V , y THE WEATHER. A POINTER! Fair Fridayrcolder east portion, Sat urday fair, brisk north and northeast winds. . ' ' ' ; . ' See the Business Local Column for Little Stories of Big Opportunities. 1 WifSJAJkir WT VMiT AXIL. -1 i AAi - ;" - - ; VOL. IXXVIj0194. ; , ;.y: -v.-" ' ' . . V 1 SHOP I IS M1MAIJLP1L IIIHIMUL! ENDORSED Secretary of War Stimpson - is Convinced of its De sirability. . "TAYLOR SYSTEM" VMS TRIED With the Result That Much Important Information Has Been Collect ed No Conclusion Yet Reached Washington, Nor. 2. "Scientific shop management," today received the endorsement of the United States gov ernment. Secretary of War Stlmson ii convinced of its desirability and ad vsntages, basing his conviction i on , a report made by Brigadier General Wil liam Crozier,. chief of ordnance, made public today. The Secretary is satis fied that its introduction into govern ment workshops would work no hard ships to labor. "It means a betterment and in no wise an impairment of the conditions of labor," he declared in a statement. The report has been awaited by or ganized labor and the' employers of labor with much interest. It is gen erally believed that the question will bf one that will figure largely in the coming national political campaigns and for this reason especially General Crozier's findings are regarded as be ing of unusual import, as are the comments of Secretary Stimson. - "As set forth in detail in the state ment which I have made public today, the War Department has given : con siderable attention to the utilization of tne methods of 'scientifio management' in the various arsenel shops of the government The Watertown arsenel bas been used practically as an ex periment station, with a view of try ing out the theory before, applying it generally. The results thus far are highly gratifying and full of promise. There has been an undoubted Increase in the efficiency of the workmen1 at the shop and a material, reduction' in -the cost of manufacture, but at the same time, and to my mind even of greater importance, these results have been obtained without in anywise endang ering the interests of the workingmen either by decreasing their pay or. fe; quiring unpleasant exertion,. orslpeed ing up.' On the contrary, ". any in crease in the real efficiency, must in sure to the benefit of the workingmen. "To my mind, 'scientific . manage ment' can and deserves to prevail only where, increased efficiency means in creased human efficiency and the workingmens' participation in the re wards resulting from efficiency. A change for that kind of betterment Is the only kind of change which the government will permit through the installation of any 'scientific manage ment.' " ;., In his report General Crozier de clares that the ordinance department has been experimenting with the "Tay loi system" of scientific management for the past three years, with the re sult that much Important information has been collected. But even yet the problem has not been solved for his conclusion is thus set-out. ' "The department has not reached a conclusion as to the extension to otu er arspnels of the part of the "Taylor system of shop management j which affects the workingmen, and It j Is not intended to do so in advance of furta er trials at the Watertown arsenel, but it seems certain that either by this system or oy some other it; ought to be possible to secure better! co-operation of the employes among them selves and between them and the management than has been had In the " past." I : The report shows the. manner in vhich the Bystera was installed at Wa tertown. A planning room was pro vided which relieved the foreman of a large amount of clerical work and insured a continuance flow of work without cessation or loss ,of time, as well a the protection of the material ip stock. Men were assigned to keep the tools of the other workingmen sharpened; laborers or messengers fetched and carried for the higher priced machinists, who were thereby named to devote their whole atten turn to productive work, and the plant was kept in thorough order by . other tt'fn-so that it could be worked at. Its highest . efficiency. Experts showed the workmen just how fast their, ma. cnine3 should run and how deep their tf fjls- should cut, thereby increasing weir efficiency. , .'I' : .' Hence it was possible at Watertown io i eauce