Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 07, 1913, Page 3, Image 3

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    THUi UUiiS: UMAHA, MUftJIAY, Jib
11113.
Before deciding
on your Insur
ance 'phono O.
1175, and ask
about the new
low cost, alt
guaranteed pol
icies, all plans.
Life, Limited
Payments, En
dowmentv.
Joint or Part-
rtAr.tiln fin...
poratlon ana Monthly incon. or Pen
elon Policies.
sua IPrndentlal Xns. Co. of America
w "So' Co- by Nw Jersey
For Nebraska nnrl nn..iT7i..
1 U9-22 city KaVl nkT BiaVr Omaha
THE
Union Central Life Ins. Go.
OP
CINCINNATI, OHIO
HARRY O. STEEL
Oeaorai Agent,
11-313 Basics Blag. Phons o 2103
OVER $4,000,000.00 ASSETS
'A constant, never-failing increase in . the accumulated
assets
THE BANKERS RESERVE LIFE COMPANY
OP OMAHA
One of the oldest of Nebraska Life Companies. A com
pany of great financial strength. Doing more busi-ness-now
than ever before Policy contracts, that ap
peal to 'all classes of men.
: A DISTINCTIVE COMPANY,
The new Insurance codo goes Into effect July 17, 191S, In part It wilt
nbt be until July 1st, 1915, that all of Its provisions become operative. But
whenever they do become tho law the Midwest Life will continue to do
business without any material change In Its methods or forms of policies.
Its agency force wilt not be compelled to make long explanations why
certain policies cannot bo Issued longer for tho reason that It Is not now
issuing policies which later will come under tho ban of tho law. This com
pany has opening for six or eight good, high-class men, with or without ex
perience, to sell insurance in Nebraska, Why not como with It If you believe
that business honesty and integrity constitute an asset of a company?
THE MIDWEST L-.IF'fc:
W. S. SWEX.I., President. A Kebraska Company Home Offices t rirst Rational
Bank Hollaing-, Lincoln. OEOafJE CBOCKEK ana F. A. PlHHB'r, General
Agents, Booms 1313-1314 City national Bank Bnliaing. Omaha, Webraska.
Agencies organizing In Iowu, Nebraska and South Dakota now.
Splendid opportunities for both agents and managers in every county.
For further information, address
CHARLES HALL JOHNSTON", Manager
Ih GERMANIA LIFE Company
1210 City National Bank Building, Omaha, Neb.
Eqtiitable Life Assurance Society U. S
4iiipOOTj,0O01(ia Policy holdersrer $815,000,000. :
J." .' A.x as uu., manager -M - -
If. D. -STEELY ' , JOE KLEIN E. H. MOICARD
'i'1-.V 220 Omaha National Bank Bldg.
-INSURANCE- .
FIKE TORNADO AUTOMOBILE PLATE GLASS BOILEB
BUKGLAItV HEALTH and ACCIDENT
ALFRED C. KENNEDY
209 First Nat'l Bank Bldg; Phone Douglas 722.
Vrm i isi.j. '"I hi i i in i ii i ii in
(
BALD RICE-MADDEN CO.
GENERAL INSURANCE
Phone Doug. 300.
THE TEST Il0W we,e your tornado losses settled promptly and fairly?
. That la exactly what our patrons ara pleased about
promptness and fairness,
3M At IVf eisrter
GENER INSURANCE
1313-14 CXTT XATIOITAL BA9TX BOT&DXXa. JPhOBs Bong. 1703.
' WAiTX' A. TO ITS SIC
B. L. BALDWIN & CO.
Established '1B31.
GKKJ1KA& ZSSJTBAWCB
609-10 First National
Wheeler &
8E&XAS&S
tsjl Doigs Strset
SECOND ONLY. TO PANAMA.
Knulneerlnp Triumph. In Drlnjrlns
Mountain Water to Jfevr
Yorlc City-
That the waters of the Atlantic and
the'Paciflo may be wedded , at Panama
ind that tho commerce of the world may
thereafter keep up continually increasing'
triumphal procession through the canal,
the people of the entire United Suites
WJll pay out something like J400.000.000.
