m W 1 va tSA ft f in J y Mile a Minute How Automobilist Edge Exceeded That Rale of Speed For a Whole Day fed on Tabloids and Coffee Niba The Feat of Felice Nxzro manner In which motorists THE beon breaking records this summer takes the breath away Both In this country and Europe remarkable feats have been performed by the automobile speeders The worlds record was bro ken by Felice Nazzaro who won the Grand Prix International automobile race at Dieppe France over a courso of about 477 miles In 0 hours 40 min utes 81 seconds His averago speed was about seventy one miles an hour Nazzaro finished third In the Interna tional automobile cup race in France in 1905 and competed in the Vander bllt cup race on Long Island In 1905 and 1903 failing to finish on both the latter occasions Still more remarkable If possible than the performance of Nazzaro Is that of S F Edge In the twenty four hour au tomobile race over the Brooklands rac ing track at Weybridge England In his six cjilnder Napier car Edge trav eled 1581 miles 1310 yards during the twenty -four hours ended on the even ing of June 29 No other man since the world began ever traveled so far in one day or even came within a hun dred miles of it A twenty four hour automobile race was held on the Point Breeze track near Philadelphia about the same time but the best record made was 717 miles for the same pe riod in which Edge drove his car over 1500 miles At the Point Breeze track rain and mud interfered with fast time The Brooklands racing track at Wey bridge was built especially for speed ing The course Is an oval Intersected by a straight finishing run of a quarter of a mile at one end Two bridges carry it over the river AVey The sur face is of concrete and Is raised above water level throughout To provide for the high speed of motor cars in rounding the curves the outer edge of the course is elevated to a considerable extent At the northern cud of the rllPPIllllilPIPI r WSm mmtt j mBWk Sy S F EDGE oval it cuts through a hill thus leav ing a sharply rising elevation within the oval itself This elevation forms a natural grand stand from which the whole course may be overlooked The circuit of the course Is three miles and it Is said to be the longest circular track in the world The whole course is inclosed in fencing and in those parts to which the public is admitted a double row of fencing has been erect ed to insure ample protection against Interference with the racers by people crowding on the track In this way conditions like those which caused dan ger to racers and the public at the Yau derbilt cup races on Long Island are avoided In order to safeguard cars running on the course a comprehensive system of telephones has been estab lished and every part of the circuit is overlooked by a sentry located in a sentry box furnished with telephone apparatus and alarm bells The whole course is thus under constant observa tion and all occurrences can be sig naled electrically to the proper func tionaries Edge in his wonderful performance undertook to cover 1440 miles in 1440 minutes in other words to travel at the rate of a mile a minute for a whole day He bettered this by 141 miles Never did his speed fall under sixty miles an hour His highest speed was seventy two miles an hour and six times he traveled seventy miles in the hour He accomplished his feat in spite of punctured tires and other road troubles When he had to stop on ac count of a puncture the wheel was replaced with lightning speed by ex pert mechanics Edge was fed while going around the course by tabloids and coffee nibs handed him by his agile little mechanician Burnsidewho climbed all over the car when it was going at seventy miles an hour as free ly as if its speed was only seventy miles a day The two men had a nar row escape once when a stone flung up by the tires struck the glass pro tecting Edge from the wind and broke it Fragments hit them in the face but luckily failed to seriously injure them or interfere with operating the car CALLING IN PARIS The Conciergo Is a Peculiar Institu tion In Several Ways You leave your card at the door of the person to whom you desire to pre sent yourself and there It is taken in charge by that peculiarly French func tionary the concierge says Professor Barrett Wendell In Scrlbners At least In Paris the greater part of French people live in large houses con- a common entrance and staircase Close to the entrance door on the level of the street are some stuffy little rooms Inhabited by the concierge or porter with his family Their duty among other things is to keep strict watch on whoever goes in or out and To Calculate Longevity Bacon took a deep interest In longevity and its earmarks said a physician and Bacons signs of long life and of short life are as true today as they ever were You wont live long Bacon pointed out if you have soft fine hair a fine skin quick growth large head early corpulence short neck small mouth brittle and separated teeth and fat ears Your life barring accidents will be very lengthy if