Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 1, Hammond, Lake County, 18 June 1907 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT.
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES. Tuesday, Juno 3S, 1907.
UN CLE SAM SUPREME
Missouri Can't Shut Him Out of a Case in Which Railways Are Involved.
SO HOLDS JUDGE MTHEES02I
He Takes Jurisdiction of the 2-Cext Law Litigation.
Act J 9 To Be Enforced for Three Months to Test Its Financial Cfl'ect on the Kail-roads.
Kansas City, Juno IS. The Missouri 2-oent passenger fare act -will go Into effect at f a. m. tomorrow, an bo tfivfn a throe months' trial. If at the end of that time it is found to be tmremunerative its enforcement can then be fought in the courts by the railroads. The state ofiulals are temporarily enjoined from enforcing the maximum freight rate law, and this case will be argued later In the federal court. Judge Smith MoPherson In the United States district court here, flfter handing down an opinion maintaining the court's jurisdiction in the premises, ordered the promulgation-of 'the foregoing statement, which had been agreed to by the attorneys for the state and the eighteen Missouri railroads Involved. Cnele Sam's Jurisdiction Sustained. The court In its decision had stiff. Rested that the 2-cent fare should bo first given a practical trial Wore In. Junction proceedings preventing its en. foreemont be considered. The jurisdiction In the case of a United States ' court was sustained. Herbert S. Iladley, attorney general, said regarding the 2-cent bill: "If at the end of three months the railroads want to litigate the reasonableness of these rates the question of the jurisdiction of the state and federal courts to determine thequestion will be fought out and the state has lost v.our f lt.T rights and advantages. The injunction suits that I have brought against the railroad companies on the passenger fates in the state courts will stand. Hadley Claims the Victory. "As the reasonablenessof the freight rate law can be more speedily heard find determined by the federal court, on account of the fact that practically all the testimony necessary to the dotermination has been already taken there, it will be heard and decided in that court. The state is in the better position to win the case under the act of 1007 than it was under the law of 100.-.. I feel that the order made U both a moral and a substantial victory for the state."
DKCIjAKKS THIS IS A NATION
States AT ill Not Ke Permitted to Dietate to the Government. In the course of his opinion Judge MoPherson said: "That the states have the right' to manage their own local affairs will ever be maintained. iUit it is too late to talk about states dictating to the government, or to riding down its courts. This is a nation. Its commerce will not be interfered with by any tate, because, for that almost alone, wo adopted our constitution. The commerce clause v. iil always be upheld, and the citizens, including corporations, Mill ever be protected in their rights under the f on r t een t'h amendment. "These are national questions, and the supreme court will hold the scales of justice with the evidence before them. I do not know, and of course do not state, that the state legislature lias wronged these railways. That is the case on its merits. p.vit the railways say they are being wronged, and they must have a hearing and a hearing on the evidence, and that evidence carried with rhe record to the supreme court. And if. upon the evidence, they are being compelled to transact business at a loss, no one need doubt that the supreme court will nullify the statute.' "If the rates lixed are remunerative, the statutes will be upheld. It is too late to talk about the alleged, wrongs of the supreme court declaring statutes void. That was fought out one hundred years ago. Down to 18,ss, the period, covering the first one hundred years of the United States supremo court, that court held twenty United States statutes void. During the same period that court declared as void 1SI state statutes, of which fourteen were Missouri statutes. "How many have since been de iraed void I have not taken the time to oseertain. And some of the statutes thus declared void were railway rate statutes, enacted by the states. It must be remembered that in passenger find freight carrying there is much to iLe considered besides rates or fares.'"
