The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, May 24, 1907, Image 6

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fiABY BAKE GLOVER
Granddaughter of hc Venerable Found
er of Christian Science
It is rather a peculiar position In
which a pretty western girl Miss Mary
Baker Glover of Lead City S D ilntls
herself She is a granddaughter of
Mrs Mary Baker Eddy founder of
Christian Science and with her father
and a nephew of Mrs Eddy has
brought suit for an accounting of the
property of her grandmother basing
tills action on the allegation that the
famous author of Science and Health
Is Incompetent to manage her affairs
She was with her father when he vis
ited his mother at Concord N II just
previous to the bringing of the suit
Mrs Eddy at that lime showed solici
tude that her granddaughter should be
Jfe - fill
MISS MAliX BAKIUt GLOVER
well instructed in the tenets of Chris
tian Science Miss Glover Is not a
Christian Scientist however Her fa
ther was at one time but recently has
not been counted among the adherents
of the sect Miss Glover has a bright
and pleasing face and her mouth Is
expressive of shrewdness She has
been familiar with mining camps and
the hardships of life in such regions
since childhood as her father Is a
mine prospector and promoter and the
Inventor of a divining rod which he
claims to be of value in the location of
mineral wealth He is Mrs Eddys
only son but was separated from his
mother for many years She gave him
up at four years of age when she was
a young widow because she could not
care for him lost track of him and for
a long time supposed bim dead
TEDDY JUNIOR AT HARVARD
How the Presidents Son Won a Much
Coveted Post
President Roosevelts eldest son
Theodore Roosevelt Jr is often an
noyed by having to be so much in the
public eye while pursuing his course at
Harvard university His position as a
student is rather a trying one in view
of the publicity thrust upon him by
reason of his fathers blgh station but
he is considered to have shown good
sense in the main and is popular with
his fellow students This is shown in
the fact that he was recently chosen
assistant manager of the varsity crew
A student wbo wins this post has to
earn the appointment Young Roose
velt could not have obtained it simply
on the ground of being the presidents
son
There were quite a number of can
didates for the position and all were
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SNAPSHOT OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT JB
assigned to the task of soliciting sub
scriptions for the support of rowing
When Teddy junior started to ask for
subscriptions he got a good deal o
joshing from fellow students but
kept at it until he had raised 600
which was 100 more than any other
student raised The contest then nar
rowed down to four candidates and
they were required to do odd jobs
about the boathouse such as filling the
tank and running errands for members
of the crew Not even this feazed the
presidents son and he finally won the
appointment In the natural course
of events he will become manager of
the crew In his senior year and this Is
a position which carries with it much
social prestige
AX IN TREASON TRIALS
Snarp Edge Turned Toward Prisoner
When Sentence Is Pronounced
Every one is aware of the dreadfully
significant part the executioners ax
had to be carried Oh put the
thing in here cried brave old Bal
merino I dont care
Yet notwithstanding his contempt
for this horrid symbol the undaunted
old man cheerfully suffered death for
his attachment to another symbol the
white cockade But Lord Kilmarnock
in the next coach was dreadfully
frightened as he showed himself to be
by his thorough realization of what
the awful ax would mean to him He
inquired minutely into all the details
of an execution wanted the governor
of the Tower to toll him whether his
head would roll or rebound and Avhen
on the scaffold he saw the executioner
dressed in white with a white apron
he whispered to his chaplain Home
how horrible
REMARKABLE HORSES
Some Clever Animals and a Wonderful
New England Nag
In his letters to Lord Granville pub
lished by the Royal Philosophical so
WORK OF THE LUNGS
What Has Happened When an Athlete
Gets Winded
The football match Is stopped Man
hurt Take time oft these are the
plays in a trial for hi h treason The expressions to be heard when a player
But has lie
