The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 26, 1907, Image 2

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    WILL TACKLF BEEF TRUST
Special Grand Jury is Called for
October 1st in Chicago.
THE ENTIRE JUNGLE LOT IN IT
Government Said to Have Received
Some Valuable Information About
the Workings of the Trust.
Government officials have turned
their searchlight on the beef trust,
and an investigation has been com-
menced having for: its purpose the
prosecution of the packers composing
the $500,000,000 trust, for having vio-
lated the Sherman law: in making the
vast merger that brought the big
concerns of the country together.
It the present purpose of
government to bring witnesses be-
fore a special grand jury that was
called for Oct. 1, and examine them
as to the formation of the existing
alliance.
It is charged that the combination
comprises the biggest trust in the
country, the ramifications being now
charged to exceed those of the steel
trust. Strong intimation is made
that the entire collection of jungle
syndicate will be placed under the
microscope of United States District
Attorney Edwin W. Sims.
; It is alleged that the instructions
include the Armour, Swift, Cudahy,
Hammond, Morris, National Packing
and Schwarzschild & Sulzberger
companies, the understanding being
that the National Packing Co. is the
holding company, or that it stands in
the same relation to the combination
that the holding companies of other
trusts maintain. The Sehwarzschild
& Sulzberger (Co. is under the
because of that
President Josephs’ holdings became a
part vf the new
There comes
of information
had long
formaiion
the courts
tions of tw
mation. Wi
by a
ment of
S0mMA reason
learned that
nand Sulzhe
the
is
the allezation
trust.
sensational
government
POSSeS vii
tha
in
depart-
for
was also
IFerdi-
managing head of
the Schwarzschild & Sulzberger
plent, ‘had made government's
ta of purs z its present investi-
gation comparatively easy. Throuzh
Mr. Sulzberger's defiance of the trust
in its efforts to control his concern,
the government has been given an
opportunity for learning spe dily just
how the trust was formed, how it
financed its merger and how it made
an effort to drive = Mr. Sulzberger
from his cherished institution and
take over its control.
but
never 1s
attitude
the of
SIX PERISH ON LAKE
Nimmick’s Crew Battle Bravely With
Gale on Lake Superior’s
Bleak Shore.
The $50,000 lake steamer Alexander
Nimmick Cleveland, OO. was
wrecked Saturday night the south-
ern shore of Lake Superior, 13 miles
west of Whitefish Point.
No living soul was
miles of the desolate
the survivors laboriously
pilot their lifeboats through the
raging surf: no help was at hand to
minister to the exhausted and frozen
sailors or to care for the bodies of
the six or seven victims washed up
on the rocks by the waves.
The dead: Capt. John Randall of
Algonac, Mich.; Steward Thomas
Parcrt of Port Huron, Mach.; First
Mate James Haynes of Detroit, is
supposed to among the dead;
three or four sailors.
It appears that the ill-fated steam-
er passed through the canal locks at
Sault Ste. Marie, Thursday, bound up
the lakes with a cargo of 3,000 tons
of coal from Cleveland, O. A heavy
northwest gale, which was at _its
height when the Nimmick plowed her
way out of the Soo river into Lake
Superior, looked too dangerous to be
trusted
of
on
within
place
managed
many
where
0
be
The shelter of Whitefish point was
accordingly taken advantage of until
Saturday, when the storm seemed to
have spent its force. Capt. Randall
then pointed his vessel out into the
big lake. All would have gone well
had not the steering gear or some
part of the machinery gone wrong.
Only a few miles away from St.
Mary's river the steamer - was dis-
abled and helpless under a deadly at-
tack from the’ tail of the storm.
There was enough left of the tempest
to dash the vessel a hopeless wreck
on one of the many dangerous reefs
that line the southern shore and to
wash overboard Steward Parent
overboard by the
steamer’'s breaking to pieces under
their feet, the crew began to battle
in the small boats with the treacher-
ous surf. Eleven managed to
themselves up exhausted on the in-
hospitable coast, but one boat, con-
taining Capt. Randall and five of his
men, capsized in the surf and . all
were lost.
Then, driven
In a battle between federal trocps
and a band of Maya Indians near
San Isidor, seven soldiers and a num-
ber of Indians were killed.
