f TOPEKA STATE J O U UNAU WEDNESDAY EVEN LIN 2t 1U04. I' j r 1AILR0AD NEWS. II. U. 3Indg Says Big Engines Are All Right. More Economical nd Less Likeljr to Cause Wrecks. M'CULLY IS MISTAKEN. Missouri 51an Has Wrong Idea About Decapods. Decapods Endorsed bj Santa Fe Engineer of Tests. W. E. McCully, chairman of the board of Missouri railway commissioners, made several statements recently which were derogatory to the usefulness of the big type of freight locomotives as com pared to those of the smaller type. Mr. HcCully's remarks were to the effect that the managers of all of the big trunk lines with whom he had con versed, had expressed themselves as not being satisfied with the big engines for freight service. He also said that the new type of engine does not make the ' time required of it, that they consume an enormous quantity of coal, and that they are hard on the fireman. The managers of the other big roads who now have the big engines In use on their lines may be dissatisfied with them but not so with the Santa Fe. For the past year the Santa Fe has had some of the largest engines in the world In use on its lines and so far the offi cials of the road have had no objection to make regarding the manner in which the engines have been handling the work required of them. In fact Santa Fe officials are ever ready to say a word in praise of the big type of en gine and consequently Mr. McCully's re marks have resulted In considerable comment among the local officials of that road. When asked today for his opinion of the large type of engine,H. IT. Mudge, general manager of the Santa Fe, said: "The large engines are entirely satis factory. They do not burn more coal than some engines of smaller size al though they do haul larger trains and thereby reduce the number of meeting points and delays. "The Santa Fe has larger engines in use on its lines than most roads and its through freight trains, and particu larly fruit trains, are making better time than ever before and several days' better time between the coast and Chi cago than any other road. "As to the statement that the big engines are hard on our firemen, all I have to say is that, as far as the Santa Ke is concerned, it is not true. It is easily to be seen that if a smaller amount of coal is burned the work is not heavier on the firemen. At the re cent conference with the firemen that whs one of the questions which came' up for discussion. It was stated that more coal was burned but we had rec ords which showed plainly that less coal was burned during the last year than was burned during the same time when the smaller engines were in use. "Another advantage in the use of the larger engines is that they obviate the difficulties which result when a large number of t.'ains are running on the road. The larger engines can haul so many more cars than the smaller ones that it is no longer necessary to run many trains and consequently we have lessened the danger of wrecks and mis haps." Mr. Mudge Is not the only one of the local officials of the Santa Fe who is loud in his praise of the big engines. F. W. Thomas, engineer of tests for the Santa Fe says: "The small engines are not to be compared to those of the larger types. Any one of the engines now in use on the lines of the Santa Fe is capable of hauling more tonnage at a less ex pense per mile than any of the smaller engines. Consequently they are a great deal more valuable to the road than the engines of the lighter class." AFTEB THE CUBAN TRADE. Southern Pacific Will Take News paper Men to St. Louis. The Southern Pacific has a plan afoot to catch all the worlds fair traffic out of Cuba, and incidentally induce a great many people to visit the world's fair who are now undecided. This plan is to bring a large party of Cuban newspaper men to St. Louis to see the exposition grounds, so thV can look over the situation and see for themselves what great Drenarations are being made for this great exposi-tion- The party will be under the ehaner enage of J. W. Flannagan, assistant general passenger agent for the South liVU lSa f 1 i J has a fine aromatic odor because it's made of the choicest materials that can be had it cures because it's made of the right material. Just smell one, that's all you have to do to compare it with all other plasters. Your sense of smell will tell you which is best. REMEMBER AHeocVt PIgsUtm are good for all pains and aches. They have been in ose 55 years, have been imitated more than any article ever sold and have made more cures than any other external remedy. They are guaranteed not to contain bella donna, opium or any poison whatever. They are made of healing, vegetable gams which soothe, strengthen and cure. ern Pacific steamship lines, who has just been made Cuban world's fair com missioner by President Palma of the republic of Cuba. The party will be entertained quite royally by the Southern Pacific, and the fact that Mr. Flannagan has just been appointed world's fair commissioner for the republic of Cuba gives the company a prestige which will have a favorable effect upon its handling of business from Cuba to the world's fair. - BOCK ISLAND'S MOVE. It Gets Credit for the New Line to San Diego, CaL. Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 27. San Diego citizens are just as certain that the new railroad planned for that city is backed by the Rock Island as they .ore that the line will be built. In railroad circles the proposed line has attracted a great deal of attention and many rumors as to the ownership of the San Diego Eastern are in circulation. The most generally accepted theory is that the Rock Island is the real promoting force. The men in San Diego who are supposed to be wise regarding the pro ject keep remarkably silent, as does H. T. Richards of this city, who holds the position of chief engineer of the com pany. They all refuse to talk, but their silence adds strength to the be lief of the San Diego populace. Everywhere but in Rock Island! cir cles it is stated as a fact that the sys tem has acquired the El Paso and Southwestern. In the region touched by the Southwestern road the line is known as the Rock Island, and it Is seldom called the El Paso and South western. This, in connection with the announcement made in the Los An geles "Herald" that the Rock Island will form an alliance with the Mexican Central, strengthens the belief that the San Diego road is to become a part of the great system now planning a coast outlet. The boom at San Diego resulting from the belief that the rosd will be built is steadily growing. Values are increasing rapidly and the citizens of the town already picture themselves residents of the metropolis of the coast. GOT SOME INFORMATION. Superintendent Hibbard Heard Him self Freely Discussed. They tell this one on Mr. Hibbard, until recently superintendent of the Albuquerque-Winslow division, now su perintendent o the Southern California division. Two engineers, Jones and Smith, were busy taking in the yards at Winslow. Smith knew Mr. Hibbard well, but Jones didn't. Mr. Hibbard was strolling through the yards and ap proached the two men, attracted by the loud talking of Jones. The latter was sore on the road and the superintendent and on the management of things In general, and was telling in a very ex pressive way what he thought of the blankety blank superintendent and his way of doing things. Smith vainly en deavored to give Jones a hunch, wink ed at him violently, and did other things, but Jones couldn't catch on. Hibbard meanwhile looked on with a twinkle in his eye. After the big super intendent had turned his back and started away Smith said, "Good Lord, man, that was Mr. Hibbard standing behind you." Jones turned pale around the gills and his jaw dropped as he looked at the retreating back of the su perintendent. He would have sold his job for thirty cents and expected to get the "can" at once. But he never heard anything more about the incident. Albuquerque Journal-Democrat. WANT $50 BATE. West Anxious for Low Price Tickets to St. Louis. J1. J. Byrne, general passenger agent for the Santa Fe with headquarters in Los Angeles, passed through this city on last night's Overland, says the San Bernardino Sun, bound for St. Louis, where he will attend the passenger meeting of the Transcontinental Pas senger association. The principal busi ness to come before the meeting this year is said to be the matter of rates to the St. Louis exposition. Railroad men in the west are making a strong demand that a round trip rate of at least J50 be made, but such action is considered doubtful. Fifty-dollar round trip rates are frequently made from the east to the coast, but seldom is such a cut made on this side. The consensus is that the rate will be $57. The members of the Transcontinental association will convene next Mondav, and the result is awaited with interest. FBISCO'S FIKST AID Packages for TJse in Emergency Are Being Distributed. Enid, Ok., J.in. 27. A sample of the "first aid" packages to be issued by the "Frisco" system was received here yes terday. They will be distributed over the entire system, in stations, water tanks, section houses, switch shanties and trains, so that in case of