Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, April 26, 1912, Image 1

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DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD.
Historical Society
MOTTO-HI Tk Maws Was JEt H 1mm.
State
VOL. 20.
DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, APRIL 20,1912.
ICO. 34.
ROADS' STATEMENTS
A REPORT ON BANKS.
ISMAY BEFORE THE SENATE COMMITTEE
!H ARN ESSi
Nebraska Institutions Shown to Be In
Good Condition.
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ALL LINES SUBMIT EARNINGS
AND EXPENSES.
BETTERMENTS FOR OPERATION
This Item of Expense In Expense Ac
counts, but Board of Eliminates
It In Computing Values.
The NobraBka railroads have all re
turned their statomnots of earnings
and expenses for the year ending Do
comber 31 to the State Board of As
sessment as one of the items on
which the board will baso the assess
ments of the property for tho year.
The Mason City & Fort Dodge, Illi
nois Central, Wabash, Milwaukee and
Santa Fo made no report of earnings,
filing a statement that they owned no
trackage In tho state, but operated
trains over other roads. Of the roads
roportlng tho Omaha Bridge and Ter
minal makes tho best showing of net
earnings to gross, the total revenue
being $92,887.54 and the net revenue
being $77,197.97, The Omaha & South
ern Interurban has a small net reve
nue, the Income being $33,508.65 and
the net revenue being $424.50. Tho
St Joseph & Grand Island and the
Missouri Pacific show a deficit on Ne
braska business, the former of $21,
421.90and the latter of $302,794.G4.
Following Is the return of the various
roads on business done In Nebraska:
BURLINGTON.
Passenger earnings $ 5,696,102
Freight 14.369,050
Earnings f'm other sources. 1,595,436
Total earnings $21,G60.695
Operating and other exp... 14,558,989
Net
earnings $ 7,101,605
UNION PACIFIC.
Pafisenger earnings $ 3,889,080
Freight earnings 12,462,902
EarnlngB f'm other sources 1,597,710
Total earnings ,.. f 17,949,699
Operating and other exp... 10,334,511
Net revenue $ 7,615.188
NORTHWESTERN.
Tassenger earnings $ 1,846,178
Freight earnings 4,800,511
Other earnings 620,546
Total earnings $ 7,267,235
Operating and other exp... 5,469,482
Net revenue $ 1.797,753
MISSOURI PACIFIC.
Passenger earnlnga .....$ 265,812
Freight -earnings -.V.v. 952,435
Other earnings 198.801
Total earnings $1,417,079
Operating and other exp... 1,719,874
Deficit ? 302,794
ROCK ISLAND.
Passenger earnings $ 520,697
Freight earnings 927,335
Other earnings 122,637
Total earnings
Operating and other exp.
.$ 1,570.671
. ,1,422,541
Net revenue 5 148,129
OMAHA ItOAD.
Passenger earnings $ 535,214
Freight earnings 1,292,479
Other earnings '. . 94,407
Total earnings $ 1,922,132
Operating and other e.p... 1,472,710
Net earnings $ 449,421
ST. JOSEPH & GRAND ISLAND.
Tabsengor earnings $ 129,954
"Freight earnings 309,087
Other earnings ' 40,543
bocretary Boyso of the State Bank
ing board has compiled the reports of
tho state banks, as shown by tho re
cent call. This report shows a cry
strons and satisfactory condition of
the banks of tho state.
Tho 6tato banks report a roservo of
30 per cent., being double tho amount
required by law, whllo tho national
banks show a reserve of 36 per cent.,
and tho comblnod banks of tho state,
Including state and national, an aver
age roservo of 33 per cent. The state
banks have increased fchree In numbor
reporting during tho year and tho na
tional banks havo increased ten in
number during the sarao period.
Tho deposits in state banks have in
creased $6,429,260.97 during tho year
and since tho report of December 5,
1911, they havo increased $6,464,305.71.
Tho deposits in tho stato banks at
this time, $80,354,728.26, Is the high
water mark In tho history of tho state.
