The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, March 09, 1924, CITY EDITION, Page 11-A, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Prosperity Is
Indicated by
;■ Homebuilders
Builders of Small Homes Al
ready Making In
quiries for Lo
cations.
Small homes, house* of four, five
and six rooms, will form t lie bulk
of the building tills year In Omaha.
Not only that but there will be a
great number of homes built during
the "building months.”
Byron Hastings, president of
Hasting* * Heyden, realtors, has de
clared that this is his idea of the
prospects for the coming year.
"Not only do people want small
homes but they want them out of
the congested districts,” he declared.
"Omahans don't want to be packed In
some one small area. They want ft
chance to get out where they can
have a little garden and a few fruit
trees.
Many Early Inquirers
"So far thla year we have had
more Inquiries about thla class of
property than ever before. Every In
dication Is for a banner year In busi
ness.
"From my observation the principal
builder this year will be the man who
wants a little home and an Inex
pensive home. The majority of peo
ple who are building now are work
ing for a salary and are not able to
Invest heavily In a plare to live.
"One of the greatest factors In
the trend of building away from the
crowded sections of the city, out
toward the acre and half acre-trarts.
la the automobile. There was a time
when It would have been Impossible
for the average person to live out
three or four miles from their plare
of business. Now almost everyone
owns a motor car of some descrip
tion apd they can easily get back
and forth.
Ia>an Companies Help
"Another thing that encourages
people in this Is Omaha's exception
ally fine building and loan companies.
If a man owns a lot It is a com
paratively simple thing to borrow the
money for building a home. Chief
among the reasons for making these
loans is the fact that every such home
means a permanent citizen for Omaha.
"Omaha has exceptionally advan
tageous Interest rates and payment
plans. The bulk of lots In the city
are -old for a small down payment
and unbelievably amall monthly pay
ments.
“All of this helps Omaha, and peo
ple realize It. That makes Omaha
grow and makes us look for a banner
year."
Prosperity Indicated
Prlca of material, prlca of labor and
•xcellent facilities for work were all
pointed out by Mr. Hastings as being i
good "Indicators’’ of coming prospert
*
[ftfcOCROSS
LIVER PILLS
B^^realmeDt^
omach, Bowels,
is, Dyspepsia,1//
on, Gall Stones//
lendicitis. /&
MOTlfe
_
ISold in Omaha oy Sherman *
McCooMlIDru^o^ric^M^I
auvkrtisemiwt"
Cocoanut Oil Fine
For Washing Hair
If you want to keep your hair In
food condition, be careful what you
wash It wifh.
Many aoapa and prepared sham
pooa contain too much frcn alkali.
This dries the scalp, makes the hair
brittle, and is very harmful. Mulslfied
cocoanut oil shampoo (which Is pure
ahd entirely greaseless), is much bet
ter than anything else you can un
tor shampooing, as this cannot possi
bly injure the hair.
Simply moisten your hair with
water and rub it In. Two or tnree
teaspoonfuls will make an abundanre
of rich, creamy lather, and cleanse
the hair and scalp thoroughly. The
lather rinses out easily, and removes
every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff
and excess oil. The hair dries quick
ly and evenly, and it leaves It fine
and silky, bright, fluffy, wavy, and
easy to manage.
You can gee Mulslfied cocoanut oil
fharnpoo at any drug store. Jt Is in
expensive, and a few ounces will last
everyone in the family for months.
IAIlVICKTINK.MKVr.
SICK, CMS
Harmless Laxative for the
Liver and Bowels
Feel fine! No griping or Inconvenl
•nr* follows a. gentle liver nml bowel
cleansing with "Cascareta." Kirk
Headache, Biliousness, Oases, Indi
gestion, and all such distress gone by
morning. For Men. Women and Chil
dren—10c boxes, alto il and 10c
aiaea, any drug atora
Modified and Extrenie Spanish Type Bungalow
Compactness, good ventilation and
good heating facilities are the three
chief requisites of the modern home.
That ft the opinion of T. H. Mean
ner, president of the T. II. Maenner
company, a designer of homes.
