A Mistaken Some pcoplo have an idea that in order to ha vo a bank account tboy must have a largo sum to deposit that the bank does not caro to bo bothered by small accounts This however is not true of the First National Bank This bank welcomes now accounts whether of SI or 81000 and tho same courtesy and service is accorded- the small depositor as those in more fortunate circumstances It is our object and wish to serve the public in finan cial matters in a manner that shall be satisfactory to all old or young rich or poor iiWe Want Your Banking Business and will be pleased to have you open an account with us The First National Bank of Mccook mk pikp By F M KIMMELL Largest Circulation in Red Willow Co Subscription i a Year in Advance Republican Ticket STxVTE For Judges of tho Supremo Court Samuel H Sedgwick John H Baunks Jacob Fawcktt For Regents of the University W G Whitmore Charles S Allen Frank Li Hallek COUNTY For County Clerk Charles Skalla For County Treasurer C Naden For County Superintendent Elizabeth Bettcher For Sheriff H I Peterson Forjudge - J C Moore For Commissioner 2nd District Samuel Peemer A Girl at the Helm Is Great When the advance notices for A Girl at the Helm herald the production as a musical comedy classic it was applying a very correct and appropriate characterization This pretty little musical comedy opened at the Majestic last night and will show tonight and to morrow It deserves a crowded house at every performance The comedy is high claBS the music superb the cho rus 6trong and tunefu the scenic effects very fine the costuming lavish and elaborate the girls numerous pretty the whole cast competent and every thing essential to a high class musical comedy provided byHH Frazeeand his assistants who present the clever Billy Clifford in his happy jingle Clifford himself is a winner The aud ience applauded him time and time again declining to permit him to retire from the stage after his very clever sing ing of the musical number Not All But Nearly Departing from the usual lines he gave some original and delight ful sketches Ably assisting him was charming Marguerite DeVon a verit able little queen with ease and grace of man ner and a mezzo soprano 7oice that has few superiors on the comic opera stage today Her great hits were in such songs as I Dont Love You Enough For That and Youre All the World to Me Hilda Mason as the countess added much to the chorus work with her lyric soprano Harry Dickirson was a splendid Colonel Higginson and Jack Trainor a capable Carl Wallenstein In fact the whole cast was good Among other song hits in addition to those mentioned were In My Little Runabout The Long Green The Man I Marry Must be a Man The Marriage Game The Ghost Ragtime and others The plot involving in tricate and magnetic love intrigue pro Tided a vehicle for the fun makers and singers concluding with a realistic boat race as the grand finale when Billy Clifford as Stanhope wins the hand of Dorothy by capturing the motor boat race from Wallenstein The audience cheered this scenic effect to the echo A more satisfied audience never gathered in any theatre in Springfield A Penny Saved Is A Penny Earned A DOLLAR SPENT AT HOME lis a Dollar That May Come Back to Your Purse BIG DAIRY RECORDS Good Results Do Not Roquire Vast Outlay Many dairymen says the Prnrtlcni Dairyman think that the big records are entirely beyond their reach thai It takes a vast outlay of money foi barns and fancy feeds to develop u great producer Nothing could be fur ther from the truth We know person ally of at least four herds In which tin annual milk production was Increase from 3000 pounds to 7000 8000 900 and even 10000 pounds for each ani mal These are not fancy breeders and the cows are not pedigreed beau ties but ordinary cows bred from com mon stock by the use of a pure bred bull for four or live generations Tin owner of sixteen 10000 pound cow was laughed at two years ago when hi set his aim at that figure lie has now not only reached it the average In cludes two-year-old heifers but he hat set his eyes on a 12000 pound averagy Blackleg Blackleg is a disease that very much resembles anthrax incurable and fatal The symptoms are very much the same as those of anthrax excepting the ani mals mayllve a few days longer with anthrax than with blackleg It only affects younger animals while anthrax affects both Perhaps the strongest symptom of blackleg Is a gathering oi air or swelling underneath the skin of the affected animals This usually takes place a few hours after the ani mal becomes infected and in tapping upon the swelling it sounds as if then was air underneath the skin This swelling may be located upon the thighs neck shoulders breast hock joints flank or rump There is no treatment for blacklei iMiMMilaflaliiB SSSSzsiuBsBsaesSiLSSSV9i - excepting preventive This is done by vac cinating the balance of the herd with blackleg vaccine which has proved very successful Dr David Roberts Protecting tho Hogs Swine are more susceptible to dampness than cattle and suffer from cold more than other stock If left without good shelter they pile closely together for warmth The pigs on the outside are too cold and those near the middle become too warm The latter are liable to be laid upon or contract a cold when they turn out