The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 29, 1897, Image 6

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    IN MEMORY OF LOGAN
' • i
ILLINOIS HONORS ONE OF ITS
HEROES.
Vtnlllni of an Imposing Monument on
* tbe Lake Front—George R. Feck
Deliver* the Oration of the Dag
—Grand Military Display—
Confederates In the Line.
The Soldier and statesman,
Chicago, July 33.—Crowds began
assembling along Michigan avenue
early this morning to witness the un
veiling of the statue of the late John
A. Logan, general and statesman.
Reviewing stands lined the broad
thoroughfare facing the monument
* and window space was at a premium.
As 1 o'clock, the hour set for the un
veiling, . drew near, the crowd was
numbered by tens of thousands, but
police precautions were timely and
the crowds good natured.
Shortly before 1 o’clock the review
ing stand at the monument began fill
ing with distinguished personages.
Seats were provided for 5,000. Gov
ernor Tanner and suite of Illinois,
Governor Schofield and suite of Wis
consin, Governor Mount and suite of
Indiana, Governor Atkiuson and suite
of West Virginia and Governor Hol
i comb and staff of Nebraska were
among the first, toonter, following im
mediately after the presentation com
mittee. Socretary of War Alger and
judges of tho supreme and circuit
courts came next, escorted by Chair
man W. Q. Harper of the executive
^committee and George R Peck, tho
orator of the day. Sculptor St Gau
dens followed. The Logan family—
Mrs. John A. Logan. Major and Mrs.
William F. Tucker, Captain and Mrs
John A. Logan, wore almost tho last
to enter the stand.
The boom of cannon on board the
revenue cutters Orosliam, Fessenden
and Calumet, anchored in the bay,
announced the hour of 1, Then the
Kev. Dr. Arthur Edwards arose and in
an eloquent prayer opened the cere
monies.
Judge Iicnry W. Blodgett, ohalrman
of the presentation committee, on be
half of the commissioners, then pre
sented the monument to the state.
Amidst the rattle of artillery John
A. Logan Hi, the 5-year-old grandson,
tugged at the silken cord, the veils
foil from the statuo and the thou
sands applauded. Again the artillery
salute rent tho air as the United States
band struck up the “Battle Scenes of
tho War.”
Governor John R Tanner in a short
speech accepted the monument on be
half of'the state.
GEORGE. R PECK’S ORATION,
George R. Peek, formerly of Kansas,
was then introduced as the orator of
the day. He said that anniversaries
were harmonies, and that observing
them people set history to music. He
i pointed out on the day of the battle
of Atlanta none looked forward to
this day, and added: “But time has
n magician’s wand and when It has
transformed real things into dreams
touches the dreams and straightway
they are real again.”
The speaker asserted that soldiers
In battle did not couscidhsly arrange
dramatic situations, and that when
John A. Logan summoned destiny and
rode, sabre.1 and spurred, along those
bleeding lines, beautiful in the deep
eensp that made tho heroio always
beautiful, he little thought of the
banners that waved for him to-dny.
As illnstrativo of Logan's patriot
ism, Mr. Peck recounted that “when
Logan had fought the battle of Atlan
ta, and saved the day that was lost;
when he had shown the consummate
qualities of a great leader,liu thought,
,»nd he had a right to think, ho might
keep what ho had won—the command
of an army that loved him. For less
than that Napoleon made men mar
shals of the empire ami bade them be
the companions of Davout. Ney and
Nassena. But it was notto.be. The
■Army of the Tennessee was given to
another, and Logan went back to his
-ijeorps, making no sign.”
-. “This hour," declared the orator,
r w ueuicaiou 10 Lo^un as a soldier.
