The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, January 21, 1897, Image 3

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    v
Tan 21, 1897
THE NERDASKA INDEPENDENT
-r'
fPHM 11 .mn mi nun nu nii
By Captain B&LPH DAVIB.
Copyright, 1896, by the Anthor.
CHAPTER XIL
TBE INCIDENTS OF AS AFTERNOON.
At high noon eouie sort of a decision
seemed to have been reached, as York
came aft with a flag of truce and asked
to speak to the captain. When told to
go ahead, he said :
"Captain, we have given you plenty
of time to consider our offer, and I have
come for your answer. Yon can have
the boats all fitted out, and the doctor
and Roberts shall go with yon. We are
bound to have this ship and carry her
where we will, and if you refuse our
offer the results be npon your own
head."
"Harkee, you bloody traitor and vil-
Iai:il" shouted the captain in reply,
"We not only refuse your offer, but are
ready for what may cornel"
"Then you won't go?"
jNoe a step. .Begin tne attack as
soon as you please. "
I stood behind the captain while he
spoke. As he finished, I felt a Boft hand
on my arm, and I turned to find Mary
Williams at my side. She was very
pale, as was the case with all the other
women and perhaps some of the men,
but I could not fail to notice that she
was also calm and collected.
"Mr. Tompkins, " she said, pulling
ie a step or two aside, "there are but
few of us and many of them. Will you
show me how to load one of these weap
ons, that I may be of some assistance
when the attack comes?"
"Lor bless you for your brave heart!"
says I in reply. "But maybe it will be
better if you look after the women and
children a bit I see you are the only
woman who a spark of courage left,
though this is only the beginning of it."
"And what do you think of the situa
tion?" "It's a bad one, Miss Williams, as
I'm in honor bound to say, but we are
not at such a disadvantage as you may
suppose. Those fellows know nothing
of these iron shutters or of the number
of guns at hand. "
" You you heard Ben Johnson say
that you and I were not to go in the
boats with the others?" she queried,
with a break or two in her voice.
"Aye, that I did, but there will bo
no taking to the boats by any of us.
The man means murder for both of us,
but we won't let that bother us yet
awhile."
"I want you to promise me some-
mmg, sue persisted, arawing me stiii
farther from the porthole. "If you are
still alive when they break into the
cabin, I want you to shoot me."
"Lor save you, miss 1" I whispered,
taken all aback by her look of appeal
and strange words. "It will surely
never come to that"
"But if it does."
"Mary," says I, never knowing that
I had spoken her given name and never
knowing till Jong afterward that I took
both her hands in mine, "if I had a
dozen lives, I'd give them all to save
yours, and so I don't like to think of
taking the only life dear to me in all
this world. I'd rather see you lying
dead, however, than in the power of
that villain, and if worst comes to
worst, I may give you my last bullet,
"Remember, Ralph. I shall depend
upon it"
I had called her Mary, and she had
called me Ralph. It was a declaration of
love, made under such circumstances as
were never known before. You smile at
me, but as I told you in the beginning,
I was but a plain sailor man and hardly
knew the meaning of the word "ro
. mance. " We were standing in the face of
death, as it were, and yet I could have
lifted up my voice and shouted for joy.
The numbers of the mutineers gave
them confidence. They perhaps argued
that a rush aft of all hands would carry
our position, with little or no damage
to their side. They gathered up what
ever could be made to answer for weap
"ons, and the cool and lawless way in
which they made ready for the attack
made us wild with anger and impa
tience. We could have poured a volley
into them at any moment during the
forenoon, but Captain Clark did not
wish to be the first to shed blood,
though he would have been fully justi
fied in sweeping the decks. I believe he
hoped, as I did, that something might
occur to stop the trouble before any one
was laid low. When it became evident
that they meant to rush, he turned to
us and said:
"I want every one of you to shoot to
kill. Do not be satisfied with killing
one man, but kill two or three, if yon
can. If we give them a good dose at
the start, it will take the fight out of
tKana Flverw mia fcrt hist OOfit "
DOCTORS
Searles
&Se rles,
HPKC1A LISTS IN
NERVOUS.
CHRONIC &
PRIVATE
DISEASES.
