M H fleM By F s jcgsak ptfrctje M KIMMELL Xargest Circulation in Red Willow Co Subscription 1 a Year in Advance Gkntleman Geouok Mkiklkjohm is tho latest announcement for U S senator Briefly his platform favors Railwny regulation regulation of trusts ana direct nomination of all oflicers state district and county and for elec tion of U S senators by vote of people Not a bad platform The date for holding tho convention for tho Fifth congressional district has lmnn nlnwd at Wednesday Aug 8th 1906 at 3 oclock in tho court house at Hastings All tho indications now point to tho renomination of Congressman G W Norris and to his election Ho has made the people and tho party an hon ored representative An upright mat of ability and growing in usefulness his re election would be the part of wisdom Notice of Republican Caucus Notice is hereby given to the Republi can voters of Willow Grovo precinct that a caucin will bo held in each vot ing precinct therein on Thursday July 19th 1906 at S pm for tho purpose of electing delegates to tho Republican county convention to be held July 21st 1906 at McCook Nebraska and for such other business as may properly come before said caucus Tho caucuses will be held in tho re spective wards as designated below 1st Precinctlst wad basement Com mercial Hotel 2nd Precinct 1st ward W 11 Acker mans ofiice 1st Precinct 2nd ward City Hall 2nd Precinct 2nd ward II II Berrys ofiice S R McCaul John Brit tain T J Smith Lon Cone Committee Valley Grange Precinct The Republican caucus for this pre cinct will bo held on July 19th at S oclock to select 5 delegates to the county convention etc R McDonald Committeeman Republican County Convention The Repnblicaus of Red Willow county Neb are hereby called to meet in delegate conven tion at the city of McCook on Saturday July 21st 1900 at 11 oclock a m for the purpo e of electing 7 delegates to the State Convention to be held at Lincoln Aug 22 Also to elect dele gates to the Congressional and to the State Sen atorial Conventionaud to place in nomination candidates for the following oflices One State Representative One County Attorney One County Commissioner 2nd District And for the transaction of such other business before said convention as may properly come The basis of representation to said conven tion shall bo 2 delegates at large for each vot ing precinct and 1 delegate for each 10 votes or fraction thereof cast for the Hon Chas B Lot ton for Supremo Justice at tho last general election Said apportionment entitles the sev eral precincts to the following representation in said contention Alliance Beaver 6 Bondville - BoxElder 4 Coleman 3 Daubury - Driftwood 4 East Valley S Fritsch 4 Gerver 5 Grant 4 Indianola J Lebanon Missouri Rigc 3 North Valley 4 Perry 4 Red Willow 5 Tyrone 4 Valley Grange 5 Willow Grovo lward 1 precinct 11 1 ward 2 precinct 10 2 ward 1 precinct 11 2 ward 2 precinct 6 Tntnl 130 tho committee that the if commended by caucuses to elect delegates to this convention It has caused more laughs and dried more tears wiped away diseases and driven away more fears than any other medicine in the world Hollisters Rocky Mountain Tea 35 cents Tea or Tablets L W McConnsiI Depredations of Tax C ojotefe Citizens ol Me iuoii and adjoining counties of Texas are in a state of ter ror because of the depredations of coyotes which are killing scores of cattle Worse than that the slinking brutes are spreading hydrophobia am ig the stock A man living In Til den was bitten by an infected colt and died In a few dayfi Ways and means of getting rid of the pests are being considered Massachusetts Slncl Tax Proposal At the coming session of the Massa chusetts legislature a bill will be offer ed giving to each city and town the privilege of raising money for munici pal purposes by such methods as the town or city may deem best This iB the single tax proposal -which was de feated In the last hay state legislature IDBIKK WHEN YOU EAT TAKE AS MUCH WATER AS YOU WANT WITH YOUR MEALS It In Excellent For the Distention It Claimed a Neither GnNtrlc Juice Nor Pepwin Worlc Troperlr Unless Largely Diluted With Water How much water should we drink and when should we drink It are ques tions so simple that at first sight their discussion seems superfluous One would naturally answer Drink all the water you wish when you are thirsty but authorities say Drink more than you wish when you are not thirsty for they recommend that a gallon or so be drunk between meals which is more water than we need and the very time the system least demands it Us ually we experience thirst during or directly after eating Inasmuch as S7 per cent of the whole body is water which is of course be ing used up every moment there is no question that we should drink of this element copiously but it is a serious question whether we should refrain from water at meals the time we par ticularly desire it There is a class of persons ever growing more numerous that believes that whatever is is wrong For the natural and simple they would substi tute the artificial and complicated To drink water while or directly after eat ing is a natural instinct Give a dog his dinner putting a bowl of water near it and observe that he will first eat all he can and then