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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1924)
More High-Priced . Land Sales Are Made in State Farms Bring as High as $230 Per Acre; One Tract Passes $400 • Mark. ■ l -- More high priced land sold In Ne braska last week. One of the outstanding sales from a value point of view was an S0-aere farm la Boone county, which was sold for $250 per acre cash to John W. Carlrnn and hts mother, Mrs. Loulso Carlson, who bought the place for a home. Another of last week’s sales show I ing tK.t there Is desirable land In all | parts of Nebraska was the sale of I an SO acre farm of pasture and hay land near Raiding for $175 per acre. There was another Boone county sale leportod last week of 160 acres selling for $24,500. In Seward county an 80 acre farm i brought J12.000, reported last. week. I and In Cumlrg. county a farm of 78 acres sold for $15,600. In Phelps and Thayer counties prices are ranging from $75 to $100 per aers. One Phelps county farm of SO acres sold for $6,000, and another 160 acres sold for $16,000. In Thayer |Rf.*<:ounty one 80-acre tract brought $6,000 and another $7,500, In Dawson county two sales were ■ reported last week of almost $100 per H acre; one 160-acre farm brought ■ $15,500, and another brought $15,000. I There was reported from Adams county,a 40-acre farm selling for $300 per acre or $12,000. The report to the Omaha real estate board did not slate whether this was an Improved farm. Another report of high priced land was from Filmore county where an 30-acre tract brought over $400 per acre or $35,000. Other reports from Fllmcre county showed prices rang ing from $100 to $150 per acre. Reports of activity in Iowa farm land continues. Three sales in the \ icintty of Humboldt, la., were re ported ranging from $200 to $225 per acre. At Storm I.ake a 251-acre farm was sold at auction for $225 per acre. ■ Another Nebraska sale which caused considerable comment was that of the 160-acre farm tn the S. M. Anderson estate, near Wakefield, which sold for $225.50 per acre. OMAHA HOUSES SELLING RAPIDLY A steady business is reported by the R. F. Clary company, realtors, 508 Omaha National bank building. Recent sales follows: 3508 North Fortieth street to Jesse Sell. 3520 North Fortieth street to Philip C. McDermott. 1801 North Twenty-eighth street to Oeorgi' McCarter. 2808 Caldwell street to George Me- j Carter. 2S12 Caldwell street to George Mc Carter. 6307 North Thirty-third avenue • to j „ Alvenia Benkhart. 1608 North Forty-seventh street to Frank Balkovec. 1612 North Forty-seventh street to Dell A. Baker. 3312 Maple street to John Henry. 3759 North Thirty-eighth street to J. Edward Larson. 3735 North Thirty eighth street to Lester Ives. The company also reports construc tion of modern bungalows for John F. Gronewuld, 6796 Bedford avenue, for Ned G. Ray, 7525 Lake street, and for Charles Fleming at 2856 Pratt street. This firm has several modern homeft under construction at the pres ent time and will erect between 15 and 20 three, four and five-room bun galow's in various locations within the next 90 days. --- Heal Estate Sales L) Forty real estate transactions of $4,000 or more each were, filed in tlie office of Register of Deeds Pearce The total of these transactions was $041,550. Following Is a list of these sales with the districts In which they are located. Hanurnm Turk. T \r Fncklif to Nicholsi Chrlitenaen, ■ 4 fouth Thirty first Ron Br*»d® ;q Anile M McMillan, 1021 South Twenty-ninth street, $',000. North w est. A. J. Edel to <; E Nord. Sr**ncer be tween Forty-fifth and Fontenelle boule v s ■ d. $5.uo0. P. J. Howe to J. J. Hughes, 425/ Wirt street, $6,000. A. F. Levy to F. J. Franzen. Forty-third between Parker anti Decatur street, $5,700. M. L. Jackaon to 8 I Honaviez, north west corner Forty-eighth and Krakine streets. $4,050. N, H. Onase ‘n Lilly E. Gale. southeast corner Forty-third and Alaple streata, $5,500. .1. W. Bates to W. J. Alettien. 