The independent. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1902-1907, December 01, 1904, Page PAGE 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    U?e Nebraska. Independent
PAGE 14
DECEMBER 1, 1904
f NEWS OF THE WEEK 1 Your Ls! "(Chance
st
The football season ended with
Thanksgiving day. The casualties of
the season were 13 killed -and 321
wounded.
A Weekly Resume of the Really Vital N6ws by the Editor &
gress of the United States is over
whelmingly republican and back of the
iepublican party stands the railroads.
They are entitled to the portion of the
spoils and will get it.
General Stbessel's last dispatch sent
congratulations to the czar and ended
up with the words: "God is with. us."
The question is how he found that out.
But General Stoessel may have some
Inside information from the' courts of
heaven as he has a perfect wireless
telegraph station on the highest hill
and the Japs have not bothered it.
Charles II granted a perpetual pen
sion to the duke of Richmond, and the
linglish government continues to punc
tually pay it every year to his heirs. It
amounts to $95,000 a year. There is a
"vested interest" wotyh having. The
last annual payment was made just o
few days ago, but like the brook, "it
goes on forever."
- Gompers had a walkaway and is
again elected president of the Ameri
can Federation of Labor. : That thing
occured as a further jab at the social
ist propaganda which Die members
seem determined ? to trample, so deep
into the. earth that it could never dig
out.
The German budget shews a deficit
'of $73,264,443.' The cost of its immense
standing army is grinding the life out
-of Germany and the thing will have
to be stopped or the nation will b3
'ruined. If it were not fa the govern
ment ownership ' of the ri.ilroads and
"telegraphs, the nation would be com
pletely bankrupt now. If there is not a
decided change in the near future this
great , gold standard nation .will be
forced. into repudiation. n
The Illinois SBippers association i
getting greatly excited over the new
'uniform bilr, of lading fthat; the rail-
roads propose to adopt. They say tha
"It will increase the net earnings of
; the railroads more than : any other
move that the managers ' have put
" through in recent years." But those
j fellows may. as well stop their yelling.
Every northern state and the' con-
One of the things that came along
with the landslide is a ship subsidy
scheme of gigantic proportions. The
stand-patters and three cr four im
mensely rich ship-building corporations
have formed an alliance. . Protection
and subsidies are their, buttle cries.
They are on the road to win.
It is now openly charged by some
democrats that S'heehan, who managed
Judge Parker's campaign was in the
employ of the .republican party. The
advice, they say, that he gave to Judge
Parker to keep silent and then put
him up to making personal charges
against Roosevelt "was all in the inter
est oFthe Standard Oil crowd and the
republican party. It is well known that
Sheehan received a fee from Rocke-
fellar of $30,000 to get some special
privilege legislation through the last-
New York legislature. At any rate
there is a hot time" between thj two
old Wall street democratic gangs.
Neither of the gangs,, however, have
any idea of allowing the national or
ganization to fall into the hands of the
reform democrats. . "
The Florida Coast railroad has raised
its passenger rate to four cents a mil'
because it runs part of the way
through an unsettled country. It seems
that it intends to keep that country
unsettled. ;
The more facts that we get concern
ing the late election the more inex
plicable the situation seems to be. Bry
an went down to Indiana and earnest
ly advocated the election of Parker
He took pains to deny the charge that
he was not in earnest. When the votes
were counted it turned out that an
avalanche of Roosevelt votes were put
into the boxes wherever he spoke. But
that, was not all. Late statements
were to the effect that t-ot less than
10,000 votes were put into the boxes
marked in the circle for a straight
INTELLIGENT SELECTION
ri-
lii the matter of life insurance maybe
. largely determined by a- Company's
record of growth which generally re
a fleets the test of public approval.
The amount of new insurance applied
for since Jan. 1st, 1904, at the Home
Office of the .
