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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1900. i NEW BOOKS AND MAGAZINES | imdr,iogmave,s St (58, 3% story of the visit at Tolstol's home in a | small volume, which also includes ““Tolstol, Many Valuable and Entertaining Volumes | B Now 8pirit.” by H. Havelook Eilis. No of Fiotion, GETTING READY FOR THE HOLIDAY TRAI History of David W nal of Davia W Book m—Chieago Aathor Writes of Tolw The Baker & Taylor company has brought that are The vast | out recently three new books worthy the attention of readers. amount of discussion as to the original Edward Noyes Westcott's character, David Harum, has led Arthur T. Vance to wr! ““The Real David Harum.” According to t novel, David Harum was a banker a horse-trader who lived in Homeville, Free- These names are so thinly disguised that persons land county, central New York familiar with the people and localities central Naw York at once recognised man in the novel as David Hannum, tanker and horse-trader of Homer, Cortlai slightly changed, as for example Buxt Hill for Truxton Hill, Peeble for Preble, e ‘The book gives much information regardi the lite num and the admirers of Mr. Westcot novel will enjoy reading it Another publication from the same house Eighteenth Cen 18 “The Salt-Box House tury Life in a New England HIll Town,” Jane DeForest Sheiton now Huntington m, the Origl- Told in Numerous other names ©of places appearing in the novel are but d quaint character of David Han- The scene s lald in that part of the old town of Stratford, Conn., which was formerly called Ripton, The book shows the man- admirer of the great Russian should fail to read this little volume, which bears on | 1ts cover the single word “Tolstol.” It gives | 1o very few words a better idea of the man DE| and his work than anything that has thus far come to hand. Alice B. Stockham & Co, Chicago. “Viola Oelrich: The Famous Baby-Scholar; an Illustrated Blography,” s a little vol- ume of elghty pages by Prof. Heary Oelrich, it tells the story of a little 8-year-old Des Motnes girl, adopted and educated by Prof Oclrich, who at the present time is & re dent of Council Bluffs, Without doubt she 1s obe of the most marvelous children that ever lived, M ug able to read English, Ger- of | man and French, besides being proficient in numbers, botany to the extent of analyzing a flower and telling the names of thirty-two he | kinds of seeds, etc. She can name all the od | flagn of the different countries, knows all about, punctuation marks, can locate aud name the states and territories of the United States, besides the oceans, lakes, mountains, rivers, otc. She can read almost anv geo- he | graphical name given in Frye s Primaty and | Complete Geographies and can find almost nd | any prominent geographicel name and place in a few seconds if the closed book is glven to her for that purposs. At the age of 1 year on | and 10 months Viola knew the portraits ot te. | more than 100 famous men and women. She Ng [ 1s very proficient on the typewriter (the book contalns a splendid advertisemont for '8 | her favorite machine) and can do many other wonderful things which cannot be men- tioned for want of space. It is needloss to add that this poor little gir), whose days by |are spent in study when other bables are at play, and whose later life and happine are in danger of belng wrecked by over- training, s being used for exhibition pur- poses. It will strike the average reader as ite of ner of lite among persons of the better class | strange that some of the prominent edu- in the country districts. bees, huskings, apple-parings, etc., ous odd customs period, presenting a graphic and realls pleture of eighteenth century life. The habit and manners of the day are glv with great accuracy and so imbued with the atmo- #phere of the period that the reader seems personality and permeated by almost to be & member of the household. Another volume from the Baker & Tay- lor Co. is land Myers. “Making a Life,” of country life at that [ Chicago. The author has | cators, pastors or Ladies' Ald soclety women excluded the well-worn records of spinning who testify to Viola's accomplishments in but has | the last chapter of the volume have not put shown many less known phases and numer- a stop to the proceedl Laird & Lee, Price 60 cent: tie -— Within the last few davs the American en | Book company has brcught out several in educational work. Among the number I8 & revised edition of a nracecal grammar of the English language. The book com- bines