you have slow growth coarse hair a rough skin deep wrin kles in the forehead firm flesh a large mouth wide nostrils strong teeth set close together and a hard gristly ear Dogs That Worry If you have ever seen a dog that has lost its master in a London street you will wonder whether even the lower animals have not the elements of wor ry to disturb them But the man wor ries about many other things than bones or masters and the dog never suffers from insomnia through fear of a future life or the state of his bank ing account Reader Wasted Sympathy Benevolent Old Man I am sorry Johnny to see you have a black eye Promising Youth You go home and bo sorry for your own little boy hes got two Illustrated Bits CLEVER MISS HARRIMAN Daughter of Railway Magnate Is Good Whip and an All Around Athlete The prominence of E H Harriman in the railroad world and the attention his doings have excited in various ways of late make his family of Inter est to many besides those who happen to have their acquaintance Mr Harri man Is very fond of his two daughters Mary and Cornelia who are of an ago tainlng a number of apartments with i when they can be boon companions for him and their liking for the same things In which he takes most pleas ure outside of business hours results in their being much in his society Mr Harriman is very devoted to his coun try estate at Arden Tuxedo Park N Y The Misses Harriman are fond of at least one of them often the porters outdoor life and Miss Mary Is especial wife or half grown daughter Is always at hand The chief peculiarity of their temper ament seems to be insatiable appetite At whatever hour of day or evening you call on a concierge you are sure to find somebody eating or just risen from table and the ate mhere inhab ited by this bustling p jonagc seems Immortally laden with e fumes of something recently boileii No matter whether you call on a friend who lives in some unpretentious out of the way place or on one who inhabits something like a palace the concierge Is always about the same You can detect little difference be tween those in charge of important doors and of Insignificant They are as like as house flies Of course there are private houses in Paris with regu lar domestic servants such as you would 2nd anywhere but these grand or simple are so unusual that you re member the concierge as everywhere standing between you and further hu man Intercourse In response to your card which the concierge duly sees delivered comes a card often with a note in return If as is generally the case this acknowl edgment of your existence contains an intimation of when your French ac quaintance may be found at home ei ther habitual or for your special bene fit you make your second visit at this appointed time and thus enter into real personal relations Otherwise your intercourse has limit ed itself to a polite exchange of cards Generally speaking you never expect or attempt to see French people socially except when they have asked you to one of their regular days of reception or have made a definite appointment To call on a person at any other time to do more than leave your card with the concierge would be an intrusive pretense to intimacy POINTED PARAGRAPHS You can waste a good deal of time telling how reliable you are You never say a man wont listen to reason if he agrees with you A boy Is liberally abused if he isnt polite but how many say Thank j ou to a boy No one seems to have as hard a time earning money as the woman who mar ries for it The average mans idea of religious liberty is the privilege of staying home from church Having good judgment and being a fool for luck are frequently the story of a single financial success told by different parties How poor are they who have no patience What wound did ever heal but by degrees Who is the author of the above It is not important wheth er you can remember the author if you can soberly accept the lesson taught Atchison Globe The Value of Diamonds The value of the diamond is at so much per carat and up to a certain limit the value per carat increases as the size of the stone iucreases When a carat diamond is quoted at 125 a diamond weighing a half a carat is counted at the rate of 75 per carat three quarter carat diamonds at 100 per carat one and one quarter carat diamonds at 140 per carat one and one half carat diamonds at 350 per carat one and three quarter carat dia monds at 1S0 per carat and two carat stones at 200 per carat Stones weigh ing more than two carats sell at about the same rate as that quoted for two carat stones and do not increase as rapidly owing to the more limited de mand for the larger sized stones New York Herald ff f j Zj f7swWnL lf YffyjjwslQBKUmFB MISS MARY HARRIMAN AND HER FATHER ly noted as a whip She is a daring horsewoman an enthusiastic golf player fences skillfully can handle an automobile like a veteran chauffeur and is good at most anything in the way of athletics Her adventures have been numerous Once she was on a railway trip in Arizona with her fa ther and started