THE DAILY HERALD. PLATT8M0UTIT. NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMRER 30, 1657. o 4 A MODEST FUNNY MAN. , HOW A HUMORIST CLIMBED AN EMINENT PLACE. TO Country toy Who I !ut Ilccoina Fn moii In Journalism rromlnt-iit Ruh1 ni Mrn Who Firt Siw l: light in the ICural Iin(ilrta A JMng IJxt. Whoever reabi alout a funny man ku-pof-t'i fun in whnt ho is rauiling, but no fun i.-i intomlivl when I say Unit Nyo is morittst. IIo is ul'iioKt iniiifuliy bo. Ho i himself tho l:i T.nm lie ever talks alxiut tho last wliorn In tri"S to jmsh alon. it was in tlio i of imit in:ri rojcnt on tho evening wIkti h wiw iiitrrMlucoil to tho fjuilil lie lian liiivrf if 'tisl.iii;uisliil, to regard liim us in I'Ti sl::: iMfitusi Iih is an outsider inmo to Ni-w Yi.ih. Not only tlmt, hocausi. Ijo luix l':!;.c.l I' mm Wyoming territory over the he.io i c.r so litany of us hero ami into a salary of ".'; ! ) a year. That is tho l.ioud fart uim'ii. Lis life. Tho IiSvspi- details are known to (".-v. Horn in New Knlanil, ho went west whil :itij, lut, like tin? tyjiiul American, w:is ni.i. so lunch either an eastern or a west ern j'T.'iii, hut tlmt he could strongly identify linn.; !f v. ilh other sections, as he did with Ashi -. ::!e, N. C lie is a lawyer, but discon iit.il 1 uuwspriner work v.:is his main relia.ic until ono lay lio ireiiscd ncrions WTifiu.;, lisovcml his own humorous vein, l'oiiuded a pajior in Laramie City, Wy, T., iiaiiu d it Tho JSoomcrang, after a mulo that l,o owned, and saw it fail for lack of 6iib':criu v.hilo every iiwiaicr odlce in t!u ;.. ry juized it ami riddled it with tibcar.-:. Then ho had un ilrer of tho jK;itioii ho mw f.'i'iijjii.-K, and his success excites rtv marl, nsifin;; his co-lalxirers liwause, us they Kiy, "l-.o is a country Ikiv who has climbed to eniiiK'Tico over tho shoulders of tho New Yorker.:." Was there ever swh nnnsonso unpunished? Tut very men who hiivo made tiiis remark to me r.re coimtrymon Imrn and rear(il. la that room, listening to Nye, thero was only one boni New Yorker himself a curiosity in tho pr.fi .v,ioi on thrit nccouut. In the littlo circle that Nye joined on that niht are tlio inanr.in editors of m.. l:ulv iio'.vsoaiHrs, and not. ono of thorn u a New Yorker. Then wr-ro leader writers, -ritics, city editrrs and rejiorteis, and only one a Now Yorker. AVsw there ever sucii a thin;; heard of.' Ne'.v York is instructed, ei:tertaincd, adviscl and in formed ly countrymen manii everyone of it:; nowKjiajiers. And pray trll mo in what walk of lifo in Gotham would Pill Nyo ho any more of an exception to the rule thrtn lie is in jotirnal i.im Wall strcvt, ruled by Gould, who en mo A'ith a headfid of hayseed grown up tho 7Ii:.h-.o:i; or K. V. White, who is us country ooki!i Uhiy ns the ohi'lLk in t!ie park, and who hails from a farm; or Cyrus V. I-'iehl, i tho bttio Luiuio'j of iSton-ii bruise, ilanJ. Would iiili Nyo have LroKt:i the rulo iiud Lo coin hciv to piactnv law with liosv oo Cixil. liicj L l'-"3, who was a rank jn'oviiicuil in dii:i'., imbiu iiiul maimer:; when ho started anew ut midillo ao in this city a lew years co v'ith Jo.si-ph li. Ciioale, wuo was a coun try boy with liiiha Koot, who hails iroin tho Aiiiroudr.ck lvios, or Wihiam F. Howe, th E:i;.;Lish i:nn:ii'a:it, cr ninety-nine in a hundred other lawyers? Would Kd-ar AVil 60a Nyo bo a rarity if ho had cui no here a clergyman with North of iiv'and Jol.n Ii-.11, "Western Dr. Coil or, and ail tho others, oniony v.uom only two tlia 1 know of arc city mci:i Ifero and tkeiv you will iiud in the roil of city doctors tho born New York son of a dead and gouj New Yorker, inherit ing tho father's business, but the leading dtc tors end the mass of doctors aro olV t!.o iarn;s of the country. And pay v. kic it i:ot tho sr.ni", lc jin our country born mayor to tho la-t j';,n.