The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, October 02, 1908, Image 4

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National
Bank
Protection
means a great deal to you as
a depositor In point of work
ing capital capital surplus
and undivided proiits of 880
00000 The First National
Bank of McCook ranks first
among the banks of western
Nebraska
Our books are examined by
National Bank examiners un
der tho supervision of the
Comptroller of tho Currency
at least twice a year There
is no better security than that
For Your
Savings
Thrift is a simple thing but
it means a great deal It is
the foundation of financial
success and contontment
Save money and put it away
safely for a rainy day Do
posit in
The First
National
Bank
of McCook Nebraska
42
xm
Wri
By F M KIMMELL
II
Largest Circulation in Red Willow Co
Subscription 1 a Year in Advance
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL TICKET
For President
WILLIAM H TAFT
of Ohio
For Vice President
JAMES S SHERMAN
of New York
tHv agwtj v3K 53Cw 5SSrSfce2sB
For Governor
GEORGE L SHELDON
The Lincoln StarJ of September 19th
haB an editorial on Speaker Cannon
in which warning is given to members
of congrcBB who are opposing him for
Tho Star says
re election as speaker
auoh members will be left out in tho
cold bo far as committee appointments
nrn mncerned if Uncle 1oo wins out
This is undoubtedly true but what
kind of a coward would a congressman
bo who would sacrifice principle for a
piece of pie in nhape of a committee ap
pointment It takes a brave man a
in Wash
man of nerve to stand up
ington and buck tho speakers
machine It is an easy thing perhaps
to do at home but vastly different to
Board the lion in his den ouuu
from this district
Norris the congressman
trict has bad tho courage of his con
victions and in tho last session of con
gress came out in tho open against the
speakers arbitrary suppression of legis
lation proposed by President Roosevelt
Ho introduced a resolution curtailing
the powers of the speaker and at once
becamo an object of disrepute in tne eye
of tho machine and the opponents of
Roosevelts policies The question is
now ud to the people Will you stand
by the man who has put principle
above pie and who even in Washington
has been brave enough to rik his own
political future to be on the side of
right Every voter regardless of his
nolitical belief who is opposed to ma
chine polities who believes in purifying
our political methods who stands for
tho square deal and the Roosevelt pol
ices should vote for tho reelection of
Judge Norris to congress Stockville
Republican County Central Committee
The following are the Republican
county central committeemen and their
post office addresses
Alliance Sam Preroer Bartley
Beaver Geo B Morgan Danbury
Bondville HN Colling Indianola
Box Elder W B Sexson Box Elder
Coleman John N Smith McCook
Danbury
Driftwood
East Valley
Fritsch
Gerver
Grant
Indianola
Lebanon
T F Gockley Danbury
J H Wade McCook
TJ GEtherton Bartley
C M Goben Indianola
C M Lofton Cedar Bluffs
A M Benjamin McCook
E S Hill Indianola
J B Cummings Lebanon
MUcnnri Ridco John Deveny Indianola
North Valley Wm Wight Bartley
perry Chas H Jacobs McCook
Bed Willow F C Smith Indianola
Tyrone L A Sheldon Lebanon
Valley Grange A D Johnston McCook
Willow Grove O all at McCook
1st prec 1st ward J F Cordcal
2nd prec 1st ward W C Allison
1st prec 2nd ward H W Conover
2nd prec 2nd ward Scott Odell
Geo S Scott Chairman
John F Cordeal Secretary
After all those famous Cleveland
letters are spurious
Indiana has passed the local option
bill by a vote of 55 to 45
And Senator Foraker is ready to say
good bye The fire alarm wont be
missed
Our Unitarian friends aro getting
their moneys worth out of this campaign-
-
Cambridge is one of tbe never aiea
October loth she will receive an
electric light service If Mc
Cook were not our home we would be
pleased to receive our mail at Cambridge
The Tribune has no objection to the
national bankers of Nebraska convening
and resolving but it does here and now
file a remonstrance against their
masquerading under the name of the
Republican state convention and at
tempting to sneeringly and insultingly
read into Democracy those who simply
demand their rights a record
Republican Faber
CongkkssmanN orris is to bo com
mended for his stand against Cannonism
In a statement given out last Saturday
Mr Norris says he is opposed to the re
election of Cannon as speaker of the
npxt house eiving as reasons because
ho uses the power of his high position
of legislation
to prevent the consideration
tion asked for by the people and desired
of the membership of
by a large body
the House of Representatives It was
Congressman Norris who introduced a
resolution in the last session of congress
to have the rules of the bouse araeuded
so the progressive members could get
some consideration in that body Cam
bridge Clarion
I am going to be elected is the con
fident way William H Taft Republican
nominee for president expresses him
