r - fe McCook Tribune F M KIMMELL Publisher MCOOK NEBRASKA Brief Telegrams The Northwestern Life Insurance company promises to revolutionize the insurance world by refusing to write any more deferred dividend poli cies A meeting of steamship agents was held at Colon to consider a fatal case 4t bubonic plague recently reported to have occurred at LaBoca near Pan ama Gorges Itodrigues the Paris banker has committed suicide It is stated that the financier lost heavily In the recent sharp decline in rentes The liabilities of his bank are given at 20000001 John P Wallace has been compelled to retire from his position as chief engineer for the Panama canal under pressure from the president and Sec retary Taft Announcement is made of a gift of 100000 by the University of Chicago toward the 1000000 endowment fund of the American Academy of Fine Arts in Rome Senator Mitchell of Oregon charged -with land frauds did not take the stand in his own behalf and defense did not take over an hour in present ing its testimony A charter was issued at Jefferson City Mo by the secretary of state for the Kansas City and Excelsior Springs Railroad company The capi tal stock is 850000 Memorial services for the late pre mier of Greece Theodore P Delyan nis who was assinated at Athens June 13 were held in Washington Sunday at the Greek Church of St Sophia Former President Alexander of the Equitable has made restitution of 25- 05322 representing certain amounts received by him in syndicate opera- tions referred to in Hendricks report A hostile demonstration took place Saturday night at the Russian con sulate at Genoa Italy There were cries of Down with the czar and windows were broken The police dis persed the mob The British house of commons has authorized the raising of a loan not exceeding 100000000 with the rev enues of India as security for the con struction extension and equipment of the railways of India The Cuban house of representatives passed the Rice bill by a vote of 24 to 10 The passage of this bill it is ex pected will open the Cuban market to American rice and encourage the culture of rice in Cuba The Pennsylvania board of pardons finally disposed of the case of Mrs Kate Edwards the Berks county wom an under sentence of death for the murder of her husband by refusing to grant her a commutation President Cabrera of Guatemala out of his personal funds has decided to establish a practical school of sci ences acts and agriculture under American professors The tuition will be given in the English language Big Frank McCoy the famous old time bank burglar and partner of the Jate Jimmy Hope of Manhattan ibank fame died at the Metropolitan hospital on Blackwells island New York of a complication of diseases Under the terrible charge of having killed and eaten many children whom they had stolen twenty Gypsies have been arrested neare Jaszbereny Hun gary The leader of the band alone is alleged to have eaten eighteen child ren William Harmon died in California two years ago leaving a large estate Only one relative is said to be living John Beckett is his name and he is supposed to reside somewhere in Missouri So far he has not been found James S Keerl a prominent civil -engineer of Helena Mont who was convicted of manslaughter for killing Tom Crystal a bartender in Helena three years ago was sentenced to the penitentiary for ten years by Judge Leslie The duchess of Norfolk gave birth to a daughter in London This is an interesting event in the light of the succession to the premier dukedom of the kingdom to which Lord Edmund Talbot brother of the duke is still heir presumptive Assessment returns complete from eighty eight counties show the total realty and personal valuation this year is but 6094679 less than last year in those counties The total in the eighty eight last year was 489013536 and this year 482918852 W W Karr the former disbursing officer of the Smithsonian Institution charged with the embezzlement of 46000 was arraigned in the police court at Washington He pleaded not guilty waived preliminary examina tion and was released on 15000 bail All laws of the late Nebraska legis lature without the emergency clause became effective July 1 Harriman of the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific railroad systems and George S Baker have been elected to the executixe committee of the Erie Railroad company Red flag ofrevolt has been hoisted in many cities in Russia and situation is regarded with grave concern John F Wallace chief engineer of the Panama canal and a member of the commission has resigned both of these positions to accept a 60000 office with a New York corporation ifiSSSSESSSE 1 THE NEWS IN NEBRASKA HEW NEBRASKA LAWS EFFECTIVE JULY 1 July 1 all the laws enacted by the late legislature which did not carry the emergency clause will go into