3afe UNCLE- SAMS CROPS avW1 - IMP ft tfe feUlfM lMi HE tale Ihnt some western farmers had been seen wear ing high hats and full dress suits wiille at work in the may not have been stretched so 2ctq after all when we learn from SSerecent government report that 1009 3s to be such a great year for crops Hn Jaet never before have the fields f America yielded such bounteous Sarrests as they are going to this 32srt it being estimated that the total Szize of farm products for the first Ifoein the United States will pass the 183000000000 mark Corn alone will xesSo the American farmer not far ffitzro SuO0O0O00O richer this year than 2 was last The wheat crop this year will be at Ttat means S720000000 worth of Biieat will soon be on the way to the efircntTs Last years harvest was Z350000000 bushels and it brought 3G20000000 so the American wheat 3araccr will have 109000000 more to up Mid from that source than he did b year before The reason wheat is worth more fan a dollar a bushel which used to p a price that the farmers dreamed oC vi not because the crop in this wintry is especially short It is but a rivL S TimASEETG EIIGISE AT WORK IStle below the record crop of 190G Bat there has been a shortage in the Jrtteat crop all over the world for the Ssst two years and it looks as if this jrars yield was going to be scant also ntside of America Europe depends Tfegely on the vast wheatfields of -Argentina for her bread Thirty per eat less wheat was sown there this Tar than last and it is estimated that Sj yield will be 50000000 bushels Sks All this benefits the American Sinner The American farmer will get over i500QO000 more for his crop of oats fins year than he did last In 190S the jield was 7S9000000 bushels and it 35d for S321000000 This years es timate is OG3000000 bushels which at ffce minimum price of 40 cents a bushel Trould bring in the huge sum of 3S3 10000 Only about a million and a 2alf bushels of oats are exported Not the rest goes to feed horses and rattle by any means The 200000 automobiles in this country have cut sown the number of horses and the erasumption of oats correspondingly liSis decrease has been more than utafle up however by human beings anting more oats than they used to jSany of the cereal breakfast foods are sarnie from oats and their consump tion in that way cuts a big figure To recapitulate the way the record runs in this years increase in the Talue of the four great staples so that ilie eye can take it in at a glance here are the figures Strtton S200000000 Sot ton byproducts 27000000 fcrrn 500000000 Oats 04000000 Theat 109000000 Tirtal 5900000000 Beside these the crops of hay alfal ia potatoes tobacco and the other protracts of the soil are either no less or else far greater than usual Ex pprrS estimate that the added wealth that these will stow away in the pock ets of the American farmer this year Trfil be not far from 100000000 Add ibis to the total of the three great ecrrals and cotton and the total is a iousand millions of dollars the vast sam by which the national wealth will Mr Increased this year Tife farmer will not get it all Ho TTfTfFay out vast sums for labor for saciiinery with wliich to plant new crops for new buildings in which to arose them and his other belongings ir luxuries and comforts which he 2ts gone without when crops were 3Prc and prices low Getting the crops to market will Stinr the railroads and steamship lines js tremendous flood of added revenuel ter the leaner years The farmer no finger stores his grain in the fields as to years ago He sendsit -Sot to the elevators that rear their Szge bulk beside the railroad tracks yMere he holds it until he gets theJ zdec he thinks it ought to bring In Sfcrwants to borrow money meanwhile fe sllp of paper that the grain ware- Zbvse gives him Is good collateral for J bj he wishes Then when the flood fteasafeftfoSaft f wheat ad cotton mover eastward ml southward to the ocean gateways where the great ships are waiting to lake it across the seas more money is put into circulation millions of it Against this time when the endless trains -will begin to journey to the grain ports on the lakes or to the cotton cities en the gulf the money for the moving of the crops is being heaped up now in the great financial centers of the country Last years crop of cotton -was 11 581S29 bales The average price wai a little under 10 cents a pound and its total value a little more than 000000 The indicated crop this year according to the governments experts reports will be at least 12000000 Hast GU300OO0O bushels and experts I it is likely from the present ssj that it is not likely to fall below outlook that this crop will be mar-51-10 a bushel for a long time to come keted at not less than 13 cents a pound 03 a bale 7S0000000 over 200000000 more than last year with but a small increase in the yield Throughout the country every line of industry feels the quickening im pulse of good crops and good prices It touches impartially the little sod house far out on the Dakota prairie and the palace of the millionaire The section hand putting in new ties -on the railroad feels it the toilers in fac tories the clerks in cities there is no life so remote that it is not affected when the crops are abundant FLYING MACHINE TARIFF A New York Lawyers Discovery About