'THE OMAHA' SUNDAY BEE: NOVEMBER 2 10V,.' . a TIMELY REAL ESTATE TALK Union Ptcifio Headquarters Annouacemtnt Comes Ver? Welcome. TEN STORIES FOR A MILLION DOLLARS Ur. Mohler ftse-a the Dimensions of Bntldln and Loral Architects Clve Estimate of Its Probable Coat. Ben Cotton's Residence a Handsome Addition to Omaha's List of Homes C01 TON'S FIXE NEW I1QCSE Hindsoma Residince in Which the Tamil Has Eeen Installed. 5 v ';,v."i- i- V, - .. ! .c MODIFICATION OF THE MODERN ENGLISH Convenience Seeored aad Comfort . Afforded. While Taate and Kle annre Mark the Whole In Every Reaper .' . 7 B Ten stories. Thin li to b the height of ths Union Pac.Mo headquarters building, according to an announcement Friday of Tle President Mohler. The building will 'bo 173 feet on Dodge street and 132 feet on I Fifteenth street and will contain an office pace of 150,ooo square feet. A million dollars tho structure will coat. It will be a credit to the railroad company and a . poaseaslon to which the city may point . with pride. Mr. Mohler, riven "more to action that to predicting action, cannot say when the ' work of actual construction Is to betfn. j It-will bo started as noon as the building ( on the site can be removed, and they cun j not be remove! until the present leases i expire. Some of tho leases run several . months yet. It Is noped construction may . Atari In the early spring, plans are being drawn In the office of Chief Engineer Hunt jley, who la si vine them his personal at : tentloa. The estimate of $1,000,000 a the cost of the building- was not made by Mr. Mohler, but by architects of the city. They say nuch a structure would cost at least that much, and perhaps more, for labor ttnd matcrlul may bo hlirher next yeur than this. Kruiwitis; the practloo of the com )ieny to erect Bond buildings and Mr. Hunt ley's skill In dcsljrnlns them, tho architects say the headquarters building la suro to be from the artlHtic, euhatanttHl and economi cal points of view. If the snncral idea adopted In tho construction of the shop buildings is to be followed, it Is thought the new structure will be plain, but with enough ornamentation to make It pleasing to look at. To the minds of the Omaha rJoncers the pausing of the old headquarters recalls a great deal of history, not only of Omaha I and Nebraska, but of the entire west, for I it was at Omaha an the gateway of the ' west that railroad and empire builders' dithered. Half of the old lioadnuarters was a hotel, built hy Ir. George 1 Miller, Lyman W. Richardson and others, the cornerstone belna; laid In 1RS6 by Ir. Miller, j and the building completed some time In ( the next year. It. was named the Herndon tinuse lifter tVptntn V. IL Herndon of the Vnlted KtJites navy. Joy Morton was born in this hotel. In 1S77 the Union Paclfto took charifo of the Ifemdon house and mado it headquarters. In lWfl a duplicate of the old pert was built and the railroad's lutiin wns mado us It is today, except that shout $.E,(ifW in Improvements lias been ipcnt on it since that date. Sales in the vicinity of Fifteenth and JlodKe streets, resulting from the estab lishment of the Union' Pacific headquar ters there, continue to be announced and rumored. Presumably before tho railroad deal was announced, L. V. Morse and H. A. Perry sold to Frank Parsons for about (10,500 tho Cumberland hotel property at the southwest corner of Fifteenth street and I'upitol avenue. LaM Friday deeds were placed on record showing that Mr. Parsons had sold the same property to A. n. McConnell for $18,000. It is now reported that Mr. McConnell Is negotiat ing a suit-. Another deal is rumored in tho same block, on lot 3, the lot on which the Oackh-y warehouse Is located. Just east of Sixteenth street on Capitol ave nue. It is said the owner, Harry McCor mkk, has sold an option on it to the Mu- DENTISTRY PAINLESSNESS, CLEANLINESS, RELIABILITY, MODERATE PRICES, Are tho Leading Features of My Practice. Pilllnga. $1.09 Up. DR. FICKES, DFNTl' Phone Douglas 537. 338 Bee Bldg. A few dollars of your earnings every week. The man or woman Kt'king tho safest investment for his or her funds will find absolute security and profit by opening an account with us. Six per cent paid on pavings accounts. "Why not begin to ac quire tho having habit today. We alno make monthly pay ment homestead loans. New lo cation and home, S. E. Cor. lfith F. nd Dodge Streets. OMAHA LOAII and BUILDING ASSOCIATION G. VV Loomls, Prts. G. M. Nattinger, Stcy. Bonders of Modern Houses "Ea it ever so humble There's no place like home." Your means must determine tbs tlx of your Investment Happi ness and contentment is quit as often found In a cottsgs at a palac. Draw a pencil sketch, of the bouse you would build. ' Wa tlevelop Ideas and relieve you of all the details of construction. SIII.MER & CHASE CO. Building Sites, Suburtar Acruge, Hsxss 1C09 Farn;m. Cround Floor DoueUo 3367 1 1- J -r e Vr -S-V- . '. ' 1 vl v I: : ONH END OF LIVING BOOM. 