Weak Men
Sexiutlly.
All private Diseas
es and disorders
of men treuted
by mail. Con
sultation free.
SYPIIILL1S,
('ured for life and the poison thorough
ly cleansed from the system. Piles. Fis
tula and Rctal Ulcers, hydrocele and
Varicocele permanently and successfully
ured. Methpd new and unfailing.
Stricture nnl Gleet Cured
;it home by new method without pain or
utting. Call on or address with stamp.
ur. Searles & Searles.
. 119 S. 14th St., Omaha, Neb.
ill
Thirty seconds later tmnnu gang oi
villains, York and Johnson leading,
came rushing at us, and the yells they !
ottered would have done credit to a wax '
party of savages. Eight of them carried
a spare yard to be used as a battering
ram, while the others had axes, capstan
bars, iron belaying pina and what not
A few had muskets, but no spare am
munition. As the first of the mob passed
the mainmast, we opened on it and
quickly exchanged our guns to fire
again. I believe that some of our bullets
ui 1. v women, wnicn was not at au un- of nervous probation, and the facts
likely in such a crowd. Some of them j were learned from Mrs. McKinney herwelf,
reached the cabin, and one burly, big j who quickly told the foil owing story:
ruffian lived long enough to strike one "The first perceptible result of her ex
blow with his ax, but the rapid fire so treme nervousness, was apparent in a
astonished them and the slaughter i "P ?f tile cniid in heP riht
among them was so annulling that thev
broke back like a flock of frightened
sheep. We kept peppering them until
the last living man had disappeared be
She was back in a minute with guns and
axes.
low decks, and had we rushed out then
we could have pulled the hatches on
and made them prisoners. I was for
doing so, but Captain Clark, who had
perhaps considered the possibility be
fore we fired a shot, pushed me baok
and said:
"Don't lose your senses, Ralph. If
we had them all prisoners, we are not
strong handed enough to sail the bark."
Of that gang of men 13 lay dead on
the decks, and in addition there were
three wounded men whom we let drag
themselves away. Two of the dead had
axes, and two more had carried muskets.
We wanted to get these, and so we re
moved the barricade from the door, and
I was about to slip out, when Mary Wil
liams dodged past me and was back in a
minute with guns and axes. She would
have returned for some of the wicked
looking knives which had dropped from
the hands of the sailors as they fell, but
I seized her arm and pulled her into the
oabin. It was high time, too, for a con
vict armed with a musket had hoisted
himself out of the forehatch and fired
at her, and the ball struck the casing of
the door beside her head. ,
The position now was a curious one.
We held the cabin and by means of the
portholes could sweep the decks clean
to the eyes of the ship, and yet we were
prisoners. If we had been a few men
stronger, we could have overcome them
while they were still in their panio, but
even to have stood guard over that
gang of villains running loose between
decks would have demanded the services
of a dozen men. It was no doubt the
wiser policy to be content with our ad
vantage, though no man could predict
how the affair would terminate. For an
hour everything was quiet and not a mu
tineer showed his head. Then a white
flag was hoisted above the forehatch,
and York hesitatingly came aft to de
liver a message. We had hoped that
some of our bullets had found him or
Johnson or both, but it seemed that
they were untouched. It was noticeable
that York had lost his jaunty air and
looked very much worried as he ap
proached us, and his voice had lost all
its impudence as he said :
"Captain Clark, I am sent to ask for
a truce of half an hour, that we may
clear the decks of the dead. At the end
of that time we shall have something
further to say to you. "
As we wanted the bodies disposed of
as badly as they did, no hesitation was
made in agreeing to a truce. Three sail
ors and seven convicts came up, and
With many a foul word and bitter curse
they proceeded with their work. Per
haps it would have been expecting too
much to suppose they would give the
bodies burial in the regular way, but
we were terribly shocked to behold
them lift up corpse after corpse and
heave them over the rail until the last
was gone. When this work was com
pleted, one of them went aloft to search
the sea for sight of sail, while the re
mainder, with the exception of York,
dived below. When the man came
down and reported and disappeared,
York came aft to say :
"Captain Clark, the blood of every
man killed here today is on your head.
