IPPPffl "3W ve ftg$P: iSS mT ,A;-3K , 'v5 -ij-f 1- ". C 3fc& T; ,-- xt" 2; Vf-. -v r y. 4 - S -V-. .- - -V8f VOLUME XXVIL-NUMBER 2. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 22, 1896. WnOLE NUMBER 1.354. 1 r wJ. ij-: uwuMt,' w (Kwrownui jomimL p l EjSKii- ?U ('t-J-' Wh? --ss? && .I LOVE ME LOVE MY DOG. tJFFY WAS Call he Tenth, looked In the light of Inheritance, having come down to him from Went worth of the name when the latter had been ordered away. Caldwell went into Wentworth's quar- ters at once, and found Duffy rubbing up a pair of his ex-master's discarded boots, with a view of using them him . Belt He liked the man's looks and he Uka4 tho condition of the vacated quar ters, with their slate-gray painted woodwork, so he took the quarters and agreed to take Duffy at a striker's usual rate of remuneration. Duffy entered promptly upon his du ties, and was entirely satisfactory. He had no incumbrances in the way of family or sweethearts, and he was faithful to a degree that was occasion ally exasperating. For six 'months he served Caldwell in singleness of pur pose, having In that time been incapaci tated only six days; that Is. for forty eight hours after each of the paymas ter's visits; and Caldwell, knowing the ways of strikers, made no objection. Duffy slept uproariously in his room, and Caldwell made his own fires and brushed his own clothes and went with un blacked boots. In the Interim, no hour was too early for rising, none too late to sit up and keep logs on the andirons that the rooms might be warm and cheerful for the "leftinant," no duly' too arduous, provided it served Caldwell's ends. Blackstone, seeing the excellence of Duffy, departed from the strict code of honesty in the matter of servants which governs the army, and made overtures to the model striker. Blackstone had no business to do it, and Duffy knew It. and a fine Inscrutable grin came upon his Hibernian mouth. Blackstone had said, with an as sumption of offhandedness: "Duffy, what do you get?" Having due regard for his employ er's credit in the world, he answered calmly: "Twinty dollars, sor." "Get out!" said Blackstone. "Yes. sor," replied Duffy. "I want to know the truth, not lies like that." "Yc'd best ask the llftinant, sor. I disremember." "He works you deuced hard." "Does he. then?" "My man Is no good. Suppose you come to me. You won't have to sit up to all hours for me." a Duffy only smiled, but the smile was not pleasing. "What do you think of It, Duffy?" "I nivcr think, sor. The liftinant cays I'm to do as I'm told and not think." f Upon this Blackstone went away, and Duffy Baluted him respectfully. In Justice to the officer's common sense. it must be said that It was only par tial intoxication which could have led him to place himself in such a posi tion toward a soldier. Duffy did not repeat the' conversa tion to Caldwell, because he knew it would make trouble between the two men, and Caldwell whose disposition was not of the mildest had several quarrels on bis hands as it was. The lieutenant fell into the habit of keeping the striker up very late, night after night, so Duffy inspected his pockets several times in succession while Caldwell was sleeping as soundly HE KICKED BESSIE. as if Justice bad been the soporific, and not. as was tho case, sutler's whisky, and he judged, from the fact ' that sometimes there was much loose change and again almost nothing, that his master was playing too much at cards. There was nothing to be fone. Duffy did not consider that bis duties as striker included the moral guidance is -superior. He reflected thjfet it Tfould be a good thing if Cajdwell should get roprried, only this he, Duffy, would very. Ufcjfelv, lose his alace. So he sat up sight after tight ard It grew monotonous. - Just at th's period there c me Unto Duffy's life a yellow and white 'dog. Exactly why it should' have wftndered to the door upon' one wet and freezing night wheu Duffy was in a particularly weary frame of mind, and where it came from, he never knew. It was well after midnight, and Duffy was sprawled in a leather chair of the troop sadder's manufacture, dozing with both 'cars open, when there came a scratch ing at the door. Duffy thought it was the lieutenant trying to find the knob. It had never been so bad as that yet, Bevertheless the striker went and opened the door, to be rewarded by tie sight of an .extremely stfcAU and miserable dog. with piteous eyes. Now. Duffy was only a soldier, and a soldier loves nothing on earth or in heaven as he does a cur. so Duffy called the dog in and warmed it and fed it and watched it with satisfaction beaming all over his face. It was spotted and 4taty and wounded and woefully thin. Vat Daly took it to his heaft He .pct three nights before thejb-e. no laager toBFly. contentedly trying