THE H'cooK TRIBUNE : SUPPLEMENT. McCOOK , NEB. tfACTS AM ) JfANICES. Secretary Lamar lives in a flat. Tho 'people of Borneo eat monkeys. Attar of roses sells for $120 a pound. John S.Wise made seventy speeches. There are female barbers 'in Hous " ton. ton.Mr. Mr. Yilas has an independent .for tune. There are 2,500 doctors in Philadel phia. Georgia has eight living ox-Gov ernors. Iowa has a Scandinavian population of 61,753. Rev. John Hall has a yearly income of 8100,000. Connecticut's oyster fleet is valued at $125,000. O'Donovan Rossa wants a custom house position. General Roecrans is Chauncey M. Depew's uncle. Senator Ingalls is a classical scholar and reads much. Dingy looking rings of India gold aro much in vogue. Chrysanthemum culture has fa rsur passed rose culture. It is said that 'Gould put 83CO.OOO into politics in 1876. A coal bed twenty feet thick has been found in Texas. There is in Utah a subterranean res ervoir of sojda water. An electric stud is the latest novelty of this inventive age. A Connecticut man traded his daughter for a horse. Mary anderson blushes when ladies praise her to herface. Attorney General Garland refuses all kinds , of invitations. Tho proposed Nicaragua Canal would cost $60,000,000. Nearly 400 puddling furnaces are in operation in Pittsburgh. . ' Henry George's eldest son shows much literary capacity. General Logan expects to make 8100000 ; out of his book. Senator Colquitt , of Georgia is preaching on temperance. ThoNow York clothing salesmen aro about to form a union. King Theebaw declares that ho will die at tho head of h's army. Chilian miners are said to be the strongest men in the world. Tho fund for the widow of Emory A. Storrs amounts to' 83,400. John Jacob Astor thinks nothing of bidding 81,500 at a horse sale. President McCosh is determined to crush out hazing at Princeton. They are playing "Macbeth" as an Italian opera in Sail Francisco. Gilbert is engaged on an operetta libretto with a Hindoo subject The patronage of the St Louis post master foots up § 30,600 a year. Wedding r.ugs aro made quite nar row , of twenty-two karat gold. A man died in the Gulf of Mexico from seasickness a few days ago. President Elliott , of Harvard , re ceives a salary of 84,000 per year. Boutwell will deliver a eulogy on Grant , in Boston , about December 20. When a cyclone gets through with a western village it is like the play of Hamlet" with hamle1left out. Some appreciative person has pre sented President Cleveland with a pho tograph of Tom Moore's harp. The inmates of the white house should re joice that the present was not the harp itself. The president can't play on the photograph. Uncle Rogers "I couldn't do any thing withthe boy. He was eternally picking quarrels with everybody , and so I had to send him home. " Father "You did right , Henry. How much the boy grows like his mother. " An actor having made ip his mind to got married , all his colleagues ad vise him earnestly not to sacrifice his liberty. At last the prompter comes and adds.his appeal in thesewords : "My dear sir ! You have always lis tened to my words ; wh'V'nbt do so now ? " Some Boston people are horrified to learn that the cook of the Parker house receives as largo a salary as tho president of Harvard university. This .probably refers to tho people who board at tho Parker house. But wo doubt whether the president of Har vard university conid cook any bet ter. ter.Tho Tho president of the Ichthophagous club of New York , speaking of the healthiness of its members , says "this result has been attained by not allow ing them to indulge too freely in Euchy trajus Tricentralopectinatus. " That seems plausible enough. In fact we should think that even an ordinary indulgence in these frightful things would kill a man dead , if not more so. Sometimes even tho most wide awake and accurate , re porter is liable to err , as is shown by th'e correction in The Sctiuyler Vindicator. "Instead of being arrested yesterday , as we stated , for kicking h's wife down a flight of stairs and hurling a lighte'd kerosene lamp after her. Rev. Jamo's Wellman died , , unmarried , four years ago. " It is to bo hoped that Rev. Wellman accepts this heartcorrcc - tipniu tho same generous spirit in which it is tendered. A QUAKER 1YEDD1N6. The Erldi 'in Ivory Satin , Venetian .Point Lnco and n Profusion of Diamonds. A Washington correspondent of the Louisville Courier-Journal writes : Thirty years ago , when Miss Bartlett , a Now York belle , sold herself to the half-breed Cuban for so many thousand dollars' worth of diamonds , the event was tho sensation of the day , and was celebrated in verso as the diamond wedding. In no other way has this country toado. groater strides-titan in the possession of diamonds , "and .doubtless Miss Bartlett's dowry would now appear small and insignifi cant in comparison to tho lavish gifts bestowed upon . 