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BEE citizenry perching on empty boxes | land others leaning gracetully against empty | vinegar and molasses barrels. | GUILD [RILS DRY FARMING|- - {air ‘rose the voloe of one orator after| another, extolling his particular favorite | Rear Garden. paving. Several times a vote was taken BLOOMS A nn‘ | indorsing « resolution to pave with one ot — x RBROTH ERS WORLDS SHOW'S scended—a motion was put that the meet- | ing ask the Board of Trustees to postpone GREATEST $3,200,000.CAPITAL cracker AMUSEM |DUNDEE RIVED OVER PAVING | Various Factions in Little Town Dis- agree on Material, Mme. Olly is Here to Stay Fo; 'I’lu Ill Show MONDAY JULY 25 Determined to Be a Real American Aotress—Failure of “The Whir.l- wind” Hasn't Daunted Her—Beginning to Know What Qur Public | Wants—Language Has Something to Do with Morality of the Stage. |BACK YARD MEETING IS HELD| OVER 500 Reatdents Fall to Get Town lan « Unes ARIETTA OLLY, who has difference in been playing the leading role in Henrl Ber 1's latest offering to Amer! audlences, ‘he Whirlwind," fully lived up Lo tt of the plece as she rushed about the big dressing room of Daly's the- or after the matinee answering telephone accepling bushes of roses thrust | through the opened door by the stage hands, melling down a skirt and swirling a Napoleonie hat to its required angle, ad- | Justing a vell, r onstrating with a tiring | woman, pinning on & bouquet Parma | Vivlets as a finishing touch and greeting Mr. Bergen, her leading man, who arrives to escort her Lo tea. Mme. Olly would probably wreet Mr. Ber- gon yust cordlally if It were not for the faet that she v foreign and in addition admires elgn plays? The ver guage is a barrier “The English language is absolutely con centrated concise. It says what it {has to say right out without evasions o adings. There is no obscurity in a | phrase spoken on your stage in your native language. On the contrary, take & IPrench play and the language is full of delicate adings. A sent pat fs %o brutal and even vulgar in Arglo-Saxon in the French tongue aiways leavee you with the feoling that perhaps after all there was something less suggestive intended—or more 0. “There is one point, however, I think I can touch on and that is the little atten- tion pald here to the beauty of the voice and to proper diction. To me, with a musi- cal education as foundation 1 am positively hurt by the indifference displayed by the work of the young Amsrican actor Im- |y porcan audiences to the distinction be- mensely, He admires her just as mueh T saw and for at legst five of the preclous mo. |16N d8d and good vocal Work be ey Y 4 R 2 1 | I your newspapers @ while ago the meuts they tell you so. You I that it | I0 On8 of your newspsp 2 d t statement that no one had ever yet used a great ad ¢ & leading man to A “ . L1y e, EET A e ‘ FORE ‘the mairied on the age, meaning pia: w a star who has had the conti- ;| that ‘lone indme (hat comes naturally sutal and tempramental expe)ienced Of|grom the intimacy of many years' relation- Atme. Olly, wiile she belleves that for an | yigty QUL RN D "0y wite, T read in uotrers (0 find all at once a mau capable another article that Mrs. Fiske's ‘Hannele' of understandirg methods aud manners & (o "s arcace bit of artistic work, but that little different from those employed on the she dld not have the child’'s voice, All American wtage is a great plece of £00d | 1y500 thousand shadings of which the hu- luck. ther In Rear of Grocery ro Farming Section Western ¥ ot of the paving this year and to go ahead with the storm sewers and curbing. A hundred voices shouted * O —Finally Vote to e re te and pone Paving. State, the chalrman. boomed & hundred voices—or that s the estimate, anyhow, Cries for division came and the chairman herded up all the ayes on one side and the noes on the other and proceeded to count them-—by feeling, somewhat Then he decldred the motion carrried. No one Is apparently satlsfied with the result of the meeting, but if enother Is held it will be in a hall, it they have to break in the door. 4y Gulld, commissioner | mercial club, Is practicing “dry tarming” in |the yard of his home near the Field club. Mr. Guild is not raising wheat or oats, but | flowers, Something W0 blossoms a coming out in the back yard of Mr. Guild's | | residence at Woolworth and Thirty-fitth avenue. When his day's work is done Mr. Guild hies himself to his back yard, and he is on the job of shaking up the earth | around the plants at 5 every morning. Abundant