"rj?: Vi ' 'l"-ii-.i v-rw .--ter-i,s-Jfcv.---i-Ta !.fe"RhiWI iWTJ-ffK.V--e. ; l.;-JSV!ri: - : . . . -v-v . 2. l-te L $ ;t K. r y ;- f- 'H-- - - s5--?"?S- -Sc5 c.. , yiJ .-.v. o . i it Tj Mttiii 8 aw o e t o . H: f,i&S f ' o o O- O ! V. o? A 1 '-. - ' f air , . K?' . h-i o - & O I o o o -. Si - Svv" -'---- - r v- ' "-s-vs- VOLUME XXVIIL NUMBER 47. THE OLD RELIABLE. (Oldest Bank in the State.) FajsIitetoiTlieDpits an Mates Loais oi Beal Estata. ISBUIS BISHT DSAFTS OH Omaha, Chicago, New York an all Foreign Countries. SELLS STEAMSHIP TICKETS. BUYS GOOD NOTES And helps Its customers when thejnecdfccli OFFICEIIS AXD DIRECTORS: L-eandf.r QEitRARD, Pres't. IL H. nEXBT, Vice Pres. M. Bbugqec, Cashier. JOHN StAUFFER, Wit ltUCnER, L OF COLUMBUS. NEB., HAS AN Authorized Capital of - $500,000 Paifl in Capital, - - 90,000 OFFICERS: Vn. 8IIELTIOX. PrcVt. 11. P. II. Of Hi.UK'II. Vice Prcs. DAMKL SCIIKAM, Cashier. FKAXK KUKKIZ. AssU Cash'r. D1UECT KS: 0. n. Siieixon, II. P. H. OF.nr.iwcii. Jonas Wkwii, W. A. McAllister, Caul Kiknkix S. C. Gray. Frank Koiii:i:iu FTOCICII M)ERS: Barklpa ni.i.is, J. IIi:nhv WDRnfA. i..nK Cray. IIknky J.osekk. Daniel Sen ram. Ci:o. w. Gallky. A. F. II. Oinii.iticn, J. p. lir.cKi:it Estate HCBECCA BtCKUR, 11. M. WlNSLOW. Bank of Deposit; interest allowed on Ursa deposits: buy and sell cxclinnpo on United States and Europw. antl buy and sell avail able securities. We shall lo pleased to ro crlre your business. We solicit your pat ronage. 3&TIE2 Journal ! A itvekly newspaper de voted the best interests of COLUMBUS THE COUNTY OF PLATTE, The State ot Nebraska THE UNITED STATES m THE REST OF MANKIND The unit of measve wltk msis $1.50 A YEAR, IF PAID IN ADrAHCB. Bnt oar limit of nrtfalnesn Is not prescribed bjr dollars and centa. Sample copies sent free to any scfiress. HENRY G ASS, &4KfpQ TJNDERTAKEE ! Collins : and : Metallic : Gases ! tW Repairing of all kinds of UpTiol eteryQoods. Ut COLTJMBUB. NEBRASKA, Columbus Journal IS raiiM RTD TO rUHNISH AHTTRnrO REQUIRED Or A PRINTING OFFICE. eouMTmv LoIumbusStateflank MM R Columbus WITHOUT AjST MONEY TEXAS FARMERS BUILDING RAILROAD. Caj'.Jal Declared m Road to St. Loal Iwajractlcahle, So Labor Shows th Wiy-Twcl allies Built nad Work Progressing. From the New York Herald: Here is an example of practicable Socialism. Texas farmers demand a railroad to St. Louis, but capitalists refuse to undertake it. So the farmers are doing U Without capital, and mean to push ft through. When they want rapid transit in the great Southwest they do not appoint a commission a3 we do in New York, with the doors Of our treasury open without time limit It doesn't make a bit of difference down there whether they have a cent to spend or not. It they takfe a notion that, they need to. get Bomewhercjjy; rail down go the rails with a rush. Everybody takes a hand in the build ing, and the miles between the starting point and the goal are girded off eo fast that a New York rapid transit commissioner must be dazed to think of it. In Texas is the proof of these seemingly astounding declarations. The citizens of Henrietta, of the Lone Star State, took it into their heads some time ago that there was only one city worth anything on that part of the earth, and that was St. Louis. There were one or two ways of getting to the middle states metropolis, such s by walking, riiling on horseback Or driving one hundred and twelve miles to the nearest railway connection, and then it was possible to get there by f""' I Russian Filcirimaoe to the inc icussian peasantrj' have a strong belief in the sacred properties of the waters of the Jordan. Nothing but Jordan water must be Used for baptism, and to be buried in shrouds tvhich have been made from linen which has been dipped in the Jordan, or, stUl better, in which the wearer has bathed in the Jordan, is extremely desirable. So strong is this feeling than an un usual csodus of pilgrims cots out for Paiestiue. Hospices have been built Ihroughosit Russia and at Jerusalem, whert the pilgrims have free accom modation for a period not exceeding twelve months. They walk from all parts of Russia, some of them even as far as the White sea, to Odessa, where they take steamer for Jaffa. Tlieuce on to Jerusalem, where they wait un til the Saturday before Epiphany. On P.