Loup City Northwestern ■'H.l.||:.\\l\_ LOUP CITY, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 2i>, 1910. NUMBERsT* SaitS OF * WEEK Li'- " - The WOR13 ‘ ""CU* .* STEM ZED rom*. c*£‘.TS HERE A*D THERE Cv-M-t- - tm a r*m L -«a far tha o# t gulf Man— Pa-»»n»i tnfan n*WMt ■ T" !**-*r» *fcr arnic rt I•••» <*■-*"• lul.'fcl ut rr _JMft a ffcr t—utoi ««r iMtoTfniBMM %'rv *'*t .rUi » ttb TO. •*« taraM r «frw vi«|i f|Wr''> !. fc »t.srts 1m» to I*' l»«* —» of ttauani it of tSu •*Hb P*4wr * * « ~ ^ fta4«at K* ttry»br«' o' • *- jf+-l f »«*;<#* i«f kaBfta* * 1 *** *t*» tbr«m:«-*r4 to brine * :** It* M’jsit Irf by bio •- Mi to fw Ktf. " * *• - HKtMMMI Sat* < ijtitn »«L 7*rd*.iz. W .41 wmv: I - v ■'t * ujwi»rf' of I ogiavtllr Ky . *■ • - *■ * *b * **r : i*t#r4 Uir<}ui» ^ '**Tr . tVr « *1»r4 4 Mti*. II -®| « ' f *| iaieo b'» PMMPMM tfi|f f * 1 i* . '*.1 rlr» '**4 ?« \.~ • % «f * r;*| to Cb* jar * *»4* oryr •f ■ i < 5 tr>! fU ;r«*4 *«* «4*orr*4 i«Rn« T ilftrthu. ,w"l* ltiae »bo ?T I *'» *jto «as i inf? «••% a i;r*at - -- . »x JftoML mam»*4 -o % ' u ~ Ur b He k Mm i+mat-K ric-r o4imiml of t.br Ojit<4 ! Vi count. *•• a l- il " f>ar«3MMi!*. .aS*»r an ill 9*»* f iit.'i i|. i fcoura H lie mV. *» *. !ur :fcr Crfaa mm&**mf* aA** Irma •»ar: Luuk ip i|v Meat -1 «w» Umu4 t- jaai ran* »>t IV aill of lii/ »rrt •t. t* »<“»*«« l“..ia*v-H/ala »«**4 astm 1U ■- la It hi* *ra.ad r*u, ■ »* « «»i4^arM »ith a b*f«4 * * ' luni ■*» a»4 «a» f neo mi are mtocemnai. tsrtjr InJiMd sad : 1C i. - r a a teas'. <4 (fee «;# a a I^ie4lander * r** V... her fin'toey at Pfcila4elpbfai Set ee*i t-—* ««« £rc»:j«4 ia rfc. • j - g - bar t* ia Wil*'**4 "be ♦ - • .-J * • e be—e Inri-atiary r * nil *■*•«■ *n. |>raad i s* Tbs: e *e» -M la Ur s*e»e 4 Cist t- „%- a at the pre-.ct tuna atr* »e- - tab a* »=T i***r:««d t*»«-e -he tecarre * b-^or active is MevSeo ** siktiev tedged l; oArdaft* at. ?be Devktr r-bbaasT at M acular oa TVr sC -..j that ft* ret-:, are ia <-v. ltd #4 • * * -unban TL KtidHtBU Use -«*i-n ’he jacrae* It Xew Torh and ret -a to hat tag a< cvwnpashed tat lit/ fa • ft** ouib>: t.r.e »* IS 'da*» ha attesapd If the pohee of Odessa. R»>o to cis»erte a students' *■ *et tag *S. t-.e pc*«inrta of 'he onieerrftp •M *o fc tenons not. li> nrhkh on# stage*’ *s* hHl-td.. th*«e sere sound ed -tad o'beta r- -*;ve j all git sound* betett |e:itacB *«r S*v«redy in faasd i-ic VV • h. the Hgbtne'ght be is, flout if. Kr^rU. terctdcilf <>.* !*•**.« * * T,"*e ngei- *• Jest Itrl.-roil. *hi- e * -- »o Itv’i* r*• igb king at Cant** * heiag **ard*H ir, b«j. V ta '■* *-n*h round oa a fool. Dri* -• *•.-■ "R tutlrd hi* nor* b»r4 e4 versarjr. . . ■ f to ate puma Claus rod tell b-tu *1 ' . e vanted aa air rifle. Fred • Kht Rear* old. .. rre' .-d a - tv a degboa**- in the rear of h«* e» e J Trtatua. X J for three * .4 *:.» found ia *h- little .true • frtsa-s. It t»ar be nece* ggr, . amputate U4h legs K wafti from Port Litaon. Costa jSira i* i aa a result <4 a tcTtfc .ar* is* *4t island ia the I!) igugo t.r ,e. , a the interior of Saltaiur. »,.* , eared. with the drounlar of y..*, « --a find chi;Jrea. is nirbogl fu - r OblR a Mlghf eartbquaki jaiatTn* W*t- *a «tn were digging lor the f ' t of « new building outslce of tfce area of the bur city of Pom - found the body of a woman eb b ad been petrified Moth bands were full of Jewels. Fot.i:j Cio-hiide de Kol II, s Ho! • it Fne :aii cow owned by Stevens Brot of Liverpool. N Y.. bus broken the world's seven-day butter record, producing 37*8 pounds Two additional iranscontlnental r :l*sys are e*p»- ted to be In opera by January. 1813 between Argen tina and the Pacific roast Vai Hi ha.an. ten years old. is In » New York hospital suffering front a i r.rerous t-ivi wound Inflicted in a • fcoolrootn -man-el with an eight . at old Italian lad In tbe East Side public si bool which he attends !•• '»! the I'nited States army are "a readiness to be rushed to Cuba t» maintain pence and protect Arner an a d o’her lore-go Interests. Of :als of the war department al j- i.