March 4 1897 THE NERDASKA INDEPENDENT V n ar it i I i MATE OF THE HINDD By Captain BaLPH DAVIS. Jopyright, 1806, by the Author. I CHAPTER XVIII. IE FINISH OF A SAJL0B8 STOBT. I the morning of the sixth day after jrival of the man-of-war Mr. Wil j was buried on the island. There another break in the weather, and as a fair day. About 100 people I ashore, and of this number about fere armed to be in readiness for 'move the mutineers might make. hat the death of the poor old man a sad blow to wife and daughter, XI. J that they had the full sympathy of every one aboard, you cannot doubt. In tzy own mind I had planned that when we reached port I would ask him for fjl:j, and perhaps remain ashore to fcr'lholdof the new life with him. f ; IT, T that he was dead it was not likely : C'J the survivors would want to remain f la Oat f aroff land, and of course mar ls rice could' not be thought of for months i' to come. I The men dug a -grave on the east I 1L3 of the island, and, with the chap- fc'iof the man-of-war conducting the tcirices and all the officers ashore, we tr led the poor old man whose love and tzJcitude for his daughter had given Mm a grave begirt by the sea. I spoke nob words of comfort and solace to the Widowed and fatherless as came to me, and in the presence of her mother Mary pot her hand on my arm and said : . : "Ralph, it was known to father and mother that we loved each other. That we have you to comfort us and depend 00 in this hour relieves the anxiety if it does not soften the blow. Our future will be guided entirely by you." ' Directly after dinner Captain Mo Oomber began to land a force of men on the beach, and Captain Clark and I both went ashore to offer our servioee. While , the courts in England had cleared both Mary and I of the charge which had sent Ben Johnson into penal servitude, : both of us felt that our characters had been stained. The only thing to clear 5 as was a voluntary oonfesteion from Ben 4 Johnson. I stated my idea of this mat- ' ter to Captain McComber, and after a little reflection he replied : is . "Yes, that is what I wish you could ' get, but I am not hopeful. From the de- fiant attitude of the mutineers I am j, ready to believe that they will suffer us j to shoot them down before they surren- der. Johnson is likely to bs the very 1 first one to fall.' I shall send out a flag of truce and give them one hour in which to surrender. If they do not come in, we shall proceed to hunt them down. A sergeant of marines, accompanied by six men, was at once dispatched to the camn of the mutineers. I did not go along, but I can tell youvhat hap pened. Of sailors, guards and convicts at the outset there had been about 80 men. Of this number 43 were left The marines found these men drawn up in line in front of their tents. Most of them were convicts, and, having lived like wild beasts for so many days, a more villainous looking lot of men one never beheld. Not a gesture was, made nor a shout uttered. They waited in si lence until the sergeant had advanced I within a few yards and delivered his message. Then Ben Johnson stepped $ out and said : "Go back to your Captain MoComber and tell him that not a man of us will give in. To be captured and taken into port and tried means the hangman's noose for every one 01 us. we win aie f rieht herel Begin your man hunt as ' soon as you willl We have no firearms, but the fun will not be all on your i side!" When the sergeant returned and re- " norted. the captain separated his men ' into three detachments. Each detach "k ment carried a supply of handcuffs, and the orders were to take the mutineers J alive if possible. Captain Clark and I , volunteered with the first company or f detachment We might have been ex cused, but as the convicts had escaped from us we felt legally and morally bound to aid as far as we could in their capture. Stretched out through the woods, but till in touch wfcth each other, the three ... ' . X. XI detainments movea to w uunu, About two-thirds of the distance to camp the detachment on the extreme left was suddenly attacked as they forced their way through the thickets by the whole body of mutineers, who were armed with stout clubs, and many had lashed their sheath knives to long poles to use as lances. As they attacked the marines and sailors the mutineers cried: "No quarter! No quarter!" They fought to kill, nor would one of them surrender when called upon. The fight did not last over five minutes, but in that time three marines were beaten or stabbed to death, two others badly hurt and four convicts were killed. When the mutineers retreated, they car ried off four muskets and the ammuni tion belonging to them and tookrefugo in a broken but thickly wooded piece of ground beyond their camp. Seeing that he had underestimated their strength and desperation, Captain McComber sent aboard for a mountain howitzer and a supply of