in a remarkable degree simplicity and by Cort- | strength, which characterized the former The author speaks vigorously edition, with the best features in the mod- and helpfully, not only to young people who | ern mathods of teaching English. have the world before them, but to all w! would consclentiously, by purposeful direc- tion, make their lives worth the living. The ho| Another book from the “Grammar School Arithmeti Horubrook house {s by A. R. It 18 especlally designed for author's atyle fs animated and picturesque | the last four years of the intermediate or and abounds In frequent {llustrations which entertainingly and with aptness forcibly fm- press his cheering and uplifting thought. He treats his theme under Life's Ideal, Pur- pose, Progress, Mystery, Influence, Wast Law, Pain, Envirooment, Memor: sclence and Destiny. ““Geber: A Tale of Harun the Khalit," Kate A. Benton, deals with the later part |in “A of the reign of Harun and tells the story the fall of the great Barmek family. Geber, | coll after whom the novel is named, and whose great skill as a physician we ha only a fragmentary knowledge, of course| s & prominent part, but the story is not | [8h has becoma of gr, pl #0 much the record of one man as it is gorgeous and splendid history of a court that | Deces! marked by a magnificence and splendor | bY Lieutenant Peter E. Traub of the United not surpassed by the pomp of the greatest No more | Publication. The book embodies the results monarchs the world has known. Con- grammar school course. Like all of Prof. Hornbrook's works on mathematics it con- forms to the order and manner in which the ideas of numbers are most paturally te, | developed in children and brings its study and application within the easy comprehen- slon of pupils in the grades for which the book 1# intended by High school teachers will be Interested General Physlology for High by Prof. H. W. Norris of lowa It is constructed on & new and of | origlnal plan and is & radical yet sensible ve | departure from the old methods of teaching. Now that an intim.ie knowledge of Span- t importance, better a| text books In this language are found to be ry. Therefore “The Spanish Verb," of | Schools, States Military academy, is a most timely tascinating period of history could have been | Of the system in vogue at the United Statos chosen by Mrs. Benton than the time Harun, nor one about which eo little known and there is so much curiosity. Fred- ot | Military academy, whereby a thorough is | knowledge of the essentials of Spanlsh is imparted to the cadet in the short period of three months. The price of this last men- works of value to all who are interested | ick A. Stokes O N 3 , $1.60. eric ol 0., New York. Price, $1.50, tioned work 1s $1. The popularity of the novel American Book. Com- Jokal, translated from the Hungarian, b evidently induced publishers to search st further into the realm of Magyar literature for matter suited to the tast readers. Peter' ot Engll Umbrella” by Kalman which Is certalnly most deserving it t volume at hand 18 to be taken as a basis ‘St. Peter Umbrella” 18 an amusing tale and one that from which to form judgment. the majority of readers will enjoy, if for other reason than because it Is so different from anything else in current fiction. Nisbet Bain, the translator of several Jokal's novels, h interesting introduction. New York. Price, $1.50. Barbara Yechton, the author of “A You Bavage, she cails “Fortune's Boats.” elor uncle in a city flat. panion to a wealthy maiden lady; Ursula & newspaper woman and writes a novel; Ju- | fairly intimate with llons dith Is of Maurus | PABY, publisher: The result is a translation of “St. Mikszath, The author is, after Jokal, the most popular of all the Magyar novelists, a popularity contributed a brief but Harper & Bros., has written & new book which | Indiamapolis. Flve sisters ltve with their widowed mother and a bach- Margaret {8 com- i Volume of Verse. Frank L. Stanton, who has beea aptly named the poet laureate of the south, has published a volume of verse having for a title “Sorgs from Dixie Land." He is the poet of youth and love and hope, with a song that sings itself {nto our hearts and stays there long after we have Zugotten he | more pretentious verse. Old loves come back and are sweet again, little children laugh In the sunlight, the rose blooms above the cabin door and all the year is 00| May when he touches his lyre. *‘Songs From Dixie Land” is a collection of R. | verses, all instinct with sweetness and of | melody. Everybody