f a r The Chief C. II. HALE, Publisher RED CLOUD NEBRASKA CONFLICT OF LANGUAGE. Austria-Hungary otcnms with Jenl ousics and bntrcds, with prejudices ol raco and conflicts of language. It it admitted that wero tho differences in langungo overcotno tho quarrels would cease, Germany 1ms realised that slio can never hope to subduo tho Polish national movement until the Polish language Is destroyed, and so she- Is forcing German down tho throats of tho Poles without mercy. Tho langungcs of China aro said tn bo ns ninny ns a hundred In number, sayB tho Toledo Dlndo. Each prov ince, each district, sometimes cities and villages, havo their own peculiar dialects. Tho Mnnchu has dimculty In understanding tho Chinaman of South China. During tho heat of tho rebellion tho Chlncso tested tho Mnn chu suspects by making them count. There was ono number at which tho Mnnchu always betrayed himself. China hnB been a mere heap of semi Independent states and autonomous governments, nut now sho has hopes of graduating Into S world force, n truo nation. In tho light of the fact thnt tho Chlncso cannot get upon a :ommon piano of Inngungo that hope seems Impossible of fulfillment Ono of tho great French aeroplane builders lms constructed n veritable acrlnl taxlcab. Tho machine has a body which looks like thnt of any taxi cab. Tho puBsongcrs enter by a side door and view tho landHcapo below through mica windows. Pneumatic cushions protect tho ipnsscngers in rough landings. The pilot sits in front of the machine, llko a chauffeur. Thcro Is even a speaking tubo to facilitate communication between the passengers within the taxlcab and the chauffeur. A 100-horscpower engine is mounted on top of a cab, and with It the fuel tanks. The spread of wing Is 43 feet from tip to tip, and the overall length Is 45 feet Ready for flight, without passengers, the aeroplane" weighs 1,540 pounds. The Eiffel tower changes its dress every five or six years at a cost of from 114,000 to $16,000. The date is at han.d when fifty painters will And occupation for three or four months in covering the 180,000 square yards or its surface with a new coat of paint The shade has yet to be decided upon. The Eiffel tower started twenty-two years ago in orange, wore red in 1803, golden yellow in 1899 and silver white on the summit and chrome yellow at the bsBo In 1907. There nro persons who would vote for an invisible shade of khaki for the coming renewal Tho tower is now used as a wireless tele graph station, as a post for an elec tric dovlco to prevent hailstorms and ob a guiding mark for aviators. A woman in Kansas City has nnDlled for a divorce, pleading that Bhe has to wear tho same dress In which she was married ir England seventeen yc:ir3 ago. When women servo on Juries or on tho bench It will not tnko them long to decide such cases against tho de fendant or to Buggest laws which per mlt of his being sent to prison for thf rest of his natural life. Debating as to whether a college man at graduation is worth 915 a 'week is a good deal like arguing about the worth of a horse. Everything de pends upon tho individual speclmer under consideration. South Carolina wants to erect a monument to Queen Isabella of Spain, the patroness of Columbus and his co worker In the discovery of America. iAt last it has struck this country that It is worth whllo to turn some attcn. tlon to tho woman In the case. The hen has entered the Industrial ring and smashed the egg trust to smithereens. Now the great Ameri can eagle is hiding his head In shamo as tho greater American hen cackles defiance at him ns tho national bird. A London highbrow tells that a cat can hear Bounds Innudlble to tho hu man car, but our neighbor's cat re fuses to pay any attention to the heated comment wo make on hit nightly concerts. A convict in an Arizona peniten tiary where the honor system of parole has lately been established broko bis word and escaped. This proves the rule by having tho expect ed happen. The increased demand for white dress fabrics for summer is regarded. In the New York hosiery market as an Infallible Indication that white hoslory will bo popular. Accordingly, the stacking mills are Etocklng up. The New Jersey farmor who breaks his hens of tho setting habit by sub stituting snowballs ' for eggs has ns much chance' of winning our sympa thy as a snowball has In tho regions beyond the River Styx. LIKE ENOCH ARDEN HE WOULD NOT STAY DEAD How P. J.Thomson, Wanderer Ex traordinary, Returned to Sa vannah After Forty-seven Years to Find His Wife With New Husband and New Chil drenWants Only to Die Where He Was Born. TORN from tho arms of his young wlfo and bnby daughter by tho fortunes of war, exiled from