COUNTY M0TT0-A11 The News When It Is News. EIRAJLDo : rtr DAKOTA CITY, NEB., FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1900? VOLUME XVI II NUMBER 19 DAKOTA Si. X CURREMT HflFPEHIHGS FAITHFUL CHRONICLE OF ALL IMPORTANT ITEMS TWO SCORE MISSING ,e ... , Jti t;ilT IX A NOVA SCOTIA STORM. Steamers In Search of Routs Tick I'p Several Frost Bitten Crews. lint Slim IItlo Is Held Out for Safety r Others. Forty-two fishermen are missing and many have, perishod In the bliz zard that has been raging for more than twenty-four hours on the Novn Scotia coast during the week. Four teen men are known almost certainly to have been tost and the remaining twenty-eight already are being mourn ed, their chance for escape being re garded as .small. The fleet from Canso and from Pe tite do Orat, about nine miles away, were also caught In the storm, but es caped by skilled boatmanship. The storm Tuesday caught the fish ermen all unaware. Lured by a line morning that promised good lishing. the men ventured to the outer edge of the paddock fishing ground. At noon the storm came up with great rapidity and in a period measured by minutes the ten-mile-an-hour wind was trans formod Into a gale, the temperature fell many degrees and thick snow ob scured the view, so that many of tht little craft were unable to make th harbor. Steamers were sent out Wednesd.-i in search of the smacks. Several crews frost-bitten from a night of exposure were picked up, but many are stil: missing, and the chance that they hnvt escaped grows less as the hours pass At the entrance to Whitehead har bor a boat from Port Felix nettlemen struck on Dogfish rocks and her crew of seven were lost. Another boat, het sail In tatters, was sighted off shore ni Canso, but before assistance could pu up she was lost from view In th blinding snow. Her crew most havi perished. MOTHER AND CHILDREN PF.HISI Father Jumps from Window and Suf -.. fcrs Injuries willed May Fx" FutaW- Mrs. Lilnton Davidson and her twe children were burned to death in a iir which destroyed the Hovenden liven barn on Main street. Peoria, III., at nr. early hour Wednesday moj-ning. Lin ton Davidson, Sr., tho husband and father, escaped from the fire by jump ing from a two-story window to thi Ice pavement below and suffered in juries which may result In his death Joseph Pacey, an aged man who roomed with the Davidsons, Is believed to have lost his life, as friends were unable to locate him alter the flames were under control and he is known t have been In the building. ITRH ALARMS GUESTS. Smoke from Factory Blaze Pours Intc, Hotel. Guests In the llroiwlway hotel in New York City hastily got together their belongings and rushed into the corridors Wednesday when smoke from a burning- factory building in Mercer street, directly in the rear, poured Into the hotel. It was a considerable-time before the clerks and bell boys could calm tho excited guests. The tiro itself Wiis extinguished with small damage. Another blaze which broke out Bhortly afterward In an adjoining building, and which, the firemen say, could not have been started from the original fire, is beina: Investigated. Tt was checked In short order. Poison In Cream Puffs, Twenty-seven cases of ptomaine poi t aoning, all but one traceable to the eating of cream puffs or chocolate eclalres, have been discovered In Syra cuse, N. Y. Six members of one fam ily were stricken Monday, three of an other Tuesday and the remainder Wednesday. Wugo Question to Ro Arbitrated. Members of the switchmen's union representing the western railroads Wednesday agreed with the Genernl Managers' association to submit their requests for advance wages and change In hours to arbitration under the Erdman law. The switchmen ask ed for arbitration. The World, a Raltimore, Md., after noon newspaper, was sold at auction Wednesday, following a receivership for $67,500. Persistent rumor makes Charles H. Grasty, formerly of the Evening News, the purchaser. Sioux City Uve Stock Market. Wednesday's quotations on the Sioux City live stock market follow: Choice corn-fed steers, $6.60 8.60. Top hogs, $$.46. lire Threatens Embassy Fire threatened the Japanese em bassy early Wednesday at Washing, ton. D. C. The flames broke out In the stables In the rear as Baron Uchida and Madam Uchida were returning home from the diplomatic reception at the White House. Sognr Is Advanced. All grades of refined sugar were ad vanced 10 cents a hundred pounds We&aeeday FIRE IN CASTLEWOOU. Dakota Town Narrowly Escapes De struction. The town of Castlerood. S. D., eighteen miles south of Watertown, and the county seat of Hamlin county. narrowly missed being wiped out by fire