materiall ythe cost of man ''iHcture. The labor of . one j seU of parts for a 12-inch mortar carriage vas cut from $480 to $275 and corres ponding reductions were made in oth- work. All this waa done. the re- 1'f-rt sots forth, without affecting the i".' oi tne employes or requiring es Penal exertion by them. t.eneral Crozier lays stress upon the '-'His. mat while further marked " momics.to the government will re the. adoption of the system lul WU1 be accompanied by Increased rrw"'1 conditins geenrally satisfac ! y ; ,he enH)loyes, as demonstrated y actual experience in shops in which system had been nnerntrt ' thl 'e,1.y 8tated lh chief "features of twi m contemPlate offering addl forrni,Py t women for work per.- Mom i . e manner and sequence Etufiv "c 'U1 oi careiui uuy aad completed within the time iilmnED THiRiV-oriE days Arango Rodrlduez. finmi. w.I Almost Dead When Brftish Steam er l Karl a Picked Him Up From Small Boat. New . York, Nov. 2. Blown out to sea in a row boat from the coast of South America, Arango Rodriguez, a Spaniard, formerly employed on . the Panama Canal, drifted about for 31 days and was nearly dead and despair ing of rescue when the British steam er Ikaria picked him up. The Ikaria reached here from Buenos Ayres bringing the castaway. , The Ikaria, when two days out of Trinidad, sighted a small boat with a nondescript sail, off the port bow. As she bore down the craft was found to be a row boat . with a- broom stick shipped as a mast and a tattered shirt set as a sail. Rodriguez, on the verge of collapse, waa taken on, the steamer. When he ha4 recovered ' somewhat he explained that he had been employ ed on the Panama Canal as a laborer and later went to Caracas. There he hired a small boat to go fishing and was blown oft shore by a storm. He had on board a demijohn of drinking water, Dut lor rood had to depend up on fish he was able to catch. After the demijohn of water was exhausted he managed to trap enough rain water to assuage his thirst. : As the days went by and grew into a, month, Rodriguez despaired of res cue and was almost too weak to sit up when after 31 days the Ikaria sight ed him 'and took him on board and cared lor him. The boat was set adrift FAMOUS ACTOR DEAD Kyrle Bellew Passes Away In Salt Lake City With Pneumonia Salt Lake City," Nov, ft Kyrle Bel- lew, one of the foremost actors of the English-speaking stage, author ah2 explorer, died here shortly after 5 o'clock' this morning of pneumonia. Mr. Bellew became ill last Friday, but although a portion of his Salt Lake engagement was cancelled, his condi tion was hot considered serious until yesterday morning.' i The body will be taken to New York today accompanied by members pf the "Mollusc" Company, in "which r. Bellew was playing. -,'- ". In addition to his successes as a romantic actor, Mr. Bellew was a dra matist and. adapter. .. .. '. The parts he played cwered tt wide i field, but perhaps his greatest success was his performance of Raxes -In the drama of that name. He also created the leading roles : in "The Thief, "Brigadier General," "A Gen tleman From France," and other plays.. ' . . . "' : ' : His private life was as varied and adventurous as the roles he played He was born in Calcutta,- India, in 1S57, of English, parents, his ratner being captain of, the Calcutta Cathe dral. For , seven , years he was a ca det in the British navy. 'but discovery of gold; in Australia lured him from the service and spent a number oi years in Australia working as a min er at Ballarat and as a reporter on Melbourne newspapers. He made his stage debut at the Theatre Royal in Brighton, England in the early 80's. - He came to Amer ica as leading man at Wallack's The atre in New York. Later he became co-star with Mrs. James Brown Pot ter In Shakespearean, repertoire, com pleting with her a tour that embrac ed all English-speaking countries of the world. , . . in 1900 he acain felt the can oi adventure and headed an expedition into North Queensland, which extend ed over two years. He returned to the stage in 1902 at the head of , his cwn company. : . .- His work as an explorer gained mm a fellowship in the Royal Geograpa ical Society and he was a member of many clubs. - f. ' . j Mr. Rellew was unmarried. He is survived by a sister, known as Sister Monica, who Is in a. convent near Paris. . 