anu k and Every Nieee and Nephew of Uncle Sam should be deeply interested in what he has said about soda crackers because they are the one food with which all of them are familiar Uncle Sam has given out figures showing that soda crackers are richer in nutriment and body building elements properly proportioned than any food made from flour This is saying much for common soda crackers and much more for Uneeda BlSCllit because they are soda crackers of the best quality They are baked bettei more scientifically They are packed bettei more cleanly The damp dust and odor proof package retains all tne good ness and nutriment of the wheat all the freshness of the best baking all the purity of the cleanest bakeries Your Uncle Sam has shown what food he thinks best for his people His people have shown that they think Uneeda BfSCUit the best of that food nearly 400000000 packages having already been consumed Uneeda Biscuit IS IQJiAL BJSOJEr COMPANY They tand Alone Standing out in bold rwliof all alone as a conspicuous oxnmplo of qpor and Inmost dealing with the aick alllk UHi are Dr Pierres Favorite Prescription for weak over worked de bilitated nervaws rnn iju cotn raeived wotfy ajid Dr Ttetfco Gdlflnn Medical Dicdvery rtie Tmnbus reniedv for weak stomach indigestion or dvs pepia torpid liver or biliousness all catarrhal aflectiohs whether of the stomach bowels kidneys bladder nasal pat sages throat bronchia or other mu cous papains also as an effective reniedv for all dieao arising from thin waterv or impure blood as scrofulous and skin affection Each bottle of the above medicines bears upon irs wrapper a badge of hon esty in the full list of ingredients com posing it n luted in jylain Enylhh This frank and open publicity places these medicines in a class all by tlicni sclvcs and is the best guaranty of their merits They cannot be classed as patent nor secret medicines for they arc neither hcina of ljunvn annjosition Dr Pierce feels that he can afford to take the aftiicted into his full confidence and lay all the ingredients of his medi cines freely before them because these ingredients are such as are endorsed and most strongly praised by scores of the most eminent medical writers as cures for the diseases for which these medi cines are recommended Therefore the afilicted do not have to rely alone upon Dr Pierces recommendation as to the curative value of his medicines for cer tain easily recognized diseases A glance at the printed formula on each bottle will show that no alcohol and no harmful or habit forming drugs enter into Dr Pierces medicines they being wholly compounded of glyceric extracts of the roots of native American forest plants These are best and safest for the cure of most lingering chronic dis eases Dr E V Pierce can be consulted free by addressing him at Buffalo N Y and all communications are re garded as sacredly confidential It is as easy to be well as ill and much more comfortable Constipation is tne cause ot many torms 01 illness Dr Pierces Pleasant Pellets cure constipa tion They are tiny sugar coated gran ules One little Pellet is a gentle laxa tive two a mild cathartic All dealers in medicines sell them JOHN E KELLEY ATTORNEY AT LAW and BONDED ABSTRACTEB McCook Nebraska sAgant of Lincoln Land Co and of McCook Water Works Office in Postoffice building FRED R BRUNS Barber Shop Bath Booms Rear Citizens bank C H Boyle C E Eldhed Co Atty BOYLE ELDRED Attorneys at Law Long Distance Phone 44 Rooms 1 and 7 second floor MrPnnlr Jift Postoffice Building WCtOOK fleD DR H M IRELAND Osteopathic Physician Kelley Office Bldg Phone No 13 McCOOK NEB Consultation free HOLLISTERS Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets A Busy Medicine for Bubj People Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vigor A SDCciflc for Constipation Indigestion Live and Kidney Troubles Pimples Eczema Impure Blood Bad Breath Sluggish Bowels Headache and Backache Its Rocky Mountain Tea In tab let form 35 cents a box Genuine made by Holusteb Dkuo Compant Mndison Wis GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE Sherlock Holmes Jr The Amateur Detective A exclaimed Sherlock Holmes Jr as lie clutched his compan ions qtol campeHiug him to top and taKe irotico What is it Sherlock the doctor asked Yes I see the tall middle aged man with the do 3ou mean the one with the panaina hat tipped down over his eyes Yes yes I see that he has his hands in his pockets What about him Hist Hist a few times my