The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, January 06, 1910, Image 6

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    With a Base Ball Bat
Some men should be beaten vilh a base ball bat instead of
with a broom If there is anything lhat will try a good womans
putienco it is bum coal If you want coal that will please let
us sell you If your wife doss not say that she never had better
coal for the money we will take the beating and remove the coal
at no expense to ou All we ask is a trial order You take no
chances Wo agrjo to deliver coal with all good qualities Give
us a trial order Ask our customers
Stansberry Lumber Co
Closing
ttvZS
1 menn buinesi If you b ive money
I chu prove to you that Money Talks
I am offering for sale tin- following
properties
No 1 Lot 8 blk 11 2n i add ro Mo
Cook unimproved except as To a fw
trees location No 903 W 2nd st
No 2 Lots 5 and 6 of blk 27 id add
to MeOook improved house No 401
5th st East one block from school 7
ronm houe good repair fitted with gas
for cooking and light shade liwn Mid
cement sidewalk corner lot-
No 3 A lovely suburban hnme ad
joining the town of Indianoln 40 cres
of land brick house of 10 moms one
half mile from post office frame barn
0
M
Sale
well wind mill and three cisterns Pos
session March 1st
Nn 4E y 320 acres im
proved frm 8 miles from McOok 140
acres in cultivation 160 acres in pasture
This is a nice farm and in plain view
of city with good roads Frame houte
of -3 rooms stable 16x40 well wiriri
nill and cistern some tree3 Posse
sion ar h 1st
Object for selling is to quit business
will make reasonable terms
If interested come and see me and
look over the properties If they suit
you we can deal If you denl with me
jou have no commissions to pay
Smith Own
20i flain ave McCook Neb Phone 191
D W COLSON
FIRE INSURANCE
Residence and Business
Property for Rent
Office Phone 16 Residence Black 333
McCOOK NEBRASKA
1
tgyrfWSVT1 W f II I I lTrvEvVETVffrT
V Fbanklin Pres
R A Ghees Cshr
- Jas S Doyle Vice Pres
G H W atkins Asst Cshr
The Citizens National Bank
of McCook Nebraska
Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 25000
DIRECTORS
V Franklin Jas S Doyle R A Green
G H Watkins Vernice Franklin
This is the face of
the man who burns
coal bought at the
BULLARD
LUMBER CO
Phone No l
McCOOK NEBRASKA
Let us estimate on
your next bill None
too large or too small
to fill Complete stock
grades high prompt
deliveries prices low
everything right
Mrs S Joyce Claremont N H
writes About -a year ago 1 bought
two bottles of Foleys Kidney Remedy
It cured me of a severe case of kidney
trouble of several years standing It
certainly is a grand good medicine and
I heartily recommend it
A McMillen
Billiard
Lumber Co
M
0 McCLURE
Manager
Phone No 1
Get our prices consid
er quality and we will
get your business
jou
saop oum ubui ar
JO 3DBJ am SI sim
After exposure and when you feel a
cold comiDg on take Foleys Honey and
Tar the great throat and lung remedy
It stops the cough relieves the con
gestion and expels the cold from your
system Is mildly laxative
A McMillen
ratmm rnnnicn
ID THE II
James J Hill Discusses the Fu
ture Needs of Both
LESS WARSHIPS MORE FARMS
The Distinguished Railway President
and Foremost Developer of Our
Great Northwest Vrites in the
Worlds Work of the Need for Pros
perous and Scientific Agriculture
Land without population is a wilder
ness and population without land is
a mob The United States has many
social political and economic
to settle
facure or its relative value in general
growth But for many years this
1 J1 41n tnintnlrn rQ tlTlllllv
fPVJ Ly JlUa IllilUt L11C lUiDlttlve vim xammvmkmmj
s3nKt Vfffl nnaictinfr mnniifnotiire commerce and
iffSffvraS Jiu nfiior nntivUioc Hint nontflr in cities at
the expense of the farm The result
is a neglected system of agriculture
and the decline of the farming inter
est But all these other activities are
founded upon the agricultural growth
of the nation and must continue to
depend upon it Every manufacturer
every merchant every business man
and every good citizen is deeply in
terested in maintaining the growth and
development of our agricultural re
sources
Preserve Jealously the Soil
It is most important that our own
country should realize the situation
and take thought for its own future
With our magnificent areas
and the relative sparseness of our
population as compared with the more
densely peopled countries of the old
world the time of economic trial
should be a long way off for us With
