T E F TH E S E A. WEIRD YARNS OF THE SUPERNATURAL - URAL SPUN BY THE CAPTAIN. The Skull In the Chain Locher-The Unlucky - lucky Bark In the Demerara Trade That Was Said to Be Ilauntcd-Thu story of an . ' Exile From Salvador. Wo were eating dinner one night on the old cargo ship and talking of the happenings at sea and on shore that are called supernatural when the captain said : "Ono sees some things at sea not supernatural - pernatural which are fit to make a nerv- oils man see g1-t. There was that case in one of Green's liners to the colonies , where a man was sent down to clean out the chain locker. The locker had seemed foul all the passage home , and so they hoisted out the chain and sent this fellow down with his brush and soap and bucket , with a lamp , to clean it out. I'll wager ho saw ghosts for a year after that , for when he'd got down on his knees to begin scrubbing ho found himself bending over the skull of a'dead man. "It was most likely a man that had stowed away out in the colony and had been caught under the cable when they were running it down quickly , and so had the life crushed out of him. "However , I did know of a case that seemed supernatural right enough. It was in the Demerara trade , and I was acquainted with the first officer of the hark where it all happened. a "In the first place , while she was out there loaded and ready to sail , the captain - tain had trouble with one of the seamen , who drew out his knife and stabbed him to death then and there. The mate afterward - ward took her home , but on the way a passenger took to ailing in some mysterious - ous fashion and up and died very sud- donly. "Of course she was a haunted ship when she arrived home , and so the owners had her name changed , and she was refitted and painted up entirely different from what she had been. Then she sailed awaywith a new captain , but t on the way out he took to drink , and by the time she reached Demerara ho was ' off his head and killed himself with u revolver. t "Now she was haunted , sure enough , if you could believe the mate. Mind ' you , after she was refitted the mate said never a word to the now captain about what had happened in her before , and even ! 'hen a new captain came out from .home to take charge of her , believing that the last captain was naturally a drunkard , instead of ono who had taken to it after coming on this ship , this first officer noversaid aword , because he did not believe in ghosts or even in a future state. "However , the first night the new capk ilwys on board thetrouble began. i The captain at about 9 o'clock went to his room and retired. An hour later he was calling the mate and telling that he had gone to sleep and then had been awakened by a light in the room. On ! opening his eyes lie saw a short , thick- sct ma ; : , with silo whiskers , in the .armchair at tlio desk , leaning over , with his elbows on the desk , holding his head between his hands and saying : 'Oh , my poor head ! Oh , my poor head ! ' "That was enough for the mate. He left the vessel thatnight with all hands. This now captain knew nothing of the style or manner of the one who had killed himself , and yet the - or what you may call it-in the chair was the imago in appearance and dress of the suicide and had complained in precisely the words and voice of the ! dead man. " This brought out the story of an exile i from Salvador whom the narrator met , in Guatemala. Having got into trouble with the authorities , Senor Don Sebas tian Mojarieta saved his life by fleeing i to Aniapala , Honduras , asmany another exile has done , and there taking a steamer north to San Jose , Guatemala. A friend of his who was involved in like manner was to havereached Amap- ala by a different route in time for the same steamer , and to prevent any possible - ble delays Dfojarieta engaged staterooms and secured passes from the Amapala authorities for hiefriend and himself as soon as ho arrived. But the steamer day , came without his friend , and Mojarieta was obliges to sail alone. ] 1 "At the usual hour , on the first night ! out , " the story teller went on , "Mo- jarieta retired and went to sleep , but had no sooner dozed off than he awoke , : hearing his friend's voice , as he says , . in the nest stateroom , which he had supposed to be empty. Leaving his berth , t he went out into the passageway aitd opened the door to the adjoining room , i and there , he says , he saw lying in the berth the body of his friend fully dressed , i but with three bullet holes in the breast t of his'coat and one in the right cheek. . 