n VWVUXV TEMPERANCE COLUMN Conducted by the McCook W C T V I W C T U County Convention Od Wednesday September 10 in the Methodist church of Indianola was held the iirst V C T U Convention of Red Willow county Delegates from Marion McCook and Indianola gave n in the convention was called to order by the president Mrs IL M Finity Misa Belle Kearney national organizer was made a member of the convention and proved herself an inspiration and help to the convention The afternoon session was givou over mostly to helpful papers and in the evening Miss Kearney gave one of her masterful addresses to an appreciative audience President Mrs H M Finity McCook vice president Mrs Orpha Deck Marion corresponding secretary Mrs Flora Hold McCook recording secretary Miss Flora VanPelt MarioD treasurer Mrs Galloway Indianola The following resolutions were adopted by the convention Reaffirming our faith in God and re declaring that the great privileges of total abstinence for the individual and prohibition for our state and nation shows upon what we stand bo it resolved 1 That we favor all cooperation with other temperance organizations 2 That we declare for county local option as a stepping stone to state pro hibition and thnt we do all in our power to secure this advance legislation 3 That greater effort shall be put forth for the enfranchisement of women bolieving that it will be a strong factor in the uplift of the race 4 Recognizing the power of the press we express our gratitude to the State journal and News for refusing to print liquor advertisements 5 That we interest ourselves more in the election of men representing our principles We declare our gratitude over the action of Mt Central Illinois Conference condemning Speaker Cannon in reference to his blocking national legislation regarding the Littlefield Bill 6 That we hereby express our thanks to the local W C T U of Indianola for its reception of our convention and to nur national organizer Miss Belle Kearney and all who have helped to make this convention a success Mrs M J Stevens Mrs H W Keyes Mrs J C Moore Committee CITY CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENTS Christian Bible school at 10 a m Preaching at 11 a m and 8 p m C E at 7 p in All are welcome R M Ainsworth Pastor Episcopal Preaching services at St Albans church at 11 a m and 730 p m Sunday school at 10 a m All are welcome to these services E R Earle Rector Catholic Order of services Mass 8 a m Mass and sermon 1000 a m Evening service at 8 oclock Sunday school 230 p m Every Sunday War J Kirwin O M 1 Baptist Sunday school at 10 a m Preaching service at 1100 a m Even ing service at 800 B Y P U at 7 p m A most cordial invitation is extended to all to worship with us E Bcrton Pastor Christian Science Services Sun day at 11 a m and Wednesday at S p m Meetings held in the Morris block Boom open all the time Science litera ture on sale Subject for next Sunday Reality Methodist Sunday school at 10 am Preaching by the pastor at 11 Bubject The Hot and Cold Disciple Class at 12 Union rally of young peoples soci eties at the Christian church at 7 Union temperance rally at S M B Carman Pastor Evangelical Lutheran Regular German preaching services in the court room of the McCook court house every Sunday morning at 1030 All Germans and Russians cordially invited Rev Wm Brueggeman 607 5th st East Congregational Sunday school at 10 a m Preaching at 11 a m and S p m by pastor Junior C E at 3 p m Senior Endeavor at 7 p m Prayer meet ing Wednesday evening at eight oclock The public is cordially invited to these services G B Hawkes Pastor Evangelical Lutheran Congrega tional Sunday School at 030 a m Pleaching at 1030 a m and 730 p m by pastor Junior C E at 130 p m Senior C E at 400 p m Prayer meetings every Wednesday and Satur day evenings at 730 All Germans cordially invited to these services Rev Gustav Henkelmann 505 3rd street West Four New City Views and an attractive assortment of greet ing and other tasteful post cards re ceived this week at The Tribune office Something new every week Once More on Compulsory Education Already the lust iaauo of this paper brought two sections or parta of two sections of the Nebraska compulsory education law To make dure that this Inws far roaching extent will bo remem bered by ull and that there may be no misunderstanding whatsoever wo let them follow again besides mnking a little addition to Sec 1 and n little cor rection to Sec 2 Subdivision 1G Section 1 In city inspiring reports from their respective J school districts every person residing unions At 1000 within such districts who has legal cou trol of any child not