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'•m Hi if -a-.-. rffo EIGHT «8 9 Games Yesterday. R. H. Pittsburg 8 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Games Yesterday. R. H. E. Boston 7 11 0 St. Louis 4 2 Batteries Cicotte, Pape and Car rigan, Madden Dineen and Stephens. Second Game— R- H. E. Boston 4 7 St. Louis 1« 3 Batterie9 Pelty and Ctiger Col lins. Nourse and Donohue. R. H. E. Washington 1 8 3 Chicago 6 10 2 Batteries Smith, Ohl and Street Scott and Owens. Second Game— R- H. E. Washington 1 10 0 Chicago 2 8 0 Batteries Withertrp and Street White and Sullivan. R. H. New York 6 10 1 Detroit 1 5 2 Batteries Manning and Kleinow Donovan and Schmidt. R. H. E. Philadelphia 7 11 1 Cleveland 1 5 2 Batteries Dygert, Thomas and Larken Leiberhardt, Sitton, Booles and Smith, Clark. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Games Yesterday. R. H. E. Toledo 1 8 St. Paul 4 8 1 Batteries McSurdy and Abbott Leroy and 'Carlson. Second Game— R. H. B. Toledo 6 7 1 St. Paul 1 5 5 Batteries Owen and Land Gea ring, Ryan and Carisch, R. H. B. Louisville 2 9 0 Kansas City 0 3 1 Batteries Hogg and HugheB Dorner and Ritter. R. H. Indianapolis 2 9 3 Minneapolis 11 14 3 Batteries Glaze, Kuepper and Bowerman Olmstead and Block. Sheriff McGilll3 was in the north ern part of the county on official busi ness Friday. -nMrs. C. A Burton and daughter, Bertha, returned Friday noon from visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jno Rodgers at Sibley Butte. The Baptist ladles will sell bread, cakes, rolls, cookies and other bakery goods at Hoskin's 3tore this after noon. WRIGHT BROS. (Continued Prom Page 1.) 'Like a giant bird, circling the sky until it marks its prey, and then darting straight for Its objective, this man-bird swept unswerving down its course. The revolving propellers en couraged the illusion of swift winged bird flight. Unwavering, It kept its course straight to the south, and It seemed to be rising even higher, as it passed over the diverse and heavily wooded country in the distance. Smaller and smaller it grew, until it became a mere speck against the pearl sky above the horizon. Those who had glasses saw the aeroplane turn, first to the left and then to the right, above Shuter Kill. Suddenly the speck was lost Jo view and as the seconds passed a silence grew upon the crowd, a silence that spoke of deep concern. Suddenly the speck came In sight again, over the distant hill. A cry swept over the watching (crowd. -On ward the machine came, growing with the seconds, seemingly swervd from its course by a westerly breeze. It grew and grew, until almost every detail of It was visible. Soon the aerial navigators were home again, over the drill grounds, flying very low. Orvllle steered straight across the field,.and at a height of about twenty feet swung around again to the southward, and landed easily far down the field. The task was done and in triumph. Wilbur began calculations to deter mine the probable speed of the trip. His first estimate was 44 miles per] n^M »WV*»-)i fiti|M*JI«(MVWmpM 2 1 9 0 Gibson New York Batteries Willis and Mathewson, Ames and Schlei. —.— R. H. B. Chicago I Philadelphia & Batteries Overall and Archer Moore and Dooin. R. H. lii Cincinnati Brooklyn Batteries Ewing and WcLean Mclntyre, Rucfeer and Bergen. Game called at end .of the 13th in ning on account of darkness. St. Louis Boston R. H. 2 Batteries Sallee, Melter and Prelps Rtchie and Graham. R. H. E hour, but after he had consulted with Lleut.^FouIois, he figured it at 42 1-2 miles per hour. The training of Lieuts. Lahm and Foulois will hereafter take place at some point on the" Potomac near Washington, where the ground is more level and freer from obstruc *ions. Tomorrow the official board will de termine the speed made today. It is said that it exceeded forty-two miles an hour. The Wrights will receive $30,000, including a bonu3 of $5,000 for their aeroplane. JUSTICE MILLS (Continued from page l.) on the "exaggerated ego," at the af ternoon session, quoting from opinions of alienists at the homicide trials. He quoted Dr. Britton D. Evans, who had complained that Thaw would not lis ten to argument and could not foe convinced. Another expert comment ed on the prisoner's "rapid flow of words and rapid manner," and a fac ulty of expression far beyond normal. This line of argument is taken to indicate that the state will strive to belittle the prisoner's general cred itable showing on the stand on the theory that he was made glib, as it were, by the "exaggerated ego." While Thaw fenced well with Je rome, as he had done all along, he was worried today as he was before, when the district attorney, for the fifth time, asked him