BATES OF AattVEBTltlinc;- fcj Business and profeasional cards of five) lines or less, per annum, five dollars. Es7 For time advertisements, apply at'this office. 7Legal advertisements at statae rates- fiTPor transient advertising, ass rates on third page. XdTAH advertisements payable monthly. (fuhUltutt) n 1" OFFICE. Eleventh St., up Hairs iii Journal Building. i k kjis: Per year Six months Three months . Single copies VOL. XIII.-N0. 47. COLUMBUS, NEB., WEDNESDAY. MARCH 21, 1883. WHOLE NO. 671. THE JOURNAL. ISUi:i EVEKY WKPXE&DAY, M. k. TURNER & CO., Proprietors and Publishers. ilii I $2 Q 198 SO .... 05 V N I k LaW I V BUSINESS CARDS. DENTAL PARLOR. On Thirteenth St.. and Nebraska Ave., over Friedhof store. jSTOfficc hours 8 to 12 a. m.; 1 to 5 p. in. Om.a AMMAUfiii, Dentist. iOK'131II'!4 SWlAlVAW. ATTORN EYS-A7-LA W, Ip-stalr in (iluck Kuilding, 11th btreet, Above the New bank. TJ J. 1II'1S4. NOT A BY PUBLIC. 12th Slrn-t.2 ilor nct of Hammond Houw, Columbus. Neb. 491-y RESIDENT DENTIST. Oilice over corner of 11th sud North-st. A II operations lin-t-clnsr. and warranted. C 1HII4 A4; II A It It Kit SHOP! II EN 11 Y WOODS Pnor-'K. tSTEvervtliint; in first -ela.s .-.tyle. A No keep the hot ofci:ir. 510-v a i:i.IC A: Kl.i.Or.lC. A TTOJiNE YS A T LA , (llliee oil Oltr -1., 'duiubu. N'ehra-ka. 2-t f t t;. A. IUI.l.IIi:-T, A. -M., M.D., ll MEUl'ATUH' I'llYSlClAN. TTTo niii.k- Miiuh nf c.iiirl Hou-e. Telejihi'lie comiliUllie iticill. r-lj A lAl.l.lSi'i:it KCKIS.. ATT'WXFYK AT LA W, Olh.-i- tlp-stujr- ill .VeAllNtelV lilllld inx. 11th M. . A. MeAllNter, Notary I'ul.lie. .1. .11. MACI lltl. VM'. K. K. CllWDKKV, At.cr-.e; ;si I'r.sry FstV :. C:l!t:t:r. LAW AM' COMiKtTlOX OFFICE or MACFARliAND & COWDBRy, Columbus: : ' N hrnsktt. i -y i-:o. . im:kui. PA INTEIi. TfV:irri:i:rc, lioiise ami in painting, ;zlniii;r. papi r ii-iniriuti. kaNoitiiiin,ir, ele. done to order. Shop on Kl ii St.. oppo-ite Kii"ine llou.-t , iiliiinhii-. NVb. 10-y I-" II. IE I X'lBi:. Ilth St., nearly opp. Gluck's store, S N Harue... viddlc. t'ollar.-. Whips, 15 nkiM. urrx (.'omh. r.ruilic-, ete., at the linvol pojble price., llt-pairs pi mptix at;. ml. d to. ( T. LAN I AND INSURANCE AU EXT, 11 1 Ml' III; EY, NEB II. II N land- eoinprie some line tract? in the Shell 'rek V:ille.:nd tin- north ern poriioii ol PI ttt- count . -Taxes paid fin noii-resideiits. :iti-l:i-tion guaranteed. 2 y t oius srnuEiitEu. BLACKSMITH AND WAGON MAKER. All kinds of repairing done on short notice. liusr-jie-. Wagons, etc., made to ord-r, and all work guaranteed. tdTShop opposite the Tatterall,' Oliie Mrt'ft. .'2." vtotici: to ti:aciii:km. J. 15. Moncrief, Co. Supt., Will le in his oihco at the Court House on the tirst Saturday of each month for the purpo.it of examining applicant- for teacher" certificates, and for the transai'tton of any other business pcilaiuiii to schooN. ."C7-y CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. Plans and estimates supplied for either frame or brick buildings. Good work guaranteed. Shop on Kith Street, near St. Paul l.uuito'i Yard. Columbus, Ne braska. .VJ Ihuo. J. WAGNER, Livcrv and Feed Stable. Is prepared to furnish the public w.'th good teams, busies and carriage." for all occasion, specially for funerals. ANo conducts a sale stable. 44 D.T. .M aut . M. P. T. Scitu3. .M. D i Deutscher Art:.) Drs. MARTYN & SCHUG, U. S. Examining Surgeons, Local Surt'eoii". I nion Pacilic and ., N. A H. H. IL K's. COLUMBUS, - NEBRASKA. :i-2-d-iii- VtTILIilAM RYAN, UKAi.Ki: I.N KENTUCKY WHISKIES Wines. Ales. Cigars and Tobacco. jSSchils Milwaukee Beer contant 1 on hand. F Elfvknth Si.. Colcsibus. Nkb. JS. MURDOCK & SOX, a Carpenters and Contractors. Havehadan extended experience, and will guarantee satisfaction in work. All kinds of repairing done ou short notice. Our motto it.,"" Ctood work anil fair prices. Call and give us an oppor tunity toestimateforyou. E3TShop on 13th St., one door west of Friedhof fc Co's. store. Columbus. Nebr. 483-v THE rOUI-MBUS FLAX AND TOW CO., Are prepared to receive and pay $3.00 per ton for good clean flax straw (free from foreign substances) delivered on their grounds near the Creamery, in Colum bus Nebraska. COLI'.M BITS FLAX & TOW CO., GEO. SMITH. Aq'L Columbus. Dec. 5, 1S&I. 32-3m COLIIMIIIJS Restaurant and Saloon! E. D. SHEEHAN, Proprietor. ggrWholesale ind Retail Dealer in For eign "Wines, Liquors and Cigars, Dub lin Stout, Scotch and English Ales. 3TKentucTcy Whiskies a Specialty. OYSTERS in their season, by the case can or dish. 11th f trtst. Strath of 9epot. ADVERTISEMENTS. 11.90 Salt at J. B. Dels man's for $1.90 a bar rel, and everything at accordingly low prices 4i-tt NEBRASKA HOUSE, S. J. MARMOT, Prop'r. Nebraska Ave., South of Depot, COL.UMBITS NEB. A new house, newly furnished. Oood accommodations. Board by day or week at reasonable rates. fSTSetm m. Vlrnt-Vlmtm Xable. Meals, 2ii Cts. J Lodgings.... 