THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: FEBRUARY 3, 1907. 3 'TIMELY REAL ESTATE TALK nsasBBBBBBSSS AxtiTity im Korlheaxt Fart of Gitj ia tbt Feature Jus. Hew. .SOKE EXTEKSIVE BUILDINGS ARC PLANNED i talon Fnrlfle Headsjaarters, Xorth westera Freight Depot and Conn Block Aro tbo Bl Enter nrlae Cade Way. Handsome Homes in Which Omaha People Are Spending Happy Lives FINISH OF THE BOND ABUSE End Si Fst to fiTttam of Eecapin? Folio Loan i enamei, FROM NOW ON LAW WILL BE APPLIED Action of Jadse Tronp and City. Proseentrr Dnnlel Calls At trntlnn to Kvll Prac tice of tears. B 4 X v Building activity, which baa been lacking In the northeast put of the city (or a few years, will be noticeable In that section this spring. It haa already begun. Last Friday the McCague Investment company began the removal of the old structures on the site where Herman Cohn will begin the erection of a large building In March. This Is on Sixteenth street. On the site of the Union Pacific headquarters building, at Fifteenth and Dodge streets, wrecking will begin March 1 and the contract will call for Its completion May 1. Construction will be gin at once after that. Bids for the con struction of the Northwestern's freight de pot on Davenport street are now in the 'hands of the architect at Chicago and the contract Is likely to be let any day. All the city's biggest building operations for this year, so far as scheduled, are to be In the northeast section. The Cohn building and the Northwestern depot will be completed this summer, but the Cnlon Paoiflo headquarters will be a structure of such giant proportions that It may not be completed by the end of the year. The end of the first month of the year shows an Increase of $7 per cent In building operations over last year and a slight de crease In real estate transferal Seventy eight permits were Issued In January, rep resenting $170,775 In buildings, as against forty-five permits fci the corresponding month last year, representing $124,500. The only large permit was for the new Temple Israel, to cost 150,000. Permits for January of 19 amounted to but 127,690. Transfers of realty for last month amounted to 1711,622, compared with 1723.271 for the same month last year and (112,606 In 1906. Some large sales which are now being closed promise to make a large total for February. Real estate men and builders agree that 1907 will surpass In point of residence con struction the previous year, when 700 dwell ings were erected. Acting on this belief, those who were foremost In house building last year are planning- wider operations for this spring and summer. The Byron Reed company Is preparing plans for ten houses, which will range In value from $3,000 to $4,000. and later In the season may decide on that many more. They will be scattered abeut the city, but several are to be en Dewey avenue. This company built a number of sightly houses last summer on Harney street, between Thirty-third and Thirty-fifth, and' all of them were sold before they were completed. Plans have been completed for two fine residences. Mrs. Cleary will build one cost , Ing (25,000 at Thirty-seventh street and Dewey avenue, and Joseph M. Cudahy will build one at Thirty-eighth avenue and Dodge street, to cost $20,000 to J 25,000. The contract la about to be let for the Cleary residence and bids will be Invited In a few days on the Cudahy house. Hastings ft Heyden are planning to build fifty houses this year. They will cost $1,500 to $4,000. Contracts have already been let for six. three of the best being In Kountse Place. This firm has operated extensively lit the same line for two or three years and readily , recognizes the signs which point to a demand for houses. -It has easily sold all the houses It has built and expects to have no trouble In disposing of all It The President's Open Letter Much hag been printed about the life Insurance business daring the past year. Let me call your attention at this time to a few things regarding The Equitable Life Assurance Society. It is as solvent as the Bank of England. Every contract with it will be carried out to the letter. Every asset claimed by the Society has been found by Independ ent expert accountants, and re-appraised In value on a conservative basis. Loans have been verified, liabilities have been measured, bad accounts have been charged off or marked doubtful. The income of the Society