will welcome them, for such songs add to the happy music of the world. The illustrations by W. H. Gal- loway are clever and show the artist's ap- preclation of the humor and pathos f DK | the poems. The Bowen-Merrill company, sh Books for Yo P d fact that many American is | children, and grown up people, too, who are and elephants, devoted “charity visitor;"” Frances |could not fell a woodchuck from a chip- i ap artist in the arrangement of furni- ture, plctures and bric-a-brac. The various dutles of the girls, singularly enough, throw as well as for m for- rd persons, John Burroughs bas written quirrels and Other Fur Bearers.” The them into the society of more or less eligible [ book 18 by no means a formal natural his- young men, and apparently there is studied Indifference on the part of any the group. vul & reasonable proportion no | tory. It is rather a series of reminiscences of | of certaln acquaintances of the author's 1t is hardly necessary to Ai-|among the squirrels, the chipmunks, the the outcome of all this, but|Wwoodchucks, the rabbits, the muskrats, the f the experience | foxes, the weasles, the minks, the raccoons, of the actors and actresses in this drama |the porcupines, the possums and the wild 18 “happy ever afterward This story is [ mice. It gives more or less complete life clearly entitled to a wide and sympathetic | histories of the various animals and many readibg. Price, $1.50. Other than Fiction. “Expansion Under tions,” by Josiah Strong, Is published by th The author pears on the title page pew and exceptionaal age. other word for opportunity. Our whole b “We live In tory appears llke a last effort of Divine [ now living in the United States. Providence in behalf of the human race; following of precedents, nd o lteral slavis! a8 by & justice of the peace, is not those who at this hour lead the destin of this people.” The author, after pointing out the ex- stion of our arable public lands, d s America’s manufacturing supremas cut Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston. New World Condl- timely volume | The reproduction of some of Audubon's col Baker, & Taylor Co. apparently taken for his|interest and value of the book. Houghton, text a quotation from Emerson, which ap- America is an- loteresting facts about the lives of these little known neighbors of ours are brought out. All is presented in Mr. Burroughs' own charming style and withal, so simply, that children will read it with pleasur ored plates of small mammals adds to the Miflin & Co., Boston. Price, $1.50. a o Kirk Munroe is perhaps the most su 18- | cessful writer of boys' books of adventure His lat- est story, “Under the Great Bear,” 's laid in a comparatively unknown portion of our for | continent, but the wonderful aurora fes | borealis effects, the dangers from icebergs and the charm and perils of winter in this frozen land are drawn from the author's 18- | own observations th The hero, » young 0y, | mining engineer, is wrecked in mid-oceaa, from which ho draws the conclusion that|but he is rescued and makes his way to are a new nece; the Chinese e dominated by the Angio-Saxon ra Expansionists will find in the pages of Mr. Strong's work many arguments in favor thelr position, as well as much Informat bearing on the subject. Price, §1.00 Dr. Alice B. Stockham is one of that vast army of American admirers of Toletei, but is distinguished above the great majority in that her admiration was so great as ity He situation and | {nvolved In difcultl writes At length of recent events in the|and a French war Pacific, which he calls the “new Mediterra- mean,” and which he evidently believes will | are eng: Newfoundlaud, where he soon becomes with an English sel on account of the {llegal lobster trade in which his friends Extricating himself from ce. | them by dexterous diplomacy he finds him- elf in u serles of exciting adventures on of | icebergs and with Indians and Eskimos; ion | and after a year of such perils, Curing which he discovers rich ore deposits, he mal his way home in safety. Touble- day, Page & Co., New York. Price, $1.25, The above books are for sale by the to | Megeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam St. n Does This We are showing th ' die stamping snd wish especially t M\ wedding invitations, apaouncements, etc. If you are interested it will cost you nothing to look. latest style Remind You of Anything You Wish? We are headquarters for Books, Stationery, School and Office Supplies. o ™ 1f you wish the latest popular novel or the mewest thing In labor-savisg