THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: TEBUTJAUT 24, 1907. HO STAMPS FOK JAMESTOWN TIMEU REAL ESTATE TALK. Debet m t Vfei wm Bs U Tmt FriBfr.pel Etail Street- trrtCT or cites, towm lines ck tiafic Handsome Homes That Adorn the Shady Avenues of Bemis Park FsstbfCos Bepartiueit XVeidfti to Allow tl Exposition as laras. f JDMN SKiTH AND PCCAHANTAS NOT ON r ' -v EsIm4 Will Ket K ImsBertellseel Oeetred fae i ;r . . j . . I I k 1 . N by avlms Ktaesr4 ea a Steel Gasrailag aed eld (er Twa ( eats. ttkm fr sesrtte tsteewte. a Otkn ( rtk M Oeelos At a meeting of advertising men om night lent week . A. Benaun made lb rcvd-ie- tion that Twenty-fourth u( Farnam vtrej'ta would one flay be the center of ths retail district of Omaha and that Omaha a main retail street would be Twenty-fourth street, between Leavenworth and Cuming streets. Tbe building of a cross-town street oar line, tbe oomtng of teterurban Une.a, the fact that Twenty-fourth street la In line from Florence and Benaon to South Omaha and the general growth of the city from tlie river westward were given hy Mr. Benson as reasons for his belief. He said the only way to hold the business where It now is. is to build a free brides over tbe Missouri river to attract tbe trade of CooncU Bluffs, which is not farther from Omaha than some of tbe outlying districts of tbe city. D. C Patterson then explained Ms rea sons for , nty business would run south om Sixteenth street and Sixteenth and How. ard would become the renter. Alexander Charlton told why the retail cent! r was bound to work north on Sixteenth street. Bach of the speakers had hlF adhcre-its. and from the liveliness of the disc -asion It sms doubtful that tbey will ever agree oa the matter. The probability of crown-town line has much to do with the location of new build ings on streets where lines would be likely to go in the next few years and also on the character of buildings creeled rn these streets. . Just at present every man who Intends emoting buildings on Twenty fourth street has some problems to figure ut with regard to these things. Bd (X Mid B P. Hamilton have these things to thick about In planning for tnelr SiO.MiO flat building at' Twenty-fourth and Farnam streets. Tborwald. the old home of John M. Thurston, at the northwest intersection of those streets, la to be moved way and a fins five-story flat building, in appearance much like the Hamilton flats on the same block, is to be built there. Whether to place the building at the west nd of tbe property, leaving a broad ex panse of lawn in frost or to plan It along Twenty-fourth street, that part of the Prompt is ONE of the things -which has made the Equitable Life Assurance Society OF THE UNITED STATES PAUL MORTON. PRESIDENT STRONGEST EWORLD Notwithstanding the recent rigid examination, perhaps the hardest test ever given any life assurance society, THE EQUITABLE still holds that distinction. STRONG FINANCIALLY PROMPT IN SETTLEMENTS The Omaha Bed TrIC Btt PuuaM!r Co. PKOPHrFTCl, 'DAILY, ImornmsmndEncws SUNCAX WLLK1Y. C ROStWATt. Carves Mr. H. D. Neely, Manager, The Equitable Life Assurance Sooiety of. the U. S., Omaha, Neb. My Dear Sir:-- I am glad to acknowledge receipt of your Society's check, paying the claim presented to your office in Omaha, September 12, 1906, on policies on the life of my father, the Hon. Edward Rosewater. My father's life was insured for $201,449.00 in fourteen different companies, the largest amount in any onei company being held in the Equitable, and you have made good your assertion that the Equitable would be the first to pay any money to the estate. Thanking you in behalf of all th-' family and executors for the prompt mannar in which you have made the settlement, I remain. Tours very truly, H D. NEELY. Manager for Nebraska I5M4-5 KeretiBls Kafie&al Bank EaUdkg, - - - GXUA UU BEXKY EE01VN. Cashier Cecrce ILL Cooper, fl. ray Ncely. Ceteral Agrats, Omaha Joe Klein, Ceteral Acts, Lkctla. Kck. - 4 C'C-y till L,:P7ii;7 jv; - TOLF HAKKET?. THlHTT-FUfRTH AND LTNTOLN BOTXEVARH. lower floor may be utilised for stores, is tbe question. Of course, a street car line cross ing Farnam at Twenty-fourth would nuJte such stores valuable. Borne argue that a 11ns on Twenty-fourth street would injure that street by scatter ing stores and brick rooming bouses among the dwelling houses, while at tbe same time it would detract from tbe Importance of Sixteenth street. Others argue that clusters of business houses would arise only at the intersection of cross-town lines with the east and west lines, and Twenty-fourth street would be greatly benefited by street cars. The opening of spring will find the con tractors through with most of the big Jobs they have under way and ready to begin on the big structures to be erected by the Northwestern, Union Pacific and Herman Cohn. In all probability the Brandeis build ing will be the only one which is far from completion when the construction of other new ones begins. Work on this structure has been moving very slowly in the last two or three months. The Methodist hos pital on Cuming street is another building which has been rising very slowly, but the third story has now been completed. The Payment a Sept. 17, '06. Ff: v - 7 Yu77r"--7 z ;-r . : i7:0 - l. r ,..