DAKOTA. - COUNTY HERALD. DAKOTA CITY, NCR, FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1908. Human 52 VOLUME XVI State Historical S WORLD'S DAILY NEWS CAREFULLY COLLECTED AND CONCISELY STATED. FORT JOLTS RESORT jersey governor "reads mox ACT' TO A1 LAN1IC CITY. Grniul Jurors Refuse Absolutely to Bring Indictments for Violation if Liquor Laws Action of Gov. Fort Creates Sensation m l'umous Resort. The action of Gov. Fort In threaten ing to send troops Into Atlantic City N. J., to j.if'jrce .lie state laws unless the people of Atlantic City observe the law caused sensation among the res idents and cummer visitors. Another nennitton was sprung at Mays Landing, the county seat of AU lantlc county, when the grand Jury absolutely refused to obey the Instruc tions of the court to return Indict ments against excise violators. Su preme Court Justice Trenchord, who had been requested by Gov. Fort to Bit with the county Judge, was so In censed at the action of the grand Jury that he Instantly discharged It with a severe reprimand. The governor's proclamation was net wholly unexpected, as there had been rumored for days that ho would resort to the calling out of the mllllla If necessary to enforce the excise laws. Assistant Attorney General Gosgill. who Is assisting County Prosecutor Golden burg In the excise cases, says the governor can call out the troops, although It is an unusual proceeding. The governor's power to declare mar tial law, he says, 'cannot be ques tioned. Sheriff Johnson, of Atlantic county; .Mayor Stoy, of Atlantic City, and County Prosecutor GoIUenburg refuse to discus the situation. Last Sunday the cafes, with but a few exceptions, continued business as usual. When' the grand Jury came Into court Justice Trenchord addressed It as follows: "I understand that all cases have been presented to you. I have sent for you In order that the clerk may take tho Indictments." When asked by the clerk if the Jury has any Indictments to present Joseph W. Salus, tho foreman of the Jury, said that It had not considered all the cases presented. Justice Trencord then said that the court would sit until a verdict wa reached in the excise cases. ) AUGUSTA FLOOD RECEDING. Georgia Town Suffer Loss of Xearly $1,000,000. Flood water at Augusta, Ga., began receding Thursday. They reached the height of forty feet, probably as high as the flood of 1SSS. Rain has ceased In the upper val ley and there Is no danger of fur ther losses. The loss approximates $750,000 to 11,000,000 and consists of damage to stocks of goods and Drl vate property, destruction of the wa gon and railroad bridges across the Savannah river and breaks In the ca nal banks. There are dependent on the canal for power eight large and several small cotton mills. While the flood was at Its height five fires broke out. The McDanlel builders material establishment lr North Augusta burned. ' Michigan Hank Fails. The Athens State and Savings bank at Athens, Mich., closed its doom Thursday afternoon. State Banking Commissioner Zimmerman stated that a deliberate plan to deceive the state banking department had been adopted by the Athens bank since the exam lnation, which took place March lo. 1908. Attorney Convicted. C. W. Trlckett, special assistant at torney general of Kansas, aprolnte to enforce the prohibitory liquor lav In Wyandotte county, was found guilty In Kansas City, Kan., of using his of fice to obtain $250 from Wayne and Frank Hurlburt. I Fined Five Millions. The civil court of first Instance at Csjt-is, Venezuela, has handed down al ftment declaring the French Ca blJmpany guilty of complicity tn the Maoi revolution against Presi dent Castro and condemning it to pay $5,000,000 damages. "Middies" Finish Cruise. The five ships of the midshipmen's summer cruising squadron, of which the cruiser Olympla Is the flagship, returned to Annapolis. Md.. Thursday and the annual summer practice cruise of the middles, which began early in June, came to an end. Sioux City Live Stock Market Thursday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow: Top beeves, $8.76. Top hogs. $(.50. "Growler" Go Home Empty. Eight hundred barrels of beer, val aed at $8,000, were emptied into I ewer at Oklahoma City Thursday in the presence of State Dispensary Agent Robert E. Lozier and Internal Revenue Collector Charles lioward Congo State Annexation. . The Belgian senate has begun Its consideration of the treaty providln for the annexation of the Congo Indc pendent state to Belgiuoi. t GOV. HUGHES "STUNG.1 IIoTOPmcn at County Fair Vent Rage at Executive For an hour, and a half Wednesday afternoon