-aiito iii tho last lino of jjirli in liicc's iiarlesquo company i Our Lct policemen, Al:- V.'illlr.ins, is a Is. -va Sc. 'iian ; our pet a 'id priuo. C'hauncey Iitv-he:l JJervewran barefcoioil overt ho rocks of Wo;t.kt-Jtcr as a boy; our Harry llili was a. country bumpkin in Enj'ar.d once; our Ilorcbiiii, whom tho boys irreverently call 'the macaroni millionairo,7' wsa a country boy in ividy, nnd litis oil tlae would not ;ct over bt i - 'country" or swapping hoivcs or woar;.:;j boots if ho lived a thousand jeaiY. Kra:-.t:i.s Wiman was born in Toronto, so th-.it Lo is no'': a countryman, but neither is ho a K's'vr Yorker. It is tho same in t he iirt world. Tho only New York born arti.it thiit I kno-rv cf is Cir l ies J. Taylor, of I'uck. In polities there ;:rv several New Yorkers, though they form c::la drop in the bucketful of country men v. L rule this town. But t j turn the subject and view it from tho other side, let us see whether any New Yorker.; occur to tho mind as having a famo snfiicK-nt to rank them in importance with lbs country boys who ere forever pouring into town and shouldering oyery 01:0 befora them and out of their way? Yes, there is Tni o.Iro Roosevelt and Henry Pergh and Kerry Wall, the ex-monarch of dude djir: and William WaMorf Vstor, and, I think, Judge Hilton, tho heir of A. T. Etswart. and James Gordon Bennett, Tony Paster, Pierre Lorillard and Edward Ilarri fjan. Or those who were born hero and are quite famous in town there aro many cf the fccirs of old established business houses, among which Mr. Bennett and Mr. Lorillard belong, as do the Appletons and Harpers; bat though their establishments are famous abroad in tho land the individuals are mainly unknown outside tho city. If yot include .he Knickerbockers and other landed fami lies of long established residence hero ycu will add possibly 2,000 men, women and chil tlrc n to the list, though not all the Knicker bockers (iy which ii meant descendants of the Dutch) are city folks. Every ono of tho Vanderbilts cZ the first, second and third generations, dating forward from the old commodore, was born a countryman and farmer's son. Julian Ralph's New York Letter. Farragut and His Son. 'While at a station on the lower .Missis sippi Admiral Farragut gave orders for the crews of the gunboats to get their fresh meat from the country. One day a boat from the Tallahatchie landed and the men went ashore Dnd shot a fine steer, dressed it and brought it aboard. Admiral Farragut and his staff wero then making the regular tour of in epection end were on board his vessel, anr ckored near by. Capt. Unnekin sent him quarter of this beef, and received a very cordial acknowledgment in return. It may not ho out of place here to relate tho follow ing anecihite of the bluff old admiral, which Capt. Linnekin gives as follows; ''Loyal Farragut was on the deck of his father's vessel during an engagement, and tho shot and6hc!l were flying around pretty thick. Loyal would duck bis head when he heard the .shells coming, while his father paced the deck calm and erect. By and by tho admiral turned to the boy and 6aid, 'Stand up, sonny, you cant dodgo God almighty."' Cor. Brooklyn Eagle. A bit of soft paper is recommended by an English doctor for dropping medicines into the eye, as being cquaHy effective as brushes, glass droppers, etc., and far fess likely to in troduce foreignubstancea. - WIVES IN THE CITY. LITTLE REDRESS FOR WOMEN DE SERTED BY THEIR HUSBANDS. Marital Trouble Urougtit to Light In th I'olli f) Court tif New York City Choir '! I'ltupcrlsiii nnil Starvation, D'-litlfjIU-Ilt IlttntlulMl. .'. !i tired of their wivet occupy more than a f'iir sh:ti f the time and attention of tho poli'-e ma.'i'.l rrtt-. The law ives very lit I lo 1 viln s lo women deserted by their hus baii ! lief'Ti- u iivigistrut cun inU-rfero at nil in i i !inlf of t lie woman hho is obliged ii n; !s to ! oiuiiii;i. !nrs of .