The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, February 02, 1906, Image 9

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    Not Special
BUT
te Ifefe
ular
All the time every day from 730 a m to
8 oclock p m you will find
Our Prices the Lowest
and following are only a few of the many
bargains we are offering in DRY GOODS
new and up-to-date
52 inch all wool panama 85c a yard
36 inch all wool panama 50c a yard
36 inch all wool voile 5oc a ard
36 inch half wool panama 30c a yard
Mohairs in all colors 50c 6oc 75c and 1 a
yard
CfnT ClflnrVC in the Piece and in dress pat
llldy 3ulUllg5 terns 50c to 2 a yard
Wool Batistes silk Batistes and cotton Ba
tistes from 1 5c to 150 a yard 36 inch
SILKS in all colors for 85c a yard Elegant
and serviceable Sampson Silks 58c a yard
Suiting silks in checks and figures 50c and
1 a yard
Best table oil cloth 150 a yard
Best prints 5c a yard
36 inch percale 10c a yard
Our line of 10c and 15c French Ginghams is
now complete
GIVE US A CALL
WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY
He
Exclusive Dry Goods
New Walsh Block Phone 56 - McCook
INDIANOLA
Mrs Frank Fritsch is still very
sick
Tom
Harrison left Monday
evening for Alliance
Doctor Brown and wife drove
over from Bartley Sunday
Mr Streff has his new brick res
idence ready for the plasterers
A H Reynolds sold his farm
of eight acres recently for 1900
Mrs Frank Smith is enjoying
a visit by friends from a distance
G W Cramer has built an ad
dition to his home in the south
part of town
Doctor Hathorn and wife of
Bartley were in our town Sunday
for a short time
Mr and Mrs Andrews are enter
taining an uncle who arrived the
first of the week
Mrs George Hill of Cripple
Creek is visiting friends and rel
atives in Indianola
Charlie Beardslee is a guest in
the city this week He is recov
ering from his late illness
A part of young people from
McCook attended services at the
M E church Sunday evening
Mr and Mrs T W Counter
are the happy parents of a baby
boy born to them last Saturday
B S Cook who has been as
sisting J Ryan in his barber shop
left for his home in Chicago first
of the week
Mr Hauxwell of the Willow
has bought the Ridgely property
near the schoolhouse and will
move into it soon
The Shafer brothers of Super
ior have bought the Cramer res
taurant and took possession the
first of the month
Dr Duncan of McCook was
called to Indianola last Sunday
for consultation in the case of
Mrs Alonzo Miller
Mrs Dave McCollom and Miss
Maggie Vaunce were married at
tfrS Catholic parsonage Wednes
day morning They will make
their home in Indianola for the
present
Mrs W A McCool received
news a few days ago that her sister
living in Maywood was very sick
Dame Rumor reports Tom
Earl is married The bride is the
daughter of Frank Hill living
north of town
Mrs A H Reynolds and Miss
Edna who have been visiting in
Illinois this winter have returned
to their home in Indianola
Sunday was a lovely summer
like day and our streets were
thronged with people who were
out enjoying the beautiful
weather
C H Russell has bought the
Wadsworth building and will add
thereto 25x60 feet It will be of
iron and used as an implement
building
I M Beardslee came down
from McCook Wednesday morn
ing and enjoyed the day with
friends He returned to Mc
Cook on No 5
Henry C Whitmore com
menced hauling ice Thursday
night from the Willow where it
is harvested after night due to
such warm days
J L Sims editor of the Dan
bury News accompanied by ES
Byfield associate editor drove
over from Danbury Friday and
spent a part of the day in town
Alonzo Miller who went from
here last week to visit relatives
in Missouri was summoned home
on account of the serious illness
of his wife He arrived home
Sunday night
Tribune Clubbing List
For convenience of readers of The Teibune
we have made arrangements with the following
newspapors and periodicals whereby we can
supply them in combination with The Tribune
at the following very low prices with
TPBLICATION PRICE TRIBUNE
Detroit Free Pross SI 00 1 50
Prairie Farmer 100 125
Chicago Intsr Ocoan 1 00 1 05
Cincinnati Enquiro 100 150
New York Tribune 1 00 1 25
Toledo Blade 100 125
Nebraska Farmer 1 00 1 65
Iowa Homestead 1 CO 1 25
Lincoln Journal 1 00 1 25
Now York World 1 00 1 65
St Louis Republic 1 00 1 75
Kansas City Star 25 120
Farm and Home 1 00 1 20
Wo are prepared to fill orders for any other
paper published at reduced rates
The Tribune McCook Neb
BARTLEY
Mr Clyde Clements is quite
sick this week
