'""- ibhbmmhibh u was blS r'in LAST OF THE WYANOOTTES Mlsa Lyda Conlcy Pleads with Su preme Ceurt for Peace for Her Ancestors. NEBRASKA NEWS AND NOTES. Kansas City. Kas. Lyda Conley, last of the once powerful Wyandottes, has returned from her trip to Wash ington full of hope that the supreme court of the United States will let the ashes of her forefathers lie la neace. The little cemetery on Minnesota avenue, the main business street of this city, lies almost hidden between the big buildings that border it on either side. The hum of traffic rattles Tic- rtcry opens with the introduction f J.1 n Stephens, adventurer, a. Massu- lniM-jts man marooned by authorities at iii:trjiso. Chile. Ht-In;; interest.-il in iDicing operations in Itolivia. he was de i!i.i::c d by Ciiile as an insurrectionist :j:hI u- h consequence wsis hiding. At his hoti-! JJs attention was attracted by an Kncl'shirian and a younir woman. it. ns rescued the youns woman from ; ilrunkfn officer. lie avas than'icd by i"-r Admiral of tlm Peruvian navy con-l-nt.l Stephens, told him that war had ''"' declared between Chile and Peru and uttered him the office of captain. He .Jefired that tliat nlffht the Esmeralda, a hifean vessel, should be captured. Jlfpi!cns accepted the commission. Mi-pin as met a motley crew, to which lie was ;i.sifj:ied. He pavo tliem final in Mriie:it,as. They boarded the vessel. They ;:i:: osfully raptured tiie vessel supposed u I.e th- Esmeralda, through strategy, -apt Stephens nave directions Tor the de parture of the craft. He entered the cab in :i,i discovered the English woman and N-r maid. Stephens quickly leanu-d lhe wrtinK vessel had been captured, it ww lrd Darlinston's private yacht, the lord's wife and maid belli;; aboard, tie explained the .situation to her iadv--Nhip. Tiien First Mate Tuttle laid hare tin- plot, sayinff that the Sea Qhhii liad ! n taken in order to no to the Antarc tic Jr. le Tuttle explained that on :i fount r vovacc he had learned that the !. Kaln-1 was lost in 17T.3. He had found U frozen in a lume case of ir. on an island and contained much fold. CHAPTER X. Continued. Tin change iu the man speaking held me breathless; liis cant, his usu ally oily method of utterance had titer--;, d mio an earnestness full ol fas'-inatlon. "Well, that was ahnut all. sir." h's voice sinking hack into commonplace. "In two hours we were out o' sight, an" leelin' ocr way through a blindin' snow squall, r.ut it was such a rum thins. diEcovcrin' t'nem islands out theie all uncharted, with that queer gnost ship pcrchm' oa Vm. that I wrote down the latitude an' longitude an' the honker's name in my log-book. W was about three weeks makin' the West Falklands. where 1 shipped a few more hands, an' then bore awav north for home." lie drew a plus of tobacco from out hi.- coat-tail pocket, cut off what he iKw.ti.tl. a::d stowed it away in hi;; cheek. He ran Ills finders through his thin hair, and resumed: 'A!cut IS months later I was back with the ol' Betsy in I he South Pa cific. One night, with the moon shin in, hardly a ripple anywhere, my mate run her nose onto a rock, a cou idt.- o' hundred miles south o' Eas ter ii.land. an' in less than 20 minutes the bark had pone down like a stone. W made Easter island in the boats without much trouble, but it wa'n't so easy to g?t away. 1 had six weeks of it before I got a chance, an' then I shinned afore the mast on b sandal wood trader. De Nova here was mate, an' finally, huntln goods to peddle anions; the islanders, we sailed into Valparaiso, an' the most of us shipped out Well, by that time I wasn't thiukin' very often about that ice ship down in the Aniar'tic; I was hustlin' for some sort o berth tn tnVn me back to the States. Hut one night, I down m Kcungues' back room, where i hung out. I got to talkin' with a gambler named Francisco the same smooth duck who introduced himself as De Castillo to you. sir. He was an educated man. an seemed to like to hear me talk, an' among other sea .van: I happened to tell him this one. He M'emed mighty interested, although be wasa't never given to seafarii:', n .'k.