effect Among the many enacted not heretofore In force are these One new law protects imported pheasants and partridges Another prohibits changes In school sites without previous notice County treasurers are given more power In the collection of personal taxes Automobile owners must register at the state house and each machine must pay an annual tax of 1 Members of the Lincoln school board are to be elected every two years A new law is on the books regard ing the giving and taking of bribes Rights-of-way are granted over state lands to irigation ditches The drainage ditches cannot be built to water courses Cigarettes cannot be made sold or given away Business combinations cannot be made in restraint of trade and the giving of rebates is made illegal This state law is framed on the lines of the national anti trust law Among the other new statutes are the following For the election of register of deeds on the even year every four years For the election of county commis sioners on the even year for terms of four years County supervisors shall be chosen on the even year and every four years H R 318 is for the simi lar election of county assessors A bill to provide for the registra tion of the vital statistics A state registrar is created to be under the jurisdiction of the State Medical board In cities the health authorities must report deaths and births under takers and physicians furnishing daily reports In the rural districts local registrars are appointed A bill regulating the practice of dentistry and providing for a state ex amining board for dentists A bill to permit cities of the second class and villages to own and onerate municipal electric lighting plants A bill extending the open season for prairie chickens to three months and making the open season for quail two weeks A bill regulating the issuing of bank charters and providing a 25 fee there for A bill authorizing guaranty bonds for saloons Granting the State university the right to condemn and purchase prop erty for university purposes A bill declaring void marriage be tween first cousins the wild animal bounty law A bill to permit counties to aid county agricultural societies to the ex tent of 3 cents per capita on the vot ing population A bill requiring railroads to furnish one round trip of transportation with each car of horses cattle or mixed stock shipped and with every two cars of hogs A bill providing for the care and treatment of dipsomaniacs at the in sane hospitals of the state To make the crime of adultery a crime ounishable by a fine of 200 A bill fixing the minimum capital for state hanks at 10000 A bill fixing a minimum speed for stock trains of eighteen miles an hour or fifteen including stops A bill to prohibit the killing of red grey or fox squirrels A bill to prohibit base ball playing horse racing or other games of public sport on Memorial day Making the county survevnr of Douglas and Lancaster counties px oflio county engineers to examine and Inspect bridges highways and other public improvements To require the State Board of Equal ization to levy a 1 mill tax annually for the payment of a state debt Permitting cities and villages to im pose a poll tax of 2 or to require two davs work upon roads within five miles of the corporate limits A constitutional amendment to be submitted to a vote of the electors of the state providing for an elective railway commission consisting of three members the proposition to be submitted at the general election in 190G To Protect Their Land PLATTSMOUTH The land owners along the Iowa side of the Missouri river south of the Plattsmouth bridge are planning a line of action to pre vent further cutting away of their lands by the current They have under consideration the Kellner method which consists of weaving wings of wire and willows and ex tending them out from the banks The wings gather deposits from the water and eventually become solid The pro ject will be an expensive one To Locate Tournament NORFOLK The Nebraska fire fighters are looking around for a place to run their races in annual tourney this year and will if the busi ness interests of Norfolk desire it return to this city for the third suc cssive time A letter from W H Miller chairman of the board of con trol at York says that he wants to know if Norfolk desires the tourney The cost of the affair to the city would be about 1200 to 15000 cash Kearney Boy Now a Cadet KEARNEY Arthur Barney son of A W Barney of this city is now a full fledged cadet at Annapolis and upon graduating at the end of four years will be an officer in Uncle Sams navy His father received a telegram from him stating that he had passed the physical examination had been granted ten days leave of absence and would start for home at once The physical examination was the last one to be taken J J Kriss a Union