I V I i t I N s 1 frETT i 1 1 i i u iHUIWIHIII JWWBCBggTI H IM T 1 1 1UKJ till M TtMHLIJMBBBMmill JlWUmiggfg aESagii5S Mr w BB m m fm ffifcw gPSfe MafStfiff Kih bt5 GBgiai n jw Economizes BkSS2p5 Flora Eggs 5 naafees the lead more Ml appetisfjig anfi wolesome ffe The only Baking Powder made fp aw from Royal Grape Cream oi Tartar W Conductor Mose Caranoney is on the sick list Engine 333 is1 being repaired in the back shop Mrs M J Sullivan depart ed for Curliis Monday Mrs A B Allen -was a Deli ver passenger Tuesday XeAv flues are being placed in the 1740 this week 1727 received work on her piston valves brasses etc this weak The 1765 received a new cyl inder head and slight repairs this week Storekeeper C W Britt was a Denver business visitor Wed nesday Brakeman A B Haley of the Orleans branch is in tihe city for a few days Two way cars were taken off Tuesday on account of a slump in business Mr and Mrs J W Spen cer were Sterling Colorado vis itors end of week The super heating pipes are being taken out of the 290 an S 2 on account of leaking Engine 1066 is in the round house for cab and considerable machinery repairs this weik New iron snowplows of the small pattern have been placed on engines 1046 318 and 1066 Engine 1124 is in the round bouse for repairs a broken cylin der head and other light repairs Engine 2043 is over the new drop for repairs her middle driv ing and rear pony wheels being dropped etc Engineers G T Leaper and E C Strand of Denver liave been transferred here and are firing while business is slow ome heavy shafting fell in the back shop a few days since but fortunately no one was in jured and the damage was small Engineer II W PerMns tire youngest man on the list lias been transferred to Deavei to run out of that city lie went up yesterday The new flue department is about ready for operation Pirnc tieally all the apparatus has bera installed for the plant whroh is better than before its -removal to Ilavelock Motors are being installed and tlie lifts ait the ice houses here will be actuated by electric ity in due season Another dyna mo is expected soon to be added to the local plant for tiliis and other purposes of power etc Engineer Lou Bartlett has been an engineer on the McCook division for even 24 years this month With one exception En gineer WD Burnett of our city he ds the oldest engineet on tins division in point of service Tlie tin gang was placed on the eight hour schedule yester day Trainmaster W G Dungan of Orleans was in the city Satur day Mrs T E Lundberry left on Monday morning for Atwood Kansas Supt Flynn in private car 83 went southeast on 16 this morning Engineer Steve Finn came in on 15 yesterday and went on the sick list Conductor George Martin is substituting for Carmoney while the latter is off duty Two way cars are on repair track this week one being just out of the painters -hands Swlltclmian Meyers is still on the sick list grip E A Jen sen has his place meantiiime Brakeman G R Cadwallader returned Tuesday night from his business trip to Wray Colorado Brakeman K E Hunt left on No 10 Monday evening for Galasburg to work on that dives ion of the BurlciUgton Six firemen have been trans ferred temporarily from the Den ver division and three from the McCook division to handle the extra business on the Gnlesburg division Fiigures compiled for 1911 of 41 growers in Western Nebraska show very satisfactory results in sugar beet growing On 1850 acres 30000 tons were grown wath gross receipts of J 59324 Aver age yield 1621 tons and 8612 per acre Tins does not include tops valued at from 350 to 5 per ton TJiese figures show 4710 profit per acre These Higuresi are from tihe North Platte country and under irrigation Cold Storage Imagination James IMcGaughey the negro with frozen feet wlio asked the pc lice for aid Saturday niglit after he had wandered over the city nil day left the shelter of the charity organization yesterday morning without leaving any word iMcGraugliey told the po lice that lias feet had been frost ed while he was beating liis way from Hastings to McCook He al so reilfliteid a wierd story concern ing a frozen body taken from a freight train at McCook wMcli was not substantiated Lincoln News The Tribune made caireful in quiry Saturday night to find that the colored gentlemans story was entirely without foum daition and was purely a fijgnint of liis cold storage imagination Read The Tribune for the news TEMPLE THEATRE One Night Only First time here Americas greatest play yCdp r g IH H ftSv W ffiiaW Kfl JfH fl 9n IK wFxrS ONE YEAR IN NEW YORK BY CHARLES KLEIN - AUTHOR OF THE LION--AND THE MOUSE w u THE GAMBLERS- MAQGE PEPPERetc with FranklynGale as Annie Jeffries Raymond Whitaker as Richard Brewster and a perfect supporting company PRICES 50c 75c and I00A Few at 150 UnUf vtst HOTBED is a device for furnish ing bottom heat from fermenting manuie for growing plants out of their natural season or for forcing them into quick growth Of course there arc hotbeds heated by steam by hot water and in other ways but these will not be considered here A hotbed adapted to the needs of the fanner or city man is simple of con struction and can be made complete at a cost