1 : " ., DIX CERTAIN OF' VICTORY nismnrrat Success Means Continued Progress, Says Governor Albany, N. Y NovM. Predicting ,ot t-ha. TwTnnrfttB will win a victory at the polls next Tuesday, uov. Dix, in a statement today, appeals to Dem ocrats to support all tne uemocmuc nAminM m "Dsmocratic success mooni .nntinued Drosress, efficiency, end honesty in the administration. uti etatoTnont in Tart reads:. . v "ti nioTiHrt record made by the Democratic House Of Representatives at Washington has won me cguuuu Vt, .rt,mtrv 'while the Republican party cannot escape responsibility for the deplora-ble industrial and econom ic conditions under" which the people of the United States are;uu "President Taft's veto of the tariff bill proves that he Js ltaed upj with the extreme protectionists of his ia Yvnnosed to any re- vision of the.to-ttJato"S.2 the producing and comuto ; or tne . country. " Atlanta, . Ga., ' November 2. South ern Railway pasenger..wuw. , southbound from . Cincinnati to Jack Seville. Fla. JWgtgg near Chattahoochee, Ga,, about 7 miles 7JT aio a numiber of persons crew has toeen rusnea which that : study Indicates as suffi cient for the 1 purpose. iw 0,U16 "z me results aside from toy increased 1" . , manhines. chiefly from Si effect of th7 Tnstructlons given whlch their effort is .; WILMIKGrTO, KC., FRIBAY ,1 11 ' 1 11 " . TR Altf D ER IS All Except En cine Jumna Track Twenty Miles From Raleigh Last Night. EIGHTEEN WERE WOUNDED Although None of Them. Are Reported to be Serious Cause of Derail ment at the Present Time is Unknown. ' Raleigh, N.' C, Nov. 2. Seaboard Air Line Passenger Train No. 43, run ning trom New York to Jacksonville, was derailed, with the exception of the engine, at Merry Oaks, twenty ailes west of Raleigh, at eight o'clock tonight. The cause of the wreck has not been determined Following were reported Injured: G. T. Cashwell. of Washington. D. C, express messenger. H. L. Rosswell, Washington, D. C, mail clerk. Miss Doyle, Quincy, Mass. ' L. R. Tlndall, Washington, D. C. Frank Strouner, Brockton, N. Y. W. H. Pave, Camden, S. C. Mrs. G. W. Murray, St. Petersburg, Fla. W. G. Thweatt, Richmond, Va. Dr. F. C. Hoke and wife, no address. Mrs. H. L. Bruster, of Rochester. N. Y. Miss Sarah Long, Syracuse, N. Y. M. H. King, mail clerk, Washington, d. c . : Mrs. R. W. Thompson, St, Peters burg, Fla. i Nathan St. Kaughman, Baltimore. R. G. Simpson, Plttston, Pa. . Miss Marie Cochran, no address. Mr. H. B, White, no address. "( J. H.; Ryan, Richmond, Va. I ! I. Mi ! I-IIUM i AT WAKE FOREST. ' President Poteat-Back. From North - r- The- Football Outlook. v. (Special Star Correspondence.) Wake Forest November 2. Presi dent William Lou la" Poteat has been m the-Northern itfor,, the, past few- days. - He is , in - New .York city addressing the i assembly , of tne New York Baptist ministers . conference. He delivered-two addresses. One on the "Biological Revolution," and the other on ."The Negro in the South." He is expected home' within the next few days. . Wake .Forest is proud that she should have a president that should be honored by being requested to speak, in such a distinguished as semblage. Prof. J. H.. Highsmith, of the department of education, spoke at the Liberty-Piedmont School the lat ter part of last week. This week the football practice 'Is being made rather heavy, on account of the exceedingly light practice of last week. Both Monday and Tuesday there were scrimmages between the 'varsity and the scrubs. The 'varsity is showing up well this wk. There are yet many hard Ibattles to be con tested and the men realize that work is needed and so work is what they are doing. Singletary, the fast half back, has (been forced to go. home on account of sickness in the family. On Saturday the team goes to the University of Virginia. While it is known that the odds are on Virginia, one thing is certain that Wake For est will fight So intense is the inter est here that 'a detailed report of the game will be received over leased wire. They will be placed on a black board In - the chapel, and almost as soon as a play is made all Wake For est will know of it. Saturday, November 11, the Wake Forest-Davidson ' game at Greensboro. There is bene! bre that Wake For est will take that game. Of course, it is remembered that last year It was 52 to 0. .but it is expected to turn the points some fifty or more points. The