20 THE OMAHA "DAILY TVEI3 : RTXDAY 15 , T8fl. THE GREATEST TAX PAYER Tobacco Holds the Record in Undo Sam's Gash Account. CULTIVATING THE SO-CALLED WEED VIiiTp mill I intiT Wlml rntnlllliiiiN UKI'liitil IN Mo-1 SinTi'wsrtill } 1'in- iluriMl SITUof ( Inrutlory mill TrlcliM uf llu * Tr C'MOrlKht , UP * ! , lij tlio K H. Mcriure Co ) Notwithstanding It Li an American ot the trtiPHi , It pays heavier tribute to foreign Ininla tlinn to I In ewn Yet Uncle Sam de rives from It n very pretty penny something 1I1 > n billion dollars In the last tvvcnly- fic-vpn years I < ater on you shall flnil how It helps to maintain half the royal powers that bo Jonn Xlcnt hml no thought of nil this when In- sent Into Prance seeds of a curious American herb They fell Into Rood hands and the big , ( srciny-ollovv plants , with huge leaves anil heads of pinky blossom whleh hprnng from them , were * duly chrls- tcndoil N'lrotlnim Tnbacum. Tor this was the herb the rod men smoked In what they called tnhago Indigenous to the wevstorn hemls- j phcre. It has oddlj enough , nuvcr been found | grow Ins wild Nomad trlbcH obtained It b > | l&aWKvSiik A barter from those who had n static habita tion Tlmo cut of wind the A/tecs ha\o crown a smaller sort with lea\cs that euro green Instead of } ollow. Sir Wnltir llalclgh was the first nngllah tohnrco planter Ho took seed of tobacco nnd potatoes to bin Irish estate , and found both well able to lhrl\o there. Hut when VlrKlnl.i was Bcttled nnd began to send homo ship 1 ads of the weed , these In nuthorlt ) thoiiKht It wlso to favor the colonial Industry Bo b > statute to this day. It Is forbidden to plant tobacco other wise than as a specimen or a curiaalt ) any where within the Ilrltlsh Isles Tobacco and skins were In largo part the accepted Virginia curruicy. Thrifty bachel ors there , tacking wives , secured them by wending abroid enougb tobacco to pay for pnssago and outllt and those who con tributed most liberal ) took choice when the cargo of brides sailed Into port Church rates were paid In tobacco and globe lands either compounded for at so many hundred weight of It , or rented outright for similar pay payTobacco Tobacco even moro than temperament made possible the opcnhanded hospitality of Virginia and Mar } land , and , through their Inlliienre the whole later south. Tobicco likewise bred n class of great men , able as they were willing , to great ! } servo their countrj without thought of private gain. Washington was the tjpo of them. Thus the small seed may be called , after a sort , a cradle of llbert } no less than a bulwark of probity In public sen Ice roim CLASSPS OF TOHACCO. Tobacco Is now grown In a do/en states and parts of states The > early crop Is about 500,000,000 pounds It may bo roughly divided Into four Classen Seed leaf , grown In Connecticut valley , rcnn.sjhanla and Ohio , bright leaf , peculiar to Virginia and the Carolina * , White Hurley , n special tjpe fiom Missouri and nortorn Kentuck > ; ami shipping leaf the product of a wide ncopo In Kcntuckj. Tennessee and .Missouri , l > lng either side of the historic parallel 30 de grees 30 minutes Hesldes all this wo Import largely of both Havana and Sumatra tobacco The best Sumatra , clamed as "wrappers , " pa > s a dill } of $2 the pound Ibis Is to protect the homo crop of seed leaf , put largely to the same i es Vorj big and beautiful Is that name seed leaf , with a tine , silky clastic surface , and \erj small fibers. It certain ! } ten-pis the ejo hut when It turns to ashen on the lip , It lacks flavor and quality It Is grown upon land \erj heav ily maiiuud and cured cither In open bheds or bains with movable Rides The cxticmo range of price for seed leaf Is from $ S to $00 the 100 pounds. Hven at the highest llguro though It cannot claim distinction as the costliest varlet } of the vvci'd Pai down In Virginia and the Caiolii-as theto are luck } planters who bell tlulr crojw sometimes at $1 to { I the pound. Hut a.s the jleld per acie la only :00 to lOO pounds against 1 500 to l.SOo In the CoiicctUut valley the bilanco Is not after all , eo verj much against the inoro nnill.crl } region. Notwtthhtaiidlng , the bright tobacco Is a might } Interesting product ; planto set out