22 Are Condemned to Die.
Twenty-two out of 58 men, who
have been on trial at Riga, Russia,
charged with participation in the re-
volt in the Baltic provinces in 1905,
have been condemned to death.
The resignations of Midshipmen
Oscar O. Salb of Jasper, Ind. and
Clarence C. Riner of Cheyenne, Wyo.,
both fourth-class men at Annapolis,
were accepted. The youths were al-
Jowed to resign after being recom-
ended for dismissal.
light |
Vice |
{the market price,
| plied
piece |
among
| aged,
I eral
| coaches
I demolished.
| taken to the hospital at Aguas Cal-|
{ ientes.
| Mercer,
be- |
fore the lifeboats could be sent away. |
| six arbitrators, three to
| by
pull |
STANDARD OIL SECRETS
Amount of Rockefeller's Holdings—
Working Agreement With
Independent Refiners,
the stockholders of the
Company of New Jer-
laid bare at the hearing of the
Government's suits for the dissolu-
tion of the oil combine, disclosed the
fact that John D. Rockefeller owns
237.692 shares, or nearly: five times
as niuch any other individual
shareholder, and that he and his as-
sociates. who signed the trust.agree-
ment in 1882 still control a majority
of the Standard Oil stock.
Measured by the present
price of $440 a share, the holdings
of Mr. Rockefeller in the Standard
Oil Company have a value of $109,
000,000. Stock sold at almost dou-
ble the present price a few years
ago.
Through Wesley H. Tilford, treas-
urer of the Standard Oil Company,
the Government Attorney, Frank B.
Records of
Standard Oil
sey,
as
market
Kellogg, was able to obtain evidence |
of an understanding or verbal agree-
ment that had been made between
the Standard and independent refin-
eries doing business near Pittsburg
and Cleveland.
This agreement which
ed into in the latter part of
provided that the companies
sell their entire output of
fined for export, to the
export “department, in return for
which the Standard was to sell the
companies a certain amount of erude
oil each day.
Mr Tilford said that
the making of
supply of crude
panies had been reduced.
Mr. Kellogg then developed
the witness that the export business
was chiefly handled by the Standard
Oil Company of New York, and that
in buying oil for export
paid the market price to the indepen-
dent refineries. Mr. Kellogg
if the Standard Oil did not determine
and Mr. Tilford re-
1902,
should
oil, re-
oil. to these com-
that it did.
THIRTY-THREE KILLED
El Paso Express Crashes Into Freight
Train Through Disregard
of Orders.
digastrous wreck
railroad. A
szenger - train
into collision Encarnacion,
the city of Aguas Calientes.
; were killed and 35
na
Conti
i
t
There has be
on the
freight
Mexican
train: and. & pa
cane at
near
Thirty-two |
injured.
The passenger train was the regu-
lar 151 Paso expfess, which left that
city Tuesday. No train- from the
United States has come in since over
the Central. but ‘one. is -expected
SOON.
There persons
The
dam-
sev-
prominent
the killed or wounded.
cars were not badly
the two engines and
second and third-class
the passenger train
The injured are
are: no
Puliman
but
first,
of
being
disaster is said to have been
disregard of train orders.
The
due to a
MINE DISASTER
Dropping of Mine Cage Kills 11 and
Fatally Injures Seven.
Kieven men were killed © outright
and seven fatally injured by the fall-
ing of a cage in the rolling mill mine
at Noegzaunee, Mich. The dead are:
Charles ISent, underground captain;
Alfred J. Wills, Joseph Rodda, Matt
Lind. John Aho, John Cheri,
Blight. Antonio Curto, John
and two unidentified bodies.
jured: ~ Sam Stevens, John Makki,
John Kelvisto. Alfred Jewell, George
Qebastono, Thomas Roberts and mil
Muhenen.
The: cage was full of men
cne in it was killed or serious-
lv injured. The steel cable
and the cage dropped 700 .feet.
have been ‘taken out and
injured are being cared for.
I'he mine is the property
Jones & Laughlin Steel: Co.
burg.
The
every
The
bodies the
the
Pitts-
of
of
The Grecian government has
D. C.
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES.
sect
in
Five people, members of the
Parhamites, are under arrest
Zion City, accused of torturing
death Mrs. Letitia Greenbaulgh, 64
vears old, to show their belief in the
religion they profess.
