Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 23, 1910, WANT ADS, Page 8, Image 36

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TTTE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JANUARY 23. 1910.
REACH'S EYES ARE OPENED
Local Democratic Chairman Surprised
by English Political Meetings.
news of me susy loisraum
B
Hanah
Shoes
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SCANT COURTESY TO THE OKATORS
,'
Ireland la Mark Better Condition
Tfcaa Railand Today. DM of
tkc Brardli Klowlaa from
Land Parcaase Art.
John E. Reagan, chairman of the demo
cratic county committer, has returned from
a business trip to Ireland. He has with
him a blackthorn stick ir Mayor Dahlman
nd a new notion of politic.
"1 did not see or heat' of one political
meeting- in the United Kingdom that did
not breakv up In a row. This wu espe
cially true In England. .It seemed to me
that the most distinguished men In public
life, when on the platform, were trratril
very much as we would treat the veriest
um If he attempted to make a public talk'i
on angelic morals, mafaguaras u
lums would Interrupt every sentence, and
continual uproar waa the order tn those
meetings. If a lord was talking he had
no show at all, but the lords had to get
off the hustings at a certain date and
keep their mouths shut from that time on.
"But Lloyd-George himself was given
most disrespectful treatment In some In
stances, showing that the Interruptions and
disorder were confined to no particular
party. 1 heard John Redmond, leader of
the Irish party, make a talk In Belfast,
and his audience was fairly decent. The
nationalists will hold the balance of power
In the new Parliament, and Ireland is .look
ing forward to getting a home rule measure
through Parliament.
Ireland Better Than England.
"Ireland Is today In much better condi
tion than England. I never saw so much
poverty and misery In my life as exists in
England, while similar conditions are fast
disappearing in Ireland; except in isolated
Instances. Englishmen have aaid to me
that they would delight to see the Irish
land purchase act made to apply to their
country, And I do not wonder at the wish,
for you may travel for hours through parts.
of England that are entirely given over to
gama -preserve uiiJ otitfer uuca that keep
the land uncultivated and unproductive.
The most useless parts the lordly de
mesnes have been set aside for the loca
tion villages, and they look most sterile
and unpromising.
"Every man In the British Isles, It seemed
f to me", carried a cane or stick, even the
clerks In the stores, and they stick to their
notions In England most tenaciously. I
ordered a suit to fie made and tried to have
It cut and tailored like the one I had on,
made here. ' The tailor would not make it
that way; told me I really dld not know
what the latest correct cut and make was.
It was like every other man's suit over
there, so I was not made uncomfortable.
Maybe 1 11 wear it a time or two In Omaha,
but If it attracts too much comment I'll
have it made over.
Cotton on Fire on Ship.
"Going over I was a passenger on the
Celtic, and for" five days In one of the
lower stories ot the boat several hundred
bales of cotton were on fire. With so much
water about, it would have been strange
If weburned up. Coming back I was on
the Lusltanla, and perhaps the news was
brought to your paper that a tidal wave hit
us, which smashed the windows in the
pilot house, two hundred feet above the
surface of the sea, and carried away eomei
of the nautical Instruments. Old sailors
aid it was the worst shock of raging water
hail k.rar vnrtMnnAl4. T t ahockfnfl
very passenger, all right, and sneaky
notions of going to the bottom crept
through our minds for a while,
"I was Interviewed by a newspaper man
In Belfast, while at a dinner gathering.
When he heard Omaha. Is a large as Bel
fast he was astonished. He wrote jf this
city as being In 'far-away western
. America,' and intimated that I, like every
American, Va boosting for the United,
States. lie congratulated me when I
told him I had quit newspaper reporting
to study law, indicating that newspaper
men are not millionaires, eyen In Ireland.
When I told hlrrt the farmers of this
state ride about in automobiles and that
the cows will not give down their milk un
til the electric lights are turned on and I
muslo box set going, he wondered quite
ft bit.
"The German war scare has everybody
eared green in England. They were
astonished when,- in answer to lnqulrie
t told them we knew little or nothing
about It over here. 'Their cherUhed hope
is that the United States will Join with
England in an alliance t6 make the kaiser
keep'wjthln bounds.
- "No. I wasn t seasick, going over or
eomlng back."
