v l ' "J . r. . J MfefEISIIMl CAR II, A L. FIUIS AlTOnNEY-AT-LAW, Office Front Room, Over Postoffloe. nLooMSDonu, pa. V II. MAIZE ATTOItNEY.AT.LAW, Office.- Room No. 8, Columbian ( building. HLOOMSBUitU, PA. Jan. SOth 188, tf.' r B. WAliLKll, , rLt' ATTOHNKY-AT-LAW . Dloomsburf, r omen over 1st. National Hank. v u: FUNK, ATTOKN E Y-AT-LA W . BLOOMSIOIO, Pa O co lii tnt's llulldtng. UlIN M. CLAHK, ATTOltN K Y-AT-LAW AMD JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. BLOOHMOIO, I'l omc over Moyor Brow. Drag Store. 0. 1 W. MILLER, ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW, Offlceln Drawer's bulldlng.Bocondfloor.roorn no. Illoorasrjurg, Pa r FRANK Z-Vim; D ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Bloomsburg, Pa. Office corner ol Centre and Main Btraeta. Clark s Building. an hfi consulted In German. jpTlJO. 15. ELWELL ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Uloombdoiio, Pa. Office on First floor, front room of Col ombian lJulldlng, Main street, below Ex. change Hotel. pAUL E. WIRT, Attorney-at-Law. umcu In Columbian Build ino, Third floor, BLOOMBBURG, PA. JJ V. WHITE, AT . ORNEY-AT- LAW, BLUOMSBURO, PA. Office In Uiowcrs' Building, 2nd, floor, may 1-tf s. xMoax. i i.,wjTfsrJWi. KNORR & WINTER8TEEN, Attorneys-at-Law. omoe in 1st National nans duikubk, D"iu"'i,u,t,,i nrstdoor to thelift. corner of Main and Market streets woomsourg, ra. Dg-lJennont and Boumtie Collected. p P. BILLMEYER, (J)I!$T11IGT-A TTOMNEY.) ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, iWOfllco over Bloomsburg, Pa. Dentler's shoe store, upr-80.88. TTT. H. RHAWN. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Catawuaa, Fa. otlloe, corner of Third and Main 8tweta. jyjIOHAEL F. EYEHLY, Conveyancer, Oolleotor of Claims. AND LEGAL ADVICE IN THE SETTLEMENT OF ESTATES, C vnm... In nnir- tmtlrirnff With F. P. BUI merer, attorney-ai-law, front rooms, tuA-Saor liloornsburg. Pa. ar--8S. IL HONOKA A. BOBBINS. office and residence, West First street Bioprns-. burg, Fa. noTB,jo u, tt n MKK1,VY. M. D..Sureeon and Phy J .slctan, north aide Main treof.below Market 0. BUTTER, PHYSICIAN is SURGEON, Office, North Market street, Bloomstmrci'Fa DR. WM. Physician, M. TtEBER Burgeon and omoe corner of Book and Market treet. EXCHANGE HOTEL. W. R. TUBBS, PROPRIETOR BL00M3BUE3, PA. OPPOSITE COURT HOUHE, Laree and convenient sample rooms. .nam room hot and cold water; ana aC modern conveniences B. P. HARTMAN BiraasiMTS thi followiho AMERICAN INBURANCE1C0MP ANTES North American of Philadelphia. Franklin, " " Pennsylvania, " " York, of Pennsylvania, Hanover, of N. T. Queens, of London. SorthBrltlsh, of London, ifflce on vurfcet stret. No, s, Bloomsburg. oot S4. 1" TinRAfl nnoWN'8 ' INSURANCE Jh AGENCY. Moyer's new building, Mala street Jll sr. nrt o V?l SMS- Tla iEtna Insurance Co., of Hartford, Conn fW?8.gM lloyal of Liverpool JJ'SSS'ES Lancashire....... 'S'SSSS I'lre Association, Philadelphia i'lSMJS Phoenix, of London. rS5'S2 Hartford of Hartford i ?5,SSS Sprlngfleld Flreand Marine... SSKS ro tha anriKlAar rtlrM. DOllClea aTS Written or the Insured without delay in the offlco at lsloomsburg. ueuvoi' r U. H0UB"E, DENTIST, Bloomsburg, Columbia County, Pa All styles of work done In a superior manner, work warranwaas roprosouipu '" '.Jrx an without Paih by the use of Gas, and free of charge whenartlflctalteetn are Inserted. Office In Barton's bulldlnft, Main t"ei hp nw Market, uvo uoorii uciun d rue store, first floor. lo be open at all houn during the da NOV U IRE INSU(AN OHI'"'AW " KNAPP, BLOOMSBURGiPA, JlEltcnANTS', OF NEWARK, N. J. CLINTON, N. Y. PEOPLES' N. Y. GERMAN AM ERICAN INS. COyNEW YORK JE11HKY CITY FIRE ' IwC' COl, JERSEY f 1TV HI T These u cobtorationb are weU seasoned by .... .. ...n nrt t,vb nuTer vet' hid a l osa settled br any court of law, T6e.lr asset are all Invested in solid ascualTisa are uamo w yun hazard of riBkonly. ... Losses rKOMFTLT and howxbtlt adlusteaand paid as soon as determined oy VS5JSJ..J!L!' KHArr, SriCIAL AOXXT AHD ADJ08TBLO0JIBirxe, . Thepeopleof commblacou 1ZB V"0 agCUUJ WUCIO VWO 4 w"-t-T7 PROMITNE88. EOUI-ry. FAIR DEALING. 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Manufacturers of CARRIAGES BUDDIES, PHAETONS SLEIGHS, PLATFORM WAGONS &C First-lass woik always on band, REPAIRING NEA IL YDONh, Price reduced to luit (he timet; rriitii iivii i vv 11 ley Vi f ' w ill ip ft A TALE OF THREE LIONS. BY It. tllDSn HAOOAno. Most of you will have heard of Allan Qu.v termaln, who was one of the party that dis covered King Solomon's mines some little time ago, and who at forward came to live in England, near his friend, Bir Henry Curtla. lie has gone back to the wilderness now, as tlieso old hunters almost Invariably do, on one pretext or another. They ennnot ondure civilization for very long, Its noise nnd racket and tho omnipresence of broadclothed mi' manlty proving morn trying to their nerves than the dangers of tho desert. I think that they feel lonely here, for it is a fact that is too little understood, though it has often Loen stated, that there is no loneliness like tho loneliness of crowds, especially to those who are unaccustomed to them. "What is there in the world." old Oimter- inatn would say, "so desolate as to stand in the streets of a great city and listen to tho footsteps falling, falling, multitudinous as the rain, and watch tho white lino of faces as they hurry past, you know not whence, you know not whither. They como and go, their eyes moot yours with a cold stare, for a moment their features nro written on your imiiii, and then they ore fjono forever. You win never see inetu again, Uiey will never see you again: they come up out of the un known, and presently they onco moro van ish into the unknown, taking their eccrets with tbem. Yes, that Is loneliness puro nnd undented; but to one who knows and loves it, tho wilderness is not lonely, because tho spirit of nature is over there to keep the wanderer company. He flDds