m l By F M KIMMELL Largest Circulation in Red Willow Co Subscription 1 a Year in Advance Republican Ticket For United State Sonntor NORMS BROWN of Buffalo STATE ForOovornor GEORGE L SHELDON of Cnss For Lieutenant Govornor M R HOPEWELL of Burt county For Ruilrond Commissioners H J WINNETT of Lancaster ROBERT COWELL of Douglas A J WILLIAMS of Pierco For Secretary of Stato GEORGE JUNKIN of Gosper For Auditor ED M riEARLE JR of Keith For Superintendent of Public Instruction JASPER L MBRIEN of Fillmore For Treasurer LAWSON G BRIAN of Boone For Attornoy General WILLIAM T THOMPSON of Merrick For Land Commissioner HENRY M EATON of Dodge COUNTY For Ropresontativo PHILIP GLIEM oy Danbury For County Attornoy PRENTISS E REEDER of McCook For Commissioner 2nd District SAMUEL PREMER of Bartloy COURT HOUSE NEWS COUNTY COURT Marriage licenses granted since last report William C Davis Chicago 111 40 Mrs Laura L Wheeler Kansas City Mo 25 Married by the county judgo Sept 26th Frank H Coleman McCook 30 Flora Shepherd McCook 19 OUio Murray Cambridge 34 Minnie Darrogie Cambridgo 24 Married by the county judge October 3 Vincent A Roe Cedar Bluff Kas 42 Debbie Ormsby Codar Bluffs Kas 25 Married by tho county judge October 3rd Richard J Grico OberlinKas 31 Minnie Roe Oberlin Cas 17 Married by county judgo Octobor 3rd Last will of James Deshon deceased late of Boston Mass has been filed for probate in the county court John Benson applied for appointment as guardian of Andrew J Benson in sane The last will and testament of Nicho las Colling deceased late of Indianola was entered for probate in the county court DANBURY Men are at work excavating for the new schoolhouse Cliff Naden is having brick hauled to make a foundation for his house which is to be moved in from one of Mrs Dolphs farms Mrs J E Noe went to Indianola Monday Meetings have closed at the hall Born to Mr and Mrs Joe Yarnell October 2nd a baby girl Wm Stilgebouer has sold his store to Mr Axtell and Harry Butler Mr Holdredge has sold his farm to N Graham consideration 6000 Jud Remington left for Kansas last Tuesday night on business Rev Smith left for his home in Ne braska City one day last week F W Halls show was in town one day last week As one of Danburys citizens stated it consisted of a few mules over which some of the school children went wild RURAL FREE DELIVERY NO 1 Mrs W P Burns was called to Friend Sunday by a telegram announc ing that her daughters Mrs S C Dragoos baby was dying W P Burns is entertaining a nephew and niece W N Rogers has gone to Kansas City where will serve as one of the judges in the Hereford department of the Royal stock show Ask any JAP that you mayfsee Why the Czar with Bearbehind had to climb a tree The YanksGod bless the Yankssays he They gave us Rocky Mountain tea L W McConnell Low Rates to California San Francisco or Los Angeles and re turn 5000 Via Portland S6250 Liberal stopover privileges allowed For particulars call at ticket office G S Scott Agent Ladies read this catalogue of charms Bright eyes glowing cheeks red lips a smooth skin without a blemish in short perfect health For sale with every package Hollisters Rocky Mountain tea 35 cents L W McConnell Souvenir Postal Cards The McCook Souvenir Postal Cards printed by The Tribune are on sale at A McMillens The Ideal Store The Tribune Office L W McConnells The Post Office Lobby Eleven different views printed Other designs are in prepara tion The price Two for five Oftnfcn z - 2we S P mm jlv - is f People In Print The Grandson of Englands Grand Old Man W I Buchanan and tho Drago Doctrine Douma Leaders W G C GLAD STONE coming of THE of a grand son of the late William B Glad stone was an event whose celebration recently attracted Interest in England This young man is W G G Gladstone and he Is a son of the late W H Glad stone M P He was born July 14 1885 but he celebrated the attainment of his majority on July 25 because on that day a statue of Mrs William E Gladstone was un veiled at Hawarden Those who know him fancy they can detect in his coun tenance and ways resemblances to the Grand Old Man His friends confi dently expect that he will develop po litical ability and make some fame of his own in due time to sustain the fam ily traditions William L Buchanan chairman of the United States delegation now in Brazil at the pan American congress has been chosen chairman of the com mittee on the Drago doctrine which is considered the most Important com mittee of the present conference in view of the conspicuous place In the discussions that this subject has taken Mr Buchanan has special qualifica tions for guiding the deliberations of the committee assigned to the consid eration of this question one which has threatened the peace of more than ono conference He has been minister of the United States to Argentina of which country Dr Luis M Drago In whose honor the doctrine Is named is a citizen He was the first minister of the United States to Panama and was director gen eral of the Pan Am