YAIIT AD SECTKll Pjrps 1 to 8. ESTABLISHED JUNE Omaha's BEAUTY SPOTS ABOUT HOMES i What May Be Dene to Make the Surround ing! Attractive. PLEASURES OF AMATEUR GARDENING Delights la the Ever-Changing Work of Ttatnra's Alchemy Decorative Tz?eet of Shrubbery sad Vlaea. Manx and varied are the ways of beauti fying home surroundings. Equally varied are the ways In Which the householder may derive pleasure as well as profit from small gardens. "It Is the Joy and despair of the gardener that his work la never done, his materials are growing, changing, ever-varying things," exclaims a writer In the Century magazine; work that affords pleasure Is not exacting work and no one who undertakes gardening even on a small , scale cannot fall to derive satisfying pleas- are from watching nature's alchemy produce results under Ufe-glvlng sunshine. This Is the delight of the man or woman who works skillfully and watches the seeds de velop. How and When Plaa. "Tell me what I shall plant In a little garden," said a novice to a seed dealer the other day. "I know something about gardening, but I want you to advise me what Urn to begin, what things I should plant first, and what I ahould leave until later on." - - "Just a soon as the sun begins to shine ' and the ground to get warm, it Is time to plant garden seed," said the seed dealer. "And so the time, for many things -has-4 seme. 'First wa will talk about peas. Tou should plant soma' of two varieties now, "' on ait extra' early kind and the other for second early or medium crop. While the smooth peas ' ara the earlier, " the wrinkled ones ara sweeter, you know. A standard early wrinkled pea la the Gradus nr prosperity pea. There are numerous varieties of second early peas; Horsford's Market Garden and Pride of the Market are standards. 'When the early peaa are gone uae the same ground for a late var iety. "Then yon ahould have some beans In your garden, too. Better plant a couple or Varieties of early dwarf beans and later varieties of bush llmas and wax beans. ( don't think much of pole beans for small gnrdeners. The lima pods have Just as milch meat In -them. All of these seeds should be planted two or three inches be low the surface In well pulverised ground In rows probably a foot or so apart, ac cording to the room you have. "Other thtnga planted now are lettuce, radishes, onion sets, asparagus roots, cu cumbers, beets and oarrota. Uae onion seta and roota of .. asparagus. Plnnt cu cumbers in hills, three or four feet apart, with four or Ave seeds In a hilt. Plant the other seeds In narrow rows or beds. Put In soma mustard and splnnach. They make fine greens. Also plant a little parsley for plata decoration. Might as well put on a little style, you know. "Parsnips may be planted pretty soon. I would wait about ten days before planting sweet corn or setting out cabbage plants. Set out your tomato planta about May L j I would reoommend one or two early va ' rletlea and soma later ones. Set them out about two feet apart. "It Is wonderful how muoh stuff can be grown on a small piece of ground. But gardening doesn't consist of early enthu siasm in planting seed and later neglect. X garden must have attention to give re sults. Ikfibi aad Viaes. An important factor In securing pleasant results in planting shrubs and vines for the town yard Is to plant In the right place. The most usual mistake Ja to place the shrub first planted, which is generally the mnt beautiful shrub, in the center of the lawn. Others are planted In the larger openings left, ao that when the scheme if complete the shrubs are scattered, each standing out alone. If thla plan la carried out It shows each Individual shrub as a specimen, rather - than as an. ornament. Each one Is a thing on exhibit as In a museum. So far front eoau-ibutlng to the beauty of the 'whole home, the lawn be comes merely a place to display Individual shrubs. The more the planter 'Is attracted by the beauty of a particular shrub, the more likely he Is to Isolate It. A much better effect may be secured by maintaining an open lawn In front and by massing the shrubs In groups in the corners, of the yard, along the sides and rear, In front of outbuildings, in corners of the building or In the anglea formed by the ate pa and the porch. Grouped In this way the ehrubbery plantings form a truly decorative frame to the home grounds. The open lawn In front admits the yellow sunlight, gives air and roominess aud a suggestion of expanse to the grounda Sharp anglea of the yard, may be soft ened Into graceful llnea by m anting shrub bery In ths corners. Low growing shrubs ran be planted close In to fill the anglea between the atepa and the porch. The bare, formal outllnea of the basement wall may be neutralised by a mass of splreaa or other low forms of