The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, May 30, 1894, Image 1
(Mvaabm anxml VOLUME XXV. NUMBER 7. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1804. WHOLE NUMBER 1,255. m s i r.l - NEBRASKA NEWS. x ijUlUl.01il A,MU, Wcst Point has reduced tlie salaries of its school teachers. The croaker is abroad and it will re quire rain to silence him. Young Men of Mason City arc taking fctepsto organize a band. David "ity is perfecting arragements for a good celebration July 1th. otuitnstantling nam times ccwaru is doing a great t deal of building. A fat and lean men's bae ball club has been organized at West Point. The late frost did great damage to the crowing beets in the vicinity of Norfolk. The two men who made a race from Omaha to lloldrcge against time lost by six hours. The corner stone of the new Herman Lutheran church in Grand Island was laid last .Sunday. The Omaha V. M. C. A. base ball team defeated the Mate University club br a score of IS to .. Juslav Mix, a German of Seward oounty. was to badly injured in a run- away that his life is despaired of. The Woodmen of York will observe Decoration day by suitable ceremonies at the graves of deceased neighbors. The police of I'eatrice made a big haul of transgressors on the occasion of the visit of Itingling's circus to that place. The base ball players of Atkinson and Newport have staked S10 a side on a game to be played at the former place on the .'.tli. The Illair canning factory will only can sweet corn. It was too late to con tract for peas after its recent sale under :i mortgage. Lincoln has a small-pox patient iin deruarantine. The man is a stranger in the city, having recently arrived there from Missouri. 'I he people of Kavenna are boring a welt to irrigate the cemetery grounds. A last report the well was -0 feet deep and no water in sight. Fire bug- are responsible for the de struction of the barn of I'eter Get, at Kearney. A valuable horse and buggy were lost in the contlagration. The women of Meatrice have started a crusade against beer by distributing tracts telling of the dire consequences of indulging in the beverage. A rolling stone tumbled aerainst Charles Crawford of l'awnee City and ' broke several ribs besides doinir con sitlerable damage to his anatomy. loci Lel'ard, an old-time brakeman, was coupling Sells IJros.' circus cars in Fremont, when his hand was caught between the couplers and crushed. David IC. Hull, a resident of Kulo un til recently, was killed at Alton, III., by a heavy piece of timber falling on him while he was helping build a oridge. Among the announcements for the Crete assembly is a special program for the Fourth. Congressman llainer of Aurora will deliver the oration of the dav. Another heavy frost in Dodge countv I finished up what little of the fruit was left after the night before. 1 here is no further show for apples in that lo cal 113. The Dorchester Mar says that some of the school districts will levy but a small tax this year, as they have enough leftover from ls.t;j to run them through another year. Miss Ida ' lark, who was brought to Ivcatrice from Denver, charged with complicity in a horse stealing case at Wymore, was released from jail on her own recogniz-aiiee. Merna has a widow who supports herself and three children by taking in washings She owns a lot and the cit- . .ens lately chipped in and built her a comfortable cottage. Ceorge IJoss, who shot and killed the deputy postmaster of Cot ton wood Falls, Kas., and was afterward hung to a bridge by a mob, worked at one time on the I'lade at Seward City. John ("riser, a tenant living on John Hanev's farm eastof Columbus, drown- cti himself in the I'lattc river. He was ( a Pout u years old. Despondency on account of crops is suppo-cd to be the cause. l'ev. 11 11 Wilson, pastor of the l'il gcr church, will soon start for Chile, where he goes as a missionary, accom panied by his wife. John Shick has been selected to till out the conference vear at I'ilger Onirics Jones, a notorious crook imi- ! fessing to hail from Omaha, Denver. ' Kansas City and a score of other points, j was arrested last week in Ilea trice for larceny ami sent to thc county jail for ! sixty days. 1 mammoth tooth in rood state of preservation, weighing about nine' pounds, was found bv workmen in a' sand pit on thc Org faVm near McCool . Junction. C. C. Noroucst of McCool' f.--.. .-...... r. owns thc tooth, A petition is being circulated in the western part of Cherry county and will be presented to the commissioners ask- ' ing that a vote be taken this fall to di- vide thc county from north to south on , the eighth range. At Fremont Conductor I. II Somers was running along on top of his train, j when thc car which he was crossing 1 was derailed. He was thrown to the ! ground, rendered unconscious and it is feared internally injnred. JJev. J. W. Kimincl. editor of the Lutheran Kra of Tekamah.hasaccepied , the charge of the First Lutheran church of Leavenworth. Kas., and is movinc to that place now. He will publish Ins paper irom mat place in tne future. A number of tramps riding on the roof of a Fnion Pacific car engaged in a quarrel at Fremout. when a shot was ! tiretl by some one. When the train ar- rived at alley a dead man was found on uic iop 01 uic car, inn 111c murtierer had escaped. The suit brought bv Mrs. llnnhcr nf ' Nebraska City against the estate of the late l'aul Schminkc for property valued at SI, 000 has been dismissed, as it was shown by the evidence that the woman had never had any right or title to the property in question. Twenty-two years ago Kichard Brown, who lived near Columbus, had a new harvesting machine broken up me night by some vandal. Recently a :nan of the name of O'Brien died at Manberry. Mo., and left S100 to pay Brown for the machine. City Marshal Acton of Wymore re ceived a telegram from Falls City to ar rest and hold a traveling man and a young girl who had accompanied him to vmore unknown to her parents. ,, 111 -i tu - 1. , Ihev were held until the girl s father . rw ..Ti.t w.