CITY LODGE DIRECTORY A F A M HcCook Lodjra No 135 A F A H meets OTory first and third Tuesday of the month at 900 p m in Masonic hall ISusbis H Stewart W M Chables L Fahnestock Sec k 8 M Occcnoxeo Council No 16 R fc S M meets on the last Saturday of each month at SKXJ p in a Masonic hall William E Hart T I M Aabox 9 Kino Sec B A M King Cjrus Chapter No 35 R A M meets arery first and third Thur daj of each month at 800 p m in Masonic hall Clarence B Gbat H P W B Whittakee Sec KNIGHTS TEMPLAR St John Commandery No 16 K T meets on the second Th urda j of each month at 800 p m in Masonic hall Geo Willets E C Setii D Silver Bee eastern stab Eureka Chapter No 86 O E S meets the second and fourth Fridays of each month at 800 p m in Masonic hall Mas C W Wilson W M S Cordeal Sec ENIOHTS OF PYTHIAS IXcCook Lodge fc o 42 of K P meets ever Wednesday at 8C0 p m in Masonic hall J N Gaabde C C C A Evans K B ODD- FELLOWS McCook Lodge No 137 1 0 0 F meets ever Monday at 800 p m in Morris hall BJ Lane N G H G Hughes Sec MODERN WOODMEN Noble Camp No 663 M W A meets every econd and fourth Thursday of each month at 830 p m in Morris hall Pay assessments at Citizens National Bank Julius Kdnbrt Consul HM Finitt Clerk EOTAL NEIGHBORS No le Camp No 862 B N A meets every second and fourth Thursday of each month at 230 p m in Morris hall Mrs Caroline Kunert Oracle Mrs Augusta Anton Bee workmen KcCook Lodge No 61 AOUW meets every Monday at 800 p m in Temple Maurice Griffin Treas Henry Moebs MW C J Ryan Financier C B Gray Rec DEGREE OF HONOR McCook Lodge No 3 D of H meets every eocond and forth Tuesdajs of each month at 500 p m in Temple building Anna E Ruby C of H Mes Carrie Schlagel Rec MACCABEES Meets every 2nd and 4th Friday evening in if arris hall J A Wilcox Com J H Yargee Record Keeper RATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF LETTER CARBIEBS Branch No 1278 meets first Monday of each month at 330 p m in carriers room postoffice G F Kinghorn President O J OHrien becretary LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN AND ENGINEMEN McCook Lodge No 599 B of L F E meets on the first and third Thursdays of each month in Morris hall I D Pennington Pres C H Husted Sec Ladies Society B of L F E Golden Rod Lodge So 282 meets in Morris ball on first and third Wednesday afternoons of each month at 2 oclock Mes Gbacjc Hcsted Mes Lena Hill Secretary President RAILWAY TRAINMEN C W Bronson Lodge No 487 B of R T meets first and third Sundays at 230 pm in Eagles hall T E Huston President F G Kinghorn Sec BAILWAY CONDUCTORS Harvey Division No 95 O R C meets the econd and fourth Wednesday nights of each month at 800 p in in Morris hall at 304 Main Avenue S E Callen C Con M O McClure Sec MACHINISTS Hed Willow Lodge No 587 I A of M meets every second and fourth Tuosday of the month at 800 p m in Morris hall Theo Diebald Pre Feed Wasson Fin Sec Floyd Beery Sec locomotive engineers McCook Division No 623 B of L E meets every second and fourth Sunday of each month at 230 in Morris hall Walter Stokes C E W D Burnett F A E RAILWAY CARMEN Young America Lodge No 456 B R C of A meets on the first and third Tuesdays of each Tnnth in Morris hall at 730 p m M Finity Pres J M Smith Rec Secy S D Hughes Secy BOILERMAKERS McCook Lodge No 407 B of B M I S B of A- meets first and third Thursdays of each month in Eagles hall Jno Seth Pres Juo LeHew Cor Sec EAGLES McCook Aerie No 1514 F O E meets every Friday evening at 8 oclock in Kelloy building 316 Main ave C L Walkeb W Pres C H Ricketts W Sec KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS McCook Council No 1126 K of C meets the first and third Tuesdays of each month at 800 U m in Eagles hall G R Gale F Sec Frank Real G K DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA Court 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 meets every first and third Thursday evenings of each month in Morris hall Mes W B Mills Commander Harriet E Willetts R K a a b J K Barnes Post No 207 G A R meets on the first Saturday of each month at 230 pm Morris hall Thomas Moore Commander J H Yargee Adjt RELIEF