j. ....... .'. ..Orl MALHEUR EXTEUT CANAL 18 HALF, DONE Report ol Commission 01 Panama Interoceaolc Wate ORIGINAL ESTIMATE IS DOUBLED Wages and Material Havi Increased Enormously 33,699 jn Now Employed on Wck. Washington, D. C, No 3. With the I'anama canal virtuey half fin ished, the members of 'e Isthmian : . Canal commission awakehto the fact ' that this waterway will co more than Vj twice the amount of the "iginal esti " mate. In other words, its now esti i mated that the canal, Ven finished t '.. and opened to traffic, wilrepresent a total expenditure of $375,2,000. Whon the canal project was added it was estimated to cost only $1,233,358. Chairman Tawney, of ti house com- ji mittee on appropriations,-! his arrival at Panama with his coitiittee, talked i of paring down the ostites of the ,i commission and reducingbe cost of ; construction. It is not serhsly thought, however, that anything wtby of note ) could be accomplished in is direction. 5 Rather, the impression j evails that when the last dollar haibeen spent, 7 the cost of the canal wile found to exceed rather thin run tier the lat f est estimate of $375,000,0' In its an- nual report, made publii today, the ' Isthmian Canal cornmlsn discusses this question of cost, sayl: "Wages have increasednd the cost of materials and manufured articles , ' . has risen. Prosperous coitions in the ; ,' United States, combined ith the un- savory reputation that tlisthmus had regarding its healthfups, made it necessary to secure lata to increaso the wage scales from 30160 per cent over those paid in ihepited States for similar classes of Ik. Certain gratuities as additionjinducoments were also offered, whiila the main have since been continp Moreover, the provisions of theiut-hour law were made applicable tpo isthmus. "The unit prices weriierefore ma terially increased. Vius changes have also been made jithe adopted plan, increasing the qiiuty of work to bo done. In additionore detailed surveys and plans thanre originally available have been !de, and the !' " work has progressed sufntly to give reliable data relative tflit costs, i "Nearly 50 per centore work is f ' necessary to complete canal than was contemplated by Original esti mate and the unit prieJue to labor conditions, cost of matls, and gra : tuities given the emph, have been increased about 20 pert. The esti mate, as prepared, shoviat the total cost of engineering ai construction alone sums up to $297,700, to which, if the purchase price aiie estimated cost of sanitation and government, be added, there resii the sum of $375,202,000 as the tcost of the canal." " STANDARD OIL f HTJBT, Attorney Says Courtprely Orders Distribution Jock. New York, Nov. 2Srortimer F. Klliott, general counair the Stand ard Oil company, saMay, in com menting for the firstjJ on the de cisions against the tany handed down by the United S3 circuit court at St. Paul: "I have eeen wharports to be the text of the decujlianded down by the United States lit court Sat urday. The company take an ap peal at once to the.cd States su preme court and wiferfully abide by the verdict of th-best court in the laud, whatever fnay be. "Arguments in tlie began last April, and we are giuve reauueu an opinion. 1 do nota that we are pleased with tbeeopfetself, but we are glad to get ititever its na ture. "The decree doesforder a disso lution of the Standi company; that is a misunderstg. What the decree orders, as I Understand it, is thut the compajall distribute among its stockholjf whom there are aproximately 5a holdings in stock of subsidiaryipanies. This distribution, I furbnderstand, is ordered to be effojon a pro-rata basis of apportion) Poison Folltfvance. Vienna, Nov. 23.4rge number of officers just promote captains on the general staff hfeived througo the mails sample b-f pills. These were accompanied ! circular relat ing to nervous del Captain Ma dos took some of pills and died almost instantly, topsy revealed the presence of oj of potassium. A further investigjhowed that all the pills containetide of potass ium in large quaj and also that many first lieuteqttached to the staff, but not pr had not re ceived pills. Despair Cherry. Cherry, 111., No -Twenty saved, 92 known dead 3 miseing was the record at the 1 mine tonight. Ten dead were I to the surface today and 27 m d were located in the second but were not brought up on a of black damp. What had promise Cherry ' real day of thanksgi ded in a night ,.f i.r.a inform sDair. Tonisht no living man clad been added to the list or tbicueu yesieruiiy All dav the tollpurch belli re , ounde"d. Eighdiei were in terred. STANDARD OIL KNOCKED OUT I Dissolution Ordered by Federal Court. Evasion Prohibited. St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 23 In an opinion written by Judge Walter II. Sanborn of St. Paul, and concurred in by Judges Vandeventer, Hook and Adams, with a special