THE HF.K: OMAHA, SA'ITRDAY. TlTXT.MTiKU 1(5. 1011. 15 - TRIUMPH OF THE TELEPHONE IS arn the 10,000 families hn hsJ Ixn j If h illwstpr cannot prvnt1 It Hard to Imagine How the World 1 ,h0 t0,e,'"" uuaiiy that hrinns first , u i tt-v . . Iul(1 to the Injured. After the flpstnio- LINES BUSY ON ALL SIDES All People Worth While on the Wires laimroKltr uf Private Linos and Their Ion. Tllum, ineie ppm to le no activity which Is not te!nn made more convenient by the telephone. It Is used to call the duck shooters in western Canada when a nock of birds him arrived and to direct tire movement of the dragon In Wagner'a S'.ariJ opera "Siegfried." At the Vandcrbilt cup race Us wlrea Kinllod Hie track and reported every ual:i or mishap of the rating autoa. And nt Kuch pxUnMve pac-ants Ui.it of tho liurheo tercentenary In !9uV where 4.000 actors came and went upon a ten-acre stapc. every rdr as given to tele I'lione. . ' v Ciirfiold was the first amonrr American Presidents to poKscss a telephone. An exhibition instrument was placed In his li'iuso without cotit in 1S78. while he via? still a member of congress. Ncithor Cleveland nor Harrison, for tempera mental reason:!, used the maic wire very often. Jn tliclr time there was one lenoly Idlo telephone In the White Jiouao uaed by the servants several times o week. liut with Mcrtlnley came a new order 'f iHnt;:. To him a telephone was more fun a necessity. It was a pastime an eiiHrstliijr sport. He was the one presl who rially revelled in the comforts of telpp-i '':''. J ii !:o had tat In his Canton home iieoru lUo ilieers of the Clifcao con nt!on.. Later lie sat there and ran the iirl presidential telephone campaign txiUed to his managers in thirty-eight SI.'iiM:.' Koiwevelt used the Instrument mainly in emergencies, but with Taft It has be come the common medium of conversa tion. He Introduced the custojn of a Ions distance talk with his family every evening when he Is away from home. Instead of the solitary telephone of the Clevelund and Harrison days the White House has now a branch exchange of Its own with wires running to every room, lloitkt-r Slow to Come In. Next to public officials, bankers were rerliaps the hist to accept the facilities of the telephone. They were slow to iibuudon the old fallacy that no business ran be done without ft written record. James tillman of New York was first among bankers to foresee the telephone era.- As early at 1S75, while Hell was teaching his Infant telephone to talk, vullman risked $J,000 In a scheme o es tablish a crude dial system of wire com munication, which later grew Into New York's first telephone exchange. At the prevent time the banker who w orks closest to his telephone la probably George W. Terklns. The Perkins plan of rapid transit telephony Is to prepare u list of names, from ten to thirty, and to flash from one another as fast aa the operator -can ring them up. Hull street brokers transact prac tically all their business by telephone. In the Stock exchange are 641 booths, each one the terminus of a private wire. - A firm of brokers counts It an ordinary years talking to send 60,000 messages. und there is one firm which last year sent twice, as many. In the mansion that the late, 12. II. Harrlman built at Arden there were 100 telephones, with sixty of them linked to the long: distance lines. What the brush Is to the artist, what the chisel is to the sculptor, the telephone was to Harrlman. He built his fortuno with It. It was In his library his bathroom, his private car. his camp In the Oregon wilderness. No transac tion was too large or too Involved to be ccttled over Its wires. He saved the credit of the Erie by telephone lent It J.i.OuO.000 aa he lay at home on a sick bed "He Is a slave to the telephone," wrote a magaslne editor. 'Nonsense," replied Harrlman; "It Is a slave to me." I.oinc Distance Talks. The long distance talks especially have l,iown to be Indispensable to the corpora tions whose plants . are scattered and geographically misplaced to the mills of New England, for Instance, that use the cotton of the south and sell so much of their product to the middle west. To the companies that sell perishable commodi ties an Instantaneous conversation with buyer In a distant city has often saved a carload or a cargo. Such caterers as the meat packers have greatly accelerated the wheels of their I business by Intercity conversations. For ten years of longer one of these firms has talked ever business morning between Omaha and Boston via 1,670 miles of wire. In the refining of oil the Standard OH company alone, at Its New York office, tends 230,(XiO messages a year. In the making it steel a chemical analysis Is made of each caldron of molten pig Iron when it starts