The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, March 23, 1911, Page PAGE 7, Image 7

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THURSDAY MARCH 23 1911
Mgms
Huiskamps
These shoes are equal to any 500
and GOO shoes on the market They
look as well are just as stylish and
wear as well cost only 300 and 400
for ladies and 400 for mens With
every pair of these shoes you get a
calendar on which you mark the date
you began to wear them when they
are worn out count up the days of
service you have had and you will never
again buy anything1 but Calendar Shoes
VIER5EN QSBORN McCook
GRANT
Another dust storm Friday
Most of the farmers are preparing
ground for spring grain
John Leitner and Miss Louisa
Wescli were Oberlin Kan visitors
last week
Peter Wesch is home from Ober
lin high school and is on the sick
list
Albert Weeks is having a new
well drilled this week John Kirch
mer of Herndon Kan is doing the
work
Chas R Lee and family and Roy
Albrecht and family visited the home
of A Peters Sunday
B W Benjamin has purchased a
fine colt at the J R Gardner sale for
which he paid the sum of 165 last
Monday
Mrs Heye of Glenville Neb is
staying with her daughter Mrs Aug
Wesch
John H Wesch and Charley Wesch
are hauling prairie hay and storing
it in the barn this week
Boh Kelley had a dance Saturday
niSjht
Hows This
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re
gard for any case of catarrh that
cannot be cured by Halls Catarrh
Cure F J CHENEY CO
Toledo O
We the undersigned have known
F J Cheney for the last 15 years
and believe him perfectly honorable
in all business transactions and finan
cially able to carry out any obliga
tions made by his firm
Walding Kinnan Marvin
Wholeasle Druggists Toledo O
Halls Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system
Testimonials sent free Price 75 cents
per bottle Sold by all druggists
Take Halls Family Pills for con
stipation
THE INTERMISSION
for all kinds
MAGAZINES AND DAILIES
Temple Building
Kansas City Post 5c week
McCOOK MACHINERY
AND IRON WORKS
Machine Work
Blacksmithing
Horse Shoeing
We are agents for the Celebrated
Ford Auto
206 1st st E -- Phone red 450
REGULAR CHURCH SERVICES
Congregational Sunday school at
10 a m Preaching at 11 a m and
8 p m The public cordiall invited
R T BAYNE Pastor
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Services
Sunday at 11 a m and Wednesday
at 8 p m Meets now in the north
east corner of court house basement
CATHOLIC Order of services
Mass 830 a m Mass and sermon
1030 a m Evening services at
800 Sunday school 230 p m
WM J PATTON O M I
Methodist Preaching by the pas
tor at 11 a m and 8 p m Sunday
school at 10 a m Epworth League
at 7 p m
LESTER E LEWIS Pastor
EPISCOPAL Sunday school at ten
oclock Morning prayer and sermon
at eleven oclock Evening prayer
and sermon at eight Choir rehearsal
as usual every member please attend
ALFRIC J R GOLDSMITH Rector
EVANGELICAL LTJTHERAN CON
GREGATIONAL Sunday School at
930 a m Preaching at 1030 a m
and 730 p m by pastor Junior C
B at 130 p m Senior C E at 730
All Germans cordially invited to at
tend these services
HENRY KATJERZ Pastor
GERMAN EVAN LUTHERAN Ser
vices every other Sunday afternoon
at 230 oclock
REV GROTHEER Pastor
DAN BURY
III I IU1IL KLkll Ill IdOl iUUUVllllU
GsiGndsr i and i5oth jicDonaid had a tin show-
lor rm Tirmin Tlnlnh
XI O S Morris went to Atwood Kan
luesday to the lodge meeting
S R Messner arrived home Wed
nesday having been at the Hot
Springs in Arkansas for the past few
weeks taking treatment
to nave a tree fall on him while cut
ting timber along tthe creek Tuesday
He was injured quite badly and is in
a critical condition
Mr and Mrs C Wise arrived home
Thursday having sold out their place
at Hastings
to lose four colts supposed to have
been poisoned while in the pasture
E A Ruby and Fred Osburn left
for Bird City Kansas Tuesday to
work on a new house
Ardil Minnisar and Clarence Green
way attended the hard time social at
Indianoa Saturday night
J L Newman was a Lebanon visit
or Friday
V V Phillips returned home on
Thursday from Iowa being called
there on account of a sick relative
Mr and Mrs E M Woods and son
Harley who have been spending the
winter at Mena Ark arrived home
Friday
Mrs Earl Peacock came up from
Wilsonville Tuesday to attend her
sisters wedding
Mrs Addie Sewell came home on
Friday from Alliance Neb where she
has been staying with her daughter
MV iwl Tw n Tni irri i
Sunday school class at her home on
Friday evening They spent the eve
ning in playing games
Harold Stone came in Saturday
from Kearney Neb to spend a few
days
Charley Henton came up from Beav
er City Saturday to see the home
folks
