id- DAKOTA ' COUNTY HERALD. 3 1 M Hi Pi NUMBER 11. VOLUME XVIII DAKOTA CITY, NEB., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER i). 1900. . i.l i I "4 4 LATEST BY TELEGRAPH SUMMARY OP THE,NEWS OP TUB WHOLE WORLD. OPTION DEALS LEGAL I'KDKUAL COI IIT MSTAINS TUP. 110A1II Or TltADK CONTHACTS. 1'iillcd States Circuit Court of A pixels IlancH Down Decision In In volvlnic Rules of lite Chicago and St. LioiiU Hoards of Trade. The United States circuit court of appeals handed down a decision Thursday upholding the validity of contracts for the purchase or wale ox grain for future delivery as It Is prac ticed by the Chicago board of trade and the Merchants' exchange of St. Louis. The case is that of Thomas Oleage. Jr., appellee, against W, H. L&idley and others. Cleage dealt in about 14.000.0) bushels of grain, and less than 2 per cent was delivered. He testified that lie did not intend to deliver or receive any grain under his contracts unless forced to do so in order to keep his contracts from being closed out under ten rules of the board or the exchnige. The brokers to whom he became in deb ted filed, a creditors petition In bankruptcy, upon which Cleage wus aidjudged to be a bankrupt. Th "bank ruptcy was assailed on the ground that Cleage was not legally Indebted to any of the alleged creditors for the reason that their claims against him were grounded upon wager agree ments and were therefore void. The court holds that the evidence did 'tmi disclose a purpose to nettle the ob ligation of his contracts by ipnytng to r receiving from the other purtles thereto the difference between the contract prices and the market -prices at the time of delivery and did not make the transactions wagers and (void. ' HAXK KOBIIKKS KSCAFE. llsappcar Artor Kngaglng tn 'Series of Battle! with Farmer. The two robbers who secured $7,000 from the Farmers and Miners bank at ILadd, III., made their escape Monday night after an exciting chase of over "forty miles and after numerous battles with farmers who attempted to lnter , cept them. After holding up the Ladd bank the robbers drove to Peru and at the point of a revolver compelled the liveryman to furnish another rig. They pussed through La Salle and then the pursuit "began. The robbers drove through .four county townships with the police, armed with rifles. In close pursuit. Farmers were compelled to. furnish the robbers with fresh horses. In Wal lace township a lively exchange of shots was exchanged, but the robbers took to the corn fields, secured a new team and escaped to Sheridan, Where they abandoned horses, buggy and overcoats and caught a train, presum ably for Chicago. KILLED XEtJRO'S WIFK. Itluck Who Helped Hicks to Kmcuo Also is Dead. The wife of Hicks, the negro who billed John A. Akridge last Sunday, was found dead in her home at Pel ham. Ga., Thursday, having been kill ed by unknown parties. Some time during the night she was shot with ver twenty bullets. On the same farm and not far away a negro who, it is claimed, helped Hicks to escape was found dead. He also had been shot several times. The coroner was notified. Hicks has not been captured. Liabilities Arc f2,35MM0. At a meeting in London Thursday f the creditors of the firm of Mae Fayden . & Co., bankers, the London house of Arbuthnot & Co., bankers of Madras, which suspended payment th day Its president committed suicide, the chairman announced the liabilities in London amounted to $2, 350,009, with assets of $100,090. The Indian liabilities exceeded $5,000,000. Ring Fxlwurd's Blrtliduy Honors, A London dispatch says: King Kel ts urd's birthday honor list Is without any features of particular interest Henry Norman, M. P., Is raised to the knighthood. No peerages are extend ed. The regular list is to be left npeii for the new year. German Minister Resigns. The Lokal Anzelger of Berlin suys that the minister of agriculture, Herr von Podbielsky, resigned Friday. Sii.ax City Live KKs-k Market. Thursday's quotations en the Sioux City live stock market follow: Butch er steers, $5. '.'5. Top hogs, $6.00. Consulate at Mukden. An American consulate general hr.s been opened at Mukden, Manchuria. Switchmen Not to Strike. The switchmen at Chicago Thurs day accepted the offer of the managers of the western roads for an Increase of 3 cents an hour In wages. A fur ther Increase of 3 cents an hour will be determined by arbitration. Ten Scutucn Pcrl-licd. Ten men perished in the wreyk of the full rigged Russian ship Soventiv which struck on the ledges at Priests Pond, off Prince Edwards island, la tha gale on Tuesday night. BLOW TO SOCIALISTS. Thousands of IVssr Itusnlans Are lls frani'hlHCil. The chances of the socialists In th. 