The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, February 07, 1901, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT
February 7, 1001
ty rp-ecUl sctznnt la tne Dln!ey
la-ar.
The Urvatr if Missouri and of the
ctfcer wirn states who witU to
tmt aa bcnble cabin in which to rar
oCs&rt&c and.aalter tfcem from
13 tlaata cf s&ows cf wicur must pay
b4 tas been paying an increase of
45 pr erst dHcjK the last fourteen
xaooins spon laraber to the great lum
ber trnt. mfckh ia Uy by day cnrlcfc
Ss tie Itxrsbtr barons of the nor.n-wrt-
Tby are at tte mercy of till
trust. and a?l la rain to the repub
lican party, new ta the majority, for
rtJf. Vet tee people of New Engl as d
receive their laater today free by a
Sla! enactment la the DinrJty law.
Tfcey owa eaormota tract of lumber
UxA la Canada, and under tte provi
sion of lie VUt-r-A it burton treaty
of 1HZ tLey are pensittad. after put
tier, up large cllli. worked by Can
adian labor, to aaw thia lumber and
then Coat It down tte St- John fiver
Sato Nw EngianJ without paylajc ore
rent tax to tte treasury of tte United
tstatea.
The thrift, the enenry. the earaclty
of the people f New England, the fa
cility wits wfelca they obtain t pedal
prime under the law of the United
State. tit excite our sincere admir
ation. T CM la m Day.
Taxa Lavxstlvt Droiao Quinine Tab
leta. AU nEx1la refund -he money
If St fall to care, EL W. Groves sla
rjLtar is oa each box.
Hsw ii CiTilizs
The trade la beer la the Philippine
St aasusninr, Immense prcportiona. On
Cm la Manila alone ships C.09Q bar
rel of a popular brand of bottled beer
to wait week for shipment on ac
count of tee lack of steamer. The
tame complaint 1 still heard la re
gard to shipment of other good.
The- trade la American beer baa
grown tip since Amertcaa occupation
and. for the length of time It ha beta
used la the Philippines, It growth la
atapeadoii Previously, wine waa the
principal beverage, but wholesale Am
erican beer is now king of drinks.
Wcn the tariff 1 takea off it caa
be sold cheaper, aad will become still
more popular- The duty oa the first
ship load cf bw that arrived In the
Philippine amounted to fCS.000 (Mex.)
Tte tariff ta not been reduced one
cent since. Manila Freedom. Nov. 16,
OPTICAL GOODS.
Tte Western Optical and Electrical
Co located at 151 North llta street. Is
composed cf old citizen and thorough
ly acquainted with the business, tar
ing Sued eye for twenty-fir years.
Certainly they onght to be competent
to do good work. They are. perma
nently located with cs aad that means
zaaea to tte porctaser of ey glasses
aad spectacles.
VICE IN PHILIPPINES
Jm&gm Terrs' rIlMMds Esshm4-TI
Is limit 4 rrUrtrd by Mt
KlaWy's Order.
Editor Independent: la answer to
Secretary Roof telegram asking
wtetter houses of 111 fame are "li
censed, protected or la any w.y n-
eocraged by the authorlti." Judge
Taft telegraphs that they are not Me
then gn oa to admit substantially
ail tte facts charged, and to def'iud
Cicm. He acknowledges that erer
'see November. 15S. the irll'Ury au-
tbcrit'.es tare suWted th inmates
cf lw cf III fam to -ertif:ti ea
mlnations and compulsory medical
treatment, and that the expense wa
-paid from a fund la the custody of
a army officer. This tlerram from
Jadfe Taft. follow! sc cIo& on the
tee is f one from General MacArthur
Hatly dcying that the social evil Is
"license-l. protected and encouraged.
shows the different senses la which
words may be understood. In the eye
of Judge Taft and General MacArthur.
a -permit is not a license, and to have
prostitutes regularly examined by
array surgeons and furnished with o9
da! fceaJtt certificates is not to pro
tect or encourage prostitution. On
this point not only the missionaries
and the churches, but the common
BEAD
EVERY
WORD
C3. noaars
SW 2jtari
Eixctmc Belts
ljurdee aad
oMsstt&l" In-Snafu i a
m n
ini
mV hmt itlrliw.