companions in tho -winds the sunny streams babblo like nature's children at his feet; high above ym, in the purple sunset, are domes and minarets and palaces such as no mortal man uat n built, In and out of whose flaming doors the glorious angels of the sun seem to move continually. And there, too, is the wild game following Its feeding grounds In great armios, with the springbok thrown out be fore for skirmishers, then rnnk upon rank of long faced blesbuck marchlngand wheeling like Infantry, and last, the shining-troops of quagga and tho fierce eyed, shaggy vildor- beesto to take the place of the Cossack lios.t that hangs upon an army s flanks. "Uh, no," ho would say, "the wilderness Is not lonely, for, my boy, remember that tho further you get from man the nearer you grow to Ood," nnd, though this is a saying that might well be disputed, it is one I am sure that anybody will easily understand who has watched the sun risa and set on the limitless, deserted plains, and seen the thun der chariots of tho clouds roll lu majeitj across the depths of unfathomable sky. well, at any rata he went back again, ami now for many mouths I have heard nothing at all of him, and, to bo frank, I greatly doubt if anybody will over hear of hlra again l lean that tho wilderness that has for so many years been a mother to him will now also prove bis grave and the grave of those who accompanied him, for the quest upon which be and they started is a wild one in deed. But while he was in England for those years or so between his return from the sue cessful discovery of the wise king's buried treasures and tho death of his only son, I saw s great deal of old Allan Quaternialn. I hod known him years before in Africa, and after he came home, whenever I hod nothing bet 0 tcr to do, I used to run up to Yorkshire and stay with him, and in this way I at one tlmo and another beard many of the Incidents ol bis past life, and .most curious some of them were. No one can pass all those years following the rough existence of an elephant hunter without meeting with many strange adven tures, and one way and another old Quatcr main has certainly seen his share. Well, the story that I am going to tell you is one of tho later of theso ad ventures, though I forget the exact year which it tmppencd. At any rate I know that It was the only one of his trips upon which he took his son Harry (who is since dead) with him, and that Harry was then about 14, And now for the story, which I will repeat as nearly as I con ill the words in which Hunter uuatermain told it to me one night in the old oak paneled vestibule of his houso in Yorkshire. We were talking about gold mining. (Joldminingrhobrokoln. "Ah, yes; I onco went gold mining at Pilgrim's Rest In tho Tiansvaal, and.it was before that that wo had business about Jim-Jim and tho lions. Do you know it? Well it is or was one of the queerest little places you ever saw. Th i town itself was pitched in a stony valley, with mountains all about it, and in tha mid dl f such scenery as one does not often get the 'banco of seeing. Many and many is tho tim that I have thrown down my pick and shovel in disgust, clambered out of my claim and walked a couplo of miles or so to the top of some hill. Thou I would lie down in tho crass and look out over the glorious stretch of country tho smiling valleys, tho great mountains touched with gold real gold ol the sunset, and clothed in sweeping robes of bush, and staro into tho depths of tho perfect sky above; yes, and thank heaven I bad got away from the cursing and tho coarse jokes of tho miners, and the voices of those Basutu Knurs as they toiled In tho sun, tho memory of which is with mo yet. Well, for tomo months I dug patiently at my claim till tho very sight of a pick or of a washing trough becamo hateful to me, A hundred times a day I lamented my own folly In having la vested i'SOO, which was about all that I was worth at tho time, in this gold raining, utit, liko other better jieojilo before mo, I had been bitten by tho gold bug, nnd now had to tako tho consequences. 1 bail bought a claim out of which a man had inado a fortune .1,000 or 8,000 at least as I thought, very choap; that is, I had given him S00 down for it. It was all that I had maua by a rough year's elephant hunting beyond tho Zam besi, and I sighed deeply and propheti cally when I saw my successful friend, who was a Yankee, sweep up tho roll of Standard bonk notes with tho lordly air of tho man who made his fortune and cram them into his breeches pockets. 'Well,' I said to him tho happy vendor 'It Is a magnificent prop erty, and I only hoio that my luck will bo as good as yours has been.' Ho smiled; to my excitod nerves it seemed that he smiled om inously, as he answered mo in a peculiar Yankee drawl: 'I guess, stranger, as I ain't tha one to mako a man quarrel with his food, moro especial when there uln't no more go ing of tho rounds; and as for that there claim, well, she's been a good nigger to mo; but between you and mo, stranger, speaking man to man, now that then; ain't any filthy luccr between us to obsculate tho feathers of tho truth, I guess she's about worked outl' "I gasied; the fellow's effrontery took my breath out of me. Ouly flvo minutes before bo had been swearing by all his gods and they appeared to bo numerous end mixed that there were half a dozen fortunes left in tha claim, and that ho was only giving it up Doc use he was downright weary of shovel ing tha gold out. " 'Dout look so vexed, strnngor,' wont on my tormentor, 'perhaps there is soma shlno in tho ola girl yet; any way you nro a down right good fellow, you aro; therefore you will, I guess, havon real Al, old jam, plato Class opportunity of working on tho feelings of Fortune. Any way it will bring the nvuscla up on your arm, for the stuff Is un common still, and what is more, you will in the course of a year earn a sight moro than (3,000 in value of experieuco,' "And ho went lust in tune, ror