A THE JOURNAL. THE JOURNAL. RATKS Of ADVKirridiyo. 2tc Jr.io Ski Cm lyr Space ito IS ISSOKD EVERY WEDNESDAY, M. K. TURNER & CO., Proprietors and Publishers. :o: GTOffice Iu tUc JOURNAL building, Klevciith-st., Columbus, Neb. Tekjis Per rear, $2. Six months, $1. Three months, 50c. nj:le copies, 5c. lt'ol'mn $12.011 1 jHi $ $85 $00 ' $IW X - I S.W"I 1 I.'.j 20 3.' oO X 0.00 j 9 1 12 1 151 20" 35 4 inches 5.25 7..V) 11 14 1 15) 1.50 0.75 10t 12 I15 2D 1.50 2.25 4 5 , ( 10 I I Dusine and professional cards ten lines or less space, per annum, ten dol lars. Leal advertisements at tatuto rates. "Editorial local notices" fifteen cents a line each insertion. "Local notices " five cents a line each inser tion. AdvertUmeiits clarified as "Spe cial notices" live cents a line lirst inser tion, three cents a line cich subsequent insertion. VOL. IX.--NO. 36. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1879. WHOLE NO. 452. Sw iiipal t Y v A CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION. Alvin acndkra. lT. S. Senator. Omaha. A. S. Paddock, U. S. Senator, Beatrice. Pkaxk Welcu, Rf preoentatlve.Korfolk. STATE DIRECTORY: ila (Jarbkr, Governor, Lincoln. Hruno Tzchuek Secretary of State. J. K. Yeton, Auditor, Lincoln. J. C. McRride., Treasurer, Lincoln. Geo. II. Roberts, Attorney-General. ". It. Thonip-on, Supt. Public Ins'ruc. II. C. Dawson. Warden of Penitentiary. cbiStl' 1rl8on iP"t"- Dr.. I. O. Darl. Prison Physician. H. P. MAthewson, Sunt. Insane Asylum. JUDICIARY: Daniel Gantt. Chief Justice, George n. Lake, Associate .Iud"Ci. . Maxwell, Associate .niici. FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT. . VT. Post, .Tudc. York. M. R. Rece, District Attorney, AVahoo LAKD OFFICERS: E. V. Arnold. Register, Grand Inland. Wm. Anyaii, Receiver, Grand Island. COUNTY DIRECTORY: J. G. Hirsiii", County J mice John Suufler. County Clerk. V. K u tinner. Treasurer. Rrnj. pMtnan, Sheriff. It. L. Ro-.niter, Surveyor. It. II. Henry. 1 Win. IMoedorn CountvCommissIo John Walker, J ncr. Dr. a. IMntz. Coroner. 01 P S. L. Barrett. Supt. of Schools. BV3MHl"!uer'J Jleortl.el-oce. Charles Wake, Constable. CITY DIKECTOKY: A. Speico, Mavor. Jtlin M'lir.nm, Clerk. John J. Kicklv, Marshal. .1. W. Earlr, TroiMirer. S. S. McAliistcr. Police .Tml-e. J. G. Ueutson, Engineer. cor.vciLMKx: 1st II "oid J. E. North, E. Pohl. 2" Ward E. C. Kiivannugh. C. E. Morse. 3J Ward- E. J. linker, E. A. Gerrnrd. ;iiiinituN po-i omo. sn on Sumlav tr in 11 a.m. to 12 m. and from !: to ; v. i. Ruinkh hour except Sunday a m to r r. m. tii in iil olc at l"l:2l a. m. V-tern mails close at 4:2(p.m. .Miil leav' Columbus for Madi-on and XrloIk. on Tueid.is, Thurdays and Saturday. 7 a m. "Arrive Monday, "Wclnrdys. and Fridays. 3 p. m. r".r Mnrof," Genoa. Waterville and Al bion, dailr except Sunday C A. M. Ar- i rive, ame, 6 P.M. For Summit. IMv-se and Crete. Mon day and Thursday. 1 A. M. Arrives Wsdnesdav, and Saturdays. 7 P. M. For IlifilexillV. OsceoU and York, Tues day, Thursday and Saturday, 1 p. M. Arrive t 12 M. rr Wiir. Farral and Rattle Creek. Mondavi and Wednesdav , ft A. M. Ar rives Tucsd.iv and Fridajsat lir.M. For Shell Cri-ok, Xcbo. Crouton aud Stanton, on Monday" at "A.M. Ar rlvos Tucsdiv s rt p."m. For David City. Tuesday, Tlmr-divs hhiI Saturdav, 1 p. m Arrive, at 12 M. I . I. Time Tulile. EaMttcurd Hound. Kmieraiit, No.C. leaves at 0:25 a. m. PaKene'r, 4, " " ll:Wa. m. Fr.isht, " 3. " " . 2:15 p. in. I r-isht. ' 10. " "... 4:30 a. in. IWttlCUrd IhtUlld. Kreixbt. No. ft, leave at 2:0(1 p. m. lU-konc'r, " 3, " " 4:27 p.m. Freiuht. " !'. ' " 0:Xp.m. KiiiiTant. T. " "- l:S0a. in. Kvc. v dav except Saturday the three llMf. lendihr t. Chicniro connect nith ' P. train at Omaha: On Saturday ,L.r vvin l... but one train a dav. a shwwn bv the following schedule ;thand2th. ! ' C. ,v X. W. I Tth C. P..&Q. ) nth C. R. 1.& P.l 2lst C.ll..tQ. 1 ..tli C. R.I. ,V P.V 12th c.t x.w. mu .".tli and 20th. Get . Dec . C, It. I. .v. P.) 2d and 23d. ) 2d y nth i lt'.tll X. W. sitiianuotitn. C. It. A- O r.. ii. a o. J .tn anu -mu ( .. R. I. .v PA 14th I. A X. W. ) 21st Farni for Sale. fSK HUNDRED and sixty, DOCTOR BONESTEEL, V J acres f excellent farm land in Rut- lr County, near Ration P. O.. about J ft. s. KXA"tBI.I."V SIJICGEO.", tui-diNtaut from three County Seats David City, Columbus and s-ehuyler; ' coi.UMr.rs, : NEKKASKA. CO acre- under cultivation; 5 acre of. tree, maple, cot ton wood, Ac: good I ( FFICE HOI R?. 