7&m .'M,-'-"'- .-I 3 .3 -.. ?2 K ' - - -.-, -3 v ' flf' V-v. -" j& .5. .&i Jr : o 3 i ".Yl VOLUME XXVII.-NUMBER 46. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA NESDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 18&7. WHOLE NUMBER 1,396. - fc-': al o m W- atsisSSwW sirs? ? y C3S iR ?- f- .' S F B6& as DECEIVERS EVER. AltEY, CHURCH ILL CARTER CHANNING, fi rst lieu tenant. Nth cavalry, died so long ago that most of his story is for gotten, although it was a very great iW ' -wonder at the time. I - Everybody con nected with it is . dead also his mother and the other two women and so many first lieu tenants have filled his place since then that no. one's heart is likely to be wounded by repeating it He was a superb;great fellow as all the ,men in hi3 regiment were said to be in those days of the big. blonde, and brave type, knowing neither fear . nor failure, and his fascination was scmethinr that hag, hecosae a traai ticn in the service. So many girls aye, and married women, too had loved him- that the shores upon which he had touched were strewn with wrecks. , The hearts of all those women bad been broken, actually broken, not just dented a little, as is usually the case In such affairs; their lives were open- ly ruined, yet Channing kept himself free of blame. No one could say "he should not have done thus or so," he never committed himself, he never act ed in a compromising fashion in the presence of a third person. But the women who ran insanely on into the desert of disillusion, following the elusive pillar3 of the smoke of his words and the fire of his looks, never again passed beyond into the land of content across the wilderness. They despised themselves in that pitiful tasHon that women have, but they loved him always for such is the way ' of their kind. It had been his good fortune to have dealings only with women who either thought of him alone, forgetting them selves, or' with those too gentle to de- ..nounce him. Then, too, he had man- aged well; there was never any definite .proof. But in the early summer of 'S3, the pitcher that had been carried nine-.-ty-nine times to the well narrowly es caped being broken. The bride of Capt. Morton, having seen fit. with due encouragement, to fall In love with him, threatened to " become unmanageable. She was a most wonderfully attractive feminine little thing, but s!s was neither of the self ?nimoIating nor of the concealing sort. Having lost her heart, she lost her head, and Channing was in much dan ger of having his methods exposed. His captain advised him. "Chan ning, you u tetter taKc a leave anu get out for a bit" "Why?" - "Well, it's a delicate subject, but Morton's an old friend of mine, and I don't want to see his wife disgrace ftim." "But what have I done? I cm as innocent as a baby; and besides, I think ycu are mistaken." "We all exonerate you. It's not your fault; but I'm not mistaken. It's evident to the whole post Take my advice and go see your mother, like a dutiful son." Channing was flattered, but he was also frightened; nevertheless, he was undecided. There was a hop the same night -i mm SCREAM2D FOR HER HUSBAXD. Mrs. Morton was there, and it was her actions that determined Channing to take Capt Lytton's counsel. She was already in the hop-room talking to the latter when Channing appeared, and the moment she saw him. standing tall and graceful and indifferent in the doorway, she grew so white that the whole room noticed it, and she trembled visibly. She realized her paleness and knew that Capt Lytton's quick movement to put himself be tween her and the watching eyes had been unavailing. Her own soft eyes filled as she raised them piteously. "You see what a spec tacle I am making of myself. I can't help it I've tried hard. There's nothing for it but to go away or break down.,' "Poor little girl! Come away, then." "If you will just take me home, and tell Dan I " she stopped, losing the thread of her words, for Channing was approaching. Capt Lytton offered her his arm. "Come quickly," he said. VJust wait a minute, please just till I tell Mr. Channing I can't stay for oar dance." She had flushed up and her eyes were brilliant She put out her hand .to Channing, drew it back, and again stretched it forth, confusedly. He took it and pressed it yes, she was sure he pressed it almost "The third you promised me, wasn't it?" "Yes, I think so," she answered. Capt Lytton turned on his heel and walked away. At the end of the third dance, while they strolled together up and down the line, Channing experimented to see how far she would go. To his