Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 25, 1919, Page 11, Image 11

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    THE BEE : OMAHA, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1919.
11
REAL ESTATE UNIMPROVED
West
$1,000
(in lot In Benson. Will Uki $1,000
cash for the bunch If Ukm together.
Lota adjoining are selling from 1300 to
moo often, muii ciom tnese out at one.
A real bargain.
CALL OWNER,
Tyler 1540.
South.
BIO BARGAIN LOTS.
ii.oo down, ii.oo a Week
bays flno garden tract, 47x132; only t
blocks from west center car lino ana
on block to paved street;1 high and
signtly. duck eon; price zti ana M0
THE BTRON REED CO.,
1111 Farnam. Douglaa 217.
FOR SALE by owner, corner lot. 10th and
WHiiam, siqox 3,3M. nougia47a
REAL ESTATES-SUBURBAN.
Council Bluffs.
FOR SALE.
IS lota located at the corner of ITtb
treet and th avenue, with eewer and
water In street. Inquire of owner. Louie
Schneider, Wick ham BlocK. council
Blurt. la.
7-ROOM HOUSE, cloae to achool; away
from mud and water. Term. Call
Red 654. .
Dundee.
DUNDEE.
Thi attractive two-atory ami attic
alucco houae, with red tile roof, la lo
cated between Farnam and Dodge ate
near Happy Hollow; la nearly new and
built for convenience; refinement and
comfort: has pressed brick foundation,
full cemented basement, vacuum vapor
heating- plant, stationary laundry tubs,
special built fruit-vegetable cellar, soft
water In go-gallon taiiK. coal Din, touec,
etc.; flrat floor has the front vestibule,
with coat closet, large living room, jrlck
fireplace and built-in bookcases, attrac
tive sun parlor and dining room, with
French doora. all finished In birch and
mahogany; breakfast room, large
kitchen with Duut-in teatures, ic dox
rooms, all finished In white enamel;
econd floor ha three good sized bed
rooms, til bathroom with baa tub and
pedestal lavatory, outside porch which
could easily be converted Into deeping
porch, all finished in wht enamel; oak
floor throughout; third floor has two
room and hall finished and three store
room; 2i rafters, 2x4 girder first
floor, 2x13 econd, 2x third; up-to-date
llghtlntng fixture, wll plug where
necessary for lamps, ' vacuum cleaner
and electrlo appliance; Chamberlain
weather atrip nd storm aah for all
window; concrete porch and atepa,
combination cement driveway, beautiful
lawn and shrubbery ;lot 60xl feet.
Price, 114,000; reasonable term. Quick
poeslon. If Interested see
GEORGE & CO.,'
REALTORS.
02 City Natl Bank.
Douglas 76.
DELIGHTFUL HOME
ON EAST SIDE
HAPPY HOLLOW
CIRCLE.
Just listed for Immediate aale a real
bargain in the very best part of Dun
dee. It' a south front (0x125 ft. lot
on grade with all publlo utilities paid
for. The house ha a large living; room
across front and large dining room all
in oak finish and oak floors: kitchen,
pantry and rear vestibule downstair;
three tine bedrooms and roomy bath
upstairs: floored attlo and dandy base
ment. Entire premise In the pink of
condition and with beautiful home
126,000 and upwards close by. Price
18,000: one-half sash, for quick sale.
Shown by appointment only. Bee us
for particulars.
PAYNE & SLATER CO.,
1 Omaha Nat. Bank Bldg. Doug. 101".
DUNDEE LOT
BARGAIN.
In the newest part of Dundee ad
joining Happy Hollow Circle, beautiful
lot overlooking Elmwood park at the
extremely low price of 1,800. Thla cer
tainly la a bargain. Paving paid to
d D. V. SHOLES CO.,
REALTORS.
Pouglae 46. 915 City Nat. Bank Bldg.
DUNDEE.
$6,750.
Seven-room, all modern and In fin condi
tion. Four fine bed rooma and bath aec
ond floor. Large attic. An unusually
well constructed home on a first-class
corner lot only on block from school
and close to car line. 12,750 cash. Bal
ance monthly. Oarage.
WALSH-ELMER CO.,
(Formerly Armstrong Walsh Co.)
Tyler 1536. 333 Securities Bldg.
""DUNDEE BARGAIN,
$4,300.
All modern bungalow very flse con
dition, on one floor; has stairway to
econd story, which' Is floored, having
aeven windows and space to build two
more rooms If necessary; house ha full
basement, floor drain, fine parkins In
front: specials all paid. .
BIRKETT & CO.,
J50 Bee Bldg. Douglas 632.
"For" SALE Beautiful Dundee home,
atrlctly modern, 7 rooms and sleeping
porch. If you are looking- for a home
ee this. Garage. 16.800.
MOREARTY & CONBOT, Be Bldg.
Phone Doug. 3841. Tyler 4677 W.
South Side.
FOR SALE By owner, atrlctly modern
t-room house; large sleeping porch;
double cement garage: close to achool
and car line; lot 50x130; best buy In
South Omaha; must sell this week.
Price 14.200; about $1,500 will handle
4429 Bo. 1MB m.
IA3 J. FITZGERALD. 4231 South 24tb
St., "lnsuranc." Buy and til property.
