Wr r m ri lHi mMA iOSMl 111 By Goodlee Thomas COPYRIGHT ZOOS BY GOOOIiOE THOMAS ffF MOW ebrybody ought to know deys welkim as kain bo So pitch right in an hep yoselbs to ebryting yo see Jes staht dein biskits goin round fo dats yo job oP man An chase dcm wif de sweet pertaters quick s dey leab yo han Now Mose yo show yo mannahs fo dese folks er Ah tell yo Daihll be a chile go hongry an hell git a lickin too Heah Oncle Dan is de possum meat Ahs lookin aftah dat An heahs a piece espeshly youahs all brown an streaked wif fat WHAS dat de graby Don yo fret its comin right up daili An sich Wy dat air possum fat enough I do declaih To mek enough er graby fo de machin Isrulite3 Heah Revend Mistah Feguson be suah yo gets yo rights De smell am sweet Wy man yo tas an den I bet yo shout An mek de neighbohs wondah wha de fuss am all about Heahs little Eph Now chile Is sabed yo sumpin nice an sweet Whas dat Good Ian Dis boy is sayin he don lak possum meat tp - kf 4Q T8 SWOT Tn li iiiifcT CS - i Z -- COPYRIGHT I90B SV UNCCRWOCS UNDCKWOC3D NV NOW JO DE POSSTJH DINNER HE saize he don5 lak possum meat an him a son o mine Now honey tuhn to all dese folks an knowledge up yos lyin Mek out tuz jes a lil joke to aggervate yo ma Or clar to goodness Ahs jes boun to whup yo till yos raw Yo speak de truf e yo lil imp Den whas yo doin heah A settin up wif niggah folks to mek yosef appeah A niggah too when ebry one kain tell in spite youah black Dat tuhnin way fum possum meat yo aint de hones fack ijELL dere yo pa saize nebbah min bekaze yos such a mite t V Dat taint youah fault yo sumays missed youah nachul ppetite Hoi out yo plate deres plenty mo to fill a chile lak yo De good Xawd mek yo suhtain ways Ah spose dats got to do But Ian Ahs feared yo grow up wrong an mebbe be a shame To all de cullahd circle an de spected famly name Fo ebbah sence Ahs ol enough to stan upon ma feet Ahs spishoned any niggah dat would tuhn fum possum meat EMFEROR AT THE PLOW Peculiarities of Chinas Thanksgiving Celebration In China at the beginuius of winter a thanksgiving festival is held at which the deities are especially thank ed for the preservation of life and health during the preceding twelve - - bj t v - S t v- i tmvcj k - AbOV W se - Aik - a tadd wtMWiVTiV I j xve f zrz 3Ms US - fr5 j rTrwr -V jiAs v - jlS - THE EMPZBOU OPENS SEYERAI rCBBOWa months Offerings are presented op the family altar and the ceremony is brought to a close by a ffnmd dinner at -which all members of the family can partake The feasting and rejoic ing are kept up for days On the fifteenth day of the first moon the emperor of China goes in great state to a certain field accompanied by the chief officers of his household and prostrates hiinself touching the ground nine times with his head in honor of the god Tien and pronounces a prayer invoking the blessing of the great being Then as high priest of the empire he sacrifices a bullock to heaven as the fountain of all good While the victim is being offered a plow drawn by a pair of highly orna mented oxen is brought to the emper or who throws aside his imperial robe lays hold of the plow handles and opens several furrows The principal mandarins follow his example and the festival which is really a species of thanks in advance for good harvests ends with a distribution of clothes and money to the poor RABBIT HUNTING DANCE Odd Thanksgiving Festival Held by the Pueblo Indians The rabbit hunting dance of the Pueblo Indians at Zuni Acoma Taos and Isleta isa festival contemporane ous with that of the white man In the dance the Indians give thanks and pray for future favors The chief of each village designates a day in No vember for the festival and the dan cers who are dressed in white cotton shirts and pantaloons and carry guns chant and dance as long as breath and strength remain They begin at day light and after a pause for food at noon continue dancing far into the night They pray fervently that the Great Spirit may give them power to slay plenty of rabbits and other game and also thank him for the game the crops and the rain of the season past it THE GUILLOTINE Was Not Invented by tbr U- M It D -- vynuaa iiwiiii it uwui o In a book published by Ilector PAYING FOR A MEAL It Was Worth About a Shilling to Pick Those Bones Colonel Ebenczcr Sproat of Revolu tionary fame was born and bred in Middleboro Mass lie was always fond of a joke and was quick to seize an opportunity to indulge his propen sity as the following incident illus trates His father also a Colonel Sproat kept a tavern One day while Ebenezer was at home on a furlough three private soldiers on their return from the seat cf war called for a cold luncheon Mrs Sproat set on the table some bread and cheese with the remnants of the family dinner which her son thought rather scanty fare for hungry men lie felt a little vexed that the defenders of the country were not more bountifully supplied The sol diers after satisfying their appetites asked him how much they should pay Ebenezer said he would ask his moth er He found her in the kitchen Mother he said how much is it worth to pick those bones About a shilling I guess