.-TeeTMsiKr :'? sr- c-v &-$?- t , y-1 -V--6?r- T ' - f -! ; ''V-JWbiatoj!ESj?'7T"1 Ve. 0mmL " 1 &: 45S&". V - - ? ir - ' Jm VOLIBIE XXVII.-NUMBER 32. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 18, 1896. WHOLE NUMBER 1,384. 3I Si '&7FW&' i"a- - -- -& ; 1pnbsst' if - (Wlumras . i . o i. ',: - ?. . - F IF I MY BURGLAR. . When I went to bed that night tnj hair was as black as it used to be. When thc day dawned it was light. So yeu may see how badly- I was fright ened. I was paring the penalty for over work at the time by taking a health , trip, and I carried along $475 to pay it irith. I also tcok a fish pele and a northwesterly direction for the Alichi gan woods. When I was leaving Detroit on the steamer I wrapped no 540G in a rubber 4band -and stowed then away in the in side pocket of my vest, and I soon ac 'quired the habit of touching myself every time I thought of it to see wheth er my cash balanced, or. to speak more accurately, to see whether I still had the bulge on my vest. As soon as I found this nervous ba , bit fastening Itseifttiaomne I was sorry From the number of fish I had caught I judge tkat Icoit have slept two cr three boon; then I found mj self suddenly awake, Iisteainginteiitly, and anxiously flasSnff-tlw air. I-Vm certain of. two tiing3. Some one was moving ia, the robs, and E smell! horse. It Js easy to write of this thine .now in a spirit of leitynt I had no aach feeling as I lay "there straining my eyes to no purpose in the inky dark ness, but hearing- that;" "fellow1- move about the room boldly, -without caution, J as though it mattered nothing to him ( whether I slept or wakened. "If I move," I thouaht, "he Is ready with bis knife or club to silence me forever." I did not know whether or not he I had already taken the vest from under my pillow and I did not care just then to investigate. I moved not a muscle, but when the first tumult of sudden i fright had subsided I tried to think to reason. -"I anr here fer my leaMh;"!rI thoaght Now won't it be healthier to lie still TRANSFUSED BLOOD. T HAS DARKENED THE COLOR OF AN EXPLORER. U Stmaley Africa uns Turning Negro? African Blood Injected Into Ills Veins to Prevent Fever, and Xow He Is Said to Be Turniny Black. iLnsStwt ' T is not a new thing to hear of a negro gradually turning white as the result cf. a pe culiar skin disease. Such cases aro quite frequently re corded in medical jcurnals. But to find a white man that I had not always carried large sums of money and got used to the sen-jand hm m tQ snr:on mi- fr tmq rnn Infp fnr vain r- I . ..- grets. and I determined to make the I move a finger and let him take my life what little I have? How did he get Accepting the antitoxin theory as ad vocated by medical men nowadays, the question of immunizing one witll the blood of an immune, Is certainly rea sonable. Many may claim that the- very pronounced change in Stanley's color is due to pigmentation dependent on disease, such as malarial fever,-or perhaps to a liver disorder, which might cause jaundice. Such sugges tions, however, cannot obtain in Stan ley's case, for it is a matter of history that he suffered from neither one nor the other during his travels in Africa. Again, there are those who will say the discoloration is due to the fierce .heat of the African sun a fairly rea sonable supposition until we consider the fact that not only is the skin of his face and hands dark, but the skin of his entire body is said to be uniform in color. This, then, demolishes the tan heory, and leaves us with the one advanced by the Teutonic observer, who firmly believes that Stanley. gradually turning black Is certainly one of the curiosities of the age. A German observer has rc- to the fact that the skin of no less a ' meat ot e pecnllar pigment found in .. ti, wrv M Sr.-inl-v. tho t&e African skin and gradually deposi- li.t.MMi)C - .w-j . w famous African explorer, is gradually fclood, with the subsequent develop- ted in his skin, is constantly growing darker. coney. It was a little too early in the season .for the summer run of sccoolma'aais on the lakes, and there were only a few passengers on board the steam boat. These were made up mostly of commercial travelers and a fair as- sortment of then" dusty-booted, slouch- v. Stanley Xaturally Fair. Those who remember Stanley as a t aewspaper correspondent years ago will IIuw IliU Can 3Ian Co. Prof. Ugolino ilosso, of Turin, Italy, 1 :. ... -r ,,!. ,-.i U- T 1.1 i "'" "" "J rC " '.l '"Z:rZ I ah. ot coeii window. , becominc bl2Ck ikb.ik i i i 1 1 f i iii iii ini r : i i"ii tTLl. . a I ii(riniiriT'nTTr cw r. mw rT- ni tg Tinihi'iii j i I should have thought of that." What was the man doing? The sounds he made were exactly euch as a man makes would he exchange leaving nis horsey old suit m tne . Ioffcy mountains arg aware lhat atgreat n-nn, rB;rrM theGerman scientist seems a very reas-j heights, such as the summit of Mont atted. shoddv-chid men who travel on . . t, "". .ul onablP one. Blanc, respiration becomes more or less trains and boats everywhere without "' " ! nnnhr!