The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, September 01, 1910, Image 5

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McCook Neb
MAIN LINEEAHT DKIAKT
N J Control Tiino 1135 r M
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It 70i a u
I UV t t
MAIN LINK WKMT OKPAUT
No t MoiiutftiiiTiiuts 1220 i m
11 11 P M
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7 J M A M
IMIEIUAI LINE
Nn 178 arrival Mouuuiin Time i15 r u
No l7loimrtn 015 am
slfrtpintf iliniusr and recllninc chair cars
froo on through trains Tickets solil
and bittftfuijo checked to nuy point in the United
din to or Canada
For information timetables maps and tick
ets call on or write D F Hostottar Agent
McCook Nebraska or L W Wakeloy General
PaHsnnijer Aijent Omaha Nobraska
RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS
Arthur Pronger has entered the
companys service
Air and Mrs John Hunt went down
to Pawnee City Saturday morning on
No 16 on a short visit
Engineer and Airs Fred Monks ar
rived home close of last week from
their trip east
Matthew Lawritson and family ar
rived home Sunday from their vaca
tion of a few weeks
S L Moench of Orleans a former
Burlington conductor and known to
many of the old time readers of this
paper Avas in the city part of the
week on business
James Kelso and family of Chase
precinct have moved to McCook where
he is working for the Burlington out
of McCook This change will give
their children better school advant
ages Imperial Republican
Mr and Mrs P G Westland have
returned from a trip to Elbon lake
at Nevis Minn Mr Westland is one
of the passenger engineers on the
Burlington He says The lake is
just swarming with muskalonges rock
bass and perch Lincoln Journal
The B M furnished an attrac
tion for the people to gaze upon Tues
day A car of coal had been run up
on the high coal chute The force of
the collision tore the front trucks
from under the car but the car did
not stop until it had passed half way
over the end of the chute where it
was left nicely balanced Red Cloud
Argus
COPIOUS ENGLISH LANGUAGE
No Other Modern Tongue Enjoys Sc
Extensive a Vocabulary as
Ours
No other modern language has so
copious a vocabulary as English
says a writer The reason lies in the
fact that it has an Anglo Saxon basis
on which has been rai ed Sn immense
superstructure of the Romance ele
ment drawn from Norman French and
pure Latin sources English has re
tained dug out from the coliseum of
Latinity the following words which
do not exist in Italian the language
which must nearly approaches Latin
of all the Romance tongues Inquis
itive perfunctory extent despair
performance desultory despond
enc3 interference hideous state
ment attendance achievement
Many of them are also lacking in
French When one examines lists of
English words often only one or two
of them are to be iounu in foreign
languages Of labor travail toil
and work only the first two will be
found in French and Italian of
large great big grand huge
Italian has only grande neither
French nor Italian has a word for
tall heaven deep shallow huge
tough bid tell earn sore hurt
average home fit bare kind and
a host of others
They express these meanings by
using other and often much worked
words in a new sense They derive
this faculty from the Latin which pos
sesses it in a high degree An obser
vant American professor Gonzalez
Lodge of Columbia university pointed
out some years ago that the total
vocabluary of Caesar Cicero and Vir
is only 4683 words This of
course means the use of the same
word over and over again to express
different meanings and doubtless ex
plains the great prevalence of the
in the Latin tongues It
is a mistake to suppose that a small
vocabulary connotes greater ease in
studying a language all the ramifica
tions of variety in use have to be fol
lowed and acquired
On the other hand great wealth
in a language demands higher select
ive powers The failure to select the
correct word is in itself a form of
slang as when an American calls
something amusing great or an Eng
lishman dubs decent that which has
the advantage of his approval when
a dozen other words would better ex
press the meaning
Her Boys Book
A certain woman is going to keep a
diary of the clever things said and
