"ivs .rJ PV s-i-'i ' F!3sBS c IJ. -" . "V BJf J . "r -- --r ?$,;' , 3fcw; k .: kO ,. " "" ? v- -- - -- 't -! ? ?. tb 4 ? (burnt r -.'.. & iJTgr, , trf'.r- sr . o e 5. I ' t' f? - . . Fr J . ", f " ' ; VOLUME XXIX. NUMBER 3. 0OLUMBU&. NEBRASKA. WEDNESDAY. APBIL 27, 1808. WHOLE NUMBER 1,459. ImtnraL V - ' e 3 r - - i;4 ;' vk .x I :V ' . -o . - . 'JBt - ; VN - IoT2i ? i" Bv - & s JfK Bssv " Iff. a CAMPFffiE SKETCHES. GOOD SHORT STORIES FOR THE VETERANS. Row rat Oatwltted the Sentry A Sara Irfeh Trick That Warae like Charm How a General Waa Cared of CaasbUaff. Willie, We Hare Btteaed You. Oh. Willie. I It you, dear. Safe, safe at home? They did not tell me true, dear; They tald you would not come. I heard you at the sate. And It made my heart rejoice: t For I knew that welcome footstep And that dear, familiar voice. Making music on my ear In the lonely midnight doom: Oh. Willie, we have miased you. Welcome, welcome home. UV longed to see you nightly. But thl night of all; Tiic lire was blazing brightly. And the lights were In the hall: The little ones were up. - m. V TIK 'twas M o'clock and iat:- . Then their eyes began to twinkle. And they've gone to sleep at lat; nut they listened for your voice. Till they thought you'd never come; Oil. Willie, we have missed you, , Welcome, welcome home. f Th" days were sad without you. The nights long and drear: My dreams have been about you; Oh. welcome. Willie, dear' Last night I wept and watched. By the moonlight's cheerless ray. Till I thought I heard your footstep. Then I wiped my tears away: But my heart grew sad again. When I found you had not come; Oh. Willie, we have missed you. s Welcome, welcome home. "-Ti How l'at Outwitted the Sentry. A funny little story comes down to its with the history of the past; it il ustrates the wit of an Irishman. A certain town was under military guard during a rebellious uprising which at the time was sweeping through the country, and all persons passing in or out of the town were subject to the annoyance of military surveillance. The soldiers were not over-particular in seizing goods, especially anything in the way of eatables. An Irishman who resided in the town lcceived word that a friend had sent him a little pig. which was being held at the house of a relative some few miles away. Some friends offered to wager him It was impossible to pass the sentry lines with such a dainty morsel, and that it would certainly ba seized. Pat thought a moment, then agreed to take their bets, refusing to tell how he intended to accomplish the matter. Early in the evening the sentry walking up and down saw Pat coming along with a bag over his shoulder, and stopped him with a "Halt! Who goss there?" "Faith, my name is Patrick Rarigan, and if ycz don't know it by this time, begorra, I'll have it changed!" "What's that you've got in the bag?". . "Shure that's me dog. I had to "car ry him that way, for he wouldn't walk with me." "That's a very good story, Patrick, hut I'll investigate the dog, neverthe less." and suiting the action to the word, he made Patrick untie the bag. out of which the dog jumped, rnii scampered away as fast as he could go in the direction whence he had come. "Faith, do ycz see that now. Why couldn't ycz take my word for it. Now I've got to travel all the way back after that diril of a dog again." "Sorry, Pat, but duty, you know." "Yis; but ycr auld duty will cost me a walk of some miles after my dog." And away he went grumbling. Some two hours after Pat cam? trudging back with the bag slung over his Ehouldcr. and again the sentry called: "Halt!" adding. "Ah, it is you. Pat. I see you caught the dog." "I did that, and now I suppose ycz want me to lose him again." "Nccr mind, Pat, it's all right; you can go ahead." And he entered the town. Now, Pat. when he reached his rela tive's house that morning had bor rowed his dog, knowing full well that when released from confinement he would immediately return to his mas ter. Putting the dog in the bag he set out, fully expecting the examination by the sentry and the result When he returned, as the sentry thought, to catch the dog again, he put the pig in the bag instead, and so successfully passed the lines. The next day the officers of the regi ment were invited to partake cf the savory mess, and the story was told them, upon which all bad a hear.'y laugh, voting Pat a genius. Harper's