'WITH, RU Cague Investment company, the option being based on a valuation of $30,000. The Real Estate exchange Is getting busy again to see what can be done to secure the extension of water mains to residence property. J. W. Robhlns, f. tf. Curtis, K. T. Heyden. E. A. lionaon and Alex Carlton were appointed a committee to confer with the Omaha AVator company, the Water board and citizens, and report on ways and means of securing such ex tensions. Among the other subjects taken up at the last meeting of the exchange wus the bad condition of the city's streets. It was agreed that the condition was due to the opposition paving contractors have displayed toward tho city's repair plant. They say the cement era is dawning. It looks that way, judging from the story that cement la now being used its a ma terial for shingles. A late number of the Cement Era says: The cement shingles are only slightly heavier than slate and not much more expensive than the best wood shingles, and as they are practically lndestructtole they are much cheaper In the end than any other material, including tile and slate.. These shingles are made in a great varletv of designs and are reinforced with metal skeletons, which hold the cement together, and terminate in loops at the edges for nailing to the roof. They are pmctlcally everlaxtltig. as moisture, tho cause of universal decay, is the chemical agent In the vrocess of hardening cement, and when properly mixed and tempered the cement shingles become harder and more durable the more they are exposed to tho weather. Wood, of course, Is abundant in Cali fornia, and there are almost inexhausti ble deposits of slate, but for all that, cement rooflng Is growing In favor. Tlint material Is cheaper than slate and tiling and vastly more enduring than wood. Though very little farm land is chang ing hands in Nebraska, the sales that are made show a doubling In valu in the last eight or ten years, and a steady and constant Increase at present. For' In stance, Charles Markham of Hall county, last week, bought H. N; Converse's 100 acre farm, four miles north of Hastings, paying $15,250, or a little in excess of $90 an acre. Mr. Converse paid $10,000 for the land a few years ago, and It was held much higher then, of course, than it was eight or ten years ago. END OF STOREY'S "FOLLY Remnant of the Tastlo of t'hlenao's Kauioan KdHor Sold and , Demolished. "Storey's Fully." otherwise known an "tha unnnlnlii-d catitlr" ot Wilbur F. Storfy, which occupied a laige portion of a five-ai-re tract at Grand boulevard and Forty third Htreot, I'hlcafro, and wlione cellar, or "catacomb," built deep uiul massive, withstood tho forces c disintegration for a ouarter of n century, is ut last belne obliterated from the sjot on which it lian been a landmark and a marvel for no many years. Immense blocks of white marble. tho lust vestiges of the old ruin, are being removed from the lot by David Palfrey man, a landscape gardener and janitor, who lives at 4321 Vernon avenue, in the basement of a house built with stone taken from the walls of the "castle." The gardener-Janitor has purchased the last stones, tho.se in the foundations and the "catacomb," from the Btorey heirs, the family of Jlrs. Mary Chapin of South Uend, ind., at a "bargain price.' The history of tho feat at house building whereby Wilbur F. Storey, the most spec tacular editor Chicago ever h:d, proposed to build for himself the tinest house on the American continent, is familiar to many In the neighborhood, and they regret the utter defacement of the colossal monument to the "mad editor's" folly. It was In the lata '70s that Wilbur F. Btorey, the famous editor of the Chicago Times, first conceived the Idea of a greot maUKloii which he wished to stand for all time as a lasting monument to his fiKht for "a fireproof Chicago" In the stirring iiy succeeding the great fire. llo wished tlm structure to be of beautiful architecture and to exceed in grandeur anything in America. Marble from the quarries of Vermont i brought to Chicago (it a freight rol thut was a small fortune In tts-'lf. The base ment, with the celebrated vault.' was fiu ished, anJ then Storey, fancying ill Lid fall ing condition of mind that lie hail been bunkoed by tho workmen an-l contractors and had not got "v:iluo fni' hs money." tore everything ui and had n'.l rebuilt. 