I l43kia HE MCOOK TRIBUNE FM KIMMELL Publisher McCOOK hjbEdi NEBRASKA No Danger of Militarism Tho opening of the war college at Washington gave opportunity for showing the characteristic American spirit Ttila was fitly illustrated in what was said by Secretary of State Root who is regarded as tho father of tho war college because he while secretary of war gave Impetus to tho movement which has resulted in the completion of the structure There was nothing inconsistent said Secre tary Root in effect in a nation devoted to peace possessing at the capital such an institution as this The sity for military Instruction was never more apparent than now in the light of the demands of modern science And the country however friendly re lations may be with others that neg lects proper precautions assuredly is not wise Secretary Root added We are not a military nation and never shall be We are warlike enough to rise in defense of our rights We are singularly like tho English and singu larly unlike most of the nations of the continent Our ideas are political and not military We do not therefore na turally run into the mold of military organization Fears of the United States being swept into the vortex of militarism are absurd declares the Troy N Y Times But preparations for effective defense are based on the soundest principles and the purest patriotism Secretary Roots address at the war college struck a note to1 which the common sense of the try responds with promptness Tragedy of Vanishing Forests There are some men In public life who profess to believe that trees grow about as fast as they are used and that it is foolish to worry about the future and try to make provisions for it This opinion is sometimes heard in the halls of congress Secretary of Agri cultural Wilson who has given the subject much attention says We are now using in one year as much wood as grows in three with only 20 years of virgin growth in sight This is an alarming prediction but Chief Fores ter Pinchot thinks it is too favorable He says the country is now consuming 100000000000 feet of lumber board measure annually which will exhaust our supply of timber in 14 years We cannot afford to run out of American lumber in 14 20 or 30 years declares the Philadelphia Press The waning supply must be replenished Our bare hills must be reforested on a large scale When the necessity of this is demonstrated so that the most incred ulous must believe it the indifference to reforestation will give place to zeal and spasmodic efforts here and there will be succeeded by a comprehensive and continuous work of tree planting A Kansas school teacher is in trou ble because she pasted strips of court plaster over the lips of a boy who would whisper in school Now the father of the boy has hired lawyers to see whether the constitution provides for such forms of punishment and if not to make the teacher share a part of her salary with the boy to soothe his ruffled feelings If the teacher wins out before the courts what a large field it opens up What a fine thing it would be for example if those running for office could paste broad strips of court plaster over the mouths of their fool friends They could feel comparatively safe with only their enemies running at large Many homes might be happier if the man of the house when he wanted to sit down for an evening of quiet medita tion could just seal in this way the lips of the dear and devoted wife who wanted to spend the same evenirfg telling him of his shortcomings The mulberry wisest of trees as Pliny termed it really likes Lon don and fruits profusely even in the grounds of the Charterhouse at murky Smithfield London mulberry trees are mainly derived from a fad of James I who wanted to found a silk growing industry With the proverbial folly of a pedant the British Solomon intro duced the black mulberry disliked by silkworms instead of tho white varie ty which forms their food The black mulberry had been planted by Cardi nal Pole at Lambeth in 1555 and there were still older specimens in the garden of Syon House According to a pretty Greek legend all mulberries1 were originally white but a mulberry tree was growing beside Ninnys tomb when Pyramus and Thisbe died there and the blood of the lovers turned the fruit to its present color The English suffragettes have elect ed again to go to jaiL This is ominous for the conquering of the movement for when women make martyrs of themselves they can succeed better than any kndwn agency in making life highly undesirable for other people A daughter of the celestial kingdom has just joined the 707 women now studying In the University of Berlin r This is Miss Li Tsu Zung the youthful daughter of a deceased physician of Shanghai j IN THE PUBLIC EYE J MAY HEAD BIG BANK 1 Frank A Vanderllp who unless the unfore seen happens will succeed James Stillman as president of the National City bank next Janu ary began his business career as a reporter on a Chicago newspaper in 1889 Believing the op portunities offered in Aurora where he was born November 17 18G4 were too limited he went to Chicago for a broader field After a short period of general reporting he was made financial editor to succeed Joseph French Johnson now dean of the school of com merce and finance of the University of New York After seven years of daily newspaper work Mr Vanderlip secured an interest in the Econo mist a Chicago financial weekly He enhanced the prestige of this publication by issuing under its name a supplement known as Chicago Street Railways that conveyed more Information concerning the mortgages contracts agreements and sta tistics than had ever before been presentd Mr Vandrllp did not remain long with the Economist Contrary to the advice of his partner and some of his friends he became private secretary to Lyman J Gage who March 4 1897 assumed the office