W.. . E. Chandler. of New
shire resigned from the
Claims Commission because
dent Roosevelt insisted,
protest, on Harry K. Daugherty
Pa.. remaining a member
commission.
of
Spanish
Presi-
of
the
All
telegraphers are
the
submitted to
be chosen by
and three
If the six cannot
seventh President
appoint him.
of
be
the zrievances
to
the telegraph companies
the operators.
agree upon a
Roosevelt is to
Judge Wm. Lochren of the
States Circuit Court at St.
granted the request of the complain-
ing stockholders of 10 railroads oper-
| ating in Minnesota that a temporary
injunction issue against the commod- |
Legis- |
ity rates enacted by the last
lature.
Polish Priest Convicted.
Rev. Ludwig Szczygiel, the Polish
priest who killed Andrew and Ste-
phen Starzynski, brothers, of Pitts
burg, on Aug. 8, was found guilty of
murder in the second degree. The
defendant testified that he was too
drunk to know what had happened.
Five Lives Lost in Gale.
The heaviest gale recorded in 40
years swept the Newfoundland coast
Sept. 19. Reports from shipping
towns and settlements showed that
five lives had been lost
| “conspiring to cheat and defraud the
was enter- |
| duced in several cases.
| defendants appeared in person, waiv-
Standard’s |
from |
purposes it | :
buildings, who certified to. bills with- |
asked |
ton in
were |
fin
| former
| and
Geo, C.
[the
Thomas |
Johnson |
in- |
and |
broke |
| larceny charges, escaped
| Laporte
de-
ided to establish a legation as Wash- |
| ington,
| wooden
[ Detroit, and valued at $50,000, burn-
10 }
| and
Hamp- |
5 = | unexplained
against his |
of
| terview
United |
Paul |
| ators
dian Territory 692,901.
IRRESTS IN CAPITOL GRAFT
$60,000 BONDS ARE REQUIRED
That Ar-
Case
Attorney General Promises
rests Will Be Made in
of Other Parties.
Attorney General Todd of Pennsyl-
vania issued ‘warrants for the arrest
of the principals in the capitol: graft
cases. .
Warrants were issued for 14 of the
18 men named in the report. Most of
the defendants are charged with
state.”
Informations
the defendants
James Walters
were made against
by County Detective
“on _ information ' re-
ceived.” before Aldermen- Windsor
and Hoverter. Bail was fixed at $2,-
000 on each charge, or a total of $60,
000. later, however, this was re-
Eight of the
and entered bail for
The other six will en-
ed a hearing
trial at court.
ter bail.
The men for whom warrants were |
: issued are:
previous to |
the agreement the |
joseph M. Huston, architect, whose |
commissions amounted to over $500,
{ 000 on the capitol job.
John HH. Sanderson, principal con-
tractor and “trimmer,” who secured |
over $5,000,000. : |
James M. Shumaker,
intendent of publie
former
grounds
super-
and
out question.
Former Auditor General
Snvder, who took orders
auditing bills.
State Treasurer
Wm.
from
P.
Hus-
Wm. L.j
Former
| ;
Mathues, who paid out the state cash
on Iuston's certificates without an
audit,
Burd Cassell, who
worth of metallic
$2 000,000.
Payne, who
building and
of sub-contractors.
Charles: G.: Wetter,
ner, who secured bank bill = heads
from sub-contracters for alteration.
Chas. F. Kinsman, Wallis Boileau,
John GG. Niederer and Geo. K. Storm,
who were associated with Sanderson
in the operation of the Pennsylvania
Bronze Co., a concern organized for
the sole and only purpose of selling |
the state bronze for the new capi-
tol. Gad LT
Frank Irvine, travelin®*auditor. in |
the auditor general's department,” wlio |
“measured” the metallic furniture-by
the cubic foot. 5 :
Stanford B.
Congressman H.
rnished $250,000
rniture for
fr
capitol
constructed
raised bills
George
3 =
the
Payne's part:
Lewis, a partner of]
Huston, who originated the cubic |
foot rule in measurims furniture.
