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About The independent. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1902-1907 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1903)
15 EXTRA SESSIO II UNPOPULAR Senators and Representatives id Con gress Are Not Enthusiastic For Extra Session (Incorporated under the laws of the State of New York.) November s, 1903. THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT Established Three Years. ' Capital $50,000. Before the Public Every Day. NEW YORK, NEW ORLEANS, CHICAGO, SARATOGA, J WASHINGTON. REFERENCES: Any Hank or Banker in New York, New Orleans, Chicago, Saratoga or Washington. $50 WON $201 .75 ROOSEVELT MOWS HIS BUSINESS He Wants the Cuban Treaty Disposed Of Without Delay and Will Have His Way. Theodore Roosevelt Is an astute as .well ' as ' popular leader. He could see without difficulty and without his ever-present glasses, that at a Tegular session of congress , might talk till mid-summer over the Cuban reciproc ity treaty. He called an extra session to force prompt action and cut off the gab f est which the opposition had planned.- The house, under a cloture rule, will approve the treaty by the 20th of November, at f arthest. The senate will follow by the close of the extra session. The - . BANKERS RESERVE LIFE commends the policy of the president in securing this early action upon the treaty. Politicians seeking partisan , advantage and eager to Impress ad miring constituents would undoubted ly have seized, the opportunity for airing their views. Not only so, but they would be engaged also in a great political fencing match, which might develop great forensic ability, but could not benefit the country at large. Hence , , : ; ' - B. H. ROBISON, PRESIDENT, has instructed the field force of the Bankers Reserve Life Company to de- Tote themselves to life insurance and eschew politics. The people of the eight western states open to this ag gressive young level premium com pany are more deeply Interested in building up high, grade western finan cial Institutions than in developing sugar plantations in the West. Indies. With up-to-date, liberal policies, the Bankers Reserve Life is leading every western company in every feature feature making growth In a life com pany. ; My Monument When my time comes to die, Sing not your dismal dirges over me. For what remains was but the earthly tenement; ' The soul that -gave it being now is free. When I am dead Carve not my deeds on monumental stone; 1 wish to be remembered by , my friends When my poor life has flown. V When I am buried deep Plant roses on my grave so they may bloom. Perhaps some stricken soul may see, Love blushing forth above the tomb. Perchance the soul may sleep. Place me deep In the forest's soli tude, Where I can hear the birds and see the flowers, For these alone could charm my ' dreary mood. WM. FELTER. Blue Mound, Kas. Intelligent Sovereigns Editor Independent: My neighbors al rm "bloody shirt" g. o. p. men. Tnostlr "home guard pension patriots" etui shoutera for the full dinner pall. I opln that you, evn In Lincoln, have a few of thmt variety of "intHIlKcnt sovereign t Itlrns." voters and tax payeri. Iff re the wood and hills are Jn.isy with them. ittr hHlev In our trnuoui, wing-bag. rowboy pretldent. Uiutut to "vote er utrafcht" for ex pansion and a world rraptre every time, I hll retain the four ittwrir tlon, rard i 1 may ci-t tbem worked off on a rtatlin or two. TIUH WVHRANTS T.ODfil-?. fHthade (oltrc. Us Ha TonVs, Mo, The Indian name of thnt Mi(Mtri town fnu transited info Kmsitih nmin "111 I aMKh," ivrbapi Mr; 1 ote o.Halnally kt rvit a rmtlr of thnt Kind a m views the "native," PatrunUo our tv.h misers. EVERY WEEK A WINNER IN OCTOBER. Average Profit Earned Weekly on 50 in October, f 50.14. Total Profits Earned on $50 in October, 1201.75. Your Money Works While You .51eep. Our famous corDS of track shams are tm at break of da v. "clocking" the horses in thair mnrnintr . trvnnfa nr! mhiU vi, sleep they spot the winners that bring you steady income. Our method puts you on a level with the most successful plungers of the American turf. We operate for you for 25 per cent of weekly earnings. We win only when you win. Results obtained really "beyond dreams of avarice." Again we scored heavily tor all of 'our clienta last month. Again we landed the money and landed Jt In chunks. Three years of organi zation, with the best facilities that money and braim can procure to mate