The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, May 28, 1909, Image 3

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Particularly Fine Line of
Writing Papers in Boxes
McCook Views in Colors
Typewriter Papers
Box Writing Papers
Legal Blanks
Pens and Holders
Calling Cards
Manuscript Covers
Typewriter Ribbons
Ink Pads Paper Clips
Brass Eyelets
Stenographers Notebooks
Photo Mailers
Memorandum Books
Letter Files
McCook Views in Colors
are a Leader with Us
ULARENCE tJ UBAY Jl r
W B Whittakeb Sec
KNIGHT8 TEMPLAE
St John Commandery No 16 E T meets on
the second Thursday of each month at 800 p
m in Masonic hall
David Magnee E C
Henet E Cdlbehtson Bee
EASTERN STAB
Eureka Chapter No 83 O E S meets the
Second and fourth Fridays of each month at
800 p m in Masonic hall
Mrs Sabah E Eat W M
W F Habt Sec
MODERN WOODMEN
Noble Camp No 663 M W A meets every
econd and fourth Thursday of each month at
830 p m in Morris hall Pay assessments
at White House Grocery
Julius Kdnbbt Consul
J M Smith Clerk
EOTAL NEIGHBORS
Noble Camp No 8S2 B N A meets every
second and fourth Thursday of each month at
230 p m in Morris ball
Mrs Caroline Kunert Oracle
Mes Augusta Anton Bee
w o w
Meets second and fonrth Thursdays at 8
oclock in Diamonds hall
Chas F Mabkwad C C
W C Moteb Clerk
WORKMEN
McCook Lodge No 61 AOUW meets every
Monday at 800 p m in Monte Cristo hall
MAURICEQBIFFINBeC MS JenningsMW
JMWBNTZFinancier RoiZiNTForeman
DEGBEE OF HONOB
McCook Lodge No 3 D of H meets every
econd and forth Tuesdays of each month at
800 p m in Monte Cristo hall
Mrs Della McClain C of H
Mrs Cabbie Schlagel Bee
LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEERS
McCook Division No 623 B of L E meets
every second and fourth Sunday of each
month at 230 in Morris hall
Walter Stokes C E
W U BURNETT t A IS
LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN AND ENGINEMEN
McCook Lodge No 599 B of L F E
meets on the first and third Saturdays of each
month in Morris hall
I D Pennington Pres
C H Husted Sec
RAILWAY CONDUCTOBB
Harvey Division No 95 O B C meets the
second and fourth Wednesday nights of each
month at 800 p m in Morris hall at 304
Main Avenue S E Callen C Con
M O McClure Sec
bailwat tbainmen
C W Bronson Lodge No 487 B of B T
meets first and third Sundays at 230 p m and
second and fonrth Fridays at 7 30 p m each
month in Morris balL C W Cobet M
B J Moore Sec
bailwat cabmen
Young America Lodge No 456 B B C of A
aieets on the first and third Tuesdays of each
month in Morris hall at 730 p to
Bat O Light C C
N Y Fbanklin Bee Sec
machinists
Bed Willow Lodge No 587 I A of M meets
very second and fonrth Tuesday of the month
at 800 p m in Morris hall
Theo Piebald Pres
rRKD WABSON Fin sec I
Fwm Bebbt Cor Sec J
mt uram
Business Office Station
ery is Our Specialty
Post Card Albums
Duplicate Receipt Books
Tablets all grades
Lead Pencils
Notes and Receipts
Blank Books
Writing Inks
Erasers Paper Fasteners
Ink Stands
Bankers Ink and Fluid
Library Paste Mucilage
Self Inking Stamp Pads
Rubber Bands
Invoice Files
THE TRIBUNE
Stationery Department
CITY LODGE DIRECTORY
A A A If
McCook Lodge No 135 A F A M meets
Tory first and third Tuesday of the month at
800 p m in Masonic ball
Chablbs l Fahnestook W M
Lon Cone Sec
B 8 M
Occcnoxee Council No 16 E S M meets on
the last Saturday of each month at 800 p mt
n Masonic hall
Ralph A Haqberq T I M
BlIiVESTEB Cordeal Sec
B A M
Kin Cyrns Chapter No 85 B A M meets
Tory first and third Thursday of each month at
800 p m in Masonic hall
BOILERHAKEK8
McCook Lodge No 407 B of B M I S B of
A meets first and third Fridays of each month
Id Odd Fellows hall
KNIGUla OF PYTHIAS
McCook Lodge No 42 E of P meets every
Wednesday at 800 p m in Masonic hall
H W Conovbb C C
D N Cobb E B S
ODD FELLOWS
McCook Lodge No 137 1 0 0 F meet3 every
Monday at 800 p m in Morris hall
H G Hughes N Q
W A Middleton Sec
EAGLES
McCook Aerie No 1514 F O E meets the
second and fourth Fridays of each month at
800 pm in Diamonds hall Social meetings
on the first and third Fridays
B S Light W Pres
G C Heckman W Sec
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF LETTER CARRIERS
Branch No 1278 meets first Mom ay of each
month at 330 p in in carriers room postoffice
G F Einghobn President
D J OBbien Secretary
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
McCook Council No 1126 E of C meets the
first and third Tuesdays of each month at 800
p m in Diamonds hall
G B Gale F Sec Frank Beal G E
DAUQHTEBS OF ISABELLA
Court Granada No 77 meets on the second
