The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 18, 1909, Image 2

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    ROOSEVELT READY FOR
THE TRIP TO AFRICA
A Busy Week Ahead of the
Ex-President
TRYING OUT OF THE NEW GUNS
With His Editorial Associates,
Disposition Of His Business Af-
fairs Will Keep Mr. Roosevelt On
For The Expedition,
(Special).
Oyster Bay, N, Y.
Roosevelt walked Sunday from Saga-
more Hill to Christ Episcopal Church
for the morning service, and after-
ward returned home on foot, covering
in all #ix miles. Several callers were
received by Mr. Roosevelt during the
afternoon.
The former chief executive has en-
tered upon the final week of prepa-
ration for the
African expedition
week, as considerable packing ot the
personal outfits of Mr. Roosevelt and
his son, Kermit, remains to be done,
and business affairs of the
President also will require some of
his time. These latter matters will
be set in order in anticipation at
least a two-year absence abroad
Farewells to numerous friends and
relatives are to be sald and a visit
to Hoboken is contemplated to in-
spect the party's quarters aboard the
steamer and see that the outfit of the
expedition is safely away
of
stowed
where is can be quickly reached and
transhipped at Naples One day of
the week will be devoted to a family
reunion at Sagamore Hill, In ad-
dition to all this, Mr. Roosevelt
spend some fime each day, as is his
habit, in outdoor exercise, and he
hopes also to have a chance early in
the week to try out the rifles he will
use during the hunt on the
range near his home. His duties
a magazine editor will take him
New York several ti during the
week, and there he will be busy dic-
tating articles for publication It is
expected also that during the week
the Smithsonian members the ex-
pedition will come to Oyster Bay
for A final ox with Mr.
Roosevelt
There
target
az
to
mes
of
inference
boxes
will be
numerous
prising the personal effects of Mr
Roosevelt and Kermit Each has
provided himself with a large supply
of clothing for wear Mr.
Roosevelt has dozen pairs
shoes and boots leather and rub-
ber. Some are hobnalled and others
rubber They range
ordinary to those
extending
cloth is the
which the
Roosevelt
ral
tropical
over a of
of
soled from the
tops
Khaki
from
styles with
knees
principal material
outer clothing of Mr
and Kermit ig mate
suits made from water-proof
terial are included in
The rifles of Mr. Roosevel
son will receive more
thing else in their eq:
are inclosed in
completely water-tight The
graphic kit of
which Kermit Roosevelt
he being the official
is a model of its kind
man is very proud of it
that the photogapt i
are to be
the specimens of f )
will the National Museun
These photographs will form a scien-
tific collection of themselves The
steamer Hamburg, rhic the
members of the v make
the first will reac!
Hoboken toward ter part of
the week. and Roosevelt and
Kermit, accompanie probably by
Mrs. Roosevelt Ethel, wi
look over the staterooms and
See that everything. is carefully plac.
ed in a safe
in the hold.
During the latter part of this week
Mr. Roosevelt's sons Theodore,
who i8 emploved Thompsonvil
Ct.; Archibald who is attending
school at Groton, Mass. and Quen-
fin, now at the Episcopal High
School, Alexandria. Va will come
home to attend a family reunion
Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, Mr. Roose-
elt’s elder daughter,
at -S8agamore Hill
above the
Sev.
ma-
outfit
and his
than
ipment These
special made
photo-
expedition of
has
each
care
CARER,
charge,
photographer
The young
»
and feels
Br ’
8 he 0 make
.
ipl
of as great portance a
hi
shoot for
leg of th
and
also
and accessible position
5
ATE POISONED MEAT.
Over A Hundred Persons
In Vincennes,
Made
Vincennes, Ind
of persons were poisoned by eating
meat the noon banquet of
celebration of the one hundredth an-
niversary of the institution of
Masons of Indiana.
serious condition
The poisoned
{ Special) Scores
at
men fell on
called to care for them,
More than 100 cases had been re
been taken
by towns had to
homes,
being attended at hotels and at pri.
vate residences.
Salt Lake City, Utah (Special).
After enduring the horrors of an
underground prison. with death near,
for 50 hours, George and Jerry Pet.
erson were rescued at the 8: Pat.
rick Mine, little the worse for their
experience,
The Captain Of The Ropublie,
New York (8pecial).—Capt. I.