-i je a whole pile o' fool ques tions. Finally he wauled to meet me aain alone the next day. i "We!!, having' nothin' better to do. I v.as lLcre when he came, an he showed up with a querr-lookin', big, o" book, the cover half ripped off. under his arm. Then he made me tell him that 3am over again, and de scribe the skip jest exactly as I rc jincnibered it. Then, when I'd got ,l"""'.rh, an' tcld him everything 1 ccilcl dig out o' my memory, he opened iup that book o' his on the table, an" 'damnr. sir. if he didn't show me a picture of that same ol' hooker, plain a? 'ifc. only everything was trim an shipshape on board, wiih the masts up an' the sails drawiif. The came was printed underneath, too Donna Isa bel. CvJiz. ' "That hook he showed me was printed in Spanish not just like what ou ree today, sir, but the letterin' all rou.s:h. as though it had been cut out o' wood, but the fellow showed me the y ,) w&!. vlBf 111- - Wmpn j r " Anderson swered me. disgusted with our long controversy. "Oh. to hell wid Francisco!" he broke in, gruffly. ;lt's w'at you're goin' to do we want to know. Fran clsco'Il hold his gaff well enough. He expects a bit of the swag, an', besides, I let him know what was comin' to him if he let his tongue wag. I had him right, let me tell ye. An', damme. Mr. Stephens," the bully in him breaking all bounds, "if it ain't comin' the same way to any other duffer who goes back on us this trip. That's what talks!" He jerked his sheath-knife from his belt, and, with one fierce lunge, drove it half to the hilt into the table, his brute eyes scowling threateningly into mine. He Drove His Sheath Knife Half to the Hilt Into the Table. da's when it was printed, an' it read !? viJie. 177fl. plain enough. Francisco '.1 rule 1..:: in -English what he said was printed there about this Donna Isa bel: an there it is. sir. in his own hand wri tin'." He tcok the paper out of his inner coa: pocket and spread it open on iw table before us. De Nova and Aptkrson leaned forward eagerly to iock at it. but Tuttle shoved it along toward me. "Head it out loud, sir." he said, his voice trembling. The writing was' not clear, and I held it up to the light. "Gaiiecn Donna Isabel, shin-rigged. S.'iO tens. Amador, Master, built 1730. home port Cadiz. Sailed Guayaquil for Valencia. June 11, 17f3; crew num bered 2, passengers 17, including five .women; carried treasure, in gold in gots and pieces of eight, valued at :;.000,000 pesos, consigned by Canda mo. presidentc. to departmevfc of the west, receipted for by Salvatore, gov ernment agent Spoken by ship Con quistador. Sanchez, master. July 16. 175'J. SO degrees 20 minutes west and 47 dprees 1 minutes souti; all well. Lost at sea: no report." I put down the paper, and looked across at Tuttle; he sat motionless, his head in his hands. I confess the tale had affected me strangely, and I could not doubt that the man honestly believed every word he had uttered. Yet it was far too marvelous ever to he true; too impossible; too wildly romantic. It must have been a hallu cination, an optical illusion born from a mirage of fog and sun in those frozen seas. Over 3,000.000 pesos, locked within the eternal ice for 12G years! Over C.000,000 pesos, guarded by the dead for a century amid that grim desolation of crested sea! God! it was simply unthinkable, and I even ventured to smile at the credulity of the men about me; yet I did it with set jaws and lips parched and dry. What if it was all true? I felt the blood boiling up through my veins, every extremity tingling with the fever of it Over 3,000,000 pesos! Merciful mother! it was the ransom of a king; it was the temptation of hell! I know not how I controlled my voice so as to question calmly, for, even as I first spoke, I noticed how my hands trembled where they rested on the outspread map. "Is that all?" Tuttle nodded his head, uplifting his eyes questioningly to mine. "That's the whole of It, sir. What do you think?" "That's more than I know, Mr. Tut tle. Perhaps you dreamed, perhaps Francisco lied. I should have liked to 5ce that book." I bent lower over the chart, stating at the red cross. "What was it you men wanted me for?" "To operate the steamer, sir; the rest of us aboard only understand sailin vessels." "Yes. of course; but why did you happen to choose a steamer for the job? There were plenty of sailing crafl lying in the harbor easier to steal than this yachL" "Very true, hut it happened to be steam power we wanted. Here Is