'■Be won It from the calendar and made
it his own. Hut. in the midst of nil
Its pageantry, wo must not forget that
. ;3ie was a statesman in the most trying
' times of ail our history. Ite loved
' Illinois, and Illinois loved him. He,
more than any other, created the
Grand Arm.* of the Republic; thgt or
ganization which makes us remember
what wo are prone to forget If was
he who gave us the sweet observance
of Memorial day. only a poet could
hare thought it; only a poet could
have made it come true. It is, above
all others, one best loved holiday, our
•“" festival of memory, love and beauty.”
The peroration was as follows:
, “Here we make a sacred place. Here
we consecrate a name already conse
crated in our bravest annala We
give the statuo to the world, in the
presence of the wife he loved and
honored, and whom we love and
honor. His children and his children's
children are here to learn how great a
W name they bear. He is not ours
• alone; but yet we claim him. In com
ing years the throngs that crowd the
’avenue will see a silent figure, always
t ®n duty. They will knoxy, and all the
world will know, that It is Logan—
. Illinois has kept her trust.”
THE MILITARY PARADE.
The program was completed shortly
. ■« i after 3 o'clock. The parade and re
^yiew followed. The troops, falling ih
.vibe in Twelfth street at the command
of fhe grand marshal. General Rrookc
of the department of Misxouri,
inarched north on Michigan avenue
paatMie reviewing stand. . Over ?0,uQy
,, .men were in line, headod by a squad
• of police on foot.
v ' The 'survivors of General Logan'a
old regiment, the Thirty-first Illinois
**®ogtpera, led the van, bearing the
•M regimental flag, Uttered and tori
by 200 confederate bullets. Then
came the grizzled veterans of the G.
A. K., with bared heads in honor of
their first and idolized commander-in
chief.
With the veterans marched 200 ex
Confederates. The appearance of the
veterans of the gray was a touching
tribute to the man they met in battle
on the bloody field of Atlanta.
Behind ahe southerners marched,
with easy swing, 2,500 regulars, the
largest number seen together in the
west since the civil war. Every branch
of the service was represented, includ
ing eight troops of cavalry.
The governors of states with their
staffs followed, and then came the Il
linois National guard, 7,000 strong,
under Governor Tanner as commander
in-chief. Knights Templar and
Knights of Pythias followed to the
number of 1,500. The rear was
brought up by 1,200 Chicago mail car
riers and 3,200 uniformed detachments
of various civic societies not bearing
arms. The parade was over two hours
in parsing the reviewing stand.
The pageant on land was supple
mented by the finest marine display
ever seen on Lake Michigan.
GIRLS STIR UP A MUTINY.
Missouri Maidens In ttsts Industrial
Hoipe Wage Thrilling War.
CIIILLICOTHE, Mo.. July 2.1.—The
State Industrial Home for girls in this
city was the scene of rebellion and a
general attempt to escape yesterday
afternoon. A incorrigible girl named
Freye, sent here from St. Joseph, was
tho leader, and a smart one she prosed
to be.
The girls at the time were in Mar
mad uke cottage, and were ordered by
the governess to march to the school
room, as is the daily custom. Thirteen
of them refused to march, and defied
the officers of the institution with
chairs and whatever weapons they
could lay hands on. Officer Walter
Robinson and Hardener Joe Smith was
called in. They made a brave attempt
to restore order, but they soon became
unpopular. They were beaten and
bruised in tlic general fight that was
going on. At this juncture two stal
wart policemen, who had been tele
phoned for, appeared. Then a general
stampede occurred. The girls jumped
out of tho windows and attempted to
escape, but. they were speedily made
prisoners.
The real cause of the trouble is said
to have been whisky furnished by
workmen making repairs.
Colorado Minors Suspicion!.
Denver, Col., July 23.—Colorado
seems to bo the only part of the coun
try where there is no sign of excite
ment over the reported rich findings
of the Klondyke district in Alaska.
Advices from Cripple Creek, Leadvillo
and Aspen, the leading camps of the
state, are unanimous In the verdict
that miners will wait for more reli
able information before venturing into
the northern region on the verge of a
winter. They are inclined to suspect
the boom is the work of the transpor
tation companies, in league with the
commercial concerns that have control
of the provisions supply, and will not
go in before next vear.
