The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, May 30, 1911, TUESDAY EVENING EDITION., Image 4

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S M SUBSTITUTE
POWDE
Absolutely Pure
The only baking powder
made from Royal Grape
Graani of Tartar
WAIUMN0 LIME PHOSPHATE
Come and Settle
JH persons indebted to the estate
of S X Wilson for stallion service
are requested to call on the under
signed at once and make settlement
Give this your prompt attention
please as the estate must be set
tled up at the earliest possible date
M O McCLURE Administrator
Jieteivod en Account Tali
Hvz Cash Credtr slips etc
issr ai The Tribune office Per
1 a3f sne
HAPPY WOMEN
FSsnty of Them in McCook and Good
Reason for it
Wouldnt any wontwi e happy
After years of backache suffering
Days of misery nights of unrest
The distress of urinary troubles
She finds relief and cure
Xo reason why any McCook reader
Should suffer in the iace of evi
dence like tiiis
Mrs A M Wilson 204 E Second
SL McCook Neb says My back
inhered me for years and there was
s dull i e across my kidneys and
ins 1 he Tain in my back became
xovp I exerted myself and of
sen I 1 ai headaches and dizzy spells
H could i ci ttccp and there were
nan other JVgreeabJe sjrrotcms
s kiinsy comprint in evidence On
vr friends advise I finally procured
Doans Kidney Tills from McConnells
irug store ana I scon found them to
3e jast what I - tided This remedy
strength en e 3 m back and kidneys
and before log effscted a complete
cere
Statement given Jure 2G 1007
Re endorsement
On June 21 1310 Mrs Wilson
I
MISS BERTHA WELLS TROMBON
1ST
Whoopip cough is not dangerous
when the cough is kept loose and
expectoration easy by giving Cham
berlains Cough Remedy It has
been used in many epidemics of this
liscatD with perfect success For
ale bv ail dealers
said I am pleased to verify the
statement I gave in 1907 recommend
ing Doans Kidney Pills This rem
edy is a specific for kidney com
plaint
For sale by all dealers Price 50
cents Foster Milburn Co Buffalo
New York sole agents for the Unit
ed States i
Remember the name Doans and
take no other
Legal Notice
To all persons interested in the
estate of August Droll deceased
Notice is hereby given that Ed
varJ M Lol executor has filed i3
final account ard rerort cf his ad
ministration and a petition for final
settlement and disshargo as sih
and for the distribution and assign
ment of said estate to the porsorc
entitled thereto
It is ordered that the same be
heard in the county court room in
said county on the 10th day of Tun 3
1D11 at one oclcck p m
Witness my hand and the seal ol
sail Court this 22nd day of Ma
1011
J Seal J C MOORE j
j County Judge
First publication May 25 3ts j
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f All
hh jiiii3ft
ELEPH0NE TALKS
No 5
THE SLOW ANSWER
Your telephone bell rings it rings again You are busy
and do not answer The ope ator finally reports to the
party calling jou They do noi answer Note she never
says They are not there Then she disconnects you
Five seconds later just six seconds too late you answer
You get no reply You angriy exclaim My bell rang
Your delay caused either the loss of a customer or incon
vsnience to a friend You cannot afford either
At certain hours in the day everybody wants to talk at the
same time and telephone calls come quick and fast At such
times all we ask is for you tobe considerate remembering
that the Central on your line will answer you as quickly
as possible and will do all any operator can do to give you
quick and accurate service
Nebraska Telephone Company
CHAS W KELLEY McCook Manager
BULLARD LUMBER CO
SELLS
THE
BEST
Lumber and Coal
ttfr
BULLARD LUMBER CO
Phone No i
Deaths
t
f
T
Shining
By JAMES A EDCERTON
Copyright by American Press Associa
tion 191LJ
Its establishment In 1868
Memorial day has grown stead
ily in popular regard as the most
touching of our patriotic holi
days This year it has an added sig
nificance in that we are celebrating
the semicentennial of the beginning of
the great war in commemoration of
which the day was founded
The list of Union dead in 186J was
not a long one few big battles having
been fought Bull Run Balls Bluff
Big Bethel and Wilson Creek were
about the only engagements worthy of
note During the first year both sides
were feeling their way and preparing
for the campaigns of the future There
was only one Federal general lost but
he was a man of great promise Gen
eral Nathaniel Lyon There were six
