" Pt-L - .v THE JOTJKNAL. ISSUED KVKKY WEDNEtsDAY, II. Iv. TURNER & CO., Proprietors and Publisher. 2ST OFFICE Eleventh St., vp tairs in Journal Building. TKKMS: Per year ... Six inonths Three months Single copies . i 65 BUSINESS CARDS. DENTAL PARLOR. On Tltirteaith St., and Nebraska Ave., over Friedhofs store. 23TOflicc hours, 8 to 12 a. in.; 1 to 5 p.m. Olla Ashbacgh. Dentist. lOKJIIil'lIJN SULLIVAN, A TTORXEYS-A I -LA W, Up-stair in Kluck ISuilding, 11th street, Above the New bank. tt .i. m;iso3i, XOTARY PUBLIC. litli Strn-t.i .loormi-fct or Hammond Hops, Columbus, Neb. 4l-y rpiilJX,Oi.:I!0VKiW. . SURGEOX DENTISTS, C2-Oflice iu Mitchell Bloek, Coliun hu, Nebraska. ll-" p KKK Jt KKEUKR, A TTORXEYS A T LA W, Onice on Olive St.. Columbus, Nebraska. Mf C. O. A. IirLLIIOltfeT, A.Mn M.I)., OMEOI'A Till C I'll YS1 CI AN, 3-Two Blocks south of Court House. Telephone communication. -ly V. A. MACKEN. DKAI.KK IK Wines, Liquors, Cigars, Porters, Ales, etc., etc. Olive Street, next to First National Bank. TlfcALIJSTER BROS., A TTOHXE YS A T LA W, Ollice up-stairs in McAllister's build ing. 11th St. r. A. McAllister, Notary ing Public J . M. M ACFAHLAN1. K. COW DKRV, Ati:rs7 as J Hetiry PsW c. C:l!i:isr. LAW AND COLLECTION OFFICE OK MACFARLAND & COWDBR?, Columbus, : : : Nebraska. G i:o. 3t. 1KKIIY, PAIXTEll. J3r'arri:ige, house and sign painting, glMzing, paper banging, kaNomining, etc. done to order. Shop on 13th St., opposite Engine House, Columbus, Neb. 10-y F i.iti;s in., Ilth St., opposite LindellHotel. SelU Harness, Saddles, Collars, Whips, Blankets. Currv Comb, Brushes, trunks, valises. Iiuggv'tops, cushions, carriage trimmings, Ac., at the lowest possible prices. Repairs pn niptly attended to. .IOII. CTASKER, Heal Estate A.gent, Genoa, Nance Co., Neb. WILD LANDS and improved farms for sale. Correspondence solicit ed. Ollice in Young's building, up-stairs. rK)-y G W.CLAKK, LAND AND INSURANCE AGENT, HUM PUR EX, NEB It. His lands comprise some line tracts in the Shell Creek Valley, and the north ern portion of Ph'tte county. Taxes paid for non-residents. Satisfaction guaranteed. -0 y pOLUmtllK PACKHO CO., COLUMBUS, - XEB., Packers and Dealers in all kinds of Hog product, cash paid for Live or Dead Hogs or grease. Directors. R. H Henry, Prest.; John "Wiggins, See. aud Treas.; L. Gerrard, S. Corv. N OTICE TO TEACHERS. J. E. Moncrief, Co. Supt., "Will be in his office at the Court House on the third Saturday of each month for the purpose of examining: applicants for teacher's certificates, ana for the transaction of any other business pertaining to schools. H"7-y TAMER SALMON, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. Plans and estimates supplied for either frame or brick buildings. Good work guaranteed. Shop on lath sstrect, near St. Paul Lumber Yard, Columbus, Ne- braska 52 Ctno. J. WAGNER, Livery and Feed Stable. Is prepared to furnish the public w;tb good teams, buggies and carriages for all occasions, especially for funerals. Alo conducts a sale stable. 44 D.T. Martyx, M. D. T. Schuo, M. D., Deutscher Art:.) Drs. MABTYN & SCHUG, U. S. Examining Surgeons, Local Surgeons. Union Pacific and O., N.iB. H.ILR's. COLUMBUS, - NEBRASKA. C2-vol-xiii-y JS. MURDOCH & SON, Carpenters and Contractors. Havehadan extended experience, and will guarantee satisfaction in work. All kinds of repairing done on short notice. Our motto is, Good work and fair prices. Call and give us an oppor tunitytoestimateforyou. 2TShop on 13th St one door west of Friedhof & Co'e. store, Columbus. Nebr. 483-t "Dl?TC!TnTQ to ALL. Soldiers that X JilJNOlUiNOwere disabled by woundi, disease, accident or otherwise, widows, mothers and fathers of soldiers dying in the service or afterwards, from disease which originated while in the ser vice, are entitled'to a pension. New and honorable discharges obtained for sol diers. iBcreajte of Peanleaut ob tained at any time when the disabilitv -warrants it. All soldiers who were rated too low are entitled to an increase of pen ioB. Rejected and abandoned claims a ipecialtv. Circulars free. Address, with stamp, M. V. TIERNE Y, Box 485, Wash XKOTOX, D. C. 45-12ct Sfo VOL. XIV.-NO. 12. COLUMBUS STATE BANK! 2s::U3rit3 "Urrr4 a Siti aal Tuair HaUt. COLUMBUS, NEB. CASH CAPITAL, . $50,000 DIKECTOUS: Lkandkk (Jerkauij, Pres'i. Geo. W. IIulst, Vice Pres't. Julius A. Reed. Edward A. Gkbbaud. Abxer Tuknkr, Cashier. Bamk of Deposit, OIkcohsu smd Exchaace. ejollectlvms Promptly Made ob all PoIatH. Pay lattereMt ea Time Deposit-. SM DREBERT & BRIG6LE, BANKEES! HUMPHREY, NEBRASKA. USTPrompt attention given to Col lections. jSTInsurance, Real Estate, Loan, etc. 5 JOHN HEITKEMPER, Eleventh Street, opposite the Lindell Hotel, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA, Has on hand a rull assortment of GROCERIES! PROVISIONS. CROCKERY & GLASSWARE, Pipes, Cigars and Tobacco. Highest price paid for Country Produce. Ooods delivered in city. GIVE ME A CALL! JOII HEITKEMPER. 31-y LOUIS SCHREIBER, Hi All kinds of Repairing done on Short Notice. Buggies, Wag ons, etc., made to order, and all work Guar anteed. Alto sell the world-famous Walter A. Wood Mowers. Eeapers, Combin ed Machines, Harvesters, and Self-binders the best made. SShop opposite the "Tattersall." Ol ive St., COLUMBUS. 