The Work of Tramps.
Larnkd, Kan., July 23.—Tramps set
fire to a train of box cars that were
standing. on a sidetraok at Rozell, a
small station twenty miles west of
here on the Jetmoro extension of the
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railroad,
yesterday afternoon. Before the fire
could be extinguished a large grain
elevator and two box cars were burned.
After setting the fire the tramps most
ed some horses that were in a pasture
and rode rapidly away. The loss is
•5,000._
Sedalln Hank Inquiry Proposed.
Washington, July 23.—Mr. Cooney
of tho Scdalia district has introduced
, a resolution in the House looking to
an investigation of the affairs of the
receivership of the First National
bank of Sedalla, Mo. It is his belief
that had the comptroller of the cur
rency been more vigilant in the dis
charge of his duties, the assets of the
bank could not have been stolen by its
officers.
Idleness Makes Convicts Insane.
New York, July 83.—The commis
sion Appointed to look into the sanity
of a number of convicts in the Kings
county penitentiary pronounced seven
of them insane. The new convict la
bor law causes much Idleness among
the.prisoners and apparently breeds
physical and mental disorder.
No Foreign Boose Allowed.
‘Cincinnati, Ohio, July 83. —At a
meeting of the American Turf congress
here yesterday it was ordered that
after August 1 there shall be no
foreign books on any track. It one be
run, all horses, jockeys, owners, train
ers and officials participating in such
violation shall be declared outlawed.
Chaplaincy for Barnard Kelly.
Washington, July 33.— It is under
stood at Kansas headquarters here
that Messrs. Baker, Broderick, Curtis
and Leland have Indorsed Rev. Ber
nard Kelly, at Independence, Kan.,
for appointment as chaplain in the
armr.
Bo Saved Virginia llarned.
,New York, July 23.—John Raynor,
one of the life saving crew at I.aw.
reace, L. L, has cashed a check for
$300 drawn on the account of E. H.
Sothern, tho actor, for saving his wlfo
(Virginia Harned) from drowning.
A Venerable Priest at Rest.
Trot, N. Y., July 33.—Father Peter
Tlavermans, the oldest Catholic priest
in the United States, diod to-day. Ho
was born in the province of North
Brabant, Holland. March 37, 1306, and
Was ordained at Ghent in 183').
•• “Healer'1 Shrader at Nevada. Ho.
Nevada, Mo., July S3.—Shrader,
the alleged "divlno healer,” arrived
here this morning from Parsons, Kan.
He will remain here until to-morrow
evening. A number of people are via.
itlng him to be cured.
THE EXPOSITION.
Architecture of tbe International Show
to Be Held In Omaha In 18B8.
The general scheme of the architec
ture of the Exposition is the creation
of the architects-in-chief. Unlike other
American exposition architecture,
elaborate color effects will character
ize it. Briefly stated, the buildings
and colonnades will present the aspect
of a Pompeian rather than that of a
white city. The arena the architects
have chosen for a display of the high
est artistic effect will be pitched in the
great rectangle known as “Kountze
tract;” which is 650 feet wide and half
a mile long. It lies between Sherman
avenue and Twenty-fourth street. On
the South line Twentieth street enters
this tract midway, and here will be
erected the arch of slates, the main
entrance to the grounds. A lagoon
extends the entire length of the rec
tangle. At the west end will stand
the government building, flanked by
imposing colonnades. The lagoon at
this end will be a trefoil or three-lobed
lake, fully 800 feet across. The col
onnades on either side converge
toward the west, creating thus a false
perspective greatly enhancing the
effect of distance. The greater build
ings of the exposition will be situated
on either side of the lagoon running
east to .Sherman avenue. Midway on
the north side the administration arch,
for which a contract has been let, will
be constructed. At the east end will
be a grand staircase, forming a mag
nificent architectural finish to’ the en
semble of the picture, rising to a via
duct spanning Sherman avenue. The
viaduct leads over into the amusement
section, which will be devoted largely
to concessionaries.
having a fall of about ten feet. This
arrangement will give the landscape
architect ample opportunity for pro
ducing pleasing effects, and the arch
itect believes the approach will be
an attractive feature to visitors. It
will be necessary to dispose of over
1,000,000 gallons of water each day in
order to keep the water in the lagoons
in good condition, and it is thought
that the waterfall will accomplish this
result, while adding a pleasing feature
to the grounds.
