Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 14, 1909, Page 35

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TIMELY REAL ESTATE GOSSIP Dundee Citizens Are Preparing to Pave the Streets. REAL ESTATE IS QUITE ACTIVE mits Ale -V;P L Street South Omaha Are Rejolcing Over New Car e Which is Projected. Citizens of Dundee are showing a most progressive spirit by preparing (o pave the sirests of that thriving ‘place veral meetings have been held and committess aprointed to select the material. Signa- lures have been secured to several of the streets, The last legislature passed a law which permits villages of the class of Dun- dec to pave by the method of signatures, the samo as citles, and the citizens of Dundee are taking advantage of that law signatures have been secured for the pav- ing of one strest a mile long and oiher streets will soon be lined up. Real estate has shown considerable activ- fty during the last week and several large sales have been made, including both business and residence property. Real es- iate men say that business always picks up after the fall festivities, during which time they say there is not quite so mueh trading donc, the people sseming to b more engaged In funmaking than in the more serious affairs of life. Many lots hava been bought by home bullders, some of whem will start this fall and many others contemplate beginning their build- ing operations in the spring Property on west L street W South Omaha le enjoying a boom since the nouneement of the Omaha & Counctt Bluffs Street Raflway company that a line was to be extended from Twenty-fourth and O streets to Thirty-sixth and L streets, through the yards of the union Stock Yards company. This property lavs well on the hill, but bas been quits a distance from a car line. For some years the resi- dents In that locality have been trying to secure a car line, but there seemed no way to get one untll & mew viaduct was bullt over L, street, as the present wooden struc- ture was not copsidered safe. Another contest has been started In South Omahw over the question as to whether the new lice will be a througk line to Omaha or a stub to Twenty-fourth and O streets. The South Omaba merchants want to have it so arranged that passengers wiil have 10 transter before coming to Omaha. Harry H. Culver has closed several transactions for city and out-of-town prop- erties during the last week., Those upon which the deeds have been exchanged are: Three hundred and ninety-acre ranch, Texas, to M. E. Richardson, consideration $15,00; 640 acres in Hitchcock county to James Stander, consideration $16,000; 350 acres In Plerce county to R. E. Jackson, consideration $52,000; flat bullding, located in Cedar Raplds, Ia., to F. G. Prall, gon- sideration $1; a house, Pacific Junction, Ia., 10 A. A. Patzmap, consideration $3,000, with elghty acres western land taken In as part payment; elghteen-acre frujt farm east of Council Bluffs, Ia, to 8. B, Davis et al., consideration $1 and the exchange of other property. an- Business men on lower Farnam street are pleased since it has been discovered tho Woodmen of the World are to locate on the Milton Rogers corner at Fourteenth and Farnam. The retall district has been moving west for some time, but property- owners hope to hold it since the announce- ment that the fraternity building was to be located cast of Fourteenth street, . Some of the recent sales made by Hast- Ings & Heyden are: Tt 20. in_block 1, Hillsdale addition, to Lewis W. Buddenberg, consideration $200. ‘Two one-half-acre tracts in Vernon Hetghts addition to Nels Jensen, consider- atlon $720. Lot 2, Ames' addition to Hillsdale, Horace Blackford, consideration $125. Five-room cottage at the northeast cor- ner of Thirty-third and Larimore avenue { Thisty-t o Mo R s ¥ complex and ;I:d:'u.-ag“ l':l usgrove, for a home, con 2 ,c:n;:::r::e"l;rzwl:“i?‘nm“;l h;d'{ | more difficult of solutton. 1t Is aifficult Lota 1 and 2 in Willlams Place to these | gor the average homebuild 0 o % o omebuilder to compr George . Yoder, consideration $300. model” laws and no individual or organ- 21, 22 and 2. in block 1. Hillsdale to Ivan Mitchell of Hlair, Neb., for an investment, eonsideration $08, Lot 16, In block 4, Herman Kraft, consideration $176. Southwest corner of _Bighteenth and e . Pinkhey streets to A. H. Olmatead for §1.600, | ¢MtIrély non-political body, the Absociation an which three bungalows will be built at [©f Audubon Socleties, which has apparently onge. .Contract to build a double house for J. . Tubbs on Pinkney street, just east of No. 1820 North Twen- therman avenue. Five-room cotts gr..?o-n.d street, to Patrick J. T. lhrfln plece of statute law not a federa! enact- Two lots in Lincoln Helghts addition to |ment. In tho crusade for its passage hu- A. Sorensen. manitarian arguments have been coupled W In Lincoln Helghts adaition 0 L. J. | with economy for the farmers lose four- Tot on Vinton street. between Thirty- |fifths of §1,000,000000 a year through insect firat and 'l‘hlr;)"'flfflnfl to Danlel B. | depredations. 