Chas Bush went through Monday
on train 190 going to Marion
Rev Wm Richards formerly of thi
place but now living at Holdrege de
livered a sermon at the Congregation
al church Monday night
Mr and Mrs W H Harris are the
proud parents of a big 9 pounds
boy born Sunday March 19th
SAINT ANN
Peter Schneider returned from Lin
coln Saturday having been down on
business
Miss Kate Braun returned home
from Illinois Friday from an extended
visit having been gone about six
months
The Jussel boys from Indianola
have been in the neighborhood visit
ing their sisters Mrs Joseph Andre
jish and Mrs Wm McKillip
Mrs Kate Deprez from York is
making the home folks a visit Mr
and Mrs John Schneider
E Beebe made a trip to Saint Ann
Sunday and took in the sights
The McCook Hayes Center mail
route has been changed from a daily
to three times a week
YOU TAKE NO RISK
Our Reputation and Money Are Back
of This Offer
We pay for all the medicine used
during the trial if our remedy fails
to completely relieve you of constipa
tion We take all the risk You are
not obligated to us in any Avay what
ever if you accept our offer Could
anything be more fair for you Is
there any reason why you should hes
itate to put our claims to a practical
test
The most scientific common sense
treatment is Rexall Orderlies which
are eaten like candy They are very
pronounced gentle and pleasant in
action and particularly agreeable in
every way They do not cause diar
rhoea nausea flatulence griping or
any inconvenience whatever Rexall
Orderlies are particularly good for
children aged and delicate persons
We urge you to try Rexall Orderlies
at our risk Two sizes 10c and 25c
Rememebr you can get Rexall Rem
edies in this community only at our
store The Rexall Store L W Mc
Connell
Subscribe for The Tribune
BEGGS5 BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES and Purifies the Blood
THE
CURIOUS
THE McCOOK TRIBUNE
TADPOLE
Maybe Ho Turns Into s F vj cs
Maybe He Doscnt
If a tndpoi cannot get ii the Top of
the water when il is at the time of life
when it is breathing by moans of its
gills like a lisli it will not become a
frog It will then alw ys be a tadpole
Keep a tadpole in cold water and in
the dark or away from the light and
Henrv llelhson had the misfortune it will be years getting to be a frog
Left to the course of nature says
Brownings Magazine the tadpole be
comes a frog in from six to eight
weeks although it will have been two
years arriving at that chance to change
into the ma lure frog
The tadpoles mouth is so tiny that
it would be dillicult to insert a pin-
Thursday night was Mr and Mrs l Ul J lu
a sharp biting beak with three row
r o i
S G Bastams 2oth wedding anniver i y
I of teeth on the upper jaw A hoou
sary and number of friends with well nml llfHSIa the on
filled baskets walked in on them
giving them a great surprise
Thos Musgrove had the misfortune
the right side leaving them open like
a spout on the left side I
At this stage of its transformation
the tadpole breathes like a fish taking
water through the gills into the mouth
and spouting it out on the iC ft side
Its tail is what the tadpole feeds ou
by absorption of the white corpuscles
of the blood during the molting and
mouthing epoch in its life when it i
fasting When it is ready to eat again
the tail and the horny beak are gone
the wide mouth of the mature frog
having taken the place of the latter
There are forty species of frogs only
nrm nf wliirh ic in Knit Hi mirifi
one more plentiful than in America
although that eminent naturalist St
George Mivart declares that the edible
frog is unknown in America I
A frog that is common in France will
mew like a cat if its thigh is squeezed
and emit the odor of garlic For this
it has to go through life bearing the
name of Pelobates fuscus Most
species of frogs will not take anything
in the way of food that is not a live
wu uo v iauen oi Jituh
moving thing or something with the
were Danbury visitors Wednesday i semblance of life and will starve to
Mr and Mrs Dan Cashen and death among a million creatures if
daughter Osa were Danbury visitors I none obliges the frog by moving
Thursday evening and Friday j
Edwin Perkins editor of the j WHIM OF AN ARTIST
ley Delphic was up Wednesday to at-
tend the wedding i Turner and His Great Picture The
Mr Good and daughter Anna who j Building of Carthage
have heen MiMicKm ti witr t Wnen Turner exhibited his great
G B Morgans home departed Mon
ture The Building of Carthage he
was disappointed because it had not
uv iu tiicn uuiue ut iieu uaK la hn nnp f t nrivnf v5pw
Mrs W C Crosby entertained her and angry with the press for
Ing it severely Sir Robert Peel called
upon him
Mr Turner said he I admire
