The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, April 14, 1910, Image 5

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UNG ITALIANS
AMAZING CLAIM
Asserts He Can Visualize Ob
jects at a Great Distance
AS FAR AS 20000 MILES
Rochester N Y Inventor Has a
Televisualizer With Which Ho Be
lieves He Can Perform Marvels
Will Reproduce Color Effects Di
mensions and Movements
The Invention wJch I hnve made
and the apparatus which I have suc
ceeded In putting together are suffi
cient for me to make the assertion that
I can visualize an object at a distance
of thousands of miles The object can
be seen with Its properties of color ef
fects dimensions and movements and
will be equal to the original with the
exception that the object Itself cannot
be felt with the fingers
Such Is the remarkable claim made
by William Vincent Pruscino a young
Italian living at 72 South Union street
Rochester N Y
Pruscino Is not very communicative
about Ills invention so far as going
into details Is concerned At present
he will deal only In generalities as to
just what his device really is He
fears that some one will steal his in
vention He was so oppressed by the
thought of such a calamity that he
even destroyed his model after he had
given a demonstration for his own
benefit Now he says that he has re
ceived financial support and he is en
gaged In reconstructing the model pre
paratory to having It entered and re
corded at the patent office
Telegraph Wires Used
The actual demonstrations made by
me not many weeks ago said Prus
cino recently have completely satis
fied me that seeing at the distance of
ten or twenty thousand miles is no
more an Impossibility but on the con
trary it is absolutely possible I re
peat that thanks to my experiments
I have succeeded in demonstrating this
to my complete satisfaction
Televisualizer is the name thai
Pruscino has given his device While
he will not tell anything about its ex
act nature he admits that telegrapb
wires have to be used and that per
sons objects and scenes can only be
visualized where the necessary appa
ratus is set up at both points which
would correspond in telegraphy to the
sending and receiving points The
televisualizer however is not a sys
tem b sending portraits by telegraph
Pruscino claims much more for his in
vention as he says he can reproduce
the color movement and various di
mensions of the scene
Some of Its Possibilities
Among the things that will be ren
dered possible by this mode of seeing
says Pruscino is for instance the
first night in a European theater by a
person sitting In a New York theater
auditorium or if a Xew Yorker should
like to attend a masquerade in Bue
nos Aires well I could not guar
antee that he could join in the fun but
he would have the whole scene repro
duced before him as vividly as if he
were actually present
Battle scenes could no doubt be re
produced within a fraction of a second
in the same manner unless the cannon
balls happened to strike the instruc
ments There is no limit to what can
be reproduced All that is necessarj
is to have the apparatus set up at the
scene which it is desired to bring be
fore the eye and the necessary appara
tus at the other end to visualize it
TO SNAP HALLEYS COMET
Special Camera Set Up to Picture It
as It Crosses the Sun
A special astronomical camera has
been set up at Honolulu which is ex
pected to catch some interesting pic
tures of Halleys comet when on May
18 it completes its 3100000000 mile
trip around the sun and begins a sim
ilar journey all over again
Dr John H Brashear who told re
cently at Pittsburg of providing the
camera said that on May IS the head
of the comet would cross the solar
disk and the phenomenon would be
plainly visible in the Pacific ocean It
will take the comet but fifty eight min
utes he said to cross the suns face
and at that time it will be possible to
determine how much solid matter is
in the comets nucleus for all solid
- portions over ten miles in diameter
will be indicated by shadowed spots
against the suns background The
comet on that day will be only 15000
000 miles away from the earth and
consequently will be brighter than at
any other time The experiments In