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to frame hou-e. grauarv. -table, shed. Ac , J 4 p. in., and 7 to 9 p. m. Office on GowUtmk range, convenient to water. . Nebraska Avenue, three door north of The place is for sale or exchange for E. J. Raker's grain office. Residence, proper! v thoue and a few acres) near corner Wyoinin and Walnut streets, Columbus. Inquire at the .Iocknal uorth Columbus, Nebr. Xl.t office, or address the undersigned at I Patron P.O. -103 JOHN TANNAHILL. iM ic.ti i:ks: TIE OF GOOD CHEER. Let not the I" low price- of your product dU- VSZTd oi-oi:rcelinYoan Vnomeor?0ir follo'w farmer, w here vou can tint! good accommodations cheap, tor hay for team for one night and day, 25 cts. A room furnt-hed with a cook tove and bunks, in connection with the stable free. Thoe wUhing can be arcomnio dated at the houc of the undersigned at the following rate: Meal 25 cents; beds 10 cents. .T. R. SENECAL. i mile east of Gerrard's Corral. lMOST) WS iFormerly Pacific House. This popular house has been newly . Refitted and Famished. Meals. . . Day Hoard per week. Heard and Lodging, as cts. $4.00. 5 and ?G. Good Livery and Feed Stable in con nection. H ATI H FA TIOX GUAItAXTEED. JOHN HAMMOND, Proprietor. JjfWWis not easily earned in these "JC times, but it can be made vD I I I in three months by any one of either sex. in any part of the couutrv who i willing to work Headilr at" the employment that we furnish. ?t6 per wock in your own tewa. You need not be away from home over night. You can give your whole time to the work, or only your spare moments. We have agents who are making over ?20 per day. All who engage at once can make money fast. At the prcseut time money cannot be made so easily and rapidly at any other busi nos. It cots nothing to try the busi ness. Tcrmsand$5 Outfit free. Address at once, H. Hli.tt & Co., Portland, Main. 375-t. BUSINESS CABDS ir. jr. s. .iicAi-i.isri:R, SURGEON AND MEDICINAL DEX tist. Office on 12th et., three doors cast of Sehilz's boct and shoe store, Columbus. Neb. Photograph Rooms in connection with Dental Office. 215.y HUGH UUGIIES, 0' ARPENTER. JOINER AND CON TRACTOR. All work promptly attended to and satisfaction guaranteed. Refers to the many for whom he has done work, as to prices and quality. 204. W. .A. OLAJRK Mlll-Wrii ill Engineer, COLUMBUS, NEB. 402-12 T S.CHRISTISON,M.D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, 5TFor oe vear a RESIDENT PRY SICIAX to the NEW YORK CITY HOSPITALS, Illai-kwuIPs Iland, N.Y. Office on 1 Hh St., next to the Journal. Mileage 50 cts. Mediriues furnished. ."!!. WEISK.Iil'I.IIIl, WILL repair watches and clocks In the be-t manner, and cheaper than it can be done in anv other tow u. Work left with Saml. Gasi, Coluinhu. on lltli street, one dor east of I. Gluek's store, or with 3Ir. Wcienfluh at Jackon. w ill be promptly attended to. 41.. NKlJsON MILI.KTT. ItYItON MILLKTT, Justice of the Peace and Notary Public. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Columbus, Nebraska. N. It. They u ill give close attention to all business entru-tcd to them. 243. RYAN & DEGAN, rpWO doors east .f D. Ryan' Hotel X on Ulli trot't, Keep a large stock of Wines, Liquors, Cigars, And everything Usually kept at a llrst clas bar." 411 X FOR SALE OR TRADE ! MARES i COLTS, Teams of Horses or Oxen, SAIII.i: I0I1-:.S, wild or broke, at the Corral of 429 GERHARD ZE1GLER. D0LAND & SMITH, DRUG-G-ISTS, Wholcsalo and Retail, VTEItRASKA AYE., opposite Citv i Hall, Columbus. Nebr. laTLow prices and lint' pood. Prescription and familx recipes a specialty. 417 STAGS ICOt'TI". JOHN IIURER. the mail-carrier be tween Columbus and Albion, will leae Cdumbu everyday except Sun day at U .I'clock, sharp, p.issiup tliroimh Monroe, Genoa, Wat.TilIe, and to Al I ion The hack will call at cithct of the Hotels tor passenger if orders are left at the pot-otlicc. Rates reason able, $2 to Albion. 