I - n I H in il II - liDDOveris W Soil Impoverished soil like impov erished blood needs a proper fertilizer A chemist by analyz ing the soil can tell you what fertilizer to use for different products If your blood is impoverished your doctor will tell you what you need to fertilize it and give it the rich red corpuscles that are lacking in it It may be you need a tonic but more likely you need a concentrated fat food and fat is the element lacking in your system There is no fat food that is so easily digested and assimi lated as Scotts Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil It will nourish and strengthen the body when milk and cream fail to do it Scotts Emulsion is always the same always palatable and always beneficial where the bodv is wasting from any cause either in children or adults Wc will send you a sample free J rpnn that this pic ture in the form of a hibrl is on the wrapper of every bottle of Kmul bioii yon buy 8G0TT BOWIE CHEMISTS 409 Pearl St Hew YorK 50c and 100 All Druggists Tribune Clubbing List For convenience of readers of The Teibune to have made arrangements with the following newspapers and periodicals whereby we can supply them in combination with The Teibone at the following very low prices with PUBLICATION PRICE TRIBUNE Detroit FreeJPress 1 00 1 50 Prairie Farmer 100 125 Chicago Intar Ocean 1 00 105 Cincinnati Enquire 100 150 Xew YorklTribune 100 125 Toledo Blade 11 00 125 Nebraska Farmer 1 00 1 65 Iowa Homestead 1 00 1 25 Lincoln Journal 1 00 1 25 New York World 1 00 1 65 St Louis Republic 1 00 1 75 Kansas City Star 25 120 Farm and Home 100 120 We are prepared to fill orders for any other papar published at reduced rates The Teibune McCook Nob CHICHESTERS ENGLISH Safe Always reliable Ladle ask Druggist foi CIIICIIENTKRN ENGLISH in Bed and GoId metallic boxes sealed with blue ribbon TTalce no other Itefuxc dangerous nubwtl imitation Buvof your Druggist or send 4c in stamps for Particular Texti xnoniala and Keller for I ndiex in letter by return Mall ioOOO Testimonials Sold by all Druggists CHICHESTER CHEMICAU CO 2100 2IadIon Square 1IHIiA SA JUentton this oaoer ikiIhBI The best of every thing in his line at the most reasonable p r i ces motto your is Flarshs He wants trade and hopes by merit to keep it D C MARSI The Butcher Phone 12 flSi4 FERQCIOUS FRIENDSHIP An Incident In the Life of the Tra gedian Mncrcaily Between Macready and my brother Charles existed a kind of ferocious friendship Macready whatever bo may have been In private life bad at the theater a simply horrible temper and he was In the habit of using at rehearsals and even In an undertone when acting the most abusive lan guagelanguage which my brother sometimes passed by with a smile but which he occasionally hotly resented lie did not mind Macready constantly addressing him as beast but he ob jected to having his eyes his limbs and his internal organs coupled with Invective terms Yet oddly enough the great tragedian with whom he was constantly quarreling had a grim respect and liking for him He knew him to be a gentleman and a scholar and one who was a competent judge of picturesque effect and an acute dra matic critic On one occasion Ma cready having to play Othello and my brother not being included in the cast the tragedian thus addressed him Beast I want you to go in front to night and give me afterward a full and candid opinion as to the merits of my acting Omit nothing Tell me how I played and how I looked I have an Idea that I shall surpass myself this evening Now the great actor used to go through a tremendous amount of realistic effort In the part of Othello and toward the close of the tragedy would get into such a disorganized physical condition that he was all per spiration and foaming at the mouth and presented a somewhat shocking spectacle My brother duly occupied a seat In the front row of the dress circle and narrowly watched the performance from beginning to end Then he went behind the scenes and repaired to Macreadys dressing room The artist was being disrobed by his dresser and was panting with excitement in an armchair Well beast what was It like My brother told him that he had de rived the highest gratification from the performance and he had never seen him play Othello more superbly He was magnificent in bis speech to the Venetian senate the jealousy scenes with Iago were splendid the murder of Desdemona was superb and he died j inimitably Macreadys face lighted up more and more as my brother answer ed his many queries