THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER W. AT. HANDKUS, I'libllilicr. NEMAHA. N EI! HAS It A. THE MOUTH ORGAN BAND. Vhon tho fireflies dnnco where tho roses are blooming, Lml lilies bond low to tho broczes' ca ress; hen tho cinnamon vino all tho air Is per fuming m Evening has donned her most beau tiful dress iik, then, as tho stars In tho firmament Kllstun And Night spreads her mantlo abroad o'er tho land, 'TIs pleasant to rest In tho moonlight and listen To sweet serenades of tho mouth-organ band. It Isn't pretentious this organization: Its members aro fow. Thero Is "Skinny, the Kid," Tho blacking of boots Is his humblo voca tion, Hut musical genius can never bo hid. There's "Hob" ho sells papers along with his fellows; He's short Just a leg and he's minus a hand, But he's chock-full of song and with lungs llko a bellows, IIo plays tho loud baas for tho mouth-organ band. And there's Widow McOann's llttlo boy "he's a dalsyl" Ho all his companions declare with r smile, And add: "Why, dat kid ho kin us' Bet you crazy When ho gives you do music In tremolo style." Oeorgo Washington Jcfforson Franklin Do zarro lie's colored tho alto Is In his com mand, And all through tho air runs a ribbon of sorrow Whenever ho plays with tho mouth-organ band. When thoy como up tho street playing Star-Spangled Hanner," "Tho Last Hobo of Summer," or "Sweet By and By," Though strangely grotcsquo Is tho music nnd Manner, A tear all unbidden may moisten tho oyo. ""or Music Is holy "tho daughter of Henvon" Her wonderful meaning wo all under stand, Hid hIiq gladdens our Uvea when with mar velous leaven Sho touches tho hearts of tho mouth-organ band. Nixon Waterman, In I,. A. W. Bulletin. VA4.4.4.J4.4.4.J.XXXXJLXXX4.X4.4.4.J.y 1 V " Capture of tbe "Comet." BY DAVID WECHBLEB. - Copyright, 1897.J STTTiPTT-H ON THE morning of June 20, 1871, thebrigCoinet, bound from Charles ton to Bahia, was oil' the coast of French Guiana in a dead calm, which had set in ut midnight. As far as could be seen from the deck not n sail was in sight, and after breakfast the watch on deck turned to at various jobs and the captain remained in his cabin. At about nine o'clock, and without our having suspected her presence, a ship's boat touched our port bow, and next moment a gang of men came tumbling in board. The entire watch happened to bo In the waist of the brig at that mo ment, nnd tho fellows, to the number of 14, reached the deck without oppo sition or question. No sooner hud I caught sight of the first one than I rec ognized the uniform of the French con victs at the penal settlement of Cay enne, but the last of the gang wns over the rnll before I stopped forward to ask what was wanted. A burly big fel low, who wns surely a Frenchman, but spoke excellent English, advanced a step or two nnd replied: "We aro convicts, ns you perceive. We escaped yesterday morning. Wo do not mean you any hnrm, and if you will do as we wish all will be well. If you aro not the captain then please call him." There were six muskets among the 14 men, and one had but to glance at tho faces to realize that they were des ecrate. I looked over the rail and saw i largo yawl, provided with mast and (ail and oars, and a breaker of water J ml a box of brend were stowed in the bows. "Wo had plenty of wind yesterday nnd up to midnight," said the. spokes man. "After that wo took to the oars. Let us see the captain nnd como to an understanding as soon ns possible." I sent the boy down for Capt. Bright, nnd if I had been astonished at sight of tho convicts pouring in over the bows ho was dumbfounded at finding them drawn up in lino across tho deck. Ho was trying to ask for an. explanation when tho spokesman doffed his cap, bowed, and Bald: "My dear sir, you see before you 14 convicts who escaped yesterday from Cayenne. Wo were all serving life sen tences. In making our escapo wo had to dlsposo of six guards, and these muskets belonged to them. Wo sailed down tho coast, and then changed our course, but it is likely that we shall be pursued. Your ship is ours, but wc only wish to use it to convoy us to some safe nud distant place. It is for you to say whother wo shall shed more blood." Capt. Bright was a firey old fellow, nnd I expected to hear him call upon the crew to attack tho invaders. Bfo grewredMMl white with anger, clenched a flnti, unci moved towards tin spokes man ns if to strike him. Then common sense enme to Ids nid. There were ten of us to 14 of the convicts, nnd we stood no show. They were us good ns in pos session of the craft, nnd would not heal Into at killing us nil if provoked. "So you are convicts?" Mild the cup tain tit, Inst. "We have that honor, sir," replied the leader. "Where do you wish to go to?" "To any spot on the American const. We are sorry to trouble you, hut under the circumstances it cannot be helped." "You have a big boat here," said the captain, as he stepped to the rail, "and why don't you make use of It to go where you will?" 