1 1 I i K K l THURSDAY MARCH 30 1911 BURLINGTON TIME TABLE Main Line East Depart Central Time No G 1110 P M 16 430 A M 2 520 A M 12 700 A M 14 920 P M ilaia Line West Depart Mountain Time No 1 1235 P M 3 H42 P M 5 arr 830 p m 13 945 A M 15 1230 A M Imperial Line Jlouutahi Time No 176 arrives 345 P M No 175 departs 645 A M No 17o departs Wed 630 A M Sleeping dining and reclining chair cars seats free on through trains Tickets sold and baggage checked to ury point in the United States or Canada For information time -tables maps and tickets call on or write D F Hostetter Agent McCook Nebraska or L W Wakeley General Passen ger Agent Omaha Nebraska RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS Mr and Mrs Ray E Benjamin are from Fairbury on a visit of a week or so s Agent and Mrs Harris of Danbury are parents of a baby boy born on March 17th Over one hundred cars of stock were shipped Sunday from the branch lines through Red Cloud Changes in the passenger train ser vice this week have caused a mild sensation in railroad circles Conductors Frank Kendlen J H Burns and T E McCarl of the pas senger department were dropped from the service this week The Tribune hears it stated that Conductor A L Knowland is working in the train service of a road run ning out of Salt Lake City Herman Hegenberger Frank Rank and A H Bagley are the new regular passenger conductors advanced by tha recent decapitation in the passenger train service Agent and Mrs George Scott and baby were down from Brush Colo rado last Friday night to attend the Eastern Star meeting and visit with friends between trains The body of Engineer W F Zum walt who was killed in January near Spokane Wash was recovered on March 19th from the river and in terment was made in the Fairmont Neb cemetery on March 22nd Two of the new O l class engines are now in service on the Alliance line Nos 5038 and 5039 They are expected to pull better than 2-000-ton trains over the Alliance Edgemont grad The Burlington has extended mil ling in transit privileges at Cambridg at the request of Cambridge Milling company to take additional territory on originating grain and to permit the shipment of flour to McCook and beyond without extra charge The Burlington SViicE iiad planne to complete an extension from Ther mopolis Wyo to Powder river in the same state this year has conclud ed not to carry out the project The completion of this line would repre sent the investment of more than 11000000 The extra stock train Wednesday morning did a distribution stunt by which several head of cattle were de posited along the right of way be tween Wilsonville and Beaver City which is not down on the regular schedule A door of one of the stock cars came open in some manner and nine head of stock escaped One calf was found at Wilsonville and a heifer was corraled at the stock yards in Beaver City One dead animal was located on the right of way between the two towns and the other six head were missing at last reports Beaver City Tribune The Curious Opossum The American opossum is one of the most curious animals living in the United States It4 is the only one that carries its young in a pouch like the kangaroo It is the only animal that can feign death perfectly It is re markable for hanging by its tail like a monkey It has hands resembling those of a human being Its snout is like a hogs while its mouth is liberal ly furnished with teeth Its eyes are like a rats and it hisses like a snake New York Herald The Beautiful Bridge Popular love of art may be carried too far The author of Charles Bour bon Constable of France tells lis that on the occasion of the sack of Rome the citizens refused to secure their safety by taking the advice of their captain Reuzp da Ceri and cutting the bridges Ponte Quattro Capi and Ponte Sisto The people declined on the ground that they were too beau tiful Appropriate Youngpop is going to have his baby christened Bill How strange Ob I dont know The youngster came on the first of the month Puck Life Iiife is not made up of great sacri fices or duties but of little things of which smiles and kindness and small obligations given habitually are what win and preserve the heart t - Married J T Freeburg of Denver and IIi j Flora Schaefer daughter of Mr and Mrs Henry Schaefer who live just west of town went to McCook Mon- day morning in M M Brees auto and were quietly married there by j County Judge Moore The3 loft on Tuesday morning for Denver where they will make their future home Mr Freeburg is in the eniplo of Burlington railway at that place Mr Freeburg is a graduate cf the bertson high school Culbertson Ban ner Application fpr License McCook Nebraska March 30 1911 Notice is hereby given that I have j filed Jn the office of the City Clerk 1W ing that a license to sell malt spirit- i uous and vinous liquors in the build- j ing situated on lot 15 block 27 117 Main Avenue in the First ward of the City of McCook Nebraska be granted me for the coming municipal year beginning May 1 1911 3-30-St DAN P CLOUSE BLUFFS AND PLAYS DEAD But Theres a Fatal Flaw In the Hog Nosed Snakes Acting When you find a hog nosed snake flattened out upon the soil in his anx iety to absorb all the sunshine that he can he immediately adopts a policy of bluff He first inflates his body by a deep draft of air Then he flattens his head and expands his neck to three times its proper