This includes all of th
the report of the inyestig#dtion |
commission,
with the excdption of |
Auditor General JWardenbergh
former State Treasurer Harris,
Keim, bookkeeper in Shu-
maker's office, and the International
Manufacturing & Supply Co. How- |
ever, Attorney General Todd declares |
that all of these will be
later.
Former Governor Samuel W. Pen-
nypacker may also be brought before
courts of Dauphin county to
answer for his share in the capitol
scandal.
arrested |
BRAIN SHERIFF'S WIFE
Indiana Prisoners Flee—She
Crawls to Door and Locks It.
After down: the wife
Sherif with an iron
wrenched bed when
Two
of
rod
she
knocking
Smutzer
from a
| stepped into the cell corridor to give
{a drink
| Arthur Cummings and John Edwards.
of water to a sick prisoner,
grand
the
awaiting grand jury action on
from
(Ind.) county jail.
Mrs. Smutzer, though badly hurt,
crawled to the outer door and locked
it, preventing the escape of 11 other
prisoners.
LLake Steamer Burned.
has been received that
Majestic, owned
the
in |
Word
steamer
The crew were all |
Buffalo by the
Charlemagne Tower. The
lost all their effects
is said to be a
total loss. The fire started in the
windlass room forward from some
cause.
Lake Erie.
and taken to
ed on
rescued
steamer
men, however,
the steamer
Insane.
Holmes,
Declare Woman
Mrs. Elizabeth M. who
i { was ejected from the White House in
striking |
January, 1906, by secret service offi-
cers, after a series of attempts to in-
the President, was adjudged
insane bv a sheriff's jury impanelled
in Brooklyn, by the lunacy commis-
I sion.
Oklahomans Number 1,414,042.
Director North of the census bu-
reau was advised by census enumer-
in Oklahoma that the final
fizures for the new state show a total
population of 1,414,042, Oklahoma
having 721,141 inhabitants and
In- |
Czolgosz’ Parents Destitute.
M. Czolgosz and his wife, parents
of Leon Czolgosz, the assassin of
President McKinley, have applied to
the charity department of the city of
Cleveland for assistance. Czolgosz is
83 and his wife 75 years of age. In-
vestigators sent to the little home
at 5716 Hosmer avenue, S. E., found
them in two small rooms. Both are
too old to work. Their four surviv-
ing children are unable to support
the aged parents in addition to their
own families.
| mand
| obtaining
| Warlike Preparations Cause
| the
| expected on his arrival
{| tema-will be
| indicate
| States Senators
| Cherokee
| blind orator.
ted by
and
AMERICAN ARMY IN CUBA
Gen. Barry Reports That Over 1,000
Soldiers Are Needed to Fill
Regiments.
Gen. H. filed
his report of the work of the army of
Cuban pacification. the
ning the government
last September, Gen. Barry says con-
ditions have steadily improved. He
recommends increase of pay of offi-
cers and enlisted men; reorganiza-
tion of the mobile army and immedi-
ate increase of the infantry by 24
regiments: increase of the term of
enlistment from three to five years,
and sale of beer and light wines in
the post exchange.
The report pays
Magoon’'s “administration and to the
rural guard. Gen. Barry says the
rural guard has been what its name
implies, an army of pacification, and
no occasion has arisen for resort to
force, the moral effect of the troops’
presence being most beneficial.
The operations of the pay depart:
ment covering disbursements for pay
of the army amount to. $1,500.000.
It has been impracticable, he says, to
keep the organizations of the com-
to an efficient working
strength, owing to great difficulty in
recruits, the command to:
1,186 men to fill the
to their authorized
Brig. Thomas Barry
From begin-
of provisional
tribute to Gov.
day needing
organizations
strength.
KOREA TROUBLES JAPAN
Reor:
ganization and Preparations for
Iron Hand Rule.
The possibility that
Japan may
have to annex Korea seems again to
quoted
to al-
if
have arisen. Marqui$§ Ito is
as saving it may be necessary
ter the present situation, and
Korean people pel their
tude of unfriendliness wily
“the last day for them.”
Tokyo papers are receiving reports
that insurgents ave gathering rom
all directions around the citv of Seoul
to attaek it. One band of 800. is
ported. Roving parties of
under the leadership ex-soldiers
killing Japanese and
civilians, and Koreans suspected of
pro-Japanese. The tak
mountains upon the approach
troops, but not
suffering heavily.