- i,r.t-, w ' arrived and returned home with her. There has been trouble brewing in the Alington house at McCook for sev eral days. which culminated in Mrs. Peterson having her husband arrested for threatening to kill her. The court placed him under bonds, which he re fused to give and was taken to the county jail. The hired girl in one of the leading fnmiliOQnt. ISlnir iTinl fi ciiit Vwlnnfr- ing to her employer the other night and ha: not been seen since she jrlided down the street in the direction of the depot- , Mie left all her own clothes as a slight remembrance to those who were left behind to mourn her departure. ' A Petition is being circulated and quite freely signed, says the Valentine , Independent, asking the countv com- j inissioners to employ experts to exam- mc the countv treasurer's, clerk s judge's and sheriff's books back to the time the county was osganized. M. M. Warner, editor of the Lyons Mirror anil deputy district examiner of Sons of Vet'cruns camps, inspected Casey camp in Tckamah last week and gave it a rating of HI per cent, the i112-1PSt ratine pvct pivcii to anv ..camp in the state. Lyons camp stood at the head last year at '.13 per cent. Sheriff .lackson arrived in Reaver Cit3' last week from Salt Lake with I". II. Sclby, the Cambridge attorney wanted for cmbcz.lcmcnt. The pris oner was sick and was at once taken to the hotel and placed in the care of a physician. As soon as his health will permit a preliminary hearing will be had. Never in the history of He Witt dur ing any one spring, says the Times, has there lcen as much house painting ami general cleaning up of the entire vil lage as has been this season. Kveryonc appears btisv. A Coxev recruitinjr otli- cer would get slim picking here. Wages are from Sl..iU to S"J.."iO per day and idle worKingmen are hard to find. While Landlord .lerry Page of Deca tur was absent on business one of liis boarders, who has po-eil himself as a gentleman of leisure the past winter, suddenly departed, leaving his board bill unpaid. -mith has been a suspi cious character about town ami is sup posed to have been connected with the j bootlegging business the past winter. Colonel II. II Kicker of St Louis, ex- general superintendent of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain it Southern railroad, died in Weeping Water last week of heart trouble. He had been ill for some time and came to Weeping Water accompanied by his wife and W. S. I'olliciinis, to visit his brother-in-law. ". W. Norton, and with the hope of re gaining his health. Ira, the l'-'-ycar-old son of Hadley Jennings, driving a horse hitched to a cart, attempted to cross the track ahead of an castbound freight train at Lib erty but not reaii.ing the dangerous proximity of the train he was struck by the engine and instantly killed. The train, which was a fast freight extra, carried the body a distance of 1,0. ki feet before the train could be stopped. Talk about hard times ami no busi ness! -Just come to Ilartington, says J the Leader, if you want to see improve iiienls that bespeak anvthing but hard times, "earlv everv property owner in town is, in some way, making im-. that classic l ural pastime of bump provements this spring, and good, sub-! -nr. Among the students' were stantial ones, too. New houses are two hoys, j0inl am Alf ('rigglehorn, springing up on every hand and car-! &on3 of ,,, ,Vlc c-igglehorn, the penters report all the work they can do. nmn wi() feomo tjmo . swwc Qa a rhenextcncampmentoftheebras-l wa . ,hat ie COI,(l bu ;l weU ha National guards will be held at the j k y , b . , state capital from August ') to . - - . Tiiis encampment will be one of the most important gatherings held at Lin coln this year, as there will without doubt be a full attendance, ami that means over l.o.K) men. There arc twenty-four companies of the guards. l'vcnty-tw two infantry, two batteries and uvo "" The supreme court of the state a f- finned a case taken from the Hurt countv district court, in which two or ., -., , , ... , 1 three thousand acres of accretion land arc at issue. II. C. Lvdick. a wealthy j farmer, began this case several vuai-s 1 ago, and fed lowed it in a forced contest 1 step by step, through all its ups and (towns. J ne decision gives nun a line to a large and valuable tract of land along the Missouri river in Hurt county. l'hillip Andrews, an employe of tin. ICrug llrewing company, committed suicide in Lincoln, lie was discovered in :i dvin'r condition A iihvsirian wa- i,.i,.,,)"nn..il f.- lmt n.li-.. u- .1.v..i 1 !-..... .... before he arrived. I he physician as- cribcil Andrews' death toa dose of lauda num. Andrews was a single man, V years old, and had lived in Lincoln about ten mouths, going there from Omaha. He had been drinking heavily Tor several day--. Chief of Police Kump of McCook did some clever detective work that re suited in the arrest of a gang of shop- lifters and the recovery of a largt amount of stolen property. For sonit time several of the merchants have ; been missing goods from their stores , ami the same was reported to the polic-, who succeeded 111 running tlie outfit .low.,. The women were well prepare.! for thc work, having dresses made with1 double skirts, which would hold a whole bolt of cloth besides other smallei I articles. The raf ton correspondent of tin. t Fairmont Signal is responsible for this story: J. 1. Johnson brought in a ireaic ol nature. It was twin pigs born """. "-: A "V "Kl.v . i...Uli ,,- ,. , , ,.,.