IhNew York, within a sone centering at
, city hal, with a radius of. fifteen miles,
the citizens of Greater JNew York are
going to pay out mprs than J2W,0C0.000
that their cup may bo fufl of mountain
watSr. -
Thtf'jfear of disease even moro than
the immediate need of an adequate sup
ply of water compelled' the board of
water supply to go ninety miles up state,
as the crow files, to the Catsklll water
shed and Just seven yr-ars ago the pre
liminaries of the work were agreed upon
and the first active operations begun.
Sines -that beginning work has gone on
with tireless energy tho' aqueduct ad
vances ranging weekly from LOOf) feet to
more than 7,000 'feet of construction in
one-form or another as It traveled along
th surface of the earth. Jmrrowed
tbrpugh an outlying mountain or dived
headilng down hundreds ot feet until It
could straighten out upon a horizontal
course way below a river bed.
The entire operative army has reached
Northwestern Mutual Lite
Insurance Company
OF MILWAUKEE
MANN & JUNOD
General Agents
B38-8-I4 llrontlcls Building.
OMAHA
Savings Bank Life Policy
Have You Seen It?
G. W. NOBLE,
Central Agent.
CKABXB3 X.. XtOVFSlt,
Bpselal Agtnt.
a SXTGHMAN, Special Agent.
orrzossi
G33-043 Brandtls DlAjf.
Omaha,
of
W. Z.XKOT WILCOX
Telephone J0Ug. 271.
Wei pt on Co.
rSSUKAXKC
PSone Bonglas A8&
a maximum of tollers of all grades of
more than 17,000 during the open months
of the year and a minimum of 000. nut
tho latter .figure has been several tiroes
greater when the men could keep steadily
at their ..work below Krounl the year
through without the hindrance of frost
or snow.
Tho aqueduct Js being built to bring
down from the mountains a dally sup
ply of tC0.000.QCO gallons, hut this will
be about double tho capacity of tho
K so pus watershed which can bo counted
upon during a series ot dry years.
Today New York is consuming an aver
age of 0,000,000 gallons of water every
twenty-four hours, and the Croton sys
tem la normally equal -to the dally de
mand of 320,000, so you se? Just how
much the tapping ot the Ashokan reser
voir will add to the city abundance and
guard It against both the perils of a
water famine and that of a great con
flagration. As the division of duty is
now assigned, the Croton watershed will
send Its trlbutemalnly to the inhabitants
of the island of Manhattan, while tho
new source-of supply wlty'taKp care of
the needs of the associate boroughs.
Even so, the life-giving flood from the
Catsklll foothills will be three days on
Its Journey ere It comes to rest at tho
Bllvcr lake terminal reservoir on Staten
Island. New York Time.,
Tho Persistent and Ju&icrous Use of
Newspaper Advertising Is the Road to
BuslnesJ Success
News From the Insurance Field
Fire Insurance
Deadlock in Missouri
is Growing Tighter
Tho tiro insurance deadlock In Missouri
has not been altered by the ruling of the
state supreme court on the right of the
slate to prosecute tho companies tpt com
bining to cease (Joint: business In the
stato. Thirty days nro allowed the com
panies to make 'answer to the court's
order clearing the boards for trial on 1
the Irsue, which Is to bo argued at the
October term. Meanwhile the fire com
panies nro enjoined from cancelling ex
isting policies, 1
Tho temper of the companies la re
flected In their answer to the citation
of State' Insurance Superintendent Re
veille to show cause by July 1 why their
licenses should not be revoked. Ono
hundred and fifty companies made an
swer stating that under existing condi
tions they did not intend to resume writ
ing insurance In the state. They deny
that they have suspended bunlncrs In
order to Impair the crodit of the state
or damage tho property of the public,
or that they have coerced any other In
surance compnnlos to leave tho state.
They admit' that they suspended busi
ness bocauso of provisions" of the On law.
