F f Just OneHalf the money you blow in foolishly if invested in a bank account would soon put you on easy street You owe yourself the protection a Savings Ac count will afford you If you are spending all you earn it is unfair to yourself and those who may bo dependent on you You have noticed the manner in which small amounts expended count up in a month a part of such expenditures saved will allow you to have an account at thi3 bank Start with a dollar have money in the bank The First National of McCook WBK By F M KIMMELL Largest Circulation in Red Willow Co Subscription 1 a Year in Advance If the Republican reactionaries do not regain the saddle in this country it will not be due to any lack of activity on their part and it will spell defeat for the party The Beaver City Times Tribune esti mates that 25000 went from that town alone last year to mail order houses Which is just 82499999 more than should have been sent The result in Lincoln dry by half thousand majority must be very satis factory to the temperance forceB of that city and of the state of Nebraska Love the Republican candidate for mayor wins by a narrow majority The volume of moral sentiment in the city of Omaha is perhaps adequately measured by the result of the last city election Tuesday of this week One James Dahlman who has been a hissing to decency and sobriety for years won the mayoralty by an overwhelming ma jority It is insisted by ThomaB Ashton of the Haigler and Wray banks that his First National bank will be duly estab lished as soon as details can be con cluded Benkelman now has but one bank the bank of Benkelman The second bank the Citizens State Bank will open for business May 15 By a decision of the circuit court of the United State3 at St Paul this week the State of Nebraska and the railroads each secure a partial victory The state railway commission under this decision may not initiate a schedule of rates on commodities embraced in the Aldrich maximum freight bill without the intervention of a complainant on the other hand the railroads are foiled in the effort to head off the order of the commission The net gain is the cut made by the legislature of 1907 namely the cut of fifteen per cent in grain rates The supreme court of the United States this week upheld the commod ities clause of the famous Hepburn bill which makes it unlawful for any railroad company to transport from any state to any other state or to any foreign country any article or commodity other than timber manufactured mined or produced by it or under its authority or which it may own in whole or in part or in which it may have any interest direct or indirect except such articles or commodities as may be necessary and intended for its use in the conduct of its business as a common carrier The decision of the court was unani mous and The Tribune thinks just and catholic The wrongs of the present system are too patent and pain ful to shippers in that section who have attempted to compete with coal com- panics especially in the line in which the coal companies have been interested and practically dictators COURT HOUSE -NEWS COUNTY COURT Licenses to marry issued by the coun ty judge since our last report Robert EKing 24 and Goldia May Hoover 20 both oPBartley Alfred M Randel 23 and Mrs Clara JA Cunningham 22 both of Indianola Con Yost 26 and Anna Lisse Brehm 19 both of McCook Makes Kidneys aad Blazer RIflht uiamMKiimtitimnfiniiwiw MOVEMENTS OF THE PEOPLE S R Smith was up from Indianola Tuesday ou legal business Douglas Wektz succeeds George Lecbleiter in McAdnms store Mips Alice Bkadhury visited her parents in Imperial part of last week Mus J AWilcox is attending grand lodge O E S in Lincoln this week W H Harmcun was in Omaha Mon day and Tuesday on business return ing home on Tuesday night Mrs Fred Bortfelt and little daughter went down to Rod Cloud last week on a visit to her folks Mrs Harry Bkale entertained n large company of lady friends Thurp day afternoon at a kensington Mrs C A Dixon of Lincoln spen Tuesday in the city on her way to Den ver on a visit to her sister there Mks Z L Kay went in to Lincoln Tuesday morning to attend the grand lodge meeting of the Eastern Star Mrs AC Wiehe is attending gram lodge Eastern Star in Lincoln part oi the week goiog down Tuesday morning Mrs Margaret West county sup of Hayes and her daughter Mrs Thot ONeill were guests of McCook friends last week Mr and Mrs George Clay of Canb precinct Chase county visited thei daughter here Mrs Benjamin Aske last