(.. ' 'es. ni ni. one nea.i, eigni icet t'.1 t'lls ,al."' f,,l,r p:'is. On the baclj "f t1,e he,a'1 ,s. ''e e-vc- -lie one head was perfect in form On the back ol i tlie liead appeared to ue tne lormation of thc second head. The two bodies were perfect. A Superior dispatch says that tin. iuteistatc reunion committee has se cured 400 of the Kansas state tents, r,' II. also the headquarters tents, for tin. use of the coining reunion at Superiot July ."''i to August 1, inclusive. This i the fourth time this reunion has been located at Superior, and the prepara tions that are being made this year art the most extensive ever attempted by this soldiers organization. The de partments of both Kansas and Nebras ka will unite and vie with each other in the pleasures of the reunion. Thc high reputation of the interstate onran- ! ization will be fully sustained in pro- . curing sneakers of national reputation and entertainment of the highest order 1 will enliven the camp. J sheriff Kyd of Cage county was the I unwilling victim of one of the greatest surprises of Ins life the other morning wnen ne uniocueu ine outer door and entered the corridor fronting the cell room of the county jail. It took but a glance of his practiced eye to discover) that his family of enforced guests had greatly diminished in number during the night- At his feet lay thc small iron door tnrongn wliicli articles are ' sometimes handed the prisoners from ', the outer corridor, the bar on which it had swung having been sawed through and broken off. An inventory of the ' occupants remaining fell eight short 1 and four cells, in which at 7:30 the pre- ' vious night the double quartet had been securely locked, were vacant. Mt st of the number were in for trivial 1 ofTeuee-s. I For several years complaints have j been made by sto-k raisers near Curtis , concerning the loss of stock bv thieves. !...: 1 .1. - j .. :, .. T 1 Sheriff Lvncn received a tip that a lot ( i ' ,,, t, . , r Y .f pork would be stolen from I. Powers ' .v. ton. hog shippers. I he sheriff and I his deputies repaired to a point near ' where the proposed raid was to be made. About midnight the expected . occurred, and about fifty head of fine fat porkers were driven out of the cor- j ral and started down the canon. When ' about a half mile away from the pen j 1 ne oineers uipe.ireu anu commanded a halt. The order was not obeyed and a Kt-oitt fnnt mpo niir Th V.-rt-l were finally captured, and proved to i.e John Kiehman. J. W. Davis ami Honr,- Johns three substantial farmers living i 'uva.A.iWi ' near, who had never been suspected of : being anything but fctraightforward I jtitieus. j THEGRIGGLEHOKN BOYS Men who term themselves social philosophers tell us that the lime ia rapidly coming when we shall have no distinctive typ's of the genus homo in this countrv. Thev declare that we are all lending toward phy- , such extreme, were willing to re sical and mental uniformity and that sort to almost any competition and in a few centuries from now wo shall . the teacher declared that it would bd all be a sort of human field of peas, a rare joke, it was so awfully furtrty. I think that this is Kindly thrown i Tho boys wont home, called up tho out as a hint to writers who arc en- dos, divided them into two separate deavoring to p rtray character; a packs and started out. It was reminder that if they have charac- ' agreed that the. should dclivor tho tors whom they wish to delineate. ' marsupial fruits of their hunt at they should do so at once or run tho , their father's hoilsc. The old mail risk of losing the opportunity. Hav- . hid said that he would conduct tho ing inu?cd over this hint and having , teacher thither in time to reach a accepted it In all its warning aigniti- ; decision, it must have been nearly cance, I hasten to give the following , 12 o'clock at night when th- boys ro true story: I turned. Alf came first with an onor- A number oT years had elapsed , mom 'possum, but John soon fol since there had Iwcn a school in that ! lowed with one fully as large. thin settlement" of Ka3t Tennessee, which lies some ton or fifteen miles west of Tom Hughes' Knglish co'ony. In the winter wild animals slept un- der the old log school hous;, and in the autumn rich clusters of grapes hung from the caves. The bovs had grownup in so strong a contempt of education that once, when a dapper little vacation sophomore came up from Nashville and attempted to open a school, they sei'.cdhim rough 1 and, carrying him down into the den-e woods, bumped him urgently against the uneven bark of a red oak tree. Tho sophomore, upon gaining his liberty, caught up his Derby hat and vanisheJ. Recently some of the more .iberal minded men of the community de cided that the youths and maidens of the land must be educated, and. knowing that their lau lable object could not be accomplished by male teachers, decided to engage a wo man. Miss Flora Hightower. an old maid of frisky shyness and hcmplikc hair, was engaged. She was so frail in structure and so innocent of ex pression that the anxious fathers and mothers knew that their boys, rough but manly, would not turn her out of the house, and, moreover, would rally in her defense, should the girls, scarcely less rough than ! the boys, attempt to lead her oil i into the woous and carry her through ; if nun lliu 3Ul;uuil il. lit iiuraiiiiu.i 111 head with a piece of -hect-iron. he remarked that he had ever been open to conviction and that his estimate of that goat had been revised Shortly after the sjIio 1 win opened the ('rigglehorn