THE SIOUX COUNTY JOURNAL. L S. IIMOIH Twm. SABRISOX, VEBBASKA. The steadiest butter in the market is the goat Kentucky waa r is ted by a water poor the other day. Hut bow did tbey discover what it was? Diamond Match jumped fourteen points the other day. It Isn't every day that such a bonanza can be struck. The match trust la now having trou ble of her own, though no one seems to be able to throw much light upon the subject Eighteen Chicago cashiers have been held up and robbed with the last few weeks; the police have succeeded In ar- resting one man for kissing his wife on the street Annie Seiner, a New York armless woman, has been arrested for having stolen a purse with ber teeth. It's no use, boys, the new woman is bound to win, hands down. A Maryland man has lived to be' eight-five years of age on frogs and oysters. A lot of other people would like to do that, but they can't find money enough to pay for the frogs and oysters. a Anarchist Turner has come from England, as be says, "to take up the thread dropped at the Hayrnarket in 1888." If he examines that thread care fully he probably will discover a slip noose In one end of It. A St Louis man, out of work, tried to commit suicide by running his head against a buzz saw. He lost half a pint of brains, but is recovering and will soon le out of the hospital He is now eminently fitted to earn his living as a juror. Official figures show that Paris con sumes daily for food an average of sixty-three horses and one donkey, and one mule every ten days. There Is a growing demand for horse meat in Europe, and that a considerable quan tity Is secretly marketed in the United States is a fact pretty well established. A wealthy Iowau with nine mother less boys in his nursery at home has Just added to his establishment by adoption nine fatherless girls and their mother, his brother's widow. The sec ond aggregation was formally obtained at Ellis Island, where It had arrived from Europe. This conspicuous act of philanthropy, it is reported, is to be fol lowed by another ceremony, which will give a mother to all the boys and a father to all the glrta, and thus perfect toe union of these two remarkable household. -w A Chicago paper informs its readers that from the mysterious depths of Cut- , Off Lake, Nebraska, a veracious fisher recently pulled a member of the finny tribe resembling the catfish about the head and back and equipped with four . legs, the ends of which are fitted out with claw-like appendages resembling human bunds. It is further learned from the same valuable source of infor mation that in the Missouri River is an Island known to Nebraska tars as Oorey Island, where a new species of mice has recently been discovered. The ani mals have a coat of golden brown and white, with pink legs and black eyes. Whetfter or not the mice are bora with gold fillings In their teeth or the fish supplied with a pouch in the region of Its gills for the accommodation of a manicure set the public is not Informed. An incident In Chicago seems espe cially preordained as a rebuke and a reply to the attack on the use of bi cycles by women, recently made by the Women's Rescue League. The details as given by a contemporary reveal lit tle Jack Callahan playing muinbledy peg, oblivious of the following admoni tion from bis mother: "If you don't come here this blessed minute I'll tan your jacket so't you won't forget It for a week." When this bad been repeated with variations several times the irate parent approached nearer to the scene with a trunk strap, little Jack took to his wheel, the Irate parent took to a wheel of her own, and the chase was on. The subsequent proceedings should be a blow to the crusade of the Rescue League. The reverberations of the trunk strap and little Jack that follow ed the conclusion of that chase show how necessary to that woman In her hour of need was her trusty wheel With a wheel In the back yard mum-bledy-peg and similar corruptions of youth can have no terrors for such a mother, and yet this solace would be denied ber by the Rescue League. Per haps If all the truth were known It would be found some secret organiza tion of small boys Is behind this league crusade, and that little Jack la one of the ringleaders. Kow that the Czar's coronation is ever, It la becoming quite evident that lis empire la by no means at peace. In St Petersburg (says the Independent) MM twenty thousand bands have Jeft wart, dsseatlaacd with their low rate Ct wages and the long boors, and the rOTssaent