l r D f I I IS 1 3 The best of every thing in his line at the most reasonable prices is Harsh s motto He wants your trade and hopes by merit to keep it HA Ml Ua Of JLIAllJLlftS JUL M The Butcher Phone 12 ttWV w vv m - n ibb ikiBiia iiiii J U UttLU UIUUUUII AGENT FOR THE CELEBRATED Fairbury Hanchett Windmill This i9 a warranted and guaran teed windmill nothing bettor in the market Write or call on Mr Rail before buviner 0 PHONEmBLACK 307 i ike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY and EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash New location just across street in P Walsh building flcCook - Nebraska v F D BURGESS Plumber and Steam Fitti Iron Lead and Sewer Pipe Brass Goods Pumps an Boiler Trimmings Estimates Furnished Free Base ment of the Postoffice Building McCOOK NEBRASKA a foTrr loops nf this remedv will in variably cure an ordinary attack of diarrhoea It can always be depended upon j cramp colic and cholera morbus It la equally successrui ior summer diarrhoea and cholera infantum in children and is the means of saving the lives of many children each year When reduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take Every man of a family should keep this remedy in his home Buy it now Price 25c Large Size 50o li jMagggJt9iIIMIMlmWWltMTOWJMaJ A CURE FOR CUSSING Tho Penitent Scotsman Found His Load a Heavy One A clergyman In Scotland observed with much perturbation that a mem ber of his congregation was greatly given to the use of strong language Over and over again he remonstrated with the man to give up the bad habit In time the man himself came to see the error of his ways and desired no less earnestly to break himself of the use of bad language The difficulty however was to find a method of doing so One diy the clcrgyinn hit upon a happy thought Get a bag he said to the nan and every time you swear put a pebble into it At the end of the month you will bring that bag to me I will count the pebbles and see what the effect has been The man accepted the Idea with alacrity He got a bag and religious ly every time he swore what Mr Gil bert in the Pinafore calls a big big D he duly put a pebble into It At the end of the month he went to the clergyman taking the bag with him It was not an easy task for as any one might see the bag was very full and very heavy no went into the clergymans study and put tho bag on the table The minister looked up with a seri ous expression This Is very serious my friend I am sorry to see you have so many pebbles In the bag Iloot minister exclaimed tho man cheerfully this is only the devils the damns are all at the dikesJde in another bag They were over heavy to bring up Excelsior A CLEVER TRICK The Way Lord Cockrane Once Won an English Election When Lord Cochrane was a candi date for parliament in Honiton he re fused to give any bribes As his oppo nent gave 5 a head Lord Cochrane suffered defeat The latter however sent the bellman round the town an nouncing that all those who had voted for Lord Cochrane would receive 10 guineas apiece if they called on his agent In those preballot days of course it was known howr each man voted and the happy minority march ed off to the agent each getting his 10 guineas Naturally enough the major ity began to think they had made a mistake and they resolved to rectify that mistake at the first possible mo ment In due course an opportunity came There was another election Lord Cochrane stood again and the voters remembering his lavish meth ods asked him no questions but re turned him with a roaring majority Then they conveyed a delicate hint to the noble lord asking what he pro posed to give them for this distinguish ed service Not one farthing roared his lordship The unhappy men re minded him that he had paid 10 guin eas a head to the minority at the pre vious election A complacent grin brightened the face of the member as he gave this explanation The former gift was for their disinterested con duct in not taking the bribe of 5 from the agents of my opponent For me now to pay them would be a violation of my own previously expressed prin ciples Identified Tommy made himself the hero of a story which the Boston Record prints when he called for that one about the boy who ate the ribbons and It made him sick Aunt Ethel was puzzled I know of no such story she said after searching her memory vainly Nothing she could suggest answered the description Tommy cannot read but he thought he could find the book He found it They read one thing aft er another until in the midst of the Night Before Christmas Tommy gave a whoop of glee Aunt Ethel was read ing He rushed to the window and threw up the sash Thats it Thats it cried Tommy You see its just as I told you A Dutch Ironclad It is of interest to note that accord ing to some authorities the Dutch were the first in the modern period of history to build an ironclad and that during the siege of Antwerp by the Spaniards in 15S3 the people of that city built an enormous flat hottomed vessel armored it with heavy iron plates and thus constructed what they regarded as an impregnable battery This they named Finis Belli Unfor tunately the vessel got aground before coming into action and fell into the hands of the enemy It was held by Alexander of Farma to the end of the siege as a curiosity but was never em ployed by either side in any action A Handy Measure If you have a pint jug and wish to measure off half a pint with tolerable accuracy it rs useless to try and do so by guessing when the jug Is half full A better way is to tilt the jug until the contents just reach to the upper end of the bottom of the vessel and Just touch the lip at the lower end of the mouth