1V A J it I t iMfVfcVftwjfr Men Who Often Get Into Print fjptbifbrtflftb H A DU rONT A iiTnouG n Senator Henry Algemon Du Pont retired from active connection with the powder business on Ills elec tion to the senate in 1000 he lias been named as one of the defendants in the action brought by the government against the so called powder trust It la alleged that ho is one of the principal stockholders in the concern which is the dominating element in the combination of powder making companies He was chosen to the senate after a memorable strug gle lasting many years and his victory meant the downfall of ex Senator Ed ward P Addlcks Senator Du Pont Is sixty nine years of oge and was in tho class of 01 at West Point On the outbreak of tho civil war he at once went Into active service and made a remarkable record for bravery receiv ing a congressional medal of honor In war Colonel Du Pont was a sol dier who loved fighting even above the rank of general In peace he has been nn aristocrat of an aristocratic family Because he preferred to hold forth on the fighting line with his favorite bat tery of twelve pound guns he retired with the rank of colonel three times spurning offers to be elevated to briga dier general When the civil war ended Colonel Du Pont returned to tho home of his famous father General Henry Du Pont near Wilmington where ho has been a man of peace ever since Winterthur Is the name of his coun try estate It Is a model place Its expanses of lawn Its landscape effects Its finished walks and roadways are the prldo of the senators heart But no automobile finds welcome within the portals of Winterthur Carriages may drive through its shaded roads but the modern motor car no Colo nel Du Ponts famous horses were good enough for him In the civil war and horses are good enough for him now His shereefian majesty Abdul Aziz sultan of Morocco is a ruler with trou bles on his hands most of the time The powerful tribesmen of his realm who are continually defying his au thority manage to keep him In hot water with the civilized powers by carrying Into captivity rich or influen tial foreigners who chance to bo In the sultans domains Most powerful of IrasllpS KAISUIiI THE BANDIT CHIEF these tribesmen is Raisuli who took Ion Perdlcaris captive several years ego and who has recently added to his renown as a kidnaper by carrying off Kald MacLean the canny Scotchman who was adviser to Abdul Aziz and chief of his military staff Brigandage is a profession which Is held in con siderable honor in Morocco hence Raisuli whose adventurous exploits would make him a most entertaining figure in comic opera enjoys a pres tige quite unique in Its way He has a grudge against Abdul Aziz since it was this monarch who was responsible for his being chained to a wall for three years Raisuli Is the Robin Hood of Morocco Is a devout follower of Mohammed Is tall and wears Im maculate white robes Congressman John James Jenkins chairman of the judiciary committee of the house of representatives takes a serious view of the railroad rate controversy in North Carolina and oth er southern states He says there has been no event since the civil war that calls for so severe condemnation as what he terms senseless tirade on be half of states against the nation The civil war was the result of such agitation and we may have earlier than we want an other civil war he says To avert such a calamity and preserve the nation we must conform to the law obey the law and have the law enforced ac cording to the frame work provided in jr ar jenkins the constitution This continual talk about state author ities resisting federal power by armed force will sooner or later end in blood- Bhed pcjwibly In the disruption of the Union Mr Jenkins was born In England in 1813 but has been a good American Blnce he was nine years of ago at which time ho became a resident of Baraboo Wis During the civil war he served three years with the Sixth Wisconsin volunteer Infantry Richard Mansfield whose nervous breakdown has occasioned widespread comment is by many considered the foremost living American actor He is not a native of this country as he was born fifty years ago In Helgoland an island in the North sea but he came hero as a young man and his career Is chiefly Identified with America At a dinner In Chicago Mansfield onco told some reminiscences about mem RICHARD MANS FIELD ia J A CHANLER bers of his and other artistic pro fessions as hus bands Daudet said Mr Mansfield In his charming book called Artists Wives shows us how the actor the painter and the poet are tormented by their better halves But has It nev er occurred to you that there Is another side to the question Dont the actor tho painter and the poet sometimes do a deal of tormenting themselves I have a friend a playwright Hia wife is good and beautiful Last New Years eve he said to her at dinner Darling I cannot begin the new year better than by confessing my tur pitude to you Know then that ours was a bigamous and illegal marriage My real wife with her three children Is living In Denver Oh oh cried the lady She ran distractedly from the room Calm yourself the playwright shouted as he put down hiB knife and fork and hurried after her That Isnt really true It is only a speech that the villain makes to the heroine In my new play and I wanted to get some idea as to how the heroine would take it Charles S Francis of