2-6m-c H. LITERS & CO, BLACKSMITHS AND "Wagon 3iilders5 Ntw Itrlrk Shop opposite Hetatz's Drug Store. ALL KINDS OF WOOD AND IRON WORK ON WAGONS AND BUGGIES DONE ON SHORT NOTICE. Eleventh Street, Columbus, Nebraska. NEBEASKA HOUSE, S. J. MARMOT, Prop'r. Nebraska Ave., South of Depot, COLUMBUS, N EB. A new house, newly furnished. Good accommodations. Board by day or week at reasonable rates. tSTSctm a Flrt-Clas Table. Meals, 25 Cts. Lodgings 25 Cts. 38-2tf WISE people are always on the lookout for chances to increase their earnings, and in time become wealthy; those who do not improve their opportunities remain in poverty. AVe offer a great chance to make money. "We want many men, women, boys and girls to work for us right in their own localities Anv one can do the work properly from the" first start. The ''Usiness will pay more than ten times ordinary wages. Ex pensive outfit furnished. No one who engages fails to make money rapidly. You can devote your whole time to the work, or only your spare moments. Full infor mation and all that is needed sent free. Address Stixson & Co.. Portland, Maine. Our lanre GARDEN CSUIDEdeacribing Cole's ree All. we oner tbe IMtesl nov elties in SEED POTATOES. Corn. Ooau and Wheat, ;and the Best Collection ofTfegetableV "Flovyer, Grass and . Tree COLE JCIJ UI1UK ia ICIKU. , AUU1CH KO., Seetfaaaea, PEL- LA, IOWA. 45-eow-4p BlacMMWapNaxer FIRST National Bank! COLU iX7S, IfEB. Authorized Capital, - - 8250,000 Cash Capital, - - 50000 OFFICERS And directors. A. ANDERSON. Pres't. SAM'L C. SMITH. Vice Pres't. O. T. ItOEN, Cashier. .1. EARLY, ROBERT l!l!LIG. HERMAN OEHLRICII. AV. A. MCALLISTER. (!. ANDERSON, 1'. ANDERSON. Foreign and Inland Exchange, Passage Tickets, Beal Estate, Loan ana Insurance. . ... -23.voM3.ly BECKER & WELCH, PROPRIETORS OF SHELL CREEK MILLS. MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLE SALE DEALERS IN FLOUR AND MEAL. OFFICE. COLUMBUS, XEB. SPEICE & NORTH, General Agents for the Sale of REAL ESTATE. Union Pacific, and Midland Pacific R. R. Lands for sale at from $3.00 to $10.00 per acre for cash, or on five 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 residenco lots in the city. We keep a complete abstract of title to all real es tate in Pltte County. 621 COLUMBUS. W EB. LANDS, FARMS, AND- CLTT PROPERTY FOR SALE, AT THE Union Pacfic Land Office, On Long Time and low rale of Interest. All wishing to buy Rail Road Lands or Improved Farms will find it to their advantage to call at the U. P. Land Office before lookin elsewhere as I make a specialty of buying and selling lauds 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. 1 am prepared to make final proor for all parties wishing to get a patent for their homesteads. D3-Henry Cordes, Clerk, writes and speaks German. SAMUEL C. SMITH, gt. U. P. Land Department, 021-y COLUMBUS, NEB. WM. BECKER, PRALKR IN ALL KINDS OF FAMILY GROCERIES! I KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND A WKLL SELECTED S I'OCK. Teas, Coffees, Sugar, Syrups, Dried and Canned Fruits, and other Staples a Specialty. Goods Delivered Free o aay part ef Ike City. 1 AM ALSO AGENT FOR THE CEL EBRATED COQUIIXARD Farm and Spring Wagons, of which I keep a constant supply on hand, but few their equal. In style and quality, scond to none. CALL AMD LEARN PRICES. Cor. Thirteenth and K Streets, near A. &X. Depot. HENRY G-ASS, TJ3STJ3ERTAK-ER ! COFFINS AND METALLIC CASES XSV DKALKR IN Furniture, Chairs, Bedstecds. Bu reau Tables, Safes. Lounges. &c.. Picture Frames and Mouldings. 3T Repairing of all kinds of Upholstery Ooods. 6-tf COLTJMBUS. NEB. O. O. STT A "NnSTQNF, MANUFACTURES OF Tin and Sheet-Iron Ware ! Job-Work, Eoofine and Gutter ing a Specialty. tSTShop on Eleventh Street, opposite Heintz's Drug Store. 46-y ipMR5?Siiv:'rrijJk fulumlms COLUMBUS, NEB., WEDNESDAY. JULY 18, 1888. THE OLD CHURCH BELL. Born of tbe metal and the tire. They bore me from my raffing sire. And made me of tbe city's choir Which sings In free air only; And here since then I've patient nunc, Silent, untouched: but, beins swung-, Givlnjr my voice with iron tongue Alone, but never lonely. The hermit of the belfry here. Celled In the upper atmosphere, I speak in accents stern und clear To all the listening people; With none my speech to check or mar, Sending my utterances near and far. With sonorous clanp and sudden jar, I shako tbe slender steeple. 1 rinjf the chimes for the bridal day: I toll when the dead ure borne away: I clan? when the red names rise and play On crackling roof and rafter: I tell the hours for the steady clock; I call to prayers the pastor's flock; And buck and forth in my work I rock. And sink to silence alter. Here by myself in belfry hiph. Peeping through bars at earth and sky. And mocking the breezes sweeping by. And back their kisses flinging; Ihlrae for-amlles, I toll for tears, I herald news and hopes and feara. As I have done for many years. And never tire of ringing. Prom place of vantage, looking down On yellow lights and shadows brown Which glint and tint the busy town With hues that gleam and quiver, I see within the streets below The human currents crosswise flow. Eddying, surging to and fro. An ever-living river. And when the twilight slowly crawls O'er slated roofs und bricken walls. And darkness on the city Tails. And dews the flags besprinkle, I watch the gloom around me creep. So dense the silence, dense and deep. The