OCR Text |
Show I V3L l. Ogden, Utah, November 10, 1908. H HIED SHIES NO. Standard Oil Again Winner On Big Fine 270 MU UHBSp Severe Editorials in Nashville Tennesseean Lead to Monster Turbine Addition to Nations Navy Christen- United States Circuit Court of Appeals Sustains Its B I oodshed Ed ward Ward Carmack Dead-Criti- cism ed in Massachusetts Amidst Impressive Former Action Remanding $29,000,000 Case Ceremonies With Distinguished of Career Stings PoliAgainst Great Corporation to Judge tician to Bloodlust. Gathering Present. t i Kenesaw Mountain Landis. QUINCT, Mom., Nov. 10. The North Dakota, the greateat battleehip In America, wai launched In the yarda of the Fore River Ship Building company distinguished assemblage tobefore A noon, Mias Mary Benton of t day. chamFargo, 8. D., broke a bottle of pagne across the nose of the giant The christening turbine battleship. party Included OovemAr John Burke of North Dakota and his staff, a delegation of prominent navy officers, and lepresentatlves of the state of Massachusetts and of the city of Quincy, The big warrior of the seas Is now It Is Sit feet 10 per cent finished. t long at the water line and Sll feet Inches over all. The breadth Is 85 feet I Inches, and the distance from the trail draft to the bottom keel la 27 leet The ship has a displacement of 10,000 tons and Is propelled by turbine engines. The launching of the North Dakota marks a new step toward the supremacy of Uncle Bam on the high seas. AH records for speed were broken In her construction, and while much remains to be done In fitting the leviathan for active service, all indicamany tions point to Its completion months before the expiration of the three-yea- r limit allowed by the government. The keel of the big vessel was laid on December 18 last,-- and by October 1 last the ship was 54 per cent, completed. It Is expected that the North Dakota will be In commission within two years from the date of the laying of her keel, which will break all records of American ahip yarda When commissioned, she will be com' manded by Captain Charles J. Badger, superintendent of the Annapolis Naval academy. ff'ster of Delaware. The North Dakota la a sister ship of the Delaware, in process of building at the yards of the Newport News and Dry Dock com Shipbuilding On at Newport. Vagtnla. pany October 1 the Delaware was 44 per cent, completed, according to the official reports to the Navy department, A fierce rivalry has marked the con. atruction of the sister ships. The North Dakota and the Delaware are almost precisely alike, each having a long forecastle deck extending from the bow almost to the center of the- - vessel. The ten twelvw-incguns erg arranged In five turrets, two to a turret, the forward turret being so located that the axes of Its guns are twenty-fou- r feet above the water line. I NASHVILLE, TENN. NOV. 10. EDWARD WARD CARMACK, FORMER UNITED STATES SENATOR FROM TENNESSEE, WAS KILLED CHICAGO. ILLS.. NOV. 10. IN THE V. S. CIRCUIT COURT TODAY. WITH JUDGES GROS8CUP. BAKER AND SEAMAN SITTING ON THE BENCH THE GOVERNMENTS PETITION FOR A REHEARING OF THE I29.0fl0.0fl0 STANDARD OIL. FINE WAg DENIED FOR THE SECOND TO JUDGE TIME AND THE CASE WAS REMANDED FOR KENESAW LANDIS, OF THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT. IT IS BELIEVED THAT ATTORNEY GENERAL BONAPARTE WILL TAKE THE CASE BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT ON A WRIT OF CERCTI-ORAR- I, LATE MONDAY AFTERNOON IN STREET DUEL WITH COL. A DUN- CAN B. COOPER AND ROBERT COOPER, THE COLONEL'S SON. THE FATAL CLASH OCCURRED IN THE STREET, WAS THE CULMINATION OF A SERIES OF EDITORIALS THAT HAVE APPEARED IN THE TENNESSEAN, A DAILY PAPER PUBLISHED BY CARMACK SINCE HIS RE- RE-TRI- 4 h ti. THE ARTICLES WERE CAUSTIC CRITICISM AND BITING RIDICULE OF THE POLICIES OF DEMOCRATWERE IC LEADERS AND IN SOME OP THEM DIRECT REFERENCES MADE TO COLONEL COOPER. t TIREMENT FROM OFFICIAL LIFE. i c The decision wa unanimous. Judge Standard Oil Co, of New Jersey. After conviction and before be proand Mr. Carmack had been warned that prostrate form of the Baker, Groascup writing the opinion. nounced sentence. Judge Landis ex- Colonel Cooper would resent the ridi- hla father atood back upon the sidereasons concurring, added additional pressed curiosity to have this