'Tor tho reason thnt there is only one sailor among us, and because it Ib a pretty long run up to the American const. We have our plans, and they cannot be altered. With all respect, I say that you must land us where we wish." "You hnve possession," said the cap tain, as he puced back nnd forth, "and I am forced to do as you wish. Let there be no trouble. I will agree to land you on the const of Florida, and you shall agree to preserve order among your fellows, and to leave the ship with out act of violence." "Sir, I give you my word that it shall be so," replied the leader; and that ended the talk. The convicts had no dunnage, but were to berth under the topgnllant fore castle. Their boat would be wanted to set them ashore, and it was hoisted on deck. This job had just been concluded when n sail was sighted in the east. She had a breeze with her nnd wns headed In our direction. She had approached within two miles before we got the first puff. She was a coasting schooner, but we could not make out her nationality until she ilew her flag. Then we saw that she was French, nnd had no doubt that she was sent In pursuit of the con victs. The men begnn to mutter nnd curse as they realized her mission, and the leader asked for Capt. Bright and said to him: "That schooner hns been sent In pur suit of us, and is probably aware that we are on board. We have six muskets nnd plenty of ammunition, and we shall fight her. You will please order your crew below thnt none may be harmed." The captain nodded to us to dispose of ourselves ns we saw fit and retrented to his cabin without n word. He probably hoped, as we all did, that the schooner would have men enough aboard to make short work of the convicts. Neither Mr. THE CAPTAIN MOVED TOWARD THE Rawlins, the chief mate, nor myself left j the deck for a time. Tho Comet hnd all plnln sail on her, nnd we wanted to watch the wind as well as the schoon er. The breeze wns light, with no signs thnt it would strengthen right nwny, and ns It reached us the brig was head ed up to lie on tho port tack, while all the convicts worked to haul the main sail yard about. "This is good," said the spokesman, ns he rubbed his hands together. "I would rather fight her standing still than when running away. Seel She is coming right down on us, but I don't believe she has over a dozen soldiers on her decks." Wo then left the decks to the convicts. Those armed with muskets were ranged along the bulwarks, and those without were looking for other sorts of weapons. What followed we gathered by hearing instead of seeing. The schooner was satisfied that the convicts had boarded the brig, and knowing that they would make a light for it, she steered boldly down and laid us aboard. There were 12 soldiers and seven or eight snil ors on her decks, and nrmed with cut lasses and muskets and pistols they swrtrmed over tho rails in a fierce at tack. For ten minutes there was n lively battle above us. When at last we heard loud cheering we rushed up in belief that tho convicts hnd been overcome. To our surprise, we found thnt they had driven the soldiers back. The odds had been heavily against them but they had fought like demons. One of their number had been killed and two badly wounded. In nddition the convicts had secured threo more mus kets and two or threo cutlasses and pis tols, nnd were firing down upon tho schooner's decks, compelling her people to keep uuder cover. Had they desired they could have boarded her and made everyone prisoner. Whon I Baw how things were, I suggested this to the leader, but he smilingly replied: "Ah I no! Hhe Is smaller than the brig and a poor sailer; we do not want her." For an hour the schooner wns held captive. Then she wns fended olT, and after she had drifted half n mile away her people appeared on deck nnd were very brave. They wasted a good many cartridges In long-range firing, and finally lowered a boat and sent the lieutenant of marines to us with a de mand that the convicts surrender. They did not fire upon him, ns he wns under n ling of .truce, but they hooted and jeered; he finally rowed away, but soon returned with an oiler to grant them Immunity if they would return with the schooner to the colony. This proposi tion also was hooted at, and the lieu tennnt was ordered off. When he had been taken aboard, the schooner headed away