-liaritics and ci i : ! t ion fi.ra reipiisition to tho mugistrato ii. ',', i'i:;ri'-t i.i whii-h she resides. Thirl ri-. . .''.'on 1 mj. mvi -is, or rather orders, tho t;i . to i- iii- a w;j rant for the arrest t ' ii'iijiieiit. Iiii ii:;n 1. P-fo!eobtainin;f :i. .; r on tin iiiiii : ivito the applicant is of i. , !) ;-.wear thai s.ii." is without means tt a:'-. and Hint sin; v. ill I xj obliged to call mx 1 iy tos.ippoft. hi-r if her husband is fi'. "ij 1 to p: o". i.i'" for hr. Ifshousks f - :n; ,' -i' th lt;xi;i ic-i of life sho will not p-: 1': in, b -i "iu :.-, liaviu..' sK"ur"l tho arrest of i.- r '..r-' and, ;:!i'r merely occupies the p'si tio'i ' i a vvi' :'i "s ia tho police court. She hus ,v...': i .i'l have to Ik supixirUid by t!) i: y ii I h : city does not. compel her hns bui; I ! ; i't. ell" 'or h r; iherefoi-o the city Li'..' i el:ii" if II. e iml'oituuato woman's tl!' :;. :-', ;::i I l.o'.'i s t!;.; hlt.diailil into custody r. I v t 1 i'1'.tei !, it:k If from, having another pan ';; to suppi ir!. rivi: ii'.n.i.AUS rirjt wttt:. "'hi ; 1; !". tl... ease, tho woman is rarely aV.ou-. ii j.i'.i--tiian ;.' per we'k by tho mag is. ::; '' tii 11; port of herself und perhap:! Iv. o .: Civ clul iren. Jf she has no chil dn:i;.od c;:u Io work, or has children who r.r: al.lo to v.or!;, m:d who turn any of their e.-;rnin;;.; over to her, these facts aro taken into coi.sldcration ai:d tho amount the hus b r.id ir. orilerod to pay her is correfipoadingly ler v.'Med. Th'i husband may havo mado tho wife's lifii :-io inis;rablo that sho cannot live with him. Ho boldly announces, however: "I 1 -ever refused to live with her. She left me. 1 an willing to tako her homo with mo now and support her.'' "How is thi..? Is ho telling tho truth?" tho m:.gs.-trate inquires. "I c'"iild not hve with him. lie abused me, called me all manner (it vilo names and said ho wished I would leave him," tho woman answers. Although tho magistrate ntay believe every word the woman says lie is powerless to do anything but tell her to go home with the husband, and, if ho abuses her, to come hack and have him arrested for disor derly conduct or assault. If tho woman re-tu-Jcs tho justice Las 110 alternative but to dismiss the caso and let the woman starve cr become a pauper, supported by the city. Many of these applicants for support hove not been actually abandoned, but havo been doing more than their shnro toward main ti'.ming the household, while the delinquent husband lias ln-en turning a mere pittance of his earnings into the house, drinking up tho remainder and abusing ids family every time he j.ot drunk. "if you would only give hin a talking to and make him promise to do better, judge," tho wife says. "i)on t lock him up. Tho little money I get from him is better than none, and if ho is locked up ho can't earn anything." LECTURING TIIE Dl-MXQrEXT. The magistrate thus appealed to delivers a lecture to tho delinquent and dismisses him with thi? threat of prompt imprisonment if he docs not treat his fimily better. Tha j:' -tieo, however, rarely believes that tliij 1. have any lasting c;cct, and it very rr.r. J does. In most instances the man i.-; ? jt, lirmly convineotl than ever that his fa:$Ty are juiabi to get alor.g wi:l:out him, and ho tvS. i si:i-i that his abu:;ed v.'ii'o will not d::ro to ;.";-e;d again to tho court through fear th:-.:. '. ; liUio i-.ieomo will be still further d'.:-fix-:- . 1 by h.ls itnprisonnicat. Aceordlsgly, Le ".. .: :Ily r.cts wors-j than before. If ho co'.i'.'nuci to f.ivo sojne little support to Lis fa:...iy his v. U'e bears his abuse as best she can. !!:'. times such mcu 1-H'omp so recklors tht.'