latter cule If continued., and waa armed with walk. for this ruling. The opinion Is written point cleared np and ha subpoenaed a revolver, tare chambers of whlrh he Colonel Cooper then walked ap to In almost the same scathing language John D. Rockefeller and leaner Stand- - emptied. th young man being wound, hla son, who waa faiat as a result of Within a few hla wound, and placing hla arm ae was the former ruling. The court ard Oil lights to testify regarding the ed In the shoulder. reiterates its original excoriation of connection between the Indiana and seconds after they met, the tragedy around him they walked to the 5. was over. of Dr. R. K. Fort. He was shot Judge Landis, which, at the time of the New Jersey corporations. On Aug. flrat decision, was said to be the moat 1997, Judge Landis fined the oil comhie office and In the right shoulder In the region of had Mr. left Carmack bitter denunciation of one court by an- pany the maximum, 129,140,000, jn an wae going to hie apartments and the collar bone, and it waa stated that other that had ever been made. The opinion scoring ths company unmercl- - Colonel Cooper and bis gon were go- the wound waa not a dangeroua ona. waa later removed to St. Thomas opinion setg out that the corporation's! fully. ing down Seventh avenue. Ae they He offense was in accepting rebates tn ths! The Standard company Immediately came together several shots rang out hospital. complete transaction of shipment but took the case to the U. S. circuit court in rapid succession and Senator Carnot In the quantity sent, wherefore the i of appeals, on a writ of error, averring mack whirled around and seemed to NASHVILLE, Tenn, Nov. 18. A an electric light pole, special session of the gmnd Jury has ruling of Landis that a carload ship- - j that the trial court had erred In ruling catch to at try ment constitutes an offense can be j that the number of offenses should he but missing thla la hla reach, fell in !betn called for tomorrow for the hear-- j Just abaft this turret la another, the reached only by the proper processes of1 reckoned by the number of carload lots a heap In the gutter Juat at the edge Ing of the ease against CoL Dunran B. barbette of which la of sufficient height aw and not through supplemental pro-- I and not by the number of shipments; of the sidewalk. Ha fell somewhat on Cooper and hla son, for killing that the trial court had erred In ruling hla right aids and waa lying with ona or Carmack yesterday. for Us guns to clear ths roof of the ceedlngs In the nature of civil action. ex-tIt le understood that both Cooper Mr. Carforward turret. Abaft the break of Indirectly, the hither court refers to j that Ignorance of the law Is not an Hi hand raised to hla face. when and hte son will waive preliminary dragging Into the case of the cuse for violation of It and that mack waa la a1 probability ths forecastle deck, and also situated excessive an he fell, ae three bullets had been fired hearing today.' Both refuge fa make on the axis of the ship, are two more Standard OH company of New Jeraey trial court had asaeased hla power In Into hie body. statements. Gov, Patterson la a warm that corporation waa not men' fine and had gone beyond twelve-inc- h gun turrets, and abaft and when tloned In the Indictment. hearing testimony after the jury had ehnta were fired Young the After This waa the second time the tT. 8. returned a verdU t. tContlnued On Page 4.) Cooper stood a few moments over the ( Continued Or Page 4.) Last July the appellate court handed court of appeels had acted In thla case. error of to the down Ita opinion on thla writ The case waa originally taken appellate court by tli- - Standard Oil Co., petition, reversing the trial court and after Judge K. M. Landis of the U. riit inlYff the vase to' Judge Landis SEATTLE MAH. DP H Thla opinion, written by U. district, had fined of the . com- - for retrlaL pany S29.240.0fl8 following a trial re- -, judge Groaacup, contained what haa been characterised as the most re- ple'.e with sensations. A Jury In Judge Landiss court had markable excoriation of one court by TO BILLS TRICKS THE REVISION OF found the Standard Co. guilty of ac- - another In the history of the American cepting rebates from the Chicago A bench. The opinion denounced Judge Alton railroad. The