boys foil in love with the teacher. Thev were .Wiited and so 'ealnns that one wou,d not cl.init tIlc othul. to ,ee , . , , . , , her alone, and at evening, when she . ., , "" , , set out Ior thc '-0 whur hc hoarded, they marched along with her, each bent upon choking olT , what the other attempted to say One evening, when they had been walking for some time in silence, Alf icmarkcd: Miss Flora. I wantcr say that 1 iove yon strong enough to move a saw log. The truth is. I have seed a good deal of cil'co in mv life, but that you air about the stuunincst lot or goods I ever seed. An' now I wanter say suthin' that I kain't git a chance to say in private, tint I want you to fling up this here school an' marry me. I r.on't kere a snap about ed cation so long as I kin git you. Hear me?'' Don't pay no attention to him. Miss Flora." John spoke up before she had time to reply. lies alius saving suthin' that he don't mean, It has been my aim ever sense I fust sce,i vou lo niarrv V0ll, an- 0f vm kuowvhich side yo' bread is biittoi- . ;,i . , , .... ... ... ed " ' " "lU ,e.t h,m !'!I,lc an takc 'V0' for am :l hone-v fn,m w.v up tl,e cr''ek whllc hc ls a slouch from tno '''- pond." -Oh,"' Miss Flora giggled, happy could I be with cither tuthcr dear charmer away." You bet I'm a charmer.' how were said Aif. ..-, chariiior enough to make . hotter husband than this knock-kneed thin: that is walkin' along with us." -That's all right." John r? joined, but when it comes to e'larmin I'm that-."' -Oh. boys. I real'v don't know which of you to takc. I had thought that I hould never be married I had read so much of the unhappi-ncs- of the matrimonial state that I had determined to live on in single contentment, but ah. my dears, you have completely up?et me." -Hut which one of us ha; upset you the most?" Alf demanded. -Keally. my dear. I can not say.' Don't "you sorter think I have?"' Ji-hn asked. -Oh. my dear, 3-0:1 must not ask me such a question. Both of vou make my heart gush with joy. and -'t c-acli of you makes me sad ah. sad, for I cannot marry but one of you and I do not know which one to accept." Tiiis recital, with but slight varia tion, was gone through with day after day. Old Pete, the boys' father, was deeply amused, and sometimes he would come over to the school-bouse at evening, and, walking a short distance behind the lovers, would follow them home, laughing in first one sleeve and then the other. He divided his mirth be tween the two youngsters, and was careiui. Mich being nis strong sCnc I of justice, not to laugh in one sleeve I more than he did in the other. j One night while thc boys, sitting by the log lire in the teacher's board- J inrr.1i mtn irnin nnin(in in ai.l . K..i ,..D ....t.. ..v,.v. ra.,.iujS in muu out 1 strong colors pictures of their adoration. Old Pete came after a time remarked: in and I have been a thinking as to the best way to settle this here affairs, boys, but like the teacher. I don't know which one's claim to urge: but it ought to be settled soon, for the school will bust after awhile an' then the teacher will have to go awav. Now let mc sec ' He mused for several moments and then continued: You bovs out to be wilhu' to arrce to mo"5t an-v sort of settlement 1 would suggest rasslin or uoxm 01 . " .. something else in that line, but we air settiif most to civilized up here to resoi t to si'h. Now, I tell von what you do as an improvement 011 th? ol1 an' worn-out methods. Pi- vido tho dogs an go out in tno woods in different directions, art thd one that can ketch the biggest pos sum may have tho girl. Do you agree?' The bovs, having been driven to -"Wall, this do b"-at anything I cvoi' did see," said tho old man. The teacher tittered musically, and said she had never ?cen anything half so funny. And," she added, "how did ( they manage to got them the same size?' It wouldn't occur again I ( don't suppose in a hundred yoars. and it shows that the possums arc so just in this matter that they are not willing to render a decision in favor of either dear party. I never saw the like, 1 am sure.' "Hold on,'" said John. "I think you aro too fast. My possum is the biggest, an' I will bet money on it. Hisn inout bo the fatter, but mine's got the biggest frame. This hero is a serious matter, an' I want these possums weighed.' Now you hit mo!" Alf exclaimed. I know mine is thc'bigiycst. an' I'll i bet my oars on it. Come, fetch out the weighin' machine." 'I tell you what you do. boys," said old Pcto: 'dress the beauties an' then we can see how much they weiirh. Hurry up " Tlie boys agreed, ani when the pos sums had boen dressed the old man remarked : -Now wo kill git at t'ie jastico of the matter. I dcclar', boy.s, I never did sec two animals so near of a size: an' do you know I thought sutin' of that sort would happen. I never did see such a courtship. Yes. an" I wa- might'ly interested, so much so that I concluded not lo de pend on possums that might turn out tho same size, an' f spoke to the teacher here, an' while you. fellers wa a INtonin fur the dogs to tree, w'y 1110 an' her went ovc to .see a jestice of the peace an' was married. Say, boys. Iling them possums up on the roof of the house an' let the frost fall 011 'em and to-morrer we'll have a weddin' dinner that will make oltl Andy Jackson waller in his grave." Opie 1. Head in the Courier-Journal. CAN IT BE? A ll.iliertknlirr's Wory C'onrtTiiiilj; tlif Clrl Who Makes Itmton'ioics. "Look here," said tho customer, -tlicsc cuffs have buttonholes on ono side only." Thc haberdasher looked at tho cuffs and shrugged his shoulders re signedly, says the X. Y. Sun. I am very sorry to have put you to tho trouble cf returning them," he said, -but our girls catch us oc casionally in spito of our watchful ness. Wo employ l'5'l of them, and nearly every one of 'em. is just watching her chance to run in a job on us. You see they get a cent for every buttonhole they make. There arc five buttonholos on a cuff, and thc cuffs arc put in boxes containing a dozen pair each. Wo look through every box, but can't take thc time to examine each cuff separately. They know that, and take advantage of it. It costs us dear, too. for if each girl fools us on only one buttonhole a day it costs us about 10 a week, which catsup the profit on a good many dozen pairs of cuffs. 