- tl't y rc:i"-'C to bo of tho slightest benefit to 1 '-.. ir i'amilics and aro locked up. Tlio law is i:. :.; to i'ov.cr! T.; with men whoso incomo wi.i n'dow them to iivear.rt from their vives. If v. ii men ciioosi? to conti ibute to tho sun I'o: ; of their wives they mny abandon them at v, ;md a police magistrate can do noth i:i;; 10 ai l the deserted wife. Many wives are ;::.p"t le to s'.iwr tn-.tlifully that they are liai h" t boconio i-au;v:"s. Many othera will noi :-'.l)!i.i'o to the lituuiiiation of swearing so eve", ii it i.i true. ?.li-.:v rcilncd. well educated women submit to the humiliating preliminaries to secur ing la ; abandonment warrants, because of their just indignation at being abandoned for women v. hooj physical charms aro sujiorior to their own. Such applicants aro surprised to learn that the law is not framed to punish such oilcan's, but merely to prevent an in-crca.-'t of th? number of paupers. The de linquent is merely called upon to give bonds to give his wile a certain amount each week. lle.ro inured do such men face their injured wives, even once a week. Some place has to be provided for tho receipt and delivery of th.j w eekly stipend. This has led the sergeants of the various police courti to assume a duty, which has of late grown to such proportions that it has become decidedly onerous. Ser geants of the police courts have more than iifiy men on their lists who arc thns handing in their weekly installments. These are passed over to the deserted wives, and receipts taken. In many of the busier courts this lLst will in clude from 100 to 150 names. New York Evening Sun. Harpooning: Jioardu at the Dorks. Among the flotsam of our docks damaged boards aro often found iu considerable num bers. The other day an Italian fished for them very systematically just above the foot of Desbrosses street. IIo used a round 1 piece of heavy wood, about three inches in diameter and eighteen long. One end of this was armed with a sharp pointed spike, while to the other end was attached about twelve feet of clothesline. Taking the stick in his hand, tho Italian darted the spike into the en I of a bqard, much as a sailor would harpoon a whale, and then carefully drew it up so that he could feach it with his hands and pull it up on the dock. The spike would sometimes pull out when the board was almost within reach, and 0110 particularly at tractive ono had to be karixxnicd a dozen times before the Italian could call it bis own. The man dribs tho boards thoroughly, then chops them into kindling wood, which Lis wife sells. He is said to be making a fair living out of the business. New York Evening Sun. The Main Toict Vividly Indicated. A littlo Sunday school girl, whoso lesson had been about tho story of the fiery furnace, was telling her mother about it. "And, mamma," sho said, "that naughty king heated an oven just as hot as he could get it, put three good men in and they wouldn't cook a hit'." SyracusoiIIoruld. HUNTING FOR RIVER THIEVES. Creeping In a Hout Alone the Wharves and 1'lers of New York City. It was n ioor night for river thieves to lx abroad. They generally come out when fog and rain and mist aro thickest. Joso and Cregan bent to their oars w ith a short arm and shoulder stroke, tho kind that would drive Bob Cook wild, but is tho lest in the world for this kind of work. Past tho silent colony of canal loats off Jeaimetto park tho boat shot along awhile, then halt.il. Slowly ard 'ilently the men lwuldlod close to the outer edge of the Ihot. On ono of the furthest louts could lie sien a man handling a long hawser. They watched him, satisfied themselves that ho was all right, then rowed away. They crept closely to tho edges of tha whurves and piers, hiding in the friendly shadows so as to spring out unexjiectedly on any crooked work that might lx going on. They rowed umong tho tishing smacks at Fulton