If you figure that one defeat will turn
us from our plans, you are mistaken.
We will have full possession of this
craft if we have to fight you for a
month, and sooner than be defeated in
our object we will set her on fire and
au perisn together. 1 now renew you
the offer to let you go off in the boats.
It is the last time. It is for you to say
whether you will save your people or
let them stay to be killed. I will re
turn in 15 minutes for your answer. "
He had scarcely turned his back when
Smith, his wife, the two single women
and Mary's mother all cried out in
chorus that we should accept the offer.
I must admit that on the face it looked
reasonable enough, and at first thought
It appoared to be the easiest way to es
cape our periL But those who had cried
out had given no thought as to what
might happen. After a bit the captain
spoke to us. In the first place, he de
clared, the mutineers were not sincere
We eend the French Remedy
CALTHOS free, (do V. O.D sua
IfRttl guarantee that Civrnoa will
STOP llMbarce and Kmlwlon.
t'l HE fcpermxtorrhra. Varicocele
and KK8TOKK Loot Vltor.
Use it and pay if satisfied.
VON MOHL CO., 304 B,'
SnJ Anrrlran 4tmU. Claetnattl. Ohio.
nBBavaaaaana
A Th rtPPn-TPar.fl rf
Child Paralyzed.
It Was Canstd bj a Nervous AfiVctbn and
Rend rd One Arm Lifeless-
j From th Time, Paolo, Kansas.
I A happy family is that of Mr. James
McKinney, of Hillsdale, Kansas, 011
whom a Times reporter recently called.
His business with these people was to
learn the facts for his paper of the cure
Of their 13-Vfar.fllll ilnni'lit-ur frnm n nua
-
J ,m,u' Ba,u. n? . woxnw, "and a pl.ysi.
cian was called in to attend her. No ap
parent change coming, another doctor
was called to attend her. She continued
to grow worse, although we thonghtthe
doctors helped her, until she lost entire
ly the use of her right arm, which hung
listless, and apparently lifeless by her
side."
'The physicians finally told us," con
tinued Mrs. McKiuney, "that Mary
would outgrow it in time, but by acci
dent my husband picked up a circular in
his shop, which so highly recommended
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People
that we concluded to try them. Mr. Mc
Kinney procured a box at Grimes' drug
store in Paolo, and we began by giving
Mary a half pill at a time and gradually
increasing to one pill at a time, and be
fore we had used one box we could see
that they were doing her good. She had
been suffering at that time for four years
under the doctors, and we were so en
couraged over the good effects of the use
of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills that we con
tinued to use them, and the child started
to school again and has been able to at
tend school ever since, gradually getting
stronger and in better health all the time
as you now see her, and we don't notice
the old trouble any more.
"Yes, we are always ready and willing
to recommend Dr. Williams' Pkik Pills,
and do so all the time to our friends,"
replied Mrs. McKinney to our question,
and continuing she said: "We do not
know what the doctor's called Mary's af
fliction, but we took it to be something
like paralysis or St. Vitus' dance, and we
became very much alarmed about her..
"Our local physician," she "savs, now
tells us that Dr. Williams Pink Pills are
as good a thing as we could use; and
wnue ftlaryis apparently well, she has
occasional attacks of nervous headache,
and then she says, 'Mamma, I must
take another Pink Pill,' so you see she
has great faith in them, but does not
like to have us talk about her late afflic
tion." Mr. McKinney is as much or more en
thusiastic over the great benefit done
his daughter through the use of ttiese
pills. He said: "Nothing too good can
be said by trie of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills they are a great medicine."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in a
condensed form, all the elements neces
sary to give new life and richness to the
blood aud restore shattered nerves. They
are also a specific for troubles peculiar to
females, such as suppressions, irregular
ities and all forms of weakness. In men
they enect a radical cure in
all cases
arising from mental worry, over work
or excesses of whatever nature. Pink
Pills are sold in boxes (never in loose
duik) at oil cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50, and may be had of all druggists,
or direct by mail from Dr. WillinnW
Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
A LINGUISTIC TRAINING.
Why Practice In Language Is of the
Highest Value.
