I SAYS EBRB ! IF ! ' lExpcrt Declares the Boasted Fight ing Ships Are Merely Death Traps. JVKBIOR BELT IS TOO LOTV. Defects in Construction Pointed Out cad Promotion System / Is Scored. Henry Rcuterdahl , associate of the * CJnited States Naval Institute and American editor of "Fighting Ships , " is the author of a startling article on " "The Needs of Our Navy" in the Jan uary MrCIure' : ; . Mr. Reulcrdahl's ex- jjertness on naval matters is not dis puted and neither is his patriotism , lie agrees with President Roosevelt that a navy must be built "and all its 'training given in time of peace" and with this in view he exposes defects In our first-class battle ships and ar- aiored cruisers which all but make them useless as a efficient units in a fleet on heavy sea and in real action. Mr. Reuterdahl's criticisms appear * to be the more amazing' account of ithe contention that most , if no * , all of the weak points he emphasizes , will be .acknowledged by sea-going ollicers. "or. if the reader is sufficiency interested , by the testimony of his own eyes. " His principal points are the folio w- iug : That the shell-proof armor of the American battle ships is virtually be low the water line where it will do no oed , leaving the broad side of the ves sel exposed to the shells of the enemy. Tnat this defect has been pointed out time and again ; that other nations years ago recognized it as fatal and now have armor wrapped around the sides of their war vessels from five to seven feet above the water line. That , despite repeated accidents on DISASTBOUS MINE ACCI DENTS IN RECENT YEABS. Lives lost. 1.S91 jLibion colliery , South Wales. 2SO 1902 Fratervillo. Tenn L-X ) IS/02 Rolling Mill mine , Pennsyl vania 105 190. , llanna , Wyoming 175 1JJQ-1 Laekawanna mine , Pennsyl vania 30 1904 Tercio. California " 1 U'OTi Virginia City , Ala 152 19H5 Ziler , 111 : .3 1 ! > ( ' . " Welsh coal mine 120 ll'Ol IMamondville. Wyoming IS 1KJKurtsisk. ! . Russia 3UO 1KJ5--M. . K.T. . Coal Company. . 13 1905 Princeton. I ml 13 1905 Coal mine in Prussia 55 KM 5 Wicox. ! W. Va o5 1911(5 ( Rluefields. W. Va. - . 21 190(5 ( .Johnstown , Pa. 25 150 ( > Century , W. Va 1 > 1130(5 ( Durham. England 1 25 190o Dutchman miue , Blosslmrg , N. M 15 1900 Courricrc mine , near Calais , France 1,0'JO 1901 * . Japan 250 Oakhill. W. Va'S West Fork. Va 75 ' K0i ; Quarto. Colo. . " : 22 19O7 Saarius , Prussia 22 1907 Primero , Cole 20 1907 Fayolt ville. W. Va bO 1907 Saarbruek , Prussia 200 1907 Las Ksperanxas. Mexico 123 11T)7 ) Forbach. Germany ' . . 75 1907 Monongahela , Pa 30 1907 Toyoka. Japan 470 1907 Tsing Tan , China 112 1907 Nejraunco , Mich 17 1907 Monongah. W. Va 398 1907 Yolando , Ala SI i.OOO.OOO ChristmaH Tree * a. Year. In discussing the effect on the forests ot the country by the use of Christmas tites , of which it is estimated that 4,000.- 000 are used each year , Gifford Pinchot , United States forester , says that the ef fect is infinitesimal compared with the de struction cauod by forest fires and waste ful lumboriuu' . If planted four feet apart fl'ese trees would be grown on less than 1.400 acres. He says that trees suitable for Christmas trees do not grow in the old forests , where reproduction is most important , but iu the open , and there is iu more reason for an outcry against usng : land to grow Christmas trees than to grow llowcrs. According to Mr. Pin chot , the center of the Christmas tree in dustry lies in the big cities of the East. New York City and the New England States consume 1,500,000 trees , or nearly one-half of all the output. Maine , New Hampshire , the Berkshire Hills , iu Mas- A BLOT OH THE LAST CHAPTER. fff. Vv'T-Lo T's slfK \ Ti-Vi-V ifycf * * * & ! jfc f * X + J > J Vi -1 w k y Vs ; k wA WH * r ' 'J - * N NS / -board our ships , the Navy Department year after year has approved of plans by which the greatest guns on the ships are directly above an open shaft leading to the powder magazine. That other nations long since recog nized the criminal stupidity of thus en dangering the lives of officers and men and have remedied the defect by use of common sense and ordinary precau tionary measures. That , without regard to the protests of experts , our battle ships have been built so low that if the sea is heavy .and ships are in action , the sea