THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 5, 1913. 11A New Life Free T All Bo longer Any Excujo for Men ?r Women to Bo Weak Merved, Brain Fagged, Thin or Haggard. 0end Your Name nd Address Today for a Free rifty-Oent Box of Xellosg'i Banltone Wafeia and Learn the Grand Truth. If you are elck or ailing It ts because the very foundation of vour existence Is gradually bolns dried up, the nervo fcorce which radiates through every litom of your hclns is perishing. Tha Xraln and the nerves require nourish ment Just as much as tho rest of th feody. KCDAKERY'S LAND OF JOY '.ccent Improvements Bring Color Photography Within Reach. WHAT AMATEURS CAN DO 5liiiilklty Marks tlip Process of the etv Invention N'o Iilntlt to the Number of Iteprodnc ttoim. ISellocc's Banltone Wafer Slake You ( ieel.l'lne All the Time. The marvelous discovery, KellogE's Snnltono Wafers, tho greatest nerve vltallzor known, restores your vitality and renews your old-tlmo strength and vlpror by Riving your nervous system the food It Is craving. Rheumatism, neu ralgia, headache, kidney disease, liver troubles, Insomnia and all weakened conditions of men and women quickly disappear, tho hollows vantBh, energy re turns, and life is worth living once more. Tho red corpuscles in tho blood aro In creased and everything that passes through tho dlgestlvo tract Is turned into good, solid, healthy nerves and flesh. In stead of being undigested and unasslml lated. In order to let you test the truth of this for yourself, a fiOc box of Kellogg's Sanltono Wafers, will be Bent you by mall free, If you simply mall coupon be low, and you will be astounded at the wonderful results obtained from tho free trial box alone. FJtEE 30c BOX COUPOX F. J. KELLOOG CO., 1994 Hoffmastor Block, Battle Creek, Mich. Send me by return mall, free of cnarge. a 60c trial box or tho wonder ful discovery for nerves, Kellogg's banltone warer. 1 enclose 6 cents In stamps to help pay postage and pacKing. Xamo ............. Street ( H.F.P. t City State The regular $1.00 size of Kellogg's Snnltone Wafers are for sale In Omalm at Sherman & McConnell Drug Co., 103 So. 16th St.; Owl Drug Co., 324 S. 16th St.; Beaton Drug Co., 1501 Farnam St.: I,oyal Pharmacy, 209 N. 16th St.; Hell Drug Co., 1216 Farnam St No free boxes from druggists. A GRAND SUCCESS was tho Ak-Sar-Uen Ball, but many beautiful gowns and wraps were badly mussed and soiled in the crush. "THE WARDROBE" makes a specialty of cleaning these 'fancy gowns and wraps, send tbom there. They will bo returned with all their former bright freshness re stored. Phono D. 1720 wo will call for olid deliver to all points' in tho city und Dundee. The WARDROBE 2016 FARNAM PilED O. WILMOTH, Mnnager. OF Copper-Clad Ranges IN BASEMENT All this week a special factory representative will demonstrate the special features and economy of these ranges. An $8.00 set of Aluminum Ware will be given with each stove sold. We invite your attendance. & Wiihelm The Wellington Cafe 1817 rarnam Street. DINNER 600 P. P. MILLER, Proprietor. Oyster Cocktail Puree of Chicken Radishes Celery or Olives Assorted Nuts Roast Prime Ribs of Beef Baked Spring Chicken, Stuffed, Olblet Sauce Loin of Pork. Apple Sauce Leg of Veal with Dressing Mashed Potatoes or June Peas Baked Sweet Potatoes Creamed Oyster Plant Fruit Salad Hot Rolls Pitted Cherry Pie Green Apple Pie Tuttl Fruttl Ice Croam with Assorted Cakes Coffee, Tea, Ice Ta, Milk, Butter milk, Cocoa October 6, 1913 Zoro D. Clark's Neat, Refined, Pain Tess Dental Parlors Third rioor Bsmge Blag. ISth and Harney Opposite Orpheum Best Sporting News Right In Tho Bee day by day. Full box scores of all big leagues. Sport car toons that hit the bullseye A method of natural-color photon raphy whereby any number of reproduc t ons may bo mado from tho original nega tive and which may be used by any am a teur who possesses a camera has at last Veen devised. Tho finished product Is stlU a transparency, tho step forward being that duplicates may bo made at will. Un der the old systems ono transparency was the total result of a single exposure. Al though the' now method falls Bhort of the Ideal system, which would bo one In which color prints could bo taken on paper di rectly from tho negative, It yet opens a delightful field of work. The new process as described by 1, C. Warburg, the Inventor, Is simplicity itself. Tho materials ore a taking-screen, a light loiter, panchromatlo negative plate, ak posiuvo piaio ana a viewiug-screen. xne taking-screen Is a glass plate covered with squares arranged In symmetrical order of red, green and blue colors. Every screen Is of exactly tho same pattern, so that when two screens are placed to gether, film to film, the squares of tho same color on each other In regular and corresponding order, that Is to Bay, ever red square falls on a red square, and tho green and blue likewise come on their re spective squares. Tho Importance of fix ing definitely the pattern of the Bcreen. and the Issuing of It without any varia tion whatever, will bo recognised when It Is montionod that. In years to come. screens may be had which will register with negatives taken today. IlnW 4 ft I'.. . 