very highways seem to sleep. But for the gaslights' twinkle. Or day or night there meet my gats The sloping roofs, the crowded way, Tbe meshes of a dreary maze Where men are ever wending; One day a rest for them may see One day in seven; but as for mo. No time from call of duty free. My toil is never-ending. I chime for birth or bridal train; I toll when souls have burst their chain; I clang when fire its ruddy rain From clouds of smoke is flinging; I chime for smiles, I toll for tears, 1 herald news and hopes and fears. And so shall do for many years. And never tiro of ringing. Tliomas Dunn English, in .V. Y. Ltiger. STICK TO THE FARM. An Open Letter to a Farmer's Boy. My Deak James: You ask me for some advice as to your future work in life. You say that you are dissatisfied with the prospect of being a hard-working farmer all your days, but at the same time you do "not consider yourself a genius, and do not expect to become a Stewart or a Vanderbilt, or to acquire a vast fortune by speculation. You ex pect to work for your living; but you think there may be some pursuit which would be equally remunerative and not so laborious and monotonous as the farmer s. You ask if it would not be better for you to become a " first-class mechanic'' than to be a farmer. This is an important question, not alone to you, but to many other boys who take a serious view of life; whose common sense gives them a fairly cor rect estimate of their own powers and capabilities, and who wish to learn a business for which they are adapted, which will give them fair wages, a rea sonable amount of leisure, and a re spectable position in life. Now, it is a curious fact that workers in almost ever' branch of industry take a gloomy view" of their own business, think almost everybody else is better off than they are, and generally try to dis courage others from entering their vo cation. The farmer and mechanic are about equally ready to say: "Our busi ness is going to the dogs. If I were a young man I should learn something else.'" Sometimes they do this from the selfish desire to keep down the supply of workers in their own line, in order that the demand for them may be great er; sometimes from the habit of judging other occupations by the standard of their most successful men. But the fact remains, in spite of this almost universal disparagement of their owu pursuits among workmgmen, that some occupations are more, some less, desirable than others; and I shall try to give a few reasons for thinking that a Farmer's boy, unless he has a decided bent for mechanical pursuits, such as will quickly take him into that "upper story" where there is always plenty of room and recompense, had better " stick to the farm." First, the farmer has the priceless boon of independence. He is his own employer. He comes and goes when he pleases, not when another man pleases. He is responsible to no one but himself. He is captain on his own ship. No matter if he only has a pota to patch from which to get "his living, he is master of that potato patch; his rule there is none to dispute in his workshop. His prosperity depends on his own thrift and enterprise, not upon thepros- fi cntv and liberality of an employer. le asks no man what he shall do or how he shall do it, except as a matter of advice. He "cares no . iore for Lord James Douglas than Lord James Doug las cares for him." He is a man among men, a sovereign in his own domain. Tho man who owns and cultivates his little piece of ground can snap his fingers at Mr. Lofty, and sit on his fence with his hands in his pockets when the Great Mogul goes by; tor he is getting his liv ing :il ursi nanu, ami neeu asK. uu iii vors of anyon. The average mechanic, on the other hand, is little more than a hired serf while he remains a mechanic; he surrenders his individual liberty to his employer for his wages, and works through another man's brains; he is an automaton manipulated by the golden wires of capital. He learns to gauge his work by what is required of him, not by the standard of intelligent and con scientious service. Unless he is an ex ceptional case, his self-respect is un dermined by the temptation to " loaf' while the " boss" is not looking, and to work industriously under his eye. He becomes a school-boy instead of a man; learns to look furtively and fearfully at his employer, and bridles his manhood through the necessity of pleasing him or losing his work. The mechanic is a subordinate in his department; the farmer is chief ofiieer in his; and it is better to be captain of a canal-boat and preserve your independence, than to be second-mate on the Great Eastern and have no mind of your own. Secondly, the farmer has health; or the means of getting it free of cost if he does not possess it. His business as sures him, is larger measure than al most any other, nature's grand - con servers "of health air and exercise. These are better tonics than any which go into people's stomachs. City pa tients get them after paying for a doc tor's prescription, but "to the farmer they come "as free as air." Better than any one else the farmer can com bine business and the hygicnisl's golden rule: "Take the open air the more you take tbe better: Follow nature's laws to the very-letter; Let the doctors go to the Bay of Biscay, Let aloae tae gin, the brandy