'O 0 n . ! n"::'n.‘:r Nv:nll.;‘rl‘;"" Twenty-fourth | AMODE the friends of the model law strest to Addle M. Wallace, for & home, |are included leading men and women of consideration $2. every community, while the opponents, ot in Hillsdale sddition to Danlel A:|jiume hunters and pot hunters, are con- Wive-room cottage No. 223 Camden ave. nue, to James Stears, for a home, consid- eration Two lots on Thirty-first ayenue, iusi north of Larimore avenue, to M. E. Put o "Fvo 1otn in Hillsdale to Mary A. Beck of_Blair, Neb. “Two Jota in Lincoln Helghts addition to | Kdward Edborg, consideration $450. T. M large real He has sold to Mr. Druse a double hric fiat at the southwest W. Gunther, northeast corner of Twenty fourth and Maple streets for $19.100; Mr. e ° Lorents Anderson two sections in Cheyenn county, Nebraska, for $15,30. All of th above were bought for investments. An important contract for building m: terlal was consumated during the nish face brick for the new Merris th now bullding at Douglas and Bighteent streets. The brick selected will make clean light butf color that will stand out | wharp contrast with the other darker build- ings on upper Douglas street ANDY STICKS TO THE TEXT| “The exie Repeats, The problem of administration of brotherhood may eh and U ship. Kreet furtune surplus wealtih of the few becomes th property of the many. and by which, th our age weaith: still bind is the together wealth passing through the hands of the few The wiillonatre Is but & trusts Pl The man of wealth should become, after unify causes for divorce. providing - moderately for the legitimad wants of those dependent upon him, the nt for his poorer brethren, bringing to their service his su- mere trustee and perior wisdom, experience and abllity dminister, dolng + they would or could do fur themselves Wise men will soon conclude thal the best (nterests of thelr families e 1 A I A AT s i AL to Hillsdale. addition, to Adams of the Western Real Estate | company has the past month made three e deals with Omaha parties. corner of Twenty- third and California streets for $10,000: E. | last week, whereby Sunderiand Bres. will fur- ater | Maw Who | proper that the ties of the poor In harmonious relation- There is only one mcde of using | for commonwealths to differ That is one by which the n be made & more potent force for |lieves in granting no absolute divorees at the elevation of the race than if distributed | all. 1 In wmall sums to the people ‘themselves. | tion of ¢ for the them better than for nests thelr descendants v use of thelr means. Be providing for the wife and daughters moderate of Incomes and very | moderate allowances, It any, for the sons. | may well hesitate, The thoughtful :Ihnn must shortly say: “1 would as soon | the state, be are an hhprop sources men leave to my e as the almighty He must admit to himself that the welfare of the children, but pride which Inspires. these son a cur | dona |1t 1s not the family legacies Rich men have it in their thelr My 1o busy themselves in organizing benefactions from which the masses of their fellows will derive lasting advantage and thus dignify their own lives. In many cases @ man's bequests are wo used as to become monuments to his folly. The day Is not far distant when the man who dies leaving behind him millons of avallable wealth, which was free for him to admin- Ister during life, will pass away, “unwept, unhonored and unsun Of such the pub- lic verdict will be, “The man who dies thus rich, dies disgraced.—Andrew Car- negfe, in the Delineator. FREAKS IN LEGISLATIVE MILLS| Scores Many power during Nebraskn but Some of the freak bills with which state legislatures adorn their statute books are |enumerated by a recent writer in the North American Review | A bill in New Jersey recently proposed a license tax on whiskers, one in Nebraska a 10 per cent income tax on bachelors, one in Minnesota made It a crime for a farmer not to practice rotation of erops, one in Towa required all eggs to be stamped with the date when they were laid, one in Missouri prohibited treating in such sweeping terms that the purchase of ice cream for a young mirl by her beau would |have been iliegal under its provisions ot such fantastic bills usually |fall, but a surprising number of them have Zot on the statute books in the past. Ken- tucky, for instance, has made it a felony |to trespass on a ginseng garden. Georgla, |doubiless In memory of many bucolic swin- dles, imposes a tax of §25 In each county on peddlers of patent churns and patent tences, The forty-six states exhibit as many crotchets as so many headstrong opinion- ated individuals. How these come into being is illusirated by the many different ways In which an entirely new subject for legislative action can be regarded. The popularity of the automobile brought such a subject before the state and local law- making bodles generally some ten years