'Uto Hlitorleni aocipt u-r jat - JTtrvr'w-fWjwswiwnvirtXfciikUH i . i t IES v JL yCl AMP Sk BRIEF HISTORY OF 20TH U. S. Orpjsnlxed by Order of President, May , 4, 1861, and Made Up Wholly of Volunteera. In response to a request for a brief history of the Twentieth U. S., the Na tional Tribune makes tho following ro Ply: Tho Twentieth U. 8. was organized by order of the president, May 4, 1861, as tho Second battalion of the Elov cnth U. S. It remained part of the Eleventh U. S. during tho war, and In 18CG was separated from that regl inent and completed ns a separato regiment. At tho tlmo of tho reor ganization of tho Eleventh U. 3. Into n tlireo-lmttnllon regiment, tho com mander was Col. E. D. Koyes. It was mmlo up wholly of volunteers and oin cers appointed from civil llfo, the only veteran ut Fort Independence, whero It was organized, being Orderly Ser geant Parr. Somo sergeants from tho regular army wero detailed to get tho men In shape, and who finally becamo lieutenants. Tho Eleventh U. S. had a very Important part In nil tho bat tles of tho Army of the Potomac, nnd at tho conclusion of the war was sta tioned at Itlchmond, Va under tho lm medluto command of Its major, Thom as II. Nelll, brevet brigadier general. Tho HrBt field officers of tho regiment were Col. Frederick Steele, Lieut. Col. 'Louis 13. Watkins ami MnJ. Thomas II. Nelll. Thesq were nil generals In the .volunteer army. Tho captains had also attained high rank during tho ,var, and included such men as (Jen. A. S. Webb, Charles S. Russell, Charles C. Pomeroy and John C. Hates. Tho regiment remained In .Richmond, patrolling the city and act ing as police for the preservation of order and property. In 18C7 It was transferred to Baton Rouge, La., and 'then distributed to various posts in that state, whero It remained for two ,years on reconstruction duty. Lieu 'tenant Colonel Watkins commanded the regiment until his death, March 29, 18G8, and was succeded by Lieuten ant Colonel George Sykes. In 1SG9 the regiment was transferred to tho de partment of Dakota, with headquar ters at Fort Snelllng, Minn. It had a troublous times In keeping tho Sioux In order, nnd in 1877 was transferred to tho department of Texas, with Colonel Sykes establishing headquarters at Fort Drown. Colonel Sykes died at Fort Urown, February 8, 18S0, and was succeeded by Col. Etwell S. tftls. In 1881 tho regiment was transferred to the department of tho Missouri, with headquarters at Fort Leaven worth. In 1885 tho regiment was re turned to tho department of Dakota, with headquarters at Ulsmarck. In 1891 company I, which had been dis banded, was re-established as an In dian company, and filled up with en listments from tho Sioux, Gros Ven tres and Assinlbolncs, This experi ment proved unsuccessful, and tho In dian company was eventually dis charged. Tho regiment is now com manded by Col. James A. Irons, Lieut. Col Arthur C. Ducat and Majors Wil liam V. nurnham, Richard C. Croxton and Frank D. Webster. Could He Tell? A "high" private of tho 140th Pa., wounded at Chancellorsvllle, was taken to Washington. Ono day, as ho was becoming convalescent, a whisper ran down tho long row of cots that the president wns In the build ing and would soon pass by. Instant ly every boy In blue who was ablo arose, stood erect, hands, to tho side, ready to salute his commander-in-chief. Tho Pcnnsylvanlan stood six feet seven inches In his stockings.' Lin coln was six feot four. As tho presi dent approached this giant towering abovo him, ho stopped in amazement, and, costing his eyes from head to foot and from foot to head, as if con templating tho Immense dlstanco from ono extremity to tho other, ho stood for a moment speechless. At length, extending his hand, ho ex claimed: "Hello, comrade How do you know when your feot get cold?" And That Finished Him. After Hunter's defeat at Lynchburg, Va., and on our rotrent, we passed through a Uttlo town nbout four miles from Lynchburg. Ono of tho Thirty-fourth Ohio boys, seeing a woman otandlng In a doorway, swaggered up to her and In a loud voice said: "Madame, what is tho namo of tnls city?" Sho answered very politely: "Little Lick." "Well." said he, "how far Is it to Big Lick?" "If you had brains In proportion to your Impudence, you would know thnt you Just came from It," waB her reply. How He Reasoned. During the excitement attending tho failure of a sutler with' tho Army ot the Potomac, who was being closed out by tho sheriff, an Irishman who had deposited his month's wages with the sutler was asked why ho did not draw out his money. "Faith, an' I won't