Pirst of the Kind in Austria. Vienna, June IS. The first Austrian parliament elected tm the basis of equal suffrage has been opened. Thousands of people gathered about the parliament building to watch the arrival of the deputies, who wore flowers designating their parry and nationality. Rryce Calls on Geronimo. Lawton, O. T., June IS James Bryoe, the British ambassador, went to Fort Sill, near here an visited Geronimo. the famous Apache warrior, end Quanah Tarker, chief of the Cora-
IT TAKES BIG FIGUBE3 When It Comes to TeJlinfr How Mncb Iiuslness Was Done at New York in 190(3. New York, June 18. The annual report of the Chamber of Commerce of the state of New York shows that the last calendar year was most prosperous. The total value of the foreign commerce of the metropolis for the calendar year ended Dee. V.l last was Sl,G,V7.720,ooo, as compared with $1,374,417,122 for the preceding year. It shows that the balanre of trade in favor of the United States for-the fiscal year was $ol7.302.0.l, an Increase of SI 12,2.-3.4-9 over the preceding ye :r. The enormous business activity during last year ip shown by the total clearings reported by the clearing house, which amounted to J104.C7.V 000,000, as compared with $9...f22.('00,000 In the year preceding. The total foreign commerce of the United States, according to the report, in lf'Oo was valued at $2.42o.rL'.o.O(;;:, as compare! with ?2W,;".,0;2 in the year preceding. THEY DON'T KNOW JTNULTY
Man Who Gave Himself Up at Iios Angeles Seems To Be Something of a Faker. Wilkosbarro, Pa.. June 18. J. MeNulfy who gave himself up to the 1 ,03 Angeles police and confessed to three murders at Yatesville. Pa., is not known there. Kate McDermott, of Yatesville, was not killed as McNuIty alleges, t)ut John Sarrain, her sweetheart, while talking to her one night about ten years ago, was killed. John and Michael Muiherrin, of Pittston, who MeNulty alleges he murdered, Avere both found cut to pieces cn the Delaware and Hudson railway tracks several years ago, and it was thought they were killed by a train. George Martin, formerly of Yatesville, who is now in Los Angeles and who the despatch alleges identified MeNulty, disappeared from home five years ago.
Iet Hi Wife Kill Herself. New York, June IS. Laura, the 10-year-old wife of James Woardell, was shot through the head and killed at their home in West Twenty-fifth street. The husband, who is six yearn the senior of his wife, notified"' the police, explaining that his wife had taken her life in accordance with a suicide pact into which the two had entered. He was arrested.
Three Fatally Injured. Trinidad, Colo., June IS. Eighteen passengers were injured, three fatally, in a wreck of an easthound passenger train on the Santa Fe near Eail, twenty miles east of here. The fatally injured are Mrs. W. W. Nichols, Fort Smith, Ark.; F. Royva, Trinidad, and F. M. Jones, Pueblo, Colo. Fifteen others were more or less cut and bruised, but not seriously.
Duke Gets His Decree. Trenton, N. J., June 18. The court of errors and appeals has affirmed the decree of the court of chancery granting a divorce to James P.. Duke, the wealthy tobacco man, from his wife Lilliiu Duke. Another Quits the Panama Job. Washington, June 18. - Joseph Ripley has resigned his position as one of the consulting engineers on the Panama canal commission, to accept a more lucrative position in this country.
NEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE
The subject of limitation of armaments has a poor chance to be discussed by The Hague peace conference. A public lands convention to discuss the president's public land policy is in session at Denver. All is quiet in Russia, except at lUaek'sea points, where a big naval mutiny has been discovered and an attempt made to kill Admiral Wlren." The prohibition against the presentation of "The Mikado" in England has been entirely withdrawn. Darwin P. Kinsley, first vice presi
dent of the New York Life Insurance
company, has been elected president or
the company to succeed Alexander E.
Orr.
More than 200 striking Italian trackmen on the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad in and about New
Haven, returned to work at the old
wages.
The American Institute of Homeopathy has opened its sixty-eight annual session at the Jamestown exposition with i00 delegutos in attendance. King Frederick and Queen Louise of Denmark have left Paris for home. The Travellers Protective Association of America is in annual session at the Jamestown exposition with upwards of 1,500 delegates in attendance. Governor Comer, of Alabama. ha3 appointed ex-representative John II. Rankhead senator in place of ine late John P. Morgan. Herbert G. Laing, a prominent attorney of Colorado Springs. Colo., waa drowned at Venice, Cal., while btabing in the surf. Commissioner Neill, it is understood, will, at the president's suggestion, go to New York to begin an investigation of the threatened strike of the telegraphers. The dowager duchess of Roxburghe had a jewel case containing gems valued at many thousands of dollars stolen from her during a railway journey from Ixmdon to Doncaster. A magnificent silver service, the gift of the state of Kansas, was presented to the battleship Kansas at the LeosTJ- isla4. A-y jrard
SCHMiTZ IS DEPOSED
Mayor of San Francisco Is No Longer Mayor, Being Confined in Jail.
SUPERVISOE IS IN HIS PLACE
Scheme of the Reformers Is to Make a Clean Sweep.
Will Likely Be a Hot Fight in the Courts Hint of Trouble Over the Man to Pick in Place of Schmitz.