concurring opinion by Judge Hook, the United States circuit court for the eastern die trict of Missouri today handed down an opinion declaring the Standard Oil company of New Jersey an illegal com bination operating in restraint of trade and ordered its dissolution. The opinion was filed simultaneously in St. Louis and in St. Paul. In this decision the government of the United States gains' a sweeping victory. According to Frank B. Kel logg, special prosecutor, the govern ment has won every point for which it contended. The decree filed by Judge Sanborn is comprehensive and enjoins the Standard company, its directors, offi cers, agents, servants and employes from voting any stock in any of the subsidiary companies, and irora exer cisingor attempting to exercise any control over the acts of these subsidiary companies. The subsidiary companies are en joined from declaring or paying any dividends to the Standard company and from permitting the latter company to vote any stock in, or direct the policy of the subsidiary companies. But the defendants are not prohib ited from distributing rateably to the shareholders of the principal company the shares to which they are equitably entitled in the stocks of the defendant corporations that are parties to the combination. The defendants are enjoined from continuing or carrying into further ef feet the combination adjudged to be il legal and from entering into any like combination, the effect of which is to restrain commerce in petroleum or to prolong the unlawful monopoly. The case will be appealed direct to the supreme court of the United States, the judges who signed tne decree are in effect the judges of the United States circuit court of appeals, although they were sitting for the purpose of trying tins case as the circuit court ror the eastern district or Missouri, The decree becomes eeffctive in 30 clays, when no doubt a stay will bo granted for the purpose of an appeal When' the decree takes effect, unless a stay is granted, an injunction will issue restraining the Standard Oil com pany from a further continuance of its business under its present forma tion. It appears from the concurring opin ion written by Judge Hook that the company cannot do business under any other form with the object of stifling competition. He says on this subject that it is thought that with the end of the combination the monopoly will naturally disappear, but should it not do so and the members of the combina tion retire from it, except one who might perpetuate the monopoly by the aggregation of the physical properties and instrumentalities, it would consti tute a violation of the decree of the court. In the trial the point was made that the Standard Oil company was a ben eficient corporation in that it, by rea son of . economy in operation, reduced the price of its product. This, Judge Hook holds, can have no weight. FOR DRASTIC ACTION DIE OF SUFFOCATION. URGED TO USE BIO STICK. Lords AM Crisis. London, Novle United King dom is more aj la polities now than for man and the week will witness $minstioo of the fierce, warfare ie budget. The home of lordjtpeeted to vote Thursday on tioa of the bud get. Muit It dtbe upper house will speak. ljsubery'e efforts for the Cunacfuad those of the l arl of llatsi Sa.te4 with a the Liberals are interest. Lava Teurriffe, 3 four craters h, alter, whirl I y vijilotiuii fi'MIl 1 heal kt vatt Ibg Jitil L cut lm Ifentrtffe. Tlce are tow out UtanilvKoat ly Is irroiiij.Li4 'w A Uvs ha .! su it eiiil vf lit fiuua-l London Wants Taft to Keep Peace in Central America. London, Nov. 23. Nothing could be more agreeable to Europe, so far as Central American affairs are concerned, than such a turn of events on the Nic araguan coast as would give Washing ton good grounds for drastic action. "It is to be hoped," says the London Hoview, "that Mr. Roosevelt did not take the 'big stick' with him to Africa, and that President Taft knows where to lay his hands on it. "There may be two opinions as to the expediency of wielding it in inter nal concerns, such as corporation ag gressiveness, like the Standard oil, and corporation iniquity, like the American sugar. That is for the Washington administration to eay. "But if the United States is to en force the Monroe docti.ne and main tain the hegemony of the western world, the plainest of plain duties to the rest of the universe requires that the brawling Latin states near the isthmus be flogged into some sense of discipline." Taft for Fighting Navy. Norfolk, Va., Nov. 22. "The navy should not only be worth securing, but should be able to fight." President Taft aroused enthuoiasm today by mak ing this statement in an Bddruss be fore the Atlantic Deeper-Waterways association convention. The president declared Hampton Roads and Chesa peake Bay should be protected by an island fort erected midway between the Vickinia capes. Mr. Taft regarded the Norfolk navy yard as probably the most important base in the country and Hampton Roads as the greatest point of naval rendezvous. Steel Men Not Guilty. Boston, Nov, 22. A verdict of not guilty was ordered by the court in the' case of five of the many defendant companies and individuals after the state had rested its case in the trial of the famous steel contract collusion case today. Those found not guilty by the court's order are the Berlin Con struction company, a New York cor poration; the BrovKetchum Iron works, the United Construction com pany, Frederick N. Rosk and James II. Powers. The charge was collusive bid ding on public contracts. Has Rste Bill In View. Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 22. Modifl estion of the interstate commerce act to obtain reasonable basse of rates to all and fairnem of practices la the op eration of interstate railways was sug gested by Attorney General Oeorge W. wickerihain in an tiJren tonight at the ansual banquet of the Commercial club, j(iven in eomwemorttiou of the signing of the John Day commercial tieaty. Mr. Wickerslam reipouded to the tuait, "The Intentate Commerce CoiuuiUiion." Taft iii:u$ Trvute Duties. Hsiiiploa, Va , Nov. S3. I'roildent TM ludar luuk up hit djt ss a ii.riuUr of L mti cf iruattm tf JUuijtoa Normal aul A jriruJl ufl lu itiui. Ike f i-1 is an .'l iraiM-i Iba uiS it ) it'J jat r al schovlt Las lUiKjlvS 4 Twekte. Americans by Zelaya. NICARAGUA CAUGHT IN THE ACT President Upholds Causo of Revolt tioniets and Sett Precedent in American History. Death In Most Agonising Forms Indl cated at Cherry, 111. Cherry, I1L, Nov. 22. Andrew Tall Inquires About Execution cl 22212 recovery of bodies is necessarily . slow on account of the fire still burning slightly Ih some parts of the mine. Bodies of the victims, piled in great heaps, have been seen, by .firemen in both the east and west tunnels of. h second level. It is estimated tHat 75 of the dead are huddled together . in the west tunnel. The bodies of two men, believed to be Andrew 'Donovan and his eon, were found clasped in each other's arms in the east tunnel. They have not been brought up yet. The bodies of the victims are all burned black, but it is said that in most casee the features are intact. When ithe 'res cuers descended this morning into the main shaft they brought eight badly charred bodies to the surface, making a total of nine recovered. One was recovered yesterday. - . The fire, after raging furiously since last Saturday, has practically burned itself out, and it is believed the work of recovering the dead will henceforth be comparatively easy. When the rescue party, headed by Mine Inspectors Taylor and Moses, reached the 200 foot level this morn ing they found a number of victims huddled together. Appearances indi cated that the men whose bodies were found had climbed from lower levels to the 200 foot station. The imprints of finger nails were seen in the palms of their hands. It was thus indicated that they had suffered the agonies of suffocation before the flames had reached them. THROWING OFF YOKE' -.ji .! , . , i - ilfeslerii Railroads Tire of Doml nation ojWall Street. Washington, Nov. 20. Announce' ment that this government is tired of the high-handed action of small Cen tral American republics practically was contained in a dispatch sent late today to tne iiluenelds Steamsuip company, which sought the protection of the state department from interference by insur gents now operating against President Zelaya. An hour later a peremptory note, couched in diplomatic language, but none the less direct, was delivered to Scnor Felipe Rodrigues, charge d'af faires of the Nicaraguan legation, de manding a full and complete explana tion of the execution of two Americans, Leonard Grace and Leroy Cannon, killed by order of Zelaya when they were found in tne insurgent army. Pending a satisfactory explanation of the occurrence, President Taft has re fused to recognize Isidore Hazera, new Nicaraguan minister. Mr. Taft is thoroughly aroused by actions of the Zolayan government, and apparently is determined to make tne lives of Ameri can citizens much safer and much more respected in Central America than they have been hitherto. The attitude of the government was clearly shown in the dispatch to the Hluehelus steamship company, the head quarters of which is in New Orleans. The compan's steamer was about to set sail for Bluefields with a miscel laneous cargo, in which were a number of rifles and other munitions of war. The corporation was warned by agents of the Nicaraguan insurrectionary forces that the vessel would be liable to seizure, and the 'steamship people promptly called on the state depart ment to declare the protection of this government in such case?. The state department replied promptly. The an swer was the result of a conference