-r: I -".,V4.- ' -i: : jll. J. v. i i Carpenter I'aper company's building- at Ninth and Harney streets la as far as the floor of the fourth story. Interior work Is being done on the Rome hotel. Work men will begin laying- brick on the addi tional three stories of the Racine-Sattley company's building as soon as Uis weather gets warm. Perhaps the quickest irk that has beea done In Omaha the last two yers was on tbe Nash warehouses for M. K. Smith A Co both of which are under cover before the time set In the contract. The roof Is partially laid on both, on one two months before tbe time set and on one a month early. Two or three months will be re quired to do the work on tbe interior. J. H. Pumont & Son report the follow ing sales for last week: The home tf S. E. Howell on Park avenue, to Oran E. Klapp; tw.o acres In Solomon's adcTitlon, to Robert Wiklund; a house at iulB Blondo street and another, 1017 North Thirty-fourth street (Bemis park), to Mrs. Settle Schuhl, for investment; 160 acres in Kimball .oounty, belonging to an east ern estate, to a local sj-ecuiator. "Some day when I have plenty of time to get the information required, I shall figure out the number of brick used In Omaha in a year and the distance thty would reach if laid end to end," said J. C. Ward is of the Capitol City Brick and Pipe company. I believe it would astonish even a builder." The remark was made lust after Mr. Mardis had figured on a piece of paper for a few minutes and had oome to the conclusion that the brick In the M. EL Smith warehouses, laid end to end, would reach a distance of more than 1,100 miles, or about two and two-thirds tbe length of tbe state of Nebraska. Forty trains of material of twenty cars each have been used on those two buildings. The demand for building sites la Increas ing and each day the real estate men have numerous Inquiries from purchasers who wish to build homes. While the bull dins in Omaha has kept the pace with other cities for the last year it has been mostly for large retail concerns and lobbing houses. There Is a great demand for houses. This is to be expected, for every line of Industry has been increased and mors men havs been put to work, so It is of course necessary that these find houses in which to live. With the increase of but a few extra trains the street railway com pany finds Itself with 100 mors men on the pay roll than at this time last year. Other labor employing firms have Increased in tbe same way and the addition of a few here and a few there ium added to the population of Omaha. The supply of dwelling quarters for colored families has for years been limited in Omaha, but a tendency to invest In such dwellings has developed lately aud houses will be mors plentiful before the Tear is out. The latest announcement of new quarters for colored people nas been made by M. F. Martin, who will eren a three-story brick building at Twenty fourth and Cuming streets, whore be baa Just bought a lot. Bids will be asked In a few days for the construction of the Toung Women s Christian association building, so the asso ciation officers say. The plans iind tbe specifications have been completed and now await tbe approval of the beard of directors. Test holes are now being ,unic In the site of the building to determine how deep the Inundation will have to go. Bhlmer sc Chase have arranged 1 1 red seven new houses In Bouevard park this spring. These axe all for different jieopie, and In addition to these four or five others are about to be started. A visiting real estate man last week .sug gested to the Real Estate exchange a pbti. for advertising the west, and the n. li ter is to come up for discussion la the ex change. Tbe man was John Malone of Denver, an officer of the Denver exchange, lie suggested an organisation, its person nol to be made np of members of real eat lis exchanges of the various cities of the wm t and us object to be tbe advancement ef the entire west. Mr. Malone thinks Ne braska. Colorado. Vtah and California can work together far their mutual benefit. Many of the local realty men think the plan worthy of consideration. "Bill" MoCune. who catches the Indians lor "Buffalo. BUI wild West show, is a resident of Omaha and believes In Omaha's future. Am fast as bs gets any money ba Is investing