lago. Thirty-six have passed auto- mobile laws since then. Not only are no two of these statutes exactly alike, but not one of them coples the essentlal feature of the law of the country from which most of our success- ful hotseless vehicles were at first im- ported. The idea of the French law was and is to impose no specific restriction on speed or power, but to hold the driver and owner to.the strictest accountabliity for all damage. A motor bleyele is an automoblle in In- diana, while a traction engine la not; both are uutomobiles in New Jersey, nelther In New York—a state of affalrs which re- calls the railway canductos famous de- olslon that “Cats i dogs and rabbits Is dogs, but turtles is inseck There s one facetious clause, that of Kausas confirming “the prerogative of any political ehauffeur “to run an autome- billous band wagon at any rate he sdes fit compatible with the safety of the occu- pants thereof, . . . provided that when- ever a mangied and bleeding political corpse implores for mercy the driver of the vehicle shall, in accordance with the provisions of this bill ‘throw out the life- line. “Bo ‘many adsociations Interested in par- ticular subjects have drafted bills to be urged upon the legislatures that a state S0 disposed could supply itself with a rea- sonably complete outfit of “model” law; The greater number of these are elther based on the statute of some particular state or have been adopted by some of the legislatures after having been originally drafted or approved by an unofficial bod: courte ized body, however conspicuous or influb ential, has ever persuaded our forty-six state legislatures to take identical aetion on any subject, However simple. It is an come nearest .o performing this feat. | Its law for the protection of non-game | birds Is In force today over a larger stretch | of American territory than any comparable temptible in numbers and influence. Yet years of effort have not brought the law | ¢|Imto force everywhere. When the legisla- - |tures of 1907 adjourned three southern states, flve western states and three ter- ritorles had refused to join the movement for bird protection, ‘The fight for pure food Is one in which the national government and the states might be expected to Join and supplement each other's efforts. The national law; passed after seventeen years of agitation, is naturally the pattern of state enact- | ments. Within two years after Its passage eleven states had amended their own laws 50 48 1o bring them into conformity with the federal statute, while seven others | which had previously made no effort at | food comtrol had passed laws on the fed- | |eral model. Ail these had copled, among other things, the federal policy of exempting the dealer from prosecution in fase he halds the | manufacturer's guarantee of the purity of | tis goods expressed in the now famillar | label, but even this group of new laws oarries the states only & third of the wa toward effective uniformity of policy. Al- K n | a teady, indeed, there have been conflicts between federal and state authorities on the question of the status of particular | produets. In 1908 forly states sent delegates to a divorce congress called at the request of the state of Pennsylvania. This congress marked, perhaps, the most conspicuous and Influential attempt of recent years f(o! arouse public seutiment in favor of uni- formity respecting so important branch of legislation. It would scarcely be possible more on any do in thelr attitude Over twenty different causes are recognized in one state or an- other, while one state, South Carolina, be. rubject than they \e | toward divorce. is #showed the delegates’ clear percep- [ ditficulties in the way of oblit- ‘l'l'll“‘ distinetive state policies that the | congiess of 1908 did not even attempt to te —_— New Subway s Started. NEW YORK, Nov. 18-Chalrman Wilcox of the Pubilc Service commission today turned the first sarth with a stiver shovel 10| 1o inau the Tuing of the Fourth venue which will oross the new anhatten bridge 1o Brook'yn and then size Ings and its furnishings. of a home is a simple one, easily com- | | | surroundings and furnishings in harmony | elaborate ' style, and different NOVEMBER 14, !knuv\n surpasses the hot air furnace wh—n{ll e of his Industry, & n:u “n' :;:: ‘.-!"