ls.. net THE OMAHA DAILY WEE: SUNDAY, MAY 18, 1002. ? n OUR TROPICAL FRUIT GARDEN i " fan Picture! of Jamaica, an Emerald Lying in a Danling Blue Bea. LAND OF GREEN CRUMPLED MOUNTAINS Prodigal Wealth la Flower, Trci aad "rait Ita Immense Banana Crop, Its Strunge People aad Surf Klaaed Coral Reefa. (Copyright, 1902, by T. J. Hslns.) It ha been through the American eppe Uta for fruit that the moat beautiful Island of tha American tropica haa been made habitable for the clrlllicd. Before the ad vent of the banana Industry the Inland of Jamaica waa, aa It atlll la In many parti, religiously, morally and physically "black." It bear the Imprint of the aon of Ham, the aon of itaTcry aloth and ther thing belonging to the downtrodden race which will not be necessary to re oqnt To the northerner It aeema atrange to .' will not under any circumstance mix with him. In the garden on the hillsides are grape fruit, oranges, bread-fruit, which la the principal fruit of the natives, and a bait dozen kind of applea under different name, all entirely tropical. Tamarind trees are In abundance and the papla, the excellent melon which growa In a treeton ard which resemble a huge pear, I to be h.-l for a sixpence. This peculiar fruit has ln.lt composition a certain amount of vegetable pepaln, which Is a godsend to people with weak digestions. A dyspeptic may eat a whole melon and Buffer no indigestion at all. The Women Help Load. Falmouth Ilea In a bay easily keen from the aea and its clustering hut and house, with here and there a church spire pointing upward, make a bright picture. Montego Bay la probably the prettiest spot on the Island next to St. Lucia. It Is next In else to Kingston aa a town and the stores are Interesting. Lying some fifteen mile to the westward, tho ship usually makes It the last or next to last stopping place, going to St. Lucta Drat to take In a few thousand bunchea that the little town pro duces. Here, aa In the other northern Jamaica ports, the women do the work of IS Hip FIELD OF ELECTRICITY Development in Variona Branches of the Subtle Science. m COURT RULING ON TELEPHONE SERVICE New Departure la Telegraph Keys How Electricity toll Steel Third Ball intern In a Tannel. The Missouri court of appeals recently rendered a decision defining the rights of usera of telephones. It Is In line with pre vious decisions, by which telephone com panies are held to be common carriers, and aa such are bound to furnish service to anyone offering to comply with their re soluble requirements, whether the inatru- and typewriter In such a manner as to produce a high-speed Instrument saving time and labor at the wire. Automatic aenders and receivers of one kind or an other are submitted to the telegraph com panies at the rate of about one a week, and rejected at the same rate. There Is a for tune In store for the man who can Invent a high-speed aendlng and automatic receiving Instrument, but there 1 one tremendous obstacle In the way, of inventora who at tempt it. That obstacle I the limit to tho capacity of the operator of the typewriter. It la comparatively easy to invent a com bination of typewriting machine and tele graph Instrument In which the operator, when he pounds the keyboard at one en 1 of the wire, records, after the manner of the stock ticker, line by line on ordinary paper at the other end of the wire the words he frames at hi end. The trouble i that he cannot do It fast enough. The operator who in practice can typewrite 100 words a minute has yet to be found. The speed at which the wire can carry the message Is almost limitless. At present It the first application of the electric motor as a means of propelling vessels. HI experiments were made on the River Neva In the year 1839. The use of electrla power In this manner has languished until late years, and now when It has again been taken up It la Interesting to find that the chief use found for It Is In the propulsion of vessels which could not possibly be oper ated by any other power. Submarine craft, of which several have been built, have been rendered possible only by the application of this form of motive power. Another form of application of thli power has been suggested In these columns and is now at trading some attention, that of the opera tion of the ferryboats which swarm In the harbor of New Tork and to a lesser