Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 08, 1917, AUTOMOBILES, Page 5, Image 35

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    6 D
HEW BLOCK TO RISE
WHEAT SELLS FOR
$1.27, sold as high as $1.32 and as
low as $1.27. July opened at $1.26,
sold up to $1.3114, with the opening
the low price of the day. '
The market for oats was more
steady than either wheat or corn and
the fluctuation was between 68 and
6914 cents, an advance, however, of
2 to 2'i cents a bushel, even the low
being higher than any former price
Receipts were seventy-seven carloads.
War and a bullish crop report sent
out by the government's Agricultural
department, smaller acreage and re
ports of damage to wheat in most
states sent prices up from the start.
Superintendent Clemmons ia Better.
Fremont, Neb., April 7. (Special.)
State Superintendent W. H. Clem
mons has so far recovered from hit
recent illness that he was able to ap
pear in chapel yesterday morning ana
address the students at Fremont col
lege. He Is slowly regaining hit
strength,
Persistent Advertising It th Foa4
to Success.
NEW WOLF-HILLER BUILDING TO BE ERECTED SOON
Splendid new hotel which it to grace the corner of Six
teenth and Harney etreeta, where the Schilti hotel i now
located.
OH SCHUTZ CORNER
Ten-Story Business Building;
RECORDJARK, $2.31
Carload of Spring: Wheat
Will Supplant Hotel On
Sixteenth Street.
PLAN ANOTHER STRUCTURE
Brines This Phenomenal
Figure Here.
-fail' iliHilii
OPTIONS ADVANCE SHARPLY
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: APRIL 8, 1917.
Wrecking will begin May 1 on the
Schlitz hotel building to make room
tor the new Wolt-Hiller building,
whi.'.. is to be erected there as fast
as the work can progress. The Wolf
Hiller building is to be a ten-story
structure. The acompanying cut is
from the architect's drawing. Bids
will be opened this week, and the con
tract let as soon as advisable after
that.
The building is to cost upwards of
a half million dollars.
Harry A. Wolf had the following
to say regarding the new structure:
"The building will be of dark red
pressed brick, trimmed with terra
cotta. It will have three high class
stores on the ground floor and a
lobby to the hotel. The upper floors
will be occupied by the hotel, which
will have 240 rooms, each room with
a bath. The building is all rented.
The same ten..nts in the present build
ing are all going back except the
hotel, which was leased to the Con
ant Hotel company for a term of
twenty years.
Bought By Joslyn.
It will be recalled that the corner
was purchased by the late George
Alfred Joslyn in the year 1915. Mr.
Joslyn in t -n gave a ninety-nine-year
lease to Mr. H. A. Wolf on the con
dition that Mr. Wolf build a $200,
000 mercantile building. Mr. Wolf
has interesteiTwith him Henry Hiller
and Louis Hiller, his son. They have
organized the Commercial Realty
company, which took over the lease
and is now erecting a modern fire
proof hotel aftd business building,
costing upwards of two and one-half
times the original amount con
templated. '
The Commercial Realty company
nun ia iiiiiiriiTii
ibl lrP"r . -
Ml
has an option on the Nash lot, now
occupied by the Omaha United States
Rubber company and the Public mar
ket, adjoining the corner on Harney
i.reet, upon which they contemplate
to build a duplicate of this building
as soon as the business in the hotel
justifies an increase in capacity.
Another Belgian Relief
Steamship is Sunk
New York, April 7. The Belgian
relief steamship Anna Fostcnes, car
rying $350,000 worth of grain to Rot
terdam, has been sunk by a German
submarine. It carried no Americans.
Cash wheat sold for $2.31 a bushel
on the Omaha market Saturday, the
highest price ever recorded for the
actual grain at any point west of the
Atlantic seaboard.
The wheat that sold at the fabu
lous price was a carload of No. 2
spring raised in South Dakota, ship-
ged by the Farmers' Co-operative
rain company of Wagner, consigned
to the Brewsher Grain company of
Omaha and sold to the Maney Mill
ing company.
While the one car of spring sold
at $2.31, five more carloads of the
same variety of wheat sold from $2.24
up to $i.os.
Winter wheat, the standard variety
on the Omaha market, reached new
and former unheard of high levels
when it sold up to $2.25, with the
low for the grade stuff at $2.20.
There were sixty-three carloads of
wheat on the market and the price
was up 9 to I2li cents over Thurs
day's prices.
Options Advance.
The options scored about as much
of an advance as the cash grain, May
opening at $2.07 and ruiinini ud to
$2.14, with the low at $2.05 a bushel
July opened at $1.75, sold up to $1.88
1 J ... ! 1Ar ...1.1. t-.
and down to $1.74; a bushel.