“ nmd‘flralnl\ warm herde and othe ture Hie Iffl'rl“.:‘l';: large registers and an ample supy the caref) methodical aecou :tn':r‘, s &) fresh air, and provide ample space for :|: '1:154‘;:._ f .»; "' nk L”-. '\hh.f‘_"l""” ot P D T eauid. be. bullt I | the men he eleots to office at:tHe eounty 1 . seat. e would immediately and promp! three sections, one side for fUFNACE, ON% |yl w hie funds from & bank incapable side for kitchen or laundry stove and the o T ying s clearer statement of its fi Sthee ity Wit ke 1. aneisl operations for the year than he her chimney p the vent v B g ks flue wlways warm, and ail impure air | “pH ",‘“' et womts (he SR W e s A e BT ercise & practical business supsrvision over his own affair and to that end It h NEW SCHOOL FOR FARMERS | ,icq nim to be reads in 1910 to give the T o | conxus tokers cert definite information Paternslistic Plan Dependent on Re= | paeq upon written reoords kept by him= fults of, Nest Yeas's [ we1f with refercnce to his operations in 1900 Cenan He will be acked for a statement of the 5 acreage, vield and selling price of all crops T USKIN says that “simplicity is the terminal point of all prog- ress.” Nowhere is this fact emphasised to a greater ox- tent than in domestic architec- ture. No matter what the style, cost of a home, it shoMd or be kept in harmopy with its surround- It the design prehended, it is not difficult to make the with ft; but if the home is designed in an sometimes several styles styles of architecture em- phasised In different rooms of the Inter- for, the problem becomes hend why he cannot have a little of ever: thing in his home and still have it at- tractive. Every room in a home may be perfect in detail, but when the reception hall is colonial, the parlor in the empire style, the library in the mission style and the dining room in the craftsmen style, furnished with Stickney furniture, with the furnishing in the varlous rooms cor- responding the effect as a whole not harmenious. It the colonial style is the keynote to the exterior, the colonial style should be is carried out throughout the interior and be emphasized In (he layout of the grounds as to settees, pargoMas, etc., when of these luxuries. There has heen but one period in the history of our country when all things were designed in harmony, and it is a singular tact that little be found today that excell the st dress, architecture, furniture, decoration and bric-a-brac of the colontal period of American history. In dress they celled as taste and personality, espe- clally the styles used for men. While some to ridiculous fads were used such as the powdered wig, there is no doubt but what there was more individual character dis- played In the male attire of the colonial period, than we can claim for the styles in vogue today. Each man was dressed in the manner and colors suited to his sta- tion In lite, official capacity or stature The same individual character is evident to a large extent in the grounds are of sufficient size o permit | is to| tar ex-| the styles of domestic | Gelting Best Results in Home Building | Arthur C. Clausen, Architect. THE BEE'S PLAN BOOK —_— NG, for Ome Dollar. This book contains forty-six chap- ters ana 200 illustrations, printed on heavy enameled paper, with cover stamped in gold. It deals with practical side of homebullding. giv- ing compiete information on the planning and designing of every kind places, exteriors, interior finish, are taken up in deiall and tre with good common sense. Nearly all questions that could be antieipated are answered and the hook should prove a great help to those who are about to plan a home. It I8 pro- fusely illustrated. Send all orders to Arthur C. Clausen, 1136-37-38 Lumber Exechange, Minneapolls. to some as the “Carpenter's Renaissance.’ Aside from the styles of dress now in vogue Tor the owner of the house and his | family, the colonial style Is the one style in which entire home inside and out can harmony without any greater effort or ex- | people as those who These are the by almost as many | look upon them with favor eolonlal architecture and furnishings. There is more character, individuality and a better example of American ldeals shown in domestic colonial architectture, than In any of the styles which have met With passing favor in this country since the colonlal period. While it is becoming known as the American remaissance, due credit should be given to those who are responsible for its origin. It was orlginally one of England's passing fancies, being an adaption of the classlc Roman orders of architecture to domestic needs by several prominent Euglish architects who were the recognized heads of thelr profession in England during the formative period of American history. It is quite natural that the younger architects who came over to carve out fame and forlune in England's most promising colonlal possession, should earry out the Impres being done by the English masters of their professian. England, however, had her | Gathle architecture which had grown and developed with her history and which she always returned to after tiring of new architectural fads. The colo 1 style, therefore, which was known in England as the G In that country. Since all of the earl examples of domestic and civic architec- ture in this country bear the stamp of the Georglan period of “arehitecture, we h come to know it as the colonia! style, It is gquite natural that this style should senerations until it has become so closely assoclated with our history and eur mede of living that we eonsider this style ail our own. Slnce most of the earller examples proesed Lhrough Fourth a ue 1o Boutl