CITY LODGE DIRECTORY A V A A H McCook LodRo No 135 A F fe A M meets ovory first nnd third Tuoxduy of the month nt 80 pm In Masonic hall ClIAULES L FAnNESIOCK W M Los Cone Hoc n s m Occonoxoo Coancll No 10 R fcS M moots on the last Saturday of each month at 800 p ra a Masonic hall Ralph A Haodkuo T I M Sylvesteh Cobdial Soc E A M KIuk Cyrus Chapter No 35 R A M moots every first and third Thursday of each month at 80 p in in Musouic hall Justin A Wilcox II P Clinton B Sawtbu Sac KNianTfl templae St John Commandory No 16 K T moots on tho second Thursday of ouch month at 800 p m in Masonic hull Emerson Hanson E C Samuel S GAnvET Hoc EASTERN 8TAE Euroka Chapter No 88 O E S moots tho socond and fourth Friday of each mouth at 80 p in in Masonic hall Mus Saeah E Kay W M F M KlMMELL SOC MODEUN WOODMEN Noblo Camp No 063 M W A moots every second and fourth Thursday of euch month at 830 ii m in Ganschows hall Pay ussossmonts at Whito House Grocory J M Smith Clork S E Howell V C BOTAL NEIGHBORS Noblo Camp No 862 R N A moots ovory socond and fourth Thursday of each month at 230 p m in Ganschows hall Mus Maky Walkee Oracle Mes Augusta Anton Hoc w o w Moots second and fourth Thursdays at 8 oclock in Diamonds hall Ciias F Maekwad C C W C Woyek Clork workmen McCook LodRe No 01 AOUW moots every Monday at 800 p m in Diamonds hall C H Ghat Roc Wm Wooton M W I M Smith Financier DEOEEEOF HONOR McCook Lodgo No 3 D of H moots ovory second and forth Fridays of each month at 80 p ra in Ganschows hall Mrs Laura Osburn C of H Mrs MatieG Welles Roc locomotive engineers McCook Division No 023 H of L E moots every second and fourth Saturday of each month Ht 230 in Morris hull Walter Stokes C E W D Hurnett F A E LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN AND ENGINEMEN McCook Lodge No 599 B of L F fe E meets every Saturduy at 730 p m in Gans chows hall I D Pennington M C H Husted Soc RAILWAY CONDUCTORS Harvey Division No 95 O R C meets the second and fourth Wednesday nights of each month at 80 p m in Morris hall at 301 Main Avenue A G King C Con M O McClcee Sec railway trainmen C W Bronson Lodgo No 4S7 B of R T meats firnt and third Sundays at 230 p m and second and fourth Fridays at 730 p m each month in Morris hall Neal Beelee M R J Moore Soc RAILWAY CARMEN T nnnn T r1 rrn Vn iSfi T R- of A meets on the first and third Thursdays of each month in Diamonds hall a67SJ0 pm John Hunt C C N Y Franklin Rec Soc MACHINISTS Red Willow Lodge No 5S7 I A of M meets every second and fourtlrTuesdtty of tho month at 80 p in in Ganschow hall D O Hewitt Pres W H Anderson Rec Sec BOILERMAKERS McCook Lodgo 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 Lodgo No 42 K of P meets every Wednesday at 80 p m in Masonic hall M Lawritson C C J N Gaarde K R S odd fellows McCook Lodge No 137 1 0 0 F meets every Monday at 80 p m in Ganschows hall W H ACKERMAN N G W A Middleton Sec EAGLES McCook Aerie No 1514 F OE meets the second and fourth Fridays of each month at 80 pm in Diamonds hall Social meetings on tho first and third Fridays R S Light Vt Pres G C Heckman W Sec KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS McCook Council No 1126 K of C meets the first and third Tuesdays of each month at 80 p m in Diamonds hall G R Gale F Sec Frank Real G K DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA Court Granada No 77 meets on the first and and third Tuesdays of each month at 8 P m in the Morris hall Anna Hannan G R Josephine Mullen 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 Mrs W B Mills Commander Harriet E Willetts R K g a r J K Barnes Post No 207 G A R meets on the first Saturday of each month at 230 pm Ganschows hall J M Henderson Cmndr J H Yaegee Adjt BELIEF CORPS McCook Corps No 9S W R C meets every second and fourth Saturday of each month at 2 30 p in in Ganschow hall Adella McClain Pros Susie Yandeehoof Sec L OF G A R McCook Circle No 33 L of G A R meets on tho first and third Fridays of each month at 230 p m in Diamonds hall Jessie Waite Pres Mattie KNiprrE Sec p e o Chapter X P E O meets the second and fourth Saturdays of each monia at 230 p m at the homes of the various members Mrs G H Thomas Pros Mrs C H Meeker Cor Sec Tribune Is All Printed in McCook You will find local or county news of interest on each of tho eight pages of this paper every week It is all printed at home No patent print Read all NOTICE OF SUIT James C Hammond Lilly N Hammond Ada A Hamrnoud Mary E Button Roy Dut ton Josephine M Hammond and Arden H Purvis defendants will take notice that on the 21st day of October A D 1D0S