about how we figured it, sir. First place, we had to get away quickly out of those portions of the sea where they'd be most likely to hunt for us. We're outlaws, an every ship sailin' under a flag is an enemy. Well, sir. what chauce would a sailin' vessel have in such a chase? We needed somethin that would show 'em a clean pair o' heels somethin' that would give 'em a run for their money. That's what this yacht can do; she's pokiu' it now at sixteen." "Yes; you've got the advantage," I confessed, "so long as your coal lasts. Hut you can't put in anywhere for a new supply what then?" He turned partially about, and winked at De Xova; the fellow grinned back at him, but burst in eagerly: "Oh. we're not quite so green 3D all zat. Mons. Stephens, an I t'ink wo got zis t"ing plan out jus' 'bout right. We steam so till we get maybe far 'naugh south w'ere zey quit look for us. How it be 130 degrees west an 40 desTees south? Nobody t'ink we go zare non, uon. We got coal plentj' for zat. an zen have bunch left I know; I try it No more need push her eizer after we leave ze Ferdandez we be well ahead zen. Zen we rig up ze schooner sails, an' make ze next t'ousan mile wizout burn a poun. You see how it do? Ze danjaire was not. for in zat ocean we meet nossing hut maybe ze whale ship." "You understand what he means, sir?" went on Tuttle, as the Creole paused for breath. "Once well ahead we can fall back on canvas, and save the coal. But we'll need the steam power down there to hold her off an' on by the island while we do the jco. It s a mighty nasty bit o water, an a sailin vessel is apt to get pinched in the ice. But with a steamer we can hold her to it, however the wind blows." I looked at the fellow with greater respect Evidently he had considered ever- angle of the desperate game he was playing. "Your scheme certainly sounds rea sonable enough," I admitted, almost reluctantly. "And the chances aro you will get there all right. But sup pose you do; suppose you discover this mysterious island; suppose you find there the galleon as you say; sup pose you even succeed iu getting aboard, and into possession of the treasure what then? Don't jou know you're hound to be caught the minute you come out of the Antarctic into any ocean patrolled by the fleets of the world? You have committed pi racy a crime against the nations- and the civilized world will unite to hunt you down." "That's another reason why we had to have a steamer," he explained, calmly. "You just remarked that they'd be lookin' for the Sea Queen to come back. Well, let "em look; they won't never see her, sir. Once we get that gold under hatches, an back as far as that rock they call Dough erty island an' that's only a run o' maybe 500 miles I'll engage to make over this here Sea Queen so that her own captain wouldn't know her 50 feet away. How? I'd strip the en gines out o' her, h'ist the stack over board, tear down the bridge an wheel house, rig her as a barkentine, change every line o' paint fore an' aft. an then wreck her somewhere along the east Patagonian coast, or maybe the Falklands. It would he nothin' but a bloomin' whaler gone ashore, an afore anybody finds out different, we'll be scattered to hell an back." I was obliged to acknowledge to myself that it was not an impossible plan. Eliminating the chance of ac cident or some unusually bad luck, success appeared not only possible, but probable. "Did you think all that out yourself, Mr. Tuttle?" "Well, Francisco suggested consid erable, but we did It together." "Where Is he? on board?" The mate laughed, his eyes ex pressive of contempt "Not much, he hadn't the nerve. He's a schemer all right, but a blame' coward." "But suppose he gets to talking back there in Valparaiso?" CHAPTER XI. In Which I Explain to Her Ladyship. I gazed directly into his bullying eyes with a depth of contempt I made no slightest effort to disguise. Then I arose deliberately to my feet "Anderson, pluck that knife out and put it back in your belt." "I'm damned if" "Do as I say quick, you surly brute," I interrupted, sternly. "Not another word. I'm in command here yet. and you'll obey orders, or I'll make you." He understood I meant it, with his innate cowardice plainly apparent, yet did not yield until Tuttle interfered with a sarcastic laugh. "The