One of the most valuable kinds of
training which the colllege can give ia"
the linguistic, says the Forum. If to
think Is important, linguistic training
is important. For we think in words.
Therefore thinking becomes clear, or
derly, profound, as language Is 'ade
quate. Language represents those
methods and results of thought with
out which thought itself is feeble and
inefficient. Therefore training In
language is of the highest value. To
be able to think in, or adequately use,
the English or any other language one
should know the language. ,He can
only know this language as he knows
those languages which have made the
richest contributions to its structure.
Every new science and every new ap
plication of any old science goes to
the Greek for its very name. Hence,
a training in Latin and Greek is of the
greatest worth. The college is not
filling the mind with useless knowledge
icquirmg stuaents to learn these
Tif4- rlrt J 1 i
ui;au. ""t living lar-nges Sec
ond, the scientific gen jo: :s a nrofes
sional school. Its graduate goes from
us commencement, as goes ths mnn.
ate of the school of law, theology or
lucuime, directly to his life's work,
It is not a school of liberal culture or
of general training. It is to be said.
aim saia witn the utmost dearths.
that the governors of our best technical
and scientific schools are beginning to
recognize the advantages which the
man desiring to -enter these schools
possesses it ne has previously received
a general training through the college.
IRRIGATED COLORADO.
Headquarters for Farm, Orchard or Garden
Land in That Great Country 200,000
, Acre to Choose From.
Farming and fruit growing in Colora
do is one of the most profitable indus
tries in that wonderful state. Good
fruit and farming lands in the best dis
trict range in price from $25 to $50 pnr
acre, including perpetual water right for
irrigation. s
If you are not fully conversant with
the many advantages as existing there,
such as markets, irrigation, climate.
soil, etc,, write us and we will send koiiw
of our handsome, illustrated pamphlets
giving full particulars. llouieweker-t
are furnished round-trip ticketn to onr
lands and return at one-half price, from
Nebraska common points.- Tha Colo
rado Immigration & Developu.orit
Co., 102'J, 17th St., Denver. Colo. ,
A state organization. Write at once
for literature descriptive of Colorado.
No fits after first day's use o! Dr
Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Free $2
trial bottle and treatise sent by Dr.
Kline, 931 Arch street, Philadelphia, Pa.
IN THE ODD COMER.
SOME QUEER AND CURIOUS
FEATURES OF LIFE.
A Brldf Built br an Unknown Engineer
Hon Aspires to Better Things
Morlts Front! I Awake Small Cau
for War.
l-rl INB Is the horror
that burns In the
brain
That burned In the
soul of the mur
dered Cain
The horror that
stares from the
eyes of the slain.
As he ' sees, as he
sees!
And I sleep, but my consciousness nev
er is stilled,
For I dream, and 'tis ever of him
that I killed
Of the man that I murdered and soul
that I spilled
Into space, Into space.
For his features forever before me will
float,
And he comes in the darkness to mock
me and gloat,
With the fear In his eyes and the gash
in his throat
In his throat, In his throat!
Will I rave in my dreaming and tell of
the fear,
Of the gash and the horrible menacing
sneer
That lies on his lips as he cometh anear
In the night, in the night?
It Is over and ended, 'tis finished and
done,
And well was the web of the man
spider spun
But who was the winner and what has
he won
Who has won? Who has won? .
Clack Book.
Built br an Unknown Engineer.
One of the most remarkable1 wooden
bridges ever built in California. If not
in the United States, Is still standing
In a fair state of preservation, says the
San Francisco Call. It crosses Cerrltoa
creek on the stage road between San
Mateo and Pescadero, a few miles
north of San Gregorlo. The most strik
ing, thing about the appearance of this
bridge is its enormous height. The
center span crosses the creek ninety
feet above the water. It is not known
who the engineers were that built the
bridge, nor just what facilities they
had for doing, the work. The structure
was put up about 1858, and has re
mained In constant use ever since. It
is true the stages do not cross it now,
1 mmm . .