SVmI JWmalea
Wwmi mi Csts IminU
AU ITitl
Tl f 1 M .11. 111 II
t::CU3AT0BS and BROODERS i ,
From fl.00 up. Fret-class in erery re
spect, ead fully guaranteed, largo Cata
logue free.
The Monitor Co.
ox M, Moodus, Conn.
Dr. Lou .v v enuj.uentist, 137 South
11th stree Hrn!l block. ,
sense of the average citizen, will dis
sent The two chief influences that deter
men from vice have been roughly de
fined as "the fear of God and the fear
of consequences." How caa it fall to
act as an encouragement to vice when
the military authorities take the In
dustry of prostitution under their i f
ficial supervision, and anneunced ' to
our young soldiers that they will try;
to make It as safe as possible for tiiem
to sin. Judge Taft telegraphs that this
official supervision of vice Is a "mili
tary necessity." But It has never be
fore been tolerated In connection with
the American army. The best of the
army men disapprove of it Theolore
Roosevelt writes: "I cannot suffic
iently express my horror of the sys
tem. General Grant set his face
against It when the attempt was made
to Introduce it In his time.
The efforts made to hide the facts
from the people at home fchow that
those army officers who have intro
duced thl measure In the Philippines
knew It would Incur strong disap
proval. By Judge Taft's own acknowl
edgement the system has been in op
eration for more than two years; vt
the truth has only Just become known
In the United States. Every assertion
by missionaries or others In regard to
It has been met by disingenous evasion
or downright denial, until Secretary
Root's telegram has at last wrung oat
a reluctant acknowledgement Judge
Taft says: "The system has greatly
n-duced the percentage of disability
from this cause." If bo. it Is the first
time In history. 'Its advocates alway3
claim that this will be the result, but
the promised improvement never ma
terializes. Paris, the heed center cf
the system, where rigid "regulation
has prevailed for more than a century.
Is scourged to a notorious degree by
the class of maladies against which
"regulation" is designed to guard
England repealed her regulation act3
after seventeen yecrs experience had
proved them a complete sanitary fail
ure, as well as a great source of de
moralization. Almost every religious
denomination in England has pro
tested against the continuance of the
system In some of the remote British
dependencies where It still lingers.
One of the latest utterances on this
subject was by the English Catholic
bishop. Judge Taft telegraphs that
the present system Is "better than fu
tile attempts at total suppression In
an oriental city of 300,000." That is
cot the question. It Is one thing to
recognise that prostitution cannot be
totally suppressed; it Is quite another
for the United States military authors
tie to go Into partnership In the busi
ness and to give it their official su
pervision and practical sanction.
Rev. F. II. Morgan of Singapore, a
missionary of the Methodist Episco
pal board who went to the Philippines
and personally investigated the matter,
writes: "Do our people at home real
ize what this means that their sons
are taken from Christian homes in
America and brought to the tropics,
with all the seductive Influences pre
valent there, and under the sanction of
their officers find everything made as
easy, as possible for them to live lives
of Impurity and vice; that our Chris
tian government, through its repre
sentatives, provides every facility for
such sin. and says by actions, if not
by words, that it Is necessary, and that
a young man cannot be pure away
from home?" - .
It is no wonder that some American
mothers who never wanted to vote be
fore are now wishing for the ballot
Everyone who disapproves of this dis
creditable Innovation in United States
army methods should write to his con
gressman on the subject, and also
write to President McKinley as com
mander in chief, asking that official
"regulation" of vice shall cease.
H. C. ADAMS. Dunkirk. N. Y.
in
ini
Your First 9usd
THIS
mwm
Is good for
813.34
if sent with cn order
for a $joxx Ieltt not
laier than th irty days
from date of this
LAST
OPPORTUNITY
o rt the
VTorid-MMBowned
on. nomiE's
&2Q Daoti'Io
Beit for only
56.66
paper Dec. 6. iqoo
OFFER IS GOOD FOR 30 DAYS ONLY
I We saske tbta fincrlml rnnrM-iul.iitfbl ft. n.i.n.
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DEIT. L. , CHKAGa. III., B.S.A.
WWIIEDB
... '
Senator Towne's Master
ful Speech.
EOAE'S POINTED COMMENT.
Said That All of Towne's State
merits Were True. ; '
EOW BEFUBLIOaIIS HADE ANSWER.