It In local real estate. Be has bought three residence properties In tbe last few months, the latest being a B3.a house at Twenty-fifth and Caldwell streets. Bs will spend some more of his money in building another bouse beside It. "No Be at tie er Xjos Angeles for me, says Mr. Mo Cune. "and no farm lands either. Omaha really looks good to me and every dollar X caa get I am going to put tnt tt" John A. Cushlng has bought from W. M Aldersnn a ninety-acre farm three and one-half miles south of Be roth Omaha, pay ing fls an acre. Tbe office of A. T. Tukey It Soa has beaa Anmg a roaming business hi the last few days. This concern has luxt aeonrvd CSO.WI of property belonging to one concern and baa placed ft en the market. Moat ef the property was obtstnel by f '-recloue p-o-osedlngs and settlements. Among the pieces old are: Thirty-nve lota In Kelley's ad dition, south of ths Country club, at fS each. A strln of seventeen and one-half feet oa Farnam street at about tbe place where Twenty-second street should bs was wild tbe first thing. Seven lots In Bowling Oreem, west of Dundee, went at 130 each, and four acre tm Bonflsld aoulh at Buser s iFark. SEW FARMS FUR TflOUSAXDS Kuy i.eret in Blaok Hills Eseion te It Added to Arrioulton. GRLAT BELLE F0URCHI IRRIGATION PROJECT esse Dv tailed Iefersnatlea Ceaerra las tbe Ills I ndertaktas; the las; te Cesssletlea. BELLE FOURCHE. fS. D.. Feb. 3 (Spe cial.) Every one has beard or read cf the Belle Fourche Irrigation project under con struction by the government of the Vnited States under the condition! of the reclam ation act of June 17, 1C but few. even here, outside of those directly interested or having something to do with it. know much or anything of its details, and few people in tbe east know anything what ever about It. The Belle Fourche Irrigation project will, when completed. Irrigate about 100,(100 acres of land, most of which Is north of the Belie Fourche river, about K..&I0 acres In Butte county and the balance in Meade county. No attempt will be mad at the beginning to Irrigate land with a slope of more than t per cent. The water for irrigation win be taken out of the Belle Fourche river about a mile and a half below the city of Belle Fourche by means of a diverting dam. This Is of solid cement or concrete SW feet long and Just high enough to raise the water out of the banks of the river. This dam is flanked on the south side by a dirt wing about ten feet higher than the concrete dam. and win be faced on the upper side with stone. In a flood the water will run over ths con crete dam onto an apron of stone and con crete to prevent washing. There are gates in this dam so that ordinarily the water of the river can be turned through without raising 1t stage tnatnially. When water is turned Into the Inlet canal the stage of the river will be raised enourh to form I lake extending to Belle Fourche. The di verting dam is now complete with excep tion of snrne ef tbe ferine; on the dirt wing and one section of the concrete dam tn the middle of the river, which will be com pleted early rn tbe summer, as soon as work can be resumed. Isxlllarr Werk AWee Real Gatew. The head gates opening tnte tbe Inlet canal are north of and adjoining the eon' Crete dam. The canal starts from the bead gates and runs northeast acmes Crow creek, where there Is another concrete dam or sluice, with gatea In order to com plete the diverting dam the river win be turned into the inlet canal by means of a coffer dam and let through tbe gates In tbe Crow creek sluice and ran back into ths liver a short distance below. Tbe Inlet canal Is forty feet wide on the bottom, sixty feet wide on top and eerrles ten feet or 1.S31 cubic feet of water per second, and is about six and a half mflee long to where it empties mto the dry creek be sin through a cut rn the divide forty-four feet deep. The failure of the Wldell-Finley company a year am, who bad this oontraet, has delayed the completion of this somewhat. but the work has been pushed by the gov ernment engineers and will bs completed early tn the summer. Great Storage mi etr. The storage dam la Just below erheie Dry creek empties Into Owl creek and about twelve miles northeast of Belle Fourche. This is of earth, will be CB0 feet long on top, IIS feet high In the center of Owl oreek, 100 feet through at tbe base and twenty feet wide on top and will be faced on the upper side with concrete blocks eight Inches thick to prevent wash ing. This will make a reservoir with a capacity ef 230.000 acre feet, or enough water to cover 226, QUO acres ons foot deep, an but about 1.000 acre feet of which can be drawn off through the steel and ood crets gates which will be pat In the dam. This reservoir will cover about LOOP acres when full, about 1.300 acres at ths