.svc-"" "S tr ,- - ,-, . .. j sT WL - PE - .. rsk '& KC ;"U5f Vsr- u f-ri-vi fe'v ! Art itifk- R. t- x- v VOLUME XXIV -NUMBER 31. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1893. WHOLE NUMBER 1,227. - - r --' - l&utmd. TBts&-w&MaE&t II II IT " -i- "J'i' bb HI US . ! . .. i- fc- !--; ?r NEBRASKA NEWS. . Vrs. Dora I eterson of Cuming coun lywas last week taken to the insane asylum. . Burglars who blew the safe of the I . Hooper postofticc only secured 33 in cash for their pains. ; . Monroe 1'cuniner of Crab Orchard .. -.is under arrest at-Auburn charged with stealing a learn of horses from a Nema- .Ja county, tromsn. The ticket oftice cf the Missouri . . Pacific depot at Nebraska City was rob- .bed last week and the cash drawer was . " . broken open a'nd rilled. The thieves :-. sccaicJ but littla booty. Twenly-uvo new members were ra- ceivcd.into the Method'st Episcopal - "church at Glenco. These accessions -.were chiefly the result of the meetings '" -Jed by Miss Mae Phillips. ; . Mrs. C. V. Mosher. wife ot the convict, .; returned to her home last week after a "- -protracted stay at her former home in . Illinois. She paid a brief visit to her ."' husband in the county jail at Lincoln. ."" - amnel Manleyand Ilezekiah Elliott, " ,prouincnt fanner? from near Utica, . got into a fight at the H. &. M. depot in :.' steward, resulting in Elliott receiving a .ediiipotind fracture of the left leg near : the ankle. Maltte Loch, driver of a bakery wagon in Nebraska City, was held up r in broad da' light by iwo colored men. Loch showed fight and put h's assail- ants to fight They were afterwards "captured and lodged in jail. "A probably fatal accident befell the three-year-old son of M r. and Mrs. Sam- .."jiel P. II cad ley. who live eight miles southwest of Hca trice. The Loy was riding from the field with his father on .. a load of corn, when heslipped and fell - " under the wheels, which parsed over his abdomen, the wagon being heavily -, loaded. Joseph Hccnan, a loy about 11 years of pgc, was shot at .lackson by .limmic ' . Parley, another boy of the same age. 'The boys were quarreling and the rc . vrtlver in tlie hands of young Farley ..""yrcnt Off by accident, it is supposed. the .:bullct entering just below the left ear ""and fracturing the skull. The attend ' ing surgeon thinks lie will recover. 1'our frame buildings at Wilbcr.occu , "pied by Ed AVickoff, onfectioner; Will . iam Waldorf, clothing: Havel tt Peck, f .merchandise, and L. Libcrman, cloth ing dealer, were destroyed by fire. .- The los aggregates nearly S'-'O.OIO; in surance about $MMH)0; cause unknown. .'JTlic lire was prevented from spreading west' by Waldorf's brick building, " which was onby slightly damaged. The . Wilbcr house, north, was only saved by hard work. m Immense flocks of prairie chickens are drifting into this county from the west, says the Papillion Times, and old timers say their coming presages an early and hard winter. It is recalled ly many that for days prior to the great snow storm in November, 1SGG, Jhyriads of chickens swarmed into the : shelter which this timbered locality af fords, and it is prophesied by many "that the birds have come again in stinctively to our sheltered fields for protection from impending blizzards. A. P. Oilman of Lincoln suicided 03- taking fifteen grains of strychnine. Evidence brought out the fact that(il trian had owned two shares of stock in the Nebraska Savings bank, arid was greatly worried at receiving a notice that an assessment would be made on it soon. It is thought that he brooded over the matter so much that he finally decided 10 commit suicide The de ceased was pos-sessed of considerable money, having between S.".t00 and $G, OOJ out at interest and some property of value. Telcgrapic dispatches from Seattle, Wash., state that Henry Fuhrmah and L. H. drifhth, both former residents of Jfrcmont, have in company withscv , cral others, been indicte.1 b the grand jury as accessory to the defalcation of Henry Krug, Seattle's city treasurer, notwithstading the fact that Fuhrman repaid the money he borrowed from Krug. and put up 525,030 as bondsman for "Krug to help make up the amount of Krug's shortage. It is stated that (.riflith also raised considerable money to reimburse the city. Detectives have been sent over Dodge - county to interview every juror in the 'late Carleton trial, endeavoring to strengthen the grounds for a new trial. " The reasons so far outlined are all statutory, finding fault with theshcriff, . county attornej. jury and even the . court, that its rulings were not accord . Ing to law and precedent. The case wpl be argued at the adjourned term ,- oi court commencing November 13. It is expected that quite a number of affi davits will be filed charging irregular ities anVl indiscretions. The barn of Oswald Uhling, nine - . miles northeast of Hooper, was burned . last week, with its entire contents, comprising nine head of horses, 200 bushels of old corn, hay, farming uten sils, wagon, harness, etc. 1 he loss N estimatcd.atS4.0C0. with no insurance. ". The barn was fired by .lames Nelson. : boy aged 17. in the employ of Mr. Uhling. He was taken to Fremont by " Marshal Crawford of Hooper and lodged in jail. Nelson confessed the crime and was bound over in S1.000 bonds to the district court. The new Sacred Heart Catholic church at Hebron will be dedicated next Sun day. The most prominent who will participate in the dedication exercises will be Kt. Kev. Pishop Ponacum of Lincoln. Kev. .1. 