The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, April 02, 1909, Page 15, Image 15

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The Commoner.
APRIL 2, 190
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Willie Whitla, the Sharon, Pa.,
boy who was kidnapped and held for
a ransom of $10,000, has heen re
stored safe and sound to his parents.
The father went to Cleveland, Ohio,
and there met the representative of
the kidnappers in a little grocery
store and paid over the $10,000 to
a man dressed as a working man.
The father paid the money in bank
bills which he had caused to he
marked.
Theodore Roosevelt, accompanied
by his son Kermit and other mem
bers of his company sailed, March 23
on the steamship Hamburg, fie will
visit South Africa.
Governor Shallenberger of Nebras
ka sent a special message to the
legislature urging the passage of a
bill to. prohibit watering of Btocks
by corporations.
A fire at SeaTcy's distillery at Mc
Braynor, 111., destroyed 28,000 bar
rels of whiskey valued at $200,000.
B. N. Morrill, former
of Kansas, is. dead.
governor
by that city. An association is seek
ing" a ten-year franchise for which
it has offered the city $365,000 a
year for the first five years and
$400,000 for the last five. It prom
ises to reduce the number of saloons
from 440 to 250 and to regulate
them. An initiative petition for a
law granting them this privilege is
being circulated."
Police Commissioner Bingham of
New York said recently that during
his first year in office he was offered
a bribe of $600,000 a year to pro
tect certain criminal interests.
Mrs. B. P. Hutchinson, widow of
"Old Hutch," who was famous years
ago as a board of trade operator,
died at Lynn, Mass.
A Milwaukee dispatch says:
"There are 14,235,451 Roman Cath
olics in the United States, according
to the advance sheets of the 1909
Wijtzius official Catholic directory
published in this city. The statistics
are furnishedby the archbishops and
bishops of -ithe United Statgs after
the takingf ' a census in all dio
ceses. Addfhg to the 14,235,4.51, the
number of -Roman Cathplics in the
Philippines, "PQrto Rico and the. Ha
waiian Islands,4 bring the grand total
of Catholics under the United States
flag to 22,474,440, as compared with
12,053,000 Catholics subject under
the British flag. The Catholic pop
ulation of the twenty leading dio
ceses in thetJnited States is as fol
low i "New Yofl?; i;21 9,920: Chicago,
1,150,000; Boston, 850,000; Brook
lyn, 700,OOOTNew Orleans, 525,000;
Philadelphia, 25,000; Pittsburg,
425000; S?. Louis, 375,000; Hart
ford', 365,000j- Newark, 365,000;
Cleveland, 33.0,000; Springfield,
323,121; Detroit, 267,000; Scranton,
265,000; St. Paul, 260,000; Balti
more 255.000; San Francisco, 250,
000; Buffalo, 2f4,739; Milwaukee,
235,000, atfd Providence, 222,000."
A Carson, Nevada, dispatch says:
"Governor DIckerson has signed the
Tallman banking act, the mining in
spector bill, the anti-gambling bill
and tho juvenile court bill. The
banking act, though not including
the guaranty feature, is almost the
same in effect. Its vital feature is
the following: 'Every officer and di
rector of any banking corporation
who shall violate any provisions of
this act shall be" civilly liable for
damages to any person injured there
by and shall likewise be liable to
the guaranty deposit fund of such
corporation for the amount of money
paid out to the depositors therein.' "
The Nebraska legislature has
passed and the governor has signed
the McVicker. bill regulating cam
paign contributions.
The Nebraska legislature has
passed a bill providing that before
any corpprationcan issue new stock
it shall furnish the state railway
commission acomplete report of Its
ownings ind the committee shall as
certain whether the company has
sufficient property to warrant an is
sue of the new rtock.
The Nebraska1 house of represent
atives defeated the county option
bill. !'' ,
TT"
Governor' Curry of Now Mexico
made a personal attack upon a news
paper editor -and then wired his
resignation. He was persuaded by
Mr. Taft to withdraw it.
THE MVIOKER BILL
"The McVicker anti-corruptions bill
passed by the Nebraska legislature
and signed by the governor is as
follows:
House Holl No. 242 A bill for an
act to amend section 5983 of Cob
bey's Annotated Statutes for the year
1907 entitled elections, and to re
peal said section as it now exists.
Be it Enacted by tho Legislature
of the State of Nebraska:
Section x. That section 5983 of
Cobbey's Annotated Statutes of Ne
braska for 1907 be amended to read
as follows:
Section 5983. Every treasurer of
a political committee as defined in
this act, and every other person re
quired by section 16 of this act to
keep an account, shall, fifteen days
before each and every election, cau
cus, convention or primary election
in or concerning, or in connection
with which he shall have received
or disbursed any money for any of
the objects or purposes mentioned in
section 14 of this act, prepare and
file in the office of the clerk of the
county in which said treasurer or
other person resides, a full, true and
detailed statement, subscribed and
sworn to' by him before an officer
authorized to administer oaths, set
ting forth the source of any money
delivered in such treasurer's hands
at the beginning of the campaign
and each and every contribution re
ceived by him amounting to more
than $25 from one person, whether
the sum be given in one sum or in
smaller sums aggregating more than
$25, and such treasurer, or other
person, shall after the said publi
cation until el :tion file on the day
that such contribution is received, a
statement setting forth each and
every individual contribution in ex
r.psa nf $25 that mar be received.