less than 7 nor more than 1G years of ago shall eau6o such child to attend the public day school for the full period eaah school year in which the public day school ia in ses sion Omitting a line or two this section continues and this is the addition The portion of this act requiring at tendance in the public day school bhall not apply in any case where a child or youth is for a time equal to that re quired by this act instructed in some private or parochial school or in any case where the child is instructed at home or elsewhere by a person qualified to give instruction in the studies re quired to be taught in tho public schools Subdivision 1G Section 2 as correct ed Boards of education in cities and metropolitan citie3 shall appoint one or more truant oliicfra who shall qualify as police oflicers shall enforce the provs ions of this law in the wards or districts for which they severally act shall have authority to apprehend and take to his home or to some public private or paro chial school any child found in violation of this act McCook having had only public insti tutions until the present it may not be readily seen just why this addition and this correction is made But within the near future in fact beginning next week Monday Sept 28 already the city will also have a parochial school and considsring the course of study a first class school it will be At lea t the German Evangelical Lutheran mis sionary who will be in personal charge having grown up in the midst of first class eastern schools of this kind shall endeavor to make also the local school such The English branches will be the same a 3 those taught in the public schools everything graded of course The course of study will be that set down by the Chicago 111 Conference of Teachers being the best one in its class enabling a child to attend the high school within the same or the childs ability and diligence permitting even in a smaller number of years than the child instructed at the hand of an other course of study Beides this from one to three hours par day will be devoted to German i e the genuine high German Here too above named course of study has the ad vantage over any other enabling a child not only to understand and to make itself understood but also to read and write German correctly in a compara tively short time Of this opportunity for their children especially the parents of German nativity should avail them selves and do away with that fault of conversing in the German language among themselves but of being obliged to use the English language only in speaking to their German children Do not forget the English language may be the Business Language but knowl edge of the German is being demanded more and more by The Boss from his clerks stenographers book keepers and reporters Knowledge of the German Langu age is and Always will Remain a Part or a General Education Seeing and knowing this thp New York Philadelphia Boston Pittsburg etc millionaires send their sons and daughters all the way to Germany and pay several thousand dollars annually that they may at least to some extent be come acquainted with this language They do not think that one should be ashamed of tho ability to speak German And thay are English while you are Ger man Why then would you tarry to have your children study German for the mere price of the necessary text books Last but by no means least the chil dren attending this German Evangelical Lutheran parochial school will receive thorough German or thorough English or thorough instruction in both of these languages in their Evangelical Lutheran Catechism and in Evangelical Lutheran Bible History that is in the bibles OWN INTERPRETATION OF ITSELF These religious instructions are the great ad vantage of the parochial school For the chid not only gat hers secular knowl edge knowledge in the elementary branches but also becomes well acquain ted with his God his Creator with His Law and with His Gospel of eternal sal vation as propounded in Holy Writ It is especially this last branch of study in our new parochial school which cannot be prized too highly To provo this here to show here what instruction in this branch means space will not permit But the German Evangelical Lutheran missionary declares himself willing to pay you a visit upon request and to show to your satisfaction that this is not saying too much This with special ref erence to the German Evangelical Luth eran population of McCook As stated this parochial school will bo opened next Monday September 2S Already however the enrollment in the beginning will and must be limited For in the absence of any other