done by her boy She expects o buj
a large book and jot down all the in
teresting events in the childs life
keep it a secret and give it to him
when he Is of age The mother is ol
literary turn of mind and this book
if ever completed will be valuable to
the owner as many pleasant littla
childhood incidents occur that one fort
gets
VERTASTEDFLESH
Philadelphia Girl Vegetarian All
Her Life
Mies Ora Kres3 Is Not Interested In
the Boycott on the Meat Trust
She Bars Feathers on
Her Hats
Philadelphia Pa There Is one
young Woman in this city who Is not
at all concerned about the outcome
of the anti meat crusade or the beef
trust Investigation and that Is Miss
Ora Kress a junior at the Womans
Medical college Miss Kress is a vege
tarian not one who adopts it as a
fad but one who has never tasted
meat from the time of her birth 22
years ago
Her father Dr D H Kress super
intendent of the Seventh Day Advent
lst sanatorium at Washington D C
Is an ardent advocate of vegetarian
Ism and he has brought up his daugh
ter In accordance with his views
Miss Kress Is none the worse off
for her abstinence from meat Healthy
and robust with a clear complexion
a pleasant temperament and genial
disposition she Is the favorite of
friends and fellow students
Time and again her chums endeav
ored to tempt her with a sirloin well
done or a brown turkey drumstick
but she resisted the temptation
Do you know it often strikes me
so funny said Miss Kress with a
laugh to see people gorging the
carcass of some dead animal or fowl
down their throats It is repulsive to
me
Why kill living things for food
when the earth is so generous with
her bounty of healthful nourishing
food
Do you believe in vegetarianism be
cause it Is healthful or because it is
humane she was asked
Both she answered
Do you wear plumes or feathers
Oh no that would be inconsist
ent
Is not the human alimentary canal
3K ss
SK
m vas
so constructed as to be able to digest
meat and fat she was questioned
Fat not meat was the answer
Butter Is fat too Then it must be
remembered that wheat and nuts con
tain a great deal of fat
The ancient Greeks who attained
the highest point in the development
of the human form and who gave so
much to the world that is beautiful
and artistic subsisted almost entire
ly upon vegetable food Flesh food
was a luxury to them and when they
ate meat abundantly they began to de
generate
Do you find your light food nour
ishing and satisfying she was
asked
Do I look as if I were underfed
she retorted- And then remember
that I work rather hard and need nu
tritious food
Oatmeal eggs butter milk bread
and ice cream are the principal ar
ticles of food in this remarkable young
womans diet Sometimes fruit and
candies relieve the monotony of her
course
You see we are not vegetarians in
the fullest sense of the word added
Miss Kress Extremists Insist upon
vegetable food only and place the ban
upon milk and eggs as well We
however use milk and eggs because
It does not require the killing of life
But fish of course is in the same
category with meat
Improved Cutting Blowpipe
The cutting blowpipe of which so
many surprising things have been re
ported has recently been improved in
France in a way to render it more
generally useful Two inflammable
gases must be employed One is re
quired to keep the metal at a high
temperature The other is oxygen to
concentrate action by oxidation along
the line of the cut For heating either
coal gas acetylene or hydrogen is
employed but as there is sometimes
difficulty in procuring a supply of
those gases the new blowpipe is ar
ranged to use instead of the ordinary
gasoline employed by motorists
Superstition of Chinese
The Chinese are a superstitious peo
ple and think it a bounden duty to
keep the body Intact and if by any
misfortune they are compelled to lose
a limb by amputation they invariably
ask for the severed member and keep
it in a box Sometimes they will actu
ally eat it thinking it only right that
that which has been taken from the
body should be returned to it On this
same principle an extracted tooth will
be carefully preserved or ground to
powder and swallowed in water
Prejnre early fr fall
Do not let the cool Autumn days catch you unprepared buy early and enjoy your Fall oulfit the lunger
TO THOSE WHO