1 1 ordered tho architecture i haig-d from 1 Gothic to that of the old KiikI.'s.! churcl.tF. Five stories were bull I, in skeleton form. u.nd the con had ( xcicdcd SJ'V, The in terior was a labyitnth. wl'.li muny rooms having secret cntrun.es "no entrances" was what some persons whimpered. His fimtiLstl ODcration ill houio bulhiina ! caused Storey's sanity to be called In ques tion. A ronyervutor was srpolni' d, and In August, !SM. the editor was adjudged In sane, lie died two months later, leaving the r'HilVss castle as bis legacy to the cause of the "city beautiful." It was never In habited for even a day by any bdy. Clii cufio Record-Herald. HOTEL CHANGESHANDS AGAIN Cumberland nought by Frank H. Parsons Is Sold to A. B. Met onaell. Ti e t unilrf-rland hotel, which went on iiooni a few data aso as having been bought by Frank H. Parsons, has been sold by Mr. Parsons u A. P.. McConnell, tho i-orslderatlon being nmiwil at $1S,M3. The hotel is a three-story building at the sauth west corner of Fifteenth street and Cpp'.tul avenue and is h)sl!, feet. -x The sale to the I'rilun Pacific of the Kui laisi buildlnkT. 'it the noithwest torner of K-fte- n.i. yiil 1kh?v sTeeis was retold-"! Ir'j . 'i'lie i-iice giw-u !-,."'-. ! . - ... , CEPTION HALL, VESTIBULE AND MUSIC HOOJI BEYOND. LIVES LOST IN INDUSTRIES rYorkihop Accidents .tore Deadly Than Modem Wars. MOVE FOR GREATtrt LIFE PROTECTION Itallroad Csnaltlea Dnt a Small Proportion of the Mortality Record of the Indus trial World. "Taking the lowest of our three estimates of Industrial aeelden'.s, the total number of casualties suffered by our Industrial army In one year Is equal to tho average annual casualties of our civil war, plus those of the Philippine war, plus those of tho Russian and Japanese war. "Thing of our cnrrylng on throe such wars at the same time world without end:'' This is tho rather startling way in which Dr. Joflah Strong, president of the Amer ican Institute o Social Service, emphasizes the fearful sacrlllce of life to "our indus trial Juggernaut.' The comparison between the loss of life in the Industries and In war falls, of course, at one point. War Is altogether destructive, while the industries give some thing in return for lives taken. lr. Strong at the outset of his article In the North American Review calls at tention to the fact that while the railroad casualties attract a great deal of atten tion, they are only a small proportion of tho casualties thut take pluce In the In- dustrlal world. "It Is Important to gain pome Idea of I the great numbers who are annually ftie riflced by accidents Inf our American in dustries," ways Dr. Strong. "As compared with Kuropcan governments, our stute legislatures havo generally been strangely indifferent to tho whole subject. Tho laws of only eleven of our slates require the reporting- of accidents in factories; and a careful examination reveals but a single state whose laws require the reporting of accidents In all Industries." Record of sv Year. Working, however, from data derived from widely divergent sources. Dr. Strong shows the minimum number of Industrial accidents in this country in a year must be considerably more than 600,000. "When In all history." ho asks, "have two great armies lecn ublo to Inflict on I each other a total of oOU.OOO casualties In a slnrle year? Thin is 50 per cent more than aJl the killed nnd wounded in the late wur between Japan and Russia. "There are more casualties on our rail ways In a single year than there were on ! both sides of the Boer war in three years, j "I.at year, on our railways, we killed as many every thirty-seven days and 1 wounded as many every twelve days as l all our killed und wounded in the 2f6l en gagements of the rhlllpplno war. Or, in other words, there were twenty. four times j us many casualties on our railways in j one year as our army suffered in the rhll lpplno war in three years and three months. , 'At thut rate we might have continued the war for seventy-eight years before ' equaling the record of our railways In u I twelve month. And we must not forget ; that less than or.e-flfth of the losses of j our Industrial army aTe suffered on our j railways. That