accident remedies will be at hand. The package contains one tourniquet a hoselike cord of rubber to bind tightly above a wound to check the flow of blood; four tjgjsaasi ILa ILa i 11 PIASTER ounces of antiseptic absorbent cotton in a sealed box; four ounces of rolled bandages; sterilized gauze, bichloride gauze, boracic acid gauze and three ounces of whisky. The use .of the packages will be taught the employes. The men will be given circulars, showing how to use the tourniquet, the method of putting on a bandage and how to know the char acter of bandage to use in different kinds of injuries. It will all be supple mented with a note of instruction to use the whisky sparingly. The instruc tions advise the administration of hot coffee, if it is possible to get it, rather than the use of alcohol. In stations will be an additional package contain ing silk and catgut ligatures in glass tubes; instruments, ether and mor phine. These are to be used by doctors only. LEFT IN THE MUD. Fifty Belgian Locomotives Abandoned by French at Panama CanaL A correspondent of the Houston Post writing from Panama, tells of the ras cality of the French company which tried to dig a canal through, the isth mus. He says: "In crossing the railroad fill, from Colon to the mainland, one comes quickly to one of the most glaring of all the available proofs of French ras cality. Lying in the mud, soft silt and swamps, are fifty Belgian locomotives, built especially to the ' order of the Panama Canal company, and in their day as perfect pieces of machinery as Europe had ever produced. From some of these locomotives the partial crating was never removed, for it was discov ered after they were delivered here that 'a.' mistake' had been made in or dering them. They were all ordered for a different gauge railroad from that on the isthmus and were therefore en tirely useless. But instead of being sent back to Euroae to be sold where they might be used, they were dumped in the mud and there they lie today. "The crime of those locomotives is rivaled for downright rascality by an other which protrudes its proof all over the isthmus. Of the whole canal work, twenty-seven miles were, by the nature of the land, from the very beginning of the enterprise required to be excavated from the surface, the other twenty two miles being under-water dredging. The French proceeded, however, in their greed for contract commissions. with the idea of dredging practically the entire route. Their scheme was to excavate from the surface until a ditch of sufficient deDth to float a dredge should be secured, then to pump water into the ditch and turn dredges loose on the work. "Dredginjr is vastly more costly .than surface excavation, yet the French en tertained this monstrous idea, evidence of which is found in the high ground of the interior jungles. There, by the side of the ditch, sticking through the tangle of vegetation at short distance, lie the hulls and machinery of dredges it was proposed to put together and launch into the ditch after it should have been filled. There is not one of these machines but countless numbers of them, with hulls, boilers, scoops and all other aripurtenances strewn pro miscuously from one end of the isthmus to the ot.ier. A MILE OF LAND. Santa Fe Has Acquired Large Hold ings in San Bernardino. The Santa Fe now owns a strip of land commencing at I street and running west along Third street a mile in length, says the San Bernardino Times Index. This is the result of the move made quietly eome time ago to secure for the company additional acres for yard and other purposes. The last par cel of land was bought yesterday and now every foot of land which F. T. Fer ris, acting for the company, set out to buy has been bought and paid for. it is understood to be the purpose of the company to extend the yards on the new land, to store lumber and ties there, and to make other changes of another nature when the time comes. As has been reported it is the inten tion of the company to increase the size of the shops but just when this improve ment will commence is not known, and though rumor still persists in the story that the Santa Fe will do the repair work for the Salt Lake for the next ten years, nothing authentic can be ob tained. It is certain that the railroad intends to expend many thousands of dollars in the improvement of its property just bought, and that these improvements will be of a substantial nature, and add to the business of the town. The prop erty newly acquired fronts on Third street and has a depth of S00 feet ex tending haif way to Fourth. HAS CHENEY SOLD