wish to buy apparel we have an unex
celled line of skirts suits and coats in the new beau
tiful fall weaves patterns and colors and handsomely
finished in the most authentic styles at reasonable prices
Wo L
Phone 22
A CHINESE TITBIT
Eggs That Have Been Preserved For
a Century or More
Wben LI Hung Chung made bis tour
of tbe world his commissariat car
ried with It a supply of Chinese pre
served eggs for the venerable nmh
sadors special use Some of thes
eggs were exhibited In New Vin
while he was staying here and a li v
experts had the temerity to samnii
them They were not so bad alter
all was the verdict of one America d
connoisseur although by their
you would think they would come un
der the ban of the pun food law
The eggs were incased fn clay an
when unpacked looked like pieces
pumice stone They are preserved i
this way by the Chinese for a cen
fury or more and LI Ilung Chang ad
mined that the hen which laid the
eges for his morning meal might have
been decapitated anywhere from a
quarter to half a century before he
was born Tbe process of keeping is
very primitive but as effective as it Is
simple Tbe eggs are first boiled hard
and then while they are hot they are
wrapped in soft clay and packed
away
In this condition the Chinese claim
they will keep forever and not lose
their flavor or wholesomeness Indeed
they consider that age improves the
flavor Li Hung Changs commissarint
brought the eggs for his personal use
in bags packed in rice husks but as
the clay was hard there was not much
danger of breaking them When
opened the white was found to be
almost black and the yolks green
The flavor however was preserved
The Chinese chop these preserved
boiled eggs and decorate most of their
viands with them They also enter
largely into all their sauces
Duck eggs are also preserved by the
Chinese in a somewhat similar fashion
There Is a considerable trade in duck
eggs of the Peking and Muscovy
breeds and many Chinese in this coun
try import them from China in the
preserved condition The duck eggs
are boiled and preserved in a paste of
charcoal instead of clay Harpers
Weekly
Teaching the Teacher
A village parish clerk who employed
a grammarian to teach his daughter
heard him with much surprise define
the use of the articles a an and
the
You cannot place a the singular
article before plural nouns No one
can say A houses a horses a
Hold there said the parish clerk
1 must contradict you in that Dont
1 at church every Sunday say Amen
London Mail
To the Stranger Within Your Gates
In New England What do you
know
In New York How much you got
In the South Who are you
In the West What can you do
Life
Candid
What do you mean hy being can
did pa
Speaking unto others as you would
not like them to speak to you Puck
One of Lifes Problems
It Is often more difficult to forget
than it Is to remember
Talent of Success
The talent of success is coining
more than doing what you can do well
without a thought of fame If It
comes at all it will come because it
is deserved not because it is sought
after It is very indiscreet and trou
blesome ambition which cares so much
about fame about what the world says
of us as to be always looking in the
faces of others for approval to be al
ways anxious about the effect of what
we do or say to be always shouting
to hear the echoes of our own voices
Corset Special
79 cents
Broken lines of 100
and 150 corsets well
sized 79 cents
MWIIIW H I H J iJL
CHOCK FULL OF INFORMATICS
Intelligent Tourist Sheds Some Knowl
edge About Historic Events
and Places
There are some people who know
it all and others who think they do
nl the latter are apt to make the
girrtest show of knowledge One of
this tnrcies rtood near the bow of a
Champk in steamer one day He had
a rer - - sunburned complexion
ha cl Idebook in id
three l zbVs t n
he ol s bv tin-
fnforaiatian I c tr iar
onger I iiw iI man
v lei- j -
i - il
Jicrd he
I suppose jou kno t
anil fallen walls ov j
we rhoro are all tl i4 the
worid fnrous Fort Ticonderoga
I df t know it said the small
man simply
Well sir they are It was on that
spot that the English commander was
called from his bed to surrender in
the name of the Continental congress
It was along these shores added the
man with the ruddy complexion wav
ing the fluttering timetables oratoric