Immediately Swore In tb Orator's
accessor Brilliant Opening? and
' Koble Closing; of av Great Address.
Greeted tor Voetferoas Applanse
From the Galleries AUleki of
Delaware la the Role of Doa In
tm aiaacer Nebraska's Senatorial
Muddle Still Beillnff Shin Sabitdy
Steal Certain to Go Throne.
Special WishiagtoB Letter.
Charles A. Towne closed his brief
senatorial career with a masterful
great speech on the Philippine ques
tion. The Washington Post, which
stands with the administration on that
subject, says that Towne drew the lar
gest audience which the senate has
seen this session of congress. It even
notes the astounding fact "that at one
point Senator Depew followed Senator
Towne with great interest." Towne'a
speech must have been a clincher to
work that miracle, for no inan in
Washington has his mind more thor
oughly made up on the Philippine and
all other questions -1. e., it is made up
to do precisely what the administration
wants done.
I was told by a veracious statesman
that when Towne finished the cherubic
Hoar, who spoke volubly against Mc
Klnley's Philippine policy, but who
voted for McKinley, said to another
Republican senator: "Why didn't some
one on our side make that speech? All
he says is true, and the documents on
which it is based are open to every
body's inspection."
The Washington Post remarks fur
ther, with a sort of ghoulish glee, that
the answer of the Republicans to
Towne's speech was to swear in Sena
tor Clapp, his Republican successor, be-'
fore Towne's friends and admirers had
ceased to congratulate him and before
he had gathered up his manuscript
That is a fine piece of sarcasm, surely!
"The answer of the Republicans" was
sheer brute force and answered
Towne's speech about as much as If
Boiler Maker Jeffries, heavyweight
champion of the world, had knocked
him down at the conclusion of his re
marks. It must Le said for Senator Clapp
that It was an exceedingly gracious
thing for him to defer his taking of
the oath of office long enough to give
Towne time to deliver an oration
which bids fair to become historic. I
take off my hat to Senator Clapp of
Minnesota.
Exordium Versos Peroration.
Did anybody ever notice the fact that
most people take it for granted that
the peroration of a speech is certain
! to be Its finest part? As a matter of
fact the exordium frequently equals
and sometimes excels the peroration.
Nearly every one who reads this can
repeat offhand verbatim or, in sub
stance Webster's peroration In his
"Reply to Ilayne," beginning "When
my eyes shall be turned," etc. But
not one In thousands remembers a worcf
of the magnificent exordium, which, In
grandeur of thought, splendor of dic
tion, felicity of expression, is about on
a par with the peroration which every
body knows by heart and which every
body has declaimed at school. That
exordium is as follows:
"Mr. President, when the mariner
has been tossed for many days In
thick weather and on an unknown sea,
he naturally avails himself of the first
pause In the storm, the earliest glance
of the sun, to take his latitude and
ascertain how far the elements have
driven him from his true course. Let
us Imitate this prudence and before we
float farther on the waves of this de
bate refer to the point from which we
departed, that we may at least be able
to form some conjecture where we are
now."
A Splendid Bea-lnnlne.
It's a ten to one shot that Towne's
peroration will be widely printed and
the exordium neglected. I hereby
snatch from oblivion that splendid ex
ordium. It Is In these words:
Mr. President, the presentation on th 10th
Inst, by th distinguished senator from Colorado
(Mr. Teller) oi a petition signed by nor than
2,000 inhabitant of the city of Manila was an un
exampled and most remarkable circumstance.
Whatever tb future has in store, this document
la historic. 1$ is spread upon the records of the
senate. There it must remain so long at our
archives arc preserved. To all coming ages its
mute eloquence will spealc "with most miraculous
organ." Either it will have proved a quickening
appeal to the ancient spirit of the republic or, in
my opinion, its rejection must dedicate th twen
tieth century to a reaction prejudicial, if not
fatal, to free institution.
Who are the signers of this petition? They are
peaceable tradesmen, merchants, lawyers, doctors.
! teachers, mechanics and artisans at Manila. Whom
do they represent? They claim to speak th senti
ments and aspirations of the Philippine people.
