TTTE OMATTA "DAILY BEE : SUNDAY , AUGUST 28 , 1808. HARTLEY'S COIRAGE. An Historical Incident of the Great Siege of Gibraltar The moat memorable slcco ot Gibraltar , indeed one ot the most memorable of nil sieges , was that which the fortress sus tained from the combined sea forces ot Franco and Spain during the years 1779 to 1783. 1783.Tho The great attack on the place was made on the 13th of September , 1782 , and all the resources ot power and science were ex hausted by the assailants In the fruitless attempt. It was on this day that a humbto private performed an act which history has handed down to us. The business of the siege progressed. The rock by the batteries sent forth Its splinters to deal destruction around at every Impact of the Spanish shot ; but the return fire was of the most telling descrip tion and most steadily "kept up by the llrlt- Istt. Istt.But But removed from tbo smoke and din , In the laboratory of the garrison , surrounded by the chemistry ot war , sat ono man , a humble private. His It was , while his com rades worked the guns In the suffocating casements of the covered batteries , to prepare - pare the shells for the use of the mortars. A dangerous task so dangerous , In fact , that even the examination ot the deadly missiles Is considered sufficiently perilous on board blue tbo 1'orto Illco flag Is red. It Is slngu- i lar to notice , that In almost every country of which liberty Is the watchword and guiding Idea , that the flag Is composed of the three colors red , white and blue. NUTTER mans. .Strange Cntrrii In South Africa In Which Tlu-y IUP. The cavern ot this most wonderful bird Is In Cnrlpe in South Africa. Among the natives In the country around , this cavern Is celebrated for Its great size , for the mysterious birds which haunt Its Inmost recesses , for the * river which flows from It , and for the super stitious belief that In Its gloomy depth * Is the abode of the spirits ot their departed ancestors. The name which It bears signi fies "tho mine of fat , " because from the young of the birds which inhabit it an Im mense quantity of fat Is annually ob tained. These birds are about the size of our 'common ' fowl , with wings which expand to ' three feet and a half. All day long the/ dwell In the cavern , and , like our owls , only corao forth at night. They subsist entirely on fruits , and have powerful beaks , which THE FUSE TOOK FIRE , HISSING LOUDLY AS IT DISCHARGED ITS RAIN OF SPARKS AND BURNING RAPIDLY AWAY. Bblp to warrant a stngo being slung over the stdo to bo occupied by only one r two men , the others being kept at a distance. Uut familiarity with p ril robs men of their fear , and Hartley sat busily making ready shell after shell , filling them with the explosive composition , and after ward fitting In the fuses , driving them homo 'and ranging the prepared sheila in cases tilt they should bo fetched to be sent in fiery arcs to deal death and destruction amongst the enemy. The laboratory was at that time full of explosive material , every grain of which was of Inestimable value to the beleaguered garrison , and it had been accordingly placed In a position which rendered it Impossible for the shot or shell of the enemy to reach it. But now the danger guarded against from without threatened , it possible , more terribly from within threatened to destroy at ono blow the whole of the explosive com pounds stored for defense , and this at a time when such a loss would have been ir reparable. Shell after shell had been filled , the grim black spheres , as they lay ready , giving but small signs of their deadly po'wer the force that should rend them Into innumerable shreds of cast iron each to malm or slay. Suddenly , while- calmly proceeding with his work , and driving a fuse Into a fresh filled shell , the fuse took fire , hissing loudly as it discharged its rain of sparks , and burning rapidly away. There seemed hardly time for thought , much less for action , and the first feelings of Hartley were those of blank dismay. Ho had seen the discharge and flight of sheila so often that ho knew he could only reckon upon its burning for a few seconds , and then would como the dire explosion that should act upon the part of the fortress where ho was like an earthquake the bursting ot the shell being , as It were , but the flash in the pan that should prelude the blowing up of the laboratory. But with the calmness of the man whoso trade was one which brought him dally face to face with death , Hartley seized the shell In both hands , hurried out Into the open air and then with a tremendous effort hurled the deadly globe far Into space , where a couple of seconds after It harm lessly burst. It was not until some time