PASSING OF THE GOWB01 rnced-It Stnoliii Smiths a Fiotnriiqoa Character of th West. FEW BRONCHO BUSTERS ON THE PLAINS Modern War of Carina- for Trnnnftirms the Covrtioy of Into an Ordinary lllrcil Man. Cottle Old Tho announcement that the ownership of ' and Is known to all as "John Brown's tbo Ogalnlla rango In Wyoming has been Body;" "Naucy Till," "The Moon Behind convertod Into a stock company, that Its J tho Hill." "Sweet Evelina" and "I'm Uncle lands will bo fenced and that hereafter the Sam, the Yankeo." cattlo will be fed In winter, Is more slgnlfl- Mr. Bishop Is the only ono left of a group ennt than It would appear to one not thor-1 of great minstrel song writers. The com oughly familiar with tho conditions of tho rades of his youth Dan Emmett, the au- cattlo business In the wot. In fact It may be sttld to mark the cloco of or.e era and thu beginning of another In tho history of enw punchlng, Tho Ogalalla la tho largest of tho open ranges north of Texas, and from It are j shipped tens of thousands of cattle to the Chicago market every year. It comprises a section of country ns large as an eastern' state, and Its manager, Illlly Irvine, Is ono of the cleverest cattlemen In the uorthweU, and Is knoun personally or by reputation to everybody west of tho Missouri. The ' fact that It has been found necessary to chnnfto the system on which this range has been operatod successfully for many ytnrs ' proves conclusively that tho 'old order la. passing uway. How great arc tho changes which this will involve one may understand on a little re- flection. First of all It means the readjust-' ment of the cattle huslnetd on n new and firmer basis. For years, In fact ever since tho first bunch of cattlo, abandoned to their fate lu a Colorado blizzard, were found to have survlted the winter, the raining of cat tlo on tlfo western plains has been an occu pation In which chance has played a promi nent rart. The Idea of providing feed to carry ttio herds through winter storms was never seriously considered. If a protracted blizzard came on and killed off 10,000 bend of stock the ranchmen bore the blow with equanimity, rewarding it ns a, dispensation of 1'rovldcncu against which It was lmpos- The organ grinder played tho tune over stble to prpvldc protection. If an extended dozen times and then the neighbors began drouth dried up tho water holes and parched to complain. Tho organ grinder was or tbo plains and left the uhltoiilng bones of . 'lortd awny. lJUhop protested. He told thousands of beeves as tha tcrrlblo record ' of death from thirst, ha charged It to hla profit anil loss account and telled on better luck in other seasons to mako the balance on tbo tight nldt, Ono season In every three was regularly counted on as a bad one, but the practically unlimited free range nnd the high prices of beef made the profits of favorable years enormous. These were the days of tho "cattle barons," who never know within a good muny thousands how many heads of stock they actually owned. If a succession of bad seasons wiped out a man'c entire herd ho cnuld buy a few hun dred head on credit and start out again with the practical certainty that In a few years be would be back In his old position. ChuiiKcd Condition. During rocont years, however, condition.' have been gradually changing, Herds mm tlpiled until the ranges began to crowd ono another. Homesteaders nocked In, took up choice quarter sections and fenced them off. The rapid Increase lu production brought down the prlco of beef and cur Ulled profits to tho point whero a bad eason meant ruin for a cattle owner. Five year ago the cattle business was almost completely doraorajlred and the ownoss of herds were hard Hp. Then'r Hemo- of them began to send their cattle down into Ne braska and Kansas, where corn wan plenti ful and cheap at the beginning of winter, nd. to feed them tor a month or two there beforo sending them to market. The price of cornfed beef was so much hlghor than that of cattle direct from the rango that a good many men have made comfortable for tunes within the last few years by build ing feed lots and acting at middlemen bc- rt twueu the range owners nud the puckers. The woro progressive cattlemen hove token a leaf out of the feed lot owner's book and have lately begun the practice of feeding their herds tberaselvei. It became neces sary for cattle raisers to own their own .t i t. ihnm in n. .1 nrotee.ilon aKnlnat Intruders. Under these conditions the business has revived until it Is again . ..,i.,in onn.ii.in,, h it u v verv different business from what It was In the nM iiavs The