to define his mental condition now and when he killed White. He held doggedly to the assertion that he had never "been medically insane," but that he might have been legally insane at the time of the shooting. Jerome's examination lasted all the morning, but on the whole Thaw met his questioner promptly and well. There were times when his demeanor was almost frivolous. He had not expected any prolonged grilling today but he settled back with an air that seemed to say, "I can stand it as long as you can." Adjournment was taken until Mon day. JEWELERW O FARGO ELECT DELEGATES TO NATION- AL CONVENTION TO BE HELD IN DENVER. ANNUAL ELECTION OF OFFICERS WILL BE HELD AT FARGO MEETING. Grand Forks, July 30.—Fargo was selected as the next meeting place of the state jewelers at the semi-an nual convention which was conclud ed yesterday at noon. At the fore noon session yesterday the following delegates to the national convention at Omaha were selected: C. Tillsen, Carrington. Max Robinovich and F. V. Kent of Grand Forks. A committee was appointed yes terday forenoon to frame a bill which will be presented to the next legislature for the purpose of form ing state watch makers examinaing board. This committee consists of B. C. Tillsen, Carrington, president C. H. Nesbit Harvey and Paul Girard, of Grand Forks. Yesterday afternoon a ball game and other sports had been arranged for entertainment features and they were greatly enjoyed. At the next meeting which will be held in Fargo in February, the an nual election of officers will be held. DR. HAGEN IS El OT GUILT WILL1STON PHY8ICIAN WHO WAS ON TRIAL FOR MALPRACTICE IS CLEARED BY JURY. SIN'KLER AND GREENLEAF, AT- TORNEYS OF MINOT APPEAR FOR DEFEN8E. Minot, N. D., July 30.—Attorneys D. C. Greenleaf and Ed. Sinkler, re turned this morning from Willlston, where they ayyeared in the Stai Hagen case. The case was brought by a Willlston (blacksmith, named Stai, against Dr. Hagen, on the ground that a needless operation had been performed. The arguments in the case were concluded last evening at about 6 o'clock, and five hours later the jury returned a verdict for the defendant. From all accounts it appears that professional jealousy in Willlston was the indirect cause of the case. The motion for a new trial will be argued in the near future and the case wiH be appealed no matter what the decision. Court at Willlston has adjourned until the fall term. Remember the Baptist food sale at Hoskin's store this afternoon. .-- ,•-*•• TBI-8TATE WEATHER, North and South Dakota: Gener ally fair Saturday and Sunday. Minnesota: Local showers Satur day Sunday fair light to moderate variable wind*. The Original Picture Show. Aladdin had just secured the won derful lamp. After a careful Inspection he began to rub It "Here," said he, "is where I give a magic lantern exhibition." Try The Tribune Want Columns. PANAMA SEITLES WITH UNCLE SAM FOURTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS IN CASH WILL BE PAID TA THE HEIRS OF MEN KILLED—CER- TAIN POLICE OFFICERS TO BE DISCHARGED. Washington, July" 30.—Panama has met the demands of the United States for reparation in the cases in volving maltreatment of American naval officers and seamen, the delay in acting on which produced much irritation at the state department. She will pay an indemnity of $5,000 in the Columbia case in which the officers in uniform were arretted, locked up and roughly handled in •Colon and an indemnity of $8,000 to the relatives of Boatswains Mate Rand of the Buffalo, who was killed in Panama in September, 1908, and an indemnity of $1,000 to sailor Cies lik of the same vessel, who was ^tabbed at the time Rand was killed. Panama also agrees to dismiss all the police officers who were present at the time of the disturbance in the Buffalo cases. The state department accepts these promises upon condi tion that persons other than police who were involved, be punished by the court and that the payment of indemnities proposed be accompan ied by a formal official expression of regret. TARIFF BILL TO THE HOUSE IS ORDERED PRINTED IN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD MANY MEMBERS PRESENT WHEN DOCUMENT IS HANDED TO THE SPEAKER BY PAY.NE. Washington, July 30.