t I J V Y FILL THE TEMPORARY TEETH This Often Will Prevent Their Prema ture Loss and Consequent Irregu larity of Second Set It is most important that the teeth of children should be attended to reg ularly When the teeth begin to come into position they should be brushcl by the parents This will not only cleanse the teeth- and assist in pre venting decay but it also will form a habit which will be invaluable in after life Many older children ob ject to having their teeth examined and it is often impossible to do any thing with them By starting at an early age it will accustom the child to the different procedures necessary in the care of the mouth If you would save your child much suffering and the evils of a foul mouth you should have its teeth ex amined for cavities every three months from the time it is two years old If a cavity can be found when first starting it can be filled with little expense and no pain One thing that should not be for gotten is that there is a regular time when each baby tooth should be lost Those children who lose their baby teeth too soon through decay do not have as a rule as healthy permanent teeth as those children who have had their baby teeth attended to What is still worse the early loss of the baby teeth is apt to cause the second teeth to come down in the mouth irregu larly and often a disfigurement for life is the result of this early neglect By the filiin FOR EVERY CHILD A TOOTH Persian Proverb Illustrates the Care That Should Be Given the Pros pective Mothers Mouth As a usual thing there is more de cay in the teeth of women than of variously accounted men this has been ed for Some attribute it to the fact that it is a result of indoor life and lack of exercise others claim that it ic n rnnstitntinnal trouble In any each meal and before going to bed The physician should be consulted as to the proper food diet and the tonics that may bo necessary to build up the system The question is often asked er dental work should be done at tills time If the teeth are attended to at the start there is no harm provid better that temporary work be done and the permanent work be deferred until after childbirth By following these few simple di rections much pain and suffering will be avoided the mothers teeth will not be lost and best of all there will be an improvement in the teeth in the coming generations of man kind Copyright Western Newspaper Union FYFH of M1M State Will Get Much Favorable Notiee During Fall Months OMAHA IS IN THE LIMELIGHT Metropolis Will Entertain More Than 100000 Visitors Conventions Will Bring Men of National Prominence to Commonwealth The nations eyes will be turned to ward Nebraska during the fall months and the state will come in for more favorable notice during October No vember and December than ever be fore For no less than four national conventions will hold their annual meetings in Omaha the metropolis of the west Men of national reputation will at tend these conventions and the citi zens of the state will be privileged to hear the words of wisdom which will roll from the lips of the men who di rect he destinies of the United States Chief among the conventions is the Nebraska State Teachers association of the baby teeth thoj which will brng according to con- cnim is atso assiEieu m me iuumiw t i hlu aunuuus not less man of its food A decayed tooth is 000 teachers into Omaha for thro sensitive to bite on and the child in- days on the Sth nth and 10th of No stinctively will avoid chewing on itj vember Misc Edith Lathrop of Clay The result is if there is much decay i Center president of the association that the child will bolt its food with- is arranging a program which in itself out chewing and thus form a will be of such magnitude that every mental habit which may last through teacher will want to attend the ses life kon For the convenience and enter- Aucthcr tiling to remember is that tainment of the teachers the if ihcre rj danced places in the tcrth where- food ray lodge for any length of 1ire fucLi nceomposed mat ter becomes gcriri lden and in many cares invites disease No wonder that the child thus ne glected often displays a peevish l club of Omaha through its pub licity bureau is arranging for tho South Omaha Stock Yards ir th Union Panfip shops A bureau nf reseivation for iooms has also been opened by the Young Mens Christian association where teachers can secure ritablc disposition accompanied by a accommodations previous to the con lack of vitality and a tendency toward vention disease When the teachers visit Omaha the At about the age of six the child city will have on its best bib and will cut its first permanent teeth and tucker for Omaha would rather make these teeth should be watched for and good with Nobraskans than with any carefully examined from time to time other pople in