The Tell-Tale Finger of the Soa. Wo have heard of the wrongs and absurdities wrought by the ancient law of Mortmain , but I canneverfor. get my strange experience of the justice that was brought about by 'the dead hand , " and by it alone , when the hands of the living would have been utterly impotent. Some r of those who witnessed what I am about to relate may see this when it is in print ; and if so they will doubtless bo willing to corroborate the facts- The incident occurred as I was re. turning from my fiist trip to Europe , bat you must know that for several years before then I had had some unimportant business relations with the firm of Murdenthrppo Brothorsi builders. I forgot the number of their then place in Franklin street , New York. They were a thrifty pair * well on in they 50s , though they used every art to keep as near 35 as might pass muster. Their fathen two years deceased , had left them the business , and just about that time a largo sum of money had fallen in , $100,000 it was said , and as it had been invested in England , Jacob and Benjamin had been across to settle the affair. As the tender was taking the big crowd of ns passengers along , the Mersey to the magnificent Segullia , I waspolitely saluted by the pair. "Hello , Jake whatl you here , too , Ben ? Bless my soul who'd a thought it ? Been over to contract for a new palace for some fourth ward American duchess ? " "No , sirree , " said Ben , rather sour ly , as it struck me. "No , sirl our girls ain't jest fools enough to go farther and fare worse than they would at home. " "They've never been able to catch you yet , anyway , " I replied jokincly , giving a wink to the elder brother , who was reputed to be as popular a Jadies' roan as Ben was a bear. They we're bachelors , both. I felt I had not struck the right keynote , so I ventured a congratula tion on the good luck they now had as I surmised entered upon the enjoyment of. At this Jack gave a queer jerk of his head : " 'Tain't all gold as glitters , sir , is it ? But Ben and I have haJ smooth enough sail ing so far , haven't we , Ben ? and I don't know as either of us really ueeds another dollar " "Not for our own-selves , why , cer tainly not , " said Ben , "but I've got that scheme o' mine everlastin'ly in my head , night and dayv and when you're kinder comin' in sight o' land , asyoumaysayyou know how you'd feel if some iceberg was to come along and just bid fair to smash you all up to " ' 'Before I had time to wonder why Jake should flatly interrupt his .brother with a highly ridiculous re mark about feeling rather seasick we had arrived at the steamer and .were all engaged in a mad scramble , to gather our wraps and struggle off the rocking gangway to the deck of the liner as it towered majestically overhead. I could not sleep that first night , though the sea was not at all rough. At last I wrapped up and strolled on deck. It was just as the dawn was jbreakiprj , and I leaned over the rail , fascinated by'the play of the flotsam and jetsam rubbish that was being tossed into the light by the waves. One paticular splinter of wood , pe culiarly shaped , kept bobbing up and down with a regularity that started me on a queer train ot thought. At last I grew chilly , which arous ed me sufficiently to decide upon go ing below for a cup of hot bouilion. I started to go , when who should come pacing alone : like a race-walker but Jake iiurdenthrope. "Hello , there ! What's kicked you out pf a snug berth this raw morning ? " "Oh I've had a develish bad night mare ; always do aboard ship , 'spec ially after bottled beer and a pipe. " 'Well , I guess I should sleep sound ly through a tempest if I were going home with a fortune in my pocket " "Oh , bless the fortune ! It's that that bothers me , but what's the use of talking about it ? It's just what I want to forget , " and we set off on a smart tramp from end to end of the deck. It was just what I needed. I'll be bound your brother takes good fortune easier than you seem to , I gathered from what he wad saying when we met on the tender that he has some benevolent scheme on hand or in mind. " "He always was a bit of a crank ; what do you think ? The fool refused to come on the boat at all ; the min ute the plank was going to be taken in I'm hanged if he didn't rush right back and jump into the tender ? " What a queer trick to be surel Well , I guess he thought there was something left or " "Not a bit of it he never would agree to fair and square sha rings never I wish to God I'd " "Look at that thing down there , " I said , as we came round to where I had been standing. I caught sight of the bit of wood unexpectedly , and jelt glad to change the current of a rather unpleasant conversation. " 1 don't see anything " "There , there , don't you see that white thing there look at it now it's behind that wave now it'll come lip in a second now , then can't you Bee it right there ! " "Why why it looks something like a " "Yes , that's it-like a hand-whatl Good God it is a hand' ' " * w Jake turned livid , he Jopked per fectly awful in that morning"light. . The shock nerved me up , I halloed out I know not what but 'hult a dozen of the officers and men were with us in a jiffy. I could only point overboard , speechless. There now was an firm , stiff as a mast , with that evil finger , which I had mistaken for a splinter , pointing , now heree now there , but in each still moment- it pointed dead at our group. A boat was over in a twinkling. Jake soon came round , but more fearfully scared than before. He joined us in peering over the mil , the hideous corpse lay in the boat just beneath , its arm and finger pointing right up to where we stood. I turned away in loathing and horrrr. I no ticed Jake stood transfixed , his eyes glared immovable upon the ghastly treasure trove of the sepulchral seu. The body was laid on the deck. "We gathered around ; I took Jnke's in mine and half dragged him * o the spot. When they moved for us to view the body , I felt a shudder run right through my frame , as Jake uttered a thrilling cry and fell prone upon the deck. It was Ben's dead body. At the trial , for the ship put into Queens- town , when Jake's delirious talk left no doubt that a fratricidal crime had been committed , it came out that Jake , the elder , had been consider ably indebted to his brother Ben , and had hoped the new legacy would induce the latter to forgive the debt. It was further pro.ved that Benjamin had had drawn up , in proper legal form , a deed of gift of $350,000 to establish an orphan asylum and training school , and the tarnsfer would have been completed on his receiving the loaned money , togeth er with his share of the legacy. There was no doubt that Jake'in his bitter disappointment , had pushed his brother overboard that first night , and he was duly hanged without one breeze .of sympathy from either side the ocean. The effect of that night's strange unrest and my.appalling illusion turning into reality can never be described nor ever be forgotten. Something of an Old Fogy. "It is an invariable custom ol Bishop Loughlin , the venerable Catholic prelate of Brooklyn , " re marks a paragrapher of the New York Sun , "to go personally to the Brooklyn post-office each morning , when he was in good health , for his mail. The Bishop always walks on these trips. He goes partly for ex ercise and partly because he likes to see and greet his many friends on the way. The Bishop's custom in this respect is similar to that of the late Horatio Seymour. The great Democrat - crat always used to walk down from his residence to the Utica post-office each morning , and take a good deal of time in the operation. Such was Mr. Seymour's fondness for this morning walk that when Utica came to be a big city , nnd the letter car rier system was about to be intro duced , Mr. Seymour opposed the in novation strenuously. He declared that it was one of the most benefi cial customs that could be imagined for the citizens of a town or city to meet each other daily in some such place as the postoffice"and there dis cuss and debate questions of a public and , social nature. Of course Mr. Seymour was defeated in his efforts to keep the letter carrier system out of Utica. But he regretted his defeat bitterly , and declared that Demo cratic institutions suffered a severe blow thereby. Mr. Seymour's neigh bors laughed at him , but it was just such ideas and speeches on his part that gave him a greater nnd more idolaurous personal following , per il ops , than any other resident of this state ever enjoyed. " . A Jumbo Spider. E. M. Tutwiler , superintendent of the Sloss Iron and Steel Company's mines at Coalburg , has , preserved in alcohol the largest black spider ever seen in this section. A few days ago Tutwiler heard a great commotion among th ? chickens in hia yard. He went out to inves tigate , and saw a small chicken be ing slowly drawn into a hole in the ground. Some invisible .reptile had caught the chicken by one leg and was drawing it into the hole in spite of its desperate struggles. Tutwiler approached , and looking down in the hole , discoverednn im mense black spider. He punched it with a stick and compelled it to re- lerisi > the chicken. He then , dug the spider out of its den nnd placed it in a jar of alcohol. It lived an hour after being put in the jar. When dead the spider was taken out , weighed and measured. It meas 2 % inches across the back and weighed nine ounces. Its longest legs were i % inches in length and its eyes were as large as a hotel clerk's diamond's. Birmingham , ( Ala. , ) Corr. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. She Didn't Walk with the Lord. There is an old lady residing in Roxbury , a native of "The Land o' Cakes , " amiable in character , a sin cere Christian , but a little deaf , a circumstance which sometimes leads her to give queer "answers to ques tions asked her. While visiting the house of a friend a few evenings ago it was decided to hold a prayer meet ing. After the exercises one of the company approached the "old lady" and asked : - "D'ye walk wi' 'the Lord ? " "Oh , no , " she replied , not distinctly - ly hearing the question. "Ijistcome back and forrit to see Mrs. Geigie. " THAT WALK THROUGH THE WHEAT. Together we walked jr. the evening time , Above un the nicy Hprend golden dear , And he bent hta hencl nnd looked in my ejes , As if he held me pf nil most dear , Oh , it wait avreot in the evening time ! A'nd oar pathway went through the fields of wheat ; Narrow that path nnd rough the way. But he wai near , and the birdr snng tnic , And the stars came out in the twilight gray , ' Ob , it