THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1912. But There's Nothing Like Fine Feathers, Though Vain, for Blue Ribbons CHICKENS ARE ON EXHIBITION United Fanciers Open Poultry Show in the Auditorium. NOVELTY BIRDS ARE SHOWN Exhibition Will Be Made Both Af ternoon! and evening Throagn oat Entire Week of the Carnival. -Chickens and other poultry traveled a long way to get to the poultry show of the United Fanciers' exposition at the Auditorium In Omaha. Pennsylvania and Texas are represented. One tag on a crate that came In reads as follows: We are traveling from West Juniata Poultry Yards, Juniata, Pa., The great United Fanciers' Exposition, Omaha, Neb., 1,137 miles. ir Please water us. The poultry show opened yesterday morning and before 9 o'clock visitors be gan to arrive to see the birds. This is the first chicken show equipped with uni form cooping ever held in Omaha. A set of : uniform all wire coops have been suipped In and every fowl is enclosed In one of the uniform wire coops. Children's Day Announced. By some error the press had announced that the price of admission to the show would be 60 and 26 cents. In reality the price of admission is 25 cents fori adults and 15 cents for children. X children's day is being planned by the management, when the school chil dren are to be admitted free of charge. The matter will be taken up with Super intendent Grari to see what can be done in the way of having the schools dis missed for a time so ' the children may avail themselves of the opportunity of seeing the show. Some splendid sped mens of bull terriers and English Toy Spaniels are among the exhibits of blooded dogs. Blooded cats lare also on exhibition. Pink chickens not born pink, but dyed pink will be the feature of the exhibi tion. Dresher Bros, cleaners and dyers, have arranged to dye a group of chickens to show what can be done In the arT of dying as well as to afford novelty. Open Day and Night. The ohicken show will be open evenings as well as during the day until Friday night. Besides seeing the poultry and other exhibits at night those who attend will" be treated to a moving picture show every evening. . THREE DAYS' WORK $25,000 Promoter In Sugar Deal Cot Hi Bill to that . Amount for Spot Cash. ' Wallace P. Wlllett, expert sugar, statis tician, received $25,000 front H. O. Have meyer about ten years ago for bringing three Utah beet sugar plants into the ffugar trust, a task that consumed exactly three days of his time. When Mr. Wlllett testified to this be fore Special Examiner Wilson E. Brlce In New York there was a sharp Intake of .breath on the part of those whom either curiosity or business brought to the hearing In the government's dissolution putt against the American Sugar Bann ing company and its subsidarlea . . But Mr. Wlllett named the amount just casually, .and then proceeded to testify that he ought to have got $83,000 for the three days work. The witness said that about the year 1891 Mr. Havemeyer commissioned him to go to Salt Lake City and negotiate for the purchase of half the stock of three beet sugar plants owned by the Utah Sugar Refining company. This was after the American Sugar Refining company had Inaugurated its policy of extension so as to include the beet sugar Industry, v Mr. Wlllett said that he cleared up the Work , in - abort seventy-two hours and then returned to New York for his fee. which according to Ms agreement with Ir. Havemeyer was to have been 6 per jcent of the price paid by lie trust for the stock. This was U, 250,000. When he dropped in at the office of the American (Sugar Refining company for his money Mr. Havemeyer told him that the direc tors vere at that moment discussing the purchase and Mr. WlUett's' commission. Mr. Havemeyer then offered him $25,000 for his services. The witness said that he did not like the Idea of losing $37,000, but that Mr. Havemeyer gave him his choice of wait ing for a decision of the directors or taking his $25,000 on the spot ' Mr. Wll lett took the $25,000. New York Sun. "There could be no better medicine than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. My chil dren were sick with whooping cough. One of tbem was in bed, had a high fever and was coughing up blood. Our doctor gave them Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and the first dose eased them, and three bottles eyed them,", says Mrs. K. A. Donaldson, of Lexington, Miss. For sale toy all - dealers Advertisement ' : Force of Habit. Two nice young girls out for early bargains met in .front of a store on the avenue. ' "I saw you In church yesterday, dear," gurgled one. "Oh, were you 4n cnurchT gurgled the other, -. "Yes, love. And I noticed that you had at last made your husband accompany you to divine worshSp." "Of course he Went with