Tuesday evening during a heavy wind. The entire south side of Main street is In ashes and the loss Is estimated at 1180,000, with about half1 Insured. Twelve buildings are gutted and the fire did not stop until the last building on that side of the street was de stroyed. The fire started In Miller's hardware store, and fanned by a high wind, spread rapidly. Ten minutes after the fire started two buildings were in ashes and the entire block was threat ened. A message came to Watertown ask ing for aid, and thirty men with fire apparatus responded on a special train. At one time It was feared the entire business district would be de stroyed. When four buildings were gone an attempt was made to check the flames by dynamiting two stores, but the wind carried tho flames on and they con tined to spread. At a late hour the fire burned itself out on the extreme edge of Main street. Tho losses are as follows: Miller hardware store, $40,000; poo! hall, $4,000; Ellefson restaurant, $4, 000; Dr. Crawford, office, $2,000; New ton's clothing store, $30,000; Shank's jowelry store, $15,000; real estate of fice, $1,000; Hollls' general store, $35, 000; Helsols & Horn, meat market, $5,000; Getty's barber shop. $3,000; Bennett's harness shop, Implement sheds and office, $50,000; residence and land office, $4,000. The origin of the fire is not known. MEETS DEATfl IX AIRSHIP. De la range, Noted French Aviator, Is Killed. I.eon de la Orange, the noted French aeronaut, was killed while making a flight at Bordeaux, France Tuesday. De la Grange fell with his machine from a height of about sixty-five feet and was crushed under the wreckage. He had been flying In a wind that was gusty and which frequently blew at tho rate of twenty miles an hour. In spite of this disadvantage, De la Grange continued and had circled the aerodrome three times when sudden ly, as ho was turning at high speed against tho wind, the left wing of the monoplane broke and the other wing collapsed. The machine toppled and pliitiged'to the ground. ' Death ""was- instantaneous. The namo of Do la Grange Is the fourth to be added to the roll of those killed In a motor power aeroplane, all within fifteen months. INTERSTATE POULTRY SHOW. To Ro Held at Sioux City, Iowa. Jan uary 12-15. 1910. Much Interest is being shown in the Interstate Pet Stock and Poultry show which Is to be held at tho new audito rium in Sioux City, January 12 to 15, inclusive. ' The first edition of premium lists was exhausted in two days, nnd the management are now sending out a second edition, which goes to show the great interest breeders are taking in this event A letter addressed to I. M. Asbjold, care of auditorium, Sioux City, for pre mium list and full Information will receive prompt attention. AMMONIA TASK BURSTS. Fire Follows, Damaging a Storage House ninl Produce, Fire following the explosion of an ammonia tank at the Pennsylvania Storage and Warehouse company's plant In Philadelphia, Pa., Tuesday damaged machinery to the extent of $25,000. Produce to the value of $150, 000 stored in the plant is threatened as a result of the' breaking down of the cold storage machinery. Owing to the fumes of the escaping ammonia the firemen were compelled tp use hel mets equipped with oxygen tanks. Ohio Murderer Cheats tho Law. Charles Smith, alias" Mike Jordan, A-ho Monday night murdered Mrs. Te resa Barnhart, with whom ho board ed, gave that crime a sensational cli max, Tuesday when ho returned to Akron, O., and killed himself in front of the Barnhart home. The pollco were searchlnging for him in Akron and neighboring towns at the time he com mitted suicide. Drastic Check on Strikes. Business has been so demoralized Dy the coal strike In New South Wales that the legislature Friday took tht, drastic step of passing a bill rendering both Btrlko leaders and employers who instigate or aid a strike or lockout lia ble to a year's Imprisonment. Awarded 10,000 Damages. Pasquale Corte, former Italian con sul at Denver, Colo., was awarded $10, 000 damages In his suit against the jsent Italian consul, Adolph Rossi, .w. alleged libel. Jermyn's Injuries Fatal. Frank H. Jermyn, a capitalist of Scranton, Pa., died In San Francisco, Cal., Monday as the result of Injuries suffered by being rur down by a street car on New Year's morning. Grain Elevator Burns. The large elevator belonging to the Farmers Grain and Live Stock com pany In Oakland, Neb., was destroyed by tire Tuesday. The cause of the tire Is unknown. NEW F1NAXCIAL M'...U Morgan, liyun mid Mot ton In n Ti l!; Alliance. J. Pierpont Murgnti, Thomas Hyi and Levi T. Morton United hands i New York in a trust inciter whir unites resources of $150.1100,000. Is a triple combination, bringing ti Guaranty Trust company, thu Morti Trust company and the Filth Avenc. Trust company, all of New York, un der one head, with tho title of tlv Guaranty Trust company. Themergc. is perhaps the larj.