o TI1K OMAHA SUNDAY KEK: SKPTKMhKIl 57. 1003. airL-Be'm! Mrgaiw I I Ak-S Vr l 111 i ( it) ) John A. Kervan Merchant Tailor. Suite 508-10. Brandels Building. Announces hl Fall and Winter showing of the most exclusive de signs In the latest shades for dresses of good taste. Yott are cordlallr Invited to pass Judgment on the newest importations and the best In style, fit and workmanship. Suits from $35.00 to 60.00 Suite 506-10 Braudcls Building Employer We furnish free of charge, upon request, Office Managers, Bale men, Bookkeepers, Stenographers, Office Help. Omaha EMPLOYEE If you are desirous of a position In any commercial line, see us, we can place you. Our terms are the most reasonable In the City; a call will convince you. SEE US FIRST IS SO. 14th Mi. Xnd. A434S a n ssiea S Isajw Offices 673-75-77 Braadels Bldg. Tel LtouglM 4011; Auto. 2011. Tailoring That Salisiies Our determination to satisfy, carries with it a Just reward. Our steadily In creasing sales are an excellent evi dence of a growing regard for our establishment. Our $25 Made-to-Ordor Suits cannot be equaled elsewhere. Reliable woolens, cut, fitted and made in Omaha by expert tailors, dive us a trial. We'll keep the garments if you don't want them. Herzog Tailoring Co. SIB North 16th Street. D. H. Beck, Mgr. Wrotti Chop Suey and Chili Parlor KAjcnro a racxAX.TT or Chinese, IfaJisxiv and Mexican Dishes Special Attention Given to Orders Going Out No more dread of the dftiltl chatrt We have a scientific formula which renders the extraction of teeth tn nearly all cases absolutely without pain. We fit teeth without plates, and If you desire we can by a new method do this work without resort Ins; to the use of sold crowns or un sightly void bands about the necks of the teeth. We employ the most skill ful workmen. No students are allow ed In our office. Gold crowns $5. Uriel? work tft. Plates 16. Teeth without plates $5. MATTHEWS The Original Ho-Faln Dentist. Telephones I Bell Donglas 6711; Ind. A-3767. 1538 Song-las Street. Open evenings till S. Sundays, 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. Rapid Shoe Repair Co, lOISi Capitol Ave. BEST OF WORK BEST OF" MATERIAL AT POPULAR PRICES Call us up. - - - 'Phone R-OQ4 Called for and Delivered Free. saMSflvsj IH DAVE Heavy Hoisting Printing Presses, Boilers. Etc. Etc. Safo Moving a Specialty 1818 Farnam St. Tel. Douglas 353 Mere We Are Again! For Genuine Bargains on Any thing in the Machinery Line...... LAUNDRY MACHINERY, ETC. STEAM ENGINES, PULLEYS, NEW AND OLD GASOLINE ENGINES, HANGER SHAFTINGS, GEAR WHEELS, WIRE, WIRE CABLES, ETC., ETC. WE ARE THE PEOPLE! Our Specialty is putting in all sizes of Second Hand Pipe as good as new at One Half Price. We handle and install New and Second Hand Radiators and . . Boilers. Let us figure with you. . ALL WORK GUARANTEED. A. Ferer Gas Power & Machinery Co. TaI Douglas site; ciM Ind.. A-1164. 810-12 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. PHOTOGRAPHS.. Clothes make the man, the old saying: "A photograph makes the man or the woman, either; a poor, sloven, careless-made photograph, will give your friends as bad an impression of yourself aa a shabby suit of clothing. Photographs made by the Truseell studio, are the best made, and have the artistic qualities to give the sub ject a bearing that will give your friends a good Impression. A' photo graph can be a likeness, at the same time be a horrible caricature. TRUSSELl STUDIO 115 So. 16th St. Opposite Old Boston Store Burgess Shirt Co. Have a whole one made to your order At 2024 FARNAM SX. . R. KENNEDY 'MW'iiEa' PASSENGER AND FREIGHT ELEVATORS Electric, Hydraulic, Belt and Hand Power. Sidewalk Hoist and Dumb Walters. Elevator Gates and Fire Doors. DRAWN BY UNKNOWN RACE Pictures of Cave Men Found in the Black Hills. TRACES OF EARLY INHABITANTS Discoveries of Lut Summer In an Vn- esplored Hearlon of Wyomln A Little Llnht on Ita Pre. fclatorlo Inhabitants. WASHINGTON. Sept. 2.-Harlan I. Smith, archaeologist of the American Museum of Natural History, has returned from a 462-mile -wagon trip , of recon nolssancc In northeastern Wyoming, made tn the Intercuts of the museum. Besides securing the first archaeological specimens ever brought from the region which extend from the Black Hills to the Big Horn mountains In northeastern Wyoming, he photographed among other things pre historic quarries, ancient pictures painted on cave walla representing vrehlatorlc cave d wallers and sculptures cut on the cliffs and sides of natural caves. . All of these were discovered by Mr. Smith's party and were unknown to the scientific world until now. The results of the trip will b published by the museum In Its ootavo anthropological papers, fully illus trated, and this report will throw new light on tn prehlstorlo Americans. The expedition was sent out to continue the work which Mr. Bmlth started for the museum last year, when he made a three months' trip, crossing and recrossing tho southern part of Wyorrlnj. The whole work Is a contribution by the museum toward an investigation Into the archae ology of a vast unexplored region, Includ ing the great