the openly expressed hos tility of the owners ot, trotting horses taking part In the events at the Sara toga county fair at F.allston, N. Y., toward Gov. Charles E. Hughes held up the racing program at the fair grounds there. Gov. Hughes was a visitor at the fair and addressed a big gathering, which gave him a hearty reception and an attentive hearing. The - governor's presence on the grounds, however, was resented by horse owners, who have taken excep tion to the governor's efforts to sup press betting on the race tracks of the state. As a consequence they refused to start their horses while the govern or was on tho grounds. The '"strike" of the horsemen cre ated an unprecedented scene'' and caused the management of the fair marked embarrassment. When the condition became known a sensation was created among the thousands of spectators on the grounds and . con siderable pressure was put on the trot ting men to change their attitude and run olt the races as scheduled. In this the fair officials took the lead, urging their cases strongly upon the recalcitrant owners and pointing out the awkwardness of the situation caused by the balk In the program. Their efforts were fruitless, however, the owners remaining obdurate and for an hour and a half refusing to budge from their position. They open ly declared that Gov. Hughes had an tagonlzed their Interests and that they proposed to retaliate by refusing to take their horses out on the track while he was present. Those In charge of the fair threat ened to have the owners disqualified for their refusal to come to time when the races were called, but even this had no effect in altering their attitude, and the races were held up during the entire period of the executive's visit to the fair. Gov. Hughes was scheduled to leave there on-the 4 o'clock train, and short ly before that time he left the fair grounds enclosure. Immediately on hl3 departure the racing proceeded. The lateness of the start caused the continuance of the trotting until dark MIXE HORROR IV SOUTHWEST. Twenty-Five Men Entombed in Okla . Iioma. 1 ' One of the worst mine disasters in the history of the southwest occurred at Hallyevllle, Okla., Wednesday, when between twenty-five and thirty miners were entombed In the Hailey-Oklaho- ma coal mine No. 1 as the result of a fierce fire which, it is believed, shut off all means of escape. It is impossible for rescuers to enter the mine on account of the Are and it Is believed the entombed miners will lie burned to death. AH the miners are foreigners. A number of miners working near the opening managed to escape. The fire is said to have started from e barrel of oil catching fire and ex ploding. The burning oil was thrown in all directions. The Are spread with such rapidity that the miners in the lower tiers were unable to escape. The mine is ore of the biggest min ing properties in the state. Soon after the fate of the entombed men became generally known crowds of wildly excited women and children, relatives of the unfortunate men, ap peared at the mouth of the Bhaft. Their grief was pitiable. REVOLTING CANNIBALISM. Starving Russian Devours Bodies of Brother's Wife and Children. Details are given In Yakutsk, Rus- sia, newspapers of a revolting case of cannibalism among a nomadic tribe of Lamuts, living on the River Kerkodin in extreme northwestern Siberia. One of the nomads, driven desperate by hunger, devoured the bodies of his brother's wife and four children. A party of hunters who came upon the deserted encampment found the ' re mains of the bodies and reported the case. There was no vestige of food on the premises. The brother's body was not found, and It Is not known wheth he was eaten or wandered away and perished in the snow. PERSIAN REBELS BUSY. Reports at Teheran Indicate Revolt Is Spreading. A dispatch from Teheran says Alarming reports have been received at the Bageshah palace regarding the outbreak of a popular Insurrection n the provinces of liars, Larlstan and Kerman. One of the local governors has been assassinated. The failure of the shah to subdue the constitutionalists of Tabriz is hav ing a bad effect on the people general ly. The advent of anarchy throughou the countiy4s regarded as imminent Strike May Bo Settled. A rumor from an authoritative source says the Canadian Pacific offi cials are getting tired of the shop men's strike and that negotiations were started Thursday with the view of ending It. Murder Mystery Unsolved. The Inquest over the remains of MaJ. Gen. Luard'a wife, who was as. asalnated near Seven Oaks, Eng., on Monday, has been opened, but the