Real estate mortgage loa-j promptly
ill ntia
you want a real home, at a bargain,
you should see Jaa. H Kopietx. real e
tate InvcstmentsTjSquUifthBt
REAL ESTATE-OTHER CITIES
"9 LOCK OF 13 LOTS, Council Bluff, right
PflWflSO ID! l"U VllICB, iUUU HIIU
ground and Improving steadily around
It: fin for horn or Investment at 21.200
for the hunch. McGee Real Eatate Co..
105 Pearl 8t.. Council Bluffs.
HOME FOR SALE, 12.600.
' Terms 3500 cast, bal. 330 monthly.
' Seven-room house, mod. ex. heat; good
condition, east front, trees; Just vacated.
imiatDltlB pUBSVSSlVII. IO.V
N. 25th St. T. F. Peyton. Sioux City,
REAL ESTATE WANTED.
BUNGALOWS WANTED.
We have cash buyer for well-located
bungalow and residence worth the
money. For quick result, list with us.
O'NEIL'S R. E. A INS. AGENCY.
412-4 Brandel Theater Bldg.
Tel. Tyler t024.
X HAVE a man who will buy your im
proved property and pay caah for It,
but the price must be right.
GEORGE F. JONES, REALTOR.
2S City Nat. Bk. Bldg. Doug. 1M.
LlST your property with us. We have
calls far homes and Investments.
McCAGUE INV. CO.
'Phpne D. 415. 16th snd Dodge.
WANTED TO BUT Modern, 6 -room
house: must be In good condition; pre-
ferably west. M-tl, Omaha Be.
LOW ratea without delay.
C G. CARLBBRG.
812 Brandeis Theater Bldg.
IF your property la for sale or rent, list
It with the AFRO-AMERICAN REALTY
CO.. 3705 Lake. Webster 540.
FOR quick results list your property with
a P BOSTWICK SON.
SO Bee Bid. Tyler 1606.
FOP quick sale list your property witb
W. G. SHRIVER.
I04T-3 Om. Nat. Bk, Bldg. Doug. 1633.
LIST your property for sale with J. B.
Robinson for quick sale. 443 Bee Bldg.
Phone. Douglas 3037.
FINANCIAL.
Private Money.
SHOPEN A COMPANY. Doug. 4223.
Real Estate. Loans and Mortgages
H and 3 p. o. loans on real estate. Private
- money. R. J. Shields. 503 Keellne. D. 6333.
, GEOLOGICAL oil lease bargains for specu
lation or arguing, in to J.oou acres.
Dwlght Perry. Edmond. Okl.
11 CO to 31". 09 MADB promptly F IT
, Weed. Wead Bldg., 18th and Farnam.
BRINGING UP FATHER
Sh Jiff ! Mafgis) in Full
Pag of Colors in The) Sunday Boo.
Drawn for The Bee by McManus
Copyright 1819 International New Service,
MS. MA-CK A.RONEY
WILL CALL TONICHT
AND I WANT TOO
TO ENTERTAIN J
HIM-
DO I HAVE TO
IN TO HIM?
-
k
FT"
Li
A 1
4&
AH!
HAVE AfcEAUTIFUL
HOME -IT'S NICE
AND Q,JIET HERE.
IT ! NOW
GOT TOO OlXHTj
TO DE here
SOMETIMES
iSfii-,1
RIHT TWROO5H
HERE l THE
SERVANTS ROOMS
HOW MANX
SERVANT
WORK FOr
Von?
rv-1
1 &J,M
oh: a&out
one third
OF THEM
A "
V? . A'
a7- -r
7SS
FINANCIAL.
OMAHA HOMES EAST NEB. FARMS
O'KEEFE REAL ESTATE CO.
1013 Om. Nat. Bk. Bldg. Doug. 2718.
MONEY t6 lend on improved real estate.
Interest payable semi-annually. W. H.
THOMAS & SON, 223 Keellne Bldg.
CITY and farm loans; 6 and 6 per cent;
no delay. J. H. Dumont A Co., 412
Keellne Bldg
5-YEAR 6 per cent loans; no delay.
DAT MAYNE. 505 Keellne Bldg,
FARM AND RANCH LANDS.
Acreage.
The Best, None Better.
43 acre all level rich soil, all In crop,
good 7-room house, big barn, etc., on
mat. i road near lnterurban, 63d and L,
about 2V4 miles west of Packing Houses.
Just the size and kind to make you
independent. Snap. 3600 per. Clear,
cash.
CHAPEK, Brand. Thea. Bldg., Omaha.
Colorado Lands.
HAVE level perfect section near Haawell,
Colo., for 31150 per acre net, quick
cash; deep chocolate loam, clay subsoil;
water about 40 ft.; no alkali or defects;
Improved places adjoin; nearby wheat
ran 21 to 30 bushels, and corn is look
ing fine. No terms can be had. It la a
bargain available only to a man with
present cash; on terms land near It Is
selling fer 315 to 317 per acre. Address
Box M-82. care Omaha Bee.
LOW PRICED EASTERN COLORADO
LAND.
