THE ttKK: OMAHA. SAITIUUY, XOVKMllKU i:t. aV FlKSn PLANS FOR BAMUOME Sam of $100,000 Will Be Expended on "Omaha National Building." " WOEK TO START ITB.ST OF YEAS "Company Will Maintain l.narh Ueom '. tnr EmpUrn on Tenth Floor of .1 Balldlnc Some Tfnanla Mast Move Soon. ' Plan hav been completed by George ,11. Prim, local architect, for remodeling the New York Llf Insurance building, which haa been bought by the Omaha Na tional bank. The chamtea contemplate the expenditure of over llOnnoo, giving the big bank nearly three timea as much floor pace aa la used In the present quarters. ' Tha bank proper will occupy the entire ground floor, except the space given up to the entrance on Farnam street and to the elevatori. which will be Improved. The entire, building will be renovated with new plumbing throughout. Entrance to the bank will be from the main entrance, where the doors now are opening Into the Peter Trust company and Into the effleea of the Brennan-Love company. A brome and Blast screen will tut off tha north part of the room from i the; elevator and along tho north wall and risible will be tha cash and book vaults. . On the east fide of the bank room, which will occupy tha ntlr floor, will be the deski and private rooms of the officers. ,'conniltatlon rooms, and In the northeast corner will be the directors' room, splen didly fitted up. In the southwest corner of tha room will be the women' depart ment, with a large reception room. Along Hie west aide of tha building will he placed the tellers and exchange cages. The bank screens will be In rrtarMe, glass and bronxe. The room will be decorated In color and ornamental plaster. The walla which now divide the rooms will be removed and col umns substituted. . Tha Omaha National bank maintains a lunch room for Its employes and this will be placed on th tenth etory of the build ing. Tho safety deposit vaults will be lo cated on the east side of the basement, ftti an entrance from th sidewalk on arnam street and a marble staircase lead ing down from the Interior of the bank. In the basement will also be storage rooms and locker rooms for the use of employes. Some of the tenants will be moved out , t,ha't work may begin shortly after Jan--uary 1. Laborer Fatally Hurt at Work Tony Chemino, Employe of Street ; Railway, Crushed by Mot- ing" Car. Tony Chemino was probably fatally .crushed Friday afternoon while working In th yards near the power house of th Omaha Council Bluffs Street Railway company. I He vu working for-that company when 'he was caught between a moving car and a large bucket of crushed stone. He was 'taken to St. Joseph's1 hospital where his V wound wer dressed by Police Surgeon ,'Harrls, who was unable to tell the extent '.itf tha Internal Injuries. Chemino lived at Fourteenth and Leaven- worth atreeta. ?n6t such bad financiering FUrahelnsa Sublet Sew Quarter So They Will Par Only Fifty Dollars Monthly. When It waa announced soma time ago that the Florsheim Shoe company had leased th ground floor of the Hanson Cafe building for $7,200 a year, many -A thought the price waa a llttl high. It turns vut, however, that th ahoe company, b dividing th room, will hav a aalea room for Its atock of ahocs at a rental of but V'iO a month. ' Tha ground floor la being divided -and tenant already hav been secured who will pay 60 a month for two stores, leaving tha mlddl store for Floraheim. Th main floor will ba dlvl'jed Into three alorea, tha 'corner on th alley to rent for 1323 a month and th tor on th south for $22 a month. T entire front la being remodeled and lfde modern, all the beautiful white tiling being torn away. Robertson haa leased the basement for a restaurant and, th aecond floor will ba occupied by Logan & Bryan. ftUNDEE READY TO PAVE SOME Hm Slcnatare for One Street Mil Lone aa4 la Going; After Others. Petitions have been signed for paving suit a number of th streets In Dundee and at a meeting held Wednesday evening ri lamltteea wer appointed to Investigate vd kind of pavement beat to use. Ninety per cent of the property owners kv signed up for on street over a mil long north and south and aeveral street hav sufficient signatures to warrant th board of trustees of th village In going ahead to prepar for definite action. Property owner are still active and more signatures ar being aecured and It now look aa though most of th streets of the villa will ba paved. BeaJon Specials Saturday Note the savins ln our special of Saturday, and, if you haven't tlma to call, 'phone your wants to Douglas 81. 