' S REINCARNATION. Her lustrous oycs.vlth their southern heat. Look Indifference into mine. And my pukes race with a fiercer heat 'Ncath her maddening smllo illvinc ! An Icy chill In her splilnxllkc lance Seals forever my hopelcbs woe. / I my future staked on a loser's chance. And her only word WHS "No ! " . In Bomo other world , In an UKO oulgrown Say a million of years ago We two must have loved as I now , alone , ' While I never then told her so ! Clarence Miles Boutclle in Godcy'a. AN AITEMOON CALL. My mother's illness had kept us home for months , but she was better and be ginning again to take interest in mag azines and newspapers. In one of the latter she discovered this item : "Miss Marian Ross arrived Saturday from Sparkling Springs , Va. She leaves next week for-Bar Ilarbor and other gay centers. " "Go over and call'Vsaid my mother ; "perhaps she will give you a whiff of the ocean. " Before I could demur she had rung for George to bring around the cart and ordered mo out of the house. I chose ti short cut to Ross hill , u country road bordered breast high with blackberry and elder bushes. There was much up hill and down dale work and many a loose stone over which to stumble , but the pony was fresh , trees shaded the road , wild grapevines waved their sprays in our faces , and an occa- sioual'breeze wafted us the fragrance of the elder blossoms. Crossing a bridge and looking down through the tree tops to the creek far below I could see the cattle drinking velvet skinned Alderneys , whose grace ful limbs showed pedigree in every line. Skirting the base of Rose hill we turned into the avenue and climbed toward the gates , which formed a cres cent and swung from huge stone pillars almost hidden by woodbine. The gates barred entrance to the drive way ; otherwise the place was not in closed by wall or hedge the great green hill stretched away in its beauty for every one to see. A rustic seat was placed hospitably on the boulevard that even a stranger might tarry and enjoy the view far away over the hill and val ley to that line of misty blue which marks the end of vision. On my way to the house I espied a hammock under the . willow trees down by the spring. Surely 'a white dress was fluttering from it. Bidding pony stand I ran down the hill , to be received literally with open arms. " dear Harriet how did * "My , 3011 divine that I was longing for you ? But I did not like to add myself to your burdens. I am so depressing. " "Oh , but my mother is better , and be sides I am always glad to see you. " "I am so tired of myself that I feel as if every ono else must be tired of me too. I was even grateful to my horse for seem ing glad to welcome me home. We are 7 no match for dumb brutes in affection. "We chatter away all our best qualities , our affection and earnestness , and that reminds me , you were not at church yes terday. I was. I sat in the pew be tween the two doors , where the breeze could fan jne and the green trees look in at me ( there were very few other specta tors ) . "The j'ellow windows were framed by the shadow of the ivy on the outside , and the choir bo-s sang like birds. The ser mon was so good all about oh , I for get what it was about , except that no said the word translated 'good' means earnest to be good is tp be earnest. I was afraid before that I never could be good , but now I am in despair. e I never realized how frivolous I was until Maud married. She was always serious enough for both of us. " We were sitting in the hammock , which vibrated slowly , encouraged by an occasional touch of her white slip pered foot on the turf. Before us the spring trickled from the earth and ran away a tiny thread of silver , just water 'enough to keep the pebbles glistening and to give drink to the ferns which leaned over it. I congratulated Marian on the luxuriance of the green fronds , knowing that the sisters were fond of them , as they had been gathering- them for years on their travels , and each fern had its pleasant reminiscences. "Now , " said Marian , "there is an in stance of how serious Maud is. It would break her heart to know that she had half the associations attached to the wrong ferns , but it only makes me laugh when she hangs the California story on a fern I know we brought from the Vir ginia mountains , or when she tells how she dug that one in an old churchyard in Morristown , N. J. , near Washington's headquarters , when Aunt Letty herself identified it as one she sent us from Illi nois , from the banks of the Sangamon. "Didn't Lincoln'wade