1 "At that Mojarieta fainted and was t found on the deck by the steward and put to bed again. Thereafter it was a most miserable passage , for the vessel s touchc ? at both of the Salvador ports and was about a week reaching San Jose. Mojarietawas sure his friend had been shot and expected a force to come off from each of the Salvador ports to demand him. Moreover , he was haunted - ' ed continually by that picture of his t dead Mend. t "Once in Guatemala he obtained employment - ployment quickly and than began to recover - cover something of . his former spirits. He ascribed his vision to his overwrought - b wrought imagination and was begm f ring to hope that his friend would yet c .appear when a letter was received from P a relative in Salvador. It not only told f 'that the friend had been shot by the t government soldiers , but described the wounds of the body after it was dead. iojarieta declares that the description accurately portrayed the vision he had of his friend , and he believes that his friend's spirit , being unable to rest or p wholly throw off its desire to take pas sage on the steamer , had come on board and was occupying that berth.New t YorkSnn. I , OAw.------- - - - THEIR NOVEL HONE'M00Ny ' Beating Their Way on Trains From Chi- I cue to the Pacific Coast. 1 Three weeks ago last Saturday , while one of the railroad boys was inspecting cars that had been sent out here , he dis covered that one of them was occupied. Supposing agang of hoboes were concealed - ed in the car , lid slid the door open and said , "Well , how many of you are in there ? " A fairly dressedyoang man replied - plied , "Only my wife and me. " The railroad man was astonished and l swung himself up into the car , expecting - ing to find that he was being fooled. He found , however , lying on some pieces of burlap in one corner of the car , a wom- an. The man in the car spoke to her , saying , ' 'Well , they are onto us , and we'll have to get out. " The woman arose and presented a neat , ladylike ap- pearance. The couple were taken into the waiting room , where the man produced - duced his marriage certificate , which gave thouames of the couple and stated that they were married in Chicago July 10 , 1894. The young man then told his story , which is in substance as follows : Ho was at work and had saved up a few dollars. They were married and had bought 1150 worth of furniture on the installment plan and gone to house- keeping. Daring the strike he had lost his place. Ho still owed X30 on the furniture - niture , and the dealer , finding that the fellow was out of a job , came around and took the furuiture away , leaving the couple in the bare rooms Plans were talked over at onc9 , and itwas decided - cided to make the trip out west. and on the evening of Aug. 7 , at 9:30 o'clock , the young people jumped on the platform - form of a blind baggage andrede out of the Union depot at Chicago for California - fornia , having only $5 in money to make the trip. On platforms and in box cars they made Ogden , where they succeeded - ceeded in capturing the car that brought them here. The young fellow iQ about 26 years of age and the girl three or four years younger. Both were intelligent and good looking. While telling his experience - ence the young fellow looked at the girl and said , "She is a game little wom- an. " On the evening of the day of their arrival here they were seen to dart across the platform hand in hand , and it is presumed that they got out on No. 4 , which was just pulling out.-Reno Journal. MEISSONIER'S HOUSE. He Hoped It Would Become a Museum , . but It Is Being Pulled Down. Meissonior's house in Paris , built on his own designs , in the Place Melesher- bes , in front of Gustave Dore's mnonu- ment of Alexander Dumas , is about to be pulled down in order to make way for a six story building , and the work of demolition is already begun. The house was somewhat in the style of the renaissance and seemed a standing reproach - preach to the vulgarity of modern architecture - chitecture around it. A conception of the mostrefined taste , itwas unlike any modern house and was neither eccentric nor conspicuous. It looked the abode of an artist and a wealthy man , but not assertively so. Its s indows toward the street , scarcely more than loopholes , suggested inner windows opening on a courtwhich , judging from the exterior , must be a renaissance cortile. This gave an impression of indifference , perhaps - haps slightly contemptuous , of the outer world and of a comfortable seclusion not so much of the hermit as of the