J DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD. VOLUME XVI DAKOTA CITY, NEK., FRIDAY, SKPTEMKER 19, 1907. NUMBER 4. LATEST BY TELEGRAPH SUMMARY OP THB NEWS OP THE WHOLE WORLD. VAST PROFITS SHOWN' OIL OCTOPIS IIRSl'OXDS TO MR. KELLOGG'S PIIODD1XG. Financial Statements Showing Earn Iiirs of Seventeen Subsidiary Com IMinlcs in 1003 und 1900 Are Pro. iluml In Federal Court. More light was ehed upon tho re markable earning capacity of the va rious subsidiary companies of the Standard Oil company Wednesday when Frank H. Kellogg, who Is con ducting the federal suit in New York succeeded In placing upon the record the profits of seventeen of the princi pal subsidiary companies In the years 1903 and 190C. The statement of thu earnings of the standard Oil Company of Indiana, which was recently fined $29,240,000 by Judge Landis, of Chi cago, for rebating, disclosed that In 1906 the company earned $10,616,082 on a capital of $1,000,000, or over 1,000 per cent a year. The Indiana company In 1906 earned more than any othersubrldiary company of the big combine. Mr. Kellogg developed during the day, while Clarence G. Fay, assistant comptroller of the Standard Oil com pany, was on the stand, u curious prob f financial bookkeeping, or handling of accounts, which Mr. Fay failed to explain. From figures submitted It was shown that the Standard Oil Com pany of New York in 1904 made a profit of $7,751,160, and paid In divi dends to the Standard Oil Company of ' Xew Jersey the total sum of $32, 99S,4!i0. This transaction reduced the net assfts of the New York com pnny from $40,425,900 to $15,179,706, while the liabilities leaped from $47, C4S.235 In 1903 to $81,393,145 in 1904, en increase of nearly $34,000,000. The gross assets of the New York com pany, however, increased from $88, 074,561 In 1903 to $96,574,852 in 1904. Meanwhile the accounts receivable of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey grew from $19,045,014 In 1903 to $58,272,924. KEAIi WIFE IS DISCOVEEED. Assertion Hint Foot Were Dig Itrings Settlement of Novel Dispute. The real Mrs. Kllmovicz has been found. A few days ago John Kllmo vicz, of Grand llapids, Mich., was ar rested on complaint of Miss Tlllle To land, of Chicago, whom he had been annoying by claiming she was his wife. In court Mrs. Mary Sematls, of Grand Rapids, Klimovtcz's mpther-in-law, identified the girl as Mrs. Kllmo vicz. The girl asked for one of 'the missing woman's shoes, expressing the opinion that she could put bo'h of her feet in It. This so piqued the real Mrs. Kllmovicz, who has been living near here, that she came to Chicago to settle the controversy. She says ulio fears Kllmovicz and wants a divorce. 1 1 10 11 AS .IEKYL-1IYDE IDEA. Indiana Man Imitates Rnvlngs nod ltccoiii' ii Lunatic. After witnessing a ' production of "Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde" some tine ago Albert Heaver, of Newcastle, Ind., attempted to imitate the ravings of Mr. Hyde. He became so adept that his Impersonation amazed his friends, and In a lew Weeks he began to expe rience the same difficulty Dr. Jekyi did in returning to his normal self. A few days ago he lapsetl Involuntarily Into the character of Mr. Hyde, which now has complete control of him. II was taken to the insane hospital. Germans Win lialloon Race. The long distance prize In the inter national balloon race has been won by the German balloon Pomeru, pilot ed by Ilerr Eiibslof. The Pomem came down at llnyonne, France, 621 miles from UruKsels. The "A. I'." Stands Put. At the annual meeting of the mem bers of the Associated Press held In New York Wednesday a resolution was unanimously ndoi'jd approving the course of the officers of the association dealing with the telegraphers' strike. lRltH-rs Kill Hank ('ashler. Two Russians entered the bank at Montreaux, Switzerland, shot and kill ed the cashier, seized the cash box and lied. A crowd give chase and the robbers were captured. II. W. Trow bridge Dead. Alva It. W. Trobrldge, former presi dent of the American Hankers' asso ciation, died at his home In Hacken waok, N. J Wednesday. Sioux Clly Live Stock Market, Wednesday's o,uotalions on the City live stock market follow: Uutetier steers, $5.40 H 6.25. Top hogs, $6.00. New York's School Children. - Six hundred and thirty -sever thou sand, three hundred and elg!ity-s. veil children are enrolled "in the schoo's of New York, an increase of more than 20,000 over last year. Muiiy People peii-ii. A Japanese steamer, suid to be th-? Tafu Maru. has