Klmrn avmliol of ftaiiili is enrrlo1 I winded why
Is he for air
fore the prisoner with Us blunt side lapsed Why gasping
A fe fl ts concerning the lungs will
turned toward him so long as he has
not been sentenced says Macmillana exPltlln Hitters
y liive 200 cubic Inchcs of alr hl
Magazine and just before sentence is
our cIlest and vou onl breathe out
pronounced the sharp edge is turned
his way at eaca expiration about twenty to
tllirt3 of Tr V as llurd as J011
Evelyn who was present at the trial
cu Jou are unable to 1rcath out aU
of Lord Stafford in 1089 tells us that
im v wn iiirno1 nwivc tn tim the air It would be bad for you if you
fortunate nobleman so soon as it was
ascertained that the voting of the
peers went against him an effective
but ghastly piece of stage management
which must have had a sickening fas
cination for the unhappy and probably
Innocent man In those davs now
rellectod on the unnecessary cruelty of
harrowing the feelings of men about to
Vlio by such shocking judicial byplay
Not every prisoner treated tills pure
ly symbolic but otherwise superfluous
and unpleasant ceremony as contemp
tuously as did Lord lialmerino When
the three coaches conveyed the Lords
Kilmarnock lialmerino and Cromartie
from the Tower to be sentenced at
Westminster on July 2S 1740 a diffi
culty arose It was not laid down by
prescription or use in which coach if
tno lunKS
there were more than one the fatal ax
could for your lungs are in a kind of
bag Prick this and the lungs col
lapse
The footballer has had too much air
knocked out of him No wonder lie
gasps for the atmosphere is pressing
on his chest at the rate of fifteen
Pounds to the square Inch He has
hannily cone bv no one seems to have
lust some ui uiu air nisiiie wmiii
should press against the pressure out
side
What about the work of the lungs
Suppose the word laundry is used
instead That is just the idea The
impure blood travels to the lungs quite
dark rod in color The reason is that
it contains much carbonic acid gas
Try breathing through a tube into
some limewater Notice the clean wa
ter becomes milky This gas is con
tinually passing from the blood into
You have to breathe six or eight
times before the air reaches the bottom
of the lungs The first breath only
gets to your collar stud The oxygen
you have inspired meets some carbonic
acid gas and they change places
Down the oxygen goes till it meets
the air cells Imagine a prison cell
with a transparent door The blood
as it were can see the oxygen Right
through the skin wall the oxygen
passes The carbonic acid gas also
passes out into the lungs to be ex
pired
What is the blood taking away
Your blood is full of small live bodies
corpuscles and these will take as
much oxjgen as you can give them
The blood is so happy when it obtains
some of this gas that it changes its
color from dark to light red Away it
goes round the body and In a minute
or two comes back to the lungs with
a fresh cargo of impure gas
In one day you breathe out 15000
cubic inches of tills impure gas Weigh
it and there are six ounces of solid
carbon There is enough material for
ciety who was also greatly interested - a dozen lead pencils Put this fact in
in natural history Smithson the another way
founder of the Smithsonian institution You will breathe out in one rear 137
in America says London Tit Bits re- pounds of solid matter perhaps as
lates how the horse of Alexander the much as you weigh
Great Bucephalus would at night on
Where does it all so von nsk
hearing a blast of the trumpet from
the soldiers on guard showing the
What about the trees and shrubs
They are principally made of carbon
proach of the enemy run at great Perhaps a tree contains some parts of
speed to his masters tent and with his -what was onrp nmn
teeth grab the sleeping monarch and
shake him until he sprang into the sad
dle and galloped toward the enemy
Also that the great Caliph
in the eighth century in
marching toward the forces of Queen
A microscope will show you holes on
the under side of a leaf At certain
times of the day this breathed out gas
from human beings enters and passes
into the interior of the leaf
Now a leaf is green because it con
Irene of Constantinople always had tains millions of chlorophvl bodies
a number of trained Arabian horses These take the carbonic aci1 gas
direct descendants of the famous eatf if you willf the carbon and set
