The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, November 09, 1906, Image 6

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    IB
a
trgiTti Tiajsj
F VVJr 1
ItA
in a Stock Certificate of the
McCook
luilding Loan
Association
w i
A FEW
TESTIMONIALS
Wo have received thous
ands of similar ones
3Iy husband had Eczema
on the face for ten years Ho
couldnt Ket any relief until
he tried Hales KczeuiaCnre
nl one lo aiiiodt cured
linn I shall use yoarireiiar
auon in my practice
ADCMiA VOYEK
ObleoiiatU Physician
Little Kobe Olila
3ry little loy liad a form
of Eczema for live years
Ve Iwd seven of the best
doctors and none of them
helped him One box of
Hales Eczema Cure relieved
him wonderfully Five boxes
luye cured him
21iis GOODMAN
San Antonio Tex
I have been a sufferer with
Eczema for forty years
Tried many doctors and var
ious kinds ot medicine but
could not get any relief
Have used one box of j oar
Eczema Ointment and I am
now entirely cured
CAKKIE BOHOX
Ewmg 3Io
I have used two boxes of
your preparation and it has
cured me of Eczema
A II STOKES
Evergreen Ala
5Iy -wife tried most every
thing to relieve her of Ec
zema but was unsuccessful
until 1 procured a box of
your won lerlul Ointment
uhich ha3 cured her entirely
I sliall Like pleas ure in rec
ommending it to anyone
Lain skin trouble
W AlEIEHONT
ilonticello ilo
I had Eczema very bad
31y body was covered With
one box of your preparation
I was cured in a few days
ANNE GO0DSOM
Lake Miss
One box of your Eczema
Ointment lias cured me En
closed And Sl00 for another
box which I nrorjosetokppn
on hand I would not take
510009 and be without it
EUNICE JIOKTON
Durham Ho
With all my heart I thank
you for the good yonr won
derful remedy has done for
me Cured my skin disease
in less than a week when all
other medicines failed
take pleasure in recommend
ingsame G LANDAHL
Granite Hill Grants Pass
Oregon
Tour preparation for Ec
zema is wonderful I cannot
toy enough for it
lias It i FftAZIER
layton Wyo
No better or safer
investment is open to
you An investment
of 100 per month for
120 months will earn
8o nearly 9 percent
compounded annually
Dont delay but see
the secretary today
Subscriptions r e
ceived at any time for
the new stock just
opened
GXsXS
SE23EXC25SSre3
and all other skin diseases CURED by Sja
ib ib isst n itrran n joxt he
A remedy that has never failed It will conquer
ECZEMA and all other skin diseases no matter how
long standing This remedy is the most powerful
local germicidal antiseptic known and was discov
ered after years of experimenting Our most im
portant mission to mankind is to relieve and cure
all sufferers from these terrible annoying disfigur
ing and irritating maladies caused from the various
forms of skin diseases When applied it draws the
disease at once to the surface kills all parasites and
germs and peals off the old diseased skin thus a
permanent cure and makes life worth living The
following poisonous maladies are easily controlled
and cured if Hales Eczema Cure is applied at once
as it kills all disease germs
Mad Doc Uites Snake Bites Poisonous In
sect Sites Erysiyelas Ivy Poisoning Prickly
Heat Itch Ilins Worm Barbers Itch Sores
where thero is dancer of Blood Poisoning or
Gangrene Old Sores that wont heal Black
Dried Scabs etc etc Dont suffer any
longer Dont let the baby cry and scratch its
skin until it bleeds
Fill in and return to us the coupon below for a
sample box FSEE It will tell its own story
There is more conviction in a thimbleful of
trial than a demijohn of talk
Eeference Any bank in Kirksville
HALE CHEMIC C
Kirksville M
laTEawrragSfiasffla
m
P
THE HALE CHEMIC CO
Kirksville Mo
GenUemen
Kindly send me free of all cost and
postage prepaid a sample box of Hales Exzema Cuiie
tiujwwvw ii iff y n ryjurrsm
Gaiewi
JL Office over McAdams Store
I Phone 190
JL
HE PRICE OF ONE
THE TRIBUNE has made arrangements with the follow
ing newspapers whereby we are enabled to give two news
papers for about the price of one These figures hold good
only to those who are new subscribers or have paid one year
in advance
PUBLICATIONS
PRICE
Kansas City Star 25
Toledo Blade 100
Lincoln Weekly Journal 100
New Idea Womans Magazine 50
The Review of Reviews 300 j
Womans Home Companion 100 p 5 00
Success Magazine 100
Cosmopolitan Magazine 100
Cosmopolitan Magazine and The WorldToday 2 50
Cosmopolitan Magazine and Womans Home
Companion 200
Cosmopolitan and Harpers Bazaar 200
Cosmopolitan and Review of Reviews 400
Cosmopolitan Review of Reviews and
Womans Home Companion 500
WITH
TRIBUNE
120
125
1 25
130
400
1 75
250
50
50
00
375
