i D 1 ' I j y Transcontinental Bicycle Relay and Automobile ; , -. . ' ' i 4 .... , c ' ' ... . .': . ' . l i i. ...... , : . " : '. - . .- ..!.;.. . . ; . ' ' . rw t. . I 1 !., ' . . ... jr -r - ... : y WvV Jr.-. 7'-- j - T' Vi ft t MOVTT nO-BKRTS rUffTtlNa T1B AMERICAN CAR THROUGH TUB CROWDED STREETS ON WEDNESDAY. 1LETN thm orwwi en Farmun T 1 Tl treat raiMd thai reieea to yy I ebtat th Amarloaa oax in tha raoa m it ohuvca 1U way to tha car? tbcjr war unooo ecioubly paylnc a tributa to a band of en thualaala that fourtaan yea-a ajp Inaugu rated the oroaa-countrjr ralay raoa aa a paatlma and aa a taat t -ndnraoo and peed, Tha original band of eranka did not, however, depend on the aubO (oroo of xplodlng vaaoline rapor to nwve tbalr nachlnaa more than half war acroa tbo continent. They . themaelTea farnlabad the motlva power and thay Staraily "klekad" their machlnea aion tha flowls road from Waabinaon to Denvar. Tba oooaalon of thla flrat teat of wfaaaled vehicles wm a maaaatra from Henry T. Thurber, prirate aaoratary to President Cleveland, to Oearnor Walt of Colorado, tent whan tha Leajrue of American Wheelmen waa boidln lta annual oon ventlon In Denver. Tha enthualaau who took tha meaaace at tha state, war and navy building In Waablnrton and awlrled It acroaa tha country more than 3,000 mllea to Denver were member of the league. The bicycle "craae" waa at Its TielKht Uinn and tha race against time was a fitting climax to the popular wave In favor of tha two-wheeled craft. It waa mora than thin, however; It served aa a teat for the flrat time of the real value of tha bicycle under conditions where relays could be aatabllahed and speed waa eaaentlal. After that race had been run, with popular demonutratlons all along the oourae, the publlo waa ready to crown the bicycle king of wheeled vehicles. The preaent race of the auto cars aorosa the continent differs In many reapeats from the bicycle race In the summer of 1894. In the latter race the machines Which left New York will try to make the entire course. In tha bicycle contaat agnltiHt time the courae waa divided into roluya of five mllea each wherever possi ble, and the black bag containing the preMliieiitlal message waa the only object which traveled the entire distance. The rire.-i-ut race also comes at a later period in the automobile 'crate" than the Waah-lngton-Denver contest did in the bloyole rage. Bothara alike, however, In that they were the longest testa made at tha time they were run. In the bicycle race the black bag reached its destination thirty-seven hours ahead of schedul time, while In the present contest of auto cars the first car la several daya lata already. This can be satisfactorily explained by the exceedingly bad weather encountered by the autolsts, who can also point to tba very good weather with whloh tha wheel men were favored. It Is also interesting to note that tha military car which left New York Feb ruary 18, bound for Fort Leavenworth, Unique Collection of ORONATION3 and conventions, treaties and court-martials, bat tle, murder and sudden death, may divide tha first paces of a year's papers between them selvesbut that- Is not tho c whole atory of tha news. All this may be tha important gist of tha dally harvest, may Influence history or affect tha greatest number of people, but there is another side to tha subject. This is the "human interest" sort of thing, tha trifling happening, which yet tells as does nothing else of man's credulity, Joys and sorrows of bis dally Ufa itself. Nineteen seven's St days have been rich in auch newa Tho supreme court of Mississippi, for instance, has declared (It waa on November 11) that "Go to hell!" la not profanity. An Ohio tribunal has adjudicated Mr. Beattey's whlakers (Wellston growth) to be worth tlOL a gas company baring to pay that sum for their destruction in an explosion. Tha newsdealer In the Albany (N. Y.) depot has offered a New Yonc Central Railroad timetable aa tha funniest book on his stand. Tho French capital has dona even better than these things. Tba Parla chief of police, having sent out to the neighboring communes photographs of aa escaped criminal. In each case submitting six In aa many poaea of tha man, received the following dispatch from a southern dis trict: "Five of the criminals whosa photo graphs you sent already arrested; wa are uu th track of tha sixth." Ltlvo.