fish or or some thing in the Sangamon ? Yet I believe Maud is happier than I am ; at least I am sure there is something lacking in me now that she is married. After one has owned a sister so long it is hard to have some man with no claim at all come and carry her off. Whatever she has had I have always had , until now she has a husband and I have none not that I want one , but she might have waited. "Since we were little girls we had planned that if ever there was a wedding in the house it should be a double one , but when I reminded her she laughed at he idea , said waiting for me was hope- 'riss ; that such an indecisive person as I wouldn't know my fate when I saw him. Then I couldn't help saying that if my fate expected me to recognize him he would certainly have to be handsomer than her Henry. Of course there was a quarrel , and after that I dared not sus pect even in my own mind that Henry was not an Apollo , and if I was exhausted in preparing for the wedding I was afraid to heave a sigh. "I just fastened a smile on my face and kept it there till all was over. When I took it off after they were gone papa said I looked like a ghost in my own house. He offered to take me somewhere , but I know pleasure resorts are places of martyrdom to him. His idea of recreation is to go fishing with a lot of men and dress like an aborigine. So I told him if ho could persuade Miss Brown to bo my chaperon she and I would iut a swath. Of course she couldn't leave her sister and the chil dren , but I whirled her of ! before she had time to resign herself to stay at home. "When we left wo were absolutely lifeless she with overwork , I with en nui. We went south to the gulf. Wo were quite too listless to think. If home ono would plan out a day , even an hour , for us , wo were happy. Ono of us would say to the other : " 'What are you going to do ? " 'I haven't decided. What will yon do ? " 'I haven't made tip my mind. ' " 'I believe I'll walk on the pier and wait for an'idea. ' " 'Oh , then , so will I. ' "There were men about too. One perhaps forty years old took a fancy to me. They teased mo about him , un'd I hadn't even ambition to retaliate just let them tease. At first I had a mild in tention of transferring him to Misis Brown ( they would have made a nice match ) , but it proved too much trouble. He would do anything for mo and noth ing -for her , and wo needed some man to devise amusement and do the talking for us. llo tried to make us promise to rcttiru some time , although wo hadn't spoken of going. He persisted in trying to make us promise , and wo were too inert to oppose him. So one day when he was out in a boat we stepped on board a steamboat and went up to North Car olina. "Beautiful country ! Oh , the flowers on the North Carolina hills ! I began to appreciate the scenery , and Miss Brown became so sprightly she alarmed me. I told her if she couldn't help growing younger so fast I should have to send homo for an older chaperon. Then we drifted about to other places Sparkling Springs last and longest. We staid at a private hotel fine old southern house in perfect preservation magnolias and- capo jasmine and pickaninnies. While I think of it let me warn you if you ever go south be careful. You will think every man you meet is in love with you they are all so devoted. "There was one man at our hotel. When I say a man I mean one who takes your breath away. There were plenty of apologies for men and several women worth looking at. There was a j'oung widow with a pensive air and a reper tory of touching allusions to her dear husband , which were very fetching. She had more men about her than any woman in the house ; in fact , she could command all of them except the one I spoke of. "When I arrived he was dancing a good natured attendance on a young ma tron unhappily married and exceedingly pretty , infantile type , theatrical tend ency to nose. She had wrapped her self about him like a vine and gave him daily bulletins of her troubles. Just think of it ! How can a woman ? And what did that man do but come and re peat all her confidences to me ! " 'Do not tell me , ' I would beg. 'I do not care to hear her private affairs. ' " 'Neither do I , ' he would laugh. 