game will probably be the closest yet played. The defeats thus far this year have been by amazingly small scores. When it is remembered that Wash ington amd Lee only won 18 to 5 and that Washington and Lee within a week tied V. P. I., it is shown what kind of a team Wake Forest has. All the line men. are in good condition, and are working hard to save Dunn, who is only, thought to be slightly in Jured.' '.. , - (. , MIGHT HAVE BEEN PRESIDENT. John Claflin, 8ays That Cornelius' N. . ... Bliss Could Have Been, v .New York, November 2. That Cor nelius N.' Bliss, former , secretary vof the Interior. . might have ibeen Presi dent of the" United . States,, had he vielded to the .Dleas of Wili'iam Mc- .par-4Klnley was the declaration made - to the New York Chamber of Commerce today, by; John Claflin, of this city. This interesting, bit of unwritten polit ical' history was revealed at a memo rial meeting of the chamber at wnicn resolutions eulogising Mr. . Bliss, who died recently, were adopted. Mr. Cla flin delivered the principal address, in which, he said: - "In, 19 00 McKinley urged him to sig nify a willingness to accept the nomi nation for vice-president. If he had allowed his name to go before the mv tional convention, it is almost certain that' no other maime would have been presented and he would have been elected with Mr.y McKInley in that veajv Two years later, on, Mr McKin ley's -death he would, have succeeded to - the Presidency of . the United States'"' l.ij.itljiiit MRS. H'REE BMWCELL Placed There After; Jury Failed to r' . Come. to aw Verdict -Was ContlT? I 1 dent of Her AcqulttaMn fV - ' a Few Mliiutes. ; Opelousas, La., Nov. 2. The jury In the McRee murder trial was locked up. at 6 . o'clock tonight ' With Instruc tions to report to the court at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning; when it is expect ed the court will order a mistrial. Downcast and with $sore disappoint ment, Mrs. McRee was ;led back to her cell in Saint Landry Parish Jail wnere she has been held without bail since the day in - September, seven weeks ago today, when she shot and killed Allan Garland, i The case was giverf to the jury at 12:10 this afternoon. After lunch was served the jurors began consideration of the evidence and at 3:14 P. M, r6 ported to the court that they: were hopelessly divided. Tbey were sent back for further deliberation and at 6 o'clock the court took and adjourn ment until tomorrow, T- - - Acting District Attorney DaBulsson announced this-afternoon that in the event of a mistrial a re-hearing would be set for Monday of next week. He said the State would Oppose any mo tion for a change of venue and x would insist on , the second trial being con ducted in Opelousas." r Mrs. McRee appeared to be confl dent this morning that the jury would acqm4t her within a few minutes. How ever, after the jury had been out of thecourt room for" 25 minutes both Mr. and Mrs. McRee 'began to show signs of uneasiness. "Both had expect ed that a verdict of acquittal would be rendered immediately and as the min utes passed they seemed to become anxious and engaged in several whis pered conversations. NOT DUE TO UNFRIENDLINESS. Premier of 'Canada .Emphasized This ' Fact In Speech Last Night. Halifax, N.-S.. Not. . 2 R. L. Bor- den, the new premier of Canada, em phasized the fact in a speech here to night, that the result j of the recent election in Canada, by which the reci procity agreement was defeated, was in no wise due to hostile or unfriend ly spirit on the part of the people of Canada, to -the great neighboring Re public, as had been .claimed in some quarters. The occasion; was a nbtable banquet ,feendejnedMr43Breea: by txio Conservatives of. H allax.' and ; of the province. - In emphasizing his point Mr. Borden said: - "It is desirable that any such idea,; if it exists, should be dissipated and dispelled. "The reciprocity compact, would have interfered with Canada's com plete control of its own fiscal system and in many respects it was properly regarded as a reversal of the policy which this country had .pursued for many years. Thus the recent decision of the Canadian people was in no res pect induced by any spirit of unfriend liness to the ' United ' States, It was rather brought about by their determi nation to maintain complete control of their own financial system to mould