Is to say, we might carry on a half ducen Philippine wars for tnrec quarters of a century with no larger num ber of total casualties than take placo yearly in our peaceful industries. "We are waging a perpetual war on hu manity," says Dr. Strong, "and one which Is apparently growing bloodier from year to year." Europe l.rsds America. He quotes government statistics to show Hiat on the railroad?, to a plven number of jiassengers, then: wore tlce as many kllhtl In lima ns In 1SK5. "Kuropo. Ii far In advance of America i in protecting workmen from needless Oc cidents both by legislation and by safety appliances. The Association of French In dustrialists for the Prevention of Acd- by :eaon of Its varied and ben- fl- dents cent activities, was devlured to In of pub lic utility' as long ago as 1SS7. There win o General Exposition or Accident lTeven tlon In Gennaiiy In Ins?. Immediately after lis close there was oiganlted in Vienna a Mtueuin of Security and of Industrial ilyglcno. There are now half a diaen such mu-3t-imi. in Europe, ono Laving been organ- Ucd In Purls last December, and formally opened by the president of the republic, liven backward nus.-la shama us by her Museum of Security at Moscow. Austria has hud a score of expositions of suf-tv appliances for tho education of the people. "Guv crmm nis and piiblic-:lrlted clU- reus have, vied wiih eax h othi re In pro- tiling funds for such Institutions. Here Hi greatest or all industrial peoples hns not see a native. The island of Luzon ulone attempted little by legislation and nothing ' Is over 7'J) miles long; most all its popula by organUcd effort. j tlon live along the seacoast; but were lis "In view of these facts, it In not strange I wonderful resources developed many times tiiit Ht tlie same Industries (rvllroadlriv; , Its present population might dmell th.re i-i and mining), of a given number of men employed we kill sud Injure from two to nine times as niutiv as they do tn Furope. "This Industrial slaughter Is utter, utier wasti wasted resources, wasted unguis'i, win led life. And. aithougli the greater part of this F iriltlce is as needless as it is use .ss. It goes wearily on year after yeur. ; T'le price of our selfish Indifference Is never paid, "It is t!l to nd the barbarities of war. Is it not tini.- to place some limit -to the barbarities f peace- l o tn's era the American Institute Social Set vl.-e I- to li..M an exposition ..utty il-.'its at the A uu. riven Mu-unt j i I' 1 7 r ... it Natural History In New York January 2$ to February !, lfTT." PHILOSOPHY FOR INSOMNIACS llotv the Terrors of sleeplessness Muy He MUUated If Ion Have the Xerve. Why make a bugbear out of lnomniu.'.' Why T'ot use it as a sen-ant Instend of whining under It as a master? "All we, like sheep." want to Jump over the same place in the wall at the same time. We are all clmntlnir the refrain, 'eight hours' work, eight hours' piny, eight hours' sleep" and we are trying pell-mell to realize It together, r.ut that Is Impossible! industrially and physically. We cannot time our lnbnr hours to a simultaneous eight. What n looking world this would be if we were nil whlxilng togother In the same eight hours for recreation. It Is Just ns Impossible and just ns ridiculous to try to bunch our sleep Into a common eight. Yet we are storm ing the skies and making life wean- to the rest of mankind with our complaints that we cannot execute the latter feat. To begin with, nnst people do not need eight hours' sleep. 1 never had eight hours' con secutive sleep In my life that was not the sleep of exhaustion that was not a siirn that something had been done that could not he continued without serious Inmnds on vitality. Seven hours Is all have been ablo normally to utilize. That amount of sleep I have rarely had consecutively. I have had my midnight wake from child hood. One of the most vivid and abiding memories of the old homo is the attic win dow, with Its seven-by-nlne panes, toward which I turned back my head, year in and year out, to make sure by Its light that I was not buried alive. I had tho muiw room college, for three years. It fronted wopt overlooking I should say overhear ingthe Connecticut valley. . I have as distinct recollection of the midnight train tolling up that valley as I have of tho 5 o'clock m'onilnsr hell that called to chapel. I heard it as often. The midnight wake has been the habit of niy whola life. Since I have, had sens enough to adapt myself to it instead of flprhtlng it I havs