THE -OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MAY 5, 1D07. ' ye ( ( OPEN ACCOUNT DEF ED Open account moans the standing credit of ono firm with an other firm. The Union Outfitting Co. have applied this method of credit to individuals. You therefore have a stand ing credit with us, and when we say standing credit, we mean credit without Inquiry, without annoyances, without collectors, without publicity of any kind, and with the added Insurance that you need make no payment when sick or out of employment. All goods de livered In plain, unlettered wagons. FREE PRESENTS On a Hill of $10 A Center Table On a Kill of $25 A Rug On a Bill of $30 A Rockef On a Hill of $75 A Morris Chair On a Kill of $100 A Couch handsome on larger Other presents bills. i DBESIIIS A I Ulan out lining C'o.'s Special, throe large easy sliding drawers. French bevel plate mirror. a rt'Kular $15 valuo. our special price Our Famous EASY TERMS On a III 11 of $.-(. OO 50c P-r Week or $2 Per Month On a Hill of $100.00 $1 Per Wet or $4 Per Month Special Offers to newly married couples or those furnishing their homes complete. All goods marked in plain figures. Satis faction guaranteed or money refunded. 7.75 11.00 Per Month fold Any 3 Rooms furnished complet for S59.50 Go-Oarts, compactly reed back and dash seln elsewhere at .M 9 ., Our price ' T aiiiml s Ub EXTiICIT TABX.E:, . finish, 4i-ln. square tops. to b leet. extra wen made, special price TBON BHDS Extra heavy tubing. lour coats or rased white enar ran be had In all sizes, sells elsewhere at $5, our price. O.OTFDTTB llden extend 3.95 ne. 2.90 CO.. 1315 -17-19 FAR NAM ST. LOQI TOn THE BED UID GOLD SXQHft. , Old 3uich .Clean The Most Successful Cleaning Agent Since Soap Was Invented. A pure, clean, natural volcanic product, free from grit, acid, grease or caustic, but the most wonderful cleanser known. Unequaled for all kinds of cleaning where you use water and a brush or cloth. 0a It cleans, scours, scrubs and polishes. Sold In Large silting top cans AT ALL GROCERS MADE fsY G6e CUDAHY PACKING CO.. South Omaha. Neb. 0s1 3SZ99E2 Avoid Accident ! When alighting from Street Car use LEFT HAND on Hand Hold, and Face di rection Car is Headed. (St4 niuitration) "a s yum Do not attempt to Gat On op Off whan Car is In Motion. Alat ua In preventing aooidenta. ) Omaha & Council Bluffs St, fly, Co, mi j .,,. , ..... , ; ,. , g MOST CROWDED NEW TORR rift Hacks, Fata w!ta lit Ftyilatici of a Ttvt. -HAT SUCH CROU'IING REAILY MEANS a WmI aid Mank with a,lT3 rahakftaats-Aa R&at BlMk wttk lSS laaaattaata ta ta Acre. NEW TORK. May 3-The publication of a aUtement attributed to a Brooklyn policeman the other day to the effect that while he waa making an arrest In a tene ment house In the neighborhood of Second avenue and Twelfth street. Brooklyn, he found a three-story house In which 2fi0 persons were domiciled, stirred tip the tenement house department, the police and the newspaper men. After a long hunt the house waa found and diligent Inquiries by the tenement house Inspectora, the police and the reporters disclosed that at the most there were only thirty-five persons living there, most of them Toles working In a nearby mill. No official action waa needed on the ground of over congested population and there were no unusual facta warranting newspaper notice. The story, however, stirred tip consid erable discussion as to crowded tenements and the most densely populated blocks to be found In New Tork. It started the Investigators. No two authorities questioned agreed exactly aa to which blocks In New York had the largest number of residents: neither did they agree as to the block which was most crowded. It waa no surprise to learn that no other borough of the Ity had wrested the palm In the matter from Man hattan. Census Tells Tart nf dAry. There seems to be no record available as to the tenement which has the largest population or the tenement which has the greatest number of residents to the square root. When It comes to city blocks the cen sus figures of 1906 tell something of the story, but only a part. The 'tenement house department has not developed the statistics fully, and neither has the health department nor any of the philanthropic societies which work among the poor. More or less data concern'ng crowded conditions are gathered by these various bodies, but tf you want to know which block In Manhattan has the largest population, you will have to examine the researches of Harold M. Finley, one of rrof. Bailey s boys from Tale, who cornea down here every year and looks over New York's slums and other things of Interest. Tn a recent Issue of Federation, a quar terly publication of the Federation of Churches and Christian organisations In New York City, there Is a ccmpllatlon