from investments and savings has been increased over $1,200,000 per annum. A still further Increase can be relied upon. This will, in time, result In larger profits to policy holders, even if not reflected in this year's dividends. The Society has complied with the new laws of the State ot York with exact preclseness. These laws provide every safe guard that a wise legislature could devise to protect policy holders. They restrict the Investments of life insurance companies. They provide that expenses shall be kept within proper limits and control the cost of new business. They prevent rebating aad political and other blackmail. They prevent many questionable things that In surance companies have done heretofore. Hereafter every policy issued by this Society will bear the hall mark of the State of New York. The new management Is committed to the Interests of the policy holder!. It understands thoroughly that the best advertisement it can have is a satisfied constituency. The effort of the present ad ministration will be to make this Society the best life Insurance company in the world. Life Insurance in the Equitable Is the best asset you can have. It will grow better with time. If you have no Insurance, or if you can afford to increase the Insurance you already have, you are doing your family an Injustice if you do not take It. Nothing can take its place. We want new policy holders. We want new agents, both men and women, but none except energetic, able and truthful men and women need apply. For such there is a splendid opportunity. A life Insurance policy runs longer and means more' to the average man than any other contract he ever makes. Therefore the necessity for great care In selecting a company In which to Insure or a company to represent. Safety and strength are paramount to everything else. We Intend to keep the Equitable the safest and strongest In the world. Address. The Equitable Life Assurance Society, 110 Broadway New York, for full information as to Insurance or an agency D. D. NEELY, Manager lor Nebraska 4924-4-5 Merchants National Back Building, . . OMASA tVU. HENRY BROWN, Cashier George RL Cooper, n. Fay Neely. Central Ajf nts, Omaha II. U. Loughrldfje, Joe Klein, Central Agts Lin coin. Neb. mmiw ' (j f ..... ; , I ... J-., . - BOMB Orn.lt HAVERLT, can build this season. The firm also be-) Ueves in double brick houses and will build two at Eighteenth and Jackson streets. Elmer J. Neville says he expects to erect a three or four-story building on vacant property at the northwest corner of Seven teenth and Capitol avenue. It was an nounced some time ago that Judge Neville would pull down some old buildings on Six teenth street, near the poetofflce, and erect another structure. Another week has gone by and another sale of farm property west of the city has been announced. Leonard Everett bought 160 acres of the Woolworth estate, five and one-half miles southwest of the postofflce, at 177 an acre. Forty acres of the Wool worth estate went some time ago to Henry Rohlff and Oscar Pickard, at (125 an acre. The completion of the Union Paelflo tracks to the Jetter brewery furnishes a lot of new trackage for South Omaha. Good sites for new Industries are afforded just east of the brewery. Trackage Is not quite so scarce as 4t is In Omaha, but still It Is not very plenty. Emll Gall has bought from Anthony Wil kinson the McOrew brick dwelling on Web ster street, between Nineteenth and Twentieth streets, raying 115,000. Dr. Mc Orew built these dwellings a year ago and sold them a month or two ago to Mr. Wil kinson for $14,000. Undoubtedly the wholesale district will continue Its extension northward In the Ninth street section. . The latest Indication of this tendency is the announcement that Hayden Bros, contemplate the erection of a wholesale- warehouse on their property at the southeast corner bf Tenth and Dodge streets, where they have had a storage warehouse for years, by buying a portion of the lot south of their present holdings, the Haydens would have access to tracks which come up the alley from Ninth street. Their site Is a block north of the present northern limit of the wholesale district. Most people don't stop to consider that there Is an Industrial center on Pierce and Hickory streets near the river. They haven't been down In that neighborhood and perhaps don't even know the neighbor hood has brick and paint factor! ea, brew- President. 