Come with us next Tuesday for the
Flagler district and aecure a farm where
price are still low 325 to 340. Don't
watt phone ua today. D. 4254. Shedd
Investment Company. Railway Ex
change, Omaha.
10,000 ACRES choice raw or Improved Lin
coln Co., Colo., lands. Bargains. Eajv
terms. See J. L. Maurer. Arriba. Coin
Iowa Lands.
FOR SALE by owner 140 acres good
corn land m Adair counry, Iowa, near
Greenfield. Price 3235 per acre; im
provements. Also 220 acres near by
with elegant Improvements; a top
notcher. Price 3265 per acre
PAUL PETERSON. 364 BRANDEIS
THEATER BLDG. Phone D. 1805, or
call at Res., Walnut 3106.
Nebraska Lands
FOR SALE at bargain price, 6(9 acrea 20
miles due south of Bushnell, Kimball
county, Nebraska. Main auto road due
south out of Bushnell passes along east
line; school H mile north; places ad
Joining on north and on south are Im
proved; 500 acres is level to very gently
rolling plow land; 1(0 acre toward
N. W. corner I more rolling to hilly,
with wide hay valley; all heavily
grassed, dark loam soil; good wheat
land, and year In and year out better
corn Is raised there than nearer Bush
nell. Legal No. Sec. 13, Tp. 11. Rge. (3,
Weld Co.. Colo., 6 mile south' of Kim
ball Co. line. All land advertised from
this section on into Bushnell is priced
at 332.50 up. My price. 320 per acre;
33.300 cash; 36,620 cash Nov. 1, bal.
34.280 June 1, 1923, at 6 per cent annu
ally. Will F. Sledentopf, Owner, Coun
cil Bluffs, Iowa.
FARM of 160 acres, 4 mile from court
house, H mile to grade achool, mile
to high school, churches, cream sta
tion; joins town of Loup City. Surface
mostly rolling. Nature of soli, clay sub
soil with black loam. Pasture and hay
land, (0 acres; farm land, 100 acrea;
45 fruit trees. Fenced and cross-fenced.
Six-room house lately rebuilt. Barn
32x45; large hay loft. Chicken houae,
buggy shed, windmill, cistern; water
piped to house and barn. Price 3105.00
per acre, easy terms. Deal with owner
only. Hiram Cramer, Lock Box 585.
Loup City, Neb.
2,000 ACRES
Sheridan county; 10 mllea aoutb of
Gordon; 3 miles Niobrara river frontage;
1,000 acrea beat farm land; balance best
of pasture; with timber along river and
In two large drawa Priced much below
anything else offered in this county.
B H A R. R. MONTGOMERY.
2lj City Nat'l Bk. Bldg. Omaha. Neb.
FOR SALE Good 300-acre farm. Jolna
city of Lexington on the east; no unaer
plow; orchard and alfalfa; good pas
ture, fenced: good Improvements. Only
3150 per acre. E. F. Delahunty. Box 2(3.
Lexington, neo.
FOR SALE 160 acres adjoining town of
4,000 in central Nebraska; an cumvaieu;
3165 per acre; no Improvements; perfect
oil. A. W. Toland. 594 Brandela Bldg..
Dougla 6707.
FOR Western Nebraaka and Eastern Col
orado land e
HELD LAND CO.,
664 Brandel Bldg.
WRITE me for pictures and price of my
farms and ranchea In good oia uawes
county. Arah L. Hungerford, Craw
ford. Neb.
PRICE and terma right on northeast Ne
braska Improved corn and alfalfa rarma.
C. V. Nelson, 513 Om. Nat. B);. Bldg.
MERRICK COUNTY, Improved corn and
alfalfa farma at the right price, m. -
LARSON. Central city, wen.
IMPROVED and unimproved wheat farm.
Kimball county, jNeo. h. a. noimss,
Bi'ehnell, Neb.
FOR NEBRASKA LANDS SEE
A. A. PATZMAN,
801 Karbach Blk. Tyler 184.
Oregon Lands.
JORDAN VALLEY, Oregon, offer you a
home In the land of surname, wner
condition ar right for raising alfalfa
and cattle. Address Jordan Valley
Farm. Boise. Idaho.
South Dakota Lands.
RANCH FOR SALE.
4,680 acrea deeded land, 8,000 acrea
leased land. Fair Improvement. Tim
ber for ahad. Good grass and abund
ance of water. Ranch all fenced and
cross-fenced.
Owner of thla ranch 15 yeara ago waa
riding the range for 330 per month.
Today be la able to retire. You will
receive the benefit of hla yeara of
hustling. Don't waste time writing;.
Come and Investigate. Price 325.00 per
acre for deeded land; leases thrown in.
THE O'REILLY LAND CO..
Draper. S. D.
Miscellaneous.
240-Acre Record Crop
Central West Farm, $7,700
120 acres smooth loam tillage, clay
subsoil, has grown 100 bu. corn per
acre, 40 bu. wheat; 60 cow wire-fenced
pasture: 15 acrea wood, timber, fruit;
near R. R. town; 12-room house, 120
foot cow barn, horse barn, corn cribs,
granary, etc. To settle affairs, quick
buyer gets all, 37,700: easy terms. De
taila page 83, Catalog Bargain It
State, copy free. Strout Farm Agency,
831 B. F. New York Life Bldg., Kansas
city.
For Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota
farms and ranches, see
ALEXANDER & GIPE,
Doug. 9008. 622 Paxton Blk.
FARM LANDS WANTED.
WE will sell your farm; timely aalee,
quicK returns. aciu una uk, 00
Brandeis Bldg.
AUTOMOBILES
RENT A NEW FORD
DRIVE IT YOURSELF
13 CENTS PER MILE
YOU ARE COVERED BY INSUR
ANCE AGAINST LIABILITY RESULT
ING FROM ACCIDENT.
(3 NEW 191 MODEL FORD CARS.
FORD LIVERY CO..
DOUG. 3622. 1J14 HOWARD.
PROMPT DELIVERY ON ALL MODELS.
NEBRASKA WHITE CO.
FRED C ROGERS, MGR. TYLER 173T.
1407-21 Capitol Av.
USED cara of exceptional value.
GUY L. SMITH,
3563 Farnam ' Sous. 1873.
AUTOMOBILES
For Sale.
SEE
WESTERN MOTOR
CAR CO.,
2047 FARNAM ST.
For Rebuilt Tires
1818 WILLYS-KNIGHT. T PASSENGER.
1318 CHALMERS DEMO, 6 PASSEN-
1918 BUICK TOURING. 3 PASSENGER.
1918 CHALMERS ROADSTER DEMO.
1917 MITCHELL TOURING.
1917 MAXWELL TOURING.
1918 MAXWELL TOURING; NEW.
1919 MAXWELL TOURING DEMO.
THESE CARS CAN HE BOUGHT ON
TIME PAYMENTS IF DESIRED.
WESTERN MOTOR
CAR CO.,
2047 Farnam Street,
Omaha, Neb.
DISTRIBUTORS MAX
WELL, CHALMERS
AND PEERLESS."
UNITED AUTO PARTS
COMPANY,
Used Car Department.
$650 VALUES.
1918 Ford Sedan, 3650.
1818 Ford Coupe, 3660.
1918 Ford Coupe. 650.
1918 Baby Grand Chevrolet, 3650.
BARGAINS.
Dodge Roadster, $1,000.
Oldamoblle Six Roadster. 3850.
1917 Dodge Touring, 3760.
1913 Rebuilt Ford, 3360.
1818 Mitchell Touring, J660.
"C" 31 Bulck, 3200. ,
1918 Oakland (six) Touring, $800.
UNITED AUTO PARTS
COMPANY,
Used Car Department.
2032 Farnam Street.
MY SEVEN-PASSENGER PACKARD
TOURlIMii t;Atl run DlliOi . w. .
CALLY NEW; SPLENDID SHAPE t
84 000. WILL CONSIDER LIBERTY
BONDS. P. D. ASKEW. TYLER 3348.
MEEKS. AUTO CO.
Used ear bought, sold and exchanged.
W buy for cash and sell on time. Full
line to seleot from. Middle Stete Garage.
2026-8 Farnam St. Doug. 4101.
18 FERIES Studebaker touring car, must
be sold at once. Flrat $550 take t;
guaranteed In order. 4713 North $lt
Ave. Phone, uonax suss.
USED CARS AND TRUCKS.
AT BARGAIN riUUISB.
STANDARD MOTOR CAR CO.
2020 Farnam St. Omaha, Neb.
FORDS, BUICKS. DODGE, NEW AND
UHKU UAK9, ruitli DUUlM,
O ROURKE-GOLDSTROM AUTO CO..
3701 SOUTH 218T ST. 8QUTH 389.
" A. LEE & COMPANY, "
Expert automobile washer, slmonyers ana
polishers; all work guaranteed. 2307
,o.k a. V1.af Cart, ao Ph Web. 207.
IQm DU - .nw. VJm .-o - .- -
FOR SALE Seven-passenger Locomobile;
- . l T7. T THa,tr-
cneap. inquire ,nuwr c. mvb,
tone Garage, 19th and Douglas.
FORD MARKET.
2230 Farnam.
Cash, Time. Liberty Bonds.
$100 Reward for any magneto we can't re
nttii. RniM mnfra. nf new self-SDaclng af
finity spark plug. Bayadorfer. 210 N. 18th
NEB. BUICK AUTO CO.,
19th an dHoward SU. Tyler 1760
WHEN ynu think of uaed cars think of
TRAWVER AUTO CO.,
1910 Farnam.
AUTOMOBILE electrical repaira; service
station for Rayfleld. carburetors and
Cojumbla storage batteries. Edwards.
WANTEDi FOR SPOT CASH, 100 USED
CARS; quick action; no delay. Auto Ex
ekanga Cc, 2059 Farnam St. D. 6035.
" 'THE DIXIE FLYER.
W. R. NICHOLS MOTOR COMPANY
2520 Farnam St.
FOR TERMS ON USED CABS
VAN BRUNTlS
FOR SALE Maxwell one-ton truck; run
about 600 mile; box and cab. Price
3976. Herbert F. Lessmann, Wayne,
Neb.
BARGAINS IN USED CARS.