be tween President Taft and Secretary rvnox and carried run weight. It gave the Bteamship concern no en couragement, and practically recognized the revolutionary forces operating against the Zelaya administration, a proceeding for which there probably is no parallel in tne records of this gov ernment. CLAIM AGAINST CHILE. United States Makes Demand for Set tlement of Old Case. Washington, Nov. 20. The Alsop claim against Chilo for more than $1,000,000, pending for 35 years, has assumed a critical stage. Mr. Dawson, American minister to Chile, is now on his way to Washington, having left Mr. Pierpont in charge of the legation. It is not improbable that, if the Chilean ..government does not consent to a final settlement within the next few days, the American legation in Santiago will be closed and its archives placed in the hands of the American consul for safekeeping. Intimation to this affect has been given to Minister Cruz, representing Chile in Washington. This action on the part of the state department is not to be taken as an ultimatum to Chile, but this govern ment's purpose in withdrawing its dip lomatic representatives from that coun try is a protest against Chile's in terminable delays concerning this claim. It is not thought probable .that Chile will willingly continue to be exhibited before the world as a country which resorts to every possible effort to avoid the pa3rment of admittedly just debts. Only a week or ten days ago Minister Dawson entered into an agreement with the Chilean foreign office as to the form of a protocol which was to be the basis for a reference of the Alsop claim to The Hague tribunal. Ihe Chilean government, however, re fused to comply with conditions agreed upon, and in effect repudiated its own foreign office. Stock Unpaid, 73 Sued. Kansas City, Nov. 20. A suit was filed here today against the Union Life nsurance company to collect unpaid stock subscriptions of $175,000, and asking the appointment of a receiver. W. S. King, of Memphis, Tenn., and 11 other stockholders from various por tions of the country are plaintiffs, and 1 3 persons who bad subscribed for stock are defendants. The principal reason for the company's failure, the petition states, is that the state requires a de posit of $100,000 befora the company can begin business. Denver Tongs Warned. Denver, Colo., Nov. 20. Denver's Chinatown is in a reign of terror today, as the result of warnings received from San Francisco that a band of 30 hatchet men are en route to Denver to extermi nate members of the Yee tong, of whom there are nearly 100 here. This action is a result of the feud that is now rag ing in nan rraucisco net ween tue lee tongs -and the On lick tongs, lee Ouong, proprietor of a chop suey res taurant, received a letter yesterday con taining tho warning. Watch will be kept for the strange Chinese. Kin of Dias Breaks Bock. Enid, Okla., Nov. 20. Vincente Diaz, who derlari-t he ia the grandson of 1'rrau'ent Diaz, of Mexico, was arrested here today on a charge nf disorderly conduct. Failing to gut bonds, be was put to work on the atn-t-t. Liter be telegraphed to Mexico City for finan cial aid, and produced letters and papers whirh aatiatied the nil re of bis iden tity. Ia the bel.ef that the young man's alory waa true, the pulire au uouneed be woul I be reloaaed. Dial aid be was the victim ef eircuiuitaitces. Floods Create llevoe. Ca e JIaytiaa, Nov, !. Arar1 nj In a'lvli'ua froiu Mulile ( full, hantu I .iiii Ui i. the Ys'I'jI r r h uvt rUftiJ It l4iik ai"l ibiiiiilatxl lualiy He ikii'i ta. 'J mr ia auiiii lu n !. JhLabHabtl GIVEN NEW TRIAL. Coal Companies Did Not Violate Sher man Anti-Trust Law. St. Paul, Nov. 22. Judge Walter H. Sanborn in the United States circuit court of appeals today handed down an opinion setting aside the verdict and ordering a new trial in the case of the United States aaginst the Union .Pa cific Coal company, the Union Pacific Railway company, the Oregon' Short Lino, Jgincs M. Moore, and Everett Buckingham, in which they are charged with violating the Sherman anti-trust law by lorming an unlawful combina tion. While the suit was brought in the name of the United States, proceed ings were started by a Salt Lake City coal dealer named Sharp, who charged the coal company and the defendant railways with refusing to sell and haul coal for him. Sharp charged that the Union Pacific Coal company refused to sell him coal, and that the railways refused to haul the commodity because he advertised and sold coal at a lower figure than his competitors. Judge Sanborn, in his opinion, holds that there was no substantial evidonce of any combination betweon any two or tne defendants, eitner to refuse to sell coal to Sharp or to refuse to trans port it for him. The lower court found the defendants guilty of violating the Sherman anti-trust law and imposed u fine of $1,000 and costs on Moore, and $3,000 and costs on the other defend ants. CHILE WILL CONFER, LAUNCH MOVEMENT FOR FREEDOM Rail Chiers Form Board of Control to Vrtn Favor cf Public Jonn A. Spoof May Lead. fhicago, Nov. . 