211 NORTH TWENTT-THIRD STREET erles and distilleries. Just at present the Standard Distilling company Is erecting a large warehouse at Fourth and Pierce streets and the foundation Is completed. The building will be eight stories In height. It will be J22 feet long', sixty feet wide at one end and fifty at the other. The opening of suburban property con tinues. The McCague Investment companjr has secured a. part of Clontarf, which Is on Thirteenth street between Omaha and South Omaha, and will cut It Into seventy nine lots to place on the market. Reed Bros, have placed on the market forty acres south of the east end of Dundee, on Famam, Douglas, Dodge, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth and Fiftieth streets. This is outside the limits of both Dundee and Omaha, Hastings A. Heyden report the following sales : Michael J. Sullivan, lot at southwest cprner Twenty-second and Browne, for a home; Leopold Kolovratek, house and lot at 2662 Sahler street, for a home; Alfred Willetts, lot on Saratoga and Twenty fourth, to be Improved; Nina My rick, lot In Military addition, to be improved; D. C. Kelster, lot on Camden avenue, close to Twenty-sixth street, to be Improved; George C. Johnson, houBe and lot at 1703 South Twenty-eighth street, for Invest ment; R. A. Swartout, lot at soitheast corner Twenty-seqpnd and Browne, to he Improved; John Y. Hooper, lot block t, Creighton Heights, to be improved; John Campbell, lot 8, Ames' addition to Hillsdale; Emll Scholl, lot on Fort street, beteween Twenty-fifth and Twenty seventh, tp be Improved for rental pur poses; Lena Strand, lot on Twenty-second and Pratt, to be Improved for a home. Hastings & Heyden report the following recent sales In Kountze Place, all of which will erect residences this spring: Helen L. Schofleld, lot on Spencer street. Just east of Twenty-fourth street, fpr $1,000; William Songster, lot on Bln ney street, between Twenty-first and Twenty-second street, for $1,050; Kath erlne C. Wonder, lot 'on Lothrop street, between Twenty-first and Twenty-second streets, for $800; 8. Hawver, agent, lot in Wirt street, between Twentieth and Twenty-first. $1.16; Breda C. EdlunC, lot on Emmet street, between Nineteenth and Twentieth streets, $900. OUR GREATEST EXTRAVAGANCE lamnit Waste sy Fir Callr Artea ttoa to Heeessity far Improved Coaatraetleau WASHINGTON, Feb. 2v-Jn the current issue of the Open Ceurt appears an article by F. W. Fitz pa trick that certainly Is an eye-opener and gives feod for thought to thinking men. Mr. Fltspatrlck is the execu tive officer of the International Society of Building Inspectors, a well known consult ing architect, who has probably done more than any ether man In the country in the interests of firs prevention and sane build ing. He calls attention to the fact that In all the country there are 11.IO0.000 buildings, valued at $l260,000,eoo. That of all that rait number there are only a few, over 4,000 in which any attempt has been made at fire-proofing, even In the structural parts, buildings whose steel frames ' are protected with hollow tile or some of the less effective substitute concrete protec tions,' and but twenty in which the decora tions as well as the structure are fire proof, and but one building in the whole country, the Underwriters' laboratory In Chicago, which is absolutely fire-proof in construction and design and cannot be ap preciably damaged by any conflagration. He goes on to show that as a result we have offered up over $1,000,000,009 worth of property, sacrificed to the god of Are, in six years! tune, besides six or seven thou sand human lives per year. Plus' that, we pay out nearly $300,000,000 a year for fire departments and water protection, and again we have paid $1,610,836,242 In Insurance premiums during the last ten years. In return for all this waste we get an average of only $&,000,000 of our own money back from the insurance companies in paid losses. Our average year's fire loss Is over $200,000,000, while in 130C, just closed, that loss reached $0,000,000, including Ban Fran cisco. But even in so-called "normal" yari we average three theaters, three public halls, twelve churches, ten schools, two hospitals, two asylums, two colleges, six apartment houses, three department stores, two jails, twenty-six hotels, 1W flat build ings and 1,600 homes burned every week. Figures that ought to make us firmly