u moots nm onu r - an 730 aecontt an - -month in Morris hall it j jiuwi C W f A i iii tmcu UOBET M mMi Particularly Fine Line of Writing Papers in Boxes McCook Views in Colors Typewriter Papers Box Writing Papers Legal Blanks Pen and Holders Calling Cards -Manuscript Covers Typewriter Ribbons Ink Pads Paper Clips Brass Eyelets Stenographers Notebooks Photo Mailers Memorandum Books Letter Files JCi miwWiWw11 - - - jj li ii i mi r i in iw iiw twniiimniiMiM1 ii -1 rMTTrTrnrmnrrnigBflPT I Hll I r w fl u U J Scab wMrJUsuanuuarsKtrixsscsxsrB iinii I umuiiiiiwiiii k liKII BUT M H H H Fil Business Office Station ery is Our Specia PiSt Card Albums x Duplicate Receipt Books Tablets all grades Lead Pencils Notes and Receipts Blank Books Writing Inks Erasers Paper Fasteners Ink Stands Bankers Ink and Fluid Library Paste Mucilage Self Inking Stamp Pads Rubber Bands Invoice Files McCook Views in Colors are a Leader with Us THE TRIBUNE Stationery Department TheTribune It is Just One Dollar the Year CITY LOGEDIRECTORY A F A M McCook Lodge No 135 A F t A M meets OTry first and third Tuesday of tbo month at B00 pm in Masonic hall Lon Cone M Chables Ii Fahkestock Sec E A B M Occcnoxoe Council No 16 B S M meets on the last Saturday of each month at 800 p m a Masonic hall Ralph A Hagueec T I M Stlvestee Coedeal Sec B A M Sing Cyrus Chapter No 35 R A M meets srary first and third Thursday of each monthat S Op m in Masonic hall Clarence B Qeat H P YfB Whittakeb Sec KNIGHTS TEMPLAE Bt John Commandery No 16 K T meets on ihe second Thursday of each month at 800 p n in Masonic hall David Magneb E C HENBT E CULIiEBTSON Rec easteen stae Snreka Chapter No 86 O E S meets the second and fourth Fridays of each month at 800 P m hi Masonic hall Mes C W Wilson W M S Coedeal Sec MODEBN WOODMEN Soble Camp No 663 M W A meots every wcond and fourth Thursday of each month at S30 p m in Morris hall Pay assessments at White House Grocery Jolius Kdnebt Consul J M Smith Clerk BOXAL NEIGHBOB3 No le Camp No 862 R N A meets every second and fourth Thursdaj of each month at 230 pm m Morris hall Mes Caroline Khneet Oracle Mes Augusta Anton Rec v- o w Meets second and fourth Thursdays at 8 oclock in Diamonds hall Chas F Maekwad C C W C Moyee Clerk WOBKMEN McCook Lodge No 61 AO UW meets every Honday at S00 p m in Monte Cristo hall MAUKiCEGKiFriNRec MSJ enningsMW JMWENTZFiuancier RoxZiNTForeman DEGREE OF HONOB WcCook Lodge No 3 D of H meots every second and forth Tnesdays of each month at SrfX p m in Monto Cristo hall Mrs Della McClain C of H Mes Cabbie Schlagel Rec LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEEBS McCook Division No 623 B of L E meets evory second and fourth Sunday of each raonthat2inMorrishallEESTOKEgcEi VT D Bdenett F A E LOCOMOTIVE FIBEMEN AND ENGINEMEN McCook Lodge No 599 B of L F E insets on tho first and third Saturdays of each mnnth in Morris hall hm I D Pennington Pres C H Hosted Sec BAILWAT CONDDCTOBS Harvey Division No 95 O H C meets the second and fourth Wednesday nights of each wt nt 8 00 P m in Morns ball at 304 San Avenue S E Callen C Con M O McClcee Sec bailway trainmen n W Broason Lodge No 4S7B of R T C j ii Unnrfnvs at 230 n m nnrf UliC MLLtV HI Ity RAILWAY CABMEN Young America Lodge No 456 B R C of A meets on the first and third Tuesdays of each month in Morris hall at 730 p m W C Stephens C C N V Fbanklin Rec Sec machinists Red Willow Lodge No 5S7 I A of M meets ayery second and fourth Tuesday of the month at 800 p m in Morris hall Theo Diebald Pres Wasson Fin Sec loyd Berby Cor Sec BOILERMAKERS McCook Lodge No 407 B of B M I S B of A meets first and third Fridays of each month In Odd Fellows hall KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McCook Lodge No 42 K of P meets every Wednesday at 800 p m in Masonic hall H W Conoveb C C D N Cobb K R S odd fellows McCook Lodge No 137 1 0 0 F meets every Monday at 800 pm in Morris hall F A Denton N G W A Middleton Sec EAGLES McCook Aerio No 1514 F O E meets every Friday evening at 8 oclock in Kelloy building 316 Main ave C L Walkee W Pres C H Ricketts W Sec national association of letter carriers Branch No 1278 meets first Monaay of each mouth at 330 p in in carriers room postofiice G F Kinghoen President D J OBHiEN Secretary KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS McCook Council No 1126 K