Pacific brake man was arrested for violently push ing a man off the train and inflicting injuries that terminated fatally Passing of the Cigarette The days of the cigarette are num bered in Nebraska After July 1 it will be an offense to sell give away or manufacture the coffin nails Cigar stores and tobacco men must dispose of their wares before the law becomes effective and must not sell cigarette paper The law was passed by the last session of the legislature and may be enforced by fine and imprisonment It is stated that the dealers will en close the cigarettes with a tobacco leaf wrapper and sell the new article in defiance of the law OVER THE STATE The Elks have1 organized a lodge In North Platte Simon P Metz a pioneer of Cass county died last week Scotts Bluff Is counting on having electric light at an early day Mr and Mrs J W Cardiff of Fair bury last week celebrated their golden wedding The teachers institute of Holt county was unusually well attended this year The new 22000 Young Mens Chris tian association building of York was dedicated clear of debt Johnson county farmers are harvest ing their wheat and find the crop one of the best for a number of years The Nebraska Banking association will hold a meeting in Lincoln October 10 and 11 and the Lincoln bankers are making elaborate arrangements for the entertainment of their guests Thieves entered the slaughter house of H A Hansen at Elkhorn stealing a dressed beef and the hide The sup position is tnat it was taken to Val ley as wagon tracks were traced to that place G C Topping brakeman on freight train No 15 of the Chicago St Paul Minneapolis Omaha road while switching in the yards at Oakland was thrown fro mthe car and sustained a number of broken ribs Among the improvements of mo ment which McCook will see this sum mer will be the investment of about 15000 in betterments by the Nebraska Telephone company in the local ex change which means a quite complete overhauling A man was killed near Gannett about five miles east of North Platte His body was badly mangled and is unrecognizable He was probably a tramp riding on the rods on train No 2 and fell off His head arms and legs were cut off and his body almost en tirely dismembered John Foilen residing just over the county line in Nemaha county came to Nebraska City and filed complaint against his two brothers Henry and Nicholas Foilen charging them with assaulting and beating him until he was insensible He vfis so badly beat en that the services of a physician was needed Max Ploehn charged with the mur der of Alma Goos pleaded not guilty before Justice M Archer at Patts mouth He was bound over to the dis trict court The prisoner will be ar raigned before Judge Jessen of the district court in a few days at which time it is believed he will change his plea and receie sentence F E Lange a farmer living ten miles north of Tekamah died from in juries reecived in a runaway Mr Lange was driving a team of colts and in crossing a bridge the tugs came unhooked letting the tongue down throwing Mr Lange out of the wagon and rendering him unconscious from which he never recovered He was 78 years old and was the oldest settler of Burt county The farmers in Saunders county do not seem very anxious to donate prop erty to the Great Northern for a sta tion and elevator site near the Mc Lean farm The company wanted twenty acres of land and Mr McLean offered to donate ten acres the farm ers to pay for the other ten Several meetings were held to consider the matter and it was finally decided to call the deal off Deputy Labor Commissioner Bush is holding daily sessions at Labor Temple in Omaha to arrange for sending harvesters to the Kansas wheat fields In answer to his adver tising he is getting a good many ap plications and expects to send away several hundred men The railroads have granted a rate of 1 cent a mile for men going to the harvest fields and Mr Bush says there is a demand which will assure all who go of get ting work Denver Colo dispatch Coming to Denver with has savings 1000 By- ron Gage of Ord Neb has been miss ing more than a month His brother Harry came last night and asked the aid of the police in finding him The brother believes that Gage was swin dled out of his money and perhaps murdered Gage came here to go into business He wrote his relatives he had met a rich mining prospector and expected to make plenty of money Since then nothing has been heard of him Now that the biennial election law has been knocked out it means that the terms of office of these officials who would otherwise have held over until next year will expire and suc cessors must be elected In the state One supreme court judge two regents of state university In the county sheriff county treasurer county clerk county judge surveyor coroner su perintendent of instruction