THE OMA3JA DAILY 153332 : SATUHDAT , OCTOBER 2. 1897. 11 | FORTUNES ADRIFT. Ily C'im'Ml-TK 11YNK. * op > rlKht. 1S97. J.y Culcllfte Ilync. ) Corlnlvln came out under the brldgo deck nwnlns up through the baking heat of the companlon'.vay , nnd dropped listlessly Into a tlock chair. Ho wai dressed In slop-chest pajamas of a vlvltl pattern , nnd had n newly flhavon chin , which stood out refreshingly whlto against the rest of his sun-darkened countenance. , "Well , " said Captain Kettle , as ho shoved across the box of cheroots , "nro wo any nearer getting under wny ? " "I looked In at the engine room as I came past , " said the tall man with ft laugh , "and the chief had a good deal to say. I gathered It was his Idc.i that the follow who last had chargn of these engines ought to die a cruel and lingering death. " "It's a sere point with McTodd when she breaks down. Uut did he say how long It would bo before ho could give her steam again ? I'm a bit anxious. The glass Is tumbling , hand over fist , and what with that nnd this heat , there's small doubt hut what we'll have a tornado clattering about our cars directly. There's the shore clcse aboard , na you can see for yourself , and If the wind comes awny nnywhero from the east'nrd It'll blow this old steamboat half wny Into Iho tnlddlu of Africa before we can look around tis. It's a had season Just now for tor nadoes. " The clattering of Iron boot plates made ItBclf heard on the brass-bound steps of the companlonway. "That'll bo the chief coming to nnswer for hlmsMf , " said Cortolyln. Mr. Null Angus McTodd nlwnjs advertised his calling In the attlro of his outward man , end the cyo of on expert could toll with suro- nesH at nny given inomeLt whether Mr. Mc Todd was In employment or not , nnd If so what typo of steamboat ho wan on , what was his official position , what was his pay , nnd what was the last bit of work on which hn Iwil been employed , The pre'ent wns tlio fourth occasion on which the Saigon's ma chinery hnd chosen to break down dirlng Captain Kettle's two months ot command , and after his herculean efforts In making re pairs with Insufficient staff and material * . Mr , McTodd was unpleasant bath to look upon and associate with. He was nttlred In moist black boots , gray flannei pajama trousers stuffed into his socks , a weird garment ot flannel upon nls upper ir.an , a clout round his neck , and a peaked cap upon his grizzled red hair anointed with years ot spraying oil. HI ? ctoows nnd his forehead shone like dull mirrors of steel , ant ! IIP carried one ot hli thumbs wrapped up In a grimy crimson rag. Ills conversation was full ot Unnecessary ad jectives , and ho was Inclined to take n cin- tankurous view of the unlveisi1. "They'd dis grace the flcrnp-heap of any decent yard , would the things they miscall engines on this rotti-n tub , " enld ho by way of preface. "Thoy are holy cnglnos , and that's a fact , " said Kettle. "How long can you guarantee them for this tlmo ? " The engineer mopped his neck with a wad of cotton waste. "Ten revolutions , If ye wish mo to bo certain. It's n varra dry ship , this. " "And how many moreVo shall want them. There's a tornado coming on. " "I'm no' anxious lo perjure myself , cap tain , but they might run on for a full minute , or they might run on for a day. There'e a capaciousness about the rattle-traps that might arnus ? some people , but It does not ap peal to me. I'm In fear of my llfo every mlmito I stand on the pole plate. " "I'd not hnvo taken you for a frightened man. " "I'm not thnt PS a usual thing , but the temperature of yon engine room varies be tween 120 and 130 degrees of the Fahrenheit scale , and It's destroying to the nerves. All the aqueous vapor leaver the Bjfitem and I'm vorra badly In need ot a tonic. Is jon whisky In the black bottle , ciptaln ? " "Tako n peg , Mac. " "I'll Just have a sma' three fingers now yo mention it. " He laid the thickest part ot his knotty knuckles against the sldo ot the tllinblcr and poured out some half gill of spirits. "Weol , " Bald he , "may wo get as Eood whisky where wo'ro going to , " nnd en veloped the tlcoe with a dexterous turn of the wrUt. After which ambiguous toast ho wiped his lips with cotton waste nnd took himself off agnln to the biking regions be low , and presently n dull rumbling and a tremor of her fabric announced that the Saigon gen was once moro under wny The little steamer had coaled at Perlm Island In tha southern mouth of the Red sea , had come out Into the Indian ocran through tha Straits of Bab el Mandcb , h-id rounded Capo Ouardafnl and was on her way down to Zanzibar In rcspouse to the cabled ordcrj of her IVrseo owners In Hombay. Cortolvln was still on board as ixassenger. Ills excuse was that ho wanted to Inspect the island and city of Zanzibar before returning to Eng land and respectability ; his real rcaion waa that ho had taken a fancy to the 111 tie ruf- ftin ot a wklppor and wished to sec more of him. him."Cheerful "Cheerful toast , that of McTodd's , " said Cortolvln. Three engines are enough to discourage nny man , " said Kettle , "and the heat down there would sour the temper of an arch- angel. " Cortolvln loosened a coupln of buttons of Ills pajamas and bared his chest. "Ifa hard to breathe even here , anil I thought JM learned what heat was In those Arabian deserts. There's 3 tornado coming ou , UiRt's certain. " "It will clear the nlr. " said Kettle. "Hut It will be a snec/cr when we gnt It , Mr. Murgatrovtl , " ho called. The old grizzle-headed mate thrust down A purple face from tlio head of the upper bridge ladder , " \ye. aye ? " " ( lot all thn awnings off her , " the ship master ordered ; "put itxtra crliu on the boats and see everything lashed fust Mat a steam crane could move. Wo'ro In for < & bad brcezo directly. " "Ayeaye , " rumbled thu mnto , nnd \ clHppotl a leaden whtstlo to his mouth and \ blow It shrilly. A minute later ho reported : "A bis simmer lying to Just a point or two off the starboard bow , r.iptaln. I I haven't seen her brfore because of the hazo. " Hn examined her carefully through the bridge hlnnculaiH and gav his observa I tions with heavy deliberation. "She's HIJIIBIO rigged foiMrd , and has a Illicit funnel with a rod bnnd no , two red bandf. Seems lo l/io Ilko ono of thb Gorman mull boats , aim I should say HUO was broke down. " Captain Kettlu rose uprlnglly from his deck chair nnd swung himself Into t1ie upper bridge. Cortolvln followed. A mint of licut shut out thu HCU Into a narrow ring , Overhead wns a heavy purple darkness , Impcnotniblo as a celling of brick. The only