Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 140, 12 June 1907 — Page 1

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THE RICHMOND ADIUM 8 PAGES TODAY TODAY A ATSJD SUN-TELEGRAM. VOL. XXXII. NO. 140. RICII3IOXD, IXD., WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 12, 1907. SING EE COPY, 3 CENTS.

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W. D. HAYWOOD l CHIT OF iCOUITTALAS EVER The Awful Stories Told by Harry Orchard Have Appar

ently Had Little tnect on: The Man Accused of Murder Defense witnesses still being grilled. Attack of the Defense on the Testimony of Orchard Goes On Unremittingly Showed Some Emotion Tuesday. Boise, June 12. V. D. Haywood is as confident of acquittal as ever. The awful stories of Harry Orchard have apparently had little effect on him. Attorney Richardson is putting Orchard through a gruelling today with ' reference to the murder of Governor Steunenberg. The attack of the Haywood defense on the testimony of Orchard goes on unremittingly, and the witness will probably be continued on the stand through Thursday. Tuesday began; with the -story of the dynamiting of . Fred Bradley in San Francisco, and j the defense made a long and determin-j cd effort to expose several features of It to doubt, improbability and further ; discrediting, and to vitiate it all by revealing the hand of the Finkertons. j Then the play went back to Denver; for the winter of l!4-or, and the spring following, and there was an extended effort to show that Orchard had, practically no communication with the leaders of the federation, so that he received no pay for the Bradley crime or anything else, and that with Steve; Adams, in. a period of extreme pover-J ty extending over a period of several j months, he was reduced to the iieeessi-l ty of stealing a sheep that he might Lave food. More Shocking Crime. Orchard, to a laughing court room, seriously confessed that he stole the sheep, but stoutly denied that it was because of want. He insisted that all through that supposedly hard winter and spring he continued to draw money from Pettibone, through Adams, and explained that if he did not see the federation leaders often it was because he was lying low to avoid captore for previous crimes. The Globeville inquiry developed a more shocking crime. At this Denver suburb tHere was a diabolical plot Orchard swore It was inspired by Max Malichi, the defense claimed that Orchard was its author to dynamite a boarding house where l."0 non-union men lived, and in preparation for the murder en bloc. Orchard. Adams and a man named Joe Mahalicht, broke into magazines and stole pounds of dynamite, which they lugged home at Bight and buried in their cellar. The crime was abandoned. Orchard said, in one of those flashes that make his testimony remarkable, because Haywood interfered and forbade him to have anything to do with it. Trap of the Defense. Carrying out the lines of testimony tending to show that Orchard, regardless of the great hold which it is presumed he had on the federation leaders, was frequently without funds, the defense showed that from late in UKKJ until the middle of 1!4 Orchard continually drew- strike relief at Cripple Creek and then dramatically invited )rcv-- 0 explain the inconsistency: to U.t ..r:y. Orchard replied that Hay-; wood, iicyer. Parker and Davis all ad-j vised him to continue drawing relief because if he displayed money he Would excite suspicion. i In five minutes Tuesday Orchard; Bhowed more emotiou than at any time! eince he began his testimony. It was! when, the defense in a roughshod digression asked him if he had not deserted his Cripple Creek wife, stripping her of every nickel she had, and leaving her in- poverty that compelled the sale of her wash tub to buy bread. Orchard's lip quivered, and with tears near he falteringly denied that he had done so, and said that the federation leaders had promised to care for her in his absence. PARTICIPATE PARADE All Knights of Pythias Are Given Invitation. AH memlers or Coeur de Lion, lola sind Triumph lodges, Knights of Fyth--las and visiting members of the order are invited to assemble at the Pythian Temple at 12:30 p. m.. Sunday, June 16, to participate in the parade incident to the Uniform Rank memorial cervices. C. W. D. JONES' FUNERAL. Cambridge City, Ind., June 12 Thursday afternoon at three o'clock the funeral of Charles Y". I. Jones

xill take place from the home. Short ' ervices will be conducted and the in-1 lerment will be in Riverside cemetery, j i - - -

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The picture. at the, left is a .recent photograph of the Princess Lonyay, daughter of King Leopold, of . Belgium, and widow of Archduke r Rudolph of -Austria. .She is said to be about to publish her memoirs which will reveal many of the secrets of the Austrian court. At the right is shown the Baroness Marie von Vesera, who died a violent death with the Archduke Rudolph.