cattlemen themselves agree i that tho raising of beef on tho western plains will never again be conducted in the old haphazard, reckless way and they add that they are glad ot it. It was not pleasant any more that It was profitable to see cattlo frozen to death by hundreds and to watch the swollen bodies and pro truding tongues that told of the terrible destruction of thirst. Artesian wells, nlfalfa nnd corn have made existence a deal more endurable for cattle on the plains and have dine away with much ot the cruelty that one. "'s Inseparable from tho business. But the new conditions under which cattle raising Is carried on have produced other changes. One of the most noteworthy of these is the transformation in the position and eatate ot the cowboy himself. The sub stitution of borted-wlre fences and winter feed-Iota for the open range clrcumacrlbo mightily the activities ot the free riders ot the plains. 8lnce the cattle cannot stray beyond the boundary ot the fenced-in rango (hero wltl be small danger of stampedes; the necessity for cutting out cattle from herds to which they do not btlong; for Us- soolng strays to inspect their brands and indeed the need of branding, itself will nil be dono away with. From being a wild, un trammeled lord of the plains, a broncho bustlcg, gun-wleldlng, man-eating paragon, the cowboy Is rapidly descending to the commonplace position of a feeder ot cattle, and will soon enjoy a status not unlike tho "hired man" ot the eastern states. He Is losing In ptcturesqueness, although he is more than likely to gain In usefulness to himself and to the community at large. Gone bnt Not Fortiottrn. Already the old order Is almost obsolote, The Ilem'ngton cowboy U fast passing away, The hero of the saddle who spent his days and nights In mad rldos across the prairie before frenzied herds, In breaking the spirit at holl-lnSDired broncho and In fmlnrlnr v .7 .v. 7 . m an uuu.uuc&abie thirst for red liquor and A Last Minstrel is He It Is fifty years since T. Ilrlgham Bishop wrote the melody which we now know as "When Johnny Cornea Marching Home." Since then his songs have been popular throughout the length and breadth of the country, relates tbo New York Sun. Among the best known of these are: "Kitty Welle," which as one of the sweetest of all sad melodies; "I'rctty As a Picture," "Shoo Fly," "If Your Foot Is Pretty, Show It," "Olory, Glory Hallelujah," the music of which was borrowed by Julia Ward Howe for her "Battlo Hymn of tbo Ueoubllc." thor of "Dixie;" Stephen Foster, who wroto "The Suwoncn Itlvcr;" Nelson Kneasg, composer of tho music of "Don Holt;" B. I'. Christy, tho originator of minstrelsy, nnd I. S. Gllmorc, the liudcr all are gone. Mr. Illshop Is stilt vigorous and healthy and carries his 00 years as lightly as ho car rlcd his knapsack In the civil war. He has had a varied career. Ho began life as a music teacher and was successively min strel, soldier, cornctlst In Gllmore's band, publisher and, lastly, banker. He Is nnd always was an enthusiastic lover of music. He once gave his last money to got nn organ grinder to play over and over again his favorite song, "Annlo Laurie." It happened In this way. Early In tho '.")0i when Chicago was a small town, nishop went there to teach tho guitar and mandolin. He tried hard, but couldn't gut a pupil. His money was going out ami pone was coining In. He was In despair and down to his last coin, a 50-cent piece. While brooding over his lack nf luck an organ grinder appeared beneath the window of his studio and began to play "Annie I.nurlc." Tho music tcacber'n heart for got Its sorrow He leaned far out of his window and asked the organ grinder If he would encore that tune for nn hour for CO cents. The mnn said be would. Bishop threw him the money all ho had. t objectors that he had engaged the mau to play for an hour and an hour he would havo to play. Tho objectors grew so strong and numerous that Illshop consented to dis miss tho organ grinder If tho crowd which had gathered would drop something Into the musician's hat. All were so eager to got rid of him that they were very gener ous In their offerings and ns a result the astonished man found more than $20 In his hat. He wont away delighted. But Bishop's laflt cent was gone. He had scarcely time to worry over it when a newspaper man who had witnessed tho af fair congratulated him, saying be had given him n story. The pair took a walk to talk tho article over and stepped Into. a. saloon to complete It. There In a corner sat a lollnlst, Dan Emmet, the author of Dixie," and a pianist, Nelson Kncass, the , jmposer of "Ben Bolt." There in the corner the newspaper story was concocted. Tho article appeared on the following day nnd It proved a boom for the man who went broko on "Annlo Laurie." In less than a week Bishop had to decline to tako more pupils. Bishop wrote a great variety of songs. He could be comic, sentimental, patriotic, gore,, is almost as completely extinct as the! dodo. Only the few caged specimens of tho Wild West show rcmulu to reveal to us the simon-pure cowboy, as bo was In tho days when tho great west was wild and woolly. Today tho woolltness Is entirely worn oft from western civilization except In a fov isolated spots, and the wildness Is almost' A Sie.U IU j.'