In thin , sandy soil 'Iho best giuund for It Indeed , Is an old Held one ex hausted of virgin fuihncs by growth of heavj export leaf } ears ago. then thrown out and allowed to cover Itself with second- growlh pin * When thej are cleared awa > ami burned , the eaith about them Ins Just the right picortlon | of potush , and with the help of a tahlc.M > oonful of phosphate 01 hone meal , In tlu > hill dlteetl } under the plant gives a leaf as line as silk , as free of gum as white paper , and as fiagiant as a May morning T11IJ AUT OK Cl'UINC 1'roperly cm oil. the color Is the palest straw gold Curing Is an art and m > s- terj requiring Infinite pains it must be tlonV with lire either In flues or open trenches The lluo bus prefircncc In that It saves from the smell of tire , or rather smoke Hut before tiring the tobacco must have hung until It has reached a piopcr stugi' of yellowness This line and ccutl > blight tobacco Is largely consumed In America It Is iibed for plug nnd twist making as well as the liner brands of chewing tobacco Of course the bulk of It bells vet } much below Jt a pound. Though cigarettes and such small deer have thu world fora parish , they are manu factured hugol ) from tobacco grown upon the sandy lands of the seaboard states irVhinoiul , Va , and Durham , N C , have thus a gec'grcphlcal reason for being cen ters of the Industry. Hut for making "tine cut , " "straight cut. " "grains" indeed , all the m > rUd forms of comminuted tobacco for cither chnwlng or smoking , Hurley's the favorite lo f. This partly because of Its mild flavor hut much more because , like the bright leaf , it Is alinojt wholly free of gum The knives lu the half hundred sorts of cutting marblnc's employed In the factories , though ground to the ktrnoit possible edge , mutt changed every minute , even when work- In * upon Hurley or bright leaf If they had InitiaJ tried conclusions with tbo heav } lorm they would bo stopped In less than ttti rr-on < U In fart no part of the machine would bebav pro ; rly Tlie "White Hurley' tobarpo has been huuwu iiid frrown \ < n than forty years , and la that trl f pa < o hai conrjucrc-d a pU'o la the American market. Some ay It Is a sprout from the eld Yellow l'ror , ilevcloped by come lndloincrnsy In the noils and climate of the upper Kentucky rc'Rlon. However that may be , It Is rertalnl } a mighty uncommon-locking plant. The fttalk Is bigger than } our \vrl l one lenf of It would have nerved Mother 12vo In the garden. It delights In a rich soli especially ono fed with Mton limestone but Is capricious as to the root-hold whereupon It will bo truly Its burlesque celf. Kven In the plant bed , It shows a light grccnlih J el- low- hue which grow * with Its growth and iitrongthcna with Its strength , until at full rlpnesfi , th < > field of It seems rioorcd with pntlnos of bright gold. Mko thp scol leaf It must bo alr-curcd , and unllko It , It IP parked In hoKuheads , not cases The nnntml jlcld of it has rlten till It runs between thirl } and lift } thousand hogsheads. Some jests prices are pyrotechnic the cream of the crop may fetch $50 a hundred In others the hulk of fairs are around 10 cents n pound. The jlelil to the aero varies quite as much Soli and soat.an agreeing , the early lain coming an wanted , and the latter falling not , It may reach 1 SOO pounds , or , under reverse conditions fall below COO smi'i'tNc UAR These gentlemen , the foreign bit } era , want i tobacco that Is exactly the reverse of Uurlo ) In the matter of gum and ccncinl subxtancc With good reason , too. An I'liglljthmati pa } s to bin government 70 cents 'or thi > privilege of using a pound of tobacco which hat , cost him from 3 to 15 cents In France , Spain , Italy an 1 Austria tobacco li a B vcrnmont monopol } that Is to s'iy , the government Is the solo Importer and Mtcs the pilcc to consumers at Its own pleasure or necfzslt } Thus It btho.es the nations over sea Pidi nnd several , to choose that of leaf that will gain most In weight by taking up moisture , } ct still remain marketable. Hence the spcclil tpe , "shipping leaf , " as thick almost as leather , oily and viscid to the touch full-flavored , dark of color richly mibHtantl.il , and. best of all , to be