dhraw mo money out at all, at all." "Ar. don't yez know ho'll lose yer money of yez don't dhraw it out?" "Sliure, an' ain't ho better able to lose it than I am?" YJMOTBB77K1 wmHAw ooiub onw Goes on the Trail of the Giant Icebergs. tnttrettlng Story of the "Gray Ghost That Lies In Walt for Hapless Ves- stls" One Big Berg Waa Mile Long. Now York. "Somo tlmo after the Ti tanic went down I was possessed with the Idea of going north in tho hope of getting among the icebergs," writes James 1). Corrington. "Thcro had been no year in tho recollection of men who go down to the sea In ships when such n fleet of giant Icebergs had been seen so far south. I wanted to see them closo at hand those silent messengers of tho land of eternal enow and Ice, gray ghosts, embodi ments of the spirit of tho north, that drift in procession with the oaean cur rents and ut tho wind's will, to Ho in wait, maybo, for somo luckless skip per to send somo vessel nnd ull aboard to tho port of missing ships, and a( Inst to topplo and dlo at tho bidding of tho sun. Tho thought of thcnl fascinated me. "Their menace to navigation la al ways a very real and constant one, nnd hardly a ship that passed along tho Newfoundland banks last year but had a report of lco written In her log. Tho greatest tragedy of tho bco, tho loss oftho Titanic, would proba bly not havo happened In a normal year of Ice and It Is normal condi tions that ships expect to meet and for which they nro prepared. "I left Now York on n summer day. Tho tar on tho dock3 was soft from tho scorching heat ,nnd even tho breeze from the bay was hot. It was tho beginning 'of ono of tho sizzling spells of July. A few days later I yas talking with tho officers of. tho ship about the number of Icebergs they had passed on their last trip and of the ships that had gono north and never been heard from, "caught and chewed up In tho Ice." "Thero was a distinct thrill In wak ing In tho cold of early morning to a vigorous hammering on my door and the call of 'On deck, sir! Icebergs in sight! ' Wo were nearlng Cape Race, and away off to port, near shoro, thero was a glistening mass of Ice that stood cut with a distinctness against tho black, rocky shores. We passed soveral other smaller plcccB and ono big berg right at tho mouth of St. John's harbor. A few days later 1 was boundfor Labrador. After tho second day out icebergs became com monplace. Wo passed them contin ually, both by day and night. I tried counting them for a while, but gave WWy 1 .v ' Both Beauty and Menace. It up. As far as tho eye could see they loomed up on either sldo of tho ship, all shapes and sizes,1 pfnnocled towers that looked Ilka come great marble cathedral glistening in tho sun, Greek galleys, the head of a great bearded Hon, every conceivable shape, and form, modeled by the sun and water. As wo passed near somo of them we heard the sound of run ning water, and could see tho grooves of deep bluo cut by cascades of wa ter mado by the melting snow nnd ice. One giant berg looked a mile long and a hundred feet high, a grent flat cake of solid Ice, shaped Hko a big coun try barn with a sloping roof enough to supply Now York all summer. Whero tho water had cut tho grooves thcro wero cxqulslto tones of bluo and green. Nearly all of tho bergs showed projecting ledges under water, light green In color. It was ono of those ledges that was supposed to havo cut Into tho vitals of tho Titanic. "Now and then a crash was heard, and a berg would begin to wabble and sway Hko a drunken man Bometimes to loso its balanco and topple over Into tho sea with a nolso Hko the crash of a big gun, causing n verita ble tidal wave. Hero and thero near tho shores a berg had gono aground, sometimes making a difficult entranco to some little harbor." Favor Compulsory Compensation. San FranclBco. Ono of tho most Im portant questions touched upon at tho sessions of tho Drotherhood of Railway Trainmen was compulsory compensation for Injuries sustained In the course of duty. A majority of tho delegates favor a federal act, and tho wholo matter probably will be placed in the hands of tho oxccutlvo commit tee with Instructions to urgo action by congress. Turns Mine Into Incubator. Big Run, Pa. Twenty-one healthy chickens wero hatched in a basket which contained 23 eggs when placed over a hot spring in a small room of the Eleanor mine, hero by Superinten dent London. The temporaturo of tho unlquo Incubator varies less than a degreo tho year 'round- ' VET"" 3jfcSFF!sS ,a slsrjii A wV-i 'aaaaBasMfce. ?V. .2' Avr"rrr' v r". AXb-z.T7 -io """7Z DIFFERENT TYPES OF