Born Saturday p m a fine
daughter at the home of Henry
Butherus
The baby son of Mr and Mrs
Sam Clark is sick this week with
lung fever i
Mr Otis Farrer has his lunch
room opened now and is doing a
good business j
Mrs Iva Gammill and son took
dinner with Mr and Mrs W D j
Williams Sunday I
Mr Rae Hodkins and Miss
Grace Brown were the guests of j
Miss Nellie Rittenburg Sunday
Miss Bessie Enlow of Cam
bridge was in Bartley Sunday
visiting friends and consulting the
Dr
Mrs N A Kite has painted
and papered the interior of her
business house and painted the
front
Robert Fischer has moved his
barn on his lots back of the store
and is making a general clean up
of the premises
C McKnight fell
on
so he has Leen unable to work on
the section since
The cold storage men are short
on ice and anxiously hoping this
line weather will close soon and
zero weather take the place
Two families from Illinois
moved into Bartley Wednesday
Several others would move here
if we had houses for them to oc
cupy
Mrs Mann widow of Rev J
Mann was a visitor with Mr and
Mrs Dr Hathorn last week re
turning to Indianola Sunday
afternoon
Dr Vahue dentist of McCook
hasafinebusiness here every Tues
day Its quite an accommodation
to the people to have a good den
tist visit here p
Mrs
Oil Ij IN 0Y BAGPIPES
IT l
FOUND IN THE ANCIENT REED
OR SHEPHERDS PIPE
lu Early Tim en There Were Many
Different Kinds of Ilnspipcn In Uhc
In Europe The Highland Lonlniid
find Irish Varieties
According to the encyclopedia the bag
pipe Is a wind Instrument the fixed char
acteristic of which has always been
two or more reed pipes attached to and
sounded by a wind chest or bag which
bag lias in turn been supplied either by
the lungs of the performer or by a bel
lows The original instrument was pre
sumably the simple reed or shepherds
pipe whicli was Avell known to the
Trojans Egyptians Greeks and Ro
mans But the strain of blowing these
ancient pipes was so great that some
genius conceived the Idea of having a
reserve supply of wind In a bag attach
ed to the pipes and hence the bagpipe
The first real instrument Is believed to
have been a skin of a goat or kid with
two pipes through one of which the
bag was inflated the other emitting the
sound
In early times the bagpipe was com
mon in Great Britain and abroad At
one time there were five different kinds
known on the continent some inflated
by the mouth and others by bellows
while in the British isles three kinds
were known the great highland bag
pipe the lowland bagpipe of Scotland
which closely resembled the
a sharp brian and the Irish bagpipe
stone last week injuring his knee I J s ec nnv
I originally had but one drone a valved
tube leads from the mouth to an air
tight bag which has four other orifices
4liss In tirvn mirnifrli r lit 1 l tn
Dr and Mrs Brown enjoyed a 1
of Umo flxe1 long tubes termed drones
pleasant afternoon drive through j and another smaller to which is fitted
the country Sunday returning by the chanter The three are thrown on
tlio Hmw n Tr u the shoulder while the latter is held in
iLknirifiiiiiiiiiiirii 1
the hands All four pipes are filled
with reeds but of different kinds The
drones are tuned by means of sliders
1 or movable joints and this tuning or
I preparation for playing which general
ly occupies a few minutes of the pipers
time before he begins the tune proper
is heard with impatience by those not
accustomed to the instrument Indeed
it gave rise to the saying applied in
Scotland to those who waste time over
small matters You are longer in tun
ing your pipes than in playing your
tune
The Scottish lowland bagpipe like
DONT FAIL
to get the
BENEFIT
of the
BARGAINS
We are giving on all our goods
Small naval oranges a peck 6oc
Large naval oranges a peck 70c
California ham per pound 10c
Wide breakfast bacon per pound 15c
Narrow breakfast bacon per pound I2c
Diamond C mild cured ham per pound 15c
Three boxes oat meal crackers 25c
Three boxes butter thin crackers 25c
Three boxes Nabiscos 25c
Sixboxes Uneeda biscuits 25c
Box crackers per box per pound 6c
Nineteen pounds granulated sugar 1
the Northumbrian pipe was in two IB TT C T TO ftTOPKMRM
I J 3L
- -- -- - -- ---- -
I lorms one consisting or 1 smaner ana
milder toned edition of the highland in- j
strument and the other a miniature of i
this and having the same relation to it j
as the fife lias to a German band Its
great drawback from the point of view j
of the devotees of the highland bagpipe
is that it is unsuited to perforin what