25. A movement which has not yet Become well defined is said to have been started to place the Western railroads in control of West ern men, so that their policy no longer will be dictated from Wall street. O-eat secrecy is being maintained regarding the subject. John A. Spoor, president of the Chi cago Junction road, is said to bo nn important member of the new coterie of railway men who will shape the des tinies of the Western roads. Mr. Spoor denies a knowledge of anything about the movement, but his recent entry into the board of the Chicago Great West ern road is said to be part of tho plan. It is the opinion of nearly all West ern rail presidents thnt an almost con stant linking of names of Western roads with' Wall street operators is responsible in a largo measure for the wave of ad verse legislation in recent years. As a matter of fact, the people own most of the Western roads. Why not let the stockholders run them instead of Wall street, operatorsf is the question being asked. It is understood that as soon as a suf ficient number of strong Western busi ness men have been elected directors there will be established a pseudo board of control, which shall shape the policies of all Western roads insofar as thoso policies affect tho traveling and shipping public. In this mrfnner it is thought tho Western roads can get away from the' Wall street stigma and so shape their policies that the public will understand that the railroad managers believe, in truth, that the interest of the; public and of tho railroads is one and the same. ON FIRE BEFORE SAILING. Santiago Regards Note From Washing ton as Ultimatum. Santiago, Chile, Nov. 22. The Chil ean government today opened negotia tions with Washington with a view to submitting the Alsop claim of tho Tjnitod States against Clyle to a spe cially constituted court of arbitration at The Hague. The notification to Chile which is looked upon here as an ultimatum, has been seized upon by the sensational press as cause for agitation. Great anxiety was felt here because of the notification, through Chilean Minister Cruz, at Washington that the United States would close its legation at Santiago within a few days unless the Chilean government consented to an adjustment of the Alsop claims or agreed to refer the dispute to The Hague. The members of the American colony here declarod the manner in which the United States was proceeding was arbi trary and detrimental to American in terests in Chile, they have communi cated with a prominent attorney at Washington and asked him to use. his influence in the matter. Merchants here fear the agitation will affect American imports adversely. Senator at Death's Door. San Francisco, Nov. 19. Thomas Flint, Jr., a member of the state senate for 16 years, president protom of that body for three sessions and twice can didate for the Itepublican nomination for governor of California, is critically ill at Adler's sanitarium here. Little hope is held for his recovery. Sena tor Flint came to San Francisco Sat urday from his home in San Juan, Sun Benito county, to attend a meeting of the directory boards of the Masonic home at De Co to. That evening he was seized with pneumonia., Heney Will Hurry Caaes. San Francisco, Nov. 19. Francis J. Heney, former prosecutor in the local graft cases, started last night for Port land, where be will immediately take ui the Oregon land fraud cases, under his reappointment as special deputy at torney general. Heney will endeavor to bring the rase of former Congress man Bingor Hermann to trial first and will have it set for trial at the earli est possible date. He expects to take up all the cases at once, and said today that it would be his purpose to dis pose of all car.es as quickly as possible. Color Line Causes Suicide. New Orleans, La., Nov. 19. Edward Von Bulow, a first eouain of Prince Von Bulow of Germany, committed suicide becauae be was arcuaed of n.arrying an octoroon. Von Bulow was arreated a week ago charged with vio lating Ihe law whirb prohibits the in termarriage of wbitea aud negroea. He Mas released on b"iil aud three days agu disappeared. Hia body was found late yriW-rJjy Ooat.ng la the ' ippi river. Enforce Bafatjr Appliance Law. Paa I raotUi-o, Nnv. 'it 1 be ( hi'stfe L Norlhweatera tailrosl flusd ly Jwla") Haven i II anrarste coni.li )iiil lay i'lt vtiiUimm it Ilia law fa rj.ng auii'iy ipj.ati)ts J Its lo'al soi'mbt hi !! Hi" 1 1 1 , 1 iyU. 'Ik Violations Sobalata l bf fa.luie 'O !'