I A THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 16, 1917. BANK DEPOSITS GAIN NEARLY 14 MILLION IN YEAR Remarkable Showing Indicat ing Continued Properity Which Surrounds This Market. Bank deposits in Omaha gained $13,861,476 since a year ago. The loans have gained $15,916,147 in that year. These gains are gleaned from the figures made public by the Omaha banks when the national comptroller of currency issued his call for bank statements of September 11. The call a year ago came as of September 12, 1916. Thus the comparison can be made on the basis of a year lacking lust one cay. As comoared to three months aeo however, the deposits in Omaha are down $9,000,000, and the loans are flown $3,500,000. , This is the norma! slump in de- posits due to the withdrawal of money at this time of year by the country banks to supply the farmers during the harvesting, crop gathering and crop moving season. This showing of the banks is also more remarkable when it is consid ered that farmers have no wheat to sell, which generally comes in at this time of the year. Following are the figures and com parisons: DEPOSITS. Jim 10,'IT. Oniaha National $14,070,805 V.. 8. National 11,490,493 Pint National 20,111,37 Merchant! National.. 11,531,33 Stock Tarda National 1J.S4S,04 1.1 ve Stock National.. 7.43MT4 fitot Bank of Omaha 4.444.76 arkra National 4,333,113 Hobranka National... 4,015,105 Corn Kxchang Nat'l. 8,897,761 Bacurltr 8tat Bank. 1,061, 6(1 American State Bank 17,1112 do. Om. Savin- Bk.. 416,112 Union Stat Bank , Ralston. State Bank.. ......... Spt. 1111 122,314,602 11,062,612 17,944,103 11,863,636 11,27,643 7,616,122 4.601,296 4.119.643 4.036,(1 3.433,676 1,063,493 622,146 ' 427.36 360.000 76,31 Totals 1116,082,134 1107,166,360 DEPOSITS. 1 ' Sept. ll.'l. 8pt 1117. Pint' National 17.3i3,6T Omaha National 19.416.S06 V: 8. National , lf.776,695 Merchants National.. 10,SM4 Stock Yard National. M66.723 Nebraaka National. I.tve Stock National.. Packers National.... Corn Kxchanio Nat'l. State Bank of Omaha, Security Stat Bank. Bo. Om. Savings Bank Jtataton State Bank.. TJalon State Bank.... American Stat Bank Totals. 4,017.72 4,841,660 2,79,361 l,66t,t6 l.ttt.StT 67,0 ' J84.83S 69.16 317,944,103 22,314,603 16.0H2.62I li.sea.sss 11.267.(43 , 4.036,611 7,614,122 4,189.64 3,43S.7( 4.601.290 ,1.063.493 , 427,66 74,36 3(0,000 122,(46 1107,166,860 (,306,674 (,7(8,89 2,980,203. 1.104.(81 3,001,017 J.1J8.7I8 T44.S86 - SM.M4 431.155 V ." i . Ak. 13.017.71 11,2(0,447 7.980.4I 1.080.07 1,826,017 3,014.40 8,066,613 3.773,104 3,306,061 878,107 . 34 914 40,6 ' 3J5.0OO ,7MJ .....I 4,04,884 . '. tOJINS. .- ' - . ' f ; Junl0.'17 BaptllIT Omaha National..,. ,I1S.W,45 13,l,470 V. 8. National 4 14,291,736 Pint National ...... 13,876,161 Merchant National.. 1,3(2,76 Stock Tarda National Live Stock National.. Stat Bank of Omaha Packen National..... Nebraaka National. a... Corn Exchange Nat'l., Security Stat Bank.. American Stat Bank 80. O, Savings Bank.1 Union State Bank .... Raiaton Stat Bank.. ' " Total ...177.28281 i $71,374,(81 V,' " LOANS, V-;'vvV ' , Sf pLjt'lt Sept 11,'IT Omaha National .. ..HM16.I0I lll.HMH IT, 8. National 11,871,00 13,017,711 'Pint National ...... 11,1I.M4 11,S80.44T Merchant National.. 6,27,21 7,960,(8 Stock Yards National 41.7S1.1S8 (, 030,07 Uv Stock National 3,2T,36 (.816,017 Nebranka National .. 1,380,(15 ' . 3,771,104 Htate Bank of Oman 1.086,601 (.024,40 Paoken National 1,660,169 3,066,613 Corn Exchang Nafl J.951.0K 1,806,061 Security State Bank . 4M3 (78,107 80. O. Savings Bank 101,(37 406,96 Ralston Btato Bank (8,90( 78.13 Union 8tat Bank M ' 116,00s American Stat Bank (41,(34 This is the Way Our Omaha Soldier Boys Look in Overalls at Fort Riley Awkward squad drilling:, with Robert H. Loomis of Omaha.Q son of Nelson H. Loomit. general solicitor for the Union Pacific railroad, in center. Lower Mascot of Omaha machine gun company. Totals .f57.a08.7SS $73,714,8(1 Rebellion Ends; Kerensky Forms Joint Cabinet - (Continued from Pag On.) ity. 279 against 150, in favor of the extreme radical position which de clares that not only the social demo crats, but all the representatives of property-owning classes must be ex cluded from power. 