burned three miles from Ching Klung, China, on the right, bank of the Yangtze Klaus. It U re sulted 100 lives were lost. FOR MIRDER OF MRS. GENTRY Trial of Frank Constantino Ileglns In Chicago. In the criminal court at Chicago the rurtaln was raised Monday on one of the weirdest criminal dramas ever staged, where Frank J. Constantino plays the role of defendant on trial for his life for the murder of Mrs. Arthur Gentry. Frank Constantlne boarded at the Gentry home and was there at the time the woman met her death. He successfully eluded the police for a long time and was finally captured In New York. The prosecution will con tend that he committed the murder, while Constantlne and his lawyers will offer evidence tending to prove that the woman killed herself following a quarrel with her husband. Mingling with the facts on the lde of the defense Is a mystery Involving a telephone conversation which Con stantlne relies on In hope of proving his contention of suicide. A steno grapher employed In Gentry's office, It is asserted by the defense, will take the stand and swear that just before Mrs. Gentry's death she called her husband to the telephone and they quarreled over an engagement. II. II. ROGERS VERY ILL. Oil Magnate Tells Son He is "About Done." That Henry II. Rogers Is In a very' weak physical condition; that his face is distorted and his speech affected; that his left side Is not In Its normal state, and that he Is unable to transact any business or even discuss ordinary affairs, was the substance of testimony given by Rogers' son-in-law, Urban H. Boughton, In the supreme court at Boston Monday afternoon. H. II. Rogers, Jr., testified that his father had signed but three check and a power of attorney to open his vault since July 22. His condition, Mr. Rogers, Jr., said, has shown some slight Improvement In the past few weeks. Mr. Boughton also testified that re cently Mr. Rogers had told him to take up business where he had left It, as he (Rogers) was "about done." After hearing this testimony Judge Hammond denied the motion to bring H. II. Rogers Into court for the pur. pose of testifying. CANNOT WED AFFINITY. Artist Earle's Wife will not Get a Dl. vorce, Ferdinand Plnney Earle cannot marry his "atliinty," Julia Kuttner, after all. Mrs. Earle has decided not to get a divorce. Earle lacks ground to sue. So If his wife refuses to help him he has no way of severing the matri monial ties, and he and Miss Kuttner must stay apart. "My gracious," Earle remarked nervously. In discussing his wife's plans for a divorce, "suppose she shouldn't get It!" In such a case he admitted he saw no alternative but for Mrs. Earle to return to him. This is Just what Mrs. Earle is counting on. She says openly she does not think "Ferdy" knows his own mind. She expects him to tire of "Af finity" Kuttner and seek a reconcilia tion. Then, too, she is beginning to see in what an unfortunate position her contemplated renunciation of her hus. band will pluce her little son. Admiral Walker Dead. Rear Admiral John G. Wulker, U. S. N., retired, died suddenly Sunday night at the home of a friend at High Pasture, York Cliffs, Me. Admiral Walker was 72 years of age and a na tive of New Hampshire. ' Frederick McNully Dead. Frederick McNully, of Chicago, for three years president of the publishing house of Rand, McNally & Co., died Monday. Mr. McNally had been 111 for three weeks with nervous prostration due to overwork. Applies to Mil Retired Privates. Comptroller Mitchell decided thu all retired private soldiers, whether retired before or after the passage of the act of March 2, 1907, are eutitleu to $15.75 a month as provided in thai act. Noted Grafter Blind. Mrs. Cassle M. Chad wick, the noted witch of finance, who Is serving a term In the Ohio penitentiary for swindling bankers and capitalists out of millions, was stricken with nervous collapse Monday which left her blind. Ininx-ciit Man to In- Freed. After thirteen years of a life sen tence for burglary had been served by William Evans in the San Quentin. Calif., prison, positive evidence has reached the authority of his Innoceiicu and ho will be Immediately released. Welsh Coal for the Nuvy. The United Stales navy department has, according to a dispatch from Car diff, Wales, contracted with a Welsh firm for 100,000 tons of the best steam coul, the delivery to extend over 19oS Six Workmen Drowned. Panic stricken when u barge ii, which they were crossing the Alleghe ny river at Pittsburg, l'u., began t sink six workmen Jumped