.jl'r.Ll ml.VNl) completely confined to pen artists and the writers of novels. The twentieth crntury cowboy Is an ex- tremely roatter-ot-fact young man who re- gards hla. business In a wholly serious light, who works hard throughout tho greater part of the year, who Is by no means fond of bloodshed and who gets drunk no more fre- quentljr than somo of his eastern portray- ctk. At a species he Is thoroughly healthy. manly and ordorly, and an reasonably happy as most of us can hope to be. Greater la- mlllarlty with civilization and less complete Isolation from hla fellow citizens have made 1 the cowboy of today a more agreeable per son to lire with than he was of yore. The desperado has been eliminated while the man has remained. There Is no doubt that, In the old days 1 the typical cowboy was worthy of all that has been written of him. Twenty vrars I - A ...l.,t ....I.. I " w-M-ii . " mii'iiv. ui iuk plaint from the Texas panhandle, to the Bid j THE OMAHA DAILY EE: rl HUHSDAY, heroic. "Shoo Fly," ono of his greatest hits, was wrlttet, during the war. He was assigned to command a company of colored soldiers and did not altogether relish the Job. One day he heard a. colored scldlcr ask a pnrtner how ne felt. The latter said; "I'se fcclln' like a mo'nlng etar." The other said: "Well, I feel like a frog that's lost Its ma." A colored listener overheard the remarks and said somewhat disgust edly: "Ah, shoo fly; don't bother rae." Bishop caught at the exclamation as If It were on Inspiration. Then he wrote the song about the members of the despised Company G. He taught It to his soldlcrj and It went llko wildfire. In a short while bis command was the most popular in the regiment nnd every night the soldiers would crowd around his tent to hear his darkles sing, His audiences grew so largo that one night when an extra minstrel en tertainment was given 60,000 soldiers, the army of the Cumberland, Joined In the chorus, The eong wr.s pirated and Bishop profited very llttlo from Its sale. In those times songs were not published ns readily ns they are today and were often nung by tho minstrels for months nnd sometimes yenra beforo they appeared In print. Thus It frequently occurred that songs wcro sold by singers who had learned them, they posing ns tho authors nnd thus defrauding the real creators. "Sv.eot Evelina" was thus at largo for years. Then Bishop sold It to E. P. Christy for $5. It made $50,000. "8wcet Evelina," which was simply a tuneful love song, became an army favorite during tho war nnd It was tho only tune that tho con federate cavalry leader, Colonel J. E. II. Stuart, would over permit to be played In his presence. He had two troopers who had been minstrels before the breaking out of the war. They were expert banjo Ists and furnished the spectaclo of two min strels on horseback at thu head of a march ing column, singing and twanging their Instruments to the tune of "Sweet Evelina, dear Evelina, my love for thu thee shall never, never dlo." Illshop found the poem "Kitty Wells" In an old newspaper. It was written by Chnrles Slnde. Bishop set the poem to music and eang It throughout tho country He then leurned that It was published with another melody and ceased using his ver sion. Ten years later he learned that S. T. Gordon hail published his version. He wrolo for an explanation and was told that hla was tho melody tho public wanted. Gor don unhesitatingly paid all royalties. Tho poem of "Leaf by Leaf the Roses Fall" wns also found In an old newspaper. Caroline Dana Howe wroto tho verses. It was sot to music by several composers. Frod Buckley of Buckley's Serenaders was ono, and ho sang his own setting in all his entertainments. But when he hoard Bishop's music ho straightway discarded his own and helped considerably to make tho latter' music popular. Mr. Bishop tolls tills little story of how the song found Its way into print: " 'Leaf by Leaf was