in another minute I should have gone for him, und I saw his face no more. "Well, I set to work on tho old claim with my boy Harry and half a dozen Kafirs to help me, which, seeing that I had put nearly all my worldly wealth into it, was tho least I could do. Aid we worked, my word we did work early and lata we went at it but never a bit of gold did we sue; no, not even a nugget large enough to mako a scarf pill out of. The American gentleman had se cured It all and left us the sweepings. "For throe months this went on, till at last I paid away all, or Very near oil, that was left of our little capital in wages ana food for the Kafirs and ourselves. When I tell you that Boer meal was sometimes as high as 1 a bag, you will understand that it did not take long to run through our bank ing account, "At last the crisis come. On Saturday night I had paid the men as usual, and bought a muld of mealle inoal at bus. for them to Oil themselves with, and then I went with my boy Harry and sat on the edge of tha great hole that we had dug in tha hill (Ids, and. which, w had In bitter mockery named Eldorado. There we tat in the moon' light with our feet hanging over the edge of tho claim, and were melancholy enough for anything. Prrwntly I pulled out my purso ind eiiptlcd Its contents Into my band. There was a halt sovereign, two florins, nlno penco in silver, no coppers for copper prac tically doi not circulate In South Africa, which Is one of tho things that make living so dear there In all exactly fourteen and nlnepenco. "'There,, Harry my boy I' I said, 'Hint is tho sum total of our worldly wealth; that holo has swallowed all tho rest,' " 'By George,' said Master Harry, 'I say, father, you nnd I shnll have to let ouraolvcs out to work with the Kafirs and live on mcnllo pap,' and ho sniggered at his unpleas ant little joko. "But I was In no mood for Jokng, for it is not a merry thing to dig like anything for months and bo completely ruined In the pro cess, especially If you hnppou to dislike dig ging, and consequently I resented Harry's lightheartedness, " 'Be quiet, boy 1' I said, raising my hand oa though to glvo him a cuff, with tho result that the half sovereign slipped out of it and fell into tho gulf below. " 'Oh, bother,' Bald I, 'it's gone.' , '"There, dad,' told Harry, 'that's what comes of letting your angry passions rise; now wo are down to four and nine.' 'Truade no answer to these words of wis aom, but scrambled down the deep sides of tho claim, followed by Harry, to hunt for my littlo all. Well, we hunted and wo hunt ed, but tho moonlight Is an uncertain thing to look for half sovereigns by, and there was sonio loobo soil about it, for tho Kafirs had knocked off working at tho Very spot a couple of hours before. I took a pick and raked away the clods of earth with It, lu the hojw' of finding the coin, but all In vain. At lost, hi theer onnoyanco, I struck the sharp pickax down into the soil, which was of a very hard nature. To my astonishment it sunk In right up to tho heft,. "'Why, Harry,' I said, 'this ground must havo been disturbed 1' " 'I don't think so, father,' he answered, 'but we will soon see,1 anil he began to shovel out tho soil with his hands. 'Oh I' ho .said presently, 'it's ouly soino old stones; the pick has gone down between them. Look!' And ho began to pull at .one of thu fctones. "'1 say, dad,' ho raid proscutly, almost in a whisper, 'it's precious heavy; feel it;' and ho rose and gavo mo a round, brownish lump about tho size of a very largo apple, which 10 was holding in both his hands. I took it curiously and held it up to tho light, it was very heavy. Tho moonlight fell upon Its rough and filth encrusted surface, and as I looked curious littlo thrills of excitement began to paw through mo. But I could not bo euro. " 'Give mo your knlfo, Harry,' I said. "Ho did so; and resting tho brawn stone on my knee I scratched at its surface. Great heavens, it was soft I "Another second and tho secret was out; we had found a great nugget of puro gold, four pounrls of it or more. 'It's gold, lad,' I said, 'it's gold, lad, or I'm a Dutchman.' "Harry, with his eyes starting out of his bend, glared dovbi at tho long gleaming yel low scratch that I had made upon the virgin metal, and then burst out into yell upon yell of exultation, that went ringing away across the silent claims like tho shrieks of somebody being murdered. " 'Bo quiet,' I said, 'do you want every thief on tho Held niter your "Scarcely were the words out of my mouth when I heard a steUthy footstep approach ing. I promptly put the big nugget down and sat on it, and uncommonly hard it was. and as I did so I saw a lean, dark face poked over tho edgo of tho claim and a pair of beady eyes searching us out. I knew tho C I. tw.ln.mn. I . n ... n rtf ..n 1 .o . 1 nl,n- ncter known as Ilandsnike Tom. who had. I ' understood, been so named at tho diamond fields because ho had murdered his mate with a handspike.' Ha was now, no doubt, prowl ing about Hko a human hyena to see what he could steal. " 'Is that you, 'untcr QuatcrmainT he said. "'Yes, it's I, Mr. Tom,' I answered po litely. " 'And what might all that there yelling bcT ho asked. 