Rain g gl boa e A Helps the Crops Preity the paviug question thau by the weather. Diversity of opinion on what is the best paving material has seriously threatened the of the whole community, has sundered old friendships and even stopped some housewives talking across the back porches, Three factions exist. One pins its faith| to brick; another says asphalt is the Ideal stuff, and the third asserts vehemently that creosoted blocks are the real thing. John Harte and his friends are the brick enthuslasts. Sylvester R. Rush leads the asphalt army and the creosote cohorts | have nominal Jéader, but some num- | bers, | All three factions foregathered at town meeting Thursday night. It quite & meeting. Nearly all Dundee | there—there with fixed and rooted convic- tions about what kind of paving is to 80 down in front of his—or her—house. Dundee is even more heated by | ot the Ok peace like day are {not to seen to be making u display, and the result Is that this garden, one of the | lovellest in Omaha, s little known, | At all events it is the best-kept back | ¥ard in the city. Mr. Gulld comes by his Northwestern Section of Nebraska | tiEany for. Pk’ T S Given Another Good Soak- Guild, sr., is well remembered for his de-’ ing Friday Night. velopment of & ard garden at his prae. ! home at Park uvenue and Woolworth. pir s | The west is again rejofcing in an apun- | Mr. Guild maintains that is able to £ L |dant rainfall. Reports Saturday morning | Make his flower garden grow just as well The mesting was to be at “Town hall | from the Northwestern railroad show that | B the dry farming methods as most people t.(\m[h( " but by some accldent the sexton|i¢ rained Friday night all the way from | 1 by @ liberal usc of the garden hose. He - janitor was not on the job. The town|Norfolk to Careyburst, Wyo. There was | &PDlies the methods in vogue at the dry the was PERSONS 680 HORSES 85 RR(ARS SUPERB, SPECTACULAR, ORIGINAL CIRCUS, 600 Peo, 450 Animals, | $25,000 Armour Prize Six-Horse Team .Gor ous Street Parade AT 10 0'CLOCK EACH MORNING l(ll\flll HMII.Y GREAT GERMAN AOROBATS ROBLIDELLO WIRE WIZARD ALEXIS FAMILY PEAN AERIALISTS hobby tone was back Bring all the | man voice is capable should not be I “I was 2 when 1 commenced to pla nored. There ig not only the married voice, \\!ul there !s as well the tone of friendship, of hate, of pascion, of eveiythlug. One cannot dépend on the ‘business’ of the part, on gesture and action. One must change the rhythm; one must have a repertoire of tones. That is the one thing Mr. Ber- gen and myself have worked on harder than on anything else in the play—to have our voices uccord, not to strike a discord- ant note. It seems to me that in attention | to this liee the secret of finished acting.” Mme. Olly is a particularly well gowned woman, not only on the stage, but gen- erally wpeaking. The majority of her cos- tumes are made in Paris and Vienna, and the jewcls worn several times In ‘“The Whirlwind” have completed the impression made on her feminine admirers. These jewels, consisting of several pleces completing the set worn by Em- press Eugenle, are a tiara, necklace, brace- lets, earrings and & brooch of pearls. They are valued at $0,00 and were given by thelr original owner to Dr. Kvans, the American dentlst, who assisted in the celebrated flight from Paris. After various vicissitudes of pawning, redemption and forced sales the jewels now await, per- fectly certificated as to genuineness, the offer of a purchaser, and Mme, Olly is | taking advantage of the delay. | "The entire set includes somo 12,00 pearls of various sizes and It is sald that two | French jewelers, the most expert in their profession, spent six months in matching, ,arranging and finally making the several pleces. The medallions are mounted on mother of pearl and the workmanship of the betting is unique. One of the main complications of “The Whirlwind" occurs when Helene, played by Mme. Olly, seeks to ralse sufficlent money on her jewels to pay the gambling debts of her lover, Careful inquiry in the Shubert office elicits the information that it 1s not intended to establish a precedent in this matter and that the loan permitted |In this Instance will not be duplicated in the future, It is hoped that actresses will take notice and that contracts In the tuture will not demand that real diamond necklaces or that emerald coronets shall bo furnished in lleu of the stage jewels of the past. It Is a compliment pald to a | unique actress. states Mme Olly, and thet was five years ago. She