- r , . , , , " : " " " ' r + . " : : . " The Valentine Democrat I VALENTINE , NEB. I / ' , I. AL RICE , - - - - Publisher I L _ l FAMOUS OEEICEKDIES I I I' REAR ADMIRAL . M'CALLA A VIC- * . . TIM OF APOPLEXY. . His Most Brillian Achievements Were in the War with Spain and the Pe- I . , : \ kin Relief Column-Had a Fine . . : Record en the Civil War. , i Santa Barbara , Ca ! . : Rear Admiral I B. H. McCallaf ' U. S. N. , retired , died at 4 o'clock' Friday morning of an.c- t plexy. High naval officers in Washington , when they learned of the sudden death i of Rear Admiral Bowman Hendry Mc- s Calla , were unanimous in their expres- sion of sorrow and praise of the dead officer. Rear Admiral McCalla was born at Camden , N. J. , in 1844 , entering the navy in 1861. His services during the almost thirty-nine years of active duty in all parts of the world were noted with conspicuous acts. The most brill- ! iant achievements of the dead officer were in connection with the war with Spain and the Pekin relief column , for which he received signal recogni- tion in the shape of a congressional medal for distinguished service in bat- tle , and also international ac nowl- edgment of his labors through the be- stowal on him of the Order of the Red Eagle by the German emperor and the Chinese war medal by : the king of England. All of this was on top of his excellent record in the civil war. Mc Calla was made a member of the Loy- al Legion and decorated in other re spects and advanced in rank in the navy. His last active service in the navy was as commandant of the naval training station at Mare Island , Cal. , and of the navy yard there , and he re tired June 19 , 1906. For some time he has been living. southern Cali- fornia with his family. DECLINES TO DISCUSS IT. Mrs. Harriman Refuses to Confirm Engagement of Daughter. New York : Mrs. Mary Averell Har - riman , widow of the late E. H. Harri- man , declined Wednesday night to dis cuss a report that her daughter Mary will marry Charles Carey Rumsey , of Buffalo. When Mrs. Harriman was informed that news of such an engage- ment was current he sent back word , "I will neither confirm nor deny the report. " She would add nothing to this lacon ic statement. Rumsey is a sculptor. It was his model that was chosen by a commit- tee to build a memorial to Harriman in the county seat of Orange county , in which Arden is situated , in recognition of Mr. riarriman's rvices as a breed- er of blooded horses and a builder of good roads. Mrs. Harriman and her daughter spent the winter at their town house in Fifth avenue. Mr. Rumsey was in New York much of the time this win ter. , fit L - CASE OF A. K. DETWILER. Indicted on Charges of Bribery in To. ledo , March 20 , 1907. Toledo , 0. : A. K. Detwiler , former vice president of the Home Telephone company , of Ohio , and who surrender- : ed in San Francisco Tuesday , where he is under indictment on charges of I bribing supervisors of the Reuf- Schmitz regime , was indicted here on March 20 , 1907. He left this city two days later and went to Adrian , Mich. , and thence immediately to St. Louis , where he stayed a couple of days. From the Mound city he went to Ar- kansas , where he lived for several months. Detwiler later went to the mountains : near the western coast where he has kept in hiding until he was notified Tuesday that arrangements had been made relative to securing a bond. A wire was received from him there Wednesday morning saying that he ] would visit Toledo in a week or ten , 1 days. i . E. S. Cooke is Indicted Again. Cincinnati , 0. : Edgar S. Cooke , ot i Chicago , formerly employed by the I Big Four Railway here . t company , was indicted by the Hamilton county grand jury again Tuesday in connection with the Warriner case. The return charges the embezzlement of $24,000. A pre- I vious indictment against Cooke charg- ed him with having received stolen property , part of the shortage to I which Charles L. Warriner , former lo- 1 cal treasurer of the road , confessed. I I Sioux City Live Stock Market. " Sioux City , Io. : Friday's quotations 1\ \ 'On the local live stock market follow : 1 : Top beeves , $7.40. Top hogs , $9.40. I ; More Snow Sheds for West. Seattle , Wash. : According to the p plans submitted by Chairman J. J. Hill , n of the board of directors of the Great Sl Northern railway , at a conference be- F be tween officials of the company and the state railway commission , practically the whole" "the Cascade . - tunnel re- gion will be provided with snow sheds a as a precaution against a recurrence CI -of Wellington disaster. 