-ee Coart Whims. In the divorce courta the twelvemonth has shown us that. In lAwrenca, Mass., at least, a wife may not with impunity go through the pockets of her worser one third; David Walkers marriage tie was legally cut on Just this ground. Wilming ton. Del., has offered the aight of mother and married daughter defendants In twa dlvorc aults brought in tha same court; but 1 orugla. Italy, beats all of these. Slgnora lialllori asked to be aet free from her liuaband, claiming he had another wife. lialllori calmly admitted this bit added that ha had tw hearts why net to wives? Phyalclans bora out this statement, and tha court (with awerabla logic) decided that two holds were perfectly rlgbt, smdar tha air cumatancea. Mrs. John Wads af filoux City, la, akd and reached Onialia March 1, covered a course about 200 miles longer than tha wheelmen did In a little more than twelve daya, while the wheelmen made tha dlstanoa In a few hours more than lour daya. Allowing for the fact that the wheelmen rode day and night, there art till several days In their favor when time alone la considered. But the wheel man who still has the old fever In his blood will still insist that the distance from Now York to Omaha has been cov ered by single riders In less than thir teen days years ago. tea thing 'In common In practically all f these aorosa-oontlnent and around tha world races will be noted with considerable pleasura and pride by the loyal Omahan. They all coma through Omaha. Could any batter proof be offered that nature In tended Omaha to be the Gate Ciiy of tha west? The army car starting from Gov ernor's Island, the Paris cars, which left New York City and the blcyclo race with Washington as Its starting point, all I ea.fj directly for Omaha, though all of ihem had different terminals in the west. The army car, headed for Fort Leavenworth, Kan., tha Paris cars are on their way to Sart Francisco and the wheelmen In 1891 had Denver as their objective 'point, but all of them came through Omaha. Not only these three contests, either. In the last decade or two, hundreda of Kloba trot tors on bicycles, In automobiles, on foot, carry their luggage or wheeling it. In barrows In front of them, have crossed the continent on their way to all parta of tha world. And practically all of them came through Omaha. A gateway for the commercial trafflo of the west, Omaha Is recognlxed far and wide even by tha "freak" travelers as the crossing place into tha region of moun tains and plains. After leaving here the paths of the travelers may diverge some going southwest, soma due west and others northwest, but all of them lead out of Omaha. These travelers do not come to Omaha because they like tha city, although tha hospitality of tha people is a matter of fame. In these contests speed, or what amounts to tha same thing, a short courso, is the main consideration. They coma through Omaha because It la the way nature made for the traffic of the estate on Its way westward. Tli a racing automobilee courted the worst kind of weather conditions when they left New York for a transcontinental trip al most In tha middle of winter. The wheel men chose their time in the middle of Au gust with a full moon and prospects for tha beet of weather. The prophecy of good weather cam true during tha greater part of tha raoa, but when the black bag reached North Platte tha favorable conditions changed and tha weather god poured out all his reserve store of wind and rain ap parently In an effort to make the race a failure Juat aa it was about to coma to a for release from Mr. W., and filed her peti tion in verse. "A Matrimonial Idyl," ran tha heading, and a couple of the eighty three stanzas read: A substitute for msn is tha latest hit Just keep a dog to growl and a cat to spit, A parrot, too, (for ha can Jaw and swear!) A monkey to dispute and pull yonr hair. Don't think you need a man to strike even a match. There are better places a Uirht to scratoh. Talmage aald matchea in heaven are made, But the brimstone attachments show where plana are laid, Tha case still hanks like the meter. Columbus, O., and Sayvtlle, N. T., raced each other in feather wonders. In March tha Buckeye capital turned out a white crow, which, quite naturally, led a flock r J. HALE. Holt County. 