locality one of the rooms in the cottage rented by RevWilliam Brueggemann at 607 5th st oast will have to serve a- school room This room is largo enough for from 12 lo 15 children only and 10 cbildreu aro al ready on the list This incouveniency will have to be put up with only tempo rarily however feince an Evangolical Lutherau church or school will bo built within tho limits of McCook before the Christmas holidays In the meantime it i and use to other readers suggest it to the library board through its secretary giving such information as you can as to the publishers price and special fea tures that would recommend it for library use It will receive considera tion when the list is made up and if not included it will be for some reason which the board deem sufficient It is the supreme desire of the library board as individuals and as a body that the library be made a3 practically useful to the reading public as possible They do not want to have it for a literary center for the literary clubs but to have it reach out in all directions with real helpfulness for the toiler in any field of life Look up what there is here for you and if you do not find the volume you need suggest that it be placed on the next book order It is only by such means the library can be made to serve its highest purpose Librarian ENGLISH TITLES Why Inferior Honors Are Sometimes Refused by Commoners Although it costs money to be made a peer no sum can actually buy a British title as may be done iu some European countries Honors of this description are in the giving of the king or rather his majesty bestows them on persons at the recommenda tion of the prime minister who really has the final say in the matter Titles are conferred either directly or indi rectlydirectly when no third per son recommends a candidate for royal recognition and indirectly when a third person brings a candidates name forward he having good and valid grounds for doing so The former method however is the one which is usually adopted It is the duty of the prime minister to distinguish a name celebrated in politics science art or literature and to decide whether the merits of any given prominent person deserve recognition at the hands of the king If in the opinion of the prime min ister such a given person deserves ele vation to titled rank before the minis ter takes any steps In the matter the favored individual is apprised of the prime ministers intentions by a per sonal letter in which is conveyed the degree or title it is proposed to confer on him subject to his approval In four out of five cases the approval is given The fifth person who may have been offered a knighthood oi perenance a baronetcy refuses be cause ins rerusal may increase his chances of obtaining at a later day a higher title still a peerage Armed with the persons approval the prime minister now takes the next step that is obtaining his majestys sanction which is rarely refused It is seldom that a plain Mr blos soms straightforward into a lord un less the circumstances are very un usual such as the reason why a peer age was conferred on Mr Morley or honors conferred on successful gen erals m the field as in the case of Wolseley Roberts and Kitchener As a general rule a plain Mr is trans formed into Sir that is knight or baronet and one who is already a Sir and has done some signal recog nition finds his reward in his ultimate service to the state entitling him to royal elevation to the peerage Chi cago News None For Her Pop Yes my son When a person saws wood it means they say nothing dont it Yes my boy And do women ever saw wood iNo women believe that sawing wood Is a mans work Yonkere Statesman uuruiniieui uiny uuiibiuut jiwuus ii - r1J few ILTUSUU I1UWI vinjj Lliu mi5Hiuuil ui muii intention of sending their child or their children and have him call Rev Wm Brukggemann 507 5th street east PUBLIC LIBRARY NOTES Established in 1902 the McCook pub lic library has grown from a beneficient thought into an institution of largo usefulness in the community which must be a matter of pride to its founders It now occupies it own building with a collection of 3518 bound volumes classified as follows General work 220 Philology 22 Re ligion 83 Sociology id Philosophy 21 Natural Science 52 Useful Arts 34 Fine Arts IS Literature 423 History 217 97 Travel 46 Fiction 543 Juvenile G15 Government Keports 550 Bound Magazines 431 In addi tion to those it receives rojiulnrly 17 monthly pubications 11 weekly and three daily It has also a large mmiier of unbound periodicals with Po- 1- rn dex to Periodical Literature fi 1897 to xwz to assist tne seeuer alter Know ledge