TUB OMAHA DAILY BE fit Fill DAY , OOTOIJEK 28 , 185)8 ) , THE FIELD OF ELECTRICITY Some Inventions Designed to Increase Met- nages on Telegraph Wirei , TREBLING THE WORK OF THE QUADRUPLEX UctrlfJimu-iit of a Mnrlilno fur I'rliil- ItiK TolcirrniiiK iicelrli'l ( j- In I'lniit 1. 1 fr Projected Pnlnrc of Electricity nt 1'nrlx , A series of Important experiments arc about to be made over the wires of the Pennsylvania railroad to determine the \aluo of the multiple device Inv anted by Pro fessor Henry A. How land of the Johns llopklrw university. IJy means of this Invention It Is posolblo to send eight telegraphic mccsngcs over the sime wire at the Bamo time , four In each direction. The messages are sent over a . keyboard slmlllar to that of a typewriter , I which Is at the sending end of the Instru ment. while nt the other end IH a small ' snachlno which records the mesaagu In glinted form , It being possible cither to pllnt the message upon a sheet of paper or j upon a long tape llko that which Is used ' In the oidlnary ticker service. "There Is no | longer any question of the value and j thorough utility of the machine , " said Pro- feMor How land In an Interview , "and mauy experienced tclegrapera who have seen It work pronounce It absolutely perfect. An ordinary typewriter operator ran send mes sages at the rate of forty wordi p. minute , while all the tlmo seven other messages are going over the wire , each separate and distinct from the others. I wanted to try the message over a very long wire , but could not make satisfactory arrangements with the Western Union Telegraph com pany for the use of their plant. However , the Pennsylvania railroad has placed Its private wires at our disposal So we have decided upon a wlro between Jersey Ulty und Philadelphia for the first trial and afur that , If wo want to , we can try a longer wire by using a system of loops. " The quadruplex device , now In use In florae telegraph offices , has been considered tt giant stride In the development of telog- uaphy and has resulted In the Having of much , time and money. The capacity of the new arrangement of Professor Rowland may bo further comprehended when It Is Btatcil that his Invention will do three times the work which the quadruples machine will do. Another 1' . Hachmann , mechanical electrical en gineer of Whitens ! ! llay and Milwaukee , has been Interviewed by the St. Paul Pioneer neer Press "Yes , 1 have made some Inven tions , " said he , producing a card whereon ho was described ns "Inventor of police alarm Indicator , lire alarm Indicator , hotel indicator , printing telegraph and the Im proved continuous rail " "Tho printing tele graph Is probably the most Important. I have made a little machine something HUe a typewriter. On that machine you send a telegraph message Just as you write on a typewriter. Only you can send all the letters of any word at the same tlmo that Is , unless It's a very big word. It It has moro than ten letters well , a man has only ten fingers. With some practice you can Bond 200 words a minute. The circuit Is broken once only , you see , to make any let ter. The present telegraph cede breaks the circuit about three times ontho average for every letter , and the operator with the pre sent system can send only forty words a mlnuto unless he's an export , nnd the ex port rarely docs better than bevcntv-flve or eighty words a minute. At the reci vltift end of the wire with my system the operator but there'wori'fbo'a'ny ' opciato"r. The mes sage will print itself at that end us In a stock ticker , only much faster and on cither tape or a letter sheet. So really anybody who can spell can send his own messages \vlth my machine If the operator doesn't happen to bo handy. As for the expert op erator , ho could send 250 words a mlnuto perhaps more. Pvo been working only six months on my printing telegraph , 1 dldn'l want much said about It until I could get It patented ovorywhcre. Just the other day I got my last patent In England , the last ol twenty-two patents covering all the civilized nations. We have already put the machine In on six stations of the Milwaukee road to test them. They worked perfectly. The ) need no metallic circuits , no change In the wiring. They arc small and simple. In a mouth or two I'll begin putting them Into the telegraph offices In the Twin Cities am elsewhere. It will send three times as fast from ono end and will dispense with any operators at the other end ; besides , It wll not require an expert to run the machine The machine only costs $10 to manufacture but It will bo rented for $6 a month. Tha will make the expense for each machine about $30 a month , Now , the average oper ator under the old system gets (50 a month ' Professor Uarrett , who had charge of the electrical department at the World's Pair said ho thought It was the greatest Improve ment ever made In telegraphing. Tvri-Mc MmftnKVM oil u Sliiiclc AVIrc Kxperimcnta nro at present being con ducted on the Parls-Hordeaux line with