San Francisco, June IS. Under orders of William II. Langdon, the board of supervisors adopted a resolution declaring Mayor Eugene Schmitz temporarily unable to perform his official duties and appointing Supervisor James L. Gallagher acting mayor. The latter says he w ill assume the mayoralty at once, and he denies that he has made arrangements with the district attorney or any one to resign at demand in order to make way for a reform mayor whose name is yet to be announced. District Attorney Heuey, Rudolph Spreokols and Langdon and their immediate associates in the bribery graft prosecution are by this move placed in actual control of the municipal situation. Ijegal Contest Is Expected. That they will be allowed to so remain without legal contest by the convicted mayor's attorneys is not expected. It is the plan of the prosecution to call for the resignation in a few days of some one of the eighteen supervisors. This forthcoming, Acting Mayor Gallagher will appoint to the vacancy a man named by the district attorney. So soon as he takes office Gallagher will resign from the mayor's chair and his resignation will be accepted. The board, acting under orders from the prosecution, will select the new member as president pro tempore and by virtue of the office he w ill at once become acting mayor. Spreckels Opposes This Man. The man most persistently mentioned for this place is Attorney Joseph Dwyer, president of the Independence League, but that political connection is said to render him unacceptable to Spreckels, the financial guarantor of the Avhole bribery graft investigation. The first act of'the reform mayor, if the prosecution's programme is carried out, will be to demand the resignation of practically the entire Schmitz administration, whose places will be filled with reform agents as fast as vacancies are created. Unless disturbed by the courts the new regime will endure until next January. Mayor Schmitz in the County Jail. Mayor Schmitz, convicted last week of the crime of extortion, remains a prisoner in the city and county jail. The resolution declaring the mayor's cha;r vacant and appointing Supervisor Gallagher to fill it was adopted after a fight on the floor. It was opposed by Supervisors Tveilmoe and O'Neill. It was voted for by twelve supervisors, each of whose-confessions to biibetaking is transcribed in grand jury records. As none of these has been Indicted for bribe-taking the general opinion is that they are to escape punishment if they continue to do the bidding of the district attorney and his prosecuting associates.
GERMANS ARE PESSIMISTIC They See All Sorts of Trouble to Grow Out of the Kecent Coup : of the Czar. Berlin, June 18. The semi-official view of the Russian situation is of the most pessimistic nature, according to an official, who said: "The events in Russia doubtless will create unrest in Poland and the Caucasus; increase the insurrectionary feeling and swell the numbers of the terrorists who will not shrink from the worst deeds in order to avenge their alleged wrongs. "The government, judging from the military preparations and the gagging of the press, evidently expects risings, which it intends to suppress with determination. Meanwhile Russia Is under an autocratic government with unlimited powers until the meeting of the new duma."
Three More Bodies Recovered. Newport News. Ya.. June 18. Clad in full naval uniforms, and with face and hands fearfully mutilated, the bodies of Midshipmen P. II. Field, of Wisconsin; W. II. Stevenson, North Carolina, and F. P. Holcomb, of Delaware, wore found in Chesapeake bay. The bodies, after being examined and identified, were taken by the naval tug Potomac to the naval hospitalat Portsmouth.
Father of the Curfew Law Dead. Omaha. Neb., June IS Colonel Alexander Hogeland. of. Louisville, the newsboys' friend and the fath? of the curfew law. was found dead in bed in his room at the Murray hotel, with the gas turned on and the windows and the transom closed. His death, however, is believed to have been accidental.
Mis. Besant Is World President. Kansas City, June IS. Mrs. Annie Besant. of Adyar. India, the noted writer and lecturer on matters occult, has been elected world president of the Theosophioal society, to succeed the late Colonel Henry Steele Olcott, formerly of New York according to a private cablegram received In this city from London-
LEAK IN TEE CROP REPORT Witness Wfco Paid the Man Who Leaked" Tells How Well the Scheme Worked. Washington, June 18. In Louis H. Van Riper, a New York broker, the government introduced the first witness in the trial of Edwin II. Holmes, Jr., who has directly connected Holmes with the premature dlvulgeuce of the information on which the cotton crops of the agricultural department are based. Van Riper was on the stand all day, and the direct examination had not been concluded when the court adjourned. He said that he had met Holmes in 194 through F. A. Pockman. and that he had agreed to give them two thirds of any profits that might be derived through cotton deals made on points supplied by Holmes. He then told how Holmes had kept his part of the agreement by giving out information a day in advance ; the appearance of the official report; quoted figures to show the degree of accuracy of the information supplied, and related Instances in which Holme;? had been paid money through Moses Haas. Ho said that $ln7,OO0 had been cleared on the Information secured in advance of the report for November 1004.
