r f i s . 16 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT APRIL 4, 1907. UNITED STATES SENATOR FROM SOUTH CAROLINA PRAISES PE RU-NA. Mr. Dooley on Things Spiritual. V.y F. P. DTTNNK. (Copyright, 1907, by H. H. Mc Clure & Co.) 'Wei!, sir," said Mr. Dooley, "I won der where science Is goin' to stop?" "What's It done now?" asked Mr. Hennessy. "Th' latest thing," said Mr. Dooley, "is weighin' th' human soul. A fellow up in Matsachoosetts has done it. lie weighs ye befure ye die an he weighs ye after ye die, an' th' dift'rence is what ye'er soul weighs.. He's discov ered that th' a v rage weigh iv a soul in. Wiv P'ntrland is six ounces or a lit tle less. Fr'm this he argies that th J conscience isn't part lv trt' soui. xi u was th' soul wud be in th' heavyweight clas, f'r ih New England couscience , is no-feather. He thinks it don't es cape with th' soul, but lies burrld-ln th' in. ins iv itjs own fam'ly home, th liver. It's so simple it must be true, an' if it -.iln't true annyhow it's simple, Hut it's a tur-rble thing to think iv. I can't see anny money in it as an in vention. Who'll want to have his soul weighed ! .Suppose ye'er time has cuiiK-. Th' fam'ly ar-re busy with their own thoughts,' giievin' because they hadn't been as good to ye as they might, because, they won't have ye with thim anny more, because it's too late -f'r thiin to square ihimselves, pityin ye because ye-er not remainin' to share their sorrows with thiin, won dhtin' whether th' black dhresses, thai were bought in honor iv what peopll might say if they didn't wear thim in mimry iv Aunt Eliza, wud be noticed if they were worn again f'r ye. Th' very young mimbers iv th' fam'ly ar-re stundin' around, thryln' to look as sad as they think they ought to look. But they can't keep it up. They nudge each other, their eyes wandher around th' -room, an' fr'm time to time they glance over at Cousin Felix an' expect him to make a laugh'ble face. He's a gr-reat frind iv theirs an' they're sur prised he isn't gayer. Something must've happened to him. Maybe he's lost his job. There ar-re a gr-reat manny noises in th' sthreet. Th' un dertaker whistles as he goes by, an' two iv th' neighbors ar-re at th' gate sayin' what a fine man ye were if ye didn't dhrink, anask!n did ye leave much. "An' little ye care. Everything is a millyon miles away fr'm ye. F'r th fust time in ye'er life ye ar-re ye:rr silf. F'r Hiven knows how manny years ye've, been somebody else. Ye've b'-en ye'er wife, ye'er fam'ly, ye'er re lations, th' ptlisman on th' beat, th' doctor,' th' newspaper rayporther, th' foreman at th' mills, th' laws iv th" land, th' battinder that gives ye d !i inks, th tailor, th' barber, an' pub miiiiion. Th' wurruld lias held a look in' glass in front iv ye fr'm th' dav ye were born ah' compelled ye to make facts in it. But in this here par ticular business ye have no wan to please but ye'ersilf. Good opinyon an' bad opinyon ar-re alike. Ye're akelly unthroubled be gratichood an' revenge. No wan can help ye or stay ye. Ye're beyond th' sound iv th' alarm clock an' th' facthry whistle an' beginnin' th' Big Day Off whin th' man iv science shakes ye be th' elbow an' says: 'Ye've got to weigh out.' An' he weighs an' figures: 'Wan hundherd an' forty siven fr'm wan hundherd an' fifty. Siven fr'm naught can't be done; borry wan; siven fr'm ten leaves three. I find that th' soul iv our late lamintd frind weighed a light three pounds avird xipoisc.' "No. Sir, it won't do. "f will niver be popylar. People won't have their souls weighed. I wudden't f'r all th' wur ruld have th' wurrud go through th' ward: 'Did ve hear about Dooley's soul?' 'No. what'." 'They had to get an expert accountant to figure its velcht, il was that puny.' "live suppose Dorgan. th' rnillyon aire. "wud consint to it?' 