that would be an elusive subject indeed upon which one could not get some enlightenment even though all the magazines referred to are not at hand The time is not far distant when the list of periodicals must bo made up for next years subscription If you have in mind some periodical publication which is helpful in your line of work and you feel would be of equal interest AM EPISODE OF WAR Tho Only Coward Evans Ever Saw In tho Navel Service After Admiral Evans had been so grievously wounded In the attack on Fort Fisher during the civil war ho was picked up by a marine named Wasmouth and carried Into compara tive shelter Wasmouth was killed n minutes later Evans own ac count continues After Wasmouth was killed I soon fell asleep and wheu I awoke it was some time before J could recall my surroundings The tide had come in and the hole in which I was lying was nearly full of water which had about covered me and was trickling into my ears I could see a monitor Gring and appar ently very near and the thought came to me that I could swim off to her if I only had a bit of plank or driftwood but this I could not get It was plain enough that 1 should soon be drowned like a rat in a hole unless I managed to get out somehow Dead and wound ed men were lying about in ghastly piles but no one to lend me a helping hand By this time 1 could not use my legs in any way and when I dug my hands into the sides of my prison and tried to pull myself out the sand gave way and left me still lying in f water Finally I made a strong elfoi and rolled myself sideways out of tr hole When I got out I saw a marine short distance away nicelv covered 1 a pile of sand and firing away deliber ately at the fort I called to him u pull me in behind his Inr of sand lvu he declined on the ground trt he fire was loo sharp for hii to evop him self I persuaded him with my re volver to change his mind a d ii two seconds he had my in a place of safe ty that is to say ssfo by a sm iH mar gin for when he fred tlv Confederate bullets would snip he panel within a few inches of our heads If he ma rine had known that my revolver was soaking wet and could not possibly bo fired I suppose I would have been buried the next morning as many oth er poor fellows were As sooif as I could roach some cartridges from n dead sailor lying near me I loaded my revolver thinking it might be useful before the job was finished When I was jerked in behind this pile of sand I landed across the body of the only coward I ever saw in the naval service At first I was not con scious that there wls a man under me so completely had he worked himself into the sand lie was actually below the surface of the ground The moni tors were firing over us and as a shell came roaring by he pulled his knees up to his chin which hurt mo as it jostled ray broken legs I said Hello Are you wounded V Xo sir he replied I am afraid to move All right then I said keep uiiet and dont hurt my legs again The next shell that came over he did the same thing and the next notwithstanding my repeated cau tions So I tapped him between tho eyes with the butt of my revolver and he was quiet after that The Glove on the Pole A quaint custom in an English tovrn Honiton is proclaiming the fair The town obtained the grant of a fair frem the lorel of the manor so long ago as 1257 and the fair still retains some of the picturesque characteristics of by gone days The town crier dressed in picturesque uniform and carrying a pole decorated with gay flowers and surmounted by a largo gilt model of a gloved hand publicly announces the opening of the fair as follows Oyez Oyez Oyez The fairs begun the glove is up No man can be arrested till the glove is taken down not coins are then thrown among the chil dren The pole and glove remains dis played until the end of the fair How Hammer of Death Struck James The old parish church of riunistead is probably at least 1000 years old The picturesque churchyard a cher ished haunt of the poet Bloomfleld during his visits to Shooters Hill con tains a delightfully choice derange ment of epitaphs One of these on Master James Darling aged 10 teaches a lesson uf moderation during the cherry season to the youth of other places besides riunistead Speaking from his tombstone Master Darling exclaims The hammer of death was give to me For eatins the cherries off the tree Westminster Gazette Had Its Limitations A Scottish farmer was proudly show ing a visitor au antique clock which had recently come into his possession Isnt that a gran clock he said I bocht it at an auction sale in the toon the ither day an got a rale bar gain Yes but docs it keep good time