1-1 English of Hast ings, Kev. C. Poll of Crete, Kev. M. Mcrkel of Fairbury, and many others. In addition to the exercises the bishop will administer the sacrament of con firmation to a 1 lass of forty, after Tvhich pontificial high mass will be cel ebrated by the bishop, assisted by four other priests acting as deacons. Mrs. iloka T. Prown, a comely young woman of less than 20 years, is in the county jail at Hastings, on a complaint . sworn out by her husband, Wesley C Prown of Fremont, charging her with .adultery. Chief of Police Wanze made . the arrest at York, and Mrs. Brown "will be given a preliminary hearing. Her husband has not a very enviable reputation, as he was once arrested for beating his wife when he smashed a guitar over her because-she persisted in . playing the instrument in the Salvation army meetings. If Nebraskans would adopt the motto ""Patronize Home Industry," there would be plenty of work for idle men, .and a good home market for raw mate- . rials. A large number of dealers have 'already adopted it. When you buy cn- qaire fox the following brands of Ne braska made goods: Farrell & Co.'s brand of syrups, jellies, preserves and mincemeat; MorseCoe boots and shoes for men, women and children; Consoli dated Coffee Co."s brand of coffee, ex tracts and yeast; Page Soap Cb.'s Silver Leaf and iiorax soap; Preston's self raising bu k wheat and pancake floors; American Piscuit .t Manafacturiag Co. , Omaha, crackers; Omaha Silicon Cos Hard Wall Plaster. Frank Hulier in the -county jail at Lincoln, tried to shuffle off by fft"g BieftRe; -with his susp nders. He was Hncousci.-.-js when cut down. - A largrf.pr?portionof t(ie calls aade 'bdob the -i ar ty organization society in L'r.co u ar or the purpose of secmr ing work rather than charity. O. H. Taylor, a P. & M. Prakeman, living at Lincoln, was cut to pieces a few miles west of that city. A special train was made up and the superinten dent, coroner and undertaker went out and gathered up the remains. Taylor was a single man, 29 years old and his parents reside at Newcastle, Ind. The following mortgage transactions in Dodge county during the month of October are shown by the records in the county clerk's office to be as fol lows: Thirteen farm mortgages filed, S1S.839.33; nineteen farm mortges re leased, 826,930.95. Twenty-four town and city mortgages filed, S31,S01.43; twenty town and city mortgages re leased, 810,713.2::. Hay springs dispit:h says: One of the most destructive prairie fires in the history of this part of the country swept over the central part of the county yesterday. The tire has al ready burned over a strip of territory twenty miles in length and eight miles wide, destroying many houses and barns and hundreds of tons of hay. The f re is still burning and as the wind is high it is impossible to check its pro gress and the amount of damage will depend upon the direction and force of the wind in the next twenty-four hours. The state board of public grounds and buildings were in the city last evening, says the Nebraska City Press, and took a look over the institute for the blind and had a quiet but decisive talk with Professor Ebright about its management The work done by Con tractor Harry Wales was received and approved. The question of the sewer was brought up and it was given out that the sewer would be built. It is to be built along the line laid out by Mr. Ed Evans, which will enable the board to come within the appropriation. Mr. Pierce's es'imate was $3,00, while the slate appropriation was only $3,000. The two negroes named Thomas and Smith, who are charged with making the attempt to hold up a passenger train at Union, admit having boarded the passenger engine, but say their in tention was to steal a 1 ide and not rob bery. The man Thomas U a very sus p cious character, he and another negro having held up a man at Ne braska City a short time ago. These men were seen loitering around Union late Saturday evening. Officials of the Missouri Pacific railway have requested Freight Engineer Morehouse, whom they tried to hold up on his way home, to appear at Nebraska City for the pur pose of identifying the men. Wilson Keynolds, says the Fremont Tribune, has just sold a portion of the hay and grain raised this season on his ranch northwest of the city, which brought him the very comfortable sum of 84,200. The purchasers are Messrs. Wilson & Reid, prominent capitalists and business men of Douglas, Wyo ming, who will feed six thousand head of sheep on the Keynolds' ranch during the winter. They raise their own sheep in Wyoming, making it a permanent business and they come down into l-ff.vpt, where corn and hay is plenty, to fatten them. The sheep will be ship ped from Douglas to Fremont sometime this month and one of the firm will re main here during the winter to see that they are properly cared for. The Louisville Times has the follow ing in its Washington correspondence iegarding two Nebraskans: For many years Senator Plackburn of Kentucky and Senator Manderson of Nebraska have been chums. Whenever a vote is taken in the senate on a political ques tion and Senator Manderson is absent, Plackburn can be depended upon to say, when his name is called, that he is paired with the senior senator from Nebraska. If he were present I would vote yea or nay, as the case might te, and when Plackburn is absent Mander son goes through the same formula. They are associated together on com mittee service and lunch together in the restaurant and swap jokes in the cloak rooms and committee rooms. The fall term of the district court of Dakota county reconvened in Dakota '. ity last week. Judge Sullivan of Co lumbus, upon request of District Judge Xorris, presiding. The court room was rowded to its standing capacity when the case of Dakota county vs. Ex-Treasurer Wilkcnson et al., was called. This is an action brought to recover the sum of S10,H(S2.40 claimed to be due the county from Wilkinson during the term of otlicc ending in January, 1SD0, as reported by Simon Fritzson, an ex pert employed by private parties to in vestigate the treasurer's office follow ing an investigation made by Ehomas .1. Welty in behalf of the county. il Iccnsen sett'ed with the county on the report of Welty arid refuses to comply with the demands of Fritzson and pay his reported deficiency. A Plattsmouth dispatch says: The attempt to lynch the murderers of Mat thew Akcsun, at Plattsmouth, last week