The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, February 25, 1897, Image 7

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    Feb. 25, 1897
THE NERBASKA INDEPENDENT
THE MATE OF TUE HINDU
By OaptsJnlALPH DAVIS.
Copyright, 1896, by the Author.
CHAPTER XVII.
THE BEGINNING OF THE END.
It was broad daylight before we heard
from tho mutineers. Then , the whole
crowd of them swarmed out of the for
est and down on the beach, and in their
madness and desperation they were no
longer men. Their cursing was some
thing awful to hear, and but for the six
or eight great sharks cruising around in
the bay they would certainly have tried
to board the bark in the face of our fire
arms. They showered ua with pebbles,
and some of them even picked up hand
fuls of sand and flung them in our di
rection. It was a long quarter of an
hour before they cooled down, nd then
Ben Johnson stepped to tho front and
aid: '
"Aye, Captain Clark, you gave ns the
Blip last night, but we count ourselves
no worse off. Within a.week we'll have
the Hindu and the life of every man,
woman and child aboard !"
Having exhausted their rage, they re
tired to the shelter of the forest and
their camp. It was raining that morn
ing, and I cannot tell you how thankful
I was. Those men had been worked up
to that pitoh that they would have fired
the bushes without an hour's delay in
hopes to encompass the death of all
aboard the bark. They would ten times
rather have destroyed her than to see us
sail away. The last threat of Johnson's
could not make us any more vigilant,
for there was never a minute we were
off our guard. Even the children were
put on watch during the day.
So far as I could observe from aloft,
the mutineers stuok pretty closely to
their camp, while the quarrels among
them were frequent and violent In one
of the altercations one of the sailors
was killed, and through the glass I
tould plainly see them dig a shallow
Erave and roll him into it as if his body
ad been the carcass of a dog.
On the morning of the twenty-second
lay of our anchorage in the bay the sun
Dame up in a cloudless sky. The bad
weather was not yet over, but this was
lull or break in it I came on duty at
f o'clock that morning, and as soon as
reaching my accustomed perch aloft I
made out a brig, with her sails aback
ind only about a mile away to the west
Che signal flag which the mutineers had
kept flying had evidently attracted at
tention. From the number of .boats on
the davits I believed the brig to be a
Whaler ; but, if so, she must have blown
Inshore or had some business I could
Hot well reason out. She showed no
tolors, but I took her to be a German
tr Dane. -I
turned my glass on the camp of the
mutineers and saw them all running
dowri to the west shore in great haste.
I hailed the deck and told Captain (Jlark
what was going on, and he at once came
up to me, bringing the British ensign
and a rifle. Just as he got up a small
boat with four men in her pulled away
from the brig toward the shore. At the
same moment we saw such of the mu
tineers as wore the uniforms of convicts
secrete themselves in the thicket, while
the sailors were pushed to the front
"Ralph, we must block that game,"
said the captain after a look through
the glass. "If they take off those men,
the brig will be seized, her crew mur
dered, and the mutineers wll make off.
I'll set the ensign flying, and do yon
load and fire the rifle as fast as you
can."
The boat's crew had got within half
a cable's length of the beach before our
signals were seen and heard. They could
see our flag over the tree tops, and the
reports of the rifle must have been very
distinct The boat was held steady for
three or four minutes, and then the brig
signaled for her return. I saw a man
going aloft with a glass and was satis
fied that he could see me and would
make such a report as would stop the
boat She pulled back to the brig, and
then came pulling along the west shore
until she opened the bay and got sight of
us. We signaled for them to come in,
but they were evidently afraid of a
" trap, and when we lowered a boat to
pull out to them they at once took to
their oars and rowed for the frig. We
hoped her captain might investigate,
but he evidently became alarmed at
their report and swung his yards and
made sail. Had he come in to ns, he
might have lent ns a few men to navi
gate the Hindu down the coast, but in
driving him off we had at least balked
the plans of the mutineers.
From the lookout aloft I saw them
return to their camp. They were wran
gling and quarreling, and many of them
stopped to shake their fists in the direc
tion of the bark. We expected another
visit from them en masse, but they did
not appear. About midafternoon the
weather shut down again, accompanied
by rain, and aboard ship we settled
down into the old routine. We were
daily looking for the appearance of a
man-of-war, and I think every man of
11s felt more hopeless and discouraged
that night than at any time since we
had been embayed. Yon can therefore
imagine our joyful surprise when, an
hour after midnight, we heard the boom
of guns on the open ocean to the south.