to ,mt a same for that dog. At lait he ned to call it "Bessie." after the i-admired daughter of the bom- officer, and with a complete for the entire inappropriate- f the name. IL II Propertjir JT 1 well oJrt liii i ana r was F I .1 V J- S he had settled this to his saCTpurposc of the conjntion is to make he tried to discover accom- ia the creature. "Here. Be3- fcer- Set up now. set up. Can't t ? Weil, then, give us your paw. paw. bow. Can't you ysw paw? Well. then, lie down; charge down, lie down. down. .charge? Welt then, speak. sale, sp-e-a-k. speak bow. nk. But Bessie could oaly 1 ry)kfbls brlghjcuttit? eyes and come when called. So the solace of many more hours of patient waiting lay In teaching Bessie these and many oth er tricks, until her was the most ac complished dog In all the garrison and greatly beloved at the barracks. Duf fy was a little annoyed about the com ment the Inappropriate name called forth, but he insisted that it was as good as another, and the incongruity was soon lost In Bessie's popularity. Caldwell saw the dog only on rare occasions. It stayed In Its master's room, and slept on his bed, and Waxed fat In retirement He had spoken to It several times, hut otherwise took no no tice of its existence, which secretly riled Duffy. But Caldwell was preoc cupied, and not quite himself. He came home a good deal the worse for wine one night, and Bessie, being in his way, got a kick that sent him crouching to his master's side. Caldwell might far better have kicked Duffy; however, the striker understood and sympathized with the lieutenant's condition. He himself could never have kicked a dog, even after pay-day, but all men are not alike; so Duffy petted Bessie and Bhtlt him up In his own room, and returned to look after the bodily comfort of his master. This considering the wine was pardonable; but the next offense could not be condoned. It occurred in broad daylight and Caldwell was sober. He had been having an explanation with the commanding officer, and that gen tleman had made reflection upon some of the lieutenant's fast growing habits that had exasperateC the already over worried junior almost beyond endur ance. He strode Into his quarters and found Duffy, who was not expecting him, dividing his attention between Bessie's charms and the buckle of his master's belt. Now, Bessie's disposi tion Inclined him to forgive; he ran to Caldwell, looked up to his face with soft, affectionate eyes, and put his little paws, one yellow and one white. upon his knee. Caldwell did not dare to kick the commandant, but he kicked Bessie and broke the yellow paw. It was the one always held out to Duffy to greet him. Duffy bandaged the paw, and in time it grew well. But Duffy hated Cald well with the most dangerous of ha tredsa silent and a waiting one. Caldwell's habits did not improve. His fondness for whisky, whether good or bad, continued. He had good whisky in his room, and Duffy knew it, for he belonged to the old school of strikers who do not look upon cigars or liquor as private property. One day, after Bessie's foot was well, Duffy went to get a drink, because his spirits were low. There was very little whisky in the decanter, barelhalf a glassful, and an Idea suddenly flashed into the striker's mind. Caldwell was officer of the day. He never started to make the rounds without taking enough liquor to 'keep him warm, and Duffy knew it and saw his revenge laid bare. The striker took Bessie for a walk over to the hospital, to show the stew ard the mended paw. "Say!" said Duffy, "I've got the toothache. I didn't sleep none last night Hev ye got some what's that ye give me once? Laudanum, was it? Kin ye let me hev a bit?" "Why, yes; I guess so," the steward answered, and went Into the dispen sary to get it '"Shall I take all that?" Inquired the striker with sweet simplicity. "Lord! no, man. Put some on cotton and stick it in the tooth." "Oh! And what wud it do to me if 1 wuz to swallow it? Wud it kill me?" "No, there ain't enough for that It would put you pretty fast asleep, though." "Oh!" said Duffy again. Then Bessie went through his tricks for the steward, and trotted bac home at his master's heels. That night Caldwell finished the whisky in the decanter, and grumbled that the sutler was selling him vile tasting stuff, then started off a little while afterward to make his rounds. The next day he was under arrest for drunkenness on duty. And Duffy, who had, with well-played reluctance, given some of the most damaging testimony in regard to Cald well's habits at the court martial, which dismissed the latter, said good by to the disgraced man with a sparkle which was not of tears in this eyes; and he told Bessie to give the "leftin ant the right paw." Which was the yellow one? San Francisco Argonaut Spldrr Web Veil. The very