struck terror to the heart of Charles W. Mosher, the man who, as president, looted the Capital National bank, of Lincoln, last winter, io es I cape the conflict of authority between I the federal and state courts at Lincoln. Mosher had been hurried to the Cass J county jail at Plattsmouth. The jail is not a strong affair and could not long resist the force of a mob, a fact which was apparent to the bank wreck er. He heard that Pcnwcll and Hill were to be brought here, and he alst heard that they would be taken out and stretched to a couple of telephone poles. This information caused him to weak en, and on bended knees he pleaded te be taken away for fear that a mob might make a mistake and stretch his worthless neck. General Manager Dickinson, of the Union Pacific sa3s that a very conser vative course will be pursued by the Union Pacific in meeting rates, and raising them. "The S3'stem being in ths hands of receivers," said Mr. Dick inson. it will permit us meeting rates that, had we been in the association, would have taken days to put in effect. What the outcome of this whole affair will be it is hard to telL" "There is a rumor abroad that the Union Pacific will not pay salaries for several months," said the reporter. "That is a senseless rumor," responded Mr. Dick inson, 4for not in twenty years has the road been in so excellent a condition to pay salaries as now. The order of the court provides for" the payment of oper ating expenses, and salaries are includ ed in that department. The rumor is like hundreds of others you hear about town, absolutely without foundation.' What might have been a serious shooting affray took place at Smartville, a village eight miles northwest of here, says a Tecumsih dispatch. While un der the influence of liquor. John Price attempted to take the life ef R. S. Col lister. The latter was awakened at his home in Smartville before daylight by Price calling to him. Dressing himself. Collistrr started to open the door to see what Price wanted. The minute Col lister opened the door. Price struck him over the head with a lantern and with the exclamation, "D n yon, I'm go ing to kill you, drew a revolver and filed at Collister. Collister warded the weapon off in time to miss the shot, but the bullet penetrated his clothing. He then knocked Price down, took the 'weapon away from him and proceeded to this city and swore out a warrant : for Price, charging him with aasamlt with intent to kilL "COME BACK, SWEETHEART." "And now, Vera, if that presumptuous Itathrerne dares to show himself! nt oar 'new house, I shall certainly sus pect you of encouraging him," said Mrs. Harvey, a youthful-iooidng widow' with bright brown eyes, and with dimpled checks the tint of peaches which ripen in the sun. "Mamma, if that entirely irreproach able young llathvenie fails to present himself at our new residence, then you certainly may suspect your daughter of meeting hlui elsewhere," Vera re torted, in exact mimicry of her moth er's tone. She was a tall, lovely girL with a flower-like face, as demure as a nuu's, and with large, deep blue eyes, just now scintillating with mischief behind her wondrously long, thick lashes. "I wish you would be serious, Vera," her mother said in a vexed and pet tish tone. "You know very well that I would 'never have undertaken the expense and worry of moving at this season, only I was determined to get out of the Rathvernes' neighborhood." A laugh'like the Warbling of a thrush rippled from Vera'a coral-red lips. "Why, mamma, the Rathvernes are not in the neighborhood. They moved away two months ago," she announced. "Well, I'm sure I hope we shall never see any of them again," Mrs. Ilarvey declared, with energy. "I think we are pretty likely to see one of them, for 1 have promised to be Gower's wife some time," Vera re plied gently. "You shall never be his wife. You shall never marry a son of Ronald Kathverne while I live to prevent it!" avowed the mother, looking aggrieved and angry. Vera wasan obedient and affectlon ato daughter despite her girlish mis chief, and she would do nothing know ingly or willfully wrong. Put now she felt tliat her mother was childish ami unreasonable. The Rarhverne family was cne of the most honored In the city. There had never been an ungenerous deed or unworthy motive imputed to any mem ber of it. Gower was handsome, wealthy, and a favorite in society. "I can't understand why you object to Gower, mamma," Vera said after a little silence. "It is not for you to understand; it is for you to obey," Mrs. Ilarvey re sponded with severity. "You keep old Mr. Rathverne's pict ure in your ivory box, anyhow, even if you do hate him so," said Vera, smiling. Mrs. Harvey's unfaded. pretty feat ures turned crimson. She darted a sudden, almost frightened, glance at her amused daughter. But just then the front door bell rung imperiously, and she seized the oppor tunity to retreat from the room. She returned in a moment, however, and Vera noticed that she appeared greatly disturbed. "Your grandfather Harvey is very ill, and I am wanted at once," she ex plained. "You will be obliged to fin ish the moving without me; and you need not be anxious if I am not home until late." After some necessary instructions and preparations, she provided herself with a latch-key belonging to the new resi dence, and so hastened away. Vera understood housekeeping and its various emergencies, and thus, to superintend the half finished work of the day was to her an agreeable excite ment, rather than a hardship. When the last van had finally trans ferred its load to the new house, when her own and her mother's rooms were made cozy, and when the culinary quar ters were made ready for immediate necessities, she was too gratified with her unwonted achievements to be con scious of much fatigue. When there was no more work to be done for the day she exchanged her dusty working dress for a pretty house gown, and stationed herself in a rocker at one of the dining