82 or 83, as wo deliver free to all parts ot Omaha. lie -tnch Flexlbl Kail File, Saturda day. lie at 16c dm en Emory Boards, Saturday, dos., at So le Orangewood Btlcka, Saturday, I for Bo 60 genuine Allegrettl' Chocolates, Saturday and Sun.tay, full pounds, at Sao 0 Poaxoni'a Powder, Saturday 18o oo fomptiia Maaaag Cream. Satur day 49a 66c ! Mara' Bensoln and Almond Lotion. Setaiday 86 rata Saturday with each 60c Jar of Bea ton's Cold Cream we will give ab solutely free a Royal Vacuum Maa aag machine. 11.60 Plnaud'a Vegetal Lllas, at Saturday, 4o Bath reader. Saturday loo Honey and Almond Cream, Sto 6o Banltol 60c Hlnd'a Saturday Ilr. Smoker, Take Notice! xiai'i Toum riToam won at malt rrnica Th Beata Drug Co 1 offering most jf th popular lOo cigars at 6c. and tha 6o cigar at lOo and less. Don't lose sight- of thia fact, and if you haven't Efsaton Di?og Co., Farnam and lGtli jsts. Some Things You The Irrigation The United Slates Land and Trrlftitlnn exposition which begins In Chicago. Nov - ember 20. rromlses to be the most unique and complete showing of the successes of Irrigation that ever has been made. The products of the erstwhile Great American desert will bo on exhibition In the richest profusion, and will tell their own story of whit Irrigation may be expected to mean to the American people In tho generations to come. "Save the forests, store the floods, reclaim the deserts and build homes on the land" is the motto cf those who have the Irrigation Interests of the country at heart. This will be the first exposition ever held solely to promote the colonization of new land In this country, now made avail able to homeseekers, because of the re rent reclamation of vast expanses of arid tracts. The object of the exposition Is to guldo and Inspire tho "land hunger" of the nation. The Irrigated lands of the weat afford opportunities for thousanda of new homes. It will not be a mere county fair exposition of land products, although tha products will be exhibited, but It will b an educational Institution for the exem plification of the possibilities of farming In lands reclaimed from tha desert. California will tell the story of fifty years progress from one lone orange tree to an annual crop of 28,000 carloads. Utah, Arlxona, Colorado, Idaho, Wyoming, all the arid and seml-ai Id slates, will hav exhibits showing tliftt arid land with Ir rigation is to be preferred to the best of land without Irrigation. It la said that there are from 70,0-X,00 to 10.000,000 acres of lrrlglble land In the I'nlted States, each acre of which might be made to produce enough to Bupport a human ioul. Ten mil lion acres have been irrigated, the bulk of It by private capital. It Is well that America lias embarked upon an era of irrigation. Tha statisticians calculate that the appetites of men are growing bigger with the passing years, Although 'the population of the world has Increaaed oniy 22 per cent in the last forty years, the amount of food products re quired haa Increased 40 per cent in the same time. In other words, men eat about one-fifth mora than they did a generation ago. With tha population of the world Increasing at the rate of 8.000,000 soula a year, and the appetites of the people grow ing proportionately, the business of making two bladoa of grass grow where one grew before will be an increasingly great bene faction to the race. Statistics showing the per cent of the arabla land actually under cultivation in the various atatea show remarkable facta. Onlv M Tint ient of th npihu lanil In Massachusett. ia cultivate. In New Tork only 64 per cent is cultivated; In Ohio, 70 per cent; In Indiana, 66 per ceut; in Il linois and Iowa, 72 per cent; Nebraska, 61 per cent; Colorado, t per cent; Utah and Nevada. 1 per cent; California, 12 per cent. Th ninety-seventh meridian, cutting In twain tha Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas. Oklahoma and Texaa, divides the climatic cut from the weat. Weat of that line II the regions where the rainfall la per petually Insufficient for crop growing. Yet th weat does not regard that aa an evil. One of th enthusiastic Irtigatlonlata of the far west has gone th whol length of optimism by SDeaklna- of tha . 