THE OMAHA SUNDAY REK: JUNE 4. 1916. 13 A i MILLIONS FOR THE CHICAGOTERMINALS Number of Roads Unite in Building Two Great Structures for Pas senger and Freight. THREE YEARS TO COMPLETE Chicago, June 3. The sum of $66, 000,000 will have been expended by several of the railroads operating in the Chicago district when the new freight and passenger terminals now under construction are completed. The freight terminal will be finished in about six more months, but it will take nearly three years to complete the passenger terminal. The freight terminal will embrace laying of trackage on a stretch cover ing twelve city blocks, from the Chi cago river south to Twelfth street. The plans for the terminal were so arranged as to give a maximum speed and convenience of handling freight with a minimum of ground space nec essary for the buildings involved. Tie work is bing done by the Pennsyl vania lines, west, and will cost, for land required, building material and labor, approximately $16,000,000 and the finished work will be one of the greatest accomplishments of its kind in the history of modern railroads. Aim of Builders. The main aim of the builders was a terminal that would be so arranged as to eliminate street congestion in hand ling traffic and would make speedy and easy the handling of the enor mous and steadily growing freight business of Chicago. This result will be accomplished by close grouping of the several parts of the terminal structure and by placing the railroad tracks below street level, with the freight house just above the tracks, at street level, and with a storage warehouse above the freight house. The idea of placing the component parts of the terminal above one an other was to save ground space and to make the handling of incoming and outgoing freight easy by a system of powertul, modern-type electric eleva tors. Adjoining the freight house, and all under cover, will be eighteen tracks, which will accommodate 400 freight cars. Inclosed driveways will protect freight and freight handlers in all sorts of weather. Thousand Men at Work. One thousand men have been work ing for about ten months, some laying me neavy piling ana concrete founda tions, and some putting up the struc tural steel framework of the buildines. About 25 per cent of the structural teel work remains to be finished This will be in about six months and the total cost of labor, by that time will, it is estimated, amount to about fI,5UO,000. The steel, brick, concrete, piling and terra cotta that will go into the build ings will cost about $2,500,000. The structures will occupy a ground space 450 by 750 feet between Polk street on the north, and Taylor street on the south; between the Chicago river and what was once Stewart ave nue. Acquisition of the ground thus used cost the railroad company $12,- v Three Years to Finish. The union passenger terminals, on Vvhich preparatory work has begun and which will be comoleted in ahout three years, will cost about $50,000,000 ana will be the tinest railway pas senger station in the world, its pro jectors say. It will be built and oc cupied by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, the Pennsylvania, and the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy roads, the Pennsylvania beinar renresentfH by two branches, the Panhandle and the Fort Wayne. The station will be composed yir- uiaiiy oi two buildings, with common facilities of egress and ingress. A main building will be west of Canal street and a concourse, between two 6ets of tracks, will be east of Canal Btreet. Each of the two buildings will be surrounded by four streets, thus giving eight points of exit and en trance to passengers and making ac cess ro trains quick and convenient Train sheds will extend from Madison Street, south to Harrison street The architectural feature of the Xnain building will be a waiting room 100 by 300 ffet and 120 feet high. The building will occupy a ground space of 32s by 350 feet. The train sheds will be of the latest covered-in type snd will eliminate columns in the center of the platform. NO SPOUSE. SHE DIES IN FIRE Olrl Who Sarrtrirrd Hrrarlr. Several Indian reform sedations fctve been attacking the evil ciMtnm of marriage downes and their efforts ouifi recently received notable rein forcement from S young girl in la! eutu hnr nin e will not soon It. Jorj?.ttM! Snrhatai hit reached iht advanced f U and ji mil iini'i:irri?d. Her t!ier tj,j nu !e rrrv rii.irt to ( n. lect enoiiifh nictiry tfiv ImmK,. f r lr, I nt in vain, (.if the price ilc mil !H for s !.rh!cr -m his vm r 'i "' ah and (.2'i in iewlry i ! ' t Hfi'hnj ptj !.--, f ., ,,, rioftv-.e t ( ,.,(, l;m , ((re.-t her ,t hi iff tf ?, . to- f.., ( ,.( f . f- t f ... f!o!i-. l I, tit I' f- i. "' "-!. t'liiv.j i f. K ' I I I " .',f,ofh., n t It It r r. ,,, if, ' t r t !: "lia ' ' ' !. it re f i y :t roor., i ; . ( " -re f . 