"-VTi jTJ 'jzy& y - .- - ftrr. C0temte aurnal v J& . ?; -ac, -st V VOLUME XXIV.-NUMBER 35. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1893. WHOLE NUMBER 1,231. . 5 h M- sbbbbw-- - - c S - . --:.- . ? -! - .... fsi.--- . . - -. I 5:-tl.-- ... "' it F'. 'r lijn- v. - .... i"a- - - : - R- - ' JT: ' ass- . . ". : J.--J o -.y. .is. - . &. '--" 0. rt t - j-; ... ri--: w . x- -- " . B- - ft " " - : . ? ;'-"' .'. '"" . -': - -" p -i " . - E-;!i- '-V ' ' P'-.t V" "" -. -J . . ' - S"i NEBRASKA NEWS. Apples bring1 ' Plate. :o cents a peck at North Chadron is having an epidemic of la grippe in mild form. . A revival is in progress among1 the Presbyterians of Xelion. A half dozen cases of diphtheria have "developed at Grand Island. Youtjjj men of Grand Island are about to organize a democratic club. A man named Crawford was jailed ia'Plattsraouth for wife beating. , .The foreign grocery sharks are now doing1 business In Richardson county. Grandma Flinn of Blair has passed the ninetieth mile stone in the journey of life. Paddy Ryan of South Omaha was killed last week by being run over by , the' cars. L L. Alyea has been elected presi dent of the Webster County Agricult ural society. A lodge of Royal Neighbors has been organized at Fairmont with twenty-five charter members. . In the burning of the barn of Eugene Mack of Beatrice, a stallion valued at .$1,500 was consumed. Buffalo Bill donated new uniforms to the band bovs at North Platte. The - entire expense was S400. Jliss Helen Ronton of South Sioux . -City is missing and is supposed to have been drowned while skating. A lodge of Ancient Order of Hiberni ans has been instituted at Albion, with . twenty-six charier members. Tlie big sewer from the state instt .tute for the blind at Nebraska City to the riveihas been completed. I'upils of the Blair schools contri buted liberally on Thanksgiving day in . food and clothing for the poor. "'Possums" are said to inhabit Gage connt7 to quite an extent, but the aui " inal is at home only in Missouri - John T. Colins of Omaha fell down an elevator the other day and was killed. His fail was live stories. . An international convention of brick flayers will be held in Omaha in Janu 'ery. There will be 200 delegates pres ent. Mrs. George Baxter of South Omaha "Miicided by shooting herself in the breast. It was a case of temporary in sanity. The Lyons creamerv divided amon? its patrons during October S1,4Gj.TI, j .the net profits of the factory for the ! month. Charles Thies fell down the stone steps at the Omaha eourt house, re ceiving injuries that proved fatal in a short time. The 14-ycar-old son of II. A. Van Housen of York county had his leg badly broken by a horse falling with and upon him. Lincoln business men ana -;; Ne " braska Telephone company are havj.fj a set-to over rates that shall govern in.. thttnpital city. IrrigJwion meetings are being held regularlyVit Lodge I'ole and an effort is being imfce to work up sentiment in favor of stale aid. Win. .1. Hftghes, an Omaha druggist, was held up by thugs and lost 540. He had about Jus person S200 which the robbers did not find. Frank Biishck, Fred Kosch and Mell jtltlJll. IL- 4tbl.ll wviuq vww ".J , tHe bAKe all LincH vouths, have been bundled I to thaVufcrm school. Article, -of incorporation were c with Secretary of State Allen jV ti,e Nine-Mile anal and KeservftFoompany of Bayardheyennej:oa7Jty. The ponCf complexion of the new Gage county board of supervisors will be twenty-one republicans, six demo crats and three independents. Fire destroyed .1. G. Kockefeller's barn at Grand Island, and two valuable horses were burned to a crisp. The origin of the fire is unknown. The Baptist society of Wayne is the one to join. There hasn't been a death in the membership of the church since it was organized twelve years ago. For making love to one girl and mar rying another, J. It. Tober, cashier of the bank of Cook, Johnson county, is confronted with a $4,f.00 judgment. Because he loaded his gan with such a heavy charge that the breech was blown out, .lim Kalston of Sterling is laid up with two badly disfigured eyes. (tiles Brink, a Gage county farmer, will try irrigation on a large scale next year, and some other farmers in the vicinity will also experiment with ditches. lohn McAleer of Brainard has been found gnilty of embezzlement and will be sentenced on the 9th inst. He bought grain for an Omaha firm and the firm got the worst of it. m Kichardson county farmers have found that sorghum makes valuable food for stock. Two crops can be har vested from one sowing, and it is proof against dry weather. At Monroe a dog belonging to Dan " Marti ey went mad and bit quite a num ber of dogs in that vicinity and then went to Columbus, where it was killed by the chief of police. In view of the threatened reduction of the tariff on hemp product, as out lined by the Wilson bill, the Nebraska Binder Twine company will