'coming .election of members of the Russian parliament have been dealt a sweeping blow by the Interpretation given by the senate to the new elec tlon law, which at one stroke disfran chises thousands of the poorer classes. The operating personnel of the rail roads and even the locomotive engi neers, the most skilled and highest paid labor in Russia, are affected by the Interpretation. Outside of factory workmen the ranks of the socialist party are re cruited chiefly from rallrond men. This new Interpretation is supple mentary to the senate's ruling of Oct. 20, from which It was estimated that over naif a million persons who voted In the last election had been cut from the election lists. These two ruling together undo to great extent the extension of the suf frage proclaimed by Count Wltte In December of last year. Their object was today frankly avowed by a mem ber of the cabinet to be to rid the electorate of that class of voters which Is too easily swayed by the tnlluence of revolutionary agitator. This offi cial, who is one of the few surviving ministers of the old regime, doubted whether either the restriction of suf frage or the execution of Premier Stol yplu's program of agrarian, political and religious reforms would be effect ive in producing a new parliament less oppositional than the first one. Con tinuing, this member of the cabinet expressed the conviction that it prob ably, would be-, found necessary to uismiss ine Dew parliament with a shorter shift than the first one and making a sweeping revision In the election law before summoning u third body. sitmhio roit ii:i,iki" Monthly Kcsrt of New System i Pennsylvania Lines. The monthly report of the Km ployes' Relief Fund for the Pennsyl vania Railroad company's lines east of Pittsburg and Erie, Issued at Phil adelphia Wednesday, shows that the payments for the month of September, 1908, amounted to $1 15,1 51. 92. Of this amount $40,000,902.03 ,were on account of death, and represented the payments of death benefits to the fam ilies of members and the farther pay ment of $74,249.90 In benefits for the 'relief t)t -member's disabled and rnca pacitated for work In the company's service. Since the organization of the relief department February 15, 1886, there have been paid In death benefits $6,- 331.J89.64. and on account of Mlsable ment 19,130,752.04, or a total of $13, 461,941.63. 5s RKMTKD .HST IX TIMK. Six Men l' Bcrkentine's Crew Were about to Prop Into the Ocean. Rescued when they were about, ready to drop into the ocean froVn the deck house, six men of the crew of the Nova Scotia barkentine White Wings and her captain were brought to New York by the German tank steamship Mannheim, which arrived from Shields. The captain Is M. J. McLeod, and the mate Alexander Lus- combe. With her bulwarks just awash and her cargo of 400,000 feet of lumber littering the ocean the barkentine wa discovered by the flare of her signals of distress, driving across the steam ship track '200 miles east of Nantuck et, early Tuesday morning. Capt. Hchau, of the Mannheim, at once sent a boat, and after a hard struggle the crew was rescued. IXDICTKD FOR BKBATING. 147 Counts Against Railroad Grain Finns. and The special federal grand jury lch convened In Minneapolis Oct. i. to Investigate alleged freight re bates Thursday returned Indictments containing 147 counts against officials .