A new official
staff of the
Korea, was approved by
ceuncil. Baron Sone will
deputy resident general.
resident general of
leave for Seoul on Sept.
be
f
S
re
Koreans
of
are officials
being parties
to ‘the
of Japanese befor
th
for
crganization of
oeneral
the privy
be. made
Marquis ito
Korea, will
23.and its
the new
vigorously pushed.
resident
SYS
OKLAHOMA 1S DEMOCRATIC
| Adopts the ‘Constitution and Prohibi-
tion by Large Majorities.
from Oklahoma’s election
the constitution was
to 1, that prohibition was
at least 30,000 and that
Demeccratic state ticket
Charles: N.® Haskell : of
was. elected by 20,000
leturns
that
adopted 3
carried by
the whole
headed by
Muskogee,
plurality.
In the
Democrats seem
the
four
election
chosen
congressional
to have
i of the five representatives, according
to the returns received. The = Legis:
lature Democratic by a large ma-
jority, will elect as United
Robert. L. Owen, a
and T. P. Gore,.'a
is
and
Indian,
Killed in Auto Wreck.
A powerful racing automobile
cupied by seven prominent Ilks and
a chauffeur. and built to hold but
three passengers, while running at a
terrific rate of speed, crashed into a
telephone pole at the bottom of the
West Hurfando street hill, Colorado
Springs, Col, and was wrecked.
Three of the occupants were Kill
ed outright, a fourth was fatally
wounded, and the others were more
or less seriously hurt. The bodies
of the three dead were mangled al-
most beyond recognition.
The dead are: W. H.
Winnal, John S. Grey,
Graves.
oe
HH.
L.
Ralston,
Britton
PIG IRON SALES LARGER
Steel Corporation Plants Take 13,000
Tons from Chicago District.
The Iron Trade Review says:
Largely ‘increased sales of pig iron in
the eastern territory, particularly of
basic, have heen the leading features
of the market, which has been mark:
dullness in most sections of
Favorable crop reports
other ‘evidences of prosperity of
the farmers are increasinghy«i rt
ant as indicating heavy -purchases by
agricultural interests. In some
quarters lack of capital is holding up
enterprises, and there is general
complaint of slowness in making col-
lections.
the country.
Standard Oil Earnings.
Frank B. Kellogg, the govern-
ment's attorney in the suit brought
to dissolve the Standard Oil Co,
brought out from the unwilling wit-
nesses the fact that the Standard’s
profits during the ecight years from
1899 to 1906 were close to half a
billion dollars. This is the first time
the vast amount earned by the com:
pany has been disclosed from any au-
thoritative source.
MISSISSIPPI ROADS INDICTED
Fail to Furnish List of Passes Issued
by Them.
dvery railroad in Mississippi was
indicted today by the grand jury for
failure to furnish the state railroad
commission with a list of passes is-
sued.
This is in line with the indict-
ments returned last week against the
Yazoo and Mississippi- Valley and the
Illirois Central railroad for issuing
passes in the recent session of the
Legislature.
the’
atti-.
97 KILLED: 16 WOUNDED
Explosion of 10-Inch Shell
Japanese Battleship.
on
OFFICERS AMONG THE DEAD
Accident Followed an Attempt to Re-
move an Unexploded Shell
from a Gun.
“I 'tha
Twenty-seven of the: crew were
killed, and
slightly injured on “beatd: the Japan
ase battleship: Was ; :
eight ‘seriously eight
hima, by’ an © ex
plosion of a 12-inch shell within tt
shield during :
Kure, at
Kashima, under command of
Koisumi, reached Kure at 6
where the woundéd were
he hospital. The fatalities
a lieutenant, two cadets and one
staff-officer, the rank and name of
whom is not given. Exact details re-
garding the effects of the explosion
are lacking, but it was terrific and
the ship is badly damaged.
target: ipractice,. 'n
Capt.
p.m.
placed in
included
The explosion followed an attempt |
to remove an unexploded shell from
the gun. : :
The casualties are follows:
Killed, 5 officers (names not given)
and 22 men: seriously wounded, two
officers and six men; slightly
wounded, :two officers and six men.