to feed and pneumonia may result It is important to provide comfortable shelter and abundant room for exer cise There is a great variety of makes anil sizes of hog houses in use These may he divided into two classes the centralized system and the colony sys tem Device For Shearing A writer of much experience in the cultivation and handling of sheep in touch wih the Breeders Gazette says I send you a drawing of a rack for holding sheep while being trimmed for exhibition I made the thing my self abtfut five years ago and have j for the great used It ever since It saves a man i up ml ILJ AJjs A SHEEP RACK holding the sheep and gives much more satisfaction You can trim every bit of the sheep except the ring around the neck and when you get all trim med but that just turn the sheep around and finish him off before let ting him go The side strips swing up out of the way and the stanchion can be ad justed to any sized sheep Bran For Lambs While bran is not especially desira ble for fattening sheep it is quite sat isfactory for Iambs provided it is not used too freely It however can be used to better advantage for dairy animals and even for horses DAIRY HINTS The genuine dairyman -who under stands his cows and their keeping is producing a good article and making a comfortable living The farmer who does not- thoroughly understand his cows and part of the time is neglect ing the cows for the farm and part of the time the farm for the cows nat urally is not making much of a profit Competent Dairymen The development of competent dairy men is just as important as the de velopment of cows These highly spe cialized cows require judicious and kindly treatment Neglect will not only be reflected in the churn but dis astrous and costly deterioration will quickly follow A generation of neg lect will practically undo the work of a century The culmination of the breeders art must be supplemented with correct methods of feeding and proper handling -Dr James Withy combe Specks In Butter The white specks in butter are due to poor ripening of the cream says the Epitomist Some of the cream has wheyed off and decomposed and the casein has gathered in clots and the whey has separated from the cream These clots of curd will not churn out They remain in the butter as clots and always look white Ar tificial coloring has no effect upon them and winter or summer they spoil the looks of the butter X3SZT gm iwitumwuilrti1 NOTES FROM BEVERLY Special Correspondence The country has learned much nboui north shore scenery since President Tuft made Beverly his summer home The correspondents who arrived at Beverly ahead of tho president and those who came with him sent out glowing descriptions of the natural beauties of the summer capital and lis neighborhood Of some of Its most striking fea tures however they have said never a word Chief among these features are the Islands in Salem bay These lie directly In the front yard so o speak of the presidents summer home The president sees them every time he looks out of a window on the water side of the house The Islands of Salem Bay Without them the view would be tame They give character to the rock bound bay and suggest stories of other times of passing ships homeward or outward bound of nocturnal landings in the old smuggling days and of ship wreck in sight of port The president would have to organ ize an expedition to visit these islands He cant drive walk or taxicab to them and there Is no regular water conveyance to any except the largest So tho president is likely to pass the summer at Beverly without setting foot on them Where Winthrop Sailed Salem bay and its islands are asso ciated with some of the most Interest ing periods of the countrys develop ment On the largest island Bakers are the two lighthouses known to lands men as Mr and Mrs Baker which guide the mariner into the channel and when he is there are straight in line behind him to make a back range for his passage up the harbor Verj properly Mrs Baker is smaller than her husband When in line the two lighthouse towers cannot be distin guished from each other Past this island and up this channel came Winthrop and his fleet to settle Salem Here for two centuries the ships of Salem on which the town built its wealth counted themselves home from sea when Bakers was abeam Bowditchs Beacon Southward of Bakers is a mass of cruel ledges The ship that missed the licht in thick weather was in grave danger from them and long is the list of wrecks they boast down even to recent years Up the channel toward Salem the channel through which the East India ships took their rich cargoes of spices and silks one sees a stone monument rising from the water a tall truncated cone This is Bowditchs beacon named mide of seamen Na thaniel Bowditch -whose home was in Salem and who made more than a century ago a chart of these waters that has not been excelled to this day Ledge of Satan Seaward from this point is another ledge which the old sailors of Salem and Marblehead out of the wisdom be got of experience named Satan It is marked by a spindle At low tide its brown length lies on the sea like a sleeping whale or other marine monster Sea birds alight on it and the wash of the waves about it is like the purring of a cat Let heavv weather come and Satan changes