she an swered The young officer returned to the sol diers and taking from the barroom till 3 shillings and smiling genially upon them gave each man one and wjtli good wishes sent them on their way Mrs Sproat soon after came in and asked Ebenezer what he had done with the money for the soldiers dinner In apparent amazement he exclaim ed Money Did I not ask you what it was worth to pick those bones and you said a shilling I thought it little enough for the bones were pretty bare and I handed the men the money from the till and they are gone Mrs Sproat could not find heart to reprove her favorite son for this mis interpretation of her words and then she too loved a joke and so after an instants glum look she laughed and said it was all right Had Seen Them AH Before Once while James Whitcomb Rilej was visiting a town wlnre he ajs booked to give a reading a committee called to take him in a carriage over the city In acknowledging the com pliment he said Ill go with you gentIenKit provid ed you promise that you will not show me the new courthouse the iew town hall the new bridge the new school building and the new jail for Ive seen them all a hundred times in as many towns and they invariably wear me out before the time arrives for the curtain to rise on the evening enter tainment Influence of Mountains The influence of the mountain is pure and holy giving strength and simplic ity encouraging the older virtues dis couraging the newer vices In the hill men of Wales we see this clo irly enough Go where you will among the wilder and more mountainous parts of Wales and you will find that rare in dependence and self reliance which are not marred by a curiously defiant dis courtesy You find there those that are truly natures gentlemen Lon don Standard A Good Reason One day Mary was found standing on a chair in front of the mirror gaz ing at her pretty image Why are you looking In the glass darlingasked her mother Cause I like the look of me was the frank reply Chicago News Ungallani Officer I appeal for protection A man Is following me and attempting to make love to me Begorry Oive been lookin for an escaped lunatic Where Is he Kan sas City Times CURIOSITIES OF OIET Fleischman lu Germany the story of HOW Nature Adapts Food to Man tue origin or me lusiruuiuiii oi execu tion which was named for Dr Guillo tiu In the days of the reign of terror Is flatly denied There is no truth In the story su long believed he says that the genial old physician Invented the machine which was named for him and l3 means of which he is said to have lost his life shortly after its adop tion Guillotin in keeping with the spirit of his time proposed on Oct 10 17S9 that all offenders regardless of their birth or station should be dealt with alike by the law and six mouths later he proposed to the government that convicted murderers should bo beheaded by means of a simple appara tus The mechanism of which lie and no one else had any idea at that time was spoken of as the simple appara tus by the humorists of the day and the phrase was used to make its pro poser ridiculous so that when a ma chine finally was adopted the wits of the time named it guillotine The gov ernment evidently recognizing the val ue of the suggestion asked one An toine Louis a surgeon at the Salpe triere to devise a machine and later gave a similar order to a carpenter by the name of Guidon who offered to construct an instrument for decapita tion for rGG0 livres This was consid ered too high a price and the contract was given to a German cabinetmaker by the name of Tobias Schmidt who received 821 livres for the accepted model in 1792 Schmidt made guillo tines for all the provinces and the in dustry brought him a moderate for tune which he proceeded to squander in Taris while Dr Guillotin who nev er had anything to do with the making of a machine which bore his name continued to practice his profession quietly and unostentatiously in Paris until he died there on March 2G 1S14 and Man to Food GREAT VALUE OF CEREALS Why People Can Et Bread at Every Meal Without Getting Tired of It The Fruits cf the Burning Tropic3 and thj Fats cf the Frozen Arctic Modern science has showu that na ture provides food for mankind with marvelous care and foresight The hu man system requires a certain amount of proteid dally to replace wornout muscle and tissue Fish and meat sup ply this in large quantities In hot climates however these spoil so quick Iy that their use is limited Nature as if to compensate for this has given to certain tropical fruits a much larger quantity of proteid than northern fruits contain Thus government analysis shows that figs have five units or calo ries to the ounce dates two and live tenths and bananas one and five tenths Apples have five tenths peaches niue teulhs and pears seven tenths Prob ably the figs and dates tested had lost part of tin i moisture and some allow ance should be made for this The Arab rail therefore maintain his vigor on a diet chiefly plucked from trees Ilenry M Stanley an 1 his white companions subsisted alio t entirely on banana flour for two years in the African jungle Their freedom