on a horseback trip about Phenix when she became en gaged in a fierce battle with the broncho she was riding She was no sooner in the saddle than the animal began to buck With great cleverness Miss Harriman kept her seat as the vicious horse reared and side leaped ner father ran to her rescue and other men tried to assist him but could not get near the broncho Miss Harriman did not appear to be scared in the least She sat like a veteran broncho buster until the horse slipped and rolled over her She escaped with only an injured ankle She was speeding once on Riverside drive New York in her motor car when her chauffeur was arrested for exceeding the speed limit She ac companied him to the police station When she told the police sergeant she would give bail for the appearance of the chauffeur and the officer asked what security she could offer she re plied My home at 1 East Fifty fifth street giving its value as 150000 The sergeant gasped a little and realized to whom he was talking Miss Harri man mistaking his hesitation for un willingness to accept the security said she could give railroad stocks and bonds if the real estate wouldnt do The sergeant assured her that there would be no difficulty about releasing the chauffeur under the circumstances AN ELOQUENT PICTURE One Used by Haywood Defense Shows Miner Bound to a Pole One of the things put In evidence in the Haywood trial in Idaho by counsel for the defense was a photograph of a miner named Henry Macki bound to a telegraph pole It was during the labor troubles in the Telluride district when so many outrages were committed by both parties to the conflict This man STINEB HEKBY 1IACKI BOUND TO POIiE was seized by the militia and put in the famous bull pen So little tender mercy was shown him that his hands froze while ho was confined in the cruel manner illustrated The photograph tells the story better than words It was used by the Haywood defense to ndd to the weight of the contention lhat all the acts of brutality and crime iommitted fiurlng the war between the jnlners and their employers were not lone by the workingmen THE CHANCE CAME Dans Father Said Ho Never Would Set the River op Fire Several years before the discovery of oil at Plthole an Irishman named Mc Carthy and his son Dan came to this country from the Emerald Isle Dan was a jouug man of twenty but his father looked upon him as a mere boy and seemed to take delight in ridicul ing him before people Yis Dan Is a good by he would say sarcastically but Danny mo by yezll nlver set the river on Are This was his stock witticism and It annoyed Dan very much but he did his best and soon surprised the old gentleman by securing a lucrative job Yis Danny has a job all right ho said Its 150 a day but the by Ml niver set the river on fire not he When oil was found at Plthole Dan hurried to the scene and was soon earning unusually large wages as a teamster All the petroleum was drawn in barrels and teams were in great demand lie saved his money bought an acre of land and soon had a well drilled that was producing 100 barrels of oil per day at 10 per barrel The elder McCarthy joined him saw the well received a liberal gift of mon ey and then shook his head ominously TIs a good thing Danny he croak ed ye re doin well but mark me worruds yezll niver set the river on fire me by A few days later a flood wrecked one of Dans small wooden tanks the oil ran down the river and there was great excitement As Dan and his fa ther stood on the bank watching the oil float away Dan drew a match and lighted It Father he said coolly the next toime yez say Oill niver set the river on fire plaze remlmber that Oi had a chance wanst and and didnt do ut bedad Then he blew out the match STRANGER THAN FICTION The Tragedy In the Life of a Russian Military Officer Lieutenant von Lemsberg of the Rus sian guards endured thirty one years of penal exile and penal service in Si beria He was in his day a fine looking and highly accomplished officer Like many of his fellows he borrowed mon ey from City Councilor Wlassow an old good natural bachelor Young von Lcmsbergs notes continued to grow and the old money lender threatened to sue unless some of them were redeem ed Then the joung lieutenant became engaged to the daughter of Count To dleben and called on Wlassow to tell him tho news and to ask for time You wait said he in a sneering way Ill give you a wedding present to be remembered Believing this to have been a threat the lieutenant called at the house the next day and deliberate ly cut his throat He opened the old mans desk to find his promissory notes and discovered them neatly tied up marked Paid and a document by which he would have become the heir of the man he had murdered Over come by remorse he surrendered to the authorities and was sentenced to life servitude in Siberia Because of good conduct his irons were taken off after seven years he married a woman who went into voluntary exile to be near a relative started a vegetable shop in the penal settlement which grew until it