TWO WDMEMRE KILLED Broad Ripple Car Wrecked Automobile of J. F. Himes. ACCIDENT AT INDIANAPOLIS Indianapolis, June 12 Two women are dead and three other persons were seriously hurt in an automobile accident in the northeastern part of the city late Tuesday when a Broad Ripple traction car struck and wrecked the automobile of J. F. Himes at Thirtyeighth street and College avenue. The dead: MRS. THOMAS W. LOVE, aged 5S years, of Indianapolis. MRS. EMMA. GORDON, an aged woman, of Indianapolis. Seriously injured: J. F. Himes, of Broad Ripple, a suburb of Indianapolis. Miss Fay Himes, his daughter. Mrs. B. Kester, of Indianapolis. OYSTER BAY. THE CENTER Uncle Sam's Business to Be Conducted From There. Washington, June 12 The executive department of the Federal government moved to Oyster .-Bay this morning when President Roosevelt, accompanied by Mrs. Roosevelt and his secretaries left for New York. SENATOR MORGAN DEAD Was Member of Upper House For Thirty Years. Wshington. June 12. United States Senator John Tyler Morgan, of Alabama, for thirty years a member of the upper house of congress, chairman of the senate committee on inter-ocean-.c canals and prominent as a brigadier general in the confederate army, died at his home here last nisht-

Secrets of the Austrian Court

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WILL BOOST THE PRICES Another Sensational Advance In Meat Rates. Chicago, June 12. Another sensational advance in the price of beef is impending. The new schedule calls for an advance averaging two cents a pound on all meats. The packers deny, but indications are that the story is true. SESSION OF THE ELKS Business Will Be Followed by Social and Banquet. At the meeting of the Elks lodge Thursday night, two applications for membership will be acted upon. Afterward there will be a social session and banquet, with music, songs, stories and short talks. CANDIDATE IN MASONIC LODGE. Richmond lodge of Masons conferred the entered apprentice degree upon one candidate Tuesday night. No other businss of importance was transacted. ' THE WEATHER PROPHET. INDIANA Thursday fair and warmer, ilght to fresh west winds. OHIO Thunder showers in south portions Thursday, CIRCULATION STATEMENT. TUESDAY (June 11) Total Circulation , 7.251 7,046 Net . Circulation , LARGEST CITY CIRCULATION. LARGEST COUNTY CIRCULATION. LARGEST RURAL ROUTE CIRCULATION.

LARGEST PAID CIRCULATION. j

Will the secret of the real cause of the death of the Archduke Rudolph of Austria be revealed?

LAW IS PARTICULAR; MUSTJBE OBSERVED Corporations Are Careless in Making Reports. STAMPS NOT ACCEPTABLE. Corporations that are reporting to tLe state for the first time under the new law passed by the last legislature, j which requires all corporations to make an annual report to the secretary j of state, are causing no end of trouble ; in that office by their failure properly to make their reports, . There are evidences of carelessness in many cases, many of the reports not being accompanied by" the fee. of 50 cents required by law. and without w-hich the report can not be received. The failure to send the fee makes it necessary for Frank I Grubbs, assistant secretary of state, to write the corporations again and do all his work over. The secretary of state must turn tuese fees over to the state treasurer and unless the fee accompanies the report this cannot be donel Some of the corporations remit the fees in. postage stamps. Postage stamps can not be accepted by the state. TAKEN AWAHO PRISON Lavester McRoberts Has Begun His Sentence. HE SEEMS INDIFFERENT. Lavester McRoberts, in the custody of Sheriff Meredith, has left Richmond for Jeffersonville, to begin his sentence imposed for criminal assault. McRoberts is a quiet acting man and seems to be hidiffti-iit to Lis fate. Tuesday his photograph was taken and it will soon adorn the rogue's gallery at police headquarters. So ir as thej local authorities know. McRoberts has never been, in trouble before-

ART EXHIBIT NOW .OPEN TO 'GENERAL PUBLIC; IS FINE Display This Year Is Based on Quality Rather Than Quantity and the Result Is of the Most Pleasing Nature.