- j It is a well-known fact that the cli- troublesome, the heart beats rapidly. any apparent reason or object. There ,. . .,.., ;i... I mite of certain portions of Africa is i and sometimes irregularly, and a reel- ill.Ti:IIIlIITIVIiriiri.T1fl .W lllllltllll . x. MM. W.A UAJ .WMt. UW , -.-.-.- 0 .i t- i. v. ,-.,.- v.. ..:. ! lina m.ulp sn-Tf mterestmz esnenments m ureasmg. nwaveua. nr,raa rv, .i e on the effects exnerienccd in ascend- clothes with me, f r' " f 4M" . ... " " !nff fn M-h nlriMiri All climber., of 1 lte -3LT1T1 Tl T I .i:LI. l.IlllK 1LX1. U13 tlttULTIll I - C3 -J3 - '-- was one lady on board. There was also another passenger a red-headed man with a sinister eye and a smell of horse about him so pro jiounced that the lady passenger asked for "the radish" at dinner, thinking to nroid hurting his feelings by saying horse radish in his presence. If I had not been carrying a wad of money Into a lonely country I should have paid little attention to thi3 ill favored person; but I was carrying a wad of money, and I suspected that he knew of it. For the life of me I could not help pressing that wad with my Angers every time I met him or heard j his voice or smelt horso. I waa cer tain that he noticed this involuntary action and that he knew the reason of it, and I came to believe that he was on the beat because I was and that he ,i- . ,wi. .w ,i -r hiiia in th- extremely dangerous to foreigners. mg ot exnaustion, otten accompanieu inside pocket Coward that I was to ' - lie there and let him take my prop- BEATING THE BAN. nkea-Beirm Gaaablen Iattlate A: tera Iato Xyaterles f System. At Nice you caa for a very small smi purchase a "system" to beat the bamk. The fact thattkese "systems" at publicly sold for an insignificant sam ought to destroy the confidence of any sane man in them, yet the gam Hers buy them regularly, says thd New York Journal. The gambler re tires a "system," that is, a previous ly arranged sequence of bets so cun ningly devised that the odds which would otherwise be in favor of the bank become by its use in favor of the gambler. Systems yary in price from naif a franc fa 2d francs, the higher tjgure being: orach, the most likely to attract buyers. The plan of Inclosing; the precious secret In a fastened en velope, which the purchaser may not oren until he has paid 5 francs for It, ala juterlally te the prospects of a through the- absorption of AfricWfesM ssleTieiSlJmtar.wWehtBMe 5-franc surprise packets, as well as in numerable pamphlets and a consider able variety of large volumes, all of them advocating systems of more or less complexity, are sold not only in Mice and Monte Carlo but also in Paris is astonishing. Roulette has not only an exclusive literature, but also a school of tuition, with "professors," who, having been themselves ruined at roulette, make it their business by means of private lessons, periodically followed by public experiment at the Casino with a pupil's money to teach the novite how to follow in their footsteps. Agents of these men waylay carriages on their way to the station at Nice and shower enticing pamphlets on the HAS MUSIC IN HIM. HEARS ENTRANCING SOUNDS IN HIS STOMACH. A Kansas FUraleUn GItm His Bo-1y to clne A Kssarkabta WIU Baqneatb. la Hlsssalf After Dth to Aay Wkt Will tavMUsate. erty. ' I hesitated no longer, but sprang t from the bed and with the cry of "Help!" rushed with resistless fury slam bang against the partition over where I thought the man stood. Some one tried to open my door, then knocked on it for admittance. Backing ' toward it so as to guard myself from an attack by the burglar, I found the bolt and lock and threw the door open. A : Ht.od of light filled the room; the win dow was dosed and the only persons present were myself and my visitor a gentleman fully dressed, with a lighted ' lamp in his hand and a trout basket ' slung over his shoulder. "There was a burglar in my room," at ll-nnlrl rrar rfF ton T HiH i T 1.. n. T .y.llT'- r-rt 1. cnAtinflvol H I L Uail. i. tUUlUU 