for the coast. The dead were simply cast overboard, but the convicts asked our assistance to care for the wounded. That we gave them. They had made such a good fight for their liberty, and had shown such moderation after the heat of the battle, that wo had a better feeling toward them. They did not swagger about, ns one might expect, but uttered a cheer as the schooner turned tail, nnd had but little to say. When the dead had been launched overbonrd and the wounded attended to, the leader of the convicts said to Capt. Bright: "I think you had better now proceed on the voyage, but you will stand down the coast until the schooner is out of sight. If overhauled again we might not bo so lucky. We ran to the south for ten miles, then came about and headed up the coast, at the same time edging further out to sen. None of us wanted another fight on his hands, and the captain was anxious to reach the Florida coast and get rid of his visitors. As was after ward ascertained, two other craft were sent out from Cayenne in search, but neither sighted us. From one of the wounded soldiers I gathered the particulars of the escape of the con victs. They were loading a vessel at the wharf when the yawl was pulled in by some sailors from a bark at anchor a mile away. There were six soldiers guarding the convicts, some on the wharf a ikJ some on the ship, and at a signal all were attacked. Only two were killed, but the other four suffered se ven, injuries. Before an alarm had reached the prison sheds, half a mile nwuy, the convicts had seized the yawl and put to sea. They were pursued by other small boats, but the yawl out sailed them. The wounded soldiers at first expected SPOKESMAN AS IF TO STRIKE HIM. to be put to death by the convicts, but not a man had even a harsh word for them. If the fellows had had liquor there is no telling how free they might have mnde with the brig, but as it was no lot of passengers could have be haved better. One of them had a few hot words with the cook one day, and the lender of the gang walked up to Jiim nnd said: "Julius, we are not here to make trouble, but to regain our liberty. Stop this thing at once. If you can't rest content, I will give you six inches of cold steel and throw your carcass to the shnrksl" The one sailor among them offered his services nnd insisted on doing n sailor's work, while the rest of them were al ways at hand whenever there was pull lug or hauling to be done. Not a ques tion was asked as to the direction we were steering; they took it for granted thnt the captain would keep his word. The lender paced the deck with me for two hours one night, nnd asked many questions concerning the United States. He declared, and ho seemed sincere, that his crime was the killing of a man under extreme provocation, and that he Intended to make an honest living in the states. IIo said there were others with the same intentions, but that about half the gang were bad men and would soon land in prisou. Not one of the fellows had a penny, and all were still in couvlct dress. How they were to manage without stripping forcastle and cabin I could not figuro out. The enptniu had $S0O aboard, and I think he expected to be asked for it when the convicts were ready to depart. Per haps he would have been but for his own sensible action. When we were within 20 miles of Abaco island, off the southernmost point of Florida, he cnlled three of the con victs into the cabin and had a long talk with them. He advised them to land I on the island and remain, for a day or two, then proceed along the coast in tbeir bont. lie gave each man of the gang five dollars In silver, and from the slop chest, the cabin and the fore castle he rigged them out In such gar ments that they might pass for ship wrecked sailors. When they came out of the cabin they held a general talk nnd agreed on the story they were to toll, and as fast as they could change their clothes the prison dress was thrown overboard. At three o'clock one afternoon we ran in close to Abaco, and the big yawl was lowered and provided with water and provisions. Each and every con vict shook hands all around and ex pressed his gratitude; then one by one they dropped into their boat in nn or derly manner. When the Inst one was in the boat shoved off, the gang gave us a cheer, and we were not yet out of sight when they landed on the island. I never heard of any of them after wards, though something intuit have been published In the papers about their arrival at some port; but they had dealt so fairly by the Comet that, convicts though they were, I have ul ways wished them good luck. BACK TO HIS OLD HOME. StnteHntnn "Win n llrlrfc Who