would wash over the vessels , render some of their most effective guns useless and practically leave the ship to the mercy of the enemy. The officers in the American navy who command the battle ships and J rsquadrons are too old ; that under ex isting conditions young men cannot at tain command , and that the service is -badly crippled as a result. That there is too much "bureau man agement" in Washington : too much red tape in the Navy Department ; that American genius is-stifled because of the bureau's immersion in details , and that with the Secretary of the Navy a civilian , he should have a ftoanl of expert advisers. Other matters are dwelt on , but the foregoing arc by far thejnost impor tant. An afternoon's fight on water sealed Russia's fate in the recent war with Japan , says Mr. Rcuterdahl , and t t\\c \ same may well be true of the next ' war into which this nation is plunged. The issue is so important and the stake so tremendous that the sea power which is prepared in every respe.-t to meet the crisis will be the victor. by According to the report of the New "York public service commission , the iium- 'icr of street railway accidents in that city for November shows a .steady decrease since llio commission bc an to keep a recon - on ] four ii'.onths ago. Ihnjing November -45 perrons were killed , as compared with 47 in October. ( > 3 in September and 42 in August. An oven greater decrease is noticcablf in the number injured. Mrs. Jcim R. MrMahon , known in literary - -erary work as Marghorita Arliua llanim , is dead of pneumonia in New York. . sachusetts , and the Adirondacks and Catskills - kills , in New York , are the sources of supply for New York , Boston and Phila delphia , and even Tor Baltimore and Washington. The swamps of Michigan , Wisconsin and Minnesota furnish the markets of Chicago , St. Paul , Minneapo lis and Detroit , while the local demand throughout the central West is mainly supplied by nursery-grown Norway spruce. Replying to this declaration , Mrs. John S. Crosby , president of the Women's Dem ocratic Club of New York , points out that there is little in the training of children that the man , as well as the woman , ought not to learn , and that if womankind were restricted to the rearing and teaching of children she would be deprived of many of the best opportunities for learning how to do that very work. President Wilson of Princeton , in a bold address before the convention of the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools at New York , got after , the pre vailing school and college methods with a sharp stick. lie declared that educators had missed the "true inner meaning of ed ucation , that we have forgotten to assem ble its elements , and that we have forgot ten to simplify our metho'ds. " Education , as distinguished from technical training , should be based on three principles : En lightenment , orientation and discipline. " By orientation he meant the power to or- ganixe one's knowledge and see things with perspective. What our age needed most was the dreamers and creators. Mere information did not educate , and it might impede the mind. The faculty of the Cornell university medical college at New York announced that hereafter the usual high school course generally accepted as suflicient pieparation for the study of medicine would not enable students to enter there. Candidates for admission would have to be graduates' approved colleges or scien tific schools , seniors in good standing at Cornell or any other like university which would permit the substitution of the first year of the medical course for the senior year. Also others not possessing a degree may be admitted by passing a special ex- animation. WORK OF Resolutions wore introduced in the Senate Wednesday by Senator Tillman asking the interstate commerce commission - sion to report whether any corporation engaged in interstate'commerce was the owner of the sto-i of any other corpoia- tipn transporting passengers and freight and calling upon the interstate commerce commission to define the authority of the federal government and of the States in respect to the control of the liquor trailic through the operation of the interstate commerce law. Senator Culberson spoke on his resolution calling on the commit tee on finance to