thi: omaha Sunday iwa. july 4, lyis. a a SEVERAL FORTUNES Oil MRS CORNER Host Valuable Location in "Omaha IUi Changed Hands Several Timet with Profit HEW BUILDING GOING TJP A jrxl imm to th nln. fhn.ha m tat Inm-sUn; 'V 1. In In hlMorr " ""Mrr- TMUon cornor" at SUlnth nd r"am ,iwti. Woric has bwn brun on 1I ir.ntUn th M on-ory bulldin. pr' parntftry to "-Uon of a l-tory Mncturs. 4 . ti,. nn RmUt company, a privately . ..M.nfvMi hv ti Ann-1 ",w ml"1' h nnrnos f r-llnir thl Milldln;, tiid the land for rlntY-nln years lit n annual rental of tItW t var to start with. This 1 en a ba-ls erf i r nt or. tb SPtltnl vshi of tr. lot, namely !. At leant thrw hi fortun hsv bn ira.l hv owners of thla lot, hlch inaa uroa only Sxl f"t- Th f!rt forttin waa mad y Anna M. Goodrich, irho boucht tha lot from William B. Jaroba In January. 13. for tVA Fh owned It for twnty-thre year, and then. In Jun. 1. aha aold It to John A. McShana for M,000. Mr. McShane held It for. ve n months, and then. In Jannary. 1W7. ha aold It to Kach Thomasson. a ranchman from Cheyenne, for r.. remain- a profit of t,X In a few tnontha. l.a.abed a llnwa". Real aatat men of. that day lauRhed and said tha old rancher baa made a poor Investment. Mr. Mchan aays to day that he considered ha had road a mighty rood bargain. He aaya llaewls that' ha now realises ha had made a mlg-hly poor bargain. For the two daugh ter of In Zb Thomaaaon ara today rcelvlnie about 41 per cent annually on t.lr father'f Investment. 1 hesa two dsuahters, tha prrsent own ej a, are Mra. J. P.. Cobb of NewYorK City and Mra. John Xuykendall ot ron- vr ' ! By tha term eflhclr leas to the Horn Realty company th?y ara to receive tM, annual rental for tha land during tha first flva of the nlnety-nln yeara of the lease. If, at the expiration of that tlm. tha value of tha land haa Increased above 830,00O, they are to receive as ren tal $ per cent on Its valuation. If It has decreased In value they ar to receive the S3o,0f a year Just the same. Re appralsement Is to be made every flv years during tha life of tha lease. W.rtk Forime a Foot. The value of thU bit of Omaha bti al liens property at present is something like $9,(90 per front foot on Farnam street. The value of each square foot li tb lot is about SO. The lease to the bulldlns- and operating company dates from July 3, and the building company will have to pay to the lot owners tha monthly leas of f 1,600 .while the old bullJlng la being demol. Uhed and the new one erected. This company will not begin to draw revenue from the property until November of this year. The contract calls for tha tores to t finished November 1, and the wtiolehulldlrig by January L y The building U tq be; sis stories high, of rlnforcl concrete, terra cotta and brii-v. It will be a novel 'truetur In i isny wtyc ( One of these la that It will have store rooms In tha basement, on the street floor and on tha second floor. eeoaa FHor Stores. The basement will be reached by only elfeht steps The second floor will have lrtrge show windows opening on three sides for the display of goods by the tore that- rent tha second floor room a The uppr four floors will consist of .f flee rooms. Heating and lighting plants will be located In a sub-basement. There will b-two elevatora Three of the stores have already been rented. 'Tha Ryan Jewelry company, which hag been at Fifteenth and Douglas streets for many yeara, will occupy one. Another will be rented by tho Napier Urothers Bhoe company, a concern with 'shoe stores In a number of cities, which will establish Its principal atore here. The third will be taken by Lewis Hen derson, tha florist, who has been In that location for a quarter century. Work boih on clearing away tha old building aid erecting the new witl.be pushed at terurd speed to mtke the big rental-earnlt.g power of : tha building available aa anon as poaarble. In the meantime the Wyers-Plllon Drug company has secured temporary quarter half a block west on Farnam street. Millions Put Into Buildings in the last Six Months A total of EM building permits have been Iveued In the first alg months of the present year. These represent building construction aggregating S2.4'.t..".. This la a trifle fewer