CMvu Property That Once AViih Ills. There is a representative in congress from Maryland, ono of the most popu lar of the delegation from that state, who has had a romance in his life which goes to prove the truth of the saying thnt fact Is stranger than fiction. The representative is essentially a self-made man, and is not ashamed of it, for it was. not his fault that fortune imposed upon him the task of carrying out his golden future. His father died and he had de volved upon him the task of supporting a mother nnd several brothers and sis ters. Work in the machine shop of his little town grew slack, am he started to Baltimore with a bravo heart and seven cents in his pocket. The first night ho reached the city he put in walking the streets. Owing to his own efforts he finally secured em ployment In one of the lnrgest machine shops of Baltimore. He sent for hii mother nnd the children, and prospered for a season. They lived in a little house on a small street and were happy. Then work grew scarce and the present rep resentative lost his place. The rent was in arrears, and one day when the young man saw the agent of the house he was told that unless the rent wns paid by a specified time they would have to go. "The house belongs to a young lady in the country," the agent said, "and she needs the rent to buy herself dresses and other things. The income from the house is all she has for pin money." The rent could not be paid in full, and the family, with the mother in the last stages of consumption, moved Into another, though they hated to leave. The congressman fell in love with his wife through a photograph which a friend had and he worried the friend into taking him to the little country town and introducing him. The engage ment followed, but the family objected to the match. The only objection they could offer, for the young man had never touched a drop of liquor, and was noted for the way in which he trod the paths of rectitude, was that he had worked as a machinist and ordinary laborer. "I knew of this," said the congress man to the Star reporter, "and I de termined, after we became engaged, that should show my intended wife exactly what I had been, for I had ad vanced to a higher position then. took her out driving one evening and arranged so that we should reach the entrance of the work's where I had been employed at a certain time. Wc got there about six o'clock when the men came out, dirty, soot blackened nnd wenry. I told her I had been one of them only a short while before. "Afterward I drove past the place where we had been forced to leave on account of my not being able to pay the rent. I told the whole story of how tho agent had said it belonged to a young lady in the country, who needed tho rent for pin money. We stopped at the littlo house, and I pointed it out. '"There It is, Mnry,' I told her. I turned nnd looked at her, nnd there were tears in her eyes. She was sobbing softly, nnd I thought she hnd been touched simply at the story of my strug gle to support myself and my family. " 'Do you know whose house that is?" she asked, in a broken voice. I told hei I did not. "It was her own. She was the younj lady of whom the agent had told me, and to whom the rent had to be paid It seemed almost Incredible, but it wa the truth." Washington Star. Strimiro Indian Veinjcnuoe. In the course of his investigations Dp Calmette has discovered the nature of t mortal poison which some of the na tives of India employ to kill the cnttU of their enemies. The poison is applied to llttlo pointed rods inserted in the end of a short stick, which can be con coaled in tho hand. Approaching the cattle, tho poisoner slightly scratches them with tho venom-charged points. The ends of the little rods break ofl Land remain in the wounds, which ara barely visible. Dr. Calmette found that tho poison was extracted from a kind of. bean, growing on a leguminous plant known botnnically ns abrus proa torius. This poison is called obrin. raid is almost as fatal in its effect am JLm J wott violent serpent niunt, ANCIENT MOUNDS IN ENGLAND. Hiiro ltd Ion L'mllturlcd for Cen turion. Scientific men are deeply Interested n nrchnoological discoveries just made oneernlng the ancient Britons. Thir teen graves opened at a little place called Dnnesdnle, near Drlfileld, in East Yorkshire, revealed relics that showed that the burials took plnce at least 1,000 ears before the advent of William tho Conqueror to British soil. For so long that the memory of man runneth not to the contrary, the mounds or graves jusfc opened have been supposed to be the last resting places of ancient Danes. They were called the "Danes' graves." Indeed, the