investigate and report upon the cause of the present financial stringency. The resolution was referred to the committee on finance. The was not in session. The Senate was not in session Thurs day. Prime interest in the session of the House centered in the announcement by Speaker Cannon of the appointment of the various committees. Many b-lls of importance were introduced. An un successful effort was made to block the erection of the statue to Gen. Grant at the expense of a number of historic trees. Adjournment was taken until Saturday The Senate , at the instance of Mr. Tel ler passed a bill Saturday , suspending for the year 1907 the requirement that 8100 worth of labor shall be done on all m-n- ing claims in course of perfection. Sena tor Cullom introduced a joint resolution providing that the presidential term shall be six years , and that the President shall be ineligible for re-election. It was ic- ferred to the Committee on Judiciary. Senator Scott introduced a joint resolu tion providing for a commission to inves tigate recent mine disasters. Sena'or Warner introduced a bill creating the rank of vice admiral in the navy. Ad journment Avas taken to Jan. G. 3 he House was in session but twenty minutes , most of the time being occupied by a pio- test of Representative Gaines against ad journment over the holidays. Adjourn- tnent , however , was taken until Jan. 0. NATIONAL CAPITAL NOTES. The President sent to the Senate the nomination of Frederick II. Magdeburg to be pension agent at Milwaukee. Representative Ansberry of Ohio intro duced a bill providing for the survey of a ship canal to connect Toledo and Chicago. A bill making it a felony for a national bi nk or any of its officers to speculate \\ith the fnnds of the bank was intro duced by Representative Do Armond of Missouri. The commissioner of Indian affairs , in his annual report , urged that laws be passed giving the more progressive In dians greater freedom in the management of their affairs. Secretary Metcalf sent a letter of re proof to Justice Delacy of the Juvenile Court , who I'-'ceutly discharged a boy ac cused of theft on condition that he en list in the navy. The Ohlsou-Malioney Lumber Company of San Francisco was the lowest bidder on 0,000,000 feet of lumber for the Isth mian canal commission , offering to deliver it for $121,372. Representative Perkins of New York introduced his inheritance tax bill so amended that one-half of the tax collect ed should go to the Slate atid the other to the government. Word was received from Pcnsacola , Fla. , that Senator Mallory , who is seri ously ill tlicr ? , would not be a candidate for re-election , and planned to retire from public life on account of his health. Robert L. Owen and Thomas P. Gore , the two ne\v Senators from Oklahoma , were sworn in the other day. Senator Owen , by lot , secured the six-year term , and Senator Gore the two-year term. Oct. 12 will be a national holiday , known as "Discovery day , " in honor of the discovery America Oct. 12 , 1492 , if a bill introduced in the House of Repre sentative Gonlden of New York becomes a law. Representative Burgess of Texas intro duced a resolution calling for the appoint ment by the President of a banking and currency commission to hold public hear ings in New York , Chicago and other large cities. Representative McKinley of Illinois in troduced a bill appropriating ? oO,000 a year for each of the land grant colleges maintaining schools of engineering , in ad dition to the ? 55,000 annually now given to the agricultural experiment station- ; . A resolution charging the Secretary of Agriculture with inaccuracy in estimating this year's cotton crop , and calling on him to furnish to Congress "the figures and the information upon which he based his estimate. " was introduced in the Ho.ise. A bill creating in the Department of Commerce and Labor a bureau of trans portation to take off the shoulders of the Interstate commerce commission all s.ive' : he larger matters requiring the exercise of the judicial function was introduced bj Representative Ste\eus of Minnesota. Representative John Sharp Williams of Mississippi introduced the old Blaine bill to admit into all ports of the Fniled States free of duty all products of the American hemisphere upon which no export - ' port duties