Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 18, 1916, Page 11

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- g OMAHA MOVING AND STORAGE “GLOBE VAN & STORAGE Stores, moves, packs, ships, 3-horse yan and 2 men, $1.25 per hour: storage, § per month ‘Satisfaction guaranteed FIDELITY il FRE™ ERVIC Phone Douklas 28 for r‘ompl.t. st ot vacant houses and apartments: also for _storage, moving. 16th_and Jackson_Sts. GORDON VAN CO. Packing, storage and mos- tng, 25 K. 1ith 8t Tel. DSiian 384 or Harney 1987, FIREPROOF WAREHOUSE Beparate, locked rooms, for house. ho(l‘d.{‘oodl and pianos; moving, packing .OnMAHA VAN AND STORAGE CO.. and shipments . againet receipts oL | u! rm bu, and shipments of M4,000 bu Pdmnrv corn_receipts were 1,47.00 bu and shipments 626,000 bu., Against receipts 970, . and shipments of 93,000 bu GRAIN AND PRODUCE MARKET | Cash Wheat is ltrong and Ranges from Unchanged to Two Cents Higher m Price. CORN RECEIP‘N ARE HEAVY | Biggest Run of Hop for a londtv Absolute Lack of Pubhr lnlerm Since March Goes for Good Prices to the Shippers, Noteworthy oats receipts were #6300 bu againat receipts | and shipmenta of 807,000 bu and shipments 802,000 bu of 1,486,000 bu CARLOT RECEIPTS Wheat. (nrn Oats. LAMBS ARE IN STEADY NOTCHES i TRADING Minneapolia The cash wheat m.rkfl was strong to- « of today's variable mar- | absolute lack Receipts E«umup- Mondn ¥ ‘The demand in nnoul for every- | Kansas City hing was good and the sales were rather The corn receipts were quite heavy nnd] there was a good cash demand for this| Same day 4 wkn ago. Same day last year.. The following tabre 2 hard winter e No % a 1. :v.. i Cars, $L10; 1 4 hnrfl winter: atiows (he receldts | naiion nf cattle, hogs and sheep at the OMAMA [tria) Alcohol, & Live Stock market for the year to date |hafer, The corn market was a trifle irregular, \ of the sampie seiling at I1c . cars sold at a States Tndus- 806 8 16th St Douglas 4163 Co., v J. C. REED 7 &rk!nz N storage: 1307 Farnam St. uglas €1 MAGGARD Van & Storage Co.: Moving packing, storage and shipping. D. 1 FOR RENT--BUSINESS PROPTY ore! STORE, WEST FARNAM. Cneap _rent, corner. Sce Reichenberg Bros., 027 City Nat. Bldg. Tel. D. 1846 i 1ow rent. MODERN store near postof’ 0. P. Stebbins, 1610 Ch!c . YES, SIR, weather bad for moving, nevertheless we need more houses. Get your vacant property on our list. Thos. L. McGarry, Keeline Blds. Red 434 __REAL ESTATE—IMPROVED 8-RM. COTTAGE—BARGAIN West Farnam district; all modern, in fino condition, east front lot on paved street; close to Leavenworth street car; 1 block to school and adjacent to valua- blo property; lot #x1%. 1f you want & big bargain Tel. H 7165 7 North. COTTAGE, $1,30, EASY DPAYMENTS. D). 83%, 211 Brandeis Thea X 3 South. SIX-ROON., modern bungalow finished in oak, beam ceilings, built-in bookcases, plate rail, beautiful red, large ce- paper ment basement, lar {rult cellar_and | coal bin, Rogers’ furnuce, east front lot, 40x12f; 153 S. %th St., phone D. 3062 Miscellaneo 170 ACRES mear Omaha for rent or sell on easy terms. 1519 Dodge St. Tyler 616, REAL ESTATE—UNIMPROVED ." comparod with last year the s:bstantial fasue of the mmon rising 1% pointa t Oats receipts were light and the mar- | i1 cate, RGB! | Marines were demand for this cereal was rather slow and the market sold from %_to %c lowers. Rye sold at unchanged prices and bar- | | The following table shows the average at the Omaha live stock e last few days, with com. wwa to explain the con d Marine issues {believed that the detafls of the reorgan- fzation plan are well on toward comple- shareholders will consideration | thought likely a few Moat of the war ‘“hares ruled alightly | prices of h | market for t ley ruled from 1@l higher. dnrum 2 cars, b t receipts were 1,660,000 bu ldllr\lm 3 cars, __FARM