THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1910. . m. - l'. V. !.....; . '..Cr ALli itOWX TOWN ; HAS NEWSUItFACE Streets in Business Section .Are Re i payed as Part of the Improve- -1 ment Campaign. . ' -! ALL. AEE BRICK AND ASPHALT Central. Part of City Gets Some Spe ' " cial Treatment. CREOSOTE BLOCK IS COMING IN 1 '' y . . Agitation for New.Matsrial on. One , . Buy Thoroughfare. " " ' GOOD ROADS TO THE COtNTRY Many Fired Ulubwiiy linn oit'froni City lilo tke Farmlnc District , j iiidi Help Out- the 'lib" . . ' . ... .. . cnl Trnde. Ten mile of new paving la the stupendous contract Onaha Is seeing carried out on Its streets throughout the business section and beyond It a't (he present tiriie." Tire wlde Dread'.work and. facility .with : which'. It Is bing done at times when the material Is ft! hand niarks the sixe and effectiveness of. Omaha's paving Industry. . ,- . ' .. "fen rnlles of new. paying. Is, a contr.aqt .far greater than the city has ever, let. before for that sort of work. It means the paving of ?J0,W9; square" yards of ground, It 'means an expenditure of approximately !6&,000. Several, hundred men are. employed 'In the laiors of laying the new paving over Omahaistreets.- Several asphalt plants are giving full time to the outputting of that kind of material for -Just a portion -of -th local , work. The output of brick blocks, which Is the kind of material which Is most used hef "by far. Is not fast enough,' by reason' of recent labor troubles, 1 for : the Omaha .contractor.. -Brick, are -coming. -In better than they .were some time ago. There are three . large contracting con cerns In the paving business here and .ev- eral outside flrma occasionally dlpping'lrito the great demand of the city. ' Omaha's soil, of the nature that bringa-the-Nebraska agricultural productions to a bumper vol ume, conspires to give paving contractor lots of work. . It. Is. of ,t he kind which , does not sustain traffic where It forms nutXnal, tmpaved roads. Therefore most of the streets -liv-and leading to the city of neces sity rn.ua.tbe. paved. . ... This . makes Omaha a thriving place for contractors ln the light . of , the: fact that Denver and certain other cities are blessed or, cired with , a hard , soil that makes almost perfect roadways without more than superficial shaping off and surfacing. ln'lhe focal industry agouti $150,000. is In vested. ' Though 200 men In the average number-employed, that mark Is 'passed and doubjed' under- the present situation , of aonormai 'activity "."j, ,i.?,r,l', Were Scarce.' " '" ' ' Thj present' big municipal paving under taking Was launched In March of .this year, antf . though it dragged for , the first few vonllis o'. Ing to tlio failure of the supply, of brick from Illinois,, the contractor ay their work will be completed by tho end of the year. Othrr (Treat contracts are ex pected for the ensuing years, tt Is com monly known that all the districts of the metropolis are seeing an agitation among property, owners for paved . streets, which Is likely, to. be . followed In due time by many petitions for the work. The hfg contract which Is now under way was brought about directly by a recent act of the legislature , w hich gave the council power to let lump ' paving contracts for work within a radius of 1600 ;feet of the city hall without submitting the question to the property owners. Before that, much delay was 'caused and considerable ragged nes In the letting of contracts experienced through the necessity of getting up a petl-' tlon with a majority of property owners signed' upon them before' the contract could be.letr When the general downtown contract came up before the council several other, district took. the opportunity of put ting their petitions into action and the result was a single order upon the navlne men for 'ten miles of new surfaced streets. Under normal conditions .the paving con cern keep their men at work nine month of the year, the contracts; being dropped only during, those months in midwinter when the paving work would be Impossible. Store xf. Year. It Is generally expected In paving circles that tlio contracts for city paving next year will reach nearly 300,000 , square yards In extent. The'allowihg of next. year's Inter ectlon'fund of $100,000 'Will give a great stimulus to the work. This appropriation was entirely drawn from the. present year's work. Besides , the main streets, and thorough fares, to bp paved, a number of alleys are to receive paving operations next year. The alley will , bp paved with -sto,ne block. There