2523 North Forty-ninth Hvime, $5,buo, Ethel J,. Robel to Haatings A Heyden, Fiftieth and Nebraska, $5,500. <}. C. Flack tii .1 AV BMgeller, 2009 iii Forty-ninth avenue, $4,400, Mouth Omahn. Theresa Hannigan to Hone M lake, 4009 .South Twenty-eighth afreet, $6,250. J. N. Laird to Martha M. Campbell, 2507 E street, $6,000. Abraham Bilverman to Omaha L A ft association, 2112 to 2424, incorporated N street, $6,300. North Mid**. Barnett* Griffin lo • F Connolly, 230» Ahennan avenue. $5,500. r P. Hippie to K. F. Clark, 1*05 Miami street, $4,200. \V. F Berger in Edward Cackley. .414 Pratt afreet. $5,000. M M. Sullivan to AV Ft. Zink, southeast . uar Sherman avenue and Victor avenue, 137,000. tl. h. Shattuck to R. J. Richardson, .1921 NortJi Nineteenth street, $>.160 VV. T gulf k to 0. M. F ixa, 2567 Pratt * » et. $6,HO. T H. Day to Martina Wagner, 3905 orih Eighteenth street, $6,600. Central. Cecelia C. Bui htel to A. W. Anderson, "IK Davenport street, $16,000. Emma A. Moores to I W. IfernI»*raon, •17 South Kelghteenth si reef, $16,000. uverlnnd Mortgage A Finance company Carrie Champney, 914*320 North Twen , u p$r#e% . 10,000 vt, J. Hfhome.9 h H K. Krause, 634 >f»uth Thirty-neeond avenue, $5,600. Mi line l.iioii. T AV. Metcafe to N. It. Itlofiiii, 6i24 ' ih Thirty first street, $7,000. F B. iiarnbafher tu <*. J. Brlnker, ' hltmore betw een Twtnl >'-fourth and nty-flfth avenue. $7,600. Rssp Brottiers to William Whlttan, 244o •uman avanuft, $6,100. Mouth went. I T. McMannU to Palma C. Mangl Smelt Fifty-eUth and Hickory streets. -I 000. Niirllirnnf. rl pH hot ak • to P J. Publ i-‘ H • kory afreet, $ 4,000, Kfltithi'ail r Flerlf to it \. PI' k re!. 4*4 V«1 D strait, $4,150 . . - hn Kueh to, Dora AV. .lands, 13*3 1 ’ha s’reet, $1 o 4«n Benson. A Rr.se to Herbert Bluer he! Ri J • i r •/ avenue, lift.ftoo. iouth ^ •sm Mageeman to Alaakl K. Afonka. I 133$ South Twenty-fifth street, $5,000. J. A Messmer to J. W. uhlin, 1725 South Fifteenth street, $4,900. Dundee. 1">. O. Eld red ire to Allen Kohan, 5106 Capitol avenue, $7,000. <». R. Vlner t.» Adolia I Rryan, 1011 North Forty-ninth street, $5,700. Lillian M. Kemp to Jennie H. Griffin. 1002 North Forty-ninth street, $6,000. Demis Park. Ruby M. I.uikart to Ad»»l M. Cash, 3401 Hawthorne avenue. $11,000. West 1^*h vemvorth. R J. Royles to A. M. De L-terro Hen* howteen Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth streets, $6,700. J. B. I tone to F. L. Heyn. 4313 May bet ry at ret t, $6,000. BRENGLE JOINS FOWLER COMPANY J. M. Brenglp, 3132 Calhoun street, for 20 years an employe of the Crane company, has joined the real estate sales foice of the Bu.t C. Fowler company. Following his service with the Crane company, Brengle spent four years in the sales department of the Payne Investment company before joining the Fowler organization. IB was in the land department of the Payne Investment company. UNION OUTFITTING SUMMER OUTING Two interesting acts are among the feature events for the big outing the Union Outfitting company is giv ing for its friends and patrons at Krug park Thursday evening. One hundred kewpio dolls and a similar number of smart swagger sticks will l>e given away. Tickets to the event can lie secured without charge by calling at the store. Buyers (i<> Hast. M. K. Chapman and Miss Ksther Shapiro of the Ooidstein Chapman company, left Saturday evening for New York City, on an extended buy ing trip. about th» time when the leader Is having some paroxysms of fear on account of Rose-Ann, it is definitely established that the father of her child is her husband. Rose returns with her child to the root of her hus band and it all goes to show that when folks agree to be husband and wife, they should adjust and readjust if the venture is to he a success. Mrs. Comstock is clever in the cre ation of her characters and her plots have an appeal to a large clientele of women. We do not be lieve that the average he-man would consider his time well spent in read ing "The Tenth Woman.” Corra Harris Tells Her Own Story in Hook • Mv Book an«l Heart.” bv Corra Harria. (Houghton Mifflin company, Boston.) Corra. Harris has written much, some good and a little of which de serves a less complimentary classifi cation. But she has never attempted sensationalism as a means of attract ing readers and in this autobiography there is a sincerity which brooks no light treatment. It Is the true story of the author's life, a life which has known little of luxury and what might seem to be more than a