flomo very Interesting machines , which the Inventor , M. Mercadlcr , has been working on for many years. With these Instru ments , called duodccaplex , twelve Morse transmitters can work simultaneously on a single wire , each sending Its signals to the proper receiver at the end of the lino. The result Is brought about by the use of al ternating or , at any rate , Interrupted cur rents. Each transmitter receives ita cur rent throuah n tuning fork having a special note. Its vibrations being electrically maintained. These vibrations furnish a current of the proper period to cause re sonance .u each application In the proper receiving circuit , which has Its self-induc tion and capacity adjusted for this risult. This receiver Is n telephone ( a monotele- pbnsio , as It la called by Morcadler ) so con structed and arranged that the acoustic re sonant < | Uilltli'S also help to damp out from the signal * received everything not Intended foi it. These signals are read in tbo ordinary way by ear , aided by rubber tubes llko those used on phonographs. T.UC bitting out of the signals , it seems , Is very perfect , each rscelvcr giving no evidence of those signals not Intended for It except a slight murmuring veiy Indefinite n.ul not nt all bothersome. 1'roteetlon of Kite AVIrcn , One of the unsolved problems of new elec trical science is how to preserve from do- Seven Sisters Slope Yes they nro going. Thla U the last week ot the exhibit ol the Seven Sutherland Sisters nt the Uriu store of Sherman & McCoimell , on Dodge street. Every lady In Omaha who hue nol reen these Udles and talked with their Bbould do so at once , as they aie able and willing to give many hints aboui the care of the hair anil the method by which theli own beautiful hair una Kroun. The following cut prices are being irmdi during the sale on the 7-sUtera goods : Jl 00 slic llalr drawer . S5 < COc size Hair Grower and Scalp Cleaner 45i Call nnd see the beautiful hair , and C < m- eult the ladles on the care of the scalp Consultation free. Sherman & McDonnell DrugCo 31 Id ill e ot Uluuk. J5it ; bt. , OMAHA , stmctlon by lightning the wire attached to mctcrologlcal kites. These kites pUo their moat valuable Indications In the upper air regions In the neighborhood of an area of thunderstorms and that Uvhcrc It U most dangerous to use them. U la Rtatcd that at Clnclnnntl , 0 , 12,000 feet of Kite steel piano wlro In mld-alr HB * destroyed by lightning and at Lansing , Mich , where 75,000 feet of vvlro had been paid out by the weather bu reau , It wao destroyed In the saino way , nnd the official observer escaped serious InJury - Jury only through the opportune release of an Iron guiding bar. The obvious remedy for this destruction would be to withdraw the line at the approach of thunderstorms , but such a sacrifice of Important data Is not to bo contemplated. It Is now suggested to use a cord of gllk , which has twice the strength according to its weight as com pared with tool steel. One of the objections to thin method which will h-xve to be mot was noticed by Prof. Marvin , who was ouo of the first to substitute silk for wire. As the slllc conl wai necessarily of a much larger diameter than vvlro , there was a pro- portlonatu wind effect , which diminished the altitude of the kite. Prof Marvin's next Idea was the retaining of the steel wlro M a whole and the Insertion of an occasional stretch of fifty to 100 feet of silk cord. Hero the fact was Ignored that the electric cur rent traveling along a wlro may be of such .1 voltage as to give a tiny spark or a de structive lightning flash. A moderate dis charge might destroy the continuous isteel wire , but a stronger flash will Jump over the fifty or 100 feet of Bilk cord nnd still destroy the wire , so that the Introduction of a silken loop simply delayed the dissipa tion of the line for It , might be , a few minutes , nnd brought the solution of the problem of perfect fcafety no nearer. I'rof. Rowland expressed the opinion that there Is pparently no way to make the kite line > erfcctly safe except to make It cither too ioor a conductor to transmit any electricity f so good a conductor that It will transmit ho entire lightning flash without becom- ng overheated. The question In Its present pen condition presents an Interesting study or electricians ; but In the meantime the meteorologists continue to fly their kites In loctrlcal storms , they say that even If the Ine Is burned up they can always go and lunt for the kilo which has secured the record. nii-ctrlulty nnil riant Life. That the application of electricity to the culture of plants Is rapidly approaching a iractlcal stage Is apparent In Prof. S. Lem- Strom's recent paper on the subject. Ex periments carried out In Plnland prove , among other things , that electricity given lo plants during dajs with a clear burning sun may damage them very much If enough water Is not given at the same time. Prof , Lflmstrom's theory as to the beneficial In- llucnce of electricity on plants is