room windows. She had not sat there long when she heard eager footsteps on the flag ging, and saw a manly figure pause at the bottom of her own steps. Gower Rathverne, her lover, had come, as he intimated he might do. In a moment she joined him, and they strolled away in the dim, hushed twi light, so entirely and rapturously happy In each other's society that they hesi tated to recall the mj-steriotis opposi tion which threatened to sunder them forever in this lower world. "For," Vera said, very firmly "for of course I cannot be your wife until mamma is willing." "Is your own happiness nothing, love? Are you so indifferent to what I must stiff er?" he expostulated. "Oh, If I yield something, then mam ma must yield something, too! She must allow us to see each other just as often as we like," said Vera. Her lover smiled at the flash of girlish spirit. "I wish, my dearest. I could feel as sanguine as you are," he answered. "But I foresee years of pain for us both, and perhaps estrangement in the end. It will be hard for you. love, but it will be harder for me. Consider well, Vera; for if you yield at alL rou must yield in everything." "But a few years will not matter," Vera suggested. "The suspense and uncertainty con tained in those few years will matter very much. I want you now, sweet heart, or at least, the assurance that you will be mine after a reasonable dtlay," Gower protested, with aU a lover's impatience. But, plead or atgue as he might. Vera 'would promise nothing more. The time had passed quickly. They had strolled far away from the house, and they had soon loitered back, to settle themselves on the topmost step of the high stoop, and there await Mrs. Harvey's ccniirg. Vera was grateful that he did re main that night. She was very anxious at her moth er's prolonged absence. "She will be here before midnight unless something has befallen her. And it is almost midnight now," Vera said at last in a tone quaking with nervous fear. Meanwhile something had befallen Mrs. Harvey. It was only a little after eleven o'clock when she turned into her street and ascended the steps of what she sup posed was her new residence. She had no need to use her latch key; the door opened at a touch, show ing that it had not been properly closed. All the lower part of the house was dark. But as she grcped her way up the bread staircase to the next landing, she espied a narrow line of light along the door of the front chamber. The door was ajar, and guided by the light she stepped quickly across the threshold of the room. And there she stopped., motionless, staring with wild eyes at the scene be fore her. The room was a superbly appointed study, and 'before a big carved mahog any .desk ant a handsome, stalwart man. whose black curling hair and rippling length of beard, showed a few streaks of. gleaming silver. "As she paused there, transfixed, he trained a dark, somber face toward her, f and gazed at her piercingly with a fa of melancholy black eyes. The astounded woman would, hate fled shrieking, but she was as incapable of movement as if her feet had bee nailed to the floor; she was as frower less td utter a. sound as if her tongue w3ro paralyzed; she could only stare helplessly at this man whom she had "shunned foi years, and whose pros race stirred within her i pain anu bitterness Intolerable. After the first omitted glaflee, his own countenance expressed naught but kind inquiry. He put aside his book after a moment, and crossed the room to where she stood. "Are you in trouble, Ada is there something I can do for you?" he asked. "Do you think, Ronald Rathverne, that I would .come." to yon In trouble to you, who deserted me long ago iu'tho darkest hour of my life?" she demanded. T never eleserted you. Ada. You would have known that the next day, had you allowed ine an opportunity to explain," he answered quietly. "It is useless to dlscnss the past," she faltered. :i came- in here, thinking it was my own house; I could not see the number, and cverythirg looked the same. I trust you will pardon my mis take. 1 am very sorry' She was half way down the landing, but his masterly hand detained her, and drew her back. "Lef me have one moment, Ada. Or if you will go, permit me to go with you. I suppose your house must be in this row, where each Is exactly like all the others. I am not surprised you should make a mistake with the nearest street lamp half a block away. But it i3 a mistake which I shall bless all the rest of my life, Ada. Oh, my dear little girl of long ago. can you not come back to me again?" He was pleading as a man pleads for what is more than life. And while she listened with eyes downcast, the years seemed to roll back like a bleak mist before the glory of the sun. She was living again, those golden days of youth and love before that dark and tragic hour, when she was deprived of parents and fortune, and when a false friend had persuaded her to believe ill of her lover. And he had been true! He loved her then, and he loved her now. They were a long time In making their way to her own house, which was some half a dozen doors down the same street. And when they finally arrived at the bottom of the high steps they were too much engrossed with each other to im mediately notice the young couple sit ting on a warm Persian rug in the shadow of the massive vestibule pillars. "Great Caesar! if that Isn't dad!" Gower exclaimed in a whisper to his bewildered companion. "Behold, the serpent has charmed the pecking dove the wolf has hypnotized the war-like protector of the Iamb!" "What on earth does it mean?" Vera gasped under her breath. At that instant the gallant elderly lover drew his middle-aged sweetheart into his arms and pressed a verv audi ble kiss upon each of her unfaded cheeks. A sound suspiciously like a giggle floateel down the high steps. Both Mrs. Harvey and her escort glanced quickly toward the vestibule. Gower was smiling rapturously into his darling's lovely, mystified eyes. "It's pretty safe to say that you will neither be constrained to make a mar tyr of yourself, love, nor a victim of me," he breathed ecstatically into the little pink ear close beside him. Then with exacirerated dnlihoratinn he arose to his feet, assumed a conse quential attitude, and looked benignly uuwu upon ine pair Dcncath him. "Come right up," he began in a the atric voice, his elark eyes flashing with boyish fun, "come right up. dad, and receive the filial benediction." Of the two older people, Mrs. Harvey was naturally the most embarrassed. But she underwent her ordeal nobly. 