permits, representing a lit tle less expenditure than the first six months of last year. Hut the chief rlerk Thomas Itltt. of the city building de partment, eatimstea that the last six months of Vti will bring the tola for the year far ahead of the total for last ear. Ha bases bis opinion on the tact that there la so rntirh. big work now In ir.t. Dm builiting per ml Is for which are 10 be takeit out shortly. The renlly big , structures for Which pirmllii are still to le taken out this year are the Bone Uialty company, a. story building; the Flrot National bank, 11 stories; I- Inner Mticsronl company en largement; National company, new build in. Joalyn building, Sixteenth and Har ney: state hospital for the University of Nebraska, Forty-second and Harney; M.-Tabe Methodist church. First Prey t'tUu church; Drendets warehouse and gurage at Meventeenlh and Dodge atresia PvCal Estate Folks Go on a Picnio The office force of Hastings A Heyden ni)od a plcnlo and outing at Benson Gudep.s Thurwtsy Twenty-four men and women weot out in automobiles at 4 o'clock, and after a plcnlo dinner, an out ing among the trees and on ths lawns, a Un oa a lUtform built there. They returned at o'clock at n!ht. Ail( Bamauer t oaatt. The flrtt di.a of lr. lirll'e I'lne-Tur-Honry lll hli you. M kilts the oold germ. '! All druj6l'- Adver- tl'.vinert. Aart:n'ris;. fete, 1oues and (ot'.agt.! an be rci.tnd u"'ly ai.d tt.ceply by a . . " r Vr liei.t." LOAN COMPANIES PROSPER Six Per Cent Interest Paid and Plenty of Money on Hand to Loan - Oat on Real Estate Security. FARM MORTGAGES ATTRACTIVE The building and loan companies ot Omaha now have combined axsets .total ling l-f .flrn.MO. The semi-annual dividends were paid July 1, ard the business of all the companies was reported to be In ex cellent share. There la plenty of money In their coffers and the desire of the public to lnvet In the companies or to deposit, as It Is called, la said to he grow In jr. It Is reported by the compsn'es lhnt this form of Investment is becoming popular -with the men of considerable money fo Invest, whereat theae com panlea were organized to handle tho money of th small depositor ralhrr than the large Investor. The regularity with whlrh O e per cent la raid out of thie companies on depoelta Is attractive (o I hone who have a few thousand dollnrs that they want to put In a aafe place., where they do not need to shoulder' the burden of conducting a business of their own with their capital. Loaning -on farm mortgages Is a new departure In the building and loan busi ness that haa taken root with aome of the companies. The Conservative Hav ings and lxio n company has loaned S3)1.0nQ on first mortgagee on eastern Nebraska farms In the last four months. If money continues to flow Into theae companies as abundantly as It haa for some time rest, officials of some of the companies assert they will probably have to conalilT the mutter of paying a smaller . ilvil nd In the future, as . the deposits come Taster than they can place the money at a profitable rata of In terest. Creston Annex Put Upon the Market Creston Annx is tha name of a new addition platted and put on tha market by A, P. Tukey ft Son. It lies on Hie north aide of. Davenport street, between Tbirty-eUlh and Thlrty-elxhth streets. There are twenty-five lots In tha tract and a number of them have been sold. Tha district Is restricted, and Is being mentioned as the flnl aval Utile tract on the top of the hill In the West Farnam district The prices range from S.T3 to 87 per front foot. Water, sewerage, cement sidewalks., gas and paving are installed, so that the ground Is ready for building. Thla la the property belonging to the Coad estate. John F. Coad came Into posaeaalon of tha property in 1W. lie bought It originally Intending to build his) home there. Later ha changed his mind and built his home on Farnam street. , t City Dads Consider General Levy for ' Next Year's Budget Next Tueaday the city commissioner will begin to consider tha general levy for UK budget. The Greater Omaha situation makes thla financial problem rather complex, aa the legal department haa not given opinion on several mooted point. Foremost among tha unsolved problems I th manner in