-tst of Its kind in the United States. Directors of all three companies met Monday and informally approved the terms of the merger. Levi P. Morton, who Is president of the Morton Trust company and the Fifth Avenue Trust company both known as Morton-Ryan concerns hns consented to act as chairman of the boayd of the merged companies, for which no president has yet been se lected. The name of Alexander J. Hemphill, vice president and acting president of tho Guaranty Trust com pany, has been, mentioned for the posi tion, however. This new move In finance follows the recent absorption of the Guaranty Trust company by the so-called Mor gan interests, but upon just what terms the merger was made was not disclosed. The Guaranty Trust com pany was organized in 1891 and has total deceits of more than $88,000, 000. The Morton Trust company, which was formerly the N banking house of Bliss, Morton & Co., was or ganized In 1899. Thomas F. NRyan Is vice president. Its deposits aggregate more than $15,000,000. Like the Guar anty Trust company. Its capital and surplus are $2,000,000. SLAIN BY MOTHER-IN-LAW. Tennessee Man In Duel with 65-Ycar-Old Woman. Clarence Carney faced his 65-year-old mother-in-law In a revolver duel Monday night at Dryden, Tenn., and was killed. The mother-in-law, Mrs. Sarah Griffith, had met Carney In the front yard of a neighbor to discuss a quarrel of long standing. The discus sion became heated, revolvers.flashed and Carney fired throe times at the aged woman. Although one bullet struck her In the hip producing a se rious wound, she stood her ground, firing five times before ser son-in-law sank dead to the ground. About a year ago Carney's wife committed sui cide by drinking carbolic acid. CARFARE FIGHT LOST. Attempt1) Tovcr Company to Self'Six Tickets for 25 Cents Fails. , In an opinion by Justice Day tho United States supreme court Monday held to be Invalid the ordinance adopt ed by the city council of the city of Minneapolis, Minn., in 1907, requiring the Minneapolis street railway com pany to sell six tickets for 25 cents. The company fought tho ordinance on the ground that it was a violation of the contract implied In its char ter, which, .issued In 1S73, was to run lor fifty years and which authorized a charge of 5 cents for each ride. FACE A 1UEL SHORTAGE. Gas Pumping Plant In Kansas Is Wrecked hy Explosion. The Kansas cities using natural gas were confronted with another shortage of fuel Monday night, as the pumping plant at Sclpio was blown up. The Sclplo station was used to give added pressure. The pipe line has not been damaged, it Is said. This will insure a small supply of gas to all the cities, but the pressure will bo weak, accord ing to the gas company officials. Oil Case Dismissed. ,, The case of tho Prairie OH and Gas company, which attracted so mych attention in Oklahoma during the campaign of 190S because of the inter vention by Gov. Haskell, in the Inter est of the company, was dismissed Monday In the supreme court of the United States. The effect of tho dls missal is favorable to the governor's contentions. Fake Racer Sentenced. Ernest L. Powers, the former unl versity student who wad found guilty recently of defrauding a Denver man out of $13,700 through a "fake" foot race nt Council Bluffs, la., was sen tenced at Denver,' Colo., Monday to from two to seven years In the peni tentiary. Rattle with Robbers. An exciting chase Monday through the snow and a revolver battle be tween two robbers, who attempted to rob the postofllce, and residents of Norwood Park, a suburb of Chicago, resulted in tho capture of one robber and the wounding of the other. Twenty Thousand Miners Idle. Twenty thousand miners are idle In the Northumberland, England, coal districts as a consequence of the dis pute over the eight-hour act, which became effective January 1. The men at the few collieries which are still active have given notice" that they will quit. ' Knows Where Cook It. Walter Lonsdale, Dr. Frederick A. Cook's secretary, announced In Copen hagen Monday that he had received a letter from Dr. Cook, but he declined to give the explorer's address. While playing with a loaded'rlfle at Seneca, Kan., Monday the 6-year-old daughter of H. H. Rottlnghous placed the muzzle In her mouth and her t yearold brother pulled the trigger. The Uttle girl was instantly killed. sr. ...... ,r.r;,....v...... NEBRASKA News of the Week In Concise