our service of picking and backing winners at the horse races the moat accurate and profitable in tbe land, hos had its natural sequence, and each week our showing demonstrates a good profit for every client. HOW $50.00 NETTED $201.75 IN LESS THAN A MONTH. . Here is aeompleto statement, showing the result ofa $V) play on each horse given In our "Discretionary Series" during Octob?r. Note: A capi tal to begin with of r0 is required by us, as a matter of conservatism, to make a flO play on each horse that Is considered by us a good betting proposition.) OCTOBER MEETINGS-MORRIS PARK AND BRIGHTON. Net Daily bxsult. Day. FIRST WEEK. Won. host, 1 Bobadil, 7 to 5, won; Castallan, 9-5 won; Duelist, lost.... 122 2 Oarsman, 5 to 2, won; 3 losers.. - 8 Juvenal Maxim, 6 to 1, won; M. Theo, lost; Wealth, lost. , 40 48. Protect., 1 to 2 won; M. Brant, 7 to 2 won; 3 losers. .... 10 6 Auriesville. 6 to 5, won; 3 losers., ,., 6 Land of Clover, 5 to 2, won; 2 losers 5 SECOND WEEK. ' , 1 Faulconbridge, lost....,.,. ;. ............... 2 Surmise, lost . ..... 8 No play (track conditions unfavorable)., 4 Medal, 7 to i, won; 4 Isoers .. 30 Charawind, 4 to 5, won; Duelist, 11 to 5 won; 3 losers 7 6 Outcome, 9 to 1$ won; Tepee, 3 to 5, woo. 15 $5 18 10 10 $122 $43 Day THIRD WEEK 1 Astarita, 8 to 5, won; Pol Rogers, lost. . . .. .. . 2 1'. Btone, 13 to 10, won; Uermls, 7 to 10, won; 1 loser... 8 Damon, it to 1, won; Emergency, 9 to 2, won; 3 losers. 4 Canuhnawaga, 6 to 5, won;2 losers 5 Klver Pirate, 3 to 1, won; Monarlb, lost. 6 Knrlght, 9 to 6, won; 8 losers.,,. -'' FOURTH WEEK 1 Mamie Worth. 2 to 5, won; Piquet, 9 to 2, won; 1 loser. 2 Woodshade, 12 tol, won; a losers........ Net Daily R em-it. Won, Lont. Forw'dl22 Hi 10 45 20 ' 80 90 12 Less Losses . . Net winnings. . , . 6i J26'J Less our Commission. 25 per cent... 67.25 Net profits onflO play for month.. .8201.75 The above showingis no improvement over that of September, aod Is not remarkable, since we have excelled it time and again during the past three years of our uninterrupted operations. Good as it is, however, we are confident we will make it "look sick" by comparison with the showing we are going to make at the meeting ot 100 days which begins at New Orleans this month. WE PICK THE WINNERS. , " ' The system we employ to locate winners is identical with that used by "Pittsburg Phil," John A. Drake, JohnVates, W. Langdon, Joe Yeager, and other famous plungers who win hundreds of thousands on the turf every year, and it proves just as successful. . . ' ., , We gather our information of prospective winners through a force of expert horsemen who hold a watch on the horset in their early-aaorning trials, and in that way learn when they are ready to win. The money that is played into the game by persistent losers, such as the large mass of uninformed players are bound to be, goes into the pockets of the big operators, of which the Maxim & Gay Co., representing a large clientele, stands at th head. The work of the Maxim & Gay Co. is to place the general public upon a level with the winning plungers, and our success in this accomplishment has made us famous on two continents. - " We do business only on thereat racetracks of the U. 8." We number among our clients some of the best known sportsmen, financiers and mer chants in the country. Investment on the turf is now deemed as legitimate as any other high-class form ot speculation. The present high stand ard to which racing has been brought, and the absolutely good faith in wheh turf anairs are conducted under the auspices of the Jockey Club Is the East, and the Western Jockey Club in the West, has Inspired millionaire captalists and business men all over the country with as much confidence in racing as in the stock, grain and cotton markets, and this is one reason why transactions in the betting rings now rival in magnitude those of the stock, cotton and grain exchanges. . ; Another reason for the rapll growth or turf speculation in popular favor, Is the rapidity with which all transactions are wound up. The specu lator makes his investment at the racetrack In the afternoon through us and receives a notification by mail, in a letter guaranteed to bear a post mark earlier than the race Is run. of lust whathorses are to be backed iorhis account By the next mail he is Informed of the result at thutdmr'a operations, and he learns quickly just where he stands. At the end of each week he receives a complete statement ot his account