on Its way to be rcfinad, and this analysis Is sent by telephone to the Eteehnaker, so that he will know ex actly howach potful is to be handled. In the floating of logs down rivers. In stead of having relays of shouters to pre vent the logs from Jamming, there la now a wire along the bank, with a- telephone linked on at every point of danger. In the rearing of skyscrapers It Is now usual to have a temporary wire strung verti cally, so that the architect may stand on the ground and confer with a foreman who Kits astride of a naked girder 300 feet up In the air. The firkt steamship line to use the tele phone we a the Cly-le, which had a wire from t.ia dock to tho office in 1877, and the first railway was the Pennsylvania, which two years later wau persuaded by Prof. Uu'l himself to give It a trial In Al toona. Pines then this railroad has be conio the cliltf beneficiary cf the art of telephony. It lias 173 exchanges, v too operators, 13,000 telephones and 20,000 miles of wire a more ample eystem than the city of New Yom had In lS9tj. In the operation it tialna the railroads have jwtl'.i-d thirty jeurs before they cared to trust the telephone, just as they waited liltmn years before they dared to tr..t ti e teltgraph. In l.3 a few rail ways '.ind the telephone lr. a small way, nit In 1.-07, when c. law v.;i:i passed that it.aC.e Uleg-apher hlfc'hiy. expensive there v j.1 ri t'.T.eial b'.vlr.g to the telephone. civnral ti-'i-i'ii roads hive now put It In i e, tome employing It as an associate of tho slorse method and others as a complete substitute. It has already keen fuur.d to be the quickest way of dls patchnjg trains. It will do in five minutes what tho telegraph did In ten. And It has enabled rullrjads to hire more suit- Whea guick action I needed In New Yoik City a general a'arm can be sent In five minutes by the police wires over Its whole vat nrea of XX square mils. Whim recently a gas main brcke in Brooklyn sixty ghls were at once called to the centrals In that part of the city tlon of San KTanclsco. Governor Guild of Massachusetts sent an appeal for the stricken city to the SM mayors of his state, and by the courtesy of the tele phone company, which carried the mes sages free, they were delivered to the last and furthermost mayors In less than five hours. After the destrurthn of Messina an order for enough lumber to build 10.0W new houses was cabled to New Yoik and telephoned to western lumberfen. So quickly was this order filled that on the twelfth day after the arrival of the cable gram tho ships were on their way to Messina with the lumber. After the Kansas City flood of 1903, when the drenched city was without rail ways or street earn or electric lights. It was the telephone that held the city to gether and brought help to the danger spots. And after tho Baltimore fire .the tele phone exchange was the last to quit and the first to recover. Its girls sat on their stools at the switchboard until the window panes were broken by the heaC. Then they pulled the covers over the board and walked out. Two hours later the building was In ashes. Three hours later another building was rented on the tinburned rim of the rlty and the wire chiefs wore nt work. In one day there was a system of wires for the use of the city officials. In two days these were linked to long distance wires, and In eleven days a 2,0n0-llne switchboard was in full working trim. This feat still stands as the record In rebuilding. Her bert X. Cosson In the Independent. MUSIC TEACHING TO FARMING How an Kaatern Woman Took Claim In Montana and Made a Stake. "Four years ago I possessed Just J1.60S, Today I have been offered 110, 000 for my property, all made from In vesting my sixteen hundred." Thi speaker was a woman or about 35, who until a few years ago supported her mother and herself by teaching muslo, "My Investment was a tract of forty- six acres of the land reclaimed, by Irri gation In Montana. I had been teaching music for more than ten years and was getting $U00 a year with room and board for nine months. Not being a concert performer I was considered to be doing very well. "It required a lot of self denial for my mother and me to save $160 a year out of my small salary, with every expense to pay for three months out of the twelve. I think we had both made up our minds to Jog along to the end of our days on my salary when I was inspired to become a homeseeker and take my chances with a farm. "I was visiting a pupil in Montam and hearing so much talk about the re claimed land I became interested. My mother was not with me, so I wrote her my Intentions and then set out to Join the homeseekers. The day after I re ceived my allotment and had all the papers In my possession I received