TH THA JURY DISERE Seven Wanted Conviction in First Degree, Five for Acquittal. RETRIAL SOON AS POSSIBLE Over 30 Homicide Cases Must Be Disposed of Before Case Can be Tried Again. After having struggled for nearly two days to reach a verdict, the Thaw jury reported a disagreement late Friday afternoon and was immediately discharged. The final ballot stood seven for conviction of murder in the first degree and five for acquittal on the ground of insanity. Thaw was at once taken back to the Tombs. Application that he be releas- ed on bail will immediately be made very soon, but it is regarded as al- most certain that this application will be denied. District Attorney Jerome announced fmmediately after the jury's discharge that Thaw would be tried again, though not for several months. On the final ballot the jurors who voted for conviction were Foreman Deming B. Smith, George Pfaff, Charles H. Fecke, Harry C. Brearly, Charles D. Newton, Joseph H. Bolton and Bernard Gerstman. The five who hung out for acquittal were Oscar A. Pink, Henry C. Harney, Malcolm F. Fraser, John . Dennece and Wilbur F. Steele. The scene in the court when the jury anrounced its disagreement, though accompanied by all the formal ity usual on srch orenciong, Jost much of the dramatic quality it would oth- erwise have possessed, for the reason that Thaw and all the members of the family were aware that no agreement had been reached, counsel for each side having been told of this by Justice Fitzgerald before they entered the courtroom. It is said that all the Thaw lawyers except Daniel O'Reilly have been thrown over and would be thrown over by the Thaw family. Lawyer O'Reilly said that as far as he knew he was the only one of the lot who had been retained for further proceed- ings. It was said that both Thaw and his mother were dissatisfied with the conduct of the last stages of the trial! The comments on the closing speech of Mr. Delmas did not please Mrs. William Thaw. Attorney Gleason said; “The dis- agreement of the jury was disappoint- ing, of course. It was unfortunate, the insistence upon the unwritten law characterized as ‘demetia Americana.’ If instead of this counsel had dwelt upon the statutory insanity of Mr. Thaw, which was plainly proven, Mr. Thaw might have been acquitted.” District Attorney Jerome said: “Thera are 34 homicide cases in my office and 14 or 15 murderers in the | Tombs, and they must dll have their | day in court. The Thaw case must take its turn.” TAFT IN PUERTO RICO Thousands Greet Secretary War at Naval Station. Secretary of War Taft and his party arrived at San Juan, Puerto Rico, April 14, on the government Mayflower. rovernor Beekman Winthrop and Secretary the of Puerto Rico Regis Post went aboard to greet | the Secretary. Secretary Taft was escorted by battalion of marines to the city trance, where Lieutenant Colonel Bailey of the Puerto Rican regiment and staff awaited him. a Mr. Taft is the sixth Cabinet officer ! to visit the island since it was occu- | Messrs. and by the Americans. Payne, Moody, Root preceding him. The Alger, flower had been \ ¢ oa nal for the gathering of thousands and soon the streets surrounding the naval station were filled with eager spectators. Secretary Taft's recep- tion by the Peurto Ricans was cor- dial. BIG FLEET ASSEMBLING Greatest Naval Display Will Soon Be Seen 2t Jamestown. Having com gram of tice the Atlantic fleet station at G: 11 for Hampt in the ceremonies opening of the J COW The division consis of 14 modern battleships and will be joined by two others at Hanipton Roads, as well as by a number of warships of other classes. ted an elaborate pro- target prac- division of the from the naval To, Cuba, Anril s to participate 1%. to - the wir exposition. When assembled in Harapton Roads | of 3¢ there will be an aggregate 5 ships of various types, the most led in the waters of the United States. Admiral Evans’ division is due to reach Hampton Roads on April 16. ? Decause her parents refused per- mission to 13-year-old Stella Burns, of Yellow Pine, Ala. to receive at- tentions of a young man the girl com- mitted suicide by jumping from the county bridge: into Dog river. Thinks State Rights Endangered. Assemblyman Burke introduced in the Wisconsin legislature a joint resolution requesting the governors