me. He'd rather go to the-theater, but the theaters aren't showing, anything on Sundays now. But he disgraced me." . "In churchT How?" '-'The rector read four chapters from the Acts of the Apostles. -And my husband Insisted on getting up and going out after every act1 Cleveland Plain Dealer. Key to the Situation Bee Advertising UNCHARTERED PERILS OF AIR Causes of the Growing: Death Soli of Aviation. MYSTERY OF MANY FATALITIES Holes In the Air the Greatest Danger : of AH Because They Defy De tection How They Are Formed. - Aviation's roll of victims for 1913 is cer tain to surpass that of any previous year since the heavler-than-alr flying machine came Into use. September has added a great number to the roll both in the United States and abroad. Three double fatalities, all army officers, have been recorded in Europe, and many single fatalities have been reported, showing the great hazard of flying with motor driven appliances. The principal causes of the disasters are three kinds-holes in the air, inexperience and recklessness. Recklessness is com mon among aviators who have commer cialised the business of flying. Inex perience claims victims among army of ficers and a class of amateurs who at tempt flight with defective machines. Holes In the air claim victims from every class and are considered a peril against which there le no safeguard or danger signal. The real and actual hole in the air, as explained by a scientist in the Boston Transcript is to be found in the center of an air whirl, and it is a counter part of the hole that you see in a wash bowl when the water is flowing out of the hole In the bottom of the bowl. When the water Is flowing out of the bowl rapidly you notice that it has a swirling motion and a little whirl-pool Is formed, the cen trifugal fapee of the water causing the water to recede from the center, and a "hole" in the water Is visible there. The water forced away from the center Is heaped up at the outer edge of the bowl. The size of the hole in the water de pends on how fast the water is flowing In the bowl. Apt Illustration. If water is put into a wash bowl which has no outlet, and the water Is stalrred round and round in the same direction with the hand, a partial hole will be formed at the center of the bowl, and will remain plainly visible as long as the water is kept moving rapidly around. The hole in the water is, however, not so deep, and Is less perfect when there is no outlet to the bowl. So, too, whirls are formed in a stream of running water, as one may see by looking at any- running water surface,;, and the more rapid the stream the greater unevenness in the bed and the change In direction, the greater and more frequent are tne wiuris ana tne accompanying noie in the water. The .whirlpool at Niagara forms a huge specimen of this character. In the atmosphere there exist air whirls, the counterparts of water whirls, and they have their accompanying holes at the center of their whirls. The little dust whirls seen on a dusty road are very good examples in miniature of the usual air whirls which form in such varying dimensions that' in the extreme case one covers two-thirds of a hemisphere. All these whirls have holes in the air at the center; these holes being more or less pronounced." Even the great hemispheri cal whirls have what may be termed a hole in the neighborhood of the poles of the earth, as is Indicated ,by the lower barometer reading at and near the pole. ' Diverse Currents, i A class of air movements which In their effect are simlUar to the real holes In the air are produced by the action, of the strong air ; currents which blow; in the upper air In an .easterly direction in air, latitudes combined with ' the i more local air currents which exist around' the cyclones or areas of low barometer and which shift through all points of tlhe compass- In cyclonic-area, which may consist of a huge ' atmospheric whirl several hundred miles in diameter, the wind blows in somewhat different directions at various elevations; but in general the velocities increase with the elevation al though not so much as one would think at altitudes above 600 or 1,000 feet. The movements of the clouds, If care fully observed, will show anyone that the wind direction varies at various ele vations. It is Just as though a seces sion of rivers of air were moving along quite Independent of each other. But at the dividing lines between these air rivers having different . directions , and different velocities there is a rumpus in them depending In intensity on the dif ference of directions, the difference in velocities and the length of time that this condition has been kept up. White Caps In the Air. Air waves are produced by the blow ing of an air current, over another, just as water waves are