The home, in Maenner's estimation,
must be compact for heating, for care
and for comfort. Good ventilation in
summer Is as essential as plenty of
heat in the winter. A house with lots
of windows does not necessarily have
to be well ventilated, but such a place
would be hard to heat.
A house with windows properly
placed may be well ventilated and ,
still, when aided by compactness, be
easily heated.
To this end he has borrowed an
idea from the Spanish type of archi
tecture. There is no patio In the plan
but the interior and many of the
little additions to the exterior of the
house are taken direct from the
spacious homes of Spain.
A Five-Room Home.
The home built on this plan is
30 feet long and 28 feet wide and
is one and one half stories In height.
It contains five rooms and is planned
to save steps and work.
Windows on every side a«sure
plentiful ventilation during the hot
months of summer and yet they are
located in such a way that there
ty. lie declared that Omaha is a
good market for farm produce and is
an economical city in which to live.
There was no factor, he said, which
would lead any one to think that the
coming year would be anything but
bright In the real estate business.
And, he added, real estate sets a
standard. ,
Douglas County
Land Past Week
Sells for $421
Nino Farm Sales Total $142,
200; Many Good Estates
Change Hands in
State.
Nine farm sales In Douglas coun
ty, totaling $142,200, and bringing
from $191.50 to $421 per acre, were
made during last week.
The highest priced piece of land to
l>e sold, according to the records, was
57 acres near Valley, owned by the
Pierce family, for $15,600, or $421 per
acre.
Another high-priced piece was 16ft
«i ith purchased hy W. F. 1 loreis
from V. Voea for $10,000, or $250
per acre.
Fred Bauermelster bought $0 acres
from P. If. Bane near Irvington for
$1.8,000, or $225 per acre. Another 80
acres near Klkhorn was sold by A.
J. McCormick to C. A. Jtoettele for
$16,000, or *200 per acre.
W. F. Morels, who bought the
Vacs farm at Chaleo, gold one to
Henry Otte near Chaleo for $30,600,
or $101.50 per acre.
A large number of farm deals were
made this month fn other parts of
Nebraska. One of these was a 40,000
acre ranch, near Hock Springs, sold
by William H. Gottche to William
Bates,
A farm near Klgtn sold for $250 per
aero; one near St. Kdwards for 8220
per arre, and the 200-acre farrp near
Wynot sold for *10,000, or $200 per
acre.
Boise Grant
[_ <y>M't<? Quint:,** . J
Rolse Grant ha" Joined the wile*
fence of lh» Equitable Trust company.
I mi men ly he was connected with the
Temple MeFayden company.
Crude Oil I’rirc Hiked.
Independent, Kan., March An
Increase ranalnir from 12 to 25 ernts
per barrel was announced today by
the Frslrl".OH and Gas company■ for
Kenaaa, Oklahoma and North Texas
^crud* oil.
Is no draft to make heating difficult
during the cold months of winter.
Attention to detail has given the
exterior of the house a charming
effect. The stone work around the
doorway gives a latin air especially
when aided by the dainty awnings
over the front windows.
Awnings Are Work of Art.
The awnings In themselves are a
work of art. Unlike the usual awn
ing they have no side pieces and do
not lower to a point level with the
center of the window frame. Two
rods, topped with spear heads sup
port the canvas and broad stripes
of yellow and black harmonize with
the general scheme of exterior decora
tion. 1
In the eaves can be seen on# of the
latest ideas In architecture. In place
of long eaves extending over the side
of the house, the roof ends almost
flush with tho wall.
A r winging gate built across the
driveway relieves the side yard and
wall. The gate can be so constructed
that it will Interfere hut slightly with
the driving in and out of a motor car.
Inside are two bedrooms, a living
room, a dining room and kitchen.
The front door opens Into the living
room. One bedroom opens from the
living room and the other from the
dining room. The dining room has
been placed in an unusual position,
between the rear bedroom and the
kitchen.
Dining Least I'sed Room.
Mnonner explains this location of
the dining room by saying that this
is possibly the least used room, in
point of actual hours, in the house.