self after his tremendously enthusiastic
reception in Lincoln and Omaha this
week
There is evidence galore that this is
not a cheap country This is not
conclusive however that we couldnt
prosper satisfactorily with some items
reduced in cost
COMMITTEE HELD A SESSION
Fifth District Republicans Are in Good
Working Trim
Holdrege Neb Sept 29 The first
meeting of the republican central com
mittee of the Fifth congressional district
was held here today and a dozen or more
of the eighteen counties were represented
not only by committeemen but a number
of the working republicans from the
various counties were in attendance
Congressman Norris was also here and a
more enthusiastic and earnest meeting
was never held in the district Plans for
an active campaign during the month of
October were outlined Mr Norris will
spend the time until October 10 in
Kansas and other portions of Nebraska
after which he will devote his entire
time day and night to his own district
The sentiment prevailing at the meeting
that his vote will be the largest he ever
received Lincoln Journal
Silas McBee for Taft
Regardless of past affiliations stu
dents of affairs delvers and thinkers
for Judge Taft A
are fast lining up
recent example is that of Silas McBee
editor of the Churchman of New
York In an interview he says
I am a North CaroliDan by birth and
a lifelong Democrat I shall vote for
Mr Taft because he has it in hi3 heart
to bring my people of the South back
into absolute union with the national
life and to their historic place as a con
trolling force in the nation and to do
1 rii tvmilH immortalize him as a
statesman
I shall vote for him because he more
nearly represents my ideals of govern
ment of social order and economic
policy than any living Democrat or any
man before the people to day save alone
Theodore Roosevelt who is the only Re
publican President I have ever voted
for Mr Taft has administered every
trust committed to him by the nation
with an eye single to the nations good
and for the highest interests of the
people that compose the nation
Rob Roy Hardin
Saturday night September 28th Rob
Roy Hardin gave a very interesting reci
tal to a small but an appreciative audi
ence at the Christian church Mr H
will be remembered by some of our peo
ple as having attended the Junior Nor
mal school here a year ago and being
quite active then in Christian Endeavor
circles Mr Hardins selections were
all of a high grade and he held the at
tention of his audience during IiIb rather
lengthy program He is preparing 10
pursue this line of work further and we
predict continued and increasing success
for him Communicated
Educatln
the
Filipioo Woman
Some Results of American Occupation
The Task of Inducing Women to
Learn Useful Accomplishments
By ELEANOR FRANKLIN EGAN
T
HE visit of the American fleet to
the Philippines agaiu directs at
tention to these possessions of
the United States
It seems Impossible to believe that In
ten years such a work could be accom
plished as has been done by the Amer
ican educators In the Philippine Islands
for the Filipino woman The Filipino
woman needs no apologist She is nat
urally strong mentally Is pretty to look
upon more often than not and she has
a feminine weakness for pretty clothes
trinkets aud innocent display But with
all this tho so called civilized Filipino
woman up to the time of American
occupation in the Philippines was
densely ignorant
When the American educational de
partment in the Philippines first began
its work girls were in all the class
es In the schools whatever the subject
taught They were to be found after
four or five years of preliminary edu
cation working out the intricacies of
advanced mathematics poring over dif
ficult problems in physics peering
through microscopes at mysterious 1k
tanical specimens glibly expounding
ethical culture theories and making
themselves generally ridiculous in th
eyes of everybody who knew that they
had not yer learned the rudiments of
civilized life for they had to be
taught the dignity of labor For a girl
to become superficially learned in th
sciences and arts which could be of no
earthly practical use to her was con
sidered an honorable achievement But
for this same girl to be called upon to
perform some menial task the doing of
which would oetter her own material
condition and that of the people about
her would have been to Insult her
aft r
Ir
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the queen of the orient in inn
FIMPINO CAItNIVAI Or 1303 AND SCENE
AT A CLASS IX DOilESTIC SCIENCE
most abominably for menial labor was
considered disgraceful by the Filipino
prior to the American regime
Through literacy they have got rid of
much superstition and have arrived at
a proper estimate of themselves Now
the bureau of education is putting
these girls and women seriousiy to
There have been installed
classes in domestic economy and girls
are being taught how to cook how to
sew how to feed themselves and their