25 Ct. 3K-2tf H. LUERS & CO, BLACKSMITHS AND Waon ISiiilderSj .New llrirk Shop opposite Hrlatz'H Ilrui; Store. ALL KINDS OF WOOD AND IRON WORK ON WAGONS AND BUGGIES DONE ON SHORT NOTICE. Elfvmth Street, Columbus, Nebraska. no D YOU WANT THE BEST Illustrated Weekly Paper published? If so, sub- scribe for Tk WmUj Graphic. It contains four pages of illustrations and eight pages of reading matter. It is terse. It is vigorous. It is clean and healthy. It gives all the news. Its home department is full of choice literature. Farming interests receive spe cial and regular attention. It treats inde xtndently of politics and affairs. During the year it gives over 200 pages of illustra tions, embracing every variety of subject, front the choicest art production to the customs, manners and noteworthy incidents and everyday scenes of every people ; and Cartoons "upon events, men and measures. Try it a year, subscription price $2.50 a year. .Sample copies and terms to agents, 5 cenb. Aiinittsa THE WEEKLY GRAPHIC. 12 & 184 Dearborn Strekt, Chicago. We ofifor The Weekly Graphic in Club with The Columbus Journal For .3.00 a year in advance. COLUMBUS STATE BANK ' Cs::i:u::t9 0sm:i 4 Btti tl Tcrsir Silit. COLUMBUS, NEB. T- CA SH CA PI TA L, . $50,000 DIRECTORS: Leanokr Gerhard, Pre? I. Geo. W. Hulst, Vice Pres't. Julius A. Reed. Edward A. Gerrard. AnNER Turner, Cashier. Bank of lepoIl, IImcohbI usd Excltaage. CollectloBN Promptly .fladc ob all PoIatR. Pay lBtrett Time Kepeti Its. 27-1 ALL PARTIES WANT I NO THE -ACME- PEYEBIZMB HAIOW! CLOD CRUSHER AND- LEVELER! IN BUTLEU, PLATTE, DODGE, COLFAX tl- SA UNDEHS COUNTIES, Will send their orders to T. W. HUNT & CO., SCHUYLER, NEBR. 4-Vlt SALARY $20 Per week to live agents. Something new. Sells on sight. Thk Temple of Lifi; representing the Past, Present and Fu ture. A fine lithograph in six elegant tints. Size 22x33. Send stamp for circu. lar. K1MEII 4t CO., PlttoBartTt Fft. 4WJtc FIRST National Bank! cox.xjicbij8. ic: Authorized Capital, - - $250,000 Cash Capital, - - 50,000 officers and directors. A. ANDERSON. Pres't. SAM'L C. SMITH. Vice Pret't. O. T. ROEN, Cashier. J. V. EARLY, ROBERT U HUG. HKRMAN OEHLRICH. W. A. MCALLISTER. G. ANDERSON, I'.ANDKRSON. Foreign and Inland Exchange, Passage Tickets, Real Estate, Loan ana Insurance. 20.voM3.ly BECKER & WELCH, PROPRIETORS OF SHELL CREEK MILLS. MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLE SALE DEALERS IN FLOUR AND MEAL. OFFICE, COL UMB US, NEB. SPEICE & NORTH, General Agents for the Sale of REAL ESTATE. Union Pacilic, and Midland Pacilic R. R. Lands for sale Jtt from $3.00 to f 10.00 per acre for cash, or on live or ten years time, in annual payments to suit pur chasers. We have also a large and choice lot of other lands, improved and unimproved, for sale at low price and on reasonable terms. Also business and residence lot6 in the city. We keep a complete abstract of title to all real es tate in Platte County. 021 4 OI.I.HRIJS. NEII. M holosale and Retail GROCERS aio dealers in Pillslnry's Bat Mimaesota, Sobnyler Saow Flake aad Sokayler 82 Flour Always kept ea kaad. Every Sack Warraated. CASH PAIO FOR BUTTER AND EGGS. jSTGoods delivered free of charge to any part of the city. 43 LANDS, FARMS, CITY PROPERTY FOR SALE, AT THE Union Pacfic Land Office. On Long Time and low rate of Interest. All wishing to buy Rail Road Lands or Improved Farms will tlud il to their advantage to call at the U. P. Land Office before lookin elsewhere as I make a specialty of buying and selling lands on commission; all persons wish ing to sell farms or unimproved land will find it to their advantage to leave their lands with me for sale, as my fa cilities for affecting sales are unsur passed. I am prepared to make final proof for all parties wishing to get a patent for their homesteads. iSTHenry Cordes, Clerk, writes and spealcs German. SAMUEL C. SMITH, Agt. U. P. Land Department, U21-y COLUMBUS, NEB. WM. BECKER, DKALKK in all kinds ok FAMILY GROCERIES! I KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND A WELL ELECTED STOCK. Teas, Coffees, Sugar, Syrups, Dried and Canned Fruits, and other Staples a Specialty. Goede Delivered Free lo aay part of Ike City. I AM ALSO AGENT FOR THE CEL EBRATED COQUILLARD Farm and Spring Wagons, of which I keep a constant supply on hand, but few their equal. In style and quality, second to none. CALL' AilD LEARlf PRICES. Cor. Thirteenth and K Streets, near A. it JT. Depot. HERMAN QRHLRIGH & BRO Crockery Lamps Glassware THE SONQ OF THE SCHOOL OIBL. With Heavy and aching' head With weary but sleepless brain, A school airl sat In her room at night, And thus gave voice to her pain: It's study by day and by night, -- And lra study by night and by day, Till a blur comes over my sight, . And my brain seems oozlnjc away. The studies are piled so high That the weight is breaking me down: 1 wish I had wings, and could fly Away from the school and the town. Ifs study anil study at school. And Ifs study and study up here. And I shudder beneath the rule That awaits the failure I fear. All day and all night Is my head w iu ngures ana iacu or And at last when I crawl Into bed They haunt me and rob me of reit. Kb oh, for a romp and a run, A game with a hoop or a ball! And Ifs ob, to bo out In the sun. Away from percentage and allt Perhaps I may marry some day, " If I ever get through with my life. And what will my husband say , To a nervous and fidgety wife? It's study by day and by night. And It's study by night and by day. Oh. surely It cannot be right To study and never to play. -A'. T.Sun. THE VICTIMS OF