Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 19, 1905, Page 9, Image 9

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    THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY, JULY lt. 1P05.
IMS
stock
B- THURSDAY. JULY
A
20
20!
)
Right .Against the Osage Line in
the live Hundred-Barrel District
el the Indian Territory the Uncle
Sam Company Starts Two Drills.
THJD UNCLE SAM COMPANY now own
and controls over THIRTY THOUSAND
(M.fXM) acres of oil and gas lands, on which
there ere five pumping; plant and kv-
ntv-nlne oil and (a well. The company
wfll eoon have Ave drill working day and
nlgni completing additional producer.
rtoina of the undeveloped properties are
recognised by old oil men aa beln the
richest and moat valuable oil holding yet
e.ncoverea. Klght up agalnat the Osage line
In the Indian territory, south of Bartles
Yllle, the Uncle Bam refinery la already
Started to work and will aoon have two
drills running: In addition to thoe now
Working- near Cherryvale. The property
adjoining ths Osage line ha a probable
eaneelty of ten thousand barrels a day
When developed.- It behooves every In
vestor to think well before he turn down
the stork of the Uncle Sam refinery, which
is now offered to you for a few buurs
longer at one-tenth Its par value. Don't
wait until the company drills In a live
bundredbarrel welt and then expect to
secure the stock at even 60 oent per
bar.
Last Allotment of Stock Was Over
Subscribed in Net Sales Over
$18,000.
Ths Uncle Bam company Is backed by the
people In general and a great many men
of Influence are among Its stockholder.
The company I the deatlned winner of the
central Wfit, and ths stock will- prove to
be the greatest Investment In America.
There are over three thousand stockhold
ers and all are at work. The last allot
ment of stock was oversubscribed In net
values over eighteen thousand dollars.
This notice will appear In more than sev
enty of the leading and most Influential
journals of the United States. lit will be
read by over tea million people. The pres
ent allotment of stock under ths prevail
ing conditions will be greatly oversub
scribed. Would advise you to get busy
quick and mull or telegraph your order
Immediately after reading Ihta announcement.
Great Refinery Now Completed
Will Be Selling Oil in Five Days.
The flret great refinery ever built by
Independent capital In the writ la low com
pleted hy the fuels 8am coiiipHny and
will be putting oil on the market In five
da) . W hen you Invest In thl company
uu ecur stock that la easily worth at
cents per share right now. Henneries and
pips lines and a vast acreage of oil lands
and oil wells are valuable. The Cherry
val refinery will have an earnliig capacity
of over six hundred dollars per day under
present conditions and It is already being
enlarged. The company will have no
trouble to sell Its entire output at the pres
ent trut price, but will oellver oil worth
a third more than trust otl on account
of It purity. Ths superintendent of the
Uncle bain refinery Is from the Pure Otl
company of Pennsylvania. The Uncle Sam
company Is going to be In the west what
the Pure Oil company la In the east. It
will manufacture the very finest grades or
oils, and with nearly three thousand stock
holders scattered all over the central west
will nave friends to work for ths sale of
Uncls Bam brands everywhere at prices
that will make the stockholders of this
company substantial profit on their in
vestments. Better send In 1100 now and
secure LOOfi shares before the advance.
WRITE FOR PRICES ON FUEL AND
REFINED OIL AT ONCE.
Has Room for 6.000 Oil Wells.
The Uncle Sam company started out on
the safe and practical basis of owning
and operating Its own oil properties. It
now has seventy-nine wells and five pump
ing plants and over thirty thousand acres
of oil lanAs on which is room for over six
thousand producing wells, which prove
how nearly this company Is doing what It
contemplated. It has oil territory enough
right now to feed Its great refinery now
completed and the other two proposed re
fineries and pipe lines for a century. The
stock that you can secure now will cer
tainly grow in value as the rapid develop
ment of these properties progresses.
Assets Back of the Company.
The Uncle Him company now has ons
great refinery completed and In operation.
This plant, on a conservative basis. Is worth
to the stockholder of the company over a
gi'ARTEK OF A MILLION DOLLARS.
They have miles of lateral pipe lines com
pleted, connecting about three-fourths of
the Cherryvale oil fields and arc com
pleting additional lines. Have thousands
of barrels of oil In storage and an pump
ing more Into storage every hour. We have
storage" for thousands of barrels, one stor
age tank alone having a rapacity for ONE
MILLION SIX HUNDRED THOUSAND
OALLONS. More storage tanks are being
built. These are all the be steel tanks
mads and will last 1" years. The re
finery plant at Cherryvale looms up like a
small city and It would do you good to
ses It. The company has a railroad switch
completed Into the grounds; also has
dwelling houses, a barrel manufactory,
water lines and pump stations. It owns
valuable franchises for ONE HUNDRED
AND 6EVKNTT-NINB MILES (179) of
main trunk pip lines, reaching clear aoroas
nine Kansas counties to the banks of
navigable water close to Kansas City,
ahere ths company already owns a FIFTY
BKVEN-ocre farm, on which refinery No.
