".,- Htrt T5 wre v""? 8--i:''rssrr5C" i-'v - t ""v. i -,iiS'i iJ4- laurnaL X. VOLUME XXVIII.--NUMBER 30. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 1897. WHOLE NUMBER 1,434. IT 11 JrZKFXJn!Bt3SUKm (mmimms aw P" I . -v i "L mr "&'- " K:i" It. i Tf r NINETTE'S SAGIUFICE. RETTY Ninette skipped daintily along the shore, her bright curls tossing with the breeze, and the j gayly colored ker j chief, v.'hich should ' iifivn rnnfinrd them. swinging iu her hand. She was happy as the birds, and her very heart sung for joy, lor was she not on her way to the dear artist's studio, where she spent the happiest hours of the day? Was she not helping to make the beauttfui picture which he said was to bring him fame and happi ness? And as she thought, her steps grew slower, and the bright, beautiful past rose up before her like a wonder ful panorama, each view more entranc ing than the preceding one; her memo ry went back to that early summer's day, when he had come upon her as she sat mending her father's nets on the shore, and had asked her to sit for him each day. while he had put her picture on the canvas with a genius that almost frightened the simple fisher maiden. Happy days! in which she had learned to love him for his gentle words, his bonny smile and the song and story with which he had beguiled the hours In which she strove with all her soul to embody his meaning, with aa earnestness that pleased while it surprised him. Ah! but it was her sig nor, and he had chosen her from all the girls on the shore, and the picture was hers as well as his, and she gloried in its perfection. Half child, half wom an, as she was, she did not understand what it was that made the sun so bright, the sea so joyous, and life so al together delightful. To-day she entered the studio with eyes shining like stars, the soft color coming and going in her cheeks, the dewy lips, arched like Cupid's bow, tremulous with excitement and it was no wonder that his artist soul reveled in her beaut'. When the day's work was over he called her to him and showed her the picture, which was approaching com pletion. "We shall soon have it done, my dear, and then we will send it away to the big city, where there will be none so beautiful ns my little fisher girl; only a few more days and our work is over." He drew her close to him and pressed a kiss on her innocent lips; which to him was but an expression of thank fulness to the chSld who had helped him to win the fame he felt sure was with in his grasp; but to her it was the awakening of a soul, and he, cold blooded northerner as he was, did not understand how soon womanhood, with all Its joys and sorrows, comes to maidens under a southern sun. She silently left the room and thoughtfully pursued her way to her home. Her few simple duties over, she crept to her bed, still with this new se cret warming her heart and opening SHE FALLS OVER THE CLIFF, out a new vista of happiness in her life. Mother she had none; her father, a rough, uncouth fisherman, was seldom at home except to sleep off some drunk en orgie; it was strange that so lovely a flower could have sprung from such a parent; but it was said that the moth er had been of gentle birth, had mar ried the handsome, rollicking dare devil, and broken her heart when she camo to realize his utter worthless uess. Some time in the night Ninette awakened from a deep sleep by hear ing voices outside the hut, and soon distinguished her father's and those of some of his cronies. As she listened she grew cold as with a sudden chill, as she heard them plan to waylay and rob some one, and she held her breath to catch the name. Ah! heaven, could it be that she heard aright! "The pic ture fellow," they said, "he has plenty of money and jewels worth taking." She must save him, he who had ca ressed her so fondly, her dear friend, for even to herself she scarcely dared call him by any fonder name yet. She would listen to all their plans, and per haps she could warn him. "He will be coming home along the cliff road from the chateau that holds his sweetheart," said her father's voice; "they will think he fell over," he ad ded, with a fiendish chuckle. "Hist." said another, "the Kirl may wake." She could hear no more, for they moved away; but the iron had entered her soul, and jealousy had made a woman of the girl of yesterday. "Over the cliff to see his sweetheart," then she could never fee anything to him: she was only a child to amuse him. Then all her passionate nature rose In revolt; no one else should have his love, she thought; they might throw him from the cliff, she would have the remembrance cf that kiss of yesterday, and after he was dead she would go too, and find her lover in the cruel waves where they had flung him, and he should be hers in death. She covered her head in the hed rlotb.es and shivered and wept untH morning; then with the bright sun came better thoughts, and she remem bered the grand picture that was to go out Into the world she must save him or it would not be finished. She would ro along the cliff road at evening and warn him of his danger. So, alternat