PRIZES ARE AWARDED BUNDY AND FORSYTH. Interesting Talks Were Made At the Opening Tuesday Night by William Dudley Foulke and Jas. W. Pattison That Richmond is an art loving cit3r, was never more thoroughly demonstrated than Tuesday night 'vhen more than five hundred people assembled at the opening of the Richmond Art association's eleventh annual exhibit at the Garfield school. The crowd was the largest of any opening night since the Art association first Inaugurated Its public exhibits in this city, while the interest was real and manifest on all sides. The displays in the various departments were highly attractive, while the qunlity was the best ever seen in Richmond, even though the exhibit as a whole probably is not as large as in previous years. The manner in which the pictures are hung and the exhibits arranged, was remarked on on all sides and it was said that the various committees had outdone themselves in arranging the rooms. Xot one department was discriminated against in favor of an other, and a more complete and well hung exhibit could not possibly have been realized. The beauty of the building filled with Its art was enhanced by the beautiful flowers and palms wrhich were artistically arranged. It represented a veritable fairyland, in ail its beauty. From a social standpoint also the event was an entire success. Mr. Foulke Speaks,, Promptl y at-.-xyne, do'cTocJtJtha i3ISU cmwd gathered in the lower corridor where William Dudley Foulke made a very interesting speech in which he paid a high tribute to the beauty of the exhibit and to the woman who is responsible for it, Mrs. M. F. Johnston, president of the local art association. During the course of his remarks Mr. Foulke said that he had never, in his travels through Europe, had the privilege of witnessing a more complete and well arranged exhibit than the one now on at the Garfield school. He gave a short review of American art in general which was highly instructive as well as interesting. He spoke of the rapid advances of American art. Following Mr. Foulke's remarks. James William Pattison, chairman of the committee of judges, made a very interesting speech in which he complimented the work being done here and showed the education of art. He particularly and highly complimented the high class of work done by the public schools in Richmond and said that the department Is in good hands. He announced the prizes also. Forsyth Wins Prize. The Mary T. R. Foulke annual prize of $50, to be awarded to the most meritorious painting by a resident of Indiana, shown at the exhibit, was given to William Forsyth, the well known Indianapolis artist, on his picture entitled, "A Woodland Brook." The picture is considered especially meritorious from the standpoint of poetic sentiment reflected and the color and general outline. All concede it one of the best of the exhibit (Continued on Page Four.) WILL TURN OUT IN BODY FOR MEMORIAL. Coeur de Lion lodge at its meeting Tuesday night decided to turn out in a body Sunday afternoon at 12:20 o'clock to attend the Uniform Rank memorial exercises. The lodge had two candidates for the second rannk.

MORE RESULTS From the Paliadiim and Sun-Telegram Classified Advertisements. FOR SALE Cheap; good family or work horse. Call at Buhl's farm, south of Earlham. . 22-tf The above classified advertisement was inserted by Mr. Siekmann of 204 South Twelfth street, on the 22nd of May and ordered run until further notice. Mr. Siekmann, however, left next day for California ?.nd the horse was sold the same day. No notification having beenv seat this office the advertisement was . continued for several weeks, during which time from four to six buyers daily appeared to buy the borse. sThis is another example of the pulling powers of Palladium and Sun-Telegram Classified Advertisements.

ELEVEN MEN . PERISH IN' HAMPTON-ROADS Were Attached to the Battleship Minnesota.

RUM DOWN BY STEAMER. Norfolk, June 12 Identity of . the steamer which ran down a naval launch containing six midshipmen and a crew of five men of the battleship Minnesota in Hampton Roads is known. Arrest of the crew is expected soon. An active search is being made for the bodies of the missing men. The eleven men left Discovery landing at the exposition grounds shortly after midnight. The men are Midshipmen Philip IL -Field, William H. Stevenson. Franklin P. Holcomb, H. L. H olden, Henry Clay Murfin, Jr., Walter C. Ulrich, Seamen R. H. Dodson, Jesse Conn, Frank R. Plumber, Harley L. Vandorne and George W. Westphal. NO DANGER OF WAR DECLARE OFFICIALS Statement Made by One Who Is High in the Councils At Washington. SECRETARY ROOT IS SILENT GREATEST FEAR SAID TO BE FROM AGITATION CAUSED BY CERTAIN NEWSPAPERS IN BOTH COUNTRIES. Washington, June 12. Secretary Root positively declines to make any statement respecting the Japanese situation. This is done with the full knowledge of the uneasiness which exists in financial circles as the result of circulation of war rumors. It may be said, however, that the secretary's refusal is based solely upt on"" lil s "fh wimngfi ?$s"to "accord tm rumors official notice and not upon any belief on his part that there Is the least danger of war, or even of a breach of the friendly relations that now exist between America and Japan. The fact is that in the official mind the present agitation is nothing more than the workings on international Japanese politics and a strenuous opposition party in Japan. The situation was summed up by a very high official in the following re sponse to the question as to what had been said to allay the uneasiness in this country. Profess to Feel Hopeful. "If the administration has any fear of trouble with Japan growing out of the disturbances in San Francisco, no responsible official is willing to admit it. On the contrary state department officials profess to feel hopeful that everything will come out all right and that the situation between the two countries will gradually become normal. That Japan has made no complaint to the United States was the statement made most positively in responsible quarters today; there is no trobule between the two countries and there is no danger of war. "The greatest fear is from agitation carried on by certain newspapers in both countries and from this officials admit there is constant danger. Aside from this the officials will not admit there is anything which cannot be adjusted in the ordinary way." GOULD SUEDJFOR SBO.OQO Claim Is On Jewelry Purchased By His Wife. New York, June 12 Tiffany & Co today sued Howard Gould for $60,000 for jewelry bought by his wife since their separation. Gould says he is not responsible for the dabt.