0' 1 . . . . " , , ' t 'I. . . . . , . RUNNING DOWN WHITE SLAVERS , I Sensational Revelations in New - York . . . . . . City. New York Additional arrests were expected Thursday in the "white slave" crusade as the result of state- ments made to District Attorney Whit man Thursday : night by Harry Leven son , the self confessed "white slaver. " Levenson's sensational account of "stockades" where girls are kept ready for delivery is believed to have been accompanied by revelations of other secrets of the traffic and of names on which the prosecuting officials may work to round up additional traffickers in women for immoral purposes. Levenson , who has pleaded guilty to one charge , was arrested with Belle Moore , a mulatto , and Alexander An- derson , charged with being dealers in young ; white girls. District Attorney Whitman's inves- tigators include two college bred wom- en who were active in getting evi dence against the slavers and who ar ranged for the purchases which the Whitman agents have testified to hav- ing made. They are reauy , it is said , to testify at the trial. Levenson told the district attorney that there are at least three "stock- ades" in New York , in each of which from five to ten young girls are kept ready , night and day for instant de- livery wherever they may be wanted. Little effort , said Levenson , is made to recruit women of the street. The "stockades" are filled from the host of young girls who are unhappy at home , or who live narrow lives on their own earnings and long for leisure , good tlothes : , gayety and , freedom from re I straint. Well dressed women make it a business to singe out such cases , first winning attention with an invitation to ainner , then describing the ease and . pleasure of the alternative they pro- pose. The girl delivered to the "stock- ades" , it then becomes the business of the proprietor to place his mer- chandise. In this end of the traffic , Levenson said , he was a specialist. His business was to find a house where the girl was wanted. The house paid the "stockade" keeper a lump sum and allowed Levenson 10 per cent on the girl's earnings. BIG DRY GOODS HOUSE FAILS. St. Joseph , Mo. , Merchant Says Com pany Can Clear Up Obligations. St. Joseph , Mo. : Judge L. J. Eas- ton , of the circuit court has appointed receivers for the Hundley Dry Goods company. Harry M. Hundley , presi- dent of the company , says the com- pany will pay every dollar of its obli- gations if let alone. William A. Graham and James M. Brady , petitioning creditors , do not agree with Mr. Hundley : in his optimis- tic views. They are not satisfied and the charge is made that funds of the . company have been diverted. They de- clare business is good , but fear for their money. The Hundley Dry Good company has a capital stock , paid up , of $500,000 , divided into 5,000 shares of $100 each. Of that stock $200,000 is preferred , and the preferred stock is owned equally by W. S. Jackson and Jacob M. Ford of St. Joseph , William A. Graham owns J 20 shares of common stock , James M. Brady owns 100 shares of common stock , and the remainder of the common stock is owned principal- : ly by the Hundley family. c The house was established in 1880 c as the McKinney , Hundley & Walker j Dry Goods company and was incorpo- j rated in 1890 under the same name. There were various changes in the name. It was the Hundley-Smith Dry Goods company until about three rears : ; ago , when E. C. Smith retired , and it then became the Hundley Dry Goods company. , ] 1 JAPAN AND THE U. S. 1 1c Temps Paper Comments on Taft't II I I Speech in Pittsburg. ; Paris : The Temps , commenting on 1 President Taft's recent speech at t