your Carthage so much that I want
to buy it I am told you want 500
guineas for it
Yes said Turner it was 500 guin
eas but today its GOO
Well said Sir Robert I did not
come prepared to give GOO and I must
think it over At the same time it
seems to me that the change is an ex
traordinary piece of business on your
part
Do as you please said Turner
Do as you please
After a few days Sir Robert called
again upon the great painter Mr
Turner he began although I thought
It a very extraordinary thing for you
to raise your price I shall be proud
to buy that picture and I am prepared
to give you the GOO guineas
Ah said Turner It was GOO guin
eas but today its 700
Sir Robert grew angry and Turner
laughed I was only in fun he said
I dont intend to sell the picture at
all It shall be my winding sheet
For years he kept it in his cellar
Then it was brought up and hung in
his gallery where it remained as long
as he lived When he died he left it
to the nation
Changing a Name
The brother of Mme de Pompadour
had at first been created Marquis de
Vandieres a somewhat unfortunate
title for a man of such new nobility
for he soon discovered to his profound
annoyance that his enemies would per
sist in calling him the Marquis
dAvant nier the Marquis of the Day
Before Yesterday
Mme de Pompadour naturally sen
sitive in such matters brought the af
fair before the king and as a title
more or less was a small matter to
grant the lady who grasped so much
after due forms her brother became
the Marquis de Marigny From Mme
Gaffrin
Tolstoy Hated Doctors
The late Count Tolstoy loathed phy
sicians slid at a dinner in Washing
ton a Russian diplomat
You remember how Tolstoy ridi
culed physicians in War and Peace
Well I heard him ridicule three of
them to their faces over a vegetarian
dinner at Yasnaya Polyana
Physicians he said bitterly look
ing up from a plate of lentils may be J
divided into two classes the radicals
who kill you and the conservatives
who let you die
Mental Arithmetic
Is your young man gittin a salry
Melia
Sure he is An whats mo de boss
tol William hes gwine to double it
Dats fine How much is he gittin
now
I dunno what hes gittin now but I
speck its somefin like half what hes
gwlneter Cleveland Plain Dealer
Just a Precaution
So you are attending cooking
school says the friend Are you go
ing to do your own work
No I wtnt to be able to teach my
husband how to prepare the meals in
an emgrgency Judge
LEGAL BLUNDERS
hen Queer Dee
of Divorce Issued by a
Psris Court
Some years ago it is said a legal
blunder of a most extraordinary char
acter was committed iu one of the di
vorce courts in Paris By some misap
prehension on the part of the presid
ing judge whose papers and inmu had
got confused he actually mistouu the
name of an advocate who had been ar
guing a petition for the name of ue
petitioner himself and in granting ud
signing the decree of dissolution of
marriage of the petitioner unwittingly
substituted the advocates name for
the petitioners and thus divorced the
lawyer from his wife instead ot grant
ing the prayed for release of the advo
cates client As the lawyer had no de
sire for separation from his wife and
as there was no process for annullin
an absolute decree for divorce even t
meet such a remarkable case it be
came necessary through this judicial
error for the man of law to remarry
his spouse without delay and this he
did
A somewhat similar error was com
mitted in the English court cf chan
eery There had been a litigation over
some property which was held by one
man and claimed by another of the
same name In evading some order of
the court the holder of the properly
had committed a contempt and on
this being called to the attention of
the judge an order issued for the sum
IHt Kty bMt f
pnrty
Australia has no frogs Of all those momV oflfe
claimant of the same surname ano
forty species only one is edlllethe
the order a very severe one was
Rana esculentn and nowhere is this
s tuaiiy in execution ueiore tne error was
I discovered New York Press
BOOKS IN OLD ROME
Trained Slavs Copyists Turned Them
Out Quick and Cheap
There were in Augustan Rome es
tablished publishing houses which not
only turned out large numbers of
books but inauy editions of them and
at an incredibly small price That
their arrangements were businesslike
may be Inferred from the testimony
of Horace He relates that when an
author failed to please the metropolis
the publishers shipped the entire edi
tion of his works to the provinces and
if he still failed as a writer they made
arrangements to bring them back again
and sell them as paper to the pastry
and spice shops
One great Arm in Rome had over
2000 trained slave copyists and their