con sternation he found that she would slop at nothing short of blazoning -her infatuation from the house tops. A scandal was not what Channing want ed. He was very gentle with her, but she wept and said all manner of fool ish things, until Capt Lytton came upon them and took her home. Very soon after this the lieutenant went on to visit his mother. She was a Virginian, of the conventional poor but proud order; and she lived on what had. once been the kitchen gar den of the family estate. Quite as often as not she was on the point of hanger, when there was no demand for the needlework of her quivering old fingers. Her son did not contribute to her rapport "All f my fcecgarl pay, and more. ttt MM it MM W WfMI aawtv X wgam fc pfttjj MjNI sL -i.sA ! ' i! lit? '' stfc-V&' fw de corps. I'd like awfully well to help yon, mother, but I must hold up my end of the row. I am a Channisg." And she loved him all the better. While he. was with her in the sum mer of 'So, through sheer lack of ex citement he became enamored of a h certain Anna Trafford. He asked her to marry him quite the last thing he would have expected himself to do and she,, being completely fascinated, consented without even a decent amount of hesitation. It was arranged that in the late fall she should join Channing at the town nearest his post, and there be married. In September the unhappy Mrs. Mor ton, having gone hopelessly away to another garrison, the lieutenant re joined his regiment In November, giving way ungracious ly enough to Anna Trafford's plead ings, Channing granted her permission to join him at th railroad town. She was very poor. Generally she was cpn slderateand. elf -sacrificing. Now.sha clamored, and would not be quieted until a mortgage was raised on the wretched little house that was all in the world her mother and crippled sis ter owned. She bought her ticket with the money, and ten days after the re ceipt of Channing's letter she was at the meeting place alone. She spent a day and two nights in the mean little depot hotel, very near ly out of her mind with loneliness, fright, and at last an acknowledged distrust Then Channing's mother ar rived, and an officer met them with an ambulance. a fever, the mother told her. The doc tor had telegraphed for her, without her son's knowledge, the day after the girl had left the village. Then Anna reproached herself for her suspicions with unreasoning bitterness. The drive to the post took two days. It was a horrible experience for the officer. The road stretched on, on and on, across desert and bad lands, where even the greasewood and mesquite were burned by the terrible sun. The The beautiful daughter of Col. Ross was standing by Channing's bed, alone, when the doctor led the mother and her young companion in. The lieuten ant had been dead twenty minutes. The dark-eyed woman did not turn; she had forgotten everything in all the world save only Channing's face. When the southern girl dropped down at the bedside and screamed for her husband, she started. "Is the poor thing crazy?" she asked dully of Mrs. Channing. "Xo. But she was not married to him. Only she was to have been mar ried at Santa Maria two or three days ago; I forget when. He sent for her." "That can't be true, because I am his wife." Mrs. Channing caught at the bedpost with her shriveled old hand. "Xon seuse!" she said. "Indeed, it is true. Aren't you his mother?" She put her arm tenderly about the bent shoulders. "I thought you wera. You look like him. He and I were married last night at midnight, when they told us he was going to die." "Anna! Come away, Anna! You've no right there. Get up. This girl's his wife. He didn't love ycu. He married her. He married her last night" It was cruel, but Mrs. Channing had gone mad. For five years afterward Col.. Ross cared for the insane mother of his daughter's husband even when his daughter was dead. But until Channing was buried in the graveyard on the hill, where the coyotes dug up the mounds at night, and the prairie-dogs barked shrilly, and the snakes glided along the dry, baked earth into their holes until ha was buried there, the two women staid by her. Their trust in the dead man never faltered. The girl believed he had been ensnared on his death-bed; the wife that he had ne.ver loved the childish, pretty Virginian. Yet neither out of pity spoke her convictions. Watching over his mother, they sat in the room where he had died, and listened to the thud of the soldiers feet as they marched by outside, fol lowing the young officer's flag-covered coffin. . Then there was a long, long