Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 31, 1910, 300,000 OMAHA, Page 11, Image 21

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THE BKK: AH A, WEDNESDAY,. . 'AUGUST 31, 1D10.
11
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Food Products
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I , r. Xaarmann
Chas. lurniii
llaarman Vinegar & Pickle Co,
( Incorporated )
CAPACITY ISO BAABXX.b' TUTBOAJl 1AXLY
Vinegar an! PickleSj Catsup. Hiutard, Sauces
OOLO MSDAIHIOKEST AWAJU TSAXI-MISSZIBim SXPOUTXOV.
rMtortiH-Ointki, Ub. Chicago, 111.1 Yalley, XbostUI. x-i eiie. xa,
1S14-1S-13 IOVTI SOTH BTKIIT. BOVO. 460
OHAKA, JTEBKABXA
8XMOTOM
0. Xcxaoek, Ptm, end Tree. O. W. ion, Tloe-Free,
Grocers Specialty Co.
Manufacturers and Jobber of
EXTRACTS, SPICES, BLUING and AMMONIA, BAKING
POWDER and PANCAKE FLOUR, COFFEES, ,
TEAS and SUNDRIES
Telephone Douglae 1783.
Try today....
Paxton
FAVORS FOR ALL OCCASIONS
ED. S. DYBALL
Alaaufactarer of
HIGH GRADE CANDIES
' - Mail or Telephone Orders OlTen Prompt Attention
- Caddies Delivered to All Parts of the City.
', Phone DoofUs 1410
1618 DongUs St. , OMAHA, NKB.
Dreibus Caivdy Co.
MANUFACTURERS OT
..FIWE C0RIFECTI0R1S..
503.10.12 S3UTS NINTH
OMAHA :-:
ALBERT VITASCHEX PAUL VVITASCHER
Telephone, Douglas 1507
MEW ENGLAND
BAKERY
2213-19 Leavenworth Street
OMAHA,
Tip Top Bread
When you consider that the sales of TIP
TOP BREAD are constantly on the in
crease, and that those who use it once con
tinue todo so, it stands to reason that TiP
TOP BREAD must be superior to other
breads. It is made of the best wheat flour
under thorouglily sanitary conditions in
our large, sanitary bake-bhop.
Try it by all means NOW, and you will
join the ever increasing ranks.
U. F3. Steam Oakery Omaha
Joka lumiu
XstabUsbeA 1ST
BL Foleai, .
Coffee
A coffee of delicious goodness. Kimo brand
means the only best. If you would have a su
perior cup of delicious coffee for your tomorrow'!
Breakfast, bur a can today.
At your rrocw BCc per 1-Ib. airtight
& Gallagher Co.
Gas Coffee RoMtera.
ST. NEAR HOWARD
NEBRASKA
NEB.
GRAIN EXCHANGE GROWING
Infant is Fait Maturing Into a Fall
jGrown Giant.
ELEVATORS AND MILLS, ALSO
Uoth Hare Kept Pare with the Won.
derfol Growth of th Kachaoge
-Ileeelata aad Shipments
Increase.
For an Infant only 7V4 year of at, th
corporation known as the Omaha drain
ischanga la a wonder a prodigy, in fact.
Organised In 180S and beginning active busi
ness immediately, the organisation was fol
lowed In ltOt by the establishment of a
grain market.
Since l"'at time the exchange has grown
by leaps and bounds. Purlng the riist year,
or rather, for the eleven months endln
December SI, 1904, the total grain Receipts
amounted to over 16,000,000 bushels.
At that time and for many years prev
ious the railroads serving Omaha had their
rates on grain so arranged that the sur
plus grain production of Nebraska could
not be handled In this city. This was due
to the fact that the rates from Interior
Nebraska points to the great grain cen
ters then existing war materially less
than the sum of the rates Into Omaha
trom the country and from Omaha to the
gialn centers.
This was finally to a great extent over
come, when A. B. BMckney, then president
of the Chicago Great Western Hallway
company, succeeded In financing an exten
sion of the Mason City & Fort DoUho
branch of his toad and building tt Into
Omaha. When this was completed he suc
ceeded In working out a plan whereby the
through rate was so arranged as. to make
It equal to the sum of the rate Into Omana
and tha rate from Omaha to the grain
; center.