la extending to the central rJ teathifa provinces as well. In ..tiracsw-Md number of other large r'aeUtcUg tewns a spirit of anrest t J i-trraatteo baa mtety been f "Tj tesetf, and It It feared that ' rssa that wtt foBow the Bt 'rEJttumsi' ' " wkai Bwkea rr3C If tte eUmttrea L j me&rttoaary aaeremeat la BuMia is in no sense dead. In St Fetersnurg toe police have discovered this, and have resorted to extremely dmsrie measures to crush it. In Mom cow, Lodz, Brlansk and other large Industrial centers, the workmen have been Incited by the agents of the Nihil ist party. Heetographed sheers of sn inflammatory nature are secretly cir culating among them. The f-igbtful catastrophe on the Holodynsky field is alluded to In these writings as a proof of the incapacity of the officials and of their carelessness when the lives of only the common people are at slake. If the government does not succeed In crushing the growing movement there will ensue terrible outbreaks of vio lence. From the law to the work bench, the new woman has made good claim to the ability to successfully enter all trades and professions. Her faculty as a breadwinner la no longer open to question. But It would appear that her i talent for affairs stops short here, that ! the brain power completely spends it- self upon acquiring. For It is a de plorable fact that when it comes to hus1anding her resources, wise judg ment is for the most part conspicuous by its absence; and a snug little bank account seems to be the very last thing on earth that especially apiieals to her. Tradition and education long ago in stilled Into the minds of men that what tbey achieve and acquire must be well on Its way before they are 50. The ball set rolling in early manhood may con tinue to bring them in an ever-increas ing income; but the average man scarcely expects to embark in any great and successful enterprises after that period. With women the winning time Is even shorter for they often do not begin until late in life after the hope of a settled establishment -has died out and already at 50 the average woman Is conscious of a certain loosen ing of the grasp, a lack of spring and elasticity and a generally lowered vi tality. Then comes along the younger woman, abreast with the times, with fresh outlook, clean grip, new ideas, and all the experience of the older one Is naught against It Yet from the tyjie writer at $10 a week to the singer at ten times ten, from the maid In the kitchen to the popular actress, women wage-earners In America seem to live in absolute forgetfulness of such con ditions, and are smitten to the soul with the mania for spending. The news of the death of Charles Dickens, Jr., awakens once more one's keen sympathy for the uncomfortable positions thrust upon the sons of fa mous men. As a rule the divine fire has all leen used up In the comjosltion of the illustrious sire and the portion of the son Is apt to be meager. The cal cium light wlilebtiraed on the former, brought out grand outlines and well proportioned contours, brings out In the latter all the commonplaceness and In adequacy which a humble, unnoticed lot might have concealed. So Charles Dickens the younger was forever thwarted in the enjoyment of the sim ple lot of a simple human being of very moderate attainments by the shade of his father. For the sake of the latter Baroness Burdett-Coutts took him up and started him In various business en terprises for which he was not at all adapted, and at which he made so many several failures. IHs father be queathed him his magazine, Household Words, which he conscientiously edited to insigmneance. - tie was moreover afflicted with an unsuccessful likeness to bis father which further hampered and haunted him by making It Impossi ble for himself or any one else to for get his origin. Had he been an un known bank clerk there would have been nothing Incongruous In his life' and surroundings and final end. He would have filled his Inconspicuous lot with Inconspicuous completeness and harmony. The son of a genius cau never collect the debt the world owes his father. There ought to be some pro vision by which, if so minded, he could go off and change his name and Iden tity and strike out for himself. If he does not want to forego entirely the ad ventitious glory of a celebrated name be might enjoy It once a week, or once a month, when the world could accu mulate its gratitude and pour It out for him for a brief space, and then let biin return to oblivion and Individualism. The