Young Pcosle. Holding by the Tall. An amusing story tells how a belated hunter dropped into a hollow tree, in tending to "bunk" there for the night, but fell so many feet that he became "alarmed. Rearing he should never get out. Toward morning a bear began de scending the hollow trunk, stern fore most. The hunter grasped the bear's tail, and the frightened animal, scram bling out. drew the man after him to the exit. In Colonel Inman's descrip tion of "The Old Santa Fe Trail" there is a story which illustrates the fact that a tail hold is a safe hold. One of the Kansas pioneers, the Hon. R. SL Dodge, started out one day with a stage driver named Harris to hunt tor buffalo. They were hungry for fresh meat, but buffalo was scarce, and after hunting all day they were return ing without having seen one. Suddenly an old buffalo bull jumped up from a sand hollow, and both hunt ers emptied their revolvers into his body. The bull, though bleeding and staggering, stood on his legs, defiantly, as if waiting attack. Harris dismount ed, that be might hamstring the ani mal, which had finally lain down. The cut of his knife brought the bull to his feet, and with lowered head, he went round the sand hill. Harris, a tall, lank fellow, had caught hold of the bull's tail as he rose, and in a moment his legs were flying high er than his head. He did not dare lsi go his hold on the bull's tail. Round and round they went. Finally the old bull weakened. Slower and slower he circled round, and Harris succeeded in cutting the bison's hamstrings. "I feared." said Harris, when the beast went down, "that his taipwould pull out Then I knew should be a goner." Hew A Geaerai Wae Cared ef GaaaMlaa;. In Acstria and Germany the army laws against gaming were, and still are very strict. When the Duchy of Pa den was ocenpied by Prussian troops after their suppressing the insurrec tion of 1849 the oCcers quartered at Rastadt were warned against playing at Baden Baden. One summer evening King (then prince) Wilhelm strolled into the gaming rooms and noticed an officer in civilian's clothes sitting at play. He had won twee on the red, and was about to pick up the money, when he caught sight of the prince watching him. Terror stricken, he sat quiet, not daring" to .reach out for his winnings. The red turned up a third and a fourth time. As the maximum was quickly reached, the prince touch ed the officer on the shoulder and said, gently, "Take up yonr money and go, lest one of the chiefs should find you here. Of course the soldier did not require to be told twice. He 'got out immediately. Two days later there was a review at sighted the culprit and sent for him. "Lieutenant ," he tald. "after you went away the red turned up four times more. I prevented you from winning four times the maximum which you would certainly have staked. Tou will draw op me for that amount. But take my advice, do not gamble again." The memoirs of an old Ger man general who lived to see his last victory at Sedan have stated as fol lows: "It was the kindness of the les son that cured me of gaming. For me It was better than a year's Imprison' ment." New York Tribune. Where He Drew The Line. With more or less of humorous in tention, perhaps. Col. William M. Olin. secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, attributes to Col. T. W. Higginson an anecdotical jibe at mili tary titles. The secretary tells the Boston Times that Col. Higginson was traveling in the south a few years after the war, and chanced to fall into talk with a farmer who bad engaged a num ber of old soldiers to help in the hay ing. "You see over there where those four men arc working?" asked the farmer. "Well, all of 'em fought in the war. One of 'em was a private, one of 'cm was a corporal, one was a major, and that man 'way over in the corner was a colonel." "Are they good men?" asked Higgin son. "Well," said the farmer, "that pri vate's a first-class man, and the cor poral's pretty good, too." "But how about the major and the colonel?" "The major's so-so," said the far mer. "But the colonel?' "Well. I don't want to say nothin' against any man who was a colonel in the war," said the farmer, "but I've made up my mind I won't hiro no brigadier-generals!" j. X Bays Use la War. The employment of the X ray appar atus in connection with photography, and the probing for bullets to save the lives