The explosion occurred inside
the shield Jof* the starboard. It
not the sHéll which exploded,
powder. which evidently caught
from gas emitted: from
breach, when it was opened for
purpose of reloading the gun.
he Kashima is ‘a ship of 16400
tons, and was built in. Englend in
1905. She carries four 12-inch and
four 10-inch guns, the 12-inch guns
in and the 10-inch hily: in
Her complemen is 93H
as
of
was
but
fire
the the
men;
REAR ADMIRAL WALKER DEAD
Commanded the White Sguadron™
Evolution and Had Distin-
guished War Record.
Admiral
‘of
Rear
BN.
friend. at
Me.
Admiral
age and a
John G.
sud ienly
High
died
Pasture,
Waiker was
native New
known as the
famous squadron
the White Squadron’ of
was appointed commander.
John Grimes Walker, Rear Admiral
United States -Navy, retired,
the son of Alden and Susan Grimes
Walker of Hillsborough, N. H. He
was born: March 5, 1835, and ap-
pointed to the navy from Jowa wu
1850, graduating from the = Naval
Academy at Anapolis in 1856. He
was promoted master in 1358.
During the Civil War he served
the blockading fleet and the Missis-
sippi- squadron: made lieutenant com-
mander July 16, © 1862, commander
July 25.1866. captain June 25. 18
commodore February, 1553,
miral January, 18234, and retired
age in 1897.
of
je was
the evolution,
Which ne
was
rear
ORDER 125 LOCOMOTIVES
Harriman Lines Withhold Car Orders
But Works Are Busy.
The Harriman
with
lines placed orders
the American locomotive C
pany for 125 locomotives to
livered in_:190S, at a ‘total cost
proximating $2,209,000. The
Pacific and Soufhern Pacific (tems
have withdrawn their proposition to
purchase 6,000 or 7,000 additional
freight cars, because they obtained
no concessions in price from the car
nanufacturers.
A representative of the American
Dar & Foundry Co. said that -his
ompany has on its books orders for
yer H0,000 cars, and all its shops are
n. full operation. Last month the
sompany manufactured 10.437 cars,
the largest number produced in any
yne month in the company’s history,
and this month the output will be
12arly if not quite as large.
PRESIDENT WILL GO SOUTH
om-
de-
ap-
Union
he
Secretary Loeb Announces Camping
Trip in Louisiana.
Far from the
routine, President
jox ~17 days in camp. This
the nearest approach to a
vacation that the President
lowed himself. He will
camp in the northeastern corner of
Louisiana on or about Oct. 5.
The plans provide for a “camping
trip,” but everyone who knows
northeastern Louisiana knows that
the canebrakes shelter game worthy
of a huntsman of the presidential
caliber.
= official
will en-
is to be
genuine
has al-
pitch his
séene of
Roosevelt
DEATHS MAY NUMBER 100
Japanese Steamer Destroyed by Fire
in Yang Tse Kiang River.
The Japanese steamer Tafoo Maru,
burned off Chink Kiang, on the
richt bank of the Yang Tse Kiang, {45
miles from Nanking.
The loss of lite has not heen ascer-
tained, but it known many vf the
passengers and crew are missing,
and it is estimated that 100 lives
were lost.
was
is
1,000 Per Cent Profit.
Jvidence adduced by the
ment’s counsel in the Standard Oil
inquiry in New York showed that a
$4,000,000 block of Waters-Pierce Oil
Co. stock was passed about from one
Standard Oil interest to another when
the government's chase, along with
the Texas octopus hunt, began
make things lively for the big
poration. It was also brought
that the Indiana corporation
1,000 per cent profit on its
ment in 1906.
govern-
out
made
invest-
{ p. m. on Sept..9.. ~The
the |
to |
cor- |
STANDARD MUST GIVE BONDS
Fixes Amount
$6,000.000.
of
Chicago Judge of
Sccurity at
|
Judge United
fixed
the appeal bonds vf the Standard Oil
Co. in the : at
Attorney Sims: at:
hie
«d: that the bond was large encugh
would have additional facts
resent.