-R' making a long, roundabout trip by rail. But that did not satisfy the cravings of the hustlers of Henrietta. They must have a railroad direct to St. Louis, so they set about to get it. The bottom of their treasury wa3 visible, so they looked around for sympathy, and found it in Southern Kansas, Northeastern Oklahoma and the In dian Territory. They found no money, but the railroad is well under way. Twelve miles of it have been complet ed without a cent of working capital, and a lesson has been taught to needy communities whose members have a habit of sitting around and telling what they could do if they only had money. Incidentally these Southerners have given to the world an example of the practical way to apply the doctrines of Socialism. With their own hands, they are doing the work for the accomplish ment of which they were too poor to pay others. Every man who has a hand in the task is a magnate by virtue of his labor. Every shovelful of dirt he turns, every sleeper he lays, every rail he places, every spike he drives home makes him more and more a cap italist, but it is share and share alike. "When the hopelessness of getting financial backing became apparent, the men of the district hit upon the plan that has gone twelve miles of the 112 between Henrietta and success. Stock in the proposed road was issued to every man who was willing to "Work on the construction or give an equiva lent. Merchants, whose business was of too much importance to be neglected, hired substitutes and put them to work with pick and shovel, sledgeand drill. Every man who is able to do so fur nishes his own provisions. Those who are too poor share the bounty of more fortunate neighbors. The sky and the climate down there are friendly lo man. and the open air is good enough to bunk in, so there is no expense in that quarter. Rails and the other necessaries for the building of a rail road were obtained on credit, based on the certainty that the road will be a money-maker, so there is nothing in the way of -these industrious South westerr. Socialists. Their way to the connecting link between them &sa St, UlW Utt CMS ttttfittt mm I Sr ZSf ' 'J-fr lFaaP S tTmKwarF nnnnnSlnMKT-WMi' tT 4WKtP j fe Southern Kansas, Northeastern Ok lahoma and Ifldliif territory; to a point northeast at eftetopa, on the southern bnunfelry of Kansas. Thence tta felrdersor steel will run on id ttU Uiver, the goal, where fconnectioa will be made, witn tfefe St Louis and Okla- oma rellfoad. Profit Is sure to come., to these men who are workine ftn shares whose value increases with their labor. When they reach the point at which they aim-, a hew and fertile coun try to the central and eastern marts will have opened through connection at Henrietta with the Gulf and Brazos railroad, on which are Port Velasco and Galveston. St. Louis will becotnd the market of the great Southwest and Mexico and Arkansas.- Her citizens have been asked to help these men who toil without present compensation, but they are called upon for only 20. 000, and her Business Men's Leagu&, Merchants' Exchange and Spanish club are relied Upon for assistance but whether they cive it or not th hnA hundred indJwjvmnesjDM TFhose'bullders'afe stockholders "bV vir tue of their own handiwork, will be completed within a year, and a rapid transit problem will have been solved as it never has been solved before in time of peace. Tlie Lawyer an an Expert. An ambitious young lawyer paid his first visit to a country court, not far from New Orleans, not long since. He went to represent a big railroad in a suit brought by a countryman t6 re cover the value of att ox which depaf i ed this life in a. Vain attempt to hold lip the limited mall. The question be fore the court wa3 one of identifica tidn, and the countryman had testified that he knew the ox by his color and that day both men and women walk in thousands down the twenty miles of continually descending road to Jeri cho, where they encamp for the night. On Sunday the whole troop, headed by their bishop, go on to the Jordan, and after the bishop has blessed the taking iiis or her own part, and pro waters they fill bottles, lift kpH): dlirinr o n-olr,l anA l.o,.tf.il ;!., raters they fill bottles, tin kett ks. and, in fact-, any available vessel, with Jordan Water, and most of them, men and women alike, taking no notice whatever of the thousands of Arabs, Jews, Greeks, Mahomcdans, and even English and American tourists with cameras who are there, calmly divest themselves of clothing, and, putting on their shrouds and crossing theni: selves three times, stumble placidly down the muddy fiver banks in the cold waters of the Jordan. There is a strong contrast between the broad, simple, honest-looking