I n THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER VT. XV. 8ANlr.K3, l'ublliliar. NEMAHA, NEBRASKA. "JIM." "Mordnunt" nho called him. In a novol book Ills fond motlior found tho nnmo sho gave to him; I don't Ilka It. fcr I'd kinder took A Hort of notion favor'blo to "Jim But when blia looked up at mo from tho bed, Half-dcnd, hut happy, an' alio said: "I want .That you shall nnmo him, aftor all, I "Why, hlamo It all, of courso It is Mor daunt." Bho know tho way I folt about such names, An' this was a sacrlllco, fer sho Had often heard me say that honest "James" Had Just about tho proper rlnp fer mo; I) lit thoitKh 'twas dlsapp'Intmont, still I thought , , A She was tho ono that had tho right to choose, '.An I there wasn't nny question ouRht To reconcllo my wUihcs to her views. Ho was bo delicate so teeny small, Hut smarter than tho cracker of a whip; T ilnn't hollnve ho over cried at nil Homohow he'd pucker up his llttlo lip 'An' look at you until you was ashamed Of all tho sins you know ho knew you d dono. I often thought ho Rrlovcd becauso wo d named By such a nnmo a helpless llttlo one. 'An thlnkln' that, when wo two was alone 1 called him by tho name I liked so well; Ills mother would 'a grloved If sho'd a known, Hut nolthor Jim ncr mo would over tell. .IVo never told. He'd laugh an crow to hoar Mo whlsporln' so hnpplly to him: Yer name's Mordatint, old boy, when mother's near; But when thcro's only mo about lt'a Jim." XVc never told our llttlo socrct, nnd Wo never will. Wo never, novor will; Bomewhero off yondor In n flow'ry land A llttlo baby's toddlln', toddlln' still, A-sccklu' In tho sunHhlno all alono The O od that gavo un' then that sont fcr him. Mordatint's tho namo carved on tho llttlo stone, STut In my heart tho namo Is always Jim. Chicago Itocord. NNMMMMttMtMMMttMMMtfMffy A DOUBLE DEATH. "9hNwmmffmNNNmmmmNfmwm& 4S I look buck now it seems to mo Unit I iiniHt always have been in i with Uertlm Maxwell. Certainly I know that if I try to fix the time when it became nn accepted fact, upon which I thought while awake, and dreamed a thousand tender dreams while sleep ing, I 11ml It quite impossible to do so. As a matter of fact, we had grown up together. Herbert Maxwell, tho bank er of U n, nnd my own dear old gov ernor, who was a retired colonel and lived on his pension nnd n small but convenient Income, which, nlnsl is now mine through his death, had been life long friends. And so when my father returned from 20 years' service in India, it was taken for granted that he would settle dowu in B u and pass the evening of his life with the dear old chum of his boyhood. Whether these two, ns they snt over their evening "grog," laid plans and wove schemes for the united fortune of Uertlm and myself I have never quite known; but the ill-concealed grief my lather displayed, whon certain un toward events came between us, nnd for a loug, dreary, hopeless time blotted the suu from our sky, led. nic to believe mo. At nny rate, Bertha's budding girl hood nnd my awkward boyhood were spent together. We played tennis, we went fishing, we took long walks through the beautiful country which surrounded B n, and so we Insensi bly grew Into each other's lives, and became a dally necessity to each other. At this time Bertha was to me the most beautiful of hiiiiinu beings in deed, she is so still and never for n single, moment has anyone else seemed quite bo fair or so lovely. Her figure was lithe and graceful; her step, when she walked, buoyant with overllowing health; and her cheeks dyed with that rich hue so often seen in those of south ern birth; -while her eyes were at once serene nnd thoughtful, or brimming over with mirth nnd mischief. She had a thousand little ways peculiar to her self, all of which, I now know, endeared her to me. However, I must come to my storv. for if I run on about Uertlm I shall never ceiiBe. The hair is frosty about iny temples now, nnd my step is not ho quick as it once was, but a little lady who now walks beside, me through the same green lnncs often looks up archly in my fnco and says: "Dad, you do like to talk about mother 1" And so I do. Well, the time came forme to go away to complete my education. When we parted I remember it as if it were yesterday Bertha kissed me over and over again. It was, however, only ns a young and Innocent girl she kissed me; and ns she Btood in tho doorway be tween my father and hers, waving n tearful farewell, it was to n chum nnd a playmate of childhood only that her "adieus" wore given. Four years passed swiftly away. I occasionally bhw Bertha, and I, at lenst, knew thnt the camaraderie of our chlld Lood was at nn end. Bertha had grown into the most queenly creature In the world, nnd hnil taken licr place, quite' undisputed, ns tlic hello of JJ n. Her , lnnnner wun me was ns cnnrming ns ever, but there was a slight constraint at Biieh times as wo were altogether alone; not the constraint of formality, but that of diffidence. For my