A SHADOW ON THE WALL. t '■ fov A valiant youth wna Tommy Strutt, * . A» brave as any tuttRht ot old: H? km* it to cut oti ui ivnts’ hoods, lie was *o very blufl and bold. Afraid! Ah, that ho never toit— At toast, this Was whnl Tommy sold: £4$.; ptoant* to note how Tommy loo!<«ti - One night when ho haii W" CHAPTER I—Continued. . .Lot us picture lior then watching his tin availing stfiijrrvlos and agonies till the opiate deadened the olToets of the poison, and ho sank down in a •tupor that she know must end in death, nay, that may so havo ended Abruptly, as she stood by and walchod him. Her crime Is accom plished, but how to hide it? See her eyus wander hither and thithor over tho walls, tlio floor, upon tho door through which she might drag this heavy weight, but that she may meet her lover on tho threshold! Her glance falls on a discolored ring level with tho ground, and scarcely viaihlo savo to those who know whoro to look for it| sho cronps nearer and wearer to it. Sho knools down and drags at tho rusty ring; a sfuaro door, about tho width of a strong man's shoulders, rises towards her, beneath is a black void, and that -void is to bo tho hiding-placo of her husband’s body. Close at hand lies •» coil of cord, sho dellboratoly cuts It in half, and knooling down besido him. makes one portion fast round his body lielow tho armpits, ttien with the ends drags that huddled, helpless body onuily enough along the floor until tho open s.]uaro is reached. And now comos tho most dllllcult part, physically, of hor en terprise. To thrust him foot foromost down that pit would be easy enough, hut with all a woman's extraor 0' I s ■ lv IS aiaary Insensibility to orimo, but sensitiveness to a' cruelty, she could »»ot bring herself to do this, but with arms stronger suroly than a woman's ®ver were, lowered them socurofully that not a bruise or a mark was any where to be found on his person. Picture her placing her husband, his foel to the pit, his head to hor knees, see hor givo him a strong push that sends his foot over the «dgo. and instantly the body disap pears with such a jerk as nearly to throw her forward on tha ground; but with straining muscles sho holds grimly on, hor thighs bent back, resisting iu every libra the dead we.ght that seeks to drag hor down *«vasps the full significance of the i V incident, and who in following up tte clue then given, brings all tho tacts home to the woman at last. fS Mti* gentleman, on reading of the vsnhfder, went straight to the village .-* '<* Trevemck, found the police i supije, and tile villagers convinced •of Judith's guilt, although they had ■only their spite to convinco thorn. I; The rural police thought that tho I -man might liave got in after tho two K* dell; and had chosen, for his own i| reasons, to conceal hirascif below; tout the medical evidence proved that If? ' *»® bal been dead at least three % the hoy was found by the igi landlord in the plaeo agreed upon, |j: while every window was securely bolted from within. But suspicion was not certainty, or Judith would probably have \p: reached Australia unmolosted, and r remained tliere to this day, had not the stranger who traveled with thorn fit produced the arsenic box and his f evidence. nt the enquiry then being ; JieJd. 'J’ho result you lenow, tho }~p woman was brought back and com .mitted to prison1 to await her trial. One cannot sufficiently admire the . J sagacity and acumen of this amateur detective who put to shame a—but 1 | beard no more. His praise sickened . I, Mo, 1 no longer felt proud ol my work, but as a mean fellow who had -deliberately hounded down a possibly S’. -Innocent woman, lsut or lay evidence *Jr about the poison seen in her pos fe. session, and that her of husband (the U ’ «**!y being in tho world who loved ■/- lierijt-bout the rope, she would be ffi. •tending' a free creature in primeval '■ forests now. Why did. 1' put the |p.' '•lumbering police on her track, why -uoable to the po. tr where they landed. and socuro hor arrest? She had dono mo no harm, nor suroly should I have dono any in leaving that hunted soul ono chance of salvation and a life with the man who honored her, the mainspring of whoso happy existence was now as suroly broken as hers. CHAPTER II. I stood still in tho Cornish market place in tho midst of the Cornish sing-song voices, trying to think of