countenances of the Russians and the ON THE BANKS OP THE JORDAN. the flesh-marks. The young lawyer rose with dignity and said: "If your honor please, there can be no question thai this witness has sworn falsely when he testified that an ox can be recognized by his color. I was a stenographer before I became a law yer, and for two days, your honor" (drawing out his notebook) "I have taken a detailed description of every ox that passed the hotel, and I am pre pared to swear as an expert that all oxen look alike to me." "You are trifling with the dignity of this court, sir!' sternly said the judge, "and J will fine " "Hold on, judge," said the clerk, "there hain't been but one yoke of oxen in this town in a week. Old Man Henley's been a-hauling wood, and the lawj-er's been count in the same oxen over and over." "Judg ment for the plaintiff," said the judge, and the lawyer took his departure, a sadder but wiser man. An Expert Bore. Barthe, the French dramatic author, was remarkable for his selfishness. He was so completely wrapped up in the consciousness of his own import ance as to be often strangely insensi ble of the wants and woe3 of others. Calling upon a friend whose opinion he wished to have regarding his new comedy, hr f juad him dying, but not withstanding, proposed to read his play.. "Consider." said the man, "I have not more than an hour to live." "Aye," replied B?.rthe. "but this will occupy only half that time." Searching (lie KcrJptarc. "I s'pose you got a Bible you'll let a guy look into," said one of the two tough young men who had called on the minister. "With pleasure, my young friend. If I can be of any assistance to you " "Nab, I got to see fer me- self. Dis is to decide a bet." Indi anapolis Journal. A new detachable grip for bicycle handle Lars is mounted on a tube which is screw-threaded on the Inter ior to engage screw threads cut OB tbt Wt! MtMMT, .- 3 i . 1 -. f-gagsftatgs --rX3 COLUMBUS. NEBRiiKA, WEDNESDAY. "KICKSHAWS" AND CUSTARDS Sreteau That H6 Memaistd W rfe&cei for Ce&tftrle. r Beaumont and Fletcher, in ons their palys, refer to the sweetmeats their time as "kickshaws and delicate new-made things.""' The term "klck Ishaws," though thus used in a generic sense, was in reality the name of sweetmeat much in favor with our ani cestors. says the Gentleman's Maga zine. Mrs. Glasse's Cookery Boofc (said by some to be the work of Sim John Hill, M; D.) tells us how kick-J shaws were made. "Make puff paste: roll it thin and if voii havp any moldsJf Wnrtr if iihnn Hiani- milrH thorn UDil with preserved pippins. Yod may fillj some of them with gooseberries, somf- with raspberries, br what you please; then close them up and either bake oirk fry them and serve them up. " Now; this b riii n da mtito ltlrE thti rnnderBV ii-. i . ;. . i ; . .:; t. - nap-jacK," anq not uniiKe tne co l?!rS:rSr-rbo tie w C WCUIUI ICa X UIUUIUCU USS.acaaf- cd in their composition. The custards and omelets of 500 years ago still re main unchanged. Again, centuries ago slices of apple, parsnip, etc., were dip ped in batter and fried", just as we make bUr beignets. In the fifteenth century "to inak payn pardieu" the cooks fried "payn-mayne or freshe bred" and soused it with yolks of eggs, sweetened. in the cookery books of today wo find "pain perdu" means slices of stale bread soaked in milk; then dipped intbeatentegg and fried in boiling fat and served hot in custard. Concerning custard, or "custad," as it was formerly called, it was common "joke" at civic feasts in the olden time j 10 piace an enormous custard in the middle of the table, into which at some WrAVWt Hnlv Inrl. keen and crafty faces of the Arab3 by whom they are surrounded. There is a surprise and a pleasure in hearing for the first time the sweet and tune ful voices with- which the pilgrims reverently chant their service, each ...0 u ..V...U uuu uiauuim un-iuuj which will long dwell in the memory of those, who heard it: The illustration showing the pil grims crossing the Brook Cherith, memorable as the spot where Elijah was fed by the ravens, and now swol len by heavy rains, is an amu9injjr dne: An Arab, with' a view to the main chance-, has provided a plank, for the use of which he demands a toll. Al though his back is turned to the spec tator, one can realize with what a look of disgust he sees the pilgrims wade rather than pay his toll. The Graph id , stage of the proceedings, the clown un expectedly jumped. Ben Johnson uses the term "custard leap-jack" of one who "in