OUT P Santa Fe Magnate Reported to Have Sold San Disgo Property. San Diego, Cal., Jan. 27. It is reported here that immense holdings of Benjamin P. Cheney, the prominent Santa Fe offi cial, located in the vicinity of this city, have been sold to Homer H. Peters, the former wealthy Chicagoan, who now re sides here, and has become a prominent figure in the local railroad enterprises. The consideration is said to have been 12.000,000. The property, which was originally owned by the San Diego Land and Town company, includes the National City and Otal railroad, which extends fifteen miles to Tia Juana, on the Mexican border, to gether with a branch of several miles to the Sweetwater dam, several thousand acres of land about Sweetwater valley. National City and Chula Vista, including I.60O acres in orchards, the Sweetwater water svstem.with an enormous dam and distributing system, a citrus acid factory at National City, and considerable real property, both m ban Diego and National City. Mr. Peters is believed to be associated with others in the purchase. Realty dealers have received orders from the managers of the companies in structing them to strike all the land and the town companies' properties from their lists. Mr. Peters will not state that the deal is closed, but acknowledges that there is truth in the report that he has under taken the financing of the project. Mr. Peters is president of the Chamber of Commerce here, vice president of the First National bank, president of the San Diego Imperial Construction company and otherwise allied with prominent business interests, besides having already started the construction of a $300,000 hotel here. LIMITED DOINO WELL.' Santa Fe's Pet Train Hauls Big Loads to California. Records, have been compiled by the Santa Fe passenger department which show that for the first 14 days of this month the limited passenger business into southern California has increased 14 per cent over the traflic for the same number of days last year. On the other hand the business of the regular overland trains show but a slight increase. The Santa Fe estimates that ! per cent Of Its Califor nia traffic comes to the southern part of the state. . -KO ADM ASTER HAWK HURT. Electric Inspection Car Jumped the Track Near El Paso. Thursday afternoon while speeding to wards El Paso on his electric inspection car, Roadmaster John Hawk of the Santa Fe was thrown from the car and badly hurt. While roundiner a curve a few miles north of Vaddo station, the car jumped the track and Mr. Hawk was thrown to the ground, wniie tne heavy car fell on top of him. He was knocked senseless and lay until some time later, when the section gang came along and picked him up. He was taken to Vaddo station and a mesaage sent to El Paso asking for medical aid. The extra switch engine in the El Paso, yards and a -oaeh were sent to Vaddo"with the company doctor. After the doctor worked with him some time he was" revived and brought into Ed Paso and returned to bis home in Rincon on the passenger. Out side of being badly bruised and shaken up Mr. Hawk did not appear to be seri ously hurt and the doctor is of the opin ion that he will after a few days' rest at home, be able to again resume'his duties on the road. MAY REACH AGREEMENT. Rock Island Gould Dicker for New Orleans Line Still On. New Tork, Jan. 27 Following a dead lock that threatened a breach of rail road harmony in the Mississippi valley, negotiations have been resumed ac cording to the Herald, between George Gould and the Rock Island-Frisco sys tem for the joint use of the new Iron Mountain-Texas Pacific route from Memphis to New Orleans. No contract has yet been signed, but it is asserted that the stumbling block to former negotiations, which at one time caused the announcement that the Rock Island would build a new line to New Orleans has been removed. ABOUT RAILROAD PEOPLE. C. W. Cook, assistant general freight agent for the Santa Fe. with headquar ters in Topeka, is in Chicago on business for the company. William Newby of the office of W. J. Black, general passenger agent for the Santa Fe. has returned to Topeka from a short business trip to Chicago. G. W. Stafford, a Santa Fe conductor running on the Osage City branch, has been granted a 30 day lay off and will leave shortly for San Diego, Cal., where he will visit with his mother. C. W. Kouns, superintendent of trans portation for the Santa Fe, with head quarters in Topeka, left Monday for Cal ifornia, where he will confer with the of ficials of the coast lines. He is expected back in Topeka some time .next week. It Is announced'that