I I ' Murray Department J.M.STONE, I'kksidknt. CIIAS. C. PARMELK, VP. CM AS. S. STONE, Ca-hii:i;. Murray State Bank Murray. Nebraska. prepared in tin: interests ok tiik people of Murray ani vicinity especially for the journal readers. Trun..ict a (in.-rul Hunkinc ltuslni-s. Ituys mill m-IW K.xi Iiiiii.-. Mniiry ill w:iy n IiiiikI. .Money loaned nil chut t t nnrt.i". ' of Hit; riiiilrrs of the Ji rn'il knoir of n ttirin.1 went or nit item of intcrent in thin vicinity awl trill mml zume to this ob-n U u:ili ajieir umkr thin hei'iJiin. W'r. ii'tnt nil itflnn of intti:nt. K'litor Journal.) ft V BARN AND STOCK ENTIRELY DESTROYED John Lloyd's Barn, Four Miles Southwest of Murray, Struck by Lightning. CONTENTS ALL DESTROYED Including Five Head of Good Horses, Hay and Some Small Grain, Etc. FREIGHT TRAIN WRECKED LAST NIGHT Mi iikav, Neb., Sept i:5. (Special to the Journal. ) The barn of John Lloyd, four miles southwest of this place, was struck by lightning about 4 or ." o'clock this in iniii' and was entirely destroyed by tire, together with all its contents, including rive headorhorses,1iarness,hay,etc. The loss is estimated at 2,500, with very light insurance. The freight train going south last night about i o'clock was w recked at this station, and the engine and live cars derailed. The accident was caused by the breaking of a switch, which let the moving train, which did not intend to stop here.in on the side track. Two of the cars wrecked were loaded with oil and the other two were empty stock cars. The morning passenger from the south was delayed here several hours, but by 10 o'clock the track was cleared so that both north and south bound passenger trains could pass. No one was injured. Grandma Buck has been quite sick for the past week. Tom Laughlin has been on the sick list for the past week. Fate Davis drove to Plattsmouth Thursday afternoon. Miss Daisy Buck spent Sunday at the home of Dr. Rrendel. Fred Shoemaker, jr., and sister, of Nehawka, were in Murray Thursday Mr. Ezra Murphy has moved into the J. L. Young house on the north side of town. Miss Margie Walker left Tuesday for Peru. Neb., where she will attend the state normal. Mrs. Jas. A. Walker and Mrs. G. II. Gilmore were in l'lattsmouth Tuesday and Wednesday. Mr. Charles I'hilpot shipped a car load of fat cattle to the South Omaha market Sunday night. Many people from Murray attended llie birthday anniversary at Mr. Puis Saturday. All report a very enjoyable time. Mrs. W. Smith went to Omaha Wednesday evening. She was accom panied by Mrs. C. A. Rawls, of l'latts mouth. Wm. Laugbridge is confined to his bed this week with a severe cold on the lungs, and an attack of pneumonia is threatened. Theo. Amick has sold his interest in the threshing business to his part ner, Walter Fropst, who w ill carry on the business in the future. II. C. Long w ill make a trip to his farm in Furnas county next week. He expects to put 200 acres in fall wheat and it is about time to look after it. Frank Roedeker, son of Adam Roe deker. and (Hun Roedeker, sonofChas Roedeker, were through here Monday on their way to l'lattsmouth where they were to take the train for Lincoln to attend busines college. The little son of Lem Rates of Rock Bluffs fell from an apple tree Sunday afternoon and fractured his right arm at the elbow. He was brought to Murray where the fracture was dressed and at the last report the little fellow was doing nicely. The cooking demonstration given at the Underwftod hardware store was a grand success in every particular. Many people visiting the store and quite a number of sales made. Dur ing the sale Mr. Underwood sold seven of those popular ranges, and hundreds of people were treated with hot bis cuits and coffee. Mr. Underwwd has placed in a large supply of the Mon arch ranges and expects to carry a full line in the future. Ed Jenkins was a business visitor in ( maha Tuesday. T. L. Amick was transacting busi ness in Lincoln Monday. W. E. Copeland and Mr. Wallace drove to l'lattsmouth Sunday. The Murray schools opened. Monday morning with good attendance. Chas. S. Stone drove to Nehawka Tuesday afternoon on business. Miss Carrie Allison returned from her Denver trip Sunday evening. Mrs. Jos. Cook, of Dunbar, is visit ing friends and relatives in and around Murray this week. Jos. Shrader and Clarence Murray passed through here Saturday enroute to the county seat. I'rof. Earhardt returned from his western trip last Saturday evening He reports a rine t ime. R. R. Stone w as transitting business in Lincoln several das last week and also taking in the fair. Fate Davis enjoyed a short but very pleasant visit from iiis sister of Mt. Pleasant, la., today (Thursday. ) Ren Hart, who has been visiting with Mark Cannon between Omaha and Florence, returned home Monday Wm. Rrown went to Yalisca, Iowa, Saturday and accompanied his wife, who lias visiting her parents, home Sunday. Miss Nellie Keean of Rapid City, S. D.. arrived Mcnday to spend a few weeks with her uncle and aunt, Mr, and Mrs. J. W. Holmes. Dave Folt. and family from near Weeping Water were in Murray Sun dav. brinuint; Mr. Munson of South Omaha to the evening train. The Widow Myers, ten miles soutl wot of here, lost her barn by lire Tuesday evening or Wednesday morn ing, being .