shells, and as we advanced again the bursting missiles were thrown into the coverts ahead. Twioe during the afternoon we tried to onen communication with the fellows by means of a flag of truce, hoping they had had enough of fighting and would surrender, but each time the flag was jadvanced they fired on the bearer. At sundown, when we returned aboard our respective vessels, we had lost four men killed and three wounded, and we had killed eight of the. mutineers, all con victs. The last four had keen killed by shells from the howitzer. Nearly all the provisions taken from ,the Hindu when we set the men ashore four weeks previously ha. been wasted or consumed Before retiring to the beach we destroyed what was left and burned the camps, and as there was no j longer any wild fruit on the trees the fellows would have to fight us next day on empty stomachs. Captain McComber had decided to land a larger force of men and more guns and give the muti neers no further show. By having men enough to stretch across the island the defenders must at last be driven to the open beach on the north shore. When the bark was brought around to the east side of the island, she was anchored about a mile from the beach. The sailors who had assisted us and three of the marines were then with drawn, while Haskell, the second mate and myself stood guard at night in ro tation with the marines. On this night, after our battle ashore, we went on duty at midnight I took the poop deck, the mate the waist, and Haskell the bows. Little or no danger was apprehended now. The wind that night was from the west, thas giving us the lee of the island and smooth water. I was greatly fatigued after the day's excitement, and at 1 o'clock in the morning I committed what was little short of a crime. I Bat down and fell asleep. I did not realize that I had even closed my eyes, but I had slept for half an hour, when Mary Williams, wno knew that I was on duty, dressed her self and came out to have a word with me about her mother. She saw me asleep, with my chin on my breast, and, just climbing over the rail by means of a rope which had been left by Haskell as he was putting on a bit of paint that day, was Ben Johnson. It was a star light night, and she identified him at first glance. He had swum off to us to strike a blow for revenge before the fight of the morrow, whioh he could well reason would be the extermination of the gang. Between his teeth he held his knife. Across my knees was a rifle. Had Mary delayed to call out for help, the villain would have been upon us both.' Without an instant's delay and realizing the situation in a flash, she sprang forward, seized the rifle and fired upon the man as his bare feet touched the deck, only eight feet irom wnere 1 sat The report of the gun and his yell of pain and rage were blended together, and in a minute the whole snip was alarmed. Johnson had been shot in the breast We went off for the surgeon, and when he had made an examination he plainly told the ruffian that he had but a few hours to live. The man had not uttered a word after being shot, but the looks he had given Mary and I proved the feeling of murder in bis heart. At first I had some hopes that hejpight make a confession, but when he looked at me With eyes gleaming like those of a wounded tiger's I realized that it was useless to address him. And yet all I had hoped for came about, after all. The desperate man died by inches. As the hand of death clutched at his throat the little good in him came to the surfaoe. An hour before he breathed his last he sent for Captain Clark and Mary. He begged the girl's forgiveness for all that had passed, and then made a dying statement which completely exonerated us both. . It was taken down in writing and duly witnessed, and, though he wanted nothing to do with me, and even spoke bitterly of me to the last, I felt that I could forgive him. After making the confession he gave it as his opinion that the mutineers would surrender after learning of his death. but his hope was that they would die , fighting. When morning came the body of Ben Johnson was taken ashore for burial There was but scant ceremony in laying him away to rest, and, when he had been covered in, a white flag was sent forward and the mutineers informed of his death and commanded to surrender. They She identified him at first glance. answered with shouts of defiance. The events of that day caused much talk in England and Australia when put into print. Captain McComber gave orders to exterminate the gang to the last man. All day long we marched back and forth across the island, and all day long two pieces of artillery were busy shelling the mutineers out of the densest thickets. Half an hour before sundown the last man of the gang was driven to the open beach. He had been wounded, but he carried a club in his hand and was still defiant When he refused to surrender, we