—Entering upon the last stages of its considera tion by congress the tariff bill as re ported by the conferees was submit ted today to the house by Chairman Payne and ordered printed in the Congressional Record. Discussion of the conference report will begin at 10 o'clock in the morn ing, the indications being that a- day will suffice for its adoption. Three hundred and fifty of three hundred and ninety members were in their seats when Chairman Payne passed up to the speaker's desk the bulky document which had occupied the attention of congress for four and a half months, and then the republi cans broke out In loud applause. Mr. Payne will open tomorrow's proceedings with an exhaustive statement of the legislation .hill. With the conference report out of the way for the time being, the house for an hour and a half wrangled over some reasons for Increasing the clerical and labor forces of the Cap itol. NELSON WILL BE)4CANDIDATE President of Grain Growlers' Depart* ment of Society of Equity Will Be Candidate for Appointment to Min nesota Board of Appeals. Valey City, N. D., July 29.—Theo. G. Nelson, president of the grain growers' department of the American Society of Equity, is being boomed as a candidate for appointment to the Minnesota board of appeals under the provisions of the acts of the leg islature assemblies of Minnesota and North Dakota. His candidacy has heen taken up over the entire state by the local unions of the society and every effort will Sbe put forth to Jtn duce Governor Burke to make him one of the appointees. In a letter sent out by Charles U. Pierson, the treasurer of the state society, he offi cially withdraws his name as candi date and nrged that Mr. Nelson re ceive the united support of the so ciety for the position. Called Hie Papa Down. little Willy Is a bright boy and a saucy boy. HI* apt answers have often turned away wrath and often turned it upon him strongly. The ott er day his father was reprimanding him for some misdeed, and Willy was answering very saucily. The father became very angry and, seizing the youngsrer by the collar, said: "Sea here, young man, you must not talk like that to me. 1 never gave my fa ther Impudence when 1 was a boy." Willy was not feared at all. With a cherubic amile be looked Into papa's eyes and said, "But, papa, maybe your father didn't need it" 'Twas all off. Willy escaped punishment, while papa retired to another room. The Number 4 There are four cardinal points, few winds, four quarters of the moon, font seasons, four rules of arithmetic, four salts of cards, four quarters to the hour, four less for furniture, most ant* mals go .on four legs/ the dead are placed between four planks, the pris oners between four walls. We haw four incisor and four canine teeth, an4 our forks have four prongs. All apt mala when butchered are cut Into four quarters. The violin, greatest of all string instruments, baa but four strings. Four of a kind is a pretty good hand at poker, even if they are only fours.—Exchange. mmmsmmmm BIS.1ARCK DAILY TRIBUNE, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 31, 1909. ..".•:•. Copyrighted by Under derwood & Underwood. --„_.„.., .. ii I 1,1 i„• i,i.».i^ii«fi»ii«iiii..«iiiiiiifirw"'i!r^'rii-,liiff|ll11 "fflllffll'i.W.lift'.f'flll '^Mi—yE"*'^ Could Civilization Do Without Government By Count LEU TOLSTOY. Russian Author. EOPLE are so accustomed tonthe governmental order under which they live that it seems „to them the una voidable, permanent form of human, life. But it only seems so. PEOPLE LIVE AN A E LIVED OUTSIDE A$X GOVERN MENTAL SYSTEMS. All the savage nations who have not reached what is called civilization have lived and are living so, and so live those" who in their understanding of life have risen ABOVE "civilization," Christian communities in Europe and Amer ica, and. especially in Russia, who have rejected government and do not require it and who only endure its interference because they must. THE GOVERNMENTAL ORDER OF THINGS IS A TEMPORARY AND CERTAINLY NOT A PERPETUAL FORM OF LIFE, AND JUST AS E I E O A N I N I I A I S N O S A I O N A O N I N A CHANGES, MOVES ON AND PERFECT8 ITSELF, 80 THE LIFE OF ALL MANKIND IS UNCEASINGLY CHANGING, MOV ING ON AND PERFECTING ITSELF. We only fail to see the fact that the life we lead is discordant with human nature because all the horrors among which we quietly live have come about so GRADUALLY that we have not noticed them. Apart from the fact that there is no kind of reason to believe that the abolition of violence, which is not conformable with REA SONING, LOVING HUMA N NATURE would impair instead of improve the condition of mankind—apart from that, the PRES EN CONDITION OF SOCIETY IS SO DREADFU that it is difficult to imagine anything worse. Therefore the question of whether people can live without gov ernments is not only not a terrible one, as the defenders of the exist ing system wish to make out, but is MERELY LAUGHABLE, as would be the question, addressed to a tortured man, of how he would live if people ceased tormenting him. People who, owing to the existence of government organizations, have advantageous positions picture to themselves the life of people