any loop-hole by which she might oscapo, but found none; then I bo thought mo how ablor brains than raino would marshall every little of ovidonco in her favor, for, I, who had brought hop there, could do no loss than ongage dno o.f tho most brilliunt advocates in tho world to defend her. He was' probubly now speaking, for tho burst of applause that just now broke forth announced tho end of tho opposing counsel’s speech. I wont back, found a man holding tho court breathless, and as I listen ed, felt mji doubts wuvor more and more of her guilt, while a hope began to stir in mo that she might escape. Ho began by contemptuously dis missing as hyperbole, and wild imagination, his learned friend’s sketch of what went on in the kitchen of Smugglars’ Hole on tho night of Seth Trcloar's return. In some points that imagination did not carry him far enough, for why was not tho court treated to a de scription of a man in ah tho agonies of poison, which must have declared itsolf long before tho narcotic had time to take effort? The fisherman within earshot of tho house heard not a sound—not oven raised voices —and was it for a moment credible that a maddonod and betrayed man, realizing that his wifo had mur dered him, would not have raised a cry for help, or uttered a single shriek at tho agony which devoured his entrails? Such conduct was not only incredible, it was physically impossible, and no woman, howover powerful, could havo strangled his furious cries and cursos, that not oven nn echo crossed the threshold. Tlie real truth was that she never gave him the arsenic, f'v how. pray.did she manago to dis solve it in water boforo his oyes, and then add it to milk, for if she had meroly shaken the powder into tho cup, it would havo risen to tho sur face, and attracted his attention im mediately. I say that this woman did not touch or see any poison, but that sho did administor a narcotic she had with her, probably with an intontion of gniniqg time while ho was asleep to think out her terrible situation. Tho sight of the trap door suggested to her mind a hiding placo, and grasping the idea with fatal hurry, she did actually, by tho oxortion of her unusual strength, lower him into tho vault while ho was unconscious, in tho hope that lie would not wako heforo sho and Sto phon Croft left tho house. That she had no Wish to harm liitn, is -abun dantly proved by tho cure with which sho inunagod his descent; that she folt sure ofdiis awaking, is provod by tho ropo sho affixed to the hook insido tho trap-door, left purposely open by her that he might sco the moans^of ascent, and climb through it. If’further proof is wanted thut her mind was not murdorish, abund ant proof was given by the plato of victuals sho set bosido the open trap door, nay more, it was tho good hoartod and gentle action by a wo man who, while nerving herself to an act of force made nocossary by her dosporato situation, could think of tho comfort of the man who .had been a brute to her, and by such thought show that she bore no mal ice against him. True, tho man’s body contained arsenic, but who was to prove that sho gavo it him? He had been in the house three days be fore ho was discovered, and., what might not havo happened in that time? An old enemy might havo pursued him thore, some ol# com panion havo followed and quarreled with him in tho deserted house; or he might havo died by his own hand; it was utterly impossible to prove mat me arsenic lound in his body was taken from the box subsequent ly found in her possession. Moro than this—(and the learned counsel looked steadily around the court be fore advancing his daring theory)— ho would boldly assert that she’ did not even know there was arsenic in the box, it had been jorked from the man’s pocket previous to her lower ing him into tho vault; and after wards in tho stress and hurry of tho moment, she had thrust it into her pocket and forgotten all about it. till j she drew it out with her handker chief in the train. j I saw Judith, whose eyes never loft her counsel’s face,bow her grand head as if she had said: ••Yes,—that is „rue,” and then sho turn;*d and laid her hand on that of'. Stephen (whom she could just reach) and tho utter conlidcnce of the gesture and the look they exchanged of pure love, quite apart from passion,might havo moved tho hearts of many who sat