'I was walking along, a-tak-ing of the evening air and a-thinking on tha stars, when I 'cars 'owl after 'owl." " 'Well, Mr. Tom,' I answered, 'that is not to be wondered at, seeing that, liko yourself, they aro nocturnal birds.' ""Owl after 'owl I' ho repeated sternly, taking no notico of my intcrpretajlon, 'and I stops and says, "That's murder," and I listens again and thinks, "No, It ain't; that 'owl is tho 'owl of hexultatlon; sonio ono's been and got his fingers Into a gummy j eller pot, I'll swear, and gone off 'U Wl In tho sucking of them." Now, 'untcr Quatermaln, s I rightl Is it nuggets! Oh, lorl' and ho smacked his lips audibly 'great big yellow boys is it them that you have just been and tumbled across!1 " 'No, said I boldly, 'it isn't' tho cruel gleam in his black eyes altogether overcom in.T my aversion to tho untruth, for I knew i ho onco round out what It was that 1 .ting on and, by tho way, I havo of rolling in gold being spoken of as a pleasant process, but I certainly do not rec ommend anybody w ho values comfort to try sitting on it I jiiould run a very good chanco of being 'kandsplkcd' before tho night was over. " 'If you want to know what it was, Mr, Tom,' I w?nt on, with politest all', although in agony from tho nugget underneath for I hold it alwayj best to bo jwlito to a man w ho is to icady with u handspike 'my boy and I havo liad n slight dl.l'ereneo of opinion, and I was enforcing my view of tho matter upon him; tlmt wnsnlL' " 'Yes, Ur. Tom,1 put In Harry, bonning to weep, for Hai r' was n smart boy, ami caw tho dilllculty wo were in, 'that was it I hel loed, boeniuo f nthi r beat ine,' "' Well, now, did ycr, my dear boy; u.J ycrl Well, all I can say Is that u phyod oi old claim is a wonderfully queer tort of pi . to como to for to nrglf y nt 10 o'clock of night, and m hat's more, my sweet youth, If ever 1 should 'avo tho nrglfylnir of ycr' and ho locrod unpleasantly at Harry 'ycr won't 'oiler in such n jolly sort o' way. And now I'll bo baying good night, lor I don't liko dis turbing of u family party. No, I ain't that sort of a man, I ain't. Oood night to ycr, 'untcr Quatermain; good night to ycr, my arilled young one,' nnd Mr. Tom turned awn; disappointed, and prowled off elM where, liko n human jackal, to see what ho could ihlovo or kill. " 'Thank gooduussfl said, as I slipped off tho lump of gold. 'Now, then, do you get up, Harry, and beo if that consummate vil lain has gono.' Harry did so, and iviwrted that ho lind vanished toward Pilgrims' Host, and then wo set to work, aud very carefully, but trembling with excitement, with our hands hollowed out nil tho kpaco of ground into which I had struck tho pick. Yes, as I had hoped, there was a regular nest of nug gets, twelvo In all, running from thesUoof a hazelnut to that of a hen's egg, though of couro tho first ono wns much larger than that. How they all camo there nobody can say; it was one of thuao extraordinary freaks, with stories of which, at any rate, all peoplo acquainted with alluvial gold mining will be familiar, It turned' out afterward that tho American who had sold mo thu claim had in tho same way made his pllo a much larger ono than ours, by the way out of a single pocket, and thou worked for six months without seeing color, ufter which ha gave it up. "At nny rate, there the nuggets were, to tho vnluo, as it turned out afterward, of about 1,3.10, so that after all I took out of that holo -150 more than I put into it. Wo got them all out and wrapped them up in n handkerchief, and then fearing to carry homo so much treasure, csjicclally as wo know that Handspike Tom was on the prowl, mado up our minds to pass tho night where we w ere a necessity which, disagreeable as it was, was wonderfully sweetened by the presence of that handkerchief full of virgin goldwldch represented the interest of my lost halt sovereign. "Slowly the night wore away, for with tho fear of Handspike Tom before my eyes I did not dare to go to sleep, ami at loot tho dawn came blushing down the somber ways of night. I got up and watched its rfoct growth, till it opened liko a vast celestial llower upon the eastern sky, and the sun beams began to spring in splendor from mountain top to mountain top. I watched it, and us I did so It Uashud upon mo, with a complete conviction that I bad not felt bo fore, that I had had enough gold mining to last ine the rest of my natural life, and I then and there made up my mind to clear out of Pilgrims' Host and go and shoot buf fala toward Dtlagoa bay. Then I turned, 1888. .took the pick and shovel, .and, althnugn it was n Bunday morning, woko up Harry and set to work to sen If there were any moro nuggets about As I cxiectd, there was none. What wo had got had lain together in n little pocket filled with soil that felt quite different from tho stiff stuff round nnd outside the pocket. There was not another trace of gold. Of course, it is jiossi ble that there were more ockets somowhoro about, but nil I have to say is I mado up my mind that, whoever found them, I should not p and, as a matter of fact, I linvo slnco heard that that claim has been the ruin of two or three people, as it very nearly was the ruin of me. " 'Harry,' I said presently, '1 am going' away this week toward Delagon to shoot buf falo. Shall I tako you with mo or send you down to Durban T " 'Oh, take me with you, father,' lieggod Harry, 'I want to kill a buffalo.' " 'And supposing that the buffalo kills you instead T I asked. "Oh, never mind,' he said, gayly, 'there, aro lots more where I camo from.' "I rebukod him for his flippancy, but in the end I consented to tako hlra," CHAPTER IL "Something over a fortnight had passed since tho night when I lost half, a sovereign and found 1,850 in looking for It, and In stead of that horrid hole, for w hicli, after all, El Dorado was scarcely a misnomer, a very different scene stretched away before us clad In the stiver robe of the moonlight. Wo were camped Harry and I, two Kafirs, a Scutch cart and six oxen on Uto swell big side of a great wave of bush clad land. Just where wo mado our camp, howover, the bush was very sparse and only grew about in clumps, while here and there wero sisgle flat topped mimosa trees. To our right a little stream, which had cut a deep channel for Itself lu the bosom of tho slope, flowoiL musically on be tween basks green with maidenhair, wild asparagus and many beautiful grasses. Tha bed rock hero was red granite, and in tho cot of centuries of patient washing tho wave- had hollowed out 6omo of tholmgo slabs in its path hito great troughs and cups, and these vt o used for bathing places. No Roman lady, with her laths of porphyry or. alabaster, could have had a more delicious spot to lave herself than we