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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1906)
y pWhAs. M"-iU.' Ta -- "V-, ss.' W if v i -. 1 i). LoaisHeld. Wat J. Niataa waaaOuptedV aMMlafaneeae cack directed io wnrttntUyataat of OiiHI'Watfdf-d: D. Alanttar Oa. Trees, cam aattntfft saooo O. jJ6artt& aa-eriaT. MUD mdT.BC daT -Je4tifssVtK Clerk. 8 00 ad- 37 25 11 28 620 'd. 2(11 " D. A'tMar.'Oo. Trees, cashed 44U4:, J. ' J. GaBey, Co A r rsediralici-d L. IIs UNr. Co Sapt . caen 'eK w "MTfl - . J. I. ft'tSffttV, litr, n-aU""X fj3 '. .i wiii. 1 ,. A&x.r KYattN' Tp ... . A.WfC Vrtr'.O p A'Rtw-uii-ci&f ..'- 21 00 10 1)0 .! 25 00 27 00 bwiCtiy li n-- reiit &' sheriff r?. I Vrri'. eUriff. jVdnr fe&.. C I iri. sheriff. lMrtJing 95(i Louis' tirle Sapr., -ervirws us M. Ef iiwrvifr-rrM , 19 40 900 JohiilflMMhj 8upr.. Ujill 37 20 J. F. MaWfe, rtepr., services as i. . 3040 Joha lati Bapr., san-icea aa si&efvwx 3000 Wn.v RewVaaa, Sapr , oervices aiWpMaor 2165 .Tad mk wee presented: To UWVWd of Supervisors of Platte aiiJdiilia:7-Ia view of the fact that tlrecaBB)a'Che Probate court of this flawtaftfdbte to destruction by fire at aay aJSede-l,' they being wboUy with oat preWbei 'of any character, aad ia event a? anal weald eateil apon thelaad owaetVerMA eeaaty endless litigation d aiflaW, snorefure the uadereigned taxaayaraTan-viB; aoUiiag bat tbe beat tetenstfatWamaty at heart, sad be--Mdivienawiafereetod ia ihe safety of aid issf fits jlo eatreat your honorable body hi 0f?iae aosoe kind of vault pro tectioaBB records and files of the county 'eMrC Signed, Theodore Fried bof anetjotttra. The'aoHewiag proposition was sub mitted: Colaaabaa, Neb., August 9. 1908. T.i tkrfiera of Supervieora, Platte couatyylfteb? GeaialBfaB:'-Beferriog again to tbe iiBprttaaterTeO'iditinn fmai fire of the retxrdsv"of tile county judge office, I aiibsuitVlir onr consideration 'the fol low ) 'itrijf-nuMi: I piofioatf'io lease to the toanty two ioobm "oa of wltirh i 20 feet eqaare aad the other 15 io 18 feet in sixe. together with the bargler and fire-proof vault betweeaaaid rooms, for tbe aaaa of $910 Ot par year. Ia conaectioa with thia I aai U tboroaThly euip tbe aaid vaalt with all neceaaary abelviaff; pro perly aad fully beat aid toobm with heat; provide aamo with a toilet aad equip aaid toilet room with all aeedful neceaaariea, keepiag tbe aaaaa together with tbe halla cleaa aad ia order aud pay all aewer aad water ahargea. The coaaty to have the optioa of declariaff th'u lease at aa end by giv .iair thirty daya aotice to the owaera. - AtthetlBM thia Butter waa before the beard the first Use, it was thought . by bobbb that these rooaia would aot be aaascieatly light, bat now that they are' takh-1 they are foaad to be perfectly lighted aad are aiodera ia every respect aad will faraiah abaolate protection to these iiaportaat raeorda. Bespectfally aubaiitaJ, Q. W. Phillippa. Havad by auperviaor Goetz, thai far tWpaiitoKivetherecordaaad flea of theeoaaty jadgaa ofitoa aaipla pro tecUoaltroai fire the prpaoeitioa of G. W. PhUtippa be aaoapted aad Ithe coaa ty attoraey directed to afapara aad ea ter iato a eoatract with the owaer of the BMilduic ia accordaace with the pcaposittoa aubautted aad that the ooa tiact'bavexerated oa behalf of the coaa ty by the chakasaa of the board of w- PS - Hatiea carried, aaperviaor Schare re- HffitTj that hia aaau) be eatered upoa the reesri'aa votiag "No". Ttolaawiag'waapVaieUled:- . To the Baaed of' 8aparvisors of "Platte coaaty, Veb.3 t t 3J Oeatlsakaa:-f aiadly aalc your hoaor hfeaearJto allow" a to malove the aew located iaaiyoaWte the taabv the board. II up i il I III j liitatllli I Jota uatter aaaa, Oeaaty Judge. .f . f l? IU.J. -i 1.