MODERN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
Departments Telegraphy Bookkeeping Banking Shorthand Typewriting Penmanship and
EcRhsb The largest the best school west of Chicago Competent faculty strict discipline
modern methods and individual instruction 300 students placed in positions the past year
Positions guaranteed graduates Combined course The only telegraph school in the west
Positions pay 15 to 125 per month Day and evening sessions throughout the year You can
ester at any time Write for illustrated catalogue
A M KEABNS Prin 500 Charles Building Denver Colo
A HANDSOME APOLOGY
Mark Twain Story of Sweet Though
Long Delayed Itcvenjre
My experience as an author began
early In 1SG7 I came to New York
from San Francisco in the first mouth
of that year and presently Charles II
Webb whom I had known in San
Francisco as a reporter on the Bulletin
and afterward editor of the Califor
niau suggested that I publish a volume
of sketches I had but a slender repu
tation to publish it on but I was
charmed and excited by the suggestion
and quite willing to venture it if some
industrious person would save me the
trouble of gathering the sketches to
gether I was loath to do it myself
for from the beginning of my sojourn
In this world there was a persistent
vacancy in me where the industry
ought to be Ought to was is better
perhaps though the most of the au
thorities differ as to this
Webb said I had some reputation in
the Atlantic states but I knew quite
well that it must be of a very attenu
ated sort What there was of it rested
upon the story of The Jumping
Frog When Artemus Ward passed
through California on a lecturing toui
in 1SG5 or GG I told him the Jumping
Frog story in San Francisco and he
asked me to write it out and send it
to his publisher Carletoh in New
York to be used in padding out a
small book which Artemus had pre
pared for the press and which oeded
some more stuffing to mrk it big
enough for the price which ws to be
charged for it
Webb had made an appointment for
me with Carleton Otherwise I never
should have got over that frontier
Carleton rose and said brusquely and
aggressively
Well what can I do for you
I reminded him that I was there by
appointment to offer him my book for
publication lie began to swell and
went on swelling and swelling and
swelling until he had reached the di
mensions of a god of about the second
or third degree Then the fountains
of his great deep were broken up and
for two or three minutes I couldnt see
him for the rain It was words only
words but they fell so densely that
they darkened the atmosphere Finally
he made an imposing sweep with his
right hand which comprehended the
whole room and said
Books look at those shelves Every
one of them is loaded with books that
are waiting for publication Do I want
any more Excuse me I dont Good
morning
Twenty one years elapsed before 1
saw Carleton again I was then so
journing witn my iamny at me
Schweitzerhof in Luzerne He called
on me shook hands cordially and said
at once without any preliminaries
I am substantially an obscure per
son but I have at least one distinction
to my credit of such colossal dimen
sions that it entitles me to immortali
tyto wit I refused a book of yours
and for this I stand without com
petitor as the prize ass of the nine
teenth century
It was a most handsome apology and
I told him so and said it was a long
delayed revenge but was sweeter tc
me than any other that could be de
vised that during the lapsed twenty
one years I had in fancy taken his life
several times every year and always
in new and increasingly cruel and in
human ways but that now I was paci
fied appeased happy even jubilant
and that thenceforth I should hold him
my true and valued friend and never
kill him again North American Re
view
Precipices In the Himalayas
There is one remarkable peculiarity
of the series of Himalayan ranges be
tween the vale of Kashmir and the
central Asian watershed They are one
after another cut right across by ridges
The reason for this is that the rivers
were there before the ranges were
formed and as by the crinkling of the
earths crust the ranges were raised
the rivers cut gorges through them
and maintained their flow Nanga Par
bat is part of the true and principal
Himalayan range and its summit rises
to the stupendous altitude above sea
level of 2GG30 feet Close to its foot
not more than ten miles in horizontal
distance from the peak the Indus
flows through a desert gorge and here
the height above sea level of the river
bed is not much above 3000 feet It is