- >u I «*k for a crisis in th> • >f ' lai. nd republic by Feb ruary Th* 11!i ... aupreaie court held tlk l»g.» t:te primary a<-t providing fo: • .nation of members of ihelow er . -e of the legislature valid in : e »n handed down. Tliree opin lot.» were handed down by the court ■fc> t- ■ iie ra «r- divided as lo tbe interpretation «.f tbe act. Fire de- -oyeu -ue recently con •r-i.ted -rnnenl tiiiil and package depart nt n» the Great Western < er#-ai <. .ny at Fort Dodge, la The fpartly covered by in * inner t'arrie Kersh. ciarged with !• r -irv <•>!. ri with the death v. \ Johnson, whose body was ki •: alt*-..- zhti-r .? Portland, tire K; - n the factory district of On :r..: • au —d dat-ieg- estimated ai f- >-J i dea'h of a fireman and bo? . d ’he r.jurv of six firemen ■a Are ■ is finally brought im - -r i • •• u ■ : f ad been burned 1 • 4 * large buildings de stroyed. ' j ply if -„j;i d and unskilled h. Panama canal at ['resent t* a ' » * - of 'h - demand. except in a.- »t 1 .i-rmak- rs This situa ’ - c» -,-d ihe Isthmian-canal i- ’-.-ion to Issti a warning . :r burrow* chairman of the ■ >g, s pod elections. ; -he nc .mil senate the • of tae in. ’s: gaiiou of chart's d : •••.-■. mad*- n connection with a- - - ' 000: Sina c.r leoriiner. The : ♦ -ton rearb-J by tl.a commit " " r oy.lt •vie .f ‘dr. Ijo aier to a seat in - rate has not been shown to be v I by the i . or employment of • ot ■ pt methods or practises. tt* !a ions betwe n w estem railroad n ‘ th- !wth hi d of Lo ur,.»?;>•• Kttgfneers are b- coming si •r. 4 ’bet an op.-o rupture n.ay ak ; la - within the next few days, a spit- .4 conciliatory efforts cl La ■. itter l)r P. Neill tt Chi. . t:- ither side has conceded » ,gi. ‘n’ no: evinr-d a desire ic 1- l«i a little ’o pr- serve peace. •:.a It li* . k c'ler has piven the - ‘ > ( *ii« 40 ar.oihk r $10, • 1 xnaounc m.-nt oi this tact was ta?*» at th.- aa*versity convoca Al -tin A Itycr-oB. chairman "rf 'fc. t.-d of trus.es. In making ■he g<: • Mr. i: ■ k. f. !!-r -aid that he •'u •; r. ia all c. n.ctlon with the al’.-r > and »o:il.l give it nothing Ip toisi gilts in 11 y.-ars ag . r.-gate t te/Hie.'SHt A * t.-rt ti 1-. !• r. seventy years •Id ■ n* il fr.r the r. public of Panama • . ; •• • --v in chern j 1 the ■ trv. r-i y of Cbfeago. w as srr* -.-d at Chicago on orders from Assist ast I'ntt.-d States District *n»-jr »I :;*r: charts-tf with mia • cut ‘nil a«lc 'rating headache powders. S Caheti. twenty six y-ars old. son f f ii;-n a »-ilto-do retired tm r cl »"• n Jv-.xt-n 'ti death hv three tic :i * 'h clubs In a meant lot at Ixts *r.r ;«**. Cal. F> -• • • two w uni.cl government sol tiers have teen brought in at Chihua h :a. '!■ xico, out:, uung reports that 'he tnuti train which left there De »t.i«r IT was -hot to piece* In the on a i-up known as Matpasa. a • w r. :!••* . jst of !' dernales. The of tc.a! report -:*t. that the federal* ■ i-t 31 killed and that ten are missing sad 43 wounded. Italians . f X. »:• X” Y. have re reived « t: .-Liars from Er e. Pa., in • hah »h> y zr» invite.: to buy spar la! terri rv for 'h .!.s'rituition of coun trrfMt 11. jr. and Sid notes Justice Edward Douglar-a V! 'e cf 'he Supreme court of the ' tilted State* 1 - anre ulnifc chief (us of list ei- . t ; d;. wber. the oath 4 s.teglance »;•« adnu. *;er> d by a*. -'elate Justice Hritlat The public •t-'i .,f 'he in-rallaCon was sim pi-v. '*. • uth 1 .nt uiken in the seclu ■ n of the rc;'. ng r.iotn if 'he justices. The g. r -ra! Hrln-h elections have tn- o a .. wl h -very indication ' o: _ ; ■ ;.:n af one lor the govern a .. iticn. Th* elections have . *• ' •■" ’v *he .i'ula.ions of the i iii'-t.- v ho had seriously expected . ga.n r • lets tbr.n 3- at*. On the n r-ry th union st* are likely in he end to suffer a n- t loss of one. Th>- h» irt of New York was shaken by a terrible explosion of illuminating eas In the auxiliary power house of •he Grand Central station. Nine per sons. two of them women, were kill 'd. four ott-ers who are missing are be .leved to be dead. 135 were injur. <1 and property damag. d to the extent of SSdMOt). Because Ms youthful bride of five seeks objected to walking with him barefooted in the dew-covered grass before sunrise, Ernest Hockstader, i'ri ityfoor years old, a wealthy con tractor. has started a suit at Pough keepsie, X. Y, for separation. i^HlS DEAD FREMONT MAN SUCCUMBS TO SELF-INFLICTED WOUNDS. HAPPENINGS OVER THE STATE What is Going on Here and There That is of Interest to the Read ers Throughout Nebraska and Vicinity. Fremont—Grr.