--'-3 by aapernsar Ooate, that the . of Jadaa ataatacwMaf be craated so be perauUed to (e tbe'aew oasea aff records'1 aacl ilea aad-fiitaraa beloagiag to hia ,Uo sab I.ntftW i asw? cxpeadttare of faada aot' oar aaid, aad - ,T 'h i ' - r'tta 'te regard to parohaae ef aad that this board i set pwrcWJsa ae addia usaeaiae at tkfttMmWBE.J.NewBasa.4 , Geete that the sewadjewrauaata ,'ma, at 2 o'clock1 p; as. Me- n't '.'' yapn iMfiHr Kimmcw hhubi nlTfid thee thai board" laaoamd A? n a jts s?r v m -r f NOT ?:- GET OUR PRICES COLUMitfS PRINTING SPECIALTY HOUSE Colamb HANNAH MORE fetter. Hsaaah Mere waa born on Feb. 2, 174S, at Btapleton, In Gloucestershbe, her father being the master of a caeol hi the aelghborbood. Ia 1757 her eldest slater, Mary, who was then twenty-one, with her sisters Elisabeth aad Sarah, opened a ladles school In TMalty street, Bristol, taking Hanaah her youager sister, Patty, who thea respectively twelve and ten yeara of age, as pupils. Tbe school waa a great success, and Hannah be came a highly cultivated glrL Some where about the year 1707 she made the acqualntaace of a Mr. Turner of BebaoBt. He was a wealthy bachelor. coaetderably older than herself and the owaer ef a. fine estate near Flax Boar ton, la' Somersetshire. She Is describ ed) as being at this time an exceedingly pretty, glrl with delicate fuaturesond beautiful' eyes. These characteristics she retained to the end of her life, as the portrait of her by Pickersgill In the national portrait gallery clearly ahowsu She became a constant visitor at" BehBont and In due course of time received from Mr. Turner a proposal of aaarrlage, which she accepted. She withdrew from her connection with tbe made all peparatlona for wedding. however, . never took place. Three tunes waa the day fixed and as for aome unintelligible reason vfi by Mr. Turner. His aaTec- tloa far her seeaaa to have been sin cere, bat he waa a man of a curious aad rather gloomy dJepoeltioB, and Ida atraage conduct may possibly be refer red to aaaae aseatal perversity. At last her Meade Interfered and Instated on the i agesat beta broken oa Mr. very anxious to.autke a act! ; and. tbough f or jsaaj iwner wae tleeaeataoeahi -Ask Your D ealcr rTJr M i r -antPnW ' snw&i tTP srl atsm00 r bT Kr JnnF aW jm - M-T-l 'WaaBBBaaaVlanaanWwaBBBBM' A aannTV anaV m Br,Bj0-'nnnnir ' aasM uJnaBnaTBYa BnawwannnnnV -r w ffajajBilit m m Lian ,jWp,anBB bbbbbT eiawvw'LnnnnL.aBBaalBBBSBj bbbbbbv BBbV i aBBBBLBBr 'BBBaTJf ilC SBBBBa7(iBVTiBnnnlaiaBBBBB SBfc BnVAV BBBPwaBBBB Bl IBnBBSL. OrannnnnWs- .an aaaan -.anannsjianri aannnljnannWrTnr anvv ananananna fiiieannwMdaannnsQt' -"annanananaa"7 .aananl BBaanT anvlannnnnBKaBraBBBlvBBBBBBBBBr"ABBBBr'':' sssan"7 bbbl.cbbtI Hi valr" HI.bbbbb! .aaBBsssl U aBBBBfaaTBBBKeaBBBBBWsBBBBvaBBBBBBBBv "- " nnwaaWaBBBBMesBe, m vmiu'i H M 4chdt,2HgggPrABusw fm J-d ' - - assssBaanlw raanaF r - aassssssssssssssssss" KM aar'anpafUfeanca H MHJP! rSUAefwdce. BanannWannK . ., , . .t..j'jt"1''" -J ana' tfatay I r TTa aaataieij aaa aha diiaaaanlad hear joglta.'