Daily THE OMAHA DEE go to the home Is read by th offlD ells goods for advertisers. Vv'EATilZil FORECAST. For Nr br: kn -Tartly cloudy. For low a (it ni t ally fair. Tor weather report see pnKc OMAHA, WEDNESDAY MOKNIXU, SEIfTEMUEK 1D1U-TWELVE PACKS. KlN(iU. COPY TWO HINTS The Omaha B STOCK RECEIPTS BROKENEAOHDAY South Omaha Live Stock Market Forges to the Front Fat. MONDAY THE BEST CATTLE DAY Range Stuff Files in at an Unprece dented Bate. TUESDAY THE DAY FOR SHEEP On that Day 49,140 Sheep Are Drought to Market. OTHER KECOEDS ARE SMASHED I) urine the Last LMitht Month Omaha lias More Thau llrlil lis Una with Other Clttea honi Well by Comparison. Omaha, or to speuk more politely, South t Omaha, is fast changing Its man. linn as a lock market and if the reports of previous year continue to be smashed up with dally regularity the packing houses of that city will take the top position. Monday saw the breaking of a record In receipt of cattle, the total number being W.i'lfl head. coming In 6U3 cars, which was 7.UU0 more than the receipts for the same day of last year. Tuesday was the occa sion for an unparalleled avalanche of mut ton; 4U.1W sheep were received in ISO can. I This Is the largest number c n record. All of this stock ha beun of the best quality and no kind of stock Is falling off. August 31 j ...... kl.ui.ai ,1a,. Hint V. a ,,,,h 1 tlllH hu ! stock yards ever had. A summary of the business done by the (South Omaha market and the activity of the other larger markets In the country how thai only Chicago Is In the same clam a far as increase Is concerned. In nttle South Omaha breaks even with Chi cago in gain and distance all the others. In hog no other market has kept up so I well and all show some loss. The supremacy of South Omaha In sheep la still maintained and there are signs that it will lose Its hold on the sheep raisers. In the last eight months there ha been a gain of )0,ouo over 1'JUI, which was the record year until this year. Slimy Record lirokrn. In making this splendid shoeing many records have butn broken, notably the fol lowing: The year to date has been the heaviest since the stock yards were established In the receipts of both sheep and cattle, dur ing which time there ha been Wl.lsH head of cattle and 1,243,6!) sheep handled on the South Omaha market. August, 1U1U. wa the largest month in the history of the market, w hen 9.670 car loads of live stock were received and unloaded at South Omaha, which T SM cars hi excess of the receipts of the largest previous month. The last week of August, ending Saturday, September 3. was the largest week, 2,463 cars. August 31, W10, was the largest day In point of receipts which the market has ever known, 770 car loads of live stock having been yarded and sold at South Omaha, eighty-seven car loads more than on any previous day. Notwithstanding the Immense volume of business that 1 being handled at the South Omaha market dally the market continues in good condition, and the outlet I more than eo.ua! to the heaviest receipts. No better test of the stability of the tiouth Omaha market could be offered than the business which has been done there this season. The continued Improvement "f crop conditions over the territory tributary to the South Omaha market offers a most encouraging outlook to the western ship pers at die present time. More records are bound to fall. The fol lowing is a summary table of the gain made by all the big markets in the first eight months of the year: Hecelpt of Live Stock. OMAHA. Head . 1910. 1909. rattle m,is (iu.isj Pet Inc. Uec. l..v Hog 1.4(11.411 J,b.f.6i. 14.0 Sheep l.:ia,ii'.4 Hs-.ssa KANSAS CITY. Cattle l.soo.iai 1.43.,4J .... Hug 1.4fti.ii2Ui .VWVoHl .... bneep I.UJU.um l.o:i,u04 1.7 CHICAGO. Cattle S.244.iit 1.111.114 12.0 iiog a,b4.ba 4.Mo,;ib0 Sheep ......... 2.694, i 2.42.,itM 7.0 ST. LOUIS. Catils Osw.iMJ 1W.0JS 6.0 hoK 1.4VI.4.V l.UAUKl Sheep 4di,93 ooi.Wa .... SIOUX CITY. Cattle X 4..S iia.,,. S.O ilogs iiu.oK! t.i.Slu .... tdivep , 4.14i J.ii 7 67.0 LIKNVEK. Cattle 240., oi 27.202 1.5 H"(S lm.O.J 17n,N.i2 .... Sneep l-u.rol 1h.2o9 .... ST. JOSEPH. Cattle auXM 3.0 Itos Wo. .A). 1.WJ.6S7 .... Sheep ilW.W 4o,27 .... 