town of Danesdale referred to gained its nnme from that supposi tion. The graves or mounds are 173 in number, but only 13 hnve thus far been opened. They are surrounded by for ests, and upon some of the mounds huge trees are growing. Archaeologists have long believed thnt investigation of the ancient mounds would lend to Important dis coveries. It was this sentiment which led the East Biding Antiquarian socie ty, through Canon Grccnwell, of Dur ham, to institute the Inquiry which re sulted in opening the mounds. Deep down In the first mound opened were found not only the bones of an ancient Briton, but the Iron tire of his chariot, the iron bit nnd trappings of his horse, nnd a bronze pin, beautiful in design, nnd ennmeled. The shape of the grave and the curious curled-up position of the skeleton left no doubt ns to the age to which all belonged, and disposed to the satisfaction of every one-of the Dan ish theory which had so long prevailed. , Perhaps the most notable of the relics, so far as establishing the antiq uity theory is concerned, was the bronzo pin. It is a specimen of the earliest known British enameling and Is of a type most peculiar to the iron period. It has a peculiar twist in the shank which makes its origin an ab solute ccrtnlnty. It is one of the curious facts found in British history that pins such as the one described only ex isted during a certain period. Distincl changes In articles of this sort were made at a certain point in the develop ment of Britain. This fact is known ab solutely, and therefore this pin settles beyond question the point as to the time before which it must have been made. Two other graves were opened at Arras and Beverley in which, chariots were found, nnd in the one at Arras the tires and naves of the wheels were complete. The tires are of Iron and the naves of bronze. There were also found in these graves an. iron mirroi with bronze mountings, the end of a shank of a bronze whip, and two oi three rings through which the reins oi the chariot must have beencarried. The bones found at Beverley had gone to de cay, but at Arras the human remains nnd the bones of the horses nppeared as fresh as if they had been buried IOC years ago. The graves referred to as having been opened were not close together. Foi instance, the places of discovery, Danesdale and Arras, are 12 miles apart, The theory advanced by the archaeolo gists who have taken the matter up is that the district throughoxit whiflh the mounds are found was formerly the burying place of the ancles t Britons, probably years before the Danes at tempted the conquest of the island, The relics discovered indicate that they once were part of and the property- ol leaders among the aboriginal inhabi tants of Britain. There hns been a dispute for a very long time between archaeologists as tc the occupation of the territory in which the mounds were found by the Danes and by the early Britons. One faction of disputants held that the mounds, be ing accepted as graves of ancient Danes, were conclusive evidence that the Danes were in possession, of tho country centuries before some persons claimed to believe. The second faction held that the Danes hnd never held posses sion of the country, but thnt it was foi centuries located in the center of the stronghold of the Britons of early days, The formation of the tires and the naves of the chariots found nlso indi cated a hitherto unknown communica tion between the Romans and the early Britons. The tires nnd the nnves are almost exactly similar to those now in the British museum at London, which are known to hnve been in use in Rome about the same period In which the or iginal chariots to whioh the Britisli tires and naves were attached sped over the soil of the island. It establishes a new fact In history In reference to the relations and power of Rome, and, while it settles one dispute, makes seemingly incorrectnnumberof assertions regard- , ing the period In which the burials in the British graves took place. It is very likely that several more oi these mounds will be opened for the purpose of ascertaining whether they are the resting places of Britons of a certain century, or whether, ns many lelieve, the mounds are located in what was the burial ground of tho leaders of the early Britons for many centuries. Should the latter prove true it is more than likely thnt discoveries will be made which will entirely change the history of Britain ns far as it relates to that period which led up to the Con quest, Philadelphia Times. No Hnrm In Thinking;. Maud I'm thinking of writing a , novel. Claud Well, there'i no harm in th4 Town -Toplci. i A -4 -il r