BANKERS RESERVE LIFE
COMPANY 3
OF OMAHA, NEBRASKA,
Exceeds ' , -
Three Million Dollars
One hundred additional agents want- ' :
,x ed in fifteen states and territories before
January.rjst, 1905..' For particulars-"
call on ori address ' -
bM: WBJSOn . . President
.90
to Purchase Shares at the Present Selling Price
Buy Now and Profit by the Advance
Only a few shares left at i$c. Will advance to 20c la a few days. Soon be ai par ($1
All outstanding: stock of this Compaay will start te draw a dividend of
I Per Cent on 40c Shares January I, 1905.
Attho present soiling: price this will net you 166 per cent profit In 63 days, and
per cent In dividends on yoar investment
AN OPPORTUNITY TO MAKE A FORTUNE '
V Comes to Each of Us Once in a Lifetime
THE ILLINOIS-COLORADO OIL GAS AND COAL CO.
- INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF SOUTH DAKOTA FOR $2,000,000
Is Offering You This Opportunity Now in a Proposition Worthy of the Most
Skeptical
The Officers and Directors are all Successful Business rten of High Standing, who would'
not pet mlt their names to be asoeiated with a qnrsiionebl en erprlse. Many
readers of this paper, no doubt, have already been benefited by investing
through fir. W,T. Garrison, President and Treasurer of this Company
A Great Enlerprjzs! A Splendid Oppsrlaniiy! A Square Deal!
THE OHIO PROPERTY
Our Ohio property is located in Mercer
county and comprises 1,020 acres. On this
property we have six prodacing wells and
Well No. 7 Is now being drilled. We also
have one of the finest pumping , stations In
Ohio, tanks, derricks, pipes and other equip
ment cos Ing thousands of dollars. The pro
Auction already secured enables us to guaran
tee a dividend on all outstanding stock of 1
per cent on at least 40c shares starting Janu
ary 1st, 1005. . ' .
THE COLORADO PROPERTY
Colorado oil Is the highest grade produced
easily worth 52.C0 per harre!. Here we have
1.040 acres in The Great South Park,-Park
County, which Prof. Arthur Lake, noted ge
ologist, claims will soon rival Florence, Col
orado, which has produced millions in oil,
and where one Well alone, No. 40, has yielded
over $1,000,000. One well has been drilled on
our South Park property which made an ex
cellent showing of oil. Tne Colorado prop
erty Is fully equipped with one of the finest
drilling plants in the Wtst, the cable alone
beiDg three thousand feet long, and Improve
ments costing thousands of dollars.
ROOM FOR HUNDREDS OF WELLS
On our Ohio property alone there is room
lor hundreds oi producing wells. Realizing
thnl this is all proven oil land and that every
well drilled will produce oil, our Board of
. Directors have decided to go ahead and sink
100 weus as fast as men ana money can ao
the work.
To carry out' this-vast project and realize
these enormous profits will require a very
Jarse sum ofinoney. That is why we are In
viting the assistance of outside capital.
Therefore, our Board of Directors has decid
ed to raise $150,000 at once, and we are now
t tiering .- - ... r,
100,000 shares atiscper share
to Charter Members. This stock is fully aid
and forever non-assessable. It stalls to draw
dividend of l per cent on at least 40c shares
January 1, 1905. That means 1GG per cent
in GOdayn and 2 per centon your investment
in dividends.
' - . ' ' y .
OUR liberalterms
enable any man or woman of modest income .
to get a block of thlsstoek. You may deduct
5 per cent from your -remittance for cash in
full; or you may take advantage of our lioer
al time payment plan, viz: 25 per cent cash
with order, 25 per cent in thirty days, 25 per
cent in sixty days, and 25 per cent in ninety
days. , .
BE INDEPENDENT IN OLD AGE
50 invested in "Oil City Pet" in 1900 would
have realized you f 3,500; f 500 invested in the
Banford Oil Company in 1900 would have
brought you $18,30J; and fc2o invested in the..
New York Oil Company in 1900 realized $8000
Yeu missei these grand opportunities but
now The Illinois-Colorado Oil, Gas & Coal'
Company otters you another opportunity -equally
promising. v
107
10
I, 070
II. 01
WHAT 100 WELLS WILL DOu ;
Tiie lollowlng table wil thow you what
100 producing wells in this field is going
to mean for Illinois-Colorado stockholders-
. 4
Total number of wells (includ
ing those we now have)
Average production per day.