of- n n n fice devices, this is the place tu look for it. m n w in fine rs, copper plate work and o call your attention to the mew form for MEGEATH STATIONERY CO, "ggragun W | Life is a joke, a joy, a sorrow, a burden or a reality; as you will. ‘He or she who frets and fumes, who worries or pines all day, must sleep fitfully at night. Then visions of despondency creep gradually o'er the melancholy one. Life is real, life is earnest. If you wish to be in the pink of perfection in the actual life, if you wish to have rich, red blood coursing through your veins, you will use the discovery Hudyan. Quit your fretting and fuming, quit your worry and despondency; three days after using Hudyan you will sleep as does a babe—slowly, gradually, strength begins to come upon you. Hudyan was used as a treatment for twelve years. Many peculiar, many remarkable, many dificult cases have been cured. If you will read “The Bee” any day you will find a new testimonial. 50,000 men and women have indorsed Hudyan. Hudyan cures nervousness, nervous depression, nervous shakings, nervous prostration, nervous despondency, nervous sleeplessness. Hudyan cures nervous depression, nervous sick headaches, nervous constipation. Weak weary, melancholy, thin‘blooded men and women gradually become strong and weighty from the use of Hudyan. % Hudyan cures pains in the head, pains in the side, pains in the face, pains in the shoulder, pains in the joints, pains in the back, pains over the kidneys, pains over the liver, paing up and down the spine, bearing down paine, sick headache and racking headache pains, pains over the eyes, pains in the arms, pains in the muscles, neuralgia pains. “Hudyan I have been nres, Never Doubt It.” w. H. a sufferer | 1 wrote to tell you that | My | | AYERS for years with dyepep- MITZEL { am_feeling .fi"a" zln?:i“ Tl‘x'\i“li‘lll:‘v:-:'\‘-fi\éi:fil'l IS gia and kidney disease. KoL A Bl JOHNSON the time. My hands are and strong. People in town speak every dgy about my looks—1 give | W. H. MITZEL, i San Francisco, Cal. | C IS CURED. Hudyan all credit. getting better, I am feel- ing better than for years, Hudyan has cured me. H. JOHNSON, Hoquiana, Wash. ] used Hudyan. 1 aw cured, W. 8. AYERS, Rocklin, California. \ ; MRS. H. | MRS, Hudyan is sold by all druggists. 50 cents the package, $2.50 6 packages. If your druggist does not keep a supply of Hudyan, you may send divect to the Hudyan Remedy Co., San Francisco, California. Myers-Dillon Drug Co., J. A. Fuller & Co.,, Chas. H. Schaefer, J. H. Schmidt, Omaha. 11 sell and recommend Hudyan. Druggists—Kuhn & Co., 8herman & McConnell Drug Co., Dillon Drug Co., South Omaha Camp Bros., Council Bluffs. \ T T ’ P, o e v N 2 01 c he months of July, August and September. \ [ | black one spared Possibly because it l‘lslo EDITOR (AL[EI’) DO unton whereby union bri '.klll” N N eensiot t u RANSOM AFTER ASHAKEDOWN | Pischsica &5 Goucts the soun ot - e N ) W | liowed 16 wdni for v general COMFAEIST; | Tho authoriies al Winalpes have been | polecat and the prowler had conscientious Buifding, nciuding il of the ",;y“,:‘;.,;.:““.\f ‘m\\'hul o ::: o e o ¢ vork. He 0 e had always employed y e Gordo © o police s e i i :n\:x‘;\ :nr h,“t".’ll tln:l this contract prevented operating table Saturday undergoing an operatiox for the removal of a bullet from bis right leg a scar was discovered on his Jeft leg above the kpee which aroused the curiosity of Burgeon Ames. Asked con- cerning it, Gordon gave evasive answers, hinting at a burn. Surgeon Ames says, however, that the scar has all the appear- ance of & buliet wound operated upon for im from being able to secure competent B I arry on his contracts and unless it {8 broken will compel him to go out of the general contracting business WANT GOOD SERVICE OR NONE re Are Unwil to Accept ‘ompromise on Ames Avenue " n | strangest part of all is that the mother Breaks Into mg‘"“‘f“‘ of His Former| (/\"{i'e that night retuses to visit her ient, Ish. | nest in the shed and has abandoned the P Mttle black IKitten, which would have starved tc death ere this it the children CHANCE FOR A HAUL TOO GREAT TORESIST | hadn't fed it artificlally. 