and tae waiaky Freely exercise, keep your spirit cheerful. uet no areaa n wcaneH ever nuuee you tearful; Eat the simplest food, drink the pure cold water. Then you will be well or at loastyou ought to." The farmer is free from' many of the temptations which beset workingmen whose occupations bring many men into close association. Tne seductions of the dram-shop and of fast society do not appeal to him as they do to the townsman. He can choose his asso ciates instead of having them forced upon him. He is not compelled to lis ten to the idle story or the profitless gossip if he does not choose to hear it. Statistics show that farmers live longer than men in any other pursuit except Washington's body-servants. The farm er can look forward to an earthly ex istence longer by several years than that of the black'smith, the carpenter, the machinist, the mason, the printer, or any other artisan, and as long as that of the average professional man. Third, the farmer has the means of 'obtaining' mental cnltnre if he has the will. The dissatisfaction with which many farmers and farmers' boys look upon their lot in life comes from their having too much hard work and too little spare time. They have not yet learned to adapt themselves to the mod orn ten-hour law of labor. They toil fourteen or sixteen hours a day. and come home from their work utterly ex hausted and fit for nothing but supper and bed. They feel discouraged and disheartened at such a prospect through life Overwork is the thief that steals the farmers' happiness. But it ought not to be so. A farm can be made to nay on the ten-hour plan. I have in mind a farmer who makes his farm pay a good dividend, takes an active interest in the world's work, has a fair library, keeps abreast of the thought of the age, spends his evenings in reading and writing, is teaching liis sons the value of study and work combined, and does all this on ten hours' daily work. It is not the amount of labor that we put into a thing that determines the re sult, it is the intelligence. The King of Spain, you have no doubt read, spent a day in trying to stand an eg"; on end; Columbus "did it for him in a second. An hour spent in thinking out a new way will often accomplish more than fifteen spent in working in the old way. Farming requires enter prise and thought quite as much as any other business: and fresh plans cannot come from a weary brain. Ten hours spent in work and two hours spent in study, with a mind quickened by mod erate physical exercise instead of ex hausted "by over-exertion, will achieve vastly more than twelve hours of un ceasing manual labor. Make no mis take. When a farm is managed in this way the farmer can devote his evenings to study and to rational enjoyment far more effectively than the mechanic, for he is isolated from the distractions which usually surround the latter. Much of the farmer's work, too, does not re quire the constant straining of the atten tion which many mechanical pursuits demand, and he has opportuuity for re flection while promoting his business in terests. So, my boy, if you wish to be manly, self-reliant and independent; if you wish to be your own employer and your own master; if you wish to make a fair liv iug independently of another's caprice; if you wish to lay a solid foundation of health on which to build your career; if you wish to avoid the temptations into which so many artisans sink year after year; if you wish to elevate your mind, 'broaden "your sympathies, and deepen your understanding by study, reflection and association with those who will help, not hinder, you in these things; in a word, if you wish to be " Healthy, wealthy and wise," my advice to you is, Stick to the farm. II. H. M., in Christian Union. How Sponges are Gathered. The negro sponge-fishers who ply their trade here in the Bahamas are a race of seamen not too regular in hab its or morals, and living a sadly monot onous life of exposure and privation. Their voyages to the sponge fisheries last each for six weeks, during which thev live crowded on board their craft unifer conditions of hardship which, in a clime less salubrious, would be fatal to health and life. The sponge firms "find" for them the boats, supplies and equipment which they use on their six weeks trip. The sponge bottoms most sought at this time are on the coral beds at the south side of Eleuthcra Island, fifty miles east of Nassau. With a good wind the fisheries are reached in eight or ten hours from this port. Then the real toil begins. Lying on his chest along the boat's deck, the fisher with his water-glass a pane set in a box fitted with handles looks down forty feet into the clear depths. With ono hand he grasps and sinks a slender pole, sometimes fifty feet in length, fitted at the end with a double hook. The sponge, once discovered, the hook is deftly inserted at the rocky base, and by a sudden jerk the sponge is detached to be brought up on deck. This curt description of what seems tho 6imple work of sponge-fishing gives no idea of the real skill and exertion needed. The eye of tho fisher has to be trained by long experience to peer into the sea and tell the commercially valuable sponges from those that are worthless. He must have a deft hand to manage the swaying hook forty feet down so as to detach the sponge with out a tear. Above all, while doing this with one hand, he must manipulate with the other the water glass xs the waves sway it sideways and up or down. The strain on eye and body is most in tense, to say nothing of the cramped position aud exposure to wind and wet which first and last make almost every sponge-fisher a victim of acute rheu matism. Yet with all his arduous toil, a faithful sponge-fisher earns no more than $15 a mouth besides his "keep" on the boat, which barely de.