CORPS McCook Corps No 93 W R C meets every econd and fourth Saturday of each month at 30 p m in Ganschow hall H Adella McClain Pres 8chie Vandebhoqf Sec L OF G A E McCook Circln No 33 L of G A R meets on the second and fourtli Fridays of each month at 230 p m in Morris hall Mrs Lottie Brewer Presinent Mrs Kate Dntton Secretary P E O Chapter X P E O meets the second and fourth Saturdays of each monta at 2S0 p m at the homes of the various members Mrs J A Wilcox Pres Mrs J G Schobel Cor Sec PYTniAN SISTERS McCook Temple No 4 Pythian Sisters meets the 2d and 4th Wednesdays at 730 p m Lila L Ritchie M E C Edna Stewart M of R C DIAMOND EEBEKAH Meets each 1st and 3rd Friday evening of each month in Morris hall Mes C S Curtis N G Miss Minnie Middleton Secy Look for the Bee Hive On the package when you buy j leys Honey and Tar for coughs and colds None genuine without the Bee Hive Remember the name Fo leys Honey and Tar and reject any substitute A McMillen MARION O L Rupert who has been visiting his brother Dan of Riverview for some time eturned to his home at Swanton the first of the week About twety five of the members of the I O O P lodge attended lodge at Wilsonville last Thursday night The Misses Martha and Minnie Nothnagel who have been visiting their sister Mrs Jake Wishon return ed to their home near McCook last mid week Mr Glather from south of town Has an east bound passenger Satur day evening Frank McCart of Hemingford Neb arrived last midweek for a short visit with his brother in law S Stilgebouer and family Little Elaine Reed was under the doctors care last mid week with a severe cold Ward Gordon came in from Omaha last mid week to install the new dust collector in the alfalfa mill Floyd Akin of the mill force re signed and went to Oberlin Satuday Mrs Brott who has been visiting her daughter Mrs F E Lafferty of Laurel Dell left last mid week for Mountgrove Mo where she will visit a son after which she will go to her home in Rayland Ohio Irvin Smiley was a Cedar Bluffs visitor between trains first of last week A C Funnan was callde to Lyle Kan the first of last week on ac count of the serious illness of his brother Avho is very low with pneu monia Clarance Reed took him ov er in the auto Albert Kemp from Colorado was a business visitor in town Saturday Mrs Jake Imeck of Seward Neb was in town between trains Saturday H L Ruby of Danbury was in town between trains Saturday in behalf of the International people Orla Newberry came down from Bird City Saturday to spend Sunday with the home folks and his best girl Harvey Sutton was a Cedar Bluffs business visitor Saturday night and Sunday The M B A public installation and oyster supper first of last week was a decided success About 125 people assembled at Eiferts hall at the appointed hour and enjoyed the fine program prepared for their enter tainment after which an oyster sup per was served which was pronounce the best ever by the hundred persons partaking of it Some of our fellow townsmen particularly distinguished themselves by making an unparalleled record in the line of eating oyster soup raw oysters etc The young peo pie spent the evening playing games and everyone seemed to enjoy them selves The Toint Of a JUL Jj is a very good one but heres a better point Are you ready to receive tho j new year properly Is your commer cial and social printing up to date Let us print your Calendars Business Cards Programs Letter Heads and Billheads Were here to print and price everything right Very Lucky I dont get what I deserve for my jokes wailed the humorist Youre lucky sympathized his friend Toledo Blade When a man falls back on oaths he declares himself out of arguments Women and Their Idols Women adore idols Do they Dont they Why when a worn ans idol proves human shes stronger for It than ever Toledo Blade i - --T- - ooks and glpr nERBEKT KAUFFMAN The real apostle of the wanderlust among writers is Edgar Beecher Bron son who has just been elected to life membership in the Geographical So ciety of Ecuador a mark of distinction that has been accorded very few for eigners His