Grosscup the
Cireuit Chicago
Court. at
829.240,000 fine
case
I 36.0060.006
District
o announced that was not sat-
11g Grosscup said he
the amount was ample
the government its judgment. ile
id; that he wonld ‘hear ' whatever
ments - Mr. Sims had to present.
ere were. two filed, one
$1000.000, to guarantee that
i vill 2 No ch to disturb
rite of the Whiting; Ind.. plant,
and The othor for the remailiing $2,-
GO HY), . peasiasaa
The $2,000,000 bond must be a cash
bond to insure payment of that
amount against the fine upheld. Judge
Grosscup intimated that this amount
will the value of theo refinery
at Whiting. John S. Miller, attorney
for the oil. company, ask if
Standard Oil" Co. "of: N Jersey
lL. might-not be seenrity for the indiana
company, and Judge ruled
that this wonld be if the
New Jersey corporation had authority
to go on hond. :
balieved
to secure
honds
be oes
cover
the
Grosscup
satists
McKINLEY MEMORIAL PROGRAM
President Roosevelt to Deliver Two
Addresses
Ceremonies.
During Canton
A meeting MeKivley
held
nded
Secretary
"On
tional Memorial “trustees: x
Canton, QO... Sept.
A President
Corte
Charles
Just
CRANK ViSITS SAGAMORE HILL
to Collect
0 from Mr. Rockefeller.
President
NORoLony ¢ { al routine
oHill was xy vod
an. nnexpected caller,
had urgent business
President. The stranger, who
ceribed himself as Orland Coland, a
farmer, of Oxford, Ala. and clad in
blue jeans, ‘had reached the front
door of the President's hoine when he
was detected and: headed off by a
service agent
the officer Cola
he wished to enlist
Mr Roosevelt in the collection
ohli m of $10,000,000 from John
Rockefeller, He was hustled on
first traimx for: New York.
1 by
arrival of
thought he
the
explained
aid of
of an
Db.
the
the
yhligetic
CURRENT NEWS EVENTS.
The: government sued
160. persons. were killed
injured on Canadian rail
wiyvs during the vear ending April 1.
D. A. Woodford, millionaire, and
former. president of Cincinnati
tinmilton & Dayton railroad, died at
{alamuzoo, Mich: Sept. 15
report
that
shows
and 5435
the
performer who went
from a country fair
Warsaw. barracks
arrested as
A parachute
up in a balloon
landed near the
and promptly
character.
Court Justice
nominated for governor
ow Jersey on the first ballot
Republican state ¢onvention.
T39 votes out of a
a sus-
ious
<lin
of
the
re-
of
suprene
twipu
Hy
He
ceived total
Rockefeller, Jr., will cease
leader of the young men's
class of fth Avenue Bap-
tist Church, New on Octo-
ber 1.
PD.
the
John
ta bo
Bible
the
city,
Judge Alton B. Parker in a speech
the Jamestown exposition Con-
itution Day, expressed the fear that
the federal governnrent would gradu-
usurp the powers of the states.
A sledge hammer was used in the
flag rush at Adelbert College of West-
ern Reserve University, and one
freshman, Kenneth White, of Pitts-
burg, was hit on the head and knock-
ed unconscious:
Neglect of duty on the part of an
employe resulted in the death of 11
pérsons and “injury to 12 “more,
through the explosion of a. boiler ‘in
the Ferrer factory at Asorradero, in
the Anguangneo district of the state
Michoacan, Mexico.
Mayor Frank
bach, Jr., of Trenton, N.
inated for Governor by
cratie state convention
ballot. Mr. Katzenbach
entire vote of the convention
complimentary votes.
A fand of
sion and
been raised
the Baptists of
of
Katzen-
was rom-
the Demo-
on thy, first
received the
except
Former S.
I.
for
church ex-
work has
$100,000 for
missionary
within the past year by
Philadelphia to com-
memorate the two hundredth anni-
of the formation of the Phil-
Baptist Association,
versary
adelphia
Denver was selected by the Sover-
ejen Grand Lodge of the Independent
Order of Odd Fellows as the place of
meeting next year. Gen. Manuel A.
Raney of Towa, was re-elected Com-
manding General of the Patriarch
Militant, and he is the first officer of
that rank to wear the new insignia of
his office, voted by the Grand Lodge.
General Juan Pable Penalosa, lead-
{er of Venezuela's last revolution, in
| Marek, who sought refuge in Colom-
| bia, has been arrested by the Colom-
bian government.