re solve to, from now on at least, build as well as we know how. DOG BITE PROVING FATAL Hydropbebia Taktag the Ufa ( WtUlasa Heeae, l'atchaaa at the Bsselter. William Reese, 4106 South Twelfth street, night watchman of the local plant of the American Refining and Smelting company, who lies seriously ill at Clarkson hospital, the victim of hydrophobia, was reported to be resting easier Saturday, but the at tending physicians say his death Is feared within the next twenty-four hours. It is possible he may survive longer, which Is frequently the case with patients afflicted with this disease, as the critical stage has not yet been reached. Reese had several convulsions Friday night, but not of the severity or number of those Thursday night. He is still In a semi-comatose condition and cannot recog nise any one. The case is being watched with great In terest by the medical fraternity of Omaha, bnt the death of the unfortunate man Is believed to be certain. .' . '.'?tj w--i--tt :i-i f HOME RIVALRY IN CITY GARDENS Work that Makes Cleveland Homes Frettier and Brings Beturas. MUNICIPAL BEAUTY DOCTOR AT WORK School Children Encouraged to Grow Flowers and Vea-etablea la Vacant Lots Tbelr Pa rents Also Interested. There Is only one city In the country which has a curator of school gardens. That Is Cleveland, and the curator Is Miss Louise Klein Miller, a former New Yorker. Miss Miller was in attendance at the re cent meeting of the American Assoclntion for the Advancement of Science, of which she was made a fellow last year In recogni tion of her social and educational work. The Cleveland school gardens, which have been in existence only a year or two, are declared to have already had a very great effect on Cleveland children, first by giving them a healthful, useful and agree able occcupation for the long weeks of the summer vacation, when so many of them run wild In the streets; secondly, by bring ing school In touch with their lives at a new and practical point. Garden work and attendance at the gardening lectures are entirely voluntary, and the children ave rage two hours work apiece a week In term time, given after school hours, while the attendance at the lectures Is always good. At the end of the gardening season each fall a little certificate Is given each child who has cared for his bed satisfac torily through the season. Work Hone Scientifically. At the Rosedale school there Is a propa gating center, with hotbeds, cold frames and potting house. Here cuttings are pre pared for the gardens scattered over the city later In the season, and here, during the last summer, an economical botanical garden was started. It Is intended to g-ow In this garden all the food, fiber and drug plans which the climate will permit. In this plan the supervisor of geography is much Interested, and the work will be made to correlate with the study of geography. In different parts of the city are various vacant lots, the nre of which has been given te the children by their ewners. All around the borders these lots are t anked with flowers, while the central space la filled with Individual varying beds, from 6x1 S to BxS feet In dimensions. The children who wish to do so take these beds at the beginning of the season and keep them ss long as they care for them properly. They raise vegetables, which they take home for family consumption. They care co-operatively for the flower border. There are flower shows with prises In the fait te which the children bring the flowers grown at home as well as those In the school gardens. But this season there will be monthly flower shows from May to October, and In February and March for winter bulbs, so that the flow ers of each month may be displayed. Prtees are also given fer the best vegeta ble beds. The school gardening work Is connected with the home gardening of Cleveland. The school gardens were really secured by the Cleveland Home Garden association. Organised by Private Effort. E. W. Haynea, president of some woollen mills in Cleveland, organized this associa tion some years ago and has been Its president ever since. They began by offer ing prixes for home gardens, establishing flower shows with prizes for fiowera and selling seeds to the school children at 1 cent a package. Cleveland has In Its poorer quarters great numbers of small one-family houses. In which worklngmen live instead of In tene ment houses. The policy of