their own destiny along the lines of a policy which has been pursued in this country for the past 30 years." THE COTTON PICKER. Demonstrations End at Charlotte -Machine Shipped Back. Charlotte, N. C Nov. 2. The Price Campbell cotton picker, which, has been doing demonstration work on the Keller farm, three miles west of the city for the past two weeks, has been packed, up and forwarded to the fac tory at Woonsoeket, R. I., where it will undergo such improvements as the inventors have in view for it. All who saw it in operation here were greatly impressed . with its practica bility. OUTLINES. United States Marshal Henkel, who has been serving subpoenas ' upon many of our wealthiest financiers was invited by John D. Rockefeller to par take of his morning meal, which -the genial marshal refused. He has only one more to serve, he being his " good friend" Charlie Schwab President Taft left New York last night for Hot Springs, Va.' where he goes, to take three days' recreation before going to Cincinnati, -Kenutcky and Tennessee. Jury in the McRee trial at Opolous- es, La., was locked up at 6 o'clock last night with instructions to report to the court at. 9 o'clock this morning when it is expected the court .will or der a mistrial - The situation is be coming alarming in China, the Imperi alists being . apparently beyond . con trol. A . massacre is expected any night, and the people of Peking have closed up their houses and shops and fled. Reports that bloody hand-to-hand fights j in Hankow, are daily occurren ces : President . Taft views the mighty naval display on the Hudson river yesterday from the yacht May flower.' Showing the grandest ever seen anywhere. Taft states . that he will urge, the Congress to build two super-dreadnaughts each year until the Panama canal is finished,, and then on a year will suffice. Only one fatility marred the day, that being the drowning of a seaman Nothing more definite. in the McNamara "case yet. Altogether 207 veniremen have been drawn, and only ten have been se lected. . "... -V - ? ew York markets: Money pn'call steady, 2 1-2 to 3 per cent, ruling rate 2 3-4 ier cent,' closing bid 2 7-8 per cent, offered at 3 ; ' flour quiet and nominally- lower;', spot cotton- closed dull,' middling uplands: 9.40, middling gulf 9.65; wheat spot easy. No.: 2 red 97 cents, elevator export basis "and 97 1-2 fob afloat; corn steady, export No 2, 80 cent nominal fWafloaf ; . ,;-: ;r w 3, 1911. ' PEKING CLOSE In Anticipation of Massacre Imperialists Apparently Beyond Control. FURTHER FIGHTING EXPECTED Massacre In China City Expected to Begin Any Night Bloody Hand to Hand Fights on Streets of Hankow Peking, Nov. 2. The massacre of natives at Hankow by Imperialist troops Intelligence of which has reach ed both the war board and the German legation may prove a serious hind rance to the peace negotiations which Yuan Shi Kai has been endeavoring to inaugurate with the rebel leaders. The Imperialists apparently have got beyond control and further fighting is feared. In such a case it will- be difficult to protect the foreign conces sions as they are divided from the na tive city by streets, only fifty or sixty feet wide. It is reported that the war board at Peking has declined to accept the suggestion of foreign doctors to form a Red Cross Society on the lines .of the Geneva Convention, the board seeming to feel that the rebels do not deserve treatment The massacre, ac cording to some advices began be fore the departure of General Yin Tchang. The exodus from Peking continues, the doors of many shops, as well as private houses, being closed in antic ipation of a massacre. The American n.issionaries who. have had a confer ence with the legation have decided that a few soldiers placed in each of the four large mission componds would suffice to prevent ordinary outlawry and looting, which is expected to begin any night But should there be a general put break all the others' could, take re fuge In the Methodist mission which !e -immediately-: east: :bf. ;the kgation quarter '.and easily defended.