er lean exposi tion which did so much to promote the Idea of the unity of the new world and the value of closer intercourse between the states W I BUCHANAN composing It Mr Buchanan enjoys especial popularity among statesmen and diplomats and in consequence of the Influence he pos sesses his advice on such a subject as the Drago doctrine will it is believed carry much weight The Drago doc trine is the principle that no force shall be used by any power in the col lection of debts owed to Its citizens by citizens of another power Sometimes it has been termed an expansion of the Calvo doctrine which was so called in honor of the Argentine jurist of that name who died about a dozen years ago Senator Overman of North Carolina was making bis speech on railroad rate regulation There were few Demo crats listening and but one solitary senator on the Republican side al though the argument was a very able one Senator Spooner stuck his head through the cloakroom door He saw the solitary Republican senator and said Ah man and Overman I When William J Bryan visited St Petersburg and attended the sessions of the Russian douma one of the depu ties who guided him about the chamber was AlexyAladyin M ALADYIN the peasant leader and exponent of radical Ideas In the accompanying picture this mem ber of the defunct Russian parlia ment does not look much like a peas ant as he is dress ed like an English swell He often ap pears with kid glove in one hand and cigarette in the other He lived six years In England and since that time has affected an English dress He is a university graduate and speaks Eng lish fluently In his speeches In the douma he had much to say about the French revolution and was wont to in dulge in much Invective As an orator he has a ready flow of rhetoric and the worklngmen are readily Influenced by his arguments In the douma he had many clashes with representatives of the government and once made a speech denouncing Goremykin when the latter was premier to his face At the end of an impassioned de nunciation of the cabinet he declared We have one and the same answer ready for the ministers When will you find in yourselves enough decency enough honorable feeling to take your selves off from these benches Aladyln is twenty nine years of age and once fled from Russia to avoid imprisonment on account of his revolu tionary ideas While in England he worked as a dock laborer Congressman Richard Bartholdt of Missouri who figured prominently ia the sessions of the interparliamen tary union In London has been an ardent advocate of international arbi 1 jf 3aCl Oration and his work In this field caused him to be talked of as a possible re cipient of the Nobel peace prize It was largely through his efforts that the in terparliamentary union which Is com posed of members of the national legis latures Af nearly all countries In which such institutions exist met in this country in 1004 at St Louis during the Louisiana Purchase exposition He presided over the sessions of the union at that time and was the spokesman when the members of the conference called on President Roosevelt He and Mr Roosevelt have long been Intimate friends When the president was a member of the New York legislature Mr Bartholdt was a newspaper corre sponaent at Albany wSBm RICHARD BAR THOLDT and in their walks and talks In the Empire State capital in those days the congressman to be who was born in Germany helped the president to be to master the German language Tho Missouri representative often talks In congress on the subject of peace and disarmament The last time a big naval programme was up for discussion the president sent for Mr Bartholdt and talked to him in his usually forceful manner When he returned to the capitol Mr Bartholdt was strongly In favor of the presidential programme including a new battleship Whats that got to do with peace Bartholdt inquired a colleague Bartholdt is a profoundly serious statesman Formerly said he I was unable to see any connection be tween peace and a battleship but whilo at the White House just now I gave the subject further consideration and on sober second thought I perceived that the interests of one will best be sub served by the other The mileage of General Leonard Wood was before the senate committee on military affairs Wood was originally a doctor re marked Secretary Taft who was testi fying And now hes a soldier said Sena tor Scott Yes put in Senator Pettus he ha3 gone out of the retail business of kill ing people into the wholesale Another of the radical leaders of tho douma who since its dissolution have been working to advance the cause of the people is M Roditcheff He was considered by many the greatest oratoi iBlS M RODITCHEFtf on the floor He is a handsome man with a ringing voice His popu larity with the dou ma members was unbounded and he had more sway than any of his fellows over the peasants in the parliament He was once ban ished as a result of his radical utter ances For years he remained