rtSVTSQr9SrttS SSQSV VS9 4 V FRANKLIN X T V pyvv S x Phonography is so simple as to be readily learned by any one of ordinary capacity and the public benefits to be derived fromiit are incalcu lable John Bright In the Bnn Pitman System of Phonography Reporting Style x WesSSE Xu S 81 Pleasure to be customer of the New Brick Meat Market They keep a full asssorment of all kinds of meats They treat you so well and so fairly deal with you so squarely that you want to come back Just try it once Phone 95 Main Avenue PAUL P ANTON WbSlSS Sown I3K592ZS2S1 ll iii i iw it mm hi iii ii have been worn by Forty Million Feet or more and have always given satisfaction That is why we recommend them A full line of the latest stjles always in stock mm For Convenience and Safety For particulars write Dr E O Valine PHONE 190 Office oyer Bee Hive WV szai TIE you should deposit your money in a good bank As for safety we have burglary and fire insur ance time lock burglar alarms bonded of ficers and regular examinations And our continued growth is evidence of the confidence reposed in us by the people of the community The First National Bank of McCook V FRANKLIN President A C EBERT Cashier W B WOLFE Vice President THE CITIZENS BAN OF MeCOOK Paid Up Capital 50000 DIRECTORS - W B WOLFE IBKHHEHREBBHHBHBiBKBBBBBHB9H9BSISBBB9infl3i9EBB vOOOOOC h A n k NEB X b jr Surplus 4000 X 3K A C EBERT OOOOOOOOdC TAYNERS horfliaod Schoo McCook Neb DENTIST EARLY CALIFORNIA SHIPS Hoiv Commerce Grew In Pioneer Day of the Golden State The first European vessel to enter the port of San Francisco of which 4 there is any record was the Eagle in lSlu commanded by Captain William H Davis She sailed from Boston via the Sandwich Islands and Alaska She carried an assortment of goods which j were a revelation to the natives and their garments of skins and hides were RiihnflfiitPfl h ir th ontrtr nf rfvtl7i - WUUW J -- w I tion Payments were made in hides J I tallow soap and flsh The Eagle then became engaged In the sea otter trade and was very successful as otters I were plentiful In San Francisco bay and all along the coast She made three trips netting about 25000 on ach trip This stimulated others and this discovery no doubt gave an Im petus to commerce which made this port known to the world Commerce in those days of manna was carried on in what might be term ed a free and easy manner On many articles the duty was 100 per cent which practically amounted to confiscation or made smuggling neces sary in self defense The Mexican of ficials generally opened the door Fre quently vessels were permitted to pass Monterey the port of entry going to Yerba Bucna and after selling as much of the cargo as possible to re turn to Monterey for entry and dis pose of the remainder The shippers were not sworn as to the value of the cargx They gave fic titious invoices and by this means would get off on the payment of 5000 on a 20000 cargo It became so customary to swindle the government as scarcely to excite comment except in cases where goods were concealed in false linings of the vessels and the government officials were outwitted URIC ACID IN THE SYSTEM A Medical Opinion on This Foe to Health and Life Haig holds that the man of average weight elaborates twelve grains of uric acid in twenty four hours and woe be tide him if he does not excrete the full amount with due celerity A little re tained uric acid will give rise to head ache lethargy and mental depression A greater retention will give rise to arthritis lumbago and sciatica The uric acid miser will end his days through bronchitis Brights disease apoplexy diabetes or cancer Man cannot avoid his fate and cease being a uric acid producer He can avoid to some degree swallowing the wretch ed stuff What he cannot avoid swal lowing he can with care excrete If man had been wise and had continued to live where he belongs near the equator and had fed on fruit and nuts all might have been well But having wandered from the tropics he must be wise or perish Here are the rules that one must follow to be healthy anj live long First swallow no uric acid and pass out each day regularly and punctually all that is formed in the body Second excretion of uric acid may be obtained by clothing warmly by avoiding exposure to cold In every way the morning cold tub is an espe cial abomination by eating freely of potatoes especially In cold weather and by avoiding fruits Bicarbonate of sodium night and morning for peo ple who live in a climate similar to Londons is a fine habit In addition to all this It Is also advisable to se cure the proper distribution of time between bodily and mental exertion and to dispense with dependence on tonics stimulants and bracing cli mates New York Medical Journal Water Thieves Water thieves are not unique Their prototypes existed at least as long ago as 1479 At that time a Londoner wrote This yere a wax chandler in Flete strete