close down 'and wait until the tariff question is settled. Over thirty feet of the B. & M. bridge near Newark were burned out last week- The engineer saw the bridge burning in time to stop his train before reaching it, and the flames were put out by the crew. William Walsh, jr., a prominent farmer, grain and stocK dealer of Vio let, was driving cattle the other day when his horse fell and pinned him to the earth, breaking his leg1 and injur ing him other ways. A lady of Broken Bow comes out in a card to the public explaining1 that her daughter was suspended from the pub lic schools because she said she saw the professor with his arms around one of 'the female teachers. The large fire-proof and supposed burglar-proof safe was blown open last week in the Doniphan postoffice, and about 100 in cash and $50 in stamps, all registered packages and postal "notes, etc, were taken. A barn on the premises occupied by W. H. Wagner, Beatrice, was burned, involving a total loss with all its con tents, consisting1 of buggies, harness, feed. etc. A stallion worth 91,500, be longing1 to Eugene Mack, was in the barn and burned to death. The total loss wiU reach $2,500. ; Near. Calhoun, WiUiam Woods of Omaha was accidentally killed while out hunting. It appears that Woods stood his shotgun up against a stump. His dog, which was playing1 around in .the snow, ran against the weapon. knocking it to the ground. The gun 'was discharged and the entire charge of shot entered "Woods' side, lolling1 him instantly. Two Missouri farmers went to bed in an Omaha lodging house after blowing out the gas. It took hard work on the part of physicians to save them, -it was on Thanksgiving .day and whea able to talk both men told the doctors that they sere enough had soatetkiac While shoveling coal intoi tender John Haairaacher.the K. C Jt O. watch man at McCool, fell on the edge of the tender and was aerionslv injured in ternally. Rev. E. F. Chester lately died at the home of his daughter, near Geneva He was eighty -seven j-ears old and was one of the first preachers to spread the glad tidings in Fillmore county. .1. F. Albin of the .McCool Record is just recovering from a severe run of typhoid fever. Last summer he was struck by lightning1, then the fever struck him and now he is wondering what will strike him next. While driving horses into a earn William Johnson of Tobi;is. who is working for J. V. Ainsworth. was lacked in the head and nearly killed. His chin was broken, several teeth knocked out and his face badly cut, Herman Braasch, a pioneer of Nor folk, who laid out from a portion of his farm the village of Norfolk, died last week at the ae of 73. He was the pioneer, in 1S6G, of a colony of Germans from Wisconsin, who settled in that re gion. An 18-year-old son of Hon. J. B. Pc poon of Table Rock got his hand caught in the rollers of a stalk cutter one day last week, and in a desperate effort to free himself, pulled the tendons off in his forearm. The doctors amputated the hand at the wrist. William Malone of Ulysses, after an absence of twelve years, 'recently went over to Osceola, where a gentleman, vw noae iace nc nau lorgotten, came up to him and paid him 510 to settle an old S3 account with interest. The debt was only an old harness trade. Fred Blandbaum. residing six miles southwest of Cortland, while adjusting the chain belt, of a corn shcller one day last week, had the misfortune to get his left lsand caught in the chain and so badly crushed that the amputation of the thumb close to the hand was necessary. One of Johnson county's oldest set tlers, Robert Kolib, died at his home in Teoxunstfh last week, aged al years and ." months. He had resided in that city twenty-live "years. He was an early settler in Chicago, locating there in Kv3i; was also a volunteer in the Black hawk war. He leaves a wife and five children. Chief Seavy of Omaiia has received favorable responses from twenty-four chiefs of police and city marshals in Nebraska, to attend the meeting to be lie l m that city. Pecember 13, for the puqiose of perfecting a permanent state organization similar in character to the national organization instituted last year in Chicago. The tenth annual exhibit of th" Ne braska State Poultry association meets in Kearney Januarv 10. 17. IS and l'.t. and the ic-al committer is beginning i t rustle around and get things in read- i mess, the exhibition will b held in tiie old Model rink, which is a large, roomy building, and can be sutiicienily warmed and is in good location for all concerned. y, Mrs. Carl Morton, daughter-in-law of iVie secretary of agriculture, had a nar w escape from a horrible death at efc'nska City. hile she was driving acro-s tile Missouri Pacific railway tracks a froig-lit engine backed down against hjr buggy. The prompt action of a ivstja(j,.rv,.i10 s..ize j thc norv ijy the hv;n.. -n-i i,ni.