Honolulu are being made by the Amer
ican Astronomical and Astrophysical
society
Biggest Y M C A Branch
The west side branch of the Young
Mens Christian association in New
York reached the 5000 mark in mem
bership the other day making it the
largest branch in the world and plac
ing It well ahead of the next largest
branch the Central Y M C A of Chi
cago
Silent Pavements About Schools
The proposition of laying silent pave
ments in the streets around school
houses is being considered by the
London authorities
ROOSEVELT AS PEACE LORD
Colonel Namod For Ambassador to All
the Courts of the World
Discussing the question What Shall
We Do With Colonel Roosevelt the
Rev Dr Robert Stuart MacArtbur
pastor of Calvary Baptist church in
New York said the other morning
I nominate Theodore Roosevelt for
the high office of ambassador extraor
dinary to all tho courts of the world
in the Interest of universal and per
petual peace
This proposal was greeted with pro
longed haudclapping by the members
of the Rev Dr MacArthurs Current
Events class
No more exalted mission can be
named for any man in the world to
day he continued The time is com
ing when the nations shall learn war
no more The time is coming when
spears shall be beaten Into plowshares
and swords Into pruning hooks The
court of arbitration at The Hague has
already accomplished wonders Only
those who are entirely familiar with
the facts know how many Interna
tional disputes have already been set
tled by arbitration The nations are
almost ready to enter into an agree
ment to settle all disputes in this way
Here we have a noble sphere for
the varied talents remarkable skill
and wide experience of Colonel Roose
velt No one will ever charge him with
being a mollycoddle a poltroon or a
coward His bravery has been proved
on fields of battle and in halls of de
bate He is as brave morally as he Is
physically he has the ear of the civi
lized world In places high and low as
no other man ever had To him doors
of palaces and cabinets will readily
open Listening ears in palaces and
hovels await his slightest word
If Theodore Roosevelt can be a
dominant factor In the era of univer
sal and perpetual peace his name will
be honored aliove that of all warriors
on all battlefields through all the cen
turies He will prove the of Mil
tons words when he said Teace uafh
her victories no less renowned tnan
war
WOMENS BUSINESS COURSE
How Julia Ward Howe Plans to Com
bat High Cost of Living
Mrs Julia Ward Howe has started
among Boston women a movement to
study applied economics relating espe
cially to the increased cost of living
It is her hope that this movement will
become national and will be considered
seriously by women throughout the
United States It was launched at a
aa
JULIA WABD HbWE
meeting of the New England Womens
club of which Mrs Howe has been
the head for many years
Mrs Howe says her attention was
directed to the agitation of the high
cost of living and that she decided that
f women are not able to cope with finan
cial matters and cites for example
women left with property to manage
and no knowledge of finance or busi
ness
Mrs Howe believes that women
should understand credit as applied to
business methods since so much of the
trading of today is done on credit and
how far that principle is responsible
for the increased cost of living She
believes that if this movement is suc
cessful a great amount of the reproach
laid at the door of women for being
unbusinesslike would be done away
with
New Use For Glass Eye
A New Yorker says that he knows a
man with a glass eye who makes it
pay for itself many times over The
man goes abroad several times a year
and buys jewels as a side issue He
puts one or two of the best stones in
his eye and so smuggles them through
the custom house safely
When We Meet Halleys Comet
When In May we meet the comet
What think you will hit us from it
Will the old earth bump its head and see
some stars
Comets so at such a rate
Is it safe to have a date
With a traveler so likely to leave scars
When we strike the comets tail
Shall we have a bargain sale
On account of all the remnants floating
round
Will spark plugs be any cheaper