plains, the barren lands and ths plateau region of America, regarding which there la practically no archaeological knowledge. LoeatlBK Old Home Sites. Wyoming la near the southern center of this region and seemed to be. the nucleus from which the work might be .tailed. Mr. Smith's task waa to look over the field In order to locate sites where people lived before white men visited the state and which It would be profitable to exca vate, Incidentally securing as much In formation aa possible. Among the general problems which present themselves for solution may be mentioned the folk) wing: When did the region first coma to bo InhabltedT What waa the natural culture of the first Inhabi tants ? Were pMHle living In the area, before the Introduction Of the horse, and If so, l.ow dtd the coming of this animal affect their culture? Was there more than one culture In the region either In various .parte or during different periods of time? And If so, where are the boundaries of these cultures and what are the charac teristics of each culture? Mr. Bmlth secured the services of Pan Chalfant. an experienced cowboy, at Lusk. With a team and a wspon, on the side of which was lashed a five-gallon cask for .carrying water through the desert places, they made the trip with only oca mishap tho breaking of all tha apokea In on wheel. Burling from tha Mine Bar ranch, at the southern end of Rawhide Buttes, they drove northward to Hot Creek. Continuing northward, they passed through a bad land country entirely given over to sheep raising and where the sheep herders live In covered wagons, so that houses are sel dom seen. If one looks at a map he will see many places marked as towns and postofflces, but they usually consist of a single house, part of which serves aa a post office. On the maps many streams and rivers are Indicated, but few of them were found to contain water, although there were evidences that In the spring floods had come down the ravines. The spring floods had washed out signs of wagon tracks, so that the route was fre quently without the guidance of even a wheel mark across the buttes and through the canons. Somethimes on reaching a ranch It would be found that all the men were away on the roundup and the women could not give directions as to tho best route to follow, for they wore acquainted with the country for only a few miles from the ranch, Itonte Krom Newcastle. Finally. Newcastle, a town In the western edge of the Black Hills, was reached. The party then turned northweatwsrd, follow ing the edge of the sparsely timbered mountains, while to the left was a graslng country. Here, about seven miles north west of Newcastle in Oil Creek canon, a cave dwelling, breatwork and cave man picture writings ware found. Continuing, the route led down Wild Horse Creek. Crossing Powder river by means of a ford the wagon was finally pulled Into Sheridan. For some days after seeing the Devil's Tower, miles away to the north, the snow on the northern side of the peaks of the Big Horn mountains had been seen miles to the west. Then for a time hlg'.s ridges had cut off the view, -until at Sheridan the party were at the very base of the mountains. doing southwestwsrd, the canons of Craxy Woman and Muddy were aearched and In both caves that had been occupied by cave dwellers were found. In Muddy Canon tho men felt particularly active, but later found that they had been drinking water charged with arsenic from the red rocks of the canon walls which was not sufficiently strong to poison them but caused the peculiar exhileratlon. Leaving behind the cave dwellings Mr. Smith pushed on past the Hole In the Wall country and the red rock region over the divide to Casper, where he left the wagon to return home, and took the train for New York. tlnnry for Moae Implements. . Terhaps the most remarkable discovery made on the trip was a quarry from which the prehistoric Inhabitants secured stone out of which to chip their arrow points, spear heads, knives, skin scrapers, drill and other Implements. This quarry cov ered at least five acres on the southern end of the mountain locally known as Brownell Hill, at a point about a mile east of the junction of Hat creek and Old Woman creek, In eastern central Wyom ing. There were numerous pits 1n the top of the hill going down Into strata carrying seams and nodules of fltnt-llke rock. Scat tered about these pits were the battered pebbles which had been used aa hammers In breaking out the rock and smashing the pieces op Into convenient tlse for chip ping and flaking Into Implements, B.m; of these hammers had a groove pecked around them to facilitate the fastening to a handle. Unfinished Implements and cores from which pieces for Implements had been clipped were everywhere about and nearby were circles of stones that had been used to hold down the skin covers of the tents of the quarry men. These quarry people must have been In tho country long before they saw any white people, for there were no glass beads, Iron arrow points or sim ilar objects such as IndianB at once get by trade from the very first white ex plorers, travelers and