after that the performer of this daring act could thoroughly realize the great danger that had threatened him with destruction , and , though the peril was past , It was some time after , and then only with unstrung nerves , that ho returned to his perilous task. BED , WIllTU AM ) IILUE. Story of the Finis tor Which Many Ainrrlcnit * Ilnvn Given Their Liven. The Cuban flag was first carried by Nor- clso Lopez about 1S50-1S51 , when he In vaded Cuba and lost his life. There are quite a number of versions as to the mean ing ot this flag ; one is that the red equi lateral triangle stands for equality ; the white tar represents Cuba , which would gain her Independence through a sea of blood , and the three blue stripes for the three depart ments which they intended to divide the Island Eastern Cuba. Central Cuba and Western Cuba. There is another version that once , about 1S50 or 1851 , a group of Cuban exiles were talking of the new flag that should be adopted and trying to get a suitable design , when one of them went to the window of the room in which they were holding their discussion and saw the evening star shining brightly In the heavens surrounded by the glare of the setting nun , while still hlghfr the sky was blue , striped with whlto clouds. Tne revolutionary flag of Porto Rico Is of the came proportions and design as the Cuban flag , only the colors are changed. Where the Cuban flag li red the Porto Rico fU * U blue , and where the Cuban flag li are necessary to crack the tough nuts and reeds which form part of their food. The cave is so straight that the traveler can enter for some distance without being obliged to light his torch. As he proceeds over the somewhat rough ground which forms the bed of the river he begins to hear from afar the hoarse cries of the Guacharo birds , and when > he has arrived at the dark parts of the cavern the noise Is perfectly terrific ; thousands of the birds uttering their piercing cries simultane ously. These screams re-echo from the surround ing walls , and when it Is remembered that they toke place in pitchy darkness , it will be easy to understand the superstitious 'ter ' rors which the natives associate with the spot. Midsummer is the harvest time for the fat. The natives enter the cave armed with long poles. The nests arc attached to holes In the roof about sixty feet above their heads. They break these with their poles , and the young birds fn'.l down and are Instantly killed. Underneath their bodies Is a layer of fat , which Is cut off , and is the- object sought. At the mouth of the cavern huts are erected with palm leaves , and there , in pots ot clay , the natives melt the fat which has been collected. This is known ns the butter Of the Guacharo ; It Is so pure that it may be kept for months , indeed for upward of ft year , without becoming rancid. At the convent of Carlpo no other oil Is used in the kitchen of the monks. I.ITTLK OIHIAS WIXMXO WAY. VUUril the Prenlilent to ( Jet Her Sulillrr Ilrother .Spilt Home. A little girl ot about 7 years of age , dressed In white , and looking as pretty as a picture , came up to the door ot the White House one day last week , while her mother and aunt stood In the grounds. ApproachIng - Ing the usher at the door , she said ; "Please , sir , I want to see the president ! " "What do you want to see the president about , little girl , " asked the usher , kindly. "I want to see him about my b.-other Ralph ; he's a soldier , and we want htm to como home. " Just then General Corbln came along , and the usher told him what the child's mis sion was. "Want to see the president , eh ? " sold the bluff old general. "Well , he's very busy now , but I am going up to sec him , and ) ou can como along. We will see what we can do about that brother of yours. " The llttlo miss , nothing daunted , wen ! along , and was introduced to the president "What Is your name ? " the president uskcc her. "Blanche Richardson. " "And what Is your brother's name ? " "His name Is Ralph Richardson , and we live at St. Joseph , Mo. ; but Ralph has been going to school at Yale , and he joined the First Connecticut regiment. " "And you want him to como home now do you ? " asked the president. "Yes , please , sir. He's been away an awful long time. " "General , " bald the president , "see wha you can do about this. " Then , stooping to the little girl : "I thlnV you can count on seeing that brother ol yours before very long. " "Thank you , sir ; I'm very much obliged , ' and she made a courtesy which would have done credit to a queen's lady In watting. IIUTTKItri.Y IIU07.UH8. Male Ilouuderd Fill Up on Alcoholic Sttiiiulnntii. A learned European professor states that insects are not free from this