shrubbery planted a few fft la width agatnat the corners. Any bold and striking stone surface of a base ment wall may be so Improved In appear ance by disposing shrubbery In this way. In massing shrubs the tallest should be , placed to Dm rear ao4 the lowest la front. The 19, 1871. Busy Wholesale District, Where Trade Runs Into Hundreds of Millions ftm 7 ?,, "if' - e fr,v'"hr';, . I. VIEW LOOKINO to form a continuous bank from the green grass to the top of the rear shrubs. Bhmba should be planted early In spring before they start their leaves. It Is usually best to spade up the entire area to be oc cupied by the roots of a shrubbery mass. In this area plant the shrubs close enough together so that In a year or two their branches will touch and mingle together. If this Is done the observer loses the Identity of each Individual shrub and thinks only of the mass as a whole. Shrubs blend In a neighborly fashion and give variety In their different styles of leaf, color and habit of growth. The variations In such a mass, from the soft, plumlike, drooping splreas to the rugged, stiff-twigged mock orange, are never tiresome to the eye as the formal outlines of a single shrub. The variations In color will be particularly noticeable when the branches play together In the wind, giving all the changes in color of a cloud effect. A Method In Plaatlaa- Flowers, Too. Among the most suitable flowers for the lawn are the hyacinth, narcissus,. Jonquil, Iris, peony, phlox and hollyhock among the perennial variety, and the nasturtium, marigold, pansy and candy tuft among the annual flowers. They should not be planted after the usual method. In formal beds of geometrical design In the center of the lawn, but about a border of shrub bery masses. The openings between the brsnches of the shrubs can be filled In with these bright flowering planta. Each apeclea of flower should be massed by Itself In the shade of the shrubbery branches. If the flower groups blossoming from early spring to late In autumn are Interspersed among the shrubs, . the shrubbery masses will be brightened by their bloom during the entire summer..' The best care that can be given vines, shrubs er flowers la tot keep the soil broken so that It willr-ttot f ri a-erwat.- Aa qrdl nurv iiHin raka or kM "Wall; answer 'this purpose. It the soil Is kept loose arid Arte' tor one Inch In depth between the, slants, it will, hold .moisture as well as keep, Away Intruding weeds. ' . ..." Vises for the Veraada.. . . Everv sossessor of a house,. with a porch, whether In city, suburb, of-country should realise the opportunity ha has, with the. helo of nature, to make it a de llctous arid beautiful, cool, green, shady retreat In summer. In winter It matters little what It Is. Vines will transform any porch Into a bower. To have vig- .1 .. .ib 11 i. .i orous vines plenty of rich soil Is needed, and It is best to insure this by adding plenty of cow manure or bonemeal to make It rich. Good drainage, aa In any flower garden, la alao essential. In the woods many wild vines may be found. There are the Dutchman's pipe, the wild grape, the moonreed vine, the trumpet vine and others. The wild grape vine la especially useful and easily ob tained. Its luxuriant foliage, rapid growth and delightful fragrance make it useful for summerhouses and similar structures. The trumpet vine, with Its scarlet orange flowers. Is easily grown, not at all sensitive to rough treatment. It Is found in many parts of the country wild. , These vines may be obtained from dealers. The silk vine Is fine, with dark green, luxuriant foliage of neat habit. It be longs to the milkweed family of plants, and derives its name from the silky con tents of Us seed pods. It Is excellent for the veranda, and is used to cover many famous old-ruins. A number of the clematises are well worthy of a place on the most beautiful verandas, especially the flowering varie ties, such as Clematis Jackmannl, which baa purple flowers, and Clematis henrl, whloh haa net white flowers, both pro ducing a mass of rich color when In bloom. ' The Urn Branllfal. While some kind of grass will grow on almost any soli, the best results come only frorn. rich, light loam. If, therefore, the soil Is thin and gravelly, work Into It at the start plenty of fertilizers digging It In . A r T1i,n ..ok w a f ltt m til grass more nutriment than would be necos - ,. ,u ssry were the earth better. This foundation work cannot be too care fully done. If available, use plenty of very dry manure and dig It In thoroughly. Just scattering on the top Is not enouh. Tou want to get down ao the roota will get the benefit, for, remember, the better grass Is rooted the better It stands dry weather. Some of the commercial fertilizers, how ever, form an excellent substitute. If