latest in veils is a large, delicate mesh somewhat resembling a spiders web. A curious little white speck like a fly near the left eye and on he. right close by the mouth, is an ar rangement of spots which might easily be mistaken for a spider. This veil is bordered with a little narrow edge of Honiton lace, and two love knots with in a reasonable distance of a pretty mouth. If the veil is white thespider and fly are black, and vice verfC This might truly be called the allegorical veil, assuming the face to be young -and innocent looking at the world beyond with wondering eyes. The old-time useful fashion of gathering the ends and front, making the veil fit comfort ably around the face, has been quite done away with. Instead, it is allowed to hang loose and fall. Itrldce off IMnk Marble. A thing of beauty and a joy forever will be the colossal bridge of pink mar ble over the Tennessee river at Knox viile. It will cost 11,000,000. and will bo built entirely of the famous pink marble which abounds in Knox county. It will be 1,600 feet long, and the span of the main arch will be 240 feet which is said to be twenty feet longer thaa the longest span in the world. The height of the center arch above the water will be. 105 feet The roadway will be fifty feet in width. Aatl-Sqalrrel Coareatloa. AuJanti-squirrel conventiopns to be hell in Spokane, Wash., which will be ended by delegates trim all county s in eastern Wshincton. The united and deterjsfned efforts to exter minate the ground squirrels, which an nually destr grain and other crops ia that rejpn to the value of several hundraLawrasand dollars. A awmber of unemployed union men at Indianapolis have wintered very cheaply and comfortably on a flatboat which they took possession of last fall and condacted on the co-operative plan. I THE HEAD-HUNTERS. THE GREAT SAVAGE CANNIBALS OF BRITISH INDIA. Feraelowa Tribe. Wha Slay Mat Md ITe err. Their Heds at TropfalM of the Cba.e Ghastly C.reMS.Ie. of the Sagas sad Was. fi here are many persons besides an thropologists who will be interested to learn that one of the wild tribes of India, the Nagas, of the Assam bor der, is giving up Its most distin guishing pursuit that of head-hunting. Scientific India has been put Into a .ferment over the fact, which comes assured on the authority of Prof. Peal, the well-known English ethnologist. The mere Anglo-Indian will rejoice to think that his head will for the future be all the safer on his shoulders, and will probably bless the spirit of prog ress for having touched the Nagas and led them into paths of virtue. The an thropologist, on the other hand, will be glad to learn that though the Indian first-cousins of the ferocious head-hunters of Borneo are conforming td the more peaceful pursuits of civilization, they have not been emancipated en tirely, but still go about when the spirit moves them and cut off each other's heads with all the cheerful bloodthirsti ness that has characterized them and their ancestors during untold genera tions. The Naga country does not exceed twenty miles square and it speaks vol umes for the energy of the inhabitants that the past forty years should have seen upward of twelve thousand mur- CELEBRATING THERETURN PROM ders for the sake of the trophies. Any devoted scientist contemplating the study of the head-hunters in situ can do so under favorable auspices on n group located slightly north of Patkal, between the Dlsang and Dekhu rivers, and extending through the hill country as far as the boundaries of Manipur and Cachar. In the group there are romcthing like forty-six villages divid ed into eight or ten distinct sub-tribes, who are on the let-brotherly-love con tinue principle generally at war with each other. The facial tattoo marks arc identical, though the dialects vary slightly. In the matter of dress, arms, koase;?, customs, etc., the Nagas appear to be identified with the Battaks in Sumatra, with the better known hun ters cf the human bead in Formosa and Bcmcc. with the African skull-taker and with their now extinguished brethren of Australia. It is said they still reserve their totems or tribal msrks. Not very far away froa tho Naga country, dwell the wild Was, another pecpla given to the hobby of head-ccl-lecilrg. Not much ws3 kaown about tae Was until a yaar ago. when Mr. Scctt TCperiatcndent of the Northern Shan States tinder the Burmese gov ernment, made the journey to their ter rllcr7 an a diversion to the pursuit of a deposed Tsawhn, who had been giv ing ironblc in Moughan. Some very ctracso stcriea have been floating about India end Burnish for many years regarding the Was. The coun try caa ccen. 10 tiurman especially, a land of mystery and fable and romance, and it is en record in tho annals of the kingdom cf Ava, that the Burmese, at tracted by rumors of