of secretary of the treasury Mr Gageat the time of his own appointment was the president of the First National bank He was the one banker in Chicago the newspapers were accustomed to seek for views on financial matters Although Mr Vanderlip began as a private secretary he was within three months made an assistant secretary of the treasury and this position afford ed him a wide range of opportunities He was not only an assistant secretary of the treasury but was in a way the confidential adviser of the secretary him self After four years in the treasury department Mr Vanderlip resigned on February 2G 1901 to become vice president of the National City bank The National City Bank of New York is by far the largest banking in stitution in this country It has a capital stock of 25000000 and surplus and undivided profits of 25219000 Its deposits are over 226500000 SS CHAMPION OPTSSV15ST wis J W4feS2L lis Mpjy William C Brown first vice president of the New York Central railway system is an Optimist Moreover the title should be spelled with a capi tal o No lower case letter would ever do justice to the great mantle of optimism that cov ers Mr Brown as a blanket It is an avalanche that falls over and around and about him like the yellow sunshine or the balmy air of spring Not that Mr Brown ever lets his optimism interfere with his business Far be it Rather he permits the optimism to gild and refine the sordid business necessity to hallow it and make it a bright rose color instead of the dull gray that is presumed to be its natural hue In the pleasant pursuit of his calling as the high priest of optimism Mr Brown has just announced that the railroads of the central west are about to boost the freight rates on January 1 next He smiled pleasantly when he said it as though it were just the one thing the commercial world had been waiting for and longing for during the past six months Of course there was an immediate response in the way of a long drawn howl from the large business interests What does Mr Brown do then Does he crawl back into his hole of a private office and refuse to see any of the reporters Does he come out with an explanation that does nothing but retract Does he rush into print with another interview that gives masses of dry figures and comparative tables Not for a minute On the contrary he permits himself to be quoted again He explains that the business interests really want a raise in rates They dont know it but they want it bad Now hes going to call a little meeting just a conference of the business inter ests and explain to them just why they have been longing for the rate boost He is going to make them like the idea Wherefore we repeat that Mr Brown is certainly an Optimist AN UNPOPULAR ENVOY Charles S Francis American ambassador at Vienna is the latest incumbent to find that espe cial job a long way less attractive than it seems from a distance Mr Francis followed Bellamy Storer in the position and all the world or that section of it which reads the United States news papers remembers how Bellamy quit He re signed it is true but the act was accompanied by red fire effects during which President Roose velt expressed several chaste but emphatic opin ions of Mr Storer and likewise of Mrs Storer Mr Francis has seen much of the diplomatic game before and should have known how to work it He was secretary to the Russian em bassy while his father was United States min ister some 30 years ago and on his own hook he had been minister to Greece Roumania and Ser- via Moreover he is a newspaper man owner and editor of the Troy N Y Daily Times and might reasonably be expected to have all the tact sangfroid smoothness and nerve anybody would need even at the court of Vienna But Mr Francis has apparently got in wrong with Francis Joseph and some of his friends He came home to vote of course and now on the eve of his return some of the Vienna papers are editorially hoping the boat sinks before he gets back Never in diplomatic circles says one Vienna journal with a name like a handful of pied type Never has a more unpopular man held the post of ambassador He and his family knowing no French nor Ger man have complained of Viennese ignorance of English and have never con cealed their contempt for Vienna houses shops climate and women When he should have returned hospitalities he subrented the embassy to the Japan ese legation sent the ladies to America and himself occupied a back room on the fifth floor of a hotel paying 1 a day And a few other bon mots of like tenor Mr Francis may be a good ambassador In fact he must be for he has been a typesetter reporter city editor and held other jobs wherein it requires the diplomacy of an angel to keep out of eternal feuds and knockdown argu ments with the foreman the editor and other domineering enemies of civiliza tion j Of course the editor may feel a little peevish about something MAY GET TREASURY POST Joseph H Millard formerly a United States senator from Nebraska is said to have been tentatively tendered the secretaryship of the treasury in the coming Taft cabinet At least he is near enough to a probability to make it reason able that five and twenty bright young newspa per writers in various portions of the country beginning at Washington should sit down and click out on their typewriters the near positive assurance that the job has been offered accept ed and all but started That may not mean much to the reader or it may Mr Millard is a banker of Omaha and is one of the real pioneer bankers of the west His institution the Omaha National is considered one of the soundest of the western country It has always been a great lender and never a bor rower in the east During the hard times which followed the dry years of 1894 5 when Nebraska was In the throes of bankruptcy and hundreds of set tlers were compelled to go