by Mr. Finley that seems to settle the ques tion. It is a comparative study of popula tions In New Tork's most crowded blocks. The figures produced, all baaed upon sen sus reports, supply the exact Information. Moat Popalooa Blocks. The block with the largest population In Manhattan Is not on tho east side nt all. contrary to the general belief. It Is on the west side and Is bounded by Amsterdam and West End avenuea and Sixty-first and Stxty-aecond streeta. The population of the block, according to the 105 cenaus. was .173. It contain 5,392 acrea. making the density of population 1.145 to the acre. In 1900 the most populous block in the city was that bounded by Second and Third streets and Avenuea B and C. It had a population of 4,106. In 1906 it had a popula tion of 8.036, but It fell to second place on the list of populous blocks. Its ratio of In habitants to the acre was 1,104. There are three other blocks tn the city which In 1905 had mors that 4.100 residents. The third on the list Is that bounded by One Hundred an Twelfth and One Hun dred and Thirteenth streets and First and Second avenuea. Little Italy. It haa a population of 4,325 and a ratio of 961 In habitants to the acre. The fourth on the list is the block bounded by Fifth "and Sixth streets and Avenues C and D. It has a population of 4.190 and a ratio of 987 to the acre. The fifth of the blocks having, more that 4,100 residents is bounded by Catherine, Madi son, Market and Henry streeta Its popula tion is 4,137 with a ratio of 945 to the acre. Fifty-One ia List. Mr. Finley has found that altogether there were in 1905 fifty-one blocks in Man hattan that had more than i.OK) inhabitants Of these twelve have a density of popula tion of more than 1,100 to the acre. Most of these blocks have an area of from two to four acres. The block bounded by Cherry, Jefferson, Monroe and Rutgers streeta la the most crowded In New York. Its population it. K05 waa 3,Sffi, making It the tenth on the list of population. It haa, however, 1,454 Inhabitants to the acre, against 1.C00 In 1900. The next most crowded block Is that bounded by Cherry, ctlnton, Monroe anl J Jefferson streeta lta density of population j is 1.422 to the acre. The third on the list la bounded by Forsyth, Houston, Chrystle j and Stanton streets, with 1,301 inhabitants I to the acre. The fourth Is bounded by Clinton, Stan ton, Suffolk and Riverton streets with i density of 1.31. and the fifth la bounded by 1 Rlvington, Sheriff. Ftanton and Willctt ! streeta. The block having the largest pop- I uiatlon in the city, that on the upper west ! ride. Is tenth en the list of density, the j figures being 1,145. Of the twelve blocks j with a density of more than 1.1C0 to the acre eleven are on the lower east s'-do. Increase In Five Years. Mr. Finley points out that the combined j population of the fifty-one blocks In th j city have more than J"X population each I 1th 132. SSI In 1100, with an average of 2.605 ' to the block. Five years later the popula- i tion in these same blocka had increased to 177, 958, on by more than 45,000, with a ' block average of 3,490, an average (ncreaae by the block of 84. This waa an increase in five years of 34 i per a nt in the most crowded part of Man- , hattan. In the same time the entire , borough of Manhattan Increased only It i per cent. Commenting on these figures j and percentages. Mr. Finley aaya: 'They mean that during these five years the percentage of increase in blocka al- ready woefully overcrowded waa more than double that of the total of the borough. ! They mean, further, that 17 per cent of the I total lncreaae of population In the borough i of Manhattan between the years 19U) and 1905 is constituted of the Increase of these iifty-one blocka alone." Mr. Finley has made some study of the alien population of the fifty-one blocks and be deduces the rule that "the greater lha density the greater the alien per centage." The one etceptlon to thia rule la the UuuO block on the Weat Side, where practically every one of the population la a j negro and the only aliena are from the Weat Indies. V In apeaklng ot what a population of S.OU0 to a block means, Mr. Finley says: lom CaaiBarisoBa. "Out in the big, open middle weat when towns without court houaoa approach the 3.000 mark they begin to plan county seat fights. A live town of this aise In Iowa or Missouri boaata of a city council, electric light plant, fir department, women's club, city debt, a college or two, policemen with uniforms and a Carnegie library. "Can we Imagine the respective popula tions of the fitty-one most populous blocks In Manhattan to be populations of fifty-one c ri Great Under-Price Sale of ILadies9 Under Muslims COMMENCING TOMORROW . LOWER. THAN A MERCHANT CAN BUY THEM! ; Bought for less than the aoods cost. Slightly Soiled Not damaged. Will be stld at a loss. Better Buy Enough to Last tv Year. Your Best Chance in Twelve Months! . Lot 3. I,t 5. Ix)t 7. Corset Covers at 25c. Mnlin Gowns at O.V. Muslin Drawers at 43c. Muslin Petticoats at S9c. Made of cambric, trimmed with Choice selection, made of fine Special lot. made of best ma- Made -of good quality of cam lace and embroidery covers that "aln80ok' elaborately trimmed terlals, trimmed with fine lace In- brie, trimmed around the bottom ,', . . with lace and embroidery, can not sertint? or embroidery. Would or- with lace. Our price is less than posimely sell regularly at 50c. be duplicated for 2. 