-.i 1,; f-,,, ,1,.. , tTcTf, alone saved her life -i Mint U1XWC 1IIU1 ilUlU kU Tne stockholders of the defunct runners' and Merchant.' laukof Hol stein filed their answer to the suit brought by the German National bank of Lincoln to t-ecure the piyment of several notes, aggregating tl.H'o, in which they say very plain'y these notes I are forgeries and fraudulent on their j face, being executed by V. M. Hope aftir he had severed his connection with the bank. j W. V. Cummok. manager of the . Kearney cotton mill, has been inter viewed with reference to the effect the proposed reduction in the tariff will have on the mill in that city, and is quoted as saying he does not think any change will be made which will affect the mill or its employes in the least. The mill has found a ready sale for its entire output and there is still a de mand for their goods at regular prices. John M. Thurston, general solicitor for the L'nion Pacific rail way. presented i a petition in the federal court at Omaha asuing that the receivers of the Union Pacific be allowed SI, 500 each per month for their services. They claim that owing to the great amount in volved this salary is only just. If they take the places of the president, comp troller and eastern manager, their sal aries would aggregate S10.003 a year more than the combined salaries of the three. A Washington dispatch says: Mr. A. T. Gatewood of Cozad, who'was the democratic candidate for congress in that district last year, is in the city seeking the registership of the North Plate land office. Mr. Gatewood had an audience with Secretary Smith and Laud Commissioner Lamereaux and he is feeling confident of success. He was given to understand that his endorse ments were strong, and that he had made a favorable impression at the in terior department. While a G-ycar-old son of Dan Leach of Ponca was playing in the yard he fell, running a large sliver into his knee. Mrs. Leach extracted the sliver, as she thought, and dressed the wound. The wound, instead of healing, began to get very sore. A doctor was sum moned, lie probed for the remaining piece of the sliver and could not find it. The knee has now swollen to enormous proportions and it is thought amputa tion will be necessary. The people of Scotts Bluff and Chev enne counties have decided not to be outdone in the matter of irrigation.and last week incorporated the "Nine-Milo Canal and iveservoir company with a capital stock of 510,000, and E. M. Stearns, Thomas Eoberts, Enos Adam son, James O'Halleran, Ewing Hall, B. P. Gentry and Fred Benton as incor porators. They hope to have the canal ready for use by spring, and to irrigate about sixty square miles of the fertile land in these counties. The meeting of the northeastern Ne braska Teachers' association, held in Emerson, was a complete success. About 250 teachers were present, rep resenting eighteen counties. The fea ture of the gathering was an address on "Psychology in the Common Schools," by Superintendent Kratz of Sioux City. In the oratorical contest the medal in the dramatic class was won by Harriet Moore of Wakefield, and the medal in the humorous class was won by Lois Childs of Wayne. A Washington dispatch says: Everv member of the Nebraska delegation in congress, excepting Representatives Me Keighan and Kem, are now in Wash ington. All are eager for the fray. The proceedings in the house, after the receipt of the presidents message, which will be read Monday, will begin quite early with the tariff. A farmer in Dakota county was of fered and refused to take 33 cents per bushel for his wheat Instead he fed it to his hogs-and lately sent a carload of them to Sioux City and sold them at a price that made the wheat fed to them net $1. 00 per bushel. That seems to be the true way to get a big price for SCINTILLATIONS CP WIT. feKiaHT SATI.G3 AJTD ixcinnsTs. ECXOROVi How the Ornctnier Lcarcl the Rm oa for a l'cculinr Circumstance The VMow'd Wail Cause for Coa sratalatloa. The drummer was looking so sad that he attracted the attention of the hotel clerk. "What's the matter?" asked that functionary; "lost a friend or your job?' "No worse," responded the drum mer. "Lost two friends?" queried the sym pathetic, clerk. "So; just thinking of a man I met out here in Adrian last night at sup per." "What did he do to you? Beat you at poker?" "No; asked me a question, and I an swered it by asking another." "Give me the particulars." "Well, it Was this way," and" the drummer showed by his. looks how badly he felt to bring it all up again. "Wc were at supper, and I had been pretty smart and the man had been very quiet " 'Did you ever notice.' he said as In nocently and kindly as a school teach er, 'that over in Wisconsin the people shake the pepper box this way, while those in Indiana hold it fast and pat it on the bottom, this way?' "I had noticed It and told him so. "Tin from Indiana,' he said, knock ing some pepper on his potatoes. " 'Yes,' said I, 'it shows on you.' " 'Do you know.' said he seriously, 'why they do it differently? "'No,' said I; 'why do thev?' 