'In the ramc way thy get tho nettur ol us on thc pearl buttons wo use for our shirts. They cost us a cent apiece, and tho way they disappear is wonderful. Scolding doesn't do a bit of good, for thoy look as innocent a angels. Frequent ly they have the nerve to wear the buttons they have taken right in our shop. I have often caught a dozen at a time with our buttons on their dresses. When I make them surrender them they arc cross and in dignant. I tell you they arc daisies." l!crioir in tht son t Invest. History repeats itself in the south western territories in the recent building of great storage reservoirs for the turning of the desert into a able land throigh irrigation. These things were done in the same region, in davs before Columbus, by a race of Aztec kinship, now sur viving only in a few scattered vil lages. Traces of their ol 1 reser voirs, canals and ditches are still visible in tracts now being again de veloped by 'own and irrigation corn- panics The town of Kddy. in Lin coln county. New Mexico, and the productive ountry about it is ono of the b"st examples of the results of this modern application of old modes of agriculture. The con-truction of dams with proper escape ways for the carrying away of Hoods and silt has passed the experimental stage and has been reduced to a practical and profitable science applied on u vast scale. Thc cost of thc dam re cently built at Kddy. which is to form a distributing reservoir, was 12o,- 0l Above this a great dam cost ing -.'00.00 ). built for reserve stor- age of the river's How. expands in a hiko larger than Lake Chautauqua, These reservoirs are indispensable to the agriculture of that re-ionat all seasons, for already the farmer t . anu iruit growers are preparing to irrigate their wheat, alfalfa .-.n.l orchards. Chicago Herald. Probabilities of I.itinp. At twenty years of age a temperate person is supposed to have a chance of living for forty-four years. Should tho same person still living a tem perate life, reach the age of sixty, the chances are that he will live fourteen years longer. An Ai-titi? Model of the Heart. A French physician has constructed an aeting model of the human heart- It is of the same hue. size and con- sistency of the natural organ, with every detail, and a red fluid courses through it and throu-'h artificial arteries. AN UNEXPLORED ISLAND. Its Oncer Population or ImH.int, Irot lly of .M oilcan Origin. Jamos Millar, who has long ro sided on Prince of Wales island, and who. by reason of his being thc first whito settler and now controlling the largest interest, is reforred toaa thc monarch of that island, is in San Jrranciseo. Mr. Millar is located at Hunter's bay, where he has been for four years engaged in the business of catching and salting salmon, says the San Francisco Chronicle- The strange island of Princo of Wales, on which Mr. Millar has elected to make his home, lies at tho mouth of Dixon's entrance, and only about three miles from the northern lino of British Columbia. Tho island is about ")) miles long and from ten t thirty or forty wide. It is singu lar in its make-up, having a fringe or lowland all around. Toward the center are ridges of mountains, some of thenl reaching lofty heights and covcrod with perpetual snow. There is magnificent timber in great quan tities. It consists of spruce, fir, hem lock, splendid yellow cedar and a very suporior red cedar. -The island has never been sur veyed nor explored." said Mr. Mil lar, -and some day it must prove, 1 think, a most inviting field for ex ploration. Thc Indians of whom there ai'e probably some '',0) , arc scattered around tho island shores in little villages, usually of about 10U inhabitants each. They consist of many different tribes. Most of those I came in contact with arc Hydahs. There are between ''00 and l' of them at Hunter's bay. and they are qui to industrious as fisher men and sailers of the salmon. The Hydah Indians came up from tho Ojiceu Charlotte islands many years ago and made con U0st, driving the nattvo tribe out. Tho former are very superior Indians. They are in telligent, and pick up anything very quickly. I think they originally came from Mexico, as they much re semble the Mexican race. Some of them, I have noticed, have as fine faces as any white man, and as full and fine boards. "Though Prince of Wales island has many resources. I do not think it will bo of any use for agriculture. When I left, on December 1 1, there was sonic snow at Hunter's bay, but still it Was not cold. My nearest whito neighbors are at the Presby terian missionary station of Howkan, twenty-live miles away. At ray place there aro no white persons, except my wife and children, and they arc away for the winter.'' Mr. Millar is of middle age and has a pronounced Scotch accent. He is of a type of the hardy pioneer only to be met st such faraway outposts. Nihility in strijl.