Tis well beast he observed at last Tis well very well and now what was my appearance how did I look beast My brother cogitated for a moment and then with perfect candor replied Like a sweep sir G A Salas Recollections Unloaded on the Editor Soon after arriving in London Justin McCarthy obtained an introduction to an editor who had started what was then the novel feature of publishing short stories in newspapers Mr Mc Carthy wrote a story for him and sent it in A few days later he called at the office to learn its fate I hope you can see your way to ac cept it he said timidly Yes and sixty more like it replied the editor Nothing more was heard of Mr Mc Carthy for several months When he eventually put in an appearance at the office he had a large parcel with him What have you got there asked the editor seeing him untie the cord These are the sixty stories you asked me to write answered his vis itor The editor gasped for breath But I didnt ask you to write any thing like that number he said You expressed your willingness to accept sixty stories like the one I wrote on approval and here they are I merely took you at your word quoth the young Irishman The stories were not refused The Salamander In Andrews Anecdotes Ancient and Modern 17S9 one reads Should a glass house fire be kept up without ex tinction for a longer term than seven years there is no doubt but that sala mander would be generated in the cinders This probably accounts for the popular idea that a salamander lives in the fire a fallacy so far re moved from the truth that the curious lizard like beast so called cannot en dure even the heat of the sun but skulks away under stones to avoid it It will never lose Its reputation for fire eating though which lingers still in the heating utensil that is named after it Dickens and Thackeray I once missed meeting Dickens at Chatsworth He left the day of my arrival writes Leveson Gower in his memoirs Thackeray came that same afternoon and was anxious to hear about Dickens visit He wondered whether he had toadied the duke very much My impression Is that though professing to be friends these two great novelists did not care much for one another A Careful Wife Hubby desperately Give me your clothesline Im going to hang myself WIfey sweetly Oh George Im so sorry This clothesline Is so rotten it wont hold you Youll have to buy one dear Cleveland Leader Sad Result of Experiment Aunt Ann You think John no longer loves you New Wife sobbing I I know It auntie I p put on an ug ugly old hat this morning and he never no ticed the dif-dif-difference Chicago Tribune Most people think when they receive a favor that it is merely a sample and that if the goods suit they can come back for more THE OLD POE COTTAGE Reminder of Sad Scene In tbe Life of u Foct Many admirers of Edgar Allan Poe have made pilgrimages to the cottage in which the poet spent some of the most melancholy hours of a most mel ancholy life This cottage Is at Ford ham once a Dutch village and In Poea time quite a distance from the city of New York but now well within the limits of the Greater New York and a part of the borough of Bronx The cottage Is near the old KIngsbrldge road and Is not far from Bronx park where a famous zoological collection attracts thousands of visitors on pleas- WMMmWM THE POE COTTAGE AT FORDHAM ant Sunday afternoons It is but one story and a half in height and on the first floor are three rooms one of them a kitchen The second story is scarce ly more than an attic but in one of the small rooms that in the southwest corner the poets beautiful wife Vir ginia Clemm Poe wasted away with consumption and died at last in the midst of extreme privation She mar ried Poe when hardly more than a child and though ho was devoted to his young and frail partner her short life was full of hardships for the gen ius of Poe was not recognized then as it has been since and the rewards of his literary labors were small There is a story that she was wrapped up in her husbands overcoat in her last sick ness because the family did not have enough bedclothing to keep her warm Whether this is true or not it is certain that they were very poor and a neigh bor who laid Mrs Poes body out for burial has said that she and other women who lived near by furnished the burial clothes It was fn 1845 just before coming to live in this cottage that Poe wrote The Raven His wife died in 1847 and in the two following years while still living at Fordham Poe produced some of his best works but they were years