bought at a very moderate price. Properly piepared , too , as "strips" for Instance , It will take 18 per cent of water without bo- comlns unmerchantable It Is the low prlcu of shipping loaf which accounts for the fact that the vatuo of leaf tobacco exported In the last fiscal } ear was less than the amount of tat collected from Us manufacture In these United States Disregarding fractions $2 000,000 of our $800- 000,000 of exportb must bo set to tbo credit of the untouched weud Tor the same period there were Internal revenue receipts of nearly MO.000,000. And the low price at least the growers of It confidently say so Is due largely to the fact of monopoly. 1 orolgn purchases , save for nngland and Germany , are made through the government agents , who hold what are known techni cally as "regie contracts" These call for such and such quantities of tobacco of a guaranteed quality , at a fixed price. Usually all the contracts are captured by one , or at most , two big firms , who agree not to rival each other in the Interior markets. Orders are given to local brokers for so many thousand hogsheads nt prices which allow the contiactors a handsome margin of profit. And the prices are accepted for the very good reason that , falling a reglo bucr , the laigcr half of export tobacco would have none. none.KKOM KKOM SHKD TIMH TO IIARVCST. A tobacco seed Is a very little thing to occasion so great a matter as the tobacco traflle. What will lie lu } our scooped palm will produce plants enough to set ton aercs And no other crop Is at once so picturesque , ho troublesome and so entlrel } bcoml the help of machinery. Thrifty planters sa } . Indeed , that to raise It In perfection "a man needs thirteen mouths to the } ear ami no Suml.i } into the bargain " To mal.e that comprehensible let us begin at the beginning otherwise the plant bed It Is a bit of virgin soil falntl } sloping , with a southerly or cobterl } ofpusure. In Janu ary it Is thickly covered with brush and small logs , which are thin burned to ashes thus not merel } kllllim out vagrant ncida of grass and weed , but occultly fiuctlflng tbo larth Itself. When the burning Is ever the tolnc o seeds , mixed with asbes , mo fcovvn evenly over the surraco , which has been dug and harrowed to liie Jltiest tilth They are tramped lightly In then the bed Is rimmed about with plank and covered with a sheet of sleazy canvass Once upon a time covering of brush sulllccd , but for twent } odd } cars past n small bug has de veloped u cheerful habit of devout Ing the till } plants just as the } peepid above ground \\liy , no man knowcth , but this bug will not abide beneath a oanva a cover So use of It Is almost unlvetsil. Hesldcs protect Ing from the hopping pest. It forces the plants forward , and makes planting possible from one to three weeks earlier. This Is a dlutlnct gain. Tobacco will not ripen In less than four months from setting ami throughout the region of greatest growth froat may be reckoned on In the early half of October. Plants Bet after mid-Juno may make a fine crop , but those put In the hill In mid-May are certain to do It soil and season permitting. The setting Is done lu wet weather during a light warm ruin , or Just after a heav.v one Heforo It the land winch Is the best the planter controls has been manured , made flne nnd light marked off In rows each way. and hills drawn up In the cluck. Wiedlng , plowing tctapltiR , jcl moro P owing , nil In the Hut six ncclH after the Plauu are In the hill Hut tilth Is no bufilcn at all compared wltb worms and imckers which como later , and tire In a sort nature's protective tariff ugaliut overproduction. A man and mule can tend fully twelve ocrca of tobacco but the best hand that over itppiu'd can do no moro than take live through a period of worms Such worms ! Hlg fat Brcen felloVa three Incbek long at ' ! ) wllh rouni1 h"1" " ' " 1 sl'arl' ' rcil % dlih honu at the other end. They nre larvae oj a night-flying lulllcr , which lays Its eggs all over the loaves When first hatched the worm Is but a wriggly white hair but give him n. little time , nnd he will ent himself to greater things. He mutt be dcstroed before he docs It , or the crop will como to nothing. A can't name for