n THE OilAIIA SUNTUY BFX: MAT 31. 190S. X i Omaha's "Water Front Not Available for Steamboat Landing: Places - ; -. W " " . . ''T'?7 fjr - t. fcm iih iii AmiiWIiW.! i..h I i i hi i i I .. i iJTsi m wn i nr m i ii i ii mi.m POVTFTR HOT - WICK in the Ms'ory of tha Ml- H " I otiri river front at Ornaha the I I In' have hoen wor.h uch a i imn amall amount that tlic-i la f'-tf-jj s.aicely any recorj of tl;-lr 'rutSi,J ng jrice or appralfe uent. When tli flrat aptiltra locatKl a ftw scat tered cabins along the river front the en tire atr-trh of land from a point near wl.at la iiiw Cut-Off lake to a point oppjslt ! Bouth Omaha la raid to have b,een bought fro-n the Indians for 11 In beads, liu:tuns, gt-wjiawa arid bad coins. This waa probably the market value at the time, but many year later, whea the steamboat tr dia- WHERE THE continued and th rallroada wanted the river front for yarda and terminals, In the minds of appraisers the value of the uncertain land hadr.ot Increased very much and the Union Pacific Railroad com- pa.-.v ohta'ne'd blocks and blocks of riv. r fr nt for prices so low that two handsful cf Connecticut-made wampum would have tenure! a rrlncly sum. I t that was forty-two years ago. To- dt the river front carries a value so lar o that those who propose building doi' a to lsnd steamboats at Omaha once nijre are staggered at the possible price which will have to b paid for ih land one a ifmm as Ut aXf said wit, la Ui 1 . v" ' x Ii , : I ;j : - i ....... . , ........ . . j . . '-: " -'- .i4;4e-i.wl '-'-..'.'-''f - :.. V,'A.- : x,-r... .v'tv--:-'.''-'-. '"C'NVS. VIEW FROM BKLOW UXION PACIFIO BRIDOa Gossip and Csarag of B. Aathoay. T has Wo so many years ago that moat people have forgot ten that the late Susan B. Anthony was fined 1100 or a year's Imprisonment for having dared to vot for General Grant fur prtaident." said Judge F. H. Meyers of Chicago In an Interview. "Miss Anthony was as brave as sh was intellectual, and asked to be allowed to siak a word in her own behalf. Permls- a.. oil helnM Klven. sh told tn coun oi the struggle slS had In keeping a llttl newspaper going, from whlcn sn maa her living. 'Your honor,' she Mid, holding up her right hand. 'I am due my creditors rot lesa than l.uo. Thla money I expect to Uv to pay. but I am willing thi arm shall wuner trom ui luJy weiuf X pay th 10 you hav so unjustly aasesMd k gainst me.' Th court realised th deep serioua r.ess of Mia Anthony' declaration, and tltugh sh could hav been ordered to Jail for nonpayment of th fin hi honor old not hv th nerv to e.foro th x Itrem penalty. MU Anthony Uv4 for many r after it Inipoaillon, but th fin waa uever paid." 4 ' jvaLa lUkaaotyh Law OOte. Few paoapl know that th law offlo la which that famous Virginian, John Ran dolph of Roanoke, ano praoUosd Is tUl la xltBti a&4 1 tUl twin; used for a elcular yurpoMb I Us courtyard tn th mn K9 AKD LVirEER YARD 3. niuiky stream. Troperty on the banka of thu river Is aa valuable aa In the h. art of the bualnesa district, and some of It has been "made" at a great txp1 n.". n th front where steami-ra cnu'.d frm:. Ik land at will factories, ameluro, rai r.uj ahopa, tHatillerlea, breweries and the lk are ojierated and power la generated f jr lighting the city and driving m;ici.lnry and trolley care, and the e miblned y rnduct la worth more than all the money In Omaba gold, allver. aptr unil cn tliia baaia it would be practically impossible to buy any great amount of the rial esiate, which waa formerly levee, government lota REED STRIP LIES. and tax lots, given away by th mayors of Only the Missouri river has been sbl to claim all the real estate on th. river front which money could not buy, and sine the first plat of the town of Omaha was made. probably In 1855. by the father of Dr. Oeorge L. Miller, the river has helped ite.f generously. Below the Union Pacific bridge near Mason street the river has swallowed over fifty city blocks which were onco. platted. These contained over 700 city lots, which would now be worth more than half a million of dollars. At the foot of Jones street, where Byron. Reed oac tali a Urg tract of river-front prop- Stories About Noted People llttl Tillage of Kenbrldg. Lunenburg county, Virginia, stands