'I think you might share the burden of woe which she thrusts upon me. ' "After I came perhaps he neglected her or broke some of the tendrils she had fastened upon him. It was only natural that he should show me about a little , all the other men being occupied with the widow. He was merely trying to keep me from stagnation , I'm sure. It was absurd for her to grow jealous , but she did , and she a married woman ! Visi bly jealous ! Perfectly preposterous , es pecially when there was nothing between us. Were only amusing each other ; only passing away the time the days were so long and delightful. " As she spoke she kept nervously twist ing a ring which I had never before no ticed on her hand. "When did you get that ? " I asked. "Oh , he gave it to me , " smiling. "So you are engaged. Please tell me what he is like ? " "You shall see for yourself. He said he would come on this winter : * ' "Then there will be another wedding at Rose Hill ? " "What do you mean ? " with arching brows and surprised eyes. "I do not ex pect him he said so ; that was all/ ' "You mean that you do not care for him to come ? " To this she would make no reply , only looked at me in a mocking way , and I rose to go. We climbed the hill arm in arm , and I jumped into the cart and was about to touch the pony with the whip when she leaned over , placed her hand on the back of the seat and whispered : "All that talk about Father Time is a mistake. They ought to say Mother Time. I always knew Time was a wom an because time will tell. " She picked up her skirts with one hand , threw me a kiss with the other and ran into the house. My eyes and thoughts followed her until a tug at the reins apprised me that pony had started for home on his own accord , delicately intimating that an afternoon call should end before evening. Chicago News. Intelligible Price Marks. Very few stores now adhere to the old plan of cipher marking. Experience has proved that a majority of customers prefer goods to be marked in plain fig ures , no one liking the idea of two sets of figures unless he is sure ho is among the favored ones who get the benefit of the lower scale. It is said to be the practice with the medical fraternity of ) some towns to grade their charges to patients according to the style of house in which they live and the same idea prevails so much as to retail stores that ladies have been known to send servants down to stores because they could get a larger discount. Other ladies are careful never to dress very well when shopping , and this shows how firmly the impression prevails that a genuine one price store is a novelty. The easiest way to get over this im pression is to have every article marked in plain figures , so that the customer may see that one price prevails for all. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. LIFELONGFEIENDS. . THE STRANGE FRIENDSHIP OF EM ERSON AND CARLYLE. Their Views AV'cro Almost Diametrically j Opposed Dissimilar In Tcmocrnment and Tastes Disliked Each Other as I Thinkers , but Loved as Itlen. The friendship of Goethe and Schiller , I of Beaumont and Fletcher , of Irving and Paulding , of Socrates , and Plato , i have often been noticed as among the friendships of literary or philosophical minds. But perhaps one of the strangest lit- I erary friendships was the lifelong inti macy between Emerson and Carlyle. This intimacy was not fostered by per sonal contact , for Emerson and Carlyle met each other only upon two or three occasions. All their lives a wide ocean of space divided them , and a wide ocean of tastes and temperament. It would be hard to find two men who were more totally unlike. Carlyle was fierce , tu multuous , the most terrific scold in all history. Emerson was mild and benig nant as an afternoon in September. Car lyle frowned like a thunder cloud , and Emerson glowed like a sunburst. Carlyle seemed to despair of the fu ture of the race and believe that the crazy old world was rattling on the down grade to destruction. Emerson was one of the most persistent optimists in all history. The past looked great to him , the present looked grand and the future looked grander. Carlyle's style was jerky , explosive and smashed to- Ijethor like : i railroad wreck. Emerson's ityle was compact , smooth and epigram matic. Carlyle wrote long histories like "Frederick the Great" and the "French Revolution , " which read like a long drawn out series of spasms , as if their author's pen was afflicted with the St. Vitus dance. Emerson wrote short , com pact essays , in which every thought was packed in the smallest possible compass. The views of these two men were al most diametrically opposed. Carlyle , es pecially in his later days , seemed to believe in an absolute monarchy. He ad mired the cz.ir of Russia. His great his torical heroes were men who had ruled men with a hand of iron. Emerson was