Sealby, who was in command of the
steamer Republic when it was sunk
near the Nantucket lightship as the
result of a collision with the stesm-
er Florida, returned from England
on the steamer Minnetonka, He is
bound for his home in Southern New
Jorsey for rest and recreation pend-
ing the official Inquiry as to the
causes of the Nantucket disaster, ‘1
have made my report,” he sald, “but
1 do not know when the hoard of
trade will take up the case.”
REJECT DEMANDS
MADE BY MINERS
The Hard-coal Operators Make No
Concessions,
Philadelphia (Special).—The an-
the
and
any
mittee of hard coal miners in
Reading Terminal Building here
flatly refused to grant the men
the demands they laid
to the mineworkerg that the present
agreement, which expires March 31,
This decision, while not un-
had long ago learned that
ators were against making any con-
cessions, came as a great disgppoint-
ment to the men when they
by the companies,
When the afternoon session of the
M., Thomas Lewis, na-
president of the
workers’ of America, and hig col-
leagues filed out of President Baers
office and went straight to their hotel
with a spirit that was not buoyant
tional
conference room, Mr. Lewis declin-
ed to comment on the development
of the day beyond stating that
and his committeemen will meet
discuss the situation.
The formal announcement made
for the benefit of the public of the
refusal of the operators to grant the
demands of the men was
in a statement agreed upon by
sides It is follows:
Demands Are Refused,
"A committee of seven representa-
tives of anthracite mineworkers and
a committee of seven representatives
of the anthracite operators held a
joint meeting at
nal! Bullding this afternoon dis-
cuss the Mine Workers’ demands.
demands are the same that
drafted in Scranton last Octo-
to
as
to
were
ber
“The operators declined to accede
the demands. The chief reason
offered for the rejection was that
any increase in the cost of produc-
tion would necessitate an advance
in the price of coal, and that such
an advance was impracticable. The
operators said that wages in the an-
mining industry were al-
ready at a high level and could not
be increased
"The announcement of the opera-
tors’ position was followed by a free
discussion of the various demands,
each side stating its views fully in
regard thereto. The operators de-
clared their unwillingness to reopen
the eight-hour day question and oth-
er questions passed upon by the an-
thracite commission of 19802 They
also declared themselves opposed to
one-year
“They
agreement,
declined to
United Mine Workers
chiefly on the ground
controlled by bituminous workers
They sald they met Mr. Lewis and
his committee as representatives of
the workers and not as
union. The operator
report of the
support their
with the United Mine
recognize the
of America,
that it was
anthracite
of the
calied upon
commission
deal
cers
girike
refusal
Work-
the
to
to
ers
of the discussion the
made the definite proposi-
renew the present agreement
r aterm of three years.”
HANGS HIMSELF IN JAIL.
Double Mauarderer Found
From Cell Door,
Accused
Dangling
Ia. Urry
for the murder of Mr
Winkle,
county jail
himself A deputy found
hanging to top bar
door Jones had formed
a rope by cutting the coverlet of his
bed into strips Jones’ real name
is supposed to be Frank Heatiy, and
he i# said to be from Washington
County, Pennsylvania
The murder of Mr. and
Winkle was particularly
In the middie of the night
entered their bedroom and beat
of both to a pulp,
club as a weapon
Muscatine, {Special )
Jones, trial
and Mrs
mitied suicide
banging
the hods
Jones’ cell
on
William Van
in the by
of
th
et
Mrs, Van
atrocious
Tones
the
heavy
North
For Killing Broker.
New York (8pecial).—John C
Lumsden, the young North Carolina
inventor. convicted of
in the first degree on the charge of
of Gen-
Sessions to not less than 18
years nor more than 19% years and 6
altercation with Lumsden over
matters. Lumsden
an
some notes.
Bodies Of Hayes To Be Moved.
Fremont, Ohio (Special). The
Ruther
Hayes and his wife, Lucy
Webh Hayes, now resting in Oak-
wood Cemetery, will be reinterred in
Splegel Grove, for many years the
home of the President.
ie now owned by Webb C. Hayes, a
son, The bodies will be placed in a
vault on the crest of a knoll, to
which point the Hayes monument
will be removed,
——— sii
1,500 Horses Quarantined,
Philadelphia (Special). One hun
dred stables in various sections of
the city and 1.500 horses are under
quarantine owing to an outbreak of
mange, discovered by the State Live
Stock Sanitary Board, Dr. W. Hor
ace Hoskins, of this city, chief in-
#pector of the board, placed the em-
bargo on the stables and sald that
the disease was brought to Phila-
delphia in shipments of horses {rom
New York, New Jersey and points
Want
$29,000,000 CASE
GOES OUT OF COURT
Judge Decides to Instruct Jury to
Find Oil Trust Not Guilty,
ATTORNEYS CONTEND IN VAIN.