part, I found thnt instead of decreasing her attractions to me, my absence had served to enhance them. To me slio was then, what she ever lias been, the oue woman in the world. Every day 1 rc bolvcd to put my fntc to the test, but hesitation, born of timidity, prevented nic, and the time passed away without my ever giving utterance to the words of love and passion which 1 longed to speak. But If I hesitated, there were others more bold indeed, Bertha, at every "garden party," or other social func tion in the neighborhood, was always the center of a group of devoted udmir ers. Among them nil Iloyal Phelps was preeminent alike for his handsome per son nnd for a certain fascination of manner which made him populnr with men and women alike. He stood over nix feet, hnd fair hair and blue eyes, and an athletic frame in which grace aud btreugth wero equally apparent. Bertha, while appeuring to share the general admiration for him, never seemed quite at case in his presence, and it was perhaps this evident con straint whenever he was present which led my father to chufl! me piensnntly one evening after dinner by saying: "Charlie, my (boy, you had better not let your bird of parudiso remain un caged much longer, or some one else may catch it!" And then the dear old fellow laughed and winked nt me mys teriously, as though ho were quite in the know. I think it was the presence of lloynl Phelps and many suggestive hints about his devotion to Bertha which finally de termined me to put to tho test my chance of happiness with her. It wns a bright and lovely dny in June, nnd a largo party had assembled upon tho spacious lawn in front of our "bungalow," as my father always called his house. Bertha had never seemed to me so fair, so altogether worthy of my love and my life. Early in the nfter noon, for she had come before tho rest, to aid us in arranging for our numerous guests, I had seen her color rise as I made some slight remark about her ap pearance, and as our hands met I thought hers tremlbled. Was it my Imagination? Or wns she, too, like me, longing to acknowledge her love? "I shall not bo with you long, Bertha," I Bald, hoping thus to prepare the way for my proposal. "I shall be leaving for Hong Kong within a mouth to take up my appointment," "Yes, yes, Charlie, I have heard it all from father; he says you passed your 'exams' with Hying colors. I am so glad." "Glad I glad of tho fate which ban ishes me from England, and from " But she did not lot mo finish the sen tence. "No, of courso not that; it will be awfully lonely without you, and the old place won't seem like Itself a bit; but still, you're a man, and you have got to make your namo and way in the world, and I'm glad that you are making so good a start." - 'I could look forward to my life in the east, Bertha, dear, with a great deal more joy if the prospect wero not so lonely." Bertha's eyes fell before my ardent gaze, and I fancied that her ttps trembled, nnd I hastened to put an end to the tension wo were both under, when a rollicking voice broke in upon us: "Ah I here you are, Berthal What, and Charlie, tool Ah I I hope I am not de trop. Shall I come again? Hal ha!" and lloynl Phelps' laugh rang out clear and loud, but with a touch of cynicism in its ring. "Not for tho world," replied Bertha, crimsoning to her hair; " wo were just arranging tho games for tho day, and now you can help us." And so the golden moment passed, and the word I had been longing to spenk remained unspoken then, and alns! remained un spoken for many bitter years. Tennis, and gossip, and ten, and laughter, and merrymaking soon sped tho afternoon. I had succeeded with tho aid of Bertha's cousin, Eva Win throp, In beating lloynl and Bertha at tennis, aud had then given myself to tho duties of hospitality. At last, however, 1 found myself free, and went in search of Bertha, resolved to ciuiure my uncertainty no longer. I approached the library window, and had almost entered tho room when I heard Bertha's voice. It was clear and cold aud positive: "No I 1 have told you how impossi ble it Is. I should wrong you and my self. I cannot marry you, because I do not love you I" I was about to beat a hasty retreat from my false position when Boyul's words chained mo to the ground: "It's for that proud brute, Charlie, I suppose, I'm thrown over! Oh! well, take him; but, curse him, I'll " "You forget yourself; I have not sold I love another, certainly I have not said I lovo Charlie. We are old friends, that is all, nothing more. Ho is no more to mo than you " But I could stay to hear no more, and with heart beating I gained my own room, and hid my grief from the curious eyes about me. And so this wns the end: "11 j is no more to mo than you " Obi, 'jruel words! Aud I- nJ there, to mo she was more than ull the world beside.. "Governor, if you don't mind, T think I'll spend the next few weeks in Lon don. I've a good deal to do before sail ing, nnd if you will run up with me we cnu bo pretty much