had within fifty! yards of our skerm or rough Inclosure of mimosa thorn that we had dragged together round our cart to protect us from tho attacks of lions. There were several of these about, as I knew from their spoor, though we had neither heard nor seen them. "It was a little nook where the eddy of tho stream had washed away a mass of soil, and on tho edge of it there grew a most beautiful, old rjiinca thorn. Beneath the thorn was a large smooth slab of granite fringed all round with maidenhair and other ferns, that sloped gently down .to a pool of the clearest sparkling water, which lay in a bowl of granite about ten feet wido by five feet deep in the center. Here to this slab we went every morning to bathe, nnd lhat delightful bath is among the most pleasant of my hunt ing reminiscences, as it Is also for reasons that will presently appear among tho most palnfuL "It was a lovely night and Harry-nnd I sat there to the windward of the fire, at which tho two Kafirs were busily employed in cooking somo impala steaks off a buck which Harry, to his great joy, had shot that morning, and were as jwrfectly contented, with ourselves and the world at largo as two people could jiosslbly be. The night was beau-' tiful; it would require somebody with moro words on the tip of their tongue than I havo to properly describe tho chastened majesty of thoso moonlit wilds. Away forever and for ever, away to tho mysterious north, rolled tho great bush ocean over which the stlcuce brooded. There beneath us, a milo or moro to tho right, ran tho wido Ollphant and mirror liko flashed back the moon, whoso silver spears were shivered on its breast and then tossed in twisted lines of light for and wide about tho mountains and the pLiin. Down upon the river banks grew great tim ber trees that, tlirougk the stillness, pointed solemnly to heaven, and the beauty of tho night lay upon them liko a cloud. Every- where was silence silence in tho starred depths, silence on the fair bosom of the sleep ing earth. Now, if ever, great thoughts m jht rise in a man's mind, nnd for a space he might loose his littleness in the sense that he partook of the puro Immensity about htm. Almost might ho seem to sea the spirit of tho heavens, girdled round with stars, asslng down in tho dead quiet to look, now that tho night had covered up her sins, upon tho sleep ins face of his lost bride, tho earth. Almost mlgnt no near the echoes of angelto voites, as the spirits poised on bent and rushing pinions wept onward from universe to universe; and distinguish the white lingers of the wind ' playing in tho tresses of the trees. "Harkl what was thatr "From far away down by the river thero comes a mighty rolling sound, then another mid another. It is the lion seeking his meat. "I saw Harry shiver and turn a littlo pule. Ho was a plucky boy enough, but tho roar of a lion for tho first time in the solemn bush veldt at night is apt to shako the nerves of any lad. '"Lions, my boy,' I said; 'they are hunt ing down by tho river there; but I don't think that you need make yourself uneasy. Wo havo been here three nights now and if they were going to pay us a visit I should tlduk that they would have dono so before this. However, we will make up the fire.' " 'Here, Pharaoh, do you and Jim-Jim get soma moro wood before wa go to sleep, else tha cats w 111 bo purring round before morn ing.' "Pharaoh, a great brawny Bwnzl, who had been working for mo at Pilgrim's Rest, laughed, rose and stretched himself, and then calling to Jlm-Jiin to bring the ax and a reim, started off in tho moonlight toward a clump of sugar bush, where wo cut our fuel from soma dead trees. Ho was a flno fellow in his way, was Pharaoh, and 1 think that ha hail been named Pharaoh be cause he hail au Egyptian cast of counten ance and a royal sort of swagger about mm. But his way was a somow hat jiccullar way, on account of the uncertainty of his temper. and very few people could get ou with him; also, if ho could get It, ho would drink liko n llsli, and when ho drnnl: be became shock ingly bloodthirsty. Theso were his bad points; his good ones were that, liko most tiooplo of tho Zulu blood, ho became exceed' ingly attached to ono if lie took to you at all; lio was a hard working and Intelligent man, and about as dare devil and plucky a fellow at a pinch as I have ever had to do with, Ho was lut five and tldrty years of ago or so, but not a 'keshla' or ringed man. I be lieve that he got into trouble in some way In Swaziland, and tho authorities of his tribe would not allow him to assume the ring, and that is why he came to work at tho gold fields. I he other man, or rather lad, Jim-Jim, was a Mapoch Kafir, or Knobnose, aud even in tho light of subsequent events I fear that I cannot spook very well of him. Ho was an idle and careless young rascal, and only that very morning I had to tell Pharaoh to give blm a boating for letting tho oxen stray, which ho did with the greatest gusto, al though ho was, by tho way, very fond of Jlm-Jlm. Indeed, i saw him consoling Jim- Jim afterwards with a pinch of snuff from his own ear box whilst he explained to him that tho next time it coma hi tho way of duty to Hog htm he meant to thrash him with tho other hand, so as to cross tho old cuts and mako 'a pretty pattern ou bis back,' "Well, off they weut, though Jim-Jim did not at nu liko leaving tho camp at tliat hour, even when tho moonlight was so bright, ami in duo course returned safely enough with a great bundle of wood. I laughed at Jlin-Jlm uud askud 1dm if he had soeu anything, and no sold yes, no bad; lie bad seen two large, yellow eyes staring at blm from behind bush and heard something snore. "As, howover, ou further investigation, the yellow oyes and the snore appeared to havo existed only in Jlm-Jlms lively Imagination, I was not greatly disturbed by this alarming report, but, having seen to tho inaklug up of tho fire, got Into tho skerm and went quietly to sleep with Harry