1 y A. ; H I H M. B. Hatch H. B. Prwlrlckfion. THOMAS FL.YEU IN TUT NEW HOW THE ARMY MACHINE LOOKED triumphal conclusion. How the weather god came to grief in his contest with plucky young American wheelmen Is well known to bicyclists of the old school, and it makes a short but thrilling story of ad venture In which Harry Mulhall and Ed Cox, two Omaha printers, are the heroes. The great relay bicycle race had been 1 heralded for days In advance by the news papers all over the country and the atten tion not only of wheelmen, hut of all other claaa of men, women and children who de light In feats of strength, agility or speed waa concentrated on tha plucky riders. For days In advance relay riders each to cover a distance of.' about five mtlos had been selected all ulong the course from W ashlngton to Denver. Bicycle organiza tions In each of the principal cities along tha way made everything else secondary to tha big event and elaborate and detailed plana were made to cover every inch of tha way without a hitch. Some of those who had watched the plans of the cyclists predicted failure as the re sult of the attempt. Up to that time the relay race on aa elaborate a scale as this had never been attempted. There were a thousand ways in which it might have come to a audden and abrupt finlah. At leaat the maintaining of a schedule over all klnda of roads, under all conditions through night and day for an estimated period of eight (lays seemed like an un dertaking full of possibilities of failure. A hitch at one of tha thirty-three division r l f T T Whims and Fancies of People in Various Moods of the usual hue. "He'll bring good luck to Alum Creek," was the Marlon county judgment but the speakers were none of them corn planters. Sayvtlle made reply In November, F. S. Jones tha month pre vlous bought a Jet black bantam rooster; In four weeks It had turned snowy white! And Sayvllle wanta to know If Luther Burbank haa been tampering with the New York egg crop. Neighboring Blnghamton reported a hen that had adopted two tiny pigs, after the loss of her own brood of chicks, and was keeping them warm under her maternal feathers. Secretary Loughman of New York's Cen tral park, received last March tha follow Nebraska Delegates-at-Large to the Democratic National Convention D. V. STEPHENS, Dodge County. THE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: MARCTI 8, 190S. ttJt i.-nLjafcv. . TORK TO PARIS RACK AS IT LOOKED TTT WL'3Tf Jo T I y V I i i, , ... . x.,r..;:;;4l;; caw JUST BEFORE LEAVING OMAHA FOR f f " ' ' CAPTAIN HANSEN, Polar Explorer j . With the American Car. points, the failure of a single one of the thirty or more organizations that partici pated In it, might easily cause a delay ing letter, written, of course. In a childish hand: "Dear Mr. Stork: Please bring Frances Stevens a baby boy. A white one, please. Do you bring clothes, too? Yours truly, FRANCES STEVENS." Mr. Loughman advised that the depart ment was temporarily out of white boy babies, but had filed the application for attention when the next lot should come in. Hoinantlo Freaks. The year's quuint happenings at the other end of life's ladder include an Eng lish romance. Mrs. Ellen Briggs of Steven age, Herts, after more than a hulf century's separation, sailed for Australia to marry there a lover of her youth, and this is !, '. i t.. I 4 tTZim V 'JVX: V ' .X - v -, ' " i 1 . ' V Frank Millrr. Montru Roherts. norRe Sclieunter. ON li AliRiVAli IN OMAHA. TT .... . m 4 w fur w ' LINCOLN SUNDAY AFTERNOON. that would defeat tho entire purpose of the race. The failure of one of the aeveral hundred relay r'dcra to do his part as It had been mapped out for him might mean a serious stoppage of the whole affair. But no such hitch occurred. From the min ute the black bag was delivered to the first rider In Washington until it was safe in the hands of Governor Waite of Colorado, its progress was not stayed for more than a few minutes at any point and usually it was caught up from the hands of the tired rider at the end of his division by the new rider and whisked away without a delay of a second. Throughout the en tire 2,000 miles of the course everything worked like a clock. Every man waa at his post, every man did his duty. The secret of It all waa the marvelous organ ization of the wheelmen and the enthusi asm of the young men who did the actual work. Figuratively apeaklng, nillllona of eyes were on the black time ball on the State, War and Navy building In Washington when It droped Just at noon on August 6, ISM. Chief Consul George B. French and C. Ronsavllle of the League of American Wheelmen caupht up the black bag and flashed out of sight, followed by the cheers of the crowd and the big race waa started. At the end of their division they tossed the bag to the next pair of riders and before dark it waa well on its way down the Cumberland valley. The riders fairly flew her 76th year. That she haa three times been widowed will not matte-, as the sweat heart In question has himself survived four wives. A parallel story came from St Louis In April. J. B. Bundren, at 101, and Miss Rose McGuIre, admitting an even 109, were wedded