I If I THE SUNDAY BEE: OMAHA, JULY 2. 1922." . Building Boom Now Under Way at Pittsburgh Scorci of Biuinets Structure! Going Up Total Expendi tures Expected to Heath $25,000,000. Bf WALTER C. MERRITT. Pittsburgh, Ti., June 27. An er of building activity uch as thii city ncrcr befort bat witnessed now U wide r way. In the downtown district new buildings are ipringing up on every corner with amazing rapidity. Pittiburgh, already a city of sky scrapers, by Christmas time will have aeverat more tall buildings. Scorci of business structures are going up. Great apartment building are cither under way or about to start. Throughout Greater Pittsburgh there are a vatt number of private residences being built. The total ex penditure for buildings business and residential probably will reach $25,000,000 by the end of the year. Million! more are being spent m and about Pittsburgh by the city and Allegheny county for street, boule vard and road improvements. For a year or more Pittsburgh was tied up by the building trades. They fixed the scale and said they would not cut prices. Building contractors and home builders said they would not pay wartime wages, and as a result there was very little building. Atop of all this, prices for materials were maintained at wartime levels. Htit this spring one of the unions decided it could materially reduce -its scale in order to get its men back to worlc A month rolled by and another union reduced its scale. One by one the other unions low ered their scales. Material Prices Lower. Material dealers were piled high with costly stocks and not turning a wheel. Interest, overhead and tax charges were eating them alive. So ! they, too, decided to reform. With i one slash they trimmed their quota ' tions about 25 per cent Then things began to start in the j building line with a big rush. Thou 1 sands of men who had been idle for ' months went back to work, greatly relieving the burden of charitable . organizations. i The contractors now are skirmisn ing around to get men. Everybody 1 in the building trade crafts seems to t be working, steadily. ' The Mellon National bank is erect ing a monster new banking building covering one-half of the biggest square in downtown Pittsburgh. In lineal area it will be by far the larg est building for business purposes ' i downtown. ncrDeri uui uy, x iitsuuigu uiu New York capitalist, is just starting (a AA 1ft mlririp rtn Vii 12-stnrv Km. pire building, which will make the Empire building 30 stories and the tallest in the city. The Bell Telephone building, jftwhen completed, will be one of the Urgest office buildings in this city. Work already has been started on one of the largest apartment build in,' iu the world in the beautiful Oakland ditrict, Pittsburgh's great civic renter. It will cost $$,500,000 and will house 2.500 Jamilies. The University of Pittiburgh will greatly enlarge its present plant in the Oakland district this summer, sc. cording to announcement, and pos sibly $.2,000,000 or more will be spent for additional buildings. On every street houses and du plexes are ipringing up as if by magic. The entire city is dotted witlj new homes. Stubborn landlords are beginning to realire that wartime rents are over. 1 hough doing so grudgingly, they are beginning to drop rent prices materially and find no great hordes of house hunters to man up their offerings, as was the case year or two ago. Movies Oust Bull Fight as Mexican Amusement Washington, July 1. The movie is displacing the Unit fight as the Doruitar amusement of Mexico. "The motion picture undoubtedly noma tirsi piacei n xne amusemrni field of the Chihuahua consular dis trict," says Vice Consul Ott in a report to the Department of Com merce. "From one small, unpretentious circus tent installed in Chihuahua City some 10 or 15 years ago, the business has grown until today there are in the consular district 15 per manently established movie houses where pictures are exclusively shown, with a number ot legitimate tneaters giving an occasional exhibition. "This development occurred part ly during a period of revolution, when it was no uncommon thing, to have the performance interrupted by firing on the outskirts of the city. Ott says that the upper classes de mand emotional dramas and melo dramas and the peons prefer west ern thrillers and slapstick comedies. American machines are used ex clusively, European makers having failed to sell a single projector. Prisoner to Receive 40 Lashes Besides Jail Term Detroit, July 1. The ancient law of the whip has been imposed on Ernest Martin, who was sentenced at Sandwich, Ont., just across the border in Canada, to 10 years in the penitentiary. Judge Coughlin de creed that in addition to his prison term Martin receive 20 lashes upon his arrival at the prison and 20 when he leaves. The punishment will be inflicted on the bare back, the instru