easy to conceive from these figures on
how vast a scale natures architecture
is here set up The path along the side
of the gorge is in places perilously nar
row and carried across precipices oi
such appalling character that at one
point a man who lost his footing fell a
mile in vertical height and was of
course smashed to atoms
A Wreck In the Potato Field
An old salt after sailing the sea for
years thought he would try a life
ashore for awhile He looked around
for a job and was engaged by a farmer
saying as he had plowed the deep for
years he thought he could plow the
land He went home with the farmer
and after a good nights rest and
breakfast started out to plow The
farmer hitched up a yoke of oxen with
a horse on to lead Taking two turns
around the field and then turning the
team over to Jack he said he would go
to the house for family prayers It
was plain sailing for a short time but
the team didnt like Jacks way of nav
igating The oxen turned the yoke and
things became snarled up Jack hove
to and went to the house asking for
the deacon He was told the family
was at prayers but pushed in and
hailed the deacon Say deacon the
starboard ox is on the port side and
the port ox is on the starboard side
The old mare is athwart the bows and
the whole thing is drifting to hades
stern first Belay your prayers and
come down and clear away the -wreck
XkuAtaMNMia
iriBj
iflllll imfTftircii
SOME GIANTS OF OUJi THE bird of freedom
NOTEWORTHY SPECIMENS THAT ARE
TOLD OF IN HISTORY
The ProdigriouM Strength of Polyda
mns Who Rivaled HcrcuIcH FeatM
of MuxlmlnuM the Imperial Giant
of the Third Century
If there is one thing iu the show
business which can be depended on to
draw it is a giant provided always
that he be big enough
But giants existed long before this
profitable business was invented and
the names of many of them have been
handed down to posterity sirnply be
cause they were of huge proportions
and combined with their abnormal de
velopment a proportional amount of
strength Thus It is probable that had
Goliath of Gath whose height the
ologians place at over ten feet not
been the strongest as well as the big
gest warrior among the Philistines we
should never have heard of him The
same argument applies to Moab king
of the Amorites and Og king of Ba
shan Orestes too was eleven and a
half feet high according to the Green
legends and he together with Ajax
the Greater had they not beey gifted
with strengtii in proportion their
bulk would have been only ordinary
soldiers of the Grecian army before
Troy
When history begins however that
is when Rome began to reach its high
est point of civilization in the time of
Augustus and learned men began to
write about the times they lived in in
stead of the times that had gone by
long before they were born we get
authentic records of giants In Au
gustus time for instance there were
according to the authority of Valerius
two giants in Rome who were over ten
feet high Their names were Idusis
and Secundflla and they were keepers
of the gates of the gardens of Sallust
Then again we havo a record in
Pliny of one Polydainus the son of
Nicas wiio wns over nine feet high
and whose strength rivaled that of
Hercules himself Polydainus used in
fact to boast his superiority to that
Roman deity and perform his special
tricks For example he once slew a
lion with a blow of his fist and scat
tered its brains about the arena He
could with his hand stop the swiftest
chariot dead and on one occasion
seized a bull by the hoof in order tc
carry it away but the animal strug
gled so violently that the hoof was left
in his hand In the end he was killed
by the falling in of a cave When his
companions noticed that the roof was
falling they left but Polydamus was
so vain about his strength that he
thought he could not be killed So he
stayed and was finally crushed tc
death
The Emperor Yitellius sent to Darius
by way of a present a Jew named
Eleazer who was seven cubits high
that is reckoning the cubits at eight
een inches ten feet six inches and a
giant who is mentioned by the his
torian Tacitus was over nine feet Hii
name was Corbulo and he lived in
Neros time and was a more than usu
ally skillful general and soldier be
sides being an enormously strong man
An account of the ancient giants
would be incomplete without mention
ing Maximinus the imperial giant of
the third century The most extraor
dinary stories are told of this emperor
of Rome His height was eight feet
ten inches he could draw unaided a
loaded wagon which six oxen could
not move while his appetite was so
great that his usual rations for the