Pittsburg , expresses the opinion that any : attempt to resuscitate Secretary a : Knox's plan for the neutralization of : : the Manchurian railways is doomed to failure. In his remarks about the open door in China the paper thinks Mr. Taft has J J placed [ his finger on the true cause of the conflict between Washington and Tokio , that of commercial supremacy t in the Pacific. However , the Temps ( does not consider the issue threaten t ng , as both the United States and Ja c pan are resolved to avoid complica a tions. ' , } ENGINEER LOSES LIFE. c . } Fireman Fatally Injured in a Missouri D Train Wreck. Hilliard , Mo. : Engineer David Bar- nett , of St. Louis , was killed ; Engineer William Hearst , of St. Louis , was fatal 1 ly injured , and 22 passengers sustained minor hurts in a head-on collision Wednesday afternoon between Iron a Mountain , trains Nos. S and 23 near t here. The injured . were taken to Pop. I lar Bluff on a relief train. i Bucket Shops to Be Wiped Out. Washington , D. C. : Complete sup. pression of the "bucket shop" busiI ness throughout the United States is sought by the department of justice. t ; Prosecutions ' already started are to v e continued. to Report on N. Y. Auto Owners. Albany , N. Y. : There are 100,000 automobiles in New York state , act ording to a report on licenses given 1.J out Tuesday. P I b 1PUUI. . . " ' , , - ' " ; , " - . . ' : ' . - - , - - - - : : Nebraska : ; . News of he ( ! n Concise Week State Newsform . -NOT LIIELY TO BE GRANTED. Judge Looks With Disfavor on Club Injunctions. At the conclusion of the trial of the Lincoln club injunction cases in dis Frost indi- trict court Thursday Judge - .cated that the application for a perma- nent injunction forbidding city and its officials from raiding the club rooms ' and seizing the 1'quors found therein without proper warrant , would be denied and the temporary injunc- tion dissolved. Last June all of the clubs obtained restraining orders to prevent the officials interfering with them ] and later these orders were mod- ified so as to forbid the officers invad I ing the clubs and seizing their liquors without a warrant regularly issued. The clubs sought to have these orders made permanent. All parties admitted that the ques- tion was not an important one , as would have no legal right to do things from : which it was sought to enjoin them ; that is ! , they could not legally enter the club houses and seize the property of the organizations without first securing a , warrant from the proper court. LINCOLN'S PLANT IS LOSER. Report of City Auditor of Lincoln on Water System Shows Yearly Loss. The Electrical Workers association , which opened at Lincoln Thursday , took exceptions to the statement of Mayor Love , who , in his welcome ad- dress , said that the city owned the wa ter plant at Lincoln and had netted the city some $30,000 in addition to furnishing water to consumers at 15 cents per 1,000 gallons and the city for nothing. Mr. "Scoutt , of the Kearney Water and Electric Power company , was ap pointed a committee to investigate the report of the city auditor of Lin- coln and give his anaylsis to the con- vention. Mr. : Scoutt's report showed that instead of showing a net revenue , the plant was actually run at a loss of $3,000. . The analysis of Mr. Scoutt is based on the contention that the city audi- tor's report overlooks charges and losses , such as arise from taxes , break- age and the like. CROPS GET A GOOD SOAKING. _ . , Entire Grain Belt of Nebraska , Kansas and Eastern Colorado Wet. Rain worth millions. The entire wheat belt of Nebraska , Kansas and eastern Colorado was visited with a general rain Thursday morning. Continuing at intervals dur- ing the day and becoming a steady fall . all Thursday and Friday night. The Union Pacific reports that it was raining Thursday over the entire sys- tem , with temperatures varying from 45 to 55 degrees. All of the stations along the Burlington route , where cloudy weather was reported. Ac- cording to Northwestern officials there is rain all along the Nebraska lines from [ Merriman : southeast. BLAIR BOY LOSES FOOT. Jesse Bigelow