The Omaha Daily Bee The omaiia dee WEATHER FORECAST. i- or to tba hovatm It ml by th For NehrasKa Fair. For Iowa Fair For weather report see page Ivomen Mils goods for advertisers. i VOL. XXXIX NO. 14. OMAIIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 2, 190!) TWELVE FAOES. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. SUGAR TRUST IS TUT UNDER FIRE Corporation, Six Director! and Two Outsider! Indicted by Federal Plot Czar's Death; Anarchists Found in Royal Palace Swede Who Killed General and Com mitted Suicide Was One of Conspirators. BODY MAY BE TIIAT0F LEON Corpse Pound Floating in Hudson F.ver is Possibly Elsie Sigel'i Slayer. ITS RESEMBLANCE IS GREAT "Yield Not to Temptation" HARVARD WINS VARSITY RAGE Crimson Crew, by Superior Strength and Endurance, Defeats Yale. Grand Jury. SUCH A RESULT INEVITABLE CRUSHES COMPETITOR BY LOAN Charged with Existing- u Unlawful Buiinen Combination. JOHN E. PARSONS INCLUDED Prominent Lawyer and Ph'nthropiit Among Those IS UNDER THE SHEi " LAW Fnmoaa Antl-Trast Statute A Trouble Grnwi Oot of R hip of Prin Hu Heflnliia; Company, ' .V NEW YORK, Jvily l.-Through -e mm, empanelled as a federal grand Jury, the I'nlted States government today laid the groundwork for another gigantic anti trust suit In the Indictment of the Amer ican Sugar Refining company, as a cor poration, six of Ha director! and two prom inent lawyers. The defendant company and the Individual! were charged with con spiracy In restraint of trade under a crim inal clause of the Sherman anti-trust law, which provide! a a penalty, upon convic tion, a fine of not more than $5,000, or Im prisonment for not more than one year, or both, In the cane of the Individual!, and a fine of not more than 15,000 In the case of a corporation. The Individual! Indicted are Washington Ft. Thomas, president of the American Sugar Refining company; Arthur Donner and Charlea It. Senff and John E. Parsons, all of New York; John Mayer of Morris town, N. J., and George H. Frailer of Phil adelphia. All are directors of the com pany. The othera indicted are Oustav D. Kissel and Thomas B. Halnett, counsel for Adolph Segal, whose plant, the Pennsylvania Sugar Refining company, was shut down by the trust, and whose fight In retalia tion, with the testimony brought out in this suit for $:iO.OOO,000 damages recently settled nut of court, largely furnished '.he i m .t ..i v. in.m ii, i ,i, u,ivp ii piii in ii.ruu mil. i i e defendants will answer to the Indictments In the I'nlted States district court on Tuesday next. What ladlcfroeat Cfcararea. Bulky and in blanket form, the Indict ment contains fourteen ' counts, alleging conspiracy and restraint of trade. The closing of the Segal plant, the details of the S1.2SO.000 loan by which this was ac complished and various details of the trans action, are recited fully. The defendant company, It Is asserted, controls 90 per cent of the sugar trade In the United States. A gist of the charges, most of which has been brought but "iiwefolora. In" the Begat Investigation, is that the American Sugar Refining company, and the indlvlduala Jointly Indicted with It, accomplished the control of the Pennsylvania Sugar Refin ing company, by Inducing Segal to borrow from Kissel, acting as a broker and the agent for a lender unknown at the time the loan was made, whereas, the lender really was the defendant corporation, to borrow H.2M.0O0 and to transfer to Kissel, with a majority stock a voting power, as the lolder of 2(5,000 shares of stock of the Pennsylvania company. It la further stated that Segal was not aware that the Ameri can Sugar Refining company was the real 'ender, and that he did not suspect the Jeslgna of the rival corporation. How Rival Was Crushed. Segal, as the defendants then well knew, the Indictment continues, would be de pendent upon the dividends from the busi ness of the Pennsylvania company to pay auch Interest, and to repay the borrowed principal, and in cave the business of that company was shut down Segal's financial affairs would be put In a "ruinous condi tion," and the hold upon both Segal and 4he company by the defendant would be continued and greatly atrengthened. Klssell, it la charged, in pursuance of this ' power, called a stockholder'! meeting of the Pennsylvania company on December J, l:07, at Philadelphia, and voted aa a di rector In favor of the adoption of a reso lution closing up that company's business. The Indictments today further compli cates the affair of the American Sugar Refining company, which was recently forced to settle the suit brought by Segal, and only a short time before waa heavily fined by the government in the false weighing cases. The action also dispels all doubt as to the government's attitude, which was considered uncertain when I'nlted States District Attorney Henry A. Wise sailed for Europe, recently. ' Indlctmeat Follows Civil Victory. After George 11. Earle had been made re ceiver for the Real Estate Trust company on August S3. 