silence. They- were wide apart the wife, with her beautiful head in her hands; the girl, looking straight at the wall; the old woman, muttering and scratching at her gown with her crooked fingers. At last came the sound of a far-off volley of musketry. The girl jumped up. "What's that?" "The firing over his grave." In a moment it came again. The girl stood swaying, the wife sat with her head still bowed. It was no new sound to her. A pause then the last volley. The girl fell, and the woman, lifting her head, stared stupidly at the pretty, dead face, at the fixed, childish eyes, that still looked hurt; while 'the moth er muttered in the corner and taps shrilled from the bugle over the grave of the man they had loved. San Fran cisco Argonaut DID THE CHINESE DO IT? Freuch Try to Prove That a Olestlcal Dlnoovereil America. The French have always been jeal ous of Spain because of the fact that Columbus obtained royal aid and fitted out and manned his vessel in that country, says the St Louis Republic. This being true, it is not at all strange that we find French scholars at the head of "nil schemes which disreputa ble geographers have brought forward in their attempts to disprove Spain's claims to the honor of discovery, of the .great western continent As early as the first decade of the sixteenth cen tury a Frenchman Raun attempted to prove that the Welsh had visited the coast of America several centuries be fore Columbus was born. Again, in 1791, another Frenchman M. de Guig nes translated what purported to be an old Buddhistic manuscript -of the fifth century. According to this manu script, a Buddhist priest sailed east ward from China 20,000 li and discov ered a continent It is the general opinion that the priest reached one of the small islands in the Pacific. - Dog Detective. r A St Beraarddog cacght a thief at work in the parlor of a residence In New York and firmly held en until his aUtrtu KQt for a policeman. The St SMMrt UwU to ma &a feoairar? MBMr if tM pita (9f ft o- &V$tKM m o m m n l C cr t- l WASHINGTON. &?frrs Vi 3 HE fame of Washington is so immense and the popular concep tion of his charac ter so exalted. that some skeptical anu fault-finding critics are dis posed to question the uni versal estimate, and espe cially In the matter of his ability as a soldier and military commander. However much we may wish it otherwise, there is in human nature a mean spirit of envy and de traction which instinctively feels the honors bestowed upon a great man to be an indirect reflection and rebuke to its own littleness and baseness. This spirit cropped cut conspicuously in the case of'CoIumbus, in the efforts to be little his great exploit and to blacken his character. I do not say that cri cisms upon Washington's generalship all proceed from base motives, but they doubtless do mostly come from the spirit and innate tendency which I have indicated. This unworthy spirit is as old as history, as old as humanity. It showed itself in a memorable fashion when the old Athenians wrote their sentence of banishment against Aris tides because they were tired of hearing him called "the Just" Wns'iinstou and Napoleon. Great soldiers are to be judged not alone by success, by battles fought and victories won though this, of course, is the great popular test but by all the circumstances and difficulties in which they are placed. There are great com manders in history who i?ave won fame by avoiding battles, like the Roman Fabius, and even by great retreat like Xenophon with his ten thousand Greeks. If Washington is to be com pared, to his disadvantage, with Xa poleon, then the popular question is, would Xapoleon, under the same cir cumstances, have done any better? It Is enough for any commander that he fills the great measure of his require ment This, of course, is not saying that Washington would have filled the place of Xapoleon in the vastly differ ent field and circumstances in which that great soldier won his fame. Nor should it ba forgotten, all the while, that ultimately Washington succeeded and founded a nation, while Xapoleon failed and lost an empire. TVaslitagtou's IMmcuIt Task. The difficulties which encountered Washington when he took up his great trust as coenmander-in-chief of the continental, army wero most compli cated and Immense. The theater of the struggle was a vast one, geograph ically, stretching along the Atlantic coast from Massachusetts to South Carolina, while the whole population was only three millions not very much greater than that of the state of Michigan, and not so great into a mil lion as that of