POMPEII. lataresUac Facts Connected with the De stroctlon or the City. The work of exploration which has been steadily going on in. Pompeii for over a century, from the day when ex cavations rirst began on the site of what was then vaguely called " La Civita," in 1748, has led to other than purely archaeological results. It has enaoled a fairly accurate notion to be formed of the nature and extent of the catas trophe. We know, for instance, that the lava stream did not reach Pompeii, and that the city was not destroyed by tire. We know also that the eruption was accompanied by one or more shocks of earthquake, which threw down houses here and there, and buried men and women under their ruins. From the fact that skeletons have been found at the entrance to the public bath, which was quitted hastily by the few Srand ladies who were not present at le gladiatorial performance in the am phitheater, the time of the catastrophe oan be fixed with approximate accura cy at or about noon. Above all, the discoveries of skeletons, every one of which has been carefully recorded for at least a century, enable some conclusion to be drawn as to the total number of victims of the catastrophe. It would be a mistake to suppose that the majority, or even a very large portion of the in habitants of Pompeii perished. The effects of the ashen shower were not instantaneous, and every one who could get away from the city on the first alarm probably saved his life. The bulk of the people were in the amphi theater, which was situated near one of the city gates on the side remote from Vesuvius, and there was nothing to hinder every one in the great audience from getting away in time. Those who perished were those who deliberately put off their flight to save wife and child, or still more often, valuables. Of such victims 450 have been al ready found. From the year when the excavations began, in 1748, to the year loi'o, tne total number ol human re mains discovered was 1C0; from 1827 to 1845 it was 63; from 1846 to 1860 it was 60; from 1861 to 1872 it was 87, and from 1873 to 1881 about 100. But it is to be remembered that only two-fifths of the buried surface has been brought to light On the whole there appears ood reason for putting the total num er of human beings who Dorished in the eruption at least as high as 1,100. To these should be added the skeletons of three dogs, seven horses, eleven hens, two tortoises, fifteen pigs,tenoxen and the bones of fifteen other animals. The remains of one of these dogs were found in the porch of the " House of Orpheus," and the cast which Signor Fiorelli has taken brings before us with a painful vividness one of the minor tragedies of that awful day. The poor beast was chained at his post, and in the general panic and confusion no one remembered to let him loose. The chain lay by the remains when they were found, and it was evident that the creature had strained his tether to the utmost in the effort to keep himself above the masses of ash and pumice tone that rapidly accumulated around and over him. The otst is to be seen in the little museum at Pompeii. The dog lies half on its side, half on its back, his slender head and open muzzle, gasping for a little air, buried between the hind leers, which have been convulsively brought for ward in the last agony of death. But the process which had been so successful in reproducing the very form and like ness of this creaturo as he lived and died has produced results no less extra ordinarvin the case of the human vic tims of the catastrophe. The idea of ! pouring plaster of Paris in a liquid state nto the moulds left by the bodies in the oft ash did not occur to any one till it suddenly flashed across Fiorelli about twenty years ago. Of the remains of the 180 human beings discovered in Pompeii in the first hundred yeat-3 of the excavation there is consequently only a written record. It is only from the "Journal of Excavations" for the year 1831 that we know of the touching and famous sight which greeted the eyes of the first discoverers of the House of the Faun." On the floor of the banqueting hall lay the body of a woman, probably the mistress of the house, with her jewels scattered where she had thrown them iu despair of res cue or escape. The roof had been crushed in by the weight of falling ash and pumice stone, and the hands of the dying woman were upstretched iu a vain effort to keep off the impending weight. Parts of the body and clothing could still be made out, and a drawing could be made of the charming foot But such records are lifeless and tame indeed, beside the extraordinary por trait statues which are now to be seen in the little museum "at Pompeii. There are nine of these, or were a very short time since, and to see them is like seeing the men and women them selves of eighteen centuries ago. Fio relli's method is as simple as possible. A small opening is made, the plaster is delicately poured in, and when it has had time to harden the surface cmst of ash is peeled off, and the man or woman comes back to life again. The details of clothing and feature have all left their mark on the soft ash, and are all faithfully preserved in the plaster cast. The results achieved by Fiorelli are striking and complete. Take the cast of the elderly slave, for instance, prob ably a man of some sixty years old, who appears to ha e leen taking- his siesta when the eruption began, and to have been painlessly asphyxiated in his sleep. He lies on his right side, the knees a little bent, the left leg drawn up and the cheek resting on the right band. The coarse, strongly-marked features and peaceful expression of the sleeper have all been perfectly preserved. -A hardly lass easy death must have beentheMot i - u . ' -- - - of the four persons found lying: on thai! hacks in tne street Three of these Were men.