Payne Bill To prevent the same trouble in the customs service whicli grew out of disputes over the classification of auto mobiles imported into this country when those vehicles first became of general use the attention of congress has been directed to the failure to provide in the new tariff bill a classifi cation for flying machines which have come into such prominence through the work of the Wrights Glenn Cur tiss M Bleriot and others The work of the Wrights and others engaged in aviation and especially the feat of M Bleriot in flying across the English channel said Harvey T An drews a lawyer of New York re minds me of the trouble and confusion that arose over the classification of automobiles when they were first im ported 1 was then attached to the force of the appraiser of the port and we had great difficulty in arriving at any definite conclusion because no pro vision had been made for these ma chines in the tariff law Now congress has just agreed upon a rate for auto mobiles in the new bill which will be of benefit to importers and will not hurt American manufacturers but it has overlooked the most modern of all inventions Mr Andrews sent a telegram to Chairman Payne of the ways and means committee calling his attention to the fact that no tariff wall against flying machines had been erected NO GRQUMD FOR COMPLAINT Husband Not Obliged to Buy Wife Seven Peach Basket Hats Per Month It had to come Anybody who thought it out mast have known that sooner or later the freaks worn by women freaks that were billed as hats the sort that women have been induced to wear for the last few months would land in the courts A Chicago man was haled to a temple of justice on complaint of his spouse The man swore that the rumpus was precipi tated by his wife when she grabbed his hat The court replied that one hat should not cause a family disturb- THE GIEIi AND THE TEACH BASKET ance The poor husband begged leave to demur He said it was the only hat he had He thought he was enti tled xo one when he had bought his wife seven in thirty days This inter ested his honor who leaned away over the woolsack and- asked in a pitiful way You dont mean to say you bought your wife seven hats in thir ty days Sure was the worldly answer And then the husband added that every time his wife got mad at him she seized her hat and tore it up and then he had to buy another to get her back to the pleasant post The jcourt mused And such hats as they pre wearing Yes replied the man Ithe peach basket variety Seven ifojits in one month said the court in a sorrowful way and of the basket va riety Well madam continued his honor turn hag to the woman In the case there Is no ground for complaint hpre The prisoner is discharged iaSEL A Womafis Ags Forget It Man has no right to question wo mans age to even think about it A woman bless her is as old as she 3iakes out or makes up and not a lay older Man is out of his latitude when lie begins trying to locate wo mans age longitude It is her privi lege to conceal her age hi any form or manner she may choose and it is mans prerogative to assist her as much as possible rather than hinder or juestion her in any way Man owes It to himself to see hat she is rap plied with every means of concealing her age or any new wrinkle which she chooses to keep from the gaze of tu Dvercuriuus public Man is not sup posed to be young or beautiful lie wouldnt be if lie wanted to be ind tvouldnt be if lie could With woman t is different She wants to be and an be and is whether she wants to be or not and it is a whole lot better for her and for her admirer or admir rs as the case may be that her age be carefully guarded under that harming veil of mystery which should ver be hers by right of possession Forget that she has an age brother md you will be happier and so will she but dont foi heavens sake for get that she has a birthday Boston ITerald The Fighting Editor The fighting editor is no joke in Paris There if a paper calls ji man a liar or a thief the man takes it se riously and visiting the office he de mands a retraction or a fight It is the fighting editor who receives him The fighting editor sits in a Louis Seize study smoking a cigarette and reading a new novel with a yellow cover He is faultlessly dressed In Jeep black the duelists color The ribbon of the Legion of nonor is in his buttonhole II is brilliant eyes and clear skin proclaim his perfect condi tion His alert supple carriage shows his military training The lighting editor never writes a line but is re sponsible personally for every word in the paper every day On a plain DUtspokeu sheet like Le Matin Avliich keeps him pretty busy his salary is very large -10 a week or so A con servative journal like Le Temps hav ing little use for a fighting editor pays the man 150 more than 20 Exchange Buttered Bread With His Thumb Cats meat is the only survival of a way of serving meat that prevailed in this country before the introduction of forks for it was the custom in mediaeval times to serve roast meat on a spit and to pass it around the table for each guest to cut off what ho liked a method that did not allow one person only to secure the carvers tit bits In France one still finds chicken livers and bacon served on small spits and to the Britisher it always suggests at first