1 can explain this only on the theory that the skunk's odor is 80 offensive to tho cat as to over- come her natural instinct of duty to her Father of Army Officer Resents Insult to Hie Son. POLITICAL TRICK THAT WILL BE USELESS How He Sacrificed James Ish Be- ai? ARG RES T | S A o o Sy D Husi ue AL She HttleTehootiog ey, of BevRHEk L Rt Y HUCHER (19 i aREnt ) SR IsONINY The meeting of the North Omaha Im- 24 Shol by 4 Chy terined a Com- last Saturday in the Sheeley lumber yar Mer 014 Age. GHOST OF DEAD WIFE ARISES provement club Monday night opened witha | wag pot the first of the kind in which Gor- temptible Lie. statement from E. A, French, outlining the don has figured and that he had neglected views ot the club. Short addresses were ionely Widower Is Forced by Italian consulting a surgeon in the matter of the The devious ways of that serpentine at- Law to Account for Fate of torney, Frank T. Ransom, are once more brought before the public in a sequel to Ma. Adorata Camero. The editor of the fusion Saline count y | Victor E. Wilson, Fred M. Youngs, John made by Henry McCoy, H. H. Baldrige, | first wound until mortification had set in Still More Countert eiting. ende: Liddell, Mel Uhl, Frank T. Ransom, Albert :T::&::im(:f' ‘lll‘le.nl“l‘l::;::w“ln‘:ur”:o‘n‘:::“u;:: J. Coleson, Harry E. O'Neill, Corneer, | Tho Secret Service has uncarthed another American prisoners captured by them, |Burton E. Wilcox, George W. Emith, Carl band of counterteiters and secured . |m‘m prints what purports to be an incident of | Nielson and QGeorge McCoy, all of whom quantity of bogus bills, which are 8o ¢ evirly the engagement between the First Ne- [promised to assist in dividing the Sixth |executed that the n\l:-ruvo v-r|-on ‘:u braska volunteers and the insurgent forces | Werd, to support laws favorable to tra. | Dever sispect them bt being spurious, Things March 1899, | terzal insurance companies and to give the of great value are always selected for imita- at San Franclsco del Monte March 23, 1899, | /7 "0 "0y g possible what they de- | tion, notably Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, ey which has many imitators, but no equals for the famous Ish murder case, Last week & divorce was granted without contest be- tween Mr. and Mrs. James C. Ish and $500 allmony allotted to the separated wife. On the heels of this decree Frank T. Ran- Two lovers in susny Italy are anxlously awaiting a certificate from tho Omaha health commissioner to the effect that Mrs. Maria Adorata Camero died in Omaha two years ago. In the land where som breaks in as attorney for Mr-‘-dlflhv "-k- divorces are unknown and marriages are ing to have the judgment set aside, alleg- ) for eternity persons who are about to : {ne that she was inveigled into making | plight their troth must furnish civil and | !B Which he makes the Nebraska volunteers certain admissions that sbe would not|religious authorities with evidence that |SPPCAT in the light of murderers and cuf « Ilke indigestion, dyspepsia, con- o After the candidates had finished the | disorders 1l have made nu:l she been advised of her ,h:y are free ,;,,md ,:mnz“nr‘ lm|n"n ::;:nlk. An extract from the artiole | After A CRRCCR I vice was taken ub 1‘]"“‘,‘:n;:?::n:::’:v:‘r:‘y:l]nka;:;,r:‘]|,’|(:b“,|,: full rights in the matter. After mourning his dead wife for a lengt Councilman Karr stated that the street | Alway olla d 0 o y 8 somhny C charged & coupls v To those familiar with llhe“ re;z::e:l: of time in keeping with his station, Nicora o,\:‘muofl,g{r;;ml;&)" 'hf'f.m'.‘u,.-."“.. rallway company had promised to put on )lm.- the reputatioh of glving <hat you ask Ransom there is quite a little Marlo Camero, & Sixteenth street shoe- | Piipinos were Killed trying to get away. |a stub line from Twenty-fourth street and | for the lines of this incident, which is ampli- | maker, returned to his native town ot Cal- Ah dozen hul (hlrm. unu\;l‘e Lo eacae, hl;udl Ames avenue to the western end of the e o o b 3 ) .| thrown t ves on their faces behinc e 4 fled by the story of Ish mmf“l .r::;':::, vello to claim the hand of a former sweet- | {;(AV0, (LGSt escape from the fire in (line from November 1 until such time as who {8 now asking the pecple to heart. front. When the Americans came up |ihe old service could be restored—the stub | Before leaving Omaha Camero provided L)lwllfl hrownt'elh‘)w- lay I\flul-“-‘l l-;,“'l"* to afford a six-minute service morning and will be remembered a himself with a statement from the priest | killed or captured, as we saw fit. g oars 0 TuD a8 they do DOW Torney for 1sh a few years ago, when he | who pronounced the last sad rites over hiy | &I Tavior. in command of L company, | evening, the ca y had been shot in the arm. wife. But the civil authorities In Calvello | and he commanded demanded a certificate from the health | black — Eila seneik chadians o BIery metiber of (e olih gebasd tha have wreaked vengeance for insults to his | commissioner of Omaha and refused to fi‘;;::."'