Tho deposits in national banks have
Increased $19,919,801.34 during m
year, and since tho report of Decern
ber 5, 1911, up to February 20, 1912,
theso banks show nn increase In de
posits of $8,199,305.83.
Tho increase of deposits In all
banks, both stato and national, during
tho year Is $26,349,062.31, and slnco
the report of December 5, 1911, the In
crease amounts to $14,628,566.80.
3
Labor Report In State.
Labor Commissioner Guye, in a re
port of labor conditions in Lincoln,
sets out that 310 concerns were In
spected and a number of them wero
ordered to protect machinery so as to
safeguard the llfo and limb of em
ployes. Conditions, as a whole, were
not found to bo bad. In summarizing
tho wage question ho says that condi
tions in Lincoln are abovo the average
so far as the employment of child la
bor or tho sweatshop system, but that
thuro nm two concerns employing
children and women which give their
employes work to take home after
they havo worked as many Hours in
the shop as tho law permits. He points
out that weakness of tho law to reach
such cases, as there Is no limit to the
number of hours a woman may work
In her homo or the number of hours
labor a rftrnt may require of a child,
provided it is performed In the home.
Boostrom Reports on Glanders.
State Veterinarian Boostrom has re
cently had to cope with a couple of
outbreaks of glanders among horses.
and In one Instance it was necessary
tq kill ton animals belonging to Over
man & Son of CrookBton, Cherry coun
ty. Seiuot. those anlmls;were paid
for by tho state and three were the'
loss of tho owner as they had not been
owned by him for a year previous to
the outbreak. One other horse was
killed at Crookston. and another was
condemned and killed at Tekamah.
Steward Gets More Pay.
The stato board of public lands and
buildings has decided to increase the
salary of the steward at the penlten-
tiary. Mont Robb, from $75 a monui
to $100. Thi3 action was taken in
vlow of the fact that tho wagC3 of
guards Is being raised all around. Un
til it was decided to pay guards $50 a
month as a flat scale all around, the
recehed wages as follows, twelve men
received $35 a month and keep, and
a few others, $40 a month and keep.
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Everything in the line of I
Harness -.ivd Hors Goods "
I Concord Harness, $35.00 j
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Our Spring Stock of Harness Goods is now in, and it will
be money in your pocket to get our prices first on any
thing you may need in our line of Harness, Pads, Whips,
Etc. VVc make a specialty of all kinds of repair work.
Fredrickef (Si Son
Hubbard
Netbrsv
J BRUCE ISMAY, managing director of tho Whlto Star line (at tho end of tho tablo with head on hand), being
questioned by tho senate investigating committee at tho Waldorf Astoria. Tho committee, bonded by Sena
tor William Aiden Smith of Michigan, is taking testimony concerning tho Titanic disaster.
FAST TRAIN ROBBED
MASKED MEN FORCE ROCK 18-
LAND PA88ENGER3 TO GIVE
UP VALUABLES.
SPEND HALF AN HOUR IN CAR
SHIPS CRASH IN FOG
FREIGHTER AND LINER IN COL
LISION OFF GALVE3TOR BAR.
Bold Hold-Up Committed by Pslr Who
Beard Cars In Bureau (III.) Yards
Secure Money and Jewelry and
Escape.
Total earnings $ 479,587
Operating and other exp... 501,009
Deficit 21,421
All of tho .roads have included
amounts expended for betterments In
the figures of operating and other ex
penses, but the board Is eliminating
tills item in computing tho revenue.
Registering Many Stallions.
Th new room fitted out in the
northeast corner of the state house
basement now houses the Btnlllon reg
istration board, which was created at
the last session of the state legisla
ture. The quarters have been com
pletely equipped and clerks havo al
ready transferred their records from
the board of agriculture loom to the
now room. The work of remodeling
the corner of tho basement cost In
tho neighborhood of $840 exclusive of
tho lighting fixtures. Tho board has
"been working undor pressure slnco
the new law went into effect.