- one of them a -negro of the most pronounced type.' The fourth was a woman of unusual stature! ,The three persons found lying on their faces :do not appear to have foand quite so quick a death. Two of them are women. One -of these, an elderly woman with thin figure, lies by herself, her face, buried in her anas, - if to .protect her self from the fatal rain, o The other lies side by side with a, man inrhfpe. com- Sany she' appears to haVe'tatefi "flight, he has covered her face with a -fold of her dress, 'and.-' the hands .are "tight clenched in tfre last death agony. Pa MM OazcUe. . - An M.8eeel Pilet. My particular friend among the pilots was a very big man, who used to amuse as much by the childish gravity of hi remarks. He was -a remmaat of a past (generation, and the. introduction of steam snocKea nis iactiuies oeyona re covery. He would say: "In the old times, sir, vessels had to turn up here. It was back, fill and shiver-r-r all the way; but" now you urght as well have sets of rails laid on the wafer and run the ships on them. There is no sea manship needed. He never quite for gave the Commissioners for deepening tne river, as he saia, in his trenchant manner: "There used to be some cred it in bringing a ship across the bar when you were never quite sure whether she would touch or not; but now you could bring the Duke of Wellington'in at low water. These kid-gloved Captains come right up to the moorings as safe a9 if they were driving a coach along the road." The first time I saw my poor friend I liked him. We lived in a lonely house that stood on the cliffs at a bleak turn of the coast. One wild morning a coble beat into our cove. It looked as though the sea must double on her every second: but just when the combers shot at her most dan gerously the man at the tiller placed the broad square stern at right angles to the ath of the traveling wave, and she unged forward safely. By dexterous jockeying she was brought close in, and the men came through the shallow water in their sea boots. They were blue with cold, and begged for a litt e tea or coffee. Hot cukes and coffee happened to be just ready, so the fellows had a hearty breakfast and went away. With prolonged clumsiness the pilot shook the hand of the lady who had en tertained him; and in two clays after the boat sailed into the cove again amid nasty weather, and the master came ashore with a set of gaudy wooden bowls painted black and red. ' These he solemnly presented to the lady of the house. He had run thirty miles against a northerly sea to bring them. He met nis end like a brave man in the great October gale which all of us remember. He was down on the pier smoking with his friends in the watch house and looking out occasionally for distressed vessels. The great seas were hurling themselves over the stone work and shattering into wild wreaths of foam on the sand. Strong men who showed themselves outside full in the face of the wind were blown down flat as if they had been tottering children. The wind sounded as though it were blown through a huge trumpet, and the sea was running nine feet on the bar. A small vessel fought through, and ap peared likely to get into the fair-way. She showed a port light for a time, and all seemed going well. Suddenly she opened both her red and her green lights, and it was seen that she was coming dead on for the pier. Presently she was struck hard, within thirty yards of the stone-work. There was "wild excitement amongst the brig ade men. for they saw that she must be smashed into matchwood in five min utes. Th3 rockets were got ready; but before a shot could be fired the ill-fated vessel gave way totally. A great sea rushed along the side of the pier, and the pilot saw something black amoug the traveling water. There's a man', he shouted; and without a moment's thought plunged in, calling on the other fellows to pitch him a rope. Had he tied a line around his waist before he jumped he would have been all right. As it was, the Dutchman whom he tried to save was washed clean on to the pier and put safely to bed in the brigade house. The pilot was not found until two days afterward. St. James1 Ga zette. The Later Geography. Q. Where are the Poles located? A. At the school-house, town hall oi some empty store. Q What is a circle? A. A gathering where the gossips sew for the heathen and tell aU they know. li. What places have noon at the same time? A. Factories and boarding-houses. Q. When are the nights the longest? A. When you cannot sleep. Q. Is there a plain in your neighbor hood? A. We should think not by the way ours is borrowed. . Q. What disadvantage in having a bar at the entrance of a harbor? A. It would take away trade from the saloons in port. Q. What is a strait? A Five cards following in order of denomination. (Hoyle.) Q. Where do we find the largest and fiercest animals? A. At the menagerie. Q Where do we find the greatest number of insects? A. Out of town on a hot night. Q. Into what races ate we divided? A.