The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, July 08, 1909, Image 5

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The New Moline Wagon
has made warm friends wherever
oised hut we know there are others
Itll jfigllwjr 1 FJi
J
and we have them such as the
Weber Birdsell and Bur Oak
wagons also Columbus wide tire
wagons with a little lower wheels
than the regular wagons Also the
Fitzer and John Deere steel
wheel trucks which are just the
thing for a handy rock wagon We
can save you money on any of them
as well as on a
Velie Buggy
Just come and look at these buggies
We have them in all styles and
Prices They are all made of the
best Hickory Steel and Malleable
Iron There is great satisfaction in
having a good buggy so come and
get the summers use of one of them
phone 3 1 McCook Hardware Co
Time Card
McCook Neb
B
MAIN LINE EAST DHPAET
No 6 Central Time 1045 p M
2 500 a m
12arr615pm 715 am
14 942 pm
8 525 p m
10 600pM
MAIN LINE WEST DEPABT
No 1 Mountain Time 115 p m
3 1142 pm
5 arrS 50 pm 930 am
13 905aM
15 1230 am
9arr930am
IMPERIAL LINE
No 176 arrives Mountain Time 420 p m
No 175 departs 710 am
Sleeping dining and reclining chair cars
seats free on through trains Tickets sold
and baggage checked to any point in the United
States or Canada
For information time tables maps and tick
ets call on or write D F Hostetter Agent
McCook Nebraska or L W Wakeley General
Passenger Agent Omaha Nebraska
RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS
The local freights were annulled Mon
day and doubled on Tuesday
Conductor O E Pope of Denver now
runs into McCook on 15 and 16 this
being hislayover instead of Oxford
Mr and Mrs Charles F Heber have
occupied their cosy and modern bunga
low on north Main avenue this week
- An employees special train will be
run to the picnic at Cambridge Satur
day and it is expected that every one
who can be relieved from duty will go
The sudden demand forcrews Satur
day and Sunday put the trainmasters
force up against it to supply the men
for a few days About a dozen new
oames were added to the board first off
r thVweekiT
Mel Harmon has gone to work for the
company in the yard force
Trenton is to have a new and wider
brick platform before her depot
Trainmaster Smarts wife has been
visiting Wymore friends since last week
Earl Hertz has been transferred from
Trenton to Palisade in the companys
service
Harve Billesbacb who has been
cashier at Orleans is now night oper
ator at Minden
P E Potter has returned to the train
service after a long absence He has
been on a rural delivery route
Conductor VV A Cassell writes a
word from Portland Oregon paying a
tribute to the climate fruit etc
Operator LeBaron whom the Oxford
Standard styles the dignified count
is now acting agent at Wilsonville
Engineer and Mrs v W Archibald
and Master Fred departed Tuesday
night for Chicago to visit relatives in
the Lake City for a number of weeks
The new passeDger trains put three
more crews into service Carmoney and
Bagley return from the Kansas branches
and Cox makes the third man out of
here McCarl goes to the Oberlin line
and Rank to the St Francis branch
A new brakeman and a derailing
switch at Minden were responsible for
the derailment of three or four cars and
an engine tank Sunday morning The
wrecker was Bent down to pick them up
The traiu was in charge of Conductor
Wm Hegenberger and Edgineer Ander
son
CITY OF THE INSANE
Happy and Honored Guests of tha
Inhabitants of Gheel
One of the most remarkable places
In Europe of whteh d tourist on pleas
ure bent ever takes notice Bays a writ
er la a Berlin paper is the City of the
Insane by which name Ghcel noar
Antwerp has been known for genera
tions About 1500 men and women
afllicted with insanity in all its forms
live there and have a happy being as
the guests of the1 inhabitants who
know by experience how to treat the
unfortunate ones In the streets in
the places of amusement the cafes
and workshops these patients may be
found and nowhere Is there the re
motest suggestion of restraint appar