-crves the name of existenee. All the Bahama waters abound in sponges of great variety, but many of them worthless for the market. Those that are good for nothing else are often most beautiful curiosities. They take most wonderful and striking shapes now a cup, now an old-fashioned drinking-horn, anon a great bunch of mossy, cup-shaped growths, and frequently foli ated, like the treo-coral. A cup-shaped sponge found some years ago in Baha ma waters, and said to be the second largest in the world, measured seven feet in circumference, and its walls from four to six inches in thickness. Up to two or three years ago the Bahama fish eries showed signs of exhaustion; but the discovery of the Elcuthera bottoms has proved a godsend to the fishermen and are likely to supply the markets foi some years to come at least. Cor. X. Y. Evening Post. A California Board of Supervisori appropriated a sum to purchase a wood en leg for a citizen and charged tho amount to "permanent repairs and im- jrovementa." fmtttpl Mlaes and Counter-MIaes at SebtitopoL The information gained by the Rus sian Comcaander-in-Chief on the subject of the mines dug by the allied armies had been sent to him by a Prussian offi cer living at Paris, where a lithographic plan of them had appeared in a shop window. This was at first supposed to be a mere ru-v Je guerre of the allies for the purpose ot misleading the defenders of Sebustopol and inducing them to dig counter-mines where there were no mines. A few days later an Italian deserter from the Legiou Etrangere of the French Army arrived at a Russian outpost and was taken to headquarters for examina tion. He stated that he had been work ing in a mine close to one of the bastions, and he described the place as being ex actly where it was represented in the lithographic plan that mines had been dug by the allies. Still, the cautious Russian General would not believe in the possibility of a secretTnilitary opera tion being made known by the publica tion of a plan of it. He supposed that the so-called deserter had been designed ly sent to convince him of the accuracy of that plan, in order to divert his at tention from the real position of the mines which were being dug. The man was therefore taken in the night to one of the trenches, where he was left in the dark and blindfolded. He was soon made prisoner by a French sentry; a re liable Russian scout followed him, and brought back intelligence of his having been shot as soon as he had been recognized as a real deserter. Russian counter-mines were then at once commenced, according to the lithographic plan of the mines of the allies. One night a distant rumbling noise was indistinctly heard at the end of a Russian gallery. On comparing the position with the plan by the assistance of a mariner's compass, it became evident that the sap was approaching one of the enemy's mines, laid down in it as being near the salient angle of one of the Rus sia!! bastions. It was then certain that passages were in process of formation through the same stratum of clay as tho Russians had cut theirs in. The advance of the latter was therefore stopped, and a large chamber was constructed. In It 400 pounds of gunpowder were placed in barrels touching each other and without lids. The end of a long fuse communi cated with one of them. Clay was then filled into the passage, strength ened by transverse scanoldings of thick wood and well beaten down, to act as wadding, through which tho fuso was made to pass. Men were placed on the rampart to watch the third French parallel, and the fuse was set fire to. After a little time something like an earthquake was felt, a smothered roar was heard, and a cloud of smoke rose from the parallel. When it had cleared away men were seen carrying dead bodies from the breach where the smoke had escaped. Eighteen of those mangled victims were counted. On going into the gallery from the fort it was found by the Russian officer of engineers that the wad ding of clay had not been in the least disturbed, and that an aperture had burst into the enemy's sap. Sentries were placed in it to report any sound which they might hear. Three days afterward they announced that digging had again been commenced. The Rus sians then proceeded to remove the wad ding of clay, with the view of getting near enough to the enemy to springother mines against him. The French fired a mine, but it did no harm to the Russians, who met every advance by an opposing passage. Mines and counter-mines were frequently sprung on both sides, with more or less success, and this fighting in the bowels of tho earth resulted finally in the establishment of tho fourth French parallel. Temple Bar. What Island? , The smallest State in the Union has the most trouble with its name. It has nev er been ascertained where, when, or how Rhode Island received its name. Some