1 will be built this summer and ths pipe
line completed to It. FORTY MILES of
this pipe line Is paid for and at ths sta
tions, ready to haul out along the line
at PlqUa, Neosha Falls, LeRoy and Cherry
vale, Kan. Connections will be mad In
the pipe line every FIVE to TEN miles
and fuel oil drawn from the main pipe
line Into storage tanks ail along the route
through the richest section of Kansas,
where it will command a ready sale from
th farmers at good prices, as coal sells
for from t to IT per ton along the trunk
pipe line route, and three barrels of oil
ars equal to one ton of good coal. Our
THIRTY THOUSAND ACRES of oil terri
tory comprises some of the richest and
most valuable properties In ths entire oil
fields. The FIVE pumping plants and the
SEVENTY-NINE producer on a part of
these holdings represent an asset that some
concerns have spent a million dollars for
and not equaled.
In addition to all these assets, owned and
controlled by the Uncle Sam company,
there are now THOUSANDS of ""dollars
In f-? treasury and also over ONE HUN
DRED AND TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS
subscribed on gilt-edged Installment en
tract for stock already allotted and whl.-h
will be paid In during th next five mon'.hs.
This monev eomee in from a THOUSAND
TO FIFTEEN HUNDRED dollars per day.
So you can e that whlls the Uncle tarn
company Is undrtskjng a vast enterprise,
It has a steady Inflow of cash to aailst in
I
doing all that Is pianned. Authorised capi
talization of the Uncle Bam company Is
TEN MILLION shares of par value ONE
DOLLAR PER SHARE. Stock la non
assessable. FIFTY-EIOHT per cent of
this stock Is now owned by anti-trust
hater of the first degree. FORTY-TWO
per oent Of this stock, or FOUR MILLION
AND TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND
shares, are now In ths treasury and will
be sold at from 10 to 10 cent per share.
There are no large capitalists In this com
pany. It Is a common man company.
Stock Will Be Advanced 20 Per
Cent Thursday, July 20.
After midnight next Thursday no one will
be able to secur a single share of tlm
Uncls Sam stock under a 2" per cent ad
vance over present prices. The stock now
Is EASILY WORTH !5 CENTS per share
and WILL BOON BE SELLING FOR
THAT. Helter not dally a minute, but mail
your check or draft at once. All letters
that are In the malls and at their starting
point that bear the postmark before and
up to Thursday at midnight, July 20, will
be accepted at the following prices:
fjfHr" ltMj stini-oi. $12.00; li.V) share
fJS.OO; 500 shares, $.".0.00; 1,000
ghareg, $100.00; B,O(0 shuns, $41H.00;
10,000 shRree, $a75.00; JW.000 shares,
fl.lH0.0O.
Installment offers: 100 shares. $2..V
cash, and five monthly paymeuta of
$2.00 each; 250 chares, $5.00 cash and
five monthly payments of $0.t0 enoh;
500 shares, $10.00 cash, five monthly
payments of $9.00 each; 1,000 shares,
$15.00 cash, five monthly paymeuta of
$10.00 each; 3,000 shares, $;0.00 cash,
fire mouthly payments of $tK).00 each;
10,000 shares, $100 cash, five monthly
payments of $200.00 each. Make all
drafts, checks and money orders to The
Uncle Pani Company, or II. II. Tucker.
Jr., aecretnry, and your stock will be
forwarded by return mull or money re
turned promptly.
Company Will Own Property Worth
Five Million Dollars Within a Year,
The t'nele Bam company experts to have
at least two hundred producing wells un
der the pump within a year. It will ac
quire at least twenty thousand acres more
o.'i lands. Complete a fuel pipe line to
cntral Nebraska. Build refinery No. I on
the banks of navigable waters. Mulld re
finery No. 1 In central Oklahoma, where the
company Is now securing olid holdings to
tske car of the Oklahoma refinery and
furnish It ample production. It will rapidly
push the Kansas City pipe line to com
pletion. In this biiihU space we cannot
outline the many s'.rong points of thl com
( any, but It is a winner and we don't rsiv
whether you are a banker, merchant,
f in m r or protisslcnsl man. you cannot
find a belter investment than this slock.
The company Is l'Ali.VO Ad IT tioKrt.
wnli li Is it. mi another strong point In Its
favor. There sre no mortgages or bondt,
mr never Till be, to snp the earnings of
tun loiii, any, for when the shove men
tioned siotk Is sold It will furnish close to
tiuii l- Ul'NPHED THOV SAND DOL
i.auo witn winch to complete this great
enioi i rise.
That Oil Trust lie A boat the
prrme Court Decision, Tat O'l by
the Otl 1 If levee, to Deceive Inves
tors. It Is a well known fact that among oil
men. and men who are vitally Interested
In tne emiKgln for ju.itloe In the oil fields
against that well known pirate cf Ameri
can commerce, that the law passed ty the
last Kansas legislature to build a state le
linery would never stand the test of the
couris. Upon the final decision by the
supreme court last week several telegrams
mere sent out from nil trust headquarters
In the east, but dated at Topeka. Kan.