Jobners to Co-Operate.
The Jobbers of Omaha have assured
Pood Commissioner Hansen that they
tvIU co-operate wlth'hlm In every pos
sible way to stop the shipping into
the state of Impure and mlsbranded
food products.
Prof. Not to Be Dismissed.
Prof, J. H. Powers of the stato unl
verslty faculty Is not to be dismissed
-as a result of a severe punishment
administered partly In public to his
18-year-old daughter, HUdegarde.
Strausvllle Wants Depot.
J. H. Dietrich and twenty-live othei
residents of Strausvllle, Richardson
county havo petitioned tho rallwnj
commission to compel tho Missouri
Pacific1 Railroad company to erect and
maintain a depot at that point.
Favor Board of Control.
The Nebraska Medical society has
gone on record as favoring the consti
tutional amendment for a board of
control for state institutions, on the
theory that it will work for better
management and also for economy.
Road Testing Machine.
Tor tho purpose of surveying the
state of Nebraska to find out tho qUal
itj of native materials for road con
struction, a complete outfit for road
construction, a complete outfit for
road testing has been ordered by tho
engineering college of tho university,
The machinery will arrive somo time
in September and w 111 probably bo put
Immediately in service.
Mollno, 111., April 23. Boarding the
Golden State Limited on tho Rock Is
land road at Bureau, 111., last Sunday,
two masked bandits robbed every pas
senger on the sleeper "Nottingham"
and then pulled the air rope to signal
the engineer to stop.
The engineer disregarded the sig
nal, and one robber then shot a hole
through the air brake hoso at tho end
of the car, thereby setting the emer
gency brakes, and they left the train.
Headed by the sheriff of Bureau coun
ty, a posse is in pursultr and every
farmer In that section of the state Is
on the lookout
Qno of tho most daring robberies
In the history of train holdups, the aft
fair Is especially striking In that the
highwaymen robbed occupants of only
one car, though there woro several
other Pullman sleepers on tho train.
One robber reached Into every
berth, snapped on the electric light
and personally examined tho effects
of the passengers lost the latter, In
handing out his or her valuables,
might suddenly produce a gun.
Less than half nn hour sufficed to
complete the roundup of that car, and
then, forcing passengers and porter
into a smoking compartment at one
end of tho car, tho robbers ordered
tho portorN to stop the train.
Ho explained that the only way he
could do so would bo to pull the sig
nal rope, and when ordorod to do It
he grabbed tho rope and gave it threo
lusty pulls.
Tho train was speeding along five
miles from Sheffield on its way to Mo
llno, and tho engineer either failed
to understand the signal or refused
to obey It, for on went the train.
Then the robbers displayed the one
clue which may lead to their Identity
and capture. Whllo one mounted
guard over tho victims tho "other
opened tho door, leaned down at the
coupling with tho next car, took care
ful aim, and with one shot cut the air
brake hose.
This Instantly throw tho emergency
brakes and the train began to Jolt
along at tho sudden stoppage.
Quickly as It had slowed down to
almost a stop, tho robbers leaped off
the train and disappeared In the dark
ness. This, together with tho fact that
they knew the location of the air
brake hoBo and what would happen if
a holo were shot in it, led railroad of
ficials to bollovo that tho robbors arc
either railroad employes or have
been
Two Deckhands Killed and 170 Other
Persons Are put In Peril
by Accfdent.
Galveston, Tex., April 23. Hidden
from each other in a dense fog the
steamship Denver of tho Mallory line
and tho El Sud of1 tho Southern Pa
cific Steamship company were in col
lision about fifteen miles from tho
Bolivar light at the entrance to Gal
veston Harbor. F$r a Uino it was
feared that the El Sud, which is a
freight steamship, Trould Din
Two lives were lost, those of deck
hands who were knocked overboard,
and one negro deck hand of the Kl
Sud was badly hurt
The crash occurred about fifteen
miles from tho Bolivar light For a
time It war feared i tho El Sud would
sink. Down at tho Jbow, El Sud raced
for the shore and wad beached on Gal.
veston bar. She was saved from sink-
tag by her forward bulknead having
withstood the in.pj(p of tho sea as tho
bow plates were ripped off.