1IMM. he claimed the trust company's difficulties were due to the pressure brought by the American Sugar Refining company upon Segal for the dis charge of his obligations, while at the same time Segal, not being permitted to operate his refinery, was helpless to pay. Mr. Earle appealed to the Department of Justice. It is understood the attitude of the Department of Justice was that so far as representations had been made, the facts did not differ in theory from the Knight case, in which the federal courts had held that the acquisition of four competing re fineries by the American Sugar Refining company did not constitute a violation of the Sherman anti-trust law. Suit was then ' biouKht in the United States district coui t lit New York, the Pennsylvania Sugar com pany seeking damages of $10 000.000 from the American Sugar Refining company. After a trial of two w'ecks a compromise was effected oil June 1 The exact terms of the settlement have not been made pub lic, but It Is understood the Sugar "trust" canceled tho Klsaell note of 11.123 000. paid St-cal lS.O0O.0U0 in cash In lieu of losses which he claimed he had sustained through the tdleneos of h!a refinery, and returned to him the 2-.000 shares of the Pennsyl vania company, which had hern deposited as security for the loan of 1901 It was this victory over the American Sugar Refining company which seemed to open the way for a federal suit. The accused men are all prominent in financial circle. J oho SL Parson, counsel for the Araer- (Continued an neeond Page ) I. STOCKHOLM, July 1. Further evidence of an anarchist plot to assassinate the emperor of Russia some time during his approaching European trip was unearthed here today. Adolf Vang, the Swede, who last week shot and killed Major General Beckman, chief of the coast artillery and then commltteed suicide, belonged to a group of anarchists who have been plot ting the death of the Russian ruler. Eight Russian anarchists were arrested previous to the killing of General Beck man, but their apprehension was kept se cret. Two of them were found hiding In the palace. Vang left a letter saying that inasmuch as his Russian comrades had been arrested it was impossible for Mm alone to kill the emperor and conse quently he assssslnated the first high of ficial he met. Taylor to Take Himself a Wife One Reason Why Nebraska Man Does Not Want to Go as Consul to Mauritius. (From a Staff Correspondent ) WASHINGTON, July L (Special Tele gram.) A little story In connection with the appointment of P. E. Taylor of Tekamah to the consulate at Mauritius de veloped today In the course of a confer ence had with Chief of Consular Division Wilber J. Carr of the frte department. Mr. Taylor has been very coy about ac cepting his assignment to the Island of Mauritius, the climate of which Is said to be anything but like the climate of Ne braska. It Is minsmatlc, torrid and en ervating and Mr. Taylor has been ex tremely loth to go to such a place, for ha Is going to marry the daugnter of Peter Berlet of Auburn. Mr. Taylor blushed when he told Ihe story of eiis forthcoming marriage to Mr. Carr. The chief of the consular bureau told Mr. Taylor that had he known that he was about to become a benedict Ms assignment would have been different, but, as the schedule Is now made up, he could see no other way out of the proposition than have him accept the place. with the hope of an early transfer. Mr. Taylor, under thene circumstances, has de cided to enter the consular service, with the Island of Mauritius as his objective. He is praying that somebody falls to qualify before he leaves for his fir-off post. Mr. Taylor will have thirty days' Instruction in Washington arid sixty days' additional before he goes to Africa, and lots of thing! may occur In three months. Making it Easy for Lincolnites Excise Board Adopts Another Strin gent Regulation for the Delivery of Beer. (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, July 1. (Special Telegram.) To prevent the people of Lincoln from get ting their beer