had some comfort. I find the rule with myself is to sleep when I nm sleepy. This has always called for an after-dinner nap. When I have had that for ten to thirty minutes I havo had a new half day. I pity myself now to think that back as fa.r as my college days I did not habitually take that sedative ti nerv ous exhaustion. I fought sleep then us if I were fighting- "with beasts at Ephesus." Now for the midnight wake. I have found that I enjoy my mind and favor my Doay Dctter and fall asleep quicker by try ing to do some good, honest work In thought rather than to toss about and in dulge In objurgation because sleep will not come. I can think myself Into position for the work of another day, can polish on essuy, or take a bout with some prob lem In science, psychology or ethics, and the first thing I know the bell of the o'clock train is ringing at the station. In this way I get rid both of myself and "the cares that infest the day." Now, mine may be an Individual case, but I imagine there are many Individual cases of this sort among men. I nm as thankful for the hour of my midnight wake ns for any other hour of my life.-Charl"i Caverns in Chicago Advance. CHARMS THAT PALL QUICKLY urprl.lnB Diversity of Philippine Climate and Marvels of Seenerr. li seems to me that the leaat appreciated feature of the Philippines is the diversity of climate. Though tho Philippines are oil in tho tropics, y. t frequently within a day's travel one will come upon strong climatic contrasts. Whether you go to the lovely, cool moun tain plateaus or down to the wanner cities of tlv- level, you will find that, though there aro tho changes of the seasons, still the climate from 'day to day varies little. liy dressing properly one docs not feel tho heat so much. Manila, the hottest in the Philippines, is often Intensely warm in March, April and May; yet prostrations never come an thev j '" New York. In midsummer, and. above ait, there are cool lUghts everywhere. Perhaps no country In the world pos-ses-i-s ro many scenic marvels as the Phll- i lpptnes; regions which, were they known, would attract tourists the world over. There Is the wonderful Taol volcano, rising from the middle of a lake; there are the vast Cordilleras, not surpassed In beauty arid grandeur by any ranges In the world: there aro the wonderful mountain plateaus and valleys covered with seas of rich and ' waving gross and bordered by forested hog. back?, which project Ir.to them as capes prcject into the ocean. Here wild deer and boar roam In great abundance, , hlle occasional herds of wih; ; carabao move clumsily over the ground. Terliups for deys In these regions one may great prc.Hrerlty.-Hamllton Wright, In L s llus Weekly. CI'T GLAPS-Frenrer, loth and Vxtt Births aad Daertiis. The following births ia4 deaths were re- ported to the Board of Health during the twenty-four hours ending Saturday noon: Births Willis Yates. 3 youth Thirty liit, girl; J. B. Gibson, J)- Urirnnre avs- Inae. boy; Kdward Crook. :':13 Leavenworth boy. Deaths Orvln . Vlckroy, 3K.T1 North Flf- 'If; ufltentu avenue. ,i; Georse W. Wir.l.im ! Wirt. ; Herman Kounlse. Forest mil.' Joseph H'jelger. Thirteenth and r..ii! t)-'; MurtLa Jau Jacvii, Gothenburg, iu. if 4 v '"."UTT: I f f 1 r ... i-r ':.."'V 7 3. .. - .,r. - LIVING ROOM AND PORTION OF DINING ROOM. COUNTY AUDIT PLAN POPULAR Proposition to Vake Clerk Fraoticallj Comptroller Meets No Opposition. URE'S SCHEME OF BUING SUPPLIES RAPPED Oome Officials Believe Tims to Kw power Board Would Be like niacins a Clnb In Its Hands. No opposition lias so far developed to the plan proposed Thursday afternoon at the meeting of county officials to make ths county clerk auditor of county accounts with practically the same powers and du ties in county affairs that the city comp troller has In city affairs. The recom mendation was made by County Clerk Hav erly, with an additional recommendation that the salaries in the office be placed on the same basis as the help In tho other offices. Tho some proposal to combine the two offices was made by Mr. I're when the Joint meeting of county officials was first proposed several months ago and it is en dorsed by County Auditor Smith. County Clerk Ilavorly declares It is the clear Intent of the law to make the county clerk auditor of all bills filed for payment and his recommendation is merely for leg islation to carry out and make more spe cific the evident purpose of the present law. Those who have examined the stat utes differ as to whether