t I You are Judged by the paper rou read. Bee reader bar no eauae to apolotfxe for a lack of jMrtfreepeot or IntelHfc-enoa. you XL-NO. 20. TAIT AND LOEB TALK 011 TARIFF President Wants Boosevelt to Under stand Administration. View point. JLPPEOVED OF NORTON'S SU1? fr -yiiitor it Tariff Expert wittf ? Practical Knowledge r- j IS INTIMATE WHH R0O;f Li Ex-President Says Nothing" jto Significance. L.J 3ETRST CALL OP SOCIAL NATURE Entirely Niw Aatlt la PnMntfd In Visit of Warm Personal Friend f Ex-Prraldent Ilooae It to Beverly. BEVERLY, Mm., Jury 11. A brand new j angle waa (Ivan to the visit of William J Loeb, jr., to Beverly today. It was r I ported that his talk with President Taft this afternoon, "on the general political j altuatlon," would Include the Payne-AId-Vrtch tariff bill. President Taft, It la believed, la anxious that Colonel Roosevelt shuuld make a care ful study of the now law before commttlng t himself in any way. The colonel undoubt edly has had the "Insurgent view" of the tariff pretty well drilled Into him by Sena tors Beveridge, Brlstow. LaFollett. and the others who have been to Sagamore HILL ' Mr. Taft, the atory goes today, wants the colonul to have the administration view. . The report that the tariff waa to ba the principal theme of discussion today aeeras to be borne out by many circumstances. It Is admitted that Mr. Loeb was sum moned to Beverly by Secretary Norton, with the full knowledge of the president Sir. Loeb'a duties aa collector of the port f New York bring him In touch with the tariff and probably he knows more about the actual, practical working of the law than any other man. Secretary Norton and Collector Loeb. were together until late last night and re sumed their conforcnce this morning. They arranged to see the President at Burgess Point this afternoon. Both remained uncommunicative re tarding Mr. Loeb'a visit, other than to re peat the explanation of last night that It waa to discuss "the general political situ ation." . " ! The president played golf at Myopia this toornlng with Henry C. Prick. Mr. Losb paid a preliminary call on the president hls forenoon and motored to the golf links with him. He also lunched wit Mr. Taft. Later Mr. Loeb went with Sec retary Morton and called on Assistant Hec retary of the Treaaury Curtlas, who U W at Manoheatar-by-the-Sea. , ' '' ' .i,;vilfwa' tvOl'ater. JBayv j 'OTSTER BAY, July U.-The .announce ment from Beverly that William Loeb, Jr., ' . Collector of the port of New York,, was to , e President Taft tbday aroused great Interest here owing to tha close relations (which exist between Mr. Loeb and Theo dore Roosevelt. It waa impossible to got from Colonel Roosevet ' an expression of opinion aa to the algniilrance of this meet ing aa be denied himself to interviewers today. . - Tha colonel Is having hla fourth day of rest In the Interval between the delegations of politicians and members of congress last fThuraday and that of Governor Hughea to morrow. IVE STOCK IN BELLE FOURCHE IN FINE SHAPE Cattle on Rasge All aa Far Along aa Tbey I anally Are by tha c Last of Ananaf. BELLE3 FOURCHiS, 8. D., .July It Special.) In spite of the scarcity of range feed the condition of stock waa never bet ter than at present, The very condition that has made grating scant has operated by the law of compensation to put range took In tetter condition than they have Tieen for yeara at this time of year. When there Is abundant rain during May atpd June, aa haa been the case for six of lght years until thla season, the grass grows ' long and ripens ' late, and cattle could hot take on their beat flesh In green grass. Comparative freedom from flies haa bean of great .advantage to cattle this year also. Generally speaking stock Is now in about the same condition It ti Ally Is the last of August. Many stock men have planned arly shipment thla year owing to tha . poor outlook for winter feed and tha fact (that water holes have been drying up. Tha rain which fell throughout tha west , talf of tha state laat night will do much :o relieve both of these conditions and may reeult In soma holding who had decided to (tell. Heavy shipments will ba made thla 'fall, nevertheless. 