ally that the French and Indians
fought the English Every stone sir
is crowded with history
Ticonderoga hey said the other
reflectively Do you live up here
No I live in New York
Born here perhaps
No sir
Travel up and down the lake pretty
often I suppose
Well no reluctantly admitted the
owner of the guidebook This is my
first trip
Tis hey Well I was purser of
this boat for nine years and I know
every foot of that shore The ruin
over there is Sampsons dock and Ti
conderoga is nine miles south of here
Anything else to tell
MOTOR BOATS IN VENICE
Romantic Canals Are No Longer
Monopolized by the Old-
Titne Gondola
The romantic canals of Venice are
no longer monopolized by the old time
gondola or even the steam or gaso
line launches for the American motor
boat has invaded those historic wa
ters
The first motor boats on the canals
were those ordered by wealthy Vene
tians and foreigners desirous of
greater speed and comfort than was
attainable by the gondolas Then the
city of Venice which entertains some
notions touching municipal owner
ship took a hand In the matter and
established a transportation system of
its own whereupon was to be seen
the novel sight of American motor
boats chugging along the canals
The fare on the municipal boats is
low about 2 cents
One great advantage which the
motor boat is said to possess over the
steam and gasoline launches is that It
does not kick up the waves against
the houses as do those higher built
craft It follows then that the little
American motor boat is permitted to
proceed where It listeth not only up
and down the Grand canal as well as
on the smaller waterways that vein
the city but Is allowed to navigate the
narrowest of other waterways where
the heavily churning craft are pro
hibited
There are those who contend that
the historic gondola is doomed before
the advance of the less beautiful but
more practical motor boats and that
it will not be so long ere Instead of
the song of the gondolier there will
be heard the whistle or the horn of
the modern craft
Subscribe for The Tribune
TO THOSE WHO
wish to make Iheir own clothes we have an cicjllent
variety of cloths to select from both fur skirts and
waists anion others which are always good Diagonal
serges ranamas per yard 50c to 150
EVERYTHING FOR A1AN WOAIAN OR CHILD
BARTLEY
Mrs Ulackson and Giandma Kitten
burg have been on the sitk list this
week
Fred Hun twork and family left for
their new huino in Mississippi Fridav
-
of last week
Mrs Shillington of Max was here the
last of the week visiting with her sister
Mrs R Y Axtell She ruturned home
on Sunday morning
Roy Hoover and wifo went to
ta Saturday to visit with Mrs Hoov
ers parents
Mrs Ira Ritchie who had been spen
i i r the week with relatives and friends
I r i rned to her hom in Wauneta Sun
nay
After a few days visit at hom Frank
Clark has returned to Council BluHs
where he is working for the street rail
way company
Miss Lena Flint left Tuesday morn
i g for Valparaisowhero she will teach
school this being her fourth year in
tbat place
WV
McCook Neb
KUmilBE3fiB0B
Prof W A Cockle and wife came in
Saturday morning also Mi Hopix and
Miss Schn itman leturned Tuesday
Wo heartily welcome them back to
Hartley and hope tieir success in our
schools may equal that of last year
Miss CJrace Flints Sunday so 1m vol
class gave her a farewell surprise Tues
day evening After enjojing an even
ing of games ami social chat ending
with u goodbye song they left her with
best wishes for a happy and successful
school year Miss Flint left Wednes
day morning for Louisville where she
will teach this vear
McConnells Fragrant Lotion 2a
cents
I carry i complete line of
hair goods Switches puffs
and curls made from your
combings L Al CLYDE
IHONKTi III W I Sr fl 1 Mf
Fine
Advance Display
Latest
Eastern Styles
may no be seen in fall
Millinery in
Miss Pecks Millinery
Formal Opening West B Street
September 16th
Store
McCook Nebr
Not Going Out of Business
But Selling Goods Right
Quaker Corn Flakes 4 pack 23c
Baking Powder 10 oz Sc 15 qz 12c 25 qz 20c
20c
25c
IOC
Former 25c Coffee now
Laundry Soap 10 bars
Coal Oil gal
Fresh Fruit and Vegetables at all times
Choice Country Butter
25c
Bring your cream and get cash on delivery
Yours for Bus
D MAGNER Prop