terrible vice and ho accuses the most elegant among them , the butterfly , of being given up to It. The professor shut up In a greenhouse i twelve males and many fcmnlcfl In order to study them at his leisure. He was not long In finding out that those of the "fair sex" were remarkable for perfect sobriety. These winged ladles drank nothing but water , several drop * of dew a day , to quench their thirst. The males , on the contrary , were ot u. revolting Intemperance. "They came , " said the professor , "to the flowers whoso distillation produce the most alcohol and they drank of the juices to the point of remaining Inanimate several hours. There was not a day when I did not pick up butterflies dead drunk. " And the pro fessor Is persuaded that the butterfly docs not merit the reputation for Inconstancy which the poets give It. When the Insect Is overcome by tbo abuse of strong liquors it staggeringly takes Itself to Us spouse to receive the attention which Its state needs. The professor conducted his experiments so far as to intoxicate his pupils , not with flowers , but with veritable spirits , of which he placed a few drops on the glass ot the greenhouse. The butterflies did not hesitate ; they pre cipitated themselves upon the whisky and several of them succumbed. Some butterflies at liberty were attracted by the fumes of a glass of gin left upon a table In a garden and fell asleep after ex cessive libations. PRATTLE OP THE YOUNGSTERS. "Mr. Meeker , your nose looks just like other folks' noses. " "Hush. Wllllo ! " "I heard you say the other day , mamma , that Mr. Meeker had had his nose to the grindstone for seventeen quit that ! " The governess was giving little Tommy a grammar lesson the other day. "An ab stract noun , " she said , "Is the name of some thing which you can think of , but not touch. Can you give me an example ? Tommy A red-hot poker ! Edgar , aged 4 , accompanied by his mother , was watching a regiment of soldiers , headed by Its band , marching by. "Mamma , " he asked , "what's the use ot all them soldiers that don't make music ? " One day little 3-year-old Mamie was passing through the market with her mother , and , seeing a strange-looking ob ject , she asked what it was. "Why , dear , that's a head of cabbage , " replied her mamma. "Zen Where's Its rnouf an' eyescs ? " she asked. "Mamma , " asked a little fellow of B , "now bat I've got a jackknlfe and a pocketbook , ain't I a man like pape ? " "Yes , I suppose o , " replied his mother. "Well , then , " he continued , "I wish you'd look and see it my whiskers la sprouted yet. " There Is a ! little boy In Denver who Is as bright as an 1898 dollar , but ho doesn't al ways have a ready command of language , says the Denver Times. The other day his sister got married , and Willie was the hap piest boy In the crowd , for his newly ac quired brother-in-law had been generous In the purchase ot candy for the little fellow. After the ceremony was over and the time 'or the shower ot congratulations had ar rived , Wllllo was ono of the last to reach his sister and her brand-new husband , and when he did get there he took hold of their hands and studied for some time before be could say anything. "Poor little fellow , ho Is almost crying , too , " said the bride. "No , I ain't , " was the brave reply ; ' 1 have forgot that thing I had fixed up to say and was trying to think ot somethln' clso oh , yes , wish you many happy returns ot the day that's what I had thought up wish you many happy returns of the day. " THE OLD-TIMERS. Isador Bush , who died recently In St. Louis at the ago of 86 , was General John C. Fremont's secretary during the early part of the civil war. Rlstorl , at the age of 76 , recently read in public the fifth canto ot Dante's Inferno , end was received with great enthusiasm. Julia Ward Howe made five public ad dresses In one day lost spring , and she Is 79. There lives In Marshall , Mo. , Alexander Steele , who was an own cousin of Gladstone. Mr. Stcelo was born in Scotland In 1815 , and as a boy used to be much with his cousin- He came to this country in 1S30. and up tea a few years ago kept up an intermittent correspondence with the "Urand Old Man. " Mother Krugermann , Berlin's senior artist's model , is dead , at the age of S > 2 years. Her husband fought In the battles cf Leipzig against Napoleon I. She was peddling In the streets when an artist took her up over thirty years ago , and Thumaun used her as the model for Atropos with the shears in his well known painting , "The Fates. " Herbert Spencer Is busy In his Brighton home revising those of his books which need to be squared with the knowledge ot today. Ho Is now a feeble old man and has been obliged to decline all