people think it was given to indicate a resemblance between the island in Nar ragansett Bay on which Newportis sit uated and the Island of Rhodes iu the Mediterranean Sea. Others are sure that the name must have first been applied by Dutch traders to an island in the bay as "Roode Eylandt" (Red Island), so called from the color of its soil. But whatever may have been its origin, we know for a certainty and that is all we do know that in 1U-14 the General Court of the Colony ordered the name Rhode Island to "be substituted for tho Indian name of Aquidneck. Since that time "Little Rhody" has heard the ques tion asked a good manv times, "What island?" Its name has given foreigners strange ideas about "the smallest State in tho Union." Even in Canada, which is not far oft", Rhode Island is but little known. A young man, who lives in Providence, It. I., was once mortified while traveling near Toronto at the ignorance shown of his native State. A Scotch lady, to whom he had mentioned his home, startled him by exclaiming: "Eh, lad, an island is't? Ye donna look like an islander!" Another lady, eager to learn all she could about it, asked: "An' how far from the main land, is it, think?" "It is not an islaud," was the youth's reply. "It is the main land itself. It is a State." "Young man," said the woman, stern ly, "you said Rhode Inland, didn't you? Well", if it is an island, it ts an island; an if it isn't an island, it isn't; an' that's all there is about it! 'Call a spade a spade,' youug man, an' don't stoop to falsehoods." The young man, somewhat discomfit ed, hastened to explain to his severe critic. After a while he succeeded in convincing her of his truthfulness, but not until he had called to his aid several persons acquainted with the geography of "the States." On another occasion, a gentleman asked: "What is the chief employment there, fishing?" Rhode Island, sir?" was the polite re ply, "is one of the New England States." "Ah, indeed! near -Boston, then, is it not?" "Yee, sir: only forty miles distant." And this served to" identify the little State. Some people go fao fur as to call Rhode Island "a suburb of Boston;" and yet Providence alone has a population of one hundred. and sixteen thousand inhab itants. YouiKs Companion. Miss Lillie Wall, of Irwin County, was dangerously ill for several days, and the doctors quietly informed her father, Mr. Jasper Wallr that his daughter could not possibly live. Going to her bedside, and viewing her sadly, the father said: "My darling child, ycu are obliged to die, but I only hope that I may die first" Shortly after he went into con vulsions, and was soon dead, followed three hours later by the death of his daughter. AtlantaOa.) ConttituUo. WHOLE NO. 688. The Boj Who Whistles. He trudged along, -unknowing what hw sought. . And whistled as he went, for want or thought." It was probably a memory of his boy hood time which prompted Dryden when he linked the jingling lines to gether which head this article, for cer tainly no man can read them without at once'eatchiug the whole sentiment of the couplet. Because John Dryden, the poet and dramitist, was buried in Westminister Abbey and lives in history, it is not im probable that Johnny Dryden, the boy, often whistled his way through the lanes of Aldwincklo to confess, on reaching his home, that he had for gotten one of the many most important articles his mother had sent him after. Boj's whistled in the seventeenth cen tury just as they whistle now. In fact whistling has always been and always will-be one of the prerogatives of boy hood, and he whose ability to whistle lives with him to maturity or old ago has always a reserve force with which to blow aside many of the aches and ills of a lifetime. Where is the boy who has not had a dear companion whose face was no more promptly recognized than his whistle? Every boy has a memory of the signal which so often reached his ears, and his alone, from the chum who. knowing that it was against rules and regulations to be out of doors at night, persistently puckered his lips and blew temptation terrible to resist and not always overcome. How many a boy has lived, who. per haps able to whistle in but one fashion, has envied his more accomplished friend who could give the calls in two or threo different ways? What a paragon was the boy who" could perform the act of whistling in all known styles! How we boys used to stare wonder ingly and with admiration as the cham pion whistled with four fingers filling his mouth, with two fingers, with any one finger and even with the thumb ami iu each instance causing a shrill shriek loud enough to be heard half a mile away.. Then with what a patronizing air the champion would sink his skill to indulgence in the ordinary lip-whistle or the almost as common and very sonorous doubled-fist-wIi'Mle. to again jump with bcwilderingbrillianeytothat chef d'ajuvre of sifllemcnt thetongue-and-teeth whistle. It is Mirprising how many are the moods indicated unmistakably by A boy's whistle. There is the whi.tle iu which the head is held erect, the eyes look straight ahead, but at nothing iu particular, the lips show the utmost muscular contraction, the distended cheeks prove total indifference to ap pearances and the noise, a strain most monotonous, because it ends in the wrong place, only to again