the world to prevent decay These teeth are rihe Grain Dealers Notional associa callcd the first permanent molars and tion will hold its annual meeting on appear immediately behind the tern- Oct 9 10 and 11 More than six hun porary teeth Most parents consider dred grain men from all over the these teeth as baby teeth and allow United States will get together Ne them to decay They do not know that braska Iowa Kansas and South Ba these are some of the most important kcta will he represented to the limit teeth we have This tooth often starts Efforts are being made to get Govern to decay soon after it comes in but or Harmon of Ohio to deliver the an if filled -while the cavity is small it nual address The Omaha Gran ex proves a very durable and useful tooth change is arranging for a big banouet Copyright Western Newspaper Union and a theater party as the entertain ment leatures The American Prison associaton will bring more than 1500 visitors west for their first trip as an associa tion They will come on the 15th of October and remain for five days On Tuesday night Oct 17 George W Wickersham attorney general of the United States will deliver an address On Monday night Bishop George Beecher of Kearney will speak on Prison Reform in Nebraska while on Sunday Dr F S Loveland of To peka Kan will preach the annual it Viot Aanav iq i Sermon fj1 during the physiological I December the National Wool ly increased process of reproduction The Persians have a saying For every child a tooth and often it would appear that it might be more true if it read six teeth instead of one While it is true that the teeth sometimes suffer during this period yet much damage may be averted if the prospective mother will take the precaution to early seek the advice of her physician and dentist to cor rect this disturbance It was formerly supposed that this rapid decay was caused by a defi ciency of the lime salts in the blood at this time but now it is generally believed to be caused by acid eructa tions vomiting and regurgitations from a disordered stomach Teeth decay very rapidly where the saliva is abnormal and acid and this Is largely the condition of the saliva during this period A rigid examination of the teeth should be made and the teeth put in the best possible condition Just be j fore and as soon after this period as passible for Nature needs every bit of help that we can give her Where the decay has started underneath the old fillings they should be removed and new fillings inserted In order to correct the excessive acidity of her mouth the prospective mother should use an alkaline prep i aration and thus neutralize the acid The tooth brush should be used after Growers association will hold its an- nual meeting In connection with the convention it is proposed to hold a sheep show which will bring all the breeders from the east to Nebraska More than 2000 sheepmen will partic ipate in the meeting AH told more than 100000 people -will visit Omaha in the next three Months The land show the and the conventions are the mag nets whieli are turning all people to Kebraska ana Omaha Her Answer He I am going to make you a present of a bracelet for your birth day Which do you prefer silver or gold She is silent He Well which do you want She is silent still He Why dont you speak I ask you which do you prefer silver or gold Then he suddenly remembered that silence is golden Creating an Impression Is he really a great scientist I have my doubts replied Miss Caj enne I suspect he is one of the scientists who get their reputations by sitting down to a dinner table and saying chloride of sodium instead of salt Washington Star Her Choice believe theres good people in all denominations Mrs Lapsling said but as for myself I always go to one of the orchard ox churches Chicago Tribune A sharp tongue Is the only edged tool that grows keener with constant ed caution Is taken not to have too use Irving long or painful sittings Later it is A Cruet Stand Several villagers were discussing a departed sister who had been given to good deeds but was ratlier too fond of dispensing sharp spoken advice She Tvas an excellent woman said the deceased ladys pastor She was constantly in the homes of the poor and afflicted In fact she was the salt of the earth She was more than that remarked a villager She was the vinegar the and the mustard as well She Many a fellow who marries innastej -pepper has to hustle vWas a perfect cruet stand of virtues 9- rime WW WWvV V V I V VWVWV V V v V A Bullet From Antietam By LILA BRIERTON Copyright by American Press f ciation 19U tea biY h - V 4 Jr 1 1 n M VvYV Ep SsS I i VERY Memorial day since I can remember my Great aunt Margaret has spent in retirement- She does not leave her room and if any one enters she will be found shrouded in gloom When we -were little children