greater wisdom than we have exer
cised in the past it may never come
But we must preserve jealously the
right and the possibility of free access
to the soil out of which grow not only
all those things that make happy the
heart of man and comfort his body
but those virtues by which only a
nation can endure and those influences
that strengthen the soul This is the
safeguard not only of national wealth
but of national character The fertile
fields of this country are its real gold
mines from which it will gather a
richer yield than the deposits of
Alaska or South Africa or any other
land can furnish These are the true
national inheritance
For the first time in the history of
this country thousands of farmers
from states like Iowa Kansas Mis
souri Michigan Wisconsin and Min
nesota are seeking homes in the Can
adian northwest owing to the cheap
lands offered tlere and the difficulty
of securing such lands in the United
States Toward saving a supply for
the future something is now being
done We are at least saving at the
spigot though we have not quit wast
ing at the bung While we are spend
ing great sums to transform worthless
lands into orchards and gardens by
the work of the reclamation service
we still retain as to other areas the
land laws under which for so many
years the great heritage of the people
has been passing so largely into un
worthy hands
The Greatest Lesson of History
For the sake of our national future
for the sake of the coming millions
who will be helpless unless each can
be furnished with a piece of tillable
land as a defense against misfortune
we should see that the speculative
abuses which these laws have fostered
are brought to an end It should not
be possible to obti in public land of
any kind anywhere in the United
States henceforth except after com
plying with all the terms of the home
stead law I cannot urge too strongly
upon every man who wishes his coun
try well and who desires all to be
prosperous in order that he may pros
per with them the importance and
growing necessity of taking such care
of our public domain as shall preserve
the remnant of it for the use of gen
erations yet unborn
Such close and careful cultivation as
will yield the highest profit per acre
is cultivated in comparatively small
can best be given to and when it
farms The greater the number of
prosperous farmers the greater will be
the prosperity of every businessman
It takes more labor to earn the same
profit from a tract too large to be
tiled thoroughly Ten farmers each
cultivating from 40 to 160 acres at the
outside with the most approved meth
ods supplemented where necessary
by irrigation can each earn a profit
equal to that taken from two or three
times the same area by slovenly till
age Ten farmers instead of one in
crease the aggregate volume of trade
with the merchants of the community
and add in the same ratio to the gen
eral prosperity
The Long Neglected Farmer
Including Alaska this country has
about the same area as Europe It
has a little more than one fifth as
much population With a trifle more
than five per cent of the population of
the world we are producing 13 per
cent of the worlds supply of wheat
corn and oats We raise more than
70 per cent of the worlds cotton All
political economy that is not mere
empty theory rests upon the ratio of
population to land area the abund
ance and value of the products of the
soil and the proper balance and inter
relation of different industries We
have been busy as a nation helping
the so called industrial interests of the
country in fact everybody except the
man on the farm
But when we have as many people
to the square mile as Europe has now
we will know the economic troubles
of Europe Our task will be to in
crease correspondingly the volume of
the earths product When we get
down to business and take stock of
those national affairs in which we are
vitally concerned as workers and
home builders as citizens and as
fathers of the children who are to
make our future we find that the main
thing is the utilization and con
servation of the soil and the resources
imwn from it This interest must
-
UOnS SOHie OIU SUIIie new 1nrro nf all I
and more take precedence
in the near future but none so more
others The man must be encourageu
mental as the true relation ot uw muu
to the national life The first act in
the progress of any civilization is to
provide homes for those who desire to
sit under their own vine and tig tree
A prosperous agricultural interest is