de gree In some other American seaports. A ferryboat has at best only an Intermittent service to perform. Their run are com paratively short and they He In their slips between runs for periods of time almost, it not quite, as great as that consumed In tho run Itself. Electrical power would allow flush decks, giving more room, would bring the whole control of the motive power to the pilot house by grouping their suitable switches and would enable a re duction of the crew carried by auch boats. True the radius of operation Is limited by the capacity of the storage battery that can be carried, but It is probable that it would be perfectly feasible to carry an amount of batteries amply sufficient for th- short runs in the Immediate vicinity of the charging station, which ferry boats are called upon to make. Electricity to Cat Steel. Julius E. Haschke, a Chicago electrician. In discovering a way to apply electricity to Iron and steel so as to cut or burn the metal as a warm knife blade does a hard chunk of butter, has brought to bankers I AI.1T FEATl RES OP LIFH. An editorial writer of the Boston Herald relate his experience In one of the fa mous restaurant In Place St. Mark, In Venice, where the Chicago' men lately got Into trouble. He ay that when his bill was presented It contained Item enough which were not ordered to double Its amount, and that when he protested against paying a row wa railed d the police were tummontd, and that any oppo sition on hi part would have Involved the risk of "resisting be police," which 1 th offense charged against the Chicago people. He had to pay to avoid trouble, and think it Is a regular dodge in thla- plaea to bleed foreigners. Zacli Snyder of Byron, 111., has Just won a wager made twenty year ago. In 1880 Snyder and O. A. Mix decided that the plre of the Methodist church was Inaecure and would oon blow over. Mix bet 8nyder that It would fall to the north, while Sny der held out that it waa going over to the cast. The result was a bet of a box of cigar, and they cleverly planned to get the weed in advance. They went to the tore of T. A. Jewell and told him of the bet, and that the loser would pay when it wa decided. Jewett, not suspecting the terms of the wager, turned over a box of cigars to the pair, and he haa been watting for his money all these years. Last Tuesday the steeple succumbed to the fury of the ittorra that prevailed In that region, the structure tumbling over to the east, and Mix, remembering Jils wager, called on Jewett and planked down the money. "Do you know why carnations have fallen bout 40 per cent in price in the last year or aoT" asks a florist quoted by the Phila delphia Record. "It Isn't because they are less popular they are more popular than they ever were but It is all on account of a little wire machine, recently invented, that cost about 3Vt cent. This machine may be described a an automatic tree box of steel wire. It Is a couple of feet high and stands upon three legs. A soon aa a carnation begin to grow It is illpped within 'the machine, and tbereafterward fill J'1' -' SA SW-'fc -Jf:,: """ - ' asaa.. -BV m atiimi I IM1 -. r-aal ay n raja a 'exengwi -naav-aJ--"-xWaasanaHta-j a m .ta a- . n a -urn And the thlp from American or English port boarded by a man a black aa, aln, with the Intelligence of a serpent and as harmless withal a a child. The new ar rival can not quite get over the fact that the custom house officer is a "nigger" in very lense. Then, when the quarantine doctor come alongside with his boat of gayly uniformed blacks, the American look at the top of his white helmet with the certain expectation of soon beholding la whit face upturned to those above. It Icome a a check to find white eyeball land ivory teeth showing In sharp contrast to the inky skin of the doctor' face. It 4 m f V. . I . r. . . I J f Kingston they are scarce a polar bears In New Tork. Port Antonio, the principal fruit port ten the coast. ! naturally one of the first places of Interest to the lover of the tropi cal garden. It is here that the fruit grow ing Induatry has advanced to a great com mercial enterprise. Here all steamers atop and enter or clear if they are to carry away the gifts of the sun god. To describe this one town would tske more space than that allotted to an ordi nary newspaper, but It 1 typical of all the other