level of tbe gates, thirteen miles lens; cZ deep water from the mouth of the inlet canal on Dry creek to the upper end of the res ervoir on Owl creek above the dam and will nave a shore 11ns of more than Aft y 1 miles. In building this dam ' the dirt If put on in layers about ten Inches thick, thoroughly wet and rolled down with heavy traction engines. Tbe dirt is han dled by the use of a large steam shovel and four narrow-gauge engines and trains of ten dump cars each on a track, two elevating graders drawn by traction en gines and teams with dump wagons. About 2. (KM yards of dirt are moved in this way per day when all of tbe ma chinery Is used. Ormaa ft Crook, the con tract era. have a second steam shovel on the track ready te take out te the work and other machinery ordered. It will take three years yet te complete this dam. but as aeon as it is oompleted te a height above tbe outlet gates water caa be turned through and into tbe ditches Work en this data has been suspended for tbe winter, as tbe froeen dirt ran not be rolled down. Werk em tbe CaaaL The north side canal from ths dam to Ic dian criisk. about nine miles kng. Is about & per oant completed, but a large part ef ths remaining work Is in a deep cut in which Orrou A Crook have their steam shovel at work. It will be finished the coming summer. Indian creek will bs crossed by a steel and concrete syphon. Tbe south aide canal from the dam to tbe Belie Fourche river, about nine miles long. Is very nearly completed. Water will be turned Into this this summer. Water from this flitch will be carried across the Bells Ftmrche river through a arvbua Ave test la d meter running under CHARLES a BEUEX, SS HA1TTHORB AVJENLJB. tbe river. Tbe canal south of tbe river has been surveyed and work already com menced on the approaches to a tunnel nearly a quarter of a mile long, which will be lined with concrete and be eight feet wide and six feet high inside. To furnish the gravel for all of the con crete work on the storRgp dam nml below. of which a great deal has already been used In sluices, bridge abutments, etc., Orman Crook have opened a gravel pit on the north side of the river, five miles smith of the flam. The g-svel is bundled with horses, run through a rock rrupher driven by steam, eievnted, screened and run into bins, from which It Is run into wagons and hauled to where it is used by thlrty-two-horse power Reeves traction en gines, hauling trains of four wngon each. These trains load about forty-two tons each. A narrow gauge railroad is being built and hereafter grovel will be hauled to the dam by trains. About three months ego Orman & Crook completed a three-Inch artesian well at their Owl creek camp. 1.407 feet dep. which flows about sixty gallons of water per minute with a temperature of M degrees. They have made a contract to have ar-. other well put down, which is to be eight Inches in diameter at the top and five ut the bottom. Gevernmeat Ex-serisseatal Farm. The northeast quarter of section 24. town ship north, range 5 east, has been se lected by the Department of Agriculture as an experimental farm: about half of this will be Irrigated, ths balance will be above the ditch, so that experiments will be made In both Irrigated and dry farming This win be of Inestimable value te the residents of the Irrigable area, as well as to those outside. A part of this land will be broken this year. It was Intended to break some of It last year, but for some reason It was not dons. Bites for severtfl towns have been reserved by the government: Section 2, township north, range east, known as tbe townsite. as It is the prin cipal one; the northeast U of section 14, township north, range 4 cast, about four miles east of the dam; the northeast Vi of section 1. township 8 north, range 7 east, northeast of the village of Vale, and It Is quite likely that a town will bt built south of the tlVer, either at Vale or at some point west of there, but as that is all patented land, that cannot be a government proposition. Oeet ef Watew RlSTbtm. The oost per acre for the water win be about B2. payable to ten equal yearly pay ments of about & each, without Interest. This will Include maintenance for the first ten rears. We b-'lleve that this is little more than a fair rei-tal for tbe water, even if it had to be paid for all time. No pav ment win be required until the first crop has been raised by the use of the water, provided the water Is turned onto the land on or before April 1. When the water right Is paid for It becomes appurtenunt to. or belongs to. the land, after which there will be no cost, except a small amount for maintenance and administration of the project by the Belle Fourche Valley Water Users' association, of which every person owning land under the ditch