1 - . '.: 1 ' e t i . . it i f t ' ONE OF FAVORITES AT CHICAGO Eddie O'Donnel, team and winner of Corona race, is on of speed pilots who Chicago clasic on Saturday. BERLIN CITY OF SPENDERS Higher Priced Cafes Always Filled and Jewelers and Rag Dealers So a Big Business. WAGES GREATLY INCREASED ((orrapondf nr of th Asorltfd PrM ) Berlin, May 30. "Alles besetzt (all full), said a gorgeously uniformed in dividual standing before 'the street door of the big Friedrichstrasse cafe. The man to whom he spoke had no in tention of going in, but he happened to look toward the door as he passed and the uniformed one had parroted forth his one phrase so many times that the simple glance in his direc tion sufficed to evoke it again. The passerby, however, grew curi ous, and made a trip through the bet ter parts of the city. This is what he found: Three better class cafes with from ten to thirty persons standing out side or in the entrance way, waiting tor a table to become vacant. All other wine or beer restaurants visited so full that only in one could a tree table for two persons be found Two others where the door keeper announced in advance: "Alles be setzt." The observer had for months en countered difficulty fn finding a table in a leading restaurant having more than 500 tables. In one of the places, Unter den Linden, the head waiter had been graciously pleased to let him dine on his promise not to retain the table longer than an hour. In another Unter den Linden restaurant he had found that it was all but impossible to eat without re serving a table in advance. And these two places are the most expensive ones in all Berlin. Brings Wealth to Some. The condition is symptomatic. War, which brings poverty -and misery to so many, brings wealth to others. Many persons who had been strug gling along with barely more than the necessaries of life for years, have grown wealthy almost over night. And they are spending, spending lav ishly, spending carelessly. Berlin has become the city of the spenders. the crowds that fill the better class places go there in spite of the fact that everything costs more than be fore the war. Beer is dearer. Even coffee has increased in price. The still considerable stocks of the high est grade French champagnes are finding a bigger sale than ever be fore, in the face of a price increase of 4 or 5 marks a bottle. A promi nent German champagne firm recent ly declared a dividend thrice great er than that of the precedign year. It was only one dividend contributed by the spenders. Caviar costs from 18 to 24 marks s pound in peace times in Berlin. Until the recent prohibition of the further import of non-indispensable articles put an end to the business, vast quan tities of Astrachan caviar w ere be-1 ing sold tor prices upwards of 42 marks. Similar conditions existed as to other luxuries. Rugs High. Too. Dealers in fine porcelains, Oriental rugs brnnre, and antiques generally are doing a flourishing business. I are mere are auriosi nn reauy tine rugsuir left among the to ki of the Berlin j dealers. None ran he secured by j bimi me aprnurra nave niiiht up all that were on hand. A erni. reicnt went recently to one ! 1.1 H 1 II k ... k. , pc "f neciirmg an oil lurktnh rK at a reanotiaMe prue. It o, for 'u per fent mote t'.-ut would have been re.i!i.e.t j,e4, t timet. '1 he same true ( ooier rU, ft )ielrv i" fad, f.f reailv rvervthir'a offered 1'eilni i( to ki Av,(nlel f 'rei ; re.reter"tu : t r ir. great !:!T'ci1' v In Vee; n ' 4t of or !er ! ! it ! r- ,le, i' ie i() pad a l4.-K (. I ''.e- f it It If .! if a l i an - . n ' 4P4IT ' e I I'ifiii fa !, hi. S it t i in It M hri i a a' ! a ? i i er i ame ! e : ( e. ' ! ' ": I'll 4 tit ' . m t ' ' t' ' t l l I tl f f 11 M' , t t i fr." . t ' l H r r v l i 1 ' I i t t f V t I't !.!' I -1 I. t l.f( " " I ' ing company will pay for 1915 a 45 per cent dividend against 35 per cent for 1914, although cut off from its mines in German South Africa. The sale at increased prices of its stock on hand in Germany justifies this, company officials said. Are Buying Pianos. The spenders are buying pianos. Their children are taking piano les sons. Fashionable tailors are making evening clothes for men who never before felt the need of them or who could not afford them if they did. A mild winter has not been able to af fect seriously the business of the best furriers. The Associated Tress representa tive asked the head of the largest theater ticket agency in Berlin about conditions in the theatrical world. "Absolutely at the top notch," he said. "Our business is every bit as good as at any previous rime, if not better. Indeed, 1 am disposed to think that it is better. All theaters are doing well. The people seem to have plenty of money, and they are spending it." This last sentence of the ticket agent appears to sum up the situation. In the nature of things, the number of these spenders, of the people who are benefiting by the war, must be small. Wages for day labor have, it is true, increased greatly, but there are fewer men laborers left to draw them. Reclamations from military service affect chiefly only skilled craftsmen and leaders of undertak ings. Hence the day laborers of mil itary age are mainly with the colors. One notes the absence