Jier answer to that letter and she sternly forbade my wasting our hard earned savings in such a mad scheme. It was a year before she would consent to come out and Join me. "Though I waa lonely, I don't krfow but this happened for the best. It was a rough life at first, though my health Improved by It Beginning In the sum' mer I had time to have a small house built and get my land cleared before the next planting time. It waa covered with sage brush, which Is harder to clear than one would suppose. I set out ten acres In apple trees and put thirty-three In wheat and oats. With the three acres about the house re served for gardens and farm buildings this waa the entire tract. "That wheat produced fifty bushels to the acre and the oats sixty. Between my apple trees I set out five thousand strawberry plants and the rest of the apple land, was .planted In sugar beets and garden vegetables. I cleared some thing more than $300 on the strawber ries and as much more on the beets. The vegetables did well, but being green In the business I had not chosen, wisely as to variety. "Had it not been that the owner of a nearby tract was Inspired to put up dill pickles, I believe my cucumbers would have been a dead loss. He bought all that I could give him at t cents a pound'. That may not sound like much, but It Is a lot more than the cost of production. . "The second year I planted my wheat and oats tract In sugar beets. The aver age yield was twelve tons to an acre and the average selling-price $3 a ton. My strawberries gave roe a better profit the second year, and so did the vegetables be tween my apple trees. The apple trees are growing beautifully and have borne a light crop which sold to advantage, though of course the amount is Insuffi cient when taken alone. "Of course I have to work hard, and both early and late. I was careful at first to be as economical as possible. To avoid debt I could only afford to build a house of two rooms with a loft over head, which was the sleeping place that first year of my only companion. "He was 14 when ho came out to me soon after I became a settler. His mother had been my laundress for a number of years, so the boy and I were very well acquainted. When my mother decided to remain with the friends with whom ehe had always boarded, I wrote for the boy. He had gone to work that summer for the first time on a delivery wagon. His motrter allowed me to have him, with the understanding that half of his wages should be sent to her each month. "I couldn't have wanted a better as sistant than be proved himself to be. He didn't go to school that year, but the next, as soon as a school opened near us I insisted, that he attend. He kept up with h!s class and at the same time man. aged to help me so much that he fully earned his wares. "When planting time came he left school of his own accord aud only vre turned when the prem of work has paused- He had managed to keep up in his studies by working after dark. My mother came, out during the second year, so of course that made it somewhat easier for both the hoy and me. "We now have a comfortable house of titre. which we use as kitchen and laun dry. Where at first my stable only housed one horse It now accommodates six and three cows. We have several dexen hens, as many turkeys and almost as many geese and ducks. The poultry is my mother's particular care and she makes them pay for their keep. During the last year they have yielded her a handsom profit If my apples yield as those or other orchards In my neighborhood do 1 expect to have my present income In creased by at least $3,000 a year. It Is bcaus of the fine condition of my apple trees that I am getting so many offers from buyers." New York, t $10 Solid Quarter-Sawed Oak $.00 Rockerwith genuine leather scat v Grand Opportunity to Get an Inexpensive Gift For Saturday only wo arc offering as a spenal feature of our Christmas gift suggestions, this won derful value in a rocker for sjsi.OO. The original price was $10.00. vVe secured a large number of these rockers at an unusual price and are making this big concession for one dav only. The rocker is SOLID QUARTElt-KAWKl) OAK WITH A QKNUINK LEATHER SEAT. It is thoroughly built ami is the greatest bargain we have offered in months and months. Other Saturday Special Offerings. $3.50 Tufted 'Reversible Rug 2.00 This rug is exquisite quality and a distinctive pattern. The size is 27x54 inches. Tho rug has a fine weave and is wonderful quality for $2.00. PILLOW SQUARES 35 CENTS Pillow squares of damasks, silk-brocades, silk velours, silk-repp, and worsted tapestry in all colors and sizes form the third (Special for Saturday. The quality of these pillow squares is excellent. They are worth as high as $2.00 each. All go for 33 cents Saturdays SPECIAL YULE TIDE FURNITURE ATTRACTIONS A gift of furniture will delight your friends be cause it delights you. Good furniture becomes a friend of the family and remains in the home for years and years. Here are a few Christmas sug gestions: Mahogany Stands Made to endure; at tractive .