These dispatches were prominently dis
plsyed In severs! well known trust-owned
papers and Intimated that this decision
was very detrimental to the independent
rehneries Now. don't let those oil trust
scarecrows deceive you. There Is a maxi
mum freight luw In Kansas that Is worth
all the other laws that could be put on
the statute books. The law Is conceded
by sble sttnrneys to be constitutions! anil
ths railroads of the stste havs already ac
cepted Its scheduled rates, which are fairly
reasonable, but not as reasonable as they
will probably be made by the next legis
lature. There is also a strong antl-dls-crlmlnatlon
law. These are the two laws
that mean something. Don't get It Into
your head that even one little alfalfa field
of Kansas Is whipped by the oil thieves
snd their gang of bulldosers. Kansnns
sre In the light to win and win they will.
There Is not a state officer but what will
do all In his power for Justice In ths oil
fields. Governor Hoch has shown his hon
esty and sincerity at every move and his
every act proves that he is ready to fight
for the Interests of Justice In the oil fields.
Kansas is more determined today than
ever. Coma to the oil fields snd see the
Woik going on. There are producers after
producers that will not sell the otl trust a
gallon of oil at the thieving prices now
offered. A pipe line to the Gulf Is prac
tically assured and with til great inde
pendent Uncle flam refinery and pipe Una
reaching the Missouri river on uie nerin
and striking determined and well tnannei
blows for right and Justice In the Mmsouii
v.illev territory ami with Tom lawaol
keening them busy on Wail street. Just o
It down In your hat that he who Isms hi
Inst laughs best. Itemcinlier, Ksnsans nn.
Ish what they start end the ridicule and
misleading statements put out hy th all
trust hirelings the other dsy Is ons of he
cowardlv acts thst Is tallying all Kansas
to the support of th Uncle bam Independ
ent refineries and ple lines. This company
must win th rtsy for Ksnsas It has nearly
two thousand stockholders In the state and
with its great production the chances are
trn to on that It will till th place of
three or four st.ite relinerles, and now has
the F.NT1KH STATE KoK A FlhXD n
which to sell Its products. Kvery sjody Is
for It and we would not be afraid to wager
ten to one that there Is not a member of
the supreme court of the state but what
would go out of his way to speak good)
word for our eucoes and to also , assist
other Kansas home enterprise. Ksnsans
are standing together and there can be
but one end to the present struggle an4
that I Justice. Any report ent out by
the oil gang and their perlurea reporters
like the falsehood wired ths other day
will prove to be groundless when the fasts
sre considered. The Unci Bam refinery
and pipe lines Is on Kansas enterprise
that will be watched over with a Jealous
eye by about nine-tenths of the people lit
Kansas, and money Invested In tills great
enterprise will be safe, as th peopls at
not only going to demand a quar deal
for this home Institution, but will force th
Issue and compel such conditions to exist.
Vow Can Telegraph Test Orders nl
Have Compear Msrfct Draft Te-w
With Stock Attached sir Writ With
Sams Instructions.
There will probably ba Investors who will
not see this announcement until th last
day and maybe the last hour. The com
pany will send stock, with sight draft at
tached. on all orders that are sent from ths
starting telegraph office up to ONK MINe
UT13 BEFOKK MIDNIGHT. THURnDAT.
JULV to, but not a share will be sold af
this price after midnight. If you cannot
reach a telegraph olllce, writ a letter. We
mean this, and we don't care even If yt!
offered to Invest ten thousand dollars
after this hour you will be turned dosrn.
for the company has ample funds and will
stand right by Its advertised statements.
References: The Montgomery County bank,
Cherryvale State bank, the People's Na
tional bank, or come down and ses (or
yourself. Address,
H. H. TUCKER,- JR., Sec, Cherryvale, Kansas.
CURRENT NEWS OF IOWA
COUNCIL BLUFFS
SUSPECTS ARE DISCHARGED
Joitlcs Field Says Evldenc it Hot Suf
ficient to Hold Them.
D0RA.N AND TRATTNER ARE REARRESTED
Jnake a Rna to Escape, but she
' OIBcers Ars Too Swift and Omaha
Slen Ars Aaaln Behind the
Bars la Coaacll BlasTa.
a locksmith had to be called In and the
handcuff sawn In two.
Justice Field yesterday decided that the
vldenco adduced at Uio preliminary bear
ing against Barney Do ran and Joe Tratt
, ner, ths alleged car bandits, was not suf
ficient to warrant him holding them to
ths grsnd 'Jtryt cat tnr acoortttngly dls
' charged tbsm. Doraa and Trattner, en
joyed, however,'' but a brief period' of lib
arty aa they were rearrested on another
charge of robbing Motorman Leuch on the
night of July X, the warrant being Issued
,(rotn ths court .oC Justice. Gardiner, whore
.County Attorney -'Hess filed the' new In
formation CO learning that the defendants
'bad. been discharged by Justice Field.