00 and $2.50. dinarily sell at $1.00. Under- you would have to pay for tho ma-Lnder-prlce sale, 25S Under-prlce sale, $5. Price sale, .15. terlals. Vnder-price sale, 39. lMt ' I-ot4, Lot 0. Lot 8. Corset Covers nt flc. Muslin Gowns at IJ1.45. Muslin Drawers at 00c. Muslin Petticoats at $1.45. A very choice lot of covers, A grand assortment, all high Choice of about 250 samples A splendid showing of swell mostly samples, handsomely trim- grade samples, finest materials. besl(leB rKuIar stock in this lot, petticoats at this price, made of mod modo at ti Kn ,.... it ii a .u made of the finest materials, ele- excellent materials, full embroid- mea, maae to sen at ii.dO ana beautifully trimmed, worth as ,i ,,j , m j no j . ... ... ... . , . ' . , gantly trimmed, $1.50 and $2.00 ery or lace flounce; made to retail $2.00, slightly soiled. Lnder- high as $4.00. Mightly soiled, values, slightly soiled. Under- at $2.50 and $3.00. Under price price sale 60. Under-prlce sale, 1.45. price sale, 607. sale, 31.43- Special Corset Covers Good materials, lace trimmed, Mon day. 9c Sperlnl Corset Girdles, taped in pink and blue, regular 00c value, Monday 39c live county seats of the great state of Iowa? Can we conceive of these fifty-one county seats being uprooted and transplanted to this city, here to be crushed down into a noisome area of 200 acres? That Is none too vivid a way of Illustrating Just what the actual fact of 177.98S people crowded Into 200 teeming acrea of Manhattan Island means. " Many New Yorkers can go back In mem ory to soma small town on circus day. Let us in fancy crowd ourselves with all the other able-bodied citizens of the town and half the countryside into a five-acre lot to witness tha 'grand free exhibition after the parade " "Can we conceive of that crowd of happy, perspiring humanity men, women and children and crying babies condemned to eat and sleep and love and hate and live their lives In that five-acre lot? And a cor don of clanging street cars and a wall of five-story tenements, and we may get some conception of such a block as that bounded ' by West Sixty-first street, Amsterdam ave- nue. West Sixty-second street and West End avenue, with its population of 6,173 I living o- 6.392 acrea." Aa Applied to fc'ew York. i In speaking of the density of pbulatlon ' in Greater New York. Mr. FlnleN says that the total area la 209,218 acrea, and adds: I "If we roughly estimate that half of the I greater city is occupied by streets, parks, business and manufacturing establish ments and vacant lots, tncre will be left ; 104.609 acres of residence area. If all of ; this estimated residential area of New York were as densely populated aa the lowest of these twelve populous and dense blocka, ! Gotham would number 115,000,000 aouls. "Allowing the residential area of Man hattan alone at two-thirds of the total acreage. If every block on Manhattan were an l,10C-to-the-acre block, the borough would need no numerical aid from alstf r j bnrougha to leave largest London far be- , hind." Mr. Finley points out that all his figures are based on the 1909 census and declares that the blocks today. If the exact popula tion were known, might treble the list of 1900 in regard to a density of popula- j tlon of more tiian 1,100 to the acre. There were seven In !9u0 and twelve In 1905. He also says that there are doubtless many more blocks in the city than fifty-one hav ing a total population of 3,000. "j REICH TALKS OF AMERICANS Women of Aristocracy f United States, Sajs Ceo al Fhiloicper. AIL QUALIFIED TO SHINE IN SOCIETY Speaker Iletates Peraonal Experience When He Took Part in Dlaeaa ion of Eutnoa at a Reception. that the woman question Is the most grave of ail questions in America In fact, thia Is the cardinal difference between Europe and America. "This being so, one may readily Imagine whither that powerful sentiment of every American man can eventually drive him. W'hen Thaw's lawyer appealed to that feel ing and with fine rhetoric called It the dementia Americana he was conscious of playing on the. biggest organ of all organs on the rapturous enthusiasm of a great and generous nation for their noblest aris tocrats. He roused thereby a Vendee, a Chouan sentiment of fierce loyalty; a real 'War of the Roses' If one may Bay so." PRINCE AS A STONE MASON Kltel Frederlch and Consort Cover Tkemselres with Mortar While at Potsdam. BERLIN. May 21. (Speclal.)