dear Whatson See he has stopped to watch the workmen on that new building You may have noticed that he wears a last years coat You certainly are a wonder nolmes How do you know it is a last years coat It looks new to me That is because you still have much to learn in the deducing line Cant you see that the slit in the back is only four inches long The slit must be at least eight inches long in the stylish coat of the present season But what has all tha to do with the case Who is he What has he done Ah ah he is a government meat in spector No Whatson youre wrong there He isnt a meat inspector That is evi dent because he is not being inter viewed by a reporter or having his pic ture taken while in the act of inspect ing a staring of sausages Look Ho has taken his hat off and isscratching his head But any man might do that I dont see what there is to deduce from such an act Ah my dear Whatson I sometimes almost despair of you How if he had not done that could we have known that he was not bald headed True True Curses on my stupid ity But I will learn yet Holmes I swear it Leaving the doctor half stupefied the great amateur detective approached a fruit stand near by and helped himself to a red apple Chicago Something In a Name I haM in my employ a young lady related the physician whose devotion to my interests was remarkable She had charge of the reception room and made waiting patients feel comfortable and at ease One day she announced that Mr Smith was In the reception room Which Smith I inquired impa tiently Why Smith the paper man I told the girl that I appreciated the manner in which she had made known to me the identity of this particular Smith who was a prominent publisher The girl was pleased Some weeks later she entered my office and announced that Mr Bell would see me Which Bell I asked as there were several among my patients Why Bell the wooden man she answered emphatically I held my finger warningly peeped through the door and there sat Mr Bell the millionaire lumberman St Louis Post Dispatch Setting Him Straight I wonder said Borroughs leading up to a touch for a loan what s the origin of that slang word dough for money Some believe replied Lenders that its derived from the Latin do meaning I give But thats all off now I dont give any more Phila delphia Press I TYPHOID FEVER Sources of This Dnnpreronn and Pro tracted Dixcuhc Although there is always more or less typhoid fever in most of the larger eites of this country the late summer and aaitifiun ar e the seasons wteeti 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 spine or nervous disorders make it quite as se rious as some which are more fatal but far less protracted Unless one knows how the disease 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 has been strikingly shown in Philadelphia where some parts of the city are supplied with fil tered water and others with unfiltered or mixed water 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 the unfiltered water was drunk 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 has typhoid followed the eat ing of these fish but the typhoid bacilli have been found in the stomachs of the oysters Raw vegetables used for salads may have been grown in soil contaminated with slops used as fertilizers or may have been washed In infected water Unless a water supply is above sus picion all that used for drinking tooth cleaning and 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 ease 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 still more How little the best doctor knows And how helpless he Is In the presence of serious illness It is said that disappointment is hard to bear but we all stand it pretty well when we look in the glass 1 for some fifteen minutes and then launched Into what I thought was my best lin of talk I finished all right and the chairman said I had made a hit In driving to the hotel after the meeting the local speaker said to mo Mr Littlelield if I only had your voice with what I have to say I would be a wonder M Peter Arkadgevltch Stolypln who became premier of Russia in succes sion to- M Goremykin when the pres ent crisis was precipitated by the dls solution of the douma held the interior portfolio under the Goremykin minis try He retains that post as premier Ho was born in 1833 and his father wns a popular general He had a brilliant career at the Uni versity of St Pe tersburg and after graduating In 1S8I obtained an ap pointment in the ministry