produced by an air current blowing across a water surface. Only In the case of air currents' acting one on the other the waves produced are about 1,000 times as' big as the ' water "waves produced by" air blowing over water. Thus the counterparts of water waves three feet long would be air billows about 3,000 feet, long. These afcr billows have their crests and, their troughs, and the aviator who trusts - himself In the air in a strong wind practically learns to ride these billows Just as a vessel rides the water waves. We often notice in a long continuing wind that gusts occur with almost clock-like regularity, at Intervals of a few minutes. These gusts mark the passage of the trough of one of the huge air billows that have formed In the great air movement that is going on. At, places we shall have a downward movement, and between them an upward movement of the air. When the contrasts of wind above the below are very great the air becomes much more tumultuous than the white-capped water waves. The squally days which the wise aviator has already learned to shun are brought about by such conditions as these. The Air Tunnel. A special danger to the aviator is the hole in the air which extends tunnel wise in a nearly horizontal direction. This Is caused by two air currents lying one above the other and coming from op poKite directions and meeting as a com mon broad surface. This causes a long spindle-shaped whirlwind, in which the central axis is horizontal and not verti cal, as In the case of the whirlwinds thal( have been mentioned. When clouds are formed in a whirlwind of this char acter the position of the whirl is marked by a long cigar or roller-shaped doiid, and this would have extending through Its center a hole of the worst kind, for It would make an aeroplane turn a somersault Such conditions may occur In the upper air, but well within the region of air flights, much more fre quently among meteorologists have re corded among their observations. If so, the aviator will soon find It wit So mobile is the air and so easily moved that almost any conditions of wind are liable to form whirls in which the hole in the air Is more or less pro nounced, and the attendant dangers quickly become multiples of such as ex isted, In the straight blow. HEADY WORK SCORES QUICKLY Initiative in the Boy Foreshadoiva the Destiny of the Han. "Boy wanted not a common boy, but one with uncommon snap and courage, a boy who knows the meaning of that big word 'initiative.' He must know how to use the talents he has without being told more than thirty-seven times." "There!" said the busy superintended of one of Chicago's smaller manufactur ing companies, asjie finished dictating his ad for a boy. "I hope I can gel a boy who can do a few things with, out having to tell him each time. I certainly do need a bright boy to take an active interest around here." Then he ordered his stenographer to telephone the ad to the paper, with In structions to set It In double space. At 8 o'clock the next morning th passageway to the man's outside office door was crowded with a motley aggro' gation of young candidates, who thought they could qualify. The superintendent was regretting the trouble of picking out the right boy from this crowd as ha elbowed his way on Into his office. There he was surprised to face one bright look, ing lad, hat in hand, calmy waiting for him. "Why, what are you doing herer ex claimed the superintendent ,I came, for that Job," the boy. re plied, i -was here first and: I : climbed through' the-window there in order to get tff:see ypu' first The other boys don't know. I'm here." "Where was .the last place you worked?" asked - the superintendent, without showing the interest he "really felt in this, lad of slight build, who has foresight enough to avoid the rush and crush tit ' the door, -courage enough to climb in the window, and sufficient cun ning to avoid the watchful eye of Jake, the - Janitor. At the Blank company," the - boy promptly replied. "Why did you" leaver "I was fired," was the equally prompt reply. "Firedr "Yes; It was like ' this. , Another boy and I' were told to carry some packages from the shipping room and load them on the delivery truck out In front of th factory. My boss told me that the bun dles should be down at the depot Just as soon as possible. ' And he told me to ti! the truck driver to start1 right out with them and not to wait for any more. Jrtut the truck driver didn't show up and 1 couldn't find him. so I Jumped In. It was an auto truck and the driver had let me learn how to run it. I drove down town and delivered the packages and was back to the factory in about twenty-five minutes. But when I got back the boss fired me on the hpot. Ho told me that I had a whole lot more nerve than was good