settlement along the shore as far as 81. Lucia, at the western end of the Island. Tall cocoanut trees line the shores and klllsldes, their top, high above the burn ing and, rustling softly in the trade wind. The coloring of the hilly slope beyond defy description and the bright sunshine make a paradise of the little hole of blue water and Ita surrounding. Far away in the southern dlatance rise the huge moun tain, peak above peak, into the dense maaae of vapor which drifts. along their tops, until the land finally vantshe in the white and blue. The banana pent are on the lowland and (he fruit Is brought to the ship In car, men transferring J t to the vessel's hold until the tally warns the stevedores that the ship is ready tor further orders and may pro ceed to aea and down the shore into the shimmering distance. Telephone In the Frott Trade. The next port where the cargo la to be made up will probably be Annotto bay or 8t Ann. All along the ahor of the island the fruit shipper have run their telephone wire and they can keep track with accu racy of all the bunchea of banana ready (or shipment. The itinerary usually covers la or ssven places and the number , of hunches Is marked for each town. The ahlp hlch can carry from twenty-five to thirty thousand bunchea will find It cargo all laid out for It, unleaa some accident hap 4ena. Then the surplus fruit which must go north is crowded into car and pushed (or the port of clearance, where It will find it war Into It hold In time for it to get to sea on schedule. Banaaa are measured In bunches and (he buntb.ee measured in "hands." For in stance, a bunch of nine or ten handa of fcaaana will have nine or ten projections of fruit averaging a dosen or mors, alter nating down the oppoelte aide of the main tern, tnaJclnc a total of more than 100 baaanaa en ths stem. The smaller bunches Jiave sometmes a few a six hands, or elxty banana, on the bunch, and will con sequently aell for lea than the bunch of ten hand. A cargo will average about 1 a bunch. All tropical towns are somewhat almllar In aapect, but these fruit ports are espe cially interesting. The huts, or houses, with their thatched roots aad dusky in habitants, are very picturesque, but not clean. The women are aeea about the yards washing clothe or doing other chorea, sometimes even, breaking atone for the roads, sitting eomplacsntly with . pipe In mouth aad stone and hammer before them, while the pile of rock between their kaeee lowly dwindle in alse under their eaay stroke. The men do very little indeed and It 1 against the religion and practice of the Jamaica women to marry tor this reason. When married the English law make their property available to their husband, who consequently will not do any work while it lasts. Unmarried they' are their own masters, and if the lover who la the father of many children does not attend to bualnesa he will - find hie place usurped by some more willing . buck and will bare to took einewhere for a home. This strange state of affaire has been the baae of the missionaries, but there aeema to be ao remedy for it, for a woman once (re will not enter elavtry aaala. With tha oollo tho Imported Indian who work ths sugar plantation the moral ties are en tirely different. The last Indian punishes marital unfaithfulness with death and sooaa down with scora upon tho re and loading the fruit Into the surf boats, the men only rowing out to the ship and trans ferring the load to the hold. To sell intoxicating liquors a license la necessary in all these towna land it has to be displayed conspicuously, but Jamaica rum is to be had at prices varying from 2 to 3 shillings a bottle, even in the first class establishments. Strategetlcally, Jamaica will be of para mount Importance when the canal la built arrass the Isthmus. Kingston will be the key to the gulf and Carrlbean Sea, and with Its harbor will be unasslalable. There has been much talk of annexation to the United States among the free thinking class of the island who look ahead to the future, but It Is doubtful If anything will be realized in this direction. As a winter resort, Jamaica certainly ranks high among other W est Indian places for the American. It haa good water, good law and good liquor, the three things a true New Yorker or Chtcagonn most needs. The habit of the table must necessarily