him Is "green hall , " nlgnlfylng that he has left more holes than would n hall storm In the tobacco of some unthrifty notil , Per by the time he Is In his heyde-y "the light of the moan In August tobacco leaves are big nnd broad , mil glistening } c1low- grccn The plants stand breast high Yet the upper leaves roach the ground The or rest of snp brings out suckers from th leaf-axils Thry must bo broken awa } o thry will roh the leaves of weight and nub stance. A tobacco Held frpp of them , Jttr as It verges to ripeness , Is a sight to rt member. There Is something icntlcnt abou the big , rich leafage of It at morning lookei across the rows at night lifting Itself at a angle that shall make the dew fall trlekl down to the toot. At full rlpciuBs the leaves curl and crls till the } scorn but half their real size. The take on a peculiar mottlo.l , grainy surface too. and ore thick as leather to the touch Then men come with knives as sharp-edge' ' as the sword of justice silt each stalk dovvt the middle , cut It from the root ami get the severed plant upside down on tno hill When It his wilted it Is hunt ; on oakoi slicks ami goes to thebarn. . Usually I Is a log struotute , four siu.iro and Ul enough to hold five tiers of tobacco stick well above the lire. SHIPPING. PIU52INR. Tin : u\r The floor Is of cirth , deeply trenched. When the barn U full logs go Into the trenches. au set on llro and kept burning day and night until the tobicco above thorn Is a dry , } ollow-brown nUtllni ; mass. TV o da } s nnd nights should aunico for thit anxious days nnd nlyhu they are for all on the plantation. The most trusted of the hands attend to the firing but such \ery little things a spark , a Haw of wind , may semi a whole } car's Income up In smoke Small wonder there Is Joy and long relieved breath when the fires are drawn from under the last barnful. Next comes the stripping Moist , warmish weather Is required for It The stalks go llrsl to the sorter , who lemovcs the two ground loaves as well as any worm-eaten or liouse- hurnt ones , then flings them to another man who breaks off the good leaves and tics them Into bundles. The bundles are laid straight and fair In big bulks , keeping each length and quality carefully separate. The bulks are covered and weighed and left undis turbed until prizing I > CRIIB. | Pressing n purist would say That same person would doubtless bo shocked at mention of screw- prizes and prize-screws. In the tobacco country the terms need liclther excuse nor explanation. To question their use , In fact , would bo to draw upon jourself suspicion of being much moro learned than wise. The screws are of Iron , running In a nut , which has been fitted Into a fiamo of massy tlm- , hers. The hogshead Is set underneath and picked as full as It will hold. Thou u heavy heading Is laid upon the packing and run down by moans of screw and blocks until the flrst filling Is reduced to about one-fifth of Its original bulk. The lining up and pricing are ropcate'd until the whole cask Is full , when It Is headed , thrown out and rolled aside to await transit to tbo ware house. Hach of the gre-at Interior markets Louis ville. Hlchmond. Cincinnati , St. Louis , Henderson , Clarksvllle has from a dozen to fifty of them. They are big buildings , full of broad , long spaces. Into and out of which tobacco rolls In steady stream through bomo eight months of the } ear The men con trolling them must have behind them caplMl running up Into the millions They make advances to dealers , who In turn help the plantois dealer and factor alike depending on the crop for reimbursement Looking at aiid Into the present complex commercial machinery ono harks back with satisfaction to the earlier day , when Richmond an 1 Potc"iiburg weio setting the ot.indard for all things tobacco-y , warehousing Included. In the good e-arller tlmo biiors gathered each morning and went from warehouse to warehouse , guided \ > y the blowing of a horn , which told when and where their prcKonce was required. And when It catno to buying thosn guild gentlemen discriminated a full half-cent on the pound against tobacco which had been "rolled" In from the back coun try , ItiMcad of coming by wagon Per In rolling the