toeWy an old, weather beaten, brick office building, with a shingle roof. It is one story high and has only a single large room, but It Is now famous in Virginia as the building in whlcii John Randolph did much of his law work and prepared his speeches. In tha earlier day of Virginia' history It was th cuatom to build a number of these little office on th courtyard greens, and It u unusual then for a lawyer to hav an office anywher but there. "Old inhabi tants" of Luen&urg still toll with admira tion of th wonderful mint Juleps that John Randolph used to mix In his office. Th Da4 "Oatmeal King." Ferdinand Schumacher, the dead "oat meal king," deserve mora than a pasaing tribute, aays th New York World. He bad won a double niche In the tempi of fam. H will rank with the Morses. Mc Cormlcka and Edisons as a hero of Inven tion and among the Havemeyer and Armour as a captain of Industry. Schu macher found th American breakfast taole a chaos of pancakes, hot biscuit and pi, and h left It a sweet symphony of cereals and cream, lie was an apostle cf pre digestion among th dyepepUe peopt. Under hi deft manipulation th deaptaed grain wbioh Dr. Johnson said waa food for horses In England and for men In Scot land was transformed into a gastronomic deligtiL Will Edinburgh hav no monu ment t th Hanowrlan immigrant who oarriad abroad the celebrity of its "gran ruld,' 'aa Dary fcaifvur- Ulid twJJad Ut II T y'fy..;,-.:. ft ( ertr. more than fifty lots are In the rlrr and the b-veu In front f them went alon? Into the merciless n aw cf the trou'ileiom-" a:id rentless Misnoyri liver. Just now the r!fr la promising to give up a gooj ahare f thia land and when the water Is Ijw the heirs of Byron Reed may fee come of tl. 'ir property coming slowly up out of the ri'-er. And this Reed prep' fly seems to be tho key to the dock question in Omah i. Th eioin has left from the avarlciou n::ark of the river aume 40J feet of river-'ront pr 'p.-rty. stretching from a point b ut 1 feet north of Jones street to within a few feet of Leavenworth street. Nothing is on this land. It has been the city dump for gome time, but me garnage co;nrani were ordered to cease dumping into the river by the War department and since tl en It has been Idle, waiting for an occupant. To the west of this, with'.n fifty feet of th river, there Is a net work of railroad tracks, owned and controlled ly the R.ir linglon. Even the heirs of the BytVn R -e-d estate are doubtful as to whether they could take possession of the property for docks, as the railroad com;. any has many times Intimated that when it secured the right of way for tracks paralleling the river, It also secured the river front or it was understood that Its title Included th' river front then but a faw feet of land be tww n tho tracks and the river. 'With the trfi b"longing to the Byron Reed ce.m pary In the hands of a railroad company, the last available land for docks on the river front, Is pone. There was a "First street" along the river front about the time the North Omaha creek wound r. bo tit through what la row a business and residence part of the city, crossing Sixteenth street at CaFS and carry 4np a good bit of soil to the h vee.- In the south part of the city theru was a '"South Omaha creek," and It too did Its full share In maintaining the levee. This levee" prop erty waa the aubject of much discussion and acores of ordinance were passed to govern it by the early municipal legislature. Uut the levee Is gone now, though some of the ordinances governing It are still oelWKO 11,0 U"KK9 0"CB, 01 lnB revlsed and erected edlUon of the ordl- nances. Three lots between what Is now Farnara nd Douglas street, west of Sixth street. wr aeeded to J- -. Mitcnell in isto for fx. nineteen jaier me.se ioib naa raiien lrjt0 tne hands or M. S. McOoeon. who sold on f them In 1ST8 for UX. Th value of this lot today Is probably $12,500 on th basis for whlcli vacant lots have sold on the river front, but as It belongs to a railroad company It could not be secured at auy price. .1 - Th pink cheek of a million schoolboys testify to th reform Schumacher wrought In a nation' dietary. Thanks to him, corn, rye, barley and all the farinaceous grains iow supply bone and sinew to tha popu lace. In a record of Schumacher's achieve ments his contributions to American litera ture should not be overlooked. 