Into thu river Monday and were drowned. Navy In Disgrace. The baseball team of the United States cruiser Colorado was defeated by a nine of the Chinese Athletic club ut Honolulu Monday. The score stood 7 to 6. BIGGEST OIL BATTLE. Rearing In Suit to Dissolve Trust Begun. Delving Into the financial workings of the Standard Oil company, of New Jersey, the holding company of all the subsidiary organizations of the so-called oil trust, Frank H. Kellogg, con ducting the federal suit for the disso lution of the company, brought to public view In New York Tuesday for the first time the enormous profits made by the company. In seven years from 1899 to 1896, ncluslve, the Stand ard Oil company, by a statement spread upon the records, was shown to have earned profits of $490,315,934, or at the rate of more than $61,000, 000 a' year. It distributed to its share holders In the same period $308,359, 403. ! While the company was earning these vast sums, the statement showed that the assets of the company grew from $200,791,523 to $371,534,631. The capital stock Is $98,338,382. Financiers and those seeking knowl edge of the exact profits of the Stand ard Oil have striven vainly to obtain the figures which Mr. Kellogg suc ceeded Tuesday in placing upon tho record of the court The Standard Oil company makes no statement of It business, and other than declaration of dividends It makes no public an nouncements by which Its business may be gauged. The hearing Tuesday brought out much Information which Mr. Kellogg obtained from tho company. Mr. Kel logg got a. statement showing that th company controlled over seventy com panies by stock ownership engaged In the refining and transportation of oil by pipe lines. TURNS MEAT INTO STONE. Chemist Discovers Method of Artificial Petri fuel hill. Agostlno Giuseppe Glwso, a chemist of Vercelll, Italy, now in New York, declares he has found a way to turn organic matter Into stone. Fourteen years ago, while he was In Peru, he had occasion to take a case of eggs to Ecuador. He had nn way of refrigerating the consignment, and began experimenting with pre servatives. He bored tiny holes in tho eggs and tried Injecting various chem icals. None seemed to accomplish the work. In trying one powerful drug he injected a smaU quantity in several egga and a few hours later found every one of them as hard as a rock. He tried to break the shells, but could not make the slightest dent. He continued his experiments on beef and vegetables. The result was the same. The chemist went back to Vercelll, and before a gathering of doctors gav successful demonstrations. JAP AMBASSADOR TO QUIT. Mikado's Representative in Berlin Asks to Be Relieved. It is understood in Toklo that Count Inouye, Japanese ambassador to Ger many, has Intimated his desire to re sign his post at Berlin. Rumors are rife as to his successor, and Viscount Aiokl, now ambassador at Washing ton, has been mentioned as a possiblo successor. The Japanese foreign office, however, is not prepared to make an official statement on the subject. Should Aokl desire a change It Is poss ble that Baron Kaneko may be ap pointed ambassador at Washington If the government can spare his services as president of the exposition to be held at Toklo in 1912, In which at present he Is actively Interested. Ba ron Kaneko is considered to be one of the most capable diplomats in Ja pan. OFFER BOYS AS SACRIFICE. An Insane Mother Slays Her Three Children. Mrs. John Anderson, wife of a farm er residing a mile and a half from Mldale, Sask., on the Soo line, took her three children, all boys, to a pota to patch and there knocked them on the head with a hammer, after which she cut them up In a horrible manner, with a big knife. She had not shown any signs of in sanity before, but had been ill and was suffering from religious mania. She Is 35 years of age. Her husband was not at home. The woman shows no remorse for what she has done and expects to be hanged. She believes It was some kind of blood sacrifice. Killed by Pitched Dull. Henri Pilor was struck over the heart by a pitched ball In a baseball game Sunday at Montreal, Que., and died almost instantly. The ball passed through the hands of another player and struck Pilor. Aid for Telegrapher. As the result of a recent conference. President Gompers, of tho American ' Federation of Labor, will issue an ap peal for aid for the striking telegraph operators. PrLsonkccpcr for 37 Year. John McLuughlln, keepe r of Block well's island for thirty-seven years, died at