of the in S2Si5ZOSr l Vb MRS 11USSEIL SAGE terior Two years premier stolypin later he was transferred to the min istry of agriculture but here again he remained only two years lie then re tired for a time into private life and devoted himself to the management of his estates In Kovno As a country gentleman he was a great success lie served the offices of marshal of the district nobility president of the ar bitration board and justice of the peace Such was his popularity tiat when In 1SD9 the post of marshal of the provincial nobility fell vacant through the death of Count Suboff he was appointed to the office A few months later the government conferred upon him the vice governorship of Grodno whence in 1101 he Avas sent to Sara toff as governor Although a gen ial and cultivat psiapa ajyU and he is regiirttefi ssi Somst h tft progressive aaft g6ttftsc eieieags in Russia Mrs Russell cl TtSSovr of th financier who djau jccsttiy tearing a fortune estimated aS 80000000 al ways kept a strtefc guj4 oyer her hus bands health and it irscs largely dua to her caro that ha fcarch3 toe rij age of nearly nnoty jfsaja I vra often said thai HS9 fXSfAn Ms gifts to char ftaftfo gtecfe JsiWk fc wire sue has tgjaaGrBfijssefl j elfin gflml on she spent hetlfusb8n6s moBQtiii su9i enterprises with more freedom than he was ever known to spend it himself She was Margaret Olivia Slocuni and she was born in Syracuse Her parents were of Puritan stock and her father was sixth In direct line from Miles Stand ish Mrs Sage has always clung to what In these times are often called puritanical ideas and does not like many of the ways obtaining in wealthy society which contravene such princi ples The panic of 1S37 made her fa ther a poor man and she was brought up to practice economies such as must be observed in a home where it is hard to make both ends meet She gradu ated from Miss Willards seminary in Troy to which in after years she made a gift of a dormitory She taught school for a time before her marriage to Mr Sage Mrs Sage was given almost the whole of her husbands fortune in the latters will AFTER JOHN D Sheriff GrovcN and His Attempt i0 to Serve Warrant on OH Magnate Sheriff E L Groves of Toledo who dispatched a deputy to meet John D Rockefeller on his arrival in New York from Europe and place the multimil lionaire under arrest took his action after a conference with Prosecutor William A David of Hancock county O Mr Rockefeller is charged with oVn COUlit warrant HANCOCK OOUMTV M MM Cc ty Cwn CUrrvw D Gb cJuXdttA - W mft k kmll hmrr Jtr4 tkmi tm fmtf nrr kirn W t tjkrr tmmt ft lmmmirrtiwmplmimt b fifth Jrttt uiik fiwVwt - r J A lI ifi fjy ifitrtm jt JKJLMsJbBafW SHERIFF E Ii GROVES AND HIS WARRANT FOR JOHN D ROCKEFELLER violating the Valentine antitrust act According to Mr David the head of the Standard Oil company will be brought to trial In September His attorney has entered appearance in the case be fore Judge Banker at FIndlay O and Mr Rockefeller is thus bound to be on hand trhen wanted The action of the sheriff in sending his deputy to New York to arrest Mr Rockefeller was thus rendered superfluous and the warrant was not served People I21 the Public Eye Mm Amam xyMWS Copyright 1S03 by J E Purdy EDCIAR E CIARK E E CLARK of Iowa w h o was appoint ed by President Roosevelt a member of the enlarged in terstate commerce commission is con sidered a represent ative of organized labor In that body inasmuch as he has been for some years at the head of a leading labor organ ization the Order of Railwaj Con ductors Commissioner Clark was born in Lima X Y in 1830 and removed to the west in 1871 serving as brakeman on various roads and In 1S8 1 becoming a conductor on the Denver and Rio Grande He was elected grand senior conductor of the Order of Railway Conductors in 188S and in 1S90 was chosen grand chief conductor He is married and has several children and his home is at Cedar Rapids la In his work at the head of the order with which he has been so long connected he has acquired an acquaintance with the cost of operation of railways and the extent of their income which is considered to qualify him especially for membership on the commission which is to administer the new railway rate law President Roosevelt showed his appreciation of his abilities four years ago when he made him a mem ber of the arbitration oommission which adjusted the anthracite coat Viscount Tadasu Hayashi Japans minister of foreign affairs who prom ises the