Sfc jBtfrrt Item By F M KIMMELL Largest Circulation in Red Willow Co Subscription 1 a Year in Advance Republican Ticket For United States Senator MORRIS BROWN of Buffalo STATE For Governor GEORGE L SHELDON or Cues For Lieutonant Governor M R HOPEWELL of Burt county For Railroad Commissioners H J WINNETT of Lancaster ROBERT COWELL of Douglas A J WILLIAMS of Piorco For Secretary of State GEORGE JUNKIN of Gosper For Auditor ED M SEARLE JR of Keith For Superintendent of Public Instruction JASPER L MBRIEN of Fillmore For Treasurer LAWSON G BRIAN of Boone For Attorney Genoral WILLIAM T THOMPSON of Merrick For Land Commissioner HENRY M EATON of Dodge COUNTY For Representative PHILIP GLIEM oy Danbury For County Attorney PRENTISS E REEDER of McCook For Commissioner 2nd District SAMUEL PREMER of Bartley Holbkook has tbe name and fame of having improved more rapidly propor tionately the past few years than any other town in Southwestern Nebraska Ask any JAP that you may see Why the Czar with Bearbehind had to climb a tree The YanksGod bless the Yankssays he They gave us Rocky Mountain tea L W McConnell Low Rates to California San Francisco or Los Angeles and re turn 5000 Via Portland SG250 Liberal stopover privileges allowed For particulars call at ticket office G S Scott Agent It arouses energy develops and stim ulates nervous life arouses the courage of youth It makes you young again Thats what Rocky Mountain tea will do 35 cents tea or tablets L W McConnell LIBRARY NOTES Whispering Smith Frank Spearmans new book has been donated to the library It is a story of the West as it was when the railroad first went through of the conflicts between the railroad men and the mountain outlaws of the love making and the fighting that came to some of the pioneers The most dramatic vivid real and thrilling story of the West since Bret Harts early days We are ready to loan boxes of books to teachers in Red Willow county Library hours Mornings 1030 to 1200 oclock afternoons from 130 to 600 oclock evenings from 700 to 900 oclock Sunday 200 to 500 oclock p m Librarian DANBURY Miss Pearl Hayes and James Cummings were quietly married in Beaver City last week We understand that S H Stilgebouer is going to move to Marian and put in a bank of which he S W Stilgebouer and Mr Smith of Bartley will be the principal stockholders Joe Dolph is building a coal house Fred Lyons has returned from Portland Oregon W R Burbridge and family returned from a visit in south eastern Kansas Tuesday and re ports fine crops down there TO REPUBLICANS We are anxious to have every Republican in close touch and work ing in harmony with the Republican National Congressional Committee in favor of the election of a Republican Congress The Congressional campaign must be based on the administrative and legislative record of the party and that being so Theodore Roosevelts personality must be a central figure and his achievements a central thought in the campaign We desire to maintain the work of this campaign with popular subscrip tions of One Dollar each from Repub licans To each subscriber we will send the Republican National Cam paign Text Book and all documents issued by the Committee Help us achieve a great victory James S Sherman Chairman J O Box 2063 New Yorkr liH 1 41 1 j m The Wrecker of Scllly As far back as the time of Henry L there were royal grants of the Islands and their wrecks and frequent was the phrase in centuries following With royal encouragement why should they not be wreckers One Sunday long ago In Scllly service was In progress when there came the cry of Wreck The men started from their seats In a moment there would have been a stampede but they cowered back as the minister sternly thundered a warn ing He strode to the door Again his voice arose Lets all start fair ho shouted throwing off Impeding cassock as he ran while his congregation la bored at his heels Most curious of all wrecks was that of a bark with a car go of beads that went ashore 200 years ago So generous has been the ocean with this treasure that throughout these two centuries it has intermittent ly boon tossing beads ashore yet so frugally that the supply is not yet ex hausted for in a few minutes search I found that some had been thrown there since the last search of the Is landers Robert Shackleton in Har pers An Old Meat Bill The state historian of New York in compiling some records brought to light some amendments to laws confirmed at ye eneral Court of assizes held in New jTorke beginning on ye 5th end ing on ye 8th day of October 1670 The following catches the ejre Whereas divers Complaints have Lbeen made of the great abuse of bring ing deaa noggs Porke Into this city it not being discernible how long they have been Killd by reason -they are too often brought frozen so not ca pable of being preserved by Salt which tends much to ye dlsreputacon of that Commodity when sent abroad and ye Merchants who Export it into Warmer Climates for ye reasons aforesaid it is Ordered That henceforth no hogg or hoggs shall be brought dead to tills place either for sale or payment of debts except it shall be in cask well Salted Packt according to ye Law otherwise sinoakt or dryed of which all persons are to take Notice as they will answer ye contrary at their Per rills IIlBtory on a Watch Face Almost the last work of the Belgian astronomer Houzeau was an article in which while arguing In favor of a dec imal division of time he pointed out the origin of the double set of twelve hours represented on our watch and clock faces The ancient Inhabitants of Mesopotamia