light that crept In rame from the mysterious unteuii pluln of the horizon. From every point ot the compass uneasy thunder gave forth now and then a stifled bellow ; nnd though the lightning splashes never showed , sudden thinnings of the gloom would hint at their nearness , The air shim- morcd and danced with thu baking heat , nd though lurid grays nml pinks predomi nated , the glow which tilled It was con stantly changing In hue. The gpcne wai terrifying , but Kettle re garded it with a satisfied smile , The on& commercial prayer of thu shipmaster U to moot with a passenger strnmsr at sea , broken down , and requiring a tow ; and beyi was ono of the plums ot tha ocean ready to hli hand and anxious to be plucked. Thb worse the weather the greater would bo the BalvfiRO , and Captain Kott.'j could have hugged himself with Joy when he thought ot Iho tropical hurricane's nparnosi. Ho bad changed the Saigon s courco the Instant he came on the bridge , nud had pulled the Bynui-jtrlng and hooted cheerfully lota tb < throbbing air to announce his coming , Thi spectral schooner grow every moment niorr clear , and presently n string of barbarl'i ' colors Jerked up to the wlro span between lu > r msetn. There was no breath of wind t > > the Hags blow out. They Inn's In JecteJ cowli ; but to Kettle they read lll'.J the paRe of an open book. "P. H. Q ! " he cried , and clapped the binoc ular * back In the box , and mapped down the lid , ' ! ' . U , Q. , * Mr. Cortolvln , and don't you forgot having aern It , Wave broken uiy machinery , ' that means 'I f.vant Iramodl- . ' " ata assistance. "You teem to know It by heart , ' aald Cortolvln. "There' * not * steamboat officer on all the 4 * tbat doesn't. Whan thlnga ara very dovn with ui we take out tlio signal book and bunt up I1 , n. Q , and tall ouroulvea that ouje day * may coma acroit a Ouutrdcr In a broken talUhaft and bo able to give up the sea and be living politely on 200 a ycir well Invested , within a fortnight. It's the steamboat officer's dream , sir , but there's few of us It ever comes true for. " "Skipper , " said Cortolvln , "I needn't tell you how pleased I'll be If you come Into a competence over this business. In the mean while. If there's anything 1 can do , from coal trlmm'ng ' upward , I'm jour most obedient servant. " "I thank you , sir. " silil Kettlo. "And If you'd go and carry the news to the chief I'll bo obliged. I know he'll say his engines can't hold out. Tell him they must. Tell him to use up anything he has eooncr than gel nnother breakdown. Tell him to rip up his soul for slruti nnd bickstays If he thinks It'll keep them running. It's the nno chance of my llfo , Mr. Cortlovln , nnd the one chance of his. and he's got to know U , and BCD wo aren't robbed of what Is put be fore us. Show him where the siller comes In , sir , nnd then stand by and you'll sco Mr. ' McTodd work mlraclcfl. " Cortolvln went below end Kettle turned to thu old mato. "Mr. Murgatroyd. " said he , "got a dozen hands to rouse up that new manlla out of the store. I take you from the forcdeck nnd glvo you the afterdcck to yourself. I'll have the bargain with that fellow over there before wo do anjthlng , and there'll bo little enl ugh time lett nfter we'vo fixed upon price. So have everything ready to begin to tnwnVo'l ! use their wlro. " "Ayo , nye. " said the mato. "Hut It won't do to tow with wl'e , captain , through what's "HOWS THAT. t'MI'Htn ? " HAH ) Hi : . coming. There's no give In wlro. A wire hawser would Jerk the guts out of her In fifteen minutes. " Kettle tightened his llpa. "Mr. Mur gatroyd , " said he , "I am not a blame fool. Neither do I want dictation from my otllcers. I I I told you tn rou ) up the manlla. You will ] I back the wlro with a double bridle of that. " j "Aye , aye , " grunted the mate , "but am I to make fist to ? Them bollards aft might be steiped In putty for all the use1 I , they are. They'd not tow a rovvlrat through | ' what's coming. I bellevo they'd draw If they'd a fishing line made fast to them. " I i "I should hnvo thought you'd boon long enough at sea to kno\y , your business by this time , " said Kettle Unpleasantly. "D'ye think that every steamboat that trades haa a bran- new Harland & Wlltf ? " i "Well. " said the mate .sullenly , "I'm wait ing to bo taught. " "Pas * the manlla round'tho combing of the after hatch , and you won't como and tell ma that's drawn while this sfcambcat stays on the water top. " "Ayo , aye , " slid the mate , and stepped Into slippers ami shuffled away. Captain Kettle walked briskly to the center of the upper bridge and laid a hand on the telegraph. He gave crisp orders to the lascar at the wheel , and the Saigon moved In perfect obedience to his will. Ahead of him , the great elato-colored llnnr lay motionless on the oily sea. Her rail was peopled with the anxious ficcs of pas sengers. Busy deck hands wore stripping away the awnlugs. On the high upper brldgo were three officers In sun-helmets and trim uniform of white drill , talking together anx iously. The llttlo Saigon curved up from astern ; stopped her engines , and then with reversed propeller , brought up dead , so th-st the bridges of the two steamers were level und not moro than twenty yards apart. H was .smartly done , and ( as Kettle had Intented ) the Oor- iiiaiis noticed It , and commented. Then began the barter of words. "Howdy , oiptainl' ' said Kettlo. "I hope | It's not n funeral you'vo brought up for ? This heat's been very great. Has It knocked , over ono of your passengers ? " ' A large , boarded man made reply : "We I ' i haf seen a slight mishap mlt dcr machinery , captain. My Ingenecrs will mend. " I "O , that's till right. Thought It might bo worse. Well , I wish you luck captain. But I'd hurry and got steam on her again If I wcro you. The breeze may come away any mlmito now , and you'vo' the shore close aboard , and you'll bo on It U you don't get j i your steamboat under command again by I I thnn , and have a bis loss ofllfo. If you get I ' on the beach It will surprise me If you don't drown nil hands. " Captain Kettle put a baud on the telegraph ns though to ring on his engines again , but thn bearded German , after n preliminary stamp of passion , hold up his hand for further parley. Hut for the moment the opportunity of speech was taken from him. The pas- t sfiigrrs worn either English or , for thn most | , part , understood that tongue when spoken , and they drank tn every word thnt was said , as Kettle had Intended , and now they surged In n wilthlng , yelling mob at the foot of the two bridge ladders , and domnmled