Of what do they complain? pt the assertion over
them by tore of arms of an alien and arbitrary
rul. What nation thus asserts its power against
them? The republic of the United States of
America. What ia it they desire? Independence
and self government. To whom do they present
their appeal? Let the answer- b made in th
words of the petition itself:
"We have not hesitated, therefore, to present
this appeal to the United States congress, trusting
that th latter may better understand the real
alms and aspirations of our people. Therefor the
Philippine nation, bearing in mind not only tha
heroic history of America, but also her sacred tra
ditions, her humanitarian dootrines and her demo
cratic institutions, asks of America to cease her
persecution ef men struggling to be tree against
greater odd sad greater wrmga than thorn whioh
lasr-titd the fathers of the American republic We
ask this of Americans in th name of Washington,
in the nam of Jefferson, in the name of Lincoln,
in the name of Justice and in the name of God
sternal, Judge of th world."
Sir, I confess that this appeal move me. What
American can remain insensible to "the unhappy
plight t s small and relatively feeble people en
gaged in a hopeless contest with s vastly stronger
antagonist for the sacred privilege of self govern
ment? Is not there something infinitely pathetic
tn the circumstance that we should today be using
the very power conferred upon us by our liberties
to subjugate a weaker nation invoking those very
liberties against us and whom our owl glorious
example inspires to resist our aggression? Their
summons ia the nam of Washington, Jefferson
sod Lincoln to challenge justice ia the court of
heaven is s most solemn adjuration. Never here
tofore would th United States hare hesitated to
take it cause on such an issue. Do we dare to
do it now? ; . .
In my opinion, Mr. President, the prayer of this
people should be granted. Not less advantage
than Justice, not less glory than duty, demands it.
As tending to support this contention, therefore,
X propose, as briefly as is consistent with th im
portance of the subject and considering that at
tention has been heretofore repeatedly caUed to
them in this chamber, to review th circum
stances of the origin of our interest in the Phil
ippines, th conditions existing in the islands at
that time and th present situation there, as well
as some of the arguments employed to justify
both the conquest and the arbitrary government
of the archipelago by the United States. I shall
also endeavor to show that the present policy of
the administration involves an adoption of the
programme of imperialism and militarism, toward
which there has been for some years ah accelerat
ing tendency in Europe, an abandonment of the
most glorious traditions of the republic and rec
reancy to her noble and peculiar mission among
the peoples of the earth.
In classic times, sir, long after the skeptic phi
losophies had ravished Olympus of its terrors and
Helicon of it charms, it still remained the cus
tom of the poets to invoke the aid of gods and
muses whose existence, for both writer and reader,
had become s tacit intellectual fiction. Today a
somewhat similar imputation attaches to those ap
peals to the nonpartisanship of their audiences
which speakers on political subjects are prone to
utter. Yet, sir, such an appeal I now make. I
do not believe the ancient shrines are all Un
tenanted. Many an American heart Still pays its
vows to the spirit of citiienship in the republic
while the altara of party "pale their ineffectual
fires."
Millions of voters in this nation, I believe, still
bear a fealty to their country stronger and more
sacred than any duty they recognize to any po
litical oiganiMtion. Many of them at the last
election, I am convinced, voted for the party in
power under a misapprehension. To some the
clamor of party drowned th voice of country. To
others the flaunting of party banners in the
similitude of the national ensign worked s tem
porary confusion. These two classes are dangerous
to the system they have aided. If they become
convinced that they have been deceived, ii one
they shall realise that the new course is away
from the old landmarks of liberty, their vengeance
will be both swift and sure.
I cannot hope that my voice may reach any
large number of these men nor that, even of those
who hear, many wUl be convinced through my
Imperfect utterance, but happily mine is but one
of a multitude of voices raised and to be raised
for Justice and national honor, for the American
ism of the fathers and for the true and perpetual
glory of the country. They shall sing of industry
rather than waste, of social equity rather than
war, of self government rather than arbitrary
power.
A Noble Peroration,
-The peroration is as follows:
Sir, this new policy is advocated by some men
because, as they contend, w need th discipline
of war. I deny it. I affirm, on the contrary, and
I appeal in confirmation of my statement to all
past and present history, that war in and of it
self is an awful and unmatched calamity and ih
so respect more so than in its effect on th char
' acter and morals of men. Mere slaughter ia never
glorious. Only the justice of the cause tor which
men have fought when liberty has been at stake
has redeemed th horror of it. The nobl senti
ment aroused by such a caus has glorified even
the awful. means by which it has thus far been
found necessary to support and defend it. Those
1 means have always been deplored by humane and
. Just men who have been compelled to use them.