a firm champion of republican institu tions. Both Emerson and Carlyle were semi- invalids all their lives. But Emerson's invalidism only served to draw out the latent sunshine of his nature. The more ho was chastened by disease the sweeter grew his disposition. Carlyle's invalidism - ism made hint rage like a caged tiger. All his life long he thundered lurid de nunciations at his own stomach. Etnev- Bon wished to be known as a lover of men ; Carlyle called the public "mostly fools. " Yet these two men , so dissimilar in their tastes and temperaments , main tained a lifelong friendship , and in fact Emerson and Edward Irving were about the only men of this generation that Carlyle ever spoke of with respect. "Sartor Resartus , " Carlyle's first lengthy work and probably his master piece , was first brought out , in book form , in America by Emerson. The first words of warm appreciation that the book received came from this side of the Atlantic. In England it was re ceived with gibes and sneers and COP tempt. It was , and still remains , one of the strangest books that was ever'writ ten , but it is full charged with Carlyle's volcanic and dynamic genius. Emerson was one of the first to appreciate this genius and help to find it a public. All of Carlyle's successive books as they appeared found a warm admirer in Emerson , though he must have violent ly disagreed with many of their senti ments. A perpetual .correspondence was kept up between the two men. In this corre spondence Emerson was at his best , and Carlyle never was more characteristic than in his letters to Emerson. He must have , in his inmost heart , despised the theories and thoughts expressed in Em erson's books , for his whole life was a battle against these theories and thoughts. But in spite of this radical difference of ideas there was something tibout the man he liked. Emerson must have abominated many of the expressed opinions of Carlyle , and yet he was pow erfully impressed by Carlyle's person ality. They both hated each other as think ers , but loved each other as men. This friendship ought to demonstrate that the strongest attachments grow up sometimes between men of entirely di vergent tendencies of thought. Men seek their opposites for friends as they teek their opposites for wives. It is easy for one man to like and respect another man without agreeing with him. It is possible , however , that if Emerson and Carlyle had been thrown Into closer intimacy they would not have continued their friendship so long. Carlyle was not an easy man to live with , as his own wife discovered to her sorrow. Ho became a chronic scold. Be found fault with his food. He scold- Dd if a draft of air blew too rudely upon his cheek. He was mad if a dog barked , a cat mewed or a hen cackled. He hated all his neighbors inversely as he ioved himself. And genius as he was , his fetyle seems to indicate that he loved himself very intensely. Emerson , on the other hand , may bo written as one who loved his fellow man. Humanity had so large a place in his universe that there was no room for self. Not a pleasant man to live with for a term of years was Thomas Carlyle. It is doubtful if the sunny temperament of Emerson could have maintained its sun- niness if brought in constant contact with such a human bear. S. Watterson Ford in Yankee Blade. Ono Thing : That Goes to Waste. "One secret of the Chicago packers'- great fortunes is simple , " said a resident of that city. "They don't waste any thing. The meat , the entrails , every thing is made use of but the squeal. They can't catch that , so it -wasted. . " Cincinnati Times-Star. " Comes Every Week Finely Illustrated Only $1,15 a Tear The increased circulation to 550,000 copies weekly enables THE COMPANION to provide more lavishly than ever for 1893. $6,500 Prize Stories. $5,000 has been awarded for Prize Serial Stories , $1,500 for Prize Folk-Lore Tales , to be given in 1893. Great Men In Their Homes. Mr. Gladstone , Gen. Sherman , Gen. McClcllan and Trea. Garflchl pictured by their children. "Tho Bravest Deed I ever Saw' 13 vividly described hy Gen. John Gibbon , Capt. Charles King and Archibald Forbes. Glimpses of Foreign Lands hy i.carlcs Dickens , Hon. Charles E. Smith , Grace Ellcry dimming , Charles Dickens , Jr. Articles on Science hy Lord Playfalr , Dr. Cyrus Edson , Sir Henry Thompson , Prof. E. S. Holden and Dr. Austin Flint. Your Work in life. What arc you going to do ? In what Trades and Professions Is there most Hoom ; by Successful Men. Leading Features for 1893. Eleven Serial Stories. The Best Short Stories. 