we used to ask mother what made aunty so disconso late on Memorial day but she would frown on us and caution us not to say anything about it to aunty adding that it was a matter we were too young to understand When I grew to womanhood while hunting for some thiug in the old ladys bureau drawer that she had asked me to get her I opened a box of those little treasures that so many of us keep with infinite care and found in it a leaden bullet I asked her if it had a history She said it had and told me about it This is her story I was seventeen when the civil war broke out Seventeen is a very impres sionable age for a girl She is likely to meet some young man she has nev er seen before and open her heart to him at once At any rate I was of that kind Near our house was a field in which was encamped a regiment that was getting ready to march south to the war Oue day when I was out at the well a young soldier with stripes on his arm came over the fence and toward me He was grown up which meant a good deal to a girl who was still considered to be a mere chit I had never received any attentions from a grown man in my life The smile he gave me is with me to this day He had auburn curly hair and a Iicht brown mustache He ask ed in if I would let Mini take away ONCE HIS HAND TOUCHED JUNE some water in a tin pail he carried And when I said he might he gave me another smile and I smiled and some how felt a strange happiness lie was a long while getting ready to till his pail a long while filling it pausing from time to time while he was doing it to say something nice to me and a long while getting away after he had filled it I insisted on helping with the well bucket and once his hand touched mine It sent a thrill through me The regiment was delayed in moving for a long while The young soldier used to come every day for Avater and I used to watch for him that I might be out in the yard when he came lie said they were waiting for shoes and then for blankets and after that for ammunition I hoped they would nev er get any of these things for I dread ed the day when they would march away and my young soldier would go too But our meetings at the well house continued and one evening while we were standing there it grew dark I felt his arms stealing around my waist and then he kissed me That one kiss sealed my fate I could neither forget it nor the man who gave it to me When he left me he took my heart with him I lay awake so late that night think ing of the strange new happiness that had come to me that I awakened late In the morning I looked immediately jut for the camp as I had become ac customed to doing and my heart sank Not a whije tent was there The regi ment had gone Oh shall 1 ever for get the desolate feeling My soldier Lad gone I should never see him again lie would be killed But I had no doubt that if he returned we should be reunited I did not dream that he would forget me It is strange to me now how one man seen by a young girl but a few times can fix the status of her whole life Perhaps at that tender age it is more possible than when she is older And yet 1 know that most young girls have what they call a first love that Is succeeded by several others Mine has been the first and only love A year passed We used to hear of hospital straggled on to the groun and Hie strongest of them got op i icnts Whin an awful wait that w for me till 1 should see my lover dri sing himself across the interval In twoen us 1 would not let mysi think that his body was in a grav c a trench in the south lie did p ome the first day nor the suroud 1 was obliged to consider the possi bility of his having been killed On the third day I saw an ofScei coming from the camp With mv heart in my throat I went carried by ray trembling legs to meet him 7c came together at the well house But he was not my lover Did you he asked form the ac ouaintancc of a young sergeant who this regiment encamped here four years ago I tried to say yes but could not I knew this man brought a message from him and what that meant ne took a bullet from his pocket and handed it to me He was killed at Antietam more than two years ago with this bit of lead 0w h MsM 1 f PlS aL iyar w w S71M sT YYtV HE WAS KILLED WITH THIS HIT OF LEAD He told me if I ever got north again to bring it here to you and to say 10 you that his last thoughts were 01 you My aunt ceased to speak I went to her and put my arm about her eaivsvingly but did nor speak to hir Tln ii left her to herself This romance brief in the few mw niirs she had had with her lover wi old in years For the most ot a loiu life she had mourned the man v i had wooed and won her within a for night Rut now she tells me that with eni Memorial day the experience whieli determined the current of her life prows more like a drenra RAFTS OF GNAT EGGS Their Floating