The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, June 08, 1906, Image 4

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By F M KIMMELL
Xargest Circulation in Red Willow Co
-Subscription 1 a Year in Advance
R F D Service
The word has gone out from post
office circles that thosS having the nd
vantages of R F D service must evince
some interest in and appreciation of the
same or the service is liable to be drop
ped This service is costing Uncle Sam
almost 30000000 annually It is a
luxury and where rural districts fail to
show that they appreciate the service
where there is no growth in business
where a degree of carelessness exists in
the matter of good roads etc the ser
vice is likely to bo discontinued and
transferred to other localities There is
a constant and growing demand for the
servico all over the country and the
most deserving are most likely to
secure it
Sioux Tribe No 65 1 0 R M
Tho tribe met on Monday evening of
this week and named the following
officers for the coming term
Sachem Floyd Roberson
Senior Sagamore W L Cooper
Junior Sagamores J Steinman and
Berryman
A public installation of tho above
roamed officers will be given on Monday
July 2 A firo program is being ar
ranged for this occasion All will be
cordially welcomed at this public meet
ing Visiting Rednien aro always wel
come
The Writ Was Granted
An application for a writ of mandamus
to compel the village of Curtis to revoke
a saloon licence was heard by J udge
Orr in chambers last Saturday night
W S Morlan of McCook JA Williams
of Stockville and L H Latham of Cur-
itis were the lawyers applying for tl e
writ J Ij White of Curtis and Starr
tReeder of McCook opposed the granting
of the writ There were some pretty
boisterous developments in the case
-Judge Orr granted the writ however
Disastrous Fire at Bartley
Bartley had a disastrous fire early
Monday morning Dodd Dodds gen
eral stock and brick store and the G W
Jones building occupied by A J Craw
mer with a stock of general merchan
dise were all destroyed Dodd Dodd
lose 8000 on building and 50000 on
stock No insurance on stock 2000 on
building A J Crawmers loss on stock
0200 insured for 2100 G W Jones
building 1 200 insured for 600
Notice County Institute
The first two weeks of the McCook
Junior State Normal school June 11 to
22 inclusive will be the Institute weeks
for Red Willow Couuty The model
school under 31 issSch lees direction will
be conducted -during this time All who
expect to teach ia this county the com
ing year must attend since a state law
makes institute attendance compulsory
6 l 2ts FLQ2A B Quick
County Supt
Telephone tfaiice
Parties who are not now subscribers
vnho wish telephones please make ar
racgemeuts ht the office as soon as pos
sible C I llAhh Manager
Pat Did you ever see the like ia your
Niver butonctandthat was in
Chicago I mean those fino turnouts
at the MeCook Livery
Cash- Received on Account
Charge Paid Out and other cash
register prinied supplies at The Tribune
office
Wanted Laborers at the Brush
Sugar Factory Brush Colorado Good
wages paid
Shamrock 3rd
Upon solicitation of manyI have con
sented to put Shamrock 3rd on tho
stand for a short season Those desiring
his services must apply at an early date
Shamrock 3rd is a black brown Stallion
4 years old Standard by breeding with
blood lines second to none Stands 1G
hands high Weight 1200 pounds A
horse of great substance and power a
more beautiful horse to look at is not
found in the state of Nebraska While
he has great courage and is a free driver
he is as gentle as a lamb any woman
can harness and drive him as my wife
has freauentlv done Tln n iin
to oreea to this great horse I dont
hesitate to say taking every thing into
account he is tho greatest and most
- horse to breed to that is now
or ever has been iu Red Willow county
You will nnd him at the New Livery
Barn at the west end of Dennison Street
McCook Nebraska Terms only 810 00
to insure foal W R Starr owner
BEGGS BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES catarrh of the stomach
HOLLISTERS
iccky Mountain Tea Nuggets
A BnBy Medloine for Busy People
Brings Golden Ecalth and Bonowed Vigor
A specific for Constipation Indigestion Live
d ine7 Troubles Pimples Eczema Impure
Blood Bad Breath Siueffish Bowels Headache
and Backache Its Rocky Mountain Tea in tab -Jet
form cents a bor Genuine made by
Eolustek Dnuo Company Madison Wis
RURAL WATER SUPPLY
Um Snnliry Condition Not What It
Ought to Be
When such great sums of money are