Snvannuh by the order of 1 (Icnorul Sherman, whoso army had Just complotcd Its famous march through Georgia to tho Sen, P. J. Thompoon, recently of Kentucky, wan derer extraordinary, has returned to his natlvo stato for tho first time In 47 years, only to find his wlfo hap pily married to another man and the mother of many children; his daugh ter, whom he left an infant,, grown to womanhood and nursing babies of her own, and his sister scarcely able to recogulzo him. With tho lines of tho years Bcarrcd deeply Into IiIh weather-benten fnco, und I1I3 back bent with ,tho burden of many dnyB, tho heart of the old man cried for tho red old hills that ho had wnndorcd over us a barefoot boy, and for nows of the little family from whom ho had parted In his youth. Ho wished to rest his bones In the ground that nourished him, und to fcol for tho lata time tho brcozes that tho "Gulf Stream, that wandering summer of tho sea," brings totlborgla'B shoes. And so ho turned his footsteps buck toward tho land of his nativity, and ns a consequence Involves his wlfo In u matrimonial tanglo not yet unrav eled. For after having spent the better years of a long llfo as the wife- of an other man and the mother of his chil dren, the old woman is Inclined to look askanco at this husband of her early youth, whom she can now re member only dimly, and whom she has soUong believed to be lying In an unknown soldier's grave upon one of, tho many battlefields with which tho bosom of tho. south was reddened. Sho is as shy as a girl In the presence of her former husband, but bug continues to llvo with her second husband. A Man Without a Home. Bcrty Jones, kindly eyed, white whiskered, who wooed and won the young Mrs. Thompson, after sho had given up her husband for dead, Is not inclined to part at this late dato with his llfo companion. He looks upon the advent of Thompson as n rather humorous incident that will break the monotony of existence for his women folks a little while, and then bo for gotten. Ho cannot conceive that thcro may bo a real Interruption In tho es tablished order of things, and as to his wife's leaving him ho accepts the suggestion with a laugh. Thcso two together havo been tho architects of too many human lives to allow a dead man como to life to break tho placid ity yof their conugal relations. Enoch Ardcna aro supposed to look through windows upon happy firesides and then to disappear again. Tho story of tho adventures of Thompson Is of Intense Interest. Through all tho years he has been a man without a home, a wanderer, seek ing always after tho wlll-o'-the-wlsp of a fortune that forever eluded him. The one discordant noto in tho har mony is that ho never made an at tempt io return to his wife and home after having been Bent north by the federal soldiers. Thompson's Early Life. When the war broko out Thompson, not yet of age, enlisted for six months. On the expiration of that period he went into a cavalry troop and saw much service in Virginia and Tennes see. The beginning of the last year of the war found him in a hospital In Savannah. Becoming convalescent, ho obtained leave to visit bis family In Pembroke, where he learned for the first time that ho was a father, and for a brief and only porlod of his life held his baby In his arms. While he was still at Pembroke Sherman and his legions Bwept across the stato. Hlddlng his wife a hnsty goodby, tho Confederate soldier took refuge In tho Bwnmps. That wbb tho last that Mrs. Thompson now also Mrs. Jones and tho wlfo of two men, ever saw of hor husband. , Driven from his hiding placo by hun ger, Thompson made his wuy across tho Ogeecheo river bridge and fell Into tho handB of a federal outpost, by whom he was promptly dispatched Into Savannah, a prisoner of war. Ho was detained thcro and furnished with ra tions for a time, but an order finally camo that no more nrovlslonn .-m to be served, and this, together with an offer of transportation north, lort Thompson and others in similar pro dicamont no alternative but to go Into the land of tho enemy as hostages of war. Ho was sent by a boat to Now York, where ho remained until tho war closed. Escaped Death In Cyclone. After tho war Thompson wandered Into tho west. Why he choso tho west Instead of the south and homo has never been satisfactorily explained. Ho lived for a tlrao In Cincinnati, but driven by tho unrest thnt was in him, he continued his wanderings over tho greater part of tho western country, stopping for a tlmo llko any bird of passago whorover chnnco placed him. Ho peddled goods for n livelihood, worked on farms, cut timber In the forests did anything thnt camo his way that offered bread for his hungry mouth. Ho nover