away from his home and in the meantime even Russia had progressed to a point where the people were permitted to choose their representatives in parliament Roditcheffs district chose him to go to the douma and It was his privilege on the opening day to reply to the address of the czar which he did in a memo rable speech that aroused great enthu siasm among the deputies When the reports about the popes re cent illness reached the public there began to come to the Vatican sugges tions and remedies from well meaning but mistaken friends in various parts of the world In speaking of these the pope said to a foreign prelate who visited him I have been offered the services of doctors and medicines from all over the world and the pious people who sent the offers seem to think that their doctors and medicines are infallible I am very thankful and grateful for the offers but I cannot persuade myself to take any of the drugs I am sure there Is enough stuff to make an International drug store I cannot possibly think of swallowing any of the drugs Bernard N Baker of Baltimore pres ident of the Mutual Life Policy Hold ers association who recently returned from a conference in England with the Mutual Life policy holders in that country believes that the Independent holders of policies will score a great victory In the coming election of Mu tual Life trustees Mr Baker Is pres ident of the Atlan tic Transport com pany and very wealthy but he lives modestly and gives a great deal of his money away When the Spanish wa broke out he presented to the United States gov ernment free of charge the big steamer Missouri which was operated for nine months as BERNARD BAKER a hospital ship at a monthly expense to Mr Baker of 5000 WTien the Boer war came he gave the steamship Maine to the British government for the same humane purpose He Is exceedingly generous to his thousands of em ployees At the Mann Collier trial some months ago Mr Baker appeared as a witness for Colliers and testified that Town Topics had roasted him when he refused to advertise in Its columns 3- Er of the Frenzied Financier JOHN C BELL R ECENT events in Ph iladelphia and Chicago have shown that the wrecking of banks and the robbing of safe deposit vaults by men who go around with burglars tools masks and re volvers are not half as much to be feared as the ruining of financial institutions by men looked upon as pillars of society It was the idea which proved the Nemesis of Banker Paul O Stensland of Chicago of Banker Frank K Hippie and Frenzied Financier Adolph Segal of Philadelphia and of Banker Frank Bigelow of Milwaukee The Milwau kee financier erred through the faults of his son who plunged into specula tive schemes and dragged his father from the path of safe and conservative finance to that of crime ruin and a felons cell Hippie and Stensland both started right and up to certain stages of their respective careers seem to have pursued lives of honesty and integrity Then the temptation to embark in projects promising big returns came and they took the unjustifiable risks involved leaning on the reputations they had built up as honest and relia ble men to obtain the support of others for hazardous enterprises In Hippies case religion and philanthropy were used as a cloak to hide doings which however much softer terms might be ased were nothing less than swindling Stensland who fled to Morocco to escape the consequences of his folly but even there was sought out and re manded to the authorities of his coun try is the son of a poor Norwegian farmer A few years ago it would have been said that he deserved great credit for working himself up to a posi tion of honor and responsibility in the community He was a sailor as a ADOLPH SEGAL young man and started in business in Chicago in a small way rising through energy and thrift But he could not stand prosperity and his fondness for big schemes that could not be under taken without assuming big risks was his undoing Hippies case was similar but his was the strangest of all His was the case of a good man gone wrong and led wrong by a man with whom it might have been supposed a conserva tive financier a man with a reputation to maintain would have had nothing to do District Attorney John C Bell who is prosecuting the surviving wreckers of the Real Estate Companj of Philadelphia declared in court that he could prove that Hippie Segal and those cognizant of their doings were engaged In a conspiracy and that as a result of their acts more than 3000 000 was abstracted from the institution for the use of one man This was Se gal who as a director of the company put it seemed to have hypnotized the president Segals career was meteoric Twenty years ago he was a recent im migrant from Austria speaking broken English and working over a boiling soap caldron in a cellar in a tenement district The invention of a new proc ess for waxing paper yielded him 20 000 This gave him a start in business and his persuasive manner enabled him to