just share of trials and discouragements. The author writes of her childhood In the south during the reconstruction period, of her young girlhood and of her marriage to Lundy Howard Harris. She tells how her husband became a Methodist preacher and how together they started out to ride the circuit. New Happy Hollow Home. A new home is being built for Mr. and Mrs. Denman Kountze at the northwest corner of Fifty-seventh and Webster streets. The lot is one of the best In the new unit of Happy Hollow which is now being developed by ( Jeorge A < *o. Sale of Big Property at Dundee The Johnston Realty company anti the t\ P. Hutchinson company an nounced the sale of the Fairview Apartments, located at Fifty-first anti Webster streets in Pundee, to Mr. K. K. llolst as an investment, the former firm representing: the buyer and the latter the seller. Tills is one of the largest apartment house sales of the year. The sale was consummated in the last week. Beatrice Company Dredging Blue River Wymore, Neb., Jury ,12.—The Be atrice Bower company, owner of the big j hydro-electric darn on the Blue riveir, eight miles southeast of Wy morje, which has hern dredging the river channel below the dam for sev eral weeks, has been forced to shut down operations on account of the main steel cable breaking Wednes day afternoon. The dam and power house was completed a year ago at a cost of over 1375,000, and the company decid ed recently to dredge out the rock and mud immediately below the ce merit darn to gain a better mad of water. Part of the same machinery with which the dam was constructed is being used in the dredging, 20-foot derricks on each side of the river holding a heavy steel cable upon which Is operated a half-ton dipper which Is let down into the stream and filled with mud, then pulled to shore and dumped by the cable. It is planned to remove about 700, 000 cubic yards of dirt and rock in this manner. The work will take about three months. Movies Mav Be •/ Made Art When Time Is Ripe Tamar Lane Tells Vi hat Is Wrong Now and How Lhange May He Brought About. "WHAT’S WRONG 'WITH THK MOVIES’” by Tamar I.ane, Th« Wav erly < uinpany, I .or Angel?*, publisher* Mr. I.fine answers his question in a very full and frank way, In tills paragraph: “AVe have no philanthropists, no martyrs, no self sacrificing geniuses, no artists and no real leaders In the silent drama. Nothing but business men and business women—money, money, money. Not a semblance of the spirit that moves workers In othet arts. Not one wiling to risk a penny or even his time that the photoplay might be advanced. But let anyone arise to cast a slurring word against the art of the screen and on the mor row there are a thousand voices raised unto the sky in indignant wrath.” He goes very carefully Into all phases of the moving picture indus try, considering the producers, the authors, th& exhibitors, the actors, the directors, the censors, the critic* and the public. Between them he dis tributes the blame for the neglect of qjt and the apotheoslzation of busi ness. Some of his conclusions may strike th^ reader as being extreme, but they are the free thought of one who knows the whole story, and who has the fine courage to set It down In words that can be understood, even if some of them do scorch and blister. For the envoi of his work, Mr. Lane concludes: “There is something wrong with the directors— “There is something wrong with the actors— “There is something wrong with the producers— “There is something wrong with the authors— , “There Is something wrong with the censors— “There Is something wrong with the comedians— “There is something wrong with the exhibitors—• “There is something wrong with the critics— "But the movies, themselves, bless them—they are all right.” Whether this well timed protest will have any effept on the movie 1* uncertain. The men who are in the business are in It frankly for the money they get out of It. The patrons are content—at least, they pay their money to see what Is set before them, and It Is sometimes very hazardous to try to make people take something they do not want. We are not cer tain if the art impulse In America has vet reached that stage where a moving picture depending on art alone will get