Falls Under Union Pa- i cific Train at Sidney. Jesse Bigelow , aged 18 , son of T. S. Bigelow , of Blair , while trying to board a moving freight train In the Union : Pacific yards at Sidney , slipped and fell from the cars and mangled his left foot so badly that it necessitated amputation above the angle. Dr. Si- mons , the county physician , assisted by Dr. Graham y , performed the opera- tion. : tion.The The young man was trying to steal I. ride with another fellow when the accident took place. : \ l'INTYREIURDER TRIAL. Judge Overrules Motion of Defense for a Continuance. Judge Hanna Thursday overruled the motion of the defense in the case of Harry G. McIntyre , charged with the murder of O. F. Hamilton , for a continuance : , and the trial will be held at the present term of court at Mullen. The law firm of Sullivan & Squires has been appointed by the court to conduct : the defense , and W. D. Old- ham , of Kearney , has been engaged to assist in the prosecution. Boy Badly Injured. Linn Linford , son of J. S. Linford , living near St. Mary , suffered an acci- dent Monday , the result of which is not yet determined. He was riding on L lister when the tongue broke and threw him off in front. The marline passed over him and it is thought injured him quite badly internally. . Jury Attaches No Blame. The coroner's jury empanelled at Bartlett to investigate the sudden death of Pearl Newman , a colored girl : , decided that death resulted from poisoning but failed to attach blame o any particular person. , „ b Plaftsinouth Votes Paving Bonds. At a special election at Plattsmouth the issuance of paving bonds carried by a large majority. The bonds are to ' f be issued for the sum of $3,500. \ ) ! AX WANTED FOR MURDER. Sheriff Kennedy and Detective from I Chicago Arrest Italian. Sheriff Kennedy , of Broken Bow , in company with Julian Bernacchi , a well known police detective of Chicago , made an important catch near Merna : Tuesday in the person of Antoine Montato , charged with the murder of a Chicago saloonkeeper on the even- ing i of April 23 last. Montato , who has been working with the Burlington road crew under the assumed name of Salvator Agan- zino , was found by the officers hid- ing behind a farm barn. He made lit- tle resistance when arrested. Montato with two others is charg- ed with entering Contanzeros' saloon April 26 , enticing the proprietor to a back room and shooting him three times through the head before rob- bing him. , Two of the alleged murderers were arrested and one confessed. Montato got away. Detective Bernacchi with great difficulty trailed his man to Broken Bow and with the assistance of Sheriff Kennedy finally located him with the - railroad gang several miles northwest of there. Mr. : , Bernacchi is one of the four Italian detectives of Chicago _ who han- dle the Black Hand cases and is one of the personal staff of Assistant Chief Schuettler. CUSTER PHYSICIAN DEAD. | Dr. A. E. Robertson , of Mason City , ] ) Ics from Attack : of Pneumonia. . Dr. A. E. Robertson , for fifteen years a well known citizen and lead- ing physician of Custer county , died at his home at Mason City Tuesday morning of pneumonia , aged 38 years. < < He was a native of Clissfield , Mich. , J and a graduate of the Michigan uni versity of Ann Arbor and of the Rush Medical college of Chicago. He located at Asrfton , Sherman county , in May : , 1893 , and two years later removed to Mason City. He leaves a wife and lit- tle daughter. Dr. Robertson was a prominent and leading citizen of that community and his untimely death is greatly deplored. The fatal illness which caused his death was contract- ed while attending to professional du ties during the severe cold weather of ten days ago. HEAR MR. BRYAN SPEAK. Governor and R. TJ. Metcalfe Also on Toastmasters' List. W. J. Bryan , Gov. A. C. Shallenber- ger and Richard L. Metcalfe were three of the speakers at the first an nual dinner of the democracy of John- son county , held at Tecumseh Tuesday night at Smith's theater. Mr. Bryan talked briefly on the in- . . itiative and referendum , Gov. Shallen- . berger discoursed on "Nebraska , " and , : \11' . Metcalfe on "Democracy's Oppor- tunity. " Judge W. H. Kelliger , of $ Auburn , , discussed "The Judiciary in to Politics. " Edgar Howard , of Colum- to bus , was on the program , but did not c appear. 