tail of a sheriff's dinner" took "his Almain leap into a custard" to "make my lady mayoress and her sis ters laugh all their hoods over their shoulders." Why the mind Do Not Smoke. A peculiarity about blind people is that there is seldom one of them who smokes. Soldiers and sailors accus tomed to smoking, and who have lost their sight in action, continue to smoke for a short time but soon give up the habit. They say It gives them no pleas ure when they cannot see the smoke, and some have said that they cannot taste the smoke unless they see it. DON'T. Don't spend your money before you get it Don't dote too much on a girl or an antidote may follow. Don't believe that curling irons are responsible for all the curly hair. Don't imagine that the dude is high er up in the scale than the ordinary fool. Don't hit a man when he's down unless you are very sure you can keep him down. Don't waste time trying to shave yourself with the razor your wife uses on her corns. Don't forget 'about the performance if you would keep the friend obtained by a promise. Don't jaw back unless you want the other fellow to know that you are as big a fool as he is. Don't forget that the man who shakes hands the hardest Is always the hardest to shake. Don't judge a man By his relations instead of by his companions. Rela tions are thrust upon him, but com panions are usually of his own selec tion, Chicago News. Cora In the field Is shocked, but when It Is aide Into whiikr It 1' JUrwWnt. - :' ; : ' SCIENTIFIC POINTERS. Current notes of discov ery AND INVENT JON. to Stop a Suawar Bono The t AaUMvtle Koztoas A HaraaloM Aatl , 'Fat The Mooa aad tho Earth An ? Iltamlaated World. To Step a Kaaawajr Hont OME deVic, by means of which fractious or run away horses may be controlled, has long been needed. The great diffi culty is that tine may know of a in o s t excel lent check, but it is - TiB' sure to be In tne hook in the barn when it is most needed. One objection to all such attachments is the necessity for an ex.ra line br cord by means oi which the check is to be operated. A simple appliance consists of it couple of small pads attached to the sides of the bit and connected over the iidse of the horse by an appropriate and slni ple band. These padg bear directly upon the nostrils. Whent not in use they merely touch or rest iightl upon tho nose. The extra reiri when pulled upon steadily presses these pads into the flexible skin over the nostrils, and partly shuts off the animal's breathing powers. No horse can fun any dis tance without taking breath, and the result Is almost immediate confusion and sufforation that brings the animal to a slow gait dr a complete stop, the greatest care must be taken not td pull too long, on this line, as the horse may empty his lungs and fall from ex haustion. It is, desirable that the padj be so arranged that the nostrils will not be entirely closed, as, In inexperi enced or excited hands, the animal might lose his life before the driver could recover sufficiently to release the strain on the stoppers. A HarmleM Anti-Fat. Most of the anti-fat compounds that are of any value whatever nave itif their basis the berries of the common pok& root., these figure under, the somewhat high-sounding title of Phyf tolacca tablets, they contain about one or two drops of prepared berry juice to the tablet. That they are use ful in reducing flesh has been proven beyond the shadow of a doubt, and this without injuring the health iii atiy wa? whateveh in fact, a number of per sons who have tried them have dis covered that rheumatic and other troubles have been decidedly decreased. These tablets are not a proprietary remedy at least there is no monop oly in their manufacture any more thkh.there Js to . quinine or witch-hazel out tnat tney are a wortny addition to the ptiarmacopea is admitted by those ' whose experience gives them the right to be heard. There are few things more distressing to the possessor than abnormal fat, and any simple and efficacious remedy would be hailed by them with delight. New Uleycle Tires. The ingenuity of inventors has been exercised to the utmost on bicycle tires that cannot be punctured in the ordi nary way. Various combinations of springs, plates and rubber have been made, and the number of devices regis tered in the patent office In this line runs up into the thousands. One of the latest models shows a series of springs placed underneath small metal plates and covered with a heavy rubber casing. It Is claimed that a greater