1; ; Call for Republic. ; This program also demanded an immediate declaration of a democratic republic, the abolition of private prop erty, working class control over pro duction, confiscation of war profits, the "merciless taxation" of capital, an immediate invitation to the warring states to conclude peace, etc. The civilian and military organiza tions are acting vigorously to nega tive the influences of General Korni loff's venture, says a statement given out by the official news agency, which reports, that the chief of the ministry for revolutionary security has ar rested Deputy Dorima Schaenghine and suppressed his newspaper, the Kievlianin. one of the moit imnortant journals published in Russia. Simul taneously the houses of persons In private life and officials who were partisans of the old regime have been searched. - laxe ivornuoit i mends. At Odessa. Minsk and Mohil ev and in other towns numerous officers who naa declared in favor of General Kor niloft have been arrested, as have Erominent politicians believed to still e in sympathy with the old rename Among the latter was Deputy Rimsky Korsakoff, the former president cf the JLigue ot tne Kussian 1'eople. ; How Korniloff Worked. An officer who arrived hr tnA from General korniloff's headauar- A. . .a - ' i si juomiev gave tne hrst au thoritative account of the events there at tne outbreak of the rebellion. The officer said that last Saturday a number of infantry "striking bat talions." volunteers and nicked mn the backbone of General Korniloff's Drier, ualician offensive early last summer, arrived at headquarters. They had been informed that they were, needed to reinforce the Riga front, but the real aim was to march them against Petrograd. That night Korniloff prepared his first proclamation to the army, order ing the printing of a vast number of copies. - The socialist compositors later received Premier Kerensky's proclamation and while diligently printing that of Korniloff also secretly printed Kerensky's and cir culated it everywhere. Meanwhile the local .council of deputies began a vigorous demonstra tion among the "striking battalions." ffhe Kerensky proclamation caused dissensions among the troops and a majority 01 tnem sent a demand to Korniloff that they immediately be sent back to the front. A battalion of the Cavaliers of St. George seced ed from the rebellion and announced that they would die for the provi sional government and issued orders to attack Korniloff. The local civilians were anti- Korniloff, but the local union of offi cers of the army and the fleet ap pealed to them to support Korniloff, declaring that he was Russia's only salvation. Plan Massacre. Another officer says that he, with one officer from the all-Moscow regi ments, was summoned to Mohilev. In Petrograd, the officer said he was told, "there has been planned a new Bolsheviki rising, in which are mphcated some of the ministers, and the object of which is to conclude a separate peace and send disbanded soldiers from house to house to mas sacre the bourgeoise. Without help from the front it is impossible to de feat the plot. General Korniloff al ready has sent part of the army to Petrograd and his plan is to appoint himself temporary dictator." This officer says that every officer was given 15U rubies tor expenses. The,, officers, he added, on Monday returned to Moscow, where they read Kerensky s proclamation and realized the truth of the situation. Disciplined Army Needed. TudninR from the tone of the press comments, party and individual ex pressions of opinion which are rain- 1 - . i. tr :i - : I - 1 I 1 ing in, inc nornnon rpisouc ima, nau the effect of quickening interest in the war and convincing the public that only a well disciplined army with a vigorous fighting program can jiave Russia. General Palchinsky, the new com mander of the troops in the Petro grad district, in an interview assures the public that the revolt "has had not the slightest unfavorable influ ence on the fighting capacity of our troops. Telegrams from the front announce that the spirit of the soldiers is good, while an official dispatch refers to the devoted bravery displayed by the soldier, fighting at Okla. It is stated that the revolting troops every where are returning to their posi tions. General Stcherbatcheff, the com mander on the Roumanian front, has issued a stirring appeal, declaring that it is the supreme duty of the soldiers to defend the fatherland against the foreign foe. ( U. S. Will Not Requisition Wheat on Farms, Says Hoover Washington, Sept. 14 Reports that the government is contemplating requisitioning wheat on farms to keep flour mills going were denied tonight by Herbert Hoover, the food admin istrator. Mills generally, Mr. Hoover said, are running on full time, al though some are handicapped by shortage of grain. Food administration officials expect wheat to begin to move freely within a short time. Except in limited areas where anti-war and pro-German prop aganda is carried on, there has been no disposition by farmers, Mr. Hoover said, to withhold wheat from the mar. ket . FRANCE DEMANDS AN EXPLANATION FROM SWEDEN (Continued from I'age On.) anxiety at the State' department where officials, although surprised at the sweeping denial, consider that their investigation