will be about 1,000 spuare yards of the . stone block' paving In alleys accom plished this year. Prom the property owners' standpoint, popular favor has been .given by a wide murgin to brick blocks as material for city streets. According to the apportionment of the work under way now,-asphalt is vastly behind Its competitor to an extent that makes it insignificant as a street, material. The paving w as apportioned ' far -'the ' two kinds of material with the following fig ures:- 202.389 spuare -yards of brick, block, 87.7SO square feet of asphalt. : ' Wood blocks do not figure at. all in the1 present operations, though a movement was on foot for awhile to have Sixteenth street paved with that 'material. The -cost of pavmg with the popular brick blocks averages about 12.10 per square yard. The other materials do . not' vary In cost far from that figure ' - ',."! .. Experienced Contractors. .. The present contractor h8,v.been In. busi ness here for the most part dating -from twenty year ago, though several changes and trades between them have marked the history of tho industry. The principal con tractor entered the field on -a strong' basis twenty years ago, and after at few' year sold out to the National Construction corn pany., Later he reentered the field on a vastly Increased financial basis and has remained In the industry -while the outside corporation has almost '..entirely .' dropped out of It. . ' ., It has been found that present day paving methods with the use of any of the various materials,'- by reason of -the great -ItAprove merit, Insures absolutely level streets and a durable ones as possibly, can be devised. Omaha demands the best there Is to be had In paving, by reason of the ever Increas ing traffic carried on. There arc no re strictions upon the routes to be taken by heavy traffic, as are laid, down In some cities. Thus tho residence streets, so far as rule are concerned, must needs be dur ably constructed as . the downtown ones, though as a matter of fact the business locations are such a to eliminate, naturally, any great degree of otherwise ecattertd heavy hauls. The hills ot Omaha also are a great cause for good paving contracts. With mediocre surfaces the hills of all the principal Btreet would be practically Impossible to heavy traffic. Material are easily accessible for the local needs. The brick come almost en tirely from Oalesburg, 111., while the as phalt I obtained In blocks from several factories In the east In such quantities as to'suffice contractors here for long per iods of time. r "71 ;- ' - I James Black 1 -l OMAHA BUILDERS ARE BUSY ! WHISKERS AT A HA,R Have Many Contracts in Omaha, as Well as in Other Cities. EXCHANGE IS MOST POPULAR I early All the Contractors of Omaha. Arc Mrmhrra of the Unmha Uulldcra Kxchaugr Plenty of Work for All. DO J ' Masonry Contracting Co. r J ' Home Office 602 Wright B'dg.. ; ' jrj St. Louis. Mist sourj. - : :. ' J ... .-'..DM OOWTRACTOM FOB ' C1TT KATIOSAZ. BAWX BtmDnTG, iTrl OMAXA, ItlBKABKA. ZJ WHOLESALE LUMBER CENTER Omaha Hanks l'onrth n Dl.t rlliotlng Tolnt far Ln miter to Went" cm Points. With approximately $10,000,000 Invested in the lumber business and with an annual distribution of between $5,000,000 and $,0n0.0M) worth, of lumber, Omaha holds a leading place among the lumber distributing cities of the world. It Is generally conceded that this city has the greatest lumber distribut ing railroad yards In the country; The local Industry gives it attention ex clusively to the distribution of lumber. Into this city I shipped the finished prod uct of the forests in Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas. Mississippi, Wisconsin, Michigan and the northern coast states. There are five large wholesale lumber concerns In Omaha carrying on the dis tributing work. A score of retail concerns supply the local needs, and the whole ter ritory of the country I supplied by the Omaha concern in general. The estab lishments maintain elaborate offices In the .business section of the city and large lumber yards at the switching points. Each railroad has found It profitable to estab lish special shipping yards of leage area for the lumber shipping business. Prob ably, nowhere In the world is the system of assembling different sorts of lumber In special cars and distributing the supply from a central part carried on to such an extent as In Omaha. Wood of every sort, Including yellow pine, fir, western pine, cedar and redwood Is to be had from the yards of Omaha. The particular advantage offered by the clty'a Industry Is that of supplying retail dealer who cannot afford to lay In a large supply of lumber for future needs them selves. 