and fourth Thursdays of each month at 8 p m
in Monte Cristo hall Anna Hannan G B
nLLl IUAN O
LADY MACCABEES
Valley Queen Hive No 2 L O T M meets
every first and third Thursday evenings of each
month in Morris hall
Mrs W B Mills Commander
Habbiet E Willetts B E
g a b
J E Barnes Post No 207 G A B meets on
the first Saturday of each mouth at 2 30 pm
Morris hall
Wm Long Commander
Jacob Steinmetz Adjt
BELIEF CORPS
McCook Corps No 98 W B C meets every
second and fonrth Saturday of each month at
230 p m in Ganschow hall
Adella McClain Pres
Susie Tandehhoof Sec
l of g a b
McCook Circle No 33 L of G A B meets on
the first and third Fridays of each month at
230 p m in Morris hall
Mabx Walkeb Pres
Ellen LeHew Sec
F E O
Chapter X P E O meets the second and
fonrth Saturdays of each monta at 230 p m
at the homes of the various members
Mrs J A Wilcox Pres
MRS d U bCHOBEL uor sec
Try Preventics At My Risk
With Book on Colds
Just to prove merit to show you how
quickly Preventics can and will check colds
or the Grippe I will mail you free on
request these samples and my book Simply
address Dr Shoop Racine Wis
Preventics are thoroughly harmless little
Candy Cold Cure tablets No Quinine no
laxative nothing sickening whatever
To check early Colds or Grippe with Pre
ventics means sure defeat for Pneumonia
To stfop a cold with Preventics is surely
safer than to let it run and be obliged to
cure it afterward Preventics will however
reach a deeply seated cold But taken
early at the sneeze stage they break or
head off these early colds That is surely
better that is why they are named Pre
ventics Promptness however is all-important
Promptness in the use of Pre
ventics may save half your usual sickness
Feverishness night or day with child or
adult suggests the need of Preventics
Write Dr Shoop Racine Wis today for
samples and booklet Preventics are sold hi
A Mc MILLEN
fciirfS tskLe3r
TO Ti CHILDREN 0
By WILLIS AMES
Copyright 1909 by American Press Asso
ciation
I am going to blossom a daisy said
Though the weather is cold and
bleak
What for said a neighbor lifting her
head
Its too early yet by a week
Said the daisy A voice is whispering
Speed
So Im wanted somewhrre I know
Well I am too wise such voices to
heed
How silly you are to go
Memorial day dawned cool and bright
The sun his warm rays gave
And there glermed a star of purest
white
On a soldiers lonely giave
Army Shoes
In Recollections of a Drummer Boy
the author Mr Keiffer describing va
rious difficulties resulting from 111 fit-
ting garments says
I There was a very small man who
had received a very large pair of
shoes and had not been able to effect
an exchange
One day the sergeant was drilling
the company on the facings right face
left face right about face and of
course watched his mens feet closely
to see that they went through the
movements promptly Noticing one
pair of feet down the line that never
budged at the command the sergeant
rushed up to the possessor of them and
In menacing tones demanded
What do you mean by not facing
about when I tell you Ill have you
put In the guardhouse
Why I did sergeant said the trem
bling recruit
You did not sir Didnt I watch
your feet They never moved an
inch
Why you see said the poor fel
low my shoes are so big that they
dont turn when I do I go through
the motions on the inside of them rt
SURVIVING GENERALS
All That Remain of the Six Hundred
and Eighty
Twelve states and the District of Co
lumbia are represented on the roster
of the volunteer generals of the civil
war surviving the first of the year
New York is the home of two major
generals Grenville M Dodge and Ju
lius Stahl both residing In New York
city The Empire State also claims
flvebrlgndier generals N M Curtis
residing at Ogdensburg W H Sew
ard at Auburn Alexander Shaler at
Ridgefield A S Webb at RIverdale
and B M McCook In New York
city
Minneapolis is the home of Brigadier
General R F Patterson and Brigadier
General L A Grant Brigadier Gen
eral C C Andrews lives in St Paul
The only two major generals surviving
Jan 1 Dodge and Stahl have been
named There were twenty five brig
adier generals on the roster eight of
whom have been named The names
and residences of the others of this
rank are here given Cyrus Bussey
Washington Joshua L Chamberlain
of Brunswick and Selden Connor of
Augusta Me A L Chetlain William
Sooy Smith and Green B Raum Chi
cago Clayton Powell Eureka Springs
Ark John Cook Ransom and Byron
R Pierce Grand Rapids Mich J A
Cooper St John Kan D McM