that either the gases In the air arc transformed to ozone and nitric oxides , which , being hea fall on the plants and Increase the activity of their vegetation , or the eleitrlclty Inducts the juices of the plants to ascend moro rapIdly - Idly In their capillary tubes. Six fields o fifty meters each were used for the cxperl mental demonstration , three being treated with electricity and three without. In the Former there was found a general Increase In the seeds of at least 40 per cent In the volts from 25 per cent to 75 per cent , depend ing on the kind of plant and on the natun of the soil ; in beans , 75 per cent ; In straw berries and raspberries , as high as 75 pe cent , the tlmo for their ripening being shortened nt least one-third. In the cul lure of tobacco , where especially the precau tlon as to nn ample supply ot water on bright days wns found necessaiy , tbo plant under the Influence- the current showei at least 40 per cent better growth than thosi cultivated without It. The length of tlnr the current was usually turned on during tbo day wai four hours In the morning an four hours In the afternpon. The total num her of hours was 161. I'nlocc of Elrctrlulty nt 1'nrln. The Colossal Palace of Electricity , whlc was designed by M. Eugene Henard , will b ono of the most remarkable features ot th Paris exposition In 1900. Llko moit of the new bulldlngc on the Champ de Mare , It will bo built with an upper floor , to which access will bo had by broad ttalrways nnd by viaducts connecting with other exhibi tion halli. It la estimated that 12.000-horss water power , which Is equivalent to a flow of 300 gallons of water per second , will bo required to op rc.te the mighty machinery. This water will be raised from the Sclno by an Immense pumping plant and will be raado to do double duty by adding to the scenic effects of the grounds. At the Chateau d'Eau there will bo a beautiful cascade , about 100 feet high , on which at night the electric lights will play. All the lower part of the Palace of Electricity will be hidden by the Chateau d'Eau , above which the central hall will rise to a com manding elevation. This facade will be 390 feet long and will be surmounted at Ita highest point , more than 230 feet above the ground , by a colo'sal statue of electricity. Ily day this facade will be outlined against the sky In n lacework of metal nnd glass , and at night It will glitter like a diadem of Jewell flashing the colors of the diamond , ruby and emerald. lllcctrlc Hot I'rcHHliin. The time Is rapidly approaching when the tailor who has any pretensions to be con sidered up to the times will rook down on any other means of pressing the suits of liH customers than by electricity Already he Is u&lng the electrically heated "gooio , " but a still moro ambitious system of hot pressIng - Ing has been Introduced In dyeing and finishing factories , which may furnish a hint on which a practical system fur the tailor may bo based. In place ot Iron plates heated In very hot ovens or hollow plates heated by steam , which have hitherto been used for this purpose , sheets are used con- slstlng mainly of prc nlng plates heated by i electricity. The presbrs ore charged with j cloth In the usuot way. but the plates are cold when placed In position and are after- I ward connected with the switches. The ' plates are arranged not only above and be low the pllts , but between the layers , so that the heat becomes quickly and evenly distributed. The current Is easily regulated bo that the desired temperature can be maintained for any length of time. If the regulator Is properly used the plates will never become overheated and what heat la applied Is made the most ot Instead of being to a great extent wasted , as In the old process , Ileyond this the work can bo put through much more expedltlousry , the cloth Is more evenly and efficiently finished and the cost of the plant and operation In very economical. It Is claimed that to hc.it tt hydraulic press charged with heavy goods to a helgnt ot ninety Inches with seventy platen , la thirty-five minutes , coats only ! l cents. Uloctrlo finn Lighter. A novelty In gas lighting Is an electric rod , which serves OH a lighter , obviating all danger ot fire Incident to the uio of matches ifK' and taptre. The lighter Is twcnty-threo K' ' Inches long over all It consists of a handle | and a straight rod , which curves at the top. j In the handle Is a sealed storage battery which la good for 5,000 lightings before It needs to be renewed. Fresh batteries can be obtained when needed and It Is onfy noccs- r , fury to drop the old ono out and slip n new one 111 The pressure of a ring on the out- 0 side of the handle completes the circuit and 1 , causes current to pass through a mlnaturo c cell of wire , a tthe top of the lighter , heatIng - Ing It to a cherry red , which Instantly ' , Isnates gas from the ordinary or Welibach burner. You Invite disappointment nnen you ex ' periment. DeWHt's I.Htle Karly Risers ro pleasant , easy , thorough little pills. They cura constipation nnd sick headacba Just at lure aa jou take them. WINNING UNDER A HANDICAP Republican Campaign Succeeding Against the Chairman of the Committee. MISTAKES APPARENT TO THE OFFENDER Coniiulltcenieit I'lmi to Take home of the Work nnil the Move the Clinlrmnn Into it CoiiMiltntlon. If the republicans carry Douglas county by a good majority , as they doubtless will , It will not be because , but rather lit spite of the leg-pullers and heelers who constitute three-fourths of the campaign executive committee. It Is over a month since the county committee organized , but the com- tnlttoo has not yet been consulted with reference to the conduct of the campaign. Oil the contrary , the chairman and his ap pointees on the executive committee have assumed to themselves cVery feature of the campaign work , with the result that little If anything has been accomplished by the committee. So great was the dissatisfaction among members of the county committee at the stubborn refusal of the chairman either to enter upon a vigorous campaign , or to call the full commlttco together , that n movement wai started several days ago to have the committee convene Itself and take ffalrs Into Us own hands. Chairman Dur- kink , on getting wind of this move , seized ils only opportunity to head It off by Issu- ng a call for a meeting of the committee next Saturday afternoon. Dissatisfaction , however , 1s general at the way In which the chairman Is managing tha nmpalgn. In previous years not only has t been a custom to call frequent meetings f the full county committee , but the dlf- 'erent ' ward members were freely consulted n everything pertaining to their own wards and were made responsible for the work done In their own districts. Thla year , In his supreme confidence that ho alone cat carry the entire county In his pocket , Chair man Burbank and his associates on the executive ecutive- committee have not only Ignored he respective cornmltteemen , but have re used oven to Inform them what Is being done In the different wards. CniuimlKii MO Pur a I'lillnrc. Ward meetings have been held with out notifying tha ward commltteeman , with a natural result that meet- ngs for the most part have been absolute frosts , from the standpoint of attendance. Ono meeting in the First ward , for example , not Ions ago , attracted just twclvo people , In addition to the speaker ! and candidates ; and another In the Second ward got together an audience of thirty , In. eluding every one on the program. There have only been two or three meetings In the county slnco the campaign opened at which the attendance exceeded fifty people. This Is due , perhaps , to a certain extent , also to the fact that the meetings have not been advertised or brought to the attention of the people who might be gotten out. Asldo from ft few posters which have been hung up In the street cars at the Instance of John L. Webster , the attorney for the street car company , and a few dodgers scat tered about here and there , no advertising whatever has been done. In every previous campaign every meeting arranged was ad vertised In the newspapers , and the respect ive ward commlttcemen made personal ef forts to get good audiences. Another thing that Is troubling the com mittee is the question of finances. The as sessments were made upon the different candldatfb nt the first meeting of thfi execu tive committee , but onfy a small part of the money hai been covered Into the treasurer's hands. The reason for this Is that the can didates themselves have no confidence In the executive committee , and are reluctant to pay In money which they do not believe will get beyond the leg-pullers In the com mittee Itself. The way In which the com mittee has spent Its money so far Is not calculated to reassurethem. . It rented n headquarters at $100 a month , wthout any body to occupy them. Even the chairman fought shy of the place until within the last week , for fear the ward workers might trouble him. Money has been thrown away on halls for meetings which have produced no results , and a man was employed to take charge of the polling of the city who only announced his conversion from populism a few weeks ago , when there were plenty of good republicans ready to occupy the place. The registration , too , has been disappoint ing , because no systematic work has been done to get republican voters registered. Terminal Attendance Ankfil. In the call for the committee meeting Saturday , Chairman Hurbank says : "I very much deslro that you be personally present at this meeting , and trust jou will so do , and bring with jou full and complete reports as to the condition of your party In jour re spect ho precincts and wards. " It Is probable that most of the committee will be present personally , but they are also likely to ask the chairman and executive committee for full und complete reports as to the con dition of the campaign , and to demand some Information as to what the committee