are imposed , whenever such nation shall admit to its ports free cer- : ain United States products. Pittsburg had a $100.000 fire. Graff ! c Co. , stove manufacturers : John Flock- er & Co. , rope dealers ; Seeley & Lcard , wholesale hat dealers , and II. W. Johns , dealer in railway supplies , were the prin cipal losers. The body of a man of striking appear ance about 40 years old was found in a street in San Francisco. Cards in his pockets bore the name and title "Lieuten ant Baron von Ilaberiicht , military at tache of the consolidated powers of l'u rope. " 6BAIN CROPS Government Final Estimate Shov/j Great Decline in Cereal Production. PRICES I.IAZE FARMESS HAPPY. They Will Get Kalf a Billion of Dollars More This Year than Last. The government report shows a shortage of 7S5.9S7.000 bushels in total crops as compared with the crops of 190U , which were the largest ever raised in this-country , and a shortage of 377- 287,000 bushels as compared with tne yields of 1903 , which were also very large. The chief shortage is in the corn crop , with 335,000,000 bushels , oats with 211.000,000 bushels and wueat with 101,000,000 bushels. There is something of an offset to the big loi-sos in the feeding grains iu the increase of 0,431,000 tons of hay as compared to that of 11)00 ) , and of 3,045,388 tons as compared to the crop of 1905. Prominent features of the final revis ion of its crop estimates for the year by the Department of Agriculture were the increases made in the reports of area seeded to spring wheat , corn raid oats. In each of these particulars as well cs iu the estimated weight of spring Avheat and oats the official re ports ran more or less counter to the general impressions of speculators. In a few instances , such as the weight of oats , the figures given wore at variance with all the experiences of the trade for the year to date. Figures of tlie Ileport. The report gave final estimates of acreage , production and value of farm crops , showing winter wheat acreage to be 28.132,000. production 409.442,000 bushels and value per bushel SS.2 cents. Spring wheat acreage was 17.07U.OOO , production 224,045,000 bushels and val ue SO cents. Corn acreage was 99.931,000. produc tion 2,592,320,000 bushels and value 51.7 cents. Oats acreage was 31,837.000. produc tion 754,443,000 bushels and value 44.3 cents. It was announced that the total val ue of the farm crops for 1907 was $3- 401,000,000 , an increase of 8428,000,000 for 190G. The farm value on Dec. 1 of the four crops already mentioned follows : Corn , 81,340,440,000 ; winter wheat , 8301,217- 000 ; spring wheat , 8193,220,000 ; oats , 8334,5GS,000. The comparative prices for the grain crops for the past three years follow : 1907. 190(5. 1905. 1904. Wheat . . . .81.7 GG.7 74.8 92.4 : Corn 51.7 39.9 41.2 44.1 Oats 44.3 31.7 29.1 31.3 Rye 73.1 5S.1) G0.7 GS.S Barley . . . .44.3 41.5 40.S 42.0 Buckwheat G9.S 59.0 5S.7 G2.2 Flax 95.G 101.3 95.0 99.3 Potatoes . . .G1.7 51.1 G1.7 45.3 Ilay . . . . $11.08 $10.37 SS.52 $8.72 FARMING IN A DESERT. There Are Colonizing Possibilities Even in Death Valley. The craze of "homestaking" which is seems to have reached its limit in the choice of Death Valley as a colonizing possibility. With the idea of trans forming the most arid and most deso late portion of the great American des ert into farm land , a number of tracts have been homcstaked , irrigation sys tems have been planned , and other preparations are now in progress for beginning the reclamation of Death Valley. A railroad is already built from Greenwater , at the southern end of the valley , to the borax works owned by the celebrated "Borax" Smith of 20- mule team fame , and there is an auto mobile stage line through the valley. Even enthusiasts do not claim that piping water from Telescope Peak across the Funeral range into the A-al- ley is also under consideration. State Holds AYater.s-t'ieree Company. The Texas Supreme Court has decided that it has final jurisdiction in the dis puted receivership for the debarred Wat- eis-Pierce Oil Company and At ton ey General Davidson has moved the appoint ment of a State receiver to take charge of the property , pending a final disposi tion of the penalty and ouster proceed ings. Col. A. S. Colynr , aged 90 years , noted jurist , statesman and author , died