with, a money order for his profits, less 25 per cent., which we deduct as our tee. .. . This gives a wholesome tone td legitimate turf speculation which cannot" be found in the more or less Involved transactions of the big ex changes, and this is why turfmen live more comlortably and live longer than do men whose involved transactions are ou their minds, day and night, for weeks and sometimes months at a stretch. OUR CLIENTS WON A MILLION DOLLARS. As it is well known that our clients have collectively won as much as a million dollars at a single race meetinir. it is sometime asked-. do not Maxim & Gay simply sit down end-back their own selections instead of running a considerable clerical force and spending large sums In a vertisina in newspapers throughout the country?" The answer is simple enough if one stops to consider the situation. Maxim & Gay, by dint of ability, energy, organization, capital and adver tising, have secured an enormous clientele, which means the command of Immense capital. If we can pick winners for this immense number of investors, our profits are larger than It we played our own money only, for on a basis of 25 percent, of winnings, which we charge for Information and commission, one man out of every four of our customers is practically betting torus. The proof that this plan works for the benefit ot the public as well is that they win three weeks out of four and our books show that no customer who stuck to us fqr two months ever failed to get well ahead of the fame, while not a few of those who now own winning stables of racehorses and who are cutting an important figure on the turf, begun the game as mere novices, playing our selections through ns. The principle upon which we operate is such that we must of necessity do the best we can for you. Our Income, as pointed out is derived solely from a percentage ot the winnings of our clients, and if we cannot make you win, our entire income is cut ott. That we have been success ful in making our clients win, is amply proven by the fact that we have prospered for upward of three years, w hile imitators, pursuing more economical and less businesslike methods have gone under by the score. Noting the success that was being achieved by Maxim & Gay, scores of "get-rich-quick" operators tried to break into the field successfully occupied by the older and more responsible firm, but it did not take the press and public long to discriminate between the legitimate and the illegitimate, and as a result we have continued to flourish uninterruptedly, while in the ranks oi our rivals there have been scores of enterprises initiated, only to end in failure. "Why d- ' A FEW OF HUNDREDS DF RECENT CINCINNATI COMMERCIAL-TRIBUNE, March 1, 1003. Maxim & Gay, who have been so successful in selecting: winners at tho New Orleans races, are In a class iy themselves and have no relation In tbdr system of operation to the "set-rich -quick" schemes that have recenUr gone to pieces disastrously to tlinse who patronized them. Mai I in & Oaj do not guarantee thetr clients profits nor aealnst looses, but merely plj the money of their tuu scrlbers and deduct a fixed percentage Irom wlanlnsrs for placing the commis sions. '1 hit point is rnndo clear In all their announcements. v hat they guar antee to do Is to confidentially handle all money forwarded them and place It on the races Just as If it were their own. They have in their employ as "dock era" the most expert Judges of track work in the country, aod there is not a bono at ths New Orleans meeting that they have nut a record of. The Infor mation collected in this way is used to the benefit of tbeir suberUwrs, and Ha reliable character is attested by the numerous winners they have picked In the past two weeks. Maxim & Oay are the pioneers in this Una of. Invent meat or speculation: they have been enabUsthed three years: they conduct their imlness on straightfor ward buslne lines; tbeir methods hav been thoroughly investigated and are entirely different from thowi pursued by the "ret-ricb-qulek" arberaef, so called, which were but recently closed by the authorities, i ha transactions of Maxl'n & ;ay are legal In every sense, and they do exactly what they i Tertian to do, it at is. piay the money of thetr subscribers on tha borwes they judg will win, and tuey uauaily win. i'rompt and pruper accounting la made ot tha result, but they guaranty no fixed pronu, though ttioe ho Have Continuously patron ised Uieut have