McCaffray Motor Co.
18th Jackson. Ford Agents. D. $500.
sUTOMOBILE wanted; must be service
able and priced right tor cash. Call
Webster io.
SIX-CYLINDER roadster for sale. Flrst-
class condition, very ciassy. xiou ovo.
402 North Sixteenth St
OAKLAND, Sensible 8ix.
MARSH OAKLAND CO.
2300 Farnam St
HERE'S a Ford sedan bargain; looks like
.1 ,.!., . r. .. t. . . i
new car; laieiy uvcumuitu, vji hj-l.. .
starter. Phone Harney 3119.
Cars for Hire.
FORDS AND LARGE CARS FOR HIRE.
Drive yourself; at very reasonable
rices; no extra to pay. Nebraska
ervlc Garage, 19th and Farnam
Dougla 7390.
Tires and SupUies.
Tires at Half Price
DRY-CURE PROCESS.
We make them good as new. New
ribbed tread. Non
Plain. Ribbed. skid.
30x3 $ 3.80 10.00 11.00
30x3 10 50 11.50 13.03
12x3tt 12-50 12.50 14.50
83x4 IS O 1?.25 19.60
54x4 17.00 17.60 20.25
12x4 15-00 16-60 18.00
GUARANTEED 3.600 MILES.
BEST ON THE MARKET.
2-in-l Vulcanizing Co.
WE will ahlp. aubject to examination, oui
3.600-mlla guaranteed tlrea at these
price;
Plain. Non-Skid
$0x2 $7.30 $ 9 90
30x3H 3 96 11 91'
3x3M 10.60 12.6(1
34x4 12.00 14.76
Expres prepaid when caah accompanies
orden .
Standard Tire Co.,
410 North Kth St Phone Dougla 3830
NEW TIRES 1-2 PRICE
Firestone, Congress, Lee Pullman, Flsk.
Write for prices. Mention size.
NEW AND USED TIRE BARGAINS.
SEE US FIRST AND 8AVE MONEY.
FARNAM TIRE AN DRUBBER CO..
H. 8768. .2914 FARNAM' ST.
GAIN more miles; have your tlrea re
treaded by G. A G. Tire Co.
2416 Leavenworth. Tyler 1261-W.
NO need for steam aoaked carcassea vYe
ret:ead and rebuild tlrea by Dry-Cure
process. Ideal Tire Service. U7 Har
noy St
KA1MAN TIRE JOBBERS. 2016 Farnam.
Repairing; and Painting.
F. P. BARNUM CO., 2126 Cuming. Doug
la 8044. High grade automobile painting.
Motorcycles and Bicycles.
SARLEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES
Bargain In used machine. Victor II
Roos. th Motorcycle man. 87tb and
Leavenworth Street.
FOR SALE Used bicycle for girl, 8 to
13 yeara old; ftrst-clasa condition. Will
ell at a sacrifice if taken at once.
Phone Harney 899.
GOOD USED CARS.
GUT U SMITH.
PERSONAL.
THE SALVATION Army Industrial home
solicits your old clothing, furniture,
magazines. We collect We distribute
Phone Doug. 4135 and our wagon will
call. Call and Inspect our new home.
1110-1112-1114 Dodge St.
SHAMPOO with Skinner's Dope, all barber
shops and barber supply houses, for
falling hair and dandruff. -
POULTRY AND PET STOCK.
WHITE ROCK and White Wyandottes, 3
to 8 weeks old; 50. Reasonabls. Web
' ster 4836.
MIXED hen food, 84.25 per hundred. A.
W. Wagner. 801 N. 16th St. Dg. 1142.
BULL TERRIER puppies, 310 South 11th.
Call Douglas 2207.
THOROUGHBRED toy Boston bull dog.
606 N. 33d. Apt. 12
Horses Live Stock Vehicles.
2,000-LB TEAM young mules; also 2,800
lb. team of 5 and 7 year old Drown geld
ings; new farm wagon -and harness No
reasonable cash offer refuesd. Recently
discharged from service. Must sell thi
week. 2228 Mason St.
BROOD SOWS
Buy on Btrdhaven Profit Staring Plan.
Phone Web. 2884. O. 8. Pettis. Ageat.
Harness, Saddle and Trunks.
W Make Them Ourselves.
ALFRED CORNISH & CO.. 1210 Faraam
GOOD young family cow; will come In
fresh In a few day; very good milker.
6218 No. 34th St. Colfax 4160.
MONEY TO LOAN.
LOANS ON DIAMONDS,
WATCHES, ETC.
EAGLE LOAN OFFICE
1301 DOUGLAS ST.
ORGANIZED by the Business Men of
Omaha. FURNITURE, pianos and
notes as security. $40 6 mo., H. goods,
total, $3.60.
PROVIDENT LOAN SECURITT.
432 Security Bldg. 16th & Farnam. Ty. 368.
FARMS and city loans.
E. H. LOUGEE, INC..
638 Keellne Bldg
Ure Takes Interest
In Accident Case;
Defendant Is Freed
City Commissioner Ure was in
police court yesterday in the inter
ests of W. B. Bryans, 1911 Emmet
street, arrested Wednesday night by
police after a machine l.e was driv
h.g crashed into one operated by
Albert Tielander, Verdigre, Neb.