- -The diplomatic body will meet tomorrow to re-consider the question of "allowing the Chinese troops to enter Tien Tsin, a consul there having made serious ob jection. An. official dispatch ' from Shlh-Kia-Tan, Shan-Si province, says .tnat a regiment of Shan-SI troops, which had been despatched to assist the Imperi alists has mutinied. The mutineers killed their brigadier general and then bombarded a Manchu city, massacreing a thousand Manchus, including : the governor and his family. '; ' - The letters October iath and 30th from the Associated Press correspon dent with the Imperialist army at Hankow say that in the struggle for the. possession of, the city there was a hand-to-hand fight in the streets, the auarters being too close for shooting, the rebels, mostly raw recruits, not understanding the use of rifles, were driven back with much slaughter, their dead piling up on the quay. The casualties among, the Imperialists for two days, October 2&th and 29th, were thirty killed and 160 wounded. The rebels had about 700 killed or wound ed. The fighting, continues the corres pondent, until the last three days, had not -been serious. The rebels bad the advantage in number of guns, but their shells did not explode. The Im perialists had the advantage in troops, but they were poorly provision ed. No prisoners were taken. Rebels captured alive were shot or decapitat ed. It is learned that the most barbari ous outrages were perpetrated on in nocent persons in the villages. The staff of officers, says, the cor respondent are quartered in an ex press train, witji engine attached for immediate service. The chief of staff, Colonel Yih, is not at the front direct ing operations. Pribr to the opening of operations on October 27th, Gener al Yin-Tachang told the respective commanders that the advance must be made and rewards were offered to the soidiers for every gun captured. The rebels, who at first numbered not more than 1,000, shot from the house top's, until compelled , to retire the shells from the warships setting the houses on fire. . . General WonS slwu Yuen, command ing the third brigade .and General Wong Yih Chat, commanding the fourth division, stood bravely holding revolvers and . shooting"' the soldiers who refused to 'fight ' V t Despatches received in Peking to night say tiie Rebels occupied , Chih- Hsin-Sen, on Monuay.iaat, um u following day" the Imperialists drove them to Liahg-Tse-Kwang, an impreg nable' pass in the mountainous coun try The rebels have torn up a. half mile stretch of . railroad and blocked the tunnel and now hold the pass with a small body of men. Set Fire to Hankow. London, Nov. 2. A special dispatch from Shanghai says that the imperial troops set fire to the native city of Hankow on Monday night in order to drive out the nsbels. The city,v the dispatch adds, has been burning fiercely ever since. - I Atlanta, Ga., Nov. -1. Fire of an unknown origin started in the Oscar Barnes. & Company-furniture store in the central .part of the retail : -district, caused damage estimated - aU $100,000 to $150,000, tonight 7 . y V'! AUSTIII DAf,l VMS FAULTY So States Professor Frank McKibbon, of Lehigh Universtty, at Inquiry, Which' 'It Being Continued.': . ;: ' . r". Coudersport, Pa-Nov, 2, -That the dam of the Bayless Pulp- & Paper Co., at Austin, Pa., the breaking of which on September 30th,-last, caused over three score deaths and millions of dol lars damage, was faulty In practically every detail, was the opinion of Prof. Frank McKibbin, of the engineering department of Lehigh University, and Alfred D. Flinn, department engineer of the board of water supply of New York City, expressed today when the inquest into the disaster was resum ed. The inquiry was again continued, to accommodate T. C. Hatton, of Wil mington, Del, who designed and con structed the ill-fated dam for the pa per company. When the inquest is taken up next month, Mr. Hatton will be the only witness examined and a verdict will come quickly. Prof. McKibben gave it as his opin ion that faulty foundations, design, construction and operation of the dam caused it to slide and break into nine pieces where it had cracked almost a year previous. He submitted samples of the shale from the foundation which he crumbled in his hand on the wit ness stand, and said that in no place was this more than an inch thick. Mr. Flinn, the New York engineer, besides corroborating Prof. McKibbin declared the geological formation of the country would indicate to him that there was not a good foundation for a masonry dam. The dam was decid edly wnsafe, he said, too thin for its height ; "It was an error to use so faulty a structure,",-he