there. “If," continued her counsel, “he carried about arsenic, might ho not have had more with him, or at any rate enough to take his own life? True, his arms were bound, but who • was to prove tout the prisoner hound | them? They may have been bound and unbound a d- zen times in that i deserted place where no villagers ! ever came, and that stood as much j alone as if it were a hundred miles 1 from-a human habitation. Then, if j antecedents went for'anything,where 1 could a woman be found with more ! blameless ones than this? Kvon her j drunken scoundrel of a husband was ; not neglected or deserted by her.and I when she was lclt alone, in tho full j flower of her magnificent btautv.hcr | name was never lightly coupled'with any man s, and sho was ashamod of no work, howovor lowly, by which she might koop hersolf from beg gary, or tho pauper’s home. It was only whon the sum of years that are supposed to constitute legal death had elapsed, that she cliosu for a husband a man of character as pure as her own and you may see, a man physically. her match, and though tho spite and venom of their neigh bors may have affected to consider the bond between them illegal, they woro unquestionably in the sight of man and (iod, husband and wife. “Could such a woman’s nature cliango all at once, could her venera tion for all things holy, all things of good reputo, Tail her utterly in the ono supremo moment of her life, when she found her heaven suddenly trans formed into hell? Was yonder the woman to boldly conceive and exo- . cute a murder with a skill and rap idity that tho most experienced criminal might have envied, and striven to imitate in vain? No! That she had displayed extraordinary norvo and resource in carrying out a wrong act, ho fully admitted; but when one comes to think of tho im mensity of tho stakes involved, of what life in bondago meant with this man,of what love in freedom awaited her in tho now world, you may con demn her, but you cannot wonder that she snatched at any raeans.liow over unlawful, by which to save her self. ‘•I contend, then, that there is no caso against this woman, and that each and all of you, gcntlomcn of tho jury, will be guilty of murder if you send this innocent and soroly tried creature to the gallows!” Ho sat down amidst applause from tlio legal fraternity, and strangers present,but low murmurs and growls of dissent rose from the fishermen and their wives in tho body of the court. “W no else hart a motive in getting rid oi Seth Treloar? And the motive was everything in murder! Why was tho door found locked.and every window fastened from the inside (for hadn’t somo of them prowled around to see after tho pair left), and tho key found hanging in the place the landlord and Croft had agreod on? Didn't tho doctors say he had been doad a good three days, and how could he have poisoned himself when his arms wero fastened to his sides with cords? Wouldn’t an artful jade like her have tiod a rope to the hook, and put the food there, just to make pooplo think she expected him to got up again? Wasn't, his face fixed in tho most awful look of hun gry agony, moro like a famine-struck wolf than a human being? Only to •droam of it was to lie awake all night afterwards.” And then the Cornish sing-song of bitter tonguos ceased as the first witness was called for tlm prosecu tion—Stephon Croft. I have said that he and Judith made the handsomest pair I evor saw in my life, but the man’s beauty was tho more pre-eminent of tho two. Savo in sculptured images of Antinous, whom he most curiously resembled, alike in foature and the sweetness tinged with melancholy of his expression. I never saw anything in tho least like him, and from the crown of eloso sunny curls on his splendid head to the solo of the finely shaped foot, ho looked a man who would wear a fisherman’s dress or a king’s robe with equal grace and dignity. No wonder, thought I, that tho women of the village hated Judith—I saw ovil looks pass among them as Stephen’s blue eyes sought hers as ho left her to take his place. And now she stood alone, and the man who loved her was on oath to give evidenco against her. And surely this was a'cruel thing to soo, for had ho been tlys woman’s husband, tho law would have closed his lips, so that ho might noitbor help to save nor to hang her; but Seth Treloar’s return had broken the