Milton H Hammond plaintiff filed a ietition in the district court of Red illow County Nebraska the object and prayer or which are to obtain a decree or judgment con firming the title to the undivided one sixth in terest each of the plaintiff and the defen dant James C Hammond Ada A Hammond Joephino M Hammond Mary E Dntton and Arden H Purvis under the will of James M Hammond deceased in and to the Southeast miarter of Section 11 Township Two 2 North of Range Thirty S0Red Willow County Nebraska and for a partition of said real estate according to the respective rights of nid parties or if the same cannot be equit ably divided that said prmes be sold and tho proceeds thereof divided between tho parties according to their respective rights You are required to answer said petition on or before Monday November SO 1903 Dated this 21st day of October A D 1903 Milton H Hammond Plaintiff By E Kelley His Attorney WHAT COLORS TELL Ths Way the Spectroscope Reads the Sun and Stars When one lights n common sulphur match in the dark It Is worth while to notice what happens First Its phos phorus gives out faint yellow rays and almost at the same time the sul phur begins to burn with bluish beams As yet the flame yields little light In a moment or two the wood of the match takes fire and then a stream of clear white light pours forth Each of the materials of the match Its phosphorus sulphur and wood has shone in burning with a color of its own In a street lighted by electricity and gas the eye detects at once the dif ference between the white rays of the one and the yellow beams of the other If nitrate of strontia is set on fire we have a spleudid red flame Filings of copper burn with a glow of greenish blue and a line pure blue is had when filings of zinc are ignited These and other such substances furnish the maker of fireworks with his materials Itockets ronmu candles and bombs all derive their beauty from the spe cial tiuts which attend the combustion of their ingredients And any one who has once seen the colors peculiar to common salt iron or antimonj as they trace themselves on the evening sky will nlwnjs know what is aflame when he sees those colors again Sir John Herschel was the first to understand that colors of this kind tell a wonderful story lie will knew how the stars varied in tint that Al debaran Mas ruddy Arcturus yellow and Sirius the most glorious of all white Might not the colors of a body aflame whether on earth or in the sky really be telling us of what that body was composed His suggestion was taken up and Its fruit Is that marvel of ingenuity the spectroscope One of Its principal parts is a prism employed to break up the hues These hues which are di vided by many dark lines make known to us that the sun and stars are built of such materials as compose our own globe Yet more they tell us what kind of atmosphere surrounds them and most astonishing of all give us the rate at which a remote star is moving toward or from the tiny orb we inhabit New York Herald NEW YORK WAITERS They Spoiled the Appetite of the Transplanted Citizen These New York waiters have got on my nerves said a transplanted citizen from a smaller town Dining in the magnificent hotels and restau rants would be a joy if some one would kindly remove the waiters while you ate I can think of nothing but the big black buzzards that hover over your head in Florida There are so many waiters standing around all in black and they look so big and get their faces or their hands so close to you and your dinner that you feel like throwing the china at them When your waiter has disappeared a smaller edition keeps right after you filling your glass removing dishes giv ing you more butter and if you look away from him the head waiter has his eye on you The most maddening thing of all to me is the way the waiter orders your dinner for you One took me in hand the other night and I let him have his way just to see what he would do to me I hate fish but he averred that fish was the best thing I could eat and one particular dish was the chefs mas terpiece He brought it and ye gods it was fish all greasy with a dope made of cheese and mushrooms that about finished me but fortunately he only let me take two bites when he whisked my plate away and set down a salad that had several kinds of fruit laced to lettuce leaves with strips of red and green peppers and French dress ing over that I barely looked at that when he took it away in triumph and gave me an ice cream thick with chest nuts and fruits- Now I dine on rare roast beef plain