1 n l)ll1n.ntn. For working the start Is made with tha taking-screen, wldch must bo used only for maklnrr the exrjosure. It nhmild b treated with groat care, and' never left lying around for any length of time in a strong light, as all colors aro likely to change. This taking-screen has been very carefully adjusted and can be used- for taking hundreds of negatives. By the single method, whoro the emulsion Is com bined with the screen, it has only to do Its work once, and any slight alteration that may take plttc after the trans parency is made would bo scarcely, if at all, noticeable to tho eye. On tho other hand. It would make a considerable dlffor. enco , photographically. For Instance, If thero was the slightest fading of the blue element, though practically Invisible to the eye, It would when used In combina tion with the panchromatic ulate roaulre a stronger yellow filter. Place this taking-screen in the dark slide so that the' class side will comn nearest the ltns. On top of this, put the panchromatic dry plate film to film and press the two into absolute contact by closing the dark slide. Perfect Contact 1m Knxontinl. Before going any further it is well to emphasize the necessity of perfect con tact between tho plato and tho screen, for in this rests tho difference between success and failure. Many kinds of dark slides may be suitable,' but those giving the most perfect results aro what are known as "book form," with a spring on each side of the ' intervening leaf. To have one or two such .slides made to fit tho. camera is a very small Item. 4llt-, it? wiuuiiiii wi(i xpiaii wny sucn huso lulp contact is essential. Tha reason Is that each color-square lets through its own distinctly colored light onjf and must produce a ' sharp corresponding replica on the negative .plate, which In Its turn reproduces It faithfully on the positive, so that when tho viewing screen Is finally Joined "'with tho positive, the clear, transparent squares In the .latter register correctly with the colored squares of the viewing screen, and so form colored transparency. Supposing thero was not perfect con tact between the negative plate and the taking screen, there would be a slight enlargement and blur of the square In the negative which would be reproduced in the positive, so that being larger when put In register with the viewing screen, it would not only admit Its own color, but also a part of the adjoining color squares, and result ' in a mixture which would give either no color at all or an Incorrect rendering. The filter for all ordinary work Is a piece of gelatine film placed In the center of the lens. This filter Is principally for the purpose of cutting off some of the blue rays, and so to equalize any difference there may be In the red and green sensitiveness of the plate, liverything is now ready for taking the picture, and the necessary oxposure can be ascertained by the usual exposure meter. AdvnntBKts ot the New System. It Is In the question of exposure that the duplicating method shows Its superiority over the old, single method. With the latter the absolutely correct exposure must be given, whilst with the duplicating methods the same latitude is allowable as In taking an ordinary negative. Slight over or underexposure makes no differ ence, tor this Is. adjusted In making the postlve, whereas by the methods where tho emulsion Is combined with the screen ft the plate has been underexposed the result is a dark, nontransparent picture, and with overexposure you get a clear transparency with weak colors. The de velopment of the negative offers no dif ficulties: practically any developer may be used. The light' In the dark room must, of course, be green, but not of that dark character generally used with pan chromatic plates. Of course the plate must not be held Immediately under this light during the whole time of develop ment, but the dish should be covered, ex cept when the operator occasionally looks at the plate to see the progress of de velopment. Wash and fix In the usual way. , Thero is now a negative with a forma tion representing the colors of the object taken, and whloh can be seen with a mag nifying glass. From this negative a posi tive Is made, by tho use of an ordinary lantern plate capable of producing a bril liant slide of a black tone, and' It Is by altering the density of this positive that the colored slide can be made to suit any lantern. With