tie between them, and she was no more than any other stranger to him In tho eye of the law. Pro BE CONTINUED.] A PROPOSED MUTINY. An Kffort at the Desperate Game Darius the Franco-Prussian War. Under the title of “The Word of Honor of a French General” the Cologne Gazette publishes a curious story of General de Bauffremont, whose death was recently announc ed. According to that paper General BaulTrcmont was one of the numerous band of French officers who, after being captured during the war of 1870, were allowed to reside on parole at Bonn. Not very far off, at the camps of Wahn and Gremburg, near Cologno and Coblentz, were tmany thousands of prisoners of war belonging to the rauk and file of the French army. In the course of November, 1870, a French agent went about among these soldiers trying to induce them to joiu In an attempt tocsqppe and to march to France in order, to fall on the roar of the German army, and the like overtures were made to some of the officers at Bonn. • A number of chassepots and cartridges were actually smuggled into Germany from Franco. On hearing that some of the French officers were inclined to countenance the project General do Bauffremont gave information to General von Bittenfeld, governor of the province, who instantly tk such measures as prevented the pro posed rising. It Was a Different ( asp. One of the local justices of the peace identified the prisoner at the bar as an old offender. Justice—What is your name? Prisoner—Sam Jackson. , “Three years ago, when you were up before mo your name was John Smith.” ■ ••Yes, but that was an entirely I different case.”—Texas SiftingB. ^jjritultarfc va £«»enlnir Demand for Horses. The following is from an address by Hon. F. A. Derthick, Mantua, O., be fore the students of the School of Ag riculture of the Ohio state university: The breeding of horses has hereto fore been a profitable feature of agri culture, and its demoralisation is no doubt an important contributor to the depression that is said to overshadow the vocation of the farmer. If our surplus horses could be disposed of, as in former times, it would relieve the stringency felt upon most farms in two ways. First, by the money received for the horses, and then by the release of thousands of tops of hay and grain now held to feed to unprofitable stock. It is impossible, however, to dispose of any but the more desirable animals, and these at prices greatly reduced. THE GREAT DEPRESSION. This change is due to several causes, among which can be numbered the general depression in business circles. There are, however, causes that will not be removed by a return of business prosperity. First, the quite general introduction of cable and electric cars within the past five years. Within this time the demand for horses for the street car service has practically ceased. The influence of this alone can hardly be estimated. The life of the Btreet car horse was exhaustive and therefore brief, and to supply, his place gave a steadiness to the horse market. The change in the motive power of street cars not only cut off the demand, but the thousands of horses already in use, now no longer needed, have found their way back into the country and are to-day distributed upon our farma ELECTRICITY". Nor is the end yet. The road com mission appointed by the governor last winter to investigate the subject of improving our public highways is quite likely to report adversely to the use of stone and gravel in the construction of free turnpikes on the more import ant roads. A part of the membership of this board is known to favor the use of steel rails. The plan is, that im portant roads shall be traversed by electric cars, which will not only transport passengers at frequent in tervals, but also, with night trains, haul produce to market. It would be folly to predict failure for this plan, for already suburban trains are run between adjoining cities, and roads are in process of construction in many parts of the state. There seems to be no limit to the skill and inventive genius of man, and the day may not be far distant when the services of horses will be dispensed with in ordi nary _ country travel. It is insisted that it is not a question of possibility, but—“how soon” we shall be able to connect our individual trolley with the public electric wire and bowl across the country