being expended by city governments
that the Inhabitants of towns may have
a sanitary water supply It seems
strange that the supply in rural towns
should receive little or no attention
This latter population may seem rela
tively Insignificant but it comprises
about 40000000 souls This means that
those 40000000 people are drinking the
water most available without a thought
of Its sanitary couditlon
These various sources of supply
whether wells springs or small
streams are similarly unreliable for
furnishing drinking water The statis
tics of mortality in the country are
very Indefinite but even these show
that the rural population is not as free
from illness as it should be And
though everywhere the rural death rate
is lower than the urban death rate yet
the lowering in the country has not
been as great as In the city An exam
ination of typhoid statistics shows that
the death rate of other diseases is gen
erally lower in the country than in the
city but the prevalence of typhoid is
almost equal to if not greater in the
rural districts than in the cities
Several instances have been reported
which show the rural typhoid rate to
be ten times greater than the urban
rate for the same district To particu
larize a certain district in central
Pennsylvania proves tnis fact It is
made up of a rural population with 100
Inhabitants to the square mile It Is a
region of fine farms wild mountains
and woods country residences and pic
nic groves And in this valley there
has been as much typhoid fever as in
the city of Philadelphia
Sad as this condition is there seems
to be no remedy for it The sources of
a ciry water supply are few and the
city government easily controls the
conditions affecting It But what can
be done when the sources of supply
are numbered by the thousands A
mint of money and an army of chem
ists would not be sufficient to give the
same care to the country supply that is
given to that of the city New York
Herald
SNOWSLIDES OF ROCKIES
Peril of Mountain Takes Its Toll of
Life and Property
Every year the life of a miner in the
high mountain regions Is menaced by
the avalanche or snowslide and every
year brings Its list of casualties and
of hairbreadth escapes The story of
snowslides would fill a book and would
be a thrilling tragic and in some cases
a grewsome one
Hen have ridden hundreds of feet on
the back of a snowslide and have es
caped unhurt Others have been caught
and buried so deep and in such uncer
tain spots that their bodies have not
been discovered until the melting of
the snow in the following spring
Some have been caught as they were
walking but a few steps from the
boarding house to the mine or while f
emptying a car on the mine dump Not
infrequently men have found them
selves temporarily imprisoned by the
entrance of the mine being closed by
a slide while they were at work and
have had to dig their way out
A Chinese cook at one of the Idaho
mines stepped outside his kitchen door
for a moment and was caught and
hurled with the slide 1000 feet down
the hillside and his body was not re
covered till the following snrins
Such incidents denote the extreme
suddenness power and velocity of the
slide Little or no warning is given a
roar a cloud of snow obscuring the
sight of the real slide and in a mo
ment thousands of tons of snow
mingled with trees and debris are shot
down the gulch or the slope of a moun
tain as from the mouth of a cannon
In a few seconds all is over and the
scenery of the little valley is com
pletely clianged Klines and Minerals
Whnt a Letter 1V111 Do
A proofreader anent the importance
of trifles read from his notebook these
absurd sentences each made by the
omission of a single letter
The conflict was dreadful and the
I enemy was repulsed with
ter
reat laugh-
When the presidents wife entered
the humble sitting room of the miner
she was politely offered a hair
A man was yesterday arrested on
the charge of having eaten a cabman
for demanding more than his fare
An ernploj ee in the service of the
government was accused of
stolen a small ox from the mail The
stolen property was found i vei
pocket
Observation
An observant man in all hio inter
course with society and the world con
stantly and uuperceived marks on
- - A UU 1lJC
lastnmlnnlvnnfn lei iLrson a tiling the figure ex-
j uuij uu W11 uave nroBn nf -
v i0 djut uiiu uiereiore on
meeting tnat person or thing knows
Instantly what kind and degree of at
tention to give it This is to make
something of experience John Foster
Tamed Poetry
I wish to submit a lyric sir said