222.lv Columbus Meat Market! WEBER & KNOBEL, Prop's. TrKKP OX HAND all kinds of fresh meats, and smoked pork and beef; aUo fr--b.lh. Make sausage a pec- ialt . Tltemember the place. Llov- ( iMltll St. one door west of D. Ryan's 417-tf l't'L OictrieltV Jlat .llsirltrl. lYatvhinston Atc, nrarljr opi(isitp Court House. OWING TO THE CLOSE TIMES, meat will be sold at this market low. low down for cash. Iet steak, per lb., 10c. Rib roat, " Sc. Roil. " ... 0e. Two cent a pound more than the above prices will be charged on time, and that to goad responsible parties only. 207. M KS. W. L. COSSEY, Dress and Shirt Maker, 3 Poors Wext of Sllllman Prn? Storp. ordandsaVisfactiaVamecdr Will -l"- ? l"-" fancy sew Ing of any dc enption. Dresses and shirts cut and made to Z5T PRICES VERY REASONABLE. Give me a call and try my work. 425-ly HENRY GASS, IP NDERTAKER, KEEPS ON HAND readv-made anu .Metallic Coffins, Walnut Picture Frame. Mends Cane Seat Chairs. Keeps on hand Black Wal nut Lumber. Tiddrc. Ate. :Va, Krt F1. "W. OTT, SKLLS All kinds of MUSICAL IIST1IH1ITS Boot, Stationer-, Candy and Cigar. ONE DOOH NORTH OF TOST -OFFICE. NORTH OF 400-tf F. SCHECK, Manufacturer and Dealer in CIGARS AND TOBACCO. ALL KINDS OF SMOKING ARTICLES. Storcon Olive St., near the old Post-ojfice Columbus Nebraska. 447-ly lr. E. I.. SIGGirVS, Physician and Surgeon. J3TOflice open at all hours Bank Building. Dont You Ilct," For if you do you will lose money by purehaiiiiir an" expensive Wind 3Iils. when ytm can buy one of J. O. Shannon for about one-haif the money that any other" costs. Call O" J. O. Shannon, on lltli street, opposite Mahlnn Clnther's Store. Columbus, Neb. 411-13 TTE.BY G. CAREW, Attorney and Counselor at Law, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. Formerly a member of the English bar: will give prompt attention to -ill business entrusted to him in this and adjoining counties. Collections made. Office one door eat of Schilz" shoe store, corner of olive and 12th Structs. Sprieht Deut-h. Paile Francais. 418-tf COLUMBUS BRICK YARD, (One mile west of Columbus.) THOMAS FLYNN & SON, Tropr's. GOOD, HARD-BURNT BRICK Always on Hand in QUANTITIES to suit PURCHASERS a:i-tf BERNARD McTEGGART, BLACKSMITH, Is prepared to do all kinds of black smithing in a workmanlike manner, and will guarantee to give satisfaction. He makes HORSE -SHOEING A SPECIALTY, anil in this branch of the trade will ac knowledge no peer. Persons having lame horses from bad shoeing will do well to bring them to him. He only asks for a trial. All kinds of repairing done to order. 440..'iin CALIFORNIA WINES! 2ed asi Thlte, S15o?51.7o A GALLON -AT- SAML. G ASS'S, Eb rnth Strret. LUERS & SCHREIBEB Shikiith asi Wagon Maker. All kinds of repairing done at short notice. Wagons, Buggies. Ac., &c made to order. All work warranted. Shop on Olive Street, opposite Tatter sal, Columbus, Nebr.ska. .152 J. C. ELLIOTT, AGENT FOR TUB STOVER WIND MILL 20 OSCILLATING FEED MILL, And All Kinds of Pnmps AND PUMP MATERIALS! ALSO Challenge Wind and Feed Mills, Combined Shelter and Grinder, Jl alt JI ills, Horse Powers, Corn Shelters and Fanning Mills. rumps Repaired ou Short Notice, Farmer, come and examine our mill. You will lind one erected on the premises of the Hammond Houfce, in good running order. COLl' .11 U V s Restaurant and Saloon! E. D. SHEEIIAX, Proprietor. Wholesald and Retail Dealer in Foreign 'Wines, Liquors AND CIGARS, DOUBLIN STOUT, SCOTCH AND ENGLISH ALES. iSTKentucky Whiskies a Specialty. OYSTERS, In their season, BY THE CASE, CAN OH DISH, 11th Street, South of Depot, WM. BECKEE, ) DEALER IN( GROCERIES, Grain, Produce, Etc. Gool Goofls anfl Fair Dealing. NEW STORE, NEW GOODS. Goods delivered Free of Charge, anywhere in the city. Corner of 13th and Madison Bta. North of PonndtT 36T Y7 &fg,jt gArJ3 WHEN ELIHU CAME HOME. All her life lonjr Sara Holmes had had a romance. Il began and end ed with these words: ""When Elihti comes home." And though she was but nineteen years old at the time of which I write, it seemed to her on the evening of that burning July day, as she sat in her bedroom and looked out upon the moonlight fields that she had been living one or two centuries in this world, and all the time dreaming golden dreams of Elihu, only to lind them shivered into atoms at the last. For Elihu had come. And the time and the manner of his coming were so unlookcd for and so unex pected