at last. The final two words aeem proper under the circumstances. The two had been parted In youth by stern parents, but love and fuith discounted even four score years. New England contributed Its share to such events when 11. C. Wilder, uged 96, and MUa Esther Crawford, aged H were married In Ixiwell after a two weeks' ac quaintance; and when Bridgeport an r . F. W. BROWN, Lancaster County. Races Contrasted , . Cw. Jack TliiKt. BTTTDERAKER "ARMY" MACHINE through Cumberland early In the morning of the following day, more than an hour ahead of the schedule; through the moun tainous d 'strict of West Virginia, on into Ohio through Indlnn-ipolla, Crawfordsville, Jacksnnvl le. 111., Bur ln;ton, la., and acrots the broad fieldB of the Hawkcye state, over the 1ouk1ils street bridge, through Omaha, over tho level road that skirts the Platte river to Julesburg, and then by as straight a course as could be found Into the city of Denver, and up to the capitol, where George M. McCarthy, tho last of the relay, covering the last five miles of the trip in less than twenty minutes, delivered the black l ag Into the hiuuls of a repiesent atlve of the governor, six days ten hours and thirty-seven minutes after It had left Washington, beating the schedule time by thirty-seven hours and twenty-three minutes. Wheelmen who were In Denver when the message arrived remember Its enthusi astic reception, even though it was 10:30 o'clock at night. Governor Wulte made a speech and the city was thrown open to the riders, who had followed tho message on trains after their part of the work had been done. Omaha riders have a right toVlnlm an Important part In the race. When Goorge Williamson of Council Bluffs scorched across the Douglas street bridge at 8;12 o'clock Friday evening lie threw the bn? to J. L. Llvesey. who carried it to Benson In twenty-six minutes and delivered It to the next rider, who whisked It on its way to Fremont. Then it waa twenty-seven hours ahead of time, ahowing that even with the disadvantage of the worst stretch of road on the course and the only bad weather the Nebraska and Colorado riders gained ten hours between here and Denver. Two Omaha riders, Harry Mulhall and Kd Cox also came to the rescue to prevent the only acrloua hitch between Washington and Denver. The worst stretch of road between the two cities was reputed to lie between Ogallala and Julesburg. Riders In the west knew and consequently the Jules burg cyclists refused to come serosa the state line for the message and Insisted It was up to the Nebraska enthusiasts to get the messuge across the line into Colorado. When the call was made for volunteers Mulhnll and Cox offered their services, not knowing exactly whut they were up against. They had been told there was a well defined road between the two cities and were hardly prepared for the actual conditions they found. Even in the best of weather and In day light their task would not have been a very Inviting one, but to make matters worse, It began to rain and blow Just before the riders reached Ogallala at 11:30 Saturday night. The storm Increased and when the two Omahans started out on their trip over the prairies It was to enter pitchy darkness with nothing to guide them. Instead of a "well defined road," they found only the trackless pralrlu. Before they had gone far nounced the elopement of Edward Skin ner, who Is 8L with a maid of only 60, Mary Curtis. Francois Leclue of Angouleme, France, has this year, and for the second time, been pronounced dead, only to revive and Interrupt the funeral. Mrs. Fred Hatzell of Huntingdon, W. Va., did the same thing, though it was her Initial appearance In the uncanny role. When she rr-ae In her coffin there was more than a panic among the ftalhered and mournful friends. Dun ton, Md., thought (Juno It had Jut such another case, fur when the bearers wire lowering the coffin into the trench a voice from It directed- "Let me down easy." Upon which it was dropped and later a it .