mm Free -Vaudeville and Photo Plays -Free Every Night at 8:45 Entire Change of Program Every Thursday & Saturday dl Oft &Bma Mammoth Swimming Pool Open 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p. m. Electric Court Attractions SO Ar.lUSEt.lET FEATURES 50 SHADY PICNIC GROVE Palm Garden Japanese Garden Rowing-Sailing -Launching Roller Skating Dancing That you may sec 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 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 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 trar shoes fitable and durable and at money saving prices. Come in and see our line. CINCINNATTI SHOE STORE 142 North 12th street. Harvest SjpecSal 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. THE ABOLITION OF PILLS AND POTIONS. Do you remember, you good men and women with graying hairs, how the doctor used to dose you with strong medicines--doses that were fearful to the taste and monstrous to the eyes ? When the doctor was not quite sure of his diagnosis, remember how he used to prepare a "bolus," a dose containing about every imaginable drug, in the hope that something 'therein would be good for what ailed you? The day of the "bolus" is gone forever, and the doe tors, by experience, have learned that strong medicines in huge doses is not the proper thing. .. The human body is a machine the most complex machine ever built. When in absolute repair there is no smoother running ma chine when out of repair there is no machine that can cause more trouble. When the insensate machine made of cogs and cams and rods and pistons gets out of order, we do not content ourselves with soaking it in oil; we proceed to adjust the displaced parts or renew them. But for centuries we have been dosing the human machine with strong medicines, overlooking the necessity of adjust ing the misplaced parts. When the linotype machine stops the operator does not grab an oil can and begin dosing the machine with oil. No; he knows that some part is misplaced a slug too tight, a "mat" caught on the distributor, or something like that and he goes to the right spot, almost by instinct, and adjusts it Then the machine moves on perfectly. That is what Osteopathy does to the human machine, it adjusts the displaced parts, removes abnormalities, and puts the human machine back into perfect adjustment. And when perfectly adjusted the human machine moves with a precision that hand-made machin ery can never hope to equal. When Dr. Andrew Taylor Still, the founder of the Osteopathic school, announced his discovery he was, of course, derided. Men always are who discover something that sets at naught the age-old superstitions of the world. Dr. Harvey's announcement that the blood circulated was greeted with jeers. Gallileo was brought before the inquisition and made to retract his assertion that the earth revolves. And so it has been through all the ages. But Dr. Still was more fortunate than most discover ers, for he has lived to see the triumph of his conclusions. Scoffed at and derided by his friends, he pursued the even tenor of his way, studying and demonstrating. He knew that just . as a dis placed part of a man-made machine might make its presence felt in a far-removed part of the machine, just so something wrong with the human mechanism might make itself felt in a remote part of the body. Little by little he made headway, and soon rumors of wonderful cures were started. This led to investigation, and with investigation came conversion. Today Dr. Still's theories are ac cepted all over the world, and the School of - Osteopathy is as solidly founded as any of the old medical schools. The Osteopath is an educated mechanic of the human body. His duty is to find out what is the structural displacement causing the machine to run wrong, and then correct it. Osteopaths depend for remedial effects upon the integrity of nature, consequently be lieves that the giving of drugs and medicines is unscientific and unreliable. The science of osteopathy primarily depends for its success upon a most thorough and comprehensive study of the anatomy and physiology of the human body, having for its object the main tenance of complete circuit of the motor, sensory and sympathetic nerves, to and from all the organs and tissues, and the restoration of a harmonious action, which must ensue when all parts are unirri tated by any cause, permitting a perfect freedom of all fluids, forces and substances pertaining to life. ' The application of this knowledge to the healing art is where the school of osteopathy differs from its predecessors. Osteopathy retains the knowledge gained in the medical world, but believes that the administration of drugs in a remedial sense is a mistake. That, by a thorough understanding of the mechanism of the human system,- on an anatomical, physiological and hygienic basis, disease can be prevented or controlled, by the application of advanced principles, peculiar to osteopathic practice. The first step in osteopathic attainment is a most exhaustive knowledge of the anatomical structures, and the physiological func tions of the human body, in its widest sense. Then is observed the fact that man is a complete beiiyj, capable of performing his own mental and physical acts when in health. That disease is simply disorder, and to restore health necessitates a correction of the dis ordered parts. In the restoration