guise The surf roars and cockles foaming white across it and woe betide the man who picks it up in a fog under his bowsprit end The Newspaper Men The coming of the president to Bev erly has been a great thing for the lit tle north shore city Its beauties and advantages as a summer resort are now known all over the world thanks to the ceaseless activity of the press With the president came a score or more of newspaper correspondents representing a number of the leading papers of the country most of them trained Washington correspondents regarded as the cream of their profes sion men who follow public events who are capable of writing intelligent ly and entertainingly on almost any topic but who keep more especially well informed on Washington and for eign topics Telegraph Facilities To accommoda these men both the Postal and Western Union Telegraph companies have set up fine new offices at Beverly A corps of expert tele graph operators have been assigned to the Beverly offices by these companies and either company can easily handle I tr vm jaaa BARTLEY J B Haining and his daughter and son-in-law Mrs and Mr Dewey left Wednesday for their new home at Brush Colorado They have been good citizens and we regret their going from us but wish them success in their new home Mr Shippee was over this week from the Beaver and took Otto Webber over there to put up for him a new concrete store building Mrs Beason and her daughter Fannie have returned home from their extend ed visit in Iowa Missouri and the southwestern part of Nebraska They report having a fine visit but glad to get back to Bart ley An unusual sight was witnessed here Wednesday morning when a train went through with seven engines to be used on western divisions Frank Doak has accepted a position in the Indianola mill Frank is a first miller and an all around good fellow We will miss him from our village Theo Faubion was called to Arapa hoe Monday to see his brother and his uncle Rev George Mayfield on busi ness Hon G W Norris will be here this week at the opera house speaking on the subject Cannonism and the Rem edy Geo Q Durbin returned this week from a tripsin the northt rn part of the state Theo Faubion visited at Danbury last Saturday R Gavitt and wife C Kennison and family EliKennison James Trissell Fremont Teeters and Mrs May Ples singerjlef t here this week for their new homes in southwestern Arkansas E E Smithishaving some improve ments madearound his residence in Bartley H H Gallatin and A J Lohr are giving the opera house roof a coat of coal tar this week Grandma Olmstead returned from Washington Tuesday evening of last week Charley Catlett wife and baby are here from Lincoln visiting relatives and friends Rev Hageman andj wife moved to Benkelman last week We are sorry to have them leave us They were good citizens and always at work in every good cause for theaibetterment of our town and vicinity Rev Norlin and family will be here this week Mr Norlin comes as pastor of the Methodist church Wo welcome him and his family to our midst W B Downs made a business trip to Yuma Colorado last week returning home Thursday Dr Brown returned from Colorado last weekmuch benefited in health Most of theBartley people attended the county fair at Indianola last week and all speak of it as the best fair ever held in Red Willow county Ball Brcs have sold their hardware stock here East Valley caucus nominations this week are Republican I A Lyman justice of the peace A F Wheeler and Guy Richards constables Geo Wheel er road overseer J A Finnegan dep 50000 words of press matter a night uty assessor Democratic John Hough- without overworking their men Spa cious quarters have been provided by both companies for the correspondents with typewriters and everything for their comfort and convenience Town Meeting Days The presidents rule is to see the Washington correspondents Monday and Wednesday afternoons and all of the newspaper men onSaturday after noon But this rule is not rigidly en forced and correspondents who deem It necessary to see the president offcen er have little difficulty in getting at him These receptions to the newspaper men or as they are termed by some town meetings are usually good na tured talks on the part of the presi dent and the newspaper men during which the president and some of the correspondents chaff one another Sometimes there is considerable hilar ity at these town meetings and the president usually has a story or two to relate that evokes the heartiest sort of laughter CARL SCHOFIELD JLiLMsi KKSKrtseKr ggggiaMa5al5 non deputy assessor Wm Casford road overseerDan Jennings and Roy Walk ington constables E J DeArmond and J W Brown justices of the peace A brother of Theo Faubion from Hol stein Nebraska visited here a few days this week Hefner HIckerson Last Saturday evening at nine oclock Rev M B Carman officiating Miss Bessie Hickerson and Mr Ernest Hef ner both of this city were united in marriage the ceremony being perform ed at the home of the brides parents Both have been employed in the Barba zette bakery of this city Clean Em Up It has been suggested to the writer that some of McCooks alleys need a cleaning up And we pass the sugges tion along to the city marshal for verifi cation and action bb provided by the or dinances of the city be