? ataa" aastrisl-ihstfrTif --i H'. AnvaanruBannv'. i- aaanwaaeBwaaBasaaMaoa-aaBamaiBeat(BiwBwiaa" 1x3. SKt- sanli BH oG C Tenhaaw that aaaraleaaaiBaiHrffj.MS)ii la bears astaereisaay seherised preaact Toa will HJ AV3H"agggggE' aaVannanl nnVan bbbbbbbi 'nfannanl 'VaBBaal sVanVfaf bbbbbb! " MaanaBBBBsnnnnnnarf --"Ztl' 12M AA.o'Jr&aaIBiJ" W? , fiBBBBr V ayasasnv,aBB ea araa ayaaani. aBaaywaFaawh aa aaawaanjaaaiaaaaBgaLy aaaBfaajBaaB bbbbbbw j bbbbbbbbK iSBBjwhstltfcnMaai, aewkfaaa aadvd waasaaeaw Hex aailSBannnnl lsiiyiisari ; - gT JvaBBTwasnaaBBBBBBBM f 105 u T rJi Brv' IL WbMHr Haln JIPa JW m.9tMmMm.wmmMm m ' WJ MW-IBBBaEaBBBBBBBmaBBBBBTu QOs' tUvfts rif trri, ansnisfij lawjaiail frrr, ? ,aaat" TH- The HHfleSaBsSaHtOl .w v Makfcajae raTa-SBBBBBBBBBBswaaBBSmBV tedwNaraVwsat. The Blcs is iaitadlraei Iadla where fctojrmwa.aailhea aanwinatnitbeaaass a' h&ABasSfiaannW pariacuy ccaatiisaafi; wMtbcaaaat haajecaiiiH:.a.h aaalTt'froaf oW - 3L M&JBLmLmmW 9- Arwaiaa awaarast, healthiest. il iiirhhagef.laaijf, walsra.Aaafi'irn laaalc -If slHHK& Jaaalanapntt. Not a eachy. heavy bear.bat a light aawtokai haataaa ef a pals saibsr color, eoasstaiag Wtf; KBL HaVHl -- 7 wffl mif witk 7ar memm v "" ""' - B" .aBnBBBV XBBBBBBaBBB9KBBBBBBBBBBBV u L't 3 ffft ..IW'' iv . .ISsA8U2i.ClWi Hj,'f alannnnWWBSKaV"1 T R NwW-Tdy. M yeas, l.ili, mi .lfalf : B VeJHMJHbHP yoa, seed yoar oreW direct lo as. We wM aaapry yea asamaUy. - ' aHBaV"ssBnBBBaa ' t-j--ofa c aj 2o;toqs sv'jIwualasaaararoJ .b" mtAi" Hlocr. BET DonTFot The Name jgii . ::. ' - - . - ". " .L. r.. ,. vw' - 4Cfr - tn r-Vi.a iw5i G PAYS iKE -' ----. 1 hiM !raiNTE'B 4 1 -t If You Have Fine Poultry; Stock for Sale, art ractive CirctilAr or Pamphlet will bring You Business - time ahellecllneuo entertain thepro posal,..sae was. Anally persuaded by Sir James Storehouse to accept' an an nuity of .200 a year. This unfortunate aJTalrdld aot Interfere with the friead ship and respect which Mr. Turner continued tofeel for her, and at hia death he left her a legacy of 1.000. But it probably' left Its mark oa bar, and, though she subsequently received two offers of marriage, "she" declined tbem both. New York Tribune. SOME FIRST OCCASIONS. Alexander del Spina the first pair of spectacles In 1289. Tbe first books were bound by Atta ins, king of Pergamus, in 196 B. O. The first glass window in England was putjrp In aajabbey about' 080. The, first typewriter ever aaade ap peared In 1714. the work of Henry Mills. The first' bread was made by tbe Greeks; tbe first windmills by the Sar acens. Tbe first playbill was Issued from Drury Lane theater, London, oa April &1S. It u asserted that, tbe dnua was the first musical lastrument need by hu man beings. t (1 Trousers, ,hv. theh, present-., shape, were Introduced Into die. British army in 1813 and' tolerated as legitimate portion of eyealBg dress In 1816. According to historians, the first etrfidng clock waa teiported lato Eu rope by the farslana about 800 A. D. It was brought asa: present te Charle magne, from AbdeBa, king of Persia, by two monks of Jerusalem. Tbe three greatest conversall isiaaal with wheat It has been my good tnne to coase tntn -for"4i -were Masanal ku ..J " -V- 2j:! C3-9 fc2fl feS-S t " w " - " . i- -.- -1 -t i - 9LM r.r'''' rfzF ? "( ? Ti'cr v'My' -i " - rk mt m Nebraska j-t ii u a i u Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes aad u- marck. - " --j-. -V -.. .Of theee Dr. Helmistfwhe-anaiosf spirited In the "bel esprtr saaae, Bhv ssarck the most hnpsslavfaBalajt same time the most aatsrtebllag la 4 point -of wit, sarcasm, -anecdote aad narratives ef ,ala1ibsaar Intpreat brought out with rnahaaf vivacity and with HgbtBlngttfce llMmlaation oTcoa dttkns. facta and-niea, within iMas smTs words there breathed such a