of C meets the first and third Tuesdays of each month at 800 p m in Diamouds hall G R Gale F Sec Frank Real G K DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA Conrt Granada No 77 meets on the second and fourth Thursdays of each month at 8 p m in Monte Cristo hall Anna Hannan G R Nellie Ryan F S LADY MACCABEES Valley Queen Hive No 2 L O T M meots every first and third Thursday evenings of each month in Morris hall Mrs W B Mills Commander Haeeiet E Willetts R K G A B J K Barnes Post No 207 G A R meets on the first Saturday of each month at 2 30 pm Morris hall Wm Long Commander Jacob Steinmetz Adjt BELIEF CORPS McCook Corps No 9S W R C meets every second and fourth Saturday of each month at 230 p m in Ganschow hall Adella McClain Pres Susie Vandebhoof Sec L OF G A B McCook Circle No 33 L of G A R meets on the first and third Fridays of each month at 230 p m in Morris hall Maby Walkee Pres Ellen LeHew Sec p e o Chapter X P E O meets the second and fourth Saturdays of eachmonta at 280 p m at the homes of the various members Mrs J A Wilcox Pres Mes J G Schobel Cor Sec PYTHIAN SISTEB3 McCook Temple No 24 Pythian Sisters meets the 2d and 4th Wednesdays at 7 30 p m M J Coedeal M E C zrQ Edna Stewart M of R C nniT fl THHDf 1 0 Sb Republican rc3i Worker San I Two Dbca3 MORE RAIDS ON BALLOTS One Bundle Is Stccn end Another Burned When Houce Containing Ticitts fcr EteUion Is Fired by Pr no State Troops Were or tuurd at All Polling Places in Fa mous Kciticky reud County Jackson ivy Nov 3 News reached hei Tildeu Blanton and Asluord dOuOims Democrats had kihiil Demosthenes Noble a Repub lican at cue Spring Fork voting pie cinct in Breatlytt county Reports iiom Crocketisville and Se bastians Branch were that two at Umpis one successful had been made to steal ballots near Crocketts vule precinct at the mouth ot Longs creek The home of Mary Dealin wno held ballots for that precinct was de stroyed by fire and the ballots were burned with the house At Sebastians Branch precinct the Demoeiats are re ported to have seized the ballots and hidden them According to their political beliefs Jackson and Breatlytt county men stigmatize the firing of the Dealin home as incendiary or accidental The most reliable report lrom the place which is twenty two miles away ih that Mrs Dealin was feeding the Lex ington soldiers under Captain Sams v hen the fire occurred The ballots were reported destroyed and fresh ones were furnished from Jackson These are the ballots which an armed crowd of men threatened to take from a Jackson bank and which were finally given to Mary Dealin by Judge Adams for safe keeping Crockettsville the home of Ed Calla han the noted feudist and gathering place of the warlike Breathitt county clans was the chief point of interest in the political war The Callahans and their friends are angry because Circuit Judge Adams candidate for re election refused to give the command of the troops to Sheriff Crawford a Redwine partisan The telephone wires between Jack son and Crockettsville were cut Cap tain Sams and his detail of militiamen are supposed to be in that vicinity Killing at Jellico Tenn Knoxville Tenn Nov 3 A special from Jellico Tenn says James Ayres former marshal of Jellico was killed and several wounded during an election riot SHANK IN INDIANAPOLIS Republicans Elect Mayor by Slight Majority Indianapolis Nov 3 In the mu nicipal elections held in Indiana the Republicans scored several victories the most vital of which was in In dianapolis Samuel Lewis Shank the Republican candidate for mayor and the entire Republican ticket were elected by majorities ranging from 1 000 to 1500 The Republicans also defeated the Democrats at Evansville where Charles P Heilman was elected may or over John J Nolan the present mayor At Fort Wayne Jesse Grice the Republican candidate and all the other candidates on his ticket were elected by small majorities Further victories were won by the Republicans at Richmond Crawfordsville and other smaller cities George T Harper Rep was elected at Madison The Democrats carried South Bend Muncie Lafayette and probably Terre Haute and some smaller cities Republicans declared that the de feat of the Democrats in Indianapolis was a defeat of the liquor interests of the state which had contributed large ly to the fund used in the effort to