Thoy admit that tho state has the right
to cancel their licenses, and hold that
In turn they have an eouat right to
1 suspend .writing business at will, either
j in whole or in part. If the state makes
I a demand that they surrender their
licenses they offer to do eo without tost
or contest and without nny dcnlat of their
obligations Under existing contracts. The
answer closed as follows:
"The companies earnestly deny all the
acts of wrongdoing charged and all the
wrongful purposes Imputed to them In
the citation, and respectfully stato that
they have no plan, purpose, - motlvo or
design other than to ceaso writing in
surance in Missouri,' because, In their
judgment, present conditions do not tier.
mlt that to be dono with either safety
or pront,"
Meanwhllo th'e few companies that nro
still writing business In Missouri aro
cnargmg higher rates than tho exiled
companies did, having a practical monop
ojy of the field.
A .solution of tho deadlock, workable
lor me better class of Insurance risks,
is offered by the Bt. Louis nepublle,
Which, whilo friendly tp the companies.
ivums mem mat they aro pursuing
wrong tactics In fighting that part of the
Orr law which prohibits the use df rating
cards. Tho Republic suggests that the
companies "take from their agents tho
power to name rates, lodging that in a
central office-say in St. Louis. The
agent. In getting business, would simply
collect the facts regarding the individual
risk and forward them to this office,
which would then namo the rate, Under
such an arrangement no company could
bo put In peril by tho acts of ttq agents.
The expense would have to bq met by
the policyholder, f courso, and the in
convenience likewise would . bo chiefly
his. At the samo tlmo well-doing citizens
wauid not bo deprived of-Insurance pro
IOWA WILL DEFEND THE LAW
State to Take Part in Test of Webb
liquor Act.
C0SS0N ANNOyNCES INTENT
Iovra BnAliiirna Blen'a Temperance
' Association PreiinrlnR Case Which ,
Will Urine the Act Up for
Determination
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
DE8 MOINES, la., July C (Special Tel
egram.) The stato of Iowa IS expected
soon to take part lp a test case of tho
Wcbb-Kcnyon liquor law. Attorney Gen
eral Cosson has announced that he will
assist any county authorities In the trial
of a case where it .is believed the new
law controlling Interstate Shipment 6f
liquors has been violated.
In the meantime the Iowa Business
Men's Temperance association Is prepar
ing to test the .law. They claltn to have
evidence of liquor being shipped into
dry towns in . violation ot the federal
statute, A field worker for the associa
tion is now working up a test case. .
To tJo AcrrinM Indian Lands.
Authority to condemn land for right-of-way
for an electric transmlssiort lln
across Indian lands in Tama county was
granted by the railway commission to
day. The Indians had protested against
allowing this right-of-way and the United
States attorney had filed a4 opinion to
the effect that the state could not condemn
land belonging to Indians, The commis
sion found that the lands were accepted
on condition that the stats reserved Its
right of eminent domain. Tho authority
to condemn Is granted under tho new
Iowa law on behalf of tho Iowa Rail
way and Light company of Marshall
town. ., t
The Rock Island Railway company was
directed by the railway commission to
begin within ten days', tho construction ot
a depot and station facilities at Rltter.
A hearing was had on this case soma
time time ago on behalf of the patrons.
Audltor'n Ilrport I" Oat.
The annual report of State Auditor
Bleakly ' on fire insurance In Iowa has
been printed and Is ready for distribu
tion. There were in 1912 a total of m
companies doing a fir business In Iowa,
of whljrti l&t wero county mutuals, twenty
state mutuals, ten Iowa stock companies
and threo Jowa mutuals. There wero
seventy engaged In casualty business.
Curing the last ten years the Insurance
department received In fees from insur
ance companies $&37,S97.7 and in taxes foi
the stato J3,1S,JX,7. The fees In 19U
amounted to t7,7CT-& and the takes to
l39C.ftS.00.
Will Start Bxnmlners,
State Auditor Bleakly expects next
week to start put a corp of special ex
aminers for counties. Those selected are;
James Parker, Pes Moines; C C Colcio.