11 was th Maecenas of th 10-cent magaxin. The mueJc-rakera may hav had th glory, but the true story of th auccea of many a periodical Is to b read tn th broakfast foot advertisements. Th mua would hav been on short rations but for th cereals. 9 Beaatar Bacss't laaT.alr, Senator N. O. Bacon of Georgia, who Is regarded as th natural successor of John Tyejr Morgan of Alabama, as an ex pounder Cf tbe cwisrtUutlon and lony-dla-t&i-.oe talker, has a scarf pin In his pos session that he prises very highly, and which has an interesting history. Several years ago he mad a visit ta ths Philip pine and enrout horn he stopped off at the Island of Ceylon and visited a camp of Bor prisoners of war. His sympathies were with the Boer causa, and h re quested permission from th British au thorities, to talk with man In th detention camp, bat this was refused. However, h waa allowed to go through, th camp es corted by a couple of English officer. Th prisoner wer drawn up In Una, acd as th Georgia senator passed down It be gav each man a cordial handshake Th next day aa h aa going aboard Lis ship a llttl gut pusiiad a aruail pax. act In Us jr - 4 t 1 . -i. ...., .-'V-;-' ...- '' " r" ; ' ' "--". '. :... "" ,.- - .',,-. , ivVr -iv SL SOUTH OI TUB DOT'GIAS 8TREET BRIDGE. It was In 1S(X that F. A. H.iffman secured three lots In the same location from tiie mayor of Omaha for II, and four years later Mr. Hoffman sold 11. em to M. F. Hamilton for :7. When the C'udy I.uuiher company Wanted these siinie lota to extend its lumber yards In l!i3, the price paid was tuu.ntfl. ' 8. line of the appraisements made by the boards when the Union Pacific Railroad company was securing ita right if way In I., show thu small v;ila placed on the river front in those days. Six lots at the foot of Ilainey street bel.nged to un eastein woman, who wanted more cf them tharv the railroad company was Willi;. g tj pay. The appia sirs allowed her . l u, fi. SJS. 3a and Iii f r her pro er;y. S i ua:ej as til. y ate teniae, with trackage fuciliile . if the rail road con ;i.'uiy was imt using t.u m for rlpht cf way. tiie lots would bo worth Jl'.iJ, eu as a factory or warehouse si'e. The river front Is controlled by about six corporations or lmUvM i: who have been making the most of i,s a.l anlao s. Beginning ut a point mv.r the Lira land aita-lied to the Nebraska Minre near Cut Off lake, the Winepoar triangle is owr.fi by Iiavld Whitney and other heirs of an estate. It is leased to a number or dilfei ent companies. Including lea puckers and rallroada. But the Omaha Water companv has the stretch of river front freim Izard to Purt streets, fettling basins beuK located vn this property. From Port street to the Pouglas stre-. t bridge the land vn the river front Is practically al! owned by the Union Pacific Railroad i-ompnny and the American En. citing and Refining company. To this land there Is little or m record. The Union Pacific seeur. d it fur ritrht-of-way and the deeds and titles given by the city to individuals did not "make gew.d" from a point some ways Inland. But the early officials recognized the necessity of the railroad and the wonderful development and growth of the city which the Union Pacific company would cause and the title to the rlsht-of-way remnlned ' w hen all else on the river front "fell through." occnnled by the Union Paclfio shop and yards has been "made." when tne COmpany enlarged Its shops at var!ou8 times. It was found that further expan8lon toward the city was Impossible, and It proceeded to make yarda and shop roora Dy fining In many rods of the "Har- hor of Omaha." This land is without a history and practically without record or title, but there Is no one to dispute th right of the enterprising company to hold It forever. From, Faraam to Harney street th river EREWUKfES JLlfD OTHER FACTORIES ABOT7ND band, and fled. Opening It up Bacon found a beautiful cowrie scarfpln, hand somely mounted, with this line on a scrap of paper: "From grateful Boers." Dr. Koch's Relatives. Dr. Robert Koch, th famous German bacteriolog'st. now visiting the United