Illustrates a Curious Property of Water Many simple experiments show thai the surface of water possesses a prop erty which causes it to resist the pas sage of bodies either from above or be low This is true not only of soapy water but of the cleanest and purest water as well A sheet of fine gauze tends to float because Its weight be lug widely distributed each of the mi merous separate wires Is resisted by the surface film so that the water can not readily pass through the meshes Insects and plants utilize this fac r in many interesting ways Some water plants whose leaves float on the water have a very simple con trivance to keep the upper surfaces of the leaves dry This consists of a great number of minute hairs covering the tops of the leaves Water cannot penetrate among these hairs even when the leaves are forced down ue neath the surface The little rafts of eggs that gnats set affoat on the water are kept from sinking and from being upset through this same principle The tiny eggs have their points all upward and they are glued together so closely that while there is open space all around the point of each egg yet the width of these spaces is so slight that water cannot readily pass through You may again and again upset such an cs raft but it will right itself every time and the upper surface will remain dry The Mandrake Legend There is an old legend connected with the mandrake which states that when the plant is uprooted it utters a pierc ing cry The forked tubers bear a fantastic resemblance to the body and legs of a man and from this fancied likeness there grew the belief which was widespread during the middle ages Heine and Hugo Iloim had a prefoweived idea that Victor IIgo railed by him flu Frencti ot 11 whsun all i fale lnl a hump on his back Uc wss dolic -d when he was iod that one of FIus - hips protruded owing to uialformsMo Caustic Delighted Maram - Oo - profesjvi what d you tliini of little Arthr a violinist Professor I like the he puts the fiddle bnk into the Ohiencn News Happiness is the natural flower of dnty Phillips Brooks rue great battles the boys crying ex tras with a list of killed and wound- Revising It Downward ed certain bouses with the shutters Then Im to teli Hit- lirm the bill all closed and afterward the persons J collector said making a memorandum living in them appearing robed in m uIs notebook that youll probably black I would have seized the lists settle this account next week eagerly but 1 didnt know my lovers Well Id hardly put it that way name not even his recriment l omilrt I hesitatingly answered the other only hope that it would come back j encamp where it had encamped before and 1 would meet my dear love at the well And so it did When the war ended one day the regiment marched into town But how different from what it had been four years before Some 200 men most of them looking as If tteyjiad just been discharged from a it Prnlinhlv lo n nrnfftr ctrnnnr n nvil v nitj wivj0 Hutu Better make It possibly Chicago Tribune No Chance Mrs Jones Its queer that baby doesnt talk Shes almost two years old and hasnt spoken a word yet Mr Jones I know dear but do you ever give baby a chance iPllMin Krn -U T4 1 the Mayor and City Council of the City of McCook Red Willow County Nebraska to cake up and pay off the Out standing and Unpaid valid Bearing Bonds of Umi v iy 1 the Aggregate Amoun of sixty five Thousand Dollars Dated June 15 1908 desig nated Water Bonds By the Issue and Sale or issue anft Exchange Therefor of the Re funding Bonds of the City i Accordance with Chapter Eigh of the Session Laws of Ne braska 1899 In conformity with law and a esolution of the mayor and city council of the city of McCook Red Willow county Nebraska July adopted by the mayor and city council on the tenth day of October A D 1911 public notice is hereby given that the mayor and city council of said city seek to take up and pay off the valid outstanding and unpaid interest bearing bonds of the city in the aggregate amount of Sixty five thousand dollars 6500000 said bonds being numbers one to thirteen inclusive bearing dat the fifteenth day of June A D 1908 payable at the option of the city after five years and ab solutely due and payable on the fifteenth day of June A D 1928 and bearing interest at the rate of six per centum 6 per an num payable semi annually on the fifteenth day of December and the fifteenth day of June in each year at the fiscal agency of the state of Nebraska in the city of New York The said bonds so sought to be taken up and paid off were issued for the purpose of erecting construct ing and maintaining a system of waterworks for the citv of Mc- Cook and were authorized by two thirds of the iegii votes of against wilh day of April A D 1908 And public notice is hereby sued by the city of McCook and designated refunding bonds in