St. Vincent's hospital. In New York, after an operation. ConiHNcr Beniiing Dead. Odls Louis Kenning, of Milwaukee, a well known pianist and composer, who composed the coronation ode t King Haakon, died Tuesday, aged 27, from mi opratlou for appendicitis. Increased Wages for Shopmen. Apprentices in all the shops of the Sunta Fe have, been granted an In crease of 2 cents an hour, dating back ito Sept. 1. The raise wus grunted voluntarily. Mens of DR. JAMES CARROLL IS DEAD. Scientist Whom Nebraska I'nlvrrsltj Honored l Victim of Disease. Dr. A. S. von Mansfelde. of Ashland, has received word of the dental In Washington. I). C, of lames Carroll, on whom, In recognition of his serv ices to science and medicine, the I'ni veislty of Nebraska hiU spring con ferred an honorary title. Dr. Carroll died In Washington from the effects of the yellow fever Infection which he submitted to during the sanitary cam paign Instituted by ,he surgeons of the United States army In Cuba Some years ag,o. Dr. Carroll was associated with the late Maj. Walter Reed, surgeon in the United States Brjny, In the study of Sanarelll's supposed yellow fever ba cillus, during the years 1S97 and 190'.. both in Cuba nnd the United States. To Justify experimentation on other per sons, he volutarily submitted to tho bite of a contaminated mosquito that had previously been caused to blt three well-marked cases of yellow fe ver. Within four days he whh taken 111 and suffered a severe attack of the disease the first case of experimental yellow fever on record. His sacrifice proved of Inestimable value to the ex perimentation planned by Major Reed himself In the successful campaign against the disease. i SALOON RORRED. Liquor Dealer Leaves Roy In Charge and I oscs $80. Sheriff E. A. Dwyer, of Pierce, won called to the village of McLean by the news that the saloon at that place had been robbed the evening before. H seems that the proprietor, William I Feddern, had gone to Sioux City and had left one of the Soiipler boys in charge of the saloon. At fi o'clock fhe buy locked the saloon and went home to supper. On returning he found I he back door open, and on going to the ; money drawer he saw thnt It. h:M domi ' pried open and the content", amount ing to nearly $80, tuken. No tramps or other suspicious looking characters had been seen about the village during the day, so It is thought by many tlu-.t It was the work of local talent. CARS FOR SHIPPERS TO OMAHA. Great Northern Ordered to Permit Di rect Shipment to Gnto City. The state railroad commission has Issued a formal order commanding the Wllmar and Sioux Falls Railway company to furnish cars at the sta tions along its line for tlje shipment of grain direct to Ornaha. This follows the complaint of the Omaha Grain ex change made some time ago against the Great Northern road, as owner of the Wllmar & Sioux Falls branch, chargingi that It discriminates against Omaha in furnishing cars and making shipments of grain. New Rates on Cream. The state railway commission an nounced the promulgation of new rates on teream and milk on passenger trains In Nebraska. The minimum charge on a ten-gallon can of cream up to twenty miles distance is made 15 cents. The maximum rate between 550 miles and 600 miles Is 68 cents per can. The new rate does not change the rate on long shipments and re duces the rate on short huuls. ItraUcman Killed nt Elwood. An accident occurred at Elwood by which Charles Reynolds, aged 22. brakeman on the Burlington, lost his life. Reynolds was riding on the pilot of the engine. - He fell in front of the engine and was dragged about thirty yards before It was discovered he was under the engine. He was badly muti lated and life was extinct when he was gotten out. Severe Storm at Pierce. A heavy storm of wind and rain came up from the southeast and did quite a good deal of damage to prop erty In Pierce and vicinity. A num ber of trees were badly damaged. A bolt of lightning struck near the Gar vey fesidence, and one of the boys, who was sitting near the window, was stunned. EiiilH'.zlemejjt Is Charged. Richie O Taylor, arrested at the Instance of the American Telegraph and Telephone company at Omaha, was charged with embezzling $1,350. Taylor came originally from the east, but was employed In Lincoln for some time. Bcii-licrl In Jap Camp. Dr. Jones, of Murdock. Informed the state board of health that twenty cases of berl-berl existed among a number of Japanese laborers at Alvo. The "state board of health sent a represent ative to make