to her, as well as to every body else that the girl sat there in the moonlight saying to herself, "He is here. I need never watch or wait for him again. In the next chamber to mine he is sleeping thai is if he can sleep, poor Elihu!" The earliest stones she could re member hud been told to her by her mother about "Cousin Elihu" and (he enormous fortune he had made "down South,"" at a time when for tunes could yet be nnidc in that un happy bind. She had heard fabu lous tales of the palace in which lie lived, of the negro slaves who flew to do his bidding, of the beautiful carriages and horses that bore him from place to place, and of the jew els, the silks, satins and velvets that fortunate woman would possess who would one day become Elihu's bride. Other girls had heard these stories also, and the belle of the school at Homesdale olten said that, when she was sixteen, she should "go travel ing," and find her way down south, and "set her cap" for Elihu Holmes. That the result would follow for which she looked, no girl among them at all doubled, for even "the master's'" stern face softened and smiled upon liosntina Meadows, when she shook back her golden curls and lilted her large blue eyes, wiili a blush, to his. Poor Ilosanna! Sara leaned her cheek on her hand, and looked over the hill-top toward the village grave yard, where the village beauty was now lying, with her blue eyes clos ed, her golden ringlets smoothed back from her white brow, and her hands clasped in an unearthly quiet on her breast. Elihu had never known how her girlish heart went out toward him. And now Elihu had come home! As Sara Holmes grew up, and de veloped from the tall angular girl into the queenly self-possessed young woman, the thought would sometimes occur to her, as she stood before the mirror braiding her dark hair, "If he should come bac'-c, would he think me pretty, now that Ko sanna is gone?" The broad, low brow, the oval cheeks and dimpled chin answered; the healthful color, the deep, dark eyes, the sudden, bright, bewildering ti.ie, said, "Yes." For hers was now a higher beauty than llosaniia's pink-and-white loveliness id ever been, and the treasures of her mind and heart might well have won an older and wiser man to love her long before Elihti came home. And now she drew a long breath and set herself to recall all the inci dents of that sudden and startling return. Tea was over the milk was strained and they were all sitting on the front piazza, under the shade of the maples and locusts, while her father read bits from the weekly paper aloud. Her step-mother was knitting; her sister Grace was lin ing a hat, and her brother Len was whittling out a toy boat from a bit of wood, while 6he, Sara, sat beside him and held his tools as he needed them, and lost herself in a reverie about our hero in the south. A carriage drove up the village road and halted at their gate. The driver descended to his seat and beckoned to her father, who hur ried down to the gate to meet him. After talking for some time togeth er, a small trunk was lilted down and left beside the gate. Then the carriage-door was opened and a tall figure descended, and, directly af ter, Ben, who had followed his father in a fit of boyish curiosity, galloped back with distended eyes, whispering loudly : "Mother girls! Cousin Elihu has come! And he has lost every cent of his property down south! I heard the driver tell lather so! And they have sent him oflf here, alone, because, they thought he was going to be sick ; and there he is. you see, leaning on rather and the driver, and he can't but just walk. Isn't it a blamed shame of these southern ers?" "Mercy! exclaimed Ben's step mother, rising, as they all rose, when the tall, slender figure approached. Sara looked up with her heart iu her eyes, to greet her hero no less a hero to her for the pitiful history of loss and ruiu that she had just heard. Ho was a tall, uprighl, elegant looking man, witli a fair complexion large, melancholy blue eyes, a long straight nose, drooping eyebrows, fine lips, and firmiy-rottnded chin, that somewhat counteracted the listless sadness of the face. His hair was turning gray, and the heavy, golden-brown moustache had one or two threads of silver, but with