The accident occurred at Twenty
fourth and Farnam streets.
Mrs. W. A. Van Orman, 4740 Q
street, a passenger in Tielander's
car, was hurled from the vehicle.
She suffered bruises.
Commissioner Ure sat at the
right of City Prosecutor Murray
and in low tones prompted the lat
ter throughout the hearing.
Bryans was discharged.
Tielander said he turned north
on Twenty-fourth street from Far
nam street and was in the center of
the intersection when Bryans' car
struck the rear wheel.
The Russian empire embraces
one-aixth of the entire land surface
of the globe. Half of Europe and
the whole of northern Asia are in
cluded within it boundaries
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
FURNITURE FOR SALE 8 rooms; dining
room table and chairs; kitchen rabln:t;
rocking chairs; all kinds of household
goods; encyclopedia, 15 volumes. 4824
South 22d St., Tel. So. 2370.
Fifty Sugar Beet Farms
FOR SALE
Here are a few :
Farm No. 4 162.53 acres. 127 irrigable. Un
improved. Two and one-half miles to Guthrie Beet
Dump. Price $7,000. Terms, $1,000 cash, balance on
or before five years.
Farm No. 6 80 acres. All irrigable. 20 acres
in corn. Improvements worth $3,000. Four-room
house, barn, chicken house, granary. y miles to
Guthrie Beet Dump. Price $11,000. Terms, cash
$3,500, balance in five years.
Farm No. 16 79.6 acres. 67.9 irrigable. 2
miles to Broadwater. Will cut 30 tons of hay this year.
Price $6,000. Terms, $1,250 cash, balance in five
years.
Fifty other irrigated farms, improved and unim
proved. Write or call on us if you want choice locations
now before the best are gone. On August 15th all
prices will advance $5 or more per acre.
Farm .No. 17 80 acres. 71.8 irrigable. 2V2 miles
to Broadwater. Improvements worth $3,000. 65 acres
in crops. Price $10,000. Cash $3,500, balance on or
before five years. '
You have heard of the famous irrigated lands
around Scottsbluff, Neb. That country has been
widely advertised. We did not fully realize how ad
vertising paid until we saw the land around Scotts
bluff selling for prices as high as $500 per acre. We
have the same kind of lands, water by the same river,
with water rights just as good and water taxes only
one-ninth as much. Our land3, without irrigation, raise
crops as good as the dry lands around Chappell, Neb.,
which are selling for $125 per acre, because they are
good and advertising has convinced the people they
are good. We get the same price for our crops and
raise the same quantity and quality of crops as the
lands around Scottsbluff, and pay a smaller tax for
water, so our farms will make you more money at the
same price, but our prices are much less. They will
not be less when the advertising we do shows the peo
ple what we have. If you want a good farm, buy now.
Write or call on us if you want a choice location.
f
Central States
Investment Co.
1109 Woodmen of the World Building, Omaha, Neb.
Phone Douglas 54.
NEUMAN & CANADA Y, Agent
Bridgeport, Nebraska, and Broadwater, Nebraska
When Buying Advertised Goods
Say You Read of Thern in The Bee
How Do You Stand on Biggest
Issue In the World Today
Ratification of The Treaty?
It Is Not Only the Problem of the Hour in America,
But All Europe Has Its Eye Turned Toward Wash
ington. Fill Out Coupon and Mail It To The Bee.
How do you stand on the League of Nations?
Are you in favor of ratification of the covenant as it
stands, or its acceptance with certain reservations which,
some of the leading senators contend, are absolutely neces
sary for the proper protection of the Interests of America?
The issue, which not only is attracting the attention of
the United States, but the whole world, briefly is this:
President Wilson and the majority of the administration
senators favor ratification of the treaty without any restric
tions whatever.
The opposition, not alone confined to the republicans,
but which is led by Senators Lodge, Reed, Borah, Knox and
Poindexter, are fighting for certain reservations, particu
larly in connection with Article 10 which, they claim, does
away with the Monroe doctrine, and the Shantung award.
How Article X Reads.
"The members of the league un
dertake to respect and preserve as
against external aggression the ter
ritorial integrity and existing po
litical independence of all members
of the league. In case of any such
aggression, or in case of any threat
or danger of such aggression, the
council shall advise upon the means
by which the obligation shall be
fulfilled."
Opponents of the league construe
this clause as robbing the United
States congress of its constitutional
rights to declare a state of war.
War can only be declared by the
league of nations, and should the
league of nations choose to declare
war against a power of the world,
the United States, as a member of
the league, would have to heed the
call of the league, instead of put
ting the vote for a declaration of
war up to the elected members of
congress.
What Opposing Senators Want.
That nothing in article X shall be
construed to obligate the United
States to enter war without a de
claration of war by congress.
That nothing in the covenant
shall in any way impair the Monroe
doctrine or curtail the nation's
prerogative of administering it as
a purely national policy.
That it shall be understood that
in accepting the covenant the
United States does not forfeit its
sovereign right to determine purely
domestic problems such as immi
gration and the tariff.
Shantung Clause.