'Whin he en tered th' race iv life he was properly handicapped with a soul to offset his iviuico an ms anuiiy, so mu.i auiue iv il' ies' Iv us wud have a kind iv a hhnvv against him. But as soon rs ne thinks no wan can see him he begins In get rid Iv his weight an' comes rom- pin' homr miles tihemi. lui m juages Moid on. there: ye'll have to say: wvinU out.' an' a little later a notice is posted up that Iornn H disqualified f'r rldm unuhervvvigni in in manner iv soul. On th' other hand, t Here's ut- tl Ml' Ml Maddlgau. th' seamstress. . ,1.1 . .kn'a H nil Ullt I U "l Ul I'wi. i intled all til way around, an" come in Wil lame, u t ad last. Mill sue n in oniy i. a 1. 1 ... .!.. wan Iv i"1 mats k pi m nini, Sh ..u.h nlnetv-slx pouna mx iv u In' tea an' toast an" ninety iv It notil. An nmid . xrlnmatlons iv rare rr m haiueH-ir Day. who hi piungea ,ivil,v 'U Plrgun In m I uturlty, an nli.x Iv joy f ! thnuiamt miner Kutly. who have linked th' idly, her number M hung out. "No Sir, whin It romi-i to Rin' up to th' cak l ln.. tlv-tr se iii weighed people'li be as shy as they are in a Customs House. Th' peiple that wud make th' invintion pay wud be th' last to want to be tested by it. Th pa apers might keep records iv th' re sults: 'Misther So-an'-So, th gr-reat captain iv fi-nance, died yesterday, universally regretted. His estate amounts to nineteen millyon dollars. There ar-re two large bequests to char ity. Wan is a thrust fund set aside f'r his maiden sister Annybelle, who will receive f'r life th' income on eight hundherd dollars in stock iv th' Hack ensack Meadows comp'ny. Th' other is forty-two dollars to buy a wooden leg f'r his brother IsawC, in Abilene, Kansas, it bein' understood that no charge is to be made be th' estate against th'- brother f'r a set iv false teeth bought f'r him in the year nine teen four. Th' balance iv th' property is left in trust f'r th' minor chlldhen until they ar-re 90 years old. Th de ceased requested that his soul be measured be troy weight. It tipped th' beam at wan pennyweight' " "D'ye think th' soul can be weighed?" asked Mr. Hennessy. "I know it's there, but I think I kind iv feel I wondher I don't hardly know " "I see what ye mean," said Mr. Doo ley. "Scales an' clocks ar-re not to be thrusted to decide annything that's worth deciding. Who tells time be a clock? Ivry hour Is th' same to a clock an' ivry hour is diff'rent to me. Wan long, wan short. There ar-re hours in the avenin' that pass between two ticks iv th' clock; there ar-re hours in th' arly mornin' whin a man pretenses.' "How can I know anny thing, whin I haven't puzzled out what I am mesilf. I am Dooley, ye say, but ye'er on'y a casual obsarver. Ye don't care anuy thing about me details. Ye look at me with a gin'ral eye. Nawthin that hap pens to me really hurts ye. Ye say, 'I'll go over to see Dooley,' sometimes, but more often ye say, 'I'll go over to Dooley's.' I'm a house to ye, wan iv a thousand that look like a rowiv model wurrukin'men's cottages. I'm a post to hitch ye'er silences to. I'm always about th same to ye. But to me I'm a millyon Dooleys an' all iv thim sthraners to MgE. I niver know which wan iv thim is comin' in. I'm like a hotel keeper with on'y wan bed an' a millyon guests, who come wan at a time an' tumble each other-out. I set up late at night an' pass th' bottle witli a gay an' careless Dooley that hasn't a sorrow in th wurruld, an' suddenly I look up an' see" settin' aorost fr'm me a gloomy wretch that ilres th' dhrink out iv th' window an chases me to bed. I'm just gettin used to him whin another Dooley comes in, a cross, cantankerous, crazy fellow that insists on eatin' breakfast with me. An' so it goes. I know more about mesilf than annybody knows an' I know nawthin'. Though I'd make a may fr'm mem'ry an gossip iv anny other man, f'r mesilf I'm still un charted. . . "So what's th' use iv thryin' to know amvything less Important. Don't thry. All ye've got to do is to believe what ye hear, an' if ye do that enough af ther a while ye'll hear what ye believe. Ye've got to start in believin' befure ye can find a reason f'r ye'er belief. Our old frind Christopher Columbus hadn't anny good reason f'r believin' that there was anny such a place as America. But he believed it without a reason an' thin wint out an' found it. Th' fellows that discovered th' canals on Mars which other fellows think cud be cured be a good oculist, hadn't anny right to think there were