1 have wronged you, Gower, and your dear father most of all. Forgive me, my son," she said to him later. Gower would have forgiven a hundred-fold more with cheerfulness, now that he wris certain he had gained his heart's desire. But it was years afterward before he and his youug wife learned the ex act circumstances under which the elder pair had met and become reconciled on that eventful evening. "And so mamma walked straight into the arms of her lete noir." said Vera, laughing, "I don't wonder they have 1 kont It to themselves so Ions after she actually went into his own house in that fashion." "It was a blessed mistake for us," Vent's happy husband eleclares. Pari Xfeillfwomea. An Inquiry made Into the condition of needlewomen in Paris shows that a workwoman cannot count on earning more than L'CiO francs, or 44 a year, which is about 3s Id a daj The de signers and cutters out of patterns and the fitters, of course, are much more highly paid, receiving in some cases salaries of 000 or 8J0, and per haps even a share of profits. The aver age earnings of the ordinary seamstress maj be put down at a little o-er 2s a day. M. Jules Simon in 1851 made nn inquiry Into the matter, dealing with 101.000 ciiies. and he calculeted the average daily wages as about lOd. There were ameng the women concern ed about 1,000 earning less than Gd a day, and ale-ut GOO whose takings w;ere about 3 fiancs. Ten years ago the average earnings of milliners were val ue el by M. el'Hyirsbonville at over 3 francs a elay, and of ordinary scant stresses at between 21-2 francs and 3 francs. If all trades were taken into account the result was a little lower, as some trades were cruelly underpaid, especially sack making, at which more than 0d a day could not be earned even by sixteen hours' work. Knew the Haail. Harper's Bazar has a story of a little boy who, if he follows his natural bent, will perhaps be heard from by and by as an expert witness In forgery cases. He Is the son of on author who writes a very illegible and very inky hand. The other day a fly fell into his ink well The boy discovered the unhappy insect, rescued it, and dropped it on a sheet of paper, where presently it re covered sufficiently to drag itself about. The boy watched its motions for a while, and then called to his mother. "O mamma," he said, "come here! Here's a ejercated fly. He writes just like papa!" Which la m Reflection f Jones (to intoxicated friend) Good heavens, man, here's your wife! Let's turn back. His -Friend No (bio). She'll never she us. She's looking at her reflection in the windows to see if her hat's (hie) on straight. Vogue. PausilB of Slcron. wan the inrrater et A caustic painting, a method ot bandag oaten Into wool or ivory MADE THE JUDGE LtCTEH fh CkMtCi Maikatte hat - ayeetial Way mi Seearlas Attea ttlra Judge Van Brunt -of New York has 1 habit' which sorely distresses members ot the bar wad appeal1 before him, particularly young men, of talking to his associates on the bench while the lawyers are delivering their speeches. At times this becomes exasperating, but according to the Tribune, the lawyers have not as a rule the temerity to com plain, for they recognize the power of the court, and Judge Van Brunt, with all his estimable qualities, has a manner causing him to be held in dread by most practitioners, who naturally seek to maintain as pleasant relations as possible with the court Mr. Choate was about to make the closing speech in a highly important case recently. Forty minutes had" been allotted him for the purpese. He had scarcely ut tered a dozen words when Judge Van Brunt wheeled around in his chair, And began a discussion with Judge Andrews. Mr. Choate ceased speaking Immediate ly, folded his aims and gazed steadily at the judges, bis handsome face a trifle paler than usual. A hush fell upon the courtroom. Judge Van Brunt, noticing the stillness, turned around and looked inquiringly at the silent advocate. "Your honor," said Mr. Chcate. "I have Just, forty minutes in which to ntakcimyflnal argument I shall not only ueea every second of that time to do it justice, but I shall also need your undivided attention." "And you shall Lave it," promptly responded the judge, at the same time acknowledging the justice of the re buke 'by a faint flesh on his cheeks. It was an exhibition of genuine cour age, but one that was more fully appre ciated by members of the profession than by the laymen who witnessed it Dlas "Set a Thief to Catch n Thief aai Soea Get Rid ef Them. Apropos of the recent train robberies in this country, a Western railroad man suggests to the New Orleans Times Democrat that wc. should adopt the Mexican plan of dealing with them, which proved so effective there. Mexico offers greater advantage over this coun try for train robbing. It Is thinly set tled; the land is cut up with mountains, offering hiding places for the robbers and a safe retreat; its people arc not as advanced in civilization as ours, and there "is a much larger dangerous ele ment' ex-bandits and revolutionists, to whom train robbing would come as a natural trade. The railroads, moreover, are a new institution, and it was natur al to suppose that train robberies would be numerous. During the first exten sion of our railroad system into Mexico they.wcre so frequent that a passenger thought himself lucky to get from the Flo Grande to Mexico without