EF FOR ENLARGING L AT EiNT Earlham Graduating Exercises Resolve Themselves Into Effort to Get Money for, Two New Buildings. PRESIDENT KELLY MAKES OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENT Prof. Mendenhall Named as New Governor of the Dormitory Address by Dr. Rufus Jones of Haverford. The forty-eighth annual commenrtv. ment was held at Earlham college thli morning at which thirty-four graduates' received the bachelor degree,' two thu master degree and two diplomas In, music. The exercises were held iu LIndley hall and the weather was such as to make the occasion a comfortable and every enjoyable one. There were several features to thitt commencement that marked it as diN ferent from those which have preceded. The exercises finally resolved themselves into an effort to raisu needed funds with which to complete the Bundy dormitory and to erect central heating plant at the college. Mr. and Mrs. Zenas Bundy were seated: on the platform and watched the effort to raise the money to complete tho funda necessary to finish the splendid building which their generous gift of J3,!K a year ago had started. That commencement exercises were turned over to Allen Jay, the financial agent of the college, was due t tho address which President II. L. Kelly made on behalf of the boan ) of trustees and from the suggestion of Timo. thy Nicholson that the time was op portune for Allen. 'Jay to raise; funds. Action of the Trustees. ?TZh bbarriL&Z tUBtecs.at , it meeting Tuesday, found that ?s,!0 was needed to finish the work on the Bundy dorml. tory, and that it was imperative that a i heating and lighting plant be erected this summer and for which purpose tho j college had no funds. The trustees ordered that the work on the building 'proceed so that they would be ready for the opening of the fall term c school and that Allen Jay, the financial agent, should raise the money. The move of the trustees was a wise one. The alumni association at ita meeting last night, decided to help ii raising funds and ' appointed a committee, of which Dr. Charles S. .Bondi is chairman while many of the friend of the college now at the commencement exercises have given liberally. Important Announcements. Several important announcement were officially made by President Kelly. In addition to the several changes already announced in this paper, in: the Earlham faculty. Prof. Mendenhall now at the Leland Stanford Jr., university, i3 to be governor of the boys dormitorj', to succeed Adelbert Andrew, resigned. The appointment of Prof. Mendenhall to the department oC mathematics was known, but his beins named governor was made public thi4morning for the first time. Portraits of Big Donors. President Kelly, in making his an-' nounccments, called attention to tho pictures hanging on either side of tho stage. To the right of the stage hung" the picture of Francis D. White, Earlham's largest donor, whose gifts to tho college have totaled l'J'MxW. Tho painting is in oil and was secured only after the most earnest solicitation onthe part of Timothy Nicholson and Allen Jay, Mr.' White being a very modest man. To the left of the stage waa the likeness of Dr. Alfred H. Liudley,; who was the largest, donor to LIndley hall and for whom the building was named. The picture was given to the college by Dr. Lindley's widow. Hazers Given Diplomas. An interesting feature was the pr sentation of diplomas to Birney Spradling and Bruce Hall, the "hazers" who were expelled from the college f-everal days ago. The trustees at their meeting Tuesday pa.ssed on the cases oC Spradling and Hall but it was not till this morning that the trustees' action was made known. When the two sen iors came forward for their parch-. ments they were given an ovation, showing that the action of the trustees met with the approbation of the audi-' ence. Program Was Splendid. The commencement program prrrpef , was splendid. - It opened with Invo-. cation by the Re-. T. J. Graham of . the First Presbyterian church. Fol-' lowing this was a violin solo by Mif-:-Katherine E. Bauer of Indianapolis, who showed herself to have exertion al ability. Her solo which was ia three parts was: fa) "Air for G String" , Bach; (b. "The Bee," Schubert; (cj "An dante and Vivace" from Zigeurrerwelseu, Santsate. 1 Address by Dr. Jones. The class address was dflivereflf toy. Dr. Ilnfus M. .Jones. of Haverford collect and editor of the Americaa Tontinued on Tage Two.)

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