6.0 36. u 21.7 14. u 1J.0 9.0 18.0 21.0 Corn shipped from Omaha. Nebraska alfalfa oeats a bank this fall, say the Wyoming stockmen. Throngs of stockmen ure at the Mer chants hotel these days. All stock that ia fit for marketing Is being sent to Omaha, specially from the Wyoming ranges. The price Is good, even for light stock, and the range feed Is woefully short "Alfalfa In Western Nebraska Is now held at 120 ton In the stack," said one Wyoming lanchmau. "Some of us are here to buy corn, strange as juch a state ment may seem. Wo find it can be bought and laid down cheaper from Omaha than In the towns out In the stale. Hay Is out of the question, for even the cheapest would stand us $20 a ton on many of the Wyoming ranches." Nebraska stockmen, with rare exceptions, have no such complaint to make as the Wyoming ranchers. Sufficient rain ha fallen to keep the pastures in fair condi tion, and hay h.rul corn aro more easily obtainable where necessary than on the Wyoming stock ranches. Where these lat ter are far from a railroad the situation is becoming really very serious. GIRL COMMITS SUICIDE Mis Kannle Mlljaa of Lead, 8. n.t Shoots Herself Thrtutk the Heart. LBAD. 8. U . Sept. .-(frpeclal Tele. gram.) Telling her mother that life with out man sh loved was empty, Fannie Mll- jan. a 19-year-old Austrian girl here locked herself In her room and fired a bullet Into her heart. She was dead when her parents broke Into Iter room. The girl said her sweetheart had deserted her for another woman. Rock Island Train Runs Into Union Pacific Caboose One Man Killed and Ei?ht Injured in Rear-End Collision Near Cedar Bend, Kan. KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Sept. . In a col lision between a Chicago, It ck Island A Pacific freight train and a I'nlon Tactflc cattle train at Cedar Bend, Just west of Kansas City, Kan., today, one man was killed d eight Injured, two seriously. r "7- 1 : I BROWN, stockman, Emmett, Th rJ, : M. . . stockman, Manhattan. Ksn. J. W ".stockman, .Manhattan, Kan. Jamc, stockman, Manhattan, Kan. ' vv-. ,'- farmer, Junction City, Kan. c . vttlllam " v, Hock Island, engineer, Kansas CI William Hock Island engineer, HerlnKion, i A. C. Vest, Jand fireman, Herlng- ton. Kan. John Yoder, ..reman, Hcrtngton, Kan. The Union Pacific train was standing on the tracks, over which the Hock Island runs train westward, when the Hock Island train, traveling at a rapid rate, struck the rear end of the waiting cattle train, tele scoping the caboose. In which there were fifteen men. Several In the caboose es caped by Jumping. Mrs. Van Clausson Creates Scene Woman Who Demanded Money from Roosevelt Attacks Officers of New York Trust Company. NEW YOHK. Sept. li.-Mrs. Ida Von Clausson, who Is remembered In connection with her sensational demand for damages from the American minister to Sweden, former President Koosevelt and others for an alleged refusal to allow her to be pre sented at court' in the Swedish capital, vis ited the officers of a trust company In the financial district today and when her demand for tl'.i.OOO, which she claimed was due her from the estate of her grandfather, was it fused, created U scene, It is alleged, by attacking two officers of the trust com- pt ny. Other officials of the trust company pinioned her arms until friends took her away. COLUMBUS PATROLMEN OUT Commission Approves Mayor' Action In Dlamlasinir Men Who Refused to Obey Orders. , COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 6.-The civil serv ice commission today handed down It de cision In the case of the thirty-five city patrolmen, who 'were dismissed by the di rector of public safety, approving the action of the director and refusing to graut to the mutineers the privilege of reinstate ment. - . .' . - The patrolmen were dismissed from the force for refusing to obey Mayor Mar shall's orders to ride the cars to prevent lawlessness during the strike riots. GERMAN SPY IN ENGLAND Officer Who Had Sketched Fort Along; Coast 1 Detained at fort Purbrook. PORTSMOUTH. Englr.nd, Sept. 6.-The German army officer who was arrested yesterday while engaged In sketching the fortifications here, Is still detained at Fort Purbrook. The man's name Is supposed to be Kim or and he Is connected with the construction division of the German land forces. Documents found on the alles-nd mrv . said to include sketches of the forts all along the hills. The papers have been" di. patched to the war office. FATALLY SHOT AT A PICNIC Jack Hanley of Lead, S. U., IVoanded Three Time at Dance at Whltewood. DEADWOOD, S. D.. Sept. S. (Special Telegram.) While ejecting an offending stranger from the labor day picnic dance at Whltewood, Jack Hanley, a well known union man of Lead was probably fatally shot near midnight last night. Hanley, who was shot three times Is believed to be dying at St. Joseph's hospital here, while three suspects ai'e under arrest. The shoot ing was done In ihe dark and no one knew the assailants. VERDICT IN RIGDON CASE Coroner' Jury Find that Chlrnsro Ileal Estate luu Committed filicide. CHICAGO. Sept. .