warmth and depth of conviction, such enthusiasm of faith tat the sacredness of tbe principles professed and of the calt to resist aaeara? tkau-From 'emhtisceaces of a Long tt-Jm Life," by Carl Scaurs. In McClure's. cave -Awwlderv- lly is knownto-take.eanrtkextilon, to hisjlate hears recently encountered his physician on thesticet Heware-yow-feelIng- these daysT asked the medico. Very well, ladeed. thank you." re- ed the clubman, "but I'm a bit wor-1 plled tbe clubman. ried about my wife- doctor. She' suf fers dreadfalry from msomaar1,- I'haVe been-on the-pout for-son-e'thne of oonsaltmg yoasabout her case. What would yonanggcsty;a aoica tzc &nt "You might try gettiag home earlier.'' ebserved tbe physician. New Yerk Times. ,u..o iii-w BnslaeM te net oary'a'sjreat 'eivlawari of nations andfipeoplea, hat alaar'thn greatest educator and , ovetopar reft character la the world, for It te.aipefrr petual school, a great life university where we do notes. to rectteaad(heari lectures for three or four boars a dayl for a few; yesjv svtwhereweaara constantly studying aad practiclag- al most from the cradle to tbe grave fsfip Success. . z. , '"" "' aaapjBBBsaiBaaajBBBBaaaBBBiBBaBSBBBaBi - 000 AND MAQOa aitHu G teats. Wha ware Gog aad Magog? EngUab traaathw aays that tbey were tbe last ef a race ef giants who Infested Eng- they werd" deitroved by was xrojanw-wao went io tue hwia after the destruction of and 3Iago?, it Is' said, were. caatHre to London. whPiw thr1 Js 1 A. I A . .. i . wan caaaara at ae ooor er tne palace 'ha kliat-: When they' died wooden pngea of tbe two giants were put hi fsalr placea.', la the course of time a, Mwst fire deatroyeil these, but now. if f)H go te Loodaa, you will see hi tbo great hall of one of tbe famous buikl laga the Guildhall two hnmenso woedaa efiVtles of men called Gog and there are other traditions of the two giants. One is to the effect that whea Alexander the Great overran! Asia he chaood'hrto the mountains off the aorth aa1 Impure;' wicked and man1 eatiag peoplewho were twenty-twa na- tiona la naather and who were shur-up with a rampart In which were sates of braaa. . One of tbeaa'-Bations was Goth aad aaother'lfagoth; from which .we readily get-the nameii of the mythical glaata. ItiS'stnipdsed; however, that the Turks are meaat'ty Gog and the Meagela wfMr.the cbllaren of Maso?. We shall filajll mentlea made of Gog aad lfagoglaf man books. Including the Bible, be there .art the great wall aad the rampart of -Geg and Mago?. whatever maybatre'Deea the fact that gave the aames of the two giants to that portloa of the structure. FEES IN ENGLAND. my Seaeaiea it SweU Its laceaae. a young man determines ts A' Barrister and enters his name at eaeof die, Inns of court in London or'Dablln be has to pay to the govern- .atenti ree or va. And when he is a faff astajed Eagllah or Irish barrister 'er a Bcbtcb advocate he has to fork out -a further sum of50. vflhaokl be desire to become a solicitor be Is fined even more heavily. When ha-becoBMS an apprentice his fee to 'th'overnment Is '80; and his yearly duty when be begins to practice is, for the first three years, 3 in the country and 4 10s. in London or Dublin and -after the third year 0 and 0 resiec- ;tjvely. So that, a ' solicitor practicing forty years In London will have paid Jne'government over 400. - -Alaw'age&t' (Scotland) pays 00 at commencement of study and 55 or 85 on beginnlag practice in the sheriCTs codrt'or courtvof session. If you want to chanee vour surname JalyaWown free will the government caargca you oniy tiu, out ir you tlo it under the direction of some deceased benefactor It costs you 50. Bishops pay 30 for permission to be elected and 30 more for the royal as- . sent to their election, and tbe fees paid en ieceivlag letters patent are: By a baronet, 100; a baron. 