2 GAMEBDH COUNTY PRESS. VI. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, ..fc no V paid Idvunce i ADVERTISING RATES: AflTertisements lire published at tho rate of dul »r per square forone Insertion ami lifty i ei square for each subsequent insertion Rmes iij ill" VI nr. or for six or thro ontliH. »rt low and un.form, and will be turnished on ppi llcat on Legit 1 and Official Advertising per square three limes or loss. S; each subsequent mser tio i • 0 cents per square. Local nonces lit cents per line for one inser •er.ion: f> cents pi r lint lor eacti subsequent •on-ecutivc insertion. Obituary notices over five lint s 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar rlnpes *nd deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, five lii es or less »5 per year, over live lines, at the regular rales of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 7."> cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pmtss is complete *nd affords facilities fur doing ih" best class of work, PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear rges are paid, except at the option of the pub sher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. Who Owns the Waterways? One of the most intricate problems Involved, and one which must be cleared before we have gone far with the management of water power, is that of the ownership of running wa ter- a matter to which both congr-">s3 and the "upreme court liiv eventless. Good handling of tlu big vessels means much, but there ar» j always circumstances like the parting of the anchor chain of the Illinois thai cannot be guarded against. The po tential danger from the mass of explo sivee carried is also ever present. P is a satisfaction to know that 110 th ing has been left undone to avoid pre ventable accidents, it is also gratify ing to believe that the American ships in construction as well as in the safe guarding <6 to 140. Death Threat sent by Mail. Cleveland, O. —-Two letters bringing warnings of death if money is not placed under the Lake Shore railroad tracks near his home within three days have been received by Pasquale Coreno. The first letter, demanding S2OO, was received three weeks ago. Coreno armed himself and notified the police. The second missive was re ceived Wednesday at Coreno's barber shop on West Eleventh street.. In it the price for life was set at SIOO. Thinks Jewel Thief Taken. Alliance, O. —While picking the pocket of a farmer Thursday, it is alleged, a man said to be Richard Jeff ries. alias "Dick" Jackson, alias Geo. Davis, was arrested by detectives. He Ib wanted for burglaries in Columbus and New Orleans.' $25,0C0 Fire at Hillsboro. Springfield, O. —A fire at Hills boro on Thursday night caused a loss of $25,000, with about half insur uice. Two stable boys had narrow escapes. BIG GUNS DID NOT DISABLE MONITOR FLORIDA WITHSTANDS TERRIFIC BOMBARDMENT. Fired at Short Range—Navy Test at Hampton Roads Proves Resisting Powers of Armor. Old Point Comfort, Va. —The big gest naval gun, the heaviest pro jectile and the highest explosive known, combined with close range and deadly aim, were allowed to work their full havoc on the turret plate of the monitor Florida in Hampton Roads on Wednesday. The result is declared to be a victory for turret construction and this notwithstanding the 11-inch hardened steel plate was blackened, broken, the seams of the turret sprung and the rivets and screws loosened and twisted. It was not five minutes after the terrible impact that the finely bal anced mechanism of the turret was being worked with ease and the 12- inch gun on the left side was trained at will. Inside the turret where stand the gunners and gun crew the havoc was much less apparent than from the outside. Examination showed that of the many delicately adjusted instru ments for fire control, sighting and operating the turret, Jew if any T/ere out of woiking order. Then followed a futile attempt to destroy the newly designed fighting mast erected on the stern 0/ the I'lor ida. After tive shots from the Arkan sas' guns had ripping through it, the mast still stood firm. The Florida hail been in the hands of experts for some time. Striking in her appearance was the "leaning tower" on her stern, the woven pipe military mast, resembling a huge waste paper basket. On top of its 125 feet of height was a broad platform. Just 342 yards from the Florida lay her sister ship, the Arkansas. The turret of the Florida was swung around so that her guns and those of the Arkansas looked squarely at each other. More than an hour of gun training followed before a 12-inch projectile was fired. It broke through the turret plate from the gun port to the edge just above and just below where the shell struck. The broken piece was driven Into the turret several inches, but not the thickness of the plate, so that no hole was actually made. TWO DROWNED, FIVE SAVED Five People Picked Up at Sea in Open Launch—Had Drifted Several Days. Avalon, Island of Santa Catalina, Cal. —Capt. A. Crist of the launch /Cetis of Avalon and C. E. 1 loo line, ordinary seaman on the Unit ed States converted cruiser Buffalo, were drowned and E. E. Easton ami wife and two small children and a col ored nurse were rescued l>y the Buf falo on the high seas after drifting helplessly for two days in a launch. Easton is a former war correspondent. On May IT Easton engaged Capt. Crist and his launch Zeus at Avalon for a camping trip of several days at San Cleniente islands, HO miles south of Santa Catalina island. Sunday they boarded the Zeus and started to re turn to Avalon. The craft encountered a heavy sea that night and when day dawned Monday Easton found that Capt. Crist was missing from the launch, together with the small row boat towed at the stern. The gasoline engine of the launch was still running, but Easton knew nothing of its mechanism. The boat drifted all day Monday, Monday night and Tuesday and the family were carried far out to sea. Tuesday evening the crusier Buffalo. Capt. Pond, sighted the little craft with the occupants wildly waving signals of distress. MONEY BURIED IN MINE Stockholders Will Have