aettlers. Specimens of the rock of the quarry, of the cores, unfinished Implements and stone hammers were sent to the museum snd are the first specimens . collected from the quarry, or In fact from northeastern Wy oming. This quarry Is remarkably large. A five acre prehistoric quarry would be pro nounced large anywhere, but when It Is considered that 'last year in the southern part of tho states several large quarries were seen, the addition of five more acres' of prehistoric quarry work makes an amaz ing total. The extent of this work seems the more surprising because it Is noit known yet whither the product waa car ried. The quarry Is also remarkable for being further north In 'Wyoming than any flint rock quarries were previously known to exist. Plctnregraphs on Walla. Petroglyphs, or picture writing cut In the rocks made by other than whlte hands were aeen and photographed on the sand stone cliffs and In the cave dwelling on the western tide of Oil creek. This place Is on the western edge of the Black Hills jomc six miles west of Newcastle. Seme of these writings represent men, the cave men who lived there, and are identical In general outline, character and approximate else with both petroglyphs and plctographs found In the cave dwell ing In Muddy canon as well as the rock carvings found last year near Hammond In the southern part of the state. This goes to show that the people who made them. If not the same, were at least In fluenced by each other. One of the petroglyphs represents an elklike animal and othera ceremonial shields with markings which possibly may be Interpreted when the photographs are submitted to those who are students of the old Sionan designs and religious ceremonial decors tlons. . The plctographs or paintings in the cave dwelling on the north side of Muddy canon In the Big Horn mountains are In red and some In drab. The drab pictures are tha first in that color which. Mr. Bmlth has seen In his archaeological work, which has been continuous for more than eighteen years. The greater number of plctographs which he hss seen In the northwest are red. Some of the Muddy canon pictures repre sent shields and one a rave man with a bear. Along the route were seen numerous circles of stone marking the sites of an cient tepees or buffalo skin tents. It Is desirable to make a map showing where all these circles are found; first, to show the distribution of the villages of the people using that style of tent fasteners and sec ond to determine If the tents In each vll llage were arranged In a camp circle or other ceremonial form. There la a large circle of atone with cross lines of stones like spokes of a wheel In the Blk Horn mountains. At the ends of the spokes are the ruins of little stone sweat houses and the whole place is held In superstitious awe by the Crow Indians. It is called a medicine wheel and has been seen by but few people. Both the cave dwellings In OH Creek canyon and Muddy canyon were barricaded In front with pllea of rocks forming "a breastwork. In the western part of the area the cow-, boys and sheep men had seen dishes cut out of soapstone of a rare type not rep resented in any of the eastern museums. The,dlshes are larger toward the top than at the bottom, but the opening Is slightly smaller in some cases than the body. An cient dishes made of true pottery are un known In the whole northeastern part of Wyoming, the Black Hills ond the Big Horn mountains." Such pottery has only been found in a few places, less than a dozen. In the whole state, and that these places were all in the southern part toward the cliff dwelling and Pueblo area of Colo rado, New Mexico and Arizona. In various parts of the area examined there are lines marked by rocks and piles of rocks. These heaps are sometimes as high as a man's head, but often vary small, sometimes consisting of a single stone, again of two or three, but often by a pile the size of a bushel basket. The plies are frequently about eight feet apart, sometimes more, and the lines so formed sometimes extend for miles across the country. They are usually on hill or ridge tops and often cross large flats. Some termi nate at cut banks or bluffs. There Is much discussion as to what these are. Some say they mark trails, others that they show which way .from the desert trail water could be found. Boundaries of Hunting- Grounds. A few believe them to be boundaries ba tween the hunting ground of different tribes, but the explanation that seems most satisfactory 'is that they are either lines used to direct the people In stam peding antelopes and 'buffaloes over a bluff or Into an enclosure, or that they are scare crows along which these animals could be stampeded, they being, afraid to cross them. On being run over the bluff or Into the enclosure ,ln confusion they could be more readily killed If not already dead or Injured by the fall. Mr. Smith called attention to the lack of knowledge of the archaeology or pre history of this region and the surrounding country as far north aa the Arctic oceap in the Boas anniversary volume published In 19u7. The museum authorities are par ticularly