M O- 5 Celebrities s Eugene V Debs Labor Leader and Socialist Mrs William T Stead Daniel C Gilman Sir Chentung Liang Cheng Miss Clara Clemens Adolphus Busch and lhe Earthquake EUGENE V DEHS fifteen years ago E -O UGENB V DEBS who was classed by Pres ident Roosevelt in the now historic Sherman letter as an undesirable cit izen along with Moycr and nay wood and E H DTarri rhnan Is labor lead er lecturer and bearer of the stand ard of socialism He is fifty two years of ago and came into prominence about as president of the then powerful American Railway un ion He lias twice been candidate for president on the Socialist ticket ne was once asked what would bo done with such captains of industry as Rockefeller Carnegie Ilavemeyer and the Goulds and Vanderbilts under a socialistic regime Their wealth will be gradually ab sorbed into the common ownership of products he replied We offer them a glorious field for their energy and genius A man like Mr Rockefeller could organize and direct the oil indus tries of the country for the benefit of the people He would live comfortably and I believe happily and would not have to lie awake at night racked with the responsibilities of too great wealth Mr Ilavemeyer could preside over the sugar making industries and see that they were managed prudently Mr Carnegie would be a great power in the building up of a co operative commonwealth We have no word of abuse for rich men A man who has many millions is the unhappy slave of his money Our co operative common wealth Avill relieve the millionaire as well as the involuntary tramp The wealth of the country and the machin ery for turning it into useful forms must be owned by the people in com mon When Andrew Carnegie invited the noted English editor and reformer William T Stead to visit America at his expense to attend the dedication of the Carnegie institute and the sessions of the national arbitration and peace congress he tola him to bring his wife along The ed itor decided to ac cept the steel mag nates invitation for his wife as well as for himself and Mrs Stead has expressed herself as greatly enjoying her stay among Americans Shewuj Miss Emma L Wilson and mar ried Mr Stead in 1873 Mr and Mrs Stead have had four sons and two daughters Two of their sons married American women William Miss Royce of Chicago and Alfred Miss Hussy of Indianapolis Mrs Stead has stood loyally by her eminent husband in all the strenuous episodes of his distin guished and useful career fSBmStw DANIEL C GILMAN MRS W T STEAD Dr Austin Flint the famous alienist who testified in the Thaw case said at the Century club in New York apropos of a will contest that had been tried last year The plaintiff lost and no wonder His case was as difficult a one as that of the young man who appeared un duly depressed after the death of hi rich aunt Why are you so sad an acquaint ance said to the young man You never appeared to care much for your aunt I didnt said the youth dolefully but I was the means of keeping her In an insane asylum the last five years of her life and now that she has left me all her money Ive got to go to court and prove that she was of sound mind When the noted actress Mabelle Gil man arrived in New York from Eu rope to become the bride of William E Corey head of the steel trust newspa per men were on Mie lookout for her relatives in order to interview them about the approaching nuptials It so happened that on the register of the hotel where the popular actress went on leaving the steamer they found the signature D C Gilman Baltimore One of the newspaper writers promptly looked up the owner of the signature who proved to be a digni fied looking man of middle age with impressive side whiskers Have you seen Mabelle today asked the reporter The stranger looked at his questioner in some wonderment No I have not seen Mabelle he replied tartly Do you approve of Mabelles mar riage another reporter asked Who is Mabelle asked the inter viewed guest evidently puzzled Why Mabelle Gilman the actress and fiancee of William Ellis Corey Isnt sha your daughter The scholarly man walked away In dignantly Thats Dr Gilman former president of Johns Hopkins and head of the Car- negle Institute an attache of the ho tel said The reporters hurried after Dr Gil man to apologize but failed to find him There has been a good deal to dis turb pleasant relations between Amer icans and Chinese since Sir Chentung Liang Cheng who is about to retire from the post of Chinese minister to the United States took up his resi dence at Washington The boycott of American goods resulting from resent ment at the way the Chinese exclusion law was enforced In this country created a situation full of difficulty and em barrassment for the diplomats of the two countries concerned but no serious quar rel came of it a fact considered much to the credit of the Chinese minister Illlli v SIU CIIENTUNO LIANG CUENG who Is quite American in his ideas owing in part to his having been educated as a young man at Amer ican institutions of learning He has been recalled in order that he may receive promotion from his govern ment for his valuable services as a diplomat Sir Chentung is to be ap pointed a member of the Chinese board of foreign affairs a body created after