that exception he wore no look of age. Elihu was well but plainly dressed in a traveling suit of gray. He le inoved his hat as he drew near the ladies', with a courteous grace; but he looked iu vain for the warm wel come from the second Mrs. Holmes and her daughter Grace that he would have received from his own cousin had she been alive. Mrs. Holmes bowed to him cold ly though civilly; and Grace, angry with him and with herself for the sudden collapsing of sundry ambi tious hopes which she had never confided to anyone except her moth er, swept him her latest dancing school courtesy, and affected not to see the hand he held out. Elihu colored slightly, and turned to Sara, whose large dark eyes were fixed with a look of tender pity upon his refined and melancholy face. "You have a face that I ought to know," he said to her, gently. You are my cousin's child, dear Sara! I hoped she would be here to meet me when I came home at last." Sara's heart was already full, and this reference to her dead mother caused her tears to oveiilow. "Dear Cousin Elihu," said she, taking his hand in both hers, "my mother remembered and loved you to the last day of her life. She would have been glad indeed to see you here once more; I am glad, too. All my life long I have looked for ward to your coming."' "But you did not expect lo see me return so poor," said Elihu, sighing. "Poor or rich, it matters little," replied Sara fervently. "You are here at home once more, and that is enough to make us all rejoice." "Aye," said Elihu, looking from her beaming countenance to the cold faces of the rest. "I should have been glad to bring gold enough to make me welcome. But what has happened has happened, and I do not wish to complain. Cousin Joshua, for my cousin's sake of the old times when you and I were boys together, I suppose you will let me stay at the old homestead for a few days ?" "Eh? Oh, to be sure! Stay and welcome," stammered the farmer, who feeling the eyes of his wife and his daughter Sain fixed upon him, was like a man between two fires. So it was settled, and Sara flew about like a good fairy to prepare supper for the wanderer, and after ward, to set in order his room and bed. At nine o'clock he retired, uid then the storm burst forth. The second Mrs. Holmes inquired shrilly, if their house was to be liniicd into a "poor farm," and made the abiding place of every shiftless creature who had wasted his sub stance in riotous living among "those negroes" only to come, at the last, without a penny in his pocket, to be supported by those who had the misfortune to be related to him in a distant way. Mr. Holmes said, meekly, that "it wasn't likely Elihu would want to stay long, and that as he had once redeemed the farm, which was heavily mortgaged with his own money, and given a deed of the place to his first wife, he didn't very well see how he could refuse him shelter there if he claimed it"lor a time, at least," he added, nervous ly seeing his wife's black eyebrows knitting together in a way he had learned to dread. Grace upheld her mother in all her denunciations; though Sara thought, privately, that it would have been more delicate had she kept silence, since as the daughter as Mrs. Holmes by a former mar riage, she could not be supposed to have any great interest, pecuniary or otherwise, in the disposition of the homestead farm. As for Ben, like most boys of thirteen, he was on the side of right against might, and he did not scru ple to say that, for his part, he hop ed Cousin Elihu would stay there forever, and that he was sure, if he had redeemed the farm, that he had a perfect right to do so. His sister Sara could have kissed him for the answer, but she kept silence. The days went on. By every art that a mean and paltry spirit could invent, Mrs. Holmes the second showed plainly to Elihu how un welcome he was beneath her roof tree. As for Grace, she simply ig nored him. And, Mr. Holmes, though he would gladly have been both grateful and kind, was so tam ed by nightly curtain lectures, hours long, that he dared not show the ruined man uny attention, and only looked at him wistfully now and then, as if wondering when he would be gone. Elihu's plate, knife and fork were placed upon the table at every