HORSE ; Men of Science Have Recently Taken Up Study of Origin and to Differ entiate Characteristics. Horse breeding hns been followed ns a trade ever slnco animals wero first domesticated, but the study of types litis only qulto recently been taken up by men of sclunco with a view of ascertaining tho origin of tho species and to differentiate their characteristics. Ah a result of this study, based upon these anatomical differences and variations which havo resulted from wide geographical dis tribution, anil which probably origin ated In early geographical times, it may bo accepted that thero are four families or species of horses. The first type In this classification Is tho Celtic horse, found on tho west const of Norway, known aa tho Fjord The Prejevalsky Horse, Specimens of Which Are Now Being Bred In the New York Zoological Gardens. horse in Iceland, Facroe, Uarra, and other smnll Islands of the outer Hebrides In northern Scotland, on tho Shetland Isles, and In Conncmara or northern Ireland. There has also been found u closo kinship between the Celtic horse und tho true Tarpan horse of Russia. The second type of horses Is the Prejevalsky, found in a wild state on ths steppes of central Asia. Thero arc a fow of these in England on tho cstnto of the duke of Bedford, , and several specimens nro being bred in tho New York zoological garaens. Tho Prejevalsky horse Is of n rod brown color with n light "menly" nose, has a largo head in proportion to his body, and Is "cat hamed," and less .powerful than tho Celtic horso. Somo writers have assumed that tho Tarpan nnd tho Prejevalsky horses belong to tho same family, but this is not now accepted, on account of their marked differences, tho most conspicuous of which Is that tho Prejevalsky has tho callosities on his hind legs. In this family It usually takes tho form of a narrow strip nnd not drop-shaped as Is common with other horses. Thero hnB been a sug gestion that this little horso oaly 12 hands high, Is tho living ex ample of tho original ancestor ot the draft horses of Europe, but It seems highly improbable, inasmuch as fossils ot tho draft typo have been found showing its great antiquity, and I am Celtic Pony Developed In Norway for Show Purposes. He Shows the Characteristic Black Mark Down His Mane. moro Inclined to believe that those big types aro a speclos by. themselves and shall call this family tho third typo. This horso Is known to science as the Forest horse, becauso ho originally ob tained his food by browsing on shrubs and low trees. Tho Arab or African horse forms tho fourth type in our classification His food is the grasses thai grow on the ground, and his homo has always been the open plains and hillsides re mote from forests. Therefore his head Is articulated on his cervical vertebra at an obtuso angle, thus forming "Hogarth's lino of beauty." This sot of the head has long been recognized by breeders as a constituent element of beauty. II. K. Bush-Brown, In American Breeder's Magazine. Raise More Live Stock. An exchungo points out that our farmers should raise more Ilvo stock ir they expect to keep up tho fertility of their soils. In Germany thero Is one head of llvo stock for each 3.C acres of land; In Denmark one for 4 acres; in Franco one for 4.3 acres; In England one for C.3 acres, but In tho United States It takes 12.1 acres to support ono head of llvo stock. If wo nro to keep down tho cost of liv ing wo must keep more live stock per aero and farm our lands better. f- ' BOILED EGGS BETRAY THEM Nationality of Diners Is Shown In Their Various Method of Eating. Sherlock Holmes might hnve figured this out, but he did not! Tho average Englishman will al was demand his egg boiled Just threo minutes, then he places It In an 'KK cup, JuBt large enough to havo tho egg lit it, taps tho .op of the Blii'll, and removes the broken shell with hlB fingers. The egg Is eaten n spoonful at n tlmo. A Frenchman, much like the Eng lishman, llkeH his eggs of three min utes, exnctly. Ho then "peels'-them, places them In a glutts. ttlrs and mixes well together with snlt, pepper and butter. Ho makes a practice of dipping bread Into the mixture, und intlng It along with the eggs. A Spaniard wouhln'l think of letting his egg hull miTrii than one minute. Ho then breaks It, and lets the eon tents run Into a glass, and consumes It as If ho wero drinking a glass of ul no. An egg Is only lit In an Italian's estimation when It has been placed In cold water, and removed' Just as tho water beings to boll. Hu then bienkti It, pours It on a plate, nnd proceeds to sop It up with