THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER W. W. HANDKItM, r-ihllihrr. NEMAHA, NEHRASKA. AN AUTUMNAL REVERIE. Just nn humble, plain-faced woman, Mlddlo-agcd nnd somewhat rny; True nnd wholcsome-llko and human Kind o' Krnvo nnd kind o' Kray. Mnkon mo think o' early autumn, Ontpos a-purplln' on tho vlnr, "Whuro tho first faint frost tins cniiRlit 'em, Caught nnd kissed 'cm Into wine. Dcop-volcod boys now call hor "mothor" Unhy hoys Hint's Krown to ho, Uy soino limbic trick or other, In a year ns tall ns sho; Girls Unit yesterday was clliiKln' To hor skirts, I've scon o' lato With tho neighbor boys a-HwIiiKln' At tho roso-wrcathed garden Kate. Whllo across hor brow Time's flnKor Writes the plainer talcs o' truth. In hor heart there still must linger All iho llowory dreams o youth. Klolds nro sweol with bloomy clover, Llfo Is crowned with blissful Joys; Love's pure Kold she's colnln' over In her happy Klrls and buys. Hoe ms as thntiKh tho cup Kate brings ut Is a sort o' blttcr'Swcnt, Kind o' soothes nn' kind o' stings us Mirth and melancholy meet. Grief comes liushln' all our laughter, Kalrest skies are clouded o'er. Hut tho sunshine follers after, Always brighter than beforo Oprlng may fado and summer vnnlsh, Autumn yield to winter's sway, Yot tho years can never banish llcauty ,ovo hns crowned with May. In thu chltnnoy-corner, cozy, r Droamln' In the firelight's glow, I shall soo her uhvoks blush, rosy, Ah I saw them long ngo. Nixon Waterman, In Kltlott's Magazine. VXXXXAAXAJ.Xj.XjUXXJ.J.XXXJLJM-y Beyond the Green Baize Door, iFPi:TipTTTr-HrTT THHIIK was mystery behind the green baize door; tangible or in tangible, nobody knew, since no one but Mr. Ulakely ever saw tlie Inside of the door whleh shuts his private room at Messrs. Ulakely &. Stephen's bank from the narrow passage connecting it with the general offices. Mr. Ulakely wus solo proprietor of the bank, which was the only one in the town, and showed every semblance of the soundest financial batis. Mr. Ulakely was a man strangely de void of eccentricities. The chief faults' the bank stall found with liiin wore ids Indcfutlgabillty, and that whenever there was business to be done in London selling or buying stock, buying cash, etc. lie Invariably attended to It him self. J was seated at the desk of the head cashier, who was away on a short holi day, one morning in September, when one of our clients entered the counting house. "Mr. ltoyton, look here," he snid, slip plug a crown piece upon the counter. "Where did you get It V" "What's wrong with it?" 1 Inquired, examining It closely without noticing any defect. "Did I give It to you?" "Yes. hook at the edge; it's quite uuiooth." ' I pabscd lii m two half crowns, and ns Itwn Wr?CSU ilr CA "I AM MRS. HI.AKICI..Y," 81113 SAID, HASTILY. he went away I slipped tlie crown into my iocket, Intending to keep it as a curiosity. Hut later in the day, when Mr. Ulakely was in tlie ofilee, 1 showed it to him. "Curious!" lie murmured. "One of an experimental mint, no doubt, for it's dated lSUfl. Do you think we've any others similar?" "No; I have been through them." "Strange! Well, I'll keep it. It's probably unique." I was disappointed with his decision, us I wanted the coin myself. It was against my principles, however, to pro test. I forgot It entirely until some weeks later, when Mrs. Ulakely, to the utter astonishment of tlie bank's stafT, turned up an hour or so before luncheon time. Up to that time, although she had been married more than ttyi months, Mrs. Ulakely had never been inside tlie hank. Now she drove up in her car riage, came in proudly and asked for Mr. Ulakely. I replied that if she would step into the waiting-room 1 would summon him in the usual way. "No. Show me into bis private room. I am Mrs, Ulakely," she snid, hastily. "1 recognize you, madam," I replied. "Hut tlie rule is that all visitors, who ever they may be, are to, be shown Into 1 fyfeMBlf 'IBS! Kan JsJOSi the waiting-room, where Mr. Ulakely will Interview tlicin." "Nonsense 1" she ejaculated. "Such rules do not refer to .Mr. Ulakely's wife. Tlie room is at the end of the passage, is It not?" "You are putting me In an awkward position," I replied. "I nm not allowed to let visitors approach the green bal.e door" "Ah!" Her proud eyes Hashed. "So there Is a green baiedoor which no one approaches?" When Mr, Ulakely came, he did ao in ills habitual leisurely manner; and he walked Into the waiting-room, leaving tlie door ajar. "Mr. Ulakely," she said, haughtily,"! have been insulted by one of your clerks. Since when has your wife been denied