meal it is true. He tared as the rest far ed, and hid room and bed were the best in the house. But this was Sara's doing. To her and to Ben, he owed each mo ment of happiness which he enjoyed in the old house. The sister and her young brother were always glad to be with him, but the other in mates of the house looked over and around him, and even when he ate of their bread and drank of their cup, seemed as if they knew him not. Sara's proud spirit blazed up for his sake at a thousand pretty in sults and affronts each day. She wondered privately to herself, and aloud to Ben, how Cousin Elihu, with the memory of his past wealth and grandeur fresh in his mind, could endure it! Nor was she sur prised when, one pleasant evening just four weeks after his arrival Elihu told her he must go. "I cannot blame you, so shame fully have you been treated," she said while her heart sank down in her breast, like a stone sinking into the depths of the tiny lake on whose banks they sit. "Bui where will you go, Cousin E'iliu? What will you do? You were ill when you came here, and thanks to their uu kindness, you are not yet well and strong enough to care for yourself. O, it is a shame a shame!" she broke out again. "And if you had come rich as I hey expected, every one of them would have been at your leet !" Cousin Elihu smiled the smile that always btighlcned her melancholy face, till in her eyes it was the nob lest, handsomest face on earth. ""Sever mind them, Sara," said he ; "you and Ben have been so good to me that I have scarcely noticed the rest. So good that" He paused and looked at her. "Sara, when I am gone, shall you The tears rose to her eyes. "O, how can you ask? You know, Elihu, that when you go I shall think of you among strangers, poor, perhaps ill, perhaps dying " She hid her face in her hands and sobbed aloud. Elihu waited until her grief had exhausted itself and then took her hand. " What you say is all very true, Sara. I am not lit to go out in the world alone. Will you go with me? Y'ou have a good home here. I know, but if I have vou to work for, I will soon give you a better one. And by and-by Ben can come to us,and we will make a man of him. Will you be my wife, Sara?" She looked at him withal the sol emn fervor of a woman's love shin ing iu her. "If you will take me, Elihu, and let me care for you, 1 shall be the happiest creature on earth. From the moment when I saw you come iu at the farm-gate, from the mo ment when I knew that your for tune was gone, and that you were ill and alone iu the world, I have prayed that you might love me. I don't care where our home is or what it is, so that we share it to gether. I can be happier with yon iu a log-hut than I could be with anyone else iu a palace; tor you need me, Elihu, and I I have thought and dreamed of you, and, I really believe, loved you from the day when my mother first told me about you, when I was sitting at her knee." So they were betrothed, and, after a slorni at the farm-house when her decision was first made known, Sara followed the fortunes of her lover to a distant city where they were married. Ben went with her as her protector and "best man." Her lather kisst d her and cried over her, as he bade farewell, and put a pocketbook con taining five hundred dollars into her hand for the wedding portion. "I can't go with you to give you away, my dear, and I can't let you be married here," said the poor man. "I shall never hear the last of it if I do; and I'm getting old now, and I want peace and quiet iu my own home. But God bless you, Sara, and jour husband that is to be. Poor Elihu! Your mother loved him dearly, and 1 don't know a fault he has iu the world, except that he is poor." So strengthened by her father's approval and blessing, Sara ap proached the alter to consecrate her lite to the hero of her dreams. The ceremony,over they they drove to a first-class hotel, and at breakfast Elihu laid a package before her, aud a casket by the side of her plate. "3Iy first present to my wife," suid he. "As for you, Ben " A cry of delight from Ben made his sister turn round to look at him. The boy was glorious in a gold hunting-watch and chain. "Open your casket, love," said her husband, smiling. She obeyed and a river of light