captain isn't exactly the sort to lie handled in that kind o way. Hill." he said, smoothly. "He's a deep-water sailor, not a land-shark. but I guess he's likely ready enough by this time to say what he's willin to do." The entire situation seemed to un roll before me like a panorama as I stood there, hastily making up my mind for action. I was afloat on the high seas, absolutely powerless to re sist the set purpose of these men sur rounding me. all rendered desperate by greed. Much as I despised Anderson, I comprehended that his threat was no idle one; nor did I possess a single comrade on board who would stand at my back. I was utterly alone; nay, worse even than alone with two women dependent upon me. If I out wardly agreed with these rascals, and thus retained semblance of command over them, I might possibly preserve all our lives; I could, at least for the the present, protect the women from insult, perhaps from danger. "Well, Mr. Tuttle," I said, quietly, "I may as well return you my an swer one time as another. I don't give a tinker's damn for Anderson's threats, and I don't altogether put much faith in your yarn. But per haps It's worth taking a chance at. What is to be my authority on board, providing I agree to go with you?" "You're the captain." "Absolutely In command?" He shifted about, appearing a trifle disconcerted under my rapid ques tioning. "Well, yes; in everything concernin ihe discipline an sailin of the yacht." he explained. "There won't be no fuss about that job. sir. But we ain't a regular articled crew, beiu that we're all here on shares in the enter prise, an so, as regards the purpose of the voyage, it'll have to be decided by majority vote. However, that don't need make no trouble." "What is to be my share if you find the treasure?" He thrust his head out of the win dow nearest him. loc. lg up and down the deck; then he leaned across the table toward me, lowering his voice until it was little more than whisper. "You get one-fifth, sir; the four or us here get one-fifth each; the other fifth is to be divided among the crew. Ain't that fair enough, sir?" "It would appear so; yet there Is still another matter of some impor tance to be decided first. There are two women on board; how about them?" "What!" The vibrant excitement or his high-pitched nasal voice was echoed by the others. "This steam-yacht we have stolen was the property of the earl of Dar lington," I explained. "Lady Darling ton and her maid are still on board, in the cabin aft" (TO BE CONTINUED.) Miss Lyda Conley. through the busy thoroughfare. The artery of the bustling city throbs all about the spot where the ashes of tho old chiefs lie. Miss Conley. who has just pleaded the cause of her ancestors before the highest court of the land, believes that they will be left in peace. The city seeks to condemn the old cemetery and turn it into a park. Miss Conley. who. with her sisters, armed with rifles, once defended the old cem etery against city intrusion, is a law yer. The city has carried Its case clear up to the supreme court Miss Conley has fought successfully thus far to prevent molestation of her an cestors. She is a quiet little woman, without the least facial characteristic of her Indian forbears, but they do say her address stirred the great judges deep ly, and she clings to the belief that. at any rate while she lives, the old Huron warriors will be allowed to slumber in peace. JILTED, LIVES AS HERMIT Andrew Johnson, University Graduate and Once a Great Musician Has Romantic Career. Worcester, Mass. Jilted by the daughter of a rich banker in Sweden nearly half a century ago, Andrew P. Johnson, university graduate doctor of medicine, musician of national repu tation and teacher of recognized abil ity in his country, lost interest in life and became a hermit Wandering over his native country In sorrow, he gradually descended the social scale and came to America 30 years ago a physical and mental wreck. For 20 years he has lived the life of a hermit, amid squalor, in a small isolated shack on the Worces ter and Auburn line, about two miles below Quinsigamond village. He has been known for many years as "the crazy hermit,' and bas sought solitude and silence. He sel dom visited the small Swedish settle ment of Quinsigamond, and then