-A coroner s Jury to day returned a verdict of sulcldo on the death of Charles W. Rlgdon, the real estate dealer and mining man who was shot to death In John C. Fetser's office In the Redford building July 6. Mrs. Young of Washington and Evanston, III., wa the principal witness att he lonir deferred In quest. Rlgdon seriously wounded Mrs. Y'oung. Man Calls Roosevelt Liar; Is Thrown from Platform FARGO, N. D., Sept. S.-A man who fought his way to ex-Preldent Roosevelt and called hi in a liar gave a scare yester day to the crowd st Island park, In tills city. Colonel Roosevelt seized the man and helped to eject him from the platform. A small, poorly dresaed man pushed hi way through the mas of people after the colonel's speech, until he could make him self heard by the colonel. He wore a bat trred had and was unshaven. "I hav a question to ask you. Colonel Roosevelt." he shouted. The men and women on th platform grew silent, Colonel Roosevelt turned snd faoed him. Waving one arm the man shouted: "I want to know who is pe'l"K the expenses of this trir of yours about the country?" The question sngered Colonel Roosevelt and his face showed It. He advanced a step U'ard his Interrogator and shot back hi answer. "I consider that to be an Im pertinent question," he said. "However, I have no objection to telling you," he added, that the exiene of the party wer being paid by the magaalne of which he I one of the editor. "You lie." th man shouted. o loudly that hundreds of peraons In the crowd could bear him. As he spoke the words Colonel C1U1TEN TRIAL BEGINS INLONDON Prosecution Charges Poisoning on Part of Man Accused of Murder of Chorus Girl Wife. HYOSCTN FOUND IN REMAINS Evidence that Prisoner Bought Quan tity of Deadly Drug. j INTEREST IS STILL INTENSE Notorious Fugitive Still Object of Great Curiosity. GIRL CLEARED OF ACTIVE PART MIm l.eneve Held on Accusation of llelnsi Accessory After the Fact Dcnd Woman la Called Belle." LONDON. Sept. 6. At the opening today of the trial of Dr. Hawley H. Crippen. who Is charged with the murder of his wife, Belle Elmore, the prosecution " an nounced that , large quantities of poison had been found in the woman'i body and that there were evidence that she had been subject to an operation. Ktliel Clare Leneve, the doctor's typist, who accompanied him In his flight to Can ada after the disappearance of his wife, and who has been held on the'same charge, also was brought to the bar today, but the crown stated that It had been decided to confine the allegation against the girl to being an accessory after the fact. This relieves .Miss' Leneve of any charge of foreknowledge of the crime and is in line with the belief of her family and friends that she did not share Crlppen's confidence up to the time that his wife dropped out of sight and was said by him to have died In California. Interest in the Crippen case, which was Intense during the search for the doctor, has by no means worn out, as was shown by the crowd which slithered In the vicin ity of the Bow 'street police court when the trial was opened today. Travers Humphreys appeared for the public proserntcr's office, while Solicitor Arthur Newton represented Crippen. Mr. Humphreys made a long opening address. Statement of Proaecntor. In the course ot his remarks the prose cutor definitely stated that the physician who made the postmortem examination of the mutilated parts unearthed In the cel lar of the Crippen home In Hilldrop Cres cent, Camden Road, had discovered the ' presence of large quantities of hyosctn, a colorless liquid poison, and also detected ! evidences that an operation had been per formed. ! It had been known that the authorities j had been working on the theory that Belle j Elmore' had fceeit In the hands of one hav- I Ing at leant a crude knowledge of surgery, ,' and further that she had been poisoned, j The official announcement of these al leged discoveries, however, have not been made before. At the time of the arrangement of the two prisoners on August 29, Mr. Humphreys said that the government's evidence against the typist pointed only to her as being accessory after the fact. Today' he said that It had been decided to thus limit the charge against her. The prosecution spoke f Mrs. Crippen as Belle, the name used y Crippen when referring to his wife. The two, the prosecutor continued, had occupied separate rooms for four years. For at least three years, lie said, Miss Leneve had been Crlppen's mistress. In January Miss Leneve was feeling her position In regard to Crippen acutely, and particularly so at that time, when she expressed considerable Jealousy of Mrs. Crippen. Chicago Man Mentioned. In a written statement made to Inspector Pew, when the Investigation first opened, Crippen said Belle was living In the