afloat for seven years," ho says. "One day while In Cin cinnati I called on John Church. He was an old friend. I had known him very well when ho was a clerk for Dltson & Co. In Do3ton. I was chatting with him In tho ofllco when a clerk came In and said that a lady was asking for 'Leaf by Leaf,' but she said tho one on sale was not tho right one. The words were there, but the music wns not. The clerk said there had been many similar complaints. Church askod ran It I know anything about the song. I Lands of Montana. He lived out of doors and out of sight of human habitation lor eleven-twelfths of the year. All of his waking and somo of his sleeping hours wcro spent In tho enddlo. His only com panions were the herds ho tended and his fellow cowpunchers. Ho wns a law unto himself because no other law was there. Ho spent his money on silver-mounted saddles, gorgeous headgear and nt rare In- tervals on vlllutnous liquor and "fixod" faro layouts because theso were his only necessities and his only possible luxutlfB. It Is cot surprising under these clrcum- stances that tho strongest possible tribal feeling was developed in the cattlemen, It Is not surprising that they wore their Runs In convenient positions and beeamo accustomed to hanging cuttle "rustlers" as a matter of course. Jails wore not nunic CALF BRANDING. ous In the old days In the plains country and the six-shooter was the only police- man. It Is not surprising either that on their infrequent visits to thosi frontier settlements which were entitled to a place on tho map by virtue of the possession of numerous saloons and a graveyard apiece they yielded to an uncontrollable desire to paint the town. As tbo Inevitable result nt hltvini- halri Hnivn Ihm faiv vilua tnr I - -v. long a time It became necessary to blow off ramous Sonjrs of T. Briffham Bishop. told him that on my travels I had been singing a melody to tho words. Ho naked me to go to the front of the store, see the woman and sing the melody to her. 1 had barely started when she said: 'Yes, that Is It and you're the gentleman I heard sing It at Mayor Bishop's.' K. U. Bishop was mayor of Cincinnati about that time. Church published the song and It had a tremendous sale. Tho melody was written In 1857, while I was In Portland, Me. "I was generally credited with having written tho words. Some years later, while on a visit to Portland, 1 was taken to task for claiming tho authorsnlti of the verses. I then learned that Mrs. Dana Howe was tho real author and that she was n resident of tho city. I Immediately placed her name upon the title page." "If Your Foot Is Pretty, Show It" was written while Bishop was In St. Louis. The song was Introduced at the Olympic theater. New York by Mrs. John Wood, It was the first time she had ever sun; a song of this class. She made a great hit with it and It was principally through her efforts that It became a great favorite. Tho melody known as "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" was first set to "Johnny, Fill Up the Bowl" while Bishop was In Providence, II. I., In If 50. It was at large until 1S63, when P. S. Ollmoro wrote the new words, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" to It. Bishop and Oll moro took the song to Tolman & Co, of Boston. It was accepted, Mr Hcaty, now of tho firm ot Lyon & Healy, Chicago, was then a bookkeeper tor tho house. He thought that tho melody had run Itself out In ItR association with "Johnny, Fill Up the Bowl" and suggested to Blthnp and Qllmoro that the name Louis Lambert bo placed upon tho tltlu page. The song bo came one of our national airs. Speaking about "John Brown's Body," Mr. Bishop said: "Tho melody, so far ns I can find out, was original with mo and the line which suggested the same was npoken upon my return from St. Iuls In 18f,8. I met a brothcr-ln-lnw of mine. Mr Johnton, who had experienced religion nnd ho took me to task, remarking that my songs were all written for the devil. Then he said: 'I am bound to bo a soldier In the army of the Lord; glory, glory, Hallelujah!' Without stopping to think I snng tills lino to a melody which seemed to escape from my mouth, repeating tho snme, and tho chorua followed, the verse and chorus simply being two lines. It was done as n Joke beforo a friend who was was always tcaslug my brother-in-law. This Is tho origin ot tho song. "Tho song, or hymn, was sung by Mr. Johnson a few evenings afterward at a revival meeting. Everybody took to It. I used It on several occasions, adapting It to circumstances and conditions and when at Martlnsburg, Va., after John Brown's execution at Harper's Ferry, I wrote the original lines of 'John Brown's Body Lies n-Moutderlng In tho Grave.' I also wrote n veree for 'Ellsworth's Body and, with the exception ot the Jolt Davis verso, all orig inated with me. "The song was published in 1881 by John Church of Cincinnati. I thought little of tho song or I would have published It long before. 