only to beg food and clothes from the merchants with whom be was ac quainted. His only worship during all these years has been the memory of pretty Mary Olson, who jilted him in Molne- Items of interest Taken From Here and There Over the State. A paving campaign is to to inaugu rated im Kearney. Mrs. Cleveland, who died at Lyons last week was 99 years old. Mrs. Elizabeth Jackson of Beatrice last week celebrated her 94th birth day. Odd Fellows of Nebraska City are arranging a rally and class initiation March 1. February 12 was observed by the Bartlett state bank by a oig reception and "feed" in observance of the fourth anniversary c& foe institution. Floyd Saxon, a young farmer east af Union. Cass county, had his left hand badly mutilated by the bursting of a wood saw. Some disease much resembling pinkeye is affecting the whole herd of horses belonging to ux. McCartney, a farmer near Lyons and there Is ap prehension that it may spread. A great many farmers in Johnsom county are holding public sales and will move to South Dakota, Scotts Bluff county and other sections. Land is too high priced hi that section of the state to make it profitable to rent and farm. Hides valued at 1,000 were stolen from the fur house of W. R. Adams in Fremont by thieves who broke into the building, by taking out a window pane. Most of the hides stolen were in packages. It is believed the goods were taken out of town. The remains of Miss Maria Hoover, who died in New Yor. City, were tak en to the old home at Brownsville for burial. Miss Hoover was one of the leading members of a choir in one of the leading churches in New York City at the time of her death. Engineer George Himberger of the Burlington, was severely scalded by steam near Washington, Kas. The en gine had jumped the track, and it was while working under his engine that an exhaust was turned on accidently striking him on the head and neck. Clarence Edwards, aged about 30 years, was arrested at Benkelman for alleged assault on two little children, one his niece, aged 7 years, and the other a step-niece, aged C years. He will be tried at the next term of court. Meantime he is admitted to bail on a $0,000 bond. Many farmers in Buffalo county are now busy picking the last year's crop of corn, which they were unable to do earlier on account of the heavy snows. Some fields will scarcely be husked before the stalk-cutter is put at work clearing the ground for the crop ex pected in 1910. The matter or arranging for the Northeast Nebraska G. A. R. reunion was taken up by a mass meeting of the business men of Lynch. It was de cided to leave nothing undone that will insure a great success of the day as far as Lynch is concerned. The re union will take place in August The Woman's Institute association Is the name of the new woman's or ganization in Laurel, which starts out with fifty members. It Is an offshoot of the Farmer's institutes for men and at its monthly meetings papers will be read and discussion had upon topics of interest to the home-maker. Evansville (Ind.) dispatch: Rev. H. NEW ENVOY'S WIFE Mme. Chang-Yin-Tang Greatly Interested in America. ' Has Always Lived In Pekinf, But Has Studied the United States and Its Language Woman's Werk in China. Washington. From a social stand point no minister from the orient has come to the United States under more pleasant auspices than Chang-Yin-Tang, the new Chinese envoy to Wash ington. The capital always Is inter ested tn the minister from China and his family. Dr. Wu Ting Fang gave the Americans much to talk about and always aroused their interest Dr. Wu always was asking questions, and it is probable that when he went. back to China several weeks ago he knew more about the government of the United States than some of the men who are sitting in congress. Mr. Chang-Yin-Tang Is not a numan interrogation point, as was Wu, but he is one of China's greatest statesman. While much notice has been given him Washington bas shown lively in terest in his wife and young daugh ters, who are attractive and full of sympathy for America and full of curi osity to learn the philosophy of feui-, ininlty, which appeals so alluringly from their side of the world. "I have lived always in Peking." said the affable chatelaine of the Chinese legation, "and except to travel