said. Through George M. Miller, a con tractor, letters written by President Bayless to the witness during negotia tions toward - reinforcing the dam in 1910, when it Is" said to have develop ed defects were introduced. In one of the letters Mr. Bayless mentions a four Inch stream that leaked from be neath the dam 'and asked if certain work could jbe done ' "to satisfy" the people of Austin." . . NO JURY YET. Out of 207 Veniremen Drawn, Only 10 ' t . AceeDted as Yet. ': -Los; Angeles, Cal, Nov. 2.i-Barring one man, the third ventre 6f prospec tive jurors was - exhausted - at the etoee, of court tan bent. in, ihe AioNama- ra -murdex case.,i JLltflgether "07 . ve- nlremen. have Deen drawn Or these ten satin the jury box tonight, -having been accepted as to cause by both sides a gain- of one man since yes terday's session in which no talesman was passed. k . Counsel for both prosecution and defense in the trial of James B. Mc Namara renewed predictions that the entire 12 men : might be accepted by tomorrow night if there were no' hitch in getting, more . veniremen to exam ine. . - 4. r The new-comer is M. T. McNeely, a retired tailor. He is still subject to peremptory challenge if .the State of defense should -desire to exercise it It was considered unlikely tonight that the defense so desired. Edward R. Jeffrey, under examina tion said: "If men belonged to a un ion they coudd not work for me." Explaining how he heard of the Times explosion, Jeffrey said: "I heard one man holler to another that Old Otis got his'." "And you think the . building, was" destroyed by organized labor?" "Yes, sir." "We couldn't bring you enough evi dence to convince you otherwise?" "You could not" Heffrey was challenged for bias. W. H. Andrews Is the sole talesman left in the third venire. Judge Bordwell said tonight that he was undecided as to when the next venire would be drawn. DREAM "COMES TRUE" Policeman Saves Lives In Manner Out ' lined In His Sleep Boston, Mass., Nov. 1. Patrolman William Noble, of Dorchester, dream ed that , he was standing in Peabody Square when runaway fire horses rounded the corner. In his dream he saw five little children in the path of . the mad animals. He seized the horses by the bits and brought them tc a stop within three feet of the chil drenand then he woke up. Still pondering over the dream, No ble when off duty yesterday walked tc Peabody Square and told anothef "cop" about the ' dream. Just as he had . finished two ; fire horses dashed around the 'corner, running wild to ward a group of children in the square At the risk of his own life. Noble seiz ed the bits and. stopped the pair with in a yard of the. nearest child. .Then he counted the children and was as tonished "to find ; there, were just ; five. CENSORS FOR POSTCARDS Animal Pictures Among Those Barred v i, From; Mails In Chicago .. -! Chicago, Nov . 1 . A : crusade against objectionable postcards has been start ed : by Postmaster: D. , A. , Campbell, who yesterday appointed censors at all Chicago subpostal stations. Hrere are the three chief kinds of pictures ordered' barred from distri bution: Men and women kissing; wo men In abbreviated costume; , animal pictures. .:. 1 When asked why he had placed the last named on the list, Postmaster CamDbell said: -s "Not one postal card -In a. hundred bearing the picture of an animal is fit to be exhibited in public." ' . . V . "The Cross of Pearls." : ; . .- Beautiful, story, of .The Confession al; Grand t todar. 'i- rt, 5 WHOLE NUMBER 13,756. PRESIDENT VIEWS MIGHTY FLEET Watches Passing Paegeant in Impressive Silence from Yacht Mayflower. TWO SUPER - DBEADIiAUGHTS Will Probably be Built Each Year Un til Completion of the Panama Canat and Then One Will . Suffice. New York, Nov. 2. Fresh from his cross-continent tour of 13,000 miles, during which , he received senatorial pleadings which seem to indicate ear ly ratification of the treaties of peace and arbitration with Great Britain and France, President Taft today from the wind-swept bridge of the "historic little cruiser yacht Mayflower reviewed the mightiest line of fighting craft ever assembled mder the American flag. The President had indicated in all his speeches in advocacy of the trea ties of peace, that he entertained no fond delusion that war, by convention, could immediately be made a thing of the past. He declared