The Wageworker. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1904-????, December 13, 1907, Image 14

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    Vall Orders Filled.
Where prices are never exaggerated
Where Values are
Never .
Misrepresented f
A -
OUR GENUINE REDUCTIONS BRING DOWN THE PRICES OF HIGH-GRADE
MERCHANDISE TO THE PRICE-LEVEL OF MERELY ORDINARY KINDS
every boys' suit and overcoat in
the store at
20 c!nrt OFF
it's a great money saving opportunity
sacrificing prices on all broken
lines of men's, women's and chil
dren's shoes don't miss the great
bargains we are offering now
boy's furnishing goods and hats
and caps are now offered at
20 crt OFF
Buy now for future needs
men's shirts worth $1.25 now 89c
Men's fleece lined and ribbed under
wear, 50c and 74c kinds, now 39c.
Sale of 50c neckwear. . . . . , ' v Cr
now. . ....
'
MEN'S SUITS
we've cut the prices of a whole
lot of men's suits that were
$12.50, $13.50 and $15.00 down
to $10.00.
Can you afford to miss a snap
like this?
1
0
MEN'S SUITS
we've cut the prices of a
whole lot of men's suits that
were $16.50, $18.00, and $20.00
down to $14.00.
These suits at these prices defy
competition
ID)
SB
Incorporated 1886 Statement of 1906
TWENTIETH ANNUAL STATEMENT
OF THE
UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
RESOURCES:
Gross Premiums on Unexpired Policies $528,087.77
Deposit Notes and Cash $236,767.77
Bills Receivable and Due from Agents 1,292.58
Furniture and Fixtures 081.96
Wiecellaneous . 14.61
Total .' S2S9,066.87
Losses Paid Since Organization - $321,34532
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT:
Business Written During the Year 1903 S6, 404,879.00
" " 1908 7.063,690.00
" " 1904 , 4400,803.00
J' " 1906 8.601,787.00
Business Written During the Year 1906 $9,230,794.00
The Union Fire Insurance Company
is iMorporated under the laws of 1878, which is the only mutual insurance law that absolutely limits the
liability of the assured to the amount stated in the premium contract.
This company writes no commercial risks, but confines its business strictly to farm property, detached dwell
ings and their contents, churches and school houses and their contents.
This oompany adjusts all losses promptly and pays them without discount upon reoeipt of proof.
All conservative loan and trust oompanies accept our policies as security.
OFFICERS AND DIRBCTORSl
. F. WATbOW, Pre. B. H. MARSHALL. Setfy. T J. BROWNTIELD. Sen. Kg.
J. F. Dohotas. Ctbus Kiumo. W. A. Wat
THIRD FLOOR BURR BLOCK, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
BRIDGE GOES DOWN.
Collapse at Mifflinyille, Pa., Causes
Seven Deaths.
High water caused the collapse of
a new bridge in course of erection
over the west branch of the Susque
hanna river at Mlffllnville, Pa., and re
mitted in the death of seven men and
the injury of nearly a score of others,
two perhaps fatally. Forty men were
tit work on the traveler in the middle
pan of the structure when it col
lapsed. They were all thrown into
the swollen river.
Failure Means Big Penalty.
A penalty of $500 a minute the
heaviest ever proposed by New York
is imposed in a contract just signed
with the New York Edison company.
The company must pay this if it fails
within three minutes after a fire
alarm is given, to furnish adequate
power to operate pumps from the
clty'S new high pressure water mains
betwen Chambers and Twenty-third
streets. The new high presure fire
service will be completed soon and
John O'Brien, water commissioner, has
made a contract with the Edison com
pany to supply the necessary power to
operate the pumps. The new system
has been installed at a cost of about
$2,500,000.
SUSPECTS SHOT TO DEATH . I BREWER BUSCH IS ALARMED
Posse Near Winlock, Wash., Avenges
Wounding of Constable.