Gregg Reading Pa E M Harland
Norwich Conn G F McGinuis In
dianapolis C J Paine Boston F S
Nickerson Needham and Adelbert
Ames Lowell Mass Johu Beatty Co
lumbus O
The original roster in the volunteer
service was 131 major generals and
549 brigadier generals The youngest
of the survivors in 1909 is Brigadier
General Selden Connor who was reg
istered Jan 1 as seventy years of age
the oldest Brigadier General Cooper
who had passed eighty -six The aver
age for the twenty -seven generals sur
viving was seventy nine
Among the lower grades of officers
a greater jercentage survive and for
the rank and file the survivors in 1909
number about 33 per cent of the sur
vivors In I SOS The average of the
600000 and odd surviving is about
sixty nine The average age of the
enlisted men during the war period
was about twenty three At the out
set the soldier L a picked man men
tally and physically and experience In
the service teaches him that excesses
and neglect surely bring a day of
volunteer generals who have been
transferred to the regular army ros
ter Nelson A Miles Is seventy and
the oldest D E Sickles Is eighty four
Sickles gained the regular army rank
in the war and Miles received it for
service in the regular establishment
since the war
CAPTAIN GEORGE L KILMER
A Day of Patriotism
Memorial day Is not only the festi
val of heroes but a festival of patriot
ism as -well Coming earlier than the
Fourth of July It takes the bloom
from the time honored patriotic holi
day Eulogy of the dead soldier is nec
essarily a eulogy of the institutions
for which he fought
LIC
Dij31EM3ER the soldiers
children
fiemember them all with
flowers
DAISYS MISSION
THEIRS was the battle and
theirs the pain
Ours is the peace and ours the
gain
I rIEIRS was the sowing the
harvest ours
And all we can give them today
is flowers
FRANK H SWEET
THE VETERANS JOKE
By RODERTUS LOVE
Copyright 1909 by American Press Asso
ciation
I fit and bled and died he said
To serve my countrys cause
How that can be I cannot see
Quoth one Tho others jaws
I fit and died and bled they cried
There was an awkward pause
Then to the man who first began
This fuss the second said
Your talk is guff Tis clear enough
You may have fit and bled
But if you died your onery hide
Would now be worms instead
Whereat this guy with jolly eye
And quite a breadth of grin
To him replied Sir what I dyed
Was cloths because by sin
Since down I laid my sword by trad
A dyer I have been
Wise Words of General Lee
It Is well that the southern people
celebrate the birthday anniversary of
General Robert E Lee said Captain
Frank P OBrien
Apart from hia military greatness
General Lee was on the side of char
acter the finest flower of American
civilization Upon his reputation rest
ed not a spot
I recall now as I think of his life a
few thoughts of his that have won
their way into print and these alone
serve to indicate the fine temper of
the man
Duty Is the sublimest word in the
English language
A gentleman always feels himself
humbled when he cannot help hum
bling others
My name cannot be bought What
Influence I have with the southern peo
ple Is not for sale
General Lee made that reply soon
after the war when In his poverty he
was offered the presidency of a north
ern insurance company
There are only two more sentences
I need cite The first of these We
must all work now was written to his
son Robert In 1S6S and indicated the
spirit of General Lee In adapting him
self to altered social and industrial
conditions in the south The sec
ond contains his well known dying
words
Let the tent be struck
No Time to Drill In the Sixties
Old vets cannot march in fine order
like the up to date fellows At one time
they could when It was worth while
to expend the effort Now the tactics
have changed and If the men of 1861
wish to compete with the boys of 1909
on parade they have to go to school
and learn It all over again But the
truth is that in the sixties only a few
regiments comparatively pretended to
make a show on parade There was no
time to look after the manner of set
ting at the enemy It was just a hus 1
tie to get there somehow An old
vfs kju uo nmvcu Uul XkU ttL
of flag his corps carried Humph I
dun no Never saw a flag
Why said the questioner didnt
you hae i flag on drill and parade
Never tvid time to drill and pa
rade deciared the survivor of the civil
war
A PLAGUE OF ANTS
Tha Vicious Insects Arc a Nuisance in
Southwestern Africa
Ants white black and yellow are
a great nuisance in Nigeria suys
Charles Partridge In Cross Ulver Na