The offi ces of register of deeds county asses sor and county commissioners go over one year as contemplated by the law and are not effected by this decision Wayne the two and a half year old son of Walter C Smith was attacked and quite severely bitten by a strange dog Only the timely interference of Mrs Glenn saved the child from being mangled in a shocking manner The dog was shot by Marshal Ellis The executive committee of the Holdrege harvest jubilee and fair con sisting of twelve of the leading busi ness and professional men of the city met at the City National bank to or- ganize and make arrangements for the second annual fall festival It was finally decided to hold this years pub llee September 4 to 9 WARFARE AGAINST CONSUMPTION Why Fight It The Charity Organization Society of New York in a hand book on the pre vention of tuberculosis encourages the active campaign against this great plague and gives a concise summary of Why the battle should be waged Because more people -die of con sumption than from any other dis ease Each year 1095000 of the people of the worlddie of It In -the United States over 100000 die every year of consumption Every day 3000 and each minute of the day two persons fall before this enemy How many of your friends have died of it Because it is a disease which spreads from one person to another and any one may catch it Because it is chiefly caused by the filthy habit of spitting Because it is a disease which can be stopped and need not spread Because every one may and should help stop it Because already there is change for the better The number of deaths from consumption is growing less Twenty years ago there were many more deaths in proportion to the pop ulation than now If the tuberculosis death rate of 1S8G had been maintained the first nine months of 1902 four thousand more persons in Manhattan and the Bronx would have died of tuberculosis than actually died in these months Could anything be found more in spiring more plainly indicative of the need for extending the work against this disease Use of Tobacco by Minors The use of tobacco by children its causes and prevention is discussed in the Medical Summary Whilst most states have laws forbid ding the sale of tobacco to minors it is a notorious fact that such laws are universally ignored The parent teacher and physician are to blame The parent that he does not thor oughly train his child the teacher that he does not better supervise the conduct of his pupils the doctor in that he does not warn the parent who perhaps errs himself School boys may be seen any day on their way to school with books un der their arms and a chew of tobacco or a cigarette in their mouths Oc casionally little girls may be observed indulging in the seductive cigarette on the streets What will be the in evitable results The best that could be hoped would be numerous tobacco users but worse might be feared and very much worse imagined The evil is evident and the remedy is provided but law is useless till en forced on violation The dealer will not obey it till public sentiment de mands it the child does not choose to submit to it the parent is negligent the pupil is indifferent or silent and what is left for the childs salvation but action upon the part of the guard ians of humanty If we act we move thankless The parent will not appre ciate the dealer will be made an enemy and the children will hate us as they become men Pastor and priest lawyer and laymen will sneer if we attempt to enforce the laws Even but a few of our own body poli tic may be depended upon to act eith er by precept or concerted movement Few physicians are even good enough politicians to ask a councilman or rep resentative to vote upon a measure The effort against the evil is necessa rily for the time along the lines of individual effort To do good we must practice act and preach If our smoking friends will close their eyes while puffing pipe or cigar they will find they cannot tell when they have fire What foolishness to spend money and waste health to watch smoke curl Horace Greeley de fined a cigar as a roll of tobacco with fire at one end and a fool at the oth er and we think him more than half right If the use of tobacco by the adult be such idiocy what shall we say of its consumption by the minor Skin Training An enormous amount of time is de voted to the training of the hand the eye and the brain but the training of the skin is seldom thought of Never theless a well trained skin is more essential to health than almost any other kind of bodily culture The neg lect of the skin must be regarded as the foundation cause of a large num ber of chronic maladies It may al most be asserted that a man who will keep his skin in a thoroughly healthy condition may defy almost any known disease The experienced horseman knows very