Form 4V - BOUND OVER. Wilson, Chnrjrcd with Killing Alns worlh Man, Waives Examination. George Wilson, charged with the murder of Jacob Davis, a prominent resident of Ainsworth, December 27. appeared Tuesday in the county court for preliminary heaving. Ho waived examination and was held to the dis trict court without bail and Is now in tho county Jail. Helen Lends, who is believed to be an Important witness for the state, was held in the sum of $500, and, in default of same, was given Into custo dy of Ufo sheriff. Jacob Davis was shot and his head lacerated with a hatchet, while on the way home from his place of business. Robbery was ev idently the motive, ns about $300 was taken from his person. - The chain of circumstantial evidence against Wil son Is very strong. IOTTER1ES IX OMAHA. Authorities Propose to Make a Cam paign Against Them. The drug store lottery, tho pool room and cigar store raffle, the gro cery prize winner, and all other games of chance that have flourished to such an extent since Uncle Sam placed his foot upon the big lotterlej, must go at least so far as Omaha is con cerned. The proposed war upon the little lotteries and games of chance does not come about ns a spontaneous move to start a purity crusade, but is a con certed action by Judge Kstello, of the district court. Chief Donahue, of the police force, and Mog Bernstein, chief officer of the juvenllo'eourt. For years these concerns have flourished until they huve become one of the most pro voking nuisances with which the le gitimate dealer hns to contend. CHARLES CARRICO HELD. Mnn Living at ldlgar Arrested nt Be atrice. Charles li. Ourrloo, of Edgar, is un der jirrost in BeatrK.on tfce chnrfee of bigamy made by Viola Grace Rhoads. After their marriage some timo ago the complaining witness alleges the defendant was married under the name of Charles It. Cnrrleo nt Atchi son, Kan., March 23, 1S9S, to Maud Liggett. January 11 the defendant was married to Viola Grace Rhoads, securing the license under the namo of BiibcI C. Carrlco.' Currico was ar raigned in county court and pleaded not guilty. Ills preliminary hearing was set for January 13 and In default of $1,000 he was locked in jail. Wolk Killed In Omaha. William Maxwell shot and killed a wolf in tho wilds of Rogers' grove on Sixth street, between Wonlworth ave nue and Pine street, Omaha. Mr. Maxwell wrote the state auditor ask ing how much bounty he would re ceive for his brave action. As tho law was repealed by the legislature some time ago, Mr. Maxwell gets nothing, other than satisfaction. Rowe Beats the Ice Trust. Superintendent Rowe of the institute for the feeble minded has stored in his ice hor-es at the Institution 4 00 tons of ice, at a cost of about 10 cents a ton, or $40. The ice" is twelve inches thick, nnd before tho winter Is over Dr. Howe expects to put up at least 20 tons more, and his total cost he figures will not be more than $60. Error in Bulletin. Through a clerical error In Bulletin No. 17, issued by the bureau of labor, Sheridan county, is credited with the production of 71.984 bushels of pota toes instead of 719,610 bushels. The correction of this error puts Sheridan county in the first place In potato pro duction for tho state. Fast Skating. Leonard Vohc, principal of tho schools at Dunning, skated on the Middle Loup from Dunning to his home near Walworth In less than four hours, where he came to spend the holidays with homo foli'.s. Danger in Corn Stalks. Losses from the corn stalk dlseuic are being reported every day at Sar gent, and it Is with great risk that the corn fields are being pastured. These conditions make hay high und the con sequences ure that not the usual num ber of cattle are being wintered. Prison Association, v The annual meeting of the Nebras ka Prison association was held ut Lin coln Thursday. Officers were elected and the reports of the officers were read. New Record for Hogs, The price of hogs at the South Oma ha market reached another high rec ord Wednesday when $8.57 Vi per hun dred pounds was paid for one ship ment of 71 hogs averaging 280 pounds each from Richfield, Neb. Two hundred men and boys engaged In a wolf hunt east of Sargent. Four wolves were rounded up and killed. The hunters covered 25 sections of lao vv-"-- - ;---- STATE NEWS I MIALLEXBEHGEU SAYS NO. Warrant for Secretary of Normal Hoard Will Not He Honereil. Gov. Shallenberger nnd Auditor Bar ton Monday stated that no more war rants for the salary of Rev. Luther P. Ludden, secretary of the state normal board, would be honored.