horses owned by Ishmael 4000 years t oxvgeu free to be rebreathed by
ago thrown forward as scouts which man Pearsons Weekly
from time to time returned to camp
and by a peculiar whinny and neigh A Curious church
reported the proximity of the
enemy The most sIagulnr cuurcb ln the
relates the experiences of
5Z I wW s probably st Jolm at Davos
the Portuguese explorer Albuquerque
pialz n Switzerlaml Davos riatz s
who lived tor the six-
many years m
ovel 5QQQ feet aboye sea leyel anQ g
teenth century on the Island of St
famous as a winter resort for con
Helena where he and the natives
sumptives on accouut of its reat
taught the herds of wild horses there
rity of aU aud rotection from Uh
not only to dig potatoes but to husk
st Jolms cmuch Ig a yerv
a herd taken there from Cappadocia
in the second century as related by
the Greek historian Philistorgius
small building but nevertheless it has
two steeples One of these is much
larger than the other towering high
nhnvo tlif rluitvli nnil nrnsontiiKr n
B V IT Lr 1 SUr t singular appearance being twist-
it is related by retired New
day a
England clergyman whose sands of
life had nearly run out that one day on
leading his horse down through a lane
to a brook for a drink the animal sud
denly halted and turning its head
around grabbed up with its teeth one
of its hind shoes which had just drop-
ed after the manner of a corkscrew
The steeples contain some fine chimes
which in ancient times were used to
sound the alarm when there was a
threatened invasion of wild animals
Amphibious Man
Afin Viopnmfiij mvmliiliirmc in
ped off and holding it in its mouth
certain Te rature permit
with the nails dangling it backed up
against a stone wall and clapped it on
to its hoof and with a few violent
kicks nailed it on again
How Slow the Train Was
Two men were coming into Denver
from a nearby town on a local train
the other day The train stopped ev
when the train halted for the engine
to get up steam the mans impatience
overflowed
Now what do you think of this
train he said to the other
It Isnt making much progress re
plied his friend
Progress I should say not said
the impatient man It would be a
fierce job to take a moving picture of
this train Denver Post
In Doubt
Some years ago Henry James review
ed a new novel by Gertrude Atherton
After reading the review Mrs Ather
ton wrote to Mr James as follows
ting he swims as well dives better
than many animals better for in
stance than any dogs The Greek
sponge fishers and the Arabic divers
must have sight almost as keen below
water as that of the sea otter They
have even learned by practice to con
trol the consumption of the air supply
in tueir lungs xne usual time lor a
ery five minutes it seemed and one of
bjppopotamus to reraahl below Avater
the became impatient Finally
men flw rrm nonrl fiw nn
remain below two and a half minutes
In a tank a diver has remained under
water for four minutes But tempera
ture marks the limits of mans amphib
ious habits London Spectator
Would Keep It Down
The late Bishop Dudley of Ken
tucky could administer a delicate re
buke but usually took pains that the
point should be obvious A wealthy
but unusually stingy member of his
church told him he was going abroad
I have never been on the ocean said
the old skinflint to the bishop and I
should like to know something that
will keep me from getting seasick
Dear Mr James I have read with much You might swallow a nickel re-
pieasure your review oi my novei wxi snonfled the bishon
JWU AAU7 1 I WAV w rw
liked It or not Sincerely
GERTRUDE ATHERTON
Everybodys Magazine
Willing to Take the Risk
Do you think a person can be both
rich and happy
I dont know but Im willing to be
used for experimental purposes
Cleveland Plain Dealer
Badly Swollen
Hewitt Large bodies move slowly
Jewett I dont see how you can shake
your head New York Press
A Slight Error
A prominent surgeon lecturing a
class of students said
I was so excited at my first opera
tion that I made a mistake
A serious one sir asked a stu
dent
Oh no the surgeon answered- I
only took off the wrong leg San An
tonio Express
The glutton Is always thinking of
what he is going to eat the dyspeptic
of what he has just eaten
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K8
BLOCKADED
Every Household Should Know How To
Resist It
The back aches because the kidneys
are blockaded
Help the kidneys do there work