AND RANCH LANDS for Central Leather Leather preferred . United Fruit an Western [nlon 87 7 1 car, sie. No. 4 yel 5 yellow: 2_cars, nd People's Gas. reflected pressure | Sult of other crimes fastened on |fercnce after the convention adjourns. him, but sald Judge English had | ME WHICH WOULD YOU RAflIE’R HA\F" LN nvl,n\\ ZERO ( \ mn'r FROM COLD, wkqu‘N STOC I\ = WEATHER, of the xame character as marked re PARM. ul‘l {cloaing at 4%, & Coppers were under the influence of M { iean conditions and Rails displayed little animation except toward the cle minor shares broke sharply. 585,000 shares. International marked depreciation ast week's closing additional selling of the Pacifics and Cop- | |pers was reported for forelgn account Marine i were almost the sole source the bond market, manifesting an oints. Olls and 2338 337378 SEZYEE MONBY PROF] lTAm,l‘ HARVESTING In Florida there is rarely a d. the farmer cannot turn his time to good PLANTING ] LE—The week opens out with & r-nr run of cattle, about 500 less than on rts from eastern markets were icting and while demand from dresse beef men appeare: was no disposition for the most about the same notches as on last Fri day, or 10@16c lower than the high spot was fair and after a basie had been arrived at rs_and cow atuff At these prices. There was a very ous demand from all sources for cattle and feeding steers, and these found Below we quote a ast Mnndu) former Nebraskan. s, i 1 car, U.c,ov : No. ard, hard, $1.11@1 lu; No 4 ununm Cash ) MAKING MONEY IN FLORIDA: “I have just of strenkth finished planting acres of Irish potatoes for my extra Jast, week. Qualit al sales of bonds, mium at the count; , and my neig! bor got first premium on peavine hay. 4 ‘yellow m‘,fi-mc No. 4 ydl { States bonds were unchanged on The Irish potatoes referred to will ba i | aviots Number of salea and leading quotations March, and on stocks were as follows unknown to northern farmers, aleo the larger plantings a month later. The potato crop will corn or other field crops, and this is frequently followed by a There is somethig| and the delightfu mate makes farmin as profitable. country can compare with it. real farm, stock and truck lands. We have cleared up our timber and are offering our lands in fair-sized | close the affairs and when it comes Lo naming prices’ we have no competi- on. the close of last week Quotations on cattle: beeves, $8.2098.75. be followed by Allis-Chalmers American Heet Sugar. Amecican Can . American Locomotive American 8. & R. fair to good M"v‘.v {I“W. common to falr beeves, $5. to cholce helren. u.u green all the time, r-round cli= 9001 ¢ S9! Chicago’ closing _ pHoes, rumhhed The Bee by lnnn & Bryan, stock and grain N outh Sixteenth, Omah lAmrwnmn | High.| Low. it nWa‘l za;m 1z Julylt 22;,/:: 1 cz‘. 1.20% Sugar Refining. (nod 10 Cholee to good (ud American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Naldwin Locomotiv Baltimore & Obo,, Jood.'- foeders, Fawdr . 40@6.80; commnn {6 fair to cholce stockers. ¥ in order to of the company, wa, . vou] chives. W 50@7 50; lls, 'stags, etc.. Representative sales: Central Leather Inquiries will be promptly answered. Clsapeake & Ohio BENSON & CARMICHAEL, 642 Paxton Block, % |dren away from my wife to try to May/ mw«. Chicao. M. & giP or! PUT $10 TO 3156 per month of your spare money in MINNE LUSA iots. REAL ESTATE is the FOUNDATION of all wealis It can't get away from you, and if you buy In a well locat new addi- tion, you will not only save but MAKR money MARTIN & CO., CHARLES W -0 REAL ESTATE---EXCHANGES Omaha, Neb. Towa Lands. SIX SMALL IOWA FARMS. Six western lowa 80-acre farms from $% to $150 per lx,re Capitol Ave., llluo-rl Llldl. l'l' IS warm |l-n-ml Eleotrle ... o . Gifford, 2622 Interborough Con. Corp.. Tnepiration Copper ... ... Interaational Harvester... | gt in the Ozarks. CHICAGO GRA AND PROVISIONS ‘Will grow anything. sizes. fm bookle Fomtaie. & Nostviie. Mexican Petroleum . res of the Tradi and Closing FOR EXCHANGH ICP!I in !h. b-l ted coun! hmlle. well {lnllhefl‘ olh.r bullfl- AthOD oans i ] ines 55w i central Neb. W °§mf?.