Coincldently, he clearly proved to Omaha
business men that they might easily build
up aa great a grain market as those ex
isting at either Kansas City or Minneapolis
If they would take advantage of the situ
ation created by his action In regard .o
tha railroad facilities. He succeeded In
Interesting all the ' business Interests of
Omaha with the result that today the
Omaha Grain exchange stands fourth
among tha grain markets of the country.
Facilities Increase.
Omaha's market facilities are increasing
with giant strides. Tha city enjoys the dls
Unctidn of being the second corn market In
tha" world. Considering primary receipts
only tha city Is one Of the greatest primary
grain markets In' the 'world. -With mora
equitable freight rates, which are bound
to ba brought about,' the rapid development
of the agricultural resources of tha large
territory adjacent to this market will be In
to the organization of the ex
Change, the elevator capacity was 2,140.000
bushels. No official account was then
taken of the Omaha receipts and shipments.
However, during 1904, the first year of the
existence of the exchange, less than 18,000,
000 bushels of grain were received here,
made up approximately of 4,000,000 bushels
000 bushels of oats. At this time the ele
vator capacity of the market was Increased
to 4.0&0.000 bushels and In 1906 the receipts
totaled 34,060,000 bushels, of which there
were , 611,200 bushels of wheat, lt.m.SOO
bushels of corn and 7,779,000 bushels of oats.
By December SI, 1906, the market elevator
capacity had beea Increased to 1,040,000
bushels and the receipts totaled 44,60,100
buBhels, this amount placing Omaha In
sixth place among the great grain markets.
The receipts of corn were 20.72S.400 bushels,
giving Omaha third place as a corn market.
Receipts aad Shipments.
Total figures of receipts and shipments
of grain for IMS are as follows:
- Receipts. Shipments.
Wheat bushels v.So.JoO t.Ml.ooo
Corn, bushels 22.391.UUO 17.933,000
Oats, bushels UU44.800 ,6f3,000
Kye, bUHliels lM.voo
Barley, bushels 67MM0
IMi.OOO
S75.UO0
Totals
,...43,4b'9,CU0 S4.M7.000
1. 1st ef Elevators.
Following is a list of elevators in the
exchange, giving owner, location and ca
pacity; Capaalty,
Owner and Location. Bushels.
Omaha Elevator Co., Council Bluffs. 1,5 0,0
Nye-Bohneldi-r-Fcwier Co., Omar,.-....! 00v) 0 0
lnoperdent levator Co., Omaha... l.COO.OtO
Merrinm 4c Holmqulst "A," Omaha.. (OifK)
Mrrrlam & Holmqulat "B. " Omttha..
Transmlsslsslppi Grain Co., Council
Bluffs
4 as ox)
M00 0
Vpdlke Oraln Co., South Omaha SOO.O O
Nebraska-Iowa Uraln Co., (ilbson
(Omaha)
Rate City Malt Co.. South Omaha...
Crowell Lumber and drain Co.,
Omaha
Cavers Elevator Co., South Otnuha..
M. C. I'etrr Mill Co.. Omaha
Manev Milling Co, Council Hluffn..
Mid-West Elevator Co., Council
Bluffs
Cnie CHy Malt Co.. Onviha
Drone Urns., CoUnnll Bluffs
J. F. Twaiu'.ey, Son & Co., Omaha..
I7V0 0
300 uu
126.000
W'.O 0
100.000
l&i.OOu
10)000
." 0 io
5'i.K0
40.0 0
Total.
6,915,000
All Grain Is nought.
Remits have been obtained through the
enterprise and business acumen, of the men
who mak up the Omaha Grain exchange.
The market has been from the start active
and open. There has been a buying Interest
from the very start that has taken fcvrry
bushel of grain offered, no matter how
large the quantity, and has paid for It
such prices as attracted further business.
The weighing and' inspection of grain at
Omaha has been gradually improved until
today Omaha Grain exchange certificates
are accepted unquestioned In any market
In the United states.
This growth and development has been
based upon Nebraska and Iowa grain only.