-'S. An uncle of thc present Lord Bra bourne was hung in Australia, not fyr one murder, but for about a dozen offenses of that character. At the present moment two Italian dukes of Villarosa, aro serving tirao in thc great Italian penitentiary of La Magdalcna for a peculiarly cow ardly murder. Then there is Count Schleinitz who is doing time in (!cr many for blackmailing, and, as I stated the other da.., Comte dc Moien in France, who h.is j.ist com pleted a term of servitude, for at tempted murder. So it is in almost every country whero titlo- and aris tocracy exist. A largo percentage of the long-term convicts in Siberia bear thc titlo of princo or barm, and it was only a few weeks ago that we read of the eldest son of an Fng lish peer, and the heir to tho title, confessing in open court that he had forged the name of his mother to a promissory note. This only goes to show that there is no family, no matter how high in rank, that does not have its domestic skeletons and black sho p. London Letter. A I5;l ro MiiirrM. Spangolitc, a very rare mineral, has b.-en found in some British museum specimens of copper ore from thc St. Day mines of Hcdruth, Cornwall. It occurs in deep emerald-green translucent crystals of hexagonal form, ending in trun cated pyramids, ana is in reality a hyd rated sulphate and chloride of copper and aluminum. Only one other sample of spangolitc is known, namely, that described by Mr. Pen field in thc American Journal of Science, lX'JU, and discovered in the district around Tombstone. Arizona. A f'rntlrn I.:nv. There are sixteen states in which a medical diploma of itself is no license for practice, and in which an extra and independent state examina tion is demanded by law before the applicant can be qualified. These states arc Alabama, Arkansas. Florida. Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi. Xcw Jersey, New York, North Caro lina. Xorth Dakota. Pennsylvania, South Dakota. Texas. L'tah. Virginia Washington and portions of the Indian territory. Tlie Sproa'l K:ii;i-. The spread eagle signifies an eagle with two heads. Porney tells us the reason why the emperor of (Jcrmany bears an eagle with two heads, viz : -On the union of the kingdom of Bomania. its arms, which wore an eagle displayed sable, being the same as those of thc emperor, were unite! into one body, leaving it two ! wings as they are now. Charle magne was the first emperor of Ger many, and adde 1 the second head to the eagle for his arms." Recruits in Afghanistan. Military recruiting in Afghanistan is practiced under sonewhat pecu liar circumstances. The ameer has just commanded ono of his chiefs to enlist 100 foot and twenty-five horse men as a body guard. If the fall number are not forthcoming within a month thc chief's income will be cut down in proportion to thc num ber of men deficient lap Colony for North Carolina. ."ecretary Bruner of the Depart ment of Agriculture of North Caro lina is in receipt of a letter from Japanese Commissioner Koidzumi, who state? that he guarantees to raise SloO.OW, if a like sum is made up in this country, to bring Japanese colonists to North Carolina and manufacture porcelain ware out of kaolin. A MAN WITH A HISTORY. The Terrible Experience that Befel John W. 'Ihunias of 'Ihcfa, Tennessee. Afflicted tVilh a recnliar Iilseane lljr Bodj Cotcrcti ttith Lump Conltl Not Cat and Thought lie VfarC.O' lag to Dry Vp Hi I5ccoerj' tlirMnrrrl of Triinece. From the XaMiviUc, Tenn., Kuiincr. Mt. John W. Thomas. Jr., of Theta, Tenn., is a man with a most interest ing history. At present he is interested in blooded horses for which Maury County is famous. "Few people, I takc it," said Mr. Thomas to a reporter w ho had asked him for the s'ory of his life, 'have passed through n remarkable a chain of events as I have and remained alive to tell the story. It was along in lSsl, when 1 was working in the silver mines of New Mexico, that my troubles began: at first I suffered with indigestion, and so acute did the pains become that I wedt to California for my health, but the trip did me little good, and fully im- Ercssed with the idea that my last day ad nearly dawned upon mc, I hurried back here to my old home to die. "From simple indigestion my malady developed into a chronic inability to take anv substantial food, I was barely able to creep about, and at times 1 was prostrated by spells of heart palpita tion. This condition continued until one year ago. On the 11th of April, 1S03. I suddenly collapsed, and for days I was uncon scious, in fact I was not fully myself until July. My condition on Septem ber 1st, was simply horrible, I weighed but seventy pounds, whereas nvy nor mal weight is lti.l pounds. All ovet my body there were lumps from thc si.e of a grape to the si.e of a walnut, mj fingers were cramped so that 1 could not more than half straighten them. I had entirely lot control of my lower limbs and my hand trembled so that I could not drink without spilling thc liquid. Nothing would remain on my stomach, and it seemed that I miihtdry up before many days had passed. "I made another round of the pli3'si ciatls, calling in one after thc other, and by the aid of morphine and other medicines they gave mc, I managed to live though barely through thc fall." Here Mr. Thomas displayed hisarms, and just above thc elbow of ench there was a large irregular stain as large ns the palm of the hand and of a purple color, the spa-e covered by the mark Was nulikcn nearly to the bone. "That,' said Mr. Thomas, '-is what the doctors did by putting morphine into Inc. On the llth of December, lS'.ir;, just eight months after I took permanently to bed I shall never forget the date 1113 cousin, Joe Foster, of Carter's Creek, called on me and gave me a box of Dr. Williams Pinli PiUsfor Pale Peo ple, saying they had cured him of par tial paralysis, with which I knew he had all but died. I followed his direc tions and