Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 19, 1904, EDITORIAL SHEET, Page 17, Image 17

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    17
TIIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JUNE 19, 1004.
ONE OF OMAHA'S FOUNDERS
Jamai H. Wlnihlp Tall of Ctji of Oit;'i
Io'aooj.
COMES HIRE FORTY-SEYEN YEARS AGO
ertleel Vra Where asees Aroa
Thirtieth street Haw Meat
a Hm Lire Her
Err glace.
A.i Interesting personality, closely Identl
fled with the early history of Omihi, Is
that of Jimel M. Winshlp of 2931 Franklin
street. Of the seventy-three years that
Mr. Winshlp baa lived, forty-seven have
been spent In Omaha, and tha venerable
pioneer blda fair to round eut many more
reara la tba Get City.
During 1857. when it waa tha faahlon
to follow tha (tor of empire westward,
Mr. Winshlp left Laurel, Franklin county.
Indiana, in a covered wagon, -bringing with
him hla wife, father, mother, two sister
And a bother. After six weeka on tha
road the party reached Omaha on Septem
ber 10. MOT. and lived with Mr. Wlnshlp'a
onola on a farm located near what la now
Thirtieth and Amea avenue. In about a
year tha nawcomera took up a homestead,
ona corner of which ia now tha eouthwest
corner of Fifteenth and Jackson streets.
They lived twenty-six years on the home-
atead and for tha past twenty yeara have
resided at 1931 Franklin street, making
two moves in forty-six years, a reoord
that Mr. Winshlp feela proud of.
In less than a year after ths arrival of
tha Winshlp, Mr. Wlnshlp's elderly father
died and waa burled at Prospect Hill, tha
first interment to ba made at that burial
ground.
Mr. Winshlp haa three aona, Frank M.,
George W., and Alphonso B., two daugh
ters, Mra. Andrew Klewlt and Mra. W. H.
Bullock, and twelve grandchildren. Two
of tha latter, Llssi and William Klewlt,
were In tha high school graduating clasa
Friday night. Mr. Winst)lp'e Immediate
family realdea In Omaha.
Bis Ufa la Omsk.
Speaking of tha first few yeara of his
resideno In Omaha, when history was
being written mora than It la now, Mr.
Winshlp yald: ,
"Well, aa near aa I can remember, there
were about 1,000 people here when I first
came to Omaha. I followed my trade aa
a painter for a while and painted the
houses that James E. and John Boyd
built when they were contractors. I
painted the house of Jesse Low. the first
mayor of Omaha, and did tha algn work
on ths old Boyd packing house, tha first
plant of that kind In thla part of ' the
country.
"But let ma tell you about the famous
robbery at tha Taylor ranch, then located
twelve miles out on tha old Military road.
My memory la falling me, so I can not
tell you the data when it occurred, but
It waa at the time recruits were being
mustered bera for the war.
"It waa on a Friday morning, in tha
winter ttme, and I waa on the road near
the Taylor ranch when I met Frank North
and two men coming to town7 in a sleigh.
North was then drilling Indiana for tha
army and Just happened to pick up the
men on the way to town. I took particu
lar notice of the strangers and made a
mental not of their appearance, as I did
not Ilka their makeup.' I played amateur
detective for awhile and my suspicions
Were confirmed, for I found them asso
ciating with the worst element in the vil
lage. I learned that the men bad stayed
at the Taylor ranch on the evening be-
fore they werti brought In by North.
Canaot Deceive) Him.
- v'. -
"The next tlm I hadpartiouIar occa
sion to notice them was on the following
Sunday morning, when the men went into
a barber shop and had their hair cut short
and their face shaved smooth. I then said
to myself: "You will have to out your
heads oft if I fall to recognise you fel
lows.' "Threat days afterward I met Taylor
coming out of tha Treraont house. I asked
him how tha folks were and be replied:
" They are all well, but we had a bad
. robbery down at our place last Sunday
night.' I was away at Logan on my form
t the time, and two men bound my wife
and tha hired man by the hands and stole
nearly 11,000 and our Jewelry and trinkets.
My wtfa says one of the man appeared to
be quite young, while the other waa much
ojder and seemed to be ths leader. The
older ona waa going to kill my wife if
aha did not tall where the money was
kept; than tha young fellow pleaded with
his companion to spar Mrs. Taylor's Ufa.
They round, tha money In the. cellar.' .