several stoppages from these "knights of the road." Detectives, blood-hounds and other means of sr.ppressing the evil were tried, but with little more success than in this country, when President Diaz, on the old theory of "set a thief to catch a thief hit upon a happy idea of utilizing the bandits r.Ld rail road robbere to protect the roads by organizing them Into a police force known as the rurales or the rural guards. He had some of the men who were suspected of this business sum moned before him, and offered them an opportunity of entering the govern ment service as mounted police, and told them that if they did so he would furnish them with fine uniforms, im proved firearms and the best horses that could be bought But if they did not he would have the soldiers hunt them down. They knew that Diaz was a man of his word, and they entered the government service, and being dare devils, as far as courage Is concerned, and thoroughly acquainted with the ways and methods of the train robbers, to whom they showeel no mercy, they very soon suppressed these roblieries. When a train was held up, the rurales, who knew even mountain recess, never stopped until they had hunted down the last robber. The plan worked splen didly, and there Is to-day less Interrup tion to railroads in Mexico than in this country, although the chances for rob bery are so much better there. Sare ef aa Oflcc. Office seekers, like fishermen like oth er fishermen, perhaps we might say are commonly of a sanguine and pa tient temper. One of the latest exam ples is furnished by the Boston Courier. "Did you see the president about your appointment when you were in Wash ington?" asked Mr. Nagger. "No," said Mr. Noodleman, "but I saw his secretary, and from what he told me I should say 1 was sure to win." "What did he say?" "He said that the president had re marked, when my name was submitted, that I was -persona non grata.' " tWhat's that?" "Why, It's Latin, and means 'no per son greater!' Pretty high praise to come from a president eh?" Too Bad. Edith's grandmother had come from Maine for a visit, says the New York Times, and the young woman she Is abJBOBt ten years old took her into the parlor to show her a lion's head done in crayon. Edith made the picture and is proud of it. Grandmother adjusted her spectacles, amd cased admiringly at the drawing. "You don't know what that Is, craadaa,'' Edith said. "DoM't know what it is!" responded grandmother, a little touched. "Lived on '. farm sixty years and not know a calf's head when I see it!" He Wai Weaderfaar. Winis I was just wondering about the old hen and her little ones. Mamma What were you wondering about them? Willis I was just wondering how the old hen gives them a bath. Milk with dry hands. It is far too common to keep the hanOs and the teats dripping wet with milk. ' It may bva little easier to mflk with wet hands, but it hi a fllthy habit There have been enough tests mad to fnnilal proof that dry corn fodder cam be sfci'i fulb made Into ensilage tar wvttsjc It aa It goes into the silo; Max torn or ire fall of water to ?9B THE YOUJTO PEOPLE. tommasTixo ubadiso for ma BOYS AXD GtRLS. The Fatal Kxeerleace et a Sank aaai-A Mother' Way Kccea- tvleitlctf 111 Palace A Care fer Ftaaaateriatf tiett. Campbell, in his "Indian Jouf naV says that whexi he was on (Jcu Dalryn pie's staff at Trichtnopoll there was a dry well in the garden, which wa A favorite haunt of snakes. One morning he discovered a large cobra-de-capello at the bottom of the well, basking in the sun. He rail to fetch his gun, but mean-abHe some of the native servants pelted the snake with stones end drovi- it into its hole In the brick work. Gen. Campbell sont for the snake charmers to get It out. Two of these wcrtbles having arrived, re lowereel them into the well by moans of a rope. One of them, after perform ing sundry incantations, began to play tt shrill, monotonous ditty upon a pipe ornamented with 6hells, brass rings and beads, while the other stood on one side of the snake's hole, holding a rod fur nished at one end with a noose. At first the snake, which had been considerably annoyed before it took refuge in its hole, was deaf to the notes of the charir.er, but after balf an hour's coistant playing the spell began to operate, and the suake was heard to" move. In a few minutes more Its head was thrrst out, and the horse hair noose was dexterously slipped over It and "drawn tight We hoisted up the men dangling the snake In triumph. They carried it to an open space and released it from the noose. The enraged suake Immediately made a rush at the bjht: nders. putting to flight a crowd of iiatlve wrvants who had assembled to witness the sport The snake-charmer, tapping It on the tall with a switch, induceel it to turn upon himself, at the same time sound ing his pipe. The snake ceiled itself up. raised its head, expar.drel Its hood, and appeared about to strike: but Instead of doing so It remained in the suae position, as If fascinated by the music, darting out its slender, forked tongue, and following with Its head the motion of the man's knee, which he kept moving from side to side Within :t few inches of It as If tempting It to bite. No sooner did the music cense than the snake dashed forward with such fury a3 to require great agility on the part of the man to avoid It, and then immediately the snake ran off as fast as it could go. The sound of the pipe, however, Invariably made It stop, and it remained in an upright position as long as the man continued to play. The charmer now offered to show us bis method of catching snakes. With his left hand he seized the reptile, which was about five fe?ct long, by the point of the tail, slipped his right hand along its body with lightning-like swiftness, and grasping It by the throat with his finger and thumb, held it fast, andforced it to open its jaws and dis play its poisonous fangs. Having now gratlfieel my curiosity, I proposed that the snake shonlel be