bcgr.n taking the medicine, ns a result I stand before you to-day the most surprised man on earth. Look at nry hand, it is ns steady as yours: my face has a healthy iook about it; I have been attending to my duties for u month. Since I began taking the pil's I have gained SO pounds, and I am still gaining. All the knots have disap peared from my body except this little kernel here In my palm. I have a good appetite and I am almost as strong as I ever was. Yesterday I rode thirty-seven miles on horseback. I feel tired to-day but not sick. I used to have from two to four spells of heart palpitation every night: since I began the use of the pills 1 have had but four fnells altogether. "1 know positively that I was cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I be lieve firmly that it is the most wonder ful remedy in existence to-day, and every fact I have presented to you is known to my neighbors as well as lo myself, and thej- will certify to the truth of mv remarkable cure." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo ple arc not a patent medicine in the sense that name implies. They were first compounded as a proscription and used as such in general practice by an eminent physician. So great was their efficacy that it was deemed wise to place them within the reach of all. They are now manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenec tady, N. Y., and are sold in boxes (never in loo-e form by thc dozen or hundred, and the public are cautioned Against numerous imitations sold in this shape) at oO cents a box, or six boxes for Si .. anl ma- be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Williams" Medicine Company. Pay or French Legislators. It may not bo uninteresting to onr readers to give a glance at the differeLt deliberative Assemblies which have suc ceeded each other in this country sinco 1789. In that year the number of representatives was 774 nine per de partment and three extra. Each mem ber received 18 francs a day, and thus the Assembly cost 13,832 francs daily, or 331,968 francs a month for twenty fonr sittings. The whole cession of nine months, therefore, required 2,99", 622 francs. In addition, 51,300 francs was allowed for the Bureau, making a total of 3,038,922 francs. The members of the Corps Legislatif, which came after the Representatives of the People, had 10,000 francs each per session, with the obligation of having a carriage for two legislators. Under the Restoration the Deputies received no pay. Tho President alone received 100,000 francs to meet the expense of receptions. Under Lonis Philippe the members did not have anv salary, but the Pres ident received 120,000 francs. In 1843 the Deputies of thc Second Republic, who were 900 in number, received 23 francs a day, or 540,000 francs per month. The session lasted nino months and cost 4,905,000 francs, including the President and the Questors. Under the empire, that is to say from 1852 to 1870, there were 283 Deputies. They received at first 2,000 francs a month during time of the ses sions. Afterward they had a fixed sal ary of 12,500 francs. The President of the Legislative Corps had a fixed allow ance of 100,000 francs, and 30,000 franca for coBts of receptions. The sessions of the second empire absorbed 3,530, 000 francs. In 1871, the Assembly at Bordeaux was composed of 750 mem bers, who were paid 750 francs a month, or 9,000 francs a year. They had their salaries even during thc months when they did not sit. The allowance of the President was reduced at this period to 70,000 francs, and the Questors to 15, OOOfrancE. Since 187G the Chamber is composed of 548 members, including the representatives of the French colo nies. Each member has a fixed allow ance of 750 francs a month. The Pres ident's salary is 70,000 francs, and that of the Questors 15,000 francs. Inde pendently of their salaries, these three functionaries have numerous privileges, each as lodging, firing, lighting, attend ance, etc A HORSE AS WITNESS. It X Very Important Ktltlrm-e lit a Tninraore Sitirtlor 4nc. Tho horse has boon knovn to act In tho capacity of a detective, ac cording to the Hostoti Herald. Thus, In Shelby county, Tenn. a shocking murder was committed, and the trial nf tln itiii-lirnt ramc lift" in :t ilis- V-. ... ...... ..w.w. - --- . triet which wa$ divided from ono of another jurisdiction by tho highway , on which thc deed was committod. Tho body was found a few yards from tho road, from which it had evidently boon dragged, and tho doubt arose as to which civil district the murder had been committed in. which gave rise to the probsbility that thc murderer wiuld cseapa con viction. Several mont!i5 passed away be fore tho trial wa- commenced, when ono of tho witnesses, mounted on tho horso of tho deceased, and accompa nied by a number of persons, was riding toward the court house. When the hors.