well the importance of at tending to the skin of the animal un der his care A horse which has a hide bound skin with the hair dry and dingy dull and lifeless in appearance shows by this fact that his whole body is in a state of disease A healthy skin is warm slightly moist smooth reddens quickly when rubbed or exposed to the action of hot or cold water is supple and elastic perspires readily under exercise or the application of heat and is free Trom pimples eruptions and discoloratlons To maintain this condition the skin must be subjected to daily bathing and grooming Horsemen rub and groom their charges daily Wild and domes tic animals left free in the field habit ually groom themselves by vigorous rubbing against trees or other objects Hunters are familiar with this fact and often secrete themselves near a rubbing tree as a means of getting an easy shot at their game Man of all animals neglects to groom himself and this is especially true of civilized man for as is well known the Savage and half civilized nations from time immemorial have practiced rubbing the body as a means of maintaining health How Habits Are Formed The formation of a physical habit Involves the education of a portion of the brain and when the habit has once been formed the act may be per formed almost Independently of the will or the higher brain This fact should impress us most profoundly with the importance of forming right habits since it is apparent that the getting rid of a wrong habit involves not only the formation of a right habit but the far more tedious and difficult work of undoing the evil work which has been done in the wrong education of the brain This same principle applies to the higher centers which are concerned only in mental acts as we shall see later It is indeed a most momentous thought that every act of our lives not only emanates from the brain but modi fies and changes the brain thus influ encing our characters What Know We What know we of the gnawing griefs That dim perchance our neighbors ways The fretting worry secret pain That may be his from day to day Then let no idle word of ours Sting to his heart with sore dismay What know we of temptations deep That hover round him like the night What bitter struggles may be his What evil influences blight Then be not hasty to condemn If he has strayed from paths of right We know so little of the hearts That everwhere around us beat So little of the inner lives Of those whom day by day we greet Oh it behooves us one and all Gently to deal with those we meet Gently to deal and gentlv to judge With that divinest charity That thinks no evil but would seek The good In every soul to see Measuring not by what it is But by that which It strives to be ASPARAGUS ITS PREPARATION AND COOKING Select fresh and tender asparagus Those versed in its cultivation as sert that it should be cut at least three times a week and barely to the ground It is is necessary to keep the bunches for some time before cook ing stand them tops uppermost in water about one half inch deep in the cellar or other cool place Clean each stalk separately by swashing back and forth in a pan of cold water till perfectly free from sand then break off all the tough portions cut in equal lengths tie in bunches of half a dozen or more with soft tape drop into boiling water barely sufficient to cover and simmer gently until per fectly tender If the asparagus is to be stewed break not cut into small pieces when it will not snap off quickly the stalk is too tough for use Asparagus must be taken from the water just as soon as tender while yet firm in appearance If boiled soft it loses its flavor and is uninviting It is a good1 plan when it is to be di vided before cooking if the stalks are not perfectly tender to boil the hard est portions first Asparagus cooked in bunches is well done if when held by the thick end in a horizontal posi tion between the fingers it only bends lightly and does not fall heav ily down The time required for boiling as paragus depends upon its freshness and age Fresh tender asparagus cooks in a very few minutes so quick ly indeed that the Roman emperor Augustus intimating that any affair must be concluded without delay was accustomed to say Let that be done quicker than you can cook aspara gus Fifteen or twenty minutes will suffice if young and fresh if old from thirty to fifty minutes will be re quired Stewed Asparagus Wash break into pieces simmer till tender in wa ter just Jto cover add sufficient rich milk part cream if convenient to make a gravy thicken slightly with flour a teaspoonful to a pint of milk add salt if desired boil together and serve Asparagus for Egg Sauce Prepare and cook asparagus as directed above When tender drain thoroughly and serve on a hot dish or on slices of nicely browned toast with an egg sauce