THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDA , APRIL 12. 1891.-TWENTY PAGES. SOUTH OMAHA iAND COMPANY NEW mo . , . LOTS SCbclSO and GS clSO. THIS PROPERTY LJEX © IMMEDIA.TEXLxY SOUTH OK Which is conceded to be the ] most beautiful natural park in the West. The company have expended over $50,000 unim- provcments in the park , con sisting of two lakes ( which are fed by natural springs ) one of which is over 1500 feet long , fountains , avenues , driveways , gravel walks , dancing pavilions , pleasure boats , rustic houses , &c. Blocks 129 to 137 , between aoth and 23rd streets , were sold four years ago , and are now built up with the finest residences in the city. The lots now offered for sale lie be tween 2oth and i6th streets , ONLY 4 BLOCKS FROM THE Motor Line on 24th street , from which SIDEWALKS AND WATER MAINS have been extended to thi > roperty. SPRING LAKE PARK. i i i i THIS IS THE LAST PIECE fo the Land Company's prop erty to be platted , and as it is covered with BEAUTIFUL SHADE TREES and slopes gently to the cast , is the finest piece of ground platted by them. Prices for Inside Lots WILL BE FROM $400 to $800 And for Corners,65x130 FROM $700 to $1,200. Terms , one-fifth cash , bal ance six equal semi-annual payments , 7 per cent interest. SPROIALx KOTIOE. ED. JOHNSTON & CO. Agents This Property Will Be Placed On Sale . . , TUESDAY , APRIL 14th , At 1 O'clock P. M. When wo will hnvo our agents on the ground to show the property. Get off-South Omaha motor . at I street , and . Cor. N.tand 24th Streets South Omaha. go east four blocks. BD. JOHNSTON & CO. . . , . RILLED FOR THIRTY CENTS. frightful Orirao for Which John H. Smith Easily Escaped a Life Sentence. EX-COURT REPORTER'S ' REMINISCENCES. Early Sliort-Ilniul legislation and the Olil Method of Slaking Tran scripts Recollections of Lawyers. "V JOHN T. 11KLU The first bill providing for the use of short- band writing in the courts of Nebraska was a copy of ttio Iowa law , and was introduced by Senator I. S. Ilascall of Douglas county nt the legislative session of 1871. The importance - tanco of the subject was not so well under stood then as it is now and the bill was re jected with great promptness , my recollection being that Senator Hilton of Washington county , father of Frank Hilton , the well known newspaper man , was the only one who Joined Senator Ilascall in voting fortho meas ure. ure.At At the session of 1875 Senator J. C. Craw ford of Cumlng county , introduced a bill to the same effect with suitable provision fortho payment of stenographers , but was able to sccura its passage only by milking considera ble concessions In that respect , the law as passed providing n per diem pay of $5 and a transcript fco of 10 cents per hundred words , the reporter being employed and paid by the county in nil criminal cases , und In the trial of civil suits the litigants were at lib erty to make use of his services or not , as they choose , but in case ho was so employed they were to foot the bill. Two years later the law was amended so as to provide a salary of $1,000 payable by the state lu quarterly Installments , but In the hurry and confusion of business , no provision was made in the appropriation hill for the court reporters , and for the next two years they struggled alone as host they could with out salaries. In 1871) ) another amendment to the law was adopted and the salary fixed at f l.HK ) , but the transcript fen was reduced teD D cents. My experience ns a law reporter In Nebraska - braska dates back to the spring of 18TO when I took the testimony and arguments In a mur- ilcr trial at Fremont. The defendant John II. Smith , who kept a small hotel nt Fremont had become involved In ii quarrel with ono George Gallon of West Point , who had had his loam foil nt Smith's barn and objected to the charge of 80 cents irnido for hay furnished , prairie hay at that tlmo being worth about &l a ton. Gallon insisted upon carrying away the hay the team had not wUon , whereupon Smith ussaultcd him with the uccuyoko of a wagon , inflicting injuries from which death soon re sulted. The cose was tried before Judge L. Crounso , stilt an honored cltizan of Nebraska. who served most acceptably oa the bench for many years , afterwards In the halls of con gress , and was last week tendered the np- IK > lntmcnt by President Harrison assistant secretary of the treasury. James \V. Savage of Omaha and 7 . Shedd of Fremont appeared as counsel for the prisoner , and W. H. Mungor of Fremont assistant district attorney , K. F. Gray in the prosecution. The first witness called in the coso was Dr. Alexander Dear , the democratic candi date for lieutenant governor of Nebraska , who came to nonr being elected lost fall. Smith was convicted of murder m the second degree and , sentenced to a term of ton years at Llncolu but escaped from the county jail the follow ing night under circumstances which led to the general belief that bo had lingered in confinement to that