thnt as sistance should be hired , let that cost what It might. Thcro wns nolnaklng a hall carrj , above that frightened uproar , but the German | shipmaster raved and explained nnd reasoned 11 for fully a dozen moments before he quelled ' U. Then , panting , lip came once moro to the end of his bridge nnd addressed the other steamer. "Itoso basnengers vos nervoun , " said hn , "bemuse dey thought dere might bo some lectio rain squall ; so I ask you how mooch ' \onld you take my rope utid tow me to Aden or Perlm ? " "Phew" " " eald Kettle. "Aden ! That's wrong way for mo , captain. Hod Sea's where I come from , and my owner cabled mo j hurry and get to Zanzibar. " "Veil , how mooch ? " "Well , say 100 000 , as your seem BO anxious , "Hundred thousand teufetsl Herr Gott. I haf tint Rhodes on dor sheep ! " "Wall , captain , take the offer or leuvf It , I'm not a tow-bout , snd I'm In n hurry to rosko my passage. If you keep mo waiting hero five minutes loiignr It'll cost you 120- 000 to bo plucked In anywhere. " The shipmaster on the other bridge went Into a frenzy of expostulation. He appealed to all Ccptaln Kettle's better feelings ; he dared hlr.i to do h ! worst ; he prayed him tn do his best. Hut Kettle gozud upon the man's gMtlculatlng arms , and lUtened to hlo frantic oratory uumoved. He lit a cheroot and leaned his elbows on the white railing of the bridge , and did r.ot reply by BO much as a single word. When the other halted through lireathlcBonPSB , even then he did not speak , Hn waved bis hand toward the fearsome heaveui , with their lurid lights , and pointed to the bumping thunder , which made both st earners vaguely tremble , and he. lot those argue for him. The clamor of the passengpri rose again In the breathless , baking air , and the captain of the liner had to yield. He threw up hie rra In token ot surrender , and a hush t \ \ upon tb cene like tbo silence of death , "My gorapany Mi nil pay you hondred touitnd pound , captain , und you haf der sat isfaction dot you make me ruined man. " "I 'nave boon ruined myself , " eald Kettle , "heap * of times and r turn for the other thing seetni to be comn now. I'll run down closer to you , captain , or flo you bid your htaSi beavo me Una from the fo'c'slehiud M I COMO p * t. You're cut It pretty flu * . You'v no Um left to get boat la the water. The wind may como away nny moment - mont now , " Cnptiln Kettle WAI changing Into another man. All the Inionclnncs hud gnno from him. Ho gave hU orders with crlspneas and de cision and the mates and the lascnrs Jumped to obey thorn. The horrible danRei thnt waste to como lay ns an open advertisement , and they know that their only way to piss safely through It and oven then the chances were slim as to obey tlio man who commanded them to the uttermost. The connection between the steamers had been I made , ( ha snaky steel wlro hnwssr had been hauled In through a stern fair lead by the Saltcon's winch , and the old mate stood ready with the shickla which would link It on to iho manlla. The heavers yielded up an t overture like the echo of n Titan's groan. "Hurry , there , you slow-footed \ dogsl" came Kettle's voice from ttl the bridge. tlh The lascars brought up the eye of the hawser and Murgfltroyd threaded It on the pin of the shackle. Then he cried , "All fait , " and ! picked up a splko and screwed homo thu pin In Its socket. Alieidy the engines wcro on the move again and the Salgoa wns steamIng - Ing ahead on the tow line. It was a time for f hurry. The nlr thickened nnd grow for the moment Ifd anything more hot and the tornado raced down upon them as r blnrk wall stretching far across the sea , with white wuter gleaming and churning at Us foot. It hit the steamers like a solid avalanrhc and the tplndrltt In It cut the faces of the men who tried to with stand It as though whips had lashed them. stSi The coollo quartermaster clung on to the I Saigon's wheel spokes , n mcro whlsp ot I limp humanity Incnpahle of steering or of doing anything else that required a modicum ) ola' rational thought. The little steamer fell away ' before the blast like a shaving In n j i dry street ; thu tonnage of the tornado heeled j her till her leo scuppers spouted green water , ! i and shu might well have been overturned nt the very outset. But Kettle beat the help less lascir from his hold , and spoked the wheel lunl up , and thu engines working strongly , brought her round again In a wal lowing circle lo face the torrent of hunlcanc. She took five minutes to make that recov ery , and when she was steaming on ngaln , hcac. to the thunderous gusts , the tale ot what she had endured was written In easy lettering. On both fore nnd main decks the bulwarks were gene le\cl with the co\- crliiK boards ; fie radio of crated , harness casks , gangplanks and so on that a small Citl trader cnrrlco In view to the sky had de parted beyond the ken of man , and Indeed these lower decks were scoured clean to thu i nakrd ; rusted Iron. The port lifeboat hung ! steve from bent davits , and three of t e coolie ( crow had been swept from life Into thn ! grip ot the eternal sea. | I Ktl Cortolvln fought his way up on to the i tipper bridge , step by step , against the frantic beating ot the wind , nnd without being bidden relieved nt the leo spokes of the wheel. ; Captain Kettle nodded his thanks The Saigon had no steam steering gear , niul ' Iitl some of thu heavier squalls the wheel . threatened to take charge and pitch the little I shipmaster clean over the spokes. j Amid the bellowing roar of the tornado , I speech , ot course , was Impossible , nnd vision , j too , was limited. No human eye could look j j ' Into the wind , and even to let It strike thb , face was a torture. The sea did mot get up. 1 The crest of any wave which tried to ilse was cut off remorselessly by the knives ot the hurricane , and spread as a stinging mist throughout ] the wind. It was hard , Indeed , to ( tell where ocean ceased and air begaii. i The whlto sea was spread In a blur of white Tfl The MK helpless liner .astern plucked sav agely ; at the Saigon's tall , and the pair of thorn were moving coastwards with speed. Left to herbclf and steaming full spec 1 Into the gale , the llttlo Saigon would have been . able to maintain her position , neither losing ground nor gaining any. With thp heavy tow' In charge , she was being driven toward the roaring surf of the African beach with perilous speed. ' It was possible to .see dimly down the wind , and when Cortolvln turned his face away from the stinging blast of the tornado , he could understand with 'clearness