Market b .sin. Baskets, coils of rojo and hawsers lay around in tho bright moon light. Not a sold was on guard. It seeunil t: range that none of tho gangs came aroun 1 to steal until you n membered tho constant fear they uro in of tho harltor police. Tho river was as quiet as a country gruveyurd on n stormy winter day. A Catherine ferry boat stole with noiseless wheel out of her siip. Not even the warning whistle was sounded as sho silently started out. Into tho I .'as in between tho twin "Dover) docks'' crept tho police loat. Giant float u laden with freight ears rose and fell slowly with tho tide, like sou monsters asleep. A bhanty on a small float was visited. Thero wasn't a sign of life about it. "Old Mc Donald isn't doing any work to-night," r.aiil oiie. "He's a 'speculator,' and sometimes people come here to sell him things lotwccii midnight and daylight." McDonald's dumpy looking rowlioats were moored close by. They lobbed np and down and mado que r noises when tho little waves broke on tin ir sides, as if they ivero guyiug tho officers for not finding any one to arrest. Foul, pungent and mysterious low tii'o odors, suggestive of old, dank tombs, floated out from under tho pier. Slowly tho men rowed their boat up between the slimy, gray timbers. Joso flashed the light through tho dim recesses and scanned every cranny with care. "Sometimes they hide a boat or two in thero with a nieo littlo jag of sugar," ho said, ''and snake it out lively when th y think we're not looking." Thero was nothing to be seen this time, though. Up past tho bridge the boat skimmed, each man keeping his "weather eye lifting" for amphibious enxks. Tho vast roadway in tho air hung fcr rdoft, like some fairy creation of silver. Its stout cables and heavy guy roies looked liko unsubstantial cobwebs from the river. Through and under all the ojen piers tho police boat threaded its way. Ships and barks ami brigs lay at their moorings on every hand with not a man on guard on their decks. And why? Because ship cap tains in this port know that river piracy is a thing of tho past. The harbor police and Recorder Smythe havo made this charming style of crime so costly that tho tough gen- j t lemen who were addicted to it have sworn oif. In the past three years the remainder of tho j once active gangs that infested this city havo I been sentenced to some 100 years' imprison- I mint iu Sing Sing. Tho "Border Gang" cr "Hook Gang" uved to operate from under tho ! long wharf at Corlear's Hook. They aro all gone now. New York World. Shall the Lower Animal Talk? How can the lower animal lx? taught ? The best animals must first be separated from their kind, tho.e showing the highest men tality mated with each other. Their offspring must lx? as earefull3r taught, as in the baby, such mere elements of knowledge as they aro best enabled to acquire. The descendants through successive generations and through years, if necessary, must receive t'ao same diligent attention and teaching that has ad vanced tho mentality of man. That the lower animal of himself has leen unablo to acquire know-ledge by exjerieuce to such an extent as man is no reason why wo should despair of Lis uliimato emancipation. Shall the lower ani mal talk.' If I havo shown conclusively thai many lower animals have knowledge above instinct, greater in extent than thos men who in'o unlearned, then it is proof pre sumptive that some method can be discovered by which they can communicate with ia; what they know. I Lave no method to offer. I shall l3 con tent to so .resent my data that those mors familiar with tho lower animals can effect tho result. I will simply suggest that if so:i:o one of wealth will bequeath i'l 00,000 to Lii. who shall open communication with tho lower animal world, some dog, cat or Lird may, ere long, break the silence