date oi.ly lu order that bo might loam Just what view a court and jury would tnko of his case. No clue to his whereabouts was afterwards obtained b > the authorities. The reporting of this trial had boon done , prlmariaily , for the Omaha Herald at nn agreed price of $3 per column , but at the suggestion of Judge Crouusp a complete transcript of the testi-nouy was made for use in ca o Smith was captured and further pro ceedings in the matter tukon , the judge stat ing that ho would anprovo a reasonable bill for the making of sucli transcript and that ho thought It would bo paid by the county com missioners. When completed the transcript was fairly worth & 25 , but I made out a bill for only ono-flfth that amount , lu my extreme ucslro that it should be favorably considered , ns it would servo ns a precedent. Knowing the amount of toit in volved Judge Crounso Insisted that I was en titled to more money , and I then Increased the charge to $8 , the payment of which was recommended by the judge , and turned the bill and transcript over to the county com missioners. As that was the last I ever hoard of the matter I have always regretted that tno bill hod not been made out for $ y. > , as It would have presented a moro symme trical appearance mid I would have lost noth ing financially thereby. During the fall and winter following I re ported several civil suits for John I Hodlck , esq. . and important criminal cases for the local press. Among the latter was the trial of Bernard Doran. who , in July or Augurt preceding , had killed Constable Jerry McCheano , and at the simo time so severely stabbed Colonel Mnlcahoy and Pat Hockbud ( the latter since known to fume us the "Rocky Mountain Skipper" ) , that for several day i their lives were despaired of. The affair croatnd the greatest excitement and the fact that , Doran was not lynched was duo chiefly to the efforts of Prosecuting At torney John C. Cowln , who addressed tbo mob and promised a speedy and vigorous prosecution of the coso. The ottlco and his two assistants had gene to Dornn's room In the night with a warrant for his arrest for some violation of the law , each carrying a bit of candle which was lighted after enter ing the room. Doran was lying on u cot and at nnco agreed to go with the party , but said ho must first put on some clothes. Drawing from beneath the cot a vallso ho produced , not additional clothing , hat a big kulfo with which ho sprang upon bis visitors , knocking the lights out and cutting and slashing right and loft In the dark. Tlio case was tried bcforo Judge George B. Lake , Mr. Cowln prosecuting and Colonel Savage and Charles II. Brown representing the defendant. Doran was a handsome vouni ; man about twenty ye.irs old , with smooth face and clear blue eyes and It was dlfllcult to bollovo him guilty of on act so cruel. Ills attractive. Innocent appearance was made much of by his counsel , and in making the closing address to the jury on bohulf of the defense Colonel Savngo wound up In this manner : "Gentleman of the jury , ray task is nearly finished. This case will soon bo in your hands , and whatever your verdict may bo , my r-onscloneo will bo clear these mild blue eyes will never haunt mo In reproach , for I know that my full duty has been most anx iously performed. " Taking his seat In the midst of nn linpres- sivo sllenco ho was followed by Mr. Cowin , whoso first effort was to dissipate In the minds of the jurors the effect of the oppos ing counsel's closing words. Said ho : "Gentlemen of the Jury : "Colonel Savage ago tells you that whatever your verdict In this case may bo , the mild blue eyes of tills defendant will never haunt him with re proach. To this , gentlemen , lot mo add that if the mild blue eyes of this rod-handed murderer over rest upon me again. In case ho Is set free , God help my wife and baby I" Doran wits found guilty and sentenced to the penitentiary for a long term , but made his escape the following Juno on the occasion Of the sensational outbreak of prisoners the night the hospital for the Insane was fired by an incendiary , entirely destroying the build ing and burning up several patients. Doran was never recaptured. It is a cu rious fact that the young ronn who reported that murder casa for the Herald was himself tried for murder in Mluncsota a faw years later. later.An An nsrlcultural export , who has tried both ways , snya it is better to hnvo a cow glvo 300 pounds of butter for flvo yonra and dlo on your linnds , thnn to glvo ZOO pounds for ton years und then maUo 1,600 pounds of old cow boot. THE FALSE AND THE TRUE , Tbo Farmers' Alliance and Its Mission for Purification. REFORMERS MUST NOT BE OFFICE SEEKERS "It is Always Safe -Judge a Man by tbo Work He Has Done , a Friend by His Counsel. " Hols a wise man that knows his true friends from tlio false. It is n degree of wis dom that usually comes late in life. It is ns a rule only after a comowhat bitter experi ence tliat thoyoung man learns to distinguish