A large field In these two states still re
mains unopened and It remains for Omaha
dealers to reap ths benefit of this, new
business If only transportation rates can
ba adjusted upon a proper basis. Kven
under present conditions the Omaha market
last year outstripped every other market
In the country except Chicago in receipts
of corn, was fourth In receipts of oats and
fifth In reoelpu of wheat, and all this
accomplished In less than seven years.
It was not supposed by the people who
organised the Omaha exchange that the
receipts of w heat at Omvha would Inert ass
as rapidly as those of other kinds of grain,
but In 1908 Omaha received U.OOO.OOO bushels
of that cereal, and the In errs se year after
year of these receipts t ece sssilly carhc to
the attention of the flour millers, and, as
a result, two splendid mills are now In
operation In Ornaha, the Updike mill and
the Maney mill. The success of these two
enterprises has been marked from the start
and there Is no question thst the flour mill
ing capacity of Omaha will grow a) rsplitly,
telatlvely, as its elevator capacity has
grown and ns Its receipts of wheat have
grown. And the presence of manufactur
ing Industries to convert the grain Into
flr.lshed product means that the grain
market may now be regarded as settled
upon a solid foundation and that the
dreams of the founders of the Omaha
Grain exchange have been fully realised.
CENTENARY OF SAVINGS BANKS
Orlla aad Growth ol Thrifty Idea
Conceived by Scotch
inns. In the little town or Ruthwell In southern
Scotland, there has recently been celebrated
the centenary of the first savings bank.
It Is true that, previous to M0, there were
In England and other countries a few asso
ciations for saving; but the savings bank,
in the sense which we attach to the term,
had Its real beginning with Henry Dun
can, Presbyterian minister and philanthro
pist, who, In a period of exceptional dis
tress, kept down the poor rates of his par
ish -by persuading people to help them
selves.
In Dr. Duncan's time, a stocking, a chink
In the wall or a loose board in the floor
offered the only ways open to poor people
for keeping surplus money. The banks then
existing did not accept sums under 10,
and to attain to the height of affluence
represented by that amount waa by no
meana easy. If one was known to save,
he might be spied upon and robbed, or he
might be deprived of his money under the
polite disguise of borrowing, or, in an
Imagined emergency, he might fall back
upon the reserve fund and use It needlessly
and somewhat recklessly. 1 Dr. Duncan be
lieved that these dangers could be obvi
ated by a savings bank. Once their money
was safe In Its keeping, he thought, people
would not break In upon the little hoard
except for some urgent reason.
This was plausible enough; yet there were
difficulties. The pool' were suspicious;
politicians, Cobbett. the London Times, the
banking Interest opposed. But the deposits
in the pioneer bank at Ruthwell, which In
the" first year, 1810, amounted to only 151,
rose r the .fourth year to I9& and, mean
time, the generous idea was being taken up
elsewhere. One of our own great savings
banks dates from 1816, as does one In Phil
adelphia, and tt Is ln the United fitates,
especially . In the east, that . savings .banks
have sustained their greatest development
By the latest available report of the comp
troller of th.e currency there were In this
country more than 1.400 such banks, having
nearly 9,000,000 depositors, and with aggre
gate deposits approaohtng 14, 000,000,000.
When one looks back upon the man who
set this weighty force In motion, the View
Is altogether pleasing. Henry Duncan, min
ister, wss the son and the grandson of
ministers. 'Weighing the number and ex
tent of his activities, It seems a wonder
The
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Feeder Cottle Division
South Omaha la not only tbe Home Live Stock Market of Nebraska, but haa beeoiue tbe market ef tbe entire west for all clatsea of Cattle,
Hogg, Bkecp and Horses, touth OrnaU bandied laat year more Western Cattle and fchecp than did the lln;nt market In the United Stateg. Thi
enlargtment and Improvement of iti treat packing houses lncrcaseg tha outlet from year to year en the fr.t mi butthur graUcg of cattle and
eheep. Its hog market la the Third Largest in the World. Ita advantageoua location with reference to thy raCu ard fooJlng districts hag
enabled South Omaha to establish a feeder market which it now second to son In the wait
If you. bare Cattle, Uoga,8neep or Heraea to aall ahlp than to South Omaha.