of their custom in the cheaper saloons snd beer restaurants, many of which are struggling along only with difficulty and some of which have had to close their doors. But as one ascends the scale one begins to meet the spenders, and their number increases in direct ratio with the expensiveness of the resort visited. Russ Pope Conducts Dramatic Easter Service at Front (Correnpondence of th Aor.!atf4 Prem.) At The Front With The Russian Army, June 1. Under a small tent dimly lit by candles, a mile from the firing line a Russian pope conducted a midnightF.aster service to the ac companiment of an occasional cannon shot and the intermittent glare of Austrian rockets. It rained, and the solemn-faced soldiers who stood with bowed heads before the improvised altar were drenched. The green and gold robe of the prelate xontrasted strangely with the dun of the uni forms and the black and white KOwns of a half doren Sisters of Mercy who stood nuunlen in the doorway of an adjacent cottage. Around the popes neck was sus pended a crucifix upon a ribbon of the Order of St. George, awarded for service on the battlefield. Now and then the chanted words of the ser vice were partially drowned by the splashing and groaning of guns and ammunition carts lumbering past through the heavy mud; but even the teamsters seemed impressed by the solemnity of the hour and urged on their striiijlinsr hest in subdued ,. six rough soM,er, composed ,, ,,ojr w1M:h asMStH n (hek i(.r. il,.ir ..;,... i.i.,..i, ;.u .u. ,,, ,4 , of h, All evening long Austrian Ukef, m grcuer niimi.fM man imul pierc-I : ed i he fuackfie. Out in frenrhra each i.(!u ,, .,,,, w. h,v,n ... Own little i e'e lira l ion of ttii greatest of a!l li'uuian bnliiUx. The light from their rn.V,t apparently had f'"ine 1 the .;" i of the rnmiv. whoe trem 1 e f..r .i the tst roij i ' ... ..,,,, lfnrh were at thu hour agla-f at in fertali linger their ralnuin l.ombi j ' r I" H !' tin rii.eet.caVH troopers, t't4't, the iruritl am) fcnute I "t )iti has tnr " Murmur cf ;., ... ,it aU.njf ht ii- a i.l I S '.! t. v the wlote I.. .( n. i... ... . CERMIM IMPERIAL BANK FORCED TO BUILD ANNEX .1 I 1 In. rrH I I ;- . a" 1 ' ! l , v ' ... lierhri, rl t . e ' I V "it. "! f a tl :! "1 ..i i--l it I i i t 1 ' i ' m ih i-.4 r m PERSONAL SERVICE IS OBTAINED ON MRS. flRADY 1 !(.! Si d ii I V. f it ft ,! captain of the Due.enberg is figured as money-getter at FRENCH AIDED BY VERDUN Partisan Spirit in Parliament and Press Hushed During Brave Defense. PESSIMISM IS DECREASING (Corrupondsnra of lh Aaenclatril Pru I Paris, April 30. The battle of Ver dun appears to have had a great moral effect in France. It has turned attention from irritating discussions over details of the conduct of the war, and has cut short an incipient revival of partisan spirit in Parlia ment and in the press, which had been favored by relative stagnation at the front. Also, it seems to have diminished the number of pessimists and hence increased French confi dence in the final outcome. "They have shot their bolt," is a frequent commentary heard in places where two months ago there were nervous complaints as to the prolong ation of hostilities. "They can do no more than they have done, which is far from enough ever to shake the French army." Shortly before the Germans at tacked Verdun some radical and so- Get 30x3 30x3S 32 x3V 33x4- a ..... t.,.., (' ... . '. . l ' 11 Hill i GOODRICH m - -i 1 i . , . - j cialist papers attacked the priests, the clericals and the "easy" class, charg I ing them with shirking arduous and ! dangerous missions. No priest or aristocrat, they said, had ever been seen in a trench. They also accused them of aiding and abetting the Ger mans after having helped to bring on the war in the hope that a dis aster to France would overthrow the republican or parliamentary regime. They accused them of sending money to German v to subscribe to the Ger man war loans. A wineshop keeper of the Department of Lot, who re peated these accusations, was prose cuted and sentenced to three years' imprisonment and was fined 1,000 francs. The campaign against the priests and clericals was even taken up by such a conspicuous writer as Mon sieur Paul Adam, who made similar charges in the leading radical news paper of the south of France, the De peche de Toulouse, and drew upon liimself a storm of protest. The bat tle of Verdun did far more to stop the campaign than toe conviction of the wineshop man of the Lot and the protests against the articles of Mon sieur Paul Adam, It has, perhaps, accomplished even more than the let ter of the premier, Monsieur Itriaml, declaring that all such calumnies should be punished. Today all par ties, including the socialists, who have just renewed their declaration in favor of a war to the bitter end, are working in harmony. Apt Reply by Soldier. About two months ago it was pos sible to witness such incidents as that which took place in a little cafe in the center of Paris. Two soldiers in stained uniforms, smacking of the front, were taking their morning coffee in a retired