is a member. All dams, flumes, gates, etc. will be built to such an absolutely permanent manner of steel and concrete that the cost for MDalrs will be very light. The homesteed unit has fixed at f acres of irrigable land or 40 acres within a ramus of two or three miles from the townsite. j In many cases a homestead unit will con sist of 160 acres, from 40 to acres of which are irrigable. This unlrrl gable land will be valuable for pasture. Only water for tbe actually Irrigable land wUl have to be paid for. Tbe government wili con struct the ditches to the edge of each farm; each person will have to construct ths ditches on his own land for his own use, only, which he can easily do himself, qwrtrr Beetiea Uemtt. Under the law, no ons person ean secure water for more than 100 acres, and for this reason there Is considers ele patented land for sals Bt from C4 to taO per acre. Home lands are held much higher than this. It to safe to say that this land has already Increased two or three times Its original value since the commencement of and ss the result of the project and Is constantly increasing in value and we believe that when the water right Is paid for tbe cheap est land under the ditch will be worth H9U and more per acre. There is, and win continue to be. an un limited amount of work on the Irrigation project for men and teams, a'bere home steaders can secure work at good wags until the water Is turned onto ths land. Orman at Crook alone win employ from l.flflO to 1.600 men during tbe coming year; S2.X to CU per day Is paid for common labor. About half of the irrigable area art pat anted, about 1.600 acres of school land; part ef tbe balance Is Included la onper fected entries, but there is yet quite a largs amount ef very desirable land sub ject te homestead under the conditions ef the reclamation act. Film mt tbe (errtea Tbe north and south aids canals will each be about 46 miles long. There will probably be is miles of main latterals and l.eso miles of eub-laterala Indian. Horse and Wlllou creeks on the north side and Wbttrwood creek on tbs south side, . as well as the river, will be crossed by sy phon Tbs Willow creek syphon will be I. nut! feet long and tbe White wood oreek syphon will be six feet rn diameter. There will be lb.uuo barrels of cement used In the diverting dam, l.euo barrels to tbs Crow creek sluice and &.9O0 barrels to ths storage dam. On December C 1SW6. tbe government bad disbursed teUT.est.lS. and the total cost of tbe project will be more than RtuO.ar. Ormaa . Crook have deVaW invested la camp outfit and snanrlnery. Tbey have al ready placed tavM rtrda (4 cart la the storage dam. which Is about one-fifth of the total amount. The irrigation district Is located from to to miles from tbe rich gold mines of the northern Black Hills, which makes one of the best markets te be found anywhere. The products of the Irrigable area win be all kinds of grain, fruit, vegetables includ lng sugar beets, and hay, particularly af falfa. The soil and climate are adapted to the raising of sugar beets; a number of fields of beets were grown last year with very satisfactory results. One of the greatest Industrie! wUl be the feeding of thouHunds of head of cattle and sheep dur ing the winter, which have been driven to from the ranges north of the project. Six thoueaiid acres between the river and Owl creek will be irrigated this year and rf.ooo acres on Indian creek will be Irrigated In the season of 1S08. The soli Is as good as can lie found any where and when the water Is turned on. the land broken up and put In cultivation and the country settled up, this will be one of the richest irrigated sections to be found In the west. CENTENARY OF ANTHRACITE it a Febresry 11, IMM, sal Wills ee ha rr Is Gelas; te OWerve It. WTLKEPBARRK Feb. 28. On February 11 1H08, Wllkesbarre Is to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the day on which an thracite coal whs first burned to an open vrjite. Incidentally the ruthless searcher after facts has shown that what was sup posed to be history was merely tradition, for it has been learned that ths original grate Is not now to existence and that the grate now carefully preserved in the Fett house in Wllkesbarre as tbe original Is a duplicate which was placed in the original fireplace in 1B7TL Before tbe experiment mads by Judge Jesse Fen In his tavern in Wllkesbarre, on the old WUkesbarre and Eastern turnpike. now ivorthampton street anthracite coal was held to be of little value, for It was thought that t would not burn; except under forced draught. Py burning anthra cite in an open grate Judge Fell opened the way to an Industry which now gives employment to 168.000 men, who produce O.ooo.ono tons of anthracite annually, and which baa given minions of dollars