had bl craft perced a pipe of the condlt withlnne the grounde and so conveied the water into his selar wherefor he was jugid to ride thrugh the Citee with a condit upon his hedde There were other difficulties too A century later 1574 it is re corded that owing to a sudden shower of rain the water in the Dowgate chan nel had such a swift course that a lad minding to have leapt JiGr it was taken by the feet and borne down with the violence of that narrow stream till he came against a cart wheel that stood in the water gate before which time he was drowned and stark dead The Suns Corona Thus far we know the corona of the sun to be a sort of outer envelope so shielding us from the Intense solar light and heat that it may be said without exaggerating that the sun has never really been studied comprehen sively Within the corona is an ocean of gas 5000 miles deep stained a ruby red by the crimson blaze of hydrogen Flashes of flame leap from this ruddy mass often to a height of a hundred thousand miles and more In a Bad Way It was a New England parson who announced to his congregation one Sun day Youll be sorry to hear that the little church of Jonesville is once more tossed upon the waves as sheep with out a shepherd Boston Christian Register Done In Advance Artist I sold a picture yesterday Friend Ah What are you going to do with the money Artist Its already done with My landlady bought it for half the board bill I owed her A long slow friendship Is the best a long slow enmity the deadliest Merriam Having been poor Is no shame but being ashamed of it is Franklin Thirty Dollars Word I A poet and literary man of some ce your own price Well announce in the progrm My price interrupted Mr Gillespie will be G0 Isnt that a little steep Not at all everything considered The manager tried to beat him down to 50 but he was immovable and the bargain was finally closed at the first named figure Alpheus said Mrs Gillespie after the cailer had gone wasnt that more than you intended to charge him when he first spoke Yes he said its just twice as much But he Irritated me thirty dol lars worth by calling it progrm What Gave the Earth Its Motion You have often asked or had the question asked of you What gave the earth Its dally motion and how is the force of that motion kept up but have never been really satisfied with the an swer given or the reasons therefor which you were able to advance In ex planation The astronomers are not even agreed upon this question Some of them claim that the original Initial centrifugal force was directed in a line slightly to one side of the center of the globe which would of course cause the earth to rotate upon Its axis and by the law of Inertia of matter must continue to revolve at a uniform rate of speed This law of the Inertia of matter is to the effect that matter once set in motion must continue to move until arrested by some outside force Others claim that the motion Is a compound resultant of the motion of the earth In its orbit and the attraction of the sun How a Wound Heals If you have run a pin into 3our thumb or received a bayonet thrust precisely the same thing takes place A myriad of white corpuscles those tiny first aid cells the phagocites from the surrounding blood vessels and lym phatic glands at once come hurrying to the rescue They begin to clean up whatever wreck there has been made In the skin and muscular tissue They eagerly absorb into themselves or clus ter opposingly about all foreign mat ter that has been introduced into the wound Then they proceed to pile themselves tier upon tier around it like so many little sandbags about a broken bastion Later they gradually join together and solidify Into the lay er of new skin which appears beneath the sloughed off scab They are at once workmen and repairing material A E MacFarlane in McClures Why He Sees Double The reason that a man sees double who has gazed too long on the wine when It is red Is that the nerve centers are changed by the action of the alco hol There is a want of harmony In the action of the muscles which move the eyeballs Consequently instead of both eyes being focused simultaneously on an- object one eye- receives an impres sion independently of the other The two impressions are communicated to the brain and the object is therefore seen twice The inflamed condition and loss of energy in the brain centers from overdoses of alcohol also account for the staggering gait of an intoxicated man How Icelanders Tie Horses The Icelanders have a strange but effective plan for preventing horses straying away from any particular spot If two gentlemen happen to be riding without attendants and wish to leave their horses for any reason they tie the head of one horse to the tail of the former In this state it is utterly impossible for the horses to move on either backward or forward If dis posed to move at all it will be only in a circle and