wroto to find out what had becomo of his wlfo and child. After a brief tlmo he found himself tho proprietor of a cross-roads Btoro near Mound City, Kan. Here, he Bays, ho cherished tho hopo of Bom'o dny achieving a competency and of return ing to Georga with means to Bearcn for his people. Dut at night a cyclone swept over the land whllo bo cowered In a cellar and In the morning ho found his Btoro distributed over a num ber of counties and himself again homeless and penniless. Nothing re mained of his possessions but an old tub, which alono had withstood tho storm and remainded to mock him in hlB loss. He again became a wander er, setting his back steadily upon wife and home and child. He moveQ into Kentucky and again began to build up hU shattered for tunes. He became tho proprietor of a general store and again began to dream dreams of n competence. But a disastrous fire visited him, and ho watched all his earthly goods go up in smoke. After tho fire he peddled fruit trees in the mountains, and watched the distillation of the yellow corn that had waved its golden ban nerets' over Kentucky's sun-kissed hills. Ho walked with the feudists in tho Kentucky hills for a number of years, braving flood and storm in tho pursuit of his several peddling occu pations. Worked His Way Home. Recently ho decided to carry out his long cherished Intention of returning to .Georgia. Old ago was now coming upon him fast, and with tho coming of age his mind turned upon tho past. Ho worked his way acrosB the Inter vening states and came at last again to Pembroke. Dut all tho friends of his youth had disappeared. Many of tho old families wero broken up. Tho llttlo Blabs in tho churchyard told him where most of tho people ho knew had gono. The graves of his father and mother ho found there. No trace of his wife and child could he ilnd. A chance acquaintance told him that his sister had married and wns living in Savannah. He found his sister, Mrs. Jessie Davis, after some search, and con vinced her, with some trouble, of bis Identity. From her he learned that his wife, after giving him up for dead, had married again, and with their daughter, who was also now married, lived in Dlltchton. He offered no rea son for having abandoned his family so long, and his sister did not press him upon the point. May Woo His Wife Again. Thompson went on to Dlltchton to see tho wife of his early manhood and his middle aged daughter, whom he remembered as a little child. Ho spent a day at the home of L. A. Schuman, tho husband of his daughter, whom ho saw mothering sturdy men and wom en whom sho hnd brought Into the world In the years that bad trans formed hor father from a veteran of twenty-ono to a bent and broken wan derer of sixty-eight With the as sistance of u plcturo taken before he went away, and by recalling intimate instances of her baby days, ho suc ceeded in convincing his daughter that he was her father. Meant to Stay In Savannah. Thompson hns announced that he will spend tho rest of his dnys In Savannah. Precisely what aro his in tentions regarding his wlfo aro not known. He has given no Indication of whnt uroceduro bo will adopt in this respect. It is generally believed that ho will not make any endeavor to lntcrfero with present nrrango montB. JoneB will cortalnly 'fight for his wife, although ho has exhibited every indication of being friendly to Thompson unless tho latter puts up a fight. Mrs. Thompson Jones will un doubtedly prefer to remalu with tho latter. Sho mourned Thompson for dead many years ago, and Bhe cannot recognlzo tho father of ner daugntcr In tho aged visitor. Dut hor position Is dellcato ns well as humiliating. Sho has two living husbands, which Is a llttlo beyond the pale of tho law. However Innocent she may have been, one Is now living In a stuto of polygumy. To desert her last husband after all these years and go to a perfect stranger is a little more than could bo expected of her, and yet her position ns tho wlfo ot Jones Is a trying one. Nobody blumes her, but thoso who know tho circum utanccB nro wondering what tho out come of tho tanglo will he. Hor nu merous offspring by her lust husband would not consont to her leaving the roof of their father even If she wlBhet to do so. Not Sure He la Her Brother. If Mrs. Tliorapsou had gono into court and bad her husband pro nounced legally dcud before she mar ried the second time all would have been well. Out so certain wob she that he was dead that she did not take this precaution. Possibly some technicality of the law will come to her rescue. The matter has not been Inquired Into. With her tho matter is simply that here are two men, both living, whom Bhe bos recognized as hua