y K il M if J 11 WOP DELL McCOOK NEB LIVE STOCK and REAL ESTATE AUCTIONEER 23CalI at Citizens Bank For Dates MiilUtoi Ruby PLUMBING and STEAM FITTING All work guaranteed Photti 182 McCook Nebraska YOU WOULD DO WELL TO SEE J M Rupp FOR ALL KINDS OF RrjnL yy P O Box 131 McCook Nebraska Hiss Ila M Briggs f fu ill teach class on piano Grad uate of Bethany conservator or ijiiKisnorfj iviiif oiuuio at lioiim of A G Bump Phone Black 2f2 Scholais call or phono for further information A G BUMP Real Estate and Insurance Room Two over McConnells drug store McCook Nebraska JOHN E KELLEY ATTORNEY AT LAW and BONDED AB3THACTE1 MCIOOK Nkhkaska CS Agdiit of Lincoln Land Co and of McCool Wator Works Ollico in Postotilce building C H uoyik C E Eldked 8QYLE ELDRED Attorneys AT 1 AW Long Distance I1 one 44 Roomn 1 nuii 7 floor Poftollice Huildinu OB 3 Bid 41 McCOOK v Melon Neo GUNN DENTIST pcne IK Office Hooms 3 and 5 Wnlsb Blk McCook GATEW00DVAHUE DENTISTS Office over McAdams Store Phone 190 H P SUTTON JEWELEF MUSICAL GOODS NEBRASKA Or lerbertj Pratt Registered Graduate Dentist Office over McConnells Drug Store McCOOK NEB Telephones Office 160 residence 131 Forvior location Atlanta Georgia Mike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY and EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash New location just across street in P Walsh building flcCook Nebraska CITY LODGE DIRECTORY A F A M McCook Lodge No Ji A P A M moeta nvury lirit and third TtiftHliiy of tlio month at 800 ii ni in Masonic hull CHAKWH L Fahskstock W M Lov CoNK Sec UnilKKMAKEKH McCook Lodgo No 407 K of 11 M I S H of A inooth irt and third Fridays of each inontli in Odd Kolluwb linll DEOUKEOF HONOIt McCook Lod bo 5Jo a D of II meets every fonoiid and fortli Kridays of onch mouth at800 p in in Ganschows liall Mifs Lauua OiiiuuN C of H Mkh MatikG Wellish Kpc EAGLES McCook Aorio N 1514 F O K meets tlio second and fourth WodnosdHjs of each month at 800 pm in GiiuscIiowh hull Social meet ings on the flrot and third Wednenlnjs W H Cummins W Pres II P Peteuson W Sec RAHTBKN STAB Eureka linptnr No fcC O E S moots tlio Hccmid and fourth Fridays of oach month at 800 p in in Masonic hail Mils Sarah E Kay W M SYIVESTEU CoUDKAI SlC G A It J K Barnes Post No 207 G A R meets on the iirst Saturday of each month at 230 p m Gauscliows hall J M Henderson Cmndr J II iakgeu Adjt KNIOIITS OK COLUMBUS McCook Council No 1126 K of C meets the lirstnncl third Tuesdays of oach month at800 p in in Diamonds liall Fkank Real G K G R Gale F Sec KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McCook Lodgo No 42 K of P meets every VcdnoMluy at 800 p in in Masonic hall M Lawuitson C C J N Gaahde K R S KNIGnTS TEMPLAK St John Coimnandury No 16 K T meets on tho ecoiid Thursday of each month at 800 p mt in Masonic hall Emerson Hanson E C Sylvester Cobdeal Rec LADY MACCABEES Valley Queen Jlivo No 2 L O T M meets every first and third Thursday ovjuiugs of each mouth m hall Ms- Mills Commander Harriet E Willetts R K locomotive engineers McCook Division No 621 H of L E meets ovory first and third Saturday of each monthut 800 in Horrys hall WC Scheie CE W D Burnett F A E LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN McCook Lodge No 599 R of L F E meets every Saturday at 730 p in in Gans chows hall I D Pennington M Geo A Campbell Sec machinists Red Willow Lodge No 587 I A of M meets every second and fourth Tuesday of the month at 800 p m in Gansehow hall D O Hewitt Pros W H Anderson Rec Sec MODERN WOODMEN Noble Camp No 663 M W A meets every second and fourth Thursday of each month at 830 p m in Ganschows hall JonN Hunt V C Barney Hofer Clerk odd fellows McCook Lodge No 137 1 0 0 F meots every Monday ufc800p m in Gansehow s liall E H Doan N G Scott Doan Sec I Supplies for P E O Chapter X P E O meets the second and fourth Saturdays of each month at 230 p m at the homes of the various members Mrs C W Britt Pres Mrs J G Schobel Cor Sec railway conductors Harvey Division No 95 O R C moots the second and fourth Sundays of each month at 300 p m in Diamonds ball Joe Hegenbergeb C Con M O McClure Sec RAILWAY TRAINMEN C W Bronson Lodge No 4S7 B of R T meets evory Friday at 800 p m in Berrys hall F J Huston Sec H W Conover M WORKMEN McCook Lodge No 61 AOUW meets evory Monday at 800 p m in Diamonds hall Web Stephens M W C B Gray Rec r