of ages find teach his companions the method. In this articlo only simple facts, plainly obvious to all, have been advanced. The subject is no serious and humane in its import that a single psychological theory or remark border ing on a hobby, or anything that reads liko a new doctrine or "ism," or any attempt at philosophical deductions from the data ad vanced in connection 'with this, would ruin : good cause, and, ierhaps, turn it to ridicule. Let these who have animals strive to advance) their mental good and eradicate their uncon scious, indecent habits. A decent, well bred lower aDimal is a far better citizen than an indecent, ill mannered person. William Hosca liallou in the North American Re view. Subjects for tho Hypnotist. Tho secretary of the American Society fcr Psychical Research says that it is impossible to tell by the looks of a person whether or not he is a good subject for the hypnotist. Ee he light or dark, tall or short, stout c r slender, sanguine or melancholy, it does not seem to make any difference, Those ordinary varia tions in the human makeup do not indicate the peculiar quality necessary in a good sub ject. It is a fact, however, that hysterical person contain a larger proportion of good subjects than any other class, and the larger number of experiments made by French phy sicians have been upon hysterical women. Among th, insnne the proportion of good subjects is smaller than among the sane. One interesting case is told of t ho effect of being hypnotized upon a woman in an insane asylum. On the firrt occasion it took the hypnotizer four Lours to put tho woman to sleep. He kept his eyes within a shprt dis tance of hers, as she was fasened down, cud moved them as she moved hers, until sho came perfectly under his influence. Later pperations required less time. The queer thing about the case was tiat her mind, while in the hypnotic state, was san Grad ually the sanity was transferred 10 her real waking moment, and she was finally com pletely cured. She was cf a low, criminal nature, but has been so changed that she ia now a nurse in that same hospital. The sec retary Ls on the lookout now for peculiarly susceptible persons on whom to perform ex periments, and he hopes that much will be, done in Boston this winter for this new field of science. Chicago Times. Quite Another Matter. A Wisconsin court Las decided that a bus band may open his wife's letters. That is ell very well so far as it goes, but what this country wants is a law to protect a husband who forgets to mail bis wife's letters. Omaha World, . WESTERN AUSTRALIA THE NATIVES VEP.Y LOW IN THE SCALE OF BARBARISM. A Native Cilrl DIIus for rood Hut and Clothing- Ilj;u.tiiiK Content of n Kmi!;:iriKi Skin Cruelty to AVoi.irn Lift In tlm liiiith. It has lcen reported at ditlerent time; that many of the natives on tho itort'.ii"..s1. n. coast of Australia aro cannibals, but lhi charge has never bvn brought against even tho worst of tho west Au!tralian blacks. Tliey aro a hideous rai, raid about as low in tho scale of civilization r.s it i't NsiMf lo go. To see a native girl digging in the groi'.vl for dalgeits and lioodies (their names for t v. - kinds of small burrowing marsupials. t flesh of which they esteem very highly), crouching on her haunches an 1 breaking away the earth with a long stick in one hind, while with tho nails and fingers of the other hand sho throws it liehind her, for all tho world liko a do; burrowing after a rat, is us disgusting a siiit as it is possible for a loan and brother to behold, unless it bo to so ber lord and master l3"ing asleep and, if h. had the opportunity of getting grog, drunk in tho hut close by, with perhaps two or three old hags, a couple of half starved kan garoo hounds and a moss of skins, opossum remains and filth, which makes one turn