opening of southern Manchu ria about the 1st of tJeptember is a very Interesting character and he had a most strenuous career an a young man He wns until Japans ambassador at the court of St James and his greatest achievement is the treat of alliance betwetm England iid Japan which has such an im portant bearing jip Cn juterntrtiohinJ ifr vis count dresses when abroad in Euro pean style and has very little the ap pearance of a Jap anese He is the possessor of sev eral honorary de grees having re ceived from Cam bridge an LL D and from Oxford a D C L He is mucn interested in Freemasonry in which order he holds a high post and is a knight of the Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian order He has written a book in Eng lish and has also translated several Avorks from English into Japanese for the benefit of his countrymen Though now so eminent and accom plished It is but a comparatively few years since the viscount was living in a cage subsisting on pickled radish and Chinese rice At times he was even cheated out of these rations After his education as a youth in Eng land he participated in the rebellion of his clan the Satsunia against the mikado When the insurrection was crushed the captured rebels were con lined in prisons which were mere cages with no protection against heat in summer and the bitter cold of northern Japan in winter Fortunately the present minister of foreign affairs had such a good knowledge of English that the mikado preserved his life in order that he might be of use to his country and he has amply repaid lm sovereign for this merciful action Congressman Charles E Littlefield of Maine whose political scalp is sought by President Samuel Gompers of the American Federation of Labor is a member of the judiciary committee of the house of representatives The anti injunction bill favored by Mr Gompers and the wage earners who belong to his organization met with its death in this committee at the last ses sion of congress and the head of the federation holds Mr Littlefield chiefly responsible for its fate It is on this ground that war i3 being waged against the Maine statesman in his dis trict by the forces of organized labor Mr Littlefield succeeded the late Nel son Dingley in congress and was talked of for the speakership at the time David B Henderson resigned the CHARLES E LIT TLEFIELD post He is noted as one of the best orators of the house and has long been popular as a cam paign speaker He once told of an ex perience he had in spellbinding in New York state It was up in Buffalo in the 189G campaign said the Maine man A local lawyer and I had been assigned to a big meeting The local man was introduced first and proceeded to draw from his inside pocket a manuscript from which he started to read At the end of an hour of the worst rot I ever heard my am bitious friend closed In what he thought was a blaze of glory Three cheers for the speaker for finishing some one yelled Cheers were given and then I was Introduced It was a tough proposi tion but I jollied along with the crowd YOU WOULD DO WELL TO SM1 J M Rupp FOR ALL KINDS OP Pp fcfc P O Box 131 McCook Nebraska McCook Tribune 1 the Year V wwvvf Ji li UfALL IllUOUUn AGENT FOR THE CELEBRATED Fairbury Hanchett Windmill This is a warranted and guaran teed windmill nothing hotter in tho market Writo or call on Mr Ball before buvini PHONE BLACK 307 W n49iW Mike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY and EGGS J Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash New location just acros strict in V Wulnh building flcCook - sells THE BEST LUM BER AND COAL Are you thinking of building If so it is ten to one our figures will please you M O McCLURE Phone No 1 Manager mpm The body is important and you cannot expect good flour unless good wheat is used in making it any There cannot be mixtures of poor wheat with the good kind You can always be sure that the 91 Flour is made of the best wheat obtainable This brand is probably used by your neighbor and you can easily find out how well it will please you Inquire about it anywhere and you will hear nothing but praise for it McCook Milling Company Nebraska II i 1 mJ i F D BUilGESS 5 I Plumber and - m Iron Load and Sewer Pipe Brass Goods Pumps an Boiler Trimmings M Jg8f 32 v 9 Estimates Furnished Free Base- Os - j rnen of the Postoffice Building r 7 tpB VT 7 McCOOK NEBRASKA - Greet VISCOUNT MII a uimoer and uoai Center Home of Quality and Quantity where 3 BOLLARD jip