150; a viscount, 200; an earl, 250; a marquis. 300. a duke, 350 London Express. iff the Dead. Russell Lowell was a great , favorite la the literary circles of Lon- donTr On one occasion at a large ban quet tbe peculiarities of American ZTitnMr S Z2 ff.0 ' Low11 ' mwuj, mu ma iv bucuit ail uuier BiUK- la one new expression Invent ed by yoar countrymen so foolish and vnlgar as. to be unpardonable. Tbey tilk of the 'ashes of the dead.' We donttbura corpses. No Englishman woojlduse a phrase so absurd." "Aad yet" said Mr. Lowell gently, yeer poet Gray aays, sneaking of tbe jietdiv tTeeJaeur aabes live their wonted fires. n &MaA In tbe burial services of the :aascafef 'England It Is said, 'Dust to dnec and ashes to ashes.' We sin ir. good eampany." A cordial burst of ap- planes gn this iwunnt rejoinder. cnntTaillAtlon la Am. tlva of great stupidity er strong; ratfMU. iSaajaagK hy. Ga 4 t -" 1 )- "ji- - . KING It enrra lameaeas, old utes, etc., and is the i afc tmu on swtaisls, scratches, era sae aacl. Ik heals & wmmmI HfiCsOISllC groM - lowa -" -TT-T. TRIBUTE TO GRASS. Peetle Emioter That Wa toaoaatpeii by Senator Ins-all. The following tribute to rass, writ ten by the late Senator Ingnlls of Kan sas, should be preserved: "Majestic, fruitful, wondrous plant! The corn triumphant, that with the aid of man hath made victorious proces sion across the tufted plain and laid foundation for tbe social excellence that Is and Is to lie. This glorious plant, transmuted by the alchemy of God, sustains the warrior in battle, tbe poet in son;r and strengthens every where the thousand arms that work the purposes of life. "Next in importance to the divine profusion of water, light and air. those three great physical facts which ren der existence possible, may be reck oned the universal beneficence of grass. Exaggerated by tropical heats and va pors to tbe gigantic cane congested with its saccharine secretion or dwarf ed by polar rigors to tbe fibrous hair of northern solitudes, embracing be tween these extremes the maize, with Its resolute pennons, the rice plant of southern swamps, the wheat, rye, bar ley, oats and other cereals, no less than the humbler verdure of the hill side, pasture and prairie In the tern- Ierate zone, grass Is the most widely distributed of all vegetable beings and Is at once the type of our life and the emblem of mortality. Lying In the sunshine among tbe buttercups and the dandelions of May, scarcely higher in Intelligence than the minute ten ants of the mimic wilderness, our ear liest recollections are of grass, and when the fitful fever is ended and the foolish wrangle of the market and the forum Is closed grass heals over the scar which our descent into the bosom of the earth has made, and the carpet of the infant becomes the blanket of the dead. "Grass Is the forgiveness of nature, her constant benediction. Fields tram pled with battle, saturated with blood, torn with the ruts of cannon, grow green again with grass, and carnage Is forgotten. Streets abandoned by traffic become grass grown like rural lanes and obliterated. Forests decay, harvests perish, flowers vanish, but grass is immortal. Beleaguered by the sullen hosts of winter, it