! i-ksl larlcif, Serious Charges Made In Ease of Burned Steamer. Los Angeles, Cal., Nov. 23. Ugly rumors in connection with the destruc tion of the steamer St. Croix on Satur day, six miles off the coast, opposite Point Dume, are to be investigated by John Birmingham, supervising inspector of the United States steam inspection service, assisted by O. F. Bolles and John T. Bulger, inspectors of hulls nnd boilers. i A rumor emanating from passengers on the ill fated vessel has it that tho St. Croix was on fire before it sailed from San Pedro at 10 o'clock Saturday morning. Steamship men say that such a condition could not have existed with out the knowledge of some member of the crew. The failure of the wireless nppnrntus is one of the mutters that will probalily be investigated thoroughly. According to the chief engineer, the pumps were working when the ship was abandoned, and if it were so, the dyna mos supplying current for the opera tion of the wireless apparatus must have been in running order. That this apparatus was tampered with is charged. Tho St. Croix carried no freight in her hold by which sponta neous combustion m'ight have been caused. ' A San Francisco dispatch quotes Charles TI. Hamilton, one of the owners, as saving that the Ht. Croix carried $175,000 insurance. When in Alaskan waters the vessel was insured for ap proximately $125,000. The vessel was estimated to be worth between $125,0"0 mid S 150,0110. Congressman Dies a Hero. Kansas City, Nov. 2.'t. Tt was in a vain efl'ort to save the life of his little grandson that Congressman David A. DeArmond, of tho sixth Missouri dis trict, perished in a fire that destroyed his liiime in Butler, Mo., early today. The heroittn of the congressman was made known Into this afternoon, when DeArmond 's body was found. He hail caught up the ti year old lad, David A. DeArinnud, Jr., and rushed with him through the flames that filled his room. He fell with his unconscioiiH burden, nnd both sank through the floor to quick di-ath. Nourmahal Is Safe. New York, Nov. 2.1. The Astor yacht puzzle is solved. Mail from Colo nel John Jacob Astor and his party readied Now York today on the insular line Nteainer Harry Liickenbach, which sailed from Han Juan, I. It., November 17. The letters indicate there was no unusual incident aboard the yacht. On that date an officer from the yacht Nourmahal came aboard the I.niki-n bach with mail just before the latter sailed for New York. This officer told Captain James Dalton, of tin- I.iicken barli, that the Nouruiahul was fo kail next for Cuban ports. East Objects to Rates. New York, Nov. "5. Delegations fifiin ten chamber' of commerce and board of trade of KtiHlern cities met today to consider the new freight rates proposed by railroads of the Norhwia-t, as a result of the famous Spokane raft) case decision. A committee was ap pointed to report on a plan for the cre ation it a central traffic bureau to pro tect the interests of the East. Com mercial organizations of this territory already have intervened in proceeding before the interstate comuiisaiou. World Is Olveo Message. Geneva, Nov. 2-1. Count Lo Tolstoi ha given another message to the world. At a meeting In liienne, when Ion Hwix and foreign delegates were assembled, Tolstoi's messagu was read amid great enthusiasm. Tolstoi k .rul to good to use of the (moplo to refuse to serve as soldiers, either vol uniarily or under pressure, even if t but refusal entails punisbinsii t. Killing by oldiura, be assarts, is a criitilu) set. Mars Needs f'laar Air. riajOtMif, Arl, N" VV' lu in . 1 1, ui a It a ft r at in - l.i in ouv In r in I for ll.a slolr ill ll.lt I r J ...oil, if III) I.hhiII uii i nei hi I , is ii;ilai.n4 a I. in U ltd -). uii Km I ism tin l"i, i au eii.iudv t btti' J J,'1' lilt WHO MAKES BUBGLABS' JQTSf Vew Shops Where the Jimmy Cm De nought. Every little while, said a London oetectlve, recently, the pollco arrest a man with a set of burglar's tools in his possession, and one naturally won ders where they all come from. It is easy to buy a gun of any description, and the most reputable pereon would not be alarmed to be seen purchasing the most wicked looking knife ever made, but who would Vnow where to get a Jimmy or a device for drilling Into a safe or any of the many tools used by the professional burglar In the pursuit of his calling? There probably are places In the large cities where these, things are made and sold to the user, but such plaees are exceedingly scarce. It may seem a little strange to learn that most of the tools used In burglaries are made by mechanics who are look ed upon as respectable men In the community. When a burglar wants any particular tool made he goes to a mechanic who can do the Job, and pays him perhaps five times what It la actually worth for making the tool and keeping quiet about it. Many de tectives can recall rases of this kind that have come to light in London. One In particular occurred some years ago, when an escaped convict named Williams went to a blacksmith In the East End and got him to make a lot of