)
HENS THAT LAY EGGS IN
WINTER, NOT SUMMER
thickens Jack Barnett Has Are the
! : . salad to Own These OO-C'ent
j r a-Uocrn Days.
Jack Harnett of the assessor's office has
h new breed of chickens of which he is
Justly proud. These chickens are a source
bf great pride and wealth to the owner.
Their great value la in the fact they have
reversed the season and lay eggs all win
ter, but refuse to lay In the summer. At
his home at Twelfth and Dorcas streets,
air. Bamett guards his fowls with an
sagle When other people are com
pelled to pay SO cents a dosen for packing
house eggs that are stale, Mr. Bamett has
simply to visit his henhouse and get all
the eggs he wishes.
' Friends are trying to find out from Mr.
Bamett what means he usa to Induce his
bens to reverse the seasons, or at least
to tell the breed of these valuable assets.
WALTER R. BEDDEO IN JAIL
rater Politician ta CTaaraed with
Defrauding South Omaha Coa
rrs ana Dealea the Same.
I Walter R. Beddeo. for a score of years
active In Nebraska politics. Is In the
Douglaa-eounty Jail, where he was lodged
Deputy Sheriff Thompson, who went
. to Orleans after Mr. Beddeo. He is charged
Kith having defrauded the Western Auto
lupply company ot Omaha out of
. Mr. Beddeo denies the charge explicitly.
the- Information against him says that he
lepresented himself to be a dealer in auto-
bublle and that this is untrue. '
f
POOL HALL OWNER PUNISHED
(Slat Alabauch remitted Gaaabllaa
la His Tool Hall ae Police
I'aaaat Players.
Elmer Alabaugh, proprietor of a pool
tall at Twenty-fourth and Urant streets,
aaa fined M In police court for permitting
t dice game in hi place.
1 stepped la to tell him to call at the
khUfs office, because of the complaints
that had been made," said Sergeant Cook.
'When I went In there was a big crap
ama In progress oa a pool table."
The "crap shooters" acre discharged.
(Ubaucb paid his floa.
- 1 . -
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Flat Buildings.
OME building is the most uni
H
versal art in the world; that la
why there .Is so many engag4
in It. To some life in a note,
constitutes the ideal home, hav
ing no responsibilities or cares.
Others prefer .attached house In which
they have to do their own janitor work,,
keep up the heating plant, mow the lawn,
etc. Ktlll others prefer what they call the
happy medium between these two modes
of live and live in a flat. A flat reduces
the labor of housekeeping to a minimum,
for llvhig In a hotel could hardly be called
housekeeping. Selecting a home is ' like
selecting a wife, every man must choose
to his own taste and what suits one man
may not suit another.
The principle advantages of a flat from
the housekeeper's standpoint are the close
assemblag of rooms on one level, the
ever ready supply of hot water and having
6 carew ha. lever of the heating plant.
From the standpoint of an investor, a flat
provides from two to any number of
homes In a minimum amount of space. A
two flat flat building usually goes by' the
name of a duplex house. When the'bulld
ing. contains mora than twelve flats It Is
commonly called an apartment ' building,
and in the later case there are In each flat
seldom more than three or four rooms: It
Is the universal opinion among real estate
mn that a five or six-room flat will rent
as readily, and for as much as a seven or
eight-room flat, and they certainly cost
more to build. They give as a reason for
this the fact that people with large
families do not live in flats. Most real
estate men put a ban on small children.
This is no doubt a kindness to the children
for flat buildings are certainly no place
for growing children where their frolics
must be restricted In order to keep peace
with the neighbors. People can always
stand the noise of their own children, but
TIMELY REAL ESTATE COSSIP
Race Against Time Again Begun on
Brandeis Theater.
MARCH 1 THE DATE NOW HT VIEW
By Them Batldias; la to Be Completed
Contractor- Determine to
Bead Every Energy to
This kind.
A race against time has again started on
on the new -Brandeis theater and offloe
building. Fatya for the completion of both
parts have been set . and the contractors
say they have a reputation at stake in com
pleting on time.
The time for the complexion of the
theater Is set for March 1,- and Manager
Burgess has been given to understand he
may book an attraction for March 7. The
time for the completion of the stores and
office part of the big structure Is set for
May 1, and leases are being made with
that date In view. . '
EnrHsltrandc-ls, who Is now in New York,
writes that ha has visited the New York
offices ot the Thompson-Starret company
and that orders Have been sent out from
headquarters to push the building opera
tions toi6 limit.