sight the food of the domestic cat It is probable that many people continued to prefer fingers to table utensils even after these were perfect ed and in general use for knives were invented at the period when Charles XII chose to butter his bread with his royal thumb London Chron icle A Wave of Water There is no necessary connection be tween the advance of a wave and the forward movement of the Avater com posing it as may be seen by running the fingers along the keys of a piano An inverted wave travels along but the keys merely move up and down Similarly a wave may often be ob served running along the ripe ears of golden grain while the stalks are firm ly rooted in the soil The onward progress of a sea wave is easily per ceptible and by watching some light substance floating on the surface the fact is revealed that the water is not moving with the same velocity Chambers Journal A Hint and a Hump A woman there was and she wrote for the press as you or I might do She told how to cut and sew a dress and how to cook many a savory mess but she never had done it herself I guess but none of her readers knew She told how to oomb and dress the hair and how out of a barrel to make a chair twould adorn any parlor and give it an air we thought the tale was true Oh the days we spent and the nights we spent with hammer and saw and tack in making a chair in which no one would sit in which no one could possibly sit without a crick in the back Economical Housewife A Legal Query Tired ot the long winded oratory of the attorney for the defense the judge interrupted him Mr Sharke he said may I ask you a question Certainly your honor What is it Language said the judge we are told is given to conceal thought or words to that effect Inasmuch as you ilont seem to have any thought to conceal I would like to know why you are talking Not Misfits Mrs Crimsonbeak It seems strange to me if matches are made in heaven that there should be so many uuhappy marriages Mr Crimsonbeak Oh you forget it is the matches that are made there not the misfits Youkers States man The Fall Satan wuz once a angel In heaven wuznt he Yes but like de rest of us he des couldnt stand prosperity Atlanta Constitution Its tho easiest thing In the world to point out the proper course for others to pursue - - 1 Mini fluupwffi mi ira FERNANDA WANAMAKER Granddaughter of Merchant Princo and Her Coming Marriage A coming international marriage which will attract wide attention will be that of Miss Fernanda Wanamaker to Arturo Ileeren son of the Count of Ileeivn of Paris and Biarritz which is scheduled foi the early autumn Miss Wanamaker is a daughter of IJodraan Wana maker of Philadelphia whose marriage in London to Miss Violet Cruger of New York was a recent event of interest in soial circles here and abroad Miss Fernanda is a favor ite with hei grandfather the famous merchant priwe John Wanamaker and has resided much abroad Itodman Wanamaker since the death of his first wife a daughter of Charles Ferdinand Henry Ins spent much of his time 111 Europe lie has a beauti ful home in Paris as well as one in Philadelphia and it is said that he carries the heaviest insurance on his iVSSPUt v X- S l lOI l iSSIV UV - JZ v ir i Z MISS FERNANDA WANAMAKEIt life of any man in the Quaker City a sum considerably over a million As a memorial to his first wife he erected the Lady chapel of St Marks Episco pal church Philadelphia and made it one of the most beautiful bits of ar chitecture in the city He has since en riched its interior with many costly gifts the most recent being a solid silver gem incrusted altar Miss Wanamaker was presented in society about three years ago She is a charming girl and possessed of many accomplishments ART BY SQUARE FOOT Edwin A Abbeys Objection to Down ward Revision of Painting Bills The idea of downward revision so much talked about now in connection with the tariff does not always work to perfection when applied to other things for in E A ABBEY stance art This was illustrated re rently in the case of 1 he mural decora lions made for the Pennsylvania state capitol by the noted mural paint er Edwin A Ab bey There has been a good deal of discussion over downward revision of the graft con nected with this structure but opinion is general that the principle should not be enforced too rudely with respect to its artistic features When the order was given for the four circular decorations for the dome representing art science justice and religion a dimension of fourteen feet diameter was specified for each By a blunder of Joseph M Huston the architect however the spaces for tho paintings were made only a little more than thirteen feet hence when the work was put up about a year ago each painting had to undergo down ward revision with a pair of scissor Mr Abbeys contract called for pa ment at a rate of o0 per square foo and he should have received for GloT square feet a total of 307SS But in paying him the board of public build ings and grounds decided to deduct the space cut off and allowed 27T0G for 55412 square feet Mr Abbey de murred and his claim for the full amount was upheld The deputy at torney general of the state took the ground that although the capitol of ficials had a right to trim the pictures they had no right to extend that proc ess to Mr Abbey Jce