' County Attorney Hess had not antici
pated that the Justice would do otherwise
than hold the two men lri face of the posi
tive Identification by Motorman Leuch, and
he was not prepared with another war
rant when they were discharged. No tiino
was lost, however, In filing the new In
formation la Justice Gardiner's court and
securing the new warrant. Doran and
Trattner on being dlschargsd rsturned to
y' the county - jail to secure their clothing
and other belongings ana tnis gave tne
county attorney tline In which to secure
the new warrant. Doran and Trattner
. and their friends were taking matters
leisurely when some ons tipped off the In
formation that Deputy Sheriff Woolnian
giaa gone w uiuo usiuuu ww, -new
warrant. ' Bidding their friends a
hasty good-bye Doran and Trattner
started west on "Willow avenue on the
dead run, but had only ; reached the
' Illinois Central track when overtaken by
the officers, who were In two buggies. As
soon as thsy saw the officers the young
fellows ran In among the cars on the
tracks and for fifteen minutes or so gave
the officers a merry chase, but were finally
: captured by Deputy Sheriffs Woolman and
Oroneweg. who, relying on their sprinting
powers, had abandoned the buggies.
Doran nd Trattner, apparently much
disconcerted at their rearrest and disap
pointed over their failure to get away,
v were taken before Justice Gardiner and
their preliminary hearing set for Thursday.
Their bonds were plaoed at 11,300 saoh.
after which they were taken back to the
county Jail. Doran appeared exceedingly I
nervous but Trattner seemed to take the
situation coolly.
A had been expected the accussd at
tempted to estabUsh' an alibi, and Several
witnesses testified to both Poran and Tratt
ner being at their homes the night the
.two motors were held up near the east'
end of the bridge.
' -Doran's wife testified thst her husband
' was at home In bed . that night, but on
1 cross-examination admitted that she had
told the officers when hey flrat called on
her that she was not rtaln whether he
was at home that night or not. Doran's
mother was In court, but. did not testify.
JJir. and Mrs. Smith, with whom ths Doran
roomed, also testified that ths young man
wa at home that Sunday night.
Trattner' mother and sister before testi
fied that he was at home that Sunday night
and a man named Gardiner, a vender of Ice
cream en South Thirteenth street, testified
that on the night of Sunday, July 1 at 10
o'clock, be sold a pint of Ice cream to a
young man whom he believed to be Tratt
aer. Th testimony of Doran's wife was taken
gs a deposition In order I that It might
K uMit In the district court If the men are
held for trial aa she Informed the authoii
ties that shs Intended leaving this sec-
y V lon of the country In the near future.
The preliminary heating of Doran and
Trattner before Justice Held was on ths
charge of robbing Conductor Mathlson
alone. In th new Information before Jus
tice Qardlnsr they are specifically charged
with robbing Motorman Leuch. It is ex
pected that the defendants will take a
change Of venue from Justice Gardiner's
court to that of Justice Field.
When Doran and . Trattner were taken
. back to the county Jail from Justice Gar
diner's court they were handcuffed to
gether, a pair of handcaffs belonging to
former Constable Albertl being used. At
the county Jail It was found Impossible to
unlock the handcuffs on Dvran and finally
BIG Alt KATES BOTIIUR GROCERS
Ask Railroads to Make Rate Which
Is Stable.
Thfl sugar rate war, which is giving ths
Jobbing trade so much concern, was the
principal question discussed at the called
meeting of the Iowa and Nebraska Whole
sale Grocers' association, held In this city
yesterday. The grave condition of tho
sugar market resulting from the slashing
of rates brought out a large attendance,
forty-six wholesale and Jobbing houses
being represented at the "meeting, which
was held as usual In the large ball room
at the Grand hotel.
The southern railroads made .a cut bt
twenty points , per 100 pounds recently and
this was met by tho eastern roads with a
.Corresponding, reduction. Fortunately ths
wholesalers and Jobbers in it hl territory
were- not caught heavily stocked,- other
wise the situation would have beep, far
Biore 'seriou 'thuji it Is, wa the statement
of the- officers tof the association yesteV
da$'. A committee, however,' waj appointed
to confer wtth, the railroads with a view
to seedling a restoration of the rates' or
the establishment of a rate which could
be depended upen for a specJOo time.
John lilaui of Burlington, delegate from
the Iowa and. Nebraska association, and
Secretary John. Melhop- made -a report on
the national convention recently held In
Milwaukee". . , 1 !
Appropriate resolutions on the death of
W. 11. Hargraves of Lincoln, a prominent
member of the association, were adopted.
The association adjourned after holding
morning and afternoon sessions, subject
to the call' of the secretary. '
These firms were represented at the meet
ing:
Dubuque Schroeder-Klelne Grocer com
pany. V aterloo The Fowler company, Smith
Llchty & Hillman company.
Des Moines C. C. I'routy company.
Charles ilewltt, Warfield-Pratt-Howell
company.
Davenport J. P. Van Pattern A Sons, M.
L. Marks & company, Smith Brothers &
iiurdlck company.
Cedar Rapids Warfleld-Pratt-IIowell
company.
Mosun City Letts-Spencer-Smith com
pany, v.
Creston J. 11. Merrill company.
Fort Dodge Fort Dodge Grocery com
pany. Oskaloosa J. H. Merrill company, J, G.
Hutchison & Co.