their exact position Close astern was the plung ing German liner , with her decks stripped j and deserted , and only the bridge ofllcera ' exposed. Beyond was the cotton white asi ; and beyond again were great leaping fountains ati tains of whiteness , where the tortured ocean tir roared against the yellow bach. j ' Thirty minutes passed , each second of i them brimmed with frenzied struggle for both man nnd machinery. The tornado ! i raged and boomed nnd roared , and the ' backward drift was a thing which could be i measured with the eye. I i Then the old mate heaved himself up the i bridge ladder by laborious Inches. His , clothes were whipping from him In tattered j * ribbons , his hat was gone , and the grizzled ' hair stood out from the back of his heart like the bristles of a broom. Ho clawed his | way along the rail , and put his great red i face close to Kettle's ear. I "We can't hold her. " ho roared. "She's taking us ashore. We shall be there In n dozen minutes , nnd then It will be 'Jones' for the lot of us. " Captain Kettle glared but made no articu late reply. If ho could hnvo spared a hand from the wheelspokes , It Is probable that Mr. Murgatroyd would have felt the weight of It. Tha old fellow bawled nt him ngaln. "Tho hnnds 'know It ns well as me , nnd they Bay cnlculntlona. He hnd born brought up In n School where life l cheap , and not o pleaa- ant nml savory a thing thnt U In net much store on. The passenger * were part ot the ship , Just as much an were her engines , ntul the bullion which ho hoped ho carried. The company which owned her was responal. bio for all ; their credit vreuld bo damaged It all or a part of her wns lent , and he , Owen Kettle , would reap n proportionate reward If ho could drag her Into nny civilized port. And when he thought of the roaring bench so terribly close nstern , he bit his beard In an ngony of apprehension lost the fates should steal this fortune from him. And meanwhile the line of surf was grow ing ever nearer. So close , Indeed , wcro they to the hateful shore , tint when for n moment the fountains of..hUo water sub- aided where the breakers" raged upon the beach , they could see dlihly'bbyond ' through the sea smoke palm trees , nnd cclbas nnd great silk cottouwoods whipping nnd crashIng - Ing before the Insane blast of the tornado. All hands on the Saigon's deck had many minutes before given themselves up for as good ns dead. Their only rhhnce of salva tion lay In casting off the tow rope , and no one dared touch the llnkjiig , thacklo. They qulto knew ( hat tholr saynfio llttlo skipper would fulfill his threat -Uf they disobeyed hla orders. Indeed , old Murphtroyd himself sal on the hatch coamlr/g / Xlth an opened claspknlfo and vowed dcqtji on anyone xvho tampered with either shioklo or manlla. The clumsy mate had swallowed' rough words once , but ho preferred tlrowhlng to living on and hearing Captain Kbttlc address him as coward. , The shore lay steep-to , hut the backwash creamed far out Into the sea , Already the stern of the German liner was plunging In the whitened water nnd destruction seemed a question of seconds. Then a wtrango tiling happened. It Ecemcd ns though the finger of God had touched the wind ; It nbntctl by visible graduations and thb drift of the steamers grew moro slow ; It eased to a inero galu , and they held their place on thn Up of the boiling surf ; nnd then with a gisp It sank Into quietude , nnd a great oily swell rose up na If by inngtc from the bowela of the deep , and the llttlo Saigon forged ahead and drew the helpless passenger ship away from the perilous beach. Those trop- Icnl hurricanes of the eastern sens progress In circles , and thin one hnd spurned them from Its clutch and let them llont on n clinrmed ring of calm. Cortolvln bowed over the wheel In silent thankfulness , but the shipmaster rejoiced aloud. "How's thnt , umpire ? " said ho. "Ily James . , wasn't It worth hanging on for ? I've got a wife , sir , and kids , and I'm remember- Ing this moment that they'll always have full bolllts from now onwards , and good clothes , nn-1 no more cheap lodgings , but a decant house semi-detached and money to plank down on the plate when they go to chapel on Sundaya. j The skipper of that Dutchman will bo mined over this last half hour's Job , but I can't help that. It's mysslf I have to think of first , one has to In this world , or no ono else will ; and , Mr. Cortolvln , I'm a made man. Thanks to McTodd " From below there came a sudden whirr of machinery , as though the engines had mo- mentarlly gone mail , and then a bumping nnd ' a banging which Jarred every plate of the Saigon's fabric , and then n silence , broken only by the thin , distant scream of a hurt man. Presently the boom of steam broke out from the escape plptj bcsltle the funnel , and a inlnnta later the chief engineer made his way leisurely up onto th ? bridge. He wns bleeding from a cut on the forehead , and nnother > gash showed red among the grime on his stubbly cheek. He was shredding to bacco with a claspknlfe as ho walked and secmfd from his manner to bo n man quite divorced from nil responsible occupations. Ho halted a minute at the head of the brldgo ladder , replaced the tobareo cake In the pocket ; of his raiment and then rolled up the shredillngs In the palms of hU crackled hands. Then ho flljcd a short briar pipe , lit It nnd surveyed the available universe. "You'll be the tornado , 'way ahead there , I'm thinking , ' said he. "Are these blame engines broke down again ? " asked Kettle , sharply. "Aye , > e may put It they've broke down. " "Then away with you below again , Mr. McTodd , and g"t them running ngaln. You may smoke whsn we bring up th' Aden. " ' McTodil puffed twlco more nt his pipe , and spat on thp wheel grating. "Hy James ! " said Kettle , "so you heat nio ? " .1 "My lugs are a bit muzzy , nut I can hear yo for a' that captain. Only thing is I can't do as you'd like. " Captain Kettle stiffened ominously. "Mr. McTodd , " he Bald , "If jou force me to take you In hand and show you how to set aboui your work you'll regret It ! , " "Man , " said the engineer , ' 'I can do some kind of Imposslbeelltles. Ye'vo seen me dn them. Ye'\o seen me keep those palsied rattle traps running all through that blow. But If yo ask me to make a new propeller \ out of rod Iron and packing cfjses I'll havu to toll you that yon kind of' mecraclo's beyond me. " ( "My great James ! " saldpKettle , "you don't mean to tell me the propeller's gone ? " "Either that , or else all the blades have stripped off the boss. If yc'd been below on