Police System of Cities. The modem system of policing clt'es was a growth rather than an organiza tion On the continent of Europe and In most cities of Great Britain the householders of the various wards cr political divisions of a city were held responsible for the maintenance of or der, and were sometimes fined or other wise punished for not repressing riot ous demonstration. In all cities aged men, unable to do other work, were employed as night watchmen, their principal duties being to call the hour and the state of the weather and look out for fires. In London, A. D. 1223. before the general Introduction of clocks, a system of night-watchmen was pnt In operation, each man being provided with a halberd, a bell and a lantern, this being the first formal In stitution of the system, which contin ued In operation until 1820, when a regular force of able-bodied constabu lary was put on duty in London. ' The system was devised by Sir Robert Peel and Arst pat In operation In Ireland, where the police were nicknamed "Peelera." Before that date the watch had little to do with suppressing dis orders, these being pat down by j troops of the garrison. "Beating the watch,'' a favorite amusement of young bloods of the last two or three centuries, was a piece of cowardly cruelty, since, from hit age and Infir mity, the poor old watchman could offer little miataace. ' It It a Bilghty pleat farmer ho does not verb ta Sands Oaring har'. Tattle Platroe in Africa. A terrible pestilence is raging In Af rica, not only among domestic cattle, but among certain species of wild cat tle; and It attacks also the buffalo, giraffe, wart-hog, eland and several other species of antelope. Captain Lugard, writing from Gaberones, in Bechuanaland, says that near villages, hundreds, even thousands of carcasses lie about. Between Gaborone aud Bu luwayo there are reorted to be four thousand wagons stranded because their oxen are dead. Wind and Walking. The Falkland Islands, and other re gions in the South Temiwrate Zone, are remarkable for the high and vio lent winds that blow across them. A recent visitor to the Falkland has noted the fact that the Inhabitants of those Islands. In consequence of being habitually compelled to brace them selves against the wind In walking, have acquired a peculiar gait so re markable that a native Falklander can tie readily distinguished by his manner of walking. On account of their gait tbey are called "kelpers." . Kdiaon'a New Lieht. One of the results of Mr. Edison's ex periments with the Invisible X-rays discovered by Professor Roentgen is the production of a new kind of lamp. Like the ordinary Incandescent elec tric lamp It consists of a glass bulb exhausted of air. This bulb Is coated on the Inside with a substance which fluoresces brlllantly at the touch of the X-rays. By means of wires seal ed In the ends of the bulb, and furnish ed with proper terminals Inside, an electric current Is sent through, and X-rays are thus produced within a flu orescent shell. When the current flow: the lamp shines with a mild, pleasing light, and without perceptible heat Horaelens CarriaKC. The recent horseless carriage race from New York City to the Ardsley Country Club on the Hudson Is re garded by those Interested as having proved that such self-driven vehicles are well adapted for use In cities. There was a French carriage entered In the contest but the prize was car ried off by an American carriage. The Scientific American says that the man ner In which the horseless carriages dodged back and forth In front of aud around cable-cars and wagons "dem onstrated beyond argument that the horseless carriage Is much more cap able of control than the ordinary horse and carriage. Camphor Krconing Scarcer. Most of the world's supply of cam phor comes from Japan and Formosa Of late years the demand has begun to exceed the supply, and the question hag arisen how the latter can be main tained. One of the reasons why cam phor Is becoming scarcer aud dearer Is said to be that It Is extensively used in the manufacture of celluloid. At present camphor Is mainly produced from the so-called camphor-tree, which attains a gigantic size In Japan, one specimen recently measured being 113 feet tall, and having a trunk over HV4 feet in diameter. The tree is common In China, but as yet the production of camphor In that country Is very lim ited. The caniphor-tree is a member of the laurel family, and Is related In genus to the clunamon-tree. It Is said that