Keokuk Kellogg-Birge company, Blom
Collier company. S. Hamlll company.
Burlington John Blaul's Sons comiany,
Blklen-Wlnser Grocery company, Burt
Zuiser company.
Independence Iowa Grocery company.
Marshalltosn Letts-Fletcher company.
Muscatine C- L-' Mull A Sons.
Sioux City Tolerton & Stetson company,
C. Shenkberg company, Warneld-Pratt-Howell
company.
Council Bluffs Oroneweg A Schoe-ntgen
company.
Nebraska City Utterhack, Sargent St
Klce company, Bradley-Carton company.
umaua niton a liaiiasrner oomnany
McCord-Brady company, Allen Brothers'
company, Stewart Brothers company
Koapke-Kats company, Jones & South-
mayd company.
Hastings Trimble A Blackman.
Grand Island Nebraska Mercantile com
pany. St. Paul Nebraska Mercantile company.
Fremont May Brothers.
Lincoln Grainger Brothers company, H.
i: uu company, Kaymond Brothers
Clarke company. . ..
Columbus Abts & Calto.
HOT WEATHER HELPS CORN
Humanity, However, is Sweltering and
Several Deaths Reported.
GOOD PROGRESS WITH GRAIN HARVEST
Ball Player Who Makes a Three.
Bagger at a Critical Time Wins
a Bride Dates for Gor
ernor Cummins,
F of the Fifty-fifth regiment of this city.
The company has been In trouble for a
ear or more trying to get someone to fill
tl.d office of captain.
Two Boys Drown.
SIOUX CITY, la.. July 18. (Special Tel
egram.i A double funeral will be held at
Correctlonville tomorrow, when Paxil
Shontg, aged 12 years, and Alvln Page,
aged 14 years, will be burled. They were
swimming In the Little Sioux river and
the Bhonts boy tried to save the other
from drowning. A smaller companion wit
nessed the double drowning and gave the
alarm.
"BOOTtEOOER" IIKLVJ SHERIFF
Attempted JaU Delivery at Port
Dodge Frustrated by prisoner.
FORT DODGE, la.; July 18,-tSpcclal Tel
egram.) Today a prisoner at the county
Jail made an attack upon the sheriff and
attempted to bring about a Jail delivery.
An imprisoned "bootlegger" came to the
rescue and the sherlt succeeded In quelling
the disturbance and returning the prisoners
to their cells.
Plans for Woodmen Pic a la.
LOGAN. Ia.. July 18. (Special.) Active
preparations are In progress here for :he
annual outing of the Omaha lodftcs of
the Woodmen of the World to be held on
Thursday, July i7. An attendance of tOOO
Is expected from Omaha en that day. At
1 o'clock the drills, sports and races will
be held and 8JS0 In prises will be awarded.
Two base ball gamas will occur on the
Logan diamond that day with the Boston
Bloomers, a girls' nine. At 10 o'clock thsy
play with th Omaha Woodmen nine and
at S.tO with th Missouri Valley bass ball
club.
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
DES MOINES. July 18. (Special.) Hot
weather which has prevailed over this state
for the lust four days has caused four
deaths and a large number of prostrations.
The first promise of relief came today In
ths forecast of the weather department
that tonight and Wednesday will be cooler.
While the weather has caused humanity
to suffer bo severely, t has' mode millions
JCof .thsv farmer , (n the,, growth of corn.
Clarmda, according to the' weather bureau,
both yesterday and today. Is the hottest
city, in the state, the temperature there
heirur 100. At Cedar Rapids It Is 87 and
at". SJoux .City a ,
i At Grundy Cenbsr" Theodore-. Brosmlth,
a farm hand, was overcome with the heat
while pitching hay and died a few hours
late,r. in this city Mrs. Marguerite Cas
per, while her mind was affected by the
heat, drank carbolic acid In coffee and
died. There were a number of prostrations
In this city and others are reported from
Marshalltown, Waterloo and elsewhere.
The 8-months-old infants of John Doollttle
and Daniel Marmon of this city are both
dead from the heat.
Martin Removes Ills Coat.
Secretary of State W. B. Martin of
Greenfield today set an example for ths
other members of the executive council In
removing his coat while attending the tax
assessment sittings of the council. The
delicate and dignified work of adjusting
ths assessments of the railroads and farm
lands up to this time has bsen done by
the council with their coats on. Today
Secretary of State Martin appeared with
his coat off and the other members of the
council at once followed his exampls.
Dates for Governor Cnmmins.
Governor Cummins today received a re
quest from ths people of Baxter to speak
there August 23 and has accepted It. He
also has an Invitation from the labor union
people of Ottumwa to speak there on La
bor day. As he has no date arranged for
Labor day It Is possible that he may ac
cept the Invitation.
' Crop Conditions Good.
According to ths weekly report of ths
crop servlae today the corn is maaing
rapid strides and ths hot weather has
done an Immense good. In the southern
part of the state the harvesting of small
grain Is reported aa completed with the
yield good. The only exception to favorable
reports are on low lands where there
has been too much moisture.
PI I month Makes Gain.
