I i Time Card jr IPS MCN Illlf Main Lino East Depart Central Time No G 1110 P M 1G 430 A M 2 520 A M 12 700 A M 14 920 P M Main Line Wst Depart f Mountain Time No 1 1235 P M 3 1142 P M 5 arr S30 p in 13 945 A M 15 1230 A M Imperial Line Mountiin Time No 176 arrives 345 P M No 175 departs 645 A M No 175 departs Wed 630 A M Sleeping dining and reclining chair cars seats free on through trains Tickets sold and baggage checked to any point in the United States or Canada For information time tables maps and tickets call on or write D P Hostetter Agent McCook Nebraska or L W Wakeley General Passen ger Agent Omaha Nebraska RAILROAD NEWS ITEMS Conductor and Mrs H A Beale went in to Omaha Monday night on a short visit Conductor Tom Enright was up from the Republican City Oberlin line Sunday visiting the family over Sun day The switch engine got mixed up a little with several cars in the local yards early last Saturday evening The damage was not considerable for tunately Conductors G L Burney and W T Wilcott were bumped this week Their cars were taken out of service and the boys added to the list of brakemen Dispatcher J S Chambers has pur chased a residence property upon north 2nd street east which he will occupy shortly Extensive alterations and rdpairs are now being completed Engineer and Mrs J C Marshall and the two children departed this week for Long Beach California where they will visit her parents Mr and Mrs F D Burgess for some time Engine 2923 took 64 cars hauling 1662 tons west last Saturday after noon on fast freight 77 Engineer Eg bert was on the right side No 2923 had recently been converted from a hard coal burner to a lignite burner and the trip was in the na ture of a trial run The results were quite satisfactory The steam shovel arrived from the Wymore diTision this week and is now being used here in loading the coal stored in the yard on the ground This coai will be shipped both east and west as required in the service 40000 tons were unloaded here Com pleting the work here the steam shovel will be sent to Akron to do similar work on the 30000 tons stored in the Akron yard Railway passenger schedules are usually revised in April and May to fit conditions existing during the tourist and summer vacation seasons When spring opens it is expected that the Burlington will resume Denver service with Nos 9 and 10 trains that now end their runs at Oxford The business on these trains has been growing rapidly since February 1 but the business necessarily is local The volume of passenger business on all roads has been growing in the past two weeks Lincoln Journal No Great Difference Indications now are that there will be no great difference in rates to the west coast this year and tourists who are figuring on the trip will find that regulations that applied to the sale of tickets and the choice of routes in 1910 will not be greatly changed for the traffic movements of 1911 The matter has been under consider ation in Chicago for several days and contradictory reports concerning ac tion of the roads have been sent out Yesterday the Union Pacific announc ed positively that convention rates had been authorized for the month of June Tickets will be sold June 5 and 6 and June 10 to 22 inclusive for San Francisco going or coming via Los Angeles These will be good for the period ending September 15 The rate will be 50 going or com ing via Portland it will be 65 Sum mer tourist rates are not announced but it is expected they will be effec tive June 1 with a rate of 60 Simi lar rates will be made by all rpads These rates will apply from the Mis osuri river The Amercian Medical association meets in Los Angeles in June The Eagles meet in San Francisco in August The federation of womens clubs will meet at San Francisco Jun 12 to 18 The international Bible stu dents association will meet in San Francisco June 20 to 27 The Ameri can Sunday school association will meet there near that date The Port land Rose festival will be held June 5 to 10 Lincoln Journal Subscribe for The Tribune 100 r LmKIUBamxBtohifkniiliM t in IIIIKITI IV 23rd ANNUAL MEETING Of the Stockholders of the Associa tion Was Held On Mon day Evening The twenty third annual meeting of the shareholders of the McCook Co operative Building and Savings asso ciation was held in the rooms of the First National Bank Monday evening for the purpose of electing six mem bers of the board of directors A canvas of stock represented in person and by proxy developed a to tal of 1459 The total number of shares outstanding being 2481 a ma jority would be 1242 hence a good working majority was represented in the meeting The following resolution recom mended by the old board of directors was read and adopted as article No of the constitution and by laws of the association A share holder may pay in an amount equal to the par value of his stock or convert his maturing shares into certificates of full paid stock and shall be credited with such rate of earnings as shall be allowed by the board of directors not exceeding six per cent per annum The earnings to be payable in cash to the holder semi annually on the first days of January and July of each year The board of directors may at any time limit the issue of certificate of stock and may require any of the members holding such certificates to surrender them on thirty days notice in writing and receive therefore the book value of the same On motion a vote was then taken on three members of the board of di rectors for two years resulting in the election of Emerson Hanson C F Lehn and C J OBrien On motion the stockholders then voted upon three members of the board to serve for three years The result was F M Kimmell T B Campbell and J E