-One of the weekly papers relates the following Inci dent of Prince Eitel Frledrlch: ' As the prince was walking In the garden ! of the villa with the princess where they j recently took up their quarters at Pots- dam, they became Interested In the work of some masons who were conatructlng a rock work fountain. Finally their royal hlghnersea seized hammer and trowel and applied themselves to the task. Half an hour ehipsed before they had tired them- i selves of this unfamiliar occupation end thev returned to the house with their clothee fairly covered with mortar. 6 DENTISTRY The selection of a dentist ia al most as important aa taa aeleo tloa of a physician. A dentist should be selected for his known ability and Integrity, for in dentistry there is aa un limited field for malpractice aad deception. When you choose a dentist tot yourself or you family I wish to be considered. At least give me credit for belnf sincere. Investi gate my office aad methods. DR. FICKES, De"tIst 'Phone Doug. 37. 138 Bee Bldg. LONDON, May 4. (Special ) Dr. Emll Reich, the popular society philosopher of London, has Just been Interviewed upon the Thaw case. He says: "Whenever people study Americana they come to the conclusion that madness has its geography as its degrees. Where an Englishman remains calm and callous an Irishman is next door to Insanity and vice versa. The Americans, however, are high strung to a degree and ahow a mentality totally different from the average Europ- eon. When they get excited they reach a rapid finale with a fearful crash. Their un governable rage la neither a big fire nor a vast flood, but a volcanic eruption. "Of the things f hat will bring the Ameri can volcano into eruption there is especi ally one that will seldom fall of effect. I mean attacka on their women. "Every American has in all truth and sincerity a deep-seated respect for and a strong desire to worship his womenfolk, i He is chivalrous and invarlubly polite to , them. He treats every woman aa If aha were a lady born. Attitude of the Men. "Aa has been remarked a hundred timea 1 the American gentleman h quite satisfied ' to pile up money by continuous and mctt worrying labor In the office or the factory ; provided hla 'missus' Is thereby enabled to give receptions, to 'do' Europe, to become i a scholar and to shine generally In society. 1 It Is quite true that millions of American women are working Just as hard as do ' American men. I "This, hjwever, does not impair the gen- ' erallzation at all. Ltke all true generallza- : tions the present one comprtsea both the actual and the potential woman In America. ' Any one ef the hard working American ' would as soon as her husband made money enough to render her personal labor superfluous at once rise to the occasion and shine shine In the parlor, at the theater, in the watering places; while her husband would continue to drudge for ber with a contented smile. "Men are in America not supposed to In terrupt the literary conversation of the 'ladies.' On leaving Huncary I first went to America 'and when I first saw the Americans at a recep'.lon I found all the men standing apeechlesaly with arms folded on their breast In the back drawing room, while the ladles were briskly itys- . cussing Emerson. i "Being under the Magyar delusion that a man In society muat be anil,' hie to women I atepped among the laJiea and also talked Emerson. In a few mlnutea I overheard one of the Americana remark to another, j 'Has that Johnny been hired for that? j Aristocracy of America. J "The fact of the matter la that the : women of America form the aristocracy of the nation. "No people can be without an aristocracy of some kind. With one, the poets; with another, the soldiers; with a third, the priests: with the fourth, the lawyers, etc., constitute what ia really the dominating or J socially supreme caste or class. "In the states for reasons quite patent such a claaa could not grow up among the men. But aince It la lndlspenslble, as all history proves, it arose perhaps for the first time among women In America. Al- j rtady the Greeks, who thought they did, i eald or forefelt everything spoke of the ! realm of the Amasons In Asia Minor. Were they not right? "If In eculptor, a great artist of our time waa to represent In marble the type of I woman ao characteristically embodied by . the American women, what better thing could he do than to hew out of the finest j