-of four railroad companies and four grain firms. The Indictments charge giving and receiving rebates and concessions. The penalty on conviction In each case Is $1,000 to $2,000 fine. None of the Interested railroads had expected Indictments to be returned against it. Kadi company had dis claimed with apparent sincerity the possibility of any criminal act In Its relations with the grain companies concerning which the employes had given testimony before the grand jury, Methodists to Raise f 1,000,000. The hourd of church extension ot the Methodist Episcopal church which convened In Syracuse, N. V., Thursday, decided to raise $1,000,000 next year. Of this amount $750,000 will be used for home missions work and $250,000 for church extension. Chewing Gum King Is llcud. Dr. Fid win K. Beeman, one of tin' best known men of Cleveland, O., died Monday. , Twenty-five years ago Ir. Beeman nult practice of medicine to enter upon the manufacture of pepsin chewing gum. Woman Guilty of Manslaughter Miss Florlnda Illarlo, who has bee on trial in the Homerset county cou at Somervllle. N. J., charged with th murder of Alexander IMpoalo. w found guilty of manslaughter by t Jury Wednesday. Carrie Nation Tries to Vote. Carrie Nation tried to vote at Out rle, Okla., Tuesday, but the judges fused to accept her ballot. She sa the constitution gave her tiie right suffnigti, but the law was against her FIVE HOtT IN GAS F.XPLOSIOX. Home of the Rev. i. G. Winter at Slwlbyvllle Wrecked. A terrific explosion of gas wrecked the brick residence of the Rev. G. O. Winter at Shelhyvllle. Ind., Tuesday. Mrs. Winter, aged 52 was burned seri ously on the head and hands, and Kmll O. Winter. 21, their son, also was badly burned. Jesse McCain. 24. was burned about the head and body and Milton Shirk, 4 0, a plumber, whs Injured about the head and hands. Shirk mid McCain are In the hospital. 1 Two sides of the house toppled over. and the furniture and library book were scuttered in ail directions several blocks away. F1RF. IX CHICAGO. lilnxo Karly Thursday Cause I.oss of 9200.000. A Are which started late Wednes day in the moulding plant of Angus & MacKey, 79i West Madison street. Chicago, spread to several adjoining buildings before It was gotten uudet control and caused a loss of $200,000. Am nog the buildings destroyed were the Robey hotel, the structure oc cupied by the Lelda , Printing com pany and the dry goods store of H. J. Borne A Co. All the guests of the hotel escaped. The ,cwls Institute, which Is locat ed across the street from the build ings burned, was threatened for l time, but was only slightly damaged MOHK PAY FOR TUOVSANOS. lVniisylvMiiia Railroad Km lit Raise to I2.Y000. The boa I'd of directors of the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany Wednesduy at Philadelphia ordered an advance of 10 per cent in the wages of all employes receiving less than $200 jer month, effective Dec. I. The directoi-s gave the cost, of living and the present prosperity of the country as the reason for the advance. Similar action will be taken by all the companies 4n the Pennsylvania system east and west of Pittsburg. About 123,000 wl be affected by th advance. HITCHCOCK IS TO ftKNIGN. .la n I s R. Gurflcld Will Succeed Hint In Cabinet. "Secretary of " the Interior K. A. Hitchcock will retire on the 4th of Tiext M-arch and James R. Oarfleld, of Ohio, at present commissioner of cor porations, will succeed him. Herbert Knox Smith, now assistant commis sioner of corporations, will be ap pointed to Mr. Garfield's place. These changes and that of the re tirement of Commissioner Richards, of the general land office, on March 4 were announced In a statement from the White House Wednesday.- Ignores Tennessee Summons. Oeorge T. Dexter, vice president of the Mutual life Insurance company, announced Tuesduy in New York thut he would not go to Tennessee In re sponse to the summons of Insurance Commissioner Folk to answer com plaints of policyholders that their money Is being used In an effort to re elect the present management of tho company. Sunta Fc Pasmmgers Roblxsl. While westbound Santa Fe paxson ger train No. "1 was standing on the tracks at Gallup, N. M., Wednesday, three men armed with revolvers enter ed the coaches and forced the passen gers to hold up their hands. They se cured several hundred dollars in money and several grips and escaped 1 Xegro Troops In Disgrace. Unprecedented in the history of the army of the Culled States Is the action of the president announced Monday from Washington, D. C, In dismissing In disgrace from the army an entire battalion of negro troops, because of their failure to disclose the identity of some of their number who had been guilty of violence and murder. Drops -Mutch; 3ft Autos Gone in Smoke Fire Tuesday night destroyed an au tomobile garage and two adjoining houses In Oakland, Cal., Incurring a loss of $150,000. Twenty-five automo biles were burned. The fire was start ed, it is reported, by the dropping of a