Work was' still practically at a stand
still on the new Morris theater, but the
contractors said they hoped to have every
thing again running smoothly, with all
back to wot k Monday.
Reed Brothers announce thewlll build a
dosen homes in fcSunset addition this spring.
This U a new addition Just outside the city
limits on k'ariiam street. The property has
been graded and tn many of the streets
sidewalks and sewers are in place. Several
houses were built In this addition lairt year
and the indications are for a boom this
spring. This addition lies south of Dundee,
and extends from Dodge stress tu the Cath.
olio cemetery. '
A boom la expected In property la this
.
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Getting Best Results in Home Building
Artlrnc O. Clausen, Architect.
- v
MR.. CLAUSEN'S BOOK
'Tne Art, Bolenoe and Sentiment
of Homebuilding."
42 chapters, 200 Illustrations and a
thousand facts on the planning and
deslKnlng of every kind of home. It
covers a wide raxige of subjects, ln-
' eluding the planning of bungalows,
suburban and city homes, letting
.contracts, choosing materials, proper
design of entrances, windows, fire
places, etc. Price, post paid, SI. 00
A monthly supplement, "Practical
Homebuilding," sent gratis for
twelve months following the sale of
the book.
Address, Arthur O, OSaaaan, Archi
tect, 1136-37-38 XiOmbar Szohange,
Minneapolis, aUnneeota,
never fall to complain If disturbed In like
manner by the children of their neighbors.
Owing to the tenancy of fiats being
rented to small families It has been found
advisable to connect one of the chambers
with the parlor or living room by a wide
opening so that when the chamber is not
needed as such it can be used as a library
or sitting room. People who live In flats
do not figure on paying rent for a guest
chamber Every style of home can be
traced back to some form of dwelling- used
by primitive man. The bungalow is the
development from the one story, frail
homes used In various parts of the World
experiencing frequent seismic disturb
ances. Take Japan for a good, example,
wh;re selsmeUc disturbances are very fre
qtient, the houses are made of the ma
terials least effected by them and most of
them are only one story high. . So It Is said
that flat buildings are the Outgrowth of
the primitive homes of the cliff dwellers,
combining the bungalow idea of placing1
an entire home on one level with the cliff
locality this summer, because of the build
ing of the viaduct over the Belt Line tracks
on Dodge street, and because of the pros
pects of paving Farnam street from Forty
second street to the city limits. Appraisers
are now at wbrk fixing the damages, be
cause of the building of the Dodge street
viaduct over the tracks.
There Js every Indication that the coming
spring is to be one of extensive building
in , Omaha, especially of home building.
Architects are busy preparing plans for
hundreds pf homes and real estate trans
fers are numerous, for the resident dis
tricts. Many applications are already being
made to the loan associations for loans
with which . homes wilt. b bul'li Several
of the real estate firms4 report their busi
ness for this month as much larger than
for January a year ago. . ' (
All the downtown buildings are taking
on new life since the yeather man has
permitted the thermometer to rise above
the icro murk and bricklaying as well
concrete work is being pushed on all the
big structures. Workmen on the City Na
tional laid off a couple of days because of
the accident which caused the death of one
of the workmen, but all other buildings
are moving along except the Morris theater,
on which there was a slight disturbance
because of labor troubles. These .' large
buildings are providing work for hun
dreds of skilled workmen as well as for i
large number of laborers and are helping--!
to keep down th4 number of unemployed
In Omaha. k
, 1 v
The new owners of the eld New York
Life Insurance company k building ' have
formally ' changed . the name ot the - big
building to the Omaha National bank build
ing. ' The huge bronse letters to go Over
the Farnam street , entrance ' have b-m
ordered and will soon be put in place.