If yoa want Feeder Cattle or Eheep SouC Omaha U the beet place oo earth to buy them.
that he escaped being denounoed aa a
Jacobin. It Is known that ha did fall un
der suspicion, as not quite "sound" theo
logically, because of his seal for education,
manifested by his psrlnh library, his science
classes, and his "conversational Sunday
lectures." Tet In behalf of such objects,
and his cherished purpose of the savings
bank, he "squandered ease, expanse and
time," and his severest eiltlos within the
bounds of the presbytery must hve found
In him "the root of the matter" when he
crowned his career by a final aot of sac
rificefor he, with his two sons and his
son-in-law, ell ministers of the Church of
Scotland, "went out" In the disruption of
IMS. Boston Transcript.
FAIR WARNING ON FIREWORKS
Kaaaas Clr Plana to Head Off the
Deadly Noise on Fourth
ol July.
A new ordinance for the regulation of the
sale and use of fireworks the Fourth of
July Is to be Introduced In the council of
Kansaa City by Alderman Louis Oppenstetn.
The ordinance will be a copy of the Chi
cajro law. It Is the purpose to enect It
now so that dealers may be prepared be
fore laying In their stooks for next year.
It Is believed the Oppensteln ordinance
will be accepted. Under the terms every
dealer muit make application for a license
before June It, setting forth where the
fireworks are to be for sale. Toy pistols.
':o
AKMCPOIR & CO
Omaha, FSJebratsIkEi
SOUTH
Great Live Stock
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j-lswwenie-sieamssr- '' T''Vsr VSSaKX10Bmm
I toy cannon, blank oar t riders, firecrackers
exceeding two Inches In length, torpedoes
exceeding three-fourths of an Inch In diame
ter, chloride of potash and sulphur, and any
explosive more powerful than black gun
powder are barred. i
A feature of the ordinance that Is ex
pected to make It effective Is a provision
that every dealer taking out a special
license for the fireworks must put up a
cash bond of 1X0 which may bs furfelled
when he violstes any provision of the ordi
nance. No dealer Is allowed to s-!l fire
works prior to the first day of July and
after the Fourth.
No device for exploding other substance
than the common black gunpowder for the
purpose of making an unusually loud ex
plosive it permitted. The fire warden Is
to have supervision of the. place and man
ner of keeping and displaying fireworks
stocks. The etorlng and sale of fireworks
Is prohibited In the following places:
Where paints, oils or varnishes are man
ufactured or kept for use or sale.
In carpenter shops or drug stores; In
buildings where kerosene or other product
of petroleum Is told or In any building
In which dynamite, gun cotton, nitro
glycerin, petroleum or any of its products
or compounds containing any of the said
substances are kept or sold.
Jn any building or place where tar, pitch,
rosin, turpentine, hay, cotton or hemp is
manufactured, stored or kept for ssle.
In any building Illuminated by any arti
si
j
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Plant of
DMAHA
Market of trie
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'I ,f sn' ' ,'v" m i n i
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u wi ... wn -1
ficial light other than aus or electricity.
In any building In whlrh dry goods of
any kind or other light mxterlals of e com
bustible nature, except rings, paper lan
terns, P'iper balloons or decorations are
kept on the Same floor end within fifty
feet of any firecrackers or ether fire
works offered or expofed for sale. Kansaa
City btar.
U him.
The city man who was summering In the
country wss lounging et a little station oa
an Interurban line.
Alona- came a seedy pllarlm walklnr un
the track.
"My friend, said the city man, "do you
expect to hoof It to the next station?'1
"Sura
"How far la
itr
" ltout six miles."
"Wl.ats the fere from here thereT
rmefln eerie, i recaon. '
"Car coining pretty soon?"
"Yep."
"Well, Just to gratify a whim, suppose
you let me lend vou money enough to pay
your fare to tha' station.''
"That II be all right, boss."
"I haven't the change. Here's a quarter."
"ThanUs. Now, tons," said the aedy
wayfarer, "Jes" to gratify a wblm, I'm
gln' to keep on hooflti' It. Good-bye."
Chicago Tribune.
Pointed Paragraphs.
Sooner or later the crooked man will find
himself in straits.
The more somo prnplo get the more they
want except when thy are handed a sen
tence In the police court
If a man can't emnpllment a woman on
anything but the beauty of her auburn nose
It's up to hlra to remain silent. Chloago
News.
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