ing "between love and jealousy, she Fpent all the day. and when the sun sank to rest behind the hills she was on her way oyer the rocks and up onto s;J,Jr.L IS I1 Itai the cliff, where she could hide herself and watch for his approach. It grew dark, and the moon was hid den behind black clouds; a storm waa coming up; still she did not stir; the thunder rolled, and lightning lit up the heavens with fitful dashes. Perhaps he would not return to-night, and she prayed he might not, although It was agony to picture to herself the lady at the chateau pleading with him not to go out into the night Hark! that was his voice surely singing softly to him self, and In one of the flashes she saw coming from the chateau road the form of him she loved; in one swift moment she exulted that he had left his lady in spite of pleading; but the feeling was brief, for from the other direction she heard voices, and realized that the evil deed planned in darkness the ai?ht be fore would be execmc-1 unless she could prevent it. Nearer and nearer they come until they are almost opposite her hiding place. Holy Mother! what can she do! There is no time to warn him, as he conies jauntily on to his doom, and she sees like a flash his mangled form on the rocks below, to be washed out by the cruel waves in the morning; then the picture rises before her In all its di vine beauty; her brain is bursting with excitement Unknowingly she rushes out of her concealment, and the ruf fians, seeing the form in the darkness, think their victim is in their power. In her frenzy she has gone too far; one false step and she falls over the cliff; a lightning flash lit up the sky, and there was one shriek as of a lost soul as she went over the edge. The men turn and flee for dear life, think ing in their superstitious fear that evil spirits are pursuing them. In an in stant all was over, and, unable to find the cause of the disturbance, the artist keeps on his way home. The next morning the village rang with excitement, for the frightened men had confessed all, and the body of the girl was found In the surf. The maiden had sacrificed her life for her friend, and although he never realized that his thoughtless kiss had cost her her life, be undertook the sim ple burial, and placed a white cross at her head, and he and his beautiful wife make yearly pilgrimages to the little grave of her who gave her life for his. Boston Herald. GIANTS. INDEED. The Old Circca Man Recollections of the Two llieeest Men He Ever Knew. "Giants?" said tho old circus man. "Oh, ye3, we've had some big men In the show at one time and another. One of the biggest we ever had used to comb his hair with a section of a picket fence. That was part of the street show when we made the parade in a town. Usually we had an arrange ment in advance with the owner of the fence, and had a panel loosened so that the giant wouldn't wreck too much of the fence in picking up the part he wanted to use. When the show came along to this spot the giant would step up to the fence, take off his hat, and pick up the piece of fence It al ways looked as if he had tremendous strength, too and raise it up and comb his hair with it And then he would put the big comb down again and put on his hat and move on. This always tickled the people immensely. And he certainly was a big man, sure; but we had a bigger man once. I wouldn't dare tell you how big this other man was, because you wouldn't believe it." New York Sun. A Sherlock Holmes Deduction. Biggs "That man over there Is a physician." Diggs "How do you know?" Biggs "I heard him say that he didn't enjoy good health." He Had to Work Wylie Do you use your wheel much for exercise? Kiely No; I use it for work. The bicycle gets the exercise. Strictly Business Transaction. First Heiress "Who presented the count to you?" Second Heiress "No one; I bought him." LATE NEW INVENTIONS. A recently patented bicycle frame has springs inside the tubing for the saddle post, crank hanger, front fork and handle bars, to deaden the force of a blow on the wheels and make rough roads easy to ride over. Hammers for hand use in machine shops are operated by pneumatic pres sure, a sliding spring pressed rod being set in the casing to be driven by push ing a button by which the air is ad mitted to the driving chamber. To safely support a lady's hat at a theater a bracket is attached to the under side of the seat to carry a swing ing shelf extending nearly to the floor, the device folding up against the bot tom of the seat when not in use. A recently patented water motor has an endless upright chain of buckets mounted on two axles with a stream of water at the top to fill the buckets as they start down, the length of the chain determining the power of the motor. In a new French railway signaling device a lever on the engine hangs in position near the rail to receive a sig nal from a flat strip of iron lying par allel to the vail, an indicator in the cab showing how many signals were given by the iron strips. Wave motors are being manufactur ed with a float mounted on the end of a rod to work