be changed if good la expected from a sojourn within the tropics, and for quantity and variety the fruit of the island excels. One may eat fifteen varieties of fruit a day and be better for It, and there will be no ex hausting fevers or bowel complaints to mar the good work of reconstructing a wornout or overworked system. For nervous dis eases the climate la the best in the world. When the Canal la Built. With the passage of a canal bill the Island of Jamaica will becqme of great in terest. Besides its Importance aa a naval base, it will probably furnish most of the labor for the giant cut through the Isthmus. The desplssd black man of great alze and exceeding atrength will be looked to as a factor to enable the dream of the commerce lover to be realized. The acorned Jamaica "nigger" will be the man behind the hoe who will make the cut. How thta drain will be met by the fruit growers of the Jamaica plantations It ' Is hard to aee. The population, however, is numerous and prolific and might supply many thousand men. The Jamaican negro la large, strong and finely built, and, what is even more necessary for the purpose, is peculiarly Immune to the tropical fevers of the Isthmus. Coolies, South American ne-1 groes, whites, negroes from the statea, all were tried In Panama, but the fever proved deadly to them. The Jamaican, however, Imported by the tens of thousands, proved able to withstand the exposure and showed, a low death rate that wa remarkable. The only quality he is said not to have la phy sical staying power. This sounds strange with his great size and strength and cli- I matlo endurance. Statistics on thla quality ! are lacking and it may be that the lack of physical endurance Is more a thing of choice, the natural quality developed In a mind prone to sloth. - j I hava ssen a huge black giant sit for hours keeping tally on coal loaders, paaaing checks to the men who filed by and dis daining even to stoop to pick up a fallen check which had escaped his fingers. Evea hla words calling the numbers were whis pered as if the effort were appalling and juite beyond the atrength of his giant frame. One of the peculiarities of the fruit growing Jamaican la bis speech. It is a language of hla own, made up from the English pronunciation of tha broad "A," j the peculiar aoft intonation of his neighbor across the way In Cuba, and the rapid, ner vous tongue of the Frenchman. It is quite incomprehensible to the stranger and at one moment the visitor will be aure he Is speaking Spanish, the next French and the next real "nigger." It takea some time to get used to the jargon. With it all the na tive la politeness Itself. With such aa abundance of fruit It is strange that bananas are almost the sole exportation. Oranges sell for a shilling a barrel for good ones, yet very few are shipped in comparison with the bananas; the bread fruit is seldom. If ever, exported and grape fruit that aell for tuppence for the choice and a penny tor the general run finds its way to the states only In small quantttlea. This is strsnga when one re member that (5 cents is the usual winter price for a prime grape-fruit in New Tork, and there la no loaa in transportation. Orape-frutt la a fad for the civilised and the native will seldom touch It. T. J. HAINS. ment la used in a public station or in a private residence or business place. In thla case now decided, a telephone was put In the appellant's place of business, but It did not give satisfaction. The tele phone company was notified to take the Instrument out. Thta it did not do, but caused the telephone to be adjusted, and thereafter satisfactory service was ob tained. The lessee of the Instrument wished to keep It then, but the telephone corporatloa demanded payment for all the time tbat the Instrument had been in the lessee's place, regardless of the time when no satisfactory service could be obtained. In reversing the decision of the circuit court the court held that the rule of the telephone company not to replace a tele phone removed for non-payment of rent would not stand. Kovel Teleuraph Key. Telegraph operators need suffer from par alysis of the wrist no longer it they will use the key Just Invented by Charles Shir ley of 41 Sidney place, Brooklyn, reports the Brooklyn Eagle. Mr. Shirley has been manager of the Postal company for several years. His