thor oughly mixed. Nor Is there danger of weeds from use of them. Except for banks or terrsces, the sowing of a lawn with seed Is found to be more satisfactory than sodding. Before the sow ing see that the lawn Is well graded. The amateur who must prepare his own land can do this grading by going over the ground a number of times with hoe and rake to pulverise all the lumps, then even ing It with a roller. Get good seed and plenty of It. It will be found cheaper In the end to go to acme reliable dealer, even If his graas mixtures coat more. The thicker it is sown the less danger there will be of weeda. Five bushels to the acre or a quart to SuO square feet la none too much. Sow evenly and alwaya on a still day, or ths seed, which Is very light, is apt to be blown where one does not wish it to go. It Is a good thing to go over the ground Immediately afterwards with a roller to press the seed In. Until the sod becomes firm be careful to keep off animals or anything that will track It- Do not mow a new lawn until the grass has grown three or four Inches, and then do not shave It. Too close clip- Omaha OMAHA, -1 BAST FROM THE ROOF OF THE PACIFIC EXPRESS BUILD INO, AT THE ping the first season Is a mistake. In a damp summer it might be cut twice a week, less often If the weather Is very dry. Every lawn Is Improved by a top dressing of bone at least once a year, though twice is better. This may be put on In the fall for the snows to work In and again In the spring. Five hundred to 1,000 pounds to the acre Is a good proportion. Wood ashes are also beneficial, and a little nitrate of soda, say several nundred pounds to the acre, Is excellent to give grass a healthy color and rapid start. Each spring, aa early as possible, all bare places should be sown thickly. During the summer, If at all convenient, lawns should be given a thorough drenching every even San Francisco Strangely prophetic of a different fate were the words of Robert Louts Stevenson, writing of San Francisco In the Magaslne of Art for May, 18S3. "According to Indian tales, perhaps older than the name of Cal ifornia," he says, "It rose out of the sea In a moment, and some time or other shall. In a moment, sink again." Earthquake and fire partially fulfilled the prophecy, but the hills and lowlands are unsutmerged, the courage and resources of a stricken people are equal to the emergency and a greater and better city will rise from the ruins. That is the American spirit, and San Fran cisco has an abundance of it. "In the course of a generation only," wrote the famous author twenty-three years ago, "San Francisco and its suburbs have, arisen. Men are alive by the score. who have hunted a'l .over the foundations In a dreary waste. I' have idlned, near the 'punctual center of San Francisco, with a gentleman, (then newly. married) -whooid, pie, of his former pleasures, . wadlng( with his fowling piece In sand 'and scrub on the site of the house where we were dining. In this busy, moving generation, w have all known' cities to cover - one boyish play grounds, we. have all started for a country walk and stumbled on a new suburb, but I wonder what enchantment of the Arabian Nights can have equaled the evocation of a roaring city, In a few years of a man's life, from the marshes and the blowing sand. Such swiftness of Increase, as with an overgrown youth,' suggests a correspond- , , . . . , . . 1 peninsula of San Francisco, mirroring Itself ,v k. 7. on one side In the bay, beaten, on the other, by the surge of the Pacific, and shaken to the heart by frequent earth quakes, seems In Itself no very durable foundation. Visible flinraeterlatlos. . "Fancy apart, San Francisco Is a city beleaguered with alarms. The lower parts, along the bayslde, sit on piles; old wrecks decaying, fish dwelling unsunned beneath the populous houses; and a triflng subsidence might drown the busi ness quarters In an hour, ttartnquaices are not only common, they are sometimes threatening in their violence; the fear of them grows yearly on a resident; he be gins with Indifference, ends in sheer pitnlc; and no one feels safe In any but a wooden house. Hence It comes that. In that rainless clime, the whole city Is built of timber a woodyard of unusual ei tent and complication; that tires spring U readily, and, served by the unwearying tr.de-wlnd, swiftly spread; that all over ths city there are fire signal boxes; that th sound of ths bell, tellins the number of the threatened ward, la soon familiar to the ear: and that nowhere else In the wt rid la the art of the fireman carried to so nice a point. "There Is nothing more characteristic anl original than the outlaying quarters of San Francisco. The Chinese district Is the most famous; but it ia far from the only truffle in the Die. There la many