lettuce and never take dessert so you see how near he came to suiting me Come again sir said he Not if Im conscious said I New York Times Blue Drinks Champagne is golden said a bar tender beer is amber claret is red cream of mint is green whisky is brown punches are white but you will never never find a drink that is blue Doesnt the thought of a blue drink seem unpleasant to you Blue drinks could be easily made i but the public would have none of them Nothing blue would go down j with the public Why is this aversion to blue so general Many reasons have been advanced but none of them is good One is that blue being the color of poison bottles incites distaste and J horror New York Tress j Even the Hash Embarrassed in the fashionable res taurant by the menus written in French the Wall street man of busi ness exclaimed Hang these froids entremeuts and hors doeuvres Bring me a plate of good plain hash if youve got such a thing on the premises You mean an olla podrida sir said the waiter in a tone of dignified reproach And afterward Cincin nati Enquirer Perhaps He Was One pupil whispered to the nest Our teacher is a regular duffer The professor who had just put a question to the class thought the boy was framinjr a reply and said Come my lad speak up Perhaps you are righ f Pathfinder IRK OF THE BEAVER Feats Performed by This Indus trious Little Worker A CLEVER HOUSE BUILDER He Is Capable of Constructing a Dwell ing as Large Though Not So High as a Small Haystack and He Can Cut Down Big Trees With His Teeth Almost every one knows something about the beaver and that It builds dams and houses to dwell in but very few people have seen beavers in their wild state It Is also a fact that the race of industrious little workers Is rapidly disappearing Iii the older dis tricts beavers generally live In the banks of the streams they Inhabit and the sight of a beaver house is uncom mon Where beavers do build houses says Forest and Stream the structures dif fer greatly in size shape and location Some are as large though of course less high than a small haystack oth ers are hardly more than six feet through at the base They may stand either wholly on land or partly in the water and partly on the bank or whol ly in the water They are never placed in very deep water for a base must be built for the house to stand on reaching up to the surface since the chamber inhabited by the occupants must be dry The shape of those houses on the shore approaches the conical Those in the water are more irregular some times only rounded at others long and rather flat on top Within each house and connected with the water by a concealed passage through which the beavers pass to and fro is the chamber which is the ani mals dwelling place It is large enough to contain seven or eight of them and high enough so that a beaver can conveniently sit up on his haunches It is warm dry and clean for the beaver is extremely neat in nil his habits The food of the beaver consists chiefly of the green bark of twigs and 3ouug limbs of various trees Cotton wood bark is preferred then comes willow then alder but the bark of almost any tree may be eaten I have known them to eat pine and wbite cedar The beaver often cuts down trees of very considerable size to get at the smaller limbs which they eat I have seen cottonwoods twenty inches in diameter so cut and once on Vancouver island I found a cedar two and one half feet through which they had gnawed down The work of cutting down a large tree is done by a single animal I have seen the beaver engaged in the operation which is as follows The beaver sits up on his haunches facing the tree and with its fore paws rest ing against it With its head turned on one side he cuts a groove above and then one below and bites out the chin taking it off in almost the same way an axmau would He thus saves himself the trouble of gnawing nil the wood up into fine cuttings When the tree is felled the whole community attack and cut up the tender limbs carrying them away to the cache Unlike many of our gnawing ani mals the beaver does not sleep through the winter He remains active often venturing abroad during the whole of the cold weather He must therefore have food and a large part of the summer and autumn is devoted to se curing this food and depositing it in caches This food consists of the limbs and twigs of the trees most pre ferred by the beaver They are cut from one and a half to three feet long stripped of their leaves and smaller twigs carried to the water and floated to the cache where they are sunk And here