--Thc Horse race, the Boat race' and the Human race. Q. How are the inhabitants of a civ ilized country generally employed? A. The men in working and the women in shopping. Q. What is mining? A. Finding out how much you have be n cheated. Q. Name some substances now manufactured for food? A. Oleomargarine and boarding house hash. Q. What is commerce? A. Selling your neighbor goods at three times their value. Q. What do merchants do with products of the surrounding country? A. Gather them together and form a "corner" in the market. Q. How are the commercial towns connected with the towns of the in terior? A. Bv "drummers." Q What is fishing? A Sitting in a boat all day for noth ing, and having to lie all the evening about what you caught, and what got away. Detroit Free Press. The nmvincial -i... - j o" "o immigration agent Buwes mat f2.o00.000 was brought into Manitoba by Europeans only. He esti mates that Americans brought $2,800, 000 and Canadians 94,000,000. 8we SaJafl Tklnga. The smallest hogs in the world are duartered in wJtheZoolbgical Gardens in London: They came from Australia and are known as the. "pigmy hogs." They are well' formed, are frisky, good natured, and make excellent pets. They are about the size of a wild hare. Probably the smallest and youngest sea-Uohjn.captivity is the one now in the Zoological 'Garden in Philadelphia. He is only nine weeks old. When about four weeks old he appeared one morning. wiU agloasyyoat.of grease. .Up to that time his coat "of hair was rather tough and nqn-repellant,',and not at all calcu lated to, shed water. The mother J9 teach.uig.hlm to swim. -. The smallest baby was born in Chan delaria, Nev., a few weeks ago. The father and mothers are4 strong, aad healthy, weighing 190 and 160 pounds. The child ia a male, perfectly f orated. When' it first saw light it weighed eight ounces. Its -face ia'aboat the size of a horse-chestnut The mother's wedding ring was pulled over its foot up to the knee. Three such babes could play hide-and-seek in a cigar-box. It is in good health. The will of the late Peter Maltzberger, who recently died in Reading, Pa., has just been filed in the Register's office. It it the shortest ever admitted to probate in Berks County. It is as follows: "Reading, Pa., January 29, 1880. I, Peter Maltzberger, do give and bequeath to my wife, Lena Maltzberger. all my personal and real property, absolutely; and I appoint my wife executrix of my last will and testament. "Petek Maltzbebqer." An ingenious mechanic at James town, N. Y., has constructed a perfect locomotive, said to be the smallest in the world. The engine is only eight and a half inches long, with a tender twelve inches long. The pumps throw a drop of water per stroke. As many as 58 screws were required to put the parts to gether. The engine itself weighs a pound and a half, and the tender two pounds two and a half ounces. The mechanic was al work upon the loco motive "at intervals for eight years. The smallest steam-engine iu the world was made 'by D. A. A. Buck, of Waterbury, Conn. The engine, boiler, governor and pumps stand in a space seven-sixteenths of an inch square or the erea of a gold dollar, and live-eighths of an iuch high. The engine has 148 dis tinct pieces of machinery, held together by fifty-two screws. Three drops of water till the boiler to overflowing. The diameter of its cylinders is a sixteenth of an inch. The length of stroke three thirty-seconds of an inch. The whole engine weighs three grains. AMI Sun. e The Man or Few Words. To prove the garrulity of some travel ers we state the following facts: A young man, some time back, arrived at an inn, and after alighting from his horse went into the travelers' room, where he walked backward and forward for some minutes, displaying the utmost import ance. At length he rang the bell and upon the waiter's appearance gave him an order, nearly as follows: "Waiter!" the waiter replied, "Sir." "lam a man of few words and don't like continually ringing the bell aud disturbing the house. I'll thank you to listen to what I am going to say." The waiter again replied, "Yes, sir." "In the first place bring me a glass of brandy and water, cold, with a little sugar, and also a tea spoon; wipe down the table, throw some coals on the fire and sweep up the hearth; bring me a couple of candles, pen, ink and paper, some wafers, a little sealing wax, and let me know what time the post goes out Tell the ostler to take care of my horse, dress him well, stop his feet, and let me know when he is ready to feed. Order the chambermaid to prepare me a good bed, take care that the sheets are well aired, a clean night cap and a glass of water in the room. Send the boots with a pair of slippers that I can walk to the stable in; tell him I must have my boots cleaned and brought into this room to-night and that I shall want to be