Troy N Y who became ambassador to Austria as a consequence of the now historic Storer episode and who recently left his post for a visit to his home in this country has a liking for newspaper men being one himself Ho is owner and was for some time editor of tho Troy Times founded by his father the late John M Francis In talking to an Interviewer recently he said I have just had an Instance of how Important apparently unimportant things may be You know the bungs that are used for barrels Well In March 190G tho Austrian tariff rate on American yellow pine bungs was raised from 8 to 10 kronen forlOOkllos A large manufac turing firm in Cin cinnati filed a pro test against what It termed this in justice with tha state department which referred it to our embassy I thought it a small matter at first but the more I looked into it the greater I found it to be There was voluminous corre spondence together CHARLES S FRANCIS with a number of personal conferences at the ministry of foreign affairs which resulted I am pleased to say in a permanent restoration of the old rate This looks like a trifle but I learned that one firm in the United States through a single agency in Vienna sells every year 0000 barrels of these bungs and that American manufac turers control the market of the world for these little pieces of yellow pine one firm exporting more than 300000 worth of them John Armstrong Chanler great-great-grandson of the original John Jacob Astor and ex husband of the author Amelle Hives Is tangled up In a strange network of court proceedings He Is making a fight for control of his property which members of his family deem him incompetent to handle He is a brother of William Astor Chanler the explorer and of Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler lieutenant governor of the state of New York In 1897 the su preme court of New York decided that he was Insane committed him to Bloomlngdale asy lum and appointed Thomas T Sher man to take charge of his person and estate But after a time Chanler es caped from the asy lum and went to Virginia where the courts declared him competent to man age his property consisting of sev eral hundred thousand dollars In stocks and bonds in the possession of Mr Sherman Mr Chanler has been liv ing for some time in Roanoke Mills N C He wishes to return to New York and enjoy possession of his estate and recently brought suit in the federal court of the district to force Mr Sher man to restore to him his property To make sure that he would not be ar rested and reincarcerated In an asy lum If he set foot In New York state to prosecute his action he applied for an order restraining any one from Inter Jerlng with his liberty The judge re fused it deciding that where a court Df competent jurisdiction had adjudged a plaintiff a lunatic It would be a trained exercise of discretionary pow v for the United States court to make i self the custodian of such a person KiT MUSICAL SOUNDS Thinking Thorn as One Does Letters and Words Is Not Difficult To acquire the habit of thinking mu Bical eouuds as one does letters and words Is not a difficult task In fact to one who undertakes it seriously there Is no difficulty greater than that of learning to read literature The usual method of tuition which teaches the pupil to regard this that or the other note as Identical with certain positions on his instrument is not one best calculated to make him an ef ficient and intelligent reader He nev er attains to independence In musical thought but must ever refer to his Instrument before he can form a fairly accurate conception of the musical story that lies silent on the page be fore him As a child may learn to read the al phabet to form letters into words and thence into sentences and so on just so may the music student learn to combine and use the notes before him Strange as It may appear the study of reading music may be carried on mentally For instance while I think of a melody my mind traces its flow and all the paraphernalia of the staff and notation appear as the melody passes away Into time I realize the clef time and key signatures bar lines rhythmic divisions and In a mo ment I transfer the thought to paper People In general are accustomed to the transference of their ordinary thoughts to papers and by constant practice the labor of transmittal from brain to paper Is minimized so greatly as to appear almost automatic in per formance Whatever of laborious ef fort appear in the process of writing music is the result of want of prac tice and not that this form of writing is really or intrinsically more difficult than writing in words or demands any greater mental or manual effort The mind is here master and directs the operations of the hand and both gain facility from the practice which comes of thinking music Musician YOUR GOLD COINS See if Any of Them Is Stamped With the Letter L I got hold of a gold coin a short time ago and it was marked with a letter L which I supposed had been stamped upon it by some one who wished to keep watch as to whether he ever had it in possession again I pasesd It along to my landlord I think and thought nothing more about It for several months Then I found out that I had been passing light coin How Is that was the question of a listener All coins whether gold or silver upon which a large L is stamped are light weight When you get one of these stamped coins