"Cf i f- V.' -s u THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER " XT. VT. SANDKItS, 1'ablUher. 1 t NEMAHA. NEBRASKA. ORPHAN BILLY. Youm; nilly hnsn't any ma To toll him w'nttodo; To make him ml ml, an' comb htshalr, An' keep him In a stew. Ho doesn't haf to wash his self, Nor mind about bis clothes I tell ye Bill has mostcat fun Of any boy I knows. "N mil kin so a-llsbln', too, Whenever he's Inclined. "N bo kin stay away all dny, 'N no one over mind. 2 toll you orfuns has a snap; 1 most wish I was ono. jMy ma an' pa watch me so elost I can't havo any fun. "N mil kin stay out late o' nights Till nlno o'clock, or ten; JBut let mo stay till half-past eight N somptbln' happens, then! "N you 1st ought to see Dill's clothes, All tored up Into bits; Hint If mine's tared a llttlo mlio My ma 1st gives me fits. "Vis, orfuns hav a snap, fcr sure Still, whon I come to think .About not bavin' any ma, I kind o' baf to wink, To keep the tears from comln' out. For ma Is awful kind, ".' treats mo nice an' lovln', too, 1st 'cept when I don't mind.. She gives mo pio and cako 'tween meals, 'N helps mo make my kites; 'N seta fcr hours besldomyBod When I am sick o' nights, 'N softly, gently strokes my bead, 'N calls me her dear son I think I'd rather keep my ma 'N lot I3I11 have the fun. Arthur J. Burdlck, In Chicago Record. CAPTAIN GLO BY CAPTAIN CIIARLKS KING. (.Copyright, 1804, by J. B. Llpplncott Co. I. Continued. Quilting- New Orleans after n long day's sight-seeing with his friends, he uad sought a berth in the Pullman and fslept soundly until aroused by the porter :af ter two o'clock to change cars at the junction. Now he was wide awake, .and, after the first few miles of jolting and grinding- through the darkness, was becoming chilled and lonesome per jhaps a trifle homesick. Twice had the -conductor bustled through the train, rousing sleeping passengers and seeing- them safely oil at dark and mys .tcrious stations where hardly a glimmer of lamp or candle could be seen away tfrom the mere shanty which served ais a waiting-room and office. A heap of wood was stacked up near the stove, -and Lambert poked the waning em "bcrs and piled on fresh fuel, whereat ,-n young- man who had got on at Cootcs--ville with a shotgun and a big- bottle for luggage, and who had for nearly an :hour been singing sentimental snatches lo his own deep satisfaction, now smiled .maudlin approval and companionably Aeld forth the bottle. " 'S good," said lie, in loyal defense of the stimulant unost courteously declined. "Bes' thing ;you can take these co' mawning's. Live 'bout hyuh an'whcre?" "No," said Lambert, civilly, yet hop ing not to be further questioned. lie Tbusied himself again with the fire, then, irisiug quicklj', sought his seat. But the young man. with the flask -was gregarious and bubbling over with the milk of human kindness. He promptly lurched after, and, flopping down on the opposite seat, sending isome of Lambert's belongings clattering- to the floor, held out his hand. " 'Scuse me, suh," he stuttered. "I Ihope I ain't 'fended you. My name's "Potts Barton Potts. We ain't what -we were befo' the wall, you know. But 1 know a gen'l'm'n every time. Hope 1 ain' 'suited " "Not by any means!" protested Lam bert, loudly and heartily. "Don't think of such a thing! I simply didn't feel dike drinking; but I'm a thousand ttimes obliged to you." "Thn'z right. ThaV. all right," said Mr. Potts, grasping Lambert's hand and shaking it impressively. "I hello! TVha'z that?" Lambert's sword, encased in chomois sskin, had come in contact with the :.stranger's elbow and gone rattling under the seat. Potts made a precipi tate dive and fished it out, regaining his equilibrium after some little struggle. "Goin' to Quitman too? ThaV. my home. An' I'm glad meet you. I "know a genTm'n an' I'll stall' your frien' I mean it. Missur Missur ' "My name's Lambert," said the lieu tenant, quietly essaying to relieve Mr. Potts of the sword. "Lammert? Glad meet you Missur Lammert. Where'd you say you b'longed?" "J'm going to Tugaloo." "Tu-gloo? TliaV no kin' of place. C'mawn to Quimman. Come to my house. What 'n 'ell's thiz?" he broke off suddenly. "My sword," said Lambert, simply. "Sword? sword?" exclaimed Potts. "You goin' Tu-gloo with sword? You Yankee offcer like that whaV. nanie? Close?" "A Yankee officer certainly," laughed Lambert. "I've never met Capt. Close." The effect of this announcement on Mr. Potts was surprising. It well-nigh sobered him. lie slowly drew back un til he sa: erect, his head wobbling u bit lu spite of his efforts at self-control. $t Presently he began to speuk, slowly and impressively at first, then winding up in a verbal entanglement: "Missur Lam-p-bcrt, 1 didn't know 1 was tnlkin' to Yankee officer but I'm a genTm'n, suh, an' I stun by wh-wha I soy. I mean to stan' your frien', suh; but as fo' that oth fcllnh Close I'll see'm in 'ell first," II. It was