drills to be used In safe crack ing. He personally superintended the tempering of the steel, but when the Job was nearly completed It leaked out, and Williams was arrested. In this Instance the blacksmith knew nothing of the use to which the tools were to be put. Most of the tools used by burglars are secured In the same way. ' The only regular establishment ever discovered where they were made was In the East End. This was years ago, and the place was soon pounced upon. The New York Building Code, sec tions 153-155, provides that, on the refusal of an owner of an unsafe building to make It safe or remove it, a report of the building shall be made to a court, which, if It finds that the building Is unsafe, shall com mand the commissioner of buildings to take It down or make It Bate, and that the expense thereof shall constitute a lien on the premises. Section 157 provides that If a building collapses the city may remove the debris, to be paid for out of the fund, under sec tion 158. In the case of In re Jenkins, 115 New York Supplement, 885, such provisions are construed by the New York Supreme Court, and It Is held that the city has no Hen on property for expenses Incurred In removing de bris of a collapsed building and the bodies of people burled beneath the ruins, and Is directly liable to the contractor employed to do the work. The Maine Supreme Court's refer ence In a previous decision to a search warrant as "a sliarp and heavy police weapon to be used most carefully lest It wound the security or liberty of the citizen." Is fully Justified by the con duct of the officers as related In Buck ley vs. Beaulleu, 71 Atlantic Reporter, 70. Under the authority of a warrant to search certain premises for Intoxi cating l.quors, and armed with axes, pickaxes and cro.vbars, they entered the house and nide a search from attic to cellar, and even dug Into the floor of the cellar. On finding no liquors, and strongly suspecting they were somewhere concealed about the house, they broke Into and tore out a strip from the Interior walls of the rooms below stairs entirely round each room, and dropped the debris upon the floors and rarpcts. All this was done In the hope of finding, not the liquors, but some pipe or other clue leading to the liquors. The officers then de parted, leaving the occupants to re move the debris, and leaving the plain tiff, the owner, to restore his house and make It again habitable. Such conduct was declared by the court to be unlawf-il, and such a search en tirely unreasonable and In excess of the officers' authority. It was no de fense to an action for damages that they acted In good faith, In the full belief that the occupant was keeping liquors In the house in violation of the law. FACTS I3J TABLOID FORM. I'uaala rr lha Pulleemasi. An amusing adventure happened on one occasion to Dr. Clifford when he was conducting a series of services In Birmingham. Arriving a few minutes before the commencement, the doctor waa refused admission by the police man at the door. "I want to go In." said Dr. Clifford. "Are you a seat holderT asked the official. "No, I am notr "Then you can't go In." "I think," remarked the famous pas sive reslster. "that there will be room for me In the pulpit." "I am not so sure of It," retorted the other. "But I am Dr. Clifford; nnd I am due to preach In another minute and a half." "Oh. are your said the Incredulous policeman. "I have let In two Dr. ';ilffordH already." Woman's Life. This VaU of tears. The news that science had at length discovered the means of destroying the germ of the laxt III which flesh was belr to called forth rapturous re joicings throughout the world. "Henceforth perfect health will reltw universally!" people everywhure ei'Ialmed and gave themselves up to congratulations. But that was not to be In the very neit day's paper was the account of somebody laving Invented a mil ro se ope wi powerful as to reveal a lot more germs, wblth meant, of course, (bat It would be no lime at all until everybody was sl k sgaln I'uik The Collre, ,f Iftrd Kuixki list Ulif hluiniil it iiiesfii (ii fit IbtQ any Institution e ki.oaj cf VYbaU b loan tbss lu buttl . Lee hvIKe Lt UI The first bicycle with pedals wa made about 1840. Nearly two million dollars' worth of tea was exported from Shanghai to the United States In 1908. The University of Bonn, Germany, for the first time, this summer reached and passed the 4,000 mark In the num ber of students. German physician baa found germ-free horse or cattle serum an ' excellent application for stopping bleeding of the nose or hemorrhages In general. Herbert Samuel, who was recently named as chancellor of " Lancaster, with a seat in the cabinet, is the first Jew to attain to that distinction In England. A big fortune awaits the man who rediscovers the lost art of the' Sara cens, who made sword blades so keen that they