which provision shall be made for final payment of added ex pense which will be Incurred by reason or ttoutn Omaha coming Into th Greater Omaha family with no fund for the last flva month of thla year. Tha city at torney has his coat off. sleeve rolled up and a pile of law books before him. It Is admitted 'that the 1?1 tax rate will b slightly Increased, th South Omaha situation being one factor and recent Increaso of soma of the statutory fund by the legislature being another factor. For Instance, the poll-. fund hua been raised i.10,000; park fund. S30.000; 11 brarey fund, S20.000; flra fund, SJ0.00O. The new charter amendments require that a bond sinking fund of not lesa than tjn.ooo nor more than PSO.Ono, thsll be levlej each year. Special provision was made i in th h.v . a . th fir department, which will amount. to about i.O00 a year for five yers. i Th new levy for Omaha will Include th annexed. territory. Postmaster Wharton is Seeking Becker A letter from JX U. Cox, attorney, Rose be try, Idaho, ha been referred to Postmaster Wharton In an effort to find J. J. Becker, auvposed to be In Omaha. The letter state that Becker I reported to b or to have been In th liquor bust ness her and to hare been a policeman In Chicago. Becker's brother Is seriously a Rose, berry. He is about 66 yeara old and 1 said to have considerable money, but will not apend any of It for medical car. He auhpecu all those who offer aid to be after his money. Kennedy Funeral Td BeHcld Today Funeral services for Alfred C. Kennedy will be held this afternoon at 3 o'clock at the reaidenoe. 1(C4 South Thirty-second street. Kev, fklln II. Jen, pastor of the FliH .rreshyterlan Church offlcuU Ing. burial will be In the family lot tn Forest Uwii cemetery. These friends wlU act aa pall bearers: J H. Adams. V. T. Bourke IP A. In. u.l, U. M. Htl.hcock. Chsrles VV. itnlney, Adam Johmion, V, T. Itolirton, John Lk Kennedy. SCHOOL BOARD TO CUT DOWN ITS SUMMER EXPENSES "At th regular meeting of th Board of tducatton Tueaday evening th commit tee on building and grounds will recom mend th dismissal of twenty school en gineer and Janitor tor th summer months. It la ei plained that not more than on man Is needed at a school dur ing th vacation period. Th saving Is estimated at U,000. JUDGE WALTER I. SMITH TO HEAR JITNEY ARGUMENTS KVd-nU Judr Walter I. Smith of Coun cil Muffs wl'l hear arguments on the spi.lication of Jitney operators for a re- laiuaiiiug Older to keep tha ne w Jitney ordinance from going Into operation. Hearing hav heen set for July 1 Th or dinance t:l co li to effect July T unleea tr. or.ivr is granted. Jurlgs T. C. Mungcr alll Ivava for bis vacatlun next week. Omaha's Newest First-Class Apartment House ,V-e- s rr i rr t 17: 0; r rri r p:. n rr. 1 T it!' f S Work ha already started on the big first-class apartment house to be known the Bisckstone hotel, at Thirty-sixth and Farnam streets. This is the struc ture designed and to be built by tha 'Hankers' Realty Investment company, THOMAS NAMES COMMITTEE Heal Estate Wen Who Will Figure Out a ; Plan for Widening Twenty-Fourth Street WOULD C0EEECT OLD EUROS Th committee of the Real Estate ex change that la to Investigate ways and mean of going about th - Iprojeot of widening Twenty-fourth street and open Ing a few ot the tributary streets now closed, haa been announced by President Thomas or the exchange. . Th personnel of the committee Is: George T. Morton, F. II. Meyer, W. H. Green, Harry Christie and K. R. Benson. The question of widening th street camo up again for a lengthy discussion at the meeting Wednesday, last John U McCagu and C. C. George objected to the manner In which th movement had been started and the wide publicity which It received, Mr. McC'ague asserted. "There Is danger of having a business cervter on wheels." He declared that the men must guard against this and not rush to rapidly into a campaign to make a certain outlying street the business vrnici u, ,( kit. "It la not fair to those who have In vested large sums of money to develop the present business center, for you to proclaim a new district and go ahead to boost for th development ot this new center' he said. Prealdent Thomas explained that all the exchange