band, and both of whom are the fa thers of her children. Thompson Is back in Savannah, at the home of his sister. She declares that while she has accepted him, she is not at all sure that he is really her brother. She does not believe that a real flesh and blood brother could drop suddenly from nowhere in par ticular after an absence of 47 years. Everybody 1b afraid to take the mat ter into court for fear of further com plicating the situation and bringing out trying points heretofore over looked. The consensus of opinion seems to bo that Thompson ought to disappear again and remain dead. Or, better still, ho ought to havo remain ed in tho weBt, and not come back to troublo his wlfo at all. Jones Is apparently waiting for the other man to raako tho ilrst movo in tho case. Ho holds tho trump cards In that ho 1b in possession of tho dis puted wife. "And possession iB nine points of tho "law, you know," he says with a laugh. Ho is not letting tho situation worrk him much, either. It 1b pr6bablo that ns long as Thomp son docs not movo he will allow the matter to drop. And Thompson ap pears inclined to bo quiescent. He will remain with his sister for rhe present. There Ib plenty ot time tc mako his plans for tho future. Hat Fund of' Strange Tales. This Is tho basis upon which the matter stands at present' Thomp son's anibltion seems solely to be among his own pooplo to make a llt tlo nlcho somewhere where he can spend the remainder of his daya and earn five feet ot ground in the end In which his bonea may rest aiong sldo those ot his father and mother. Why Thompson did not tramp to ward Georgia instead or continually away from It la a secret that remains lnnkod In his own bosom. On thW point ho has been consistently silent He talks of his adventures pleasant ly and of the affairs or his family hu morously, but any questions leadlnB up to hlB reasons for remaining away bo long Invariably bIIciiccb him. ' Thompson shows his ago raoro than his wife. His faco Ib finely lined and wrinkled. HlB shoulderB are a little bent, but they nro of groat breadth, and would indicate that-ne was a man o great physical strength In his young er days. His teeth aro white and fine, and his smile Ib pleasant and Infec tious. Ho has at his tongue's end the "blarney" thnt comeB to all who pul their feet upon .the road. Ho has a fund of strange tales always roady to tell, and ho apparently takes delight In relating them. Ho Is a pleasant com panion, nnd there is much crudo wis dom burled beneath his experiences. All Georgia and the south is inter ested in the strango case. Everybody has a solution of tho dlfllcultyy to of fer. The theories advanced aro at thick as dust in vacant houses. But It Ib not theories that are troubling thoso old people. It is hard facts facts that drive thought home as with tho Impact ot a hammer. What la tc bo' done? Suppose Thompson de mands his wlfo at tho hands of Jones! What will tho consequenco be? Mrs Jones cannot deny that sho la tho wife of Thompson under the law. Thee what will the consequences bo to the children who have been born to hei In the Intervening years since Tbomp son disappeared? 2Xi '71WmwBTs if'mf.m'w &Ae HOME DEPARTMENT .. tifr' r3L WARM WEATHER STYLE COSTUMES FOR LITTLE MAIDS ESPECIALLY BECOMING. Short Sleeves and No Collars Will Be tho Rule Very Little Trimming on Hate- Wraps Continue Short -In Length. Tho llttlo maid's dressy Bummer frock Is still to bo collarleES and short sleeved, but when thla cut Is unbecom ingly to u child, no it would bo for a thin llttlo muld not In iiio best of health, it is nn easy enough mntter to add a guimpe and undcrslccve of tucked or plain net to cither style. In point of coats and hendgcar, tho mother who wants her child to look well must surely consider tho Btylcs set forth by the Juvenile shops, for somehow these people seem to get the best Ideas going for children's wraps nnd millinery. There Is a delicious uklmplncBs about tho trimmings ot tho little hats Just enough nnd no more nnd while suggesting the adult cutH of older garments the wraps nro also slmplo and bewitching. With tho long coat there Is a tendency to round tho fronts of all, but ir called "long" tho wrap Ib still some Inches ohort of tho skirt bottom nnd often quite as short as the kneeB. For dresBy uso one shop showed n number of thcso curtailed cbatB In pongees of various sorts, silk, poplin, satin and lined veiling. Tho pongee affairs sported deep collars and cuffs of the popular ratine lace, the collars often with the deep back dip used for the The Lingerie Hats the Wee Lassie Wears With Her Little Wash Frocks. Quaker model, and tho cuffs in a straight, loose piece merely buttoning over the