the county clerk or the county board is really empowered to audit bills. The county board has claimed the power and under the claim has ap pointed a county auditor to do the work for it. The law Is said to be rather Indefinite and a number of county officials would like to see It changed so as to provide an elec tive official responsible to the people alone to go over all bills as they are filed and the accounts of the various offices In which money Is collected far the county. Opposition to One Plan. Some opposition has been aroused to one recommendation of Commissioner Vro In this connection. One of his proposals was to prohibit tho county clerk from ordering any supplies or employing any help with out the consent of the county board. Those who oppose the plan declare It would give the county board a club to wield over tho head of the county clerk If his appoint ments had to go through the hinds of the members of the board. County Auditor Smith has a proposal which may bo presented at the next meet ing of the officials. He proposes that all certified copies of official records bo coun tersigned by the county treasurer before they are delivered to applicants for them. At present there is no way by which the county can check the number of these rec ords furnished by the different offices or the amount of fees that ought to be col lected for them. If the treasurer were re quired to countersign them beforo they were delivered he would have' a check on the office furnishing tho record. W. 1. Klerstend's plan for an Insanity commission, composed of the county cArrk, county attorney and county physician, which would save the county about $3,000 a year In fees pahl to the insanity commis sion under tho present law, was objected to In one detail by H. T. Clarke, Jr., at tho meeting Thursday. Mr. Clarke declared If he ever had to be examined for insanity he wanted the examination made by an expert in mental diseases and not by tho county physician, who might or might not be an alienist. Mr. Klerstead says his pleu might be revised In this one detail and still effect a great saving to the county. MOTHER WILL IGNORE ORDER Mrs. Basaett Determined Not to Sur render Children on Deeree from Washington Court. A decree affecting the custody of the. chil dren or In T property Interests, which may be entered by the court at Washington will not be recognized as being- legally binding by Mrs. Fuiinie Rice Dassett, who Is de fendant in u suit at Washington and pluln- tin In a divorce suit here against Charles C. Bassett. Judge I. F. Haxter, who Is Mrs. HhshcU'u t attorney In Omaha, declares that not hav ! ing secured service on Mrs. Iiassett the court there can make no order affecting the children, which are in her custody. In cae an attempt is made to enforce such an order the case decided by the supreme court I last summer, which created samething of a stir in divorce court circl-s, will be ap pealed to as a basis for a tight agulnst the order. In that suit the supreme court practically -ald a divorce decree where no actual serv ' tee was had on the defendant was not en forceable outside the limits of the stute In which It was granted. No service has been had on Mrs. Hassett and she Is not uppcar- - ! 1 'I I - . - i , . I 1 ..,.V.Vr -V Ing In tho case, consequently pho will not recognize the decree. Her case here Is still pending nnd prob ably will be heard some time next month. As personal service was had on her hus band in that cao, It will not come under the rule luld down by the supreme court. LEEDER GETS BOOST FOR BILL Kinds Chicago System Sncressfiil and Heeelves Support for Double Shift In Oniaba. Representative-elect l,eeder has Just re turned from Chicago, where he went to seo the operation of the two-platoon or double fchlft system and is enthusiastic over what hrf saw. "I talked wllh Mayor Dunne and he tells me they will have tho system completely Installed and in active operation all over the city by Juu.V Rild Mr. Deeder. "Mayor Dunne Is heartily co-operating with the firemen; he hns their Interests Ht heart and !s going to see that nothing he is able to do to promote this proposition is left undone. "If this system Is good for Chicago, H Is good for Omaha. And we are going to have It. This next legislature is going to give It to us. The fire and pollco board could have done it long ago, but it chose not to. It can arrange the hours of tho policemen, why not of the firemen? They tell us firemen sit there nil day long with nothing to