became a great mercantile establish ment and when the war with Japan broke out he volunteered became an officer was decorated for bravery and received a full pardon The Old Stagecoach Those who are accustomed to look back with longing eyes to the good old days will find it interesting to learn that in the middle of the eight eenth century the common carrier be tween Selkirk and Edinburgh a dis tance of thirty eight miles required two weeks to make the journey In 177S it took a day and a half for a stagecoach to go from Edinburgh to Glasgow only forty four miles away About the same time the swiftest stages seldom covered the road between Edin burgh and London 310 miles in less than two weeks an average speed of about twenty two miles a day St Louis Republic The Bride Wins At Yarmouth in St Nicholas church one of the most curious objects is known as the Devils Chair It is formed out of the huge jawbone of a whale and stands at the west end of the church When fisher lasses get married they think it good for the newly wedded couple to race fiom the chancel and they believe that whoever reaches the Devils Chair first will rule the roost in the little household they are about to set up London Graphic A Canine Secret You can always tell the people who are unhappy from the look of their faces said the tired woman but if you look out into the court of a morn ing you never can tell which dog It is that has cried all night and kept you awake Xew York Press A Social Catastrophe Was no one injured in the railway collision fount No but nevertheless it was a most painful situation First second third and fourth class passengers all min gled together Simply unheard of Fliegende Blatter Traveling For Health My doctor recommends Europe Going Dunno yet My lawyer seems to think Canada will do Louisville Courier Journal The confession of evil works is the beginning of good works Augustine sXSS2X No Tyranny of Circumstances Can Permanently Imprison a Determined Will If you are really determined to get ahead to accumulnto some thing to be one of the solid financial men of the community you can do it Just n Itttlo self denial and the conserving of your incomo until you have enough to make an investment then koop your monoy work ing for you Even if your present incomo is small you can start a bank ac count and build up for tho investment Start now Safety Deposit Boxes 1 per Year First National Bank -- McCook Nebraska sxs Make your friend a birthday present of some Monogram WEAK WEARY WOMEN Learn the Cause ot Daily Woes and End Them When the back aches and throb3 When housework is torture When night brings no rest nor sleep When urinary disorder sets in Women 3 lot is a weary one Doans Kidney Pills cure such ills This is one Kansas womans testi mony Mrs Mellissa A Love of 211 Hen dricks street Fort Scott Kan says Last winter I had an attack of the grip and it effected my kidneys so that I suffered for a long time afterwards with pain and lameness in the small of the back I had felt this trouble com ing on all during the fall and a cold I took was the final means of bringing it to a climax If I swept the floor or exerted myself in any other way I had to go and lie down but the dull heavy aching would commence again as soon as I got up and stirred around My son urged me to try Doans Kidney Pills and I got a box at T W Atkins drug store and began using them I found such gratifying relief that I con tinued tho treatment until the trouble had entirely disappeared My exper ience certainly warrants me in recom mending Doans Kidney Pills to others For Sale by all dealers Price 50 cents Foster Milburn Co Buffalo X Y sole agents for the United States Remember the name Doans and take no other We have arranged with The Weekly Inter Ocean so that our patrons can secure that sterling paper together with our own at the exceedingly low price of 5103 for one year This is a rare op portunity and should be taken advant age of About the thinnest thing in the world is the film of a soap bubble It would take about 50000000 of them to 1 ure one inch Stationery We have an excellent line of samples from which you can choose embossed in one or two colors or in bronze or gold any letters or combination of letters Call and see samples of the monograms and stock The TRIBUNE Office Afeqfcfefebfe fefefefefe V r KANKLIW PRESIDENT A C EBERT CASHIER JAS S DOYLE Vice President THR CITIZENS a a BANK OF McCOOK NEB Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 1 2000 V FRANKLIN DIRECTORS JAS S D0YLEt A C EBERT t w iiicS The McCook Tribune 1 Per Year Dr ADJFINCH OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN and OPTICIAN Ofiice days Tuesdays Wednes days Thursdays and Saturdays Ofiice in Post Office BIdg - Phone 13 E F OSBORN J W WENTZ OSBORN WENTZ Draymen Prompt Service Courteous Treatment Reasonable Prices GIVE US A TRIAL o tj imm11 mlmia i tT Seeuc Mieyiii If you will figure with usand quality of material is any object you will be easily convincedthat we out class all competition LIBER CO t Mm mim sa