A New explosive.
A Bridgeport inventor says he has
discovered an explosive which will blow
an invading army into cats’ meat as
soon as it is dropped among them. He
has gone to Cuba to try it upon Gen
eral Campos and his peninsular myr
midons, and if news from that Island
were not so habitually untrustworthy
it would now be awaited with increased
interest. So many destructive agents
of warfare are reported in this period
that if all their claims were realized
war would become impossible, and an
other mode of settling internecine and
international difficulties would have to
be devised. But many of them thun
der in the index, exploding with more
smoke than carnage, and effecting no
revolutionary change in military meth
ods. The Bridgeport fulminant may be
In this category, but its pretensions re
main to be tested.
A Cruel Kemark.
Sam Johnsing—Don’t you fool wld
me! Don’t make me mad. Don’t stir
me up, nlggah. You oughter know dat
when I onct begins I'se a wild beast.
Mrs. Johnsing—Huh! ef dat’s so you
nebber stops.
THE ADMINISTRATION ARCH.
The managers have determined upon
the construction of the following list
of buildings:
Administration building.
Agricultural building: '
Mines and mining building.
Manufactures and liberal arts build
ing.
Machinery and electricity building.
Auditorium.
Transportation building.
Dairy and apiary building.
Railway terminal building.
Live Stock buildings and paviilion.
Poultry building.
The total cost of these buildings is
estimated at 8550,000 and the total cost
of preparing the grounds at 8500,000.
Work will begin just as soon as pre
liminary plans can be made and con
tracts let.
It has been decided that the build
ings shall be given the tint of old
marble, and the staff turned out of the
factories will be colored to produce
this effect. These “slabs" will be on
an immense scale and many of them
will be works of art in themselves.
Intricate carving and classic sculpture
will be imitated to a nicety and the
artistic effect produced by the finished
buildings will be such as could only be
found otherwise in the most beautiful
buildings of the old master. Statuary
of heroic size will surmount some of
the main buildings and these will all
be done in staff. The imposing
columns of the long colonnades and of
the beautiful jiorticos facing the main
court will be constructed of the same
material. The handsome bas relief
sculpture adorning the pediments of
the main buildings will be moulded of
staff and the lions couchant and ram
pant surveying the main court from
their lofty pedestals will be poured out
of a huge pot and not won from
the bowels of mother earth by the hand
of the sculptor.
The railroad terminal building will
be situated at the base of the bluff
1 defining the east edge of the section of
j the exposition grounds devoted to con
cessions. Two broad stairways follow
a zigzag line up the face of the bluff.
These stairways will be about forty
feet apart and the space between them
will be converted into a waterfall.
The distance from the level of the rail
road tracks to the top of the bluff is
thirty-three feet and this distance will
be div'ded into three waver falls, each
There Was No Danger.
It was midnight. Massive clouds ob
scured the moon and stars, and the si
lent, deserted streets of New York city
presented a dismal appearance as the
occasional gas Jets flickered In the
gloom. Two bold burglars had entered
the Bank of Good Hope and were ran
sacking its vaults, when they suddenly
ceased.
“Hush!” said one. "I hear footsteps
on the street; wait here till I get a
peep.”
He crept to a shaded window and
peered into the darkness. He saw two
figures approach; hut as soon as he
could discern who they were he stepped
back briskly and whispered:
“We’re safe, Bill; ’tis no one but the
police.”
The Cowboy’s testa.