'brides of tho present day by loving relatives and apprecia tive friends. There was a modest , unheralded wedding which took place in Albany , N. Y. , on Thursday , tho 5th , which deserves an extended no tice. Tho bride , Miss Jeannie Mon- teith-Wils'on Lathrep , daughter of tho late Daniel Lathrop , of Albany , was married to Col. George P. Lawton , of Troy. Although tho wedding took place in the Presbyterian Churob , and tho service was conducted by a Presbyterian clergyman , yet the cere mony was that of tho Quaker. The Rev. Charles Wood comes of a Quaker family , and Col. Lawton is also of Quaker decent. He and Miss Lathrop requested their pastor to use tho-re gular Quaker formula. The church was filled with the elite of Albany and Trov. The wedding gown was of ivory satin , garnished with old Vene tian point lace , and the flowers used were Scotch heather and apple blos soms. A long , graceful train of white plush and "moire" flo\yed over tho 'satin , and that was trimmed with Venetian point and orange blossoms. The veil was fastened with three dia mond stars of great splendor , aud her necklace of solitaires had sixty-six diamonds varying in size from three carats to one-half carat. Her ear rings wore diamonds , each stone weighing ten carats. She wore three bracelets , each one consisting of seven large diamonds , and the bouquet do corsage was fastened with a crescent and star of seventeen diamonds. The bride carried a bouquet of white rose buds , orange blossoms , and maiden hair ferns. Hnr fan was of duchess and point lace. She presented a love ly vision of youthful beauty set in diamonds. Sho looked radiant as she ought to have looked , for the husband whom she met at the alter is in every way worthy and suitable. Ho is a lawyer of ability , and comes of good old Rhode Island stock. He is connected with Gen. Lawton , of Savannah , Ga. THE JEWELS SHE WORE. The nejklaco and bracelets worn by the bride were a gift from her aunt and uncle , Senator and Mrs. Leland Stanford , of California. The diamond stars were from her sister , Mrs. Lath rop , who makes her home in California with her uncle and aunt The ear rings were a gift from her mother , Mrs. Lathrop , and the ere-cent from Mr. Lawton , the father of the groom. The groom's gift was a deed lo a handsome house set in the midst of a line park , aud this is to be their home. It will be filled with the cost ly wedding presents , for they were numerous , including entire sets of silver , pictures , cutlery , richly em broidered portieres , and hangings lor the walls , antique vases , bronzes , a French plato bronze mirror , aud the groom , in addition to other presents , gave a blue diamond ring , and anoth er with one largo diamond with a sapphire on either side. Col. aud Mrs. Lawton left Albany after their reception and came through to Washington. "They left this morn ing for a Southern tripwhich will take in Richmond , Charle'ston , Florida , and from there to Cuba , and back to Savannah and all the Southern cities , and perhaps a trip to the City of Mex ico. Col. Lawton has never been South before , and meets with surprises at every step. Tho most" astonishing revelation he says is to find out that all the negroes he has met thus far are Democrats. Living as ; he always has in the North , he beiieve'd the race were Republicans , and all reports to to tho contrary wero thought to bo inspired by bulldozers who hold the negroes in tho bondage of fear. Ho is in a quandary. * A MILLION" IK DIAMONDS. So little does Mrs. Leland Stanford care for ornaments that few know that she has diamonds to the amount of 81,000,000. She has four entire sets which belonged to Queen Esaballa of Spain , tho mother of tho present King. It will be remembered that the Queen at one time was in Paris in such needy circumstances that she had to sell her jewels aud other valua bles. GovernorStanford bought tho four complete sets at that time. Each set has tiarras , necklaces , brooches , ear-rings , bracelets , and other orna ments. One set is called blue , because tho rays which are emitted are of a violet hue. These are tho rarest of all diamonds. Another set give * out rose-colored flashes another has - ; yel low tints , and. the fourth pure white. Tho price paid for these sets was 8500- 000. Outside of these Mrs. Stanford has one necklace which cost 8100,000 , and the pendant 830,000. She also has many black diamonds , and has sixty riu s of great , magnificence , aud'does'not * wear any. She has ' ' - ' ' ' ' ' % emeralds , pearls and rubies in addi tion to a million dollars of diamonds. She is the bereaved mother who mourns a dead boy , and finds no con- solat'on in