the only thing to do Is to take It to some assayer who will weigh it and pay you about 10 per cent less than the face value of the coin for It He will then place it in a crucible to be melted into gold bullion The government itself mutilates these coins and in so doing turns the ruined currency right back into circu lation where some innocent party will become victimized by them When the light coins are tendered for duties on imports they are weighed at the custom house quickly stamped D for light and returned to the im porter If the latter cannot pass the coin off he must take it io the retort to be melted The light coins may be rendered light in the ordinary course of abrasion in circulation or they may have been sweated by parties who sell the gold dust thus bruised off the coin The common mode of sweating is to place a number of gold coins in a sack and shake them up for a long time when the gold dust will gather at the bottom of the sack Utica Observer Mules and Gray Horses I wonder if that truck driver knows of any good reason for hitching that mule with the gray horse remarked a Georgian as he saw such a team halted at Chambers street and Broad way Lets ask him The driver only knew that the team was always driven together by order of the stable boss Well went on the southerner sinco I was a child Ive always seemed to know that mules will follow a gray horse or hitch with him where they wont have any truck with a horse of any other color Ive seen the most unruly mules behave properly when In the company of a gray but Ive nev er heard a good reason given for the fact New York Sun How She Viewed It Perhaps she was jealous perhaps she wasnt Anyway she had just heard o the engagement and she could not help noticing the engaged girls pride In her captured youth Really she said and her lips curl ed scornfully theres no accounting for tastes is there Some people think they have won the game when they get the booby prize A Perilous Prospect Coldeck I hadnt the heart to write a note Break it gently to my wife wont you Ills Second Now dont feel that way about It my boy Youre coming out of this affair safe and sound Coldeck But it is more serious than you think I have reliable infor mation that Wildshot will fire in the air Puck Position With a Pull Visitor I understand that our friend Stuckup has got a position with a pull to it at last Residenter Thats right By means of a rope he helps to yank cattle to slaughter In an abattoir Morristown Times Promising Is not giving but serves to content fools Portuguese Proverb - gXWTJltr - YOUR TRUE COMMUTER He Must Be by Nature a Man Who Takes to Routine Your true commuter must be by na ture a man who takes to routine There are some who have commuted for a quarter century or more and yet have not acquired the trick and never will They are the ones who write let ters to the newspapers airing their grievances against the heartless rail road corporations They are not born commuters They have had commuta tion thrust upon them But many real ly enjoy the life of the commuter They like the clocklike regularity They like the pleasant social aspect of the early morning trip to town the neighborly Interest in one anothers af fairs the ample time for reading the newspapers which numerous city resi dents miss by not being obliged to get an early start They look forward to the pleasant relaxation of the whist game on the way home with head on one side to keep the smoko out of their eyes Somo of them even say that they enjoy being awakened early in the morning In time all who work In New York will come to it Meanwhile for the man with a family it appears to be In many ways a happy solution of a diffi cult problem Undoubtedly it is a more wholesome existence physically but mentally and spiritually It has the de fects of its virtues when pursued all the 3ear round The commuter devotes the best part of the day to one narrow corner of the city The rest of his time not consumed on the train Is In still more narrowing atmosphere of tho suburbs He neither gets all the way into the life of the city nor clean out into the country So his view of things has neither the perspective of robust rurality nor the sophistication of a man in the city and of it nis return to nature is only halfway His urbanity Is suburbanity Much of our literature art and especially criticisms show the taint of the commuters point of view Jesse Lynch Williams in Century NUGGETS Genius Is Inspiration Talent is per spiration Do not measure your enjoyment by the amount of money spent In produc ing It Education turns the wild sweetbrier into the queenly rose A vigorous initiative and strong self faith make up the man of power Be sure that the honors you are striv ing for are not really dishonors What men get and do not earn is often a curse instead of a blessing You can purchase a mans labor but youve got to cultivate his good will Ignorance itself is a disease the deepest most treacherous and damn ing malady of the soul Worry poisons the mind just as much as a deadly drug would poison the body and just as surely While you stand deliberating which book your son shall read first another boy has read both Success Magazine Lincoln and Stanton There was a marked contrast be tween Lincolns manner which was al ways pleasant and even genial and that of Stanton The latters stern spectacled visage commanded Instant respect and in