children to the best advantage on what
their resources allow They are being
taught how to make their tropical
homes homelike and sanitary They
are being taught first last and all the
time personal hygiene aud all such
useful accomplishments as will make
them propagators of a healthy race
As in most nations the best material
to work upon among the Filipinos ex
ists in the ranks of the upper classes
and it was almost impossible in the be
ginning to get either a well bom wo
man or man to make any personal ef
fort Did the teacher ask Miss Carmen
Rojos to bring a dish from the school
cupboard in which to mix the omelet
that was to be the object lesson in tut
cpoking class Miss Carmen would turn
to somebody of less exalted rank than
herself or perhaps to her personal serv
ant who would be always at her call
commanding her to do the teachers
bidding Then the teacher if she
were diplomatic would carefully ex
plain to Miss Carmen her duties and
the dignitv which lay in the perform
ing of them without protest If slip
were not diplomatic she would say
Carmen I asked you to bring the
dish you are to do it at once and
Carmen would very likely break it in
her fine aristocratic rage or else swing
on her little naked heel and leave the
class room But the classes in do
mestic science are rapidly becoming
popular among that class of girls which
It is most necessary to reach and it is
safe to say that In the next generation
there will be a vast decrease in infant
mortality due to this education alone
as well as the development of finer
stronger and better balanced Filipinos
Could there bo a stronger objective for
education than this
CORKS HAVE DISEASES
Caused by a Small Worm Which Spoils
tho Flavor of tho Best Wines
To the average person a cork Is a
cork said a well kuown restaurant
man the other day But smell this
cordial Would you believe Itr And
he hold up a bottle supposed to have
the bouquet of cherries all the way
from the blossom to the pit The odor
was musty and altogether unpleasaut
lu fact it was decidedly bad He con
tinued
Xow tho man paying 20 cents for
his tiny glass of cordial after dinner
Is entitled to have it free from Imper
fections If he bought a bottle of
whin with that flavor he would say
the wine was bad for ninety men out
of a hundred know nothing about bad
corks He would want another bottle
of wine or his money refunded and he
would be right
The defect is in a tiny worm in the
cork that is often invisible to the man
cutting corks and sometimes cannot be
seen after tho cork is drawn A
tomer will taste me wiub im D
Bid wine You explain about the
cork and he will say Impossible
That was a beautiful cork beautiful
And yet we know that the contents of
the bottle never could have that flavor
uuder other conditions
I tell you there are millions of dollars
who can invent
lars waiting for the man
vent a perfect cork that will stand the
test of vears for flavor and preserving
qualities If it could be proved that
his invention was perfect lie would
make millions in a month New York
Herald
MRS ANDREW JOHNSON
The
Life In Washington Was Not a
Happy Time For Her
Mrs Johnson was so much of an in
valid that outside of intimate family
fiiends very few knew her She ap
peared only twice In public during her
husbands administration Still her Influence
and it was
fluence was a strong one
ex rted in tho direction of toleration
and gentleness A slight movement of
her hands a touch on her husbands
arm a Now Andrew made it easj
to see that the Avonian who had helped
him through his struggling youth and
given her health to his service who
had taught him to write and had read
to him through long winter evenings
in the little tailor shop that his active
mind might be fed Avhile he va prac
ticing his trade still held her place in
his life She was a sweet faced wo
man who showed traces of beauty
through the sharpened lines caused by
the old fashioned consumption which
was wearing her out Her face was
not unlike that of the late Mrs Me-
Kinley The deatli or ner uiuil u
which sho never
was a blow from
in Washing
fully recovered The life
time for her She
ton was not a happy
told me herself that she was far more
content when her husband was an industrious
tailor William II
dustrious young
Crook in Century
Nubcr Pasha and the Pipes
Cnmi nftor tllO OCCUPatiOll Of
bv the British troops
ADDITIONAL PERSONALS
D E Whistler was up from Indian
ola today on business
Mr and Mrs W F Evkkist rejoico
in n new daughter born on last Fri
day
Frank IIassler of No 1 spent Sundny
of last week with tho homefolks in
Exotor
Cairo
the late Xubar
pnsim took a nrodisious fancy to the
music of the Black Watch and had the
idea of having a servant taught the
use of the bagpipes Nubar dispatched
a French friend who spoke English
very well to interview a piper on the
subject
Donald replied Weel he micht
I mioht no Bit let me tell
ye it needs wind an mickle strength
tae fill the bags o the pipes an keep
blawin Sae if yin o thae Egyptian