match into a pool of water heavily coated with oil. StocHMcl AskM Financial AM. A dispatch from St. Petersburg to Reuter's Telegraph agency at London Thursday says that Lieut. (Jen. Stoes sel. the defender of Port Arthur, Is In such financial straits that he has ap plied to a charitable Institution for wounded soldiers for assistance. lowan Is 4'Iiomii. Rev. K. M. Vlttum, li. U., of (Jrln nell, ., has been elected president of the Fargo Congregational college. He will begin his duties there Jan. 1. To Iteorguiilxe CIUiicmi tovcrniiicut An Imperial edict providing for the reorganization of the government was published In the official gazette In Pi kin, China. Wednesday. Put Coder Civil Service, President Roosevelt Wednesday made an order again classifying the deputy collectors of Internal revenue under the regulations of the civil serv ice commission. They were classified by Cleveland, but were taken out by McKlnley. ritujiexuiit Fish Ousted. J. T. Harahan, second vice presi dent, was Wednesday elected presl dent of the Illinois Central railroad,, succeeding Stuyvesunt Fish. STATE OF MUMASKA! KEWS OF TMF. WF.F.K IN DFNSFl) FORM. COX- 'rcmout ;lrl i:sinv !ss Kama j Itrcoks, I'tiurncn Vrttis Cld, Believ ed to Hae llccn FutU-cd Away. Sheriff In Pursuit Ctlier News. Kmma Brooks, n 14-year-old gli'l. j is missing front the home or Her pa rents. Mr. and Mrs. William F. Brooks, of Fremont, and It Is believed she has been enticed nwny by a stuinge man. with whom she was seen chatting lit the city park at 9:30 Saturday night. Rooming houses of V remont were searched by the authorities, and Sher iff Pnumnn went to Omaha In an ef fort to find the girl. At 8:30 o'clock Saturday night the Brooks Blrl. accompanied by Ooldle Pollock and Mollle Schneider, left the home or Mr. and Mrs. Schneider to walk to the residence of H. P. Tracy, where Miss Pollock Is employed s a domestic, Miss Schneider returned In about half nn hour, and some tlm later' Miss Pollock reached the home of Mr. Xmcy. Mls-s Brooks h:is not been seen since. According to Miss Schneider the trio were accosted by a young man near the Congregational church, who forc ibly detained her to talk to her. while the other girls walked on. ;:jc claims to have returned home alone a few minutes Inter. MWs Pollock says she and Miss Brooks were accosted by two strangers opposite the Methodist church, and that they were detained there a half hour or more. When she went on home. Miss Pollock soys. Miss Brooks and one of the strangers were seated on one of the ben.'hes at the park. ' Late Monday night un olllcer pass ing through the Fremont park dis covered Burt Wright uml the unions girl sitting on a bench, and arrested them. The. man raid that they were out so late Sunday night thut F.ninia was nfrald to g' home, so they stayed over night with "a friend." When first arrested he was anxious to tlx things up by marrying the girl, fully realizing the predicament he was In. Wright was Jailed. . 1U RXS IIKBNIOI.F TO DF.ATII. House Found In Flames and Table I'lnccd Against IKsir. Monday afternoon about 4:30 o'clock an alarm of lire was turned In at Falls City arid it was discovered that a residence occupied by a. woman named Mrs. Ray, and her five chil dren, was on fire. Before the arrival of the fire company the east door of the kitchen was broken In by Frank Dllts, who discovered that rt table hud been placed against the door so that It was almost Impossible to open it from the outside. When Dilts finally got Into the room. It was u mass of flames and as soon us he moved the table from the door so he could throw the door wldeopen hesaw the body of Mrs. Ray lying on the floor near the place where the table stood. The file was put out after the body of the woman had been removed. It wus at first thought thut Mrs. Ray hud met her death from an ex plosion of the coal oil can while light ing the kitchen lire to get supper, but the coal oil can was found not dam' aged, and whn Dllts broke Into the room the kllohen stove hud a big fire in It. Mrs. Bay had been in poor health, and It Is thought she commit ted suicide while laboring under a fit of temporary Insanity. WAS HOSPITAL PATIENT. Identity or Suicide In Omaha is Fin ally F.slablished. . A man who committed suicide in n hotel at Omaha last Suturday night was later Identified as a patient who escaped from