election was celebrated with a banquet that was attended by the most distinguished men at Quito the capital The career of Mr Bronson who has recently come Into prominence as an author of true stories of travel and adventure has been literally crammed with excitement He began life more than thirty years ago as a reporter on the New York Tribuue He had charge of the staff of reporters who covered every word of the Beecher trial in Brooklyn and in getting this report to his office one night lie scored a great beat and gave an early exhibi tion of his nerve The East river was so full of floating ice that the ferry boats could uot run so he crossed the stream by jumpiug from one ice floe to another and swimming a part of the way This experience shattered his health and he went west to recuperate In Wyoming he established his famous Dead Man ranch and had many fights to maintain it He has told of these days in his Reminiscences of a Ranch man just republished with some new chapters A few years ago he gave up the west and returned to New York but civilization could not hold him In the spring of 100S he preceded Roose velt on a big game hunting trip through the closed territory of British V--- fiAv - - - f lilted i f mmg2 mm mmm wmwfsct k WjilSW V Sf vv St mcm mmmikj a V aS5BK J v EDGAIt BEECHEIl BRONSON East Africa for which he secured a special permit He went into many places there and in Abyssinia where no white man had ever been seen His contempt for danger caused the warlike Wanderobos to christen him Bwana Vimerije which means the white haired warrior who always laughs He returned with the largest and finest collection of trophies ever brought to this country from Africa His adventures and experiences are recited In In Closed Territory itvttwTfrtniKTaa -a s N E W S P A P E R man becoming un author is uot an unusual condition in the w o v 1 d of liter a t u r e as many of the best vriTs in history have served their a p p r e n ticeship with tlie daily press But it is an unusual thing for a newspaper nan to become a practical socialistic student That is what Herbert Kauff man did and he intends that his lit erary merit shall be judged by his powers in picturing conditions among the poorer classes undreamed of by settlement workers even Mr Kauffman graduated from the newspaper field into that of the maga zines and within a year became the editor of one of the leading monthlies But that did not serve bis purpose which was to write a series of novels which should penetrate the crust of American life So he and his wife did a daring thing He resigned from the magazine and went into the heart of New Yorks crowded east side tene ment district to live They shun ned the police and the settle ment and mission workers and he wrote only enough to keep the wolf from the door They lived the life as they found it and soon became a part of it In fact At that time Mr Kauff man knew nothing of the extent to which the white slavery traffic was car ried on among the poor The condi tions appalled him and he put the con ditions before the public in The House of Bondage With that duty off his mind Mr Kauffman has recalled his original purpose and has settled in his home town of Columbia in Lancaster Pa to work out his Action series plans n GREELEY CLEAN AND READY Bronze Horace Awaits Centennial Un moved and Spick and Span New York the city that used to be editorially cleansed by Horace Gree ley many years ago has had its re venge It was a benevolent revenge but cleansing There were no coals of fire heaped on the Greeley head rath er buckets of soapsuds But it Is af firmed that norace smiled complacent ly when the laving process was com pleted and he again surveyed busy Broadway There was no doubt that Horace needed a bath sadly More than a year was required by the Hudson river - -- - - - - - StfVfcW VVMi0W5 a lb IBIfifH 3n wst Wf m ssslS tfstfofS iAfV rJWH SI Jy0wAWwvw v Photo by American Press Association WASHING HORACE GKEELEYS STATUE tunnel people to construct their Thirty third street station and the Greeley statue was moved from the triangle it