comes a very curious point These sticks are floated to the cache and are sunk by the beaver to the bot tom of the water where they remain without any apparent anchorage They are not stuck in the mud of the bot tom or held down by weights If you lift one to the surface it will float but you may move it about on the bottom without its rising I have myself tried this with sticks from which the bark has been eaten but have never done so with the green impeded limbs before the beavers had taken them into their houses This matter to me is a very mysterious one and I have never been able to get any hint as to how these sticks were sunk All through the winter the beavers visit these caches carry the sticks to their houses where they eat off the bark returning the bare sticks to the water Sometimes it may happen that for some reason or other the cache may not contain enough to last the whole winter In this case the beavers if possible get on land through some air hole or piece of open water and then forage among the timber Occasional ly a combination of scarcity and severe weather may oblige the colony to emi grate during the winter to some more favorable spot Courting Trouble Look here said the official therell be trouble if your wife disregards us when we persistently tell her she must not pick the flowers Then replied Mr H Peck for it was no other why ever do vou Be prepared to answer for the sin gle talent committed to your charge and take up thought for tbe rest St Bernard of Chairvaux IflDIAWOLA Say What do thick of that snow Mr and Mrs Whitmoro of Illinois are here visiting their eon Horry The little daughter of i Mr and Mrs Roy Noilson died Fri day and was buried Saturday Mr and Mrs Dr Brown of Bartley visited with Indianola friends Sunday Mike OReilly returned homo Sunday from Oklahoma where ho has been visiting with homefolke Two of the upper rooms in the high school building were nicely papered this week Pearl Lyman of Bartley was an In dianola visitor Sunday John Rollins of Brush Colorado visited with homefolks Monday Mrs Fletcher of Iowa arrived Mon day night to visit awhile with her daughter Mrs E G Caine iohn Balding of- Edison visited with the Crocker family Sunday Cnlvin Rollins spent Sunday in In dianola John Gillen went to Geneva Monday to shuck corn W A McCool spont Sunday on his farm north of town Charles Teeters went to Superior Monday night on business Sam Minniear of Danbury visited friends in Indianola Sunday Y Stothard has opened up a new restuarant in the A H Bell building Maude Calhoun of Cambridge visited her parents Mrand Mrs Allen Sunday MrsFW Deffer of Kansas City is here visiting her parents Mr and Mrs J S Phillips The first number on the lecture course Brush the Magician given at Shorts opera house Tuosday night was pro nounced by all present to be very fine DANBURY Mrs G B Morgan who has been visit ing in Iowa for the past month return ed home Friday J L Sargent and C W Dow of In dianola were business visitors Friday W H Eifert of Marion was in town a short time Saturday Several citizens from Danbury and vicinity attended the corner stone laying of the new Masonic temple theatre at McCook Saturday Sam and Albert Dolph who have been visiting in Kansas City and Lin coln arrived home Saturday Rue Thomas who has been working in the sand hill country for the past two months arrived home Saturday Mrs Earl Peacock who has been visiting with her mother returned to Wilsonvile Monday Beth and Madeline McDonald who have been visiting with the homefolks on a weeks vacation returned to Beaver City to take up their studies in the high school Henry Rittenhouse who has been here the past week returned to his home at Wichita Kansas Tuesday S E Ralsten of Lebanon was up on telephone business Tuesday D H Rittenhouse died at his brother-in-laws J L Sims Saturday morning W A Minniear went to Omaha on business Saturdav night BOX ELDER Mrs J K Gordon and the girls were out to the farm latter part of the week Mrs J L Campbell and daughters Miss Nellie and Mrs Elmer Shepherd visited Mrs Charles Wilson last Fri day Mrs G A Shields and mother Mrs Martha Johnson visited Mrs J C Ball last Saturday Rev Rubottom is attending the Min isterial associatian at Atlanta this week Mr and Mrs James Whitcomb of Friend are visiting relatives in this vicinity The people of Garden Prairie have invitations out for a reception to be given Rev and Mrs Rubottom Friday evening of this week After service last Sunday Mr and Mrs F G Lytle visited a S C Kings Mr and Mr3 G A Shields at G H Harrisons J A Modrell