'COMMONS DISCUSSING WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE BILL rVate oa Proposition to Extend I'ar . llantealary F reach Isa Will Ba Takea Tonight. LONDON. July 11. The first real formal Judgment to be passed by tha House of Commons on the question of conferring the parliamentary franchise upon women, will pa rendered tomorrow evening. The bill In troduced by David. James Khackelton, labor tnember for Lancaahlre, waa brought up this afternoon when Mr. Shargleton moved Its second reading. Women already possess a municipal vote tn England and about 1.000.000 would be given the parliamentary franchise if the hill passed. Party , lines are obliterated on thla question. The parly leaders are di vided. Aran? Worm la Aouth Dakota. SIOUX FALLS. 8. D.. July 11. -Mysterious worms which' have been working In Tolds lu the vicinity of White. rBooklngs bounty, during tha last week or two have tee u Identified by an expert from the state agricultural college at Brooking! as the dreaded army worm, which puts in an ap pearance about once In fifteen yeara. They have been doing damage to fields of tim othy, stripping the heads and In some cases making quick work In cleaning up a field. 1'h worms will destroy all kinds of grain, pasting Xom one field to another. The only protection the farmers have against tha worme ta to plow a furrow around a field, throwing tha dirt toward the worms, s they win not attempt to climb the per etaadlcular aides of tha furrows. Twelve Deaths from Heat in New York City Temperature at One O'clock Was Seven Degrees Cooler Than Same Hour Sunday. Viriir iukk. July lL-Tha suffocating wave still hangs over New York City causing scores of prostrations. Twelve per sons nave died from the heat in the last twenty-four hours. VT 1 - . "riy j.uw.wo persona visited the Deschea on Bundsy. The whole Atlantic seaboard is In the clutch of the hot weather, but lower temperature la nrom- Ised. The early Indications of a warmer day than yesterday were not borne out, the official thermometer in the lofty weather bureau station at 1 p. m. register. lng only 88. as against 92 at the same hour on Sunday. oureei temperatures are still higher, how ever, and humanity continued to suffer. Alexander Kuryla, prostrated while work ing on the Sixth avenue elevated structure. collapsed against the power rail and waa shocked to desth. UUBTUN. July U.-Half a doaen prostra tions from heat In Boston and vicinity early in the day were reported by the po nce ana nospuaia. i.xiu.:auo. July ll.-Two mora deaths were added today to the list of heat fatai- itiea here. Edward H. Hovey, president of a rurnace company, was stricken Saturday and died today and George Scholl, a laoorer, also died from heat prostration, Pioneer Stage Driver Retires Harvey Fellows Makes Quarter Mil lion Miles Without Missing a Trip. DEADWOOD, 8. D., July U.-(8peclal)-Harvey Kellowa, the only one of the old time augers still In active service will climb down tomorrow and hereafter lead a less atrenuous life. For twenty-five years "Harvey" haa -made dally trips between here and Spearftsh and ia known the coun try over. Until two years ago he never had a vacation, driving hla four-horse team 10,000 miles every year without a day off In years and never failed to bring his stage through. Harvey never failed to get through, and when winter storms, ' deep snows, temperatures as low as 35 and spring floods that washed out brldarea h always somehow managed to get there. Tralne have often been stalled for days, other .drivers would refuse to make the trip, yet he has weathered It all and never suffered a serious accident. And despite the lurid stories of the wild . and woolly west and the Dead wood stage coach, Har vey haa covered 250,000 miles and never had a holdup. , Mr. arid Mrs. Fellows will leave in a few days for, an overlaid irm Chicago Man Kills a Bandit Elmer Cooper Shoots Holdup in Sight of Fianoee He Had Just Bid den Good Night. CHICAGO, July ll.