That signified that the long expected re
lief ship had arrived. From the moment
we got the report of her first gun up to
daylight we were up and down and on
the watch. We could make out her
lights and knew that she was lying to
for the day to break.
It seemed to us as if daylight would
never come, but when it finally did it
was a glad sight which met our eyes.
There was the old Endeavor lying out
there, carrying forty odd guns and a crew
of over 200 men, and we had only made
her out when a boat left her side and
oame pulling into the bay. Captain
Clark was taken off in her to make a re-
Rlpans T&bulea cure bad breath.
y.'l . VI UUl L U.T, MJU AJ 119 tU -
rival on board the Hindu her captain
sent ns off four sailors and six marines.
The latter were to relieve us of our
guard duty and the former to help us to
get things shipshape preparatory to run
ning out of the bay. Just before noon
Captain Clark returned in company
with the first lieutenant of the man-of-war,
whose name was Robson. He had
heard the particulars of our story, and
after introducing himself he rubbed his
hands in anticipation and said:
"But it's all right now. Of course
you'll get help to take the bark to her
port of destination, and of course we'll
soon be after these fellows who have
cansed all this trouble. They must know
of our arrival, and I'm looking for them
to come down and offer to surrender and
take their punishment "
At that very moment though we did
not suspect it, the entire gang of muti
neers was concealed in the bushes near
by. They no longer hoped to capture the
Hindu, but Ben Johnson had worked
them up to such a pitch of desperation
that they were burning for revenge and
had armed themselves with large peb
bles from the western shore. As soon as
we had the marines aboard we carried
our private firearms to the cabin, and
Lieutenant Robson and others of us
were strolling about the decks, when the
mutineers suddenly sprang out and be
gan to bombard us with stones. Some
of the marines were below, and those
on deck had to wait to load their mus-
J sow them all running down to the west
shore.
rets, and for a couple of minutes our
assailants had it all their own way. As
we were driven to shelter the lieutenant
was struck on the head and rendered
senseless, while none of the others of us
esoaped injury. As soon as the marines
opened fire the mutineers retreated, but
even with muskets leveled at his breast
Ben Johnson stood np and defiantly
said:
"You may land your whole crew, but
you cannot take us alive I We'll die
fighting before you shall ever lay hands
on one of ns!"
When the officer recovered, he was
for going on a man hunt at once, but as
he went off to the Endeavor to make his
report the rain began to pour down
again, and nothing could be done. The
wind was fair for getting the Hindu out
of the bay, however, and after dinner
four more sailors were sent us, and we
lifted her anchor and sailed out and
around to a good anchorage on the east
side. Then Captain McComber of the
man-of-war came aboard in person. He
had met the merchant vessel at sea, and
he was on his way to Adelaide, but had
been obliged to make that port, and had
also been delayed by heavy weather. A
full and circumstantial account of the
mutiny had to be written out and at
tested by every passenger, a survey held
to ascertain damages to ship and cargo,
and the legal proceedings were not fin
ished for four and twenty hours.
Everything depended on Captain Mo
Oomber's report to the government au
thorities, and you can well believe that
at least Captain Clark and I were on
the ragged edge until he had finished
his business and was pleased to say that
we had done all that could be expected
under the circumstances. Had the ship's
doctor been living, he would certainly
have been held legally answerable for
the outbreak, but be was gone, and the
best thing to do was to recapture, such
prisoners as were alive and make our
way into port. Before making a move
against the mutineers we fixed up
wooden cages or partitions to hold the
convicts, and it was proposed to give ns
plenty of marines to guard them on our
passage down the coast. Two men were
detailed from the Endeavor to act as
cooks on board the Hindu, and after we
had got washed and scrubbed and had a
few regular meals it seemed like living
again. Captain McComber was so dila
tory about moving against the mutineers
that I spoke of it to Captain Clark, who
turned on me with a wink and replied :
"Never you mind, Ralph. If it be so
that they build a raft and all go off to
gether and get drowned, we shan't
have no more bother with them, and it
will be good riddance to bad rubbish."
I went aloft with the glass for the
first time in three days to take a look at
them, but they were not raft building.