of the various states to call a conference in Indianapolis in November, 1907, to discuss and formulate plans for uni- formity of legislation. The resolu- tion declares that the rights of the states are endangered by the federal government, particularly as to legis- Jation affecting transportation and communication. of yacht | Metcalf ‘announcement that the May- | fod wen ¥ . wars constituting | powerful fleet ever assemb- | A POLITICAL SENSATION John Temple Graves Makes His Pro- posal That Mr. Bryan Name Roosevelt. A sensational feature of the banquet given at Chattanooga, Tenn., April 10 by the Bryan Anniversary club, at which William J. Bryan was the guest of honor, was the letter and subse- quent speech of John Temple Graves, editor of the Atlanta “Georgian,” who in his letter refused to speak because the toastmaster asked him not to talk about his suggestion that Bryan should nominate Roosevelt for re-election. Later, Mr. Graves was induced to go to banquet hall and deliver his speech. Mr. Graves, in his letter said: “I am profoundly convinced that in this period of tremendous economic crisis the only man who ean carry to successful conclusion the reforms in- stituted in behalf of the people is the man who is already entrenched in the power and prestige of dauntless cour- age, and is a conspicuous success in the executive office. “Of course, this is only an individu- al conviction submitted to the judg- ment of my party. I do not need to say that if Mr. Bryan shall be nomi- nated in the wisdom of the Democratic party as our next candidate for President, I shall give him my whole- hearted and unqualifiedly enthusiastic support.” Later, Mr. Graves was persuaded to take his place at the banquet table and make his speech. Bryan Not Ready Just Yet. In beginning his address, Mr. Bry- an paid his respects to Mr. ..Graves and what he had said. He compli- mented Mr. Graves in the highest manuer for his honesty and his bold- ness, and said if there was any place in the world where absolute freedom of speech should prevail it ought to be in a Demorratic gathering. He add- ed that when he had heard that Mr. Graves had retired from the hall be- cause there might be doubt about the sent for the Georgia and insisted that the be delivered. subject of Mr. Graves’ tion, Mr. Bryan said: sneech should recommenda- present the name of Theodore Roose- velt to the National Democratic con- vention. Dear in mind, I say, ‘as at present advised." ” : Mr. Dryan contended that if, after ‘mature consideration and reflection and the presentation of the arguments in the case, he should feel that his duty lay in that direction, he would present Mr. Roosevelt's name, even though it should prove to be the last act of his life. He then went on to say that if any Republican was to be selected by the Democrats to head their National ticket the man should be Senator La Follette, of Wisconsin. TRAIN WRECKERS KILL THREE Break Switch Lock and Smashup and Fire Follow. Three killed and one probably fatally injured is the result of what is be- lieved to be the work of train wreck- ers at Cheneyville, La., on the Texas & Pacific Railroad, when a westbound passenger train plunged into an open switch while running at high speed. The wreckage caught fire and the coaches were burned Engineer John Michael two passenger The dead: ington, Fireman unidentified man. Express Messenger William Keogh, of New Orleans was fatally hurt. An investigation showed that the switch lock had been broken and the switeh turned and the signal lantern | thrown away. | Kass, one WILL TEST RATE LAW en- | Reading Company Claims It Is Not : Constitutional. The Philadelphia road Comvanv. will institute legal | proceedings to test the constitution- ality of the 2-cent fare law. Just how the issue is to be raised, | the law not going into effect until { Sentember it is not explained. It is | understood that the point to be made | is that, under an existing charter § granted under the constitutional | & Reading Rail- amendment of 1857, the Reading is not subject to legislation which aims | to abridge or change the rights pre- viously possessed. 