'bleaalnss of aridity," and ha offers many. Interesting "elves In the Irrigation and reclamation facts to prov hla caa. He firs declares work 11 ' doing. It doea not always in that the. Bible offers . conclusive" evidence tni t0 b the KCOQ nel of ,h8 work- but that th Garden of Eden was an Irrigated Poct to establish communities of set snot, and calls attention to the passage tlers- traln tnem UP ln the art of co" where it say that a river went out of operation, and gradually teach them to care Eden to water the garden. Then he looka for ln work It has built. As soon aa they around and sees that every ancient civlllxa- nv" completed the payments which llqul tlon haa Its birth In seml-arld regions, and th Pnsei incurred ln the construe that most of the glories of antiquity sprang Uon and maintenance of the works, Uncle from the heart of th desert. He looks to sm tnen "Tenders possession to them. Egypt, Asia Minor, Syria, Palestine, Persia. pom8 tatlstlclan haa estimated that Arabia. Northern India. Carthage: Into the when evel'y ,cr of Iand ln the United and of the Aitecs and of the Incas, and eea civlliiation rising from the sands and wml-arld lands. He says that the com- mon belief that the fertility of th Nile regions is du to th coat of mud deposited by th rivers' subsiding waters la not well founded: that It amounte to lesa than two ordinary two-horse loada of material per acre, whereas Americana may nut three timea a much manure per acr without as great resultant fertility. Furthermore, on golng up to Fayum. ln tha Llblan desert, where irrigation la carried on with clear water, th land la Just aa fertll as the mud-covered valley of the Nil Itself. Also, In th Loess region around th headwaters of the 1'ellow river In China, which la known as th granary of th celestial em pire, th land Is perpetually fertile though WILL CASE DECISION SOON Jadgre Estell and Radicle Will Rale Satarday on Hlsht of C. J. Smyth to Intervrae. An Important decision ln th Crelghton will fight will be given by Judge Redlck and Katella ln district court this morning. They will then pass upon the motion of the attorneys for th heirs and executors to itrlk from th record th petition of Intervention filed by C. J. Smyth ln behalf of several working girla. If the motion ahould be sustained the ex ecutors will go to th county court for an opinion on th proposed compromised. tint to call Saturday phone, as w de liver free to all parte of Omaha. There's no old stock ln oura; It move too fast 10c Preferencia, Con:haa rise, Saturday, for 86o Pox of 60 for , ta.60 lOo Kcbort Burns, Conchas Extra, Satur day, S for 88o 10c Aragon, McCord-Brady'a leading clear Havana cigar, Saturday, 8 for 86o Box of 50 88.60 lOo Ml Contento Long Perfecto, at, for 85o Saturday, box of 26 BUS Th Contento is th equal of any lsc cigar on th market. lOo Palmer House Invincible, Saturday, at a for 86o Box of 26 1.86 10a Robert Emmet, Saturday, a for 85o Box of 60 1 88.60 10c Tom Moore, Bouquet aixe, Saturdsv 6 lor SSo Box of SO B3.60 10c Nanon Invincible, Saturday. (or a So Box of iO lac Oato, ut Box of SO Marconi 1. Saturday, each, too l'.'v.'rMii ;Tr lue blinon Batt Cos. feclurlnos, each to, Kux of 50 94.70 ltc Kl Brlncip r Oalae Pullman Bou. quel or Madia Perfects. Saturday, at. eacn v. Fox of 26 18.36 ltc Ml Klecclon, Gladstone alse, Satur day, I for 16 Box of 10 3.Ta 16c Aragon, Breva alse, Saturday three tor 9 so Box of 60 (4.00 All other cigars ai cut nrires. Want to Know Exposition. Irrigated with clear mountain water. The kmcluslnn Is that the binds of arid and semi-arid regions are Inherently fertile and that water is tho golden key that unlocks their treasures to the use of man. Arid land has a thirst for water that reaches astonishing proportions. Often when the Irrigation ditch Is first com pleted and the water turned over the land It is found that it takes as much as fl.OXVnoo gallons of water to satisfy the burning thirst of an acre of land. It has been shown that the average cubic foot of earth will ab sorb thirty-two pounds of water, and that as much as fifty-eight tons of dew may fall on a single acre of ground in one night. Experience has demonstrated that the amount of rainfall best stilted to the suc cessful growing of a crop Is forty Inches annually. In other words, to produce a good crop 4,5?! tons of water must fall on every acre of ground annually. Someone baa mado a study of the use of water by plants, and estimates th-it every ton of ! hay directly absorbs 5T0 tons of water from j the time of the germination of the seed i to the mowing of the hay. Another scien tist undertook to atudy the use of water by maple trees In their digestive" econ omy. He counted 12. 