The cowboy’s lasso is made by cut
ting a rawhide into thin strips and
half tanning thorn with the hair on.
These strips are then stretched over a
block and braided into a rope, the
strands being pulled very tight. The
lasso is then buried in sand for a week
or two, and absorbs moisture from the
ground, which makes it soft and plia
ble. When taken out of the ground
it is stretched out, and the hair is
sand-papered off. It is then greased
with mutton tallow’ and properly
noosed, when it is ready for use
lier n«Hi<inlii(.
"Johu," exclaimed the nervous
woman, “,lo jou think there is a
burglar in tho house'.'”
“Certainly not. Why, I haven’t
heard u sound all night.”
“That’s -just what alarms mo. Any
burglar who wasn’t foolish would
keep pcrfoetl/ quiet so as not to ex
cite our suspicion. Tndocd, John, I
do so wish you would got up and
look through the house'.”
Opinions Change,
When a man gets old enough to
know himsolf thoroughly he begins to
entertain cynical opinions of the whole
human race.—Indianapolis Journal.
THE FECIT GEOWEES
THOSE IN NEBRASKA HAVE A
SESSION.
Baasmer Meeting of the State Hortlenl
tni*! Society at Arlington—What
Some of tho *rnlt Growers la
Attendance Had to Offer—
A Days’ Session.
Nebraska Horticulture.
The summer meeting of the Nebras
ka State Horticultural society con
vened at Arlington for a two days’
session. In attendance at the meeting
were a number of the representative
horti-ulturists of the state.
That the soil and climate of Ne
braska are adapted to the propagation
of any and all kinds of fruit was amply
shown .by the display on exhibition.
The display, notwithstanding it is
early in the season, was one of the
features of the meeting. Among the
exhibitors were: C. A. Whitford, Ar
lington, apples; J. M. Russell & Co.,
Wymore, apples; H. Hildencamp, Ar
lington, apples; Marshall Bros., Arling
ton, apples, cherries, raspberries,
and dewberries; C. W. Sheldon, Fre
mont, cherries on twig; George L.
Allen, Leigh, cherries, currants, apri
cots and gooseberries; J. A. Miller,
Arlington, cherries and blackberries;
A. J. Brown, Geneva, cherries bn twig.
The business session was called to
order at 2 p. m., after which G. C. Mar
shall, on behalf of the citizens of Ar
lington and vicinity, tendered to the
society members and their guests the
freedom of the city. He'said in part:
“As the Great Architect of the Uni
verse when He ordered Adam and Eve
placed them in the Garden of Eden, the
art of horticulture is the first we have
any account of. The man who first
crossed the Missouri river and looked
over the plains of Nebraska and said
We can here settle and grow trees is
deserving of a monument.”
E. F. Stephens of Crete, on behalf of
the society, responded to the address
of welcome and said that while the
society was compelled by law to hold
its annual meeting at the capital it
was found advisable to hold meetings
at various points throughout the state.
Briefly he reviewed the objects and
aims of the society.
A paper read by J. W. Stevenson of
North Bend on the subject: “Culti
vating and Marketing the Straw
berry,” demonstrated that the author
is a practical horticulturist and
specially well versed in the science of
strawberry culture. The paper was
discussed at length,
r Messrs. Tannehill and Allen of Co
lumbus, and Leigh, president and sec
retary, respectively, of the Northeast
Nebraska Horticultural society, made
exhaustive reports, covering their re
spective locations, on the subject,
“Progress of Peach Culture.”
Mr. Russell, of Wymore, an exten
sive grower of the fruit, said: “This is
an off year for peaches. The late va
rieties, however, will yield a fair sized
crop.” He offered many valuable sug
gestions on the subject and advocates
thorough and continued cultivation of
the growing? trees.
W. F. Jenkins, of Arcadia, the own
er of the largest cherry orchard in the
state, in a letter addressed to Presi
dent Marshall reported that all kinds
of fruit trees in the vicinity of his home
this season have made an exceedingly
heavy growth. He also reports an
abundance of fruit and rabbits in his
county.