pro tection of another man when he married her In Jersey City. The doctor also spoke of Bruce Miller's alleged acquaintance with his wife while he was in America and frequent threats which Belle had made to quit him and go with another man who oc cupied a better position In life. Crlppen's statement concluded with a story of the quarrel on the night of January 31, after Paul Martlnettei and Mrs. Mar tinettei, .who had spent the evening with the Crippen, had left the house. During the quarrel the doctor said that his wife threatened to leave him on the following day. On returning from buslnesa on February 1 Crippen said he found that his wife had gone. He took steps to prevent a scandal and fabricated the story of her trip to California and her death there. Counsel added that If It were possible to get Bruce Miller over here from Chicago he would be Invited to attend the court In order that the prisoner's statements might be put to a test. Doctor Purchase Poison. Speaking of the post mortem, the prose cutor said Dr. Wilcox had found more than (Continued on Second Page.) Roosevelt stepped forward quickly and seized his arm Just above the elbow. He explained later that he did not know who the man was or what hi Intention were and that he had taken hold of his arm a a measure of self-protection. His vigorous action did not deter the man from finishing what he had to Bay'. He shouted out: "Your expense are being paid by the people of the United State." Although Colonel Koosevelt wa the first to act. other ran quickly to assist him and even before the man had finished his remark two men seized him. The colonel dd not release his grip until the stranger was moving rapidly from the stand. He was ejected from the platform and was swallowed up In the excited crowd. An effort was made to find the man, but all traces of him were lost. No one of those who had feen him knew who he was. Colonel Roosevelt said that he wa not at all alarmed by what had happened. H merely caught hold of the man to guard against the possibility of any sudden mov, he ssld. The man was arrested later and charged with disorderly conduct. He said hi name wa John Martin, hi occupation a painter, and hi residence In Fargo. : :v :M$4 P Jsilijg From ttia PbiUddphl Inuulrer. NEW MANEY MILL RUNNING Plant Burned Down Five Months Ago Replaced. NOW BIGGER AND , BETTER Officers of the Commercial (lab Arc at Hand to fee start of l'irnt Uniln Down Hopper. Five months after fl(e burned down the first Maney mill, a new and bigger and bet ter grain mlU has started Operations. The formal opening of the new plant of the Maney Milling company took place Tues day afternoon. The other structure, it self a new plant, perished April 3 of this year together with the elevator of the Nye-Sehnelder-KowIercoi.,,- Any and other .prop erty. Y- The Commercial cluo took a prominent part In the opening. President Edgar Al len dropped the.flrst sack of wheat Into the hopper and watched It go through the various stages of the flour 'making pro cesses. Others present were David Cole, chairman of the executive committee of the club; W. H. Bucholts and Commissioner J. M. Guild. The new mill represents an investment of 2O0,O0O and will have a capacity of l.fjno barrels a day. H. Dlttmer, vice president of the Maney company, and F. F. Blake, manager of the plant, conducted visitors through the mill. The new mill Is built upon the most modern lines and with a much Improved capacity over that of the former one. Under the guidance of Its officials the Commercial club visitors rode up the unique pulley elevator to the fifth story and inspected every strange machine in a walk downstairs. r The structure receives Its opening five months after the old pne was burned, and while the fire still smolders In the Nye-Sclinelder-Fowier elevator, a short dis tance off. The first structure required ten months In the building and the new one, through energetic efforts on the part of the company to be In commission for this year's mlllktg business, thus was erected In half the time. A bursting supply of grain fills the gran ary and an enormous business is expected for the future. MOISSANT LANDS IN LONDON Chicago Aviator Flulahea Flight from Paris In Three Week from Start. LONDON, Sept. B.-John B. Molssant, the Chicago aviator, reached the Crystal palace this evening, completing hia flight from Paris to London In exactly three weeks. Molssant did the few remaining miles In two stages today. On the first attempt he encountered ad verse winds and was forced to descend at Oxford. There he awaited better weather, again ascending with hi machine at 6 o'clock. He reached the palace twenty five minutes later. The aviator circled over the palace grounds for several min ute and then landed about a mile away In a cricket field at Bal-Beckenham. HOT DAY ALONG ATLANTIC amber of Prostration from Heat lu Pblladelohla and New Yorli. PHILADELPHIA. Sept.. 6.