camphor can be produced from other species of trees. In Borneo a very aromatic camphor Is obtained from the natural deposits of gum on the trunks of a species of tree Indi genous to that Island and Sumatra. Borneo camphor Is rare and very cost ly- A Terrific 'ea-Fieht The Prince of Monaco has recently announced his Intention to send his yacht ou an expedition of discovery among the haunts of the sperm-whale. This leads Mr. Frank T. Bullen to re late In Nature some of his experiences with whales, and he tells a story of a fight of sea-monsters In the strait of Malacca which reads like a romance. The fight occurred In a smooth sea on a moonlight night and Mr. Bullen watched It from the deck of a ship with the aid or a night-glass. His at tention was first attracted by a com motion In the water, which he sup posed might be caused by a volcanic disturbance of the sea-bed. Examin ation with the glass showed a very large sperm-whale engaged in deadly conflict with a monster squid, or devil fish, whose tentacles encircled the whale's body. "The livid whiteness of those writhing - arms which enlaced the cachalot (whale) like a nest of mighty serpents stood out In bold re lief against the black, boulder-like head of the sgressor." The aggressor was the whale, squids being a favorite prey of sperm-whales. "Presently the whale raised Itself half out of water and we plainly saw the awful-looking head of the gigantic mollusk. At our distance, something under a mile, It appeared about the size of one of our largest oil-casks, which held 330 gal lons. Like the rest of the squid visible It was of a peculiar dead white, and In It gleamed two eyes of Inky black ness tboot a foot In diameter. To de scribe, the wonderful contortions of those two monsters la far beyond my powers. All around the combatauts were either smaller whales or immense j sharks who were evidently assisting j j In the destruction of the squid, and get ting a full share of the feast. Mr. Mul len says the encircling tentacles grad ually slipped off the whale's body, and the fight ended in an evident triumph for the whale. THE FATAL SHEARS What Taey Did ia a Way of "Gettias Kven. " There was a hard look In John War wick's eyes, but It was also a look ol triumph. He bent over bis desk and worked steadily for an hour without saying a word to any of his associates. Finally. one of the boys asked him what had happened. "Oh, It's only a little domestic flare ... .... mi" lie said, "but I euess It will tutx out all rljfbt" l-pon being pressed to relate the na ture of the trouble, Warwick said: "My wife got a pair of bloomers last week. Intending to go out to-day for A rl-mile ride. Wiw I tmve slwjiv declared that I would not iermit m lumn f""- Pu"!hed by Franc M. wife to be seen in public with a rig ol PauL Thousands of copies were sent that kind upon her person, and I pro I to y Tullahoma. Tenn. ceeded early this morning to show that , ften ""P" w" Inadequate to I was a man of my word. I got hole i tt ow!n to 'ne thM the of those bloomer, and locked them iD.Pub "ner drT my trunk. Here," he concluded, defi antly slapping bis hip pocket "is th( key. Every man In the office congratulated Warwick upon the stand he had taken His employer, a crusty old fellow whe seldom spoke to the young men In th service, came around and told him. lc an undertone, that his salary would be raised at once, as It was evident that he was a person of sterling worth. When the day's work was 'ended John Warwick went home with a light heart The announcement of his prosperity he reckoned, would patch up frlendlj relations with his wife, and vlsiour of future happiness flitted before him But alas, the door was locked, and the place seemed to be deserted, lit sat down upon the porch anil waited for an hour, but the woman be loved dld not return. Then be thought hf would nut on his old overalls and dls around In his little garden. He fell that he needed exercise. jne Key to the kitchen door wat under the mat and be was soon rum maglng the clothes closet In search ol bis overalls. They could not be found At last he entered his wife's sewing room, and there, upon the floor; laj the southern extremities of the suit that had In days gone by served hlit so well aud faithfully. They had beer cut off at the knees. John Warwick burled his face lu lib hands and wept In wild despair. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Identified In Advance. Notwithstanding she was nut a danu of high degree, she was a woman ol character, and there was a peculiar ag gresslveuess In the freckle on her nose which made the police ullicers on dutj at the station hou.se step around Ilvelj when she called on a matter of bus! es.L "I understand," she said to the s-r geant, "that there's the body of a man waiting to' be Identified here." ii is ar rue morgue, mnam, re sponded the sergeant but with mor suavity than Is common. "Well niy husband hasn't been a: home for three days, and I thought ii might be him. Can you tell me wha! he looks like?" "Yes; but you could get a good dea' more satisfaction by going to the morgue yourself, ma'am." "I suppose I could." she sighed a.' if she felt sure she would not Identity the remains as those of her husband "Wa he killed V "Oh, uo, ma'am," exclaimed the ser geant. "He died suddenly. The pi trolman saw him fall on the street" "Died sudden, did hp?" she asket with Interest. "Yes, ma'am." Her tone Indicated that she though' the police were to blame in some way 'Well," she said, "there's no ue Ii my going to the moivue If I hat's the case. It ain't my husbind. He nevei done anything sudden In his life. Hc' the slowest man on earth. Oood-bye. and she walked out of the station houK as If she were sorry about something The Army Rifle in Hunting. Something for sportsmen to con dlder seriously, If they Intend to gej one of the new 30-callber army rifle Is the great penetration of the bullets One of the bullets would kill a mat, through a 4-inch spruce tree, or a cow a mile and more away. No ordlnarj tree can be depended on to stop onr of these bullets, and It might easllj travel half a mile through dense woodi and hit a man far out of sight wltt deadly effect "Field and Stream'' says that the next Legislature of out great game States should pass a law prohibiting the use of a Jacketed bul let because of the danger to humar beings. Another argument It offers It favor of such a law will have greai influence on the men who do not wis! to wound without killing the game This class of bullets Is Useless foi large game unless soft-poInted,"lt says as It rarely kills Instantly, but allowi the game to die from Internal bemor rhage, and In terrible agony out ol reach." W hen such a rifle is used for big game a bullet that mushroomi should be employed. The mushroom Ing bullet will kill anything, as It goct clear through an elk, moose or deer and the force of the Impact woulc knock a running grizzly down New York Son. Caltare or Beaaty. Just a blossom or two, with somi green leaves, will lighten the table won derfully. Teach the children to brinj. In clover blooms and blue grass, wltl the graceful seed heads, If you have nrr liner flowers. It will teach Uieni to set beaaty In small things, and to rniiki the moat f ,t heir umMindiogs-Wash IngtoaStar. THE BATTLE-FIELDS. OtO SOLDIERS TALK OVER ARMY EXPERIENCES. Wtad'rinn of "The Rebel" The story of The Rebel In Its wan derings over the South Is one of in- terest Survivors of the Army of Ten nessee especially rememnerea tne nine sheet that found Its way to the camps t.n i t i . v. v. .. .i,k iui"iru mj i newel energy and hope for the cause deemed the right Like the loved and Inspiring "Dixie," The Rebel fired the Southern heart by Its very name. The Rebel first saw the light Aug. 1, 1W52, In Chattanooga. It was a fonr- couia nor. print tnem last enougu. Often the press was kept going all day to supply the demand from the army sutlers. So popular did the Rebel become in a few weeks that the publisher In Octo ber, 152, engaged the young but ver satile and rising journalist Henry Watterson, to edit the paper. Sir. Paul brought to the assistance of Mr. Wat terson Mr. Albert Roberts, a vigorous writer and trained journalist of Nash ville. He was a humorous writer, nslng the nom de plume of "John Happly." Watterson and Roberts kept the Reb el at white heat and the paper grew In Importance and size, after the pub lication began. Well does the writer, who gives this i PC0" n t In the Boston Herald, remem- Dlr eagerness of the army for the uln,r I'riBf.j papers. The boys In camp could not rest until Its arrival every morning on the train from Chat tanooga. When General Bragg began his re trograde movement In the spring of '03 to Chattanooga, the Rebel wa sup plied to the army with much difficulty. When the army arrived there the pa per was In still greater demand. In the summer of that year, how ever, It became evident that the Fed erals were corning to Chattanooga for the purpose of capturing that