J.WI,. imBstji eera hti n oma tto
ii " " M. 11 V A T
' , , cuiarjy- e only effect
I I g years of servIce Is a slight
! f s e northern end. The bridge
swag at the northern end
rea"y omit or the trunks of red
wood trees that were hauled from the
forest about fifteen miles away. How
tney were placed in position is some-
tnmg past finding out, as there Is no
body living in the locality that remem
bers when the bridge was put up. And
indeed, it looks as if the Job would
puzzle an engineer of to-day, even
though he were given the use of all
modern appliances, which the others
did not have.
In,all there are seventy upright sup
ports in the bridge, and they must
have been stood on end entirely by the
use of ropes, pulleys and muscle. Those
in the center of the bridge are the high
est and the others get shorter and
shorter as they climb the bank on
either side. Very few braces ar u.d
so that the bridge presents the appear
ance of a series of straight poles readi
ng across the ravine. The country
in this vicinity is picturesque and wild
and the bridge does not loflk the least
bit out of place. In fact, it rather
blends into the landscape. It does not
present a very beautiful appearence,
nor does it look grotesque.
Hone Aspire, to Hither Things.
J3x-Alderman Peter R. Hopper of
Paterson, N. J., is the owner of a big
uay nurse mat occupies a room on the
first floor of a building in St. Louis,
formerly a dwelling. The second floor
Is usea as a carpenter shop. When Mr.
Hoppei went to hitch the animal up
one morning recently it was found
missing. He found the wagon and
harness in their usual place. There was
no trace of the thieves, relates the St
Louis Post-Dispatch.
While Mr. Hopper was wondering
what to do, a neighbor solved the mys
tery. Down the street he saw a horse
leisurely looking around from a sec
ond story window and apparently en
joying the novelty. 'Stairs four feet
wide connect the stable and the shop.
Mr Hopper went up them two at a time
and found his horse, which had
reached the second story in the samo
way as his master. The horse refused
however, to return that way. A cleated
incline was laid over the stairs but
still t it refused to budge. A strong
runway forty feet long was then con
structed from the second story direct
to the street, and the anlm.ii t
down. The descent was witnessed by
a large crowd.
Tomb, of the Apoatle.
All that now remains of the anostles
of Cbnst is in the following nirB-
Seven are sleeping the sleep of the Just
in Rorne, namely, St Peter, St. Philip,
St. James the Lesser, St Jude, St.
Bartholomew, St, Matthias and St. Si
mon. The remains of three He in the
kingdom of Naples St. Mathew at Sa
lerno, St Andrew at Amalfl and St.
Thomas at Ortona. One. St. James the
Greater, was burled In Spain, at St.
Jago de Compostella. Of the exact
whereabouts of the remains of St John
the Evangelist there Is much disDute.
says the Hartford Times.
St Mark and St Luke ara burled la
Cwmm
Italy, tns former at Venice and th lat
ter at Padua, St. Paul's remains ara
also believed to be in Italy. St. Peter
is buried in Rome in the church which
bears his name; so, too, are St. Simon
and St. Jude. St. James the Leaser Is
burfed In the Church of the Holj Apos
tles, St. Bartholomew In the church on
that Island in the Tiber which bears
his name. The "Legends of the Apos
tles" places the remains of St Matthias
under the altar of the renowned Bas
ilica.
Morlta Tront Ia Awake.
Morltz Pront, the young man who
slept for six weeks in Beth Israel hos
pital, is now at the home of Mrs.
Kroom, a magnetic healer. He is awaka
and Is slowly regaining his strength.
His appetite is normal, but he is too
weak to talk Or drt TnnrA than mnva
rrom his bod to a chair. He has no rec.
ollection of the time 'he spent at tha
hospital, and can tell nothing of his
sensations during that neriod. Perhan
when he gets better he will be able to
tell what he thought the physician
appnea tne electric battery to him and
stuck pins into his flesh in a vain eu-
ueavor to end his nap, but so far his
nurse has been unable to get any such
information from him. His pulse Is
'cijr wean, at times being hardly dls-
cerniDie. He is little more than skin
and bone, and his arms are pitifully
small and lean. At present his body
.0 wvereu witn a scaly eruption, which
Mrs. Kroom says is due to the diseasa
uciu5 iorcea out of his blood, bhe
claims to have effected the change in
ma 'condition by personal magnetism,
uob usea no drugs or medicines.
new iorK World.