the genuine ring of true friendship , says the Iowa Homestead , tie will never bo able to do so until his own character gives out the true ring. It Is not , however , merely sincere ano honest friends that are to bo trusted in times of great emergency. A sincere frlond may not bo n sato adviser. Ho may mean well but lack knowledge , sagacity , that indo- 11 liable thing which wo call rlpo judgment , the faculty of doing the right thing at the right tlmo and avoid doing the wrong thing at any time. The man who has learned to select irom among his true friends safe and judicious advisors and counsellors has learned one of tiie most Important lessons in HIo ana may ou saiui.v counteu 11 wise man. Friends should bo judged , not merely bv tbo ring of the metal , but by their fidelity i'n the past. If thn advice they have given in the past has proved wise , and it has comoout all right ; if the danger * they have pointed out and warned against have proved real and the courses they have suggested have proved wise and practical , then they are entitled to renewed confldonco in the futuro. "Thino own friend and thy father's friend forsake not. " The friend whoso solicitude for your wcl- faro develops , after tno fashion of Jonah's gourd , in n night , is always n legitimate ob ject of suspicion. It is especially so if there is some manifest personal advantage to bo secured through your kind ofllces , whether in the shape of pecuniary gain or political preferment. For tills reason the rich , the powerful and Influential have few friends In whom they can trust , and as they advance In lifo they learn to rely with conlldonco only on these who have been the friends of their youth. What Is true of Individuals Is no less true of organizations. The organization is only an aggregation of men who carry into the organ ization tholr wisdom and unwisdom , all their frailties and follies in matters of reasoning and judgment. Men attach themselves to organizations not because of personal attach ments , but because they uollovo In the prin ciples and purposes for which the organ/- ! nt'on ' was formed. In the beginning few men connect themselves with any organization who do not believe in Its principles. As it grows in power and Influence it attracts to it , whether it DO church , political party or farm ers' nlllaneo , two classes of men , neither of which are of any possible benefit , and both a source of positive damage. The first is that class who are nl\\ays desirous of belli ! ; found in the majority , and bonce , without any fixed convictions , aim to bo always on the winning sldo. The second U that class who wish to use every organization to which they belong and they usually belong to many of them for tholr own personal and political ad vancement. Those , under the gulso of friendship , nro the most dangerous ene mies of any organization. Looking , con sciously or unconsctouslv , nt all publio ques tions from the standpoint of tholr own per sonal and political interests , they are Incapa ble of giving wUo or judicious counsel. They are not capable , for this reason , of tak ing the broad and comprehensive view of public Questions that is demanded of any man who is fit to bo trusted with the shaping of a safe publio policy. If tholr counsel Is unheeded - heeded they are disposed to toke It as a per sonal affront , are ready to join the crowd of disaffected , sere and soured men men that have a grievance that hang around the edges of all organizations. It is quite natural for men of this c'ass ' to TJO In secret or open opposition to the officers of the organization , and to all whoso counsel has been adopted In preference to their own. This is human na ture and its workings may bo socn m almost every largo and well established church , po litical party , corporation , alliance , or , in fact , any other form of organization that has been long enough in existence or has attained power and influence. In every organization there is another class of men who take a very narrow view of Its alms and purposes. They are in the main honest and sincere , but their minds nro so constituted that thuy tuko hold of some one feature of the organization which to them becomes the main and exclusive foaturo. They are zealous and even florco in their ad vocacy of some distinctive principle of a churchor some special feature of nn nlllaneo , which to them becomes the end of its ex istence. In the alliance they are ant to re gard some one evil as the source of all the woes , real or imaginary , that affect the agri cultural interest. There ure. In all con science , enough of the real , without drawing on the imagination for others. They adopt some specific measure of reform and really believe that If this wore adopted the Now Jerusalem would como down in full view of every farm house. With one It is prohibi tion , with another it is railway reform , with another it is free coinage , with still another it is 2 per cent loans on land , with another