independent of horses. Who shall say that in the near future the _ young man, with his carriage equipped with a storage battery, may not go for a ride with his best girl, in which event the material for “a spark” would be an unfailing accompani ment? BICYCLES AND WINGS. The advent of the bicycle has also contributed to the general slaughter of price and demand for horses. Large numbers of men and women who, until recently, kept a horse each, either for pleasure or business, have purchased a wheel and disposed of the horses. Again, I notice that on the 18th of November last, the first canal boat in the world to be propelled byelectricity plowed the waters of the Erie canal. It is expected that at an expense of 50 cents per day per boat for electricity furnished by Niagara falls, a boat will be sent from Buffalo to Now York in much less time than at Present, and with no outlay for driver! hay, oats or horse flesh. It would not be so bad if this were all. Did you notice the re port of the international meeting of scientists held at Chicago during the World’s Fair,and that they discussed iu all seriousness the question of a flying machine? Ten years ago this body would have ridiculed the idea, but to ri-}y these learned and dignified men declare, in all seeming sincerity, that the time is coming, and early too, when men will fly where and when they please, and from dizzy heights look down upon those of us who content ourselves with the snail like pace of the old-fashioned horse. You will admit that a good part of this review recounts facts accomplished. A part, it is true, is speculation, yet who dare say, that is conversant with the development of the last decade, that it will not be realized in the de cade to come? BETTER HORSES. At all events steam, electricity, the waves and the wind are all competing for the honor of ministering to the wants of man, and I have been saying all this to establish this one point, namely: The majority of farmers mnst make a change in the number and character of the horses bred and reared upon their farms. Fewer animal sand of better quality must be the watch word to insure success. There are thousands of idle horses in Ohio to day that will not sell for an amount, on April 1 next, that will balance the value of the bay and grain consumed by them during the winter. Speaking in general terms 1 believe the time is past and gone forever when an indif ferent horse of any age or condi tion can be sold for a price in excess of the cost of rearing. It is doubt ful if a horse can be brought to maturity, or four years old, for less than one hundred dollars ($100), and I believe that certainly 50 per cent of the sound horses in Ohio can be bought for less than $100. Where then is the ! profit? Some one has lost money. Upon the other hand, I do not think the time will ever come when the business condition of the country is normal that a horse of fine form and great powers of endurance, or an animal of good form, fine style and action, will not sell for a price that will compare favorably in profit with other lines in agriculture. If then these propositions be true it follows that the business of breeding horses upon the farm must be reduced to that same system which has become neces sary in -every other line of farming. That is close attention to details. We should use not only thoroughbred sires, but dams possessing individual merit. Harmonious crosses, one that will produce a colt bred for a specific pur pose.- - .-i- w.-. *!r-./v “COD BLESS A DA RICH.” The Street rlan let He* u Experience on e W»)hln(ton Street. It was noon on F street and on all sides there was a hurrying to and fro of clerks and typewriter girls towards the lunch rooms of the vi cinage. Under foot slop reigned; overhead the heavens rained. By a curb a street pianist was converting the east winds into strains of "Annie Rooney.” By his side stood the partner of his sorrows — joys he bad none, for he wore a face as long as a funeral, and twice as mournful. She was wrapped cris cross in a big green and blue shatvl, and as 6ho turned slowly around to sweep the horizon with her eagle eye in search of some penny or nickel she resembled a boy’s brightly paintod top. Suddenly a shout was heard: Wahoo! Wahoo! Wahoo! At an cpen window in the top story of the Hood building a group of savants in shirt