even then there must be mutual agreement to turn their heads the same way The Money Lenders There are many examples of Lord Palmerstons ready wit in Sir M E Grant Duffs book Notes From a Diary In a debate about tho Jews an orator rather bored the house by enumerating many of the things which the English owed to Hebrew Initiative Lord Palmerston In reply gave the dis cussion a sprlghtlier turn I quite agree with the honorable gentleman he remarked Many of us owe a great deal to the Jews Priests and Beards The beardless priest is only a matter of custom there being no edict upon the subject All of the popes from Adrian VI to Innocent XII and all the cardinals and other church clerics during the same period were bearded dignitaries Ignatius Loyola St Fran cis Xavler Francis de Sales Vincent de Paul and the Cardinals Bellarmlne and Richelieu all wore full beards An AtvI nl Finish Hen What makes you look so glum Rooster Ive just been chased out of the wood shed with a feather duster It got so close to me that I recognized the tails of three of my family De troit Free Press A Man of Ability Chollie Can you recognize ability when you see it Miss Ruth Miss Ruth looking around Certainly Where la any It cannot be too often repeated that It Is not helps but obstacles not fa cilities but difficulties that make men Matthews CARTS IN SCOTLAND lebrity was Visited In his study OHO The- Were a Canne of Wonder la morning by a manager of a lecture bu 1 e Eighteenth Centnry reau who said that he had called to In Scotland at the beginning of the ask the writer to take part in an eighteenth century produce was car tertalnment rled In sacks on horseback or on We want you to read selections Bledges or later in the century on from your own works Mr Gillespie tumbrels which were sledges on tum together with an original poem com- bllng wheels of solid wood with wood posed expressly for the occasion Name en axletrees all revolving together These machines were often so small that in a narrow passage the carter could lift them bodily for they held little more than a wheelbarrow They had wheels a foot and a half In diam eter made of three pieces of wood pinned together like a butter flrkin and which quickly wore out and be came utterly shapeless so that a load of COO pounds was enormous for the dwarfish animals to drag Yet even such vehicles were triumphs of civili zation when they came Into use when the century was young Carts are a later Invention still and when one in 1723 first carried Its tiny load of coals from East Kilbride to Cambuslaug crowds of people It Is reported went to see the wonderful machine They looked with surprise and returned with astonishment In many parts of the lowlands they were not In ordinary use even till 17G0 while In the northern districts sledges or creels on tlje backs of women were chiefly employed to the end of the cen tury The wretched condition of the roads was the chief cause of the re luctant adoption of carts In the driest weather the roads were unfit for carriages and in wet weather almost impassable even for horses deep In ruts of mire covered with stones winding up heights and down hills to avoid swamps and bogs It was this precarious state of the roads which obliged judges to ride on cir cuit and a practice began as a physic al necessity was retained as a dignified habit so that in 1744 Lord Dun re signed his judgeship because he was no longer able to ride on circuit Scottish Review LIFE IN ANCIENT GREECE No Itemizing Whatever of Grecian Domestic Architecture Of the domestic architecture of the Greeks nothing whatever remains writes Jean Schoepfer in the Archi tectural Record Magazine In ancient Greece private houses never had any architectural Interest A citizen of Athens or Sparta was too busy with state affairs to spend much time at home He wanted to be in the public place where he could find his friends and fellow citizens Moreover the climate allowed him to live in the open air during the greater part of the year It was on the agora that the citizens assembled in public meeting It was there from a rostrum that the orator3 harangued the crowd hence the need of a good voice and a clear enuncia tion hence too the famous pebbles of Demosthenes It was in the open air that Socrates and the sophists held their discussions alongside the Ilyssus under the plane trees or on a public place It was in the academy gardens that Plato patronized and in open air gymnasiums that the youths practiced their athletic games There was no raison detre for a domestic architec ture with such a people and in such a climate It is not necessary to have palatial administrative buildings for governing a people that live in the pub lic places Besides what significance would the term comfort which is so full of meaning to us twentieth cen tury westerns living in cold damp cli mates where fog wind and rain pre vail during half the year