sun-up nnd snapping cold when the brakeman shouted "Tugaloo," and gratefully Lambert Htcppcd from the train and felt free air. Mr. Potts was sleeping soundly, doubled up in one of the seats. The only wakeful bipeds in sight were the conductor and his train man. Unseen hands forward had shoved the trunk out upon the frosty boards. The sun was just peeping over a low wooded ridge before them. The track wound nway among some desolate fields where tiny flakes of cotton still clung to the brown and withered stalks. In a cloud of steam the train pulled away, leaving Lambert and his trunk to look after each other as best they might, and as the cloud lifted the young officer looked curiously around him. He was standing on a rude wooden platform whose shrunken planks left black, gaping ,seams between their tip per faces, now, at least, beautiful in their thick coat of sparkling white. Ex cept where the footmarks of the train men marred the smooth expanse, and where in two or three places the planks were gone entirely, this gleaming sheet stretched the length of the platform to where the white bulk of his trunk stood on end at the eastern edge. The charred and blackened relic of a flight of stairs led from the platform to the sloping ground some five feet below, but not even a hand-rail warned the unwary against a breakneck plunge into space. Part of the platform itself had been burned nway, nnd some charred and blackened posts, sticking bolt upright from the ground in the shape of a nar row rectangle, showed that a wooden building of some kind had formerly stood nlong the rear of the rickety staging. Midway along its length, on the southern side, a shed with a sloping roof had been loosely thrown together, and the ends nearest him, boarded in and pierced for a door and a couple of windows, bore over the threshold in black stencil the legend "Ticket Office." Under the shed were a couple of plows and some boxes. Out on the bare slope, midway between the track and a "snake" fence that paralleled it some twenty yards to the south, a dozen bnlcs of cotton were huddled, three of them partially covered by old war-worn 'paulins and ponchos, the others en tirely exposed to the rain of sparks to be expected from any passing engine when the wind happened to blow from the track; and all of them, evidently, defenseless against the predatory hands of pilferers, for jagged rents were torn in the coarse sacking of each, and huge fistfuls of the white staple had been dragged from u dozen gaping wounds in every bale. The red soil, showing here and there through the scant and withered herb age, was camcd with mule and wheel tracks, and a few rods nwny a broken down farm wagon lay with a spoke bristling hub close by its shattered axle, while the tire, rolling away from the general wreck, reemed to have crawled off to die by itself, and leaned rusting against one of the charred timbers. The southward view was limited to a long, low ridge of ugly, white-flecked cotton stalks. Eastward the sun was breaking a pathway through the fringe of trees along another ridge, and a faint line of mist, rising sluggishly in the in tervening low ground, with the hollow rumble of the train crossing on invisible bridge, told of the presence of some slow-moving stream. Westward the track came into view around a thinly wooded hillside, with a clearing here and there, in which some low cabins were scattered. With this cheerful outlook to greet him at three points of the compass, Lambert turned him to the north. There was a siding with a switch at each end, but, us three or four rails were missing opposite the west end of the platform, it stood to reason that the railway com pany found the other nil 1 hat was neces sary to the traffic of so bustling a place as Tugaloo. A brown freight cor stood on the siding with wide-opened doors, nnd some household goods loomed in plain sight. "There is more honcstj' in this community than the United Statesmarshal would give us to believe," thought Lambert, as he recalled the ex tract from a recent report which was shown him at department hcadquorters. Ho laid his satchel and sword upon the platform, and, wrapping his blue cir cular about his shoulders, took a few steps forward and a peep into the in terior of the ear. From the midst of bedsteads--, burenus nnd cheap old-fashioned furniture, a quantity of bedding had been hauled out upon the floor, and from the midst of the bedding a woolly head protruded that of n negro fast asleep. Beyond the cor stood a dusty open square bordered on three sides by dingy wooden structures, some of two stories, but most of them only ono in height. A wooden sidewalk framed the square in home places, and in others only indica tions of its former presence were to be Been. The sidewalk was bordered by a rude railing, to which, it was evklent, horses nnd mules were tethered during business hours, for at one of the