-vr Doihanyk died Sunday at the Fremont hospital from if If indicted wounds. Doihanyk had lived since Friday night with his throat cut from ear to ear and his windpip* severed in two places. Fri 'ay nivht. llolhanyk, while in a fit of despon lency. left his bed. Later his wife fou-.d him in a pool of blood on the kitchen floor. He was taken to the h<-;e;al. Seven small children u’.ij a wife survive the deceased. Electric Light Plant Blows Up. Orleans—The Orleans electric light ph.ni a .is blown up Sunday morning and th town is in darkness. Just after the electrician turned on the i ehts something got out of fix about tin machinery and an explosion fol oued which completely demolished engine and di.l considerable other damage to the plant. Heavenly Messenger at Hastings. Hastings.—a meteor was seen in *■ northern slcy Friday evening by a number of p ople. It appeared as a string of light and when seeming shout twenty feet from the ground it bursted and east a blue flame which din med the street lights for an in stant. For University Removal. Fremont—Senator Fred Volip of this district may introduce a bill at the vf\t s-.-cion of the state legislature as a r.s-uit of a conference on a plan which lculcs 10 tiie putting of the uni vershv buildings on the same site as that occupied by the agricultural col lege. — Ponca—William C. Flege. convicted by a jury of killing h:s sister, l.ouise, « < s' a;. ncs-J to life imprisonment in ti:e a miiMjtiarv by Judge Graves, j The court passed sentence immedi . :eiv after hearing arguments on a motion for a new trial, which he over ruled. Franklin—Ernst Arnold. county treasurer, has on exhibition In his office in car of corn that has fourteen distinct ears grown together. Beatrice firemen will have a fair wst week. X bra - ka sheriffs are in session at CV>'' mutts. York will vote bonds for a $33,00u waterworks plant. Hustings will give a free Christmas dinner to the poor. J. S. Young, an old resident of Ne braska City, is dead. The State Lumbermen’s association w ii! meet at Omaha, January lit and 20. Over five hundred birds have been entered in the poultry show at Fre mont. A local association of Nebraska retailers was organized in Diller re cently. Buffalo county will hold a poultry show at Kearney the second week in January. The city council at Fairbury refused to allow an exhibition of the Jeffries Johnson fight pictures. Will Hayward of Nebraska City, ac companied by his wife, has gone to Cuba to spend the winter. Rev. H. 1). McGan of Xuma, Colo., has accepted the pastorate of the Presbyterian church at Fairbury. The eleventh annual meeting of the Nebraska State Bar association will be held in Omaha December 27 and 28. Nebraska Scots will celebrate Iturn>' birthday at Omaha, January 24. A program of Caledonian games has been arranged. McCook will cultivate about a thou sand acres of sugar beets next season, find contracts to that effect are rapidly being signed up. Beatrice is much interested in a waterworks system, and will probably build an electric plant of its own to furnish power. The Hastings fall festival developed so niu h interest and was so success ful that it will probably be main tained permanently. James Fieischman. a farmer near Avoca. was seriously injured by the ta-caking of a chain with which he was palling stumps. Became his father reproved him for dissipation. William Dill, a Lincoln youth, shot himself in the head. He will probably recover. The farmers around Lyons are or dering cars and shipping their own corn, instead of patronizing the ele vators. Fremont ministers have fixed New Year’s day as the date for beginning a revival meeting. The meetings will be conducted by the pastors of seven local churches and will continue for an indefinite period. James G. Imwrence. who for the past twenty-three years has acted as deputy postmaster in the Beatrice postofllce. had just been notified by Washington