There were about 100 pnBsutieY on
the Denver and acrew of 70. Thore
waa a -wild rush, fofcltto preservers and
tho lifeboats of the vDenvcr after the
crash, but Capt Charles P. Staples
and First Officer Lamb auccecded in
quieting tho excited men.
MOORS (N MUTINY
KILL FRENCH OFFICERS AND
CITIZENS IN MOROCCAN CITY
OF FEZ.
PARADE HEADS ON PIKES
Massacre One Hundred Jews Mur
der Telegraph Operators While on
Duty Paris Hears Distressing
News False Rumor Starts Trouble.
ROADS ARE RULED BY STEEL
Stanley Body Asserts U. 8. Corpora
tion Has Control of More Than
55 Per Cent.
Washington, April 23. Directors of
tho United, States Steol corporation,
through stock ownership and plaecs
upon tho directorates of tho great
railways systems of the United States,
havo a controlling voice In nearly 55
per cont. of tho railroads of the coun
try, according to a satlstlcal study
prepared for tho Stanley Steol trust
investigating committee of the houso.
Tho total value of tho railroads is
fixed at approximately $18,000,000,000.
and of that tho Steel corporation affil
iations are said to control more than
$10,000,000,000.
The 23 directors of the Steol cor
poration also sit on boards of direc
tors of banks, insurance companies,
expreBB companion and various other
industrial corporations, with an aggre
gate capitalization of $7,388,099,416.
New Banks Authorized.
Two now banks wero authorized to
commence business, as follows: North
Loup State bank of North Loup, Neb.,
capital, $20,000; E. J. Andrews, W. H.
Schultz and C. O. Earnest, incorpo
rators. Loma State bank of Lomn,
Butler county, capital stock, $10,000.
No Date for Argument.
No date has yet been fixed for argu
ment on tho conflicting water right
claims of Coad and Boss, tho testi
mony on which was heard somo time
ago by tho Stato Board of Irrigation.
It was originally set for April 12, but
on that date a contlnuanco was asked
for, to a date to be determined later.
There has been no move since ttK fix
a date and those who havo been
watching the current of events havo
concluded that a compromise 1b being
engineered for settling conflicting
claims.
Fares to Haveloek.
The State Railway commission has
set April 27 as the date for hearing
the streot railway case Involving tho
fares to Haveloek, Tho traction com
pany wants a straight 5-cent faro In
stead of the present six for 25-cent
rate.
The Water Power Fight.
A protest against tho granting of
water power rights on tho Loup river
to H. O. Babcock of Columbus was
filed with Stato Engineer Price here
by A. C. Koenlg of Omaha. The lat
ter eets out in his protest that tho
Ilabcock filing was not complete, in so
far as its requirements wero concern
ed, and that not all of tho provisions
of tho law have been met by tho Co
lumbus man. The filing of tho protest
follows an energetic effort on tho part
of several big concerns to get control
of advantageous water power sites
RIVER STEAMER GOES DOWN
Twenty Passengers Are Rescued But
Much Live Stock Drowned In
the Mississippi.
Natchez, Miss., April 23. Tho
steamer Concordia struck a Bnag in
a flooded cotton flold thirty-one miles
south of hero Sunday and sank In ton
feet of water. Throe hundred head
of live stock wero lost, but tho twenty
passengers, all flood refugees, escaped.
Tho water did not reach tho cabin. Of
tho live stock there were two hundred
cattle, sixty mules and forty horses, a
totnl value of $10,000
Governor Dlx 8alls for Europe.
New York, April 23. Governor Dlx
of New York and Mrs. Dlx sailed Sat
urday on the Lapland for Paris, whoro
they will meet Mrs. DIx's sister, Mrs.
Curtis Douglass. They plan to tour
Hollund and Germany ere returning.