proposes to do during the remainder of the campaign. OPERATES AFTER TUESDAY Iiilimitary Hnnkriiitter Ill-come IJfTectlv c home of the Detail * of the 1'roeenM. That section of the bankruptcy law refer ring to Involuntary bankruptcy will become effective November 1. The provision foi voluntary bankrupts went Into effect Julj 1 , but the law provided that no petition' under the lnvoluntar > section could be filed until four months after the statute was signed and approved and in force. Under the voluntary section of the law twenty-three cases have been filed In tbo United State ; court for Nebraska , but with two or three exceptions , thcao are petitions by men whc are seeking to rid themselves of a number of small debts of long standing which thej find themselves unable to pay , and the ) have no assets from which any dlvldcnc can bo realized. Under the prvlslon which becomes opera tive the first of next month a petition cai be filed against an Insolvent or one guilt ) of an act of bankruptcy , such as the as- slgnment of his property to defraud a per < tlon of the creditors and upon default by thi defendant , or after a fair trial , ho may hi declared a bankrupt and his property dis posed of accordingly. Parties owing debti amounting to Jl.OOO or over , except farmers and wage earners , are subject to this pro > vision of. the law. Companies and corpora- | tlons are also amenable to this section , a : are private banks , but not national or stati , bankb. Companies and corporations , on tbi | other hand , cannot take advantage of thi voluntary section of the low. Petitions un- der the Involuntary section of the law mus be filed within four months after the ul- leged act of bankruptcy Is committed. j Heferees in bankruptcy , who operate man generally under the voluntary section , hav < a long list of duties assigned to them , am In Important cages their work possesses cou < slderablo responsibility. They are allowe. just } 10 on each case , which must be de- poalted with the clerk of the United States court when the petition Is flled. Where dividend ! are paid out of the property 01 the bankrupt the referee will be allowed : small per cent of the sum In addition tc this fee. The clerk of the court l > allowed | { 10 for bli work and there is } 5 for othei work , which mokes the total cost ot a bankrupt case 123 asldo from attor ney's fee , The fee li left entirely with the court , notwithstanding several attorneys ambitious to make A specialty of this clasi of business , arc sending out circulars to prospective cHenls , agreeing to act as at torney for $50. VETERAN OF VICKSBURG Colonel MoiitKomcrj , Who AVtm One of 1'enihortoti'n CoiiinilxNtoncrii , to Arrange the Surrender. Colonel L. M. Montgomery , special agent of the Treasury department at Washington , with headquarters nt St. Louis , Is In the city checking up the office of the collector ot customs. He has charge of n district com pose J ot Missouri , Kansas , Nebraska and Colorado , and goes from Omaha to Denver In pursuit of hU official business. Colonel Montgomery has been for a long tlmo In the government service , and has traveled abroad a great deal , through which ho has acquired n fund of reminiscences which are decidedly Interesting. To begin with ho was one of two commissioners ap pointed by General Pemberton to negotiate articles for the capitulation of Vlcksburg with commissioners from General Grant. Ho describes Pemberton as a haughty and austere - tero man , a martinet of an olllccr. It became - came his duty to Introduce Pemberton to Grant , and after this ceremony had been performed on neutral ground between the battlements of the two armies ho says Grant took out his cigar case and offered Pember ton a cigar , but although the latter was al most suffering for a smoke his prldo would not let him accept the offer. He and Grant had been classmates at West Point and ho' | ' felt the humiliation of having to surrender' ' to tha hero of Appomattox.Ve hadn't had anything In the way of tobacco but the raw leaf , " continued Mr. Montgomery , "and when General Grant turned to mo nnd of fered me a cigar I told him If ho would excuse - cuso mo I would take two , which I did. Grant always remembered the Incident and when on his tour of the norld I met him In Paris ho recognized me and recalled the In cident. " When a child Mr. Montgomery was taken to Paris with his parents and arrived there at the tlmo Louis Pbllllppe fled the country In the disguise ot John Smith. He went there again later when the commune held the city and whllo his family was In Paris he was not allowed to enter the gates. He was personally acquainted with Louis Na poleon and says the unfortunate emperor spent three months on thecolonel's planta tion In Louisiana whllo In this country , at which tlmo Napoleon told him ho had been betrayed by his army. This fact was re called by Mr. Montgomery In connection with the present atato of affairs In franco. Mr. Montgomery , a man now In Chicago and another now