How true this is msy be seen in every single case
where war is waged tor greed or power and when
; the soldiers engaged in it are not sustained and
' animated by lofty enthusiasm or generous senti
ment. They will cither shun the service or they
will become "subdued to what they work, in, like
the vrs hand." "War," declares Vereschagin
who painted it so truly that Yon Moltke com
manded his soldiers not to look upon the artist's
canvases, "war ia the , opposite of humanity." .
"War," said General Slicrnian. "is hell." All its
repulsive features are magnified by an ignoble
cause. Writing from the unblessed fields of the
South African campaign, a British officer has said :
- "One of .the greatest calamities of war, espe
cially a prolonged war, is the moral degeneracy
that sets in among the combatants, and I fear
that this is sometimes even more marked among
the victors than among the vanquished, for, flush
ed with triumph, they believe they hare a right
to trample to any extent jtn a prostrate enemy.
Years of civilisation and peace teach men to re
spect the lives and property of others, but a few
months of war seem to scrape off this veneer of
virtue and return them to their primitive sav
agery." This is profoundly true, and when we read in
the accounts of our operations in the Philippines
how the American soldiers customarily speak of
their pursuit of th enemy as "hunting niirgers "
. how upon one occasion a company hemmed in 60
Filipinos at s bend of the Pasig river and shot
them to death in spit of their prayers for quarter
(and I have talked with a man who saw it) or
bow at another time a detachment of troops sur
rounded a native house where a wedding ceremony
was being celebrated, set the building on fire and
then hot the escaping guests of both sexes, I say
when we read or hear of such ineffably tragic
things as these, is it possible we can Btill prate
about our "mission of friendship," our "benevo
lent intentions," our "Christian duty" or of the
glory of such deeds of arms?
r Out, out upon it for an infamous delusion. Cod
speed the day when tb American people, whose
annals blaze with records -of unequaied heroism
and who again and always, if some great cause
demand it, would freely pay with life itself the
pric of its defense, shall have the moral courage
to do their civic duty a rarer thing than to
face, undaunted, the cannon's mouth and with
their sovereign Voice declare that this unholy war
for greed and empire shall be stopped and that
no soldier of the United States shall ever again in
all our history b sent to other lands to war on
people fighting for their liberty.
Sir, the time has other duties. I shall : not
willingly cease to dream of a twentieth century
devoted to the demonstration, the first and only
on in history, that a "government of the people,
lor the people and by th people" need not "per
ish from the earth. There is an inspiration in
the thought that to our beloved country may T
reserved the culminating glory of ' the ages in
crowning with success-the long experiment of
righteous self government.
Gallery Applauded.
During the delivery of this peroration
the applause in the galleries was so vo
ciferous that the Hon. William P. Frye,
president of the senate, threatened to
have them cleared. I have no doubt
that he would have liked to clear out
Towne with the galleries. : I heard
about half an hour of Towne's speech
myself, and one of the things that
struck me was the awfully bored ex
pression on the face of Senator Frye.
If some senator had been making as
strong a speech on the other side as
Towne was . making on his side, the
genial face of the senator from Maine
would have glistened like a new moon.
The Honorable "Gas" Addlcks.
Macaulay says that at the close of
the Seven Years' war all Europe In
arms could not wrest Silesia from the
Iron grasp of Frederick the Great, and
while it is a far cry from that mighty
monarch to the Hon. "Gas" Addlcks it
is nevertheless true that It seems utter
ly impossible for all the good people In
Delaware to wrest that tiny common
wealth from the grip of the greasy
hand of boodle. Addlcks, like Alexan
der Selkirk, seems to be monarch of all
he surveys. Addlcks is playing the
Etar engagement as dog in the manger.
Twice he has produced ' a deadlock
which for two years at each time has
caused Delaware to have only one sen
ator. It would be strange indeed If for
two years he should produce a dead
lock that would prevent Delaware
from having any senator at alL yet
that seems precisely what is going to
happen. Out In Nebraska the conflict
ing ambitions of Colonel Edward Rose
water, Assistant r Secretary of War
Meiklejohn, Hon. David Mercer, Mr.