In my own country and tho neighboring lands I am experiencing my first sensa tion in a great journey. Certainly this one can be considered an ambitious attempt for a beginner. "I anticipated my first winter in Washington much as a young girl who has learned everything from books and who wants to see things for her- BBBBBBf LBfriBBBBKflBsV nL f- - 'V"'' fytM tBBBBBBBBBBm -P -A - M BbbB . jC ieBaBaBaBaffii Mme. Chang-Yin-Tang. jBaHRnvV self. I have read much about this ccuntry. and met many of its people, and. of course, I have studied the lan guage, especially after it was deter mined that we should come to Wash ington. "I fina that my visitors are as in terested in my country as I am in D. Helwig of Fremont. Neb., who, un- theirs, and that they have read as der the name or H. J. Smith is much about it So many American charged with uttering a forged check j women nave traveled in China, and Tor $50, has made confession of hia t eacn 5"ear brings travelers rrom tho guilt and will be sentenced before the east to see ,he wonders or the west, close of the week. Strong influences I We nave a wona's question, but not are being brought to secure a suspend-! ,n ine acuto rorm which it has taken ed sentence. Joseph Jensen of Lowell suffered a severe injury in Kearney when his horse became frightened at an auto mobile and made a sudden bolt which threw Jensen and two lady occupants out of the carriage. The ladies were not hurt, but Jensen suffered bad scalp wounds. He was unconscious for several hours. Tint the corn which has remained in the fields all winter, was damaged more than was thought is pro-ed by some of the lately gathered grain that inence. and the way women work Andrew P. Johnson. Not a Dealer in Flattery African Native Gave Straight Answer to Straight Question. The negroes of Africa are simple and direct in speech. It never occurs to them, writes Mr. R. H. Milligan in "The Jungle Folk In Africa," that the purpose of language is to conceal thought, and to commiserate the Afri can for his color is a waste of sym pathy. In illustration of this Mr. Mil ligan gives an amusing conversation with one of his pupils. One day. when I was talking to Bo jedi, something in the course of the conversation prompted be to ask him whether he would like to be a white man. He replied respectfully but em phatically In the negative. I wished to know his reason. He hesitated to tell me; but I was insistent, and at last be replied: "Well, we think we are better-looking." I gasped when I thought of the vast ly ill-looking faces I had seen in tin jungles, and in apology for myself, 1 said: "But you have not seen us in our own country, where there is no 'ma laria, and where we are not yellow and green." He quietly asked what color we were in our own country, to which I prompt ly replied, "Pink and white." Looking at me steadily for a mo ment, he remarked: "Mr. Milligan, if I should see you in your own country I don't believe I should know you." Youth's Companion. baka Buck. Sweden, when he was a popular young organist, with a posi tion in the State Clinch, at Karlstad. Such has been his physical and mental condition this winter that the officials of Worcester and Auburn took charge of him. and he is now in the Worcester city hospital for treatment True and False Friendship. False friendship is like the ivy, which decays and ruins the wall it embraces; but true friendship gives new life and animation to the object it supports. Burton. Immense Blasting Operation. To get rock for the Morena dam in southern California, one of the big gest blasting operations on record bas just been successfully carried out Describing this feat, the Engineering Record says that a tunnel 125 feet long was first drhen into the face of the granite. In this chamber was placed 3S.050 pounds of powder and dynamite. This was exploded by electric fuses and dislodged 120,000 cubic yards of rock. is being brought to the grain buyers in Beatrice. Recently a load was brought in that was saturated with water, tue ears containing so much moisture, that they could be bent easily. John Head, a farm hand who was almost disemboweled a few months ago when he fell through a county bridge along with a threshing machine, has filed a claim for damages with the county board of Dodge county. Head