Shall we find our gas bills steeper
Can we get our stock of fireworks from
the ground
J Will its carbon diamonds send us
5 Will its iron courage lend us
Will its sodium salt the sea more when it
i falls
Will It shower a lot of rocks
Giving us magnetic shocks
What will be the card it leaves us when
it calls
Camilla J Knight in New York Sun
Time Card
McCook Neb
MAIN LINE EAST DEPaHT
No 6 Central Timo 1133
8 15 r m
Its 500 a m
2 550 A M
12 70d a m
14 9iiv M
10 5130 r m
MAIN LINE WEST DEPART
So 1 Mountain Timo 1220 P M
3 1142 P M
5arr8iMJpin --
18 9 W A M
Id JE3 A M
9 615 A M
7 930 am
imperial line
No 176 arrives Mountain Time 345 p M
No 175 departs 645 AM
Sleeping dinintr and reclining chair cars
seats free on through trains Tickets solij
and baggage checked to any point in the Unitod
States or Canada
For information time tables maps and tick
ets callVon or write D F Hostetter Agent
McCobkf Nebraska or L W Wakeley General
Passenger Agent Omaha Nebraska
RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS
Engineer J H Thomas has the
foundation in for a new residence dver
on north 6th street east
Engineer Niewig is building himself
a new residence on east 5th Btreet op
posite the eastward brick school house
Agpnt Ensstrom of Holdreee whr
gave Maor McConaujihy quite a ce
for the mayoralty la6t weik Tuesday
was a euesfof MattLnwritsnn Sunday
Knights of the Maccabees
Mr L M Thomas of Lincoln state
commander of the Knights of the Mac
cabees is in the city looking after the
interests of the tent here Mr Thomas
will spend several days in organizing a
new class for initiation and holding
schools of instruction under the revised
ritual which has recently been adopted
by the supreme tent at Detroit at their
last national meeting This ritual is
said to be one of the most pleasing and
instructive yet adopted by any similar
association Crystal Lake tent No 16
is one of the oldest tents in the state
organized in 1S92 and is composed of
quite a number of the business and pro
fessional men of our city The associa
tion at large has a combined member
ship of over 300000 and has accumulated
funds in excess of S9000000MrThomas
expects to add at least 25 new members
to the local tent when the tents at
Trenton Culbertson and Indianola will
be invited to be present and take part
in the class initiation The date for this
will be announced later
How to Spot Em
I shall not wed until I can marry
a hero Well you show the first
man who proposes to you a schedule
of the cost of living and if he still
asks you to take him for your meal
ticket he Is a hero
We Make Portraits
That are Different
Styles Up-to-date
Methods Modern
Kimmell Studio
1st door north
Commercial Hotel
Phone red 428
- JE --
--
iTtfirTiinnT n
IH
MXSMsW I
2ihba rv - --
5f
w w
FOULARD SILK in dark and medium
grounds with dots rings scrolls etc per
yard 90 tb 100
PONGEE SILK the silk for summer
Cool light and launders like linen Abso
lutely nothing like it per yd 125- 150
PSALE
SILK WAISTS smartly fashioned of
plain and fancy taffetas and messalines
Newest cleverest designs 5 to 8
JUDGE GEORGE H WILLIAMS
Career of Jurist Who Was Last Mem
ber of President Grants Cabinet
Judge George Henry Williams the
last member of President Grants cab
inet who died recently at Portland
Ore was born In New Lebanon N Y
on March 22 1S23 He studied law
and was admitted to the bar in 1844
Almost immediately Mr Williams
moved to Iowa After three years of
private practice he was elected judge
Of the First judicial district of Iowa
In which position he remained until
1S52
Mr Williams in 1S32 was named as
a presidential elector In the follow
ing year when President Pierce took
office he appointed Mr Williams chief
justice for the territory of Oregon
Although President Buchanan reap
pointed him to this position when lie
took office Mr Williams declined to
accept the reappointment
Judge Williams was attorney genoral
of President Grants cabinet during the
latters second term After serving in
that capacity for three years Judge Wil
liams retired to be succeeded by Ed
wards Pierrepont Upon his retire
ment from the office of attorney gen
eral Judge Williams was nominated by