wonderful gold mines, once sent a regiment of 3,000 men to subjugate the Was. who instead subjugated them and cut them all to pieces. Since that time the Wa Hal have had an unenviable reputation for thcir-ferocity. their masses of pure gold, their depravity, their fairy lake, and especially their nakedness and their cannibalism. This reputation is borne oat by the experience of Mr. Scott He tells that outside every village, though not neces sarily at any special point of the com pass, is an avenue of skulls referred to in the euphonious language of the peo ple as the On Gau Pong Kau. These groves are conspicuous from a long dis tance. They consist of strips .of the nrimeval Jungle, feujee forest trees left standing where all the remaining coun- try Is cleared for cultivation. The un dergrowth Is rank, and these avenues are usually in deep shade. Here there are rows of posts, all in one line not on both sides Of the path decked with human skulls. A niche is cut in the back of the post with a ledge on which the skull'can rest There is a round hole in front, through which sometimes only the teeth and empty eye-sockets shdw, and at other times the whole skuii grins a horrible ghastly smile. These head posts are very trippingly called 'Tak Heng." or "K'rawng Ngai." and there is never a village so poor that it has not a dozen of them, while some that Mr. Scott encountered numbered a round hundred. One purpose which they fulfill Is to drive away the timid Shana, but the primary purposes is sacrificial. The harvest god of the Was still demands human heads, and it is necessary to add some skulls to the pathway every year if the crops are to be good. Feb ruary and March are the busiest months, but there is no "close sia&on." The heads of distinguished and pious men and strangers are the most effica cious, and bearing this in mind, it is no wonder that no traveler prior to Mr. Scott ever contrived to return. When he came to know all about the tribe it was a matter of wonder to that gentleman .that he and his party con trived lo db sd. The acquisition of a head Is sufficient justification for widespread rejoicing, andvthe ceremonial attached to the "placing" of the prize is quite elabor ate. It is first of all put in a basket or thatched cover and is then hung up in a tree or perched on the top of a bamboo until it ripens and bleaches. Then comes the dedication day, when, to the accompaniment of the village gong a huge log of wood hollowed out with a narrow slit In the side and beaten with wooden mallets the skull A SUCCESSFUL MAN HUNT. is carried away and set up in the fatal grove. Naturally most honor is accorded to these skulls which arc acquired by tho prowess of individual members of the tribe, but travelers in the region being scare? and luck being occasionally against the young warriors, it is some times a difficult matter to add the requi site number to the grove by the most nonored mode of acquisition, and then it is permitted to purchase the article from neighboring tribes, who have to resort to measures which betray a cer tain lack of commercial confidence in the Was in order to retain their own heads on their shoulders, and at the same time to insure the equivalent in silver. The prices run from two rupees weight of silver for the head of a lem to a couple of hundred for unusual or fashionable heads; and judging from the whole range of prices there would seem to be a good chance for an enter prising man to make a fortune out of the business. The practice of offering human heads as a propitiatory sacrifice to the har vest god is. of course, not peculiar to the Was Perhaps the most notorious head-hunters are those of Borneo, whose general practice of disposing thorn, around the village is Identical with that of the Was. Among the Nagas. too. much the same incentive exists that is, the heads are offered to the gods, but feminine caprice Is said to be one of the prime incentives. If the young women of the tribe did not chaff the young men because they had not earned their tattoo marks, then tho young men would probably not get wild and go out and cut off a few heads just to show they have grit in them. It looks as if the young women were not particularly critical, for something like half the number of heads taken are those of their own sex and of chil dren. Among the Djaks the head is more of a personal trophy than among the Was. and in addition to the disposal of important skulls in a conspicuous line at the entrance of the village, every self-respecting native has a choice collection ranged round his" own hut The custom Is found among the can nibal tribes of the South Seas. In some of the islands It is not the heads of strangers but only those of defunct chiefs that are allowed the distinction of being placed on a pedestal. Here, - I