H. H. Pitkin, man ager of the Harvey, eating house at the Santa Fe depot In Chanute, has resigned his position and has been succeeded by Manager Cumminga of the eating house in Colorado Springs. Mr. Pitkin was for merly manager of the eating house at this place The circular announcing the appoint ment of George E. Roe to the position of general agent at Kansas City, to succeed Douglas Dallam, resigned, has just been issued by the Santa Fe. The change is effective at once and Mr. Roe is expected to arrive in Kansas City at any time to assume the duties of his new position. BRYAN'S CRUSADE. He Opens the War for Endorse ment of K. C. Platform. New Tork, Jan. 27. Every seat in the Madison Square concert hall was taken last night when William Jennings Bryan began his speech on "Moral Is sues." In the audience there were many women, while the body of the hall was more than half full of clergymen. There was no presiding officer, Mr. -Bryan being escorted to the platform, where he was greeted with prolonged ap plause. He said in cart: "I have preferred to speak independ ently of any organization, because I do not care to embarrass any friends or supporters who may differ from me in opinion. Both I and they therefore are left to pursue in the future, as we have in the past, the course that seems to us bast. "I do not speak with authority; I am not a candidate for any office; I am only a private citizen, and I can prove by the editorial pages of nearly all of our leading daily papers that I have excellent prospects of remaining a pri vate citizen during the remainder of my lire. "The trouble with our government to day is that it is too much influenced in its operations by men whose only loyalty is loyalty to the money bags. wui it pay 7 has been substituted for 'Is it right?' and as a consequence our legislative assemblies, city, state and national, are becoming auction rooms in which governmental privileges are knocked down to the highest bid dor. "One evidence that our party was honestly seeking to secure justice to tne masses in lsas and 1900 is to be found in the fact that our campaign funds were insignificant in both cam paigns. In 1892 the Democratic party collected a large campaign fund from the corporations. It spent more than $1,000,000 in the two states of New "i'ork and Indiana alone, and what was the result? The most plutocratic admin istration this country has ever known. We witnessed a surrender to organized and predatory wealth so abject and so complete that seven years of exile from power have not entirely removed the stain from the party. You ask why I am opposed to the reorganization of the Democratic party. Because I want my party to define the rights of the people; I want it to be the fearless chamDion of their interests; I want to present tne moral Issue involved in public questions, and to appeal to the public conscience. "When the next Democratic convention undertakes to write a new platform it will find the last one a model of clearness and conciseness and of square dealing. and I hope that the delegates to the con vention will Be instructed by the various states to indorse it. "And how about candidates? It does not matter much what the name of the presidential candidate is, but it does mat ter what he stands for and in what direc tion he is going to lead the party. Let tne tepuDlican party De challenged to meet the moral issue presented this is democracy that is patriotic. Let this be done and unless reason and love of coun try have fled we shall fight without being ashamed. If we lose, it will be but a temnorarv defeat and will brine no dis grace with it. If we win, the victory wilt mean much for our country and for the world. Coming to the subject of imperialism, Mr. Brvan said: "I believe that in the last campaign that subiect appealed to the American people. I was willing to put all other subjects in the background, although I was wedded to them. I must confess that I was disappointed that so many were Indifferent as to the issue and the questions. Some people thought, as the Republican party must have done, that the tambline chance in the Philippines was God's will. Some people are quick to see the hand of God if it has a dollar in It. What pained me most in the cam paign was that the ministers of the gos pel saw the hand of God in the killing of the brown people in the Philippines and allowed a carpetbag government out thiue Rrvan referred to a soeech of Mr McKinlev s when in congress attacking President Cleveland's fiscal policy. Mc Kinlev. he said, practically intimated that Mr. Cleveland was making money "uEEII in this package yos get both liquid aad powder. This is the Large Sire. FOR THE ri ti Peruna is recommended by fifty members of Congress, by Governors, Consuls, Generals, Ma jors, Captains, Admirals, Eminent Physicians, Clergymen, many Hospitals and public institu tions, and thousands upon thousands of those in the humbler walks of life. . the master and all else the servant. I agreed with Mr. McKmlev. contin ued Mr. Bryan. mat is why I did what I could to re organize the Democratic party. I never regretted what I did, and, if necessary, will do it again." Later Mr. Bryan said: "Labor organi zations allow each man to have a con science. Capital is a combination or money, and money has not a conscience. I am told that labor organizations are in danger. I am willing to stand this danger for a little while until we rid the country of dangers you don't complain of. There are very many differences between organ izations of labor and organization of cap ital. Remember, that the laboring man is your brother and as such you must treat him as your brother. He has his rights as much as we have our rights. I want you to know that the laboring man has done great good to this country. Where has the trust in any way none good? We must settle the labor question by a moral issue." Mr. Bryan closed with an invocation- of divine aid for the laboring men and the equalization of all. POINTS WITH PRIDE. Civil Service-Commission Bays Postal Grafters Were Political Appointees. Washington. Jan. 27. The civil service commission in its report to the president for the fiscal year ended June 30 last, urges legislation retiring superannuated government employes. It suggests that congress provide that the further admis sion of persons into the classified ser vice shall be based on a condition that they shall provide against their own su perannuation or other disability by ade quate annuity insurance, the premiums to De deducted trom tneir salaries, ana that suoerannuation and disability an- nuties for" those now in the service should also be provided for as far as possible by similar deductions from salaries. The commission notes a continued im provement in the observance of the civil Bprvice act and rules and says that few complaints appear to be well founded. The report makes the f jllowing refer ence to the postoffice investigation: "As a result ot tne investigation into tne con duct of the postoffice department, a num ber of officers and employes of that de partment have been Indicted. An inspec tion of the commission record shows that none of those indicted entered the ser vice through competitive examination. This should oe gratuying to tne advo cates of the merit system, who hold that employps secured through fair, open competition have a greater degree of In tegrity as well as efficiency than em ployes appointed under the patronage system." ,m The merit system, wnicn ueKitii " with 13,924 positions, now covers approx imately 125,000 positions. The revised rules adopted last April, the report says, have given general satisfaction. It is stated that the conditions of employment in the Philippines continue to improve with the result that more applicants for govern ment places there were examined in the last five.month3 than in the preceding 12 months. , The commission urges a reclassification of the entire departmental service by congress. It says the present arrange ment is merely a salary classification, re sulting from increased appropriations an nually to meet the needs of the service and there should be uniformity of com pensation of the service for uprk of the same kind. Fought Off Three Robbers. Tucson, Ariz., Jan. 27. A Star special from Patagonia, Santa Cruz county, says that Michael O'Mera, a well known miner in that section, was held up yes terday in the Patagonia mountains while on the way to his mines py tnree strangers. O'Mera had $3,000 on his person which he was taking to the mine to pay off his men. The highwaymen called on him to halt, but instead of complying O'Mera opened fire, killing one and wounding a second, ine tnira fled in such haste that he left their horses. It is believed that, all three men were Mexicans. Tou may trust Piso's Cure to relieve sore spots in tne lungs, too r wtu?. CONURESS OF LAWYERS. The President Has Named a List of Delegates. Washington. Jan. . 27. The president has appointed delegates to the Universal Congress of Lawyers and Jurists to be held at St. Louis in September, 1904. Among them are the justices of the supreme court. Attorney General Knox, Secretary Hay, Secretary Root, Secre tary Shaw, Secretary Moody, William H.