Ventilation here is less essential than
anywhere else. Yet, located as it is,
it is convenient to the kitchen.
The kitchen, in Maenner's estima
tion, is the crowning success of the
plan. It has one large window that
is clear of all obstruction, and a
Two Attractive Dundee Homes
Here are shown two attractive Dundee homes recently built by John K.
WcCarville, builder. The homes are located at 101 and 10.'* South Fifty-first
street. Confident that the season of 19?4 will see a remarkable gain in real
estate. MrCarville is now building two more homes simitar to these. He
expects to be busy throughout the summer and fall erecting homes in all
parts of Omaha.
Home Hunters Are
j Already Looking
Unusual activity in spring house
1 unting was evinced during the Inst
week, Omaha ,realtors have an
nounced.
The Hchroeder Investment company'
declared that they have been sur
prised by the number of people who
have applied to them for lists of de
sirable property that in for sale. Th**
prospective buyers, in true “early
spring rush" style, have preferred to
inspect the house by themselves.'
Driving their own cars and i.ot ask
ing for the aid of salesmen.
Officials of the Hchroeder Invest-j
ment company declare that 'iu the
siring of every veer this rush of
buyers comes to look over property.
The system of Inspecting ell property,
regardless of price or location, la to
he deplored, they say.
A salesman is generally called for
in the end and he Is alile to show
just (he houses that would suit the
prospective purchaser. The habit of
"helping themselves" holds, however,
nd the company declares that the
ettisiness has looked better this year
lhan ever before.
Spring Weather Helps
Realtors’ Business
Pleasant weather during the last
week encouraged prospective home
buyers to venture Into the re d estate
market, much to the satisfaction o<
Omaha realtors In general. Keversl
firms reported excellent progress
toward a record In volume of business
for this season.
second window that It only obstructed
by the paraphernalia to-the breakfast
nook. A current of air Is always
passing through the room, and It is
possible to keep it exceptionally cool
in the summer.
A picture of the home, together
with floor plan, appears above on the
left.
Another house which Maenner has
designed and which has furnished
ideas for more moderate plans of
■ Spanish architecture is shown on the
right, above.
More Spanish In Effect.
This house stays more to the true
Spanish type. It has the patio, the
stucco walls and the flat root of the
houses of Spain arid Latin America.
On the outside, the long windows,
the solid door and the small balcony
give it a very individual air. A care
ful selection of shrubbery will aid
materially in increasing this individual
atmosphere.
The floor plan of the home, except
for the increased spaciousness of the
front bedroom, is identical with that of
the mollified Spanish home.
A plan book, recently published by |
the Maenner company, gives these and
many other plans in detail.
Hill on Sales Force
of Equitable Trust
1 W JC, Oil'll \
William Hill ha* been added to the
sales force of the real estate depart
ment of the Kqultable Trust com
pany.
Mr. Hill was formerly connected
with the firm of Hill & Scott, In the
McCauge building.
Carpenters* Union Art
Brightens Outlook
When the carpenters' local union
resolved the other day that Its mem
liers would not ask for any increase
In wages and dcclnred themselves
satisfied with the general condition
of things at present they aided great
ly in inert islng the bright aspect for
the coming season In the real estate
business.
Hullders had feared that the talk
of a strike among the building trades
a mild frighten prospective homo own
ers from beginning work on homes.
With the < aCpenters satisfied this
strike fear has been laid to rest.
Arthur Brisbane
Invests in Land
Columnist Is One of the
Most Careful of
Buyers.
Arthur Brisbane 1* putting his
money in real estate.
•'Barrons." a weekly financial re
view, has this to say about Brisbane
and his real estate holdings:
Arthur Brisbane, whose ptingen
paragraphs reach every day nearly
10,000,OOP readers, is not only an In
defatigable writer, but one of the
largest operators In real estate In
New York. The bulk of his fortune,
now' In seven figures, Is In land and
buildings. A list of his holdings
would disclose some of the choicest
bits of property, not only in New
York, but in oflier cities over the
country.