Carroll; C. C. Hunt,Mpntsuma; F. d.
Luke, Hampton; J. X, Israel, Keokuk;
J. M. Matthews, Council Bluffs; B. V,
Rehkopf, Indianola; C. B. EJIIs, Onawa.
The assistants or helpers In thft account
Ing work aro as follows; E. F. Whitney,
Oes Moines; E. P. Carlson. Madrid; A,
C. dustafson. Rud Oak; E. W. Woodruff;
Des Moines; C. E. Davey, Baxter; A,
j'amleson, Jefferson; R. 0-. Mulkey,
Knoxvillt.
Mrs. Charles Wclgle of Elkhart, mother
of four small children, may b tho first
tectum ana tho companies would not .be
PUln the i position -of. attempting to
coeca;,the?sate:iV. , H ' K . tS. & &R
Travelers Opens
Branch Office for
Liability Business
Because ot tho new workmen's com
pensation law, which goes Into effect the
lhh of this month, the Travelers'
Insurance company has Just opened an
exclusive branch office In Omnha to
handle the liability and workmen's com
pensation business. This is the first
branch ot Its kind to bo Installed In this
city.
William Sutehall Is In chsrge ot the
new branch. He Is a special representa
tive of the company and Has had ex
perience In this, lino In Michigan ana
Massachusetts under similar laws. Ac
cording to Mr. 8utehall, the purpose of
this now office Is to provide expert art-
vice and Immedlato adjustment to. agents
and policyholders of the company on this
olftrs of Insurance.
The new branch Is to bo locatod In tho
suite occupied by tho Travelers tn Ihe
City Nations! Bank building, which suite
has been enlarged to accommoaate u.
The Love-Haskell company is to con
tlnuo In Its representation ot the Travel
ers In the same capacity as heretofore.
D, L, Hollub Joins
National Cotnpany
navM l. HollUb. formerly with th
Massachusetts nondlng company of Chi
cago, has Joined tho forces of the na
tional Fidelity and Casualty company,
having taken charge of their accioeni
nnA hr-alth department, which will now
be strongly" developed along conservative
lines. Mr. Hollub'a insurance experience
Is very cxtonslvo. ho having spent
twenty-five years In this work, starting
as office boy with tho Pacltlo Mutual
Llfo Insurance company, and at the time
he left he handled their railroad depart
ment, and his success In this lino ws
very marked, a fact which speaks well
for his ability as there Is no department
of Insurance which requires more care
ful and skillful underwriting to be suc
cessfully handled than contracts cover
ing railroad employes.
After arriving In Omaha, Mr. Holiuu
went to view the scene ot tho tornado,
and ho was very" much struck by the
vigorous way the damage which was done
n hainir reolaced. and ventured the
opinion that Omaha was almost entitled
to as much credit as San Francisco for
the rapid rehabilitation, which had been
made In tho face of tho great disaster.
He was also much struck with the great
progress wh'.-sh this city has mado in
the last ten years,- and particularly by
the splendid dtflco hulldlnga and dry
good stores ot which Omaha is Justly
proud.
. Lowes Hnmlleit Jointly
The "fire losses ih tho thiyton flood
werh handled conjointly by a committee
of field men. representing all the com
panies interested. Its report hos Just
been issued, showing 1R3 loss claims, with
136 companies. Interested under 631 policies.
The sound ,vahie of tho property was
tl.422.08t, wtih. insurance- involved rot
9J4.poo..,a loss to tne assured 01 i.w,.ii,
aniiiajioaa- td .theJcomphlcs. Tpf J78i9i
to jsecuje a widow's pension in Iowa.
Although the new law onl went into
effect yesterday, Mrs, Welgle's applica
tion was also filed then.