-Wlthln sight of his fiance whom he had Just klsaed good night, Elmer Cooper, a salesman, shot and killed one of iwo highwayman, who attempted to rob him early today. The tragedy oc curred while the young woman. Miss Cath erine Rush, stood on 'the porch of her home 612 Lexington avenue. The second thi.f' who is believed to have been wounded es caped. Cooper waa arretted and later re leased. ' He waa robbed under almost simi lar condltlona July 8. On that occasion ha waa unarmed, but he had Immediately pur chased a revolver.' Sioux City Officer Commits Suicide James Lester, a Veteran Member of Force, Shoots Himself on Lot Near His Home. SIOUX CITY. Ia.. July U.-(Spedal.) Lylng In a pool of blood, tha dead body of James Lester, a veteran of the Sioux City polloa force, waa found by. neighbors thla morning In a vacant lot adjoining his borne. Ha had committed suicide during the night, using a large thlrty-two-callber revolver carried by the patrolman. Do mestic; troublea of long standing la thought to ba tha eauae. MURDERER CONFESSES CRIME Oacar Pallea of Aeaoowa, Ark., Bare Ha Kllca W. L. Deleaer at Mrs. Drlaney'e laatlgatloa. ASHDOWN. Ark., July U.-Osoar Pullen,' surrendered to the sheriff of Little River county last night and con Teased to the murder of W. L. Delaney near Ashdown, June IS last. He says he and Mrs. De laney planned the murder. The wife, Pul lan says placed a large box under the window from which he ahot Delaney In the bark as the latter lay asleep. Mra Delaney and Pullett were Indicted last week. Mrs. Delaney la In custody. Plumber is Rewarded for Giving Negress His Seat One of the most unusual cases of virtue getting a reward is that of the young man who got $15 Monday for giving a colored washerwoman his seat tn a car. Besides kurrendering his place to the aged woman with her heavy basket the young man found himself walking beside her to the scene of hla work carrying her basket He says he haa bean remunerated at the rate or $1 a block for hla trouble, aa ha walked fifteen blocks. Frank Trummer. a plumber of iSOl South Tenth atreet, was the lucky recipient of the money. He was a passenger In a Har ney atreet car Sunday when the colored woman bearded It at Twenty-fourth and The Omaha Daily OMAHA, TUESDAY Ml Mt.S'INU, .IIXY 12, 1!I10 MAYOR ATHERTON IS SUSPENDED Newark, 0., Executive is Out of Of Jice Pending Inquiry Into Lynch ing of Detective. GOVERNOR HARMON GETS BUSY Probaility that Similar Action Will Be Taken Against Sheriff. ONE SUSPECT IS ARRESTED Negro Charged with Aiding in Breaking Jail Door in Custody. CHARGES AGAINST THE SHERIFF Complaint Signed by Jadge Reward and Other Acrnaea the Officer of . COBnlTlna;. at Viola tloas of Law. COLUMBUS. O., July U.-Oovernor Har mon at noon auspended Mayor Herbert Atherton of Newark for thirty daya pend ing an Investigation of his actions during the rioting Friday nlaht which r.,,nH In the lynchlnr nf Pari cik.vi... 'dry" detective. Charges are now on tha wav to the rnv. ernor from cltlsena of Newark, involving rr.iiiam i.mke. arid the eovernor la Pciea 10 suspend him at once. Attorney General Denman todir l an order postponing the special meeting i... county grand Jury at New 10 investigate the lynching of Detctlve btnerlngton. Tha special zrand Inrv . """"" l meet by Common Pleaa Judge Seward. The reason given by tha attorney general is that he did not want the papers served on tha Jurors bv Kh.riff u.i,. against whom charges have been filed in connection with the lynching. The news papers will not be allowed to publish the names of the special grand Jury when It Is oauea later. The attorney von.r.i . take personal charge of the lnvatiHnn when the Jury meeta, probably week after next. Charsea AaTalaat Sheriff. NEWARK. O., July ll.