satisfied - isfied bourgeois. Meissonier hoped that his house would become a museum. He wrote : "My hotel was built for a museum. This apparent to any visitor. My descendan l might live there as tenants aucl cu' tors. " Auother time he wrote : "I h that the treasures of art in my stn will never be sold. I hope that my son will give them to the state. I believe this is his wish as well as my own. I am sure that he will feel too much love and respect for his father's work ever to disperse it. I trust ho will turn this house into a little museum.London Exchange. Ghost Statistics. The English Society of Psychical Research - search has issued a sort of "census of spooks. " The society has been asking as many persons as it could reach this gnestion in more technical language , Have you ever seen a ghost ? " Out of [ 7,000 persons interrogated 15,316 answered - swered in the negative , leaving only a meagre 9 per cent of people who had 1 been favored by extraordinary experi- ences. But the relative proportion of a men and women who saw visions and dreamed dreams is more remarkable. Only 655 males answered in the affrmat ive , but therewere 1,029 females. Mr. Balfour , who is president of the society , s the leading ghost hunter aid golf player as well as the greatest commoner te n the Tory party. He discusses some of e he finest ghost stories in this interest- and makes earnest 5 ng census an appeal o scientific men to drop their attitude t of "bigoted intolerance" and face the mass of strange phenomena which the ociety has gathered so conscientiously. Foreign Blood Helping France. The conscripts who will take their places in the French army this coming o November are said to be much taller men than any batch of recruits during he last five years. The reason given for 1 his increase in size is that by the new aw all sonsof a foreign fatherand of a l French mother who are born in France 1 are looked upon as Frenchmen and Bale - le to serve in the army. Our authority or this statement is Le Ganlois , but it 6t annot be very gratifying to French t ride to have it acknowledged that the 1 ew hundred foreigners thus pressed iny o the French army can so sensibly raise 1 the standard of the recruits.-London d pun. Parlaian English. f A Paris correspondent for a London rint speaks of Marie Bashkirtseff as the talented young Russian lady paint- less and authoress. " A "lady author- ess" is bad enough , but a "lady paintti Tass" must be little short of a monster. - - - - - - - = - -a-- - - E 1 F THE A IT WAS REALLY CONSTRUCTED JUST LIKE A LEYDEN JAR. The Fire That Came Out of It Was Elec- trical-Aaron's Sons Were Electrocuted. Edfdon and Tesla , Had They Lived at That Time , Could Not Dave Surpassed Aaron. There is nothing new on the face of the earth , and there is no doubt that electricity was well known to the Israelites - ites and probably to the Phoenicians. The first record of electrical ' phenomena is as old as the Ten Commandments. Moses , when he received the stone tables - bles on which the Ten Commandments were written the second time , built a box out of fir-not the common cedar or any other native woods , but firwood , which had to be imported by Phoenician merchants from the southern part of Europe. Was this choice accidental on account of the great value of the resin- ons wood , or was it the choice of the best known nonconductor among the great number of various timbers ? Moses had time fir box lined inside and outside with beaten gold , which converted - verted the ark of the covenant into a very expensive but very perfect Leyden jar or storage battery for electricity. As gold is by 50 per cent a better conductor of electricity than copper , was the choice of gold again on account of its value , or was it an inspiration or revelation - lation ? So much is certain-that if Edison - son or Tesla had lived in those days they could not have improved on the choice of material , and the result was a powerful leyden jar. How was this leyden jar charged , was the next problem. A fire of material - rial rich in carbon was kept burning on top of the ark of the covenant , and during - ing daytime a tall column of smoke guided the 12 tribes of Israel through their wanderings , and at night a tall flame was equally well seen by them. Now carbon is agood conductor of electricity - tricity , and the particles of carbon floating - ing in the smoke would conduct sufficient - cient electricity to highly charge the leyden jar. At least the current of elec- tricty would be amply strong , so that if a hand were held toward the ark of the