the right to enter your private room?" "Kvcr since she wrongly assumed that she had such a right, Mary. My clerks have their orders; they obey them. You cannot blame them for upholding rules 1 myself have framed. What do you want? I nm busy this morning. The market Is unsteady just now." "Tell me, Itlchnrd; had you known I was coming would you have allowed your clerk to deny me access to your private room?" Mrs. Ulakely inquired. "The rule is of many years' standing, Mary," he said, deliberately. "I f it were set aside for you it would be the thin end of the wedge: my room would no longer be private." "You indorse your clerk's insult?" "I uphold my clerk who upholds the bank's rules." L felt her brush past me as she came out of the room and saw her walk round tlie desks, iter lips tightly compressed and her head high. Tlie following morning when I turned up at the bank tlie porter met me with the inquiry had I seen anything of Mr. Ulakely? No one iiad seen him since tlie bank closed the night before. lie wart not in tlie bank had not been home indeed, It, was Mrs. Ilfakely who had driven down the first tiling to in quire about It i in ; and no ouu had seen him. "Mr. Uoyton," she asked, "have you seen my husband? You were the last to leave, I believe?" "Yes, madam, but I have not seen Mr. Ulakely since he put you into your car riage yesterday." "That decides it," she muttered. ".Something has happened to him In his room. The door must be forced, l'or ter, go for n carpenter!" "You take the whole responsibility of forcing the green baize door?" L sug gested. "The whole responsibility," she re plied, and turned away impatiently. When the carpenter arrived Mrs. Ulakely led him to tlie door and ordered him to force it. lie smiled grimly as he looked the door up and down. He sounded it witli a mallet and Ids jaw fell. "Iron!" he said, laconically. " "(.'isn't my job; you want a blacksmith." The porter was sent oil" in the car riage to fetch a smith. When the man arrived lie eyed tlie door critically and looked dubious. For live minutes he dealt a rapid fire of blows, and then tlie door began to tremble, then to shake. Finally, after ten or twelve minutes, it gave a shudder and came forward, swinging on its hinges. .lrs. Ulakely darted forward and stopped. Six feet farther down the nar row passage another door obstructed the way. She signed impetuously to the smith, who stepped forward and shivered the lock of tlie second door, which was only light wood. All was darkness beyond the door. I turned to Mrs. Ulakely, who stood gazing In wonderment Into chaos. "Porter," she said, in a hushed oiec, "get me a lanturu. Then you can both leave us. Mr. Hovton's will be all the help 1 shall need." We passed through the doorway and Into a small, dark room, poorly fur nished with a little oiliee furniture and littered with papers. There was no sign of Mr. Ulakely. , "hook!" cried Mis. Ulakely. "hook! A trapdoor!" I saw a square had been out out of the carpet, in the center of which was a ring by which 1 raised tlie trap. hooking through, wo saw a ladder leading down to darkness. doing carefully down -four rungs of the ladder, I held tlie lantern out at arm's length and sun eyed the scout. A stone-walled chamber stretched be fore me like a largo ault. in one wall was a low, barred door; hi a corner was a small furnace. A peculiar-looking ma chine stood in the middle of the ault, and upon a ledge of its frame rested a row of silver coins. I went down, and, stopping, as 1 thought, to the ground, my foot encoun tered something soft. 1 sprang aside, avoiding it, and saw tlie body of Mr. Ulakely huddled up in a broken bundle. "Ah, me! Ah, me!" she moaned, propping the head upon her knee with frenzied tenderness. "Uiehnrd, hus band! You did not merely dream- you lived your crimes that night and now! This is ills secret! hast night the night before, he was resiles in his sleep; he talked of coining, years of coining-coining silver coins nnd vcapr ing profit profit. 