the sub-treasury scheme and still another the crushing out of the "Big Four. " Still another class honestly believes that if ofllcos wcro filled wilt members of the alliance , and especially with these \\lio hold tholr own pe culiar views , the state or the nation would bo reformed nt once. It is well that ovorv measure , whether it bo practical or not , should have earnest advocates. The people can bo safely trusted to sift out eventually the true and practical from the false and im practical. It is a great mistake , however , when the advocates of these special mcns- uros , Impatient because their views nro not adopted , begin to denounce all who do not endorse them to the fullest extent as enemies to the cause , and make zeal in advocating some pot measure the test of fealty to the cause itself. If an organization , snch for example - ample us the Iowa farmers' alli ance , which has impressed its stamp on legislation us no other nlllaneo in the United States has , and whoso measures nro taken as models in other states , refuses to bo guided by the counsels of mon who have never been identi fied closely with any of her reform measures the world should not bo surprised. Neither should it bo surprised If these same men in their Impatience should seek to establish a rival organization wlj.ch they hope will ad vance the schemes of the ambitious and the solfUh , and endorse tho'theories of the mon who think that If their pel schemes wore adopted the mllloulum .would surely como. The rank and file of , the Iowa alliance nro wise enough to trust tlio friends whoso coun sel bus proved wise and , practical In the past and who have never .sought ofllco or prefer ment as the price of thoiradvocacy of reform measures. Tlio man who would to a reformer must not bo nn ofllco seeker. ' 'Tno ' moment , ho be comes a candidate ho is' liable to the imputa tion of advocating reforms because of the personal advantage likely to accrue. Any or ganization which seeks to reform the ab'usus of the times , and Is g'u'ltloa and led by mon who have been notcu ofllco seekers in the post , Is Justly liable to1 suspicion. It is the more liable to suspicion ; Jf thcso men have re ceived , at the lianas dt 'tho nubile , repeated indications of a want'df ' confidence in tholr wisdom and ability. The friendship of this class of men U always suspicious , und especially so if with loud professions of friendship for the cause there Is a scarcely concealed enmity and hostility to these who have boon trusted and successful loaders In tbo past. The public nro not sucli fools as they are sometimes supposed to be. It Is always safe to judge a man by the work bo has done , and n frlond by the wisdom of post counsel. If the policy of the mon who huvo guided the Iowa alliance In time * post have led to reforms - forms In railway management which nro re garded as models In all states , east and west ; If It has led to reduced prices for school books , to a great reform In agricultural education and to reduced rates of Interest , these men can bo safely trusted to formulate measures for t > > o reduction of taxation of farm propertv , for the moro equitable distribution of public burdens , and whatever other reform moos- urcs in the state or nation the agricultural interests may demand. STORY OF A DOG TRAVELER , He Always Bides in an Engine with an Engineer. TEMPORARILY SOJOURNING AT FREMONT. How tlio Doe Visits tlio Various Points of Interest Through the AVcst llccciit Trips Over the Klkliorn System. , Nob. , April 11. ISpocial to TUB Bun. | "Bull" is the rough but expressive name of a dog who Is making Fremont his temporary homo. Just how ho got this name and who gave It to him nobody kuows. It Is an appropriate one , however , as there is a strong , perhaps predominating , trace of the bulldog in his makeup. Ho Is n llvor-colored animal with u white ring around his rather heavy neck and a white spot on his breast. Tils jaws are Inclleed to bo a little broad and heavy , indicating linn ness in his character at the expense of alTociton. His parentage was a mlsmatlng being , evidently , an un happy combination of bulldog and pointer. Ho is , in short , a plain , blunt fellow , who loves his friends , such affec tion as ho has going out , not to any human master but to locomo tives and not , so as fur as discoverable to any particular locomotive , but to locomotives In general. Bull has the appearance of being about ono year old , and has doubtless lived as eventful allfo and scon us much of the country In that tlmo ns any other ciinlno in the country. Ho is a great traveler a veritable tramp who appears to have no other ambition except to roam the country and see the sights. The hum-drum life of a town or city with an uneventful existence in the back alloys , among other dogs of his caste , has no charm for Bull. No pent up Utlca for him. The boundless world is his , and ho Is busily engaged taking it in. Like the wind , no ono knowcth whence ho came und few