-h:.‘r ln}!;,n': :-!n (;:J lr:;mh:ll;‘(l:’r"u‘;“ :d‘:.::h‘r R Aiah s ot 1 mould Thaiics it ""The logal maneuvering which at- | gramt Camero & license. The prospective | Shois fames. k b it oo dud s ne malt G| tended the trial was long and tedious, and. | bride refused to leave her homo to be mar-| When the Saline county paper reached | " p "jonnson was adopted that nothing| Whitle mEseto,the phiot SSpuckiver LU o0 ook Chmare oabiad Y iiacmns fo fomate Ondwc Taslor, faluas’ o CRPIMATencet ot iy restoralion ot 1he marvios in was in falfly well-to-do circumstances | relatives n Omaa, urglng that the much- | Taylor, was justly indignant. In speaking | ygreoq prior to September 1 would be satis- | when it began. When it ended he was needed certificate be sent without delay. |of the matter he said: , o san penniless. Ransom and his assoclates had toctory to the clu o b The records in the office of the health| rmpne motive for i - all the property, or the greater part of it.| commissioner show that Mary Camero Tayl Runsom, moreover, failed to clear his | wag burled hero in March, 1898. So careful GORDON BEARS ANOTHER SCAR cllent, as Ish was found guilty and served | are the authorities in Italy that Camero's i Mardes Dibses utity, but Not Account for an Old Wo! a sontence of elghteen months in the state’s | friends were confident that it would be {m- | tion of & milltary man i3 unworthy of very | Pr He was mad, |guring the middle of the day. Wi on trial for the killing of a man “Shoot all of them |~ poot. member of the club opposed the named Chapple, upon whom he claimed to Have you seen the new EastmanDay- light Leading Camera? It takes pictures 213x2% imches and sells for $1.00. It 1s & winner. You eas - ways depend on getting the lIat- est and best goods at the right prices at our store. THE ALOE & PENFOLD CO., Amateur Photographic Supplies, 1308 Farnam St. OMAHA. | | £ c! ch attention. In order that there may prison as the penalty. possible for him to secure a license unless | Much 'fln“und:};““dh Flense any for mo the death certificate contained his former | {nat any man who says that Captain Tay- Ran- | Wife's full name written in approved Ital- | lor ever gave an ordei to shoot an enemy Spmkisg of o oW sppeaanoe. of ho wanted to surrender, of in any mann’t w0 n s Sole caloulated to shake somebody | 18n style. Tha doctor who Anglicised Maria | Mo wanied, (g surtendels 0F i G0 f08Cow down for another windfall, Mr. Ish sald to [ 8nd falled to write the middle name 15 |ard and a contemptible llar, and I should reporter for The Bee yesterday: *I might dead, so Camero's parents appeared before | be glad to meet him and say so persoi- :anpuvtd myself the disgrace of that pun- | & notary and swore that Mary Camero ishment it 1 had had the means wherewith and Maria Adorata Cameron were one and to stand another trial, but i was absolutely | the same person. without & cent. Ransom had taken every Taxpaye Proteat. Nebraska was engaged, 1t was a hand- even compelled me to deed to him my home | Eibourn against the ordinance now pending | 0 trepehes Wt reachels, R, BILH® Wiy and the little real estate 1 had outside of | I, the SORACH 19018 (0 ke Uy the fout- | & NENE to"the death or surrender, | Pexau; that, and left me virtually a pauper. ing indebtednens of the city. Tha protest i | Koopman, _:;‘{m!{‘"r:;fl-m; f::‘{;;m P “You may know how hard up I was when | signed, by Jorty-thres \SpAYErs Bl s tain. Forby met his death wound a_little ‘h“‘" 4y :r"" .l":/:u‘l :‘:";:,"“.'l“s:"f'," Lo o unnocessary Mt the present tme | farther down the line. captain Tayior the penitentiary, DR nat ‘o foating indebtedness can be | a® Wounded in'the arm in the hot fight In packing house In South Omsha for $10 a |lawfully incurred under the charter of the the trenches. = After (hey entored i ; h trenches Wil Mason nearly jost his life at | from our house this week ls sold at week as night watchman, and that I held [ city of Omaha. the hands of ‘& boloman; two others at-| goctory prices and on very easy terms finally being pro- 2 tempted to Kill the captain and there were this position for a year, y belng Women e O N nana Hants” T 'am proud to|and if you want one you must hurry moted to head watchman, when my pay|( Mrs. Benjamin F. W and Mrs. | Piher Ot Only one son in that fight. i was raised to $16 a week. I certainly [ Charles Bass w’ar: m.n-: llml“he Irml;- but two, and 1 rejoice n,,"a..; ryone of tha | we include standard makes and every- g fonable event of the weel erday after- Company L boys faced death shoulder " it n wouldn't have done this It T badu't been | FOAPIS SYRTL A5 S0 BUE Rl Wimen at pro- | Bt COIREER Y b OV h G Siraaes wers | DIDE else—now 18 your time fo buy broke, would 1? gresstve high five at Metropolitan hall.” | dropping il sbout them. The captaln b | that “BARGAIN" which you have been N v now in t ppines, in the Thirty-nin . NacAase Na0 (505 800 WY ! c‘:“m‘?