-Formal char. against Sheriff Linka of Licking county, for failure to atop the lypching of Detec tive Etherington last Friday night were made today, the paper being sltrned hv common -iaaa Judge Charles W. Seward ana otnere. These charges were Imme diately forwarded to Governor Harmon. ! Judge Seward haa. issued a venire for a special grand Jury to meet next Monday to Investigate the lynching. "This city haa been for yeara In the hands of law break- era." said Judge Seward today, "and the High officials of the city and county openly connive at violations of the law and hv. aenea the. courts. The tragedy of FrMav night has aroused the cfty and the law. abiding element, ia determined to wee that una lynchers are, punished.'" i i ,0 Iert .Valentine, a Colored Ynan. was ar rested today onh'eharre of being one of uie rioters who manned the telegraph pole Used in the battering down of the Jail doors r"rlday night. . This Is the first arrest since the lynching of Detective Ethering ton. The warrant waa Issued by Prosecut ing Attorney Smith and tha arrest was maae secretly. Strong Protest from Vatican Holy See Insists that Spain's Pro posed Bill Restricting Religious Orders is Wrong. MADRID, July U. The government has received a strong protest from the Vatican against the bill prepared by Premier Can alejas forbidding other religious orders to enter Spain pending the aettlement of the recent difficulties. The Vatican contends that Spain haa no right to take any atep regarding tha religious orders without a previous agreement with the holy see. Anti-clerical meetings continue to be held In Madrid, Saragoass, Tarragona and To ledo. At Barcelona a petition signed by 22,000 women waa presented to the governor of that city endoralng the government's re ligious policy. At Grenada a gathering of Catholics .waa attacked by the antl-clerl-cals. MRS. HELEN K. GOULD AND RALPH H. THOMAS MARRIED Ccremoay la Performed la Bride's Apartments Nlao Detae tlvea Watch Hoaee. NEW YORK, July U.-Mrs. Helen Kelly Gould and Ralph Hill Thomas, nephew of Washington Thomaa, president of th Amer loan 'jugar Refining company, were mar ried today In Mra. Gould's apartment on Park avenue, by the Rev. Dr. Webster of the Brick Presbyterian church. Joseph Thomaa, brother of the groom, acted as best man, and the bride was given away by her mother, Mra. Edmund Kelly. The wedding party waa held to the Im mediate friends of the couple. According to me present plans Mr. and Mra. Thomaa wll! sail for Europe tomorrow. The presence of the Frank J. Gould child ren, little Helen. Margaret and Dorothy at the wedding, and the fact that nine detectivea, who admitted they were In the pay .of Frank Gould, watched the .house gave rise to a report that Mr. Gould had "-" u,in. not io let the children accompany the newly wadded couple abroad. Dodge atreeta with her basket Trummer ros. and Invited th. aged MWoom l0 and teasing of the plumber Getting off the car at th. earn, comer the negrea. and her benefactor walked to gether, th. young man assuming the bur den of th. basket H. aaked her if ,h. won anything on Johnson and was told sh. had gathered In M f,om that aourca. In parting the negresa Mk.4 ,b and address of Trummer. Monday be rZ oelved a note In which ha was declared tha "most mannerly whit, man I .VM Mw" and In which was enclosed tie. I 4. ; .cm. From the Cleyaland Plain Dealer. j BOAT SINKS ? IN ' MISSISSIPPI Steamer Cape Girardeau Goes Down Fifty Miles Below St Louis. PASSENGERS ARE LANDED SAFELY Ninety . Excorsioalats Are Asleep When Steamer Strikes a Unas Pilot Tarns Prow To ward Beach. ST. LOUIS, July H.