Judge Anderson Disposes Of The Fae
mous $20,240,000 Fine By In-
structing Jury To Bring In A Ver-
dict Of Not Guilty—S8ays No Proof
Was Offered That Fixed Railroad
Freight Rates Existed Or
Standard Oil
Reduced Rates,
Judge Ander-
the jury in
in which
imposed
Chicago (Special).
instruct
Ol] case,
fine first
Judge Landis, to find the company
guilty,
the
decided to
Standard
WHS
In face of repeated rulings
theli
had
more difficult the
case, the Government
decided over night to abandon the
idea of additions the bill of par-
covering the defects pointed
the Court, and began argu-
in the hope of inducing Judge
to reverse his decision.
The Standard Oil lawyers express
the would
soon, but
proving of
attorneys
to
out by
ments
case
be brought to a close
until issue wa
out
fight the
thrown of court
Of Government,
line of
pared to
actually
View
first
the
that the
argument was
Court's indicated
18-cent freight
under which the indictment was
drawn, could not be established by
means of Illinois classification
According to the Government's point
view, the published rate on
from Whiting, Ind., to East
Louis wag 18 cents. This was estab
lished by means of Tariff 24
application to the Illinois classifica-
tion issued in 188%,
in 1900 a IHinols
tion was issued, and the
tion of the Court's opinion is
this invalidated the old tariffe,
If there was no legal published
rate as the defense claims, the Oil
Company cannot $e prosecuted for
making shipments at a
The prosecution, which
failure, having once
by Judge K. M. Landis,
with its fine of $25,000,000,
was reversed by Court of Ap-
peals and the remanded to the
District Court for a second trial, had
its beginning on August 27, 19508
On that date 10 indictments were
returned by a Federal Grand Jury
charging the Standard Ol] Company
of Indiana with accepting conces-
sions from raliways in shipments of
oil from Whiting, Ind
Demurrers two
he
decy-
gion rate,
ihe
of
St.
in ita
classifica
interpreta
thai
new
six-cent rate
ended In
after been tried
whose de-
the
Cage
to of these, In-
Railroad and
Junction,
the in-
Eastern Illinois
connecting roads to Grand
Tenn., were ined and
dictments were quashed shortly
had returned. The eight
remaining demurred to,
but demurrers overruled
Two of the eight
voived shipmentg over
and Alton Railroad
ind, to East St
Louis, one
and the other
the 1.803 a
the Oil Comp:
based
and
si aig
after
they been
bills were
the were
prosecution
Trial Before Landis,
148 allowed to stan
went trial
Landig on March 4, 1
consumed six weeks
a verdict of guilty on April 13,
Arguments for a new trial
rd May and a motion
was denied On
Indge Landis imposed
$28 240.000 fine
the case went fo
United States Circuit Court Ap
peals and was argued a year ago
The decigion of the Court of Appeals
reversing Judge Landis and remand-
ing the case for a new trial was giv-
on July 22, 150% Attempts of
of
;overnment rehear-
With
the case
counts
before
807 The
and resulted
1807
wore
for a
August
: his
famous
On appeal
the
Of
en
the
ing
Court
secure a
obtain a
before the Appellate
ag well as their endeavors to
review of it before thi
failed.
before
23
to
of the case
The second trial was begun
Conclusion Of Court,
of the Court
the clote of a
hy Assistant District Al-
torney Wilkerson, and the jury was
immediately summoned and instruct
ed to return a verdict of not guilty,
This means that all but two of the
pending indictments against the
was
1 ry
Ong
The decision
be abandoned by the
The two cases not affected by this
decision are cases involving
shipment of 1.815 carloads of
from Whiting, Ind, to
Ind., via Dolton Junction, over
and Eastern Illinois
oil
Ralil-
road.