over. Recent Publications THE MESSAGE OF AQUARIA,” bv Har riett? AuKURta Curtlvn en«I F Horner r'urti**, B 8. M. l>. (<*urtl»» Philo sophic Book Company, San Francisco). The authors claim that their new book ''contains a clear explanation of and many prophecies concerning the new Aquarium, or Woman'e Age, in its mission to a distracted and war weary humanity.” It certainly covers a wide range of territory. ■•ADJUSTING IMMIGRANT AND INDUS TRY,” hy William A. I.ei»*-r.un (Har per A- brother.. New York). A valuable addition to the Amerl canizatlon series published bv the same house. Iir. Leiserson'e unique experience In the field of Immigrant Industry qyallfles to write con vincingly on this important topic. In this volume, the ninth of the series, the author has treated in detail the many,aspects of adjusting the Imml- | gram to American industry, supple- ! mentlng his facts with numerous tables and enlivening the whole with Interesting stories of individual cases coming under his personal observa tion. A careful study of this book will greatly help to clarify the situa tion. •■NINETEENTH CBNTI'RT EVOI.UTTON AND AFTEH by Rev. Marshall Daw •on (Th« MacMillan Company, New York). The author has boldly declared that human nature can be revised, and with many an Ingenious argument sets about to prove his declaration. It Is clearly the intent of the author to offer a peacemaker In the welfare be tween religion and science, If such warfare there be. "WHAT IS MODERNISM?" by r.ev I.elKhton Parka, rector of St- Barthole mew, N*w York. (Charles Scribners Suns, New York). The author insists that modernism ''in not a body of doctrine, it is a state of mind." This volume is de signed to explain In clear nnd under standable Knglish ju*t what the whole controversy is about. It may not solve your perplexities. but it is calculated to convince you that the c liurch is not at all likely to Vie weak ened by those who would make a system of religion that would be easy for them to live. "OCR FAITH IN EPVi ‘ATION " by Henry Huzza IP* Ph i> president of Washington university f.T B Llppin cott Company, Philadelphia and Lon don ». Shall we abandon our schools to the politicians and the free lance critics or shall we use our great educational system for the maintenance of a suc cessful democracy? This question Is answered convincingly by the au thor. It will be user! to maintain a successful democracy. Teople who desire to get a clear understanding of our educational problems will find this little volume of immense benefit. "I.IFF AS t HAVE KNOWN IT" by Wal ter P Vincent (Lothrop, I.re A Strep. • rd I'omptiny, Boston). Judge Vincent, associate Justice of the supreme court of Rhode Island, has drawn upon the rich experience of 50 years at the bar and on the bench, and given the public a book that is a wonderful relief from the tide of literary trash. Sound advice, rich humor, witty and earnest dls missions and character sketches of folk of other dat a, combine to delight the reader for hours on end. The sin rerlfy of the author Is to be noted in every line. Not only will members of the bar read it with pleasure and profit, hnt laymen will find in It not only pleasure hut treasure. 'THE AH IP nr T IGHT " hy r? t ^ P*n*on. (Th* Stratford Company. Bo» ton). Thin 1a An allegory. "It 1* my Arm belief.” says the author, "that prog ress in g divine heritage, and that it j !a based upon certain fundamental* which emanate from the Creator.” These fundamentals are love, truth and wisdom, nnd upon these the au thor builds. "JtMKft T • • V« I. HIS FIRST FORTY V K A R A " l>\ l!**rb*Mt S Gorman <B W lluehit h. N• >\ York) This Is a c ritical analysis of James Joyce and his works, with especial at tent ion to Ills "ClyMses. ' Students of contemporaneous literature will And In tills volume a thorough analysts of the author urn! the the books that made him famous. "\\ H T nr NO MIN be TT * n» W#|#npr i\ir PuhtluhinK Company, Philadelphia » Another in the long !h*t of sex problem books. It Is a plain, courage nus and outspoken message to young men. ____ I ABE MARTIN On Show Window Dollin' —-->\ I r When Ih' average grnn'inotlier glls t’ lookin' hack she can't help com parin' th' lurin', tedious, uneventful days of