looks you squarely In the admit to yourself that it she had sald 26 years and 11 months you would not have had any cause for suspicion, for in the crual north light of the dressing room without makeup and & little fatigued by the strenuous work of the stormy drama our latest forelgn importation does not look a day older than she says she is. ‘Though not strictly beautitul according | to classio standards, Mme, Olly has a face interesting by its varied expressions. Hor hair, complexion and eyes all light, In coloring, suggest her Teutonic rather than her Latin ancestry, whils her figure, sup- ple, slight and nervously alert, is far re- imoved from German stolidity. “Always,” sho says, “the American pa- papers speak of me as m German actress. As 1 made my American debut in & Ger- man theater playing In the German tonguo that probably s the reason; but I al- ways think of myself as an Hallan, as my mother was & Neapolitan and I lived in Italy until I wi 16 years old. My father w born at Trieste, in Austria, where the German language, by court decree, I8 spoken. “As Marietta Davia I played in Italian pleces, acquiring a small repertoire and | enjoying tremendously my vagabond Iife | through the provinces of my beautiful country. It was quite by chance that I wi seen by the celebrated author, Paul Lin- duu, who apparently belleved that I had promise, and in that belief brought to my work the attention of Ernst Possart, the well known stage director of his own theater in Munich. Soon after our first talk on the subject I commenced to study under his tutelarge, and after some rather ditficult months of learning and unlearn- ing—principally the latter—~I made my de- but at a special matiness performance in “The Blue Devil,” in which Frital Scheff was very popular and with the memory of whose triumphs I had to compete, “After 1 played in the next part allotted to me by Herr Possart, that is, ‘Divoreon: 1 was written of as the overnight star, but 1 don't allow myself to feel over-triumph- &nt at any praise 1 began my work I have been especlally fortunate In the matter of criticlams. With very few exceptions the newspapers have | been tremendously kind and appreclative, and particularly in America, where I had been told I would be chilled by the un- demonstrative audiences and that after- ward I would be wcarred by the bitterness of the attacks in the press. Don't think for & moment that the forelgn artists come over here thinking to find an easy fleld to conquer and that great artists can af- ford to play carelessly. That point of view may have been held at one time, It cer- tainly fs not any more. American audi- ences to us now mean audiences the most diftioult in the world to comprehend and to . eonquer. “After & run of ‘Divorcons' I played in some of Oscar Wilde's plays, then In ‘The Yollow Star,’ by Tourchouski; ‘Avims and the Man,’ by Bernard Shaw; In Gorky's ‘CRild of the Sun' and in ‘Zazs,' which 1 ave here when I came to play 'Bacearat at the Irving Place theater. 1 have also played in all of Ibssn's and should love to produce some of them here, but naturally it would be foolish to try to compete with Mme. Nazimoya and for the same reason | ‘Divorcons,’ which I particularly like, would be another unwise choloe. “T'ko faliure of “The Whirlwind' has been o greal disappolutment to me. It has, however, fulfllled the vocation of most fallures und has taught me a great deal negessary for me to know. The fact that | my own work as well as that of the other artiats has been satisfactory to the man- agement and to the public and that the lack of patronage has come about because | My, Bernsteln's drama did not the American public has sweetcned faflure constderably, ““Whether rightly or wrongly, the An can audlence 1 swayed by the general ton of the ploce rather than by the keynote of fiy creation, and one has to come o here and realize it before that fact pen irates one's comprehenslon. I had hoard it causally in ierlin and other places. At & popular premiero of pl over whieh the German audience was wild in enthusi- wsm, 1 listened to friends of mine who knew America well, actors and actresses maybe who had played over here, oxclaim, ‘Well, it won't §0 tn Amerlca,’ and I ques- tioned the mccuraey of thelr opinions, be- cause when I said ‘Why?' they had shrug- ¥ed thelr shoulders and mevely sald, ‘Well, You know the man and woman aren't really warried, and ln America—' “'0t course they weren't married, I would say to myself, ‘but If they had been there wouldn't be any reason for the play.' 