for me. That is exactly how It hap pened. But I want the Job adver tised. I can make good." The superintendent lost no time tele phoning the Blank company to verify fho boy's statement, then asked him when he could come to work. "Right now," replied the boy, showing eagerness to begin. Then the superintendent stepped to the outside office door and told the other boys that the job was filled. "The best time to get the habit of mak ing good," says this youngster, "is in boyhood." Chicago Tribune. THE SUN AS A LIGHT-TENDER Stops and Starts Beacons for Marin ers with Incredible Precision. The sun Is the most trustworthy of lighthouse-keepers. The sun, or the heat from it, lights many hundreds of beacons along our coasts and waterways evening after evening and extinguishes them punctually every morning. They are guides on land and sea that never are touched by human hands from one month's end to another. The way in which the United States government through its lighthouse board, has utilized the services of the sun and made that great lamp of heaven a faithful and un erring servant Is most interesting. The discovery of acetylene gas was the first step toward retiring the lonely keep ers of the little lights in far-off places. Modern magic was not slow in recogniz ing the fact that by the application of certain well known scientific principles the lighting of the great chains of bea cons that girdle the coasts of the two seas and the gulf and cover the great lakes and every navigable stream In oupi huge country could be much simplified. The United States did not become Inter ested In the acetylene Ught and Its auto matically generating gas buoy until about six years ago, and did not adopt it until 1908. Then the engineers of the lighthouse board devised some wonderful Improve ments, among them the utilization of the sun. In the last three years many hundreds of the old? type of lanterns afloat and ashore have been superseded by this new device. About sixty of them have been installed in Alaska this year. The self-lighting and self-extinguishing acetylene beacon Is a very simple thing, but It depends almost entirely on the "sun valve," which Is one of the most wonderful but least complex of the achievements of modern science. In the first place, the source of light for these lone beacons is dissolved acetyl lene, wWch Is stored under pressure in steel cylinders. One of these cylinders can be charged With enough gas to last a small beacon three years. Usually, how ever, in the case of floating buoys, a six months' supply Is all that is neces sary, as such buoys are overhauled and painted twice a year. Knowing the size of the flame and Its hourly consumption of gas, it la very easy to compute how long a cylinderful will last and how often it will need to be visited. That is all the care the light will need. The sun valve does the rest. The scientific principle upon which the sun .valve depends is that light-waves become transformed In different degrees, according to the nature of the Intercepting-body.- Sunlight upon dark surfaces rr inr inp pecial Sale of Desks During the next few days e will sell all our high class Gunn desks and other office furniture at special prices. Gunn desks are the kind that meet the demand of the best office. They are substantially-constructed of solid oak, have every modem convenience and are sanitary. There is no better desk than the Gunn. Here are just a few-prices: Roll Top Gunn , Desk, 54 in. $27.50 Roll Top Gunn Desk, 60 in. $35.00 Flat Top Gunn Desk, 54 in $21.50 Flat Top Gunn Desk, 60 in $24.00 Swivel Arm Chair, at $ 6.50 Roll Top Gunn. . Desk, 50 in $33.00 Roll Top Gunn Desk, 54 in. .....$40.00 Roll Top Gunn Desk, 60 in. $45.00 Flat Top Gunn Desk, 50 in. .....$24.00 Flat, Top Gunn jDesk, 54 in. .....$27.50 Flat Top Gunn v Desk, 60 in. .....$30.00 Miller, Stewart Beaton Co. 415-17 South Sixteenth Street is converted into heat and heat produces expansion. This expansion Is especially perceptible in certain metals. In a care fully sealed and substantially mounted glass Jar nearly a foot high and about one-fourth that in diameter a thick black rod is placed perpendicular through the center. It is supported by three slender rods of hIghlypollBhed copper. The big black rod Is of copper Jbo and is coated with lampblack to make It absorb light to the greatest possible degree. The sup porting rods reflect light without absorb ing It and do not expand or contract to the same extent as the largest rod. The thick black piece of copper In the center of the Jar is extremely sensitive to light and heat. As the sun appears and the atmosphere grows warmer In the momlnir this rod lengthens. It pushes down into the metal chamber In which the glass Jar rests and touches the end of a lever. It presses