“'w7§.l ratiand. Wyo. FOR EXCHANGB and m—ccrc tru:t in cen- ln) Flnrida for 00d O I1¥. HARLES E. WILLIA BO Tel. Douglas 2107. 240 ACRES; good improvements; farm for sale or trade. Write August Krejcl, Golden City, Mo., owner. REAL ESTATE—WANTED SELL YOUR PROPERTY. Do you want to? If so, let us know about” it. We always have buyers on hand for good, well located gromrty when same is priced right. 459 and let us ;hov you u:e but and quk‘kmll way to sell HIATT-FAIRFIELD COMPANY. 2% Om. Nat, Bk. Bldg. Tele. D. 498, FOR RENT—SUBURBAN Benson. MODERN HO['SE*'I rooms, basement, closets, mntr{ bathroom; half acre set to fruit; hol and cold water ail over the house. Phone Benson 620W. Dundee. $1,750. Fine east front lot on glst St. in the new part of Dundee, just south of high and sightly. Prices advancing in this location. Buy now and get the benefit. D. V. SHOLES CO., 915-16 City Nat. Bk. Bldg. Doug. 4. e——————————————————— o BTOC KERB AND Pl', 17.—Surprise over the lmnllneus of ‘an Increase in_ the United visible supply total had a with giving the little stock farm four miles Neb., all good botlom l.lnd -crl Ice. (nr o . LR Little Falls, mn s;\u‘a-l-:n'u,\- near this clly Todd “Nen. City, Neb. 507 Paxton Block. | FOR SALE—Best llr‘e body high grade meodium priced land lttle mnuny required. C. Bradley, Wol- Mimouri’ Pacifio Natl deal to do today final control of the wheat market, a 80, too did prospects of the removal of rallroad embayg> Baltimore. Prices closed stron net_higher. with May at $1. All the other chief sta lo‘l‘ too scored gains—corn, Se, oats provisions 1ic to traders had nnmhln enlargement N Nevada Copper /... Now Vl'l :I\n\nl Nortoik & Woatern: Northern Pacitio . choice farms, xnrdm npol volume for a on -hlvmwnl- u: il i Jj@ie to 1% been expecting a of the visible sul were compelled to make change of position when late in ssion figures werg posted 2,000 bushels, whereas eek was 2,614,000 bush- . A falling off of 606,000 bushels in the of wheat on hand at Chicago formed one of the items which had not Pullman Palace Car. ! gince |Ray Con up) was in Nebraska; very &nnd largest received when arrivals Ilrt more | Read! March 15, 1 than 16,000 head ' bought freely them, paying unoe- that woie in most cases b6c h of their purchases up, and tops sold run here and 0 made packers bear- ‘act that advices from most other markets were of an encour- aging nature, and on first reflusfl to give even steady prices. ogs started moving ard, though, packers were paylng | fully steady prices for everything, and a | ood of their purchases that were | xed and butcher order, Iooka'd i of the kln increase of onl: general crop state in the union: settlers for sale at low prices on easy terms. Ask for booklet 3 on Wis- | consin Central Land Grant. lands for stock raising. 1f interested sk for bookle! on apple or. ind and 1ndustrial Minneapolia, supplies at Chica, Western Unlon ; Wentinghouse Blsctric .. andicap to the bears was the renewal of cold weather damage to unprotected |fields in the crop belt leading firms was depreasion that the opening and tinued in less evidence until midday. selling which nullified for the time being the influence of higher wus based largely on repc rds. Address La 3‘9\.. Soo Line Rallway, rounds they m...rn| Motors * responsible foj Miscellaneous, in soon after HAVE YOU A FARM FOR BALE? Write & good description of and send i, to the Sioux City Towa's Most. Bowerful Vant A Hledtom, 'numy-nva words every Fri- | Saturday morning y evening and Sunday for one mo-th