12 leaves on a single maple. Studying one tree carefully he found that C49 trees on an acre of ground would evaporate 3.875 gallons of water in twelve hours. At this rate the acre of trees, In the ninety-two days life of their leaves, would send Into tha air nearly 8.000,000 pounds of moisture. Not long sine a western railroad Is sued one of the most striking maps ever seen. One part of it shows the physical features of the Promised Land of Canaan; the other shows those of the Salt Lake valley of Utah. If on the map of anaan Salt Ike were substituted for the Dead Sea, Ogden for Bethlehem, Salt Ltk City for Jerusalem, Provo City for Tiberias, and Utah Lake for the sea of Tiberiaa, Canaan would become Salt Lake valley. In that connection it is interesting to note that the three ereat religions of the earth beglln , arld or ,eml.,rld reelons; Judaism sprang from the deserts of Sinai; Chrlstl- anity from tho hills of Judea; Moham med lam from the deserts of Arabia, The densest population In tho world, outside of cities. Is to be found in arid and semi-arid regions made to blossom by Irrigation. The Nile lands of Egypt support a population of 1,200 to the square mile. The densest rural population In the United States east of the ninety-seventh meridian Is to be found in Rhode Island, with 27S persons to the square mile. In some of the older Irrigated portions of California one may find as many as 600 people t0 the ,,quare m,Ie' Practlcal'y " of them engaged In horticulture through Irrigation. 1 Irrigation is as old as history. It Is a far cry from the old hand-power dumping machine used along the Nile to the modern twenty-inch centrifugal pump, one may sometimes sea, and from the baby dams of the ancients to the gigantic Assuan dam In Africa or the Roosevelt dam in our own western country. But wherever Irrigation has been kept up, even after the passing of thirty centuries, the soil ia aa fertile and aa productive as of old. The United States is playing the part of n who helps others to help them States la developed to Its maximum pro- ductive power the country will support a population equivalent to one-fourth the Present population of the world. If the history of th oldest Irrigated communities of California becomes the history of the entire region eventually to be Irrigated, th great territory eat of the Misuisslppl ill become a sort of aid show to the mln circus weat ot that river. But then th east may conclude to do some lrriga- tlon of ltB own- Irrlgationiats assart that ven "oia iana mignv d maue to pro luc lv Umea as much aa It now produces war Irrigation and bclentiflo farming combined. ( By Frederick J. Kaskln. Tomorrow Popular Photography. LOCAL INTEREST IN CORN SHOW GREATER THAN BEFORE Omaha People Are Hiking Lively De mands for Seute at th Evralnar Eserelees. Indications are there is a much greater local Interest in the National Corn expos! tlon than there was last year and the Corn show management Is preparing to handle the local crowds better. Many applications have been received for reserved sests st evening entertain ments and the management is now consid ering the advisability of reserving Beats for th evening band concerta and big lec tures. Last year no eifort was made to reserve seats snd It wit a case of the first come first served. This year applications are already In for aeats because of the big attraetlona, Including the Mexican band Soma firms aj asking for blocks of Boats for each evening. By thla means they will be able to entertain their guests at all timea and be sure of having seats reserved for them. The management Is considering the proposition and if th demand teema to warrant the expenditure it will be done. BURLINGTON BUILDING FENCES Five Haadred Feet of New Ironwork at Station Being; Fat Ia by Railroad. Work haa begun at tha Burlington sta tion on th new Iron gate and fences in the train sheds daalgnad to keep passen gers without proper transportation from th tracks. The Smith Iron work ot Chl- cago has th contract. Over M0 feet of iron fence Is to be built. extending from th carriage entry on the ;outh aid of the building around the coiner of th structure and west to th viaduct Th fence will be aeven feet high and will be fitted with gate and booths for th gatemen. Th work will require about two weeks' jjjjjtlme to complete. A similar fencing ar rangement ia to t DUUt at th Burlington station at Lincoln. Chamberlain's Cough Ueinedy in cheapest because It is beat. HuilUluw I'eruitla. G. A. Freeman. 