u hospital In Council Bluffs a few days previously. It Is said the man had been known as J. Haggerty. but that his real name was supposed to be Delaney, a Catho lic priest, and that he was for thir teen years In charge of a church at Green River, Wyo. He is said to have formerly lived at Scranton, Pa. Hotel Burned at Nebraska City. The Grand Pud tic hotel block was damaged by fire at Ncbrusku City to th eextent of $1',"i00. The fire was caused by the explosion of a tank of gasoline In the store of tl. W. Trul llnger. The room occupied by Tral linger was wrecked by fire und the flames destroyed nearly the whole of Its contents. Mr. Tralllnger's lo.. will amount to $l,000. with no Insurance. The loss on the bulhllng Is fully oov "red by Insurunee': linlsirer Fatally Hurl. John Wurner. a laborer, mum fatally hurt and two other men seriously bruised at Blue Springs by an accident at the Union Paeillc stone crusher. A train striking u swing beam while bal last . was . being loaded into u cur was the cause of the accident. The tele graph line was put out of business and the tracks blockaded for a time. Wur ner has a wife und two children. Itcl'truinl Votes Bond. At a special election the citizens of Rertrand voted to issue bonds In the sum of $12,001) for a water works sys tem, the vote standing 1.1 for the proposition to six against. Still After Nebraska Boys. Tile government Is still seeking all varieties of recruits from among the brawn and muscle of 'Nebraska. A new recruiting depot has Just been 'ipened In Omaha. Beat lire Ice Plant. The ice plant of the Beatrice Poul try and Colli Storage company is man ufacturing a fine quality of Ice ut present, which is being sold to local consumers for 40 cents p r hundred. Tbe plant bus a dully capacity of Wclve tens. Fatality nl a (.rude ('.'ossing. A Bohemiuu named Shullu. a Hon of Frank Shalla, living three miles n nth east of Oddl. was i-ti uck by a Burllng tou train early Sunday morning uml instantly killed. Mp Kallrind Ftniloes on Handcar Are Ri:n Down by Switch Knglne. The national holiday of the Japan fse. in celebration of the mikado's birthday annlversaiy, was marred by a death In the Jspnneee colony at On-nd Island Saturday through the running down ly u switch train of a handcar of section men. The hand ear was maklnc 1U way to Alda, where thirty-two Japs are at work In reconstructing on the l.'nlon Pacific. Six Japs had come down to Grand Isl and to get supplies, part of which were for the celebration. When a mile west of the city, on their return, they were run Into by a switch engine and a string of cars and T. Kshu was In stantly killed and his body mangled, the five others escaping without In jury. Aside from those at Alda. forty-five Japs are engaged In the same line of work In Grand Island and thirty-five In the 1'H'bI yards east of the city. There are also a number of beet work ers. They had the Japanese flag hoisted front their construction cars, but the unfortunate accident caused a gloom In the circles of the colony. On the car were over $100 worth of goods, most of which were destroyed. HATTLi: AT COI NTHY DAXCK. One Voting Man Seriously Hurt ml Two Others In Jail. A Fremont special says: Growing out of a quarrel and fight at a country dance held at Kldgeley hall In Itldge ley township. Noah Orr und Albert Coons, prominent young men of tho neighborhood, are under arrftst and C. H. Olese. alleged to have been their victim, lies in a prrvarlous con dition at his home, where physicians performed an operation for the re moval of a blood clot from the brain. Orr and Coons deny their guilt, al though they admit they had quarreled with Olese. After the quarrel at the dance Olese came reeling Into the vestibule and fell senseless to the floor. He was evi dently struck on the head with a blunt ; Instrument. Men who were at the dance say that orr had remarked he would give a dollar to get Olese out of doors for n light. It Is claimed there had been bad blood between the two. . Coons ssys he and Orr were absent from the hall at the time of the as fault because he had been taken sick nnd went out to' the buggy, accompa nied by Orr. to sit till he felt bet ter. The latter two are In jail. FATHFJt AND SOX SETTLE Slit. Son Receives Fifty-Five Thousand lHillars In CiimIi. On the puyment by William Otto to his son, Waldron Otto, of the