'To get the pepper out,' said he earnestly, and then the gang at the ta ble gave me the laujrh in eighteen places, and the man asked me how much salary I got for learning things." Detroit Free Press. Cot What He Wnted. lie walked into the boolatorc and stopped before the Bible department. He leaned over fh; counter and said to the ministerial-looking salesman: "Is them Buffalo Bill books over tbar?" "Nope; religious works." "Don't nun o them read about chnsiii Injuns an' shootin' wild varmints?" "Not exactly." "Nothin' about a feller 'at could kreck "em out like John K. ner a fel ler 'at's slick with er Winchester, cr hed the nerve to tackle er b'ar?" "Oh. yes. One better than that." "Who's he?" ".Samson." "What 'd'e do?" "Oh. he had a fight with a lion." "Laid 'im out. did ho?" "Yes, ho killed the lion." "Jes, bored 'im with er Winches ter?" "Nope." "Jes kyarved 'im with his bowic?" "No, he just caught the beast by the throat and choked It to death." "You don't say!" "Yes, he was the strongest man that ever lived." "Wusscr'n John L.?" "Yes." "An wusscr'n Jimmie Corbett?" "Samson could knock them both out at once." "Whoopee! Ain't he the stuff? I'll take two o them Sampsou books." Atlanta Constitution. he Widow's Wall. The somber morning habit served but to enhance lier dazzling beauty. "Mamma" In the hour of her trial she turned to the maternal breast for comfort and support "I don't know what to do. Alone ami helpless, I fear the competence my poor husband left may be taken from me, although the last words of his lips " Great tears clung to her curving lashes. "bade them give me all. His children contest the will. I know not which way to turn." A mother's hand caressed her. and a mother's voice whispered soothing y: "Be brave, mv child; be brave." "Mamma" She was sobbing now. "I w-w-want to k-k-kcep my own. I shall be a l-b-b-beggar without it." "Don't fry, dearest." "Mamma, advise me. Shall I m-m-niarry my 1-1-lawyer or the one on the other s-s-side?" The thought that her fate was in her own hands was terribly oppressive. Puck. Cnase for ConRrntnlatlon. Briggs Girls are queer things, aren't they? Griggs Very. But what makes you say so? Briggs I was thinking of Miss Red bud. I happened to meet her on the avenue ycsterda$- about noon, and hav ing a few cold bones in my pocket and being inspired by her new tailor made gown, I asked her into Del's. Griggs Did she accept? Brig At first she said she didn't care for anything, then she said she believed she did feel a little faint Say, old man, did you ever take a girl out to lunch when she felt a little faint? Griggs No. Did she eat anything? Briggs Did she eat anything! Well. sir. that girl grabbed the menu, took a lightning glance at it said she wasn't feeling very hungry, and then she or dered Griggs Well' what did she order? Briggs (impressively) She ordered clams and bullion, lobster cutlet sweet breads and peas, chicken a la Mary land, shrimp salad, biscuit glace, mac aroons, coffee and a creme de menthe. Great Scott! It cost me $14. Griggs (thoughtfully) Well, old fel low, you ought to be glad. Briggs Glad! What for? Griggs Why, glad that she wasn't hungry. Harper's Bazar. s. "Why She Shook HIM. Til never, never speak to him again!" she exclaimed. "Never in this wide, wide world!" "Why, Clara, he adores you." "Perhaps he does, but he has no ap preciation, no judgment no idea of the fitness of things. Why, the other night when he called I put on that new gown I have just had made." "Yes; what of It?" "What of it? You know what a beautiful and artistic creation it is?" "Yes. indeed." "And bow perfectly it fits?" "Yes." "Well, I asked him how I looked and b said I looked like an angeL Why. I could have cried with mortification, and my dressmaker was nearly heart broken. She felt it keenly. Such a re- flection on her work, yon know.-MJfct cago TosL Cnlte" mcerent. Justice (to CoIsmbLi college student) Yoa are accused by Mr. Meyer, who lives across the street from your room, of insulting him. Student (surprised) In -what way have I insulted him? ' "He alleges that you continually call your dog Meyer." "May I be permitted to ask Mr. Mey er a question;" "Yat Li it you rant to know?" "Mr. Meyer, Low do you spell J-out name" . H spe21 my naniC M-o-y-c-r." "I thought so. Your honor will per ceive at once haw groundless Mr. Mey er's charges are whii I inform your honor that my dog spells his name M-a-y-c-r." The rrr.e-Fls:Uter i'aa DUcofrraKeO. "What's de matter wid Blowsprint," said the man with the poIItt-dohcoUaps "De pnze-figuter?" asked his friend wWh the big diamond. "Yes. lid ain't bin sayW a word for" a week." "Well, you see, it's dis way. He was in the senate the other da-, an now ho sez dat fur long-distance talkin' he ain't in it, an' he's goin ter give up pugilism jes as soon as he kin