evi dence thus far has not helped to un ravel the mystery surrounding the murder. Robber Secure $2,200. The State bank of Geneseo, N. D. was robbed Wednesday night of $2,200 by robbers, who made their escape. BIG UHOKF.KS GO TO WALL Suonslon Announced on the New York Exchange. A. O. Prown & Co.. or.e of the larg est brokerage house in New York, an nounced their suspension on the stock exchange Tuesday afternoon. The ronractlon of the firm In the remark able stock market last Saturday had been under investigation by tho au thorities of tho stock exchange and Tuesday It was announced tho trans actions had been made for the firm's account under a rule which provides that where a firm Is, unable to deliver stock sold to another broker the pur chaser may buy in the stock at the ex pense of the firm falling to mako the Hellvery. At the height of the boom market several years ago Prown & Co. did on enormous business, said to have been arger than any other brokerage house at the time. There ore five branch of fices In New York City and many oth ers throughout the country. ' The firm was organized In 1002. Tho members are A. O. Brown, G. Lee Stout, E. F. Buchanan. Samuel C. Brown and W. Rhea Whitman. A representative of the firm said: 'The affairs of he firm are badly tan gled and It was felt necessary to sus pend In order to straighten them out." D. W. Noel has been named as as signee. No statement of assets or lia bilities is yet available, but it Is pre sumed the figures are very large. The effect of the suspension upon the stqpk market was not so violent as anticipated by those who know how large ine amount ot siockh ine nrown & Co. owed to other firms. The vol ume of trading Increased rapidly, but prices vacillated and there wns no gen eral movement In cither direction. At 2 o'clock the market was quiet. Tho transaction of A. O. Brown & Co. covered nearly "5 per cent of the trading In the sensational week-end session Of the stock exchange, and it was stated officially by n member of the firm that delivery had been made on only 277.000 of the more than 700.- 000 shares handled. How ninny of lh outstanding shares represent tho deal ings of customers, and how many wero carried on the firm's account It wa Impossible to learn. FLAYS CHURCH AS HE DIES. Minister Kills Himself In a New York Hotel. Ill, half blind, criticising the church on the score of untruthfulness and in- slncerelty, and declaring that ho could not worship America's trinity, "suc cess,' pleasure and gold," Uev. Albert IT Trick killed himself In a room In the Mills hotel. New York, Tuesday. Ho was once a pastor of a Presbyterian church In Chicago and later had a charge at Saratoga, N. Y. The former pastor left a letter to Charles N Down, of New York, which In part folr lows: "I have never been ahle to conquer an Inborn contempt for tho place money has In this world, though knowing so w-ell how absolutely a fair amount of It at least Is necessary to all of us. I could never adapt myself to methods by which It Is made. They are so transparently selfish and more or less unscrupulous whether used by the church or the so-called world. "I could never worship America's trinity snccess, pleasure and gold. "I rejoice In the better day dawning when society With its superstitions and errors, like all the ocher religions of men, shall have passed away, and religion Itself free and simple, religion that has a passion for truth. Justice, love and liberty, purity and humanity, shall prevail." LAND LOTTERY DATE FIXED. Rosebud Tract to' Bo Opened on Oc tober 5. The president has Issued a proclama tlon for the opening for settlement of the surplus lands (800,00 acres) of the Rosebud Indian reservation In South Dakota. The lands will be selected by lot iery process and the drawing will take place at Dallas, S. P., on Oct. 19 next, The minimum price was fixed at $6 gji acre and the homestead laws are made applicable to all entries. The registration will begin on. Oct 5 at Dallas, Chamberlain, Gregory or Presho, S. D., or O'Neill or Valentine, Neb. Chafiii to Can Siieeclies, Too. It was announced at the national prohibition quarters In Chicago that speeches of Mr. Chafin, national can didate for president, and of Aaron 8 Watklns, the vice presldenlal nomi nee, would be recorded In a phono graph for reproduction. Menaced by Forest Fires. ForcBt fires burned Tuesday night in the neighborhood of Klmberly Man., says a Cranbrook dispatch. The towns of Klmberly and Southerland are still threatened. Another serious Are Is burning a mile from Moyie and a fourth fire near Ryan. A vast amount of valuable