1. CTO lue a.UUiliii-., but I heard him washing hl3 hands anc putting on my " He did get off when I did, o'clock at night on the lonely dock in I .1. . " 1- - .1 w Tvt- I me town oi uraveiiou, uuu uu uue ;cu the boat there but us two. I saw him disappear in the darkness and I took my seat In the hotel bus. The Gravelton hotel was one of those large, cheaply built houses which one will find in all the lumbering towns ot the west where land is cheap and pine i cheap and regular boarders are rheap and numerous, but my room was clean enough and reasonably secure. The window had no fastenings, but the sash had swelled and the casement held it in a grip which all my strength could not loosen. The door was pro vided with a bolt and lock, and the transom wag too narrow to admit the . fcedy of a man. I felt pretty secure, but I was made nervous by the fact that the curtain failed to cover the lower part of the window. I was morally rertain that my ugly fellow traveler stood outside in the darkness, watch ing me with hungry eyes. I did not feel sleepy enough to go to bed, neither did I find it particularly J MY I stopped, for I saw my clothes hang ing where I had left them. "I think you must have heard me washing and dressing," said the gen tleman, "and I must ask you to pardon me for disturbing you. I should have remembered that the walls between these rooms are very thin." That Is my burglar story. I might devise a better ending for it if. my im aginative powers were equally distrib uted, but they seem mostly to center in my olfactory nerves. I could have sworn that I smelled horse. C. H. AUGUR. - ' "". 2 S4S '""'V "? 7 J2 -rTrr -'i-5;. STANLEY TOOK BL OOD FROM A NEGRO BY THE TRANSFUSION METHOD. THERE WAS A BURGLAR IN ROOM. The 3Iother of Seven Suldien. When Col. Knok, of the duke of Cornwall'e light infantry, acquainted the queen with the fact tkat Mrs. Ke veth, of Garrow, St. Bernard, Corn wall, was the mother of seven sons, all in the army, her majesty caused the following leter to be written to , Col. Knox: "Her majesty considers the fact of seven sons of one family serv- ? ing in the army, all with exemplary characters, reflects infinite credit on . themselves and the parents who have brought them up. The queen desires ' that you will congratulate Mrs. Ke- -" r veth, give her the 10 and framed print Danger is particularly great along the , by nausea, is experienced. These 2f- I occupants. These, whiea nre usually of her majesty, which I send herewith, J "est coast, where the land is lew and ! feefs arke largely from the rarity of j ignored on the journey to Monte and tell her how glad the queen is to , intersected by numerous creeks and ' the air, and since the atmosphere be- j Carlo, are eagerly perused by unfor think of this fine example of good and ( rivers which are subject to freshets, canes less dense the higher one goes, tunate gamblers on the return journey. honorable service to their sovereign -ii! a result mis una gies a maiari.ii t it is evident that a limit must soon and country from the sons of a single cnaracter to the entire section. Al- J be reached above which man cannot Cornish family. Her majesty had kent ' t00"?1 there is much dry and elevated ascend. I'rof. Mcsso made his first ex- the photograph of Mrs. Keveth which ' and il is surrounded by swamps, mak- periments on Mcnte Rosa, next to Mont ! you sent me. and would be glad to 1 m6 a unitorm maianous atmospuere. have one of the seven brothers in a Europeans who travel through this part group, but if this cannot be obtained of I of Africa are almost invariably at separately." Tba photographs iave tacked by a very severe form cf ma- been framed touether in an oval fnmo la"al disease cajieu uy any one ct the V ... Wy EALtZING tkat there are some points in my anat omy that may be of interest to our profession,- I will map them out in drder to facilitate the work of the opera tor who may dis sect my remains. This is a clause from the last will and testament of Dr. I. N. Foote, of Argentine. The doctor is-'stinvery-mnck alhre; bat he has published his will in order that the medical profession generally may know that his body exhibits some remarka ble and scientifically inexplicable phe nomena, and that he is willing and In fact wills that his remains after death shall be investigated by competent medical experts. He therefore for mally bequeaths his body to any medi cal institution cf respectable import ance who will agree to make such in vestigation. The phenomena that Dr. Foote considers so