would have fired upon him, but he walked down to a ledge of rocks, made his way out to the break ing surf, and with a shout of contempt for us he plunged in, to be seen no more. If wave and tide brought his body to the sands later on, we were not there to find it They had said they would die to the last man, and they had kept their word. Need I tell you that the Hindu, with the help of the men loaned us by the generous Captain McComber, finally reached her port of destination? There was a legal investigation, of course, but we came out of it all right, and "the government was held to its contract While we were detained in Australia for this investigation Mrs. -Williams passed away, leaving Mary an orphan among strangers. That Bhe did not suf fer for companionship and care you will readily believe. When the Hindu was ready to sail for home, she was one of the 80 passengers, and despite her be reavement there were many pleasant features about the voyage. I am an old man now, and my aged DOCTORS Searles & Se arles, SHKCU LISTS IN NEKVOUS. CHRONICA PRIVATE DISEASES. Weak Men Sexually. All private Diseas es and disorders of men treated by mail. Cou- sulfation free. SYPHILL1S, Cured for life and the poison thorough y cleansed from the system. Piles, Fis tula and Rectal Ulcars, Hydrocele and Varicocele permanently and successfully rured. Method new and unfailing. Stricture and Gleet Cured at home by new method without pain or utting. Call on or address with stamp. Or. Searles & Searles. 119 S. 14th St., Omaha, Neb. wife bends over me as I write these few lines. I long ago gave up the sea at tne ish nf hnr whn has made mv life hap- dv and I told you in the beginning not to expect too mucn irom one wnooo u-1 ncation was flecked by the Irotn 01 tne sea. THB END. Everybody Sari So. Cascareta 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 tne enure system, dispel colds, cure headache, fever habit ual constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a box of C. C. C. today 10, 25, 50 cents. Sold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists. ' WANTED TO BE A MAN. Th Vonnar Woman Who Want to CM- cago In Men'i Clothing-. Miss Hettie Dickey, the young lady from Delaware who recenty visited Chi cago In men's clothing, has told the com plete story of her adventures. It ap pears that for years she has had an overwhelming desire to be a man. The Impulse to see the world as a man sees It grew upon her to such an extent that she Anally decided to leave home. She secreted a suit of her brother's clothes In the woodshed, and soon after noon on March 24 she slipped quietly into the shed and put on masculine attire. Then she walked calmly out of the yard in front of her home to the road lead ing to Klamensl station on the Baltl more & Ohio railroad. It was then about 1:30 o'clock in the afternoon. She followed the tracks three miles without meeting anyone. Then twe men came In sight, and, for fear of de tection, she turned aside into a field and made her wav to Newark, where she took the 3 o'clock train for Baltl more. By this time her parents were searching the country for her In the im mediate vicinity of their home. Keach Ing Baltimore, she stopped for an hour. Then she bought a ticket to Chicago, and left on the 7 o'clock train over the Baltimore & Ohio railroad. 'All the money she had on leaving home was 120. She reached Chicago on the night of March 26 with $3.48 in the pocket of her trousers. Her original Intention was to go to Denver or San Francisco, In both of those places she has relatives. After her arrival in the Windy City she was at a loss to know where to lay her head. She was afraid to go to a lndclnp'-hniia in sha nnnplnded to walk ! fhe streets rather than run the risk of beins detected. For two nights she tramped the sideWalks of Chicago be fore finding a place of shelter. At last she found a big lumber yard near the lake, and there she spent five nights among the piles of lumber. What little food she ate during this time she pur chased at cheap restaurants. In all of these she seated herself at tables along side men. For three nights she occupied a corner in a box car standing on a side track of the Illinois Central railroad. One of the employes discovered her and demanded an explanation of her pres ence. She maintained her fortitude and succeeded in escaping arrest. She went on in this way for two weeks until, over come by exhaustion, she fell 111, and was removed to the Cook County Hos pital. The incessant tramping and the clumsiness of her brother's shoes caused severe injuries to her feet. Upon re moval of the shoes at the hospital flesh came off with them. A diagnosis of her case was made by the physicians in charge. While making an examination of her lungs he discovered her sex. She told him her name was Hettie Dicker- son, but subsequently admitted that it was Hettie Dickey, and that tier