chose the number 12 as an arithmetical base because it has four divisors viz 2 3 4 and G while 10 has only two divisors viz 2 and 5 They counted twelve hours in the day and twelve in the night measuring the day by the progress of the sun and the night by the progress of the stars across the sky This system prevail ing over all others has come down to us and so our watches bear on their faces a souvenir of those ancient days when the sun served for a clock hand half of the time and the stars the other half Banlces and His Horse Animal trainers of the old days led adventurous lives In 1G00 all London was talking of a man named Bankes servant to the Earl of Essex who had taught his horse to count and perform a number of feats including mounting to the top of St Pauls cathedral while a number of asses as the historian puts it brayed below Sir Walter Ealeigh in his history says of Bankes that he would have shamed all the enchanters of the world for whatso ever was most famous among them could never master or instruct any beast as he did his horse When Bankes took his horse to Rome both were burned for witchcraft A Possible Exception A high schoolteacher was examining the physiology class How many ribs have you Charles he asked Why er I dont know said Charles Didnt the text books state he then queried somewhat sharply Yes oh yes of course but you see Im long waisted Ben Butlers Retort An old lawyer in speaking about Gen eral Ben Butler said Ben Butler was a terror and a torment to the judges On one occasion Judge Sanger having been bullied and badgered out of ail patience petulantly asked What does the counsel suppose I am on this bench for Scratching his head a minute Butler replied Well I confess your honors got me there Easy Answer A Liverpool paper tells the pathetic story of one A who is compelled to grow a beard to ward off pneumonia and other ills The woman with whom he has fallen in love however declines to marry him unless he will shave What asks our contemporary should A do The answer seems easy Keep the beard and cut the woman Friendship There Is a certain development of love in which the covetous longing of two people for one another has yielded to a higher mutual thirst for an Ideal above them both But who has found such love who has experienced it Its true name is friendship On the Safe Side Schroeder to his neighbor a widow edWhy did you send your housekeep er away since she was such a good cook The Widower She made such splendid puddings I was afraid I should marry her Fliegende Blatter A cubic foot of distilled water weighsvery nearly 1000 ounces -5 HETTY GREENS SON Hei a Smart One and la No r a Railroad Prcnident Edward Howland Robinson Green who was nominated by the Reorgan ized Republicans for governor of Texas but declined to run is the son of Mrs Hetty Green the richest woman In America He is president of the Texas Midland railroad and his mother says Eds n smart one He did not become president of a railroad without working hard to attain that rung on the ladder of success despite his mothers influence in the financial world When he graduated from col lege In 1887 his mother asked him what he wanted to do Well mother said the young man I think I would like first of ail to take a vacation and have a good time About three months would be enough I think The latter asked him how much money he would need for his ex penses while resting and he replied that about 1000 a week would suit him She turned to her secretary and told him to place 12000 to young Mr Greens credit The latter started out to enjoy his vacation and for twelve weeks Mrs Green saw or heard noth ing of her boy On the last day of the last month young Green returned to his mother and reported himself ready for work On this occaslan Mrs Green did not consult her sons wishes as to just what employment would suit him I want she said turning to her clerk those papers about the Connect- mBmMwmk EDWABD H E GREEN icut road The clerk passed over some folded documents She selected one from the bundle and gave it to her son When he examined it he found that it was an appointment making E H R Green the foreman of a railroad section gang in Vermont As a compensation for his labor in this aesthetic occupation Edward was to receive 45 a month He did not chew his pill He swallow ed it and struck out like a man for his job A tough job he found it His section was one of the roughest on the road The drop from 4000 a month spending money to 45 a month wages was a rather difficult matter to adjust and at the first months end he was 40 in debt He wrote to his mother for a remittance but she didnt remit One day Mrs Green rolled along in her private car and stopped for a chat on the roadside with Ned She was favorably impressed with his progress and that night promoted him superin tendent of the division at a salary of 100 a month He proved himself so capable a railroad man that when Mrs Green bought the Texas Midland she made him its president HAS FIVE WIVES President Joseph F Smith of the Mormons and His Arrest Joseph Fielding Smith head of the Mormon church who was arrested a few days ago on the charge of living unlawfully with five wives was a wit ness before the senate committee on privileges and elections in the Smoot case He at that time expressed his belief In the principle of polygamy and admitted having a plurality of wives President Smith recently returned iiiHRFXiiiCabK3jHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1w9nBiiHnLlsiKdiiiiiiLiiiiiiiiHK JOSEPH P SMITH from a trip to Europe and on his ar rival in Utah