of soldiers wounded in battle, is the latest thing in warfare. The British in the Tirah valley, on the Indian frontier, have utilized Herr Roentgen's invention with excellent re sults. The surgeons who operated the X ray machine did so under great diffi culties. The illustration here given shows a British soldier-surgeon taking an X ray photo of a wounded man's chest, the sensitive plate being placed direct ly under the body, below the wound. Many lives have been saved by the wonderful machine, and its general use in the English army and navy is as sured. Looking Unto Tcsn. No experience is more sweet than to waken in the night with thoughts of Jesus. The Psalmist speaks of it: "In the night his song shall be with me.7 A poor woman lay ill of a lingering and fatal disease in a hospital. She was homeless and unknown; a cancer was gnawing its way slowly to her vitaLi, 'jut she was radiantly happy, her face shone. "I suppose you think of the heaven to which you are so soon to go," said the minister who had called to see her. "No, I don't think of that" "You feel great consolation in read ing your Bible, I suppose," the minis ter suggested. "I can't read." 4 "What is it. then? What do you dor "I think of Jesus." "Read the chapter about his feath ers." said another invalid, a beautiful young lady who had a long illness, bedridden and fatal. She always want ed her pastor to read the Ninety-first Psalm. "Read it again, the same one yoa read the last time. I ache so. and It rests me. the feathers arc so soft. I am so sore, and everything hurts me. but that is such a tender, soft place under his wings." For Cleaning Stave Pines. Soot, cannot accumulate in the elbows of stovepipes to clog the pipe if a new arrangement is used, which is attached to the section of the pipe nearest the el bow, and has perforations to admit air. which it discharges into the elbow : change the current of the smoke Inside the pipe and drive it around the elbow. EATING IN NEW ORLEANS. Dellcloa This Which Are Served la That City. The day is begun with a cup of coffee and a roll an egg, if one wishes It. Then breakfast at 10 or 11 o'clock. It is a city of restaurants, and he who has only lodgings lives at the chef's taste, at the epicure's board, says a writer in the Philadelphia Press. The flavor and taste of their coffee is different from that gotten north or vest of Lake Ponchartrain, unless in the hostelries with French chefs. I watched the most famed cook In the city make it one morning and this is how it was done: It had been partial!? roasted. at the market; hut she p'ui about two cupfuls la a pan with a lid and roasted it a Wt more. Heat brings out the flavor. Into the coffee mill it went and the fresh grounds were put into a tin dripper. This dripper she laid over a brown-stone jar, which was entirely warm, and then poured the boiling .water into the dripper., She placed-taw-stoerTsi 'fronrbfTnot' on, the stove. Only a little water at a time was poured over it, and two or three times the whole contents of the jar were poured through the dripper for extra strength. The result was a coffee that was rich, brown and frag rant. The cup was poured only half full, the rest made up with hot milk. It was nectar! Liver is a freqaent dish, cut very thick 'and served very hot Very little, it aay hot bread is seen. The bread is delicious. It Is broken, never cut. The crust is thick, the bread is porous and one can eat the most inexcusable amount of it The concoction of dishes is entirely difer ent. Garlic has touched everything that can be improved by the flavor and mushrooms or truffles are con stantly used. Omelets are rarely served plain. Omelet .souffle is the favored way of cooking, and sweet' lireads, truffleB, oysters and brains are often used. Their omelets are made exceedingly thick and quite brown. Roast beef and mutton are not so fa vored with them as chicken, turkey, venison and squirrel. These meats are made into a composition dish oftener than served as plain roast. And with everything one drinks claret. Not in a wine glass! Dear me! No! But in a large water tumbler, half filled with ice and diluted with water. Your good Frenchman never gets drunk, but he drinks always! A Carloas Start In LUe. A correspondent writes to the Fam ily Herald and Weekly Star from Mac leod, N. W. T., as follows: A slip of your paper (I am unable to