up and down as the waves move, the rod moving a piston which operates a water or air com pressor and fills a tank to furnish pow er to run machinery. In a new non-puncturable shield for pneumatic tires the tread is formed of closely woven wires, with the trans verse strands extended beyond the longitudinal strands, thus making an armored tread without decreasing the flexibility of the tire. A recently patented insect-proof dis play rack has a base on which rests a cup, which is filled with water after the socket of the rack has been inserted in a hole in the center of the cup, thus preventing insects and vermin from crawling onto the shelves above. Fire hose can be cleaned and dried by a new mechanism, consisting of two cylindrical brushes set in a frame which can be attached to the hose cart, the brushes being rapidly revolved as the hose passes between them by a chain geared to the axle of the hose ml. - r f"Wnrf SiiBTnW - i - f.fcj IN THE ODD CORNER. SOME STRANGE. QUEER AND CURIOUS PHASES OP LIFE. l"e Color Jadlcleiuly When There Were Xo Pottage Stamp X Bird Telegraph Line To Ilaruesa the Sau The Silliest Bird. An Antaaaa Wondroad. HEN the partridge coveys fly In the blrch-topa cool and high; When the dry cica das twang Where the purplins flr-conts hang; When the bunch berries emboss Scarlet beads the roadside moss; Crown with shadows. Dright with sun. All day long till day Is done, Sleeps In murmuring solitude The worn old road that threads the wood. In Its deep cup grassy. cool Sleeps the little roadside pool; Sleeps the butterfly on the weed Sleeps the drifted thistle-seed. -.Ike a great and blazing gem, Baiks the beetle on the stem. Up and down the shining rays Dancing midges weave their maze. High among the moveless boughs. Drunk with day, the night hawks drowse. Far up. unfathomably blue. August's heaven vibrates through. The old road leads to all things gcod; The year's at full, and time's at flood. Charles G. D. Roberts. Use Color Judiciously. There are colors that are refreshing and broadening.others that absorb light and give a boxed-up appearance to a room, others that make a room with a bleak northern exposure, or with no exposure at all, appear bright and cheerful; some that make a room ap pear warm, some that make it cold. The thermometer seems to fall six de grees when you walk into a blue room. Yellow is an advancing color; therefore a room fitted up in yellow will appear smaller than it is. On the other band, blue of a certain shade introduced gen erously into a room will give an idea of space. Red makes no difference in regard to size. Green makes very lit tle. If a bright, sunny room gets its light from a space obtruded upon by russet-colored or yellow-painted houses or else looks out upon a stretch of green grass, it should be decorated in a color very different from the shade chosen if the light comes from only an unbroken expanse of sky." Red brings out in a room whatever hint of green lurks in the composition of the other colors employed. Green needs sunlight to develop the yellow in it and make it seem cheerful. If olive or red brown be used in conjunction with mahogany furniture, the effect is very different from what it would be if blue were used. Blue would develop the tawny orange lurking in the mahogany. If a ceiling is to be made higher, leave it light, that it may appear to recede. Deepening the color used on the ceiling would make it lower an effect desir able if the room is small and the ceil ing very high. Various tones of yellow are substitutes for sunlight. The Up holsterer. When There Were No Postage Stamp. In these days postage stamps are a familiar necessity. Their loss would occasion almost as much confusion and difficulty as the loss of our money sys tem; and yet fifty years ago the world never had seen a postage stamp, nor even an envelope. Before the days of postage stamps it was the custom to pay in cash at the postoffice the charges for transporting the letter, and the postmaster stamped the word "paid" above the address. Our first stamps were of two denominations, 5 and 10 cents. The first bore the like ness of Franklin in rose color, and the second that of Washington. Envel opes were not in use in these days, but a sheet of paper was carefully folded and sealed with a red wafer. For a letter of one sheet of paper for a dis tance less than 300 miles the 5 cent stamp sufficed. When envelopes, in cluding the stamped envelope, came in in 1S51. a revision of postal practices was necessary, and weight, instead of the number of sheets of paper, became the standard of measure. Postage was i in that year reduced, and the 3-cent price for t?e half-ounce letter was adopted. A Bird Telegraph Line. Uncle Sam -s busily at work estab lishing a bird telegraph line. At the United States navy yards in Brooklyn a two-story pigeo.i cote has been erected and more than 150 of the finest carrier pigeons nave -jeen purchased and placed inside of it Most ot them are young and inexperienced, and Mr. Car ter, their keeper, is busily giving them a good education. They are first taught to push open