withdraws Into tbe impregnable fortress of its subterranean vitality aud emerges up on the first solicitation of spring. Sown by the winds, by wandering birds, propagated by the subtle horticulture of the elements, which are its ministers aud servants, it softens the rude out line of the world. Its tenacious fillers hold the earth In its place and prevent Its soluble components from washing Into the wasting sea. It invades the solitudes of deserts, climbs the inac cessible slopes and forbidding pinna cles of mountains, modifies climates and determines the history, character and destiny of the nations. Unobtru sive and patient, it has Immortal vigor and aggression. Banished from the thoroughfare and the field. It bides Its tune to return, and when vigilance Is relaxed or the dynasty has perished It silently resumes the throne from which it has been expelled, but which It nev er abrogates. It bears no blazonry of bloom to charm the senses with fra grance or splendor, but its homely hue is more enchanting than the Illy or the rose. It yields no fruit in earth or ah, and yet should Its harvest fall for a single year famine would depopulate the world." A CHEMICAL TRICK. Cfcaaate' a Wklte PaMenoartl Cat late a Striped Tiger. When we happen to witness a phenomenon which seems to violate natural laws we are not likely to for get Its. cause If It be explained to us, Tbe following experiment, which I de vised for my students, helped them t understand as well as to remember some chemical data: A white at, made of flexible paste board and imprisoned in a glass jar, 13 shown to the audience. The lecture! announces that without opening th Jar or even touching it be will causi the cat to undergo a zoological as well as a chemical transformation. lie takes the support of the jar and pushei It forward in full view of the students. The change occurs almost instanta neously. Tbe cat takes a rich oiangj color on which black transversal stripes rapidly paint themselves. Tlw cat has become a tiger. The whole transformation Is pro duced by emanations of hydrogen sul phide, which Is generated In the jar itself without any visible apparatus. The cat has been previously coated with a solution of chloride of antimony wherever the orange hue was to b produced and with a solution of basic acetate of lead wherever tbe black stripes were to appear. Both solution8 are colorless. After the coated cat has been Introduced in his glass cagn a small piece of pasteboard Is placed under the wooden support so as slight ly to Incline tbe Jar forward. A few decigrams of pulverized sulphide of Iron folded In a piece of blotting paper are deposited behind the cat on the elevated side of the bottom of tbe jar. Two or three cubic centimeters of di -oi astt- fn?! THE CBEAT HEALEB ff0gAKDB of gratefal caatoaMra kt every elate attest the WONDERFUL HEALING PROPERTIES of the WORLD'8 BEST LINIMENT- DEAN'S .. CACTUS Oil i jJjw,fyBl1jHSB-EBJ.M avH enta. wooada, laail ' torhmrh aa! saddle nlk laMit.Hea, aMas.etc. she aawaaa aa aad la SFI&Xy utkaetlc. sTIMS CACTUS OIL is sold by draKBtata In HclSaaitl Bottles. P sad Baecorairaraaa,orsear aaeaaia ajr tae saaaarsc tarera. OMMKT e JaaVtBTICIaMea, lewa, U aot obtainable at yoar draajfaarV POLLOCK&CO. a plpetteroa tea opposite lid, "When the perforajar wishes tbe traaaf 0 tJon to take flace ho takes tbe aswport sad paahas It forward as If bs wanted everybody to sea better, what Is going to happen. By so doaaa; ha suppresses the slight Inclination watch kept the Iron aaJpblde beyond the reach of tbe sulphuric add. The ajae hi evolved, and tbe formation ef the orange sulphide of antimony and blade sulphide of lead takes place hi a few seconds.