"MY RCSARY" AUTHOR DIES
Robert Cameron Rogers, Literary
Genius, Succumbs In California
After zn Operation,
Santa Barbara, Cal.. April 23. Rob
ert Camoron Rogers, a Utorary
genius, author of "My Rosary" and tho
dedicatory ode to the Pan-American
exposition at Buffalo, dlod Sunday fol
lowing an operation for appondlclUs.
Rogers Is survived by a widow, three
sons and two stepsons. Ho waH born
in Buffalo, N. Y., in 18G2, being a son
of S. S. Rogers, a law partner of
Grover Cleveland.
ROOSEVELT LEADING, 3 TO 1
Colonel Has More Votes In Nebraska
Than Both Taft and
La Follette.
American Sentenced to Death.
Lethbrldge, Alta, April 23. James
Carlson, who murdered a companion
near Castor, Alberta, was sentenced
hero last Saturday to be banged June
19. He caino to Lethbrldge from Montana.
Lincoln, Nob., April 22. Corrected
tabulations of tho Nebraska presiden
tial preference voto. Including roturns
from 880 precincts, give Roosevelt
31,242; Taft, 10,092; I A Follotto, 10,
279; Clark, 14,031; Harmon, 11,241;
WIlBon, 9,800. It Is believed that this
Includes 80 per cont of tho voto of
tho stato.
Foz. April 24. Friday at midday
tho revolt of tho populace and the
Moorish soldiery began, after .a dele
gation of native troops had obtained
admission to the palace and com
plained to tho sultan of the new mili
tary regulations in connecUon with
tho French protectorate.
As the military delegaUon came out
from the plac tin soldiers compos
ing it Beized and killed a French cap
tain. This was the signal for general
pillage nnd massacre throughout city.
The native soldiers, pushed on by
nhrlpklng Moorish fromen, rushed
throiiKh the streets of the city slaying
all the French they could land "Bd In
citing tho population to violence by
the false cry of ""tho 8ultaritiaavi8
oner of the French, and must be lib
erated." Tho French telegraphers were at
tacked by a howling crowd and mado
a heroic stand, defending their offlco
for four hours, In tho meantime send
ing messages to headquarters at Tan
gier. Finally the offlco was broken In
to, tho telegraphers killed, and their
bodies mutilated and burned.
The heads of all the Europeans
slain by tho native troops were pa
raded through tho streetB on pikes.
The Ficnch legation Bent out roller
squads of troops and brought in mnny
foreigners, and afterwards tho French
artillery opened fire on tho rebels,
who were grouped in tho northern
qunrtor.
Paris. April 24. After four days of
anxiety here due to lack of news from
Fez, whoie the populaco and Moorish
Boldlers mutinied some days ago and
attacked all foreigners, somo account
of the trouble reached here Tuesday.
It Is known 15 French officers and
40 soldiers wero killed in the fight
ing, whllo 13 civilians, all of them
French citizens, woro massacred In
their homos or In tho streets. Be
sides these four French officers and
70 soldiers wero wounded and 100
Jews slnln and a largo numbor wound
ed and mutilated.
A delegation of native troops had
an audience with tho sultan to com
plain about tho new military regula
tions of tho French. Upon leaving tho
palace IW captured and killed a
French captain.
Then a general attack on tho city
began, and native troopB, urged to
fury by screaming women, stormed
through the Hlreets, killing all tho
French they met and pillaging every
where. The mutineers roused the people by
declaring the oultan was a prisoner
and must be sot froo. The French
telegraphers sent the alarm to Tan
aler and held their office for four
hours, but woro finally overcomo and
slain. Tho legation guards at length
restored ordor.
Tho absence of dispatches from Fes
led to the belief that the uprising has,
assumed serious proportions and that
the French troopa were In danger of,
losing control of tho situation. Dis
patches which wero raeagor reported
500 rebels killed in a desperate strug
glo and tho imprisonment of 2,000
more. All of tho European residents
woro gathered in tho sultan's palace,
whoro French troops, aided by rein
forcements from tho barracks at WeBt
Meklnese, were on guard.