the excise board has adopted a rule prohibiting the hauling of beer from Havelock In wagons to Indi vidual customers In Lincoln, but provided that the saloons of Havelock may deliver here to a central station and the buyers of the booze miiRt call for It In person. To help along the new order City At torney Stewart has decided officially that the wagons being operated between Have lock and Lincoln are common carrier! and aa such come under the rules of the excise board. Just how manv men It will take to. prevent the beer depots from becoming retail liquor house has not yet been figured out, but the excise board is expected to hold another meeting ahortly to again change its rules. In the meantime common carriers under the law are regulated by the railway com mission, so the state may get mixed up with the excise board before the finish. PRIESTS REFUSE TO PAY FINES Court Orders Rrrleslaatlra to Jail I'nlraa They Heeogstie Penalty Imposed on Them. AUCH. France, July 1. The correctional court of Auch today fined Archbishop Ricard 1100 for making public a pastoral letter in which he denounced secular edu cation as antt-Chrlsttan and anti-patriotic. Six priests of the diocese also were fined $10 each for complicity with the arch bishop. The eccleslasts refused to pay and the court ruled that If they did not com ply with its orders they would be impris oned for the minimum period. Kanaaa City Hears Art Talk. KANSAS CITY. Mo.. July l.-Halsey C. Ives, director of the St. Louis School of Fine Arts, and Lorado Taft, the sculptor, addressed the City club here today in the Interests of founding an art. museum in this city. ' William Perm's Send Corn Corn from William Penn's farm, one of the oldest and iiiom historic farms in the United States, will he on view at the Na tional Corn exposition this fall. Harvey Gray, one of the directors of the Indiana Corn Crowera' association, writes here that he, some time ago, sold seed to tho owner of this ancient Pennsylvania farm, who haa promised to exhibit the product in Omaha this fall. Word cornea from St. Lou la that the Mer chants' exchange of that city will aend a special train to the exposition, tba delega tion of twenty-five which visited Omaha last year making a report whloh has In duced a large number to promise to coma. President Cochran of the Cochran Grain company who beaded last year's St. Louis delegation on ta booming the corn show aa hard aa ha caa and recently deolared Id aa Interview; Further Identification Will Be Neces sary to Establish It. MAY HAVE KILLED HIMSELF Clothes Are Missing, Which Adds to Police Difficulties. MAY SOLVE MURDER MYSTERY Chinese Minister Calls on San Fran, risen Chinamen, Demanding that They Help Find the Miss. In I.I n sr. NEW YORK. July 1. Although complete, identification was Impossible tonight, there appeared to be a strong probability that the body of a Chinaman which was found floating In the Hudson river In the upper part of the city this evening was that of Leon Ling or William I Ieon, the alleged murderer of Elsie Slgel. The man's height, weight and general ap pearance tallies with that of Leon Ling. but as the body was nude except for a silk undirshirt and had been In the water for more than a week a thorough examination will be necessary. Coroner McDonald, who mp the first to inspect the body, believes that it la Leon, as do a number of police men, but until measurements and facial characteristics are carefully gone over the Identification will remain in doubt. IT It is Leon the cause of his death will be another mystery, although one theory, that of suicide, would appear reasonable. The body was discovered by Clinton W. Bell, a rewldent of Harlem, who was out In the river In a motor boat with a young woman. Bell secured the body, then com municated with the police. Officers were Immediately dispatched to the scene and the body was taken to a morgue in the Bronx, where the examination was begun. Resemblance to Leon. ' In snllent features there was a marked resemblance between the dead Chinaman and the official descriptions of the missing Leon Ling. The teeth were good, as were Ling's, the height about five feet four Inches, which was Leon's height, and the weight 12S pounds, which was about the figure at which Leon tipped the scales w hen he disappeared. The age of the dead man appeared to be about 25 or 30. Leon's age was given out by the police as 30. The right arm of the body was greatly discolored, but whether from violence or the effects of the water could