they consider the perfection of pipe mu
sicthe pibroch These small pipes 1
clhVk nnrl rlancrhtr h vp were however gentler than the high-
WVl UU UlAVl fc w
moved from their farm in Fron
tier county into their new house
erected here They have rented
the farm and will hereafter reside
in town
Post master V F Miller was
taken seriously ill Friday night
Dr Hawthorn was called and an
all nights work gave him relief
He was able to be in the office
Tuesday
His honor Justice C E Mat
thews was quite busy Monday
with an attachment replevin suit
in which a watch three men and
a boy were mixed up The case
was finally continued indefinitely
The amount of business trans
acted in Bartley every week is a
surprise to the oldest settler
Stock grain and produce coming
to market Lumber coal and
merchandise going out keeps
things lively all the time
A team belonging to Will Sheets
of Indianola ran away Saturday
night One of them caught the
harness on a hitching post and
stopped the other ran on to the
railroad track and fell down and
was not found for some time
A band was organized here
Monday evening with 18 mem
bers Ray Hodgkins was chosen
president EE Shoemaker treas
urer Gordon Athey secretary and
Robert Fischer leader Mr
Fischer is well qualified as leader
and we anticipate Bartley will be
the home of a fine band before
the summer is over
Mr and Mrs John Graham of
Bethany Neb are guests o Dr
and Mrs Hawthorn Mr and
Mrs Graham were recently
united in marriage and are enjoy
ing their honeymoon in this pleas
ant part of Nebraska In com
pany with Dr and Mrs Hathorn
they drove to Indianola Sunday
and viewed the landscape oer
and returned to Bartley in the
evening
Corn Stubble Cats Throat
L T Davis a farmer living near
West Union W Va had his throat
cut by a corn stubble and almost bled
to death before asslstanca readied him
While hauling fodder he fell from his
wagon his throat striking the sharp
pointed stubble A tearing gash yraa
the result
land having the same tone but less
j sonorous It was to the strains of such
I a bagpipe that Chaucer tells us the corn-
pany of pilgrims left London and it is
the same instrument that is alluded to
in Shakespeare as the Lincolnshire bag
pipe
The Irish bagpipe is the instrument in
its most elaborate form and is supplied
with wind by a bellows The drones
are all fixed on one stock and have
keys which are played by the wrist of
the right hand The reeds are soft and
the tones very sweet and melodious
and there is a harmonious bass which
is very effective in the hands of a good
player The Irish instrument is fast
dying out
The bagpipe though at one time fair
ly common never obtained a firm hold
in England It lost favor and gradual
ly deteriorated until it is now practi
cally extinct The average English
man neither appreciates nor under
stands it A famous poet irreverently
once compared its notes to the shrill
screech of a lame goose caught in
corn wLile another heretic writer lik
ens its sound to a horrible noisy mad
Irishman or to the cries of the eter
nally tormented To the Irish people
it appeals more strongly They still
possess in a degree the feeling of at
tachment to the bagpipe which is so
general among Scotsmen sut it is
undoubtedly more closely associated
with Scotland both in the highlands
and lowlands than with any other
country the particular instrument in
use being the great highland bagpipe
which as already explained consists
of three drones including the big
drone which was added about the be
ginning of the last century It is this
type which has gradually superseded
the lowland pipe There is no doubt
that the bagpipe was in use In Scot
land from a very early period and it
is in Scotland that it has been brought
to the highest degree of perfection Its
music distinctly connects it with Scot
land as is clear in the pibroch the
strathspey the reel the march and
other popular melodies There are
proofs that the instrument was culti
vated in Scotland certainly in the
twelfth century and of its universal
popularity as early as the fifteenth cen
tury while in the seventeenth century
nearly every town in the highlands and
lowlands boasted of its piper London
Globe
Trnstlnjc to Appearances
A photographer is really among the
most trusting of men
How do you make that out
Doesnt he always take people at
their face value Baltimore Ameri
can
A Relief
Mother Bo you think it is a good
thing to spank a child Doctor Well
it often relieves the parent of a bad fit
of temper Detroit Free Press