a thorough Investiga tion. Gus Stove Explodes. Mrs. C. A. Powell, of 515 Court street, Beatrice, was severely burned about the face anil hands by the ex plosion of u gas stove at her home. The windows were blown out and the kitchen badly disarranged by the forco of the explosion, .Man W ho Passes Itml Draft Caught. G. T. Durst, who succeeded n ob taining a ticket to Denver and $-"Jii in money from City Ticket Agent II H. Kller, of the I'niou depot nt Fremont by means of a fraudulent draft, win arrested at Evanstou, Wyo.. and is now in jail at that place. SusiM'eteil of Keltic Train Kohhc:. Believing he saw before him the two men wanted for Induing up tin Great Northern train at l'edford. Mont., Sheriff Ress, of Lincoln, arrest ed Edward Clark und Fred Montgom ery near Firth. Th y deny being train robbers. i lioulil (ion r I' npi.v. While hitiidllng a revolver uppoed to be unloaded John .). Haul, (lit i ( Lo ot the State hank at St. 1'aul, And son of the bank's president, incidentally bhot himself Unough the heart. Nebraska HURRIED RACK TO JAIL. Nehraskan Broke Rolens Pledge ami Started War on Family. Henry Mahler, who was In Jail for a few weeks on a criminal charge pre ferred by his 16-year-old daughter, was released from custody at West Point when his mother signed his bond for iitio for his appeainnco he fore the district court of Cuming coun ty In November. He remained in town about three days, during which time he broke the most sinners promise made to his attorney and the court to keep sober, go home and treat 1 Is 'amlly with due respect. Whisky got the upper hand of him again. He boarded the evening passenger ' train for I'eemer very much Intoxicated, when shcritf Mnchow, without any preparation, with not even Ms coat, Pepped aboard and followed him. At reenter, near where his homo Is situ ated, he enraged a liveryman to drive him out to his home, tried t ) have him get him a pint of whisky and then went to n hardware store to buy a re volver, evidently Intending to lpe out the whole family. At this pnlrA the sheriff took him In charge anli took him to West Point. His wife In, mediately swore out a complaint W keep the peace and he was placed uf der $1,000 bonds, which, being unable1 to procure, he once more languishes In Jail. SWINDLER GETS MONTH IN JAIL John Richardson Worked Ministers It) .Smooth Trick. John Richardson, who attempted to swindle Fremont ministers out ol small sums, pleaded guilty to vagrancy in justice court and was sentenced to thirty days In the county Jail. He was Identified as the some man who worked tho Lincoln ministers In tho same way last April and had done the same kind of a trick In Omaha and the western part of the state. Each of his Intended victims says the man showed thorough knowledge of law and creeds of the different churches und is a very smooth fellow. His scheme was to call at the house of a clergyman, tell him that himself und family were members of his de nomination nnd had Just moved ontv) a farm a few miles from town. Ho hnd a baby he wanted baptized the next day, when he and his wife would be In and would bring In some vegeta bles, and could the minister pay him In advance? The scheme, he said, generally worked. OFFICER RROWN CREATES STIR. Fires Four Shots in Effort to Halt Man. Officer Brown, of Omaha, fired four shots at Henry Moran and three others who were thought to have held up John Jones at Thirteenth and Douglus, but none of the shots took effect. Moran was caught. It appears, however, from investigation that It was not a case of holdup, but that the three simply Intended to give Jones a beating as a result of an old grudge. The shooting attracted considerable ol a crowd and created much excitement Sward Surrenders Push. Some time ago the state board ol health Issued an order that none ol the secretaries should ride on pnsses. in response to this order word hn.H been received from Dr. Sward, of Oak land, one of the secretaries, that he had returned his pass to the Great Northern road and notified that orpo rntlon that hereafter any work done by him for that corporation would be on n cush basis. Conner Nebraskuu Dead. Word has been received thut Hon. R. F. Jones died In a hospital at Seat tle. Wash., where he had gone from his home at Watei'ville, Wash., to b3 operated on for a gathering 1 1 hla head. He was an old nnd highly re. spected pioneer of Lyons, and at one time represented Hurt county in the Nebraska legislature. liiirkctt Against Big Shows. Senator E. J. Kurkett, who left re