work was swift and cheap for Mar
tial writes that they had ready an edi
tion of a thousand copies of his Epi
grams in just one hour to be sold at
10 cents a copy The exceedingly
large reading public which all this in
dicates must have been many years In
growing and one may assume that
Rome had long been a city of readers
Atticus the publisher of Cicero had a
great many modern methods in the
conduct of his business and the fact
that Caesars Commentaries were
very quickly dispatched to the out
posts of civilization shows that the
machinery of distribution was also
well organized Thus we may con
clude that -the advertising and public
ity department was in good shape
Bookman
Husky Dogs of Labrador
All along the coast at every Eskimo
encampment and about the cabins of
the liveyeres are numbers of husky
dogs In winter these animals pull
the sledges and form the sole means
of travel or communication from set
tlement to settlement During the
summer they are not fed by their
owners but are left to seek their sus
tenance as best they can hence the
hungry brutes range the land near the
coast and add to the problems of Lab
rador as they permit no creature to
live that they can pull down If a
horse were to be turned out to grass
overnight only its bare bones would
be found in the morning Even to hu
man beings they are sometimes dan
gerous when night begins to fall and
on occasion when hard driven by hun
ger they have been known to attack
children in the day Considering they
are hardly ever fed in the summer
one only wonders that there are not
more ill deeds to set to their account
Wide World Magazine
A Tramps Story
You say you were once the editor
of a newspaper
Yes lady and it was a very bright
little sheet if I do say it
How does it happen then that you
are forced to ask at back doors for
meals
It is merely a case of the irony of
fate I had a printer who was near
sighted and one afternoon when he
made up the paper be got a wedding
notice and a murder trial mixed so
that after describing the costume of
the bride it said the condemned man
almost collapsed when sentence was
pronounced Chicago Record Herald
A Way to Do It
Mrs Binks The people In the next
suit to ours are awfully annoying
They actually pound on the wall every
time our Mamie sings I wish we
knew of some way to drive them out
of the flat
Why not have Mamie keep on sing
ingsCleveland Plain Dealer
Hard Work
A mounted policeman must have a
hard time
How so
It cant be an easy matter to sleep
on horseback Judge
Cheering Him Up
De Broke So the tailor called again
with his bill Did you say I was out
His Man Yes sir and I told him that
I thought he was too Boston Tran
script
HEAT AND COLD
The Range Between Liquid Helium
and the Arc Light
Have you never wondered on some
terribly cold winter day when the
falling temperature had long since
passed the zero mark if it could pos
sibly be any colder anywhere and then
when summer comes and the mercury
is apparently never going to stop
climbing you cannot imagine how any
thing could be hotter or more uncom
fortable
Fortunately we live in a world where
the temperature seldom exceeds the
limits of say 50 degrees below zero
Fahrenheit and 110 above This
seems a tremendous range of tempera
ture but it is only trivial compared
with that found on every side in na
ture or in the laboratory Why this
1G0 degrees is less than the range
through which a dish of cold water is
heated when you place it on the stove
to boil
A moments thought of some of these
higher and lower temperatures is well
worth while Liquid air at 312 de
grees below zero is cold but liquid
hydrogen at 421 is still colder while
liquid helium at 451 below zero is the
coldest thing we know of Going the
other way lead melts at G20 degrees
above zero Fahrenheit while gold
remains solid up to a bright red heat
or 194G degrees A good furnace tire
r mav get several hundred degrees hot
ter than this Platinum one of the
most refractory of metals melts only
when intensely white hot at a tem
perature of 3230 but even this is 100
degrees or so less than the tempera
ture of the flame on your gas stove
The hotter a body is the more light
it gives so the tungsten lamp filament
which runs at about 4500 degrees
gives a brighter and whiter light than
the carbon filament at 3500 The elec
tric arc gives still more light for a
given amount of current consumed
and generates a temperature not far
from 7200 degrees Fahrenheit This is
the highest temperature we can pro
duce artificially No metal known can
stand this terrible heat and even most
refractory substances such as carbon
are volatilized by it
But while the arc is indeed hot it is