sum' of $55,000 cash, settlemept was made of what promised to b the most fiotlf contested case and one Involving the largest utnount of money of any nuli ever tried In York county. . About two years ago Wm. Otto deed od and guve a bill of sale to all per sonal ami real estate owned by him In York county, with, he claims, the un derstanding that when he wanted tho property bHck the grantees were to deed It buck. All of the sons deeded back except Waldron. Otto brought suit for a division and an accounting, claiming that tho transfer was made to him In good faith. William Otto Is the largest land owner in York county and the richest man. Five thousand dollars wus paid lawyers for making I lie settlement. Tlilcr Returns Checks hut Keeps Cash Tom Adams, proprietor of the Brunswick reslHurant at Fremont, re ceived by mail $l00 worth of checks which were taken from his coat pock et a few duys ago. , The checks had been placed In an envelope and mail ed at Lincoln. About $160 In cur rency, which was stolen with the checks, was not Included In the return package. Much Wanted Man. Officers are looking for James Lll lle, who Is wanted for highway rob bery. They searched the home of Mrs. Llllle, mother of the ex-cotivlct. und also the home of his brother, Frank Llllle, but no trace of the miss, lug mun was found. The search was made because reports had reached the sheriff's office to the effect that Llllle was In hiding at his mother's home. Ncbrusku Student In ITcccctl. A dispatch from Cambridge, Mass., suys: H. F. Myers, the Harvard law student who charged John McCwmlck in New York with tleeeclng him out of $1,L'00, In a pool gurne at the Fifth Avenue hotel the other uight, la Kd wln Francis Myers, A. B., of Broken Bow. this stute, a third year student In the law school and a graduate of the fnlverslty of Ncbrusku in 1804. Hog Thli-r .Missing. Recently a fat hog was stolen from Wllllum Wynn In Plattsinouth arid hid In a vucunt burn on the premise recently occupied by M. S. Brlggs. Be fore the thief returned to get the porter a neighbor informed the police of ihe find. The premises were guard ed for u few duys and nights, but the rubbers came not. Want a Church. The Sutherland Lutheran orgunlxa tlnn will endeavor to build a church there at a cost of approximately $1.5aO. For some time the project has been under consideration, and recently it has been decided to make un effort to raise the necssary amount by the subscription of stock method. Mall Player Is Policeman, leu Harmon, who pitched for Lin coln in the Western league, und subse quently for Fremont's Nebruska charn nlon leum, has become a policeman 'i Fremont. Tragedy Occurs on Train. Conductor Kmll Waller was shot and perhaps fatally injured by an in fane passenger on Burlington tral'i No. 40 Wednesday morning. The shooting occurred near Gretna. With out warning the passenger then blew his own bruin out. Plenty of Coons, Buccootis seem to be plentiful urouiiu iteutrtce this fall. A purty of iiumcrB nave sineii iwo lurge ones four milts ttoitli of Beatrice on Indian crock. GUN DECLARED USELESS. fwelte-laeh Weapon No l.oiiKer Fit for t'tutst Defense. That the l.'-liuli gun In use si inoa of the coast furl ilieat ions of the T'niteil State would not lust tliroiuh sit oncnite nieiit of two hour. Hie is-riod that would elapse from the time the lending vess-1 of a fleet would come wilnn the range until the last vessel would pusi beyond the range of the guns. U the statement mndo ly llriit. lien. William Crosier, chief of onliiBliec, who' unnital report hn been untile pulilii-. Gen. Cror.ler thinks that It U of the ut most linportiince thai some method he devised whereby (lis neces-wry gunpow er ran lie secured with less upetise than that Involved hi using the hlnh velocities of projecttlis now 'inploveil, with the accDinp.inyiuit rapid wearing sway of the riflitiK, In such a insiiner to destroy the acctirucy of the gnu after a few hour. The 1-ineii sun will Irtst for about sixty rounds, and as the gun Is m pnble of firing for a considerable Inter vol t the rate of forty-live rounds ier hour, it can be sceii that Ihe limit of the life of this gun could he reached In less than au hour and a hitf. Similar statement ctin be made with regard to guns of smaller caliber, say the rvisjrt, nltluiugh us the caliber dimin Isbe.