did not state the amount he wanted, but indicated he would be sat isfied to leave it for the supervisors to determine. The experiment station of the state university has designated the eighty acre tract owned by David D. Reavis of Falls City and situated on the Ne maha bottom, subject to overflow in the past, through which the new lat teral drainage ditch has been con structed for a tile experiment, to test the value of that class of drainage on low bottom lands in that part of the state. Prominent citizens in Bennet Dun bar, Talmage anu Brock have received here. To begin with, the Chinese peo ple have ideas founded on many cen turies or noting results. We prefer to keep our women at home, and every girl is reared with the idea that her place is at home and that there she is safer, happier and more useful. In poor families the girls work, of course, but at home. "That vast source of income to China, embroidery Ivory, wood and metal carving, tapestry and Teather work, are done by women at home. Some factories are coming into prom- in these, compared to the population of the empire and the way factory sys tems prevail in other lands, they are scarce indeed. We never employ women in stores or commercially at all. "There are fewer still employed as servants and the whole of our way of disposing of the question which is caus ing such unrest in the other parts of the world is to permit women to en large their horizon If they will but keep the national Idea always fore most in ah that is done for them." Mystery of Snakes. Snakes are creatures or mystery. have often tried to trace a snake im mediately after it had entered its hole in a small rubbish heap, but always without success. It disappears like magic. The reason is the snake can only burrow in soft mossy or ferny places, and so haunts old runs made by the small mammalia. Brusher nev er wasted time Iookirg for a snake. "'Taint nary a mossat a use; 'tis gone." he would say. The harmless grass snake deposits its eggs in some warm place, like a manure heap, for Incubation. It Is a question. "Have communications from T. P. Kennard. ( the small reptiles, at the moment of a promoter, asking what they think ' birth, the guidance of a mother to in nbout the establishment of an interur- struct them in life?" I have nevM ban line from Lincoln to Auburn via seen the grass snake surrounded by Cheney. j her young, nor to my knowledge has J. W. Knowles & Son. living one any one else. The little snakes, it No Doubt About It. Blowhard had just finished reading 1 strange occurrence. "Why do you look so surprised?" he queried of his one-man audience. "Don't you believe it?" "Yes. that's the trouble." rejoined the other. "I happen to know that it's true." Trebly Surprised. "Do you know anything about this eportea double of Mr. Jaggers?" "Not a single thing." mile north of Craig, held a farm and thoroughbred hog sale, everything bringing good price. Twenty-two head of Poland China sows averaged 175.43, the top price being $130. paid by Lute McDonald of near this place. Forty four head of pigs averaged $14.95. Thieves forced open the door oi Frank Polak's tailor shop in Wymore. and made away with all the goods, and made up garments on hand. Mr. Polak's loss is about $100. The Omaha Commercial club Is leading a state-wide campaign for the purpose of interesting farmers In test ing their seed corn and thus prevent ing an economic waste which means millions to the state. Newspaper men, bankers, implement dealers, grain buy ers and others are being asked the elimination of loss through planting "dead" seed must be remembered, are more or les.s matured when the so-called eggs are deposited. A :Irth both snakes and reptiles are about three inches long, and in a few days grow to a foot and over. I think the young of the adder shift for themselves after birth, never going into the nest hole. "Uncle Ar thur" in The London Express. It Is Different. "Papa, what is meant by placing a witness under the rule?" "Why do you wish to know?" "I was wondering if it Is anything like placing a school boy under the rule?" Only Chance. "Do you believe." queried the fair widow, "that universal peace will ever e established?" "Not unJess people quit getting mar .icd!" growled the old bachelor. Jl" 'v Wl .... .J, VJ-