seemed to flash upon her from the diamonds within. At the same mo ment her husband broke the seal of the package, and showed her a bank-book inscribed with her name. "Ten thousand dollars are deposit ed there, subject to your order," said Elihu, carelessly. "Ten thousand dollars! and the watch and the diamonds!" gasped Sara, turning pale. "What can it all mean I" "I know" broke in Ben, with a joyous laugh. "Cousin Elihu has only been pretending to be poor all this time. Nicely sold all those people at the farm will be!" Sara turned to her husband. He smiled, and drew her closely to his breast. From that happy day not n wish of hers or Ben's has been un gratified. And all the romance ot her lite began instead of ending (as she for a time had supposed) "when Elihu came home." Ilpthcri:t unci ll Treat men t. Diptheria is a disease which spiings from the growth of a real fungus on some of the mucous sur faces of the system, more generally of tlie throat. It may be surfaces ot a diseased with those of a healty person, as in kissing, and is to a limited degree epidemic. From the local parts aflecled it spreads to the whole body, affecting the muscular and nervous system, vitiating the lymph and nutrient fluids, and pro ducing paralysis. As soon as I lie b.tclcruiin or fungus appears in white patches ou the throat, it should no more be neglected than a bleeding gash or broken arm, and there is almost as little need of a fatal termination of one incident as ofthe other, Il has been found by actual experiment, both in aud out of the human system, that, this bacterium is killed by several drugs, the sale?t and most certain of which is chlorine water, diluted with the addition of roui two to lour times the volmup. .of. water. This wash is harmless, even when swallowed, and is pretty certain to arrest the disease. The great cyclopaedia of Ziemcssen on the practice of medicine gives the highest place to this method of treatment. To keep the patient well housed and warm, with addi tional tlauuel clothing if necessary, and to keep the system well nour ished and the bowels open are mat ters of nursing often neglected, but, with care in these respects and early application of the remedies above suggested, there is no need of the disease proceeding to a fatal termin ation, or even to the debilitating ill ness and pain till cauterizations which go together in its later stages. As to the origin of diptheria, the weight of testimony is that it be longs to the class of filth diseases, but further than that the source is not clear. Families which would be scandalized at the suggestion of un-lidine-s are attacked, while others of filthy surroundings escape. This aiuiply shows that our sense of cleanliness needs cultivation, so (hut wc may discriminate between what is offensive to our fascly-cdu-cated tastes. The farmer's wife, to whom the closed and carefully-dusted parlor, or the pretcrnaturally scrubbed floor arc the essentials of neatness, may endure the proximity of a sour swamp or of the kitchen cesspool for years without taking offense. To many a careful aud la borious housekeeper, a chance cob web or the children's "litter "of a few hours' play will outrank iu heiiiousuess a defective drain for the cellar or a badly-conducted out house. Springfield Mass) Jiepubli can. A lloy Willi a llcnrt. The other day a bit of a boy called at the side door of a good looking farm residence aud fold such a sor row'ul story that the lady wa3 not stingy in throwing provisions into his basket. Happening to look into the front yard after a few minutes, she saw the strange boy mixed up with her three or four children, aud she called out: "Boy, what are you doing here?" "Feed'n these half starved chil dren !' he promptly replied. "But those are my children I" she indignantly exclaimed. "Makes no difference to me," he said as he broke off another piece of cake. "When I find a young "un crying for bread, aud ready to swear that he hasn't tasted pie for over a year, I'm goin' to stop busi ness aud brace him up! Haveut you got a clean waist which I could put on this dirty little boy?" She looked up and down the road to see if any canvassers for the poor heathen were in sight, and then she grabbed the broom and ran the