1 believed It would never amount to anything. But IU success was magical. Then Julia Ward Howe took tho music and used It for her grand .poem, 'The Battle Hymn of the Republic' And now who doosn't know the melody?" A list of Bishop's songs would be very long. Nearly fifty years' ago he' began to write and he Is still at It. His successes have heen many and" et;Vttltiu. kinds. steam. It was only natural that the con ditions ot the cattlo business developed an original code of ethlcsand morals and that It evolved a distinct type of the human Individual. ' It would Do Interesting work for the psychologist to trace also the Influence of tho cow upon tho cowboy. Tbo vast herds that roamed the plains In the old days were subordinate only to the . superior intelli gence of their human attendants and not always subject to that. 'From association with them the rider of the plains imbibed their spirit. They made him bravo, reck less and solf-rellant. Ho presented the strongest possible contrast, for example, to the sheep herder, with whom be waged an Intermittent, fierce and bloody war for the possession of the free range. The sheep tender, like the cowboy, lived' alone, far away from .companionship und human associations, but be lived under very different conditions. His flocks moved slowly and required little exercise of skill or vigilance to keep them together He covered less ground In a month than tho. cowboy frequently did In a day. Ills diet was an unvaried round ot mutton, biscuits nnd tea and In time he became llko his shoep sheepish. Tho cowpunchers even as serted that they could scent him at a dis tance by his woolly odor. It Is not surpris ing then that he proved no match for the active, beef-eotlng nnd resourceful cowboy, or that ho was almost Invariably worsted In their frequent encounters. It waa only by mute persistence and tho force of test multiplying number that tho sheep were able to hold onto any part of the free range. While the old-time glamor of cowboy ex istence lives only In ralnbow-hued litera ture, there remains a wide field of useful ness for the cowboy of today. The work nf carefully studying breeding conditions, nf testing different varieties of feed aud of I riding to matket In tho caboose of a callle 'raln rems tame In comparison with wild night rides to avert stampedes, exciting roundups and terror-spreading charges up and down the streets ot unoffending towns with a six-shooter In either band, but a utilitarian age places by far the greater value upon the former work. In the de parture of the passing cowboy literature mourns the loss of a highly Interesting character, but In the coming of his sue- .. 1 . . .cctsor tne catue Dusinevs is gaining Ira measurably. E. W. MAYO. . JU-LX 11, 1H01. Which Girls? The Bee wants to know which girls in tho territory in whirh it circulates aro iiiost tk'servinjr of the vacation trips offered to the girls who work for a livelihood. We would lilcu every reader to vote the coupons which appear on page two each day. Auy young lady who earns her own living may enter the con tefit. The Bee will pay all of the expenses of the trips and furnish -additional transportation, so it will not be necessary to go alone. Head over the rules carefully. Twelve Splendid Vacation Trips From Omah.i to Chicago nn the Mil waukee. Chicago to Buffalo via the Nickel Plate. Ten days sit the Marl borough and the Paii-Amerlcun Ex position. Ilnturn via Chicago with a day nt the Grand Pnclflo hotel. From Omnhu to Hot Springs, 8. I)., over the Fremont, Klkhurn & Missouri Valley railroad. Two works at the Motel Kvnns at Hot tiprlngs, with prlvllencs ot the plunge and bathH, From Omaha to Minneapolis on the Northwestern. From Minneapolis to Luke Mlntietonkn over the Orent Northern, with two wucks at the Hotel Bt. t.ouU. From Omaha to Chicago on the Chi cago, HurlliiRton & Qulticv Two days at the Orand Pacific. Chicago to Lnko Geneva, Wis., on the Ninth western. Two weeks at the Qarreson house. Heturp via tho same routes. From Omaha to Chicago via the Northwestern with a day's stop nt the Grand Pacific hotel, From Chicago to Waukesha, Wis., with two weuks at the Fountain Spring hou;ie. RULES OF THE CONTEST: Tho trips will be awarded ns follows: Kour trips