in royal, ties to the owners of tbe lands. Just firry years after his experiment four young men were traveling toward Wilkeabarre. One af tbem was a grand son of Judge Fell. He had that day been reading in an old oopy of a weU known masonic book an account of tbe experiment made by his grandfather. When he men 1 tioned it one of the members of the party recalled that ths experiment had been made Just fifty years before. The young men determined that something must be dona When tbey arrived In WUkesbarre they called a public meeting, to be held in the same obi tavern to which Judge FeU made his experiment. Tbe four young men were James Plater Dennis, a grandson of Judge Frll; Henry Martyn Ho)t afterward gov ernor of Pennsylvania; John Butler Cunyng hara and Stanley Woodward, afterward one of tbe leading lawyers of tbe state. Thus they became the founders of the Wyoming Historical and Oeulogloal society. It is this organisation that now proposes to celebrate the lOOth anniversary of tbe experiment of Judge Fell. It was at a meeting of the society that the facts concerning the old Jesse FeU grate were learned. A paper on "Where Is tbs grate on which Jesse FeU made bis successful experiment of burning anthra cite coair was read by the Rev. H. E. Hayden. Mr. Hayden has come to tbe conclusion that the original grate Is not now to exist ence, and that the "only well authenticated grate extant belonging to Judge FeU is that heretofore known as tbe Kleman or Eick grate and now to tbe possession of the society. Concerning the origins! grate ae aiany as six statements are mad a The first Is that the grate was made of hickory withes Mr. Hayden declares this te be untrue. Next eomes the marble grata, so called because Its claims were first put forth by Colonel J. M. C. Marble, president of tbe First National bank of "Uis Angelea He status that while visiting bis grand father at Wyoming hs was told the story of Judge Fell's experiment. According to this story some iron bar were set to tbe old chimney, which Is still in existence In tbe FeU house, bricks were piled to front and on both sides and on the Iron bars a fire of hickory wood was built. Coal was then procured and placed on tbe fire, and it was found that it burned nicely. Judge FeU was so pleased, the story con tinues, that be took out this grate and bad another more substantial one made on the following day. This. then, disposes of tbe original grata la lae there was ao grate in ths flreplaoe. Tbe projectors of the historical society secured from a Mr. Carpenter an old grate which had been used by Judge FeU and placed h to the fireplace for this celebrstloa. Tbe old grata was worn out. and whether to was tbe one made by Judge"FeU after his first experiment or what became of It afterward Is not known. Later to Judge Fell s lifs be married a widow named Culver. When to 1H0 thry , moved from ths old Fell bouse they took j the grate with tbem, and this Is tbe grate now to tbe possession of tbs histuriacl society. Tbe old grate now In tbe original fireplace at tbe FeU bouse, was. according to Cap tain Calvin Parsons, plaoed to the fireplace by him to 1K7&. when a centennial celebra tion was held fur tbe Wyoming massacre. When to like tbe original tavern was torn aowa the old tuwpiso and chimney wore preserved intact and now eeoitpy a nlaoa. yt hrfianr la Uta saw Tbe bureau of engraving and printing, la Washington. Is preparing to print the new series of postage stamps to rommenurate the iih anniversary with the settlement at Jamestown, which is to be iasued con leniKraneouk with the opening of the exposition at Norfolk. Msy l. xna striking f nature of these stamps will be a nejuttlve one none of the stamps will portray either Captain John Bmlth. whose Ufe via saved by the Indian maiilen. Pocahontas, or Pocahontas herself. Such a condition of affalra seems clmust as in congruous to the &:.. stamp collectors) to the Vnited States, as would the omission of Hamlet In the Shakespearean tragedy of that name to tbe theater-goer, and ret it Is true. When the Postofflce department after bav ins previously turned down cold tbe L wis and Clark people, who, in accordance with previous custom, asked for a special aerie of stamps for the Portland expueuion. yielded to strong pressure and finatTy agreed that the Jamestown show should have special stampa It was regarded as a foregone conclusion that either Pocahontas) or Captain John Smith, and probably both, would be pictured on the stampa Tbe de partment officials charged with the isfrue of stamps Indicated to the public that sketches and Ideas for the new stamps would be welcomed and given consideration. John ttmlth and Ponahmtae. As a result of this announcement the d'"partment received great numbers of sus gestiona and as might