Illinois. Out of this small, scattering and peaceful popula tion an army was to be raised, organ ized and equipped capable of contend ing with the chief military and mari time power of the globe. And it was cot to be a struggle between govern ment and government, between one na tion and another. It was a rebellion, and there was really no centra! aulhorj ity. no arms or warlike stores, no navy, ao treasury or financial system or re sponsibility. It was only a brave and patriotic people, small in numbers, vithout discipline cr military experi ence, without arms and without money. ushing thus bare-handed into a con ict with the mother-country, their wn government; a powerful nation, vhich had recently been raised by the ;enius of the elder Pitt to the front ank. among the great warlike nations f the wcrld a nation whose military osts and possessions already dotted the globe, whose victorious navies cov ered every ocean and sea. whose corn :s drum beat as Webster said, was 'eard round the world. It was ag3inst uch a power as this that this handful f patriots had thrown Cown the gage f rebellion and defiance.- TVhca ilnj-Iand Closcrt In. Wnen England saw that the contest ..as fairly opened her great navy closed n upon our ports and landed upon our horcs different armies of her veteran oldiers, who had fought in the conti- ental wars, and these were soon sup- Icmented by trained Hessian soldiers, ired and paid by her gold. These rmies were greater in numbers than jc colonies had to oppose to them. And still, tt they had to he transported 10 Uri tMi t cror m wilt a HU, Ur--TW I IESSsSBt JtD-'UJL-2 v r ZI&'tflL M i W SHI rjj) XCSk'f v? ?s'?s: & w .& !i m m 11 ! hej were never very large, and the tattles of the revolution were never on a great scale as to numbers. The country was new, there was next to no cavalry and not much artillery, and the engagements were thus mainly with infantry and at close range. There was little chance for tactics or man euvers. All depended upon pluck, hard fighting and endurance. A rrovidentUl Man. Washington is known In history as a providential man; that is, a man raised up by Providence to fill a great place and perform a great mission. However this may be, he certainly had great parts and great and peculiar fit ness for the most difficult and trying place which he filled in history. He had had experience In the , previous Indian and French wars, and had prov en himself a wise, competent and hero ic officer. He had great personal ad vantages for command. He was of fine physique and imposing presence, a splendid horseman, carrying with him ever the port and air of authority and native majesty an ideal commander. Knew It MeantFrccc!ona. So when this noble Virginian appear ed before that northern army and drew hi3 swerd as their commander under those Cambridge elms his fame had preceded him and he was received with shouts of welcome and of confidence. Then all men knew it wjis to be a struggle to the death. I have no room here, of course, to recount the particu lars of that seven years' conflict Pa tiently and steadily organizing and dis ciplining the raw patriot militia and volunteers into an army, Washington at the same time closely invested the British in Boston and finally drove them to their ships in the harbor, from which they sailed away, while the pa triot army marched into the Xew Eng land capital, which was never again to be trodden by the footsteps of ah enemy. Thus was scored a great suc cess at the opening. Then followed the march to Xcw York to meet the enemy, landing in great force on Long Island; the brave but disastrous battle, followed by that masterly retreat which alone would stamp Washington as a great general; the gallant stand at White Plains; the reluctant but stern and heroic winter retreat through the Jerseys ended by the master coun ter strokes of Trenton and Princeton, by which the great leader saved the cause of the revolution at its lowest ebb. Then the next year the struggle to save Philadelphia, the defeat at the Brandywine, where Lafayette first shed his blood in our cause; the loss of the continental capital and the well planned but accidentally lest battle of Germantown. Then the gloomy winter quarters at Valley Forge, which tried the souls of patriot men and proved the great soul of George Washington. Who but he could have held that de feated, freezing, starving army to gether in that terrible winter? And at the same time the country was filled St'" 7 . VI AP X WASHIXGTOX THE SOLDIER. with the praise of Gates, who had con quered Burgoyne at Saratoga. Iu the