git a job cz deck hand, see?" Washington Star. Xnt n riennnnt Outlook. Little Max Ma, will I go to heaven when I die? Mother If you ate a good boy. "Will ycu go too?" "I hope so, Max." "And will pa?" "Yes, Ave will all bo there some time.' Max didn't seem altogether satisfied, but after some time he said: "I don't see how I'm going to luve much fuu." Street; the Wrona Mna Landlady How Is the turkey, sir? Or perhaps you aiv not a godd judge. New Boarder I ought to be, madam; I am in the leather business. Smothering n Great Idea. Mr. Marrowfat had been reading something about a new system of re form schools, when an idea suddenly struck bin:, and glancing across the table at his wife he observed: "My dear, if we should ever have a boy" "Zedekiah!" exclaimed Mrs. Marrow fat, interrupting him. "isn't there a bill before congress forbidding anrbodv to speculate in 'futures'?" And, somehow or other, that seemed to turn Mr. Marrowfat down. Judge. Very Strange. Indeed. "Mr. Skinny," said a New York land lady, looking into the little boarding house parlor, "will you be kind enough to step into the back room for a mo ment?" "Certainly," said the consumptive looking boarder "It's funny." he mut tered to himself, "that every time any body comes here to apply for board she hustles me out of sight." A SocoeKwful Inane. "How was that murder case you had when I was in St. Louis. Brief?" asked one lawyer of another. "You defended the murderer, who was said to be worth half a million." "Yes, I remember. It came ont all right I got his money." "What became of him?" "He was executed." Judge. Dreadful Alternative. I wonder what I'd do if some one wn?. ter say they'd give me that turkev, if I'd eat it all at one slttin'? 1 guess I'd take it and bust! Life. AntroBomleal Item. Mr. Westside (slightly intoxicated) Shay, you know anything about astron omy? Mr. Eastside A little. Mr. Westside Well, then perhaps you can tell me (hlc) if astronomers use big dipper when they skim the milky way. Any Mean. First Street-cleaner Oi've a schame now fur takin' a ristin' shpell now an' thin. Second Street-cleaner How do yez wnrruk it? First Street-cleaner Oi bumn mo nose till it blades. A Possible Reason. "I guess I know why cannibals is brown," said Johnny. "Why7 "Because they don't wear clothes, an' nature wants 'em to look as if they had sumpin' on anyhow." Sam Johasinc's Woe. Parson Whangdoodle Baxter Can't you quit dat howlin. Dat ain't gwinter bring yer wife back ter life agin. Sam Johnsing I knows dat. Parson. If dat was poaseraWe you bet I'd keep my motif shut. CHINESE SOCIETY LAMES VIUiJ.E.CUj OULLI 1 liiil'lCi.. -trAiiTHT cheese IadIes 6p slji FRAXCISCd. "Golden Lilies' Very Rarely Seca Oat of Doors How Ther tin la Their Seclasloa laflaeace of Ataer ieaa laeas. A Chinese home amongst the upper classes contains one tacred secluded pot, curtained off frcm ptofane gaze. It la the ahum kwel, or inner apart meiibJ. No Turkish hafetn or Indian Seh'ana is guanfcti more Jealously than the shuin kwel of a wealthy Chines es tablishment. There are gilded! recep: tion rooms, where the master of Ihe house receive and feasts his male guests, but the ladles are never pres- Ah Que in Holiday Attire (A natlTe daughter of the golilea Ivesb) ent, add no male friend, however in timate, would have the audacity to ask to sec Madam. Tho "golden lilies as the bound-foottid ladies are called, arc in tho fear ot ilic curtains, and tsin only be Visited by persons of their Own sex and rank, says a correspondent of the Globe-Deniocrat The extreme difficulty of gaining ac cess to these homes accounts for the tnany silly things said and written about Chinese ladies. The world has been made to believe that Chinese woni'jn are a down-trodden class. They arc- pictured as hewers of wood and drawers of water, drudges of all work; sad-looVing, earc-wcm, scraggy and ugly, so different from the gay, viva clous Japanese maidens of the tea houses, over whom Sir Edwin Arnold went into such ecstacles a year or two ago. The fact is Chinese beauties keep indoors. Only the old hags and the menials are seen on the streets, and these are taken by ignorant globe trot ters to be specimens of the Chinese indies who are out of sight Hence Japanese women, who have never been accused of shyness, are immoderately praised to tho disparagement of their sisters across the Yellow sea, of whom the world knows little. Some day the "golden lilies" of China will break away from their seclusion and will be found to average as high as Miss Chrys anthemum in grace and loveliness, and a little in advance of the virtue and in telligence seen in the tea houses of Japan. High-bred Chinese ladies are few and far between in San Francisco. Tho majority of Chinatown ladies are concubines. The first wife Is often left In China, and the concubine rauks as first wife when the latter is absent. Amongst the upper fifty of China town society