In its upward night, corn could
hardly keep the pace set by wheat
but it made some remarkable gains
scoring new high points and making
gains of Sii to bY cents a bushel
There were 121 carloads ot the cereal
on the market and it sold all the way
from $1.31 to $1.33 a bushel.
The May option on corn opened at
The Studebaker SIX
The Latest and Best Studebaker Automobile
STUDEBAKER has spent four years
in perfecting a single basic automo
bile design.
Each year Studebaker has produced a
better car.
The Series 17 Studebakers offered such
remarkable values at their prices that the
entire output was sold early last August
The Series 18 is still better.
They embody ninety distinct improve
ments of mechanical construction, con
venience and comfort.
In ratio of power to weight they are
probably the most powerful cars on the
market
In ratio of power to gasoline consump
tion the most economical.
Their balance is refined to such a point
that a single set of tires frequently runs
from 8000 to 12000 miles.
Their lines are distinctive.
Their paint and varnish work excellent
Genuine leather is used for all uphol stery
leather not only genuine, bucy high
grade genuine leather. '
Their seats are formfitting, deep, com
fortable, luxurious.
See the Studebaker SIX, examine it
thoroughly, see how carefully every detail
is finished even the tonneau carpet is
bound with leather.
Ride in the Studebaker SIX, sense its
ease, its readability.
Then you will realize why at $1250 it is
the greatest "buy" on the automobile
market today.
Four-Cylinder Models
FOUR Roadster .... S98S
FOUR Touring Car . . . 5
FOUR Landau Roadster . 115
FOUR Every-Weather Car 1185
. All trie . Dm
STUDEBAKER-WILSON, Inc.
Farnam Street at 25th Avenue
OMAHA, NEB.
Sis-Cylinder Models
SIX Roadster .... 1125
SIX Touring Car . . . 125
SIX Landau Roadster . . 1351
SIX Touring Sedan . . 17H
SIX Coupe 175
SIX Limousin . . . . 2600
All trlta f.t.t.Dttnll
Production
Doubled
People everywhere want Cole
Eights more people than ever before.
We are working tooth and nail to
keep up with the demand.
Production has been doubled.
And it is doubtful if even this in
crease will meet the demand.
Such leadership such popularity
can be accredited only to Cole perform
ance, Cole quality, Cole ideals.
No other Eight approaches the Cole
Eight in gas, oil and tire economy.
No other car of any kind excels the
Cole Eight in power, smoothness and
dependability.
Our engineers have taken advantage
of every worth-while improvement.
And Cole coach work, Cole finish,
Cole appointments, Cole equipment are
unsurpassed.
Let us demonstrate.
Price
Seven-Passenger Cole-Sprlngfleld
Touraedan ....$2,21
Four-Passenger Cole-Springfield
Tourcoupe 52,295
Cole-Springfield Four-Door '
Touraedan $2,41
Seven-Passenger Cole Eight
Touring Car 11,75
Four-Passenger Cola Eight
Roadster ..fl.TM
Prices f. o. b. Factory
Subject to Chang Without Notice
Owing to the large extent of eur
operations wa art able to secure
prompt deliveries and eur financial
resource enable ua to store a large
number of can, thus Insuring prompt
deliveries, for the present at least,
Some very valuable territory In
Iowa and Northern Nebraska Is open
for good dealers.
De Brown Auto Sales Company
Wholesale, Distributors
Traynor Automobile Co. Retail Distributors, Omaha
2210 Farnam St. P bona Douglas 5268
De Moines, 1414 Locust St
"Honettly Built
When you have a car that is sold at a reasonable price,
and one that has the power, the durability and appearance",
that good taste demands you are.satisfied. , . ....
When such a car can be operated and its upkeep main-;
tained at an economic figure, you may enjoy, to the fullest
extent, the pleasure it affords you through its long years of.
service. "
Such a car is the HOLLIER. ,
Its builders back it with fifteen years of experience in ,
automobile manufacturing and we, the T. G. Northwall Co.;
are backing our twenty-seven years of experience in passen
ger conveyance with this wonderful value. '
Let us demonstrate the Hollier models before you buy.
It will cost you nothing and may be the means of giving you
a new conception of automobile values.
HOLLIER "SIX"
ms
I. o. b. Chelsea, Mich.
HOLLIER "EIGHT"
H185
t. o. b. Chelsea, Mich.
The T. G. F'orthwall Co:
Omaha ; Sioux City
i-'H ii I, 4 j -tl-r 1-W W-'I'WgEM