not be ascer tained tonight. The fact that the clothes were missing makes identification more difficult and an autopsy wilt be performed In the morning. The coroner was unable tonight to arrive at any conclusion as to how the Chinaman met his death. Captain Carey of the homi cide bureau, who has had charge of the investigation of the Slgel murder, started for the Bronx when notified that the body had been found, preparatory to making an examination. Chinaman la Murdered. Early this morning Yung Yow, an In conspicuous, hard working Chinese laun- dryman of the east side, was found by his neighbors strung between two wash tubs, with, his head beneath the. water of one of them, and his feet in the other. There wore bloody marks on his neck, bloody footprints on the floor and a knotted cord about the man's neck. In the cash drawer the police found 1 cent. All attempts to connect the murder of j Ung with the murder of Elsie Slgel by Leon Ling nave laueu. There is notmng to show that the two men ever knew each other or ever had friends in common, and they did not belong to the same societies. Investigation soon showed that Yung was beaten over the head by flatirons, prob ably by more thug one man, and then slung between the tubs until he probably died by drowning, while unconsicious. To all appearance he was killed by thugs for money. His relation! in Chinatown be lieve he waa killed by white men ,and the police were Inclined to the same theory, Quon Ylck Nam, the local Chinese in terpreter, who will be replaced by Prof. Gardner o fSan Jose, Cal., who will en deavor to unravel the Slgel mystery, said today that he himself suggested Prof. Gardner's name to the district attorney's office. "I was angered," he said, "by the In sinuations of certain police officers that I might not be sincere In my work." Irate Chinese to Help. SAN FRANCISCO, July L-The bulletin boards of Chinatown were placarded to day with copies of a letter from Ng Shau Chun, acting Chinese minister at Washing ton, urging the Chinese of this city to assist in the capture of Leon Ling, wanted in New York tor the Elsie Slgel Murder. The tragedy haa started a dress reform among the orientals here. Llns wore the latest American clothes and had no queue tnd as muny Chinese of his description have been apprehended on suspicion be cause of their American attire there is a tendency to avoid annoanee by discard ing the garb of the white man. Farm Will to Exposition "That trip to Omaha haa been responsible for a good many things. We were satis fled, royally entertained and learned a great deal. Besides the party of twenty five saw Nebraska. At least eighteen of the men who are piomlnent grain dealers and merchants, had never been in Ne braska and probably never would have had a reason to go to Omaha and visit Lincoln at the aame time. If It had not been for the visit ta the National Corn exposition, wblcb was made a apecial ex cursion. "One of the results was the excuralon which the Merchants exchange recently gave on the ateamsnlp 'Alton" and which waa accompanied by a number of Omaha grain dealer. Wa were treated so well on our trip to Omaha and stopping on our return at Lincoln and Kansas City, that we gave the excursion to even up." ilii fill ( w jj 9 ,l',l'illlinMjjli''-' From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. WORK OX BANK TO START NOW Operations Will Begin, as Transac tion is Now Complete. COMPANY IS INCORPORATED i Lot on Which Building; jWIH Stand Valued at S27S,000 and Hold for 905,000 About (se-rca Yeaira Ago, Legal steps have been taken for the completion of the deal Involving the erection of a fifteen-story bank and office building at Sixteenth and Har ney streets. The City National Bank Build ing company was Incorporated and the deed of the property signed to that company by the syndicate which has controlled the property. The price paid for the lot was that which The Bee announced Monday, $275,000 In cash. The lot on which the building will stand Is 99 feet on the Harney side by 132 on the Sixteenth. The syndicate, headed by C. C. and J. E. George, bought It Beven years ago for $65,000. The property was originally the site of the residence of C. E. Balbach, , and the neighborhood was then a fashion able residence district. The building will be of steel construction with brick-filled walls and reinforced con crete floors, all of fire-proof construction. The trimmings will be of terra cotta. The estimated cost Is $700,000, which Is $500,000 less than the amount