another dingy corner, many a young an tiquity, many a terrain vague with that stamp of quatntness that the city lo'vttr seeks and dwells on; am the Indefinite lProlon - "lon tret' UD hl down dale, makes San Francisco a place apart. The aame street In Its career visits and unites so many different classes of society, here echoing with drays, thure lying decorously silent between the man sions of Bonanza millionaires, to founder Evidence of SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL n ing. A little water often does more harm than good by baking the aurface. Keep weeda well pulled out. The following tools should be In every garden, as their use will give the garden the very finest appearance. A gardener cannot work without good tools and plenty of them any -chore than can a carpenter. These tools are cheap and durable and can be had of any seedsman or plantsman bill hook for cutting briars and coarse weeds. Iron-point dibble for setting plants, a scythe-bladed grass hook for trimming grass where the mower will not go, a dock or weed lifter for cleaning the lawn of weeds, grass edger for edging the walks, hand-weeding fork, half a dosen hose men Before the at last among the drifting sands beside Lone Mountain cemetery, or die out among the sheds and lumber of the north. Thus you may be struck with a spot, set It down for the most romantic of the city, and, glancing at the name plate, find It Is on the same ftreet that you yourself Inhabit In another quarter of the town. Hills and Hollows. "The great net of straight thoroughfares lying at right angles, east and west and north and south, over the shoulders of Nob hill, the hill of palaces, must cer tainly be counted the beat part of San Francisco. It la there that the rnllllon alrea are gathered together, vying with each other in display. Far away down ' you may pick out a building with a little belfry; and that Is the stock exchange, the heart of San Francisco; a great pump we might call it, continually pumping up the saving of the tower quarters into the . mtrm. ,.n h. Mil But tha,a ,am tnorournfarM th(U enJoy for awhile so elegant a destiny have their lines prolonged Into more unpleasant places. Some meet their fata In the sands; some must take a cruise in the Ill-famed China quarters'; some run Into the sea; some perish unwept among pigsties and rubbish heaps. . "Nob hill comes,' of right. In the place of honor, but the two other hills of San Francisco are more entertaining to explore. "On both there are a world of old wooden housea snoozing together all forgotten. Some are of the quaintest 'design, others only romantic by neglect and age. Some have been . almost undermined by new thoroughfares, snd sit high upon the mar gin of the sandy cutting, only to be reached by stairs. Some are curiously painted, and I have seen one at least wltti ancient carv ings paneled In the wall. Surely they are not of California building, but far voyagers from round the stormy Horn, like those who sent for them and dwelt In them at first. Brought to be the favorites of the wealthy, they have sunk Into these poor, forgotten districts where, like old town toasts, they keep each, other silent coun tenance. ' Telegraph hill and Rlncon hill, these are the two dozing quarters that I recommend to the city dilettante. There stand these forgotten houses, enjoying the unbroken sun and quiet. There, If there were such, an author, would the San Francisco Fortune de Bolsgobey pitch the first chapter of his mystery. But the first Is the quainter of the two. Telegraph hill commands a noble view; and aa It stands at -the turn of the bay. Its skirts are all waterside, and round from North Beach to the bay front you can follow doubtful paths from one quaint corner to another. Everywhere the same tumbledown decay and sloppy progress, new things yet unmade, old things tottering to their fall; everywhere the aame out-at-elbows, many-natloned loungers at dim. Irregular grog shops; everywhere the same sea air and laletted aea prospect; and, for a lsst and more romantic note, you have on the one hand Tamalpals atandlng high In the blue air, and on the other the tall of that long alignment of three-masted, full-rigged, deep-sea ships that make a forest of spsrs along the eastern front of San Francisco: . In no other port Is such a navy congregated. For the coast trade Is so trifling, and ths ocean trade round the Horn so large, that the smaller ships are swallowed up and can do nothing to confuse the majestio order of these mer chant princes. In an age when the shlp-of- E. A. Benson's rr, jAMxa oRyntNAOB at benson.