together until I leave." "All right, my boy, I shall bo delight ed; but I thought ah, well, never mind what I thought. I shall be ready when ever you are." And so tho next dny we slipped away to town, I leaving a brief note for Bertha, saying 1 hoped to sec her again before sailing, though I knew full well that I should not dure to see her with those words still ringing in my cars: "He is no more to mo than you!" I will not dwell on the days my dear old father and myself spent together in London. They wero the Inst I ever spent with him. Ho died three months ufter I loft England. We were as brothers together then, and he entered into all my plans with greater zest than myself; and when at last I told him how and why I had come to resign all thought of Bertha, his dejection seemed as real and ns deep us mine. Bear old dad, next to my wife, he was the best chum I ever had; nnd I can see him now us ho stood waving his umbrella on that foggy day when the Oriental carried me away from home and all I loved to China. Of my life in Hong Kong I need not spenk in detail. It was a combination of hard work, which soon led to pro motion, nnd such sports as are to be found in the island. Having been a "blue" at Oxford, 1 was soon well to the front in cricketing circles; and, singu larly enough, it was my interest in cricket which led to consequences to Hertha and myself as far-reaching as they were sad. I had been chosen as one of the eleven to represent Hong Kong against Shanghai, upon the sad and memorable occasion when the Bok hara was wrecked on the return voy age, and, with a few exceptions, all hands wero lost. By what seemed to me the merest lluke at the time, I man aged to cling to a plank, and after be ing tossed about, till nearly dead, by the surf, was thrown ashore thorough ly exhausted. The news of the catas trophe cast a gloom over the entire Eu ropean population, and it wns cabled home that all were lost. Before the news was corrected Bertha was mar ried and married to Iloyal Phelps. Her father, shortly after the death of mine, hnd succumbed to pneumonia, nnd Bertha with her mother had greatly to their surprise been left in comparative poverty. So that when Royal renewed his suit Bertha had yielded, and to gain a home for her mother, had consented to nn early mar riage. And when tho news reached England that I with two others had been saved from tho Bokhara, Bertha was alreudy the wife of another. I shall never forget the effect upon me of the news that she was no longer free. Tho meaning seemed to have been taken out of life, and for me there was no joy in the present, no hope in the future. Two dreary years passed away, and 1 came home, having resigned my np pointmeut in the east, resolved to set tle down in England, nnd devote my self to those literary pursuits for which I believed myself to be better suited than for public service. I had no in tention of settling in B n. The place was too full of sad suggestions to prove inviting to me. 1 wns com pelled to go down there, however, short ly after my arrival, to attend to the disposition of certain family belong ings, and it was then, for the firbt time since that fateful afternoon, that I again saw Bertha. How changed she wns! Not that she was less beautiful: but her proud face was, oh! so sad. It seemed as though sho had gone through a world of sorrow since I Inst saw her. Her greeting was one almost too pain ful for either of us, nnd when she said: "We all thought you wero drowned; you are as one risen from the dead," I realized that she would never have been the wife of lloynl Phelps but for the news of my death. What I saw and learned in B n mndo me resolve to stay there, for the present nt least. I do not know how I enme to suspect it, but the suspicion grew, nnd at last be came absolute knowledge, thnt Iloyal Phelps was turning the life of the only womnn I had ever loved into misery. I had always known him to be of a reckless disposition, but I had not dreamed that he was oddicted to gam bling, drunkenness, and debauchery. I did not see him often, and I scarcely ever saw Bertha; when I did, her face was so sad so silently nnd uncom plainingly sad that it was all I could do to look at it and remain quiet. An for Iloyal, he had grown gross in per son and coarse in manner, nnd scarcely ever seemed quite sober. And so the days passed; from a distance I watched my proud, beautiful darling pine nnd fnde, till I feared that death might step in to interfere where I was pow erless. Thus things went on, till one night I wns summoned by a message from Bertha's mother: "Come quick ly, wo are in great trouble." I weut, and found the doctor there be fore me, and learned that an hour be fore Iloyal had come home drunk, and upon meeting his wife had first abused her, and then struck her a cruel blow, which had left her senseless at his feet. He had then sallied forth again, ienv ing his wife, for all ho knew, dead. There was little I could do but creep back