the associa tion in the last few years has had the effect of cleaning up yards, front and back, and ridding them of all refuse to make room for gardens. Many of these little houses are bowers of beauty In summer and families who do not go to this extent are ashamed to db nothing when neighboring grounds are blossoming so brightly. As a reoult there is scarcely one such house In Cleveland which has not at least a vine trained over Its porch. Its gay bed of nasturtiums or some other spot of greenery or brisbtness. This has been very noticeable In Polish and Bohemian neighborhoods and others which In some cities are apt to be uncared for. last fall a hardy chrysanthemum show was held In a distinctly Polish quar ter, where geese meandered through trip streets. There was scarcely a yard In the quarter which did not contain hardy chrys anthemums. Seed Sales Pay Expenses. The Home Garden association pays all Its expenses out of the sale of Its 1-cent packages of seed, and last summer It pre sented the school board with $500 for school garden work. Some 450,000 packages of seed were sold last year and a carload of bulbs imported direct from Holland. The association has now twelve branches and 8.000 members, among whom a dosen differ ent nationalities are represented. The mothers of the children often attend Mine Miller's stereopticon lectures at the school houses. Summer before last the made a 14-cent garden in the back yard of her own home. She took one of each variety of the 1-cent packages sold the children. , , Then, laying out the garden in a square, with a circle in the center, she filled the square with vegetables In such a way that the contrast of pale green lettuce leavea, crimson veined beet leaves and so on was very attractive. The center was a maaa bf Wight, oldrlaahlonad farUaa tow ,' . Ve - f i ' I i -v . S j Siilaii;i Or OARIOCK, THTRTT-THIRD ers. When all was at its glory she pho tographed It and had a colored stereopticon slide made, which showed as the 16-cent garden in her lectures. Although she said nothing about copy ing this garden, It was taken as a model by many the following summer, and hereafter there will be competitive drawing of de signs for gardens of specified size,' shape and expense. The Interest aroused by this work amorg many residents is unusual. One man "of fered as a prize last summer hardy plants enough to make a hardy garden. Anothpr presented 6,000 bulbs for distribution two years ago snd 100,000 last season. Mr. Howatt, superintendent of the Rocke feller place. Forest Hill, sent 1,500 plants to the propagating center, gave a talk on practical gardening to the children and offered a prize for the best written report of his address. It is hoped In time to have hothouses, scientific study of soils and to correlate the garden work more and more with other branches ot school work. Despite the fact that seeds are sold to the school children at cost, the local seed stores of Cleveland have sold more seeds each year since the movement began. Y. M. C. A. FOR COLORED MEN Proposition Is Agitated by Religions Workers and May Be Brought to Practice. A branch Toung Men's Christian associa tion for colored men is a project being re volved in the minds of certain religious workers In Omaha Just now. The Young Men's Christian association has not, so far as known, taken up the matter, but may be asked to consider Its advisability. As explained by one man who is agitat ing the proposition the Idea Is to establish quarters wholly separate from Hhe present establishment, where colored men may find comfort and edification during leisure hours when they otherwise might be less profit ably engaged. Rent a room in soma con venient downtown location, he says, and equip It with furniture, books, magazines and other means of entertainment and let it be for the exclusive use of the colored men. He proposes, of course, to organize these colored men Into a body which may be Indirectly unaler authority of the Toung Men's Christian association proper, but may have one of Its own number one or as many more as expedient to direct things. As the membership Increases he would in crease the scope and quarters of the or ganization. "I believe," says this man, who fer the time being desires his name withheld, "that this proposition is entirely feasible. At present the colored men who desire the best associations are without such advan tages as a