-tt wa jxwfAfwn by vr. bfnboh- unday 29, 1906. Jv CORNER OF FOURTEENTH AND HARNET ders for bursted hose, a spray nozzle for ths hose, five shapes of hoea, the scuffle, the setting, the weeding, the flower garden, the scraping; a half dozen of wire pot hangers, a wopden lawn rake, a garden rake, pruning shears, grass shears, an angle trowel, a common garden trowel, three sieves, with different sizes of meshes; a long-handled shovel, a spade, three dozen green stakes for tying up flowers, several hanks of rafla, a large and a small water ing pot, an atomizer spray syringe, a hard powder gun, a rotating lawn sprinkling nozzle, a supply ot pots from two and a half Inches to eight Inches In diameter. In a large garden add a cultivator, with a full set of fixtures. Earthquake the-llne Is already a thing of the past, and we can never again hope to go coasting In a cock-boat between the "wooden walla" of a squadron at anchor, there Is, perhaps, no place on earth where the power and beauty of sea architecture can be so per fectly enjoyed as in this bay. How it Looked to Klpllngr. "San Francisco has been pitched down on the sand bunkers of the Blkaneer desert," was the sententious comment of Rudyard Kipling when he first saw the city of the Golden Gate on his Introduction to the American continent a decade ago. His views are contained In his "American Notes." "About one-fourth of It is reclaimed from the sea. The remainder is Just ragged, unthrifty sand hills, today pegged down by houses," was an aftermath. The author of the "Recessional" spent two weeka In the metropolis of the world'! greatest El Dorado, and left It with a bitter taste In his mouth, a taste which he placed upon vellum for posterity to read. "Why did he write ltT" he inquired of Bret Harte's gem: Serene, Indifferent to fate. Thou aittest at the western gate; Thou seest the white seas fold their tents, ' Oh, warder of two continents; Thou drawest all things, small and great. To thee, beside the western gate. "There Is neither serenity nor Indiffer ence to be found In these parts," caustic ally comments Kipling, "and evil would It be for the continents whose wardship were Intrusted to so reckless a guardian." The chosen spot of htm, who, like unto Kipling in -his virility, wrote "The Man. With the Hoe," Is characterized as "a mad city Inhabited for the most part by per fectly insane people, whose women are of remarkable beauty." "Think of It. Three hundred white men and women gathered In one spot, walking upon real pavements In front of plateglass windows and talking what at first hearing was not very far different from English," Is a comment. Caustic to the verge of bitterness were other Impressions. "I found a mighty street," he said, "full of sumptuous build ings four and five stories high, but paved with cobble stones, after the fashion of the year one. Here a tram car, without any visible means of support, slid stealthily behind me and nearly struck me In the back. That was the famous cable car of San Francisco, which runs by gripping an endless wire rope sunk In the ground. "And the Palace hotel, a seven-storied warren of humanity, with a thousand rooms In It. In a vast, marble-paved hall, under the glare of an electric light, sat forty or fifty men, and for their use and amusement were provided spittoons of In finite capacity and generous gape. They all spat. - They spat on principle. The spittoons were on the staircases and in the bedrooms; yea, and In chambers even more sacred than these. They chased one Into retirement, but they blossomed in greatest splendor around the bar, and they were all used, every reeking one of them." But the creator of Mowgll afterward came to take the San Franciscans for their real worth. "The gold shows when you scratch the surface," he said. In speaking of well known club he spoke of "soft carpets and superior cigars, and paintings In which the members had caricatured themselves, their associates and their aims. There was a slick French audacity about the work- Philanthropy V1-' . .' . " - .- . I -' i. .. I -1 -.- Bee. SINGLE : -vl .i - STREETS. manshlp of these men of toll-unbending that went straight to the heart of the beholder. The men painted as they spoke, with certainty. In this club were no ama teurs spoiling canvass, because they fancied they could handle oils without knowledge of shadows and anatomy no gentlemen of leisure, ruining the temper of publishers and an already ruined market with at tempts to write "because everybody writes something these days." Kipling 'winds up hie Impression of Ban Francisco by telling of the cosmopolitanism of the city. "Men of world-wide experi ence, graduates from every university, laborers evolved Into millionaire senators, soldiers of fortune, and a reckless con glomeration of types besides which Cal cutta and Bombay sank Into Insignificance," brought forth a reluctant acknowledgment. Mark Twala in a Shako. Mark Twain tells of an earthquake he witnessed