width Next he strikes angrily toward the intruder and hisses with malignant fury The average pedestrian naturally retreats with a feeling of gratitude for the dauber sig nals so unmistakably imprinted by a kindly Providence upon the deadly members of the reptile race A good field naturalist will quietly advance his bare hand to the reptiles head because he knows that this snake can neither be induced to give a poi sonous bite nor a bite of any kind See ing that the observer cannot be in timidated the snake then opens his jaws and acts os if he had been in jured Convulsive spasms ripple down his spine He writhes and twists as if transplanted by the agonies of death and turning over on his back the last onvulsion dies away along the tail Now nothing in nature looks more dead than a snake lying with the ivory white of his belly plates turned upward to the sky and the hog nosed snake will simulate death so patiently that you may carry liim by the tail or hang his body on a fence and he will swing in the wind and give no sign of life for an hour or more But this clever acting has one fatal flaw If you place him on the ground with the belly downward he will twist over on his back again He has such a fixed idea that belly plates skyward is the correct pose for a serpents corpse that although supposed to be lifeless he will turn over on his back a dozen times if you as perseveringly persist in laying him on his crawling surface His zeal for the perfection of mimicry blinds him to the obvious truth that dead snakes stay where they are put Century Path TWO DUELS The Second One Was to Avenge the Victim of the First A certain English gentleman who was a regular frequenter of the green room of Drury Lane theater in the days of Lord Byrons committee and who always stood quietly on the hearth rug there with his back to the Are was in his usual place one night when a narrative was related by an other gentleman newly returned from the continent of a barrier duel that had taken place in Paris A young Englishman a mere boy had been despoiled in a gaming house in the Palais Royal had barged a certain gaming count with cheating him had gone out with the count had wasted his fire and had been slain by the count under the frightful circum stances of the counts walking up to him laying his hand on his heart say ing You are a brave fellow have you a mother and on- his replying in the affirmative remarking coolly I am sorry for her and blowing his victims brains out The gentleman on the hearth rug paused in taking a pinch of snuff to hear this story and observed with great placidity I am afraid I must kill that rascal A few nights elapsed during which the greenroom hearth rug was without him and then he reappeared precisely as before and only incidentally men tioned in the course of the evening Gentlemen I killed that rascal He had gone over to Paris on pur pose had tracked the count to the same gaming house had thrown a glass of wine in his face in the pres ence of all the company assembled there had told him that he had come to avenge his young compatriot and had done it by putting the count out of this world and coming back to the hearth nig as If nothing had happened Conquering a Critic William Simpson a British artist who accompanied the army during the Crimean war said that Lord Cardigan the commander examined his early sketches of Balaklava with a vacant stare curtly remarldng It is all wrong Still Simpson persevered and was rewarded in the end with the expression of Lord Cardigans highest admiration The real truth was Simpson adds in his simple way that in the last sketch I had taken greater care than in the first two to make his lordship conspicuous in the front of the bri gade THE McCOOK TRIBUNE rKfcJtMTMKgT Jul 4tA - raWtttn vJrfes - 7 rcSsSS5 yriglimM r W -- o rimm PLzm WCMT W M SS fS1 r i A J I LTA -aw KZgp wjwwiniMtt tfaAwfa M4VmfMNWM A so a Splendid Line of Trimmln I Hi THE SCRAPPY OSTRICH Hs Is Full of Treachery and Dearly Loves to Fight Those who manage ostrich farms de clare that inuh diplomacy is required in the handling of the ostrich which in more respects than one is a decidedly queer bird The ostri ii requires aside from other necessary qualifications a mas ters hand a strkt hand tempered by justice and mercy Not that the ostrich Is at all appreciative of kindness In deed he never becomes thoroughly domesticated say those who know him in captivity On the contrary the ostrich is haughtily- and stolidly irresponsive to kindness and so treacherous is he when full grown that even his daily attendants never approach him unless equipped with the necessary appli ances to bring him to terms when in an ugly or dangerous mood The ostrichs chief object in life seems to be to fight on every possible occasion Indeed a fight to him is the very spice of things The male ostrich is not without com mendable qualities however For in stance ho mates but once and forever Should he as often happens in the course of a domestic complication kick his mate to death he remains true and constant to her memory never seeking a successor In the ordinary phases of domesticity he is attentive and help ful He digs the whole in the ground that is to serve as a nest and during the process of incubation which con tinues for forty days he relieves the mother bird of her duties from early evening till late the next morning A