In New York were each at about that time offered commissions In the Trench army , but each declined. Mr. Mont gomery was also personally acquainted with General Boulanger , having met the dashing olllcer first at Algiers when he was a major. Later the colonel was one of the commis sioners to Europe to Invlto the descendants of old patriots to participate in the celebra tion of the surrender of Yorktown which was held In Virginia. He hunted up the descendants of Lafayette and others who as sisted the early revolutionists In their strug gle for liberty , and then went to do the same service In Germany. He said the feelIng - Ing was so bitter between the two countries that It was difficult to get the French to take part when they learned that Germans were to be there , and when the German flag was raised at Yorktowp In honor of the vis itors from that country the French turned their backs upon the banner. Mr. Montgomery was specially warm In hi ? comnlendatlon of Us , characteristic of General Grant which made him ever loyal to his friends. He sad ( he- was brought In contact with Grant many times after the Incidents at Vlcksburg , and this chatacter- Istlc Impressed Itself upon him more than any other , and said It was this trait of the man's character which caused his later mis fortunes , as unprincipled men took advan tage of the great soldier's confiding sim plicity. When John Hussell Young wrote the story of Grant's tour around the world and Incoporated a sketch of his military career , he requested Mr. Montgomery to write that part concerning the surrender of Vlcksburg , which he did. Mr. Montgomery will remain In the city until Saturday , combining a visit at the ex position with his official duties at the cus toms ofllcc. For broken surfaces , sore * Insect bites , burns skin diseases , nnd especially pile * , there 'is one reliable remedy. DeWltt's Witch Hazel Salve. When you call for DeWItt a don't accept counterfeit or frauds. .You win not bo disappointed with Dc\Vltt' Witch Hazel Salve Ilow it I III a nroUcr. M. Corlat. the ticket broker at 1S17 Far- nam street , was arrested yesterday 01 the charge of malicious destruction of prop erty made by T. F. O'Connor of Bruce , S. D. O'Connor alleges that ho visited the scalper e s office to sell a return ticket to Sioux City. ; entered for the Whllo there another man ; sarao purpose , and the two engaged In con versation. Corlat. It Is alleged , grew angry at this and said O'Connor was trying to i Influence his customers. This the latter de nied and showed the broker his ticket , vvnlcli i he wild he had entered the place to sell. Corlat. according to O'Connor , grabbed the I tkket trtm his hand , tore It up und drove him out of his office. To Sne Vour Dlwcntloii Use "Garland" Stoves and Uangcs. MAYOR ENSOR GETTING EVEN < < Peculiar Grounds Alleged In Inunction Petition Filed In District Court PUNISHING A MEMBER OF WALKER JURY Hint HulliIliiK Inspector , nt Ilclimt of Mil ) or of South ( Ininlm , Stopn Hepnlr Work oil Iloctor- JoluiNton Conipany llnllUIiin. Major Unsor's alleged connection with the recent fatal prize fight In bouth Omaha furnishes tha somewhat peculiar grounds on which a temporary Injunction has been l&sued out of the district court restraining Ilulldlng inspector George S. Dunacomb of the packing house city from Intcrlcnng with the Hoctor-JohDBton company In the work of attiring the Interior of Its fHce bullulng. According to the allegations set up by the plaintiff company they sought permission to make these changes some tlmo ago and the building Inspector permitted them to do so without securing a permit , saying that the work did not come under the provisions of the flro limit ordinance. The office building Is a frame structure , but no additions were to be made to It. The company set a gang at work upon the alterations and they were not molested until a day ago. Then the building Inspector ordered them to cease work and did not permit them to return to it afterward. The reasons for this , ns out lined In the petition , were as follows : , That the building Inspector Is a pliant and obedient tool of one Ihomtvs II. Ensor , mayor of South Omaha , mho is the Instigator and director of the wrongful and malicious acts cf the defendant In Bald particular , bolcly and simply because the secretary and treasurer of the plaintiff company was a j I juror In the coroner's Investigation Into the 1 cause of ono Vt alKcr's death In a prl/o fight In South Omaha , und as such juror concurred In finding against and recommending to hold one J. K. Carroll , acting thief of police of South Omaha and a pet of said Ensor. That said verdict had scarcely gained pub licity when said Ensor dispatched to the defendant a letter directing him to slop work on said building at once and that de fendant accordingly stopped the work as aforesaid. That when plaintiff asked de fendant why ho had stopped the work the defendant said that ho had been ordered to do BO by the major , that It was because of I the verdict In the coroner's Investigation , and ho said that the wld agent of the plain- i tiff should have brought In a "minority re port , " as ho termed It , and In no Instance did he claim that the work was stopped be cause of a violation of the tire limits ordi nance. I It was further set out that Ensor had I boasted that he would not permit the work ' of changing the building to continue. On i this showing a temporary Injunction against , the building Inspector was Issued and will I be In force until further orders. Take Dr. Bull's Cough Sjrup In tlmo and you will not get consumption. 