cently for Washington, declared that he would fight the Alaskan-Yukon ex position appropriation In congress. He declared that tho exposition at James town had been' n lamentable failure and he would oppose all such project! In the future. Gcriiuiiirt Celebrate. The Bow Valley Sehutzen Vereln held their annual two days' schutzen fest and harvest picnic nt St. James. A very largo crowd was present the last day of the celebration. The so ciety was organized eleven years ago, and has since given a two days' cele bration every yeur. I'.oilwell Gels ApMlutmeiit. E. .1. I'oilwell. superintendent of tht Norfolk schools and formerly county superintendent of Douglas county, hat been appointed u member of the boeril to examine tenehtrs for ntnti certificates. He takes the place mf the liourd loi nierly occupied by E. 'D. Shvrinuii. Prairie (iilii.cu Season ()m iih. Sund.'iy Sept. 15, according to the game liws, was the opening day on pnii'ie chicken, and many a true "poi tsnian slriuldcrod his musket, un 'haliied his bird dog undstarted forth. Some big kills are reported In the ter rltoiy north of Central City, one party from l!i::t place bagging fifteen birds. Potato Grower Meet. The I.rovvn County Potato Growers' esMoeiation held its nuiiuul meeting Saturday. The new officers are, A. It. lieebo, president; Park Stillma!!, sec. retery; Huuli I'ooth, treasurer, and J. i'Vrnuu and T. J. Hustings member! of the board of directors. PcinocrutM Delay I east. TV.o Democratic executive commit-tn-t deeldi d to postpone the banquet set for Kept. 21 because that Is tin (lute for the btato convention at Lin coln und the two events might conflict. A BATTLE ON KANSAS PLAIN. America Artillery to Reproduce the CJreat Makden Conflict. Out on a wide stretch of Kansas plain the savage bnttle of Mukden is to tie fought again a mimic struggle which for ten smoke-blown days is to stagger over 80,0(10 acres of government reservation. There will be the crai of h.vivy siego guns and the stench of picric a the dis rupting shells hurl earthworks and their dummy defenders in the air. The Infantry, with its siege guns and field artillery, will throw Its strength against the redoubts which the engineers have constructed a fortification which duplicates as far as possible the one be hind which Kuropatkin intrenched his Itussians at Mukden and over which the little brown men swarmed after their Shlmoso shells had blown great breaches iu the works. It la chiefly for the purpose of seeing what American artillery ran do under Identical circumstances thnt .this mimic battle is to be fought. Du unite Is the ex plosive with which our shells are to be charged, a picric compound which takes its name from Major Beverly W. Dunn of the United States Ordnance Corps. Th works which are to be attacked by this shell were constructed by the Third battalion of engineers, now stntiou ed at Fort, Leavenworth. The redoubt is 30 feet through nt the base and Yi fet at the top. It is rivetted with fa clues, hurdles, brush and sod and is made as strong as the nature of the soil and subsoils of the region will allow. On the Inner face a banquette trend, about four and a half feet bplow the top, lias been constructed, and on this will bo placed a largo number of dummy figures represent ing men, to test shrapnel lire. The work of making this redoubt has occupied the engineers all summer nnd they believe that it will put the artillery to a stubborn test. It is practically the strongest fortification thnt modern mili tary science could construct. In all about .1,000 men will be engaged in the maneuvers at Fort Riley. WORSE THAN BLACK PLAGUE. Great eat Catastrophe 'World Ever Knew Now lu I'marena, The greatest entnstrophp the world has fver known is in progress nt this present moment and the world reeks little or nothing of it. This is the plague epidemic in India, w hich has now beeu raging for more than eleven years, nad which, so fnr from showing any tendency to die out, keeps steadily increasing in intensity. Thus, during the six weeks ending May 11 last, 481,802 persons perished from it, or at the rate of over 80,000 deaths n week. Nothing approaching the appalling hor ror represented by these figures has ever been recorded before. The nearest to it was in 100.", when, during the lust week in March, the epidemic was responsible for 57,70'J delrths. No pestilence of ancient or . modern times, of which we have any knowledge, bus slain so many millions of people as has this one and the end of which, mind, is not