Darkest Hoars. In this dark hour. too. Washington was bsset with cabals and conspiracies, in congress and in the' army, to de pose him from the command which was to be given to the successful Gates.' When in- the early "summer of 1778 the British commander evacuated Philadelphia, and Washington follow ed him with his little army to give him battle, en the field of Monmouth he met one of these detractors and conspirators. Gee Lcc, his second In command, disobeying b!is orders and in shameful and unnecessary retreat It was here that Washington is said to have lost his temper. It is pretty well demonstrated that he did, and if Gen. Lee received upon his miserable head that day an explosion of titanic wrath it was surely no more than he deserved. Despite this untoward disar rangement of his plans Washington here won a partial euccear. The bat tle of Monmouth was his last e'sfaae Mtftt uitU&t fcrtalft tfcWt ft PtSS er- N U aiN '-ft - vK u Nr w ---y A 7 i r m o; &? rsS" a.-ps ?p!a?j -3 ) Yorktown, three years later. In the meantime the war was going on in other parts of the great field of opera tions, battles and skirmishes were be ing fought and subordinate command ers, Jike Greene and Wayile and Mor gan, were winning some laurels. But the central army was not immediately engaged. It was holding the ground and perfecting its alliance with the French forces, on land and water, which had now come to cur assistance. When all was ready came that sudden and rapid march from the Hudson 'to Virginia and the great final victory at Yofktowu. Had o Personal Ambition. Even from this briefest outline of Washington's career in the revolution, it will be seen that he had little op portunity for personal distinction as a commander. He was. an unlucky general;, fortune did not seem to smile upon him and he had more de feats than victories. Long Island, White Plains, Brandywine, German town all these were defeats; some of them disastrous. Monmouth was little more than a drawn battle, while to offset these, Trenton and Princeton, while brilliant in conception and exe cution and great in effect were so small in the numbers engaged that they amounted to little more than success ful skirmishes. And besides they were with Hessians and not with Brit ish regulars. Yorktown was, indeed, a great and crowning success, but it was won with superior numbers and the honors had to be divided with the French. Greatest Figure in IlUtorr. Hardly a better instance does his tory afford of patience under provoca tion, of dogged determination under difficulties, of unconquerable will and courage, holding on so long and com ing out triumphant at last over such mighty opposition. These great quali ties, as we have already seen, belonged to the man more than to the soldier. It was indeed the great man behind the soldier, the man with the great pa triotic heart, with the wise head, and the lofty, unshaken soul, that brought us through that long and tremendous struggle and gave us our glorious place and opportunity among the nations. No other man on this continent but he could have done it. Greene, among the generals of the revolution, would have come nearest to it, but he would have failed. But in looking over the whole field and record, in the light of all the facts and history, it will be seen that Wash ington made no military mistakes, that he improved all his opportunities, that his generalship will stand the test of criticism. He struck whenever he had the chance, his plans were good, and when compelled, his retreats were masterly. Washington's Best Portrait. The famous Boston Atheneum por trait of Gen. Washington was painted in the humble studio of Gilbert Stuart in an old farm house at Germantown, Pa. This house had long been tenant less and Just previous to its purchase by the artist it had been used as a barn. During Washington's first sit ting (in Philadelphia), Stuart failed to find a subject that could elicit the ex pression he knew must accord with such features and such a man. In the Atheneum portrait he was more suc cessful. By this time he had become better acquainted with the great man, and, feeling at case in his presence, was enabled to turn the conversation into such channels as interested and roused the General, giving Stuart the advantage of the expression which he desired. Stuart retained this portrait and that of Mrs. Washington in his own possession during-his lifetime, not being able to dispose of them at the! price at which he valued them. After his death his widow, in an emergency, accepted an offer of $1,500 from the Washington