-t the mlmls-oblc velocity 'nerease. Ry lowering the velocity of the l'J-iiu:h pro jectile froUK 'J.oOO feet to LVJoO feet per second the life of the gun is increased to "(Ml roun.li. The penetration of armor is nUiecd by the process, that of the 12- inch gnu at 1f),0)0 yni'ils coming down, from nbottt ten and one-naif inches to about nine inches and the muxe at which Its projectile would js'iietrate twelve inches of armor plate being reduced from about S.000 yards to about 0.000 yards. The chief of ordnance shite that it appears, by using in the situations re quiring the greatest power a 1 1 Inch gun, with foet per second velocity of pro jectile, ' instead of the I'.'-incli kud with -..VKI feet per second initial velocity, the army would secure n Wtt.er gun and gnu which would last four times as long, tlon. Crozier state that the. Tuft board for the revision of the report of the Kndi colt board on coast defenses, recommended this gun and thut the department has de cided to use it in place of thi 1-inch gun in sitUHtkuis where the highest power li required, and the 12-inch gun as a max imum caliber lias been abandoned. Among the changes made In the equip ment Iss-ied to cavalry, infantry and ar tillery during tly' year was that of the cup, which formerly was made of steel, heavily tinned, aud which is now aiude of aluminum, udopted after an extensive ser vice trial. . Uen. Croxier states thut "it number of militia batteries have been supplied with the new thren-luch Held artillery material und others are being rapidly furnished with it. :. . . ,: , .: " MOODY TO THE -SUPREME COUjflf,. President Asmes Attorney fleneral to Succeed lleury H. Brown. The President has announced the ap pointment of Attorney General William Henry .Moody of Massachusetts as justice of . the Supreme Court of IIih 1,'uitei! States, to succeed Justice Henry Itil Unas Brown, who retired some time ago. Mr. Moody has HI led the ofliee of Attorney General since Jily 1, IIMi Previous to that Liiii lie had served for more than two e.in I'd nn M..eFetMtv of the Navy. He was in Congress eight years. TALLEST BUILDING WINDPROOF. New fork's - lllab Strut-lure A ebored by Inaenlous Method. The Singer building, now building on Broadway, uear Lilwriy street. New York, which will be IKK f.st high, the tallest skyscraper in the city, is to have wind anchors so that it may be firmly braced against, every gale. The wind pressure, on aecouut of toe structure's great altitude, will be tremen dous, and for that reason the building in to be literally tied to Its foundation by an ingenious arrangement of steel rods. They will be three and s half Inches in diuiiieter and descend for nearly fifty feet into the i-oucrete which forms the caixsoiis rest i uk ou solid rock eighty-live (i-et Isdow the curb. The lowest rod has on the end of it a great anchor piste to which ll is secured. or The Si. Louis Nationals tried 10 pitch cr during the pust campaij;u. Willie Fitzgerald 1 to (jet another crack at Hurry l.cia, tTie clever young light weight who recently knocked lihn cold in jig time. The boy have signed articles for u six-round scrap In I'liila ilelphiu soon. Buttling Nelson w'M now have to find an antagonist other thau Joe Guns. The Battler's manager, Billy Nolan, tried to urrunge a mutch Is'Dveeii the twu men, but Gins imistsed conditions as to weight und splitting the pulse tluit Nolan would not consider. John Morgan of SI. Louis, Mo., cham pion continuous siol player of the world, has formally surrendered hi title and re turned the diamond championship emblem to I lie donor. Kurgan's iutetvsl in bil liurds, lie suys, causes him to give up ihrt pisil title. I"t Wulsli, wliose great twirling was one of ihe main can sen of the Culls' de feat, is Ihe youngest iiicmiIht of the While Sox, He is i!l. No member of the Impj'i club will have u two-year contract for l'.K7 and l'.KlS. duly one-year instrument have been bunded out. The American athletes who covered themselves with glory in Greece have miowii me tit enects or the journey since their return. Nearly all of them dis played pisir form in the contest in which they competed after returning from the Olympic game. ! .fey 1 Tuft renlly is secretary t peae. I'ittsburg Gazette. Morality cb a heap of parading la public. New York Press. Whether denatured alcohol means simplified juleps Is another question.