from disease was in pirt attributed to tue wholesomeness of this diet The dried banana contains 20 per cent of prou id about double that of ordinary wheat dour At the opening of the mango season lu Jamaica many of the natives prac tically live ou this fruit for two or three weeks They fairly revel in it An Englishman who was familiar with the science of diet could not under stand how they could not only main tain their health ou this fare but actually grow rleek and fat Ce knew that an effort to live on the fruits of his native country would result in weakness sickness and eventual death Chemical analysis showed howeer that the mango contained enough pro teid to supply the bodily ueeds If nature has been thus kind in adapting food to mans uses she has been equally so in adapting man to his food You ma j have wondered why people can eat bread at every meal without tiring of it The difficulty of eating oue quail a day for thirty days is well known Even such delicacies as asparagus and strawberries cause an aversion when served too frequently Nature sends men a never failing ap petite for cereals because they are alto gether the most valuable of foods They contain a considerable amount of proteid their salts are of importance to the organism they are readily di gested when properly cooked and they furnish a great deal of nourishment iu small bulk Thus wheat flour cornmeal oatmeal dry and rice dry have more than 100 units to the ounce Baked potatoes have 327 units cabbage has 92 spin ach 7 asparagus G3 apples 1S4 straw berries 114 spring chicken 195 and tenderloin of beef broiled 39 If a man tried to get even half of his nutrition from the coarse vegetables which have a considerable indigestible residue he would have to eat pouuds of them daily and his stomach would be sadly overburdened Nature gives us the de sire for a varied diet and science shows that this is altogether the best for us In the arctic regions there is little vegetation Man must live almost wholly on animal foods Fish and meat would not suffice because they contain only proteids These would re place wornout muscle and tissue but could not be burued in the body to generate heat and energy Fats how ever consist of carbon and hydrogen which are the chief components of the foods of vegetable origin and supply the fuel needed by the body The po lar animals have fat in abundance but icsidents of the temperate and torrid zones can eat it only in limited quan tities To them the mere thought of chewing chunks of grease is uause atiug The children of the frozen north however are endowed not only with the ability to eat and to digest largo quantities of fat but with a keen ap petite for it One who is sensitive to such impressions must turn awaj when he soes the natives of southern Alaska the Thlinkits swallowing seal oil flavored by salmon berries with the gusto of a boy over ice cream The Eskimos farther north will eat blub ber slightly cooked in the flames to an indefinite number of pounds New York Tribune Her Object Attained Forgive me my dear said the gos sip humbly but I thoughtlessly men tioned to Mrs Brown the things that you told me in strict confidence There is nothing to forgive replied the wise woman pleasantly It was for that very purpose that I told them to you in strict eonnueuce I Post -Chicago Getting Even You are half an hour late this morning said a schoolmaster to a scholar Yes sir replied the boy who had Ipor kept In the day before It was late yesterday when I got home London Tit Bits We give altogether too little Impor tance to what we say to others and too much to what they say to us Eliot A MENTAL FRENZY Some of the Things a Man Saw In Do lirium Tremens Charles Roman gives n record of his own experiences as a victim of delir ium tremens It is a remarkable psy chological document comparing favor ably in interest nnd as a piece of writ ing with De Qiiinceys Confessions of an Opium Eater Following is a brief extract which gives some suggestions of the things the patient saw Up to this point the zoological vis itations had been intermittent Dur ing the next few days however I saw all that I could stand I saw such pre historic creatures as exist nowhere ex cept in museums I saw rats as they marched past my door or Hew through my windows or floated In my tub Elephants strode iu and out with lum bering steps and swaying trunks At times they seated themselves and taunted me with their thunderous bel lows or their ear splitting screeches Thej flaunted their snouts high In the air and giiiTawed Monkeys jumped from limb to limb in the trees outside my room Snakes of all colors of all descriptions reptiles with fantastic figures upon their backs and witli eyes of sapphire or ruby or of milk white marble wriggled upon the floor or crept in or out of heretofore unseen crevices in the walls and dropped into the water iu my tub They swam around and around me squirming un der me with their tongues darting in and out with ferocious activity Gi raffes craned their necks around the doorways or through the windows chickens roosted over my head and cackled dogs and wolves ran around the room