" 'Have you any suspicions who the men
might be, and do you think they might
be the men who stayed at your place last
Thursday nightr I asked of Taylor, who
replied:
" Tee, I believe It waa those fellows,'
he answered.
Advisee Hiss t Be slleat.
"Then I told Taylor to keep still about
tha matter for the present and assured
him that the men Were in town. I told
him to go over to Lacy McCormlck'a
grocery store and stay there until I came,
I went after Sheriff Tom Sutton, but being
unable to find him then I soon came
across Marshal Riley, whom I sent to
Join Taylor at the store. Button then
came and Joined the others. I ordered a
rig sent from Homan'a barn on Thirteenth
street for Mrs. Taylor and the hired man,
so that they would be on hand to identify
the robbers when caught.
"The men were soon arrested, and re
leased on some technicality, but publlo
feeling grew to such a pitch that their
rearrest was soon accomplished.
"Mrs. Taylor and the hired man soon ar
rived from the ranch and both identified
the robbers out of more than 100 men.
Publlo sentiment was growing as evening
approached, 'and the prisoners knew this.
When the robbers were identified the
younger of the two pleaded with Mrs,
Taylor to Intercede for his life, even as he
had done for her when his partner threat
ened to kill her with a knife on the even
ing of the robbery. Mrs. Taylor pleaded
successfully. A mob broke into the Jail
that evening, hung the older of the crtm
inals and escorted the young man out of
town and told him not to return. He,
however, did come back the next day and
slipped Into the recruiting office and en
listed."
Gold t rre-re Hla iterles.
Mr. Winshlp tells a little story about an
Omaha cltisen of the early Urns who went
to Denver to start a newspaper and re
turned with samples of gold to vindicate
his published statements that there waa
Dlenty of gold In Colorado.
. "Bowers," said Mr. Winshlp, "left Omaha
at the time of the first rush to Pike's
Peak. He opened a printing office in Den
ver and. If I remember correctly, his office
was attacked by disgruntled prospectors
who took exceptions to his reporta of the
gold possibilities of Colorado.
"Bowers oame back to Omaha and waa
at the big dance being held out at Elk
horn. I was at the ball and waa ths only
one to recognise Bowers, or at least the
first -one. I said to him:
" "Hello, Bowers, I'm glad to see you.'
"Bowers said, 'Don't speak too loud; they
are going to kill me.'
"Tou see, he was afraid that people
here were angry at him for publishing
such glowing statements of the gold fields,
when so many had returned home disap
pointed, not having stayed at it long
enough. I assured Bowers that there were
lots of Omaha people at the ball and
that he need have no fears as to his
safety. The next morning, bright and
early. Bowers displayed a wheelbarrow of
gold nuggets In a show window on Farnam
street.
"No, I did not get the gold fever; in
fact, my first visit to Colorado waa six
yeara ago."
OCT OF" THB ORDINARY.
An extremely fine quality of green leather
made In Turkey is manufactured from the
skin of the angel fish.
The $40,000,000 which w paid to Panama
for the canal rights was tne largest sum
this government ever paid to any foreign
power.
Nettlna- had to be put over the whistle of
a big powerhouse at Racine, Wis., to shut
out the sparrows that nested there and
choked it - i
One of tha results of the recent Anxlo-
French ajireement Is a renewal of the
scheme for tunneling the channel between
d ranee ana ungiana.
Yankeeland Is not the Only original. In
ventive country on ' earth not by any
means. A Dutch manager is building a
floating theater, with seats for 2,300 persons
and liberal provisions for appeasing the
hunger and thirst of his patrons. He will
tow his unstable temple of harmony up the
Rhine and down again and give operatlo
performances on board.
Captain Ludwlg Elsenbaum, the lone
navigator who crossed the Atlantlo from
Boston In a seventeen-foot dory, has Come
back to New York as a member of the
crew of the Red Star line steamship Kroon
land, from Antwerp. He brought his dory
with him, and it is said that both will be
seen later at the St. Louis exposition. The
captain's trip was almost a constant fight
with death. Twice he waa sighted in mid
Atlantic by passing steamships, and tha
skipper of one vessel spent considerable
time urging him to abandon his perilous
undertaking. He had several narrow es
capes from drowning and once he lost
nearly all of his provisions.