week Mr Vina Wood departed Mondax for Iowa on a visit to ber aged fathei who is not in good health just now H is in his 89th year Dr O E Robinson of Danbury wjj in town Monday on legal business an incidentally to see the Beell Acto wrestling exhibition Mrs R E Counce and Mrs Willian Barker two Hayes Center friends c Mrs Charles Bailey have been hi guests since last week Captain and Mrs C H Barrett dt parted on laBt week Thursday for Rom berry Idaho where they will rema luring the summer Mrs Barrett has married daughter there Mr and Mrs James Campbell caroi up from Hastings end of this week I be guests in the C F Pade home for few days They will then go up to In perial to visit his brother A S Camj bell a few days George Lechleiter who has bet nm ployed in McAriams store for son1 time departed on Monday for Goodim Idaho where he will go into a lumb yaid with his brother Frank th representing a Salt Lake City compan in that business Mr and Mrs Charles Kwnw bave tender sympathy in the death of their new born baby girl Wednesday morning of last week The remains of the little one were interred in Longview cemetery on the afternoon of the same day The mother is recovering favor ably Mr and Mrs A C Ebert entertain ed a score of friends last Friday at a dinner of four courses Carnations were table floral decorations Hand painted place cards in marguerites for the ladies and apple blossoms for the gentlemen were attractive particulars while Happy Houligan Bu3ter Brown and other current humorists decided the couples for dinner Mrs J W Wimer arrived home Monday morning from Denver and re ports her son Nye who was injured at Brighton a suburb last week as pro gressing favorably He was attempt ing to board a suburban passenger train for the city and failed to note a switch lever along side the train He ran into the switch mechanism was knocked down and the wheels of the passenger car passed over one of his feet making amputation above the ankle necessary ADVERTISED LIST The following letters cards and pack ages remain uncalled for at the McCook postoffice May 7th 1909 letters Anderson Mr A G Dunn Mr E S McUride H Potter Wilber Snider Mrs Jane Wilbur F W Burchett Mr Sam Gordon Miss Cecil Hanson Mr A C Jones Mrs W L Miller Miss Edna2 Shevlin Mrs P J0 Burgwin Miss Maltila Evans Prof W F McDaniel Mr Cyrus Smith Mrs D W Trutson Mrs A cards ChadwicJc Mrs Joy Gordon Mrs Mallilla Johnson Charley Lehmeir Mr Ernest 2 Osten Mrs Katherine When calling for these please say they were advertised Mr Lon Cone P M Engraving and Embossing Your wants can be supplied at The Tribune in the line of engraving and embossing such as calling cards invi tations and announcements monogram correspondence paper etc Handsome samples of all on display Prices rea sonable Prompt service If interested come and inspect If you have headache and urinary troubles you should take Foleys Kid ney Remedy to strengthen and build up the kidneys so they will not properly as a serious kidney trouble may develop A McMillen Druggist Typewriter ribbons papers sale at The Tribune office etc for Madame a ia Mode Noxv la dresses tightly drawn Now in skirts full blown Now In gowns of whitest lawn Now of startling tone And everything shell dare If but fashions code Says this Is tho style to wear Madame a la Mode Golden hair or black or brown Pompadour or straight In a stack or hanging down Who can tell its fate What next fall will bring about No one can forebode Ah what should we do without Madame a la Mode La Touche Hancock in New Yort Press Charitable SI Summers Was it really the nig gu3t show on earth as they advertised in the country papers Wes Winters Waal makin allow ance for the leetleness of the tents an eonslderin the fewness of their animals an takln account of the small number of performers I reckon It was Iuck A W A I 5- Vt V A Quick Lunch Enter Set Napkin Wet Order Mush Gobble Rush Water Pie Ji 1 - ARVri B7V m Exit- Fly Joe Cone In Boston Herald- Answered Bobby Whats the simple life pa Father Doing your own work ray son Bobby And whats the strenuous life Father Doing some other fellows work Now run along and play Lip pincotts Magazine A Song of Finance Sing a song of finance A pocket full of chink Four and twenty lambkins Hover on the brink When the market opens The lambs begin to bleat Come ye kings of finance And share the dainty treat Judge The Arriving Hour In Edwins home there is a clock which strikes with a soft chime much like the ringing of a silver bell The other day he