First National Bank, O’NEILL - NEBRASKA. Paid-Up Capital. $5o,ooo. Surplus, $2o,ooo> Authorised Capital, $100,000. THAD. J. BERMINGHAM, Pres. ED F. GALLAGHER. Cashier. J. P. MANN, Vice Pres. FRED H. SWINGLEY, Asst. Cashier. Money Loaned on Personal Security on the Most Favorable lerms. Issue Time Certificates Bearing Interest. Buy and Sell Foreign . CJlrl In a Trance. A Michigan school teacher, it is al leged, has been in a trance-like state for 130 days, and has wasted away to a skeleton. The young woman is 10 years of age, and when awake weighed 140 pounds and baa excellent health. The long sleep came on her without warning. Liquid refreshment is ad ministered, but of late siie does not seem to have the power to assimilate it. The doctors are puzzled. Brides of Illnd'ostau. A native bride in iiindostan is loaded down with all the jewelry she can get. She has a girdle at the waist, numer ous rings, anklets, bracelets and bells, and decorations for the hair. Although she has never seen her intended hus band. she goes and sits beside him the day of the ceremony. The priest takes a corner of the bride’s veil and ties it to the groom’s shawl, and they are married. TOLD OF WILD BILL. SCENES PROM THE LIFE OF A DESPERADO. Ha Killed a Large Number of Men In HI* Day and Finally Died with Ills Own Boots On—He Ouoe Threw Up Hla Handa. { Among1 tho prominent citizen* of Hayes City In the fast days of Kansas railroad building was “Wild Bill” (William Hickok) who had been a serv iceable scout in the Union army along the Arkansas border during the war. Sfil came to Hayes City with the pres tige of having killed nine men, unas sisted, who had corralled him during the war intent upon Ms death. lie, too, had followed “the K. Kv railroad along evory inch of its con struction from Manhattan. His per HOLDING UP WILD BILL. •ounl appearance and the complexion of hla white-handled revolvers had be* come quite familllar all along the road, and especially at Abilene, during Its days an the terminus of the Texas eat; tie drive, where, as City Marshal, there was never a cowboy who got “the drop” on Bill. “Wild lllll" In those days was "the Slade” of Western Kansas, the man who Mark Twain says in “Houghing It” was respected In Nevada for having "killed his man.” In physique, as the writer remembers him, he was as per fect a specimen of manhood as ever walked in moccasins or wore a pair of cavalry boots, and Bill was a dandy at times in attire—a regular frontier dude. Ho stood about six feet two inches tall, had a lithe waist, and loins, broad shoulders, Binall feet, bony and sup* pie hands, with tapering fingers, quick to feel the cards or pull the trigger of a revolver. His hair was auburn in hue, of the tint brightened but not reddened by the sunlight. Ho had a dean, clear-cut ft.ee, clean shaven, except a thin, drooping, sandy-brown mustache, which he wore and twirled with no success, even, in getting an upward twist at either end. Brown-haired as he was, ho had clear gray eyes. He had a splendid countenance, amiable in look, but firm withal. His luxuriant growth of hair fell in ringlets over his shoulders. There was nothing in his appearance to betoken the dead-shot and frequent murderer—except his tread. He walked like a tiger, and aroused he was as ferocious and piti less as one. Bill’s means of livelihood at the time he was in Hayes City went unques tioned, and there is no reason fog Ml; tating the subject at this late day. Is, t “a killer,” however, Bill put himself record very shortly after coming t§ s Hayes City. His first exploit wan % ; double shot, a right-and-left fusUtnAn. ' The writer witnessed the affair. • , Two men'eame out of Tom Drantff saloon and walked toward the uSTTlj built depot, surrounded by a reiaM platform. Each man haa a plstnl drawn, when suddenly from a group of four or five “crack! crack!” went twe : pistol shots, and Wild Bill stood tm the & edge of the platform with a smoking.' bone-handled revolver in each hnwC and the two men who had boon ups , preaching the plartform were seen to totter, stumble forward and Ml, Death was instantaneous in each ease, as if Jove had hurled a bolt at thessen* A row over cards the night before caused the double death, and a double funeral as soon as the corpses ooeld be ^ prepared for interment. . It was only “a few moons” after^fhe obsequies following tlfe demise of the - two gentlemen, whose sudden tsUw off has just been recorded, that WQa Bill came very near furnishing, in hie own person, the subject for a “Bret - class funeral.” He was ssnnteriim ] west on Front street (traversed by the railroad), when, near the corner of Feel: street (the avenue leading toward Fort Hayea), a small man, an Irishman of the name of Sullivan, jumped oatta ' front of Bill with cocked revolver, as* . olaiming: “I have got you! Hold up yoifr hands. I am going to kill you, you Up went Bill’s hands, Sullivan hav- : ing “ the drop” on him. Sullivan then started into a gloating dissertation about killing him, wbilo Bill stood be fore him as rigid as the Apollo Belve dere. Opening his eyes wide and frowning, Bill in a few moments ut tered in expostulatory tones—looking over Sullivan’s head: ” For God’s sake, don't stab the man in the back! Give him a chance for his life.” Sullivan turned to see his enemy in the rear—and his funeral came off next day, Strange to say, several years af ter the death of Sullivan, Wild Bill “ died with his boots on” in Wyoming while at a game of cards, a brother of the Hayos City Sullivan proving an avenger._ The Alpine Flower. The government of the Tyroll has passed a bill, imposing heavy fines on persons who may be caught while selling samples of the beautiful and rare Alpine flower called edelweiss, which has been pulled up by the roots OD the mountains to such an extent that there is danger of the plant be coming extinct. The people complain that tourists are rapidly killing out that and other Alpine plants, and Ens best on money-making have d on the destruction by gathering _ lanes for travelers.