bread. Tho German, like the Italian, de mands his eggs ns near the liquid state as possible. Ho breaks Ills eggB In an unsightly cup, and scoops tho liquid out na If it wero soup. Tho American Is about the only one who prefers his eggs hulled hard. When they are served up to him, he knifes them in half, removes the con tents Into a ghiHH, atter which he adds n plentiful supply of pepper, but ter and salt. He then miners tho iggs line, mixing them well with the hldcen, and eats them with Ills toast. ITCHING AND BURNING Iberia, Mo. "I was troubled with scalp cczoma for nbout live years nnd tried everything 1 heard of, but nil of no avail. Tho doctors told mo I would havo to havo my head shaved. Being a woman, I hated the Idea of that. I was told by n friend that tho Cutlrura Remedies would do mo good. This spring I purchnsed two boxes of Cutl cura Ointment nnd ono enko at Cuti cura Soap. After using ono box of Cutlcura Ointment I considered tho cure permanent, but continued to uso it to mako suro und used nbout ono half tho other box. Now I nm entirety well. I also ubed tho Cutlcura Soap. "Tho disease began on tho back of my head, taking tho form of a ring worm, only moro severe, rising to a thick, rough Benlo that would como off when soaked with oil or warm water, bringing a fow hairs each tlmo, hut in a fow dayB would form again, larger each time, and spreading until the en tire back of tho head was covered with tho scale. This was accompanied by a tcrrlblo itching nnd burning sensa tion. Now my head is completely well and my hnlr growing nicely." (Signed) Mrs. Geo. F. Clnrk, Mar. 25, 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout tho world. Snmplo of oach free, with 32-p. Skin Book, Address post-card "Cutlcura, Deptl L, Boston." Adv. Catching Files Pays Well. Catching flies Is affording a Shreve port (La.) man a profitable and inde pendent living. He sells them to tho city board ot health. His namo is Bartsch, und his not revenue from tho fly Industry for tho first two days of a recent week was 121.20. When tho health board begun offering premiums for tho flics, dead or alive, Hartsch purchnsed nbout 100 traps and placed them in fly-ridden sections ot tho city. Then ho began making Inroads on-the health board's exchequer, and so well did ho operato that ho boro the market price down from CO cents to 20 cents a quart, for It Is by that measure that the board purchases. Bartsch Is still working, nnd ho will work as long ns1 tho treasury holds out. Ho finds fly catching pays. Droken Heart Caused Death. A broken heart, caused by vlolont beating duo to sudden omotlon, was said by a doctor to bo responsible for the death of Alexander Durness, sixty-four, a master tailor, at a Ixindon Inquest. Durness fell nnd died during an altercation with a foreman cutter as to the ownership of cortaln articles which ho was about to remove from his former premises to now ones. Ambiguous. "That actor has such finish In his work." "Well, I'd like to see his finish." Tho man who doponds entirely on the push of those who aro back of him will seldom get to tho front. Save the Babies. INFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. Wo can hardly naliM that of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent, or nearly one-quarter', dlo beforo they reach one year; thirty-seven per oent., or more than one-third, beforo they aro Ave, and one-half before they are fifteen I We do not heeltato to say that a timely uso of Costoria would save a majority of theso precious lives. Neither do wo hesitate to my that many of these infantile deaths aro occasioned by tho use of narcotlo preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children's complaints contain more or lees opium or morphine. They are, in considerable quantities, deadly poisons. In any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. Costoria operates exactlv tho reverse, but you must see that it bears the signature of Chas. H. Hetcher. Custoria causes tne Dioou to circulate properly, pores or ine BKin ana auayu rover. Genuine Castoria always boars the PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter anifastercolorsthananyotherdye. One KV: package colors all fibr. TJhfydyelncoM wa'erbetterthansnyotherdye'. Yeueaii ye any mrment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet How to Dye. Bleach and Mix Colon. MONROE UBUO COMPANY, ' QMiac. IU? sT M s 'Lf Jp$M SiAV T f? aW jjCyV. I m Hag W9 ssssBiasBBBBBBBV to insure complete success take k along a case of M jjm The satisfying beverage infield1 m jKSMff or forest; at home or in town. m MPHjW As pure and wholesome as it is K JfSfjf temptingly good. 