covenant sparks would result. That this was done by Moses at different times is a matter of record , and that he could always depend that his faithful Levites would obey his instructions to the letter and have the jar always charged. After Moses' death his brother Aaron took the matter in hand and greatly im. proved the electrical power of the strange battery. He had the ark of the covenant placed in the temple and had it surrounded by poles 50 ells high , of 150 feet. These poles were covered with beaten gold , and gold chains were hung from poles to the ark of the covenant which made a very expensive but very complete and powerful electrical con- nection. In a country where electrical storms are as frequent and as powerful as in Palestine at an elevation of 600 feet and a reach of 150 feet of the best conductor an abundant supply of Frank- lin's electricity would necessarily always - ways be on hand. It is very likely that Aaron knew nothing of amperes , ohms or volts ; otherwise his two sons never would have monkeyed with this powerful apparatus - paratus , and they would not have been killed by fire breaking out of the ark of the covenant and killing them without any wounds or burns appearing on their bodies. Any coroner's jury of today , if it were to sit on an inquest over the body of Aaron's sons , would at once bring a verdict of death by a discharge of elec- tricity. Aaron knew this power , and to make it ellective all he had to do to deal death from his apparatus was to remove the costly camel's hair carpets , which are almost perfect nonconductors of dec. tricity , and make the culprit stand on terra firma. Death wouldresult instant. ly by fire breaking out and leave no wounds or burns to account for his death. That several members of revolting - ing tribes of Israelites were thus dec. trocuted is also a matter of record in the Bible. Solomon in building his temple advanced - vanced one step further. He found that copper would do as well as gold. He had the temple covered with copper , and capper water pipes led into the cisterns nside the temple. On the temple , or rather on its roof , number of gilt spears were placed in vertical positions , ostensibly to scare off the birds and to keep them from defiling he temple , but these spears were several - eral cords high , or from 16 to 24 feet. Such a height would hardly be necessary for scarecrows , but it was ample to load he roof , water pipes , etc. , with a pow- rful current of electricity. Franklin , the electric chair in the tate of New York and the discovery of he leyden jar itself in Lyyden , Germany - many , are all back numbers. History only repeats itself , whether recorded or not.-C. B. Warrand in Savannah News. Why the Dial Has Sixty Divisions. We have 60 divisions on the dials of ur clocks and watches because Hip. parchus , who lived in the second century - tury before Christ , accepted the Baby- oniau system of reckoning time , that s system being sexagesimaL The Baby- oniaus were acquainted with the dec- oral , but for common purposes they ounted by "sossi" and "sari , " the 50550" representing 60 and the "saros" 0 times 60-3 , 600. From Hipparchus bat mode of reckoning found its way t nto the works of Ptolemy about the ear 150 A. D. , and on that authority has been perpetuated to the present ay.-St. Louis Republic. t The "Venus de Medici" was 5 feet 8 nches in height , and this is held by i many artists and sculptors to be the most perfect stature for a woman. Some evils admit of consolations , but ere are no comforters for dyspepsia end the toothache.-Bulwer. -HOW WE WALK. The iifuscles Used and the MechanicalWork , That They Do. The chief muscles concerned in walking - ing arc those in the calf and back of leg , which , by pulling up the heel , also pull up the bones of the foot connected with it , and thou the whole body , the weight of which is passed ca through the bones of the leg. When walking , the trunk is thrown forward so that it would fall down prostrate were not the right foot planted in time to support it. The calf muscles are helped in this action - tion by those on the front of the trunk and legs , which contract and pull the body forward , and the trunk , slanting forward when the heel is raised by the calf muscles , the whole body will be raised and pushed forward and upward. This advancement of each leg is effected - ed partly by muscular action , the muscles - cles used being (1) ( ) those on the front of the thigh , bending it forward on the pelvis ; (2) ( ) the hamstring muscles , which slightly bend the leg on the thigh ; (3) ( ) the muscles on the front of the leg , which raise the front of the foot and toes , preventing the latter , in swinging forward , from hitching in the ground. When one foot has reached the ground , the action of the other has not ceased. There is another point in walk- ing. The body is constantly supported and balanced on each log alternately and therefore on only one at once. Hence there must be some means for throwing the center of gravity over the line of support formed 1'y the bones of each log , as it supports the weight of the body. This is done in various ways , and hence the difference in the walk of different people. There may be slight rotation at the hip joint , bringing the center of gravity of the body over the foot of this side. This "rocking" motion of the trunk and thigh is accompanied by a movement of the whole trunk and leg over the foot planted on the ground and is accompanied by a compensating outward - ward movement at the hip. The body rises and swings alternately from one side to the other as its center of gravity comes alternately over one or the other leg , and the curvature of the spinal bones is altered with the varying position - tion of the weight.-Loudon Hospital. THE POWER OF POETRY. Scott's Description of the Chase and What the Ordinary Man Would Have Said. Take , as a single instance of the power - or of poetry , Walter Scott's opening lines in the "Ladyof the Lake , " where he describes the chase of the stag. The stag escapes and evades his pursuers , but what a picture the great poet has put into words ! Reduced to prose the ordinary observer - er and writer would have said , "They chased the stag several miles , but lost him in the Trosachs. " He could not possibly have said in prose : The antlered monarch of the waste Sprung from his heathery couch in haste , But ere his fleet career ho tool The dewdrops from his flanks he shook ; Like crested leader , proud and high , Toss'd his beamed frontlet to the sky : A moment gazed adown the dale , Amomeot snuffed the tainted gale , A moment listened to the cry That thicken'd as the chase drew nigh. Then as the headmost foes appear'd , With one brave bound the copseho clear'd , And stretching forward free and far Sought the wild heaths of Uam Var. The poet began his picture with an incident that only a poet would have thought worthy of words , but what a f , picture the few words make ! i The stag at eve had drunk his fill Where danced the moon on Monan's rill , And deep his midnight lair had made ' In lone Glenartney's hazel shade. -Forest and Stream Fire Easily Obtained. The average civilized man would be hard put to it if he were compelled to start a fire without matches , tinder boxer or burning glass. But Lieutenant von Hohuel describes an African chief as not only accomplishing this feat but doing it with quickness and ease The traveler had asked him to show his skill. It was really wonderial , in view of the moisture laden atmosphere , with what rapidity he did as I had requested. The materials employed were such as we saw wherever we went-two simple bits of wood , one flat about six inches long and not quite an inch wide , with a row of grooves on one side , the other about 12 inches long and of the thickness - ness and shape of a lead pencil. The longer piece , fixed in one of the grooves of the shorter piece , was held tightly between the palms of the hand and whirled rapidly round and round. In a few seconds the wood dust which was produced by the friction , and which fell through the grooves , began to smoke. This dust was carefully nursed into a blaze , which was fed with fine grass and bits of cotton stuff. The whole thing is done so quickly that our men , even the lazy Wasungu , always employed this method on short halts for lighting their pipes.-Youth's Companion. No Word Like the Doctors. Mr. Sydney Holland enlivened the , uests at the annual festival of Poplar hospital by relating an incident which occurred within the walls of that insti- tution. A man was brought in who was I thought to be dead. His wife was with him. One of the doctors said , "He is dead , " but the man raised his head and aid , "No , I am not dead yet , " whereupon - upon his wife admonished him , saying , 'Be quiet ; the doctor ought to know best.London Echo. Ominous of Unpleasantness. "Mrs. Blimber is very nervous about here being 13 at the table tonight. " "Does she think something unpleasant - ant will happen ? " "Yes. She only has a dozen knives and forks.Chicago litter Ocean. The German empire has no prison of is own. Offenses against