to my solitary misery and spend the night in agonizing reflection;; upon the past. But, when the day at length broke, I had resolved that the mini who had robbed me of my dnrling, only to maltreat and make her miserable, must answer for his brutality to me. There is, however, a higher power than any we can wield, which often in tervenes in the niTnirs of man when least expected: und, before I ever saw Iloyal Phelps again that power had placed him forever beyond the reach of earthly retribution. While still half wild with drink, he hnd mounted to follow the hounds, nnd n few hours afterwards was curried home dead. We never speak of those dreadful days, now long passed. In the old home to which Bertha clings with tenacious effection we nrc living a life ns nearly perfect in happiness as ever falls to mortal lot. The old light has come back to my darling's eyes, the old-time buoyancy to her step. As I write these lines, upon lifting my eyes I see her und a smaller Bertha lnughiug nnd playing upon the lawn together, and I know that if the news of my death was the beginning of misery for her, she Is, at least, happy forever. St. Paul. ELECTRICITY IN DENTISTRY. CoiuIiik to lie n (.rent lloon to Suf fering Humanity. In dentistry eataphoresls is supplant ing many of the primitive methods, from the reproach of which even that progressive profession has for many years past wtinly endeavored to es cape, and hns made actually painless op erations at least possible. Tor by this method cocaine can bo applied not only to the soft tissues of the body, but to the hard substance of the tooth. The teeth, although coated by a superficial skin the enamel internally are com posed of a tubulous structure called dentine, quite capable of conveying cur rent, since within the little tubules is inclosed n gelatinous filament rich in salts and fluid, which make it a goad conductor of electricity. If a cavity in the tooth which is constituted a cavity for the reason Hint the enamel has been destroyed and n portion of the dentine has been en croached upon is filled with a pledget of cotton saturated with a solution of cocaine, nnd to this pledget is applied a piece of platinum wire connected to tho positive pole of an ordinary gal vanic battery, and a very small current is allowed in a period varying from six to 30 minutes, according to the ability and knowledge of the operator the shortest period recorded is a minute and a half the cocaine will be con veyed by the electric current down the tubules to the nerve itself, nnd the dentist can proceed with the dreaded preparation of tho tooth without pnin to the patient. The tooth can be ex cavated, filled, or even extracted with out the infliction of the slightest suffer ing. If one tales into account the steady and accumulated agony of dental oper ations throughout the world, and considers the wear nnd tear of pro tracted pnin which they entail, he may easily comprehend what an onornioua boon to suffering humanity such a process as tills will be when generally applied in dentistry. George H. Guy, in Chuutmiquan. HE ALWAYS STUCK TO THINGS. So He To 111 Ills Wife, Hut tho Joke AViih on Htm. It happened in one of the parks one Sunday, and the maddest man in Chi cago failed to receive n bit of sympa thy from anyone who happened to be within earshot. He wns walking with a womnn, evi dently his wife, nnd a small boy, pre oumnbly their own, and he had the aii of a man who had brought his family out for a pleasure trip and left his tem per at home. Running along tho walk, the small boy tripped and fell, rending the air with shrieks entirely disproportionate to his size. Tho woman ran to pick him up and soothe him, while tho man sanli upon an adjaceut bench entirely oblivi ous of a small placard upon it, and pro ceeded to deliver a lengthy lecture upon the evils of running anywhere and in the park in particular. The child's clothes were somewhat dusty, nnd his mother vainly ratchet for her handkerchief to remove the traces of his mishap. Finally she said, timidly: "James, will you lend me your handkerchief to dust off Willie's clothes. I am afraid that I have lost mine." "That's right," retorted James, us he fished out the article and threw it nt her. "Throw 'em away; I can pay for more. Money's no object. Look a tine; do L ever lose anything? Now, do I?" "No, Jnines," replied his wife, meek ly, "but" "But there's no but about it. I stick to things and" "Yes, dear," said his wife, meekly, an she completed her task and rose to her feet, "I know you stick to things, and pcrhnps," her voice grow meeker yet, "perhaps that is why you sat down on that freshly-painted bench!" Chicago Times-Herald. John Huff died at Hyden, Ky at the nge of 99, leaving 78 grandchildren, 142 great-grandchildren and 14 great-great-grandchildren. Bis immediate family was a large oue. GREASE STOPPED ENGINE. KxcltliiK' Incident IlvMitonnlhle for NlekiiumliiK of nn KiiMtern llonil. "When the roud was first built," the