ent The board ranges from 240 to
2400 marks a year and no matter
how small the amount may be the pa
tient is always the favored member
of the family lie has the first right
to the most comfortable chair and the
head of the table belongs to him lie
receives the most attention and this
he learns to appreciate and to endeav
or to maintain by living down his
illness Even the children know how
to treat the demented people The
dangerous ones are sent to another
settlement and to institutions It Is
wonderful how considerate carefif
and kind the simple people are toward
their charges and a peep Into the com
munity would probably terrify physi
cians who had never heard of and
could not appreciate the good which is
being done in this City of the In-
sane
A RACE ON ICE
Trw Skates That QatyApay and Those
That Wore Hcovrd
Thackeray cite asked one of the
men who let out skates on the Ser
pentine whether he had ever lost a
pair through the omission to exact a
deposit and he replied that he had
never done so except on one occasion
when the circumstances made it al
most pardonable
A well dressed young fellow was
having his second skate fastened on
when he suddenly broke away from
the mans hands and dashed to the ice
The next Instant a thickset powerful
man was clamoring for another pair
He was a detective in pursuit of his
prey and a very animating sight it
was to watch the chase He was as
he had boasted a first rate skater and
it became presently obvious that he
was running down his man
Then the young fellow determined to
run a desperate risk of liberty The
Ice as usual under the bridge was
marked Dangerous and he made for
it at headlong speed The ice bent be
neath his weight but he got safely
through
The sheriffs officer followed with
equal pluck but being a heavier man
broke through and was drowned
His skates said the narrator of
the incident I got back after the In
quest but those the young gentleman
had on I never saw neain London
rr IC
xeiegrapn
The Salt Sea Legend
There Is a legend In the Norse scalds
which explains why the sea Is salt
The bountiful Frodi whose mythical
reign was a golden age Indeed pos
sessed a quern or hand mill which
ground out gold and peace but which
would grind out stores of anything de
sired by Its owner Two giant maid
ens ruled over by Frodi were the
grinders In an evil day a sea rover
came upon the scene slew Frodi and
carried off the quern and the two
giant maidens who worked it When
the sea rovers vessel was right out at
sea he ordered the maidens to grind
salt At midnight they asked if they
had not ground enough The sea
rover angry at being awakened from
his sleep commanded them to grind
until morning Now the giant maid
ens naturally enough worked very
quickly so as they went on grind in
the load of salt grew so heavy that it
sank the ship and now the sea will
continue salt forever
Looked Too Far
There wjv an Ijli h fanner a
Somersetshire mm who on- o
a telescope The d man ren irlcd
to a friend at a local race meeting th t
the gentry nowadays had gsses for
both eyes ard added tint he had hC
one once for one e o If roed one
it was but now it was no u c at all
no not to nofecd
Why net - d the friend
Well lie said it were a good one
I could ih mile v i en I cculd sec
plain the s teeplu te five
miles off But raius son John hs
borrowed en ii rivd to see the
steeple of t fc cri i ten mi
off and tried rd rrir I and cacil
And that rrraived it vd It vero no
er of no j a vre - not to n
bedv
A Tro blcccms Mirror
Mamma vii ilossir - this oh
looking gli x isnt any good
Why whats the matter with it
dear asktl kr r mother
Every time I try to look in it ex
plained Flossie my face gets in the
way
As a Corollary
Are marriages made In heaven
As to that I cant say but I do
know this much
Whats that Peleg
Theres lots of courting done In
church Louisville Courier Journal
Didnt Get a Chance
She What did papa say when yon
asked blm for my hand
He Why he couldnt say a word
He couldnt
No your mother was thereP Yon
kers Statesman
- V
A New City a Thousand Years Old