give the date), recently fell into my hands, in which was an account of an unique hat, constructed entirely of corn. In this connection the following may not he deemed altogether inappropriate: in the early days of the Soho Works, Birmingham, Eng., a workman called on Messrs. Boulton (k Watt requesting to see Matthew Boulton, from whom he unsuccessfully solicited employment As he was turning away, Boulton, who was a very sharp-sighted man where anything mechanical was about, called him back, and, asking him whence he procured his hat, was told he had made it himself. "What 1b it made of?" "Wood." "How did you make it?" "Turned it in a lathe." replied the man. "But, man," ?aid Boulton, "that thing is round; you could not turn that in a lathe." He had hit upon the expedient, now well enough known, of causing the lathe spindle to rise and fail once for every revolution it made, as is done today in the invention known as the elliptical chuck. This man was Murdoch, who became the manager of the works, and who was instrumental, above all other men, in giving to the Soho Works the prcud position it for so many years enjoyed among mechanics. In another place you mention as a modern invention a fall-down lazy man's b3dstead, actu ated by the alarum of a clock. This, was exhibited at a workman's exhibi tion held at the Lambeth Baths, Lon don, England, in the year 1864 or 1SC5. Coaldn't Stand It. A countryman walked into a news paper office to advertise the deatli of a relative. "What is your charge?" he asked of the clerk. "We charge two dollars an inch." "Oh!" said the coun tryman, "I can't afford that My friend was six feet three inches." ODDS AND ENDS. Projectiles used by the United States army for its great modern guns cost as follows: Solid shot, 8-inch, $69.S0 each; 10-Inch, 1144.50 each; 12-inch, $212 each; 12-Inch mortar shells, weighing 800 pounds, $114 each; 12-inch mortar shells, weighing 1,000 pounds, $195 each. In the royal family of England the order of precedence among men is thus: The sovereign, the prince of Wales, the other sons of the sovereign in the order of their age, the sov ereign's grandsons, the brothers of the sovereign, the sovereign's uncle and finally the eons of the brothers or sis ters of the sovereign. Ah inventive genins in Media, Pa., has rigged up a device which he con fidently predicts will put an end to street-car hold-ups. He is a conductor on an electric line and has lined the Interior of his car with wires charged with electricity. Along these wires runs a small trolley device, which is intended to be kept in bis hand con stantly, no matter where he may be in the car. It terminates in a fork shaped metallic rod. and with this rod it is proposed to'electrocute any darlns footpad who attacks the car. The nickel-steel ingot, weighing over ninety-nine tons, for the tube of the sixieen-racn Dreecn-ioaaing Hue gun lately designed by the army bureau of ordnance, has been cast at South Beth lehem, Pa. This ingot is seventy-four inches in diameter, and its total length, including the sinkhead. is 199 inches. The gun. which, when completed, will be mounted on the Romer shoal. In New York bay, is the most powerful in the world. Its total cost, including car riage and emplacement, is estimated at $54.M. The following figures will give some Idea of the power and dimensions of this stupendous en gine of war: Weight of completed gam, 12f tons; length, forty-nine feet; weight of projectile. 2,35 pounds; pow der charge, l,f pounds; range, 15 to IS miles, SOLDIERS OF CHRIST J OUR ARMY CHAPLAINS ON THE iATTLiFiELdi They Have Been In the Thick t the, fight and Fravrtl Use and Brave SeMlere ChMwick and Ireland Btohen Fallows, Chaplains in our army and navy al ways hav had the incorrigible habit of keeping anywhere but In the rem They have been among the first on the field C? battle and the last to leave. Chaplain Chidwick's devotion and self sacrifice in remaining day and nighft now, for more than a month, beside the wreck of the Maine in an unceasing effort to identify the bodies of the blue jackets and marines, has been applaud ed all over the nation. On the days oa hich no bodies could be found, tat thaplaia was at the hospitals, cheering,, r BSOTerea-saiiorsr-wnea tne - pupy mass which once was part of the life and soul of the battleship was brought to the surface, the chaplain accom panied