at his homo in Nashville , Tenn. lie was a member of the Confederate congress. DAVIS' DEBUT. Arkansas Senator Delivers Maiden Speech. Breaking all traditions and prece dents. United States Senator Jefferson Davis , of Arkarsa.s , addressed his col- * | 1 < ffi < H leagues on "trust control of busi- nefcS. " after nine days' service. Up to a few years ago it was an unwrit ten law that 110 Senator should ad dress his fellows in a set speech un less he had served at least one term. .sh.NAio : 4.A\h. . . , . Then Senator Bev- eridge reduced the time limit of sena torial apprenticeship by speaking aftei- three months' occupation of a Senate seat. Davis' purpose to cstabdlish a new record had been widely advertised and there was a lar e crowd to hear him. In 1S9S Davis was Attorney General of Arkansas and , while in this position , secured the Democratic nomination for Governor. Although bitterly opposed by practically every newspaper in the State he was elected by one of the largest majorities ever given in Ar kansas. Throe times he was elected Governor. lie is of a restless , nervous temperament , devoted to his family , an eiitbusiastic lover of books and a keen student of men. He is of tine appear ance , being over six feet tall. Ilia daughter is his constant companion and stenographer. Senator Davis is a nephew of the illustrious Southerner whose name he bears. TWO NEW BATTLESHIPS. \ Government Ne\v Building1 Largest in the World. Coincident with the departure of the Atlantic ileet for the Pacific , there was laid down in the Fore River shipyard , at Quincy , Mass. . the keel plates of the battleship North Dakota , which is ex pected to be far more powerful thnn the most effective ship now under the command of Rear Admiral Evans. The Intrust vessel in the Pacific bound fleet is of 1(5.000 ( tonnage , but the North Da kota will be of 20,000 tons displace ment ; nearly 2.0GO tons heavier than CROPS OP TOUTED STATES EQE , THREE YEARS. 1907. bu. 19015. bu. 1905 , bu. Winter wheat 409.442.000 492.8'-'S,001 428,402.834 = Spring wheat 224,045.000 242.372,900 201,510,055 Total 5.137,903.000 5,923,890,235 5,515,189,880 Hay , tons . . . . . 03,577.000 57,145,959 00,531,012 the famous Dreadnought , of the Brit ish navy , and 25 per cent more eiTec- tive in gun-fire than the latter. The North Dakota will be 510 feet long. It is already figured out that the launching will take place next October , or in ton months from the time of the laying of the keel. Although the keel was laid only recently the North Da kota is regarded as nearly S per cent finished. Long before the keel blocks wore placed in position the ship was completely laid down in the mold-loft mid over 50 per cent of all the plans in the construction of the ship were de veloped and approved. The North Dakota is a sister ship of the Delaware , now being built at New port News. I Money is suffering from bad circulation. Pennsylvania miser who spent only 3 cents last year is dead. He just couldn't bear the increase in living expenses. An Aurora (111. ( ) physician has discov ered that peanuts are a beauty diet. This ought to be a circus for some people. An Eastern banker says , "We want more common sense. " We want also more dollars , which are not so common now. If prices of bread and meat keep on coming down , pretty soon the average man can afford , to eat three meals a day. Chief Sprybuck , the Indian who drank a quart of blue paint , is carrying the "decorative interior" fad to an extreme. With 1.300,000 divorce suits in ten yars , the United States is plainly in need of a national "Stay-Married Association. " Secretary Cortelyou is trying to im plies us with the fact that stockings were made to be worn and not to hoard money iu. James J. Hill says the railroads need billions of dollars. From present pros pects , it will be some time before they ge ! 