to tlia four j-ouujr lnrilcn living In Omnhn rocnlvlns tho most rotes; ono trip to the yountf lady lu South Omaha receiving tlm mont votes; ono trip to the youtijr lady In Council Illufts receiving the nio.it votrn; throo trips to tho rouK lndlcw living In Xolnnskn outnido of Omaha nnd South Omalm receiving the most votr; two trips to tho young Indies living In Iown outHide of Council Bluffs receiving the most votes; and one trip to tho young lady In South Dakota receiving tint most TOtCB. The young lady receiving the highest number of votes will have tlm first choice of the trlpH, tho next highest second choice, and no on. No votes will be counted for nny young lady who docH not cam her own living. All votes must be mudu on coupons cut from page 2 of The line. Prepayments of subscriptions may bo made cither direct to The llec Publishing Company, or to nn author ized agent of The Bee. No votes sent In by agents will bo counted unices accompanied by the cash, In accordance with Instruc tions sent them. No votes will be counted for employes of The Omaha Bee. The vote from day to day will be published tn all editions of The Bee. Tho conte&t will close at 5 p. m. July 22, 1001. Votes will be counted when mndo on u coupon cut from The Omnha Boo and deposited at The Bee Business Office or mailed addressed "Vacation Contest Department," Omaha Bee, Omaha Neb. WHEN NIAGARA WILL RUNDR1 Gtolofiiti Fat th Event Beyond tha Villon f Thus Now Liviaf. CONSTANT CHANGES AT THE GREAT FALLS Draining the Great Lake bj- Way ot the MUalmlpiil lllvor Proposed Dam at the Foot of Lake Brie. Before Niagara Falls, which are now cutting their way backward along the bed or tbo river to Lake Erie at tho rate ot about four feet a year, reach the head ot (Jraud Island less than Ave miles away, there will be no Niagara. The whole sys tem of the Oroat Lakes is changing, says the New York Sun. The waters of Lako Michigan at Chicago are slowly rising, and Lako Erie Is growing shallow. Eventually, unless a dam Is built to pre vent It, as has been proposed, Lake Michi gan will overflow to tbo Illinois river, as It did centuries ago In tbo last pre-glaclal period; the basin ot Lake Erie will be tributary to Lake Huron, the current will be reversed In the Detroit nnd the St. I Clair channels and the whole lake system 1 will drain southward Into the Mississippi. Then Niagara will vanish. From a ma jestic cataract the Falls will dwindle to a fow threads of water falling over a preci pice, ns may bo seen In the summer sea son in the upper falls of the Qeneseo at Rochester. All that they will carry will bo the drainage of tho Immediate neighbor hood. 1 There Isn't any occasion for alarm for the present, however, for all this will take place In from two to three thousaud years from now nnd many things may happen before then. Also, as It Is extremely un likely that the elixir of life will bo dis covered In this generation, nobody now alive need worry much about It. Hut that la what the great lake system b tondlng to, as Is sot forth In an Interesting "Guide to tho Geology nnd Paleontology of Nlagarn Falls nnd Vicinity" by Prof. Amadcus Vf. Orabau, S, D., of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, arranged and pub lished In most compltto form by John M. Clarke, tho state patrnntoloKlst, as n bul letin of tho New York State museum. A Fntnri- r.vent. It will ho from E00 to 600 years before the tendency of the lakes to a new dralnase bed Is plainly manifested, according to the au thorities cited by Prnf. Orabau. Tho rlstnR of the waters of Lake Michigan nt present Is at the rate of nlno or ten Inches a cen tury. The first water to overflow will he that at somo high stage of the lake and the discharge may at first be Intermittent. For a mean lake stago such a discharge will begin In about 1.000 years, but after 1,000 years thero will be no Interruption. In about 2,000 years the Illinois river and the Niagara will carry equal shares of tho surplus water of tho Great Lakes, and In 3. SCO yejirs, for certain, there will bo no Niagara. That Is If man, In the shapo of tho United States government, does not Interfere. The shoaling nf Lake Erlo at Cleveland and at other points on the Ohio shore has already given cause for alarm and the stoppage of this natural movement In the general drain age pystem of the lakes, which la attrib uted to the gradual tilling of the land In the northwest, has bren seriously consld-t erert, The plsn proposed to stop the tendency Is to erect an Immense dam In tho Niagara ' river nbove PulTalo, with tho object of cheeking and eventually