however, strange heads being only good enough to gratify the individual owner and make his friends envious the ob ject has nothing to do with the propi tiation of any particular god, but only the manes of the dead chief himself, who is supposed to stand guard from bis coign of vantage 07er the destinies 6f the tribe, and who is prevented from going asleep and allowing these same destinies to look after themselves by liberal libations of roast hog and poce pdc. Among some of the mere advanced kacbih tribes inhabiting the country round about the wild Was, the offering of human heads' and human bodies to the gods has ceased, and the god of harvest has to content himself with the" ornaments and garments of the females to whom possibly they eventually re turn. The transition from heads to or naments is more simple than it look3. First men's heads ard Indispensable. Then with the growth of a spirit of scepticism women's head3 are consid ered good enough. Finally, when wo meii aro too scarce to be. as it were, an unfailing source of supply, it is not considered a reflection on a warrior's courage or skill if he goes out and pur chases heads for himself. The head is the main thing. It is preferable to bo obtained In war but obtained it must be. THE FORGOTTEN ORATOR. bat the ttaaaglas Editor Had for the iltteient Lo.t Mis Name. "Say," saiiied the managing editor of the St Louis" Star, coming out of his sanctum with his brows knitted. "I know the name, but I can't for my life recall it What was this fellow's name that made such a stir in the world some time ago? He was quite fa mous as an oartor." "Demosthenes," suggested the liter ary editor, with a profound look. "No. I'm speaking of modern times. I kndw hie name as well as I do yours. Hi went through Texas While here and left without accomplishing any thing.'' "Was it Huntington?" asked the railroad editor, hopefully. "No," shouted the editor. "You know It wasn't The man I'm speaking of was a very prominent person, and he went down very suddenly." "Possibly it was McGinty," said the alleged funny man of the paper. The editor glared at this remark, and the funny man began to have visions of a note on his desk in the morning. "This man," continued the editor, "whose name I can't remember, was an Irishman and was considered the best man in the republic. Ho was " "Oh, 1 know who you mean," said the sporting editor. "O'Brien Moore, ain't it?" "Never mind, gentlemen," said the managing editor, "taxing your stupen dous intellects any further. I have thought, of the name myself. Corbett James J. Corbett is the name I was trying to recall." And the staff said "Oh!" and tho wheels went on grinding. Ilair-Dollar Hones. Several carloads of horses that start ed from Oregon for Kentucky recently were Btoppcd at Shoshone, Idaho, by the owners, and the horses were taken from the care and sold for fifty cents apiece. This was more profitable than to pay the heavy freight bill with what the horses would have brought in Ken tucky. PLATING PAPER DISHES. Machinery for shaping plates, dishes and other ware from paper pulp has been introduced into this country suc cessfully. The dishes are shaped al most entirely by compression. Heavy plungers fitted with correctly shaped flanges are forced upon flat sheets of the pulp and as the outer rim of each flange is fitted with cutting devices a plate is cut, shaped, compressed and ready for baking at one operation. A new feature in the business is a process of plating the paper dishes to resemble china, silver, etc. If the or dinary methods were used the plated paper dishes would cost more than the old kind, eo the new enamel is made from waste silk. Defective cocoons, or those contain ing a double end, waste made in wind ing or swept off the floors of the fac tory are all used. It is dried, cut. up, ground and dissolved by a chemical preparation so that it flows a liquid into a large tank. Paper dishes plated or enameled In this way are both cheap and lasting and the enamel does not crack. SOUTHWEST BREEZES. The best preacher on earth can spoil a sermon by preaching too long. There Is no higher praise for a friend than to say that he is faithful. Some people seem to have no ambi tion beyond making a collection of dis eases. The trouble with cute children Is, they soon outgrow it, and become im pudent . No man 13 really unlucky unless he can make a train late by going to the depot to wait for it Thousands of people would appre ciate sympathy and help who never ask for it, and neve:- get it Some barber is losing the chance to make a great hit by not inventing a Padcrewski Hair Tonic When there is a snow storm the fancy of very young men lightly turns to thoughts of tracking rabbits. Most people's crowning proof that they regard a man as a good friend, is that they