determined the au thenticity of the disclosures and that Von Eckhardts letter speaks for it seit. , German Argument Weak. Amsterdam, Sept. 15. The three ca hlcorams nr hv Cmint T ovKum German minister to Argentina, to the German foreign office through the bwedish legation have finally been permitted to be published in the Ger man press. The Koelnisch Zeitung says that it is easy to understand that the oub. lication of these dispatches in Argen tina has made an unpleasant impres sion ana tnat President Wilson has so far probably been successful with his maneuver, but adds that they can only oc ngnuy juagea it it is not torgotten that they were secret messages in code and if the dispatches of entente diplomacy could be read still more drastic expressions would be encoun tered. Regarding the ohrase in on of Count Luxburg's dispatches about sinking steamships without leaving a trace the paper lamely argues that the expression does not mean sinking a ship with all hands, but so sinking it tnat military mishaps might be avoided, as, for example, concealing me mv.i iruut inner snips mat it was sunk by a submarine and not a mine. Mrs. Patrick Henry Makes "Give Me Liberty" Speech Patrick Henry, last name Hushes didn't spring the immortal speech o "give me liberty, etc.," when his wife, Ruth L. Hughes, was granted a de cree by judge bears, sitting in'di vorce court. Patrick Henry didn't get his liberty his wife got hers, but judge bears ruled he would have to pay her $50 a month alimony any way. Mrs. Hughes sued on grounds of alleged nonsupport and desertion. She said her husband earned $200 a month salary, but did not contribute regu larly to the family exchequer. She was given custody of two children- Robert Munger Hughes and Hortense Ruth Hughes. The Hughes were married in Chi cago January 18, 1914. Ship Launched By. Number for The First Time Quincy, Mass., Sept IS. For the first time in the history of the For? River Shipbuilding corporation a steamship was launched here today by number instead of name. The ves sel, an oil burning freighter of 9,100 tons gross, was christened as "No. 265,." this being due to the fact that it was taken over by the government while under construction for the Luckenbach line. A ,yr- .. .- - It is an even chance that your teeth are only 60' per fect or even less, and every day's delay makes that per centage smaller. If your business was only running on a 50 perfect basis you would stop at nothing to correct that business you would, if necessary, call In experts to reorganize and build up that 60 to 100 efficiency without delay. Are you using your teeth on the 60 basis the chances are even that you are. Let us give your teeth a thorough examination we will tell you honestly if attention is necessary. Best 22k d A av m Crowns. . . HfT Work, ear tooth w sj Wond.r Plato Worth Heaviest Bridge A Best Silver CA I Best Filling OUC Gold Wondor Flat Worth Ar An d 1 $15 to $25 $0, $0 it) 1 CJ McKENNEY DENTISTS HonrT 8:30 A. M. to F. M. Wadnndajra " and Saturday Till 8 P. M. hot Opa Sun da jr. 14th &nd Farnam Sts. 1324 Farnam Street PHONE DOUGLAS 887. NOTICE Out-oMovn patron eaa a?t Plata, Craws. Bride and Fill iBf compltt In ONE oaf. Ftm Examination. . Udy Attendants. No Studrats ,TA, 3 S' KING CORN MS IN HOT RACE WITH OLD JACK FROST (Continued from Page One.) great extent by heavy and freauent rains that have been general over northern and central Nebraska. Fall plowing ,in most localities is well along and the solving of winter wheat under way, with a considerably mcreasea acreage over any tormer years. Already in many portions of the state farmers have nearly completed seeding their corn fields. This is done by working small seeding drills between the corn rows. Good results are anticipated, the theory being that tne seed will germinate this fall and attain considerable - growth. Then when the winter snows come it will fall between the rows of the stalks will prevent drifting away, thus hold ing and conserving the moisture for next spring. All through the state haying has been finished and the tonnaare of both wild and tame, is the largest ever gathered. Speculators Begin to Ship Wheat to Market Holders of wheat in Omaha trade territory are beginning to loosen uo. presumably in anticipation that in stead of prices being higher, they are going to be lower, is the opinion of Food Administration Agent Neal, who is greatly pleased with the out look for the future. Saturday wheat receiots on the Omaha market were twenty-nine car loads as against fourteen on the cor responding day of last week. This to the mind of Mr. Neal indicated that the men and corporations having wheat in storage are beginning to show a disposition to help in the matter of increasing the