-Philadelphla is swelteiing from the hottest September day In twelve years and as a consequence j a number of pro.-tratlon have occurred. ! The government thermometer registered 32 degrees. NEW YORK, Sept. 8. While all New Y'ork la suffering from a sweltering heat wave today, Street Cleaning Commissioner Edward printed the city' advertising bids for snow removal for the coming winter. There was one death and several prostra tions. KANSAS CITYSTRIKE SETTLED Contractor Meet Demand of Strar tural Iron Worker and Bnlldlnsr I Resumed. KANSAS CITY. Sept. .-The strike of the structural steel worker, which began last Saturday and for a time threatened to tie up building In Kansas City, wa settled today. The contractor agreed to meet the demands of the steel workers for a raise of 60 cenu on the day' pay, which would ptovtd for a $5 wage cale. The men re turned to work this afternoon. Higher He Goes In His Infancy Yet Court Files Opinion in the Post Case Petitioner Failed to Show Necessity for Order and Proper Notice Had Not Been Given. ST. IX)riS, Sept. B. The opinion of Judge . Smith Mcpherson, who yesterday denied the application of C. W. Post of Battle Creek. Mich., for an injunction to restrain the American Federation of Labor officials and Bucks Stove and Range com pany of this city from entering Into a closed shop agreement, was Tiled In the United States circuit court here today. Judge McPherson decided me case In chambers at his home In Red Oak, la. The' tentative. .agreement, the ratification of vrhlch Mr. Poet opposed, tb oourt saya, was reached some six weeks ago. Judge McPherson continued: "Complainant then knew of it. ' He has given notice of 'this hearing to no de fendant. "Restraining orders should not be la sued except upon notice to the defendants, and then only when irreparable harm will follow If such restraining order Is not Is sued. I utterly fall to see wherein the harm can come if this restraining order Is not issued." Formal Protest From London Official Objection Will Be Made to recent urder for Textile Import ers to Submit Samples. LONDON. Sent. A Th. n,.i,:v. office today instructed Ambassador Bryca o.i ruiiingiuii to make a formal protest to the American Mate Department against certain conditions Imposed on short export textile firms In the circular recently sent to its consuls here and on the continent and to endeavor to have what are re garded as the most objectionable of the regulations modified. The circular of Instruction sent by Wash ington to the American consuls abroad re quires shippers of woolens and textiles to the United State to deposit at the opening of the season with the nearest American consulate two samples of each type of goods which it is designed to sell In this country. The new regulation have re sulted In unofficial protests from Paris and London. PRESIDENT TAFT IN CHICAGO Chief Executive Make a Short Stop on HI War Back to Ileverly. CHICAGO, Sept. 6. President Taft de parted for Beverly, Mass., at 10:30 o'clock this morning, following a short stop in Chi cago on his way homeward from St. Paul. During his brief stay the president had breakfast at the Congress hotel and met i committee from the Chicago Association of Commerce. This committee invited the president to attend a banquet early next spring No date was set. Secretary Norton, who accompanied pres ident Taft to St. Paul, will remain in Chi cago to attend the banquet to Colonel Roosevelt Thursday night. This was dont at the sollciation of Chicago friends of Mr. Norton. Mr. Taft arrived at 8:30 a. m. At tin hotel he met Henry S. Giavet, government chief forester. Tyler 1000. That's the num ber A cheeful staff Is always ready to attend to your wants. If you want to rent a home Or Wish to buy land To sell property To employ servants. Call Tyler UMMJ nud tell tho ml man aliout it. He will write j our notice and place it. That's all. i MAYOR GAINS THREE VOTES Governor Drops a Little in Count of First Ward. COURT REFUSES A WRIT Judac Troup Decline to Issue Ite trulnluK Order Aaulnst Canvas, u Prayed by Don J. Connell. Count of the Douglas county v te at the recent primary progressed througi the) First ward, yesterday afternjin with Mayor Dahlman malting a not i;tln of three votes. Governor Shallenbergor lost ! one and his opponent had two more counted for him. . In th morning Judge Troup In distuct ceurt overruled the objections to a rrfijul of the county ballots' by the