called at five o'clock in the morning. Ask your mistress what I can have for supper; tell her I should like a roast duck or something of that sort; de sire your master to step iu. I want to ask him a few questions about the dra pers of this town." The waiter answered "Yes, sir," and then went to the land lord and told him a gentleman in the parlor wanted a great many things, and among the rest he wanted him. and that was all he could recollect. Old Anecdote Book. Houses en Poles. For the benefit of any who may be cast upon the hospitable and kindly feelings of the natives along the northern shores, 1 would most earnestly recommend that some token of appreciation be otl'ered to the natives of St. Lawrence Bay. Flour, tobacco, calico, drill, lead, indeed, almost any article or articles of usefulness would not only be duly appreciated, but would insure the further extension of that hos pitality and protection which to the cast away is life itself. There are many veins of bituminous coal near Point Barrow. They vary in thickness from seven to eight inches to as many feet. I visited the habitations of the natives of King's Island, in the Arctic Ocean, a curious people who live upon a precip itous hillside as no other people live. The houses are erected upon poles. The entrance to each is effected through a hole iu the front wall about fourteen inches in diameter. Having clambered through this entrance, one finds oneself in a room about eight feet square, which is the common living room of each house. From the sides of this room an: found several apertures similar to the main one of eutrance, which lead to as many sleeping apartments. The appearance presented by thee houses is, to say the least, unique, and more strikingly so by reason of their great contrast with those .of the usual Indian village, which is always built on low sand spots. The priucipal means of livelihood of these natives are fishing and walrus and seal hunting. To these people, the wal rus is the more important auimal, inas much as from its hide and intestines they obtain the covering for their houses and boafej, and the ivory tiicy sell to traders is the most valuable article in demand. The necessities of their posi tion have stimulated such inventions and developed such superior workmanship as to cause their articles of manufacture to be the most greatly prized of any along the coast. Report to the Navy Depart mentby Lieutenant Healy. m m The Baptists had planned a general Bible Convention, which was to have met at Saratoga in November. But the 'plans failed for lack of enthusiasm, and the convention has been postponed un til next May. Chicago Tribune. The mace and sword of State used in South Carolina in Colonial times are still preferred. They were brought. to this country in 1729. FACTS ASH FIQPHE8. There are six coal mines working in Arkansas. Philadelphia ia assessed at $371. 183.255 less than half of the assessed falue of New York City. Twenty years ago it required five tons of coal to make a ton of iron rails. Now a ton of steel rails may be pro duced from .the on with half that amount of coaL A German arithmetician has been calculating' the aggregate number of combfn'ationavin:the game of dominoes, aad has ahowa them to be 284.628, 2ll,840!,t Two players, playing four S Lines' in a minute, would only exhaust ese combinations in 118,000,000 years. ' A year ago a Laramie plains cattle man was offered a Utah herd and ranch for $70,000. which, offer was rejected. Since that the Utah man sold $45,000 worth out of the herd, then' sold the ranch for $4,500. afterward put $9,000 more into the herd, and then sold It for $140.000. Chicago News. Boston is the largest market for boots and shoes in the world. There were shipped during 1880 over 2, 250.000 cases of boots, shoes and rubbers to in terior and coastwise ports, the cases holding from twelve to seveaty-five pairs per case, but containing, at a low estimate, over 50,000,000 pairs. Boston 2Yanfcript. The latest Russian census shows St Petersburg and its suburbs possessed of a population of 927.467 in 10.929 stone house3. 9.318 that are of wood, and 913 that are partly both. The city has 75 hotels. 625 restaurants, 1,416 beer rooms. 170 grog shops. 793 wine rooms. 645 schools and 109.000 children between the ages of 7 and 16. Ground has been broken for the new Pension OAice on Judiciary Square. Washington. The building Ls to be 400 by 200 feet and 75 feet high, and will accommodate 1,500 clerks and cost $400,000. General M. C. Meigs thinks it will he finished in two years. It will resemble one of the old Italian palaces, but will be built of brick and iron. It is said that the old post-office, which was sold in New York recently for $650,000, is probably the largest UlncU. of down-town property ever sold in this city at public sale. The lot comprises 19,800 square feet. The property has changed hands but three times in 155 years. In 1727 it was pur chased by the consistory of the Re formed Dutch Church, for $2,875. and it remained their property till 1860, when it was bought bv the Federal Government for $250,000? N. P. Inde peruknt. m m WIT AND WISDOM. Let well enough a loan and it will pay you back. When you fret and fume at the pet