association, which, in Oc tober, 1831, presented them to the Boston Atheneum. Jane Stuart writes: "About the time General and Mrs. Washington were sitting for their portraits, my father's painting room was the resort of many of the most dis tinguished and interesting persons ol the day. Nellie Curtis,. Mrs. Law, Mis; Harriet Shaw (afterwards Mrs. Carroll generally accompanied Mrs. Washing ton. General Knox, Gen. Henry Lee, and others came with the president The British minister and his wife, Mr and Mrs. Liston, Louis Phillipc d'Or ieans, Counselor Dunn (an Irish bar rister), and' the Viscount de Noaillej were particularly fond of Stuart's so ciety, and were daily visitors." Among the Cornish miners CS pei cent of all who are. sick are coasump tives; and among needle-workers ovej W per ctat! f riadstostcttaten W t ii m oomtt pvi own TLMETMLY GOSSIP. WHAT THE sfXlW SW THE k EARTH'S ItiHA&riAWfSJ H la Good Wea to Coasalt the & tieiftjior Wfcea Aoeat to Eater lafa XmttlaioayAMwera to nwitt-li, straetloaa for ArteoU to Go By. F PEOPL& iVM-M consult an exjitrt astrologer befort falling in love. i atarriages would be (mere kamoaious. The astrologer. Is often rc&Mrte to compare the nero scopes of man arid wife to lad out the cause of the exiat- m erenees. etc. He that Safnrri n on la afflicting" the Venus of the other, denotisg: that love affairs do not invariably thrive well; yet improvement can bd made from a better understanding of eac!, which, can only be determined by the cafefel I comparison of both horoscopes, it would be well to do this previous to marriage. Those wishing free char acter delineation from their zodiacal sign and ruling planet published under their initials, should send: Sex, date, month, year and place of "birth, alstf the time a. m. or p". Efc If you do not know the time of birth send two two-; ?nt stamps for. further instruction? if you prefer the delineation sent by Mail send twelve two-cent stamps to cover expenses. Address Prof. G. W. Cunningham, Dept. 4, 194 S. Clinton Sti Chicago. I, S. Iroy; 111. According to data furnished the zod ical sign Virgo, which Mercury rnles was rising at your birth, therefore Mercury is your ruling planet or signl Scator. You are medium height or above; with slender figure: dark com plexion, hair arid eves;the eyes have a peculiar brightness afid q'uick rest!e33 movement. You arc endowed by na ture with a kind and obliging disposi tion; you are kind to animals and hu mane in all things. Yon are very in dustrious and energetic; you make up your mind quick and every move you make is quick. You are too impulsive and if you will be a little mere conserv ative you will find it to your advantage. You are rather too modest and do not push yourself forward as you should, consequently you are not appreciated to the extent yqur ability should com mand. If you had been born twelve minutes earlier it would have changed these indications very materially, for the sign Leo would hare been more ox less considered. Mfes Mae, Glentllle, few. According to data furnished the zodiacal sign Aquarius, which Uranus rules, was rising at your birth; there- fere Uranus is your ruling planet or signiflcator. The sign Pisce3, which Jupiter rules, was intercepted on the ascendant; You are naturally the pos sessor of two kinds of temperaments. At times you are very cheerful, happy, jolly and jovial; then again you will be subject to spells of the blues and will brood over an injury that is either real or imaginary. You are kind to ani mals, and especially fond of a fine horse; you are quite a leader in any thing you may become interested in, yet it will be in a very modest way and without boasting. You are fond of water and enjoy a good glass of it at any time in preference to almost any other drink. Ycu are very fond of the mystical and take delight in unraveling a mystery. Marriage is only average fortunate for yen, however you will have more than average wealth and will always be provided for. Mrs. II. B.. Iloltou. Kan. According to data furnished, the zodiacal sign Gemini, which Mercury rules, was rising at your birth, there fore Mercury is your ruling planet or signiflcator. You are medium height or above; medium to dark complexion, hair and eyes; the eyes have a peculiar sparkle and sharp sight. You are quick in all your-- actions and oftentimes change your mind too quick for your own best interests, and it would be bet ter for you to deliberate more on im portant business matters. You are very fond of books and everything relating to literary attainments, and will always admire d person that