wealth or splendor. Sena tor Stanford has taken the house own ed by Gen. Brady , of the star-route fame. It is a pleasant house , situated on Farragut square , and the Senator will give dinners and accept invita tions , but his wife will not appear in society , it is her wish that her niece , jVIiss Latbrqp , jhall represent her on all official/occasions. A Strike in Ancient Days. When strikes are so common in Europe and America , it will be inter esting to consider how the ancient Egpytians managed such a crisis in the labor question. It was supposed that strikes were an original outcome to our modern civilization ; but the deciphering of a papyrus in the muse um of Turin shows how the old pro verb that there is nothing new under the sun applies to strikes as well as to many other things. This papyrus , which is a sort of journal or day-book , of the superintendent of the Thebes necropolis , furnishes curious details of a workmen's riot or disturbance in Thebes , in the twenty-ninth year of a King Ramses , who is supposed to be Ramses III. The workmen's quarter sent a deputation on the 28th of Do- comber to Hatnckin , the keeper ol books , and to several priests of the necropolis. The speaker of the depu tation spoke as follows : "Behold , wo are face to face with famine. We have neither nourish ment , nor oil , nor vestments. We have no fish , we have no vegetables. We have already sent a petition to our sovereign lord the Pharaoh , praying him to give us these things , and we now address the governor , m order that he may give us wherewithal ta live. " These facts took place on the 27th of December ( first day of the month of Tybi ) . The general distribution of wheat was then evidently duo to tho workmen , but why it did not take place is not known. Perhaps tire in dividual who should have distributed the food was absent Whatever was the cause of the delay , the need was urgent , and Hatnekin , with the priests present , either touched with compas sion or to prevent tho affair from reaching tho ears of tho governor of the necropolis , accorded one day's rations. . How the workmen lived in the days following is not recorded in the papyrus : but some weeks after ward they were in full revolt. Three times they forcibly emerged from their quarters notwithstanding the walls which surrounded them and the gates wliich closed them in. "We wiH not return , " cried a kneftu to the police sent in pursuit of them. "Go tellyourchief what wo tell you ; it is famine which speaks by our mouths. " To argue with them was. useless. "There was great agitation , " writes the superintendent in his day-book : ' I gave them the strongest answer I could imagine , but their words were true and came from their hearts. " They were quieted by a distribution of half-rations , but ten days later they were up again. Klions , the leader of the band , pressed his companions to provide for themselves. "Let us fall , " said he , "upon the stores of provisions and let the governor's men go and tell him what we have done. " This counsel was followed as soon as given. They entered forcibly into the inolosuro , but not into the fortress whore the provisions were kept. Tho keeper of tho stores , Ai en-Nextu , gave them so'methiug , and. contrived to induce them to return to their quarter. Eleven days later the movement began again. The coinniancter of Thebes , passing by , found the men seated on the ground behind the tem ple of Seti , at tho northern end of the necropolis. Immediately they began to cry : "Famine ! Famine ! " The commander then gave them an order for fifty measures of wheat in the name , of Pharaoh , "who has sworn , ' 'said he "an oath that you will have food again. " Most likely Pharaoh never heard of tho event ami never received the petition addressed to.him a couple of months previously. The Pilot. Plain Enough. No need to send a stamp for the in formation. The art of writing is ex plained by a learned man in five lines : "The secret of lorce in writmolies R not so much in the pedigree of nouns and adjectives and verbs , as in having something that you believe in to say , and making the parts of speech vivid ly conscious of it. " Yes. yes. This reminds us of tho Irishman who wrote to his friend that all-he had to do was to carry up the brick "the man at tho top of the ladder did all the work. " Pittsburgh Telegram. High Times in flew Orleans. New Orleans has every promise lor a delightful winter. The city is now fairly crowned with roses. The orange trees are yellow as gold , with fruit. Tho markets overflow with green peas , cauliflower , line fish and game. 