story-telling railroad man continued, "which now runs from Harrisburg to Canandnigua, N. Y., it was nicknamed the 'Davy Crockett,' und for many years thereafter tho name clung. it was brought about in this way: "One dark night, when the conductor was taking three passenger enrs through to Sunbury, he noticed tho headlight of a locomotive in the rear. He instantly informed the engineer of the fact and both begun speculating what it meant. The train was running at u high rate of speed, but the head light In the rear wns gaining steadily on them. As there was no lights in the rear of tho headlight, they con cluded it must be an empty engine. That road twists in and out among tho mountains aud skirts the banks of tho Susquehanna river in such a way as to permit anyone looking back to ob serve what is going on in the renr for a considerable distance. "The conductor ordered the engineer to put on more stenm, nnd the hrtter pulled the throttle wide open. Then followed a wild chase through" tho night. Pursuer nnd pursued tore along at the highest speed. Everybody on tho cars believed that the engineer of tho pursuing engine wns either drunk or crazy. "At last n bright idea struck the en gineer. He recalled the fact that a locomotive enn make little progress on greasy rails. The contents of two large cans of lard oil were poured on the tracks from the rear of the last passenger coach. The idea proved a great one. Soon the headlight of the pursuing engine grew dim in tho dis tnnce. Whon it was snfe to do so the train stopped nnd backed up to solve the mystery. A very funny sight was revealed. "One of the finest engines on the road, called the 'Davy Crockett' they gave tho locomotives names in those days instead of numbers had broken away front a hostler up in Williamsport and started down the track on a voyage of destruction. The oil poured on the track had baffled all the destructive abilities that locomotive possessed. There stood the 'Davy Crockett,' pulling and snorting like a Texas steer, the driving wheels buzzing around on tho greased track like a flywheel in a ma chinoshop, but hardly moving an inch." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. THE WILD HOG OF MEXICO. A VleloiiH Ilrnte "Will eh SeeniM to Hare No Motion of Kenr. "The most vicious nnd fearless of the brute creation is the peccary, or wild hog, of Mexico," says C. W. Bartlett, of Laredo, Tex. "This animal seems ut terly devoid of tho emotion of fear. 1 have never seen it turn a hair's breadth out of its path for any living thing. Man is its special bete noir. It displays nn intelligence in fighting the human strangely at variance with its apparent ly complete lnck of mental instinct. They are rarely found singly, but go in droves of from hundreds to thousands. Their ability to scent men is particular ly marked. I have known a drove of them to scent a man a mile off and strike as straight for him as nn arrow flies. There is no use to try to frighten them with guns. The cannonading of a full battery would have no more effect on them than the popping of a fire cracker. The only thing to do when they get after you Is to run away from them as fast as a horse can carry you. And then there is no certainty that they won't catch you. They are near ly as swift as a horse and their endur ance is as great as their vieiousness. "A friend of mine encountered a drove of them in a wild part of Mexico a few years ago and his escape was miraculous. Ho very foolishly shot and wounded a number of them. Then he took refuge in a tree. The peccaries kept him in the tree all that day and through the night. They circled round the tree, grunting and squealing their delight at the prospect of a feast. He .soon exhausted his ammunition and brought down a peccary at each fire. But this had no terrors for the beasts Along toward morning the brutes be gan to eat the ones ho had killed, and whon they thus satisfied the cravings of their stomnchs they formed in line und trotted off. If they had not had some of their own number to devour they would have guarded that tree un til my friend, through sheer exhaustion, dropped from his porch und allowed them to make a meal off him. The wildcats and tigers that infest the Mex ican wilds flee from the peccaries with instinctive fear, nnd even rattlesnakes keep out of their path." St. Louis Re public. Miirilcriiiin IlnhooiiH. A species of baboon, inhabiting the colony of the Capeof Good Hope has be come a pest to the farmers by destroy ing their lambs. The baboons hnunt the clumps of cactus scattered through the fields and exhibit much cunning in keeping out of the reach of their human enemies. It is nsserted that they have taken note of the fnct thnt women do not carry firearms, and therefore need not be feared. But when a man appears the baboons instantly take to their heels. On this account the farmers have lately devised the plan of dressing in, women's apparel whon they set out to shoot baboons. Youth's Companion. A