amount of elasticity is secured with much less danger of injury to the rub ber. In passing over very rough suf faces, the springs yield to sudden pres sure, and thus insure more safety to the more fragile outer portion. An tllnmlnated World. A useful and yet beautiful lamp shade is made in the form of a terres- trial globe, the continents colored as they are in the school maps, and the countries and principal cities plainly lettered. Such a globe i3 not only a pretty ornament but an educator "as well. Paterfamilias may read his evening newspaper by the soft light diffused through the surface, while his son and heir studies geography from the same source. This is a decided nov elty in lamp globes, being entirely new this season. The only wonder is that some enterprising dealer did not hit upon the idea before now. The Antartic Region. It is a curious fact that while enor mous sums of money, and property of great value, have been appropriated and used in exploring the more north erly portions of this globe, little or no attention has been given to the extreme southern part. Of late, however, the eyes of explorers have been turned Antarcticward, and expeditions are be ing sent out to determine various de batable questions that have arisen con cerning this country. No human foot, as far as known, has ever approached nearer to the south pole than "720 miles. The ice is said to far exceed that found in the north pole, and greater diffi culties are apprehended than Arctic explorers have ever encountered. Vege tation ceases at about 5S degrees, no man has yet been met with south of Sf degrees, and the country is dtitl ttttt oC Ual MliHUf fwta of If O SgLgaafegsasafe MARCH 2, 1898. (trees, atonnialas with towering peaks laird been discovered, and velcanoe ate thought to be nusWrous. Whether Um intense heat of the latter May it ert any influence Upon the climate la their vicinity is d question of iaterest to thfe scientific world.- The Mooa aad the Earttk Among the theories of scientists Is one regarding the original unity of the moon and the earth. It is believed that out of a mass of rapidly revolving ele ments molten fluid of gaseous, the earth and the moon took such shape' that the mass was divided into two parts. They continued thejr revolu tion and became the earth and tlie ihoom Each had its'own axis on which it spun, each also revolving about the other. The months were but a few hours long,- and the days not much shorter, then the gravity mutually exerted by these rapidly revolving bod ies disturbed them, tidal friction held them back, and UUart,moYlBa; nore rapiQifoftne'twoeiriburswSTir the moon slowly receded. During ages of time, the earth took on its present Shape and hardened, thus paving the way for such conditions as would make it habitable. It Is' thought that the moon has nevef become entirely sym metrical, and that One and the same side Is always turned toward the earth. lillnbr (fee of Electricity; In the realm of hygiene', electr'city has been applied to curing deafnes'3 by producing vibrations of any desired rate of frequency, which are found,- it Is claimed, to be efficacious in improv ing the hearing pdwer Of the partially deaf, in line with this is the substi tution of an electric light bath for a sun bath, and the production of ozono for inhalation by means of the high potential discharge. For .the insect collector the incandescent lamp is sug gested as a bait or attraction for noc turnal lepidoptera and other insects. It is proposed to surround the .lamps with a globe coated with a-sticky com position, the light attracts them. And once they touch the globe, they are se cured. Improred Divine Drrae. There was recently exhibited in Eng land a diving apparatus, used for pearl fishing in the Australian colonies, with which a practiced diver made a de scent to a depth of 189 feet, remain ing under water fifty minutes without any discomfort. This depth, it is said, was never before attained in Great Britain. The diving apparatus weighs seven-and-a-half hundredweight, the arms and the lower half consisting of a series of spiral springs. We take our illutsralion from a sketch in the Scien tific xnieriean. Electric Traction on Canal. Experiments in this direction have been in progress in France. One method Is to have an electric tricycle the "electric horse," as it Is called move along the tow-path, actuated by double trolley, there being, of course, no possibility of using the ground for a return circuit, owing to the