W. C. T. UU. After Mrs, Taft.
Indianapolis, Ind. (Bpecial).—A
canvass & in Progress among
bers of the Women’s Christian Tem-
perance Union thoughout the state
to secure unity in representing to
the wife of President Taft the ovils
may come from serving wine
on the table, Letters have been writ.
ten to leading clubwomen in the state
ask'ng that they join in a friendly
protest.
a " - A
Princeton Drops Fifty-Five Students,
Princeton, N. J. (8pecial) «Fifty.
five students have been dropped from
the rolls of Princeton University un.
til the opening of the next college
year, in Beptember, as a result of
deficiency in the recent mid-year ex
aminations, accord'ng to announce
ent just made. With the exception
of 1907, this is the smallest numbe;
thus suspended in the lgst decade.
Twenty-six of the number were
sophomores, the freshman class,
which usually suffers the most loss,
being deprived of but 17 members.
STEAMERS CRASH
OFF CAPE COD
The Horatio Hall and the H F.
Dimock in Collision,
Boston, Mass (Special) .~—When
plowing their way through Pollock
Rip Slue, off the heel of Cape Cod,
about 8 o'clock A. M.. the steamer
Horatio Hall, bound from Portland
for New York, and the steamer H
F. Dinnock from New York for
ton, collided,
The Dimock
port side of
mainmast, a
{emer and then
way into the
almost to
of about
captain, John A
tut her
the Hall
distance
her
wounded vessel across the
on a sand bank and filled
While
Aas
the Dimock’'s nose
collision mattress,
was
the five
two Misses Ruth
Were SWUNgE 2Cross
former, and some
the crew followed them After
Hall had settled upon the bot-
and her decks were about awash
remainder on board
with the exception Capt. H
ing women
Enstrom
the deck of
of
the
the
the of those
her, of
pilot and two sea-
lifeboat and
where they were tak-
lowered a
to the Dimock,
aboard
Captain
hig vessel
stay with
danger,
plenty
is In
high
take
Jewell refused to leave
and the others decided
him. They are in no great
a8 they have lifeboats in
the revenue cutter Gresham
the neighborhood and only at
water will they be obliged to
to rigging
Water Rushed In.
The settling of the Hall upon the
sandbank did not complete the story
this marine occurrence, for the
Dimock in driving a wedgelike hole
into the side of other craft had
a gash eight wide torn in her
starboard bow, through which the
water began to come almost immedi-
atel) At first the pumps handled
the inflow without difficulty, but
when the Dimock tried to steam up
along the Cod her
way to Boston a rising began
to send a greater volume of water
into the opening
This was about
the welght of the
partment
down by
her list to
f the
of
the
Cape beach on
se
noontime and
water in the
to put the
BOON
com
hogan craft
began ral
well
WAS
and C
hows AR
Th
sinking
lifeboat ing
and into this
the
port
of t} steamer
Thompson had ‘a
on davits,
placed two women taken
the Hall, with Mrs. and Miss
of Melrose Hillside, Mass., passengers
Dimock. They were wrapped
blankets and told to remain in
the boat, = in vessel went
down, thes Orders
were also Thomi
son to the and sea-
men not
gave the word
conditions, with
ger of plunging
minute, Captain
on all steam and
leans beach
The
sand half
Orleans Life-say
o'clock P.M
whistle speedily
the
an
Ore dan
Aptain
out
he
from
BW
the
Casey
on the
case the
saved
Captain
PASSE NRETS
boat u
these
‘A »
would be
isgued by
men
fo Aa
Under
Din
to take
dan-
ANY
wk in
tom
crowded
Or-
the
too the bho
Thompson
sr the
keel Into the
gouth of the
at 2.1bH
g of her
lifeboats
gtruck
’
a mile
ng Station
and the
craft
about
toOtin
3s
Harbor and
from Orleans
Nauset Station
Crew Stays On Board.
sacle and
Hall
and
DARSCNROTSE | f both we
{ the Horatio
of
officers
were
Crew
hoard
which
1'n-
hig
aining on
rations
the
and
the scene
ope
fags
the
sOON
Orion
reach
begin as AR
derwriter
lighter Salvage
WAGES ARE ADVANCED.
Thousand Pittsburg Workmen
Reap Small Harvest,
Pa
increase
Nix
Aa
y
Pittsburg { Special)
wage of about
for more than 6.000 work-
average
per cent
ing of the wage committees of cer-
tain mill owners and the Amalgama-
ted Association of Iron and Stee]
Workers This advance in wage
will hold for the next 80 days, when
there will be another readjustment
The new scale of wages announced
has based on the selling price of bar
iron for last 60 days It was
found that these prices had kept up,
bad. in fact,
of that of the 60 days
preceding this period,
the
immediately
and
will be put into effect at once
IN THE WORLD oF FINANCE
Wonder talk very hopefully of that
As already announce
to ship the ore,
impossible
haul,
the long wagon
profit.