giving sixteen ads on twelve different days for §2; or 80 words, 31, or Yoia) ‘sates for New York Money Mark: |'I ~MERCANTILE EXCHANGE ; out some of I not of the best qull Yy, Ane with more of the same on later trains, were still unsold on the close. hi were pretty well filled, and as no one wants the poor lights badly, last rounds were, as -ollx.' hogs being ay. depressed by prospects of larger receipts and by re- ports of beneficial rains in Argentina, was @iven a decided » strength came chiefly from talk of reduced stocks in the east and of chances of improved export demand. broadened out 76%. SILVER—Bar, C. Nn!—covernmcn(, la. MONEY—Tims ninety days, 2 66%¢c; Mexican dollars, £ t eirculation of any Iowa news. | uw. 250,000 readers dally In four great . dull and weak 1 in first hands General market ler and closed weak. sales was made at . a sprinkling of the §7.15, the top, and a lnod many lghts &t Representative sale oans, steady: per cent; six Big end of the 00, with q\ll:\\‘ [V v 3 Prainy Rehis o (‘lodnx uuouuon on bonfi todly were Tells of Honest To “Well,"” he sald, “After 1 broke away I went to Oklahoma. I worked In the Cushing oll flelds and sent money home to my wife regularly. In the meantime my wife's mother died and my wife Omaha |houses were ecnume of hetter railroad and shiPPINE onditions at Baltimore and owing to the wide discount it ligher prices on hogs helpe tended also HORSES'LIVESTBEK‘VEHICLES | Thirty-two milk wagons for sale, chuv _Johnson-Danforth Co.. R SALB-1-year-old Shetl Mdnu J. M. Allen, Nevada, lowa. HORSE and wagon for sale. Tyler 1113, to bring n.bcut an advance. ‘hicago Cash P FINANCIAL Renl Estate Loans, Mortgages. WE are ready at all times to make loans on first-class city property and eastern Nebraska farms, Rates on request. UNITED STATES TRUST CO. 212 8. 17th 8t. — FOR SALB., _ A $4,000 mortgage upon Holt county | 30 acres, worth | Well improved, than $16,00; mortgage matures 1919, g 6 per cent inter- annually. Excellent s K b, Bee, % for loans on best class city in_amounts $2,000 nnl)la ommis 22 Farnam St. homes. kast Nebraska fnrml O'KEE REAL STATE CO., OIG Om\l\l lllunnl Phone l)ou[lu Hh. !N\ll) mude proi llhIU F. Wead Bldg.. 18th & Farnam farm »ans. || W. Binder, City National Bank Bldg. TITY property. Large loans a specialty. W, I, Thomas, &) h'l!e NnnLlfld‘ ITY and rarm ioans, 5, 5%, ¢ per cent. "JT H. Dumont & Co., 416 State Bank. 6o, CITY LOAX 6% 12 Brandes % MONEY. HARKISON & MORTON WITEN buying real estate In\eAu pile your abstract. Guarantee Co., Rm. 7, Patterson Blk. D. 247 KERR Titie suarantee and Abstract Co., 4 modern abstract office. | 5487 %5 8. 17th St. ‘Tel. D. REED ABSTRACT CO oldest officeé in Nebi 206 Brandels TIIL FARM LOANS 0% castern Neb.. or west- orn lowa. Toland & Trugnbull, #3 lige Hldg. FARM A0 RANCH LANDS Minnesota Lan FIGURES won't lie, llhrr 'Ill E acres, tone Lu, Minn., u’l §7,600 cash, $15,000 nine years ll L) lance to suit. M. L. 'ln. cent; Sibley. Ia. PECAN ORCHARDS ace sure money makers. Charles E. Pabst, 2 acres, 480 C, 8 Bell, 20 young trees, $1600. This in 1915 at Ocean Springs, Miss.' Investigate, W. F. SMITH CO., w. b, s iy Nedask Bink Bids. | Fe Motoreyéle tan 1 & &, un'w nomlnnl whne,' AT@ASC: © 5. 50q01 75: elover. 310,008 Provisions: Pork. $18.80@19.80; lard, ereamery. W HAY-$7.50 ton. A. W. Wagner, %1 N. 16 o h———F WILL trade forty hompovler 1915 mud'l |18 car for horun. Bee. Spaulding tourin tie_or_sheep. 4 ohle .. . | Chea » ported in, as against 11,864 head two weeks ago and 5,940 on the corresponding day last year. Recelpts were liberal local run being amo: of the western marl most other points indicate that packers were making a determined offort to lower but' the local trade opened with '!II as some that were a little weighty, in just about steady notche: e bulk of the welghty l different ere the outset, und | while hardly lnylhln‘ in this line mov: until well along in (M forenoon, improvement on the bulk fln.II’ -llln‘ on a T BGGS-— "llhv-r POULTRY AND PET STOCK | HOMER pigeons, about 15 birds. have you to trade? [ MXD grain. 