abuse their kin to him. The martyrs among women are near ly always women who are treated par ticularly well by their men folks. The women can always depend upon this: that a man at his meals will ask for something that is not on the table. It would be pleasanter living In tho world if there were not so many fools in it but more difficult to make a living. There never was a nlan who would die for a woman, and never a man who has not said he would do it cheerfully. When the average woman attends a play, she wants to see a noble youth triumph over a lot of unprincipled old mowfAtt V,A1 mere is oniy one inmg ior a man 10 do when he finds himself married to a woman who enjoys spending money, ' and that Is to learn to enjoy earning itFrom the Southwest ' A MOTHER'S SEARCH. IN HER HUSBAND'S CLOTHES SHE SOUGHT HER EOY. a Slept la WiUMnitpnri City Mall, Whew Slio Registered as "lliomis 2IcCarihjv Sailor Age 4G' Sought L0113 for h Runaway tad. Hut She Jb'ouud Hint. N Ohio newspaper of recent . date' told an interesting story, in the mak ing Gi which Wili Iamsport waa a factor, as an entry on the docket . in tho police oHlce 1233 . ..irn ?vV rrrmim. " ' will show, says -x- Willlamsport Grit. It will probably surprise Night Captain "Wcrrall and his force of patfohncn to lc:ira that one night in December last they entertained a woman lodger who wore the Habili ments of a man, slept on the floor in the tramps' bunk rqom and gave her name as a man a sailor, by the way, just on a little voyage intend for the benefit of "his health." As the story goes this woman was of medium stature, srokc with an Irish brogue and was not averse to wearing a sandy moustache on 'ier feminine lip when it became necessary to make her disguise more complete than did just the dress of a man. However, bccallse of the multiplicity of lodgers who wan der nightly Into tho city hall the ofii cers cannot recall this particular in dividual who called on the evening of Dec. 13. registering as follows: "Thomas McCarthy, aged sailor, Philadel- phia." According lo thj narrative printeJ in the Ohio newppatjrr. rcferrcJ to above, this "Thomas McCarthy" wis not Thomas McCarthy ::t all, but Mrs. Philip Whalcn, whose misshn it was lo find her son, who hid left home be cause of his stepfather's ill treatment and for whom the mctbrr worried un til she could no longer lestrain her self and she then started out to find her boy. Tho story declare that the poor woman's life had been made miserable by her worthless husband, who wanted to live without work, expecting" his wife and stepson the latter aged 10 years to earn the livelihood. Because the young man objected Jo this, Whnlen became abusive and drove the boy fiom home. Before marrying Whalen his wife was a Mrs. .McCarthy, and it was a happy life that she and her first husband led. Their only boy had been christened Thomas, after ins father, and he was the joy of the house hold. When McCarthy d'ed ha c'lcsred his wife by saying that she yet had tho lad to help her. Two years after ward Mrs. McCarthy married Philip Whalcn, at Cleveland. An staled, mat ters in the new household were far from pleasant, and in the lat'er part of November last young Tom rrn away lo escape the wrath of his stepfather and to seek his fortune in the wide, wide world. Two weeks later Tom wrote from Pittsburg, saying that he wa-s working his way eastward. Before- leaving Cleveland lie had been em ployed in a rolling mill, and his moth er calculated that he would naturally drift into cities and towns where this sort of industry was in operation. Yearning for her boy made Mrs. Whalen sick at heart. She thought more of the lad than she did of her husband, and thus it wa that she de cided to find her boy. She v. as fearless, physically strong and possessed an en durance of steel, which, backed by the Celtic determination to win. Mrs. Whalen quickly laid her plans for ex ecution. Donning a suit of her hus band's clothes, she ms'de herself into a robust-looking "man," then, without bidding her husband udieu. much less telling him of her queer mission, Mrs. Whalen went off on her search for Thomas. Naturally enough, when it came to choosing a rame for her new self, sLc decided i:non the -cognomen which was then tho name of her boy. and had been that of ins father before him Thomas McCarthy. For more than two months Mrs. Whalcn, with her falsetto voico, and her hair cut short, wanucrcd about cen tial and southeastern I'cnn&ylvanla in search of her boy. She was "cfecred" of nothing and knew how to steal- a ride on a freight train just as well as tho "tourist" of ten years experience. But the beet part of the story is that she succeeded in d-jing just what she started cut lo iTo she found her son Tommy. She fouad him three weeks ago in Bethlehem, where he was em ployed as