the aggregate amount not to ex ceed Sixty five thousand dollars 6500000 to consist of Sixty five Go bonds in the denomina tion of one thousand dollars each payable in lawful money of the United States of America and bearing interest at the rate of si per centum 6 per annum from and after the first day of September A D 1911 payable semi annually on the first day of March and the first day of Sep tember in each year and evidene ed by coupons attached to said bonds said bonds to lie number ed in regular and consecutive or der commencing with number one of vrliich ten thousand dol lars 1000000 numbered one to ten inclusive shall be absolute ly due and payable on the first day of September A D 1916 twenty thousand dollars 20 00000 numbered eleven to thir ty inclusive shall be absolutely due and payable on the first day of September A D 1921 and th balance or thirty five thousand dollars 3500000 numbered thirty one to sixty five inclusive payable in the order of their number at the pleasure of the City at any time after the first day of September A D 1921 and absolutely due and payable on the first day of September A D 1931 said bonds- and the coupons thereto attached to be payable at the banking house of Kountze Brothers in the city of New York U S A being the designated state agency for the payment of bonds issued by Ne braska municipalities said bonds to bear date the first day of Sep tember A D 1191 executed as the law directs and as shall here after be prescribed by ordinance which ordinance shall provide fo the sale or exchange of said re funding bonds for the bonds to be taken up and paid off to wit j fJL said water bonds bearing date the fifteenth day of June A D 1908 in the aggregate amount o sixty five thousand dollars 65 00000 or such portion thereof as by lawful means may be taken up and paid off by the issue and sale or the issue and exchange therefor of the refunding bonds hereby contemplated And public notiee is hereby given that on or before Saturday the twenty eighth day of Octob er A D 1911 at the hour of six oclock p m of said day at the office of the City Clerk in the city of McCook any tax payer of such city may file objections to such proposed action If no objection or objections are filed as to the amount of said bonds as stated in thisnotice and if no objection or objections are filed against the validity of such bonds then and thereafter the authorities of the city of McCook will issue and sell or issue and exchange as the case may be the bonds contemplated by this not ice not to exceed the aggregate amount of sixty five thousang dollars 6500000 and not to bear a greater rate of interest than six per centum 6 per ac num and thereby take up and pay off the outstanding water bonds described in tins notice L C STOLL City Clerk Dated McCook Nebraska Oc tober 10 1911 First publication Oct 12 5ts Notice of Administratrixs Sale In the District Court of Red Willow County State of Nebras ka In the matter of the appliea tion of Nina IJarris Wado - - mmistratrix of the estate of Jam es B Wade deceased to sell reat estate Notiee is hereby given that in pursuance of an order of the 1 TTva i n n city of McCook east for and r - S8 the proposition at an I Z xtil aiuu Vil - iu vuiuuv u uhk mnfip nr eii iMn iua lor mux purpose in thn 7fl - n thp i Iiv of McCook on the the I sale IT VULU V xwx of the real estate here inafter described situated in givn that said bonds issued and ilHn0 I 7 - oraska to wit lot numbered a t sis outstanding aforesaid ii SiS ii i i - - 1lock in numbered crti i - i six in the or- o t uy -- iginal to n now city of McCook ott by means ot bonds to be is Lm i 1 bam reai esrate wm oe sold art public vendue to the highest bid der for cash at the front door of the court house in the city of Me Cook Red Willow county Ne braska on Wednesday the Sth day of November 1911 at the hour of one oclock in the after noon Dated this 7tlr day of October 1911 NINA ITARKIS WADE Administratrix of the Estate oF James B Wade deceased First publication Oct 16 6ts Fresh fruits at Magners Foleys Honey and Tar Compound Still retains its high place as the best household remedy for all coughs and colds either for children or for grown persons Prevents serious re sults from a cold Take only the genuine Foleys Honey and Tar Com pound and refuse substitutes A McMillen Lumber and Coal Thais All But we can meet your every need in these lines from our large and complete stocks in all grades Barnett Lumber o Phone 5 ATIVTTT l7lnTYYnHTreSi5 SVSf fffTYrVHTr tl V7 V Franklin Pres G H Watkins Vice Pres R A Green Cshr The Citizens National Bank of McCook Nebraska Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 25000 H V DIRECTORS V Franklin A McMillen R A Green G H Watkius Yernice Franklin -- ftcLJ L MfaWiAli - fitnV1 I l rtlh i fif tl kiHMiMfi M iSfei -