Union colonels and several minor offi
cers among the years dead the two
most conspicuous being Colonel Elmer
E Ellsworth and Colonel Edward D
Baker Lincolns friend
The first to fall in point of time was
Colonel Ellsworth The three events
that aroused the north to fever pitch
in lSiil were the firing on Fort Sumter
the Baltimore inahsarie and Ellsworths
death This gallant wllii ur was only
twenty four at the time of his
3 t ln had orgnukrtl two rem
incuts ol uuivtw one in Clm ago and
one in New lurk and wi planning a
rioigUiiiutiuii uf the militia ur the
country lie had iKn participated 111
Mi Lincolns campaign tor the preii
dency and had accompanied the pi evi
dent elect to the capital n the call
lor troops on April l Ellsworth has
tened in New York and organred a
regiment of lJOO zouacs tiom the tire
department iu three week he had
marched his m legimeut thiough
Pennsylvania avenue and on May 2J
was ordered to Alexandria Va where
he aimed with his -command 011 the
morning ot the 24th Seeing a COu
lederate Hag tloatiug over the Marshall
House he entered the hotel and de
manded ot 1 lie proptietor to know
whose Hag it wjus Receiving an eva
sive answer he went to the roof with
two or his soldiers took the flag
down wrapped it about Ins body and
dc ended 1 lie ropnetor Jackson
ivmid him 111 a dark iisac ai
li t liisuorth dead heini killed in
1 urn n one of the soldieis The Mid
news made Ellsworth the iieio of 1
in New York state a reuiniciu
tit man Iroin each town
wis made iif in his honor
on June in was totighi really the
Hi si engagement of the war at least
the first where organized forces op
posed each other on anything like
equal terms Because of palpable
iilunders it proved an ill starred bat
tle for the Union side General Pierce
was in command and was sent out
from Fortress Monroe by command
of General Butler Two federal offi
cers lost their lives Lieutenant Colo
nel John T Greble and Major Theo
dore Wiuthrop
Colonel Greble was the first regular
army officer killed in the great con
flict He was twenty seven years old
was n West Point man and for four
years had been an assistant professor
of ethics at the Military academy lie
had also served in the artillery branch
of the service in Indian troubles In
lSliO he asked to be transferred to
Fortress Monroe and rendered efficient
service in preventing its seizure
Major Theodore Winthrop was a
graduate of Yale a traveler and nov
elist At one- time he was aid and
I My Soldier
Uncles Grave 1
By ROBERT DONNELL
Copyright by American Press
elation 1311
OT long ago 1 read that a mon
umunt had been raised on
Johnsons island at the mouth
of Saixlusky bay in Lake Erie
to the memory of the Confederate of
ficers who died there as prisoners of
war and were buried on the island
The information had personal interest
for me My uncle after whom I am
named lies buried there Forty years
after his death I visited the island to
search for his grave and I found It
Johnsons island lies three miles west
of Sandusky O From 1SG2 to 18G3
this little island about a mile wide by
a mile and a half long was used by
the Federal government as a prison
for Confederate officers
Born several years after my name
sake uncles death I had beard my
father tell frequently of his brothers
capture imprisonment and end My
father supposing that his brothers
grave was unmarked never visited the
island but I determined In boyhood
that if ever an opportunity offered I
should go there and try to locate the
grave of my uncle In the autumn of
1904 T was in Sandusky on business
To gain some Information about the
Island prison I visited a newspaper of
fice The editor received me cordially
I told him the object of my desire to
go to Johnsons Island
1 presume however I said that
search for my uncles grave tvIII be
fruitless
He took from a pigeonhole a small
Warks
First Year of the Civ
War
military secretary toGeneralBuller
When killed at Big Bethel while lead
ing a charge of his troops he was
thirty three years old Among his ef
fects were found two novels in
script which were published after his
death
Bull Run took the heaviest toll of
officers of any battle in 18G1 On the
Confederate side two brigadier gen
erals and other officers were on the
list The Union officers killed were
Colonel James Cameron of the Seventy-ninth
New York Colonel John S
Slocum of the Second Rhode Island
Major Sullivan Ballon of the same
regiment Captain Levi Tower of the
First Rhode Island and Captain Otis
H Tillinghast chief quartermaster of