was Informed of tbe birth of his forty third child President Smith is of patriarchal ap pearance He was born in 1838 and married his- first wife forty years ago He was elected president of the Mor mon church in 1901 fes4SOSUJcik - - Sir Walter Scotts First Brief Sir Walter Scott had his share of the usual curious experiences shortly after being called to the bar nis first ap pearance as counsel In a criminal court was at Jedburgh assizes in 1703 when lie successfully defended a veteran poacher Youre a lucky scoundrel Scott whispered to his client when the verdict was given Im Just o your mind returned the latter and Ill send you a maukin I e a hare the morn man Lockhart who narrates the Incident omits to add whether the maukin duly reached Scott but no doubt it did On another occasion Scott was less successful In his defense of a housebreaker but the culprit grateful for his counsels exertions gave him in lieu of the orthodox fee which Ire was unable to pay this piece of advice to the value of which lie the housebreak er could professionally attest First never to have a large watchdog out of doors but to keep a little yelping ter rier within and secondly to put no trust in nice clever gimcrack locks but to pin his faith to a huge old heavy one with a rusty key Scott long re membered this incident and thirty years later at a judges dinner at Jed burgh he recalled it in this impromptu rhyme Yelping terrier rusty key Was Walter Scotts best Jeddart fee Westminster Gazette WastebunUct TrcaxnrcH I have In my employ said -a dealer in autographs a number of celebri ties housemaids Thanks to these young women I secure at nominal cost many an autographic gem All I ask of the maids is that they ship me week ly the contents of their masters waste baskets They bale the stuff up In burlap and every Monday or Tuesday It comes to me by freight I go over It carefully making many finds Here will be a begging letter from a famous author in hard luck Here in a brief note a great actor will boast of his last success Here will be a dinner invitation from a celebrated million aire Some celebrities of course save their valuable letters and some sell them but the majority throw into the wastebasket most of the mail they re ceive and I searching the baskets contents every Monday morning find my reward in many a letter worth 10 or 20 The Bed and the Candidates Judge Harlan and James B ry once canvassed Kentucky together as the Republican and Democratic can didates for governor They traveled about the state on a joint debating trip and in many small mountain places had to sleep in the same bed They were warm personal friends and so did not object to this intimacy One night Mr Harlan got into bed first Senator McCreary was not far behind and just as he entered the bed Judge Harlan raised his bulky form and said in his stentorian voice McCreary there is one thing certain the next governor of Kentucky is in this bed As he spoke the bed slats broke and Judge Harlan rolled to the floor Sena tor McCreary caught and held himself in bed and as Judge Harlan reached the floor said John you are right The next governor of Kentucky is still in this bed The Sea Horse This fish is found in the Atlantic ocean around the coast of Spain the south of France in the Mediterranean and in the Indian ocean Sea horses are very small and have been found often curled up in oyster shells The head is much like that of a horse and the rings around the body and tail re semble those of some caterpillars The habits of these fishes are singular and Interesting They swim with a waving motion and frequently wind their tails around the weeds and rushes They have fins to sustain them in the water and even in the air They live on worms fishes eggs and substances found In the bottom of the sea Odd Proposal of Mnrrlaffe That celebrated painter of flower and figure subjects William Hunt was on one occasion commissioned by a gentleman to paint his portrait in the attitude of kneeling and holding in his hand an open scroll whereon were writ ten a declaration of love and an offer of marriage The lady to whom this un usual proposal of marriage was sent replied with a chalk drawing of her self with a sheet of paper in her hand on which was inscribed a laconic Yes Rnliliish Heaps In a thousand miles of Europe I saw but one rubbish heap some old metal cans at Carlsruhe Everywhere else was a complete absence of all waste or carelessness and above all of de facement and roadside uncleanliness The foul vacant lots and dirty dumps that abound In and about American towns are not to be found anywhere Exchange One of Them Struggling Artist No use trying to compete with the picture factories which are turning out cheap daubs by the million The trouble is the people are not educated Lots of buyers cant tell the difference between those pic tures and mine Frank Friend I pre sume thats true I cant myself Open to the Warning Old Quiverful And so you want to take our daughter from us you want to take her from us suddenly without a word of warning Young Goslow Not at all sir If there is anything about her you want to warn me against Im willing to listen The secret of progress lies In know ing how to make use not of what we have chosen but of what Is forced upon us MODERN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Departments ToleErnpIiy Bookkeeping JJnnkinc Shorthand Typewriting Penmanship and English The larRest the host school west of Chicago Competent faculty strict discipline modern methods and individua instruction 00 students placed in positions the pact