decreasing the out-; flow, It is argued that this would not greatly decrease the power of Niagara, now UurllriBton. Three days .it the Ilrown ralnec hotel, n dayM excursion to Georgetown through Clear Crack Can yon. Irom Denver to Colorado Uprlngv on the Denver ltlo Orundo to the Garden of the aods, u trip up J'lko'j Peak. lth headnmrters for ten days ot the Alta Vista hotel at Colorado Spring. Iom OmuhH to Lake Qkoboli on the Milwaukee. Two weeks at The Inn nt Inke OkohoJI. Iteturn via the Mil waukee. .J,ro.,fl Omaha to Kansas City over the Missouri Pacific with thr'e days at Kansas City at tho Coutes house. Kansas City to Portlu Springs, Mo., with two weeks nt Hotel Mlnnewawa. From Omaha to St. Louis over the Omaha A. 8t. Louis and Wabash linn, with three days at the Southern hotel, l rom bt. Louis to Toledo with a day at the Uoody house, From Tflle.ln to PuMn-llny via the Detroit Cleve ll".J s'0"'"8'!'!). with two weeks nt the Hotel Victory. valuablo, but there are authorities who con tend that this argument Is absurd and tho plan Is opposed on that account. This tilting of the territory In the north- j west Is a curious phenomenon for which the geologists cannot wholly aocount. It is plainly recorded In the beaches of the old glacial lakes, which hod a uniform eleva tion while forming, but now aro no longer ot a uniform height above the sea level, rlolng progressively toward tbo northeast. The movement is still going on. Prof. O. K. Gilbert has made an extend ed study ot the problem and he has been led to the assumption that the whole lake region Is being lifted on one side, or de pressed on tho other, so that Its plane Is bodily canted toward the south-southwest. Tho rato of change, he estimates, Is such that tho two ends of a line 100 miles Ions; and lying In a south-southwest direction aro relatively displaced to the extent of four-tenths of a foot in a century, From this It follows that the waters of each lake are gradually rising on the southern and western shores or falling on the north ern and eastern shores, or both. Orlstln of the Fnlta. Niagara Falls came Into existence when tho waters of Lako Iroquois', which In ages long past was the predecessor ot Lako Ontario, fell beneath .the level of the I escarpment at Lewlston. At first the Falls were only a small cataract, but year by year as the lake subsided tho cataract ' fffilnflrl In height mnA e.rmrienitentlv let I force of fall as well as efficiency In cutting Its channel. The Niagara gorge from Lewlston to the present Falls Is believed to bo wholly the product of river ororlan. Refore the ndvont ot the falls the Niagara was a placid stream from lake to lake much as It la today from Buffalo to th northern end of Orand. Island. It cut shallow banks Into the glarlnl till and their tracen ore S'vn now in nnme placca a mile buck from the edge of the gorge which the Falls have since out. It has bern patiently cutting that gorge ' for thousands of years, how many the peologlsts cannot tell, but they place the ' total at not less thin 10,000 or moro than 50,000. One gfoloelst, Prof Hitchcock, puts the b'RlnnlnR of the great cataract at 102Q B. p., which Is 300 years before the time of nomulus, or p'bout the period In which King David rolned In Jerusalem. ' As lonr ns a river Is narrow nnd v'gor ously undercuts Its banks the latter will be I strep nnd tho river channel will hnvp the ' clnracter of a gorge. ,Thls continues as long as 'he river Is cutting downward, that Is, till tho prsde of the river bottom is a very ientlo one Then tho spreading of the current unt'o-euts tho banks, nnd atmospheric dlen'egrtlon qu'ckiy den'roys thn cliffs, which the river doer not keep perpendicular. Ntncrrra gorge changes r.rently even In a century. Helow the falls tho river flows In a rlinnrH la places only ten feet wide nnd 110 feet below tho level of tho platform, which was Us bed a cen turv ago. There Is a theory that only a part, the southern or later rart of the gorge of the whirlpool rapids, waa carved by tho Niag ara, the volnmo of whlh was at one time reduced or the ni'rieii HI. Davids gorge and slnre swept nwsy in a glacial period nnd that the greafr half nf the gorge wpR pre-glaclal. All the authorities agroe, however, that the broad and deep gorge from Clifton to the present falls was mode by a cataract carrying the full supply of water. This, which geologists sy Is the most readily Interpreted part of the gorge, has now come to an end nt the present falls and the ehnrartrr of the ehannel here after can only bo conjeeturod, CtjniiKen .Voted, Niagara, It seems, Is now ot a critical