by my side. "Homo hours ufterwards I woko up with a start I don't know what woko mo, Tho moon hail gono down, or at least was almost hidden behind tho soft horizon of bush, only her red rim being visible. Also a wind had sprung up aud was driving long hurrying lines of cloud across tha starry sky, and alto gether a great chaugo had como over the mood of tho night. By tno look of the sky judged wa must bo about two hours from daybreak. "The oxeu, which were as usual tied to tho llsselbooiu of the Scotch curt, were rustless they kept suufilns and blowing and rising up and lying down ngalu, no I at onco sus- THE COLUMBIAN, VOl COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, VOl XXII NO 6 LJ, NO 41 Apeeted tbnl they fuust wwa something. Presently1 1 know what it. was that they winded, for within fifty yards of us n lion roared, not very loud, but qutlo loud enough to make my heart come into my mouth, "Pharaoh was sleeping ou tbo other side of tho cart, and beneath It I saw htm rnlso his bond and listen. " 'Lion, Ihkoos,' ho whuperod, 'lion.' "Jim-Jim also Jumped up, and by tho faint light I could seo that ho was In n very great fright Indeed. "Thinking that It was as well to lio pre pare.! for emergencies, I told Phnrnoh to throw wood ujoii tho fire, nnd woke up narry, who I verily liellovo was capable of sleeping happily through tho crack of doom. Ho was a littlo scared at first, but presently tho excitement of tho position camo homo tO him, and ho liecnme quite anxious to sea his majesty face to face. I got my riflo handy and gavo Harry his a Wcstly Richards fall ing block, which is a very useful gun for a youth, being light and yet a good killing rifle and then wo wnlted. "For a long tlmo nothing happened, and I began to think that the licst thing that wo could do would bo to go to sleep again, when suddenly I heard a sound more like a cough than a roar within about twenty yards of tho skerm. We, nil looked out, but could eco nothing; and then followed another jierlod of susiwnse. It was very trying to tho nerves, this waiting for an attack that might bo develojwd from any quarter, or might not be doveloped at all; and though I was an old hand nt this sort of business, I was anxious about Harry, for it is wonderful how tho presence of anybody to whim one is attached unnerves a man in moments of danger, and that mado me nervous. I know, although It was now chilly enough, I could feel tho per spiration running down my nose, and In order to relievo tho strain on my attention, em ployed myself in watching a beetle which ap peared to 1h3 attracted by tho firelight, and was sitting before it thoughtfully rubbing his antenna) against each other. "Suddenly tho beetle gavo such a jump that he nearly pitched headlong Into tho fire, and ft did wo all gavo jumps, I mean, and no wonder, for from right under tho skerm fence there camo a most frightful roar a roar that literally mado the Scotch cart shake and sliako and took the breath out of ine. "Harry made an exclamation, Jim-Jim howled outright, while tho poor oxen, who were terrified almost out of their hides, shiv ered and lowed piteously. "Tho night was almost entirely dark now, for tbo moon had quito set and tho clou had covered up tho stars, so that tho only light that wo had came from the fire, which by this time was burning up brightly again. But, as. you know, firelight Is absolutely use less to shoot by, it is so uncertain, and besides it penetrates but a very httle way into tho darkness, nltCoitgh if one is in tho dark out Ti be O 'NTINDKD. Limits of Human Semes. Tho limited nature of tho human senses, whereby we may fail to perceive an all per vading "second universe," has been greatly emphasized by tho progress of scienco slnco Isaac Taylor reasoned from it in his "Physi cal Theory .of Another Life" half a century ago. Improvement in Biwctroscopy and pho tography show that Invisible rays extend as far beyond the violet end of tho spectrum as the length of the spectrum itself, and indeed must continue until tho vibrations "become infinitely rapid and Infinitely small." Soma of these ultra rays can lie made visible by in terposing a substance that lessens their re frnngtbillty. Professor Htokes, tho physicist, found that when a tubo filled with a solution of quinine sulphate was moved along the spectrum, "on arriving nearly at the violet extremity n ghostlike gleam of pale blue light shot across tho tub; It did not cease until tho tubo had been moved far beyond the violet ex tremity of the spectrum visible ou tho screen." The wave lengths of the spectrum sun rays havo been measured, and we per ceive only thoso ihnt are from about ono forty to one sixty thousandth of an inch; to all others we a blind. Soot sound; tho human ear, practically, hears only thoso sounds that come from forty to 4,000 vibra tions of the air per second, though the pos sible limit has been traced to near 40,000. The microphone- reveals a new range of notes, nnd It is conceivable that this instrument, in con nection with sympathetic and harmonic vibrations, may bring down to nudlbillty still higher sources of sound. It is not afilnnablo that any construction of mortal eye and ear could disclose the supernal; but it is certain that there is verymuch visible that wo don't know how to discern. Tho Forum. Rescue of tho Shipwrecked. A new plan for the rescue of shipwrecked sailors, which it Is thought Is a great im provement on the inventions now employed, has been propoeed to Secretary Whitney by Rear AdmiralAmmen. It consists -of tho construction ofwhat is called a balsa, or a float. Tho rear admiral suggests tho follow, ing method of launching them: "Tho head sail should bo hoisted so as to bring the wind quarterly; oil bags would bo thrown over from each quarter, Tho railing at the stem fitted for unshipping would bo let down and tho launching skids put in place nnd tho balsa carried aft by eight men aud lowered with four on it. Then a rough