1 detmpenitr bees mies menent ! Eight Burned to Death. {| Eight persons were burned to i death nera Gunter, Tex. The dead | are: J. C. Price, Bell, Annie, Hom- | er; Elmer, end a boy whose name has i not been learned, all children of | Price, Jottie Dyers, step-daughter: of | Price, and Aline Upchurch, a niece of Price. Price attempted to start a | fire with kerosene, when an explosion | occurred. beyond recognition. Jetween 500 and 600 people were rendered homeless by a fire which iswept the town of Westwego, on the Mississippi river, opnosite New Orl- | eans. In all 42 buildings ‘were de- The loss is estimated at | | Five Hundred People Homeless. i | stroyed. | $50,000. Sue Judge Hargis for $90,000. Suit was filed at Jackson, Breathitt county, Ky., by the heirs of Dr. B. D. Cox, demanding $90,000 damages from Judge James Hargis, Edward Calla- han, Asbury Spicer, John Smith and John Abner, for alleged responsibility for the assassination of Dr. Cox. Want Roosevelt to Make Bryan. In the Missouri house a resolution indorsing President Roosevelt on his Way for tion of wealth, was introduced, and tabled after it had been amended so as to read that it was the sense of the Republican members that Roose- resolution lauding W. J. Bryan and declaring that President Roosevelt should retire to make way for Bryan was adonted. Qil Octopus Convicted on 1462 Counts of Indictment. FINES AMOUNT TO $29,240,000 Standard Lawyers Chestfallen, but Will Carry Case to United States Sppreme Court. The Standard Oil Company of In- diana was found guilty by a jury in the United States District. Court of receiving rebates from the Chicago & Alton Railroad. The jury declared the trust was not guilty on 441 counts of the in- dictment, but that it was liable on 1,462 counts. The maximum fine is $20,000 on each count and the mini- mum $1,000. Therefore the maxi- mum gross fines may aggregate $29, 240,000. The jury devoted two hours time intervening between the ment from the court and the to render a verdict, to eating a course dinner. The jurors has been listen- ing to the evidence for six weeks and evidently arrived at a conclusion before the final arguments. Judge Landis returned from dinner attired in full dress suit. He open- ed court, sent for the jury and re- ceived the verdict. Immediately upon its reading attorneys for the oil company moved for a new trial. United States District Attorney Sims declares the full penalty in each case will not be disproportionate. He says that if a common criminal is sentenced to a year for the theft of an article worth a few dollars, then the imposition of $29,240,000 in fines against a corporation worth $200,000,- 000, a large portion of which wealth of the retire- return wisdom of what he had to say, he had | editor to return | Turning directly to the | mail car. baggage and express car and | i Moeller, the German minister of state, J. Cov- | The victims were burned | stand against unprincipled manipula-. was amassed by collecting rebates, will be reasonable, and according to the practice of the courts in cases of | petty crimes. | The high-priced lawyers for the oil | | company | defeat. “As ‘at present advised T shall not | were crestfallen over They express a determina- tion to carry the case to the United | see States Supreme Court, rather than permit their clients to pay the great fine. FOUNDERS DAY IN PITTSBURG Dedication of Enlarged Carnegie Lib- rary and institute. The Carnegie Library and Institute at Pittsburgh which has been en- larged was reopened and the event celebrated as Founder's Day on the 11th with eleborate ceremonies. Many distinguished men from Europe as well as Canada and the United States were present. Mr. Carnegie, the founder of the great institute, received a remark- able reception when he arose to deliv- er his address. Mr. Carnegie’s address was in his usual vein, a statement of his objects in founding the institate, and his hope that it would prove to be of great value to the people of Pitts- burgh, - for . whose benefit it was founded. His Excellency, Theodor von then delivered an address on ‘The Ponular Feature of the. Carnegie In- stitute,” and was followed by Baron D’Estournelles de Constant, of France, on ‘The Organization of Peace.” : Secretary S. H. Church, of the board of trustees, gave a review of the work of the last 1S months at the institute, after which Frew made an address and announced closed the exercises of the afternoon. Trainmen Found Not