the suppression of the Boxer uprising His successor in tills country will be Liang Tun Yeng at present Chinese customs taotal at Tientsin Sir Chentung approves of many of the improvements in vogue in Amer ica but he has an aversion to automo biles For this he is indebted to an experience he had in California when he was on his way to make an ad dress at the state university In relat ing his adventure Sir Chentung said I noticed In front of me a long wet stretch of muddy street and without any warning the machine headed for the nearest lamp post I told the chauffeur to straighten his course and he just stuck his nose further over the wheel and I decided he was Intoxicat ed But do you know he was just as sober as he could be and he said the automobile skidded At any rate we smashed into the sidewalk The whole right side of my head was bruised and I had to get out and walk to the uni versity I never was very fond of automobiles and now that their little peculiarity of skidding nearly cost me my right eye I shall leave them strictly alone Adolphus Busch the multimillion aire St Louis brewer who with sev eral members of his family has started on a European trip hopes to benefit his health by the visit to the old world Mr Busch was In San Francisco at the time of the earthquake about a year ago and was thrown out of bed by the shaking the hotel in which he was stop ping received It was a shock to the rich brewer In more than one sense of the word and his health has suffered from it since Mr Busch was born In Mainz Ger many and came to this country at eighteen engaging in the brewing of beer and in time be coming connected with other lines of business also He is a generous patron of ADOLPHUS BUSCH anj Qf charita ble Institutions and was active In the work of interesting the business men of his native Germany in the Louisiana Purchase exposition at St Louis in 1904 Mr Busch is quite democratic and the saloon keepers of St Louis hold him in great affection A well known writer tells of going into a small saloon in the suburbs of St Louis and falling into a friendly chat with the proprietor a native of Germany As the writer was about to leave the beer dispenser walked from behind the bar took him by the arm walked him to the end of the counter and stopped him Stan right dair he said as he stepped off a few feet still facing his visitor Adolf Busch he stan right vair you is las night free hours The popularity of Samuel L Clemens Mark Twain causes the public to take especial interest in the efforts of his daughter Miss Clara Clemens to at tain fame on her own account But Miss Clemens has chosen music rather than literature as her field and she Is ambitious to win a name for herself as a singer without re gard to her fathers eminence in litera ture She has many of his characteris tics and her resem blance to him is considered striking by many Miss Clemens studied music in Europe and has achieved popularity there as a singer Since MISS CLARA CLEMENS making her professional debut In this country she has been making steady progress toward popular favor She possesses a rich contralto voice and her singing gives evidence of the care ful training she has received Enrique Creel the new Mexican am bassador said at a dinner in Wash ington apropos of unpleasant truths Why should we ever tell them They are always unnecessary and how they wound I have heard of an American countess or duchess I forget which who said to her noble husband fondly Tou were embarrassed when you pro posed to me Pescivol were you not Yes the man answered 1 owxl 300000 wtiuimiimM BOOKS AND BINDINGS A Critics Comparison of the Modern With tho Ancient One of the strangest things about the early printing is the fact that the paper and binding Avere so much bet ter than we have nowadays said a St Louis collector I have books on my shelves printed and bound by presumably reputable firms and yet after six or eight years of careful use the paper is coming to pieces and the bindings are gone while side by side with them are books 300 years old with paper intact and the bindings as good as new The differ ence is of course in honesty of ma terial and work In the old days a hide was allowed to lie in the tan ners vats for a year before it was thought fit for use Paper was hand made of real linen rags Now book cathcr is ready two or three weeks after the calf has been skinned Pa per is machine made of heaven knows what Of course there may be honest ly made paper and strong binding now as there were then but a couple of hundred years ago good binding and pa per were the rule Now they are the rare also the costly exceptions It Is true that the high temperatures of the houses the gases and coal fumes may have something to do with impairing leather bindings for as everybody knows a stout cloth or canvas binding is better than the leather now used The same influences may also damage the paper but still the fact remains that neither the temperature nor the gases affect the work of the old print ers so the difference after all is one of quality St Louis Globe Democrat A COINCIDENCE Peculiar Combination of Events Re lated by Andrew Lang As to the long arm of coincidence it may be as long as is necessary Nothing is impossible to coincidence