le supposed the pre at majority favored depicting Captain Johsj Smith and Pocahontas on the stampa This was In harmony with previous ideas of the officials of the stamp division and con firmed them in their determlnatlrn te picture tbe famous couple on these pedal stampa end they at once set about serm Ing suitable photographs for the purposa. After searching the entire country for likenesses of Pocahontas, the officials were compelled, absolutely, to abandon the Idea of portraying the Indian maiden upon a postage stamp that should circulate ex tensively among civilised people. Even tbe photograph of Pocahontas, which ap peared to present her at her best depicted a female, so ugly that the stamp experts simply threw up their handR In despair rnd declared that Pocahontas was Impos sible. Felrly gnod portraits rf Captain Joh Smith were found, but It was not deemed aflviRnWe to honor the gallant captain with out showing equal courtesy to the dashing red-skin In petticoats, who had saved hie life st a time when his life was very dear to him. Thus the hero of Jamentcwa suffers because of the lack of personal charms of his dusky savior. After eliminating Captain Smith and Pocahontas from the list of ellglbles the department experts were completely at sea as to whst to do. It was proposed by many that a picture of the ftrrt church erected in America, at Jamestown, should, adorn one of the stamps. This church was in fact simply four long poles stuck In the ground, over which was spread a ship's saO as protection against sun anj rain. The engravers of the bureau of en graving and printing did not seem to think this subject could be worked up trrto a satisfactory design and It also waa aban doned. Owe Water Breae. It has, however, been decided that on of the stamps shaU depict a water scene. group of people by the ses welcoming or bidding adieu a fleet of vessels stand- tog out from tbe land. This design has been approved and the engravers are now at work making the plate. The design foe the other stamp has not been selected. The seriea if indeed It can be termed a 'series." will consist of but two stampa of ths demnomlnatlon of 1 and 2 cents. A strong effort was made to increase this number to three so as to include a 6-cent value for foreign postage, but the depart ment adhered to Its original purpose te re strict the Issue to two denominations. The Jamestown stamps will be the flftjj commemorative series issued by this gov ernment. First came the Columbian stamps In IFtfS, comprising sixteen denom inations, from 1 cent to SS, generally re garded as among the most beautiful stamp ever printed. The Omaha or Transmlssls slppi series followed in 1898, whh nine de nomlnattona, from 1 cent to C Next ap peared the Buffalo or Pan-American series, famous because of their tao colors and errors."' with tbe central figure upside down, a oopy of the t-oont denomination of which sells for about (300. This seriea waa issued In 101 and consisted only oi the 1. 2. 4. (. I and 10-cent denominations. In 1904 the department Issued ths Louisiana Purchase or Bt Luls stamps, still fur ther reducing the number of values to five, the 1, 2. I, and 10 cents. Tbe department was strongly opposed to giving the Jamestown people mors than a single stamp, the -cent denomination, but finally consented to Include the 1 cent. With only two values three stampa will be required to frank a letter to a foreign country and a parcel requiring 111 oents postage win need eight stamps. The stamps for Jamestown will be about tbs siae ef the Pan-American, allghtly smaller than ths current stamps, longer horizontally than eertlcrl and will be printed In only one color each, red for the J-cent and green for the 1. These stampa will be on sale during the life of the ex position only, but win be good for post age for all time, as are all ths commem orative stampa They will be supplied to all postmasters making requisition for them, but it Is understood ths regular Is sue win be supplied unless ths special stamps are specifically requested. Several millions of collectors throughout the world are eagerly awaiting tbe appear ance of the new stampa and sufficient numbers wUl be sold to foreign coUectors to pay ths entire cost of production. A CHANGE DENTIST TOOTS TAXK BO. 10a. If you ve noticed your dentist grow indifferent and careless you lio doubt con template a chance Now if yeu wish to eltnitnute that element ef chance (always to a chang oome to me. Of course you can readily detect the thought of sell -interest In this ad. but aside from that for vocr own good, pluase Invent tgate thene up-to-date, cleanly, pamiee, meth .oda of luiue. DR. F1CKES, PentUt Thone Doug. MT. 12k 1M liidg! LAara xjKjrxcjax" t u il l 111 o AMcmam run oomtrAjrx, ay Bersa ira St, eaaka