canals on Mars. But wan iv thim said: 'I won dher if there ar-re canals on Mars; I believe ther? ar-re. I'll look an' see. Be Hivens, there ar-re.' If he'd won dhered an' thin believed about clothes poles he'd've found thim too. Anny kind iv a fact is proof lv a belief. A firm belief atthracts facts. They come out iv holes in th' ground an' cracks in th' wall to support belief, but they run away fr'm doubt. "I'll niver get anny medal f'r makin' anny mun give up his belief. If I see a fellow with a chube on his eye an' hear him hollerln', 'Hooray, I've din covered a new planet, 'I'll be lh' last man In th' wurruld to brush th fly off th end iv th' telescope. I've known people that see ghosts. I didn't see thim. but they did. They cud see ghosts an' I eudJen't. There wasn't anything else to it. I knew a fellow that was a Spiritualist wanst. He wan in th' chattel morgedge business on wwk " an' he was a FplrilulH n Sunday. II cud understand why th" uplrlts wud alway pick out a xtout lady with faint hair or a Klnlltii..i that hit hH thumb nuuk reitred t ToHs Hailnuai tn t ilk through, an' he knew why spirit llkr.l to rlay on Iwit'JoeM an iiiundoUiia an' why they ionvarx"il 1 rapphi on a table In th' ilis'i, Th' uii'y iea-oa I cud think lv can't sleep that Methusalah's age cud stretch in. Clocks ar-re habichool liars, an' so ar-re scales. As soon as annything gets good enough to weigh ye can't weigh it. Souls ar-re "f'r th other fellow. I'm perfectly willin' to take ye'er weight or ye'er soul's weight fr'm what th' scales say. Little I care, A pound or two more or less makes no diff'rence. But when it comes to measurin' something that's precious to me, I'll not thrust it to a slight im provement on a see-saw. "But what do I know about it anny how? What do I know about anny thing? I've been pitchin' information into ye f'r more years thin annywan iver wint to college, an' I tell ye now I don't know annything about anny thing. I don't like to tfrrust mesilf for ward. I'm a moSt man. Won't somebody else get up? Won't ye get up, Tiddy Itosenfelt, won't ye Willum Jennings Bryan, won't ye Presidint Eliot, won't ye, pro-fissors, preachers, doctors, lawyers, iditors? Won't anny body get up? Won't annybody say that they don't know annything about annything worth knowin' about? Thin, be Hivens, I will. All alone I'll stand up before me class an' how much more humbly befure me teacher? an' say: 'Hinnissy, about annything that can't be weighed on a scales or meas ured with a tape line. I'm as ign'rant as ye'ersilf. I'll have to pay ye back th' money I took fr'm ye f'r ye'er schoolin'. It was obtained be false was that they'd always lived in boord in' houses an' could't get rid iv th' cus toms. "But he had th' best iv me. He be lieved an' I doubted. He toqk me to what he called a seeance wanst. They gave him a front seat. I heard a good deal iv talk among th' spirits bejfind th' curtains. Says wan with a Gar man accint: 'Who's th' fellow with iv old come-on?' 'Oh, he don't amount to annything, an' annyhow ye judden't wake th' old boy up if ye set fire to him.' 'Hurry along with thim feath ers,' says another spirit voice. I turned to me frind an' I see be th' look in 1 is eyes that it wud be a waste iv effort to impose on him. 'They come,' he says. 'It is Ungawapa he says, as th' ghost Iv a noble red man iv th' for est appeared through th' curtain, mut therin': 'Himmel, why didn't ye get that chain out iv th' way?' He looked ivry inch th' warryor fr'm th war bon net on his head to th' congress gaiters on his feet. 'Is Israel Simpson here?' says he. 'Yes,' says me frind. 'What can I do f'r yo today, great chief?' 'Do ye know a man be th' name iv Mul larkey?' 'I do,' says Simpson. 'I see him carryin' a rockin' chair down stairs,' says th' haughty Pattywato mie. 'Gig chief wants wampum,' he says. Simpson pressed a roll iv bills into his swarthy hands an' says to me: 'Come along quick.' 'What f'r?' says I. 'Mullarkey is movin' his furniture an' I have a morgedge on it,' says "he. 