Total dally production...
Price per barrel.. ....i.,
Average daily income..... .. .... $1,080.70
Number ot days to the month . . 30
Average monthly income...... 832,421.00
Appropriate expense . . .". ..... 500.00
Net profit per month 531,921.00
' This sum would be enough to pay 1 per
cent per month on all stock then out
standing at S2.00 per share. 1 per cent on
$2.00 shares is equal to 13 per cent per
month or 160 per cent per annum on
stock purchased at 15c per share. - -Notk:--10
barrels to the well Is the lowest possible-
estimate. Our present, production Is
Is much higher.
WHATYOUR MONEY WILL BUY
AT 15C. A SHARE .
SG00 will buy 4000 shares of pa r value 4,000
450 " " 3000 ' ' " " 3,003
SCO " ' ' - 2000 .. " " " 2,000
150 " " 1000 '': " " " 1,000
120 " . 800 '" ' " 800
90 " '.' 60!) " . " " " . - 600
75 " " 500 " - " " 500
60" " 400 ' " " " ' 4:X-
45 " " ' 3.0 " ' " " " " 300
i 30 " " ; 200 " " " " 2u0
15 " " 100 " " " " " 100
DON'T DELAY
This stock will go to 2Uc quick. To ;
be svre of getting a block at 15c per share t
your order hould be mailed at once. Act '
now and investigate afterward. If not '
fully satisfied upon receipt of further par :
titulars ue ciil refund your money.
Make' all money orders and checks payable to -
W. P. GARRISON
Dept B -79 Dearborn St-
CHICAGO, ILL , U S A-
democratic vote and then Bryan's name
written on them so as to destroy the
ballot. What did all that mean? These
voters would not follow Bryan's ad-
vice and vote for Parker. Did such a
ballot mean that they were for Bryan,
or did it mean that the voters wished
to rebuke him? Who can tell? .
In the United " States and Canada
there are 7,414,173 men who belong to
secret orders, 990,000 of .wriom are Ma
sons. " , '
The great dailies are now devoting
columns of their space to informing
the people that the RocVefellerFuei
and Iron company of Colorado is noth
ing but a great experiment in social
ogy, the object of which is to train up
the bravest and best citizens in all
America. The New York and Chicago
dailies gave several columns each last
Sunday to praising this great philan
thropic work. ,.The articles were all
different but any, man who knows any
thing about how articles for a news
paper are concocted, could not fail to
see that they" were all written in one
office. ; -
No man is employed In the street
sweeping department of New York un
til after a medical examination and is
pronounced in perfect health. Never
theless a large number of the men
have contracted consumption during
the last two years. The health board
says this condition among the street
sweepers comes from the habit of con
sumptives spitting in the streets.
There has been a great contest be:
tween German and Italian opera in
New York and it is ! claimed that th3
Italians scored the first touchdown. Tho
points scored ' by the Italian side, are
counted up as" follows: The four hun
dred never came so late before. Tha
diamonds displayed in the boxes were
worth at Jeast ; $1,000,000 more than
were ever seen at a Wagnerian opera.
There were more young sprigs of so
ciety in the boxes who had killed their
man automobiling, some t them hav
ing as high as six or seven deaths " to
their account,5 than a German opera
could ever boast of. . There was r.
least three '- times as much chatter
and talk in the boxes, while the music
was being rendered, than was : ever
known at a German pperi. It was de
cided that the Italian opera won.
One day last week the Bee had an
editorial telling what a safe place Oma.
ha was to live in. Turning over to the
page recording the local happenings it
appears that that "very night there were
four hold-ups' in the. city. ...
, St. Ann's church, New York, has
hired the bruiser Sharkey to teach
boxing in its gymnasium. , Sharkey
says that" that, shows thac the churca
and the ring are getting closer togeth
er. No one will deny tl-e statement
wiio has been observing (hi churches.
The following description of the du
ties of a congressman is so accurate
that it must have : been written by ao
ex-congressman: "The main duties of
our congressmen is to get speeches
printed in the Congressional Record,