Kelley The hold over members of the boarc are H P Waite W B Mills and J A Wilcox The report of the auditing commit tee C W Kelley and J N Gaarde was read as follows and approved by the stockholders To the Board of Directors of the McCook Co Operative Building and Savings Association The undersigned committee appoint ed to examine the books of this as sociation beg to report that We have examined the accounts and records of said association and found them to be correct We have examined and compared the vouchers of the treasurer with his report and his report with the records of the Secretary and found them to be correct Treasurer has received from the Secretary during the year 7530250 Jan 20 1910 Treasurers balance overdrawn 264 50 Paid out by Treas on sec retarys vouchers 73915 06 Balance on hand January 20 1911 1182 94 Cash in secretarys hands January 20 1911 000 We examined the records of the secretary and found the following statement correct Real estate loans 156500 00 Stock loans 3675 00 Treasurer Delinquent dues Delinquent interest Tax Certificates Int on matured stock Expense 147 94 93 50 123 77 410 39 176 56 250 00 101377 16 Capital stock 152876 26 Reserve fund 2758 07 Prepaid interest 12 00 Interest 5092 73 Prepaid dues 264 00 Premiums 291 25 Fines and -Membership 82 85 161377 16 We have examined the securities held by the Association and found all loans numbering 152 properly secured by real estate mortgages except stock loans which are secured by assigned certificates of stock The real estate loans are further secured by insur ance policies on the buildings located on the mortgaged property in approv ed companies loss if any payable to this Association and also by assign ed stock certificates This report covers the year ending January 20 1911 J N GAARDE CHAS W KELLEY Auditing Committee McCook Neb Feb 13 1911 B of R T Annual Dance Cards are up announcing the an nual dance February 22nd by the members of Bronson lodge B of R T The K of P orchestra is a par ticular Tickets are 100 Twenty two firemen on the McCook division have been taken off the board on account of retrenchment or der Wm M lfOTV B ji SfiSSj W5 1 SmSmmm i xmmmmw first 1C TO MOVE - T3Jr -a - DOWN GOODJ OUT lar will now buy more a dollars worth At no time 11 f 1 r if of the year do we ever put high prices on our mer chandise so when they are marked much lower than the marked price you save in real money the difference be tween the marked price and the reduced price We do not ship in shoddy goods just to make special sales but on our regular quality goods we have put Prices down to move goods out JL To most of the American people today John Alexander Dowic is but a memory The world at large was forced for a time at least to acknowl edge his transcendent commercial genius The establishment of Zion City the immigration to it of fol lowers from all over the civilized world the founding of the lace indus tries and other enterprises of magni tude in that colony the blending of civil and religious authority in a way which recalled the patriarchal days of old all stamped Elijah the Second as Dowie called himself as a man born once in a century Dowie possessed the rare power of converting his visions into realities In that industrial Utopia which he established there stands a great monument to his memory For in establishing the Zion Lace Industries Dowie gave to this country a new industry As late as 1900 this beautiful prod uct was considered a monopoly of the historic lace centers of Europe Today the plant is one of the largest and most interesting textile industries in America A wonderful development has taken place in this factory during the past three years It has been thoroughly reorganized Out of chaos has beer made the most efficient plant of i kind The plant covers nearly five acres It is 586 feet long and 284 feet -vide two and three stories high now em ploys about 700 people and during the past three years has operated all machines 18 hours daily except Satur day when the factory is closed at 1 p m for a weekly half holiday The rapid growth of the Zion Lace Industrie has not equaled the re markable increase of the demand The product is constant oversold The Zion Lace Industries is today the life of the city of 5000 inhabitants Many of its most intelligent wage earners are toiling with the satisfac tion of knowing they still have a chance to get back in that way at least a comfortable existence in re turn for the fortunes they have lost So even if the founders work may be said to have been unfinished even though he was crushed out of the minds of the people a great reality has resulted from his dreams Superb Showing of Embroideries also C L DeGroff Co The McCook Tribune 100 a year MOVEMENTS OF THE PEOPLE Clarence Dann is very ill with pneumonia Don Thompson returned Tuesday on No 13 from St Joseph Mo Mrs Chester A Rodgers entertained the B Y Embroidery club lastF riday afternoon Mr and Mrs C H Boyle attend the funeral of the late N T Hall at Trenton Monday Mrs F W Bosworth is down from Denver today guest of her daughter Mrs R J Gunn Marie little daughter of Supt and Mrs C W Taylor has been very ill with pneumonia but is better at this writing r r ZfrtisCl THE mfzmft mimi Charles G Kerst of Bartley had business with the county officials on Tuesday of this week The Misses Ruggles were up from Indianola Saturday to attend the fun eral of the late E F Couse Harvey Springer of Bondville pre cinct was in the city Tuesday on bus iness with the county officers Mr and Mrs H C Clapp write thai they expect to finish their work in New York City by the end of this week Rev Wm Patton O M 1 of St Patricks church attended the funeral of Bishop Bonacum