immediately drink Wild animals look for a stream after feeding Cage birds will stop pecking at seed to peck at water Chil dren have a perpetual thirst aud I haA e seen babies that unlike young Oliver have refused to eat more when denied water after every few mouth fuls It is especially important that babies be given what water thej vish and at the time they wish it which is usually at table The thinner food is the more easily and thoroughly is it digested in fact it cannot be digested until it has been made liquid by the gastric and intesti nal juices Indigestion is caused often by food that has not been sufficiently moistened by the digestive secretions There are sound p iological rea sons for our craving water with meals Water is the solvent that constitutes 93 per centof the gastric juice Now when one eats a hearty meal and does not drink the amount of water in the stomach is not suflicient thorouguly to moisten the great quantity of food and tliis makes digestion difficult On the other hand when enough water is ingested with the food the latter is well moistened and broken up the di gestible particles being then readily acted on by the gastric juice and after ward absorbed Again when the par tially digested food chyme passes into the intestines it is most important that it be very moist particularly as water is constantly absorbed from the chyle in the large intestine Bad cases of constipation are caused by dry chyle remaining in the intestines where it sets up an inflammation that some tius proves fatal dry faeces of course resisting peristaltic action The excrement of persons suffering from constipation is always dry and hard and is a potent cause of appendicitis The idea that water drinking at meals unduly dilutes the gastric juice is nonsensical water being not so pal atable that one is apt to drink more than his digestive functions require As a matter of fact water generally facilitates the digestion of albuminous substances In this connection Dr A Jacobi in his work on Infant Diet houldhe held on Thursday July 19th at 8 p esg began to siacken but was renewed m TfrHipr recommenueu wiiuu i convention and that the bo allowed at said delegates present from each of the respective precinct be authorized to cast the full vote of their precinct t mkb Ryan uharle Secretary Chairman Bondville Precinct Tho Republican caucus of Bondville precinct to elect deleKates to tho County convention to bo held at McCook July 2lst will be held at tho residence of Herman Reiners on Thursday July 19th 1906 at 8 pm Heney N Colling Committeeman Grant Precinct The Republican caucus of Grant precinct to elect 4 delegates to the County convention to be held at MoCook July 21st will be held at the Banksville school house on Thursday July 19th 1906 at S p m A Peters Committeeman page G7 says In experiments upon digestion of albumen with gastric juice obtained from the stomach of animals It was no ticed that after a certain time the proc- merely by the addition of water The gastric juice became saturated with the substance it had dissolved and ceased to act upon what remained un til it had been diluted In the living stomach this dilution is of even greater importance for it permits of the im mediate absorption of the substances soluble in water and which do not re quire the -specific action of the gastric juice Neither the gastric juice nor pepsin has any true digestive action unless they be largely diluted with wa ter It goes without saying that it Is not the food that Is ingested but that which Is digested that does good and this principle holds good with water which is practically a food Now when one resists the perfect y v -al desire to drink while eating Lj n bi not thirsty several hours afto v rd but he is advised nevertheless to lv himself to drink at that time But if he drinks then the water having no food to mix with it will go through him as it were--that Is It will do no good The importance of water to the hu man economy may be inferred from the various purposes it subserves First It softens and dissolves solid foods thus facilitating their mastica tion and digestion second it main tains a due bulk of blood and the structures of the body third it keeps substances in solution or suspension while moving in the body fourth It supplies elements in the bodys chem ical changes fifth it makes easy the elimination of waste material sixth it discharges superfluous heat by tran spiration through the skin and by i slon through other outlets and sev enth It supplies in a convenient form heat to or abstracts heat from the body Some of these functions are performed by water In Its liquid state land others In a state of vapor Have yon Indigestion Try water instead of drugs with your food G Elliot Flint in New York World ji MRS REGINALD DE KOVEN She Quention Veracity of the Author of The Life of Inul Joncn The life of the naval hero Paul Jones has been much under public discussion of late owing to the finding of his body in Paris by General Horace Porter and Its burial ut Annapolis with signal hon ors All this has given renewed Inter est to The Life of Paul Jones pub lished by the late Colonel Augustus C Buell in 1900 It was hailed by the critics as the final word on the career of the