Frank A Shankland, father of the bill
In Iowa, presented tha claim. Mrs,
Wclgle Is asking .00 per week for tho
support of her children. Her husband,
she says, died May, 1907, In BonduranC
-Courts on tlnnrrclxomenens, ''
- The Iowa courts disagree on what it Is
that goos to mako up a reputation for
being quarrelsome. The supreme court,
this week reversed a manslaughter case
partly on this account. In the cose ot
the state against McCasky at Waterloo,
the lower court had instructed the Jury,
n effect, that repeated quarrels of tho
deceased victim of tho homicide would
show that he was quarrelsome, provjued
it was also shown that in each case
he was the aggressor. Tha supreme court
refused to stand for this theory an held
that a quarrelsome disposition mtghtfbe
shown no matter who, started the fuss
each time. Error in regard to this 'ono
matter had an effect on the pica of self
defense'1 entered in the case.
Roml Work on Wrmiff H""ds.
The fact has Just come to the atten
tion of state officials that in Pes Moines
the city administration is entirely Ignor
ing the roads which lead into the city
Joining the county road system and'ls
doing all the road work on other roads
In the suburbs. The city has about 111,003
to spend annually on these rural roads.
It has been put up to the highway com
mission and attorney general to compel
the city administration at least not, to
entirely ignore the county road system
in the working ot the. roads. This mis
understanding of the law is said to bo a
cause for the complaint that the worst
roads of the state are hero In Pes
Moines,
NATIONAL SWEDISH HOME
DEDICATED FREE OF DEBT
BOONE, Ia July 6-(Special.)-The Nr
tlpnal Swedish Old People's home, a new
structure just dedicated In this city, is
now free from debt. The homo was made
Possible by the Commercial association
donating $5,000 and by the untiring1 work
or Rev. J. H. Hedstronf of this city, who
solicited and worked even as far west
as California. lie has Just returned from
the national conference In Minneapolis
and thero the last of the Indebtedness
was raised, news of which was received
with Joy by the people of this city. The
home is an Ideal place, elegantly ur
ntshed, splendidly ventilated, with a treat
colonial porch on the front Everything
has been arranged for the convenience
of the old pi-opts and nothing Is being
left undone to make their declining years
pleasant and harpy.
Iowb SWS Notts.
LOGAN Fire of unknown orlrrln
stroyed the Fred Seeley farm-house, ono
and one-half miles south Df Woodbln.
last evening. According to reporls but
llttU was saved. , k
STORM LAKE J. A. Woodruff, for tha
tour run cnunix lupcnmrnurni 01
schools In Bucna Vista county, has, re
signed to accept a position as state rural
scnoois- inspector.
STORM LAKT-Rev. R. Lv Barackman,
u. u., ot aac uity. nas ueen cnosen presi
dent of the board pf trustees of Buena
Vista college. At the annual meeting
Rev. W. M. Hamilton, P. P., of Sioux
City, was named, but he declined to serve,
WEBSTER CITY-C. A. BrennecR. a
well known Pioneer resident of Webster
iitr, nas jusi presented ins city wun
tour elegant DUDDiing fountains. Tney
Three Members of
"Arson Trust" Are
Convicted in Chicago
Tho trial of Edward and Paul Covlts,
wootcn merchants, and Joseph Clarke, In
surance adjuster, on the chargo ot ar
son, resulted in their conviction by a Jury
in a Chicago court last week.
The defendants were charged with hav
ing tired the building at 18-50 Pouth Fifth
avenue, Chicago,, occupied by the Covltx
brothers, Tho blaso occurred on Novem
ber 8, last.
John Dantes, confessed firebug, who
apparently Is ono ot tho leaders of the or
ganization, was the state's stnr witness.
His story on tho witness stand, reciting
tho perils that attend the life of the pro
fessional "'torch." was ono ot tho most
dramatto Incidents ot the trial. Ho told
.the court how ho had saturated the goods
with gasoline, how ho had been overcome
by the fumes, and how, when tho explo
sion finally occurred, his clothing was
fired, and he ran fainting from tho build
Ing.
According to his statements, ho was to
receive fc'OO for the Job, with a bonus 'of
$200 It ho mado a "clean sweep."
tn-inrnnp Notrs nml Pergonals,
Frank B. Martin ot Martin Bros, com
pany Is back from his vacation spent
in tho east, but he has returned sin
and tho attending physician fear that
a case ot typhoid fever Is likely to de
velop. Mr. Martin lays the troublo to a
dip in the ocean at Atlantic City.