MR. M'TUlJU S\VAYin ON THK STOOL ANDHUOAKDKU HIM WITH A I't KKMHi jYn. they're not going to bo drowned for anybody. They say they're going to cast oft the hawser. " j This tlmo Captain Kettle yelled back a icply. "You thing ! " ho cried , "You putty I man i , get back to your post ! If you want | to live keep those niggers' fingers off the shackle. Ily James , if that tow Is cast oft I'll turn the Saigon for the beach , and drown the uholu crew ot you Inside of three min utes. By James , yes , and you know me , and you know I'll do It , too. You ham-faced jellyfish , away a l with you , and eave your blooming ' llfo ! ' ' The man winced under the llttlo captain's tongue and went away , and Captain Kettle looked across the wheil at his assistant. Cortolvln shrugged his shoulders and gldnced backward at the beach and nodded. Kettle leaned across and shouted' "I know U , sir , as well as you do. I know It as well as they do. Uut I've got n fortune Iti tow yonder , and I'd rather die than set It [ i adrift , It Inu't ono fortune either ; It's a , | dozen fortunes ; and I have just got to grab ' ono of thorn , I'm a married man , sir , with a family , and I've known what It was to watch and see 'em hungry. You'll stand by me Mr. Cortolvln ? " "It seems 1 promised. You know I've been long enough with Mahometans , skipper , to be aomowtiat a fatalist , So I say. God Is ' great , and our fates are written on our foro- liearts , and no man can change 'by an Inch the path which It Is foreordained ho should tread , nut they are queer fates , oome of them , I wont away from England became of my vita ; I "top out ol the middle ot Arabia and stumble across you , and hear that she Is dead ; I look forward to going home and I I living peaceful country life ; and now It ap. ' pears I'm to be drowned obscurely , out of the touch of the newspapers. * However , I'll be conslatant. I won't grumble and you may bear me cay It aloud : "La Allah , Utah Allah , " Captain Kettle made no reply. Through i the Infernal uproar of the tornado , he did I not hear much of what wis Bald , and part J of what did reach hlc ara was beyond hli comprebenilon , Besides , his mind wai not unnaturally occupied with moro iclflsh con- Ideratloni , vUtern of him. in 'the German liner , wore come thousand passengers , who were all aeieU for ealvace. The detail of human life did not enter much Into bU my footplates yo'd have kenned it flno. When it went , those pulr engines raced like an auld cab horse tryln' to gallop , and they just got tied lu knots , and tumbled down , and sprawled fifteen ways at onco. I was on the I l platform oiling when they jumped , and that ' nigger second of mlno tried to got at the throttle to close her down. " "U'oll. get on , man ; get on. " "Weel , he didn't , that's all ; he's lying In the low pressure crank pit this minute , and the top of his nluill'11 bo to seek somowheru by the ash lift. Mon , I tell ye , yon second o' mine's an uncanny sight. So I had to do his work for him , and then I blew off my hollers and came up here. It would have bceit Mira comforting to my professional con. science If I could have sttumed her Into Aden nut I'm no as sorry as I might bo for what's happened. I have It In mind that yon Pnrseo owner of ours In Dombay'll losb siller over this breakdown , and I want that beggar punished for all the work hc'a given mo to do on a small wage. Mr. Cortohin , ha' ye a match ? " A hall cume from the liner astern , "Salgcn , ahoy I Keep our hawser taut. " "You're all right for the prtaent , " Kettle shouted back , "Dor vlnd might return onless you got In middle of him. " "Then If It does , " retorted Kettle , "you'd 'better tell your passengers to say their pray ers , You'll get no furthof help from mo. I'm broken down myself. Lpst my propeller , If you want to know. " < "Herr Jleuer Oott ! " "I shouldn't swear If I were you , ' said Ket tlo. "If the breeze comes this way again you'll bo toeing the marli In the other place Inside five mlnutcu. " | Ie turned and gave an order. "After dock , there. Mr. Mur- Batroyd , you may cast olt tbelr , ifpe. We've done towing. " Now , after this , a variety of things might have happened. Amongst { hem It waa quite possible that both ett'jmcrs , and all In them , ' might have'been spewed up as battered re fute high upon the African beach. Hut u Providence ordered It , the tornado circled down on them no more ; ft fight air came off the shore , which filled Jhar | scanty wnva * and gave them just ttosrago way , and they rode over theouelli lu oomfany as dry as a pair ot bridge panloani and r.b-ut as lieo- ! lets. All Immediate danger was swept away ; nothing but another aitatner could relieve them , and tn the meanwhile It was n time for phlloscphy. Captain Krttlo < ld ! not Crumble ; b > fortune - tune was once more aJrltt and beyond hla grasp ; the Parson In Uombny would for a certainty dismiss him from employment , and Mrs. Krttlo and her family muit continue to drag nlons on such scanty doles as ho could contrive lo send them. All those were dis tressing thoughts , but they were things not to be remedied , a ml he took down the accordeon and mido sweet music , which spread far over Iho moving plains ot ocean. Hut Mr. McTodd hud visions of more tin- mrdlato profit. He washed with soap until his fAce was 'brilliant , put on a full suit ofl slotichlrat serge , took a boat and rowed over to the rolling German liner. It was mid night whrn ho returned , affluent In pocket and rather deep In liquor. Ho went Into the chart house , without Invitation , smiled bo- nlgnly and took a camp-stool. "They thought they would got me down Into the messroom over jonder , " said ho , "and I'll no deny It was a temptation. I could have Idled these Dutch engineers a thing or two , Hut I'm a' for business first when there h siller ahead. So 1 went oft to the saloon. I They wore at dinner and there were pulr j appetites among them. But someone spied [ | mo standing by the door and lugged me Into | a scat nod gave mo meat and drink cluin- j pigne , no less and Bet mo on to talk. Lord ! | once I got my tongue wagging you should ; i have seen them. There was no moro eating I done. They wanted to know how near death they'd been , and 1 tolled 'cm , anil there was the old man ccid all the brasi-cdgcd ofllcors at the ends of the tables fit to cat mo for giving the yarn away. Hut a ( hlc ) fat lot I ! cared , I set on Iho music nnd they cent round the hat , Loshl Thcro was 24 ' Kngllsh when they handed It over to me. Skipper , ye should go and try It for your self. " i "Mr. McTodd , " s ld the