down on this lever which Is controlled by a spring, and cut off the flow of the gas to the lamp. ' When the sun disappears from view In the evening and the temperature of the air falls the process Is reversed. The rod contracts and releases Its pressure on the lever, allowing the gas to flow upward to the lamp. The gas is Ignited by a little pilot flame that is never ex tinguished. Thus the beacon is lighted at the proper time and is put out when it is no longer needed, although along desolate coasts It may never gladden the human eye for months at a time. The engineers of the lighthouse board say that the precision of this device Is almost Incredible. It can be used with equal certainty In equatorlcal heat and in polar cold,, for It responds with the ut most accuracy to small variations In tem perature. It Is used on lonely Islands In the Pacific There are nearly a hundred of these sun-valve beacons In Alaska. In summer .they are aids to navigation and in winter they guide the travelers on dogsledges over the frosen wastes. Harp er's Weekly. Omaha Architect on Board of Experts JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Oct. l.-(Spe-clal Telegram.) The capltol building commissioners this afternoon announced the selection of the following Jury of ex pert architects to aid them in selecting a plan for tho new state house: William B. Ittner, St Louis; B. Cllpton Sturgls, Boston, Mass.; and Thomas R. Kimball, Omaha. Ittner la the architect of the St. Louis Board of Education. Sturgls Is vice presi dent and a member of the executive com mittee of the American Institute of Archi tects. Kimball also is a member of that organization. The experts are expected here tomorrow to begin work. The ten architects seleoted for the competition by, the elimination contests some months ago will each be requested to submit eleven sketches of their plans, showing different elevations and interiors. It may be sev eral weeks before a selection Is made. Taft Gains Strength ( Out in the Stat d Forty-five of the petitions for Taft electors, all fully signed, ' were returned to republican state headquarters at the Paxton hotel yesterday. The petitions must' be In' the hands of the secretary of state by October 5. Bach petition sent In has been accompanied by an en couraglng letter from the man who cir ulated It. II. C. Henderson of Wilson, vllle writes there has been a rapid change from Roosevelt to Taft in the precinct where he resides. From signers on his) petition, he says, he knows definitely that the Taft votes at the election will be seven-fold what they were at the primaries. ...... v "I have an old popuitst for a neighbor;" says Mr. Henderson, "who has voted for Bryan every time he has been a candU date. He says he will vote for Taft. Several republicans who voted for Rooee velt and La Follette at the primaries have told me they will vote for Taft at the election." , The Taft people , are working hard at the headquarters at the Paxton. Some prominent speakers 'are to be secured soon for Omaha meetings. The Eternal Impulse. Fair Suffragette And now. If any one who has heard my speech wishes to ask a question, I shall be happy to answer. Masculine Voice (from rear of hall) If you haven't any -other company, -may I see you home this evening? Judge. MIMpwWMMMlMllwuiiMii II. II . M Htp- it. Single Comb Brown Leghorns After many years of breeding I now have , one of the greatest laying strains inr exist ence, and they have proven exhibition qual ities they have been winning the blue rib bons wherever shown.. I have a limited number of cockerels for sale. Eggs for thatching in season. Don't fail to see my exhibit at the Exposition, O. C. '''GEHRfVlAN Phone Web.1170. 2850 Fowler Ave., Omaha Neb. 21 AT THE GREAT T o A I HUH fbT .Fillers O fl o I have a splendid collection of utility females on exhibition-one of the best I have every shown. Because I do not wish to move these and be bothered with the work incident to clearing out the' exhibition, Ihave placed particularly low prices on this collection. See these birds and learn what you can get for extremely low prices ess mw n n w in ss n These probably are the world's best layers. For fifteen years I have selected the most vigorous rapid growing chicks for breeders. My system of using for breeders only birds thatjhow rapid development and vigor when chicks has devel oped in "Peerless" birds vitality rarely equaled, even by the -best barnyard: fowls. Almost anyone can make money with "Peerless" birds. You should1 see my stock. We certainly can do business after you examine the birds I possess. Attend the great exposition and see my birds and talk to me about the ''world's best layers." If you cannot see me in person, write for a catalogue. Box 12 B, Station A Omaha, Nebraska ...