Brooklun. | Extenslons wil laiey b bttt were of wood and the style has been de- veloped 80 that it may be easily worked |!hose recelved upon ecutering a house for oy, and as & matter of pure air and per- Has become known ,the first tme. If the lmpression here 15 | gect cireulation, out in this material, | ons of the work. then | glan style, soon went out of favor | be worked upon and developed by future | mission and craftsman styles. Although ‘h, #ome 'u‘)_v filljyll It‘flilf" for this llnld it No wear and teara ltrem- similar, they are not one and the same |does not require an expert to explain y I ” as many people belleve, The mission style | why. The reason is that you are breath- bhflg fearwthe jar is scarcely as adapted to domestic architecture is |Ing over and over the same air, whieh 1 sometimcs referred to in a slurring way |lowera your vitality and eventually brings fek_ as Ary pods box architecture.” While |on sickness. Kvery hot water system or | the style calls for a square and severely |#leam plants now in use ought to be pro- | plain exterior it is not entirely deserving |vided with an indirect system. This meang of so severe @ critisism. It the mission |that fresh air should be admitted in such | {#tyle is adopted for the exterlor of a home, quantities as to keep the air in \uch‘ E] . Ll ht d P c {it should be carried out throughout the |VOOMS reagonably pure and fresh | maha ectnc lg an ower Lo, linterior, both in the design of the rooms | Furnaces have been abused Aeicar] : e atyle|much by furnace men themseives as by | 40d"spe turplahings, s, sbprebriate syld | FLLS CLL ave. thair anainiss. Uniika steam | . M., C. A, BLDB,—BOTH PHOKES ifor a door would be the sanitary door, or |a door without panels. The ceiling should be beam celling (not paneled celling) with the beams of solid wood actually carrying the floor above and not plastered betweei.. | All door casings, base boards, etc., should | be perfectly plain strips of wood without | moulding. The stair treads should be two- | inch planks, the newel a perfectly square | post and the handrail without moulding Ihe balister should be severely piain. The | entire strueture, inside and out, Including | furniture, should look as It any boy with | |& mechanieal turn of mind could make all |y its parts in his work with ordinary carpenter's tools The craftsman style is not quite so plain, some ornamentation of woudwork belng permitted. “Studied Rustieity” would be a ¥ood definition for it, every pieco of furni wooden shon ture, bric-a-back, decoration or moulding | belng studied to give an artistie, mougn simpic, and almost rustic effect. . he sur |roundings of sueh 4 home _oould be | severly plain, a level grass plot with per | feetly stralght walks, stralght briar or | evergreen hedges and all trees wet in regu- arder lar I ‘The entrance (0 the home should always be the keynote 1o its Interior. Few people_ ap- preclate the value of first impressians. Many people g0 through the world play- ing the game of life “cateh asgatch can,” |and wonder why they fall. Nowhere do | we recelve impressions more lasting than good it will go a long way toward mak- ing one overlook a lack of paintings on oThrough an acrangement with Ar- || the interior adorning the exterfor of & ur Clausen, architect, th: |- r e T ontais || home. It should stand out ae a mark ot copy of his beautitul book, welcome to the passerby and be an in- ; i . o Al Bo dication of cordlal hospitality within, The e - J = || entrance is the keynote to the Interior, an i TIMENT OF HOMBRUILD- Wy, index of w fore be both surprising and disappointing to & vifitor who mentally commented on ) | the beauty of a magnificlent colonial en- | | terance and | the exterior and Interior, they should be | kept in harmony with both and this can of home, There is nothing mo ‘uu])' be done (when the upper lights are| prestiosl Hian meing (he home e {dividea in any manner) by keeping tr | [ ] Tistio, butiding It on' s ! and to Insure sanitary conditions \1flltflul and exterior of a home in har-| and warmth. The author of the book mony. Also make the. rear of the house alms to glve the Intending home- as attractive as the sides or as the front. builder advice on .“bl’.C‘.‘h.“:h a8 | Most people invite visitors into their homes buying the lot, plannin ome, || i § oithion el il orl ote, Problems about front 00! e ; y T doors, windows, - statiways, fire || to their taste, Why not have your house | manutactured fn the world—also | be large as possible, be chary in your | of colors. dents of heating and be built, furnished and kept in complete [ing back to the furnace as being the per- pense on the part of a house bullder to|W, Leeds, consulting engineer of ventila- | P " obtain the necessary requisites. ting and heating for the |'..