pleased that they were able to begin the work of Investigation in the region. The task of solving all the prob lems will take many years even If other educational institutions co-operate In ex ploring the area. Mr. Smith sums up the results of bit trip as follows: "Nothing was found to indicate that any of these remains were as recent as the coming of the first white men to the reg ion, aa no glass beads or iron arrow points or similar materials wtere found asso ciated with them. On the other hand, nothing was seen which would prove tbelr great antiquity or show that they were older than the securing of tha horse by the native peoples who formerly lived tn this part of the country. "While, of course, those results art not sufficient to prove that man did not occupy the region until after the introduction of the horse gave him a beast which would facilitate his movements out Into the buf falo plains anl until after the settlements In the east had begun to crowd the Indians westward, nevertheless this negative evi dence suggests quite strongly that at least a portion of the Great Plains must have been uninhabited until after the horse was known to the Indians. "There are certainly no deep deposits of village refuse nor a great amount of an tiquities to be found In the region, such as are easily discovered In places that are known to have been Inhabited for a period antedating the coming of the horse, as, for Instance, Ohio and the state of Washing ton. To be sure the results of quarrying are very extensive a great deal of stone has been moved but those who know tho real Indian are aware that this work could have been done In a comparatively short period of time. 'On the whole, the results of the two archaeological trips to Wyoming would suggest that that particular region until after the advent of the horse was not In habited." i MOTORS PUT TO GOOD USES Machines of te Honk Order Hooked Up to Do Good 1st Many Instances. The average urban resident looks upon the automobile merely as a convenience, more rapid in motion than the horse and less likely to shy at strange objects. Such an assumption is far from an adequate con ception of the vehicle. In Connecticut the owner of a newspaper sends his paper to press by automobile. He backs the machine up near his presses, at- liaihes the power and the news Is chugged out away beyond speed limit. Heedless persons laugh at farmers who mortgage their farms to purchase automo biles. It is the farmer who has the laugh. At 4 o'clock In the morning and mayhaps at i or t, for the milk Inspector has a way of walking In at 4 o'clock and Interfering with milking the carburetor inay be heard at the dairy. One motor car connected with six milking machines can milk twelve cows at a time. Is there churning to be done? The motor can do almost everything but roll the butter. Perhaps the farmer takea his milk to the station tn his machine and then he gets back in time to saw the wood for cooking breakfast. He attaehea a cir cular wood ssw to the motive power of the car and the result Is highly satisfactory. This may even explain why so many tramps frequent large cities. There are now less opportunities than ever for them to saw wood for a breakfast In suburban places. The automobile fairly snorts at their shlftlessness. This snort, redolent of disdain and gaso line, one heara often now at the haymow In place of the accustomed sneeze of a horse trying not to contract hay fever while hoisting fodder into the barn. No longer seed the patient animal at the tar end of a pulley rope start upon a run, only to be brought up short, under the Impres sion that he has made a false start, wh'le time Is given him to reflect upon the per versity of mankind, and the farmer to un hitch bay from pulley and S'-nd the hoist ing hook out for more. A motor car runs out with the rope now, and lifts double the quantity, without stralnlDg a muscle. In San Frar.cisoo the motor fire patrol Is able to get to and' extinguish a fire while the speediest fire horse is still panting on his way. Automobiles are used to haul snow, beer, drygoods, bank boxes and to cure consumption by rapid motion through the air. No longer need the mining pros pector wander wearily through arid wastes in the west. He may seek his nuggets by means of a motor car. No longer need a presidential candidate risk bursting the rail of an observation car with his eloquence. He may speak from an automobile. No longer need the flower grower urge his horse through wintry dawns In the effort to get his blossoms early to the market. He may arise later, get to the train earlier In his automobile, and maintain, mean while, the aspect of a gentleman of leisure out for a morning spin. Plcnlo parties vote the automobile a vast improvement over a farm wagon carpeted with straw. Stowing away dishes is no longer a task fraught with danger to ohina. The automobile hamper has in It every necessary for ar ar fresco luncheon, strapped and clamped Into an economy of space scarcely conceivable to the mind of an average housewife. Motor oars have all manner of little hidden eupbjard contriv ances In which