Guilty. A jury returned guilty in the case of Frank Galnour, engineer of a Baltimore & Ohio pas- senger train, who was charged with involuntary manslaughter in failing to give proper signals to the crew of a. freizht at Woodville, causing a collision deaths. our’'s train and Engineer Burke and Conductor Moste of the freight train, who were also indicted, were dis- missed. train PIG IRON OUTPUT SOLD Product + for Remainder of Year In Central West Is Taken. Pig iron production of the Central West has been sold for the remainder f "the year, 230,000 during the weel. stances in the history contracts aggregating been entered into There are few in- - of the industry when tl ut haa teen disposed of so early in the season. Of the 1{ntal amount Charles P. Snvder & Co. sold 109,000 tons to in- terests in the Pittsburgh district, the price being $31. disposed of by the semer ASSo- ciation to the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company at the same price. Bomb in the Mails. St. Louis, April 11.-——A mail pack: age, apparently containing dynamite, exploded while being stamped in the St. Louis postoffice. The explosion blew away a finger and thumb of John G. Bayer, the cierk, who was stamping the package. All trace of the contents and all the address ex- cepting the words “Independence, Mo.,” were destroyed. yo outn Be Bank's Funds Squandered. That more than $200,000 paid into the defunct.Prqvident Securities and Banking Company, of Boston, was squandered by the directors of the company and that less than $5,000 re- mains, is the allegation of the receiv- ers of the company, who filed a report velt should run for president again. A | in the supreme judicial court. Driven insane by wrong over imag- inary financial troubles, Robert N. | Crow, member of a wealthy family, | attempted suicide in a box at the | Grand opera house, Pittsburgh. their | : : | uted in the southeastern provinces of President | the winners in the art contest, which | | of Emperor | today. | turning from Tsarskoe-Selo by train | + then | a verdict of not | Ind, | resulting in 61 | Conductor Porter of Galn- | { cablegram 2 "The remainder was | CAPITOL PLANS COPIED STODARD FOUND: BUY]. 2% 2 Investigators. Direct evidence that Joseph M. Huston confiscated the plans of Henry Ives Cobbs, the noted New York archi- tect, for the $13,000,000 capitol at Harrisburg, was given to the investi- gation commission April 9th by Charles. W. Guhle, a draftsman, of Philadelphia. He testified that he had been employed by Huston in 1902 and the first work he did was to copy the Cobbs plans. So fearful was Huston that some one would learn of the Cobbs plans being in his possession that every night he had them locked in a secret drawer of his drafting room. Mr. Cobbs was a competitor for the capitol work and, as such, submitted to the capitol commission a set of plans for the building. These origi- nal drawings, it was brought out, had been secured by Huston and copied with a few alterations. How Huston procured the drawings or what be- came of them after he had copied them, was not developed. The hearing was also enlivened by the testimony of past and present State officials regarding the disap- pearance of the schedule of 1902, un- der which the contract for filing cases was awarded to the Pennsylvania Construction Company, of Marietta, Pa., of which Congressman H. Burd Cassel is the head. The commission has been unable to find any trace of the contract or the schedule under which it was awarded. The schedule mysteriously disappeared from the office of Audi- tor General Hardenbergh and has not been found since. FINDS MILLION STARVING Dr. Kennard Appeals for $2,500,000 to Aid Russians. Dr. Kennard, commissioner of the Society of Friends, who was sent to investigate the Russian famine, writing from Samara, in the heart of the famine district, United States and Great Britain promptly send help. He says: “There are 20,000,000 people distrib- to Russia who without aid cannot live to another harvest.” In Samara alone, the commissioner adds, thou- sands are dying and 750,000 are starving. Of the latter only 372,700 are geting relief, a dole of one meal in 24 hours. He appeals to the An- glo-Saxons for $2,500,000 to save “20,000,000 of human beings who are dying lingering deaths from