day consisted of forty pounds of meat
and a whole amphora of wine besides
bread and dried and fresh fruits
Mediaeval giants are plentiful but
strange to say the records of them are
not so authentic as those of the times
of the emperors Funnian a Scottish
giant who flourished in 1S27 seems to
be the most authentic of these but as
he is put down as being over eleven
feet high the statement should not be
criticised too closely Still more star
tling however is the following wlncli
is vouched for by a monastery full of
monks In 1509 some workmen dig
ging near Rouen came across a cave
in which were some human bones and
a copper plate bearing the words
Here lie the remains of the great and
mighty Chevalier Ricon do Yallemont
The skull was large enough to have
held a bushel of wheat and the shin
bone was over four feet long It the
bone was preserved by the above men
tioned monks and it was estimated
that the height of the defunct knight
must have exceeded eighteen feet A
stranger though somewhat similar
legend comes from Ireland but in thi
case the discoverers thought that they
would to use an expression popular
some years ago go the whole hog or
none It happened in 1G08 Some men
were digging in Ireland when they
came across a brick tomb which con
tained a human skeleton no less than
120 feet long But there is a raison
detre for all these legends Accord
ing to a German professor these bones
which were supposed by ignorant per
sons to be those of human beings were
probably those of mastodons or some
other fossilized remains which to the
uninitiated would look exactly like
those of a man London Standard
An Amiable Dnel
There was a duel in Edinburgh re
cently between two Italians over a girl
with whom both were smitten It tool
place at midnight in the presence of a
party of friends The duelists had but
one revolver and drew lots for the first
shot The winner shot at forty paces
and missed Then he walked up to his
opponent and politely handed the pis
tol over When the man had walked
back to his station the second shot was
fired and also missed So the two men
rushed forward and embraced each
other and the feud ended
ilude of Life of the Famous Bald
Headed ICaprJe
Eagles are popularly supposed to bo
quite different from hawks but In a
word they are nothing more than largo
aawks They reach sometimes the age
of nearly 100 years They live singly
or in pairs and dwell in the wilder
places in all kinds of country from
tropical deserts to the arctic regions
In their search for food however they
often wander far and emboldened by
hunger even approach the abodes of
man In story books and newspapers
eagles have many times been accused
of carrying off young children but
such tales are unreliable
The bald eagle white headed eagle
white headed sea eagle or bird of
Washington is of particular interest
to Americans as the national emblem
of the United States to which dignity
It was eldWted on June 20 17S2 The
name bald eagle originated from the
white head and the erroneous impres
sion of baldness it gives at a distance
This bird measures about three or
three and a half feet in length from
six to eight feet fn extent of wings
and weighs from six to twelve pounds
Under most circumstances wary and
difficult of approach this eagle never
theless is often surprisingly tame and
unsuspicious Unprovoked it rarely
attacks man although such instances
have been reported It prefers trees
for watching and roosting but in
spring sometimes descends to ride the
cakes of ice in the river apparently
looking for fish
This species breeds throughout its
range wherever suitable places exist
and it has been known to lay and hatch
eggs in confinement In the southern
part of the United States from Florida
to Texas it breeds very early deposit
ing its eggs usually during the first
half of December in the middle states
and in California it lays in February or
March about the middle of April in
southern Alaska sometimes in May or
even June in the arctic regions
The nest is located nearly always in
the vicinity of a stream or body of wa
ter The favorite site is the top of a
tall tree Where there are no trees a
rock or a niche in a cliff serves the
purpose
The same nest is occupied year after
year and annually repaired or aug
mented until it becomes an immense
structure five six or even eight feet
high and as much in diameter contain
ing fully a carload or two of material
It usually forms a strong platform
with only a slight depression in the
center and easily sustains the weight
of a man
Ducks of various kinds fall regularly