and the Senator Although the hot weather has been severe on the statesmen at Washing ton during the tedious weeks of the special session it has not spoiled the temper of all of them Joe the best known and most pop ular of the newsboys about congress woke up one afternoon from his siesta on the sun baked steps of the capitol to find that while he slept it had rain ed pennies and nickels all over his small person He doesnt know yet that Senator Wintlirop Murray Crane of Massachu setts happening to pass by while the child slept sprawled on his back in the sun with outstretched arms and legs spreckled him all over with the small coins and then with others stood at a bit of distance to see what he would do when he awoke STCOC fc n WtV Np r Not Sisters Now and again you see two women pass ing down the street who look like sisters You are astonished to learn that they arc mother and daughter and you realize that a woman at forty or forty five ought to be at her finest and fairest Why isnt it so The general health of woman is so in timately associated with the local health of the essentially feminine organs that there can be no red checks and round form where there is female weakness Women who have suffered from this troubls havo found prompt relief and euro in the use of Dr A S oeiety rd Of Any Character Printed at This Office GET THE BEST Samples Shown and Prices Fur nished on Application The Ruling Passion Goldsmith somewhere tells of an old lady who lying sick unto death played cards with the curate to pass away the time and after winning all his money had just proposed to play for her fu neral expenses when she expired His Only Chance The young man leads his bride to the altar but thats as far as he goes in the leading business Meddler A Song of Finance Sing a son of finance A pocket full of chink Four and twenty lambkins Hover on the brink When the market opens The lambs begin to bleat Come ye kings of finance And share the dainty treat Judga The Arriving Hour In Edwins home there is a clock which strikes with a soft chime much like the ringing of a silver bell The other day he thoughtfully listened to its stroke then said solemnly Mam ma another hour is ringing to get in Womans Home Companion Widow Grimes Old Grimes is dead that good old man We neer shall see him more He used to wear an old gray coat All buttoned down before But Mrs Grimes who still survives No longer wears the black But sports a gay and festive gown All buttoned down the back Cleveland Plain Dealer The Happy Family Mr Scrappington Only two weeks ago I paid for a new spring suit for you Mrs Scrappington Yes I know you did and you screeched as loudly as if you were paying for a lawsuit Puck Retort Pert If I should lend a ten to you And youd keep every cent That would be a lent sacrifice And also keeping lent Nay I would call it neither one Though you may think me dull If youd lend mo a ten Id say It was a miracle Kansas City Times To Be Sent The Bride I want you to send me some coffee please The Grocer Yes maam Ground The Bride No third floor front Womans Home Companion Whats the Use None can be all he wants to be Th man Who would be strong some fatal weak ness grapples I posed once as a vegetarian Then found that I was eating -wormy apples Cleveland Leader Uncle Allen If I was a doctor said Uncle Allen Sparks It would puzzle me to know whether I ought to thank the Lord or not when I prosper in my business Chicago Tribune Dr Abernethy the great English physician said Watch your kidneys When they are affected life is in dan ger Foleys Kidney Kemedy makes healthy kidneys corrects urinary ir regularities and tones up the whole system A McMillen 1P 1 KCBFFI mipm m ui v T5fcV Ti - - - - y -- Pierces Favorite Prescription It gives vigor and vitality to tho organs of womanhood It clears tho complexion brightens tho eyes and reddens the checks No alcohol or habit forming drugs is contained in Favorite Prescription Any sick woman may consult Dr Pierce by letter free Every letter is held as sacredly confidential and answered in a plain envelope Address Worlds Dispensary Medical Association Dr RV Pierce Pres Buffalo NY Makes Kidneys and Dladdcr Right A G BUMP Real Estate and Insurance Room Two over McConnells drug store McCook Nebraska jiCWWrffrTWiii1 itFW J S McBRAYER Real Estate Farm Loans and Insurance Office over Marshs Meat Market E F 0 S B 0 R N GIVE ME A TRIAL Office First Door South of DeGrofPs Phone 13 KM Mike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash New location jnst across street in P Walsh building lt UUK F D BU11GESS Plumber and Steam Pitter Iron Lead and Sewer Pipe Brass Goods Pumps an BoierTnmmings Estimates Fumshed Free Base ment of the Postoffice Building McCQOK NEBRASKA e3 Lumber and Coal Thats All But we can meet your every need in these lines from our large and complete stocks in all grades Barnett Lumber Co Phone 5 tt t m t m m m m 1 m m 1 nSTULAPgy when CURED All Rectal Diseases cured without a surpir tl 1 operation No Chloroform Ether or other tii uucoiiucm used tUKK jUAKANTEED to last a LIFE TIME I examinatiom WRITE FOR BOOK ON PILES AND RECTAL DISEASES WITH TESTIMONIALS ceo ounamsr omaha Mehraif JWfiHflWfcx - K4rg iii Af - r I i sli 9 Prompt Service Courteous Treatment Reasonable Prices J M W J l V i li tr 1 - Y t m