thoughtfully listened to its stroke then said solemnly Mani ma another hour is ringing to get in Womans Home Companion Widow Grimes Old Grimes is dead that good old man We neer shall see him more He used to wear an old gray coat All buttoned down before But Jlrs Grimes who still survives No longer wears the black But sports a gay and festive gown All buttoned down the back Cleveland Plain Dealer Mr ago r None can The Happy Family Scrappington Only two weeks paid for a new spring suit for you Mrs Scrappington Yes I did and you screeched as if you Puck were paying for a know you loudly as lawsuit Retort Pert If I should lend a ten to you And youd keep every cent That would be a lent sacrifice And also keeping lent Nay I would call it neither one Though you may think me dull If youd lend me a ten Id say It was a miracle Kansas City Times To Be Sent The Bride I want you to send me some coffee please The Grocer Yes maam Ground The Bride No third floor front Womans Home Companion Whats the Use be all he wants to be The man Who would be strong some fatal weak ness grapples I posed once asi a vegetarian Then found that I was eating wormy apples Cleveland Leader Uncle Allen If I was a doctor said Uncle Alien Sparks it would puzzle me to know whether I ought to thank the Lord or not when 1 prosper in business Chicago Tribune my And So May She Ever Shes given up candy and matinees And bridge and she will not dance But still from her pew with mischievous eyes She casteth that little glance New York Telegram Evasion Whats the plural of hippopota mus asked the grammarian You dont have to use any A hunter is lucky to see one of Washington Star plural em Both Out of Business Dan Cupid drew his tiny bow And aimed his fatal dart Now they are brothers in their woe She had a marble heart J J OConnell Killing Time She I heard you singing in your room this morning He Oh I sing a little to kill time She You have a good weapon Bos ton Transcript The Flowing Fountain A splendid poem flows from Doms fountain now and then But most of those in print like this Flow from a fountain pen Kansas City Times Painful Progress You dont seem to be getting along well groaned the victim In the chair No rejoined the dentist I have i evidently struck a snag Brownings i Magazine TIKSI81IGLISG The Way Uncle Sam Is Swindled Through the Mails WATCHES IN WEDDING CAKE A Scheme That Was Disclosed by a Gleeful Girl Who Cculd Not Hold Her Tongue Gloves That Came One at a Timo and Corsets In Sections Too few people think it a crime to swindle the customs For that reason many bright and brainy persons think hard how to get goods from abroad without paying toll to Uncle Sam As most of the successful operators in this line are women who have more time to think -bout such things than men it can he imagined that the cus toms ollieers hiive to he eternally alert to protect the government Tlt avenues through the steamship passenger route are pretty carefully guarded and as comparatively few people go abroad the great mass of dwellers in this protected land are de barred from sharing in the humorous little game of hide the diamond or smuggle the silk But there is an other avenue that is being used enthusi astically by the anti duty aggregation It is the United States maii With the immense volume of foreign mail delivered to this country it is manifestly impossible to open and ex amine every package that seems to contain newspapers or merely a bulky letter to see whether or not some duti able article is concealed therein So far as it Is possible however it Is done and the addressee has to go to the postoffice and pay duty on the amount at which the dutiable article is appraised The custom house experts at the postoffice have their hands full check mating the clever moves of those who are constantly devising new ways to disguise dutiable things as innocent looking parcels We used to pass cakes through without question said one of the ex aminers ft seemed loo had to lay hands on a Christmas pudding sent by relatives in England to some exile in this country It also disturbed the sen timental side of a customs olBcer to demolish a section of wedding cake that had been sent from the old home In Germany to Fritz in America So we let these sacred things pass through But one day we had an awakening One of the customs men heard that a neighbor had obtained a new watch from abroad It had come through duty free and the gleeful girl who was wearing it could not keep quiet about the clever way the post