bv no means the highest temperature
I to be found in nature There are the
best of reasons for believing that the
temperature of the sun is some 12000
degrees or more and it is probible
that some of the stars are still hotter
This great heat explains the almost
unbelievable fact found by Langley
that sunlight is 5000 times brighter
than the dazzling stream of molten
metal from a Bessemer converter
New York Tribune
They Both Knew
When the war ended Thomas B
Reed went to California with a vague
plan of settling in that new country
He used to tell with intense delight of
his examination for admission to the
bar of California A young southerner
came before the judge for examination
at the same time The judge asked
the southerner if the legal tender acts
were constitutional and the young
man answered without a moments hes
itation No Then the judge turned
to Reed and asked him the same ques
tion Mr Reed with equal promptness
answered Yes
Very well said the judge you are
both admitted Two men who can
answer that question without hesita
tion ought to be admitted to any bar
Henry Cabot Lodge in Century
Very Simple
A rather simple looking lad halted
before a blacksmiths shop on his way
home from school and eyed the doings
of the proprietor with much interest
The brawny smith dissatisfied with
the boys curiosity held a piece of red
hot iron suddenly under the young
sters nose hoping to make him beat
a hasty retreat
If youll give me half a dollar Ill
lick it said the lad
The smith took from his pocket half
a dollar and held it out
The simple looking youngster took
the coin licked it dropped it in his
pocket and slowly walked away whis
tling
Making Life Worth LivinV
The other day I beheld a woman
whose husband earns something less
than 200 a month purchasing her sea
sons wardrobe Into it went one hat
at SoO and another at 30 Her neigh
bors in the flat building admired and
envied One of the bolder wondered
Well I cant help it said Mrs Jones
Tjust tell Mr Jones life isnt worth
livin If I cant have what I want
Atlantic
Pithy Sayings of Famous Men
Eli Whitney Thats some gin be
lieve me
Charles Dickens Got change for
American notes
Barnum I will
Noah Webster Just a word or two
Christopher Columbus My land
Chicago Tribune
Hard to Satisfy
Broker to wealthy but stingy client
Glad you did so well with those
shares I told you to buy Client Why
I lost a pot of money over them
Broker What You bought at two and
sold at seven didnt you Client Aye
But they went up to ten after Lon
don Punch
His Come Back
Mrs Jawback I suppose you con
sider your judgment far superior to
mine Mr Jawback No my dear We
proved the contrary when we chose to
marry each other Toledo Blade
Every man has at times in his mind
tbe ideal of what he should be but is
net
PAGE 7
A Mothers Safeguard
Foley- Honey and Tar for the
Jreh Is best and safest for all colds
cough croup whooping cough and
branch tis No opiates A McMiMen
The McCook Tribune 100 a year
PROFESSIONAL AW
BUilNEao DIRECTORY
I carry a complete lute of
hair goods Switches puffs
and curls made Irom your
combings L M CLYDE
PHONE 72 ill V B Sr UP STAIRS
DAVID MAUL
Tuner of Pianos
South McCook
Leave orders with C C Brown
in RishePs store
ROLAND R REED M D
Physician and Surgeon
Local Surgeon B M
Phones Office 163 residence
217 Office Rooms 5 6 Temnle
building McCook Neb
DR HERBERT J PRATT
Registered Graduate
Dentist
Office 212 Main av over Mc
Conn ells drug store Phones Of
fice 160 residence black 131
DR R J GUNN
Dentist
Phone 112
Office Rooms
building McCook
3 and 5 Walsh
DR J A COLFER
Dentist
Phone 378
Room 4 Postoffice building Mc
Cook Neb
R H GATEWOOD
Dentist
Phone 163
Office Room 4 Masonic temple-
McCook Neb
DR EARL O VAHTJE
Dentist
Phone 190
Office over McAdams store Mc-
Cook Neb
C E ELDRED
Lawyer
Bonded Abtracter and
Examiner of Titles
Stenographer and notary in office
McCook Nebraska
JOHN E KELLEY
Attorney at Law and
Bonded Abstracter
Agent of Lincoln Land Co and of
McCook Water Works Co Office in
Postoffice building McCook Neb
JAMES HART M R C V S
Veterinarian
Phone 34
Office Commercial bam McCook
Nebraska
LC STOLL CO
Jewelers Opticians
Eyes tested and fitted
pairing McCook Neb
H P SUTTON CO
Jewelers
and Opticians
Fine re-
Watch Repairing Goods of quality
Main avenue McCook Nebraska
JENNINGS HUGHES CO
Plumbing Heating
and Gas Fitting
Phone 33
Estimates furnished freeBasement
Postoffice building
A G BUMP
Real Estate
and Insurance
Office 302 overWoodworthsdrua
store
Go to NELMS FEED STORE
for the
FAMOUS CAMBRIDGE FLOUR
and all kinds of feed
Phone 186
Your combings
made into switches and puffs
MRS L M THOMAS
Phone Ash 2354-
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