and family at I H Harrisons and Mrs Martha Johnson with Mrs T M Campbell There is to be an oyster supper at J A Modrells Thursday evening of this week The proceeds will be used for the church and Sunday school RED WILLOW Horace Taylor has been hauling sand for the foundation to his barn Lucy Miller is staying with her sister Mrs Junker helping to take care of that new niece which the stork brought last week Mrs Smith returned on Monday from her visit to Valparaiso Mr and Mrs Cox and Evangelist Greg took dinner at Owens Longneck ers on Wednesday Drs Mackechenie and Eakin were at Charles Rincks on Saturday morning to perform an operation on Mrs Rinck who has been in poor health for a long time Mr Sexson has a brother visiting him 1 T- 11 1 1 mJT iiihi iiTnn purTir iiMMW MM jMirrnn BARTLEY Miss Pearl Lyman was an over-Sunday visitor at the homo of Elmer Thomp son in Indianola Several from hero attended tho exer cises of laying the corner stono of tbe Masonio temple in McCook and wero highly pleased with tho proceedings Wednesday evening at 7 oclock Miss Loavy Williams and R S Durbin wero united in marriage at the homo of the brides parents Mr and Mrs W D Williams Rev Hageman officiating They received many beautiful and use ful presents They are among the best of Bartleys young people and all wish them a pleasant furture Ira Sheets drove up to Indianola Sun day afternoon taking Rev Wilson to his appointment with theM E church at Indianola where he held quarterly meeting services Dr and Mrs Brown attended church at Indianola Sunday and wero tho guests of Mr and Mrs Elmer Thompson Mr and Mrs John Ritchie visited Sunday with Mr and Mrs R R Hodg kin Mrs E R Moon received the sad news of tho death of her mother Mrs Ben Libbitt of Maywood Excavation is being made for a fur nace and addition to tho Christian church The Cambridge orchestra will be at the opera house here Thanksgiving evening Miss Katie Williams is confined to her room with diphtheria Marion Rittenberg and wife of In dianola wero down to attend tbe wedding R F D N01 Miss Hattie Mueller is just back from a visit in Eastern Nebraska Robert Johnstons baby daughter has been sick but is improving Alfred Kennedy and wife are over from Beaver City visiting his parents here Dora Wagner and Edward Bey were married in the German Lutheran church Monday morning RevBruegge mann of McCook performing the cere mony A big wedding dinner followed and the event was fittingly celebrated thereafter Peter Karthouser has been visiting Ernest Neumann and family in College view Frank Dudek and family Harvey Phillips and family and tho Misses Johnson were gue3ts Sunday last at the home of Joseph Dudek W N Rogers was in Cambridge Mon day on stock business Ed Bower and wife were guests of Frank Dudek and wife Wednesday night G E Evertson was called up to the neighborhood of Kimball first of the week by news that his son Frank who has been suffering with walking ty phoid fever has become mentally un balanced Mrs Oscar Burd and daughter Misb Mable and Miss Edith Lyon was visiting Mrs J I Lee and Mrs E E Rogers latter part of the week returning to their home in Trenton on 13 Sunday Mrs J I Lee was called to Haigler last week by the serious illness of her sister Mrs McDougal GRANT John H Wesch has sold a lot of feed to L A Salada at Traer Kansas and is delivering same this week Simon Schreiber and August Wesch went to McCook on business Tuesday Mr and Mrs Jacob Wesch were visit ors at P H Bluncks Sunday John Hoffman is picking corn for Henry Wesch over in Kansas Harve Rowland is picking corn on the Brinegar place getting an ear occas ionally after carefully searching Some of the household goods have been missing lately at Edwin Towles While he was out husking corn a party broke into his house to phone Mr Towle is investigating CULEMAN The stork called on Mr and Mrs Asa Schlagel Friday and left a ten pound girl Grace Strawder is staying at her brothers Oliver Strawder this week There was a fine attendance at Zion Hill Sunday There will be a pound social at the church Friday evening Nov 13 Every ons invited Ernest Nelson and Neal Irwin left in a wagon Tuesday evening for their home near Blue Hill Mrs Nelson and the children left the same evening on the train Colds are all the rage since the snow PLEASANr RIDGE Miss Artie Beebe and Ernest Hamil ton were married in McCook one day last week We wish them a long and happy married life Mrs M E Kimberling and son Ray returned Sunday from visiting rela tives in Indianola Tbe folks on route one out of Culbert son are glad