timber has been destroyed. Bridge AVaslied Away. A dispatch from Samden, 8. C, tells of the washing away of the Wateree bridge at that place and the probabU loss of two lives. Slayer Starves to jcath. Clayton W. Williams, a negro, who murdered Mrs. L. B. Briggs, of Chi cago, recently, beating her over the head with a chair, died of starvation and exhaustion In the county Jail at Chicago Tuesday. Cuught Under a Wheel. Seven workmen were killed and fif teen more or less Injured at Chelsea, Mass., by the collapse of o brick. w" which was being erected. NEBRASKA STATE NEWS BELLEVUE MAN LANDS IN PEN. Arrested, Pleads Guilty and Sentenced In One Day. George Ringer, of Brllevue, was ar rested, pleaded guilty and was sen tenced to seven years In the peniten tiary ail In one day at Tekamah. The charge was burglary. Sheriff Phlpps. of rvrt, and Mencke, of Washington county, succeeded tn arresting George Ringer, of I'ellevue, who was wilMng to plead guilty to a number of thefts In that vicinity. Dr. Gregg, of Decatur, notified Sheriff Phlpps Sunday morning that someone had stolen a harness from his barn the night before, and that he suspect ed a man who was traveling In a cov ered wagon. Tho sheriff had seen the wagon go through thcr a few hours before and at once notified the sher iff nt ninlt trt Itfipn a shnrn lookout. The man was arrested about thee miles south of Herman and brought to Tekamah In an auto. On the way into Herman ho told the sheriff If he would go over Into a certain cornfield near the road and count eleven rows west and then turn south he would find two guns, which he did. He says he hid them there a couple ot days ago, expecting to get them when he went buck home. When arrested he had a guitar and gold ring, stolen from Jim Cornish, a farmer living three miles south of Te kamah, also a $50 microscope and two suit cases full of books, which he had stolen out of the school house at De catur. The prisoner gave his name as Geo. Ringer, his home Is at Bellevue and he Is a man about 83 years old. A party who knew htm at Bellevue asys he has a house and lot at that place. AMENDMENT FINDS FAVOR. North Plutte Bunker Endorses One to Broaden State Investments. It Is evident the publication of the figures showing the enormous amount of money Invested In other states by the state of Nebraska has created con siderable favorable Interest In the adoption of the proposed constitutional amendment relating to the Investment of the permanent school fund. The following letter . was received by State Treasurer Brian from F. L. Mooney, cashier of the First National bank, of North Platte: "In a - recent newspaper article I note some figures regarding the Invest ments of the permanent school fund and the same article Intimates that you have difficulty in placing these funds under the present law. "Am surprised, as many other read ers must be, that the Investments tn bonds of other states has reached the large total of $4,316,000. While no one one can criticise the board for mak ing these investments, as they are all first class In every way, everyone must deplore the fact that our present laws make It a necessity. "Am glad you are giving publicity to this Important matter, and I feel that the press of the state and speakers who may appear on the platform in this campaign should give some atten tion to this metter in order that the proposed constitutional amendment providing for the Investment of these funds In municipal and school bonds may receive a hearty and intelligent support." GRETNA MERCHANT IMPROVES. John Byorth, Shot In Brain, Gives Promise of Recovering. The condition of John Byorth. the prominent hardware merchant of Gretna, who was accidentally shot In the head Friday morning by the dis charge of a rifle trap which he had set for burglars. Is exceedingly encour aging at this time. Although small hopes were held out for recovery at the Wise Memorial hospital In Omaha, where hewas removed, a delicate sur gical operation was performed and the bullet removed from his brain, since when he has continued to Improve and at present there Is strong hope of his recovery , The condition of Clarence Larson, the young farmer who sustained a broken back on Wednesday last by being caught between a cross beam and a load of hay, remains unchanged at the Omaha general hospital. He still retains his consciousness, but small hope is held out for his ultimate recovery. STOCK vTRAI.V PILED IV DITCH. Fifteen Curs Wrecked ami Many Cattle and lloiMH Killed. , A good sized freight ' wreck occur red on the Burlington near Berwyn, ten miles east of Broken Bow, In