ment being a stout ash stick to which is appended 12 heavy leather thongs. Martin, 23, was convicted of brutal ly assaulting Henry Killie, 65, a farm er. High Tension Electric Wire Kills Fisherman Bayliss, 111., July 1. Fishing sea son has claimed death to one jiimrod here. Casting with a metal rod, Webber Grammar, 64, threw his pole against a high tension electric wire overhead, receiving a dozen burns which proved fatal before others in the party could rescue him. Auto Business Here Barometer of Prosperity Omaha Ascending Peak of Another Record Year, Say Experts Noting Car Own ership Increase. It the automobile business Is s barometer of prosperity and some claim it Is the greatest Omaha it ascending the peak of another rec ord year. So say experts of the Omaha Auto club. They base their statement on the big increase in local car owners and the ease with which new members to the Tourist club are being ac quired. "Omaha now boasts of 18,000 car owners, 1,500 of whom are mem bers of the Auto club," said J. L. Haskin, secretary. "And the number is increasing daily." The auto business has "come back" from its postwar slump more no ticeably than any other industry, he contends. Factories Swamped, "Factories cannot turn out enough standard, tried and true cars to sup ply the demands," he said. "Only the lesser known cars are the ones having any load to pull now." The cuts in price have stimulated car purchasing, he said. "Even people who had the money held back from buying while they thought prices excessive. Now they lorm the biggest class of cash car purchasers." The fact that there are many times more tourists passing through Omaha is taken as another indi cator of business prosperity. "We will have more than 75,000 tourists passing through Omaha this season," he said. The cars vary from the lowly rord to the luxurious $13,000 Rolls Royce, two of which passed through Omaha last week. One was that of a New Mexican, en route home from the east. The other that of a Honolulan, going cross-country. Praise Nebraska Roads. All speak highly of Nebraska roads, an ambition program for which, involving an expenditure of $1,000,000 this year, is now in progress. Not only are these tourists an in dication of success, but they bring more business and thereby greater prosperity to the localities in which they tarry. A new tourist camp located in Elmwood park is soon to be installed at a cost of $20,000, appropriated by the city. Two brick building?, one containing a lounge and reading room and the other a kitchen and laundry, are soon to be erected. They will be fully equipped. All tourists are on pleasure bent, another indication of well-lined pock ets. . Don't Have a Care. "They don't seem to have a care;j they take "plenty of time to linger by I the way and enjoy the beauties of this vicinity. said Haskin. Another feature h noted was that the residents of one reort district in variably seek the pleasure of another resort. Minncsotans pass through here en route to the Colorado moun tains while the westerners1 seek the quieter lake fishing. If radio experiments prove suc cessful, the Auto club will install this service, too. in order to furnish tourist with the latest and ti"t complete road and weather reports, Haskin stated. A B. Waugh Is manager and W. R. Cheek, chairman of the good mad committee of the Chamber of Com merce, is president of the Auto club. American Victors View Historic European Gems Paris, July 1. Wealthy American visitors to Paris are being regaled with views of some of the most his toric jewels in Europe. Last week the sale of these baubles is reported to have amounted to many millions of francs. Most of the jewels are of royal Russian oricin and with most of them goes a tragic story of their former owner and also a most excit ing recital of the manner in which they were smuggled out of the coun try after the bolsheviks bcgaji seiz ing personal property. In spite of this influx of gems the price of pearls seems to remain about normal, but real bargains are being found in diamonds, emeralds, and sapphires, Russian women of high family and frequently of title are helping their less fortunate sisters by offering the jewels to Americai women at their hotels, while in other instances, necklaces and tiaras of fabulous values are being left with Paris jewelers, who display them behind closed doors to specially se lected clients. The man who knews more about the business than his employer should not break the news to the boss too suddenly. Canton News. Nov Towel Cabinet to Be Sold Here Improved Device to Be Han died ly Frontier Towel Supply Company. J. M. Jensen, president of the I'mnii.