the li,tle wire door that leads into the cage, so that when they return from a long flight they can eas ily be caught Next the muscles of their wings are hardened by flying practice, which lasts far half an hour every morning. All the birds in the -age are kept in motion by the waving of a white flag, and by constant repeti tion of this exercise the pigeons become exceedingly strong. When they ;et a little older they are taken a few miles away to Governor's island in "Mew York harbor, to Staten island or to Ssn dy Hook and set free with a xnessace tied to their feet. Each time they an,; given a longer flight, until they lean to return homeward unerringly. As they come in Mr. Carter makes a rec ord of the time of their flight, so that lie knows just what every bird can do. .tame of the best pigeons made as good tme as the fastest express trains. The use to which these birds will be put is most important Suppose a foreign navy should cross the Atlantic and at tack New York city. Of course, our ships would go out to give them battle and then the pigeons could be set free and bring reports of the engagements or requests for re-enforcements. It is expected that the pigeons will be able to return from a ship 300 miles out to sea in less than eight hours, which is much faster than any boat can sail. To Harness the San. One would think the sun had enough work to do in wanning np the whole - fls' .iiii "s; irf. earth, but there are some shrewd Yan kees down in New England who are not at all satisfied and are determined to make it do still more work. They have already taken out a great num ber of patents for solar heaters, solar cookers and solar engines of many kinds, although they have not been able to invent any machine that is really practicable for converting the sun's heat into power. And yet they still have hope. They say that lightning has been harnessed, and they don't see why sunshine should not be made to carry burdens. Many wonderful things have been accomplished by using the sun's rays. In Europe a newspaper has been printed by power from the sun. and salt water has been distilled and coffee and cider made. The only prob lem to be solved in harnessing the sun Is to properly concentrate its rays. To do this many Inventors use an immense curved mirror or a large lens like r burning glass, but they are hampered in their work, first, by the fact that the sun does not shine steadily, and, next, by the immense expense of large lenses. It is reckoned that the heat ol the sun would sufficiently warm ami illuminate 2,000.000,000 globes as bie as our earth. It would seem that som clever inventor would sometime be able to discover a way to use it The man that succeeds will make a fortune. Cily Where Sunlight Never Hhlnes. Beep down in the earth near the city of Galicia, in Austrian Poland, there is a considerable city with streets, houses, churches and other public buildings, and a population of over 1,000 men. women and children, a good number of whom never have seen the dayligh . It is known as the City of Salt, and it is approached by means of a deep hole in the ground. All the year around the temperature is nearly the same, and although no grass grows on Its lawns and no water runs in its streams and the only sky Is a vaulted arch of solid &ck salt, the inhabitants love their town as well as If It was situated by a running river and under a blue sky. They have built a theater, a church and a town hall, ornamented with beauti ful statues, all carved out of rock salt. The streets are beautifully illuminated with electricty, and the homes are large and comfortable. Here men and wom en are born and grow up, are married, and die. and some of them never once go to the surface and have no idea how the big outside world looks. The pop ulation is made up almost entirely of the salt miners and their superintend ents. Silliest Bird In the World. Dodo is the Portuguese name for sim pleton, and it is given to the silliest bird that ever lived. Three hundred years ago, when the Portuguese first visited the island of Maufitius, they found a great number of these birds. They were about the size of .a large swan, blackish gray in color and having only a bunch of feath ers in place of a tail, and little, useless wings. More stupid and foolish birds could not be imagined. They ran about making a sillv. hissine noise like a .. w - goose and the sailors easily knocked ' them over with their paddles. The' couldn't fly, they couldn't swim, the cculdn't run at any great speed, and as , for fighting, they were the great es-t cowards n the world. They were much too stupid to build a nest, and so they dropped an egg in the grass and went off and let it hatch as best it could Added to all of these things, its fles' was fairly good to eat, and the Portu guese pursued it so steadily for for that in less than a century's time ther wasn't a single dodo left in the world It was quite too silly and stupid to saw its own life and so it became extinct. Farming for Frog. You have all heard of corn and pump kin farms, but who ever heard of a froe farm? Yet