absence of rails. Aloe fibre tires are used. Another system involves the mounting of an electrically driven propeller on the rudder at its rear lower corner. It is actuated by current from over head trolley connections. The govern ment concession allows a speed of about 3 miles per hour in the straight reaches, and 1 miles on bends and critical places. When Life Began on Earth. Lord Kelvin estimates the time since the earth became sufficiently cooled to become the abode of plants and animals to be about 20,000,000 years, within limits of error ranging between 15,000,000 and 30,000,000 years. From similar physical date Clarence King has made an estimate nearly agreeing with thl3. Warren Upham says that geologists generally regard this period as too short. Dana, Wol cott and others compute that the dura tion of time since life began on earth is from 60,000,000 to 100,000,000 years. Aged Fponse Beat Iter. The suit for divorce just filed at Shelbyville, Ind., by Mrs. Theodore Jaco illustrates anew the inadvisability both of a marriage in haste and of a union bewteen persons of widely di vergent ages. Early last spring Jaco, who is 73 years old and rich, told hi3 attorneys that he wanted a young wife. The firm set to work to find a suitable woman, and decided on Miss Blanche Whitman, IS years old, a good looking domestic employed at a hotel. At their second meeting they were married in the lawyers' office by Squire Andrews. Mr. Jaco had reared a family. For a number of years be has not been well. For a while the home seemed to be happy. It is on a picturesque knoll, 200 acres of fine land being one of the properties of Mr. Jaco. Last week Jaco had a brother of Mrs. Jaco ar rested for trespass. The brother came to visit his sister and after staying sev eral weeks, the old man asserted, wa3 trying to make trouble between him self and wife. He ordered him to leave the place and when he refused to go Jaco had him arrested, but on his promise to go the suit was dis missed, Jaco paying the costs. Wednesday afternoon Jaco appeared before Squire Kenton and entered a plea of guilty to assault en his young wife. He said that Mrs. Jaco had as saulted him with an iron and a stick of wood. He then pushed her and kicked her. The next morning the suit was filed for divorce, in which Mrs. Jaco charges Mr. Jaco with cruel and inhuman treatment, asking for a dl vofM aad demtadlng fio.&w ajjaT. JZG . vfc ' r--, ? g 110LA BUKSH. OLA BUKSH longed to the b-Ma- fcaraja of Benares, and was lent by him one January to a small shooting party in South Mizapur. consist ing of three gentle men, two. of whom had their trlve and children. 1I was without tusks, of great size, and of what amateurs call beautiful points; stanch with tiger, trained and traeable, but credited from the first known of him with an uncertain temper. On the 15th of the month lie took part in an expedition into the jungle; pelted a wounded tiger Into a ravine with clods till the brute charged and fas tened en his ear; then got his toe be- twee kla.lecs, and kicked Un rro; hind-foot to forefoot and bacK fgatn till he was done for. On the 19th he carried some of the party, including two ladies for an outing, nothing un usual being observable in his manner, except a rather excited rivalry with a horse which was cantering by his side, tin arriving lit camp, he was fed. as usual, by female hands, and his affec tation humored of having his biscuit put actually Into his mouth. He had, however, about him rather a menagerie smelf, for which a bath In a neighbor ing river was prescribed. In perfect peace of mind all retired to rest. But at midnight came the cry. "Mola Buksli has killed his mahout!" This was true, but it was generally thought the act was accidental: The paroxysms had come on him about 2 a. m. Ho at onC6 tore himself loose and went In search of his Second attendant. This man was a purloiner of grain, inatten tive and cruei, and greatly detested by the animal. The mahout and his dep uty were sleeping side by side under A tree, shrouded in their coverlets, a"s the manner of the country Is. Mola knelt on Ills enemy and killed him, and. per haps, in attempting to rise, slipped on td the mahout, who was a drunkard. and not likely to be easily awakened. or td think of rolling aside. At any fate, some hours afterward, when the animal returned and saw the bodies, he only looked down at that of the ma hout, but seized the other and tossed it hither and thither. All was alarm, .naturally, in the camp. Cots