chaps took the job on hed need tae be
bandaged a owre like yin o thae auld
mummies or maybe hed burst him
sel
This conversation was reported to
Nubar who took the pipers remarks
serlouslv So he gave up the idea of
his household
having a skirler attached to
hold as the use of the bagpipes was
attended with the prospect of such
darker to the performer Westminster
Gazette
Depth of Cyclones
From the study of clouds an official
of the United States weather bureau
onnrliiflcs that ordinary cyclones
which traverse our country from west
to east are not more than two or three
miles in depth although their diameter
is many hundreds of miles In other
words their motion does not affect the
upper regions of the atmosphere In
the case of hurricanes this authority
finds that the depth is greater amount
ing to as much as five or six miles
But higher currents blow directly
ncross the cyclonic and anticyclonic
areas which produce storms and fair
weather at the surface of the earth
Chicago Inter Ocean
Easy Money
Theodore Hook was one of the Gar-
rick clubs most famous members He
generally arrived at the club late in
the afternoon and never went home
till morning He had been told by
the doctors he said to avoid the night
air A member of the club in Hooks
time predicted the advent of the mil
lennium at the end of three years
All risht cried Hook Give me a
five pound note now and I will repay
you 30 at the millennium
Dangerous
Giles Hows your son gettin on up
in Lunnon Garge Very well He
tells me hes got a job partly behind
the counter and partly out o doors
Giles And what appens when the
door slams London Telegraph
Make Cowards of Us All
There is uothing from which even
the bravest man shrinks so pitifully
as the lancet of the surgeon even
when It Is wielded by the most skillful
of his craft London Sketch
Mrs EJ Ashcraft has gone to
Conway lown to remain during tho
winter
Miss Edith Waite returned honioon
No 1 Wednesday from visiting Lincoln
and Crete
Mrs Fred W Bosworth of Denver
was guest of her daughter Mrs R J
Gunn part of tho week
Grandpa Dutcher returned to
BurreBS early last week from visiting
relatives in Red Willow county
Taylor Cameron of our city has been
drawn on the federal petit jury for tho
session of federnl court which opens in
Omaha October 5th
A A KANNOwand family who have
been occupying tho Lehn residence on
North Main avenue departed Wednes
day for Indianola whore he is running
the Hour mill of that place
Jacpr Crockford returned Friday
from Goodland Kansas where he went
recently to attend tho funeral of his son
Bird Crockford who died very suddenly
of paralysis Mr Crockford arrived in
The
Mrs Mary Whittakkr will lonvo
noxt week to reside upon her homo
stead near Otis Colorado
Mies Alice Bradhury of tho electric
light oflico visited tho homo people in
Imporinl end of Inst week
L II Lindemann arrived home last
Friday night from a successful land
excursion dowu into tho panhandlo
country of Texas
Mn and Mrs T J Lynch of Frank
lin and Mrs G C Dako of Orleans have
been guests of Mr and Mrs Thomas
Mooro this week They aro old settlors
of Franklin county
Mr and Mrs W A Pickering of
California cousins of Mrs Will Gather
cole stopped in our city this week be
tween trains on their way to Kansas
City They noted a big growth and im
provement in tho city during tho putt
ton years
Mr August a Anton leaves this
week for Lincoln were sho will servo
the McCook lodge as delegate in tho
grand lodge sessions of tho Degreo of
Honor After that sho will go to Dos
Moines Iowa on a two weeks visit to
her daughter
J P Notley will leave bunday
night for Williamsport Ponna whero
he expects to meet and wed n lady of
his choico Mrs Sarah Miller an excel
lent widowed lady whom ho knew years
ao They will be marriod somo time
closo of next week and will return hero
Goodland two hours late for the funeral soon tofmakeithoir homo in McCook
Governor Sheldon
Nebraskas manly and pro
gressive young executive will
speak on the issues of the
national campaign in
Menards Hall McCook
on the evening of
Tuesday October 13th
The governor represents the
Wests best progressive
square deal Republicanism
You Should Hear Him
iniiPuiummMmi iHJ l B Bg
hcientitici cola
X v IH V Ik A
IQUS M
5
Hast B Street
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it
er
I Millinery
The new large and
medium size fall hats
nowest shapes and
trimmings charm
ing ideas with the
dashing air always
seen in LOVELL
NIES We have a
larger assortment
than ever in Ladies
Misses and Child
rens Street and Dress
-
The machine that sets your tires while
vou wait and does the work right
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
If not satisfied your money will be re
funded We also do turning lathe
work and general blacksmithing
ARK WAD
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McCook Nebraska g
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Hats Dont fail to see them
LOVELL NIES 111 BstW
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