car to fit in tho skids would be loadod with tho helpless persons and lowered to tho balsa, bo received and placed, and tho operation continued until tho boat has her load, then sho would bu cast adrift, make a drag of her mast and sail, throw overboard her oil bag, and tho same operation would lio rcjioatod until every one was embarked. Then thoy bhould fasten to each other in sections of fives." The balsa consists of two casks, upon which a platform is laid. In tho casks aro scuttles for stowing provisions. A sufficient number of them to carry a thousand peoplo could, iu tho opinion of the rear admiral, bo carried on a largo steamer without iuconveuicuco. Chicago Times. Plea for lliu I'ubllo Schools. Criticise tho publio schools as we please, wo aro all obliged to own, after investigation, that they offer to every child who enters them certain advantages tthich no private wealth can buy. In our cities and larrro towns thoy are, to begin with, as clean as tho decks and cabins of a man of war. Every child who enters them learns, so far as tho school room influence goes, habits of neat ness, method, decorum mid punctuality points of training hardly to bo burpassod in their importance, ut only for tho mental, but for thu moral nature. When I enter such a school room, and come uin fifty littlo peoplo marching In procession to or from their seats, obedient to a wave of a linger from thuresgluto youth or maiden who has them in charge, and when I rc'Jeet that ull across u continent, from the Atlantic to tho Pacific, this same process is going on, then that raodet teacher's work rises into sublimity, and seemaono among iniiuinernbla shuttles tliat aro together weaving tho vast web of a now geueratlon. "T. W. II." iu UarperVi Bazar, Old Lady (to a boy In drug 6tore) I havo paiu,ruiuiiu' up and down my back and I guess you can glvo mo a bottlo of liniment. Iloy-r-Wot klud will you havel "What's thu cheapest you havol "I kin give you a good horse liniment foi $1 a bottle." Texas Biftlngs. Hope for Yonuc Men. Who says that thero Is not hope for the young men of to-day! Of Amherst's ninety three freshmen but seventeen smoke" tobacco. A tobacco report from tha class three yoais from now will lo interesting. New Yoik Sun, Xj ver wash wooleu goods or bluukets on cloudy luy. The icing' Secretaire. A secretaire w hich, cost $173,000 was sold for 13,000, and this wus a sjiecUneli of the sacrifice in tho sale of tho lata king of Ba vurta's goods and chattels. No monument bos been raised, to his memory. Two planks with u cross uiiou tueui mark tha spot w hero tho king was orow ued. New York Sun. An cnthuslostlo materialist put a headstone over the gvavo of bis wlfo iu a cemetery at Nioyre, France. ukh which there U tha fol low iug inscription: "Deprived of all vitality, here lio tho remains of tha material that formed Mino. Duraud. No cards and no prayers." L'hlcajo News. II os tetter, the bitters man, is wvrth (0. 000,000. THE TAIUSOAH EJIl'IRE. A NATION WHO WEHE NEVER. CON QUERED BY THE A2TECS. , An lnilomlUlile Nation of Warrior Which KsUIrd In Meilrn at tha Time or tliei Spanlth Conquest How They Planned Their C'anipBlcnt. The Indians living around Lake. Pntzcuaro were an Indejiendent nation when tha Hpnn iards Invaded Mexico, nearly 400 years ago. They had como from the north, nnd had never been conquered by tho Aztecs, who who lived in anil controlled the country south and cast of here. They lived in towns and cities, nnd they had laws. Their capital city was on the border of tho lake. They railed It Tzlntziintznn, in Imitation of tho sound made by the humming birds, which are very numerous. They bad a king, whu designated his successor, They were divided into four provinces, and at the head of each was a cacique, or chief. There was, accord ing to Cubits, the Mexican ethnologist, n great variety of suliordlnato officials in tho Tarnscan empire. There were tribute gath erers who collected from the rich, and nil other set who saw that the poor contributed to the government There was a head game keeiK-r, and a chief falconer who looked after the bints. There wns a chief for the fishermen who fished with nets, and another." for the fishermen who used hooks and lines. Kvery Industry had Its representative In tha government. Theee Indians, raised cotton, matiuf acturod domestics, quarried aud carved stone, cultivated sugar rane, fermented wlno from tho maguey, made leather garments and did a great many other things, all under tho suiicrvlilon of the sub-delegaU, as Cnluis calls the representatives of the government. There was a chief woodsman. The princi pal feather worker directed tho artists in that branch. The Curingurl had charge of the making of drums. The carenters had their master. A trensurer general kept in his safo untold quantities of gold and silver or namcnts, while tho grain collected for the crown was housd In great granarien under charge of a store keeper. A PATERNAL QOVKHNMRHT. It was a strong paternal form of govern ment which raised aud mado all that Its peo ple had any uso for, which directed and con trolled a great variety of industries in such a manner that there was little export or im port, no overproduction and plenty of time to go to war, The painters, potters, earthen ware makers, sweepers, flower makers, shop keepers, ami even the doctors, had their masters. And all this was before Christo pher Columbus discovered America. But the Tarascans were more interesting as warriors. They wero simply Indomitable. It does not appear that it was their policy to extend the boundaries of the Tarascon em pire by conquest They fought battles, whipped surrounding nations, settled imme diately with the conquered on a cash basis and returned to Lake Patzcuaro to enjoy the fruits of victory. There are 200,000 Taras cans now, and they were probably more nu merous before the Spanish invasion. When war was declared against another nation the chiefs of tho provinces commenced mobilizing