a m King Cyrus Chapter No 35 R A M meets every first and third Thursday of each month at 800 p min Masonic ball Clarence B Gray H P Clinton B Sawyer Sec royal neighbors Noble Camp No 862 R N A meets every second and fourth Thursday of each month at 230 p m In Ganschows liall Mrs Mary Walker Oracle Mrs Augusta Anton Rec B S M Council NolRRSMmpnt nn the last Saturday of each month at 800 p m n Masonic hall Ralph A Hagberg T I M Sylvester Coedeal Sec w o w Meets second and fourth Thursdays at 5 oclock in Diamonds hall Chas F Markwad C C W C Moyee Clerk Have You Houses To Rent Then you should be supplied with rent receipt books The Tribune has just what you want compact and com plete Any time you find yourself in reed of your Office just drop in and see if we do not have exactly what you want whether it be a box of paper clips or the latest improved filing system The TRIBUNE Office V C A TEARSOX Roosevelt in hi- Secretary to ttb n ne rres ent The Office Has Been a Stepping Stone to Higher Honors The Case of Wiiliam Loeb Jr T HE position of secretary to the president has come to be re garded as a stepping stone to higher honors or more lucra tive posts George B Cortelyou step ped from this position to that of first secretary of the new department of commerce and labor later becoming postmaster general and then being pro moted still further to the highly Im portant post of secretary of the treas ury one of the most hononibie In the gift of the chief magistrate Mr Cor telyou is now in the list of presiden tial possibilities Dan Lamont as everybody used to call him stepped from the position of private secretary to that of secretary of war in the cabinet of President Cleveland Retiring from political life he became a street railway magnate and when bo dtol wua worth millions William Loeb Jr has been President Iloosevclts secretary since Mr Cortel you In 1003 surrendered the post to accept a higher one He was secretary to Mr Roosevelt when the latter was In the executive chair at Albany just as Colonel Lamont was secretary to Mr Cleveland when our only was governor of the Empire State When Mr Roosevelt became vice president Mr Loeb continued as his private secretary and on his acces sion to tlio presidency became assist ant secretary to the president serving under Mr Cortelyou at first and thus demonstrating his ability to fill a high er position when the hitters promotion left a vacancy Mr Loebs tact has sometimes been questioned But a man cannot always please everybody in a post so trying as that of secretary to the nations presiding officer The fact that for five years he has stood off those who like to take the presidents valuable time unnecessarily and has made few enemies proves him a man of diplo macy To help Mr Roosevelt in the preparation of his 30000 word mes sages not to mention the voluminous state papers and correspondence of every description Incident to the daily routine at the White Ilouse or the in terviews and statements given out to the numerous press correspondents at the capital requires no small amount of executive ability There has been talk recently to the effect that Mr Loeb would leave Mr Roosevelts serv ice before long in order to take up duties as head of a Washington trac tion corporation There has also been gossip about the probability of his being promoted to the cabinet the next time a vacancy occurs Mr Loeb draws the comparatively modest sum of o000 a year as secre tary to the president It lias been said that he might now be receiving 23000 a year instead of 5000 if lie were do ing the same work for a corporation People Mentioned In the Disptelhes - i so called THE newspap er magnate Cyr il Arthur Pearson who has been nego tiating for control of the London Times was once described by Joseph Chamber lain as the great est hustler I ever knew outside of America He re sembles President strenuousness aud marvelous capacity for work To most men the editing and publishing of one newspaper or magazine would yeein a task of sufficient magnitude but Mi- Pearson is never satisfied unless he has a big string of publications to look after When it was rumored one tine that he was about to start a newbja per in Xew York Mr Pearson was asked his ideas about American news papers and replied I am not competent to criticise them but front my standpoint I