‘“ Marrl, Totantry. United Btates Volunteers, but his | l0oking for the past aix months—call aved myself from going to the pealtentlary, | pqyarq Uilery, Omaha .. putation 15 enshrined in the hearts of his | and ask to be shown the wonderful and that was to have Impoverished my | Therese R. Harris, Omaha brave comrades at home, who will know ks i Shfaant mother as well as myself. If I had been | Willls I, Mathis, 8t. Louls self-playing “Apollo” plano attachmen willing to have wrecked her little home and | Alice F. Wikl how to defend him in his ‘absence. Oliticlan finds it hecessary o | —this 18 acknowledged by all to be the to have made a beggar of her in her feeble il ish Relates His Exper Walter Gordon, alias John Wallace, v/ho‘; is held at the city jall on the charge of a | double murder committed In Whitewater, | Manitoba, last month, persists in denying his identity and insists that he has never | been north of the Canadian line. He offers to prove to the satisfaction of the police that he was in Chicago continuously during ally. 'Thie battle of Ban Franclaco del Monte on March 25, 1899, was one of the most flercely contested of the thirty-five or forty in - which Company L, of the Fighting I Don't You Know?— What we are offering pianos and or gans at? Why, every plano that goes z 28 in express my regret that any publish such a scandalous lie. “ACME OF PERFECTION old age, I suppose Ransom would have(gand other heroes of the Army and Nevy| _— pulled me thiough, but because I wouldn't | ynow their faces on Anheus ' Brick Trust do that he sacrificed me. Dew series of playlng cards, just issudd.| The sult whereln John H. H L as @ eneral contractor, seeks to have an alleged “I'see he bas 20w got hold of Mabel, she | gent prepald for 25 cents In money or| friat ‘termed the Brick Contractors n480- who was my wife, aud may heaven help | stamps to any address In the United States.| clation broken up, was heard yesierday be hi A. HOSPE, Mosio asd AL 1613 Dougles. ber. She had a little money. 1 gave her | Malt-Nutrine Dept., Anheuser-Busch Brew-| fore Judge DIC ineon. 18 bl testinony what little I had saved. But now that he , St. Louis, Mo. tween the assoclation and the bricklayer: has got hold of her-it will be goodby to that. It may be he expects to get another chance at me, hoping to get hold of what little property my mother has, but I don’t think he can do that.” SKUNK SPARES A BLACK CAT Night Prowler ates Feline's Home, t Withhold, s Claws from the Swarthy Kittea. Whers To Eat— The proper place is at Balduff's—for 'tis there you'll find all that one could ask for—and the price I8 no more than you'd pay at the ordinary restaurant these few prices will give you an idea how reasonable our prices are—half dozen blue points 26c—plain or milk stew, N. Y. counts, 23c—half dozen fried, Drex L. Shooman's— Famous foot-fitters—any manufac- turer can make shoes—but to make per- fect feet-fitters requires no common abllity—Drex has them right—not only In Hanan's and John Fosters' finest made—but in his $3.00 welts for women folks—made on the new foot-form last There is an int history out at E. J. Rudd's home, Thirtieth that is not only beautiful, but comfort- 8bc—dish of elegant soup, including 80d Woolworth avenus, = A week 880 the | ghble—in this great live of $3.00 shoes bread, butter and crackers, 15¢--halt housecat gave birth to six tens—al 9 % g o mixed white and yellow e one, which | ©f Drexel's the foot rests firmly on the wild duek, c—roast beef, 25c-all bottom, not pushing over the edge of gole, a8 In many makes of supposedly good shoes—it bought at Drexel's, they fit. was jet black. When the kitt wera three days old a skunk came by might, visited the shed in which they were shel- tered and ate all save the black ol “I knew it was a skunk,” sald Mr. Ruad, “because the next morning I could detect the subtle aroma that characterizes the be: but the situation presents 1 | kinds of vegetables, 5c and 10c—-any kind of ple, be—-tea, coffee and choco late, He—then the service is unequalled. Try one meal at Balduff's and you'll eut there regularly. 1820 Farnam St. tions to the thoug