4 The dinner was attended by 200 men.tJ Rev. Thomas Barden , of St. Andrews' , to gave the invocation. The toastmaster to was Dr. A. P. Fitzsimmons , county tl chairman. . ' to Gun Found in Bed. $ $ The chambermaid at the Hotel $ Ainsworth at Ainsworth , in making 0 the bed in room 14 , occupied by Wal- ter Refenberg , alias George Wilson , found the gun with which , it is al- h leged , he shot Jake Davis last al$7 - ' ber. The weapon had been stuck in CI 40c ( the mattress. It showed blood , . There was \ also found a bloodstained pocket- book , some bloody papers and some h empty shells. $ ' ceN Proposed Hospital for York. 8J At a meeting of the York Commer- cial club , called for the purpose of ' $ promoting and building a hospital , w R ev. Dana Colgrove of the Episcopal 3 church of York , submitted blue prints 4 : and plans of a hospital that will be under the supervision of a board of . $ , directors , residents of York , and main- tained by the diocese of Nebraska. 78c m Next Session at Kearney. The 1911 meeting of the Nebraska st Commercial clubs is to be held at cl Kearney. A sharp contest between to Kearney [ : and Lincoln featured the fair closing : day of the convention at Co lumbus. : Two combats were involved to in the general campaign which re- " 60c ( sulted in the ultimate choice of Kear - I1 ney by a practically unanimous vote. $ G ( More LiccMiscs Issued. I , he At a special meeting of the city $ 'j council of Beatrice Tuesday evening co saloon licenses were granted to A. M. w Lavalle : , Bryan Bladt , Winfield Dolen 27c and F. II. Hobbs. This will make five saloons ; for Beatrice. , 'th Stratton ) [ an Found Dead. de who ] Clark ) : Townsend , of Stratton , was gr found dead in bed Thursday morning , The death resulting from heart disease. po , . Kt : ' JAL A1 D V - - - - - - - CHICAGO. R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Chicago ] trade says : "Seasonable weather stimulates ac tivity , but distributive branches re- cover slowly from the recent setback , and the curtailment in business gen- erally is reflected by reduced pay : erm ments through the banks and increased trading defaults. Allowing for exag- - gerated estimates it is clear that the late bad weather has been hurtful to various interests , but most indications encourage large hopes of good pros- pects in agriculture , although grain growers are confronted with declining prices. . I "The industrial position as a whole exhibits sustained strength in both production and new demands despite efforts of pig iron operators to lessen outputs. Transportation returns tes tify to enormous movements of heavy freight , and the aggregate remains good in general merchandise and raw material for factory use. "Packing operations are still limited by . a poor supply of raw material , and advance estimates of provision stocks in store indicate little change over a month ago. "In general merchandise dealings a , fair business is apparent in dry goods clothing , mllinery , silks , footwear and food products , notwithstanding a smaller attendance of outside buyers "Bank clearings , $267,301,374 , exceed those of the corresponding week in 1909 by 6.8 per cent and compare with $235,642,956 in 1908. Failures report- ed .in the Chicago district number twenty-eight , against fifteen last week , twenty-three in 1909 and thirty-nine in 1908. Those with liabilities over $5,000 number eight , as against four last week , seven in 1909 and nine in 1908. " NEW YORK. Cold weather , with snow West and South , has checked retail trade and dulled reorder business in spring goods , while the reports of crop dam- age resulting from the return of win- ter : have tended to discourage full busi ness ! , pending clearer views of the ul timate crop outcome. Taken as a whole , the reports from jobbing and wholeseale trade lines and industries point to a slowing down rather than a quickening of demand , and , the down- ward tendency of many commodities does not seem to have brought out much new business. Business failures in the United States : ; for the week ending with April 28 were 189 , as against 193 last week 268 ! in the like week of 1909 , 282 in . 