the water under the
long sweeping strokes of the oars
first boat back Again the tricolor
ed pendant flies out and the captains
doggie midshipman climbs out of
the galleys stern sheets beaming all
over his boyish countenance
The boats are hoisted as they return
the men left on board manning the
falls and running away with them to
the sound of the ships band playing
on the shelter deck Presently all is
square again The boatswains mates
pipe Hands carry on smoking The
forenoons drills are over and officers
and men alike are in good humor
proud of the final signal received from
the all powerful flagship
Evolution smartly performed
London Globe
-
Gasoline Stoves
are sold in McCook by
H
Po Waite and Co
KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE
Burlingtons New Main Line
Through Central Wyoming
the richest undeveloped country in the west Farmers here have no fear of
drouth wind storms or hail storms
THE BIG HORN BASIN
is now fo well started on its great wealth producing era that it not only aj
peals to farmers looking for new lands upon which to establish now homos
under most favorablo conditions but appeals as well to the inventor who
wants to turn hi- money quickly and to the
Business Han Professional Han
Mine Operators and Manufacturer
in new towns that are springing up like magic and where raw material in
plenty can be handled at a profit
The new line will reach Thermopolis about July 1st connecting the
outside world with one of the greatest health resorts in America
Cheap excursion tickets first and third Tuesdays Send right away for our
new booklet just oir the press and then go with mo on one of our personally
conducted excursions
wiww TAJ
CLEM DEAVER General Agent
Land Seekers Information Bureau
Room 6 Q Building Omaha Neb
STAR
ssr
t JRfea e J III
Ek at i m
JXK
s cggytgggwwwswi
TLING
n IS THE SUCCESS of onr Pattl
mON AIUISTAUKEK wliicli oxtonus auor
it is half way np with tlio load and is oper
ated with ono liorso Also our Pntd
PUSH HAKE and Denver Made MO WEIi
Our Clients and Competitors
Acknowledge This
225000 invoatod inour factory to backonr
Roods Onr elegant illustratodprintod mat
tor and prices delivered at yonr station
sont free for tho asking
1 CERTIFICATE and SOUVENIR FREE
THE PLATTNEB IMPLEMENT CO
DEPT
7 DENVER COLO
Kindly mention this paper
THE TR BUNE
I
I
1 50 Value
for 100
nrnp yrrTTin tnfTVun1 wftvr vwr v if vv rWvv prrrnr niy ETflvWTOi
V FKAJf Klin Pres G H Watkijjs Vice Pres
R A Green
I The Citizens National Bank
f of McCook Nebraska
t
F
t
Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 25000
DIRECTORS
V Franklin A McMillen R A Green
G II Wntkins Vernice Franklin
4
l llLL 11 S
ctUtuuitAijytjji1vVt V
STANSBERRY LUflBER CO
Everything in Lumber
At Live and Let Live Prices
Phone 5o
tj
McCOOK NEB
D W COLSON
FJRE INSURANCE AGENT
I have Residence and Business Properties for Rnt
Office Phone 16
Residence Black 333
McCook Nebraska
HIGHPRICED McCOOK
Living expenses have advanced 50 percent in the past
few years but you can get the BEST OF ALL
KINDS OF COAL at the SAME OLD PRICE of the
Bullard Lumber Co
Phone No i l
i M O McCLURE Mgr
1