President Grant to be chief justice of
tlie United States supreme court The
Dffjted States senate however refused
lo confirm the nomination and after
a long fight President Grant withdrew
Judge Williams name While servim
in the capacity of attorney general
Judge Williams was sometimes refer
red to as Landaulet Williams be
cause of his alleged improper use of
government carriages
After retiring from public office
Judge Williams moved to the state of
Washington where he practiced law
before the supreme court of that state
After a number of years however he
again returned to Oregon and in lf02
was elected mayor of Portland Ore
He served in that capacity until the
end of his term in 1003 His wife was
reported to have the smallest foot in
Washington and cut a figure in cabi
net society Recently she has been de
scribed as the founder of a religious
sect In Portland one of whose tenets
is that the devil in the form of a ser
pent resides in the vermiform appen
dix Since 1903 Judge Williams had
lived practically in retirement
WHITE GYPSY QUEEN
Head of Band Says She Gave Up So
ciety For Roaming Life
Camped just beyond the river Des
Peres is a gypsy queen extraordinary
She is the wife of King John Mitch
ell head of the little Romany band
that stole silently into St Louis the
other night
With her white skin for she is a
Caucasian surmounted by a beaming
red headdress Queen Jessie who is
twenty four years old looks strangely
out of place surrounded by the
swarthv men and women for whose
company she says she gave up home
wealth and an enviable place in so
ciety in Baltimore
Queen Jessie claims to be closely re
lated to some of the best families In
the country Francis Scott Key she
says was her maternal great-great
grandfather and Justice Roger B
Taney who wrote the Dred Scott de
cision was her great uncle
Her sister she says is now in so
ciety in New York but she does not
give her name She says A W Ha
bersham a wealthy broker of Balti
more is her father
My father sent us to Brown col
lege and then to a finishing school in
Baltimore I was then sevehteen and
just about the time I should have
been entering society I ran away from
home Five years ago I became ac
quainted with King John Mitchell
The roving life of the gypsy appealed
to me and four and a half years ago
we were married
Revised Version
A schoolboy was asked to write in
his own words the story of the prodi
gal Bon He wrote He w ted his
substance In righteous living and
when he came back his father killed
for him the fat headed calf
MITATIONS are put out for everything Even a good many o called
silks come from the cotton patch hut hy a process of met cunning cot
ton is made to look like silk until after it is cleaned That is when it
shows its true color
The goods we will sell you for silk will he silk nbsolutdy and guaranteed
Here are some of the various silks and their prices
SILK GLOVES that are stylish
must lit We have all colors and dou
ble tipped per pair 50 75 100
C L DeGROFF and Co
PHONE 22
McCOOK NEBRASKA
Advertised Letter List
The following mail matter nmiins
uncalled for at tbe McLJook postollic
April 1 1910
letters
Brjnnt Mr C S Clark Mr K M
Davis Mr A H Hnry Mr D J
Hay J A HnjesMrTA
Hare Mr Charles Hood Mr CharlusWCO
Hill Mrt Libbio McAdmns it owe
KiRbt Mrs Mary Hiuse Mr V E
CARDS
iriBKS Mrs Sadio H Hojolds Mrs Peart
Advertised April 8 1910
LRTTKHS
Emerson Mr II E Hays Earl W
Miller Mrs Elizabeth Mattinj Crist
IJ au Mr John ItoKcrs Mrs N J
SirnBue Mr J E Submit Mr Geo 2
Waterwortb Mr C F
CARDS
Buckett Mr G L Hays Mr T A
Latropo Miss Ruth Litonbee Mr II W
McCaskill Mr G C Olday Miss Mary
Peterson Miss Ethel Hoop Mr J C
Komelin Mr M C White is Miss S E
Wilkins MrMrsGeo Wiudlaud Miss Martha
Advertised April 15 1910
LETTER
Hill Miss Annise Herndon n H
Nevin Mr J E Itussel Mr J
Scherff F C
CAKD3
Itremer Miss Christine Hrehm Miss Emma
Calhoon Hert Fox Mrs Leta
Keen Mr Fred Melius L O
McGrath Mr Ed Mahouey Mr George
Starkey Mr Guy Stafford William N
Smith Archie Volker Mr Mart
Whitker Mr George
When CHlling for these please say they
were advertised
Lon Cone Po tmaster
Relic of the Past
The modern housewife if she now
sees an old clothes der in the