yet. The "Groat Plague" of Iondon, foi' example, about which everybody has heard, killed at the outside some KO.000 people In seven months, or about as many ns are dying weekly in India from a dis ease which is identical with it In every respect. The "Black Death" is said to hn,ve slain one-third of the then population of England -soy l,.ri00,)00 persons; bit this i.i doubt fill. Even admitting the correct ness of the estimate, however, tho mor tality of the present epidemic iu India has already more thiin doubled this huge total. What will be the end no man can foresee or venture to foreeasl. It limy be that all that has gone before, nnd nil thnt is happening now, inexpressibly aw ful though it is, is but the prelude of worse to follow. HIGH PRICES FOR COAL. fnr Scnrrllr Mar Make Coat of Fori HltrheMt In Yeur". The Pittsburg Con I Company, the Mo noiigaheln Itiver Consolidated Coal and Coke Coinpnny nnd the Pittsburg and Buffalo Conl Coinpnny have refused to nccept nn order from the Italian gov ernment for ft 10,000 tons of coal, to be shipped to Italy. For some time past a representative of the Italian government has been in this country trying to obtain coal, first in the nuthraeite field and afterward in Pitts burg. In both places he has been un successful. The Pittsburg oMTators have decided that it would he luiMissible to fill the order because of the grout home demand for coal. There is a shortage of miners nt the present time, and the car shortage is so serious thnt it would be Impossible to get the coal to tidewater. Besides, there are no boats available on which the coal could bo shipped. According to the operators, there is every reason to believe that the price of coal will be higher this winter than ever before, mainly through the car shortage. The railroads entering Pittsburg have served notice on the operators that here after no ears will be allowed to be sent off the lines owning tl i. 'litis action will prevent the shipment of thousands of tons of coal until tho order is rescinded, which Is not expected to happen until af ter the crop movement is completed. The situation wus never more serious than ut present. Itrlet Ncwa Iteaia. Chicago bunks semi millions of dollars West to aid in crop movement. Mayor Becker of Milwaukee intimates that he will iu a short time be a full Hedged candidate for Governor. A strong sentiment favoring Roose velt for a third term as President Is seen by Secretary Straus during a trip. N During n reception at the Eagle Club rooms in McKeesport, I'n., Louis Delo, a well known athlete, attempted to kill him self by shootiug. His condition is crit ical. The Panama canal cost the American government $S I, I III, (KM) up to Dec. .".1, ISM aj, according to a statement of the audited oxpendil ures made as of that tht. ami just published. Sliermiin Lonif. n ciirnotitot. u-nn ulmt and killed nt his home in Colmnbiw, Ohio, j by Frank M.ller, his brother-in law, who has had trouble with his wife, and went to Long's house in search of her. t OKLAHOMA GOES DRY. Election llrlnrns from New ! Indicate acres of Prohibition. Oklahoma has ratified the enabling act and become a State so far as Oklahoma and Indian Territory nre concerned. Re turns from the largest cities and eoun ties of Oklahoma and Indian Territory up to midnight Tuesday Indicated that the constitution of the proposed new State has been adopted by a large major ity; thnt the prohibition clause of the constitution has been adopted and that the Democratic State ticket, headed by C. N. Haskell of Muskogee for Got ernor, has 'Leon elected over Frank Frantz, the present territorial governor of Oklahoma, who was the Republican nominee. In the enabling art Congress provided for prohibition In Indian Terri tory for twenty-one years from Jan. 1, I'.HMl. The prohibition clause voted on applies the same provision to the Okla homa side of the now State, All of the elements of a nntionnl cam paign wore at hnnd in the canvass. Secre tary of War Tnft was the chief represent atlve of the Republican side anil William J. Itrynn was brought in to answer Sec retary Tnft nnd to load the Democratic fight for the constitution and the Demo cratic ticket. The election was held wider the terms of the net of Congress grnntlng joint statehood to Indian Territory and Okla homa Territory. The statehood bill was passed nt Washington after a strenuous fight which was carried through several sessions of Congress. President Roose velt intervened on behalf of the people of the