home was in Stanton, Del. After listening to her narrative the doctor notified her parents. On April 24, one month from the time of her disappearance, she wrote to her mother, describing her sufferings and asked forgiveness. She reached home a week ago, and, with the excep tion of a slight feebleness, she was none the worse for the experience, 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 Qcm to place on the market at the fol lowing prices:' Purchasers expense, 7 pounds, $1; 15 pounds, f 2; 80 pounds, f 3. Remit by express, money or postal order. When ordering give name of nearest express and postoffice and your name in full. English &, Co., Fertile, Polk Co., Minn. Rlpans Tabales cure dizziness. MHMSk.vl MEDICAL AND ARViJ RED TAPE. KoglUb MlHtary Surgeons Who Md Thcaoaalvea KMIraloo. Considerable controversy still con tinues to be waged with reference to the titles of the army 'doctors, says the London Navy and Military Record. In Its zeal for the cause which it has so much at heart, the British Medical Journal has dropped into a funny error. Deploring "the sad incongrui ties," our contemporary refers to two supposed army surgeons, belonging to the Royal Sussex regiment, who died in Egypt, who are, it Is stated, men tioned on a monument at Brighton merely as "Drs. So-and-So." their names being placed between the Lance corporals and privates. As our con temporary, The Globe, points out: Every soldier will, of course, see at once that, as a contemporary points out, the "Drs." are not "doctors," but drummers. It is In this way that the friends of those army surgeons who glory only in the military half of their double-barreled titles, make their cause ridiculous, for they quite seem to forget that it is the other half of those titles by which they won their commissions and earn their pay. It is stated that there was a certain very military brig ade screrenn lieutenant-colonel in t r l - 1 A A nnaaA a note as to "Dr. So-and-So." The note came back unopened, ana superin scribid "No such person in M .' But the subaltern was equal to the oc casion, and sent it back supcrinscribed, To await arrival." It was the same medical officer to whom a captains wffe wrote a friendly note. "Dear Dr. So-and-So: - Baby has a big boll, Please come round and bring your lancet" - To this came a reply that the note should have been addressed Brigade Surgeon Lleut.-Col. So-and So." and the lady wrote back: "Dear Brigade Surgeon Lieut.Col. So-and-So Babv has a hie boil. Please come round and bring your sword." NEW GUNS FOR THE GERMANS The Army Camp Ha Some tntereitlog Experiment. The new German caiuv al Malmedy close to the Belgian frontier, has at tracted special attention owing to the experiments lately carried on there, says Revue du Cercle Militaire. .The object of the experiments was to try the effect on field fortifications of the new guns with which the German "foot artillery" has lately been equipped. The guns in question are six-inch howitzer guns and eight and one-quar- ter-fnch mortars. It is intended to utilize some of these guns in the at tack and defense of positions, in which respect they would play a considerable role, seeing that the defense nowa days disposes of better means of resist ance than formerly. The obstacles in front of the line of defense will be in creased, natural points of vantage will, to a greater extent, be utilized and im proved upon by means of portable ar mor, screens built up with heavy rail way rails, etc., shelters will be pro vided, against which ordinary field ar tillery will be powerless, but they will not resist the heavy projectiles thrown with a very high trajectory from these guns. The object of the trials in ques tion was to determine the best mode of use of these guns, more especially the mortars, against fortifications of an analogous nature to the so-called forts d'arret protectingia great part of the French frontier. At the same time experiments were also made with a view to determining the efficiency of infantry fire by day and night. Disposal of Sewage in Birmingham. One of the worst features under the old management was The disposal of the sewage. By way of remedy two sys tems have found adoption. Under one the health committee collects the of fal of the houses, and either destroys it or turns it into fertilizers. This Is more offensive and less successful than it might be made, but is appar ently a necessity until the pan system has been abandoned. A -sewage farm of nearly 1,300 acres has been devel oped several miles from the city, some 400 feet lower in elevation. The sevr age, first mixed with lime to prevent too rapid decomposition and to assUt in the precipitation of the solid mat ter, Is passed through a series of de positing tanks, during which proces the mud is removed. The remainder Is dug Into the land, one-third of which Is dealt with each year, the ef fluent being