The Shantung clause is based
upon a secret agreement between
Japan on one side and Great Britain
and France on the other. The
clause demands that all territory,
before the war serving German in
terests, and located in the Pacific
north of the equator, should go to
Japan, and all the territory south of
the equator to Great Britain. The
French and British made the prom
ise to Japan that they would indorse
these claims at the peace table in
a secret treaty in July, 1916.
The Shantung treaty alone turns
over a populace of more than 40,
000,000 and one of the richest if not
the richest territory of China to
Japan. The only reason for Amer
ica's indorsing the Shantung clause
is said to be the refusal of Japan to
become a member of the league of
nations if her claims to Shantung
should be refused.
The awarding of Shantung to
Japan was bitterly opposed by the
American Peace Delegates Lansing,
White and Bliss, but agreed to by
the president.
Opponents of the Shantung clause
offered these. arguments:
Acquired By Robbery.
That the German rights in
Shantung were acquired by robbery.
That China having fought Ger
many, German rights in China
should have reverted to China.
That the fact that the Japanese
ousted the Germans from Shantung
gave them no more rights or title
through conquest, than the French
British acquired to the territory of
Belgium from which they ousted
the Germans:
That the action of Japan in forc
ing an ally through military menace
to cede it the German rights by
treaty was not an action which
ought to command the indorsement
of the other allies and the United
States.
That the stripping of an ally of
her territory to buy the good will
of a power that seeks to dominate
that nation and its people would
nofl only be shockingly violative of
the purposes for which the United
States went to war, but would be
an act of unparalleled infamy.
That indorsement of the seizure
would be in sad contrast with the
previous history of the 'United
States, all of whose wars have been
to right wrongs of its own and for
eign peoples, and never to under
write them.
Could Demand Aid.
Should China, at any lime, make
an attempt to take the "lost prov
ince," Shantung, away from Japan
by declaring war upon her, Amer
ica, as a member of the league of
nations, would immediately have to
come to the aid of Japan. If the
league of nations government thus
decides, provided the treaty is ac
cepted by the senate without reservations."
Peace Treaty Coupon
Here's your chance to show how ybu stand. Put an
X on the Peace Treaty coupon indicating whether you fa
vor ratification with or without reservations, or are op
posed to the league as a whole, and mail it to Peace Treaty
Editor of The Omaha Bee. Your vote will be sent direct
to the senator from your district. -
How I Stand On Peace Treaty
I favor ratification WITHOUT reservations
I favor ratification only WITH certain reservations . .
I am against the League of Nations as a whole
Name i . . . .
Address ; . . .
The Weather.
Local Comparative Record.
' m IMS 1117 11
Highest Thursday 95 82 90 7
Lowest Thursday 68 69 7 72
Mean temperature 82 80 80 84
Precipitation
Temperature and precipitation depar
tures from the normal: i
Normal temperature 77 degrees
Excess for the day 6 degrees
Total excess since March 1... 219 degrees
Normal precipitation 14 Inch
Deficiency for the day 14 Inch
Deficiency since March 1 4.39 lnchea
Deficiency for corresponding
period In 1918 8.06 Inches
Deficiency for corresponding
period in 1917 157 Inches
REPORTS FROM STATIONS AT7 P. M.
Station and Temp. HiKheat Prec.
State of Weather. 7 p. m. today. 24 hrs.
Cheyenne, cloudy 74 84 T
Davenport, clear 8 90
Denver, cloudy 86 94 ..
Des Moines, pertly cldy.90 94 ..
Dodge City, clear 92 92
Lander, psrtly cloudy.. 80 92 ..
North Platte, clear 94 94
Omaha, clear 92 95 .,
Pueblo, clear 94 94
Rapid City, clear 94 94 .02
Salt Lake, clear 96 96
Santa Fe, partly cloudy. 80 80
Sheridan, cloudy 86 96
Sioux City, cloudy 88 88
"T" Indicates trace of precipitation.
1. A. WELSH, Meteorologist.
Pioneer Bellevue Woman
Dies at Home of Daughter
Mrs. Adeline Beckstead, pioneer
Bellevue woman and widow of El
ton Beckstead, who pointed out the
grave of Logan Fontenelle, last
chief of the Omaha tribe, died Wed
nesday night at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Nellie Busch. She
was 72 years old and had been a
resident of Bellevue for 47 years.
She is survived by four sons, Frank,
William, Lawrence and Phinios; and
four daughters, Mrs. Mary Vanar
num, Mrs. Addie Carper, Mrs. Nellie
Busch and Mrs. Edna Houghtaling
of Brownsville, Tex.
The funeral will be held Friday
afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from the
home of Lawrence Beckstead in
Bellevue. Burial will be in the
Bellevue cemetery. Rev. Steven A.
Phelps will conduct the funeral
service.
Direct wireless communication
between England and Australia haa
been effected with the Marconi sys
tem. The distance ts between 12,
000 to 13,000 miles.
South Side
NAME MEDIATOR
TO END STRIKE
IN STOCK YARDS
Workers From Harvest Fields
Replace Strikers and Con
ditions Are Said to Be
Normal.