hero and was read with much avidity by students on ncceunt of the attractive glamour thrown by It about his career But now eomes Mrs Regi nald De Koven and says that this life of Jones Ks a mass of fabrications that it Is based upon a framework of truth and deals In proper sequence with the yrfVV 3SilM MKS HEGI2fAIiB DE KOVEX Hiinf ovciits of the heros career but is padded with inventions of clever construction and of unparalleled au dacity Mrs De Koven classes the book as the most audacious historical forgery ever put upon a credulous pub lic The woman who makes these charges against the veracity of a dead author is the daughter of ex United States Sena tor Charles B Farwell of Illinois She was born in Chicago in 1SG0 and is a graduate of Lake Forest university She married Reginald De Koven the operatic composer in 1SS4 Mrs De Koven is herself well known as an au thor one of her best known works be ing By the Waters of Babylon which she wrote in 1001 and dramatized three years later A NOBLE CHARITY How Done Tuberculosis Patients Are Treated at Sea Breeze It is estimated that there are GO000 persons in the United States who are crippled through bone tuberculosis and the pity of it is that they should re main so all their lives when they might be cured There are nearly 5000 such cases in the city of New York and an effort is being made to give strength courage and health to as many as pos sible of these sufferers through treat ment at the hospital maintained at Sea Breeze by the New York Association For Improving the Condition of the Poor Some 20000 of the poor of the great city are benefited each summer by a longer or shorter stay at Sea Breeze which is at the northern end of the famous Coney Island The good done there for persons afllicted with bone tuberculosis is only a part of the large work done by the association The salt air and the life out of doors winter and summer have been found Boarcen I - -- IiTrriiE MAX WHO IS CHEEBFUIi UNDER DIFFICULTIES to bo very beneficial to such cases where the treatment has been tried on the shores of England and France and it is expected that the success of the hospital at Sea Breeze will lead to the establishment of others in different parts of the United States The visit which President Roosevelt paid last summer to Sea Breeze through the in vitation of Jacob A Riis brought the good work dona there to public atten tion as never before The sight of the children strapped to boards or with their legs in frames Is a pitiful one but they are cheerful and hopeful for they all expect to be cured and the medical men say there is good ground for such expectations They all agree with five-year-old Max I dont want to get dead and be an angel I want to play first of Thin DanRcrouM and Pro- tructccl Disease Although there is always more or less typhoid fever in most of the larger cities of tliis country the late summer and autumn are the seasons when It is most to be feared The disease Is not so formidable as regards the mortality as some others but its great length and the evil conse quences which sometimes follow it in the form of weak heart weak sirine or nervous disorders make it quite as se rious as some which are more fatal but far less protracted Unless one knows how the disoase is usually spread one cannot hope to avoid it and so it may be useful to consider in what ways the germs of the malady find their way into the sys tem Water is the usual vehicle for ty phoid germs as is well known and probably all great outbreaks of the dis ease in cities are due to an infected water supply This lias been strikingly shown in Philadelphia where some parts of the city are supplied with fil tered water and others with uniiltered or mixed Avater Comparing two parts of the city in which the conditions ex cept as to water supply are almost the same it was found that in the one sup plied with filtered water the occurrence rate of typhoid fever was one in five thousand while in the others in which tho uniiltered water was draink it was one in sixteen hundred But a city with an ideal water sup ply may be scourged with typhoid fever although less severely through the medium of impure ice and it is al most as important to know where the ice is cut or with what water it is made if artificial as where the city water comes from Not long since a number of officers on one of the United States ships in the Mediterranean squadron were taken down with ty phoid fever When the source of the infection was traced it was found to be some ice bought at Athens the ice ma chine on shipboard having broken down Another source of infection is found in oysters that have been fattened in streams contaminated with sewage Not only lias typhoid followed the eat ing of these fish but the typhoid bacilli have been found in the stomachs of the oysters L w vegetables used for salads may have been grown in soil contaminated with slops used as fertilizers or may have been wa hed in infected water Unless a water supply is above sus picion all that used for drinking tooth cleaning aud in the kitchen should be boiled and the drinking water cooled by putting vessels containing it on the ice not by putting ice in the water it self Finally great care should be taken to screen