1908 , 163 in 1907 and 139 in 1906 Business failures for the week in Can ada numbered twenty-one , which com pare with fifteen last week and twen- I ty -one in the corresponding week of 1909. - Bradstreet's. 0 D - www Chicago-Cattle ; common to prkne , $4.00 to $8.30 ; hogs , prime heavy , $7.00 o $9.40 ; sheep , fair to choice , $4.50 o $7.75 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.11 to $1.13 ; corn , No. 2 , 59c to 61c ; oats , standard. 40c to 42c ; rye , No. 2 , 77c to J8c ; hay , timothy [ , $10.00 to $18.00 ; prairie , $8.00 I ) $14.00 ; butter , choice creamery , 25c o 28c ; eggs , fresh , 17c to 20c ; pota- toes , per bushel , 24c to 33c. Indianapolis - Cattle , shipping , $3.00 ) $8.00 ; hogs , good to choice heavy , $7.00 to $9.55 ; sheep , good to choice , $3.00 to $6.50 ; wheat , No.2 , $1.04 to $1.06 ; corn , No. 2 white , 62c to 64c ; oats , No. 2 white , 42c to 43c. St. Louis , . - Cattle : $4.00 to $8.25 ; hogs , $7.00 to $9.25 ; ; sheep , $4.50 to $7.90 ; wheat , No.2 , $1.13 , to $1.15 ; corn [ , No.2 , 62c to 63c ; oats , No. 2 , } c to 42c ; rye , No. 2 , 77c to 79c. e Cincinnati - Cattle , $4.00 to $7.60 ; 1 hogs , $7.00 to $9.55 ; sheep , $3.00 to h $7.00 ; wheat , No.2 , $1.10. to $1.12 ; s corn . , No. 2 mixed , 60c to 61c ; oats a No. 2 mixed , 44c to 45c ; . rye , No. 2 , e 82c to 84c. v Detroit - Cattle , $4.00 to _ $7.00 ; hogs , $7.00 to $10.85 ; ; sheep , $3.50 to $8.00 ; in wheat , No. 2 , $1.06 to $1.07 ; corn , No. yellow , 61c to 62c ; oats , standard , 43c to 44c ; rye ; , No. 1 , 79c to Sic. Milwaukee-Wheat , No. 2 northern , t : $1.06 to $1.09 ; corn , No. 3 , 59c to 61c ; a oats , standard , 40c to 42c ; rye , No. 1 , 0 tc to 80c ; barley , standard , 64c to of . . , . . 65c pork mess $21.75. ) c ; , , y-- .1 t ) 0 Buffalo - Cattle , choice shipping ce ' steers : , $4.00 to $8.15 ; hogs , fair to h choice , $7.00 to $9.80 ; sheep , common n good mixed , $4.00 to $8.50 ; lambs , Ii .ir to choice , $6.00 to $9.35. . to Toledo-Wheat , No. 2 mixed , $1.07 th ] $1.08 ; corn , No. 2 mixed , 59c to er } c ; oats , No. 2 mixed , 42c to 43c ; rye , No.2 , 78c to 79c ; clover' seed , $6.30. ; 1'1 New York - Cattle , $4.00 to $9.00 ; hogs , $7.00 to $10.00 ; sheep , $4.00 to c ( ! J $7.50 ; wheat , No. 2 red , $1.11 to $1.12 ; h corn , No. 2 , 61c to 62c ; oats , natural , ' $2 white , 45c to 4Sc ; butter , creamery , J : c to 30c ; eggs , western , 19c to 22c. I SE A New York cable dispatch tells of e recent death in Paris of Baroness i Roques , mother of Mrs. Maybrick : , t 1 ho was confined many years in a British prison under a life sentence. to 1e baroness is said to have died IP t ! poverty. ed : . I - I . , r p.- t BHIBERY CHARGE IN ILLINOIS. / Legislator Says Senatorial Deadlock /1 Was Broken by Vote-Buying. , An amazing story alleging bribery and corruption in the election of Will ' . iam l Lorimer as United States Senator ' : - from Illinois was unfolded to State's. ! - the- Attorney Wayman ; in Chicago other day by Representative Charles A. White of St. Glair County , who made a confession to the public prose- cutor that he received $1,000 for hia vote. Charges that the breaking of the celebrated deadlock was accomplished by the' ' wholesale buying of votes at prices ranging from $1,000 to $2.000 were accompanied by further allega tions from White that he had pat tlci- pated to the extent of $900 in the splitting up of the "jack pot , " a term he used to designate a "slush fund" alleged to have been collected for the defeat or passage of legislation. The , disclosures , which shook State politics to its foundation , were followed b } ' im mediate steps on the part of the . au thorities to start investigations. . ' . . . . . . ' - Senator Lorimer makes emphatic denial of the White charges , and says ' . no votes were purchased. Minority Leader Lee O'Neil Browne asserts