100 Stories ofAdventnrc. . , Health and Hygiene. New Sea Stories. Science Articles. Monthly Double Numbers. Household Articles ; Sketches of Travel. Illustrated Weekly Supplements. 700 Large Pages. Charming Children's Page. The Companion gives each year nearly One Thousand Illustrations by the Rest Artists. To New Subscribers who will cut out and send UH thltt slip with Free to name and addrens and SI .75 vro will fiend The Companion Free to This Slip January 1 , 1893 , and for a full year from that date , including the Double Holiday Numbers at Christmas , New Year and Easter. Jan./93 THE YOUTH'S COMPANION , Boston , Mass. 8 Send Cheek , Post-Off.ee Order or Registered Letter at our risk. Souvenir of the New Building in colon , 42 pages , tent on receipt of fix cents , or FTtKK to any oncrequeitino it trfco sAids a subscription. Incorporated under State Laws. Paid Up Capital , $5OOOO -DOES A a iliSiilBSS- Collections made on all accessible points. Drafts dravn > directly on principal cities in Europe. Taxes paid for non-residents. Tickets For Sale to and from Europe OFFICERS : V. FJIANKLIN , President. JOHN K. CLAKK , Vice Fres. A. C. EliEUT , Cashier. CORRESPONDENTS : The First JS'ational Bank , Lincoln Nebiska. Tlio Chemical National Bank , New York City AUTHORIZED CAPITAL , CAPITAL AND SURPLUS , $60,000. OFFICERS A TD DIRECTORS. GEORGE HOCK/HELL , President. B. M. FREES , Vice President. W. F. LAWSOfJ , Cashier. A. CAMPBELL. FRANK HARRIS. THE McCOOK ROLLER MILLS , E. H. DOAN. PROPRIETOR. . Is Now Open and Ready for Business , J3jf I am prepared to handle , all business in my line promptly and \vith the most approved machinery. DOAN & HAJRT are also prepared to handle wheat for which they are paying- the highest market price. KgT"Mills and Elevator on East Eailroad street. The laws of health are taught in our , schools ; but not in a way to be of much prac-1 deal benefit and are never illustrated by liv- j ing examples , which in many cases could , easily be done. If some scholar , who had contracted a cold was brought before the school , so that all could hear the dry loud cough , and know its significance ; see the thin white coating on the tongue and later , as the , cold developes , see the profuse watery ex pectoration and thin watery discharge from the nose , not one of them would ever forget what the first symptoms of a cold were. The scholar should be given Chamberlain's Cough Remedy freely , that all might see that j even a severe cold could be cured in one or ; two days , or at least greatly mitigated , when properly treated as soon as the first symptoms appear. For sale by G. M. Chenery. . As soon as the spuriousness of a saint is detected we see the halo eat into his forehead. An honest Swede tells his story in plain but unmistakable language for the benefit of the public. One of my children took a severe cold and got the croup. I gave her a teaspoonful - spoonful ot Chamberlain's Cough Remedy , and in five minutes later I gave her one more. By this time she had to cough up the gather ing in her throat. Then she went to sleep and slept good for fifteen minutes. Then she got up and vomitted ; then she went back to bed and slept good for the remainder of the night. She got the croup the second night and I gave the same remedy with the same good results. I write this because / thought there might be some one in the same need and not know the true merits of this wonder ful medicine. CHAS. A. THOMPSEEX , Des Moines , Iowa. 50 cent bottles for sale by G. M. Chenery. In Use Forty Years. Humphreys' Specific number seven , for coughs and colds , has stood the test of more than fort-years. Can you asker or greater proof of intrinsic merit ? Price 250. at all drug stores. Feeble and capricious appetites are best regulated by the use of Ayer's Cathartic Pills. They do not debilitate , by excessive stimula- latio'n ; but cause the stomach , liver and bowels to perform their functions properly. As an after-dinner-pill , they are unequaled. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. . A. WILCOX & SON. we will receive witlim a few days an eleg'ant line of Ladies , Misses and Children's Cloaks direct from the manufacturers ; also Shawls and want you to look at our stock before purchasing' . also receive a large stock of Shoes , , Rubbers , etc. Our new dress goods are now arriving * For Hats , Caps , Ladies , Gents , and Child ren's Underwear , Gents Furnishing Goods. , Groceries , Flour , etc. , etc. Call on . A. WILCOX & SON