\;a smlu‘ The cleanest power in the There are other styles which have been | Treasury department, says. “Under no cir-| 2 growing In favor, but which are abhorred |cumstance should s ronm or office be | land—no dust or dirt, from Should the taking of t of 1910 be | conducted strictl harvested this year, together with the value ong the broad 1ines| ¢ pig jive stoek, dalry products, poultry, already marked out for it, one of the inel- | cooe " puit ate. In addition, he will be dental results will be (o establish & | ygq ypon for an fnventory of all live R e o s sinixs UG ¥ | poultry and bees on hand April 15, farmers which promisex large and sub- b 8 X4 stantial results. One fault of many, per The government will ask how muc haps of & majority, of our farw % that | Money he paid out for fertilizers in 1900, they do little or no bouk . AR Rt JNBY h he pald for farm labor, grain or the farmer who sits « reckon up othcr articles not raised on the farm, bt the results of his vears wuri [ \ ed for feed for domestic animais his caleulations upon facts drawn and pouliry, w acreage is planted for memory or from records which are in- | each staple in 1300 and what acreage he complete as well as unbusi like and intends (o plant for each in 1910, the num- untrustworthy. ber nd value of animals sold in 1908; the The government, through the wechanism pumber and value of animals slaughtered of the Census buree o h this | on 1 vm, elther for home use or for slipshod system of by ng and | gate, the number and a of wool floecd Porouiie Iuttiin 1t _9 th definite #old, the quantity of milk and of butter in business forma like those vsed In other|,,,0q¢ produced, And a comprehensive w York Mal! to “the tarmer himself, but to the govern- ment. The farmer who at the end of the —_— season I8 unable to present a clear, com- | Toake Chanber “ouxh Kemedy when prehensive statement of the vear's work, | vou have & cold and you will be delighted setting forth in detall the financlal opera- | with it Northwestern Expanded Metal Co. 84 Van Buren St., Chicago Manufacturers of EXPANDED METAL the Standard Material for CONCRETE REINFORCEMENT in floors, roofs, bridges, ave- ments, sewers, etc. Write for pam- phlets containing full information. mALCeM W™ 1 (ARGOND Flaem LA nd the wall, fine furniture in the parior other unessential but welcome lux The front door, is so to speak, & part of :t 18 to come. It would there- a1 later finds himself ushered into & hall designed In the severest mis- ( slon style. Since the windows both adorn | We Make Them in Omaha and can duplicate any designed “all front” and have a garden at| the rear? If you want a small house (o | use | Save You Money Hydraulic-Press Brick Co. 330 Bee Building. Let us show yon samples. A variety of colors on the in- side of & house should be avoided. Furnaces and Common Sense By 0. M. Baton. The nation's greatest thinkers and stu- ventilating are com- fection of heating and ventilating. Lewis direct radiation from There must heated exclusively by expored steam radiation pipes.’ wheels or belt. \ or hot a cheaply constructed fur- | nace, no matter how poorly Installed, wil give a certain ddgree of satisfaction, an water, many people have put in furnaces only he- cause they were cheap. How different It | would be if the prospective home owner | would consult some good authority upon | heating and ventllating and put in their heating accordingly. We could £l this whole page with letters from phy- | slelans begging their clients to insist upon | your | Furnace Heating We Carry in Stock Three Distinct Lines of Furnaces systems pure, fresh air. It may be worth A time to read just one such letter from | WONDER— Ior those who must have a cheap furnace. Christopher H. Shearcr, M. D., as follows iaat: o vice oavY T have Botsd thet direat. steam and hot IXOfELBIOR All cast; a medium priced, heavy all cast water heating has an unfavorable effeal urnace, upon heaith, and (his is particularly e furnacas A : marked i diweancs o he gy throns ||| MABVEL-—All wrought iron furnace; absolutely gas tight and respiratory passages. I attribute this and dust proof. This furnace is the perfection of fur- unhealthtul condition to the ventilation rooms thus heated. Living | ms should be heated by pouring in tainted warm alr and in no other way. appreciate the vital \necessity tlon. We spend one-haif of our lives s and the quality of air breathe | In our homes is the prepondering factor 'n determinfng the state of our health and 18ok of prave nace construction. MARVEL - Combination hot water and hot air; quick re- sults of hot air and steady heat of hot water, with an ample supply of pure fresh ai It will pay you to give an opportunity furnaces and methods of installation ro une Fen of people ventil indoo oy us to demonstrate our i Ll Yl Omaha Stove Repair Works You can live three weeks without food. Both Phones 1206-1208 Douglas Street three days withoyt water and only three minutes without air. As a matter of econ- ROBERT UHLIG, President. HUGO SCHMIDT, Vice President. GEO. A. WIOOX, Treasurer. €. M EATON, Secrotary. no system of heating

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