which eighteen slock cars of eastbound No. 46, containing about 600 head of cat tle and horses were completely ditch ed A broken frog was responsible for the catastrophe. The truin was going at a high rale of speed at the lime and had Just cleared Berwyn. The engine and several cars- passed over the defective frog in safety, but eighteen carB were caught and derail ed. As near as cun be ascertained, none of the train crew was Injured. About thirty head of cattlo and twen ty head of horses were killed Fifteen cars were completely demolished. Survey for Electric Line. Surveyors for the Holdrege-Kear-ney electric line have reached Kear ney and have driven their stakes to the head of Diagonal avenue. y Puts an End to Suffering. John Boulton, aged 76, ended his long suffering from paralysis by com mitting, suicide at the home of hU daughter, Mrs. W. J. Peterson,- near Hastings. Hoy Shoots Sister in Breast. Dora Tanslsela, of Omaha, 18 years of age, was accidentally shot In the right breast by the premature dis charge of a 22-call er, revolver In the hands of her younger brother, John, who had Just finished cleaning the weapon. m m ft INTEREST H3 rUPPENlHSS From Cay lo Pat Condensed w cur cu;y readers NOVEL WILL MAY BE IN VAIN. Effort of RI-.-Ii F.inrcr to Evade Con ttt Is Threatens! Willi Defeat. Tho efforts of William Topper, the wealthy Ulkhorn farmer, to so dvls his property that his will could not bt contested after death may be In vain. Some tt the heirs. It Is asserted, have em;lryed an it'.orr.ty to look Into the will with a view to contesting Its pro visions. General John C. Cowln. who has been employed, said he had been examining the will but could not say until Inter whether ury contest would be filed or not. General Cowln Is said to reprerc nt several of the heirs. Mr. Hof, per left his property to his jflne children. Mrs. Lomlla McLean, a (laughter. Is said to be one of the dls sntlrfled heirs, she will not under the provisions of the will receive any of the property In fee. The will provided for a trust of $5,000 and slxty-flve acres of land, the Income of which Is to go to her during her life and at her death tho property Js to descend to her children. Bryan B. Hopper, a son. was left nothing by the will except what ho owed the estate for debts paid by his father during the latter' life time. The wrtl provided these should be cancelled. Daniel Q. Hopper was given sixty six acres of land, with a provision he should pay Mrs. McLean In trust $5,000. The other six children were given deeds to property owned by the old gentleman, the deeds being signed by him before his death and transmitted to the executors In a sealed package. Mr. Hopper provided In his will If any of the children refsued to accept the terms of ti e testament and tried to breuk It they should lose all their In terest In the property to the heirs who died not contest and should receive only $100 In money. The estate ts estimated to be worth $200,000. FIVE MEN HELD FOR TRIAL. Charged with Attacking Campers Near Cedar Creek. Judge Archer's court was crowded Saturday during the trial of Edward Dowllng. George Wilson, Joe Keenan, Percy Fernal and John Andrews, charged with having made an assault upon B. E. Hill, of Omaha, with Intent to do-great bodily Injury. The defend ants pleaded not guilty to the charge. The men are employed-by the National stone company in its quarry near Louisville. -,.., Mr. and Mrs. Hill testified they were married In New York, but had made their home in Omaha for two years; that they had been camping near Cedar Creek on the Platte river since Aug. 10 and the five men came to their camp about 8:80 in the even ing In a drunken condition and bring ing liquor with them from the saloon In Cedar Creek, threatened to kill HI1I unless he turned his wife over to them. Refusal made It necessary for him to defend his camp, but he was beaten Into unconsciousness and his collar bone broken, i I After listening to the evidence the court oounu the prisoners over to the district court and they being unable to give a bond- of $200 each they were taken back to the county Jail. Byron Clerk and Will Robertson appeared for the state and Judge Sullivan for the prisoners. OPTION FIGHT IN CAGE. County Option and High License Can- mimics in ciomo Race. As the date for holdl n? thA rpnnh- lican primaries draws near the fight among the candidates becomes more and more Interesting. For state sena tor the contest between H. E. Sackett, or ueatnee, and Adam McMullen, of Wymore, Is one of the most bitter ever held In Gage county, and so Interest ed have their