what sense we ask would this word have for the robust Greeks of the fifth century B C whose children Aristophanes pictures to us on their way to school barehead ed in spite of the falling snow and singing as they go Took the Ltist Chance An old Scotch gravedigger was re monstrated with one day at a funeral for making a serious overcharge for digging a grave Well ye see sir said the old man in explanation making a motion with his thumb toward the grave him and me had a bit o a tift twa or three years syne owre a braw watch I selt him an Ive never been able to get the money out o him yet Now says I to myself this is my last chance and Id better tak it Was It St Marie or Lazarnst As Jesus was being led captive from the garden back of Jerusalem one form followed the guard It was white in the moonlight and looked like an ap parition When the guard noticed the figure they sought to lay hands upon It when the figure cast off the cloth around Its form and escaped St Mark is the only historian who mentions this and some writers think St Mark was the figure Others think It was Lazarus Graphic The end of a novel compressed by the editor owing to lack of space Ot tokar took a small brandy then his hat his departure besides no notice of his pursuers meantime a revolver out of his pocket and lastly his own life Deutsche Leschalle The Thrown Im taking my riding lessons In strict privacy Why not In public So as to avoid the fierce white light that beats about the thrown Louis ville Courier Journal Breaking Her Word She Would you believe it When the bride came to the word obey in the wedding service she stuttered terribly He Well she might just as well break her word one time as another Yon kers Statesman F D BURGESS Plumber and Steam Fitter Iron Lead and Sewer Pipe Brass Goods Pumps an Boiler Trimmings Estimates Furnished Free Base ment of the Postoffice Building McCOOK NEBRASKA Mike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY and EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash New location just ncro9s street in P Walsh building McCook Why Bucksfaf Nebraska IS Best Cailfornii Oak Leather No 1 Trimmings First Class Workmen Look for trade mark BB ON ENDS of TRACE Ask Your Dealer 600D AND SKIM Dl3fcAitSj i cz urn tKin eancor and all pamrnl licu ins slm 1i eBes treated by tho mot cer tiin iiioMikIs JMolus Birtlimak nndtai iil lilomhies remov d by en i tricity Klood prison in nil stiics All private iudgm Callorudd Dlt AStiIl Sc ilist Skin Blood Ind Li oaMs 1215 O S reut Line In Nebraska IUIVATE IIOStlTlL - Coming DR CALDWELL Of Chicago PRACTICING Aleopafhy Homeopathy Electric and General Medicine will by request visit professionally McCOOK NEB OCT 2X At Palmer Hotel Hours l p m to o p m Returning- every four weeks Consult her while the opportunity is at hand DR CALDWELL limita her practice to the special treatment of diseases of tho eye ear nose throat lungs female diseases diseases of children and all chronic nervous and surgical diseases of a curable nature Early consump tion bronchitis bronchial catarrah chronic caiarra neaaacue constipation stomach and bowel troublesrhenmatismneuralgia sciatica pngnl 3 disease kidney dizziness nervousness indigestion obesity interrupted nutrition slow growth in children and all wastingdiseas esin adults deformities club feet curvature of the spine diseases of the brain paralysis epilepsy heart disease dropsy swelling of the limbs stricture open sores pain in the bones granular enlargements and all long standing diseases properly treated gmWmmWSmWs Mil BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES Pimples blotches eruptions liver spots fall ing of tho hair bad complexion eczema throat ulcers bone pains bladder troubles weak back burning urine passing urine too often The effects of constitutional sickness or the taking of too much injurious medicine receives search ing treatment prompt relief and a cure for life Diseases of women irregular menstruation falling of the womb bearing down pains fel male displacements lack of sexual tone Len- buiiuca aueruny or oarrenness consult Dr Caldwell and she will show them tho cause of their trouble and the wTay to become cured CANCER GOITER FISTULA PILES and enlarged glands treated with the subcutan eous injection method absolutely without pain and without the loss of a drop of blood is one of her own discoveries and 13 really tho most scientific and certainly sure method of this ad vanced age Dr Caldwell has practiced her profession m some or the largest hosnitaU throughout the country She haflately onel an office in Omaha Nebraska where she will spend a portion of each week treating her patients No many incurable cases accepted for treatment Consultation examination and ad vice one dollar to those interested DR ORA CALDWELL CO Omaha Nebraska Chicago Illinois Address all letters to 103 Bee Building Omaha y iP A i j JL r r k 1 - e 4 VI J I S