An Associated Press dispatch from
San FranciscOLsays: "A special from
Portland firp atn.toa fhnf tho ftnfli-
. w.v.f- -v. ......, w ... , -- . V nn.y.onn
enuurg system, of placing all saloons Ana sucn treasurer, V 1J , "'
under one ownership may be adopted , shall not receive, within two nays
DE LAVAL
SEPARATORS
MAKE THE
BEST BUTTER
The ono purpose of every tli inking buyer -of a cream separator
is tho making of the most and the best cream possible, whether
for home buttermaking, creamery patronage, or any other use
to which cream is put.
It is possible to "claim" almost everything for tho various
makes of cream separators, . but the one indisputable fact that
would-be competitors do not. even attempt' to got around Is tho
unquestionable superiority of tho DE LAVAL machines in tho
making of tho best butter.
Year after year, dating back to the Invention of tho "ALPHA
DISC" system of DE LAVAL bowl construction, butter made by
users of DE LAVAL machines has scored highest and won all
higher awards in every large and thoroughly representative but
ter contest throughout the world.
Beginning with the first great annual contest of tho NA
TIONAL BUTTERMAKERS ASSOCIATION in 1892 and ending
with tho 1908 contest, not only the HIGHEST but every any
where near high award has been made to users of DE LAVAL
separators and more than nine-tenths of all exhibits scoring above
90 per cent in quality have been DE LAVAL made..
THE ROLL OF HONOR
ALL DE LAVAL USERS
The First Prize winners and their scores at every convention
.of the National Buttermakers Association since its organization
in 1892 have been made as follows:
1892 Madison, Wis., Louis Brahe, Washington, Iowa . . Scoro 98.
1893 Dubuque, Iowa, C. W. Smith, Colvln's Park, 111. . . Scoro 97.
1895 Roclcford, 111., F. C. Oltroirffc, Tripoli, Iowa . . . Scoro 98.
189G Cedar Rapids. Ia Thos. Milton, St. Paul, Minn. . . Score 97.82
1897 Owatonna. Minn., H. N. MUlor, Randall, Iowa . . Score 98.5
1898 Topeka, Kan., Saml. Haugdahl, New Sweden, Minn. Score 98.
1899 Sioux Falls, South Dakota, A. W. McCalL Creston, la. Score 97.
1900 L. ncoln. Nob.. H. T. sonderKaaru. -LrttcnneKi. Minn. . corc a.
1901 St. Paul, Minn., E. O. Quenvold, Owatonna, Minn.
1902 B. L. Duxbury, Green Bay, Wis
1904 St. Louis, Mo., L.. S. Taylor, Glenville, Minn. . .
1906 Chicago, 111., A. Carlson, Rush City, Minn. . .
1907 Ohlrficro. 111.. A. Llrfdhlad. North Branch. Minn. .
1908 J. C. Post, Hector, Minn Score 98.
(Thoro were no conventions in i, laua ana lyub.j
In the great 1908 contest 504 of the best buttermakers in the
United States competed, with first, second and third, and all
Important awards, being made to users of DE LAVAL machines.
At each ,of the big Chicago National Dairy Shows DE LAVAL
butter has made a CLEAN SWEEP of all highest prizes, and at
the December, 1908, Show, when Instead of butter there was a
cream contest, under the supervision of the Dairy Division of the
United States Department of Agriculture at Washington, first
and second prizes in both classes were won by DE LAVAL cream.
Score 97.
Score 98.5
Scoro 98.5
Scoro 97.
Score 97.6
Going back further, DE LAVAL made butter received the
GRAND PRIZE at the ST. LOUIS WORLD'S FAIR and as well
at the last PARIS WORLD'S EXPOSITION.
In all the hundreds of important state and country contests
the world over for twenty years the superiority of the DE LAVAL
separator in the making of fine butter has been conclusively
proved.
THE EXPLANATION IS TO BE FOUND IN THE IDEAL
DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF THE DE LAVAL SEPARAT
ING BOWLS AND THE THOROUGHLY PRACTICAL CONDI
TIONS UNDER WHICH DE LAVAL MACHINES MAY BE
OPERATED AND USED.
A new 1909 DE LAVAL catalogue--affordlng an education
in this as in other features of separator knowledge is to be
had for tho asking.
The De Laval Separator Co.
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42 E. Macison Street
CHICAGO
1213 & 1215 Filbert St.
PHILADELPHIA
Drumm a Sacramento Sta.
SAN FRANCISCC
General Offices:
165-167 Broadway,
NEW YORK,
173-177 William Street
MONTREAL
14 & 16 Princess Street
WINNIPEG
107 First Street
PORTLAND, OREG.
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