starva- tion.” ROBS CROWDED BANK Sneak Thief Reaches Into Cage and Gets $1,700. A sneakthief stole $1,700 from the paying-teller’s cage of the State Na- tional bank at St. Louis, April 9, and escaped undetected: The thief forced open the wire netting in front of the cage, reached inside and drew forth a package of bills. The theft was committed during the noon hour rush. Teller’s Hague Peace Conference. June 15, has been fixed for the op- ening of the second peace conference at The Hague. The function’ will oc- cur in the Knights hall, a building resembling a chapel and forming a part of the Binnenhof, a | buildings in the surrounding the medieval pile of center of the city, palace built for Count William IIL, of | storm would never [ of.” in 1259. Attempt on Grand Duke's Life. Another attempt on the life of Grand Duke Nicholas Nicholaievitch, president of the Russian council of national defense, and a second cousin Nicholas, was frustrated While the grand duke was re- Holland, into his coach, duke escaped men fired The grand four escaped. uninjured. New British Head in Egypt. Lord Cromer, British agent consul general in Egvpt, who has been the power behind the throne in that | since Great Britain es-! tablished a virtual protectorate, has | Sir El- | | irresistible impulse to kill has no .| place in the law. The Judge also informed the jury! country ever resigned because of illness. don Gorst has been appointed to suc- ceed him. War Ended. The end of hostilities in Central America is recorded in the following received at the state de- partment at Washington from Ameri- can Consul Olivares, dated at Man- agua, the Nicaraguan capital. today: Bonilla and the war is ended.” Minnesota for Third Term. The Minnesota House of Represen- | ives wi rising vote which, the | ” iatives with 2 Bou {| Taft Plans Reversion of Control speaker announced, was “nearly unanimous,” for. a tkird term. Fire Causes $2,000,000 Damage. The mercantile suburb of Harbin, known as FEudoadam, in which many large warehouses were situated, has | | which will result in the turning over | of the control of Cuban affairs on the American been destroyed by fire. The burned area covers almost a square mile. The loss is estimated at $2,000,000. The Moore-Heart-Sill bill, which prohibits speculation in futures, and | which was passed by both legislative | branches several weeks ago, was signed by Acting Governor Moore. Twelve Workingmen Killed. Numerous fights occurred the workingmen in the district about Lodz, April 9. The men were actuat ed by political motives and the fight- | ing resulted in the Killing of 12 and the wounding of 14 persons. Bomb Explosion Hurts Many. Another bomb explosion occurred | in Barcelona, Spain, and several cas- nalties are reported to have resulted. | It appears that five persons were ser- iously injured by last night's bomb explosion at 26 Boqueria street. appeals to the | | Delmas to tatters. brick | | Tenderloin the principals in it had been poor and | obscure persons instead of a man of | | genius and a millionaire, the brain- | been heard | passed concurrent reso- | lutions indorsing President Roosevelt | | affairs | people. | cire of the Liberals and Conservatives regarding the election a compromise | among | JEROME MAES HS PLE District Attorney Presents the State’s Side of Thaw Case. SANITY ONLY POINT AT ISSUE » Judge Declares That Irresistible Im- pulse to Kill Has No Place in Law. Mr. Jerome's address to the jury occupied about three hours and a quarter. In its course, he pursued the methods with which everybody who has heard him on an occasion of im- portance is familiar. He never soar- ed to the florid heights of eloquence whereon Mr. Delmas balanced him- self for the better part of two days. The figures of speech that he used were few and simple, but every word that he uttered appeared to carry with it the conviction that it was spoken sincerely and he held the crowded court room from beginning to end to an attention that never faltered for a moment. There were times in the course of the district attorney's speech when everybody in the court room sat up straight and grasped the arms of his chair or the back of the chair in front of him. A, Such a moment arrived when Mr. Jerome conjured up a vision of the spirit of Stanford White begging