impor tant point And then It was the Rebel began Its meanderlngs over the South The paper was removed to Marietta Ga, Messrs. Watterson and Roln-rt staying In Chattanooga for a few day after the plant had been shipped. The shelling of Chattanooga In that month soon convinced the editors that they too, must go If they would avoid cap ture by the Federal army, aud they left to joiu the paper. Editor-in-Chief Watterson had been sharply criticising General Bragg while the paper was In Chattanooga One evening he visited a gentleman's house In that town, and It happened that General Bragg was also a visitor. The two gentlemen had never met, and while waiting for the host to appear, after being ushered Into the parlor by a servant Watterson and Bragg be gan a casual conversation, which soon turned upon the war. Although h! knew he was In the presence of an fllcer of high rank. Watterson little suspected It was the commander-in- chief of the army. He Indulged in some criticisms of General Bragg as he had been doing In the Reliel. The gen eral listened for a while In almost speechless wonder, but controlled him self till his fiery critic had abused him for some minutes, when he arose, and, addressing Mr. Watterson, asked: "Do you know who I am. sir?" The editor replied that he hml not that honor. "My name is Bragg, sir," said the now fully aroused commander. Of course, Watterson was somewhat taken aback, but In his most courtly and chivalrous manner assured General Bragg that he had not meant to be of fensive, but that his criticisms were made In good faith and from motlvei of sincere desire to promote the wel fare of the Confederacy. Rut apologies were not asked nor given. General Bragg, however, never forgot nor forgave his critic. After the battle of Chlckamauga, while the paer was at Marietta, Watterson continued his at tacks on General Bragg who Informed the publisher of the Rebel that uulesg the Irate editor were discharged the paper could not come Into his lines. Mr. Watterson then realized that he must seek other friends, for he was not the man to retract a word nor to be dictated to. As editor-ln-chlef he would write his sentiment so he be came one of the staff of Lieutenant General Leonldas Polk. After serving a short time In that capacity Watter son resigned anil liecame editor of one of the papers published in Atlanta. After an uneventful existence In Grif fin for a while, the approach of the Fed eral army to Atlanta In July of that year warned the publisher that he must move on If he would keep the Relief afloat and save his scalp, so it was taken to Selnia, Ala., that fall. Here It was that the eventful paper came to an untimely end with the Con federacy It had so long and faithfully upheld. It was In the latter part of April, 1S05, that Bel ma was taken by General Wilson. The Federals knew of the existence of the Rebel, and one of the first things they did to appease their wroth was to fire Its olJlee, which was in a building beside the river and built partly over It The Yankees print od a small sheet in which they an nounced their victory over the 'Tehs," and probably the general orders from headquarters, announcing the surren der of the armies of the Southern Con federacy. Tbey then threw the ma- fa mm aa It Ofay lasH-aM a M lata War, mm a OahU aata 111 n i-Hag Sliaaar lafl at Cast. aa4 SteaMa-Thrinia laaHaal terials In the river aud burned all LLe flies they could find. Ftole a titeaaier. There Is now before Congress a bill appropriating f20,tJ to be paid ta Robert Smalls, a negro politician of Charleston, S. C. The money is to be paid for the performance of one of the most daring feats of the Civil War. May 12, l.yi2, the Confederate steam ship Planter, the special dispatch boat of Gen. Ripley, the Confederate com mander at Charleston, was lying at the wharf in Charleston. The officers had all gone ashore, leaving ou lsard a crew of eight men, all negroes. Among them was Rotiert Smalls, who was virtually the pilot of the boat For some time previous he had !een watching for an opportunity to carry Into execution a plan he had conceived to take the Planter to the Federal fleet. This, he saw, was about as good a chance as he would ever have to do so. Consulting with the balance of the crew Smalls found that they were willing to co-operate with hlrn, although two of them afterward concluded to remain twhiud. The design was hazardous In the ex treme. The boat would have to pass beneath the guns of the forts In the heritor. Failure