$3.00 and up Mahogany Sewing Tables Made in the best woods and fashioned in the handsomest designs . $13.00 and up Costumers Selected oak and pretty ma hogany; strong and durable $2.00 and up Tea Tables Solid Mahogany and quart er aawed oak; graceful and charming de signs $8.00 and up Mahogany Tea Trays Very excellent qual ity and .graceful models $5.50 and up Fire Side Chair Mahogany; roomy and comfortable $20.00 Cellarettes Oak and mahogany; some with special attachment features $15.00 and up Smoker Sets Very select line 50c and up $5.50 Ladies' Desk Chair Imitation ma hogany .......$4.00 Sectional Book Cases Macey and Gunn do- . signs; oak and mahogany $12.00 and up $34.00 Overstuffed Chair Mahogany frame; roomy ' $25.00 Smokers' Cabinets Oak and mahogany; strong and durable $3.50 and up Smokers Stand Oak and mahogany at .' $1.50 and-up Children's Rockers and Chairs Beautiful oak G5c and up Childrens' Sulkies Strong , and pretty at . $1.5 $ and up Umbrella Stands Oak and imitation m;t- hogany $3.50 and up Pedestals Oak and Mahogany $2.50 and up $47.00 Bed Davenport Quarter-sawed oak frame; denim covering ..$30.00 $16.50 Mahogany Settee Upholstered in denim; strongly made ; $12.00 $30.00 Overstuffed Chair Full of comfort and beauty; graceful lines. $23.00 Telephone Stand and Chair Solid oak; strong built i $5.50 Piano Seats Beautiful mahogany, quarter sawed oak and selected walnut at. . .$7.50 and up Medicine Cabinets Selected oak and white enamel handy and roomy! ...... .$3.75 and up Mahogany Book Blocks Neat designs fashioned along graceful lines $5.00 and up Hall Clocks Mahogany and oak; accurate timepieces; beautiful decorations. .$25.00 and up Drop Leaf Tables Finely grained and fig ured; handsome articles $8.00 and up Ladies' Writing Desks Birch, mahogunv and oak ..'.$12.00 Ladies' Desk Chair Selected oak; fine construction $3.75 . $60.00 Mahogany Setteo Built up construc tion; handsome article $30.00 Miller, Stewart & Beaton Co. THE TAG-POLICY HOUSE Established 188 1 413.13-17 So. 16th St. A Special and Uery Important CJotiee! To the Givers of Christmas Presents: WHY NOT GIVE SOMETHING WORTH WHILE? We aro making an extraordinary effort to place in every home a high grade standard piano. OUR EFFORT CONSISTS OF SELLING A MUCH HIGHER GRADE PIANO FOR A GREAT DEAL LESS MONEY, AND ON MUCH EASIER TERMS THAN ANY OTHER PIANO HOUSE HAS EVER OFFERED, OR ARE OFFERING. You Have Always Uanted a Piano Why not take advantage of the special offerings to be found here? Waiting and de laying will not bring to you a better offer than we are prepared to make' during this, tho greatest money saving, opportunity offering. tgySyy.3' fcia-Asvi miisBWsHaBsB"sBta. lids-?? Plan -J SALE We have done our part, why not do yours? There is no reasonable excuse for your home any longer to be without that article of furniture that is most useful as well as ornamental to any and every home. A MBH GRADE Adds character; has a refining influence; is a source of amusement and entertainment; is a great educator, and in fact, is the most useful article of furniture that you can place in the household. START TODAY IN DOING YOUR PART By calling at our warerooms, see the beautiful case designs, hear the beautiful tones of the pianos we are offering, and allow us to prove to you that you can well afford to pur chase that much wanted instrument now today. r s"7) 1 0- -A- tm ii i i i few aim ii. ;'")! Give Gifts that Will Please They are at the Christmas Fair of the Churches December 4 to 20 Beautiful Court of the Bee Building Every gift a- gift that will delight and every one a gift at a reasonable price Visit the Gift-Land of Omaha this week Some of the Christmas Fair sutftfesTvons are: Water color novelties, fancy paintings, nprons, band-painted china, handkerchiefs, comWrts, fancy baskets, Mexican stamped pocketbooks, dusting caps, porcelain ware, dolls outfits, delicious homo cooking, candies. THE FOLLOWING CHURCHES WILL BE IN CHARGE DECEMBER 15 AND 16: Churches. Chairman. Residence. Telephone. North Side Christian Mrs. C. A. Mangum 2804 N. Twenty-eighth St. B-2940 Church of Good Shepherd. .Mrs. Ira Marks .Apt. 8, Roland W. 6000 Lowe Ave. Presbyterian Mrs. H. M. McClanahan. 13 12 North Fortieth St. ..H. 1402 St. Mathew's Eng. Lutheran Mrs. L. B. Snyder ,1952 South Fifteenth St. D. 7475 Your Money Goes Farthest at the Christmas Fair. " Under auspices of The Omaha Bee. 1