available food supply. While the receipts were fairly heavy, there was nowhere enough to go around and fill the orders that Mr. Neal had on hand. The demand from millers of this territory are piling up and at the same time numerous or ders are coming from those in far away states. No attempt will be made to, fill orders of the outsiders until the home territory is amply supplied. On the prospect of a bumper crop over the corn belt; prices on this cereal slumped off 10 to 12 cents a Barber Service is Resumed at Springfield Springfield, 111., Sept IS. Union barbers went back to work here this morning after a forty-eight-hour strike and will remain at their chairs, they declare, providing authorities permit a parade tomor row in support of striking street car operatives. City and county officials are silent as to whether the labor demon stration will be allowed, but it is understood no objection will be raised. It was believed confidently this morning that the action of the bar bers will signalize a back-to-work movement on the part of the 8,000 men and women who have been on protest strike because a parade similar to that planned for tomor row was broken up by soldiers last Sunday. bushel, though the demand was good and many sales on the Omaha Grain exchange were made at the reduction that came during the short session. Receipts were ninety-six carloads and prices ranged around $1.951.96 a bushel. Oats were H to 2 cents off. selling at 585SJ4 cents a bushel. The re ceipts were forty-three carloads. Editor Receives Prison Sentence For Conspiracy San Francisco, Sept. 15. Lawrence de Lacey, editor of a weekly publica tion, was sentenced today in the United States district court to eight een months' imprisonment at McNeil's island (Washington) penitentiary and a fine of $5,000 following his recent conviction with two others of con spiracy to effect the escape of former German Consul General Franz Bopp and E. H. von Schack, former vice consul, from a detention camp on An gel island. D. J. Harnedy, a shoe dealer, and William Mullane, a bartender, were each sentenced to one year in the county jail and fined $1,000. Motion for a new trial for the' three was denied and notice of an appeal was made. Bopp and Von Schack were interned as dangerous aliens after the declara tion of war. Both had previously been convicted of violation of United States neutrality. Publishers of German Paper Held for Trial Philadelphia, Sept. 15. The five men arrested in connection with the raid by the government on the Tage blatt, a German language daily news paper published in this city, were to day indicted by the federal grand jury. The men are Peter Schaefer, presi dent; Louis Werner, editor-in-chief; Dr. Martin Darkow, managing editor; Herman Lemke, business manager and Paul Vogel, treasurer. They will be tried for conspiring to print false reports in violation of the espionage Jaw. There were nine additional counts in an indictment of Werner and Dar kow on the charge of treason. Eastman in Jail at Grand , Island on Arson Charge Grand Island. Neb.. Sect. IS. fSne- cial. Frank E. Eastman, recently of Loup City, was brought to the county jail here last night from Des Moines, where he was arrested on the charge of arson. He is said to have confessed setting fire to George Wo ten's frame store building at Loup City about two months ago, and to have declared that Woten offered him $300 for the job, of which sum only $100 has been paid. Woten's hearing will take place in the county court at Loup City on Tuesday morning. He is under $500 bond to appear at that time. The building was used as a postof fice, and it is understood that the federal authorities are following the case closely. All mail and postoffice fixtures were burned at the time. The purpose of the fire, it is saidf . was to defraud the Connecticut Fire Insurance company out of $3,000. The sum was collected after the fire. It is declared that the building was worth considerably less than that amount. Gompers Pledges Labor's Support to Kerensky Washington. Sent. 15. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation nf T.abrvr. hat rabled tr Premier Kerensky a resolution adopt ed by the Minneapolis conference of the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy pledging the support of the American workiner class to the new Russian democracy. EEL To view in their entirety the Fashions that wield the greatest influence for the Fall and Winter Seasons Women's Outer Apparel Millinery Fabrics and Accessories of Dress THE OPENING DAYS: Monday and Tuesday of This Week i r wmr 'lvv i AfeaWTvv vaa! wmmr J m aw ytmm. rrt - if : Qp ' are invited V . THOMPSON.BELDEN - CO CP- CTk Ctathinn Center fdr UUomciV J- -7 (SSsCJoMww Center JorWome-. Jj