de stroyed, or at least that Its fangs should be extracted, nn operation easily performed with a pair of forceps: but the snake being a remarkably fine one, the charmer was unwilling to extract Its teeth, as he said the operation some times proved fatal: anu he beggeel so hard to be allowed to keep it as it was that I at last suffered him to put it in a basket and carry it off. After this he frequently brought the snake to die house, still with its fangs entire, as I ascertained by personal Inspection, but so tame that he hand led It freely without fear. But one elay the snake bit the charmer and ended his life. Hard to Manatee. In Mr. Winshaw's "Out of Doors In Tsarland" there is a humorous descrip tion of the author's first experience with snow shoes. These, he explains, were not of the Canadian type, but long, narrow, wooden ones, six or seven feet in length by six inches In width. The foot Is secured by a strap over the Instep and another behind the lieel. The beginner's first attempts are na turally pretty awkward "hopeless and heart breaking." Is Mr. Whlshaw's phrase. He had starteel out on a wolf hunt with several companions, lie says: My plight was pitiable, for this was almost my very first attempt to mani pulate, or rather pedlpulate, these slip pery engines. Gavril and my friends n ere up and away, gliding with easy grace over the smooth surface, as If the thing were as easy as walking. Anx ious to keep up with them, and full of the sense of responsibility awakened by A s instructions as to absolute silence, I, too, endeavored to slide along with grace, but my efforts were only partially successful. A told me afterward that when ever he lookeel round I was "just get ting up." Once, at the bottom of the hillock, he turned to see how I was getting on, and nearly jeopardized the success of the battue by bursting Into a roar of laughter, a catastrophe which he averted only by stuffing the thumb of his huge glove into his mouth. I had Just arrived, breathless, at the top of the hillock, he says, and was evi dently Intending to stop and straighten my shoes before attempting the d-scent. But my shoes had no thought of stop ping even for a moment, and started down the slope on their own account one pointing southwest and the other northeast This state of things was bound to end badly, and the expression in my eyes, A said, was one of anguish and boded catastrophe. The next instant both feet were in the' air, high up. and my head in the snow, after which I rolled the rest of the way down the hill, a confused mass of legs, arms and snow shoes, with occasional visions of a face bear ing an expression ftf agony and alarm quite uncalled for by the circumstances of the case. I believe this to be a distortion of the facts; but I admit that I did have a tumble while going down the hill. Fertltade la SafTerlaar. Our bite war famished many In stances of great heroism and fortitude of wounded soldiers of that time were much better off than those of the Revo lution. A hundred years ago, says a writer In Harper's Young People, the unfortu nate people who came into the bands of the surgeons, generally soldiers or sailors who bad been hurt in action, were forced to undergo the operations necestary to the prolongation of life without taking ether or chloroform, as is now adminlsteied to make the pa tient unconscious and so free from palm attendant upon the operatloB. To Mcure quiet often the patient had to be bj roaea, so aa anuah aa h j might desire to -rince li-was utterly 'ja awe to ao so. uoeaayinj uww would show remarkable fortitude at the crisis of their troubles, but bob ever showed more than a soldier, who,' on the morning after the battle of Yorktown (Oct 19,1781), was brought into the hospital, having been shot im the knee. It waa found necessary to amputate the limb, aad tna surgeon or dered the nurses to bind the man fast preparatory to the operation. "Never!" protested the soldier. "You may tear my heart from my breast, but you shad not bind me! Can you get me a fiddler His request was emplleel with, and he proceeded to time the instrument, after which he Bald. "So. doctor, now you can begin." And he played dur ing the whole of the operation, which lasted forty minutes, without uttering a single false nofe or disturbing bis features In the slightest "Flavin Feel.' ' it U net every man who recognizee the folly of his etourse before it is too late to make amends for bis actions. It was otherwise with the young shoe maker In the following instance. How much better, however, it would have beca had he never entered upon hbj fool ish course at all! This young thoenaker. though an energetic aad industrious workman, fell into the habit of spending much time at a saloon near by. One by one hia customers began to desert him. When his wife remonstrated, with him for so neglecting his work for the saloon, he would carelessly reply, "Oh, I've Just been down a little while playing pool." His little two-year-oldnxiught the refrain, and would often ask, Ts you going down to play fool, papa?' Snathe tried In vain to correct this word. The child persisted in his own pronunciation, and day by day he ac costed his father with, "Has yon been playing fool, papa?" This made a deep Impression on the shoemaker, its he renlizxl that the question was being answered iu the falling off of his cus tomers and the growing wants of the household. He resolved again anel again to quit the pool table, but week ly allowed the passion of play to hold hlni a long time. Finally he foimd himself out of work, out of money and out of flour. Sitting on his bench one afternoon. Idle and despondent, he was he;inl to exclaim, "No work again to-elay! What I'm to do I don't know." "Why, papa," prattled the baby, "can't you run down and play fool some more?" "Oh, hush, you poor child!" groaned his father, shame-stricken. "That's just the trouble; papa has played fool too much nlreatly." But he never pl.tyed It again, and to day