- reached tho vicinity of tho scene of the murder he began Jo shov symptoms of alarm, which conduct greatly surprised all who witnessed i!, for the other horses of tho company betrayed no indications of fear. As the party proceeded on ward the agitation of the horse it: creased, and when he reached a point in the road opposite where the body was found his exe'teniont was so great that he became unmanagea ble altogether. The gentlemen present came to a halt and looked on in perfect astonishment. His llesh quivered, his nostrils dilated, and. his eyes glancing into the woods near by, he stood snorting and neigh ing, a picture of the wildest excite m nt. One of tho gentlemen present, sus pecting the cau-e of tho horse's agitation, suggested that he should have a loose rein, which being granted, thc noble animal rushed into the thicket, and coming to a certain tree commenced pawing at its roots-. Then making his way farther into the forest, ho circled round and returned to thc same spot, where he stood trembling with agita tion and pawing until he was vio lently forced away, and whenever afterward he passed that same spot his conduct was invariably the same. No blood had ccr been seen upon tho road, and no appearance of any unusual struggle had ever been dis covered. If the murder took place, in the highway, the horse would have known nothing of the trees in the neighboring thicket: if it was committed where the body was found, then the court had no jurisdic tion and the murderer would go cot free. I'pon tho trial this testimony of the dumb animal against the prisoner p oved most startling. His sagacity was proverbial in thc neighborhood where he belonged, and his attach ment to hio master was such that he followed linn round like a dog. In unmistakable pantomime he enacted thc committal of the murder, pictured thc decoy into the wood, the assas sin's demand for gold and thc death struggle under the tree, and thus the doom of the prisoner was scale I. At Vet I'olni. Violet Dowers, being shown thc pightri Who is that splendid look ing fellow walking un and down so proudly with a gun'' Everybody seems to he admiring him. radei; Flatbael: That's- Hotspur walloped a fourth-class man He's got tt) do sixty hours' extra ;uard duty and may bo court-martiai d. And what do you stipposo is tho matter with this poor fellow com ing? He looks as if something awful had hap; ened to him." No wonder: he's just been re ported for having a button off tho tail of his dress coat." Puck. '1 In- Modern May of I-iulil ins. Professional Pugilist Did you send my last challenge to all tho papers? Secretary Certainly. "And publish the card calling that policeman a liar and a coward?" "Of course." Anu tell the reporters how I licked four fellows last night?"' Yes, sir." Then I'll get out There's a fel low coming around who's threat ened to lick mc, and I don't want to meet him.''--Texas Siftings. I The Comini; IliimorWt. Tohnnie You ought to give mc a nickel 1 was at the head of my class ycterdav instead of discour aging me with that switch. I Mother I'm glad to hear that you knew your lesson so well. j Johnnie We didn't have any les I sons, because I was the onlone in , the class All thy lest are at homo down with the measles. Texas Sift ' ings. A liricoii Out ll:tt-k. Cab fares are pretty high these d:ys."' .-aid. Dawson. "You can't get 1 a cab for less than a dollar wherever yon want to go.' I got a haek for fifteen ceutsthis morninc. said Wit hum p. Where?" "At a Sixth avenue barber shop.'' Town Talk. Tin- Objei-t of rh.irlty. Tramp, piteous'.y Please help a poor cripple- Kind Old fientlcman. handing him some money Bless me: why, of course. How are you crippled my p-ior fellow? Tramp, pocketing the money Fi nancially, sir. Truth. To Hear :t Ttii:iiil-ptrm in the sun. In a somewlmt spe -illative conclu sion of a recent paper Mr. Preece mentioned tho effects of an aurora on telephone circuits and stated that it was not a wild dream to say that we may hear on this earth a thun derstorm on tho sun. Answereil. Wonder I see that Life has started tho query. "Is there an.-thin that a rirl won't marry?" Do you think there is? Aster Yes. I know it. What?" Mc' Texas Siftings. Modern llrrnitm. Weary Watkins Say. ley ain't no real heroes nowadays. Hungry Hig-fins Dey ain't, eh? W'y. right here in de paper is a fel low adveitisin' dat ho ain't afraid of woric - Texas iftiiii's THE OLD RELIABLE Columbus - State - Bank ! (Oldeat Baak I Uw Kate) fays Interest on Tims AMD ' - Hales Loans on Real Estate, NHfcS SIQHT DRAFTS CI Otfa&s, Chicago. Now Tork ani all Frim Ceamtrlss. JILLS : STEAMSHIP : TICKETS; BUYS GOOD NOTES lad Helps it Cottomcn when they Need lit OPflCEBS A5D DIR.ECT0&S1 tEANDEIt GERHARD. Prwi't. B. H. 1IF.NRY. Yic rre1. JOHN 8TADFFER. Cmhler. M.BRUGGER, O.W.UUL8T. L -or COLUMBUS, NEB., HAS AX Authorized Capital of - $500,000 Paid in Capital, - 90,000 OFFICER. C. H. SHELDON. 1'iWt. 1 II. 1. II. OKIIMMCII. Vice Pros. CLAKKl'KAV. Cashier. IAXI I.I. SCHU.Ul. Ass't Cash IlIKIXTOKS. II. M. Winsi.ow, II. V. II. Or.m.niCH, . II. Hiei.nox, Y. A. MrAi.i.isrEit, ('Alt I. KlKNKK. Jonas wei.cu. STOCKIIOMKKS. s. c.nmv, I'RItllAKI) I. OS EKE, Cl.AItK lillAV, IANIi:i, S'CllHAM, J. Henry Wuiwemas, IIknuv Losr.KK. t'KO. Y. A!.I.KY. A. I. H. Or.iii.nicn. 1 UAXK KOItEH. J. P. HECKEK tST.TE. 1CEBF.CCA ItECKEU. Rank of deposit: Interest alIorcd on time deposits: luy anil sell exeliaiico on United States and hurope. anil liny ami sell avail able securities. We shall be pleased to re ceive your ImisIiiv.3. Wo solicit yuur pat ronage. -THE- First National Bank COX.XTICB'CTS. NED. OFFICERS. A. ANDERSON. J. H. n ALLEY, 'resident. Vice Trcs't. O. T. I'OEN. Cashier. WIHECTOl'S. O.AfltERSON. P. ANDERSON, JACOB OREI8EN. . HENRV RAOATZ, JAMEH O. BEEDEK. Statement or the Condition at the Close or Business Jnlj 12, lH'Xl RESOURCES. Loans and Discount $ 241,407 .? Real i-state Furniture ami Fix tures K,.Tl 91 IT. S. Ilnnilc 13.--JO0) Due from other banks 37,PT5 31 Cash on Han 21.567 W K.T41 &3 Total.... frjJJ.lW 35 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock pahl In Surplus Fund Until vldeil profits Circulation ue posits.... .................... otai... .............. ....... S eo.onnoo W)0 4.571" 10 i:w(n 25.119 37 ...f333.10G 3i HENRY GASS, Coflins : and : Metallic : Cases ! 3T Repairing of all kinds of Uphol ttery Goods. I-tf COLUMBUS. NEBRASKA. Columbus Journal is l'REi'Aitrn to iritMsii anytiii.v llEyflltEO OK A PRINTING OFFICE. o -wrrn the- PEST PAPERS -OF TB- COUNTRY. IHIA