barking and snapping pi geons flew from one corner to another and cooed Lions I heaid roaring and tigers I saw while they opened their mouths like huge cats in silent angry disapproval licking their whiskers and wettLig their paws softly and daintily this and far more I saw crocodiles In droves Fat scaly glistening beasts they were with frothy foaming jaws long sweei ing tails crouching upon or creepiug along the foot of my bathtub or my bed and grinding their yellow teeth in gluttonous auger as they contemplated me their prey I saw the reeking slippery body of a crocodile slide into the water of my tub Then as I shrank in breathless horror to escape I saw his greedy lilmy eyes arise to the surface with his cold foul chin flush with mine His icy beak touch ed my cheek The hot vapor from his lungs seared my flesh 1 turned as cold as ice and trembled like a leaf in a storm American Magazine GENESIS OF FEAR Gray Cells of Our Brains Stamped With Ancient Terrors The average man would sooner face a 200 pound human antagonist than a fifty pound dog which he cok Id choke to death in three minutes I have een a charging ram scatter half a dozen men any one of whom could have mastered the brute in a moment and not one of whom was in ordinary mat ters a coward There are instances on record of men who with their bare hands have held and baffled an ugly bull but it was only the pressure of grim necessity that taught them their powers Put a man against an animal and the man looks around for weap ons or support whether he needs them or not There was a time when he did For man today the most lordly of animals was once well nigh the most humble of them all He has come up out of a state in which fear was the normal condition of existence fear of violence of the dark that gave oppor tunity for violence fear of falling of animals of being alone And into the plastic gray cells of our brains are stamped these ancient terrors a liv ing record of the upward climb of man The shows this record most clearly In him the prints of heredity are not yet overlaid by the tracks of use and custom and therefore in him we may mcbt easily read our patt his tory lie is our ancestor as truly as he is our reincarnation and his every shrinking gesture and frightened cry are chronicles of the younger world tales of the age of fear They tell of the days when man was not the master of the earth nor even a highly considered citizen of the same but a runaway subject of the meat eating mouarchs whose scepter was tooth and claw a humble plebeian iu the presence of the horned and hoofed aristocrats of woods and fields They speak of the nights when our hairy sires crouched in the forks of trees and whimpered softly at the dark whimpered because the dark held so many enemies whimpered softly lest those enemies should hear Lippincotts Bright Prospects My dear saul the hanker to his only daughter I have noticed a young man attired in a dress suit in the drawing room two or three evenings each week of late What is his occu pation He is at present unemployed fa ther replied the fair girl a dreamy faraway look in her big blue eyes but he is thinking seriously of accepting a position of life companion to a young lady of means An Everyday Suit That Gus is certainly a nifty dress er He has a suit of clothes for every day in the week Why he has the same suit on every time I see him Yep thats the one Cleveland Leader The sweetest of all sounds Is praise Zenophou OR B J GUNN DENTIST Z XJirZCJSJal - br r B- pr- -a i prW ---T Pjicnb IK Ofllco Rooms 3 nnd 5 Wnlah IU McCoiWi GATE WOOD VAHUfe DENTISTS Office over McAdams More Phone 199 Dr J A Colfer DENTIST Room Postofkick Huildimv Phono 178 McCOOK NEBRASKA JOHN E KELLEY ATTORNEY AT LAW and BONDED ABSTEACTEE McLook Nehkaska G Anfut of Lincoln Land Co ami of McCouk Water Works Ofllcrt In Pottnlllcc litiiMioc P II Hoyik C K Eumxu BOYLE ELDREB attorneys at I aw Lung Distance ue 41 Rooms 1 and 1 second door Posrtollico UtiilduiK MCCOOt KciL A G BUMP Real Estate and Insurance Room Two over McConnells dttGg store McCook Nebraska i YOU WOULD DO WELL TO SEE J M Rupp FOR ALL KINDS OF Rpjol Vjnffc P O Box 131 McCook Nebraska Uirldleton Ruby PLUMBING and STEAM FITTING All work guaranteed Phono 182 McCook Nobrnski AUTOMOBILE LIVERY DALLAS DIVINE Prop PHONE 166 McCOOK NEBIL Night or da trips made anywhere Prices Reasonable Good Service Guaranteed i I Mike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash Now location jnst acros rrCrflri street in P Walsh building EShD9 ESSSSBaJSSSSiSSSSfOyaS F D BURGESS Plumber and 1 Steam Fitter Iron Lead and Seer Pipe Brass Goods Pumps an Boiler Tr mrrings Estimates Furnished Free Base ment of the postoice Building McCOOK NEBRASKA vS2OSZsaNBSSSfxDSSS27sSSQ j wrEtE5 sLBS SUCCEED Xti Q in friU ditj SW rtU - rnU II t Apto Xl5a4rt I CFFES Yflfc i buJ cw A V4ii5 - if a l rr i - t jta guaraatteU or jour r toIeitoit M -v j wP ve tm r V p l - - f 3 J - lWip untrv J - TO FIXATE B 91 OL4 - m - f tMvtoibte c is CoiorVtai f ccw - a-vi- v- 41 Jt T r - -UK-- t r c an j US- TUI1 UUjrt - j I T nr rr mi W DEChe5 ccktoe3 hi Ahj A UKJ LfXf7 - JN W feWCW V-