that the trea- -. -ties were a step in the right direction; that the armed camps of Europe were . looking to the United States to lead in what might prove to be a great world movement toward the goal of peace, but that for a long time to come the suggestion of disarmament would have no force. Today Mr. Taft let it be known that he would urge uppn Congress; the ne cessity of building two great super dreadnaughts a year until the Panama ' Canal is in actual operation. The ca nal, he declared, would double the effl- -ciency of the. navy .and from that time on one. battleship a year might suffice to keep the American navy in the fore front of . the , world' a, military powers. Countless thousands of people joined with the- President in paying tribute to-the five. score vessels which lay. at anchor, in the Hudson.. -.Twenty-f our, , firbt-class battleships were in . the line, , . surrounded by armored cruisers, scout. . . inl8era,-'9BetenHkcde8treyers to , pedo. boats, submarines and the rank' and file of auxiliary vessels that "serve -'- as tenders., to the fleet There- were 99 in all. ( v.' . ' " Twenty-two of the .'battleships to-' ward the dose of the day picked up their anchors, turned in the teeth of the gale, and went proudly out to sea. The President watched , the passing pageant in impressed slience. The review had been the most bril- liant in the history of the country and with its conclusion the great fleet had dispersed, the various ships wending their way to home stations to await the call to Winter maneuvers in south ern waters. The setting for the review 'was a splendid natural marine . amphitheatre. The fleet lay on the broad bosom of the. Hudson,' walled in on either side by the towering buildings of River side Drive and the precipitous cliffs of the New Jersey Pallsaides. The day was one of changing sun shine and shadow. Out of the northwest there blew a gale which at times attained a maxi mum of 59 miles an hour and brought with it the chill of Winter. One of the cloudbanks brought a flurry of snow with it the first of the; season here, but it did not deter the spectators who stretched for miles along the river banks and crowded the decks of excursion steamers circling about the warship anchorage. There was one fatality during the , day. Gustav Frey, a seamafi of the battleship New Jersey, fell overboard, and drowned. The news had not reached the President when ' he left tonight for Hot Springs, Va., to spend four days In recreation before resum ing the final stage of his long trip to Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee. The President arrived from the West shortly after 7 o'clock and went at once aboard the Mayflower where later he was Joined by the Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Meyer, and the lat ter's staff from the Navy Department Rear Admirals Wainwright, Porter and Vreeland, Captains Fletcher and,. Potts, and Commander Philip An drews. The ceremonies formally began at 9:30 o'clock, when the President's flag amid a roar of guns from every ves sel of the fleet was .broken from the main truck of the Mayflower. The lit- tie yacht by this. time. had moved up' close to the head of the-seven mile column of battleships and tiad cast anchor. Immediately the admirals of the fleet set out : in launches . to . pay their' respects to "the" commander-in-chief of the army and the navy. Mr. Taft received them on board with the honors due their rank and after the . first formal exchange, had a' per sonal' word xt greeting for each. - The wide river reaches had been lashed into white capped waves when President Taft went out to the flag ship Conneticut to repay the courte sies of the commanding officer. The tiny power launch in which he rode bobbed about' perilously in the rough water, but Mr. Taft did not mind the' tossing. The Mayflower's guns boom ed a salute as the President left the yacht and when his flag temporarily was hoisted on . the Conneticut the ' other vessels of the fleet took, up the noisy token of tribute and respect and for;the second time their guns spoke in ainlson. The Presidential call on; thk flaeshin was brief and formal' and the last- of the ships had scarcely (fin ished their 21 guns when . the cannon f . . 'A ' " ! ! ;? '; - ; 4 ' A , ' , :''.. v . V.; m, 1 1 ' -; ; ;-; ri ' '. ; . more advanUgeously applied. :. n ' .: u: '