The postofflce at Winlock, Wash.,
was entered by burglars, but they
were scared away by the burglar
alarm before securing any plunder.
Marshal J. P. Castalor and Constable
T. F. McFadden accosted two men
walking on the Tallroad track. After
a few words, the men started running,
with the constable in pursuit. Sud
denly the men turned and began
shooting, McFadden being seriously
wounded. The fugitives then took to
to the woods-. A posse soon sur
rounded the robbers and shot them
to death. They are believed to be
professional yeggnien.
Illinois State Grange.
All arrangements have been com
pleted for the annual meeting of the
Illinois state grange, which is to begin
its sessions in Joliet, 111. Advices re
ceived by the local committee in
charge of arrangements indicate that
the meeting will bring representatives
from all parts of the state and it is
anticipated that fully 300 delegates
will participate in the " three days'
meeting.
Says Prohibition in Oklahoma Cost
Him a Million.
Adolphus Busch, the millionaire
brwer of St. Louis, was quoted in
an interview at Kansas City as say
ing he favored local option and partial
Sunday closing. Mr. Busch, with his
wife and a party of friends, passed
through Kansas City in his special
car on their way to Pasadena, Cal.,
where the brewer has a winter home.
"I am in favor of local option,"
said Mr. Busch in reply to the ques
tion of a local newspaper man. "If
a saloon is obnoxious to a community,
let it be voted out." He continued:
"As to Sunday closing, I have a plan
that should meet with universal ap
proval. It is this: Close the saloon
from midnight Saturday until 2
o'clock Sunday afternoon, and then
let them open. That would give
everyone an opportunity, to go to
church in the morning"
The widespread prohibition move
ment was viewed with some alarm
by Mr. Busch. "It is spreading all
over the south," he i said, "and even
Oklahoma went prohibition. That
cost a million dollars.'
KILLS TWO, THEN HIMSELF.
Telephone Lineman Author of a
Triple Tragedy.
Isaac C. Wilcox, a telephone line
man of Hannibal, Mo., shot and
killed a Mrs. Wilkerson and her
brother, "Cotton" Hanson, at the
home of Louis Leitz, and then blew
out his brains with the revolver.
Leitz was the only witness to the trag
edy. Mrs. Wilkerson was a widow
and Wilcox was once a suitor for her
'hand.
LINCOLN'S SHOWING IS BEST.
Bank Clearings for November Indi
cated Good Increase.
A Chicago dispatch says: Lincoln,
Neb., rith a 36.2 per cent gain over
last year in bank clearings for the
month of November, made the best
showing of any city in the west. A
majority of the cities lost ground.
Abolishes the Stripes. .
Blackwell's Island penitentiary,
where minor offenders of New York
city's laws serve their sentences, will
know the striped suit and the lock
step no more. John V. Coggey, com
missioner of correction, announced
that he had decided to put an end to
stripes and lock-step in the peniten
tiary, as he believed that they did
much to kill any smouldering spar of
decency that may remain in the pris
oner when he is brougni to the city
prison.
Cost of Educating the Deaf.
The per capita cost for maintaining
the institute for the deaf and dumb for
the six months ending November 30
was $84.24, according to the report of
Superintendent White. Officers' sal
aries amounted to $30.28 per capita;
employe's wages per capita $13.87;
maintenance $40.06 per capita. The to
tal amount expended for officer's sal
aries was $5,420; employe's wages,
$2,483.65; for maintenance $7,171.15.
For repars and improvements $1,122.24
was expended. Farm products con
sumed were valued at 596.65. The to
tal amount expended by this institu
tion for the' six months, excluding re
pairs was $15,079.60.
State. Senator Sentenced.
In the linited States district court
at Carson City, Nev., Judge Farrington
pronounced sentence on the Williams
brothers, one a state senator, for ille
gal fencing of federal lands in the
eastern and northern parts of the
state. On four indictments each was
sentenced to. a fine of $100 and serve
county jail. '..'