- ', v. : i I. J. Dt'NN, Douglas County. t l f L i 7 :. - j . . ; , . r W. 1 Walla. RECEIVED BY THRONGS ON SUNDAY. they had fallen Into three sand draws and an Irrigation ditch. Fishing themselves and their wheels out of the latter, with the few threads of clothing they had managed to keep dry from the rain, drenched, and after discovering that they had been riding In a circle a part of the time, they left tho track less prairie, end took to the railroad. They made a path In the darkneaa a part of tho way along the side of tha track and then dismounted and walked the ties. They walked through Brule and on to Big Springs on the tracks and then tried to ride again, "To be drenched with rain, to go sprawl ing into the mud and water time after time, to have your trousers and shoes hacked to plecea by mlsmng the pedals In tha darkness was bad enough," said Mulhall, discussing the trip, "but these were not tha worst features by any means. The very worst discomfort we suffered waa the lack of drinking water. From the time wa left Ogallala until we got to Big Springs we had none except what we lapped up from hoot tracka In the band. This waa clean and of a good quality, but It was bard to get. We had to Ho on our faoea to drink It, At Big Springs we gut a drink, but during the remainder of the trip we had to resort to the hoof tracks again. "The coyotes bothered ua soma, too. There seemed to be a pack following us. We shot at them several times, but in the darkness we could not tell whether we hit thorn or not." Finally, at 5:10 in the morning the two covered from head to feet with mud, their trousers torn off from the kneea down, arrived In Julesburg. In the darkness they almost missed the place and It was by ac cident Mulhull happened to ask a young fellow who walked leisurely toward them, what town it was. "Julesburg," he replied. Then they realized the young man was tha next relay rider and ha waa to relieve them. Mulhall threw the black bag at hl:n and aa he mounted his wheel the two emptied their six shooter. It Is needless to say the rider got out of sight without much delay. Mulhall and Cox were so thoroughly en crusted with mud the hotel keeper in Julo burg refused to allow them to enter tha hotel. They were shivering outside tha building when a friendly brakeman from Denver called the bluff of the hotel man and secured lodging for them. After clean ing up they went on to Denver and wera there when the black bag came In. In addition to being the hardest of tha relays between Washington and Denver, tho Ogallala-Juleaburg section waa also the longest. The two men covered the thirty-seven mllea between the two towns In five hours and forty minutes. Battling with Bnow drifts In Indiana may not be Joy to an auto driver, but thusa two men will testify there are hardships Just as severe to be encountered In tha good old summer time on tha plains of 'western Nebraska. ventriloquist was arrested for a sadly mis placed practical Joke. Surely, speaking of funerals, one may record the playfulneas of a Bag Harbor shark, who in August mistook a torpedo for a fish. And also the finding In a Mex ican postoffice of a packet of letters writ ten back in the nild-seventiea. Thia last has been excepted a full explanation of why at least some of the letters ahe longed for never came. Text Fitted to the Events. Payville was enlivened ono April Sunday by the odd aptness of Rev. J. B. Ham mings text. "Lean not on weak founda tions," he announced, and at the same In stant the pulpit desk collapsed. Quite as fitting was the decoration con ferred upon Prince Henry of the Nether lands by England's Edward. Queen Wll helmlna's consort had saved a score of lives at the time of the wreck of tha Ber lin, nearly drowning himself In tha at tempts. Now he lias been made a compan ion of the Older uf the Bath. New York has produced a non-sinkabla German too fat to commit suicide In At lantic basin, though he tried his Teutoneat; but Indiana university has surpassed all the other attempts of 19-77 to Illustrate the Irony of fate. Colonel Bryan offered an essay prlzx there, and now It has been won by a genius who wrote opposing the gov ernment ownership of railroads. Guatemala made its bid for first place when (in April) President Cabrera Issued warrants for the arrest of Francisco Rafas, an editor. He was a criminal In that he had dared to print the presidential mea ane on the back page of his sheet. Paris added to her escaped prisoner epi sode a characteristic Item when, last April, It began to perfume its subway lines will) the sci lit a of Aruby the blest. And dear old Lunnon sent In no less than three good "trys" for head of the list, la the eur second month It reported a gen th man, Thomi xm by name, who had been In bid sinc e- 1;;; he Is perfectly healthy. Just lazy! This wan follow- up, In May. with a iu'iIh squib of the arrest of half a d mi little girls who had been ruught throwing dice for a Bible. August saw Ird Wulsiugl.ain out shooting wuspa on the wing with a rifle. Henri Naissant, a member of tha French Legion of Honor, and Stefan Magaley, of New York City, bequeathed apeolfled sums for the cost of Jollifications at U-eir f a berals. New Orleans Times. t I I . hi li! i