'Lumber may be obtained from the mill direct, but the small dealers find it con siderably more convenient to buy In small quantities a their needs arise from the wholesaler. Omaha is the only city on the Missouri rlvf r that through Its wholesale lumber concerns, maintains an unlimited supply of lumber for all demands. Tho smaller towns cannot hazard the expense of unloading a wholesale stock of the commodity on their ground and reload it to suit the de mand that reaches them. In this respect Omaha transcends even St. Joseph, and Kansas City, which me tropolises make more of a pretense at lum ber greatness than this city does. Omaha, from all sources of Information, ranks easily fourth In respect to the lum ber industry of the country. The order of the cities In relation to their Importance a lumber concerns are St. Louis, Kansas City, Chicago and Omaha. Omaha loses considerable of It deserved prfstlge In lumber reports when compared with other cities from the fact that what Is known as "office business" Is carried w to an enormous extent in other cities, whereas the real business of handling lum ber Is done In this city. The sales are not only made In Omaha, but the lumber Is obtained at this point and actually shipped out to purchasers. The shipment receive handling at this point to the extent that I tliey are unloaded from the cars, assembled 1 systematically i.nd reloaded for their ultl ' 'Uite destinations. Jowpk IV .Vmte; Bjrisii Hulls' Bora : Burness G o n s iru c Ho n Company - Concrete Builders V ' ,'' Central Ciitractors- for Ciij'xy Pazvij Cis. :i ; BuUdings Tiroujhout the West ERECTORS OF NE V CAR BARN 0. & C. B. ST. RY. CO. Wichita Omaha Kansas CUy BUILDING OPERATIONS GOOD Omaha Stands Twenty-Seventh In the l.lat of Cities ot the Country, and Still Grow.. Omaha's building operations in 110? tunde u good showing cr.d the Indications are for ir considerable Incroae this year. Omaha il i'mN twenty-spvntli amo:iK the V.r go cities In the amount of building done ,n lIMXt, according to government utatlstics, recently issued by the interior department. Salt Lake flly H twenty-fifth. Cincinnati f.vonty-slrth. Indianapolis twenty-eighth :ind Jerey City twenty-ninth. Kan-isCity tands well up In the lir.e, being fourteen:h. two places ahead of Minneapolis. Si. Jos -ph l uway down, being slty-elglith, and Toledo (about the same slxe as Omaha) la seetity-fifth. outli Un aha IiAm .luxl enorrgh to get inlc the lift.' ranking as the VCth, and Council HluffK s the lliith. Omaha stands well up In the percntase of Incrense In building for 190H. The aver age of the W7 cl;li s Is 3ti 34 per cent, but :i Omaha It Is 5G.D3 per cent. A. SCHALL CO. Inc. 1 ... Cut Stone Contractors t) Offlc9Saw Mill and Yards on Jones Street. J .... ""n. . n Jonejf Slraal. I ESTIMATES GIVEN ON ALL KINDS OF STONE WORK JtLEfEONES; Fell, Poilu,l 570; Iiic.icit A-1570 Oaaka, Nchrula l.emoua Cur Malaria. Some twenty years ago I was a victim of t..t- disease, and, of course, took the Ul .ili.o UtMtn.enl. till my head begun to sio o'.k and roar rntt rr.ally and Infcrnuny. A . hanse of climate was recommended, and I went to Saratoga, but my head continued u require more (-pace and the roaring be anie louder, till I thought I would go mad. On - day my husband chanced to tee an inkle written by a physician on the Pi Ific cuaiit. in which he said he had for ifteen years been trying to find a remedy or malaria which would not have the In jurious effect of quinine. He whs success, ul. and In many places where public works tad been abandoned because of malar a irnong the men they were reumed. II. cure was very simple and within the reach of all: Take one lemon, wash thoroughly with a brush and hot water till all germs are gone, cut In very small plro-s, using skin, seeds and all; cook in threo glsrs ot water till reduced to one. and take this while fjstlng. I took It before breakfast, and In l-ss than a wwk I was myself again. Since then I've had no use for doc tor. If . I feel a little "off" I resort to h lemon cure and all is well. New York Sua. Omaha builders and contractors manage to keep busy erecting buildings In this always fast growing community, but being mostly ambitious, a large number of local contractors have reached out and secured contracts In cities and towns all over the west, and this in the face of the keen com petition of the great national construction companies of recent growth. f Local builders owe a good deal