the timid young man My friends say
its a beauty really sings itself
Humph said the cold hearted edi
tor We couldnt use a poem like that
We want one that once printed will
remala perfectly quiet and not keep
our readers awake by singing itself at
all times
The true strength of every human
soul is to be dependent on as many
nobler as it can discern and to be de
pended upon by as many inferior as
It can reach
The world which took but six dnva
QLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE j out Browne
ST0EY OP THIS FLOOD
THERE ARE MANY AND VARIED VER
SIONS OF THE DELUGE
Tho reat Event In Chronicled Not
Ontr In the Talmud and Koran bat
In the Lcgentld of Almost Every
Race That Ever Lhcd on Earth
One of the most powerful and vivid
descriptive portions of the book of
Genesis is that devoted to the wonder
ful story of the deluge Together with
the accounts of Adams fall the slay
ing of Abel and the turning of Lots
wife into a pillar of salt every one
remembers from childhood how Noah
was warned of the doom impending
over the children of men and how he
constructed a huge ark in which he did
live himself and his family and two
of every beast of the field and fowl of
the air for tho space of 100 days or
until the waters subsided and the dry
land appeared But the Biblical recital
of this terrible visitation of divine
wrath is by no means the only one
In fact the most skeptically inclined
must believe that something of the sort
actually occurred long ago for It has
been perpetuated not only In the Tal
nfud and Koran but in the legends of
almost every nation and race that ever
lived on the face of the earth including
the Chinese the ancient Aztecs of
Mexico the Indian tribes of North and
South America and even the savages
of Africa
The story of course varies material
ly in the multitudinous traditions but
the gist of it remains substantially thp
same namely that the earth was onco
visited by a great flood in which nearly
every living tiling was overwhelmed
and lost Thus In the Koran we read
that Noah constructed the ark with
divine assistance and was railed at for
his pains by the wicked When the
time prescribed for the punishment of
mankind arrived water was seen to
flow from the burning oven of Noahs
wife and immediately all the veins
and arteries of the earth broke and
spurted out water
Noah was then admonished in these
words Take and bring into the ark
two couples of every kind of animal
male and female with all your family
except him who has been condemned
by your mouth and receive the faith
ful and even the unbelieving but few
only will enter The Koran also says
that the ark was built in two years
and that it contained three stories the
upper one for the birds the middle one
for the men and the provisions and the
hold for the beasts Canaan the son
of Ham refused to be saved There
fore Noah cursed him and his posteri
ty became black and Avere enslaved
The Persians assert that Ilam incurred
his fathers malediction as well When
six months had passed the ark rested
on the top of Mount Djondi Ararat
after having made the circuit of -the
world Tabari says that two sorts of
animals left the ark which had not en
tered it the pig and the cat Concern
ing the latter we have this interesting
piece of information When the rats be
gan to make trouble the voyagers com
plained to Noah Whereupon the patri
arch passed his hand down the back
of the lion who sneezed and the cat
leaped out of Its nose And the cat ate
the rats
According to the Talmud Noah and
his family and one pair of each kind of
beast were to be saved in the ark but
of every clean beast seven were to en
ter iu The rhinoceros however had
to be left out for the simple but suffi
cient reason that its neck alone was
three miles long Nevertheless all the
rabbinic writers agree that thjj Rhi
noceros survive ille flood hoMce it ig
reasonnble to suPO tho jJe jjUe
ed on the roof of the ark and rceqved
his daily food through a hole bored in
the side of the vessel
writer declares that an entire countiv
was so called after Aral he Fair ail
ancient Armenian i h i
aboht l0 B C no fell in a bloody
battle with the Babylonians and the
scene of his death was thenceforth
known as Aral Arat or the Fall of
Arai Tosephus refers to the moiinr iin
as Xazuana and declares
that the re
mains of the ark were there to be seen
carefully preserved
Almost all the Asiatic traditions
closely resemble the Biblical
Berosus in hs Chaldee history B C
2G0 speaks of ten kings who appear