correspondence save that of Immediate personal concern. He can work only a short time each day. There Is said to be a steady demand for his books all over the world. John II. Reagan , the only survivor of Jefferson Davis' cabinet , is living in Chicago , and Is almost 80 years old. He was post master general and secretary of the treasury. During the reconstruction period be was an adviser of President Johnson and Secretarj Seward. Ho was born in Tennessee , but went to Texas when a young man. Since the civil -war ho has been elected rep resentative in congress and United State * senator. Aimer C. Goodcl , aged 93 , of Salem , Mass. Is the oldest living inventor In the Unltei States. Ho perfected the design of the first printing press which printed on both sides of a paper at once , and he also discovered the process for preparing steel and copper plates for engravers. Later he helped built the first locomotive for the Boston & Lowell railway. He worked on the first electric motor ever constructed , which afterward ran between Baltimore and Washington , am : on the first engine lathe for the railroad repair shop. John Browne , one of the few survivors ol the Balaklava charge , died at Llchfleld England , a short tlmo ago , 84 years old. Ho served through the Crimean campaign with the Seventeenth Lancers , and was present at the battles of Alma , Inkerman and Balaklava and the siege and fall of Sebastopol. On tbo memorable October 25. 1854 , the day of the charge ot the Light Brigade , he was regi mental trumpeter , and sounded the charge for the "Death and Glory Boys. " Browne escaped unhurt , but lost the heel of his boot and spur by a musket ball , and had his coat tall cut off by a Cossack lance. He was In India throughout the mutiny , being present at the capture and execution of the rebel chief , Tantta Topee. A Good Collector. A Lewlston ( Me. ) young man ttlls how he secured his place as collector for a large house In that city. Ho was working for $3 a week for an Auburn man and used to collect bills. Ho had a bill of | 3.50 against a rich Lewlston man and whenever he went to collect It the man never had th * change. But he kept right after him til ho worried the life nearly out of the man One day the Lewlstonlan paid him and tolc him bo never wanted to see him again and ordered him out with strong language. A week later the same man sent him an offer of $16 a week to do collecting and asslstan bookkeeping and added : "You're the best collector I know. " IVot the Wi e t War. It Is not always best to wait until It Is needed before buying a bottle ot Chamber lain's Colic , Cholera and Dlorrhea Remedy Quite frequently the remedy is required ID tbo very busiest season or In the night nnd much Inconvenience and suffering must be berne before It can bo obtained. It costs bu a trifle as compared with Its real worth and every family can well afford to keep it in their home. It Is everywhere asknowlodged to be the most successful medicine In the world for bowtl comolalnU. I OUR EXPOSITION SUMMED UP Jctaro Thanet's Impressions of Art and Industry Mirrored There. SURPASSING BEAUTY ELECTRICAL EXHIBIT Ilnnnil to Ilnve n I.nfttlng Effect In the Wont Srmmctrr ol Architecture- Some Ohl KxhlliltK-llon- "Do" the Away down in a llttlo hollow on the iluff tract stands a red building with a orest of slender smokestacks. An unob- ruslvo clacard announces that hero dwells and tolls the captive genius that works the greatest magic of the century ; but the il.icard merely says , "Power House. Vis- tors Are Invited ! " Yet one may spend a wonderful half hour icro amid the dynamos. The electrical dls- > lay of the Transmlsslsslppt Exposition Is ar beyond any ever given in this country , probably in any country. The electrical appliances in the Electricity building are only a part of the wonder. The lighting of the grounds shows what electricity can do to turn night Into day. It Is more bril- lant than the most brilliant boulevard ot 'arts ; but there Is nothing of tha harsh dazzle nor the Inky shadows of the ordinary electric lighting. At the World's fair there were no half tones , the exquisite gradation of sunlight , the softened olives and violets of moonlight were lost ; ono was bathed In Ight and suddenly ono stepped into dark ness. Hero , the 10,000 incandescent lights preserve the transparency of the shadows , iroduclng a thousand exquisite effects. To try to "do" the exposition In a day s a wearying mockery. One could easily pend a day In the Government , or the Lib eral Arts , or the Electricity , or the Mines and Mining buildings. "Doing , " in this ense , usually means a tramp or ride In a hair or jinricksha around the lagoont across ho bridge to the plaza , down