-The river steamer Cape Girardeau struck a anag and aank to the bottom of the Mississippi river today at Turkey Island, fifty miles south of here. One hundred and fifty . passengers were aboard and all were taken ashore safely. The boat waa returning from Commerce, Mo. Many of the passengers were women and children. They were asleep when the boat hit an obetruction. The alarm waa given by Captain William H. Leythe. The Cape Girardeau was built In Mad ison. Ind... In 1S99. It waa 230 feet long and carried a crew of &. The boat la owned by the Eagle Packet company of St. Loula. On th evening of May 11 the steamboat City of Saltillo struck a snag and wont to the bottom of the Jlver fifteen miles below St. Loula. . Twelvi persons were drowned by the einklng of the poeV.j,. ' Pilots John flout ISid John Street as soon aa the boat hit the snag headed the prow toward. the. shore The boat aank close to the bank of the river soon after' tha pas sengers left. One side waa submerged. The passengers walked from the- boat on the gangplank. ' Dfexel Breaks British Record for Altitude Son of American Millionaire Reaches Height of 2,493 Feet in Bleriot Monoplane. BOURNEMOUTH, England. July 11. A new British record for high flying- was made by J. Armstrong Drexel, eon of An thony Drexel, at the aviation meeting here today. He reached an altitude of 1,930 feet, Young Mr. Drexel haa been practicing for some time with Bleriot monoplanes. His best previous achievement waa at Brokenhurat, July 20, when he reached a height of 1,070 feet Drexel made another ascent by sunset and beat hla own record. He achieved this time height of 2,493 feet Wolfner Buys Alcohol Plant Distillery at M&xiholltown, Ia., Be comes Property of Peoria Cooperage Magnate. MARSHALLTOWN, Ia.. July ll.-(Spe- olal Telegram.) William F. Wolfner, vice prealdent of the National Cooperage com pany of Peoria, today bought the large new plant of the National Denatured Al cohol company, valued at $120,000. Mr. Wolfner aaya he will operate the plant. beginning the laat of August He denies having any connection with the whisky trust in making the purchase. DES MOINES LOCKOUT WILL BE ARBITRATED General Strike of Holldlag Tradea Annonneed for Monday la Averted. DES MOrNES. Ia.. July It-Contrary to expectatlona, the building trades council did not call a strike of all union men em ployed by th. master builders today. It waa announced that the men will work pending arbitration. 'Phone Tyler 1000 for all departments of The Omaha Bee This Is the new switchboard tel ephone number of The Bee. Get Tbe Bee operator and ask for the department you want. After 6 p. m. aud before 8 a. m. call Tyler 1000 for edi torial department, Tyler 1001 for advertising and circula tion departments and Tyler 1002 for managing editor. - TVELVE PAdES. That Summer Vacation "The very place!" Prominent Men Fall Under Trains and Are Killed F. H. Lincoln, Traction Manager, and Rev. Jacob Salade Are Crushed to Death in Philadelphia. rmuADELPHIA, July 11.-F. H. Lincoln until recently assfstant general manager of the Philadelphia Rapid Trannlt company. was Instantly killed while attempting to board a Washington train at the West Philadelphia station of the Pennsylvania railroad today. . . . nr. Lincoln resigned his position with IK . II A ... . . u" nuiuwi company to Deoome as sociated with the Goidschmldt-Pherlm com pany. metal manufacturers of New Tork oity. He waa one of, the original promotere of the Pay-within oar company, and at the time of hla death waa vice-president of the Electrlo Service Supplies company of thla city. While attempting to board a faat moving in-bound pasuenger ' train " at tha , Tioga station or the Reading . Railway ' company today. Rev.'- Dr. Jacob Sellade. acUna naa- tor of Orace BpUsu temple, was- whtrledJ under,, the wheels and -crushed to death. Dr. Ballade waa secretary of the American Home Mlsalon society, aiid formerly eervd aa pastor ot the Temple Baptist church. TRINIDAD, Colo., July U.-Dr. R T Wiley, a wealthy resident of Mineral "Wells Ter., walked off a Pullman car while asleep laat night, near Rameyvllle. on th. oiuraao uoutnern railway, and was killed. His body waa found today by a searching party. Wiley, with' his wife was siuuuie io voioraao springs. I . Fast Train Wrecked " Near Hudson.N.Y. Seven Para nf Trr.t. r - " viittiu xixpress on New York Central Derailed Three Trainmen Balled. NET,LORK' Ju'y U-Thr- trainmen w.r. killed and a tralnload of passengers up wnen north-bound train No. 69 on the New Tork ru..