llttlo sailor , "I ' am not a dashed mendicant. " | i The engineer stared with a boiled eye and } swayed on his campstool. He had not quite I grasped the remark "I'm Scotch mysel' , " said he at length. j "Same thing , " said Kettlo. "I'm neither. ' I'm n common low-down Rngllshman , with j the pride of the prince of Wales , and a ' darned ugly tongue , nnd don't > ou forget It. " I McTodd pulled a charred cigar atump from I i his pocket and lit It with caro. He nodded to Iho accordion. "Go on with your noise , " said he. Cjptaln Kettle's fingers began to twitch suggestively ; nnd Cortolvln , to keep the peace , offered to rscort McTodd to hla room. "I thank ye , " said the engineer , "it's i the climate , t have malaria In the ays- ! ' 'teni. and It stays there In spile of all that drugs can do , and affects the perambulatory - latory muscles of the lower extremities. Spcakln * of which , ye'll na doot have seen for yoursel' " "Oh. come along to bed , " said Cortolvln. "Hide a wco. matinle , " said the man In the blue serge solemnly. "There's a thought como to me that I've a mcrsigo to Rive. Do you ken anybody called Cal- vert ? " "Archie Calvcrt by < nny chance ? " " 'Krohle' was 'the name ho gave. Ho i said ho kenned yo weel. " ' " \Ve were at Cambridge together. " i | ' "Cambridge , were ye ? Weel , I should Ifvo been a D. D. of A-berdcen mysel' If I'd done na my father wished. Ho wan Free Kirk meenlster of Halllndrochater " "Yes , hut about Calvert ? " "Ou av Calvert. Krchle Calvert , as yo say. Weel. I said we'd you aboard , and thU Calvcrt Erhle Calvort said he'd nuwq for you about your wife. " "All right , never mind that now. She's dead. I know , poor woman. I ct me help you down to your bunk. " "Dlnna be EQ offensive , man , and bldo n wee to hear ma' newj. Yo're no a widow after all widower that to. Your guld wife j dldna dee as yo tMnk. She'd a fjl | from a j horse , whlch'll probably tcich her to leave horse riding alone to men In the future ; nnd I It got In the papers she was killed , but It ' seems a shaking Mas all she earned. And | talking of horses no.v , when I was a bairn I In HalllmlrochJlor " I Cortolvln shook him savagely by the arm. "Mv Gntl. " he rrlcd , "do you mean to say | i sho's not dead ? " "Aren't I tolling you ? " , Cortolvln rasaed a hand wearily over his pyes. "And n minute ago , " ho whispered , "I thought I was jtolng home. " IMs hind dropped limply to his side , his head slid to the eharthouso deck In a dead faint. MoTnld awij'pd on thn camp stool and re garded him with a puzzled eye. "Losh ! " ho said , "here's him drunk ns well as mo. Two of us and I never kenned It. It's a sad. Im moral wnrrld , nklpper. Vcra sad. Skipper , 1 say. Here's Mr. Cortolvln been 0 , Lord , and hn Isn't listening , either. " Captain Kettle had gonb out of the chart- house. The thud of a propeller hnd fallen upon his oir and he leaned over the S.ilgon's rail and sadly watched a trlnnglo of lights draw up through the cool purple night. A cargo steamer , freighted with rails for the f'elra railway , was coming gleefully toward ] them from out of the north to pick up the rich gleanings which the ocean offered. A Valuable rri-xcTiiitlon. Editor Morrison of Worthington , Intl. , Sun , writes : "You have a valuable prescrip tion In Electric Bitters and I can cheerfully recommend It for Constipation and Sick Headache , and as a general system tonic It has no equal. " Mrs , Annie Stehle , 2G25 Cottage Grove avenue , Chicago , was all run down , could not eat nor digest food , had a backache which never left her and felt tired and weary , hut six bottles of Electric Bitters restored her health and renewed her strength. Prices 50c and Sl.OO. Get a bottle at Kuhn & Co.'a drug store. MIIIIIKTH Tli c-ii niul Noir. A London exchange deplores the bad man ners of the dancing people of today. The gentleman ot the old style asks : "May I hnvo the exquisite dellgnt of being your ladyship's humble ci\aller in the coming country dance ? " "Oh , sir , you are vastly polite , and I am overwhelmed by your re quest , " fays the lady. "Then I do not make too bold ? " "Oh , sir , I would not have you misconstrue my words. " "I then reckon upon your treading the mtfasuro with your devoted servant ? " "I may not say you nay , sir , " curtseying. "Madam , you are too con descending. I will not foil to clilm your hand , " retiring with courtcoun humility. The gentleman of the new style fliys : "Ah , Lady Florence , got an entry lett , or la jour book full ? " "Well , here's a quadrille running loozp , " says the lady , looking at her card. "Oh , hang the quadrllloJi. I'm not out for walking oxcrclses. Not on tno square ; twlggey vous ? " sajs the gentleman. "You funny old cripple ! Hero's A polka I'm not sure about. " "A polKa ! That's my form. Wo'll fire right Into the brov.'n of 'em and have a. glass of the boy afterward , eh ? " "It's a bet , " cays the lady. "Done. So long , " &ay the gentleman. Ho strolls off , humming a popular air. JIM 1IUIIJJKTT OP TOM1JSTOM3. Uuuntr Cut Dnvrii III * 11111 niul tin linn the Court to Stilt llluiKcir. A stormy llfo It was that ended lost month , when old Jim Burnett was killed In Tombstone by William Greene a llfo full of experiences of tbo border kind that would supply material for twenty of the most thrilling of the yellow-backed novels , The end wns In keeping with the llfo , rotates tlio Philadelphia Tlmci. llurnett , a justice ot , the peace In I'carco Camp , had left his work 11 In order to go do n on the San I'edro river , fifty f miles away , and Iriow out with giant powder the Irrigating canal dam of hln enemy , Qrponn. Holow at the time , probtbly unknown to Hurnett , were two young girls , ono n daughter of Orctnp , ngpd 18 , and her J friend from Hlsbce. They wcro caught In the flood that followed the explosion and were drowned. The father learned of the presence of his fee , saddled his horse , rode over to Tombstone , found llurnett nud the main street and shot him down. The town stood behind Greene In his deed. Ho lim been admitted to light ball and will bo ac quitted ever brought to trial , Since Hurnett's death many are the talcs bolng raked up about him. His was a singular personality. Strong-willed nnd violent lent In temper , ho tfipeclslly shone In n frontier camp. It was , therefore , qullo ap propriate that he should have been elected justice ot the peace In 1SS1 nt Charleston , on the San I'edro , whrce the rich ores of Tomb stone were at that tlmn milled , Charleston was Ihcn a howling camp , full of freighters , miners and the wooltcst of cowboys. Tlio