not been losers. T. rVV DISPATCH, February t8, 1993. An lnvestlsratton of the methods of tha Vaxlm k Hay & shows them toN condoctintf thrtr famine tm straightforward litilnM lines. I hey have been established nearly three years, lhey do not guarantee clients pruttit or against ENDORSEMENTS OF THE PRESS. loss, but merely place subscribers' money on Judgment of experts, charging a fee for Information and deduct a fixed percentage trow winnings for placing the commissions. They are the pioneers In this line of Investments or speculation. N. Y. MORNING TELEGRAPH, February 23, 1903. f lnce the Incorporation of the Maxim & Gay Co.. tha casual racegoer can pes Bess himself ot as much if not more knowledge of the comparative merits of th horses, and their chances of success, as the "regular" who burns the midnight oil studying from charts, ho can secure through this company, which Is in corporated under the laws of New York Mate, the expert knowledge and expert Judgment of an experienced combination of horsemen whose duty it Is to find out for him such things concerning the horses as be could not possibly find out for hlimwlf, uulrwa be devoted his rnttretlma and attoottoa to the business. Kvcn then, to do as well, he would have to possess a peculiar Ulent and be su daily lilted by experience and natural ability. CINCINNATI TIMES STAR, Marah X. 1003. The Maxim Oay Ompany, well-known pnrveyors of turf Information should not be confounded with the "get rlch-uulck" turf InvMtment or mo corns of similar character. I hey hao been entaMlKhed nearly three years Ibey place subscribers' money on Judgment of their experts, and deduct a fixed percentage from winning for plaolng tho commissions. They are tha Napoleons in this line ot Investment or speculation. MEMPHIS EVENING iCIMITAR, March ft, 1903. The advertisements that appear from lima to time In tha columns of various newspapers with refereooe to the turf plan of Maxim & Cay (nmpanyteil a story entirely different from the exploits U the defunct "get-rlcb-qulck" c ccrns. I h v,int h rjsy ompsoj transact pwtiaew toormicaly and solely on bnti , nMS principle. JOIN OUR WINNING ARMY. The grratet race meeting In the MMory ol the South beptns at New Orleans wttMrt a fortnight. In magnitude it will eclipse all other turfeath ertiiijs f the past. The ("rewent (Ity Jocfcr v Clob knows this to be a batiuor year and has prepared for It. Ho toavn we. If there are more h'.r-s at the New Orlrons racetrack than ever fathered them bt'iorc, we have more expeit "cWN-kera" and handkupp-rs than we ever employed at anr Other mertlng. 1 hi f rsuiu.t make the game too bin lor u to handle. We move with the time. ' If you want logei aboard our dH retluuary u rie, at New OrU ani, In which we tly dally those and only thru horses we think At betting prop, mltlotiw, with tha pmltttm of not playing any borw at all on day when we foniider conditions un propitious, fill out tho follow lug blank aud for. ward your r n.lun to u at New fririuia as iHn you can. May will t begun on the flrt day tl the luerlltig. If vour money reaches us In time; iitnrww, we willbesm rlay the Prtrtav il rrochrs ti alter the meeting ha Uiun. Moury should be tent by bank draft. hmiik.uiy order, of mrrtnry tu rrglstt-ird Irtler, I lici t lifted t u k are ui accepted. it To. tsm & list Co. tlncorp.), m Caiul r't., New Orleans, la. orrtliHf ret tht Ui m ymr l in the l.tr,4n Srh, Xrtmuka In h nid Imthm t.ty.. i,i 4,.. ..... .i.it.. , , , ,.r .( . ...,..... , mHI!ll w rut fi Hurruun f f tcryf ii'tirv ."Tira m Jn VlU1 llll.llll Mix I'i,u rtniu 1.1 JLN! iil vnj il In .k , . .1 .... .1 .. t., i .... i I. ..... 1 1 . Iht lurf K nb ft tHil M I '-itf 1 ' r tmtt owm il that iy tmun tf f.i wuf mffl.ttumtnt nn.1 .It. h wJUs tut u,r,t4 it e- UMl U mljtt t u ilhiii i ut in tit tl dima!. ,V.li; 7"ri or ( ity THt Hflt.nVtVii HI' 11 t iHKf ItK MlMMl'M ACCklTKIl TO I! I'f.tV; Vf a fS 1 Uv vu vim h rn l r riff M ft Hi l.laltf SUM a. t iiftnuA ti talM '.r 'irui u ,urr , M t,r 'A i,u M n b.f A. . ftl 'k, . ...... f ........ it-ytm, .! h , ,,, i f nr a tiui 11 u 111 vai it nr.. at t iC't lu iuii (iiicrt iuHu. Msiint,t a C, iiHjr.UtanlilfeH. K. w OrJeana. AlUvrt.utila r. .Jt d t.y tb Mm'iV;'VuVnV'y 'ihiYMy! ";- ! A r o . atid ice Mrtatni & liny t u 1U reals all av tMiiUHr tli'r. i tu I'a ( Ucnts. Ili Mailw 4 if t u hoioii a.l jmlHUiy lr jrtirf rtaruitoH oi tu einm uidv-r, ' Out mrd ar iuitiut ataMi stlti moiicf tiirwif h tha mail without cttertnx.