remarkable are fully described in this peculiar document. After describing some peculiarities of minor importance, he tells some re markable stories about his stomach. "The surgeon who makes the exami nation," he writes in his will, "may or may not find anything abnormal, for cf late years my stomach has caused me little or no trouble, but some yeara ago I suffered much with indigestion, acid ity and regurgitation. A frequent me tallic tinkling, as if an iron or steel rod was lightly hit in that region, was heard, which was very annoying, and after this I was prostrated by solar heat, and was unable to labor or retain food or drink to any extent for thirteen weeks." This metallic tinkling in his stomach is something that the doctor fails ta understand after much research. There is no precedent or parallel for it, but the sound was persistent for so long a period and was so distinctly audible that he think-j he owes it to science to give his body up for examination after death. Again, he suffers from a con sciousness of having a third arm, end this so acutely as to occasion him real mental distress. Then he feeta "like a steam engine," as as expresses it, and again, like a musical instrument Of these latter feelings he goes into this explanation in his remarkable will: "For a period of eight years a noise resembling th interrupted escape of ueam from a locomotive was heard w. every pulsation of my heart, vri . lea me to suspect thrombosis cerebri and greatly annoyed, but dur ing this tine I was frequently enter tained after retiring by hearing tw3 soft and musical notes of about one second's duration each, commencing on G of the middle scale and ending on D below. "These sounds were peculiarly melo dious, more so, in fact, than any pro duced on organ, piano or harp, and would often be repeated once a minute or so for an hour or more. Their ori gin was, of course, attributed to some abnormal cerebral condition, but what that condition was I am unable to even conjecture and leave it. hoping an autopsy may shed some light that may benefit the profession and thereby hu manity at large. All the above condi tionc are now much improved, and it is perhaps my duty to state that stimu lants have contributed more to effect contained a bookcase im one cordar filled with medical and other scientlfle literature, in ponderous volumes an la magazine form. HINTS FOR DYSPEPTICS. Tktegs Taas Stay Estm mmd Tkk t Mm Avded. The cure for dyspepsia rests almcst entirely upon diet alone. Three mod erate meals daily are sufficient., and. of coarse, great care must be taken in the (election and cooking of food. Boiled keof la not advisable' neither is sou? of any ort. Vegetables need not nec essarily be excluded, but they should be taken cautiously. Muttoff, poultry and whiteflsh are good. New Sread should not even be looked at. and pastry and cheese arc to be regarded as poison for th time being. Cocoa is recommended in preference to tea. Toast and dry biscuits may be eaten in plenty Wine, to be of service, must be really good. As a rule, sherry, Ma deira ami Marsala are not suitaule far the victim of indigestion, but claret is admissible. It must, of course, be understood that these few hint3 are general; It can hardly be expected that they will apply to every case, no two people being exactly alike. Gentle ex ercise is usually beneficial in maintain ing the digestive organs in a state of healthy activity, and perhaps walking is the best, as it is the most natural exercise for the purpose. Philadelphia Record. Colualm-State-Bank 1 Apttkfflt tMtsifti Imalal&tatt sHsssssy sssjssssjBfc jsw xasrss A nr Stevrable Balloon. At the Berlin Industrial Exposition there is to be seen a wonderful bal loon, which is reported to be steerable in a remarkable degree. On the 2Sth and 29th ult. this tremendous bag rose to the height of about sixty-five feet and was propelled in all directions, even against the wind. The public was allowed to give the directions, so that there should be so doubt as to the genuine powers of the new aerial vessel. Dr. Wolfert. the designer of the balloon, claims that it can be steered against any wind at any alti tude, but this has not yet been tested. The motive power of this ellipticaily built balloon is a kind of double-bladed ship's propeller, having a diameter of about three yards. It is placed in front of the basket, while right below the car is another propeller of the same dimensions, for upward and downward movement. These propellers make 500 revolutions per minute. The