that he has been given a life position as deputy postmaster. Harold Smith, a farmer hoy rear Howe, was thrown from a horse and dragged along & barbed wire fence, which nearly severed one leg. Dr. Giffen was thrown from his buggy by a frightened team at Lin coin, and so severely injured that he had to be taken to a hospital. The German clubs of Ian coin will put the iocker system Into use in their halls that they may in a measure avoid even the appearance of evil. ; An investigation as to the cause of the delay in the erection of the new federal building in Kearney has been commenced by the commercial club. Temperance sermons will be deliv ered in all Lincoln churches of which the pastors are members of the minis- . terial association, on Sunday, Janu : ary 22. A large number of converts was the result of a series of meetings just closed at Franklin. The conversions were principally among the younget people. Ben Henderson, a brickmaker. was picked up in the Burlington yards at Lincoln with his skull badly frac tured. Huw it occurred is still a mystery. Prof. 1). .1. Park, w ho has been teach ing botany and other studies in the Beatrice high school, has resigned and will accept a similar position at Yal .halia. N. Y. A wail is going up from various parts of the state over the reported scarcity of turkeys with which to properly observe the time-honored Christmas feast. 1 lie annual meeting of the Ne~ j braska Historical society at Lincoln, j January 9 to 11. inclusive, promises to i be the best meeting of the organiza tion yet held. Frank Calkins, a ten-year-old boy at ! Filler, was sc badly injured by the ; explosion of a can of powdt r with which he was experimenting that he j may lose his eyesight. The management of the Fremont : Young Men's Christian association is ! planning for a big reception New i Year's. The day has been set for j Monday evening. January 2. While out hunting Sunday near Sterling. Owen Frost lost his right hand and Otho Carrey sustained a bad wound in the head by the acci- I dental discharge of a shotgun. A. M. Berry, county treasurer at Fairbnry. announces that his office is overburdened with work on account of farmers from all parts of the coun ty coming in to pay their taxes. William Lyle, employed at a Hoi drege brick yard, was caught in the j huge conveyor shaft and severely in jured before a fellow workman could 1 stop the machinery and rescue him. An old fiddlers' coutest will be held i in Auburn some time in January. All J the fiddlers of Nemaha county over forty years of age are eligible for the contest, and some valuable prizes will be awarded. It is estimated that it will cost nearly $6,000,000 to run the state the j next two years. The state board of public lands and buildings has awarded the contract for wiring the basement of the state house to the Union Electrical com pany of Lincoln. The price was fixed at $464.tO. W. S. Whitten, secretary of the Com mercial club, has gone to Chicago, where he is to appear before the in tegrate commerce commission repre senting the shippers in their fight against an increase in freight rates. Secretary of State-elect Wait is pre taring a new automooile tax law which lie will have introduced in the coming session of the legislature. This act will provide for a flat rate of taxation. The other details of the bill have not been made public. John Y. Ashton of Lincoln, who foT the past three years has been prin cipal of the schools at Hickman, has been appointed by Superintendent Manuel to the position of grade man ager in the state industrial school at Kearney. Adjutant General John C. Hartigan who is to retire from office January 3. decided to remain in the Nebraska national guard. He lias ap.pointed himself quartermaster of the Second regiment, with the rank of captain, to take effect January 5. He hopes to be promoted when war breaks ou; with a foreign nat’on. The Union Pacific has been permit ted to put into effect a new weighing rule on live stock destined for the South Omaha market similar to the rule permitted the Burlington a few days ago. The new, rule, which allows unevenly filled cars to be averaged in