efforts to find a remedy for the telegraph operator's dreaded malady "lost grip," resulted in inventing this Instru ment. It Is a radical departure from the telegraph key now In uae, which has afflicted so many operators with paralysis and "operator's' writers cramp. It Is in tended to Increase the Bpeed of the opera tor. It consists of a handle that may be grasped by the whole hand or operated by the touch of any finger or part of the hand. It la unnecessary to retain a firm hold upon this handle and the fingers may be shifted as desired during transmission. It can be turned completely around at will, ao that any desired position may be secured In stantly. This little Instrument brings Into action new and vigorous musoles which the suffering telegraphers never knew they had. Electrlo Waves (rout the Snn. The London Electrician give an abstract of the report of C. Nordman on hi experi ment at the Mont Blano observatory for the purpose of finding out whether the sun emits electro-magnetic rays, or, rather, whether such rays are capable ef penetrat ing to the surface of the earth. Of course it Is reasonable to suppose that electro magnetic waves of the Hertzian kind are actually sent out. In order to obtain the beat conditions It Is necessary to choose the highest possible elevation, so as to escape the abaorblng action of the atmos phere and of aqueous vapor. The experi ments, therefore, were conducted' si the station of the Orande-MuTots, at an altitude of more than 10,000 feet. A spell of bad weather prevented him from conducting the experiments at the top of Mont Blano Itself. The receiver used consisted of a galvano meter circuit with coherer and an antenna 175 meter long stretched over the Boson glacier, in such a position that at midday the sun's raya fell upon it vertically. This had the double advantage of protecting the wire from the electric waves emitted by ths Chamounlx railway and from the inter ference of waves which would have been reflected by the ground If the aoll bad been a conductor Instead of a non-conducting glacier. The results of the experiments, made under a cloudless sky on September 16, were entirely negative. The sun, there fore, either does not send out wave of this order or they are absorbed by the sun'a at mosphere or by the upper strata of the earth's atmosphere to such an extent that the registering device was not delicate enough to record them. Aatosaatle Telegraph Systeasa. Among all the problems which engage the attention of Inventors, says the Boston Transcript, there seems to be none more at tractive thaa that of cetnblniaf telegraph is limited only by the capacity of the operators, sender and receiver, and speed, even more than labor-saving, is the thing the telegraph companies are aeeklng. For the last three years one company haa been experimenting on two circuit between New York and Chicago and New York and Buffalo with an automatic system called the Buckingham. This Is not strictly a combination of telegraph and typewriter. The typewriter is a perforating instrument which punches holes in sheets of paper which are fed into the sending Instrument and are sent and received automatically. By this system from fifty to sixty messages of an average of thirty words each can be sent an hour. The trouble about this is that two or three men are required to pre pare the messages. There is an Instrument already Invented and now being perfected and develpoed for commercial use which may be brought into practical use before automatlo telegraphy cornea to pass. This is the Poulaon telephonograph, invented by a Dane. In this instrument words spoken into a phonograph combined with a tele phone are reproduced on patent tape at the other end of the wire. Should this be de veloped cheaply and . universally It may revolutionize telegraphy. Suit (or Time Lost at Telephone. The rapid Increase in the number of tele phones in use in northwestern cities haa caused the demand of patrons for connec tions to grow almost faster than the facili ties for taking care of the increase can be provided. It thue happens that many per sons have gained the Idea that the service is not as satisfactory as when the systems were much smaller than at present. These people are much Interested in a novel suit, for which papers are being drawn at Ta coma. The prospective plaintiff