- Ludden Is a member of the board and tho law forbids the pnment of salaries to members. Ludde.i has drawn about $1,100. The matter was made public when Gov. Shallenberger wrote a let ter to President Chllds, of tho Btate board, and asked for an explanation. Ludden says that Senator Norrls Brow i, then attorney general, author ized the payment of the salary In a verbal opinion. Norrls Brown, In a signed telegram, from Washington, denied the state ment of Rev. Mr. Ludden. Ho said he had never sanctioned the salary proposition. EVAXGELIST'S SON TOO GAY. Arrested nt I'nlrbury for Shooting Real I Bullets. The evangelist, Dr. Herbert Yeuell, who Is holding revival meetings In Falrbury, was called out about 12:30 Saturday Vnornlng to ball his son out of Jail. It seems that the boy, who is about 1" years of ago, was out watch ing the old year out and the new year In. When the whistles began to blow the boy whipped Out H revolver and begun shooting loaded cartridges down the street. He was arrested. The boy protested oh the grounds that he attended military academy, and that that gave him license to curry a revolver, but the officer decided it did not give hltn lleonse to shoot lead bullets clown the street. CAREER FILLED WITH CRIME. Man Whit Drank Wood : Alcohol ll, Penitentiary Goes Blind. Few men of his ago have hud a ca reer more tilled with crinre than has Simeon Hudson, tho young prisoner In the Nebraska penitentiary who has .lust gone totally blind -from the effects of drinking '7oiiJ Ulcirhot'f ine' fiaa'a of Intoxication. flridnmv who Is a tall. fine looking young man. Is but 26 years of age. lie ponies from n good family in Iowa and is serving n sentence of five nnd one-half years for forgery, having been sentenced by Judge Will tmn Kelligar In the Johnson county district court. October, 1907. Sixteen Hamulus Fatal Ut Boy. After eating sixteen bananas John Claussen, 10 years of age. became ill and died at his home at Bladen Mon day. With u'number of -companions, he entered a restaurant. Fora cash payment of 5 cents the proprietor of fered the boys all the bananas they could eat. It Is claimed that the fruit had been frozen. I Ins n Bud Fall. County Supervisor Richard Stafford met with u serious accident on Thurs. day nt his home nt Bancroft. He was taken with u severe spell of coughing nnd in the paroxysm he lost his bal ance and fell on an icy cement side walk with great force, sustaining a fracture of the skull. Some hope of recovery Jh hold by attending physi cians. Illness Postpones Wedding Friends nre concerned over the mis fortune of Contractor Kvans, of the postofflce building in Grand Island, and Miss Grace Gorman, who went to Omaha n few days ago to bo murrled. The bride was accompanied by her mother und brother. When the party reached Omaha the groom was sud denly taken ill nnd the wedding had necessarily to be portponeil. Recluse Dies from Exposure. Herman Schloesser, an old Imchelot who lived alone neur Beaver Crossing, was taken III while alone and when found on Wednesday night was lying partly on the lloor and partly on a sofa nearly frozen. Tho exposure caused his death. He was 49 years of age. "Let .Me Sleep Liilc;" Never Woke Up. "Let me sleep lato in the morning; I'm all In," said C. A. Orre, a laborer, when he went to bed Saturday night at the Saratoga hotel In Omaha. The clerk called him at noon Sunday, but Orre's long sleep proved his last ono Ho was dead. Mrs, McColg to Kansas City. Mrs. Nell McColg lert Grand Island for Kansas City, where she will tako charge of tho body of her husband, the man found murdered last Sunday, and will have it sent to Watson, Mo where other members of his family lie burled. Saloon Men Sued. Mrs. Orpha lnman began an action in the district court against five North Platte saloonkeepers and their bonds men, In which she seeks to recover damages Inthe sum of $20,000. .. Stewart for Principal. At a meeting of the school board In Sterling prof. O. P. Stewart, of Schuy-.t-i- wad chosen as superintendent of the schools there, to suoceed Prof. J. A. Dtmmlck deceased NATlOMlfeCAPlTALJ Folks who live In towns of a thou sand population will have nil the postal facilities enjoyed by people In the great cities, if a bill Introduced In the House by Representative Grlent, of Pennsyl vania, goes through. The bill proposes the establishment of an urban mall de livery service in such towns where there ore second or third-class postof ftces and it contemplates a feature of tho mall service which may be viewed as an extension of tho rural delivery while in fact It Blso embodies the prin ciples of tho city delivery servire. 