-truck by lightning. Tie inside wood work of the Murray State Rank was cleaned and re- varnished this week and now we have one of the neatest banks in the county. Dr. A. E. Walker, of Shubert, Neb., passed through Murray, Wednesday, enroute to Omaha with a patient to be placed in the hospital in that city. Miss Anna Davis of Mt. Pleasant, la., stopped in Murray Wednesday on her way home from Colorado Springs tospeud the day with her brother, Fate Davis. W. J. Philpot passed through here last Saturday with seven head of mules, which he delivered to a horse buyer in Plattsmouth. They were young mules and brought him $100 per head. In conversation with Mr. J. A. Wal ker he tells us that his popular sum mer resort has closed for the summer of 1905. Numerous repairs will be made during the winter season, and in the spring of 100; will open in full blast. Buys Another Store. The firm of Holmes & Smith have purchased the Elizabeth Goodwin stock of goods at Mynard, and take charge and carry on the business in the same location about the first of the coming month. The invoicing will commence about the 25th of this month. Messrs. Holmes & Smith need no introduction to this part or tne country, as they have carried on a suc cessful business in Murray for several years past, and the people of Mynard may expect to find in them a firm that will give one hundred cents worth of goods for every dollar spent with them. Howard Graves w'.ll take charge of the stock and carry on the business in the future. Howard is a most excel lent young man and will ever be found exerting every effort to please the peo ple around that little village. He will move to Mynard and occupy the resi dence adjoining the store some time next week. Birthday Sarprise. On Wednesday evening, September 13, occured the celebration of the 42nd birthday anniversary of Mr. Jesse Rennard. at his home four miles northeast of Murray. The whole affair was a complete surprise to Mr. Rennard, the occasion being planned and carried out by Mrs. Rennard. The evening was not a pleasant one to drive any great distance so many friends who wished to attend were kept at home. Oysters, cake and coffee were served, and various games were indulged in. and a very pleasant time was enjoyed by all. Following are the names of those present: Dr. and Mrs. R. F. Rrendel, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Carroll, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sans, Mr. and Mrs. W. Hutchison, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gapcn, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sans, Mr. and Mrs. R. Fitch, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Rennard, Mrs. Philip Rrisbin, Mrs. Samuel Smith, Yilla and Oliver Gapen. Jessie and Freddie Rennard, Willie Smith. LARGE BUSINESS ON THE BURLINGTON Why Passenger Traffic is Delayed Every Day in the Week. The Lincoln News says that never before in the history of traffic on the Rurlington road has business been so heavy as at this season of the year. Through business has grown so heavy in the last ten days that it has been practically impossible to handle the city traffic and jobbers everywhere are impatiently calling on the cor poration to get cars which have been standing around unable to reach the proper side tracks for want of switch engines and men to move them. Through business has the call and it is with ditliculty that it is handled with any sort of dispatch. It is reported that every side track in the great grain belt on the main line and the branches is already com fortably rilled with cars, the bulk of them being loaded and waiting for their turn to be shipped. In the last rive years the Burlington has been called on to handle the big lumber and shingle traffic of the Northern Pacific from the Pacific coast, which amounts to thousands of cars a year. Resides this the volume of company traffic has become very burdensome. The building of the Great Northern spur from Sioux City to Ashland is a heavy draft on the road as hundreds of cars of material must be shipped there from the Lincoln yards of the Burling ton and elsewhere. Empties, too, by the hundreds are daily being sent out to stations along the line for the re ception of more business. It is reported that the side teacks are glutted, with rolling stock tilled with lumber, coal and grain and other staple commodities waiting to be shipped to their destinations, yet un able to move, because of the immense volume of the business offered. There are about 5C0 cars of shingles alone on Lincoln sidetracks waiting to be shunted to all points of the com pass. There is a great quantity of coal, also. Trains have been running very heavily laden over the road and they have made such slow time that it has been found necessary to send them over the line at increased speed. "I have worked in