hogshead was laid upon the hide , a big lion pin vet In a halo In each head , then sluflb and crcfti-barH m&do fast to thu pirn ami two liorncn hitched tamlem In front When they pulled the hogshead rolled a huso fcolld wheel Hy I ho time It had gene a mile It was HO coated with mud and elay that no water could get through the seams of It. Notwithstanding somewhat of foreign tiubntauco crept lu around iho end plus bo- Over $411,000,000 Paid to Policy Holders in Fift3r-three Years ! [ 1 RICHARD A. McCURDY , President , : E Who will pay that mortgage on your home if you die before it's lifted ? A life insurance policy will do it , and the cost to you is only the annual premium paid to the company. It is like pay ing a little extra interest on your mortgage to insure its re lease if you die. The resources of the Mutual Life of New York exceed the combined capital of all the na tional banks of New York City , Chicago , Boston , Philadelphia , St. Louis , Cincinnati and Balti more. A duty delayed is a duty shirked. Let a man convinced of responsibility secure adequate protection and at once. INSURE NOW & J IN THE MUTUAL LIFE. A Policy of Insurance in the Mutual Life is the quickest asset you can leave. clew the clayey cask Itself was III to handle on shipboard or nnywhere clue. So , as wagons multiplied , rolling wont out of favor. Hut old teamsters who liavo tried It over 100-mile' ' Btrctohcs nigh for It jet as the Jolllejt mode of transit ever Vnnwn. Heturn we to our warehouses. Sec the rows and rows of hogshcada there , stripped each of cask and * waiting Inspection. The Inspector Is a salaried person , under oath and likewise bond. Now the warehouses choose him. though not so long back ho was n public functionary. He sots his breaking Iron against the brown impacted maha , three times , between head and head , and from each break draws a sample. The drawings , tied neatly together and Healed , ore marked with thu owner's name , the weight and ware house number of the hogshead , then laid upon the top of the cask. Prom there the auctioneer takes thorn , passes them about among tbo bujero who troop at his heels and cries each In turn , knocking It out to the highest bid when It has made the round. If a cask of tobacco proves not to be up to the sample drawn the seller of It the ware house firm Is responsible to the purchaser. There are tricks In tobacco packing as In all other trades That Is partly why , In each of the tobacco stales , there are stringent laws against a warehouse man being ale a dealer In or btior of tobacco They have small need to bn either , since , out of legiti mate fees and charges , they oo much more of the mono } the weed brings In than do the landward folk who 1 car the burden and heat of the day MAHTHA M'O. WILLIAMS. The Now Zealand ROV eminent pensions every worker who has arrived at the age of Gr If hu has worked twent j-ono jears In the colony TOLD our OK COIHT. Ini'lili'iitM mill of lluliar. . Visiting the Infinity of a Ao upon Us owner lu generally thought just , If the ownei knew that the canmo character was bad In an opinion whMi a correspondent calls u literary classic , jrvportcd In 11 N. Y. S. It 411 , Iluasoll , ' J. , sa > s that It was de cided as fr back as 1SSO , In 22 llarb. MG , that If ono dog Ikllls another In a contro versy , "tho owner of the slain dog Is en titled only to the salvage , conslitlng of thi ot the deceased. " Uut 03 the prcaeu The IS THE COMPANY IN TWO GENERATIONS 1843-1898 The Mutual Life Insurance Co. , of New York , has paid $246,000,000 to its living members. Has been the benefactor of women mid children to the extent of $165,000,000. ad els members in all over IOWA and NEBRASKA , 1'IRSr NATIONAL RANK BUILDING , AND LOCUST STllEETS , OMAHA. DES MOINES. Agents Wanted in Every County. H. S. WINSTON , Special Representative , Omaha. case Is ono In which a man was attacked by a dog , the court Indulges the presump tion that the dog was the aggressor , and sis that ho must "give wny to the Interests of man. Whether this be so or not as a question of pure ethics. It Is so recognized by man-made law In courts administered by man. As against the dog , man has the right of wny. " "I went Into a country district In Mary