collection is apt to bat is that
for It was us pounding
clothes in a barrel on washing day
in the everlasting fight with dirt It
Is far removed from the modern laun
dry or the washing machine of tho
present day
Appertaining to the Knocker
Sometimes de knocker is mo fool
ish dan malicious said Uncle Eben
Hes liable to be sacrificin friendship
an resppct foh de sake of intertainin
a mighty ongrateful audience
Therefore Forget Them
The troubles of to morrow disqualify
is for the duties of to day
R F D NO 1
Last Sunday a class of sixteen nine
girls and seven boys were confirmed at
the merman Lutheran church
Frank Dudek ami family visited vcL
Wauneta over Sunday
Leon Kurisel of Indianola came to Mo
Cook Tuesday with a commercial mac
and after hitching up their team to re
turn drove to Kast McCook whe ihoy
discovered the outside cheek was un
buckled Tho team ran away and Leon
Riisbt 1 jumped spraining his ankle
Tho travelings man took tins lines and
succeeded in driving the team back to
the east livery barn where they had
advance notice by phone that tho team
was coming The liveryman succeeded
in stopping tho team after they had
gone under some clothes lines and
broken thw double trees throwing the
traveling man out and bruising him up
BEGGS BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES disease with Pure Blood
I LEGAL NOTICE
Ed JelTer and May Jailers defendants will
take notice that the Nebraska Central
and Loan Association plaintiff lias tiled its pe
tition against s id defendants in the District
Court of Red Willow Count Nebraska the ob
ject aud prajer of which arc to foreclose t
iiitiriRtiKe Kien by said defendant to the plain
tiff upon the follow ii k described premises situ
ated 111 Red Willow County Statu of Nebraska
to vvit
That part of the southeast and nortnast ff
section twenty nine township
three 181 north bailee twcntj iiine west
dfs ribed as follows Commencing at - point
in the east line of the southeast quarter of the
northeast quarter of section tventy nine Town
ship three rane thirty three Eir
feet north of the outhtast corner of aid tract
from thence ruiiiiiut north in the east line of
said tract three hundred CM feet thence west
parallel with tin south line of said tract twe
liiiiidr d sjxty lue riii feet thence outh to a
point thirt -three north of the line of said
tract thence east parallel with said uth lino
two hundred ixty lie 2fi5i feet to the placo ti
bemninriK according to the recorded plat there
of
Which niortciiKu was filed for record April
ird llHJll and duly recorded in book C patce CS
of the mortKafje records or said County
Said mortgage was ill ven to secure the pay
ment of their one certain bond for the sum of
Eight Hundred Dollars tjwyMiO due in monthlF
payment failure to make which prompt
when due makes theentire amouutduc and pay
able without notice Default has been made it
the payments falling due on tho itii dns ol
Nov and Dec llui and Jan Feb and March
Ul respectively and there is now tlui on aid
bood and iiicrtKace the -um of seven hundred
seventy nine and 75 1 1 HI 77175 Dollars with in
terest thereon at the rate of ten percent iK r an
num from this date nud the plaintiff pravs for
a decree that the defendant be required to par
the sum or that said premises be sold to aatisfr
I said amount
I You are required to answer said petition oc
I or before Monday the llrd day of Maj ISIIW
Nebraska Central Iiuildinir and Loan Associ
ation Plaintiff Hy John E Kkiiky
Its Attorney
t
Copjricht 1909 by C E Zimmerman Co No 60
Barefoot Sandals
IVE your childrens feet a chance to grow make
lB r them comfortable in this hot weather and you go a
jj long ways toward promoting their health And not
only is a sandal comfortable but they are stylish as
well When you and I were boys and girls we went barefoot
and nobody cared but today that is considered not quite the
proper thing but a pair of these sandals permit them to en
joy barefoot days and at the same time be dressed up Be
sides as well as being comfortable sandals are quite inex
pensive We have them in all sizes
SHOE REPAIRING A SPECIALTY
The Model Shoe Store
FISHER PERKINS
201 Main avenue