of only a few dollars While it is possible to make a hot bed in October sow the seed and have young plants like lettuce large enough lor transplanting by Decem ber and then make up a new bed in Rlucli they are to be grown to matur ity it would ue much better in most casps to use the ordinary hotbed for growing such crops as lettuce rad ishes cauliflower etc beginning about the fast of March The hotbed is es pecially useful for starting many plants n very early spring expecting TREAT SEED OATS VfTADsi WITH SMUT Disease is Easily Killed With Formaldehyde RIGHT NOW IS THE BEST TIME During the winter when other work Is not pressing is the best time to tieat the seed oats for smuh Any time before seeding will do however If dried out well the oats will keep al most any length of time after treat ment Farmoi s n general are familiar with the work of the smut Whole crops are often seriously injured by it and the infection is carried over to the next year in the seed One farmer who treated his seed got thirty bushels of TOTALrXELa OF TJSATD QtTS YELD OF UNTREATED OATS VlSrTm am VVrtJ RESULT OF AN EXPERIMENT SHOWING VALUE OF FORMAL DEHYDE TREATMENT FOR OATS SEED oats two years ago while his neighbor who did not treat had a crop scarcely vorth cuttirg It undoubtedly pays The follo ing directions are given for the form Idehyde treatment Prepare solution as follows Mix one pound o commercial formalin 40 J t HI HIM Jl IHLI1III KIMIWI WB MIMIIKWIDPn H III I KJglfmaiJJ -- imi n l T M JMI1 M mm - a r jv - - ri fn b wrt iw n n ff t i SMWBiMMBMMHMBWBBlBlM3lltMWIWWBMHMaMnr5gTTwil jiji in in - 14 BflflV fl a muLLu inns ul a of Constructing Hofbed Adapted to Needs ot Farmer or City Man j inches m six feet the beds will have about the proper slope but if this is lot the case two of the legs those on the north side should he a few inches longer than the other two After the frame is fitted into place the earth sl ould be banked around it One load of fresh manure will be suf ficient to make up the range The best material for this is that secured direct from the stable the material itself consisting largely of the bed ding from the stalls Material whcb has boen exposed to the weather for a time is useless as it will not heat The manure is thrown into the pit distributed evenly over the space and tramped down firmly by having a man walking constantly over it After be ing filled to the top of the pit and perhaps a couple of inches higher the whole is nicey levelled It is then necessary to water the bed thoroughly Emphasis should be laid on this part of the work as it is necessarv that vTTtii r T Y t -v r T rrry r CONSTRUCTION OF HOTBED to transplant them to the field when the weather is warm and settled An other ute to which the hotbed might be profitably put is the growing of violets Fur this crop no bottom heat is required and hence these plants should be grown after the bed has been used for forcing purposes It is just as easy and costs not a great deal more to have a range of tlnee frames instead of one This rangement makes it possible to grow dilferent kinds of crops under differ ent conditions The following description supple mented Ly the illustration will enable anyone to make a hotbed The best location for the hotbed is on the south side of 1 building or high borrd f nre It would also be better if the ground slopes toward the south Under these conditions the fullest amount of sunlight will he secured As will be seen in the illustration this description is for a range consist ing of three sashes The size of each sash is 4xC feet hence the space to be staked off would be 0x12 feet For Missouri conditions excavate to a depth of six to ten inches throwing the earth out on all sides Next pre pare the frunework for the bed which is made of pine board twelve inches wide In th corners are nailed pieces of 2x4 pine which not only serve as braces for the frame but as legs for It to rest upon These of course should be Jong enough to reach to the bottom of the pit but allowing the framework itself to stand level with the ground Two 2x4 preces should be fltred across the frame to correspond with the width of the sashes that is the first rece should be four feet from the end and the next should be half way betwpen that and the other end If the ground slopes four or five the manure be properly soaked before the proper fermentation will take place A lajer of rich porous soil about two or thiee inches thick should be spread over the manure After a hot bed has been in use for a year or two the old manure which has previously furnished the heat but which is now thoroughly decayed makes a most splendTd soil when thoroughly mixed with the dirt that is upon it In the absence of this however good soil may be prepared by using equal parts of garden lorm and thoroughly rotted nnnure and mixing with the mass enough sand so that the particles can be seen throughout when handling it Two or three shovelfuls would be suf ficient The bed isnow ready for the sashes to be placed upon it This form of bed is a compromise between the old fashioned regular form with the pit eighteen inches deep and the kind which is made wholly above ground no excavation