WOULD HAVE BEEN AWFUL Dynamite Bomb Found in a Load or Coal Delivered to a Mill Employing 300 Girls. Cleveland, O., June 18. A dynamite bomb big enough to wreck a building, was found in a load of coal being delivered to an east end knitting mill. The police are investigating whether an attempt was made to blow up the mill or whether effort had been made to wreck a mine from which the coal came. There are three hundred girls employed at the knirti ng plant. Police were rushed to the scene and there was so much excitement that work was suspended for the afternoon. There has been no labor trouble at the factory and the police believe that the bomb came from the mine and that no attempt was made to wreck the factory building. Thives Travel in a Fast Auto. New York, June IS. The automobile thieves who have made numerous raids among the residents of suburban Long Island, were abroad again Sunday. They looted the home of Charles Oswald, a wealthy farmer near Mineofci, securing $1,000 in cash and jewels worth $500. Oswald and his family were at church when the robbery occurred.
Will Have to Get Along on $100,000. St. Louis, June 18. The efforts made by relatives of Mrs. Thomas Connor, widow '''of a Joplin, Mo., millionaire, to secure for her a child's portion of the estate were defeated by a ruling of the probate court denying the motion of her nephew to set aside the will. Mrs. Connor will therefore receive but $100,000.
Secretary Taft in the Black Hills. Hot Springs, S. P., June IS. Secretary of War Taft and party made the first stop in the Black Hills here at Hot Springs, staying an hour. The time was spent Inspecting the National Sanatorium and in making a fifteen minute address. The secretary had fully recovered in health, excepting for a cold.
Planters Hotel in New Control. St. Louis, June IS. Negotiations have been completed whereby the control of the interest in the Planters hotel passed from the possession ot Colonel Thomas Landrum, president of the company, to Captain James L. Lawlor, of Houston, Texas. The deal includes a two-year lease on the hotel.
Collapse of a Country House. Rome, June IS. The country house of Marquis Cappelli, at Chiarino, collapsed. Twenty-five soldiers who happened to be taking shelter in the house during a rain storm were buried in the wreckage. A captain was fatally injured and a lieutenant and twenty men were seriously injured. Killed by an Earthquake. Valparaiso, Chile, June IS. Late reports from Valdivia state that thirtyfour persons were killed or injured by the recent earthquake. The region affected by the shock extends from Valparaiso to Magellan vtraits and from the Pacific coast to Neuquin, Argentina. Civilization in Sovith Carolina. Augusta, Ga., June IS. In the renewal of an old quarrel after church services at Ashley Station, S. C, J. B. Ross, chief of police of Barnwell, S. C, shot and killed Johnson Tender, a farmer. A coroner's jury exonorated Ross.
Decn in the Devil Wagon. Sanbornville, N. II., June 18. In an automobile accident three persons were probably fatally injured. They ere: Dr. Ben Hicks Metcalfe, head of Metcalfe's Hospital, Winthrop, Mass.; Mrs. Metcalfe, and Miss Churchill, matron of the Metcalfe hospital. The automobile plunged over a high embankment, burying its occupants underneath.
Another Victim of the Auto. Milwaukee, June IS. Burr K. Chandler aged 34 years, prominent clubman of this city, is dead from injuries received in an automobile accident last week, when he suffered a fractured arm and injury of the spine. The accident was caused by the breaking of the steering gear of his automobile, the piaHiw tippling over on top of him.
ORCHARD TESTIFYING
He Goes on the Stand Again To Be Questioned by the Defense.
WILL TRY TO IMPEACH HIM
Has a Conference with the Prosecuting Lawyers.
Steve Adams Is a Trouble, It Seems, but He Will Probably Be Called by the State New Witnesses Arrive.