in Lincoln end of week Misses Elsie nd Trusca Budig ar rived home clott of last week from their absence in Plattsmouth and Omaha James I Lee arrived home Monday night from Sterling Colorado He reports his father and mother as both better Theodore Bailey departed Sunday night for Kersey Colorado from which place he came here a few months since G E Simon was a passenger to McCook this morning going up as a witness in the Kightlinger will case Cambridge Clarion E M Stewart stopped over in the city between trains Saturday on his rQturn to Denver from a visit of a week or two in Chicago William Sullivan visited his wife in Lincoln over Sunday He reports Mrs Sullivan as improving nicely in a san itarium in the capital city Mr and Mrs C F Heber arrived home Monday night from Omaha It is -a pleasure to n ote htat Mrs Hebers health is much improved Mr and Mrs John Coyle called here by the death of his mother sis ter and brother left for their home near Culbertson Tuesday morning Mrs W E Babcock was called to Beatrice Monday morning by a mes sage stating that Miss Annie was seri ously ill with pneumonia Cambridge Clarion Mrs T B Campbell was called dow to Monrovia Kansas last Friday by illness of her daughter Mrs Frank Humphries who is at this printing much improved we are pleased to note C R Livingston Dr C L Fahne stock F A Pennell and L W Mc Connell drove over to Atwood Kansas Tuesday Mr Livingston making de livery of an automobile to an At wood purchaser and the boys accom panying him as his guest HIE Miss Mary Wray who has been ployed in the office of the Updike Grain and Coal Co here has gone to York Nebraska to live leaving for that city end of week - Mrs J G Schobel and Mrs Lavosiel Burney arrived home Sunday night from an absence of two or three weeks in Chicago where they pursued their studies and work in painting County Supt Bettcher will not at tend the superintendence division of the National Educational association at Mobile Feb 23 25 as indicated in the dailies Official duties at home engage her at that time Mr Weybright agriculturist of the American Sugar Co has rented rooms of Mrs S A Rowell and ex pects to occupy the same about the first of March His daughter will joi him here for the summer Miss Kubick who has been employ ed by The Thompson Dry Goods Co for several years quit the service this week and after a short visit with her sister here will join the family on the farm down in Kansas Mrs W B Mills was the object of a pickpockets nefarious work while in Omaha last week at the Rome hotel The nimbled finger gen try abstracted about 20 from her pocketbook Page T Francis of Crawford came to town close of last week as a witness in a land case in district court Page is one of the early set tlers of Red Willow county and ac such is always greeted by old timers here R B Sheridan returned to the city close of last Aveek from spending some time on his ranch on business Chas Skalla was in Lincoln Mon day at the organization of the Ne braska Progressive Republican League Dr and Mrs Fahnestock Monday evening anticipated their regular card club meeting and entertained their whist club affording them opportunitj to adopt St Valentines Day decora tions and forms in refreshments and home decorations D C Marsh went down to Lincoln Tuesday night to arrange for the re ception of Mrs Marsh into a sani tarium in that city Mrs Marsh went down to Lincoln last night being ac companied there by her sister Mrs Keefer of Omaha and her brother Owen Crispen of Superior both of whom have been visiting her here It is hoped that treatment in a sani tarium will improve Mrs Marshs im paired health Co For Sale Cheap A black Percheron brood mare with foal Weighs about 1200 lbs 9 years old Also a black Percheron gelding 3 years old weighing about 1400 lbs Well broke Both in good condition and first class work ers Will sell with them a set of good harness Some one can make some money on this team Call on or address J W Peabody R F D No 3 McCook Neb Subscribe for The Tribune FOR SALE FOR RENT ETC FOR RENT Farms with 4 room house barn and granary wells and cisterrs Inquire of G W Trimpey Culbertson Neb FOR RENT Dwelling house Phone cedar 983 or 25 tf FOR RENT My residence furnish ed 207 2nd street east Phone blacS 170 Mrs F J Martin FOR RENT Four unfurnished rooms 1002 2nd street east FOR RENT Two furnished rooms with heat and light Phone red 281 Call at 319 1st st west FOR RENT One room in Electric theatre building McCook Hardware Co Phone 31 FOR RENT Four furnished rooms for housekeeping Mrs J I Lee phone red 455 Nice new clean rooms to rent furnished or unfurnished and for light housekeeping Inquire at 112 west B street 16 2t FOR SALE My residence on 1st st E Also a dwelling on 2nd st E Phone black 109 FOR SALE 10 hole Columbia drilL W T Spencer Phone black 272-13-3 FOR SALE Hay and alfalfa Phont ash 3681 S B Rankin FOR SALE Modern five room cot tage 711 1st street west W T WILCOTT LOST A tan hand bag from buggy on street or road L eave or inquire at Tribune office Reward offered FOUND Monday in N W part of McCook a pocket book containing some money Owner can have asme by proving property and paying ex penses Inquire of Howe Smith or at 1002 2nd street west Temple TheatreFebruary 23rd WM T GASKELL EDWIN W ROWLAND OFFER George Middletons Dramatization of Meredith Nicholsons Novel AND MULES AS PRODUCED FOR ONE YEAR AT Dalys and the Hackett Theatres New York and j Gar rick Theatre Chicago The audience at the Garrick liked the play and many many audiences will go wild over itAmy Leslie in Chicago Daily News 1 uum IMI A IK Prices for this engagement 25 35 jL i I - OBA J J wum1 i i -1 i 7JTSU JL mn ui i vr 75 100 23Srwfl iiCV11 T- S- 1 V I -