do. That's true sometimes, and sometimes the fireman is the busiest man all day long In the state. But busy or not he is constantly subject to the most dan gerous of duties. His Is the most hazardous work there Is. almost. Ask the insurance companies. And It Is desperately hard work. Aside from the constant danger of losing his life, the fireman Is deprived of home pleasures: ho la almost a stranger to his family. Is this right? What other class of workmen under the city government of Omaha hns to suffer this injustice? Certain men those who went or rent to the legislature last session und finally ac complished the defeat of our hill by Just eleven votes tell y&u 'we taxpayers' can't afford this additional cost of government. Who are we taxpayers? Go to tho city treasurer's ofllce and see how many poor old firemen in Omaha there are who are paying taxes on homes they have bought through their small salaries. Are not they entitled to say what 'we taxpayers' shall and shall not do? It seems to mo the tiro men have a double right In this matter. "I um meeting with the most encouraging en-operation in Omaha for my bill, ami I do not believe the lobby that defeated It two years ago can defeat it this winter. The powers that governed me two years ao would not let me go down to Lincoln and work "for the bill as others worked against It, but by the grace of those powers' popu larity (?) 1 shall go to this legislature, not as a lobbyist, but as a member." Mr. Irf-eder Is the veteran fireman who was discharged by the Board of Fire and Police Commissioners for projecting him self as n candidate for the legislature. EASY TO ELEVATE CHECKS W. F. Oldham Points Oat Koine Tricks that Are Difficult to Detect. "The tricks and devices by which checks aro 'raised' are almost numberless," ul W. F. Oldham, who represents a devlc for preventing tampering with cheeks "Bankers and others who have much to d with checks cannot be too careful In the' examination of all pHper that comes undo their hands. Take, for example, a chee' for tifOO. Notice how easily it Is raised t 1M by merely adding other lines. Th written word 'two' can be changed to the written word 'five' by the addition of Jus two strokes, a dot and one loop. The (irs' stroke is ucrots the 'T,' the second stroke Is ndiled to the first part of the W nnd a dot placed over it making this an 'I;' then lie second part of the -w' Is a 'v' and b putting u loop at the top of the 'O' you lmve nn 'li.' "Hut c'liei ks are often raised by changing all except ;he signature. Acids that will take out Ink und leave the, aper Intact ate common. When this fort of fraud be came too common the watermark paper was Invented. Then when the acid wus u.)ed to take out the ink it took the water mark with it and showed plainly that the cheek hud been tampered wllh. Hut the clever fellows who were raising checks met the water murk with another Inven tion, namely, an a-ld which made the water murk fixed so that when the aed was put on to take the ink out tho water mark was not disturbed. "Check protecting devices now are mostly of the kind that cut through the paper after the check has been written." Mayor Mchuilts Starts Hume. NKW YORK. Nov. y. Mayor Kugene Acliinlis of Han Francisco, ho arrived heie Friday on the sl-uiner Patricia froiu Km ope, start-d for San Francisco toilav. The liandsome new residence of Mr. and Mrs. Pen Cotton at Thlrty-'eighth and lewoy avtnue. completed last spring. Is an iidinlmble specimen of that class ot new homes tm longer conspicuous In the west end that, while considerably beyond ths reach of the malority, are still not to ba classed with Omaha's more pretentious residences. Architecturally Its Interior is one or tho most attractive of this year's hulldlnas. It was designed by F. A. Ilennlng-r and cost SlO.noo. it Is a modl Pontlon of the modern English style, that conforms the qunint, substantial elegwnca of n period past to the present day Idea, -if the aesthetic and convenience. Its de tails are rich nnd effective, and contribute a unlonc, feature that adds much to Its attractiveness. The living rooms of the first floor era ptactlrally thrown together by larae squar columned openings and pedestaled par thions, the city affording; few other Il lustrations of this style. A living room, reception hall, rnusio roo;n and dining room constltiitn the first floor. Living apartments and all are visible from the front entrance, together with the stair way which Is directly opposite the door. The