think they invade the privacy of the home too much aad the rights of private citi zens I admire the enterprise of the American publisher but I do not admire the contents of his news paper It has seemed to me that too much prominence is given in your pa pers to trivial matters As to becoming an American jouru ist himself Mr Pearson added Heaven forbid I dont want lo be in American journalism I prefer to live a little while Im alive and nol work twenty live hours a day trying t cater to any public however many millions there may be in it Journal Ism is too strenuous in America for an editor who wants to edit and enjoy life at the same time Mr Pearson is a son of a clergyman and only forty two years old a gradu ate of Winchester college and the re puted owner of a score of daily week ly and monthly publications including the London Standard for which he is said to have paid 3500000 Irving B Dudley who figured promi nently in the doings at Rio de Janeiro on the arrival of Admiral Evans fleet at that port was appointed ambassador to Brazil to succeed Lloyd Griscom that he is doing fo Jr Roosevelt anrt the nation for he lb a sort of deputy president Mr Roosevelt himself Is a tremendous worker But he could hardly accomplish what lie does were he not seconded in his efforts by a man who is able to be his second self who Is able lilce himself to lead a strenu ous life to stand ns a buffer between the chief executive and a thousand and one persons and things pressing upon him and in danger of leaving him no time or energy for his most impor tant duties Secretary Loeb Is at his work so early and so late that he does not have much time for exercise yet he keepi up to the mark physically and at forty one is a good specimen of robust man hood Ills favorite method of getting air and exercise Is horseback riding in which he indulges as often as he can Thoi gh he calls himself only a park rider lie can do a few tricks in that line as well as the president When he was making preparations for his first trip with Mr Roosevelt on a hunting expedition he heard the guides plaining to give him for a mount a horse that in trotting would have shak en one of the pyramids from its foun dations But Loeb never gave the nag a chance to trot lie loped all the way to the presidents camp and all the way back again and the guides had to ILIilAM LOEB JR lope too This programme was re peated day after day until the guides were so sore they could hardly walk One of them went to the secretary and said We picked you for a tenderfoot but you aint none Were the tenderfeet and if youll just ride this other boss and let him trot well be much obliged Loeb sticks closer to his chief than a brother Vacations for him are few and far between When he married the charming Miss Katherine Dorr of Albany the president could spare him less than a week for his wedding trip After he brought his bride to Wash ington he tried on three successive evenings to take her to the theater to see a play they both desired especially to witness Each time an emergency called him back to the White House before he reached the theater door Yet when asked awhile ago how he liked his office the secretary promptly replied Best of anything I ever did Wouldnt trade it for any job under the government whjn the latter was made our first am bassador to Japan Mr Dudley is popular with Latin Americans and is making a most creditable record at the capital of the largest of the South American republics When the officers of the American fleet were received by the Brazilian president Dr Penna thoy drove after the functions at the Brazilian White House to the home of Mr Dudley where a superb banquet was given The house and grounds were illuminated by Venetian lan terns and colored electric lights Within the salons were ablaze with graceful illumina tions and gorgeous with the coloring of quantities of flowers The tables were laid in two of the salons and were united by an arch of flowers Ambassador Dud- IRVIXO B DUDLEY ley m fln adaress said It is for me a great and deep sat isfaction to call your attention to the warm welcome of the Brazilian govern ment and the good people of this city have prepared for the fleet I am con fident that our people at home are keenly appreciative of the courtesy and honors being extended to you at this Vme by a friend