ty ills" of life remember that the wheels which go round without creaking last longest. A". P. Herald. One of the best rules in conversa tion is. never to say a thing which anv of the company can reasonably wish had been left unsaid. Swift. A cow at Pittston, N. Y., ate up a section of a spring bed before her own er noticed that she had a wiry appear ance. Some men are so absent-minded, you know. Detroit Free Press. A New York paper says: "Last night Gustavus Sehwackheimer. a Ger man, attempted to commitsuicide." etc. The explanation that Gustavus is "a German" was necessary. Readers would have supposed that he was an Irishman from Tipperary. Norrislown Herald. "Baggage not allowed in the seat, sir," said the conductor. " I have no baggage in the seat," said the passen ger. "Aren't those two valises yours?" "Two valises! Why, I haven't any," arising from his seat. "Oh! excuse me," said the conductor, and he lit out, remarking: "The biggest feet I ever saw." We are told by a recipe book tha "eggs may be kept in good order for six months by dipping them into warm tallow, and after they are cool packing them in saw-dust; cover with sawdust and make as nearly air-tight as possi ble, aud put away in a dry. cool place." This costs but little more than twice as much as it would to throw away the eggs you have and buy fresh ones when you want 'em. Ar. Y. Post. Nothing is ever lost by being pleas ant and agreeable. You ask for two pounds of steak no more, no less. One butcher growls that he can't cut off just two pounds, and you leave him, thor oughly vexed. At the next stall, the man of meat hears your request with unruffled visage, cuts off a pound and a half, slaps it into the scale and out again in double-quick time, rolls it up neatly, and says, with a sweet smile: "Just two pounds, ma'am." He is the man who succeeds, Chicago Tribune. "What is your business?" inquired a city merchant of a country youth with whom he was playing an innocent game of euchre. "Oh. I'm one of nature's humorists," replied the verdant lad. "I fail to catch on," said the merchant, unconsciously dropping into slang: "what are you giving me?" "Just what I said, boss, responded the boy. "Well, what do von mean by nature's humorist?" "Why, I tickle the ground with a, hoe," explained the young grangfr, "and the earth smiles with plenty." The merchant passed, and the youth inside it spades. Japanese Ethics. There is one custom practiced iu Japan that is full of poetry and utility when a daughter isborn to the family a tree is planted one of rapid growth and making wood of fine texture. At the tinif of the girl's betrothal the tree is cut and made into articles of furni ture suitable for housekeeping and of ornamentil value. In the place of the tree thus used another is planted to commemorate the celebration of the nuptial period. Veneration for parents is held to be one of the cardinal virtues in Japan, and in fact reverence in that direction is-the epitome of excellence. It is considered a fault to place one's self voluntarily in peril of death before the demise of the parents, as thereby they are deprived of the usual honors conferred upon the dead by the children. In caso the child is taken before the parent a petition for pardon is made for the child for the unintentional fault The fidelity of families from all the members thereof is sublime, the will and desire of the parent being absolute law in the guidance of the conduct of the child. Throughout the scope of all the religious teachings of the people of the far East it is inculcated that ances tral worship and devotion to filial duties are at the base of all virtues, and that in default thereof all the pains and penal ties are to be encountered that may be come the portion of the depraved after death. Yokohama Cor. San Francisco Chronislt, SCHOOL A5n ClUBCM. The American Tract Society is ciron lating religious pamphlets in 246 lan guages. The New English Wesleyan Confer ence minutes show that that body has 509.347 members, 54,489 on trial, and 2.124 ministers, with 299 on trial, aad 941 supernumeraries. In the high school of Dedham, Mass., the experiment is being made of using daily newspapers instead of text books in the reading class. The princi pal thinks that the plan is successful. Miss Emily Smith, of Provincatown, a graduate at the Boston School of Ora tory, is to take charge of the Depart ment of elocution and oratory in a col lege of music at Cincinnati, O. In Rochester. N. Y., the Board of Education has ordered the study of "in tellectual arithmetic" to be dropped from the third grade of the school aad ' some text-book on language and compo sition to be substituted. The' new plan of synod organization in the Presbyterian 'Church, making each synod coextensive with the State. has proved a failure in New York, fot the reason that il was overloaded with delegates who had a legal right to bi present. A''. Y. Times. The Interior laments that the prac tice of memorizing the Scriptures has pas sed away from the Sabbath-schools, and it is now a rare thing to find Sunday-school teachers who can recite from memory a single chapter in the life of Christ, or even one of the Plalms. The Rev. A. D. Mayo, reports that as fast as education