the building com pany Is Incorporated for. laaao T. Cook Takes Stock. Beside the company of Omaha men who have taken stock In the City National Bank Building company Is Isaac T. Cook of St. Louis. Mr. Cook has built office buildings In St. Louis, Kansas City and other cities and. haa met with uniform success. He is putting up a large share of the capital for the new local building. The City National bank will not as a corpo ration take stock, for it may not by law, but its officers and directors are among the subscribers. The officers of the company just In corporated are as follows: President C. C. George. Vice President A. J. Beaton. Secretary J. R. Webster. t Asrlstant Secretary J. E. George. Treasurer John F. Flack. The Incorporators are: John R. Webster, A. J. Beaton, James E. Baum, J. E. George, I. A. Baum, C. C. George, all A. L. Schantx, of Omaha, and Charlea E. Smith, Isaac T. Cook of John F. Flack, St. Louis. EiosTstloa Starts at Once. It Is officially announced that the work of excavation will be begun Immediately and the plans are promised, so that con- I tracts can be let within sixty daya. The (Continued on Second Page.) People will have time to look at real estate on the 4th of July. Monday will be the best time, for you to make a trip around town and look at some of the property that you think might do for a home. While a picnic is all right in its way, a home is a good deal more imiortant. If you buy a home, it will be a 4th of July that you will remember for the rest of your life. You bad better plaa to put In tba day In tbla way. Letter from Husband Ends Death Claim Dubuque Woman Identifies Corpse and is About to Collect Life Insurance. DUBUQUE. la., July 1. Spec!aO Robert Pegel of this city, left home during July of last year, leaving a wife and two chil dren. Five weeks ago a body was taken from among the logs of a raft, which had laid many months in a slough, After bur ial, the unknown body waa exhumed at the Instance of Mrs. Pegel, and Identified by her and several friends as that of the missing husband. Following this a claim for $1,000 on an Insurance policy was made and allowed, and It was to have been paid tomorrow. Yesterday Mrs. Pegel received a letter from her husband, dated In Can ada, where he says he Is working. New Railroad in South Dakota Company Organized to Build Line from Pierre to Brown's Valley, Minn., Via Onida. PIERRE, S. D., July 1 (Special Tele gram.) A new railroad project, for which articles will be filed In a few days, is the Redfleld & Southwestern road, with head quarters at Redfleld and a capital of $2,000,- 000. It will be incorporated by H. P. Packard, Peter Norbeck, Z. A. Craln, E. O. Issenhuth and W. S. Clark of Redfleld, and J. H. Gropenheiser and L. E. Snyder of Onlda. The company proposes to build a line from Pierre to luown'a Valley, Minn., by way of Onlda and hcedfleld. The counties proposed to be crossed by the line are Hughes, Sully, Hyde, Hand, Spink, Day and Roberts. The proposed line la to be 200 miles In length. Governor Vessey today reappointed O. S. Hasford aa Insurance commissioner and W. E. Ege of Centervllle telephone In- kpector. There will be several changes In the Insurance department, Herbert Gregory of Weasington Springs taking the position of assistant fire marshal and assistant ex aminer and Mrs. G. B. P-ox the position of fire marshal clerk. At the organization of the State Vet erinary board today Dr. J. P. Foster of Huron waa selected aa president; Dr. J. C. Trotter, Bereeford, vice president; Dr. F. L. Moore, Brookings, secretary-treasurer. The board will hold another meeting at Sioux Falls, July 12, to examine applicants as practice. New Laws in Effect After Midnight Last Night (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN. July 1. (Special.) At mid night all the lawa enacted by the late legislature save those which carried the emergency clause, became effective. This Is the holding of the attorney gen eral, who bases his decision on the reso lution passed by the legislature to ad journ April 1 though final adjournment as a fact did not occur until April 4. This means that every saloon In Ne braska must be closed at 8 o'clock Friday night; that the Home for the Friendless paasea out of existence and the public school for indigent children oomes Into being; that the demurrage law becomes ef fective; that the governor t)omei a mem ber of the state printing board and that the treasurer la relieved of that burden; that the State Board of Publlo lang and