may be foufid some Chi nese ladies who have relaxed their so cial trammels so far as to give the out side world a glimpse of their charms. There are women amongst them who would pass for beautiful in any land. A well bred Chinese lady, brought up in the seclusion of the shum kwei, has Miss L!a Fah Lotas. a fairer complexion than the werien one sees about the streets. This, ith a well poised head, a pretty mouth, a dimpled cheek and a perfect arm and hand are elements of beauty not to be despised. The face Is too often Inclined to be chubby if not pudgy, but a charm ing smile, and invariably the whitest of teeth, make up for this defect. Fashion, as everywhere else, is the China woman's inexorable foe, and has done its best to mar both face and form. They literally plaster the face with cosmetics and vile paints. They do not blacken tho teeth like the Jap anese, but they pencil the eyebrows with ink and daub their lips with Ver million. Their loose costume is against them, for no one ever saw a woman look well in loose shapeless sacks. This, however, gives them the advantage over their Western sisters hi the mat ter of hygiene. Treatment of the Iet. The most cruel custom is that of binding the feet, a little foot in China 3frs. Lenac Teas;. CWTi cr a Chlnow Merchant.) being the differentiating mark between the lady and the common woman. What we look upon as a frightful de formity, the Chinese regard as a mark of beauty. How much beauty will be seen by a glimpse of the accompanying photograph of a Chinese woman's foot that Waa apuktd j by a - medjcal I r-t !c- te s vli0 nt8 ,obea tdT mugt bnjjt t0 tbii torture when she" is" oclie- small. The bandaw is wrapped lightly around the. foot, caus ing the" fovr jnaaller toeg Ur turn in to? ward the sole' of the' foot The hed also is drawn forward1, causing A deep hollow. The bones contract tiie tfrbwth Is retarded and the flesh shrivels up. t OUSc witnessed the process of foot binding in Clilurt. and remonstrated with the father io? permitting it He blandly replied: "Yes, tl te rather cruel. Customs differ. Here we Mnd girls' feet In your country you bind girhi waists." It is gratify"!! to find that while foot-binding i fashionable In China, the practice ti not popular In Califor nia. Some pictures arc given of two pretty .Chine? ladies with feet their natural size.. Another plclnfe show Miss Kwel Fa", a sinail:fvoted native daughter of ihe golden West. She be longs to "one of out' best Chinese fan ilies, and is a very sweet y"0up? lady. How They Spend Tbcir Time. - A Chinese lady knows nothing of the h joys of saoppntg, of promenades, ser enades and tete-a-tetcs with the oppo site atx. She goes out in a closed car riage, accompanied by her lady friends pr an old female SC-rvailt. She covers her fa"c wifii her"- open fan when she alights, aufi th6 few steps front the car riage to the door i3 nil she" khuws of outdoor exercise. .. Amidst the round of domestic duties the ladies of a Chinese household find time for amusement as well as work On the whole they live a merry life. In the morning the lamps of the house hold shrines have to be trimmed, and luceuso bunted to what the Itomans called lares and Penates'. The morning meal comes at 30 o'clock, after which the day is speut in domestic affair and fancy needlework. Many of our China town ladies do exquisite work In silk embroidery, working on their own dainty little shoes, making sachet bags, children's ciipa, knick-knacks and charut. Others occupy themselves with painting porcelain or other arnstlc wor: Chinese ladies are sometime well educated, arc nhle to quote Con fucius and even Write compositions iu poetry and prose. Ilecieation te found in a visit id a neighbor's house. Avhcre a inery party gathers for gossip and amusement One simss an ancient bal lad; another tells a historical love story; another plays oa the pcypah, lute or 3I! 3Iey Tnnjy. (Tn the Fjhloaable Chinese D?ps.) the Yenng Kum. Then come checkers, dominoes or cards, in which there is nlways more or less of gambling. Smoking is not considered Indelicate, and it is no Unusual thing to see half a dozen Chinese beauties smoking brass hubble-bubble pines and enjoying the mildest of tobacco. But the happiest V V, rJ, '-""--"? "': num.. than out do gathers together in the evening and ' mt(,re, a V(.,mi usieus wane mis u, mi ui sun reaiu u chapter from some book of fairy tales, such as the "Dream of the Hed Cham ber." It is their "Arabian Nights," and a Chinese woman believes every word. In the best circles in China It is not considered proper for a lady, married or unmnried. to attend a show or any theatrical exhibition In San Francisco we have a Chinese theater with boxes and galleries especially provided for the ladies, from which they cau see the play without being the objects of men's rude gaze. Hero may often be found some good specimens of Chinatown beauty. At one time Chinese