all food from flies for if there is a case of typhoid fever in the neighborhood flies may become most active distributers of the poison Youths Companion POINTED PARAGRAPHS Jealousy is like some other things the lid should be kept on it When you say no say it in a manner that will leave no doubt of your mean ing When giving advice to others here is a small slice to serve yourself Keep stiil more How little the best doctor knows And how helpless he is in the presence of serious illness Tt is said that disappointment is hard to bear but we all stand it pretty well when we look in the glass A man jut starting into a law suit has more faith in courts than his at torney ever claims to have There are too many young men who start out to make their mark in the world and stop at a soda fountain or hammock on the way Atchison Globe The -Word Cniuiibnlism The word cannibalism is really the name of a people It is identical with Carib many of the Caribs who for merly flourished in the AYest Indies having been consumers of human flesh The letters 1 n and r are Inter changeable in certain aboriginal Ameri can languages so that Columbus found one West Indian island saying Cani ba where another said Carib while Shakespeares Caliban is another va riety of the same Columbus own con jecture was that the name was con nected with the great khan and later philologists of the old slapdash type as sociated with canis a dog Ap parently however the meaning of carib was brave and daring Tio Faith Iu Him Guess that freckled daughter of Thompsons must have a steady young man What makes you think so The old man was in here yesterday to buy one of these newfangled con trivances that make a big saving in the gas you burn I dont believe the young mans a steady If he was theyd save all the gas Cleveland Tlaln Dealer There Are No Certain Ones The only objection I have to this story said the cynical bachelor is the frequent use of the phrase a cer tain girl The phrase is grossly inac curate as everybody well knows that all girls are exceedingly uncertain Chicago News Love when true faithful and well fixed is eminently the sar tifying ele ment of human life Without It the soul cannot reach its fullest height or holiness Ruskin Comfort and independence abide with those who can postpone their desires Success Magazine iniuiinuii w JMnnimnnrmiTrt m rT TYPHOID FEVER er A Novel S2i Valuable Vacation Tour in the Big Horn Worland Wyo Buy a S2000 excursion ticket to Basin and rector there to draw for a land prize in the Shoshone Reser IZnormake Worland your objective point in looking uP mineral -timber final limit of August loth The claim in the Curl Creek mountains X rmitvoutomake the side trip from Worland to the Thermopoh m fane hot springs uhoe waters and curativo properties are Pnonced ns any in Lb world the out flow is 18500000 gallons of water wery 4 will become one hours at a temperature cf 135 degrees P Tnermopolis of the most remarkable health resorts of this unUy the Black Hills to Dead through Side trip tickets from Edgemont S D and return g P wood and return S700 to Hot Springs returnS230Stop overs allowed on Shoshone tickets and Frannie to Cody j iiv nmliiKtiul camping tour from Cody throujn vii inri Wp th Svlviin Pass Route everything providedvOJUU Another delightful mountain side trip is that from Cody to C Inn in the Yellowstone Park l Log Cabin aha8ka Tepeo or boundary This is one of tho hoicest Ferv 2 miles eaht of the park Reception and Banquet to the V G M The boys or McCook lodge No 590 Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen tendered a reception and banquet to Vice Grand Master C W Mier of the orderglast Fridny evening The affair was a memorable one in every aspect and particular to the bos of 599 This is the first visit from a grand master this lodge has ever received since its organization four jears ago and it was keenly appreciated by the members The McCook Commercial club rooms where tendered the lodge in receiving j the grand master and here the reception master addressing propor was held the grand dressing the members and a pleasant session withal being enjoyed with profit to all After the session in the club room a banquet was spread in honor of the grand master at tho Palmer hotelwhich was in keeping with the traditions of that hostelrietho management spareing neither expense nor effort in producing a banquet of unexcelled excellence or in serving it in the best stylo and with the mot t tasteful accessories W C Allen of Galesburg Illinois general chairman of the joint protective board wns present and served as toast master with distinction and cleverness The wives of the firemen enjoyed the occasion with their husbands The affair was a most satisfactory ore and the boys are delighted with the success of the same ascribing much of the credit to the management of the Palmer for their banquet Over The Thousand Mark The school census has been complet ed and while the increase is not as large as expected on account of quite a num ber of Russian and other tamuies leav ing the city this spring to engage in the sugar beet culture elsewhere the result indicates a growth over last year Tho tninl number of nonulation of school age is 1071 as against 1018 last year