1 understand that in the newspaper field It is a vory satisfyng truth for editors and reporters snd writers o know that the John Browns and thelr wives snd children all live happlly together, but it doesn't make copy; and in the same way cye | when she says this, and you sre obliged to| £ that kind, for ever since | appeal to | the " ito the moving pictures to be shown, Amusements Manawa Offers Some Strong Mol iday Attractions—Pictures and Vaudeville st the Gayety—Com- edy ot the Airdome for the Week. Elaborate preparations are being to entertain the crowds over at lake {Manawa on the fourth of July. A special | b gram appropriato for Independence day | Wil be given. For the occaslon the Manawa concert band - will render afternoon and evening programs of patriotic mugic. The hig special feature will be an exhibit of Pain's fireworks in the evening. A mag- vumnm spectacle is promised. The fire- works were, ordered direct from the Pain factory and consist of large and fine spa- ofal exhibit pleces such as Pain uses ih his spectacles. For today, afternoon and even- ing, the Manawa concert hand will render two entire change of programs. The biggest Tun on bathing ever cxperlenced at Man- |@wa has prevalled during the current hot weather. During the last weel 600 new suits |were added to the stoe which now . | ulsts of over 1,500, suits, which is ample to accommodate more bathers than lockers |ean be provided for without having to resort (o the lssue of wet sults. Professor |Harris, who has had extensive experie along the Atlantie cosst as a life sav T. |18 now chief of life savers at Manawa. Mr. |Harris will organize a swimming class im- {mediately, and a little later he intends giv- ing exhibitions’ of long distance and fast swinuning. made | The Gayety is omie primed up for the i holiday crowds of today and tomorrow, As one throngs to the show Is that of Roosevelt's return ‘\-hhh will draw great Gayety's popular summer ('\'I'I'Mhh'nl Theodore to the United States It was taken by the | famous Lag mle film people who ru\(rhm'( @ bet In the moving plcture game. The plcture has never been seen in Omaha. lAnn\l(‘l exclusive | taken at Camp Tart great military 1 4000 - United States soldiers | Added to all this will | Roberts, @ sister act, In *“The Dutch Girl and Her Pal” and El Morino, a noveliy equilibrist who will tle himself into knots {and other positions not at all comfortable |in hot weather, Harry Lyons will sing a song with @ military story. Starting with this week the Gayety will change the plo- tures three times a week—Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday. New vaudeville will b given every Sunday and Thursday 1,800 people \A'crn' the Hillman theater Do never ‘oledo, O. tournament in during the which over participated be Franchett! & Over In attendance at corner Eighteenth and cature will be pictures | hqn was locked tighter 8 p. m., and though o Janitor could be found and tained, Wherefore the meeting, layed, was held in the rear of the Dundee Grocery company's store, some of the no keys ob- than a saloon after mmittees hunted, no | thus already de-| also a general light rain from Newport and from Ainsworth where the rainfall was heavy. It rained in the Black hills territory a: still cloudy today. further west in Wyoming. Inman to to Gordon, The pastures were got- ting quite brown and rain is still needed farming experimental station. Most After suff Amos King, Port Byron, N. Y., by Bucklen's Arnica Salve. by Beaton Drug Co. also Wonderful Healinu. nd s 2%c. For A National Philanthropist “IOWA’S GRAND OLD MAN" LOVED BY RAILROAD MEN ADMIRED BY ALL HUMANITY Hon. L. S. Coffin of lowa Investigates the Neal Three Day Cure for the Drink Habit, and Says: “It Borders on the Realm of the Miraculous” RAILROAD TEMPERANCE ASSOCIATION L. 8. Coffin, Author and President “White Button Work," Fort Dodge, la. Hon. James E. Bruce— Atlantic, Towa. ble walks of life, where my lot has bee gratefully say, friends, as the write; to the ored grave, and to the To personally see done what the world and espe my lly to my hundreds eyes have seen of the Let the future reveal what it may, with all desire, appetite and craving f and trust hecause of the drink habit, help I may, so I cordially hail the a bound the slave of the habit to his cu that no man need be hopeless now. tude “Praise God from Whom All B | You bave my permission to use humanity. th ‘With be . ON THIS SACRED DAY WE AP- PEAL to_evely minister of the "Gospel, | the great mighty other organizations—in fact— citizen of