Plymout county, according to ths official
figures given out by the census bureau.
has 22.S37 people, a gain In five years of
653. Th gain Is due to the large gain
at LeMars, where the population increased
from 4,146 to 6,041. Jackson county shows
a loss In five years from 23,1 to 22.210.
. What Is Coming;' to Schlpkef
Gertrude Beneilel of Oklahoma City and
F. J. Wells, shortstop for the Altoona
base ball team, were married In this city
today. On July 4 Miss Bneflel was visit
ing friends In Altoona. At a critical stage
of the game Wells knocked out a three-
bugger which won the game and also the
admiration of Miss Benetlel. A meeting
followed which proved a case of love at
first sight
Brandt Elected Captain.
Amos Brandt of the stale auditor's of
fice was today elected captain of Company
Kills Self While Insane.
SIOUX CITT, la., July 18.-(Speclal Tel
egram.) Benjamin Budge, a farmer, was
found dead In a grove near his home at
Crashing this morning. Ho had shot him
self through the head with a rifle. Ha
was 63 years old. He was insane fifteen
years ago, and worry over the Illness of
his wife probably brought on a recurrence
of the old malady.
plon tWlce was within two points of be
ing put out of the tournament. Miss
Myrtle Weltner, the former eastern cham
pion who forfeited to Mies May Sutton of
California last year placed herself In the
semi-final round of the woman's singles
by winning both of her matches In easy
fashion.
was pitching ball when John Clarkson and
Jim HuftinK-ton were playing on the corner
lots, Is still at it. Having come to lire the
second time, he is doing slab work for
Shrevenort, in the Southern league, and
the other day held Nushvllle down to
three hits.
Ron Down by Past Mall.
NEVADA, July 18. (Special.) The
Northwestern fast mall, running at fifty
miles an hour, struck.. 8-year-old May
King as she was crossing the track. The
body wa hurled fifty' feet, the head falling
on one side of 'the, .track and the crushed
and mangled trunk am" the other.
With the Bowlers.
Huntington of Omaha and Frush of
Council Bluffs finished their match on the
association alleys last night . Frush won
the first series In the Bluffs by 60 pins
and the final last night by pins. Hunt
ington's average game on the home allevs
would have landed him a winner, but for
a week he has been unable to touch n
ball on account of an Injured hand. A
return match will probably be arranged
for the near future. Score: Totals.
Frush 168 177 175 lis 12 128 2'3-1.2'-'0
Huntington 165 184 147 181 lm 2ol 17; l.lil
McElwee and Smith Defeat the F.aan.
CHICAGO. July 18 In the semi-finals of
the 1-ttke county four-some the event which
opened the Onwentsla club annual open golf
tournament at Lake corest today, national
and western champion H. Chandler Kgan
and his cousin, waiter Egan, were de
feated hy H. H. McElwee and Bruce D.
Smith of Onwentsla by 2 up. The Egans
were second In the !st of four teams quali
fying, having a scre of 84. About 100 play
ers are entered In the tournament.
Jones Faces M order Charsre. .
IQWA CITY. Ia., July ft. (Speclal.)-B. E.
Dnnner,' one' of the persons shot by Jones
on Sunday, - died this morning and the
charge against Jones will now be murder.
Jones' divorced wife, the other person shot,
Is almost sure to die.
Walkaway for the Elks.
PLATTSMOITTH. Neb.. July 18 (Special.)
Tha game played here Saturday with he
team from the army headquarters at
Omaha and the Elks' team was a walk
away for the latter. Score:, i ,
Elks 7 6 2 0 1 1 4 -20
Army Headquarters .. 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 06
The Elks have only been defeated - once
this season.
Building: New Hotel.
SIOUX CITY, Ia., July 18. (Special Tel
egram.) The contract was let today to
J. Keefe for the erection of a new hotel
at Third and Nebraska streets. It will
cost 1100,000. Frank Donahue will be landlord.
Lawyer Bays Newspaper.
SIOUX CITY, Ia.. July 18. (Special Tel
egram.) H. G. McMillan of Cedar Rapids,
United States attorney for the northern
Iowa district, has bought the Farmers'
Tribune here and will become Its editor.
Lumber Yard to Move.
LOGAN. Ia.. July 18. (Special.) The H.
A. Qulnn Lumber company have secured
a new location and will move their yards
uptown August 15.
MAROCZY WI.NS
CHESS
PRIZE
12H Yit
12tf 13
l-'i
. Hut Weather Roostlaa; Cora.
ONA WA, Ia.. July Is. (Special. )-The
weather Is getting to be something fearful
out this way, but the corn crop is get
ting there every minute and will soon be
caught up to the average July state. Sun
day was the hottest day In Onawa for
four years, the mercury recording; M de
greas and It has been over tt every day
lur a weea. I sstaiUsy U wag fc
URICSOL
Rheumatic Specific.
Kidney aud Liver Stimulant.
The most Successful Ilemedf
before the public. Does not In
jure the Stomach. Call for Free
Iiooklet on Treatment and Diet
for Rheumatism, at Sherman &
McConnell Drug Store, 16th and
Dodge Sts., or drop a postal to
URICSOL CHEMfCAL COMPANY.
tttsd ass tsraad Ave, La Aaaelee, CsO.