had decorated for so many years It was decided that he should be washed and two workmen went to work They began with the noble brow and dropped soapy water In Mr Greeleys eye but he bore it all even to the tickling of his nose as an im mense crowd can testify It took an hour to thus publicly wash Mr Gree ley and he was not given a rough tow el rub down cither But so invigorat ed did he appear that a reverent news boy offered to shine the Greeley shoes free of charge and he was with diffi culty restrained from doing so Boston Trot Is Ancient To show that he is still up to date though serving his last term as speak er Uncle Joe Cannon did the Boston trot with much grace and eclat at a ball In Washington recently The par ty was given by Robert J Wynne for mer postmaster general for his daugh ter and all the younger set of Wash ington were there So was Uncle Joe who Is not quite seventy five He was immediately captured by Miss Ruth Wynne who demanded a dance and the speaker assented so far as the Virginia reel was concerned But the reel was long in coming and Miss Wynne grew impatient The Boston trot latest thing In terpslchore was announced but It did not feaze the Illi noisan There were many on the floor who did not fully understand the trot if P pays and Players PIRITDALISM in serious vein has entered the theatrical realm with David Belasco as its in terpreter The play entitled The Return of Peter Grimm was enthusiastically received at Boston on its initial performance The part of Peter Grimm wac comes back is delegated to David Warfield and he handles it well ac cording to the critics The story re volves around Grimm a wealthy old flower grower who has an adopted daughter whom he loves dearly Be cause of this affection he desires to keep her in the family by marrying rV r - x DAYID BELASCO her to a nephew The town doctor Is a believer in spirit ualism and enters into a compact with Grimm that who ever dies first shall come back Grimm Is the first to depart and he returns to complete his mat rlmoniaJ and other plans eft Incomplete by his sudden demise Curiously enough it was a vision that inspired Belasco to writo The Return of Peter Grimm It was the death of his mother and the- Incident Is related by the dramatist In these words When my mother died five years ago I had not seen her for some time I was kept here in the east by my affairs but I knew she had been In poor health One night the night she died I suddenly was awakened as though some one had touched me and there above me I saw in the darkness my mothers face I heard her whis per Davie Davie I want to see you again Davie Davie I wanted to say goodby And she slowly disappeared I received a telegram next morn ing telling me of her death She had died at the very minute she appeared to me in the vision The thought of this remained In my mind Two years later I was aroused into activity when Cecil Demllle came to me in New York with what he thought was a good idea for a play The idea was the one I had held in mind so long about my mother Miss Ethel Barrymore Is appearing this winter in a revival of Trelawny of the Wells Sir Arthur Wing Pin eros comedietta of the heart Accord ing to its reception In New York its twelve years of age has not affect ed either the sadness or humor of the ETHEL HARIIYUOUE picture of Victorian life in the sixties when crinoline and pegtop trousers flourished Miss Barrymores reading of the title role is voted by the critics to be sweet and appealing and she is ited with triumphing over unbecoming and showed It but not Uncle Joe Not - nnmnB M hm f Ki v j w 1 Mi lf1 in niiet otw tirt il WIOl Uaf VI 1V V4U WUOO UUU - I vn r wrrrt htvi I rtii irtn f llln f 1 I tin tiLLuij LuiiiaLuiaiuu iu ia luuiiuiLHi uue uc buiuiiiu wlllIn rnlor wh acul tn hn Wii u vw u vut w w 1 C 1 l tl lie has scored a popular success In uiu ui oiu iinius uut mai is uuij T Wnnnr1 f Fin o fnr wHr rlnnnn T lnrtiir T lAOVfnl If 1YryrL tdntl uauiu i nuun l itamtu ii v luuu t 1 ol T fifty years ago The barrel has just o r nQ nro m nf - v I 1 I l uluu iuiuuu over ukuiu LIVING RING IN