borrow money to any extent de sired for all kinds of visiouary proj ects He built a sugar refinery for the purpose of selling it out to the sugar trust and succeeded in doing so mak ing about 1000000 on the deal Later he tried the same game again but this time could not sell and got left with the refinery on his hands It is said he once overdrew his account at Hippies bank 140000 but Hippie being inex tricably involved in Segals schemes had to honor the check After Hippies suicide his family found a hastily scribbled note which read No one to blame but myself Segal got all the money I was fooled into lending it to him thinking his business good The dead bank president was a plodding lawyer for years and his reputation for integrity and safe methods led him to be made the custodian of many trust funds including those of church es and charitable institutions Out wardly he was so highly moral that nobody suspected mm capame or uo ing a wrong thing and when his fall came it carried misfortune to many In nocent persons with it Y 9 Lets Talk Furnace Who is your Furnace Man All depends on him whether your furnace will be satisfactory he understand tory or not Does stand the system of hot air heating circulation and ventil ation Is he competent to make the elbows angles fittings etc required in an ordinary furnace job and install them without endangering your property by fire A Furnace Man must have practical experience We have made the furnace business a specialty for the past twenty one years fourteen years at Omaha Nebraska We are the sole agents for the Boynton Furnaces They Are the Best Made Estimates and any information regarding the proper installa tion of a modern heating apparatus free of charge L Your patronage respectfully solicited Polk Bros New Store Dennison Street HcCook Nebraska NHSSNQVZSSsaN3SBXSSa3NBBNSJfe I inV I M I ttja n EsH 1 Six months course in shci than and new Oliver Typewriter for ioooo in Stay ners Shorthand School GrSE3SCZNQSSBSXSENKKNINSVSasBSVsSSSSKSX oe The Biff Ideal Op enins aie Will begin in the New Store just below the Post Office on so Wednesday October 10th The First Anniversary of the Ideal A call by everybody respectfully solicited by M L Rishel pro prietor l Remember the date Hie IDEAL BARGAIN DEPOT INDIANOLA J Chester Strockey who has been sick The first frost of the season came to so lonS Wltn typnom lever is awe to De us on Friday morning Thomas Haley has been among the ailing ones this week William Medlock arrived Saturday morning from Oklahoma where he has been spending the summer E E Smith and W Taylor attended the play in the new opera house in Mc Cook Saturday night J CPuckett and family went to Bart ley on No 12 Sunday morning and spent the day with friends Miss Lovina Kollins of Lincoln is visit ing in Indianola and vicinity Frank Shaw of Denver is in town the guest of friends and relatives Mr Ormons new residence south of I the depot is nearing completion Mr Kains of Wisconsin at one time a resident of this place is in town among old friends and acquaintances Rev E Smith of tho M E church will be with us for another year Landlord Cosgro is very poorly at this writing being confined to his bed the greater part of the time Miss Bertha Walker is convalescinc slowly but surely and her friends hope soon to see her out again Miss Pearl Russell of Danbury visited friends in Indianola last Saturday A P Day has bought the brick build ing known as the Baker building now occupied by Frank Hardesty in the drug business Dell Teel is very sick with typhoid fever at his home north of town Rev E Smith and wife are away this week attending conference The Methodist ladies will serve meals at the fair grounds during fair week out again W George Shepherd is having a very cozy little home built on his lots in tho north part of town The medicine show took its departure Sunday night for McCook after a weeks stay in town Mr and Mrs Albert Price and chil dren visited John Baldinga folks Sun day Frank Teels new house is looming up in good shape and when finished will be both commodious and comfortable Luke Hayden came home Sunday night after an absence of several months Ed Smith and Smith fc Taylor are painting the mill of Andrews Marsh Mr and Mrs Alexander Brown of Missouri Ridge were Indianola visitors Saturday Miss Jennie Deveny who has been in Indianola for some timereturned to her home in McCook Monday Miss Ella Ford of Bartley won the prize in the voting contest here last week as the most popular young lady Master Bennie Smith drove over to Danbury Monday morning returning in the afternoon Ottoe Webber has finished the brick work on C W Dows new residence and and commenced work on his store house which will be 30x75 feet To Cure a Cold In One Day Take laxative bromo quinine tablets All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure E W Groves signature is on each box 25c Bound duplicate receipt booksj three receipts to the page for sale at The Tribune office Vt if v r t h