100 Ibs, $1.75. Wagner, 301 N_16. _—— AUTOMOBILES—FOR SALE 1914 Ford touring, 1913 Motz roRdstas. . 1916 Monitor tourin, 1914 6-cylinder Stu lh-kPr touring. 1913 Ford coupe.... A everywhere, the lightest at any Reports from rases’ 1nrlud'fl POTATOES—Steady ; What | Michigan, W ‘I)ukoln Ohios, $1 aom POTT I.TR\— All\w Feceipts, 4 cars; Minnesota and Da- Minnesota and fowls, 16c; | Values, | NEW YORK GENERAL MARKET -emnh 3 wu however, | Quotations of the Day om Vartous |Offers wi Commodities, -FLOUR--Steady; winter patents, $0.65@6.75; Coffee Market. 17, —COFFER-Re. | cémber, 1914, and stayed till Baster, 1915. pona of freer offering_in the cost and |Then we went to Loulsville, Ky. and exc. mndmon NEW YORK markets from Brasil seemed re- sponaible for some scattering llquidation or trade selling in the market for coffee | the mountains in Kentucky. We stayed The opening was | there untll after Decoration day. to five| “we went to Oklahoma, near Tulsa, Furopean od, 10615 lower famby sold at tering sales down fair clearance was made by h there were still a fow lambs unsold at the raights, $.60% fitures here today. steady at an advance of three | e M g et 71k Pand |and stayed till Beptember 2, 1n5. We | bld ihe early trad- | came to Omaha October 1. You know the | rings seomed to | rest ! while there was support in evidence, 'nh M-y selling off %o 7.06c, and September 1 Bt thres (e | palats mt towes: 5,25 February, VER you are considering sell- ln.; ‘or buying a used car and you ol |41 m"' full value for your money or yo people who are willing tc pay for what they are geiting you will have no re-|s gret if you buy or the used ‘car column of The Hee. Phoae |5%%e. northern, Mlnllohl 'I 45, New L york Futures, -lu CORN- h;m( BXrs-Bpot, close of the In the mutton division prices showed about the same tendency as lamb values Some a‘al..:fild close to steady, others Bulk of the goo 0, which 4 wi h‘ di retty good #0-pound yearl 90, the highest tually been paid in a lon best are nominally quof that. Not much of anything in the feed'ng Inquiry is good for feed- and shearing lambs uotations on -heez nnd lambs: Lambe ub May, $1.30%. Septemiber at 7. D. | ' yellow, new, Later. however, of d ¢ Ittle | advertise through | ‘strong; No. 3 white, 52%@ Y on hand for cl!) “and tarm loans, | moved around | e state, common to cholee, 16G%c; bidc; Pacl 5 tml’. 1@léc: 1914 crop, s@ioe, Bogota, 3@dic; America, 30c. I'IuiVIBI()NB -Pork. 15, 6.59¢; March. 8.37¢; Ap: ; E ; July, 7.17¢. August, T8lc; Sep- = 3 "liors_steady; old discarded . T.A2. Spot coffee, quiet. ported that Santos 48 were offered in the but in excellent condition, new batteries or, Councll Bluffs, Al"rnunml ¥ & general insurance- liability, etc mess, $16.50017. Price 3. "W i hemlock firsts, 33Q : city, Sc; country, T% I FA'I‘H ER—Firm Il' fire, Al}‘r THATCHER, Nebraska Buick | Nl Ferman NEW YORK, COTTON —Spot, middling uplands, 0| Hauser incidentally denied the story "Service_Station. Phone Douglas 721 T AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL INSURANCE .. Douglas 72519 Representative BUTTER—Firmer. extras, BGMC; 25T Ve i vn—nm receipts, 6,687 cases; fresh red extra fin ( ullun futures opened steady: Janua 1%&’&: May, 1277¢; Cotton futures closed steady !12.9%6c. March, 12 %ie; October, 12.78¢ narket closed steady at a net_advance of three to ten point LIVERPOOL. good middling, low middling 1657 fed ewes 81 510 fed lambe . Auto Livery amd Gurages, “Garame Co. ® & Harney Bta Aute Repairing and Paluting. 