'em. After a while it may dawn on the army recruiters that the average soldier doesn't look upon SI3 a month as any great graft. An Italian count one American heiress married turned out to be an ex-convict. Some of tlse other counts haven't yet been convicted. These people who will fail to notice the absence of "In God We Trust" from the lu-w ten-dollar gold pieces will be largely iu the majority. Astronomers are worrying over the fact that the rings of Saturn are disappearing. Maybe the hard timej have compelled her to yawn 'em. ENNSYLYAN Terrible Explosion Imprisons AH the Men Working in Coal Shaft Near Connellsville. FIRE ADDS TO AWFUL HOEROE. Darr Workings , Owned by Pittshurg Coal Company , the Scene of Lat est Slaughter of Miners. Two him(1 red miners were entombed in the Darr mines of the Pittsburg Coal Company at Jacobs Creek , on tha Youghiogheny River , eighteen miles west of Connellsille. . Pa. Of the vic tims fully 100 are Americans , the oth ers being principally Hungarians. A terrific explosion shook the vicin ity of the mine Thursday morning and announced to all the surrounding coun try that a great disaster had occurred under the surface. Smoke soon began to issue in heavy columns from tha mine , which is of the slope variety. The mouth of the mine was wrecked , and this , together with the lire which was discovered raging inside , prevent ed any attempt to rescue the imprison ed men. There was nothing to indi cate whether it was gas or coal dust that exploded. Within a few minutes after the ex plosion the mouth of the pit was sur rounded by the relatives and friends of the entombed men. Smoke and flames issuing from the slope made it .impos sible to enter and the wives and chil dren were frantic. The scene of the explosion is on the Pittsburg & Lake Erie Railroad side of the Youghiogheny River. Jacobs Creek , on the main line of the Balti more & Ohio Railroad , is across the river. It is forty miles east of Pitts burg and eighteen miles west of Con- nellsville. The officials of the Pittsburg Coal Company stated that the mine was one of the largest and was equipped with the most modern appliances for mining. The Pittsburg Coal Company mines are on both sides of the Youghiogheny River. The fuel mined in this lield is used for coking purposes. The terri tory is a part of tfie original Coimclls- ville coke field and the mines are said to contain considerable gas. THIRD HORROR IN A FORTNIGHT li/XV. Va. , and Volancle Dis aster Cost liives of Hundreds. The Counellsville mine horror is the third to shock the nation within the last fortnight. An explosion in mines Xos. G and S of the Consolidation Coal Company at Monongah , W. Va. , wreck ed the interior of the mine and caused a loss of life at first estimated at 500 , but since found to have been less than 400. Not all the bodies of men trapped in subterranean passages have been re moved even yet. At last accounts 336 had been found. This disaster brought desolation to the whole city of Monongah and the surrounding region and destitution and even disease have resulted. The State authorities and others have taken measures to investigate the causes rig idly and to seek greater safety for the workers. The other serious accident occurred in the Yolande coal mine , near Bir mingham , Ala. The latest reports from the scene of this horror , published yes terday , show fifty-nine bodies found and twenty-two men listed as still missing. W. R. Boggs , an American , -was slain by Mexican laborers who demanded their wages. Twobombs were found beneath the box of King Carlos o Portugal in the Royal Theater of Lisbon. Brigands tortured Marquis Cite of Na ples and forced his wife to write a check for $20,000 for his ransom. In the effort to gain the mastery of the Pacific. Japan forced every foreign shipping line out of the China trade. Thousands of native troops who attack ed the French forces on the Algerian frontier were driven back into Morocco. A steamer went on the rocks of the Nova Scotia shore in a blinding storin , but the GOO persons aboard were taken off. off.Oscar Oscar Erbsloeh was forced by German authorities to pay duty of $30 on the James Gordon Bennett Cup he won in the balloon race. " The death sentence of Prof. Karl Hati , convicted of murder in Germany , was commuted to life imprisonment. Empress Alexandra of Russia became so ill that special consultation of court physicians was deemed necessary. Nicholas Tschaikovsky , known as the founder of the first revolutionary circle at St. Petersburg , and Mine. Breshkov- skaya , one of the first aristocratic con verts to the terrorist program , both of whom have many friends in America , have bien ? arrested and thrown into the Fortress of SS. Peter and Paul at Russian capital.