her girlhood with th* pleas ures an’ skylarkin' o' t'duy. She has nothin' I' look back on but uri oc caslonal buggy ride or tli’ ole wide apart dancin' of her lime her wed din' I' a feller with a heavy niuslai he an' Hr' colorless years that followed days o' no bathtubs, days o' lop sliries an' cotton stockin'*, lots o’ petticoats, an’ a full head o’ hair that fell I’ 111’ waistline. Kven th' modem mother o' fifty must sigh when her daughter struts out limp an' willowy, an' evenlv cropped, for an evenin' of alternate darnin' an' motorin'. Let th’ poor child enjoy herself, ter she'll be married soon Her Itemin' Curries Independence, enough." she save. Our gills Hie grow In’ up an' broadenin' out too fast. Wo no longer ne»* Mi' meek ness that used t‘ link under th' long lushes o’ Miss fourteen. Th' nn trial sweet ness, too, seems t’ have been replaced b> somethin’ counter fit. Th* Hen Davis flush that used i leap t’ her face at th’ slightest slip o' th' tongue Is off th' Job. Th’ girl o' t’dny Is Interest In,' but not girlish. Thor's somethin’ about her that makes us feel that w« mullin' sup port H*»r In fh' style she'd like to live. We like t ’!*» around her. hut we wmfldn’ want, her Instead n' th ole luster her eyes sparkle with a challenge a sort o’ how much are you ms kin’ an’ where ate you worfcln'?” In her home her hearln carries sn Independence that makes t feller feel like he wut meetln • k great Srftea* Th’ *frt r>* t’dnv aff» « la ih' aiyle an’ manner* one grown • alloua In th' "hlil o' pNamiic and Jazz music. Hut after all Im Maid ait' don* ther’a lota t' admiro In Ih' new glrl'a pluck and duah her effort t' he Independent HU’ aelf MiMtalnln’ and keep out o' dlahwatcr. \V« love t’ aee her huatlln' off t‘ work, an' we love t' ae»* her hehlnd th* counter, or perkin’ sway at a typewriter. \Vn love t' aee her pow'der her nos** mi doll her Vlpa tip. an* w»* lov • r aee her on her wav home aftei th* nerve rackin' worries n’ th’ ds\ How Kind her folk* must he when ahe gita aafe 1v home, an* how glad h» • paw mu at be that ahe* worltln' However, wa do regret »h' pastin' o' th’ ole Inde acrlhsble somethin' In ^ girl in her teena that uasd r make us stutter' sn* trembls In her preaencs. f---- ^ Peeping Into the Underworld! V. ___—--— i5> n. o. McIntyre. New York's underworld today Is far more vicious than 25 years ago In the hey-day of "The Haymarket" and "The Star and Garter." In the old daya a victim of knockout drops might die, hut as a rule he was only robbed and left to sleep off the potion. Today the underworld Is out to kill. Women are the victims—women with "heavy sugar daddies" who decorate them with jewels. In former days the Tenderloin was hard shelled and tough. Today It has a coating of class, a Wicked veneer of resperta bill t>_. The silk hatted criminal in full eve ning clothes supplants the rough neck In sweater and cap. The biggest robberies are planned In the exclu sive cabaret. Robbery more than likely means murder. The new under world believes the dead tell no tales. The “creep joints" have disappear ed. These were places where the victim's clothes were placed In such a position that a "creeper" could enter the room, rifle them and leave without detection. The "badger and panel games" are no more. The modern criminal is a tangoing, lobby lounging vulture. He Is far re moved from the old underworld char acters w-ho at times had a certain gallantry. They never molested women. The cabarets have spewed out thousands of these parasites. The more exclusive the resort the better the prey. The little country girl who crosses the perilous night life zone Is In constant danger. The murders of Hot King and Ron Iso Rawson are illustrious examples of the new mur der sway. In the old days the Tendersloin ex tended from the north side of Four teenth street to the south side of Forty-second street, from the west side of Park avenue to the east side of Seventh avenue. This was the famous old 19th police precinct. The new Tenderloin lies from Forty-sec ond street to Fifty-ninth street and from North River to Fifth avenue. It Takes Brains Now. If Is a highly skilled business—this now campaign cf robbery and murder i The lounge lizard heglns hie plan for robbery by bringing