'The theatres promise brilliant attractions. Society promises unlimited gayeties. The churches have all , fine choirs and will have fine music as well as good sermons. Frenchtown is , as pictur esque as ever. The weather is simply perfect. New Orleans Picayune. The flanging : of Riel. Tho news of tho hanging of Rio yesterday will bo received throughout the civilized world with surprise am disapproval. In a strictly legal sense the man was guilty , no doubt , and it may bo that the world is better of ! without him ; but conceding ail that , tho fact remains that it was a mistake to dispose of him in such a manner. Tho circumstances surrounding his case were of a peculiar kind , and tho Government had more to gain by leniency than BBverity in the * matter. . He was not a commanding figure in any sense , nor were his operations of a sufficiently important nature to de mand his sacrifice as a traitor tho first instance of the kind under British rule for half a century. Had ho been tried , condemned and hanged on an ordinary charge of murder , as he might have been , it is not likely that tho transaction would have excited any special interest or unfavorable comment ; but in electing to treat him as it did , tho Government gave him a higher character than that of a com * mon malefactor , and put itself in the attitude of inviting universal noticq and criticism. Even if it was for any reason absolutely necessary that ho should be convicted and sentenced as a traitor , his life might have been spared , by pardon or commutation , without destroying the effect of the verdict ; and it was in failing to take this view that a fine opportunity was lost , and blame deliberately chosen where praise was within easy reach. As tho affair now stands , Riel's mem ory will be cherished by his followers as that of a .man who died a martyr. The Government that should have trivialized him by dealing with him as nothing more than an every-day law breaker , has exalted hs : name and career and provided the most effective means for the perpetuation of his sen timents and the renewal of tho con test in which he was overthrown. It is entirely safe to say that the spirit of rebellion in Canada has been made stronger by his taking off , and that ho is really a more potent force now that he is dead than he eveiwas while ho lived. Those who believed in him could have been led to renounce him and to respect and honor tho Govern ment by denying him all chance to be looked upon except in tho light of a cheap impostor and a miserable fail ure ; but they can not now be 'induced to take that view of him. Ho has made the'gallows splendid in their sight , and they would die to-day for the cause ho represented a great deal more readily than they were willing to do when their rebellion was in pro gress. The Government has therefore simply confirmed and intensified the very feeling which it aimed to sup press. Riel has been put out of the way , but like another John Brown , "his soul goes marching on. " Ho could have been consigned to oblivion in spite of himself ; but in spite of him self , he is now assured a permanent remembrance. A Government can indulge in no less profitable exercise of its power than that of visiting the utmost rigors of the law upon public offenders when there is room for the idea of martyr dom to bo associated with their fate. It often happens that strength can best be vindicated by a refusal lo inflict a penalty ; there aro times when person al mercy is public safety , aud tho vir tue of pardon the highest wisdom. The appearance of a man like Riel may be made a great or a small event , ac cording to the degree of practical sense displayed in dealing with him after tho collapse of lys undertaking. There aro many things to be taken into consideration when the leader of a re bellion is brought to account for his crime. Tho world has been moving considerably in the last fifty years , and civilization is not at all what it used to be when enterprises of that sort were condemned as a mere matter of course , and those engaged in them were con sidered outside of the pale of sympa thy on any account. Furthermore , the notion has been exploded that it .is always an advantage to a man to spare him when he has deserved lo be im prisoned or put to death. A culprit's life may be saved to him in a way that leaves him merely the privilege > of breathing , with everything el-e for feited that makes life worth having and that might have been done in tho case of Rtel , if Canada had only known it. The principal wonder is that , with a living and conclusive example of tho better policy so near at hand , the Can adian Government should have com mitted such a grave blunder. It was only necessary to lookacross tho boundary line to see in the United States the sure and pprfect working of the opposite plan. At the close of the slaveholder's rebellion , the great ma jority of the people of the South were subject to