417 Franklin, biiek veneer frame dwelling.- $1 0; M. Garrison, worm 'l wenty-aecond. frame dwelling II .('.': T. W. Ru-kel. 4L'U! Grunt avenu-, 111'; P. r. 'mmer, ii KuaV. fraiuo daelhnc. ll.iAAi, Saturday at Sensational Starting at Siiiis ot In nil our retail experience we never presented suck nn attractive assortment of choice silks :it such a low price. (Joods have been fhown in the windows for several days hundreds of women have been attracted, ami you will not wonder when we tell you that silks are shown which sold as high as $3.00 per yard, to be sold Saturday at G9c per yard. Not all the silks shown sold so high, but not one yard is worth loss than $1.00. Choice Foulards, newest Moores, fine Taffetas, Satin Mescaline, selected Fancies all colors, widths various, some 19 inches, many 27 inches, a few 36 inches. A full assortment of the latest in Hough Silks- more popular than ever. Silks for all purposes all perfect, all with the Kilpatrick guarantee all to be sold without reserv at Kilpatrick's Saturday at 10 A". M., all at 69c a yard. There'll bo other big attractions also upstairs and down us for instance: About 100 Women's Fine Tailored Suits, tailored by men high grade, made to sell at $25.00; Saturday $1G.75 Center Aisle Handkerchief Counter Several broken lines ladies' linen, embroidered by hand, initial handker chiefsall to be closed out to make room for the holiday stock, formerly 25c; Saturday, three for the price of two 16 2-3 cents each. The holiday showing of Mouchoirs is now complete Handkerchiefs of all kinds, Madeira embroidered. France makes a great showing and Ireland is well to the front. Hand embroidered, pure linen. "We are taking many orders for special initial embroidery. If you want any you must get your order in before Nov. 2Gth to insure absolute deliv ery by Christmas. L Mrs. Gaines Gets Husband's Body on Replevin Writ Denied Corpse by the Coroner, She Secure it Through Court Order. Refused the body of her dead husband by Coroner Heafey, Mrs. Stella Gaines, widow of James I Galncs, the negro club man murdered early Wednesday morning In the yard of his home, secured a writ of replevin from Justice C. M. Bachman and the body was removed by Constable John Woods to the undertaking establish ment of O, Wade Obe, 903 North Sixteenth street, from wher th burial will be held. A hearing on the writ will ba held in the office of Jude Bachman Wednesday. No vember 17, before which time the body of Gaines will have been Interred ln mother earth. According to the story told Judge Bach man by Mrs. Gaines, she went to tha cor oner Thursday, following her exoneration of complicity ln the crime "by the coroner's Jury, and demanded the body of her hus band, bo that he would b given proper burial. The coroner refused to deliver the body except upon a written order from Herbert E. Daniel, ex-city prosecutor, and who represented her at the luquost. Tht Issuance of the writ by Judge Bachman followed and Constable Wood carried out the Instructions of the court without in cident. Arrangements for the Gaines' funeral have not been completed. There is a peculiar mystery about the killing of Gaines and Captain Savage Is very anxious to clear It up. A detail of detectives Is at work on the case. SUSPECT PAIR AT TRIAL KNOWING OF GIRL'S BIRTH White Man and Woman In Attend anew at Ilearlnar f William l.rnll Heine; Watched. A man and woman who followed eagerly the prosecution of William Lewis for stat utory assault will be watched for by court house attach-" when Lewis comes up for sentence today. This couple, who are white, are suspected of knowing who are the parent of Emma Kruse, the white girl left on the doorstep of a negress when the baby was but an hour old. The white girl, who waa brought up as her own daughier by the colored woman, was the principal witness for the prosecution, hav ing been Lewi' victim. The man and woman to whom suspicion has been dliected are not known person ally to any of the principals or wltnessej In the case and It is difficult to Imagine any reason why white people, well dressed as they are. and unacquainted with the defendant, the girl "r her