Budapest whose front is circled with
lights like a crown whose hills xhw
dark and feathery above the river
whose parliament buildings run along
the bank and are second to none hut
Westminster Budapest bright flash
ing gay beautiful modern and rich
ardent and executive close built ami
amalgamatlve blender of peoples Is
the product of only a few decades and
yet at Its last exposition it celebrated
its thousandth birthday Pest to the
right of the river for the cities are
twin and divided by the Danube Pest
dates back to 1200 and Buda was the
Ofen of the Romans Buda climbs up
the opposite hill today magnificently
new but sown round with green
crumbling walls that mark the passing
of the original founders whose painted
galleys came up the Danube from the
Black sea The twentieth century civi
lization sharply new and powerful
must for a moment be brushed aside
and the Buda of mediaeval times put in
its stead Marie Van Vorst In Har
pers Magazine
Gathering Cloves
Cloves are now cultivated In many
of the tropical regions of the earth A
clove tree begins to hear at the age of
ten years and continues until it reach
es the age of seventy five years There
are two crops a year one In June and
one in December The tree Is an ever
green and grows from forty to fifty
feet high with large oblong leaves
and crimson flowers at the end of
small branches In clusters of from ten
to twenty The tree belongs to the
same botanical order as the guava
The cloves which are the undeveloped
buds are at first white then light
green and at the time of gathering
bright red Pieces of white cloth are
spread under tke trees at harvesting
time and the branches are beaten gen
tly with bamboo sticks until the cloves
drop They are dried in the sun being
tossed about dally until they attain
the rich dark color which proclaims
them ready for shipment
Cards and Their History
Cards are square shaped pieces of
pasteboard printed with various de
vices and employed as a business me
dium by money changers They are
usually mide up in packs of fifty two
one for eacl week of the year A good
many people play cards for pleasure
in which case their opponents are said
to be buying experience In most card
games the rule Is that the cards may
be cut but not otherwise marked This
rule is not strictly observed In games
In which only three cards are used
Indeed the marking of cards has at
tained a high degree of perfection
since the Introduction of numerous
card index systems Fashions change
In card games as in everything else
Old maid for instance is nowadays
seldom played In the best clubs Play
ing cards should not be confused with
score cards which are rather larger
the murdered man was a closer cal
culator even than his assassins for he
had previously poisoned a part of the
provisions that he might appropriate
to himself the whole of the spoil This
precious triumvirate were found dead
together
Salt Codfish Omelet
Soak a piece of salt codfish about six
Inches square overnight Split six
crackers and lay them in cold water
just enough to cover them In the
morning pick the fish fine and mix
well with the soaked crackers three
well beaten eggs and a piece of butter
the size of an egg also salt and pep
per Take one quart of milk and add
to it one dessertspoorful of flour Boil
five minutes and pour over In the dish
In which It is to be baked
twenty minutes Boston Post
What
Boring the Bores
do you do to get
Bake
Regatta In England
The first regatta in England was in
1775 and it was imported Into that
countrv bv Ladv Marv Wortlev Mon 1
tagu who had been impressed by the
water show of Venice There was no
series of races There was a proces
sion of city barges to a temporary oc
tagon where there was reveling that
night and well into the next day Only
seven of the company were drowned
on the return Journey which speaks
well for the average sobriety of the
crowd London King
Breakfast Hours
A traveler stopped at a hotel in
Greenland where the nights are six
months long and as he registered
asked a question of the clerk
What time do you have breakfast