Vice , President Lulkart of the Lion
Bonding company Is In Minneapolis nnl
other Minnesota cities this week, estab
lishing agencies and getting tho agents
started. Tho Lion Bonding company
entered Minnesota hut a fow weoks ago
and ever slnco has been doing a flatter
ing business tnrougnout tho state.
General Acent Mann of the North
western Mutual Life, who Is spending hl
vacation In northern Wisconsin, writes
home that he Is having sumo rare sport
fishing In the lakes and streams, Ho
ftnvs that slnco hn itot saunred for busi
ness that there has boon hardly a day
when he haa not caught the limit on
plko and bass.
The 150 employes of the Columbia
Flro Underwriters' association had rea
son to bo thankful last week. Thumday
noon when thoy quit work, they woro
Informed by Manager Talmage that thero
wnnld lm nnthlne ilnlncr until this morn
ing nnd all on account of the fact that he
proposed a nouany vacation tor every
body from office boy up to assistant
manager.
Fred L, Gray, general manager of the
London auurantce ana Acciucn; com
pany, spent a couple of days In Omnha
lnut week, ennforrlnfr with Foster A
Barker, the Nebraska agents. This In
one ot tho companies that Is affected by
the workmen's compensation law that
goes Into effect July 17 n& Mr. Gray
wns anxious to gain some Information
relative to what It will do to tho ac
cident business,
A level Increase of B0 per cent on all
employers' liability rates, effective Sep
tember 1. has" been ordered In Iowa by
the workmen's compensation service
bureau at a recent meeting In Now ork.
Insurance Commissioner Done of Utah
has asked nil the llfo Insurance com
panies In that state to prepare n state
ment of surplus to be apportioned at the
end of the fifth policy year on all de
ferrrt dividend policies Issued after April
12, 1909.
Flro losses In Missouri aro heavier than
they wero immediately after tho Com
panies suspended writing. In sddltlon to
the loss ot ncnrlv tsr.O.OOO at BprlngMeld
tho losses In Kansas City have been
.imnlHi. htltvanii (Yin unit I7K CM n wnlW
t lor inrao iimn iui, wwn
Quent In St. Louis jtnd In smallpr tbwps,
will be nlnced In the business district
Brennccke Is an old-timer hero and until
recently owned a targe block of property
in the business district ot tne city,
C0NSCIENGE NOT BIG FACTOR
Fear of flrttlnu; Caught ivlth the
Goods ICreps Men
Straight.
There is a notion that the slings, tho
"scorpion whips" ot conscience,' constl
tute tho most frightful and agonising pun
Ishment which tho human evil-doer can
suffer.
This notion is taught almost exclu
slvely In the old-time books on religion
and morality, in tho hopo that it would
deter men and women from tho commis
sion of sins with threats uf futura spirit
ual punishment to back It up.
But it Is not too much to say that we
have reached a point in human develop
ment when the stings of conscience and
tho fear of future punishment havo very
little effect upon the deliberate and In
tcntlonal perpetrators of serious crimes,
This Is seen In the tact. Instances ot
which aro mado manifest every day, that
public1 officials and private persons
business of various sorts whose lives
are secretly long -courses of crime, but
who, until finally they aro exposed, llv
in the odor ot the highest respectability
political, social nnd financial who prob
ably never felt a twinge of conscience,
but are crushed with the shame and'
humiliation of having their black lives
mads public.
Good men, upright and honorable In
their live, but who either In self-defense
or purely by accident have taken a
human life, have been mado to undergo
extreme suffering by lashings of con
science and the stings ot regret, while
the really bad man fears nothing but
exposure, nnd until he is called to ac
count Is noted for his cheerful disposi
tion and his happy and free-from-cara
frame of mind.
It has come about that conscience and
fear of spiritual misery only operate on
the good, whllo the secretly wicked and
criminal can only bo mado to suffer
for their sins hy having them brought
to light, with the result of pouring out
upon them the shame and humiliation
which alone they had reason to dread.