to a nation what good digestion is to
a man The farm is the basis of all
Industry The soil is the only resource
that renews itself continually after
having nroduced value I do not wish
Tirlion
to go to the farm The man on the
farm must be considered first in all
our policies because he is the key
stone of the national arch When he
has produced the share of natural
wealth that corresponds to his best
effort he must be able to find a pur
chaser at prices that will enable him
to live in comfort and enjoy at least
a moderate degree of prosperity This
has a ays b een th final lest of eVery
1
to belittle the importance of manu and it
and every civilization
country
trill Tin more chance than the seasons
are likely to reverse the order of their j
succession i
I
A Farm scnooi Tor every i dimma
pc tnliisliari and maintained a common
school system on the sound principle
that education is essential to a right
discharge of the duties of citizenship
Another element must be introduced
into the eaucaiionai system To direct
roAKiNOPQwi
NOT MACE BYTHETBjj
rpME
fRiKiwr
CHICAGO
v j t l j r a mm
work explain it by such instruction as
wp now eive in our technical schools
nd institutes for the trades Anyone
who has studied the growth and de- j
i Jl -- n 1 1 rt 1 mil
cline or nations aim wuum iwu wm
own industrial iuuire must ue
that instruction in farm econo
my and management should become an
indispensable part of the educational
work of this country
Why So Many Warships
If I could have my way I should
build a couple of warships a year less
Perhaps one would do I would take
that 5000000 or n000000 a year and
start at least 1000 schools
in the United States at 5000 a year
each in the shape of model farms
This model farm would be simply a
tract of land conforming in size soil
traeatment crop selection and
tnn anri mpthnds of cultivation to
modern agricultural methods
nncn wniilrl hp to furnish to all its
neighborhood a working model for
common instruction Cultivating per
haps from forty to sixty acres it
could exhibit on that area the advan
tages of thorough tillage which the
omnii fnrm makes nossible of seed
proper fertilization stock raising al
ternation of crops and the whole scien
tific and improved system of cultiva
tion seeding harvesting and market
ing Tne iarmers 01 a county couiu
SAFER RAILROAD TRAVEL
All American Railroads Report Notable
Advances in the Protection
of Life
The best safety records made public
hy the big American railroads are
now coming to light month by month
The Pennsylvania railroad set the
example by announcing that not a
single passenger had been killed on its
rails in the 12 months that ended last
December Now follow others says
the Worlds Work
The Erie railroad probably the most
decried of all the big trunk lines
claims the unique record of having
carried more than 125000000 passen
gers in the last five years without
killing a single person in a prevent
able accident The Lehigh Valley
makes a similar report
Four western railroads the Bur
lington the Rock Island the Atchison
and the Northwestern claim that in
the past year they killed not a pas
senger in any accident chargeble to
the railroad This is a matter of the
greatest importance
And there is a new spirit in the rail
road world In the passenger depart
ments of our railroads a deep im
pression was made a year or so ago
by the announcement from England
that all the railroads of that island
had been operated for 12 months with
out killing a single passenger The
Pennsylvania took pride in its record
of last year in equaling the English
record and there is no doubt that the
other railroads are engaged in a con j
test of this excellent sort
le
Rakmcr Powder
Story in a nut shell
Adulteration Cheap
Impurity Baking
Unhealthfulness Powder
Hieh Price
Indifferent Leavening
Residue of Rochelle Salts
Trust
Baking
Powder
Most Leavening Power j CALUMET
AKING
Purest Ingredients
Moderate Price rWUfcrt
Received Higheit Award
Worlds Pure Food Exposition
Chicago 1907
Summer Climes
JQESS
- -
miMrMgrri
No need to bear the discomforts of a noithcrn winter
At a low cost you can enjoy the sunshine flowers ami summer
- - r 1 1 t 1IvmiI il r a
County j lite ot bouthern uaiilornia uuua me ruiimu liunua mu
This country has from the beginning Qur Country
Take a winter vacation and see the historic Southland
Write me for descriptive literature about our personally con
ducted excursions to Southern California about Florida and all the
thP minds of the younc to work upon other far famed winter resorts berths rates tram service etc