Hard Time Getting It Out. Chicago, 111. —The Amador Mining ami Development Co. of Montana, a 810,000,000 corporation with head quarters at Chicago, has come to an end. The copper-gold mine in which has been sunk $650,000 is worthless. The majority of stock was owned by residents of Chicago. There also are a large number of stockholders in Pittsburg, where the company had H' branch office, and in Boston, where the secretary and general manager, D. E. MacKinnon, has had headquarters. Boston, Mass. —D. E. MacKinnon, secretary and general manager of the Amador Mining and Development Co. of Montana, is not known in financial circles here. Hamby Got Three Years. Cleveland, O. —J. W. Hamby, 3fi years old, real estate operator, was sentenced by Judge Beacom Wednes day to three years in the penitentiary at hard labor. Hamby was sentenced on the indictment charging he ob tained SII,OOO from G. E. Rose under false pretense. Three years is thf maximum sentence. Ten Killed by Tornadoes. Wichita, Kan.—Ten dead, 12 in jured, hundreds of cattle killed, a vast acreage of crops destroyed and many buildings wrecked are the re sults of a series of tornadoes that vis ited Alfalfa county, Okla. Admiral Crowninrhield Is Dead. Philadelphia, Pa. —Admiral A. S. Orowninshield IT. S. N., retired, died at the Episcopal hospital Here Wednesday. He never recovered from the shock of an operation per formed some time ago. JEROME GOES ON WMH DEFENDS HIMSELF AGAINST CHARGES OF DERE LICTION. SAYS HE DID HIS FULL DUTY New York's District Attorney Avers His Course as Public Prosecutor Has Been Guided by Law and Conscience. Ellzabetlitown, N. Y.—District At torney Jerome was the central fig ure on Tuesday in the final proceed ings here before Commissioner Hand, appointed by Gov. Hughes to hear tes timony in connection with the charges of dereliction in the performance of the district, attorney's official duties. Mr. Jerome began his summing up after the filing of a brief by Franklin Pierce, attorney for the complainants. He presented no brief on his own be half. but will file one for Commission er Hand's perusal at the conclusion of the hearing. The district attorney's argument occupied the entire day's session. He launched Into a lengthy analysis o! the motives which animated those most active in bringing the charges against him. He said the procc< Jinga were "flimsy and mendacious." "I have lived all my life in the city of New York," said the district attor ney, "and the 16 best years of my life there were given to the public service. Twice I have run for office in that city and have been elected, the last time against every political party and all alone; and I consider that I was elect ed to exercise my judgment in the dis charge of the duties of that office and not the judgment of irresponsible edi tors of yellow journals and what they might say I ought to do. The duties laid upon me in that office and which I have striven to discharge were these: To be fair and just, to apply one law to all persons, not one law to the poor man and another to the rich. I have stood under great pressure be fore that grand jury room as a south ern sheriff has often stood before a southern jail when he knows that the prisoner within is guilty and worthy of punishment, but will allow him to be punished only as the law requires." Regarding the charge that he had refused to advise the grand jury to in dict George W. Parkins, in the so called $50,000 political contribution case, Mr. Jerome said: "It was perfectly plain that Bryan's election would have been followed by a shrinkage in the value of the securi ties of the New York Life Insurance Co. of 10 to 12 iter cent., so that with $450,000,000 worth of securities this contribution by Mr. Perkins was a shrewd movement even if illegal. But was it illegal? There was abundant evidence that the officials of almost every financial institution in New York City had contributed to the Re publican party committee to help de feat Bryan, so that if Perkins was guilty, then I had my work cut out for nie good and plenty for a year or more ahead. I tried to get a judicial de cision in the matter. Judge O'Sulli van refused to take it up and decide it. "The Judiciary of New York City was as scared as anybody in New- York. because it was on one hand J. Pierpont Morgan's partner and on the other hand the yellow journals." ELECTION OF BISHOPS. New Dignitaries Named, M. E. Con ference Turns to Other Things. Baltimore, Md. —The Episcopal elec tion of the Methodist Episcopal gen eral conference of 1008 is now a matter of history and when announce ment was made late today of the se lection of the eighth and last bishop very many of the delegates heaved sighs of relief. The new bishops, in the order of their election, and the number of votes each received on tlie electing ballot, are as follows: Rev. Dr. W. F. Ander son of New York, secretary of the board of education, Freedmans' Aid and Sunday schools, 540 votes; Rev. Dr. J. L. Nuelsen, professor in Nast Theological seminary, Berea. 0., 540 votes; Rev. Dr. \V. A. Quayle, pastor of St. James' church, Chicago, 519 votes; Rev. Dr. Charles W. Smith, ed itor of the Pittsburg Christian Advo cate, 511 votes; Rev. Dr. Wilson S. Lewis, president of Morningside col lege, Sioux City, la., 524 votes; Rev. Dr. Edwin H. Hughes, president of De Pauw university, Green Castle, Ind., 511 votes; Rev. Dr. Robert Mclntyre, pastor of the First church, Los Angeles, Cal., 514 votes, and Rev. Dr. Frank M. Bristol, pastor of the Met ropolitan church, Washington, D. C., 4P3 votes. The bishops-elect will be consecrated at a special service which will be held on Sunday afternoon at the Lyric. Fatal Shooting in Texas. Mineral Wells, Tex—W. E. Mc- Connell, one of the most prominent attorneys of the state and a former member of the state legislature, was shot and killed today by T. J. Pear son at the home of the latter here. Killed Guard Trying to Escape. Baton Rouge, La. —Two life con victs, in a desperate attempt to escape from the state convict camp In West Baton Rquge parish Tuesday, killed one guard and wounded two others. They were recaptured.