the imperial government are enforced by the imperial attorney , who calls into service the state's attorneys of the federal states. a to Poland it is a penal offense to speak Polish in any public resort. rTHE ANGOMANIAC PLAUE. - tadignant Protest of an American Over the Marring of Our Language. It is strange , but so , that the English don't know how to speakwhat they call their own language. If they do , they don't know how to spell it. I am not referring now to the "lower" classes , who take such unwarranted liberties with the letter "h , " but rather to the titled trash-the beiizened deadbeats who drag at the tinseled tail of a rotte soi disant royalty. To prove my point that they are strangers to a tongue they call their own , I will cite an illustration or so. For instance , they call Lord Cholmon- dely "Lud Chumley ; " London they pronounce - nounce "Lunnoim ; Pall Mall , "Poll Moll ; " Berkshire , "Berkshire , " and so on , on and on. I They never have known and never will know how to pronounce the letter a. They talk of "dawncing" and "prawncing" and "glawncing" and don't for a moment comprehend that they are making' sasses" of themselves thereby. Then , in their ignorance of the linguistic - guistic proprieties , they speak of a locomotive - motive engineer as a "driver , " of the fireman as a "stoker , " of baggage checks as "brawsses , " and so forth. When they want a bath , they tell you they believe they will take a "tub. " They spell color , honor and like words with a highly unnecessary u in the last syllable. I have only cited a feN of their blunders - dors , but if I had the space to mention a tenth of them I could fill awhole volume - ume without half trying. I wouldn't take the time or trouble to write this article if it wasn't for the fact that curtain Anglomaniao "school- mawms" and ' 'schoolmawsters" in our own United States are teaching English pronunciation to American pupils. This is an evil that ought to be strangled right off , beginningwitli this very day. No man or woman is fit to be a teacher who mars the beauty of our cosmopolitan - tan language by twisting it out of shape after the fashion of your "Henglish miluds. " I say "our cosmopolitan language , " and I mean it. There is no such thing as an English language Four-fifths of the words we use , even in everyday speech , were drawn from Latin and other vocabularies non-English. I am sick-sick-sick to queasiness with all claims to the contrary. Speaking of Anglomaniac schoolteachers - teachers , I see of late that they have introduced - troduced another British fad into their schools-that of teaching boys how to knit , sew and perform other purely feminine tasks. If you doubt it , just drop into a primary schoolroom at Hast- ings-on-Hudson or at any other place on the banks of that historic stream. I presume , if the British school "mawms" and "mawsters" should order their boys to wear petticoats , the Anglomaniac pedagogues on this side of the water would compel our bright , lively , progressive - gressive young Americans to wear petti 1 coats too. The New York authorities ordered a . general vaccination to prevent the ' spread of smallpox. Would to heaven ] high there could be a general vaccination - tion of some kind to prevent the further spread of the Anglomaniac plague- ! ] Will Hubbard-Kernan. , c DUNNING BY POSTAL CARD. A Decision at Baltimore Which Permits 1 This Awful Thing to Be Done. ] United States Commissioner Bond of Baltimore has dismissed the complaint against a man who was charged with dunning by postal card. Inspeaking of , this decision the Baltimore News says : t "The results of this decision are already I apparent and are very farreaching. Ev- ( cry man who owes a debt and every I man whom some one else claims to owe I a debt is now likely to receive postal I cards g lore asking him to pay up , and pay up promptly. Until he does pay up he need not be surprised to finds gentle 1 postal reminder waiting for him on his desk each morning. C "Nay , that is not the only terror I awaiting him under this decision of Commissioner Bend. He may find postal cards beside his plate each morning when ho comes down to breakfast. If ho e happens to live in a boarding house , he may find his curious fellow boarders glancing with interest at a printed 1 statement that lie owes his tailor for that last handsome snit of his that has C been so much admired and will he kindly - ly call and settle. " Ii I i Asleep on the Bottom of the Eiver. I' A strange incident in connection with ' time work of clearing away the debris of the recently wrecked bridge at Louisville - l ville is related of the submarine diver whose duty it is to descend to the hot. torn of the river and fasten chains about the heavy ironwork , besides placing 1 dynamite charges in spots where the most desirableresults maybe had. Yesterday - terday ho remained beneath the surface 1 , for more than an hour. There was no response when signals were made , and there was uneasiness felt. At length c the diver who goes on as a relief reportv d for duty , and he was at once sent down to ascertain what was wrong. In a few minutes both men came up. The fi diver was found seated on a pile of iron b fast asleep.