has a fine mind. You do not think that wealth is the only thing to live for and will spend a fair portion of your money for books and papers. You will make more money through salaried position than in any other way. You arc somewhat lacking in confidence in your ability and should cultivate self-esteem. Note. These who have sent in their stamps (26 cents) for readings by raa'I, will usually be promptly answered. In cases where there is an apparent de lay the astrologer should ba notified at once and the mistake will be rectified Commerce rrrrall'. Schoolmaster Master Isaac, what wrong did the brothers of Joseph com mit when they sold their brother? Isaac They sold him too cheap. New York Tribune. WORDS OF GREAT MEN. To choose time is to save time; and an unseasonable motion is but beating the air. Bacon. True delicacy, that mosr beautiful heart-leaf of humanity, exhibits Itself most significantly in little things. Mary Howitt Who can define the bounds of future improvement? Who will venture to allege thai men have not yet as much to learn as they have already learned? Noah Webster. If we exclude sympathy and wrap ourselves round in a cold chain armor of selfishness, we exclude ourselves from many if the greatest and purest joys of life.-xair John Lubbock. Patient hopeful waiting is hard work when it is the only work possible to us In an emergency. But patient wait ing is in its time tne highest duty of a faithful soul. H. C!ay TrambuIL Read the bosk you do honeatly feel a wish and a curiosity to read. The very wish and curiosity indicates that yy fet as4 Utsr Af th rsm 1! ta ttei q JtfftrJ-!, . i m Sfew WoWteC BUrk o? CWSamki , Interest in the? whereabout aa c loss of Xcr. Canel $& bee manifest ts late, nartlcmlarly isi the Brt32 I klesv where he wae onctf httfiisa; im& ccttSDfcaeaii figure in big ?i' iffa? ahtf in dmrch affairs, says K- respoii'nt of ti Cincinnati Costs? j cia!.- He w the Cateubr or Disraeu "LothaTr" aaoHe it m tria converted the rich asarquik' of B-.o axil ether atenbers of the English aristocracy (9 4fe Catholic faith, d his nas was JaariUar- oue throtifhout th united k&Jfoa. He got uade? a cloud, however, in .e way and w i to the United Stafts ftf a sort oZ eKUc. The clergy- iu this eotfffry Kd not take to him much and he swtiflff a fectan.C teftr circle, finally taking timnett tc Calffftrnia-. where he has sinew re- M cpmaiete iaolatioa. Xo t.a.kra ranci went I;. raising ine hotSfts and Wooded stock generally. A young" jrjest who knows him well and has kepf ap with him Informs me that he has gxewn rich. Foraserly the pink of perfection in dress, he has grown indifferent to hb garb and dresses and looks like a typ ical ranchman: He is a man of rare culture s4 most elegant accomplish ments. He is cf the most imposing ap pearance and imperial bearing. His dark, deep-blue eye flashes from seem ingly fathomless depths and indicate. a masterful mind. His hand is aa per fect as Trilbr's fcot and he has a way of laying it affectionately across his manly and magnificent chest that fetches the admiration of the ladies to an alarming degree. It was at a brilliant and fashionable reception at Louisville given by the late million aire. Dr. Standiford, whose wife was a Catholic, that the correspondent mzt the captivating Capcl complacently sip ping his champagne and fascinating all abctt him with his wit and superb physiqUff. He wore his smart-flttlng robe trimmed with the purple denoting ecclesiastical rank. Whenever he laid that lovely hand across the purple above bis heart the ladies sighed. He singled out one very attractive young lady and mads her three distinct and pretty speeches in the course of the evening, all of which apparently touched a tender upot. I should like to iee him now in his cowboy costume. It was said that Capel is tutor to the son of a wealthy Italian widow, who owns an adjoining ranch. ,Hc and the widow may swap horses and chickens. PAPER IS KING. Oa or the Tommaat of American la dostries. Every yar Europe sends us tons and tons Of her rags to be manufactured into paper, says the San Francisco ChroniciC. Tne obnoxious odor of much of our writing paper attests this original association wih the slums and filth of the old world. Our higher 'grades of paper are, however, made from carefully selected material con sisting not only of untainted and clean linen and pure vegetable matter, but are scientifically made under the in struction of men who have made a careful study of the hygienic and ocu listic effects of paper. Bank stock, of which we have read and beard so much of IsLtt, is the