There is 25 per cent, more copper
day than a month ago. :
According to the news from Wash.
in half It is pow equal to about half
the selling price of the metal
Standard Ol] stock made a charae-
teristic jump when the news came
that Uncle Sam had dropped the case
in Chicago.
Reports are circnlated that steel
mills are sticking to no schedule of
prices whatsoever.
Lackawanna Steel's sales last year
amounted to $15,087.879, compared
with $33.011,410 in 1907.
The head of a large Philadelphia
house sald: “The bond market, while
much better than if was a Year ago,
is less active than it was two monthe
ago.”
American
$25 a share to $225.
Snuff common jumped
The dividend
per cent. annually.
WAR ON BETWEEN
NICARAGUA AND SALVADOR
ing With Mex'co.
These Two Governments Convinced
That The Time Has Come To Take
Drastic Measures To Enforce Peace
In The Central American Repub-
lics——Reported That United States
Will Annex Two Republics And
Mexico Do The Same—Relations
With Nicaragua Broken.
1
Mexico City (Special)
been persistently rumored here
broken
Salvador and
hag been an « negagement between the
Salvadorean gun! and
the Nicaragu inhoat Momotombo
A private dispatch here
absolutely confirms the reported en
gagement
Three Nicaraguan g
Momotombo, Tues
Salvadorean
has betwenn
and
out
that
oat Presidente
rece ved
inboats, led bh
atiacked
gunboat Presidents
lucky shot put the
of action almost
beginning of the
three Nicar ing
Later the Mc
and went in pursuit
day
the
The later by a
at the
The
arew
repaired
engagement
then with-
motombe
The
the
Herald advocates annexation
of five Central
by Mexico The general opinion
i8 that intervention is nevi
and Mexico the
States to make initia
Washington (Special)
of any kind bey
patches has
partment of
American Btates
100ks to
the
ond the
reached the
the rumored
hostilities between Nicars
Balvador. The department
ig exhibiting the
the reports
If an engagement
between gunboats
tries is was pointed out at
Department that as
is superior to the Presidents
manned entirely by Ameri
probab 3 that the Ni
were
Owing
conditions
EUa
however
Heenest inlerest
has
the
taken pla
two od
the Na
of
the Momotombie
anda
continued distur}
and
Zelaya's fs ma
efforts
1 he
dent
our look
i the Bis
partment, by withdrawing Mr
the American nt
and ordering the legation
the
fave
of Emers laim
charge
hands of the consul
no diplomatic
broke off diplo
country
in Central America
y watched by the
Mexican
now
that
Amer
governments both
an un
arriv-
moasures should be
in
can and
of which have
derstanding
ed when dra
enforeed
tral American republ
Barra
the State
with
and the determination
that if the American
in Nicarag: waters and
there are sufficient to
President
pence
Central
10
come to
that the time has
®1i¢
10 Insure peace the Cen.
& Ambarsa-
dor la of Mexico, spent
I
Department in
BOM
CON
Wil
WAR
ference
£on
reached
ehi now
to be sent
impress
stant Secretary
War-
an
not
Zelaya
entered into between
American republics is
up to, more
y
taken to accomplish
that the
treaty of
the
not
Riens
he lived radical
be
The
need be.
rted
the i
was
0 the
wonid
mpression was gis
intervention
-
The
en that if
would be res to
nited
stated
govern-
ments of i
Mexico, it
cord as policy to b
toward Nicaragua and sre
ticipating Zelava's {
EX-STATE TREASURER SHORT.
now an-
tuirther moves
Bondsmen And Friends Make Up
Deficit OF 870,000,
Lake City, Utah
Christiansen
Salt {S[Special)
James former State
Treasurer, who retired from office
on
defaulter ic
lanuary 1. is
charge of being a
of $70
arrest followed
his
the
the
under arrest
amount ERE]
The
¢
confession of
Christiansen’s
responsibiine or
the shortage He i8 now in jail here
The money if acknowledged. was
used to speculate in Nevada mining
ventures Christiansen was State
Treasurer for the four-vear term that
ent year. The shortage was discover.