In this way the space in the pint jug is practically cut into two equal portions each half representing the space taken by half a pint Lon don Graphic Man Is Wiser Gerryman at the mirror Put a monkey before a looking glass they say and he will look behind it Miss Sharpe Butva man knows better He knows he wont find anything funnier there than the face he sees before him Boston Transcript All affectation is the vain and ridic ulous attempt of poverty to appear rich Lavater mtrrwranc i i rum umaiH Fftfjtftfjs jftrfHM3 The Empire of Abdul Aziz 2WlWlWli empire of Morocco which THE been the scene of exciting events recently Is one of tho worst governed countries In the world It has become accustomed to turbulent scenes for fighting of some kind has been going on within Its bor ders most of the time for over 2000 years In the person of Sultan Abdul Aziz IV Morocco has a ruler who is supposed to possess absolute powers but in reality he controls but a part of the population of his realm The wild tribesmen under their different chiefs are In continual insurrection and the present troubles are due to unusual ac tivity on the part of these unruly sub jects In consequence of the barbarous character of these tribesmen travel In to the interior of Morocco has been at tended with danger and is seldom undertaken by Europeans Even his shereefian majesty Abdul Aziz Emir el Mumenin or lord of the true believ ers Is not safe from molestation with in ids domains He has been accus tomed to make a wide detour in the past when traveling between Marra kesh and Fez his capitals In order to avoid being set upon and murdered by those who are supposed to yield him loyal allegiance and hold his person in sacred regard The principal wild tribes are the Rifflans and the Berbers the latter the descendants as sup posed of the race that Inhabited the country in the earliest historical times The Rifflans are notorious brigands and pirates who never hesitate to cut tho throats of any mariners or travel ers unlucky enough to be cast upon their coast or to fall into their power The Berbers of the interior are scarce ly less ferocious In the towns and cities of Morocco conditions are not so very much bet ter The imperial revenues are de rived from arbitrary imposts on im ports and exports from monopolies and from fines and confiscations The sultan receives and disposes of every thing uncontrolled Every office is directly or Indirectly purchased small salaries or none at all are paid and public officers recoup themselves by plunder and oppression All justice is bought and sold and those who do not unhesitatingly submit to oppres sion may be thrown Into dungeons - i i COURT IN A MOROCCO PAIiACC ONE OF THB GATES OP FEZ and left to rot or be beaten and tor tured It has been said that the Mo rocco of today is more backward and in a worse condition of corruption and anarchy than the Morocco of 500 years ago And yet Morocco has many attrac tions Its scenery is picturesque and the climate of the coast regions is in many respects enjoyable as a range of high mountains covered in some parts with perpetual snow intercepts the hot air from the desert so that refreshing sea breezes prevail through out the year The country is believed to have great mineral wealth but it is as yet very little developed Under stable and orderly government such as Egypt is now enjoying the natural resources of the country might be made to provide much wealth and prosperity for its inhabitants and com merce with Europe and America would thrive At present travelers in Morocco are chiefly interested In the numerous mosques in the ancient walls with their curious and some times elaborate and artistic decora tions and in the strange customs of the inhabitants Morocco is a land of sloth and decadence but its very backwardness contributes to its pic turesqueness in the eyes of the dis cerning traveler who can witness in the life around him a replica of that one reads about in Genesis Essen tially the customs of the people have changed little in 3000 years Fez the holy city of Morocco with its more than 300 mosques and its stranse fanatical observances is an interesting city to visit but its Mos lem inhabitants have a great prejudice against Europeans who In consequence seldom gain admission within its gates The latter are decorated in characteristically beautiful Moorish designs and also In a savage fashion sometimes by the heads of criminals or of those slain in battle It Is proba ble that ore many more years have passed Morocco will yield to the Influ ences of twentieth century civilization and many of the barbarous and at the same time picturesque aspects It now possesses will pass away forever GUM ARABIC The Two Classes Amberlike and Bleached and Their Uses Gum arable which forms one of the moro Important minor exports ot Egypt Is really the sap from a special kind of tree which grows from three to five yards in height whole forests of which are found in the Kordofan prov ince and also near Gedld In the White Nile province The natives are free to collect the gum The season during which the trees yield their sap runs from December to May Prior to gath ering the crop the natives prepare the trees by slightly cutting the bark in numerous places The sap then ex udes solidifies in the shape of large and small lumps and is afterward gath ered by baud such gathering being done before the rain season com mences There are two main classes of gum amberlike and bleached In the latter the gum is merely exposed to the strong action of the sun generally In Oindurman while in the former in stance it is allowed to retain its nat ural amber color The confectionery trade is perhaps