wanted to do was to get behind a movement to straighten and widen Twenty-fourth street which needed such attention badly. "All w want to do." he added, "1 to correct an error mad twenty-four or thirty years ago. What we do, or say will not move ' th business center of Omaha In a day, a week, or a year. It la not so easy to put the business center of a city on wheels."' W. II. Green explained that It was not the purpose of this movement on the part of th exchange to move the bul- noss center to Twenty-fourth street, twit rather, to get that street ready for tb growth and development tha 1 Inevit able In the future. Business Men to Go . On a One Day Trade Trip Into Iowa A one-day automobile excursion of wholesalers, manufacturers, hankers and otne of Omaha U planned to run Into the Southwestern section of Iowa JuI' Xh" run wl" ' unar the , U'P' or th "n.te extension commlt- ee or ine i ommerciai c;uo oi umana. The autnmobllea are to leave Omaha at 7 o'clock Thursday morning, July 8. and are to return before dark the same even ing. The Itinerary Include Glenwood, Malvern, Hastings, Emerson, Red Oak, Kssex, r'henandoah, Sidney and Tabor.' Borne twenty-five mlnutea la to be spent In each town. Thla la expected to allow those In th party to visit their customers In each place, , Wheat Fluctuates .on Erratic Market The Omaha Grain exchange will observe Monday aa a holiday and consequently there wilt not be any market until Tues dsy. With reports ot clearing weather generally and wheat turning out better than had been anticipated, wheat was rratlo. Belling at t cent up to 1 cent down from th Friday price. Sales were made at 11. W to Sl.SS, with fourteen car loads offered,' Corn waa weaker and was oft ocni, selling at T1V4 to Tlla cents. The receipt were fifty-five cars. Oats followed the slump and sold off H to i cent per bushel, prloe telng !& to 4, k cents. Th receipts were twelve carloads. ' MAN WHO SINGS GETS BEST OF THE ARGUMENT When John Miller ot Portsmouth, la., Insisted on slug Ing 'neath hi bedroom window, . William, Rasmusaen, Seven teenth and Capitol avenue, emptied th content of a revolver at th warbler, and both men were arrested and brought to Jail. Rasmussett got decidedly th wora ot tb affair, by having hi dumber shat tered, being hauled before Judg Foster and flued 10 and coat with, suspended sentence, and losing th revolver, which was confiscated by th court. MUler waa discharged. MAIL DELIVERIES WILL BE CUT DOWN MONDAY Two deliveries of mail wffl mad In th bustnee district Monday and one In the - residence dlstik-ta Parcel poet automobile deliveries will b mad tn tl morning. General delivery. Inquiry, Information, stamp said registry depart ment will close at 10:M a. m. Janitor, firemen, etc., la h building will be given a full holiday and th elevator will not operate at al. ,wew tvwr: ' Is-.-. r-r'"- ' - rri rr. n.; , I i 1 . r-; L ' i ' ' I r"' r- f rV i v . . - - ; Hrf ... ! -I ) e t . i i I we t ' r- r !- f" !rrrir and owned by a syndicate of-Investor known th Blackstone Holding com pany. It Is to be ISO by 90 feet. It will have 97 one-room apartments, 36 two room apartment, 10 three-room apart ment. 4 four-room apartments, I five- BRIEF CITY NEWS TElaetrl fan, 17.00. Burgess-Grsnden. Slav Seo Friat n Now Beacon Pre VnbUo lasnraao AJatr Oeorg Schroeder, 0S Ware block. Ked M. rree Calif orala Sxonrslon, July IS, to buyer of Live Oak Colony land.-W. T. Smith Co., City National Bank Bldg. Cfcoie of Iprlag Ohiokaa or plfcnked whit fish dinner at Bchllt hotel July 4 and S, served from 11 a. in. to 9 p. m. Prloe SO cent. Br. jr. 9. BTuUer, Deatlst, announce th removal of hi office from 621 to 615 M CTty National Bank. Bldg. Telephone Tyler 2061. . Fred W. Anhenawr and Cornelius F, Connolly, aUomey-t-law, hav moved to 682-4 BrandeU Tneater Bldg. Bam phone, Douglas 49fiO. Hart lastk lUsswhsre No luncheon will be served at th Commercial club dining room July 6. The dining room la to be closed on that dsy. "Today Complete Movt Program" classified section toaay, and appear In Th Be EXCLUSIVELY. Kind out what th various moving picture theater offer. Clothing Btolea from Barn li. D. Berger,, eWJ CLarlca street, reports the theft of clothing to I