Evelyn Thaw, since his own lips were sealed and the law forbade him any champion, to say a word in his be- half. Other occasions like this came when he assailed the picture-that Mr. Delmas had drawn of Thaw as the champion of virtue, the modern Saint George slaying the dragon that prey- ed on human virtue. Sanity Only Point at lcsue. The district attorney tore “dementia Americana” defense of Mr. He strove to show that there was only one point at is- | sue and that was whether Thaw was sane or insane when he fired the shots that killed White and he solem- nly warned the jurors that they were under oath to decide the that and on that alone. He ridiculed the brainstorm theory and dubbed the California lawyer “Pr. Delmas,’ a title he conferred on him by virtue of “dementia Americana.” The district attorney Evelyn Thaw’s story with every source at his command. He admitted that the Hummel affidavit was not entitled to any consideration, unless it was supported by corroborative evidence. He said that he now had Hummel where he had wanted him for years, that he had convicted him of attacked felony, that he hoped soon to land | him in prison and that he would keep him there as long as he could. But he contended that the corrobor- | | ative evidence showed that the mater- | jal for the affidavit was furnished by | Evelyn Nesbit for the purpose of at-| | tacking Thaw. Afier marshaling all the facts of | the case in review he declared that it | was really the simplest case in the | world. HE cheap, he said, “and a common, murder,” is have Again lionaire.” District Attorney Jerome ended his at | summing up for the prosecution 3:40 and after a short recess, Justice Fitzgerald delivered his charge. The Judge’s Charge. The Judge's charge, lasting about | an hour, was a concise outline of the | law and gave to the jury the alter | { native | following four verdicts: Murder in the | first degree: murder in the second de- | and | of rendering any one of manslaughter in the first de- gree; not guilty on the ground of in- gree; sanity. The statute governing the plea of insanity was defined clearly, much stress being laid on the fact that an {hat an illusion, unless the illusion if true might result in the injury of the man suffering it, could not be accept- ed "as an _excuse. The jury retired at 5:17 p. m. Six hours later they failed to reach a’ver- ‘dict and shortly after 11 p. m. were «Amapala has been surrendered by | locked up for the night in the jury- room of the Criminal Courts Build- ing. » CUBA FREE JULY 4, 1908 on That Date. It appears that July 4, 1908, will be the day when the control of Cuban is given back to the Cuban Tn view of divergence of de- holiday is probable. The Illinois of tives passat Representa- ary of members of the legislature to | $2,000. i $1,000. Abandoned Town. Puerto Cortez, one of the no fighting, Honduran troops having abandoned the ‘town before the caraguans arrived. Fifteen Burned to Death. Lisbon, Portugal—A fire broke out | The in an apartment house near the cen- tral market house occupied by families. Fifteen persons lost their lives: Most of the ribly charred. the | issue on | his “discovery of | re- | sordid | if | | he characterized the brain- | | storm of the “paranoia ‘of the mil- the | 1-increasing the sal- | The present compensation is | princi- | pal ports of Honduras, is now in the | | hands of the Nicaraguans. There was | Ni- | 18 bodies were for] LAW CANNOT CURE ALL ILLS a Legislative Work Not Swift Enough to Keep Pace with Individual Crookedness. At the “Appomatox Day” banquet of the Hamilton club at Chicago, Con- gressman F. W. Cushman of Washing- ton state said in his speech. “I regret to say that there are some signs, social, economic and political, appearing upon our national horizon today that might indicate that- the only thing on earth that will ever approach the suddenness of our rise may be the swiftness of our down- fall. There are too many people whose sole desire is to cut a dash— who would rather ride in a mortgaged automobile on borrowed gasoline than walk in the paths of honorable ob- scurity in virtuous unostentation. If one-half of the people who are operated on for appendicitis would instead have their vanity and their i selfishness cut out, they would be so | vastly improved thereby