From half past March to a quarter
to May Harpers Weekly
rid of
bores
Just as soon as they come Into my
office I start In telling them of the
latest cute thing my baby said De
troit Free Press
But He Did
Her Mother I saw him kiss you I
am terribly shocked I did not for a
moment Imagine he would dare take
such a liberty Herself Nor did I
ma In fact I bet him a pair of gloves
he darentl
q mn in i vn v r rftn ny ruT itfiYVWw v i
I
fc
t
1890 Tax Collected
1991 Tax Collected
1892 Tax Collected
1893 Tax Collected
1894 Tax Collected
1895 Tax Collected
1896 Tax Collected
1897 Tax Collected
I89S Tax Collected
1899 Tax Collected
1C00 Tax Collected
1901 Tax Collt cted
1902 Tax Collected
1903 Tax Collected
1904 Tax Collected
1905 Tax Collected
1900 Tax Collected
vi I
V- -
A
rifptvvvriwrriTTg
for 10 ct and 121 ct
Values in Lawns Or
gandies Etc
Get our prices on Suits
and Wash Dresses new
goods good styles at
bargain prices
Also a Special Discount
on the Better Grades
of Wash Fabrics -
or with visiting cards which are small- 8riMiiuAaAui ifit mm n mm bi i i ii m i i i ti ik it ii ii i qvji
er Frys Magazine j
A Rhineland Legend I
There is a Rhineland legend of three
German robbers who having acquired
by various atrocities what amounted
to a very valuable booty agreed to di
vide the spoil and to retire from so
dangerous a vocation When the day
appointed for this purpose arrived one
of them was dispatched to a neighbor
ing town to purchase provisions for
their last carousal The other two
secretly agreed to murder him on his j
return that they might divide his l
share between them They did so But j
t
C L DeGroff Co
Summary Tof Collections
June 30th 1909
TREASURERS STATEMENT
Disbursements and Balances
on hand for Six Months cnlz
C Naden County Treasurer
COLLECTIONS
Cashlon hand January 1st lfOO 79SOiM
To lc88 Tax Collected
1889 Tax Collected -
38 21
2a 19
it 40
2 07
2 77
oi ra
10 71
29 SO
23 89
iSJl
20 2tf
53 23
00 23
65 it
23 79
S3 SO
40 90
40 93
1U3 33
1907 Tax Collected 101170 23t2t
190S Tax Collected 75733 2
Sewer Tax Frontage 2a
School Land Principal 2 t
School Land Interest 212 Z
School Land Lease 9G1 S
School District Aid State Treasurer 48 -U
June State Apportionment State Treasurer 29fi W
Miscellaneous County General Fund JM ii
Fines and Licenses S37C
Rank Interest County Deposits TVB B
Redemptions 307t T
Fees lg g
Total 1G04S
DISRURSEMENTS
Rj State Treasurers Receipt No 58935 OSbiJft
County General Fund Warrants Redeemed 19035 C
Comity RridgeFund Warrants Redeemed 7373
County Road Wai rants Redeemed 141 t
Soldiers Relief 2jC
Precinct and City Bonds and Coupons
School District Knnds and Coupons
School District Treasurers Orders
Road District Overseers Orders
School Land Refunds
Poll Tax Refunds
School Tax Refunds
Poll Tax Receipts
City Treasurers Receipts McCook Sewer
City Treasurers Receipts McCook
City Treasurers Receipts Indianola
Village Treasurers Receipts hartley
Village Treasurers Receipts Lebanon
Village Treasurers Receipts Danbury
43Hf r
- X 9 A
tjlt
5572iC
2i x
a--- M
a
- w
mm 4
- - Vv v
2lii W
m 2ii -S
Redemptions 3333 0
County Treasurers Fees 113
County Treasurers Commissions - lftSfi re
Total
BALANCES
State Fcnds U
State General Fund S 6714 51
State School Fund 7 fcfl
State University Fund 15G 55
Institute for Feeble Minded 61
State Redemption Fund 1503 51
State School Land Principal 22 20
State School Land Interest 2101 44
State School Land Lease 062 01
Cocntt Fcnds
County General Fund 933 4
County Bridge Fund 2037 14
County Road Fund 407 29
Soldiers Relief Fund 10 51
City Bond Fund 1190 99
Precinct Bond Fund 7075 62
School District Bond Fund 15013 01
Sewer Bond Fund McCook 1255
School District Fund 10915 18
School District Free High School Fund 1 1519 48
RoadDistrict Fund 1439 31
City of McCook
City of Indianola
Village of Bartley
Village of Lebanon
Village of Danbury
Inheritance Tax Fund
Redemption Fund
359 60
I 73 19
43 53
5 72
- 2 75
955 K
305
3443 ZJa
23141 UE
13M3
517 51
24T1E
Total r 5 56537 CB
Less Commissions andtFees - lOSgj
BalanceronlHand 55450 30