liii Free -Vaudeville and Photo Plays-Free Every Night at 8:45 Entire Change of Program Every Thursday & Saturday a!f UaAci Ming Mammoth Swimming Pool Open 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p. m. Electric Court Attractions SO AtlUSEUET FEATURES SO SHADY PICNIC GROVE Palm Garden Japanese Garden Rowing-Sailing -Launching Rollor Skating Dancing DSD(0)S That you may see and enjoy the beauties and pleasures of this popular resort we extend a hearty invitation to all visitors and everybody in Lincoln to visit the beach Free of Charge, this week only from 7:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. :: :: After 5:00 p. m. Admission Only a Dime footwear. If this seems to be your trouble we advise that you call at the Cincinnatti Shoe Store, 142 North Twelfth street. They say, "It pays us better to please you it brings you back. That's why we please." You will find our shoes Stable and durable and at money saving prices. Come in and see our line. CINCINNATTI SHOE STORE 142 North 12th street. Harvest Special Labor Day Edition The issue of Will Maupin's Weekly for August 30 will be the ninth annual Labor Day edition. This year it will be combined with a "Harvest Special" number, making it doubly interesting and valuable. It will tell you about Nebraska's resources and possi bilities. It wil tell you of Nebraska's history. It will be a complete text book of Nebraska. It will be printed on heavy book paper with illumin ated cover. It will be the handsomest edition of this newspaper ever published and that's a promise. A destructive bail storm about one mile wide crossed the irrigated sec tion at tbe big bend on Wet Sheep creek about twelve miles northwest of Morrill, Nebr., Monday evening. All small grain and corn was totally destroyed as well as the second crop of alfalfa. MA A Good Place To Go When one is troubled with tired and sore feet it makes life miserable and relief is sought. So many people do not realize it is in ill-fitting New York The passenger steamer Old Colony ran down and sunk a fish ing yacht oft the Battery Wednesday. Fishermen, bound for the fishing banks, were rescued from the sinking craft, which was submerged, having ' her mast and pennant clear of the water. I NELLIE GRANT ed her with injustice and cruelty, so much so that her father-in-law's sympathy was aroused in her behalf and h made earnest efforts to effect a restoration of good feeling between husband and wife. Failing in this, he gave her ?mall London house in Cadogan place, forced his son to give her a country l-.me near Hampton and settled a hand tome income upon her. Upon his deafa, in 1890, he left her the town house In which she had lived after her separation from her husband and also set tied upon her $35,000 a year. Three years after the death of the elder Sartoris her husband died ani Mrs. Sartorirs received the principal of his income, as guardian of her chil dren, and the lease of the country house. BIDDLE'S UNIQUE METHODS It is a far cry from prize fighting to religion. At first blush It seems most sacrilegious to associate the two subjects. But it has been done suc cessfully not only in words but in deeds, and, as results have proven, It is the basis of one of the most re markable religious movements this country has ever seen. The man back of this novel idea for furthering the cause of Christian ity is Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, mil lionaire, of Philadelphia, Pa., who but a few years back became famous as an amateur boxer and an object of criticism and source of disgust to the ultra-exclusive set of the Quaker City of which he is a member. But withal, "Tony" Biddle proved himself a prac tical pugilist one who loved the man ly art only for the manliness which it brought out; one who stood for hon esty and high ideals and who was ever a gentleman. When Mr. Biddle conceived the idea of his Bible class movement, his secret motive If such it may be called was to Introduce athletics as an inducement to young men, and when he tool charge of his first class in the Sunday school of Holy Trinity .Protestant Epi copal church, Philadelphia, four years ago, he had but three members, and the attendance of the school was very slim at the time. So rapidly has the Drexel Biddle Bible Class grown that it now numbers TOO members, and it is the ambition of the originator to make it of national cope. MARSHALL NEW IN POLITICS SWCTtar i--jw pent his entire fifty-eight years in his native state. He was graduated from Wabash college in 1873, when he was twenty-one years old. He practiced law in Columbia City, Ind., until he was elected governor two years ago. He is a member of many clubs and holds LL.D. degrees from Wabash,. Notre Dams and the University of Pennsylvania. He married Miss Lois I Kimsey of An gola, InL, in 1885. In the Literary State they call Marshall the "Little Giant" When one sees him for the first time he wonders why, because there is nothing colossal about the slender, undersized man with sloping shoulders and quiet mien. His hair and mustache turning from gray to white, do not bristle, his brows do not "beetle" so one can notice It and even his violet-blue eyes are mild. It is only when one knows him and his political history that that "Little Giant" term is understood. HILL'S REMARKABLE CAREER The retirement of James J. Hill from his position as chairman of the board of directors of the Great Nor thern railroad, which has just become effective, was officially announced Monday from the office of the 'com pany at St. Paul. The resignation of Mr. Hill was presented to the board of directors June 7, and unofficial reports of the changes were made at the time, but the statement with which Mr. Hill ac companies his resignation was made public only a few days ago. Louis W. Hill, who was recently succeeded by Carl R. Gray as presi dent of the Great Northern, succeeds his father as chairman of the board of directors. James J. Hill will re main a member of tbe executive com mittee of the board. With his retirement Mr. Hill com pleted thirty-three years of active service in the northwest, beginning with his purchase of an interest in the St Paul and Pacific, of which he was made general manager, to the time ol his resignation from the office which he has