to know that the route will continue a daily until January 1st 1909 Winter wheat looks real good A large tiling will be put in the can yon west of Jacob Betzs place tm i - tts t NOTICE OF HEARING OF WILL Tho Stute of Nebraska Red Willow County To nil perhoiis Interested in tho cstuto of Joseph Dudok decensud Whenms Frank Dud ok nnd Joseph Dudok have Hod in my oillcy tin Instru ment purporting to be tho Inst will nnd tistti inont of Joseph Dudok Into of Red Willow county Nubrnskn dCLfihud nnd tlm tmd Frnnk Dudok mid Joseph Dudek htivo filed their Peti tion therein prnyim to hnvo the sumo ndmfttod to probate nnd for the ismiin of lutter i tosta inentnry which will relates to both real and personal estate I hnvo therefore nppotntcd the fifth dny of December 1HW tit nine oclock in the forenoon nt the county court room in said county ns tho time nnd nlnco for heurinirsuid will at which time nud plnco you nnd all concerned may np Ienr nnd contest tho allowing of the Mime You are further notified that on Monday the thirtieth dny of November 1103 said propon ents will tnko the dciositious of II J Mc Crncken Abraham Ilowurth Jr nnd Frank Hurnett sundry witnesses to be iihmI as evi dence on said henriiiK at the office of A J Mitchell in tho city of Littleton county of Arapahoo nnd stuto of Colorado ImHwooii tho hours of nine n in nnd six p in of said dny nnd tho taking of said detositiotiH will bo ad journed from day to day between the same hours until they are completed It is further ordered that said petitioners tivo notice to nil interested in said estate of tho pendency of said petition nnd tho time nud place set for the hearing of the same by caus ing a copy of this order to 1k published in tho McCook Tribune a newspnper nrinted and nub lished in said county of lied illow for throe weeks successively previous to tho dny set for the hearing In witness whereof 1 hnvo hereunto sot my linnd nnd ollicial seal this 12th day of Novem ber 1J08 J C MooitK seal County Judge Morlun Ritchie it WolIT Attorneys for tioners NOTICE TO CREDITORS In tho County Court within and for Red Willow County Nebraska In tho matter of the Estate of Elizn M Hamilton Deceased To tho Creditors of said estate You nro hereby notified that 1 will sit at the County Court room in McCook in snid County on tho 15th dny of May A sD 1109 at 1 oclock l M to receive and examine all claims against said estate with n view to their adjustment and allowance Tho time limited for the presentation of chiiuls iiKuiust said estate is six mouths from the Kith day of November VMS nnd tho time limited for tho payment of debts is one your from snid 13th duy of November lJOS Witness my baud and the seal of snid County Court this 2Uth day of October lJOS Seal J C Moore 10-23-1 County J udKO PUBLIC SALE Having decided to move out by Denver will sell at public auction on tho C 11 Boylo farm one half mile east und one half mile north of McCook on MONDAY NOVEMBER 16 1908 commencing at 11 oclock a m tho following described property 8 HEAD OF HORSES One black gelding 8 years old wt 1250 one bay gelding 5 years old wt 1250 one black gelding 7 years old wt 1100 good all purpose horse for driving riding and working one sorrel mare 11 years old wt 1100 in foal by imported black Percheron horse one bay yearling colt one bay gelding coming 4 years old wt 1100 one black mare 9 years old wt 1100 in foal by coach horie one gray mare 5 years old wt 900 One Duroc Jersey Gelt IMPLEMENTS ETC One newMoliuedibc with tonguotruck one 2 row disc cultivator ono new Halleck combination weeder and harrow 12 foot one lumber wagon one Osborn mower one Little Hoosier 1 horse wheat drill one rubber tired tip buggy one now hay rack one walking lister two sets work harness two 3 rod rolls slat corn cribbing one 20 rod roll American field hog fence ono small chicken house that can be transported anywhere also a number of small chicken coops a lot cedar posts a lot of 12 in 12 ft lumber ono walking plow one 4 section corn harrow one 1 hole corn shelter and numerous other articles FREE LUNCH AT NOON TERMS Sums of S10 and under cash on sum3 over 810 a credit of ten months will be given purchaser to give note drawing 8 per cent interest from date with approved security A P MORSE J II WODDKLL F A PesNELL Auctioneer Clerk J A a Bl SL 1 V eCm Hii I FRANK BEISTLE I ENGRAVER and ELECTROTYPER PfONtllM 1420 24 LAWREMCE DEKYEH COLO ft ft fc fc k Attention Farmers Make your corn crib of SLAT CRIBBING When through with the crib it makes a line fence Investigate This Barnett Lumber Co Phone 5