friends become for the success of their respective Candidates that many have lost siurht Identl.il candidates and others at the neaa or the ticket. County option Is the main Issue In the scnnfoHnl Mr. Sackett favors this system of regu lating ine liquor traffic, while McMul len is an avowed hlirh limn RA rnnrll. date. LOWER FREIGHT RATES. New Schedule Adopted A fleet In Points in Nehruska. The Lincoln Commercial club has been notified ofthe adontl on nt ftw sourl river rates as the maximum for a ii points In Nebraska on shipments originating In the Pacific coast termi nals. The adoption of this schedule means the abandonment of the old system or charging the inland town the rate to the Missouri river plus th local rate bark. Th reduce tho maximum tn Ininrmniiai. points In Nehruska from 5 to 60 cents per hundred, according to the class of ircignt. V Ask Burlinutoil for Trains. A petition has been sent in to ofll cials of the nurllneton rnn.l V.v Mil...... of towns along the Ashland-Sioux ntu line asking that a morning passenger service oe estaDllshea. The present service consists of one train each way tn the arternoon. Corn Carnlvul for Craig, The village of Crulg will hold a corn carnival Kept. 15 and 16. Several hun. dred dollars have been raised and the committee guarantees this event to be the largest ever pulled oft in Burt county. Camp Meillng ut Hasting. The state camp meeting of the Unit ca evangelical church was opened wiurouy at Hastings. Rev. Mr. Nl bcl. of Harrisburr Pa., ami rr.i.i nt Thomas, of Western Union college, L Mars, ia., are loading In the bible con ference. Much Corn ill Custer The Urgent Leader makes the es mate that Custer rimniv .ni ,.. stl corn yield of 6,000,000 bushels thti fall. Tho prospects ere for the larg est corn yield ever harvested in Custer vounty. BRYAN FLAYS TRUSTS HQ KERM IQ M Head of Ticket Charges Abuses ot Corporations to Inaction of Republican Party. GREAT COLISEUM IS CROWDED. Huge Concourse of People Sees Parade and Attends Ceremonies in Hoosler Capital. Indlsoapolls correspondenre: ' John Worth Kern, Democratic can didate for Vice President, wns notified formally Tuesday of his nomination. The meeting wns held in the elaborate ly decorated Coliseum ot the State fair grounds and wns nt tended 4y many thousands of iMMiple, regardless of par ty, attracted by the noted speakers on the program. The weather wns ideal, clear and cool,' with a jilensnnt breese thnt swept over the grounds. While the notification of Mr. Kern wns the occasion, William J. Bryan wns the central figure in the proceed ings. The Nebrnsknn delivered an im portant speech on trusts. He charged the Republican party with responsibil ity for the growth of harmful corpora tions, lie contrusted the platforms ot the two parties, contending thnt while iV'- ' . -7 I., JOHN WORTH KERN. the Republican platform was evasive on the subject, the Democrntlc plat form wns specific. He asserted that Mr. Tuft's Biecch of acceptance was weaker than the platform. ( Traction Lines Crowded. Ten traction lines and fourteen rail roads brought the people ou regular and special trains to the ceremonies. Five hundred ears transported the crowd from the city to the fair grounds and back. The Coliseum, recently built of brick and steel, holds 15,000 people and arrangements were made early In the dny to hold overflow meetings If necessary. Mr. Bryan and other sink ers, members of the notification com mittee appointed at the Denver con vention, members of the national com mittee, headed by Norman E. Mack and others of the official party, arrived Monday night and on early morning trains. A conference wns held Monday night between Mr. Bryan, Mr. Mack, Mr. Kern, members of the national and congressional committees and others, at which campaign matters were dis cussed. The morning hours Tuesday were de voted to conferences by party leaders, whilo a hand concert at the Deulson Hotel assisted in amusing the crowds thnt poured through the corridors. La ter a reception wns held by Mr. Bryan nnd Mr. Kern in the hotel jmrlors. Drive to the Fair Ground. The p.Dgram for the dny Included luiiclieo i at the hotel by the spenkers and me libers of the national and notifi cation i-ominlttees, ufter which the of ficial party was driven to the State fair grounds In automobiles, Mr. Bryan Mr. Kern and Chairman Bell of the notification committee riding together, The rltle through the city to the fair grounds wus through the principal huxliictH streets and jmst the Kern resi dence. The doors of the Coliseum were thrown open to the public several hours before the exercises