'Tlie- mint' makes profit on Its silver coins, and why not I?' He said that, and as 1 lay awake 1 hoped he merely dreamed. Dead, dead! Yes, yes, and if you had lived these J hands would kill you for the ignominy and shame! Itiohardt Oil, Richard! Menard l" licyond the police, only Mrs. Ulakely nnd myself know the true secret that hid licyond the green bal.e door. hou dou Tit-Uits. AFRAID TO BE AFRAID. A Kfttintloti In Whlrli It Win linn. Kcrous to Slimy tlie .Nllklit- vmt Kenr. There are.BltuatloiiH in which n timid man cannot, out of consideration for his own Bufety, show the slightest fear. A writer describes such a situation on board a ship which was transporting u great number of coolie's across tho ocean,, many of them desperate and brutal men. One day ut luncheon In the saloon the passenger heard horrible yells and shouts of "Ta! tn!" (A fight! a tight!) "Jlulio!" the captain said. "Another jol jy row belowl Uetter stay where you arc. You'll find a loaded revolver in my room if anyone attempts to molest you." Lighting his pipe and calling his dog, a fierce-looking English bull, the cap tain went on deck to see what was the matter. The coolies were fighting sav agely; broken howls and pieces of fire wood were Hying about, and several of the men hnd ugly-looking kniics drawn. Into the midst of them walked the cap tain, knocking first one and then an other aside. One fearful-looking coolie nimed a blow at him with a broken basin, but before the blow could descend the dog brought the man down on his back and held him there. Tlie two principal of fenders were caught, their heads banged together until the fight was out of them and an explanation asked. Ev erybody wanted to talk at once, but the captain hold "P his hand till there was silence, and then called one in.in after another and heard each through an in terpreter. Tin row turned out to have been caused by a man trying to light his pine ut an opium smoker's Innip. The most trivial thing often caused tho worst fight. After all was over the pas senger said to the captain: "Are you not afraid of these people?" "Yes," said the captain, "to tell the truth, I am. Hut to show the least fear among such n crowd as that, or to lose my temper, might lead to my deatli on the spot. I cannot n fiord to show' that L urn afraid. Hut I am getting used to it." Chambers' Journal. PLAIN SPEAKING. nxninploN of the GriifTneMH of Ilnff- IIhU NotnhlcN The Truth In IllsiiKrvcnlile Komi. To nn American who avoids rudeness ns vulgar and unbecoming in social in tercourse the not infrequent grulTness of Ids Huglish cousin and his habit of forcing the naked truth upon friend or foe, in season or out of season, is often quite incomprehensible. Mrs. Oliphaut, in lierNiutobiogrnphy, gives an example of this grufi'ness in her nccount of a visit paid by hor to the Tennysons. The poet apparently had not tlie least interest in hor and did not hesitate to show it. When she was taking leave his wife regretted that her visit hud been so short, and Mrs. Oli phaut declared that it had giwu bora great pleasure. Tlie poet, who stood glowering down on them both, sudden ly exclaimed: "hord! what liars you women are!" Archbishop Temple, clerical head of the Church of Englund, is noted for his brusque sincerity. A lad" told him a remarkable ghost story, for which her! aunt was authority. "Is not that a proof of the existence of ghosts, your grace?" she asked. "I really can't say. I don't know your aunt," was the reply. A clergy man who wished for a bish opric was consulting the primate, and said, Willi an evident desire to tliow thiit he tlid not overestimate his quii.V flcations for tho place: "i know that I am no preacher." "No, you are not," was the prompt and startling reply. "I bue heard you." Another clergyman who had boasted of his parisii reforms anil talked inces santly of himself said, at last: "What do you think of m work, my lord?" "Oh," said Dr. Temple, "it's much the same as other men's; only they don't talk about it, and ,oudo." It is a duty to speak the truth, but it is not the. dut, of any man to toll, when it Is unnecessary, all the truths that he knows," - Ulnok and White. Her Selr-KNteeiii. "I low you," he passionately said "with all my heart, with all my soul, audwitli the whole strength of inv be ing!" "I don't soo how you can help it!" re plied the maiden, who was fully aware of her own worth. I'uck." Kat Pot a to II read. Tn (icrumuy potato bread is used by the natives of Tliuringia to feed their horses, especially when.. they are worked h.'id in cold weather. Tlioan hauls thrive on it, and their health and strength are excellent. Cliniitituiiuii'M Growth. Not less than 1,000,000 persons attend the 73 branch Chautauqua assemblies every summer. AN ELEPHANT IN BATTLE. The Knltliftit Aiilimtl Stood Stnnclilr llcxldc Ills Dcnil Mrmtcr for Throe Ilnys. An old elephant taken into buttle on the plains of India wns a standard bearer and enrried on his huge back the royal ensign, the rallying point of the 1'oona host. At the beginning of the fight he lost his mnster. The "inahoot," or driver, hnd just given the word to hnlt, when he received a fatal wound and fell to the