E. F. Stephens of Crete was assigned
for a topic “Culture of the Cherry.”
He said the cherry is adapted to a wide
range of soil and should be grown
more generally. He has found that
where orchards are planted on steep
sloping land the rains have a tendency
to wash the soil away. To increase
the fertility of the soil he has found
that ashes collected from where straw
stacks have been burned and stable re
fuse are very beneficial. He also
found that the trees which bear the
maximum crop are those that have
heavy trunks and are “headed” low.
The cherry tree requires very little
trimming. The essential conditions in
the culture of the cherry are: First,
soil of good character; second, low
headed, stocky trees of vigorous
growth and of suitable varieties;
third, thorough and freqiient cultiva
tion; fourth, heavy manuring.
Discussion that followed the reading
of Mr. Stephens’ paper was general.
From the expressions of members from
all over the state, the three varieties
thatfind the most favor are: Early
Richmond, English Marillo and Mont
morency.
Well Paid for Walking.
Lincoln dispatch: Sheriff J. H. Hu
berle of Otoe county today brought to
the penitentiary a prisoner and after
ward came, to the auditor's office and
made out his statement of expenses
and procured his warrant for the
amount. In the statement was a
charge of S3 for hack hire at Lincoln.
After the warrant was issued Warden
Leidigh asked the auditor's office if the
hack hire had been included. When he
was told that it had he declared that
Huberle was not entitled to it, as he
had come up on the Burlington and the
train was stopped at the penitentiary,
within a few hundred feet of the door,
and the sheriff and his prisoner had
Walked over. Leidigh was at the state
house this afternoon and said there
could be no mistake about the matter,
because his clerk was at the railroad
when the train stopped and the sheriff
got off with his prisoner. Huberle is
said by the clerks in the auditor's office
to have told them that he came up over
the Missouri Pacific and got off at the
depot down town. Huberle left for
home before Leidigli’s message came,
and the sheriff's explanation could not
be secured.
O. A. R. Post Will Disband.
Baker Post, No. 9, Grand Army of
the Republic, of this city, says a Colum
bus dispatch, has decided to abandon
the post at the next regular meeting
and surrender thfe charter and other
property. The reason given for this
movement is that only a very small
proportion of the enrollment ever at
tends meetings only on public occa
sions, and that the expenses of the I
post have long been paid by a few—
the whole sharing in the credit. Fail
ing repeatedly to arouse any interest
among a majority of the members they
hat« decided to abandon the post.
▼Mtors to Lincoln Pnrk In Chicago
delighted with the souvenir booh
of this beautiful spot now being distributed
by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railway Company. It is a magnifies***
publication of 96 pages full to overdowlCa
With delicious half tone pictures of one oft*
Creation’s most charming places of resort I
for citizens of the Great Republic. -
No stranger visiting Chicago should b*
without a copy of the “Souvenir of Lincoln
Park.” It can onlv be procured by enclos
ing twenty-five *25) cents, in coin or post
age stamps, to Geo. H. Heafford. general
passenger agent, 410 Old Colony Building,
Chicago. IP.
England Has Unwelcome Immigrants.
Lord Lyon Playfair recently stated
in the house of lords that since 1891
200,000 pauper aliens, 17,000 of whom
were Russians and Poles had landed
in Great Britain, against an immi
gration to America of 179,392.
AMERICA’S LEADING MUSICAL IN
^TITUTION is The “NEW ENGLAND
CONSERVATORY OP MUSIC” of Boston,
Mass., which has nearly one million doilan
invested in its magnificent buildings and
home with unsurpassed advantages in the
'ine of eauioment and educational ability.
Of all poverty, that of the mind i>
most pitiable.
No-To-Ilao for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 60c, It All druggists.
Fame sells her words by numbers.
Genius by weight.