General McDowells army Colonel
Cameron had served in the Mexican
war and had studied law in the office
of President James Buchanan Colo
nel Slocum had been a brevet captain
In the Mexican war promoted for gal
lant conduct at Contreras Major Bal
lot had been clerk and speaker of the
Rhode Island house of representatives
and judge advocate general of the
state militia Captain Tillinghast was
a West Point man and had served in
the Mexican war
General Nathaniel Lyon who was
killed at Wilson Creek Mo on A tiff
10 was prhans the man chiefly re
sponsible for koepiii MK ouri in the
Union He was a West Point gradu
ate born In Cnnpeftliu who led on
made a captain bv brevet if lie Mex
ienn w had served in ti Indian
troubles in California then in Karsa
during the disorder before the war
and at the time of hi dear was a
hriirndipr renera in command of flu
western depaitment Early in 111 In
tooJi Cam Jackson which chaicrert
rpppcts in St Louis Latr he defeat
ed the Confederates at Boonville and
Bus Spring Then the enemy receiv
ed great re enforcements and had fiv
to one against Lyon but nevertheless
he attacked them at Wilson Creek and
fought on until twice wounded and
fipally killed lie willed most of his
property to the government to aid th
Union cause It was generally pre-
1 dieted that had Lyon lived he would
have become one of the greatest Un
ion commanders
j Colonel Noah L Farnham succeeded
Colonel Ellsworth as head of the
aves lrevii usly he had been an oii
er o he Seventh New York Of
Ant 11 he aiose fiom a sickbed it
lead his troops In an action at
sas was fatally wounded
On Sept 10 Colonel John YV Iowt
of the Twelfth Ohio was killed at Car-
nifex Terry while clearing out the Ka
liawlia altv Colonel Lowe had been
a soldier in Hie Mexican war
Colonel Edward D Baker who fell
at Kails Bluff on Oct 21 was one o
the most romantic figures in America
1
history Born in England and left ar
orphan in Philadelphia atvi early ae
he made a I hint for himself nnu a
i
brother emigrated to Illinois and be
came one of the leading lawyers in
j the state A member of congress at
I the outbreak of the Mexican war he
I enlisted and before It wa over com
ma tided a brigade Gointr to the Pa
cific coast he was elected a Unifpd
States sen tor from Oregon but hi
high position did not prevent him frou
effering iis services at the outbreak
of the civil war While raukint onlj
as a colonel at Balls Bluff he reallj
commanded a brigade and had beer
nominated for brigadier general Colo
nel Baker was pprlmps the leading or
ator in the senate He was a devotee
friend of Abraham Lincoln and Intro
duced the president elect to deliver his
first inaugural address
pamphlet opened to a certain pijf
read i name my own then tiirpid t
a diagram on nuiitlicr page run he
finger along the paper and let it rest
on the same name bearing a number
There he said take this booklet
along for guidance Theres the grave
f I
AMuvOomES
ITT OWN NAME WAS ON THE STONE
of your uncle in the burial plot The
graves of several hundred of the of
ficers were marked a few years ago
a wartime diagram of the burial plot
having been discovered by which they
were located correctly In fact two
such diagrams were discovered and
compared The movement started -with
us northern people but the money was
raised in the south Each gn ve is
marked with a small marble ead
stone bearing the name rank an date
of death of the officer
A steam launch took me to the island
and 1 walked to the burial ground
Using the diagram supplied by the
Sandusky editor it was but a moment
before I stood with uncovered head at
a gravestone nearly in the middle of
thb Rttle cemetery
My oivn name was on the stone
Also there was carved briefly the mil
itary rank of my uncle the detach
ment to which he belonged and the
date of his death Commanding a Mis
sissippi battery during the terrible
siege of Port Hudson he had fallen
into the hands of the victorious Fed
erals
Though my sentiments have been al
ways for the northern cause as were
those of my father himself in wartime
brother divided against brother 1
withheld no homage from the gallant
Confederates whose mute pathetic lit
tle headstones surrounded me For
many miniftes I stood alone and silent
above the southern dead I recalled
the letter still sacredly preserved by
me which the commandant of the pris
on had written to my father announc
ing my uncles death He was a gal
lant Christian gentleman the com
mandant had written of his fallen foe