el a few dave ago through the
checking of the accounts by the
Board of Examiners
2 YEARS FOR KILLING FRIEND,
S£1.000 Bond,
Laurence, 8. C. (8pecial)
overruling a motion for a new
After
trial,
Pinson,
Thornton
convicted of killing
Boyee last November, to
pending an appeal the State Su-
preme Court. Pinson was released
on a bond of £1,000 signed by his
father anfl uncle
The appeal will be made to the
higher court on the ground &f error
in the rulings and charge of the pre-
siding jndge
Fire In Spartansburg,
Spartansburg, 8. C. (Special). A
fire in the heart of the husiness dis-
trict of Spartansburg threatens to be-
come the most destructive in the his
tory of the city. The Cleveland
Building ig already in ruins and ‘the
Bank of Spartanburg Ruilding is in
danger,
Patron Shoots Clerk,
New York (8pecial) A man be-
leved to be Charles Loeffler, of New.
ark, N. J., entered the hat store of
A. Wheeler, at §% Broadway,
Brooklyn, shot and seriously wound
ed Norman Bush, 28 years old, and
then shot and instantly killed hime
self with the same weapon. To a
note found in the dead man’s pocket
the name of Charles LoefMeér, New
ark, N. J, was signed. The nove
indicated that the writer had a griev.
ance against the store in which Bush
was employed as a clerk,
.
*
BY TELEGRAPH
Identenant Commander Hutchin-
son 1. Cone has been appointed head
the Bug of Engineering
the Navy, with and pay
of rear admiral
Of CH Bteam
the rank
Ballinger has decided to
West 11 gluay
Dir
Becretary
make a tour of the
problems
HE Bec retary
the that will confront
of the interior
Judge Walter of
prominently
secretary
Beeves,
mentioned
the
for
Of
i
Gc
¢d to Pres dent
( ompirolier
i ray
Missouri, a na
appointed
imrege
President
of
of Por
Newcomb,
entist
the death Juan
tice Revers
Prof. Bim
Lingus
eventyv-fous:
on
hed we celobra
th bit TT
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BLAST FINAL TUNNEL
Under The Hudson System Is Near.
ing Completion,
New Y
too the he
first bore
pleted the
of the Huds
Hudson sys
Thuredas
by Thu
one
minating
City
With
furnixh
Pennsyl £la-
tions, irough
the North and Sout} wore, on the
New
of
fg Con
direct the
ckawan
glide
through
ceremony, that
ie early part of
expecied the first
passenger rain 11 be run through
the Jersey C i :
MEXICO FEARS BREAD FAMINE
Will Again Suspend Duty On Wheat
Imports From States,
Mexico City (Special)
try again
| duties on or before April 1 to pre-
vent a bread famine Wheat now
{ costs $2.60 Mexican money por bush.
el in this city when imported from
the United States, and the home crop
is exhausted
United State: wheat on the border
{now costs $1.28, and with the duty
of 20 cents gold per bushel and the
| additional freight rate to Mexico City
ithe price is exorbitant For sev-
| eral years Mexico has had to suspend
| the duty on wheat each spring.
This coun-
off ail
will declare wheat
Japanese Training Squadron.
Yokohama (Special) —The Japa-
nese training squadron, consisting of
i the armored cruiser Aso and the pro-
| tected cruiser Soya sailed for Hono-
lulu under command of Captain Isojl.
. 180 cadeis of the
{ Japanese Navy. The squadron is due
to arrive at Honolulu about April 1.
and it will then proceed to San Fran.
cisoo, cruising northward later along
the coast to Beattie. The Aso and
Soya, as the Bayan and Varlag, re-
gpectively, were formerly Russian
cruisers. They were sunk by the
Japanese during the recént war and
were refloated later and added to the
Japanese Navy.
Danghter Wins From Father,
Washington, D. C. (Special) «<The
five years’ litigation of Mrs. Henri-
etta Sand Anderson, wife of Capt
Edward Anderson, U. 8 A. against
her father, F. P. B. Sande, Inwyer,
soflety man and clubman, was ended
by Judge > eigut, of the Buprems
Court of the injic of Columbia.
He numed the Naflona! Savinge and
Trust Company as trustee of the
Sands estate In place of Mr. Sands.
Mre. Anderson aoocused her fathe
grossly mismanaging mother’
ber
State, in which he had a life inter.