take up the first note and give a repetition to tho erratic finale over anil over again, totally oblivious to all surroundings. Then there is the disconnected whitle, doubtful, often false, and generally ac companied by a slow pace, a hanging head and a general indication of regret and unwillingness to do anything but whistle. Again there is the boy. often grown to manhood, who does nut know one note from another, yet who insists on whistling constantly, in a hopeless effort to catch a tune which he heard the band play at the county fair. Sharps and flats are alike to him, while measure is wholly unknown and uu thought of. Perhaps the man and his whistle are a bore to a majority of people, but it is bread and meat to him. It is an unconscious sanitary measure, doing much to keep lungs and stomach on good terms with each other. Where is the boy who has not often "whistled aloud to keep his courage up," while busy in the attic at some mischief or slyly in the pantry search ing out the cake box. How many wives and mothers now live -and love their boy's whistling because it re minds them of the time when they used to listen for the whistle of the boy of long ago who now sits over there in the great arm-chair with spectacles on his nose, legs crossed and the heel and toe of the free boot rocking in time to the whistling of the young man wko. having mastered a new operatic aria, is putting on his hat and gloves in the hallway preparatory to going over to lei his sweetheart know of his latest accomplishment. It is only among boys that whistling becomes a fine art. and it is often aston ishing to observe the perfection which some of the artists attain. A hundred boys will attend the production of a new opera, and the next day fifty of those boys will be heard whist ling selections from that opera, each one having chosen the air which most pleased him. In this way have the reputations of song-writers been made. Fritz -Emmett's "Lullaby," Willian Scanlan's " Peek-a-Boo." and many of the old-time Foster melodies are notable examples of popular songs, and the first herald of that popularity were the boys who whistled the airs all over the streets of America. Much of the success of "Pinafore." "The Mascotte," of that oddity "The Turkish Patrol," and of numerous other compo sitions, is directly attributable to the boy who whistles. Detroit Free Press. An Honest Hoy. There were :i dozen of us waiting around the depot at Chattanooga to take the train for Atlanta, and pretty soon a stout, red-faced ami high-tem pered man from Columbus, O., began jawing about the way he had been bled by the waiters at the hotel, and added that there wasn't a single honest nigger south of Mason and Dncon's line. " 1 beg your pardon, but I must differ with you,' remarked a man from South Carolina. " Differ be hanged!" shouted the fat man. " I wouldn t trust one of 'emout of sight with a ten-cent piece." "Oh, you certainly misunderstand them. I'll bet you the cigars that if I give one of 'em a teu dollar bill to get changed he'll return as straight as a string.' " I'll do it. Give your money to that chap by the window!" The gentleman walked over, took a bill from his pocket, and quietly said: "Boy, run uptown and get change fortius." " Yes, sah,' was the reply, as the youth hurried out. Iu about fifteen minutes he returned, walked up to the Carolinian and re turned the bill, and said: " Went all ober, sah, but couldn't git it busted." He was rewarded with a dime, and the Buckeye, after a great deal of puff ing and blowing and wondering over it, paid the cigars. As we boarded the train I asked the winner: " Did you know the boy?" For answer he took the bill from his pocket and unfolded it. It was a ten dollar Confederate note! Cor. Detroit J 'Free Press. KATES OF AlWEMTISINC;. ESTBuainesa and professional cards of five lines or less, per annum, five dollars. 32? For time advertisements, apply at this office. JSJTLegal advertisements at statu rates. ISTFor transient advertising, ses rates on third page. "v J3TA11 advertisements payabl monthly. OF gEXERAL PiTEREST. The moat universal favorite among English statesmen is the blind Pottsmtot General. A girl baby, whose hair at.Jurtk, reached below her waist, is theTatesi Mormon freak of nature. It ia proposed to so change the Mas sachusetts State Constitution that women who are lawyers may be made. Justices of the Peace." Jackfish are very numerous in ths streams in the Riding Mountains, where hundreds are being speared with, pitch forks by the men in the lumber shanties. Chinese historians have been at work for 200 years past, and. yet hare only brought their books dowa to the four teenth century. They don't believe ia skipping anything. The Philadelphia Bulletin thinks there ought to be a grand crop of good living cominaup about this .time, as the result of the grand sowing of good reso lutions during the last six weeks. Two Ohio men played checkers for thirty-eight hours without eating or sleeping, and the game would not nave been broken then had not the wife of one of the players made clubs the trump. Detroit Free Press. Mr. Josiah Quincy writes that in 1820, during one of his visits to Phila delphia, he was struck by a singular ec clesiastical privilege which then existed in that city the right to obstruct tHe streets by chains