- New York Mn II. One (mm'soii ciin lead a mnn up to re form, but a thousand rnn't niiike liitu keep It.-Xcw York Press. Iki juitr Christinas shopping now. Then you can jury for it with the money you get for presents. Neir York Mull. The raising of salaried at Yale ptttst professors nearly on a par with fisit Imll couches In Income. New York World; In n few year from now we will ls hearing of reunions of people: who were once Incubator babies. Chicago Ijec-ord-ller.thl. Another serious defect liHS been dis covered In the new football rules. Tlw Hvt.itora inn sw tlie Ktuie. -New York World. If there were no birthdays, Curfcf- iniises and weddings a man would hare- . a chance to get ahead a' few dollars. ' New York Press. Tlie consensus of feminine opinion seems to ls Hint so long aa bridge whUt Is fashionable It cannot Im gambling. Philadelphia Inquirer. Most persons are not personall1 wor fled much nbottt the President's effort to curb the power of great wealth. Philadelphia Inquirer. I.o, the s)or Indian, may have ntr un tutored mind, but the football scoro allows that his muscle are trainod all right. -Philadelphia Press. A corn Vrop of 2,"fW),0O9,OOl) buslielsr suggests Unit the Internal revenue offi cers will have to le exceptionally vljt- llnnt. Atlanta. Constitution. According to the Berlin dispatches. Kaiser W'lllieliu said hurrah for Presi dent Histsevelt throe times out loud. Philadelphia North American.. There were fifty-eight, arrests for drunkenness U one town of Prohibition Mr Ine Inst week. This Is a great apple year. Philadelphia Inquirer. There are u good uiauy people Iu Mil VorUrVbo thluR thoy are puMlc-spirlt-n ed not to kill a man after they have robbed hliii. New York Proas. The latest motor collision Is said to have leu due to a cigar. Some clgurst are bad enough to make the explana tion credible. New York Tribune. If the Fulled States would rujso more wits and less magazine reformers. there would be less silly talk about our sad condition. New York Evening Htm. ' A man uever seems to ttiluk be lsj dolug his duty to Uls country uu1mj he goes n round before election yelling his; views Into everybody's ears. New York Press. Bertha Krupp's husband Is a poor iiiiin. Sue thus disprove the assertion that a ioor young man has no chnnce- uf rising In this world. Philadelphia; Record. Mr. CorteJyou wants S 16,000,000 more- thnu lust year for the Postal Depart ment. But, perbups, the postcard erase ' will be only temporary. Philadelphia Ledger. If George Bernard Shavr would reuse1 from troubling and give two weary- lauds a rest, all would be forgiven t the man who stopped him. Philadel phia Press. Five buudred Kugllsb school teachers are com log to study our schools ami wonder how the boys van atuoke m many cigarettes and keep up. New' York World. Besides the champion baseball play ers, Chicago now bus the billiard cham pion. All kinds of champion things are packed In Chicago. Charleston News) und Courier. Why should Princeton be-allowed to boast lunger of having the only 1 1 Vug ex-President? Can't Yale capture the Hon. Toiqus L'strudu PalmaT Philadel phia North American. Somehow, the American, girls who) murry foreign uoblcmeu without refer ence to the paternal check book do not seem to have much trouble iu keeping their husbands. Philadelphia Inquirer. I'he joke seems to be on those gener ous Kuusus farmers who took their sur plus peaches Into Concordia to give them to the poor rather than feed tluua to the hogs, but when they arrived Iu. Cou.Hirdlu they couldn't find auy poor." Kausas City Star. The mob eruption In Atlautu was nothing short of au outbreak of bar barism. It was of the same churccter of atrocity as the Jewish massacres iu Russia ; It will ut least be bo regarded by the outside world, and the wretched feature of It all Is that the eutlre South, and to some extent the uatiuu, must share the odium that It entails. Nashville Banner. A New York mun has lss:u arrested for frauduleut collection of life Insur ance premiums. The circumstance that he wus not connected with any com pany evidently counted agulust him. Philadelphia Ledger. f lu the practical West the prevaillug seutluieut among the best scholars ap pears to be that it would bo u dnin site bftter If the government would pay more attention to Irrigation proj ects aud less to spelling reform. Uutt later-Mountain. V