Brisbane bases bis investments on
careful studies of population, busi
ness and traffic tendencies in much
I the same Way that the United Cigar
Stores operate.
Six-Room Dutch Colonial Txoe
___— i
New six-room home of the llutih roionial type has just been com
nl. tril for Kdward K. Williams of llm Kdward F. Williams rompany. real
tors at 119 South Fifty-third strict.
Its dlmwitions arc 33 by 38 feet.
.Mr. Williams declares that, prices
are now right for building.
Six-Room Brick Bungalow
Thin nix-room house ha* just been completed at 5118 Florence boule
vard for B. J. Xewlon.
The ground formerly wan occupied by the Donahue greenhouse. The
plat ha* been subdivided and placed on the market an Xewlon and tiib
non's addition.
The foundation of the house in of black chinchilla brick with black brick
trimming around the windows am '•
doors. The upper part is a deep red
with black rake joint mortar.
The house contains five large liv
ing rooms witli a tile bath, breakfast
nook, and a full basement, with glass
tiinish for dancing.
Real Estate Value
Increased by Bank
First proof that thr mw $550,000
federal reserve hank building at
Seventeenth and Dodge street** would
stimulate building in that district was
*1 ven when flcoige Brnndeis an-i
nounced that a plan was being formu
lated to reconstruct the garage build
ing owned by the Brandets Store
company on the opposite corner.
The building, a two-story brick
structure, ts at present used for a
garage and a power plant. The plans,
as yet not definite, are to erect a
much larger oulldlng on the site and
to utilize the ground floor apace for
stores.
AIM ERTISEMK-NT.
Gallstonesj
Dr K K Paddock. Ho* J81-OH. Kan
sas City, M«*. mo* about on* p*non in
t*n ha* Infected gall-bi add-r or gall
stone* and neglect often leads to surgery.
Hut many people at* too old. weak or ill
for dangerous operation. The** people
reasonably wish to avoid suffering and
obtain relief with medicine* The Doctor
began specialising on the** troubles
years ago and hi* treatment* ha** been
of untold \a!ue to thousand* all o\*r
the 1\ 8. Hundred* of letters te*tif>
to health restored and freedom from suf
fering. Rather than suffer or let condi
tion* grow worse, and before you decide
on *urgerv. write the Do* tor Cpr his
FRICK HOOKLKT describing gallstone*
and explaining this home iic«tnt*nf.
UROPE
Tour, of tlle Better Grade
AT MODERATE COST
37 to 73 Day.—$475 to $925
Send for Booklet
Colpitis Tourist Company
281 WASHINGTON ST. BOSTON
Kstablinhed lh«9
Regular sailing* from New York,
Boston. Montreal. WEDNES
DAY S haateat mail sendee to
South?mpton sr.d Cherbourg,
SATURD A YS to Cobh:Queen*
town , Londonderry, LsverpnrjL
Glasgow. Plymouth, London
and Ham burg
ANCHOR LINKS
Randolph &. Dearborn Screen. Chica*o. UL
$100 CASH AWARD
For a Slogan for York
Write
Chamber of Commerce
York, Neb.
\i>\fcan MEMi s i.
.XI#\ ERTI'EMENT.
New Safe Way
to Whiten Teeth Instantly!
Marvelous Discovery, Bleaches
Dark Teeth White
! A new hwra>M treatment h-a been
'discovered which dissolve* teeth *t*»na
instant!;, giving dull teeth a (harming
whiteness and lustre. Thia new treat
rnent i* called the Bleachodert Combm
a Hon. It rrtssists of a marvelous liquid
and a new kind of paste. The liquid in
• lantly curdles or softens the stains—
while the pa.*te removes them and pre
vents the formation of future stains. You
uat brush >i-ur teeth with a few drop*
«>f the liquid—then use the past**-—and l*e
fore y«.ui ver> eve# vour teeth acquire
a rlrnr. flashing whiteness that even an
hour s scouring hy old-fashioned methods
oiild not give them.