Thompson, Mr. Malner and an unnum
bered throng of lesser statesmen ap
pear quite likely to leave Nebraska
without any senator. These two cases
are sufficient arguments In favor of
electing United States senators by di
rect popular vote, even if there were no
other reasons. This reform is absolute
ly Imperative for the best Interests of
the republlcanform of government.
: A' Man of Paris. f
Senator Turner of the state of Wash
ington, who, by the way. Is a Missourl
an, Is rapidly developing into one of the
strongest debaters in the senate. He is
a tall, handsome man of the brunette
style of beauty, with a large, capacious
head chuck full of Information on the
leading questions of the day. Notwith
standing he is a man of affairs who has
spent several years on the frontier,
where competition in all lines is piti
less, Senator Turner has found time to
dip into the best literature and knows
how to use it effectively in debate. , I
hare always regarded Lord dive's dec
laration as to his own moderation in
taking money from the East Indians as
one of the most remarkable that ever
fell from human lips. In his speech
against the subsidy bill Senator Turner
thus deftly uses that celebrated decla
ration of the great English soldier:
So w are gravely proceeding to vote out of th
treasury of the United States an open, bold, bald,
emphatic subsidy, a mere gift, to this favored in
dustry of shipbuilding and shipowning, and w
are proceeding to do so for the period of SO years,
involving the government in payments to the sum
total of 1270,000,000, at the very moment when it
la reasonably certain that if ships cannot now be
built and operated by us as cheaply as by any
other people the time is not far distant when they
can be so built and operated. I do not blame the
shipping industry for making the most of this op
portunity which has been tendered them. Lord
Clive, after tiie battle of Plassey, was taken into
the treasure vaults at Moorshedabad by the nabob
his victory had raised to the .throne and there,
walking between heaps of gold and silver, crown
ed with rubies and diamonds, was told to help
himself. He accepted between 500,000 and 300,
000. Many years later, in England, undergoing exam
ination before s parliamentary committee, he waa
! reproached for this act and exclaimed: ."By God I
Mr. Chairman, at this moment I stand astonished
at my own moderation."
- When we remember that this bill was framed
by those who arc to b benefited by it, at the in
vitation of the leaders of the Republican party,
and that that invitation waa equivalent to throw
ing the treasury of the nation open to them and
inviting them to help themselves, w, in consid
ering its provisions, may well be astonished at
their moderation, although,' whereas Lord Clive
helped himself to only a million dollars, they
have provided for helping themselves to two hun
dred and seventy millions. But the treasury of
the United States to the treasury of Bengal is as
the sea to an insignificant rivulet, and in this case
there are many Lord Clives to be provided for. To
complete the picture we must have a nabob of
Bengal, recently crowned and drunk with power.
but still grateful for assistance, to open the doors
i the treasure vaults, ana we cave inai inai
vidual personified in the Republican party. But
ss dive's nabob of Bengal did not last long on
the throne, neither will the Republican party if
it indulges to any great extent in legislation such
as that which we find in this bill.
Ship Subsidy Bill.
But notwithstanding Turner's great
speech and Vest's great speech and
all the other great speeches that have
been and will be delivered against the
ship subsidy bill, that infamous and
colossal steal is absolutely certain to
become a law of the land either at
this session or at an extra session to
be called for that purpose. The men
who put up the boodle for the last
presidential election and - the one be
fore are determined to have their
pound of flesh. They have the country
by the throat and will never release
their hold until -they get this $1S0.
000,000 and several other grabs of like
amount,
Terms In Falconry.
When under a year old the hawk is
called a red hawk, owing to its
plumage before its first molt being
reddish. After Its molt It Is termed
a haggard. The female peregrine is a
falcon, while the male is a tiercel. The
various parts of a hawk have their
peculiar names. The legs from the
thigh to the foot are the arms; the
claws, the pounces; the wings, sails;
the crop is the gorge; the upper bill,
the beak; the lower, the clap, and the
yellow portion between the beak and
the eyes is the cere. When a hawk
seizes Its prey, it Is called binding,
and the game or bird flown at is the
quarry.
The making of a hawk tame and gen
tle Is termed reclaiming. Hawks when
In training have a couple of bells fas
tened round the legs by two narrow
leather thongs, called Jesses. This Is
to discover them more easily from
their wild brethren while flying and
gives notice that they are trained birds.