Boise, Ida., June IS. When the Steunenberg murder trial is resumed today Harry Orchard will be the first witness called to the stand by the state. He will then be placed in the hands of the defense in order that a series of formal impeachment questions may be presented, and then the prosecution w ill take him over for his re-direct examination. Despite bin long stay on the stand there were several points relative to the Steunenberg murder and alleged conspiracy behind it that were not developed and these the state will bring out The prosecution also wants to clear up several matters dealt in by the defense when Orchard was under cross-examination. Prosecution Holds Conferences. When Orchard was brought over from Caldwell yesterday his guards took him to the office of James II. Hawley, senior counsel for the state, for a conference as to his testimony, and at the conclusion of the meeting he was driven back to the penitentiary. Counsel for the state had an extended conference as to the concluding moves in their case, and chiefly relative to the course to be pursued by them toward Steve Adams. The derision as to Adams was not final, but it was tentatively agreed to call him as a witness for the state, but to leave him for the defense if it sees fit to make him a witness. New Prosecution Witnesses Adams stands by his repudiation of the confession which he made to Detective McParland and there his connection with case, other than in the use of his name, rests for the present Orchard will be succeeded on the stand by James Kirwan, acting secretary of the Western Federation of Miners. Several additional witnesses whose testimony is said to be of importance to the state's case will arrive here today and tomorrow, and will be called as soon as the way is cleared for them. Charles Neville, sou of John Neville, who was a member of the camping party that aecompained Orchard on his flight into Wyoming after the Independence station was blown up, has arrived here. Will Affect Orchard's Story. Orchard alleges that on the day of the explosion he started out with Charles Neville and his father, John Neville, since deceased, and that after the party went into camp for the night he stole away, mounted a horse, rode back to join Steve Adams, set off the mine at the station, then hurriedly rode back to the camp. The youth's testimony as to the events of the night should have an important bearing on the truth or falsity of Orchard's story. Continuance for Orchard. Caldwell. Ida.. June 18. narry Orchard was brought to the scene of the crime which landed him within the clutches of the law and taken before Judge Wood at the county court house. The Haywood case at Boise was adjourned over to enable Judge Wood to come to Caldwell and enter an order formally adjourning Orchard's trial for the present term of court. The proceedings began at 11 a. m., and occupied only a few minutes, at the end of which tima all the parties went back to Boise. LUXURIOUS QUARTERS Custom House at New York Is Going To Be a Palace When Completed. New York. June 18. Rapid progress is being made toward the completion of the custom house in Bowling Green. Although the contractor! predict that the building will be ready for occupancy July 1, treasury officials believe It will be September before it is moving day from the present Wall street building. The building has been under construction for eight years, and, including the land, has cost approximately $8,000,000. It is estimated that the new custom house will have floor space of 300,000 square feet The suite of offices to be occupied by Collector Stranahan is off the first corridor of the main floor. A hand-carved screen of massive oak divides the main apartment Into antechambers and reception rooms. The reception room contains a great open fireplace of carved stone. Broke His Neck in a Scuffle. Junction City, Kan., June IS. In a scuffle between Privates James Force and Blayney Devine, both of Battery D, Sixth field artillery, and both garrison prisoners at Fort Riley, Private Devine's neck was broken and he died Instantly. Another Competitor of the Standard ? Dover, Del., June 18. A charter has been issued to the Barnsdell Oil company, of Pittsburg. The company has an authorized capital cf $10,000,000 and is empowered to acquire oil and gas landsr
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New Use for Automobile. "I like the automobile for style," said the old Georgia farmer, "but for safety an' solid comfort give me the slow, old-fashioned ox cart; but I'd like to collar one o' them automobiles an' hitch about four plows behind it in a 20-acre field, then turn on steam an let it give the old mule team lessons in glttin over ground."
Carry Offerings to Infant. A singular custom prevails in Yorkshire, England. In parts of the West Riding it is quite common for visitors to a house in which a new baby has appeared to carry with them as an offering to the infant a new laid egg, some salt, a piece of bread and in some cases a penny.
' Railway Time Table.
Best Remedy for Cold. As a rule the simplest remedies for a cold are the surest. There is nothing for carrying off the congestion like a hot bath, a hot drink and a good sweat Do this at night
Well-Watered Canada. Lake Ontario is as large as Wales, Lake Superior exceeds Scotland in size, Lake Huron equate the aea of Holland and Belgium combined. No other country can match Canada for lakes and rivers.
A Dysphagitic Incubus. The hot cross bun is a dysphagitic incubus, a morsel of inadaptable antiquity, a pious fraud. Pall 'Mall Gazette.
An adTfrllsrmfBt la THE UKE COLXTY TIMES pays for Itself before the Issue that contains It reaches onethird of the readers.
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