office had been deluded ft seems the watch had been baked right into the cake and had come through without discovery Now this forced us to take some step to prevent a repetition of such smartness and ever after that we held on to all cakes or puddings that came in packages through the mail A letter is sent to the person to whom the package is addressed and this person it is almost always a wo man has to come to the postofiice and cut the cake or slice the pudding right In front of the customs officer Do we catch a Tartar occasionally Well you may take it for granted that any one who would try this trick is a Tartar to begin with and so we dont get off without a scene when the cutting time comes A trick that fooled us for a time was the sending through the mail of one glove a trifle creased to give the idea that it was merely a worn glove that had been left in Kurope by a tour ist With the glove would come a let ter to that effect You went away without one of your gloves etc Of course we passed it through unsuspect ingly But we got so many of these that it began to look suspicious So we held on to one of them and by the next mail there came another glove from the same address to the same person The glove was the fellow to the other Then we got another left hand glove and later the right hand glove to match it The trick was sim ple and admirable in its simplicity Gloves were being sent through in quantities one at a time But the queerest trick we exposed the other day A woman was accumu lating a large stock of fancy orsets without troubling about the duty that should have been paid on thm The trick was to send half a corset through the mail We knew of no rue about paying duty on half a cornet It ap peared to us to be a mere remnant of the up to date womans attire and not important enough to consider as duti able So we passed the half corset along and thought no more of it But half corsets began to drop in with all too great frequency It looked as though corset remnants had suddenly attained considerable importance in some ones estimation So one of the men put it up to uis wne ana sue iouu yim thing less than a fraction of a second to juncture the scheme The half cor set was useless in itself but when the other half arrived there was a French corset ready for wearing We find fine silks done up in pack ages of herbs watches diamond rings and bracelets concealed in the leave of books in holes cut for the purpose and separate diamonds hidden away in bottles of transparent liquid where the gem Is scarcely visible No doubt many dutiable articles escape us but we are getting wiser every day to the tricks of the mail smugglers New York Tribune to the sun I Keep your face always shine and the shadows will fall be hind you H LIVE AND LET LIVE H Some people cant see straight but they do not have to see they can feel that we have as good lumber as money can buy and you hit the mark every time you let us figure your lumber bill If we do not sell the bill there is no harm done You can rest assured that you have bought your lumber right if you buy on a basis of our figures We do not get sore and chew the rag with anyono because we do not sell you your lumber We want to figure your bill every time you want a stick whether we sell it or not Drop in We have books with cuts of modern houses from S 100 up and take a pleasure in helpingjto arrange your home Stansberry Lumber Company fB II III HIIIMWI I I II 1 1 II Ml SrWEEST I iBgrHM VTBMiif if iT THE LEADING CL Mil Marc flEV MYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYTYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY l Jj and pW Hats in Latest Styles and Colorings andfthe Haircloth and Bulldog Caps - - A -4 RQZELL fBARGER - - O TIH IERS R 150 Value for 100 HYVYYYYYYYYYYYYYVYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY7YYYYYYX r 4 Auspices M W A Log Rolling Association -- - -- -- Benefit of July Log Rolling in McCook 4 - -4 66 THE PLAYERS CLUB IN ip Van Wink CAST OF SIXTEEN PLAYERS EIGHT CHILDREN COS TUMES by LIEBEN of OMAHA BEAUTIFUL LIGHTING AND STAGE EFFECTS -- le I Tuesday May 1 8 09 MENARDS OPERA HOUSE Prices 25 cents 35 cents and 50 cents KAAAAAAAAAAlllii 4 4 aMAAAAAAAJLAAjuAAiLULUUJLUJkAi A A n A V I HANKLire Bnrrnri n V t PRESIDENT A C EBERT Pdcuco JAS S DOYLE Vice President THE CITIZENS BANK OF McCOOK NEB m m - V Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 20000 t Y FRAHKUM B B DIRECTORS JAS S DOYLE A C EBERT 1 cr vA LV r ii rJ V ol i tJ i ti i I t ft A 4 W