engine is cf eight-horse power. The monster balloon is over thirty yards long, and in the center the diameter is about ten yards. The basket, from its shape, is called a gallerie. and 13 five yards long. It is constructed of bamboo, and is fas tened to the balloon in such a way as to form an integral part of its bulky sustainer. Neither part can have sep arate movement. The method of fas tening the two is the cecret of the in ventor, Dr. "Wolfert. who will not say anything about it. He has made fifty three ascents with other smaller bal loons of his construction, the last time on May 20 from the Royal Department I of Military Aeronauts' drill ground. I This latest and largest of his progeny I he has christened Deutschland, and it I is hinted that the form of the balloon is not dissimilar from that ordered by the Spanish government for use against the Cuban revolutionaries. New York Tribune. BUYS GOOD NOTES A5DDIMCTOB LU5dzx GnxASS, Praa't, B. H. Hz9srt Vies Prest, M. BmroGn, Cashier. Johx STAcrrxK. Wit. Bccjweb. n L H COLUMBUS, NEB., HAS AX AitlMrizii Capital if - $500,0u0 Paid in Capital, - 90,000 OFFICER. O. . 8HXLDON. Pres't. B. P. H. OEULP.ICH. Vice Presv DANIEL SCifRAM. Cashier. FItAXIC IIOltEE. Ass'tCashtel DIEECTORS. r. n. SnEtnox, IL P. II OeHtnicn. Jonas Welcit. W. a. McAllisteii, CAUL RlEkE. ?. C GitAT, Frank Horer. STOCKHOLDERS. Gerhard Loseke. J. He.xrt Wcrdcxax-, Clark GRAr. HcsrtLoseke, Daniel Sciiram. Geo. w. UAtr.Br, A. F. U. Oehliuch J. 1. Becker Estate, Uedecca Becker, U. M. Winslow. Baak ef deposit: latemc allowed on t!ms leposlts; buy and sell exchange on Ualted States and Europe, and buy and sell avail able securities. We shall be pleased' to re ceive your business. We loliclt your patronage. z&rmEtm: Columbus Journal ! A Story or UuIIfiii. Louis XIV. once insisted upon being given an honest opinion by Boileau en some verses of his own. The verses were execrable, but the "Roi Soleil" this than all other prescriptions that I j wa3 not much accustomed to hear uAe ineu. tiiougn sociany ana nnan cially I am aware of their evil effect and a visit is forthwith paid to the "academy." A GimxI r.ifpnrr. blanc, the highest peak of the Alps, . Doa-t i2t vour eyes wander whn a where he ascended to an elevation ex-' story i3 toid you that taxea vm.r m. ceeuing 15.G00 feet without serious in-! tience? or endeavor to listen to -some convenience. Returning to xurin, "he j more amusing conversation around. that of Mrs. Keveth beins in the mid- following names: African, Guiana, Bu- checrful to sit in the one little wooden J die, and sent to the queen: London lam or Loas- ever- iCls fe1" is simi chair which the room afforded, and j Graphic gaze at the cheap wall paper covering j the pine partition, or the "skied" pic- , tare ot a naming reu, long tailed bird of paradise with his head set backward on his neck, ily books were In my trunk and there was nothing at hand to read eicept an old newspaper which " was doing duty as a cover to the wash stand. Glancing at this paper I saw that the page exposed to view was made up of "syndicate" matter and that the prom inent article was by a startling coinci dence the story of an adventure with a burglar. I began reading it. The narrator told how he found him self in a strange room seeking for a safe place to beetow his money for the ' night; how he determined to place it ' between the leaves of a dictionary; and wishing to remember the exact pla.e iar to the maianai levers ot other t countries, differing only in severity. Injected witll Xejjro BIr.otl. When Stanley travelled through this section of Africa it was observed chat he alone of those who made up his party escaped the terrible fever. It is i Trtrr CTit-r! tOf Crl ! Innwn In r er's walk' that is, a gentle roll oft -"."""- .--, .mas th hn.lv -nri-Th rn nnonnnl t,T,o !.. I "" ""-""-. "J.. ic ixuix.ca, swinging his legs with rhythmic pre cision. He is a slim man, but tough, full of energy, and with iron muscles. Sir. W. 3f. Coniray. In a sketch of Sir W. M. Conway, the great mountain climber and explorer of the Himalayas, the English Illustrated Magazine says that he has the "climb- ana mat dioou transiuseu irom a na- 1 tive to a foreigner would protect the I latter against the disease, submitted . tn r'na nnarfjfinn ftvn timoe TN-i.