'Th' Injun always advises me right on matthers Iv business,' says he. An' there was a man that wud bite a silver dollar in two before he'd take it f'r good." "My aunt seen a ghost wanst," said Mr. Hennessy. . "Ivrybody's aunt has seen a ghost," said Mr. Dooley. SHORT STORIES. RACIOUS, Fanny!" exclaimed a mother to her little daughter, Why are you shouting like that? Why can t you be quiet like your brother?" "He's got to be quiet," replied Fan ny. "He's playing papa coming home late." "And who are you playing?" "Oh, I'm playing you." A teacher in a Long Island City school was glv ing her class a lesson In hygiene. "Never sleep on more than one pil low." she said: "in fact, it's better to use no pillow at all, because if you do it's likely to make you round-shouldered." Little Uocco Pisciolta waved his arm wildly. "Well?" said the teacher. "S'poseti you sleep on your stum miek?" piped Koeco. "While it I. of course, a platitude to say that a wise teacher learns by In structing others." recently obnervud an Instructor In a preparatory school in Brooklyn. 'lt is permissible to remark that he frequently picks up some, curi ous information in this way. "I once aked a boy to explain, If he could, the difference between animal ntlnct and human Intellbrenee. It Waa a prtty hard question, but the lad ,n j ' ', ll to It, '"If we had Instinct.' he il.l. we li.Mild know everythltijj we iteeded to 1 Ui.mv without learning It; but we've 1 got reason, nnd fo v hive to Mtidy i ourm hca 'mot blind, or U il fool.' " ' Ex-Senator M. C. Butler. Dyspepsia Is Often Caused By Catarrh of the Stomach Peruna Relieves Ca tarrh of the Stomach and Is Therefore a Remedy For Dyspepsia. 1 Hon. M. C. Butler, Ex-U, S. Seu- ator from South Carolina for "two terms, in a letter from Washington,, D, C, writes to the Peruna Medicine Co., as follows : ' can recommend Peruna for dyspepsia and stomach trouble. 1 7 have been using your medicine fori a short period and I feel very much i relieved. It Is indeed a wonderful I medicine, besides a good tonic. " r CATARRH of the 6tomach is the cor rect name for most cases of dyspep sia. In order to relieve catarrh of the stomach the catarrh must be eradicated. Only an internal catarrh remedy, such as Peruna, is available. Peruna exactly meets the indications. A certain member of the Pittsburg stock exchange has set his nephew up in business three times, but the young man lacks something essential to suc cess in the line selected for him, and has failed with each effort. When he recently appeared before the uncle with his fourth request, the latter said: "You must learn to lean on yourself. I can't carry you all my life. I'll tell you what I'll do. You owe me a great deal as the result of your last failure. Pitch in n your own hook and go it alone till you pay off those debts. When you've done that, I'll give you a check for what they amount to. Such an experience will do you more good than all the money I could give you now." Two months later the nephew walked in with every claim receipted in full, and the uncle was so delighted that he gave the promised check. "How did you manage it, Howard?" he asked, after an expression of con gratulation. "I borrowed the money," replied Howard. A well-known American actor, who is old enough not to consider himself a matinee idol by any means, was some what surprised and pleased in a St. Louis hotel a short time ago, when a pretty girl etopped him in the corridor and presented him with a rose, without saying a word. He was more surprised and less pleased to receive a note the following day reminding him of the In cident, and asking him to send the giver of the flower two seats at the theater in which he was playing "as a memento of tha occasion." "My dear young lady," the actor re plied, waxing sarcastic as he realized what had bven the object of the at tention he had been paid, "I would be glad to send you the Keats you nk for, but. on consultation with the manager ef the theater. I h.ive been Informed that the eals are ull fastened down, and Hut h" H opposed to havJnf them -fnt riwiy ,i Honvt iiirn In Any t ,nt, no that you will have to he contented with nn autoRiaph fcr it souvenir of your Uenuvoletjee of j jsletd iy lntad.M "