buildings has nothing further to do with the Home for the Friend I aa or Its auo- ceaaor, but that this Institution goes under control of a governor appointed board, done EXEMPT, FRATERNAL ORDERS Burkett Offers Amendment to Aldrich Occupation Tax. LAW NOT TO TOUCH THEIR INCOME Motoal or Insurance Benefit "orlrtlrs to Be Made Free from Proposed Hcrfnae Raising; Mrainn'i . Provisions. (From a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, July 1. (Special Tele gram.) Senator Burkett today Introduced an amendment to the Aldrich amendment to the tariff bill relating to the taxing of corporations, which provides for exemption of beneficial or other orders from the operation of such taxation. The text of the Burkett amendment provides that nothing in the Aldrich amendment shall apply to fraternal beneficiary societies, or ders or associations operating under the lodge system and providing for the pay ment of life, sick, accident and other bene fits to members of such societies, order! or associations and dependents of such members. , ' Indian School Affairs. Former Indian Commissioner Leupp, prior to retiring from office, caused to be Issued an order that hereafter Indian pupils not 14 years of age or over should not be admitted to non-reservation Indian schools. This order has stirred up Repre sentatives Burke and Martin of South Da kota, and they demand to be shown why such an order should be enforced, at least so far as their state la concerned. Thus far they have not made much progress, being simply Informed by Indian Com missioner Valentine that the prohibition does not extend to pupils now enrolled, or to thoe whose terms have expired, who may wish to return, or to those who go home on summer vacation. Superintendents have been Instructed to look carefully over the rolls and see to It that former students are not shut out of schools for the coming season. This does not entirely satisfy the South Dakota congressmen, and they are seeking to have the regula tion promulgated by the former Indian commissioner set aside, so that all Indian children of whatever age may attend non reservation schools. If their preference lies In this direction, rather than to be forced to attend schools upon their par ticular reservation. The purpose of Mr. Leupp's regulation Is to compel Indian children of tender age, that Is under 14. to attend school near at home, where they may have the protection of their parents, rather than to send them to (Continued on Second Page.) under the slogan "Let the people rule," and many other laws, which went into effect last night. Put there are two laws which do not. The ill-fated banking law Is Indefinitely tied at the post; ditto the non-partisan Judiciary law, which has already been de clared by a district Judge to be contrary to the state constitution. The State Board of Secretaries of the State Board of Health Is supposed to make room today for the Board of secretaries appointed by the gov ernor, but there Is a hitch there also. The old board met this afternoon and In structed Secretary Sward to hold onto the records and letter heads and other paraphernalia of the board until further orders. The right of the governor to ap point will probably be attacked In the court before the new board gets a chance at the finances of the would-be doctors. But the Board of Oateopothy, the Board of Nurseaj and several other boards get buay tomorrow without oppaaotna Winning Crew Shows Superior to Rivals in Every Way. WRAY'S JUDGMENT SUSTAINED Makes Change at Eleventh Hour Which Brings Victory. SLOW TIME IN FIRST EVENT llnrvard Takes Morning Rapes Freahman Crew tieta Lead and Holds It from tart Finish. NEW LONDON, Conn., July 1. In a notable exhibition of rowing by a crew, remarkable for Its physical power and endurance, Harvard this evening defeated Yale In their annual varsity boat race on the Thames. The Crimson's crew led from start to finish and won by six boat lengths. Harvard's time was 21 W; Yale'a 22:10. By this victory Harvard won Its second consecutive boat race from Yale In twen ty-eight years. Not since 1W0 and 1RS1 has Harvard won two consecutive raoea from Yale. Since 1KV. Harvard haa won five 'varsity races from Yale, Including to day's namely. In 1WH, 1SIW, 1S0S and M Since Wray has been coaching at Cam bridge, Yale and Harvard have met three times, and the Crimson has won two races, Knormoni Crowd Present. The greatest crowd that has ever as sembled here on the Thames poured Into New Ixjmlon today to witness this