A mothers tears are the same In all
languages
J A WllCuX
Say Mamma
Listen Quick
Why do you use those old
holey rusty pans kettles
wash pans etc when you
can buy 20c values in granite
ware for half price 10 cents
at the
Ideal 5 and 10c Store
Have you been destroyed by promises
of quacks swallowed pills and bottled
medicine without results except a dam-
aged stomach To those we offer Hcl
listers Rocky Mountain Tea 3o cents
L W McConnell
Somewhere in the world life is at
stake every minute of the day Right
at our own doors perhaps is going on a
struggle as grim and fierce as any fight
or flight on record You hear the hol
low tearing cough see the ooze of blood
which tells of the wounded lungs mark
the emaciated body and hectic cheek
and know a life is at stake
The use of Dr Pierces Golden Med-
ical Discovery has saved many a life in
just such a crisis It cures obstinate
deep seated coughs stops the hemor
rhage strengthens weak lungs and
restores the emaciated body to its nor
mal weight and strength
There is no alcohol in the Discov
ery and it is absolutely free from
opium cocaine and all other narcotics
I desire to send you this brief unsolicited
testimonial writes Rev Joseph H Fesperman
Barium Springs Iredell Co N C In 1898 one
of my daughters was suffering on account of a
severe cough hectic fever wasting of flesh and
other symptoms of diseased lungs I prompUy
gave her Dr Pierces Golden Medical Discovery
with gratifying success and she now enjoys
excellent health This experience caused rae
to recommend Dr Pierces medicines to my
neighbors who without exception used them
with favorable results
Dr Pierces Common Sense Medical
Adviser in paper covers is sent free on
receipt of 21 one cent stamps to pay
expense of mailing only or if cloth
bound volume is desired send 31 stamps
Address Dr R V Pierce Buffalo N Y
Of iMJ
l
Groceries at Almost Whole
sale Prices
in
Son
Beautiful feix Ieaf calendar will bo sent by us aiholotely frhk to eveut rtrok
men who may rhip I119 cattle henjs or sheep to market and who will write us
nubwuring the following questions
1 How many bend of stock have you
2 What kind of btock have you not including horses
When do you expect to market your stock
4 To what market will you likely ship
5 In what paper did you see this advertisemet
This calender will 13 ready for distribution in January It is an exceptionally beautiful
artistic and cootie production printed in severil colors reprsntintc fox hunting sceno i It
was made especially for cannot be obtained oleswhero and is worthy a place m the finest
noma Write us today giving this information and iusur getting this calender Address
CLAY ROAINSON CO
Livestock Commission iMerhants Stock Yaras Sta Kansas City Kans
also have our own ollicivs at Chicago South Omaha St Joseph
Denver Sioux Citj So t Paul East Buffalo
PUBLIC LIBRARY NOTES
In the February 1906 Worlds
Work is a very interesting article
by Mary Crawford Fraser Jap
an Since the War The thought
ful mood of the people after the
reaction from the frenzy of war
the new indifference to foreign
opinion a closer union of the so-
cial classes the
old religions the
justments and the working of war
charities
M G Cunnif has an article in
the same magazine The 101
Ranch the wonders of a big farm
an Oklahoma ranch of S000
acres where
good business
plowing with
cutting hay in
managing 300
streneth
of the
business read-
organization and
methods prevail
fortr mules and
five mile swaths
hands and 1000
Indian landlords a buffalo herd
living on the range how the
ranchmen gave the greatest of
Wild West shows
What Shall Haitis Future
Be by Eugene P Lyie Jr a
land of misery amid opulence
where childish negroes play at
dignity spill blood and do no
work the entering wedge of
American influencein a new rail
road
Frank Damrosch and a
Great School of Music by EX
Vallandingham The Great
Democrat among musical direct
ors who has spent an unselfish
life in developing a taste for mu
sic in America by training the
children in the schools and large
classes from among the
years of service culmin
ating in the endowment of ia
great school These may also he
found in the February Worlds
Work
Library hours Mornings from
1030 to 12 oclock Afternoons
from 130 to 600 Evenings
700 to 900 Sunday afternoon
from 2 to 5 oclock
Ida McCarl Librarian
Methusala was all right youtjefr
For a good old soulwas he
They say he would be living yet
Had he taken Eocky Mountain Tea
L W McConnell
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