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is a moral dvnamo s maeaxine devoted ex
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eiimivniv tn the whoio nov a, mairazine mac
imbues tho boy with high morals, honor and
manliness. 600,000 dots are bow enuuwtMuo
readers overy month.
The American Boy
contains ttorle ot the this bora Hk to rsad .bos atws
tnre, travel, hlitorr.. ptaolotTspny.rtaawL stoeJfW?.,esir
Mntrr. norta. current events, to., nil bMsUtally Uhutr-UxL.
And department devoted to the Bo fleoste of America, t
which Ernest Thompson Beton, Chief Soont, eoatribntea m
illustrated pat each month. It is the beet mas lae lor
bore In all the world.
Ive Kh ywrateyl 1 Tec wfcle' year.
The American Boy, 1 yr, il.OO ) Both for
The Herald. 1 year for, 11,00 J $1.05
I Abstracts of Title
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Dakota Omtj ibstnet C: J:
ond.d Abstracter
I. J. BINERSI
WHY NOT MAKE $200. A MONTH--Thai's
S50.00 a Weak, almoit $10,M a Day
Belling Vletor Safes and flro-proof boxes
to merchants, doctors, lawyers, de&Usts and
well-to-do farmers, all ot whom realise the need
of a sate, but do not know how easy It Is to owa
one. Salesmen declare oar proposition on ot
the best, clean-cut money.maklnfr opportuni
ties ever received. Without previous experi
ence YOU can duplicate the success of others.
Our handsomely Illustrated MO-paao catalog
will enable yon to present the subject to ous-
tomers in aa inieresung a, manner mm i-ouga
you wero piloting them tbrouKh our factory. Men appointed aa
salesmen receive advice ana instructions tor iiing , giving
convincing talking points which it Is Impossible for prosj
don't YMJ be tho nrst to apply from your vicinity before
We can favor only one salesman out ot each locality.
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Our New Home, CaaaeHy SO,000 Satea AnewaHy.
for a prospective customer to deny. Why
someone sum etn wmrarvr ,
The 36th anniversary ot our
company waa celebrated by
erecting the most modern ear
factory In the world. Wide
awake saaa who received our
special selling- inducemrnt,
rendered It necessary to double
oar output. We are spending;
many thousand of dollar en
larging our sale organisation,
butto learn all particulars, H
will eost you omly the price ot
ft postal eard.
WfwkWsfrslST.
THE VICTOR
SAFE & LOCK CO.
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CONCORD.
Federal Moving on Juarez.
El Paso, Tex., April 24. A hundred
additional liberal soldlors havo beon
ordered to Juaroz from Casas Orandes
to defend tho city. Reports arc that
federnls nre coming from OJInaga.
cast of Juurez, to attack the town.
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HAMP-JtOaaK AHKSIaV
Stllson Hutchlns Is Dead.
Washington, April 2-1 Stllson
Hutchlns, millionaire philanthropist
and retired Journalist, died at his
homo hero last Monday after a linger
ing attack of paralysis. Ho was born
In Whltefleld, N. H., In 1838
Will Build Threo-Mllo Tunnel.
Coattlo, Wash., April 24. Work will
bo begun May 1 by tho Chlcngo, Mil
waukee & Pugot Sound railroad on
the construction of a throo-mllo tun
nel through tho Cascado mountains
to cost nearly ?5,000,000.
Shoot Herself When Knife Is Near,
noaton, April 21. Dread of under
going a surgical operation Is bcllovod
to havo lod MIbb Judith Ttlco ot Wow
York to shoot horself last Mondny.
Her father Is said to bo a woalthy
Salt Lako City merchant.
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Now Open for Business
ZShe Dakota. City
feey'u wit., Wines, Liquors, Cigars
Western Brew Sifttw Baar
Courteous
Treatment
FRED G STANNARD
Dakota OUT
Nebraska
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1
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A
I
41
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