know whither ho gooth. About six weeks ajo ho arrived in Fromont. Ho cnmo over from Missouri Valley on a Fremont , Elkhorn & Missouri Valley engine. Ho always travels on nn engine. Ho stopped hero a few days to "tnko in the town. " Ho made two or three casual acquaintances , but formed no warm friendships during the stop. A few days later ho boarded another engine and wont cast again. The next his Fremont ac quaintances hoard of him was when ho reg istered In St. Paul , Minn. , shortly after his disappearance hero. The Pioneer Press noted his arrival there , and It wus through that means ho was known to bo at the Twin city. Later ho doubled on his track and came back to Fremont , stopped off over night and next day loft over the Elkhorn road for a trip to the Black Hills. His visit there lasted several days , during which tlmo ho traveled over the several scenic routes ot that mountainous region and evidently enjoyed the trip. Bull then returned to Missouri Valley und ono day last week came over to Fremont again OH the onglno of n regular passenger train. Arriving hero ho changed cars , or engines. From the thrco trains which go out of Fremont over the Elkhorn branches at 11 o'clock every forenoon , ho picked out the ono he wanted to take. Ho had been over the Black Hills route. Ho had also taken a trip over the Hastings lino. Ho passed by the engines on these trains and hopped up the stops into the cab of the nnglna on the Lincoln train. Ho had not visited tbo capital city and the legis lature , and that was where ho was bound for. Kugono Nelson shared his seat with bull. During the stop at Wnhoo the dog made a short circle about the depot and vicinity , but was in the cab again \ \ hen Con ductor George Knight shouted "all abotrd , " Arriving nt Lincoln Bull started home with Engineer Nelson. When in u crowd of men on the street bo got lost from Nelson , and the latter supposed that was the last ho would sco of his canine fellow traveler. Ho wus therefore surprised when he wont to the round house to got his enclno out for the re turn trip to find Bull sitting 011 his scat watching the steam gauge. The dog had gene to the round house and picked out the proper engine from among all the rest and taken possession of it. Ho wouldn't permit the "wipo" to rub the engine off or allow the fireman to got into the cab until Nelson came. Ho felt that ho had rights they were bound to respect. Coming homo from Llt'coln ' on that trip Bull got off again nt Wahoo for a brlofrun up town. When ho came hick to the depot the tram had pulled out and ho chased It down the track , all tone no purpose. But on the very next freight which followed there sat Bull on the seat in the engine cab , with his head ojt of the window. The dog has not made any moro trips this week. Ho has formed n sort of nttncbmontfor Fremont and Is now amusing himself in as sisting , part of the timo. to run an engine In the switch yards. Ho is being taught to ring the bell by taking the rope in bis mouth and pulling It. On the whole this dog traveler Is notn very genial companion. Ho Is apt to regard his rk'ht to a scat in the cab as taking pri ority ever that of the engineer or llroman , and sometimes disputes with thorn. But usually ho gets fair troatmout and thov enjoy the novelty of his company. What his next exploit will bo remains to bo scon , but It Is certain that n dog of Bull's roving disposi tion and penchant for seeing things will not bo content to "iottlo down" and remain in any ono place a great length of tlmo. Ho Is a curiosity in his line and Is gaining a wldo acquaintance among trainmen and others along western lines of railways. Count Herbert Bismarck says that the English nro doing splendid work for civiliza tion in Egypt. Mr. Gladstone's now word , "Snrcast , " which ho recently used in describing Boa- consllold , is severely criticised In England. Mrs. Agnes H. James announces herself as a candidate for city treasurer of Hutchlnson , Ivan. Exactly. INO sooner is n woman eman cipated than she wants to take charge ot the raonoy. Mrs. Leland Stanford gives $000,000 , a year to charitable objects and keeps a number of women employed in making pretty decora tions for her Washington and California homes. Emma Abbott .was not ashamed to acknowl edge a strong partiality for newspaper mon. "Thoy nro always inquisitive , " she said , "sometimes impertinent , and often unfair ; but never dull. " Dr. Selyoo , the well Known college presi dent , declares that nt the present nito of progress tha women of the country will nt the end of the present century bo better edu cated than the men. Ex-Senator Irigalls is said to find consola tion for defeat In the reflection that Mrs. Lo.iso , who did much to defeat film , is not a strictly bonutltul woman , and that she has a largo family of children to bother hor. L. 7 . Loiter , who for several years has been n tenant of Mr. Blaluo's big red bilok house In Washington nt a yearly rental of about 911,000. is going