weight, instead of charging each car separately, will go into effect January 10. The change amounts to a reduc tion of rates in the cases to which it will specifically apply. The Lincoln Traction company will appear before the state railway com mission in an attempt to get the old 3-cent fare pnt hack into operation. Notice of this has already roused a large majority of Lincoln street car patrons and the hearing promises to be lively. The university board of regents are reported to look with disfavor on the plan of removing the general colleges from the city campus to the state farm. The comig legislature will be asked to provide for a warehouse or arsenal for the national guard in Lincoln. \ CIO OF BANKER JESSIE HABERSHAM MITCHELL WAS SCION OF DISTINGUISH ED BALTIMORE FAMILY. PASSES AWAY IN CINCINNATI Remarkable Story of Her Life With the Nomadic Band Whose King She Married—Was a Descendant of Francis Scott Key. Cincinnati. O.— Jessie Habersham ‘Mitchell, wife of J. H. Mitchell, king of the Romany gypsies, who. it be came known, w as the daughter of H. (1. Habersham, a wealthy Baltimore banker, and a great-great-granddaugh ter cf Francis Scott Key. author of "The Star Spangled Banner."' died here recently. The discovery that the gypsy qneen was a scion of one of the oldest fami lies in Maryland created a sensation In St Louis some time ago. Detec tives and agents who were sent by the woman's relatives and who tried to get her to return to a life of lux ury and ease, railed to impress her. She said she preferred the life of a nomad. According to the death-be.l story, told by Mrs. Mitchell at the hospital in Cincinnati, she was stolen from her home five years ago by a band of gypsies and sold to one of the tribe for $900. During ail this time her father spent several fortunes in searching for his daughter. I.ast April she was located in St. Louis, but the search was all in vain. Jeu-ie had become innured to the life of the noaiad and refused to shake off its fascination and lure, despite the prayers of her relatives. Her mother died several months after her abduction. During the first few years she was held in bondage and not allowed to communicate with her father. The iribe would quietly leave a neighbor hood whenever she was suspected of having made any attempt to get in touch with her own world. Accounts of her abduction and the endeavors'of her paren's to trace her, which ap peared in the newspapers, she was compelled to read to all the gypsies. Tsiter she was wooed and won by King John H. Mitchell and married The Gypsy Qucin. him. While In camp with her band of rovers south of St. Louis she made a small fortune from the curious so ciety girls who took the long journey to the gypsy tent to see the whfte queen. Like the women of her band, she was learned in the art of telling fortunes. Cincinnati folks weA apprised of the strange life of the American gypsy queen only after her death. Her con fession of her career to the Sister Su perior of the Seton hospital was the channel through which her story be came public. She told th-> sister that she was not allowed her freedom un til she really became infatuated with the life led by the roving people. Mrs. Mitchell was a great-grand daughter of Mrs. Marie Lloyd Key. one of the most famous beauties of the South; grand-niece of Roger B. Taney, the Justice of the Supreme court; cousin of Lloyd Lowndes, a former governor of Maryland; great-great grandniece of the first postmaster gen eral of the United States, and niece of a commander in the United States Navy. Gita $10,000 if Sober Three Years. New York.—If Andrew L. Colvin of Brooklyn takes a seat on the "water wagon” and Is still there when he reaches the age of forty, which means abstinence for at least three years, he will become the sole owner of a $10, 00 estate left by his mother. Mrs. Susan Colvin, if he falls he will get only the interest on the estate during his liietinie. Mrs. Colvin's will was Sled in the Kings county surrogate's office and it contains a long clause providing for her son to inherit her estate if he is leading a life of sobriety at the age of forty and has not been under the influence of intoxicants for the previ ous three years. Hiccoughs Kills Pastor. Asbury Park, N. J —Rev. James W. I-aughlin. retired Methodist Protes tant minister of Belmar. who after an attack of hiccoughs lasting four days, became unconscious, is dead. Water on the brain developed as a result of the hiccoughing and other cotnpllca tions. • r MINNESOTA PAIR WHO ELOPE ON A ‘CYCLE’ DAUGHTER OF A FARMER SPEEDS AWAY WITH HER LOVER IN LATEST FASHION. jr Lesueur. Minn.