WATER PIPE Curious Photograph Taken In Worlds Greatest Conduit One of the worlds largest water con duits has been constructed at Albeda Spain on the line of the Aragon and Catalonia canal To demonstrate the acts the part of a immense size of this water pipe a forgetful young man who fails to HUMAN CIRCLE IN SPANISH WATER CON DUIT cuuiuuiuus piuys but this one is not all William There are also his sister Helena Collier Gar- rick and William Collier Jr and all have scored hits The comedian remember the time f his marriage mfim WILLIE COLLIER and Is confronted fresh from the tub and pajamas clad by his father the brides brother and mother anc finally the bride herself He is repent ant but wants time for breakfast This breaks off the match So Percivals irate father sends him to Nevada with a 10000 check with which to grow up with the sagebrush and the first event he encounters is a charge of holding up a stagecoach This causes him to purchase all the available rope and twine in the neigh- tograph was taken of a human circle borhood to prevent a lynching and consisting of workmen holding on to then he conducts his own case be the conduit ribs It shows that the cir- fore an antagonistic judge cumference equals the height of seven j As in most of Colliers comedies he men The length of this water pipe is scores test by having others seemlng about 823 yards ly score on him A Reliable Cough Medicine Is a valuable family friend Fo leys Honey and Tar fulfills this condition exactly Mrs Charles Kline N 8th St Easton Pa states Several members of my family have been cured of bad coughs and colds by the use of Foleys Honey and Tar and I am never without a bot tle in the house It soothes and loosens up the cold I have always found it a reliable cough cure A McMillen Estimate of Expenses At the regular meeting of the coun ty board of Red Willow county Ne braska held on the 10th day of Jan uary 1191 the matter of the esti mate of the necessary expenses for the year 1911 was considered and the estimate made as follows County general fund 3000000 County bridge fund 1500000 County road fund 700000 County Soldiers Relief fund 100000 Bartley village bond 300Gl McCookC ity court house bonds 150000 McCook City Sewer bond 1S0O0C M Cock Ci water boid JJlMOoO Schawl rtftrict bords 1200000 Dated t Mcccok this liith day of January nil CHAS SKALLA County Clerk First publication Jan 12 It In the County Court of Red Willow county Nebraska In the Matter of the Estate of James E Wingate deceased All persons having claims and de mands against the estate of James E Wingate deceased will take no tice that I have set and appointed the following days for the recep tion examination and adjustment of said claims and demands at the county court room in McCook in said county to wit January 30 1911 and August 2 1911 All persons so in terested in said estate will appear at said time and place and duly pre sent their said claims and demands in the manner required by law or show cause for not so doing and in case the same are not presented by August 1 1911 they shall be forever barred Notice of said times and place of hearing shall be given by publishing a copy of this order for four weeks successively in the Mc Cook Tribune a newspaper printed and circulated in said county Given under my hand and the seal of said county court this 4th day of January 1911 J C MOORE Seal County Judge First publication Jan 5 1911 4t Shampooing Hair Dressing Scalp and Facial Treatment L M CLYDE Phone 72 m W B St Up Stairs Mike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash New location nt acre is TlnCrrlr street in P Whleh bnldicg l llWtlUIV PEa1 iKKH Lumber and Coal Thats All Best Imported Fercheron Belgian English Shire Suffolk Punch and fiprman Tnarh ismJ StallionsSiooo ea WW Imported maresbome iWr bred stallions S250 650 each A- LATIHER WILSON Creston Iowa HomeBred Draft Stallions 2n0 to 600 imported stallions your choice 1000 F L STHEAM Creston la 5i But we can meet your every need in these lines from our large and complete stocks in all grades Barnett Lumber Co Phone 5 MM1M1 j