the value 6f S30, which waB taken from a barn to the rear ofSHJO Charles street. To Closs on Monday In observance of Independenco day, the Toung Men' Christian association will close its cafeteria Monday and the vacation school for boy j will also have -a holiday. Combs . to Wind Uls Clocks Tha clock In th federal building, will be wound during th coming year by T. I Combe A Co. There are thirty-eight of them beside the big tower clock. They must b wound each week. The contract ric I 1130. ' Censor Parent Judge Leslie, sit ting In .Juvenile court, censured Abraham f'enchanaky. who brought his 10-year-oH son into court declaring that he waa Inoorriglbl. "You should take better car of your son," said the Judge; "you would fln-1 hlro a better behaved boy." Liberty Ball Badges Several) thou sand liberty bell badges are being prC- pared by th Pennsylvania society and j th secretary of tb society, will be In. i th Pioneer room of the court house Thursday afternoon and probably Friday morning to distribute them to member of th Pensylvcnla society and other na tive Pennsylvania of Nebraska and Iowa. Th Turkish and Bulphnr Bain Boon at th' Harney hotel. Fourteenth and Harney street, entrance on Harney, will not fall to attract th public. They are conducted by er'perloneej attendant from Hot Kprlng, Ark. To Introduce them, a uniform fee of II for the entire night is charged.. Separate rooms for electrical treatment, and massage. Tel. Douglas SUS. All Roads Leading Into Omaha Put in Finest Condition All roada will lead to Omaha Monday, and, according to reports, all those roads will be In fine condition. Commercial cluba, auto club, farmer and townapeopla hsve been dragging all ' auto roada lthtn 900 mile of Omaha, to put I hem into share for the heavy traff lo to tho big peedway race and ; world' championship wrestling match j her Monday. Many of th road hav also been given additional treatment, to make them perfect for travel. Clarke Powell, secretary of th Omaha Auto club, sent 0t letter to th various organisations, asking them to Improve th roada within 90Q mile : of Omaha, and wlth'n th last few days he has had ample proof that th appeal haa had a ready response. "I was motoring out around Calhoun i and Itlalr," Powell aaya, "and found that th road had been dragged all along th Una. I also hav letter from ' many of th Commercial and auto , clubs I wrote, and they all rrfport that : much work has been done to make th , roads first claaa for Monday. Among j th club replying were those at Lin- j coin. Schuyler, Fremont, Lyon and majiy other place." Has Plan to Abolish the Telephone Toll City , Commissioner Butler Tuesday morning will offer a resolution to pro-" vide that a committee ot th council wait upon th officers of th ..ebraska Tele phone company with a request that th ! Omaha-South Omaha . S-osnt toll be abolished. "Now that consolidation baa been ao-1 eompllahed it ! not fair to asses thla I toll to ttoutl.dld resident and not make I the same assessment on calls to the ' north lde, said Mr. BuUer. Cupor S. Yost, president of th tela- , phone company, said It would consider tills matter when h received official ; notice of the action ot the council. II j intimated, however, that If th toll 1 cut out it woulj be fair to raise the' South Omaha monthly rates to th earn ) basis as now charged In Omaha proper. room apartments and t six-room apart ments. On the eighth floor there is to be a kjiall room, 38 by 60 feet The structure is to b completed by February 1, 1918. Holdup Men Take Victim's Shoes and Hat and Get Away Carl Lauterbach of Emerson, la., was (trolling at 4:30 a. m. near Thirteenth street and Capitol avenue when two men Induced bim to give 17 toward the col lection they were taking. Description -of the two men in the Cope land and Lauterbach cases agree with those of two ot the four men who held up Mr. MoCloud. Th police are on the trail of th quartet. J. H. McCloud of 81 West Fourteenth avenue, Denver, reported to th police that he was (topped at 11:30 Friday night at the north and of th Sixteenth street viaduct and compelled to contribute tl.23, hoe and hat. Th stranger 'stopped to untie hi shoes and were deliberate In their proceeding.. The