There was plenty of timber on the
island, and the sailors among them
could have made a stout raft without
trouble, but to put to sea in such
weather on anything they could con
struct meant disaster before they were
clear of the land. I saw a few of them
lounging about the tents as cool and un
concerned as if their necks were not en
circled with halters, and I greatly won
dered what would be the ontoome of the
affair.
You would have thought that among
so many men at least one of them would
have played the sneak on his compan
ions and come down to the shore and
made terms for himself by furnishing
all the information he could. Not one
of them appeared, however. If any one
was so minded, he was doubtless de
terred by the threats of the others. They
were watching one another, and had
any one attempted to slip away he
"Would have fared badly.
I think Captain MoComber had an
Idea that the men would revolt against
Rlpans Tabmles cure dizziness.
DOCTORS
Searles
& Series,
BPKCIA LISTS IN
NEKVOUH,
CHRONICA
PRIVATE
DISEASES.
Weak Men
Sexunlly.
All private Diseas
es and disorders
of men treated
by mail. Con
sultation free.
SYPHILIDS,
0ord for )if and the poison thorough-
y cleansed from the system. Piles, Fis
tula and Rectal Ulcers, Hydrocele and
Varicocele permanently and successfully
mred. Method new and unfailing.
Stricture and Gleet Cured
it home by new method without pain or
utting. Call on or address with stamp.
Or. Searles & Searles.
HQ S. 14th St., Omaha, Neb.
Johnson and bring him to us tied hand
and foot, thus throwing themselves on
the mercy of the court which would try
them when wo readied port, but noth
ing of the sort came to pass. They were
sullen and deliaut, and it really seemed
as if they might have some plan in view
by which they hoped to escape the hunt
which they could reason out would be
surely fa ade for them.
I told you in one of the opening chap
ters that Mr. Williams, Mary's father,
was an old man. He was over 60, and,
though hale and hearty at the beginning
of the voyage, and even up to the date
of our first trouble, the mental and phys
ical strain pulled him down very fast.
He held himself almost by will power
until the arrival of the man-of-war, and
then there was a callapse. On the sec
ond day we had the surgeon of the En
deavor aboard, but he had little encour
agement to offer. Just at night on the
fourth day, without even his wife or
daughter realizing how near his end he
was, he died in his bed, passing away
so quietly that they still thought he
slept
Farmers, Attention!
Try our Golden Gem seed wheat.
A No. 1 hard variety of the Red River
Valley, produced by careful cultivation
and study, producing a flour unexcelled
by any known variety.
We believe this wheat can be success
fully grown throughout the wheat-producing
states and retain its fine milling
and great yielding qualities.
Yields of 25 to 40 bushels per acre
have been repeatedly raised. This grain
stands up better, on occount of its
strong growth, than most any other va
riety. We have a limited quantity of Golden
G' m to place on the market at the fol
lowing prices: Purchasers expense, 7
pounds, $1; 15 pounds, $2; 30 pound,
3. Remit by express, money or poHtal
order. When ordering give name of
nearest express and postofflce and your
name in full. English & Co.,
Fertile, Polk Co., Minn.
"NIGGER DOG8."
How They Ware Trained Before tho
War.
Before the war, when I was a small
boy, in the country in which I was
raised, in east Texas, the county that
had more slaves than any other county
in the state, there were two or three
packs of what in those days were called
"nigger dogs," says the Galveston
News. They were the same breed of
hounds used by deer hunters. One no
table pack belonged to John Dever
eau'x, who was overseer on a planta
tion a few miles from the county site
of the county. John Devereaux never
failed to catch the negro he went after
if he got to the quarters the negro had
left in twenty-four to thirty hours af
terward, and 30 It was with all the
"nigger dogs" of those days. The
question is, why were the packs of
those days so much better than the
packs owned by sheriffs now? The
only answer Is that it was lnthe train
ing. '
In those days If a man wanted a pack
of "nigger dogs" he got him five or six
puppies of good blood and before they
were weaned he would begin . their
training. The first lessons were to
make a little negro run and set the
puppies after him around the yard.
They would run after him by sight
and if he dodged out of the way they
Immediately, little sucklings as they
were, hunted for his track. This was
kept up every day and several times
a day until they got old enough to fol
low a trail pretty well, and then the
little negro would be given a good
start of them and they were put on his
track for a mile or two's run, Increas
ing the distance gradually as they de
veloped until they were grown, by
Which time they were well trained to
follow a human track. The training
did not stop then, but every day they
were still exercised.