land n few davs ago , to try a case , " said a Washington attorney to a Washington Star reporter "I aopcared for the plaintiff nnd It must bo confessed that the evidence failed to establish his claim. I presented the matter bcforo the justice of the peace In the best light I knew how , but had \cry little hope of securing a verdict. ' .My client , when I finished , whispered to me that he would say a few words If I was willing , nnd con sidering the case lost , I consented. It was the most unique speed- ' over heard and It won the case. Ho said " ' 'Squire , I brought this suit and the evi dence except my own. Is ngalust mo. I don't ae-cuso any one > of llng. 'squire , but the witnesses are the most mistaken lot of fellows I ever saw You know mc , 'squire Two } pars ago } ou sold mo a horse for sound that was blind as a bat I made the trade and stuck to It , and this Is the flrst tlmo I have mentioned It. When } ou used to buy grain. } ou stood on the scales when the empty wagon was weighed , but I never said a word. Now * , do } ou think I am the kind of a man to kick up a rumpus nnd sue a fellow unless ho has done mo wrong ? ' It took just flvo minutes for the Justice to dccldo for the plaintiff " There nre four bosom companions In Jack sonville the brcker , the dentist , the under taker and the capitalist states the Plorida Citizen Where } oit BCO one of them you will find the rest taking a drink. The un dertaker and the capitalist admire the dent ist and the broker because they can tell such wonderfully clover stories. The broker and the dentist revere and love the undertaker and the capitalist because they are such wonderfully good llstoucrs. This happy , admiring quartet form an Idcil round table , and around tins round ta ble the two listeners often hear good stories by the dentist and the broker. The dentist Is an Imaginative sort of n stor-teller , who manufactures finales to fit Incidents. The broker It a great reader , n realist and u philosopher. One night the broker tel < > ofl a lawsuit In Alabama. A cracjccr from the mountains was on trial for ishootlng and wounding a "nigger" IIe > was arreated , and , having no money , the Judge appointed the broker to defend him The broker was not a lawyer In the legal sense of the word , but the Juduo who was nn old college-mute of his , said he was an Idiot because ho wasn't cue ; In otho . _ - i | _ J- J _ ! | 1 JS , M rL'J ? iV'i ' $ - illUi % a OTSPfW words , that ho was a lawor by Inatlnct. The broker cross-questioned the wltnetmes briefly , sending In now and then a sarcastic and discomfiting trajectorj. When ho came to make u speech he said' "Ocntlemen of the jury , I have taken great pulns to show you that my client was a respectable citizen Tin witnesses have asserted on oath , mind you that ho stands high In his community. " The defendant was C feet 3 Inches tall , and the jury smiled , "Ho Htood high In hi * community , and that Is Milllclent , Now for the law Wo find In the thirteenth vena of the sixteenth chapter of Chilly on Pleadings Chilly , gen tlemen , was ono of the bravest generate in the confederate army this well establishes principle of law. " Here the broker snapa his ccs togethc nnd adjusts his glasses bolus the book fa off , elevates his chin and reads : "No respcctabla whlto man can be guilt ; of crime. ' "That , gentlemen. Is enough I leave tin case In } om hands " Kach Juror changed his quid , looked a his neighbor , nodded , nnd , without lenv Ing their scats rendered n loud and em phatlc verdict of "Xot guilty , " nnd thei joined In three cheers for the defendant am his lavvcr. The undertaker found fault with the stor ; because nobody In It had been killed. The dentist remarked that If nil } body deserved served killing It was the broker. A very funny story Is told by the Chicago cage Tlmea-Herald on James I3plcr am Oi > car Holevv. Loth of whim enjoved a rc-pu tatlon for wit and humor during their life time. In one of the tovvnshhlps adjaconl to Cook county the people elected a new justice of the peace. He was a man knowi for his strict application of parliamentary rules to everything possible , having actec as president of many small dellbcratlvi bodies In the township. In fact , ho