'There Is a gap between the city nnd rural mall delivery." said Mr. Grlest, which Is literally a discrimination against many millions of people resid ing In approximately 5,000 of the small er cities or towns throughout the coun try. These citizens are supporting a class of postofllces which do not add to the postal deficit. The cost will hard ly approximate $1,000 per ofllce per an num as practically none of the smaller presidential offices would require more nan two carriers, while In tho major ity of cases sn adequate service could be accorded with a single carrier. The creation of an urban delivery service will be sure to result beneficially to tho millions of citizens living In the smaller cities and towns who Just ap peal to Congress asking tho removal of the discrimination in tho collection ind delivery of mail matter." Everything on wheels looks like a vehicle to Washington's chief of police, and his next order will put roller skates In that category. Tho chief has fo-nid that roller-skaters are a nul sunce. Therefore tho Bldewalks will be barred to them nnd they will have to use the streets, taking their Chances with automobiles and the fire depart ment wagons. Everybody in Washing ton skates, men and women, boys and girls. Clerks In tho departments use skates to save carfare, and shopgirls drop their bolts of ribbon to buckle on rollers as soon as the doors to tho big department stores roleaso them from the day's work. But it's the boys that are aimed at by the police chief. They use the sidewalks and have scared many sedate old citizens almost into apoplexy. To count the coins and securities in tho United States treasury it has taken a committee of four persons, supervis ing from thirty to forty counting ex perts, almost two months. .Upon the retirement of Charles II. Treat " as Treasurer it became necessary to count the contents of the vaults, and tho In coming Treasurer, Lee McClung, give a receipt for all valuables. Mr. Mc Clung has given to Mr. Treat a receipt for $1,259,001,756.37 2-3, the exact con tents of the treasury Not a cent was found to be missing from Uncle Sam's pocketboolc It was tho quickest count ever mado by tho treasury, and was absolutely necessary before Mr. Treat could bo relieved of tho responsibili ties of the oinee. Tho count included 158,521,317 sliver dollar pieces. An army of 67,000 strong is being or ganized. It is to be ono of peace and not of war and will be engaged next spring In taking the census. In other words, there are 67,000 or more Jobs awaiting to be handed out to those who wish to servo as enumerators. No par ticular ability Is required to paaa th examination to which cuch applicant will be subjected. Tho examinations are to be practical and will be confined to lining out the blanks that will h used in taking the census. The super visors of the 350 enumeration districts will recommend for appointment those who have pussed the best examina tions. In a recent address President Tuft said there were many ways of saving money, and ono of theso was the bring ing up of a standard of efficiency of the employes In governmental depart ments. Ho said that he felt like one crying In the wilderness to advocate civil pensions, but he believed the time would como when the policy would have to be adopted In order that tht government could run Its business a it should be run. The project of a canal connecting Lake Superior and the Mississippi Riv er by way of tho St. Croix River Is disapproved in a report forwarded to Congress by Gen. Murshall, chief of the corps of engineers. Gen. Marshall also reports adversely regarding tho pro posal to enlarge the anchorage area In the Superior entrance to the Duluth- Superlor harbor. The Smithsonian African expedition, headed by former President Theodore Roosevelt had, up to Dec. 10, taken 6,663 skins. The collection consists of 243 large mammals, 1,600 small mam- mala and 1,356 birds. The collection has a series of human skulls picked up along the line of the ancient slave trail. To help in assorting the extra Imavv foreign mall of the Christmas season, Uncle Sam sent extra clerks on the steamship New York for Southampton. The leasing of coal-bearing lands within forest reserves Is authorized Id bill introduced by Senator C. I. Craw ford of South Dakota. The Secretary of War urges Congress to pass a law placing the quartermas ter's department at the big forts on permanent basis on the ground that the business of the forts could be mort effectively administered by men famll- lar with the conditions surrounding them. ftv a lolnt resnlutlnn nrrnr in rvn.. vrpHfl a commission r, f .unan .. I . provided to investigate the prospects for a seml-centennlal celebration of the emancipation proclamation In 191$, ,iiii,V.'V -mlmm Retail clerks In Sacraments, Kwlll