to correspond to the ten patriarchs in
Genesis before the flood The last of
theo kings was called Xisuthrus Be-
- relates that Kronos appeared to
Xihriis in a dream and warned him
that all men would be destroyed by a
deluge on the loth of the month Dae
sios and commanded him to write
down all the learning and science of
men and to hide it in the sun city
Siparis and then to build a ship and
enter it along with his family and rela
tives and nearest friends and to take
into it with him food and drink and
beasts and wiuged fowl When he was
asked whither he was about to sail lie
was bidden to reply To the gods to
pray them that men may prosper i
did as he was commanded
and when the flood showed sisms of
abating he sent out three birds In suc
cession The first and second came
back the latter with mud on Its feet
but the third returned not Soon after
this the ship was stranded on a moun
tain and Xisuthrus disembarked with
his family offered thanks to the gods
and vanished Subsequently the re
maining survivors heard his voice In
the heavens bidding them fear God
to make is like to take 6000 to make aml to take uis Things out of Siparis
I and from them instruct men
I
HABITS OF THE RICH
Vaiaulca of Millionaire Sxtrarneance
In the Metropolis
Zola In his youth before fame came
to him wrote some stories about mil
lionaires wherein it seemed to him he
exaggerated shamefully In his descrip
tions of the costly homes and habits of
the rich but later on when Zola be
came a friend of millionaires he found
that his accounts of their extravagance
had fallen far short of the truth
In the same way stories about the
extravagance of American millionaires
that sound like exaggerations may also
fall short of the truth Here for In
stance are some facts that an interior
decorator of New York supplied the
other day They sound extreme but
let Zola be remembered
A man bought for his hall twelve
antique marble columns at Pompeii
Finding he could use only eight of the
columns he had the remaining four de
stroyed although he was offered for
them twice what he had paid He had
paid 5000 apiece
Aubusson carpets with a pile three
inches thick are often made to order
at a cost of 10 a yard Such a cost
though Is nothing beside what is or
dinarily paid for antique rugs They
measured by the yard often cost 500
or 000 a yard
Chairs of ivory inlaid with wood are
occasionally sold at 500 apiece
One millionaires piano cost 150000
A five inch band of Ivory four years in
the carving runs around the case
which was decorated by Everett Shinn
The gold and silver plate of one
household requires an expert to look
after it The man is a goldsmith and
his salary is 2000 a year
Billiard rooms sometimes cost 50
000 to furnish The tables and cues
are inlaid with Ivory and gold
Certain wines Schloss Johannesberg
for instance stamped with the crest of
Prince Matternlch are sold at private
sales to millionaires for 40 and 50 a
bottle
Automobiles of ninety or more horse
power made to order will cost from
30000 to 10000 Some millionaires
keep a dozen or more automobiles
with a head chauffeur at 4000 or
5000 a year salary and two or three
assistants at 25 a week each
Then there Is the ocean going yacht
which cannot be maintained In the
most modest way at a smaller annual
expenditure than 25000 New York
Press
A PESSIMISTS QUESTIONS
Why is It that a cleaning of win
dows is the signal for a rainstorm
Why is John always late the night the
cook is out and visitors are expected
In the evening
And why oh why do visitors al
ways come the one afternoon in the
week when one is not dressed to re
ceive them
Why does a woman think she has so
much better taste than her richer
neighbor if she but had as much money
to gratify it
Wiry is it that a leak in the pipe is
always discovered Saturday afternoon
when a plumber cannot be found until
Monday morning
Why is it that when one has made a
purchase one sees ten minutes later
something else which would have been
better or cheaper or more becoming
Philadelphia Ledger
The English Police
In the conduct of the police depart
ment in an English city we find a
striking comparison with our Amer
ican notion of police work In Man
chester as in London the policeman
always the servant of the public
As i pdon he carries neither club
i 7 Ilir duties are verv
beast was taken in tow by a rope at- iv the sniilg thse of a New
tacllPil tn ifa lin S0111O iiitlir IHJiii j i - c
wm -- - uuo OniCei a UJUUIUU Ul
likewise declare that oaji extended r ls work that the striking dif-