25e. FIND POISUN AS THE CAUSE Coroner' * Jnry Attnehen Illume too One In YOIIIIK llnrr ) Hott- * IIIIIII'H Death. The Inquest held yesterday In Coroner Swanaon's office over the death of little Henry Hoffman , who drank a cup of poison by mistake last Sunday morning , failed to bring out any new facts that would fix the responsibility of the lad's death upon any ono but himself. There were several now developments , however , regarding the tlmo and manner of the poison drinking , making It plain that the boy's life could probably have been saved had It not been for one or two unfortunate - fortunate circumstances. This was shown In the testimony of Herbert Devlue , the 14- year-old boy who was In sofa charge of Mr. Hyan's store at the tlmo the Hoftman lad entered and took the drink. He told how the latter came Into the store Sunday morning and , having asked for a drink and having been directed to the work shop In the rear of the stare , went back to get It , | Devlno said that when the Hoffman boy j returned to the front part of the store ho asked what that funny tasting stuff In the stone jar was , and being told that It was poison said that he had swallowed a little Little Devlne then remarked that the poison would rnako him sick and perhaps kill him and the Hoffman boy replied that It woulc be no great IOE if he did die. He then wen out the door. At that time , according to the testimony of the Dovlne boy , there was nothing In the appearance of his friend to show that ho had taken enough of the drug to make htm sick. Had the effects of th poison been evident at once BO the physl clans could have been called and told wha the bov'a ailment was It is more than likely his life could have been saved , but h u ) was not taken sick until a. few minutes later , and being thei I among people who did not know what the trouble was , he was not given the proper treatment and died without having regained consciousness. Several other witnesses were called , among them the physicians who attended the bo > and the man In whose store he had takin the drink. . The latter testlfled that the so lutlon was cyanide of potassium , used to clean jewelry , and that It stood in a stone jar somewhat res mb Ing the ar that the bo ; was accustomed to drink from. After being out a few minutes the jury re- tuined a verdict to the effe-t tnat the Ind The New Shoes Arrive- Ladles' genuine box calf cork filled fall and winter shoes this shoes com bines style and durability-something ' never before made In a bos calf or heavy shoe the ideal winter shoe no rubbers no wet feet cau't be beat for skating we want the ladles to inspect this shoe we know It will pleafo the eye and be comfortable to the feet wo have made the price on this shoe $3.00-- \\hlle the price is very small yon can depend upon the value being theie-- about the same as In most $4.00 shoes a genuine box calf shoo ? : i.OO. Drexel Shoe Co. , ' Shoe Home. Oiunhn'c Up-to-date 1419 1'ARNAM STREET It Won't ' Be Long- Till you can make snowballs but you can't burn them even this Jewel ba&e bmncrs won't burn snowballs yet they ate the Krealest fuel savers in the world so easy to regulate we are the Omaha agents for these famous stoves and have them in all sizes and styles-$20 to ? 40- theJewell cook stoves arc perfect bakers burn either wood , hard or soft coal $10 up Jewel steel ranges with the patent sectional oven $24 and upe can only nt > k you to call and look at the "Jewels" It they don't come up to your expecta tions-why , don't buy. A. C. Raymer , WE DELIVER YOUR Pt'ItOHASE. 1514 t'aruam Street. THE REGAL VENTILATOR , The handsomest and most economical stove in the world. Don't let anyone tell you that they have one just as good. Here is our guarantee : It will Heat 3 Rooms with 2 Tons of Coal a Season. Guaranteed to Guaranteed to Heat 3 Rooms Heat 3 Rooms a Season a Season with 2 TONS with 2 TONS of Goal of Goal or your or your Money Back , Money Back , Remember our guarantee means something it means yon can save from 1 to 2 Ions of coal each winter while the price of the stove is no higher than others want for the old kind Over 500 of these stoves sold in Omaha last season. Let us show you how it works. Weekly on monthly payments if you like-No extra cliarge. 