This has- saved many a hawk's life
from the gamekeeper's gun. A leather
thong, called a leash, is attached to
the jesses when the falconer takes the
hawk on his fist In the field, and the
same leash Is used to tie the bird on
the screen or block In the hawkhouse.
Always when the hawks are carried
Into the field for sport they are hood
ed to , prevent them from fidgeting
about. These hoods are gaudy little
helmets coming down over the eyes
and fastening with a strip of leather
at the back of the head. Usually they
are colored and . decorated with a
feather in the crown. Caa sell's Maga
urr
The BURR
Writs for Free Cstalsr.
SULPHO-SALIHE BATH
a DBS. M. II. AND J. 0 EVERETT, f.lAtlAGIIIG PHYSICIANS
The University of Nebraska
SCHOOL
OF MUSIC
Ia the leading institution of its kind in
the west. It offers complete and thor,
ough courses in all branches of Music. f
It has a. corps of twenty instructors and ;
a fine " building for its exclusive use,
and would ask you to send for catalogue.
' WILLARD KIMBALt,
DIRECTOR-
O V O U 1 1 I O OR BAD BLOOD CUBED. 1st. 2nd. or 3rd stages of Syphilis eurd I
tl I I M I L I aJ (or f20' FuU 12 001 treatment nvr fails. Piaipl, skin eruption 1
V" V vanish ss if by magic Bemember anoney returned if not satisfactory. 1
$2 aingie box. By mail, plain wrappers. Hsha'i Pharmacy, 1S05 Farnam St.. Omaha, Neb. 1
BOLD BY B. O. KOSTKA. LINCOLN, NEBR. m
!
W t
i mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
C i t y
HOW TO GO
Twice ; e a c h week- eve r y T u e s d a y
a t 10:55 a . m; and every T h u r s
day at 6 p. ni. The Burling to n
run 8 Tourist Sleeping Cars to
Los An g e 1 e a via O gd e n . a n'd Sac
ramento. Call and arrange y our
trip by this r out e .
Yon can leave Missouri Rim after breakfast to-day on
"THE OVERLAND LIMITED"
and arrive in California sooner than if you left yesterday via any other train.
A
Rooms, Dining Cars, meals being served a la carte, and every delicacy
is provided. ' The cars are illuminated with the famous Pintsth Light
and heated with steam. A notable feature ia that safety, perfect com
fort and speed are all included.
O n ly Two Nig hts
. . botwoon. .
-Missouri River and San Francisco
For time tables and full Information, call on
E. B. SLOSSON, Agent,
. - . - ; , Lincoln, Nebraska.1
i
Incubators
.And BROODERS for Chickens, Ducks aad Turkeys.
hatches anything-that a hen can hatch. 1
BURR INCUBATOR CO., Omasa, N. p
HOUSE & SANITARIUM
m ftf ? ,ot tas-Turkla, Bssstsa, Bo.
man, JClectrle with special attention to th
spplioatioa of natural salt water batns, several
f,t,roai'tT thn water, Rheumatism,
Bkin, Blood, Catarrh, Stomach, Nervous, and
Hssrt disease; JUlvr and Sidney troubles i
aisaase of women snd chronic ailments treated
successfully. A separate department, fitted
with a thoroughly aseptio ward aad oparatlar
rooms, offer special lndaosmont to oririeal
cases, Sad all disease pseoiiar to women.
(Clarence L. Gerrard:
' C I r I Tl IJVIRWOATION GROWN SEEDS.
I If 1 1 MOT KILN-DRIED.
jJJI L L KyjSEND TOUR CENTS for samples.
I Columbus , Nebr. -
.
UNCOLN, NEBRASKA.:
T icket Office Cor
1 0 th an d O Sts, Tel. 2 3 5.
Depot 7th : S t . , Between
Pan d Q . T e 1 e phone 2 5
TO CALIFORNIA
TRIP TO CALIFORNIA, in regal
splendor, can be made on The
Overland Limited," tbo celebrated Union
Pacific train. - Thia train runs ria the
O verland Route," the established rout
across the continent. It haa, perhajis, the
most finely equipped cars in the world.
There are Double Dra wing-Room Palace
Sleepers, broad Testibuled Cars through
out. Buffet Smoking and Library Cart
with Barber Shops and Pleasant Reading