sympathetic boy out of the yard. ."Veto York Graphic. THE 1IOSS 1IRSJTJB. Richards Showing His Sullen Sider and Trouble Begins. Special to the Omaha Herald. Kearney, December 31. -S. D. Richard?, the murderer, confined in the county jail, refused to go into his cell last evening, at the request of Deputy SherilT Lew Johnson, saying he had only one time to die. The deputy sheriff pointed a re volver at his head and told him ho would give him until he couuted four to get into the cell. Johusou counted, aud Illchurds still failing to move, Johusou fired just above his head. Richards dodged as the revolver was tired aud retreated to his cell, swearing that ho will havo vengeance on Johusou. Richards was then 6hackled with heavy irons. He has remained sullen nnd ugly, mid has not said a word to any ouo since. His dodging os the bullet was fired, and his retreating inlo the cell Is the first sign of weaken ing he has shown, and seems to show that he cares more for his life th u he has claimed. Your correspond ent was up to the jail a short timo since, aud was admitted to Richard's cell with the sherilT. The sheriff told Richards it was an O.i'aha re pot tcr. Richards was at first sullen, but tried lo appear pleasant, evi dently for the purpose of making a good impression on the sheriff, of whom he scenn to have a whole some fear. This happened about dusk and just before supper. He had been given the freedom of the hall, iu common with the other prisoners. It has been customary to give prisoners this freedom while they behave themselves, but when they are ugly they are placed in tho cell and kept there. Sheriff Ander son thinks they are likely to have trouble with Richards, now that he has begun to show his disposi'ion. The way to get along with Richards, I find, is to flatter him, and mako him think he is the most remarkable, man on earth. A "L:.son to I-'utucrw. The great secrst of success in bringing up children is to establish and preserve perfect confidence be tween parents aud children. Iflhc father is the boy's best friend, ns all wise mothers are the girls', Ihere is no trouble about keeping them from bad associates, whose vicious ex amples and silly bravado have a lasting ell'ect upon their characters. Fathers, in your efforts to securo fortunes for your families, remem ber that money will not save you from the heart-ache if your bjys go wrong, and that their only safety is iu being kept close by your side, helping you in busine?, and you in turn sharing their fun and play. Nothing is so flattering to boys as the society of their fathers, and nothing makes a man so popular with them as his joining iu their amusement Try to do this and your sons will try in turn lo understand your cares and troubles. Take a3 much pains toprcservc theuifromcon taminatioii in the shape of immoral companionship as mothers do their girls, and you will find them grow ing up to be modest and virtuous young men, fit companions and hus bands for girls who have been care fully guided from all knowledge of evil. Devote your evenings to fam ily amusements and pleasures. In vite young people to your house and pay them attention, instead of going off to bed or shutting yourself in an other room the moment they make their appearance, as if there was aud could be, nothing between your manhood and their youth. So shall you be kept young iu heart, aud the inexperience of your sons will be tempered with sonielhiug ofthe so briety of experience. "Jake," said the blushing damsel to a lover that her father had for bidden the house, "I don't care if your feet arc big; I love you just as much." "Wall, Sally, I don't mind so much about the sizo of my own feet, but I wish your dad's were a little smaller; I should feel more confident, you know, about staying all the evening.' "Jumping-sheets" are being in troduced into the English fire brigades. They are of stout canvas, with sixteen loops or handles, to be held by as many men, and so break the fall of a person jumping into them from a burning house. Trials have resulted very satisfactorily. A Georgia colored dei y"'S ciety wa3 lately discj y$ is the best for iIvn.y."1 worlr-- wage.SSa5SSSaia3 iVN tl ? Book-k&5tr3. SeixKtera. o Operators, Teachers, b 'e Collece,Xekui Jow