-Taft. Richard Olnev. George H. Wil liams, Portland, Ore., Judson Harmon,! W. H. S. Miller, John W. Griggs, John F. Dillon, James C. Carter, Joseph H. Choate, Charles P. Manderson, Piatt Rogers, Denver, John W. Noble, George Turner, Spokane, Wash., Francis J. Henry, San Francisco, W. H. Pope, as sociate Sustiee of the supreme court of SJew Mexico, Roswell, N. M. Edward Kent, chief justice supreme court of Arizona, Phoenix, Ariz., James Wick ersham, United State3 judge Eagle, Alaska, Sanford B. Dole, United States district judge Honolulu, Lorrin An drews, attorney general Honolulu, Wil lis Street, attorney general, San Juan, P. R., Luke Wright, vice governor Ma nila, Cayetano Arellano, chief justice supreme court of the Philippine Islands, Manifa. The following United States senators: George F. Hoar, John C. Spooner, J. T. Morgan, John W. Daniel, Charles W. Fairbanks, Francis M. Cockrell, Alfred B. Kittredge. The following members of the house: John J. Jenkins, John Dalzell, Henry W. Palmer, Charles is. Littleheld, David A. DeArmond, Henry J. Clayton and John S. Williams. " Good Coal at Reduced Prices. We are obliged to move a large stock of Arkansas Anthracite and Semi anthracite coal on account of certain changes in our yard, buildings and sheds due to changes made by the Santa Fe to accommodate their new freight depot. In order to move this coal quickly we have made a large re duction in the price. Preference will be given in the delivery of these coals. THE SOUTHWESTERN FUEL ' COMPANY, 734 Kansas Avenue. Telephones 771, 193, 144. SOkET Should not be neglected for an instant as it may lead to asthma, bronchitis, grippe, pneumonia and consumption. As soon as you feel thattight ening sensation in the throat take a dose of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup and you will get quick relief . There is nothing else so good for all diseases of the throat and lung3 as DR. BULL'S OQUOEl SYRUP THE OXETEAT CURES Mybov had a very severe sore throat and' cough. I tried many different cough medicines 1 for him but he found no relief. 1 was advised j to use Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. After taking half a. hottle. he was completely cured. -When . anyone has a cold accompanied by a cough, I immediately give him a doseof the famous Dr. Bnll'.nnnffhSrrnn. I recommended it to mv friends, and those who tried it were well pleased with the results. Mrs. Mary E. Weatherby, 1719 Snyder Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. AVOID SUBSTITUTES Many unscrupulous dealers are trying to sub stitute cheap and worthless imitations for Dr." Bull's Cough Syrup. Insist on the genu ine which has cured coughs and colds for fifty years, and look for the "Boll's Head" trade mark on the wrapper . Price 25c., 50c. and $1.00. A. C. Meyer & Co., Baltimore, Md. BRIEF TELEGRAMS. Chicago, Jan. 27. Carl Corper, head of the Corper Brewing company, was found dead in his office last night. He had committed suicide by shooting himself through the head. Business troubles are supposed to have een the cause. Richmond, Va., Jan. 27. The two houses of the general assembly voting separately chose John W. Daniel, to succeed himself as United States sena tor for the full term beginning March 4 next. New Orleans, Jan. 27. The "Lily White" Republican state central com mittee met here and selected February 17 as the date of the conveition to name a state ticket and select the delegates to the Republican national convention at Chicago. No negro was present. Washington, Jan 27 Secretary Moody entertained a large company at dinner last night in honor of President and Mrs. Roosevelt. The dinner was given at the new Willard hotel, where covers were laid for 40 persons. The guests included President and Mrs. Roosevelt and several members of the cabinet. Ft. Wayne, Ind., Jan. 27. Judge Rob ert Lowry, former member of congress from the Twelfth Indiana district and one of the best known Jurists in the state, died at his home in this city to day, aged SO years. Berlin, Jan. 27. Near Dombrau, in Upper Silesia, a pile of slag, which la borers were removing for railroad build ing caved in today, burying nine men. Washington, Jan. 27. Hezekiah A. Gudger, at present United States con sul at Panama, has formally applied for promotion to the place 'of minister to Panama which he expects is soon to be vacated by Mr. Buchanan. Detroit, Mich., Jan. 27. The Demo crat state central committee has decid ed that the state Democrat convention to select delegates to the national con vention at St, Louis shall be held at Detroit June L HROJ4T W1