a helper in a livery stable. But the reunited pair did not go back to Cleveland and Whalen. They are now located in a lovr. In northeast Ohio, and Mrs. Whslen declares that she will get a divorce from her hus band, then she ard Tommy can live together in peace. She still has the suit of clothes that accompanied her on her trip her boy. through Pennsylvania for Oil at Itasbj-. Rugby, Tenn., the little town founded by Tom Kughea and his English asso ciates, which was ro extensively written up a uczen years ago anu men forgotten, is again enjoying a tem porary spurt of nctorle1-. Somebody has "struck oil" in the vlciaily and speculation in alleged oil territory is being worked for all there is in it. Some of the unlucky 2ng!sa colonists who put their little all into the original enterprise may realize something on their investments, but the chances are that many of their successors will have nothing to show for theirs but empty holes in the ground. The Standanl Gil company is reported to have leased 300,000 acres in the neighborhood ' of Glen Mary, near the Kentucky line. If so, that is probably the location and size of the new oil field. Cincinnati Times-Star. A Snprcmo llebijr. False gods, idols, the sun, and other objects were worshiped by the ancient pagans, but this spirit showed that they believed in a being higher than mortal man. Rev. P. Llalone. An image impressed upon the retina of th eve remajns there an nnnreeiahla t!me Tuis is tne rcasou wiiy a torch BWUng rapiuiy Bccms t0 be a circular game. is VENEZUELA'S SHCFHERD BIRD. t r.illrtl the Ynk.-imlk and Talccs Goo-J ! Caro of Domestic AnltnaU. The natives of Venezuela and adjoin ing cottntrics on the north side of the river Amazon often avail themselves of the services of a native crane to care for their poultry, and also, in the place of collies or shepherd dogs-, used by North Americans orEuropeans.to guard and herd their domestic animal:, says i the Popular Science News. This re markable bird, which the Indians call vakamik. is found in a wild state in tho great forests that lie between the northern coasts of South America and the Amazon river, particularly in Vene zuela and British Guiana. The birds never leave the forest unlcs3 shot or captured. They travel about in Hocks of from 100 to 200, in eearrh of the ber ries, fruits and insects upon which they subsist. Their usual gate is slow and stately march, but they enliven them selves from time to .time by leaping up into the air. executing eccentric and fantastic waltzes ami striking the most absurd and preposterous attitudes. If pursued they endeavor to cave them selves by mailing, for their flight te so weak, according to Schomburgk. that when they attempt to fly over a body of water cf any considerable width they (ire often obliged lo drop upon it and save themselves by swlmminpr. When alarmed they utter the peculiar cry which La3 obtained for theni their name of trumpeters. The sound I something like that produced by a per son endeavoring to shout the syllables "tor, tow. tow; tor, tow. tow,'' with his mouth shut, or tho doleful noise made by children on New Year with their trumpets. The yakamiks usually de posit their eggs in a hollow ill the ground, often at the foot of a tree. A nest generally contains ten cygs. of a palc-gn-cn color. The young birds fol low their mothers as ?ocn as they arc hatched but do hot loc their pretty downy covering until several weeks old. The yr.kamiks aie ery readily tamed, and provo very valuable servants to the Indians, who domesticate them, and as they are courageous and will pro tect animals intrusted to their car? at every risk to themselves, even does ai? oblige 1 to yield to their authority. They may he trusted with the care of a Hock of sheep or domestic fowls, and everv morning will drive the ducks and poultry to their feeding places, and; carefully collecting any stragglers, bring them safely home at night. A yakamil: oen learns to know ami to obey :he voice of its master, follows im. when permitted, wherever he goes. and appears delighted at receiving hi3 cares?cs. 11 pines at his absence ?r.d welcomes lila return, and is extremely jealous of any rival. Should any Cog or cat approach, it Hies at it with tho utmost fury, and attacking it with wirgs and beak, driven it away. It presents itself regularly during meals, from which It chases all domestic ani mals, and ctcu the negroes who wait on the tabic, if it is not well acquainted with them, and only asks for a snare ot the eatables after it has driven away all who might aspire to a favorable notice from the family. It appreciates fa- I vera- in the same proportion as it is I jcalon-. of sharing them with others and I -!iv,(. tnv fml flffrpiinn bv the most i extravagant 'capers and gesticulations. When the animals cf which