10 l‘vu‘ for t magneto we cnn PR i B s fancy, 17%@17%¢; otal b0, Teeders, | 35.001. 7, BaA(:. cows end heiters, 4.00) Kansas Clty Grain anda Frovisions. KA“A" CITY, Jan. 1T.-WHEAT-No, 1] lyl‘.fl. No. 2 na $1.2091.%5; 2 white, i turhn. Botsc. Minseapolis Grain Market. JNINNEAPOLIS. \m-c ; ‘fowls, . % | 1.30; good heavy, $1.% LAMBS—Receipts, {:,"""flm and Bank Clearings. Bank clearings for Omaha today were §3.60) 562 32 vorresponding day last year $3,375,086.51 HErp head: market sisady: |T”'0r No. nnlluv, 00630, 9 2 white, #%@fT%c; Neo. 2 Keeps Promise to Talk. Last night's interview was in fulfil- ment of & promise which Hauser had made & quarter of an hour after the ver- dict was returngl by the jury Saturday 2 lhprl\. 1. n 1“-‘1“»1 4 {astthors, H4am BARLEY €7@ N.'E MOTORCYCLES BICYCLES HARLEY- DAVlDwN MOTORCYCLE Vietor Roos. caveaworth. firsts, 28o; nds, PGGR- F"’l(l POU 1;rm «llen-, . 1e; I,Ax P - OMAHA LIVE STOCK MARKET NEW YORK STOCK WARKET HAUSER TELLS STORY OF LIFE | Man Convicted ol Murder of Smith BROAD | Gives Details of Career Since | His Boyhood in Wichita. in- | SAYS WIFE DIDN'T GIVE HIM UP| forenoon with a confusion of Arthur Hauser, convicted by a! the | jury of the murder of W. H. Smith, {in a two-hour interview in his cell | “,‘,,,h..,,. never | In the county jall last night. told the story of his life. It began at Wichita, Kan., where he went with his parents at the age of 16 years, continued - through ten years of! honest labor, and his entrance into jerime in Denver five years ago and jconcluded with his arrival in Omaha j on October 1, 1915, He denied the murder of Mr. | might ‘Come around and see me Sun- |day. he sald, “and 1 will talk) The man was at his case and gave no | #ign of fear or of remorse. Ile declared, however; “I hate the name of murderer )'h"} have fastened on me, on account of |my wife and iildren. But If I've got to serve for life I'm going to serve right There won't be any sulking for me | There's nothiug to that 1 hope if T go to prison 1 can get {work as a trusty so that 1 can make a little money and send it to my wife. Even A few cents a day would help her a lof She (s living with her brother in Wichita, | but she needs money." Mine Operators Ask for New Interstate Contract With Men INDIANAPOLGS, Ind., Jan. 17.—~While delegates to the bennial convention o {the United Mine Workers, which open Tuesday, were ¢ athering here today from | different patts of t & United States anl Smith and declared the jury had | Canada. officers of the union were en convicted him on account of the ; avil reputation given him as the re- fairly conducted the trial. Woul He Model Prinoner, ! penitentiary he would be a model pris oner. Although he was on his guard against making damaging admissions, he | talked with apparent frankness of “safe other | Subjects. His ianguage was grammatic- ally correct Tells Life Story. “Give ua the story of your lite, Hauser stralght story of the rest.” ‘Transfer company as a driver, ) worked for them seven years. They've worked. “I got married wheén I was just past | 20 years old and my wife is as good a | woman as lives. I have four children, three of them older than the baby you saw in court. They took the older chil- t her |to turn me mn." Dentes Wite Gave Him Up. Here Hauser entered an emphatic de- nial of the story that his wife gave the information which caused his arrest last fall in Indianapolis and would receive part of the reward money. When asked whether that report was true he said: 4% 1 It s not true. My wife never turned me in. They may have got the informa- tion by playing a trick on her, but she didn’t give mo up. 1 wish you would be 4% |sure and say that. She won't get any of the reward money and wouldn't take it. Lived in Los Angeles. tinued, “We had two children. The baby an honest man then, Oklahoma." “How