actresses were not permitted on the stage, the female parts being taken by men. The latest innovation is a genuine Chinese actress. Miss Kum Fah is only eighteen years of age, and has shown great his trionic skill as the heroine In several Chinese dramas. Here she Is in mar tial robes, in the character of the Chinese-Joan of Arc, Muk Lan. who joined the imperial cavalry, and through the twelve years' war fought as a mau and never once betrayed her sex. Slpplns Vinegar. There are no old maids In China. Every healthy Chintto maiden before she is 20 will become either wife or concubine, and to be the latter Ls no disgrace in China, where her status and v i$SWS ' 'V (1 -v . ;' 1 Cast of an Amputated Foot and a Pair of Chinese Shoes. tliat of her children are recognized by law. It is the sad blot on Chinese fam ily life and tthen the Jirst wife is child less a supplementary one must be ol tained. for the line of descent must have no break. A few ladles in Chinatown have ac quired an American education, have been through the public schools, and are imbued with American ideas. Some were born in this tend and are proud of their birthplace. Those that have grown up have married rich Chinese merchants. Ameriecn furniture, car pets, comfortable IxhIs nnd a piano or organ are in their homes. They can cook and bake bread, play the piano like American women and their hus bands idolize them. They live a dual kind of life. One eveninz thev are seen at the Chinese theater In gorge ous Chinese dress of silks and satins, another night they may be seen at the Baldwin dressed in the latest style a la Parisienne. I met two of our swellest and handsomest Chinese ladies driving in the park the other day. They were taken for Japanese. Several of these Americanized ladies have adopted American ways entirely and live away from their own people. Mrs. Aw Yeong, the wifG of the Chinese consul, iQTx graduate of the high school and a thoroughly accomplished lady. She dresses In perfect taste, and many who see ner nme ngure, uie uarK eyes and striking features take her for a Spanish lady. She has lust returned A7a aaaaaf ff sw amw I ,"w By fsBLaf I jm i - aaaF aaaaalr L 1 iAv yjTLft ,BWigTaaFajaaaf JsBflaaasaS--g JTrl. U .'iS traveling about with all the happy free dom of an American. Her husband is a graduate of Yale, and appreciates a wife with aesthetic tastes and enlight ened Ideas, and 4 home that contain MIm Klrel Vtt. (A merchant's UaKUtcr with lxand feet. -the choicest porcelain bric-a-brac in San Francisco. , A CLEVER JUDGE. -. i - ilow He- Awarded the Pearls Ah dall.lh Nut III Slater. "Sie," Said Abdullah, as he appeared with hb swtef. Fa lima, before the judge, "perhaps ycu Wiil remember the brave Abbas, who died thirty years rgo. He was cur father, and left both of us property in equal portions, on which :ro have hitherto subsisted In common. Fatima, it Is true, has been peevish and qrarreLsome during the last few yjara, but I always gave way, as I am n lover of peace. But I have recently chosen the beautiful Zoralda for my bride, and thought of giving her this valuable string of pearls the most precious keepsake of my father's in my possession, for he gave it to me on his return from a jouruey Whott I was live $ears old. and it has been mine ever ulnce." quotes Waverly. "But Fatima will have it that the pearls are part of our father's legacy and claims half of them as her shre. Slie refuses to listen to my argumSits and insists upon her claim not Indeed, for the sake of the pearls. .Oh, no. I Fe quite plainly she wants to spoil my pleasure and that of my bride elect, for my sister does not like the Idea of Zoraida eutcriuc the paternal house as mistress. Now, wise cadi, give judgment" The cadi bowed his head and said: "Fatima, is the cr.se as your brother has slated?" "It ta quite correct excepting the as sertion that the string of pearls be longs to him alone. How does he mean to prove that father gave it to him? I dispute the fact and claim my share. My reason for so doing" is immaterial to the question at issue." "Well. Abdullah," said the cadi, ad dressing the pltintiff. "have you any living witness or any handwriting to prove tliat your father gave you tho pearls?" "I have nothing of the kiud," was the reply. "That is a bad outlook," the cadi continued. "I fear there is no prospect of an amicable settununt by persuading your sister to accept a sum of money for her share." "No." she broke In. "I want half the pearls." I "Very well," said the cadi, beckoning I to his clerk. "I must have a report of i the case drawn up before delivering ' Ju lament Say, defendant your namo h Fatima wlui: fc- your age? Here she blushed, hesitated, tried once to speak, but never "How old are you?" the cadi re peated. "Do speak!" At last she replied in faltering tones: "I am twenty-eight" Iteallyy said the judge, with an ironical .tiii!e. "I hereby award the whole Ktrinjr of pearls