this peerless state, the good of humanity and the best interests of those so sorely afflicted temperance -to every “NEAL THREE-DAY DRINK HABIT CURE.” have—many of them from among the ranks of our best, drink and dissipation, lose not only their own self- power to control their disnrdered physical desire for stimulants, and as a result great grief and humiliation of their friends, uunless some medical remedy or cure is found, spreading the glad tidings of the NEAL CURE to all humanity magnificent every member of every church and of | aud[ who have Ex: President Towa Benevolent Ass'n. County. Ex-Railroad Commissioner. “WILLOWEDGE." of Wel 1 feel it is Neal Cure has done and the wond life, filled as it has been with special privileges and providences, permitting me to be a help to humanity, and thousands of friends and acq results of the D when I see now and know or drink gone and many 1, as a lover of my race dveut of the Neal Cure of these as a gift ps. It seems from the cases whic lessings Flow." \s letter as in your judgment you t wishes for your success and the success of the Neal Cure by this awful foe of | DRINK. Senator banker head of this great work as pres and treasurer, confidence in the cure } which prompts him when be men- Bruce, the well m which my duty as wel DAL THREE-DAY of scores of can do no le STRONG known of Atlantic, Ia., who is at shows his unqualified and the motive resident State Anti-Sploon League | | R. R. Employes' Home, bster j L. 8. Coffin, Prest,, Destitute and | Men. FORT DODGE, Ia., June 19, 1910, made s0 many acqualutances and, I 1 am greatly astonished and as greatly pleased, as a result of my investigations, to learn what 1 have in regard When I see, observe and talk with hundreds of men as 1| ablest and bri espect but the respect of those who know them and lose all will , Bo down to an untimely and dishon- result to aid in | ightest men, who, as the result is the usual and almost certain 11 as the duty of all good people, erful results, it uaintances in every state of this union, DRINK HABIT CURE. men restored to a dignified s than the lend to this cure what from good Father of us all, h have come under may cousider for the best interests I am sincerely yours, L. 8. COFFIN, LL. D. BOND AND CONTRACT EACH PATIENT AT TREATMENT. REMEMBER, that Mr. established ~ four large, home-like bufldings—nothing like ‘Jag cures” or “joints' that GIVEN TIME the fdent Hvruce nakes ing many years with a sore, was cured sale | Aged Railroad may of strong | | | seems to me that it borders | {on the realm of the miraculous,and I am not only willing. but I egteem it one of the special providences of my luugl \ to tell (hP‘l what | | manhood men who had lost good positions of honor little and as a brother to the fallen ones, I am ready to preach the gospel of release from the chains that have so long and hopelessly of my personal observation Let us take hold and lend a hand and then write and sing with neartfelt grati-| of CORDING WITH THE uUARANTEE | OoF has comfortable, | the you have | ™e 375 CIRCUS JARTISTS 6 ARENAS 125 ACTS 108 CAGE pelo] 40 LEPHfl ACTORS 3 BIG MILES o] 3 PARADE WONDERS Admission tickets and numbered re- served seats will be on sale show day in the store of Myers - Dillon Drug Co., CORNEX 16th AND FARNAM STREETS At exactly the same price charged in the regular tioket wagons on the show grounds. MANELLO- MARNITZ Upside Down Acrobats | THE DUTTONS Equestrian Trie DARWIN Chimpanzee Marvel 50 CLOWNS [ PEaroamanecrs osel; ONE 50 CENT TICKET ADWITS 10 ALL OWILOREN UNDER 12 ALY PRIOE Omaha’s Beautiful White City The Haas Bros. Comedy Bar ex- perts i1l give perfomances during the entire week com- mencing Sunday, July 3 Free Moving Pictures. Bathing, Boating and Fishing in CARTER LAKE New $2,800 Roller Rink now open| My Dear Brother Bruce—Please pardon my delay and apparent neglect to make reply to your recent letters, : 1 Which have been go kind and which assures me of your deep interest in your mew great work for humanity. I ss nno 'M“I 0' F“. only regret 1 am not up to the high mark you have placed me, yet I fully realize that but few ordinary men in hum- n cast, have, under God’s province, works July Fourth BASE BALL OMAHA vs. DENVER Vinton Street Park June 30, July 1, 2 and 3 riday, July 1, Ladies Day— GAMES CALLED 3:45 Special car leaves 15th & Farnam 3:30 ATRDOME Corner 18th and Douglas Streets. The Hillman Stock Co. THEE ONLY DRAMATIC CO., IN OMANA, Phone Douglas 4685 City of COURTLAND BEACH “THE GIRL From The WEST"" folks and see for yourself a Fifty-Cent Cir- cus for 25 cents. Don't forget it’s a cruel circus war relentlessly waged by a cir- cus trust, so Seils-Floto de- clares bargain General Admission This Day and Date 5 day. Thus the people—not the circus ~—benefit while the circus war lasts. 