( ,
Altman Foaad Not (iallty,
CHICAGO, Jan. a. The Jury in the trial
ot Vincent Altman brought in a verdict of
not guilty today after being out since yes
terday afternoon. Altman. wa accused of
having exploded a bomb that partially de
stroyed the Central exctiange of the Chi
cago Teleyboue company ou June 27,
" iWllrllHTWr'
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I dwellers habit ot housing a number of
families In tiers, one above another In a
single rock. In fact,, residents In large
apartment houses are sometimes jocularity
referred to as "cliff dwellers." (The Idea
of placing as many homes used, one roof
as possible is sometimes carried to the ex
treme by Investors. One man remarked to
the writer that he had to go out doors
when he wanted to smile because he lived
in a flat Another said that his flat was
not wide enough for a dog to wag his tall
in. The flat should not be so narrow or
the rooms so small as to bring forth such'
Jocular remarks. ,
While people have come to expect small
rooms in the modern flat, that would hot
be satisfactory in a detached house, a flat
with good sized rooms will invariably rent
for more and keep its tenants' longer than
one which has rooms so small that' they
are continually- dissatisfied with them.
Location has a great deal to do with the
rent one can get from a flat. It If never
a profitable ' Investment to place a good
flat . In an inconvenient locality or on a
cheap lot. People who live In flats do so
because they like Its conveniences and they
much prefer living on a car line or very
close to it than taking a half mile walk,
which the suburbanite prefers in the In
terest of his health. The cost of flat build
ings varys according to size and finish, the
same as all other buildings. The higher
up the building, goes the more the ooBt
o the foundation and roof is distributed
among the flats, thereby reducing the cost
of every flat in proportion . to the entire
building until you get up four stories,
when, after that, the dlstanoe which the
materials have to be hauled up and the
Inconvenience of doing so commences to in
crease the cost of each additional story, and
since the rent of the upper stories is not as
great as' the lower stories, there is a
height at which flats will not be profitable
unless there are so many la the buildings)
as to warrant providing kn elevator.
Pacific Express
Loses Traffic )
on Overland
American Will Hereafter Handle the
V
cifio Railroad.
Exit the Pacific and enter the Amerlaan
Express company on the lines of the
Union Pacific railroad
There seems to be something more than
a rumor .to this statement. In fact, it is
practically assured that the American, Ex
press will begin operating its cars on the
Ha'riiman lines on April 1. when the con
tract . with" the Pacific company will ex
pire. ' .
At the local office of the . latter com
pany Superintendent Patterson said-that
the arrangement, it made at all. had been
consummated In the Chicago offices. At
any rate the change wtll not affect -the
headquarters of the Pacific company In
Omaha, as that concern will continue to
operate over the Missouri Pacific and the
Wabash lines.
C. D. Summy, assistant general agent of
the American Express company, ataXea
that; no authorised statement is available
concerning the arrangement . with . the
fnlon Pacific railroad.- x
It Is given out, however, that ttle office
furniture of G. C. Taylor, assistant general
manager of the central division of the
company at Cleveland, was ablppel.to Salt
Lake City last week.
' Union Pacific officials stata the Informa
tion Is news to them and that the trans
fer would be handled In Chicago. Erastua
Young. ' resident director ot the Pacific
Express company, alao states thai Ha
knows nothing f the change.
-To dste the American handle no express
west of the river and the move to secure
the business on the Union Pacific is be
lieved to be one contemplated for many
yesra to secure through bustnees to the
coe. . .
' A man who gts bid feet
Into a. pair of
HAN AN SHOES
will feel good enough about'
" It to tell, all his friends
That't why Hanan Shoes are
, a universal favorite.
We have HA NAN SHOES
In all the new saapes and in
all leathers.
We are exclusive agents, '
' and carry a complete line la
men's and women's stgrles.',
PRICES
Women's, $5.00 to 6.00 ,
Men's, . . . $S.50 to $7.00
Drex i Shoe Co.,
B i j r&TRsm urest.
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If Some Have Failed
Why should you speak harshly of the other men who are spending their
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THE RADIUM jlEDICAL AND SURGICAL INSTITUTE, N. W.
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REMIT TODAY REMIT TODAY
' Address The Twentieth
lyl No. 3010
Three dollars and fifty censs In
either button or lace.
This shoe in the wonder of the Shoe
making world nothing that pp-
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We Invite comparison with anv $5
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It la a Patent Colt Welt and la re
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thera.
The proof of the ahoa la in the
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Sorosis Shoe Store
208 South lSth Street
Prank , Wilcox, Mgr.
TEI BXOXBT OT KM SUCCESS.
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