Commissioner Patrick F. Gill or
the conciliation bureau of the
United States Department of Labor
has been asigned by Secretary of
Labor Wilson to act as conciliator
in the strike of the . Union , Stock
Yard employes. He is expected to
arrive this week.
The strike condition remains
about the same with the union offi
cials confident that attempts at a
settlement will be made soon and
the stock yard officials stating that
affairs are almost normal. Men are
being employed daily at the yards,
although the class of labor is said
to be lower than formerly. Harvest
hands passing through to the fields
composed a large part of the new
force. New men are being taken on
in sufficient numbers to fill the
vacancies, it is stated.
Strikers are meeting daily. The
regular bi-weekly meeting of the
district council of the butcher
unions will be held Friday night.
The strikers are reported to be
sticking together, only two men
having deserted during the week.
Watch for the Bee Sport Pink
sheet in South Omaha at 5 p. m.
each afternoon. It carries ALL the
sport news of the day. It is the only
real sporting sheet, with all box
scores, in Omaha.
Only Hospital on the
South Side to Close
for Reorganization
The South Omaha hospital, Twenty-fifth
and G streets, the only South
Side medical institution, will be
close indefinitely August 1, during
reorganization of the South Omaha
Hospital association, C. R. Waters,
president, announced yesterday.
The hospital will be reopened
when financially able to continue its
work, it was stated, contrary to re
ports yesterday. South Side polke
have been notified that the hospital
will not be able to care for patients
who are unable to be removed from
the institution by August 1.
The building accommodates 27
beds and has been in operation since
1898. It has handled hundreds of
emergency cases annually. It is
owned by the state under a nonprofit-sharing
basis. Three months
ago, following an inspection, the
city commissioners declined to take
over the hospital.
1
Watch for the Bee Sport Pink
sheet in South Omaha at 5 p. m.
each afternoon. It carries ALL the
sport news of the day. It is the only
real sporting sheet, with all box
scores, in Omaha.
E. F. Hansen, Alleged Cattle
Thief, Caught on South Side
After a chase of two blocks. South
Side police yesterday arrested E. F.
Hansen,- Fiftieth street and Wool
worth avenue, for the alleged, theft
of two cows, belonging to Joseph
Fteyfkal, Seventieth and Elm
streets.
According to the police, Hansen
stole the cows yesterday and sold
them yesterday morning at the
Live Stock exchange to a cattle
dealer. In search of the stolen
cows, Fteyfkal visited the stock
yards and identified the animals.
When Hansen saw the policemen
yesterday afternoon, when fie was
calling for the money, he dashed
through a first-floor ""window an(
tried to make a getaway. He was
captured after a flight of two
blocks. Hansen had a .22 caliber
revolver on his person when arrested.
South Side Brevities
Light baggage and expresa; call offtca.
South 1281 or South 11S9. P. J. Ford.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Trussel and family.
Nineteenth and H streets, have returned
from Kansas City.
The Lady Foresters will hold a card
party In the St. Agnes school Friday
afternoon at 2:30 o'clock.
The Wiseman Construction Co. reported
to Police Thursday the theft of a con
crete wagon from Twenty-fifth and Q
streets.
Sergt B. P. Pemoreet. recently dla
charged from service, will speak Sunday
at 6:30 o'clock at the Christian Endeavor
meeting of the Wheeler Memorial
church.
C. E. Martin, 4914 North Twenty-seventh
street, reported to police Thursday
that a gold watch left In the Lehman
livery stable, 4931 South Twenty-fifth
street, waa stolen Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Olbson, re
cently morrled, will make their home In
Dodge Center, Minn. Mr. Glbaon recently
returned from army service and Mrs. Olb
son was formerly Miss Pearl Hover.
For Sale 12-room house, built for two
families;, modern, except heat; desirable
location; streets and alleys paved; cement
sidewalk; good shade; a snap for some
body. Phone South 33. O. E. Harding
Coal Co.
The Ladles' Aid aociety of the South
Side Congregational church will hold an
Ice cream social Friday afternoon on tha
church lawn. Fortieth and Q streets.
Mrs. John. Wells, Mrs. J. Stlckley and
Mrs. Ruby Sterns are in charge.
The following South Bide boy re
turned from overseas army service this
week: Lt. Earl C. Sage, Sergts. Byron
Demorest and William A. Hutchinson.
Pvt. James Cushlng, 2720 D street, and
Pvt. Clarence Haas, 1541 Z atreet.
The Women's Home and Foreign Mis
sionary society of the Wheeler Memorial
church will meet next Thursday afternoon
at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Free
man, 202S South Twenty-foartn atreet.
Mrs. George McCormick and Mrs. William
McBurney will speak. Miss Luctle Bilsa
and Miss Evelyn Vora will give musical
selections.
Watch for the Bee Sport Pink
sheet in South Omaha at 5 p. m.
each afternoon. It carries ALL the
sport news of the day. It is the only
real sporting sheet, with all box
scores, in Omaha.
Weird and wonderful are some of
the remedies devised in different
parts of the world for diseases which
afflict suffering humanity. One ol
the oddest of these is the belief
prevalent in many countries of
Europe that the passing under the
belly of an ass of 'a child suffering
from whooping cough will bring In
stant relief.