being em ployed at all This raised kind is of course a temporary bed but it often serves a useful purpose for growing early spring crops and can be used throughout the coM weather by heap ing manure around the outside If the frames are to be used during cold weather and are expected to be kept for a number of years it will pay to make covers for each of the sashes out of good pine lumber one inch thick There are on the market special ly prepared mats or rugs for covering hotbed sashes A cheaper way than either which is quite effective in severely cold weather is to cover the sashes over with manure to a depth of six inches Beds treated in this way come safely through a tem perature of 20 degrees below zero I per cum strong wun lorty or litty gal lons of water in barrels This forma lin can be secured from practically any drug store After the seed oats have teen thorough fanned spread them out on a clean floor and sprinkle with the solution until they are wet enough to pack in the lHid Turn them with a shovel until all have been well damp ened Then shovel them into a pile and cover with some old sacks or carpet for two or three hours The oats should then be scattered and turned from time to time until dry As soon as dry the oats are ready for seeding at once or they may be left for weeks before using This solution is poisonous in con siderable quantities but as recom mended it is very weak The treated oats however should never be fed to animals as it will likely poison them FLAVORS IN MILK CAUSE OF CONTAMINATION The abnormal -or injurious flavors In milk are of two kinds first those due to feed eaten by the cows second thos due to contamination The first kind is scientifically spok en of as feed flavors and is due to the cow eating large quantities of turnips onions ensilage beets ragweed etc cause of the contamination of milk is largely due to lack of perfect cleanlinoss with the milking utensils surroundings methods of delivery and personal cleanliness t The udder and adjacent parts should be washed with clean water and wiped dry with a clean dry towel The hands and the clothing of the milkman should he clean Bottles buckets etc should be sterilized with live steam ind turned upside down so as to pre vent the collection of dust which al ways contains germs and mold spores Small top pails should fie compulsory by law H tV HIaaiL1 iijhiiliw hmwmijjhh J I minimiwiiii iiijuiinivi H y i are arriving daily and there are some especially good things frrmf rnn clirwilrl coo In New Foulards 22in wide at 50c New Madras at 25c to 45c New Percales at 7c to 15c I Vi j QTE2 n1 New Ginghams at 10c to 25c New Voiles at 25c to 50c Jacquard Silk at 25c to 35c Have your piece goods shrunk and refinished on our New I Duplex Shrinker and Finisher UBJUmJJbLEJPtrPTTWVI Hwiiii 1 tiif iinvmliVlVVlltWfLJj lij v immwiiwtiMi l jwhlji mgjijg OBITUARY Miss Margaret Palmer was born near Plymouth Illinois April 19 1845 Died in McCook Nebras ka February 4th 1912 Was bur ied in the cemetery in Birtloy Nebraska beside the body of her husband February 6th 1912 AVjls married to John Sentance April 20th 1875 Four children were bom to this union Charles B Leniance of tour city Mrs G L Ashby of Denver Colorado Mrs fi E Lee of Council Bluffs Iowa Mrs C S Hepburn of Topeka Kansas all of them be ing present at the funeral save Mis Lee who was not able to be Enables here Mrs Sentanee died of monia but has not been wII since her injury in the wreck at Indianola May 29th 1911 She united with the Christian church in Plymouth Illinois when 1 young girl and remained in that faith until the end Card of Thanks We appreciate deeply every kindness and assistance rendered during the illness and after the death of our mother and are most grateful to all C B Sentanee and Sisters A McMillen Druggist NOTICESSBl The car of baled cane I have corning has been delayed but will be on track here by Saturday Better get some Saturday if you want it MARSHS FEED STOR1 PHONE 25 Money to Loan on Farms See Rozell Sons at clothing store Engraved Cards Orders for engraved cards will re ceive prompt and satisfactory atten tion at The Tribune office Cards and invitations also printed tasteful ly Call and see samples and we will quote you prices Satisfaction guarantee Wants for rent for sale etc 5c a line in The Tribune Osborn Burton DRAY LINE All kinds of Hauling and Trans fer Work promptly attended to Your patronage solicited Office First Door South oiDeGrofPs Phone No 13 ThGreat WesternfSpreader you to cover two to three times more ground than by the old method TrflrtlirPQ mucn Detter results due to thoroughly A 1 UmiVvi3 pulverizing and distributing the manure more evenly KT fYl aTflll1l7 increases tne value of your land by YT VllVlvllUllj increasing its productions S2VCS a Sreat amount of time and labor Pn7C or tse everv ve3r lt lsl used bv tne mcrease IPCt constru on Deing made of oak malleable iron and DviSL steel to last twenty years nr more not the cheap est but the best to buy A on terms to Mit p f la 1 50 you 1 not afford to Sfl p7it off getting this most useful and valuable tool on the farm - x t COlllC m ad et s exPain further to yon FlcCook HardwareCOe JZz5 -is