bottom ot tho sleeves. With the plain satins and silks, which were In every color as well as in black, thcro was sometimes an under collar in a stripe, thus and a touch ot the same on the sleeves giving the coat a very dashing appearance. A favorite hat of tho season Is shown in the picture, the two pretty MUCH FUN AT HOBBY PARTY Clever Idea of Girl With 8ome Origin ality That Is Well Worth Being Imitated. A party given recently by a clever girl which was both original and en tertaining and proved to bo a great success was a hobby party. Tho in vitations were worded in tho following manner: "Como to my party on Wed nesday night and wear your pet, hob by; also state in your acceptance what Is your favorite dish." Tho groups that aBsembled In the big living room were Just the funniest conglomeration Imaginable, the "ec centricities of genius personified," as one girl expressed It. There wob tho postage stamp fiend wearing a motley collection pasted on various parts of her clothing, even her face, hands nnd hair bore a stick er rrom some placo. Tho girl who was mnklng silk quilts out of her party gowns and thoso of her friends was arrayed In a costumo by tho side of which Joseph's historical coat of many colors would have looked a sad nnd sober garment. Bugs, butterflies, toads and lizards played In most life llko attitudes over the clothing of the naturalist in tho crowd, und the girl who went In for physical culturo wore a necklaco of miniature Indian clubs nnd dumbbells. Of course tho camera crank went around trying to "tnko" everybody nnd the nutograph collec tor was on hand with book and pencil. A golf enthusiast wore a golf suit made ot calico tn a brilliant Scotch plaid and topped it with a Tarn 0' Shanter. Fastened to his buttonhole was a small case of golf clubs, such rTBffi J3L NEW TAFFETA WRAPS. Instead of a regulation cape the sum mer girl will wear over her thin frockB at the beach or for out of door dining one of the new shades. The wrap pic tured is sleeveless, though often sleeves are added; and the coat tails falling almost to the skirt hem at the back are particularly smart The wrap Is made of blue in a smoky violet shade and plaltlngs ot the silk trim It all around the edge. The long slk gloves, embroidered on the wrist, are lavender to harmonize with tho coat, but tho smart buttoned boots aro white, to match the frock. little mushrooms being tho sort of headgear liked for llttlo maids who will spend a good part of tholr time in tho country 'or elso wear rather simple wash frocks all summer long in town. The top hat is ot whlto linen with n hand-scalloped edgo and a gurnlsh of pink satin ribbon. The lower ono Is of white duck, braided nnd embroidered, nnd ot course each lint may he unbuttoned from the crown for laundering. This washable species of millinery Is very convenient for the wee girls who soon ruin mora elegant hats, and despite its simplicity such milli nery has, nevertheless, a very choice air. Tho dainty little hats can easily be made nt home, and it there is no gift for tho embroidery and braiding stitching may finish tho edgs. MARY DEAN. Vicarious Penance. "Have you given up any pleasure aa a penance during Lent?" "Certainly. I've given up giving my wife money for matinee ticketa." SB are sometimes used for dinner favors. One ot the drollest figures was tho man devoted to making band-made furniture; he had a set of doll's chairs, tnble and bed, which he had in a basket, and insisted upon showing everyone how perfectly they wero constructed. Altogether It was a most amusing party. When refreshments were served It was seen how tho hostess had endeav ored to cater to the likes of her guests. Children's Wear. Great variety exists In the applica tion or punch-work, says tho1 Dry Goods Economist. This stitch Is used in medallion effect, as a background to bring a design Into strong relief, or to form the whole or a portion of a design. An excellent Illustration of the last mentioned method of application Is noted In a poppy design with punch work petals, wltch comes in scarfB and pillow tops, and in a highly fa vored butterfly design with punch work wings, Ue latter being one of th favorite designs ihigueut towels. Fashionable Fixings. Many of tho latest blouses which aro worn under coats have lace ruffles at tho wrist. Many of the newest coats still show tho sldo fastenings, soma starting slightly below the wnlstllne, and oth ers up at the shoulder. Capo collars extending over tho shoulders nro a feature not only of many heavy coatB, but clso of houso anu street gowns. - K S ) F$ll'vt''M'' v m Crepe de chine Is enjoying a dccld- I j ed popularity. 1 " I A li p MMjWi)h - v - f '!l . . - - -