-Marine Journal. la The Silver Dollar's Centennial. The silver dollar of Uncle Sam will I celebrate the centennial anniversary of c + its birthday upon Oct. 15 next. On July t ] 18 , 1794 , the Bank of Maryland de- sl posited at the Philadelphia mint French coins of the value of $80 , 715 for coinage into silver dollars under the act of 1785. The first lot of there finished coins was Sc delivered on Oct. 15 , 1794. There were T 1,758 of them in all , and they were the ii precursors , the first waves of the vast a ] flood tide of silver dollars that has poured out upon the country during the hundred - dred years that have elapsed. Truly the Sherman purchasing act repeal has been al timely bill' and a proper celebration of f1 the centennial of "the dollar of our tl daddies.Philadelphia Record. PROSPECT PARK. There was a very gentle rainfall - fall here , Wednesday night. Frank Cain left , Sunday of ter- uoon , for southern Colorado to obtain - tain work if possible. Our teacher , Miss Marsh , visited - ited over Sunday with her parents who live near McCook. 1' Te wish to correct a mistake in last week's items. Miss Duffey is teaching in District No. 67 instead of 73 as stated before. Mi' . Pickrell talks of going to the eastern part of the state for the winter. It is the earnest hope of all that he will decide to stay with us. There is a rumor of a watermelon - melon party in this heighborhood. All our African blood is thrilled at the thought of such a thing happening. The Sunday school entertainment - ment was a grand success , considering - ering tile numler that took part , and reflects great credit on the managers , Misses Shears and Holbrook - brook and Mrs. Wade. The Tariff , Financial , Hawaiian and other questions of the day do not interest the people hereabout as mucli as the question where can I get the most and best groceries for the money. C. M. Noble can answer the question to the satisfaction - faction of all. The Barnett Lumber Co. is selling - ing eastern hard coal cheaper than. ever before. Send your orders to the Barnett Lumber Co. for hard and soft coal. Tablets , inks and pencils at this office. LEBANON. Quite a rainfall here ell. Friday ° vening. Heavy frost here on Saturday uight last. B. F. Bradbury cut a second prop of alfalfa , last week. Charles Piing and wife have peen visiting eastern' points , the past week. JOllll Abbott and sister , Mrs. T. T. Cress , are visiting at their old some in Iowa. farmers that have begun to glow sac that the ground is in rood condition. Quite a windstorm preceded the Vain on last Friday , overturning laystacks and small buildings. You can buy 100 pounds of rood flour for $1.40 , in 1,000 ) ountl lots , from the McCook ) onlmission Co. They have a fine sigh patent flour fear sale at $2.00 ) er 100 pounds , in 1,000 pound ots as well. The McCook Commission Co. seeps a large stock of all kinds of ] fop feed , coin and oats , at lowest uarket prices. 'Buy your writing paper at 'HE TRIBUNE office. All kinds in took and prices very reasonable Leave your orders with the Bar- iett Lumber Co. for all kinds of oal. DANBURY. Powell Bros. shipped a ear of Logs to Denver , last week. W. F. Everist came back from is Illinois visit , last Tuesday. A nice shower here , last Friday , ut it rained harder east of here. Quite a number of people from ere attended the fair , Thursday. Rev. Huntzinger of Lebanon is arrying on a meeting here , this Peek. Frank Barker's stable got on re , last Wednesday night , and urned up sip head of horses and 11 of his hay and fodder. Eev. Meyers bill go to Custer ' ) unty > next week and will preach iere the coming year. Mr. Weber - er will take his place here. Russell McClung and family ill start , next week , to the Indian erritory , where they expect to ye. George McClung will go eng and probably stay. Fnipple always leads in fruits id vegetables. He carries the eshest and largest assortment to market affords.