just such a novelty exists in the Trout river basin of Onta-io Canada. It has been in operation U, many years and has a large annua; output of frog legs and live frogs. In the summer time it is probably the greatest place for hops in the world, and as for orchestras and vocal music few places can equal it The farm is mostly a stretch of shallow water and swamps and the frogs are allowed to hop at large and breed until they are 3 or 4 years old. Then the "farmers" go out at night with torches and the frogs are caught in nets and placed in pens. When they are wanted the wat er is drained off and the frogs are sent away to market. The farm is stocked mostly with big bullfrogs, which pro vide the largest and best legs. In 1893 and 1896 the "farm" produced the im mense amount of 5,000 pounds of dressed frog legs,beslde3 7,000 live frogs for various purposes. Caught on Fly Paper. A Pittsburg grocer has been catching flies on sticky fly paper, and the other Homing he caught something else. Having left several sheets on his coun ter at nignt, when he opened the store ne U morning he found the sheets par tially rolled up on the floor, and tang- j led up in them was a rat It had evi dently got its feet on the paper in such a manner as to prevent its running, and then In lying down to free itself gave the stickiness a good chance up on its hairy coat, so that at last it was unable to move and thus came to an untimely end. Golden Days. Bushels of Berries. Little Lyndon went alone to nick field strawberries and brought back a small cup half full. "Oh, mamma," he said, "there were bushels and bushels of berries, but I nicked them all." j Youth's Companion. rj8b .. Wy.A.-.r"afl 1,tjj4!ito A CHEAT ACTOR. Sorrest Was Always Trade, Especially When AUassny Day Came Bound. McCuUough did mot carry the actor into erery-day life, as Forrest did. For rest was" always "the great tragedian," and after his divorce generally moody and silent, but when he spoke it was in deep, tragic tones and with shakings of his black curly locks that Impressed j uie listener witu unuounaea awe, says the Overland Monthly. No one, I think, ever dared to joke or be familiar With the great Forrest When "ali mony day" came around and he had to pay a good, round sum to his divorced wife it'was better to keep away from him, for then he allowed his temper and "ugliness" to have full sway. No where in American dramatic history does an actor stand out with the prom inence of Forrest. His individuality was so pronounced that no one who once met him could ever obliterate that meeting from his memory. Forrest is also a part of history, for there are many who remember the "Macready riots," incited primarily by Forrest hissing Macready in Hamlet tor intro ducing some business he did not like waving a handkerchief and dancing on in the players' scene which Forrest sarcastically dubbed "the Fas de Mou choir." This was in London and the news spread like wildfire, so that after playing a magnificent first engagement all over England his second was made a failure by Macready's friends hiss ing, groaning and interrupting his plays. HOLDING SUSPECTED VESSELS. The system of quarantine observed by civilized nations to-day shows the methods of the past in anything but a flattering light. The old habit of de taining a suspected vessel for months with its cargo, passengers and crew constantly exposed to the possible in fection is now absolutely disregarded and after the people on the boat have been removed, she is sent on her way with very little fear of further disease following, since the cargo has been kept fastened close under tight hatches during the whole voyage. It is an endless task to clean a vessel and its cargo of supposed contagion and it is rarely done. The main precaution is to get the exposed passengers and their contaminated personal property off into little bands, where, if the disease does break out, only a small number of people will be in danger. At the discovery of vaccination by Jenner in the beginning of the present century the matter of taking care of smallpox epidemics on shipboard be came a simpler matter and the com paratively recent discoveries in the science of bacteriology have put the matter of caring for infected craft on a high plane of systematic intelligence. Steam is now used largely in treating the "baggage of passeners and crew and constant experiments are being made with a view of securing absolute se curity in such cases. Quarantine, which means literally a detention of forty days, was originally instituted as a protection against the bubonic plague, which Is working such dire havoc in India at the present time. ' This dreadful visitation, known as the ' "black plague," was first officially treated in Venice in 1348, at which time it Is estimated that fully one quarter of the population of Europe succumbed to the terrible disease. Al though these early attempts to stem the flood of death were generally of lit tle effect, we read that the plague in 1656 carried off 300,000 people in Naples, while Rome's policy of better sanitation kept its death rate