discharged in a harmless state into the river Tame. Upon the other two-thirds are grown early vege tables, and grain and hay for cows kept for milk and market. The net annual cost to the city Is about 24, 000. "An Object Lesson In Municipal Government," by George P. Parker, in the November Century. Don't Tobacco fepit and Smoke YoorJLlf A war. If you want to quit tobacco using easily and forever, be made well, strong, magnetic, full of new life and vigor, take No-To-Bac, the wonderworker, that makes weak men strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten days. Over 400,000 cured. Buy No-To-Bac of your druggist under guarantee to cure, 50o or $1. Booklet and sample mailed free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New Y. Farmer' Institute. The following is a list of the local or ganizers of farmer's institutes and their addresses. Information as to date and place of holding the institutes will be furnished by them upon request: Albion E. W. Gunther. Arlington G. A. Marshall. Fremont R. D. Kelly. Greeley Center -T. C. Phelan. Hastings W. H. Lanning. Minden L. M. Copeland. Nehawka Isaac Pollard. Norfolk-Phil F. Sprecher. Ord-S. L. Perkins. Plainview O. J. Frost. Platte Centre Fred Jewell Raymond R. Kenyon. Syracuse A. F. Coddington. Valentine W. S. Baker. Waverly C. J. Warner. Among the Cherokeeans NTERESTINQ ITEMS FROM THE .WOMEN OF TIHS WIDE AWAKE TOWN. Fromth 8'entlnal, Cbtrokaa, Kaniaa. Mrs. A. J. A u m mens has resided in the vicinity of Cherokee. Kansas, lor a number of years and is much esteemed by a wide circle of mends wno will re joice to learn that after many years of suffering she ha finally been restored to btalth. Wishing to learn the particu lars of Mrs. Auemeus' wonderful cure, a reporter called at her residence and asked for an interview. Mrs. Ausmeus laiseq freely of her caae and made no objections to stating tne fact for publication, one said: 'I bave been sorely afflicted with stomach trouble for upward of fifteen years. The suffering I endured during that time is Doyond description. I was taken with a doll pain in the back which never left me. I had to be very careful in my diet as my stomach would stand only certain kinds oflood. ror niteen years I could not eat fruit of any kind. I was treated by a nnmoer 01 tne Deet physicians in the county without receiv ing any permanent nenoni. lasc lau while looking over an Illinois newspaper my attention was attracted to an ac count of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I was so impressed with the statement of a cure these pills bad effected that I made up my mind to give them atrial. Iac mrriinslv Durchased a box and began their use and they helped me from the nrst, nnen i naa rasen luree uuira my health was fully restored and there has been do return of the disease or any of its symptoms. I "The pain in my back nas leit me en tirely and bow I can sat fruit or any thins- else I desire. I ftel better than bare for fifteen years. I caa cheerfully recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills lor thev accomplished what a number ol Dbvficians failed to do." Mrs. J. F. Morrison, wife of Mr. Fred Morrison, the ice dealer, of Cherokee, Kansas, when Questioned by a reporter as to the cause of her restoration of health, said: "For more tban three years X was a sufferer from stomach trouble. I had no annetite for anything and became so weak and emaciated that 1 could not at tend to my household duties. I was treated bv the ablest nhTsicians in Cher okee, but received little or no benefit. ' A neighbor seeing that the doctors bad failed to do me any good, advised me to trv Pink Pills. You know that when vou are sick all of your friends know of some sure cure remedy which they in gist udod vou taking. 1 had little faith in any medicine but I finally .consented to give the pills a trial. So I sent to Rover & Graves' drue store and got a box of the Pink Pills and began to take tbem. 1 took two boxes without feeling much improvement and was about to discontinue their use when Fred ar- sued me to take another box. I did so and before ball ol tne tnira dox was token I felt so much better that I be came greatly encouraged and kept on takinir the Dills according to directions, When I got the fourth box of Pink Pills my health was completely restored, and I feel better today and weigh more than I have for a number of years. I keep a box of Pink Fills in the bouse and would not be without them. The trouble with uiont DeoDle who use Pink Pills without receiving any benefit is because tbey do not eive them a fair test, but abandon them because tbey do not give imme diate relief. Mrs. Mary Jones, wife of Wm. Jones, the blacksmith, a resident of Cherokee, Kansas, for twenty years was a sufferer from a severe pain in the bead and nervous prostration. She noticed an advertisement of Pink Pills inthe Chero kee Sentinel and concluded to give them a trial. The result was that one box of Pink Pills restored her to complete health. Mrs. Jones is enthusiastic in her nraise of Pink Pills, Mrs. Meda Walker, of Cherokee, Kan sub. has nrobably suffered more from neuralgia tban any other woman of her aire in the state. In an interview with a reporter she said: "Ever since I can remember I have been a ereat sufferer from neuralgia. About threeyears ago the disease seemed to grow worse. The pain in my head be come almost unbearable. 