about the meet ing between the ambitious young Rirl from the small town, eager for a sue. cessful career, and the middle-aged man of opulence, with a weakness for a pretty face. ITe knows the provident papa will buy her Jewels. Ami he knows that if there is a family the papa will pay blackmail hush money. He has two sources. The girl with her jewels and the extortion. Sprinkled about in the Tenderloin are "go-betweens’1 who tip off promi nent prospects. These are boot leggers and beauty parlor experts. They bear and see much that can lie used profitably by the perfumed criminal. And they are paid well for their information. There are scores of beauty shops in the Furious Forties that are mere ly clearing houses for criminal In formation. Then, too, there is, the slimy trail of the "fake doetor" = __ blurring across the glided path of light. Girls go to him and tell him things that would shake high circles. If in the background there is a timorous, e.-tsv individual he Is going to be ma de to pay The roving night hawk taxi driver Is also a figure. Most of them are rat faced crooks who came up from the gambling houses of the East side and are willing to take chances. They will pack the gun or chloroform and they will wait with engine racing for those who fle« from murder and rob bery. Three of the most prominent own ers of exclusive Broadway cabarets were former bondsmen for women of tbe old Tenderloin. They do not re gard murder as a serious business unless the murderer Is caught. There are many cafe keepers who receive their share of the spoils. We often wonder if people would go to some of the smartest clubs if they realized the type of men who run them. There is something sinister about them even when cloaked in evening clothes of the gentleman. They aid the butterflies in “hooking the live one for a daddy." They know that aside from the money that will be spent at their tables there is another I source of revenue—even though it smells of human blood. .Evening Clothes and Automatics. Evening clothes cover many sins. Not only the cabarets but the most exclusive hotels are not unknown to the shrewdest crooks. In the din ing room of the smartest hotel In town the nthpr night there sat "Raid ■Tack" Rose, the sinister figure in the Broker murder. He was dining in .'igntto with the aid of a jet black wig to cover his hairless head. Another fellow conspirator in the Eii.k»r case conducts a fence on one of Broadway’s brightest comers The crook does not run to cover thosei days. The brighter the lights the better. Three theaters had box patrons one evening recently who are interna tional crooks They sat with beau tiful women and might »-**ily tie taken for men high up in the social and business life of the city The bootlegger is given acce«s to many fine apartments lie must de liver his illicit wares In person, lie will not accept money in halls. Thus this contact gives him a chance to study surroundings—the lay of the land. The buyer is rather fraterniz ing for she realizes that she too is equally culpable In breaking the law. She may tell him a few things about herself. This he carefully catalogues, lu some Instances she asks him to call a certain prominent man's office to he paid. All of this information is something the under world was never able to learn before. 1 ''iWtiH in iJi.Ua' i l P-«M«H8ER ybvi / ijjl| Plli I have- AN APPoMtMeriT >,/ r ' j |!l||||'|!'‘j I -to BLACKMAIL A HILUGfJAiRe j ^ AT O-gOCPL. _/ —-s. \ "• = V, -' T The modern denizen of the under world has a realization that “class" is going to make the job much easier and less likely of being detected. H* lives in fashionable apartment house districts. He goes to the best cafes. He fills his library with good books. He has a brink account and possibly a secretary. He knows the value of keeping up appearances —- especially where he lives The elevator men. janitors and neighbors are given the Impression he is a rich gentleman. When he goes dipping into crime ail of this is helpful in establishing his alibi. One of the small hut exclusive apartment hoti.ee* on Riverside 4th " wan discovered to be the horn* seven men whose face* had been '’mugged" at police headquarte. Three of them were wanted in Pari* and one