tives They march from place to
place In military formation Some cur
ry their young others bear food and
scouts and a fighting escort are always
on duty Their column looks like a
long black snake curving along the
ground
They leave behind them a well
formed road about four Inches broad
and half an Inch deep worn smooth by
the tread of the countless throng
They do not bite when the sun Is
high but woe betide the haptens wight
who comes In their way at other times
While traveling through the bush you
occasionally find them In possession of
a section of the road Perhaps you are
In the midst of them before you dis
cover the presence of your small but
fierce adversary The first man bitten
yells out something meaning Ware
ants and we ail hurry forward stamp
ing vigorously Those of us upon
whom the little warrlorshave fastened
tear off our clothes and nip the foes to
death My little black horse always
wanted to turn back when he came tc
a column of ants My dog Bob a na
tive used to dance like a bear on hot
bricks when the driver ants got be
tween his paws and had to be held
down while they were plucked out
One night I suddenly awoke with a
feeling that something was amiss All
the household pets such as snakes
lizards rats toads centlpeds and spi
ders seemed to be bestirring them
selves restlessly No sooner had my
foot touched the ground than 1 knew
what it was for a fierce bite told me
that the driver ants were upon us
On lighting a candle I found a col
umn marching across the floor and a
whole regiment attacking my bed I
roused the assistant district commis
sioner and eventually using wisps of
burning paper we drove out the en
emy Fire or hot ashes are the best
means to use for expelling them
A HOTEL DINNER
The Husband Ordered It and His Wife
Criticised It
On the midnight train ride from
town where he and hi3 wife had beeD
entertaining one of his best patients
at dinner and the theater the subur
ban doctor spoke bitterly
What a dinner And it cost 13
The cooking in these big hotels Is atro
cious They smear sauces over every
thing I suppose It Is to hide poor ma
terials
It isnt the fault of the cooking that
our dinner was a failure It was its
selection that doomed It
What was the matter with the se
lection
You should not have done the or
dering You have your meals chosen
for you almost every day In the year
It Is the women of people In our cir
cumstances who ought to arrange the
menus at restaurants Look what you
ordered Bisque of lobster a soup
with a body of thick white sauce
Sweetbreads cooked as usual with a
cream dressing Virginia bam with
champagne sauce a brown sauce as
thick as molasses Then for dessert
you took a chance on pudding Reine
Victoria candied fruit and lady fin
gers swimming In soft custard
Well how Is a fellow to know
Lobster soup sweetbreads Virginia
ham and pudding Relne Victoria it
sounds fine
But a woman knowB that it Is a
wretched combination of splendid
dishes It is the womans dull duty
to choose menus for 365 days in the
year She learns a good deal about
selection Yet when a sum of money
equal to a weeks food expenses is to
be squandered on one dinner at a
hotel It is the man who seizes the
menu and tries to look capable lie
makes a failure frequently as you did
tonight It would have been a pleas
ure for me to order a fifteen dollar din
nera change from manipulating din
ner for four on 1 But men feel too
important in a restaurant to submit
the menu to their wives for assist
ance Exchange
He Came Back Hard
That boy said the Biliville farm
er beats my time Jest now when I
quoted Scrlptcr to him he come back
at me bard
You dont say
Shore 1 told dim to git a hoe an
foller tbe furrow Tbars gold iu the
land I said An what do you reckon
he made insvcrv
You tell it
Father hi vs J dont keer fer
the gold tli - world Ive in it I
up treasure in lici n1 Atlanta Con
stitution
Fsr rning
Yoar after i n i Id farmer Ind
listened in rioi to truiu t
thuudTiiiu hi tud Kinalh m
daj bis an ml Iw drip
ped hi iliu arid Sinok his list at L
passing
Ye ran puff an blow all yt Hfc gol
durn ye hn Inn Im irm to
ride ye Satuiday Everybodys
The Zones
Teacher How many zones are there
Small Boy Six Teacher No tbr r
are buL five However you may name
six if you can Small Boy Torrid
north temperate south temperate
north frigid south frigid and ozone
Chicago News
His Genius
Why do people think hes a genius
Nobody can understand what hes talk
ing about
No but he can make people believe
that he does Exchange