elect Gauss mayor In several other cities the question of law enforcement was the principal issue and the victor ies were divided between the fac itons At Evansville the supporters of J J Nolan the present mayor made their fight on the declaration that Nolan stood for the strict en forcement of thp saloon laws and that the election of the Republican candi date Heilman for mayor would mean that the city would be opened up Heilman won RHODE ISLAND REPUBLICAN pothiers Plurality Over Arnold Is Five Thousand Providence Nov 3 The vote for the first sixty districts in the Rhode Island election indicated a marked Re publican gain all over the state espe cially for governor The districts showed a net gain for Governor Poth ier Rep over Arnold Dem of 840 and indicated Pothiers election over Arnold by at least 5000 Bliss Rep was running far ahead of Carroll Dem for lieutenant governor The outlook for a Republican majority in the assembly is favorable Virginia Democratic Richmond Va Nov 3 Returns from all over the state indicate that the Democratic ticket headed by Judge Mann for governor has been elected by about the usual majority American Ticket Wins Salt Lake Nov 3 Complete re turns fromtwenty eight out of fifty- two districts give Bransford Amer ican lor mayor G794 Wallace fu 3309 Murdock Rep 3259 The American anti church party claims eight out of ten councilmen to be elected Euffalo Adopts Ces Moines Plan Buffalo X Y Nov 2 The city vooj r ri asking the legislature to i v - rter on the Des Moines The it stood three to one in tavoi oi - preposition Whitlock Re elected Toledo O Nov 3 Republican headquarters concedes Mayor Whit locks re electicn by probably 2500 plurality Jacksonville Dry Jacksonville 111 Nov 3 In the local option election Jacksonville went dry by a majority of 304 LABOR CHIEFS HELD GUILTY Court of Appeals Affirms Verdict Against Them Washington Nov 3 ihe district court of appeals affirmed the decree of Vac supreme court of the District of Columbia adjudging President Samuel Gompers Secretary Frank Morrison and Vice President John Mitchell of the American Federation of Labor guilty of contempt of court In the Bucks Stove and Range case Chief Justice Sheppard dissented from the opinion of the court on con stitutional grounds The court held that the fundamental issue was whether the constitutional agencies of the government should be obeyed or defied The mere fact that the defendants were the officers of or ganized labor in America said the court lent importance to the case and added to the gravity of the situa tion but it should not be permitted to influence the result If an organization of citizens how ever large the court held may dis obey the mandates of the court the same reasoning would render them subject to individual defiance Both are subject to the law and neither is above it If a citizen though he may honest ly believe his rights have been invad ed may elect when and to what ex tent he will obey the mandates of the court and the requirements of the law as interpreted by the court instead of pursuing the orderly course of appeal not only the courts but government itself would become powerless and so ciety would be reduced to a state of anarchy The action of the supreme court of the District of Columbia in sentenc ing Gompers Mitchell and Morrison to twelve nine and six months impris onment in jail respectively was the result of the failure of these three de fendants to obey the order of the court directing them to desist from placing the Bucks Stove and Range company of St Louis on their unfair list in the prosecution of their boycott against the corporation MUST CATCH BOMB GANG Chicago Detectives to Run Down Crim inals or Quit Jobs Chicago Nov 3 Following an or der from Chief of Police Leroy T Steward that men responsible for the hurling of bombs in the war between gambling syndicates in Chicago must be found Captain Stephen Wood head of the city detective bureau told ti members of his department that if they fail to get definite results in the investigation they should get out of the bureau Captain Wood in addressing his de tectives concerning the latest bomb outrages of Sunday night when two buildings were wrecked went further in his threat and declared that should his department fail to run down the perpetrators of the prolonged