The Cherokee Advocate Is one of the old
est and most remarkable newspapers In the
United States. It is the official organ of
the Cherokee Nation, and Is published at
Tahlequah at the nation's expense. .It la a
five-column folio weekly, half of which is
printed in the Cherokee language. It is
strictly nonpartisan and la forbidden to
law to deal In politics. Indians who read
only Cherokee get the paper free. The
total circulation Is about 1,000. The cost of
publication ia about It, 600 a year over and
above receipts from advertisements. The
expense is met by an annual appropriation.
The salary of the editor Is $000 and a nice
home. He Is appointed by tha national
council. The Ppes! haa been in existence
since 1840.
CFOCE" gives you real strength
and gumption, so that you like to work.
C It's a great cure for hot-weather
laziness, v
I
The will ts work semes from certain constituents la feed tha
Pboephstes, Nitrogen, an Pnneids, -
Cartel toad are richer la thea aoneUtuent than ethers, sad
are eoaverts soon readily tnte Energy.
" rOKCS - Is one ef uwae feeds concentrated.
It ceneiata of the vital things U Wheat tb Phosphates, Nitre
aea, and Destiia, B-algeete4 tar east to aasimiiaie aUaoat as
Serve eold lor b) with rai umo, o fcitt.
FEATURES OF SCHOOL WORK
Pregratiira 8tri9i of Education Cal
Forth Comment and Criticism.
CAUSES FOR TRUANCY AND THE REMEDY
Desaaad for More Mrs Teacher De
fease ef the Married School
Ma'ase specialists Case
la for m Roast,
In a carefully prepared "diagnosis of the
truant," read before the national confer
ence of charities at Portland, Me.. Super
intendent MacQueary of the Chicago
Parental school corrected the popular no
tion that truants are "diseased or de
generate children," or that they constitute
a particular class of defectives. Truants,
so tar as he had been able to dlsoover, do
not differ greatly from other ohlldren.
"They are. Just boys," said the superin
tendent, "with all the Instincts, feelings
and characteristics of other boys." Taken
as a class they compare favorably with
others more fortunately circumstanced
children who respond as quickly to mental
and moral atimulo as' others do, and often
times more quickly.
In the second place tnianoy in a city like.
Chicago cannot be ascribed to causes found
In the defects of the publlo school system
or in the incompetency of teachers. "The
real causes of truancy in at least 90 per
cent of the cases," says Superintendent
MacQueary, "are to be found outside the
school and the truant. In unfavorable
homes and social conditions."
Seventy-five per cent of the boys com
mitted to the Chicago parental school are
below normal in physical development, and
the defect most aggravated In Individual
cases, If not the most prevalent defect, la
found in those disturbances which arise
from a defective nervous organization. In
general these defects are due to unhygienic
conditions, to malnutrition, to Irregular
meala and unsanitary living or sleeping
rooms. It la to be borne in mind also In
making comparisons that 60 per cent of
the publlo school children are classed aa
subnormal; that is, they have more than
the average number of defect found among
such children.
The cause of truancy must be sought in
circumstances and conditions over which
the truant haa absolutely no control. Some
of the boys in the parental' school come
from "good homes," where they get enough
to eat and wear, but the vast majority
suffer from bad environment and unfavor
able domestic conditions. Poverty, parental
Ignorance, weakness, cruelty, drunkenness,
unhygienic conditions, and, above ail,
vicious associations, are the chief causes
of truancy.
The first remedy, in thejoplnlon of Super
intendent MacQueary, which must be ap
plied la permanent change of environ
ment, and this change must embrace a
scientifically evolved system for physical
Improvement, mental development and
moral training. "This the parental school
Is designed to supply," says the Record
Herald, "and for this it Is most admirably
adapted. If it have any defect at all It
lies in its manifest inability to keep cer
tain wayward lads permanently away from
the old environment and lta baneful in'
fluences." ...
.- Specialists In Schools.
Comptroller Grout has long contended
that the Board of Education of New York
City Is spending too much ' money in spe
cial Instruction, ' and. ,wlth a view of
strengthening his case,, he recently em
ployed Mrs., Mathilda Coffin Ford, an educa
tlotial expert, to investigate the school eya
tem of the city. Mrs. Ford's report advo
cates the abolition of special Instructors in
music, physical culture and manual train
ing In the public schools, on the dual
ground that these subjects Interfere with
the common school courses to which the
students are entitled, 'and also that a
much needed saving of $350,000 a year
thereby could be effected. ' Mra. Ford de
clares that a specialist magnifies the Im
portance of his specialty, gives It too large
a place relative to other subjects, and also
constantly underestimates' the amount of
effort which an ordinary person, who Is
not especially skilled In his line, must cut
forth to accomplish given results. If Mrs.