Names the Receiver.
Judge Edmund Waddill of the
United States circuit court at .Rich
mond, Va., announced the receivership
for the Jamestown exposition com
pany. They are Messrs. Alvah H. Mar
tin, late director-general of the exposi
tion, Edward T. Lamb of Norfolk and
William M. Geddes of Washington.
Two Cents and No More.
The Oklahoma corporation commis
sion ruled that railroad companies
could not collect in excess of two
cents a mile for passenger fare from
passengers who board trains without
tickets.
Fix Date for Encampment.
At a meeting of the national execu
tive committee of the Grand Army of
the Republic in Toledo, O., the date
of the next national encampment of
the G. A. R., to be held at that place
next year was 'set forward from Au
gust 31, until September 7.
Piratical depredations on the
Whangho river are giving the Chinese
government considerable trouble., Be
cause of the difficulty in controlling
the lawless element, a fleet of four
British vessels in Chinese waters will
patrol the river.
Bacon Awarded Medal.
Assistant Secretary of State Robert
Bacon has been awarded a bronze
medal by the Massachussetts humane
society for his bravery in saving two
unknown Harvard men from drowning
in the Charles river, October 11, last.
First Trust nd Satfccp
Dank
fOth and 0 Sts. Linooln, KabrasfcaW
CAPITAL STOCK S0.C:3
Yea are invited to open j mm
MTnfi Meot with this bank
Intarast Paid at 3 1-2 Par
Accounts opened for $1.00 or
more. - Can bo seat by may
The owners of this sank are Mm
en of the First National Bank of
Nebraska, with a Caottal of
and a Surplus of $152.000.00. t t
OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS
FROM 5 UNTIL 7 O'CLOCK!
itockboTfi
LtnOfisk
IOQlmMUuv
DR. ROBERTS
CHRONIC DISSAOBO
OFFICE 1339 0 ST., LINCOLN, NEBj
Bell Phones-AlfiOl and A91M.
Found Dead on Train.
Dr. Frank G. Dusen, said to be a well
known physician of Kansas City Mo.,
was found dead on a Chicago, Milwau
kee & St. -Paul train when it reached
the depot at Clcago. ; It is believed he
died of heart failure: ' ;-.
Leg Broken at Initiation.
James T. Smith filed suit in the
Vernon county circuit at Nevada, Mo.,
against the Modern Woodman' of
America for $20,000. He alleges that
whilg being initiated by the Brie,
Kansas, lodge his leg was broken.
Steamer Goes Ashore.
The Dominion Atlantic Railway
company's steamer Yarmouth, bound
from Digby, N. S., to St. Johns, N. B.,
went ashore at Black Point. The ves
sel is not in immediate danger.
Bill for a Drydock.
A bill for the construction of a dry-
dock at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, at a
cost not in excess of $2,000,000 and an
appropriation of $500,000 for the com
mencement of the project was intro
duced in congress by Mr. Kalanianaole.
Trust Company Resumes.
The Bath, Me., Trust company, at
one time controlled by Charles W.
Morse, resumed business after a sus
pension ttf several weeks.
H. B. MOOH an JOHN MOORE
Scccrity tavestcent Co
Fab. 1st, 1SM. ' .
N. BVaerv 18th A N 6ts.
ob Improved farms ta eastern
Mearaaka. t per cent Interest for. :
tana at year with rtTllee ef ;-.
payment before due i otrower'B ,
fare. .. , r . '- v
DI8EA8E8 OF WOMEN.
AH reatal diseasea, svoh as
FOes, IMsbaA Fiasmrs and rao
tat ttosr, tatted scleatlfloaftly
aad amcoeesfully.
Da. J. PL Haggard, Specialist.
Office, Richards Block.
Good Photos
PltEUITT'S QALLERY
1214 O St. Automatic 4754
V