could cut in two the best Sheffield blades of the present day. Full of 7,eal. the country convert in his first prayer meeting remarks offer ed himself for service. "I am ready to do anything the Lord asks of me," said he, "so long as it's honorable." In the United States of Colombia $1 In gold Is worth $102 of the national paper currency. The Colombian ex port duty on cowe has been reduced from $612 currency ($6 gold) to $102 ($1 gold). Rrftatn la at last awakening to the absolute necessity of progress and the highest kind of knowledge. British universities are opening terJjr,'. col leges rivaling the greit German poly technics. Two Cockney "lldies" were dlscuse-lna- each other publicly. One said something about the other's "Jaw," or "Jore." "Gam," answered her oppon ent, "you've got enough Jaw for two sets of teeth, you "ave." By way of expediting the transmlsv Rlon of letters, the Belgian postal au thorities hsve recommended that all letters Intended for Brussels should be Inclosed In red envelopes, those for other Belgian points In yellow, and foreign letters In green envelopes. At th hnnnuets of the eighteenth! century the man who carved needed to know words as well as the use or Vnlvea. Venison he "broached," the pheasaht he "allayed," the rabbit and woodcock he "unlaced" and the cram hn "tamed." Dismembering a swan was "lifting" him, and the crane un der his knife was being "dlsplayea. The peacock was "disfigured." "Tea," says the London Chronicle,, in ih s-nrrinn is one of the best-estab- llshed of our mid-Victorian Institu tions. Mr. B. V. Lncas, who Is a con noisseur of the caddy, recalls In bis- essay, "The Divine L,eai," a siory the late Arthur Cecil, who once en countered the following Inscription in e-arrtan at Kew: 'Tea. plain, Gd.; Tea. with shrimps, 9d.; Tea, with chil dren, Is.'" "Biscuit" was until the eighteenth century spelled "blsket." as still pro nounced, the current spelling being merely a senseless adoption of the modern French spelling without its pronunciation. "Blsket" originally munt a twice-baked bread of the kind alluded to by Shakespeare In "As You Like It," where the melancholy Jacques Informs the duke that hl "brain Is as drle as the remainder blsket after a voyage." ( "Grass widow" is not necessarily sv slang term. It appears In the mar riage register of Halstead, Essex, Eng land, as early as 1654. It Is said to be a corruption of "grace widow" and dates from the days when divorce were granted only by the authority of the church. The woman who was .o empowered to separate from her hus band was commonly called a grace widow, and from this the expression gradually gained lta present meaning . and spelling. A Phlladelphlan who was formerly a realdent of a town in the north ot Pennsylvania recently visited his old home. "What has become of the Hoov er family?" he asked an old friend. "Oh." answered the latter, "Tom Hoov er did very well. Got to be an actor out west. Bill, the other brother, le something of an artlat In New York, and Mary, the sister. Is doing literary work. But John never amounted to much. It took all he could lay his hands on to support the others " Four railroads, according to "The Black Diamond," the official organ of the coal trade, have closed contract for approximately five hundred thous and tons, of coal for use during the entire year. In and of Itself this Is probably not Important, because the coal would have been used whether purchased on contract or In the open market. The significance attaching to the transaction Is that the railroad had been holding off their purchases and apparently only rushed to cover on the eve of what promises to be a rising market. Little Robert and "Jim." the grocer's delivery man, were great friends, and on the momentous day of Kobeit's promotion from dresses to knicker bockers hs waited eagerly In front of the house for "Jim's" coming. But the delivery man. when be came, busied himself about Lis wagon without seem ing to see anything unusual In bis small rhuin's appearance. Kobert stood around hopefully Jn sarlous conscious positions until he could stand It no longer. "'Jim,'" be burst out at last. "Is your horses "frald of pant?" Everybody's Mainline. Nobody ever dies In Tombstone un less -they bring It "within" or fall Into a sli hundred foot vertical shaft or buy an automobile or "aaas" their mother In law or try to thaw out pow der' or mistake cyanide, of pwlaaaluni for sugar or atari off a county seat removal racket, floine die of old age, some old pailljris of Daniel iloone. but none has ever been known to die f i una phyab al Ii reaulai lllos roeitrai led In Tom Lutein, Ssl.U fioll) the shots ll.tll (loin . I causes ami o aaloiu'ly an ate Mutual tilitut'S sl-iol Mia 1 1, Knit, aoji In t i' t d V s Kill of Miautl M'l'U, or (loin S -Id taiielil Hi ion gd a hide li.mW ly a 4. I c-ii.t-.U us (Altai avaJWrWJi