tho positive you now take u viewing screen, und by placing the two together, film to film, and moving them about slightly, with a view to getting the color squares Into perfect register, the picture will gradually appear In Its cor rect colors. Clip the two together and bind them In tho ordinary way when the color transparency Is complete. Any Number Can Be Made, The advantage of this method Is that It Is not only pocslble to make any number I or colored positives from one and the j same negative, but a screen never need be wasted The taking screen, as has I been previously stated, has no limit to the number of negatives that can be made with it, and the viewing screen, when the result attained Is unsatisfactory or the slide Is no longer required, can be unbound and used again with another subject. In tho old method It could only bo consigned to the dust heap should the result be unsatisfactory. There Is a fur ther advantage, that as the negative has been taken through a screen and on a panchromatic plate. It makes the most perfect negative for a monochrome paper print, the gradation of light and shade together with the color values being abso lutely correct. , Lantern slides made by this process are more brilliant than any other, owing to the transparency of their colors, but they will always require a more Intense light in the lantern than when showing an ordinary monochromo slide, for the rea son that only one-third or In some cases two-thirds of the light passes through transparency. Take a patch of red color an Inch square. In that there are equal areas ot red, green and blue squares. All the green and blue squares are blocked out, and as tho light can pass through the red squares only, no more than a third of the light is available. In the case of yellow, which Is made Up equally ot red and green, the blue being blocked out. two-thirds ot the light Is used, whilst In the case of white when all the colors are working you get practically all the light. Partly to over come the loss of light, the positive should be regulated. For a weak light, weak positives are necessary, whilst the slsa of the enlargement must also be limited. For weak lights, however, It Is better to pro ject the picture on to a transparent tracing cloth and view the composition from behind. The devices and plates for working this method are now a purchasable commodity and are comparatively Inexpensive. Each completed transparency costs a trifle under DO cents. Frederick W. Ford, In Boston Transcript. FAMILY SPITE LONG DRAWN Snuff Fortune Willed to Outsider!, Cousin Given the Empty Hand. Enmity handed down from generation to generation for more than 125 years found final expression In the will of Miss Julia Garrett, last member ot the dls tlngulshed Garrett family, Who died In Vlllanova several weeks ago. Leaving, so It Is authoritatively stated, at least $9,000,000 ot an estate valued at 110,000,000 to Isaac T. Starr, her financial adviser and executor, sho cut off from participation members of the Dunn fain lly, cousins, because the Dunns' forbears looked with contempt upon John Garrett, from whom sho was descended, when he started In a humble way the manufacture of snuff 181 years ago. When his buslnees, begun on a capital ot 100 In New Cattle county, Delaware, expanded and ho beonmo wealthy, Oar. rett remembered tho attltud ot the Dunns. Succeeding generations kept the enmity alive, and of the great fortune that grew from the original capital ot $100 tho Dunns, unleM proceedings to break tho will aro successful, will receive nn amount so slight comparatively as to be almost neEllglble. This amount will come to them through a perronal liking of Miss Garrett for a woman who married Into tho Dunn family. Her will leaves i5.000 to Mrs. Dunn, mother of George Garrelt Dunn, a mil lionaire banker. The snuff buslnoss, from which tho Gar rotte made their enormous fortune, passed from the hands of the Garrett family In 1900. It was sold to tho American 8nuff company for approximately 115,000,000. Four years later tho American Snuff company waa absorbed by tho American Tobacco company. Philadelphia North American. CENTENNIAL OF LOCOMOTIVE Honors of the Invention Reaches Back Beyond Stephenson's Rocket. Among the centenaries which should be celebrated this year Is that of the loco motive. It Is true that the automobile and the flying machines have of lata years rather "put It over" on our old friend, the choo-choo engine, but the lat ter still remains for the average man the chief means of rapid transit for long dis tances. Although some doubt ts cast upon tho genuineness of the "Puffing Billy," which is still proudly exhibited at South Kensington as the original locomotlvu and the founder ot the great race of giants which we now know, it Is certainly