Statea, has a good many relatives living in this country. Ills wife accompanle him and they are on their wsy to Japan, China and India, to be gone until th sum mer of 1Si9. Th reel purpose of Dr. Koch's Journey Is to recover his health, which suffered In Africa, whre for the lsst two years, sent by Emperor William, he has traced the course of the disease popularly known as "sleep sickness. " Tie discovered a new germ, but sacrificed hta own health In thla service for science and humanity. He will vialt a nephew In Chi cago, Prof. Waldemar Koch of the Unl veraity of Chicago, then go to ee hta brother, .Adolph Koch, a farmer In Key stone. T , "4 then to Bt. TjoiiIs, where h ha three brother, Arnold, Edward and Henry M. Koch. Dr. Koch Is a native cf Clauathal, Hanover, Germany, where he was born In MM. He was grsduated from th University of Goettlngen. In 1W b waa made chief of th German communion sent by th imperial government of Ger many to Egyypt and India to Invesitgat cholera, with th famous result of dis covering tha cholera germ, known as th cholera spirillum or comma bacillus. A year later th government awarded btm lOO.uOO marks or K2.000 for th dlatln trulshed service. In 1930 ha waa credited with bavin discovered a process by which by th us of a bypodermlo Injection th consumption gr in or lubaxel baoilU eouid be destroyed, ( . i i . - - w front belongs to the Union Tnclflc m!t- road company, the Purllngton Railroad rotnpsny and back from the river in a location wl leh would he a pnudVile plac for div ks. tiie Cady Lumber company haa its .van's. South of this to Jones street, on the est side of the tracks, nrt to Leavenworth street, on the ea.t side cf th I'l-rlrrtoii tiai;s. t he lind Is owned t'jr the railroad companies, Tlenne Rerson and the Hyron Re, d et:ite. Puth of Jones street the railroads hv another strip and P. K. Her owns a long stretch. The Ovrnra Electric Light and Power companv linve a block south of Jones, and the Ona'u & Ouncll Itlufft Street Railway -onipany have property nor.i. of the Union I'nfifie hr eli-e. but It Is bU equally fnacr edible to the river front beeiuse of the Purl'ngton railrvaJ trnrks. Vrn-re In the h i-l" r. of Omal a a t'ea-n-b'.nt could li;nd with its cargo, south of I'love; ce nr 1 n irih of .Couth Unwha. is im'ter of n;st'iy to enjrlne-.'rs ho hnvs exam 'ie 1 the rlvr front at Otnal-.a. and it lupins to Inok as lhouh a fw acres of land will have to be d.i!iat"d by the river or "rmdo" by the first coirpsT.y whh-li deciles uoe-l.e Oil tl-u river frriM. Thus th Missouri river front, one? fre fer the landing of a rowhoat, stesmer, launch or raft. Is protected from the ns cf those who would use It for dorks, by thousands and thousands of tons of steel, which cross n.nd recross all roads leadlnaf to It scores of time's, forming a perfect ne-t. work of rails. The value of It to the great corporetirns s Inconceivable to the ordi nary mind. In the contemplation of an, evolution so Immense a million dollars or so could pass unno:lc!l. To tho student of finance it presents a staegerlne; a"cumula tion of riches, for he realizes that nearly half of the gigantic total has gone In th form of unearned Increment to the owner of the bare river front. , Rut thoee who had to do with giving the river front to the railroads did not foresee the day when It would be again wanted for docks. They saw only that th railroads were to take the place of the, steamboats and th river front offered the easiest way for the lines to enter tha city. The business houses which wera formerly located along the river In order to handle merchandise with the least ex pense, demanded that the railroad track be built to their doors, and as the city develooed the river front was abandoned to those who appreciated Its value. Thus while the land one sold for SS la gewgaws and buttons. It is posalbl that It Is worth, with Its property, a sum so vast that any other plan for developing: a harbor with docks would b cheaper than to buy or condemn and psy for th real estate and property on the river front. r sTTS HERE. Quaint Toraad Brlaaa Bars Bark. NE of the resident of Green Village, Pa.. Yen Yensen by name, feeling aggrieved because doubtera acoffed at hla