foster mother, should have such an interest In Lewis' fate us they showed unless It be that they know romethlng about th whit girl's I'll ih and antei edenta. So regular was their attendance at the li.nl and their manner to uUt-iuive that it was remarked by Judge button himself. If the man and women, who went to the tilal not together, but singly, are the par tnts of the girl, their feelings can only bo imagined' when they heard the testimony and discovered thai their offspring, aban doned by ihini on the doomiep of a negro woman, ha:d Ik en brought up by her, and l.ad met the fate for which Iei will get a long term In the penitentiary. BOYS GIVE GEPSON SURPRISE Official Scout of Omaha schools is Walled On by Appreciative Vosaiitert. In honor of the birthday anniversary of E. D. Gepson, truant officer of the Omaha schools, a few friends Joined himself and his wife at dinner Thursday evening. Then ram a new development ln the shape of a dozen Italian hoys, who arrived In a bunch. They did not know It was Mr. Gtpon'a birthday, and came empty handed, so far as present were concerned; but they brought something much more acceptable, til auuutaneou lattlmuiiv ot tbnir anorauia- Kilpatrieli's Happenings A. BL AH Kinds tlon of Mr. Gcpson'a work In aetting them straight. The visiting lads were furnished with re freshments and were entertained hos pitably, having a good time all around. About the time they should go home some of their mothers dropped In to add a word of thanks to the truant officer, who con fesses he has never spent a much happier evening ln hln life. MESDAMES SHALLENBERGER AND BRYAN HELP WOMEN Will Come from Lincoln to Assist In Entertaining" WItm of Japanese, Mrs. A. C. ShaJlenberger, wife of Gov ernor Shallenborger, and Mrs. W. . J. Bryan will arrive from Lincoln early Sat urday morning to assist the women of Omaha ln the reception of the Japanese women who are with tha Japanese com missioners. At noon they will have luncheon at the home of Mrs. C. N. Diet and during the afternoon they will visit the homes of J. H. Millard. L. L. Kountze and later at tho home of George A. Joslyn. where they will listen to an organ recital. They will he entertained at dinner, ' after which the women will wltneos the show at the Or pheum from boxes. GOVERNOR TALKS FOR RIVER Shallenhera-er Will Adrtreas Nsvla-n-tors in Omnhi Naniri Dele gates to the Congress. Governor Shallenberger haa accepted an Invitation to address the Missouri River Navigation congrusa In Omaha and will speak lcoember 14 or 15. He has also named the Nebraska delegates to the con gress, and the Hat Includes the following: Congressman G. M. Hitchcock, Henry T. Clarke, P. J. O'Brien, Edward P. Berry man, Joseph Hayden, Arthur C. Smith, Emil Brandeis. Omaha; Colonel M. A. Betes, Plattsmouth; Captain Logan Enyart, Nebraska City; Congressman J. P. Latta, Tekamah; Joseph Miles, Falls City; Clark O'Hanlon, Blair; Lr. Btewart Livingston, Plattsmouth; George W. Ildlgh, Nebraska City; J. M. Tanner, South Omaha; W. 8. Dempster, Beatrice; Charles II. May and Ueorge L. Loom Is. Fremont. A. B. Bull, chairman of the program committee, has gone to Pittsburg to Inter est two of the largest builders of boats In this country In the congress and to try to get them to bring models of a new boat r.lch has been built for river navigation. This boat needs but thirty inches of water to carry 1.000 tons, while the largest boat now on the Missouri hauls but 600 tons and draws neaily four feet of water. The new 19 astaa A 11 l m mil 1 in II "I i 4 n.u ijsiii. i unjiiiiiiii 1 1 il n s n i ! liiniliiijip llliinniii.ilililiyp mm i" m If immm ... -. .-a. .. . .t... ... . Set the Alarm CIocEd Sale Extraordinary! See That Yon aerificed Cruelly! Notion Section 1'arrettes, niiiny styles, worth Uc; Sat urday, 10c each. Fine carved or plain barrettes,- worth 35c, will go at 19c. In the New Department for Children Some new Coats,, sizes from 3 to 5 years; very special for Saturday at $7.50 and $5.00 each. In the Muslin Underwear Section On Saturday, as a special value a lot of hih neck, embroidery trimmed, mus lin and cambric gowns, worth $1.75. at $1.3'J each. Holiday Aprons at 50e and 25c worth much more. The stock of silks is large but it will pay you to make a bee line for the counter at 10 A. M.. Remember none re served and everybody has an equal chance. rl o n MPaiFUffi boat is constructed largely of steel and has a steel