held for five years, since he re signed the presidency of the Great Northern road. James J. Hill rose from a job as a day laborer to the presidency of the, Great Northern railroad. He was cat out for the pulpit dreamed in his youth, of war and literature, and when a man turned his tremendous energies to the , massing of money. He was born in Goalpn, Ont, in 183. iit WEDS AGAIN The marriage recently of Mrs. Nellie Grant Sartoris to Frank H. Jones, a Chicago banker, was in sharp contrast to her first marriage, 38 ye -ago, to Algernon J. Sartoris, an ' lish army officer. Nellie Grant was then the idol r . the nation and her marriage tc place in the east room of the Whit House while her distinguished father was president. It was one of the greatest social events the White House had seen up to that time, or perhaps since. Simple, amiable and unaffected, Nellie Grant, the only daughter of General Grant, had en deared herself to the American people and she went with her husband to their English home accompanied by the heartiest good wishes. In England she was presented to Queen Victoria and dined at Windsor Castle. Yet her life in England provt ed most unhappy. Her husband treats Gov. Thomas R. Marshall of In diana, the Democratic nominee foi vice-president, rode to the front of hii party on a wave of reform. But th Indiana wave was not so boisterous ai those that broke on the New Jersej coast and elsewhere. Governor Mar shall believes in reform in modera tion. Also he believes in progressinj with moderation. He does not be lieve that this great and glorious com monwealth is going to the "demnitioi bow-wows;" in fact, he points witl pride to his belief that the country ii just a little bit better politically financially and morally than ever be fore. It required heroic measures on th part of his friends to induce Governoi Marshall to take his presidential chances seriously, and even then h refused to allow any effort to be made In his behalf outside of Indiana. Governor Marshall was born In Manchester, Ind., in 1854 and has j' SSM? .... jap P"y" Prepare for Comfort When Jack Frost gets 'around next winter it will be too late to consider the furnace work. Let us figure to install one for you. : We have the best makes for your consideration at reason able prices. We do all kinds of tin, sheet and metal work. Call up and we will figure on all your work. Repair work a specialty. LOGAN & RAIN1NECKE 137 No. 12th St. Auto Phone B3471 THIS LABEL ON YOUR PRINTING g TRADES BJgff COUNCILS ifTP Is proof that it was printed in an 8-hour f-f' shop, manned by Union workers, drawing II good wages and working under mutually satisfactory conditions. This newspaper is printed in a shop Union in all Departments. Demand this label on your printing Meet Me at Rector's Onyx Fountain All the fancy soft drinks known to the expert mix ologist. The favorite re freshment resort of Lincoln. Drugs and Sundries Rector's Twelfth and O Streets, prescriptions accu rately compounded. Prompt deliveries. T. A. YOUNG General Hardware 1907 0 St., Lincoln, Neb. Auto B2390 Bell 573 THE CENTRAL National Bank of Lincoln , Capital $15C,000.00 - Surplus and Undivided Profits I50.O0U.U0 Washington. John Mitchell, vice president of the American Federation of Labor, who, with President Gomp ers and Secretary Morrisson, was ad judged guilty of contempt of court in renewed proceedings several weeks ago, was Tuesday sentenced by Justice Wright to serve nine months in jail. Mitchell was not in court when sen tence was pronounced, having waived his right. His counsel immediately noted an appeal. At the close of the trial Justice Wright offered to Mitchell to suspend sentence if he promised hereafter to adhere to all court orders, but Mitchell spurned the tender. j Attempts to Swim Channel. - Boulougne. Jabez Wolffe, the well known amateur swimmer, started on another attempt to swim across the English channel Monday. He entered the water in the vicinity of Cape Gris nez at a quarter past 4 and at 7 o'clock was seven miles to the north of that point on the French coast. At that hour a brisk. breeze sprang up,, making the water rather choppy. m& 'ten Must Take the Examination. The attorney general's department has given an opinion holding that chi ropractors who treat physical or men tal ailments for hire violate the law unless they take an examination be fore the state board of health and ob tain a certificate to practice medicine. I ine same holding applies to Christian scientists, says the attornev zenm-al. under an old decision of the supreme court. ,- v Part of the Nebraska national marH will be allowed to attend the Pole Mountain, Wyo., army maneuvers July z to Aug. ft, u plans projected bv Ad jutant GeneralPhelps are carried nut. tn a telegram to the war department at Washington the head of the Nebraska guard conveyed the information to the war department that the First regi ment would take that trip providing tne szo.OOO voted bv the recent nrmv bill in congress would be forthcoming in tne near future. Thousand Island nark on St. Law rence river nasi been swept by a dis astrous fire which wiped out nractfoal- ly the entire business section, the Columbian hotel, the New York state educational building and eighty-seven cottages. The loss, it is estimated, will be approximately $500,000. , ' . i Tod Harrincr The Man Who Knows How to Cloan, Pross and Repair Your Clothes or Hat 235 North llth Auto B1T9S Bell FI0O9 Accidents Will Happen And it is wise and prudent to insure against them in the reliable NATIONAL ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY ' . of Lincoln, Nebr. The "National" does a larger acci dent insurance business in Nebraska than any other ' company, and settles all claims promptly and in full! A host of satisfied policyholders are stunch supporters of the "National" : and the numbers are increasing rapidly. W. C. HOWEY Secy, and Genl. Mgr. WAGEWORKERS, ATTENTION We have Money to Loan on Chattels. "Plenty of it. Utmost Secrecy. Kelly & Norrla Room I, 1034 'O' MONEY LOANED on household goods, pianos,4 horees, etc.; long or short time. No charge for papers. No in terest in advance. No publicity or file papers. We guarantee better terms than others make. Mony paid immediately. CO LUMBIA LOAN CO.. 127 Kouth 12th.