series of crimes he would resign as head of the detective bureau Gambling paraphernalia in the club rooms where bombs were thrown Sun day was destroyed by Assistant Chief of Police Schuettler and detectives of the gambling squad FIVE BURN TO DEATH IN HOME Mother Loses Life but Succeeds in Saving One Child Pittsburg Nov 3 Mrs William Marlow and four children were burned to death when fire caused by the up seting of an oil lamp destroyed their home in the outskirts of this city A fifth child was saved by the mother before she met her death Lyle an eight-year-old son was playing about the kitchen when the lamp on the table was overturned Mrs Marlow carried the boy to the yard and entered the house again to aid the four other children who were asleep on the second floor The five perished VISITOR KILLED IN MINE Manager of Educational Paper Is Knocked Off a Tramway Lead S D Nov 3 A J Voeltz of Madison business manager of the South Dakota Journal of Education in attendance at the convention of the South Dakota Educational association here died as the result of injuries re ceived when he was knocked off a tramway into an ore bin at the Home stake mill He fell sixty feet and lived but three quarters of an hour after the accident He was knocked off the track by an air motor hauling ore cars His parents live at Desmet this state Fickert in Lead San Francisco Nov 3 Partial re turns from sixty two scattering pre cincts out of 301 give for mayor Crocker Rep 374 Leland Dem 3S4 McCarthy Union Labor 537 For district attorney Fickert Rep S94 Honey Dem 460 nrrrMmti - - ttTrrnmic wTiiiiiinT imwjmjijiixmiluiirnuillJiiiW il mnwn n n iwiim i n MAY PROVE FATAL When Will McCook People Learn the importance of it Bnckache is only a uiniplo thing at Qrst But when you know tis from the kidneys That serious kidney troubles follow That Diabetes Brights disease may be the fatal end You will gladly profit by the follow ing experience J L Davis living in Arapahoe Neb says About a year ago I was in very poor health having suffered from kid ney trouble for some time My body was racked with dull nagging pains and I felt nervous and restless all the time The secretions from my kidnejs were too frequent in action scanty in passage and contained a heavy sediment My feet and ankies also became swollen and I suffered from frequent chills After using several remedies with un satisfactory results Doans Kidney Pills were brought to my attention and I procured a box They relieved me at once and continued to use them until 1 entirely received a permanent cure Plenty more proof like this from Mc Cook people Call at a drug store and ask what customers report Sill rvs S For Bale by nil dealers Price 50 ptits boster Milburu Co Buffalo New York solo ageuts for the United States itemomuer me name uoan s iana take uo other vS N jiiiS T 1 Ufa a J fa i i Lfyh UP1 I W 5Z2tt STxSiXrTV7 ta - With a Base Ball Bat Somo men should be beaten with a base ball bat instead of with a broom If there is anything that will try a good womans putienoe it is bum coal If you want coal that will please let us sell you If your wife does not say that she never had hottf r coal for the money we will take the beating and remove the ccal at no expense to you All we ask is a trial order You take no chances We agree to deliver coal with all good qualities Give us a trial order Ask our customers Stansberry Lumber Co ife R F D No 1 i Miss Martha Boll of Bartley and Mr Jacob Liibrandt of Ash Creek were married in Trinity German Lutheran church last Thursday November 4th 1909 Rev Theodore Gooble officiating Those present included many friends neighbors and relatives of the parties Leal Blanks Here This office carries all kinds of legal blank forms and makes special blanks to order promptly and accurately Farm Loans 1 Optional payments No cash com mission required P S Ukaton McMillens Cough Cure is effective and pleasant If you desire a clear complexion take Foleys Orino Laxative for constipation and liver troubles as it will stimulate i these organs and thoroughly cleanse your system which is what every one needs in order to feel woll J A McMillen D W COLSON FIRE INSURANCE Residence and Business Property for Rent Office Phone 16 Residence Black 333 McCOOK NEBRASKA iifc mm mm rm TFMo r2Aib mmmjztf Th5iCiSTiV51cl33 EgBMsraca S V 1t 0J A ml