company had been Landis In unmeasured terms, holding Stand-JuriLOSES HIS JOB Indicted by two special federal grand that he had really convicted the TARIFF NATIONS on 5.428 counts, charging viola-- 1 ard Oil Co., of New Jersey, when law, t was not even on trial. The opinion, tlnns of the Elkina anti-tru- st Arguments Begin in United States which prohibits the granting or accept- - referring to Judge Landis's decision, no no ance of rebates on oil or other product, mid: "No monarch, parliament, WASHINGTON. D. C Nov. The trial began March 4, 1907, and tribunal of western Europe, for Supreme Court Involving Ecornmeans 9 10. The waya and for six weeks. U. 8. District turlea haa pretended to have the right 4 mlttee began tariff revisionAttorney Slpis represented the govern- - to punish except after due trial-unde- right-Mori- ts xpress Companies. ment and Attorneys John 8. Miller, ,n the form of the law. Can that hearings thla afternoon, conaldA. D. schedules basis no other pertaining Rosenthal, Virgil P. Kline, ertag the fully be done here, on 4 to chemicals used chiefly in the- 4 Eddy and H. W. Martyn appeared for than the Judgee personal belief, that WASHINGTON, D. C.. Nov. 10. Repre4 the Standard company. 4 manufacture of dyea the party marked by him for punishIt so, which If ment deserves eentatlves of the varnish mak- punishment? The specific Indictments upon Arguments were began in the United the U. 8. authorities elected to make la because the man who happens to be 9 era association testified. States supreme court today tn regard their fight numbered 482 and charged Judge la above the law." to the express companies of the nacomservice the acceptance of rebates aggregating On August 14 last. Diet Atty. Sims The charges by tha civil post-offithe austalned were missioner ca tion. The case Is practically a teat of by A the Alton filed a for the from rehearing Chicago 5222,880 petition inspectors. They reported the and Involves the validity of tha anti-parailroad on shipments of oil from Whit- before the appellate court, alleging that the circuit court had misunderstood condition of thc service to be generally ing. tnd., to East St Louis, IIL provision of the Hepburn act. The trial ended In a verdict of guilty and misquoted the ruling of the trial unaatlafactory. express comjiany In the counEvery on each Indictment and on each count Judge and a'leglng further that the Interested In the issue la vitally try tn each Indictment The maximum fine circuit enurt'a ruling, If austalned, and all of tlio companies of the nation LADING commerce less UNIFORM of be Interstate the make would could waa 521,240,000. It are partiea to the appeal to tha higher of legisshould It be shown that the Standard act a mere court. TALK Oil Co., of Indiana, a l,fl00,000 cor- lation, a phantom statute." BILL FOR THE WEST on thla petition. waa of the waa a not ruling Today's subsidiary poration, MUTUAL ADMIRATION. i of-fl- ev h 'at he ! d STM IMPORTANT I CASE IS es cen-ast- Episcopal Rector Charged With Improper Association With Girl. ed ce SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 18, Rev. Payson Young, rector of High Church In Episcopal pariah of St Mary, the Virgin, made official application to Bishop Nichols today for Investigation of charge that Young had Improper associations with Edna Clark, a beautiful art student The girl haa befn missing since October 27. The rector admitted that he kissed and embraced the girl In his study, saying it waa only n a priestly manner. He denies all knowledge of the girl's whereabouts. The mystery of her disappearance haa baffled tht detective. sa iEODfir . LIBOR sp WASHINGTON. D. C.. Nov. 10. It is learned today that following his labor dinner to be given to leaders of the country next week, the president will give out a statement with regard to the administrations attitude on Till j HIT BY AND KILLED L HOT SPRINGS, W. Va, Nov. 10. CHICAGO, Nov. 10. Western rail- - Republican national Chairman Hitch-roa- d have' announced their intentlou cock and President-elec- t Taft, reviewed of adopting the new uniform Mil of, the details of the campaign today, lading on the first of next month, fol- - Hitchcock gave Taft a Hat of the most Both exchanged con-cas- te lowing similar action on the part of active worker m roads