sleeves were gesticulating and shouting, says the Washington Star. One of them was shaking a glitter ing coin in his hand. The pianist became slightly ex cited and with his free hand gesticu lated violently to his wife. "Skippa tra loo! Ho gotta da mon!” ho shouted above the tumultu ous notes of his instrument. •T noclimbada wall. You make tire. Go getta da monk.” The woman looked up despairingly at the shining reward a hundred feet up in the air in the hand of a young Ph. D., or something of that sort, who might after all be teasing her and put the coin back in his pocket. “Gotta damova, Tina. He droppa da mon pret’ soona.’” The man waved his arm at the fourth-story scientist and beckoned to him to throw down the coin. The hint bore quick fruit. A sil very gleam flashed from the window to the asphalt and fa musical ring followed that not even the notes of “Annie Rooney” could drown. "Zip! Biff! Datta granda! O. K., vor gooua: Map pa tra loo! uetta da mon! We go’n eata da din’, drinka da beer, feeda da sick monk. Datta vor nice man upa da skyahigh. ” Tina waddled nimbly across the street. The bit of silver was half a dollar and it had finally rolled into the 'middle of an English sparrow’s dinner under a buggy. Tina hesi tated, but was not lost. A tall, well dressed old gentleman stepped off the sidewalk, came around to Tina’s side, and with his cane poked the half dollar from under the wheels. When he straightened up his silk hat fell off, the woman screamed and jumped to pick it up. As she gave it to him she bowed, and her little yel low black eyes twinkled and snapped with gratitude. The pianist lifted his hat to the savant in shirt sleeves and the polite old man, and started his music fac tory down the street ••God blessa da rich, da poor taka cara daselves!” Five Vowels in a Kow. The Hawaiian language is com posed mainly of vowels, and a few consonants put in to vary the mo notony. And the beauty of the sys tem is that there is no waste. Every vowel is pronounced. For instance, when the American eye winks at the appearance of the simple word “naauao,” the glib native roils out th - five syllables with neatness and dispatch. This means “enlighten.” Double vowels are very frequent, but never a diphthong. Three vowels are not uncommon, and, as above, four and sometimes more are found unseparated by consonants. In the mouth of the uneducated native, the language is apt to be explosive, but the higher classes speak it with a fluent grace that surpasses the French or the Italian. In sound it some what resembles the general flow of the continental European languages, for the vowels all have the French quality, and the accents are not dis similar.—Washington Star. Gordon's Soudan Throne. Gordon’s “Soudan Throne’’ is a folding armchair he always sat in at Khartoum and carried with him on his camel journeys. It was a little Btraight-backei chair, having a skeleton frame of round iron, a car pet back and seat, gilt knobs for or nament and small pads on the arms for comfort. The carpet had grown dim in the African sun, which de prived it, of all royal pretensions, so that when Gordon returned from his governorship of the Soudan and sud denly asked, "Where is my throne? Has it been brought in?” they were all surprised, his throne? Nobndy had seeh a throne. But at length the camp-stool was found whore it hai been stowed away.—Chamber’s Journal. Hearing a Fly Walk. The microphone makes the sounds of a My’s footsteps perfectly audible. The apparatus consists of a box with a strong sheet of paper stretched over it in piaco of the customary lid. Two carbons separated by a thin strip of wood and connected by two wires charged with electricity are fastened to it and connected with a carbon pencil which communicates with the papor tympanum. When everything is in readiness and the ear is hold to the sounding trumpet a Uy allowed to cross the papor makes a sound which to the listener is equal to the noise mado by ahorse crossing a bridge. When Money Comes Especially Handy. Parents should exert themselves to save a little money to keep them in old age. It will save their chil dren the trouble and expense of ship ping them from one child to an ther. Old people who are poor seldom have a steady home.—Atchison Globe. 