race. Harvard's growing confidence In Its boat ing system brought double and quadruple the number that usually follow the crim son to the Thames, while Tale'! determina tion to win back its glory brought a record breaking Yale crowd. The railroads could not furnish enough cars to accommodate all the people who fought and struggled for seats on the ob servation stands. It was estimated thai at least 40,000 people witnessed the spec tacle from trains and every other kind ol vehiclo and from a flotilla of the finest floating craft that graces American waters. Itace Always a Contest. Although Harvard won by a handsome margin, and administered a crushing de feat to Yale, the race was nevertheless a contest-up to the last halt mile. All the way up the river the two eights rowed with almost equal precision, and a Blight of any kind in either shell would have turned the victory Into defeat within a few seconds. But there was r.o break in the Harvard boat. Rowing all the way two atrokes, and sometimes three strokes, to the minute more than Yale, the crimson eight crept.,, awsy from the blue little by little. For " two and a half miles Yale kept Within a scant boat's length of Itt rival. Then Harvard put on Its power and Increased Its lead first to three lengths, then to four length!, and finally to six lengths. Yale spurted with Its oldtlme determina tion, but it waa In vain. Two Sets of Hrothera. In the winning Harvard eight were two sets of brothers. Roger Cutler, the Har vard stroke, la a brother of Eliot Cutler of the Harvurd bow, while at No. 6 and No. & the two WUhtngtons of Honolulu rowed. At No. 4 sat Eliot Bacon, son of ex-Secretary Bacon, whose two brothers had preceded him as Harvard oarsmen, as had their father. Former Secretary Bacon, leaning against the rail of the referee's launch, The Scout, watched the race with anxious Interest until he saw his boy a winner. Then he Joined the group of Har vard men who hugged each other in their Joy. On the Mirage, the boat of the re gatta committee, which followed the race, was Postmaster General Frank 11. Hitch cock, while Secretary of the Navy. George Von L. Myer, saw the contest from the United States Steamship Dolphin. Leas than a minute after the race waa over the two eights rowed off to their quarters, Yale In the gloom of defeat. Harvard amid the noise and glory of vic tory, to fall Into the arma of 300 old graduates who had tumbled out of the ob servation trains and hurried down to the Harvard boat house. Then followed tha procession of the victors back to New London. It semed as though the crimson flags would never cease to flutter. Old oarsmen got together amid the excite ment, however, and talked It all over. At the Harvard quarters the crew elected Jesse Edwin Wald, 1M0, of Denver, Coh, captain for next year. He rowed at No. 7 In the crew. He Is 20 yeara old, 9 feet i Inches In height and weighs 17 pounds. Then the" oarsmen boarded a yacht and went lo the Fort Orlswold house to cele brate the victory. They were accompanuni by a large number of friends, Yalu elected as captain for 1010 Ruthven Adrlance Woodell, 1010, of Poughkeepele, N. Y. Woodell Is 21 yeara old, feet 1 Inch In height and weighs 172 pounds. Record of the Race. The record of the race, as kept by the official timers, was as follows: Harvard Half mile, 2:M; one mile, 8:10; two miles. 10:45; three miles, 1:10; four miles. 21:50 Yale Half mile, 2 27; one mile, 8:12; two miles. 10:4R; three miles, 16:20; four miles. 22:10. Winning distance, six lengths. The stroking of the crews by miles fol lows: Harvard Start, 39; one mile, 24; two miles. 34; three miles, ; finish, Sf. Yale Start. 33. one mile, 31; two miles, 32; three miles, 34; flnlxh. 36. Harvard's Team Heavier. The explanation of Yale's defeat Ii not difficult. Harvard, with a crew which averaged almost six pounds to the man heavier than Yale, Was able to row right through the race at a gait which averaged two strokes to the minute faster than Yale's and still get out of this stroke Its maximum of spetd. ' Any crew that ran row In the form that Harvard or Yale rowed In this evening and at the same time average two strokes a minute moro than its rival and not exhaust Its men by so doing la bound to win, and the margin at the finish will be measured rnly by the physical endurance of the men In the winning boat. Comparisons of strokes and scientific dls cuasions of methods of rowing will not explain away Yale's defeat. Yale today had men In lis shell who proved that the? t