1 bad some decayed teeth extracted thinking that perhaps tbey bad aggravated the mal ady but no relief resulted. I was treated by the best physicians, among tbem a faith cure doctor, but none of them could do anything for me except give temporary relief. "About a year ago I saw an advertise ment of Pink Pills in the Cherokee Senti- el and thinking they might help me I sent for a box. As soon as I began tak in? them I commenced to improve, and when I bad used two boxes all symp toms of neuralgia had left me. That was about ten months ago and I have not felt a toucn ol tne malady since. My cure was certainly due to Pink Pills alone, and I regard them as a blessing to mankind. Dr. Williams rink 1'iiis contain in a condensed form, all the elements neces sary to eive new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves Tbey are also a specific for troubles pe culiar to females, sucb as suppressions, lrreirularitiea and all forms of "weakness, They build up the blood and restore the slow of health to pale and sallow cneeks, In men tbey effect a radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, over work or excess of whatever nature. Fink Pills are sold in boxes (never in loose bulk) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. Notice of Sale Under Chattel Mortgage Notice is hereby given that by virtue of a chattelmortgage dated on the 27th day of June 1890 and duly filed inthe office of the county clerk of Lancaster county Nebraska on the 29th day of June 1896 and executed by Frank B. Johnscta and L. B. Johnson to Helen A. Leslie to secure the payment of the sum of 229.53 default having been made in the payment of said sum and no suit or other proceeding at law has been insti tuted to recover said debt or any part thereof, therefore I will sell the property therein described to wit: About 2,000 bushels of corn in crib, about 50 tons of hay in stack, at public auction attbe house of Mrs. Helen A. Leslie situated on east bait lot (3) three, town (11) eleven range (5) five in Lancaster county Nebraska, Saturday March 20, 1897, at 2 o'clock p. m., of said day. Dated March 1,1897. , 44. Helen A. Leslie, , Mortgagee. nir aac Womi'i ralr M Btoaa a4 Madat OalTaalMd Rtaal Tank, Ramlatorn arid Orla an. St. H. WlXttaW. Nal tuKaawooa' Tarn wood Tmi . Cklaas. Dr.Reynoldo Will visit any part of the state to perform opera tions or in consultation with your family physi cian. PHONES 65S AND 6S6. OFFICE BOOMS- 17,18,19, Burr BIk., Lincoln, UNDERTAKERS tits. llth St, Lincoln, Nebraska. Talphonea Office, 470, Bo.. 471. A. D. GUILE E.T. ROBERT! SULPHO-SALINE Bath H0US3 Hid SanltariUZ3 T Const Mta ft lists., LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. Open at All Honrs Day and Night All Forms of Batha. Turkish, Russian, Ron, El::trh. With IpasiaJ attmUoa to tfc apfUeatioa sf RaTURaL SILT WITER BITHl vraral ttmaatromgw tkaa M water. Ihmtnatlam. Skim. Blend sad Nwvaa M iaa, LItw and Kidney TtosNm sad Ghrealr tlUMBta art traataa aaeaatrauy. gv.'.Sea Bathing EM nlojrrt a all saaaaB la anr larga MatlM POOL. MlUI fatt, I to IS fatt da, ad to eaUom fmpratif ot M iitnav . . Drs. 2I.H.&J. O. Everett, If aaactag PVMaaa Kim ballS FOB CATAliOaUB A1TO On High Grade Pianos and Or gans. $100.00 new Organs, 48; $400.00 new pianos, $185. BeUable Goods, Easy Terms, from the only whole sale mnsio honso NEBRASKA." AGENTS WANTED. Address) Qen'l Aat A. HOSPEJr. 1 1613 Douglas St., Omaha, Netr. The Elite Studio Will give you Five Per Cent Off if you clip This Add Out AND BRING IT ALONG The Most Popular Art Establishment in the City. 226 8. EleTenth St,TUQ rije Gronnd Floor. IflC tlllC EVery Thursday erenlng a tonrlst sleeping car for Salt Lake City, Saa Francisco and Los Angeles leares Oma ha and Lincoln Tla the Burlington route. It is carpeted, upholstered in rattan; has spring seats and backs, and is provided with curtains, bedding, towels, soap, etc. An experienced ex cursion conductor (and a uniformed Pullman porter accompany, it through to the Pacific coast, While neither an expensively furnished nor as fine to lotfk at as a palace sleeper It is Just as good to ride in. Second elass tickets are honored, and the price o! a berth, wide enough and big enough lor two is only $5. For a folder girlng full particulars call at the B. & M. depot or eity office, cor ner Tenth and 0 streets. Q. W. Bonmux, C. P. and T. A. r, L P ISMAIL io Drop Us a Card