past the minted grotesquerles of the Midway to the State buildings , a llttlo loitering In the wide lawns amid the splendid parterres and he riot of color In plant and flower which urrounds the beautiful Horticulturebuild - ng , statllest palace ot them all , then a dip nto the Midway on the other side , a re- urn to the lagoon and an excursion Into ono or two buildings with eyes and brain equally dazed and satiated. The real way o have either pleasure or proflt in an ex position Is to know what ono wishes to see and go to see it ! The clamoring at- ractlons on either side are not to bo re- ; arded. A leisurely morning spent in one lulldlng , a leisurely rldo for an afternoon , resting on the settees which are placed at convenient distances ( at least in theory , in > ractice I found them too much like the > ollcemen , always in evidence when not needed and apparently in another world when sorely wanted ! ) , then a dinner on thereof roof garden near the plaza , whence floats .be sounds ot music , and an .evening amid the Incomparable loveliness of the western summer night and the lagoon this makes a day that does not greatly weary either mind or body , but leaves its Ineffaceable delight in the memory. Of all the state buildings the log cabin of Minnesota Is the most original and typi cal. It is built ot hewn logs , very tastefully and the receiving room has a great etone chimney wherein almost a forest might blaze , a floor ot ax planed logs and tables , settees and easy chairs framed of three limbs In an ingenious fashion , which sur passes the rustic furniture of parks. The building is lighted with acetylene gas. I observed several farmers Inquiring concern ing this gas on a ready tongued young mau who stood In a little room with the cylin ders , otherwise , I suppose * "the plant. " Is acetylene the coming light for the country ? Will the carbide saturated water freeze or will It defy a northern winter. Is there the safety from explosion claimed ? To all these questions the young man makes plausible answers , and there is a whlto radiance winking at you from the celling. U winks At 2 cents a eight , per burner , or some such sum. The Art Collection. The Art exhibit is considered the weak point of the exposition. The building Itself is one of the most beautiful ami impressive. It Is really two buildings conceded by an open court. The order of architecture Is Corinthian , but Corinthian of the renais sance , not of the classic typo. Broad and high flights of steps lift the Columned porticos ticos above the water , and the two great domes are nobly proportioned. Above the porticos , with their richly sculptured en tablatures , are winged figures. The central court has a fountain and the etatucs no where have a fairer background than against the velvet lawn and the innumer able vines that wreathe tiees and collonido. Within are some 600 pictures , a very fair collection of the French schools , a rather In adequate exhibit of American art. There are a few statues. It is not a bad show ; on the contrary , It la a very good collection. There are Carols and Rousseaus and Daublgnys and I think and Ingres , and one or two or more Jules Bretons and Detallles and Monets and others of the later great French artists ; there Is a very coed Car penter It Is , In fact , most Interesting. That the pictures , as a rule , are not the masters' more important examples makes for noth ing ; they all have distinction and charm. It is merely that comparing the collection not with the superb riches of the Colum bian exposition , which would be unfair but with those ot a permanent nature In any of our great cities , the dearth of plan apparent and the unbalanced character of the collection , Its lack of proportion and desultory character may blind one to its real merit. The Omaha pacers have very quietly done a good turn to the art gal leries and to the people ot the west. They have published steadily articles describing the different paintings and other objects of art. Notably there have appeared a series of letters or essays In The Omaha Bee , signed Ethel Evans , which have de scribed artists and pictures with admirable lucidity and plcturesqueness , withal , In En glish , not in the jargon of the studio. Any honest farmer , any clerk or typewriter , any business man or woman ( whether she had the smattering of an art club education or the least tincture of learning bestowed on diligent readers ot the art periodicals or no ) could understand those letters. And after those letters and the kindred articles in other papers , the art gallery cannot but be a stimulant and Inspiration to thousand ? . Do we , I wonder , quite apprehend how far our hueo expositions , at Philadelphia , at New Orleans , at Atlanta , nt Nnitnllte , nt Chicago , at Omnhn , lend the , average cltl * 7on nflpld In paths of pleasantness nnd wars of peace , liow much of sweetness and light they iLargely ! because of their In- llueuct , .at unkno-Mi Idenl of art Is shnplng the dreams of eray village builder , nnd names which wcro unki'xvn a quarter ot n century ago , nro tbo property of our com- nion speech ; and groping still , but plnln to bo seen , Is a now coiine oC beauty among every rlnss. I heard .a story the other day , which llustr.Ves this usrvasneuc.'ss of better taste. A very chat tiling Clitcigo woman was talk hit ; about cot tain onginvlngi. They had been In the house before taste had passed through the flro. "I have been thinking , niy dears , " snM the mistress to her children , "you know tboso old engrav ings In the back hall up stairs you miiko such fun o * them , yet 1 hate tr patt with them you know the new laundry. 1 think wo might put them In the drying room. " "Why not give them to Hull House ? " said ono daughter. "Hull House ! " exclaimed the mother. "Mercy ! they are not good enough for Hull House. I should never venture to send them tlero ! They nro so particular ! " Which tale has n number of morals If ono bo minded to search for them ! Yet , does It not all point to an ever-widening and deep ening culture among the plain people ? The American has paused long enough In his flcrco struggle for money to perceive that his dally life needs beauty. Prosperity to him begins to mean a more leisurely and beauti ful ordering of life. Ho perceives the lack today , tomorrow ho will bo trying to fill it. And not even the magazines and the dally journals have done so much to bring him to this attitude of wholesome unrest and anticipation as the great expositions. Modestly at ono corner nro the Apiary and Dairy , buildings and facing them U the Transportation building. Why a stray In cubator should have sought shelter in this part of the grounds , I know not ; any more than I know why the Liberal Arts is the appointed guardian for the main body of artificial chicken mothers. The Transporta tion building la interesting , but not ( to the writer's mind ) so Interesting as ome of the other great buildings. In the Dairy building ( which well repays a visit ) there te an ingeniously cooled car , where a butter artist models busts of Dewey , Hobson , and other popular heroes In that pliable but perishable medium. One of the stilklng ex hibits of the splendid Studcbakcr collection of wagons and carriages , In the Transpor tation building , Is the aluminum farm wag on. It Is a wagon fit , for a prlnco and light enough for a fairy ; but , alas , only a prince or a millionaire could afford to pay for its light strength , for It cost , I think , some $2,500 this simple farm wagon. Thcro are thret ) exhibits which towir above all others at the Omaha exposition. They are typical of the transmlssisslppl states ; the agricul tural , the slectrlcal and tha mining exhibit. I have spoken of the two flrst , the third In its own way Is stupendous. Beneath the equaro Greek ( towers and thn grand dome of the Mining building Is a wonderful display of metals and minerals and mining machinery. The great silver and gold mines of the far west , the great coal mines of Iowa and Illinois , 'tho ' great stone quarries ot the tronsmlsslsslppl elates , all have representatives In miniature- machinery and product. There is a mine In operation and a 'history ' of mining In object lessons. And there is a prodigious display of minerals from alabaster to coal , from Hire to sapphires and rubles. It Is as typical of the wealth of the vast land be yond the river na the Agriculture building , with Its many hucd and fantastically fancied display ; and as typical of the * devouring energy of its soul as the purring monsters in the Electricity building. The Rxponltlnn aft a Work ot Art. Yet , when wo como 'to the parting word , of all the beauty , all the marvel which man has wrought that which will haunt the mind In memories of the latest of our American expositions , Is it not the Art ? I do not moan the pictures which are hung on the gallery walls , or the statues In Its portals ; I mean the art embodied In the noble archi tecture , in the splendid groups that are painted against the vast sunlit spaces of the blue Nebraska dome , in the fair procession of Nature's velvet and Jewels In lawn and terrace. In plant and flower and vine and the subtle blending of all these enchant ments into ono harmonious , conquering charm. It Is our last night at tbo exposi tion. We have left painted savages leapIng - Ing and yelling around flaming fires In the dark fields beyond. Almost without