Toung Men's Christian associa tion would offer. There are a great many young or single colored men In Omaha who are holding good positions and have high ideals and purposes and would be glad to take hold of this sort of enter prise. I was talking to one the other day, whe told me he would be glad to put la $36 as a starter for such a movement and would contribute liberally from time to time as occasion arose. And, he said, ha knew of others who would aa willingly co operate. This seems to me a practical way of helping our colored friends, and I am going to see If It can't be auahed through to a successful end." WORK ON jmSH EXHIBIT Dnblln Is Harrying to Get Groan d Ready for Exposition This Toar. DUBLIN, Feb. 1 (Speclal.)-To tha crude musla of hundreds of hamme the hand some buildings wherein wi'.l be held the Irish International exhlblt'en of 1807 are rising like magic from the ground. Spread over fifty-two acres of land, within a mile and a half of the center of Dublin 600 Irish women are busy trans forming mounds Into lakes and hollows Into grass plateaus. Stretches of mud are becoming broad gravelled walks or beds of rich soil ready to welcome and nourish the flowers of summer. Upon barren stretches of meadow land there are arising massive looking struc tures whose roots will cover the products of the world s Industry. "We are well ahead of time," Mr. James Shanks, the chief executive officer, re marked one day this week. "We have seventeen more weeks yet before we open and we feel satisfied with our progress. The exhibition will be opened during the first week of May and will remain open for the public for six months to be ex act, 150 days. During that time wa esti mate we shall have from 80,000 to 60.000 vial tors dally and an average of 4.0 for every twenty-four hours, or a total of (.OOO.OOO during the ISO days." The question now being asked is. Can Dublin meet the demands of these t.OOO.QOOT The large Dublin hotels are fuTiy booked for June and July, notably the Shelburne, which has accommodations for 800. Under tha circumstances it can readily be seen that Americans and other foreigners who have not even booked their passage across h, ocean may And soma difficulty in get ting accommodated. In fact persons con templating visiting Dublin next summer will do well to commence to make Inquir ies right away, alnca accommodations tour or five months from now are likely to be at a decided premium. Raffrasre Hill for Sweden. STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Feb. .-The bill promised In the speech from the throne at the opening of Parliament providing for the introduction of universal suffrage and a proportional electoral system for elec tions to the second chamber was introduced In Parliament today. The members of the upper house will continue to bo chosen as at present, but the term of service will be reduced, from ulna to six yeara.- ; iifflll 1 : - A2T HAMTLTOIf BTRSbTb. LOCAL CASH BUILDS OMAHA Home Honey Invested in Bui'dinei Dunne tbe List Two Year. ONLY A SMALL AMOUNT OF 0UTSISE HELP Capital from Abroad la Very Sllmly Represented in the Bin Piles that Have Been Added to City's Straetnres. Omaha buildings for the last two years have been built with Omaha capital. Many years ago a considerable portion of the building operations were undertaken by capital from the distance. Such conditions are of the past. The proportion of buildings erected by foreign capital In 19"6 was 16 per cent. In 105 the proportion was 14H per cent. Total building operations in 19U6 were J4,Z73,OjO, of which $0S7,00O was outside capital; In 1906 total operations were $(,387,464, of which $16,000 was outside capital. These figures take cognizance only of permits Issued in the two years, and presume that all dwell ing houses were built with Omaha money. and undoubtedly only a ridiculously small number of them were not. Mrs. E. W. Nash and Count John A. Creighton have been the biggest builders recently. Mrs. Nash Is erecting two large eight-story warehouses for M. K. Smith & Co., and Count Creighton built last year a warehouse for the John Deere Plow com pany and a fine home for the Byrne & Hammer company. Most of the smaller concerns, and some of tbe larger, are erect ing their own homes. In the olden days Vtlllam A. Paxton built the Paxton 4 Gallagher warehouse, the Paxton hotel, the Ware block and the Paxton block. Peter Iler has several