arrest and punishment as traitors. But not one of them was ar rested or in any manner disturbed. Even the leaders were permitted to go free. Jeff Davis himself was turned loose to spend the remainder of his days in sober reflection and in witness ing tho daily growth and increasing power and fame of the Government which he tried vainly to destroy. Ho would have been very glad if he had been given a chance to play the mar- : tyr. No punishment , even to hanging , that would have been put upon him. j r - - " - ; r , - * " * -/.s > V , V ' . ' - * ' " ' ; ; J * would have boon worse for hini thai the act of declining to punish him nt .all . , and leaving him to bear his burden of disappointment and shame as bcs1 lie could , witli all tho world looking ai him. Docs anybody believe that if he had been put to death his name would bo the poor , carelessly spoken thin" that it has now become ? Better foi him a thousand times would Kiel's fate have been : but the United States had more foresight and more"moral cour age , and resolutely refused .to grant him the 'privilege of dignifying his course by dying with an appearance ol sacritice for principle. The pitiful es tate into which ho has fallen by reason of this wise clemency should have taught Canada to avoid a mistake for which she will pay dearly in loss of reputation and in future trouble of the same kind that Kiel gave her. Shu has satisfied a feeling of small revenge ; but in order to do so she has been obliged to put aside considerations o : infinitely more importance , and to in cur a measure of adverse criticism from which she will not soon , .if ever , be able to recover. SI. Louis Globt- Dcmocrat. IServia's Grievance1. According to a correspondent at Belgrade the Servian government takes its formal stand and bases its action upon the treaty of Berlin , but the quarrel between Scrvia and Bulgaria , morally considered , so far as regards Servian real inward feeling , means not an invasion of Bulgaria , but redress of those wrongs of San Stefano which the treat } ' of Berlin left unrepaired. Bulgaria , as shaped at Berlin , is not wholly Bulgarian. Ethnographically it is Bulgaria plus eastern Sorvia. At- heart the Serbs not only have no re pugnance to the union of northern and southern Bulgaria , but desire its con summation , on condition of effecting their own union with eastern Servia , comprised in the sandjaks of Widin and Solia , and the reason why Serv'a insists at this moment on having east- rn Sorvia is that it is a favorable one , inasmuch as Bulgaria can better aflord to lose the district in question , now that Roumeha gives such amplo compensation , Roumelia being a far richer acquisition in every way than the two sandjaks. 'The reason why the Serbs prefer ob taining Widin aud Sofia to any corre- oponding extension south or west is that the danger of denationalization is much greater in Widin aud Sofia than in Bosnia or old Scrvia. Related ele ments unite easily ; so that while there would be no risk of the Serbs of old Servia being metamorphosed into Turksor those of Bosnia into Germans , the Serbs of the two sandjaks would probably blend with their Slav breth ren and become Btiigarized. In sup port of this view it is shown how the descendants of some two hundred thousand Austrian Serbs , who , in the reign of Maria Theresa , emigrated in a body to Russia , have all been com pletely Russianized , uniting with their brother Slavs , while those who have remained in Austria retain strong na tional sentiments aud a good Servian dialect. The nation called Bulgaria is akin to the Serb. Practically one people , they werein fact , one in heart and soul before Russia to advance her own interests , sowed discord between the brothers at San Slefano. When Russia ceases to encourage the Bui- gars on the San Stefano course there will be a natural union between Bui- gar and Serb , based on ethnographic attraction ; but while Russia works Bulgaria to prepare her own way to Constantinople 110 Balkan confedera tion is possible , nor any other form of peaceful and progressive existence. Servia makes war on Bulgaria to pro test against this unnatural course of things and to make something secure for the future. War between Servia and Bulgaria will be no more fratricidal than an Anglo-American war , or than that be tween Prussian Hohenzollerns and German Hapslmrgs. Peace and union may follow a Serbo-Bulgarian war , as it has followed in previous similar cases. What makes the Sorbs most angry is that Servia has been exhausting her resources in making railways , which are useless because thcBulgars do nof make theirs. He Caught it. "George , " said an intimate ac quaintance , the other day , "You arc not looking as cheerful as usual. What seems to be the trouble ? " "I