tornado experience, sulemnly depoaea as follows: "On the night of April 90. while he was asleep In his barn after participating in a birthday party, he was awakened by a roaring sound which he .Is convinced was produced by a tornado. That the barn was csught up in the vortex and waa whirled around with auch rapidity that he became giddy and clung to the floor to maintain Ms equilibrium. "That the bam was carried through the air for a long distance until by a freak of nature the tornado reversed Its motion, greatly to his discomfort, snd returned tha barn to the place from which It came. "That, In a gentle and careful manner, the whole stroctur settled back upon It foundations so that not even a chicken was disturbed upon Its roost and not a Joist was sprung. 'That all thla took place In the apaca of leaa than an hour and was not noticed by the members of his family In ths dwelling house 100 feet swav. Furthermore, depo nent believes that this peculiar freak In storm motion might properly be called th Bwadlsh movement." Dead Wife Waa R settee. Seven death In seven days by suicide er murder war recorded In Ltansport. Ind., when, as a climax to a week of tragedy Myndua Grace, aged S year, com tuitua suicld toelar. en np&t&a ajt ta I! v SMEL.TIXQ OCCUPIES MUCU WAXES FRONT. VCTLLOW EPRIN03 DISTTLLERT. assJeJaMrgapBlsppig j'' 'L'',':: V' ' !"rtii', ''I',1'1 .'i-'t'i ' CHEDS BELOW r,: ? . - 6HOP8. TARDS AND STORAGB Features of Everyday Life went south to work, snd as he failed to write to his wife, she thought he had de serted her. She promptly committed suicide. For weeks before Grace had complained to friends that hla wife's ghost haunted him. In the midst of hla dreama ha rose shouting: "There sh la! My wife!" The vision waa ao acuta that Grace killed himaelf, leaving this note: "When you bury m beside my wife she may keep still." Slept With a Mamany. Eben C. Chamberlain, famous scientist, former city bacteiiolrglst of Chicago and honor graduate of Princeton In 1&-4, is dead at Pittsburg. He was one of tha moat remarkable churactera and one of the best chemists In the United Elates. Eight years ago Chamberlain and his bu r.caa partner eut 13 Ps'afonia to look for gold. While there they mad an agreement that if one died the other waa to cut off his head and bring It back horn. The partui r died there, and Chamberlain carried out tha agreement. He kept the skull in l is room all the time. Between the grinning teeth of the skull was thrust a clgaieUe, tiny electric light glotes took the place of eye, and rakiahly balanced on one 1Jj of tha akull waa a battered straw hat. Several yeais ago, as a Joke, several frlenla of Chamberlain placed an Astec mummy in his bed. When Chamberlain discovered It ha calmy went to bed and to sleep. When bis friends claimed the mummy next day b TtvnA to glva it v 4; -t"t li-o. I 1 1 I Jin TUB DISTILLERY. GROUNDS. constantly. Tears ago Chamberlain mad a contract with a local undertaker to taka charge of hi body when b died and cre mate 1L 1 Qaeer Caper af Fata. It may be questioned whether In mod ern anr.sls a queerer accident ever hap pened than that which cauaed th death of a man on a road near Philadelphia. Ha' was picking dandelions growing under a wall along the road when a paaslng trol ley car Jumpetl th track aa It Beared him and, running squarely at him, crushed hire to death against ths walL Not tha most vivid imagination could conceive of such a tragedy, and yet, according to th laws of probability. It will not happen again for two or three generations. It Is simply an Instance of the grotesqueness which sometimes ao suddenly appears In human fair, and to which feiaiiete pout will, trlumpli. Maine's Champion Fargettrr. The most forgetful man has bean found. He Uvea In a Utile town iu tha upper part of Yoik r .unty. Mnirie. He fell Hi with aytnptoms Indlentlng appendicitis and sub mitted to an opt ration. To their groat sur prise and einbarrassinent, the surgeons found that the appendix had already been removed. The' tieit afforded tha naoaa sary explanation, when he recovered from the ether by staling that h ramatobarad then, "come to think of it," that b bad beau through a almllar operation twa yeaxg "LI . ') ' '3" mm in -