'U ilSlilSl Delicious Refreshing M Thirst-Quenching M Refuse substitute. r lf tcni foi fret Booklet. . p THE CotA-COLA COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA. England's Oldest Bowling Green. Which Is our oldest recreation? Thero are not wanting nrcheollglsts who profess to bo ablo to trace refer ences to footbnll and baseball on Hgyptnln moral tablets. However, when It comes to actual records, tho lino tdd ICngllsh game of bowls would appear to bo as old ns any. Southampton, Kng., has records showing that ono of tho local bowling greens was In e.xistenr.0 In 12DD, Many Interesting customs nro asBo elated with the game on this historic green. Every summer a "Hro Jack" competition Ib held, and an order of knighthood Ib conferred on tho win ner, who kneelB in the center of tho green while tho other players gather round him nnd tho master touches him with a sword aud dubs him "sir." London and Its Lumber. London is tho most conservative city In Europe, It not In tho world. It loves Its lumber. You1 may still bco those notices attached to lamp posts which announces "Standing tor Four Hack ney Carriages," or whatover tho num ber mny be, though for ten years (In ono ense, to my own knowledgo for twenty-five) no vehicles of any kind have stood there. Perhaps U Is as well that theso relics should remain; they aro a tiny part of our social history. Thoy will probably remain when wo nro flying to dinner or tho theater In omnlaeros. By that tlmo people won't know whnt "hackney curriago" meant, nnd thero will bu discussions In thu "Notes nnd Queries" of tho period. For each generation hands down to tho next certain nuts to crack. To Identify the Corpse. In the blanks which llfo Insurance companies provldo their medical exam iners for uso in recording tho data of tho examination of tho applicant for Insurance, they provldo a spaco for personal marks which may bo used to Identify tho insured after death. A western company recently received a roport from an examining physician with the following in tho Identification blank: "Ho has a strong Cornish ac cent." Llpplncott'fl. Good Magnet. Helper We're going to have n big crowd here, and it'll be bomo Job to keep em moving. Manager That'll bo easy. Take down the rear exit sign, post up tho word "Free," and they'll all bolt for It. Judge.. Athletic. "Miss Corker does a great deal of fancy work." "With her needle, you mean?" "Shucks, no! On the horizontal bars," opens tue signature At Soda Fountainj or Carbon ated in Bottle. l . tUfcKElV HAIR BALSAM A tolltt twptntloa of mtrtl ,i!"t,, "MlcM dandruff. Baaut t to Cray or FJl Hair J Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver (a right the stomach and bowels aro right. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Kently but firmly com-. Lpel n lazy liver ilo us duty. Cures Con itipation, ln digestion, Sick Headache.' and Diitrati After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK, Genuine must bear Signature Saskatchewan Your Opportunity Is NOW In the Province ef Saskatchewan, Western Canada . IVitnadmlra to seta KritollcimetlriidutlHO ACItKS of that well kniiKIl VUhmmt T B....1 Tho arra I boiomlng more llmltwl Imtnqli'iiivalMirilft . KKW IMNTIUCT8 rate rrrontlr ten upenrd up for noil cuif in, and. Into tbmo rail roads aro now bnlny built. Tho d??. ." ,ooa come wben tbora nlUbn no A Hwlft Current, Saskatchewan, faruirr wrlti-i: -I mine on nir ?1''!!,"t""''' Mb !. with about I1.UU) worth or hortfn and wacbln nrr, and Jurit tf& In rat.li. Today 1 hare IU) aero uf whi-iit. SOU arret tif aU,andUacrrsof flax." Mot bad fur lz Trim, butonlr an In- tunco ot wliut mar bn dona in WiMern Canada In Manitoba, hiwkiitclianan or Alberta. hrnd at nnco for Miemtura, Maps, Hallway Hatus, etc., to W. V. BENNETT, Bee Dulldlng, Omaha, Nab. Canudlan (loYemnwnt .Agent, or a.r,lr-i.e Niiirlntrnlcnt of liuuilgnuioii, Ottawa, lu4a. W. N. U., LINCOLN, NO. 25-1913. Nebraska Directory BOILERS! Vertical or lior- Izmilnl new oravcondkaud. WILSON STHAM BOILER CO., Omiha GREEN GABLES Tba Dr. Ben. F. Bailey Sanaloriuai LIbcoIb, Nebraska ha brick and atone buildings so taata. fully furnished and thoroughly equipped. In the beautiful pa' of 25 acres, with staff of experienco and a nursing corps of unusual merit, offers you most per feet hospital results, yet always pre-, serves the atmosphere- of a delightful tountry HOME. Writu for particulars t0LCARTFRS V iJITTLE .aBaw vtK JBMBI pjribWS. ay aafcfi i &&&&zg m H i I ' i r; I ., 'A J .V SS!'!?i?rhlu-''fe'ftfj