during the hours of divine service. There is less snow on the Sierra Ne vada Mountains this year than there has been for many years past. Along the line of the Central Pacific Railroad fire trains are employed in wetting down the snow sheds to prevent their catching fire from sparks. A rooster owned by a Virginia farmer has gone oti to live with a flock of wild turkeys. Every morning at day break ho crows, and the farmer, who knows where his rooster is, is thus enabled to go out and kill a wild turkey every day. Such an abuse of hospitality Is worse than human bunko-steering. Prof. J. P. Stelle, of Alabama, is down on what he calls the "carp farce." He thiuks the carp is no better than the buffalo fish. He calls it the "aquatic buzzard," and Bays it is tho "meaneat fish of any waters; a nasty, grisly-fleshed kind of mud-sucker, which digs in the muck and feeds on decaying substances." Connecticutdeinands a law to pro tect railroad brakenien. The Hartford Couraht says: "Nobody doubts the story now going through the newspapers that a railroad Superintendent told an applicant for the place of brakeinan that he had no vacancy then, but somebody would be killed off in a few days. It is too true to be questioned." The Lyons (N. Y.) Press states that a dealer in that village recently shipped two car loads of straw to a firm in Penn Tan, who informed him that every par ticle of that straw would be made into a certain kind of paper, which after being oaked in tobacco juice, would greatly re semble Havana leaf, and be used as such in the manufacture of cigars. Burglars broko into a Cincinnati newspaper-man's bed room, anight or two iiuce. It w:is unlucky for tho inmates A neighboring rooms that the intruders found nothing worth stealing but a per fume bottle in the newspaper-man's apart ment, for from the others were taken money, jewelry, handkerchiefs, hosiery and other proinjrty of varied value. A re'K-rt comes from Montreal, Canada,' that the right of a nun to take off the veil and re-enter society will soon be tried in the law courts there, as tbe opulent friends of a young French Canadian lady are about to apply for a writ of habeas corpus to compel ths mother superior of one of the local con vents to open the doors and allow her to leave. The statue of "Liberty Enlightening the World" will weigh eighty tons and is to be placed on a pedestal 150 feet high. The fear is that the statue will not be able to resist the pressure of the wind. As only $80,000 of the S2."0,000 necessary for the pedestal is collected, there seems to be no prospect- ot their raising either the statue or the wind high enough to do any harm to it Detroit Pott and 'Tribune. Two young men from the rural dis tricts visited a King street, Hamilton, Out, photograph gallery, for the purpose of securing the "shadow ere the sub stance fadf," and they performed their ablutions in a bowl of water while the operator's back was turned. It was a nitrate of silver bath, and they have con cluded that, though the Ethiop may not change his skin, it is not difhcult for a white man to do so. The injudicious use of metaphors has occasionally created great amuse ment both in the old Irish and English Houses of Commons. The other night Mr. Callon, M. P. for Louth, a staunch opponent of the Sunday Closing and Permissive bill, aud personally a great benefactor to the revenue, replying to the Irish Attorney-General said: "The facts relied on by the learned gentleman are very strange. Now, Mr. Speaker, I swallow a gooa deal. "Hear, hear," "Quite true?' "Begorra you can," and roars of laughter. I repeat, I can swal low a great deal ''Hear, hear," and fresh volleys of laughter, but I can't swallow that." A few nights before, in a debate which had to do with the Jews, Baron ds Worms laid just remarked, "We owe much to the Jews," when there came a feeling groan from a well-known member in his back corner, "We do." Some Arablaa Yarns. In the way of serpents, a skipper named Abou Mohammed, son of El Hassan, son of Amr, had a strange experience, ths authenticity of which was vouched for by Ismail, on of Ibrahim, already cited. Running into a creek for shelter during a violent gale, he observed on the follow ing morning, a gigantic serpent, fearful to behold, plunge into the water, traverse the creek, climb the opposite bank, and glide away with startling rapidity. Toward night-fall it returned, but iu movements were then slow and heavy. The same thing happened for five con secutive days. On the sixth the skipper bade some of his men follow the reptile and mark whither it went On their re turn they reported that the snake repaired to a marshy ground completely covered with ivory tusks voided by that devourer of elephants. For several suc cessive days the crew were employed in filling up the ship with ivory, throwing overboard their less valuable cargo. Almost incredible was the value of ths tusks they collected during their twenty days' detention. Another celebrated mariner named Djafar, son of Raahid, spoke of a serpent that entered a bay on the Malabar coast and swallowed a croca dile. The Governor of the place forth with dispatched a body of troops to seize the monster. It took 3,000 men to master and fasten a rope around its neck. It was lixty feet ia length and weighed some iLcusand of pounds. AJltheYtar Rouni.