In San Francisco many years ago. He describes the affair In "Roughing It": "It was Just after noon on a bright October day. I was coming down Third street. The only objects In motion anywhere In sight In that thickly built and populous quarter were a man In a buggy behind me and a street car wending slowly up a cross street. Otherwise all was solitude and a sabbath stillness. Aa I turned a corner around a frame house there was a rattle and Jar, and It occurred to me that here was an 'Item' no doubt a fight In that house. Before I could turn and seek the door there came a really terrific shock; the ground seemed to roll under me Inl waves, interrupted by a violent Joggling up and down, and there was a heavy grind ing noise, aa of brick housea rubbing to gether. I fell up against a frame house and hurt my elbow. Z knew what It was now, and from- mere repertorla lnstlct. nothing else, took out my watch and noted the time of day; at that moment a third and etill severer shook came, and aa I reeled about on the pavement trying to keep my footing I saw a sight. "The entire front ot a tall, four-story brick building In. Third street sprung out ward like a door and fell sprawling across the street, raising a dust like a great vol ume of smoke. And here came the buggy overboard went the man. and In less time than I can tell It the vehicle was distrib uted in small fragments along 300 yards ot street. One could have fancied that somebody had fired a charge of chair rounds and rags down the thoroughfare. The street car had stopped, the horses were rearing and plunging, the passengers were pouring out at both ends and one fat man had crashed half way through a glass window on one side of the car, got wedged fast and was squirming and screaming Hire an Impaled madman. Every door of eve.y house as far as the eye could reach was vomiting a stream of human beings, a.id almost before one could execute a wink and begin another there wae a massed multitude of people stretching in endless procession down every street my position commanded. Never was solemn solitude turned into teeming life quicker. "The curiosities of the earthquake were simply endless. Gentlemen and women who were sick, or were taking a siesta, or had dissipated till a late hour and were making up lost sleep, thronged Into the streets In all sorts of queer apparel and some without any at all. One woman, who had been washing a naked child, ran down the street holding It by the ankles, aa If it had been a dressed turkey. Prominent citizens, who were supposed to keep the Sabbath strictly, rushed out of saloons In their shirt sleeves, with billiard cues in their hands. Dozens of men with necks swathed In naplrtna rushed from barber shops, lath ered to the eyes, or with one cheek clean shaved and the other still bearing hairy stubble. "A crack 100 feet long gaped open six Inches wide In the middle of one street and then shut together again with such force as to ridge up the meeting earth like a slender grave. A woman sitting In her rocking and quaking parlor saw the wall part at the celling, open and shut twice. 4-Hke a mouth, and then drop the end of a brick on the floor, like a tooth. She was Suspended pictures were thrown down, but oftener still they were whirled completely around with their faces to the wall. Thousands of people were made so sea sick by the rolling and pitching of floors and streets that - they were weak and bed ridden for hours and some few even for days afterward." Goldea Iastraments for largeoas. A steel hypodermle needle Is never in serted without leaving a permanent blue speck In the skin of the patient, probably because of the, perhapa, very email quan tity of Impurity rust or otherwise which It contains. The gold needle Invariably leaves no mark whatever. Appreciating these facta efforts, in which surgeons par ticularly have been Interested, have been made for years to contrive a process for hardening gold so that it could be used for the bladea of the Instruments of surgery of all kinds. This Is Juse what Dr. Vaughn has accomplished after eighteen years of experimenting and research. His method consists of the employment of heat and chemicals; but the tempering process does not maks an alloy of ths precious metal. Pure gold tempered by this process re mains pure; but the surgical Instruments which Dr. Vaughn Is now manufacturing and which are beginning to be need ex tensively In hospitals and by practicing physicians and surgeons, are of fourteen karats fineness, these being as efficient. but not as costly as Instruments of ths purest grade of the metal. Leslie's Weekly. Tlltl OUA1IA OCC Best & Wat COPY FIVE CENTS. Annually Vjw. t .. Jf1A" 2 TIMELY REAL ESTATE TALK Oohn'i Purchase on North Sixteenth the Feature of the Week. HOW ORIGINAL