**f« MHhed.
R'ea( hodeot Cwnbinatisn is ftafe to use.
es lt«« mild ingredient* e.re intended to
act onl> on surfaie stain*—not on the
enamel itself Teeth stair* a* all den
tists know, are caused by a gluieneus sub
stance tailed ‘mucin’' which collects on
teeth, where It attract.'* sta.ntng sub
Stances Hitd harden*. Formerly tl..- hard
coating of mucin could not be removed
without often grinding away a part of
the enamel But now. t honks to Bleach -
odent Combination. # these stains can be
enamel in mjr wav.’
\o More Tobacco *>tsin*d Tce^^!
Surely nothing spoils one s appearance
quicker than v allow Ish. lob** t o *t*in»*i
teeth Yet with Bb s* hodeit iV.ot tna
tion unsightly te»th stain* are no longer
ne« -**.-* rv No matter how *!.« n*d the
teeth nis lw from t- ‘q»cco or other sub
stances, the st ,>ins disappear with alm*as:
mss>*a! cui-kii*.*5. and ♦he tee-h icqfiirt
i aonJcrfui fla«h:c,g whiteness and g.#
ten.
Fine for 1 hiidren's Teeth.
It is \ Gaily important that only a safe
m.id preparation like B!*a< hodent Com
bination may be usel :n ch dren i teeth
which are o-pe ally subject to stains and
deca> B:*-a hodent Combination was
fir*t r id# for childrcr « tee\h to avoid
the u«*> if hamh, gritty dentifrices which
are so ruin# is to teeth in xhtir forma
tive urge.
€tet liburhodfst Combination Today !
You risk noth.a# In trying Bleachodent
;n«i:un for un.es* you are more then
delighted « ;h faults of first application,
jour money will be instantly aad gladly
refund'd w.thout qo ‘ton. Say Good by«
to dull stained teeth'
Note: Po not upeet Bleachodent Cora
• naton t.< remo\» stains rau*~d by a
silver filling. Bleachodent Combination
"ill n*’ a nt’y remove surface s*aln* but
:« r> t *? • •'ded to art on emmei. and
tb. • : *■ - . «*: h ■« expo*-ted to
•♦sins Mb. h go 1 •low x he enamels sur
ft ** Sold at all *ood store* s.i h as:
lira "id* * Store. |T«> !e? Goods l*ept I,
" b • m A M G : ne \ R#v.'n Drug Cw.
.•e n l*rug H ranek A Son
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
AS OF JANUARY THE FIRST, 1924
ADMITTED ASSETS
Real Estate .... $ 465,610.17
First Mortgage Loans.. 11,205,905.68
Policy Loans. 2,289,531.74
Premium Notes. 175,464.76
Government and Municipal Bonds..’. 284,621.82
Cash in Office and Banks. 420,005.60
Due from Reinsuring Companies on Death Claims
Reinsured . 2,000.00
Interest and Rents Due nnd Accrued. 747,212.11
Net Due and Deferred Premiums. .... 221,440.88
$15,811,792.76
LIABILITIES
Policy Reserves. $13,169,036.49
Supplementary Contracts. 239,750.46
Total Policy Claims.-. 52,658.00
Coupons and Dividends left with the Company to
Accumulate at Interest . 652,835.24
. Prepaid Premiums and Interest . 54,396.27
Reserved for Taxes . 87,500.00
Reserved for Dividends to Policyholders.\. 295,974.70
Special Reserves . 600,000.00
All other Liabilities. 51,907.91
Capital. $250,000.00
Surplus . 357,733.69
Surplus as to Policyholders. 607,733.69
$15,811,792.76
INSURANCE IN FORCE - - $109,447,793.00
ROYAL UNION LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
A. C. TUCKER, President DES MOINES, IOWA WM. KOCH, Vice President
F. B, ALLDREDGE & COMPANY, General Agents for Nebraska and Western Iowa
213 City National Bank Building, Omaha, Nebraska
Specials Agents—A. Block, Percy W. Stewart, Joe S. Wilder, James J. Hill
UNEQUALED OPPORTUNITIES FOR RESPONSIBLE AGENTS