-i known' aa the Northern and Western Exl vroae, was wrecKed near Newton Hook nine miles north of Hudson, early today' Th. railroad officials her. report that all the passengers were able to continue their Journey. Tha Twentieth Century Limited, on whioh Jack Johnson, the heavyweight ch.mm fighter and James J. Corbett was coming iu ... -. " uciajeu an nour bv the smashup. Engineer Tyndell was caught under his engine and was fatally crushed, dying shortly afterward. Th. other trainmen were ' instantly killed. A report waa reoelved by the publlo strives commission stating that the wreck waa caused by the engine striking a door of a freight car that had fallen on the track. Th. fatalities were primarily due to the overturning of the engln. and baggag. ear, which toppled completely over when they left the ralla. Every other car of the seven comprising th. train wer. derailed, but only th. baggag. car overturned. The tracka were badly torn up and traffic was blocked. The train waa known aa th. Northern and Western Express and carried sleepers for Utlca, Syracuse, Buffalo and, other points, Including on. for St Louis. Seven Alleged Conspirators Are Arrestee! at Havana HAVANA, July ll.-Colonel Jorge Valera, a mulatto, and six other persons, most of them colored me, were arrested by the secret police today, charged with conspir ing to start an uprising against the govern ment. The seven men were on their way to Vleja Bermeja, In the province of Matanxas, to which placd a trunk containing arms and ammunition and dynamite has been shipped from Havana. Letters and documents found on tha prisoners, who have been brought to Havana, are believed to implicate many other persons in tha conspiracy.' - The trunk v. as traced by the police of ficials to the medical school of tha Havana university The Janitor of that Institution was arrested today aud a large quantity of dynamite was found in his possession. It Is not quite three months since the last negro conspiracy against the govern ment was nipped In the bud by th. police Bee SIM! 1.1 METCALFE IS WITH BRYAN Associate Strings Along with Editor in Commoner's Cause. EASY TO BE A PROHIBITIONIST Wrltea to Mr. Hitchcock that He la Not Maklaar'Aay Sacrifice In Hla npport of the Peerless Leader's Plaa. : (From a Staff Correspondent) LINCOLN, July 11. (Special.) Now war has broken out between Congressman Hitchcock aiid Richard L. Metcalfe. The associate editor of The Commoner In a letter to the editor of the World-Herald today makes It plain that the expected split has come at laat. He Joins his chief In charging the World-Herald with having misrepresented not only the Issues but Met calfe aa well. His letter Is aa follows: "LINCOLN, Neb.. July H.-To the Editor of the World-Herald: In your leading edi torial today you Bay that Lancaster coun ty's declaration for county option 'was a personal- concession to Mr. Bryan, mora than an expression of opinion of. convic tion.' Then yotj add 'th. aam. motive led Mr. ! Metcalfe v to sacrifice hla well-known convictions, to '.Mr. Bryan's wishes.' I would rather do something to quell controversy within the ranks of our party than contribut. to It: but I cannot in Justlc. to myself, permit this statement to go unchallenged. ' "I know you did not mean to do me an Injustice, but you must not let, real for your cause prompt you to misrepresent the conduct of others In order to bolster your own position. . . If democrats are at all Interested In what I have done on this subject then they are entitled to the exact facts. "Tears ago I grew weary of the domination of the democratic party by the liquor In terests. , I heard my party habitually re ferred to aa the 'whisky party.' and I saw the republican party habitually getting the whisky votes. Loasjr for Conn ty Option. "For several yeara I have advocated county option. Recognising the differences on this question In our own party, I bo lleved that the best method in dealing with it waa to relegate the contest to the legis lative districts, pledging In our state plat form that In event the people, apeaklng