away with loathing from the scene. Tho huts which they build for themselves are the most temporary and roughest kind of constructions. A few large branches leaning together in tho shaie of a round hut, covered sometimes with strips of bark off the "paper bark," a tree that affords a tough and fibrous covering, and only largo enough for three or four to lie down in, anil pretty close together, too. Such is their idea of "home." Tho utmost limit of their clothing in the bush is a kangaroo skin clonk and a band of hair which they tie around their heads to keep their own swarthy locks out of their eyes. In the north and where white meu are scarce they go entirely naked, and appear to Ih without the sense of shame. Every man has the right to three or four wi ves, and they generally have them of very various ages. An old gray haired man often has a wife of 1 J years old among others. It is, of course, rather a stretch of languago to call them wives, for they havo 110 kind of marriago ceremony, and ure as often secured hy ab duction as by purchase. This way of win ning a wife is luiturully conducive to con stant fighting, which forms a large part of tho interest of their lives, the more so ns, owing to the low value set upon women's lives, that sex (which it is really impossible ia this connection to speak of as the lair -ex) is scarce. They eat any kind of food they can lay their hands ujion, meat of any kind, of course, and 110 matter how stale, the fat and entrails quite uncooked and the remainder scarcely more prepared. Snake's, lkiards, frogs, white ants, grubs of almost any kind and the bodies of some kinds of moths thej esteem highly. The women,- who always have to do anything in tho way of currying that has to be done, carry their babier (pickauinies) slung over their backs in a kan garoo skin. If a woman has not got a baby to carry, or sometimes even if sho has, she carries a bag made of the same material, the contents of which constitute their only food against future want. It is an awful thing to see the contents of this bag. Tho writer has seen two women, who had come up to an Australian station to beg for food, given the remains of a rice pudding in a pudding dish. The one who carried the bag took it down off her shoulders and gravely liegan to un load it on top, iicrhaps, two or three crusts of bread, green with mold, then a piece of raw meat half putrefied; an old tobacco pipe; an opossum's skin; some red clay, a little greasy; black hair; and at last a very dirty piece of an old flannel shirt was reached. This, which was about a foot square, was spread carefully on the ground. The content of tho pudding dish were scooped into it with n most filthy band. It was neatly and gravely folded up and put back in the bottom of the bag, and then tho other valuables were re placed on top of it. And yet, though so degraded, they are far from useless, these creatures. They ma'-.o tolerably good shepherds, can bo taught to uro their hands skillfully in any way that is desired, and the good ones among ttiem msy be trusted to do things that many a white man would not do well and conscientious!-. Settlers will send their horses long distances hi charge of a "blackfellow," and sheep, too, are often intrusted to them to drive to out lying stations or down into the town to mar ket, Kven those of them who have been brought most near to a state of civilization require every now and then a month in a savage state in the bush, and after working, perhaps about the stable yard, in clothes, and apicar ing quite domesticated for months together, they will suddenly inform their employer. "Mo walkaway morning," which is equiva lent to saying that they require a holiday. And next morning they may be seen airily clad in a single kangaroo skin, their black hair all stained red and