of extreme mel ancholy and the poets frame of mind was reflected in the sad but beautiful Ulalume and Annabel Lee which he composed in the study of the Ford ham cottage or while pacing the little veranda in front and gazing at the stars WILLIAM E COREY Head of Steel Trust Whose Marital Affairs Have Attracted Notice William Ellis Corey the head of the gigantic steel trust whose marital troubles have recently attracted atten tion is one of the younger set in high finance and reached eminence in the business world at an age when many men are just starting out on the road to success He was born in 1S6G at Braddock Pa and obtained his first job at sixteen in the laboratory of the Edgar Thomson Steel works In his spare time he studied chemistry His work and ability soon attracted notice and he was sent to the order depart ment of the Homestead Steel works At twenty one he was appointed super intendent of tho plate mill and open WUiIiIAM E COREY hearth department and he was next promoted to the armor plate depart ment in which he Invented a new re forging process that revolutionized work of the kind From this time on his advancement was rapid He suc ceeded Charles M Schwab as general superintendent of the Homestead Steel works and subsequently succeeded him as president of the Carnegie Steel com pany Later on he succeeded Mr Schwab again In an Important post the presidency of the United States Steel corporation In this position he has drawn a salary of 75000 a year Rumors of his resignation from this post in consequence of his domestic troubles have been in circulation His wife is now In Nevada and is said to have Instituted divorce proceedings Ellen Terrys Scream Miss Ellen Terry is said to have achieved her first stage distinction by screaming In a play bearing the out landish title of Altar Geell she had to take a snake round her neck and scream and so realistic was her simu lated horror at the situation that the scream electrified the house I9jg4aumsmnrn 1 w A Sidrr of Alexandre Damns This story Is told of Alexandre Du mas It is well known that he could bot zrefusft a request at least not of len One day be gave a man a letter to one of his intimate friends In Brus sels The friend a wealthy merchant received him as though he had been Dumas own brother introduced him to his circle of acquaintances placed his stable at the mans disposal and did everything in his power to makg life pleasant for Dumas friend After the lapse of fourteen days tho man sudueuly disappeared and with him the best horse In the merchants stable Six months later the merchant visited Dumas and thanked him for the kind of people he recommended to his con sideration Dear friend he added yuar friend Is a shark He stole tha best horse In ray stable Astonished Dumas raised his hands toward heaven and cried What he stole from you tool laeepin and the Cosaaclfs The Turd cossack means robber and the name Cossacks was given by the Turks to a race in manners appear ance and language like the Russians but who are said not to be really akin to thun The Cossacks of Little Rus sia and the Don Cossacks are said to be the most unscrupulous robbers in the world They excel In horsemanship and form a large part of the Russian imperial cavalry Styled sometimes the spies of the czar they keep tho nihilists in greater check than any other power and number many more than a million men Mazeppa a Don Cossack the subject of Byrons poem when condemned to be bound upon a wild horse and borne away to his fate was carried toward the Ukraine on the borders of Poland and being res cued by Cossacks became their chief Violet For MonruliifC It was not by accident that violet was chosen by many nations as the ex clusive color for mourning and by ua also for half mourning Painters Buf fering from hysteria and neurasthenia will be inclined to cover their pictures uniformly with the color most In ac cordance with their condition of lassi tude and exhaustion Thus originate the violet pictures of Manet and his school which spring from no actually observable aspect of nature but from a subjective view due to conditions of the nerves When the entire surfaco of walls in salons and art exhibitions of the day appears veiled in uniform half mourning this predilection for vio let is simply an expression of the nerv ous debility of the painter Nordaus Degeneration A Broad Hint Sir Andrew Agnew of Lucknow a well known Scotch baronet was long pestered by an impudent sort of per son who insisted on being constantly underfoot