did you come to break away from the “straight and narrow? was the next question put to Hauser. “It was bad company,” he answered, “I got to assoclating with a bunch of petty larceny thieves. I never drank, Hauser was cheorful exce when he | taiked of the verdict. He spoke hopefully | of the prospects of a new trias and of an | | appeal. but declared if he wvent to the | 1 was 16 years old. I went there with my | folks, 1 went to work for the Wichita | got me wrong if they (hink [ never “When we left Wichita,” Hauser con- #irl got sick with fever and the doctors told us to take her out to the coamst it we could. My wife had relatives living in Los Angeles, We started out there at once and came back, because the baby got worse, Then we went again. There | was only money enough to pay my wife's fare and 1 beat my way. | was “I worked three years in los Angeles for the Citizens’ Transfer company. The | child got well and is alive now. About five years ago we went back to Wichita. We stayed a while and then went to Denver. 1 got into trouble there and was sent to the penitentiary on a robbery charge. After thirteen months I broke away from a road gang and went to @mvOrnT to reach an agreement with | conl oparators from the central eompeti tive bituminous districts for a wage eon The central competitive districts are made up of the Nlinois, Indiana, Ohlo and ! western Pennsylvania soft coal flelds | The mine owners in these districts form- erly had o four-state agreement with the union miners, but it was abrogated sev- oral years ago, since which time each | state concluded its own contract with the union employes. At a conference here | today between the officers of the union and representatives of the operators ef forts were made to bring about a mew | interstate agreement. Lenders from various districts fn town appear optimistic with regard to the min- , the man was urged, “Leave out what|ing situation. Agreements expire in many you dom't want to tell and give us a | *tates this spring, but the lenders express themselves as confident of negotiating “Well,” he said, "I would have to|new contracts without much trouble. think to remember it all. “I'll begin at| Wichita,” he continued, obligingly, “'when Charles Dwyer Dies from Effect of Fall on Ice CHICAGO, Jan. 17.~Chearles Dwyer, 58 years old, editor of the Woman's World, and well known as an editor of journals for women, slipped and fell on a side- walk here today and died a few minutes later. Advertiser and customer profit by the “Classified Ad" habit. CHICAGO LIVE STOCK MARKET Cattle Slaw, Hogs Stroms, Sheep Unnettled. CHICAGO, Jan. 17.—~CATTLE—Receipts, 2,000 head;’ market slow; native beef i«;n uwu:su’i lrme‘r: steers, $6.60Q cows and heifers, $3.2005.40; calves, ¥7.20810.60, HOGS—Receipts, 70,00 head: marke! strong:; bulk of n|el. % wa1 46, 11 96.7547.25 40; rough, $. FHEH AND 1-. ‘ewes, 352567 Kansas Clty Live Stock Market. KANBAS CITY, M Jan. 1T -CATTLE ~Receipts, 12,000 head; market higher, prime fed steers, $.6060.25; dressed Loe) 'lm?d f‘Ifidlll.l‘ll Il“l‘w b‘“" ckers ‘eeders, 00@8.00; bulls, ; 0, % 9,200 head: market ulk of sales, $6.90G7.. lfl heavy packors and hutchrrn. $i.0u 2 ”Illl $8.90G7,06; . SHEEP AND LA“%‘—RM.lM h“dl ml;:ww“l’f. |ll"lllbl .'d ngs, X .00; wethers, ~0\ Sloux City Live Stock Market, SIOUX CITY, I Jan, 17.—~CATTLE Receipts, 3,000 head: market strong; na- I H lng'tchnrl uzffl 00 ; bulls, stass, ete., #.500 H’ook-luulm- 11,000 nua market Gc heavy. $7.1067.30; ed 4 .10 E%w : SHEEP AND LAIIB!