the fighting material- without a day's delay, Tho wholo army was com manded by a captain general .called the EozoncL Ho was magnificently accoutered. A plume of green feathers nodded above his head. A silver shield wns slung over his shoulder. His quiver was of tiger skin. Ho had ear rings and bracelets of gold. A doub let of scarlet cotton clothed his hips and thighs. Leggings of tiger skin completed bis dress. . The war spirit was very strong in the na tion. Tarascans did not wait for invasion. They marched to their frontier and there gave battle. While they were on the road tho people came to them, fed them and cheered them on. One branch of the service was an organization of war spies under com mand of a chief, Tho vuzanoti had a trained corps of couriers and messengers. Till! FLAN Or. BATTLE. When the army reached the locality In which a battle was to be fought the spies had already been, over the ground, and the couriers had conveyed a description of It to the commander. The plan of action had been determined upon, and the legions took up the positions assigned them without any delay. This preparation of the plan of ac tion was very complete, und- it was what en abled the Tarascans to bo so uniformly victo rious. Their commandor hod been informed of the character of the ground so thorough ly that he was not only able to assign his forces advantageously, but he carried ou with wonderful rapidity pretended repulses, made apparently unsuccessful advances aud retreated until ho had drawn the enemy into just the place he wanted. Then his legions fell upon the opposing army from ull eldes and annihilated it This was so often dona that the Tarascans, although a small nation compared with tho Aztecs, maintained their Independence. In battle the Tarascan legions carried mag nificent standarj. of plumes. In some of the engagements more than 300 of these stand ards of white heron feathers glistened iu tho sun. Each warrior wore a plume of caglo feathers. A column of smoko upon a hilltop was often the signal that the ouemy hiii been drawn into tho de3tred position, and tln.t. tho time had come to uncover tho ambu-cadcd and muko a general charge,. Then the Orgies and drums sounded. The long lines of Wr vlng plumes seemed to spring up from tha ground and to come from front, flanks and rear. Even boasted Azteo prowess could not stand before such an onset. The Tarascans repeat edly destroyed the armies sent against them and retired to the lake with great numtiers of prisoners. Of tho younger they made slaves. The older they sacrificed to their gods. Human sacrifice .was the blot ou Tarascan civilization. It was honor to die in battle, and the widows nnd orphans of dead warriors were liberally pensioned by the government. GlobeDemoc'rat, Greeting- an Egyptian Monolith. There has been much speculation as to how the ancient Egyytlans managed to erect their enormous inonolitlis, sometimes 100 feet in height and weighing hundreds of tons. An interesting recent article in The Revue Scieu tiflquc, by M. Arnaudeau, offers the explana tion that water was employed. Round tho obelisk, lying horizontally, with the bass toward the pedestal, was raisod a circular inclosure, of height equal to that of the mon olith. This latter hud pieces of wood or other floats fitted to It, especially at the up jicrpart; so that wheu water was brought into the inclosure tho obelisk rose gradually to tho vertical, Tho process may be simply imitated by introducing the end of a screw nail Into n piece of cork, putting it in a basin nnd then Introducing water, Frank Leslie's. Torre of Habit. OmnliaMan (brutally) Come now, hurry up, can't wait all day, stir your stumps-now. Ills Mother in Law (furiously) How dare you s-ieak to mo in that manner, sir! I'll Omaha Man (abjectly) I I beg your par don; I forgot myself. I used to bo a street car couducter In New York. Omaha World Practical Co-operation. No one who knows anything about co-operation in principle and practice disputes the fact that it pays. A fresh aud iiitereetlng proof of this has Just'come to mo. A young grocery clerk in a wholesale house found himself out pf a job some time ago. Ho lived in Harlem, in a neighborhood tenanted chiefly by peoplo of limited means liku him self, Knowing the vnluo of produce ho had often remarked to his wife on the advance price charged up town by purveyors of the necessities of Hfe, and when bo found he had nothing elso to occupy his time with he com menced to buy tho family supplies down town and carry them home ia a basket. A neighbor in the house suggested that he should do the marketing for ho. too, because she fancied the goods he purchased were bet ter than those she got from her grocer uud butcher, Bho paid lilm tho up town price for them, so that he not only got his own sup plies at bottom figures, but bad the iwnso of bringing them up town more than jiald This suggested an idea to him. Ho mado out a price list, charging an advance on cost and still less than tho local scale, secured tbu support of some more neighbors and utn mencod to market for them dally in a wugon that ho hired by tiie month. In this way ho got his own food supply for nothing. Then somo of his customers proposed to form a regular association, pay him a salary for dot ing the business and enjoy t,he benefit of the savings themselves. He readily agreed to this, and is uow purveyor general to boma twenty families, gets a bigger salary thai ha received through his clerkship uud hopes to build tha society up into a strong co-opera-tivo club, with its own store and staff. Al fred Trumble in New York News. Au Inquisitive Youngster, Bobby (reading) Pa, what is the moaning of homo genua! Father Let ino see it means that Homer was a genius. llobby Well, who was Homer! Father (Irascibly) Didn't-1 just tell you that he was a genius! Mother (cominx to the old man's asslstancei Bobby, you mustn't bother your father when bs is reading bis paper. The Epoch,