or a gain of 26 The Alliance papers of recent date announce the completion of an exceed ingly careful census and report the en umeration of 927 youngsters of school age in that city or a gain of 11 over last year This shows McCook to have 147 more persons of school age than Alliance For State Professional Certificates Examinations for state professional certificates will be held in McCook Monday and Tuesday July 23 and 21 The examinations for Red Willow coun ty will be conducted by County Supt Quick Following will be the program Monday forenoon Chemistry gener al history Monday afternoon English literature plane trigonometry zoology Tuesday forenoon Geology physica1 geography Tuesday afternoon Psychology rhet oric Prairie chickens are being killed by local sportsmen notwithstanding the law of the state of Nebraska prohibits killing before September 1st After all what is the difference between breaking the law against theft and against shoot ing birds out of season You will find the only Shetland pony for hire in the city at McCook Livery BEGGS1 BLOOD PURIFIER CURES catarrh of the stomach SHERIFFS SAliJ -- cii By virture of an order of sale issued from the District court of Red Willow county Nebraska under decrees in actions wherein James r loy L plaintiff and Carlos C Bnrret al are defen dants and Edward B Cowles is plaintiff and The Cheshire Provident Institution are defen dants to me directed and delivered I shall offer at public sale and sell to the highest bid der for cashat the east door of the court house in McCook Red Willow county Nebraska on the 13th day of Aufiust 1900 at the hour -of I oclock pmthe followiDcdesnbed real estate to wit The west half of the southwest quarter of section twenty 20 and the west half of tho northwest quarter of section twenty nine lJ in township two 2 north of ranse twenty nine 29 west of the 6th pm in Red lllow coun ty state of Nebraska Dated this 13th day of July 190C II I Peteesox Sheriff W A Middleton W C Milliard C H Meeker W E Htffelbower ColCodys Forest Re- - i i nnta in vtvlinrn nvailaulC tain and forest hunting mm trout nsum oi j - Call or write for Yellowstone Park folders describing tours beyond Shoshone free lands Big Horn Gardiner or Codv or Black Hills leaflet 1 Wszssss folder etc Let mo describe to you mu mi outing through tho interesting Northwest in con nection with the cheap excursion rates to Worland ono of tho principal points of registration for Shoshone lands GEO S SCOTT McCook Neb Trr77 City Council Proceedings The city council was in session Mon day evening all present but councilman McConnell Following bills were allowed W A Gold 8 10 00 Thomas Burge CO 00 Frank Denton 50 00 tf H Sliirlnv 3 00 John Ekstedt I 1 SAWarner 20 20 W T Coleman 1 15 L W McConnell 50 Rosebush Northrup 120 57 J B Northrup 11 SS Hammond Printing Co - 15 75 L P Chapman 100 2 35 J 4i 101 30 13 00 John Hunt 2125 Schell Kimmell 5 50 C A Seed 1 00 William Zint 2 00 Fire claims were allowed to city fire men to the total of S1S600 City marshals report was read and filed Police judges report was read and referred to city attorney City treasurers report was read and referred to finance committee Resolution was passed establishing and making tho annual levy for the fiscal year of 190G The estimate calls for S1235000 The revpnue for 1905 was 6907825 The expenses of the city for 1905 were 8918052 The appropriation ordinance was pis sed It is No 126 Ordinance No 127 establishing and describing sewer district No 1 and pro viding for its construction and the pay ment thereof was passed PUBLIC LIBRARY NUTES Growing Oranges in California by Bertha M Smith A business worth 11000000 a vear was developed from half a dozen navel orange cuttings How the fruit is gathered sorted and packed The struggle of the producers for a pay ing market and their triumph through co operation Automobiles for Everybody o longer mere toys for the rich but within the reach of men with moderate in comes What it costs to keep one How they compare with horse and carriages for physcians and others who drive The economy of commercial automobiles by Harry B Hanies The New State of Oklahoma by M G Cunniff The spirit of the peo ple of Oklahoma and Indian Territory who will soon be citizens of a new com monwealth Stories of life and work in the two territories What the pioneers have accomplished Bridging the Gorge of the Zambesi by A T Prince The enormous span flung across a canyon 350 feet deep just below the greatest cataract in the world The adventures in its building The most picturesque link in the Cape to Cairo railway The Model School House by C C Johnson The H plan building a new and simple design that allows light and air How New York has improved the vision and the health of its children 30 per cent iNoiaoie examples oi mis school architecture The above may be found at the public library Library hours Morning 1030 to 12 oclock Afternoon 130 to 6 oclock Evening 7 to 9 oclock Sunday after noon 2 to 5 oclockr Librarian To Cure a Cold in One Day Take laxative bromo quinine tablets All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure E W Groves signature is on each bos 25c Six gentle high headed high single drivers at McCook Livery t bred r l 4 i v If A i I