his home Is comfortable and happy- A Mother's Way. When the Rev. Horace Bushncll was a boy, he was very desirous of knowing something about music. No one In the family could teach him, however, and his mother, with that divine patience and insight which belongs to mothers in general, found that if the lad was to have his wish at all. it must be through her. She obtaineel a book, and soon taught him all she knew, the scale, the keynote and how to find it and the time of the notes. This was only "book-learning," how ever, and the question was, to adapt it to the use of the voice. Little Horace wanted to sing by note, and that his mother could not teach him. She could sing by car, however, and the two hit upon a species of reverse process; the mother sang familiar tunes, and the boy watched the notes, observing how the Intervals and time ran along, and, as he expresseel It, "soon began almost to sing with ns.' And from singing airs they knew into notes that bore no meaning, they finally learned to sing airs they did not know out of similar notation. The method liad been unlocked, and further progress was easjf. The mother's heart had found out the way. Eccentricities la Pnlace. Tlie king of Slam, who, according to late reports, has had a palace con structed which be can submerge in the sea at will and so live under water whenever he chooses. Is tot the only monarch who has Indulged In eccen tricities of tlds sort! For Instance, history has preserved the memory of the ice palace built by the Russian Empress Anne, who pun ished several of her dainty courtiers by compelling them to pass the night In this great chamber of state, where they were alracst frozen to death. The Czar Paul, ancestor of the pres ent emperor of Russia, const racted a room formed entirely of huge mirrors, where he spent hours walking to and fro In full uniform a singular taste for the ucliest man in Russia. One of the native princes of Java cooled his palace by making a stream fall In a cascade over the gateway; end the Indian despot TIppo Sahib pbced beside his dinner table a life size figure of a tiger devouring an En glish officer, the roar of the beast and the shrieks of the victim being imi tated by hidden machinery. A Care far Stammering A gentleman who stammered from childhood almost up to manhood gives a wry tlnipie r:-n:cly for the misfor tune. He says: "Go into v. room where you will be quiet and alone, get some boo!; th: t v. hi interest but not excite yon and -.it elowu and read two hours aloud to yourself, keeping your fertk together. Do this every two or three days or on- a week if very tiresome alw: y.s taking care to read slowly and dis :nc;ly. moving the lips but not the teeth. Then, when con versing with others, try to speak as slowly and distlnetiy as possible and make up your mind tliat you will not stammer. "The first result was to make my jaws ache that is. while I was read ingand the next to make me feel as If something had leosencd my talking apparatus, fcr I could speak with less difficulty immediately. Tlie change was so great that every one who knew me remarked it I repeated this rem edy every five or six days for a month, and then at longer intervals until cured. HI Reaana. The Sixth Michigan cavalry of the renowned Custer brigade was com manded by a gallant colonel, formerly a member of the Michigan bar. In the early morning of the last day at Gettysburg, while his regiment with others, was in line awaiting orders, the men grew noisy in their conversa tion and laughter. Turning nervously to them the colonel roared out'" "Keep silence there!" Then he addeoVdn an apologetic tone, "Not that I care, but it will sound better.' THE OLD RELIABU M-oBlms - State - Bank 1 ParilikrtettiTiaMDciitni lata Im tot 6tit mm mxj s tnAMfii? : -nom-i BUYS GOOD NOTES fntm in MucftMi UiDD XBKaBD. FwaX B. M. nmaT, flee Pierf. john wTkvmm,Cktm etHUOOn, .W.KUIaTC. L COLUMBUS. NEB., HAS AX A.tlM.izi Capital ! - $500,000 Pai. Ii Capital, - 90,000 OFFICERS. 0. II. SHELDON. Prcs't It P. n. OEHLRIOB. Vice Pre. CLARK GRAY. Caabler. DANIEL SCII RAM, Aaa't Cash DIRECTORS. H. M. Win stow, H. P. 11 . Oratmcw, c. II. Shkldox, w. A. McAixutsb. JOSAS WCLCH, cabl Burnt. STOCKHOLDERS. 9. C. Gbat, J. Hkitrt WcKDmnur. Ubrbard Losau, llKiunr Losikk. olark grav. Geo. W. Gallbt. Daniel Schrak, A. F. II. OataXJOCa. Frank Borer. J. P. Beckjw Estate, Bxbecca Becker.' Bank of deposit; Interest allowed os tlsta deposits; buy and sell exchange on Ualtad States and Kuropo. aseT buy and sell avail able socnrltles. We shall bo pleased to re celTo your business. We solicit your eat ronage. -THE- First National Bank OFFICERS. A. ANDERSON. J. H. GALLET. President. VlcePrea'U O. T. ROEN, Cashier. DIRECTORS. 0. 4JtotM0!t. P. ASDfJflON, JACOB 08X18X5. BXNBZ MAQATZ. JAMlt O. XXfOXK. SUteneat af the Oaaltlaa at the Clase ef B-hIecss Jilj 13, 1893. RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts. f 241,467 57 Real Estate Furniture and Fix tures. .............. J6.10I 91 D. 8. Bonds 15,200 0) Due from other banks.. ...137.878 at Cashonliand .210? 66 59.743 W Total imM36 zjAB-xrrraa. Capital Stock paid In ....I 60.000 00 .... 30.000 0) .... 4.576 00 surplus tuna Undivided profits Circulation ............ .. icposi IS......... .................. . 1300 00 . E3.119 37 Total., eeeeeeee 1333,196 36 LOUIS SCHREIBEfl, All kiids f ReMiriig Irae t. Sfctrt Nttiee. Biggies, Wag- aaaa a4aa aTBaea aVak 4aa Ala!am !l,-l"Vr' axi Giar- an nira aiteei. AIm Mil tke werM-fa-wif Walter A. Wood Meweri, levers, Ceatsia- ed KeCalHM. Ham aid lelf-fcimdors-tko est Bude. Shop on Olive Street, Colnmbna, Nab, roar doors south ot Borowiak's. HENRY GASS, WcJEmz&u RurflL LiBakB-KE-H fcT I BBaTaBaB-laT fl WW UNDERTAKEK ! Cofftas : aad : Metallic : Cases M Repairing of all kinds of Uphol titty Goods. Mf COLTJMBUS. NEBRASKA- -COME T The Jtirnal fir Job Work Mia mTMWl SUFll I fta-teha CUeate. Kev Tea Mm M . -IT. "- i -Jk- JL--JS gjj,.- k e .g?tS. yX -skfci..jr( ite-'.4'xsfc