down to 1.400. England established a rigid quaran tine against the plague in the first part of the eighteenth century and the rules were later extended to all "highly in fectious disorders." The system thus imposed was, however, named a "commerce-destroyer," for it was no rare thing for a boat to be held for at least two months while waiting for further cases to appear among its passengers or to arise from contact with the cargo. Lazarets for the keeping of suspected goods were constructed at a great cost to the government. There are records of cases where whole vessels and their valuable cargoes have been burned or sunk, the government paying the vast sums to their owners as Indemnity. Patient Doctor, this is the worst at- ' tack I ever had. Doctor Well, don't worry yourself. I am quite sure you won't have another. LABOR AND INDUSTRY. Three-fourths of all the iron mined in the United States Is shipped from Duluth. It is affirmed by men in the building trades that the Italians make splendid union men. Some twenty city councils in the United States now use the union label on their official printing. Last year the United States exported $12,000,000 worth of hams 130,000,000 pounds of which England bought 103, 000,000. It is reported that the Florence mills at Forest City, N. C, have been bought by the Henrietta mills and will be equipped with 12,000 spindles and 400 j looms. The strike of the British Society of Amalgamated Engineers for an eight hour day without reduction in wage3 continues to spread, and 70,000 are now oat oZ employment A Georgia cotton mill has paid 90 per cent in dividends during the last seven years, a testimony of the pros perity of that form of industry in the south which carries its own lesson with it The Tremont and Suffolk mills, Lowell, Mass., are receiving unfinished goods manufactured by southern mills. This company recently napped a con signment of 11,000 pieces of cloth for a Georgia mill. There are fifteen woolen establish ments in Stafford, Conn., and all are In operation except the worsted yarn mill of the Warren Woolen company, and arrangements are being made which will insure the starting of that Mill before many weeks. jfeJ-aCe-' i. J. - 1 POWERS OF MUSIC. ANCIENT PHYSICIANS BELIEV ED SOUNDS WOULD CURE. Effect Philip of Spain In Ecynt Certain Sengs Were Used to Promote Tlrtae la the Toang Stories Aboat Famon Marlclaarf. HE powerful influx ence of music on our intellectual fac- ( nlties and conse-, quently on our . fA(Jftv&P health has long 'l (TCIk9 been ascertained, I either in raising j energies of the mind or producing despondency and meloncholy assocla Uons ot ideas, says the Fireside. Impressed with its sublime nature the ancients gave it a divine origin. Dlod orus tells ns that it was a boon be stowed on mankind after the deluge and owed its discovery to tho sound produced by the wind when whistling through tho reeds that grew on the banks of the Nile. This science be came the early study of philosophers and physicians. Herophllus explained the alterations of the pulse by the var ious modes, and rhythms of music. In the sacred writings we have many In stances of its influence. The derange ment of Saul yielded to the harp of David and the hand of the Lord came upon Elisha as the minstrel played. In Egypt certain songs were legally or dained in the education of youth to promote virtue and morality. Polybius assures us that music was required to soften the manners of the Arcadians, whose climate was heavy and Impure; while the inhabitants of Cynaethe, who neglected this science, were the most barbarous in Greece. The medical power of harmonious sounds was also fully admitted. We find Pythagoras directing certain men tal disorders to be treated by music. Thales was said to have even cured a disastrous pestilence by its means. Martinus Capella affirms that fevers were thus removed. Xenocrates was credited with curing maniacs by melo dious sounds, and Asclepiades deafness with a trumpet. In modern times it has been related of a deaf lady that she could only hear while a drum was beating, and a drummer was kept in her house for the purpose of enabling her to converse. Aulus Gellius tells ns that a case of sciatica was cured by gentle modulations, and Theophrastus maintains that the bites of serpents and other venomous reptiles can be re lieved by similar means. Ancient physicians, who attributed many dis eases to the influence of evil spirits, fancied that harmonious sounds drove them away, more especially when ac companied by incantations; and we find in Luther "that music is one of the most beautiful and glorious gifts of God, to which Satan is a bitter enemy." In more modern times we have several instances of the medical powers of music. The effect produced by Far iuelli on Philip of Spain is well known. This monarch was in such a deplorable state of despondency from ill-health that he refused to be shaved or to ap pear in public. On the arrival of Far Inelli the queen was resolved to try the power of music, and a concert was ordered in a room adjoining the king's chamber. Farinelll