—R.:‘? TM 50@7.10: : market |0¢ lower; ewe: except a little wine and beer on a few | jambs, $5,00010. occasions ang never hun hard up?” The interviewer passed the opportunity and lnvited Hauser to continue | oll fields, and I worked there again. they then to my wife's relatives “Did you kill Smith? ‘The close Dentes Killing Smith, “I mo more killed that man than you did,” sald Hauser. “But the jury's verdict was not fair. | They convicted me on account of the | prejudice against me. Don't believe a lot of the stuff that has been told about me.”" that & messenger boy had captured him 'htn he wi denled that he went on a hunger strike in the city jail in Omaha and laughed | red, $§1.31%@1. over the reports that he had done so. IL) At one stage of the conversation Hauser @Thhe discussed the evidence ‘n the murder case. “Do you suppose | would have jumped on a street car or stood under an arc around pool halls or salodhs. But I was hard up and my family was lard up. Were you ever to relate his own financlal difficulties was sickly. The officials took the three | Chicago older children away from her to try 10| ¢ Toufs make her give me up for the Colorado | Kansas Cf job. 1 went home to Wichita in June, 184, We decided we couldn't get the children back and we went back to the | Evaporatea A who live in “1t 1 go to the penitentiary 1 am going November, | innocent of that murder. The judge was s fair as any judge that ever lived and | III three of my lawyers worked as hard | cont and freight market at 9o, based on|uy though they got $10,000. I am grateful 11, od an -Av-n~ of 5 rels in the mar- | to them all | ket at Rio, while SBantos was unchanged |have treated me well, too. and Rio exchange on London wa. The sheriff and the guards | arrested in Indianapolis. He I!ll over the boy's bicycle, he declared, ‘/hflo running to escape the officers. He §t. Joseph Live Stock Market. ST JOSEPH, Jan, ¥.-CATTLE—R celpts, 20(!) head; market steady; steer: sows ‘and heifers, 34.009s. c. oo, W, "m .“ruu| l ta, OI‘% plgs, : buli of sales, & A Deod: Tarket slows Iambe. B Tehu ol o Live Stoek in Sight. Receipts of Hve m 5 d’:n :.n.:. -~ s at the five prin (‘Mu!. Hi . 8h .* R0 13%0 1000 ity Totals Dried Frults 17.~EVAPORATED NEW YORK, Jan. | "My wife didn't get any better and in | APPLES—Dull’ and easy: fancy, S@9%c; August, 194, we went to Seattle. I worked ""g"'fxg‘fi"g_mm' ca- for the Seattle Transfer company. 'y e, A You can check this up If you want to, and you will find my name on the pay roll. In the last part of November the weather was rainy and my wife got worse. We went to Kansas City in De- fnmy 12c. * Peaches, nnfly. e: oxtra rmlm, B%c: Y. ins, stead; loose muscataels, Market, NEW YORK, Jan. 17.-METALSLead : % asked. Speiter not quoted. Copper: electrolytic, §. 60, ron 1_nort . : Quiet} spot, $40.87 Spot copper, £85 1is; fu . £%5 s 6d; electrolyfic, €114. Spot TIT3 15e; futires, £17¢ 15 Antimony, Lead, £29 10s. Spelter, {88, 011 and Rosin. SAVANNAH, Ga, Jan. 17 -TURPEN TINFE—Firm, 5@651c: sales, none: re. ceipts, &2 barrels; shipments, none; stocks, 666 hlrr.i'l‘: ROSIN barrels; re- ceipts, 1, ‘shipments, nome: | wtocks, 106,33 mnu Qunuunn A‘;_x B. b 3. Nt N W $.10; WW, .60, Sugnr Market. NEW YORK, Jan 1.-SUGAR-Raw, llrm l‘enl“f\l‘l‘ e lasses, [S mol b “‘1 Sle; r?flned steady; out loaf, §.66c, er : mould A, 6.30c; cubes. 6.65¢; 16.00c; x‘(xx rmwdt-ud.,:c‘h: powdered, 6.85: fine granulated, dlamond A confectioners A, 5. Bugar futures :ve.ned firvier ‘Tn ing and some buying 4\1' noon prices were n&\o points Nu’m St. Louls Gral 8T, IK)UIB 1. 24/ Jul $1.1 '(-OR'N . 2 ’lh‘l‘hhn 2 white, 141§ Ti%e. July, TTie. OATl—ho ‘.!. Wfl No. 2 white, #%c. Liverpool Grain Market. ERPOOL, Jan. 11.—WHEAT. t LIV —lg‘ Nght the way they said I aid, if T had | o' 1u£nno i“u.nga. 0. 3, 1is i No. killed Smith that night?' he said. “If 1 had passed Grace Slater on the street May, Jor; | she wouldn't have known me. 1 was |ioq i pointed out to her at Wichita No. 2 hard winter, 129 (‘()%—Bpfi. American, mwixed, mnew,

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