Pentelic marble an Ideal Amason? Bo great la the domination of woman In the atatea that I have ne hesitation in saying that her poailltin, rights and activities in short BRITISH . STARS IN DEMAND London Says American Managers Want Kng-lleh Talent Rrsard. less of the Price. LONDON, May 4. (Special.) As a result of the almost world wide music hall war between Keith & Proctor and Klaw & Erlanger, the representatives of the English artists, say that their stars are "in clover." Mr. George Foster, who is agent for Harry Lauder, and other well known artists pro phesies halcyon days for English artists. "They want English "stars' at any price," he said in an Interview. "I am asked to engage them at all cost salary Is no ob ject. "Harry Lauder Is to have $2,500 per week. A friend of mine declares that he will be offered I7.0CO a week before his engage ment is over. There are hundreds and thousands of Scotchmen In New York, who will support him to a man. "Gus Elen and Marie Lloyd will visit America In September and Lockhart's elephants In October. George Robey and Harry Fragson are ready to cross the At lantic. I made Little Tich a phenomenal offer last week, but so far, he has refused It. Daisy James is another artist, who is getting ready to go. "I am negotiating with ai dozen other atars, but nothing is settled aa yet." "There are a number of agenta of Klaw & Erlanger In this country at present, and they will engage every one they can. 'Get the biggest that can be found,' is what they ten me. 'Money Is nothing.' "It has all occurred recently since the formation of the great combines and the beginning of the music hall war. Artists have visited America regularly In the past, but this is quite a different matter. They will now go In shoals. "It will be a great thing for English artists, but I do not think It will affect the muslo halls here. The visits will be only short ones and the artists will then return to fulfill their engagements In this country. There is no question of their breaking their contracts." COLONIAL RAILWAY PROBLEM Cape Will Endeavor to Prevent Con atrnctlon of Political' Lines In Future. JOHANNESBURG, 'May 4. (Special. )-AI commission waa lately appointed In Capo Colony to devise some meana of saving the colony from "political" railways that la to aay llnea built from the point of view of party expediency and not because they were likely to be financially or commercially suc cessful. Dr. 8 mart, the commissioner of publlo works acted as chairman. Within eleven daya of the first meeting the commission decided unanimously upon a report, the substance of which ia a recommendation for the establishment of a railway advisory beard, to devise the minister responsible for the control of the railway department on all large questions of policy. It Is to be the duty of the board to advise upon all questions of policy, including the fixing of rates and fares, the estimates to be sub mitted to Parliament, and alterations of wagea or hours of employment. No pro posal for a new line will be submitted to Parliament, If the proposals of the com mission are carried out, unless It Is ac companied by a full and exhaustive re port by the board. Betting forth the capital expenditure to be Incurred, estimates of the cost of working, of the probable volume of traffic to be handled and the revenue likely to be earned, and also the probable effect on the traffic and earnings of existing lines. French Vessels Ashore. CHHRBOrRO. France. May 4.-A fleres gale Is raging in the channel. The French steamer Laure and the French bark Jane Gulllon have been driven ashore. The bark arrived at Queenstown May 1 from 6an Francisco. Its crew was landed and It is hoped it may be refloated. Britain Demands Cash. CONSTANTINOPLE. May 4 -The British embassy has lodged a claim with the Porta for the reimbursement of the $75,000 ransom paid to the brigands who abducted the Abbott child, aon of a prominent British subject, who waa reaiding at Balonlca. MAKIL, HOML COMiJL, 11,111, No home is completely furnished unless supplied with a good Sewing Machine-THE NEW HOME MACHINE. One admitted by all leading Sewing Machine Operators to be far superior to any other sew ing machine on the market. And owing to the fact that we are buying WfTN in lartre lots direct from the factory, coupled with the positive fact that we save you agents commisions you are able to purchase the BEST Sewing Machine made on. time at Cash Prices. We give ' free instruc tions on all machines sold and, with New nome Machines you get an unlimited guarantee. We rent machines and give credit for amount of cash paid for same as first payment on all sales. Supplies for all makes of machines, machines repaired Uayden Bros. Sewing Machine Dept. PB9'M lati - . ' Vvx