many cases Inspired fear In receiving visitors and they were legion Stanton seldom or never sat down but stood before a high desk as the crowd passed before him and one by one presented their requests or complaints which were rapidly dis posed of He was haughty severe domineering and often rude When I think of him in the daily routine of his public audiences the characterization of Napoleon by Charles Phillips the Irish orator comes to mind Grand gloomy and peculiar David Homer Bates in Century Gambling In Church The mania for gambling will out no matter how carefully hedged about by the law Here is an illustration It took a conversation I overheard at the close of the church service last Sunday night to bring me to a realiza tion of the virulence of the betting fever said a Harlem woman I ac tually heard two boys betting on the skill of the sexton in snuffing out the candles One bet 25 cents that he would extinguish each candle at the first application of the snuffers the other that he wouldnt I had been watching the proceedings with the same thought In mind but It never oc curred to me to bet on the outcome New York Tribune One Gleam of Sunshine His play is a rank failure It Is a frost and a fizzle and he knows it The dramatist bows his head upon his hands and refuses to be comforted for it Is his first flunk One by one his friends try to say something that will console him but to no avail Finally his trusting wife finds one sunny gleam in the clouds Anyway she said you didnt have to go through the ordeal of making a speech before the curtain and you know you always said you would be thankful beyond words if you could escape that Success Magazine Late Already Five minctes after the tardy gong had struck the principal of the school was walking through the lower hall when he saw a pudgy little fellow Bcampering toward the first grade room as fast as his fat legs could carry him See here young man I want to talk to you called the principal to the late comer I haint got time to talk to you Im late already replied the breathless beginner as the door of his classroom closed Circle 1 FirstNationalBaiiofMcGoDk i Solicits the patronage ot those who work on a salary as well as the account of the merchant and farmer If you have not already opened an account do so today no mat ter how small it will be cheerfully accepted Capital and Surplus 7500000 Safety deposit boxes for rent These are always inside our fire and burglar proof vault 100 per year ttd It Cver Qccur p iy Ott that photos sent through the mails insecurely wrapped are very likely to get damaged No one likes to receive a soiled photo If they are worth sending at all they are worth the taking of sufficient care to insure a safe delivery at their destination Tfie Security Mailing will give you that assurance and the cost is but a trifle We have them in sizes from 5x7 to 1 1x14 They are made of heavy tough material and are especi ally designed for safe and secure photo mailing mTMVfMMnmtiMMtTtmm rivntiQ TTTTl T t T T T T Jriut erii A mr - V FKANKLIN PRESIDENT A C EBERT CASHIER JAS S DOYLE Vice President THR CITIZENS BANK OF McCOOK NEB Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 1 2000 V FRAHKLIH DIRECTORS JAS S DOYLE A 0 EBERT 5 kfefefe SSbQ T9 Wanted 50 Men and Women C R Woodworth Co the enter- j prising druggists are advertising to day for fifty men and women to take ad vantage of the special half price offer they are making on Dr Howards cele brated specific for the cure of constipa tion and dyspepsia and get a fifty cent package at half price 25 cents So positive are they of the remarkable power of this specific to cure these dis eases as well as sick headache and liver troubles that they agree to refund the money to any customer whom this medicine does not quickly relieve and cure With Dr Howards specific at hand you can eat what you want and have no fear of ill consequences It strength ens the stomach gives perfect digestion regulates the bowels creates an appetite and makes life worth the living This is an unusual opportunity to ob tain 60 doses of the best medicine ever made for half its regular price with the personal guarantee of a well known bus iness firm to refund the money if it does not give satisfaction If you cannot call at C R Wood worth Cos store to day send them 23 cents by mail and they will send you a package promptly charges paid C R Woodwroth Co have been able to secure only a limited supply of the specific so great is the demand and you should not delay taking ad vantage of the liberal offer they are making this week A Guaranteed Cure For Piles Itching Blind Bleeding or Protrud ing Piles Druggists refund money if Pazo Ointment fails to cure any case no matter of how long standing in 6tol4 days First application gives ease and rest 50c If your druggist hasnt it send 50c in stamps and it will be for warded postpaid by Paris Medicine Co St Louis Mo Say you saw it in The Tribune Dn ADTINCH OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN and OPTICIAN Office days Tuesdays Wednes days Thursdays and Saturdays Office in Post Office Bldg - Phone 13 E P OSBORN JWWENTZ OSBORN WENTZ Draymen Prompt Service Courteous Treatment Reasonable Prices GIVE US A TRIAL Efc mm IS BclJBTiMg If you will figure with us and quBlity of material is any object you will be easily convincedthat we out class all competition nmmrn m IMCO H T tH 1W