the local yards for more than twenty years," said a Burlington man, ''and I never saw the beat of the traffic that has been offered in September. Think of what it will be when the millions of bushels of new corn commence to move strongly. Be sides dead freight and merchandise, live stock is being shipped by the hundreds of cars each twenty-four hours, and the movement, from the ranges has not yet reached its zenith. Extra after extra stock tiains are go ing out daily, and there js some delay because it is impossible to secure crews, engines and cars to take care of the business. Every brake man who has been in the service more than a year has been called on to take charge of a train, and new green men are be- ng hired right along to take their places. Old passenger coaches and outfit cars and any old thing that will serve as a caboose is being utili.ed in these strenuous times of prosperity and big crops. Men are forced to turn back and take out another train as soon as they reach Lincoln, and many of them are not in the best condition, either to make another trip, because they need rest and sleep. Locomotives do not have a chance to have their tires pulled and are kept in the round house just long enough to be overhauled quickly and then sent out again. The pace is hard on men and on machinery, but traffic must be cared for and the big dividends earned for stck holders." In the local yards it is necessary to have the services of two operators day and night to issue train orders and transact other business which is inci dental to the movement of freight and stock. Experienced trainmen, engi neers, firemen and switchmen are in great demand and the age limit is not so closely adheared to as it is when trattic is light, or it is just ordinarily busy. The road does not like to accept green brakemen and switchmen and turns down such applications, when it is possible, but bright young fellows and even middle-aged men have a chance to earn money railroading if they want jobs. , The main yards have twenty-four tracks, yet they are so gorged at cer tain times during the day and night that trains out and in cannot be hand led. Lately trains have been made up in the local yards and surplus rolling stock has been sent to outlying side tracks and even to close-by towes to insure room for through tratlic. OF THE or THE CONDITION Mvirray Sta.te Bank Of Murray, Nebraska, Charter No. 57 Invorpor.-it-! In tlie State of Nt'Wruska. :it the rlose or buslnes Aui?u.-.t j. iaa: RESOURCES: Liouns ami discounts 24.3.J 74 Overdrafts soru red mi d unsecured.. I. M Hanking house furniture and fixture 1'iS 50 Current expenses and taxes paid 371 55 Uiw from national, state and pri vate banks and bankers ltt.KH 20 Total cash on hand... l.U! SJ Total I 45.341 LIABILITIES: Capital stock paid in i 5.000 0(1 Surplus fund 1.5,'fO 54 I'ndiviiled profits 5c:i 40 Individual deposits sub ject to check .'H.H37 75 Time certificates of de- Ksit 4..'IH Due to state and private hanks and bankers.... l'.l O'.i ?K307 Total 45.341 tW Statu ok Nkbkaska. " Couiitv of Cass I. Chas. S. Stone, cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the alnjve statement is a correct and true copy of tlie report made to t lie Mate Mankind Hoard. Chas. S. Stoxk. Cashier. Attest: .1. A. I'oi.i.Aitit. Sit.. Director. .1. M. Stone. Director. SubscriU'd and sworn to before me this 1st dav of SentemlHT. l'."0.. seai.1 Chas. L. Ukavks. Notary Public Com. expires April 1'JlU. J. T. Porter is another victim of last Tuesday night's storm. He lost two horses by lightning. They were in the pasture at the time and were killed in stantly. In the last few years several miles of additional yard space has been built but it has proven inadequate for tak ing care of the increased traffic. Of ficials are sorry now that the corpora tion did not see ahead and remodel the entire freight yards, as was proposed last year. With more than double the capacity, as was planned, business could have been cared for with much less switching and w ith decreased ex pense. The employes engaged in the trans portation are making more money now than they have for a great many years and, perhaps, more than ever before in the existence of the road. Many brakemen are earning $85 to $100 a month, conductors from the latter figure to $150. Engineers running in the pool are making close to the $200 a month wages and in some instances more. Many Switchmen are taking $100 and more from the pay car. Re pair men are also sharing in the profits of the immense traffic and are reaping quite a snug sum laboring over time The fall and winter is alwa3'sa bonan za for this class of employes, but this one and the winter to follow will see all records smashed. When the new corn is being shipped in November large quantities of mer chandise, coal, lumber, building mate rial and other important commodities will still be moving heavily and rail road officials will be face to face with a difficult problem. Democratic County Convention. The democratic electors of Cass county, Nebraska, are