of their prosperity and success to the existence of a mutual benefit association and com pany which came into existence seven years ago. Thi Is the Omaha Builders' ex change "which was formed for the purpose of furnishing and regulating suitable. rooms for daily meetings In the city of Omaha; to promote mechanical and industrial in terests; to Inculcate Just and equitable principle of trade; to establish and main tain uniformity In commercial usages of rules and regulations; to acquire, preserve and disseminate valuable business Informa tion; to adjust differences and settle dis putes between members, or between mem bers and others, and for other purposes con ducive to the interests of its members, especially of a protective nature, and for the upbuilding of this section of the west." All this sounds somewhat ambitious, if not pretentious, but the foregoing purposes have been carried out by the Builders' ex change with notable success, and it is doubtful If there Is an organization of the kind and purpose, in Omaha or out, in a similar or different line of activity, which has done more real good for its members, and always In a quiet and unostentatious way, .without beating of cymbols or blaze of public trumpet. Large Membership. The building exchange Includes 100 men or firms or companies in its ranks numbering besides contractors and builders ail the large building material supply houses of the city. The exchange ha done notably well In perfec'lng pleasant and harmonious relations between the men who buy and the men who sell building material. The active conduct of the exchange has always been as Is well within the hands of the builders rather that the material men, but the latter have had some representation In office or on the board of directors. When the exchange was formed and In corporated In 1903, John H. Harte was chosen Its first president, John Reynard was elected vice president and J. E, Mer rlam was treasurer. John H. Tate was the first secretary, a position he held for three years and was then succeeded by C. A. Crlgg, who is still in the position. The secretaryship is a salaried Job, and on the secretary devolves the routine work of the exchange. In 1904 and 1905 Charles J. Johnson was at the head of the exchange. The vice presi dency In 1904 was held by William P. Deverell, Mr. Merriam continuing as treas urer that year and down to 1909, when he became president. J. W. Dow was vice president In 1905. The next year E. O. Hamilton became president and Thomas Herd vice president. In 1907 Mr. Herd stepped up a notch and Andrew C. Bush become vice president. Mr. Herd was re-elected In 1908, the vice president being A. A. Newman. The year following A. C. Busk was again vice presi dent and Robert Sanderson was treasurer, succeeding J. E. Men lam, who now held the highest office of the exchange. Present Officers. For the current year A. C. Busk Is presi dent, with George Oyball vice president and Mr. Sanderson again treasurer. On the board -of directors during these years, hes'des the names already mentioned as officers, appear the following men: Wallace H. Tarrlsli. John Reynard, J. Walter Phelps. A. J. Vlerllng. Kred Riremp Ing. Albert Foil. Walter Peterse. A. O Borchman, Henry Hanrsnn, Orant Parsons David M. Potter, Benjamin Melqulst, Lc Bridges, Charles Anderson, R. L. Carte'. William Kedgwick, George Klent, William J. Creeilon, A. A. Newman and R. C. Strehlow. The builders and contractors who lielonT to the exchange, and practically all In Omaha do, have a monthly Informal meet ing, but the big gathering of the year comes about the first of January when the exchange stages a banquet which is one of the most elaborate tire city knows ea -lr sea seas n. Tho exchange, of course, does not exist as a money nuklnu Initl'utlon, but its revenues are sucli that there is generally a tidy little balanca which c-tn bo appro priated to the banquet and this helps to make the affair a delight to the epicure. The rooms of the exchange are In the Elks building on Fifteenth street between Farnam and Harney. Any business dry In the year a number of contractors can be seen figuring on a Job or conferring with one another. Three of t'ne exchange member have achieved national imputation ,y speciallx'ng. These are R. (. Strelilow, who has built exposition buildings all over the country; O. H. Wlese. w ho has received some of t re largest poMoftice building coniricts In tno west, and Hamilton Bros., wh have gone In fur garrison work, barracks, officer's quartern and other army liolUllnyH. "flat" Maatemon'n. Pal. Hloffs