large structures In the wholesale district, but he has built none in recent years. Details of Local Investment. Of the larger fruits ot .local capital, tbe records of the building inspector's office mention permits for these as having been Issued In 1906: Catherine B. Nash, for M. B. Smith & Co., two warehouses, each $190,000 Carpenter Paper company 126.000 Rome hotel 1U0.U00 First Christian church 46,000 Wise Memorial hospital 60,0Ti0 Omaha Methodist hospital S1.000 All Saints' church 66,000 Mets Bros., bottling house 36.0U0 Paint and Brick works. Second and Hickory 86,000 Fairmont Creamery company 60,000 Nebraska Telephone company, ware house (0,000 F. D. Wead 25.000 Wead it Baldrige 23,000 Mrs. Elizabeth Dufrene 44.000 Conservative Savings and Loan asso ciation 80.000 Frank B. Kennard 25.000 J. M. Daugherty, residence 80,000 In VM may be mentioned these permits for local money: Toung Men's Christian association... $200,000 John A. Creighton, building for the Byrne ft Hammer company 200,000 Webster ft Sunderland 157,0ue J. L. Brandels ft Sons 65o."H0 Hayden Bros 60.000 Wright ft Welhelmy company 80,ouO John A. Creighton, building for ths Jehn Deere Plow company 66,000 S. . Mercer 67.000 Allen Br:., annex 60,000 Edward Riley 20.000 R, C. Btrehlow, apartment house 60.0H0 Merriam ft Holmquist, elevator 4n.ono Rohrbough building 39.000 Burwood theater 20rt Dormitory at Creighton college 25,000 Street car company a shops at Twenty-sixth and Lake 88,0n0 Adams ft Kelly 4O.U00 A. C. Drelbus, warehouse and factory for Drelbus Candy company .,.. 80,000 Cudahy Packing company's Omaha branch Jn.flf) Omaha Casket company..' 22.000 Foreign Capital Figures. Of the Instances of foreign capital In vested in Omaha In 1906 and 1906, the most prominent are the following: Omaha Daily News. $3O.P00; t'nion Pacific, for shops and warehouses. $4tf,0u0; Crane company, $75,060; J. B. Pierce, building for the American Radiator company, $42,00; Val Blatx Brewing company, J.fiOO; Dr. A. B. Wright of la Angel, $22. (no; the In dependent Elevator company, IHi.wiO; Crow ell Lumber ft Grain company, elevator, $40, (fl; Nye-Schnelder-Fowler company, eleva tor. IIcO.OijO; H. H. and A. B. Emmons, building for M. Spiesberger ft Bon company, !'. Ij; W. H. Burnham, building for the Tutted States Supply company, $T0,0n0; Pur lin, Orendorff ft Martin, 1124. w; United States government, improvements at Fort Omaha, $366,000. Tha permit for the Hoagland block at Sixteenth and Howard streets, costing $250, GuO of local money, was Issued In UOi. MTAGUES HAVE FIRST HOLD " v Investment Company Una Signed Con trast to Clear Slto for Cnlon PaclSo. It Is quite probable the McCague Invest ment company will clear the site of the Union Pacific headquartera. The McCagues have signed a contract and deposited a cash bond, though the railroad company still holds the contract In Its possession and will withhold Its signature until February Hi. Several contractors have been asked to return bids February 10 and of course oaa of these may be able to gst the work away from ths McCaguea The removal of buildings from the site will be begun March 1 and is to be completed by May L Tha McCague Investment company has the contract for the clearing of Herman Conn's property on North Sixteenth street and began the work Friday. Ran on ew Jersey ttaak. NEW YORK. Feb. t-The run on the Mechanics' Trust company at Bayonne, N. J., which was started yesterday by a false rumor regarding the lns'itutlons' solveri&y, continued today. There were none.ef u, scenes which marked the early stages of the run. Where hundreds stood In line yesterday there were only seventy-five on hand today. Officials of the company an nounced that more than $1,000,000 had bono awaluAf Ui ileaaiua ot Uia wepoaitwra. The action of Judge Troup and City Prosecutor Daniel Friday of dismissing twenty-five cases appealed from polloa court and forfeiting the bonds In thirty five more calls attention to what Is de clared by those familiar with It to be an abuse of long standing. It has become tha custom to allow all cases appealed from police court to die a natural death and this custom has become so firmly fixed that it Is generally recognized that one way to ket-p from paving a fine In police court la to appeal to the district court. The twenty-five cases dismissed had been on the docket more than three terms and consequently had become outlawed. Many