whisky sold wasn't of the mildest brand , and , consequently , tribula tion sate within the community nnd the Justice's court was always open , Hurnett did a rushing business. At the end of three months ho duly reported , as by law required , to the county supervisors , sending In his bill for the amount duo him from the county. The county fathers cut the bill down one- half. Burnett swore vigorously when ho got the returns , but held no further communica tions with the county ? c.it. Another three months elapsing the county treasurer wrote llurnett to furnish his quarterly statement. The reply came promptly. U wns : "The blazes with you ; this court after this will be solf-suslalnlng. " And so It was , In gronl shape. Every tlmo a cowboy would get exhilarated nnd shoot up Iho town the judge would nno him several hundred dollars arid would pocket what remained after paying his constnblts for the arrest. Ono day old man Schwartz got excited and killed a man. After the Justice , as.cx-ofilclo coroner , had finished the Inquest ho had Schwartz hauled before tne bar , found him guilty of the crime nnd lined him n thou sand dollars. Schwartz wanted to appeal Iho case , but Hurnett would Issue no papers on appeal. So the defendant sent up to Tombstone for Attorney Mark Smith , now delegate ; to congioss from Arlzonn. Smith came down at once and heard Schwartz's tale of wo . It was a clear caoe of murder. "Pay the money , you ass , " the lawyer fairly shouted , "nnd then go bury yourselt somewhere down In Mexico. " Schwartz paid and skipped , and the case was never again heard of In court. But the county never received any of that coin. Those who figured on the proposition said that Burnett came out $22,000 ahead on his ofllco In two years. TUllK'S IMlAYmi t'.VllUOIvHX. ' Ilitw n PriK-llrnl Celt Ki-lli-trcl n Fnli Imvcr of Allnh. Among the Turks employed on the line of the first Turkish railway was nn old man who hnd a sou who wns a soldier In ono of the regiments In the garrison nt lluatchuk , whom he had not seen for a good many months. Each day the regular through train arrived and left , relates Harper's Round Table , but the old Tuik ne\ergot the chance to run up to Itustchuk to see his son , for the : train Just came and went at the very moment - ment when ho was engaged at his mid-day prayer. ] i And BO the days a.n < J the weeks passed , nnd the old man , between his do- votlon to his religious duties and his love for his son , was left lamenting the Incon- vcnlont arrangement of the railway time table. Ono day he confided his trouble to the Irish foreman , whose name waa Flynn. "Ah , my friend , you do not know how sore my heart Is. " "Well , baba ( father ) , what Is the matter with you now ? " asked Flynn. "Well , jou sco , " Bald tbo old Turk , "my son , whom you know , Is up at Ilustchuk , and I have not seen him foi so many months , and his mother Is longing to hear something about him. " "Why don't you get leave , then , nnd go to see him ? " said the practical Irishman. "How can I ? " replied the old man. "Doesn't the train como In and go while I am at prayers ? Allah wills It that I should not see him. " And BO the time continued to pass , the old man ] telling Flynn how his heart was weary to | see his son. It happened ono day that , as t the train drew up at the station , the old man j was engaged at his devotions on his prayer-carpet ' close to the line , an empty truck with the door run back had stopped Just opposite where he was on his knees and his forehead to the ground , and the Irish man came along. Seized by a sudden In spiration , ho caught up the old truck , prayer- carpet and all , and landed him In the truck Just as the train moved off. Two days after the old man come back by the down train , his face beaming with pleasure. "Ah ! my friend , " ho said as he saw Flynn on the platform , "only for you I should never have occti my son. It must have been Allah who put It Into your heart to throw mo Into the train. May he reward you for It ! " Slant Cofitly Leittlit-r In the Market. The most costly Icather'noiVIn the market Is known to the trartu AS "piano leather. " American tanners years rigo dlecovered the secret of making Itussla leather , with Its pecuMaily pungent and lasting odor , but the secret of making plana leather Is known only to a family of tanners In Thurlngla , Germany. Thla leather hua but ono use the covering of piano keys. 'A ' peculiar thing about It Is tint the skins from which It IB tanned are prepared almost ontlroly In America. H Is a particular kind of buck skin. Thci skin of the common red or Vir ginia deer will not maKe tha leather , a spodes of the animal known as the gray deer , and found only In the vicinity of the great northern lakes , alone furnishing the material. The German tanners have un agency In the west , which collects the skins of this doer from the Indians and the half- breed hunters , who supp ! ) the innrkot. When the skins are returned to thU country as piano leather they cost the piano maun- facturors from $15 to $18 a pound. The world's supply of this Invaluable , and neces sary mntorlal Is supplied by the Kutzcliinan family of tannern , who have six establish monta In Germany , the largest in Thurlngla. ervR.es NOW READY FOR DISTRIBUTION. Bring 10 cents to The Bee office , either in Omaha or Council Bluffs , Mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in coin , SHE GLADLHPEAKS ! Victim of Nervous Dyspepsia aLJ Nervous Prostration. Onnln ! < 1 < iVK For ten years I huva teen llio HUlTorlnR victim of nervous pros- trntlon mid nervous dynpepiln 1 cnnnot begin to tell you or remember tlio renio- illcs t Imvo taken or tlio prescriptions I have trlcil. Tnko what I wotiiil. 1 Brow wprso liistcnil of belter , niulnn wci | nigh illscournRtd. Then cnmo tlio itrnlo * fill chniiRo. Ono month IIKO--OM ttio nil \lc of my brother , who sent mo a box - 1 commenced Inking Or. Clmrcol'a Ko i\ Nervine. Tablets , 1 hnvo tnkon ourln < nnd Rnlneil flvo pound * , but thnt In notli- IIIR compared to tlio physical relief I hnvo expel lenced. I nm better niul impnlcr tlinn 1 Imvo been for tlvo yenis. If t could nii\ko thn iccommomUtlon stronger I would gladly do so. so.Mrs. . I.ulti OlcAnon. Dr. Chnrcot'n Kola Ncn Ino Tablets rtra recotnblo nnd hnrmloM , Their strength fiml vigor RlvliiK riunllllcs nro wonderful. Fifty ctnlji nnd Jl nt dniprKl t * or mnlletl illrcct , Kurcka Chcmlcnl it Mfff. Co. , La i | HUDYAN Is turrnf ji ot dla , he xr.'nteit rr. charge In a media - trcnt- * a > . HUD , .iient thnt hai VAN cuiet b"en produced lotpca. HUD- by nny combi VAN cure * nation of | ihy- drulini , nnd nlclnns , The H U I ) Y A > f IUDYAV re-n. : ures plmnlrt , idle trrntment HUDYAN Slirrs the d ? . lure * ilHr-a. Jllltles nnd dls < lon iif iiurtt . raaes of men , bai'ifulnt.