Two Had", Men In the Uame at Tucson. "When we were out to see the fight at Reno," said Alfred Henry Lewi at the round table at Shanley's the other night, "a bigger fuss wa made over my travel ing companion, . Bat Masterson, than over Jeffrie, even before tho fight. Bat had 'come back,' .if only to the scenes of his earlier activities and there was some doubt about Jeffries. "Among the many friends who came to see Masterson, to shake his hand and talk about the pioneer day In the west, was old Jim Bruce, Old Jim had no Interest In the fight, but hearing Bat would be there he made the journey Just to see him, "Bruce was the queerest looking west erner you have ever' seen. He rather re sembled a down east farmer, his most con spicuous adjunct being a paint brush chin beard, an ornament "he 'has worn on hi face ever since he left. Missouri for the border, shortly after ,the war, because Mis souri was getting built up. "For years Jim Bruce dealt faro all over the wild west and. was known, by those who stood by or those who were curious to find out, a a square and fearless man. "One time, when he was dealing faro at Tucson,"'. Masterson told me, two tough strangers sot Into a dispute with the old man over whether a bet waa made a cer tain way. " 'You can gamble that the old man was in the right,' Masterson said, 'and he pulled the money over.' "One of the strangers said to his friend, who was nearest the dealer. . 'Get the money. Jack, and If you can't get the money get his whiskers!' "The old man thrust out his chin till the bru.-h wa almost In the face of the nearest stranger, and remarked softly, 'Ye' can't have the bet, and as for the whiskers, there's a standing reward of $1,000 a hair for them! "And then," concluded Mr. Lewis, "1 learn the game went on the even tenor of Its way." New York World. Drlnkinir Water at Meal. If the Rockefeller . Institute ' has done nothing else In its history, Its report that drinking water at meals Is healthful would be sufficient to emblematize It in the minds of many persons. . From time immemorial the mass ot physicians have told people not to drink water while eating; to take plenty of It at other times, but never while the gastric Juices are at . work.. . , It wlll.be remembered by some of the older generation that fifty years ago water wa seldom if ever given patients suffering with fever. There was a lot of fixed rule which seem to have gained authority, but which were based on nothing but fallacious notions. In these days, of research every dictum is being Investigated and a .lot 'Of almost sacrosanct Ideas have gone down before the Iconoclasts. Boston Herald. C D. Vbodworth & Company 8HIPPERS OF Platte -'River Sand Vashed Gravel and Bank Said, Rip-Rap and Rubble Sione Fire Clay - vRock Island and Mo. Pac. R. R. 8TKAM DftKDtil.MO PLANTS AT lX)VISV!LIaE, NKH., on M. Pac. K. H. CKDAK CREEK, NKU., on O., B. & R. H. VALLEV, NKU., on U. P. R. R. MEADOWS, NEB., on C, R. I. & P. R. R. , " ' . . LOUISVILLE, NEB., on C, B. and Q. R. .U. . . ' . - " . - . 1 . ... Of float 403 Xarbach atlock. Fnon. Soar. 9053; Ind., A-2052. Omaha, Hb. OZOBOB FABII, President. JAME8 FA.KK8, o'y-Tra. The National Construction Cat. OFFICE: -Rooms 1 and 2 Elks' Building. YARDS: ' 28th and K Streets. . Telephone Douglas 289. OMAHA, NEB. Newman & Johnson Contractors and Builders i1 Office No, 7 Elks Building, . Omaha, Nebraska . . . Phone Douglas 1236 . OM EB& BRICK CO, ...HIGH GRIDE.... Building and Sewer Brick Prompt -Deliveries : a' Specialty. ri Second and Dorca Streets. , Telephone 3250. v. Q .- Hoy Wlllt-'d. A icnain btirlness man of Roche ter is of opin.on thai lie lias an exceedingly tirlglu oirice boy, ami nothini; p.cu?.a liim better than to tell how hr acquired tl.e yoiingxti-r's service. A notice had been oxtcd In I he man's lion window, winch itad as follows: "ioy wanted, about H yeuis." A lad of that hkv with Utile that was pi epotmesElns; in his appearance came into the office and stated that he bad lead the notice. "So, you think you would like to liave the position?" asked the merchant, patron islnaly, as he gased at the lad over the rim of ins spectacles. "Yea, sir," was the reply: "I want the Job, but I don't know thut I can promlxe to keep It foi the full fourteen years." Lipplntolt Mafc-aslne. . BUILDING CONSTRUCTION New York Boston Philadelphia Pittsburgh Washington Cleveland Chicago Omaha Salt Lake City Spokane Portland, Ore. San Francisco Sacramento Seattle Tacoma CONTRACTORS ON BRANDEIS THEATER BUILDING Omaha. Nebraska Q' him -iiiiiiiiitlWUMMI H J O o