the visitor asked Ah weel its no good enough to catch a tram or that sort o thing but good enough to get up to 3cr breakfast wi A Budding Philologist Bobbie aged live saw a cow grazing In his mothers llower garden and shoutiJ Scat Seat The cow didnt seem to be much In timidated and calmly ate on Three-year-old Man dancing with excite ment exclaimed Tell him lo scow Wobbie tell him to scow Deline ator He -Understood Ilewitt Do you understand where that fellow stood the one who was just talking to us Jewett Sure he was standing on my feet most of the time New York Tress We are natural believers Tnuth or the connection between cause and ef fect alone interests us Emerson - Right It- OOV3IHD 1StV uMJiyuii ill3HlAa30mo m Mi Real Estate Filings Tho following real estate filings been made in tho county clerks V- bottom have office since last report R A Green vs James Haven m lien to s hf no qr n hfse qr 301 23 511 40 Alfred H Bell et ux to Young Stothard et ux wd to lot 1G blk 32 Indianola 15C0 00 Gladys N Boylo et cons to II T Groves wd to lot G blk 8 2nd McCook 400 00 William II Chapman to Alma J Chapman wd to lots 3 4 blk G Sterns 1st add McCook 1 00 Lincoln Land Co to Clifford R Sheets wd to lot 3 blk S Gth McCook 300 00 William R Pennington to Francis M Penningtonwd to pt se qr ne qr Francis M Pennington et ux to Mary J Pennington wd to pt se qr no qr 17-1-26 A STEADY DRAIN 1 00 1 00 J M Brown to C M Babbitt bill of sale to drug stockshenv cases etc located on lot 3 blk 54 Bartley Neb 3000 00 United States lo Jacob P Squire pat to sw qr 4-2-30 Delia Green et con to McCook Co Op B S asso wd to lot 2 blk 12 West M cCook 300 00 George R Hoar to Amy B Hoar wd to n hf 11-1-30 George Ray et ux to Elmer E Devoe wd to sw Lincoln Land Co to Maurice Griflin wd to lot 9 blk 14 1st McCook H R Krug et ux to Harry Patee wel to w hf 4-2-26 P F McKenna et ux to O N Rector wd to sw qr nw qr nw qr sw qr 29-2-30 3000 00 2150 00 00 1200 00 1 00 Sick Kidneys Weaken the Whole Body Make You 111 Languid and Depressed Weak kidneys weaken the body through the continual drainage of life giving albumen from the blood into the urine and the substitution of pois onous uric acid that goes broadcast through tho system sowing the seeds of disease Loss of albumen causes weakness languor depression Uric poisoning causes rheumatic pains ner vousness nausea cricks in the back gravel and kidney stones Tho proper treatment is a kidney treatment and the best remedy is Doans Kidney Pills William Parkes living in Red Cloud Nebr says For about three years my kidneys were in a disordered condi tion and I was obliged to gut up three or four times at night to avoid the se cretions I was also subject to dizzy spells I have now used Doans Kid ney Pills for some time and have the greatest relief therefrom My kidneys give me no further troubles and the dizzy spells are a thing of tho past Plenty more proof like this from Mc Cook people Call at McConnelPs drug store and ask what customers report For sale by all dealers Price 50 cents Foster Milburn Co BulTalo X Y sole agents for the United States Remember the name Doans and take no other Typewriter ribbons for sale at The Tribcxe office iijpj UPiimw of M - 4 H y Vt - i i i at the taking Powder Question today Put it through Buy a can of Calumet the most rigid baking test that you know it it it docs not fully come up to your standard the baking is not justasgoodobetter lighter whole and delicious more evenlv raised more some takeit back to the grocer and get your money t Calumet is the only strictly high grade baking powder selling at a moderate cost Dont accept a substitute Insist upon Caiumct and get it EBAmg Received Highest Award Worlds Pure Food exposition Chicago 1907 jLe Walsh DEALER IN roULTRY EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Hiuliest Market Price Paid in Cash J Now location just across rirfnnk street in P Walsh bnildin l ltvuuIV BEGGS1 BLOOD PUBI7IEH CURES catarrh of the stomach IT iji j iii jp hi II i J hi iii i pim ill mi m I iMHliMUlnwwliMil lECfOTWI C rm REISTLE ENGRAVER and ELECTROTYPER PMOt 1114 1420 24 LAWRENCE nTNVFD rm n it Ej CV B KUDU er oofing Old Hickory 2 ply Rubber Roof ing per square complete includ ing Rubber Cement and Broad Headed Nails 225 American Rubber Roofing l py per square complete including Lap cement Tin Caps and Nails 1 95 tv Ji i If i rji1 M Ki VSSTV3SZsSV V FRANKLY President a p cdt 9 w UASHIER JAS S DOYLE Vce President THR CITIZENS DIRECTORS JAS S DOYLE BANK OF MeCOOK NEB Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus icooo Y FRANKLIN W VftVfefe fctg A- 0 EBERT -R-1 m j fV II f A U -4 ts ff 1