2 COMPLETE PERFORMANCES DAILY, RAIN OR SHINE, AT 2 AND 8 P. M. Doors Open One Hour Earlier,” zoo IF IT'S AT TRE Admitting of a Visit to the Big The Hpitome of Safe and Sane Cele- bration is in our SUMMERTIME VAUD’VILLE First Omaha Showing of the Moving Pioture Graphically Portraying COL. ROOSEVELT'S RETURN Depiot! the Welcome Doin's b m‘compl'tlli 4,000 U. 8. " TROOPS %o ilitary Tournament at Camp Taft, 2 “Tol:;:, Ohio, Gen. Fred Grant, Commanding. EL MORINO FRANCHETTI & ROBERTS gIotaiivte Pictures Change Tues., Thurs, & Sun. Daily 1 to 57 to 11 P. M. New Vaudeville Thursday. e Any Time—Stay Rids S Cong 'As ¥ou Like. 10c % Novelty Acrobat BEAUIIFUL LAKE MANAWA | THE COOL PLACE WITH |LOTS OF FUN EVERY DAY, |AFTERNOON AND EVENING Bathing | Cooling, Invigorating, Healthy | Everybody has the Craze. MANAWA CONCERT BAND Dancing Roller Skating, Miniature Rail- road, Roller Coaster, Merry- Go-Round and Twenty other Features. Follow The Crowd to Manawa ON THE 4TH OF JULY A Magni(‘xcenz Display Of PAIN’S FIREWORKS AND OTHER FEATURES. Special Excursions JULY 3d and 4th * Steamboat Peoria as strect last Sunday night, and large crowds each succeeding evening with one exception. Tonight and all this week the| Hillman company will be seen in a beau- | tiful society comedy drama entitled, “The the sane, wholesome, ¢ommenplace truths of existence which make society stable we sre all consclous of And we are glad to know they exist, bul they are not dramatic in the least and while an occasional play may I $pite of those Umintations suceeed, |l from the West" The play wil be the majority of them must depend on the | °'8borately staged with beautiful scenery tragedies, the irregularities and abnormali. | #0d costumes. New vaudeville speclaities ties of human life. between aots. “I say wrongly or rightly, for I am not| putting myself up as a censor for the| American stage 1 wouldn't say that )'uu‘ wera not quite reasonable and correct your striotures, I am sure forelgners do| not understand American plays because they do not understand the complexities | Persistent Advertising is the Road (o Big of your life, Why should | receive for “Rplu. at heart, to throw off the shackles of skepticism, which enshrouds them, long pough, at least, to do the same as Father” Coffin has done; that is, IN- VESTIGATE AND SATISFY THEM- SELVES REGARDING THE MERITS of this most wonderful Cure, AND THEN, IF SATISFIED, take their places alongside of the hundreds of cured patients and their happy fam- illes, many good minssters, judges, lawyers, doctors, business, prolullonnll and working men and women, who are| AT ANY TIME WITHIN THIRTY |1 missfonaries in this gveat field, | DAYS AFTER THE TREATMENT | 1502 which offers possibilities for the re-| YOU ARE NOT FULLY SATISFIED, | b., and you can call upou or address clemation of men and the prevention | HEREBY PERSONALLY WILL RE-|the Institute of your cholce or most of the suffering and distress caused | FUND EVERY CENT VAID IN AC-|convenient or accessible to you, this public offer to all people “IF YOU ARE AFFLICTEL WITH THE DRINK HABIT, wO TO ANY NEAL INSTITUTE IN EITHER T0WA | OR NEBRASKA, OR 1F YOU ARE |NOT AND HAVE A RELATIVE, A FRIEND OR ACQUAINTANCE WHO 18, TAKE OR SEND HIM TO ANY NEAL INSTITUTE IN EITHER OF SAID STATES OR SEND AND GET THE HOME TREATMENT, AND IF read or heard about—but restful, quiet places in and amoung the best residences in each city, where each | patient has a comfortably furnished,! separate room for his own use, where | bis meals and drinks and treatment are served privately by an attendant and nurse under the directions of a skilled and expert physician in the treatment of alcoholic afflictions. These NEAL INSTITUTES are lo- ated at 802 Fifth St., Des Moines, Ia.; Douglas St., Sioux City, la., and South Tenth Street, Omaha HIGH CLASS ATTRACTIONS Both Days High Diving by Joseph Hirschberg, the champion swimmer and high diver of the United States. e SPECIAL MUSIO FOR DANCING Jaundice, malaria, biliousness, vanishes when Dr. King's New Life Plils are taken. Guaranteed. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. The boat leaves from the foot of Douglas street for Florence at 2:30 p. m. and 8:30 p, m. on Sunday and Monday. Be. No liguors sold on the steamer. s—————————— P S A prepdyre