- i- When climbing the Himalayas he .pent! -,.,, nrovI snittessfiii M iM eighty-four days on snow and glacier, t Joubted, as stanIe7 traTeiip(i repcat. During that time he traversed from end , sdlv witn impUnitv throush the -faver to end the three longest known sla-1 colratrv." uiC in uie ora ouisiae tne -oiar i Thc operation of transfusion is not J regions, and landed on the summit of t .attended with danger, the matet ' Pioneer Peak, 22.000 feet high, the ,.are bein& necessary to ?revent"the in- greatest height yet reached by man. ' rn.lnpt5on of air into n hlnnrt t-ocjt . . - -- --. - , . i ne nas already made plans for another I when performed by a skilful operator . aiiU a,cconimaoaiea n a j . made his next ascent, so to speak, with out ascending at all. In ether words, he produced an imitation of the rare atmosphere of a very lofty mountain top by partial I y exhausting the air from a large pneumatic chamber in which he had shut himself. When the air in the chamber corresponded in density with that which would" be found at a height of 21,272 feet above sea level he suffered such ill effects that he could not carry the experiment i mriuer. ise neignc to wnicn rror. Mosso thus simulated an ascent is al most a mile less than that of Mount Everest (23,002 fcet above the sea level)i so that it sesms improbable that man will ever be able to set his foot on the loftiest peak of the earth. Your "eyes" and "no" will be ejacu lated inappropriately and your intelli gence put to a severe test It ha3 been written, "They are never alone that are accompanied with noble thoughts," but when ou mix with your fellows and move in the world of society, above all things let those thoughts be "seat ed in the heara of courtesv." -VsS I tTOTO'lflX r J ' raS ''. ' .n Awful Tlmujjht. Hotel-keeper Did the man say any. thing when you handed him hi3 bill?" Clerk Not a word, sir. Hotel-keeper Great Scott! I'm afraid I receipted the bill. Fliegende Blaetter. A Story of Sir John 3nil:il. The late Sir John Millais was once attending a celebrated case at Bow- 'SCRAPS. s&.u W1 !ir-' i DR. L N. FOOTE. But what can I do when suffering other than to resort to the only remedy known? I realize that the tendency is to overstep the bounds of moderation, and strive to guard againat that evil the best I can." These are the princi pal features of what is probably the 1 moat remarkable last will and testa I ment ever made in this country. Dr. ! Foote pxacts very little in return for ! the bequest of his remarkable body to science. Ke makes the condition that blunt truths; yet here was His Ma jesty insisting upon candid criticism. What was he to do? Perhaps in proph etic vision Boileau saw a famous pas sage in "Gil Bias," and determined tp diminish the danger of his Royal mas ter acting like the Bishop cf Granada. Anyhow, he rose to the occasion, and in courteous words, replied: "Nothing is impossible, to your divinely-gifted Ma jesty; you desired to chow how verse should never be written, and your Royal pen has achieved supreme success." A weekly netrspriper de voted the best interests of COLUMBUS THE COIIIITY OF PLATTE, The State ol Nebraska THE UNITED STATES MD THE REST OF MANKIND with Araliia'i Laughing P!:it. The laughing plane cf Arabia pro duces small bean-like seeds, small deses of which, when dried and pow dered, intoxicate like laughing gas. 1UC iiViCUl i.lin..0i. jii liiu Uiio dances, laughs and shouts like a mad man for about an hour, when he be comes exhausted and falls into a death like sleep, which often lasts severa.' hours. he thought he wou:d open the aock at , expedition when he gets back from , the proceeding is simple enough the word money, but behold, when he opened it the first word that he saw was murder. Here the narrative was broken by a soap dish, which adhered firmly to the paper in spite of my careful efforts to remove it, and I read no further I arose and shook myself. "Pshaw!" I said, "what a fool I am. He's proba bly just an ordinary hostler come up here to work, or perhaps to see his old mother. No doubt he's as honest as I am. I wonder what word he would have found if he'd opened the diction ary at Caeh," I soliloquized, and out of mere idle curiosity I took from my handbag the nearest approach I had to a dictionary a little paper covered beck of synonyms, and opened it at C. Clutch grasp lay-hold-on catch seize. This was the last line that met my gaze. I laughed, threw the book on the table and began to undress. 'If anyvone enters my room tonight, tspitzoergen, and hopes to get through , apparatus used fcr the purpo two or even three more before contest ing aseat in parliament, as. he intends to do at the next general election seat in the press box. In front of him tat a youthful new addition to the staff sists of a rubber tube with a bulb in - OI a lmzis ionuon mustraieu. thc center. To each end of the rubber t . 