is a Whatcom business man and hla object will be to re cover from the telephone company for tho time lost In trying to attract the attention of the central telephone office in order to secure connections with his business patrons. Recovery will be aought on that por'lon of hla contract which provides that he snail receive prompt and effective serv ice. His complaint as drawn declares that through the Inattention or overworking of the telephone employes he is compelled to I spend long periods of time, ranging from I three to 'fifteen minutes, In obtaining the i necessary switches. He alleges tbat o ' much of his working time la -lost In this i manner that bis buslnees is financially dam i aged. Third Rail In Tiiuael. The Baltimore Ohio Railroad company on March 15 put Into active service the third -rail system Installed on the belt line between Camden atatlon and Waverly through Ita tunnela under Baltimore. Final tests were made and one of the electric locomotives wss regularly using the third rail. The other two locomotives will follow suit as soon as they are equipped for the ' purpose. Baltimore Ohio engineers re gard the system aa a complete auccess, and ths entire overhead electric conduita and supports will be torn down. The belt Una haa been fenced In for Ita entire length where the third rail is used to keep persons from walking on ths tracks. The third rail is charged over the whole route to Wav erly, except at Camden and Mount Royal stations. In Baltimore the device used keepa the third rail "dead" until It la au tomatically cut in by the electric loco motive in passing over the surface. It 1 cut out by the same method. The re mainder of the third rail la protected by wooden guard. Tb system will prevent smoke and gases In the tunnel. Electrical navigation In Hauls. To the efforts of a person named Jacobl who lived la Bt. Petersburg is credited u- 1 T. 'iTri a. v.- i -.r 3 t ' 'i 3- II and other guardians of public treasure a feeling of Insecurity. Mr. Haschke did not invent his carbon point the name given the metal cutting device for the purpose of opening bank safes, reports the Record-Herald, nor does he wish, so he says, to aid or abet In any way the dark lantern fraternity, yet he is able to cut into two pieces the thickest bar or steel plate. It makes no difference to Mr. Haschke whether he Is called upon to cut In two a btg boiler plate In Milwaukee or sever asunder great steel ribs in the Rookery building. Chicago he goes about bis labor with full confidence that he can carry out hla part of the contract. Mr. Haschke'a experience In Milwaukee a few daya ago le an example of what hla carbon point will do. A big boiler foundation was to be removed from the basement of a building. It was almost impossible to get the great mass of metal out as it lay. , Mr. Haschke'a simple invention was men tioned to the Interested persons and be was invited to go to the Cream city. Mr, Haschke ensconced himself in a little steel house, placed two pairs of blue -spectacles to his eyee and after connecting his car bon point he touched the steel plate. Per sona standing far back in the basement saw a lurid flame shoot up; it wss a while light and produced extreme beat. Tho light well-nigh blinded the spectators, but the operator was well protected and did the work. At the rate of a foot in five minutes and cutting or burning away a wide space in the plate the carbon point with its terrible power worked along. Mr. Haschke bad no trouble whatever In handling the work, and those who watched him left tha place aware of the value of the discovery of the Chlcagoan. The Haachke apparatua la simple. A car bon of electrode Is attached to a wood handle by means of a metal clamp; to thla clamp a wire Is faatened, tbs other being connected with the object to be operated upon. If a safe, the second wire is at tached to a hinge or lock, as the fancy of the operator dictates. The eyes and face of the workman are protected against the glare and the heat by a box of aluminum or sheet iron. The carbon point la thrust through a hole In one aide of this box. The box used by Mr. Haschke is small and its inner sides are lined with asbestos. Drill-proof Bessemer or cromer steel are cut as easily aa the softer metala with thla remarkable Invention. lalLWiT TIMES CARD. I'NIOX STATION lOTH AXD MARC I . Chicago, Rock lelcnd and Patslde. CAST. Leave. Arrive. Chicago Daylight Lim ited a :00 am a (:6 am Chicago Daylight T:00 am a :K pro Chicago Express bll:l$ am a pro Ies Moines Local a 6:20 pm bll:50 am Chicago Fast Express. a ;u5 pra a 1:26 pin W EST. Rooky Mountain Lim ited a 116 am a 4:55 am Lincoln. Colo. Springs. Denver, Pueblo and West a 1:30 pm a l:U pm Colo., Texas. Cal. t Oklahoma Flyer a 1:30 pm alt:40 pm Wabash, fit. Louis "Cannen Ball" Express l:U pm a : am St. Louis Local. Council LUuUs alO.OO am a U:tf pm It remain upright, for there la a eerie of rings that take hold of ,11 and guide it In its growth. Before the invention of this device the majority of carnation spoiled because when they became tall they fell over and the flowers rotted In the dust. Now none of them spoil, and hence their present cheapness." IA1LWAY TIME CARD. Inlon Paclao. Leave. ..a l:to am ..a 8:60 am ..a 4:25 pm ..all.oir pm Arrive, a 7:30 pm u I 25 pm Overland Limited.., Fast Mall , California Express Pacini; Express Eastern Express... Atlantic Express Llncoln-Stromnburg Ex.b 4:05 pm Grand Island Local ...b 6:30 pm Chicago, Milwaukee tfc at. l'aui. Chicago Limited a 8:00 pm a 8:06 am Chicago & Omaha Ex..b 7:16 am b 3:40 pm MUsouri Pacific. St. Louis Express sl0:00 am K. C. Ac St. L. Expreni.al0:60 pm Illinois Central. Chicago Expreaa a VM am Chicago, Minneapolis & St. Paul Limited a 7:50 pm Minneapolis tt bt. Paul Express b 7:20 am Chicago Express tsuagu at AuiiantitttB, ' "The Northwestern Line " Chicago bycc.Mi a i:iv am all:) pm Vlllt-fc'4 . a.-iiftvt . .. .. . law I 111 taaieiu A,xprce aiw:aa am tt.usieiu opeciai ...a 4:e im r aal Aiuit... a l.w um omaua-Co.lcu.go L i u. ..a Ilia put Htl Man Cedur iwiuds pans iwni cu ikxpieaa a 7:06 am iwiii city iiuiiieu a ?;o pm bloux City ijoval a i.Ut am a 4:35 pm a 1M am bl2:30 pm b 1:35 am a 6:25 pm a :16 am a 6:10 pm a 1:06 em blO:36 pm a;o: ym a .M am a 4 uu pm a I uu pin a (;4u pm a am a : am a ; n pot alo:ii pm a :40 am a :m pm WEBSTER DEPOT 10TH 4t WEBSTER Fremont, Klkhorn at atUaonrt Valley. Leave. Arrive. Black Hills, Deadwood. Hot Springs a t:o0 pm a 6:00 pm yumlng, caaper and Douglas d l:W pm 6:00 Dm HabUufc-s, York, David p City, tiuperior, Geneva,, Exeter ana bewaru....0 1:00 pm b 6:00 Dm Not folk, Unooln and Fremont 0 7:30 am b 10:15 am Fremont Local o 7:30 am Missouri Paelus. Nebraska Local, Via Weeping Water b 4:10 pm 010:36 am Chicago, Bt. Paul, Minneapolis Omaha. Twin City Passenger..,. a 6:30 am a 1:00 pm Bloux city Passenger... a 2:uO pm all:3u am kmeraou Local. ... e;w pm It s.a not BIRLINQTON Slal lOlt-lOTH Jk MASUlf Chicago, Burlington at ttalner. Leave. Arrive. Chicago Special a 7:o am a 4:06 pm Chicago VesUouied Ex.. a :w pm a i:i am Chicago Local a : am all:oo pm Chicago Limited. a7:Mpm a 7:4 am Fast Mall a 2:40 pm Burlington at Mlasaarl River. Wymore, Beatrice and Lincoln a 1:40 am bll:6S am Neoraska Express a 3:40 am a 7:36 cm tienver Limited a 4:26 pm a am iiUck HU1 and Pugei " ' am Bound Express all:U pm a 3:00 nm Colorado V tatlbuled pm Flyer a oo Bm Lincoln Fast Mall b 1:00 pm a 307 sm Fort Crook ana Plaits- mouth b 3:10 pm bll.-OJ am Bellevue A Pac rte Jet.. .a 7:40 pm a 3:10 am Ballevue At Pacific Jet. ..a 1:00 am Kansna City. Be Jooenh at Council BlusTs. Kansas City Day Ex.. ..a : am a ( 06 pra ot. Louis Flyer..... ...n 6:10 pm aU:U km Kansas City SUht Es...au):M pm a 6.U am " Dally, b Daily except Sunday. gun day euiy. d Dally except SalurUa. Dally I r. o I h-H Delight Old and Young Alike angwssj o S3 B4 u . O sz; 3 V3 cn o H O w o u X H W w a w UJ CQ x O w s H O rn s o. o u o cn on x O r eJ H O X Section 1 APES, MONKET8, LCMTJRS. BABOONS. Section 2 LIONS, TIGERS. LEOPARDS, JAGUARS. Section 3 CATS. WOLVES, CIVETS. CHBETAS. Section 4 DOOS. FOXES. BEARS. RACCOONS. Section 5 BADGERS, SKUNKS, SEALS, RODENTS. Section 6 RABBITS. BATS, ELEPHANTS, ETO. Section 7 ZEBRAS. HORSES, OXEN, BISON. Section 8 SHEEP. OOATS, ANTELOPES, ETC. Section 9 GIRAFFES, KUDU8, OKAPI. DEER TRIBE. Section ) DEER (Cont.) CAMELS. PIGS. ETC. Section 11 Hippopotamuses, WHALES, DOLPHINS, KANGAROOS. Section 12 OPOB8UMS, FLYING MICE. PORCUPINES, ANT EATERS. Section 13 OSTRICHES, OAME BIRDS, PIGEONS. OROU8B. Section 14 OULLS, AUKS. CRANES. HERONS, ETO. Section 15 SWANS. DUCKS, GEESE, OWLS. And Five Section to Follow, Equally Interesting. ta er: J t