rails, even now, sprawled upon the soft, hoof- pawed dust-, a long-enml quadruped was half hanging by the bridle rein, while the dilapidated saddle had worked around during the night until it set tled upon the animal's side. Judging from such sign? or legends as were visible over the doorways of Tugaloo, Lambert's impressions were that the vending of intoxicating drinks was the principal industry, as there were three saloons to one store devoted to general mcrohundise--whleh estab lishment, painted white and with an air of prosperity and a flock of cotton boles around it, bore the sign of I. Cohen, and told pathetically that the pioneers of a relentless nnd one-sided trade had al ready made their lodgment in the midst of a helpless community. It was sunrise, nnd not n soul was ap parently astir. A street lvd away north ward at right angles to the main front of the square, and straggling houses lined it at intervals on either side. One of these, with a belfry, at the corner of the pla.i, seemed to be a meetinghouse of some kind, possibly the pro tempore substitute for the county courthouse, Thought Lambert, for the center of the Square was still heaped with charred j'nd blackened beams and bricks where once the courthouse stood. As for the camp or quarters of Ma future comrades and associates, Lam bert could see nothing that in the least lescmblcd a military station, and, do what he could, the boy found it impos Aible to down the faintly heartsick, homesick feeling that speedily took pos session of him. A dog would have been welcome as companion, hut there was not even a stray dog. For a moment Lambert thought of arousing the negro, but after one glance at the wide, red cavern of his mouth nnd the emptied flask lying close to the frowzy head, hu decided in favor of the mule. A short walk brought, him to the side of the prostrate creature, and a long pull induced his mulcship to stagger to his feet, but in his struggles he snapped the old headstall, and the remnant of the bit and bridle dropped into the dust. It was not until the vagrant stood erect '.hat Lambert discovered from the U. ?. brand that he was, or had been, gov ernment property. The saddle, too, turned out to be one of the old-fashioned, black-skirted, pigskin McClel lans, so familiar during the war days. As the mule seemed only half awoke and unaware ne yet of his freedom Lambert The younfr oQlcor bocamo suddenly nwaro of a man woRrlni; tho chevrons of n corporal, who, lUhing- rod in hand, wm standing Just buyond a clump of buihei bolow. first essayed to reset the suudlu.to which he submitted without objection, and then to replace the bridle, to which he would not submit at all, but with low ered front nnd menacing hoof turned him about nnd jogged over to where some wisps of hay lay scattered in front of a shanty labeled "Post Office." For ten minutes Lambert exercised his arts in vain effort to recapture that mule, nnd then, in sheer disgust, threw the bridle on the sidewalk, picked up an abandoned half brick, and let the mule have itin the flank. He merely twitched his scraggy hide, raised one instant the :iearmo3t hoof, but neer lifted his bead. The brute was hungry from long fasting, and did not mean to bo dis turbed, and Lambert, who had eaten nothing s!nce the previous day, was -presently in full sympathy. Once more lie looked around in search of some human being, nnd found himself con fronting o citizen in shirt c.leeves and a Tangled head of hair, who, leaning out cf a second-story window was neverthe less not 20 feet away. For a moment eachregirded the other without a word. Then the native spoke: "What ye tryin' to do?" "I wns trying to catch that mule." "Wont him f'r anything?" "No; only I found him Inngled in his reins, nnd he got away after I loosed him." The native regarded the newcomer curiously. Lambert hod slung his blue cape over the hitching rail during his brief pursuit of the ungrateful beast and his neat-fitting suit of tweed was something new to Tugaloo eyes. So wns the jaunty drab derby. "You don't b'long roun yore, do you?" queried Tugaloo next. "I don't; and the Lord knows I don't want to; and I'd be glad to find some way of getting myself uml my trunk yonder, out to camp. Can you tuiggest any?" "We-cll, you might walk. Don't reck on your trunk kin, though. Know tho way?" "No." "Poller the track down thar a piece, an' you'll come to a path along th branch. It'll take you right In 'mongxt the tents. Toin't more 'n a few rawds." "Thank you, my friend. You're the first live man I've found. I suppose 1 con send in for my trunk?" "Beckon ye can. They've gowt mulcn an' wagons enough." Lambert gathered up his belonging!! and trudged away. He did not mean to yield to the feeling of depression that wns struggling to possess him, yet the blue devils were tugging ot his' heart strings. Wasn't this just what his class mates had prophesied would happen it he went