have a clear case of hay-fever , I guess , " replied the genial Gale. "Hay-fever , eh ? " said his friend. Ah ! that accounts for it. " "Accounts for what ? " anxiously in quired George Gale. "Why , I saw you bow to a grass- widow yesterday , and I gness you caught the hay-fever at the time. National Weekly. Equalization. Small brother : "Where did you jet that cake , Annie ? " Small sister : Mother gave it to me. " Small broth er : "Ah , she always gives you more han mo. " Small sister : " .Nevermind ; he's going to put mustard plasters on is when wo go to bed to-niiht , atid ' 11 ask her to let you have the big- rest. " Troy Press. Mrs. GarCeld will writj a b o.jrapby of bet husband. _ . - * " ' ' M U . ; . - < st , PEBSOflS ANMHINGS. H LORD SALISBUKY says he never sa * , ? J , Iv r T5i oll ' . * . ' " " ' Mr. Parnell. - * JERSEY farmers aro nowswearing at fox hunters. PACIFIC oysters grow as largo as.At- { lantic oysters ' . / * ' / THE So'me is being stocked witb.x : American salmon. - MILLS at FallRiverjyil.lbe rnn.ohly' ' f " vi ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' eighfhours a'day. , SECRETARY MANNING is at his desk as early as 9 a. m. : - MAHONE is much worn by the labors1 ' of tho lato canvass. - ? IRA DAVENPORT owns a large block of land in Nebraska. AMiLWAUKEE girl earns § 10 a month tending switch there. SENATOR GORMAN hag leased a resi , dence in Washington. Kv. TURKEY is the onlyState. ' in Eurono that is not Christian. ' -1 , MRS. STANFORD has diamonds , val i ' ued at over 81,000,000. , . < - IN finishing Cologne Cathedral $5- 000,000 has been spent . ' " ITS new Chamber of Deputies cost , ' Franco 81.500,000 a year. FREIGHT trains in England run at twenty-live miles an hour. THE Groat Eastern is to bo moored at Gibralter as a coal hulk. / : SENATOR JONES , of Nevada/is-re- covoringfronvpnonmonia. , QUEEN MARGURITE is one of , the loveliest women in Europe. AN immense coal iield has been dia- coverod on Bchriug's straits. II SENETOR PIKE , of New Hampshire , is troubled with heart disease , DR. SCHWENINGER cures Bismarck of obesity by feeding him. fish. RALPH MODJESKA , a son of Mme. Modjeska , is in business in Omaha. \ \ THE widow of M. W. Baldwin , the locomotive builder , has 82,000,000. SENATOR SAWYER has bought a 865- 000 tract of pine land in Michigan. GOVERNOR OGLESBY puts his Thanks giving proclamation into ten lines. REPUBLICAN majority in the ' New Jersey Legislature on joint-ballot will be seven. NINE million acres of land in Ger many are devoted to the cultivation of the potato. II. M. KEILEY , of political notoriety , has moved from Richmond , Va. , to New York. * EDITOR DOKSHEIMEII disclaims his ( editorials , and they are taken down by a stenographer. Ex-Gov. BOUTWELL will pronounce tho eulogy on Gen. Grant before the Webster Historical society , at the Old South , Boston , about Dec. 30. THE Nevada state capitol is in such a dilapidated condition that it has been necessary to prop up the columns in front to prevent the porches from falling down. Miss HEWITT , tho daughter of the congressman , has organized an or chestra composed entirely of ladies well known in New York social cir cles. They will play all the instru ments , from tho violin to tho trian gle. BUFFALO is afflicted with a suicidal \ mania. During the past year more persons resorted to self-destruction than ever before. The favorite meth od has been by shooting , thenexcmost acceptable way has been by drowning. The suicides have been for love , polit- cal disappointment , business troubles , and poverty. SOCIETY circles in 'the town of Beallesville , W. Va. , are in a state of turmoil over tho simultaneous disap pearance of William Riley , of the milling and merchandising firm of Dixon & Riloy , and Mrs. John .Price , " the wife of a well-known farmer. All the parties are connected with the best families in eastern Ohio. i- . A METHOD has been patented by a V Buffalo man for thaw ing out hydrants , which may bo of great service in case of fire. The hydrant is fitted with a small pipe , which passes below the frost level into a sewer-the-top-being covered with a cap. This tubo is , of course , empty of water , and by forc ing steam through it the hydrant can be quickly thawed out. CHARLES A. WETMORE , chief viti- cultural officer of California , reports an unusually short wine crop. The periods of cold weather in tho spring caused the berries to drop off the vines , so that comparatively few matured. Instead of last year's yield of 15,000,000 gallons , only 7,000,000 or 8,000,000 will be produced this year. Napa county , which made 5,000,000 before , will have only 1,500- 300. In consequence of this diminish- 2d production , pricesarealready go ing up , and are expected to reach a rery high point