—There was an ! elopement extraordinary from the ; home of Wilbur Methmen. a rich farmer of Cleveland township, when his twenty-year-old daughter. Eliza beth. sped away with her lover. George netting. She was seated in front of Hetting on the handlebars of a motorcycle, which was exceeding The speed limit at the rate of SO miles an hour over none too good country roads. They were pursued by the wrathful parents in an automobile. The route was along the devious windings of the old Dodd road, and Methmen kept up the chase, never more than a half mile behind, across Cordova and into Waterville township, until a blowout of a front tire landed him and his machine in a ditch. i-r Eloping on a Motorcycle. George, with the race and the bride both won. sped on across the county line and down to Waseca, where the couple were married and soon after forgiven by telegraph bv the defeated father. BANK NOTE IN AN OLD BIBLE Currency of Ninety Years Ago Is in the Form of Personal Notes of Today. Jeffersonville, Ind.—A bank note for $5, more than 90 years old. was dis covered a few days ago by Gray Morri son. but it is doubtful whether the note has any value except to a collector. Recently Mrs. Edward Bradley of Newport. Ky„ presented an old Bible to Morrison, her grandson. Mrs. Bai ley is past eighty and the book had be longed to her parents. While turning the leaves of the volume, Morrison found the bank note. The local banks said they did not believe it could be cashed, as It was not national cur rency. Part of the writing is so faint as to be undecipherable, but the president's name staDds out as clearly as writing only a few days old. The note reads as follows, as far as it can be read at all. “Xo. 861. - months afterdate (number is torn off) the President, Directors and Co. of the Bank of Vin cennes. the State Bank of Indiana, promise to pay on demand at their I Branch (this is written and is barely i decipherable) Bank, at -, Five 1 Dollars to the Bearer. Vincennes, April 7, 1819. Xathl. Ewing. President, !-. Cashier." The place where it is payable and the cashier's name cannot be read. The back is blank and the paper was apparently white with "black let tering. and it bears a picture presum ably of Vincennes and its bank, but re sembling a small cross-roads settle ment. It appears to have been print ed from a wooden block. KNOW? HIS MASTER’S VOICE Pet Hidden In Cellar Squawks Loudly When He Hears Owner Shout “Bill!" Allentown, Pa.—“Bill." a pet gander, knew his master's voice, and Gustav Conrad, of this city, recovered a Sock of geese that had been stolen from his poultry yard. Conrad began a house-to-house search on discovering that his geese were missing, constantly yelling “BUI! Bill:" At last there was an answering squawk from a cellar, which he recog nized as the note of his gander. Conrad went into the house and be gan to ask questions. The woman ad mitted she had a number of geese in the cellar, which she said she had bought from a man in a neighboring house, who said he had won them at a raffle in the country. She returned the geese to the owner. Bays Cat Meat Is Fine. Cleveland, O.—Recently Edward Sanders bought a big black Tom cat for 25 cents. Today Sanders would have to pay $1 for the same cat Young men of the neighborhood of East Sixteenth street and Hinds ave nue organized a secret society called the Cats Jammers. According to mem bers. cat meat has a certain piquant flavor found in no other animal. “Cat meat is irresistible," said Ed ward Dufek. “After you have once overcome aversion to the meat you can relish it more than venison or squab." II IS FAST LIVING DR. STARR SAYS THAT IS REAS ON FOR INCREASING INSANITY. AMERICAN HUSTLE WRECKING ‘•Crying Need of the Present Day is a Realization that We Live Too Fast.” New York.