ATTRACTIVE MILLINERY assortment the beautiful Have you seen sortment of some of the finest Millinery for Fall ever shown by us These hats are correct in style made of the BEST MATER IAL and at prices which will en able every lady to have a Fall Hat Call and see them you are always welcome anJ we are al ways willing to show our goods MISS ANDERSON 2 1 T MAIN AVE McCOOK NEBR MOVEMENTS OF THE PEOPLE F S Vahue arrived in the city last Friday P Walsh returned first of the week from the national convention of national bankers in Chicago Miss Margaret Thompson returned to Lincoln last week and resumed work in the university A R Scott manager of the Elec tric Co went up to Wray Colo Mon- day on a matter of business Dr J A Colfer attended the meet ing ef the S W Nebraska Dpntal assoc- j iation at Holdrege Wednesday Mrs J Jackson is visiting a brother in Hitchcock county near Trenton dur ing the plowing and seeding season Dr H J Pratt was a participant in the S W Nebras kh Dentnl association convention in Holdrege Wednesday Will Rolfe has retired from De GrofPs and returned to bank work He is now employed in the Franklin bank at Wauneta Mrs Andrews who has been vibiting Mas H P Waits entertained Priscilla club Inst Wednesday afternoon Mies Barber sang durirg the session Dr E O Vahue was au attendant on Weduesdajf session of the S W Neb raska Dental association in Holdrege Mr and Mrs J G Schobel enter tained thpir card club last Friday even- i ing A seven oclock dinner was served I DrC L Fahnestock was summoned I to St Louis Tuesday night by alarm- ing news of the condition of his aged mother in a hospital in that city Mr and Mrs William Weygint de parted last Saturday with their daugh ter Mrs I J Starbuck to make their homo with the daughter in the great Mormon capital Mrs Huijkut Plousrard who has been visiting a bister Mrs Wm Wash burn at Holdrege also at Beaver Cross ing this state an uncle and aunt Mr and Mrs Roger Barnes who were resi dents of Hitchcock county for many years is home after an absence of seven weeks her daughter Mrs T E McCarl Big Business Methods turned to her home in Cambridge on gome bi buginessi methods were Wednesday evening illustrated in a -small way in this city Miss Jok Murray of Indianola enter- ladt week one day by a nervy youngster ed the DpGroff employ this week as representing Klopp Bartlett Co of cashier Mrs John Murray the old cash- Omaha After showing one of the ier bookkeeper is absisting the novitiate county officers samples of legal blanks Postmaster Cone attended the dedi cation of the Masonic temple in Hold rege Tuesday Wednesday returning on Wednesday night accompanied by his mother Mrs C L Fahnestock arrived home Sunday from St Louis She announces the operation on Mother Fahnestock as successful and outlook encouraging for her recovery in good time Martin Rishel departed last night for Kansas City Mo on business He will also visit in Omaha during the and will perhaps take a lookin at Chicago before bis return two weeks hence Mr and Mrs S W galore which could have been secured at any local county printing office just as cheap and just as well printed he flashed some blanks of a character sel dom required by the office blanks which perhaps properly should be purchased by the officer out of his own pocket and and then had the gall to state to the official that he could have the blanks charged to the county at so much but that the charge made to the public could bo as the officer chosed to make it At the office of another county official he broadly offered a nice premium if the officer would buy a certain article The Tribune makes bold to lay down the law that any representative of a - bCHOoLKY of j wholesale manufacturing or private Cozad this state were guests of Dr I concern local or out of town who should and Mrs A T Gatewood of our city closing days of last week The families were old time Cozad friends and the gentlemen many years since partners Nye Wimer went up to Denver re cently expecting to undergo another operation Happily the surgeons state that it will not be necessary that the trouble is but a slight local one and can bo overcome without recourse to fur ther amputation He is doing nicely and expects to remain in Denver dur ing the fall and winter so approach any county officer should be promptly kicked out of the office Just one more proposition which is self evident Every article that can be purchased in Red Willow county in the printing line at a fair and reasonable I price should be bought of the local offices and that not one unnecessary cent should go to the big business fellows Have you noticed the beautiful effect of Keystona Flat Finish Sold only by A McMillen Druggist Copyright 1909 by C E Zimmerman 14 I - -1 1 lwir Tmnwinr nwm Muimij School Shoes SPECIALLY for misses Shoes must not be - durable but posses style and snap as well It is at this period that the foot is being molded and now if ever an improperly fitted shoe may do a great deal of harm to say nothing of the unnecessary discomfort It is no small matter to insure you affainstall these troublesthis is why the first pair of shoes you buy here will make you a permanent customer The Model Shoe Store McCook Nebraska Fisher Perkins 201 Main Avenue Z I jy fl v ti i i a r 1 1 - J 1 1 I t i 11 W V ai t