bottom which would prevent injury from snags on the Missouri. Th National Waterways committee, headed by Senator Theodore Burton of Ohio leavea Kansas City, November IS, for a trip on the river to ft. Louis. An effort is being made to hav this commission visit Omaha during the river congress. Major E. H. Rchuitx will accompany the party. SET TIME LIMIT FOR . ANSWER ON WAGE RAISE December 1 Dnt When Locomotive Firemen Expect to Hear from HnllroadM. , December I, has bten set by the Brother hood of Locomotive Firemen for an answer to the demands of the nifan for Increased wages and uniform working schedules on the railroads running west of Chicago, and involving all men running on trains out of Omaha. Members of the union in Omaha have taken no direct action In the mat ter, leaving the caao to the executive com mittee of the brotherhood In Chicago. It Is expected that the railroads, forty two In number, affected by the demands for Increased wages, will name a general committee of railway managers to mcsl with the locomotive firemen to settle the question. One of the clauses la the formal petition presented by the trainmen to the railroads says that "the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen shall have the right to establish tha seniority date for all engineers promoted from the ranks of firemen." This clause la said to be causing rail road managers more unrest than that re questing higher wages. If the demand i conoeded it Is feared it will Involve the railroads in trouble with the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. In this connection, th Insurance ques tion among the men also comes up. Most of the engineers have risen to their sta tion from the ranks of firemen and many of them prefer to hold their membership In the parent organization because the In surance rates are more favorable to them on account of the young men who art continually entering the service. MORE AUTOIvTOBILES NEEDED Omaha Oivarri Can Help Oat Commer cial Club Committee In Conveys Ina; Japanese Tialtora. The Commercial club haa Issued another call for automobiles to assist In the en tertainment of the Japanese commission- (Get There! am. Plenty of automobiles have been ar ranged for until 3 o'clock, when several more are needed. At that time the com mla loners will be taken for a drive through the wholesale and Jobbing districts and also through the residence districts of ' Omaha, and for this lengthy trip more machines are needed. BILL CANADA HAS NEVER FAILED T0LAND HIS MAN Old t'nlon Par" tic Chief's Record la Mot Broken In Forty Tears of Service. Not a train robber Is now doing time In the penlte.itiary or who may be for tunately at large, but has a profound re gard for William T. Canada, special agent of tho Union Pacific, who has railroaded more men to the penitentiary for train robbery than any other man In the coun try. They all know him. No man haa held up a Union Pacific train In the last forty years but has been caught sooner or later. Every one of the Omaha bandits knew or had heurd of the veteran "Bill" Canada and knew they were up against a hard proposition when thty tackled the Union Pacific. When returned to the county Jail after their case hed come to a end IIk five rob bers were a little more garrulous than usual. Even "William the Silent," (Matthews) unloosened himself enough to talk. Some one remarked In reference to. William T. Canada of the Union Pacific: ' "Bill" getting ton old to do much more work. He may lose out yet on his boast that 'No man who has ever held up a Union Pacific train has escaped.' Why, Hill is 'i year old." "That's all right nbout BUI Canada." said Matthews, "Hut let me tell you he's good for twenty years yet and don't you forget it." While Matthews u being undressed to go Into the Jail suit he remarked: "It looks as If I'll not need this suit now for a long time." Woods, Torgenson, Grlgware and Golden had but litfle to say. Grtgware seemed to be completly broken, and took his convic tion harder than any of the five. Daly Impressed. "How" solemn we should feel, children." said the elderly stranger who was address ing thu Sunday school, "in the presence of the mysteries of creation! Think of thla vusl globe on which you and I live, whirl ing through space at the rate of 600,000,000 miles a year." Impressive pause. Then the stillness was broken by Tommy Tucker: "(lee! That's goln' some!" Chicago Tribune.