They were always kept up close, so
that when they were taken out for a
run they would be eager and fresh for
the (to them) sport. After they were
put Into the service for which they
had been trained and had been on a
few hunts for their human prey of one,
two, or three days, as some of the old
chases lasted that long, they were not
so assiduously trained. But even then
they were given two or three runs of
five to ten miles, a week. This is an
absolute essential- lest they become
worthless.
Windmill Cheap
We have on hand a crniui now ninrimill
Steel tower, with anchor posts complete,
if men we win sen at a Dargain lor cash,
or will take a cow for part payment.
J. I. M. oWIGART,
Lincoln, Neb.
The Surprised Avowal.
Whoa one wont It ipoken,
When one look yon se,
When you take tn token,
Howe'er so (light It be,
The enffe's twit is brokn,
The happy bird U tree.
There is no unsaying
That love-etartled wordi
It were Idle praying
It no more to be heard 1
Yet, Its law obeying.
Who shall blame the bird?
What traits the mending
Where the cage was weak?
What avails the sending
Far, the bird to seek,
When every oloud is landing
Wings toward yonder peakf
Thrush, they eould recapture
You to newer Wrong,
H"w could vou adapt your
Strain to suit the throng?
Gone would be the rapture
' ' Of unlmpritioned song.
Bobert Underwood Johnson, In Century.
Preserving Palms.
One of the greatest palm fanciers in
London Is said to have discovered that
the leaves should be washed, not with
pure water, but milk and water, which
has a wonderful effect of preserving
them and preventing the appearance
of the brown spots which are eo dis
figuring. The Glass Eye.
"I suppose," said the man in the yel
low ulster, "it doesn't hurt your glass
eye when you get anything in It?"
"Does it look as If it wduid ever be
likely to have a pane in it? responded
the other, frigidly. And he gave him
the glassy stare. Indianapolis Journal,
, ' .
Eyerybody Bars 80.
Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most
wonderful medical discovery of the age.
pleasant and refreshing to the taste, act
gently and positively on kidneys, liver
and bowels, cleansing the entire system.
dispel colds, cure headache, fever habit
ual constipation and biIIounnens. Please
buy and try a box of C. C. C. today 10.
25, 50 cents. Sold and guaranteed to
cure by all druggists.
ENGLAND'S SEAL.
tl Is Great
In Size as Well as
Name.
Many people doubtless know thai
apon the accession of a new monarch
to the throne of England a new seal it
struck, and the old one is cut into
four pieces and deposited in the tower
of London. In former times the frag
ments of these great seals were dis
tributed among certain poor people ol
religious houses. When her majesty
Queen Victoria ascended the throne ol
England, the late Benjamin "Wyon, R.
A., the chief engraver of her majesty'!
mint, designed the beautiful work of
the present great seal of England.
The details of the design are: Ob
verse, an equestrian figure of the.
queen, attended by a page, her majes'
ty wearing over a habit a flowing and
sumptuous robe, and a collar of the
Order of the Garter. In her rleht hand
she bears the scepter, and on her head
la nlar.ert a reeal tiara. The attend-
ant page, with his bonnet in his hand,
looks up to the queen, who is graceful
ly restraining the impatient charger,
which is richly decorated with plumes
and trappings. The legend, "Victoria
del Gratia Britainlarum Reeina. Fidel
Defensor," is engraved in Gothic let-
ters, the spaces between the words be-
ins filled with heraldic roses. The re-
verse side of the seal shows the queen,
royally robed and crowned, holding in
her right hand the scepter, and in her
left the orb, seated upon a throne be
neath a niched Gothic canopy; on each
tide is a figure of Justice and Religion;
and in the exergue the royal arms and
crown, and the whole encircled by a
wreath or border of oak and roses. I
The seat itself is a silver mold In
two parts, technically called a pair of
dies. When an impression is to be
taken or cast the parts are closed to
receive the melted wax, which Is
poured in, so that when the hard im
pression is taken from the dies the
ribbon or parchment is neatly affixed
to it. The impression of the seal Is
six inches In diameter and three
fourths of an Inch in thickness. Har
per's Round Table.
Your Eyes.