front door admits one to a small vesti bule that Is screened rather than separated from the reception hall by the half par titions that are only as high as tint five foot wainscoting. The door opening' formed hy square columns and Is about the width of the average doorway, the column oceiirlng again at tho corners of the vesti bule, affording h shelf between that admita of exceptional decorative possibilities. The same columned doorways, only much bronder, and the half wall connect rather than separate tho rooms and hall. The music room at the north end of the house is lighted and extended by three recessed windows on the north, with the window scat below, and another window on the east. Across the hall extendlnr to the south end of the house Is the living room twenty-four by seventeen feet, and to the west of this, conrtectod by a wide doorway, the dining room. On the east side of the living room ara two windows, and on the south on either side ot the broad mantle a French window opens onto the broad, inclosed veranda. Throughout the first floor the woodwork Is of mahogany, a five-foot paneled wainscot ing and beamed ceilings being used In all but the dining room. In the living rmm, , above tho wainscoting, the walls are eov ' ered with dark green burlap, a slatted ef ' feet being- accomplished by the extension of tho plain, flat window casing up to the ' moulding. The beams are plain and cross the celling at Intervals of seven feet one way nnd five the other. The low partition between the living room nnd reception hall is inset with book cases with leaded doors. The chimney breast at the south end is of gray brick, crossed by a mahogany shalf and the fireplace is broad and low. Tho hall and music room have tho same dark green burlaped walls. The dining room has also the paneled wainscoting, but not the beamed ceiling, and the walls are cov ered with brown burlap nbove a narrow shelf that tops the moulding. The south end Of the room, in occupied by four win dows, the room being further lighted by threo high windows on the west. A nar row moulding is used close to the celling and the two doors leading to the. hull and butler's pantry are high and heavy. The stairway, while not a showy feature. Is peculiarly harmonious. With a few steps extending Into the hull, directly, op posite thev vestibule, and flanked by a broad, extended seat, the stairway rises wldo and inclosed to a commodious, well lighted landing, suggestive of room, light and airy above. From the landing It crosses back to ,the floor abovs. The upstairs rooms fulfill all that the stairway suggests, being large nnd airy and finished with white woodwork. SUIT TO SAVE TRADE MARK Action Broasht by PllUlinrys to Pro tect Their A tamp from In fringement. The Plllsbury-Washburn Flour Mills company of Minneapolis has brought suit In the Fiilled States circuit court to re strain the Galloway Flour Mill and Eleva tor company of Omaha and WlUlur.i C, Clyde W. and Arthur T. Galloway from further Infringement of the trade mark of the PUIsbury-Washburn company, known as "Plllsbury's Best" flour nnd asks that the defendants be perpetually restrained ''nm using tho sacks of the Pillsbury cpm- ny to put nn Inferior grade of flour 1n T.tha purpose of sale and "thereby fle- -'vlng the public." tn tho petition Ihe rillabury people claim ey have already been damaged to the nount of $;.".fl(!0 in the sale of flour and ive suffered an additional damage of 1 nofl.OOO through the discredit given their -do mark by the practices of J lie Omaha impany. ' No damages are ssked In the petition. bough Ihe Pillshury company claims to ' sreatlv darrared. All the company asks "i this suit Is that the Galloway company ay be nerpetusl-y restrained . from cort "nulng the practice. RANDEIS BLOCK IS CHOSEN Will Be Home of Omaha Grata G. change and Offices of Dealers. " 1 " The proposed plan to move the Omaha Grain exchange ond the offices of the vari ous grain tli ms to the top floor of too new P.mrd'-ls bui'dlng u taking definite shape. It Is raid that ai! :.J grain men In the Hoard of Trade building but one have signed nn agreement to remove to tho Piamlels building, provided the exchange will move and provided satisfactory tem.s of rent can be arranged. The exchange Ik offered quarters free. It is said the Hrandels firm proposes. In case the Commercial club does not take quarters in the new building, to eatablUh a cafe und smoking and billiard rooms oa the top floor. SCALLD fACHAfttJ UK 1UUS, ROTCCTIOM