sung two of his best airs, which so overcame Philip ' that he desired he might be brought in to his presence, when he promised to grant him any reasonable request he might make. The performer. In the most respectful manner, then begged the king to allow himself to be shaved and attended by his domestics, to which Philip consented. Farinelll con tinued to sing to him daily until a per fect cure was effected. The story of TartinI is rather curious; In a moment of musical enthusiasm he fell asleep, when the devil was said to have ap peared to him playing on the violin, bidding him with a horrible grin to play as well as he did. Struck with the vision, the musician awoke, ran to hi3 harpsichord and produced a splen did sonata. Bruckman and Hufeland relate cases of St. Vitus' dance cured by music, which, according to Deses sarts, also was reported to have reliev ed catalepsy. Schneider and Becker have ascertained its Influence in hys teria and hypochrondriac affections. A singular effect of music is related by Roger in the case of a poor wretch broken upon the wheel. In his agon ies he screamed in the most fearful manner. Some Itinerant musicians chanced to pass by; they were stopped and requested to play to the sufferer, when, to the surprise of all around, he seemed relieved, and became so tran quil that he confessed his manifold of fenses and died, according to the tale, with "calm resignation." It seems more likely that the man lost con sciousness owing to the horrible tor ture inflicted. This Thief Is Eccentric. San Francisco has probably one ol the most peculiar thieves In the coun try. He is William H. Kinney, a middle-aged Australian, who takes any thing In sight when drunk and then when sober gives himself up to the police. Ten years of his life have been spent in lail for petty thefts, of which no one would have known but for his voluntary confession. Only a few days ago he was released from jail after serving six months, but yesterday he saw a nickel-in-the-slot machine In a saloon, and when the barkeeper's back was turned he stole It and pawned the machine for 75 cents. This Is Awful. "Good story, eh?" "Yes, it is very original to have a man fall in love with his landlady. What are you going to call it?" "I haven't yet decided. Can you suggest something?" "How would A Border Romance do?" A New Meaning-' Grover Walton The bass that got i away was at least three feet long. Yon may think I'm crazy, but Friend (interrupting) Oh, I don't think that I think you're only an angler-maniac. A Fonr-BasTcer. Plavwrieht I think mv Dlav will make a hit Manager Br i I want a ' play that will make a rur. j- a-C jln SS&y HEIRESS KIDNAPPED. ' Follee Minneapolis BaUsw Kiss ataerferd Has Been Carried Away. The Rutherford famUy of Minneap olis is a very wealtL one. and as it consists at present only of Mrs. Ruth erford and her daughter Fanny, it will be seen that this young woman is heiress to no small fortune. But her present wealth and future prospects seem to be more of a curse than a blessing, for they have made her in the past a target for fortune-hunters, and now she Is missing from home, and tho police have offered a reward for J. A. Morris, who is believed to have kidnap ped the young woman. Morris, who has a long criminal record, met Mrs. Rutherford and her daughter while they were traveling in the south last spring, learned of their wealth, and that they lived in Minneapolis. On the 6th of May Miss Rutherford disappear ed from her home, leaving a note say ing that she was going to St. Paul and would return the following day. Since then a letter has been received Iron: her, evidently written under restraint, saying that she was happily married to a man she worshipped. The police are convinced that she waa kidnapped by Morris and is held by hiin, and they are making every effort to find her. Miss Rutherford is about twenty-five years old and is highly accomplished. Her father was Capt. George Ruther ford, a pioneer citizen of Minneapolis, who left a vast estate to his widow and only daughter. This wealth has brought Miss Rutherford many suitors, but she has always refused to leave her mother, and has expressed no desire to marry. All these things strengthen the police in their belief that she has been kidnapped. LOVERS OF THIRTY YEARS WED Indiana Boasts a Bright Example la Constancy and Devotion. A bright example in constancy and filial devotion is afforded in the experi ence of a couple recently wedded Iu Liberty township, Indiana, the newiy married pair being Mr. and Mre. Henry Foreman, who reside on their 400-acro farm near Greentown. In point of age both bride and groom have passed the half-century mark. Though lovers from early childhood and betrothed from youth, the marriage was deferred until now, the engagement covering a period of thirty years. Young Fore man had a stepmother to whom he was greatly attached, and to whom he solemnly pledged to support during her lifetime, promising not to marry while she remained alive. Contrary to ex pectations, the invalid and dependent stepmother lived until a year or more