It to the graveyard, and 'saw that the grave was marked in such a way as to facilitate removal ill the fu ture to American soil. John CMdwick is not an 6id hand in the navy. He was ctimraiisibned by President Cleveland only three years ago. He 16 one of the three Catholic chaplains in that arm of the service, which contains among its enlisted men over 40 per cent of Catholics. But de nominations have made no difference to him. He wrote the most touching letter regarding one of tho lost sailors who was a member of the Society of Christian Endeavor. Father Chldwiek is a New York boy by birth, fthd lie came honestly enough by his fighting blood, tor bis father served in the civil war in both the army and the navy. Archbishop Ireland is perhaps the most celebrated chaplain of the civil war. He went out with the Fifth Minnesota, and the first thing he did after the regiment took the field, and before the first battle, was to substitute chess for chuck-a-luck among the sol diers. This was in 18??. In October of that year the young chaplain had a chance to show the stuff that was in him. At a critical point In a battle the Fifth Minnesota was called Upon to fill a gap through Which the enemy had pressed capturing, as they surged into our tines, one of our batteries. The Fifth went in with a yell, and poured volley after volley almost point blank into the faces of the Confederates. This was not the first appearance of the Fifth in the day's fight, and it wa3 not long before the cry went down the line: "We're out of ammunition!" He Had Cartridges, The men stooped over and tbok the cartridges from the boxes of their dead comrades, and tried to hold their ground. It was not many minutes be fore a stout, smooth-faced young man appeared with a box on his shoulder;; and called out: "Here's cartridges for you, boys!" He passed quickly in along the rear of the ranks, throwing the cartridges into the soldiers' haversacks a more con venient receptacle than the cartridge box, with its separate compartments. "Bully for you. Father!" "You're the stuff!" and similar expressions were heard, and the men turned to their work with redoubled vigor. That night when the battle was over, and the fragments of the regiment had been gathered together. Chaplain Ire land was missing. After long and anxious search he was found on the very front, in an improvised hospital close to the enemy's pickets. In a speech recently to the students of the Notre Dame university. Arch bishop Ireland said: "Should there be a war. I will take it upon myself to say that the response of Notre Dame would be so quick to save America that she would send out all her priests as chaplains and all her students, as far as age will permit, as soldiers. Some Holy Regiments. This is the university In which is organized a Grand Army post which is composed exclusively of priests. The Rev. Father Corby, who was chaplain of the Forty-eighth New York Volun teers, is post commander. Father Cor by is the author of "Memoirs of an Ar my Chaplain's Life." The Forty-eighth New York was called "Perry's Saints," much as another New York regiment was called the "Die-no-Mores," because they sang so often lhe gospel hymn, "We're Going Home to Die No More." The Seventy-third Illinois was the "Preacher Regiment," and the Fortieth Wisconsin the "God and Morality Regi ment." At least one chaplain in the army became a general. He was Samuel BISHOP FALLOWS (An Army Chaplain Who JSsSflKsimmmmmmmmmmbi hsmmmmmW 'A ti am HmmlaSSIrePalmmmmvisX Fallows, who is now bishop of the Re- led Episcopalian Church at Chlca- where he did his part in solving the luor problem by founding the home church saloon; fiisbon Fallows was ra la England and ent tB Wiscon.- in In 1848, graduating from the TJni- ersity of Wisconsin two years be- the outbreak of the rebellion. In be became chaplain of the Thlr- -second Wisconsin Infantry; but his tlth gave out temporarily and he Iras obliged to return home. After a rhile he organized the Fortieth Wis- sin, returned to the field as its Is-ienei, and won the stars of a bfiga- ier general. The "Preacher Regi lent" before referred to was organized f James F. Jaquess, who bad gone in- 9 the service as chaplain of the Sixth linois Cavalry. Regiment or Mct'.iodUts. "By God. chaplain." said his colonel the day, to the alarm of the good man. 