nis Hospitality to another outsider itt Jftnce VlL
uie snape 01 Og the giant ho elimi
ter Success
He is always quiet al-
ways neai -v ti
deferential P1 treatment of the
nubiip Such o crbearins manners as
a ew police-
we sometmes see
Ararat has been known under tlifa mm w nniif not bo oicrared ij Man-
name for 3000 years and an Armenian I In LOrt foi J mat-
Oriciii of
There were chauffeurs lo
automobiles Ilistorv tell ic
Defore
about the year lido men strangely ac
coutered their faces covered with soot
and their eyes carefully disguised en
tered by night farms and lonely habi
tations and committed all sorts of dep
redations They garroted their vic
tims dragged them before a great fire
nnere tuey burned the soles of their
feet and demanded information as to
the whereabouts of their money and
jewels hence they were called chauf
feurs a name which frightened so
much our good grandmothers Paris
Figaro
Child Love
Welcome to the parents the puny
straggler strong in his weakness his
little arms more irresistible than the
soldiers his lips touched with persua
sion which Chatham and Tericles in
manhood had not Ilis unaffected
lamentations when lie lifts up his voice
on high or more beautiful the sobbing
child the face all liquid grief as he
tries to swallow his vexation soften
all hearts to pity and to mirthful and
clamorous compassion Emerson
Merely n Precaution
Now Lester said the old codger
addressing his callow nephew in an
admonitory tone it is as proper that
you should pay the fiddler as it is to
liquidate any other debt but its a
fine exhibition of extry width betwixt
the eyes to Inquire the fiddlers price
before the dance begins Puck
Use your gifts faithfully and they
shall be enlarged Fractice what you
know and you shall attain to higher
knowledge Arnold
ysk
SilJv OitYZiZLtt
selling
Christian Sunaay school at and
Christian Endeavor at il oclock every
Sunday morning All are welcome
Elder J G Slick of Arapahoe will
preach Sunday June 30 Morning sub
ject The Lords Suprer Itr Use1
Evening subject The Pover That
Conquers
W E Rambo will preach both morn
ing and evening June 17th
SCHOOL CREEK
A good rain is needed in this vicinity
Fruit tree agents are beginning to
come
Valentine Gray is working for C S
I Quick
Edd Vandervort is helping N Smith
with 11S
Wheelers moved in their
- lnci Tuesday
neu
baiJ family of McCook spent
Jim L
Kilgore
ounaaywit Tndianola visited
Mrs Kankin and Sun
with Mrs Sedden
u t putcher
Mrs Sedden and Mrs Mrs C
spent Tuesday afternoon witu
K Dutcher
John and Charlie Dutcher accon
panied their mother to McCook Wed
nesday evening where she took the
train for CrestonIowato spend the sum
mer with her da lighter
COURT HOUSE NEWS
COUNTY COURT
g Licenses to marry have been issued as
follows since our last report
Royal W Emberling 1 of McCook
and Mrs Dollie Russell 23 of Bartley
James E Wilson 35 of Bennet and
Catherine Longcecker 2G of Indianola
William A Cassell 2S and Edna
Cathcart 2G both of McCook
William X Yocum 59 and Mrs Eli
zabeth Yutzy GO both of Cambridge
Aaron A Kryder 22 and Hazel M
Hatcher 19 both of Indianola
A petition was filed for the probate of
the will of John Bassler
Whats the good of keeping from him
Any good things you may see
That will lift his load of labor
Like Rocky Mountain Tea
LWMcConnell
iJO 55
Boys
fiT Tfr IlYtO M
to make moneys
A whole army of boys are
making all the money they want
W THE SATURDAY
m EVENING POST i
1 1 r
u ii a few hours a week after school I
i It isnt luck it isnt thai they are
any brighter tnan you it isn t
that they have any better
chances than you
S3
They just took hold of the work
heartily and found that making
money came lots easier than
they expected Most every-
body who sees THE POST
wants it And what we want
you to do is to show THE POST
to the people in your town to get them
to let you deliver it every week In a few
weeks youll have a regular list of cus
tomers and be making money steadily
PrV you don r neea a cenl xo sia we
ijaend ten copies of THE POST free Sell
tnese at 5c tne copy ana mat iurmsnes an
r the money you need to buy further supplies Sit
fffir aown now ana write us a iener mai yuu wum loirci
fjfA iA ftA n1k vnAr nnrl 11 2nI Vnll PVPTTthinir
T 111 llliu IU lliunv Altvlvjr uiiu w w j w - -
troti npi1 - otor An pHiicntinn nt nnv husiness callepe in
ff the country free to boys who sell a certain number of copies
250 in Extra Cash Prizes
Each Month to Boys Who Do Good Work
THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY
425 Arch St Philadelphia
cirr church announcements
Episcopal Services on Sunday at 11
a in and 8 p m Evening prayer at
730 oclock Wednesday All are wel
come to these services
E R Earle Rector
Catholic Order of services Mass
8 a m Mass and sermon 1000 a m
Evening service at 8 oclock Sunday
school 230 p m Every Sunday
J J Looghran Pastor
Congregational Sunday school at
10 a m Preaching at 11 am from the
subject The Sunday School There
will also bo baptism of children Child
rens Day exercises in the evening at
730 All are invited
Geo B IIawkes Pastor
Baptist Sunday school at 10 a m
B Y P U will meet at 7 p m SC
Miller of McPherson College McPherson
Kansas will preach at 11 oclock a m
Childrens Day exercises at 8 p m
Prayer services every Wednesday at 8
A A Holmes Pastor
Methodist Sunday School at 10 am
Lesson Matt 1G13 28 Preaching at 11
a m and 8 p m Class at 12 Epworth
League at 7 p in Prayer meeting Wed
nesday night at 8 p 111 A O U W
memorial sermon at 3 p m Sunday
school and preaching in South McCook
next Sunday afternoon
M B Carman Pastor
McCook Market Quotations
Corrected Friday afternoon
Corn 35
Wheat 00
Oats 2S
Rye -10
Barley 25
H0B8
Errs
Good Buttoi
5 90
12
15
Real Estate Transfers
The following real estate filings have
been made in the county clerks ollice
since last Thursday evening
F M and J G Ricliej to J II Gerdis
vd w hf G-2-50 CwG0W
G B Morgan to J Mos vd jt se ne qr
19-1-27
A C Fluiicliniau to AK Meier wd nw
Powell XiNcon to GT Iliinixlecd
lot 2 4 and r Mock 1 Marion
J B LillHrd to E Lewis qcd se qr
U S to ED Uair nat lots 1 2 3 and I
e lif nr qre lif
U S to R A Bair pat e lif svv qr lots
Gand i G MJ0
O M Mejcn to II II Mclntoiii wd
swqr 7-2-30
R II Jolnioii to R O Fisher wd o lif
e qr 32-3-215
V Peterson to J B Smith wd ne qr
10-4-30
Yf Steinliraker to G Bfiomuard wd
lots 14 and 13 block 2 WG McC
G B Smith to HC Shouse wd mid 1 5
to lot 22 bkek 2H Indianola
B G Go ard to II Rarliazutt wd lots
2 3 and 1 block 1 Fifth McCook
M L Loperto I M Peirce wd swqr
20-1-29
O E Derore to V Rider d sw qr 13
nw 13-4-30 and lot 10 block 7McCook
USto JLtiriKK pat w hf nw qr 27-1-3
U S to J L Gram pat e hf sw qr 22
e hf nw qr 1 28
A G Bump to J V Lathrop wd lot 3
block 21 First McCook
V Lakin to K Lakin wd whfseqr
W P Clark to X II Wolf wd u hf no
qr 13-1-29
J A McKeow n to J D Wilkin wd so
C D Flannels to A J LansjHtou wd
vo qr and e qr of nw qr 10-1-27
G A Attwood to S J Attwood d n hf
TT Plnmmer to GDTroendly wdlota
3 and 129-3-30
BM Frees Tr to II Rishol wd lot 3
lhnk 17 Second McCook
L L Co to E Rislicl wd lot I block
1 7 Second McCook 1
C Snjder to E Britfnd let 9 and 10
Second McCook 1
M Bntchellor to WD William d lot
7 block 21 McCook
J C Latterly to S J White d ne qr
33-1- 1
JBBlair to F Blair wd e hfnwqr
lots 1 and 2 4
L L Co to O M Hes wd lot IGblack
37 Indianola
B E Sherey to G Shcrcy wd u hf lot 8
and lot 9 block 19 Indianola
G Eckart to C E Hotze wd same
C Snjder to E- Britt wd lots 9 and 10
block 2i Second McCook
NOTICE FOR BIDS
Sealed bids will be received by the Secret
tho Board
HJ0GO
1JuO CO
1SO0O
15C0 00
2coaoo
2CGO0O
323 GO
otoco
fcOCO
100
CO CO
ICO
331 X
123 DO
Lao to
2060 IX
tM1W
223 CO
LGOOCO
W
of of Education of th School District
of the City of McCook in Red Willow coaatT
in the State of Nebraska until C oclock m
i rf mj ii XJ
- isvrj
iVi iimwuKiiie nw uanKcliooI hou e in aid
city the ame b inK a four room two story
frame budding about fortj -nine and one half
bjfifty oix feet in its present location-
a distance of about one fourth mileover almost
level pround toa place selected by said board
baid btllldinc I to homnrlm rt
prudent manner and no unnecessary ininrv
done thereto 1 he same is to be
u uiuvk ueruie ioundation about four
or
five feet from the Bround so that it can be let
down on the foundation wall- Iho person
movHjB said bui IdinBhall furnish tho blocfe
on hj h it shall be left standinff prior to Je5
tint tlit down on the foundation A certi
fied check pa able to tho order of Eaid board
for not less than fifty dollars by some reson
sible bank shall accompany each bid Said
board reserves the nBht to reject any and all
Uj order of the Board of Education of the
School District of the City of McCook in Red
W liiow county in the State of Nebraska this
Slt day of Mav IPCS r w nT
1
jt3t
Secretary
0
30b 0
10 10
460 00
When the baby talks it is time to
Uollisters Rocky Mountain Tea
give baby medicino known
Its the g iers It makes them eat
to loving mot 53 cents Tea or
sleep and grov W McConnell
Tablets L