of health the osteopath works entirely in harmony with nature, correcting disorders of mind and body purely upon a physical basis, through the application of his ad vanced knowledge of the laws and principles of the human body, and not as an entity to be attacked by some foreign force which would only alleviate, antagonize or overshadow the real trouble. The Osteopathic School is founded upon commonsense. It teaches that every effect must have a cause, and when that effect is evidenced by ill-health it searches for the cause, knowing that the effect comes from some misplaced or abnormal condition of the human mechanism, that most wonderful and complicated of all machines. " Today there are Schools of Osteopathy all over the land. No longer is Dr. Still's name greeted with derision; no longer do people sneer at his theories. Osteopathy has conferred upon mankind too many blessings to be longer a subject of scoff. It is today advancing by leaps and bounds; every day sees it recruiting new advocates; every day it is relieving human distress by methods at once rational and free from superstition and nauseous drugs. It is attracting world-wide attention, and its practitioners are among the most highly respected members of every community. A SOLUTION OF THE BEEF QUESTION. General Manager Buckingham of the Union Stock Yards Co. of South Omaha proposes a remedy for the present beef shortage. He asserts that the present high price is due simply to the shortage in supply, and further asserts that the shortage will continue until something drastic is done. The high price has resulted in the mar keting of everything in the shape of beef, and as a result there are no cows left on the range or in the barn lots. Manager Buckingham proposes a law forbidding the sale of cows under seven years of age. No cows, no calves; no calves, no beef steers. That's the situation. It is claimed that several South American countries have laws for bidding the sale of cows. Whether Mr. Buckingham 's proposed solu tion is the best or not, the fact still remains that something should be done to further the cattle raising industry in this western coun try. It is a problem that deserves the attention of our best thinkers. 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. Kepair work a specialty. - LOGAN & RAININECKE .137 No. 12th St. Auto Phone B3471 THIS LABEL ON YOUR PRINTING TRADES COUNCIL TIP Is proof that it was printed in an 8-hour J-f shop, manned by Union workers, drawing ll 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 He 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 Sundrios Rector's Twelfth and O Streets, prescriptions accu rately compounded. Prompt deliveries. Accidents Will Happen And it is wise and prudent to insure' against them in the reliable . NATIONAL ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY of Lincoln, Nebr. 1 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. WA6EW0HKER5, ATTENTION We have Money to Loan on Chattels. Plenty of it. Utmost Secrecy. . Kelly & Norris Room 1,1034 "0 T. A. YOUNG General Hardware 1907 0 St!, Lincoln, Neb. Auto B2390 Bell 573 THE CENTRAL National Bank of Lincoln Capital $150,000.00 Surplus and Undivided Profit! $50,000.00 Tod Harrinor Tho Man Who Knows How to Gloan, Press and Repair Your Clothes or Hat 235 North llth Auto B17W Bell F1608 MONEY LOANED on household goods, pianos, horses, 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. Money paid immediately. CO LUMBIA LOAN CO., 127 South 12th. Notice to Creditors. Estate No. 3091 of Emma Cloyd, de ceased, in the County Court of Lan caster County, Nebraska. The State of Nebraska, ss. : Credi tors of said estate will take notice that the time limited for presentation and filing of claims against said estate' is March 3, 1913,, and for payment of debts is October 1, 1913; that I will sit at the county court room in said county on December 2, 1912, at 2 p. m., and on March 3, 1913, at 2 p. m to re ceive, examine, hear, allow, or ad just all claims and objections duly filed. Dated July 22, 1912. GEO. H. RISSER, ! - . County Judge. BYY ROBIN R. REID, (Seal.) Clerk. EXTRA HEADS ON STALKS Government Becomes Interested In Grain and Orders an Inspection ' of Method. Chico, Cal. Barley and oat-growlna experiments by O. W. Overton of Chi. co have developed grains that may be adopted throughout the United States. The experiments are considered so remarkable that the government baa ordered an inspection of his process with a view of establishing his meth ods throughout the country. The feature of the new barley la that from two to five heads grow oa each stalk, the principal head ripen ing first and becoming easily twice as large as the others, which are of normal size. The combined heads are about nine inches long, while the stalk is tough and about as large as an ordinary lead pencil, standing; against a heavy wind. His tame oats has an average of three heads to the stalk. Colt Drag Boy to Death. Cheyenne, Wyo. Bert Pearson, twenty years old, was dragged tof death by a wild colt. The young man: was leading the animal by a rope which he had passed around ulai wrist. Suddenly the colt bolted. - Un able to check the animal or loosen thai rope, Pearson was carried off his fee and was dragged at the rope's end. The colt galloped close to a telephone) pole, dashing the young man agains the pole and knocking his brains out.