The pathos of war then and the
burrowed its way into my soul forever
Stooping I picked up a few acorns and
oak leaves from the grave of the man
whose name I bore Then I turned
away and walked down to the launch
WAJOT HMJf
JTiiT5rB
nmcRi
fey STACY EBCEIL
Rallie ol drum and the shril oi l
Where is there piujc the likr to this
March March Maich
7 AGGARD feet at the martial air
8 Quicken step to the rhythm there
x t Time the tyrant must stand aside
Heie are fighting men true and tried
Men who sneered in the painted iace
Oi Death and iought for a victors place
Men who slept to the fitful rune
Oi wai and dreamed to the cannons croon
Dreams ol home and the wives wan eyed
Or mothers brave If the dreamer sighed
Or moaned i sooth twas a dreamer s right
Day was day and the night was night
Codes of courage had they apart
Nor was there fear in the dreamers heart
Who there in the mud lay down to rest
And dream his dreams of the one loved best
March March March
Rattle ol drum and the shrill of fife
This is the day of the nations dead I
M jnh March lhrcti
Gray and gaum ith their weight of years
Then toK ot wiejths and their lolls ot tears
Se- th widow and children come
And maihii tree to the strumming drum
Their hau as gray as the suits of those
Who fought then fight to a bloody close
Come the nu n who have lived to tsll
The tales unloid by the men who fell
And Rags hii most on the breeze today
Wave alike to fhe blue and the gtay
March I March March I
t II V i I i it
I iic i in i t tiif Mtiotj
i ur i I i I riloi
Subscribe for the rntju
The McCook Tribute It is 100
the year in advance
BEGGS BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES and Purifies the Blood
fWiTTT yreggre
Your Neighbors Experience
How you may profit by it Take
Foley Kidney Pills Mrs E G
Whiting 360 Willow St Akron O
says For some time I had a very
serious case of kidney trouble and I
suffered with backaches and dizzy
headaches I had specks floating be
fore my eyes and I felt all tired out
and miserable I saw Foley Kidney
Pills advertised and got a bottle and
took them according to directions and
results showed almost at once The
pain and dizzy headaches left me my
eye sight became clear and today I
can say I am a well woman thanks
to Foley Kidney Pills A McMil
len
All grades of Oxford flour and
each sack guaranteed at the McCook
Flour and Feed Store
BEGGS BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES and Purifies the Blood
Liii Sanifariuin
I
Suipho Salina Springs
Located on onr own premiss sad u4
in the
Natural Mineral Water
Unsurpassed In the treatment of
Rheumatism
E jurt Stomacu Kidney and Llrev
Di ioases
Mi rtr Chrjfc Kiitrm
OR 0 V EVEJI TT tfgr Lincoln Rs
like Walsh
DEAI SB IS
POULTRY EGGS
IJ Rubber Copper and Brass
Highest Market Price Paid in Cash
stroetiu P W let or ni
Heating PlumbiDg
MMdletonRuby
Are prepared to fur
nish estimates on
short notice They
keep a complete line
of Bath Tubs La
vatories Sinks and
other plumbing mater
ial including a good
line of lawn hose and
sprinklers
Phone No 182
McCook Nebr
New Government Irrigated
Lands
Opened in the Big Horn Basin
THE RALSTON UNIT and other choice lands comprising 14000 acres
of government Shoshone Project within three miles of Powell Wyoming
will be opened to entry June 23d 1911
Come wih me on June 20th homeseekers date and let me help you
celect a valuable claim My party will arrive at Powell in time to make
your selections before the opening
This is the land for which so many settlers have been waiting and is a
part of the rich valley surrounding Powell and Ralston where over 400
farmers are already located You can see the bumper crops now grow
ling on these Government irrigated farms
YOU HOMESTEAD THE LAND and buy water rights from the Govern
ment at actual cost on the ten payment plan without interest The Gov
ernment Shoshone Dam insures permanent and ample water for all time
NEW FOLDER just from the press contains a map and plat of these
farms and pictures showing crops grown last year also the dam storage
lake and several farm scenes Send for it QUICK
D CLEM DEAVER
Immigration Agent
1004 Farnam Street - OMAHA NEB
rea2agcgAfe
tr1rIirwfriyipy ifrwr i ptw myrw n t v v v iV V v itft
V Franklin Pres G H WATKiNSVice Pres
E A Green Cshr
The Citizens National Bank
of McCook Nebraska
Paid Up Capital500Q0 Surplus 25000
DIBECTOKS
VvFranklin A McMillen E A Green
G H Watkius Vernice Franklin
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