were slung up in the trees Ohe, fortunately, a banian and the Isdies and children put in compara tive safety. Morning was anxiously loooked for. When It came, however, the coast was clear. Mola Buksh was passing his time in wrecking a village at a little distance, unroofing houses and plundering the sweetmeats and grain. The other elephants had been driven Into the jungle. The men were armed and vigilant, the servants on the watch. As no alarm was given, a forced march was determined on. and off. the whole party set for an encarap- ,vt gc&S3iVr3 "'IS ON THE RAMPAGE. ment ten miles off. This was reached in safety, but the elephant was soon in pursuit, upset the camels. loads and all, on the road; flung to right and left the burdens deserted by the flying coolies, caught up two unhappy linger ers and killed them both, and pounded away over the hill-stones with mad ness in his head and unnatural activ ity of overheated excitement in bis limbs. The anxious friends vterc seat ed on trunks, watching their growing encampment, when the shout arose: "Mola Is coming!" And, sure enough, headlong down a steep pitch, just descended with every caution by the party, swung into view the reckless mammoth, as if the fiends were close behind him. That was a moment, indeed! Wives, ayahs and children were hurried to trees scarcely of adequate height, and the men and the servants took their places for de fense, beside them. But one I shall certainly name him Wigram Money, magistrate of Mirzapur, advanced on the little plain before the tents alone to meet the approaching brute. He received Mola Buksh at fifty yards with his first barrel, and the ball struck the center of the forehead. This stopped him, and a second made him turn toward the hill. He wa3 pursued on horseback, and though he doubled round and again approached the tent3, he remembered his lesson; and, Inr deed, though he dogged the hurried marches of the party, appearing sud denly and causing great alarm, for the next day or two he seemed to have a dread of coming quite close. The distances he traveled"" were scarcely credible; by light and in the dark It was one excited -and destruc tive raid, without exhaustion and with out repose. He tore.ofMhe roofs, he tore up wheat, he devoured or scat tered the contents of shops. The villagers men and women, chil dren and old people fled before him. He invaded two other sporting camps besides the one he was at first' attach ed to, tossing the equipments about, maddening the horses, and at times surprising some unfortunate attend ant. One of his last feats was this. A ranee of high birth was on a pilgrim age to Benares. She was encamped in a grove. Red and white striped tents were enclosed by the canvas walls; in the Innermost was she herself. The tag-rag entourage of native rank en circled her. A seedy sepoy or so, with shakos over their tied-up heads, and old, unloaded flint muskets, stood about. There was a rush of cattle and peasants down the road, dust in clouds. and a cry of "The elephant!" The ranee's currish hirelings left her. Mola Bukish leveled all opposing obstacles, and stood before the miserable princess herself. The slave girls had hidden themselves. The old lady flfd to her palaBktta, Tfat mi4 aoiaaS tort Ut J E A tir&Z? vcM , fc - vssr ,vfi-3!5a. rZ jfttij- jCjl.. gU - WHOLE NUMBER 1,451. frosa behind it, and put her te death. He feasted on a heap ef cakes which had been prepared for the shrines ot the holy city. A Brahmin crept in to see what the fate of his mistress had been. Mola seised him and destroyed him, and Hang him on the road, where his body was see by my informant. On the twenty-seventh the fit subsid ed, and Mola Bukish walked into his stables at Ramnuggur. the fort of his master, near Benares, glad to have his wounds attended to. He had been a week on the loose had killed twenty persons and wounded others, and had destroyed a great deal of property. Morals to stories are dull appendages: but I surely may say such an occur rence would create some excitement in the neighborhood of Primrose Hill. A toi toujours. 1 'JOHNNY LAW.' Tne Qwaer Te !