the principal purchas er of gum arable though a very large number of other industrieschemical works printing and dyeing mills let ter press printers and so on are inter ested in this product of Sudan Chica go News PAYING THE PENALTY Tho Vay Beckmann Begged Frankels Pardon Before Witnesses One day Beckmann the comic actor was induced to take off a well known newspaper editor Frankel by name in one of the characters he was repre senting in Berlin He performed his task so cleverly that at the close the audience broke out into loud calls for Frankel The journalist brought an action and Beckmann was condemned to go to the house of the insulted par ty and there beg his pardon in the presence of witnesses At the hour ap pointed Frankel sat in the circle of his family together with a number of re lations and friends who had been con vened for the occasion waiting the ar rival of the delinquent He tarripd long and half an hour had passed in weary suspense when at last the door opened and Beckmann put his head in and asked Does Mr Meier live here Oh no answered Frankel He lives next door Ah then I beg your pardon said the actor and hastily withdrew hav ing thus acquitted himself of the im posed penance to the great annoj anco of Frankel and the intense amusement of the assembled witnesses London Tit Bits Posters In Paris French law gives the authorities of every village and commune complete control over posters No one writes our consul general Is permitted in Franco to deface streets and public places with crude ostentatious an nouncements of his business or other subject Billboards are infrequent in Paris and are generally built perma nently into a wall where they are tax ed according to their superficial area When a building is in construction and board screens are erected to shield the public from dust and other annoyance puch temporary screen will soon be covered with posters of amusements and other business but each poster so displayed has been previously submit ted to the authorities a license obtain ed and eacli sheet bears the canceled revenue stamp according to its size A Long Swim A tramp has beaten all known rec ords by swimming twenty seven miles in thirty minutes He did not mean to do it He merely tried to steal a ride from St Louis to Chicago on the rear of a locomotive tender When the train started he fell over backward through the open manhole into the water tank The noise of the train drowned his cries for help and he was obliged to swim until the first stop was reached at Alton When taken out he was nearly dead but the engi neer was so unfeeling as to call his at tention to the fact that the water was only four feet deep and he might have stood up The conductor also unfeel ing asked him for his ticket but the tramp said he had not come by rail but by water Youths Companion Strange Bequests In his will Stephen Swain of the parish of St Olave Southwark gave to John Abbott and Mary his wife sixpence each to buy for each of them a halter for fear the sheriffs should not be provided and John Aylett Stow left the sum of 5 guineas for the purchase of the picture of a viper biting the hand of his rescuer to be presented to an eminent K C as a reminder of his ingratitude and insolence Grand Magazine Not Like a Woman Have you interviewed that female 2riminal I have tried to Tried to Yes but she refuses to talk Refuses to talk Head your article Man In Disguise and make it three columns on the first page Houston Post Chance to Prove Himself She I would never marry a man who was a coward He About how brave would It be necessary for him to be in order to win your approval She Well hed have to have courage enough to er propose Chicago News Rats according to a government bul letin eat 100000000 worth of grain annually and yet in spite of rats and rates the farmers manage to do pretty well Kansas City Star SXsXaXsXiXSXs W HI STfc V 1IM 1 W y 4 WW M W gV i un 9 General Contracting Painters and Decorators Not How Cheap but How Good with Us Office and Shop west of Fltst National Bank Leave Orders with C R Woodvvortli Company XS3 S V FRANKLIN President A C EBERT Cashier JAS S DOYLE Vice President THR CITIZENS BANK OF McCOOK NEB B Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus S 1 2000 DIRECTORS J V FRANKLIN JAS S DOYLE A C EBERT WAkr A BOY OR A GIRL CAN EARN AS MUCH AS A MAN Wo want bora and sirls who want to earn monoy to solicit subscriptions to tho Kansas City Weekly Star Dont hositate because you are young as you can do tho work as roadily as an older person and wo will pay you just tho eaino The Knnsay City Weekly Star is the best kNowu weokly newspaper in tho west and youri paro time spoilt working for it will pay you handsomely not in toys watched or other small wares but in cash Write today for terms and full information Address JHE WEEKLY STAR Kansas City Mo r iSXsXS All the Same Every man woman or child who comes to this bank is treated courteously and his or her business is attended to to tho best of our ability We want your business because we know wo can servo you well and to our mutual advantage If you transact your business here you are assured of tho friendly interest of our bank and its officers Our customers havt our first consideration 53536 First National Bank flcCook eXsXsXsXsXs Make your friend a birthday present of some Monogram fHDNFFf 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 3E3SE hbmhhhmhbhbbpiiiiiii n I n 0 IPS 1 fill lJf3 13 5 in a Stock Certificate of the McCook Building Loan Association 3S No better or safer investment is open to you An investment of 100 per month for 120 months will earn 80 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