into the infantry? Could nny service be much more joyless, unevent ful, forlorn, than this promised to be? "Mark Topley himself would go to pieces in such a place," he hod heard some one at headquarters say of Tuga loo, but he meant to out-Topley Mark If need be, and nobody should know how much he wished he hadn't been assigned to this sort of duty and to this particu lar regiment certainly not his class mates, and, above all, not the loving mother at home. Heavens! how unlike wns this bleared, wasted, desolate land to the sweet and smiling New England vole where his boyhood had been spent, to the thickly-scttled, thrifty, bustling shores of the Merrimoe! He hod walked nearly a mile and had seen no sign of camp or sentry, but on a sudden the path left the brushwood beside the sluggish "branch," rounded a projecting knoll, nnd wns lost in tt rough, red elny, country rood. A fence, with n thick hedge of wild-rose-bushes, was to his left leaves and roses long since withered and over the tops ho caught sight of the roof and upper storj' of some old southern homestead, nt which he hod a better peep from the gate-way farther along. A path of red brick led to the flight of steps, broad and bordered by unpretentious balustrades. Dingy white columns supported the roof of a wide piazza. Smoke was drifting from a battered pipe projecting from the red brick chimney at. the north end, nnd the morning air wns faintly scented with a most appetizing fragrance of broiling ham. It mode Lambert ravenous. Somewhere, around the next bend in the rood, beyond the northward extrem ity of the old fence, he could hear the sound of voices and a splashing of water. Hastening on, lie found himself over looking a level "bench" surrounded on three sides by a deep bond of the stream and porfially separated from the red roadway by a fringe of stunted trees nnd thick, stubborn bushes; and here, in an irregular square, Lambert came face to face with the encnmpinent of the first company, outside of West Point, it was ever his hick to join. At that particular moment he was just about ready to resolve it should be the last. On two sides of the square, facing each other and perhaps 20 yards apart, were the "A" tents of the com pany, ten on a side. At the flank farth est from the road and pitched so oh to face the center of the inclosiiro was a wall tent, backed by one or two of the smaller pattern. Nearest the road was a second wall tent, used, possibly, by the guard though no guards were vis ible the white canvas cover of an army wagon, and a few more scattered "A" tents. Cook-fires hod been ablaze and were now smouldering about the wag on. Several men in gray woolen shirts were washing their faces at the stream; others, in light-blue overcoats, were sauntering ubout tho tents, somu of whose occupants, ns could be cosily Kee'n, were still oslcep. Standing at the edge of the winding rood, and thinking how easy a matter it would be to toss a hond-grcnudc into the midst of the camp, Lambert paused a moment and studied the scene, test ing on his sword, still in its chamois case, with his cloak and satchel thrown over his shoulder, the young officer became suddenly nwore of a man wearing the chevrons of a corporal who, fshing-rod in hand, wns standing just, beyond a clump of bushes below and looking up at him with on expression on his shrewd, "Bowery-boy" face in which impudence and interest wero about equally mingled. So soon as he found that he was observed, the cor poral cocked his head on one side, and, with arms akimbo and a quizzical grin on his freckled phiz, patronizingly in quired: "Well, young feller, who made them clothes?" Lambert considered a moment before making reply. One of his favorite In structors at the academy hud spoken to tho graduating class about the splendid timber to be found among the rank and file of the army. "They are like so many old oaks," said he, and some of Lambert's chums had never forgotten it. Neither had Lambert. to nn CONTINUKD. The convicted murderer cannot bo sold to have a very high regard for tho law, but he has for tho law's dolay. Texas Sifter. Men say more evil of women thnn they think; it is tho contrary with women toward men. S. Dubay. LABOR DISSATISFIED. An Open Letter to Hcrmtor Mot-gnu Iron unci Stool Worker Unit Work Coal Min ors to Btrllto Lockout In I'cminylvimla. CmoAao, July 3. W. D. llyan, secre tary of tho United Mine Workers of Il linois, has written an open let.tcr to United States Senator Morgan, In which ho soys: Tho stand taken by you In behalf of tho pa triots lu Cuba dosorvca tho commendation of nil liberty loving pcoplo, but lot mo call your attention to tho condition of 40,000 of your constituents- tho coul minors of Illinois. Tho In snno competition Inaugurated by tho coal op erator: has brought about a condition of bu( forlng and destitution which was novcr equaled. Wo havo been forocd to ncccpt reduotlon after