shoe were new and bought for tb Fourth of July. L. A. Copeland of Persia, la., waa ac costed In an alley near Eleventh and Farnam streets by two men who grabbed him. Copeland brok awajr and ran, leav ing hi hat. . FIVE-YEAR-OLD LAD IS BITTEW ON HAND BY A DOG - Th 6-year-old1 son of V. Krotfcy, 917 Homer streets was badly bitten on tha right forearm and left hand by a dog belonging to . John Bterrert, 1015 Homer street several day ago, when th child entered th Sterrert yard ttnd tried to take a puppy from th ' side of th mother. Bterrert . waa given his choice of taking a fin .of 123 and cost or bringing tho animal to th station and having it shot. H chose th latter course and tise head of th beast will be sent to th Pasteur Institute. v 5000 MEN'S SUITS PRICE - YOUR MONEY SHOULD EARS FROM 7 to 10 ' We have several different plan whereby you can xt from 7 to 10 per cent on rour money and - be absolutely, safe in your Investment. A every one knows real estate Is one oJ"' the best and safest Investments on. earth. We can arrange It so you can invest In Individual properties .or take an interest wltU others It win pay you to ee or write ueabout' it. kslings & llcyden 1014 Harney St. Psoauy foisting E.J. BAUiS UI2rSrr,:mSL TcLD.35! .. E-; GARTEQ, ARCHITECT AND GUILDER 2314 M SU Sculh Cntaha Phono South 1133 jx) L 1 . HOME BUILDERS nc . Southwest Corner 17th and Douglas Streets, Omahar Financial Statement July 1st. 1915 RE80VRCKS Rest KsjAte Mortgages and Contracts...:.. $70,9(0.04 1'nconu'letcxi Building. Contracts 20,495.98 "'lis Receivable 9,183.25 Storks and Konds 1,010.00 Loans on Home Builders' Stock Dwellings .' Accrued Interest Furnltnre and Fixtures ....... Ciifth on Hand- and with Fiscal Agents Totsl , UAlUMTIK.-i Capital Stock . .'. $136,395.00 Accounts Payable, for labor and material on dwellings vnder construction' (not yet flue) . 4,898.67 Dividends Payable , 4,596.76 Surplus and Undivided Profit 28,172.81 Total COMPARATIVE Resources $ 17,12.',C5 55,006.40 85,303.39 124,685.72 173.0CS.14 Jan. 1. 1912 Jan. 1, 19V1 Jan. 1, 1914 Jan. 1, 191S July 1, 191b Jan. 1, 191A Tbe In addition to our cash dividend at the rate ot 7.98 on par, or 7 on the book value of Home Builders' shares, we carried 2 per share to Surplus, making the VALUE OF THE SHARES NOW $1.16. Net earnings over 10. , OFFICERS AND DIKECTOR8 U.i A Rohrbough, Vice Pres. C C. Bhtiuer, 8ec'jr V, A. Banks .. O. IV. Johnson Hon. Lee S. Eetella H. O. Townend E. E. Llti Geo. J. Morris American. Security Co., Fiscal Agents for Home) Builders. Brandeis Theatre Bldg., Ground Floor. Nouthweet Corner 17th and Douglas Street, Omafia. This Company is Equipped to Provide the Class of Service That Assures Protection for the Building Owner ; Should you hare this company build for you, you will know: FIRST, the final cost of the entire building before work is commenced. , . SECOND, that yon will be free from every resporisi-' bility, excepting the approval of plans and materials,and the meeting of payments. " ' y AND THIRD, you will know the satisfaction that comes of dealing with a firm that is financially . . . ' responsible. Submit Your Plan, for Our Figures I"-1. , , 1 Hvs. Mcdonald. 17c Set the Fashion in Awnings whsa yon erdar frm a yoa ar assord of stylish, asrvtoaabls lnrs thai ar marantd. Orasr yonr awaiaa' bow ws wiu rcs ai IDEAL . CM?IX3 TEXTS LAWN TEXTS TESTS OF ALL KIXD3 aa. Oar prie vUl latrst you sua ear matrl4a ar tb bsat tbat oajt b ao. 3 NEBRAGKA TENT & AWNING CO. I'hou. ItooKlas H641. 700 South Sixteenth St. PHONE DOUGLAS 7018. PAIHTS FOR ALL POQPOSES VAENISHES, OILS AKD 0LAS3. OMAHA'S LEADINO PAINT STOKE, 1812 FARNAM 3T. G. h. COOEv PAINT 'CO. DODD rhone DougU SS081. PAXTOX BLOCK. OMAHA. Send fiO Cents (or My New Flan Rook, . . 4,381.61 . 16.623. 45 . . f. . . . . , 6,958.22 1,064. IT 49,296.52 .' .$173,063.14, ,$173,063.14 STATEMENT Surplus 3,542.67 8,721,86 17,966.63 Dlv. Rate on Tar 7 7.14 . 7.66 7.84 7.98 . 28,172.81 rate per cent will be 8.12 E 1 (Acthorlssa Capital $750,000.00) COSTS ACTORS AND BUILDERS Gtrouad Floor Ess Bldf. on a ha. ra. NATE TUAFHAGAN. m ill W, iUpp4 tb ToataiU XoUl with awaln; lis abov oat. IO BKaJrCS KOT7SBS. THE 9 ARCHITECT "rp For jResolto i i Bcc Want Ado