-. tmtTwnmM ...twi There is no queerer legislative va gary on the statute books of any of the states than what is known as tho c "Johnny law," passed by the last Ten nessee assembly, and now being en forced in that state, says the New Or- , leans Times-Demqcrat. The law was passed, we arc sorry to have to say. , for the restraint and humiliation of juvenile lovers, as if "sparking the girls" had not been a recognized and altogether legitimate pastime with the youthful section of the male popula tion from the days of Father Adam until now. Here is the "Johnny law" of Tennessee: "An act for the protec tion of boarding schools and colleges for females and the principals and in mates thereof. Section 1. Be it enact- ' ed by the general assembly of the state of Tennessee. That hereafter it shall be unlawful for any person or persons to willfully and unnecessarily Interfere with, disturb, or in any way disquiet the pupils of any school or college for females in this state, or the principals or teachers in charge of them, while on any public road or street, or In any building or structure, or on the school premises; nor shall any communication be had for such purpose with such pupils or any of them, either orally or in writing, or by signs or otherwise; and it shall bo Unlawful for any person to enter upon any such school or college premises. except on business, without first hav ing obtained permission from the prin cipal in charge of same; and every per son guilty of either of said offenses shall be deemed guilty of a misde meanor and on conviction thereof shall pay a fine of not less than S nor more than $50 for each offense on first conviction; and upon second and sub sequent conviction of a like offense shall pay a fine of not Ie3s than $10 and not more than $50 and be Im prisoned at the discretion of the court in the county jail not less than ten nor more than thirty days. Section 2. Be it further enacted, That it shall be un lawful for any person or persons to loiter, wander, stand or sit upon the public roads, streets, alleys sidewalks or other places or to frequently and unnecessarily pass along the same in such manner and with intent to an noy, vex or disturb the owners or oc cupants of premises used for school or college purposes for education of fe males. Any person violating the sec ond section shall be deomed guilty and shall be fined and punished ns in the first section. Passed on March 17. 1S97." LARGEST SAFE IN THE WORLD. One Built by un Knslluli Firm 17 reet IlighniMl 13 Feet Wide. The highest, if not actually the larg est, safe in the world has just been constructed in Liverpool by a well known safe manufacturing firm for a bank in Scotland. It is a steel struc ture, quite as big as many a cottage, or even a house. It is built in two stories, and is in height rather more than 17 feet. Its other measurements are: Depth. 15 feet; width. 13 feet. The whole is divided off Into rooms or chambers of a fair size. This enormous safe is to stand in a large room, its bottom resting on steel girders. It is believed that this kind of safe, is im mensely superior to chambers or vaults built of stone, having fireproof and burglar-proof doors, because all such vaults can be undermined, as has ac tually happened in more than one In stance. As this safe stands free of the ground. It Is. of course, quite impos sible that .It can be entered by any process of undermining without detec tion. Their Antho-. The publication of a little posthu mous volume of poems entitled "Vox Humana," the late John Mills, ought to set at rest the question of the au thorship or, at least, one of the au thorsof the simple epitaph: "His work well done, . t His race well run, "i ' His crown well won, " Here let him rest." which was placed over the coffin of President Garfield and over that of the Duke of Clarence. Mr. Mills, it seems, wrote the .lines in 187S as an epitaph for his brother, and. never having published them, was much as tonished to find them mentioned in the accounts of Garfield's funeral. On inquiry it was found that the American copy, which differed slightly from Mr. Mills" poem, had been translated from a Latin version.- which was. in its turn, a translation from an English original. London Chronicle. Better Still. - Dixon I don't see why you refuse to join our little party; you have failed to give a single reason for do ing so. Hixon Very true; I haven't a single reason, but Dixon But what? Hixon I have a married one It Does. Fuddy It is disgusting the way people go ou about that fool of a Knuggate. Just because he has money they say he's a brilliant conversa tionalist. Duddy That'sright. Money talks, you know. Boston" Transcript. Anatonical. Heardso "I heard you drove down to the club the other night and took a hand. How did "you leave 'the game?' Saido-r"On toot," New York Icif. at), S&& y fcji'- " - -1 kir lettBaggtagsl - j