lays its hand upon the Southern children, black or white, they begin to draw near to each other, and that there is no doubt that at a time not very far distant they will dwell together in unity. The present attitude of the higher classes is favorable to this change. Mr. Mayo said that although many of the children to whom he spoke, were descendants of the leaders in the Confederacy, he found the former free from the bias of their fathers. Miss Rebecca Husey died as long ago as 1714, and by her will bequeathed a sum of 1,000 for, as she quaintly ex pressed it, "the redemption of slaves, if it may be effected, or else to the ease ment of their slavery." The fund was allowed to accumulate until 1863. when it amounted to the large sum of 23.481, and it was then decided that the princi pal should be kept intact, and the annual interest equally divided between St He lena and Lagos, to be expended for the benefit of the slave class. The trustees at Lagos allowed their share to accumu late until they could establish an insti tution for the industrial training of boys rescued from slavery, aud such a school has just been opened, 170 years having elapsed since the bequest was made. A steamer whose hull and machin ery weigh only six tons has been built for the British Baptist Society, who intend it for services in the upppcr regions of the Congo. It is appropriately named " Peace.' Many ingenious devices have been resorted to in its construction, with a view to good speed, very light draught and capability of being transported over land. The boat, built iu seven water tight compartments, can be taken to pieces, aud tin; total number of pieces, neither of which will be too heavy for a mau to carry, number 800. It will be sent to the mouth of the Congo, aud there 'the pieces will be carried by 800 men a distance of 300 miles up to Stanley pool, where the boat will be reconstructed. It is a gift to the missionary society from Mr. Robert Arthington. of Leeds. AT. Y. Examiner. PUMJENT P1U K;R VPHS. Amusic-box can be shut up when its music is not wanted. The discordant singer cannot be treated in the same way. Chicaqo Journal. A Vermont debating society will tackle the question. " Which is the most fun to see a man try to thread a neidle or a woman try to drive a nail?" Boston Post. It was the last act of a new comedy, and the house, half empty at the start, was nearly deserted, only a few dead heads remaining. The curtain went up and the leading man began with his line: "Are we alone?" The utility man glanced over the auditorium and an swered in tragic tones: " We are." For the first and last time the audience laughed. Boston Star. Josh Hillings recently said: "Humor must be based on truth. " It is because a thing is ludicrous and at the same time true to nature that people laugh at it Now, Artemus Ward was not a humorist but he was the drollest mau the country has ever produced. Writers who make their effects by hyperbole are not hu morists. Genuine humor lasts forever, because it is true. You soou tire of hear ing a man tell stupendous lies." A Detroit grocer is trying to make his friends believe that while he was stooping over some butter he was knocked senseless and robbed. An intelligent jury will decide whether the suspected parties did the knocking down or whether the smell of the butter was the guilty party. Aud as to robbery, there is butter sold in Detroit that no living man can rob of a single scent Pittsburgh Telegraph. When we see the young man of the period, with the cut-away coat, his ears sheltered from the cold north wind blasts by the broad expanse of collar, his two watch chains, but no watch, his pointed shoes and intellectual eyeglass, his tootsey-wootsey cane and pan-cake hat. we realize that the $84,000,000 annually expended in educating the American youth is little enough. lioche&tcr (N. Y.) Post-Erpress. "Mamma, dear," said a girl. Justin the flush of early womanhood, "I have something to tell you. George has pro- Fosed andl have accepted." "My child, cannot think of you disgracing your self. George is not a suitable match for you. Besides, this would make him one of the family and he would pay no more board." Thus will be seen the incom patibility of a boarding-house girl falling in love with one of the boarders. "Teach your daughter how to cook," exclaims the Philadelphia Rerord. That is all very nico in theory, but experience has shown that they will waste about $5,000 worth of provisions while learn ing, and then, after mastering the art. will get married and cook for some other fellow, leaving you to wrestle with the uew Biddy. Better let the other fellow do the teaching and bear the expense and dyspepsia. Chicago Times. The New Haven Register says that on the evening of the graduating exer cises of Mr. Waller's class in the New London high school, "a terrific thunder storm burst forth at the very moment young Waller stopped upon the stage to deliver his declamation on Spartecus; but undaunted by the peals the young graduate delivered his effort, and was heard far above the elements." 'Those who were present," we are told, "testify to the grandeur and suggestiveness of the scare'-evidently meaning "the scene.' Hartford Evening Post.