result of the in vestigations of an Intelligent, deep thinker. Herr Karl Heinrich Mausel. He conducted his work in the inter ests of Gerfiiiny'a youth. As the chil dren are to be recruited from in the future to fill the ranks Of the emperoT3 army their health and the condition of their eyesight is of paramount im portance. The investigations of Herr Mausel proved to be of great value and as a result we have bank stock, the only paper made from a purely ocu listic staddpoint The ingredients and component parts are not known and are not accessible even by analysis and will not be divulged except by the shrewd German, who is sot at all likely to part with so valuable a secret. Many attempts have been made to imi tate this paper, but they have all proved failures. Quite recently a large order was placed with a local house for stationery to be made from bank stock. A paper having the general ap pearance of it was substituted, but the fraud was detected by the man. who knew the value of what he had ordered. Of course, the goods were returned by the incensed buyer and the loss of sev eral hundred dollars was doubtless a salutary lesson to the man who thought the substitution would be overlooked. Bank stock, like other commodities that need a protection in the way of a brand, carries its watermark woven into the fiber of every sheet and has the protection of the government. Broail Xindeil. "I'm ginerally disposed ter side wsth the kickers." remarked Meandering Mike; "but I mus' say thet I can't rile up ez much ez some o the folks thet wants ter rub out ev'ything this gov er'ment's been a-doin so long, an' start over agin." "That's a nice way fur a down-trodden victim of capitalistic oppression to talk," exclaimed Plodding Pete, con temptuously. "I tries-ter be fair. I'm agin wealth. But some o' them fellers is jes ez much sot again workin' ez we are. They've inherited wealth through no act of their own, an' I can't bring my self ter hate a man jes' because he happened ter be born rich." Washing; ton Star. Very Accoiuiuotlatiu;;. The Boston fire department is at once humane and accommodating. While on the way to a fire the other day the attention of a fire company wa3 called by a kindhearted old lady to a dis tressed cat up a high tree in Union park, near by. The hook and ladder boys kindly stopped and put up a high ladder and brought Tabby down. The thrilling rescue was loudly applauded. In the meantime the building went on blithely burning. Kesolt Disprove! It. "This is all rot about pure grit win ning success." . "How so?" "I sank a fortune in a grindstone factory." Detroit Free Press. "The Collecting- Fad. Alice I hear Jeannette is getting a teKcetten ? rincs1; men. CAFcru YNkVl ftftUenfta, t THE OLD RELIABLE. ColumbusStateBank (Oldest Bank in the State.) iFaisIiWiliuDeii ASB KaiBltwiMEdJt ISSUES SIGHT USAFTS OX Oaiaba, Chicago, New Yorkaaul rt6H SELLS STEAMSHIP TICKETS. BUYS GOOD NOTES And helps Its customers wbcuthey seed keif . OFFICERS AXI DtUKCTOKS: Leaxdeu Gekkakd, Tres't It It Hexkv, Vice Prcs't. ' " " M. BitucGER, Cashieri Jonx Stauffer, Wit Blciier. CONUM BUNK OF COLUMBUS. NEB., HAS AX A.ttorizri Capital if - $500,000 Paii ih Capital, - - 90,000 OVS-1CKSU: C. H. 50 F.LDON". Prcs-t- U. T. II. OEHLKICIT. Vie. -vcs. DANIKIi SC1IKAM. Cash tar. FRANK ROKEK, Asst. Cash' DIRECT K?: C. II. SnELDO.V, 11. 1. 11. Oehlrich. Jonas Welch. W. A. McAixisteu, Carl Kienkc s. c. G kav. FnANK KOHREU. STOCKH LDF.KS: Sarzi.dv Ellis, J. Henry Wbrdeman; Clark Gray. Henry LosEnr. Daniel Hchram. Geo. v Galley. A. F. II. Oehlricr. J. I. Becker Estate; Rebecca Becker. II. M. Winslow. Bank of Deposit: 'ntcrest allowed on titn deposits: buy and sell exchange on United States and Enrope. and buy and sell avail able securities. We shall be pleased to re ceive your business. We solicit yourpat ronasc. Columbus Journal ! A weekly newspaper de TOted the best interests of COLUMBUS THE COUNTY OF PUnE, ' The State of Nebraska THE UNITED STATES AND THE REST OF UNKIND Ths nmitof : vsis with $1.50 A YEAR, IV FAH 1ST ADYAVCK. BttowlisaltaC is aot prascribesl hr dollars md esatsv Bai semi frss to mmj sddrsss HENRY GASS, TJNDEBTAKEE ! Ctslas : ! x Metallic : Cases ! IRcpairing of all kinds of Uphol tterjf Goods. lt SC0LTJMBU8.5EBRASKA- Columbus Journal S TUMTABWD TO FURNISH ASTTHI50 JtSQClREO Or A PRINTING OFFICE. -warn IBs- ilsfsiilaai riasstaiisyaawv,, . x- i .- ;.99"jLatALbh 9WNTRY, " " Jrl c - y "-jS. . fefelSSC--v : rfgBssx4 swiaa ...Vii- ' .T - - -i -? &' .' - J. . r -e - . J.. :i 'T' - - C. - SSrs- :St;:5ir-;5"i'-sC Ckr- cni :-JajiiALlk. IHflHi