beg:in. Thomas Tnggart, "national commit tecmiin from Indiana, bud been select ed to call the meeting to order. He immediately handed the gavel to Na tional Chairman Mack, who Introduced Theodore E. Bell of California, ehalr uiuu of the notification committee, who formally notified Mr. Kern that he had been selected by the Democratic party to go on the national ticket with lr, Bryan. The Vice Presidential nominee In his sjicech f acceptance asserted that the icopIe do not rule because their will has not been given effect by the party in power. nuJbins OF NEWS. A strike which will affect from 25,000 to ;H,H workers, including 10,000 wom en, is being planned by the cloakmakers in New York, owing to the low wages now being paid, which run from $3 to $3 a week. John Summers, alias Frank Engle, and Therem Ziler, alias Mrs. Engle, were ar rested in Pittsburg charged witU tlip murder of Mrs. Ziler' huxlwud in Mil waukee almost two years ago. The cou ple have been lu Europe siuce the crime was cou'tiiitied. 'v.".-: W .. . v,..;-:;, , v .1 .-.;. - ' " '. mm Frank Harris Hitchcock, who hai been made chairman of the Republican National Committee and who therefor will manage the campaign for. the election of Secre tary Taft as Presi dent, was the East ern manager of Mr. Taft's cm palgn for the nomi nation. He re signed the office of F 1 r st Assistant rostuiaster Qcn ernl Inst spring to " Hitchcock. u n d e r t a k e this work. Mr. Hitchcock was born at Am herst, O., Oct. 5, 1807. He was gradu ated from Harvard University and en tered government service nt Washing ton as a clerk In 1801. While a clerk he read law and became Interested in politics, nnd after serving as assistant secretary to the Republican National Committee he wns made chief clerk in the Department of Commerce and La bor, whence he was promoted to th Post Oflice Deistrtment. Got. Claude Augustus Swanson of Virginia, who seconded the nomination of William Jennings Bryan at the Den ver convention, was Congressman from the Fifth Vir ginia District for fourteen years be fore bis election as Oovernor In 1000. lie Is a self-made man, obtaining his general and legal education through his own efforts, and he has followed the plow on a farm. A year ago be was brought to public v- "wanbon. attention outside his State through hu stand for the rights of the State against a federal Judge in the enforce ment of a 2-cent passenger rate. Gor-i Swanson was bora in 1802. t ! ' '' Thomas L. Hlsgen, candidate for. President on the Independence League! ticket, .was Yprn la Petersburg, Ind., ou Nov. 20, 1S58, the son of William Hlsgen. Ills fa ther, a German,, moved to Albany,.' staying there a short time, and then went to Indi ana, where he ran a country store Thomas was the fifth of eleven chil dren. At the aga- thos. l. hisokn. of 10 he went back. to Albany and benme a clerk In a cloth ing store. In Massachusetts Mr. Hls gen achieved wide prominence because of a bitter flght covering twenty yearsr with the Standard Oil Company. Mrs. Mary C. Bradford, who war elected by the Colorado State Demo cratic convention a delegate to the na- in Colorado and the East as a lecturer on woman suffrage and has always taken an active part In State and city politics. She was the first super intendent of schools lu Adams county and has held other political offices. Several years ago she was president, mbs. bkadfokd. of the State Federation of Women'g Clubs, and Is an active worker. She founded the Jane Jvfferson Democratic Club. Chief Justice Fuller of the United States Supreme Court Is 75 years old. Despite his flowing Buow-whlte hair Justice Fuller la far from looking his years. Ills eyes are as bright' and his theeks as ruddy as (hose of a school boy, and mentally and physically he la active and vigorous us ninny uien half his age. All hls llfe he has beeu fond of outdoor ex erciseand to this he attributes bis gen At 75 Justice Fuller JUSTICE VvU.EB. Till good health. nu look back iiisiu a long and active-itte.-r. When he retires Justice Fuller -v I ! I have completed a service of at eust twenty years as bad of the high- tribunal lu the land. "The mere fact that a man is sent iy h'.s doctor to some particular baths r springs where bu sees other Invalids outlileut of a cure makes, him think li:it he. too, can get well," said Dr. B. li'.fhi Lt!le. speaking nt the Iccor urst'cd Intitule of Hygiene in Loudon. 'n.i- toUl oii'i ut of the uluety-HereQ ..i it.iui ci'i;r.-:.t pluuts of this country I ;'.i cii!ci..:.-.r year 1007 -gpproxl-'. u s -til.-iUt. i'-l barrels, a decided lu ; .'. i ...i yo;'."a. ''' IKS A .- ,gH.