vvn regarded In his precinct as the prince o "pro tcmporcs " His election waa duo ti this fact , which had brought him popu larlty. Ho was what the craft called judge of necessity , "for necessity knows no law " Among bis first cases was one of trlfilnr Importance an assault. Tplcr and Delew represented the defendant , and a man b ) the name of Smith the prosecution. Hot ) : sides announced they were ready for trial Just as the court was about to proceed Mr Kplor arose and said- "If } our honor please , I move that thh case bo dismissed. " "I second the motion , " quickly put In Mr Delew- "It Is moved and seconded that the case be dismissed , " was put by tbo court. "Hut , your honor , " quickly Interrupted Mr Smith , with great surprise at such pro. cediire. "Mr Smith , this court has presided ovei meetings before , and Is thoroughly familial with parliamentary procedure It needs nc assistance from } ou In this matter. " "Hut } our honor " "I shall flne } ou for contempt , Mr Smith If } ou continue to disturb this court. " The court then put the question again , adding "All In favor ot the motion will the" ttplcr and Delew and the prisoner arose "Thoso opposed will rise. " Smith ami the prosecutor arose "Tho motion IH carried bv a vote of .T to 2. and the case Is dlsmlshcd , " declared the Justice. A iiii.ATin STOIIV. I'lii- li-irriliilliiiiM | of n Cir iii of Olllllllll KIllN Oil lllltllMM'Vll. "Say. do } ou see that jli'ger standing over hero by the patrol box ? " abkcd Clinton of ho druggist "Yes , vvKit's the matter with him ? Hasn't mother victim , has ho ? " "Ho'H the ono that us kids had so much un with hallow con night. I met him today s I wa > < coming homo from school , and ho aid , 'Never mind , } ou } oung rascal , I'll ; et } ou } ot , eo If I don't. ' I wasn't lolm : " "What nilf-thlcf have } ou been In now. lay I ask' " "Who , mo' I haven't been doing nothing. , lot of us kids got together hullowten and or about a couple of hours wo Just " "Was It you the police were chatting so hat night' " "Oh , ho was after a lot of us kids that Ight. Me and Lou Walker and Art McKln- y uti'l a lo * of other kids were out for a mo and sav , but you should have been eng ! Wei JUKI bad dead loads of fun that light. I toll you You know that old Token down wagon In the alloy , back of Cramer's , don't you ? " "Do } ou mean that old rattle-trap thai omobody left there last summer ? " "That's the ono. It's been a good buggy loinu day , but It Isn't worth C cents now. Us kids bought It for 20 cents , and on Hal loween wo concluded wo'd take It to our hoiux and see If wo couldn't fix It up and go riding In It some day. Wo hadn't gene moro'n half a block with It when this lly cop camc'S a-snnaklng along , and bcforo wo could say 'beans , ' there we-ru half a dozen ] \K \ en In citizen clothes surrounding un jutt Ilka wo tvero a lot of jail birds from down at Lincoln. I dropped the shafts and wont a-flylng up the street , with Mr Ooj , chaslne mo Ilko a cold wave going thrmiKli North Dakota , I knew ho darseu't shoot tc kill , BO I Just kept far enough ahead to wak YOU Ho\v much will your admin istrator have to sacrifice your estate to force quick assets ? An Installment Policy for $100,000 will leave your family $5,000 yearly income for 20 years , in any event , and if your stated beneficiary is then living he or she will be paid $5,000 yearly during life. A 5 per cent Debenture for $100,000 will leave your wife $5,000 yearly income either for 20 years or until her death ii prior thereto ; then $100,000 will be paid in one sum. A possible return of $200,000. The true business man acts promptly. Get our rates at once , him sprint good , nnd when wo reached Cen ter street , nnd I saw his wind was failing him , I slowed up and allowed him to fasten his pnws on my collar He brought me down to the patrol box , where the coppers had the * rest of the gong , nnd pretty boon along- comes the patrol wagon and takes us all to the station. Opcar Grebe was a-crylng Ilko overthing , nnd said as how he 'hndn t dona nothlif to bo 'rcste-d for ' hut the } took him In jtibt the same When the } got us In the cooler and commenced flshln' In our porkets , I asked Captain Hare what wo were In