INVESTMENT HAS INCREASED Flfteea Haadred Times First Pur chase Price is Gives for Property la th Last Transfer of Its Title. "Speaking of the sale of the Parmalee and Redlck properties on North Sixteenth street to Herman Cohn of the Nebraska Clothing company for $135,000," said Alex ander G. Charlton of the MoCague Invest ment company, "this marks a new era for Sixteenth street, the Broadway of Omaha. This property comprises the entire frontage on the east side of Sixteenth street from Capitol avenue to Davenport, being 21,120 square feet. Upon the whole property Mr. Cohn contemplates the erection ot sub stantial Improvementa aa aeon aa his plana are materialized. "The Parmalee family came Into posses sion of this property forty-four years ago, or six years after th founding of the city, paying $90 for the two lots. Presuming that the Income from the property has been sufficient to pay for all buildings, taxes and . betterments, the land has Increased LGOO times In forty-feur years, which reads Ilk a romance, but It Is not an Isolated case simply Omaha truth. "Mr. Parmalee and Mr. Redlck ara Omaha-born boys, who have seen the de velopment and growth of the olty, and are progressive young business men. Mr. Cohn la a keen observer ot the growth of cities. who haa been doing business in Omaha for a. number of rears and knows what to buy for Investment With ths erection of this building, the Brandels building, Hayden Broa.' annex, the Hoagland, the Sunderland-Webster, the Wright building and other contemplated improvementa no street In Omaha ehows greater Improvement. Other Important sales on North Sixteenth street during this month were the sale of the Bolln block and the Northwestern hotel, both purchased for investment. "While a great amount of the property on North Sixteenth street Is held strongly by such holders aa the Boston Ground Rent Trust, the Ames estate, Brandels & Sons, Browns, Folsom, Hayden, Neville, the United States government, the Masonlo lodges, Baloombo, Vlascher, Wright, Myers, ' Callahan, Estabrooke and others, i still there are a few pieces which men of wisdom and cash will look up and purchase as Investments." 'Though some of the leasss on Herman Cohu's new purchase on North Sixteenth street have yet six months longer to run, Mr. Cohn is beginning to consider the na ture of the Improvements he will put on the property. A local architeot Is sketch ing plans for a four-story building, which will cover the entire property, the ground floor to be used for stores and the upper floors for rooms and apartments. Mr. Cohn does not believe In speculation, but In permanent Investment and Improvement, Strange as It may seem, real estate busi ness haa baen practically neglected during the last three or four days for the msyor olty campaign, the majority of the mem bers of the realty guild having held them selves ready to sacrifice their business la order to get In some good wcrk for Mr, Benson, who la one of their number. They feel that the election ot Mr. Benson, who Is a home and town builder, will do much to give the olty a. good reputation In the state at large and they feel that their business, along with that of others, will be more flourishing If be Is successful next Tuesday. The loan and rental busi ness has received Its full share of attention, but as far as new deals are concerned they have been allowed to languish for the cause of politics. The Real Estate exchange has outdone Itself In politics this spring. Acting on the advice of "Pa" Tukey, who always "kicks" when anything of a political nature la brought Into the meetings, the exchange has not gone Into politics as a body. But that did not prevent the majority of the members from organizing to further the Interests of Mr. Benson. Meetings were held at the Commercial club Thursday, Friday and 'Saturday and plans for work Saturday and Monday made. Saturday ths real estate men furnished twenty tigs and they were out In force bringing the voters to the registration booths. The realty men were also responsible for 10,000 Benson tags, which are so noticeable on lapels all over the city. Other sales reported by Thomas Brennan are: Two houses at 11 0 and. 1144 South Twenty-second street to A. A. Gibson for G. 500; house and lot at 1206 North Six teenth street to T. C. Claney for $3,900; bouse and lot at 1911 South Fifteenth street to Joseph Novak for $1,100. Many of the men who sold their homes near the Webstar street depot to the North western are meeting with much difficulty In finding suitable new locations. Houses for sals are not especially plentiful and houses for rent are scarce. Indeed. The renters who will be left without homes by the operstlons ot the railroad are placed In worse condition than those who owned (Continued oa Second Page.)