-g , IU'DYAN In ft re medy for look fiunkly mtn HUD- In'.it the eye * VAN euros or another. iv pnknesri. II U 1) Y AN It U D Y A N curen hendaclla curr sperma holr faillnv torrhoea Jut. dlmnom ot HUDYAN llKht. nolsca In mrti promo.- Ahuiul and il.Wr euro , wenk memory , loss of voice , tmto or sm ll. HUDYAN curr * sunken eves , Rtunteil growth , palpitation , Miortntss of lircnth. U > cprp8la , con stipation ami flatulency. IIl'UYAN cures wcnk. ness or pnlni In the small of the back , Ions ot muscular power , Kloomy , melancholy foreboding ] and disturbed aleep. HUD VAN can be hnd from the Doctors of th Hudson Medlcnl Inttltute , "ml from no one l e. You neei ] IH1DYAN nhcn the fnclnl ncmii twitch ni there la certain to be an Irritation nt their cenlcn of the brain. You need 1HIUYAN when there Is n decline of the nerve force , because thl * decline shows a lack of nerve life , and may de velop Into nervoUR debility und then Into nerxnxi * prostration. If you hast * harra lied your nerves. If you ha\e knotted or knurled them , If you Imvo abused your nerves , to strnlghtcn yourtelf out you will use HUDYAN No one else can Rl\ you HUDYAN except the Hudson Medical In. itllutf. HUDYAN euros \nrlcolclc. hjdroeelo Impotency - potency , dlzzlneatt , fallingtensailcns , bluen , despair , sorrow nnd misery , WIUTI3 FOll fltt- AND TESTIMONIALS OF T1I1J HUDYAN. HUDSON MIDICAI > INSTITUTE , Stockton nnd illln St. , Ban Francisco , California. ( on SYPHILIS ) A 'Written Gimrniitec lo KVIIIITT CAME or fllO.VKV Our cure Is permanent and not a patching up. Cases treat * d ten yealt RO have never won n nimpton llnco. lly dencrtbliitr your c. e fully wo can tl cut ) uu by null , nnd we give ihe wunesi-ronKifuarnnipe loeuieoi n'lund nil money. Those whn miter lo come hoio for Irett. tncnt can ilo fonlrJ we will pay tallroad tnra liotll i > ) l and Ijotel bill * wlille here If we fall to c-urc. Woclinl- kn e Die world tor a cane thai out .llnulc Itcmcily will n > t cure Wille lor full imrtlciilnin and K t tlio erlddnce. We know that jou arckkfptlcalJustly totoo. an the mo t eminent I'liyhlcluni ' ha o ne cr been abl > to fflve moro than Irtupuiiiry llllef. In our ten 3 ear * practice with this -tlnulc Itemcdy It ha been inoit dir.lcult tooyercome th iireJurtKeiacalnut all or " - ' iperlrtcs. But under our itionc truamnteeyoii nothefllatcto trj tM renmly. You takr no chance ot lotlne your money Wo guaiantev to euio or refund every dollar und as wo hate a rcpulallun lo protect , alio Hnanelal backing ot I9OOOUOO , It In peifeclljr fafoloall whowlll try the treatment. Ileielofoiorou hav bftn putting up and pajlnir out your money for dirr renllieatincnt > and although you air not jel cured Io not wa to any teated to oul rcpulntlon as burlnc * * men. Wrllo uit for name * nnd addrcFicx of thoie ro IIKT cured , who have tflrcn | xrmlftJ ; > lon to refer to then. It cosu i ou only poktoRo in ilo tnli i It will nave yo i a worldof Minoilntf fioin inentnl * lraln t indlfyouir * marHed hnt may > our on rirliiR | > utfer through yiur own ncKllKencel If ) our r ) inptoms are plmi lc on lace , aoie throat , mucous rulchrii In monlh. rheninatUm lu bonei and joint * , hair falllinr out. eruption ! on any part of the boily. feellni ; of general ( Jt-prceslon. iwlni lo head or bnnciiou have no llmo towaste. Thoce who are conntanlly laklnor meicury and pota h iil'ould dlt- contlnuolt. Constnnt utn of thcr.o dmio will rurely brlnpc fore and rallnv ulcers In the end. Don't lull to write. All correnimnrioncu Knt fraled In plnln tnvel * open Wo Invite Ilie niont ilyld InvcrtiKallou and will do all In our JIOH ar lo ajd you In U. AddrCM , COOK REMEDY GO , , Chicago , II ! , I iNoapo THEdREiT HINDOO REMEDV rnoDoacRiiiR ABOVJJ Urtnltnln UOilt'V Ctn , , nil Norvou Ulioawi. FnilFnBMojnorr 1'nrotlB , HlcoplosonoaB , UlRlitlr I.mlc- iloni , etc , cnuwd br pntt abuw , Btrci. vliioramlulu ) in ahrnnkcn orEHna. and quickly but sur lr restore * f ofl Jfunttnotl in old cr rnung. Knsilr rnrrled In vr t pocknt. 1'rioo # 7.Oft n package , BU for fa.oou-ltlt tt tirrinin u" ranltn lo curt or tnootv rrfitiHln ! . DON'T ntir AN IMIIATION , hut Inmt nn liavlnit 1NBAPO. If your drnuRl > t l'l. ' not eot It , w wlll end It prepaid. . . . . IllNbOO IICMFU1 ( . , I'ropr. , ( lU c , III. or uur tjiolt. lin'in ' A. Co , ( 'or. l. ' > 'h ' niul fUs. . und J < V Vnllur.V O ) . lllli , V1) ) tls. . OMAHA. NU BVIE A AJAX TAHI.ETS rOSVnVKl.V CUItK A LI , Frnou * IHtrnnei FiMlnj Mr , nry. linpotencKlinjilr noMintoinuii d h ; Ahum i.nd other ) ) iif > it and Imlls. cretloni. 'lli y tjutfl.lv t > nil * ttrt > lit TMtorc Ixitl Vltulllr in old or jcunuml ( It n roun for uludy , l > u lnn i cr rcnrrl.ixa , „ , . rrrvent Insjnlly and Coniumt > llon l ( taken In lima. Thilr uta IIOWH lmniea.ila ! IIIIITOO. laent and ellvcti a CUltK where nil otbei'n Jail. In list upon ) UTIIB ; th cenulnn Ajnx Tablet : . 'J'hy hntocured thousandund will oura you. Ma rive a Itoiltire written Bunrnnten to t > rTeet i cure In each cats or refund tha inonir. i'rlr * CO cenu tie ; nrrkncn , or .Ii n.ukuiei [ full troatntnt | for S'JKi. tlr ii ll/i / , plufn wrapper , uunn rnrolnt of nrlco. I f rculur f roc. A ( AY nF AIKf V / " / > 'a " ' ' . ' " lf.J/'l/\ ? 1 (1 ( Ml' ' For eale In Omaha hy Jainea Koruyth , Z52 N. Hth street , Knhii A Co. , Uth and Dounlas Strteti. nn. iiAiNns' fioi.nux"ii ) > i < : crpic cDiiifi It can ho nfven YvUlioul tli of flic iiiiilrrit In rnttre. tea or artlclti ot fond ; will effect a p rmanont and ( needy euro , wlirther the pitlenl Ii a nodtrat * drinker or n alcoholic wreck. Hook of partlcuUri free , to b Imd of K uli 11 .t Co. , litli and PuUElut. , Omul'a , Neb , ROMIKV HI'UOIFIU CO. , Clm.'liuiiitl , O , Write for their "Book on Murphln Ilnblt , mulled free , ClilchoUV. Knjtlltlt 1'Uuauud llrtut. Original and OnlUrimlnc , . tl . ; i Klltl.li. L t I > ut , H for Ckltktittrt JfnalltlUt I ran ( In II rd un ) GOJ nit ulllcV um. : j ! a wkh tint rUUn. TaL lnootbrr. Jtf/un tlaacr r u uiuu I.OJM mn4 fMUarter. * . A I I > raf f l > lt , . la tluii fw JHutlnlui. u.Umoalil. ttf "IMIof for T.Atn"liltM' . b/ntira Ui Jllf U for ununur | dlicnargM , lnti imn llgn , Irritation ! or ! c tMtloni of manual . . _ I' ! DM | < , and not aitrln * | THE WCHIU < CUCO. " * < " nr nt ID pUlu wrappir. bexprtu. . cttpald , tat ll.in , or ) iiOttUi , > ; . ; > , ttrcuUr a r tCM |