4 Mr. George W. Tuleg Benjamin, MissourL Good Advice Quickly Followed Cured of Rheumatism by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. “ C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “ I was taken down withyheumatism over a year ago. I was sick tor over six months. hardly endur^them? A friend carnet meand Sarsaparilla I toSk him at his word and got a bottle oTVtTand stow have taken eight bottles ol it. It Has Cured Me When the doctors could do me no good what ever. After being benefited so much from this medicine I describe Hood’s Sarsaparilla as a leritctnp I also advise1 every on! llimuHsm I,« _in wonderful medicine, i aiso an vise evprv nno who Is troubled with rheumatism not to be5wit™ ---- vvavaa iuoiuiMUflUl UUllO Lie With Hood’s^Cures nilt UfWirl’t SnrofittarlTTo T nm _ _ out Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I am a farmer, and the medicine has given me much energy and strength to perform my work.” Gkoboe w Tclky, Benjamin, Missouri. Hood’S Pills are hand made, and perfect In proportion and appearance. 25c. a box. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies — OR — Other Chemicals are need in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO.’S BreakfastGocoa n which is absolutely '! pure and soluble. j] 11 hae more than three times «(the strength of Cocoa mixed ■ with Starch, Arrowroot or 'Sugar, and is far more eco iiuiutvtWf KUiinii5/ vMO if.ur* VfW VCTtli U CUV, It is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIOKSTED. Sold by Grorers ererf where. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Kan. WIFE CANNOT SEE HOW TOO DO. "■fC IT AND PAY FREIGHT. , Buy* our 9 drawer walnut or oak ta» prove* High Ana Singer sewing machine j -' li*! pUted,adapted to light iranteed /or 10 Tears; with - Joder,8eir-ThreadiagCvUB der Shuttle, BoIf.SelHag Reedle and a complete i»**t of Steel Attach aunts | shipped any whereon 80 Day’s Trial, No mon«y#equired in advance. 15,000now In use. World’s Fair Medal awarded machine and attach ments. Bny from factory and save dealer’s and agent’s profits. PQPF Cut This Out and send to-day for machine or large free ■ flCC catalogue, testimonial* and Glimpses of ths World’s Fair. OXFORD RIFD. GO. 313 Wabuh Art. CHICAGO,ILL, FINE. PICTURE FREE A fine panel picture entitled "MEDI TATION ” MAILED POSTPAID in exchange for IS large Lion Heads cut from Lion Coffee wrappers and a 2c. Btanip to pay postage. Write for list of our other Fine Premiums. W00LS0N SPIGE GO.460 n"ron st e TOLEDO, OHIO. ' PISO’S CURE FOR Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asth ma. should use Piso’sCure for Consumption. It has eared thousands. It has not injur ed one. It is not bad to take, is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. 85c. XIH4IIF.l-JLJI.ir WORN NIGHT AND DAY. holds the worst rup ture with ease under all circumstances. Perfect Adjustment. Coinfort and Cure New Patented Improvements. illus. t rated catalogue and lilies for 6elf-measure. ment Bent securely sealed. _G« _V. HOUSE MFQ. CO.. 744 Broad wajr, iSeur YoriL City Business Houses. NEBRASKA CLOTHING COMPANY0ma,'a 'Jnr OMAHA alogue Is ready. It costa you nothing. Spring Cat Write for it. Hotel ©pea.. ——.— • liection. 11th und Farnam. Risley & Wil kins, 1’roprs. Depot St. care pass the door. GROSS GUN GO Wholesale and Retail Sportsmen’s Supplies. Write lor prices, 1163. 15th Hotel Dellone Omaha, cor. 14th and Capitol Ave., blk from botn Council Bluffs 4 Omaha car lines. Beat *JB.OO a day house in the state. Fire proor RKE1) Jk CASEYi Proprietors. Killlard and Pool Tables, SALOON Bar Glassware. Send for catalogue. Cate C’lty pivTIlDCQ Hilliard Table Co. Omaha r 1^ I U »» CO ItIreo“:. PLATIN6 WORKS. Printer’s Lend* and Slug* lOc per pound. 11K-1114 Podge Street. Mall orders promptly filled, special cash discount union STOCK r a ui)£' So. Omaha. l.Ive Stock Comm las on Merchants. Correspondence solicited. Market quotations tree. Geo. Boyer, McGoy&Go.,I; Wall Paper 4c Roll Only NMl.OO required to paper walls or room 15x15, including border, feml A postage and pet 1KKK, 100 beautiful sam ples, and guide how to paper. Agents in* sample book *1.00; FKEK with a *b.uv order. Write quick. HENRY LEHMANN, 1620-1624 Douglas St., - Me CREW ISTHKOXU •s;sif“s£ > PRIVATE DISEASES, I W n«*s JV*t'rt 1 r plsonlorsot I men ONLY. Kvery raro 1H years o’1!" ™ " , (Vritiimt'iitly 11 Somalia. Book tree. ■ 14th and KurnaB 'tv f OMAHA. -