through the legislature, passed a county option bill the governor would sign the measure. Last February I wrote to Mr, Bryan, then In South America, advising this plan. At Columbus on the evening of July 27th, speaking upon by own Initia tive and speaking only for myself, I reit erated these views In the hope that they would provide a common ground upon which . leader, with different opinions might stand ao far aa our state platform was concerned. "While It la true my suggestions seemed popular with the rank and rile of the demo crats who attended the Columbus dinner, it Is also true that I could not persuade any of the leaders to endorse my position or to agree upon that method. "Harmony being desirable, with what reason la Mr. Bryan criticised by those who on their part declined to yield any thing for the sake of harmony? "Mr. Hitchcock was on. of th. first to whom I made . known th. purport of my proposed speech at Columbus and ha waa mong tho. to whom I looked in vain for any encuragement r support for this plan to bring about harmontus action In the democratio atate convention. "Referring to my Columbus address the World-Herald treated me handsomely aa it usually does but It said not a word In (Continued on Second Page) officials,. Agitation of the race nuettcin in various parts of th. Cuban republic cul- m(rA .... A .. .I . Aa ..... rtiui'a. wun me arrest cf uenerai .varuio Bstenosa, (colored), leader of th. Independent party, and four of hl associates. Following the detention of Gen eral Eslenose, many arrests were made In various parts of the Island In compliance with orders from PreMdent Gomes, who announced . Ma determination to proceed with, th. utmost vigor agnlnst the elemenU rcpponalble for th. agitation, which In ft feet was regarded aa a serious movement calculated to develop open revolution against th. government . Indictments were returned againxt Gen eral Estenoue and twenty-two of his asso ciates, charging them with the crime of inciting rebellion and Instigating aml-whlle violence. Later, however, all th. negro prisoner, concerned In th. alleged con piracy, with the exception of the nerro leader, were discharged by a eprclal Judge, who waa appointed to try u. cases. f v ac wni'c aw I 1 WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebraska Kalr. I'or Iowa Kalr. For wpathur report see iaso . ; t'Oi'V TWO CENTS. BELL. COMPANY BUI'S UP0THEBS Several Deals Ale Completed Look ing Toward Telephone Merger in Nebraska. WILL ASK AN INJUNCTION Independents Ask Attorney ;neral to Intercede for Them. WANT MERGER HEADED OFF Y . 1 . V. i . .. . .xumQna Km uajl l, 41 U S 4JU,VAV ill' dependent Connections. THREE MORE COUNTIES ADDED S stems of C'uaa, Otoe and Harpy Countlea Ilnvc ileen ftrt-nred by Krlriida o( th Dell Comim) . Telephone mergers aiw going on all over tho stats and a battle In now In p.vgiesg bn ana imu'iK'nat-nt telephone. Interests. Closely fallowing the announcement mad. by Tin- llee that the Nebraska Telephone lompany l)nd atcured control of the In dependent tclopltona companies of Cass, Otoe ami Smpy counties eomes the an nouiicement from Lincoln thut the Indepen dent telephone people have aski'd the at torney generul of Ncbraxka to Mtop fur ther tmigcia between tha Bell and Incte pendent Interests. In addition lo the other mergers com.s the announcement that tho Alliance tele phono ay.tem. which was reorntly sold to L. O. Dow, and who toek possession July 1. has been again transferred, thla time to the Nebraska Telephone oompany. whU'U means that It It -now a part of the Bl! telephone system. A. D. Lane conduced the transfer. It Is announced that copper wires will be installed between Omaha. Al liance and Denver and also to Crawford. The Alliance system now numbers 77S city phones, SO country phones and service Is also supplied to 130 telephones on con necting lines owned by farmers and ranch men. Fifty Thousand Won Over. In a statement to Tha Bee Monday. Mr. Yost suld that already 60.000 Indononri.nt telephones of Nebraska were connected with the Nebraska Telephone system and thut tha addition of the phones of Cats, Sarpy and Oto. countlea would' add about 6 0U0 more. The Duff, and Parmule people have sold out their Independent telephone Interests to the Nebraska Telephone company and the ine owners or th. Home Telephone system of Sarpy county have followed ault. The Otoe county Independents were oned by E. A. and Ralph Duff, brothers, and hs Cass county lines by Tom and C. C, Par.. iele, and everything goes t m ' the deal. . Thla lets-llie Wta .