wna sweet In the evening time1 Softly ho spoke of the days long past , Softly of blessed days to be ; Close to his ormp. and closer 1 pressed , The corn-field path was Eden to me. Oh , itwns B-.Tcet in the evening timel Grayer the twilight grew , nnd grnycr still. The rocks flitted home through the purple shade , Thenightingalessang where the tbornsstood high. As I walked with him in the woodland glade , Oh , it was sweet in the evening time ! And the latest gleams of daylight died ; My hand in 1m enfolded lay ; We swept the dew from the wheat as wo passed , For narrower , narrower wound the way , Oh , it was sweet in the evening time ! He looked in the depth of my eyes , and said : "Sorrow nnd gladness will come lor us , swe t ; But together we'll walk through the fields ol life CJosp ns we walked through the fields of wheat. " Good Words. A Peculiar Kind of Waifare. Making war on Indians is unlike any other war making in which arm ies engage. Finding them , not fight ing them is the difficult problem to solve. If the reader will consider that the theatre of operations in any Indian campaign whether in Wy oming , Dakota , the Indian Territory and Texas , or Arizona is about as large as the New England States with New York added ; that each of these possible theatres of wpr is an unin habited wilderness ; that they are withont roads , and often impenetra ble for hundreds of miles because ot arid deserts or impassable mountain ranges ; that while all parts of each Territory are to the Indian as famil iar as the paths of the home orchard are to the farmer and his children , it is and of necessity must be an unknown - ' known land to the best-informed white man ; that in these trackless wilds the Indian had no fixed habita tion ; that upon being discovered by his enemy the direction of the trail he takes is a matter of indiffer ence to him ; that where night finds him is his home , and that his sub sistence and clothing are always with him if all these and collateral mat ters depending on them are considr ered , an idea can be formed of how difficult it is to make successful war on the Indian. In war the Indian , though partial ly civilized , reverts to his worst phase of savagery. Much has been written as to the false sentimentality which crops up in the discussion of the Indian question by humanita rians and lovers of fair play , which it is not intended here to repeat. But itr may properly be observed that it is worse than nonsense to urge that the Indian regards the white intruders as thedescendents of those who , two centuries and more agro , came to this country and by might deprived the Indians of the lands and hunting fields , and is through his children pursuing the "red man toward the setting sun. " The Indians's knowledge of his tory scarcely extends beyond one generation. His white enemy is served in war as is any other enemy , and for the same reasons. He has no inherited animosities dating from the time of the Pilgrim Fathers. Nor does he feel gratitude for kind usage shown to his ancestors or to himself. The annuities paid him are looked upon as tributes exacted by fear or someless worthy principle , and kind ness shown him are those by whom they are shown are weak and afraid of him. Fortunately for the whites , the In dians in their warfare are not in the habit of attacking our so-called forts on the frontier , else the horrors of past wars would equal in any year the fearful pictures ot the Indian mu tiny against the English. Our front ier forts have often been at the mercy pftheIndians , but the capture in any instance could not have been made without great loss of life , and it is characterastic of the race that they are slow to attack when certain death awaits any great numbers. They are brave where supersticious beliefs make chances of safety greatly in their favor , but will not take the risks that satisfy the civilized warrior. Gen. Wesley Merritt , U. S. A. Before and After. From the New York Tribune. Perhaps ess of the saddest and most pathetic trights is to see the bright , joyous , fun-loving , brilliant dandy of 24 or thereabouts trans formed into the spiritless , taciturn and shabby family man of middle life. We all know of such- transformations mations as mysterious as they are unexplainable. In "Pendennis" Thackery has painted for us , with a master hand , some of these evolu tions downward in the clerical pro fession , when the brilliant Oxonian for whom everybody predicted a mi tre somehow or other missed the run ning , and ctomes out seedy , hopeless recluse in a country parsonage , whose trery appearance suggests a life of tragedy. Lknow a number of such cases. There was Goodfellow , of Harvard. In all his class , and bril liant fellows they were , too , there were none so brilliant as he. .His conver sation sparkled with jest and epi gram , and his good-natured buhomfe won him a host of friends. He was a good dresse- , and pet the fashion for his class. When he was finally grad uated with high honors , and an nounced IriH intention of entering the ministry , we all said that he would in a fewyeors become one of the most famous preachers in the country. ] visited him not long ago. He is the pastor of a parish in a targe factory town , with a shabby-genteel congre gat ion which worships in a shabby- genteel-looking