it hac j charge arc shut up for tne mgni. ue yakamik i costs upon some shed or tree near at hand, to be ready to take his place as keeper as soon as they are let out in the morning. One Quality that makes it valuable is its sense of iocr- j tion, which is perfect; however far it , may wander with the flocks or herds it ; ..,i ,-f r,nvr- ffiite fo find its way ! home at night, driving before it all the ; creatures intrusted lo his care. Sumo Gnotl M ".l.ick." On Laurel hill in Dridgeton, X. J., there stands a house between whose walls is hidden a quirt bottle cf the purest apple-jack. Tho bottle hac rested there for thirty-nine years, and has. according to the 3tory told, eleven years more to stay. When the house war. built, thirty-nine years ?go, a quart bottle was filled with "jack" and tight ly sealed and plastered in the wall by a man who had the house built The bot tle is not to be taken front its dark re cess until the son of the man who placed it there for him becomes 50 years of age. The "boy" is now 3a yeara cf age, and In ail these years ha3 kept true to the promise made in the days of his youth to his father not to touch the bottle of apple-jack until he reaches the haii-ccntury marl: in life's journey. NajolciHs S:. Helena House. A French engineer has conceived the inteusting idea of icproducing the; house in which Napoleon lived at St.; Helena as an attraction during the Paris exposition 'Of 10 JJ. The house will be an exact copy of theoriginal, with panoramic canva?es represent-, ing the natural surroundings. Uncle aitMC-t W'Uh. "I shore does hope," &ai J Uncle Me.se, "dat dey will git dis heah new photo graph trick so line by summer dat man kin tell wedder melon is ripe." LITERARY i-EOPLE. A. T. Quilicr-Coucb. the novelist, i.i an enthusiastic yachtsman and is one of the leading spirits !n a London yacht club. Viscount Robert Tortcra Lafaro an nounces that he will scon begin the publication in Paris of a journal to nicn a. iiiiiii.K.'r ui zyurits v.ui vuhil. ute. A conspicuous victim cf literary am bition appears in the personality of Lieut. Krafft of the Carman army, who has been deprived of his rank because his book, entSt-lsJ "Drilliaat Hisery," caused, tail; distasteful to the emperor The Rev. Daring-Gould, the novelist, lecturer and historian. :a a keen anti quary. One who knows him writes that "he wallows in it." You should see him on Dartmoor with his shovels and wheelbarrows unearthing some forgot ten domicile and then you would sec the real man. Give him an old church register and he'll spin you yarns about it by the hour." The late Hjalmar Hjorth Boycsen was once asked why he didn't simplify the spelling of his name, so as to make it less perplexing for the average Amer ican. The inquirer wa3 informed that it was a fine Norwegian name in the first place and, secondly, that it was worth a good many dollars to its pos sessor as a distinct trade-mark for his literary wares. THE OLD SEUA1U Columbus -State -Bank) (Old fays Intel 03 Han Dddls lales Loan n Seal Watt KSSfeS 8HMT D-BiTlt CM Oatalia, CUeac. Kw Terk aiaA afl FereJga Ceaatriea 2ELI3 : STEAMIER : ttOKITI. l BUYS GOOD NOTES And Helps its Ccatoaten wham OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS: ISANDER, Gerhard, Pres't, B. H. Henry, Vice Prest, M. BRuaaER,'Cashier. John Stauffkk. Wm. ItccnER, COMMERCIAL BANK OF COLUMBUS, NEB., HAS AX Authorized Capital of - $500,000 Paid in Capital, - 90,000 t , OFFICERS. O. H. snELDON. Pres't, 11. 1. II. OEHLKICH. VIco Prea. DANIEL SCtt i: A . Cashier. FirANivKOKEK.Att.s'tCashfCi IlIKECrOKS. f II. Snixnojf, II. p. II Osniaucii, Jonas Vi:i.uii. A. McAixistkh, Caui. I:ii:nuc, S. V. Guat, i'ltANK KOKElt. STOCKHOLDERS. GF.ItH.WtI I.OSKKK, J. Hk.nky Wurmmax, 'i.a:::c Cicav, Henry Losekk, l.ixii:r. cuitAM. Geo. W. (Sallet. A. l H. Oi:iii.:ticit J. r. It kcker Estate, KhULCCA ilECKER, II. 91. WlNSLOW. Tank of deposit; Interest allowed on time deposits; buy and sell cxeh&ngo on United States ami hurope. and buy and sell avail-' ttiHuscciiruic.s. v o snail vo nieascu to ro i ceivo your ronago. bustness. Wo solicit your pat- & :gf & fjll jjl A weekly newspaper de voted tho best interests of COLUMBUS THE COUNTY OF PUnE, Tlii; State of Nebraska THE UNITED STATES AND THE REST OF MANKIND The unit of measara with us is &1.50 A YEAR, IF l'AIU IM ADTAXCE. But our limit of nsefolac is not prescribed by dollars and cents. Sampl copies sent free to any addi HENRY GA8S, (5. .?. T -jv?i jgs&Zzr Collins : and : Metallic : Cases ! E2T Repairing of all kinds of Uphol itery Goods. Ul COLUMBUS. NEBRASKA. Goiiiiiibiis Journal is racPAitro to rcnsisH aktthiko- KEQL'IISED Or A HINTING OFFICE. -WITH THE- PEST PAPERS COUNTRY. inus journal! relSCSSKrtSTCB'5. &Bak tApTYl it&g!"SHWij5BBfc'"' . fet5iB' t -S - , t -ViSU-t-n'- ----Ze'' &BS&4).