jenr Positions guaranteed graduates Combined course The only telegraph school in the west Positions pay 15 to 12 per month Day and evening sessions throughout the year You can enter at any time Writo for illustrated catalogue A M KEARNS Prin 500 Charles Building Denver Colo The American UnfTnlo The buffalo is the bulkiest living land animal nativo to North America A full grown buffalo bull stands about five feet eight or ten inches at the shoulder and weighs about 1800 pounds But specimens of over six feet at the withers have been recorded and Mr Hornaday tells me that he weighed a living bull at 2100 pounds A full grown cow stands about four foot eight at the shoulders and accord ing to Audubon weighs about 1200 pounds though Henry says seldom over 700 or S00 pounds The lower weight seems to be nearer the average run but I have seen cows that stood as higli and looked as heavy as ordinary bulls Ernest Thompson Seton in Scribners Fish Sold Alive Fleusburg a seaport town on the east coast of Schleswig Holstein has an ex cellent system of bringing to port fish which are intended for immediate con sumption Instead of packing the fish in the hold of the vessel the fishermen use flat oblong boxes drilled with holes to allow free access of water and into these the live fish are placed as soon as caught and are towed under water By this means the fish are kept alive until the harbor Is reached and they are then taken out of the boxes and sold alive on the quay so that there can be no question as to their absolute freshness Iiifc Preserver Seats Some pleasure steamers on the Eng lish coast employ a very good idea in connection with a few of their deck chairs They are really air tight boxes to which a back and sides have been added They stand back to back in the middle of the deck and are kept together by means of a piece of wood across the top When this is removed the seats can be opened on hinges If the vessel got wrecked the seats could be opened and flung overboard and they would form a buoyant raft for passengers to cling to London Mail What the Jury Thoncht Flatman I hear you were arrested the other day for insulting and brow beating a janitor How did you come out I was tried for it and acquitted On the ground that it was justifi able No the jury couldnt be made to believe such a thing was possible Chicago Tribune In Study Tourself order to judge of the inside of others study your own for men In gen eral are very much alike and though one has one prevailing passion and an other has another yet their operations are much the same and whatever en gages or disgusts pleases or offends you in others will engage disgust please or offend others in you Ches terfield They Knew Him Knox It seems that Graphters ac quaintances are all very shrewd peo ple Jenks Did he tell you that Knox He implied as much He an nounced the other day that he doesnt owe anybody a dollar Philadelphia Ledger Feminine Amenities Yes dear I was married last month Id like you to call on me and see the pretty little flat I have Tve seen him my dear Life Every being that can D4f something Lets Talk Furnace Who is your Furnace Man All depends on him whether your furnace will be satisfac tory or not Does he under stand the system of hot air heating circulation and ventil ation Is he competent to make the elbows angles fittings etc required in an ordinary furnace job and install them without endangering your property by fire A Furnace Man must have practical experience We have made the furnace business a specialty for the past twenty one years fourteen years at Omaha Nebraska We are the sole agents for the Boy n ton Furnaces They Are the Best Made Estimates and any information regarding the proper installa tion of a modern heating apparatus free of charge L Your patronage respectfully solicited Polk Bros New Store Dennison Street HcCook Nebraska R F D NO 1 While Joseph Dudek and W P Broomfield were stretching wire the other day the lever slipped and struck Mr Dudek a violent blow over the eye giving him an ugly cut Joseph Downs and son Edward have returned from their Hooker county visit Mrs W P Burns arrived home Tuesday from her trip to Friend where she was called by the illness of her daughters baby A new house is being erected on the Hatfield ranch which will be occupied by a Russian family Mr Hatfields policy seems to be now to farm his big ranch out in smaller parcels to the thrifty Russians A sound policy doubtless W N Rogers and son Henry left last night for Kansas City to look after some show stock Mrs R D Rogers received a telegram Saturday moaning tell ing of the death of a sister in Illinois Postal Clerk A D Bower is at home for a vacation of a couple weeks Some unknown parties are caus ing considerable annoyance at North Star schoolhouse Threat ening letters are being placed un der the door against the teacher and a young man of that neighbor hood besides windows have been broken the door and the room be fouled and defiled insomuch that for two days of last week it was not possible to hold school in the room until the same could be cleaned and purified It is to be hoped that these creatures can be brought to justice and this outrage terminated BEGGS CHERRY COUGH SYRUP Cures BRONCHITIS 1 8 COMMISSION ON WHEAT COMlANDlOATS Chicago andKansasCity delivery A H SMITH CO Rooms 7 8 and 9 Pratt Buildin over Profit Lovell Hastings Ave t3 Hastings Nebraska rr 10-12-4 K Bell 67 Telephones Auto 1637 McCook Laundry Q C HECKMAN Prop 1 Dry and Steam Cleariing and Pressing vfGS CHERRTC0UGH 5YRUP Cures BRONCHITIS n r i - i r t r 7 3