-..a.a. l the business ex apt for their holdings is th. plant in Omaha, which Is In the stag, of regeneration. If It, too, should uitl lately land In the hands of the Bell people, It would surprise no one. The Woods brother, of Lincoln thebe things go by families-are tbe big ducks in the Omana puddle, though Lysl. I. Abbott is paddling the canoe as receiver. Mr. Yoat Talks. Concerning th. deal, Casper E. Yoat. president of the Nebraska-Telephone com pany, said: "Parties friendly to the Nebraska Tele phone company have purchased auhstuntial Interests in the Plattsmouth Telephone company, the Nebraska City Telephone company and the Horn. Telephone com pany of Papilllon, operating In Cass, Otoe and Sarpy counties. This will mean a con nection of th. telephones operated by thee, companies with the Nebraska company a system In the near future, an Increase or over 5,000 telephonea which may now be connected to tha Nebraska company's Omaha subscribers and to Its ' system throughout the state. "Perhapa It is not generally understood that over 60,000 Independent telephonea In the state have been connected with th. Nebraska company's lines, and while thi new arrangement means a substantial In crease In the number of connectlona, It Is by no means as important In point of num bera aa the connecting arrangements whlou have been made previously. "The telephone la peculiar in ni. thut It la of advantage to the aubscriber in pro- yomon io me number of other subscribers which may ba reached over it and it la the duty and Intention of th. Nebraska 1 company to add to Its avaiiabl. connec tions as rapidly aa possible." APPEAL TO ATTOR.NBV GENERAL Iteprcaentatlve of Company Wants Him to Invoke Oaater Order. LINCOLN. Neb.. July H.-(Speclal Tele-gram.)-The attorney general has been asketo bring suit to oust th. Nebraska Telephone company and th. Bell Telephone company from doing business In Nebraska because of an alleged violation of the law of the purohase of competing ayatema in Otoe, Cass and Saltne counties. F. M. HaU, representing Frank H. Woods, president of the National Association of Independent Telephone companies, con ferred with the attorney general today aud asked him to file the ouuter suit. Vhe officials Interested are not yet ready to give out the details of the suit and neither would the attorney general ' U'a. ores tha case, other than to say, "It was reported to me by Mr. Hall that th. Ne braska Telephone company had been buy ing a majority of th. stock, of competing companies in various parts of tho state. He delred that a suit b. started to pre vent a merger of these companies 1 Ba.J IwoulU Investigate th. evidence and see whether there had been a violation of the law. I do not know whether I ahall file the suit, and the only statement I can make U that I have the case under adi l.iemtnt." Faith Town Lots Bell Writ. ABERDEEN. S. D.. July H.-(SpecIal)-A large crowd waa in attendance at tha town lot aala at Faith, tha new . town on a branch Una of th. Milwaukee railroad, thirty miles southwest of Mobrldge, In Meade county. The branch road has not yet reached the town, and persons drov. overland from Lrrnmon. 8. D., elKhty-flve miles away. Of th. 200 lots offered for sale all but thirty was dlspoeed of at prices ranging from $110 to $1.2.-j0. the total amount received for th. 170 lots being JJ3.950. Faith, it Is believed, will b.com. one of the best of the many new towns springing up In thla newly opened country tn northwestern South Dakota. 1