1JOa - you cCm,c tnat "K'0UI1 be aa The con- It is claimed that a citizen of Eldo- his rGmains' or sucn Par of them as rado, Kan., originated the word "Pono- tue eaialn:ns scientists do not need crit." " ' "e cremated, as he has decided objec- i ti, iM f iif. , ,... .,. .. i "ons custom ot ounaj. Hear. - -- -. -u i iae uom- ther conditions that the medical scciety bardment cf the palace of Zanzibar :sj accepting his trust and taking his bo,!? tube there are attached metallic needle- improvement?" suggested the grea pay his widow S265 a year for the re- put at 500. A whortleberry patch in Klamath ! aainder cf her life, but he tempers this county, Oregon, covers an area of sixty . b" remarking that his wife will jlXULmmA 1 mm GoSis : and : Metallic : Cases ! squares miles. Bacon's Note. pointed tubes. f Before using :carcey survive him, as she is suffering the apparatus the air oal 1,oint ia the sketcu t1ja youngster u t mm . v.n-.r'i., ii -o ' is forced out cf the bulb and tube bv was engage cn- liie -voun5 lelI0W - .i-w uu ui. i .i.-lliMHCUUl OULUU . artist mildly pointing out some techni- j Dr. Pouchet says that some forms ot from a s6"0113 aeart trouble, and that i .nl TinTnt ir thp skpJ-oli tha rnnnncMo ! i . : .sn : . . ... I if She does .she Cannot at bp?t livp ?nrur uuieriu. wui surwve an orueai Ot 40J xr i jJ . v- , T- I thought, as I folded up my vest ""k-gj placed !t nnder the pillow, "I'll clutch that he never troubled to take a iote of the proceedings before him, for his t TnmriTr il"ic cn Trnnrlayiil T.n .j... ' acsistance it could retain all the ma terial facts of a case. Sometimes he might be seen putting pen to paper, and then it was supposed he was mak ing rough; sketches of counsel or the witnesses, i One amusing story about him was to thc.effect that on the hear ing of an apfeal'from one of his judg ments, the lij justice sent for his notes. They iwwed to consist of a single sheet of paper, on which Tras drawn a i iriMjafi. 'portrait of the ap pellant, with, the mjrds "This man is a liar!" writte-TOder it London An. 7 him. erasn him. lav hold on him. ratrh him !?a nim nnri veil for Too. Too 3Cncfa. help." ' ' " "Have aIittle sure- of the booze?" r When I went to sleep I dreamt that j asked Perry Patetic, after taking a pall I was wading up a trout stream fishing at the bottle. for black hasB -xlth a wad of money i "I I gness I better not try any or hjit and that as fast "as I caught pore," sayl Wayworn "Watson, -with a 'fish rwas- Tolced of then: by a Ted- jrhndder; Tve been seein' 'woodsaws ieaded corsrs ' noatin ia the air. for near an" hour.' filling them with a warm solution ot salt The patient and donor are placed side by side, and the with the salt solution openin; Then bulb, donor forced the tube connected with, the patient3 arm and the blood passes from the was highly indignant at first, but even tually adopted the alteration with such tubs. still filled ' Improvement that he turned round and , are inserted in I inQi"ed somewhat patronizingly, degrees o? heat u "" "" LO Uii V1:1 a ian oisser- " . , . tation upon the immorality of burial The huge pins c modern navies can and the advantages of cremation. Ke only be fired about seventy-five times, j wants a portion of his dust given to hl This suffices to wear them out marrird daughter and he bequeaths his The elephant is the chief beast cf extensive library and apparatus of all ... . TI1i ntx-tr n .- rnf ann.MAt Va T gs previously maoe m tne veins. . -"- -""..'.' "- -"? - , burden in Siam and Afshanlat.-in descriptions to the medical sociPtv tht the operator compresses the correct my woric. r or answer he re- .-ieni!an.iriari" is Pim.t.i " undertakes the rrnst nrarlP in h! iii , as well as the tube from the ceived a caru on whica was neatly in- to " Dr. Footc got ais educaUon at the Unl- s arm. aad the salt solution is . senpeu, Jonn.ua.iJs. . a., accom- m4r1.rM , . ., ' versity of Michigan and the New York ?n The -n-raaimra. ic -m-, r, , nameu or tne Kinciy remarK. we are iU- "lut """e"1" ut r- -luurew ( Vprfimi rniioo vx tt-c i,n. - A.AA.LA Jfci;UA. 4.3 ilitssc JL f " " ' j - - some months ago. It has recently come never too old to learn; perhaps you mar te able to jrive me a timelv wrin- vein, at thc donor Cllinir the Iialh. I --ile one of these fine days." That ar- ! ouc 0I nsr 3lP' " .. . t , , . r t . Pressure is again, made on the bulb usz n3S mat:e consmerauie ceauway