curious habit of the male -ostrich is his constitutional At sunrise and just before twilight the male birds line up in single file and race around the inclosure at whirlwind speed until thoroughly limbered up Then sud denly arranging themselves in sets they execute a grotesque minuet with ludicrous gravity Harpers Weekly PORSONS FOIBLE The Drink He Got From Mrs Hopp nerc Private Bottle In Samuel Rogers and His Circle is this anecdote about Richard Porson the famous classical scholar and pro fessor of Greek When Hoppner the painter was re siding in a cottage a few miles from London Porson one afternoon sud denly arrived there Hoppner said that he could not offer him dinner as Mrs H had gone to town and had carried with her the key of the closet which contained the wine Porson declared however that he would be content with a mutton chop and beer from the next alehouse and accord ingly stayed to dine During the evening Porson said I am quite certain that Mrs Hoppner keeps some nice bottle for her private drinking in her own bedroom so pray try if you can lay your hands on it His host assured him that Mrs H had no such secret stores but Porson in sisting that a search should be made a bottle was at last discovered in the ladys apartment to the surprise of Hoppner and the joy of Porson who soon finished its contents pronouncing it to be the best gin he had tasted for a long time Next day Hoppner somewhat out of temper informed his wife that Porson had drunk every drop of her concealed dram Drunk every drop of it cried she Heaven above it was spirits of wine for the lamp The Way He Took It Kindly Landlady to the new board er How did you find your bed Mr InlateV Mr Inlate taken aback Oh dash it maam I was not as bad as that London Tit Bits Nothing Lost I hear she doesnt like me with a mustache Going to shave it off I spose Oh no She never liked me Kan sas City Journal TOOK HIS FATHERS PLACE The Night Edwin Booth First Ap peared as Richard III Between the ages of fifteen and eighteen Edwin Booth was almost con stantly the intimate companion of his father Junius Brutus Booth the elder That fathers eccentricities were such as to tax even the devotion of such a son but Edwins affectionate care never failed He used to beguile the tragedians time following his arduous performances by playing the violin or singing negro ballads accompanying himself on the banjo Many times he attended his father on long walks be tween midnight and morning In ISol on a certain night the father was booked to appear as Richard III at the National theater New York An hour before the time for the curtain to rise he chose to lock himself in a closet at his hotel and refused every persuasion his son could offer to keep his engagement In despair Edwin rushed to the the ater to explain his fathers absence The house was already filled The manager was distracted and in his excited questioning of the boy acci dentally learned that the tragedian had flippantly told Edwin to go and act Richard himself Well take him at his word said the manager And the frightened boy was hastened to the stage and helped into his fathers Gtoster costume several sizes too big for him Members ef the company gave helpful encouragement The play opened without an explana tion to the itliewe When Edwin made his ontraneo for oiiiJrstlil oquy tiie substitution -- recognized hut xo was the liov for Edwin had several t red in lesser parts noably r I In the same pbv in i made his very first aiiir e The audience was kindly frt a time then ittvsed and in v enthu siastic for Edwi j BMith altli uiih only eighteen years of age played Hi hard worthily revealing many flashes of that brilliant genius that afterward made him a star of much greater emi nence than his father had ever achiev ed On the strength of this success Edwin Booth was soon engaged by the manager of a Baltimore stock com pany to play any part assigned to him at the enticing salary of G per week Small as that pay was Edwin Booth later on in the far west experienced deprivation that would have been im measurably relieved by an even small er income Kansas City Star Mark Twains Sealskin Coat At the time of our first meeting which must have been well toward the winter Clemens was wearing a seal skin coat with the fur out in the satisfaction of a caprice or the love of strong- effect which he was apt to indulge through life With his crest of dense red hair and the wide sweep of his flaming mustache Clemens was not discordantly clothed in that seal skin coat which afterward in spite of his own warmth in it sent the cold chills through me when I once accom panied it down Broadway and shared the immense publicity It won him W D Howells in My Mark Twain Serious Acting Author I see you gave Blinks an important part in this play I thought you were not good friends Manager Thats all right He gets mobbed in the last act by a bunch of supers But thats all stage play Not this time I have selected these supers from among his creditors Life That The Trouble chap really has a lot o brains I know it replied Farmer Corn tossel But the trouble is that he keeps usln em to think np new ways to act foolish Washington Star Pot Valiant Mrs Lushman Arent you ashamed to come home in this condition Lush man Shamed Womn r aint even fraid Boston Transcript MOVEMENTS OF THE PEOPLE Mrs Charles Meyers of Alliance is visiting McCook