corner modestly and inconspicuously, as is the way with the men who have seen real service. They were concealed from two citizens who were discussing the war. "I've had my fill of it," said one of the civilians. "It's time it was brought to s finish. If the generals in command can't do it, they ought to be replaced." One of thesoldiers roset o his feet and confronted the pessimist. "My good friend," he said, "you must have had a hard time of it. When were you mustered out? Tell us what you have done in the war, and what the war's done to you to give you such a tired feeling.' The civilian gulped down the rest of his coffee and rush ed out of fhe cafe without replying. Today the cafe conversations are all about some exploit around Ver dun and what will happen to the Ger mans, if they persist in their effort to take the ancient stronghold. , There is less discussion of the high cost of living than two months ago, although there has been no appre ciable easing of prices. This, too, is accounted for by the heroic resist ance of the army. You will always get best results if you use Bee Want Ads. your Money's Worth ! WIIEN the largest Rubber Factory in the World, --With a 47-year EXPERIENCE in Rubber-working and, A 47-year RECORD of Business-Integrity, Good-faith, and Square dealing behind it, f Makes the following deliberate Statement, you can well AFFORD to believe it. Here is the Statement: MONEY can't build BETTER Tires, -of Fabric-Construction, - AT ANY PRICE, than tho "Black Barefoot," GOODRICH Tires which are Fair-list-priced below. Dependable Tires cannot be built, and sold, for lean. , lrV1 .WTK MONEY when you pay MORE than the following prices for AN fabric Tire. Goodrich "Fair-List" Prices BLACK "BAREFOOT" f$ 10.40 $13.40 $15.45 $22.00 Ford Sizes "Black-Tread" I in a AiMrfsi, 2(Ul rmm .Slret. NEGRO ATTACKS SOUTH SIDE WOMAN Answering Knock at Door, Mrs. M. Stafonek it Felled With Blow in the Face. POLICE IN BIO MAN HUNT Practically the entire South Side police force went on' a man hunt yes terday following the robbery and assault of Mrs. M. Stafonek, Thirty second avenue and D street, who was attacked by a negro when she was alone in her home at 8:30 o'clock. Feeling among South Side residents is high, ainster threats were made as to what will happen to the negro if ho is captured. Police and citizens are scouring the country around the scene of the at- tack, automobiles and motorcycles fig- j uring largely in the chase. The police i stopped u train on the Union Pacific I railroad and went through it to see if the negro was aboard. j F'orces His Way In. According to Mrs. Stafonck's story, ! she answered a knock at the door ami i was confronted by a medium-sized negro, who inquired if there was any one home. She closed the door in his face, but he forced his way into the house, felling the woman with a blow in the face. I She arose and struggled with him several minutes, finally being over powered and left lying on the floor. The negro ransacked the house, steal ing a watch, jewelry and a purse con taining Some Mnafl change, lie es caped before Mrs. Stafonek's cries for help attracted the neighbors' at tention. She was severely beaten about the face and body and is under the care 1 5 a physician. AMERICAN CONCERN TO PUT LIGHT PLANT IN MONGOLIA (Cnrrpnnilenr vt I hi Aneorlatd Treat ) Shanghai, May 10. Anderson, Meyer & Co., an American concern in this city, has received an order to sup ply a complete lighting plant for Urga, the capital of outer Mongolia and the home of Ilutukutu of Urga, the living Nuddha, who has defied Chinese authority so persistently and curried favor with the Russian gov ernment. Like all the Mongolian cities, Urga is s collection of huts and tents, which shelter the nomadic herd who make up the great part of the popula tion. Urga is 300 miles south of the trans-Siberian railwsv; and the mi' chinery for the lighting plant will he transported there by means of camels. SAFF.T Y-TREADS 34 x 4 35x4S 36x4'i 37 x 5 AUSTRIAN WOMEN PROTEST AGAINST MARRIAGE PROHIBS (CorreBpondenca of the Ansnrtnted Preaa.) Vienna, June 1. To protest against the legal prohibition and hindrances to marriage in Austria the Austrian Women's union is organizing a series of demonstrations. In a manifesto issued to the public the union de clares that it is surprising that at a moment when there is a general desire for an increase of population the state itself prevents whole categories of persons, especially women, from mar riages. Listen to JOHN (PADLOX) HUSSIE, Manufacturers have once more advanced prices on Refrigerators, but we will still sell you the famous sanitary, odorless Alaska Refrigerators at the same old prices you have been paying: $9.00 to $39.00 That's some inducement, isn't it? LAWN MOWERS no cheap ones. Just good ones $3.25 to $12.00. John Hassle Hardware Go. 2407 Cuming St. Doug. 1116. Send for Special Announce ment of Our Summer Term June 6 to September 6 Cntar Any Tima D.nvw, Cola, A Fully Accredited Commercial School. $22.40 $31.20 $31.G0 $37.35 m ."': .7 i ii 1 V tt ilRES