Finals In International Chess Match
Played at Ostend Yesterday.
OSTEND. July 18. The final round In
the International chess match was nlaved
here today. Maroczy played out his ad
journed game with Taubenhaus from the
twenty-fourth round and won, Increasing
his total score to IA points. This gave
Maroczy tne nrst prize or i,nuu.
Tsubenhaus drew witn Tsciiigorln.
The gams between Janowsky and Wolf
was adjourned to be played off tomorrow
On this encounter hinges the second prise,
wmcn lies Dei ween isrrascn ami janow-
sky. Schlecter's prize amounts to $300; Mar
co s. Pi and reisrnmann s. iiw. .
Following were the scores at the close of
play today
Marcozy 19H 6H
'larrasn in s
Janowsky 17V 714
Schlechter Id1 1H
Marco 14 12
Telschmann 134 12H
Burn
Ieonhardt ..
Marshall ....
Alapln
Wolf
Black burns
Tschlgorln .
Taubenhaus
RACING VP MOIST WASHINGTON
Record Over Carrlaaa Road Coarse
Broken Plaht Times During; Day
BRETTON WOODS, N. II., July 18 Tho
record of H4 minutes Sots seconds, estab
lished last year by Harry Harkness of
New York, In making the elghl-mlle climb
over the carriage road from the base to
the summit of Mount Washington was
broken no less than four times todsy.
The first of today s contestants to break
last year's record was William 11. Milliard
of Boston, who. accominled by Frank
Townsend, driving a forty-horsepower gas
oline car, reacneu tne summit in zv min
utes iai seconds, the new record. Stanley
ir i ' . . i . , t ...... . ........ i j m . . .. j
1. cvriiug v l oiiuiiHiiciu, .tiann. , uiuvv m
three-horsunower motor cycle up the steep
grade In 30 minutes seconds, only
i seconds behind Milliard s new record.
Pert Holland of Newton, Mass., In a
flf teen-horseower steam runabout made
the ascent in tl minutes ITS seconds, and
Oscar Hedxtrom of Springfield, on a three
horsepower motor cycle covered the dis
tance in tl minutes 42 seconds.
llVi 1V
....1IV lol
....11 15
.... V4 19H
6 il
Races Today at Trkainah.
TEK AM AH. Neb . July 18. Tomorrow Is
the starting of a gala week for Tekamah.
In the morning the Tekamah baseball team
plays Lyons and In the afternoon the pro
gram for the four days' races commences.
The following is the program for Wednes
day: 2:10 pace, with 14 entries; 2:40 trot,
with 10 entries; 8-year-old paoe, with 10
entries.
IOTVfi Golf Tournament Opens.
BURLINGTON. Ia.. July 18. Thirty-two
players qualified In the opening slate golf
tournament today. A temperature of 84
deprees caused the withdrawal of several
players. L. W. Maxwell of Marahalltown
made the best score, i6 holes In 171 strokes.
GREAT .OHTHERM IS KXJOIMED
Attempt to Cross Milwaukee Tracks
at Vankton Is Opposed.
YANKTON. S. D., July 18.-(Speclal.)-Soveral
temporary Injunctions have been
granted to Joseph Wilde and others ngnlnst
the Great Northern railroad restraining
the company from grading on tho right-of-way
of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railroad company's right-of-way which
crosses that of the Great Northern south
of Second street. These Injunctions were
Issued and served on Saturday evening.
Queal A Co. have also secured an Injunc
tion restraining the road from proceeding
with the construction work. It has been
contended that the Great Northern "as
attempting, to gain switch privileges to
the Yankton Portland Cement works and
that this was the sole cause for the out
lay of 140,000 which has been spent In se
curing the needed property.
The fact that Joseph Wilde, the local
manager of ths cement works, is at the
head of the Injunction suit against the
railroad would Indicate that the Interests
of railroad and company are not so thor
oughly united as has been stated. The
question of the southern extension of the
Great Northern has been a most im
portant one to the southern section of the
state,, and the cases which will come to
trial tomorrow will be watched for In
formation as to the Intentions of the Hill
people.
clared thnt the rates charged for the ship
ment of live cattle ss compared with ths
shipment of dressed meat Is unreasnnabl,
and unjust. Judge Bethea Issued an ordet
that the defendants answer by. August IS.
The rstes complained of botween Omahe
nnd Chicago have been a bone of conten
tion for some time. The rate on live stock
to Chicago Is 23 cents per hundred on cat
tle, hogs and calves and 25 cents on sheep.
The rates dn dressed meats and packing
house products is 18V cents when the ship
ment Is to go beyond Chicago and 20 osnti
flat when it Is to stop at Chicago. This
rate applies to all packing house products.
The Chicago Grat Western made, the re
duction on packing house products when
the line was built Into Omaha. The offielati
of the Great Western made a seven years'
contract with the packing houses to haul
the products at the reduced rates Jn con
sideration of being given a certain per oenl
of the business. The other roads wsrs
forced to meet tha Oreat Western rate,.,,
Sporting; Brevities.