Therefore, punishment for crime ought'
to Invoke as much publicity and humilia
tion as possible, whereas It seems to be
the object In the administration of
Justlc to- subject the criminal to as
little exposure as possible, and if ono
should happen to get a term ot imprison
ment he I saved as much as possible
from the hardships of prison life and
from the degradation ot wearing the
"stripes," the badge of tho criminal.
It is only the shame and humiliation
of exposure that make the real punish
ment for such criminals and If the pun
ishment has been as free from degrad
ing conditions as possible, when be re
ceives his pardon ho will feel that the
worst that happened to him Is the toss
of time spent in prison, and whether
he shall havo reformed or not. he de
termines not to be "found out" again.
The real punishment for such- criminals
is complete exposure and humiliation, and
if these are mado as light as possible
there Is no retribution, New Orleans
Picayune
Persistent Advertising is the Boad to
.Big Ueturns
Have You ocn Our Now
AK-SAR-BEN POLICY?
Unquestionably tho moat liberal
$25.00 policy on tho nlnrkot.
A Policy Contract Years
Ahead of tho Times.
Wo nro looking for a cooil aalna
man to Bpecinllzo on this policy. To
mo man wno can flollvor tho gooda
tu mil nuuuui n very uoorni propo
sition. Fidelity &
Casualty Company
2th nnd Fnriuim Sts., Omnha
Jay D. Foster
Foster-Barker Company
Succossors to
H. E. Palmer Son & Co.
Accident Health Insurance
LIBERAL CONTRACTS
i ,
Losses adjusted hy lis right here
in Omaha.
Brandeis Bldgt
Seek no Further
LION HEALTH and ACCIDENT policies cannot be ex
celled. Its UNLIMITED policies can be issued in any
amount desired by the Business and Professional man.
Smaller policies are issued in all classes. There are none
better ask the man who has ono.
Lion Bonding & Surety Co.
9th Floor W. O. W. Bldg. Phone Douglas 678.
Let the Buyer Beware
bsb us ssroKS ztmva another so&xtnr xs Airs bx&kph
OI" ISOURAKOS.
GALLAGHER &
General Agint
MARTIN BROS. & CO.
Workmen's Compensation Insurance
BARKER BLK. TEL. DOUG. 735
TOM KELLY
r
BOOST 70S OXJHCA
Ths Columbia Fre Underwriters
OV OMAHA
tlonts Offices Entire Third 2? low Merchants national Bank Building.
SbonsJUonglas 451.
3, O. TalniBge, Ktanasrsr. VL Tt. X.e&as, Assistant SZanager.
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ADVERTISEMENTS
Wit, -r icrm
J. H. Mitiien Co.
INC
021-1 CITY NATIONATj
DANK DLDQ,
Surety Bonds, Kmploycrs' Lia
bility, Automnhllo Liability,
Unrglnry, Plato Glass.
INSURANCE
ju.ujlslijl-ua r
"State Mutual Life"
OF WORCESTER, MASS.
ONE OF THE OLDEST-69 YEARS
and Best Companies on
Earth.
W. H. INDOE
General Agent
052 Hco Jlllilillnu, OMAHA.
Joseph Barker
Phone Doug, 29
NELSON
8 anflsJs Hldg.
Illinois bursty Co.
LIFE IN8UKANOE
ACCIDENT INSURANCE
Elgtoy.flvo Millions Assots.
"Tl InsuriM Mm"
reoxB Dotmx.A sei.
n
-
The parcel postmalcos
It easy to reach country
buyers. Tho city mer
chant can send small or
ders so fast that distnrtce
no longor hinders traao
with tho people out In the
state. Let them know
what you can send them
by parcel poBt and you
will .Improve your busi
ness. Small Bee want ads
will effect the desired re
sults. Ilea Want Ad Department
Tyler 1000
Trie Baa Engraving Ja
partmcnt will make
drawing and cut like this
for 13.50,
1
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