be organized this month. Retail grocery clerks In Philadelphia have undertaken a campaign for or ganization. A movement has been started In St. Paul, Minn., for the formation of a pipe trades council. ' The Alabama State Federation ad vocates the establishment of a naffon al tuberculosis sanatorium. According to the Inst available Jig ures, those of 1907, Denmark had trade union membership of 109,914. Oklahoma City has started a move ment to get the convention of tho In ternational Typographical Union in 1912." Steps have been taken looking to the formation of a State organization of bricklayers and stone masons In Min nesota. Short time notices have been ported In the locomotive industry at Horwich, England, where five thousand men are employed. Boston (Mass.) boiler makers have ununlmously rejected the terms pro posed for their return to the A. V. of L, international fold. For the two-year period ending June 30, the International Association of Machinists paid strike benefits amounting to $612,896.50. A dradlock has occurred in the South IXi ujshlre (England) pottery trade with regard to tho revised scale . of payments to the sanitary pressers. A most serious strike of gas workers In Italy took place recently." Tho :gas men's federation gave the signal and tho men struck at Milan, Madona and Genoa. Tho Journeymen bukers of Pari France, and suburbs have Issued,, an appeal to the public to boycott all pak erles where Sunday work Is still' car ried on. The master tailors' organization of London, England, la considering" the advisability of forming a strong rado union in order to protect their Inter ests under the trades boards bill. New England clgarmakers' unions will undertake a vigorous label cam paign in Vermont, and the most 'par ticular attention will be paid to Rut land and vicinity. , Tho Swedish government has inter vened to settle the dispute which was the cause of the general strike f n Stockholm. Arbitrators have been, ap pointed for this purpose, and to draft regulaflnns- for wtUeimiiti t ' future, disputes. . . "The commercial telegraphers' or ganization Is actively engaged in .or ganization v. work, the Southeastern States being tho principal Held of .ac tivity. New unions have been formed in Charleston, S. C; Columbia, S. C, and Augusta, Ga. The, bookbinding societies of Great Britain have for tho last twolve months been considering a scheme of amalga mation, which lias received the iina) sanction of the members belonging. to the various unions connected with that Industry. ' Minneapolis (Minn.) Typographical Union Is considering a new constitu tion and by-laws, a most ' Important feature of which is the establishment of a loan fund for needy members. This Is being ' established to circum vent the loan sharks who have preyed on woikingmen in thatj city. A special meeting of Boston (Mass.) Coremtikcrs' Union has been culled," to consider whether it will admit to mem bership tho women employed in She core making shops of Greater Boston, or contest --with the proprietors oyer tho propriety of their employment In this arduous laboring work. VU?S&NDSL or The trans-Pacific yacht race from San Pedro, Cal., to Honolulu wlll.b sailed again next July. Thomas Johnson, quarterback, has been elected captain of the Kanjsas University foot ball team for 1916. Ozana won the handicap race at ?!x furlongs at Tampa, Fla. T. M. Green, the favorite, ran a disappointing race, finishing last. , At Emeryville, Cal., the Ke,en9 Stables won twice, Boggs taking the Berkeley handicap and Nagazarna car rying off a purse event Over 6,000 witnessed an excellent racing progrum at Moncrlef Park, Jacksonville, Fla. The Quickstep han dicap went to Sir Ormonde, The fight at Paris between Sam Mo Vey and Joo Jeanette, the American colored heavyweights, was declaredly the referee to be a draw at the end .01 thirty rounds. , Base ball in the Minneapolis hlgtr schools may be ubaudoned and the popular game of lacrosse, the favorite Canadian outdoor sport, may be sub stituted. No decision as to that ef fect has yet been made, but the sub ject Is being agitated and the plan may be carried out. At the meeting of the South Atlantic league directors In Augusta, Ga.. it wu decided to cut the league down to sis clubs. Knoxvllle was eliminated amf the Charlestown fans may replace Co lumbia. Columbia will remain. Star Pointer, 1:59. the first horse to reach the two-minute goal, son) whose record stands as the official "un paced" record of the world, his time in the open having never been beaten, except by Dan Patch. X : 55 V4. was re cently purchased through Dave Me Cleary of New York, who drove him to his mark Cal.,