The back will ache no more
Lots of proof that Doans Kidneys
Pills do this
W H McCay engineer at the Aber
nathyMfg Co and living at 110 Dakota
street Leavenworth Kan says
Though I doctored and tried all kinds
of medicines I suffered severely from
kidney trouble for all of ayear and noth
ing seemed to do me the least bit of
good The pain in my back was ter
rible and sharp twinges would cramp
me up at times so that I could hardly
move The kidney secretions were ir
regular and contained a great deal of
sediment that looked like brick dust
One physician who treated me said
I had muscular rheumatism but he
did not help me After giving up all
hope of finding relief 1 happened to
learn through a friend about Doans
JFJtTfjmiMmm
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mrnggmmmm wh urn mm m
mmmmiwm jf w wss
WKmBpM i h ii
itfllliftf
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ikifcit
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Kidney Pills and got a box at E C
Fritsches drug store 1 found benefit
in the treatment and continued it until
I had taken three boxes I was entirely
cured of kidney trouble and havo had
no sign or symptom of it since If over
any medicine saved a mans life Doans
Kidney Pills saved mine I havo been
well for six years and know several
people who have used Donns Kidney
Pills on the strength of the testimonial
I gave in 1899 recommending them I
have yet to hear of a case in which this
remedy failed
Fr sale by all dealers Price 50
ceii i Fostor Milburn Co Buffalo N
Y dIo agents for the United States
Remember the name Doans and
take no other
Office supplies at the Tribune oflico
GATEWOOD VAHUb
DENTISTS
Office over McAdams Store Phone 190
You Can Get
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TO GUARD SHIPS against the unseen dangers a sea
the United Stales Government maintains lighthouses
To guard your home against the un
seen dangers of food products the Govern
ment has enacted a pure food lav The
law compels the manufacturers of baking
powder to print the ingredients on the
label of each can
The Govranment has made the label your protection
so that you can avoid alum read it carefully if it docs not
say pure cream of tartar hand it back and
I
sS tea
iggfflli
IIS59
POWDER
ROYAL is a pure cream of tartar baking powder a pure
product of grapes aids the digestion adds to the health
fulness of food
PUBLICATION NOTICE
Mary E Rriidy Iiorottn IintdyJoIm T Iinnly
Julia C lirariv and Josnli K lirailv minor
lieirs of John T Brady deceased and Marj E
lirudy ustfimnlinuof Lorutta Brady John T
Brady Julia C Brady ami JoM ph F Brady
minors defendants will tako notice that on the
ithdayof April 1WJ7 E jthurA Lewist defend
ant filed hexanwur and cross petition against
said defendant tho plaintill aud the other de
fendants hereinafter name I in the suit pending
in tho District Court for Bed Willow County No
brasku wherein Edward B Cowlos is plimUft
and Esther A Lewis Andrew E Harvey Hiirviv
iun partner of the lirtn of Burton llano and
tho defendants first aforesaid nro defendants
the object and praj or of which are to foreclose
a inortKaKo executed and delivered by Harris
Tuttlonnd ilary Tuttlo to said Esther A Lewis
on Nov 16 18Si upon tho uest half of tho
southeast quarter of bection one and the north
enst quarter of section twelve nil in township
on- north ranee thirty went of tho 6th princi
pal meridian in said county to secure tho paj
mentof one promissory note dated November
10 lhfeU for SMJOduo in years from dato thereof
and to foreclose the payment of H 24 taxes paid
thereunder anil interest on said notosand taxes
that there is now duo and upaid on said notes
mortgages and taxes paid by srid Esther
Lewis tho sum of SCSI 21 with 10 percentinterest
thereon on 000 thereof from NovlSlh91 on SYA 09
thereof from Dec 5 lltOti and on llr thereof
fr m Dec 7 lOOOfor which sums and interest
said cross petitioner prays for a decree of fore
closure hiid sale of said premises and for gen
oral relief You are required to answer caul
cross jMjtition on or before tliOord day of June
1907 Dated April 23th 1W7 -
EsriiKitA Ltwisfroas letitioner
By W S Moklan Her Attorney
BEGGS CHERRY COUGH
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VW1
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Takiner cartoons and illus-
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