east to save their lives the Millard bank and its minor connections were never in peril Born in Canada the Omaha banker is still an American in that both of his parents were residents of this country who were temporarily domiciled across the border His early years were spent on the farm He has been president of the bant since January 1 1867 He was mayor of Omaha for one term and served one term In the senate s CW - i J v vVS - IG SLC KskK p Fy BY A E JOHNSON fjj PHAGE OF LIFE WOT OFTctt dN3Y TOURMT o fpjSJUUOH I II inBIBBgnatMBllMIIIIIIMII g canton cha5 great g covvepcal city A cynic has said that our minds are ruled by catch words and there is certainly this amount of truth in the statement that ones mental image of a place is usually based upon some telling phrase which has stuck once heard in the me Dry and become in separably associav I rightly or wrong ly with the locality to which it os tensibly refers The Greenland of my fancy thanks to a mind exceedingly retentive of childish lessons has for its natural features icy mountains and very little else That a coral strand of a deli cate pink shade encircled the conti nent of India like a fairy zone was a cherished belief only shattered when I first traveled to the east and wondered why it was called shiny But there are times when the fa miliar phrase is more than justified and preconceived notions are startling- ly indorsed by first actual impressions Every schoolboy knows that China is inhabited by teeming millions and I defy the most felicitous of phrase makers with two words more succinct ly to summarize such a first glimpse of a Chinese city as is afforded let us say to the traveler from Hongkong who approaches Canton up the Chu kiang river In the west the over crowding of cities is a problem which has come to be regarded as amongst the most pressing and perplexing of all that confront the social reformer But compared with cities of the east and of China especially those of the west may almost be regarded as depopu lated Only those who have penetrated the innermost purlieus of a Chinese city can conceive the degree of con gestion in which it is possible for a human community to live In the great Chinese towns it is literally true that the population overflows its con fines the result sometimes being as at Canton those extraordinary floating slums which choke the riverside and form at once the most picturesque and most pestilent feature of the citys aspect Stand beside the imperial custom house at Canton and let the eye range down the river towards Hong kong As far as the sight can reach lie boats boats and again boats These are no ordinary craft mere ves sels of transport plying hither and thither but the countless homes of myriad Chinese in which millions of human beings have been born have lived and have died They are the dwellings of the very poor who live in them practically free from rent taxes and other burdens of the ordinary citi zen The Tankia which means boat dwellers as the denizens of these floating houses are called form a sort of caste apart from the rest of the Cantonese The shore dwellers re gard them as belonging to a lower so cial order and indeed they have many customs peculiar to themselves which mark them as a separate com munity How the swarming masses of them contrive to support existence is a mystery but their chief mode of em ployment is in carrying merchandise and passengers from place to place In some cases the daughters of the family go ashore to work in factories as do the girls of other countries but the years earnings of a Chinese fac tory girl would scarce suffice to buy a single hat for her western sister It So o is of course hardly necessary to point out that as against this low rate of pay the standard of living is corre spondingly different The houses which make up these vast floating slums are of all sizes Some are but 15 feet long From these cramped dimensions however they range up to a length of 50 and 60 feet A boat large enough to accommodate a family of moderate size can be ob tained for 20 and since the anchor age is free it is obvious that the Tankia effects many savings impos sible to the shore dweller For a hun dred dollars a boat that is compara tively luxurious in its appointments can be obtained and not infrequently European travelers who wish to make a prolonged sojourn in the vicinity of Canton and do not care to pay the high prices charged in the one hotel hire a comfortable house boat at a cost of about one dollar per day In that case the native owners occupy a small space in the bow where all cooking is done for the traveler with out extra cost with the additional ad vantage of free transportation to any point on the river Most of the boats however are small A thatch of palm leaves or a cover of matting over a part of each boat serves to protect the occupants from sun and rain and serves as an eating and sleeping place The in terior presents a curious picture of domestic economy beside which the arrangements of an Irish cabin or a crofters cottage in Lewis are palatial On many of them pigs and chickens are reared and frequency when the smallness of the boat does not afford deck space for such stock a box or cage is suspended from the stern to serve as a pigpen or chicken coop Nor do sties and henneries in addition to the apartments of the family ex haust the accommodation of the tiny craft for on many flower gardening is carried on a considerable space being set apart in the bows for the flower pots How life can be endured in such quarters cribbed cabined and con fined well nigh passes comprehension It has been estimated that about Can ton there are not less than 85000 in habited craft and that of this vast number some 40000 are- permanently located 250000 to 400000 human lives that is to say daily rising and falling with the tide Births deaths