In London. A police lieutenant th* other »'* ning rat at an obscure table in a r«f« thronged with pleasure-seeking mm and women—rare jewel* flashed. Ail were immaculately dressed in full eve ning regalia, lie picked out 47 mm ard women in a crowd of slight* more than 300 patrons who had police records. In the old days the crook was liarred. lie was known, and head waiters an<l others wiio greeted him turned his steps in other direction. Today the liars seem down. The only thing the cafe and cabaret men aid: Is that their patrons he In eve ning clothes, if they do that, and are good spenders, they r-ome a* often and remain a* long u* they desire. < rimlnals do not se-k ttie easy-going yokel for small robbery, lie Is ot*i ifter the fine fe;,111ered birds. He will remain on ihe trail for months—plan ning and scheming, and he general; lands Ills victim. The new Tenderloin is far, far more dangerous than the old ever was. Rmadway is becoming not only s lane of lights—but of death Copyright, H7C MM r It I l>l Ml NT Why Nobody Likes a Person With Stained Teeth N " i h1 *.» will ruin a perann'e appearance oi populnrilv i|iil< her limn «l«rk atmtiv xt'llowlah *1 aim'd troth l n< lean or 1 "' nli"-I i- • ll» denote uniidlnea* nil.| • Ht»lpaane»« Theee a ra fatal to l>uainr-M m no. ml an.-,-Yal |( In «,.w I*» remove teeth atatna ami have ilia I auarlilln* while tart hi Title la t hrouvh III* .<• hmlaiit «'omblnal l..n . *n aialliia of II in 11*1 an fa 1mm,1 win h R.*fi ana a'altia. hik! a apertal pnate win. h ■ etitly r-imiVM i ham without affecilmt ••UdiP'l Perfected t.v I wo pi oin.oani 11 ant | «t a hilnaa Inatant laaulta Mnk* x niif laalh fin thin* w hite thta now. *• ife wav ‘Irt Mlen«'ho*1ant Combination to «l •' »i nil «"o*t itealera **u< li m Tiran ilala Ml ora l t*n||et iIoiiiIr I'ept. I Mh^rmnn .< Mil'innall. M**tioti Pitte Co. Green I »rmr Me»..nek \ Hnn \l»\ f KThl MINT ASTHMA nr Ifay f>\er r* needle** and ran h. T k v aertad IN \\V HIMAH Kate.*,,' 101 r. - . If*! rr lit* Tlf*> •• ► trtped Hally at Heaton Grog t >• -• fnr Irrr ''ta«V> !r'■raHire w • ita Haniio ■■ 1 Hill* I ahoratoM. 726 17th fct , pen-er ; Colt* I The STEINWAY Preferred by Music Lovers It*s RICH, mellow, expressive tone, full of charm and beauty, has caused discriminating musi cians to choose the superb Steinway Grand YOU will find our sales people ready to aid in choosing the style you like best. Our service is just what you'd like to have it, and our prices are exceptionally moderate. Our bud get plan makes purchasing easy, with out necessitating a large cash outlay. Steinway Uprights, S875 Steinway Grands, §1,425 Pianos of other makes accepted as, part payment. Take 3 Years to Pay Schmoller & Mueller 1 514*16-1S PI AMD m Telrphon. Cod,. St. rlHHV l*VJ. AT 1SS6 The Steinway Houie ir Health Take Chiropractic Adjustments Start today and regain your alth by taking Chiropractic ad stments. Dr. Burhorn has restored thous ds of sick people to normal by i methods. Why not you? Consultation at the office is thout charge. Adjustments are for $10 or 30 for $25. 7 FOR APPOINTMENT ful Practice in Omaha rn, the Chiropractor Cor. 16th and Farnam St». tory—Lad, Attendants. CHIPOfPACTIC s PHONE JACKSON 534 * Ninth Year of Succeti Dr. Frank F. Burho Suite 414-420 Securities Bldg Complete X-ray Labors . 3 “Trouble Visits” to Realty Board Included among the callers at the Omaha Rea. Estate Board office every week, are those that make what we call “Trouble Visits.” We use the term “Trouble Visits" because the visitor is in trouble over a real estate deal. We had three such visits last week; about the average weekly number. Our last week’s “Trouble Visits” were all for the same reason—the visitor was in trouble over a real estate deal made without the advice and counsel of a Realtor. The difficulties were different in each case, and had hern caused by unethical practice, or inexperience on the part of the agent. So much expert knowledge is required in making a real estate d«;al. that difficulties very often arise, costly to the buyer or seller, unless the agent is a Realtor. Realtors are experienced and ethical. They know how to avoid, and do avoid, these costly mistakes. OMAHA REAL ESTATE BOARD Consult a Realtor—He Knous.