hereby called to meet at Elm wood, on Tuesday, Skitkmiikk 19, 1905, at 1 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of selecting 20 delegates to the demo cratic state convention which meets in Lincoln on Wednesday, September 20, and also to nominate candidates for the following offices: Treasurer. County Clerk. County Judge. Sheriff. County Superintendent. Coroner. Surveyor. And also to nominate candidates for Register of Deeds and Commissioner for the second district, if it is deemed wise so to do. The bases of represen tation was fixed at one delegate for each 10 votes cast for Hon. Geo. W. Berge last November, which entitles ecah ward and precinct to the follow ing representation, to-wit: Tipton 10 Greenwood 9 Salt Creek 12 Stove Creek 11 Elm wood 10 South Rend 8 Weeping Water o Center 7 Louisville 8 Avoca 7 Mt. Pleasant u Eight Mile Grove 11 Nehawka 7 Liberty 14 First Rock Rluffs l Second Rock Rluffs .', Plattsmouth precinct 1 l'lattsmouth City First ward. 0: second ward. 12: third ward, 12: fourth ward. 7: fifth ward. 5 in Weeping Water City First ward. 4: second ward, 2: third ward. 2... Total number of delegates 2111 It is also requested by the commit tee that the primaries for the various precincts be held on Satukday, Sei'temt.kk lt', i:0-. between the hours of (', and o'clock p. m., at their usual voting places. By order of the county central com mittee. M. A. Bates, Chairman. REPORT For which we will pay the highest market price any day in the week, delivered at the creamery in Murray. This week we are paying for Old Hens, per pound, - 8 cts Spring Chickens, per pound, 9 cts Old Roosters, per dozen, - $2.40 Don't forget we always pay the Highest Market Price in Cash ! Chris DR. R. L. NEWELL DENTIST. Fifteen Years Experience t t : OF In Murray Every Tuesday. OFFICE REAR MURRAY STATE BANK, SATISFACTION (iKAJJAXTKMI). 2 Got Off Cheap. He may well think, lie has got off cheap, who, after having contracted constipation or indigestion, is still able to perfectly restore his health. Noth ing will do this but Dr. King's New Life Pills. A quick, pleasant and cer tain cure for headache, constipation, etc. 2.3c at F. G. Fricke & Co.'s drug store; guaranteed. A Clear Complexion and Bright Eyes. In most cases a sallow, blotched com plexion and dull heavy eyes are due to poor digestion and an inactive liver. Ori.no Laxative Fruit Syrup aids di gestion and stimulates the liver and bowels and makes the complexion smooth and clear. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup does not nauseate or gripe and is mild and pleasant to take. Re fuse substitutes. F. G. Fricke & Co. Will Be Taken Back. Sheriff McBride received a telegram this morning to arrest Clyde Wright of Weeping Water. The message came from B. D. Hayward, superintendent of the reform school at Kearney. The boy was out on parole, and as he has not conducted himself just as he should, his return to the reformatory was deemed necessary. The young man has been arrested and will be brought here, and the superintendent will come after him. Geo. Dovey and family, Rea Patter son and Elizabeth Dovey, Florence and Margaret Dovey and a number of young people from Omaha, spent Sun day at the home J. A. Walker and family. DOC OUR COOKING n DEMONSTRATION IS NOW OVER and we sold several of the ever popular "Monarch" Ranges, hut have placed a number on our floor for the future trade, CALL AND SEK THEM! U n HOW ABOUT THAT n New Lightning Rod Call and let us show good Shinn Wire Cable. L,. B. UNDEHWOOD DOC Miller UNION TEETH 'without put ' SPECIALTY Big Show Coming. Will be here in a few days! Gollmar Rros.' big new railroad shows, triple circus, elevated stages, Roman hippodrome, free horse exhibit and deep sea aquarium. A gigantic undertaking, head and shoulders above our so-called rivals. 20 funny old clowns 20. A multitude of riders, leapers, aeronauts, aerialists, gymnasts and charioteers and everything per taining to the circus world. Rig dou ble menagerie of all the brute creation. Herd of big elephants. Gollmar Rros.' $20,000 feature the only real living hippopotamus in cap tivity: a savage blood-sweating terror of the river Nile: the wild man-slaying monster; the only one in the known world on exhibition: afternoon and evening in Gollmar Rros.' millionaire menagerie. " bands of music, : circus rings, ele vated stages, ;300 men and women em ployed, 300 horses and ponies. Every morning at 10 o'clock a grand coiossal free street parade, a mommoth free street show. 7 open dens of wild beasts 7. Ponderous marching ele phants. An amazing wonderland. 10 different kinds of music, golden steam piano. A big double procession of shining armor, glittering dens, cages, band chariots, rich and rare costumes of silks and satins, tableaux, floats, comedy provokers, a perfect blaze of splendor majestically moving upon the public highway at 10 o'clock. Two performances daily, afternoon and evening. Doors open at 1 and 7 o'clock. Will exhibit at Plattsmouth, Wed nesday, September 27. DOC qualities in The Best. the DOC -1 1 r 1