Ford's recommendations should be adopted
fifteen directors and 246 special teachers
would hava to seek employment elsewhere.
A Blow at Frats.
Stringent measures to crush high school
secret societies were taken by the Chi
cago school management committee when
It adopted resolutions forbidding "any stu
dent who Is known to' be a member of a
fraternity or aororlty, or other ao-called
'secret' society," from representing the
school In any literary or athletic contest,
or In any other publlo capacity.
The committee also forbid such organiza
tions the use of the school name, denied
them all publlo recognition, Including the
privilege of meeting In the school build
ing, and called upon all principals and
teachers to acquaint parents of pupils at
tending the high school with the fact
that -the Board of Education, Superin
tendent Cooley, and the faculties of the
various schools unanimously condemn all
secret societies.
The action of the committee waa a sur
prise to the " frat" boys, who had as
sembled In the board rooma to await the
outcome of the meeting. When they heard
of the action taken they declared it would
strengthen the societies.
The Heady School Ma'am.
Charlotte Perkina Oilman write in Suc
cess: Our present, laws against the mag
rlage of school teachers no, I mean too
sweeping against ' tha marriage of women
school teachers, on pain of official decapi
tation, are historically amusing. We shall
laugh at them a few yeara hence, as we
now laugh at the sumptuary laws of the
past For Instance, the worthy Zaleuohus,
450 B. C, ordained "that no woman should
appear In the street attended by more
than one maid servant unless shs were
drunk;" Edward III of England strove to
keep his aubjeots down to a menu of two
courses only, and our own more recent
forefathers In New England prohibited
such personal decorations as they chose to
consider too expensive for common citizens.
Why ahould not a achool teacher have a
husband if aba choose! ? The married state
doe not detract from the ability of an ed
ucator. Indeed, aa all teaching originated
In motherhood and aa that experience is
understood to have a widening and en
nobling Influence, It la hard to sea why
school hlldren should be debarred from
the advantageous society of the- married
teacher, with her calm happiness, or of the
mother-teacher, with her new depths of
love.
Are any instanoes given of a falling off
In efficiency In teacher after marrlageT
Is It claimed that a happy wife - cannot
give aa much attention to her work aa a
hopeful damsel or a resigned spinster?
Not at all I
The contention la that the teacher who
marries haa got another Job, and ahould
give up her former position to one who
needs It more than she does.
It haa been wisely and conclusively an
swered that the married woman who electa
to continue her school work does so either
because of especial devotion to that work
or because aha continues to need the salary-
Bo tha upholders of spinster school
ma'ams are caught en either born of tha
dilemma if the married teacher wants to
teach because of eapeclat ' Interest in the
work ah haa a right to do It on tbe
ground that of fitness; If she wants to
teach because she "needs the money" she
has a right to It on grounds of necessity.
The essential error In the whole discussion
lies In our common misuse of the term
"need." which Implies that the schools of
our country are maintained at great pub
llo expense for the purpose of providing
food and clothing to a number of single
women. A school is an institution for the
education of children, and all it processes
and standards are to be Judged and meas
ured aa they conduce to that end.
If a woman la a good school teacher
though married' to a millionaire we have
as much need of her services as we should
if her buiband ahould die and take his
fortune with him, or if she ahould be de
pendent on ber salary for bread.
What the woman does with ber money la
no concern of the achool board. Whether
she "needs" It or not is ho business of
theirs.
The phlld needs thm onnA imhmr ,nA
that is the only question of "need" which
belongs to this subject.
Men Teachers Needed.
President Hall may have exaggerated tha
evil when he aaid that the preponderance
of the feminine influence In the public
achoola means "racial degeneracy," says
the Chicago Tribune, but an increasing
number of close observers are coming to
the opinion that the loss of the male ele
ment in the American school system of
Inst ruction Is a matter requiring serloua
attention. This preponderance of women
teachers struck most of the members of
the Mosely education commission as the
unique feature of the public schools of
this country. It is commented upon aa
follows:
"As teaching 1 an occupation in which
more than any Other lmmrlnt(va fi
Individuality, insight and originality are
wBuieo, it is important that men rather
than women should exercise the predom
inating influence. In both countries it la
Important that we should discover manna
of attracting men of practical Instincts and
superior mental gifts into the teaching
profession. There Is a tendency for women
leacnera wnen dealing with boys of ad
vanced age tO instill (unconaHnnalu
doubt) senUmental vtews of facts rather
man to derive principles of conduct from
them. This was SDeclallv nh,v,ki.
lectures and lessons on English literature
tuia History."