Oh. praise me not with your Hps, Dear One
I Though vour tender words I prize;
Bjnt dearer bv far Is the soulful gaze
Of your eyes, your beautif ol eyes,
Your tender, loving eyes.
Oh, chide me not with your lips, Daar One
Though I cause your bosom efKhsj
You can make repontar.ee deeper far
By your ad, reproving eyes,
Your sorrowful, troubled eyes.
Y7ords,'at the best, are but hollow soundsj
Above in the Beaming skies,
tho constant stars say never a word,
But only smile with their eyes
Smile on with their lustrous eyes.
Then breathe no vow with your lipi,Dear One
On the winged wind speech flies.
But I rend the truth of your noble heart
In your soul.ul speaking eyes
In your deep and beautiful eyes.
Ella Wheeler Wlloox.
No fit after first day's use of Dr
Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Free f 2
trial bottle and treatise sent by Dr.
Kline, 981 Arch street, Philadelphia, Pa.
tf
The Largest Boiler Plate.
The largest steam boiler plate in the
world was recently turned out at the
Knipp works, in Essen, Germany. Its
dimensions are as follows: Length, 39
feet; width, 11 feet; thickness, 1
inches; surface, 429 square feet, and
weight, 37,600 pounds. Compared with
this gigantic steel plate the one re
cently rolled by the Stockton Malleable
Iron Company of England sinks into
insignificance. This plate, which was
announced by the makers as the largest
ever turned out in England measures:
Length, 74 feet; width, 6 feet, thick
ness, three-quarters of an inch. Its sur
face measures nearly 370 square feet
and it weighs 12,300 pounds.
NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA.
A CURE FOB IT.
Not a Patent Care-all, Nor a Moden Mir
acle, but Simply a Rational Cure for Dys
pepsia. In these days of humbuggery and de
ception, the manufacturers of patent
medicines, as a rule, seem to think their
medicines will not sell unless they claim
that it will cure every disease under the
the sun. And they never think of leav
ing out dyspepsia and stomach troubles.
They are sure to claim that their nos
trum is absolutely certain to cure every
dyspeptic and he need look no further.
In the face of these absurd claims it is
refreshing to note that the proprietors
ol btuart s dyspepsia 1 ablets Dave care
fully refrained from making any undue
claims or false representations regarding
the merits of this most excellent remedy
for dyxpepsia and stomach troubles.
They make but one claim for it,and that
is, that for indigestion and various
stomach troubles Stuart's Dyspepsia
Tablets is a radical cure. They go no
farther than this and any man or woman
suffering from ' indigestion, chronic or
nervous dyspepsia, who will give the
remedy a trial will find that nothing is
claimed for.it, that the facts will not fully
Buxtain.
It is a modern discovery, composed of
harmless vegetable ingredients accept
able to the weakness of the most delicate
stomach. Its great success in curing
stomach troubles is due to the fact that
the medical properties are such that it
will digest whatever wholesome food is
taken into the stomach, no matter
whether the stomach is in good working
order or not. It rests the overworked
organ and replenishes the body, the
blood, the nerves, creating a healthy
appetite, gives refreshing sleep and the
blessings which always accompany a
good digestion and proper assimilation
of food.
In using Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets
no dieting is required. Simply eat plenty
of wholesome food and take these Tab
lets at each meal, thus assisting and
resting the stomach which rapidly gains
its proper digestire power, when the
Tablets will be no longer required.
Nervous Dyspepsia is simply a condi
tion which some portion or portions of
the nervous system are not properly
nourished. Good digestion invigorates
the nervous system and every organ in
the body.
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are sold by
all druggists at 50 cents per package.
They are manufactured by the Stuart
Chemical Co., Marshall, Mich.
Any druggist will tell you it gives uni
versal satisfaction.
MONUMENT TO WH1TTIEB.
A Figure to Inspire the Sculptor Agi
tator and Poet.
It may not be out of place to suggest
that If there Is any American poet
who deserved the statue of a man of
action not the seated or half-recumbent
effigy of the thinker or philoso
pher, but the figure in bronze standing
I in me auituae or lnteueciuai cuiuuui
, with the world that poet Is Whlttler,
says the Atlantic. No figure, It would
seem, could more readily inspire the
sculptor, especially if the man be taken
in the prime of his life. Every one
who has described him at that epoch
has left en account of most impressive
personality. Col. T. W. Hlgglnson saw
In him, at 35, "a man of striking per
sonal appearance: tall, slender, with
olive complexion, black hair, straight
'Mack eyebrows, brilliant eyes, and an
oriental, Semitic cast of countenance."