'WNT' W "IT died from tbo effects of di Inking polbon as hewn In the testimony , but they did not find anything In the evidence to show that any one but himself was to blame. STRIKES OU1 THE WORD GOLD Hoard of Kilucntlou Catfm to I ) - muiiilH of the 1'cipuUntH In the AVorilliiK of the A special meeting of the Board of Educa tion was held at noon yesterday to so amend .ho school bond proposition ns to satisfy n class of populists who have been frantlo be cause of the fnct that the word "gold" had appeared In It. The original proposition provided that the principal and Interest of ho bonds should bo payable In "the gold coin of the United States. " The populists threatened that If the detested name of the > cllow metal was not expunged from the proposition they would fight to defeat It on purely political grounds. Chairman Penfold of the committee which had drawn up the proposition declared that the committee had not put the word In for political reasons , but simply because It was thought that a better premium could be secured. The proposition had been copied exactly after ono that had been presented to the people of Kansas City , and had passed because the populists In the city down the Kaw vvcro not disposed to become so In flammable when the word gold la mentioned or appears In the types. He , however , moved that In order to still all opposition to the bonds the proposition should be rescinded. This motion prevailed , and then for an hour the members discussed what the principal and Interest should bo payable In. Finally , upon motion of Burgess , It was agreed that the bonds should stand and fall In the fonn of the government wnr bonds that IH , that the homli should bu payable "In the coin of the I'nlted States " So amended the bond proposition was agnln passed and will be presented to the people. Three ronllilenoe Men Captured. The capture of Peter Wade , John Walsh and Thomas Anderson , alleged confidence men , by Patrolmen Kissano and Kelly Cap tain Mostyn regards an nn Important one , as it breaks up the gang of confidence oper ators that have been working very success fully of late , and makes public their ren- dezv oils. All the three men were captured In the two rooms used to llcecp victims ut nievonth and Ilouslas streets. When arrested thev had Nel on Anderson , nn aged farmer , und his son , from Iowa , In their rooms , and were trying to get his money by means of u poker game When the ofllccrs entered tha room a pile of chips nnd three decks ol marked cards were Ijlng on the table whcia the farmer wan seated. The officers hava positive evldeiiLO against the men , as they Isaw them accost the farmer on the street ' heard them coax him to their rooms and followed and arrested them In the act ol fleecing htm. COURT NOTES , Application has been made to the county court for the appointment of an adminis trator for the estate of John H. Weseleo , who left some $2.000 In property. In a petition for a now trial that has been filed in the district court In the cnt-o of Maria Hell man against David Adler nnd sou 1,123 pages of typewritten testimony ac companies it. Application has been made In the probalo court to have the will of Valentine G-rlr-f probated. Grief was one of the old et- tlcr ) of Douglas county nnd lived near Elk- horn. He died on October 21. The deceased leaves considerable property In the count ; , all of which Is bequeathed to his wife. Are You Ready- buy a piano ? Yon won't have nn- other such opportunity as we arc now Riving to buy llrst class Instnunt-nts at nctory cost we've sold many of the bargains - gains already tlioio ate many left but Saturday night HOCS the end of this lulu- ous pilco cutting for we'll have loom then for all our exposition pianos you can have yoin- choice of a Kuabe Klin- ball Kninlch & Uach Ilallet & Davis Krell Howard Hospe Llndell Wheel er Schlrmer United Makers Victor - and many others prices run from il"8 - $1 18-ir > S-$108-$178-lSS - SH)8 ) - - $ aa."i ! f37U on terms of $25 cash and 910 a month no trades or cominlsblon at this sale. A. HOSPE , Music and Art. 1513 Dotmlas Take Care of Your Eyes Have them examined by a competent optician and have the little dofcctf. remedied at once It's the little things that grow larse and caiihe so much trouble by proper attention now jou may be able to avert the painful surgi cal operation that is auro to follow- where neglect Is allowed our optician Is reliable and competent If you don't need classes he will tell you so after he has made a thoiouRh examination-- which lie doe1 * free of char e-we grind our own lenses and can guaiantee per fect hatlsfncllon. The Aloe & Penfold Co I.rndlnir < < r1eiitfl Optician * . 1403 Far < m Qtrttt i Stop Beating Your Old Carpets They won't look much better you los lime and money you never can make it as clean and h althy as a biand new carpet you'll save money to say noth ing of gain In satisfaction by coming here and bcltctlng ono from among the numberless stylennd qualities we offer come In and see If our goodh don't match our ads we have pleased others and we can easily please you. Omaha Carpet Co Jnuilm's Exclusive Carpet House , 1515 Dodge St.