An instance of my own experience said Andrew Lang convinces me of this fact I had been reading a foolish book Out of the Hurly Burly and some of the rhymes ran in my head They began Bury Bartholomew out in the woods In a beautiful hole in the ground Ill the afternoon I drove with a par ty of friends and we took the refresh ment of tea at a house where there were several other guests all unknown to me even by name As two of these lived at a place on our homeward route they accompanied us in our ve hicle As we passed a wood on a hill side one of these anonymous strangers said to me This Is the burial place of the Murrays of Glendhubreac I ab sently and automatically replied Bury Bartholomew out in the woods In a beautiful hole in the ground A kind of chill blight settled on the party though one of them tactfully asked me what poet I was quoting When we had set down our two strangers at their own home I was asked whether I knew the name of the gentleman on whom I had expended my poetical quotation Of course I did not know and of course his surname was Bartholomew while as he seemed in bad health my citation had an air of brutal appropriateness Thus does fortune banter us for Bartholomew is a most unusual name in Scotland Superstitious A well known New Yorker while dining at his club one evening ob served that his order of oysters on the shell was not complete there being only eleven bivalves instead of the dozen it was his custom to order On reflecting that his waiter an Irishman was a newcomer he decided to let the matter pass but when on the next evening the same thing occurred he became a trifle impatient See here exclaimed he to the wait er what do you mean by bringing me eleven oysters when I order twelve This is the second time that this thing has happened Sure sir quietly responded the Celt I didnt think you would want to risk being thirteen at table sir When Life Is Wasted Life is wasted every time one gives away to gloomy selfish angry or re vengeful thoughts when resentment or a grudge against man or fate is al lowed to find root in the heart when the temper is let fly loose over a trifle when one goes to pieces nervously when obliged to repeat a remark and the voice is allowed to rise in anger when one forgets that a loose temper is a sign of vulgarity and lack of cul turePhiladelphia Press Julius Caesar The consensus of learned opinion is to the effect that historys all around greatest man was Julius Caesar the originator of Roman imperialism Cae sar was great as a general and great as a writer and speaker but greater as a statesman Could he have been spared the assassins dagger and been permitted to live ten years longer he might have set civilization ahead a full thousand years New York Ameri can Misled Mrs Gadsby Ill get even with Mrs Gabble Mrs Gibby What has she done to you Mrs Gadsby She told me that Mrs Guffy wasnt at home so I hurried over to make a call on her and she was at home after all Cin cinnati Leader Friends Now Tom Have you had any spats with your girl lately Dick No Were great friends now Tom Hows that Dick Weve broken off our engage mentPhiladelphia Press It Is less to suffer punishment than to deserve it Ovid I BASKET FISH When Dried the Queer Arms Cloacly Iteaemblc Planter of PiiriM At Its marine residence away down In deep water the name on the door plate would be Astrophyton and It belongs to a species called onhiurans It has a well marked control disk not unlike a clam but has no shell From this central body radiate arms five In number like those of the familiar star fish and these arms are divided into minute branches like the twigs on a tree until they number in some cases a thousand separately defined hairlike tendrils While the body is not large the brandies when extended measure about eighteen inches in diameter Tho creature has the power of iucurling these branches until it closely resem bles a shallow dish This it does when caught and about to die remaining in that shape when dried It has been given the name of basket I fish It frequently when caught by a dredge for that is the only way it can be taken throws off these arms or parts of them so that a perfect speci men is hard to be procured in its natu ral condition These arms and their subdivisions are almost white when dried and close ly resoinble plaster of parls They are very brittle easily broken and cannot i be repaired The fish live among the roots of seaweeds and are supposed to food upon these moving about by wriggling and clambering with their arms or fastening upon the roots and pulling themselves along Most of the knowledge regarding their habits is conjecture for none have been taken alive and kept for suf ficient time to give them proper ex amination and study St Nicholas HOW TO KEEP YOUNG Be Hopeful Avoid AVorry nnd See the Amusiiif Side of Life Women more than men are possess ed with a dread of growing old not realizing that maturity has Its charms and compensations We wish young people oftener had it impressed upon them that they may provide for a hap py old age by laying up a reserve of sound health and a store of happy memories as well as by cultivating tastes and resources which will out last youth As for those who are al ready approaching middle age