that they { wouldn't have any trouble thereafter living in company with .an innocent and respectable veriform appendix. “There seems to be a crazy notion that all the ills that this nation is heir to can be cured by law. That is an idiotic heresy that ought to be laid away in the political graveyard along with the pet theories of the flat money lunatic. It ought not to require anti- trust laws to prevent combinations of capital from plundering the people. It ought not to require a federal injunc- tion to restrain labor leaders from ! murder and violence. The cause and the cure for these evils can be found | in the hearts of men, and not on the | pages of the statute book. “Let me say that the law-making | machinery of this government cannot | by any human ingenuity be enlarged or accelerated so that it can move as quickly or in as many directions as | unrestrained individual crookedness.” RAILROADS RETALIATE | Reduce Fast Train Time in West as Result of Wave of State Regu- lation. Western railroads have definitely decided upon a date for lengthening the schedules of their fast trains, and lon June 9 all trains will be slowed down. This announcement comes from Union Pacific headquarters in | Omaha and is the result of a con- ference between general passenger | i in agents of the Union Pacific, Rock | Island, Northwestern, Great Northern, Northern Pacific and Chicago, Burl- ington & Quincy railroads. Other roads are expected to sub- scribe to the agreement, said to have been made necessary by the cutting of rates by Western Legislatures. The Boston Wool Market. The wool market is unusually dull, on account of the depletion of sup- plies, but prices are firm. It is stated that leading manufacturers have suffi- cent supplies. Tight money and the high rates for borrowing also work to the restriction of business. The mar- | ket is dull also for pulled wools, with small lots of fine and combing sell- ing steadily. Foreign grades are i firm. Leading domestic quotations range as follows: Ohio and Pennsyl- vania XX and above, 34 to 34lec; X, to 33¢> ‘No. 1, 39 to 40¢c; No. 2, 28 to 2c: fine unwashed, 26 to 27c; unmerchantable, 29c¢: half blood, un- washed, 33 to 34c: three-eighth blood, unwashed, 3314 to 33%; c. Da D0) | | CURRENT NEWS ITEMS. | The decision of New York court of { appeals declaring void and uncensti- i tutional the present legislative appor- tionment has created a sensation. The interstate commerce co'e«lis- sion has held that express compiriies cannot give “franks” to railroad ofli- | cials. The decided longs to United States that the Isle Cuba and is the United States. The Wisconsin Senate adopted in the assembly a resolution for a con- stitutional amendment, increasing the pay of members of the Legislature { from $500 to $1,000. {The New Jersey senate tonight pased a bill imposing a life sentence for kidnaping. The Delgian ministry because the chamber adopted a motion in favor the labor hours of miners. At Cleveland, Elizabeth C. Hacken- berg has asked common pleas court to appoint a receiver for the Iroquois | Portland Cement Company, a $500, 000 corporation. Ten thousand tons of steel rails, or 20,000,000 pounds, have been ordered by the Chicago City Railway Company for use in reconstructing its lines. supreme court of Pines be- not -a- part of will of resign deputies of fixing Ambassador Tower, at a dinner ten- dered him by the Manhattan club of New York, said there was little like- lihood of a tariff war with Germany if report of cominission recently sent to Berlin to investigate trade con- ditions is favorably acted upon. | —— | Gets 99 Years for Murder. Fred W. Troy, a traveling photo- | grapher, who shot and killed his wife l and mortally. wounded Ralph Guin in { Joplin, Mo., New Year's’ day, pleaded | guilty to second degree murder and | wae sentenced to 99 years in-the peni- i tentiary. Mrs. Myers Will Not Hang. The sentences of death imposed up- on Mrs. Aggie Myers of Kansas City | and rank Hottman of Higginsville, Mo.. who were convicted of having murdered the woman's husband, Clarence Myers, in 1904, were com- | mutted by Gov. Folk to imprisonment i for life. . American National Red Cross cabled through the State department, ” $5,000 to the Russian Red Cross for the relief of the famine sufferers of i that country.