of long standing rhe friend who has stood the test the United States of Brazil Turning to his Brazilian guests Am bassador Dudley said Permit me gentlemen to thank you sincerely for the welcome you have ex tended our fleot aud at the same time I have the honor and the pleasure of proposing the health of his excellency your illustrious president Dr Penna and that your great and noble nation continue long in the path of peace and prosperity The Finishing Touch While the organ grinder ate the thick ly buttered slice of bread on the back porch the summer resident who had provided the repast amused herself by trying to turn the crank of the organ steadily It must be quite difficult to turn the crank in such excellent time as you do she said at last No hard if you no hava da monk replied the organ grinder with a mel ancholy smile Turna da crank keepa da time and watcha da monk dat taka da arteest Youths Companion mmwrwiw wwwpfwwMiwwm mmjj wlj AN ODD CANDLESTICK With a Curious Reach of the Long Arm of Coincidence Historical students when called upon to criticise relations of events especial ly thosi that seem in themselves un likely that are recorded to have hap pened In the lives of persons whose careers are separated by a long period of time when the said events have a very striking similarity between them are wont to regard the first narrative as the prototype and the latter as a case of transference Sometimes this may be the correct view to take but It is commonly a dangerous proceeding to insist upon An example has oc curred to me which illustrates this At East Butterwick a village on the banks of the Trent there lived In the middle of the nineteenth century a shopkeeper named Marshall lie was a general dealer supplying nearly all the wants of his neighbors Above this mans shop and adjoining out houses was a long chamber open to the roof in which he kept such stores as he had not room for in his somewhat small shop Among other things this room contained a mangle which was at the service of such of the women of the town as made him a small pay ment One winter evening several women were engaged in mangling when one of them knocked down their solitary candlestick and being probably of earthenware It was broken Work for the night was nearly over It did not seem worth while to fetch another so one of the women took the still burning candle happily it was not a very short one and stuck it into some black dusty looking stuff which she had noticed in a barrel standing near Soon however one of these good dames had occasion to descend into the shop and encountering Marshall there naturally began to apologize for the candlestick having suffered We may conceive what was the shop keepers horror when he heard what was the substitute that had been found for he knew at once that the caudle was standing in a cask of gunpowder He rushed upstairs and was just in j time He made a cup with his two j hands as he said so that no sparks I could get to the powder and drew the candle calmly out without uttering a sound His words afterward when all danger was over were I have been told of a kind not uncommonly heard on board of keels and coal barges on our rivers but such as are discouraged elsewhere In the year 1SG1 The Depositions From the Castle of York In the Seven teenth Century was published by the Surtees society In a note in ftils work by its editor Canon Raiue the follow ing passage occurs Tb2 parallelism between the two narratives as to the way the candle was removed from dan ger is very striking Newcastle had a very narrow escape about 1GS4 An apprentice going up with a candle into a loft which con tained many barrels of gunpowder and much combustible material thought lessly stuck the candle into a barrel of which the head had been knocked off to serve for a candlestick He saw the danger and fled A laborer ran into the loft and joining both his hands to gether drew the candle softly up be tween his middlemost fingers so that if any snuff had dropped it must have fallen into the hollow of the mans hand London Notes and Queries The Charm cf the Orient Rich and poor wear the plaited frock coat of somber hues the absence of a collar producing a slovenly appear ance while the snow turban of the Arab and the red fez of the Turk are replaced by the black lambskin kolah and the brown