ago. During this long wait of nearly a third of a century the lovers scrupul ously observed their vows, tolling on through the years without a thought of disregarding the pledges given the stepmother or breaking faith in any manner whatever. They grew gray, lived frugally, saved their earnings and patiently bided their time. When death removed the barrier, the lovers had accumulated sufficient means to buy the lnrgest farm in the township. The minister first engaged to perform the marriage ceremony died of old age many years ago, and a divine of a new generation officiated at the long delayed wedding. Chicago Times-Herald. The Wheel In Court. The Adams express company has been assessed $50 in a somewhat sin gular suit decided by the New York Su preme Court. A trained nurse went to New Brunswick for her vacation, and intrusted her bicj'clc to the express company to be sent there. The agent mislaid the document furnished by the owner to get the machine through the custom house, and not until the close of vacation time was the wheel discov ered. Having been deprived of its use when she wanted it most the nurse sued for its value. She recovered a judgment for $50, and this decision has just been sustained on appeal. ni Discovery. Grinncn "Old fellow, I've discover ed the fountain of youth." Barrett "What?" Grinnen "That's right. And It l3n't a fountain at all. It's a bicycle." Bar ret (still incredulous) "What make'" Chicago Tribune. Not Cp-to-Date. He lies in jail for bigamy; The law is mo3t inhuman In robbing man of liberty For wanting a new woman. NOTED MEN AND CHILDREN. Children have a genuine friend in the person of the King of Siam, and he ha3 always taken an immense Inter est in watching the progress of the child rulers of Euroye Alphonso cf Spain and the little qaeen of Holland. During his present European trip he intends to make theu personal ac quaintance and become their fast friend. In Alphonso of Spain he will find the unique combination of a small boy alive with infantile fun, mingled with stately dignity, for the small king of Spain is fully aware of his exalted position. By the younger members of the royal family the Prince of Wa!e3 is consid ered a martinet and a disciplinarian, In spito of hi3 worldwide reputation for jovial good nature. A short time ago he saw tho little Princess of Batten berg and Prince Edward of York at play in one cf the palace courtyards. Running past a sentinel they emitted to return the salute which soldiers are obliged to give every member of the royal family, whether the age be 60 years or 60 days. Immediately the prince called the children back and in sisted that each should make his salute to the soldier. President Faure of France is ex tremely fond of the youngsters, and his greatest pleasure is a remp with his grandson. When he became a grand father for the second time the fact was carefully kept from the public for 3 couple of weeks, the reason for this act throwing a new light on the French attitude toward Russia the great. The strange reticence is officially explained in this way. Almost at the time of the birth of his grandson in Paris the czar ina also became a mother, and the French president thought it wiser to wait for the royal proclamation from St. Petersburg, so that his congratula tions to the czar might precede those f the czar to him. THE OLD RELIABLE. ColumbusStateBan! (Oldest Bank in the State.) Fajs Interest on TiKDepo;it: ASD Males Loau oi Real tlait. HSCIS SIGHT DRAFTS OX Omana, Chicago, New York and all Foreign Countries. SELLS STEAMSHIP TICKETS. BUYS GOOD NOTES And helps its customers whoa they need help OrFICEttS AND DinECTOKS: Leaxdeh Gerrakd, Tres't It H. Henry, Vice Prcs't.. Bl Brugoer, Cashier. Jonx Stauffek, Wju Bccjibr. L OF COLUMBUS. NEB., HAS ax Authorized Capital of Paid in Capital, - $500,090 90,000 Ot'fr'It'I'RM: C n. SITKLDON. I'res't. II. I II. II l,i:K'lf. Vice Trei. DAXIKL M.MIKAM. Oasblor. 1'ltAMC UUUEi:, Asst. Cash'r. DittiXT us er. IT, Snr.i.no-r, II. P. II. OEnr.Bscn. Jo.vas Wi:i.uii. W. A. MCALLlSTEIt, CAUI.niE.NKl-. i". C. (illAY. Frank Uoiiitr.it. STOCK1I LHRRS: S,itEr.iA Ellis, J. Hemiy WURiiAr-. i.4i:vc ;rv. IIpvhv l.nsEKE. IANIKt. SOU RAW. A. I II. Okiii.kicit, Keiiecca Utcur.it. Jeo. . Galley. .1. P. ItrcKKK Estate, H. M. WlNbLOW. Bank of Deposit; nterest allowed on time deposits; buy and sell exchange on United States and Kurope. and buy and sell avail able ecuritlei We shall bo pleased to re ceive your business. We solicit your pat ronage. Columbus Journal! A weekly newspaper de voted the best Interests of COLUMBUS THE CGNNTYCF PLATTE, The State ot Nebraska THE UNITED STATES 'M THE REST OF MANKIND The unit of aseaswswith us is 51.50 A YEAR, XT PAID OT ADTAXCSL Bat our limit of -Msfalaess la not prescribed by dollars sua cents. Sample copies tent free to saj address. HENRY GASS Coffins : and : Metallic : Cases ! tW Repairing of all kinds of Uphol ttery Qoods. Ut :OLaMBUM. NEBRASKA Columbus journal IS nMTAKTD TO -rCRKISBI ASYTHISO KXQCIRKD or A PRINTING OFFICE. -WOT Tl COUNTRY. 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