warning ire are back In the light and nro walking by the basin In front of the Horticulture building , where the tropical llllk'S float their crinkled , uncanny leaves. All about us Is the glory of tall , cannas , yellow and scarlet , "mystic , wonderful. " Plants of other lands have emerged from their green houses and flaunt In the transient kindness of our fickle northern sun. They lend an air of fairy land to the unreal beauty of the scone. Bathed la this genUo radiance whatever might MigRent hasty work , the un substantial material or hint at soil or crud ity , vanishes as If It had never been ; be fore us rise the sculptured walls , the grace ful columns , richly carved plinth , entabla ture and frieze , minarets ami domes that seem in this Hour .is enduring as the hills. We are quite alone , the hour Is late. We seem to have this wonderful world to our selves , a charm to be counted. So , slowly , almost sadly , we pass from the tranquil fields to the deserted plaza and across the viaduct to the silent lagoon. It Is a city penciled in flro ; and the long gem lines of the porticoes and cornices , the stars that point Innumerable slender col umns fencing the lagoon , the blazing torch that flares above the vast dome to the south , these are multiplied and lengthened In the still waters of the lagoon. It is so light that every flower splashing the ter race , every vine masking the tree trunks or climbing the colonnades has Its every tint of color for the eye , It is so still that we hoar the fountains drip on the fiery lilies. Stainless and white the great battlements , with their colossal figures of conquest and peace and winged aspiration , nro carved against an infinite , unfathomable violet sky , pierced here and there by stars. And we are fain to say to the passing mo ment : "Stay , thou art too fair ! " But rail ways cannot be wheedled like Mephlstophe- les , and we have the Inevitable train in waiting , of which Faust knew nothing ; wherefore , wo turn for ono last backward , wistful look and go. But the scene will remain. Whoever has seen It cannot forget It any more than ho can forget that other nnd greater city that wo treasure in our hearts. OCTAVE THANBT. Ufelt Shoes Are better than hand-sewed shoes but cost less. Men , women and children wear them. All kinds a e made. The following merchants are some who sell Goodyear Welt Shoes : DREXEL SHOE CO. . 1419 Farnam St. , NEBRASKA CLOTHING CO. , Farnam T. 1' . CAKTWniOMT & CO. . 16th and and 15th St. , ' HOWE-TALMAQE SHOE CO. . 1515 Douglas A. K. STOCKIfAM. TOO N. 16th St. . A. D. MORSE. 1517 Douglas Rt. , WM. N. WHITNEY. 107 So l th St. , UUBTON BTOHE. 16th and Douglas. T. U. NOniUS. 1413 Douglas St. . Douglas St. , W. W. FISHER. 2923 Leavenworth St. , A. W. BOWMAN CO. , 117 N. 16th St , W. n. BENNETT CO. , ltW-1512 Capital AY. DAYS ONLY TWO TOES ! WEI , JUST 304 GROUNDS AT TWENTIETH AND PAUL STREETS , TWICE DAILY , 2 AND 8 P. M.-RAIN OR SHINE , The Show of Shows. Bigger and Better Than Ever. The One Show That Means Something. INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TOURNAMENT ! "It is somebody's crlnio If nil the children do not see It. " The Great Editor , Jfitrat Jhtlstcad. I And Congress ol liders ol h World OF ALL 6TH U , S , CAVALRY- The Army's Finest Riders. * 5TH U. STiRTILLERY Double Light Battery in Field Drill and Expert Driving. Artillery in Action , the same as in actual warfare. 5th Royal Irish Lancers 9th Russian Cossacis _ * * 1st German Cuirassiers COLOR of the Single-Starred Flag of CUBA LIBRE 20 Cuban Heroes , , Twelve officers and privates whose wounda k prevent them from doing actual service ia the field. REALISM REALIZED In the Historic , Fascinating , Military Spectacle , r Custer's Last Battle Produced with superb Scenery , 100 { INDIAN WARRIORS and hundreds - j dreds of soldiers and horses. . Mexican Vaqueros. > Argentine Cuachos. Arabian Acrobats and Horsemen. Jlf Pamons Frontier Girls , AME OAKLEY-JOHNNY BAKER Mistress and Master of Maikmansblp. t Many New and All the Old I * Thrilling Features. A Carnival of Excitement and Fun U ALL UNDER COMMAND OF * * * * \ ' $ % P COL. W. F. CODY 15 ( BUFFALO BILL , ) Who will positively take part in , every exhibition. J Tuesday Morning at 9 there will be a GRAND FREE STREET PARADE Which will movn over the followln B route. On Twentieth to Cumlnp , to Sixteenth , , to Capitol , avenue , to F . iftccnth , to Douglas , to Ninth , to Farnam , to Sixteenth to Cumlng to Grounds. Prices , 50c. Children 2 60. NUMBERED COUPON. Actually . Reserved scats , $1nlll bo sold on the ilny of Exhibition . nt Kuhn & CO.'H Driif ? Store , Corner 15th and Deus Ins streets. WEDNESDAY , PflTW Fl A V AT THE AUG. 31. LUill DAY EXPOSITION.