ground, where he lay under a heap of slain. The obedient ele phnnt stood still while the battle closed around him, and the standard he enrried. He never stirred a foot, re- COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF '. . . Tho new head of tho Grand Army of tho Republic, Col. Albert D. Shaw, of "Water town, N. Y., Is a Now Yorker by birth and 58 years of age. He was 20 years old whon. ho enlisted In tho Thlrty-llfth New York volunteers. Ho fought at Rappahannock,, tho second Hull Run, Cliantllly, South Mountain, Antlctam and In many lessor eiiRaKenients. After the war ho served as consul at Toronto, Canada, and later at. Manchester, Kncland. He Is the author of a text book used in many public schools, called "The Teaching of Patriotism and Civics." In 1S'J7 ho was elected department coniuiundur of tho New York G. A. It. fusing to ndvance or retire, as tlie con flict became hotter and fiercer, until the Mahrattas, seeing the standard still flying steadily in its place, refused' to believe that they were being beaten nnd rallied again and again around the colors. And all this while, amid the din of battle, the patient animal stood straining its ears to catch the sound of that voice it would never hear again. At length the tide of conquest left the field deserted. Tlie Mahrattas swept on in pursuit of the Hying foe, but the elcnhnnt. like a rock, stood there, with the dead and dying around, and the en-; sign waving in its place. For three da s and nights it remained where its master had given the command to halt. No bribe or threat could move it. They A FARMER OF wmmim v- P "-ethods of aKrlculturo In vokuo throiiKhout tho Philippine Islands, says tho. National Stockman and Farmer, aro the most primitive. There Is not, Plow or other modern farm Implement on any of tho islands. Tho ancient crooked stl k u t h Plow in use, and tho fertility of tho soil is such that Ils possblo to raise t-ood u'io' XXXt oncarin'Zm PT then sent to n village 100 miles away and brought tlie mahoot's little son, Tlie noble hero seemed then to remem ber how the drher had sometimes given his authority to the little child, and im mediately, with all the shattered trap pings clinging as he went, paced quiet ly and slowly away. .Mil telle x. Tt is estimated that we use annually In the United States over 00,000,000,000 matches. These indispensable little ar ticles were first used in this country less than 70 years ago, and at that time a box .containing 25 was sold for 25 cents. Imagine, if you please, matches at one cent, apiece ! To-day, we buy.l',000 for Ow cents. . , a . . THE FOREIGNER IN JAPAN. Clinnge of Status in Ofllclnl Circle AVItlilu tho Vant 1'cht Venn, One of the most interesting ques tions in consideration of present Japan is the changed status of tho foreigner. To be a European or nn American in Japan twenty, ten, or even five, years ngo was to be a man of power and in fluence. When foreigners were first-admitted to the empire the Japanese, one of the shrewdest, most far-sighted peoples of the world, adopted their methods and their religion, hired them as teachers, engineers and officers. Now according to "Japan in Transition," the ALBERT D. SHAW. ' K first important book dealing entirely with the new Japan, since they have learned sill the foreigners enn tench, them in science, literature, art, war,, commerce, manufacturing, in short, in all enterprises, they are relegating t heir instructors to the background -with the cry "Japan for the Japanese." It was. thought at one time that Japan would in time become a Christian nation. The nutlior of Japan in Transition shows, that almost all who accepted Christian ity did so for the sake of the instruc tion which the missionaries alone could give. In the army and navy the same state of affairs exists. English and German officers who fought for Japan throughout the China war were dis charged for tlie reason that the mill THE PHILIPPINES. tary schools which were founded' through their efforts ha-.e developed" ilrst-class officers. Everywhere the pol icy of discharging the foreigner as soon ns possible has been adopted, nnd In a few years a foreigner in nny kind of nn oflleial capacity will be the ex ception. At present the ambassadors, of the powers are practically the only foreigners who command and real re spect. Genii Aro I'MmC-Iloni, An Italian professor has promulgated a new theory concerning genius. Ho-" snys that the majorltyof personsof dfs- -tinetion nre the lirst-born of the family while a large proportion of the minor" ity are the youngest of large families, '' 7 Y r r