territories, nnd, while each terri tory was nnxious for separate statehood, a compromise whs affected by which the friends of statehood accepted the joint bill rather than have none at nil. Imme diately after the statehood bill was sign ed by tho President the battle for the o litlcal control of the now Slate opened. NEW CHARTER BEATEN. , Clilcaifo' Proponed Measure la Deo fen I oil Two to One. Chicago's proposed new charter was defeated nt the polls Tuesday by a vote of more than two to one. The measure was snowed under in many strongholds of both parties alike, losing In all but four of the thirty-five wards. Fifty per cent of the registered electors turnfd ont, and their ballots killed the act by a vots of ftl.oSl for to 121,479 ngalnst. Knowledge had bnrdly been obtained thut the charter was dead than a move ment was on foot to secure another in strument that will contain the good fea tures of the defeated measure while hold ing none of the alleged defects that lei the voters to turn it down. An analysis of the vote shows thnt the campaign made by the United Societies bore much fruit In the shape of ballots nguinst the measure. A survey of the situation indicated that the defeat of the charter was due most largely to the con tention that taxes would be raised un der thu instriunent, and that the Sunday closing lavva would be put Into force. On the North nnd West Sides hundreds of small property, holders turned out to register an adverse vote because of the taxes argument, while in the thickly set tled foreign sections a heavy vote against the act was tallied because of the "per sonal liberty" appeal. ' The ward gerrymander, too, undoubted ly played an important part lu the defeat. Tho political aspect it gave to the char ter led many an independent voter to show his resentment by marking an adverst ballot. STANDARD OIL PROFITS. Eurnlns-a from 1NIM) to 1UOO Shows lo lie S H0,:il5,u:t4. . Sensational disclosures regarding the fabulous euruiugs of Standard Oil wer brought out In New York at the hearing In the suit of the Tinted States govern ment to dissolve tho corporation. Adroit questioning drew from the reluctant lips of Clarence G. Fay, resident comptroller of tho Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, the admission that in seven years Standard Oil's total profits amounted to $400,313,1)34, or something over STO.OOO,- OIK) a year. Mr. Fay was also forced to admit that in ISO!) tho profits wore nearly $80,000.- 000 Instead of $31,000,000 as set forth oo the books of the company. The Standard Oil managed to cover up its great earn ings In that year by deliberately failing to credit the earnings of nineteen subsi diary companies thut contributed vast sums to the parent corporation. This is the first time the company's earnings have 'been made public. i iguring on the capital stock now out standing $08,330,38:; this is an annual profit of something over 70 per cent. Fig ured on the basis of the Standard Oil trust, which hud a capitalization of $10,- 000,X)0 when it was dissolved and reor ganized into the present; company with out any additional investment on the part of Mr. Rockefeller uhid his associates, the annual profit is something like 700 per cent. On the basis of the original Stand ard Oil Company, with a capitalization of $1,000,000, the annual profit is a little more than 7,000 per cent. On the basis of the little refinery Mr. Itoekofeller had when he started out, with nn Invested eap- Itul principally of nerve, the percentage of annual profit is well, the statisticians haven't figured thut out yeU BLAST ON JAPANESE SHIP. TnriiD'.NFvrii Men Killed by Ex- IiIokIoii on the Knuliluia. Twenty-seven of the crew wore killed and many were injured on the Japanese- battleship Kashhua by the explosion of powder after target practice near Kure. The Kushlma, under command of Captain Koizumi, went to Kure, where the wound ed were placed in the hospital. The dead included a lieutenant, two cadets and on stuff officer. Details regarding the effects of the ei- plosiou ure lacking, but it was terrific and tlio ship wus severely damaged. The blast followed an attempt to remove an unez- ploded shell from the trim. A majority of tho bystauders were fearfully mutilated. The explosion U under Investigation. It occurred inside of the shield of th starboard nfiter ten-inch gun. It wus n"t the shell which expljihd, but powder. I'vldeutly caught lire from the gas emitted from the breech wheu opened to rloud the gun, Tho hull of lbs KaUim is not damaged.