older than the Wylam Dllly In the lidtn burg Museum of Science and It deserves tho credit ot demonstrating that It could outdo horses In speed and putting power. From the heavy beam engine of Boul ton and Watt, the Improved ono. beam less and direct acting ot the Cornlshman Trevlthlck and the Improvement on this of Hedley, which Introduced the horl xontal cylinder and tho fly wheel, camo the work of Stephenson, which finished the first stage of rati locomotion. William Hedley, the colliery superin tendent. In October, 1812, began at tho 'n stance of his employer, Christopher Blackett, a series of experiments to over come the difficulties which had been too much for Trevlthlck. Tho chief of thesa difficulties wns thought to be that nf getting a smooth wheel to hold on a smooth rail. Hedley belloved that the ;. 1 heslon would bo sufficient and expert ments proved that he was right Ills completed engine, a crude and ponderous thing though It was, proved In 1S1.1 that It cnuld pull eight loaded wagons at fixe mites an hour. It was sixteen years after this that Stephenson's Rocket appeared, and In that time he and others underwent heart breaking experiments before they arrived at anything like a solution ot the UfN cuttles presented by tho eiiRlne and th rails. The first use to which the loco motive waa put was tho carrying of malt and other freight, but tho transportation of passengers naturally followed, and soon railroads were In operation In the principal countries of the world. Hvrn In our present day vast changes have taken place In the evolution of the rail engine and speed and endurance un dreamed of by Hedley and Stephenson have been achieved, but, with Trevlthlck, the honor of the Invention Is theirs. Chi cago Tribune. District Court in Johnson County TECUMSEU. Neb., Oct. l.MSpeclaU In the district court here the damage case ot John C. Miller against the Chi cago. Burlington & Qulncy Railroad com pany was settled without trial. Mr. Mil ter, who Is old and infirm and a resi dent of Sterling, waa suing tho railroad company for (5,000 for the death ot his son, Guy C. Mllltr, who was killed In the railroad yards In Lincoln on August 11, 1911. Mr. Miller Is very stck at the pres ent time and It ts feared he will not gat better. The settlement was for IJ.000, the attorneys for Mr. Miller saying that this amount at this time Is acceptable owing to their client's physical condition. A divorce was granted Mrs. Anna L. Townsend from Adalbert Townsend. and Mrs. Townsend was given custody of the children. George W. Krltner was given a divorce from Lydla L. Krltner, and the defendant waa allowed the use of her maiden name, Lydla 8. Matthias. A new case to be filed Is the Johnson County Drainage district against E. H. and Lottie Grist This Is an appeal by the drainage hoard from the decision ot a board of appraisers. Girl Hnrt In Runaway. QVERTON, Neb., Oct. 4.-(Speclal Tele gram.) MIsa Florence Bates, lS-year-old daughter ot George Bates, a fanner liv ing two miles west of this city, was thrown out of the buggy and had one of her legs broken between tho anklo and knee. Miss Bates was driving u high ran way. Lee Wntson found her by the road and took her home. rnrt i of a Name A piano, moro than anv other instrument is sold on the name of the manufacturer, or the reputation of the dealer. For IW years we have sold the World's Best Makes. No matter what piano you may 'have thought of buying, accept our invitation to inspect our magnificent stock. Only at This Store Can You Find These World-Renowned Pianos MASON & HAMLIN Uprights from S550 up Grands $800 up KRANIOH & BAOH "Uprights from $450 up Grands $750 up BUSH & LANE Grands $650 Uprights from $350 up KIMBALL PIANOS Grands from $650 up Uprights" $275 tip 0 ABLE-NELSON From $250 up Payments to Suit. Monthly payments extended to thoso who do not wont to pay cash. A. Hospe Co. 1513-15 Douglas Streot. t 4 The Cadillac Leadership is Once More Strikingly Demonstrated in the V 1914 Limousine ; The Cadillac Limousine continues to maintain its position of leadership of enclosed cars. It is the preference of those who place luxury, comfort, ease, richness, taste, dignity, elegance and refinement above every consideration, and are satisfied with nothing short of that which represents these qualifications in, the highest degree. The improved Delco electric cranking device, the electric lights, both inside and out; the powerful, quiet motor, the ample wheel base, the large wheels and tires, the flexible yielding springs, the deep, soft, com- ' fortable upholstering, the richness of trimmings and finish, all contribute to theluxuriousness of this splendid car. This car is now on display in our salesroom. . N 2054-56 Farnam Street CADILLAC COMPANY OF OMAHA GEO. F. REIM. Pres. Phone Douglas 4225-6 5