If mere booklearnlna- wna ih, a
of the common school education It would
do jmmatenal whether It was administered
by a man or a woman. Tahin,
properly be regarded as aexless. Or If
cnuaren could be made to absorb nothing
but the knowledge,
books it would not matter who listened
'".H.IIW1.. nut' tne teacher has an In
fluence which serines frWm fha
element and Is especially strong with the
,w....B, KDCttuso ot tneir Inclination to imi
tate and Idealize thn-. ,!., .i
are brought In contact i
The preponderance nt r , .
mlgbt be unobjectionable if all the pupils
, """ ui would not the mothers
raise a protest if th no. .
... --- u& jcxiucation
should announce that next year 85 percent
of the teachers would be men? It la im
portant that boy. .houid. at a certain
"tage of their education, be brought Into
close personal relation- i,k " .
J30"- "6ed he po,nt ' "lew which
luo or tne wori,j j. .
the right kind can i.iJI fi .... "laa '
. w is interest and
th! "Ce f bOJ" t0 reat- lee-re
,. even ir she be a model
w,, WWch 18 Prove'biaIly associated
with the youth of her sex. What Is
wanted in the school, Is the presence of
more men of infectious enthusiasm, at
tractive personality, originality of method
and practical mind.
that i. L , m?rVnCreRW ,n lnt
Jh f ! ' bUt the ,n"-1ction into
the schools of the right class of men. The
, Bu,ch men OUId noi hav t
be relatively large. But they are needed,
and proper Inducements should be offered
to enlist their services.
Famona Napoleon Relic.
In the ponderous Iron safe of Miss Flor
ence Hayward's office In the Administra
tion building, at the World's fair, guarded
by a combination known only to the super
intendent of the history section. Is a prlce-
lees Napoleon relic loaned for exhibition
in Miss Hayward's department
The relio Is a bronze cast of the death
mask of the great conqueror made a half
hour. after his death on the "lonely isle."
The bronze cast is one of five authorized
by the French government It bears under
the chin the seal of the French govern
ment, vouching for Its authenticity.
The cast waa obtained by Miss Hay
ward, for exhibition purposes, from Miss
dally of New Orleans, a descendant of
one of the owners of the cast. The orig
inal plaster cast was made on the island of
St. Helena by Dr. Francois Antomarchl,
the physician of the Imperial exile, who
brought It with him to Parle some time
later. '
Here five bronze casts from the original
were authorized by the French govern
ment to be made. Two of these were
placed in the Louvre, one in the British
Museum, one kept by the physician and
the fifth eventually found its way through
various hands to the possession of Lau
rence Hutton of New York, its present
owner. St. Louis Republic,
HISTORIC DAY FOR OMADA
0n of tha trial Date in ths lnnali cf tL
Oat City
easasmvaanmmi
BREAKING GROUND FCR UNION PACIFIC
( Cemaaeaeemeat (
Coaatraetlen,
At the reunion of old settler, held in
connection with the semi-centennial ode
bratlon of the passage of the Nebraska
Kansas bill, Edward Rosewater gave an
account of the ceremony of breaking
ground for the Union Pacific road. At the
request of General Qrenvllle M. Dodge,
Mr. Rosewater'a remarks are here pub
lished:
"The second dsy of December, lWJ, was
a gala day In Omaha. A proclamation had
been Issued by Abraham Lincoln, a few
days previously, locating the terminus of
the Union Paciflo railroad, and the people
of Omaha and Council Bluffs participated
Jointly In the breaking of ground for the
great transcontinental railroad. About 1
o'clock in the afternoon of that day the
best atage coach of the Western Stage
company, carrying all tha passengers it
could accommodate on the Inside and on
the outside, started from the front of the
Douglas house, at the corner of Thirteenth
and Harney, for the telegraph poles, about
a mile and a half north of Farnam street.