-G. Midland In SdentHs American. MOVING IN PORTUGAL. It Tmkea AWa Flfteem Weaaa Five Steai Vv Oae Jekw Moving day In Portugal is a time of trouble than It Is even country. A traveler tells aboat Ms 'Vans are unknown, the only means at wheeled transport being rough carts drawn by bullocks, these In "turn prov ing so ruinous to furniture that only kitchen utensils. Iron stoves, bedsteads and other unspollable articles are sent by tbem. For the rest, the goods art carried often for many miles by men, only the heaviest things taken by men, of whom four sre aaa ployed to take pianos, wardrobes-and other heavy furniture. Tbey carry these on poles laid across their sboaj ders, to which they are tied by scarfs passing under the opposite arm. All lighter goods are taken by the women K-on their heads. Six dining room chairs form an ordinary load for one wosaaa. "She carries these by placing .one an her bead, to which chair the 'remaining five are tied, forming a sort of cage around her. Previous to starting the woman gives herself a shake, tbe chairs vibrate around her, and. with her bands on her hips, she starts off at a content ed Jog trot, covering six miles perhaps In an hour and a half and considering herself fairly and sufficiently well paid with 12 cents or 16 cents for the return Journey there and back- again for a fresh load. For long distances only two Journeys are made In the day. "The women are nearly always bare footed, except on tbe coldest days In winter, when they may perhaps wear sabots, but they often wear as many as fourteen or fifteen much gathered petti coats of all colors and materials tied with a sash round the waist, the bunch thus formed upon the hips, making a rest for the hands. - All tbe china and glass are carried In big round baskets on the head and very rarely support ed by tbe hand. About fifteen or six teen women are generally employed In an ordinary move and four or fivo men. Chicago News. The Wfcale'a Heath. The whale's mouth is the largest Institution of the kind In the animal kingdom, being capable of containing over two hogsheads of water. Tbe whale's throat, however, is so small that an orange would scarcely pass through It, and he lives on the minute sea animals contained In the water. Drawing hi a large quantity, he strains It through his whalebone sieve, retain ing the animal organisms It contains and throwing out tbe water through circular boles In his head. Whales en gaged in feeding are' said by whalers to be "spouting." Reaaaa Eangb. Benevolent Old Gentleman (rescuing one small boy from the pummdlng of two others) What are you hurting this boy for? "Because he made so many mistakes In his arithmetic this morning. "But what business was that of yours?" "Why, he let us copy our answers from his. A Strike. Bin. Nulywed You don't love nte any more; I know you don't! Nulywed But, my dear, you're mistaken. I adore " you. Mrs. Nulywed No; yen don't. No man could love a woman an badly dressed as I am? Paris Bin. $? PiTElT PETEI SCINTT na. WIS jfsfwaT Advertise ia the Journal for quick 'J) Its. & 1 -'L l -"-sts . JS; '-rJ J . aaaaBaasaa vsa aaaafigaWRaelBBaaaB fii - -iawaSafa&- sf '6;-'- .-.--. ...r:st..a-;Lahi;urerwv;-r ;-- .'--j-r.yy.-- V-w.- ' nir r-i.-'-i?.SL."x5tsTr3--W--rsrn7:-. r. j-- mui - ---rwi ISt-ySk -r zJ STA-7U; - T-T . Z. . ' JLr