Finally however he dropped off and Sir Andrew was ask ed how he got rid of him Oh said he I gave him a broad bint A broad bint repeated the in quirer I thought he was one of thoso who never could be induced to tako one By ma saul said Sir Andrew ho was obieeged to tak it For as the chiel wadua gang oot at the door I just threw him oot of the window Air Pressure At the level of the sea tbe pressure of the atmosphere on tho piston of an engine is about fifteen pounds to tho square inch but decreases at higher altitudes As this atmospheric pres sure must be overcome by the steam pressure before any work can be done it is evident that at the diminished air pressure of high altitudes more work can be obtained from a given pressure of steam than at the sea level or in other words an equally effective pres sure of steam can bo obtained with the expenditure of less fuel The dif ference however Is not great enough to be of any practical Importance Bounty For Scalps During the French Indian war of 1754 the French offered a bounty for British scalps In tho same year a bounty of 100 each was offered by the authorities of the several colonies In 1755 Massachusetts granted a bounty of 40 for every scalp of a male Indian over twelve years of ago and 20 each for the scalps of women and children In 17G4 John Penn grandson of Wil liam Penn and governor of Pennsyl vania offered a bounty of 150 for every Indian buck killed and scalped Tho Conditions Different Husband with newspaper When Im at home you are forever hammer ing at that piano or else your tongue Is running like a trip hammer It wasnt so before we were married Wife No It wasnt Before we were married you held my hands so I couldnt play and kept my lips so busy that I couldnt talk Too Much Nothlnff This cheese Is full of holes com plained the prospective purchaser Yes sir said the proprietor Thats right Havent you got one with the holes full of cheese Louisville Courier Journal Unconsciousness Shes the most unconscious girl I ever saw Well why shouldnt she be Shes pretty and knows it shes clever and knows it and shes good and knows it What has she to be conscious of Puck A cheerful manner makes an Import ant wireless connection with tbe heart of a prospective customer and trans mits an Irresistible call for business Success Magazine rS3F355reiJ2sgl8aa Mr anrf i i u jirc 7-v- KT lJl TatilnirAlNCKRPr Coimm hbvdq Vvrr Real Estate Transfers The following real estate filings have been made in the county clerks olfice since last Thursday evening T Weidman to A Atkinson wd to no qr soqrandseqrseqr 21-2-30 800 00 Ida M Dolan to J B Rozell wd to blk llIndianola 2500 00 J A Plasmcyre to F L Young wd to swqr 5-3-30 2C00 00 P Boyle to Minnlo Boyle wd to o hf nw qrand w hf no qr 20-3-29 3000 00 W S VanMetre to FKelloy wd to no qr andohfseqr 3000 00 A W Stevens to E D Currier wd to no qrlOandnw qr 29-4-29 C F Lehn to F L Young wd to no qr 1200 00 C C Burt to W A Davenport wd to w hf ne qr 7-1-27 700 CO F T Walker to II A Houtz wd to a hf 2-2-30 4000 00 J A Forman to F Iluntwork wd to o hf ne qr 23 and w hf nw qr 24-4-27 1800 CO F Huntwork to J C Tilton wd to o hf ne qr 23 and w hf nw qr 24-4-27 2400 CO P Blatt to W B Kendall wd to e hf nw qr andohfseqr 3-3-30 2C0O 00 H Winans to Jennio Gockley wd to lot 2 blk 23 McCook 1200 CO YV Doyle to J C Ball wd to pt of lot 13 14 and 15 blk 20 McCook 4C0 00 McCook Loan Trust Co to E Rishcl w t to lot 15 blk 16 McCook 1CC3 CO G Bullis g le gd to lot 12 blk25 McCook 714 70 A C Crabtree to F S Lofton sd to bw 550 00 J E Hathorn to L J Kito wd to lot 5 blk48 Bartley 57 50 Lincoln Land Co to J L Sargent wd to lota 10 and 12 blk 5 Danbury 0i5 f 3 Powell Nilsson to J Wicks deed to lots 3 and 4 blk 4 Marion Powell Nilsson to E I F Wicks deed to lots 1 and 2 blk 4 Marion 950 00 J F Throne et al to R Mooro wd to nw qr and w hf sw qr 25-4-30 2300 CO R Mooro to P T Mooro wd to nw qr and n hf sw qr 25 and s hf sw qr 24-4-30 1 CO United States to N W Wallin pat to lota 2 8 10 and 11 in 19-3-27 Nothing like knowing whats going on We keep you posted locally but The Weekly Inter Ocean gives the news of all the world By our special arrange ment you can secure both papers for one full year for the very low rate of 105 jg Reward tfVfM lite8 Be jjjKp Cored Backed up by over a third of a century of remarkable and uniform cures a record such as no other remedy for the diseases and weaknesses peculiar to women ever attained the proprietors of Dr Pierces Favorite Prescription now feel fully war ranted