felt skullcap of the peasant You ask why the carpenter should draw his plane toward him why the horse is backed into his stall or the boat dragged sternforemost on the beach You notice the footnote at the top of the page and that your morning egg is invariably served with its small end uppermost But not cer tainly in such trivial matters dees the charm of the east reside We are near er an explanation when we acknowl edge the release from care and artifi cial conventions which accompanies a relapse to the conditions of a freer and more primitive life To enjoy an ease even luxury of life we could not af ford at home to have a servant for ev ery task to ride in Bombay or Teheran when we would walk if in Piccadilly to be free from the burdens of a civi lization which has created civic re sponsibilities and duties to one fel low iuen to have no Yoin Mc s Christian association to support lire- mans ball to patronize to h able play thy ro of self iuuucice to hearts content an- he in tti a lille kin in these thiurs iy lies the secret of thir ci Atnie Giriccns r n ciizzr Many f fhinp bHee Iirt when all other vv f fi tl tcrtli is at hw g p brinT i crMi i - 1 - who- t0 r tin- tl i 1 i pay fa uW p ice ft r L root A rent to ivi a a commodity must fx i fie mountains of Kirin or unei to have come from thee It t lo bi furcated so 3 to to jmblc iucli as possible the humrn fai n Vo transparent Cry and flinty Cf corrse the larger the iret the belie- anl -5 it is sold by weight ii Is not very rncom mon for a good rnecimen to biing as much as 100 an ounce The value for such a root is in its shape its texture the manner in which it has been cured and the region whence it came But it must be borne in mind that out of a great quantity of roots only a very few of the kind described can be obtained so that the average price of ginseng Is even greatly less than 100 per pound A Ed ear Hawkins Phone Hlnck JM HP11 HP 1 H n H Evans Phono Muck 2SC HAWKINS EVANS Contractors and Builders Phm draw n ami f urn ifllifd on iip lic lln 1212m McCook Xfitmsku Ciiod tzzrszzzzT r7i A BUCKBEES SCED3 SUCCEED 1 SPECIAL OFFER MsR o to bntld New Ilulnni A trial WUl make you our permanent customer Prize Collection 11 the finest Tnralp 7 aplenuil Onion 8 oent yarlo Uea 10 BpriDnflowrlic Iiuib c4 varieties In all GUARANTEED TO FLKAME Iffife JPzdyj McpMpnJM3 Paper - SEND 10 CENTS to eortr poUg and pcilnj and recti thin valuable collection ot Beeus poxtpalu tcfether nllh raj big inairncuvo ucanuiui seea ana llnnt jioou L mui au aoout us licti vatiouci oi sxtat r laou aic H W Buckbee bW WoWL t Jan i iww i nit n AS hM i wW If i T- I r n VTrt r i 2- rix If Vt ivv r tH FRIEND TO FRIEND The personal recommendations of peo ple who have been cured of coughs and colds by Chamberlain s Cough Remedj have done more than all else to make it a staple article of trade aid commerce ovea large part of the civilized world KEEP YOUR MONEY CIRCULATING When j on keep your money in your pocket or hide it around your home you are doiim just that much to retard the industrial growth of our commun ity this is a detriment to you as well as others When you keep your money in the bank it is safe yet where it can bo loaned to thoe who will use it for in creasing and upbuilding ot the busi ness of the community this means an increased property value in both town an country If you want to be one of those who help build up and improve our town and surrounding country come in and start an account with us The amount of your deposit is not so material as the fact of making a start in the right direction Safety Deposit Boxes i Per Year THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK McCook Nebraska J vi i i February Specials Winter Tours To the south and Gulf resorts un til April 30th Homeseekers Rates 1st and 3rd Tuesdays to Colorado Big Horn Basin Montana and Northwest One Way Colonist March and April to Montana Washington Oregon California and Utah To Farm Renters Write D Clem Deaver Landseek ers Information Bureau Omaha for list of farms to rent in Big Horn BasiD Do it now they are going fast Business Openings We have a list of excellent busi ness chances in new growing towns on Burlington extecsions gpt established early ahead of the coming population Write the undersigned R E FOE icket Agent McCook Neb L W WAKELEY G P A Omaha Neb