church. He is mar ried and has six children who quarrel and play in the mud and dust. He rarely smiles , and there is on his face a look of constant preoccupation. His clothes don't fit him , and are de cidedly shabby. He no longer has a future , all his energies bein gcon- sumed in the potty and corking cares of the present. Indeed , the best part of the aianis gone , dead I might say ; and there remains a galvanized automaton , which wearily goes through the motions of his calling. Oh , youth , youth , how often do you deceive us with the promise of a fu ture that never comes ! Curious Will Making. A New York court has established the validity of a will of a citizen Of that State , who 'left his entire pro. perty , about $90,000 , to the United States Government. The New York" law prohibits bequest ; * of more than a certain proposition era man's es tate to the religious or charitable in stitutions when he has near relatives living. In other words , a man can. not buy peace for his conscience by adding another wrong to those he has before committed. The first duty of property is to provide lor those naturally and legally depend ent on the man who owns it. The law will not even allow a man while living to impoverish himself so as to leave his family in want. If this is often in practice it is because exist ing laws are not enforced. What he cannot legally do while livingthelaw will not help'him to do when dead. But giving to the Government where a man has no near relatives , and those more distant that he has , is another matter. The court probably held in this case that the man was right in thinking he as nearly related to the entire American people , and had as much obligation to them , as he had to the few distant relatives who after death would claim what they had while living done nothing to prove they could properly have any interest in. People who do nothing for their distant relatives' while living ought to be restrained by shame from profit ing by their deaths. Where there are near relatives the lawpoftnost States make more just disposition of pro perty than its owners themselves would probably make. The law re cognizes a supposed natural affection , which events often show does not really exist. A Resourceful Wife. A good story comes from one of the rual districts of an ex-swell who married a young woman with a rep. utation much to the chargriu of his family , "who cut him off , " so to speak , for such a fatal mistake. Re cently the paternal hearts began to relent and a proposition was made through an accommodating friend that the young ex-swell should di vorce the objectionable daughter-m- law and receive in return not only the parental blessing , but a goodly part of the parental exchequer. When the matter was laid before madaine she advised her spouse to accept the generous reward offered for the "inconstancy of man , " sug gesting that it would be advisable to replete the empty coffers. "What's a divorce more or less ? Let's have one by all means divide the spoils and get married over again. " Now , could a man , an ex-swell , have a more accommodating wife. "Why , " she said to a listening con fidante who , of course , circulated the matter as all well-regulated con fidantes do "Why 1 am ready to do anything for the dear boy. " And she added ingenuously , "Only last 'winter , when he was strapped for funds , I went to San Francisco and worked in a bookbindery. " San Francisco Call. The June Bug Rampant. The bug is a very useful insect , but how objectionable it can make itself on occasions was shown by an inci. dent which occurred one night on the Central railrond of New Jersey. The milk train was' carrying two passenger coaches behind the milk cars , and as the night was warm the half dozen passengers aboard had the windows all raised. The train. had been standing on a side track a few minutes when a swarm of large June bugs , attracted by the car lights , flew In through the windows. In five minutes the seats were nearly covered with bugs , and they began to crawl around the legs of the passengers and to prove otlier- wise unpleasantly officious. In five minuten the insects had possesion of the two cars and the passengers turn ed out. The problem which now presented itself was how to get the pests out of the cars before the train started. A fire was suggested , and while the passengers gathered brush wood and kindled a roaring blaze , one of the brakeraen "went into the cars and put the lights out. The ruse was successful , the bugs deserted the cars and the passengers went back , shutdown the windows and sat in darkness until the train started. New York Commerci' * Advertiser. H. KAPKE Tailor , Has moved across -Dennison street into the building recently vacated by P. Penner. His stock of spring goods is new and complete and he will make clothing at LOWER FIG-- UBES than any tailor in McCook W. 0. BULLARD & CO. L1ME , HARD CEMENT , LUMBERHARD AND DOORS , LUMBER BLINDS.LUMBER SOFT BLINDS. COAL. RED CEDAR AND OAK POSTS , BUY OK US. do not sell ONE ARTICLE BELOW COST and make it back sev eral times by selling- other goods for MORE THAN THEY ARE WORTH , but we can SAVE YOU MONEY on Dry Goods , Notions , f Hats and Caps , l Boots and Shoes , Groceries , Flour. Everythingat Bed-Rock Prices ! 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