i u aa queer tmng tnat some men and on the tube from the donor's arm i sirLce izi his profession, but he was par- can not consider themselves truly re- as cefore, and blocd has been injected. Staaley Turning Color. , The German physician, mentioned j " - .t J , I water power is so abundant, are being came an immune to the fever, but that I .. , -t. ., T . - ' """a , , , sunpucu uj liiu eictuis: currenc iar of Belair, Md.. swallowed a needle ; Massachusetts, i'n 1S2S. and spent most gain, made on the bulb lI!,i "iiI "'ie -uusiuexAme ceanway be from the donor's arm sirLce i:i his Profession, but he was par d so on until sufficient ; at that supreme moment Electric rower. It is said that a large number of the smaller towns in Switzerland, where .!.. . T. , ifriran SInn.1 . ,-r. 1 I z"L't Z Z- -lXiT .17 CTJ' : Ifgntins and power purposes which is iato his circulation, and absorbed a . r t. . Lit ,v j zenerated by water power, gradual metamorphosis has taken j I place, with the result that we no long- To hunt the lion was kingly sport er behold the fair-skinned Stanley of ! from the earliest times, and the Em- s tian monuments show that all kinds of years ago. In his stead we see a tt.:t who presents the appearance of a mu latto, and a dark one at that i j hunting, as well as fowling, was "owed for pleasure; other people ligious without making uncomfortable. Truth Expert hydrographers say that in its deepest parts the ocean'3 waters are so dense that a sunken iron-clad would never reach the bottom. It is claimed that during the last twenty-five years but one person for every 3,500,000 carried by the railroads i ot Denmark has been killed. Argon has at iast been combined i with water by ProL Villard of the Parte Ecoles Normale. It required a pressure i ' of 200 atmospheres to do so. of nis life in Ohio. He says in his will that, though ruined three times by flccd and once by fire, his practice has been successful A Kansas City Times reporter who recently visited him at his home found him a patriarchial old gentleman, with a long white beard that concealed the absence of a aeclc tie. His head, which was bald .except for a rim of gray above the ears anit back above the collar, was surmounted by a large black silk tile. His eyes beamed with intelligence, and instead of the crank that was expected he seemed a venerable philosopher in his lair. The room bare of any carpet, was ' j scrupulously neat, and yet typical of a studious occupant. Besides the little 1 table at the front window the rouar- The nit of asia S1.50 A YEAR, OT PAID Or ADTAVCsV Bet oar lisalt of asafnlnesa la cot BT.ecribed by dollars and centa Sample, copies sent free to any address. HINTS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD. . JjJE-NJRjL (xASSj In making a salad of fish, if you adl .1 Iitrl OKPtimbSi nitVTo phnnrwd tror-j line, to the dish before th.- i-iTVsir- w ' T ,. ...... poured over, you will greatly im prove it. Anything with a meringue over it should be put in a cosl oven and al lowed to brown slowly if you wish to have it light. A strong heat toughens meringues. If a bunch of grape leaves are put .n -zoaketi fnr Wr!hff ir :ii h-i v.-n fBTBgpoxnMg of all kinds of Uphol tne cucumbers sound and firm, and of ' . ' M a good color. W COLUMTCi. SSBEaSaX In blanching nut meats, pour over , . them boiling water and let it stand a few moments. Throw ovpr thc water and rub them between thc fingers, and the skins will rcadilv came cff. When the whites of eggs arc isel, and the yelks are not required at tha same time, drop the yelks into a sma.I ' cup or glass, cover the surface with a little cold water and keep In a cool piace. If corned beef, tongue or ham is left to cool in the water In which it is boiled, the meat will be much better and mere mcist. All boiled meats should be cooked slowly, and never be ' allowed to boil rapidly. i If whipped cream is wanted quickly, ' and there is no whip churn available, i have the cream very cold, and put it I m a glass rruit jar with an air-tight cover. Half fill the jar with the cream, fasten the cover tightly and shake '.he jar vigorously. i Use the graceful wild grasses as well S aa the cultivated ones for tabic decora- ' tions as long as they can be had. Thcs3 I grasses come in great variety and are ', bc-autiful and decorative. Foliage also ' may be used to great advantage at this j season, and flowers are to be bad all ( the year. cold ' Columbus journal a nzTAKra to rcnsiaa astthisq bzqcibzo or A PRINTING OFFICE. wrt xhj COUNTRY. M -Ki SS? jb..