clotted with a horri ble mixture of red clay and grease called "wilgie," and carry ing a small shield, a couple of spears and as many boomerangs (or keileys as they call them), setting out for a mouth in the woods with three or four more of their tribe. When natives are out in the bush it is nec essary for them always to go fully armed, for almost every native of another tribe is their enemy to the death, and thej- stre broken up into a great number of tribes. If a native of ono tribo dies a member of another tribe Las to be killed. This is tbo nearest thing they have to any religious code, and it is in vain that white men havy tried to stamp out the savage custom. Their principal weapon cf offense is the spear, the bow and arrow being quite unknown among them. They have no ideas, however rudimentary, of a creator or supreme being, and the only consciousness cf the supernatural which they seem to have is a fear of evil spirirs; the they appear to associate with dead people who have been left unburied. They attribute all illness to tho machinations of these baq spirits. Tbey are very cruel to their women ("Gins," as they call them), making then buiM the huts and carry firewood, and do al? the work there is to do, and spearing them through the K-g or cruelly beating them on tho very slightest provocation. Girl babies they often kilL On the day of the writer's arrival on one station (sheep and cattle ranches aro called "stations"' in Ana tra'ia), ho was shown a litt'.o. black picfea-. nir.y, only a week old, jut ji curiosit-, and a ra?.;t Ftrrv.ige lookiug inhuaaan littl animal it was. Ti e (ollo-.vin3m9rr.iug soruo of the gir.s, v. ho came up to the. houc r'.c't rnoriiing to he'j for tra. :.:!::c.ance'. m""U? talraly that Xonkey (iha l al.y's fev-f ) was foirg to kill rkkari-.y.-, 'i'Uo uivaw of the iitation, who y.V5 a justice cf the ptace, cent a solemn m?i-sa;-e to Monkey to the cicct tha. if he titled that baby "whitcfeliow ovcn:cT kol him.." The i.iat tai::g beard was that "ilcnfce.Y- am Lis i"3 v.aik r.v. ay," a.ud it cj ; eared that up to Ike t:u:e oj tli;-,r.vart"re, at any rate, the tl.'.y rjc-vi.il v.as iiU4 iivkig. tiaa Frcu $ i2i fLi-ca;rlj, OTS liu; Kuinc niiaiitv ol r Js Hi i r the .Missir-si'.j.i. Wiil i.ever Ik; mult TroM. Ci.ll mid In convince d. ALSO jFtLaHS IE0 J&JJi EZ.2:JSr3r PETER MERGES. X30 T117Z rJEfLtrTHK JUCI3 BTTM FURNITURE A.-.LG1 SlTI -FOR ALL "O" j3I "3? "O 3E3 FOU Parlors, ISrdroojiss, Iisssn.-rooiiis. ICitciuis, Ma.Iways mid 4ffS'ircs, (JO TO "tCP" "sr" T"tf '' ""V hcj"v r.r .-".n vj" q -4 ci-. ti; H.", -r J Vvliai 7y VVheio ;i main's (iceiil stork ol (Joods and Fair lVicos abound. '!NDERAK1RG AND F.BALMJKG A SPECIALTY 3&$v ' s "OIlXEIt MA IX AND SIXTH (SL'CCESSOl: T : Will kceji cenrt aritly en h.;..i! HI rugs and iefJicleos, Paints, Hi V. all I'atrei and PURE L E. G. Dovey & Son. g5B Mi A m ttert win? s Ih h hs ess em 1 urn KIR O 69 n K 3 ri m t" 1 st irj , t m 1.14 t"! r a . Wg ( cle pica si i'o ii( sqjiqg lqG flG Y i"llcs' tcld- soiigs( lirjG cf Fall and Winien Goods Ever broHl lo thiH J(!sirizet and sliail Le please to show you u n 5U06!! OF Wool Dress Goods, and Trimmings, Hoisery and Underwear, Blankets and Comforters, A splendid assortment A Ladies' Miisses' and Cliildrens CLOAK?, WRAPS a:-'d .ikkskv.s. "We liave &h.o added to v ii:e of carpet .s -oine new patterns, Flooi Oil GU, Aq(ts qqd liir. In men's iieavy and fine ouo'.s and f-Iioes. sdso in Ladies. Mi-sep nnd Childrens Footgear, we have a. complete line to which v. : J..WITE vonr insjection. All dtpartn.ents 1 u'i and ConiTl-te. & SHOE cent, c-J c:i 1 ic-r limn iiiiv house uot o EMPORIUM BEDRtGfti SET ! CLASSKS or 1'L.t::: vvv.. ni:;::.aka -I. M. ): I; I I 1 .-' , i ..'.i ;im: '.; . e 1 1 1- .f ; !. 0 0 ii l ull JLim' c,l IQU O RS, E. G. Dovev & Son. MP If i w mi v m