The Secret of Belna- at
The secret of being at ease wberevei
you are Is a very simple one. It Is only
"" uui uuuK aoout yourself. Bash
juiueHa, awKwardness and clumsiness
u causeu oy what we call self-consciousness,
and as soon as we entirely
forget ourselves thflsa
girl who writes to me complains 'that
u . so tan ror her age that she can.
not. hAIn hatno
e uw.ig owKwara. rnn m
ment I enter a room," she says, "I look
auom to see if any other girl is as taU
as I am, and I am always the tallest
a perfect beanpole. Then I fancy that
everybody Is sorry for me nnii t
fix my attention on anything that ia
n7s un- " makes me quite wretched.
What shall I do?" In the first placa.
j,vul ueigni, ir you carry
yourself well and hold your head up
is a great advantage. Far from being
a thing to regret, it is something to
emu ot. xan, or short, fat and
dumpy, or thin and pale, let the young
girl never think of this when Bhe meeti
her friends. Instead, let her try her
very best to make the rest happy. If
there Is a girl in the room who Is a
stranger, or who seems not to be hav
ing a pleasant time, single her out and
entertain her. Your hostess will be
p witn this sort of unobtrusive
"ejy, u h is Kindly given.
A War About an Eteetra. '
In 1654 a Polish nobleman becaraa
UUUUi,OUB to i-ne laws of his country
UJ icmuu oi a crime. e lied to Sweden
whereupon John Cassimir, king of Pol
and, wrote to Charles Gustavus, klnir
"eul uemanaing tne extradition,
of the criminal. The king of Sweden,
on reading the dispatch, noticed that
his own name and titles were followed
by only two etceteras, whi'e the nama
of the king of Poland was followed by
three. The missing etceteras so en
raged the king of Sweden that he at
once declared war against Poland. This
war was carried on with great bitter
ness until 1660, when a peace was slga
ed at Oliva, near Dantzig.
A contemporary writer, Kochowsky.
poured out his lamentations on the war
in these terms: "How dear has this et
cetera been to us! With how many
lives have these two potentates paid
for those missing eight letters! With,
what streams of blood haa th ,n
of a few drops of ink been avenged'"
In article III of the treaty it was 'ex.
piicitiy Iald down that they?u;
shortening titles bv "atnat,,.
should still hold good, but that for the
future each of the two parties should
give the other three etceteras.-Tit-
UltSa
Ketunoltatlon from El.ctrlo shock.
OIJDr,ail,k f ,Grover- forean of a Rooh.
ester electric company, a few days as.
received a shock of nearly 3.000 volt
of electricity, and was resuscitated in
about seventy-five minutes. The reme
dy employed in reviving Grover was
discovered by Dr. d'Arsonval, a French
scientist, in 1887. It consists In re
storing artificial respiration by rhyth
mic movements of the arms and pres
sure of the chest. Dr. d'Arsonval's
system was also successfully applied in
restoring to life James E. Culter. who
was struck apparently dead by an elec
tric shock of 4,600 volts in Pittsfleld.
Mass., on November 21 last.
Kweet Revenge.
A man with a painful expression hla
face sat on a large box.
"Are you ill?" some one asked.
"No," replied the man.
"Have you lost anything?"
"Never had anything to lose.1
"What's the matter, then?"'
"I'm sitting on a wasp."
"Why don't you get up?"
"Well, that wuz my first impulse, but
I got to thinkln that I was hurtin' tha
wasp as badly as he was hurtin' me, so
I concluded to sit here a while."
Remembered.
Stokely I met Gibson in Chicago.
He spoke of you. Brokely Indeed!
He remembered you then? "Oh, yes;
said- he never would forget me."
"Then you owe him money., too?"
Yonkers Statesman.
Emma Nevada, the famous American
soprano, is filling successful engage
menu ia Italy.
Intense Suffering,
From
Dyspepsia and
Trouble.
Stomach
IoDtantlr Hollered and Permanently
Cured by Stuart Uynpepiiia Tablet.