the land as an honorable and desirable
career and to prepare for tnem worK j triVjfauq nncTCTTCP Tint Ao pnt MrHnnk
they return there by suitable jSIfiffii
ution is to promote good citizen j 1 M2jJigr2J
instruction
o1i onri iintinnn qfiCUrilV lO iiuse
aMMMMJ lWV - - tt0
the productivity of our soil 50 per
cent would be an increase greater in
value than the entire volume of our
foreign trade These results can be
brought about only by a general un 1
derstanding and practice of agriculture
as modern science and experiment
m
7j 43a
it ysrwj
HT M - 1 I m jrJXLi -
L W WAKELEY G P A Omaha
M 111 RGB
jSkggaBS5i rsvft 7yA f rAizZ
specially chosen and tested by or four times at night to void the
ment at agricultural college farms ol Cretions I was also subject to dizzy
spells I have now used Doans Kidney t
Pilla for some time and have the great
est relief therefrom My kidnejs give
me no further trouble and my dizzy
lHs are a thing of the past
see must see as they passed its j
ders how their daily labors might j Plenty more proof like this from Mc-
bring increased and improved results j Cook people Call at McConnells drug
Cur Hills striKing articles win De store and asK wnat customers rejjuri
T- 1 TTT 1J 1 - -
continued in tne ueceinoer worms
Work with a discussion of the develop
ment of the northwest
For sale bv all dealers Price 50
cents Foster Milburn Co Buffalo
New York solo agents for the United
States
m
Remember the name Doans and
take no other
Rev I W Williams Testifies
Rev I W Williams Huntington W
Vh writes us as follows This is to
certify that I used Foleys Kidney Rem
edy for nervous exhaustion and kidney
trouble and am free to say that Foleys
Kidney Remedy will do all that you
claim for it Sold by A McMillen
FRED WIGGINS
AUCTIONEER
k mi
will cry your
sales an
timn a n y
where
Bills post
ed in the
Sappa coun
try and tin
cups fur
nished for
your free
lunch with
out extra
charge
Terms 10
first 1000 or
less 1 per
cent on all
Hales run-
ning over 81000 Dater made by The
Danbury News Danbury Nebr
FOLEYSHOHETTM
gttpos the couli and Heals lungt
f mimr
A STEADY DRAIN
Sick Kidneys Weaken the Whole Body
Make You III Languid and
Depressed I
Weak kidnejs weaken the buly by the j
continual drainag of life 3vin
men from the blood into the urino and j
the substitution of poisonous uric acid
that goes broadcast through the system
iisit Loss of
sowing the -
albumen causes weakness languor do 1
pression Uric poisoning causes rheu
matic pains nervousness nauseu cricks
in th hHck travel and kidney stones
Its Tno proper treatment is a kidney treat j
ment and the best remedy is Jjoan s
Kidney Pills I
William Parkes living in Red Cloud
Nebia ka says For about thrtejears
my Uiinejs were in a disordered condi
tion iiui I was obliged to net up three
J0k
i xiZGyttL
150 Value
for 100
P2ani the B0HNTF0LV
Collection of Vesekle Seeds
m yens juaMeii
MfA t itlA ritv fnfMp1 In nl3nt thCSfi
4U llAlll lll 11 jui - - -- - - -
five should certainly find a place ia your caxden
c IVITft lTitItin Trlt c3 SirCCt 3ad
fine In flavor a s the eld Klaei Mclean without 1 j
objectionable color Cooc yicIOer niaturci erly and
remains edible longer Kccular rIco luc
Volm CnllBZi Ncvjr caualld for ualfsraior or
growth shape cf head and liarrlres Has few outclda
leaves Set out in July vl mihirc anc soiM
heads In October Krjralar Frloo ZOo
Mask Melon Iluncorlan Ilneapole Finest fla
vored sweetest and most arcim Mc of all nick
melons Flesh deep red ltcs ilcr price l e
Klondike flu umlier C to 7 Indues Ion errerrly
early very proline Dark ijre n ijf od shipe most
profitable sort forshlppir B Itctfuler price lc
New Corelcss Tomato Lame size globe shaped
bright red stronu crower and bis crappT Averaeo
weight 12 ounces llcsuicr price 10c
55c collection for 39c
This excellent assortment 1 worth Kc bat -we win
send it to any address postpaid for 33c
uomoieie line 01 ueii ijr ni u
i nn conMc Vi hmskn
grown Alfalfa and all vane ss of v aver
ana urass
Write to day for free catalosue
gsrx
GERMAN rlURSERES
SEED HOUSE
KirasSfW Box 7a
for children safe sura No opiates
MTTTYYTTTTTTTTTTTTTYTYTTTJJ
The Updike
Grain Co
sells the
following coals
Nigger Head Maitland
Canyon City Lump
Canyon City Nut
Baldwin Lump
Iowa Lump
Pea Coal
Wier City Lump
Wier City Nut
Sheridan Egg
Rex Lump
Pennsylvania Hard Coal
S S Garvey iManager
Phone 169
t
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4
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