to Abdullah nlcne. Take them. pLiintilT. nnd go away iu pe-fe! Fatima is not your sis ter, for Abbas died thirty years ago, and she is only twenty-eight!" SPOILED BY SOTHERN. The Actor Finyn n. I'rnctlc.nl JoUe on One of IIIn AtMovIntes. And here one of Sothqrn's practical jokes obtrudes itself, and we must give it room. During his engagement In London "Money" had been performed with a phenomenal cast on the occa sion of some benefit Charles Mathews appeared as Capt. Dudley Smooth, E. A. Sothern as Sir Frederick Blount, John Ryder as the Old Member, and .1fX sxtltf,. .Ywk Jtt.l ..f n1f,ttlUf tV h liiu uiuci ujiUiiLitij viu tr-iiiv iv i persons of equal prominence in the pro fession. The part of the Old Member appears only in the club scene, lie calls loudly every now and then for a waiter to bring him the snuff-box, but as other members are making the same demand at the same time, the waiter always passes him by, and ho does not get the snuff-box until it is empty, which fact he emphasizes by turning it upside down, at the same time exclaiming. "And it is all gone!" This Is a small part, but it generally "goes' with roars of laughter, and on this important occasion Jack Kyder had laid himelf out to make the most of it But on calling for the snuff-box, the waiter, according to the business of the scene, passed him by and was on the point of handing it to Sir Fred erick Blount, the Old Member still vo ciferating. "Waiter, snuff-box!" Judge, then, of his horror, indignation and consternation when Sothern coolly waved the waiter off. and. pointing to Ryder, said, "Tliat old gentleman seems to be making such a fuss about it, let him have it first" Of course, the snuff-box being handed to the Old Member thus early in the proceedings, killed the entire scene. On the first impuLe of the moment Byder was on the point, of hurling the object at Sothern's head, but then the ludicrous nature of the sell struck him. when he commenced to roar with laughter, and, being unable to control himself, arose and left the stage. There were a num ber of actors present in the audience. and they called Ryder back several times upon the scene, Sothern all the while gazing from one to the other, an apparent look of amazement upon his face, as much as to say, "What is all this about?" After a few minutes Ryder, having gained the mastery over his feeling3. reseated himself, and the scene commenced all over again as If nothing had happened. Inter-Ocean. There are 15,170 free schools in Eng land and Wales, with 3,429,577 chil dren. The total number paying a fee In schools receiving the fee grant, but still charging a fee ranging from under 1 penny to a 'ittle over sixnenea. Lg&092. THE OLD REUABU Columbus - Stato - Bank J PajsIitostnTlKDeitfS tics Lias n M Estat MvB WQ1T D1AITO CM Omaka, CUmm, Kw Trk sal al IILIS MTHMITO : HOKIXf. BUYS GOOD NOTES iad Krijs tt Onteaun wmm aVaj ffflCtM AI IHtTtlll j UtiSDSB QDUtABD. Mrt. B. JL UNKY. Tie Ptmt, JOHN 8TATJT1XB. Oaiata atnUGGEB, .W.HUUT. COLUMBUS, NEB., . HAS AN Aitktrizti Capital of - $500,000 Paid in Capital, - 90,000 OFFICERS. C. H. 8HELBOX. ftes't. XL I. H. OEULRICII. Vice Pre. CLARK GRAY, Cashier. DANIEL SOHRAH, AsVt Oils DIRECTORS. II. M. Wisslow, II. P. D. Oebuuch,- C. H. Snr.LDOX, W. A. McAixisteb, Jonas Wslcii, Carl Kikskk. STOCKHOLDERS. 3. C. Ghat, J. Hexry Wcrdkkjut. Gekhahd Losxkb, Henrt Losekb. irrjiRK Giiat. Geo. W. Gallet, Daniel ScintAM, A. K. 11. Oeiilricit. i'uank kouer. j. p. iteckxb estatb. Rebecca Beckeil. Dinlrnf ifAnrMlt? fntnrivtt allowed an time iteponlts: buy and sell exchange on Unite States anil Kurope, and bur uuu bell avail able securities. Wo shall bo pleased to re eel vo your business. Wo -solicit your pat ronage. -THE- First National Bank OFFICERS. a. ANDERSON. J. H. GALLEY. President Vice PreVt O. T. ROEN. Cashier. DIRECTORS. O. ANDERSON. P. ANDERSON. IIENBX BAQATZ. JACOB QREISEN. JAUa 0. UCJPB. 1 StateaUBt er the Coadltloa at the Close er Business Jalj 13, 1893. RES0CBCX3. Loans and Discount?. f 241,467 57 Real Estate Furniture and Fix tures. .............................. 16,73! 9) U. S. Bonds 15j0 0) Due from other banks.. ...137.878 Si Cash on Hand M&J X 59.74.1 M Total. .333,1M 36 Z.TABIUTIXS. -M..I...1 CV tf.l1 Im I 60.000 00 . " . w a " surplus r una ! 90,000 0) Undivided profits 4.578 00 Circulation 1.T50OOU Deposits. Total. . rsata 37 .f333.1!K 3ft LOUIS SGHREIBER, BlacMaflflfeiMte. ill kilo's ef Rciairiig dene 1 Short Netiee. Biggieg, Wag-. is, etc., Bade it rder, aid all werk filar- aiteed. AIm Mil the world-faaWHU Walter A Wood Mowers, stovers, Contain-. ad Hachiasa, Harreaters, aid Belf-biadars tht tftftaUdf. Shop on OUtb Street, Columbus, Neb., four doors south of Borotoiak's. HENRY GASS, UNDEETAKEE ! Coffins : and : Metallic : Gases-! XW Repairing of all kinds of Uphol' ttery Goods. i-tt -COLUMBUS. NEBRASKA- -COME TO- The Journal for Job Work IMUL ' (I 'wmtlitCirldafiJxJdhEa