and detection would have been certain death. Fearful was the venture, but It was made. Wood was taken aboard, steam was put on, and with her valuable cargo of guns and ammunition. Intended for Fort Rip ley, a new fortlficarlon just construct ed In the harlxir, about 2 o'clock In the morning the Planter silently moved off from her dock, steamed up to North Atlantic wharf, where Smalls' wife and children, together with four other women arid one other child, and also three men, were waiting to embark. All these were taken on board, arid then, at 3:25 a. m.. May 13. the Planter started on her perilous adventure, car rying nine men, Ave women and three children. Passing Fort Johnson, the Planter's whistle blew the usual sa lute and she proceeded down the liay. Approaching Fort Sumter, Smalls stinxl In the pilot house leaning out of the window, with his anus folded across his breast, after the maimer of the commander of the boat, and his upnd covered with the huge straw hat which the commander wore on such occasions. The signal required to 1h given by all steamers passing out was blown as coolly as If (Jen. Ripley was on lxard, going out on a tour of Inspection. Sum ter answered by signal, "All right" and the Planter headed toward Morris Island, then occupied by Hatch's artil lery, and passed beyond the range of Sumter's guns Iwfore anybody suspect ed anything was wrong. When at last Planter was obviously going toward the Federal fleet off the bar. Sumter signaled toward Morris Island to stop her. But it was too lute. As the Plain er approached the Federal fleet a white flag was displayed, but this was not at first discovered, and the Federal steamers, supposing the Confederate rams were coming to attack them, stood out to deep water. But the ship Onward, ("apt. Nichols, which was not a steamer, remained, opened her ports, and was about to lire Into the Planter, when she noticed the flag of truce. As siKin as the vessels came within hailing distance of each other, the Planter's er rand was explained. Cs.pt Nichols then Isuirded her. and Smalls delivered the Planter to him. Dutchman and Prisoner. At the breaking out of the war,! en listed with a Dutch neighbor and we were soon put on picket duty together. The officer of the guard finding ihe Dutchman utterly Ignorant of the ordi nary duties of a picket, concluded that he would at least know enough to watch a prisoner. So he placed rbe Dutchman In charge of a prisoner with Instructions to shoot him If lie attempt ed to escape. The name of this Dutch man was Hans, and he was inclined to be of an obliging disposition, although not over bright and having a llt:le too much confidence In human nature. The prisoner was tied with his linuds be hind him to a tree, and soon was on friendly terms with the Dutchman. He managed In some way to loosen bis hands aud then asked the Dutchman to do him a favor by taking a handker chief out of his pocket and wiping a nose. Jians placed his gun against the tree, and proceeded to do ax requested, rmt suddenly the prisoner struck him on the side of the head and knocked him down, seized the gun, aud sklmu-d. The Dutchman got up, rublied bin eyi s, and said, "Jimlny Christmas, I d it dod vas an elefand kick." Then, looking around, he said. "Mine prlsner vas gone, my goon vas gone, rind l guess i pctter lo Imck bv de camp out. And thus he reported that his pris oner had escaped. line Kat InB. Ed Trick, of Burlington, Yt. who served In Company G, Second Vermont Is the man who played the practical joke on the officers of a New Jersey reg iment, ine ermont regiment cap tured some sheep one night killed dressed, and hung them up. During the night the servant of the New Jer sey officer stole the sheep, and they feasted. Trick had had a hand In get ting and killing those sheen, and. of course, felt ugly. In the Vermont regl- mem was a large Newfoundland dos One dark night Trick killed and dressed tne aog, and hung It where the sheep had hung. In the morning the dor waa gone, and It was soon found that the Jerseyltes had stolen the Newfound land dog carcass, and enjoyed another feast, pronouncing It the finest mutton they had ever eaten. It did not take long for the news to spread throughout the corps, and whenever that regiment made its appearance on the ma rah or In a fight, or was passing by any other regiment, their follow-seldlers cosaj menced barking. Thick aaye It waa a case of bog eat dog. He has never for. given those Jersvyltas, ad says be never will ,