The hot weather seems to have loosened
up the hinges of the batters' arms. Judging
from the generality of long hits.
The cimblned attendance at Denver and
Pueblo Monday was less than thut at Vin
ton street park. Maybe if a third Colo
rado town was put In the league they might
altogether come up to Omaha,
Pour old Liebhast. Pueblo only hit him
far sixteen safe ones with whlcn tha former
Omaiian threw six bases on balls. From
this combination Pueblo deducted nineteen
runs. But Licb struck out nine men.
If Bobby Carter doesn't quit cutting off
runs at the Mate, runners will soon get
so they will stick right on third base when
ever they perceive that the ball has been
knocked out into rigiu neia.
It was a splendid gallery tht greeted
the match In the Field club tennis tourna
ment Monday evening. And it was a splen
did exhibition of the sport In which all the
preliminaries and all savs one of the
matches In the first round were completed.
It wasn't that way when CarutherB was a
star Ditcher back In the 'lius for the
?ld Four Time Winners of which Chris Von
)er Ahe was "der poss manajer." There
was not a steadier man on tne aiamona
than Bobby, but he had the best of health
then.
Old Pretsel Breitensteln, tne man who
Farm Laborer Disappears.
HURON, S. D., July 18. (Special.)
Thursday night Bert Davis mysteriously
disappeared from the farm residence of
Charles Johnson, lh Clifton township, and
It Is feared that he became temporarily
Insane from heat and has wandered out
upon the prairies and died. He left the
Johnson home about midnight, saying he
was going to the barn to care for the
horses, und took a lighted lantern with
lilm. which was afterwards found in the
barn. Ha was clad In shirt, blue overalls
and unlaced shoes, wore nlther hat nor
coat. A general search has been made
throughout the neighborhood, the bed of
Pearl creek dragged ond nearby towns
Inquired of, btu no trace of the missing
man has been found.
WANTS LOWER CATTLE RATES
Allegation Made that Rate Is Too
Utah Compared with Dressed
Beef Rata,
CHICAGO. July 18 A new attack has
been made against rates charged for live
stock over the Chicago Great Western and
fifteen other roads.
In a bill filed before Judge 8. H. Bethea
of the United States district court Assistant
District Attorney Marstens asks that the
railroads change rates from Missouri river
and Minnesota points to Chlcsgo. It Is de-
fflD a CBI9
in fAc. Aene,
Sunday Ball Players Arrested.
FREMONT. Neb.. July 18 (Special.)
Mis. Frances Beveridge filed a complaint
today in county court against the players
on the Fremont base ball nine for playing
on Sunday. The boys appeared in court
this afternoon and the case was) continued
until tomorrow morning, when they will
probably wulve preliminary examination
and give ball for their appearance at the
next term of the district court. The city is
divided on the Sunduy bull question and the
local apers have contained numerous long
articles by cltlsens on both sides of the
matter.
Tennis Matches la Caleaao.
CHICAGO. July II Brilliant and hard
fought matches marked the third day's
piy in me vnampionsnip tennis lourn
ment today. The surprlaes of the day
wu ia mi uiaicn oeiween waiaoer and
Velars, ia whiUi Waldaer, ta atata) cnaa-
XT
ItwIKM IU ATME SIGN J J
v
STTIR,a
Many Children Itesowed,
Many children have been rescued by tr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption
Coughs and Colds. 60c and 11. For sale
Sherman & McConnell Drug Co.
Club Chances . Its Name.
Monday evening at ths annex of th
Idlewild hall, Twenty-fourth and Grant
streets, the Rlxth Ward Roosevelt end
Fairbanks club met and changed the nam
of the organization to that of the Sixth
Ward Republican league. The followtni
officers were elected for the ensuing year:
H F. Morearty, president; Ed Foster, Sec
retary; Alfred Kelpln, treasurer. The con
stitution of the old club was adopted
Committees will be appointed later by th
president. ,
HOOI.s AMI COLLEtiKS.
Western Military
Academy Vpp:LZoa'
S7th year New fireproof buildings. Modem
equipment. Delightful location. Number
limited. Strong faculty. 1 roroush mill
t.irv and academic department. Local
references.
CL Albert M. Jaekaoa. A.M, President
SalUiilQ. ' .
lolling ;
Poudor
A wonderful powder of rare)
merit end unrivaled strength.
5
7
M 1
.00
From Omaha
via
Kock Island System '
CALIFORNIA
and return
$6.00 more via Portland
in one direction.
Tickets on gale:
August 0, 7, 8, 0, 10, 11,
12, 13, 14.
Heturn limit ninety days.
Liberal stopovers and
low rates for side rides.
Two routes
Through New Mexico
Through Colorado.
Dining car service and re
clining chair cars both
ways.
F. P. RUTHERFORD, D. P. A.
IJJJ Far gam Sc. Oruba, Ntk.
SCHOOLS AUD roLLEOKS.
9 WENTW0RTH
jCf MILITARY ACaDtMV
.-fr-x Osaaa a is siiuu v. ssa
rV Mm A Uaisslvsa -