stage. The river has reachod the second of the points where a rectangular turn Is made and the gorge behind the falls Is changing. A short channel, considerably narrower than that of the last section, Is ililli From Omaha to Denver on the nock Island, Three days nt thi Ilrown Palace hotel. A day's excursion on the Colorado road through Clear Creek Canyon to Georgetown nnd The Iaup. Fiom Denver to Uletiwood Springs via tin; Denver & lllo CJraiulc. Ten ! At the Hotel Colorado, Olenwood Springs. Iteturn via the same routes. From Oniuha tn Halt Lake via the Union Pnetne. Ten days at the Hotel Ktuitsford, Salt lnke, with privileges of Haltalr Deaoh, Iteturn on the I'nlon Pacific via Denver with thren day' stop at tho Ilrown Palace hotel, a day's excursion from Denver to Georgetown Hiid the Loup through Clear Creek Canyon on tho Colorado road, From Omaha to Chluatro via the Illinois Centiul, with a day nt the Oraml Paclllc. Chicago to Charlevoix via the Pere Marquetie railroad. Ten days at the Hotel Ilelvldere ut Charle voix. Iteturn via Steamship Munltritl to Chicago, Chicago to Omaha via tho Illinois Central KRHni being cut by tho Horseshoe fall and that fall Itself Is narrowing, '-his uariunuuss of tho channel Is duo to the concentration of water In tho center of the stream. Goat Island, which divides tho Horse shoe from tho American fall and the other Islands as well, owes Its exlstenco to this concentration of the water, tor at one time all of these Islands were submerged by the current. Tho channel abovo the Horse shoo fall has been cut to more than fifty feet below tho summit of Goat Island at tho falls, whllo tho Upper end of the Island Is still nt the level ot tho water In tho river, Tho effect will be that tho Island as an Island In time will disappear. It lies on one side of the main mass of water which, rushing forward, passes It and strikes the Canadian bank, from which It is deflected toward the center of tho cataract, that portion being thus deep ened and worn back most rapidly, as may be observed from tho upper walks of the Canadian park, where In many cases the shores have been ballasted and otherwise protected from the current. In an earlier period, when the falls were farther north and before the central part of tho stream had been deepened to Us present extent, tho water, then at tbo levol of the river above Goat Island, flooded what Is now the Queen Victoria park and carved from the glacial bill the pronounced concavo wall which now bounds the park on the west A local eddy, probably In very recent times, carved the steep and semicircular cliff which Incloses the Dufferln Islands. ( American Fall FallliiR. In a thousand years from now and at the present rate ot recession ot the falls, It Is calculated by the geologists whose views aro set forth by Prof. Orabau, that tho Horseshoe Falls will have reached tho upper end ot Ooat Island and that will end tho American Fulls. These having a smaller erosive force will have receded only about half way to tho Goat Island bridge In that time. The Horseshoe Falls will draw off the water from the American Falls and all tho Islands will then bp Joined by a dry channel to tho mainland, an event which, Prof, Orabau says, was anticipated only as far back as 1848, when owing to an Ice bloqkado tn the Niagara river near Buffalo tho American Falls was deprtved of all Its waters for a day. Should a dam bn built In the Niagara river the effect might bo the same, This Is not the first tlmo In tho history of Niagara that the falls havo been di vided, Long ago when tbo falls were at Foster's flats, almost soven miles below their present situation, It Is supposed that a narrow Island, comparable to Ooat island, In tho river bed cut the falls In two. Tho foundations of tho Island, which has since crumbled awny, are to bo seen In the ridge which divides the old drv ehannel on tho left from Ihi main bed of the river. The Eastern or American Fall was In this case the larger of the two and as lt carried the channel It receded more rapid ly. When tho Canadian fall reached the head of tho Islnnd the Amerlcnn had Just passed It and the Canadian fall fell nut of the race. So history li only repeating Itself now In Niagara. ( Molliirm ni'i'lilon fiiics Over. ALBANY, N. Y., July 10. Thero Is re. liable authority for tho statement that the court of apprals. which met here today, will not hand down any decision In the Mollneux murder case until the October term of the court. The niccHt bun! D088 under the nun Is FeiH-Xiiptliu money-batik Koup, at your grooer'B. Fels & Co., maker:), Philadelphia. r