and funerals all take place within the narrow limits of the boats and many are the inhabitants of the floating slums who never set foot on land throughout the whole of their strange existence Not all the boats in the dense mass Lat blocks the riverside are squalid however There are some as gaudy and resplendent as the majority are wretched and poor and these are fa miliar to every one who has visited Canton Have you been to the flower boats is a question continually heard in the hotel and he is sure to be a recent arrival who answers in the neg ative The flower boats are in brief the pleasure resorts of Canton Whole streets of them are moored in rows that extend from mid stream to the shore and every night they are thronged with seekers after pleasure and recreation of a sort For it can not be pretended that the amusements to be found thereon are of a very high moral order Concerts or rather sing songs are held on some but most cater to that gambling instinct which is the national vice of China Vision of Husband Drowning True Boston In a vision in which she says it seemed as though she was viewing actual happenings Mrs Lot tie Johnson of Beachmont at midnight saw her husband George Johnson clinging to an overturned boat in mid ocean heard him cry for help and finally with one despairing shriek throw up his hands and sink With the cry of her husband ringing in her ears Mrs Johnson awoke and ran screaming to her mother Her husband had started early in the eve ning with a friend in a power boat for Gloucester Early the next morning the power boat was found wrecked on the north shore about twenty five miles below Beachmont With ordinary speed the boat would have reached there about midnight The body was picked up at noon and the medical examiner said he bad been dead about 12 hours SHOVED BY TIME No Fear of Any Further Troujls David Price Corydon la says I was in tho last stage of kidney trouble- TTfTTL rf - - i lamo weak run down to a mere skeleton My back was so bad I could hardly walk and the kidney secre tions much disor dered A week after I bogan using Doans KIdnoy Pills I could walk with out a cane and as I continued my health gradually returned I was so grateful I made a public statement or my case and now seven years have passed I am still perfectly well Sold by all dealers 50c a box Co Buffalo N Y WHAT WOULD HE HAVE SAID fill KJZSXV t Get up Jack You mustnt cry llke a baby Youre quito a man now You know if I fell down I shouldnt cry I should merely say Yes I know pa but then I go to Sunday school and you dont TORTURED SIX MONTHS By Terrible Itching Eczema Babyo Suffering Was Terrible Soon Entirely Cured by Cuticura Eczema appeared on my sons face We went to a doctor who treated him for three months Then he was so bad that his face and head were nothing but one sore and his ears looked as if they were going to fall off so wo tried another doctor for four months the baby never getting any better His hand and legs had big sores on them and the poor little fellow suffered so terribly that he could not sleep After he had suffered six months we tried a set of the Cuticura Remedies and the first treatment let him sleep and rest well in one week the sores were gone and in two months he had a clea face Now he is two years and has never had eczema again Mrs Louis Leek R F D 3 San Antonio Tex Apr 15 1907 Kicks Harry Payne Whitney the day his own and other noted horsemens racers were shipped from London on the Minnehaha said of the death of racing in New York A good many jockeys have been hard hit A jockey told me last week a very sad tale of misfortune I lis tened sympathetically Ah Joe said I when a man is down few hands are extended to him The jockey as he chewed a traw smiled bitterly Few hands yes thats ri he said but think of the feet A Multiplicity of Father Ardyce had been learning j sing America at school and was trying to teach It to brother Waym On morning his father heard him shout ing Land where my papa dic i land where my papa died Ardyce interrupted Oh no Wayne not that way It is Land where our fathers died Waynes expression could not be described as he tipped his heal side wise and in a very surprise i tone gravely asked Two of em De lineator Grown Up Children It is not only the frivolous whom the spirit of childishness is just now leading astray Silliness Is the fash ion even among the wise Women especially affect a kind of childish shrewdness in talking of serious sub jects Like children who hae the habit of romancing they lose tho sense of reality and because tl y nev er talk exactly as they think t iey be gin to think exactly as they valk London Spectator CAUSE AND EFFECT Good Digestion Follows Right Food Indigestion and the attenda t dis comforts of mind and body ar cer tain to follow continued use of improp er food Those who are still young and robust are likely to overlook the fact that as dropping water win wear a stone away at last so will the use of heavy greasy rich food finally canse loss of appetite and indigestion Fortunately many are thoughtful enough to study themselves and note the principle of Cause and Effect in their daily food A N Y young wom an writes her experience thus Sometime ago I had a lot of trouble from indigestion caused by too rich food I got so I was unable to di gest scarcely anything and medicines seemed useless A friend advised me to try Grape Nuts food praising it highly and as a last resort I tried it J am thankful to say that Grape Nuts not only re lieved me of my trouble hut built me up and strengthened my digestive or gans so that I can now eat anything I desire But I stick to Grape Nuts Theres a Reason Name given by Posttnn Co Battle Creek Mich Read The Road to Well- ville in pkgs Ever read ihc aboTc lettert A aew ose ainyeara from time to time Tfeer are seaulae trae cad fell ef kasraji tsterefct n