deprived of governmental authority as a WILD DISORDER, a STRUGGLE OF ALL AGAINST ALL, just as if we were speak ing not of the life of animals, for animals live^ peacefully without governmental violence, but of some terrible creatures prompted in their activity solely by hatred and madness. But they imagine men to be such merely because they attribute to them QUALITIES CONTRARY TO A N NATURE which have been per verted by that same government organization under which they them selves have grown up and which, in spite of the fact that it is evi dently unnecessary and merely harmful, they continue to uphold. And therefore to the question, "WHAT WOULD LIFE BE WITHOUT GOVERNMENT?" there would be but one a namely, that there would certainly not be all the evil which is created by government., THERE WOULD NOT BE PROPERTY IN LAND THERE WOULD BE NO TAXES SPENT ON THING8 UNNECESSARY FOR THE PEv PLE{ THERE WOULD NOT BE THE SEPARATION OF THE NATIONS, THE ENSLAVEMENT OF SOME BY OTHERS THERE WOULD NOT BE THE WASTE OF THE PEOPLE'S BEST POWERS IN PREPARA TIONS FOR WAR8 THERE WOULD NOT BE THE FEAR »F BOMBS ON THE ONE SIDE AND OF GALLOWS ON THE OTHER THERE WOULD NOT BE THE INSANE LUXURY OF SOME AND THE 8TILL MORE INSANE DESTITUTION OF OTHER8. Square Deal For the Railroads, But They Must Reciprocate. By WADE H. EIXIS. Awi.Unt to the Attorney General. ITH respect to gigantic combinations of capital engaged in a purely public service* like the railroads, there is no need of any limitation whatever upon their right to make mutual agreements. Why Because such agreements do iyt and cannot control prices, since the charges imposed for the service are controllable by the state or by the nation itself. THEREFORE THERE 18 NO REASON WHY THE ANTI-TRUST ACT 8HOULD APPLY TO RAILROADS AT ALL. THEY ARE OUT SIDE THE REA80N FOR THE LAW AND OUGHT NOT TO BE WITHIN I TERM8. The RAILROADS MUST BE ENCOURAGED to keep pace with'the industry of the country. It is a lamentable fact that'rail road facilities in recent years A E NOT RESPONDED TO THE COMMERCIAL GROWTH of the country. With the esti mated need of seven to eight billion dollars within the next twentv years for railroad building in this country no policy must be adopted which will retard the natural development of trans portation facilities, the first and foremost essential of al] business prosperity. While it is true, however, that traffic agree ments and pools between railroads, now forbidden by the anti-trust act, ought not to be forbidden, it is NOT TRUE that a necessary condition to railroad improvement is that ALL GOVERNMENTAL SUPERVISION SHALL CEASE. In my judgment he is likely to be disappointed who predicts a RETREA ALONG THE LINE OF RAIL ROAD SUPERVISIO N THE GOVERNMENT, and he is mistaken who asserts that the issuance of railroad securities is NOX OF THE PEOPLE'S BUSINESS. THE RAILROADS ARE NOT ENGAGED IN PRIVATE BUSINESS. THEY ARE PUBLIC SERVANTS. THE ADEQUACY OF THEIR SERV ICE, THE FAIR RETURN UPON THE MONEY INVESTED, THE SAFETY AND COMPENSATION. OF THEIR EMPLOYEE8 AND THE H0NE8T MANAGEMENT OF, THE BUSINESS ARE MATTERS CF PUBLIC CONCERN,. AND THE SOONER THIS 18 REALIZED THE BOOKER WILL THE RAILROADS RECEIVE THAT MEASURE OF PUBLIC 8UPPORT AND PROTECTION WHICH COME FROM PUBLIC CONFIDENCE. .•••,,':..:.J.^^.iij. AST WEEK aud the week before we talked to yon about the necessity of protecting your family from the dirty Fly. The screen windbw and door .sW North Star jBS W, E. Gleason, Mgr. MARGARET WILDES O'CONNOR Beauty Parlors. Phone 415. McKenzie Block, Main Street. E fl.ro Furniture and Undertaking LICENSED EMBALMER IOO O N I Main 8 Third St., HaveYou a Sitz Bath? Maybe you are not familiar with, the luxury these little tubs contribute. They are an invaluable addition to your bathroom. Come and see them at our store. Of Course. Have a Bathtub? But is it a modern porcelain one? The old zinc-lined wooden affairs nave long alnce been passed up. We will Inetal an up-to-date full-siae porce lain tub In your home for as little as !!°-, W te will be done right. I •1 1 rrn on a house is necessary. The screened porch is really not a necessity, but more of a luxury. How much enjoyment you would get if your porch was screened a place you could go to those hot summer evenings, after a long day of hard work, and get real solid comfort. Measure your porch an| .come to our office next time you are passing and we will tell you exactly what it will cost it is not ex pensive, you will wonder why you did not do it before. N .,p I y°« some of the latest and convince you that the sanitary feature is alone worth the H. C. Meacham Succe»«or to O. W. Wolbert Hardware Company Plumbing and Heating houH73 Co/. 3rd and Broadway