things may be stowed. With tent and living necessities tucked onto and under its mechanism, one may move on to new places and pleasures every day to fishing, boating, hunting and climbing, with wide, free country contribut ing ever new sources of enjoyment and of fering ever new attractions to the wan derer afield. The luxurious traveler en joys lite In a touring car, which may be converted into bed chamber, boudoir, library-, living room and dining room at will. Electrto dome light, speaking tube, sta tionary Clock, elaborate toilet articles and .mirror, dcludo one Into believing this- motor car a mlnature hotel va wheels. New York Tribune. TESTS OF THE NOISELESS RIFLE Promlne Greater Hevolatlon la Modern Warfare Then Did Rmoke leaa Powder. With airships, aeroplanes and dirigible balloons war, Indeed, must become terrU bio, but the climax Is reached when one considers the latest phase of firearms a developed In Hiram Mixlm, Jr.'s noiseless rifle, which, Indeed, must make war an impossibility. Equipped with this new de vise, attached to an engine of destruction, the United States army would be practi cally Invincible, and no foe need be feared so long as the device remained an Amer ican secret. Experiments being made by an army board are being watched with the closest attention, and already the effect that the elimination of noise will have upon battle tactics is, receiving attention. Colonel R. Blrnle and Major Tracy C. Plckson of the United States Army Ordnance board realizes that Its adoption means the re equipment of the entire army and the working out of many difficult problems. The government la especially desirous of keeping the matter of the noiseless device as quiet as possible and an Injunction has been placed upon the Hta of everybody lit the service. "The lact of the matter K" said one of titer, "that If this Invention of Maxim proves entirely successful the United State army will be placed 60 per i.ent ahead of any other army tn the world In efficiency, man to man. For the flr.tt time In years ihls government has a chance to take a big step In advance of the r3St of the world in arming Its soldiers, and It Is desired to take full advantage of It. "There is no doubt that It will bring about a greater revolution In warfare than did smokeless powder. It will add an ele ment of terror that Is almost Impossible to describe. Smokeless powder robbed the soldier of the sense of sight in the dis charge of firearms, and now the njlseless gun wot Id render his hearing of n value. Mentally, he would huve a feeling of help lessness that would tend to make cowards of the bravest." It Is believed In army circles that the Maxim Invention can be applied as readily to. artillery aa to small amis. Should this be the case, it will result In both the army and the navy . ordnance being equlppei with the device. The expense would not be . great, while the results, If the United States should engage In war, would bi be yoi.d measure. The Inventor of this device Is the fon of Sir Hlium Maxim, who gave to the world the machine gun. He lives In Hart ford, Conn. The device is the reu t of long study of the problem of muffling the rapid explosions Incident to the operations of an automobile. The report due to the sudden release of gasu at the muzzle of a rifle when the discharge occurs Is pre vented through the action of a valve which, allows . the gss to escape gradually, and with an almost silent hissing sound. The appearance of the weapon Is not al tered, except tor a small nrossplcce In the barrel a short distance from the muzzle. Just aa the bullet emerges the escape of the gases Is shut off. This result Is gained through a piston valve, sliding across the bore f the barrel Immediately after thi bullet pase. The valvo is operated by the pressure of the gas, and there is no Intricate mechanism. Tests are being made at the government armory In Springfield, Mass., and accord ing to reports the discharge of a gun with out the noiseless device could be heard (,700 yards. With the device It could be heard only 1,500 yards, the Invention thus eliminating 74 per cent of the noise. All that could be heard at the latter distance was the click of the hammer on the shell.-. Pittsburg Dispatch. Had Aaotber Nam . for It, J. F. Johnston, the new United States senator from Alabama. Is an ardent agricul turist. One day, after retiring from tha governorship and returning to his home. In Birmingham, he donned bis overalls and went to work In the garden. A society lady, a newcomer, entered tha yard to call on Mrs. Johnston. Her ring at the door not Being answered, ahe walked Into the garden. "How long have you worked for tha Johnstons?" she Inquired of the man aha found there. "A good many years, madam." "Do they pay you well?" "About all I get out of It la my clothes and keep." "Why, then come and work for me," ahe said. "I'll do that and pay you so much a month besides." "I thank you madam,' he replied, "but I signed up with Mrs. Johnston for life." "Why no such contract Is binding. That is peonage." "I have always' called it marriage," re plied the senator. Success sXagaxlae,