county tanvaK altifV boa id In the Suit for a resti Jiii:lug order brought by Din J. Connell, and re fured to prant the order. The recount was resumed at 2 o'clock. In making his decision, Jjdge Troup held that the word recount as used In that section of the statutes governing county boards was Intended to mean a recount of the votes from an Inspection of the bal lots rather than a mere recount of the vote from the poll books as turned In by the Judges and clerk of election. A court of- equity, the Judge said, never enjoins a public officer or a public body from per forming the duties Imposed upon them by law, A meeting of the state canvassing board will be held today at Lincoln to review the decision of Judge Troup. With the recount again under wuy In Douglas county and a district court decision upholding Its le gality. It is expected that the state board will await the result of the recount before awarding a certificate of nomination In the democratic gubernatorial race. The recount will occupy about two weeks. although it Is Impossible to say just when the finish will be. The recount will be on two "'b" of candidates: Shall nhei get and Dahlman, Flxn and Connell. While the board was In the midst of the recount on the Second precinct of the First ward, William Butt handed In his formal withdrawal from the contest of J. H. Bulla's vote for the state legislature. HE WAKES UPJN BOX CAR Austrian Supplement In Person Information ftlven by Friend to Poller. Victim of two thugs, Frank Canjer, an Austrian, woke up early yesterday morning twenty-five miles from Omaha. Ho was In a box car where he had been dumped, an unconscious, inert mass, by his assailants. Canjer wa In the box car for thlrty-slx hours, having been chucked Into it late Sunday night. His appearance in the police station last evening at o'clock ended fears that he had been murdered, but Ida story confirms the tale of a plot already narrated to the police by another Austrian. Canjer was a leg weary man when he told his tale. He had walked all day, but from what direc tion he does not know. He remembers be Intf followed by two men, being struck with a brick and waking up In the car yesterday morning. Before he came to the station tho police had these fact in their possession : Hide Money lu Mceve. Sunday night t litre was an Austrian chris tening at a house at Fourteenth und Pierce streets. As Is their custom, a collection was taken up for the child, and tho sum. amounting to about S-A was entrusted to (,'jnjer for safe-keeping. CanJ r started out for home accompanied by two of his countrymen, Joe Munixler and Joo Uelcge. Somewhere along Thirteenth stiect, he al leged, they presented guns and held up Canjer. He, however, had suspected some thing, and concealed the money (n his coatsleeve and the would-be holdup ut nothing. They continued to follow Canjer to his boarding house at 1002 South Thir teenth. Canjer woke up his landlord, Ivan Sollc, and told him what had happened, glv liig him tii of the money and saying that he was going to the police station to report the matter. Sollc watched him down the street as far as the Thirteenth street bridge, still fol lowed by th two men. Suspect I'mlrr Arrest. Munlzler and Relee are employed at the smelting work and were arrested tliei e Monday afternoon Immediately after Soli,-, j the landlord, had filed hi Information. Although they have been put through stiff cruss-txamlnation. both men have main tained a stubborn silent;. KOOSEVELT ON CONSERVATION j Former President Makes Address j Upon National Efficiency Before j Enthusia:tic t. Paul Crowd. NEEDLESS WASTE SHOULD STOP Favors Rigid Stips to Preserve Country's Natural Resources. STATE CONTROL OF DRAINAGE Where Land Lies in One State, Loenl Work Best. I GLAD OF CONGRESS' ACTION Appro cm Work tif Ncpiinitlits: Surface Title to l.uml from Mlnrrul He nen tli It Part .Miiy He Excelled. ST. PAUL. Sept. 0. Theodore Roosevelt's speech 0:1 cmsei lhn delivered tu.ljy at the National Conservation congress, w.u received with I ho" wildest applnuso. It was several minutes after hu Rixso to speak before ho could make himself heard, so persistently did the crowd cheur him. Colonel Roosevelt outlined 111 idea as to conservation, bavin that tho reckless and uncontrolled whs to of the past must be stoppid, bo declared himself ill favor of rigid steps to piuscrve tho country's nat ural resources Tor the benefit or the whole peoplo and to check the power nf monopolistic corporations. "Much that I have to say on the sub Ject of conservation will be but a repetition of what was so admirably said from this ' platform- yesterday," suld Colonel Roose velt. His compliment to