Not 111 moment for the sculptor's
consideration would be that of Whit
tier's appearance at the anti-slavery
convention at Philadelphia, In 1833,
when, according to Mr. J. Miller Mc
Kim, who was with him, his figure,
"with his dark frock-coat, with stand
ing collar, black flashing eyes and
black beard," was noticeable;. and if it
be objected that it should be the poet,
and not the agitator, who would be
thus represented, the answer may sure
ly be made that the ethical basis was
never lacking in Whlttier'o verse, and
that it Is as the poet moving his fellow
countrymen by his works to humaner
feelings that this poet at least should
be depicted.
Hand.
Miss Citybred Where is the mllk
maldf Farmer Waterbury Well I don't
mind tellln' ye; a good bit of It is made
right here, Miss Citybred.
Strangers Now.
Daisy Beli What a remarkable col
lection of curiosities your husband
has. Was he in the business when he
married you? ,
Mrs. Sourweln Oh, yes.
Daisy Bell That's what I thought
lUlllliUL.il sIm ormske ofotimn.
Uiuswlnd mill, and srind sli kiixls of
(rain. A wotidorfnl machine wAUo
msnafsHniwrot Html Wind Mill.
E. B. WINGER, SUtian R. CHICAGO.
Br.Reynoldc
Will visit any part of the
state to perform opera
tions or in consultation
with your family physi
cian.
PHONES 6S5 AND Co.
OFFICE BOOMS
17,18,19, Burr ML, Lincoln, Ksb.
UNDERTAKERS
81 8.
llta gt,
Lincoln,
Nebraska.
Telephones
Office, 470,
Res-471.
A. D. OTJTLE
E.T. KOBKBtl
SULPHO-SALINE
,
Bath House and Sanitarium
CoraerMthAMSta,
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA.
Open at All Honrs Day and Nigbt
All Forma of Baths.
Turkish, Russian, Roman, Elsstrl:.
ma Spsstal attratloa to th appueatlm af
RATURAL SALTWATER BATHi
srsral Mas stroasw tkaa ssa water.
Rheumatism, Skis, Btoad and Ntrrsms Dts
mis, LItst and Kldnsy TrocMss aad Car sals
UlawnU ars trsatsd neosssiauy.
Sea Bathing
j b salorsd at all ssasons la ear larg SALT
IWlslUINO POOL, MiHt !, I to U tsst dssa,
sU4 1 nitons tsaparatnn of M dsgiasa.
Drs. M. B. & J. O. Everett,
If aaagtauj rfcyslaiaaa.
Kim ballS
' FOB C4T4X00U1 ARB
On High Grade Pianos and Or
gans. $100.00 new Organs,
148; $400.00 new pianos,
$185. BeliablaQoodis
Easy Terms, from
the only whole
sale musio
. ... house ..
NEBRASKA.
AGENTS WANTED. Address
Gen'l Ag't A.. IIOSPEJr.
1613 Douglas St., Omaha, Netr,
The
Elite
Studio
Will give you
Five Per Cent
OS if you clip
This Add Out
AND BRING IT ALONG
The Most
Popular Art
Establishment in the City.
226 8. Elerenth SUTUQ PjtQ
Ground Floor. I IIC CHIC
Every Thursday evening a tourist
sleeping car for ' Salt Lake City, Saa
Francisco and Los Angeles leaves Omar
ha and Lincoln via the Burlington
route. It is carpeted, upholstered in
rattan; has spring seats and haoks, and
is provided with curtains, bedding,
towels, soap, eto. An experienced ex
cursion conductor and a uniformed
Pullman porter accompany it through
to the Pacific' coast.
While neither an expensively furnished
aor as fine to look at as a palace sleeper
it is just as good to ride in. Second
class tiokets are honored, and the pries
of a berth, wide enough and big enough
for two is only $5.
For a folder giving foil particulars sail
at the B. & M. depot or city office, cor
ner Tenth and O streets.
Q. W. Bonnbll, C. P. and T. A.
Rlpans Tabules: one gives relief.
p MAIL So
PC V. CD A.
Drop Us a Card