'yoa are the best soldier in or out of regiment aad I want you, to take -4m" Jaaaeas- .fsaaised the Seventy-third Illinois from among his Methodist brethren, and ho led the regi ment through eleven pitched battles In the West. Its record for saving grace Isn't on file In the war department, but its record for dare-devil fighting Is, and all Americans cjh. read and glory in ll: A dozen chaplains in the army JM iSmmltemi: A??&2 mmmmmmmmm?iam6mmmmmmmmm. BmmwAavmmmmnmmmpSmxv. Qjammmm. StainmmmV W MmmmKaf nma m BPBmmmmaamT ARCHBISHOP IRELAND OF ST. PAUL. (An Army Chaplain Who Brought Up Cartridges While Under Fire.) gave up their lives, not by reason of being hit by chance shots, but in actual hand-to-hand fighting. Chaplain Ful ler of the Sixteenth Massachusetts volunteered for a forlorn hope, which he saw was getting ready to cross the Rappahannock in paddle boats to drive off the Confederate sharpshooters, who were on top of Marye's Heights in the bloody and futile charges at Fred ericksburg. He was one of the first to 'reach the shore and was killed, rifle in hand. In the streets of Fredericksburg. Chaplain O. N. Benton was killed while encouraging the Shepard Rifles, the Fifty-first Netv York, at Newberne, N. C Chaplain J. M. Springer of the Third Wisconsin took up a musket in his first battle, Rcseca, and was mor tally wounded after a four-hour fight. Chaplain Francis Butler of the Twenty-fifth New Jersey was killed while carrying water to the wounded men of his regiment at the battle of Suffolk. Chaplain John I Waltkcr Was killed while fighting with his regiment, the Forty-third Illinois, at Shiloh. Chap lain Levi W. Sanders was killed with his command, the One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Illinois, at Caldwell's Ferry. The Seventy-second Indiana, mounted, made a desperate charge at Hoover's Gap, Tenn. Chaplain John W. Eddy went with it to his death. Chaplain H. S. Howell of the Ninetieth Pennsylvania was wounded the first day at Gettysburg, and died on the steps of a church. The First Maine cavalry charged up a hill at Cold Har bor into the muzzles of several bat- OF CHICAGO. Became a General. teries. Its ckaplinl; $eerg6 W. Bart- I lett went with It. aad waf e W tw by a solid shot at the first ire. tad Texas Rangers made a sadden charga upon the First Wisconsin caValm? L'Aagaille Ferry, Ark. la the de fease the ehaplala of the First. G. W. Duamore. was kifiett while fighting splendidly. Not all of t"ffe .wsjy chaplains who went Into the thick of the fight were killed. There was H. Clay Trumbull of the Tenth Connecti cut, who, when the men gave way, went among them brandishing his revolver for he did not carry a sword aad rallied the regimeat to victory. For this deed of gallantry, he was recommended for promotion. But there fe no bish ops in the army, and promotion w'oftid take him out of his religious work; He Fenght aji Dnr. Father Peter Tlssot of the Thirty seventh New York took part in the bat tles of Williamsburg and Seven Pines. In the latter battle his horse was shot fromaa4er aim. CjMtaUia.pwl. theSlxtyHEarlew "York was" where the battle waged 'fiercest at Antietam. and Chaplain Rennet of the Thirty seventh Ohio fought all day with a gun at Bald Hill before Atlanta. The regulars remember Mainor C. Blaine, post chaplain at Fort Ring gold, f &: Od thanksgiving night, 1896, the upper part of his quarters, where his wife and daughter were sleeping, took fire. He rushed up stairs, found his wife, and, wrapping a blanket about her, got her out in safety. Then, in spite of warnings, he went back after his daughter. The stairs then were ablaze, but he made his way to her room, and the last seen of him he had her covered with a blanket, standing at the head of the stairs. Just then there was a crash, sparks flew in all directions, and fath er and daughter were plunged through tb the cellaF. there they WeM foUnd when the fire had been put out He was horribly burned, but on the dead body of his daughter was not a mark of fire or smoke. He had fought the flames from her successfully, though he could not save her life. A recHlIar Epitaph. the following epitaph is copied from a tomb in the vicinity of Port Royal, Jamaica: "Here lieth the body of Louis Caldy, Esq., a native of Mont pellier, in France, which country he left on account of the revocation. He was swallowed up by the earthquake which occurred at that