Dyspepsia
Is weakness of the stomach. It is tho*lJ
source of untold misery. It may be T
cured by toning and strengthening the /
stomach and enriching and purifying the
blood with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Many
thousands have been cured by this medi
cine and write that now they “can eat
anything they wish without distress.'’
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is prepared by C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, Ma««.
Bold by druggists. »l, six for S3. Get Hood’s.
Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills. 25 cents.
$100 To Any Man.
WILL PAY *100 FOR ANY CASE
Of Weakness In Men They Treat and
Fall to Cnre.
An Omaha Company places for the first
time before the public a Magical Tiieat
mkn't for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous
and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of
Life Force in old and young men. No
worn-out French remedy; contains no
Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. It is
a Wonderful Treatment—magical in its
oifects—positive in its cure. All readers,
who are suffering from a weakness that
blights their life, causing that mental and
physical suffering peculiar to Lost Man
hood, should write to the STATE MEDICAL
COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and they will
send you absolutely FREE, a valuable
paper on these diseases, and positive proofs
of their truly Magical Treatment. Thous
ands of men, who have lost all hope of a
cure, are being restored by them to a per
fect condition.
This Magical Treatment may be taken
at home under their directions, or they will
pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who
prefer to go there for treatment, if they
rnil to cure. They are perfectly reliable
have no Free Prescriptions, Freo t un®,
Free Sample, or C. O. 1). fake. They have)
1250,000 capital, and guarantee to cuvS
every case they treat or refund every dollar;
or their charges may be deposited in a
bank to be paid to them when a cure ia
effected. Write them today.
Thro* Yellowstone
Park on a Bicycle.
Among the geysers, water
falls, lakes and terraces of
Yellowstone Park is where •
every true wheelman should
spend his ’07 holiday. Most
delightful outing imagin
able. Less expensive than
a week at a fashionable
summer resort. Good roads
—built by the government.
Elegant hotels. Fine fish
ing. Splendid air.
Write for booklet contain
ing a map of the Park as
well as full Information
about the cost of the trip,
what to take, what the roads
are like etc.
J. Francis, Gen’l Pass’r Agent. Burlington
Utiutu. Omaha. Neh
HALL’S
Vegetable Sicilian
HAIR RENEWER
Beautifies and restores Gray
Hair to its original color and
vitality; prevents baldness;
cures itching and dandruff.
A fine hair dressing.
B. P. Hall & Co., Props., Nashua, N. ZL
Sold by all Druggists.
IT’S DANGEROUS
To liny NCALKM. guaranteed **A» GOOD AS*’*
FAIItlKA!%KM\ for less money; they can't bo
made Don't buy, unless you get the best. A
cheap Meale Is Iho most expensive Investment
you can make; it Is unreliable, and means that
sooner or laier you must buy again. Huy only
a fennlne, latest Improved FAIRBANKS
which will last you n lifetime, and prove the
e lien peat In tl»e end. No one ran then dispute
your weights UKlt’AKK OF IMITATIONS!
FAIRBANKS, MORSE & CO.,
1102 Farnam St.. Omaha, Nob.
tOld Ncnles Kepalred.)
CURE YOURSELF!
I jP®? Big ® for unnatural
I discharges, Inflammations,
J irritations or ulcerationa
of m u c o ii s membranes,
rainless, and not astrin
«THEEVANSChEIIICALCO. K«nt or poisonous.
] Sold by DrniflstSi
"or sent in plain wrapper,
by express, prepaid, for
•1.00, or 3 bottles, |2.75.
Circular sent on request,
PENSIONS, PATENTS. CLAIMS./
JOHN W. MORRIS, WASHINGTON.0.ft1
Late Principal Examiner U. 8. Pension BurtaJ. 1
Syrs. in last war, M adjudicatih* clainJ, atty. «iaoa
Y' PISO’S CURE FOR
, „ bURcS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
I Best Cough Syrup. Tsstes Good. Due I
Id time. Sold by druggists.
TSI