for. ami ho K.is , 'for stealln' a wagon and ralslu' Cain ' I told him the wagon belonged to us , and showed him the receipt for the 20 cents , so they talked the matter over ami let us go telling us tliev'il krep on o > o on us , nnd the next tlmo we'd got third daa on broad and water. When we got to the barber hhop near Sixteenth end Williams wo went In and tried to make n dicker for the barber polo , out on the hldewnlk The bar ' ber said ho didn't want to soil , but I to him p.i needed one for a hitching post and wanted that ono , 'cause It was painted ami wouldn't rot. Ho hummed and hawe-d fern n long tlmo , but finally let us have It for 35 cents. Us kids got around It and pulled It up by the roots , and as wo were going homo with It , who should we run against but this very same cop Ho scooped tin lu nnd marched us off to the patrol box anil gave us another rldo to the station polo anil all Captain Hare didn't want to let us gu this time , 'cause ho said wo looked full of mlsdilef , and It would do us goad to wear a ball and chain for a couple of weeks but we asked him to send an of- flcei to the barber shop nnd we'd prove that It was all right , and the polo was otir'n. Officer Kirk marched us up to the barber shop , where wo proved wo were giving him straight goods , no he let us go , telling us we'd better fklp off to btxl and cover tip or we'd soon bo an the road to the reform school It was too eirlj to go to bid ci > we went up to Art McKlnloy's house and boirowcd their donki1 } I was alia lint ; the canary down an alley , with the iilnr bos Eiioaklng along behind , when , ve onro more fell Into the Htrong aim of the law. Pa had missed me , and was trailing nu > up with the cop He enld fib how I was get ting to bo a 'holy terror' of a hn } nnd ho couldn't do nothing with me no moro so the cop said ho'd take a hand In the game > and KCO If ho couldn't make n bettor boy out of mo , giving us all another ride down town at the expense of the elt } Captain 10/u was kinder sutprlsed to see me so iioon , but ho bald ho louldn't hold mo for leading a donkey thiongh the < , lrei-l and so ho max hid u.s nil to the front door and told us to 'git ' When wo got bilk on out * icsonatlon again , we played so man } prunkn on that co ] > that he cummcnrcd to HUH II , i rat about 10 o'clock , and no nnttor ho\v much noliio wo made or what devilment \\u wo.o up to , ho never let on ho lu arc ) IH. When two colored men commenced fighting anl ono was trjInn to cirxe the oilier wllli n rn/or , wo told the cop about It and asked him , to brace up and run 'em In but hn thought wo were plnlng another Joke on him and ho wouldn't bndgr an Imli Sc - Ing hn wouldn't do nothln' . wo Icliphumd for the hurry wagon and a enuplo blim coils , and when they came up nnd arrested the follows wo told 'em about the nth' ? top refusing to come whrn we told him about the fight , and now they've got Mr. Cop on the carpet and twenty-Hlx to two ha loses bin star and gets cllsi'li.ir nd from the force Ho says I'm respoiiHlblo forb , ha' Thiro comes pa He's got my Youth u Companion In hid pocki t and I've got ta road that continued stor } Lnsl week the * had a plrjlo down In n well , and I'm jinit dying to find out If the } pulled him up with a rope or piled rocks on him If that cop comes In hero any tlmn and asks about mo ( just tell him } ou know mo ami that I'm thu only model boy In the wliolo of Donglau county. Reservoir' " UHUVKNNi ; UOI1. Iltd.I'lato Snillli'M Wixiloiii , , Puck : Ma flays llfo Is snort-as pa alwnju Is. Pa sa > n he's for sound money , an' ma najd that th' kind sh' gotu from him IH nothln * but sound I heart ! pa nay once ho wlsht ma 'd get R newspaper t' d'clure her views on tli * money qtieistlou In , Our house In on th' outskirts of th' town. I H'POMO U'n th' skirts that kick up u < > mud * llllBt Wonder why 't Is th' tr.cn that are peen OH th' dickens nluajii know ' much 'bout th' money question ? I dunne what pa meant , but hn said th. ' other day that the kind of ration ma bo Moved In wax sixteen , words t' hU one Once whrn I ait pa what ganm ho an < aomo company was plnyln' he nald poker 1 ait wluro th1 poker was , on' 1m nulcl It ho4 catered hk uuul , What (3Id ( hu uu.au2