A New Discovery. Hut ,ot a Patent Med
clne, Dr. Redwell relates an interesting ac
count of what he considers a remark-1
able cure of acute stomach trouble and
chronic dyspepsia by the use of the new
discovery, Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets.
He says: The patient was a man who
had suffered to my knowledge for years
with dyspepsia. Everything he ate
seemed to sour and create 'acid and
gases in the stomach; he had pains like
rheumatism in the back, shoulderblades
and limbs; fullness and distress after eat
ing, poor appetite and loss of flesh; the
heart became affected, causing palpita
tion and sleeplessness at night.
I gave him powerful nerve tonics and
blood remedies, but to no purpose. As
an experiment I finally bought a 50
cent package of Dr. Stuart's Dyspepsia
Tablets! a drug store and gave them
to him. Almost immediate relief was
given, and after he had used four boxes
he was to all appearances fully cured.
There was no more acidity or sour,
watery risings, no bloating after meals,
the appetite was vigorous, and he hss
gained between ten and twelve pounds of
solid, healthy flosh.
Although Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets
are advertised and sold in drug stores,
yet I consider them a most valuable ad
dition to any physician's line of reme
dies, as they are perfectly harmless and
can be given to children or invalids or
in any condition of the stomach with
perfect safety, being harmless and con
taining nothing but vegetable and fruit
essences, pure pepsin and Golden Seal.
Without any question they are the
safest, most effective cure for indigestion,
biliousness, - constipation and all de
rangements of the stomach, however
slight or severe.
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are made
by the Stnart Co. o' Marshall, Mich., and
sold by druggists everywhere at fifty
cents per pack aire.
Little book on stomach diseases mailed
free. Address Stuart Co., Marshall,
Mich.
II
SAVINGS"
Clothing; $.00 suits for $4.95
.Harness .tlO.00 Harness for $5.25
Sewing Machines $7,5
Watches ..tio.oo watches for $5.25
A catalogue full of the best valued ever offered
At factory prices. Hrnal 4 eenla In at am pa
for this vnlunbln book aod buy your Bunolles di
!tor tun
rectfri
Dept.
rect from the manufucturer. Address
H. C. LEECH & CO.,
,183-186 Dearborn Street, Chicago, 111.
A Hint to the Public.
Do you eat to live or live to eat. In
either case you will find what you want
at the Merchant's Dining Hall 11 & P,
street, Lincoln, Nebraska. It ia so cheap
you can't afford to go hungry. Try us
once and yon will always be our guest
while in the city, i-
Meals at all hours from 10 cents np.
O. E. Houck,
' Prop.
i
The
Will give you
Five Per Cent
Off if you clip
This Add Out
Elite
Studio
AND BRING IT ALONG
Thp Most
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Establishment in the City.
o
226 8. Eleventh St."
(j round Floor.
fhe Elite
Winger's Steel ffi!?
Mechanically
j constructed and
elmple. Awarded '
World's Fair m.
I ploma and MedaL
Tanks, Regulator and Grind,
era. K. H. wiwakr.
Eeowood Terraoa. Chicago. "
It la Just Wonderful
The time the Union Paciflo "Overlaid'
fast mail No. 3 makes to Ogden, Salt
Lake, Butte, Helena, Portland, rjeattls'
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Daily Meteor has the finest equipment
consisting of Pullman Palace and Uphol
stered Tourist Sleepers, Free Reclining
Chair Cars, and Diner. For full informa
tion call on or add reus E..B. 8loon,
General Agent, 1044 O St, or J. T. Maa
tin. C T. A.
OVEN WRP..FENCE
Brat m Kartk. Hnrwklrli. Bull'
trow, Pip ind Cfelrken-tlitut. With
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you can Amketio rials a dav for
12 to 20 cts. a Rod.
Urr 50 .tylett. i'atnlntrite Free.
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o I4. Ridgeville, Ind.
Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat
M. B. KETCHUM, M. 0., PHAR. D.
Specialty ytttlng spectacles without medlotn
tn the eye.
Offlesi Fosrtli Floor Front, Blcksrdi Blk, Lsseola
McNtrney & Eager
ATTORNEYS
AT LAW,
Room 8 Newman Blk.
1025 0 Street. .
Lincoln, Nebr.
T 2