the president wa lrcelwd with a cheer. Minnesota, he suiil, had been one of tht first to take hold of the conservation policy In practical fashion. "And," he added, "It has done greal work and Is an admirable example to tht rest of the United States, doing work rep resenting a policy well set forth In your governor's addiesa yesterday. I am glad this congress Is held In u state where wa can listen to such addresses as hsve been made by your governor, who had a right to speak for conservation." ' Wntervtay and Knllroad. In speakln.t of the control of waterways by the railroads, Colonel Koosevelt warned the people not to sit supine and let the railroads get control, only to say later that thoe at the head of the railroads were very bad men. . The ex-president then turned to the ques tion of drainage, departing from his pre pared speech. Where the land to be drained lay entirely within one state, he said It might bo well, foi;, the tlin for the'etatei to take control fit lbs mte,-,,. Swamps which extend over parts of more than ont state he said, should be improved by tht federal government and he thought It would be better If state swamplands should ot ceded back to the general'government thai It might do the drainage work. "All friends of conservation," he con tinued, "should be In heartiest agreement with the policy which the president laid i down In connection with the coal, oil and phosphate hinds, snd I am glad to be able to say that at Its lateslon Congress fully completed the work of separating the surface title to the land from the mineral beneath It. "The average American Is sn efficient man," he added. "There Is great reason to be proud of his achievements, but there Is no reason to think we cannot excel out past." Kansas nti Example. Speaking of the railroads Colonel Roose velt said: "There are classes of bulk freight which can always go cheaper and better by water If there is an adequate waterway and the existence of such type of waterway In Itself helps to regulate railroad rates." Relo.rlng to lil recent trip through Kan sas as showing the lively Interest the peoplo there have In such spend lng their own money for the Improvement of their water ways, the speaker held up as an example that should be emulated by other nates, tho couise that had been followed by Kansas. When Colonel Roosevelt came to that part of his speech referring to the national con servation commission, he told the story of the Introduction "by a congressman from Minnesota" of an amendment to tho civil 1 service bill whlcn he said wa designed to put an end to the work of tho commission. His recital of this ttory threw the crowd Into an uproar. A man in the balcony shouted: "No, what tlo you think of Townoy?" The colonel went on to say that the mat ter came up Jt:t at the clone of his term In tho While House. If he remained presi dent, ho said, ho would have paid no at tention to this provision of law, bicaura he believed It to be unconstitutional. This declaration was applauded loudly. Speaking of loiestry, he declared, amid tremendous cheering, that after winning so much In tho fight for conservation, If the people lose what they had fought for, they bad themselves only to blame. "But," he added, "wo ore not going to do It." "It has been shewn," he ald, "that the states in the cast could not do the work a well as the national government and we are now netting tho national government to take Ihoe lands biicft nnd do the work. When we are doing that In the cast, it seemed to me the wildest felly to ask us In the west to repeat the same blunders that are now being remedied In the east." Colonel liuusevelt'B Addre. Colonel Koosevelt said: "America's reputation for efficiency stands deservedly high throughout tho world. We are efficient probably to tho full limit that any nation can attain by the methods hitherto used. There la great reason to be proud of our achievements, and yet no reason to believe that we can not excel our past. Through a practically ' unrestrained Individualism we bavu reached a pitch of liteially unexampled material prosperity, although th distribution of till prosperity leave much to be deslud from the standpoint of Justice and fair dealing. But we have not only allowed the Individ ual a free hand, which wa. In tho iuu.lii . right; we have ulao allowed grout corpora tion to act a though lliey weru individ uals, and to exercise the rights if Indi viduals, in addition to using the va.i com bined iuwer of high oigahlkatl'in and enor mous wealth for their own advantage. T . 1 1 a development of corporate action, It is true. Is doulitlesa in laige part responsible for the gigantic dovelopiiient ol our natuial 1