there is no surer way to grow old premature ly than to dread the future It is es sential if we wish to keep young to cultivate that hopeful habit of mind so characteristic of youth the hope which makes one able to say with Browning The best is yet to come and with Lucy Larcum Every year life Is lar ger and deeper and more beautiful in its possibilities Allied with this at titude of expectancy must be the abil ity to see the amusing side of life Worry and vexation over what would better be laughed at result In disfigur ing wrinkles Above all if the years bring usas they shouldabetter un- A fe 11 dersTandlng oTourservesraliroaffenliig of active human sympathies u firmer faith In Providence we shall find life abundantly worth the living no mat ter Avhat may bo the number of our birthdays Western Review The Heart of u Child That which disparages us and quick ens revolt is no less a factor In a childs emotional life But there Is thin difference we have the better oppor tunity to defend ourselves and to ob tain reparation So there Is a certain pathetic pleasure In standing Avlth hu manity where Its joys Its longings its embarrassments and Its disappoint ments are simplest and newest and perforce where impotency is absolute Give me this most uncommercial this divinest of enterprises for my own Give me a child to be at home with to be in absolute confidence with If 1 cannot refashion my warped wrin kled and discolored old soul into the unbiased graces and the ethereal puri ty of the spirit of the child let me now and again open that little door and shut myself in that little heart just for the sheer delight of it Patterson Du Bols in Success Magazine Ilml Tor Til 11 Hats New Years eve which is sacred to St Sylvester Is celebrated In Berlin by the blowing of tin bonis the ring ing of bells and all other devices for maklqg a noise The only horse play indulged in is at the expense of the wearer of the silk tile Any one on the street Is privileged to bring his cane down on the crown of the of fending headgear as hard and as often as he can When the man with the dilapidated hat complains to the po lice the only consolation he gets is It serves you right for wearing it on Liiir Down You are anaemic says the phy sician after thumping and prodding You should practice deep breathing Deep breathing retorts the pa tient Why doctor that is just what I do all the time I work in a subway cellar sixty feet below the street lev el Judge Where the Relief Would Be Dr Story the late principal of Glas gow university taking a holiday in the country once was met by the minister of the district who remarked Hello principal You here Why you must coine and relieve me for a day The principal replied I dont promise to relieve you but I might relieve your congregation Coming and Going What kick have you against mar ried Hfe oil if I dont keep my wife dress ed the height of fashion I have trou ble with her and if I do keep her dressed in the height of fashion I have trouble with her dressmaker nous ton Post You Can Get b W iijj F D BUKGESS LADIES t While you think of it drop in at THE TRIBUNE office and ask to see XXYVYlWVttXfik lumber and Steam Filter MCCOOK Iron Lead and Sewer Pipe Brass Goods Pumps an Boiler Trimmings Estimates Furnished Free Base ment of the Postoffice Building MvCOOK NEBRASKA svMSSEVjnNJSS Vs Ask yoor DniRght for UlAMUiNU UKAND PULS in GorD metallic boxes sealed lUDDOB iAKE NO OTHER SrntceUt and auk fur CIITl h Merchants and Bankers Attention I buy notus nnd accounts against cor poration and rnilroarl employees fi 17 Ilt K J O no am Council Bluffs Iowa Room 2 Brown Block II P SUTTON JEWELER MUSICAL GOODS NEBRASKA FAY HOSTETTER TEACHER ON PIANO McCook Nebraska Studio upstairs in now Kishol building south of Post Ollico A G BUMP Real Estate and Insurance First door south of Foams gallery McCook Nebraska C II Boyle C E Eldked BOYLE ELDRED Attokneys AT I AW Look Di8tanco Ione 4 1 Rooms 1 and 7 second lloor Postollico Building WCLOOK Net CHICHESTERS PILLS DIAMOND GO BRAND i Ked anUA with Blue IJuy of your DUKS TKIlS V DIAMOND IJKAND PIILS for twent7 fiv years rcparucu as uesiaaicsi Always Kcnauie SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS tVhnYWnhnfc tried tested The Best Typewriter Paper Made fhe excellent quality and finish of the Strathmore will surely satisfy you MMEMrm ss D al II With the Choicest Magazine and Agricultural Features For Only Five Cents More Than the Price of the TRIBUNE Alone i f1 W1i5itthfWffklvIiitfr0rMnrniiljnniFrhWpplr 21 columns of news 14 columns of talks by a practical farmer on farm topics economical machinery planting growing and storing of fruits and vegetables breeding and marketing of live stock 20 or more Lost and Found Poems and Songs 1 column of Health and Beauty Hints Chess and Checkers Best short and con tinued stories Puzzles and Complica tions Dr Reeders Home Health Club Miscellaneous Questions and Answers Poems of the Day A special Wash ington letter Taking cartoons and illus trations 5 columns of live entertaining editorials 7 columns of live stock and market reports 40 questions and answers by readers on any thing pertaining to the business of farm ing gardening raising of live 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