-r Tiu'il Simnlv fnmmnv. re turned from Chicago last week, where he completed arrangements lor me sale and distribution of the Ameri can Continuous Towel cabinet in this territory. "From all sides we hear." com mented Mr. Jensen, "about the sue reis which the American Continuous Towel cabinet is having in industrial concerns, schools, office buildings, and hotels. Scores of letters tell us it is one of the most economical and sanitary towels ever used. "One letter states: 'It not only offers relief from the old fashioned roller towel, but the objectionable features of the old individual towel have been totally eliminated in this continuous towel cabinet.' "This cabinet is controlled by gravity no springs, no weights or complicated mechanism to get out of order. It can be loaded in 20 sec onds and is so simple that even , i child can load or operate it. This cabinet does not clog a shield in the cabinet straightens ordinary twists, and separates the clean from the soiled towels." Massachusetts' Oldest Man Observes 118th Birthday North Easton, Mass., July 1. Charles H. Munroe, who has jurt celebrated, his 118th birthday anni versary, is now the oiaesi resiaeni in the state. Munroe is well up ih the events of the day and does not believe tu the Volstead act, chews and smokes and appreciates a good cigar. For health, though he would get around much better only (or a crick in his back. For many years he followed the occupation of farming In Kox bury. Ashland and also in North Eastern, Mini me was never married, and he attributes hie long life to regu lar rxnite and gwd habits. M;tSf fey Bekins Omaha Van & Storage Co. 806 South 16th Street Automobile and Merchandise Storage, Separate Locked Room, ' Fireproof Room for Household Goods, Heated Piano Room ' ' B H M I "A" STANDARD 16-Oz. Seamless BEMIS BRQ. BAG CO. OMAHA, U. S. A. JEFFE ' JPOT.TTlr A. - AnTFnTIHKWEXT nnilTirAI, AnVFIlTHCMtyT POt.ITOCAI. An'.'KRTISKMKNT , POUTirAI, AnVKRTWUMWT "BIG JEFF' "One of Us" Big in Stature Big in Intellect Big in Works . Big in Heart - lHMHBaB(BltBBpBnnannBBM(JtBaaiiBMiBiBnniBiieHeeaaiHi ' . ALBERT W. JEFFERIS ) -a . Candidate for Republican Nomination for U. S. Senator His Experience and Work in Congress for His District Have Trained Him Well to Serve His State in the Senate Unselfish Civic Worker The Omaha Daily News, an independent news .paper, in its issue of June 8, 1919, printed this wonderful tribute to Mr. Jeff eris : "Even before he entered public life, in the tech , nical sense, Mr. Jefferis was considerable of a public man. For years he has been much in de mand as a public speaker, and as a worker on civic affairs, for which he has received no mone ' tary consideration. Public committees that have called for men of ability and willingness have had the habit of calling on "Big Jeff" for serv ice. They got it." Always ready to serve his community and state Higher Grain Prices Once a farmer, Mr. Jefferis bat taken an active interest in matters relating to agriculture and cheaper transportation for agricultural products. As a member of the committee on merchant ma rine, he has expended much effort on the proposed St. Lawrence River Ship Canal, which will mean a higher price per bushel for grain raised in Nebraska. This will mean more wealth for Nebraska Fights War Profiteers Congressman Jefferis, as a member of the Graham committee, investigating war frauds, gathered much valuable evidence, which will be used by the Department of Justice in prosecuting war profiteers and those who practiced fraud on the government during the war period. He has spent many months examining witnesses and taking testimony. This testimony will be of great value to the governmental authorities in se curing indictments and convictions. Newspaper reports recently said that the work of ferreting out the war profiteers already is under way. The country demands the expose of the war frauds He Is a Product of His Own Labors He was horn and raised on a farm. He got up early, followed a plow, broke oxen, etc. He taught country school in Pennsylvania. He was a star in athletics while in the University of Michigan. . . "One of Us" He has made a decided success as a lawyer. He is a civic worker, unselfish and sincere at all times. He has served well in the halls of congress from his own district. Always a True, Earnest and Consistent Republican- Congressman Albert W. Jefferis, now serving hi second term in Congress from the Second Nebraska District, to which office he was elected by the tremendous majority, of 14,850, always has been a True, Consistent and Earnest worker in the Republican Party. For many years he was a member of the Repub lican State Executive Committee. He always has participated actively in public-speaking cam paigns in behalf of Republican State and Na tional tickets. x As Congressman, he has taken a leading part in the great work which the present administration is doing for, the reconstruction of our country. V He Believes in Nebraska He Works for Nebraska Primaries July 18 Be Sure arid Register REPUBLICAN Vote for Jefferis