prepared in the following man ner Heat a half cup of rich milk to boiling add salt and turn into it very slowly the well beaten yolk of an eS stirring constantly at the same time Let the whole just thick en and remove from the fire at once Asparagus With Cream Sauce Thoroughly wash tie in small bunch es and put into boiling water boil till perfectly tender Drain thorough ly untie the bunches place the stalks all the same way upon a hot plate with a dressing prepared as follows Let a pint of sweet cream about six hours old is best come to the boiling point and stir into it salt to taste and a level tablespoonful of flour rubbed smooth with a little cold cream Boil till the flour is perfectly cooked and then pass through a fine wire strainer Asparagus on Toast Cook the as paragus in bunches and when tender drain and place on slices of nicely browned toast moistened in the as paragus liquor Pour over all a cream sauce prepared as directed above Asparagus Points Cut off enough heads in two inch lengths to make three pints Put into boiling water just sufficient to cover When tender drain off the water add a half cup of cream and salt ii desired Serve at once Calumet JlgC Baking Powder The only high grade Baking Powder sold at a moderate price Com plies with the pure food laws of all states Trust Baking Potvdera sell for 45 or 50 cents per pound and may bo iden tified by this exorbitant price They arc a menace to public health as food prepared from them con tains large quantities of Eochelle salts a danger ous cathartic drug A Note to Novel Readers Well worth pondering by a gener ation of novel readers too apt to im bibe a code of ethics from irrespon sible purveyors of fiction are these words in Harpers Magazine from William Dean Howells himself the dean of American novelists If a novel flatters the passions and exalts them above the principles it is poisonous it may not kill but it will alone exclude an entire class of fiction of which eminent examples will occur to all Then the whole spawn of so called unmoral romances which imagine a world by the penal ties following swift or slow but in exorably sure in the real world are deadly poison these kill The novels that merely tickle our prejudices and lull our judgment or that coddle our sensibilities or pamper our gross ap petite for the marvelous are not so fatal but they are innutritious and clog the soul with unwholesome va pors of all kinds No doubt they too help to weaken the mental fibre and make their readers indifferent to plodding perseverance and plain in dustry and to matter-of-fact poverty and commonplace distress Leipsic Books and Music In the city of Leipsic the headquart ers of the German book publishing trade there are 2916 firms filling orders and its book publishers ex change has 3240 members Leipsic has not only one of the most cele brated universities in Germany but as a city is renowned for its music schools and concerts Many Ameri cans of both sexes are now studying at Leipsic Proved Beyond a Doubt Middlesex N Y July 3 Special That Rheumatism can be cured ha3 been proved beyond a doubt by Mrs Betsey A Clawson well known here That Mrs Clawson had Rheumatism and had it bad all her acquaintances know They also know she is now cured Dodds Kidney Pills did it Mrs Clawson tells the story of her cure as follows I was an invalid for most five year3 caused by Inflammatory Rheumatism helpless two thirds of the time The first year I could not do as much as a baby could do then I rallied a little bit and then a relapse Then a year ago the gout set in my hands and feet I suffered untold agony and In Au gust 1903 when my husband died I could not ride to the grave I only took two boxes of Dodd3 Kidney Pills and in two weeks I could wait on myself and saw my own wood I dug my own potatoes and gathered my own garden last fall Dodds Kld nely Pills cured me Rheumatism is caused by uric acid In the blood Dodds Kidney Pills put the Kidneys in shape to take all the uric acid out of the blood The Difference In England the youth is perhaps the exception who is not waiting for something to turn up in Scotland he is the exception who is not taught from the beginning that it is his busi ness to turn something up The Young Man I r Kennedys Favorite Remedy Bondout Y cured my serious kidney trouble I sained Mpounds aWrdellBuniiTlleKJ BotUestUO His Excuse Mr Hope Spriggins Jones says of poetry I dont write it for a liYin I just write it cause the rest o the world seems to be tacklin of it an I might as well have a whirl at it as anybody else Atlanta Constitution Prisoners of war are never spared in Morocco they are beheaded as are the wounded foes and their heads placed on the falls in cities as a warn ing example am WH grZlcTfltf Best Couch Syrup Twtei cSSa Vk m lime aoiq or aruETEists J L 1 m Wj fr4 4 3 t I I I