that White's story : originated as a blackmailing scheme. Representative , Robert E. " Wilson , who is said to be 1 the person who paid to White the money for his votej says White's ' charges are false and denies knowl- " " " ' " edge of a "jack pot" or "slush fund. MUCH STRYCHNINE IN SWOPES. Dr. Vaughan , State's Most Important _ Witness , on Stand. Dr. Victor C. Vaughan , the toxicolo- gist of Ann Arbor , Mich. , and regard- ed by the State as its most important witness in the Hyde murder trial in Kansas City , began his testimony'the other day. Searches for , poison made . by him alone and also with the aid of Dr. Walter S. Haines of Chicago , who has already testifie i. had resulted in the discovery of the following : Twen ty-six thirty-thirds of a grain of strych- nine in the entire liver of Colonel Thomas M. Swope. Signs of cyanide in the stomach. A trace of strychnine in a kidney. A suggestion , but no positive proof , of cyanide in the stom ach of Chrisman Swope. Strychnine in the contents of the stomach of Mar , garet Swope. Cyanide in capsules said to have been thrown into a street by Dr. B. C. Hyde the night he was ex- . pelled from the Swope residence , last Dec. 18. In reply to hypothetical ques- tions regarding the convulsions suf- fered by these three , Dr. Vaughan said , , in his opinion , they had been caused . by the administration of some con- vulsive poison , such as cyanide or . strychnine. , ROOSEVELT DAM FINISHED. Project in Arizona Cost National Government $8,640,000. The Roosevelt dam , the great en- gineering work in connection with the- Salt river irrigation project in Ari . zona is finished and the United States. , . / .J has closed down its cement plant at- /l/ Roosevelt. The government entered . 1 Into the manufacture of cement for1 t the Roosevelt dam nearly five years- ago , because of its inability to obtai cement at reasonable prices , owing to the : inaccessibility of the dam site and its remoteness from transportation. The engineers of the reclamation serv- ice state that the mill has saved the- government more than $650,000. The reservoir created by the dam Is the ; largest artificial body of water in the : world. Its capacity is 61,000,000,000- cubic feet , and if its water were spread' over Delaware it would cover , the en- I tire : surface of the state a foot In- depth. The project when completed will cost $8,640,000. It will irrigate' 240,000 ! acres of land and it is esti mated that the crops of a single season- will return enough to repay the entire Investment of the government. BOY FIGHTS OFF POSSE. Youth Who Tried to Slay Girl Gives- Up When Soldiers Fire Volley. Clarence Woods , 19-year-old clerk employed by the Title Guaranty and. Trust Company Manhattan , killed. - - ' himself in a boathouse on the Hacken- I sack River , near Rutherford , N. J , - after the State militia had been call- ed out to take him dead or alive and- with a posse of armed citizens wait- ing for the first chance to shoot him. down. Woods had barricaded himself' D the boathouse after attacking 17- year-old Anna Kip with a club be- cause of her refusal to marry him- Believing her dead , he took refuge i > 3. the boathouse. Armed with a rifle and two revolvers he shot and seri , ously wounded Deputy Sheriff Smit . f Rutherford and repeatedly fought off all attempts by seventy armed of3- cers and citizens to rush the boat- house. Woods apparently lost his- nerve when Company of the Third- : Regiment of Hackensack was rushed- : [ ) the scene and fired a volley into the boathouse and killed himself rath r than surrender. Court Takes Cordage Trust. An involuntary petition in bank , ruptcy was filed in the United States- court in Xew York against the Stand ard I Cordage Company by three bond- holders , who assert liabilities total - $2,400,000 and assets only $1,000,000. Judge Hough appointed Lindsay Rus- , " . sell receiver. .i Union "Workmen. Start Store. . The high cost of living has moved the union workmen of Brockton , : \Iass. . _ ) establish a co-operative store , whefe-- the : necessaries of life may be purchas- :1 : at the lowest possible cash priceSr- . r