reduction, until tho price now paid l.s bo low thnt miners cannot earn an average of 76 conta n dny, nnd tho mines work only half time. Taking an nvcrago of SI a day and three day' work a week, u miner enrns $12 a month. With a family of llvo a fair avorngo tho wlfo has an nvorogo of less thnn three cents n maul, to my nothing of clothing, rent, etc. I doubt If any mora lives havo been lost In Cuba slneo the Insurrection commenced thnn In tho mines of Illinois during tho fmmo time; and I urn certain there aro no more women and chil dren hungry In Cuba ot present than among tho families of tho minors ot IlllnoU Do something to put tho lillo minors of Illinois to work nt n fair rata ot wages and I will guaran tee that every miner In Illinois will contrlbuto nt least ono duy's wages ovory month for tho bcnollt of tho downtrodden pcoplo of Cuba. At Strentor, III., a meeting of miners voted unanimously to go on striko now and not wait for a general suspension order. As a consequence, no coal is being mined hero and nearly 2,000 min ers aro idle. At Brnldwood, 111., tho miners of tho entire Wilmington field met at Chicken's grovo yesterday and decided by a unanimous vote to go on striko when tho national oflleers shall order a suspension of work. THOUSANDS OP J1KN BTOl WOltlC. Pinwiimnn, Pa., July 2. As tho re sult of tho failure of tho joint wago eonferenco of the Amalgamated Asso ciation of Iron and Steel Workers and manufacturers to agree upon tho sealo at tho Youngstowu conference all tho union mills closed down yesterday and between 75,000 and 80,000 men aro idle. This includes thu skilled workmen and those depending on them. Tho gen eral suspension of work following tho disagreement of tho joint, conference committee at Youngstowu cannot bo regarded ns cither a strike or a lock out. Repairs aro always made at this season of tho year and many manufac turers do not sign tho scolo until after their plants havo been over hauled. Tills usually takes two or thrco weeks. In thu meantime, tho conference committee will meet and endeavor to settle tho differences. If tho committee finds that an agreement is impossible, tho striko can then bo considered as on in earnest. Tho con ference on tho tin plate wago scale will bo resumed to-day by tho committees of tiio manufacturers and Amalg mated association. All tho tin plate plants lu tho country, with tho excep tion of four non-union concerns, aro idle, and a number of manufacturers aro anxious to get to work. MTtJMIMOlM COAT. MINIMIS TO STRIKE. Tiutiti: IIautk, Ind., July 2. Next Sunday, or prior to that day, circulars will bo placed in thu hands of all tho bituminous minors in tho United States, calling them out on strike. It is estimated that 200,000 men will bo involved. Pennsylvania, Ohio, India na, Illinois and parts of West Virginia nnd Kentucky will contrlbuto to tho movement. Tho striko is to enforco tho Columbus scale of 01) cents per ton for Pennsylvania; 00 cents for Ohio; 00 cents for Indiana, nnd f15 cents for Illi nois. When the Columbus scalo was adopted, it was not thought advisable to attempt its enforcement. A commit tee was then appointed to take in hand tho matter of a striko and to order ono as soon as such a course scorned oppor tune. This committee has decided that tho time has como to act. LOOKOUTS IK rKNNHrr.VANIA. Nicw Kknsinoton, Pa,, July 2. Chambers' glass works and tho two tin plato works at this placo have shut down pending a settlement of tho wago scale. About 1,B00 men are out of work as a result. Chambers' glass works gives employment to over 1,000 men and boys. Neither tho manufac turers nor their men want an extended shut-down. JAPAN IS ANGRY. May Withdraw Her Mlnlntor on Account of Hawaiian Trouble. Washinoton, July 2. Torn noshi, tlio Japaneso minister, is likely to bo recalled at an early date. While offi cials of tho Japaneso legation hero claim to be ignorant of any such probability, well-informed opin ion in state department cir cles inclines to tho belief that Mr. Iloshi will ask for his papera within a short time. Tho reasons for tho minister's recall aro twofold, not tho lelst potent of which is said to bo tho feeling of tho mikado's govern ment and of tho minister personally towai'd tho United States over tho Ha waiian difficulty. WHOLEFAMILY POISONED. Mother and Tliroo Chlldron Dead ami Two Other Children 111. Br.ooJUXOTON, Ind., July 2. Tho vi cinity of Belmont, Brown county, 14 mllos east of hero, Is greatly excited ovor thu extermination of tho family of John Stephens. Tho mother and ilvo children wero taken suddenly ill with what was thvught to he ilux Monday afternoon. That night tho infant diod. Tuesday morning tho llttlo one-year-old boy died. Yester day morning tho mother died and an hour later tho six-year-old hoy died. Two llttlo girls aro all that aro left of tho family and thoy are dangerously ilL b now believed that all wero poisoned.