of the other cases would have outlawed Saturday, as Friday was the last day ot the October term of court. In most of tha cases no information had been filed. Until the county commissioners required filing fees to be paid in advance It waa eaey for a person fined In police court to avoid the payment of both fine and costs. He could file an appeal without paying tha filing fees and in the course of three or four terms the case would be dismissed with costs unpaid. Judge Troup Friday or dered a clearing of the docket of all these dead cases, snd from now on persons under bond will be required to appear in court on time or forfeit the bond. Suit will bo begun In all of the thirty-five cases lit which bonds were forfeited to collect oa them. Ths dismissal of the cases also disclose a class of professional bondsmen, one ot whom. Secretary Chase Green, Is said to have signed bonds to the amount of about $30,000. He Is not possessed of this amount of property, but as th bonds are small waa able to qualify In each Individual case. Third ward saloonmen also are on a num ber of bonds. Most of these bonds are for $100 each, while a few are for larger sums. MAYOR WILL BE AT NEXT ONE DaaUnan t'nable to Attend Boxing; Hatch Friday, bnt Will Se Coming Contest. "I waa sorry I could not get down to tha boxing contest last evening, but a mora pressing engagement kept me away," re marked Mayor Dahlman Saturday morning. "I really Intended to get down to see, as I said yesterday, for myself whether thero is prize fighting in Omaha. Seeing, you know, Is believing, and while I am satisfied no prise fighting is going on, yet I think I should make a little investigation for myself. I'll be down to the next one." The crowd at the Oshoft hall ringside Friday evening waa all agog over the re port that tbe mayor would drop In any, minute. During the Wallace-Blaezak event tha patrons ot the "manly art" looked toward the door as one man every time Wallace boxed Blaezak harshly or Blaezak slammed Wallace against he ropes. What would tha mayor think If ho saw one ot tha prin cipals punching the other "In tha slats, "landing on his kidneys," "drawing tha crimson from tbe nose of hlsantagonlst," or "putting out one of his lights T" were tha questions they asked themselves. Mayor Dahlman, however, believes tha Civic Federation is making a misuse of tha English language in referring to the al leged fistic carnivals being held at Osthoff hail as "prize fights." Fasersl of Ed Culbertson. Tha funeral of Ed Culbertson, aged SS. who died Thursday afternoon after an Ill ness of only a few days from pneumonia, was held at 8 p. m. Saturday from the un dertaking parlors of Bralley ft Dorranoe. Rev. John Williams, rector of St. Barnabas Episcopal church, had charge of tbe serv ices and performed the Impressive burial ritual of the church. The body waa taken to Troy, O., for interment, which Is the old home at the family ef Mr. Culbertson. Mr. Culbertaen was a foreman in the employ of tbe contractor building the elevator for the Ne-Schnelder-Fowler company and was formerly a well known contractor of Fremont. Ha was unmarried. 'PAINLESS" DENTISTRY TOOTX TAXK JTO. 107. There is no magic in "painless" dentistry. It Is science, common sense and uncommon care that re move all that ia dreadable from the operation. If you need fillings or crowns do not hesitate through fear of dis comfort. I have practically elimi nated all the old-time pain and annoyance of dental operations. I charge nothing whatever for examination. DR. FiCKES, Dentist 'Phono Doug. 617. 131 Bee lildg. WLittleBoy' Should be taught that the short cut t prosperity and Independence Is the sav ings account. Whan considering his finan cial interests It might ba well to remem ber that this association offers its deposi tors a safety and assurance against losa and pays on every dollar deposited with. It six per cent a year compounded. Why not open an account today for ths little fellow and start him on tha right noad and meanwhile remember that the mort gage on your home can bo easily paid off In monthly payments through this asso ciation with less annoyance and sacrifice than under any other system. Call for In formation. Omaha Loan & Building Ass'n, S. K. Cor. lttk and Xkxlg Bts. W. 6. Laasris, fret, G. M. Nattlnger, Scc'y uav at d.ai-x, t $4-44-U- Mi dJtcxos rzmom OOaarajrT, OT sTorta lTtk BV, Oasaaa, i a. . . . t.Jk.t . Wmm