There waa no river cable in those days and
no bridge. The single wire that connected
Omaha with Chicago waa suspended from
two tall masts that had been planted on
each side of the Missouri river bank, noar
one of the ferry crossings.
"I occupied a aeat on the top of the
stage, with other distinguished deadheads.
Governor Saunders, Peter A. Dye, chief
engineer of the lUnlon Pacific; Ed Creigh
ton, superintendent of telegraph; Dr. Atch
ison, superintendent of the Western Stage
lines; Mayor B. E. B. Kennedy and George
Francis Train, who ' had been expressly
commissioned to come all the way from
New York to participate in the ceremonies,
were on the inside of the coach.
CeremonlpM at the Site.
"When we reached the sandy shores of
the Missouri, near the telegraph poles,
there were about 600 people on the ground.
Presently Peter A. Dye struck the ground
with a pick a few times and handed the
pick to Governor Saunders and he In turn
handed it to Augustus Kountze, and when
half a dosen of the dignitaries of pioneer
days had scratched sand to their satisfac
tion, Rev. Thomas B. Lemon, tall, gaunt
and gawky as Abraham Lincoln himself,
delivered . himself of prayers and blessings.
Then came the speech-making. Interrupted
only by the cheers from the crowd and the
salvos of two 6-pounders that were' being
fired on each aide of the river every few
minutes.
"Among the speakers whom I remember
were Governor Saunders, Mayor Kennedy,
Peter A. Dye and Augustus Kountze.
When Mr. Kountze got up to speak he as
sured us all that he was trembling in his
boots, because thla was his first effort.
George 'Francl Train, who followed him.
created much merriment by declaring that
he Iso was trembling In his boots, having
never yet faced such a large audience.
Train was then In the prime of life, and
hla speech waa full of pyrotechnics and
prophetic forecasts. He professed to be in
a trance and cried out, 'Passengers for
China, this way! Passengers from New
Zealand and Australia to the rear.' All
this sounded to the bystanders like the
talk of a man who had broken out of a
lunatic asylum.
Andrew J. Poppleton'a Speech.
"After Train had gotten through,, amidst
uproarious applause, a man with a very
florid face, whom I had noticed frequently
w ilklng about the streets in a red woolen
shirt and who I had always taken for a
butcher, climbed on the tall end of a
wagon, got Into the box and delivered a
speech that eclipsed all the other speakers
and simply' paralysed everybody. -I was
dumfounded, and asked a bystander, 'Who
is this Irian?' 'Why, Andrew' J. Poppleton,'
said he. ...
"After the speechmaklng congratulatory
dispatches were read. One of these was
from John Hay, private secretary to the
president; another from William H. Se
ward, secretary of state; one from Leland
Stanford, governor of California; another
from Governor Tates of Illinois; one from
Brlgham Young, governor of Utah; there
were also dispatches from Mayor Updyke
ot New York, ,and mayors from many other
American' cities.
"Jn the' evening Omaha City gava itself
up to a grand Jamboree, The principal
buildings were Illuminated with tallow can
dle and ( roaring bonfires consumed all the
strayboxes and planks within, reach of the
small boys. . The celebration wound up with
a grand ball at the Herndon house, at
which Train was the star attraction, and
Omaha pioneer aristocracy disported itself
and cut the pigeon wing."
r
mi
NEARLY NINE MILLION ACRES
OF GOVERNMENT LANDS IN
WESTERN NEBRASKA IN
640
ACRE
LOTS
ALMOST
Mm
1 International Union of Hdtel and Ree
taurant Employes has 69 locals In 608 cities,
with a total membership in good standing
Of 60,430, a gain ot 11,860 since lost year.
m"Barker,'S
tf COLLARS SJ
iHW3 and CUFFS f
i k7 re stamped l jfi J
mSX Warranted Linen
Y You can get them at A j&hA
( r g A many reliable dealers in r
i Omaha. I
m eweasr acQ e soeip 't J
LZ- . TACTQaYi ytf fj 1T,otr.H Y
NEAR THE
UR3SOE3 PACIFIC
RAILROAD
RATES
AT
ONE FARE PLUS 02.00 FOR
ROUND TRIP
Tickets Admit of
Liberal Stopovers
Write for Kinkaid Folder telling
how the lands cap be acquired when
entry should be made, and other Infor
mation free on application to any Union
Pacific agent, or
City Ticket Office, 1324 Farnam St.
'Phono 310.