relatives Miss Florence Jacobs is visiting her sister in Culbertson this week loe Dieringer Jr of Harvard was in the city end of week on business A Galusha arrived home Tuesday night from a week spent in Lincoln on business Tlfll x- i - win u rsien tne sale expert was m the city close of last week meet ing oldtime friends J C Moore county judge was in Lincoln closing days of last week observing- legislation and- legislators Clarence Rozell arrived last Friday night from Chicago to remain at home some time on business matters C W Meeker postmaster at Imper ial was in town Friday last looking after matters political and otherwise Bert Sutton arrived in the city close of last week and was a guest ol his cousin H P Sutton the jeweler Miss Edith Waite came home last Saturday on No 1 from Doane col lege at Crete on a visit to the homo folks Miss May Haddell who has been a guest of Miss Gertrude Milligan de parted on last Thursday evening for her home George Henderson formerly of our city son of J M Henderson was down from Haigler Nebraska Friday on business Mrs M C Scott who has bean spending the winter with a daughter in Boulder Montana arrived home last Friday R J Branscom departed end of week for Alberta Utah where he expects to remain for a while at least and possibly made his future home Mrs P E Reeder departed last Sat urday evening on No 14 for her home In Kansas City Mo after a short visit here with her mother Mrs Amanda Berry F S Wilcox has written his broth er Justin of our city that he has sold his residence in Denver and will in a few days return to McCook to live Heres welcome to them Miss Mattie Daugherty entered up on her dtuies as teacher in the third grade west Monday morning She had just finished a term in a country school in this county in this vicinity Saying the Right Thing I dont seem to be able to say the right thing to women a bashful young man confided to us the other day and thats why I dont shine in society Ill tell you an instance of it Not long ago I met a woman I hadnt seen for years and I could see that she was trying to keep young so I thought Id say a graceful thing to her You carry your age remarkably well says I Well the moment I said it I could see that I was in wrong She was looking chilly and getting red so I said Dont mind my little jokes I nev er mean what I say As a matter of fact you dont carry your age a bit well And then she killed me with a haughty look and sailed away without saying goodby Say how should I hiivojnnikJt3 Dufferins Warning Dream There are many stories on record of the warning dream The late Lord Dufferin when in Paris dreamed that he was in a hearse being conveyed to a cemetery A few days later as he was about to enter a hotel lift he was startled to observe that the attendant was the living reproduction of the driver of the hearse in his dream He stepped back and the lift went up without him Before it had reached the top of the building some breakage took place in the mechanism and the lift crashed down to the bottom every one in it being killed PAGE 5 E ARE showing mighty good values in Ladies Waists Skirts Suits and Coats Come Look If you prefer to make XJ Ngfeg J S nckCs s iPiwf m a O own garments we want you to see what we Suave in cotton wool and silk fabrics New Goods inn ji j u j i ii a m - I Hag ILJUIH gs Mr and Mrs D B Boyle came down from their Colorado farm near Vernon last Friday and are visiting relatives and friends and transacting some business affairs this week to d part for the west again tomorrow Mr and Mrs Cornelius Ryan of Mo Cook visited relatives here the first of the week Mr and Mrs John Colling returned to McCook Tuesday after visiting the latters sister Mrs Albert Diederich Grafton Brevities Postmaster Lon Cone and brother and druggist Woodworth of McCook were over on the lakes near Champion last week hunting ducks They re port plenty of game and that the shooting is good Imperial Republi can FOR SALE FOR RENT ETC FOR RENT Dwelling house Phone cedar 983 or 25 tf LOST Old fashioned collar pin b tween Gil 1st street East and High school Mrs A C Wiehie FOR SALE Nearly new Schiller piano at a bargain if taken soon W A Middelton Phone red 275 FOR SALE S C Rhode Island Red eggs 350 per 100 Mrs G C Smith R 1 McCook Phone Ash Creek line FOR RENT Good seven room house barn and plenty of room In quire phone 200 Bryce Jones FOR RENT Nice outside rooms en suite or single in Electric Theatre building and over hardware store McCOOK HARDWARE CO- FOR RENT Two furnished rooms with heat and light Phone red 281 Call at 319 1st st west FOR RENT Four room cottage on 6th street good lawn and fruit trees Inquire of J S Miller phone black 376 Services Avill be held at the regu lar hours on Sunday at the ME church Rev Alfred Sturgeon will preach both morning and evening Be sure and hear him A R Scott together with a doz en or more others went down to Hast ings Sunday to join the Elks order Dr J O Bruce osteopath has re turned to the city and is again ready for business Office over Electric theatre WE SHALL BE GLAD TO ADVISE YOU as to the character of any proprie tary medicine you may wish to know about And our advice will not be influenced by a question of profit THE MEDICINE WE RECOMMEND you can rely on as being the beslj for you regardless of now mucli or little profit it yields us U Mill 111 hi nr Z rftfS IV A McMiPLEN Druggist