—The records of Ameri can lift and more especially of Ameri can hustle are to be found in the many insane asylums of the country is the opinion of Dr. N. Allen Starr, who addressed the Academy of .Med icine here. “The crying need of the present day.” continued Dr. Starr, “is a realiz ation that we live too fast; that we work too hard; that we strive too intensely; that we feel too keenly. Moderation, not excess, leads to health." The meeting was called'to discuss the prevention of insanity on the the ory that many cases now incurable are the result of comparatively triv ial causes.which. if their sequelae had been wisely foreseen, might have been checked before they become irreme diable. Dr. Albert YVarren Ferris, president of the state lunacy commission, esti mated that almost half the cases of insanity under observation in state hospitals were the result of loose liv ing and nervous strain. Homer Folks, secretary of the state charities aid association, em phasized this relation between loose living and insanity, a relation., lie said, insufficiently understood, and one which it is planned to make plainer to the layman in a special series of articles for general distribu tion. In the last ten years, said Dr. Fer ris, while the population of the state has increased t7.fi per cent, the num ber of insane has increased 103.9 per cent, making « total of 32.639 mental ly deranged persons now in the siate. Nearly half of these were of foreign birth. Twenty-eight r.er cent had been driven mad by alcohol and drugs. Discussing a plan of campaign. Secretary Folks said that it would he much similar to that employed in the fight against tuberculosis. To Extend Crop Reports. Washington.—To enable everyone interested in the department of agri culture's monthly crop reports to re alize the full meaning of the crop estimates in the growing season. Vic tor H. Olmsted, chairman of the crop reporting board, contemplates includ ing quantative 'interpretation of the figures for improtant crops Twenty to Forty Years. Seattle.—Bert Schuman. alias Her bert Rolason, was convicted today of kidnaping Henry Willman. IT years old. Schuman was given an indeter nrinate sentence of from twenty to forty years in the state penitentiary. Schuman and th^ boy were found in Omaha in September. Rooeveslt Will Talk. New York.—The Periodical Pub lishers' Association of America will hold its annual dinner at the Wal dorf-Astoria on the evening of Jan. 6. and former President Roosevelt will be the guest of honor and will make the principal speech. j; Fourteen Firemen Killed. Philadelphia—Thirteen known dead 12 firemen and one policeman? and more than 40 injured, of whom 2f> are still in the hospital, is the recit’d of Wednesday night’s fire at the lather factory of Daniel Friedlander, in this dty. 1 New Trial for J. N. Huston. Washington.—James N. -Huston, former treasurer of the United States, recently convicted of conspiracy to use the mails to defraud.”virfjs5gr^inted a new trial by Justice ■Wi'idpt it» the criminal court. ‘.jfo j -rtdPt Priest Murdered fh'-4mj|^t Hong Kong.—Father MertgOt. who had been a French missionary in Chi na since 1503, was murdered by na tives in Yung Pey in the province of Yunnan. -’s;5B Dies in Hotel Chair, -\ Anthony. Kans.—T. W. Dantes. 60 years old. a traveling.from Clarinda. Ia.. died in a cnair al a ho tel here yesterday Urbana. O.. Bank Closes. Urbana, O.—The Farmers and Mer chants* bank of J^osewood- ck>sd its edcors. The court appointed O. F. Birkhold receiver. Banks Ready for Emergency. Washington.—-Completed statis Jcs show that more than 32 per cent of the national banking power of the United States, bow representer in emergency' currency associations, which Secretary MacVeagh has been urging the bankers to form. Returns show that out qf 7.204 national balks in existence,' 22? are member^ of cur rency associations, but thajt ^^lali number represent $524,024,720 of cap ital $nd surplus. The capital of all the banks in the association is $288. 964’71#iii ^: w quoJ