on ..ovember 1. gratulationa. sii lives WHOLESALE MURDERESS David Decamp Thompson Dies in Selectien of Jury to Try Ray Lam IS St Louis;lnjuries Received Last Night IH NEED OF A CHANGE phere Progresses Slowly at La Porte. ST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 10-David Decamp Thompson, ona of the moat prominent Journalists and literary writers of the day, died thle mornIning at 8L Luke's hospital from he when juries received last night driven an down by auto, was run by Frank White, a chauffeur. The latter la being held pending an Investiga- LA PORTE, Ind Nov. 10. The selection of a Jury for the trial of Ray Lamphere for the murder of Mrs. Belle Gunnesa la progressing slowly. Many talesmen have expressed th positive alleged had been ERLIN. Germany, Nov. 10,-- Herr belief that the woman wtlll lives. d I In concluding be ssennan. In the Reichstag today. Lampheres counsel admitted that It KHo1 S-l? might put him on the stand, provided d"1 the court overrules tha motion to be We to Met. pttlnlr nil public- - jthe empire He eeMttot Introduced by the defense to talfe the to the World that we are not afraid discretion had case from the handa of the jury at the boll tion. the at was indignation until tlon but lb yellow or ny other peril, victim was born conclusion from state's testimony. unfortunate The He danger from the International policy ing point must cease to ed upon the,kataei'e sudden moods had come April 29. 1852. He bud degrees from . the Ohio Wesleyan university, the Incalculable. Germanys fate must be a stronghold for reaction 1m- - more damaging than th t and Mckeen-dre- e Northwestern university one mans longer depend upon that demoded Ife or waa a Russia He Turkey. layman of the ive temperament. The Idea of percollege. al absolutism 1a undermining the , Von Buelow give the Methodist Episcopal church and from the 1892 to 1901 acted as assistant editor ndatlons of 0ur national security." Inite guarantee that more In thehne he speaker vehemently declared remain, btoceftarto. of the Northwestern Christian Advoand that the chancellor wiiin cate of Chicaga Since 1001, he haa t the kaisers reign was character-groun- d a bill Hmlting 1 trodnee acted as editor of that publication. by a number of unwise and regret. acta which would have been pre- - personal power. The Among hla beat known books, are itea If the emperor had submitted to violently PJuded: . S!IIonaJ n, le" Abraham Lincoln, the First AmeriRecontrol of responsible ministers. He followed So can" and John Wesley aa a Social Ited a lengthy Hat of tha emperors of the empire and Pxulallnger. a former. Hla residence waa in EvansIscreet utterances and told of nj , ton, Ills. (Continued on nber of Impulsive acta which he nd ' ' : Je E Rev. i 10. Tha Nov. DENVER, Colo, woman dynamiter arrested yesterday this afternoon told the police that she was Mrs. Allen F. Reed, the wife of a Denver druggist. While in the office of Chief of Police Armstrong, with whom she waa consulting, the woman today attempted to extract enough morphine to kill a doaen persona from her handbag: Her attempts were frustrated by th chief, Mrs. Reed was arrested late yesterday afternoon, after she had shadowed the house of her intended victim, Mrs. Genevieve Chandler Phipps, for days In an effort to extort 120,000 from the letter. When the woman saw the police She threw several sticks of dynamite, but. fortunately, they landed on the cushioned seat of an automobile and failed to explode. The woman ref sues to discuss herself or her case. She la apparently refined and aeta like a per son In a hypnotic trance. The police incline to the theory that she la mentally unbalanced on the subject of money, or la In a stats of hypnosis and acting under the suggestion of some person responsible for her condition. of the E D. Stout, the proprietor American hotel, said the woman registered last Friday under the name of Mrs. H. C. Cones, of Albany, N. T. She explained that she was a tourist A telegraph cipher code waa found among her effects, but Inquiry failed to reveal messages containing the words In cipher sent from Denver. CASA BLANCA SETTLEMENT. PARIS, France, Nov. 10. The ag- reement between Germany and France tn the settlement of the Casa Blanca matter, waa signed by both nations thla afternoon. I |