a prey to the bald eagle and they are
stolen from unwary sportsmen just as
readily as larger birds Wounded
ducks with those purloined from hunt
ers form at some seasons a good
share of its food At favorable oppor
tunities this eagle preys upon fawns
and pressed by hunger will sometimes
attack a full grown deer particularly
if the latter be wounded
In most of the states of the Union
and in many of the Canadian provinces
the bald eaale is protected by law ei
ther specifically or by general enact
ment but in a few it is still specially
exempted from the provisions of the
general nongame protection acts Bul
letin by the United States Biological
Survey
Origin of a French Disli
The names bestowed upon certain
dishes have often an origin entirely
distinct from technical consideration
This is true of the well known epi
grammes dagneau a la Michelet or a
la Toulouse as it is more frequently
called Michelet was the cook of a
young French marquise of the century
who was noted for her lack of educa
tion On a certain occasion she gave
a dinner to the officers of the regiment
Choiseul Cavalerie During the func
tion her guests spoke of a banquet that
they had attended on the previous
evening at which the host had enter
tained them with many new and bril
liant epigrams The marquise suppos
ed that epigrams referred to culi
nary surprises Consequently she sum
moned Michelet her cook and ordered
him to prepare some epigrams for din
ner on the following day Michelet
was greatly troubled as to how he was
to obey the order He recollected
however that he had in the larder
some very superior lamb lie braised
the breast removed the bones cut the
meat into pieces and bread crumbed
and fried them He then cooked the
cutlets arranged them on a dish al
ternately with the braised breast and
served them with a suitable garnish
under the name of epigrammes dag
neau a la Michelet by which name or
a la Toulouse the concoction has ever
since been known
Do the Hard Thinsr First
He who defers an unpleasant duty
does it twice Anticipation of it may
become a continued torture It is wise
to be done with it in the first place
and then contemplation of it becomes
a pleasure The undone task resting
upon your head weighs you down and
holds you back The well finished one
beneath your feet raises you up and
helps you forward Somehow or other
it seems that the hard things are the
Important things Maybe it is because
they are hard and sometimes left un
done that their importance Is realized
If you have not met with the success
you think your efforts merit do not sit
down to groan and rail against fate
but just quietly cast about for the dis
agreeable parts of your work from
which you have shrunk There you
wili find your point of weakness You
may not attach much importance to
these things you shirk from but you
can never know how your neglect of
them has changed the current of your
life
iHS
FAY HOSTETTER
7 TEACHER ON P1AINU x
McCooK N c b r a s K a
lT V
Studio upstnirs in new JRisbel building
south of Post Office
M U R NM
I 111 5
DENTI5T PHOSB m
Offlco Booms 3 nnd 5 Wnlsh Blk McCook
YOU WOULD DO WELL TO SEE
J M Rupp
FOR ALL KINDS OF grjpk WOfk
P O Box 131 McCook Nebraska
McCook Laundry
G C HECKMAN Prop
Dry and Steam Cleaning and
Pressing
JOE HIGHT
CONTRACTOR
and BUILDER
Farm Buildings a Specialty
SATISFACTION
GLAKANTKED
McCook Neb
wVliMk
60 YEARS
r HAltKicnuc
ffiS
Wtffiti1fif msfaaalW
mmw
Kffy
Trade Marks
Designs
Copyrights c
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion froo whether an
Invention Is probably pitontahle Communica
tions strictly conSdontlal HANDBOOK onPatenta
sent free Oldest agency for securinfrpatents
Patents taken through JUunn Co receive
tpecial notice without charge in tlio
ttaume Jf menon
A handsomely illustrated weekly largest cir
culation of any scientific Journal Terms 3 a
year our months 51 Sold by all newsdealers
RIUNN Co3BBroadwa New York
Branch Onico 623 F St Washington D C
kAif 1 t t tt t t H
Mill
If you will figure with usand
quslity of material is any object
you will be easily convincedjthat
we out class all competition
M II 1 VVM I I I I T j
ggzgfiBSsaEBgasgasc
fi iV
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m Of 5 B -a
i wiie will aiwovs
i keep isrippliedi
BALLAHDS
3MOW
USMISV1ENT
A Positive Cure For
Rheumatism Cuts Old Sores
grams wounds Stiff JoiuS
Corns Bunions and all Ills
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say enough for it for EheU
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Three Sizes 25c 50c 100
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