in offering- to pay 500 in legal money of the United States for any case of Leucorrhea Female Weakness Prolap sus or Falling of Womb which they can not cure All they ask is a fair and reason able trial of their means of cure I used four bottles of your Favorite Pre scription and one of Golden Medical Discov ery writes Mrs Elmer D Shearer of Mount hope Iancaster Co Pa and can say that I am cured of that dreaded disease uterine trouble Am in better health than ever before Every one who knows me is surprised to see me look so well In June I was so poor in health that at times I could not walk To day I am cured I tell everybody that Dr Pierces medicines cured me Free Dr Pierces Common Sense Med ical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only Send 31 one cent stamps for the cloth bound volume Address Worlds Dispensary Medical Asso ciation Proprietors Buffalo N Y and zmond pTn0 vs Tff ms of e Seas mmmm Only a limited number of Mens Boys and Youths Overcoats left to be sold at a great reduction DIAMOND THE WORKING MANS FRIEND Open evenings if- Sully Courtahlp While on a secret mission to Paris In 1583 Rosny had fallen In love with the daughter of the president St Mes mln The young lady was handsomo and kind but while paying her his ad dresses he heard of a Mile de Courte nay who was reported to be beautiful well born and wealthy besides Pru dence suggested that he should inaku her the Baroness de Rosny but he was already half committed to the other While he was pondering the subject he arrived one day at an Inn In Nogent and found to his dismay that by an unlucky chance both ladies were lodged in it Mile de St Mesmin in the left wing and Mile de Courtenay in tho right Both were ready to marry him and he was ready to marry one of them but could not decide which It wa3 a very awkward position for tho wavering lover and at first he thought of saving himself by instant flight While he hesitated Mile de St Mes mlns younger sister saw him and ex pressed her surprise that he had been half an hour In the house without vis iting them The decisive moment had evidently come Turn to the right whispered the friend who was with him He did so and Anne de Courte nay became his wife n C Macdowell ha Macmillans Magazine A Very Sensitive Hady A young lady endowed with the most sensitive nerves mentioned ono evening to a few friends assembled in bi drawing room that she had a hor ror of the rose The perfume of this flower said she gives me a severo headache and falntness The conver sation was interrupted by the visit of a fair friend who wore a rosejud in her headdress Our fair heroine turned pale directly tossed her arms and fell gracefully in a swoon upon the otto man What a strange nervous suscepti bility What a delicate and impres sionable organization cried the spec tators For mercys sake madam go away Dont you eee that you have caused this attack I replied the astonished lady Yes of course it is the perfume of the rosebud in your hair Really if It is so I will sacrifice the guilty flower but judge before you sentence The flower detached from the head dress was passed from hand to hand among the spectators but their solici tude soon gave way to a different emo tion The fatal rosebud was an arti ficial one London Leader A Versatile Parish Cleric The ancient parish clerk In EnglnJ had many functions Letters were not go common in those daj s as today and the clerk was the learned man of the community One of his functions was writing epitaphs but tins was not thr sum of his accomplishments as inay be seen from the advertisemc nt of John Hopkins clerk of Salisbury in the eighteenth century John Hopkins parish clerk and und r taker sells epitaphs of all sorts and prices Shaves neat and plays tho bas soon Teeth drawn and the Salisbury Journal read gratis every Sunday morn Jng at 8 A school for psalmody every Thursday evening when my son born blind will play on the fiddle Specimen epitaph on my wife My wife ten years not much to my ease Eut now she is dead in caelo quics Great variety to be seen within Tour humble servant JOHN HOPKINS Then He Got 3Ind Husband impatiently If the fool killer would strike this town he would find plenty of work to do Wife Is there such a person dear Husband Of course there Is Wife with anxiety Well I do hope John that you will be very careful Returned Thousrhtn Do thoughts that came to you In the long ago ever return asked the orig inator of silly questions Not unless I Inclose stamps an swered the literary party Chicago News