place in 1692, but by the great providence of God was by a second shock, flung into the sea, where he continued swimming till res cued by a boat, and lived forty years afterward." The Mikado Favorite Sport. The favorite sport of the mikado is horse-racing, but he allows no betting, and the price of admission to the races is placed so high that only the upper classes can attend. The mikado's sta bles accommodate about 3,000 animals. HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE. When sweeping the carpet, if you have no tea leaves handy, try the effect of sprinkling it with chopped cabbage. This will prevent the dust flying about much, and it has also the effect of brightening the colors of the carpet. Teacups, even when carefully kept, sometimes have dark stains at the bot tom, caused by the action of the tan nin in the tea. Salt slightly mois tened, will remove these, but in the case of very fine china It sometimes scratches it a little. Powdered whiting will be found quite harmless and equal ly good. To restore the color of black lace shake the lace free from dust, lay it on a smooth, clean board or table, and sponge It over with a bit of black siik dipped in a solution of a teaspoonful of borax in half a pint of warm water. Iron the lace while still damp, covering It first with a piece of black silk or cloth. To cut letters out of glass is not so difficult an operation as the amateur glazier may be led to think. To con duct it successfully first, with a little paint mark out the shape of the letters upon the sheet of glass; then heat a piece of thin iron wire until red hot. and with It draw over all the outlines of the letters. The concluding item, should the glass letters not Immediate y separate themselves from their sur roundings, Is to carefully dip the sheet. !n a wide bath of cold water; the let ters will then detach themselves with. cut splintering. ME WINS A BATTLE. WELL-KNOWN GUEST OF IN DIANA MINERAL SPRINGS HOTEL THE PROUD LIAR. ' Capt. m. 8. Cat C the a Shoald Be Order He u i f Ceart Martial aad SafrM Indiana MMrhtSpriagavIai., April 1L Special Cfcrrsfds) Warbks dis patches in the moraiCa nawnaysf stirred pageaeral dkcaaeioa aaVigahnlf aw r gentlemen in a corner of thsissakaag SfthelBdiaaaMiaeralSpriataHotaJteday. Several veterans of the civil war wh hava been fecauiag health hy Magna Mad Baths aad Litaia Water hara oc a Mvely inwrsat in ta diacsjadoa. Many !nerestia ttstfas of the lata con flict were iMd.- m ... .. "la the cauraSig before Riehaead la the last months of tbs war,' iaai Can. H. 8. Cola, of Fergaa Fall, Mhu.. "I was guilty of a distortion of aa order that, had the battle which it caoeed been a defeat far as, woaM have had sad naalts for ma; feOaaaliUmfahrtaMll (rem a parOoas paatttoa aid wa wstfa victory." Capt Cola's regiment was the famous First Maine Cavalry which by special order of the War Department has seven more battles on ita colors than any other carried by any regiment in tha Union army. Tha First Maine also has tha record of having turned more of its troopers iate preachers at the close of Lostilities Shan any other regiment of tha northern army., ttbile several of tha men who have bean governors of the Pine Tree state since 185 were at the front with tha First Maiae. But it was while he was oatkestaSTof Gen. Chas. F. Smith, who commanded a brigade of the Second Cavalry corps, the head ef which was Gen. D. McGregg, on of tha best cavalry captains in the north or soath. that the incident happened. "Oar brigade was In a desperate condi tion," said Capt. Cole, "when Geo. Smith sent me to ask Gen. McGregg forre-inforce-ments. 1 found the Pennsylvania fighters and delivered my message. He thought fully stroked his beard. " -Giro my compliments to Gen. Smith, he said, 'and tell him ha can't have a tefofercement., It was the first time I eve beard Gen. McGregg swear, aad I waa convinced that it was due to the serious condition of his command. I was also con vinced that our brigade should fight ita way out, so when 1 galloped op to Gen. Smith I determined to somewhat caaage bis superior' orders. 'What success?' he asked. 'Gen. McGregg can't send any re-inforceraents, and desires you to attack.' I said. He waa surprised, but the word was given. In spired by onr peril we routed the enemy and gained a safe place. "Some time afterward I told Gen. Smith what I had dene." "What happened?" asked one of ths other veterans. "Drinks on the general," said the man from Minnesota, who added that with a few more MagnO Mnd Baths he would be in a fit condition to fafce a band in the im pending war with Spain. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Ob, should seme power the glftle gf us To see aurseycls as ithers see us. 'Twould do no good, for, spite of blame. We'd chase cur ollies just the same. Chicago Itacrd. He: 'Mlsa Beatrice, I love you more than I can find word's to tell." Miss Beatrice: "Why don't yon say a dictionary?" Somervllle Journal. "Here, how's this? In this article on poets you speak of the .stepladder of fame.'" "I wrote that one day when my wife was cleaning house." Chicago Record. Husband (angrily, after somewhat heated argument with his better half) Do you take me for a fool? Wife (soothingly) No John! But I may be mistaken. Tid-Bits. "Mr. Jabbles is a man of extensive information." "Yes," replied Miss Cayenne. "'Extensive' expresses it precisely. I never saw a man who could take a fact and stretch it as he can." Washington Star. Wife: "Horrors! Husband, I've just heard there is a case of smallpox in the flat above us." Husband: "Yes, I know about it It's tho young man who plays the flute." New York Weekly. "Did yon heflr how young Cad!ets made love to afiss Dttckleta?" "No; how did he?' "He sent his valet to intercede for him." "Goodness! I never heard of such a thing!" "Hot I; but I suppose he thought it was beneath him to press his own suit." Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Ada: "Jack says he wouldn't marry tle nicest girl living." Dolly; "Pshaw! As if I'd have Jum." Phil adelphia North Amerlcat. Irwin McDowell Garfield, a son of cs-Prcsident Garfield, tried his first case in the municipal courts of Bos ton last week and came out victorious. He is 27 cars old and is said to be aa unusually able lawyer. Johnny: "How old was Methus-tleli auntie?" Aunt: "Nine hundred years old." "And how old are you auntie?" "Thirty, my child." "Then papa reck oned wrong by 870 years. He said you were as old as Methusaleh." Tld Bits. Choose butter by its fresh odor, freedom from buttermilk and streaks of color. Time Required. "I wonder," said said the artist, thoughtfully, "what price that picture ought to command." "O," replied the dealer, cheerfully, there is no way of telling that. You're not dead yet, you know." Washington Star. Incurable. Bing Yes, that's old Spriggings. Half a dozen doctors have given him up at various timc3 during his life. Wing What was the trouble with him- Bing He wouldn't pay his bills. Boston Traveller. e The richest institution of learning in Maryland s now the Jacob Tome institute, which receives 14,000.000 by Mr. Tome's vill. The John Hopki33 nevr had so much wealth, even with the Baltimore & Ohio stock lated aa it was at Johns Hopkins' death. Yeast I heard year neighbor call his wife a giraffe. Crimsonltcak Yes; did you ever hear such Ignor ance? Yeast Ignorance, did you say? Crimsonbeak Why, certainly, Ignor ance. Don't you know that the giraffe is the only animal that is really dumb? It is unable to express itself by any sound whatever. Youk'crs Statesman. "And you swear that you will always love.mer' she asked, eagerly. The vouns circulation manager of the Daily Scoop bent over the fair g lovingly. "I shall draw up my aft! davit to that effect at once," he said, earnestly. Puck. According to official statistics given out April 1. there were 104 suicides during the last three months in New York. Thirty got a gun and forty four went to the drue store, where poison is plentiful. The majority were persons between the azes of 2 and 45 vears. Of those who committed self destruction, seventy-nine were main and twenty-flye females. ColumbosStateBank (OUst FIatrtfiTiBDcpak ImtaliBiMHifc ICLL3 RUHUP TICKETS. BUYS GOOD NOTES aafi helps its easterners when they men ah prsJtcraaat riKAWOKBOCBBaXD FMa't. K. EL Hkrbt, Vfca Free. 1 BarSara, Caaaiar. Joaac Suvrm, Wit Mucaaa, or COLUMBUS. NEB., sua as AHMzii Capital if - $500,000 Pitt ii Capital, - - i rrici a H. SHELDON. rreVt. H. P. H.OEHLKIt'B. Vice Praa DANIEL SCHRAM, CaahJar. rRANK ROKER. Aaat. Cash DIRECTORS: C. II. Snnxoir. H. P. H. Oaat.ascav JOXAS WKLCH. W. A. MCALLMTia, Cabi. Kizkk. s. O. Gbat. FllAKK 1COHRKB. 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