to build u magnificent mansion of his own within u stone's throw of it. it.Dr. Dr. Koch has boon honored In Bnrlln by having his portrait displayed ever the en- trinco ton now cafe called the "Jolly Bacil lus. " lu order that the attractions shall not bo too exclusively scientific , the place is equipped with pretty waitrossos. Private Kcllar of Company D , Eighteenth Pennsylvania regiment , Is proving very useful - ful ns un Information gatherer during the present t rlko troubles In the coke regions. Ho sneaks seven languages Hungarian , Austrian , Gorman , Polish , Slav , Italian and English. The queou regent of Spain Is suffering from nervous prostration , the result of over work and anxiety. Although her physicians have advised her to leave Madrid for as a- son she dares not quit the capital for fear that during her absence some plot should endanger the safety of her son's throne. Key. J. W. Mendonhall wrltos to the Now York Times : " 1'ho report that I claimed to bo the author of 'The Breadwinners' is u baseless absurdity. H Is duo to the Ivncutlon of a brllllr.nt Chicago reporter. I only claimed to know the name of the author , but. as it was a literary secret , I could not rovool it. The fiction should parish In a day. " Miss Gabrlollo Grceloy is to bo married this month to a clergyman and the St. Louis Globo-Domocrat makes this suggestion ; "Tno printers nro about to erect a handsome statue to the memory of Mr. Grooluv , ana why wouldn't It bo a good thing for the editors of the country to unite In making up a handsome marriage gift for Miss Gabrlellol' OF SUGAR. The United States Consumer Moro Than Any Other Country. Indianapolis Journal : No two coun tries on earth consume the quantity of sugar that is disposed of in the United States. The plonoors of Indiana used to talk of "troo sugar" that is , sugar made from tlio sap of the inaplo tree , and "store , "or Now Orleans suartho ; ; latter , a very common article , bringing about 12J cunts n pound. Honey was the chief source of swcoots to the an cients and it lias not boon until very modern times that sugar has boon found in the homos of the poor. In tlio time of Shakespeare it was a rare com modity and Prince Hal spcalts of having sugar clapped into his hand by a waiter who wants to innko fair weather with him. The Chinese , who claim every thing , of course claim that sugar cano originated in tholr kingdom , and they called the julco "honey of canes. " About the ninth century the cultivation of this cano had extended to Persia. In the tenth and eleventh centuries , in Europe , sugar cano was only In the pulaoos , and castles of the nobles and used in medi cine. Ttio discovery of America , which bet the old world forward as nothing that had previously happened ever did , distributed the cano ever a largo portion tion of the globe. Santo Domingo , 15ra- zil , Cuba , Mexico and other countries began its cultivation , and in the mean time it was taken to Africa and the In dian archipelago. The proparatloritf tlio purest varie ties of sugar did not originate in tlio countries probuclng that sweet. Tlio art was first applied by the VonotianH to crude sugar brought from Egypt. It was practiced in Antwerp in the sixteenth century and thence intro duced into England. Tlio cano ap pears to have been first cultivated in this country about 1751 , near the site of Now Orleans , by some Jesuits from Santo Domingo , and in 1758 the first mill was built , probably , for breaking cano and manufacturing molasses. The manufac ture of cano into sugar was not begun before 17(11. ( Though Louisiana Is the most favorable state In this country for its cultivation , it Is too far north for the perfect ripening of the plant , which In homo portions Is sometimes killed by frosts in the spring and alw > injured in October and November. Cano IH alno grown In Texas and to some extent in Florida. _ _ Uriulc \ \ utcli GIIHO. Talk about frogs In lumps of coal , said a merchant to the Western .Icwolor , I've got a better story to toll you. A Virginian friend of inino hailing from Norfolk says that a short tlmo ago n bride fell from a building being erected on Market street , Norfolk , and was splintered by Its fall lo the pavomont. half of it being picked up was found to contain the works and ciuo of what was once evidently a fine watch. The only way the watcli being baked with the brick can bo accounted for is that someone ono of the negro hands must have stolen it , bccamo frightened , and worked it into the brick in its first stage to avoid being captured with it on him. For years the editor of the BurllngUn Junction. ( Mo. ) Post , has been subject to cramp colic or fits of indigestion , which pros trated him for several Hours and unfitted him for business two or three days. For tbo past year ho has boon using Cluimborhiln'H colic , cholera and diarrluca remedy whenever oc casion required , and It has Invariably given him prompt relief. 5 and 50 coat bottles foi sale by druggists.